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es teas abe cannery WEIRTON STRIKERS CARRY OUT MILITANT PROGRAM DESPITE A.A. TREACHERY Youngstown Strike Is Against Discrimination; Steel Union Urges Rank and File Leadership in East Ohio Strike STEUBENVILLE, Ohio—The most brazen treachery of Amalgamated Association officials yet seen in the Steubenville-Weirton-Clarkesburgh strike failed to break the solid ranks of the Weirton men, when thousands of strikers disregarded the orders of Long, Amalgamated Association strike chairman, “not to picket” and blockaded every gate of the mill. Hing he suspicions of the® strikers in packed strike meetings "by milita: hes calling for a mass icket line at 7 am. g and his partners wait- Monday evening (too to meet again him) to broadcast the off. No pi to state of martia lraws from the rs disre- uctions. Thousands is. Scattered tem- ily by clouds of tear gas thrown y state polite whom Long had told e strike: re here to protect life and vronert the bombs at the police and quickly rmed their lines. ite of the cltims of the man- that several thousand re- ed for work, it is definite that few hundred out of the 9,000 entered the plant. Pope plant, subsidiary -of ton Steel in Steubenville, nor- z 1,200, some 300 went ning, but at 9 o'clock only of the 12 hot mills was operating. vef' We’ mally the pickets threw back! Dye Shops Closed Down by Paterson Mass Picket Line “Truce” at Wage Cut Blocked by Action of Silk Strikers PATERSON, N. J., Oct. 12,—The | N.R.A. Conference in New York for terminating the strike has ended, with Senator Wagner retreating to Washington and the strike stronger than ever. A sharp fight of the National Textile Workers Union delegates and pressure upon the A. F. of L. officials of militant rank and file, has blocked any truce that would leave the Workers without a pay increase. The mass picket line at the big Lyons Dye Works here this morning forced the company to admit the workers’ committee to go through the plant and see that no Scme of those going in were unskilled nvoved, and most of the rest} in other departments than hot mill department. Con- ts from strike leaders} ful picketing,” and demor- he sheriff's procla~ jotous gatherings” one Was working. The strike meetings of the N.T. W.U, here and at Lodi grow larger and morefenthusiastie daily. Despite widespread hunger, with the Asso- ciated (U.T.W.) officials sabotag- ing the relief work, the spirit of workers to fight through to vic- nee of riot guns and sub- > guns in the hands of ‘city deputies, the few strikers ine stood aside as the herded the sc abs men, office employees, and some honest in a “strike y the company Steubenville. need the results to return to work nue the strike. But the main b of the strikers boy- cotted the meeting and refused to vote. The “vote” was but another ef- fort of the company to stampede the men back to work. y, Solidarity and un- ing spirit of the Weirton 's is amazing, especially in view consistent sabotaging, strike- ng tactics of the Amalgamated ciation officials, who are affil- jated with the A. F. of L. bureau- crats. But all their courage and-de- termination will not be enough to-wjn the strike unless the proposgls of the rank and file committee of the-Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union for the election of a broad rank and file strike committee to be placed in full charge of mass picketing and all other strike activities is put into ef- fect. Meanwhile, the men in the LaBelle plant of the. Wheeling Steel Corp. here are preparing to join the strike, in spite of the anti-strike position of the leaders of the union, the Amal- gamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers. A rank and file group of LaBelle Lodge members have issued a statement to the rest of the men, endorsed by the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, calling upon them to vote for. strike for the following demands: Wage increases for everyone; 8-hour day, 5-day week, equal division of work, no favoritism; 20 minutes on company time for lunch; abolish the speed-up; no dis- crimination against Negro workers in hiring of promotion; recognition of the union of the workers’ choice and recognition in each department of the committees elected by the workers in that department. emer * YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Oct. 12— For the second time in five weeks the chippers of the Bessomer depart- ment of the Republic Steel . here have gone on strike, this time to enforce the company’s promise 6f no discrimination against strikers and Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union members, and equal division of work among the chippers. ‘The strikers are picketing all gates and all turns. : The strike followed the second re- fusal of the management to meet with the chippers’ committee, who wanted to protest the wholesale dis- crimination aaginst active strikers and union men when the Bessemer department resumed operations after a ten-day shut-down. The vote for sirike was unanimous and the men edged to stick together until the eompany agreed to put all chippers vack to work, with equal division of the work, no discrimination and no favoritism, . Company (police) thugs drew black-jacks to force the picketers off the city sidewalks leading into the mill property, but the strikers suc ceeded in stopping quite a few of the afternoon turn and expect to stop both turns in a day. TRADE UNION DIRECTORY:;. CLEANERS, DYERS AND PRESSERS UNION #28 Second Avenue, New York City 5 Algonquin’ 4-4267 FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 4 West 18th Street, New York City, Chelsea 3-0505 FURNITURE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 818 Broadway, New York Clty Gramercy, 5-8956 METAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION. 85 East 19th Street, New York City Gramercy 17-7842 NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 181 West 28th Street, New York Oity Lackawanna 4-4010 the tor ry, is visibly higher. Pat Quinlan, speaking for the Associated at its strike meeting in the Roseland ball- room this morning. attacked yester- |day’s huge demonstration for criti- cizing President Rocsevelt, whom Quinlan declared to be a friend of jthe workers. Roosevelt has just |signed the silk code condemning the silk workers to a $13 a week mini- mum wage. These remarks of Quinlan were interrupted by a storm of boos from the audience. “N. R. A. means ‘Never Roosevelt Again’,” one strik- er_shouted. It has been discovered here that the National Guard is being given tear gas drills at Paterson Armory, indicating that the authorities plan to launch a terror drive against the strike. The mass meeting of broad- silk strikers today was addressed by Martin Russak and Abe Guston. The Associated (U.T.W.) yesterday | decided to eliminate the shop chair- man from its strike committee, leaving the authority in the hands of its small strike committee of seven. Endeavoring to block effective re- lief work of the N.T.W.U., the local press is featuring the statement of the Associated that only the Asso- ciated is authorized to collect dona- tions. A riot occurred at a small Associ- ated relief station when 500 Associ- ated members crashed in, breaking through the partition and seizing food supplies. Cleaners’ Dyers’ Union to Protest Terror at N. R. A. Office Today NEW YORK.—Five strikers of the Cleaners and Dyers Union were ar- rested yesterday in front of the, Mu- nicipal shop and held on charges of malicious mischief. Bail of $2,000 was placed on each of the strikers. Three of the five strikers declared that they were taken into the plant and there severely beaten in the presence of two officers, whose names and numbers are in the possession of the union. Hearings on the cases will be held at the 10th ‘District Megistrate’s Court, Brooklyn, on Saturday, Oct. 14. ‘The attack on these pickets is part of the terror drive of the bosses against the militant of the Cleaners and Dyers ion now in its fifth week. Striking cleaners and dyers will demonstrate their protest of the N.R. A's refusal to mediate their strike on Friday at 11 am. at the Penn- sylvania Hotel together with the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Industrial Un- jon. A delegation will be sent to see Senator Wagner to present the union’s demands for 36-hour week and a wage scale ranging from 42 cents for unskilled and 83 cents to $1.39 for skilled workers and demand an immediate settlement on this basis. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1933 Striking Chippers in Buffalo Beaten by Thugs; 13 Hurt Preparations Are Made to Spread Strike to Whole Plant BUFALA, N. t¥.—One of the most vicious attacks was made Tuesday night by the Republic Steel Company thugs and police, special imported gangsters from Chicago and the un- derworld of Buffalo, against the strik- ing chippers. The chipping depart- ment is crippled; out of 750 workers only 100 are at work in all three turns. One man was shot and is in a seri- ous condition in the hospital, 12 were injured. After knocking them down company thugs continued to beat the workers. All workers from the chipping de- partment, including representatives from other mills and departments, met today to discuss what steps are to be taken. It was decided to call @ general meeting of the entire plant and present the demands to the com- pany for recognition of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, re- instalment of all 175 men fired for union activities, a 40-hour week with- out reduction in pay. If the company refuses to grant the above demands, the strike will be spread to all departments. The whole mill is organized and is ready at the first call to come out in full support of the chippers. To Plan Unemployed Relief Campaign at Pittsburgh Meeting Jobless Organizations, Unions Invited to Sunday Gathering PITTSBURGH Pa. Oct. 12—In the very center of the mine and steel workers struggles a conference has been called to “rally the widest support” of employed and unem- ployed in a campaign for immediate adequate yelief for this winter and in support of the national campaign for the enactment of the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill. “Despite all talk of ‘pickup’ and ‘prosperity’,” states the conference call, “over 67,000 families aré on the relief lists in Allegheny county, and tens of thousands throughout western Pennsylvania.” In the great struggles in this territory, the strikers are finding the solidarity of the unemployed an important weapon. In the Walworth Foundry strike in Greensburg, Pa., jobless workers picketed together with their. fellow strikers and thwarted all schemes to break their ranks, The conference to which delegates from unemployed organizations, trade unions, youth clubs, women’s auxiliaries, Negro organizations and all organized groups are invited will be held Sunday, Oct. 15, at 10 a.m., at Labor Lyceum 805 James St., N. S., Pittsburgh. JewelryWorkersOut in General Strike \Walk-Out Called in Defiance of Union Heads NEW YORK.—After a strike vote taken Thursday night, 2,500 jewelry workers, members of the Internation- al Jewelry Workers Union, local 1, | left their shops yesterday morning to | Strike for a 30-hour week and a wage scale of 80 cents to $1.25 an hour. At strike headquarters today, how- ever, no preparations were being president of the union was in con- ference with the bosses. Garci is calling the strike a “holiday” but this is not dampening the spirit of the strikers. The strike was called in defiance of wires received from Major Paddock of the N.R.A., from the Manufactur- ers’ Association and from Beardsley, and Williams, international officials urging the workers not to strike. Garci went to Washington two weeks ago promising the workers that if he did not return with a satisfac- tory code there would be a strike. While he ap; to favor a strike before he was opposed to it on his return. The code was delayed for ten days. The workers, among whom strike sentiment strong, de~ cided not to wait but to force im- provements in their conditions by a strike. They expect the strike to spread throughout the country. Al- though union officials call the strike @ “holiday,” several scabs were found working in the shops yesterday morn- Where Deadly Battle Raged i ' Carrying off one of the wounded miners after an attack on strikers’ picket lines by deputies and company thugs at Harrisburg, Tl. Page Three | Worker Barricades Home to Halt Evicting Marshals 35 Evictions in One Day from East Side Rat made for picketing as Peter Garei,} Holes; Unemployed Councils Demand Abolition of Eviction Law By HELEN KAY NEW YORK.—The marshal was due at 12:30. 3:30 because he hoped that he would He didn’t come until catch the home of Theodore Pujach, at 235 Monroe St., unprotected by workers, But when he arrived he found the eaded; barricaded with steel netting, furniture and slabs of wood. © He found the narrow dirty streets | of the lower east side filled with neighbors, and members of the down- town Committee of Action, a united front of Workers Committee on Un- employment, locals No. 2 and 3, and the downtown Unemployed Council, speaking from a temporary platform. The brave Hyman Lazarus, mar- shal, played safe. First came the Police radio car, with additional cops as protection, and then he arrived from the 12st Street area to oust this unemployed carpenter. “Why leave the likes of them live in the place. There’s an excuse for @ family but this single man prob- ably doesn’t even. want to work,” de- clared the beefy marshal. His cousin, also Lazorus by name, is a civil judge, and assigned Cousin Hyman to evict workers in this downtown area in order to keep the $25 to $30 received for the job in the family, although it is customary for Benjamin Horn, Wil- liam 8. Lief, and Mr. Neck to handle evictions in this particular neighbor- hood. Carefully Theodore Pujach had tried to protect his home, and his furniture. The windows looking over the firescape were blocked with wire and steel netting, with bed springs nailed over them onto the walls, The door had been reinforced by a double door, and steel plates were affixed between the doo: It took the marshal and his mover: nearly two hours to break in the win- dows and force the door. Monday 35 evictions took place on the lower east side. It has become an everyday affair in downtown New York to see workers’ scanty posses- sions piled into the strects. The push carts and the dirt, the garbage and the narrow alleys join company with the piles of furniture. Theodore Pujach lived in one of the many rat hole apartments, unfit even for the roaches and vermin they are infested with, that decorate the east side. Today he finds himself without a roof over his head. His few pa®sessions are stacked into the narrow alley, called Monroe Street. ‘Theodore Pujach used to be a mem- ber of an American Federation of Labor, carpenters local. He was dropped from membership because he couldn't pay his dues. He is 47 years old and spent more than half of his life in America, and yesterday he was evicted; no home; no money. He is even denied relief by the Home Re- Hef Buro because he is a single man. “How do you get along?” the Daily Worker reporter asked him. “I don't know,” he answered, “some- By MARGUERITE YOUNG (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) WASHINGTON.—The spread-the- misery effect of the N.R.A. is clearly indicated in the very reports which official government agencies hand out here through statistic bureaus, In the plain words of the Labor Review, issued monthly by the De- partment of Labor: “Union scales of hourly wage rates in May, 1933, as compared with May, 1932, showed 13 increases, 287 decreases and no change in 394 cases. . . , Full-time working hours between the two dates had increased in 17 cases, and de- creased in 67, while in 601 instances there had been no change.” y The Department of Commerce's monthly Survey of Current Business, for October, quotes Fairchild’s index, Saying: “Retail prices increased 8.4 N. R.A. Spreads H unger, Labo Codes Result in Share-the-Work Plan, Latest U.S. Official Statistics of Perkins Show in over a decade.” Thus the great gap between the total income of the working class and the cost of living is clear. The re- ports, of course, do not set out to facilitate such comparisons. ‘They do show, however, that, while “employment”—the numbers listed as working, whether for one hour per week or full time—has increased by an estimated 750,000 during August, productive activity actually fell off, industrial production dropping 8 per cent. Does this mean that employers, while doing less business, are digging Per cent between August 1 and Sep- into declining, profits to pay more to tember 1, the widest increase in prices employes—or does it mean that the “employment” figures are mislead- ing? The Commerce Department says that “under the stimulus of the N.! R. A, codés of fair competition, aver- age hourly earnings moved upward from July to August,” but its own actual figures show that these in- creases were both small and not uni- form. In fact, average hours per week in manufacturing, says the report, r Report Reveals apartment of Theodore Pujach barri- and double doors; barricaded with times I do an odd job or so, and get two or three dollars and I just hap- pen to be living.” “What do you eat?” the reported further enquired. “Bread and something,” was his answer. He is a tall, lean man with hunger lines creased into his leathery face. Bluish rings under his eyes prove his starvation diet, Theodore Pujach used to pay $7 a month for his apartment. He was four months behind when he was evicted yesterday. After the marshal and movers had successfully ripped down the door and broken into the barricaded windows, the dark little hole with only one of the three tiny rooms having windows was sickening to look at. The owners of these houses are holding these east side tenements for speculation. Some day these tene- ments will be torn down and good ; money is in store for the owners. The land is worth money. In the meantime they live abroad, and the workers of the east side must pay rent or be evicted from these dives ‘The cynical attitude of the ma: al fanned the anger of the crowd of workers. With nonchalance, the mar- shal said, “I’m not getting paid for this job. I’m doing is free, because it’s a poor landlord. “Next. ti in the walls, yelled up to the movers as t ied down the furnitur Hyman Lazarus, evictii offered to shake the hand of Jack Anyon, unemployed organizer. Anyon | shunned his hand and said: “I refuse to touch a hand that has put workers’ furniture onto the street. I have only contempt and will fight such as you.” The downtewn committee of action together with Communist Party Unit No. 19, last night rallied the workers in the neighborhood to put the fur- niture back into the house, so that Pujach would have a roof over his head until Friday morning when they will take him to the Central Regis- tration Bureau, where they will de- mand immediate shelter and relief for this worker. * . * Florence Diamond, 5 Hester St., was put into the street Wednesday night and slept in the street all) night. The landlord refused to take | the rent check. The Workers Com- mittee on Unemployment, » Locals No. 2 and No. 3, expelled from the Socialists and working unitedly with the Unemployed Councils, sent | a committee to the Home Relief Bureau and got new checks and moved Florence Diamond into a do not venture into the matter of how many thousands of workers who are being “employed” (whether re- ceiving $1 or $15 per week) are work- ers who have been taken off public relief rolls in the decrease-relief trend of which officials boast. So obvious is it that statistics now available do not tell the facts that offiicals teday (Oct. 11) announced they are taking a census of re-em- ployment and payrolls. This sup- posedly will show how much the tota) workers’ income has increased, The Washington Daily News (Seripps-Howard) forecasts that the pay-roll figures will be “disappoint- ing,” and reported that “an increas- ing number of complaints to N. R. A. Anti-Eviction Parade ‘in Downtown New York on Saturday Morning} |_ NEW YORK, N. Y.—An Anti- | Eviction parade will take place on Saturday morning in downtown |New York.* The parade will be held under the auspices of the Downtown Unem- ployed Councils, and will start from Rutgers Sq. at 8:15 with the Red Front Band leading it. They will march north to 14th St., south on Second Ave. to 3d St., east on 3d St. to Avenue A, and will wind up jon 7th St. and Avenue A. | Thousands of leaflets rallying the unemployed Workers of downtown | New York to the parade have been | distributed. One of the important | Speakers will be Ben Gold, Com- |munist candidate for President of the Board of Aldermen. 1,000 Shenango Valley |Workers Attend Steel Union Meet in Masury | YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio.—Over 100 jworkers from the Shenango Valley | responded to a mass meeting called |by the Steel and Metal Workers | Industrial Union in Masury, Ohio, | last Sunday. | | | This sentiment of the workers has | the company and city officials very |much worried. State troopers have |been guarding the mill gates and |the highways looking for picket$ from strike areas. The city officials | knew that there would be a good meeting in Masur’ they arrested |Henry Mack, the | organi £ tl | in Fa before th lf meeting. ame night the police raided of e the headquarters the union in Farrell, Pa, ‘ un- a long time, a sus- | pended case of the Home Relief Bu- eau, had his. furniture turown imto | the street while he was not at home. Salvatore Favara of 5 Jackson St., Was thrown into the street with |his new furniture. He was not a |Home Relief Bureau case. The com- | mittee went to the Home Relief Bu- reau and forced them to give this family a check and they were put into a new apartment. Sara Silver, 290 Hendrick St., has two children and is unemployed. The marshal came yesterday morning at 10 o’clock with an eviction notice and then had the furniture put out on the street. The furniture is deco- rated with a Blue Eagle,“ We Do Defeat Motion to Enlarge A. F. L. Executive Council Unprincipled Fight; Rank and File Is Desirous of Industrial Organization By B.D. WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 12.—The attempt to enlarge the A. F. of L. Executive Council, engineered mainly by heads of unions with industrial charters, as distinct from the craft unions mainly of the building trades, mustered some 6,725 votes yesterday on roll call out of a total of 21,360 votes in the convention. The Brewery Workers’ Union, the Metal Miners, the United Textile Worker thee — and United Mine Workers were the unions|of maay strikes now going on there with industrial charters supporting |js seen to be little if any difference the proposal to increase the numbef} in the sentiment of the workers in- of vice presidents in the Council from | volved; in their attitude toward A. F. 8 to 25, The T al Union| of L, officials and policies; in regard ed a mpromise | to mass methods of struggzc, esti~ for increasing the Council to 15, but) mates of the N.R.A. codes, etc., no favored the general propose 1-| matter to whi anization they larging it. The LT.U movement for ind affilia al side its ranks. with the inner politics of t ship, the Printing Pres Bricklayers union ¢ lution for enlargi: Amalgam Steel and Tin Workers, Mike Tighe, is the only uni industrial charter which opr move, It would be wrong to aserit an honest motive as a strengthen the st of L. by a st wnionism replac structure to John L. Li ed the movement agree with the advc~se report of official committee “hich took high ground that “it has been the Ba indust | old ¢ who head- ther can one for the to decentralize the growing pow control within our labor moy | «+» Through this method direct rep-| resentation is effected without the} dangers inherent in the proposal we | are reporting upon.” | progressive policy of the A. F. of L.| i id| ion leaders of the boil+ cksmiths, machinists nd to some extent the electrical although ‘they are today of a building trades organiza- feel tk the are fighting them r special craft interests were own in the recent bitter jurisdic- ional fight with the Brewery Work- herein the lines of conflict were exactly the same as in the the resolution to enlarge Council. he officials whose struggle ds this expression there volved, but there m but that large of the membership favor ¢ changes in the A. F. of L. re. The struggle around this ue in the present convention, no. matter how much disguised, reflects pressure from workers who pay dues and, as President Howard of the I.T.U. was forced to declare in an outburst of unwonted frankness, is one means of “restoring confidence” can be no qu ew rene The truth of the matter is that|of the rank and file in the leaders great pressure for removing obstacles|who sadly need some issue on which of craft division and jealousy in the| they can speak in militant terms, way of rapid organization of the big| without immediate danger of their industries is being exerted by the| control of the union machinery being membership—as well as from ou taken from them. by the increasing number of mi mass struggles led by the unions of | the Traie Union Unity League; there is the obvious fact that in the course | | 300 Cotton Pickers — ‘Evicted in Strike, Thrown Out: on Road Tom Mooney’s Jailer, Is Preparing to Send Troops TULARE, Calif. Oct, 12—Three | hundred cotton pickers, of the eigh- teen thousand on strike in California for $1.00 per hundred pounds, have | been evicted. Evictions have taken place in Fresno, Kings, Tulare, Kern and Madera counties, where six pick- ets were murdered. Belongings are |dumped in the road and left there. | | Women and children are suffering | intensely. | Gov. Rolph, who keeps Tom Mooney in jail, is holding the militia ready against the cotton pickers. The six workers were murdered when armed growers, vigilantes, and deputies fired on unarmed strikers. In Arvin, Pete | Subia was killed and three were | |wounded. At Pixléy three pickets | | were killed and 15 wounded, Two | were killed at Corcoran, Four grow-| | ers agents have been arrested, charg- ed with murder. Mass funerals are | being arranged, as -well as mass| meetings throughout the state, de- manding the right of the strikers to | arm in self-defense, The United Farmers League has joined w strikers in a united the finance corpo: small farmers, merchants and others, inciting terror against the strikers. | Growers are attempting to incite race prejudices, many of the strikers being Mexican, Negro and Filipino workers, as well as whites, The strikers are standing solid in the face of this terror, The Hoover ranch at Waco | is threatening eviction of strikers. The growers have even refused N.R.A. “mediation” and are organ- izing shot gun squads. The capital- ist press is forced to admit the cold- blooded attack of the growers. | On Saturday the Daily Worker has Our Part,” and underneath it it says, “We cannot eat the Blue| 8 pages. Increase your bundle order Eagle.” for Saturday! | | of-O BE able to speak Russian! The ce Janguage in which an entire new world is being created! 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One hundred | and fifty world famous language pro- | fessors of Columbia, Oxford, Cam- | | bridge, the Sorbonne, Bonn, Lenin- grad and other universities made ‘RUSSIAN The Lanuage of the Hour) PEAK what they say and why it is so popu- | lar, Send for it, it’s FREE. | LINGUAPHONE HOME STUDY COURSES: Russian French Italian German Spanish Polish Swedish Dutch Trish Afrikaans English Chinese | Latin Greek Persian Japanese Esperanto Bengali Visit Our Studio ely | FREE DEMONSTRATION |LINGUAPHONE INSTITUTE | |3 Rockefeller Center, New York City | LINGUAPHONE INSTITUTE 3 Rockefeller Center, N. ¥ Without cost or obligation pleace send” your Free Book D.W. and details of your “Pay As You Learn Plan.” | | eM | “dropped” 3.8 index points, The Commerce Report also says that payrolls “continued their upward trend” in August. But again these increases were slight and not uni- form, as shown by tables in the re- port.’ And these reports, of couise,! charge that employers are actually reducing total pay rolls in complying with minimum wage and maximum hour requirements, and that they are attempting to turn the, whole drive for increased purchasing power into another ‘share the-work’ yovement.” Linguaphone the simplest and sound- | | | est way to master a language cor- | | T'Wish To Speak — | rectly. Name ~ The new illustrated Linguaphone erred Book tells how to acquire a language, arate = who made Linguaphone, who uses it, OUT, ion sera tint vs OUT OF TOWN AFFAIRS Daily, Worker Tr ee e given by the Fifth Ward Daily Committee at Elks Rest, 2315 Ave, Refreshments. Admis- Wylie sion 16c. Gary, Ind. OCT. 14: Vetcherinka given by the Working Women’s Progressive Organization and all Russian Branches at 224 W. 15th Ave. Dai Los Angeles Section Comrade MacHarris, touring for the Daily Worker, with the great Soviet Film “Ten Days That Shock The World” and “Bread” will ba showr in the following cities on the dates listed below for the benefit of the Dally Worker: Oct. 14—Pasadena Oct. 15—San Bernadino Oct. 16—Alhambra Oct. 17—San Diego Oct. 18—Long Beach Oct. 21—Santa Barbara Oct. 22 to 26 inclusive— Monterey, Santa Cruz and Watsonville Oct. 27—Carmel Cleveland OCT. 14: Dance given by the Bride Block Com: e 2 all, 528¢ Broadway, OCT. 14: House Party arranged by Unit 17 at 4389 W. 50th St. at 8 p.m. Goer program OCT. 14: Dance and Entertainment given by Unit 12 at the Finnish Workers Olub, 4593 Detroit Ave. at 8 p.m. OCT. 15 House Party arranged by Unit 3-4¢ at the home of 8. Halper, 3779 E. 154th St. at 8 p.m. OCT. 15: Big Affair arranged by Section 11 at Workers Center, 3843 Woodland Ave.. 3rd floor, at 8 p.m. Entertain- ment, Sterioptican slides on the Workers Press, Columbus Relief March and Views from the soviet Union. Toledo OCT. 15: Testimonial Banquet and Program for the readers and subscribers of the Dally Worker at the Jewish I.W. , 410 E. Bancroft 8st 7.30 p.m. Auspices, the Daily we Committ-> of ‘Toledo Section, Ad: mission free. Chicago OCT. 14: Finnish Workers Club, will give ® dance and entertainment at Im- perial Hall, 2409 No. Halsted Street + at 8 pm. Admission 20 cents, OCT. 15: Concert and Dance. Auspices of M. Winchevsky Workers Club, at 4004 W. Roosevelt Road. Bxcellent pro- gram. Admission 15 cents. OCT. 17: A city-wide meeting of Daily Worker readers will be held at People's Au- diterium, 2457 W. Chicago Avenue ‘The Velunteers Committee will be elected at this meeting to carry on the work for the benefit of the Daily Worker. Argo, Ill. HOTA: ven by all revolvttionary or- tions rgo et 6219 Arehet n 15 cents. Philadelphia miven by the TLD. lin Street. Admis- ‘Ths affair is for the benotit ef the Drily Worker and the TLD. Convention, OCT. 20th: Gola Coneert at Turnzemeinde Mall Broai and Cclumbus Ave. Rebert Minor, Candidate on the C. P. ticket in New York will be the main speak Interesting program. mission 35 gents, aa 7 ROB