The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 10, 1928, Page 4

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Page Four THE DAILY MORSE NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1928 Philadelphia Transit Spreading Collaboration Bunk, Correspondent Shows I MITTEN ISSUES $20 a Week for 50000 LUMBER —|!22.¥etropottan | SOCIALISTS I — DRA Mans : nds | . Y” COMING BACK; DOPE SHEET TO ©@2!¢ Sp/icey WORKERS IDLE Get $18 Week READING WONT © STRINDBERG, MONDAY pe 0. | 'y a Worker Correspondent) | seit “MISLEAD SLAVES“! 7°22" © QNWESTGOAST "C2673 HELP WORKERS| x. en sue amcecy NT wa & { a d s old I enliste tan Life Insurance Co. in behalf | “Porgy,” which had been playing on ] lin ues t cee States army. I did my of 400 brother workers. We are| | Broad ince Novemb d which : a = |share over there hen I came “ [Soecoeoare i lf] ‘oadway since November, and whic Progressives Only |B) O10) a Oa at alee ci eeayel Move to Smash| big eeh se rh en Admit Betrayal rR O) 20 baeniodcs: Republip: Theates “est| of Traction Men the same way yet. Peach Growers || plaints at the office and have| Slogans Saturday is returning to New York| 26 Is Too Old. oe | ; asked for some increase. But our] | early in June. The Negro folk play! ; (By « Worker Correspondent.) s is the sort of thing you get, By « Worker Correspondent.) voices were shouting into the} | (By a Worker Corresepondent.) by- Dorothy. and Du Bose Heyward| r eS een oe nt down to the Telephone Co., on SACRAMENTO, Calif, (By Mail).| |empty air, We don’t hear nothing READING, Pa., (By Mail)—Can |i. making a short tour. The produc. ‘ nd Management of St. and filed an application. | —Oregon’s resources, California’s | | \{from the office. | f the interests of the work-|,. Lee ‘ H yy in other words, the |PUt down my age and my experience.' preatness and the wonders of Wath-| Please don’t print my name. _| | betrayal of the interes tion is playing in Boston this week, —S. S. | |ers, such as has distinguished every) vy 076 it will remain a fortnight. Fol- he told me I was too old for the posi- wave of prosperity in the near future. -——-—® | instance in which social democrats lowing this the tour will take in the} tion. All I am is 26 and American h is the prediction of George | have acquired power in government] cities of Washington, Detroit and| born, ‘ aker, the mayor of Portland, Ore- | ( ene | or in workers’ mass organizations,' Cincinnati. mine says later I filed tes ar rding to the Sacramento Bee. | be expected from the new socialist Porgy” was to have been pre- lication for a a . Gronne: When I was calied by a M ngton will be the sources of a grea stretch of the nation é > f| sented this summer in Germany under aaa are staller. ‘I I put doy ; 5 ; arty officials of the government o . itle; “Union Labor Adopts Mitten| installer. This time I A a s¢ “ he reaches this conclusion is a puzzle Sends $400 me city of Reading, Pa.? It can. |the sponsorship of Max Reinhardt Plan “a ae 5 ae ier i ie ae Own Everything. | i j ; OlasMistondese | Who saw it here two months’ ago, but Cooperation Bunk. cate eagle Packt eying es re all familiar with the eco- | Same Old Mis "Reading | the tour to Europe will wait a bit—! hich: sing | had to go to a man (I can’t recall his : : 0) 1 ners Is the socialist party of Reading} : , Which are being name, but he is the first man that’ "omic ebh in the states in questicn. | _Is Fe ON the | at least until New Yorkers have had ad all the city, the conscious | "yes youlyour application), He gayvai bywbering) and agriculture are the ade diff seated other parts of the|@mother view of the play, and the| ) ; ey ¥ ives you your applica ‘ gavel yi enn ane! eiianesonene dame party. or , a ie of Phila.|me about three seconds of his time tu Chief industries of the states of Wash- (By a Worker Correspondent.) | United. States and from other na- other American cities are visited. | 2 ; a nil; it there. He said, “I am sorry 1ington and Oregon. The lumber i “go-| During its final week here “Porgy” | J © prove the n between the | fudtr CINCINNATI, Ohio, (By Mail).— tional sections of the Second or dustry is hichly monopolized » (By : ees inp ae nee f eee i acer timber | |Reading so much in The DAILY cialist and labor” International, al pirates who own and control. the | WORKER of what is going on in/are the leaders of the socialist party did almost capacity business, which | was a big surprise, considering th rae é |lengthy run of ites play. sine One of the principals in the large can’t he you, but you haven’t a col- lege education.” And again I was turned away. employees, « timber, the land on which it | Other cities, I thought it would inter-/of Reading more Marxian than 4 ste a ‘ | cast of “The Greenwich Village get through s Knew the Ropes. s, the tools of production and lest readers elsewhere, to know what cial democratic leaders elsewhere in | Follies,” the new review at the nd that the Mitten} On my way out I met a young man// 2") & ie we are doing in Cincinnati. this country and the rest of the|CENTENARY EXHIBITION Winter: Garden: t, as such, is not against |@bout 27. We ge 4 ie ese apont Due to modern machinery and the | Primarily, we are devoting the ma-| world, as some Reading workers seem TO BE HELD IN VIENNA sa To prove this the /JO0s. -l “the same job. He haa! SPecd-up system of production, the | Jor part of our efforts to helping the to think? They are not. . i } issuing ari ation @ Biss same 0s is = nit| Market has long since been glutted |miners. The secretary of the Penn-| Answering, more spec ically, the} A Schubert exhibition on a large | Broadway Briefs See eee ey ee AT apes see tte Ged ce angle ands productind’ daiiak. aL MiEadatlll’ | eeivenia Ol ontinetey Relies Commit: iae question first, the socialist party,/scale is being prepared at the Fair a aller. accomplish-| School, but he got the job This is In the last|1 asked him how he did ‘Ket. been here for a few weeks / in this instance, being on the defen-}Palace, under the title of “The Schu- As a result more than 50.000 lum- | . eee ‘ - rT d arranged lectures, entertain- | sive, one is inclined to do so by ask-/bert Centenary Exhibition of the City| An interesting item was release her workers are idle on the coast. | the presents the agree- | the rs i t If you are a Catholic or a Jew you! OF is the mayor’s optimism due to} ments, ete, m behalf of the miners! ing further questions Are not their|of Vienna, 1928.” Lhe in the Seeman a the : aac trorites jare out of luck. Get a letter from ¢*?ellent conditions in agriculture? |and has collected over $400, together | program and policy identical with], In honor of the composer a “Schu- | revival o: August Strindberg’s drama Bee a "Eve 2oY STGWE | eomisotie Gn EERE UERNGRIIEE oe cet An fee back’ ae 1056 Orecon's “and With falepstaeinine cbs those of the national party and inter- he Pues similar to that of |The Father,” which Robert, Whittier an fvick ete sa Shad he ent your club. ‘Then you will get shington’s farm prosperity was} An Unemployea Council was formed national of which they are a part?| Beethoven, which was released at the | will present here next Monday night composers’ celebration, will be issued,|at the Eltinge Theatre. The play te, job- | Is » record of the socialist party in 1 + ete., for job- Is the reco showing his portrait and some of the | was recently seen in London, where iortgaged for 80 per cent of its total |1o provide work, re’ : families. They} Reading or are the records of its | position if you can get to see a M gala ; Middledorf. He is the head of that Value. There are thousands of in-|less men and thei? eh ee ge SES conerOn tel ea mene aoe Vai give you the stances where, in 1927, the farmers | celled on the city manager, Col. C. 0. |leaders essentially different, to date,|Places where he lived, ve eo ane Bes the gone The Mitten 1agement today same old stuff. Then you go to the of Oregon and Washington went bank- | Sherrill and, in cases where destitute | from those of other social democratic — = et ie Beha ay Tasha: practical the entire|doctor.. If y: 0. K. If not tTunt due to the high taxes, deplor-| families had been refused relief by parties and leaders at a similar BeBe “The Command to Love” is nov | Pegey Keevan, ee Raed Hohe. Philadelphia, in-|five or ten b ou get a ubly low crop prices, extortionate /the Associated Charities, took steps in their careers? They are not. What} + its Tihaltwolwecks, the placa its es or a - . 0 ies per | job at the ‘elephone Co., zht rates, ete. to see that they were provjded for in| reason can there be for believing that be followed’ atthe Tongasre ‘Tass ne eee pete uvere ale, 3rd, n tenant farmers S are driven | the matter of focd, clothing, rent, doc-\the future will show any divergency | 5 n the land by these circumstances | tor, medicine, etc. But their demands! worth mentioning from the records! as George Baker very well knows. {upon the welfare director heing SO | of other social democratic parties and s 2 Barks Control. jansastent, the most active members’! Jeaders? of the development of the di idledort. The salary was a The Sacramento Bee recently car-|of the Unempioyed Council were pro- Not only may the interests of the action on the part of the em-|week for installers. I c.”, red in pages an outline of Cali-| vided with jobs. The homeless and} ployees the Mitten Management Then he took a good loo fornia. More thar half of this map | joble jing its ol-pigeons into the|the letters and said, “I was stencilled in black, across which | City fanks of the P. R. T. workers and,|there is no place I can use you. But written the words “Bank of | Col. "m. Cooper Proctor, one of the | |peatedly. It occurred in years pass if some one is trying to protest|for $10 a week you can get a job in Italy,” showing the control of one| city’s millionaires) and in that way it ceed Gusti’ the vovent. candle agai conditions, he finds himself |the department of Mr. J. J. Barr as a bank alore in the agriculture and in-|caused the Unemployed Council to & Peinicee ea eda huevos immediately out of work. The com-|cable-splicer.” dustry in California. The rice, cotton | “fall by the wayside.” Neaieed since they assumed office. It| The workers of a rement are not sati: } $10 Per Week. i nomic onditions at all,} Two weeks later I went back and t in order to prevent the possibi + | be ight two letters to by John Tuerk’s production of “The ~ Golden Age,” the new script by Les-| “A Lady for a Night,” a mystery ter Lonergan and Charlton Andrews | play by Hutcheson Boyd wiil open | now in rehearsal with George Marion | this Thursday night at the 49th Street we Fi dae abso poe. eels ueren Williams | Theatre. The comedy was formerly s | workers be betrayed by the ;Vavid Landau, Leila Frost, Dianth: |'mown as “Nize Girl?” and has Es- asian (wich maineatoad by [TY city officials of Reading but) Patterson and Selene Johnson in the | ‘her Howard, Helen Lowell, Dorothy the betrayal has already occurred re-| cast. Hall and Betty Lawrence in the cast. J] = pany is also trying to fool the work-| 1 was angry but I said, “I will take, and other farmers are hankrupt, with | However, a new Unemployed Coun-| occurred, in fact, in their inaugura- = by une them that the em-|the one aoe seeing this Sogo eae ercuere following closely on} .i] has been formed with three of the an , ~_ = Pe j ployees have their representative on|man he sai¢ am sorry, but no their heels. comrades as a nucleus, around which 1 ——— The Theatre Guild presents. — 44 St 130 the board of directors or other com-| married man can live on $10 a week.| suciation, which, jn we expect to form an active, go-get-\ ay emgbhaniie At ae sien} Grea 5 - |ERLANGER ¥ Mats. Wed. & Sa 330 mittees, that these “workers’ repre-;S0 you can’t have the position.” 2znk power, smote the that will i I a es is 1 oneetits « M. COHAN (HIMSELF) nat DI | jar will Produce oy since have the socialist party lead-|| Neil's trange Inte | de sentatives” fight on the board of| So again I was out of luck. That’s| peach growcrs on both ears this year. | tangible resuits. ‘s afd ‘city officials claimed ‘that? Play, ig TU Bot ey Na MERRY MALONES directors for the interésts of the em- | what I got for fighting in the war, They notified the peach growers that | We are also Lavine w class one nicht ers es v wah : ‘ 1a “GREE John Golden Thea., 58th, E. oe B'way N THE ployees. » it is easy to un-|whlle Mr. Gronner, Mx. Middiedert, the latter wouldchavetto. bill back”"| , west. for’ new wembers, . thott ned BAe Mer tina ate ay Evenings Only at 6 ey ANE Sig erstanc s Barr a appl eS hes si es £2 BE ns , workers preference over those 0: = : ts : . ; and cons cious worker |M J. Barr da the application 50 on every ton us peaches sold | jfriends, families and interested sym- employing and owning class. In fact Sat SENS ee HUDSON Theatre, West! 44th Streeg, that these so-called workers’ repre-|¢lerk are home having a good time.’ the ca annery in 1926-2’ thi fon thn S f teach a a % E 8 Mats. Wed.& Sat, sentatives” are merely other stool-| Well, the next war will have a hell 50 Per Ton | pa ee oe 1 e ied on eucn” the term “workers” was seldom men- OLPONE Wie een be sai ed ; ° x Pi . Phe Pi aE * ing the principles o: ommunism. i sa Pigeons for Mr. Mitten and his com-|of a time to get me. p. | Jf any peaches grow this year and | oe Boel th a aga ae Ghee Guild 2;,%;,522,5¢ Ev ese || WHISPERING FRIENDS | —C; Bo ithey are wroueht tot y. the | 2 ys le ey e peo- 3 Mats. Thurs. t, 2:30 Officials Seld Out. \ a growers ea & st nye $14.50 per | . — ple,” “citizens,” ete, Even a socialist|| Week of Apr. 10: “Marco Millions” ___B¥ GEORGE M. COHAN. ing that the officials! ,7 on. Advance prices for the 1928! Favors Textile’ s Death »2 of democratic principles, would | = zl = x nk h t 2 28 shal a he ea i ears th WEEK yor movement: in Philadelphia | Nearing Lecture peach rcp run from $20 to $25 per} ma acess nus oP ta save the vet| ame oene' Garden :} §,5° St Extra Matinee ‘Today found it necesse if Sande 2 other than promis servi vast} Twiee daily ¢ 2 o ae a Sov ae For Milwaukee ton. So you ean see what the future | BOSTON,, April 9 9 (FP).—Painless Seat a che poqeleebee ee EN y (exeept Sun.) 2 and 8 rant attipde theca Late He ters Tene cate en trey | death for the Massachnsetis textile|oarver’ A cenuine workeia’ phir, BOTH CIRCUS f attitud 1 Ae ae sa part | This is 2 deliberate move on the part}; cy ie aie a bir unionization of thou-| MILWAUKEE, April 9 © DONS | Aa the banked toieioke aad erish priv- | seauety is the hope of Rep. Henrylits candidates or elected officials BUEN *< sands of workers of Philadelphia. of a national tour Scott aring will Shattuck of Boston, chairman of i officials of the Phila-|¢ive an afternoon and evening lecture ements, al wall aa alte Milwauke: als of the American labor move- |Cathedral Auditorium, 50 Jackson St. are unable and not willing to|Both lectures will deal with his re- would pledge itself or themselves, Including Among 10,000 Marvels ate farmi in California ce and . ; vay: Paneer ete omnia ence @2G\the all-important ways and means first, last and always, to the ser-| GOLIATH, monster sea elephant 7 for all. =: to e I Monday 16.86 St; gobs The mayor predicts further that as vice of the workers, promising to give ADMISSION ‘TO. ALL $1 to lea golden cpportunities lie in store for}, The textile industry is a liability/to the problems of the non-working! haif price at all Agé Proteome ee | — to the state, Shattuck affirmed in| class portion of the population only|cept Saturday. sai labor. Naturally the broadcasting of ; Bi > the thousands of workers from |cent trip thru the Soviet Union andj {209M Naturally the i iG y, | the debate on the women’s night work] the consideration which they deserve|\,: EN oe. ES ae é China. such propaganda will attract large | \" : i ; : National on ate, 41 £t. Ww. of B'way ont Ly Hak se workers ig : eA es iubitieee ok Wockers t6-iile cecklon of | bill. He favored getting rid of it as| from representatives of the workers ae Bva.s 30. Mts. Wed. &Sa “EVGS: Ss. Baier a theie hope foc better Goa ip. cae with “Edueation in So.|th® country. Therefore a word of | Quickly a§ possible, © ceils pee ie as tet AS Gekce Thee —Ann Codee, Flo Ver= ‘The Trial of Mary Dugan” es Val Harris, Others. Syd Chaplin in “The Fort Hi mr, By Bayard Veltfer, up n “The Fortune Hunter’ with Ann "aardingcwex Cherrymap warning to eastern workers: Stay} away from the Golden West. | Breadlines. ih ditions and militant trade union P. R. viet uta ” The subject of the 8 )2 # Ischune is “Russia and China.” | It is now April; things should be- Se 1 PAMEO BEE aa! Defenders GS” gin to loosen up a little. Instead what “MUSIC AND CONCERTS | HARRY ee have we? Breadlines in full swing. LANGDON P| Pe BE DAL LY Wo RR K b2 Hundreds of thousands are idle and} 1k HALL, TONIGHT at ‘AMEO 1a nin ewes Ganuae starving who are forced to live in lon ‘Aunenian Appearance 89 ; cheap tourists camps. Herded « “THE CHASER” Fee rie gether like cattle they live on s ’ BINDER : $2.00) Jc , New York City and other greens. anc eritars 1.00 é ew York Cily Who dares to deny these state-| le sgtesene S ‘ cask foi eal 1.00|J. Cernohorsky, New York City ments, step forward. Underfed. half- | | mnCuledian Retdtfons elt usa for | DAILY WORKER 1.00 | Henerik, New York City clothed, with scanty shelter, and often | | Tickets NOW at Box Office, $1 to $2. worker daily? . 1,0( Herman, New York City with -such nitary provisions as | H Tax Free. wes ou ie BEL eT W. Bicanic, 1.00! F. Hlind, New York Ci would put swine to flight, they sit K. Milkkola 1.00| 0. Fousek, New York City and patiently wait for a job. And if| i ; Minn, 5 .. 1.00) X. Form S. Hill, Du ka, New York City . a job really comes, the workers swarm | G. Williams, Duluth, Minn. -.1,00| Ae Worker, Boulder, Colo. over it like’ flies on carrion. For the a aes ij J. Volkman, Wilimington, Del. ..1.00!P. Kosch, Bellaire, Ohio .. workers’ corditions are infinitely | ‘ A. Warkosky, Steel Head, B. C., F. Veverka, Bellaire, Ohio worse than can be told by a pen. | | Canada : “2.00 | k, Bellaire, Ohio: .. The mayor, of course, has ae | bias AGAINST 1H 46 F. Bodak, Phila., Pa. . +. 00] Bellaire, Ohio 5 position, All he has to do is to keep | 1. Organization of the unorgan- Injunctions. | | L. Lainon, Santa Cruz, Colif. ....1.00 hlempa, Bellaire, Ohio 5 s 2ig Bizness polished an ized, s : M. Nerad, Willard, Ohio . 5.00, t, Bellaire, Ohio eee bee oii ae ee eee ond Ao. Midées!) Ratiet, Company Unions. ! e e W. Light, San Francisco, Calif. ..2.00| A. Ligin, Bellaire, Ohio ~. he spouts what he thinks is good dope || % Recognition and Defense of Unemployment. oviet ussla v.S. Long Beach, Calif. 00) A. Frizzi, Bellaire, Ohio ...... ‘50 gor such suckers, by. whi e|f) the Soviet Union. i q Hihuaniane Son's Soe, Wilmenic | Pate atest, alate, Ohio a0 {Oyameesvethy Malte ans |f| 4 Labor Paper Se _ ing, Pa. . ..-5,00| Kuzma Seneth, Bellaire, Ohio . 50 | pense of the suffering toilers. & OA Workers’ and Farmers’ | A Worker, New York City ......1.00|H. Selle, Ridgewood, a A 1,00" ithe tages: AHeeshyom eid dieeclaaat tl Government. War. May 25, and July 6 Evenson, Bridgeport, Conn. ..1.00| A. Martin, Ridgewood, ; represent are dead. Néthing for you : - Reiner, Hartford, Conn. 5.00 |Ch. Laubner, Ridgewood, N. Y. 00 liacthe future George Rid wns ‘ : if J. Reid, Providence, R. 1.-...... -1.00|R. H. Beckner, Ridgewood, N. Y. 1.00 sels —_PRANSISKA i i | Via London, Paris, Berlin, Warsaw J. Fish, Providence, R. I. ......2.00/K. Meyer, Ridgewood, N. Y. ....1.00 siemkeneets : . . P ! | id 4 ” Two Chi Workers, |H. Lehman, Ridgewood, N. ¥. ..1.00|W. Sandowdaward, Akron, Ohio... |{| om a 1g. ting arty ! é ; ; ; University, Calif. ......... - 5.00) Bayer, Ridgewood, N. Y. ........1.00|M. Kishe, Akron, Ohio .........++ Be | 10 interesting days in Leningrad and Moscow. i L. P. Lemley, (collected) Phila, |B. Alto, Ridgewood, N. Y. ......100 |W. J. Doran, Akron, Ohio «1.04 i ist) Party of Ameri | Seas ‘ { RE an Oaeaeaas 33.50|C. Plipphan, Ridgewood, N. Y. 1.00|P. Balline, Akrone, Ohio ........ 1.0 | |! Join the Workers (Communist) y sie TT Individual Visas granted } Hu rian Br., Ww. Pi Newark, |W. Syyot, Ridgewood, N. Y -1.00 |M. Malesof, Gary, Ind. - -1.0( | Six bli ib | all over the US. SR 4 N.. J. eae -10.00| Fred Henige tidgew A. Garish, Gary, Ind. 1.0 4 P) ge : | enabling one to travel a er e U.S. 8. R. trent Nuc: No. 7, Detroit, Mich. 1.00) - Neo¥. i |M. E Daniff, Gary, Ind. ....... 1001) Application for Membership in Workers (Communist) Party g Street Nuc. No. 6, Detroit, Mich. 3.00 | Ridgevrood, N.Y... |M. Petroff, Gary, Ind. 1,00 |) Gem out this blank and mail to Workers Party, 48 E. 125 St, N..¥. ©) $450.00: up. D. Zittel, Detroit, Mich: .......:7.50 ker, Ridgewood, N. Y. |S. Bekrich, Gary, Ind. -1,00 | f i {. Torpinian, S. N. No. 5, Detroit, Arechsel, Ridgewood, N. Y. .1.00/ j|A. Chiparat, Gary, Ind. .. SANE EP NAR V's sien sedans oemasstiabhneten e Veeder vsetncee Wes alee pammne anil L Mich. ° . bp tee, i) Sharf, Ridgewood, N. Y. .....1.00 | J. Kapetanovich, Gary, Ind. ....1.00)}}, ADDRESS 4 ‘A Worker, Kansas City, “Mo. ..-2.00 | MC Phillips, Ridgewood, N. Y. D. Sever, Gary, Ind. ..... -1.00 4) ag SNES get APPLY IMMEDIATELY Hankins, Kansas City, Mo --1.00| Mrs. E. A. Hall, Ridgewood, N. Y 'S. Kuchor, Gary, Ind. .... -. 1.0077) Garfin, Kansas City, Mo. ....... 1.00!H. Berger, Ridgewood, N. Y. . |S. Soerideck, Gary, Ind. . .1,00 |}; OCCUPATION ...... tet eeeeeeeeeeee WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. a Taraba, New York City ....1.00{A. Yahion, Akron, Ohio ... |P. Sheliko, Gary, Ind. . 2.00 H If you are on strike or unemployed and cannot pay Initiation fee | if J, Donie, New York City .........50)A. Kusnijer, Akron, Ohio .. J. Yankowich, Gary, Ind. -2.00 |, please check this box. Q | A. Hornick, New York City .......50/F. Oberhoffer, Akron, Ohio |S. Heince, Gary, Ind. ... ISOM “neat siciran kiroraeste meek buna WHEL OER eee an 69 Fifth Ave., New York ; 4 Vesh, New York City .......... 1,00|F. Szalio, Akron, Ohio ... 50 |'T. Dokovich, Gary, Ind. .... 50 and receive dues exempt stamps until employed. Telephone Algonquin 6900, M. Pavlikaitoria, New York City 1.00|S. Karascsonji, Akron, Ohio . R. C. Shoglund, Gary, Ind. . 50 | (Enclosed find $1.00 for initiation fee and one month’s dues.) } N. Bloch, New York City .. .50|D. Williamson, Akron, Ohio . M. Puljarich, Gary, Ind. . 50 | | M. Boldizar, Akron, Ohio ... J. Wilde, Oakland, Calif. 1.00 | en Broz, New York City ......

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