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it Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1927 THE DAILY WORKER The Disiniesration of the Socialist Party Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO, Daily, Except Sunday 83 First Street, New York, N. Y. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By mail (in New York only): $8.00 per year $4.50 six months $2.50 three months Phone, Orchard 1680 By DAVID KVITKO. pany in which he finds himself at present, and the S. P. leaders also QuPPOSsE now ‘that the party has! done away with the names “so-| “Address all mail and make out checks to THE DAILY WORKER, 33 First Street, New York, N. Y. cialist” and “comrade”, has ousted its | 3 {old leaders and stopped feeding its new Se ol the party of jzadicals’’| members on scientific socialism, | i | is built and the name “comrade”) would that purging be enough to be mie cat pelea dd anes | CHARLES EDWARD RUSSELL is|is omitted, what shall the name of | cligible for a “pati party? a |“ remembered not only by the so-| the party be? For “Mr.” Russell | what he says: “You will never ad-/| | (comrade it was in the old “foolish” | vance by sitting down to make faces | days) advises also to change the/at the American Federation of La-| |may land there soon, ARTICLE II. By mail (outside of New York): | cialists of New York state, whose | gubernatorial candidate he was at the J, LOUIS ENGDAHL WILLIAM F, DUNNE {° BEF { MILLER Mey of an party. ee spa of | bor. That organization may be ies! is generation,” says he, e very | tifically all wrong, but you will notice HERE is a great,play’to be writ- word ‘socialist’ will be hateful im the| that it trundles right along and| 1 ten about the od reaaad pio- | platforms throuout the United States. |¢ars of Americans.” The reason we|keeps up its membership while your | neer spirit which drove men out to |time when the socialist party had | been still in its glory. He had been | quite frequently seen on the socialist Reviewed by HARBOR ALLEN, | Yet his sudden dissappearance from | know already. The socialist party as-|own has just about disappeared. The topple over forests and conquer a| Entered as second-class mail at the post-office at New York, N. Yu under). oc oistist ranks caused no more|sociated once with the “wild-eyed” | best thing you can do is to support the act of March 3, 1879. Son Advertising rates on application. “ Civilian” American Army Officers in Nicaragua. Two dispatches challenge our attention—one an associated | press wire from Tribune Washington bureau. _|stir than that of other “shining| Russians, and on its guilty conscience | the Federation and trot along with | lights.” Nor is it surprising now to|lies the “St. Louis platform of 1917.” | it, It is a blame sight nearer to the learn the two causes for his breaking| Now we have the plan: of a party| mind and will of the American work- away from the party—“The St. Louis platform of 1917 and the perform- ances of the wild-eyed in Russia.” Managua, Nicaragua, the other from the Herald | THESE two events, which stand out| thus. answers the question: They read as follows in the order as the two bright spots in the | which shud drop the name “socialist” | and “comrade”. A question no less {serious arises, who should be the leaders of the party? Mr, Russell “Select young Americans for leaders . jer than you are or are likely to be} fhe ite Get a hold upon its coat! We RUSSELL surely judges the! party by what it used to be in! |1917, or else he would not speak of continent, Such,a play must be writ-| ten in a white heat, with turmoil and battle and epic grandeur. It must come out of some fierce, rugged mind iike a giant welding or a colossal dynamo, i { In “Inheritors” (at the Civie Rep-| ertory Theatre) Susan Glaspell at- tempted to write a play about pioneer drab past of the socialist party, were Gently but firmly put into the dis-| Clint sc utiah ‘ Spreng | the last straws which broke his so- [Whe mpcialist “pera eepelicy or "not named: ard the leaders that were respon-/} love of freedom. She was not equal | to the task. She had glow, but it was 1.) Fierce fighting is going Muy Muy, between Liberal and Conservative forces, the CIVIL-| people” can never forgive the socialist | St. Louis platform . on near Terra Azul, not far from jcialist back. He and the “America ible for the catastrophic folly of the| Who are} the A. F. of L. Or it is possible that! the glow of a lamp rather than of a the socialist partys policy of “non- |furnace. She chips at a cameo in-| IAN aviators Lee Mason and William Brooks, who are attached | to the Conservatives, reported tonight. 2.) The firing of several blocks of buildings in Chinandega by MAJOR William Brooks and MAJOR Lee Mason, American aviators serving with the Diaz army in Nicaragua, was charged) in a protest submitted to the state department today by Dr. S. T. Vaca, agent for the Sacasa government here.- Who has given permission for these “civilian” American | army officers to fly over Nicaragua homes and bravely bomb the} party these two sins, though the lead- ers tried hard to repent. As for Mr. went so far that he is even ashamed of his own socialist past. Now he stands on the solid rack of the Amer-|things that don’t happen in this| useful in helping its leaders in their| tired people who have dropped their ican type of “democracy”, and from| world. This is one of them. Besides,|war upon the left wing? his lofty heights he advises the so. cialist party “to canyall this stuff) helpless inhabitants? ment? Kellogg? Coolidge? If some Nicaraguan worker of his burning home and the shattered fragments of his kindred | time. punctures one of these American Peis with a well-aimed rifle | about it. Forget all about the econ-|run in for the psychopathic . shot this will immediately become, The state department? The war depart: | or farmer, enraged by the sight a monstrous atrocity justifying the most extreme measures by the American forces. In this manner are the Latin Americans taught to understand | nustings. Drop all the names and|[T is curious that this wiseacre indeed, unless as an example of peo-| they wish would happen, what has teaches the socialist party leaders|ple who turn traitors at the first | happened, and what will happen. that American citizenship is a high and holy thing. Every bomb | abstruse. dogmas that you have learn- a 4 : ee “one step at a time” and to/| gust of revolutionary wind. What is They walk in, they sit, they rise, they about scientific socialism and all the | | this country and will not be in you It is worse than useless to talk jomie interpretation of history and |value, price and profit. These are ;not useful to you in your present sit- | }uation. What you want ‘is somebody | | Russell himself, he covered quite a|that understands the American psy-| |distance, since he parted company | chology. . ty hte” and “ex with the socialist party, In fact he|of reforming the world in a swoop|the socialist party leaders\ are not|and “inspiration” instead of Give up the idea! |and bringing in a complete new 80-| |cial order overnight. There are some ow far will you get with the Amer-| | There is no “class consciousness” in| how it can all be changed and made | pis advice to lovely? He will merely: move toward |the nearest patrol box to have you | Progress in this world is made a step jat a time . ve things for the class-room, not for) | interference” with the A. F. of L.|stead of striking at an iron cast. is taken by Russell as making faces? | She offers refinement instead of| Is it possible that such a “keen” psy- | grandeur, She has “beautiful chologist, as he is, failed to see that) thoughts” and “exalted language” elash only far from criticizing the A. F,|/and battle and blood, | of L. policies but are actually very) Her pioneers are loveable, gentle, That the| hoes and guns to talk, Their grand- |children who in 1920 fight for the socialist party leaders of a member- |ican voter if you start out by assur-| ship which “has just about disappear-| 01d, lost freedom, do it sitting in a y ing him that everything in this coun-| oq” wish to hang on to the A. F. of library.’ The play behind Miss Gias- rminology jargon that goes with it. try is perfectly putrid, but you know/y, coat tails is an open secret, and/Pell’s “Inheritors” somehow never “Forget all about the | |Third International and the Thirty-|; ‘third and all between” only shows! that Russell’s data is antiquated. | {"HE Russells are too tedious and, they would interest us very little, | reaches the visible stage. It gets lost in the wings. It takes place in the intervals between the acts. Before you are only people talking, talking, interminable talking. They talk about how they feel, what they think, what their grandfathers thought, what | is ing I erica i $ i ed at the feet of long-winded pro-|t? take | "4 oa ae ryt om * - me and bombing of hohe of the Tatecha tonal They ‘will | Write the platforms in “straight out| interesting is the psychology of the ; aoe a merican cities there: ore a holy rite. : i neeee go here.” | old-fashioned American, and don’t re-|Oneals who offered these gentlemen} | We hope some peasant with a Mauser has a little luck. | |quire everybody that reads them to| the socialist party paper to abuse the; al sea COREE IRE ALT rae ME: RUSSELL, as we see, is quite| understand perfectly what’ Marx|party. What induced Mr. Oneal to! y a mature person, and class-room| meant in the fourteenth chapter of} publish such advice as to do away) FEW H M F LE § § CHILDREN IN THE |stuff is quite unbecoming such a re-|‘Das Kapital’ ”. with the last vestiges of socialism?) spectable gentleman. That this wis-| | Not the novelty of criticism. The so-| i |dom is borrowed from the A. F. of L.,|| Mr. Russell is certainly courageous|cialist party has been previously | aI | jhe is ashamed to acknowledge, for it besides being wise. To write in the| criticized from the right far more| a y Oe |does not befit such an “independent | socialist party press, and to advise its! ably. | | if thinker,” as he deems himself to be,| leaders, who, offered him the columns} ‘The reason must be sought else-| 4 —_ to follow the footsteps of lesser pro-| of the paper, to expel themselves, re- _ the snow, their (Continued from Page One) counter-revolutio: press. Now It! nalism. of the International.” Yet prophecy | ing is to charge the socialist party | nearer to the “American” conception | king on The latest Real Figures Lower. must be quite an alluring occupation,| leaders in having demanded of their| of Russell, that is the borrowed A. F. in ar The Moscow dispatch by a corre-|in spite of its dangers to fall into|readers a perfect knowledge of|of L. program, than Russell to the ealls for tears o s|spondent stationed here, H. R. Knick-| company of fools instead of the wise,|Marx’s Capital. If this terrible|old socialist ideology. If the social- vicious, home stand in ragge corners of the ci their bare feet of essly in chests, while the praise the fur coats of the passerby. This was contained in a story sent heavy snow flew in Moscow, thanks to an unusually late winter and long, mild autumn. So we have to do here obviously with a made-to-order horror story reminiscent of Hearst’s cable to; the artist, Remington, sent to Cuba for “war pictures” just prior to the) sinking of the “Maine”: ‘You furnish | the pictures and I'll furnish the war,” ! the millionaire publisher wired the} artist when he reported from the scene | that there was no war for him to; depict. The Moscow correspondent fexpression of “100%” American jour- | phets than the “long-winded prophets | quires nerve. But what is most amus- where. The socialist party and the editor of the “New Leader” are much | this light on the hill; his way of ex- go out. Actually nothing happens, The pity of it is that so much might. In Act I you have old Silas Morton dreaming of the college he will found on the hill above the pioneer settle- ment. It will be his gift to the un- born children of the new country, pressing love for the land, of passing on the visiomhe has caught from his learned neighbor, Felix Fejevary, the revolutionary refugee from Hungary. Forty years later, in act II, Mor- ton college is a Babbitt factory on a hill. It pays lip homage to its » many well-informed people insist that | not be any class consciousness in your | the socialist party. Everybody knows, r meagre , r eyes eagerly ap- y ,spending the summer at Caucasian |and he further teaches the “radicals” | here—the poor socialist party leader- mail by a Moscow correspondent to | his paper six weeks before the first | erboe! puts the figure at 125,000, | and Russell could not resist the temp- charge were true, there would not which i | u ist party cannot play the leading role approximately correct, altho| tation of predicting that there “will{have been so many ignoramuses in in the A. F. of L. it can and tries to jhang on to its coat tail (and the A. F. of L. knows how to reward its friends). Some useful services it can certainly render in the fight upon the Communists. Russell, consequently, ‘ : 49h does not reproach the socialist party and Crimean centres and the winter in| to drop the word “comrade” out oF Lane with all the charges,against it-;of today but of yesterday, and his j the larger towns, and they are es-/|their vocabulary, as “you can never | self, is handed one of which it is cer-| advice to throw off the misnomer “so- | timated in both cases at the peak. | make headway with a political party|tainly innocent. The fact that Mr. cialist” is quite in accord with the | Made out of whole is the story that|in America whose members call one | Russell himself still hiccoughs from | spirit dominating now within the so- “in Moscow alone 65,000 homeless! another by any such name. It only | the large portion of “Das Capital” he | cialist party. That of the socialist children are registered,” and implying | makes Americans stare and laugh—| swallowed simply shows that he could | party only its name remains, which is jthat there are facilities for only 2410 | which is bad for your aimings.” The|never digest the material, and the|a misnomer, we shall see from our of them in public institutions. | ex-“comrade” feels provoked of this|fault lies not with the socialist party|further analysis of the “New Lead- As a matter of fact no such number | piebian name in the “decent” com-|but with his own stomach. ler” symposium. are registered anywhere. There are a| __ s Movement? even this is much too high because of | time.” | with the exception of Mr. Russell, the duplication involved in the esti-| ee ‘ | perhaps, that the theoretical level of mates. These children do not stay, in| ()¥ COURSE, his wisdom is not ex-' the socialist. party membership. was one place but shift with the seasons,|~ hausted by his prophecy or advice, ! never high enough to boast of; and total of 192 institutions under the su- | pervision of the Moscow Department | of Education, and in them 25,748 chil- | |dren are cared for. Not more than) | from 500 to 1000 are outside of these > Why a Communist Children working class organization to be free needed only to furnish the date-line, | homes and schools in Moscow and in the snow and the freezing children | Leningrad the census showed only 260 could be furnished in New York. ‘entirely homeless. This is not because Heritage of Past. '“the homes are full to the overflow- No Communist denies that there are | ing,” as Mr. Knickerbocker writes, but homeless children in Russia. There | because these left-overs are of a foot- are—many thousands of them. The |loose vagabond type that can be and problem is frankly and publicly recog-| are being won over only one by one nized, and the Soviet government is | through the application of highly in- making most strenuous efforts to com- teresting social methods, which I shall pletely eradicate this evil, inherited | describe later. i from Tsarist days and tremendously Many Sent to Parents. aggravated by years of imperialist! From October 1925 to October 1926 war, following by intervention and|a total of 7140 homeless children have counter-revolutionary massacres, and | been reclaimed from Moscow’s streets, by one of the worst famines in his-| of which 4500 were sent back to par- tory. jents or-relatives and 2640 were put The government is doing more and jinto institutions; 80% are transients spending more to overcome this evil| from other towns. These youngsters than any other country on earth to|who are left are not “6 and 7-year-old overcome the identical evil in its| bandits” as the Hearst press puts it—| boundaries, and this does not exclude |61.8% of the footloose children who the richest of all: the United States. took advantage of the excellent Chil- It has already astounding successes to} dren’s Night Shelter in Moscow from | its credit and the complete liquidation | May, 1925, to January, 1926, were 14 of the problem is reckoned with in the | years of age and 30.6% between 14 course of a three-year program of | and 16, (according to an article by Dr. governmental and voluntary social ac-| Footer in the organ of the “Society of tivity. | Children’s Friends,” May, 1926). Nor I shall try to show not only how |are they “bandits” at all, anththey are greatly the capitalist newspaper sto-|not treated as such even though their ries about “children who lurk like lean | method of getting a living does trans- and hungry wolves in the shadows of | gress the law somewhat. They are Russia’s cities” distort and exaggerate | children who, as a result of conditions the problem, nor how false are the | beyond their control, have lost their tales of exile prisons on Arctic islands, social roots, and the Workers’ and and the crime-wave of “6 and 7-year-| Peasants’ Republic is sparing neither old bandits,” but, in addition, these jeffort nor funds to reclaim them and_| articles will show the origin and true|give them an opportunity of taking extent of this problem, and the meas- | their rightful place in the proletarian ures employed to cope with it. It will | productive process. then be seen that not only are these | fairy-tales untrue—but that from the | very nature of social relationships in| the Soviet Union they CANNOT POS- SIBLY be true. How Many Are There? On this question the plute propa-| gandists ought to get together first to agree on a common line. A two-page Hearst Sunday “spread” tells us with its customary “scientific” acetiracy that: “Official estimates place the to- tal strength of this juvenile army of Custom Tailors Plan, Membership Drive Arrangements for an important membership drive will be made at a meeting of Local 1, Custom Tailors of New York, at the Bohemian Hall, 821 East 73rd street, Monday even- ing. The membership of the local has By EVA STONE. With the intensification of the class struggle, we will find that the children’s movement will be playing a more distinct and significant role. The Boy and Girl Scouts is an in- ternational children’s organization of the bourgeoisie. Its composition is mostly of working class parentage. On first observation, the scouts are a sport organization which is interested in developing the children physically. Give them enough physical training and out-of-door sports so that they might grow up to be healthy and happy men and women. lf a mem- hers of the scouts would be questioned on the purpose of the organization such would be the answer. Let us ask what is there beneath the surface? What is the one aim of the scouts’ movement? The capitalists support the Boy and Girl Scouts movement both financially and morally. It is thru the propaganda of the scouts that the children «re imbuéd with the spirt of loyalty, patriotism and devo- | tion to the ruling class—the bosses. This is what the capitalists get in| return for their support. And last, but not least, scout propaganda will prepare staunch defenders of and fighters for capitalism, and will turn cut the future anti-labor agitators and strike-breakers. The scouts pic- | ture life to the child as meaning no | more than that with which they come | in contact with on hikes or at camps. In other words, they picture life as being full of happiness, joy, beauty and plenty of opportunity. For these children no class struggle exists, and no misery can be found. In short, the boy and girl scouts is an organiza- tion to train fighters for the defense of the bourgeoisie. On the other hand, there is the Pioneer Youth. An educational club and camp organization of workers’ children, sponsored by many trade unions and leading educators. This is according to the last conference of the Pioneer Youth which was held on |from propaganda, and play a neutral role must arouse suspicion. Agreeing that society is divided into two dis- tinct camps; the working class and the capitalist class, and that these two classes continually fighting each other like two armies at war, is it pos- sible for such a thing as neutral to exist? Although the Pioneer Youth may claim to be neutral, they are obviously collaborating with other hourgeois organizations, In order to counteract and fight the propaganda of both these organi- zations, the Pioneer Youth and the Boy and Girl Scouts, and to arouse class consciousness among the children of the working class, making them realize the true conditions that pre- vail, and finally rally them to the cause of the proletariat in its strug- gle for emancipation—there is in ex- istence the Young Pioneer League’ of America, the children’s section of the Communist movement. The Young Pioneer League is based on the active participation of its mem- bers in the class struggle. The main sphere of activity is centered around the school where the minds of the children are daily being poisoned with the propaganda of the nature of the boy and girl scouts in addition to the incorrect interpretations given to the children onthe current events as well us historical facts—all tending to serve as capitalist propaganda in the schools. Tn eases of strikes, as in Passaic, the teachers are the spokes- men of the capitalist class in pro- pagandizing against the workers who are fighting for a living wage, a strong union, and better conditions. The Young Pioneer League carries on propaganda thru the issuance of leaf- lets and bulletins in the schools, en- lightening the children on what is go- ing on and giving a working class interpretation to these incidents as well as exposing the conditions in the schools. The Pioneers are participat- ing in these activities of the workers but rather education that will develop netive, militant participants in the struggles of the workers. A class education that will develop class lead- ers. That is the purpose and aim of the educational activity which is be- ing carried on. The Young Pioneer League has a big task before it at present. A task of educating the large masses of | workers’ children who are found in other organizations and winning them cver for active participation in the struggles of the working class. For this task we will depend upon the adult workers to cooperate with us. The children of militant trade union- ists belongs in the Young Pioneer League or they will otherwise become our enemy. The Pioneer Ruthenberg Enrollment Drive should inspire you to send your child to the only working class. re- volutionary children’s organization of the world, THE YOUNG PIONEER LEAGUE. Let us pave the way, fellow work- ers! Let us save the children of the working class from the capitalists! Read The Daily Worker Every Day Naturalization Boss Likes to Have Fascist ' Thugs as Citizens WASHINGTON (FP).—Raymond F. Crist, commissioner of naturaliza- tion in the U. S. Department of Labor, has expressed the view that Italian Fascists are just the sort of material from which to make Ameri- can citizens. argument of Dr, Chas. Fama, of the Anti-Fascist League, that men who had sworn implicit obedience — to Mussolini, as members of the Fascist orgapization, after they came to the United States, were not in good faith when they swore allegience to the United States government. Crist was asked his opinion of the | « the wretched at between 800,000 and 600,000.” Surely there is enough lee- way here, it is as if one said that the population of New York City is be- tween 16 million and 30 million—~even vy increased considerably in the last few months, and active members hope to make the local more militant and effective than it has hitherto been, | An interesting program has been March 2nd, 1927, Altho the Pioneer Youth call themselves an organiza- tion of workers’ children, at the same time being sponsored by trade unions ~-they also claim to be “free from in general, and in the interests of the working class children in particular, Although educational activity is car- ried on quite extensively within the Young Pioneer League, the first prin- the lowest is about twice too high,| provided for Monday’s meeting, All| ‘isms’ and propaganda.” Do you mean | ciple in education is thru active par- — and another hundred percent is added | tailors, in or out of tho union, are| trade union “ism” by that also? This | ticipation in the etruaae, At is not BUY THE DAILY WORKER for good-meagure, This is a typical) uxged to attend, seems quite contradictory, For a!cducatfon for the sal af edv@™sa4| AT THE NEWSSTANDS The naturalization commissioner said he saw no objection to Fas indeed, he thought they were just the sort of men needed here. |pioneer founder; meanwhile begging money from -reactionary legislators. |Its students are anxious to squeeze! jout the “jays” and “get the right) |sort.” Its conscientious objectors | |have been sent to jail, Its Hindu | students, clamoring for Indian free- | dom, are heckled by the sons of the | pioneers, arrested, beaten. Its radi- |cal professors are muzzled with the | threat of dismissal. The light on the hill is pretty well burned out. | Only Madeline, granddaughter of | old Silas and old Felix, still feels the pioneer fire. But there is no longer |room for the old free spirit; and in |the end she too is carted off to a leell. What a play this might have made! What a scene could have been written about the skirmish on the campus, the Hindu boy thundering jagainst England, the students jeer- ing, the police jerking the speaker down, Madeline beating them with her tennis racket! Instead, all you have is a broken racket and tedious recital. Granted, the Greeks did it Here is! “Tnheritors” is an essay.on the vanishing pioneer freedom of America ROMNEY BENT Plays an in John important role Howard Lawson’s “Loud Speaker” at the 52nd Street Theatre. And so “Inheritors” remains an es- say rather than a play, It remains far-off, like an echo of something lived and seen, like a faded photo- graph, Its revolt is sincere, but bloodless, bookish, Its spirit has beauty, but the minor beauty of miniatures and old prints. Even so, it is worth seeing. Eva Le Gallienne gives it a simple, earnest production with Josephine Hutchinson as an ex- cellent Madeline, Broadway Briefs Edwin H. Knopf has acquired a second play, “Lucretia,” by Ernita Lascelles, actress and novelist. The play deals with’ the life, and times of the beautiful Borgia, “Hearts Are Trumps,” a new play by Felix Gandera, the author of “The Bride Retires,” will be presented soon by Henry Baron. The play is now in rehearsal, with Frank Mor- gan and Vivian Martin in the lead- ing roles. — Katherine Cornell will end her sea- son in “The Green Hat” next week at the Shubert-Riviera Theatre. Next season she will be presented by A. H. Woods in a new play, Somerset Maugham’s “The Letter,” which re-° cently opened in London. “Human Dust,” a play by Ossip Dymow, a study of New York life, | will have its premiere at the Yiddish Art Theatre, Friday evening, with Maurice Sehwartz in the leading role, Barrie’s “The Legend of Leonora,” with Grace George in its leading part, will open next Tuesday night at the Ritz Theatre. The play is being re- vived by William A, Brady. Mrs. Henry B. Harris announced the purchase of “Blood Money,” by George’ Middleton, for production next season. too, But this isn’t Greece, and the talky, intellectual drama has had its | day. BUY THE DAILY WORKER AT THE NEWSSTANDS @¢ ; Cor. 6 Ay, & 14 St. Civic Repertory fej (yagi &, 478% EVA LE GALLIENNE Fri. and Sat. Eve. NHERITORS” Saturday Matinge CRADLE SONG” TIMES SQ. CRIME Thea., W. 42 St. Eves, 8:30. Mats, Je & Chester Morris, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 with James Ke: The LADDER Now in its 5th MONTEL WALDORF, 50th St, East~ of Bway. Mats, WED, and SAT. ‘Theatre on var Cempeer in Week Mar, 23—Brothers Karamazov THEA, W. 52 St. ys. 8: GUILD Mats. Thurs. and Bat, H i NED McCOBB’S DAUGHTER Week Mar, 28—The Silver Cord John ‘Th. 58, Bot Bt 1 j Golden sratiure sac) Sera A TW. 48 0S Eres B39 Wels Med tat 250 PRICLS EVES, 10 TO $3.85. Bronx Opera House j#°* Pa teen pirat ee aise “RESTLESS WOMEN” A Powerful New Play of Today. Se enlnaid Street, Tf not, let us know and we'll instruct our driver to call at your home. Drydock 7516. Every Eye, (Except t. Sat. prove bacon PINWHEEL Last Performance March 30, canton. Wanities CARROLL ’S West 42nd_— Street, WALLACK’S Evenings 8:30. Mats. Tues, Wed., Thurs. and Sat. ‘What Anne Brought Home A New Comedy Drama SMNR NS ll 2x 2 Lew PLAYWRIGHTS thea, 524 Thea, 206 West\Mats. Thur: St. COL. 7592\Byvs.$:45. May . ? By Joh ‘Loudspeaker iiéward Lawaon VgtuHERA TR @ HAMPDEN 8 62nd St, atcarecaway Bys, 8:16, v WALTER Matinees Wed. and Sat, HAMPDEN in CAPONSACCHI —_/’ fa HARRIS 281 WHAT PRICE GLORY Mats, (exc, Sat.) 50c-$1, Eves./ 500-$3, (Union Made) Neighborhood Playhouse . { THEA, Weft sand. ae 4 Twice Daily, 2:30 & 8:30 1h 3 I