The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 1, 1927, Page 4

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\ Page Four More Contributions to| | CLEVELAND CIty: eens Da aily | WorkersSustining | MANAGER REJECTS --— Tiere PLEA OF HUNERY - A, Allan, Hanna, .100' Unemployed Thousands} ee Galsworthy's Latest HGH BUCKLER A. Allan, Hanna, V. Williams, Hanna, A, Lappala, Ha Episodes Having to Do! With an Escaped | | J. Luoma, F a 8.00 . AKT i 100/ Demand City Work | Convict “in ae oer Bee City ara TH cRE is no better acting on ex- ea : 2 hibition in New York than that to e seen at the Booth theatre where John Galsworthy’s “Escape” is run- | ‘ning. It is the acting, even more than the play, that de-| serves first men-| tion. But the play! is by no means trivial. “Escape” deals with the ex-! | periences of a con- ict, one Capt. Den- ant, who runs away _from the prison "farm under cover of | a Dartmoor fog, 1.00 |™2 1,99 |utive Cc . 1.00 |¢ mpl - 1.00 e 1.00 | * 1.06 Neerle Trade Defense An appeal to all holders of sub-j|¢ scription lists » aid of the Min-/a worse. ented the fol-| e soup kitchens | free food for} the unemployed; | free fuel for employed; no eran of un-| ed from their homes; immed commencement’ of public work: dants to turn in retment of provision for unemploy- ? BP cotectcs sued_yes-| tent compensation by the city coun- Frieda yaonse i Mint ant terday by the Joint Defense ard Re nployment Bureau to Inescourt tne ie Ponte lief Com » Cloakmakers’ Ms k with the une! mploy ment council ti in Hyde pene Tonia . In “The Ladder” which has taken and Fu 41 Union placing of. unemployed in De ENENs 2 up new quarters at the Lyric Theatre. Denant, excellently played by Leslie 4 pate ext saat) Howard, dodges in and out of the play ae a sen Davia\play = now tniits A i ~Y {second year. which contains a prologue and nine} _—— ia A se scenes, é inasmuch as ‘there Ss no sermonizing, The prologue is in Hyde Park|no effort to portray his queer com- where the former captain sits read-| bination of liberalism and fabianism. ing in by a flickering lamp-light.| It is just an amusing play without Comes along a lady of the evening, | pointing a moral. one of the unfortunate dregs who is; During its run the Booth will be happily possessed of a sense of ironic | 2 pleasant place to spend an evening. humor. A short conversation ensues;| Aside from the faultless acting of at a decorous moment the man Leslie Howard, Edgar B.. Kent de- to go. A plainclothes man arrives on| Serves special praise for his ver- the scene, arrests the girl for solicit- | Satility in handling three parts and ing; the man returns and tries to|mdking each of them distinctive. persuade the snooper to mind his own| Frieda Inescourt is excellent in the jobs; private employment~sharks be idden to ply their trade; provision by the city of immediate shelter for the homeless unemployed. The prem- ses to be administered by the un- aployed council See City Counsel. Hopkins evaded every issue raised | on the flimsy excuse that he was without power to act, and passed the buck to the city council. In the opinion of the city manager Tickets For Friday. there is no unemployment worth men- joning in the city today, and very if any, suffering among the few workers who are out of work. | Square. The appeals in the Mineoia cases} are to be heard in the very nesr fu- ture and funds are needed at once, according to the appeal. The defend- ants were convicted of felonious a: sault in the furriers’ strike. Each worker who has collected $5 or more will receive honor roll button, Ludwig Lundy, manager of the committee, said. The tenants of United Workers’ Cooperative Section K, have bought all the Jew Playwrights wens sages ae ee : i affairs, a scuffle ensues and the de-|small part of the lady in the inn, Theatre for aay UNS BRO a a ieeece gremea ty clernee ew S itective falls, striking his head on an|while Allan Trotter makes the land- ceads of ig will go to. thel ov Ge aetually gufferine from: Hine: | : iron post causing a fracture of the |holder about as mean and low as a Joint Defen nmittee, eaeras Plane rete Sea e Drawn by Morris Pass. skull from which he dies. so-called christian can sink—H. M. Labor and fraternal organizations; ‘The committee produced eviction | In ee opinion the best ¢ country y inthe world. The first scene opens in the ptison Ww es are pledging th support to the| notices, notices of the stoppage of lot where the convict escapes, after Joint Defense Committee Bazaar to ¢ d light service in workers’ being warned by a fellow , prisoner | be held < nd Central Palace from} homes in support of their case. The A 1 TO ari nN r ma that he hasn’t a chance in a million. | December 23 to 31. hollow cheeks of several members of Through ithe dense fog “he ‘manages Several branches of the Workmen’s| the committee bore mute witness to to evade:the patrol and the constabul- | js = one - Circle and other organizations have the fact that hundreds of Cleveland ——____—— Be eons dane aS phen | SAN CARLO OPERA AT GALLO pledged more than $6,000 in advance workers are staring actual starvation] «py NATHANIEL BUCHWALD. | In the home of the workers’ family “The interests of the industry de- ae he bed Et a lady Sutah SeaeseHelk THEATRE NEXT MONDAY. See bese st ae ands Wait | (Translated from the Yiddish |which is the strategic part of the mand it,” explains the chief. But who| gids him by furnishing him with her| The San Carlo Opera Company re- ges are urge sands Wait. Bailie ad, ia Bal by SENDER GARLIN.) |play, one sees the human counter- wil! provide food for the workers? | husband’s fishing rod and basket, so| turns to New York for its engage- 7 4 Ae ae isan wvereary Medan x PETERS parts of the standardized cheap and What will become of them and their|he can disguise himself as a fisher- | ment of two weeks beginning next : = aa eee RU ae SEN os NacharielBiehwald, chedvamats aeary be rs grodieed | in the auto ae What matter: . this when | man. FALLING ¢€ AMONG Pay eG IGGE Ge he ceablie Square | ic critic of “The Freiheit,” is con- | {2¢tory-. is worker talks, acts and the interests of the industry are be- Next an old man, ‘an. former bar- -NOBLES. waiting. The crowd unanimously ap.| sidered one of the most brilliant _| thinks like millions of ones thruout ing considered. ter, cynical and cunning befriends | : 31—The former| proved the proposal of the Executive} proletarian writers on the theater. pes jane ot ee ee Tone A tragedy of helplessness, impo-|him. He next encounters a picnic. Kaiser is opposing the marriage of Committee to present the demands| His criticism of “The Belt” is an» i“ weer Wen tence. There is but one emotional re~| party on the high moor; vicious and tickets. Those have not fra to do so as Gallo Theatre. Vyrna Sharlow, ormerly with the Chicago Opera, his sister, the Princess Victoria with some modification to the city| interesting contribution to the un- [in ehele Be. agirrerieA tg cig goer Port igre Regt ie rene = ESE es Rags fs el ai ekea ge Schaumburg pepe ate Con God coun) Mandar eee Bh a ike cota ae of the | a |mechanical standards—a hangover an end to that destroyin isnaten fore them. He steals ‘their Ford car | Other guests en- Koff an obscure Rpssian noblemap,, John, Foley, secretary of the coun-| Tied on in the columns of the Tabor |» nr thelr monotonousy@rinding tasks “ie alt” Goon: the bad of capi-|and rides away. He barely misses a| zaged for special = it was learned today- The count, who cil, announced that plans for the im-| press. re lin the factory. tal 1i 1 y PX one ble half hi lat hil =I rerformances are had to flee from Russia during the| mediate acquisition of a permanent | ‘alism arrived: police, soldiers, guns, | constable a half hour later while en Tommasco. Aleaide ~~ revolution, now works for a living. \ headquarters, where beds and a soup |YJITHOUT any equivocation, without} Among the automatons who produce ‘clubs. The leader is arrested, but|gaged in conversation with a man an. talian lyric a ee —— |kitchen can be established, are well any patronizing concessions, it is} |Ford parts there are some who re- the vlemental class war is not over. | Waiting for his wife to get a pebble | nit tenor” - of: ‘note, Riernrrerrree ce erlemcemcmmcmmmoamts ras. Pi S aN) i t of her stocking. The man wants | }under way. The council will issue |necessary to say that the New Play-|fuse to be completely enslaved by the’ Tomorrow, next year, in a decade— | ?U a % ‘ ie | Gladys Axman, a |a call for a conference of all unions|wrights’ Theater has produced a} |machine; some in whom the machine the suffering and resentment will be fee ye eb a he BeUeS ae Shavlow soprano well and fraternal organizations at an strong, vital, proletarian play. There |has not entirely succeeded in sapping crystallized and forged into an intel- STIRS RICE tS, CRG ARe be ig i i js | known in New York. Other sopranos hearly date to lay plans for immediate |is the danger that the aesthetes on|strength and courage, the spirit of ligent and class-conscious strategy. Ses at aa end Bee Louise Taylor, Tina Paggi, Ethel |relief of the neediest cases. the one hand, and the class-conscious| protest and revolt. The young work-,Then there will be no onslaught on izi Koyk . 7 i yar Fox, and Hizi Koyke, the latest | Over a Third Idle. proletarians on the other, will object | er who displays the courage to organ- the steel machines; then it will be the Here Roane nanecieeed tata Japanese. interpreter of “Madam le That unemployement in Cleveland|to the philosophy implied in “The/ize the “revolt” in the factory is not social standards which will be de- jis growing at an alarming rate can-|Belt.” It will not please the aesthetes|2 leader in our sense of the word. The stroyed; those standards which sup- |not be denied. Official statistics | because the play deals with such raw,|robots in the shop are suspicious of port and sustain the system of de- i |gathered by the American Federa- | prosaic aspect of life as the shop, ex-|him and brand him a “radical,” a “bol-' gredation for the mass of the work- “cottage of gentility” where two sis- | Butterfly.” : ters dwell, one godly, the other un-| Franco Tafuro, with the organiza- godly. As is logical, the ungodly one tion for two years, still heads the list sympathizes with him, while the other | of tenors, with Fernando Bertini, | tion of Labor and sent to local unions | ploitation, workers’ protests, ete. The|shevik,” a “trouble maker.” What ers. Yesterday the revolt was blind,| one wants to turn’ him over to the |and Giuseppe Barsotti, and Francesco {| show that Cleveland tops the list proletarians will undoubtedly resent} | the poisonous newspapers have taught senseless. Tomorrow it shall be guid- jailers. While they fight over the|Curci in his usual roles. Mezzo-so- |for the sou in a nerpmage of the introduction of the obviously irra- | them they repeat—mechanically, ed on the path of class struggle, with | ethical elements of the case he leaves |pranos and contralto include Coe organized workers out of jobs. Nn | tional machine-breaking scenes which | “ ‘emancipation as its goal. aed restr’ Glade, Bernice Schalker, Frances Gieveiand loss udionei eat ao cee gz The “old man” provides them with, P g and seeks sanctuary in the vestry of , close the play. ie He is omnipotent; he has or-| * * * a village church. The parson doesn’t | Morosini and Beatrice Altieri. The Even if we desired to do so it would) gered every detail of their lives by, This, really, is the message, the|know what ‘to do and procrastinates baritones are Mario Valle, Emilio be a hopelessly futile task to diseuss/his officious “personnel welfare’. meaning of “The Belt.” It cannot|until the barking constables and the |“hirardini, Giuseppe Interrante and |the issues involved with the aesthetes.| which takes the place of the company t aid that the author has dis-| yokelry of the country-side fall upén | Luigi De Cesare, the basses are An- Moreover, it is quite probable that for| anion, The speed- nay sistema ene corned whe | has written ac-|the prisoner and escort him back to |drea Mongelli and Natale Cervi, and these gentry “The Belt” would not | their vitality. But it is the estab- © not possible to} jail. the musical director, Carlo Peroni, even be placed in the category of |lished system, and one must obey, It 25 on succeeded! As a study in psychology the| Will conduct all performances. “artistic production”—for does it not) seems but yesterday that the mob in ¢ ar eye and a sure|tapidly passing episodes are excel- The operas announced for the first lack those refinements of stage-tech-) was ready to lynch the young agita- he implications of|lent. Those who profess the highest | week are “La Boheme” Monday night, nique and settings associated with the| tor, using as a moral pretext the ac- th th the written text and{Sentiments are most base while the | “Rigoletto” Tuesday night, “Madam | professional art theater? cusation that he had seduced the the , in many respects, help-| thers are almost human. It might | Butterfly” Wednesday night, “Faust” {| Protley Company Lets | With your own comrades, however,! daughter of Jim, the former foreman !¢ weak. But there | be called a study in prejudices. Thursday -night, “La Traviata” Fri- : ) Pater rome s | es y In many respects it is a relief from t, “Martha” Saturday after- a a jit is essential, that we di in “The Belt’-—the madhouse of the 2fe sce nthe play that sear one | haa? a ‘ Materialism | [Pea oe on Curve:| | apparent contradicti r ‘ord plant. Then they were a ku With its h. And the total| the usual run of Galsworthy plays. da” Saturday night. ye Th ar ree: and Empirio- - | | bership of 24,000 which replied to a | aeetionate” sent out by the A. F. of | tee recently, reported 8,500 out of} | | work. In other words 36.9 of Cleve-| land’s organized workers are tramp- ing the streets looking for jobs. The | percentage of unemployed among the unorganized workers is undoubtedly much higher. Lenin’s great work appear- ing in Englis first time for the | i ' Ready Now! | ie i s: Hurts 22) this play of mass-pr klux klan mob. eff: | Detroit inferno. «we j ten ED CSE SATO A ER one of great in-| 24. no ) | ITHACA, N. Y., Oct. _31-—-Three of | out, firstly, that it is noi 2] however, it is aj reets this CUS2t) Q Criticism $) 22 passeng d today |sible for a drama to ha iting against the; of kinship. And/ z 2 —— - = | when a trolley of Tx action | ideological soundne against one hun- ne that even. the placid and| CIVIC REPERTORY THEA. pine : * i Corporation ran gram. The logic of a dization; it jeers| table bourgeois does not leave) 14 St. & 6 Ave. Prices 50c to $1. presents ae Volume XIII in the only au- = lone hill and c od into another | matic situation o threatens him} ¢ in a serene and undisturb-| 2" EWA LE GALLIENNE | pL Na thorized Eng i h tr bebattacessD V trot y stance Both | max and a sc nis | is e of mind. | be Tonight—"THE CRADLE SON Eves. ine it 4 the nie is @ cars y Honbe re 10s ; The industrial czar, Among the group of actors at the |———--— eee - i edited texts prepared oy the pact, which to | tifieally-guid class war. he would suspend) S oF § Lenin Institute in Moscow. i Leaves on i] have caused | strategy of she ae s war Paul 3 se of evwmane:| Nee Ser Rn nant The Desert ong’ | REPUBLIC be serena Pia t sox the wheel. the workers would walk/iasm, a genuine striving f | with Robt. Halliday & Eddie Buxzell , ie for ake { ig tas { line, the most dangerous in the city, | laine ee, it jobless. Their own “ef-|artistie growth and achievement. Gerla at psig mn Lhe Mulberry Bush Lena ee i thas three shar at once on|not to conduct th eprived them of their; holds out promise and adventure A cae West. Bvenings sat 8:30, | With James Rennie & Claudette Colbert ng re volut jon ' which ve ; , sans have tie aa or Ame saat H ge cauldron. No jobs | those who are eager for the creation) —— ™a‘® 8d. and Sa : The Theatre Guild Presenfs urea Api Antic jumped the rails and caused fatali-| this production re ro ntning for nine months. . ‘of a true proletarian theatre. fi r. a 3 :30 | te ophy that prov. | ties. flashes me sheer Eoatreye acy ki * ‘BOOTH Lie wae = Poy sheet oer PO R( ; positive dan- habe SEE EGS lof the workers against the machin | WINTHROP AMES presents [Fes oe ! | DETROIT, Oct. 81---Ty Cobb, one|and their owners—the capitalist ex- : el Sh pre Da a ale Pel at } Guild sii. thurs & Sat, Lenin exposes. this attitude j |of the greatest baseball players of all /ploiters. Th Ne P, . RMP oe rang eat oot a A of di jtime, is through with the game, ac: | We would be breaking into open’ | é Cw. VUWT1L ts eatre eR, REN ea rie ae _ National r It. 4 its relation to other f | cording to a story published today by|doors were we to atiempt to prove |) eaudience Quaked Delightedty wo of philosophy | Bert Walker, sporting editor of the | that sabotage is no method with which 19 Commerce Street, near Sheridan Square Greenwich Village | —Woolentt ye Jal f M Du For the first time this great #1 Hot, t Ti eee a a a | 0) ary gan” communist ¢ » is present- ns imes. Res fight economic slavery which the TELEPHONE WALKt c ' re ard site els ed in ish Amstio be | Fr J J P ae ’ foe et core see ow ue with HE ONLY HOME POR LABOR PL AYS IN AMERICA ‘ ) CHERRYMAN Used in all work schools * | |the aid of its machine-technique, Co erent nantes ey and it should be in every i | Franco- gOS! ay we | f duction, aud its - | CR) MPD worker's library abeau- $1] | | standardization oF cy = i h _ Presents Paul Sifton’s play uae mde AM tiful edition, cloth bound, t | B: Kk | efficiency.” It must be noted, how- FULTON x9 Brew, es En HEY | aC! bone of Alliance ever, that the spontaneous expression th: Ebsen'a PD 4 $3.00 { | f si F P \of ae prays Seve, sea goes H B | > ’ HU DSON West 11 St. E nines, 20 “AN ENEMY Bh THE PROPLE* t irection of sheer destruc M e h st. P Bee) tawny {| OF oIx Uropean rowers eae lies, perhaps, the tragedy | WILLARD. MACK'S COMEDY DRAMA _Hampden’s * : 30. f so by LENI? | $ “ a |blind revolt and the pathos of help- The first modern labor play to debunk company unionism and the | ‘ : oa 1] LONDON, Oct. 31—A powerfal eebeeae' RUM unter mueh de. carta: souballed wibod pebty; inthe’ Boed taccorie: | Weather Clear Track Fast iF h e L A Dd: D E R i ORGANIZATION $1.50 1} ragesiecerneg tashacs inal stages of | fit igs no concocted “scheme” of the [J | with Joe Laurie Jr, & Wm Courdeish | Bg STATE AND EIB Rkearmsat ey ‘dramatist, in this instance. a; 4: SiR — a, er POPCLAR PRICES. be REVOLUTION 25 | Headed by F * ina- “+f Wm. Fox presents the Motion Picture fy RIC " ; IMPERIALISM | ia ol eae Poland || “The Belt” is a powerful social dra- What T. J. O'Flaherty says of The Belt in the Daily Worker | ‘S UNRISE pr virested 2 y | on Bway, € Paper -—.60. Cloth —1.00 \iR rat C ho-Sl hai } ma. In it is found extraordinary vi- } F. W. MURNAU | nees bist and Sat. at 2 ich INFANTILE SICKNESS, or 1} | ourmania, zecho-Slovakia and tality!” honesty) and’ Boldness, of “ex- “A labor play that shows the havor created by the industrial | By HERMANN SUDERMAN a ; Leftism in Communiam—15 i | | Jugoslavia, 1} ¥> itty Lica auatnui the speed-up system... tho evils of class collaboration, and the folly of | Symphonie Movietone Accomp: meat | GARRICK then, BS WW. abhi: 5 4 oN Co-oPpmRATIVES —05 j|| Tho final treaty—that between | | Pression, piting satire against the J) devoting one's lite to the interests of a ‘benevolent’ master, this group {| Times Sq. These da, 8b, Wot Bvay | pasin sypNwY and MARY BL % | | France and Jugoslavia--probably atta of patho at ae of artists that nave undertaken the task of producing labor plays 2 biovateian NACHE ees amy ae MODERN i | | fill be signed within ten days, ac-| ; Well as agains e exploited. he should be supported and encouraged by the workers.” ant shiftin, of bookings G OF THE SHREW 3 DAILY WORKER j)} | cording te teftreation, toms an characters on the stage aro vivid, hu- J) 9 ——-_ ec, HOw, iene ba ennifting of bookings |__with the GARRICK PLAYERS i 3 BOOK DEPARTMENT i The French foreign office | |™an, and appear almost photograph- Help support this theatre and The DAILY WORKER by buying moved, this time to the Imperial ‘ $3 FIRST ST., NEW YORK 4) lready notified the powers of | |ically realistic. Yet, in ip elves way, | | tickets at The DAILY WORKER office, 108 East 14th Street. Theatre, where it will continue its 0 + a | Piatise's intention todd ke. | |they are not mere types but symbolic! , - long run beginning Monday, Novem- ptt Ty ee ys eit. Ne 200 ee. r SAN ae Levine | bee 1 | John Golden “Weuesatz:s0 by ‘ af . ete cas \ Pd ~~ 1

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