The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 27, 1931, Page 3

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| | | | | dor the week. I { i F3 e 1, Boston... 391 617 991 498 1008 ey Se 1169 7784 1190 7784 898 8974 3. Phils. 868 1622 ABA 1702 2490 2591 4, Buffalo 148 618 «154 613-166-767 B. Pitt, 4 278 275 877 260 “G Cleveland... 777 1731 779 1638 2508 2417 1 Detroit ... 893 2418 A417 24108 S241 8250 “a Chieago 12th BORG 1244 AIDE 4927 ORB _ ® Mnple. M47 GIN ABS NTR 1062 1008 JORans.Cty.. 2 GRY 258 847 MA BR (11 Agrle. Et 8 8 OR 12 Seattle 263) 798 MBE ORR 18 Calif. cry f ‘ 15. Conn. 2 E 5s 18 South 26 4110, 17 Birming. 8700178 «195 TN 18 Batte 1% 88 107 108 2 Denver 197 146 258 ATR 108 68 174-178 g| Okla. Clty vn a | Reading nn nore. 7029 29242 8087 25252 51288 51280 1 Chester us DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEUNEEDAY, MAY 27, 1931 SAGINAW ELECTS 12 DELEGATE S FOR BIG MICH. HUNGER MARCH Hold Enthusiastic Meetings; 85 Join the Local Branch of the Unemployed Council Workers Calls Upon the Poor Farmers to Join Struggle Against Starvation Conditions Dear Comrade: Saginaw, Mich, We just held two fine meetings of the Unemployed Coun- cils at the Italian Hall at Hess meeting was held on May 14th and Their Streets. The first and the second on May 2ist. Altogether we got 82.applications for membership into the council. These meeting were very enthu~ siastic, Many of those present asked why we did not come before and tell them that we were organizing the native citizens. They said that they had never heard about the un- employed council before and were wild to organize. Elect 12 Delegates In the last meeting we elected 12 delegates to the Lansing hunger march. All the workers are inter- ested in this march because condi- tions are terrible here with all the unemployment. The people here in Saginaw are really starving. The Welfare will not give clothes, shoes, milk or rent to the starving people. The only “re- lief” given out is to a few families: $8 a month to families of 5, and $10 to families of 8, nothing more. This is just slow starvation. We workers in Saginaw have filled the ware-houses to the brim, we have worked like beavers to do it, now all that the bosses will give 4 starv- ing family of 8 is $10 a month, Children are being brought up in life without any milk, while the farmers around Saginaw get only a cent and a half a quart for milk. Workers and Farmers Must Organize The farmers must organize with the city workers and fight the cream- eries which are enslaving the farm- ers and robbing the workers. We must organize and give battle against these rotten conditions, Let's be free to do what ever we want with the surplus of milk and butter, —™. A. §. Jersey Club Uses John Reed’s Name; Jimcrow Negroes bs Jersey City, N. J. Dear Comrades: I would thank you for a smali space in your columns to say a few words, After reciving a letier from the John Reed Youth Club, inviting me to their meeting-on Friday, May 8, in Jersey City, I went there and was told by the secretary that I could not come in because the house was too fine. He said that he did not think it was such a fine house and was sorry, but I would not be allowed to attend the meeting. Hoping this will be printed. —A “—- Comrade. es Editorial Note.—Beside this let- ter, the Daily Worker has been in- formed by comrades that the John Reed Club of Jersey City has also refused to sell tickets for their af- fairs to Negroes. We wish to make it clear that this organization is not affiliated with the John Reed Club of New York, an organization of revolutionary writers and ar- tists, which has set as one of its chief tasks the struggle against white chauvinism and race discrim- ination. The John Reed Club has refused to give this so-called John Reed Club 7 charter. It is being dominated, we are in- formed, by a clique of petty bour- geois, lily white, psuedo bohemian intteletuals whose chief function, while flitting around the fringes of the revolutionary movement like so many Peter Pans, is to sip tea, at- tend gwell parties in high-class apartments and talk a vulgar hog- wash which they label radicalism, while they Jim-Crow Negroes. This organization has no right to use the name of John Reed, who was Bolshevik and a Communist and a fighter against all kinds of Jim-Crowism. There are, no doubt, some real revolutionary workers in this organization. If there are they must at once expose and denounce the degenerate elements who are responsible for the Jim-Crowing of Negroes and purge their ranks of them, thus giving the club the right to bear the name of the fighter, John Reed. Mother of Three Toils 12 Hours Daily for $7.50 A Week Baltimore, Md. Editor Daily. Worker: I am a widow and I have three children. I also have a grand- mother sick in bed and I have to support her since she is 65 years old and is unable to work. Just to show you that the situation is growing, worse every day, I forced myself to take @ job as a cook, where I must work for 12 hours a day at the rate of $7.50 weekly. Now, fellow-workers, how can I support my family on this amount per week. If I don’t accept this job the charities would refuse to help me anyway, since they would say that OHIO YOUTH DAY IN YOUNGSTOWN and White Youth YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio. — The Na- tional Youth Day Committee thru the local secretary Paul Ray issued the following statement: “The National Youth Day Demon- stration and all events will be a great demonstration of solidarity of white and Negro workers and for the release of the Scottsboro boys. Already over 250 young Negro work- ers are expected to come from all over the state of Ohio among the delegations for National Youth Day. From Detroit the Young Liberators are coming and bringing along their band of 10 which will play at the dance to be held Saturday evening May 30 at the Central Auditorium. From Cleveland the Crescent A. C. is coming, a colored youth club of 50. From Akron a large group of Negro youth is coming, most of them members of the B.Y.P.U. and the Epworth League. To Hold Big Meet After the demonstration and par- ade on Saturday, a great Athletic Meet will be held at Idoar Park Sta- dium on Sunday, open to all amat~- eurs. Negro athletes are especially invited to participate on basis of full equality. The meet in itself will be a demonstration against the jim- crow policy of the Amateur Athletic Union which is run by the bosses. The headquarters of the Commit- tee are at 334 E. Federal Street and entries can be sent there. All young people who would like to get in touch with the Committee can do 80 by calling at any time. Workers are asked to put up young people coming from all over the state for the night of the 30, since it is out of question to get hotel rooms. Most of those coming are out of work or have far too little funds for that. LAWRENCE TAG DAY IN BOSTON BOSTON, May 25.—A conference of labor and fraternal organizations was held at Ambassador Palace in defense of the Lawrence strikers and their leaders, who face 10 years jail and deportation. The conference decided to hold a house to house collection of Greater Boston on Sunday, June 7, 1931, at 10 a. m. to 12, noon. All workers’ organizations are asked to partici- pate. The following are the sta- tions: 93 Staniford St., Boston; In- ternational Hall, Roxbury; Morton Hall, Mattapan; 376 Broadway, Boston; Russian Hall, 88 Hawthorn St., Chelsea; 141 Shirley Ave. Re- vere. I don’t want to work. ‘Women Workers Organize! T call upon all the workers of Bal- timore, Md., to get together and fight, especially the women workers, to help change these rotten condi- tions. Join the Trade Union Unity League, 9 S. Greene St., Baltimore, Maryland, —Domestic Slave. Solidarity of Negr é| Pay Cuts Sweep On As Doak Praises U.S. Steel Co. Head DENVER, Colo, May 26.—The Great Western Sugar Co., which dominates the beet industry in this state, is putting through terrific wage slashes. By forcing whole families to work on the contract system it is able to avoid the Colo- rado compulsory school law, the chil- dren are nominally “employed by their parents who need their sup- port.” The Great Western has paid in dividends more than $93,000,000 since 1905 and has bought assets worth $88,000,000, making thus a profit of $181,000,000 we capital pe $13,000,000. DENVER, “colo, May 26.—Coal dealers in Colorado cities are printing advertisements: “Colorado Fuel and Iron Co. Prices Slashed to Lowest Level In 20 Yea: A number of coal operators have filed notice with the state industrial commission that they intend to cut. miners’ wages by $2.52 a day. ee ae WORCESTER, Mass., May 26.— The Grosvenor Shoe Co. reduced wages of hand cutters 43 per cent last week, They struck, but the State Board of Arbitration and Con- ciliation is stepping in to persuade them to go back to work. Bs Net SIOUX CITY, Iowa, May 26.—De- spite the statement of Secretary of Labor Doak that wage-cuts are not a general occurrence, wages have been slashed right and left. ‘The latest wage-cut was put over at the Iowa building, at Fifth and Pierce Sts. The workers were hired at 40 cents an hour, but a few days later they were lined up and a wage- cut announced from 40 cents an hour to 22 cents an hour. Incidentally only eight men are working, because if ten more are employed compensation must be carried on them. Cees ane Postal Grinds ‘Em. NEW YORK —The Postal Tele- graph is “helping along prosperity.” It is firing old employes and hiring youngsters at $18 to $20 per. It is assessing each employe a tenth of a per cent of his yearly salary. It has put through a wage-cut of $5 a month. It allows no more vacations, no more- bonuses. It has installed new speed-up. Efficiency men are combing more and more out of each department, until those that are left work like mad. Girls working night- shift are speeded up by threats of firing. Operators work like mad- men, never mind the quality of the work, but turn out quantity. Occa- sional “unemployment benefits” are deducted from the pay WASHINGTON, May 26. Sec- retary of Labor Doak issued a state- ment yesterday approving the policy of the United States Steel Corpor, announced through its president James A. Farrell regarding “keeping up wages.” The U. S. Steel Corp. has been slashing wages through speed-up and the stagger plan. But Wm. Green and Woll of the A, F. of L., and now Doak for the govern- ment approve this method of wage slashing. CHICOPEE, Mass.—A. G. Spald- ing & Brothers, sporting goods man- ufacturers, on Monday announced that a 10 per cent wage cut would be handed out to all its workers. Over 1,600 workers are hit. Tarrytown, N. Y. Wage Slash TARRYTOWN, N. Y.— Lord & Burnham Co., manufacturers of boil- ers and greenhouses at Irvington-on- Hudson, announced a 10 per cent wage cut for all workers beginning June 1. Several hundred are em- ployed by this company. A New Name for Wage Cuts CLEVELAND, Ohio.—On Monday Col. Sostheenes Behn, chairman of the International Telephone and Tel- egraph Corp. announced that a sys- tem of “incentive bonus,” would be put Wito effect on June 1. This is an out-and-out wage cut under the disguise of another name. The plan, which amounts to a slash in, pay of from 10 to 25 per cent, will af- fect. 95,000 workers in the I. T. T. Corporation ‘Liberal’ Senator Does His Part To Push War Preparation WASHINGTON, May 26. — Sen- ator Brookhart, who claims he is a “liberal,” yesterday announced he would introduce a bill “drafting” capital in the next war, but at a good profit to the capitalists. Brook- hart wants the next war conducted efficiently and is doing his share to prepare the masses for it by putting So./over a fake bill to make it appear that “capital” will bear the same burdens as “labor” in the next war. NEW YORK. — Not satisfied with one air war show, the 600 planes which recently maneuvred over New York City have returned from Bos- ton to extend the war preparations. In Boston thousands were hurt in the crush of people who gathered to see the air war show. Assistant Secretary of war, Davi- son, who declared that the charge Districts! Set Machinery in Immediate Motion in Drive for $35,000 for “Daily” Tables last week showed a total circulation of ; 31,288 and a net circulation of 31,075 cial orders of 213 were deducted. This week's | figures show a total circulation of 31,289 which | with special orders deducted amounting to 169, leaves a solid circulation of 31,120 increase over last week's figures of 45. The | figure in the tables shows increase last week. This is due to there being 44 fewer temporary orders this week than last. Chicago in Front Again With Increases. _ After three suceessive losses District 8, Chi- cago, emerges with the outstanding gain of 111 | This showing is covered by a temporary order of 83 from Ziegler, UL, increase of 36 from Chicago and a from Indiana Harbor of 25; also including a decrease of 50 from Hammond, Ind. { District 3, Philadelphia, is next with increase of 101 due almost entirely to a gain of 100 from ‘Wilkesbarre and a slight increase of 10 from Philadelphia, notwithstanding a decrease of 25 District 13, California, follows with a gain of 33 due to temporary increases of 8 from Roswell, N. M., and other smaller from Chester. gains, An additional order of 50 kane (in spite of an unexpected decrease from Tacoma) plus a special order of 17 from Port- land is responsible for after spe- | 12, Seattle. week—124, or a net of 1 over | | week. an new orter District 1, Boston, has the biggest loss of the This is caused by cancellation of | special order of 150 for Pawtucket for duration of textile strike (settled Wednesday), relieved | by gains of 18 and 15 from Providence and Wor- cester respectively. District 6, Cleveland, after showing increase of 89 last week, comes for- ward this time with a setback of 91 due to a cut of 50 from Barberton, 70 from Akron, 50 from Cleveland; an increase of 75 from Cin- cinnati is the only bright spot in District 6 this District 16, South is next with a loss of 50 from Charlotte. Cuts of 15 from Duluth and 10 each from Superior and Minneapolis make a@ gain of 24 in District “up decrease of 29 from District 9, Minn. Two hundred thirty-nine new subs and 216 tion list. Committee $35,000. subscribers trict 7.” from Spo- Summary By Districts Summary By Cities letter, renewals were received during the last week. | | 455 New Subs and Renewals for Week. | There were also 111 drops from the subscrip- Plan $35,000 Drive. District 7. Detroit, has appointed a District to manage the “Daily” Drive for “Plans have been made,” writes S. C. District D. W. Rep., “to visit all organizations, and sympathizers throughout Dis- We quote below from a letter pertaining to the Campaign sent to all the Units by the Worker” Committee for District 7. The points listed are excellent directives and should be studied carefully by other districts. “The Section Daily Worker Agent,” reads the “must see that each Unit has a func- tioning D. W. Agént, that regular meetings are* called and that check is made and -reports re- ceived on progress of each Unit during Drive. The Section D. W. Agent should accept full responsibility and organize committees for Sec- tion socials, picnics and open air meetings. Leading comrades in the Section should be as- signed to visit the mass organizations to take up collections and draw them into the Drive. Serious efforts must be made to form Daily Worker Clubs consisting of sympathizers and regular readers of the Daily Worker. “Daily The whole drive in the section should be conducted on the basis of revolutionary competition with Quotas should be worked out “Every Unit member must have a coupon book and be active selling coupons. Street Units should concentrate on building up neighborhood routes and the Shop Units on getting workers in the shop to become regular readers, Mem- bers of Unemployed Councils and other frater- nal organizations, also close sympathizers should be drawn into the Drive to obtain subscriptions and donations. Socials and picnics should be arranged and also special open air meetings held to sell and get contributions for the Daily Unemployed workers should be ap- proached to sell the Daily from store to store, house to house and at factory gates. concentration should be made in the proletar- ian (Negro) neighborhoods to build the Daily Worker by laying stress on the struggle against unemployment and the role of the Dally Work- Special a i 5 2h& : 38 98 132 —1 a 1m 134 ail 38 a 88 8 732 6324 1042 Tae 45 oid 363 (886 «1214 cy 1 321 402 —I 45 183197 1 60 260 320 46° 1037158 2 110 17% 285 bra! 49 98 aote| Cone sections. oo & 16 | for each Unit. 60 25 28F 243 «615 900 bt 598 1831 2410 2429 ot} 47 109 «134 156 rt J 718 606 668 «(Ont ay o> 185 248 250 2 763 2003 2837 2856 ay wm 111 252 24h tL a 7 at 16 1 Mw 30 a me 12 2 | Wt 171 12 1 Sa 318 4TH at at Bb 128 145188 16) Worker. 268006277) «OB2h AO 19 200 TR 410 408 2 at MS MO BME ‘ 18 100 TER 1 as 188 «282 «(9Re ct a3 48 as G6 287. 298 203 1s 125 164 140 ph er in the Scotishoro case." that $3,000,000 was being expended for the air war maneuvres was un- true has himself been proved a liar by an editorial in the New York Times of May 25 that admits this sum is being spent—but that worth it because it puts the United States on a war footing. it is Farm Workers Get It In the Neck Likewise WASHINGTON, D. C., May 25.— Farm wages are the lowest since 1916, says a report in the May issue | of the Monthly Labor Review of the U. 3. Bureau of Labor Statistics. For the whole country, the average farm wage in April last year was 162 per cent of the average for the five- year period, 1910-14. On April 1 of this year it was only 1217 per cent of the pre-war average. In January this year it was 129 per cent. For April, this year, the average rate paid per month, with board, by divisions of the country, was: North Atlantic States, $35.86; North Central, $31.28; South Atlantic, $17.50; South Central, $17.88; Far Western, $43.07. Per day, without board, the ay- erage rate this April was: North At- lantic, $2.86; North Central, $2.19; South Atlantic, $1.23; South Central, $1.16; Far Western, $2.73. Per day, with board, the averages ran: North Atlantic, $2.11; North Central, $1.61; South Atlantic, 90 cents; South Central, 89 cents; Far Western, $1.96. 285 DELEGATES AT CHICAGO CONF. Bloek Corum cieee Ral- ly Masses M PAGE (CONTINUED ONE) Union Unity League explaine dthe purpose of the Tilinois hunger marches to the state capitol on June 15 and won the endorsement of the conferen' Endorse I. L. D. Defense. The Resolution Commitiee of 12, which included two ministers and President Morganpark of the Citizens Association, presented a unanimous report with a sharp resolution, en- dorsing the International Labor De- fense and repudiating Walter White of the N. A. A. C. P. top leadership and his Klan lawyer, Stephen R Roddy. The objection of one min- ister to the sharp wording of the resolution was overwhelmingly re- jected by the Negro rank and file members of the Resolution Commit- | tee. | Send Protest to Alabama Governor | } The conference sent a protest tele- gram to Governor B. M. Miller of Alabama and a telegram of solidar- ity to Claude, Patterson, father ot | Roy and Andy | One hundred and forty-four dol- lars was taken up in collections and donations, with piedges for much more. A committee of 25 was elected to meet this week to plan a drive to raise $1,000 for the defense within one month, Another conference has been called for June 211, The work of building block and neighborhoood comunittees, already showing great progress, will be pushed with energy. Mass Demonstration June 21, ‘The delegates present pledged their organizations to support the mass meeting at Forum Hall on June 5, at which Richard B. Moore, national Negro director of the I. L. D., now on tour, will speak. ‘They also endorsed the plan for a huge mass demonstration and pa- rade on June 27 at Washington Park. The sub-committees on speakers, finance and publicity will open head- quarters on the South Side imme- diately in order to push the work. Charlotte Workers Smash Race Bars; Join the Fight (CONTINUE: thing they could. I’ve seen some of the good they have done. If it hadn't been for the LL.D. we mothers wouldn’t have been able to see our boys, I guess, until judge- ment day. I hope we win this fight. If we don’t win this, they'll do something else against the workers.” One of the white delegates exploded the boss fiction of “protecting white womanhood.” He told the confer- ence: The capitalists when talking about the Scottsboro case claim they are protecting white woman- hood. These saine people killed Ella May Wiggins and lynch wom- en, It's not women they are pro- tecting but capitalism! We must fight for these framed-up boys. Mrs. Williams is ous sisted because she is a worker!” A colored woman delegate stated, “I've got boys myself and don’t know when they'll be railroaded to the elec- tric chair. We must work to free these boys.” An 11-year-old Pioneer, a little col- ored girl, pledged the children of the working class to the fight to save the condemned youths, themselves children, 3 only 14 years old, the old- est just 20. The conference elected five dele- gates to the All-Southern Conference this coming Sunday in Chattanooga, Tenn. A resolution of protest was unanimously adopted and sent to OM PAGE ONE) Governor B. M. Miller of Alabama and Judge Hawkins at Scottsboro, Cut out and mail at once to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th » New York SAVE THE DAILY $35,000 Save-The-Daily Worker Fund. Enclosed find dollars cents We pledge to do all in our power to save our Daily by raising $35,000 by July 1, . City MUST HAVE $1,000 A DAY! HAIL 1ST NATION- AL YOUTH DAY On to Passaic, N. J. MACY S0TH PARADE RALLY BOXING DANCES ’ Special Train leaves Erie Station 12:30 p.m. Daylight Saving—Take Hudson Tube to Erie or Ferry at 23rd or Chamber St,—ROUND TRIP 75 Cents including E TICKETS for Rookshoy Office, 1 WwW, le oats W. i8th Str ¥. ©. Le E, 12th St, Sth floor: ©. Room 606, 32 Union Sq. | Ala. | Negro workers was set up as a Dis- Page Three ae TODAY! The new contributions follow: DISTRICT 1. Hillsboro, N. Kiba Chase, Hillsboro, N. Fred Chase, Hillsboro, N. Thomas Bailey, Hillsboro, N. H. Oliver Chase, iH, Homer Chas Charles Chase, Jos. Chase, ane . Gewitz, J. Caplan Arthor Vt. Total Murray A Reader. N. . Gabrailn Unger, Brooklyn Two Comrades, N.Y. ( M. Oberlander, N.Y. ©. 1,00 Unit 14 5, N.Y.C. Working Women's ce, Brooklyn 10.00 Brookly A Sympathizer, V Hodus, Cole Brooklyn, N.Y ‘amp Nitgedaiget, WY). . Camp Bronx , Bronx ack “Rotgard, Bronx Molly ‘Tocker, N.Y Anta Meisel, Bronx Betty Breines, Bronx Rose Ceive, Bronx 1.00 ha Teishman, Bronx . Kramer, Brooklyn Morris Kieln, Bronx M. Levin, Bronx S. Levine, Bronx. . mel, Bronx Sonia Stein, Bronx Resnik, Bronx R. Rendar, Camp A. Sabbath, Bronx A. Comrade, Camp Sam Baron, Rronx 3, Cohen, Bronx Schwartz, Bronx. Kolodny Taxi Abe Uneredited, Camp Nitgedaiget ewis, Brooklyn homas, Brooklyn 1.00 1.00 Smash Frame-Ups ! Demand Amnesty! | A committee of 10 white and trict United Front Scottsboro Defense Committee. Following the conference, Mrs. Wil- liams addressed a congregation of 2,- 000 at the House of Prayer of All People, the largest Negro church in Charlotte, where her plea for the nine boys was warmly received. Save the “Daily Worker”! Rush Your Nickels, Dimes and Dollars Contributions on Monday to the Save-the-Daily showed an increase, with a total of $77 deal below the $1,000 a day that is needed. wait till your coupon books are full, E N Bi A velyn Markun, Broux David Medoff, N.¥.¢ at. Laut, Brooklyn lisabeth Maffen, Brooklyn Comrade Gruenberg, See. 3, Day Unit m. Mackoroff, w Ww K. B. Hungarian &, & D.B.S,, Bogrow. nit 14 Abe Reante M. Hirshbaumn. 5. 2 Vdward Jay, Plainfield, N. M. Ringham, N.Y. ¢ Al Kantoff, Albany. N.Y Geo. Harmolis, Bronx Anna Rochester, V. ¥ F, H. Morrison, Brooktyn a ee) i Worker campaign But this Js still a great? Get busy, comrades! Don't but send in every cent you have 46. In the list of contributions printed in yesterday's paper an error was made in crediting $165 to the Bronx Co-operative House. should have been credited to workers employed in the co-operative house, The money Ariks, Sec, 1. Unit 6 ghton Beach Workers’ Club, collected at concert dolin Orchestra, Section Training School, N.Y, omen's Council, No. & ; Wakhurf, N. ¥, © sels rsen . Unit 6 Halusyka. axter, See. 9 Total DISTRICT 3 Geo. Gondoff, Phila, Pa 5.00 Philadelphia District 100.00 K. Adam, Philadelphia, Pa, 3.00 Total 8108.00 DISTRICT 4 Fred H. Sch: . Batavia, N.Y. 1.00 DISTRICT @ Bulgarian Workers! Club, ‘To: ledo, Ohio 81:3,00 Frank Nazariwien, Steubenville, Ohio 19.00 A, ©. MeDonald, Norwood, Ohie 1.09 Tetal DISTRICT 7 N. 1. 0. Ince. Flint, Mich 3.00 DISTRICT & Chicago Distri P. White, Chicago, M1, Rook Shop. &o. Slay Buro, Chi. F. W. Galle. Chienzo Fritz FE, Carlson, Chicago ‘Total 5 $356.00 DISTRICT 15 W.T. Conrew, Black Hall, Conn, L, Lashnits, Waterbury, Conn. Total B13.00 D 1.00 S. Olnap, Clary Mary Dalton, DISTRI Atlanta, Ga. Total, all Distriets..... Previously received. Total to date SPARTAKIAD — ELIMINATION Track and Field Meet Sunday, May 3lst National YouthDay FROM 10 A. M. at ULMER PARK 25th & Crosby Aves., Brooklyn,N.Y. B.M.'T. West End Line to 25th Ave. TICKETS IN ADVANCE 25 CENTS At the gate 35c. DANCING AT NIGHT General Secretary of Tr UU Le R. SALTZMAN | General Secretary of LW. o. | | MAX BEDACHT of Central Exec. Committee of Communist Party of USA. WM. Z. FOSTER ADMISSION 85c * _ MADISON SQUARE GARDEN 50th Street and 8th Avenue : Irs PROGRAM: Children Chorus of I. W. 0. Schools Freiheit Gesangs-Verein—J. Schaefer Mass Pageant —in 8 parts — by Artef SPEAKERS (| Opening of the Ist Convention of INTERNATIONAL | WORKERS ORDER } FRI, MAY 29 | 8:30 P. M. | conducting J. SULTAN Secretary of Jewish Buro of C. P., U. S. A. C. MARMOR Educatoinal Director of 1. W. 0. A. SCHILLER President of 1. W. 0 Chairman of Evening i a a a a a a — ow oe a a a ADMISSION 55

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