The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 21, 1927, Page 4

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Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1927 : oe Poe - me a ere — { e [ OOKS The Fake Co-Operative Conference DRAMA ecanasae sree rmanat creo “awe By GEORGE PAPCUN. { AFTER all the big boobs from all THE left wing’ must take Roeaieeieey ee or THE SOV ¥ ON ’ REVOLUTION. | pere te hi. ,. |“ over the United States spoke, the} “of these conferences and must take’! P $ b) ° THE SOVIET ECONOMIC REVOLUTIO : she ue eran me | conferehce elected a cooperative con-| definite steps towards fighting the il- | 1S ay S O S ing THE ECONOMIC ORGANIZATION OF THE SOVIET ION. By Scott | |. ar nary yrds fee a He aa |ference committee which is supposed | lusion which John L. Lewis and his, - RS calles pres y ty oe : sorkers ip. ne ae HE Soviet economic order is a revolutionary ‘ ; Chamber of Commerce, raised about | &" coal operators, and the so. alley out the Pune SORKEES: mepaberstip ay ia Juana” at the Bijou I aves an Expectant sult of the collapse of the old system and through a successful working he cooperative conference, which | Public. The coal operators are repre- It must take definite atone to coun- a : s revolution which transferred the powers of state from the capitalists they held at Mt, Carmel, Penna,, on |* nted by Daniel T. Pierce, chairman |ter-act the propaganda for wage re- udience Gold 50 cents, ry order, It has come as a re- F jlords to the workers a! peasants. By means of the state power, Ry aes ree nieg va jof the Anthracite Coal Operators’|ductions, for arbitration, and for the | a bf Ra ae RES NYE da Se ED oo ard y nk a Pea ie Deen toiling masses are building the new ee sa ee ee ae al ge | Conference of New York and E, H.| speed-up and against the aes [oe average individual who leads | EMIL JANNINGS ecgnomic order which is displacing the old economic system of capitalism ‘ers’ union and the left wing officials Suenders, general manager ot the | propaganda and against the extension; 1 , quiet domestic life, attends “to. and is ere len actually see what wantion at chia’ Madeira Coal Co. of Prackville, Pa. | of ‘ the present 5-year agreement jhis daily grind and reads detective | A stu conomics is therefore important from two angles: | .on¢erence. The reactionary machine | The coal miners are represented by | which has lost to the miners the con- | stories for a thrill likes nothing bet- | First, the the old economic order, which had become the | o¢ the U. M. W. of A. in the anthra- Thomas Kennedy and Chris Golden | ditions which they have fought and jter than to see portrayed on a stage | of District 7. The so-called public is|won thru years of struggle. All this|the kind of a life the cave man in | yepresented by Raymond E. Gibbs, must be taken into consideration thru|him craves for. This average indivi-! | secretary of the Scranton Chamber of | the fact that all last winter and sum-/ dual is just the sucker who probably A : ee | Commerce; C. Ws Laycock, president | mer the miners have been more or | parked $3.30 or $6.60 if he wanted to'! union into an efficiency and} ‘Ge th8 | and agony for the overwhelming majo inevitability of its downfall. Second, tke socially ure the new economi which, despite the tremen- 1 and internal difficul ing successfully a socialist cite has taken a step towards a com- plete sell-out of the miners’ union and for a complete turn over of the min- e order of suécd:uploneanisauintor ihe conbepet Miners’ National Bank of | less out of work and are in a very |share his contemplated joy with an’! While concentrating their chief attention on the organization and work- ebatdve: | Phin eentevencecwenks inl W ilkes-Barre, Dr. R. mG Buckley, bad financial condition. And with the jescort—in the box office of the | ings of the new economic order, the authors of this book start out with step | president of the Miners’ Banking and struggle of the soft coal miners which | Bijou Theatre to see “Tia Juana, ' an exposition of the * conditions which preceded the revolution. But |" ** | Trust Co. of -Carbondale, William | is going down in defeat because ot eayensinee as a melodrama based on! the tre ven to this subject 2 to be inadequate not so much “ Dyatt, president of the Hazelton! Lewis’ reactiona poli : the coal|the doings of the wi ‘ked in the bad- | from the point of view of space as from the point of view of |... neue | Chamber of Commerce; 0. L. Dou- operators are taking definite steps lands on the California-Mexican bor-' sneeption. Instead of discussin . of Russian capitalism under J! Would be well to go about three | trich, president of the Doutrich Co., for an onslaught against the miners’ | der. j ool ézar : tem the authors confine themselves to - Months back when the conference of Pottsville and others of the same junion in its place where it has its; What a false alarm! The dramatic y the Bolshev nat the the Which, obviously, |“ ive a com- . bs ution, which is, | Seven or eight of the most s' last strong foothold. child of Chester de Vonde and. Kil-| i ul —--__...- |bourn Gordon could not have been} |less thrilling had the scene of the, |play been laid in Plymouth, Vermont | {and the thing itself written by:.Cal-| vin Coolidge’s grandmother. | The |customers who came to laugh re-! first suggested and see that all type. the anthracite region in about | - tegic n pinata places, cay sentences took lace i | | So hocleet the: 2 3 before the actual conference for the | L tt F: O R d ee eck aie ne eue re whole region took place. The main \ é ers vom Ur ea ers | t Russie nee, 2 t the t purpose of the conference as stated | Ji. Bile tensa Ss CUPS tary I oe A eee E Sch, ; E ot nae R a aaaie pre-revo eye aa | by the bunch that was running them : meee Toh SEY an ae Sener ; lism,” or that capitalism began to invade | Was to “boost the anthracite coal in- Los Angeles Times On Russia. | seven-hour day in a comparatively ee os - @ he a ho ws re seized ; dustry.” | Editor, Daily Worker: | shokt ‘petiod “of ‘inie, /are unanswer| oo ARONGM St Oe | eel uigdartnenr rR ee al t ee At these conferences, district mine | ‘ YORKER:—If|able by the reptile press, and eo we|‘2shion—but from sheer nervous: ex.|- " S¥Si0 8 BYRCrS : : all possible to set down a date . tric To The DAILY WORKER: ! y i press, @lvaustion with the strain of expect.|German film, “Husbands or Lovers? that date is to be found way | °fficials spoke, also presidents of | there is any newspaper in the coun-|may again expect a campaign of viele e cometh ie La Sen ERE? a A nog ehuwin: ab thet Cartel Testes: nu of the peasants” which took Ca! companies and representatives |try that shows more bitter hatred to-|diculous falsehoods about the Com-| 5:4 Soe gts ence ero sh ssia towards capitalist | Of the state government. Their main | wards the labor movement in general|munists in place of recent attempts !°"\; i the introduct indications The 1885, the industrial | thra “wage reduction,” “arbitra- | than the Los Angeles Times, that pa-|the Soviet Union was doomed to fail- wish thee better luck the next time A creaadently. cons ‘the ; talmiady torah acti | home industries tion,” and “more efficient methods | per would be hard to find. So it isjure. It is easy for liars to juggle fig-| ~ ; Ag, OAR lea OUHAS TiSly, bobs ato e: Tewiae eng: when agricultural | Of producing coal by the miners and | quite: fitting that the Times should|ures, but even such expert liars as is faith 4 : labor the following basic | more production.” The seven confer-| hail the tenth anniversary of the Rus-|{newspaper writers will find it hard to Hes - pede tet modific not casual |ences that were held were about all| sian Revolution as it does in an edi-|explain away the tremendous prog- lpia: Reece Entameinment® ke aie but pern early phase | the same, only held in different str2-|toyial, “A Decade in Russia.” The|ress of the Russian working class and Capitol Theatre beginning today will ‘be the new Metro production “In Old to the home tegie places. These culminated in the | hero. of the theory that high-wage de-|the establishment of a work-day low-| was which dominated to a large extent the rest‘ of the na ing agriculture. o * * eel as < aneleey es It is true, as the authors point out, that the economic system in Czarist ie Sener seen ne a and returned to the post-war days} : 2 next Thursday evening, with the Russia was extremely backward as compared with Europe or the United |"HE papers all over the anthracite es small but compact and highly organ-| When the orgy of ink-slinging to paint | Douglas Fairbanks as “The Gau- | Shotodrama “Underworld” and a But it w a capitalist system neverthele: dominating within | £ spread far and wide that at last | ized group of factory SelB RS: and at. | the Russian revolution in horrible col- | cho,” begins a limited engagement | vaudeville program. ia the entire national economy. And it was this capitalist system, }a new proceedure in industry is tak- i tempted ie put into. ptacicerte doc. {0'S to its timid readers was at its|at the Liberty Theatre, this even-| hampered and complicated by remnants of feudalism, that the revolution linge place at the Mt, Carmel parley. |tyines of Marxian Communism, The bight. Fortunately, such methods |ing- It was at the same theatre that! Wallace Beery and Raymond Hat- has abolished and is now erecting a socialist economy in its place. | It would be well for us to actually go | yecord of tragic failure that followed |#%@ Now received with: skepticism by | Fairbariks presented his picture, “The | ton are the featured players in “Fire- ig bi x lover the proceedings of the confer-|is one of the most illuminating in the|the American workers ——Wm. Schnei- Thiet. of Bagdad.” The locale of | man Save My Child,” which will come As to the treatment of the organization and workings of Soviet economy | ence and see what took place. On the | world’s history, masked as it is by | derman, Los Angeles. | oneis new photoplay, is the pampas| to the Broadway screen Monday. proper, the authors have accomplished their task with commendable skill | one hand we have them discussing the fogs This dg. iby ono iakadie odie jof the pabecitn and the Story; deals _; 5 er and thoroughness. The reader is given a graphic picture of the social basis | increasing of the production of coal, pélled but it is beginning to lift a lit-. The Klan Jn Colorado jwith a beautiful shrine city, whose | The 55th Street Cinema, beginning as well i i ” i Page ; 4 i , sa - | wealth is coveted both by a bandit)today will show a new film “Death as well as the economic machinery of the new economic order. The num- without increasing the cost. On the | tle, and the outlines that may be seen! p.- A < | ahisk and iatenuel dictat D. ey a z erous tables, plainly arranged, offer a great aid t6 a clear understanding / other hand, nothing is said about the | now indicate that in a few years more| Editor, Daily Worker:— | Oc oe the Gs i 3 He 1 a aeee pe Valleye? Carrol’ Nye and. Hada Ree, of the subject. terrible conditions the miners of the the bourgesisie will be as firmly. in| ‘Some issues back I read ‘in the | Pears aie a Spey bath Se! “ At jplay the leading roles. Will Rogers A great virtue of the book is the dynamic method of presentation. All | anthracite have to work under. Noth- control GF Basia an they axe of| WORKER an article which stated | S¢vera The bat 9 RPL oa Belts ‘Dublin’ and Ben Turpin in through it run the lines of development and the actual process of creation jing was said about the number of iPr a chat Communism will ot | “hat an I. W. W. caravan into Fre- | Pampas. ted ‘f iene an i ae five | ‘Broken in China,” are the other of the new economic order, which is shown emerging from its beginning, | miners that are hurt and killed thru- | ee a Abd i ism) Wi" NOE! mont county was to be met at the pa ec ed sae ee and Eve | screen features, passing through its various phases down to the present period. It is anjout the anthracite because of the| © *°°O™cee |p Service. county line by a Fremont County Vig- reas Ven ear Sve ane singe: | ¢ e up-to-date book in all essential respects. | speed-up system and the carelessness The Truth, , jilence Committee. I also read the ae Nr (ot Ou Sy oe bea a de “Good Time Charley,” a new film The impression given by the book is quite definite. Soviet economy | of the coal operators in not comply-| It is true that the fog is lifting, same article in the capitalist press. | Gra nies Bearans We hae best aan oe back stage life, featuring Helene is sound and stable. It is dominated by basic socialist elements which are | ing with the rules, laws and regula- | but the mountain-peak facts which|I will now make a correction. The | of arbanks’ aanontant wiccareae ine Costello, will open at the Roxy hee steadily extending and strengthening their influence. The condition of the tions, as even now laid down by the | Stand out with clarity are not the!mayor of Canon City did sign an ul- Ni bs iong pictures; and’ atre starting today. The cast includes Be es ‘1 i j ; : Y BS Misti . Paee Sa ee ‘ | Nigel de Brulier. The story was pro-!\Warnor Oland, Clyde Cook, Julanne masses is continually improving. Wages in 1927 stood at 8.3 per cent above state government. Nothing was said ones that the Times would wish, but! timatum to the wobblies in conjunc- | vided by Elton Thomas, who also sup: |; ECRSE nee z the pre-war level. The seven-hour day, fecently proclaimed by the Soviet | about the cuts which are taking place ‘Yather the opposite, so the editor tion with four more towns in the | lied ‘the story for “The Thief Pe {Johnston and Hugh oll Aas ory government, will undoubtedly soon be realized. Agriculture has already |in the actual wages of the coal min-| makes it his duty to do everything| county, but as hundreds of Klansmen | Bagdad”: and the picture was ea by Darryl Francis Zanuck. reached the pre-war level in all basic respects, while transportation and |ers thruout the anthracite by the cut- | possible that the workers of America|in Canon City and the county are ted by F. Richard Jonker BowarPaty freight shipménts have gone beyond the pre-war days. | ting of pay on dead work and increas- Should not see thru that fog which! cither members of the I. W. W. OY | off, the Russian Balint: muaster“and Broadwa Briefs Apologists of capitalism like to point to the stabilization achieved by jing the amount of work to be done. | the capitalist press has thrown around; sympathizers, they (the I. W. W.) | one time ‘assistant of Murray Ander- yy the European capitalist countries to offset the effects of stabilization in | the achievements of the Soviet Union.} did come into the county and held} on: has staged an elaborate prologue. the Soviet Union. But they fail to m jIt is precisely because the bourgeoisie| large meetings and closed all mines. : | ind jeularly in the |2nthracite conference held at Mt.|mands “for the American workers/er than in any of the so-called “pros- | 7 ok is lacemtueles pre perio capitalist economy in Carmel for the whole of the anthra-| would be an “economic absurdity” has |perous” bourgeois nations. |Douglas Fairbanks As | u banking and in commerce, in the productio iron, steel, oil, etc., | cite territory where about the same | the following to say of Soviet rule: | ‘hus the reason is quite evident; “The Gaucho” at the The New B. Madison The- nal economy includ- | thing took place on a larger scale. Weird Lies. why the Times has abandoned its} - ~|atre, at Myrtle and Wyckoff Ave- more subtle methods of propaganda, Liberty \nues, Ridgewoed, will definitely open ee eee ron the essential features and the basically different character of the socialist stabilization in the Soviet | yw this our officials of the U. M. W. | Will never again get their grip on the| The Daily American, the official klan Union and the capitalist stabilization in the rest of the world. The capitalist Be ; uttine | Russian workers and peasants that) paper, spoke ef them as a nice clean economy of Western Europe is also approaching its pre-war level. But | ; ADA fi i jthe Times and the capitalist class it| and well-dressed bunch of men and| ers?” which has been showing injand Mayo and Lynn are two other how? Chiefly by means of American credits and by reducing the standard foe tie ee ee |represents shows such bitter hostility | upheld their constitutional right of | paris, Berlin and other hla a on ate program. Wallace Beery of living of the working masses. With the result that the invasion of \Wepe sigh aiedieane cad aes ast to the Russian Revolution; were there;free speech and assemblage. Some | capitals is coming to the Cameo The-)and Raymond Hatton in “Firemen, ‘American capital into the capitalist economy of Europe has already pro-| ctons towards furtheri earthy ne |the slightest possibility for such a years ago this feat could not have|atre, today. This sereen-drama is .a|Save My Child,” is the chief screen duced a new set of insoluble imperialist contradictions and rivalries threat- ener hailed’ eo" a ah te tae |counter-revolution as they hope for,/been accomplished. The story of the |drama on modern marriage, interpr 2- | presentation. ening the peace of the world (i.e., the coming crisis of the Dawes plan), bes that the Saha, ete WN © | they would sing a different tune. No) Vigilence committee is pure capital-| ted by Emil Jannings, Conrad Veidt, | PENS ah SD and also the growing militancy of the European working masses refusing theadite Coal 0) gece Co; Hs ™ | one believes the fairy tale spun by| ist propaganda. Of course I do not| star of “Caligari” and Elizabeth Berg-| Two openings are scheduled for to pay the price of capitalist stabilization. Wertcs “ani nen ‘ oe ee the Times, least of all the author of| mean to infer that the heads of the |ner. On’ the: same program will_also|this-evening: Bernard Shaw's “The The stabilization in the Soviet Union has been achieved without the president of the Mine Workers’ \it himself. Klan have any love for the Industrial |be presented the first showing *‘of]Doctor’s Dilemma” which will be help of foreign capital, rather against its opposition and sabotage, ex- [inion shook hands and talked things | Still Hoping. ) Workers of the World or any organi-|‘‘The Eternal Student,” a character|housed at the Guild Theatre and tlusively with the resources within the country itself. The growth of} —”° i | There are few papers that still cling! “tion that is fighting for economic | study of a rare Jewish type fast dis-}“People Don’t Do Such Things” at stabilization in the Soviet Union brings a higher standard of living and |v" 8¢ Mt. Carmel. After three days | : the Forty-eighth Street. ‘ * zt |to the hope that Soviet rule will be| freedom. W.C.BLOYED. [appearing from the vanishing Ghet- Land enone for the toiling masses, just the reverse of the effects of ee ee me aon prreae ae | replaced apatl by the rule of the tan Canon City, Colorado. | etme ASD aioe 74 a capitalist stabilization in Euro rica. \ fs Mydradees “te | italis 2 : a $$ PThis book tells ee tay Wiles oe Ge Bees Union has so endeared | 2 Timers: union will help the’ coal prey an th roe iy oki oF He Reads Our Stuff. itself to millions of exploited throughout the world. By the same token jones He gebang elt mor eogl lth ; Niles as 3 abana or Editor, Daily Worker: the book discloses one of the chief reasons for the. bitter enmity of the SSA te ac le ea et a nal validated Haste a it ceva That jase ad eaeiat y very capitalist world towards the Soviet Union and the present imperialist ma- )coudenence scaed sav: the splloveane le peutort mai we Fee eer! ali ti aati ae tick on "The DATLY : DM ei. oat couince SRG se! erialist M2- | statement by John L. Lewis: “Labor | Steatest enemies admit the stability | in! cresting articles in e 3 | — Ss 3 fo against i e book should go a. long way towards lexpresses itself as gratified by the |°f the Soviet government against all WORKER. If you and your damn Moss” Broadway Theatre, is featur- The American premiere of the Emiljing on the vaudeville bill Teck Mur- Jannings film “Husbands or Loy- | dock and Company. Rome and Gaut A. participate, without putting A WALTER ie ; . educating the American workers to the need of organized struggle for the | A | odds 1 itali iali iT li i " | Max Reinhardt’s on 3 adie i | results of the meeting,” and . odds, and the vitality of Socialist] people do not like this country, get a a recognition and defense of the Soviet Union. —-ALEX BITTELMAN, | Testis of the me Of hinaintaining ny | economy. The die-hards like the|the hell out. Nobody wants such | AMPDE | ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream” lpeare ° : i iil Gent thes ; ai i Ibsen's comedy -~ er Central Park West ‘lasting peace in the anthracite,” and | imes will vent their rage on the an-| spreads of hatred and disloyalty ‘to | ‘ fone depen =». CENTURY i Bs seedy SHORT STORIES IN A NOVEL. proposes that the present agreement Miversaries celebrated by the working! the states here. There are plenty of | | “*% ena ee bat lca St. Mats. F a eatat ee oe PROFANE EARTH. By Holger Chill, M $9 be extended for another five years, |¢!88 thruout the world, and attempt] other places to go to if you don’t like) Hampden’s *"hvenings at_s-00. peas : NE EARTH. By Holger Cahill. Macaulay Co. $2. | : | desperately to keep the facts from the | it here--A LOYAL AMERICAN. | Matinees Wednesday and Saturday thanin’s Ww. Royale. M HERE are a number of short story writers in America who, because there | Si rae masses. —— RC) H 45 $ We of BAWes gv 8:40: Winthe ey ae _ i no market for such wares, write books of 300 and 400 pages and con- | wrarrINRR. chair va |, Such powerful arguments for work-/BUILD THE DAILY WorKer!| BOOTH 41 .8t. Wy Bax mves 31) Mimtirey ites “Mikado” sider themselves novelists. I have never seen an independent short story RINER, chairman of the An- ers’ rule.gs the establishment of thePass the Paper to\a Fellow Worker! [xtra Mat, Thurs. (Thanksgiving Dey): Opera’ Co fray trance by Cahill but ali that is really worth while in “Profane Earth” is found| ‘hracite Operators’ Conference, | uinthede “anes OW PENZANCE in four brief tales inserted in the book. expressed a belief that a strike in| ——-————— —-~--——— rary: ‘ In these four incidents—Ruth and the writing in the women’s closets. ithe industry would "De forgotten in) How a fellow salesman took the girl who liked Ivor, Ivor’s failure to seduce |‘P® desire for general prosperity of | the seducable Laura, and the carnival girl and the “funny” story of the jthe region, (which, of course, means | hawk—Cahill actually comes to grips with life. He has been so impressed |Pr%erity for the coal operators). | Buy your tickets at The DAILY WORKER nee, BSCAPE | John Galsworthy's Z ! New Play With Lesife Howard ~~ The Piteatve Guild presents — H Bernard Shaw's Comedy ae Theatre, 41 St. W. National TYSYy, sits wea 1 2 | Extra Mat, T Thanksgiv ay) &Sat.,2731 BERENS Catinot help vote por Seine | Then also the so-called rank radical, | . i <i : cannot belp setting qown his impressions former ovialist, Kennedy, who is now | Office, 108 Hast 14th Street and help The | “The Trial of Mary Dugan” In the rest of the 383-page volume, which is plainly enbineseont secretary of the U. M. W. of A. made | . 2 i by Bayard Veilier, with } Cahill recalls what te did but far too ofien forgets to set down what ‘2 following statement, “the mine | DAILY WORKER and this theatre, | av» stiwbikiiiush' Uittitvaay i really happened to him. One feels that the author has censored his life- | omens have "always. “stood _ for | story to meet the approval of bourgeois relatives or that he is actually | Saute oe cooperation. The ‘princi- afraid to grapple with such a problem as sex. |Ples of the United Mine Workers of | For example, here is how he deseri Ivor's feelings on seeing a nude | America wes Eee tonppiatie sileeae| | The New Playwrights Theatre ir F f er Ps mez e,. ‘Th, W. 42d. 'The-Desert Song .:.... Re ane ) With Robt. Hatliday & Eddie Buxzeli ~~~ a Thea.W.44 8 | ond. Year ERLANGER’S {he “ihuse i ‘VHEA.,, 45 St. W.of Bw: = (IMPERIAL i oar woman for the first time. It is in a friend’s studio. cooperati a a ond eee hey Toe Ivor renerth. hi Aka fart na | 40 Commerce Street, near Sheridan Square Greenwich Village Mats, Thurs, and i THE MER RY MALONES | fev S the paper a n looked up. She had stepped back fee py ‘ TRLEP. SE WALKER 57 —— Y Aa ‘ q from him into the frame of a picture, had become a ) “Tho question has been Weer en ee PE BRORGRE TS BEANS As , es of concave and convex forms rising against a stand covered with ourple cordur They worked in silence for half an hoi ” (Page 211). Anyone who s: that a boy in his ’teens regards the fi ed as to the effect « with MUNI W i foo John Golden | . Grant Mitchell ™¢ tion | THE ONLY HOME FOR LABOR PLAYS IN AMERICA nude woman he sees as a “series of concave and convex forms” is mentally drowsy. Te teh: hava) et ahi Presents Paul Sifton’s -play | ay oe tae THE BABY CYCLONE Later Cahill is muddled over the disintegration of Ivor’s marriage and | 100 Cften have the imine | I h e ib A D D E R (eersecrallisatemenclemuttetiont =sistirled 2 | apparently goes not know why he ended the beok where he tid except that eee bay Sol a fei | mat 7 ~9 DAVENPORT THEATRE a certain number of pages had been reached. abt o aoe 7 DIODE Ren | Woot piwa ‘ ais ei Mead ee ee dal Te The book has a jacket design by John Sloan that is Hogarthian but for iy POU ROME DS te eval the (Alle of | : : 0.) 2 Phone Madison sae 20 the fact that there are sky-scrapers in the background. Bis ana try se the mine ah er sets | GARRICK rl 2 Sth. By. 8:30 6 ; +} WALTER SNOW. thes ecueuttadl: lendecur oh sihse caine The first modern labor play to debunk company unionism and the BASIL a UMAR EOE a AMLE tj ia workers’ union 1h ety so-called prosperity in the Ford factories, With Gatick Players in the Modern | with BUTLUR DAVENPORT or tally, and the mine of i and relent Cast, Joseph Stalin, leader of the Communist Party of the U. S. S. R., com | taking a step t miletely der 'PTON SIN SAY, - H TAMING of the SHREW wm. tion re 5 : ‘ Ce . 0 a Saya - a step to 1 ty demov- UP’ SING “THE ‘LT’: Wn. sents tributes an analytical article to the current issue of “The Communist Tosi altag the mine work: rs’ union and ic UE TON CRAs BANE CE TOE, Bite —_— a Ae UN RISE, birected oy You have produced one of the most vivid and exciting labor piays in my Ute, If the workers knew how much fu you our little theatre couldn't hold the crowds, I wish I twenty yeurs younger, to start writing tor your theatre all over ternational” (Vol. 4, No, 15) on “The International Situation.” Other ar-|rob it of its ighting character and ticles included in the same issue include “Lessons of the Saeco-Vanszetti | to use it merely as a union corru: Campaign” by John Pepper; “Edinburgh” by A. J. Bennet, and other fea- | thru the coal operators influence © | By HPRMANN SUDERMANN | Symphonic Movietone Accompaniment ULA | Ss U N R I S E F. NU. MURNAU tures including book reviews, American distribution of this magazine is | used it for the. benefit of the «.. | sin . 4 a ve st in saiat ‘Avi DA a Shee wade thru the Workers Library Publishers, New York. —wW. ¢. operator. a a, a” FULTON , ° BUILD THE DA WORKER! wy x a } 4a 3 * Mae i i co bef DOCTOR'S DILEMMA”

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