Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
28, DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1930 Page Three E- Fe ao rs SHOPS dees: oe ae ae a Syrupy Smile and Soup Is “Relief” That Paterson, NCR Boss, Gives Organize Your Unemployed Cuoncil While Eat ing the Soup and Fight for Real Relief! (By a Worker Correspondent) DAYTON, Ohio.—They keep streaming in. ployed workers who have been These unem- starved into begging a measly plate of soup or dry piece of bread. Men, women, children. Numbers of young girls can be seen. They try so hard to keep up the appearance of being like the rest. painted lips and rouged cheeks, , one can recognize the fear of hunger and starvation that is creeping on them because they can’t get a job. Many colored workers with hallow cheeks, humbled expressions are seated at the tables. 5,000 ON BREAD LINE IN SEATTLE Served Miserable Slop, Stale Bread (By a Worker Correspondent.) SEATTLE, Nov. 24—There are nearly 5,000 unemployed workers who are forced to eat at the rotten soup Jine in this city. The line is run by the Volunteers of America, the same grafting outfit that received over $70,000 from the local Communist Fund. The workers eating at this soup kitchen have to stand in line for hours to receive a small tin bowl of soup and a piece of stale bread. On interviewing some of the workers in this line I found that there were masons, carpenters, machinists, in fact workers of practically every trade. As to the uality of the soup served, the following incident may give some light. Two workers in the line were attracted by a hungry dog that was standing nearby. Feeling sorry for the dog and wanting to test the qual- ity of the soup these two workers procured a bowl which they set be- fore the dog. The dog took one smell of the soup, threw up its nose and went trotting down the street. Workers! Even a dog will not eat the slop that the bosses throw at us. ‘We brag of the fact that we are hu- man beings and supposedly superior to the common animal, but here we see a dog that knows better than to eat the poison that the bosses of Seattle want to give the workers, It is time that we got together anc showed the bosses of Seattle that we do not want their rotten slop, but real unemployed insurance, BOSTON WORKERS TO PROTEST DEC. 8 Against Persecution of Militants BOSTON, Nov. 25.— The workers of Boston will hold a mass-protest meeting Dec. 8, at 12 noon at Pem- berton Square, before the Suffolk county court house. The meeting will take place in protest against the attempts by the employing class of this district through its spokesmen Mayor Curley, district attorney Fol- ley, chief of the police Crowley and Mr. Shenck, to jail 25 workers who will face trial in the Suffolk Superior court on that day, and against per- secution of worker militants. Long prison terms await seven ‘women and eighteen men whose only “crime” is that they attempted to exercise their rights as workers, to orzanize for their class intetests—the interests of the great majarity of people, Three of the defendents are accused of attempting to hold a street. meeting in South Boston, Oct. 6, 1930 during the election campaign of the Communist Party. Herry J. Canter is one of the defendants. Bella Lewis and Mark Whittier were ares- ted on Boston Common, Oct. 12, 1930 for holding a meeting though they had a permit for same. Carter and two other workers were arrested for showing to workers a bill proposed by the Communist Party for social insurance against unemployment. Martha Zall was talking to her shop mates when officer Coakley arrested her because “somebody saw her giv- {ng out circulars” and forcibly took her to station four. While Fred G. Biedenkapp of New York, national secretary of the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union, was arres- ted when he attempted to speak on Boston Common, August 22, at the Saceo Vanzetti meeting. The remain- ing fifteen defendants were arrested when they attempted to hold a de- monstration against unemployment and the treacherous policies of the officialdom of the A. F. L., while that body was in convention at the Hotel Bradford, Boston. Twelve of these defendants face sentences from one to five years imprisonment. The calling of a special court ses- sion, the constant threats and pro- posals by Curley, Crowley and Mr. Shenck (of the Federal Government) to deport workers who organize to improve their conditions, the increas- “ed number of arrests of workers (over 350 were arrested since March 1930 in this district) are clear indications of The white and »colored workers are one in this scene of desperation, Together they are being humbled, humiliated and in- sulted by the great capitalist system. Kind-Hearted Boss (!) Mr. Patterson is in the room beam- ing. He looks upon his flock with a benevolent expression! His face is not like the worker at the table who eats silently and ravishingly. No. Mr. Patterson has a nice round face. He appears to be only 25 years old. His suit is immaculately and per- fectly pressed. His tie is of the most expensive texture. His whole appear- ance is prosperity. He is explaining the method of the lunch room to an- other notable of the city. That the women in the white aprons and white caps are from his plant, the N. C. R. Welfare Dept. They are serving the food. Mr. Patterson is overwhelmingly Satisfied with himself. He can't get over what a good fellow he is. There's @ worker who once had a job at the Cash Register. Mr. Patterson must make these poor unfortunates feel good. He slaps him on the back and asks how he likes everything. He smiles patronizingly here, there, everywhere, he wants to create the feeling of a king over his subjects, devouring the crumbs after a huge banquet which the royalty has just feasted upon. . Sickeningly Sweet. Mr. Patterson is a real disciple of the capitalist class. He is one of the masters and knows how to serve his class. In order to make the illusion 100 per cent that the worker and capitalist can be friends and that soup kitchens can take the place of social insurance he has trapped the workers who are starving and come to help. The lunch room is run on cafeteria style. Long tables, flowers set on each table. As soon as anyone comes in a man is at the door with a professional: “This way, please. Take your tray and move right along.” The workers takes his tray. He is unaccustomed to even such po- liteness. There is a choice of oat- meal, boloney sandwiches, soup, milk or coffee. You can have a dish of each, The children get milk. When you come- to the end of the line a woman hands you a cigarette (if you are a man) with a sickeningly sweet smile, a man is right at your elbow to strike a match and light it for you. The children and girls get candy. Mr. Patterson, president of the N. C. R., is descended from the great Frederick Patterson, who died a few years ago and was the original own- er and president of the N.C. R. He was always known as a “benefactor main character in the flood of 1913. of the poor people.” He was the His laurels are still sung because he turned over the N.C.R. School House and Diningroom for the relief of the stricken workers. He has always been in order to keep workers from fight- for all kinds of reformist measures ing for the real thing. His son, John H. Patterson, has inherited this ten- dency and has learned how to carry cut his father’s teachings very ef- fectively, The line of hungry workers keeps growing. Every fifteen minutes there aré about 20 children coming for food. Some have not eaten for sev- eral days. They go back in the line after they have once been served. They want to fill up so that they will not suffer so much from the pangs of hunger. The lunch room is opened from 4 to 7:30 p. m. and there are many reluctant workers and children who hang around until it is closing time. It is this impoverished state of the workers that the capitalist ex- ploiters are after. It is their object to make the workers so low ‘and to get them used to being satisfied with a bone if the master throws it at them. It is such methods that the workers must rebell against. To show that we cannot stand for such outrages against the workers. THINK HOOVER DOES NOT KNOW OF LYNCHINGS WASHINGTON, Nov. 26.—Osten- sibly to break the news to President Hoover that Negroes are opposed to lynching (how strange!) but really to spread among the Negro masses the illusion that the bosses will them LUNATICS SA: Na sian tee PRN class is carrying out against the workers, The International Labor Defense is rallying thousands for the Decem- ber 8, meeting at Pomberton Square, where Boston workers will demand the uncoditional release of all arres- ted workers and will organize a mighty protest against the persecu- tion of workers, ‘ And under their Mulct Metal 2 Workers tor Boss Charity (By a Worker Corespondent) McKEESPORT, Pa.,—When I was fired from the National Tube Co. there were rumors that every worker | in the mill must give one day’s wages to the Welfare Fund for the unem- ployed. Lots of workers are mad about it, if you refuse they will take it out of your pay just the same. The Welfare Fund is run by our crooked Mayor George H. Lysle, Senator W. B. Manseld, owner of the Daily News paper and others. Why take one day’s wages from the workers for the unemployed. Why don’t our Mayor Lysle give the un-| employed the money he gets from all the clubs in McKeesport for pro- tection and the money he got $50,- 000.) in stock from the U. S, Steel Corp. For Strikebreaking The $50,000. in stock he got was this way. He got that as a present from the U. S. Steel Corp in 1919 strike, which he helped break. And why don’t the preachers in McKees- port give to the unempoyled. -They got $300. from the U. S. Steel Corp. Fellow workers let’s wake up for once, The bosses don’t care for our health in the mills, all that is in their heads is how to make profits the fastest way. Don’t give a cent to the Welfare Fund, let the bo#ses do that, we must make them do it. Join the Unemployed Council to fight for unemployment from the bosses profits. TRY STOP DAILY IN INDIANAPOLIS But It’s Growing and Mighty Fast (By a Worker Correspondent) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.—I wish to state that I have started a regular route of the Daily Worker here in this city since Friday, Nov. 14th ana | am meeting with good success, I also wish to report that Indian- apolis Comrades are fighting eviction eases one right after another. Our organizer was arrested and is out on an appeal. The boss courts are fight- ing us but their tactics are making more militant fighters. Cops Try Bully Workers. Two of the comrades and I were passing out leaflets at the National Melleable Co. and one of their stool pigeons carried one of the leaflets and took it into the office. In 20 minutes a squad car with 8 slugging police came up and grabbed a Daily Worker out of my hand and forced me and three of the comrades onto the companies premises and threat- ened us if we did not give our names and address. Another squad car came up and surrounded us in the companies inclosure. They placed us under temporary arrest and we de- manded that they serve papers, they refused and due to the fact that workers lined the sidewalk they all became yellow and finally turned us loose. The next day at noon we held our meeting and the yellow coppers never even bothered us but were cruising in the neighborhood. Heard Moore Speak. We heard Comrade Moore on Soviet Russia. He spoke last night at the League Struggle For Negro Rights Congress. The hall was overcrowded and all were greatly enthused. We will probably need an increase in bundles of the Daily Worker here. BALL TO RAISE FUNDS FOR THE DRESS STRIKE NEW YORK. — The ball of the Needle Trades workers Industrial Union, will be held Friday evening, December 5th in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th Street. All income is to be used fom the preparations of the coming dress strike. ‘The Union will have both floors of Manhattan Lyceum for this ball. A beautiful program has been arranged. | Tickets are only 50 cents. Buy your tickets now in the office of the Union, 131 West 28th Street, or in the office of the Morning Frei- heit, 50 .,ast 13th Street. Shop chairmen are instructed to report to organizers immediately to take tickets for the workers in their shops and buildings. Organize Unemployed Councils to fight for unemployment insurance! selves call a curb to their lynching terror and will jail themselves for crimes against the Negro massess, a delegation today presented a protest against lynching to Hoover. The delegation was from the fake Anti-Lynching Congress of the Na- tional Equal Rights League which has been in session in this city for the past few days, preparing new plans for the betrayal of the strug- gles of the Negro masses while pre- tending a fight against lynch terror. ‘The delegation was headed by Maur- ice W. Spencer, president of the League. insurance } CHILDREN—WHERE While Hoover, at the conference on child health and protection was spilling hypocritical phrases about American children, Solomon Mac- Kenzie, a Negro worker of Brooklyn, N. Y., was notifying authorities that one of his children was dying of star- vation. When the physician, Dr.| Guidiotti of Holy Family Hospital, | reached the MacKenzie home at 557 Warren St. he found the baby, Er- skine, dead. Death was due to mal- nutrition, the doctor said. The ten months’ old child had starved to| death. MacKenzie said he had been out |of work for eleven months and the |family had nothing to eat except what working-class neighbors, who are also very poor, have been able; to give them. There are five other children, including Ursula, twin sis- |ter of the dead baby. The rent has |been unpaid for some time, so evic- tion is not far off. The lights have | been cut off and MacKenzie fears the igas will be turned off soon. A few days ago the Daily Worker reported the death of another baby, Frank Perrone, who also died of “malnutrition.” This baby’s father was a shoemaker, likewise unem- ployed for several months. Unfor- tunately, Erskine MacKenzie and Frank Perrone have many hundreds of companions among the children of the workers and impoverished farm- jers of the United States. Pellagra, a jdread disease which atacks not only jthe body but finally the brain as jwell, and tuberculosis, both recog- nized by medical authorities as “dis- eases of poverty,” are taking a heavy toll of the children of the 9,000,000 unemployed, as well as of those whose fathers and often whose mothers are toiling in the textile, mining, steel, tobacco and other “starvation wage” | industries, Deaths from starvation and its at- tendant diseases are especially high among Negro children, because their fathers and mothers are forced into the worst jobs at the lowest pay. | Negro Harlem’s infant death rate is one and a half times that of the infant death rate for New York City as a whole. According to Dr: Wini- frid B, Nathan, who made this study, the higher rates in Harlem are due to “poor sanitary conditions brought on by congestion of population, to- gether with the poor nutrition and living standards,” which he attributes to “poverty and ignorance.” In other words, due to specially intense ex- ploitation of the Negro toilers, a Negro child in Harlem has less than a 2 to 3 chance to survive. The death rate of Negro infants in the Southern states is even greater than that of Harlem’s. Thirteen per cent of Negro infants in South Caro- lina die before they are one year of age, while the death rate of Negro mothers at childbirth is four times the rate of such deaths in the coun- try as a whole. If a direct compa- rison between the death rate of working-class mothers and infants could be made with those of the cap- italist class, the difference would be RULE AND WHERE WORKERS RULE THE BOSSES even more glaring. Furthermore, it is generally admit- ted that since the beginning of the crisis the health hazards and death | vates of working-class children have | considerably increased. am | In contrast to these conditions in| the United States, there are the lo’ ered death rates of children of toil- ers in the Soviet Union. Under the| czar, Russia had one of the highest infant mortality rates in the world. In 1911-13, 27.3 per cent of the chil- dren died in the first year of life, or, in other words, barely three out of every four born lived to be one| year old. By 1926 this rate had been cut by the government's measure of | social protection for the mother and| child, to 18.7 per cent, and it has been further reduced since then. | Death rates of women from child-| birth has been likewise reduced. The mortality rate of adult working pop- ulation has been cut in half. Further- | more, while the situation for work- | ers’ children in capitalist America is) rapidly growing worse, in the Soviét | Union, where the workers and pea- sants rule, conditions for their chil- | dren — working-class children—are constantly improving. Some of the social measures which are bringing about the new life of | the Soviet’s children are the follow- ing: Every working woman receivas two | months of rest and full pay before | |the birth of her child. After the| child is born, she remains two weeks | lin the hospital, with competent) |murses and physicians at her dis | Posal, all at the expense of the gov- ernment. She receives a free layette for the child and is granted two months more of rest with full pay. For the following nine months she receives 25 per cent extra on her wages to cover the expense of child- nursing. On returning to work, she finds a nursery for the baby situ- ated near her place of work, or she. leaves the child in a nursery at the workers’ co-operative, where she lives. During working hours, mothers are given ten to fifteen minutes every three and a half hours to feed their babies. Two thousand health stations, in addition to the nurseries, have been distributed throughout the industrial sections of Russia, where the latest information on child hygiene, train- ing and nutrition are available. For illiterate mothers, brightly colored Pictures give the same information. Also, public playgrounds for workers’ children, practically unknown before the revolution, are now spread over the entire country, running into the tens of thousands. In addition to these tractors, the higher wages, better living quarters and generally improved conditions of the working class naturally have a direct affect on the health and physique of the younger generation. These changes are reflected in an increase in weight, height and chest measurement of the children, In Soviet Russia a new day has dawned for working-class youth. Nov. 27, The following amounts ¥ ceived on Wednesday, Nov. 26: DISTRICT E. L. Lee, New Yor F. Maki York P. Martinez (list), New Yor ie Brooklyn, N. ¥....: I, Sugarman & Br New York RECRUIT NEW RED SHOCK TROOPS ‘ Dr, Mesley, New York 5.00 J. Pinsk (night v 5.00 2.00 1.00 . & P, Pappas (1) Unknown 2?” ROtal sisss0s $65.00 REPORT ON VICTORY AT" WRIGHT SHOP, FRIDAY NEW YORK.—The Wright Aero- plane Co. of Patterson was compelled by the militancy of ‘the workers to take back a wage cut that the bosses tried to put over on a department of 100 men. The activity of the Metal Workers Industrial League organizers helped very much to keep up the solidarity of the workers. Shop-gate meeting were held, leaflets distributed and meetings held with workers of the department to be affected by the cut. The A.F. of L. tried to sabotage the stoppage without success. A report by organizer Overgaard will be given at the next membership meeting on Friday at 7:30 p. m. at the head- quarters, 16 West 21st Street. Funds for organization purposes will come from the tickets sold (50 | cents admission) to the concert and and dance Saturday at New Harlem |Casino, 100 West 116th Street. Edith | Segal will dance and Alison Bur- | roughs will sing French Creole and | Negro work songs. There will be re- freshments and the John C. Smith lee will furnish the music. Registration Scheme Developed by Paper NEW YORK.—Workers in the gar- ment section are being stopned and questioned by men who say they are reporters of the Daily News. The reporters want to know whether the worker they approach “ a left wing Communist” and ask other questions, also wish to take picture, name, etc. The blacklist, deportation and Fish Committee possibilities of this move are apparent. One worker gave the reporter a considerable lecture on the confusion in the question, pointing out that there is no left wing Communist and telling him what the left wing and militant revolutionary union move- ment is, and also what, the Commun- ist Party is, and disabusing the man’s mind of his idea that if you are a Communist you “belong to Russia.” But of course he didn't let him take a pieture, Police Bar Hall to Negro Rights Meeting JERSEY CITY, N. J., Nov. 26.—A | meeting to organize for the League of Struggle for Negro Rights (for- merly the American Negro Labor Congress) was prevented by the po- lice yesterday. When the Negro worker Welsh and Sadie Van Veen, the two speakers, arrived at the hall (Elks Rest Hall, 735 Ocean Avenue) they were told | by the proprietors of the hall that | the police had threatened to raid the | place if the meeting was held. | The proprieors told the cops the: had taken the money and Pantene carry out the contract to rent the hall for the meeting, but were intimi- | dated by the police. | oe ‘he hall was | INTERNATIONAL NEWS ° Workers Flock Communist Speaker Wildly Greeted at Conference of Peruvian Workers to Communist Party in USSR MOSCOW.—On and around the 7th November there has been a mass influx of workers into the shock groups and into the Communist Party. In the workers quarter} Saomskvaretchye 900 of the best shock group workers joined the party. | In the “Proletarian” quarter 1,170| joined up, and in the Baumann dis- trict 920 members of the shock groups joined the Party. In the factory “Izammer and Sickle” 230 workers joined the Party, in the auto works “Amo” 360 workers, | in the power station “Dynamo” 100} workers, in the “Elektrisavod” 90 and| in the Mytistchi district 350 workers | joined the party. Workers meetings | adopted resolutions condemning the| right and left-wing opportunists and experssing approval of the explusions. | Six hundred workers in the Tiflis | factories joined the Party during the| anniversary celebrations. In the Se- bastopol harbor 120 shock group| workers joined the party, Two thous- | and shock group workers have joined | the party in Baku. The Communist} arty of Aserbaijan has also exper-| nced an influx of new members amongst the ranks of the workers. HOLD SERIO MEET IN ROCHESTER Workers Protest De- portation ROCHESTER, Nov. 25.—A well at- tended mass meeting was held this afternoon in protest against the trea- tened deportation of Guido Serio, Italian worker, to fascist Italy, which be equivalent to sending him to death The speakers Max Stern, district organizer of the International Labor Defense, and Tom D’Fazio needle trades organizer, who played a pro- minent role in the Passait Textile Strike of 1927, charged collaboration between the Department of Justice and the Fascist regime in Italy in an endeavor to send Serio to death. A resolution was unanimously a- dopted demanding the uncoditional release of Serio, and pledging to fight against the deportation of Serio, the persecution of foreign born workers and to intensify our fight against Capitalism until the workers and farmers of this country shall have replaced thé present capitalist form of government with one of their own. Use 160 Daily Workers, CrowdFollows forMore NEW YORK.—A crowd of 800 stood for two hours at a meeting last night conducted by the Red Builders Club at University and 14th Street listen- ing to speakers: Sam Nessin Emil} Meyer, Mrs. Weavin and Ted Brown | was chairman. During that time| they got rid of 160 Daily Workers and the crowd followed to the door of the Workers Center and Daily | Worker office for more only to find them sold out. “We wish that all other groups fol- low our example and do the same,” say the Red Builders Club members. CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDAIGET PROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $17 A WEEK CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N.Y, PHONE PROLETPEN published on this occassion The Harlemite Negro at the ROCKLAND PALACE 155TH STREET AND 8TH AVE Saturday Evening, December 13th ELABORATE PROGRAM Artef Players Jazz Band (A novelty feature) “THE RED ROOSTER’—A humerous satirical AUSPICES: PROLETPEN (PROLETARIAN WRITERS) Tickets: $1.00 at the Morning Freiheit Office 35 East 12th Street MASQUE BALL E journal specially and distributed to visitors. Orchestra will play 56,000 Workers Plan|Jobless in Germany Battles for Wages and Bread LIMA, Peru (By Mail).—The clash of the workers in the mining region } of Cerro de Pasco followed the hold-| Change in Berlin figures that on No- ing of a conference of the Workers| Confeceration on November 5th.) There were 111 delegates, represent- | ing 56,000 workers at this conference, | of which 30,000 were Indians; 8,000/ unemployed. When a representative of the Per- uvian Communist Party spoke at this conference he was greeted with wild applause, The Communist Party} heretofore illegal in Peru, is coming out into the open, despite the fascist | regime of Sanchez Cerro. The Workers Confederation confer- | ence decided that it would call a con-| gress of all worxers on January 15,| 1931, to formulate a program of struggle against the Peruvian bour- geoisie and their imperialist support- ers. Immediate economic demands for | higher wages, better conditions, social insurance for all workers, were put forward by the conference. Special demunds for land for the peasants, and a struggle against the feudal landlords was put forward. 7: was especially stressed that the workers and peasants (most of whom are Indians) must unite in their struggle against the bourgeoisie, rep- resented by the Cerro government, and against British and American imperialism, There is a strike going on in the North of Peru against the Standard Oil Co. Recent reports from Lima, Peru, state, that the recent battle against the so-called Civilian Party, was car- ried on by a large number of workers under the leadership of the Com-| munist Party. The Communist Party | is leading the struggles of the Peru- vian workers and peasants, and de- spite attempts of Cerro to keep it in illegality it is forcing itself into the| open. The Civilian Party represents the “left wing” of the bourgeoisie in the Cerro government. There is now an open struggle going on between the workers on the one hand, led by the ernment and the so-called Civilian Communist Party, and the Cerro gov- Party. The minister of the interior was dismissed by Cerro because of his “mishandling” of the labor troubles Show Big Increase; Number 3,484,000 (Cable by Inprecorr.) BERLIN, Nov. 26. — The Labor Ek- vember 15th there were 3,484,000 un- employed workers in Germany. There has been an increase of 230,000 since. The Ruhr mine owners intend to end the existing wage agreements and they are demanding reductions, in the wages. The arbitration deci- sion of the Breslau metal workers provides a 5 percent wage cut on fixed wages and a 7,5 percent cut on piece work rates, The arbitration decision providing wage cuts in the case of the Bavari- an foundry workers was declared binding. ‘ CALL TAILORS TO- MEET TO FIGHT CONDITIONS NEW YORK.—The Rank and File Committe of 30 elected at a meet- | ing of a tailors to fight against check |off, piece work and wage reductions calls all members of the Amalga- mated Clothing Workers to a mass | meeting Saturday at noon at Stuy- |vesant Casino, 142 Second Avenue to | plan how to carry on this struggle. Their call to meet, points out that | for several years there has been class |peace under Hillman, and that Hill- man is satisfied, the bosses shower |him with presents, pin medals on |him, and teach his doctrine in the universities. But, says the committee: “Can we be satisfied with™our | wages contiuously being cut? Can {one be satisfied when he is driven |like a Slave for $3.00 a day? Can we be satisfied by walking the streets and starving? Can we remain cool when we see the Hillman gang taking our money away from the Unemploy- ment Insurance Fund and giving us stamps for it? No! We are not satisfied! We must no longer stand for it! We must organize and fight the clique that is ruining our lives.” in Cerro de Pasco. Throughout Peru the strike move ment is spreading. The workers are putting forward concrete demands. The Communist Party is taking the political leadership of the struggles, urging the unity of the poor peasants, peons and workers in fighting against the bourgeois dictatorship. Spend TONIGHT at the “ICOR” BAZAAR HELP BUILD THE SOVIET UNION! Attend the SIXTH ANNUAL For the benefit of Jewish Colonization in Biro-Bidjan, U. S. S. R. “ICOR” BAZAAR ONE MORE DAY Saturday, November 29 165™ INFANTRY ARMORY 68 Lexington Avenue, New York City (Between 25th and 26th Streets) Articles of all kinds at " DUMPIN G” prices Program: TONIGHT—Johnson's Negro Choir (from “Green Pasturés”) also Dancing SATURDAY EVENING—Huge Biro-Bidjan Ball. Two Orchestras— Ridgeley’s Band, and Vernon Andrade’s Negro Orchestra Two Restaurants and fine Buffet every Night! Saturday Night last day of Bazaar—All articles will be sold at your own price TICKETS—Tonight 50 cents, Saturday 75 cents; No hat checks