The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 3, 1933, Page 3

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800 Brookly | ovals Reject Pact “Signed by Bosses and Union Officials \ Rank and File Group 1 Get Endorsement NEW YORK.—Local 808 of the International Longshore-| men’s Association in Red| Hook, Brooklyn, went on-rec- | ord at the membership meeting Monday night, repudiating the agreement of the leadership ‘md the bosses. ‘ The local called upon the other LL. A. locals to support them and to arrange for a central mass meet- ing of Brooklyn longshoremen to discuss steps for forcing the bosses to meet the requirements of. the the local in accord with the pro- gram put forward by the National Rank and File Action Committee of the I. L. A. | Three more locals have voted to support the stand of Local 808. | * * * a ' NEW YORK. — Eight hundred Red Hook longshoremen repulsed an attack on a‘ mass meeting Wednesday night, called by the Rank and File Action Committee to discuss the new agreement of the bosses and the International Longshoremen’s Association, of gangsters led by the delegates Patsy and Carmardo. Patsy. was knocked down and the gangsters driven off. The police arrived at President and Columbia Streets after the » gangsters had been driven off. and attempted to arrest one of. the | militant longshoremen. The work- ers stopped them and made the po- lice march with them to the LL.A. ! hall and arrest the. gang, who were ' later freed by the night court'mag- istrate, who tcld the men they could swear out warrants. The first de- - tachment of police told the workers » that they were afraid to bring, out | the gangsters and barricaded them- selves inside the hall until -rein- _ forcements arrived. Efforts of the | gang leaders to disperse the crowd | by telling them that the I.L.A. had “won you 10¢ an hour increase” ere met by the booing of the-men. The meeting had been called to iscuss the new agreement which he ILL.A. leaders were forced to make this week by the pressure of the membership, led by the rank and file groups in the various lo- cals. The agreement doesn’t provide for improved working conditions and the rank and file groups called the ; meeting to outline steps to force these into the local agreements, Continue Meeting After the attack had been -re- pulsed the men marched back and ) continued the meeting. They en- thusiastically voted to send a rank and file delegation to the code hear- ings in Washington on Nov. 9 and voted to call a central mass meeting of all Brooklyn longshoremen to .elect the delegation and to diseuss ‘{che demands. A delegation-was }{blected to go to the Board of Edu- ation and demand that the board give them use of a school auditor- jum for the meeting. A previous meeting in a school was cancelled at the last minute by school offi- cials, acting on the orders of Joseph P. Ryan, president of the I.L.A. The Rank and File Action Committee were endorsed as the leaders of the men in the fight against the leader- ship and the bosses. A motion to fight for the 1929 agreement, in- cluding working conditons and.over- time pay of that period, was passed. All the proposals were voted™un- animously- A collection of $5.00 was taken. TAX APPEALS DE! UNION CITY, Nov. 2. — Because they came a day late, the State Bogrd of Tax appeals turned down the applications of 263 appellants yesterday. CITY AFFAIRS BEING HELD FOR THE. BENEFIT OF THE Daily, qlorker Friday, Nov. 3: Batertainment and Dance vc aie wiven. by ‘Workers ‘Trend in Modern ture” at the Brownsville Youth Cen- ter, 106 Thatford Ave., Brooklyn, at 8.90 p.m. 5 Saturday, Nov. 4: Coney hepa rth fia mgs B agemr4 Marten by Leonard Posner om the piano; 818 E. 180th 8 pm. Movie Lenin” Showing of the “Land” of and the “Struggle for Bread” by Rabbt Go will play. Concert auspices of Boro iay Br. at I.W.0, Center, 1875 43rd St, Brooklyn. _Frefhelt Mani Mn Orchestra, 1.L.D. Chorus, 1.W.0. Drama Group will be there, Goncert and Dance, Spanish Music at 1664 Madison Avenue, Arranged by Unit 409 See. 4, Dancing till dawn, Ex-Investigator Reveals Cruelties of Tammany Agencies With Empty Promises The following is the first of x series of articles by Elizabeth Potam- kin, a former investigator of the Wome Relief Bureau in New York City. These dramatic articles, revealing toward the unemployed, are appearing simultaneously Worker and the “Hunger Fighter,” employed Councils. > By ELIZABETH POTAMKIN I WAS one of the unemployed. With the creation of Emergency Home Relief and outdoor welfare, I was given a job, but not until I discovered cay E: just what strings fo pull to make Tammany notice me as a potential vote, That made me another white collar worker saved from de- spair, and I was glad to have the job—$20 a week. I had spent two thousand dollars in capitalist in- stitutions to equip myself as a social worker. Of all the social work courses I took, I never came across a simple statement by Karl Marx. This state- ment covers the whole field of social work under capitalism: “Capitalism will do everything for the worker but get off his neck!” Hence charity, in the form of hos- pitals, foundations, recreation centers, settlement houses. Now with the New Deal, Home Relief, Reforesta- tion, Fascism. I wish to relate here some of my experiences in Home Relief: One of the first cases I visited as an in- vestigator was a man living alone. Neither then nor now were we feed- ing men living alone, The policies of Home Relief change and vacillate with the day like the policies of all the muddled politicians who control administration. Nevertheless, I was advised by the supervisor to contact the man—the idea being that some day we might feed him, The whole idea of Home Relief is to drug the people with false promises, keep them quiet, even if investigators have to be run ragged—after all, investigators are only workers. I readily under- stood her instructions. I agreed. I found the man in despair, sur- roundings bare—no food in the house. With the sual instructions from headquarters, I said, “You will have to show proof of two years’ residence in New York State and City if you wish me to help you,” He was hun- gry and irritated by my crispness. “Don’t be in a hurry,” he said, “I've been starving for a long time, lady.” Child Driven Crazy I felt a little ashamed, took a seat and listened patiently. I, too, had long been unemployed. He had had a daughter—an only child, his wife was dead. He had lavished all his affection upon her, but since he was an unskilled needle worker, had been unable to provide for her adequately. She had to go to work at an early age in a paper box factory, a little dump that drove her insane, and her EMBER 3, 1938 n Dockers Smash Gangster Attack on Meeting Home Relief Dope Jobless Workers the brutality of Tammany officials in the Daily official organ of the New York Un- * . mania took this form: She would travel from one room to another and ferret out every scrap of paper in the place, tear it to shreds, and throw it down the tene- ment air shaft. In this way she destroyed every paper the man had. Her father despaired. He could do nothing for her. She was taken to an institution for the insame. “Now, you see, I have no papers to prove my residence in New York State or City!” he said. I returned to my supervisor, re- lated this tale. “Good,” she said, “now we have a good excuse. We do not need to. feed him, Now put on his history sheet: “CASE NOT ACCEPTED. MAN HAS NO PROOF OF RESIDENCE.” Signed by the supervisor, O’ked in red ink by the investigator. A com- plete record for the files for state and city, We must preserve these records! “Did You Bring Food?” Wie Ill, Worker to Give Up Children in Face of Eviction NEW YORK—With his wife in the hospital, and his three little chil- aren without food and depending upon his care, Comrade Concepcion, a very active worker in the Unem- ployed Council of Red Hook, was served an eviction notice by the marshal. Unemployed for many months, Comrade Concepcion, like many other Spanish speaking workers, founr it hard to obtain aid from the Home Relief Bureau. . His wife is expected to remain in the hospital for a num- ber of months. He is so badly off that he asked for a sympathetic family to volunteer to take care of his children during his wife’s illness. Antonoff Calls for Protest for Borich Deported Worker Says NEW YORK.—Todor Antonoff who has been ordered deported on Nov. 8, when the Department of Labor re- fused to re-open the case despite the protests of thousands of workers I came to Tillie Schneider’s house. She is seven years old. Her eyes are much older. They have that questioning look: “Did you bring me some food?” I am tired and ir- titable. I have been climbing stairs all day—tenement stairs, hard and cold. I speak in a loud voice, “Where is your father?” I must see the man of the household—he may be work- ing—a source of income is a most serious offense, to the Home Relief Bureau. To the unemployed, a source of income is fantasy, but Home Relief really believes we have lots of money. Tillie motions with finger to her lips that I must be quiet. She says softly: “Pop is sleeping in the other room, He must not know I am hungry—it makes him nervous, and. yesterday when I asked for food he cried just like me.” Mr. and Mrs. Donatelli greet me at the door. Mrs. Donatelli is too eager to tell me her troubles—‘My husband he no work, what are you going to do?” She goes on with the now familiar, oft-repeated tale of woe—but Tony, age 4, brings new realization to me: “Mom, can I have @ piece of tomato? Mom, I want a piece of tomato.” In my fatigue, I see quick visions of vegetables dumped in rivers for the profits of the few. In California a tournament was staged where men and women had a lot of fun throwing eggs at each other. A good time was had by all. Electrification of our country—the cheapest commodity for which we pay the highest rates. Too poor to pay, electricity at Osterman’s is shut off. There are four children. The baby, nine months old, creeping in the darkness, severely burns his side against the pot-bellied kitchen stove for J. P. Morgan and for Mr. Mellon. Eternal light for Mr, Edison, throughout the country, yesterday is- sued an appeal to the workers, and particularly to all members of the trade unions, to support the Inter- national Labor Defense in its fight to save Borich from deportation. “Borich belongs to the miners,” Antonoff declared in an interview with a Daily Worker reporter. “Especially now when the miners are in desperate struggle against the N. R. A. and the bosses, fighting for living conditions, must every effort be made to prevent the deportation of this militant leader. It is the task of every class-conscious worker, and every intelligent person, particularly the native born workers, to raise their voices in protest against the strike- breaking activities of the Department of Labor. “If I am being deported, it. is not because the Department of Labor has any evidence against me, but because the workers and particularly the trade union members did not protest strongly enough. Therefore, I again appeal to the American work- ing-class to do everything in its power to save Borich, Bob Wold, Edith Berkman, Sam Paul and others for the American revolutionary move- ment. No matter where I go I shall still carry on my activities for the working-class.” Antonoff declared that “the so- called liberal lady, Frances Perkins” has become a real strike-breaker and is actively aiding the bosses in de- porting militant foreign born workers and leaders of the trade unions in an attempt to smash the revolution- ary unions, . STUDENTS AGAINST WAR NEW YORK.—Two hundred Uni- versity students adopted a resolution that they would not co-operate with the United States War Department in the event of war, at a meetin: Wednesday night. Socialist Nominee SERPS aN (Continued from Page 1) deny the evidence of these photo- static copies? eRe ‘HE second charge of the Daily Worker is that Solomon used the injunction against striking workers. It was in December, 1929, in the strike of the Food Workers Industrial Union against the open shop Miller Food Market, 866 Union Ave., Bronx, that Solomon used the injunction against the workers. It was in this strike that Steve Katovis was mur- dered on the picket line by one of Whalen’s detectives, who later re- ceived an honorary decoration from Whalen for his work. The official records of the city manafier of Solomon’s law firm, sought an injunction for the boss A the ST his Tate agains ibe bidbing food workers, ‘ectomon also had the food ‘kers in 1929-30, sunt ‘ormation is part of the of- The Daily Worker is to show all workers the of these documents. The Communist Party believes that the workers of New York are entitled to an explanation from 5 when he makes use of them je regen Daily Worker invites com- parison between Solomon’s record on injunctions and that of the junist candidate, Robert protest demonstra- tion at City Hall against the mur- der cf Steve Katovis while at the same moment Solomon was in Perr te ott eee ! a ———————— To the above named Defendant appearence on the Plaintiff's Attorney within tient il Keeps Silent Re tbe coment Cosham A Rhee Say, fe en oe Yok Tene Ba #8 ow ort ferrbg Summoned to answer the complaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your anewer, of, if the complaint is not served wish th summons to serve a notice of days after the service of thie summons, exclusive ofthe day of service and tn ease of your falure'to appear, or answer, default, for the rll deasoed i cha emo? SAMORL 3, ROME 2 Ht ‘Attornéy for Plainti‘t verano "88 West Bireee Borough of SOSRIIR New York Cicy | ‘Phis is the summons issued by the Bronx Supreme Court in behalf TOMAR, WASSERIUS, individual ATK UNION, LOCAL ivy, Affiliated | Sita, the Aunligama ted forners of Toea amor iea, against the Food Workers’ Industrial Union. - lawyer appearing on the summons, is Samuel 8S. Solomon’s office at 66 Court St., Brooklyn, and Defocadants. Se eoceex Plaintift?, by OOLIBMS & SOLOMON, ite attorneys, |(\ eusplaining of the defendants alleges: PmSts That the plaintiff, Netail airy and Grocery A ante aden 20 Rene ten Cam went ight against injunctions Photostat of the affidavit for an injunction filed by Charles Solomon Pemnt eee an 8 =e W898 in January, 1980, through his firm Goldman and Solomon, 66 Court St., Brooklyn, asking an injunction for the A. F. of L. union which “signed up” the boss of Miller's Market, Bronx, several days after the strike began, The injunction was against the Food Workers’ Industrial Union. court demanding the injunction be granted, Every worker knows how Minor was arrested for fighting on the picket line against the recent in- Janction against the furniture workers, The election approaches. The workers must know the truth about Solomon, The Daily Worker will be happy to discuss the whole matter with any Socialist worker who wants to get the All Must Support ILD; Sheriff and Labo | | | | evidently aided by the Hamilton been cut instead of raised. ‘The letter says: ers of America. I was sworn in wi or 126 members. I with 4 others wa: Aug. report to the body, that in this mill raising them.” fare OF, HAMILTON copnty 7” er REG rary coer Hy : ers’ organizations is reproduced in the letter below. sheriff, on whose stationary he writes that the workers are complaining that under the N.R.A. their wages have r Spy Cooperate La ea} Nad 3 ‘amen oH ssa we ; An example of the vicious methods of labor spies used against work- This stool pigeon, County, Chattanooga, chief deputy s his letter, tells his slimy employers “Attended the union meeting of Local 1744, United Textile Work- ith about 25 others. The president, A. M. Liner, is employed at Richmond. The Standard-Coosa Co, was represented by 5 women, who joined. The National Yarn Co. has 125 s selected a delegate from this local to represent them at the Chattanooga Labor Council, Monday Week, The vice-president, whose name I did not get, made the following they were cutting wages instead of (FP Pictures) Conference when it opens on Chicago Activities in the field from now will in all likelihood bring the total onference a rallying ground of rank- and-file delegates where the i rediate problems of the farming discussed and here plans will-be drawn up to real relief in place of the double ling promises of the Roosevelt New al administration. | From. 40. States At least forty. states will have di tes at this “conference. This een more. states than were nted at “the First Fari Conference held- in “December, indicating that the desire for and organization of United Front Action has spread throughout practically the entire country, From Iowa, which had no delegates | at the last conference, fifty delegates are promised. Organizers are already at work in Kansas, which was like- wise not represented. at the last con- ference. Thirty delegates, Negro and white, will scon be on their way from Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, and Louisiana, to. bring the prob- | lems and experiences of the busted farmers and Negro sharecroppers of the South to the conference and to cement their solidarity with farmers throughout the rest of the country. Of these four states only a was represented at the last _conference. Nebraska already has fifty dele- gates elected. Under the auspices of the Nebraska Holiday Association, work is under way to increase the number to one hundred. Roberts county, South Dakota, one of the banner counties in the entire United Farmers League . organization, has elected 10 delegates while Brown and Perkins counties have elected six delegates each. Eleven other South Dakota counties, at least, will send delegates. Sheridan county, Montana, has set its goal ab 25 delegates, over twice the number sent to the last conference, and is rapidly approach- ing its goal. Two trucks and one car are already lined up to bring delegates from the four northeastern Montana counties. The work ef organizing the con- ference is going on step by step with the organization of local struggles by the farmers in many parts of the ceuntry. In Moose Lake, Minn., one hundred and fifty farmers forced the return of livestock and machinery to © farmer who was to be sold out— and they did it wthout any sale. The struggle was conducted under the leadership of the United Farm- ers League, which had sent Reino Tantialla, Minnesota U. F. L. or- ganizer, into the territory to organize @ delegation to the Chicago con- ference. The United Front of busted farmers which took part in this ac- tion unanimously elected the farmer who was to be sold out, and whom they helped, to represent them at Chicago. In McPherson county, South Da- kota farmers massed recently to pre- vent the eviction of one of their number by an insurance company Farmers from 40 States Get Ready for Nov. 15 Conference 600-750 Delegates Prepare Fighting Program for Chicago Gathering By EXIK BERT Reports to the Farmers National Committee for A assured (otal of at least 600 delegates for the Farmers Second National m indicate an on Noy. 15, until the opening of the conference of delegates to 750 or even to one thousand. The enthusiastic response ¢——-——_-_—_——_-— @ to the Con: coming. | he impoverished farmers see in this| Emmons count North Dakota, under the leadership of the militant O. F. L. is sending a delegation. But before they go to Chicago they are going to participate in a county-wide hunger merch on the courthouse in Linton on Nov. 7, to force immediate cash relief from the county commis- sioners, The farmers from Emmons county will be able to tell nearly a thousand other farmers at Chicago how they organ the march and wha’ the year there will be de! from the Chicago, City, and New York milk sheds. farmers in all these milk The sheds, who have betn in struggle during the past year, have learned through their own experience that only mass ac- tion under rank and file leadership win results for them in their Tuggles against the milk trust and against the rest of the exploiting class. For this reason they are send- ing their delegates to Chicago where mass struggle and rank and file lead- ership will be the basis for plans for nationwide struggle against capital- ist robbery and oppression, especially in its New Deal form. Fight Against Reno Farmers throughout the country and especially members of the Holi- day Association can witness again the rankest betrayal of their interests by Milo Reno, president of the Na- tional Farm Holiday Ass'n. Once again Reno has ordered the farmers not to picket in their strike strug- gles, once again he is attempting to S| toria, for wages of $5 for an 8-| strike. Boss Pays $500 to Cops \F or Anti-Strike Action WILMINGTON, Del., Nov. 2.—In appreciation of the strikebreaking service of the local police, Peter A. |Blatz, superintendent of the Amal- gamated Leather Co. yesterday sent a check of $500 to the Director of Pub- lic Safety. For thirteen weeks the police har- ried strikers who were demanding higher wages. The police acknowl- edged the bribe with thanks and turned it over to their pension fund. Untermyer Locks Qut Union Painters’ Scabs To Do! Work at Lower Pay | | YORK.—After locking out ion Pa ’ Union men in | Astoria, Long Island, Samuel Un- | jtermyer refused to see a commit-| tee sent by the painters and de-| clared he would have nothing to} do with the union. Untermyer is |hiring scabs at lower wages and longer hours to do the work of the union men. Union standards were established on Untermyer’s j last Septem- the Alter |ber when aticn Painters’ | Union, affiliated to the Trade Union| | Unity Council, calle! the workers | jout on strike. The workers won! $9 a for 7 hours of work.| |Four weeks later, the painters were locked out and 15 scabs were Jemployed, supplied by the Weisberg | |Painting Co., 2929 Grand Ave., As-| hour day. | Commenting on Untermyer’s ac- tion in refusing to see the paint-| jers who are now on strike, the | |Alteration’ Painters’ Union de- clared: | “Mr. Untermyer, who is a staunch | supporter of the ‘Blue Eagle’ and! a legal and financial advisor to Tammany Hall, is “doing his part,” | |to smash union standards and} levery attempt of the workers to} jor ize and fight to improve} | their conditions. Regardless of his professed loyalty to the NRA he| prefers to employ scabs and beat down union standards on his apart- ment houses in order to squeeze as much profit out of the workers as possible. | “Claiming to champion the| rights of the Jews, Untermyer has no hesitancy to smash the living standards of his Jewish worker.” The union is calling for a dem- onstration in front of Untermy- er's office on Pine Street and | Broadway on Saturday, Novem- | ber 4th at 10 a. m. and calls all members of the A. F. of L. Brotherhood to join in the de- mand that Untermyer come | across with union conditions and take back the union painters locked out last week. The Trade Union Unity Council | }calls on all affiliated organizations to rally their members to participate in the demonstration before Unter- | myer’s office on Saturday. WEAVERS THREATEN STRIKE PATERSON, N. J., Nov. 2.—Pater- |son ribbon weavers have announced |that unless they receive a 10 per cent wage increase within a week they would consider strike action. turn the militant actions of the farm- ers into harmless channels — telling them to wait for him to confer and manoeuver with the New Deal gov- ernors of the midwestern and north- western states. A r ago Milo Reno sold out the | Sioux City strike through a gov- ernors’ conference. He sold out the last national strike even before it d, by conferences with Roose- 's agent in the northwest, Gov- ernor Olson of Minnesota. Since then he has been conferring with New Deal politicians and business men to curb the farmers’ struggles. Now comes this latest betrayal. The farmers are learning that this is not the way to better conditions. They are learning that if results are to be obtained they will be obtained through their own mass action act- g under their own elected rank and file leaders, responsible to them and not to the bankers and ‘their poli- tical henchman. The farmers are learning whose interests are served by Milo Reno and the lesser Milo Renos throughout the country. That is why the Farmers Second National Conference will be his- toric as the greatest national con- ference of rank and file farmers and as a starting point for even greater and more determined struggles in the American country- side, North, South, East and West —from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from the Canadian border to the Gulf and the Rio Grande. BOSTON, Oct. 31—An exhibit of Marx-Lenin writings and works is to be held for three days at the John Reed Club Hall, 825 Boylston St., be- sinning Sunday, ge, That evening H. M, Wicks will lec- § ture in the same hall on “The His- torical Role of Marxism.” On Monday eve- ning there is to be a lecture on another subject in the same hall, and Tuesday night is reserved ! as “Party Night,” 7 With the ant cee te ene meetings called for % o'clock to take up the most pressing questions and then the entire membership of the units will go to the lecture on “The Basic Principles of Marxism- Leninism.” First Showing In U, S. from the land on which he had been living 24 years. This is one of the counties from which a delegation is The array of documents, photo~ graphs and other material that makes up the exhibition was gathered Marx-Lenin Exhibit Opens in Boston With Lecture by Wicks from many parts of the world and | has been shown in a number of Eu- | ropean countries including the U. S. | |S. R. It was brought to the United | States and mounted so that it can | be exhibited and easily transported. ADVERTISEMENTS CHICAGO | | | | | CONCERT Saturday, Nov. 4, 1933 AY WINCHEVSKY CLUB ROOMS 4001 W. Roosevelt Ra. Admission only 15e. Good time assured Auspices: City Central Committee Women’s Councils SN Film Showing ef Gorki’s Famous Novel “MOTHER” Sunday, Nov, 5, 1933 CARPENTERS CENTER ‘3317 Wy Roosevelt Ra. ‘The picture will be shown twice 1 p.m, till 9 pm. andgd p.m. till 11 p.m Three Women’s Councils of West Side Leaders of Detroit Tool Strike Break Workers’ Ranks Auto Union Calls for Organized Retreat to Build Union By A. B. MAGIL DETROIT.—Matthew Smith and Jay J. Griffen, leaders of the Me- chanics Educational Society, whose reactionary policies have broken. the ranks of 17,000 striking tool and die~ makers and have provoked many of, | them to desperate acts of terrorism, are now playing the role of open stoolpigeons by publicly putting the blame for these acts on the militant rank and file workers. Smith declared to officials of Gen- eral Motors that he had nothing to do with these acts, that “the radi= cals” had gotten control of the strike and they were responsible. At the same time Smith and his. clique are preparing to go once more to Washington to take part in the hearings on the code submitted by the National Tool and Die Machine | Institute. Monday night more than 5,000 strikers carried through a peaceful picketing drmonstration at the Fisher Body ; This is the key plant in the strike. It is the only. one where the strike is still solid, and, significantly enough, it is the plant where the militant rank and file opposition succeeded in gaining control in the early days of the The militant Auto Workers Union, whose influence among the strikers has steadily grown, is calling for an’ organized retreat that will make possible the building up of organiza- tion in preparation for new strike struggles of all auto workers. The A. W. U. also urges the mem- bers of the M. E. S. to demand the election of rank and file delegates to go Washington for the hearings on the employers’ code, OUT OF TOWN AFFAIRS FOR THE J Daily, Morker Contra Ports USA Boston NOV. 3rd: “What I Sow In Soviet Russia” will be the lecture by Dr. 8. Pavlo at Curry Hall, 12 Huntington Ave. near Copley Square, under the auspices of the American Workers Chorus. Ad- mission 20c. Chicago, Ill. NOV. 4th: “Arabian Night,” = colorful evening of entertainment and music at 7610 Lestlake Terrace, given by Unit 401. Adm. 15e, City Central Committee of the Wo- mens’ Councils will hold a Concert at M. Winchevsky Club, 4004 W, Roosevelt Road. Adm. I5¢. Musical Bntertainment, Ukraintan Mandolin Orchestra, John Reed Club Chalk Talk at 3345 N, Clark St, Aus- pices Lakeview Daily Worker Comm. NOV. 5th: Film showing of M. Gorki's famous noval “Mother,” will be shown at 3317 W, Roosevelt Rd, at 7 pm, and 9 p.m. Auspices of West Side Womens’ Councils. Racine, Wis. NOV. 5th: Gala Affair at Foster's Hall, 417 Wis- consin St, Starts at 7.30 p.m. Good time assured! Lincoln, Neb. NOV. 7th: iéth Anniversary of the Russian | Revolution at minent program. Hotel Nebraska. Pro- Speakers. Special musical Starts 8 pm. Los Angeles NOV. 5th: Extraordinary Concert, Music, Bn- tertainment and Drama to be hel¢ at 214 Loma Drive at 8 p.m. Detroit A well known Soviet film tly Worker: NOV. 8rd: Martin Hall, 495° Martin Ave, of the halls mentioned above. All showings begin at 7:30 sharp. Ad- mission 15¢, Philadel phia NOV. 38rd: Helloween Party and Dance given by Italisn Labor Sports Club and the Women’s League at 1208 Tasker St: Good music and prizes for best eos- tume. Adm, 250. Cleveland 3 NOV. 4th: Dance and Entertainment at the Finnish Workers Hall, 4538 Detroit Ave. at 8 p.m. under auspices of. Unit 12. 1) ©. Ford, Communist candidate for Mayor, will be main speaker, Latke (pan cake) Party at the Work- ers Center, 756 ¥. 108th St. at § p.m. Slide Ohlo Relief March and towns will be shown, Arranged by Unit 2-23, NOV. 5th: Scandinayien Workers Club and Unit 2-24 will hold a Dance at 7010 Wade Park Ave, Macedonian - Bulgarian Educational Club and Unit 14 will hold an En- fertainment and Social at 30615 Madison Ave, pm, California ‘The great Soviet film “1905 adapt- ed from M. Gorki's famous novel “Mother” will be shown in the fol- lowing cities on the dates listed be- low for the benefit of the Daily Worker, Comrade Ed. Royce is touring with this film. Nov. 6—Santa Monica, Nov, 7—San Diego. Noy. 8—Boyle Heights (Belve- dere) rear, of the Soviet Union, J. Roosevelt-

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