Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SAS + ca mE vu E DAILY WORKER BROWN BROS. AND WHITE CO. NAMED in the Limelight (Continued fom page 1.) pare this evidence for presentation be- fore the senate. With the attack on the administra-| tion’s entire policy in Latin‘America that was precipitated by the Nicaragu- an invasion already scheduled to break on the floor of the senate, this latest revelation forecasts the worst bom- pardment that any American admin- istration has had to face, it is pre- dicted. Operations of the National City Bank, the largest bank in the United States andthe world, will come under the spotlight of the senate investiga- tion, it is predicted. It is known that megotiations were conducted between the Diaz government and this institu- tion shortly after Diaz was inducted into office. Reports had it then that Diaz had offered to sell control of the Nicaraguan financial house to the American bankers. * New Victories for Revolution. MANAGUA, Nicaragua, Jan, 3. - Liberal forces of Dr. Sacasa’s govern- ment annihilated the Diaz armies in a battle at Telica qn the west coast of Nicaragua and are now within 70 ihiles of Managua, capital of the con- sérvative “government.” Defeat of the Diaz troops at Telica places the liberals in a strategic posi- tion for their march on Managua. The capture of Leon, which is only a short distance from Telica, is expected momentarily. Leon is the transporta- tion center of all railroads leading in- to Managua and its capture means that Managua will be cut off from out- gide communication, making its cap ‘ture comparatiely certain. Reports on the battle at Telica are meager, but it is indicated that many Diaz soldiers were made prisoners nd much war material was seized by the liberals. Some 800 liberal soldiers took part in the battle. Diaz Wails About Mexico. President Diaz has ed a state- ment addressed to the “American and foreign public” in which he again e+ makes the charge that Mexico is giv- ing aid to the Mberals and asks that | the United States take steps to “rid Central America of the Mexican menace.” __— Diaz said that the present conflict ig one “between his government and Mexico.” “The future of Nicaragua and eventually of all Central Amer- ica,” he said, “is at stake in the pres- ent conflict between my government and the Calles government of Mexico.” He then Jaunched into his usual at- tack on Mexico, calling the govern- ment there “poisonous, anti-foreign ‘and Bolshevist.” * See War on Mexico. LONDON, Jan. 3—The London press is viewing the Nicaraguan inter- vention by the United States as an attempt on the part of the American state department to prepare the way tor war with Mexico. The Spectator, a weekly review, declares that the United States wants to bring matters to a head with Mext- co without exposing itself to the chatge of being militaristic and ag- gressive, and that the Nicaraguan in- yasion is part of this program. Other magazines draw the conclu: sion that the war spirit is growing in the United States and that the world can soon expect serious consequences in Latin America, American Committee Visits Mexico for Study of Conditions MEXICO CITY, Jan. 3.—A group of American publicists, lecturers, minis- ters, business men and social workers haye arrived here to conduct an an- nounced study of conditions in Mexico as they affect relations with the United States. This group, which is ‘one of several that have visited Mex- {¢o during the last year, is sponsored by the social relations department of *the Congregational churches of the ‘United States. ‘The party includes: Herbert Croly, editor of The New Republic; Paul Hutchinson, editor of The Christian Century; Dan Brummitt, editor of the Northwestern Christian Advocate; Isaac Landman, editor of the Amer- jean Hebrew; Benson Y. Landis, ed- itor of the Rural American; Prof. Herbert A. Miller, Ohio State univer- sity; Walter Frank. ee _ THE _ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT ‘a OF ATHEISM will mail its first annual report, compris- of reading matter, and FREE to interested Dues $1 a year. Organizers wanted. ber | . Write to ‘eremen Hopwood, General Secretary, PR. 0. Box 483, City Hall 2 New York City, ap torbame ee oe | | RISE OF FRANG BRINGS | | FRANCE 10 FACE GREAT ||. NUMBER OF UNEMPLOYED PARIS.—The year 1926 came in with the fear of a floundering france in the hearts of the French people; it goes out with the specter of un- employment rising before them. The rise of the franc has left many manufacturers with large stocks of raw material bought when the franc stood at 150 to 200 to the British pound. Importers are like- wise stocked with goods bought with cheap money. They cannot sell without a loss and so far have | resisted the advice to swallow the | loss and go on. e Against the official figures of 50,- 000 unemployed, the radicals place | the number ag 200,000. | | | | | Daugherty Gets Respite. | NEW YORK.—The second trial of | Harry M. Daughe former Attorney |General, and of Col. Thomas W. Mil- |ler, former alien property custodian, jn ve now been postponed, tt will not | start before Feb. 7. WOMEN MEET T0 AID PAPER BOX MAKERS ON JAN, 17 'Will Rally to Feed the | Children NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—Women’s or- | ganizations in New York and vicinity {are urged to, be represented at the conference of the organizations on Jan, 7 for the purpose of enlisting the | aid of all the working-class women in |the strike of the Paper Box Makers’ | Union. Each organiztion is requested |to send two delegates to the meeting \that will be held at Manhattan Ly- }ceum, 66 East Fourth street, near | Third avenue. On Strike 12 Weeks. The Paper Box Makers’ Union has been on strike for 12 weeks. They have waged a valiant fight against the bosses for better wages and con- |ditions and will continue the fight, in need of assistance to give food and jclothing to the families of the strik- rs. | The women are urged to come to | the aid of the strikers and help main- tain the strikers’ kitchen that was opened by the United Council of Workingclass Housewives, - which. is feeding from 800 to 1,000 strikers every day. “We appeal to the mothers, who iknow better than others what it | means to have hungry children,” says |the call for the conference. “We ap- peal to the sisters who helped the Passaic strikers and others to help feed our children and maintain the kitchen and so help the paper box makers win their strike and so better their conditions.” Organizations which do not meet before this date and so cannot elect delegates are asked to be represented thru their officers. in Three New Members; | Now 14in Money Gang | NEW YORK, Jan. 3—What ts con- | sidered to be one of the highest priz |es in Wall Street—a partnership to J.| i | | P. Morgan and company—has been given to Francis Dwight Bartow, Ar- thur Marvin Anderson and William Ewing. | Announcement of the admission of these men to the firm increases the number of partners to fourteen. Bartow entered the company in 1924 ‘coming from the First National Bank of New York. He started with the bank in 1902, became assistant cashier in 1911 and a vice-president in 1915. A. M, Anderson has been with J. P. Morgan since June 1914 as chief of their bond department. Ewing has been associated with the house of Morgan for the past ten years. Mitchell Laughs At ‘Good Will’ Flight, Is Jitney Tour, He Says MILWAUKEE, Wis., Jan, 3.—Flight of the United States army amphibian planes on a “good will” tour of Pan- American countries today termed a “jitney” journey by Wm. B. Mitchell, former brigadier general in the air service. Mitchell, reduced from high rank because of his attacks on American defenses, especially in the field of avi- ation, sald present flight is only “jit- ney” because it is only a leg of a great flight across the Antarctic which he organized in 1919. Poor equipment is boing used in the flight, he said, and flights are only being made when there isn’t a cloud in the sky. Ee Ee DBE eAEOTIC WANTED: Several pianists and vocalists to work with lectures and readers several eve- nings a week in Chicago and the im- media vicinity. This is P-d2, Exchange Bidg., een meme | put their funds are low and they are | House of Morgan Takes | Jj weaker countrios, PAN-AMERICAN UNION WITHOUT U8, 18 PLAN | Washington Disturbed | Over Developmenis | | | i (Continued from page 1) with the resultant unpopularity that usually goes with the peacemaker, Columbia Has Grievance. Columbia has never thought she re- ceived a square deal in the treaty | which made a financial adjustment for the building of the Panama Canal. Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Guatemela, all have felt the weight of North Americ financial or naval power | 8 }in one way or another in the last | | quarter century. | Latin-America has seen the gradual }encroachment of North American |power and dominance into the south | year by year. It has seen Cuba, Porto | Rico,-Panama, Haiti become virtual | | United States dependencies, with in- | dications now that Nicaragua may go | the same way. | The picture is not a pleasing one |to those Latin diplomats who have dreams of a great Spanish-speaking union in the western hemisphere. Three recent events have now com- bined to bring the agitation to a head, according to well informed sources here, They are: | (1) The controversy with Mexico, |in which the United ‘States challenges |the right of Mexico to enacty-her own Jalien land laws, (2) The Nicaraguan situation, in which ‘the state department elevated | Adolfo Diaz to the presidency and | |then sent warships and marines to lend him moral, if not actual, support. | Diaz is a favorite with the American state department of many years | standing, | Panama Is Vassal State. (3) The recently concluded Pan- ama treaty, whereby Panama pledges lherself to consider herself automati- cally at war with any power against which the United States goes to war. | This treaty, which reduces Panama almost to the status of a vassal state, |has been savagely criticized by the | press of South America. There is no doubt that President |Calles of Mexico has been and is| la prime mover in the agitation for a | Spanish-speaking bloc to resist the |creeping United States dominance to the south. | | The Mexican government now has as one of its activities its own wire- less news service into the Caribbean. | countries, thru which daily goes what | the state department characterizes as “radteal propaganda,” but which friends of Mexico say is merely “Latin-American views and news.” Protest Flourishes. | Where the present movement for greater Latin-American unity will | end no one in Washington can or will | predict. It is admitted, however, that lit is stronger than it has ever been, better directed and better financed, and, for the time being, flourishing. It is recognition of these facts here that is held responsible for the i“softening” of the state departmient’s olicy in Nicaragua, which was some- what brusque at first, and for the ex- ment is proceeding in its dealings with Mexico in the land laws controversy. |Sormenti Protest Meeting Postponed Due to a number of legal complica- tions in connection with his case, Enea Sormenti, who is under bond Awaiting decision on a deportation charge, has been obliged to return to New York City and to postpone the meetings which were planned for him in the courge of his tour. Among these meetings was the one scheduled. in Chicago for Thursday, January 6, at the West Side Auditori- treme caution with which the depart: | | $8,410,000. um, under auspices of the Interna- tional Labor Defense and Anti-Fas- cist Alliance of Chicago. Because of the latest development in the tour; the meeting has been indefinitely postponed. ti This holds for the Chicago meeting, since in some of the other cities where Sormenti meetings had been arranged, they will be held with oth- er noted Italian and English speak- ers. Workers are urged. to attend these meetings wherever held so that they may add their voice of protest against the plans of the American au- thorities to deport Sormenti to Italy, where certain imprisonment, and pos- sibly execution, awaits him at the hands of the bloodthirsty fascisti. Tax Shift Alds Foreign Aggressions. WASHINGTON.— Untaxing of the wealthy and shifting of the cost of war to the wage earners, farmers and small salaried people has favored for- eign concession-hunting and aggres- sions abroad, says Benj. C. Marsh, se- cretary of the People’s Reconstruc- tion League, in a New Year review of tax shifting: In 1919, he finds, persons whose net incomes were over $50,000 paid federal income taxes of $729,444,000, while in 1924 this class, altho its to- tal net income was 15 per cent more than in 1919, paid only $440,358,000 in income taxes. The surplus sought in- vestment, and this means an annual addition of about 750,000,000 to the pressure foy American domination of JOIN THE NAVY, BOYS, AND EAT GORNED BEEF HASH FOR BREAKFAST SAN DIEGO, Calif—As a result of eating corned beef hash for breakfast, aboard the U. S. S. Rin- gel at the destroyer base here, 21 blue-jackets, court-martial prison- ers, have been removed to the na- | val hospital, Capt. John Church, base com- mandant, says that the food was apparently spolled, The 21 biue- jackets unanimously concur in that opinion. APPROPRIATIONS FAIL TO PLEASE NAVY BOOSTERS Air Service to Get Along on $8,410,000 WASHINGTON, Jan, 3—The ad- ministration’s naval program was laid before congress today, thus paving the way for the bitter fight to be waged over strengthening America’s sea power. The program was brought out in the naval supply bill, carrying $316,469,530 for the next fiscal year, a reduction of $5,500,000 and with no money pro- vided for cruiser construction to bring the United States navy up to the 5-5-3 parity with Great Britain and Japan. It was laid before the house by the jadministration-controlled appropria- | tions committee. The naval commit- tee is on the other side of the contro- versy and will fight for new cruiser construction, a “With respect to new vessels, the committee is ready to proceed in pro- viding the requisite funds whenever the president shall so recommend,” said the committee's report, A total of $23,250,000 was recom- mended for new ships, all either un- der construction or®fort which plans and specifications have been complet- ed. These are two aircraft carriers, three submarines, six river gunboats being built in China, two light cruisers under copstruction and three others tor which plans have been drawn, Marine Corps Cut. The navy’s enlisted strength is kept at 82,500, while the marine corps was |slashed 1,200 men over the protest of Major General Le Jeaene, command- ant of the corps. ot Recommending an Appropriation of $19,065,288 for the mayy’s air corps, the committee asi amount will carry on. five-year air program on a slightly reduced scale. This amount is $724,712 above cur- rent appropriations. . ,, The committee, however, rejected the appeal of the nayy’s air experts for $1,500,000 to begin, construction of a huge dirigible, of more than twice the capacity of the Los Angeles. The navy’s air secretary, Edward P. Warner, took issue with Coolidge’s recommendations for delay, a record of hearings on the bill disclosed. Con- gress last year authorized two dirigi- bles, but made no appropriation. Five-Year Program, The bureau of aeronautics had re- quested $9,077,500 to purchase new planes, and this amount was cut to Reduction of plane wast- age, however will make possible sub- stantial progress on the program, which calls for a strength of 1,000 planes at the end of five years, the committee reported, States’ Requisitions Are Granted by Small SPRINGFIELD, Il. — Requisition from Governor Donahey of Ohio was honored by Gov, Len Small for the re- turn to Mansfield, 0., of Philip Orleck, alias William Fox, wanted on a charge of killing Urban Wilford, a guard at the Ohio reformatory. Orleck, while free on parole, is alleged to have been aiding a pal to escape when the guard was slain. He is under arrest in Chicago. We witli send saraple coples of The DAILY WORKER to. your friends~ send us name and address. that this} ” yi A Z ic stn ec HM wt Rrra tee ainqhirainane neem er odie The Core of American Capitalism’s Apple of Prosperity Is Rotten By J, LOUIS ENGDAHL. huge overdoses of “business optimism” injected into the cap- italist press “reviews of 1926” were unable to put a healthy aspect on the bitter condition of agriculture. Even the most adept of the pros- perity painters had to put in huge black spots indicating the dark out- look for the farmers, $ When the purchasing power of farm products has fallen from 89 per cent of the pre-war par, that prevailed last year, to 81 per cent this year, then there is something to worry about, eo. @m The attitude of big business to- ward agriculture, in these days of the splitting of huge stock divi- dends, can well be stated in the words of United States Senator George W. Norris (republican-Neb- raska) in an article in the maga- zine, Current History, as follows: “Mr. Richard B, Mellon, brother of our secretary of the treasury and president of the Mellon National Bank of Pittsburgh, on the eve of his recent departure for Burope, was quoted as saying that funda- mental conditions were sound, To prove this he cited the steel busi- ness, which showed that great im- provement was taking place and that the rolling mills were operat- ing at a greater capacity than ever and turning out large orders. In- cidentally, he said, ‘Grain prices have fallen off, which is as it should be” When the great leaders of banking and industry can see no further than the artificial prosper- ity that comes to big business while those who toil,on the farms are get- ting no return for their labor, then indeed we have a right to question the wisdom of our financial lead- ers.” oe Senator Norris, of course, asks his questions and then remains in the same party with the Mellons, (his financial leaders) with the Mel- lons in control, So he gets the Mellon answer, ‘The Mellon answer was recently given in part by Coolidge. It was that where there is a surplus crop, as in the cotton belt, the planting « area should be cut down. Other crops should be raised, But the re- publican senator from Nebraska, who remains in Wall Street’s party, is compelled to declare that, “The farmers of America produce @ sur- plus of nearly all the principle farm products.” It will do the cotton farmers of Texas, for instance, no good to quit raising cotton and return to cattle raising. That will bring the inevi- table meat surplus, Today the cry goes over the land to, “Wear more cotton!” Tomorrow it will be, if the cotton farmers change to cattle rais- ing, “Eat more meat!” Today the demand also is, on behalf of the corn belt, “Eat more corn!” But if the corn farmers change to wheat then with the inevitable wheat surplus comes the-cry, “Hat more wheat!” Such is the vicious circle. The south has, for the first time in its history, produced 18,000,000 bales of cotton, With the carry> over from last season taken into ac- count, it is estimated that the world’s supply of American cotton now aggregates 25,000,000 bales. In spite of the low prices, however, there are no indications of an in- creasing demand. With the cotton profiteers taking this huge crop from the growers at bankruptcy prices, the problem be- comes one of increasing the Selling price, This increase now, however, benefits only the profiteers in this crop, It is to their interests, there- fore, that the crop next year be small, Thus the pressure is exerted on the cotton farmer, according to a dispatch from New Orleans to the Galaxy of Stars in Baseball World Ate Summoned in Probe of Scandal Clarence Rowland, former manager of the Chicago White Sox, and Ray Schalk, present manager, are in Chi- cago, the first to arrive in answer to telegrams sent out by baseball com missioner, Kenesaw M. Landis, re questing all members of the White Sox and Detroit teams of 1917 to meet in the commissione’ office here on Wednesday to answer “erooked baseball” charges made by Charles “Swede” Risberg. Risberg, former White Sox short- stop who was’ expelled from organ- ized baseball for bis alleged part in the crooked world series of 1919, charged before Commissioner Landis that the Chicago White Sox “bought” a four-game series from Detroit in September of 1917. He named prac- tically every momber’on the Chicago team at that time,’ including Ray Schalk, Eddie Collis and Urban “Red” Faber, Te Rowland, now ant’ ‘umpire in the American League, Game to Chicago , from Milwaukee to “face the charges.” His first impression was, ‘Risberg, is a barefaced liar.” Schalk, who hurried here from Farmersvil Il, where he was visiing relatives, was equally emphatic in denouncing his former teammate. At least 21 of the 38 men summon- ed are still affiliated with organized baseball and will be affected by what- ever decision Landis makes. Oscar Felsch's reported offer to furnish additional testimony for a consideration of $1,000 fell on deat cars at the commission's office. Explosion Claims Another. EL CENTRO, Calif—-Another has died as a result of an explosion on a dredge operated in the Imperial Val- ley Irrigation district at Dixieland. The second victim 1s Rollie Glenn, who died in a hospital here from nis burns, The beat way—subdaoribe today. 7 New York Times, ag follows. “Bankers and merchants. .. will undoubtedly see to it that their customers do not plant more acre- age in cotton than can safely be financed and that they divert a good part of the land to food and other moneyanaking crops.” “Money-making” for the owners, of course, In the meantime let the farmers take notice that in Cleve- land the other day 1,000 jobless rioted for jobs at buting tele- phone directories at $2.50 per day. s 2 * Director 8. J. Stanard of the state department of agriculture of Illinois steps into the breach, taking the place of those who lack for other arguments and recommendations, by declaring that: “It has been a trying year (1926), No denying that, But we must carry on, A kind providence and that game determination of the farmer and his family is bound to sie 2 about improved conditions in 1927.” But a “kind providence,” as it is usually considered, is supposed to bring forth great crops, a situation ‘that wMl be enhanced by the in- creased toil of the farmers’ family. Thus the inevitable farm crisis re- turns to the huge crop with its low prices that do not cover the cost of production. This is all that capitalism has to offer to the great agrarian popula- tion. The farmer is pushed from one difficulty into another, from the frying pan into the fire, and if he manages to get out of the, fire, he is back in the frying pan more des- perate than ever. sf @ There is considerable hope, there> fore, expressed by labor, in the cities and on the land, in the calling of the conference of FarmerLabor Party forces in Minnesota, to be held in the Labor Temple, at St. Paul, Jan, 17-18. This conference will discuss meas- ures to be introduced in the state legislature, in which the Farmer- Labor Party will have numerous spokesmen elected in opposition to the legislators of the capitalist parties, But the conference will also discuss farm relief legislation now before congress at Washington, thus giving the gathering a national outlook. In fact, the Minnesota Farmer- Labor Party, speaking for the work- ers andefarmers of that state, must inevitably sound a working class note that will receive a welcome greeting from labor thruout the the whole nation. PS The Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party has always been interested in relief for the farmers, It origin- ally.favored the Norris-Sinclair bill in 1924, When the McNary-Haugen proposition came along as a compro- mise, it was admitted that it did not meet the situation in a thoro-going manner, In view of the pressing conditions, however, the Farmer- Labor elements lined up behind this latter measure. The McNary- Haugen ill, especially as it ap- pears in its changed form before the present session of congress, is mere- ly looked upon as an emergency measure made necessary by the de- pressed condition of agriculture. e G7 It is to be hoped, therefore, that the forthcoming Farmer-Labor con- ference at St, Paul will go into this problem much more fundamentally. It must be realized that legislation that is acceptable to the multi-mil- Honaire, Frank O, Lowden, and the ‘Chicago banker, Vice President Charles G, Dawes, can be of little or no benefit to the farmer, except to continue his bondage to the great predatory interests. This bondage helps also to shackle the workers still more securely in the cities. The Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party must take up this question and fe- velop it from the viewpoint of the workers and farmers as a class, the producing class, It must expose the rotten core of American capitalism’s apple of pros- perity. “THE PASSAIC TEXTILE STRIKE” STUDENTS SHOW OPPOSITION TO WAR EDUCATION Imperialism of U. S. Al- so Flayed MILWAUKEE, Wis., Jan. 3.—Only the invoking of a precedent that it is against the policy of the national stu- dent conference to pass resolutions prevented the passing of a resolution condemning compulsory military train- ing in the colleges of the United States by an overwhelming vote. The resolution was not passed, but there was no mistake about the attitude of the 2,000 students who attended the conference here. They are against military training in the colleges. Score U. S, Militarism. The guns of Young America, as rep- resented by the delegates, were trained on Americdn imperialism at the conference as well as at military training. A resolution condemning the U. S. government’s imperialism was introdueed and warmly supported, but was not passed for the same rea- son as the military training resolve. Fight Progress. Progress is being made to gain the abolition of the training in the col- leges, Roswell Barnes and Prof. George Coe of the committee on mili- tarism in education, told the students. The number of colleges where it ex- ists is now cut to 81, they reported. A fight is being conducted, they said, with chances for victory in Minneso- ta, Nebraska, and Oklahoma, where military training exists in its worst form, The students were warned of a pos- sible war with Japan by a Japanese student, Susum Kobe, who declared that anti-American feeling is strong in Japan because of the U. 8, immi- gration laws. Turn to Sex. Turning from militarism and im- perialism, the students launched into a discussion of the “sex problem.” Dr. Edith H. Swift, lecturer on so- cial hygiene, told the students. that “compulsory postponement of sex gratification until after marriage adds to happiness and prepares the envir- onment into which children come in- to the world.” She said that when “sex gratifications can come from any cor- ner and is easy to obtain there is no spiritual or sentimental element.” Jail Conspiracy Case Still in Spot Light; Say Jury | Was Fixed Charges, that the jury was fixed which acquitted Sheriff Peter M, Hoffman, Frankie Lake, Terence Drug- gan and five others in federal court on accusations of conspiracy to ob- struct justice were being investigated today by the federal attorney's office. “I believe the jury was fixed,” As- sistant Federal. District Attorney Hope Thompson, prosecutor at the trial, declared, “The government pre- sented evidence which we thought and the presiding judge thought was conclusive evidence of guilt, and we were confident of convictions.” Judge Louis Fitzhenry of the Peoria district, who presided at the trial, has been notified of the investigation and was expected ‘by Thompson to issue warrants upon the evidence obtained. Masonic Bureau Defends Mexican Stand. WASHINGTON. — Two news ar- ticles defending the Mexican govern- ment’s attitude on the oil and church laws are published on the front page of the current bulletin of the Scottish Rite (Masonic) News Bureau, issued at the temple of the Scottish Rite, southern jurisdiction, in the capital. In a third article the Nicaragua in- tervention is attacked. Two Bandits Loot Bank. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Jan. 3— Scooping up $13,000 into a sack, two bandits made their escape from the Kent State Bank branch today after binding three employes. New York Issues Call for Party Meetings A special general membership meet- ing will be held Wednesday, Jan. 5, at 8:00 p. m. sharp at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St. This mem- bership meeting is called for the pur- pose of acquainting the party mem- bership of the general situation exist- ing in the United States at this time, particularly in the New York district. i A Motion Picture to be shown at Forester Hall, Olive and 10th St. LOS ANGELES, CAL. THURSDAY EVENING, JANUARY 6, 1927 Two shows—from 7 to 9 and from 9, to 11. Max Amsterdam, violin solo R, Liebich at piano. ADMISSION 25 CENTS Proceeds for relief of textile strikers’ children,