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SaRASE ——— wom ib Page Four What the Daily Worker Means to the Workers | - More Encouraging Contributions to Our Emergency Fund. How Not To Parliamenta T. Johnson, Cleveland ......... 2.50 C. Litz, Sandusky, Ohio........1.00 . P. Maxwell, Sandusky, Ohio. .1.00 3y ABRAM JAKIRA. Wm, Bovio, Detroit, Mich. 1.00) Several comrades in a small steel a ohne San Francisco .....-100 town in the Pittsburgh district, with Ree ee ae it cs ‘VY out asking the District Committee or Workmen's Sick & Death Benefit even their own nucleus for a policy _ Socy W. York, N. -10,00 | registered “republican” and voted the South SI W. iw est | republican ballot in the recent prim- aus oe 20.00 | ary elections, These comrades had an C. P. Wilson, San Jose . --9.50 idea that they were following a cor- J. Freitas, San Jose, Cal. :1.00 | rect policy by supporting elements on N. Roden, Cleveland, Ohio......1.00) the republican ticket who pretend to Ws; Oancea, Cleveland +++:100!be friendly to labor and by helping M, Braica, Cleveland 1.00) to defeat the candidates of the K. D. Butico, Cleveland ... +++1.00) ¢, sponsored by the steel corpor Wom. All. of A., Lin- aan gl 5.00 While this may be an isolated yet it deserves the attention of the , Br 31... entire party. There are undoubtedly J. Wilmington, Del. similar cases in other districts. ; , Chicago bari eee reer Cinicago. «5 The comrades who voted the re- A. Yran, Hen i, N.Y. publican ballot showed that they al- K. Tamkus, Cleveland lowed themselves to be influenced by ee rene re Yorke City’. the general wrong conception of par- oman (collected) Ashburn- liamentary action now prevailing eh +*5-/' among the masses, What is the gen- Radakovich, Prescott, Ariz...1.00 eral situation compelling even Com- A. Santu, Wadsworth, Ohio ....2.00 munfsts to vote the republican ballot? Paul Thomas, Wadsworth, O.....1.00\The same situation is general thru- Vv. Jemson, Wadsworth, tN 1.00 ont the tcoal andiateel towns.) Che 1 J. Mack, Wadsworth, 0... --1.00| candidates running for office in these T. Lerich, Wadsworth, 0. -1.00| towns are usually the candidates of 2. G. Nescheff,, Wadsworth, 0...1.00/the coal operators or the steel mag- Be menu, Wadsworth, 0: 1.00 nates who own and control thes M. N. Mustricu, Wadsworth, 0...1.00!iowns.. In most cases no one dares tol? E. Thomas, Wadsw« --1.00 | oppose these candidates. M. B. Thomas, )...1.00' “Here and there, however, the small Be encelott, W 1.00 business interests or even some rival B Bachvaroff, Wad 1.00'hig business interests choose the D. Bachvaroff, Wac 1.00 | own candidates. This is exactly what| G, Marku, Wadsworth, 0......-.1.00 happened in the city under consider- J. Polici, Wadsworth, O. 1.00 | ation. Here a contest took place be-| T. Singer, Borlston, Q. 1.00 tween the candidates of the K. K. K. D. Mihailoff, Toledo, O.. 1.00 who had the support of the dominat- | i Mustricu, Akron, 0.......0.+-100ling pusiness interests of the city and J. C. Emedy, Lacrosse, 1.00 | the candidates of small business men W. Pinz, Lacrosse, Wi 1.00 who for business considerations have J. Shifton, Lacrosse, Wis 00) shown a more friendly attitude to- Roxbury Lettish Club, Findlen wards labor and civil liberties. The Mass. vette etree {comrades considered that between the M. Mar Galveston, 1 two evils it was best for them to South Slavic Nuc. Milwaukee . |choose the lesser one and cast their J, M. Cummons, Napa, Cal.... support to the elements running VY. M. Johnson, Riverside, Cal . against the Klansmen, Siegel family, Ontario, Cal.. = = H. Chibnik, New York City. S. Levin, St. Louis, Mo. J. Pojar, Bellaire, Ohio rev senret ey ey Vai oe By WILLIAM SCHNEIDERMAY Canada HE American ‘Federation of Labor J. Silve: . has found new friends while hold- M. Mislig, New York City .00 | ing its convention in Los Angeles. We Slovak Work. Soc., Kenosha, W .00 | have heard of strike-breaking exploits in other centers, but as if anxious to M. Howat, Kenosha, Wi: t ‘prove that these reports were not in A. Popkin, Bristol, Pa F, Shamatovich, Bridgeport \the least exaggerated, the “labor J. Ponce, New York City ... \leaders” have out-done their previous P. Podleck, Los Angeles exploits by exposing more than ever before the role they play in hounding Er. Astoria, L. I. i t N. Stoyanoff, Fort Wayne, Ind...2.00 | militants out of the labor movement. J. Blasutch, Kellogg, Iowa. “Red Baiting.” The jroper “anti-red” atmosphere was set with the first statements to the press when the Executive Coun- cil arrived for the convention. Every welcoming speech, from government officials to labor leaders alike, praised Minneapolis.... Minneapolis, Minn. , Brooklyn. Chicago by, Westport, 31, Toledo, . Kolacio, Jonn Ohio. E. Veser, Detroit, Mich. the A. F. of L. as the greatest enemy | C._ Cassell, Kalamazoo, of radicalism. O. Wenubery, Brook Every day, Green arose and de- B, Weisman, Bronx, N. livered his little sermon against the Eva Bingham, Bronx, N. Y Communists; no-matter what the sub-- ject was under discussion. The new: ‘papers joined in the paean of praise for the leaders who were so loyal to ew York Cit Brooklyn,. Esther Ford, N Teresa Marraco Singer, Philadelphia ; z ican ene ¥ “American first,” as Green put it. | C. Gomberg, Chicago Even the-Los Angeles Times, who S. K. Libert, Philadelphia 00 | only last week denounced the high- A. Popkin, Brooklyn, N. Y.. 00 | Wage theory of, the labor movement A. Polkoff Chicago, i 1.00 | 28 “economic absurdity,” applauds! Td: ‘ rang the “courageous” attacks upon the Ida Bernstein, New York Cit: B. Strauss, New York City. S--Reich, Chicago Her L. Harle Angelina Victor, Kincaidi, Ill \left wing. The Evening Express adds | 1.00] to this sentiment that “they (Green r & Co.)*are not such foes of the open- | 200 shop as they would like to make out.” ss = “sy 1.00 Both of the above papers declare that ee ety New York ity | the open-shop “is here to stay.” A Worker, New York City. as i ‘00 Woll and Hynes. H. Renne, Philadelphia Sd ae et 1.00} it was with this background that | F. Zaharko, Hastings on Hudson, 2.00| Matthew Woll and Frank Morrison, Tom Ray & Alex Fountain, Mc- appointed as a special committee of Donald, Pa. the Executive Council, reported that I. LeBosky, Chicago, Ill. . the writer cannot sit as a delegate in A. Martinli, Turtle Creek, Pa, the convention, because he is a Com-| OK BARGAINS AT PECIAL PRICE? On SOVIET RUSSIA Here are four small booklets that give the laws, the care of Labor and a picture of the world’s first workers’ government. Get a set to give to your shop-mates. CONSTITUTION OF SOVIET RUSSIA ($2.00 a hundred) -05 LABOR LAWS , SOCIAL INSURANCE, Ete., IN THE U.S. S. R. MARRIAGE LAWS OF SOVIET RUSSIA RUSSIAN TRADE UNIONS Organized Russian Labor at the time of Revolu- iion and immediately after. 10 All for 25 Cents SEND A DOLLAR FOR 4 SETS! | NOTE: -10 10 Books offered in this column on hand * in Mmited quantitie All orders ah and filled in turn a# received, THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1927 Participate In ry Elections } What was the policy that the com- rades should have followed under the condi First, it was the duty of the comrades to act not as individuals in such an important matter. They should have cortsidered this problem in the nucleus, they should have re- ported *o the district office asking for a policy. Second, the comrades should have raised the question of ‘the labor party, they should have made an effort to form a local labor party or a labor party committee and to nominate candidates on its ticket— only small number of signatures being required to nominate ‘candi- dates. in the primaries. This they failed to do. They should have then appeal to the workers of pointing out that the work have no ticket in the field this ar and calling upon them to build the Work- ers Party, so that in the future tl may be in a position to partic in the elections thru a party of their ons? a issued an that city own, eee As it is, our party members fol- owed at best an opportunist policy, a policy which is in line with the A. of L. policy of “rewarding th nd and punishing the enemy, which we have exposed time and vain as being nothing short of a be- rayal of the worke The republi- ean and the democratic parties are the parties of the coal operators and steel magnates and must be co: jered as a whole as the enemies of the workers. It is not a question of “good or bad” men, it is a question lof the party as such. a cae It is our duty to speed up and deepen the division between the big] and the small business interests, who themselves feel the iron heel of the big corporations, This, however, must be done by building the labor) party based upon organized labor and | getting these small, dissatisfied busi- ness elements to support it and its candidates. THE AMERICAN FEDERATION ( OF STOOL-PIGEONS munist. With the Committee, Frank Morrison's office, F. Hynes of the “Red Squad,” Chief of the Police Intelligence Department, who was responsible for the Sacco- Vanzetti raids and arrests. On the desk of Frank Morrison, were docu- ments which the police had seized , during those raids and had evidently turned over to the A. F. of L. During} the convention, this individual was in constant conversation with Secretary Buzzel of the Central Labor Council. The police department knew in ad- {vance that the writer would be un- seated, as they were no doubt kept informed by Messrs. Woll and Morri- son, Threaten Communi: The arrest of Sidney Bush on the following: day was undoubtedly with the knowledge of the A. of L. convention. Every known Communist who came near the convention hall was threat- +ened, and one of the préminent labor officials was seen pointing out Com- munists in the hall to the red squad, who thereafter kept them under close watch. i The newspaper reports stated can- | didly that “This notorious red was} arrested because it was believed he! had anti- imperialist resolutions in his | possession.” : | Just “Forget” China. Coincidently with this | following morning Pri Green }made a violently anti-Communist speech to the convention, in his reply: ;to the report of the British delega- |tion, Pugh, Sherwood, and Coppock | A rumor has been spread in the press |row that the Executive Council would }etart expulsion proceedings against “red” delegates if any showed them- jselves on the floor. A resolution on |“Hands Off China,” introduced by the jinstructions of the Hotel and Res- taurant Employees’ convention, was “accidentally” left ovt of the prot ceedings. As if to affirm the united front be- {tween the police department and the A. F. of L., Green and his associates went on a_ sightseeing trip thru Southern California in police cars, driven by uniformed officers. Green, } Woll, and Morrison should take one jof those numerous gold badges being jhanded out freely to fraternal dele- | gates, and decorate the breast of the | distinguished head of the police in- | telligence department of Los Angeles, st, the jas an honored visitor and guest of [the convention. Green, Woll and |Morrison have proven themselves {worthy allies of stool- pigeons. Phone ‘Company Advertises Welfare Work. (Federated Press) | Welfare work for its hello girls [js advertised to phone users by thé |New York Telephone Co. Leaflet No. \3, picturing the non-union phone com: | pany’s camp and the city kitchen—one of those preparing a total of 33,000 meals a day for operators, is en= closed with the latest bad news—the month’s bill. “Storing up summer smiles. for winter voices” is the blah the company gets off about the girls’ camp scene, But the phone company fights every effort of its girls to organize # union, a id- |e m was William)” A Wall Street Labor Leader at Geneva HE “labor delegate” appointed by the Coolidge administration “to represent the American workers at ;the Geneva Economic Conference of the League of Nations was John P. Frey, editor of the Molders Journal and now the secretary of the Metal Trades Department. The American Federation of Labor thus took part in this conference as a government agence The report of Frey is included in the report of the executive council to the Los Angeles convention without comment or rec- ommendation. : REY’S report is an exposition of the mind of official American la- bor and shows the invaluable service labor officialdom is rendering Amer- can finance capital in aiding it to beat down the living standard of the European m: Frey says approvingly: “The outstanding action of the sec- tion on industry WAS ITS AP- PROVAL OF ‘RATIONALIZA- TION,’ the European term for what yas cence known in this country as cientific management.” The representative of the American Federation of Labor dismisses here in one sentence the life and death strug-} gle which the European worke been waging since the armistice to prevent the whole burden of the war being placed on their shoulders. TVERY- country outside of the Soviet! Union has witnessed and is still} | witnessing these tremendous battles. | The workers and peasants of the} Soviet Union solved their problem by taking over government and industry | in 1917 and putting the cost of the! war on the former ruling class. But in England, France, Italy, Ger-! }many and the other smaller countries{ the workers have suffered reductions | in wages, increases in hours and a generally lowered standard of living. | This is what is meant by “rationali-! |zation”—forcing down the economic, |social and political ievel of the work- je that the damages of the im. alist w: of the this, the representative of the! American Federation of Labor ap-} proved, Frey, officially credentialed | by Wall Street government and the| A. F. of L. executive council, lined up | with” the exploiters of the European) | workers and against the European masses’ as he admits in his report. More than this, Frey Broves that | the conference itself was a “rationali- | zation” conference and that the two | principal speeches for this program | were delivered by Hunt, an American capitalist class. phe efficiency expert. By ROY C. MAHONEY. “Negro has chance to show what is in him,” says H. L. Mencken in a re- |The above quotation was written in |bold headlines ‘across one of the pages |of the Pittsburgh Courier, one of the biggest Negro papers in the country.| , Mr. Mencken goes on to say, “Most lof the educated Negroes of my ac-; quaintance seem to be convinced thet the social attentions now being lav- ished upon their race in New York represents only a transient fad, and that in a short time the colored lion will be out in the cold again. I doubt it. The plain fact is that New York, or, at all events Manhattan, has got to be so cosmopolitan a town that its old social distinctions and™prejudices are in decay and can never be revived. Anyone who is presentable may go anywhere. Some of the current Aframerican pets are highly pre- sentable; others are surely not. The latter will return to Harlem whence they came.” | There is no doubt but what the highly conventional “pets” will re- main, just as the pets—canine, feline ‘or human—always responding to \given customs and certain planned lines of behavior are always allowed to remain. But I fear if the pet showed too great an individual ini- tiative, or transgressed certain well planned American customs, or criti- 1 some existing social institutions, or too strongly recommended the rev- olutionizing of the position of the Ne- groin general, he would cease to be the social lion of the new Manhattan) and would return to his noisy Har- lem with the other less presentable ones. | Mr, Mencken states “True enough, those admitted constitute only a small jminority of the race. It will be time! enough ‘to. invite Pullman _ porters, colored preachers and witch doctors when white Turkish bath rubbers, ovthodox rabbis and chiropractors are invited.- The acceptance of the edu- cated Negro socially removes his last ground for complaint against his fate in the republic.” Therefore Mr. Mencken voices. the fact that only a certain well trained and conventional group are acceptable. The Negro as a whole desiring to show. the world what is in him, had have | ll rot come out of the! engineer and Mauro, an Italian fas-| NEGRO MUST LEARN TO FEEL CLASS-CONSCIOUSLY, NO [RACE-CONSCIOUSLY, IN ORDER TO DEFEAT OPPRESSORS | idge—Executive Council Reports | tical officer of the Baths in Henrik |Ibsen’s masterpiece, “An Enemy of the People” was a naive lover of hu- |manity who expected the inhabitants of a smug Norwegian town to hail him as a_ savior when he discover- hero of the conference, according to} Frey. Sir Arthur was against com-} pany unionism, says this keen observ- ,er. He assures all and sundry that Sir Arthur’s statement, “which was| accepted without protest by the con- | ference,” on the question of manage ment—labor cooperation means ‘“co-| ed that the baths operation between management and of which the cit- the official representatives of the| MEGHGL Wie Tr @i 78:0. jtrade union movement.” This, s: proad and fom Frey, means “that true cooperation which some of can be established.” | them drew profit were a source of danger to the pub- lic health. Indeed this good man did not expect those E find then that the American Federation of Labor thru its of- ficial representative is aiding the re- formist labor leaders of the Interna- tional Federation of Trade Unions} who profited from and the various governments to put | Sei we! the baths to inter- over the same efficiency unionism! W. Hampden pose the slightest schemes which the A. F. of opposition to rem- | L. lead-| ership foists on the American work-| ing class. The loans made before and after| pig fs i lis brother the establishment of the Dawes plan} z |conservative burgomaster, chief of must be paid to the House of Morgan. police and chairman of the Baths The interest and principal is sweat- & |Committee looked on his brother as a ed from the European working class | vol}-intentioned but impractical and pastels labor Jleade np ce do-| dreamer who was always making ing its bit to BS A Possimc. —___| trouble for others as well as for him- - This is the significance of the re-| elf The doctor, in haste to acquaint port of Frey as Wall Street govern-|the public with the result of his in- | ment’s labor delegate to the Geneva | vo gation gave the information to Economie Conference. : Hovstad, editor of the “People’s Mes- B JT Frey is not satisfied with mere-|senger” who promised to rouse the ly carrying out instructions, He! people to action with the revelations. |feels it necessary to prove that to| But no sooner had Peter the burgo- edy the situation cost. at no matter what Peter, the stout and aid in the oppre sion of the Euro-|master, ete., heard the news than pean masses is for him a labor of|things began to happen entirely con- jlove. What better way to do this | trary to the genial doctor’s expecta- tions. Indeed the. scene of the play could have been laid in anyone of thousands of American cities where a word from the industrial boss is usually sufficient to make priest and lthan to insult the representatives of | the only labor movement in the world j which is steadily raising the stand- ard of living of its members and the \saole working class in its country— the Soviet Union? parson, editor and. publisher do his /THE delegation from the Soviet| bidding. Union to the Geneva conference! When the burgomaster frowned on lfought against “vationalization.” | his. brother’s plan to make the baths ‘hey fought so ably that they forced | Safe for the inhabitants at the cost of the respect of their bitterest Euro-| much money the doctor’s supporters But for Frey the| quit him cold, nay, turned against him rule of the working class over one-|With angry words. The editor re- xth of the earth’s surface means | fused to publish his revelations and nothing. He lists by name the petty. the little shrimp representing the ‘reformist leaders of every two-by-| “Compact majority” branded him an four country in Europe but the repre- SAE thes people nate a lone {sentatives.of the Soviet Union he in- captain 10 not believe in |cludes with those of fascist Italy emi governments of any kind and his wife describes them as “the Russian dele-|and children stood by him until the ‘gation who, tho apparently all intel-|end, Tbsen’s anarchist tendencies lectuals, professed to represent noth- ‘permeate the play but if he had in- ling but labor.” | tended to expose the futility of an- 4 hism he could not have done it | The abysmal depth of ignorance |"! Pr pre Hl en by % F. of] better. Thomas Stockmann was play- |ing a lone hand. He would appeal to Es leadership perhaps is better alte people,’ He did and they hurled py this last sentence than by its open re a oH Sa Rane gs curses and stones at him. After all, espousal of the “Americanization' of | the gat Huxgomnster hed an oresnt |the European eyorkine wes and): ation and he talked bread and but- European industry under the ANSBICES | ter, The doctor talked eloquently Jot sue SBS s oi Se | about ideals. The people would prob- |ably have no objection to killing the ‘germs that infested the baths if they ' eoul (ene the slaughter was taking place.! they presented their would-be | pean class enemi |savior with a fine collection of rocks, | jbetter learn that he is a worker be-|which they hurled thru his window. | longing to the working class. He! Dr, Stockmann did not like parties | class and view the future from that! that grind all the brains of its mem- position. He must conceive of the! ‘necessity of uniting with all labor, |black, white, yellow and all types. He must learn the value of organizati | industrially, politically and si see their way clear to eating | Starring Walter WILLEM MENGELBERG _ | John P. Frey Appointed by Cool \ | His Trip—A. F. of L. Representative Helps to Force “Ra- | tionalization’’ on European Workers—His Hero Was | aati arid Clever | Sir Arthur Balfour—The Insult to the Soviet | Union Delegation—The Official Labor | “An Enemy of the People,” Viewpoint. Hampden, Pleases Its Patrons By- WILLIAM F, DUNNE. ®CIR ARTHUR BALFOUR, leading ee : British imperialist, was the att Leet Thomas Stockman, med Conductor of the Philharmonic Or- chestra, who will direct the opening concert of the season at Carnegie Hall this evening. ntaehine and the play ends on the heroic note that “the strongest man in the world is he who stands most alone.” This is a hallowed phrase but the essence of bunk. If Dr, Stock- mann had organized the masses against the corrupted owners of the Baths instead of waging war a la Don Quixote on the germs he would have accomplished something for the people. His grand gesture was a pro- test of the individualistic petty bour- geoisie against the machine era. And ironieally enough it always happens that those apostles of untrammeled democracy are themselves the perfect autocrats who refused to submerge their own personalities in the common social stream to the degree that is compatible with the social good. Ib- sen’s play is a splendid portrait of the corruption that is inevitable in a society that suckles on the capitalist system, but his solution—a voice ery- ing out the truth in the wilderness— belongs in he political mausoleum. Walter Hampden as Dr. Stockmann, gave a masterful performance and C. Norman Hammond as the burgomas- ter did justice to his role. Cecil Yapp, as the representative of the “compact majority” comported himself to the satisfaction and temporary detestation of the audience and Marie Adels as the doctor’s .daughter contributed beauty and spirit to the performance. The rest of the cast did their bit as expected of them. Dramatic critics are agreed that this is the most ade- quate presentation of “An Enemy of the People” yet seen in the United States. —T. J. O'F. Machado Man Loses Loot. TORONTO, Oct. 12.—The loss of several thousand dollars worth of | jewels from the apartment of Senor land Senora Don Cesare Barranco, | Cuban consul here, was reported to | the police today. lcent article in the New York World.;must learn to think as one of thatjbers into one mass like a sausage Pess the Paper to a Fellow Worker! !When these fundamental processes human endeavor have been accom- *. AMBASSADOR By |plished, not only the Negro, but all) Mats. Wed. & Sat workers, will be in a position where| eo « MATRIMONIAL BED” they can show the world what is in} or John 'T. Murra Thea. | them. Then after the simple require-| ments of life have heen satisfied, we! ean have a world resounding with (it! desired) jazz, spirituals, rhapsodies | and blues; books filled with litera-| ture—poetry and prose—arts, science and All fields of learning fully cov-| ered—but no Manhattan Pets, | Battle Over Remus Cash. - H AM M 'P7 PD E EN LANSING, Mich. Oct. 12.—This | |state will, not permit George Remus ) ne Then At Gomtady, or anyone representing him to re- | hil RTS The ese oo , move the contents of any safety de- Hampden’s Boe RM Gare eat posit box that may have been rented jaauaeeey Wednesda nd aturda, by Imogene Remus, the wife he} killed, Ralph Hughes, chief emis: Desert Song administrator, declared today | with Robt. ; Hanlday « aie Brezen | Hughes said that if Mrs. Remus Ne . left #1,000,000 in a safety deposit Hi box within the state, there is an in- heritance tax amounting to approxi-! matcly $100,000 standing a first | ° , lien on it, also the money might be vian Oakland . 8:20 ew Play FREDERIC © FAN With a Stellar Cast 1 HATTON MORE READERS! GEE TING THEM? € “The ‘Theatre Guild Presents _ PORGY | TITTLE | HELEN MacKELLAR |W. 448 | & RALPH MORGAN atte lin ‘Romancing ’Round’ oe LADDER V Prencith the Motion Pictyre SUNRISE, Uree. MANN SUDERMANN = | | | sraupnent Symphonic Movietone Accompaniment ov ay 42d St, W. of B'w. | Times Sq. pwitr paity, 2:3b-s:30. Jutional Theatre; St. W. of B [National ySa\iul arts We, aguesd The Trial. of Mary Dugan” Sayard Veiller, with > ‘ REX CHERRY AN used for defense or to finance ex-| posures by the defense. | EVA LE GALLIENNFE ANNOUNCES | OPENING PLAYS FOR | NEXT | W VEEK, THE ONLY HOME FOR The Civie Repertory Theatre, un-| der the direction of Eva Le Gallienne, | will open their season, Tuesday night, October 18 at the Fourteenth Street Theatre, with the production of “The Good Hope,” a play translated from | the Dutch of German Heijermans, by | Lillian Saunders and Carolina Heijer- mans-Honwink. The play will be repeated on Wednesday matinee, and on Thursday and Saturday evenings, “The Cradle Song,” which proved so successful last season, will be re- vived on Wednesday evening, and re- peated on Saturday afternoon. “La THE Other plays to SINGING JAILBIRDS, b. THE CENTURIE by IC, by * AIRWAYS, INC,, and a play by John Howard Lawson. “The Newb Plepiariehi Theatre “The Theatre Insurgent” LABOR . PLAYS Announces a season of prodyctions dramatizing the class war! OPENING OCTOBER 19 with IN AMERICA BELT An industrial play with an acetylene flame by PAUL SIFTON. rans be selected from Uptom Sinclair Em HOBOKEN BLUES, By Michael Gold PICN Jo Basshe ‘Francis Edwards Faragoh by John Bos Passos Locandiera” (“The Mistress of the Inn”) will be revived on Friday night, The DAILY WORKER has purchased a special block of tickets.