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Bad Seema Plans Speeded for National Congress on Social Insurance City Meetings Will Be Held inBirmingham Philadelphia Vine cils Push City-Wide Canvass BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Nov. 28. Representatives of trade unions fraternal, mass and unemployed or- ganizations met here Sunday and | made plans for a broad city-wide | conference on unemployment In- surance, to be held in the court} house, Sunday, Dec. 16. Roger Bald- | win a member of the national spon- | soring committee, who will be in Birmingham on that date, | will be asked to address the conference. Plans for a large mass meeting in the City Audito- | rium late in December are being made. The Birmingham Trades Council in regular meeting Saturday night | raised a big red scare over the committee and the Workers Bill. | A. Towns, one of the Council del gates brought a copy of “The Web of the Red Spider” which gives the | names of many revolutionary work- ing class leaders to prove that the secretary of the Congress Arrange- ments Committee was a Communist It is significant to note that these Trades Council fakers rely on the | information of Hitler’s paid prop- | agandist in this country Vierick. | The Council appointed a committee to investigate the secretary of the Congress Committee but they failed to show up at the meeting Sunday. Plan to Reach Unions It was pointed out in the meeting | Sunday that the Congress Call and the Workers Bill had to be carried to the rank and file members of the trade unions over the heads of fakers. Each member of the local Committee pledged to reach every uniop, club, church or other organi- zation that it was possible to meet to have them endorse the Workers’ Bill and the Congress Call Mr. Bowers. International Organ- izer for the International Brother- hood of Blacksmiths, Dropforgers and Helpers, was elected chairman of the Arrangements Committee by @ unanimous vote although he was not present at the time he was nominated. It is expected that he will accept the chairmanship, and replace Mr. J. G. Qwen, Secretary of the Relief Workers League of Tarrant City who has resigned the chairmanship but is still working with the committee. The organizations represented at the Sunday meeting included the following: Local No. 1766 of the} United Textile Workers Union, the Switchmans Union of North Anseri- ca, Woodlawn Lodge No. 23 of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, Hodcarriers Union, International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths, Dropforgers and Helpers, International Union of Mine, Mill Smelter Workers, the Rank and File A. F. of L. Com- mittee. the Unemployment Council, | the Relief Workers League of Tarrant City, and the Ensley Colored Ethos Expigate Club. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Nov. 28.—A house to house canvass on Sunday, Dec. 28, which will bring to the workers of this city full details of the National Congress for Unem- ployment Councils. Every member of the Unemploy- ment Council and other working | class organizations are mobilizing | their members for this canvass, The canvassers will popularize the “Un- employment Insurance Review,” the official magazine of the National Sponsoring Committee of the Na- tional Congress, seek financial as- sistance for sending the large dele- gation from the Philadelphia area and distribute post cards addressed to local Congressmen demanding that they support the Workers Un- employment Insurance Bill. The canvass will also be utilized to more firmly root the Unemploy- ment Councils in Philadelphia and urge all workers to fight the vicious eviction terror used against Negro and white workers, and mobilize for a fight for increased relief. Workers Centers, clubs and trade union centers throughout the city will serve as headquarters for the canvass, and supplies will be obtain- able at each center. Challenge Pittsburgh In appealing for fifty workers to sell the magazine “Unemployment Insurance Reviéw,” the Unemploy- ment Councils of Philadelphia has pledged to sell 25,000 copies, and have challenged the Pittsburgh Coun- cils to sell the same amount in Socialist competition. Workers have been asked to ob- tain supplies of the magazine at the headauarters of the local sponsoring | committee, 207 South Fifteenth | Street, Room 707, or at the head- | quarters of the Unemployment | Councils, 919 Locust Street. Speakers’ Congress Mects The first speakers’ conference to train workers to address various organizations and bring to them the | call to the National Congress for | Unersployment Insurance met here | Sunday at 154 North Fifteenth | Street. The Workers’ Bill was out- | dined and compared with the various | fraudulent schemes put forward in | State legislatures and by Roosevelt in the name of unemployment in- | surance, | The conference will meet weekly | hereafter at 154 North Fifteenth | Street at 8 p. m. When you approach a prospec- tive subscriber to the Daily Worker, remember to ask him for a contribution te the 960,000 campaign, The mystery shrouding the of the many tragedies in Nazi Ger THE NEW DEALS FOR CHILDREN UNDER ROOSEVELT AND HITLER death of the three working class children near Altoona, Pa., recalls one ‘many where the parents, finding themselves and four children facing starvation, hanged their own flesh and blood and then committed suicide, ‘Mystery’ of Three Dead Girls Another Tragedy of the Crisis Bodies on Mountainside Show Evidence of | Family’s Misery The police mystery surrounding the death of three children, whose bodies were discovered last Satur- day on a mountainside near Carlisle. Pa., was no nearer solution late yesterday, according to the reports of Pennsylvania police. The three girls, the oldest six- teen and the two others ten and eight years of age respectively, have not been {dentified. The police continued to profess ignorance of the cause of their death. But their shabby and torn clothing and phy- sical condition show that the dead children are among the multitude of | victims of the capitalist crisis, with | its mass unemployment, increasin misery and denial of adequate re lief to the jebless and their families. This indication is further | strengthened by the following| facts: (1) that despite nation-wide publicity, with photographs of the dead children and detailed descrip- tions of their clothing, size, etc. no one has come forward to claim or identify the bodies, and (2) the clues, reported by the police, linking the three dead children to a couple that died early Saturday in a suicide pact. Jobless—Suicide The bodies of this couple were found near Altoona, Pa. The body of the man was identified yeste day by Larry Carney, a Philadel-| U. 8. Suppresses Arms Inquiry Data (Continuea from Page 1) | first time. Dr. Manley O. Hudson of the Harvard Law School, who is @ member of the Advisory Commit- tee, will also be heard. The suppressed exhibits were published in the few copies of the galley proofs distributed shortly after the conclusion of the first round of hearings. They dealt with U. S. Lieutenant Commander James H. Strong's “recommendations” to/| the Consul General of Colombia, 21 West Street, New York City, for the purchase of guns and . armament costing great sums of money and with “the defense of the ports of Buena Ventura and Tumaco, Co-} lombia. . . . The defense of Car-| tagena, Puerto Colombia, Barran-! quilla.” It was also learned that efforts were made to tamper with Lammot du Pont’s testimony declaring that | “a serious situation might develop in a certain South American re- public’ (Argentina) if certain let- ters implicating officials with his concern were published. The doc- toring attempt was defeated only because one of the newspaper cor- respondents actually confronted the committee with the discrepancy be- tween his sheet of du Pont testi- mony, which was given to him by the committee on the day the du Ponts appeared, and with what was being manufactured as the official transcript of the testimony, | The Suppressed Testimony | This is what appears in the tran-| script of Drigg’s testimony on page 476 of the official record: “Senator Pope—Now, in that report, which has been marked for identification as ‘exhibit No. 207'—— “(Exhibit No. 207 has been stricken from the record upon in- structions from the chairman of the committee.)” | Exhibit No. 207, published in the) galley proof, declared: “From: Lieutenant Commander | James H. Strong, New York, No- vember 19, 1932. “To: Consul General of Colom- bia, 21 West Street, New York City. | “Subject: Recommendations for the defense of the ports of Buena Ventura and Tumaco, Colombia, “As a result of careful study and analysis of the various prob- Jems connected with the defense | Philadelphia the Monday before the | tragedy. |Company, to “Mr. German Olano,” > phia worker, as Horace Hughes, a Child-Killing by German worker whom he knew in California. Parents Perhaps Is Carney said that he met Hughes in “Hughes said he was up Duplicated Here against it and asked if I could help | - him out,” Carney told the police./ man finance capital, the parents of “T said I was in bad straits myself.”| three children put an end to the Hughes then told him he intended | lives of their children and them- to go on to Pittsburgh if he was/ selves rather than face the increased unable to find work in Philadelphia.| misery they realized would follow The police, while daily evolving| With the advent of Fascism. The all sorts of fantastic theories only | Photograph of the German family to have to abandon them still-born, | is published in today’s Daily Worker. have carefully shut their eyes to the) How Did Children Die? possibility that the three children i were killed by their unemployed Among the theories alternatively parents, demoralized by the crisis; advanced by the police in the case and their inabilfty to obtain food) of the three children whose dead for their children and unwilling to| bodies were discovered last Satur- view their suffering. day, is that they were the victims of iia vuisnteaiae ees fie com- | ploded by a medical examination mitted suicide, as in the case of the| Which showed no sign of rape of unemployed couple whose bodies “ apie tet ‘the Pied bad were found near Altoona, if, indeed, | UI, ‘Or traneuiation, but had this couple are not the parents of | died of strangulation, but had no the dead children. ‘This angle, how- | ©*P!anation as to how. this had oc- nll i # curred. No wounds or any other onal anthbnties seinen ine. police injuries were found on the bodies of Aesar ines : ,| the children. Police also claimed known that such instances have by |that an autopsy failed to reveal no means been rare during the| age "i present crisis, | any signs of poisoning. Cases of workers mistakenly}; The fog of mystery which the taking suicide as the “way out” of | police have woven around the case their misery instead of joining in| was increased yesterday by police the mass fight for relief and un-/ claims to have discovered a “my employment insurance, have been | tery woman” in the case. The wo- reported quite frequently even by | man, whose name was not revealed, the capitalist press as occurring in | was being secretly held by the police this and other capitalist countries. | who declared their intention to take In Germany, for example, when| her to Carlisle last night to view Hitler was placed in power by Ger-| the bodies, LLD. Threat’ Tale Denied By Warde of the above-mentioned ports, the following pertinent points are submitted for consideration of the Colombian government. “Peru has in her national de- fense, cruisers, a destroyer, sub- marines, and a considerable | amount of aircraft; any and all (Continued from Page 1) of which could be employed singly | or in joint action in attacks upon Scottsboro Committee, organized the west coast of Colombia .. .” Another Suppressed Exhibit Exhibit No. 208 is a letter from A. J. Mirands, Jr., the South Amer- ican representative of the Driggs around Leibowitz, to demand action Committee for a united front, on the Consul General of Colombia in New York City. “Pursuant to our conference with Commander Strong we are Pleased to quote you on the material required for the ade- quate protection and defense of the two zones that you have mentioned. From Commander Strong’s report, you will under- stand that this material has been Several successful Scottsboro con- determined upon after most | 8 ae careful consideration of all pos- | ferences were held last week, sible contingencies, bearing al- notably the Bronx County Confer- ae in ng cee ne ad- jence and the Youth Conference, vantage of overmatching the ma- | sponsored by the Young Liberators, terial of the probable enemy.” and held last Sunday at the Bronx The price quotations for anti- |studio in Harlem. Resolutions de- aircraft and other guns, totalled | manding the release of the Scotts- hundreds of thousands of dollars. boro boys and dropping of the Exhibits 209 and 210 gave the | charges against Angelo Herndon “specifications” on other war ma- , z |were adopted and forwarded to the terial, the profits of which went to governors of Alabama and Geor- the Dr s Company and its cor- rupt South American clients. front, the Action Committee pointed out that “on this single issue there tive of their political or religious affiliation or sympathy,” and | warned of the danger of division. meeting of the Radio Industrial Unit of the Young Communist French Farmers Fight League sent a similar resolution to ; the U. S. Supreme Court. Police in Protest At | Protest was also made at a meet- New’ Provocations ing Monday at the Union Theo- logical Seminary, which was ad- (Special to the Daily Worker) dressed by Joseph Brodsky, chief of PARIS, Nov. 28. (By Wireless) —|* tae oe benefits have been Farmers battled police in the| arranged in Harlem to raise funds streets of Paris this afternoon, fol- | for the defense, among them an af- | lowing numerous provocations the end of a meeting held in pro- | Hall, 27 West 126th Street, test of agricultural conditions at | Wagram Hall near the Arc de “Baby Face” Nelson Triomphe. | s : Kerlier in the day 300 crippled) Found Dead in Ditch war veterans, in desperation at! having their reduced pensions neg-| SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Noy. 22— lected by ¢ormer minister Dou-| “Baby Face” Nelson, member of mergue and now by Etienne Flandin,| John Dillinger’s gang, was found lay down in the boulevards off the dead in a ditch on the road near Place de L’opera in the center of| Niles Center today. His body was Paris and demanded “Pensions for| riddled with bullets. the crippled!” | He received the fatal wounds in | a battle with two federal agents in whose automobile he escaped wiph St. Paul section of the Conynunist | the help of his confederates after Party will hold a carnival and | mortally wounding both of the gov- dance on Saturday evening at Bast | ernment men, Nelson's real family Side Hall, 865 Payne Avenue. name was Gilli¢ ST. PAUL. Minn. Nov. 28—The ‘a rape assault. When this was ex- | ‘gia, and to President Roosevelt. A} at| fair Dec. 5 at the Finnish Workers | | | MADRID, Nov. 28.— | “L’Humanite.” \nists and non-Party workers, quick consummation of the united front of the international prole- tariat in the interests of the Span- ish revolution, which has only | paused for a moment before renew- jing the onslaught against fascism. | The letter states: | “The political prisoners on the |third story of the Madrid prison |send heartiest revolutionary greet- |ings to their French class brothers. The Lerroux-Gil Robles govern- | ment, |and fascist bourgeoisie, is now | carrying on a great campaign of | Tepression against the masses who |rose in rebellion in the glorious | days of the 5th October, in order | to put an end to the regime of op- ; Pression and exploitation which held them in slavery and misery. | More than 5,000 and 8,000 wounded have fallen victims. More than | 40,000 workers are imprisoned and persecuted. This is the balance |sheet of the fortnight’s struggle and oppression. | “Thousands of workers have been |The court martials are imposing |the severest of sentences: death the sole issue of the fight for the | sentences, 12 years penal servitude | lives and freedom of the Scottsboro | for an illegal leaflet, etc. In spite \Peasants from Alamo, eight peas- boys, In its proposal for a united | of all this terror our courage, and jants from other villages, nine taxi | the courage of all the Spanish | workers, founded in our immutable |faith in the triumph of the work- is room for all sincere and honest | ers and peasants, is not broken. We | people to stand together, irrespec- | ave been defeated, but tomorrow | | the lessons we have learned in this movement will enable us to carry | off the victory all along the line. | “The Spanish workers need the resolute support of their class ‘We Shall Triumph Tomorrow,’ Spanish Prisoners Declare representing the reactionary | “Defeated today, tomorrow we | shall triumph,” declares a letter from 488 workers im- prisoned here sent to the Communist Party organ of France, Signed by Anarchists, Socialists, Commu- the document appeals for the | brothers in all countries. Workers of France, organize the defence jand the relief of the victims of the | Spanish revolution of the 5th Oct- ober! Organize mass actions of the United Front, that the right of asylum may be guaranteed for the | Persecuted revolutionists, and to | force into retreat the bourgeoisie |who are anxious to prevent your proletarian support for the Spanish | workers, “French comrades! Our triumph | will be guaranteed by the realiza- tion of the united front of the workers and peasants of every trend in the Alliance, which must |gather into its ranks more and more of the exploited, and by the | jfact that you are making trade- | union unity a living reality, giying the struggle fresh impetus. Work- jers of France! May our experience set you an example, serving you in the final abolition of your own | bourgeoisie and of murderous fas- jcism. Long live the united front! | Long live trade-union unity! Long onthe proposals of the Action | killed, hundreds shot without trial. |live the workers and peasants gov- ernment! Long live the interna- tional solidarity of the proletariat!” The appeal is signed by 25 drivers, 17 tramwaymen, one book- binder—all these members of the reformist trade-unions—and by 20 members of the Communist Party, 13 members of the Young Commu- |nist League, 13 members of the | Socialist Party, 10 Republicans, two membets of an Anarchist trade- union, a Portuguese journalist, and ‘a French peasant. Rift Widened Between Two _ UnionGroups WASHINGTON, Nov. 28—A widening, rather than a healing, of | the breach between the leaders of |two groups of building unions divided by jurisdictional war was evident as the Building Trades De- partment convention called by President William Green of the American Fedemation of Labor be- gan its sessions in Washington. Leaders of twelve of the unions, representing the bulk of the old Building Trades Department, re- | fused to recognize Green's conven- tion. President M. J. McDonough of the department, as their spokes- man, declared: “The 28th annual convention of the Building Trades Department has been held. I have nothing to do with this one.” Officials of seven building unions, including the carpenters, bricklay- ers and electrical workers, who were refused seats at the San Fran- cisco Building Trades Department convention, and the stationary en- gineers, marble polishers, teamsters and hod carriers, attended the con- vention presided over by Green on the seventh floor of the A. F. of L. | building. The other 12 met yester- | day in McDonough’s office on the fifth floor. Declaring that the convention he had called was the only legal one, Green explained that the one held in San Francisco last September Was not recognized by the A. F. of L. because it refused to seat the “big three” unions, which decided to reaffiliate to the Building Trades Department last June after remain- ing outside for several years, British and American | Boats Prepare Attack On Chinese Red Army CANTON, Nov. 28.—An American gunboat, the Mindanao, which yes- terday left for Wuchow, arrived there this afternoon, prepared to fire on the workers’ and peasants’ Red Army now rapidly marching to- ward the city. The H. 3x. 8. Robin and the Cicala, two British destroy- ers, were on the scene ready to join in the savage imperialist attack upon the Soviet army. Cantonese and Kuomintang forces, fighting in the interests of British and American imperialism, are reported to be advancing on the main body of the Communist army, now concentrated northwest of Wu- chow. In less than two days the Red Army has crossed Hunan, en- tered the province of Kwangsi and | is now about thirty miles from Wu- ; chow. All along the road of march it confiscated the property of the landlords, divided the property and lands among the impoverished a ageais and instituted local So- vie BUFFALO NAZI RALLY TO BE PICKETED BY ANTI-FASCIST FRONT ,Communist Party Calls for Big Protest Before Elmwood Music Hall On Saturday, Dec. 1 | BUFFALO, Nov. 28. — Growing fascism comes more: openly into the light with the announcement of a “Thankse | giving celebration and German military concert by the Stahle | helm Kapelle” of New York, Saurday, Dec. 1, afternoon and Sales Tax Looms In Many Cities (Continued from Page 1) “Twenty-five percent of those on relief rolls are chiselers and alliens.” Within the home relief bureaus, a veritable reign of terror to which the liberal Welfare Commissioner | on. Police slugging of unemployed | delegations at the bureaus are a | commonplace. Relief workers | within the bureau apparatus who protest police brutality and dis- crimination against Negroes are dis- charged, transferred or otherwise intimidated. Honest social work- | ers within the city relief organiza- | tion who demand a progressive so- are rebuffed. A vicious drive, led by Mr. Hodson, to smash the organi- zations of relief workers, the Home Relief Bureau Employees Associa- tion and the Association of Office and Emergency Employees has been going on for some months. Prices Go up While relief is being cut, prices going up and, to top it all, new taxes are imposed on an already half-starved populace—all in the name of aiding the unemployed!— the Wall Street bankers are not touched. On the contrary, they dic- tate the very policies, using La Guardia today as they used Walker yesterday. ‘The infamous Bankers’ Agreement, drafted by Samuel Untermyer, spe- cial financial advisor to the Tam- many administration preceding the | La Guardia regime, is still in force. | La Guardia is living up to the letter | of this pact religiously. By the terms of the Bankers Agreement, signed in October 1933, a bankers syndicate was to lend the city $70,000,000 to be used for work and home relief. This was to be repaid by the city with interest over |a period of ten years, It will cost | the city about twice that sum when | the entire thing has been paid off. | And it is this agreement which is | the sacred cow of City Hall, which | La Guardia lives up to, the abroga- | tion or suspension of which he re- | fuses to demand. Aids Bankers This agreement, among other | things, stipulated that savings banks could not be taxed. Real estate in the city cannot be taxed, according | to the terms of the contract, over | $438,700,000 in the years of 1935, 1936 and 1937, It is to meet terms such as are found in the Bankers Agreement that the city set aside in its 1935 budget, approximately $180,000,000 | for interest and principal payments to the bankers. What this means can be understood when it is pointed out that the $180,000,000 is about | three times as much as all the three taxes recently adopted would net, ‘The firms making up the bank- ers syndicate are the Bankers Trust Company, The Chase National Bank, Morgan Company Is Agent J. P. Morgan & Company are the agents of the entire group. Power to investigate the books and financial statements of the city at all times is given the bankers syndicate by the Bankers’ Agree- ment. Shylocks exercise over city’s finances | and, thus, over the masses of the city. | Two principles were opposed in the entire tax and relief question. | The first was that of the bankers: placing new taxes on the masses to pay for relief (while at the same time slashing relief). The second was that advanced by the Commu- nist Party and supported by mili- tant labor organizations: taxation of the bankers, the large corpora- tions to pay for relief. The Communist Party, as an im- mediate measure, has proposed the suspension of the debt service to the bankers, the $180,000,000 thus rescued to be used for unemploy- ment relief. This debt service is to ; be suspended pending the. passage of | adequate Federal Unemployment In- | surance, that is, the Workers’ Un- employment Insurance Bill. | By his support of the sales tax, | LaGuardia has shown himself again a tool of the bankers. The fight will not be ended with the passage or defeat of the sales tax. It will continue, with the Communist Party leading the resis- tance to the efforts of the bank- ers and their agents to place the | burdens of the crisis on the backs of the masses, STRIKE SELTLEMENT REPORTED PORTLAND, Ore., Noy. 28.—The settlement of the Swift and Co, strike was announced yesterday by the Regional Labor Board, _ William Hodson is a partner goes | evening. Fascist groups from Rochester, Cleveland, Detroit, RET fo ee ———* Chicago, | mentioned, | Swastika), is to be dedicated. A | picket the meeting is being organs cial outlook towards the unemployed | Philadelphia, New York and Toronto and St. Catharines, Canada, are taking part. A flag dedication (nationality of flag not but presumably the united front of anti-fascists to ized. Given Music Hall Use of Elmwood Music Hall, city owned building, has been granted to the fascists by city officials. Work- ers’ committees are demanding of Mayor Zimmermann and the City Council that the permit for the meeting be cancelled. With 3,000 now on work relief to be put back on charity, three worke ers found mysteriously dead in po- lice precincts during the past. few months, hung with their own belts; the police murder of a, 15-year-old boy just a.few days ago, the sixth youth shot by police in four years; the brutal beating and unsuccessful frame-up of Manning Johnson, the. rape frame-up against Alphonso Davis and William Fisher. in Niag- ara Falls, sentenced to 20 years and five years, respectively, and now: he+ ing appealed by the I. L. D—all these events being followed by this thinly-veiled Nazi meeting, take on a sinister significance. A Unity Appeal Made To meet this situation appeals to a united front against fascism have ~ been extended by the Communist Party to the workers’ organizations of Buffalo. Eighteen youth or- ganizations, among them the ine dustrial department of the Y. W. Cc. A, Y, P. S. L. and Y. C. L,, are taking up the question. Rey. Hahn, spiritual leader of the local S. P., approached for partici- pation in the united front, objects because he believes in free speech and “if we interfere with the fas- cists on this we, too, will be .open to condemnation.” Neither local 8. P. branch has replied officially as yet. * All workers, Negro and white. So: cialist, Communist, professional, lib- eral and all others are urged .to demonstrate against this brazen. fascist action to be at Elmwood Music Hall on Saturday, Dec. 1, and step on this monster so that it: can- not rise again. RATES: 35¢ for 8 lines on. weekdays Friday and Scturday 50c, Money must accompany notices. Chicago, Ill. ‘The International Workers Order, Junior Section, is holding a huge rally at People Auditorium, Dec. 22, and are asking all workers’ organi- zations not to arrange any affairs for that day. First Annual Dance given by Painters Br. 565 I.W.O. Saturday, Dec. 8 at Mirror Hall, 1156 N. Western Ave. Adm. 25¢ in adv., 35¢ at door. Seventeenth Anniversary Celebration. given by Sec. 9 C.P. Thursday, Nov, 29, 2:30 p.m. at Workers Lyceum, 2733 Hirsh Blvd. Eugene Bechtold, main speaker. Adm. 10c. Unemployed. free. Philadelphia, Pa. Lewis Bentzley, leader of the Na~ tional Farmers’ Movement, speaks at the Workers. School Forum, Priday at 8 p.m. on “The Farmer Under the New Deal.” Adm. 25c, unemployed The First National Bank, The 10c, 908 Chestnut St., 5th floor. Guaranty Trust Company, The Na- Mass meeting’ in defense of the tional City Bank, and J. P. Morgan el ae oar Bates, mie speaker, jurday, ec. 1, pe N. 30th St. Adm.’ 15¢. Concert and Report of the Intere national Women's Congress Against War and Fascism, Mother Bloor, main speaker, Friday, Dec. 7, 8 p.m. at Boslover Hall, 701 Pine St. Adm. ||) 15c. Ausp.: City Comm. Working Wo { men’s Councils. § Jubilee Concert of 20 years of prow letarian musical development of the celebrated proletarian composer, Comrade Jacob Schaefer, Friday, Nov. This is but a tiny inkling of the 30 at ‘Mercantile ‘Hall, Broad and degree of control the Wall Street Master Streets. ‘“Einziger Span’ will be performed. Tickets 40c, at 316 Washington Square Bldg., 7th and Chestnut Sts. Boston, Mass. “Oust the Jinx” Party with: plenty’ of laughs, music and fun, Sunday, Dec. 2, 8 p.m. at 12 Hayward Place, the Sacco-Vanzetti Room. Subs. 18c. ‘Thanksgiving Dinner served from 1 to 9 p.m, Thursday, Nov. 29. “All the fixin's’—and more too! Adm. 35¢, Proceeds for Defense of Scottsboro boys. Scottsboro Br. I.L.D., 1029 Tre= mont St. Providence, R. I. First Annual Bazaar of Labor Bduce- tion Association. Three evenings: Thursday, Nov. 29; Friday, Nov: 30; and Saturday, Dec. 1, at 1755 Weste minster St. Starts 7 p.m. Adm. 10t. Bargains, dancing, entertainment. Cleveland, Ohio © Michael Gold, on Iteture. tour for the New Masses, speaks on “The. Crisis in Modern Literature,” Satur: day evening, Dec: 1, at News Aue |) ditorium, E. 18th- and Superior, Ave. | | at a meeting arranged by the John Reed Club. Adm. 5c. Supper and Dance given by West Side Hungarian LL.D. Br. Saturday, Dec..1 at West Side Hungarien Workers Home, 4309 Lorain Ave., 7:30 p.m, Benefit Political Prisoners. Adm. 35c. Washington, D. C. Film showing of “Road to Life,” ‘Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, 2 to iL P.m. continuous, followed by special midnight’ performance, 212 H St. N.W. Ausp.: Washington Film and Photo League. Rochester, N. Y. Michael Gold on lecture tour for the New Masses, speaks on ‘The Crisis in Modern Literature,” Friday Eve., Nov. 30, at Lithuanian Hall, 575 Joseph Ave, at a meeting arranged by the Pen & Hammer of Rocht } | | | |