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DAILY WORKER, NEW W YORK, WEDN! ESDAY N VEMBE R 26, 1930 mm &$ EX © EF $s Sloppy Charity Is “Relief” Spokane, - Wash. Bosses Propose for the Jobless Organize Unemployed Councils to Fight for Immediate Relief for All Jobless! (By a Wor SPOKANE, Wash.—It is funny to watch the capitalist newspapers how | they change their color and opinion. in Spokane were full of prosperity and baloney about the good times we are | having and the good things ahead of us, Correspondent) A few weeks ago all the papers here They even went so far as to have a prosperity week here in Spokane and had the business section of this town decorated with flags and bunting galore. But all this was before election. ‘Good Times’ Suicides and Starvation (BY A Worker Correspondent.) OAKLAND, Cal. — The capitalist press in order to create a sentiment, that good times are returning are j writing on front pages in boxed space \daily, “Today’s good news of good |times.” Here usually they print “news” of some building project in view some time in the future, or some See the same papers now and you will be surprised how they all at once | department store gaining in profits, discovered that we really have poverty, misery and starvation right here in the fair City of the Inlande Empire, and headlines like this are the common thing now: ST. PAUL ‘CHEST’ REFUSES TO AID Demand Re Real Relief | for the Jobless (By A Worker Correspondent.) ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Commun- ity Chest is being played up in the capitalist press here as all over the/| country for the “wonderful relief” it is giving the impoverished work- ers, Two actual cases witnessed by the writer today in the “pest” head- | quarters are typical of what goes on | every day in this “relief” work. | Refuse Aid. Among better than a hundred heads | of families, despera#€ enough to risk a refusal in spite of what they have heard about this “relief” was one worker trying to get a few groceries for a wife and *three children, so hungry they are crying for some- thing to eat, Asked for his religion he supplied the information and was told to go to his church relief so- ciety. On learning that this same society had “aided” the worker by suggesting the “chest” the smug, well- fed member of the board of control very “sorrowfully” explained that as he had only recently moved to this! city nothing could be done—in other words he and his family could starve. | Another case was a worker, father | of six small children, who had ex- hausted the $12.50 of groceries the “board” had so generously provided in exchange for four days work — the maximum allowance regardless of how large the family may be* He was told he should “stretch” the ra- tions—imagine one person trying to live on $12.50 groceries a month much less than eight persons. To hell with organized charity, join the militant Unemployment Council of the T:U.U. L, and let's fight, not crawl! — Another Unemployed Slave. MANY JOBLESS AT LACROSSE, WISC. 96 Corhmunist Votes Here Nov. 4 (By A Worker Correspondent.) LA UROSSE, Wis, — Here in La Crosse (a railroad center) workers are enjoying Hoover's prosperity as well as the 9 million thruout the na- tion. We still remember the slogans “a chicken in every pot”—“a car in every garage”. In fact we realize them to the fullest. Speaking of the first slogan I wish to call your. at- tention to our “Daily” menu, Much Unemployment. Unemployment is our main dish with part time work and has made of poverty, misery and starvation spiced with capitalist bunk. A side dish of speed-up and rationalization. A’en a generous dessert of juicy wage cuts. 5 Our honorable mayor, J. E. Lang- don, has become very serious about the unemployed. In fact he has taken necessary steps by selecting a city unemployed committee which pasted the resolution to reappeal the Vol- stead act and voted $2500 for the Community chest and let the Salva- tion Army do the rest of the dirty work. ‘The Communist candidates received ® total 04,96 votes in La Crosse on Fovernber ‘4th, MORTGAGES INCREASE AS CRISIS DEEPENS —— (By a Worker Correspondent) SEATTLE, Nov. 24—Indicative of the depth of the economic crisis of capitalism is the huge gain in mort- gages fited here during the past week. Mortgages filed during this period showed an increase of one million dollars over the pievious weex. ‘This means that those workers who were induced to invest their earnings in installment home buying and the petty bourgeois business men are being pushed to the wall and forced bt mortgage their properties up to the It. The extent of th? crisis becomes “Campaign to Aid Jobless Is Under Way,” “General Call to Arms Is Sounded In Behalf of the Need; “Quick Relief Will Bring Pros- * perity Sooner,” and so on. Charity “Relief.” But what are they doing to help the needy? Fake charity to exploit the unfortunate whom they feed and shelter in return for work done on the unite plan. They even went so far as to put the so-called Hotel De Ginks out of business organization, and this is now under the manage- ment of organized charity, thus get- ting a better chance to exploit the hungry jobless. In both of these places they are now taking care of about 500 to 600 jobless workers. What of the rest of them and the | married men here in town? $2 a Day Wages. Wait and hear. At an emergency meeting of the “Chest Welfare Fed- | eration,” which was held at the Ho- tel Davenport on Friday, Nov. 14, it was decided that something has to be done for the married men at once, |as Mr. Davies very rightly - said: “Hungry men won't wait.” So after lots of pow-wowing at last they agreed to put 200 men to work im- mediately in Indian Canyori to do some work, 100 men three days and another 100 men for another three days at $2 wages for a day’s work. Now, if we can take into considera- tion that the wages for such work is and has been $4.50 a day we can see what the proposed charity really amounts to, “Slashing the wages for the workers more than half.” A few of the married men got together here in town and presented a peti- tion to Major Funk of Spokane, the Chamber of Commerce, Spokane, and to Mr. Davis, secretary of labor, pro- testing against mailfoading being done by aliens (Japanese) and ob- jecting to the use of outside labor on local contracts and also the reduction of wages. This committee was led by William D, Holland of W. 119 Third Ave., Spokane. This petition was signed by 126 men, with 149 depen- dents. rganize Unemployed Council. olland, instead of whining and crawling on his belly, begging like the servile slave that he is, would stand up like a man and demand that what is his by right, instead of going down on his knees and say- ing: “This petition is not presented to you in any spirit of enmity, but with only the best feelings toward those in charge of the condition. We thank you for your consideration.” Workers of the West, when will you wake up and stand up like men de- manding your right as free born men? To hell with begging and whining; that will never get you anything. Why not come together and form an unemployed council here in town and in an organized way demand “Work or Wages.” Don’t starve, fight! REFUSES TO GET INJURED; FIRED Want Only Young to Speed | Up (By A Worker Correspondent.) MCKEESPORT, Pa. — The Na- tional Tube Co. is the worst place I ever saw to work. I was working as a laborer in the mill, One day I was piling pricks and I was doing it in the satést way. ‘The foreman came to me and said I was wasting too much time. Fires Worker. He said, pile it the way I'm going to show you. The way he was pil- ing the brick was very dangerous, Said “either pile siem that way or get the hell out of here.” I told him it was very dangerous. Go get your coat and hat and get out of the mill, you are wasting too much time, he told me. I told him TI have a wife and three children to keep and I couldn't af- ford to get injured. Then he said if your health is worth more than the job, go out and I did. Now I will tell you some of the things that happened in the mill. The mill is working half time and the company is firing all the work- ers that put 25 and 30 years in the mill. They tell the workers that they are busy and want fast workers and told them they are too old, A fellow asked for a job, the conipany asked -him how old he was, he told them 39 years old. Then the said you are too old and married, are lots of young workers on the apparent not only in wage cuts and lay-offs which continuo rapidly to lower the living standards of the en- working class, but in the rapid ter ‘Mortgages, streets and we are going to hire them for they like to win some prices by doing the most work in a day.| What does that mean, nothing but speed-up. etc. Looking further through news col- umns inside the papers, picked out below given list from only one day's November 18th news. How much of this kind of news is either extorted or not put in, we can only imagine. For here in the Bay cities we have no less than 10,000 unemployed. Family Starves. “Wentworth’s family of 4 children starving, Police picked Wentworth up for questioning. Went to his home 691 Sixth Street and found wife and children starving, scantily clad and shivering.” “Jobless -youth, 20, attempts sui- cide. Despondent over his inability to find employment, William Davis, |348 Olive Ave., shot himself above the heart. More Suicides. “Mother of 3 children, Mrs. Milton of San Pablo Ave., gave poison to children and took some herself, be- day before. No prospect of a job. Couldn’t see the children suffer. | “Woman attempts to leap ferry boat, but was caught in time by fel- low passengers and prevented her jsuicide. Mrs. Mally said she was ill |because of lack of proper food and had no means to support herself. She tried to get employment, but found none. “Despondent, because of ill health and having no means to live on; her husband disappeared some time ago when he went out to look for work, Mrs. Agnes Strachan, 54, committed suicide by hanging herself to a base- ment rafter at 1409 Ninth Street.” Workers, Don’t Starve. Fight for Unemployment Insurance proposed by the Communist Party. Join the Unemployed Council, 1020 Broadway. Out of a job? Got spare time? You can earn a little money and take a crack at the system by sel- ling Daily Workers. Come up and we will explain. 35 East 12th St. show that circulation increased 3,450 of two weeks. ‘Wednesday's tables, 950 reported in tables and 1,000 Daily increase. for order for which arrived too late to in this week's tabulation. Many Bright Spots in Circulation Drive creased orders from scattered distri United States showing that they hi units which never before ordered. Campaign Develops New Selling Methods methods of distributing the Daily ,w« show great possibilities. News Club in New York, composed against 3,100 the preceding week. possibilities. The best customers won over to the subscription idea. near factories. Advertising by mass Several Districts Push Into Spotlight Increases showing in this week's daily increase of 108. District 1 of 95. ing but their direction is incorrect, 1; District 17, Birmingham, 3. City gail Seattle and Denver. Detroit has accepted the challenges of Phila- cause last cent was spent for food | 'HE possibility of mass circulation for the Daily Worker is apparent in, figures which This increase includes the 1,500 shown in last The bright spots for the past week were De- troit’s order; the wide turnout for Red Sunday in New York; the spread of the Red Builders News Club to Sacramento and Chicago; from innumerable small cities throughout the the campaign; individual orders from scores of The campaign so far has developed new Whirlwind meetings for Daily Worker pro=) motion netted 400 sales in New York last week. Truck and sandwich parades to advertise the Daily Worker are planned. ‘The Red Builders less workers sold 4,300 papers last week’ as Sales in subways at 4 a. m. have made it possible for several Daily Worker sellers to pass the 400 a week mark. Sales are being built up the Daily Worker has been found effective. Sales on the day following are found to be better. cate awakening of activity throughout the United States in the 60,000 circulation campaign. District 12, Seattle, remains in the limelight by registering another daily increase of 150, Dist. 2, N. Y. made an increase of 184 daily, District 8, Chicago, has pushed up a total romps into the campaign with a boost of 101. District 3, Philadelphia, registers an increase There are still some districts which are mov- circulation for the week are reported as follows: District 4, Buffalo, 3; District 11, Agricultural, are apparent in Detroit, Chicago, PHILA. WORKERS BLOCK EVICTION Of Unemployed Negro Worker PHILADELPHIA, Noy. 25.—Three ship of the Unemployed Council pre- | vented the eviction of Silas Copeland and his family here yesterday. This worker who lives at 4155 Matua Ave., has been out of a ffiob for several ; |months and was unable to pay his |rent. eviction notice and told to get out on Monday. The Unemployed Coun- cil upon finding this out immediately mobilized its members and the work- ers in the neighborhood and prevent- |ed the sheriff and police from taking | the furniture out of the house, . In the fight Louis Scott was arrested. In spite of a warning from the sheriff and dicks not to interfere with the eviction, 400 workers again successfully persistéd the attacks of the police on Friday, with the result that this Negro worker was not evict- ed and th eboss and police had to re- treat. Workers of Philadelphia are organ- izing into Unemployed Councils, and are on the job collecting signatures | to be presented in Congress, Gorki Appeals to the Workers toSmash War Plots Against Soviet (Continued from Page One) tion was caused so that the capital- ists might enrich themselves. “The capitalists want the workers in the imperialist countries to slaugh- ter their fellow workers in the Soviet Union against whom they hold no grudge. Daily the boss press slan- ders the Soviet Union, intending to cause the workers to doubt the achievements of Socialist upbuilding and to incite hatred against the masses in the Soviet Union. “The capitalists realize that Social- ist success means a fatel danger for them. It means that the workers in other countries will follow the ex- ample of the Soviet Union. “The interventionists’ motives are greed and fear. The masses of the Soviet Union don’t want war. But they are prepared to defend the rev- olution again. “Ten years ago, ill fed, ill clothed, ill equipped, the Red Armies defeated the armies of capitalism. Today the Red Army, well equipped, clothed and organized, knows it is fighting for the interest of the workers of the world, “Workers in the capitalist coun- tries, however, are expected by the hundred workers under the leader- | He was then served with an | for the Unemployed Insurance Bill | MINNESOTA RED VOTE TRIPLES Metal Miners Show Are Against Capitalism|_ MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Nov. 25. Official figures at last released by | the election officials in Minnesota how that the Communist vote in he state this year was practically three times that of 1928. The 192! vote was in round numbers, 5,000. | ‘The highest Communist vote this | year was for Andrew Roine, candi- |date for lieutenant governor, 14,719. Other candidates got votes as follow For secretary of state, Henry Bart- |lett, 12,326; for U. S. |dolph Harju, 5,645; for governor, Karl | Reeve, 5,594; for railroad and ware- house commissioner, Nick Maki, 8,753; for congressman, fourth dis- trict, Rebecca Grecht, 2,847; con- gressman, fifth district, A. N. Ander- son, 1,690; congressman, eighth dis- trict, Walter Harju, 3,318 (this is the} district in which are located Duiith | jand the Iron Range); for congress- |man, tenth district, David Moses, |1,913 votes. Sinclair Congratulates Rolph. LOS ANGELES, Cal., Nov. 25— Just like the Gemocratic party prom- |ises to help the republican adminis- ers, so the socialist party candidate here congratulates the newly elected governor, Rolph, on his victory. Upton Sinclair has sent a message, | reprinted in the Civil Liberties Union “Open Forum,” to Rolph which be- jgins “Congratulations upon your large vote,” saying that those who voted socialist “would appreciate it” if Rolph would do something about the Mooney-Billings case. This is fooling the workers into the idea that a “good” capitalist officer will help | them, Paid subscriptions wi!l solve the financial crisis of the Daily Worker Join the drive for 60,000 readers, capitalists to fight against the work- ers’ interests, “Workers and peasants! gAbandon your passivity in the face of threat- ening danger! You can prevent war! “Workers of Britain and France! Demand the expulsion of the Rus- sian czarist emigrants who plan to use you as cannon fodder! “Not only international proletarian solidarity but plain self-interest dic- tates that demand. “The workers, adult and young and women workers, intellectuals and farmers must combine in a powerful protest against intervention!” Daily Worker Circulation Jumps 3450 in Two Weeks Under Impetus of Detroit’s 1000 Boost delphia and Chicago house sales, where the paper is sold after dis- cussion with the worker, is developing great in a period | ness. Let’s have a return blow from Phila- "4 fg delphia and Chicago in next week’s figures. a an 8 £3] Study the following tables carefully: Sg Ge ge £6 S E 25 ¢ this week's aa BA ae a Detroit, the \ Boston ...... 69 107 «68 —1 ha geflacted New York Cit; 857 5725 861 a7 Philadelphia = 391-260-392 1 Buffalo ...., 53 118 53 Pittsburgh ., 128 196 138 10 @ | ¥ounsstown . 25 5625 10 Cleveland 280 352 283 20 Detroit anu 750 844 751 101 Gary .. 2 40 40 23 Milwaukee ws 82-2438 pir | St. Louls ping 102 110 101 -1 Chicago Ta 1458 718 124} in- Minneapolis . 61 186 60 aoe cts; reports St. Paul et 865 = «63 1 Ki 19 26 19 ave entered Seattle 65 636 «70 105 Portland . 4 wt 4 3 Los Angeles ., 245 378 244 1 San Francisco 115 99 115 Ookland .... 78 125 17 19 | gt Denver es.” Ae ae 83 Okla. City .., 6 100 6 100 106 106 orker which Summary of Subscriptions November 13 ? Overdue Subscriptions . + 4673S Paid-in-advance Subs 4070 Total 8743 November 22 of 35 job- DIC DOWN / oS Overdue Subscriptions ..... 4533 , Paid-in-advance Subs 4261 ‘House to Total .cscdgececseee 8794 Summary by Districts. ic are being s_| Permanent Apparatus Ps S so 2 gp 4 * ae Fi Pe a oh #1] Must Be Established 2 ¢ de ge Bs gs gs § a $2 af 22 BS 2 BE 48| 3 ts the duty of every Party member to see shouting of |1: Boston 447 358 af 373, 805 gg1— 19] that during this campaign there is established | 2 New York . 1382 6875 1892 7044 8252 8436 184| ® Permanent apparatus for the distribution of 3. Philadelphia 771 397 776 «487 1168 1263 95| the Daily Worker. 4. Buffalo ..., 243 245 248 237 488 485 —3 Party members must demand that each dis- 5. Pittsburgh S24 280-584-285 80481915] trict have a functioning committee in charge 6, Cleveland ., 852 1095 bed 1113 1947 1974-26) of the campaign, There must be energetic 7. Detroit, ..,. 977 1363 988 1463 2340 2445 103) Daily Worker representatives in ev tio 8. Chicago... 1271 2536 1204 2421 3607 3715 108 Lgehrtaet pie cpaxa tached monk 8. Minneapolis 392 398 390 din 735 gos 12g, 204 every unit. City-wide and district-wide tables indi- | 15 kansas Clty 223 221 223 286 444 459 © 15| COMferences of all fraternal organizations must 11, Agriculture 135 91 134 91 226 295. —1| be called and plans laid to involve all pos- 12 Seattle .., 201 690 291 810 9st 1131 150| Sible aid behind the Daily Worker campaign 18. California = 688-740 689813 1428 1502 © 74] |“ for mass circulation. 15. Connectiout 205 181 204 2188 389 392 = 3 16. South ..... 68 68 67993 136 160 24 17, Birmingham 10l 128 99 122 224 221 3 i 9, Denver, |1% Denver .. 88 42 94 137 130 281 101 Party Units Must Unorganized §=85 «618 «87 = 2B 108 11 Increase Activity , 8748 15419 8818 16960 21257 25202945! uring the present week there must be a great increase in the activity of individual units. mn Each unit must take the resporfsibility of or- Losses in 256 New Subs and dering Daily Workers at the price of one cent Renewals For Week per copy to sell at factory gates and from house to house, \The Daily Worker must be on the During the week under review there were | agenda of every Party unit meeting during the 153 new subscriptions received and 103 re- | drive. Thousands of new centers of distribution newals. A total of 102 lists during the week. and that 1,000 order makes it look as though Detroit meant busi- were dropped from the senator, Ru- | tration in Washington fool the gork- | for the Daily Worker must be developed during the campaign. _ Fase Three. Three INTERNATIONAL wNEWS. " LITVINORF LEAVES EXPOSED WAR ARMING OF BOSSES and Peasants \Imperialists Driving to} War; Refuse Facts ~ ” on Arms After exposing the fakeries of the | imperialist representatives at Gen- Jeva, gathered at the Preliminary Dis- }armament Commission, Maxim Lit- vinoff, head of the Soviet Union dele- gation, has returned to Moscow. Litvinoff, on the first day of the commission's meeting pointed out the hypocrisy of the meeting and sharply brought out the war danger. Loudon, | of Holland, chairman of the commis- | sion, attempted to cut off Litvinoff’s speech because he did not want the | workers throughout the world to} learn the facts. He refused to per- mit the speech to be translated. Litvinoff, in bringing out the grow- | ing war danger, said that the Danish representative, Munch, the Belgian minister, Huysmann, and the repre- sentative of the “Washington Post,” admitted that the present situation in Europe was like the period imme- diately preceding the last World| War. | “Since 1926,” Litvinoff said, “the | war budgets of five of the imperial- ist powers had increased by one and | | a half billion dollars.” Comrade Litvinoff then declared that the Soviet delegation would draw the attention of the commission to a number of points necessary to be dealt with if the draft agreement | were not to be impotent from the beginning. The Soviet delegation proposed, 1, to substitute the expres- | sion “limitation of armaments” by | the expression “limitation and reduc- |tion of armaments”; 2, a reconsider- ation of the points dealing with the problem of trained reserves, and, 3, a discussion of the problem of wer materials. A new discussion of the whole question would permit a num- ber of new delegates to suit their ac- tion in commission to their speeches outside. A negative decision in this matter would cause the Soviet Union to lose its interest in the majority of the points on the agenda, Later developments in the com- mission completely confirmed Litvin- off’s speech. A squabble took place over the question of inserting the | words “limitation of armaments,” and though the imperialists could not ignore this question since it had been broadcasted to the masses, add- Summary by Cities. GENEVA; HAD | Poincare in War Cry Against Soviet Union; | Cachin Answers Faker} PARIS.—Poincare has now placed \himself openly in the front ranks of the anti-Soviet campaign. He has just published an article entitled “The Claws of the Soviet Union.” |He attacks “the collective aberration | | which has placed Russia outside the | international pale” and. also “forced labor” which he says exists in the| Soviet Union. He repeats all the perfidious slanders of the anti-Soviet maniacs concerning the preparations | jot the Soviet Union to attack its | neighbors. Fears that the Soviet’ Union is co-operating with Germany to this end, and then goes off into] a string of irritable inaccuracies con- | cerning “Soviet dumping.” “L’Humanite,” Communist daily, answers trenchantly. Marcel Cachin prefaces his reply by remarking that Poincare is the last man in the world who has a right to complain of war preparedness in the Soviet Union in view of the fact that Poincare vio- lated international law in 1919 and criminally misused French troops to invade the Soviet Union. The des- perate resistance of the Russian jworkers and peasants, coupled with | the glorious revolts of the French soldiers and sailors, robbed Poincare |of success, Cachin tears Poincare’s arguments to pieces and closes his | tion of the revolts of 1919 on an immeasureably larger scale should dare to attack the Soviet Union. Don’t miss full circula- tion tables each Wednes- day in the Daily Worker. Each Wednesday in the Daily Worker the full story of circulation is told in hard figures. ed the words “as far as possible.” Then the failure of the London naval treaty was glaringly brought out. And on top of all the fact that all the imperialist robbers refused to divulge any information about their armaments showed up the ridiculous- ness of the disarmament commis- sion, Out of a job? Got spare time? You can earn a little money and take a crack at the system by sel- article by warning him of a ry |the French bourgeoisie ever again ‘Break Workers ‘Meets in Tokio TOKIO. —wor! ‘ker and peasant con- ferences have been held in Tokio and Osaka at the instance of the Cen- trist “Senko Kutaisiuto” party. The police dissolved the conferences and made many arrests, The Tokio con- ference was able to adopt a number of resolutions, including a message of with the greetings in connection 13th anniversary of the November Revolution, one against the danger another against the use of police inst the workers in labor struggles and one against the cam- paign of extermination against the insurrectionary natives in Formosa After this latter resolution the police dissolved the conference. FINAL RESULTS OF AUSTRIAN ELECTION VIENNA—The Communist Party jreceived 20,879 votes at the elections, |as compared with 16,119 in the 1927 {elections; the social democrats | 1,507,603, the christian social party | 1,303,605, the Schober block 429,425, |the independent Landbund 43,767, the fascist Heimwehr block 228,338 and the national fascists (Hitler | group) 108,445 votes, as against 27,- 000 at the last elections. The social democrats won 13,000 otes in Vienna, but lost 35,000 votes the provinces. A significant fact of the election is the rapid growth of national fascist votes, although they receive no mandate, due to the | Austrian election system which fa- vors the large parties and makes it practically impossible for smaller parties to obtain mandates, The Heimwehr block was lucky to receive its mandates. It received the necessary basic mandate in Upper Styria and was thus able to count its votes over the whole country, which gave it another 7 mandates, The votes of the parties which fall to gain sufficient votes for a basicman- date in any one constituency are lost. The press of the christian social party declares that the election rep- resent a victory for the government, The new parliament will be called on Noy. 8, the last day permissible by the constitution. All signs show that the fascist parties intend to hang on to the reins of government at all costs, as promised by Starhemberg. of war, ALL YEAR VACATION PLACE—$10 per week, Write Avanta Harm Ulster Park SY THREE M THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Send (Between 25th Two Restaurants and TICKETS: Combination $1.25 for all ursday and Friday Spend TONIGHT (Thanksgiving Eve) at the Opening of the _ “ICOR” BAZAAR Help Build the SOVIET UNION ATTEND THE 6th ANNUAL “ICOR” BAZAAR for the benefit of Jewish Colonization in Biro-Bidjan, U.S. $. R. ORE DAYS 27 NOVEMBER 28 29 1657H INFANTRY ARMORY 68+Lexington Avenue, New York Ci and 26th Streets) HY. Articles of all kinds at "DU MPIN@G’ prices Program: TONIGHT—Russian Ukrainian Choir and Thanksgiving Eve Ball THURSDAY AFTERNOON—Dances and plays THURSDAY EVE.—Dancing galore, Vernon Andrade’s Negro Orchestra FRIDAY EVENING—Johnson’s Negro Choir (from “Green Pastures) also Dancing SATURDAY EVENING—Huge Biro-Bidjan Ball. Two Orchestras— Ridgeley’s Band, and Vernon Andrade’s Negro Orchestra fine Buffet every Night! Saturday Night last day of Bazaar—All articles will be sold at your own price four days; Saturday 75 w Se Sayt Gataciley, 75 conte ednesday