The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 27, 1933, Page 3

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C.W.A. Workers Answ ~AILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1933 Upholstery Strike Gets Aid of Jobless In Mass Picketing| Stone Blue Eagle Sign, Foree Cops To Free Arrested Strikers MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, Dec, 26.— Pour thousand people responded to the call of the striking upholsterers, now in their tenth week of strike, for 8 mass meeting and mass picket- ing demonstration last Thursday. ‘The strike which is under the lead- ership of the A. F. of L., involyes mainiy Levine Bros., the Grau-Curtis Co., and the Brooks Parlor Furniture Go,, the largest shops of their kind in this city. The sentiment of the rank and file forced the leaders to permit this call for a united front with the un- employed and for mass picketing. The response was beyond all ex- pectations. The Unemployed Council, which had helped to mobilize hundreds of workers to this demonstration, asked the chairman for the floor to bring the greetings of the Unemployed Council and pledge their support, but was refused, After several demagogic speeches, the parade followed. Stop at Factory The workers displayed very much militancy. After parading past the first two shops without stopping, they came to the third shop, the Brooks Parlor. Here the workers, in spite \of the attempt of the A. P. of L. lead- ers to march past, insisted on stop- ping for a mass picket, demonstra- tion in front of the shop, The police began to use their teargas and clubs. Two young workers were arrested. But the indignation of the crowd forced the release of these workers. Stone“Blue Eagle The windows of the company, which carriesa big Bite Bagle, were stoned by the workers. The A. F. of L. leaders told the workers not to try to release the two who were ar- rested, but to march away. This the workers refused, and stood by until the two were released. I spite of the terror, which has already resulted in one striker, John Jeremko, being shot and is in a crit- ieal condition, the strike continues strong. The A, F. of L. leaders, among them Deamer, the upholisterers or- ganizer from New York, are frantic in their efforts to keep control of the strike, which threatens to get out ‘of their hands. Demagogy is spread thicker than ever before. At the mass meeting, @ resolution was adopted which en- dorsed all of the unemployed demands for which the Unemployed Council has been carrying on a struggle, in- cluding the Workers Unemployment Tnsurance Bill, Rank and File Committee ‘To insure the success of the strike, it is becoming more and more clear to the workers, that they must elect their own broad rank and file com- mittees to lead the strike and to ne- gotiate, and that they must organize more mass picketing of the unem- ployed together with the strikers. This becomes more clear now that} Mayor Bainbridge hes announced his request to the Federal government to ask the N.R.A. Labor Board to intervene. Demand 40 P.C. Pay Rise in Rayon Plant U.T.W. Head and Boss Attempt To Sidetrack Demand Thru NRA PARKERSBURG, W. Va., Dec, 26. —To sidetrack the demand of the rayon workers in the Viscose Co. plant here for a 40 per cent increase in wages, William F, Kelly, vice-pres- ident of the United Textile Workers and representative of the National Rayon Workers’ Council has agreed with the employers to take the mat- ter up with the National Labor Board in Washington. The move to shift the discussion ¥ “They Were Lynching Me—| And Two White Workers Saved Me” Louisiana Negro, Who Escaped After Being Hanged, Tells of Lynch- | ing in Which Another Died; to Speak in Harlem Tomorrow On Saturday, Oct. 7, Anna Mae Larose, a white girl living with her mother and step-father, a man named Darvie, in Labadieville, La., left home, When she did not re- turn that night or Sunday night, a search was instituted. Just after dark, a deputy sheriff drove down the road, stopped his car at a certain point, entered the sugar-eane field, and immediately found the girl’s body. She had been stabbed. Immediately, Freddie Moore, a Negro boy, who lived close to the girl’s home, was arrested, and charged with murdering her, Word was sent out to adjoining counties, and even as far as New Orleans, that there would be a lynching. Wednesday night, in Labadieville. Though it was known that there would be a lynching, Sheriff Hem- iel, of Napoleonville, conveniently left town Thursday night. The jniior, an old man of 60, named Landry, readily turned Moore over to the lynchers when they asked for him. Moore was tortured, beaten, cas- trated, and hung toe the bridge in night, the gangsters, led by Deputy Sheriff Ferdinand Richard, went to the house where Norman Thibod- eamx, 19-year-old Negro bey, was ung told by himself in the After the experiences story, Thibodeaux was arrested for peddling fish without a license,” in New Orleans, where the sale of fish is a monopoly, and held ae s. WU his rel » fifteen day: pon meee 2s Labor Defense representatives in New Orleans. His situation was still dangerous there, and the LL.D. made arrangements for sending him te New York City, where he has now arrived. The full, dramatic story of the lynching of Thibodeaux and of his escape is here told for will speak at a meeting called by the International Labor omer and the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, in Temple Baptist | Church, 260 Lenox Ave. at eight o'clock. 4 By NORMAN THIBODEAUX (As Told te Louis Colman) On Oct, 11 I left New Orleans in and arrived at ville, La., about 4:30 in. the afternoon of the next day. I came there to visit my grandmother, 5 After I got to my grandmother's house, I heard that a white girl, named Anna Mee Larose, had been found killed in the cane-field, and they had a Negro boy, Freddie Moore, in jail. Hredaie Moore's mother went to see him that day, They wouldn't let her see ga s pee “I heard weeping, she told me. “I said: ‘Is that my boy erying and weeping?’ And they told me: ‘Never mind, you can't see; him. “I heard him say: ‘Mama, get me out of here, Mama!’ But they wouldn’t even let me see him.” Thursday lege about one rk two o'clock, about or seven came into my house. They woke me up and stood by my bed. The one at the head of them was Ferdinand Pichard, the Labadieville deputy sheriff. He said to me: “Nigger, get up and put your clothes on.” They all had guns, and when I didn’t put my clothes on fast enough to_suit them, Richards hit me with the butt end of his gun on the fore- head. There’s a big scar there yet. I put on my pants and my shirt, but they wouldn’t let me put Annual Trade Union Unity League | CONCERT and DANCE | Dramatic Sketch — Well Know Soloist — Ballet _ Dancers—The Famous “Georgia Crooners” Orchestra A World of Fun to Please Everyone SATURDAY, DEC. 30th, from 8 o'clock on Peoples Auditorium, 2457 W. Chicago Ave. Sctortes Ted by Byerybody will Celebrate the Strike the T.U.U.L, Admission 25¢. The Other V ictim or om ther, on» Freddie Moore (above), horribly xoutilated and lynched by the mob which attempted to lynch Norman Thibodeaux also. they dragged me out of the car onto the bridge, where the automobile lights made it like daytime. Freddie Moore was hanging from an overhead girder of the bridge. He was already dead. Bis clothes were all covered with blood. His toes were all burned where they had put red- hot irons to them. His hands were found out later it was true—that the when they took him out of jail was to cut off his testicles, Later on they took pictures of Freddie, with a sign hanging to his feet, saying: “Niggers Let This Be An Example. Do Not Touch for 24 Hours. Mean Tt.” Before they took this picture, they tore off his shirt and tied his hands, to make it look more horrible. They peddled this picture all over New Orleans and everywhere around. When they dragged me out of the car, they started to hit me. I guess about sixty or seventy took turns at hitting me. I knew some of them. One was the District Attorney. I didn’t know him then, but later on TU tell you how I came to see him again. There were two brothers named Emil among those beating me. There was the man who owns the drug store in Labadieville. I don’t know his name, but there's only one drug store there. They hit me everywhere except on the soles of my feet. The only reason they didn’t hit me there was because I was standing on them. They tried to make me say my name was Norman Jackson. I told them no, my name was Norman Thibodeaux, so they started to beat Me again, The reason they wantd me to say hanging free. They told me—and Ij ing first thing they had done to him my name was Norman Jackson, 1) found out from what they said: } They had been torturing Freddie | Moore before they hanged him. You could tell that from the eondition| he was in, especially his feet. Finally, | it seems, they made him say that nebody by the name of Norman Jackson helped to kill this white) girl, There wasn’t anybody living} anywhere near by that name, and} I guess that’s why Freddie said that. He hoped they would go looking for somebody by that mame, and leave him alone. But it didn’t do any good. They hung him anyway. Then they heard there was some: body by the name of Norman livin in my grandmother's house, and that's all they wanted to know. I knew there wasn’t any use say~ ing anything to them, or pleading with them, I just told them I was innocent, and kept repeating it every time they hit me. I mever pleaded with them. They just had one rope that they hung Freddy Moore with, and they sent a boy away to get a brand new, | springy rope. They put it around |my neck, and threw the end of the rope over the girder to a boy who was standing there. The District Attorney came up. | He was a big fellow with glasses. Somebody said: “Here's the big shot. Tell him what you want to say.” I said: “I have nothing to say. I am. innoent.” The D. A. | away. “Nigger, you carry a dirk, don't laughed and walked don’t even carry a pocket-knife,” id, “You lying son-of-a-bitch,” the fel- low said, and he hit me with his gun, ; All the big shots were standing around there, all dressed up nicely. One of them standing there in a brown suit said: “This nigger don’t even tremble— he will before we get through.” So they started to hit me again with their fists and 5 “Nigger,” they said, “do you know how to pray?” “No,” I said, “I don’t know any prayers.” “Nigger, you'd better learn some kind of prayer quick because, you black son-of-a-bitch, we're going to string you up high.” There was one heavy-set white woman standing in the crowd, shout- “Kill that black bastard!” said: iy 4 “Let’s hang the nigger and be done with it.” Another voice said: “No, let's burn him. We hung the other.” | Omaha Workers On CWA Jobs Organize ‘Against Pay Cuts Demand $15 Minimum Pay and UnionWages for C.W.A. Workers OMAHA, Neb, Dec. 26—Civil| Works Administration workers on Lincoln Highway, between Elkhorn and Waterloo, Neb., received a wage | cut of 20 per cent last week, when | their wages were cut from’ 50 cents | to 40 cents per hour. Sixty workers, representing five | gangs of these workers, held an or- ganization meeting on Dec. 20, and after sending telegrams to Harry 1.! Hopkins, national C.W.A, Adminis- | trator, and to H. W. Smith of Lin- cut be restored, formed a C.W.A. | Workers Protective Union. Elect Committee An organizational committee of fiv jand by-laws, and to arrange ‘for a A program of demands has been worked out calling for a job or $15 weekly cash relief for all workers, a minimum of $15 for C.W.A. work with union wages for all skilied workers, free transportation and pay for time spent while going to and from work, and the rgiht to organize on the job in unions of the workers’ choice, 65 Join Councils Sixty-five workers joined the Un- d Council at a meeting of C.W.A. workers of Sarpy County, on Dec. 21. A county committee of representa- tatives from each township was set up. Practically the same demands adopted at Omaha were made at this meeting and will be presented to the Sarpy County C.W.A. administrator. A Sarpy and Dougias County Con- jference Against Unemployment will be held on Dec. 31. Local demands will be taken up, and a struggle planned to win these demands. Del- egates to the National Convention Against Unemployment to -be held in Washington, D. C., Jan. 18, 14, and 15 will be elected, eoln, Neb., demanding that this wage | | Was elected to work out a program | mass meeting of all C.W.A. workers. | Denrands of C. off the C. W. A. projects and to cut C. W. A. jobs. The demands of the ditions, put forward by the Unempi relief for every worker. weeks work each month. 3—The en every job. No wage differentials. minimum for all skilled workers, 4— 5—The right to organize and recogni te belong to any union of the worl Negroes to all categories of jobs wit fliscrimination. 7—No discrimination ployed workers, and milk, clothing control of registration. committecs. Make demands on the Jan. 13. Police Fail to Halt Jobless Meeting Move to Another Hall; Meet Again Dee, 29 WORCESTER, Mass., Dec. 26,—Po- ‘lice tried to break up the united front Unemployment Conference here Fri- day night, but after the delegates moved to another hall the conference was held. Seven delegates were elect- ed to the National Convention Against Unemployment, to be held in Wash- ington, D. C., Jan, 13. ‘When the delegates came to the conference Friday, they were con- fronted with a whole array of police and detectives, who tried to break up the conference. ‘The police were told it was not a public gathering and they had no business to be present. Despite the protest of the delegates, the police forced their way into the conference and refused to leave. The Gelegates then left and went to the Workers Center, 3 Harrison St., where the conference was held. The con- ference was called by the Unemployed Council. Demands for the unemployed and the C.W.A. workers were adopted. A program of action to make the city government, led by the Democratic mayor, Mahoney, come across with cash relief was adopted. A mass meeting will be held Friday night, Dec. 29, at the Workers Center, President Roosevelt’s C. W. A., as shown by the news stories on this page, is using every possible trick to cut a maximum number of workers 2—A guaranteed 30-hour week with four full ers. §—Free clothes, transportation to work, rent, gas, coal, for all unem- These demands every C. W. A. worker should fight for. Organize job National Convention Against Unemployment in Washington, D. C., on W. A. Workers Gown the wages of those working on C. W. A. workers against these con- jioyed Councils. include: 1—A job or forcement of the minimum wage on Standard trade union wages as the ‘Workmen’s Compensation on all jobs. tion of the job committets; the right kers own choosing. 6—The right of h equal pay for equal work, and no against non-citizens or young work- and shoes for children. 9—Workers C. W. A. officials. Prepare for the Newark Jobless Hold Conference To Have Mass Demon- stration Jan. 13 NEWARK, N. J., Dec. 26.—Fiity- three delegates, representing 35 work- ers’ organizations with a total mem- bership of 4,558, attended the first conference on unemployment and so- | cial insurance called by the Un- employed Councils of Newark. The conference fully endorsed the Workers’ Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill, and set up a City Unemployed Council with the vari- ous organizations represented. Tt was decided at this conference to hold outdoor mass demonstra- tions at Military Park on Jan. 13 at 2 p.m. in preparation for Jan. 15, when workers’ delegates will present their demands to the City Commis- sioners, The conference issued a call for another such meeting to embrace the broadest possible representation of workers’ organizations. This con- ference will be held at Sokol Hall, 358 Morris Ave., on Jan. 6 at 2 p.m, Delegates to the National Conven- tion Against Unemployment in Washington will be elected. to protest the police action and a delegation has gone already to the Mayor and the newspapers, protesting. But I guess since they had the rope around my neck, they thought it would do Q. K. ‘They started to pull me up, slow. It was a new, springy rope. It isn’t an easy death to die. It isn't hang- ing, like that. It’s strangulation. They pulled me up two feet. hung there, strangling slow. Then the old man of the bridge, the bridge-tender, came up. His name is Coudeaux. He began to say: “Cut him down! This boy is inno- cent. He just came into town today from New Orleans, I saw him get off the bus. He doesn’t know anything about the killing.” I was hanging there and I couldn't say anything. But I was listening, and while I was strangling I was saying over and over again to my- self: “I am innocent. I am inno- cent.” I don’t know what the sheriff and the other big shots said, but the old man’s son, Harry Codeaux, up on the side of the bridge ae ohne down, and I fell to the bridge. They are two white workers, Cou- deaux and his old man, that saved my life. (TO BE CONTINUED) I CHELSEA, Mass., Dec. 26.—The above cut explains how President Roosevelt gets his much-advertised heavy mail. The C, W. A. workers here were given this printed Christmas card and instructed to mail it to Roosevelt. Some of the workers immediately tore the cards Greeti CHEL MASSACHL Dees Mi Pennant Cheon, | wish you # Ohritmas denarred hepsi, « happiness Fellow Aneccons. You have made thie Chis Now Yous wih renewed hope. up. It will be noticed that President Roosevelt is depicted at the infan- tile pursuit of playing with blocks —N. R. A. C. W. A, P. W. A., HL. B., etc. The starving unemployed are given rotten, non-union condi- tions, many can’t get jobs, and, to add insult to injury, are instructed to “give thanks” for these miser- ‘As ans ofthe 1800 amplored under the CWA to 120 ond my family, and we wre deophpratabc. Dos to yoo? ‘aie, courge and biesd homey, ie How Roosevelt Gets That Heavy Mail POST CARD ngs SEA seers Hon. Freakiia D. Reoserstt, President of the Unhad Staten fall te the brim of wchiy that yo have poured in inch ppcerous moore int the homes of milions of your The White Houre, stmas 4 eymus oneat for Washington, D.C. able conditions, The C. W. A. workers here are getting 80 cents an hour for skilled work instead of the scale of $1.20 promised in the C. W. A. program. The skilled workers are dissatisfied with these wages and are taking steps to make demands on the C. | W. A. officials for the $120 they | were guaranteed. Ohio CWA Foreman Frames Negro Lad LL.D. Rallies Workers to His Defense C.W.A. Jim Crows Negroes in La. Swamps; Holds Up Pay i ORLEANS, Le, Dec, 26— been given are Pere im- way, are disease ridden swamps digsing drainage clearing the heavy under- After putting in weeks of k-breaking toil, their pay was held So destitute are the unem~- here, that every day waiting at the C.W.A. vain hope of getting town of Gretna, a suburb Orleans, all es ‘workers i i i f ede a, FREE? 2 Ta sei #84 iH af i g 3 g 3 3 ¥ ie ten weeks ago for relief, and who registered for C.W.A. at the very start, have received neither jobs nor Tellef. the whites receive cloth- from the relief Government salt pork of such in- ferior grade that it cannot even be rendered into lard is given out by the relief agencies, Payment for work done on ©.W.A. Jobs is made in checks, the workers have no cnet hoe cashing their checks, the storekeepers here are charging ten cents for cash- ing Federal C.W.A. checks, 1,000 Dairy Workers in Los Angeles Organize For Pay Raise, Union LOS ANGELES, Calif—One thou- sand milkers are being drawn into a struggle for increased wages and bet- ter working conditions by the milk eptenci Food Workers Industrial nm, ‘The program which was adopted as @ result of three meetings represent- ing 51 different dairies in Los Angeles County provides for $65 per month for single men, $85 per month for married men, recognition of union, and one day of rest, Of the 51 dairies represented, 24, including some of the largest dairies in the county have signed up 100 per cent with the union, with the remain- ing 27 dairies having signed as high as 75 per cent. CCC Men to be Denied All Civil Works Jobs| inn FORT LEWIS, Wash., Dec. 26,— Notices served on all members of the Civil Conservation Corps here cate- gorically state that no member of any peat will be given jobs on Civil orl a framed charge of “rape,” Robert. Harris, 18-year-old Negro worker, locked up in the county jail at Lisbon, will be defended by the International te Defense, it was announced to- lay. Young Harris, the oldest son and of his family, was re- @ C.W.A. job as’ water- Masses of workers, especially on C.W.A. jobs, are being mobilized by the LL.D., for the defense of Harris. His defense will be an important feature of the Scottsboro protest meeting called in Wellsville, Dec. 28. Protests against his arrest, and the demand for his release should be sent to Sheriff Frank Ballantine, Lisbon, Ohio, and to Mayor W. H. Daugherty, Wellsville, Ohio. of the Ninth Corps Area state that: “Mem- bers of the C.C.C. are ineligible to be given employment in connection with the Civil Works program.” The notices further state that no member of the C,C.O. will be given @ discharge from that he might get | News Briefs French Train Wreck Death Total Mounts PARIS, Dec. 26—Known deaths | Saturday's railroad wreck reached 19: today. The exact total of deaths may never be known. Remains shapeless beyond identification were gathered today in unnamed caskets. The disaster, aggravated by the use of wooden cars, has aroused great indignation throughout France. Hun- dreds of relatives of the victims stormed government offices today with angry protests. In an effort to .) cover up the responsibility of the Tailroad officials for the disaster, the government has arrested Lucien Dau- digny, engineer, and Henry -Char- pentier, fireman of the wrecked train. .| Spinster Sisters Die of Hunger and Cold ROCHESTER, Dec. %. While peace on earth reigned over all, two sisters, past 80, died here on Christ mas eve. They were found in bed, ot asa result of cold and starva- jon. Two Mexicans Slain JUAREZ, Mexico, Dec. 26. — Two ..| Mexicans were killed here yesterday, climaxing a week of violence which Police say is due to gangsters’ quar- Tel over distribution of profits, Murder Total Rise in Chicago CHICAGO, Dec. 26.—Reports show that murders for the year 1933 ex- ceed that of the previous year. The ‘suicide figure, however, was smaller. Volcanic Eruption Kills damage was reported eruption and tidal wave in the Phil- ippine Islands today. Bandits Hold-up Five and Ten |Chicago Conference jon Unemployment and CHICAGO, Dec. | Sidi | 26.—The North Workers’ Committee for Unem- nt Insurance has issued a call © a conference on unemployment in- ‘ance to be held Jan. 7, at 11 am. Organizations wishing to send del- egates should immediately send the names and addresses of elected dele- gates to 3345 N. Clark St., Chicago, Unindentified Man Dies of Starvation CHICAGO, Dec. 26—The body of an unidentified man about 65 years old, who had died of starvation and exposure was found in an abandoned barn, body, gnawed by rats, was The taken to the morgue for a pauper's burial, caped with several thousand dollars in receipts. While the holdup was in progress two detectives entered the store and opened fire on the ban- dits. It is believed at least two were wounded. Two Death in Mexico on On Holiday MEXICO, D. F., Dec. 26.—Two chil- dren were burned to death and thirty were injured during Christmas cele: brations in Mexico, Coast Guard Cutter Sent to Aid Grounded Liner LOS ANGELES, Cal., Dec. 26—A coast guard cutter was sent to the aid of the Quaker liner Peter Kerr, which has been grounded since yes- oat on @ sand bank off Asuncion Poor, Kills Himself HOUSTON, Tex., Dec. 26.—L. A. Cramer, sixty-year-old storekeeper, was dead today, having shot him- self yesterday, bis daughter Mrs. | Social Insurance} Page Three er Wage-Cuts, Discrimination by Forming Job Committees Foreign Born Fired From C. W. A. Jobs As Xmas Presem. | Kenosha .W.A. Cuts | Number of Jobs; No Notice Given (By a C.W.A. Worker Correspondeat) KENOSHA, Wis., Dec. 26.—All C. | W. A. workers suspected of being non- citizens have been discharged without {notice from C,W.A. projects in this jcity. The order was worded as fol- | You az |such unde: in conj C.W.A. rules, your se:vices tion with Ciyil Works Projects ‘minate tonight, ‘Thursday, Dec, 21, 1933. You are notified to bring your citizenship papers to this office, and if found to be in good standing, you will be allowed to go back on the job. However, in case you do not report immediately, you. will be dropped from the payroll,” The order was signed by W. E. | Lindbloom, complaint office, Room | 304, third floor, Courthouse, Kenosha, | Wis. The native-born workers are voic- jing their disgust at such methods, | which are obviously for the purpose of cutting down the number of C. W. A. jobs. CWA ‘Workers Told To Buy Own Tools Fired for Organizing; Replaced by Kluxers (By a Worker Correspondent) MIDDLESBORO, Ky., Dec. 26. —On Noy. 27, President Roosevelt started his C.W.A. labor project in Bell county, Kentucky, in Middlesboro, with one hundred men the first day and one hundred men added each day. until there are now 577 men working. This leaves over 1,000 men still unemployed. The men that are working receive 45c per hour and 30 hours per week, which is $13.50 per week, provided they do not lose any time on account of snow or rain or sickness. Of those that are still unemployed, some get $1.20 per week direct relief, some get more and the big majority of them get nothing. Those that get more than $1.20 are some coal company stools or some of the snitchers who go around among the workers and find out all they can about the organizational work of the workers and report it to J. H, Mc- Gibbony, who is the works manager \of the C.W.A. here in Bell county, ‘and also a stool and henchman for the coal companies. | Bought Own Tools ‘The men were hand-picked and put on the C.W.A. work by McGibbony and the enemies of organized labor. | They have three walking bosses, such | men as Dr. Van Kirk, who owns abou! $10,000 worth of property in |bore, Ky. Besides the three bosses they have about 20 straw bosses who stand around and tell the men to put on a little more speed. The C.W.A. furnished 400 wheelbar- tows, but forced the men to buy a pick and shovel, which cost the men $1.00 each, These tools were bought by that they belonged to the “reds.” is the work of the stools to all they can and report to MceGibbony. One worker was fired for holding conversation with a member of thi revolutionary organization, The men that were fired were re- placed by men that I have known for years, and who never did an honest One. oe i gis E ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATIONS DISTRICT 1 LOWELL, Mass.—Jan. 6 at 338 Central Dance Concert and Speakers. Adm. 18¢, Bt PROVIDENCE, R. I.—On Jan, 6 st Swedish” ‘Hall, 59 Chestnut St. KEK. members, so it is easy 4 the condition of the workers the South. It is time we were waking and s ' 4 1] * i MAYNARD, Mass.—On Jan. 6 at 20 Pow! — dermil!’ Road, DISTRICT 3 NEW YORK CITY.—On Dec. 30 at Bronz Coliseum, B. 177th S&. Concert snd DISTRICT 7 DETROIT, Mich.—On Jan, 14 at Pinnish Hall, 969--1¢th St. A. W. Markoff, from New York, will be the speaker. Musical program arranged, DISTRICT 10 OMARA, Neb.--On Jan. 9 in So. Omaixa, DISTRICT 14 Bia NEWARK, N. JOn Jan. 6 at the YM. seckin., Revetlad preprane Adm, 990; Im advance 2%, i i ss

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