The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 5, 1927, Page 6

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of the Passaic, N. J., e of last year, in which aten and mal- treated by po mand of Ch (above), were the suspension of Zober from duty pending the outcome of an inves- tigation of the alleged purchase by him of five stolen cars. Twin Citi Meetings 54 Novemb tale will the “ tion,” November Sout by Narman H. On 20 Max k Bedach will the ember will and will con- on the various for a Farmer- January Month,” en on the be “Labor Part; sist of four lect hases of the need bor movement in / will be “Anti-Imper when lectures wll be ‘war danger and imperi m. In Feb- Yuary,'the program will be a series i ‘or the recognition of the Soviet Union lectures being given on the conditio s and the meed for tr A similar forum has been organ- fzed in St. Paul by the local Agit- Prop, which will hold opening meeting on the Sunday afternoon of November 6 with a debate on the question of “Political Action vs. Di- | rect Action.” C. R. Hedlund will sup- port the proposition of political ac- tion and a representative of the local I. W. W. will take the opposite side. | The New Plays “THE FANATICS,” an impor-| | | tation from London, by Miles Mal- \| leson, will be presented by A. H. Woods at the Forty-ninth Street | Theat y night. Rich: jan of opens Mond. Lonergan ar the lea “HAM “AND SO Fagan’s n opens at nesday e er will | Yvonne TO BED,” to the 2 story Many years The picture Broadway be a comedy with G Chester Conklin and to Sweeney “Body and the Capitol s' was adapted fre Burt’s novel, The Brandir The UFA production House,” zg the 55th Street Ciner featured players include | Hartmann and with the story bj Coane hea Van Harbau. to the “Pajamas” comes Rox: day. Olive Borden, Lawrence Gray, Jerry Miley and John J. Clark are in| the east. It is based on a story by BUY THE DAILY WORKER s Forums and thi : poor ei ee Old L Kiva Le Eatienne Good Hope” a Gallienne, a job of acting that challenges per- fection. It might be said that with p even bya Le Galliennc ¢ oid t such a indiffer acting e in its nly the 1ona ts, be thing. But good play rocity than rded to an In this case the worthy of the p' acting of the story is laid in on the North c by lamers Eps went down with all her crew. The owner of the fleet was kind enough to give the widow em-|F: ploymen of her son Dutch Navy, wa for protesting the rotten m served to the sailors. Another son was the victim of a terrible fear of | the sea. He shuddered at the thought | of being compelled to go fishing, for which his mother branded him as a coward. The ex-marine returns from and shocks his mother and the more respectable of the villagers by his {denunciation of the government and the capitalists. A group of neigh- bors gather and they all drink copi- ouSly of gin and sing a socialist song to the chagrin of Clement Bos, the owner of the fishing fleet. Clement Bos orders his fishing |fleet to sea and all leave but the widow’s son, who heard an old in- lebriate say that “The Good Hope” on which he and his brother was bbing his na jail t o sail was so rotten that her loss was | certain in any but the finest weather. | His mother upbraided him and pinned | |his father’s earnings on him in. an Bos, and toa pany Present “The t the Civic Repertory Theatre Devi il Sea RICHARD BIRD The an English play by Miles opening Monday night at ninth Street Theatre. |women who came to his office when |to give them a meager sum of money if they exhibited the proper humili but to those who expressed the’ {wrath at his coldblooded greed for |profit, sending men to almost certa: ;doom on a boat he knew was rotten, | jail | he was hard and cold as steel. It was legitimate business and he had the backing of the lav That last scene in Clement Bos’s office, with the capitalist’s overdressed. wife in- terested in g money for a church and seducing it from her hard- fisted husband on one side, and on {the other, the mothers and widows of | the drowned fishermen, brough home | | with telling force the brutal callous-| ness of the whole capitalist stem, | whether in a Holland fishing village | ‘or in the mines of Colorado. In the acting La Gallienne as} Jo, the fiance of of the widow’s sons; Donald Cameron as Clemens the cold-blooded fleet master, effort to induce him to go. The/,yq Alma Kruger as the widow coast guards came and took the pro-! Kniertje, play the leading roles ex- testing boy. Days went by and there was no} word of the fleet. was raging. The women talking of husbands dead and alive and drink- ing coffee s nally, now Good ashore. The fied as one of » it will not be go to the expense of A terrific storm | leeliently. The scenery by Cleon Throckmorton is realistic. T. J. OF. the screen starring will be “Husbar cs of “The ores Costello. The play by MUSIC AND CONCERTS TLR ETE IT PEE SAN CARLO LIMITED E PHILHARMONIC. JENGELBERG, METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE THIS SUNDAY AFTERNOON, AT ALL-WAGNER PROGRAM Hall, Sun. Att. a bos Conducto Nov ran ie Hall, & ~~» Rabinot with GO » Nov. 18, 8 VIOLINIST, embers of PhilharmonicOrchestra, Prof. Leopold Auer cting. (Steinway) Aft. Cond CENTURY—This Sun. CONCERT BY L. SIBIRIAKOFE World's PROM TICKETS 50¢ W AT BOX OFFICE. NO Dir. frUnoK ATTRACTIONS (paldwta) | CEanD OPERA ‘ Pnecenn a Ege un ons rsne RAeAN ENT CF 2 WEEKS TUNE GALLO OPEN oO} ©. E ndo Bertin milio Ghirardini t Plus Tax), $ 1140. on sale at Box N.Y. Symphony : FRITZ BU SCH _ ganar ANDA A SAMINSISY, YOLANDA * Atelusray| ~ (Steinway Piano) Nov. 8;| Flonz Mat. Loudon if arnegic Hall. Town Hall Mon, Aft. Nov. 7 Song Recital ROBERT STEEL Mgt. Danie Baldwin Pia a Concert ayer, Inc, | TOWN HALL, Wed. Eve. Nov. 9, at 815 DORIS PIANIST - Rosenfic ld Mgt. Haensel and Jones, Chickering Piano. > | Giuseppe Barsotti, and will} vehicle | Rida John- | Geno ‘ i % San Carlo Opera Seas Gallo Theatre The San Carlo Overa Company will jopen its New York season in the new | 'Gallo Theatre in 54th St. west of | Broadway Monday night, with Puc- cini’s “La Boheme.” Myrna Sharlow, q oumeely with the Chicago Opera, will have the role of Mimi. Ethel Fox, a lyric soprano new to the San| ieee lo forces, will be the Musetta, and {others more familiar in the cast are | |Franco Tafuro, Mario Valle, Andrea Mongelli, and Guiseppe Interrante. Carlo Peroni will conduct all per- | formances, A new Portuguese lyric tenor, Tommaso Alcaide, will be a guest art- ist Tuesday night as the Duke in \“Rigoletto”; others in the cast include | | Tina Paggi, Coe Glade, Emilo Ghirar- jdini and Mongelli. | Hizi Koyke, a Japanese soprano, \will make her debut in “Madam But- terfly” Wednesday. Bernice ker, Tafuro, Valle and Natale C jare the other principals. | Other operas of the week: “Faust jon Thursday with Sharlow, Schalker, |Alcaide and Ghirardini; “La Travi- ata,” Friday, with Paggi, Morosini, |Tafuro and Valle; “Martha,” Satur- |day matinee, with Paggi, Schalker, another new tenor; Interrante and Cervi. “Aida,” Sat-j | urday night, with Louise Taylor, Coe Glade, Fernando Bertini, a new com- er; Ghirardini, Mongelli and Cervi. | With the Orchestras METROPOLITAN A new young American tenor, still in his twenties, Frederick Jagel, will be presented by Gatti-Casazza at the | Metropolitan, a special Election Day |matinee on Tuesday. He will sing | Radames in “Aida.” The new German sopranos, Grete Stuckgold, Matzen- er and Basiola, are the othe prin- cipals. Other operas of the week: “Giocon- | da,” Monday evening, with Rosa Pon- | selle, Gigli; “Tosca,” Wednesday |evening with Jeritza and Lauri-Volpi; ‘La Juive,” Thursday evening, with | Easton and Martinelli; “Violanta” and | | “Haensel and Gretel,” Friday even- ling; the former with Jeritza and Kirchhoff; the latter with Fleischer and Sabanieeva; “Romeo et Juliette,” Saturday matinee with Mario and | Gigli; “Lohengrin,” Saturday night with Stuckgold, Matzenauer and Laubenthal. NEW YORK SYMPHONY This Sunday afternoon’s concert of the New York Symphony Orchestra will be held in Mecca Auditorium with | Fritz Busch conducting. Yolanda ¢ will be the soloist. The pro- a: Symphony of the Seas, No. 3, | Saminsky; i ea Capriccioso, | Yolanda Mero; Symphony No. 5 in |B flat, Schubert; Prelude “Die Meis- | ersinger,” Wagner. The program for next Friday even- | ge in Carnegie Hall will include: ; | Pr ude “De Meistersinger,” Wagner; |Velleas et Melisande, Faure; Horhce | Victorieux (Symphonie Mimes), Hon- egger; Till Eulenspiegel’s' Merry R. Strauss. nother of Walter Damrosch’s y Concerts for Children will Carnegie Hall next Satur- | day ‘morning, with George Barrere as | the soloist. PHILHARMONIC The first of a series of concerts at ¢ Metropolitan Opera House by the | Philharmonic Orchestra will take |place tomorrow afternoon, with Wil- ‘lem Mengelberg conducting an all- |Wagner program. The program in- jcludes the “Faust” Overture, Prelude, |Good Friday Spell, Transformation Music and Finale of Act 1 from |“Parsifal,” Preludex to “Meister- | singer,” and the Introduction to Act} 111, Dance of the Apprentices, and Greetings to Hans Ach from that jopera, the Waldweben from “Sieg- fried,” and overture to “Flying Dutch- man.” | Next Sunday’s program at Car- negie Hal]l includes the Cherubini Overture “The Water Carrier,” Dop- per’s Gothic Chaconne, Liszt’s Les Preludes, and Beethoven’s Second Symphony, Music Note==—= E play the fol-! [lowing program at his debut piano | l} ecital in the Town Hall on Wednes- | minor, Mozart; Variations serie- ef Mendelssohn; Scherzo, opus 4, | Brahms; Rhapsodie, Dohnanyi; ‘Anda- Inza, de Falla; Sposalizio, and Polon- | in E major, by Liszt and a group | |by Chapin. Bach is to be portrayed in the piano program announced by Anton Rovin- sky for Nov. 15 in the Engineering Auditorium. The Oratorio Society will offer Handel’s “Messiah” on December 26 jat Carnegie Hall, a restudied scoring of this work by Albert Stoessel. Robert Steel, baritone, will make his debut at Town Hall, Monday afternoon, presenting a program 4 old Italian, German, Russian and English songs. | memM UST Cm | evening: Fantasia and Sonata in Wen | | | on Opens Monday at MYRNA SHARLOW i] DAVENPORT THEATRE (Rormeriy, « “Bramhall”) E. 27th ST. An Actors’ Theatre Production “JOHN ” By Philip Barry with a cast headed by JACOB BEN-AMI and CONSTANCE COLLIER Play Staged by Guthrie McClintic KLAW THEA. Evenings. 8:30. Mats. Thurs. & Sat, 13. BUTLER DAVENPORT - - Director Opening Monday Night at 8.15 |“HAMLET” By SHAKESPEARE with BUTLER DAVENPORT and the following players Octavia Kenmore, Robert Le Sueur, Robert Gorham, Edward England, Sidney Dexter, Helen Stern, Samuel Satin, Ruth Randolph, Jules Art- field, Rudolph Lovinger, Lloyd Fos- ter, Henry Wise, Seth SAEY WC ae Scat) Rothstein. 45th Street W.ot B'way 2:80 the San Carlo to Opera, who will sing the role of Mimi, in the opening performance of “La Boheme” at the new Gallo The- atre Monday night. A newcomer The Flonzaley Quartet will appear lin recital Tuesday evening at Town | Hall. The program includes, Mozart’s juartet in Dimmor, Leopold Mannes’ Quartet in C minor, and Ernst Van Dohuanyi’s Quartet in D flat: major, op; 15. Samuel Gardner will give his violin program of classic and modern music at Carnegie Hall this Sunday night. Max Kaplick, baritone, appears in recital tomorrow afternoon at the Guild Theatre. Constance Wardle will give her song recital Monday evening at Town Hall. Dimitri Tromkin, pianist, will give a program of modern music at Car- negie Hall, Wednesday night. Albert Spalding, violinist, appears in recital this Sunday afternoon at Car- negie Hall. Helen Taylor, will be heard in song recital in Town Hall, November 14. Henri Deering, is scheduled for two ‘piano recitals in this city, at Town Hall on November 17, and December 12. "Ilse Niemack, violinist, will appear in recital Sunday afternoon, Nov. 13, at the Gallo Theatre. Myra Mortimer, contralto, will give her song recital at Carnegie Hall, Monday night. Anna Meitschik, Martha Muehl- hausen and Arnold Gabor will give a program of Schubert and Brahms lieder at Town Hall this evening. John Valentine, tenor, will give a song recital at Steinway Hall this Sunday afternoon. Youry Bilstin, cellist, will return for a Town Hall recital on November 15, presenting a program of early and modern composers. Dmitri, in modern dances, and Helen Jeffrey, in music for the violin, will present a joint prograin in Carnegie Hall on BOBOES 15. Lord Ge VWI.:¢ the Little Thea. Dunsany’s West 44th Street. Comedy Dves. 8:30. Mats. Thurs. & Sat. 2:30 ‘The Desert Song with Robt. Halliday «& 11th Month Century $224, St, and Central Paric Mats. Wed. and Sat., West. ets W. 45th St, E BOOTH Mats. Wed. & Sat. at 330 WINTHROP AMES presents JOHN Wish Gr Li gg Play ESCAP E LESLIE" ‘RowaRD “Audience Quaked Delightedly.” vs ~-Woollcott, World. DRACH seat Sundder FULTON 44 St. Bway, 6 & Pres £30 Maa. sib A Bat, 2.39 HUDSON Wess 44 $0, Byent WILLARD MAG K'S COMEDY aR A Weather Clear Track Fast with Joe Laurie Jr. & Wm. Courtieiz Wm. Fox presents the Motion Picture > Directed by Ss U N R Is E F. W. MURNAU By HERMANN SUDERMANN Symphonic ovietone Accompaniment | . thea., 42a St., W. of B'way Times Sq. Wien baiLy 2.90.8 Mats, Thurs, v3 ‘sat, 2:30 BASIL SYDNEY and MARY ELLIS in THE MODERN TAMING OF THE SHREW with the GARRICK PLAY RS with MUN) dghn Golden W.58 St.Mts. Wed. &Sat.2 20. AWALLS =: ee | ‘ r Eddie ang | ! “Thrilling story. Superb play. Enthusiastically received.” i ! 5 —Times.| “A personal triumph for Mr. Hampden.”—Eve. World. Hi i! “One of most oe arrivals of season.”—World. H | LED in Hot AN ENEMY | HAMPDE HAMPDEN’S THEATRE Ibsen’s Comedy OF THE PEOPLE} B’way at 62 St. | Eves. at 8:30 sharp. Mats.? Columbus 3073 || Wed. & Sat. 2:30 sharp. | THEATRE, 14 ST.-6 AVE. Phone 7767 WATkins. PRICES: 50c to Civic Repertory $1.50, Matinees WED. and SAT, EVA. LE GALLIENNE WEEK OF NOVEMBER Gr “The Cradle Song”) Wed Eve.: oe Mon, Eve.: “The Cradle Song” The Seal SPE CIAL ELECTION DAY Thurs. Eve.:, “The Good Hope” rs MATINEE. et “The Cradle Song” Tues. Eve. : bat. Mat.: “The Good Hope” Fine Play Wed. Mat.: “The Good Hope”! Sat. Eve.t “The Master Builder” This Aft.: “The Cradle Song’—Tonight: “The Good Hope” Prem A Theatre Guild Production ------------. ee, PORGY A FOLK PLAY BY DUBOSE AND DOROTHY HEYWARD Evs. 8:40 GUILD THEA, West, St ? Mats. Thurs. & Sat. 2:40. } EXTRA ELECTION DAY MATINEE TUESDAY { LALRA HOLIDAY MATINE® (ELECTION DAY) TUESDAY UNITED ACTORS, Inc. present The LADDE by J. FRANK DAVIS 42nd STREET, WEST OF B’WAY 8:30, LYRIC THEATRE Eves. Mats. Wed. & Sat. | The NewPlaywnghts Theatre 40 Commerce Street, near Sheridan Square Greenwich Village | TELEPHONE WALKER 5786. THE ONLY HOME FOR LABOR PLAYS IN AMERICA Presents Paul Sifton’s play THE BELT The first modern labor play to debunk company unionism and the so-called prosperity in the Ford factgries. WHAT LABOR CRITICS SAY OF “THE BELT” “The Belt 1s the truest revelation of our industrial life that has for some time pounded the stage."—Joseph T. Shipley in the New Leader. “This play is labor's own, and is far ahead of anything of the kind attempted in this country. It should receive the support of all mill- tant classconscious workers.”—Ludwig Landy, in the Daily Worker. Help support this theatre and The DAILY WORKER by buying tickets at The DAILY WORKER office, 108 East 14th Street. }. “The Desert Song” moves to the | Imperial Theatre next Monday, after |a@ year’s run at the Casino and Cen. \tral theatres. This operetta and | “Good News,” the other Schwab and | Mandel show, announce special mati- ses on Tuesday, election day. CAMEO: NOW Fat fine, Houg. GIEBERT cBpESSIE LOVE.» «ST. ELMO’ LBS" A New HACK SEANETT Mirhquate WANTED — MORE READERS! ‘

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