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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1927 FINANCIAL HELP IMPERATIVE NEED OF PASSAIC WORKERS--WAGENKNECHT Relief Leader Gives Authoritative Review of | Situation Resulting From Strike Settlements Due to unfortunate errors in the composing room, statements of leaders of the Passaic Local of the United Textile Workers were omitted in an article in the February 18 issue of The DAILY WORKER concerning the mill situation. The DAILY WCRKE Alfred Wag cht, reli tion in Passaic today. Althou t editing of a daily newspaper, make corrections, “Our publicity director, Cyril Briggs, has called to the attenti both the union and the relief office | strikers must be given the best de-| your issue of February 18th, in which fen possible, and their families | appears ‘an edited news release re« must receive support while»they lie in| s glad to publish the following letter from rman, explaining carefully the exact situa-| regrettable errors occur occasionally in the he DAILY WORKER is always anxious to Here is Wagenknec ¥. rs in prison. These} gee garding e settlements in Passaic. | jail. “Two very s s errors have been Support Needed Now. ‘ made in blue-penciling the news re-| “Third: sixteen thousand strikers lease we sent you. In the first place, | hay struggled one year in order to you quote in full the speech by J Starr, vice president of the Textile Workers, but blue-pe the speeches ma by strike izers and union of s who have been in this struggle from its very inception, win a union. The struggle has been against capitalists numbering among the richest in the United States, em- ployers who stand at the forefront’ as advocates of company unionism. Hun- dreds of thousands of dollars have ted and whose speeches at the meeting | been spent for relief and organ n here should have been featured by purposes with the one object in view you rather than blue-penciled. of winning for the sixteen thousand “In the second place, you eliminat- textile workers a union. ed from the article all»reference to “Ryvery worker in the labor move- the continued need for relief of the te si - ment knows that the, most critical textile workers. p {moment in a struggle of unorganized " Many S' e Out of Work: | - | workers is the moment immediately | Bhs “exact situation in Passaic is| ster settlement. It is then that all forces must be put to work, in order) to secure as large unions as possible, | strike settlement has taken | bosses hepe to create the same spirit | of loyalty tg the firm among the Labor Sports Union Prevents Company’s Game of Fooling Men CHICAGO, (FP).—While /Arrade unions pay almost no attention to sports @8 a labor recreation the Chicago employers are everywhere cultivating this activity among | their workers, the Labor Sports | Union declares. “Almost every good-sized store, bank or factory has a girls’ basket- ball team,” the union says, “while large plants like the Western Elec- trie have quite a number. Wie- boldt’s department stores have teams which compete not only with each other but with other stores and factories. Even the ushers in the Balaban & Katz movie theatres have their regular athletics. The From time to time the U: | | light of the assembled stiff-sh has been extracted from the t The affair resembles nothing some peaceful community. shirts at this affair, a proleta vail. There will be no gloating from the blood and sweat of there wiil be a real get-togethe energetic members writers and speakers who haz the radical labor movement. Affairs like these are an employes as is created for a school by its athletics.” The Labor Sports Union issues a sports press service from its of- fice at 453 W. North Ave., Chi- cago. It is distributed free to la- bor papers. CHICAGO MAYOR CLAIMS CREDIT WITHOUT GAUSE paper—morale. To the same strongest asset is the convictio that he is engaged in a struggl extent a labor newspaper nee readers and supporters. To t tionary Sun Chuan-Fang wa same extent will the influence the labor press. Banquets an calls its directors together to celebrate. viviality and bootleg Judge Gary usually recounts to the de- the Roman conquerors celebrating the cruel despoilat largely to the complete demoralization of his troops, to the build the elements which mak The Manager's | Corner A STRENGTH-GIVING GET-TOGETHER. nited States Steel Corporation irts the amount of loot which | On Monday evening, February 21, the evening before Washington's Birthday, the Daily Worker Builders of New York have arranged « banquet, the first one held since the paper moved to the great metropolis. There will be no stiff rian attire and spirit will pre- over the ill-gotten gain wrung thousands of toilers. Instead v of the participants in a vital co-operative enterprise, a get-together of the most loyal and of the vast family of DAILY WORKER supporters, comprising workers from every walk of life, | »e been closely identified with i “Shop,” which recently completed a important factor in building | up that element which is most vital with a working class | extent that the Red Army’s | nin the mind of every soldier | le for a just cause, to the same ds a similar spirit among its he same extent that the reac- s summarily defeated owing of the capitalist press be over- shadowed by the superior morale and confidence enjoyed by d get-togethers of this nature | e a working class newspaper. | Amid much con- | Place in all mills except the United Piece Dye works of Lodi. However, in all the mils, “The question is, shall this year’s ee 2s, even in the fix t three struggle and the hundreds of thou- y pee ew Were the most favorable | jsna9- pf “dollars tavested go for 3 terms were obtained, very few of the | naught? Shall all this immense { pecans mare b : menbioved, due to’ amount of activity and suffering be ME rhs ncane, that. glth h. the |J08tfor the want of a few additional f oe means’ that although. the} thousands of dollars for the purpose 5 Strike is practically all over, we must still face the s employment. worl a us question of un- mployed, they must be given relie: must tide these workers _ov ployed period if we are to successful in building a union in Passa s long as the textile! of building the union? “We therefore call upon you to acquaint your readers at once with the situation in Passaic, and ask them to assist us in giving bread and milk to the thousands of unemployed strikers and their families; help defend the hundreds of arrested strik ., the advance Workers Party Points. To Wretched Schools CHICAGO, Feb, 20.—Mayor Dever in opening his campaign as the dem- ocratie nominee for mayor spoke on made by the public school*system in the last four years, If the facts in the case really deter- mine the election of Chicago’s next ayor both the republicans and dem- ts will have slim chances for vic- tory on thi: ue. An authoritative statement tells us They build morale. They build loyalty and strength. Boston | and New York are trying them. Other cities should do like- wise—BERT MILLER. : LITHUANIAN FASCIST ATROCITIES ROUSING WORLD. WIDE PROTEST; AUTHORS SEND CABLE | CHICAGO, Feb. 20.—Aroused by the reports of drum-head court mar-| tials and executions of Lithuanian working class leaders by the new fascist | government, a group of prominent labor leaders and publicists, ineluding | Upton Sinclair, James Maurer, Theodore Debs, Victor Berger have joined in| a cablegram of protest to the Lithuanian president, A. Smetona, demanding | the abolition of the arbitrary punishments and civil trial for all the accused, | | of life. help us “Second: there thousand struggle. a very seriou conviction ve been nearly one ed during the eases are of nature, and entail, if place, sentences of build the union. “Fraternally yours, Alfred Wagenknecht, Relief Chairman.” UNEMPLOYMENT ON INCREASE IN ILLINOIS AS 36,000 FACTORY WORKERS LOSE THEIR JOBS; EMPLOYMENT DROPS 815 PER CENT SINCE 1923 By | ND OLDS (Federated Press). Unemployment ‘is the keynote of the review for January issued by the artment of labor. The report shows the most serious situation ‘according to an announcement made t tional Labor Defense. { - x Many Names Signed. consulates and the Lithuanian embas- ) The protest message is signed by $Y in Berlin have to receive labor del- | boxes) in use and about 20,000 stu-| Upton Sinclair, internationally known | ¢g@tions day after day. Many protest | dents are being rushed around in dou- | noveltst: Bishop William Montgomery telegrams have been sent to the! ble session shifts or half day schools. | Brown; James ‘Maurer president Lithuanian government. In some dis- In the face of this deplorable situ-| o¢ the ‘Perinsylvania State Federation | tvicts all the labor organizations have ation, Mayor Dever is trying to make ‘of Labor; Congressman Victor L. Ber- Joined in a common campaign. political capital out of the addition | poy of Milwaukee; Theodore Debs; Dr. Also in U. S. of eight new schools to the 1927 | john Lapp, of the National Catholic! Ih Czecho-Slovakia, too, many pro- building program—a program which Welfare Council; Scott Nearing, au-/| test meetings have been held and pro- | will hardly make a dent in the seat thoy and lecturer; Duncan McDonald, | test resolutions have been sent to the shortage. While Dever is busy ex-| tomer president of the Illinois State |Lithuanian legation and. the Lithua- | cusing himself on this issue, the can-| Federation of Labor; David Starr nian government. In Austria, Switzer- didates of the three republican fac-| Jordan, the world famous educator; |land and other countries the protest tions, Litsinger, Thompson and Rob-, 4 yw, 1, Dana, of the Boston Trade | movement is growing and protest tel- | that there is a seat shortage of ‘60,- oday at the national office of Interna: 868 in Chicago’s public schools. There} are 425 tin can portables (sardine | A 2 When Mind Doesn't Count | « * +, oiling slaves in the steel mills. | Mage Jes. Saves hae so much as the wild orgies of ion of ‘ | in Poetry and Character |Z OR the third time during the last \D' few years I’ve seen “Rags,” by H. Leivick, now playing at the Yid- \dish Art Theatre, And for the third | time I’ve succumbed to its gracious- | ness, its charm, its deep and playful | veracity. But now that my emotions j have proved such easy marks, that | portion of me known as’my mind or intellect grows a little distrustful } and suspicious, . | But before I give my mind a chance to strut I want to say, for the | edification of the general reader, that |“Rags” is an early play by H. Lei- |vick, author of “The Golem,” pro- | duced by the Habima players, and of long run at the Irving Place Theatre, Leivick won his first reputation in poetry, and both as poet and dramat- ist he is one of the most important in the Yiddish tongue. The present production of “Rags” is the annual revival, the play having become aj vermanent part of the repertoire of | the Y-ddish Art Theatre, | “Rags,” my mind tells me, is not | a play. It is a story, an idyl. Its dramatic core is the conflict between the older generation and the younger, a conflict whi:n in the case of the Jewish people in America, is given its ultimate tragic twist by the 1act that | it is also a clash between two alien} cultures, two mutually exclusive ways | Mordecai Maaze, admirably played by Maurice Schwartz, is an arisv.- crat of the spirit, an old-world schol- | ar whose emotions chng to the an-! cient Jewish traditions. ‘franspianted | to the United States, he becomes a) worker in a rag factory. His chil-| dren have grown up ina spurious, ap- ing Jewish-American bastard cul- ture. One of his daughters has mar-| ried his own boss’ son and become an | elegant, vulgar lady, while his only | sen is a well-meaning rowdy, a mild sort of Looey dot 1 ope, whose chiet | passion is baseras}. ' All of which seems dreadfully seri- | ous. But it isn’. that way at all in| the p In fact, much of it is shamelessly funny. And that’s j t what this sour, obstreperous mind of | mine objects to. “Rags” is tender and} idyllic rather than searching, and} |what ‘should be tragic is merely | / poignant. The central conflict, more- | over, undergoes no development. It! is practically the same in the last act as inte first. What is deyeloved is the character of Mordecai Maave and This talented comedian will join the revised edition of “Vanities” at the Earl Carroll Theatre tonight. Song,” will be played Tuesday and Friday nights, Wednesday and Satur- day matinees. “La Locandiera,” Wednesday night, “Three Sisters,” Thursday night, and “Johr Gabriel Borkman,” Saturday night. Johnny Dooley, Dorothy Knapp, Irving Edwards, Harry Welch, and Cooper and Redello will join the cast of the “Vanities” tonight.. A re- «vised edition of the Earl Carroll re- vue will be inaugurated this evening. Four matinees of “New York Ex- change” will be given this week at the Klaw’s; Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. William Courtenay, will be starred in the Chicago production of the “Night Hawk,” which is booked to open at the Blackstone Theatre Sun- |day, March 6. Bertha Kalich, who has been mak- ing a tour of the Pacific Coast, will return to New York in April, appear- ing in “Magda” and “The Riddle Wo- man.” Five new productions will have their premiere this evening: “What Anne Brought Home” at Wallacks; “A -Lady in Love” at the Lyceum; “Window Panes” at the Mansfield; | “Polly of Hollywood” at the Geo. M. Cohan, and “Set a Thief” at the Em- pire. all those rich, odd, intimately Jewish types that sprawl ir} “1922, “With unemployn s of the unemployed in Tl- linois,” says the department, “were Swelled in January by a further de- erease of 1.9% inthe number of work- means loss of jobs in the past 3 years by more than 60,000 industrial work- ers. The department continues: “This 4-month’s decline means that there were fewer men at work in Il- linois factories in January 1927 than in any January in the past 5 years. With the exception of the last 6 months of 1924 the current’ month’s index shows fewer men working in factories than ih any month since ment in Chieago approaching critical 8 The applicants per 100 open jobs in various cities in January compared with December were: Applicants per exs on factory payrolls. This decrease A Jan. Dec. followed declines in the 3 previous) 100 open jobs 1927 1926 months, so that the level of industrial | Aurora + 198 169 operations is now 5.1% below that of Moline-Rock Island . 139 128 September last year. In only one; Chicago + 290 172 other year out of the past 5 years has |Bloomington . 127 116 z there been a decrease of this size in’ Cicero 217 184 the December to January figures.” pee 138 36,000 Since September. peah Laas i It means that since September more ak is a Nn sin er ares 218 185 | than 36,000 Illinois factory workers Peoria 176 190 have lost their jobs. Mlinois factories Quincy bir 211 158 today offer 8} less employment Rockford 96 ‘ 4 than in January 1923, a decline which | Springfield .. 107 106 These figures indicate roughly the jextent of unemployment in the indus- trial centers of the state. Only in | Rockford do there appear to be enough jobs to go round. Glass Workers Hard Hit. In January employment declined in 4 major Illinois industrial groups as follows: stone clay and glass products 7.1%, metals machinery: and convey- April 1922.” % % p s ances 2%, wood products 5% and food a 3 Workers for 1 Job. products 8% %. There were increases Bes The free employment offices of the|in fur and leather goods, chemicals, ae state report a large surpius of work- oils and paints, printing and paper % «rs. The ratio of applicants to the | goods, textiles and clothing. ¥ number of jobs available has been’ Outside the manufacturing groups steadily rising since September. In that month there were 123 applieants for etery 100 jobs, in October 127, in November 140, inDecember 155, while in January there were 214 applicants for every 100 jobs, the highest figure recorded inthe last 5 years. In Chi- cago the rai was 290 which means coal mining which had been showing unusual activity started down hill again. The departmert reports that ;“one large mine employing over 800 men which was opened in October was again closed in January. Present in- dications, are. that other mines may follow this example in the next few |circles, of a platoon system for the /ers (Communist) Party. rade around from class room to class ; oom. | will be turned out from the schools | {like sausages from a sausage mach- | ithe building of new schools to take are too busy throwing Per- Union’ College; Morze Lovett, sonal filth at each other to give a/of the University of Chicago and edi- real thought to this vital problem. | tor of the New Republic; Carl Haess- The cure that is proposed in some ler, managing editor of ‘the Federated Press; David Rhys Williams of the Unitarian Church of Chicago; Ralph Chaplin, the I. W. W. poet; EF |Gurley Flynn, national chairman In- ternagonal Labor Defense; Robert W. Dunn, of the A, C. L. U.; Ellen Hayes, of Wellesley College; Edward. C. Wentworth, and Alice Stone Black-| Under this system, children | well. schools, is roundly condemned by the local elections platform of the Work- Platoonism is nothing more than a Taylor system for standardizing the teaching meth- od, in which the children have to pa- Anti-Radical Drive. The results of the fascist coup in | Lithuania have been an intensification of the drive against the radical and ‘labor movement. As, soon as the blackshirts took over the government, the piace of the old “fire-trap” build- | four of the leading Communists in the ings, the “sardine cans,” the double |country * were summarily executed. session shifts and the platoon sys-|These were Karl Pojella, Kasis Gedris, tem. This ean only be realized if the |Josef Greifenberger and Rafael taxation of the millionaire corpora- Tchorny, one of whom had been active tions and the capitalists is enforced, in the labor movement in the United The capitalist parties will never | States a few years ago. tackle this. Only thru the unity of| Fascists Torture, the labor forces behind a labor elec-; _ News is now received that in Kovno, tion program can the seat shortage eight Communists are being tried by be overcome. The Workers (Commu-|¢ourt martial, in Schaulen, another nist) Party is calling for a united la-|eight, in Poneviesh, six Gommunists bor ticket in championing this move. | nd in Memel six more, of these In the meantime, it has placed its | are in danger of execution. In Koyno, own candidate in the field, C. E. Ruth- | the fascists have begun torturing the enberg, executive secretary of the | Political prisoners. One, Glowatski, Workers (Communist) Party, Aj]| Who had already been -tried in 1925 workers are urged to sign the Work- 2nd 1926, had béen tortured with espe-| ers Party petitions, to stay awa; cial cruelty and his life is feared for. from democratic and republican pri- | S¢ores of others are in a similar posi- maries, to raise the question in the tion, although they have committed workers’ organizations of a united la- |" crime but that of belonging to a bor ticket, and to register on March dlitical party and holding views in 15 for the general elections, April 5. ca seat to those of the reigning ideas tn | party, Philadelphia Members ine. The solution to the seat shortage problem is a wholesale program for Universal Protest. The protest movement against the nearly 3 applicants for every job. weeks,” “Clemenceau Sulks in'German Rail Workers _ Hidden Village; Hopes protest P] L His Crimes Forgotten stoi ahaa (FP).—German railway unionists PARIS, Feb. 20.—Georges Clemen-| are protesting the plans of the man- ceau,’“The Tiger,” the war maker,| agement of the state railway system the man responsible for the “cordon|to lay off 14,000 shopmen, says a sanitaire” by which the allies tried |message from the International Trans- to starve out the Bolshevik Revoly-| port Workers’ Federation headquar- tien, is in practical hiding, according | ters. The 1927 operating program to his statement to an American| would reduce the shopmen’s force newspaper correspondent. from 114,000 to 100,000. Latest word “Let the world forget me,” he said; says the mandgement is offering to with a sweep of his hand as he re-) compromise with a reduction of only cognized the correspondent. “It’s all | 5,500. the same to me. Since my letter to| Accidents on British railways have President Coolidge on debts I have greatly increased since the number come (out of my retreat only to say | of maintenance of way men have been «# last farewell to my old friend, Gus-| reduced, the federation learns. And tuve Geffrey, and to accompany to'a railroad wreck in Holland where their final resting place the remains several persons were killed recently of Claude Monet, That is enough ac- is attributed to defective roadbeds— tivity. for one season.” the result of an insufficient mainten- ance force, a A defective gas tube leading to a. heater caused the death of Mrs, Mar- ‘waret Mayer, 47, of 2654 Summerfield! | » BUY THE DAILY WORKER AT THE NEWSTANDS To Consider Argument | In All-Union Party. PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 20,.-—On Tuesday, Feb. 22, 8 p. m., the party membership of Philadelphia will gather at 521 York Avenue, to hear a detailed report on the differences of opinion within the All-Union Communist Party. i | The reporter will be Comrade Wil- liam Weinstone, general secretary of | the New York District, | Discussion will follow the report. Admission to the meeting will be | by membership only, Comrades fail-| ing to bring membership cards will! not be admitted, ; Newark Electricians Ask $2 a Day Increase NEWARK, N. J. (FP)—Newark electrical workers (Local 52) ask $2 a day increase in pay when their! agreement expires May 1, Three| months notice has been given the em- ployers. The new scale would be $12 + St. Ridgewood, Queéns. a a day minimum. regime of terror in Lithuania has spread throughout the countries of Europe. In Germany, meetings have taken piace in all parts of the country, especially in eastern Prussia near the Lithuanian bordér, Al Lithuanian Cleveland Irish Workers Protest . Fascist Meeting CLEVELAND, 0., Feb, 20.—In‘a} statement issued by John M. Gal- lagher, in behalf of the Irish Workers Alliance, local organizations of the Irish Republican movement are taken to task for letting a hall which is under their control to an Italian fas- cisti organization for the purpose of holding a mass meeting there on Feb- ruary 15, The meeting was not held. however, Italian workers saw to that. In pro- test against the action of the Irish conservatives who let the hall to the faseieti the Trish Workers Alliance whieh hitherto held its meetings in the hall withdrew and now meet at 4809 Lorain Avenue, every Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. egrams have been sent. } In the United States, the Interna-| ‘tional Labor Defense has already sent telegrams and cables of protest to the | Lithuanian government, and to the! Lithuanian legation at Washington. | izabeth |The latter is being informed of the | its hat or’ whatever it is minds wear jcablegram of protest sent to Kovno| to preserve their dignity. by the- American labor and progres- | sive leaders, | On the Screen | The screen feature at the Capitol Theatre this week is “The Scarlet Letter,” with Lillian Gish starring as the tragic heroine of Nathaniel Haw- thorne’s classic tale, John Barrymore in “Don Juan” with its Vitaphone accompaniment will be given for the 400th time at the Warner Theatre this evening. Irene Rich is featured in “Don’t Tell The Wife,” the current film at the Hippodrome. Huntly Gordon, Lilyan Tashman, William Damarest and Otis Harlan, are the other prin- cipals playing in Rex Taylor’s story. |. “Wandering Girls” is being shown | on the Broadway Theatre screen. Dorothy Revier, Mildred Harris and. Eugenie Besserer are featured play- ers, Ralph Ince directed this produc- tion from Dorothy Howell's story. The official fight pictures: Jack De- laney Vs. Jim Maloney, are also being shown this week. 4 | The Paramount Theatre is feature “Love's Greatest Mistake” this week, This picture was directed by Edward Sullivan and the cast includes Evelyn Brent, James Hall, William Powell. and Josephine Dunn. | VAUDEVILLE THEATRES. © PALACE. Bert Lytell in “The Valiant,” by Holworthy Hall and Robert Middle- mas; Ned Wayburn’s new “Buds of 1927”; Robert Emmett Keane and Claire Whitney in “The Faker” by Edwin Burke; Tom Burke, with Royal | Bernard; The Four Camerons; Charles Sargent and Bert Lewis. cites HIPPODROME. | Alma Neilson, with Dan RB. Ely, Billy Atkins, the Chalafont Sisters, | and Burt Lynn; Dave Kramer and |- Jack Boyle; Ruby Norton; Baltic Naval Chorus of twelve from. “Po- temkin”; Brems, Fitz and Murphy Brothers; Fred and Hazel Gardner's Champions. RIVERSIDE, Nazimova; Mel Klee; Dollie and Billie; William Brack and Co,; Tillis ‘acters in the unforgettable rag shop throughout the|, The Dramatists’ Guild will shortly play. | bring three playwrights to trial on And having patiently listened to | Charges of having violated. the rules my respectable, pedantic, humorless | by doing business with managers who mind hold forth so ceremoniously, 1/h@ve not signed the basic agreement beg to say that my mind is a solemn, | With the producers. The council of “ ‘ j the Guild will act as jud; dj eared 4 Iking througn | faES Aa seey. long-eared ass and is talking throug with Arthur Richman, president, as 1 laughed | Chief justice. too much at Reb Elyeh and the char- ‘ Miakope | Preparations are being made for a | revival of “The Wild Duck” are being jmade with Blanch Yurka and Tom Powers in their old parts. Ibsen’s tragedy will be put on for special matinees, scene, I was too much éelighied by the play's fresh, salty humor, its poetry and gracious wisdom to be able to swaliow such super-intellec- tual hardtack, Is “Rags” a good jplay.” Is it a play at all? Idon't) ,, re re ‘ know, I don’t care. I urge every-| “In the Springtime,” a musical body to see it—A. /B. MAGIL. | show by Eddie Dowing and James : |Hanley, authors of “Honeymoon ; Lane,” will be put into rehearsal by BROADWAY BRIEFS Eva_Le Gallienne and her group of players will open this week's reper- toire with Ibsen’s “Master Builders,” to be given tonight and repeated Charles Dillingham. Ray Dooley will play an important role. Walker Whiteside, who has been on tour in “The Arabian,” will bring the production to Broadway some time in again tomorrow afternoon, “Cradle! the spring: Neighborhood Playhouse|"ALEACK’s with OPENING TONIGHT A New Comedy Drama Thea,, 48 St., W. of B'y, Evgs, 8:30 Matinees TUES. and SAT., 2:30 * BONNIE 466 Grand St. Drydock 7516 Tonight and Every Eve, (Except Mon.) Matinee Saturday ‘Deh DY bE U ie’ Last Performances—Thro’ Feb. 23 “PINWHEEL”—Resumes Feb, 24. | Extra Mat. Tue. ( shington's Bthday) THEA. W. 45th St. ws, 8:30 KLAW MATINEES THURS, & SAT, “SINNER”. With Alla Extra Mat 4 + THEA. West 42nd 8t. HARRIS tee Daily, 2:30 & 8:30 WHAT PRICE GLORY Mats. (exc, Sat.) 60e-$1, Eves. b00-$2 Vey Pop, Prices, Mat, Tues., Wed. & Sat, “LOOSE ANKLES New York's Laugh Sensation. BRO! see WA Xtra Matw, Feb, 22, 2, 24 Civic Repertory fey: {,A4.,&,14,8t. EVA LE GALLIENNE and LaRue; Cardini; Murdock and Mayo; The Brightons. — Tontght ... LASTICR But De) Tomorrow ASTER BUILDE Tomorrow Night.....“CRADLE SONG" ! | CARROLL Bronx Opera House jj"), tye An @ MERICAN TH TRAGEDY MONTH Musical Bon Bon with Mts, Wed Dorothy Burgess, Louis Si Longacre «st and Sa’. Wm. Frawley, George Sw Thea. West 45th st, P LYMOUTH Mon. Tues., Wed., Fri, extra Mat, The, (Warhinstos's nga xtra Mat. Tne. (Was ‘s BY WINTHROP. ‘AMES? as Gilbert & T Mi Thursday Evenings Only, ee IThe LADDER ‘body's Pla: - 50th St, Toast ot . Mats, TUES, and SAT, Vanities 1 Thea, 7th Ave. & 50th St, Karl Carroll nee jin Ave: 450th st, Bw ee Li One, ier EARL Week eb, 28—-Brothers Karamazov THEA 52 St. 5 GUILD Nats, ‘Tues. Thu. & Su 1 Week: Feb, 28-—The Silver John Golden Th.,58, B.of BY Mts. Tue. Thu, Cc R IME moran ELTINGE | NED McCOBB'S DAUGHTER | Cord MILODRAMA Oe NNER WORLD IN 4 ACTS ‘Thea, W, 42 St, Evs, $:30, Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2:30,