The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 14, 1927, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, |. , - APRIL | ; 11927 THE DAILY WORKER Published by tiie DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO. Daily, Except Sunday 83 First Street, New York, N. Y. SUBSCRIPTION RATES , By mail (in New York only): By mail (outside of New York): 68.00.per year $4.50 six months $6.00 per year $3.50 six months ~*~ $9.50 three months $2.00 three months Address all mail and make out checks to THE DAILY WORKER, 32 First Street, New York, N. Y. J. LOUIS ENGDAHL | secon Courts Place Labor Whats What» Washington Chinese Names as In Glass of Trusts The Legation Says Lettish Proletarian Artists Mourn Loss | Of C. E. Ruthenberg | LENINGRAD, March 28.—The \| following resolution has been adopted by the Leningrad Associa- || tion of Proletarian Writers, Let- || tish section at its regular meeting at the “Dom Pechat:” Whereas we, The Association of \Idea, But the Wrong Approach, | } “Rapid Transit” Has the Right | Reviewed By HARBOR ALLEN | A social revolution occurs in | Under Sherman Law They Should Sound sai | epant ; courbay i WILLIAM F, DUNNE {ott Editors ; cath Lettish Writers, Lettish section of Pes sane dards ue te ue rineeie BERT MILLER Business Manager | (By a Staff Correspondent.) (By a,Staff Correspondent.) || Leningrad in memorial assembled || wien Nothi Ue hi | AN a tA RC a |. WASHINGTON, April 13—Organ-| WASHINGTON, April 13.—Some {move you. Nothing in this play | to share your grievous loss in the death of Comrade Ruthenberg. Your loss—our loss—is keenly felt by the revolutionary proletariat of |translated from the Hungarian of | Lajos N. Negri and produced by the | Provincetown: Playhouse moves you. | It is an intellectual exercise, a toying idea on how to pronounce the names | of many of the Chinese leaders now ying a leading role in the civil war | Entered as second-class mail at the post-office at New York, N. ¥.,.under|ized labor sustained a bitter body | the act of March 2, 1879, |blow by the decision of the Supreme | Court, reversing the Circuit Court of |p a Advertising rates on applicatiol ppeals, and giving the right of em-|in China was obtained here from a|} the world. Close up the ranks and x ¢ | —————. << loyers to enjoin the Stone Cutters|member of the Chinese embassy. The|| carry forward the banner of our || With ideas, phantom revolt, Not a| Union for acts alleged to violate the official explained that the pronounci- | fallen comrade. single figure comes to life, All re-| |main gray shadows racing in crazy | patterns across the stage. Some-| j times you laugh a little, sometimes |you are stung by an idea or two, sharp slash of satire. But you never | tion of Chinese namés varied greatly | throughout China, so much so that) what was understood in one part was | Ruthenberg Meeting In | frequently unrecognizable in another. Oakland Raises Money The pronounciation he gave is that) Sherman Anti-Trust Law. Justices Louis D. Brandeis and 0. W. Holmes | dissented from the majority view and upheld the union, The case is one in a series of su- It is the Atrocities of the Imperialists That Are the Issue in China f | Imperialist hatred for the Chinese liberation movement has again provoked it into excesses which solidify sentiment against! it. OT ae The raid on the Soviet Union embassies and consulates and the continual provocation which is conducted by means of the “volunteer” corps in Shanghai patrolling the grounds of the Soviet Union offices, has drawn sharply the distinction between the imperialist nations and the Soviet Union for the Chinese masses. The Chinese have concrete proof that Great Britain, the United States, etc., have the same hatred and fear of the workers’ and peasants’ government of the Soviet Union that they have for the Chinese revolution. The imperialist powers by their recent actions have cemented the alliance between the Russian and Chinese masses so strongly that it will never be broken. Knowing this, the imperialist press has the last few days begun an orgy of lying without parallel except during the most feverish days of the world war. _ The false charges of murder and raping upon which the powers have based their notes to the Hankow government have been featured on the first pages of the imperialist press from the moment they realized that the Nanking massacre was a monumental blunder and could be excused only by a falsification of the facts. * But the continual acts of provocation and aggression against Chinese indulged in systematically by imperialist troops have not been mentioned until Chinese demands for their cessation and) reparation for the insults have been made. | We find on an inside page of the New York Times for April 2 that: (1) British soldiers have raided a Chinese school outside of! the foreign settlement—the Great China University. Equipment was destroyed, money stolen and students@were beaten with gun butts. : 2) Chinese military telephone circuits have been cut by sh soldiers. - (8) British airplanes have been flying over Chiang Kai Shek’s headquarters and the national arsenal. (4) The Nationalist flag was taken down and torn up by} : (5) British military positions have been extended outside of the foreign settlement. The notes sent by the powers will get just those concessions from the People’s government that troops and battleships can, force, and nothing else. From the political standpoint the im-| perialists have suffered a defeat in China since the Nanking} massacre because their objective was to drive a wedge between, the Sovfet Union and China. The raids on the Soviet consulates, the hue and cry about “red” plots, the efforts to exaggerate the! political differences in the Kuomintang into an open split, the preme court decisions which have in- terpreted the meaning of the Clayton Act of 1914 adversely to what organ- | ized labor desired. The Clayton Act, | acclaimed as_ organized labor's “Magna Charta” when passed by con- gress, supposed to exempt unions | from the operations of the anti-trust | {laws and to prevent issuance of in- junctions in labor disputes, has been} so interpreted by the Supreme Court! as to be.a liability rather than a help. Aids Powerful Corporations. The present case, known as the Bedford Cut Stone Co. vs, Journey- men Stone Cutters’ sociation of North America, further shears the wings of the Clayton Act by permit- ting injunction on a new series of! | practices resorted to by organized la- bor as economic weapons. The Stone Cutters Union has a membership of 5000 with 150 locals and about 30 to 35 members in each. The 24 corporations involved in on| the employers’ side control about 70 used in Shanghai and usually meets }most needs, Family Name First. In China, the instructor declared, | the family name comes first. In | writing names, the first and second almost invariably take capitals with a hyphen between the second and third, which takes a small letter, for example, Sun Yat-sen. Dr. Sun Yat-sen, is Sun Yat-san. He is the George Wash- ington, or the Mazzini of China. He started the revolution of 1911 which overthrew the medieval Manchu dy- |nasty. The Cantonese are cartying }on his program for an independent | China, General Chiang Kai-shek—Cheeong Ki-sheck, Cantonese generalissimo. He is well educated and one of the! ablest military leaders in the country. | Japan’s Protege. Marshal Chang Tso-lin—Chong, or to approximate its Pekingese accent, Jong, Se-leen, dictator of Manchuria, | pronounced | }the Bedford company. |threatened to destroy or narrow the | prone to procrastination. war-lord of the Northern armie which are fighting the Nationalists? percent of all the cut stone in the country and represent a combined in- vestment of $6,000,000. Following the strike in the Bedford Cut Stone Company’s plant, the cor-| magnificence. He is ruthlessly cruel. policy toward union men, undertook | tyrant. to solve its labor difficulties by the} General Chang “company union” method. Evidently Chong, or Jong, Sooey-lee-ong, son of the Bedford corporation was a mem-;|the Manchurian war-lord and one of ber of the United States Chamber of | his chief generals. Commerce extension course on how Killer, Not Strategist, to hornswoggle labor. General Chang Tsung-chang— The stone-cutters’ union thereupon; Chong Soo-ong-chong, not to be con- urged its members working on build-|fused with the above Changs. He, ings in other states to refuse to work | like them, is a northern commander on stone put out by the scab labor of|and is dictator of Shantung. He is The corpora-| also a protege of Japan and a former tion went into the courts for an in-| bandit chieftain. He is a huge man junction for relief against this pro-|for a Chinese, being 6 feet 2 inches tective act by the laboring men. tall. He is eruel and fierce, but is The Supreme Court in its over-|rated as an efficient military leader. riding of the lower court’s refusal to|He was defeated by the Nationalists grant an injunction now upholds the|and has disappeared from the scene use of the injunction in labor dis-| for the time being. putes. It takes the ground that labor} General Sun Chuan-fang, Sun battles are now of inter-state char- Choowan-fong, commanded the North- acter and that therefore injunctions|ern forces at Shanghai which were are in order, Associate Justice Suth-|defeated by the Nationalists. erland, who wrote the majority opin-| Wu Pei-fu, Woo Pay-foo, one of ion, held that the union’s action, the ablest strategists of China, but He really interstate trade of the Bedford Com- follows up his victories in the field. pany. {He is a six-footer. He started the war in sympathy with northerners Knifes Labor. ‘For The Daily Worker | | OAKLAND, Calif., April 18—Last night we held a meeting in memorial to Comrade Ruthenberg at Frate:nity | Hall. There were speakers representing {the Workers Party. Owens gave us a most interesting review of the history of Comrade Ru- | thenberg and his activities in the left | wing and in the Workers Party, | As a memorial to our departed |comrade and the. Memorial Ruthen- berg DAILY WORKER Fund, we made a drive for a goodly collection, Robert Leidig of Carmel started the ball rolling in the following manner: “Carmel, April 1st, 1927. “Comrades: “Enclosed find check for $25.00 for Ruthenberg Fund.” Charlotte Anita Whitney said she would double up any amount the com- | jrades might raise up to $50.00, so! Alward Tobey immediately pledged ackson, Maul, Schlaff and Taylo’ |and then a general collection was! Hsueh-liang— | taken—80% of which will go to The | won't fight. | DAILY WORKER thru the National Office, This amounted to $6.00. Thus a/| collection of $131.00 was raised for the cause. Let’s Fight On! Join | The Workers Party In the loss of Comrade Ruthen- |}ty has lost its foremost leader and th American working class staunchest fighter. This loss can onl be overcome by many militant work Fill out the application below an mail it. Become a member of the Workers (Communist) Party and |earry forward the work of Comrade | Ruthenberg. I want to become a member of the Workers (Communist) Party. | Name | the Kuomintang, Young Pioneers and | get the warm, irresistible emotional pull which I insist a good play must | exert on you. | | Imre Szabo is blown from his cell | to the border of Hakuba and Hekuba. | | It is a world in which men live only | twenty-fours hours. Children are born -every fifteen minutes; love, | marriage, divorce are a matter of | seconds. Imre is appalled. Only! | twenty-four hours to live; yet the | whole world spends these precious | | minutes in gossip, theft, wars, fed- eral investigations, quarreling, fake | religion, business, business, business. | Egri leaves nothing out. Every hate- | |ful thing, every vice, every exploita- | | tion, every social crime he crowds | | into his six scenes. Too much, too |much. He feeds you’too fast. You can’t stomach it all. And too, he! | wants to feed you on scientific pills. | | They lack the taste of bread and) | eee Chief funmaker of the Ringling- Barnum and Bailey cireus which is playing a four weeks engagement at Madison Square Garden. | Broadway Briefs G. V. Calthrop, technical direct of the Civie Repertory Theatre, sails for Europe this week. While abroad Mrs. Calthrop will design sets and costumes for the new plays to be pre- sented next season. Karl Huebl is a late addition to the 1 | who for twenty hours has been beg- | berg the Workers (Communist) Par- | its | ers joining the Party that he built. | . teat, ‘east of “One Glorious Hour” the com- : ss edy which Murray Phillips will pre- Love Isn't All. ‘sent at the Selwyn Theatre tonight. The author’s trouble, it seems to! The play is from the German of Ger- me, is that he denies the life around | hard Falkenberg, and was adapted by \He is former bandit, uneducated | $29.00. Comrade Haun of Berkeley, | him, He holds his emotions in: they | Ella Barnett. and al ih barbarie splendor and |Pledged $5.00—Comrades Friedman, | are too sacred to loosen on so mad, | ‘0 vicious a world. Time and again, Jane Thurston, will make her stage | he * ‘ \poration, ‘after pursuing a lock-out;He is a protege of Japan and a/ followed with pledges of $5.00 each | his hero pleads to be alone with the | debut in the company of her father womey he loves. He won't eat. He | who comes to the Central Theatre for He won’t even hate/an indefinite engagement commenc- lustily. He wants love. I’m willing | ing Monday evening. to put love on a higher plane than | business and gossip and certain kinds| Basil ;Sydney, now appearing in jof war, But it’s a pretty thin thing “The Crown Prince,” annoupces that | to fill twenty-four hours with, if| he will present a series of special | ‘Decal ate | twenty-four hours is all you have to matinee performances of “Richard III live. That’s why his off-stage social | starting with the first week in May. revolution is unconvincing. A man | we ‘ | The producers of “The Ladder” at | ging only to be left alone with the! the Waldorf Theatre, awarded a prize | Woman he loves, isn’t likely to lead| of $500 for the first week’s contest, | 4 social revolution an hour later. | to Miss Billie Shaw, for the best “Rapid Transit,” I-am told, mate essay on the play. The contest for a lively manuscript. Much of the! the current week closes 10 A. M. play must have beem ruined by some April 18. Another $500 will be awar- of the worst casting I’ve ever seen,'ded for articles, not exceéding 200 | terrific crowding on the tiny Prov. q|imcetown stage, and -unimaginative H cea é |eardboard scenery by Cleon Throck-; Felix Gandera, author of “Hearts | morton. They play, incidentally, of- | Are Trumps,” the new French comedy fered a wonderful opportunity for|at the Morosco Theatre has written | morton’s sets looked like daubed toy | Virtue” which is to be produced in palaces. ‘Paris next month, PENG, WS piper . 7, = | 4 7 7 i 7 7 i eee Pe eceeerecensesese | attempt to place the responsibility for the Nanking massacre! Pa gatas Me EE deserted. him for the | Address | upon the Communists and the left wing, the reference in the re-|t5 do to them apparently meant noth- | Feng—in the West. CEPR EONS se saey AN ne & Theatre Guild Acting Company in.) MADISON SQUARE GARDEN cent note to “foreign influences,” all point in one direction, i. e.,|ing to the august tribunal. | Marshal Feng Fu-hsiang—Fung] Union Affiliation...........000.0++ THE SECOND MAN | TWICE DAILY, 2 P.M & 8 P.M. a drive against the Chinese masses who are making the Kuomin-' In effect the court's order directs | You-see-ong, the so-called “Christian Mail this application to the Work- Week Apr. 18—Pygmalion tang the expression of the labor movement and the peasantry and/ the —_ a Pena egy and as | Gees us is ep si pen ue ers Party, 108 East 14th Street, New |PGUILD Sitio? St Eve $8 BEYGUING BROS. CIRCUS atin p. ni; ; wt ad A composed of individuals, to do a cer-| army is at present on the edge o: €! York City; or if in other city to time seinparepintetntanisatiaaipntebainiesmetae mepreciincnes F A a desperate effort to split off the right wing by promises of |/7\, type of work. How this verdict | Mongolian desert, west of Peking,| workers Party, 1113 W. Washington RIGHT YOU ARE | BARNUM & BAILEY less harsh treatment if the Soviet Union and all “radical” in-! fluences are repudiated. This conspiracy appears to have failed. Both Eugene Chen and Chiang Kai Shek have sent messages to Moscow denouncing! the raids on the Soviet Union consulates. The Hankow govern-| ment also demands the appointment of an international commis-, sion to investigate the Nanking affair. This demand should be supported by the labor movements of the imperialist countries. It fs a demand that is in conformity, with international law and usage but one that will embarrass the | will be carried out remains to be seen. | threatening the northern flank and Commenting on this important an-! rear. gle of the situation, Associate Justice; Eugene Chen—Shen, Minister of Brandeis in his very sharp dissenting | Foreign Affairs for the Nationalists. opinion said: Alfred Sze—See, Chinese minister “If on the undisputed facts of this/to the United States. He has ex- case refusal to work can be enjoined, | pressed Nationalist sympathies. Congress created by the Sherman law | Wife Bosses Koo. and the Clayton Act an instrument! Dr. Wellington Koo—Ku, former for opposing restraints on labor|minister to Washington and ‘until a which remind us of involuntary serv- | few days ago foreign minister at itude.” | Peking. He is a reactionary, married Blvd., Chicago, Tl. |phlet, “The Workers (Communist) Party, What it Stands For and Why Workers Should Join.” This Ruthen- berg pamphlet will be the basic pam- phlet thruout the Ruthenberg Drive. Every Party Nucleus must collect 50 cents from every member and will receive 20 pamphlets for every mem- ber to sell or distribute. Nuelei in the New York District | Distribute the Ruthenberg pm- ‘ x Raty Incl, among 10,000 Marvels PAWAH If YOU THINK YOU ARE . r. Pim Passes By |SACRED WHITE ELEPHANT GARRICK Bye. $30 | TICKETS at GARDEN BOX OFFICES , : sand daichadtvoadl TS EP d‘49th St., and Gimbel Bros, THE SILVER CORD |. Week Apr. 18--Ned MeCobb's Dauguter | Neighborhood Playhouse Sonn Golden Th-.38, H.of B'y |Circie | 466 Grand St. Drydock 7516 " Thu. & Sat.) 5578. | every Eve. (except Mon.) Mat. Sat, TIMES sa. mmedia dell’Arte jn Annual —_—_ (Foo E EM a mn cern etn Bves's:36, Mats Bi RI M 'Civie Repertory Ser $4. % Tel. Watkins Wed. & Sat, 9 je & Chester Morris, | 14 St, 7767, | we | EVA LE GALLIENNE | Tonight “CRADLE SONQ" British and American governments exceedingly. Their crimes in| Class Decision. jto a very ambitious and enormously! will get their pamphlets from the | ———~~~ ~~~ son Pontes INHER Nanking can be exposed too easily. |. Mr. Brandeis then went on to show | wealthy woman. District Office—108 East 14th St. The L A 1 D E R tcieesrkAns bien P how the Supreme Court had inter-| Kuomintang—Koo-o-min-tong, na-| Nuclei outside: of the New York | WALLACK’S West 42nd /Strees, * The Chinese masses must have the help of the working class in the imperialist nations. In Great Britain the same ruling class which is making war on China, made war on the British workers! during the general strike and miners’ strike. In the United} | preted the Sherman law. to permit) tive name for the Nationalists, liter- the United States Steel Company and the United States Shoe Machinery Company to dominate their respective |ally meaning “The People’s Party.” It was founded by Dr. Sun and is be- hind the Cantonese revolution. Its District write to Daily Worker Pub- York City, or to the National Office, Workers Party, 1113 W. Washington lishing Co., 33 East First Street, New H Now in its 6th MONTH } By Evenings 8:30, | WALDoRE, Oth St, ‘East of | Mats Tues. Wed,, Thurs, and Sat. WED, and SAT, A New Comedy Drama MARTIN BECK 47% 45 St. a, Sr se kt ss which forces 300,000 miners ike | fields, adding that it “would be | main plank as expressed by its mem-| Blvd., Chicago, I}. ix wea. od Be re poy ot ara agy es ess er Ee . the orig pao gh ; whi h vise * oi Kat bachincty tebe strange if Congress had by the same | bers, is: od Siasenis’ Prceed " HAMPDEN’S bee's ae at Brdstwot to defend their right to tive as human beings, is sending troops act willed to deny the members of a! “To establish a government in | Read The Daily Worker Every Day. Evs. 8:15. and warships to China. Hands Off China is an international demand. It is made ; : ; c " i r ia, | EARL Bs ‘ j international enemy of the working class—world jm-|ftom work when that course was the) -—-———— ——— canetseijenensnte The International Workers Aid, | V a5 roe int Aik uiiten in RS vestaeaa one Ant in behalf of i only means of self-protection against should be no injunction against the | Local Chicago, has secured the ser-; CARROL? anl 1es Ms - peria ‘ism—ani e b na | a combination of militant and power- | strike, picketing or the boycott, Or-| vices of the Chicago Art Theatre| Bar] Carroll 72 ve. de both Bt, | DW, / Chinese masses all the oppressed of the earth. ful employers.” * ganized labor acclaimed the law. It|/cast for a series of nine perfor-|_™ ee ua yest RS SP, The failure of the Clayton Act to ROADN GUST W $0 Ent 850 as Hath 230 / Involuntary Servitude. The majority decision of the United States Supreme Court) small craft of workingmen the right to co-operate in simply refraining! China, of the people, by the peo- ple and for the people.” | Gorky and Shekhov in Chicago. Matinees Wed. and Sat, WALTER DEN (SPREAD EAGLE” i in CAPONSACCHI do what the officialdom of organized labor claimed it would do is a vivid \{llustration of the sham of such lég- islation and a demonstration of the was accompanied by passage of an anti-injunction law in Massachusetts mances which will be given under) fread The Daily Worker Every Day. the direct supervision of Ivan Laz-| ALAIN \in the same year and a similar law in | areff, formerly of the Moscow Art) Arizona. | Theatre. These performances will! | In 1921 the Supreme Court started be staged at the Chicago Art Thea-| restraining the Journeymen Stonecutters’ Association from refus-|St¥Pendous power of the Supreme its series of decisions “interpreting” | tre, Fine Arts Building, 410 S. Michi. | ing to handle scab produced raw material was stigmatized by Justice Louis D. Brandeis as “opposing restraints on labor which! remind of involuntary servitude.” \c ourt. The act said, in substance, that an injunction should not be is- sued in a labor dispute except to But Brandeis, as usual, dis-| prevent irreparable injury to prop-| while the United States Supreme ip) |the Clayton Act. That year the Mas-/g.n Avenue. | |sachusetts Supreme Court held the} April 16-17-20: Chelkash, Maxim | anti-injunction law unconstitutional| Gorky; Riders to the Sea, J. M. All Sections Meet Beginning April 18 Section Membership Meetings will! be held in all Sections thruout the Synge; The Flattering World, Geo,' city during the week of Apri! 18th as | PRICES LVES, $1.10 TO 93.86. /" ee aS ie SORAYA |. Section 6.—(2 meetings; Williams- | burg and Brownsville). / 6-A & 6-B.—Tuesday, April 29th, at 7 p.m, at 29 Graham Ave. | 6-C & 6-D.—Wednesday, April 20th, at 8p, m,, at 63 Liberty St. Section 7.—-Wednesday, April 20thty sents against such opinions. He was placed in that body of cor-|&'Y gor which thee is no, adequate | Court did the same for the Arizona | Kelly. |part of the general eampaign of the ja 8p. m., at 1910 Benson Ave. r rf ‘ remedy at law, and also that there! act, April 21 24: The Witch, Anton Ruthenberg Drive. poration flunkeys by the astute Wilson, who, more than any)" "* * “8%: ane Ste D3 a ~|Chekhov; The Will o’ the Wisp, ‘Thoso meetings are-tho first. step Markoff Speaks On China, President of modern times, knew how to cloak the most reac- tionary acts with a show of liberalism and who placed liberals in positions where they could do no harm. Unquestionably to force | union men to handle scab work is a form of slavery, or involun- | tary servitude, and is a blow against one of the oldest practices of | trade unionism. Every union, even the most reactionary, uses| this weapon. y It is particularly ironic that this decision is based upon the Clayton Act which was hailed by the late Gompers and the offi- cialdom of the A. F. of L. as a great victory for labor as it was supposed to protect labor from prosecution under the Sher- man anti-trust law. The Clayton Act was backed by those labor lieutenants of capitalism wh elections by their odious | ‘ s ” your enemies,” and its adoption “carping crities” on the left wh was held to be a rebuke to those | Doris Halman; The Dear Departed, | | Stanley Houghton. | no strive to create a labor ea la party | Added attraction on April 16, and, in the general campaign to raise the ideological level of the ,Party mem- bership and also to promote the Abraham Markoff will lecture on |the latest developments in the Chi- \nese situation next Friday ‘evening independent of the two old parties. This decision is only the latest of a series which interpreted the Clayton Act, called by Gompers “Labor's Magna Charta,” so that it is used against labor, but it will not induce the successors of Gompers, the Greens and Wolls to change their policies. It ought, however, to cause those honest labor elements who can think at all to join the forces striving to kick these agents of the bosses out of their places of leadership in the unions, R As for this particular decision of the Supreme Court it is to be hoped the Stonecuttérs have the courage to ignore it and that © continually betray the workers in| they) continue to refuse to handle the products of the scab|w, igth Street, Geskenky's Book- an, “reward your friends and punishj con \ f pilin Tg W. Division Street. 21: LOLA MARIE SANTRO pre- senting “The Dance of the Hammer and Sickle.” Tickets in advance, $1.00; at tho | box office, $1 Tickets are now lon sale at International Workers | Aid, 1553 W. Madison Stree}, 1096 8. | Racine Street (Book Store), Frel- theit, 8209 Roosevelt Road, Vilnis, 3116 S, Halsted Street, 19 S. Lincoln Street, Russian School, 1902 W, Division Street, Rovnost Ludu, 1510 F Pp. m., at 81 East 110th St. “BULLD THE PARTY. RUTHEN. 8 542 East 145th St. Admission free, BERG DRIVE. | SF NG AIA! The Section Membership Meetings | Strike In New Orleans Hotel, ; |have been need as follows: | NEW ORLEANS, (FP). — Union | Section 1.—Monday, April 18th at/men have withdrawn from work on | 6.80 p. m., at 66 East 4th St, the Monteleone Hotel .annex haying Section 2.—Monday, April 18th at|been unable to reach an agreement ) 6,30 p. m., at 100 West 28th St. with the contractors in regard to | Section, 3.—Thursday, April 21st, at | Wages and hours. A full force of (6.30 p.m. at 100 West 28th St. | ~ Section 4--—-Friday, April 22nd, at the city have been put to work and Kemeny ave progressing slowly, Read The Dally Worker J Sage some real scenic designing. -Throck-'a comedy called “Nicolo and Her o non-unionists mostly from outside ©

Other pages from this issue: