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| 60,000: Circulation Drive to Continue Until Feb. 15 With the crisis deepening, unem- ployment and starvation growing, with wage slashes, speed-up and the stagger system for those left'on the Job, the working-class now more than ever requires the powerful weapon ot the Daily Worker to fight the in- creasing attacks of the bosses’ gov- | ernment and mobilize the workers for | struggle against these conditions, | Now more than ever must the) Daily Worker be given mass circula~ | tion. In the campaign which has | been going on for over 2 months, the | circulation of the Daily Worker has | increased 7,500. The quota set was | an inérease of 30,000 so that only | one quarter of the road has been | traversed. The circulation campaign of the, Daily Worker must be continued | until the full quota has been ob- | tained. The Daily Worker must be | used to the fullest possible extent in | he mobilization of the unemployed | or hunger marchers. Stories-relative to hunger marches should be sent in early and extra orders of the Daily | placed. Realizing the importance of press- ing the campaign for Daily Worker circulation at this time the ©. C. has decided to advance the date for the | completion of the drive from-Jan. 1 until Feb. 15. This will allow si more weeks of activity. - + The districts have so far failed to establish satisfactorymachinery for | for the distribution of the Daily | Worker. This must> positively be | done in the next six weeks: Party | and sympathetic workers must be mobilized en masse behind the drive for 60,000 circulation. .In-every city | Red Builders News Clubs of unem- ployed workers must be organizes Answer the attacks of the boss government with 60,000 circulation for the Central Organ of the Com- »munist Party. KANSAS CITY AGAIN BOOSTS BUNDLE ORDER. Mel Wermblad, Daily Worker Re- | presentative in District 10 Kansas | City writes: “Please increase our Daily Work- WALK-OUT IN GERMANY IS o C.C. Decision SPREADING According t er bundle order to 75 copies daily. I sent you an order yesterday to increase our order to 50 copies daily but this will probably not be enough for the drive that we are starting to increase our street sales. Comrade Earnest Evrard has been appointed as city Daily Worker agent.” WANTS TO SELL DAILIES TO PAY FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS. Henry Anthony of Springfield, Ohio, writes: “I am out of work for months, I haven't a penny for anything and I can’t get any to pay for my sub- scription. “I think it would be wise if you think so to send me 25 copies daily to sell on the streets and at shops and that way I can pay for my subscription, as I am in arrears over two months. I don’t think there is any blood redder than I am. STARTS WITH 50 A DAY FOR GARDNER. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) quickly bring them to terms accept- able to the bosses. | o we | 22 Pits Out In Ruhr. (Cable By Inprecorr.) | BERLIN, Jan. 2.—Mineys in 22 pits| | in the Recklinghausen districts of the | | Ruhr mine region went out on strike | today under revolutionary union lead- jership. The reformist misleaders are nervous, fearing the strike movement will spread to embrace the 300,000 | miners who have suffered wage-cuts. The mine owners are insisting on @ 12 per cent cut, while the reformists, | who oppose the strike and are trust- | ing to arbitration, favor a 4 per cent wage-cut. The capitalist press here reports that 10 per cent, or about 30,000, of | the miners are out on strike already | under revolutionary leadership. The boss press complains that the devel- “T am sending $3 money order | Ping strike situation in the Ruhr | with which in return I expect to|™ines will prevent the mining indus- receive Daily Workers,” writes Er- | {TY from exploiting the South Wales nest Annelin, Gardner, Mass. “As you may know in Gardner the workers are very un-class- conscious and I am going to help the Party to get the paper sold in Gardner. Now if you are able to send 50 copies a day in a bundle to me as long as money holds out, and if I am able to sell them I'll send more money.” SELLING DAILY WORKER AT CHICAGO SHOPS. Ruth Levin of Chicago sends this note: “Shop Nucleus 508 did their very best to secure subs for the Daily Worker. We secured three subs. Will continue to do so. Nucleus consists of four members. We are issuing a | monthly shop bulletin and Nucleus 503 is selling the Daily Worker at our shop.” STAMFORD, CONN., INCREASE ORDER. Chester Kimbrough, Stamford, Conn., writes: “Kindly increase the strike to the advantage of the Ger. man mine bosses. The revolutionary central commit- tee of action in the Ruhr coal fields has issued an appeal to the miners to extend the strike front throughout | the Ruhr. The unemployed, under / red leadership, are lining up with the | strikers, The final results of the Berlin Post Office Workers’ Council election have | been announced, as follows: Those entitled to vote, 14,839: of these 12,099 participated. The re-| |formists got 4,839 votes, the revolu- tionaries 3,788; Fascists 1,872,.Christ- | ians; 1,469. The revolutionaries have | 5 : | | bundle order to ©. K., Etamford, | | Conn., to 40 copies daily. I am get- | | ting 15 copies a day now. Do so at | once and oblige.” eee. Camp Nitgedaiget orders: 100) | copies every day until further no-| tice.” BRTPNING GOV'T AIDS. FASOSTS AGAT'ST TONERS -Ban All ~ Proletarian Demonstrations BERLIN.—The measures: of-repres- sion against the . working class adopted in Germany during the last! ‘weeks prove that fascist methods are becoming the regular methods of government by the Bruening gov- ernment. | While the fascists demonstrate | Against workers the policé look on, and on the other hand there is no damonstration of workers which is not interrupted in its march, arrests made, the marchers dispersed on the ground of “singing forbidden gongs,” ete. Now the government has gone one | eur eae | step further and has forbidden all} demonsirations under the pretense of | trying to curb the fascist organiza- | tions. The practical administration of this act will prove that it is.mainly directed against the workers. Begin- | ning from Wednesday, thé 10th of December, all open air meetings and | demonstrations were banned. The police have orders to disband any | demorstration “without warning!” That means that free reign is given to the gun of the policemen and more victims will pay the penalty of ask-| ing for bread. ‘These bans on demonstrations have | been issued already before in several BRIEFS FROM ALL LANDS JEWISH COLONISTS IN SOVIET UNION | versary of the Canton Commune. The | BERLIN, Jan. 1—Reichminister of the interior, Wirth, has prohibited Lee. showing throughout Germany of the Soviet film entitled “Trial of the | Industrial Party.” HOLD CONGRESS |Contrast Conditions In) Other Lands the Celle| , MOSCOW.—On the 10th of Decem- ©) ber ti rison was broken up amidst great ber the second union congress of the | Pp % ; eine eS disturbances. A Vienna actor partic-| 2°W#82 colonization society | “Oset! ipating in the celebration declared| “®S OPened in Moscow. Delegates that’ the teachings of Christ were | ¥ete Present from all parts of the | tundamentally. the tame ‘a th Soviet Union and from a number of | wesc "© | other countries, including the United teachings of Luxemburg and Lieb- States of America, Latvia, Denmark | knecht. The prison director indig-| "2/5 © 5 fas an nantly denied this and proceeded to} 74 Austria. a tirade against Liebknecht and Lux-| The chairman of the society, emburg, whereupon the prisoners rose ; Diamondstein described the situation | in a body and shouted down the dir-| Of the Jewish toilers in the Soviet | ector. The celebration stopped and, Union and compared it with the situ- | the prisoners were led back to their| ation of their fellows in the other | cells. countries. | oe It was revealed in Berlin that the Christmas celebration in In Poland and Roumania the Jew- ish population was gradually decreas- ing under the weight of anti-semitic terror. In western Europe the Zion- | ist illusions were gradually dying. The hope of building up a Jewish} police attacked the demonstrations | State in Palestine was gradually being with great brutality and made many | abandoned. In the capitalist coun- | arrests. In view of the workers pre-| tries the masses of the Jews suffered parations to celebrate the anniver- exploitation and oppression, | sary, martial law had been pro- The speaker then dealt’ with the claimed over the town. situation in the Soviet Union where | Similar scenes occurred in Peking, the national minority problem had| and Tientsin where the police ar-| been solved according to the prin-| rested a number of people. Leaflets | ciples of Lenin, The “Oset” had over | of the illegal Chinese Communist | 300,000 members, 31 per cent of whom | Party were distributed in many! were workers. The chief centres of SHANGHAI. — Despite the fierce police terror, meetings and demon- strations took place in the workers’! quarters of Shanghai on the anni- | places calling on the working class and peasant masses to carry on the struggle of the Canton Communards | other states: In Leipzig, in Hamburg, n Upper Silesia, in Duesseldorf, in Jewish colonization in the Soviet Union were Birobidjan and the Crimea where 128,000 Jewish colo- Badenia and Wuerttemberg and in Savaria workers’ demonstrations are forbidden. In Hamburg the organ} of the Communist Party has been} forbidden, and although the police have no more the excuse that this paper is “inciting the masses.” An- to. a successful conclusion, and in particular to {ight against all at-| tempts on the part of the imperial- ists to attack the Soviet Union. Yesterday negotiations in the Ruhr | ———------—-+_—--—_-— other shooting took place.in the night | mining conflict broke down. On the | tionary trade union movement is pré- of December 10, whereby one young first of January the agreement ex- | pared to lead the strugle of 300,000 boy, a bakers’ apprentice, has been|pires. The owners announce wage-|miners against wage cuts and re- killed and six persons heavily injured. cuts on January 15th. ‘The revolu-!formist treachery. Speed up the Unemployment Camnaicn; Fight Starvation - (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) originally there were but three local hunger marches scheduled; that is, two in Pittsburgh proper and one | oe, ie etree ay eo ey throw | in Ambridge. But, after checking carefully on forces, it was decided that it was quite possible to extend the Let the situation in the Pittsburgh district serve to illustrate the widespread aaa eit: te tcrinatts | movement into the surrounding steel and mining towns, and that no less than a dozen additional marches a eed aa tee gana beget ae aan could easily be organized. These, of course, would Dur cant be Ying a jon of how | carry the movement into the most strategic and radi- ‘ lized sections of the workers, The Example of Pittsburgh. ie Th the Pittsburgh district unemployment conditions | __,THIS broadening out of the campaign will bring are especially terrible, reaching almost a state of | With it an intensification of local struggles generally, famine among the miners, and producing a growing | ® Mass collection of signatures, an increase in the revolt on the part of the workers. But the Party dis- | Slotted quota for the Washington delegation, a wide sation base for a great hunger demonstration on February trict paid very little attention to it all. It carried out the various phases of the unemployment work in a | 0th, and, needless to add, a great strengthening of purely formal manner—a’ spasmodic fight against evic- | Ur Party and the Trade Union Unity League unions. tions, a scattering collection of signatures, a narrow Extend the Work. and mechanical united front movement, casual prep- The revised program of the, Pittsburgh district on arations for election of the Washington delegation, | unemployment work amounts to about a fourfold in- and for local hunger marches, little or no actual or- | crease in activities. It is entirely within the pos- ganization of the unemployed, ete. And even this sibilities of the district and the district officials should weak work was confined almost’ entirely to Pittsburgh | be held strietly responsible for its fulfillment. More proper, the outside town with their starving masses | than that, the yarious other Party districts should be of workers, being chatatteristically neglected. required to correct and intensify their unemployment All in all, it was a prograni of work entirely inade- programs of work similarly, The work cannot go on quate and impossible for our Party in such a‘situa- as at present if our Party is to come forward as a tion as the workers now find themselves in. real leader and fighter. A great extension and in- How readily the work-could be strenzihened was | tensification of the unemployment campaign is a ‘shown by the action takem by the district a few days’ % matter of the most immediate and nists had settled on 3,100,000 hec- tares of Jand. * Sixty per cent of these Jewish | colonists were organized in collective agricultural undertakings. ete COMING EVENTS IN JOBLESS CAMPAIGN DETROIT—Delegation to state legislature, Jan. 7. Foster mass meeting, Danceland Auditorium, Jan. 11, CLEVELAND — Hunger march, Jan. 5, assembles in three places, 30th St. and St. Clair, 30th St. and Central, 5th St. and Lorrain at 6:15 and march on city hall. Foster mass meeting Jan. 12 at 8 p. m. at Slovak Hall, 6417 St. Clair, Second United Front Con- ference, Jan: 9, South Slev Hall, 5607 St. Clair Ave. PITTSBURGH-—Hunger march » Ambridge, Jan. 5. Hunger march n Pittsburgh, Jan. 10. United Front Conference, Jan. 4, Russian Hall, 1345 Fifth Ave.,.2 p. m., fol- towed same day by Foster mass meeting at Carnegie Hall, Federal and E. Ohio Sts. SACRAMENTO—Hunger march |) on state capitol, Jan. 7. Delega- tions from all over state meet at 1l a. m. on Second and K Sts. CHICAGO. — Ratification mass meeting Foster speaker, Jan. 9 at Chicago Coliseum, 14th St. and Wabash, 7:30'p. m. Second United Front Conference, Jan. 11. Hun- ger march on city hall, Jan. 12. NEW YORK — Hunger marches on Brooklyn and Bronx Boro Halls, Jan. 8. Hunger march on |! New York City Hall, Jan. 19. Mass trial of Hoover, Green and Walker, Jan. 11, Second meeting N. Y. Campaign Committee, Jan. | Salaries, giving Jersey City the high- Priests, Gangsters and Newspapermen On ' City Payroll Bolster Hague Machine e (This is the fifth of a series of articles on A. F. of L. and political corruption in New Jersey.) By ALLEN JOHNSON. There are two methods that cap- italist politicians use to build their political machines, and Hague has) refined and developed both with a gutter-snipe’s shrewdness. One is to convince the wealthy men of the dis- trict that they need not fear what Hoover, the great stationary engineer, calls “interference with business” in case the politician and his henchmen are elected. ‘i The other is to build as large a! payroll as possible, putting every one | on it who offers the slightest chance | of sometime becming an adversary. Not only does everyone on the pay- roll becomié a disciple and a voter, | but it can be taken for granted that | those who thus become parasites will | see to it that their families and close | friends will likewise become disciples and voters of the new machine. | Hague has padded Jersey City’s} payroll so that approximately 75 per | cent of the city’s budget is spent on est taxrate in America. The fol-} lowing are characteristic groups to be | found on Hague’s payroll: Virtually | all the priests and a large proportion of the ministers and rabbis in the city; most of the gunmen and roust- 12, Two hundred open-air meet- ings, Jan. 13, 14, 15, Indoor meet- ings Bronx, Harlem, Downtown, Williamsburg, Boro Hall, Browns- ville, to elgct delegates to Wash- ington. House to house canvass for signatures to Unemployment Bill, Jan. 16. PHILADELPHIA — Foster mass meeting at Broadway Arena, Jan. 14. Special Red Sunday to collect signatures, Jan. 4, between 9a. m. and 4 p. m. Second United Front Conference Jan. 25. BOSTON—Hunger march, Jan. 3, on City Hall. Foster mass meect- ing at Ambassador Palace, Jan. 15. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio—Hunger march, Jan. 5 at 7 p. m, . NEWARK, N. J—Hunger march Jan. 16. Second United Front Conference Jan. 18 at 2 p. m,, in Slovack Hall, 52 West St. STAMFORD, Conn. — United Front Unemployment Conference, Jan. 26. RALEIGH, S. C.—One hundred delegates from all over state make demands on state legislature, Jan. 6. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.—State Unemployment Conference and hunger march on state capitol, Feb. 1 and 2. WHEELING, W. Va—United Front Conference, Feb. 1, at 2 p.m, | at “Masonic Temple, 1407 Market | St. many towns have not sent in the announcement of thei: meetings and hunger marches. Théy should do so at the earliest possible date The Campaign Committees ne | 2k WORKERS MEET, SIGN UP FOR IN. SURANCE! | WHEREV ALL YEAR VACATION PLACH—810 | per week. Write Avanta Farr Ulster Park, N.Y. CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDAIGET CROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultura! Activity Proletarian Atmosphere 317 A WEEK i CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N.Y. PRONE 731 | | gathering abouts; most of the newspapermen; | all the wardheelers who push buttons | at election time; many of the most | powerful lawyers, and, needless to add, most of the adult members of | the families of these people. More- | over, when the police and the fire- | | men and the teachers are counted’ readily visualize the vote possibilities of such a machine. | 50,000 Jobless Denied Relief. A brief examination of some of the | individual jobs on Hague’s payroll | would be enlightening, especially in- asmuch as there are 50,000 workers in the city who are unemployed and | ,who have been denied one single penny for relief. There is a man in| Jersey City, for example, who is paid twenty-five hundred dollars a year for sauntering around, every Sunday, to see whether the 13th St. viaduct is still standing. There are cattle in- spectors to inspect a handful of arms | one can |in Secaucus where 'no cattle can be| found. There are health inspectors who have learned their business by a| careful study of the undraped girls in | Bernarr MacFadden's Physical Cul- ture magazine. There is a sporting editor of one of the local newspapers | who is on the payroll as a laborer, | even though he doesn't know the | difference between a pick and pick- axe. And there are many hundreds more who don't even take Tie trouble NEVIN | BUS LINES tLLW, 31st (Bet. 6 & 7 Avs.) Tel. Chickering 1600 OUT ADE PHIA MOURLY EXPRESS SERVICE $2.00 One Way $3.75 Round Trip Chicago Los Angeles . Pittsburgh Washington . Baltimore . Cleveland .. Boston Detroit . St.Louis - Lowest Rates Everywhere Return Trips at Greatly Reduced Rates “MAINE TO CALIFORNIA” ! i 4.00 THE WHOLE WORLD IS TALKING ABOUT— U.S. SEE IT FOR Special Rate for | 1). YOURSELF! Winter Sailings $260 Inceluding Five Days’ Stay in Moscow and Leningrad i NEXT SAILINGS JAN. 17, 1931, S.S. AQUITANIA FEB. 17, 1931, S. S. EUROPA FOR PARTICULARS: WORLD TOURISTS, 175 Fifth Ave., N. ‘Tickets to All Parts of the World) Algonquin 6656 NANCE given DANCE | CUBAN WORKERS CLUB Saturdov. Jannarv 3, 1921 ASTORIA 62-64 East Fourth MANSION Street, New York MUSIC BY CASCARS HARLEMISTES COLORED BAND |} to call for their pay envelope, but;bery, marched up Newark Ave. with time Jersey City was beginning to have it sent to them. | his six colleagues. Hague couldn’t| assume the leading position among But these payroll parasites have a| Ven wait until the burglars reached | the gambling and drug-selling cen- little duty of their own to perform. They must return three per cent of} their salaries to Hague as “a contri-| bution to the campaign fund.” This, | of course, is the most arrant kind of | poppycock, as Hague doesn’t spend) as much of this money for campaign | purposes as he does op iunches| during the year. | These “campaign contributions” from every person on the county payroll, added to Hague’s income from gambling dens, bookies, drug | peddlers and labor rackets, amount | to not less than $5,000,000 a year. Church Ordered Raids. | Hague first attracted the attention | of the Jersey capitalists by his) handling of the Jersey City police | department, after he was elected commissioner of public safety. Im-| mediately after he took office, he raided various saloons and brothels | and was promptly hailed as a “re-| form” commissioner. That, of course, is the reception that Hague hoped | for and expected, but the real reason | for the raids was something quite | different. The raids were instituted | at the express order of the Catholic church, without an understanding of | whose activities in New Jersey it is impossible to understand either the | influence of Hague or the unbelieve- | able oppression of the mass of! workers in the state. | Better to solidfy his position as a| the safe, as per agreement. ters in the country that it now en- Victims of Hague Trick Jailed. | joys. Hague himself at this time was While the sofe shoe men were | just beginning to play an important jimmying the front door of the store, | part in ‘he gambling racket, actually. Hague ran towards them from his} buying an interest in several of the hiding place in a hallway directly | largest gambling houses in the east. across the street and, surrounded by | The men on the pol'ce force, under the dozen cops, bravely arrested the | Hague’s personal® supervision, were dumbfounded New Yorkers. At the) first becoming involved, on a large ensuing trial, the leader of the gan a 4 a Sade aivasidelo HIGIAg “bik the i 7 | scale that is, in the widespread crim- inal activities that actually has tims of Hague’s itch for glory were sent to prison for long terms. turned the majority of the force into It must be remembered that at this; an underworld element. JAILING SHOWS UP TAMMANY BANKS iTry to Stiffle Quiz of Bank of U. S. NEW YORK.—The rottenness of Special Membership Meet in Philadelphia Special membership meeting of the Philadelphia comrades will take place on Sunday, January 4, at 2 p.m. sharp, at the Hungarian Hall, 1144 N. 4th Street. Admit- tance to this membership meeting will be by membership cards only. It is a very important meeting and the inside robbery of banks, and-the connection betwen bankers and Tam- many grafting politicians, is brought | out strikingly by the rare instance |of the conviction of Frank H. Warder, state superintendent of banks of New | York state, whose place was taken | by Broderick, the present Tammany all comrades must attend. .. .... Kill 8 Imperialist Invaders in Nicaragua (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) |@ $10,000 bribe from Francesco: M. caraguan soldiers. There were eleven | Ferrari, president of the City Trust | man in the same job, Warder took _ “reform” poliee commissioner Hague | skirmishes between the Nicaraguan | Co., which failed some time ago. He | by the | concocted a scheme that would not) independence army and the imper-) was convicted Friday. only convince the workers in Jersey City of his interest in their “safety” but would certify to his personal courage. He got in touch with a well-known New York gunman and told him that he would make It worth his while if he would arrange with his gang to rob @ certain store on Newark Ave., one of the city's busiest. streets. The gunman was somewhat surprised. His relations with police commissioners had been the friendliest imaginable, but none had ever actually gone so far as to propose that he rob a particular place. Hague soon enlightened the gun- man. The gang was to descend on the store en masse, actually unlock the door—and be arrested in the act of tampering with the safe by none/ other than Commissioner Hague himself, who would be accompanied by a dozen policemén. The gunman accede dupon the payment of a fee commensurate with the risk entailed in double-crossing his pals and on the night agreed upon for the rob- | jalist invaders during November. The revival of conflicts, though many took place while Sandino was | out of the country for many months in Mexico, indicates the growing des- | | peration of the Nicaraguan masses | under the crisis which has struck Nicaraguan coffee and other pro-| | ducts, impoverishing still more the Sendino himself, in agreement with | | the Mexican governmental lackeys | | of Wall Street, broke with the anti- imperialist movement (led by the Communist Party of Mexico) which | was and is the only force that gave | | the Nicaraguan masses real assist- | ence. He has* always refused to support concrete demands of the | workers and peasantry and maintains a national reformist policy. The masses of Nicaragua have the task of raising demands in the strug- gle not only against the imperialist | | This clearly shows the connectioA | between the bank robbers and the former state superintendent of banks, and the 400,000 depositors in .the | Bank of the United States can draw | important lessons from this fact: In Bridgeton, N. J., J. Pierson | Reed and Charles A. Barraclough, of- | poorer peasantry and peons. |ficials of the Vineland Trust ©o., which failed, were given six-year Jail terms for inside robbery of this bank. At the same time, the Tammany grafting politicians wha run thestete and city government gnd who are closely connected with the Bank of the United States are being protected through all sorts of fake investiga- tions. Bernard K. Marcus, president of the bank, is refusing to come to any investigation. He gets away with it because the phoney investigation is in the hands of Tammany henchmen who do not want the facts to come invaders, but against the native | out, landlords and capitalists, in spite of 3 support ine fighting Nicarasuen ae-|BRITISH CLAIM CAPTUR OF PEASANT REBEL FORT RED BA NEW YORK WO! on the occasion of thei given by the to grect the Central Committee of the Communist Party building, 35 East 12th Street Sunday January 11, 1931 Admission Fifty Cents All Workers Organizations Are Uurged to Elect a Delegate to this Banquet ses to the limit. The British troops, ordered by the MacDonald labor government .. to crush the rebel peasants in the Thar- awadday area, Burma, claim they have destroyed one of the strong- holds of the peasants in Alantaung. They are trying to create the im- pression that the revolt has been endéd through this move, but tha | fact is that it is constantly spreading until whole villages are taking part in the uprising. Sharp fighting is going on in many districts, showing the militant spirit of the agricultural workers and pea- sants, who, rather than face starva- tion, have taken up arms against their masters, native and British. NQUET RKERS CENTER r moving into the new ~Today-Tomorrow | | | JANUARY 3, 4 , | Ba JOINT Zz f. AT D> ds | ' NEW STAP, CASINO Large Assortment of Articles Will Pz Sold 107th Street and Park Averye at, Low Prices | A RESTAURANT WITH BEST OF FOOD PREP‘) HY a‘ MEMBERS OF WOMEN’S COU CILS .PROGRA "ans TODAY k Theatrical Performance by W. I. R. Scouts —Games a0) Yo sess ; TONIGHT TOMORROW Auspices: WORKE | NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION | UNITED COU Admission—Today 5\ \ Combination Ticket $1.00 * NEEDLE TRADES NIGHT—COSTUME BALL WOMEN’S COUNCIL DAY—Workers Daboksiory Theatre of the | W. I. R. Council Drd4ma Group, Women’s March, Final Salco. Dancing till 2 A. M. RS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF ’ IL OF WORKINGCLASS WOMEN 0 cents, Tomorrow 35 cents, Children 10 cents only (will admit three people any night)