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SG Satins ( Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 7 Tammany and Non-Partisan THE LIFE OF TIM HEALY, ‘by Liam O'Flaherty. Harcourt, Brace and het {mediator in the state department of, the person of Jim Holls Th Tam-| Sign of the Times ! Company. $3.75. The need for a Labor Party tojlabor; Tom Fitzgerald, deputy com-'many Tiger had on!y to swish its tail . 7 righ ugeveae rela merous short/|unite the workers must be apparent/pensation law commissioner in the|and these gentlemen walked away | PRESUMABI Y Sit Lia Flaherty, the author of several novels and numerous short) unite t : _ lay , n laa _ Sentle € 3 XESUMABLY the modern play} Ree hathere aroused considerable indignation in the manly and womanly | to anyone who has observed the work- Albany district; Jim Bogart, license | from their | LaFollette pledges and |P represents the ideals and ne breasts of Irish patriots has made his first venture in the biographical field ings ot the Tammany machine in| commissioner of Greater New York; “delivered” in a body to the T: |tions of those who see >it. If so vd probably his last, with this book which is a story of one of the stormy New York City and its relation to the/and Herman Robinson, also a license! candidate. 7 and E s las this be 3 jmodern middle class society is t- t ee Ry eet rer abor unions. T 0 issioner wi 1 3 er al a are i ieatsaho; erage petrels of Irish polities, one who began political life as a raw, uncouth rustie leaders s certain a unions. The commissioner following Bogart. One must remember also that the! ting quite cynical about the regular bject 0 cle 5 f i D s erely to} The above list is only a hint of the “Al Smith Socialists” in the needle] ,.:3 i itter enemy of sh rule in Ireland, but now in. his old age |‘ ee pe 18, MORLEY. % iddle class morality. To su and @ bitter enemy of British rule x ketch some of the incidents in this eceed : = Se eRe ia ae of graduations which have taken place trades deserted their candidate, Nor- | occupies the respectable and remunerative office of Governor General of relationship. . The reader’ can judga {of labor Votticials efeppinglout fiito| man ‘Thomas, end lined up with’ Al. Dial you the Irish Free State. : - t thine to the life of Tim/for himself what the effects of substantial state and city offices.~ As' Just what the considerations were is Bs ae Lier eal Tho the author, in a preface which adds nothing to the life o able|must be upon the trade union leaders|John O'Hanlon, the president secre-|not known to this writer. Whatever |¢ pcodh wate ae Healy, declares that he is not interested in politics, the Book i a valli” /and upon the general problem of|tary of the State Federation of La-|they may have been, one cannot over- SL es contribution to the history of the stirring days when the Irish Home Rulers a inion political unity. | bor, says: “The long list of vice-presi-|look the close political relations of bad chevl : | under the leadership of the great Charles Stewart Parnell made life m To barter the “labor vote” for polit-|dents and associate officers, accum-/the needle trades leaders and certain | audi . qanite pe ble for the British ruling classes, and particularly for that arch-hypocrite/;.21 pveference has been one of the|ulated during the past sixty years,|democratic politicians who had per-| eae teeta and libertine Gladstone, the “Grand Old Man” of British Ee cena favorite parlor tricks of the trade contain many of the most notable|formed substantial favors for the of youE sineuieses stalks like a ghoul thru this period and whose machinations again: union leadership almost since the!names in trade union annals and of|trade union bureaucrats in their their pretensions, | but you must also | BERT W. DUN \‘Synthetic Sin” as a® finally brought that battler to bay, hunted by the catholic hierarchy and) 4 when unions were fi organ-|many now occupying prominent struggles against the left wing and/ the protestant non-conformists, ed in this state. The labor leaders|places in business, professional and|the Communists. | argue for the good| * * * : have alway ken part in polities of | governmen cireles.” The above are | Support Smith’s Game. | ein the same at | The author is a confirmed Parnellite and indeed the book devotestine most partisan character, tho, of! but a few examples out of the his-| Of course the labor leaders have| S@@ee-h24 of volta th al almos h time to Parnell as it does to Healy and rightly so. After! course, professing publicly that they | torical records of this state. been systematically “sold” to Smith thy B subwa habit 4 all, this Healy never contributed much that was constructive to the) were interested in the game only To cc down to more recent days, | fo» a good many terms. Al's plat- | Hava wares says eta ene | tional freedom. He was an adder in the path and @ “non-partisans.” And the labor lead-|a look at the current shakings of the! forms ‘have reeked with civie right-| When he straight-arms a man away | 1 and moral superiors. He played a lonejers have for decades been more or plum tree will convince ‘the most/ eousness and social reform. On the| from the desired seat. The ude Has an important part in the new yed the backing and confidence of the Jess strenuously opposed by the so- | skeptical that the labor officials have/ vital issues, however, and in the|must be there or the victim feels in-|¢omedy, “Romancing ’Round,” at the invective and specialists in the language | cia and socialist-laborites not been slighted in return for their | critical moments, he has not de-| sulted, but if the words mean any-| Little Theatre. ; ated him. His American counterpart would be Sen-jhave claimed that the trading of |services im the'ficld of “non-partisan||livered, Take, for example, two oftthing, all concerned feel foci 4 Missouri and their roles in polities have been some-| votes for personal jobs was not. the Take first the state de-|the hardy perennials SNE Te reso-| “Synthetie Sin,” by Frederic and : ‘ to get labor ahead in the polit- | partment of labor, where labor MeN lutions passed cae ah the New|Fannie Hatton, at the Forty-ninth == Screen Note=== Parnell, on the other hand, was one of the greatest revolutio ates i al field. In the national, state and | would most naturally be found. Some} york state Federation of Labor—|Street Theatre, is in the prevailing | nd produced at any period in her history. In his day, the /local councils of labor the socialists|28 ave now on-the roll and six of | child labor and the injunction, Al|mode. It is the familiar story of zs ee ide.” ji ms was a forensic battlefield and the British Communist | ca a constant attack upon these belong to the class exempt from| was, of course, pledged to smite them|a moral person seeking, for some|y, ~28t Side, West Bley acne OF well to study the tacties employed by the Parnellites| the ” were feathering the civil service examinations. These | noth, But the first he evaded when | reason, (in this case to become a bet.| NeW, York based on Felix Riesen- n the respectable members of the British Labor Party. their ne ing the labor vote | Six are Mr. Curran, referred to above;|he saw that the Catholic Church was| ter actress) experience with sin. [Herers: movelich pie same, names Wil politic S en, what similar. gists that Ir House of Cc movement would do and urge : : 7 . : et to than'| for. bt iT oaslition) i ern } Some leo % : f Ww. Indeed, Thomas Jackson of the British Communist Party, he ou mig than oe political jobs. eh = ea se anti-labor. So he forgot his pledge, | The Hatton family send their Bathe eee eo eee Vena Wall ate Mocsacasion re ec » Labor Party r bers that Parne ved more) Why se the Lab Party.,.| 2 Mr. bKSON.} vi . 2 vould | Fairfs ; SE Ss eas ; 2 @ne occasion reminded the Labor Party members. tha’ ell g: no ppose the Labor Party Hi Ate at eh ahaeoeevho’ ines dineckan ot knowing that labor, as usual, would] Fairfax (part taken by Dorothy Bur-| the featured players. Run down the lis cers of the New Yor! the Dureau of workmen’s compensa- | tion, probably achieved office because as an official of the Brotherhood of nd their way into happy political |}ocomotive Enginecrs, he had organ- ons by lightning “strikes” in Pa z2ment than by brilliant spee: nell looked on both liberal and tory parties as the tools of British of sm and used his “balance of power” against them both. He did ration of Labor, for example and you not confine his act ; ie , ee a agai he landlords and made alliance with the underground Irish R dq ete : ce! Bi lecoairotharhoed, which organization together with James Connolly’s| positions thru these methods. jezea and acted a chelimen sete Citizen Army struch blow in Easter Week, 1916, that eventually for Even before the days of the State} Non- s gu tailroadmen’ later . | 1. later a labor-supported Justice rse Betty is still irgin.” y » Nag: s x ‘of Greater York, s 8 scans 1 Re, 3 ; course Betty is still a virgin. the British government to sign the treaty of 1921, recognizing the Irish Federation, when the state body was|2. or@# thor the ang | Churchill was handing outinjunetions|' Dorothy Burgess and Louis D'Ar-| “Hula” starring Clara Bow will be Free State. And it is one of history’s many ironies that Timothy Healy,;| known as the Workingmen’s A : ;Governor Smith, iv - i : Pig bol Aa ea eae eee ne de_| 222inst labor on behalf of the Inter-|clay (who acts a dope peddler) bur-|gooy un the amin of Meee’ Broad, the parliamentarian, constitutionalist and foe of the rebels of Haster Week sembly, we find the first president,|Povice queceure “7 {national Tailoring Company. The lesque their parts a little, The en-|way the week of October 17th, Clive should be the first Governor General of the Irish Free State at a salary ai oes & ae —— Paints | THER Ea ete neec ciermee aaa Ee eae perme ore Se ree the tea peeesion Of Brooks Arlette Marchal and Arnold 000 a year. . eae a he ree jthe present day luminaries in. the|strikes of 1926. Laboe supporesdiaey eats ae te Spetane He os | Kent are in the supporting cast. best in portraying the role played bythe catholic} W. N. Thayer of the Tepouptabieal (ee cage aa Toe | Laas judges did their duty for] ail poisoned by the general air of| e are Mae ace cogranee of ihe Life of im Healy, tho|eommon "counell of "Troy “nna” | former offital of the photo engravers| amples of “labore woamee’ once may | eee ceebnistication which the a |turization of Ben’ Hecht’s erime story State or republican, so far took cognizance e i v5 thd | Comman council and the |, ane Aeeeraes sie By Oo ween aewe n vay | ill ches Seen Cal ithe: Cates ‘ the republicans could well profit by giving it a wide circulation, The fact Monae ena ie pri a : The au beeen peel me a A tla ap ort iee rn _The audience was most apprecia-| beginning tomorrow. Evelyn Brent, is that the catholic church has both political parties in its grip and that baekainth aes : Dow ing, || sup isor of the City Record, the|sters. But the labor leaders should poe) of the single bit of realism in! Olive Brook, George Bancroft, Larry the leaders of both organizations would see Ireland shackled to the British) ) M0 °° position at hate as rewarded | daily official publication of the City|worry. They get something more| 2° thing; the climax where a play-|Semon and Fred Kohler are in the imperialist chariot for centuries rather than see the people emancipated | (> aes eae eee omer! of New York. The modest salary ae Manin ee BAB at cede Me tga wright, an apartment house owner,| supporting cast. from the intellectual fetters of Rome. Liam. O'Flaherty was trained for) >. O'Brien of ‘the “granite cutters {companying this office is $6,500. Mr.|tion. So they go on ehdbeine Gch and a jockey battle the dope peddler| 3 ae 5 . | the priesthood but discarded the dope needle of religion and undertook to| 15 was Tatas Ghe cae me oe &FS,! Brady within the last year turned|talist party candidates year after and kill him with his own gun, then) “Spring Fever” with William do one man’s part in delousing the minds of the Irish people of the super- yon VOonty. Then With the formes {over this office to a friend and now] year. ; eae conspire with one of New York’s| Haines will open at the Capitol this stition that has been serviceable to the British in keeping them enslaved. Hen eae Beaks i se e forma | devotes his time to banking, being Wises Lane eas | “Finest” to make a case of suicide of | Saturday. The stage features are The suthor due credit to the Irish socialist and labor movement’)... we find Jim Lavery, a typo. | thé President of the Federation Bank| In 1995, with both a’ Workers’| it, -Atte! they have properly ar-|headed by Nora Bayes, Ben Bernie in the part it played in the national struggle, but he has a tendency to/ .).5nieal man, the first wee de ees at New York. "Davey andeasa epee ieee a ranged the corpse they gather to ad-|/who will wield the baton over his magnify the importance of individuals rather than the mass movements that |. later appointed to he veae civil | Mr. Stephen Kelley, former presi- | Y ocialist candidate on the/| mire it, the concensus of opinion be- | band, “The Capitolians,” Lester Al- ee b Ae ¢ sous i t . ies | ballot, the non-partisan political com-|j “ 4 c n, Nelli rT I ~ push them forward. Taking Liam O’Flaherty’s word for it that he is an} convicg commission. Martin Murphy | dent of the Allied Printing Trades) mittes of the Central Trades and La- gate oles ate ae) ees neva Nea ee newite ad Hie Chena a See a ee en thee act deel at Meme, he thie retains [of the moldets followed Lavery, He, | Council, was very glad to pick up Mr.|bor Council, annex of Tammaiy. Hall,|''r way b id that the eto 16 the | Girls should avoid a field in which they do not feel at home. Tho this reviewer in turn, became a civil service com.| CT#4y’s job with the City Record. It] endorsed demodtaties candidates’ #6c| ats. ah oe a ‘i ie Bere te the | Girls. does not seek to minimise the influence exerted by powerful personalities | missioner in Buffalo and then went |i8, Understood that in addition to the] mayer, president of the Borough of abies + pretty well done by Alan on the course of history it is nevertheless true that certain objective con-| into business. The | $6,500, the job carries with it a small Manhattan, judges, aldermen Aas a SGD es forget his forgetting when it came gess) to sublet a shop lifter’s room time ‘for another election! Then the|while she does her stretch, and sur-| The 55th Street Cinema, ‘will offer injunction evil. Labor had always| round her with such -an atmosphere | two tear beginning - Saturday, come out strongly against it. But) of crime that it is occasionally neces-|/when it wail present a revival of | the state democratic platform in 1924 sary for a subordinate character to|“galome” with Nazimova and a com- |slid over the issue and a few months | d in some remark like this: Ona starring Liénel: Barrymore. conce ities to the house of commons but rallied the peasantry |find a goodly number of them who of $ * * * to “Underworld” | Paramount’s _ pic- The author is at hi church in Ireland, It is ; theles next executive ditions must prevail otherwise those individuals would be merely one among) was John Pallas: of the pattern | #mount of patronage. jon down the line. Of course, in the! the billions. The Russian revolution did not collapse after Lenin died makers, who became park commis- | Double Salaries. |primaries the labor leaders some- , i and it is not likely that the death of Mussolini tomorrow would mean the} sioner of Greater New York, while} Then we have Mr. John Sullivan,|times make mistakes, Witness Tks se of the fascist dictatorship in Italy. Indeed if such were a proba-| the | | next in line, W. O. Jones, gradua-| president of the New York Trades|Holiand, who came out for Hylan.) bility, if the fas than on the big industrialists and financiers supported by international tor at Utica, Finally we come to Jim{of the Brewéry Workers’ Union.,made him write a letter repudiating | AMBASSADOR {)° W.o TEAC. @RaRTRS CAA icant write words around him rather than get to the bottom of things and explain /and Appeals at a salary of $7,500, | dustrial aid bureau of the city, Mr.|™any’s choice. Witness also Hylan Ug aera SE ad ‘ toe Fig cpa eel . |& RALPH MORGAN amuses himself by writing sweet little bits of nonsense until he recuperates| Presidents in New York State have | annum in addition to his income from}47d Jimmie Walker putting it right | st movement was based on Mussolini’s personality rather|ted into the job of building inspec-|and Labor Council, a former official|But the Building Trades Council| = ees LEE capitalism, Mussolini’s personality would be speedily obliterated. y | Holland, who was appointed a “lay | Since 1921 Mr. Sullivan has held a/his action and telling Tammany his Mats. Wed. a) But it serves an artist’s purpose better to pick on an individual and/member” of the Board of Standards $5,000 position as director of the in-| followers would back Walker, Tam- ee A 1 es ; 2 4 asics x 5 é EB M TRIMONIAL BED Guild 2. W. 52d. Evs. 8:30 the social forces that produce him. Not that Liam O'Flaherty is blind to| Mayor vane having made this ap-|James F. Costello of the Executive | ng to discipline his former labor Vivi M those social forces. Here and there thru the book he exhibits a keen in-|pointment, Mr, Holland resigned from | council of the Central Trades and La-|{ftiends by taking a quarter of. a oni eae cae —____——. sight into the economic factors that make politicians dance like puppets on/| his § 00 job as head of the State’ bor Council, is assistant director of| Million dollars of the city’s money | s:so| LITTLE | HELEN MacKELLAR a stage, but he soon tires of pursuing the slippery facts to their lairs and| Federation of Labor. Federation | the same bureau, receiving $3,000 per|ftom deposit at the Federation Bank. 3 ag: | SYNTHETIC SIN in ‘Romancing "Round ne Sufficiently to do another piece of hard work. jalmost invariably accepted these |the Metal Polishers’ and Buffers’|back in again the minute he becomes A New Play by | Re ORY alg |"Promotions” to the service of the |Union. mayor thru the support of the labor| FREDERIC & FANNIN HATTON |7 ae If this brief review ever meets the eyes of the author of ‘The Life of |“*¢ ae es | Other labor officials who now hold | bankers. es = ‘The & ADD Es Tee's Tim Healy, I hope he will consider the suggestion that he devote a few ay, poss ot Honest Toil. RODEN 20% $10-a-seasion: positions) The workers payer Ole anould + i> | POPULAR PRICES. Best seats years of his life to a history of thas catholic church in Ireland and the! 0 S476 yolution of labor lead. |in.the city or state government are/also take note of the mutual compli. H we M Pp D E N $ CORT THEATRE, 48th st. | famifications of the connection between the protestant government of} -4) followed thru all the/such well-known figures as Hugh|ments and back slaps exchanged be- | ; ‘ ot ed Tag hae: 50, rai | comedy | 3 x S : : ; .°" other offices of the state federati ray : 8. Keati y “big” in Tbse: ‘and ‘the “watie: i relati ; 'g 8 eration, Frayne, Jerome B. Keating, John|tween the “big” labor boys 2 in bse ais: toa ee seca: dee eke a Sous poke foetiee | Among the secretaries and t Munholland, John K. Hallett aa sev-| politicians around Aauecoe Ta “AN ENEMY OF THE ProPLE” Shinion . epad deal of this kind Gi ipadabetve snusy ae Rone i Ireland | ren’, Mies a a legislat: ré | eral others. Alderman Kenneally, pal| spectacle is interesting and inform- Hampden’s GR Sg at bad st: % a eae i ¢ vho later he i e vii A . lie ae tae Matineen Wadvesdas ann eek before the soil is properly prepared for the building of a revolutionary or-|were Alexander Troan nue Soe os precy ace saaNGiae eae ee. Ai eee ex~ | Mesihers Dy eanerdsy and saturds) E 3 s a s a Li : vy au- W. Fox presents the Motion Picture SUNRISE ». W'Nthwiw By HERMANN SUDERMANN ganization whose leadership will not have to boast of its loyalty to the | lector of federal cust re - A “Sith im Be | i at ge eae |Symphonic Movietone Accompaniment Miticitc church and ie devoGon to'the holy Gren petides in: Rowte® | aria er! ean pou Presi=| grafter, _and a power in. Tammany dience on Governors Island, 1925: ‘The Desert Song 7; Sq. 22 2d St., W. of Bway “LEONARD FARLEY. Sapte ; ard Curran, now jcircles, is still an official of the : . my congratulations to you (hel with sopt. #1. . i Times Sq. ywit DAILY, 2:30-8:30 \ Seana redweat Bat ee sna Cite Union. was talking to the masses), for the|™ oa qin Mosth oe i a A ie Mate ‘ates, later deputy|\ After considering this list one can-| great leaders you have picked 62nd St. and Central Park | Nati Theatre, 41 St. W. of B’wa | deputy i 3 ed out 2 t, and Central Park |National Theatr ay BRIEF REVIEWS. |secretary of state; John Williams; | not but be astonished at the eleventh| Who come into official bodies with Century West. Evenings at 8:80.| SA oe gapehorece a am ._,. [later a state labor ji In THE GENTLEMAN FROM THE 22ND (Boni & Liveright), Benjamin | Patrick Dose, ae es sioner; | hour developments in the presidential |Sober mind and strong hearts, with ae pee te “The Trial of Mary Y the state| campaign of 1924 when the executive|Sreat intelligence and with a mani-| WANTED — MORE READERS! | Antin, a state senator from the Bronx, tells the simple story of his meteoric | railroad commission: Jim 1 es : Y t peu oer résiiver » : ag cree ppl ssion; Jim Ly ‘ors | 0 i rs ae ARE } THEM? | aw 3y ldayard Veiller, with rise to power and influence in his district. In passages full of gushing,|merly head of se pied areBSE | eon Gah eel oe ce ia ie ad ae bas co ee ee Ein HARDING REX Srbachic tan cohol purple writing the once obscure lawyer raised to eminence by the editorial | Typographical Union and 1 e i, efforts of the Bronx Home News, tells how he was born in a little town|head of the state indaetieal cht the swung from LaFollette to Davis, ac-|¢etera, ad nauseum, | ¢ in Russia, came to America with his parents, availed himself of the high/| sion; Jim Hooley, appointed ad state ies ees iis Teeoctl 3 as ais garren pete seater Be The NewPla wi, his Theat { Privileges of the public school system, studied law nights at the not-too-| factory inspector; Jim McManus a city and the state federation itself in| celebration . eth ig rady on the | Ly BY ve exacting New York University. (Classes 8-10 a, m.; 4-6 p.m. $200 a year, net Dai Ah A) a coe ose $9 ‘ation of the second anniversary " payable in advance or in installments and elevator operator demands tuition ecards at the door before admitting the aspiring Justinians to the lecture room.—Note.) | The book is full of ominous asterisks, dots, dashes, and other devices! cy aimed to give it an atmosphere of seething intensity and “artistie flavor.” o | “The Theatre Insurgent” rire wena tod the Federation Bank in 1925: “We are now at the dawn of a new THE ONLY HOME FOR LABOR PLAYS IN AMERICA » of labor, and we firmly believe Announces a season of productions dramatizing the class wart! os a result of our experience and in- fluence, also the dawn of a new era OPEN NG OCTOGBER 19 with hi between the wage earners and their AT PPEC IAL PRICE? employers, between capital and la- T H E B E LT / \ nnn nnn | Strikebreaker Cal's ide: . ;will have been fully reached ‘when by PAUL SIFTON. { ore 00 $ On ussia every labor skate and every worker BiasAvere AG Other plays to be selected from fi THB ad * * * Margaret Sanger’s WHAT EVERY BOY SHOULD KNOW (Brentano) is practically a reprint of a combination of two separate little books gotten out several years ago by this courageous and energetic social pioneer, Certain vital statistics, however, are brot up to date in the present edition, and one or two new chapters have been added. In its present form the book tells in very simple, sincere and under- standing terms the important physiological and biological facts that all yung people should know if they are cager to lead normal, sane, healthy eS. } 3 CENTUR purpose of a Labor Party is to Keep | HOBOKEN BLULS, By Mic ithis dawn from ever breaking. | PICNIC, by Francis | AIRWAYS and a play by John iow |eats out of the bipartisan pot. The Pitta eons Fact, s of present-day Russia and a book of dwards Paragoh | ‘, by John Dos Passos rd Lawson. reminiscences of early revolutionary days a nen on * * * THE HEART OF EMERSON’S JOURNALS, edited by Bliss Perry {Houghton Mifflin Co.), is an intelligent selection from the ten-volume Jour ngls originally published between 1909 and 1914. There is a minimum of | CONS TION OF SOVIET Rigs Transcendental mush in the present collection which at the same time con- Pe ee TION OM SOVIE RUSSIA ; compose this group of book and pamphlets at a special rate. 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Henry Waterson Co. NOTE: Aaiiminee cuuareivaas baste yt Litre The ABC of Prohibition, by Fabian Franklin, Harcourt, Brace & Co. | * and filled in turn as recelved, Patriots Off Their Pedestals, by Paul Wilstach. Bobbs-Merrill Co. | Wallen as ad ea 4 We will pay the postage, re: 6 eee — eR George Satenoy, Argo, Il.