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2A OIE i wt BA BD OS aE Ee A, THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THU NOVEMBER 24, 1927 a With the Young Comrades FORWARD By FRIEDA TRUHAR. | Page Four The Workers Forum Farmer Replies to Shyster Lawyer.‘ thought I might get work from his | Editor, DAILY WORKER jpeighbor, some ten miles cut in the A jcountry. And as he offered me a ride TENTH ANNIVERSARY Two Lessons Free Admission to “Thet Ladder” Beginning | I am no writer, have never written | 94: T took a chance on it. However |__ Tho our backs are bent and weary | 4 | for a paper. Besides, I am extremely | was top late anothes slave had | INTERNATIONAL CHARACTER AND LEADERSHIP Tho our heads are hanging low Tonight | busy making a living for myself and | gotten it. The tenth anniversary of the existence of the Sovjet Tho our hearts sink down within us | — | family. Get up at 5.15 in the morning : Union has been celebrated during last week by oppressed Yet forward will we go. Beginning tonight. all. perfor- | k to my family at six in{ Nevertheless it gave me an oppor-| 14ers and farmers thruout the world. The children of |mances of “The Ladder,” which is | the evening. But I should like to tunity to talk with a few of the farm- |these oppressed peoples have also parieine tedinetiesa Tho they cast us into prison now playing at the Lyric Theatre, | make some sort of a reply to the Uae fers and learn unas oe a reas | lebrations. This important event is so important that Tho they call us traitor, foe | will be given free to all comers. The yer, Silas B. Axtell, who doesn’t; also getting it in the neck. @xeS | it ig necessary to review some points of information and Tho they persecute and torture us | United Actors, Ine., the vine ie seem to like what the workers have|are high, and produce is cheap, ie. | some lessons that can be drawn from it. , Yet forward will we go. | sent out the following announcement 1 i accomplished in the Soviet Union. when the producers have it to sel Fi Walwase 3 : ate ‘ vy ‘along with the news of this impor-| i 1 I am a smail farmer who is sup-/ Incidentally I asked one of the farm- Ru: pre on aa seis me seen the revolution tn For our cause is a real cause, jtant event: “The management feels | eal posed to own a piece of land in the! ers what land was selling at around | Nes A “ ssOlaved co purely Russian event. It must ‘And this thing do we know, that while the present version of the | i | northern part of Minnesota. I have|him. “You see that ten acres over | Ri bash Reheat sce ala event which started in ° That victory will ours be | play contains much that is meritorious | i always been in sympathy with the | there adjoining my place on the left,” | ia eels and must inevitably spread to other capitalist If forward we will go. 2 worthy of the theatregoers’ at- workers in the class struggle and al-)he said, “well they are asking $7,000 eawaae abae the system of capitalism is wiped off the NL Ps en en | tention, ‘The Ladder’ has not reached | i ways worked for their interest. for it with only that board shack of | mere Pbanila It is the beginning of the proletarian eins <P le No. 40 the point where critics can be called | i sf S a house on it.” “I should think Te Te are : fe : os This Week’s Puzzle No. lin ae the Bay, Dern ie ordi- | " 5 > .s,; would sell cheap if they can’t make| Second: e must learn that revolutions dognot fal gi : * zle is a way fighting | narily prescribed y theatneal cus- | “ 4 e ” When Silas B. Axtell, a New York thing off it?” “Well, neighbor, |from the skies. Given all the conditions which make a, 7he answer to this week's puzzle fs Pea eee leet? (Duvinge thie: petinds “until the | Cees PEE a lawyer addressed a certain letter to) \oy don’t understand,” said the farm-| revolution necessary and possible, only the proper lead- {ye anewer, : . ? {play reaches its ultimate state, all’ Suitivan repertory this evening at the Albert F. Coyle, secretary to the <." «you see he paid a whale of a/ership can lead the revolution to a correct. and success- ‘MASPSWEH oo not tell anyone. PUZZLE | Performances of ‘The Ladder’ will be| Royale Theatre First American Trade Union Delgga-/)i price for the place during the | ful conclusion. Russia had that leadership in Lenin and CANERET COMING. SOON! Prizes i everything! |@bsolutely: free.” Roya atre. tion to Soviet Ru a ne wrote more! 69M and only a small payment! the Communist Party. Our lesson from that is to build eek sh! D ea eat re inks: 2 % “| Seats will be issued under a first = 2 full-fledged Burns detective. |. Hence he has a pig mortgage | the Young Pioneers, the children’s section of the Amer- bela Mistress |come, rved policy at the the- Why ‘all the questions and insinua- 1 oainst it and must get a big price |ican Communist Party. All workers’ and poor farmers Ate Ait letter te in STICK but hot i WOOD. | atre’s » They will be given tions? Tho Soviet Russia has JUSt\ (1 joose the first and all subsequent | children should therefore join this organization which it sedand iu TRUE but notinGOOD, jonly upon personal application. Re- lees oe tenth ode fae bit oe payments made on it.” | will help bring the second American revolution nearer. ate thied is in RUFF and also in RE ADY. iqu ie Ty mail and telephone will be; Jeanette Vreeland, soprano, appears ussian Revolution, and in spite of | ; - , es ae Ll beset ala nin ane é Tet eyes ae ignored. LES fs , ‘ ll, Friday her great achievements, she is still| “Now it’s different with me. I have My fourth is in RIGHT but not in STE ADY, Thesplay eben BreheDeeuke in recital ey Osrnegie Hall, ; in a state of transition. It takes time |a little business in town that I look OUR LETTER BOX My fifth 1s In WALK but not in RUN, a | been a ying pe eee eee ue bas | evening, December.2, i to build a socialist order on a defunct | after while my wife and kids run the IN HARCO, ILI s is in RAISE that the workers WON. tober 22, 1926, and is backed by Ed-| Yelly D’Aranyi, violinist, will give ih ay Bee etre. farm,” Ciuldren not in: school?” |. hear Comrades: ‘Only, afew lines to let yo Muow, HOW... eGieacn euawers totthe Daily. Worker Youle Comrade who it is said, is very) jer recital at Town Hall, Saturday if: asked. ‘Well, {have hduito keep the)) 1 oa are geting along in Marco) Teel hate tegen you oldest ones out to harvest the crops ew: thingarate eertinees BaBebuc Liam cee ae nee you see. I can’t afford to hire al! | "1 * . \of all we bad shape, for the mine shut jhends down on April Ist, and But some of the d in the subject of the | afternoon, November 26. i ’ which deals with reincarnation. —— \ |The cast is headed by Carroll M Comas, Hugh Buckler, Edgar Stehli, When I read the Trade Union re- port in The DAILY WORKER I was much impressed with the sincerity of the delegation, and firmly believe that Corner, 33 First St., N. Y. C., stating your name, age, | address and number of puzzle. Myra Hess will give a pianoforte recital, Tuesday evening, November k ier aren to give oy ie eheonmei The next morhing I got a ride back |men are working. Now, if they would be union men, DON’T DISAPPOINT ; lMERHeMRIKE Ge eee and} 29 at Town Hall. j saw it. It is quite Sean aiee neg |into the city. And as I was going | they wouldn’t do anything like that. But, sorry to say WANTED: More articles and more poems. Frieda | caters Sree | ‘ > i why Mr. Axtell should attempt to) 7. toward the railroad station I|it is not worth while calling this a union. If one man Truhar and others take notice. gee | A song recital by Paul Althouse, | Tlammerstein’s, the new theatre at minimize the importance of the re- met a group of angry unemployed | ~ since 1913. , port. The facts are that the legalized should go down to work, why shoul dn’t the others? | 53rd Street and Broadway, built by |tenor, has been arranged as the open- ; jing musical event of the new Pythian robber class of the world fear the | Wovkers. I saw that they Tove much | Or wid then go'down all at once = "Answer to Last Week’s Puzzle | Artur Hammerstein, will be opened | Temple at 125 West 70th Street Nest Workers’ Re- | excited and at os a all a by : Be eo! yadda NovaREn 806 ince empl : eauth: about Hie Bue eons Beal erone| asd ventured: ay wartlct in- | Then another thing happened out here that I want The answer to last week’s puzzle No. 39 is: HAIL |! Sk Naa la Ses ge a es on Sunday Ee Rs eed ct the a quiry. |to tell you about. Not long after the yine shut down, THE TENTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE SOVIET |) Dict puvoudls. | “Golden Dawn,” afternoon, 3 27. iti tie Ecaitalist system. Of cour: | “You see, strange a work- | = a aa oo4 ae os ad aie ee ine ee Soe laa tion with Louise Hunter, formerly} Harold Morris, pianist, will give cata ate. OF cou a) an am rmaee” sail work: | money ech and every one ot here ta thy pti the Puzzle No. 38 [Traine ietapltan Spera Howe, nin tata at Hom Hal "Rutiay building a state for the producers. | while the fisherman’s boat gets\in! come handy. But, now it is all gone. Then the store- Mo a geo a ee it ee OnE ees , : 1 7 jus fter e fas xpress s gone. As| 1, 5 foe eee ee Se lie RCT er 3 a Esther Cohen, Chicago, .; Ethel Menuch, z | i | Mr. Axtell, what do you do to jus-| ster te toe ea een until the keepers don’t give you any “credit.” There are three a4). James Mishkis, Chicago, Ill.; David Friedman, De-| _Mieczyslaw Munz, pianist, will give| Youry Bilstin will give his second t jthe fish won’t keep until the next | |day, they have been giving them to | who have had the misfortune to vio-| Whoever would come down and get jate the law of a decaying capitalist |one. We have all been going down at order. Under a new order you would | such times and getting a mess for | have to produce value for your sand- | the wife and kids. It helps a lot you witch. | know, when we ain’t got any fade s A rs | “But,” he continued, “when we went,| What is the difference between @/ Gown this morning we got none, as | ai who Boles fe ee a ee |some of the high-ups eon the eee i p= eon and takes away your {ber of Commerce or the merchants’ $100 or the International Harvester | association had been there protesting Co. who compels a farmer to dip his | that such acts were hurting business hand into his own picket and hand | and that the city couldn’t stand for over an extra $100 in buying a bind- \it any longer. So we are coming back tify your existence? Judging your profession you are serving those grocery stores out here. You go into go up to the counter, the first thing Credit Please.” Now what do you think about that? I will now close the letter. Comradely yours, MARGARET YUHAS. any of them and you hear is, “No troit, Mich. wood, Cal. More Answers to Puzzle No. 37 | Vilarino, Inglewood, Cal.; Liberto Vilarino, Ingle- | Boosters Jack Up Anthracite a Notch by ED. FALKOWSKI. | UPERSALESMEN, adver tisers,) iY While Mr. E. H. Seunder, manager | of the Madiera-Hill Co. coal opera- tions followed Boyd on the floor, he ators, as the miners were willing to sign another five-year agreement on top of the one they now enjoyed. jhis recital season at Carnegi i Hall, Monday evening, November 28, cello récital at Town Hall, Monday evening, November 28. | ANIZE LABOR LYCEUM. A labor lyceum will be established soon in Yonkers, it was announced last night. The recently organized Workers’ |Cooperfttive Center his purchased a jhouse at 252 Websterton Ave. which | will be remodeled for this purpose. | Barkers’ Union locals, Workmen’s ' U. S. IMPERIALISM HIT. | WASHINGTON, Nov. 23 (FP). — British, French and German trade in- terests, backed to some extent at least by the British government, are | reported by Ambassador Poindexter |—returned from Peru—as conducting | anti-American propaganda in Latin | The state department has | America. a | Serer . | empty-handed, ‘35 the oa i ae mine managers, labor officials, | barged the ane ot we labor etl * * | Cirele branches, the German Sick and | heard Poindexter and declines to { hat’s how 12 millionaires have | will have to be taken out and dumpe: 5 A ete which he larded wi eavy sympathy | wrFICIENCY experts talked of the| Death Benefit F : make public comment on the situa- 4 been produced in the United States |into the gulf.” “Looks like a damn |DUSinessmen’s knife-and-fork clubs) # "Huo miner,” His talk was| KG y und, the Workers | shame,” I say, “when so many of the | always,” my friend ventured. reader in suspense. What I did find have gotten behind the anthracite in- | such as confronts all industries at the followed by advertisers who igsisted excessive labor power employed int miners are working calls for annual | (Communist) Party, the Lithuanian |Gen. Preston Brown walked home tion. | “No more than 20 to 25 per cent |of the petroleum originally contained =: on 7 a z iy | dustry in a huge effort to steamroll | 2 é the hard coal industry, and how faycational Societ 1 * Fee eae q RRANE.ENGMAN. «| men are out of work and their fam-| + ‘the highway of prosperity. Not-| "mst the hard ebal industry des) NOt | machinery: could cut down operating mi ccc, cca aca the Ttalian| DOUBLE OIL PRODUCTION i Se ree OY P1827 pte Se et | withstanding the current market de- | Spend enough money telling the world | expenses. The congress endeg with} ~ vonal Society are represented) WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—Petrol- H Soe rs | “yes, it's hard,” I said, “but you| pression which inevitably affects the ) bout its product. Since substitutes) many hurrahs, and tremendous re-|°? @ committee raising funds for the|eum production may be more than 4 Hunting a Job in Florida. | ER careers aagy oe : 3 a he.| for hard coal have -advertised, de-| lyceum. } k 3 z: | know we're living under the Profit | hard coal industry, attempts are be- : se Its were to be looked for. The! !¥' |doubled through new methods of re- 7 Editor, The DAILY WORKER: sys othin; st be allowed|ing made to inflate. the hard coal|™and for them increased prodigious-| miner, sipping his glass of illegal| |moving oil from the earth perfected system, and nothing mu: ng ie Debh th t rod fol | : i My work—hunting for a job—|to interfere with the capitalists’ pro-| regions with a self-induced prosper-|!Y- Let the anthracite producers fol-/ heer, lifted his shoulders in perplexed} w. & i & " | by the United States Bureau of Mines, i y e J e «.| low their example, and spend a few are GDN WAR SECRETARY OUT OF GAS. | avcordi ee F brought me to Pensacola in west] fits.” ity. Whether the laws of economics illi 3 ici 3 | wonder, as he lit his pipe and labelled | WASHINGTON. N a ,according to the annual report of Di- | Florida on the Gulf of Mexico. No,| can be shunted aside, or whether the | #1 10nS every year on publicity, since | the whole affair as “hot air.” | NGTON, Nov. 23. —- Han-/rector Scott Turner, made public to- TI didn’t find one; I won’t keep the! “Well it ain’t going to be this way|}57q coal industry is to face a crisis it is logical that publicity should be | , . _ , |ford MaeNider, assistant secretary. of |day. | : p the | a y a mS | aad ta couuteractovablinte: | The present contract under which| war, with Mrs. MacNider and Maj. j i { was UNEMPLOYMENT on a large) «No, that’s true,” I said, “but it | moment, remains to be seen. rep % * : discussions of wages at the request|from an airplane ride Sunday. A |in underground deposits is obtained scale, and wages cut ae it hurt. | Will be this way until the city work-| The Anthracite Booster Movement NEWSPAPERS chanted praises of| of either party. There is some pos-|three-motored Fokker plane in which by’ ordinary methods,” Turner de- ‘ Wages for unskilled labor ranging | ers and the poor farmers organize the wise remarks made at this/ sibility that such requests may come | they were returning to the capital ran | cl: ; : | from 22 to 30 cents an hour, and for skilled from 40 to 50, with the cost of living still high. and take charge of things as they {have done over in Russia, where they }are just now celebrating the tenth But this doesn’t mean that the/20miversary of the workers’ and| through the press, and burst into an|Show that this wisdom has any de-| producers of coal have remained|in. Nobody was injured. ‘ter of fast economic moment.” age slaves there are really recei | farmers’ victory.” eruption of meetings at which the finite bearing on the problem of hard| aloof from the meetings, Only small! —~-——-—-—————— Z Gian aay vaccine: he ; i PE ee ail conditions facing hard coal were dis- | coal. | independents who incidentally, seem ifig wages at the above rates. No| “Besides,” says I, “from the looks conditions facing hard coal were di: peli y | sir. Let me expla I talked with a| of those eight or ten hydroplanes T gman who had a paper route with @| see over there in the air the capital- list of 112 subscribers, and on his |jsts can’t all be broke.” | rounds to collect the Saturday before he found that 62 of th were out of | work. And this I think is typical as I related’ the story to other workers and they did not think that this case was exceptional. And I don’t from the number of workers I saw idle. ie Pee | Well, in my unfruitful search for| “Yes, my friends, they are training Sein the city I met a farmer who | them for the next war, I guess. Learn- } = ————= | ing them how to swoop over and drop bombs and poison gas on their fellow- |workers and their families of some other country, just as they have been ° doing down in Nicaragua. “T don’t think the American peo- ple will stand for another war like \they did last time,” commented my | friend. “Oh, them belong to our govern- ment, stranger. They are being} used to train young fellows to fly. | | You see we got a government: naval | |station here and flying school.” | “Oh, yes they will,” I said, “they will have to, unless the workers and farmers of America get together and has spread contagiously through the hard coal belt. Originating in the head of a member of the Pottsville Amer- ican Legion, the idea percolated eussed. Luncheon clubs found this a fruitful topic; business men, com- | plaining of the slack time which hit | the region, brought the matter up time and again. Finally tremendous meetings were organized to which in- luential business men were invited! (rather, they invited themselves to their own meetings), and colliery of- |ficials and newspaper men attended | in strong numbers. es keynote of these meetings was the mournful one of oil cutting in-| to the hard coal, and s:reatening to eliminate it. Sharp-faced mine offi- cials gravely diagnosed the situation, hailing the miners’ wage as not high} enough for the risk he takes—yet in the end, tying the talk up with re- marks about the “present high cost, of labor.” Seldom a meeting passed by without some official delivering the tune of “high labor cost” which | meeting, as they praise the unexam-| pled wisdom poured forth at every meeting. Yet nothing happens to | Banquets in the different’ hard coal towns gave the diners opportunity to ‘ dissect the industry along with their} fried chicken. These small affairs were sideshows compared with the monster congress which met two, weeks ago at. Mt. Carmel where Gov. Fisher, patron of the cossacks whose |THE mind of the anthracite “public” | thumps are being felt by many pro-} letarian skulls in the soft coal field | ed but hasn’t got. The miners got their share of rubs for the “sev- years of industrial — strife” which “killed” the industry. Coopera- tion was stressed in a manner which made the company union seem the next logical step in anthracite devel- opment. John L. Lewis, however, threw a hard note into the harmoni- ous gathering when he disdained the idea that miners were responsible for | the troubles which shook the industry that the long-time peace was desir- eniy from the operators in January. One of the notable features of the booster meetings is that the large to enjoy steady markets, had repr niatives there, while the huge cox porations hit by slack work seldota had any one to represent them, up to the time of the large meetings at Ashland and Mt. Carmel. strained in its attitude toward the to use it—which puts them class of salesmen—but it is treason to find fault with the industry or to criticize the many features of the| booster movement. The fact that it looks like a trap for the miner must be utterly smeared over with the | honey of optimism. One dare be truthful no longer even to one’s own | views on this matter. To mention one’s doubts as to the motive 4 behind the By is to incur the wrath of labor officials, of public figures, of movement 1 industry. Not only are mine s | of the state, blessed the prosperity’) urged to boost hard coal among them- | ics which the hard coal industry de-| selves, and to ‘write to city friends! p, 45 into BOOTH M get so well organized that they turn | is apparently the chief reason why. jout of gasoline and made a forced jlanding in a cornfield a mile and a half from Bolling Field. They waiked OAR clared. “The bureau is studying methods to increase the recovery of oil from the oil san This is regarded as a mat- HAMPDE in Ibsen's comedy EOPLE” at 624 St. AL 8:20 atinees Wednesday a. iving Day) ESCAPE with Leslie Howard | xtra Mat. Thu | Winthrop Ames Presents John Galsworthy's New Play Jational Theatre, 41.St. W. of B'w. | National ivs.8:30, Mts, Wed.&Sat.2: | uxtra Mat. Thurs. (Thanksgiving Day) “The Trial of Mary Dugan” Bayard Veiller, with ANN HARDING—REX CHERMYMAN the capitalists out of power and es- jtablish here a Soviet Union of Work- ers and Farmers, as has been done over in Soviet Russia.” Seldom has any book issued by a labor organization, at- coal, which costs about $4.50 per ton, to produce, should sell in the large cities for $14 a ton. From the very beginning, miners, able, and whether it would come to editorial pens, and may even culmin- — The Theatre Guild presents — PORG Th Republic Isxtra Mat Ma y Thurs. (Than "DOCTOR'S DILEMMA Guild TP. §:20 Mats at. j Max Reinhardt’s “Midsummer Night’s Dream” The Desert ‘Song. pass depended largely on the oper- ate in a lynching bee. with Robt. lia IMPERIAL ear THEA.,, $5 § & Eddie Buxzell _ RATES OF PENZANCE? Thea.W.44 § Mats, Thurs, vs.8.30 & Sat. ERLANGER’S tracted such welcome re- | A | Even : chao aca tibet | « Bat eat htae | have regarded these booster meetings | 4 \ ae ened mins sonar 08 these collections ve 80 one eee Vout | with a shrug, Few have troubled |’ Buy your tickets at The DAILY WORKER |)" =e“ =" THE MERRY MALONES of copies have been sold of | “Goodbye, I must be going too. I each number. The Commu- | must find that job I am hunting for nist and other labor. papers jif I have to search all over sunny of Europe, Russia and Amer- _| Florida for it. ica have reprinted them. We offer these three splendid collections at a special price | | RADIO CONFEKENCE IN MADRID WASHINGTON, Nov. 23.--The In- to attend them. “A day off is a day off—we get it in our bones” is the feeling about slack time. While news- papers blow hot and cold about these meetings, advertising for the crowd, the crowd is always absent when the chairman’s gavel bangs the table, and the stodgy business men pai their office, 108 East 14th DAILY WORKER and this theatre. Limited Engagement ‘ From November 22 to December 4 Street and help The | WALLS :-: with MUNI WI John Golden. {P.¥2 The LADDER LYRIC THEATR ) GHONGE M, COHAN Henry Miller’s 7228. Grant Mitchell erin, conany THE BABY CYCLONE DAVENPORT THEATRE if all are bought at one time: ernational Radio-Telegraphic Con-|hands over their bald heads as they | ‘ | Nite wells sare 7th St, near Lexington Ave. RED CARTOONS (1926) | to which 74 countries sent] set to figuring out the quirks in the | The NEW PLAYWRIGHTS THEATRE production of | ]) -———~-——— ye Madison Sar 2081 ; (Size 9x12) on 50 delegates, unanimously selected Ma- | industry. | |GARRICK ane te Madis Sa. 206 if ’ iy BaD CARTOONS) Or’ 1so7' | arid) today, aa) the meeting) bless for sop e ee Ji nasin sypwny ana many | HAMLE I i Same size as the first volume ra st eas nee, ys be held in ie things are said at these me: j with Garrick Players in’ the | a | —with 5 new artists repre- 7 ne. conterence year was ings which never find their way | | | with BUTLER DAVENPORT Sad, as at ein constantly bulldozed by Secretary of | to newspapers. The editors of hard! 4 | TAMING of the SHREW ' nc obbissthised ihe { CARTOONS ON THE CASE Bs eacatitice aka diene aera Hohe Pie ends now playing at the | eranerry p= =omaarpeeaies ——~| Win. Fox presents the Motion Pleture , OF SACCO-VANZET1 Dyce vs Bates eves neg al ly, and carefully select the) | } Directed by BF BAgCOVANAETT [ina of te arate ran ome] mata tay wit arent anee||_ PROWINCETOWN PLAYHOUSE. | A SUNRISE» yoauaren e amen readers. When Mr. Boyd of the Phila-|]} iW) eaes it | a cehonie Mevietake TA ceieaenatenint i ALL FOR $1.50 eT delphia Daily News gave his analy is| | 133 MacDougal Street. Telephone Spring 8363. | far east | areal, Sq. Thedy 424, St, W. of B'way ‘ BAS We will face FOOL-PROOF ATRPLANES. of the coal industry at Mahanoy City | FULTON 1:03; 80.8%, Bva. 8.20 Times Sq. pwitn batty, 2:30-8:30 : + cay pias REA in th é Clarence D. Chamberlin, trans-|some time ago, he delivered a worthy |[) Performance balan died hited (except Monday) including Sunday at si diasert Melee Will Gale a pisede Wanediae oe : WORKERS LIBRARY Atlantic flier, announced yesterday | lecture in which he stated the main | 8:40, Matinees Thanksgiving and Saturday at 2:40. Frances Starr in the | is ay ie sa nS: rea ae ; = Ky ciate "4 that he was about to manufacture a | economics in the problem. Concluding, . . ‘ | i ae Ie Naru erate) wea % 2 PUBLISHERS fool-proof airplane flivver that any-|he said he knew of no remedy, but |} The first modern Labor play to debunk company unionism | Bos primitive man, “Before Adam.” ‘This 29 E, 126 St. New York, N.Y. one could operate with safety, at a| hoped to hear something concrete be- | and the so-called prosperity in the Ford factories. IMMORAL ISABELLA? book was among the late novelist’s , cost of batwween $1,200 and $160), | fors the evening passed off. a Th, W. 4th St Mats, Wed, & Sat, most popular wo , 4 : a