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® YLY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1933 Determined to Fight for Their Farms Page Three STRIKE COMPELS SEATTIE WELFARE BOARD VOTE TO | AGAINST FORCED LABLR | —_—_ —--—-— Jobless; on Strike Two Weeks, Capture Four WALL STREET'S | Mass Meeting Will | Mark 1st Memorial By serie L for J. L. En g dahl ‘HE recent abruptly interrupted Nazi propaganda hearirgs| Died Year Ago While | ; should serve as an eloquent warning to those misled Amer- Fighting for Nine | an workers who have been blinded by racial and political Scottsboro Boys | smagogy to the umbilical cord connecting a desperate capital- schslad ry) NEW YORK.—Nov. 22 marks one \ sm with an en- , ‘Naturalization Committee, rang 3 own a fast cur- on the startl- @ testimony of Clarence Hath~- 5 way, editor of the 8. Waldman aily Worker, because things, to use ickstein’s apt words, “got too hot.” (The s became uncomfort- lably “hot” when Representative Hamilton Fish, Jr., wealthy and aris- tocratic Red-baiter to the workers ‘but a “high class citizen and a val- luable member of our House” to Dick~- stein, stood revealed as one of the leading co-workers of the Nazis’ Am~- jerican murder and terror brigade. And “too hot” when Hathaway showed how ridiculous and ignorant Committeeman Focht was in accusing him of being an “anarchist.” mie OR honorable Dickstein describes himself in the Congressional Di- | rectory as “a member of the Grand Street Boys’ Association, Associated Travelers, and many Jewish welfare | and religious organizations, including Paul Revere Lodge No. 929, F. & A. 4; Mystric Shrine, Mecca Temple; | 3. P. O, Elks No. 1, New York City.” Obviously “noble” Dickstein is not in- | terested in providing a forum for the official exposure of the terroristic Nazi capitalistic propaganda and ‘espionage. But he was_ politically | cunning enough to see that many of | the 90,671 people he “represents” in | Congres were sensing that Fascism is | interested primarily not in killing, | torturing, and beating up Jews but in} | brutally crushing militant workers’ | organizations to supply the blood and bone for the propping up of a | collapsing capitalism. | And so an “investigation” of Nazi Propaganda with Dickstein as the People’s Cicero!—something to head off the workers’ awakening and something to throw as a sop to those who, despite recent German history, persist in separating fascism from anti-semitism. Fine. A chase after the already exposed Heinz Svank- noebel which would satisfy not only the Jewish racialists but alsto the bankers and industrialists (Jew and Gentile), the employers of the Spank- noebel, the Hitlers and the Goerings. f IOW, Dickstein could and did sup- F press the fact that the Daily ‘Worker was the agency which had so thoroughly uncovered the Nazi brood in this country—until, for his hearings, he had to have the Nazi letter, first published in the Daily, which revealed the roots of the Nazi organization in America. So, after much iM.tempered wavering, he brought himses!f to the point where he actually sent Hathaway 2h invita- tion to appear. He got more than he bargained for. He got the truth, and the whole truth—something rare indeed in the poisonous political air of Washington, A goodiy percentage of the cor-| respondents, who don’t know whether | States.” (Bold-face mine.) In addition to spreading the truth about Nazi activities in the United 3tates on the record of the commit- tee’s hearings, Hathaway's visit to Washington accomplished something else. It showed the importance of taking advantage of Washington as the journalistic nerve center of the entire nation. It showed that mil- lions of workers may be reached by the simple method of sending a capable and calm representative to every official forum where workers’ interests are discussed. That is one of the ways of giving the masses Jeadership. Editor’s Note: This column will continue to appear every Saturday; it had to be left out last Saturday on account of the large amount of Soviet Recognition news. Terre Haute Stores Pocket 30 P.C. On Every Relief Check TERRE HAUTE, Ind, — Mer- chants here are refusing to give out more than 70 cents on the dol- lar on relief warrants presented to them. The highest amount given on a warrant is $4 and all grocery prices are marked up whenever a warrant is presented, 1,200 Armour Plant Workers Strike for ‘Pay Rise and Union SO. ST. PAUL, Minn., Nov. 17— Twelve hundred workers in the Ar- mour packing plant struck Thursday | night when their demands were turned down by the bosses, Mass picket lines day and night effectively tied up the whole plant. Efforts are now being made to spread the strike to other plants. The strike is led by the Packing Mouse Workers Industrial Unton. The demands of the workers are: 10 cents an hour increase; abolition of piece work for girls, and the speed- up system; maximum 40-hour week, with 31-hour guarantee; time-and- | a-half for overtime over 8 hours per | day; recognition of the Packing House woes Industrial Union. pps Ce Farmers Aid Strikers SIOUX CITY, Iowa.—The farmers jcommittee here for “Uniting city workers and farmers,” are soreading j tions of the police abroad, instructed year since the death of J, Louis Eng- | dahl, former national secretary of the International Labor Defense, ‘This day will be commemorated by ® mass meeting at Irving Plaza, where, at the same time, the Scotts- boro case will be reviewed and the| winter campaign of the New York) district of the International Labor, Defense will swing into action. | J. Louis Encvtgh! w-~ on tion to thousands of workers through- out the world. Always a man of ac-| tion, as well as a writer and speaker, he led numerous demonstrations. Engdahl toured Eurove, tozether with Ada Wright, mother of Roy and Andy, two of the Scottsbo-o boys, where the message of solidarity of white and black workers was brought | to tens of thousands of workers who | Hors) Serdacer asia in boro. ‘The rigors of the tour and the ac- | by the U. 8. Department of Justice, broke down the health of Engdahl, who rushed fom place to place when he was already in need of rest and medical treatment. He died in Moscow Nov, 21, 1932, where he and Mrs. Wright went to attend the conference of the Inter-| national Red Ai4. He was buried in| Moscow with the honors accorded revolutionary mass figures, He will be remethbered above all as one who gave his life in the fight to save the Scottsboro boys. The John Reed Club, the Freiheit Gesangs Verein, New Dance Group and Red Front Rand will atd co'or and drama to this meeting in com- memoration of a comrade who showed by his own actions how the working class must fight fn its own defense. ay 3. Chicago Memorial Nov. 21 CHICAGO, Nov, 19.—At # J. Louis Engdahl Memorial meeting to be held at the Peovle’s Auditorium on ‘Tuesday night, Nov. 21, the workers of Chicago will pledge their allegiance to the cause of the Scottsboro boys and Negro liberation, for which Eng- dah! died. The ashes of Comrade Enzdabl, together with the ashes of Bill Hay- wood and George Sposob, will be dedi- cated to a permanent memorial at the Auditorium meeting. The meet- ing will be used to rally the workers of Chicago to the defense of the Scottsboro boys and their attorneys against the lynch conspiracy of the Alabama ruling class. Metal Workers Strike in Brooklyn Shon for Recognition of Union BROOKLYN, N. ¥.—Workers of | leaflet among Sioux City workers, | varticularly packing house workers, | The leaflet is headed: “Support the | Farmers Strike.” “The fight of the farmers,” it says, “is also the fight of the city workers,” |Chester Dock Men ' Refuse to Load Engels is an_arithmetic formula or Phila, Strike Ships the J. Mass end Sons shop, 78-19th Street, manufacturers of kitchen utensils, went on strike Thurs?7y | when the boss refused their cx- mands for shorter hours and for recognition of their union, the In- dependent Sheet and Metal Union. A. F. of L. officials have been called in by the bosses to help break the strike, but the workers are hold- ing @ solid front and are getting rid of scabs by militant picketing. Many EES o A group of farm dotegates to the historic National Farm Conference, which ended at Chicago yesterday, after three days of action-packed session. ‘These delegates came from over 40 States to hammer out a united fro: | | | | | robbery farm program, which is driving them off | the'r land. The Daily Worker and the Producers News can be seen in the hands of the delegates, mt of struggle azainst the Rooscvelt 650 Massachusetts News Briefs' Tanners on Strike Sentence Kresel Today NEW YORK—Isidore Kresel, con- | | vieted of misapprovriating the funds | NORWOOD, Mass. Nov. 19—The i i " workers of the Winslow Brothers and |0f the Municipal Sa“e Denosit Com- Smith Co. tannery here in Norwood, |?42Y of which he was director and went on strike Wednesday, under the hte mane a A ce leadership of the National Leather) The Municipal Co. is an affiliate of | 2 the Bank of the United States. Its | afen markers, numbering about 650) |failure caused the loss of the life sav- of a 25 per cent increase in wages| NES of thousands of workers and | ms = | widows. through arbitration, finally voted to| i . rag go on strike against the prevailing | , During ee vial ex-Governor miserable working conditions and low | aati AS seg ia wages. The strike so far is almost a |<, omer " . a honesty.” Seabury er hundred UM man ade bad | with the investigation of the infamous scabs have been reported, despite the | .xtortion charges against women efforts of H. Crosby, a company big | ¢.. shot, to break the unity of the strik | — ers, by offering to settle separately, | .. with the workers of the different departments. | med as prostitutes. Kresel faces a maximum penalty of ven years, Seek to Free Capone ATLANTA, Ga.—Attor: | Dhonse Capone, notorious roacketee: * |have applied to Federal Judge Un- Fy * derwood for @ writ of habeas corpus Amter at Two Ohio Meetings; | {5 free Capone, who is serving a ton- November 21, 22 jyear sentence in federal prison for YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio—I Amter,|‘VSding income taxes. National Secretary of the Unemployed | The nens as ite wait is.6 tech- Councils will speak here on spo stir lg ed Fight for Increased Relief and Fed- sons for cerca: Cee ae ee srt jelapsed between the offense and the Workers Industrial Union in Central | !7est of the eri Auditorium. This will be followed by an ad-| dress in Campbell, Ohio, town, where unemployed s' z were ki! at the will draw up a@ series of griev | Grantmocr Colliery nesr here today under the leadership of the S.M.W. jin a blast that rocked the neighbor- LU., which will be used in a mass | hood. campaign for immediate relief. The} Retcue men worked for hours to re- meeting will be held in Ukrainian | cover the bodies of the men. Only Hall, 165 Gordon Ave. |three miners in the colliery at the + * @ National Events 5 Die in Blast Ts ys for Al- | r a certain length of time has | Tov. 19—] Unemployed Mass Meeting | time of the explosion escaped injury. | * | PITTSBURGH—A mass meeting, ALF. of L.Spiking Budd Auto Strike PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Nov, 19.—} Two thousand production men of the| Budd Auto Plant were cailed out on strike last Tuesday, under the lead- ership of the A. F. of L. officials. Workers were not called to decide on oF own demands or strike leader- ship. A few weeks ago when the produc- tion department was busy, the A. F. | of L, leaders, Ritchie and Hynes, did | everything they could to prevent a| strike, At that time the Auto Work- | rs Union had urged the men to| ‘ike, but when a vote was taken,| due to the sabotage of the A. FP. of | |L. the strike was voted down. Evidently the leaders of the A. F.} of L. had no desire to stifle produc- | on. Now when most of the produc- | fon men are out of the plant be-| cause of no work, they decided on | the top to call the men out. Further | preof that they had no desire to! cripple preduction is the fact that| they have not called out the machi- | | nists who are at this time very busy | changing dies for new models and} | doing scab work for Chrys'ers, whose plant ts tied up by a strike in Detro: No concrete demands were ad-} | vanced by the leadership with the! | exception of recognition of the A. of L. union. t jt ‘nists must be brought out plant. The strike of the pro- | men cen be su’ ful if t! machinists are brouzht cut on strike. | These facts were pointed out by the | Auto Workers Union, who issued a | leaftet calling the Machinists to come | out on strike, and fight tegether with | the production men for their wage- | increases ch were promised them | several weeks ago. * The Auto Workers Union urges the | Machado Here | workers to draw up their own de-| "| lynching in all its forms is ra! Relief Bureaus in Main He Battle; 300 Storm adquarters SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 17.—Three hundred unemployed delegates from every part of King County stormed re lief headquarters in Seattle and forced the State Welfare Board to pass a resolution abolishing forced labor in the state of Washington. Previous to this, the King County Welfare Director had been forced to accede to the Unemployed demand: as follows: (1) Recognition of a grievance committee from the Unem- Ployed Citizens’ League with da‘ly contact. (2) No Unemployed to be deprived of food for refusing to i. (3) Clothes and fuel without ¥ (4) No discrimination against Ne and Filipinos. Forced Labor, which Roosevelt is now tryinz to extend to four millon men, has meant sti a. tion for the unemployed of Washing- ton state. The King County Strike forced labor was called on Oct. 3! At Salmon Bay (Ballard) the work- ers captured the Relief Stat‘on and barricaded the place in a fight to restore two sing’e men on relief, Bothell raided the Relief station, cap- Mann Urges Fight for Nine Boys in Farewell Message NEW YORK.—“Save the Scotts- boro Boys! Forward with the fight against lynching!” as the British revolutionary leader sailed for London last week “I am very glad to learn of the irquiry to be made, respecting the lynching of George Armwood in Bal- timore (Nov. 18 and 19), and the attempts to legally lynch the nine innocent Scottsboro boys. “Our comrades in Britain will also be following this public inquest and anti-lynching conference with the keenest of interest, and real solid- arity. “I am myself closely associated with the comrades in Britain, who are carrying on the struggle for Ne- gro rights, and our comrades, I know, will make this inquiry one of 1eal value to the movement against lynch- ing. “We have held repeaied demon- strations in London on the same sub- ject. And the volume of opinion on | behalf of the Negrovs and against idly growing in Britain. “It will be my pleasure on return- ing, to avain take part in any and all such demonstrations, and to help} the movement in every way I can. Allow me to extend the greetings of myself and the comrades of Britain to the delegates who will attend the | conference, and wish them the best | possible success.” This was Tom| | Mann’s last message to the black and | white masses of the United States, | d the Welfare Agents, and forced ief. Redmond forced 83 vouchers ‘om the Welfare after imprisoning belly-robbers for three hours. Woodenville captured the station, cut man i arge to issue relief or else—, They got relief. Communist Lead Strike rbor Heights told the Welfare its “you won't eat until the Un- ed get vouchers.” Again the “s won. Twice the workers on soup line waged battles for food st forced labor. This was second attack on Relief head- rters in the Centennial Building. ce were worried. Gas bombs were ht in. Concession after conces- sion was offered, All right; but stop forced labor was demanded. J. 8. Hall, the Relief Director, tried to split the workers. He promised the county delegates all they asked if they would senarate from the city organization. Hall told us the lead- ers were Communists. “Get rid of them and you'll get what you want.” The workers hai heard this before. They jeered. “Stop forced labor,” they demanded. A school strike had been called. Children came to support their par- ents. A collection was taken from | the police and welfare workers and | milk and sandwiches were brought in. A. F. L. Forced To Support Strike | The Central Federation of the U. C. L. took a recess last Wednesday evening and 250 marched in a body to the Central Labor Council of the A. F. of L. W. K. Dobbins, chairman of the U. OC. L. and Richard Harring- ton, Chairman of State Committee, | presented the conditions of the Un> employed and the strikers demands. Realizing the force of a broad organi- zation and the representatives pres- ent, the A. F. of L. unanimously A | committee to work with the U. ©. L. | Central Strike Committee. | One thousand unemployed have | secured work-relief with wages in | cash since the strike started. The | wage scale has gone up 5 cents an hour on County work. Hours have | been reduced from 8 to 7. | nation against Negzoes and Filipinos by the Welfare Board has been | stopped. The U. C. L. has a recog- | nized grievance committee, to prevent. | discrimination, | To Put Insurance Bill On Ballot This much is the result of two weeks on strike. The job is not done. Organization of many more workers | is needed to carry on the struggle, Committees from every one of the 32 Unemployed Locals in King County | will be at every Relief Station to point out to the Unemployed the Discrimi-.. | value of a fighting organization and Siporin and Marlin that they should join the U. C. L. endorsed the strike and designated a .. young workers are involved in the; .nzed by the 5th Ward Unem~- od Council, will be held at the NEW YORK, Nov. 19. — Gerardo | mands and to elect rank and file com-| | and fight for more relief and better Machado, former bloody dictator of | mittees; do not permit the strike to| @ town in Bohemia, were frankly | labor conditions. Sketched Delegates CHESTER, Pa.—Chester longshore- amazed when Hathaway developed his testimony showing how the Nazi propaganda germs were smuggled in with the help of the egregious Fish men expressed their sympathy with the striking lonzshoremen of Phila- delphia by refusing to load for two Southern Steamship boats, and “other people in high places.” Nor did the press miss the delight- ful irony of the loud, hysterical in- quisitor Focht, stupidly baiting the forceful but thoroughly composed Communist witness Hathaway, it acute pan the antipathy of the! Washington press towards any-| thing even remotely connected with | Communism, the drama attendant on | Fae Pa pant presentation was of the city. of Chester refused to in-| Action | This Conference was attended by nright cases of grave offens» Workers MA RX -l EN I N EXE II BI I the liberal press gave the most mis- | "fere with the striking longshore- By PHIL FRANKFELD fag eoins tthe whote oer ae ee : ies leading account. The Washington Post, recently! bought by banker Eugene Meyer to fs 3 seabbing company. Of the entire|ous unem d organizations here| A few days later, letters were received | standard of living of the jobless to| © nst the splitting tactics Pe bied Sunitly ther Teeene| stew, ooly’ two llers “‘perated!| gre dutenuttyine tear sabetene sna | By all those who had signed the call,| a minimum; of raii@itinposune acc| € | GIRARD MANOR HALL spoke “with well phrased logic and| Winches. open splitting tactics to prevent the | notifying them that they had violated | mands on one hand and doing noth- | n with the struggle | exactness. Hearst's Washintgon Her- | ald even published a picture of Hath-| | the S.S. San Antonio, and the 8.8.) City of Dallas, which were shifted to | | that port from Philadelphia for the | | purpose of loading pipe. | | When the City of Dallas was sent | | to Chester for this purpose of load | | Ing pipe, the longshoremen of Ches- Support from the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union is| strengthening the strike of the In- dependent workers. Zelvy School, 200 Bedford Ave.,|Cuba, is reported here visiting his onight, 17:30, to prenare for the|wife. He came fren Montreal by County Hunger March, Nov. 28, at/auto. He did not disclose to reporters West Park. ‘where he intended. to travel next. ter twice cut the ship loose from its moorings. They refused to handle any cargo at Philadelphia, by means of unskilled scab labor, Policemen | men and picketers of Chester. The seamen of the 8.8, Antonio refused to operate winches for the As a result of the solidarity of the Chester longshoremen with the strik- Pittsburgh W orkers| | Suspended for Unity | PITTSBURGH, Pa. Nov. 19.—The | | Socialist misleaders in control of vari- | desire of the rank and file for unity materialize in united struggles. ference was called tn the the Unemployed Council and in the name of varic and local members of th name official Uv. Cc Tho appealed to twice, the Count Central Committee under Lieber leadership voted against parti some sections of the U. C. L. con- stitution, and telling them that they and delegations; trying m their way im-gs part of vernment relief machinery in order © smooth over the rough edges and to ne xposing the whole apparatus of re- f as intended to cheat, demo; e, ow-beat, and reduce the whole ing to rally the unemployed to fight for either an increase in | be settled without the consent of het | | Srike Committee and the member-} | ship; do not settle without an in-| ‘ crease of wages. | | Socialist Fight Against Demand for Jobless Unity Using Gutter Argu- ments Against Negro n orders of the County e rank and file have rd almost unanimously | 2 tters of the socialist | que, the fight thus far has been} Through an oversight, the draw- ings which appeared on the special Farm Page in Saturday's Daily Worker did not show the names of the artists, These excellent draw- ings were the work of Michel Siporin and Merlin of the Chicago | The Workers’ Bill for Unemploy- | ment and Social Insurance has been | popu‘arized throughout the strike and bi the A. F. of L. Petitions for placing this Bill on the ba'lot will be circulated on a state-wide basis. The Voice of Action, state labor served to carry the news of ke and as an organizer of the ers around the concrete de- John Reed Clab. PHILADELPHIA Tuesday and Wednesday, November 21 and 22 2P. M. to 11 P. M. —— 911 W. Girard Avenue away on the stand, nexi to the head-| ing Philadelphia longshoremen, the| For @ number of months, te Us were summarily Suspended from the | relief and unemployment insurance, pee avd ane Jailian Homers Lecture Both Days by Harry M. Wicks at 8 P. M., on ine: “REP, FISH AIDFD NAZIS,| twi united . e | Socialist Lead : : “ istori 7 ism” CHARGES EDITOR AT QuIZ~Con.| feturn to Pier 40. Bh Philadelphia, with front actions on auite e mamaber of | they had the right to appeal to the | artigo ne pelle ad pf Deve not vel been cated Doe ety eee cee eee gressman met leaders in New York,| out an ounce of cargo in thelr holds. | issues with the Unemployed Citizens | County Committee, lership of the Or rete tng ad; | suMclent vigour. ‘These are: (1) Admission: Afternoon 10¢ Evenings 15¢ Unemployed Se House Inquiry told by Daily Worker Leagues of Allegheny County, whose Socialists Call Police enough. However, some recent im-|U.G.t. ssainet paren, or tne Bie ee aad Ei tecd PUR Sc Ned aL Hold a house party for raising | leaders are Socislists. For this meeting, the socialist clique | provements can be noted, such as:| sions and splitting tactics of the see — paagpate 33 'Y| funds for our Daily Worker. The basis not only for continued | came well prepared. Firstly they ex-| 1. A certain Scull, a chief supporter | alist clique; (2) meetings to be called oe cecnaee copa eae: cae ==_ | united tront—but for one united un-| cluded the rank and file from attend-| of Lieberman, has concluded an| er ait members of the ULC. cithen ie employed organization based on the] ing. Secondly, they had their strong | agreement with the relief authorities xtra-legall Communist organizations in this officially or e: legally to acquaint country” and of “purported Hitler class struggle and militant mass ac-| arm squad at the door ready to sluz| that the Unemployed Citizens League the rank and file with recent de- propaganda activities in the United Bee teed ark ee re eae | ee ee any, ay ld not | will “tnvestigate andl report tiswartky | velopments; (3) a conference to be S O N I A R ADI N A Steesinemeantranntns evilaietacoees! frase, H I L D B ] R T it the united front, This was not only| want to admit those delegates who| cases.” By this is meant that the | cared by various loca's now on record : the Lisberman:Rinre Rochaliae otiaue facta ee fr tce ase | tee eae fob, and earns ¢6-o¢ | 2g0inet susvensions, and involving the , Famous Dramatic Soprano - le 5 : Ye of th art OUT OF TOWN PREN AT ‘AL ¢ ‘ARE that had managed to capture control | gates. Fourthly, the machine was| $10 a Week, he is “unworthy” of re- Te cr GHOLE Oat will appear in a Soviet Concert of Classical, Folk and Revo- of the a eens Comm. of the] well oo aiholy eer ate the ree ie pal oa! = bon a ation in the County lutionary Songs, Russian and Ukrainian, in costume on ‘ OO Unemployed itizens Leagues. suspension order ant en adjourn | food order out. e U. C. L, lead- h throuth distribut’on An excuse to be found for| the meeting. This was done. Fifthly,| ership is immediate!y converted into ‘ings wit! \ A F F A I R S Also Pregnancy, occupy one-half }| breaking off Paneth front. The ae were notified to be on hand § Sool ee agency to spy on work- Is otnt Contes ing duet SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26th, 8 P. M. of the book “Sex Life and Mar- went ically case of any “trouble.” The police} ers, and becomes a voluntary append- | cations on various issues, ete. A oat 39 sect : Mage® SEW Gtainy aehe Gal | Seia SOA. Tie ob Cocteatt cn) | were Vestas oniueetionbty called by| ege of the relied againlen gations on vavious issues ets. ||| Masonic Temple Auditorium, 32 W. Randolph St., 14th floor $) sexual married kind of a pretext — to hinder the| the Lieberman clique—by the social-| When the County Central of the | tion lack of decisiveness on the | . Tone ele are Daily, Worker sara sph pier growing united activities be- | U. C's was asked to agree to a similar | vart of the Musteite sections of the | JOSEPH ROSENSTEIN, Violin Virtuoso a eee oO ONT with. the hook “eu ce tween the Leagues and Councils, So} In answer to the arguments of one| arrangement, the answer was so cate- | opposition. | BD Sh ve cabal’ bonnie recs. Shenandoah Section ie ‘Sex and Health” |! the little 5 of the Lieber-/ of the oppositional elements against | goric, decisive and incisive, that we| To attempt to merely fight them on | Come and demonstrate your solidarity with the Cultural Achievements 4 .s same price, it gives all information |] man strip suddenly “ ” the | this socialist-police collaboration, «| believe that Mr. Mills or anyone else | constitutional and legal grounds alone of the Soviet Union ‘ iat Oenturies’ ill be sown’ ims ||] Decessary to any intelligent worker || fact that Jimmy Egan of the Un-| certain Braden woman, chairman of | Will not gather the couzage to propose | {s the shesrest folly and nonsense : following towns’ on the detes listed |i] The latter describes the anatomy {| employed Councils was the Commu-| the Child Welfare Conimitice of the this aga! We were informed, that | Instead of # defensive constitutional || TICKETS can be procured at Lyon & Healy, Jackson and Wabash; Wark-4> | wa} bine and physiology of sex and nist candidate for mayor in the city| U. C. L., called this delegate a “nigger | the U. C, L. however, had agreed to| fight, what is needed is a vigorous, ers’ Book Shop, 2019 W. Division St.; Kroch Book Shop, 206 N. Michi- November 21st: 4 explains |! of Pittsburgh and was thus introduced | lover.” ‘Having no answer to the open | this atrangement. aggressive, extra-legal struggle gan Ave.; Royale Cafe, 3854 W. Roosevelt Road. a etl |i a eae oy Oe ad temas bas leet See: | ood oleae 0s ota Se ae te | See, ee ne ae AUSPICES: FRIENDS OF RUSSIAN MUSIC F Sunbarry St., at 7 P.M. ’ id to revert to the vilest, filth-| and chicanery to oust all of the -|rank and file, gaining their con- TP ENDS November 22nd: Workers’ Book Shop ‘While many oppositional elements | iest, arguments taken from the gutter | tant elements in the locals from even| fidence, levding them in. strugele, Pottsville, Ps. ‘ 50 East 13th Street, New York were out of town vit ety or against the Negro and te who going ba Me beset spn asin mobilizing them on the basis of the * —_ 26th Cleveland Conference, -| dare defy the Jim Crow laws and| agencies, Speaking ¢ relief auth~-| united front, not permitting the ranks : November 23rd: or from the publishers alist clique in control of the County with the Negroes on a basis | orities not to recognize those elected/ to disintegrate and break up, but tol W ROM NOON TILL MID NIGHT Shenandoah, Pa: At Sweets Hall, Rational Livin Central Committee passed a motion | of full social equality. There is truly| by the locals. Writing of letters to| solidify a conscious organized mass of H Lloyd and Mata bts, & |j‘ormaltly breaking off the united|no line of demarcation between the| achieve this end. Resorting to the unemployed ready to resist the split- TO CELEBRATE 5 y November 24th: Box 4, Station M, New York front. i So-called socialist in open alliance | most eens methods to elimi-| ters to the end. . Kurlmont, Pa.; At Liberty Hall, 10th From that time onward, things have| with the police, the white chauvinist,| nate rank and fi'e representatives. For this purpose, the widest mobi- Th 16th A I f th U S § R. “ ‘and Pine St. SEND NO sTAMES been moving very rapidly within the| and the eventual participant in the| 3. Continuance of the Practice of| lization must take place for the € hhiversary 0 e 2 Oe ee November 25th: tanks of the Leagues. A broad op-| lynch niob! working with the police against the| County Hunger March on Noy. 28th.|} Sovict picture: “The Fragments of an Empire (to start 12 a. m. sharp) (atte daly Aare AO aa positional movement embracing over]. Until now, this class collaboration | rank and file. A powerful united demonstration of |] The Rebel Players — Ukrainian Chorus — Junior Mandolin Orchestra = ‘ If you add another 20 cents you {| 25 to 30 delegates, Musteites, Com-| policy of the socialist leaders showed| 4. Use of physical attacks against| thousands of unemployed in Al- — Instrumental Music — Lecture — Also Bazaar — Refreshments ponteen) can get the book “How Is Your munists, and rank and file delegates| itself in the reformist methods of | the rank and file, as demonstrated in legheny County, of U. C. and U. 0. L. and Dancing — Moscow Broadcast (Weather permitting) - - + « St. Louis, Mo. Stomach?” (About foods ‘n favor of the united front, developed | work; refusal to engage in mass ac-| the attack on Marsh, from Woods| members as well as thousands of un— November 21st: a how to |] in the County Central Committee. | tions; dickering with the relief auth-| Run Local No. 6, U, ©. L,, and Mor-| organized unemployed — will be not N i} bs Dillons Min ene ope at et LS mene Laan i etd demas rae orca ren acy eae Grae rom Tarwatum” Lowa of |niy's bow sasnet nunee out = | NOVEMDEL OU, oon 1am iS 2 i 3) U. 0. L. yell aimed ja’ a \ if sitet ied Workers Chih ASU TIT san Avebgn. ti WELL-xnown | Within the U. ©, ZL, from top to/sending down of small groups or Con. |. More attecks: Mame tuary expulsions| splitters, of the socislist-Lieberman || Women’s Council House, 214 Loma Drive, Los Angeles, Cal. contol ————eeneaeecee| On Oot: Hb, 8 mated tome Conn Hight” enmesianiend af arvad Goce | oul have wane Garena” castes | eemace cabmeausss and destroyers of |] Admiesion ate Anecions; Pete ote Batre i ~ = +0]