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* being repeated in Britain, Page Six THE DAILY WORKER Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO. 1113 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago, Il. —____ si SUBSCRIPTION RATES By mail (in Chicago only): By mail (outside of Chicago): $8.00 per year $4.50 six months | $6.00 per vear $8.50 six months $2.50 three months | $2.00 three months Address all mail and make out checks 10 THE DAILY WORKER, 1113 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago, Illinois J. LOUIS ENGDAHL t WILLIAM F, DUNNE MORITZ J. LOE Entered as second-class mail September 21, 1923, at the post-office at Chi- cago, Ill, under the act of March 3, 1879. wee Editors, Business Manager Advertising rates on application. The Truth About Cieplak The Chicago Tribune revives the sentimental slush of Laura Jean Libby in a mendacious attempt to cover the shame of-an archbishop with a phantom martyrdom. In a screed, reeking with filth and lies, the Tribune pictures the Polish prelate, Archbishop ‘John Cieplak, now in Chicago, as an audacious crusader hurling defiance at “Red Russia, the religion murdering rabble, God befouling Soviet.” Cieplak is pictured as having inhabited a cell in Moscow from which he viewed the Kremlin walls and also overlooked a jail yard in’ which his priestly brother in Christ, Butkiewiez,),was executed before a firing squad. This picture is as accurate as, the rest of. the Tribune’s fairy tale. Every word of the storyvis a.lie except the statement that Cieplak was in jail. From his prison cell he could not even see the walls of the Kremlin and the exeeution of.Butkiewicz did not take place inthe prison yard. But Moscow is,a long way from Chicago and so the readers of the kept press in this city are treated to the harrowing details concocted by a locak profit scribbler. Just why was this Cieplak person in prison? Because he was a Roman Catholic priest? Certianly not; there are many priests in Russia who are not in prison. People are not imprisoned there for their religious beliefs. He was there because he was proved con- clusively to be the agent, the servile tool of the French and Polish military missions trying to destroy the government of the working class of Russia. / Butkiewiez was executed only after money that-he had obtained from French agents was found in his possession and after it was proved that he used other money obtained from the same source to hire murderers to launch a campaign of assassination against Soviet officials. The Polish archbishop, Cieplak, was an as- sociate of Butkiewicz, and co-conspirator with him in his treacherous work. ‘i This holy pair were willing and anxious to take money from the imperialist mauraders who tried in every conceivable way to destroy the government of Russia and restore the rule of the czars. According to the Chicago interpretation Cieplak opposed the Soviets because “Lenin and Trotsky fetched their eternally accursed visions to supplant the rule of Nicholas,” \ There is the whole thing in a nutshell. The Bolsheviks sup- planted the rule of Nicholas! It is their yearning for the return of Nicholas that causes tears to well up in the hearts of the prelates of the holy church. Instead of the Bolshevik education of children with the facts of modern science, these apostles of darkness yearn for the return of the good old days in Russia when ignorance was a virtue and intelligence a crime, the days when priests were permitted 4° pollute the minds of children with their filthy teachings, Instead ‘yf a government that serves the interests of the working class this ious gentleman wants the return of Nicholas; for the triumphal ng of the workers he, yearns to hear the muffled_groans of thou- sands to the accompaniment of the hiss of the knout, That is music to the ears of this saintly scoundrel. wis He wants Nicholas and his delightful household, containing the fanatic monk, Rasputin, to carry on their orgies in the Kremlin, while the black hundreds shoot down workers in the streets when they ask for bread. But his yearnings will never be answered. Nicholas is gone— and forever. The crimson emblem of the proletarian revolution in Russia floats defiantly in all the breezes that blow. As for the priest, Cieplak, he was voluntarily released, because he could do no further harm. The Bolsheviks held the cringing creature in such contempt that they would not even dignify his assaults upon them with execution so his supporters could proclaim him a martyr. Not all the staged demonstrations arranged by, the white guard Polish priesthood of Chicago can efface the record of Cieplak as a hireling of imperialism in its efforts to befoul with their lies the workers’ government of Russia. The Y. C. I. Approval The communication from the Executive Committee of the Young Communist International, greeting the establishment of. unity in the Young Workers (Communist) League of America;and calling for an energetic fight for the liquidation of factions inthe Workers..(Com- “munist) Party, comes at a time when the last remnants of factional- “ism are being eliminated. The approval of the,Young Communist Inetrnational again emphasizes the fact that the Gentral Executive Committee of the party and the National Executive Committee of the league followed a true Bolshevik policy invadopting the unity “resolutions as a basis from which to proceed.to,eliminate that fac- tionalism that vitiated our party for some twenty months, * Our party and the league now prove to all the enemies of Com- nuinism that we knowhow to meet and overcome erises arising over questions that would wreck ordinary political groups and parties. With the right danger completely overcome ard the last remnants of the disease being eradicated the Commnutist’!miovement’ in the United States emerges Stronger than ever, prepared to. fulfill its mission as the revolutionary vanguard of the, working class. <i 290 The Belated Mr. MacDonald Mr. J. Ramsay MacDonald introduced a motion of censure against the government for the persecution of the Communists recently ar- restedgn London, which was defeated by a vote of 351 to 127. After paving the way for the vicious attacks, against the van- guard of the working class by his action at the Liverpool conferences of the labor party, MacDonald now comes forth against. the Baldwin government that carried to conclusion his own program. Tt is not because MacDonald has had a change of heart that he ow moves a vote of censorship against the government, -but because “he has discovered what is well known to revolutionists: the fact that an attack upon the vanguard of the working class always means an “attempt to exterminate the labor movement, When the front of the working class is broken by an attack on the most advanced elements the campaign is followed up untfl it «thes evenethe moderates. That is the erience of the labo: ement in America’ since the first red raid A ae Phone Monroe 4712 ' curred, andait is nov fli” " To the Workers EDITOR'S NOTE: — The DAILY |}; WORKER is today publishing the manifesto of the Communist Inter- national on the eighth anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution of Nov- ember, 1917. For unaviodable Teasons this manifesto has just reached us. We had hoped it would arrive in time for our anniversary issue of Nov. 7. However, since the party is conducting a broad cam- paign for the defense of and recog- nition of the Union of Soviet Re- Publics, this manifesto should: be of great interest at this time, ak ee HIS year the 7th of November is a double festival for us. We cele- brate the eighth anniversary of the October revolution of the workers and peasants of Russia, and the twentieth anniversary of the 1905 revolution. The Russian workers inaugurated a new epoch in the history of the work- ers’ international movement, In 1905 for the first time they endeavored to create the embryo of their dictator- ship; the Soviet; for the first time they endeavoured to unite with the peasantry in order to overthrow auto- cracy and to create that union of working masses which in 1917 formed he basis of the victory of proletarian dictatorship; they proved to the work- ers of the world what a useful weapon the general strike is, and showed that the armed struggle of the proletariat is not a thing of the past. Already during and after the revolution Lenin drew’ the theoretical and practical consequences from the experiences and lessons of this historical event. A firm chain of development leads from the 1905 revolution to that. of 1917, when the ideas were realized which were inaugurated in 1905. WELVE years after the 1905 revo- lution the Russian workers fought for victory under the leadership of Lenin. Jointly with the peasantry the Russian proletariat overthrew the power of landowners and capitalists, nationalized the land, socialized the factories, workshops and banks and (Special to The Daily Worker) POLAND (By Mail)—More than 50 per cent of the territory of the Polish republic contains purely Ukrainian and White Russian populatigns— east- ern Galicia, Volhynia, Polesia, Kholm- stchina, and White Russia on the west- ern side of the famous Kurzon line. About 30 per cent of the population of the Polish state is composed of Ukrairfian and White Russian peas- ants; their Jangiiages, religion and customs and traditicns have nothing in common with, Poland. On, the con- trary, for them the Poles are the synonym of the !andowner—oppres- | sor, There Polish “Irishmen” there- fore hate Poland and feel drawn to- wards the Soviet Union and to the independent republics of Soviet Ukra- ine and Soviet White Russia. There they have national unity, there there is complete political and cultural free- dom, there the peasants have the land, which in Poland is concentrated in -he hands of foreign landowners, ye seized western Ukraine, (east Galicia) and western White Russia’ by force, the Polish imperial- ists are holding on to them by force. + Polish Ukraine and White Russia are now in the position of some Afric- an colony. There is a military ad- ministration and practically a state of martial law. The power of the secret political police knows no bounds. The peasant lands are taken away from them by force and distributed among “deserving” Polish generals and sol- 'aiers, Taxation oppression is unpre- cedented, The Polish administration absolutely tramples on the rights of the local population to their native language. All this has led to such a state of affairs that even the regime of white terror, which reigns in Pol- and proper, is a kind of ideal order which the Ukrainian and White Rus- sian peasants dare not even dream of. The Polish bourgeois occupiers wipe out this discontent for the Polish au- thorities by force. ~The ,Prisons are always full up, while behind the walls of the seget police stations, scenes take place which surpass the tradi- tions of the czarist regime, and which ae THE DAILY WORKER established the. rule ‘of®the workers in the Soviets, In October 1917 the Russian work- ers as the advance guard of the world proletariat set about building up so- cialism. The international bourgeoisie reacted thereto by war and intrigue, the leaders of the workers’ moyement in the west, the petty leaders and satisfied bureaucrats of the trade unions and socialist party treated this brave and powerful inauguration with disdain and abuse. For many years the Russian proletariat had to fight with hunger and suffered the greatest deprivations in order to prove by their tireless creati the interna- tional prolétariat the cessity and the possibility of buijdfwg up social- ism and the fitness*@f the workers to be the leaders of gociety. ORKERS of the -world! . During these years of hétoic struggle of. the workers in the Soviet Union, You have followed with passionate inter- est the struggles of ‘your brothers and sisters. The victoryi"$f the heroic red army has instilled courage and confidence in you; yéregarded the hunger on the Volga-48 Your own mis- fortune; and the ecdnotmic revival of the Soviet Union has) filled your hearts with new hopé Thousands of bourgeois and refornsist..newspapers have circulated lies about the Soviet Union, have cast mud at, the: tried ad- vance guard of the Russian workers, the Bolshevik Party... Dozens of so- cial-democratic | “theoreticians” and politicians—the Bauerg and Kautskys, the MacDonalds .and Venderveldes— “proved” the “criminal utopianism” of the Bolsheviks and prophesied a col- lapse of the Soviet power. But look! in spite of everything, millions of ex- ploited and enslayed workers outside the Soviet Union firmly believe in the victory of the Russian workers, The eighth anniversary of the Oc- tober revolution is in very reality a festival for the workers of the whole world. It marks the fist period of the struggle fer socialism. On the eighth anniversary of the October re- is indeed the direct ancestor of Pol- and of the landlords and: capitalists. Children Political Prisoners. Not only the most protfiinent public men are arrested, not'only individuals “suspected of Commiini#m,” but also the entire population? %f whole vil- lages, encluding evéif'dld men and children, bay AC the beginning of April of this year for instance, t tire territory of Volhy! the district searches and arrest In Volhynia about 1, workers and intellectuals were arrest- ed, and“in the Novigrodsk military governorship about f460, ~ In September of this*¥éar over 1,000 pebple were arrested” lincluding 13- year old children, in iG’ Bielostotsk district. #1 bk In general this -struggle against children is one of the»most vile and most savage methods of struggle on the part of the Poll joupters and against the’ workers: ints, na- tional ‘and liberation movements in the eastern provinces of Poland. There is a tremendous number of juveniles imprisoned for ‘ political “crimes.” The following facts are characteristic of the attitude of the prison administration to these “crim- inals.” The newspaper Volkszeitung March 9th states: “We have received a letter from Bielostok signed by the parents of children who are detained in Bielo- stok prison as political criminals. In their letter the parents tell how their children are beaten and ji treated. ‘uout the en- Felasin and k mass of Fine after fine is inflicted and the children are not allgwed to receive food from home. They are put into isolation cells for _ slightest of- ence. They are nof allowed to see their parents for long, periods. iS hte prison adminigtration does not even want to bé #esponsible for inflicting such heavy*punishments on the young prisoners//@#ho, as a result of this terrible regiitie become seri- ously ill. They are #¥stematically de- prived of the rights‘which ordinary political prisoners énfey.” ss Beatings Break Children’s Eardrums. In Strye (eastern®@alicia)—accord- ing to an interpolatioffin the sejm by the Deputy Skrzipiéiseveral young AMERICAN DESTROYERS ON WAY TO SHANGHAI TO “DISCUSS” CHINESE INTERNAL SITUATION (Special to The Dally Workers MANILA, P. 1, Dec, 2—Three more American destroyers that were stationed here have left today for Shanghai. ; The destroyer McCormick, left the harbor at Manila last Satur- day for Shanghai, in order to enforce the opinions of the American imperialists on the Chinese internal situation on the Chinese work- At the time that the McCormick was stated that if the situation became worse in Sha ers. more destroyers would be sent. Conditions instead of becoming more to the liking “of the Amer; ican imperialists have become worse and now three mi i) ve. ‘near Shanghai to exert their “civilizing” in is Chinese workers, jay eamed out of the harbor, it ai, that three destroyers _on the volution the workers of the Soviet Union can declare proudly to the workers and creators of all countries: Brothers! Sisters! In eight years we have not only repulsed the counter- revolutionary attacks, we have done much more and attained much more. We can already register tangible suc- cess in the economic reconstruction of our country, We have conducted our economic life with a firm hand on the part of socialism. 99 per cent of heavy industry and of transport have been, socialized: Foreign trade is in the hands of the state; the co-operatives comprised 30 millions of the inhabit- ants, We have a stable currency sys- tem and our production will in a short time be on.a par with pre-war days. Millions of workers who have been in- corporated in the work of the Soviet and social organizations, men and wo- men togther, for only in the Soviet are they on an equal basis in. all spheres of social life give proof of how far-reaching is the revolution. The youth, even children, find. their way into the mass organizations of the Communist Youth Leagues and the Red Pioneers, in order to advance the structure and to made certain its futute. The national minorities even the smallest groups of nationalities, have in the Soviet Union free self- determination and thereby have re- ceived the possibility of higher de- velopment by preserving their own national characteristics. On the basis of our economy it is becoming daily more secure a social superstructure is arising filled with the spirit of Communism. A new, higher culture is beginning to blossom, not as a privilege of a few and a small group, but as the accepted right of the broad masses. -The dictatorship which was established in Red October is an ex- pression of the will and approval of millions. A light shines in the life and work of the Soviet Union, which awakens the exploited and oppressed peoples of the East and fills them with hope and a desire for liberty. The Soviet Union is a symbol and an workers have been arrested including 17-year old Becker, 16-year old Hoff- ner, and 16-year old Gliava. They are arrested as a result of information given by a trade union secretary, the Polish social-democrat, Kraxitsky, who at the same time is an employee of the political police, All these young people were beaten up by the police in a most merciless manner. Becker was ill treated most of all, and was hardly recognisable as a result, The White Russian deputy, Bre- mitch, pointed out in the sejm, the faet that-twa pupils of a White Rus- sian high school have been beaten up by the police to such an extent that their eardrums have been broken. The newspaper Polonia published in Stanislavov (eastern Galicia) wrote in the April 24th number: “In a street in the suburb of Kni- ginin-Kolonia a number of school boys gathered together to play on the man- dolin. An agent of the secret police, Kozlovsky approached them and cried out to them to disperse. He threaten- ed them that in the event of their re- fusal they would shoot. When one of the school boys, Veselovsky, son of a railwaymen, said: “fire, if you haye the right to,’ Kozlovsky drew out a Browning and fired at Veseloysky, wounding him.” Schools Secret Police Stations, i baie Polish schools in the Ukrainian white border provinces are no vetter than the prisons and the secret dolice stations, Russia Creates New Comedy “Carmen” Film Pokes Fun at “Mr. Cornedbeef” from Lessons from Western BY WILLIAM F. KRUSE. spue life and love of the poor and pretty »“cigarette girl” has long been associated with Bizet’ ‘armen’ and the colorful city of Seville. Love and hate are woven into immortal tragedy through the media of music and drama. It remained for the film producers of Soviet Russia to give us, not a new “Carmen”, nor a film “Carmen”, but a new filmed “cigarette girl” who ought to be even more. satisfying to the lovers of laughter than are the plump operatic damsels to the devo- tees of melody. For this Russian cig- arette girl is pretty and slender and intelligent, and she is surrounded with 4 cast of peerless comedians in a fast moving story jammed full of unex- pected quirks and twists, “The Cigarette Girl of Moscow" is a fine five-reel comedy that needs make no apologies to anything of its’ kind produced anywhere in the world, and its absence of any trace of direct propaganda will make {t* more readily saleable than the more Serious pro- ductions. At the same time the true Pieture it gives of modern life in Mos- cow; with all the well known streets and buildings used as location, will make it more than welcome to the Strictly radical working class ay- diences. , Photography is excellent, continuity of story and richness of human- inter. est episode are all that could ; be desired, acting perfect, full of ingenious twists, and tion replete with that ‘broad humour of th example of the liberation of maniind. ; ELEGATIONS, which you sent to us—men and women workers, teachers from Great Britain, France, Belgium, Germany Czecho-Slovakia, Sweden, Norway,—have convinced themselves that the Soviet Union is really the country of the dictatorship of the workers, the country that is unerringly proceeding along the path to socialism. For this reason international cap- italism, chiefly British, is endeavour- ing to from a “holy alliance” for the destruction of the Soviet Union, The international bourgeoisie is mobiliz- ing all its deadly hatred against the Soviet Union. Why? Y The Soviet Union ‘and*its, develop- ment stirs up the exploited and op- pressed of the whole world\/and urges them on to fight for thé’#utcess of their: rebellion against ‘all oppressing powers. The. very existéfive of the Soviet Union encourages the fighting Chinese peoples,, who “have- rien against the foreign imperialists and their own militarists. \o. §) [@ The position of the national govern- ments in the countries of*'the Near East is strengthened by''the ‘iteighbor- hood of ‘the Soviet Union'\and they are encouraged in their strifggles for national- independence, The Soviet Union is/carvying on 4 decisive struggle on ‘behalf, of free- dom. Its very’ existence makes it dif- ficult to permeate the “mMilsdes: again with the poison of chanyinjsm. RITISH imperialism ig trying to _form a .hostile alliance out of world réaction to the Soviet Union, and is definitely planning its struggle against Soviet Russia. The guarantee pact is a very important part of its armament. The aim of the guarantee pact is especially to impede collabora- tion between Germany and the Soviet Union, it. is to forge a hostile ring around us and to create for the future war a united and firmly welded front. The guarantee pact is the answer of international imperialism to the grow- s Children’ Polish Bourgeoisie Attacks and Imprison Here is what. we readin the sejm interpolation of the :White Russian club dated December 4th of: last year: “On November 6th the" White Rus- sian club asked the nfinister for pub- lic instruction a question concerning the ill treatment ‘of éhiiren: by a teacher in-a’Polish.school in the vil- lage Krizhtalovstchisne, Anton Corba- tchevsky, This case*has not yet been investigated, and-.-meanwhile. this teacher hangman is~ continuing the physical ill treatment of White Rus- sian children. “Here: isa letter in which @ mother describes her eight- year old little girl was \beaten until she lost consciousness: i “On November 22nd, a Saturday, the eight-year old girl Maria Dukhovitch was beaten first with'@ Tuler, then her head banged against the*wall and was finally thrown to the ground, the ‘teacher sitting on her head and beat- ing her back with his:fists until the chitturned black in the face.” The bloody offensi lish bourgeoisie against.’ not even waver before the court of “Vigil- ant” justice, Ce November 17th the official Polish telegraph agency sent out a tele- gram in which it was stated that a court case had come up in Lvoff in eastern Galicia in connection with,a 19-year old bootmaker, Rechweld. The latter was. handed over to the court for having brought 25 kilogrammes of Communist literature into Lvoff. Rech- L1G ue Ke? that always. verges onj.and nccasion- ally trespasses into, thesdomain of the slap-stick, A 4 B het Solzneva. is a “beautiful and talented heroine, atid “M/°Zeretelli, the leading man, is*adeqidtely hand- some, strong, forlorn, masterful and sentimental as the Seript’ demands. The outstanding player is Igor Ijins- ky, who makes the “low!/vomedian” easily the star of the pleces- a love- lorn, foo) .who worships the idigarette damsel in vain and/ffaaliy contents himself with the amijlykged and weighted “vathp.” - Otitsuifiinir also in a long list of exestent’ comedy Darts, is..that of ‘Atiericain film magnate, “Mr. Cornedbeet”,) With the straw hat and shell-rims. of Harold Lloyd and the face’ ana figure of “Fatty” Arbuckle, Keen satire is spent on this character, cigarettes taste better to him because the box bears the American flag (one of the most widely ‘distributed of Russian brands), he thinks he can buy any- thing hé sees: with good: Yankee dol- lars, and spices his skirt-chasing with @ ludicrous streak of conventionalism, The story. hinges around a pretty cigarette seller whose looks win her @ place in the movies. Hor admirers three, the cameraman who can ‘shoot” no scene in which she does not appear, the clownish’ élerk who cannot smoke but buys stacks and stacks of cigarettes from the dame m America and Comedy Technique. World ft } ing power of the Soviet Union. Just i now™it is not directed against the Soviet Union only; its aim is also L directed against the international pro- letariat. The guarantee pact strength- ens the power of reaction in Germany, strengthens British imperialism inter- nally and externally, is accompanied by an intensified terror in the coun- tries of white dictatorship, Hungary, Italy, Bulgaria, Roumania, as well as in the states of “holy democracy,” The guarantee pact is intended to give the entente imperialists in Central Europe a free hand, and to enable them to at- tack with full force the rebellious peoples of northern Africa and Asia. st at guarantee pact is represented tothe masses as a bringer of peace.” In reality it is and will be an instigator and preparer of néw wars, a new onslaught against the ’ workers. ’ Brothers and sisters! Do not let \ yourselves he again betrayed by the speeches about peace and democracy. Think of the bloody lessons of pre- | war days! Think of the lessons of the peace of Versailles! Ponder the star- vation wages and endless days of toil! If you love peace, if you will oppose the attack of predatory capitalism, the growing freedom of fascism, then fight the guarantee pact and see that. it is destroyed by an internation#l workers’ front. 2 The anniversary of the October fe- volution must weld together all hon- est revolutionary proletariants under the slogan: The United Front of the Workers! Fight Against the Guarantee Pact! Defence of the Soviet Union! Defence of the Revolutionary Past, of all Colonial and Semi-Colonial Peoples! Fight Against the White Terror and Fascism; . Long Live the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics! ® f Long Live the Proletarian World Revolution! j The Executive Committee of the Communist International, } weld was charged with “state treason” and in accordance with a legal code of the former Russian empire, inherit- ed by independent Poland, he was threatened with the death sentence, © It was only because of the youth of the accused that the “tender” court commuted his sentence to 10 years penal servitude. Want British Trade Union Delegation. That is how the Polish bourgeoisie } is fighting against the children in Pol- ish Ukraine and White Russia, while the governmental circles and promin- ent politicians of Poland dare to de- f nounce as low slander the charges / about white terror in Poland, which the working class organizations and liberal sections of the bourgeoisie are raising. in western Europe. RTUNATELY the British work- ers have reliable facts in their hands which the Polish hangmen will not be ‘able ‘to deny. If the Polish bourgeosie continues to insist that it is the victim of a p, campaign of -slander on the part of ‘Moscow” Communists, Germans, and Jews, let it agree to a special com- mission being sent to Poland by the British trade unions, which can be convinced on the spot as to whether the white terror exists in Poland or not, as to whethér the Polish bourge- oisie is really persecuting the White Russian and Ukrainian peasants and workers, and as to whether or not their children are being beaten up, i Shows Many cameraman to shoot a scenic of Mos- cow, and when this is screened (a film within a-film and very well done) the girl is found to monopolize @¥ery scene, So he is fired altogether. hoe girl also turns against him and Cornedbeef, has things his own way, buying fine clothes on the girl's approval, and hiring ‘as his secretary the love-lornj clerk, now turned would- be scenario writer. Interesting com- Plications ensue when he purposely mistranslates the proposals of his @m- ployer-zival, and finally, after count- less side-splitting by-plays the girl tires of the movies and fake ret and murder plots, so goes back Mo selling cigarettes, where with anothen riot, arrest, wedding and movie show the film conies to a happy eid, at This picture shows how much the Russian directors are learning from the American films; they are copying much of the bad as well as the good. All the comedy tricks, ‘the tat man breaking the wagon, the pie slinging, the boob wandering into the movie lot, the fat girl who would be a vam Fi the rescue of the movie dummy, all these things prove lessons learn from Mack Sennet and Al Christie— if not trom the old “Essanay.” But the combination of these elements in: to smooth unflagging tale, the mingl- ing of roaring laughter with touching pathos and deep human sympathy, these show the influe Charlie Chaplin’s latest wor! be welcome