The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 11, 1935, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NE W YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 19 Page 3 BACK MINNEAPOLIS STRIKE, COMMUNISTS URGE ALL WORKERS Many Cities Release of Hillsboro 14 Local Reliet Garage M en Need Support | Of All Labor HIS MASTER’S VOICE by Gropper Will Conduct ; Lenin Rallie Reveals Growing Power Of Fight on Fasci sm Needs Ignored In Washington Strikers Warned Against Week-End to See Meet- All‘Unemployables’Face Arbitration or Craft | | ings in New Jersey Starvation; One-Sixth Settlements | and Middle West Live on Aid Lists into Open Retreate d Steadily as Mass - NEWARK. N. J. J is s NGTON, D. C., Jan. 10.— MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Jan. 10— A clsfer routes Rhaec Pressure for Defendants Grew : Be The entire labor movement must. be 1 Bias theese ee - one "pe res pa called upon to give support to the leaders of the national By John Adams t Bee striking garage mechanics, reads against war and fascism by h (One of the Hillsboro Defendants) tuned the statement of the Communist a series of anti-war and Rae : ‘ ‘ rales Party, Twin Cities, greeting the |cist demonstrations in the most im- HILLSBORO, Ill., Jan. 10.—The court house in this SPPrOpa. striking garage mechanics, now out portant cities of New Jersey. The| little county seat of 4,000 was the scene Monday of one of bess for a week. largest of these meetings will take 4, = ing sone of ¢ a} > } od ranks The Communist Party warns the place in Newark Friday at_8 pm, ‘he most heartening signs of the ability of the united ranks workers against arbitration, against at Kreuger’s Auditorium, 25 Bel- of the working class to smash through the incipient fasc separate craft settlements, or | mont Avenue. attacks by American capitalism. The prosecution in the “friendly” city officials. The state- | On the program for the evening person of State’s A ey Hall, hidé a ment recalls how the Farmer-Labor are William O'Donnell. colorful for an hour and a haif after the jeot ion by the defendants. ‘The de- aldermen and others joined last leader of the Seabrook Farm of court, while hundreds | cision of the defendants was upheld off the Federal summer to order machine guns and last summer, recently released from packed the cou with vociferous cheer a hae a tement every other means of suppression against the striking truck drivers. The Party’s statement, in full, |jail as a result of a hu Y which he conducted against his im- prisonment; Mac Weiss, editor of jon of the v d the first two jury panels. Second “Offer” Made The prosecuting atiorney had of Friday) unem-~ 5,000 | ’ ; 3 ; ployables” will be dropped from the : | the Young Worker and member of The 14 defendants, arrested in Ot actually entered the court room relief ach the National Executive Committee connection with relief struggles this Another “offer” was sent in to the “© ** Fellow Workers, Greetings! | of the Young Communist League, past spring, which had uncovered defendants. Instead of a trial ief here is directly We congratulate you on the step jand a rich program of ente; - the conspiracy of the county o! court taking on the as; tration through you have taken to win an increase |ment, including the Harlem Young cials to rob the relief funds whole- a market place. e three com= in wages and better working condi- Liberators, the Jack London Thea- ale, were informed by their at- ; “I wonder if Hall the prosec r) missioner n here, these tions. Garage workers are now tre, the Rebel Dancers and others. torneys that the prosecution was has 2 icense?” remarked 5.000 iny e of the na- learning what the textile workers, There will be dancing after the desirous of making an “offer.” one newsp: tion's capital will not be exempted truck drivers and others have meeting. Frank Carlson, District; The prosecutor asked if five of |_ The he Roosevelt relief learned in the past, that the N. R. | | Organizer in New Jersey will he defendants would accept one |fear that tt ae ises hi cs “been a delusion, | jas chairman. One of the 1 t year in prison on a minor charge, the face of the 1) Be pao lie te sine | mectings will be in Trenton where |in return for dismissal of the fense by the powerful ] ions for such ‘a and. thet if the workers. re, Boing | three former section organizers will | treason charge and release of the Progressive Miners of / iy been made, and to gain anything they will have to act as speakers. These are I. remainder on one year parole. This Cialist Party locals, ng machine is ready fight for their gains. We know ed Murphy, Ann Barton and Frank offer was, of course, rejected, and OVer the heads of the 3 the garage workers are among the | Carlson. the defense demanded that the trial leadership, was for a nine months ate figures for re- lowest paid Se intensely ex- Other meetings will be held at: proceed. arts ae all the defendants : are not yet avail- ploited of all to ers. ; ; Bayonne, 10 West 22nd Street, Send Wire to Roosevelt . his third “offer” was accepted 20,806 families We take this opportunity to in- | Sunday: Another hour of waiting. A de-/Pecause th a : tha By far the most you that our entire member- ; Rie sien ,. fendant addi the waiting work- the pressure of the working class is. ed nies a Bee inte atk cule GRIER | Paterson, 682 Rivers Street, Sat- Sir aes eiaeare tat eeraeepnAd Glimnbed: Gren tie ferme ne Negro domestic work as cers those who are in the uae Jan. 26. Speaker, Frank sevelt is adopted, demanding the fascist reaction. Tne “parole” meas- ve been ha’ i hit by ers, . arlson, rkers’ Bill Jn- ure was accepted for what it wa fe i loyed. Coun- a iN pessage of the Workers’ Bill for Un- ° at pas ene VERT OF Seas g Mediated pes SEE tiie arike Genessee and Hudson Streets./and also protesting against the in. ¢cution. The fascist forces were in bitants— be re ene? sift We realize Speakers—Frank Carlson, Ann Bar- creasing use of the courts to frame etreat. ordinate am.unt when one consid- that you are fighting, not only for By CHARLES KRUMBEIN ton, I. Murphy. militant workers The defense and the assembled the tremendous number of office yourselves, but that your fight is ee eee can stil earn a tot.” | ene Setumaay, Jan. 12, at 686) And s tremendous roar of “Aye,” |wotkers realized the nature of the Sud government ee i . king | Ss! y r. a ym ‘om Hitler we St) a in Street. er t - made the sheriff's force hastily ~ ° s was rete eee st fe alee sey a ae La aieaie Saat ueteak, te eontehteatinnt| “This is the sense of his cam- Agee i pic ena aia vacate the courtrcom, and sent As to have been used in a sweeping working class districts of Washing- : living standard of the entire work- Se ae ns eee cp al eninte, ee Ctorsue iungeana, Ine tindlen = Tt ik tha, Hesincane. (oben has Soaks ae faci the sistant State's Attorney Dennis attack on workers’ organizations all ton, which alone can give a picture \ ing class. Your fight must be car- | been the moat Sa ee ey ea Bann of the world’s classics, the |huge elementary school for the in-|meotings, the New seeey Distriet scurrying to Judge Paul Mewil- over the State was i of the depth of destitution on the ried on aad broadened in eee sada ee His press with its| mutual slaughter of the beloved m and popularization of is distributing 25,000 copies of its Hams, hollering, “Judge, they are Prosecution, the ca i : very doorstep of ‘the Roosevelt, Aer sciousness that if you win tt wi | ook me of filth has always been at| leaders, the brutal suppression of m and Fascist methods in the recruiting pamphiet with the ads taking possession of the court room, Shown that it was afraid to de- Deal, those on the rel : abet Bivicvory. ton<all yctsers, ane, Sus SuacaePridk. OF the” erieriieavot the | the workers, and of all democratic |most extensive manner possible. | for the various localities on the back Judge, do you know that it is abso- fend its terrorist basis of ex Teach’ 60: per cent ‘of the pom £ you lose, all workers will be made | te serViGatherland, And here is|Tihts, stinks to high heaven.|Indeed Mr, Hearst did not waste | cover. lute contempt of court? in open forum before the Tae ae, to bear the consequences. workers’ fatherland. And here is) 780°, M ih iE i nets Following the vote, the prosecu- | Pcpulation. 5 ‘ the essence of capitalist “freedom Fascism, not only in Germany but | his time in Germany! F pila cllbe testes ean arr PaGeclso tik: wiletieaie dae dae: >: . Must Not Lose of the press.” One millionaire news- On an international scale, is becom- | That Hearst received support in| DETROIT, Jan. 10—William aia eh i? fs Oeste Paneaeadeea' a tell enespinndea W erkers kt ick But you cannot and must not », ee owner, because of his mono- | ing more and more discredited. this campaign from forces who Weinstone, District Secretary of the { an nF hepa Paabpep ey si odsad RFS she ge a te plee on = i ed. pats ? e vert But in this situation Hearst sees) would vehemently deny all con- Communist Party will address the ‘0 the two “outsiders.” John Adams © (BS Censpiraey | Chats lose. Victory can be assur poly and control of a powerful a Lenin-Liebknecht-Luxembi and Jan Wittenber of Chicago, get-|0f holding a demonstration without 1. The entire labor movement chain of newspapers, has the free- | the danger that fascism as the in-| nections with this magnate of yel- | Lenin-Liebknecht-Luxemburg me - must be called upon to give their support—with pickets, material | help, and so forth. This can be ac- complished by sending committees dom, day in and day out, to let loose a reactionary, vituperative stream | | of lying propaganda against millions of toilers. strument of the American finance- capitalists, of Wall Street, against the increasing wave of dissastisfac- tion, strikes, growing embitterment low journalism is another question that needs some investigation. Let's take the liberals of the “Nation” and “New Republic.” These good|of the Young Communist League. ting one year terms and the rest freed? The defendants indignantly rejected this second “offer.” Back in the court room, the num- morial meeting to be held here on Sunday at the Finnish Hall, 5969 » 14th St. at 7 p.m. under the auspices @ permit. The judge droned out @ face saving patriotic speech. The audience sat quietly. judge spoke, the taces of the w: As the 3 Candidates In Decatur / ov i : |ing of 2,000 copies of the Special Ay > 7 man, into | learn, and they are learning. Never- | Swered the question now being te, and the leaderless generals of 3 r Strike,” 8 p.m. sharp. Subs. 250 1 by a ~ coer PT aaaea: may | theless, it is clear that Hearst also |solved more and more in the same |Cannon. If Hearst has not thought | seein ie nit pee iy oa Chicago, Il. Car toons by BL RCK . fall, to use his influence and to_ learned a lot from Hitler and from Way in the minds of the rich bank- |up the idea of financing this group | to house canvassing in Youngstown First Chicago League of Workers . take energetic steps to ensure vic- the German Nazis. |ers and owners of the big trusts: (how many agents he has among Theatre, New Theatre Nite, Satur- ourselves, as we prove by our sup- the purposes of Mr. Hearst's general Forum, Sundzy evening, Jan. 13, 8 D L Editi ‘ 213 De Soto Building, 8 systematic and enthusiastic de-| pression of the Negroes, by our campaign of villification against | Of Woman in Seattl a oh ek ede e Luxe ition , Minneapolis, Minn. tas of ie peer of German brutal terror in strikes, and by the the fortress of the world proletarian in Seattle | Adm. 15¢. y . ‘ascism. 1a jowever, } } : x 4 i ber of workers increased steadily. |ing class men and women, miners of strikers to all union and other) In a Soviet America, whici will| f the workers against the whole people are always so liberal that at yh es alae tee a oe Rumors spread by the prosecution and others, began to urlghten, Thee a workers’ meetings to point out that | pe achieved despite the resistance | Capitalist system, can not be so every critical moment, although keg provided: be tencpiece or- Of expected riots, etc., had failed | understood. The victory was their's, DECATUR, Ill, Jan. 10—A cane if this strike is lost it will give en-| of the combined class of Hearsts Casily foisted on the American they do not like it and protest chestra, z in their purpose of intimidating the | They began to walk out of the ‘idate for Mayor, Arthur Jay, Com- couragement to the Citizens’ Alli- | in the United States, this gentleman People. The more so because Hearst | against it in the most liberal man- aie | workers courtroom and while the judge munist, and two for Commi: ance and to all employers in the would haye no other connection Sees at sa mesg aie that in the |ner, tind themselves flying as the! sstNNEAPOLIS, Minn.. Jan. 10. ironed on, voice: ing “Bandiera William Cow Communist, and ‘Twin Cities to start wage cuts and | with newspapers than the right to| United States there is mounting tail of the kit of reaction. What , “ye n4 n - Liebknecht-Luxemburg Rosa,” echoed in through the win- R tterson of the Unemvloy- lay-offs, longer hours of work and | read them. He could then read the among wider sections of the popula- high and optimistic notes did they Youth Memorial Meeting under the from the prosecution, and their re- i rat : dows of the courtroom ment Council have been chosen to speed-up. The strike must be | press owned and controlled by the On Adnuration. respect, and love sing about the New Deal and about | auspices of the Young Communist 1 por ge - run on a workers, ticket here in the f i ili sses, and edited by the for vie ion, whos the “new life,’ and the “new or- : Han if Cinee al spread. All garages in the Twin | toiling masses, ani nefficient” class, the workers, are League will be held here on Sat February election: Cities must be closed, without ex- | ceptions, to prevent any and all) most talented workers, intellectu and farmers in the interest of the building a new world while the cap- der,” and by this means objectively they aided Roosevelt to befuddle urday. The affair will be held at the Workers Cultural Center, 1229 from Western Pennsylvania to the National Congress on Social Insur- Workers Vow ers are not able to run ' | i ion | italist world flounders in crisis. and finally betray the masses. To- re ance, wish to send you our very 0% a Communist ticket since they possi scab work. If it becomes | toilers and in closest cooperation 7 ; a . Logan Avenue North, starting at Ld ’ 3 ve th n-pa n shell game fa oe other unions must be | with those who did the work of so- aan serena Ancien i a aay, it is Ene they a phoned. 8 pm. A varied program of mu- 1 1t to V @E &est wishes and to remind you that ee isan shell gimie ah y | ciety. | en ittle liberal disappointment in the | sical selections, skits, speeches, to we have not forgotten y 7 eb = as = peat wee OP ARES: SRN | oe 6 what “Worrtes licarah the United States ask themselves: |turn of affairs. How anxiously, be followed by dancing has been gorten You nor the | point program has been worked “If it is possible for the government art which you so bravely and ef- 4 Puy be ut—h reliof Jeariny slums; i ; " i against the interests of the Scotts- | arranged, Pk ] k « kf | if out—higher relief; clearing slums; 2. You must struggle against) This press of Soviet America, the of the proletariat in ‘backward’ res boys, did they jump iato the 3 weet a ran CLG tectivety took in the working class building of workers’ homes, parks, meparate: craft, settlements See ernie which drives Mr, Hearsg | Russia to create such a remarkable | criminal lawyer Lichowlts’s cam-| CHICAGO, Til, Jan. 10-—Prank " struggle. We are sending you this | Tecrestion centers; free water Jos the |SaTage Worse’ all workers, | te pages to deseribing the under. (Te™ Hf What could we in Amer~|paign against the International |Muccl, Communist, Village Boatd| PITTSBURGH, Pa. Jan. 10.-A| etter as we are about to depart for | he Unemployed: abolition of | the | PEE UT Pe cee eat youl wine OF princes: nar ta exaevining | eee Fhe Gort newanced | Labor Defense. Today, even the|member of Taylor Springs, one of | letter, pledging to continue the fight Washington. We a. uru'gou that we Sean, nik Ge cone ae and uns 5 y | ua country it e world, ace ish i -s0-! 3 e acquil Heit Basa wee oars sabia hoi ae sed BA ve $5,000; for the right to organize Sees aa The unskilled are the the bedclothes of princesses. It will ee rd, accomplish ‘f | not-so-liberal Supreme Court has |the acquitted defendants in the for their release was sent to Phil gant y aries to order machine guns, riot majority of garage workers. The | emphasis must be for winning the strike demands for ALL garage | workers. Every garage worker into | the union. | Guard Against Arbitration | 3. Guard against the arbitration | teap. Experience proves that | bhrough arbitration the workers are | stalled off, their ranks split, the fight weakened, and the workers’ interests betrayed in the end. The results of negotiations, and even of | arbitration, will depend upon the: degree of militancy and the effec- tiveness of the strike. 4, Do not have illusions about the “friendliness” of the city offi- cials, whether they: are labeled as | | the Socialist Party have been urged date for its Grand 11th Annual e reactionaries or as Farmer-Labor | Soviet. Republics, despite his daily |WU4 lying attacks against the So- the “Forward,” who are distin- to come to the Lenin Memorial. SE oie tear de a ves. The Farmer-Labor | slander, had not reached such con- | Vt Union consists in attempting | guished from Noske, Ebert, Severing | Meeting which will at the same time | ih atic eas ate aldermen joined with the reaction-| centratad heights as we observe { ‘iscredit the ripening idea in/anq Schedeman only because they be an clection rally at which Bob H Se. chon life guns, tear gas bombs and clubs for use against workers. If state troops and other forces are brought in, as was done in the truck drivers’ strike, they will come to break the strike, not to defend you. You can rely upon the organized mass power ef the entire working class. The Communist Party appeals to every worker, regardless of political affiliation; to every liberal, profes- tory for the garage workers. Fraternally yours, DISTRICT 9, C. P. U.S. A. Fascist Terrorists School, Sat.. Jan. 12. 8 p.m, 18 thousand workers marched behind | . Back Bay 8 Adi Defended by Trotsky DETROIT, Jan. 10.—Total pay- the body of Mrs. Lena Dans last | sinment, Refreshments, e Followers in France 10 Japanese Forces |. Mase’ Fotk Dancing. (Special to the Daily Worker) PARIS, Jan. 10 (By Wireless).— League of Rights for Man, to- er with the Trotzkyists and the leaders of the reformist trade un- fons, led a campaign here today against the execution of the self- confessed counter-revolutionary terrorists who were involffived in teh murder of Sergei Kirov. The anti-fascist Liberation Com- | mittee, headed by Henri Barbusse, Jaunched an appeal clarifing the _ stern measures of the Soviet work- “ers in the interests of the interna- tional proletariat and calling for not be a press devoted to the love episodes of millionaires, their seduc- tions, scandals and riotious society orgies. We will find nothing in this press about that salacious game of the movie stars, American by Mr.. Hearst, of the weekly changing of their most be- loved. No space will be found in the press of Soviet America for the | fate of poor Mrs. Vanderbilt, the woman who in copious columns of | Mr. Hearst's papers is conducting such a desparate fight for her chil certainly only because of her deep mother. love—valued by the court at $50,000 a year. Previous to U. S. recognition of the Soviet Union, Mr. Hearst’s at- | tacks against the Union of Socialist. now. If one follows the Hearst press, one can see that this in- furiated campaign against the So- viet Union, and the American work- ing class, started shortly after his return from Germany, and, more precisely, after his secret business negotiations with Adolph Hitler. We do not want to be unjust to Mr. Hearst and say that Hitler or the Fascist bloodhounds could not also Jearn from him. Sure they could The Editor Begins What Hearst started immediately after his return from German was | (though in a somewhat veiled form) | is not | considered truly | we were to set up the dictatorship of the proletariat here; that means, | the government of the workers in closest cooperation with the toiling | farmers?” So Hearst, after his visit to Hit- ler, resorts to the method of de- fending Nazi Germany and propa- gating his aims of fascism by de- veloping the most vicious and hein- ous attack against the Soviet Un- ion and the Communist Party of the United States. This campaign reached a “high” point—though not yet the highest point because there is no limit for yellow journalism in any field of slander and lies—in connection with the assassination |of our Comrade Sergei Kirov. The whole essense of Hearst's more and more workers’ minds of |the necessity of a workers’ gov- ernment in the capitalist countries. _And by his special means and in | his own specialized way Hearst ad- vances the aims of Fascism in the | Usited States. Is Fascist Agent Hitler in America. He is a little more cautious than crude Spank- | noebls. But he has already an- how to find a way out of the crisis. And that answer is: “Hitler shows us the way. Many things we know efficiency of our yellow press. But Hearst is the voluntary agent. for | again taught tnem a lesson Encouraged Rotten Liberals And when the white-guardist as- Chicago Lenin memorial meeting | sassins, spies, saboteurs and wreck- jers were shot by the Soviet state, which was created only because the | Bolsheviks were not liberal with the counter-revolutionists as were the German Socialist leaders, and |the Otto Bauers in Austria, and the |Spanish Socialists after the over- throw of King Alfonso — the lib- erals shed their copious tears for the assassins and not for the slain Kirov. And the unexampled vi- cious attacks of Hearst against the |Soviet Union at the present time | were especially encouraged by the| Western Electric, members of the | attitude of liberals of this kind. The yellow social-fascists around jhave not yet had the chance to play the same role on a grander scale in America, bring plenty of grist to |the Hearst anti-Soviet mill. What ,do these people bother about the fact that in the United Sates, as in Germany, the workers may have to pay the bili, There still remains what is com- |monly known as the Workers Party of America, this combination of the \flying reactionary Dutchman, Mus- \them will be found out later) it is only because they voluntarily, in their own particular. style, carry out revolution, the Soviet. Union. Bandits Offer Pretext For War Maneuver SHANGHAI, Jan, 10.—Bands or- | ganized by Japanese agents in Man- churia are continuing to penetrate into the demilitarized zone, burn- ing and pillaging villages in order to give the Japanese a pretext for concentrating their forces in the re- gion of the Great Wall, it is re- ported here. Japanese authorities in Man- churia are continuing to round up arms, particularly among the peas- ants in Jehol and Hopei, north of the Great Wall. The peasants have been ordered to surrendbr, under | rolls in the automobile industry of | Michigan during the month of No- vember declined .6 per cent from October, at a time when employ- ment was increasing one-half of one per cent. This is revealed by the latest sta~ of Labor and Industry, The de- cline in payrolls can be attributed to the wage cuts which have been introduced in most plants. The sta- tistics also show that average week- ly wages in the transportation equipment industry (with the ex- ception of a few hundred, this con- Sists entirely of auto workers) de- clined even more—8 per cent—in the same period. The statistics of the Department threat of severe punishment, not of Labor and Industry also reveal tistics of the Michigan Department | AUT! . s . UTO PAYROLLS DROF = Nazis Will Substitute | Military Zone System For Reich Divisions BERLIN, Jan. 10.—A_ long-con- templated war maneuver will be put into effect by the fascist ad- ministration on Jan. 30—when the all-Nazi Reichstag meets, it was an- nounced today. All Germany: will be divided into twenty districts or ter- ritories with a population of 3,000,- 000 to 4,000,000 each, in placg of the old monarchic or state bound- aries. | This military-mobilization move dovetails with the allocation of large Reichswehr units, This move, largely actuated by Minister of the Interior Wilhelm Frick, has infuriated Premier of Hillsboro Criminal Syndicalist case, has been invited to speak at the on Sunday, Jan. 2, at 7:30 p.m. at the Coliseum, 15th Street and Wa- | bash Avenue. The Chicago working class will celebrate the partial victory of the Hillsboro case and will mobilize its strength to wipe out the criminal syndicalist law in Illinois, to defeat | the fascist propaganda of Hearst and other counter-revolutionary or- ganizations, and will mobilize the ; Working class to struggle against war and fascism. | Workers in the stockyards, rail- roads, International Harvester, | American Federation of Labor, of | Minor, member of the Central Com- mittee; Karl Lockner, candidate of | the Communist Party for Mayor of | | Chicago, and Claude Lightfoot, Ne- | | gro leader of the Young Communist League, will be among the speakers. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Jan. 10.— | Plans for the Lenin Memorial Mect- ing here Saturday evening, Jan. 19, at the Central Auditorium, 225 w. | Boardman Street, include the order- |and the small steel towns in the |Mahoning and Shanango valleys, 3,000 at Mass Funeral (Special to the Daily Worker) SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 10—Three Sunday in a mighty protest dem- onstration against the relief and home loan policies which had will do all we can to secure your early release and to make it possible for you again to take your place in the struggle.” Frankfeld and Dan Benning, two imprisoned leaders in the fight for unemployment relief and social in- surance, by nearly 100 delegates elected by scores of organizations in | and strike; against fascism and war; for the repeal of the Criminal Syndicalism law; for the defense of the Soviet Union—which should rally the support of the workers, | this district to the National Con- gress on Unemplo:ment and Social Insurance. The letter follo “Phil Frankfeld and Dan Benning, “Allegheny County Workhouse, “Blawnox, Pa, | “We, the undersigned delegates WHAT'S Philadelphia, Pa. ORGANIZATIONS — Attention! organizations are asked not to ar- range any affairs on April 26, 1935 ‘The Freiheit Gesangs Farein has this Limited! All sound picture showing the life and struggles of Ernst Thaelmann. Also | anti-fascist struggles in U.S., France, England, Friday, Jan. 11, 8 p.m. at 1208 Tasker St. Adm. 25¢ Lenin—His Life and Work by A. W. Mills, HUN Lecture C.P. organizer, at Park Manor Workers Club, 32nd and Montgomery Ave., Friday, Jan. 11 8 p.m. Also Drama Studio Group. Freiheit Gesang. Harmonica Band. Adm. 10¢. ‘Sunday night Forum, Workers School, 908 Chestnut St., George Morris, tor Western Worker during general strike, speaks on “The San Francisco day, Jan. 12, 8:30 p.m, at John Reed Club, 505 8. State St Pearl M, Hart, Public’ Defender, will | lecture at Chicago Pen and Hammer Boston, Mass. ' Housewarming by Vanguard Dance | Meriden, Conn. Performance and Dance at Horrigon CHAPTE Autographed! A REVOLUTIONARY HiSTORY OF THE WORLD CRISIS and REVOLT: ONLY 100 COPIES GER RS BY: Hell, 87 Camp St., Sat., Jan. 12, 7 caused this worker to commit sui-| p.m. Dancing. Come and have a fine time. cide. Mrs. Dans, owner of a small| mortgage-burdened home, had been | refused unemployment relief on the | grounds that she was a home own-| | er, She had also been denied a loan | by the local home loan bureau, set up following Roosevelt's demagogic , Promises of relief to small home owners, | ‘The mass funeral and demonstra- tion was arranged by the Unem-_ ployed’ Citizen League. An honor | guard of men and women marched | directly behind the hearse to the demonstration, which was addressed by Rev, Thomas Edmonds, George Bradley, organizer of the unem- 4TH ANNUAL JUBILEE CONCERT COSTUME BALL SUNDAY, JANUARY 13 beginning 3. P. M Prospect Auditorium 2612 Prospect Avenue Program: MAX BEDAC! main speaker; Workers’ Choruses; John Reed Club; I. W. 0. Children’s Group Henri Barbusse Earl Browder William F. Dunne Michael Gold Clarence Hathaway DAILY WORKER -, Marguerite Young s 4 O@ Check or Money Order must accompany orders. |] e Only 100 Orders will be filled. Langston Hughes Corliss Lamont Joseph North 2 John Strachey Seymour Waldman ‘e @ DANCING ALL EVENING @ Admixatan. De ,50 E. 13th St., New York :

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