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Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATU Y, SEPT. 22, 1928 MAXIM GORKI OF ENEMIES Maxim Gorki a writer name is known not only whos: se Attacks White Guardist Writers | REPLIES TO THE Liberal Wail NEW BEDFORD:SLAVE Imperialism OUR CUBAN COLONY, by Le- land H. Jenks; Vanguard Press, $1 Pye. we DRIVERS’ PARADISE By A. B. MAGIL. ke vote had unfortunately been just 11 votes “shy” of the requisite HE great pulse of the ship stops|+ thirds, New Bedford strike i beating. Slowly the qu voting in the past had for some rea- frontiers of the U. S, S. R. b See RS Sap most in every part of the globe ry 4s but natural that an author with such a reputation be listened to by the whole world not when he Se in his usual language of a x@tion writer, but also wv raises his voice as a social and a politician. In this respect Maxim Gorki is ene of the few writers whose pro. ductions were frec imbued with a distinctly revolutionary spirit Ym days gone by Gorki was con- feeted with the Bolshevik Party and had very close rel, tade Lenin who with Com- ighly appreciated the great gift of this writer. This, however, did not prevent Gorki from going astray, and he did not alway: keep pace with the Bolshev ticularly in regard to the the bourgeois intelligentsia S, pal titude to A Friend of the Soviets. Compelled by the state of his health to live in South Europe, Gor- si followed very attentively develop- nents in Soviet Russia, watching greedily any shoots: of new life. In spite of all his vacillations Gorki Maxim Gorki, well- Russian writer who recently known returned to the So- viet Union, bitterly attacked the White Guardist writers who are busy manu- facturing poisonous propaganda against the workers peasants republic. Gorki is a staunch defender of the So- When he returned to Mos- and viet Union. cow several weeks ago, he was greeted by thousands of workers. , HIS is the first of a series of studies of typical examples of American imperialism which the American Fund for Public Service (Garland Fund) has undertaken. |The series is appropriately edited by |the tin Jesus of the New Historians, | |Harry Elmer Barnes, and promises in spite of his passionate plea for a dispassionate study of the facts, to | religiously reflect the liberal cry for kid-glove imperialism. | Dr. Jenks, himself, is a little | more cold-blooded. He utters pious exclamations of horror at the } exploitation of Cuba. He cuts out |the sob stuff, but makes the regu- |lation vlea for a prettier and inci- {dentally more efficient imperialist policy. | Sint ee After an excellent survey of | Cuban-American relations, he rec- ommends the revision of the Platt | Amendment, which openly sanctions | American intervention. Why? Be- eause it has “outlived its useful-} ness” (to American imperialism, of | | meekly out of a wet gray dawh. | no |, boat cuts its way thru the dar water. Bells ring, there clanking of chains, the sound feet running, voices. And New Bed- ford, city of smooth green lawns| Mr. Batty and. Mr. Binns when the and textile mills, of ornamental, workers insisted on taking a vote wealth and starvation, of tight New at an inappropriate time and it England faces and warm dark turned out overwhelmingly in favor southern European laughter, crawls Of a strike. Imagine how Mr. Batty must have felt when Mr. Fleecem, I was glad to shake the ship from | the Big’ Mill Owner, stared at him my feet. T hadn’t felt much at ease coldly from his Rolls-Royce as it among my elegant traveling com-, Passed him @n the street. And im-| panions. Most.of them were of the|agine the feelings of Mr. Binns, a} spectable well-to-do, business and | Justice of the Peace too... . | professional men, clean - shaven,| And so the strike was called on} well-dressed, their shoes shined, | April 16, | their neckties in place, all their! And it came to pass, after many thoughts and emotions well-groomed, | weeks,’ that Matthew Woll, vice- polished and neat. None of these! president of the American Federa- had ever gone hungry, none of these | tion of Labor, acting president of had ever come home with aching | the openshop National Civic Fede- limbs to dark dismal houses and|ration and labor faker extra- watched the youth of their children /ordinary, arose at the convention of swallowed up by the mills, chained|the United Textile Workers of to the relentless wheel of exploita-| America in New York City, and de-| tion and wage-slavery, livered one of his flaming, patented These were the possessors of denunciations of the Communists | son suffered from similar “shy- ness.” is But imagine the consternation of ; was always a revol of the workers and peas Soviet country, and what d before his syes during the ten years of great onstructive work has made him ‘riend and defender of the Soviet yower. Without any vacillation, in vords which cannot be twisted and urned he gave expression to this ‘s a social and political writer in an rticle dedicated to the Tentn An- tiversary of the October Revolu- ion—“My Congratulations” pub- ished in the Moscow newspaper. This article caused great excite- aent among all the White Guards broad. The article was a stone hrown into the emigre morass. It hould be stated that generally peaking Gorki was not greatly onored among the emigres. The White Guards. Emigre newspapers which con- idsred themselves “friends of the eople” and “revolution were eeply offended when revolution wept them from their path as soon s they went against the revolution, gainst October, and they could not f course forgive Gorki, the intellec- gal, his “treachery.” No gossip ‘as considered too dirty to be used y the White Guard em orki. White Guard writers were > bitter against Gorki that they egan even to cast doubt in in- umerable article and feuilletons on orki’s gift as an artist: there is sally nothing great in this writer. Gorki’s October article in which e says that he is proud of the new} ussians, in which he welcomes the oviet power and speaks of its ac- vievements, filled the cup of emi- ve patience to overflowing. Thite penny-a-liners replied to this rticle in their organs ‘Rul” and Dni.” The author of the “Reply” ays: “What induces you (i. e., Gorki) to asely flatter these illdoers and to 2ep silent on their crimes.” Gorki’s Reply. Tn the “‘Izvestia” of December 25 orki gives a fit answer to the nigre penny-a-liners. At the same me Gorki replied to the well-known ussian Menshevik Dan whose anderous article appeared on Nov- mber 7 in the “Manchester uardian” side by side with Gorki’s tticle dedicated to the Tenth An- Versary of October. This is what orki writes: wo Anonymous and Pseudonym Writers. “I deem it necessary to inform 1e author of ‘The Reply’ and those ho are of one mind with him that ashy letters such as this, I have en receiving very often. Formerly, lack-hundred elements’ were writ- & ™e in this strain, threatening ith all manner of things just as sople of whom 15-20 years ago I wought to be true enemies of all ack-hundred ideology, are threat- ting me now. Literature of this nd did not prevent me then from tionist, a friend res against} The} Maxwell Anderson Play on Sacco- Vanzetti Case Coming | new play by Maxwell Anderson based on the Sacco-Vanzetti }case is now on its way for early |production here. The play was joriginally called “Gods of | Night,” but it will be known here Jas “Gods of the Lightning.” Mr. Anderson will have his play |produced on Broadway by Hamil- |ton MacFadden, who has two more |plays from the same source, “Hell on Wheels” and “The Sea Wife.” Mr. MacFadden is a member of the younger generation of theatrical |producers, having first tried his luck on Broadway only last season, Jand this season it looks as if he |would have a Maxwell Anderson |cycle of plays to offer. “Gods of the Lightning” goes into | production immediately and will be the first of the three to appear. Outside of the leading role, ~ labor organizer, which will be played by Charles A. Bickford, the casting has not yet been settled. Bickford was seen here last season in “Bless You, Sister.” In writing “Gods of the Light- ning” Mr, Anderson has had a col- laborator, Harold Hickerson. It may be remembered that ‘Mr. Anderson collaborated with Laurence Stall- ings in writing that famous war play, “What Price Glory?” From advance accounts of “Gods of the Lightning” it looks as if this play would stir up as much excitement and comment as did “What Price | Glory?” Anderson is also respon- sible for “Saturday’s Children,” |one of the hits of last season. BARRYMORE THEATRE TO | OPEN IN OCTOBER The new Ethel Barrymore Thea- |tre, now under course of construc: tion on West 47th. Street, will be | dedicated by Ethel Barrymore in |the new G. Martinez Sierra play, “The Kingdom of God,” the latter part of October. Rehearsals of the play are now on and the opening will occur in Cleveland. Following this the Sierra play will go to De- troit and Washington previous to the New York premiere. Soviet Engineers Here to Purchase Machinery “n the next five years,” said Mr. Chramtsoff, chief engineer of the Central Paper Trust of the Soviet | Union, “we plan to purchase $130,- 000,000 worth of plant equipment. of be bought in the which half will United States.” John Chramtsoff and Jacques Gor- the | course) and because a revision will “only bring into clearer light the |character of our new concerns.” |: Jenks by no means recommends the complete rejection of the Amend- iment. Some of its provisions, he says. “would form suitable material \for a treaty of mutual friendship, by which Cuba would agree to allow jno foreign bases on the island and to enter into no agreements which would menace American interests.” | Scan oS IN “ELMER THE GREAT.” Developing his program of a |more efficient imperialist program, Jenks says: “The United States is now the most powerful nation in the | world, the most impregnable to | attack, as menacing as any to | other nations, the most conspicu- ous obect of international jeal- ousy. Able to compel interna- | tional recognition of our rights | and most of our claims to right, | we need friends more than legal | status in the controversies in | which we may be involved. And | our abnormal relations with Cuba Walter Huston will play the chief; are becoming more of a liability roie in Ring Lardner's baseball com-| than an asset in our efforts to de- edy, “Elmer the Great,” which fend ourselves by securing the George M. Cohan will present at the, good will of our Hispanic neigh- Hudson Theatre Monday night. bors.” = This program is by no means new. \It is a reflection of a significant WRITERS JOIN IN shift in American diplomacy which Morrow is now busy applying in Mexico, and which the United States \put over at the Havana conference | Kid gloves may hide, but they don’t |wash the bloody hands of American rai : | imperialism. Haessler and Whitaker) tt is in these new imperialist |methods, put over by Wall Street, Score Frame-up | that Jenks sees hope for Latin Amer- Er ie ., .|lea. “The great business aggre- fin ee editor | ates, which are the most evident service) in 3 statement “s the, Na. | ¥mbols of American power in Cuba, tional Office of International Labor 1#v¢ siven hostages for their sedate Netense on the Tom Mooney and behavior to the New York money Warren Billings frame-up declares: | ™@*ket. pereaym “Why doesn't candidate Hegbert ivpatiaiies! Hoover break his silence gn the Tom| With this as a premise, Jenks pro- Mooney frame-up? Why doesn’t U, | ceeds to defend the bloody Machado S. Senator Hiram Johnson stop| dictatorship, which has butchered gumshoeing and come out in the|and tortured hundreds of Cuban open in Mooney’s fight for full jus-| labor leaders. tice? “Cries of alarm at the rottenness “Because both Hoover and John-|of Cuban polities or at the tyrany son are afraid of the power that|of Machado’s remote imitation of wanted to hang Mooney and has| Mussolini, threats or rumors of in- succeeded in keeping him in jail 12|tervention, may agitate investors years, the California money power.” | and disturb the conditions that have Robert Whitaker, a writer on the enabled Cuba to borrow money more Pacific coast, writing to Martin|cheaply than Florida and Cuban Abern, assistant national secretary railways to get loans as favorably |of the I. L. D., ‘states: as American.” “There ought to be, of course, an| In the Machado regime, which has immediate and unconditional re-| steadily served as a watchdog for \lease of Tom Mooney and Warren|the interests of the American Sugar |K. Billings from their long and un-|Trust and J. P. Morgan and Co. | Just, imprisonment in the peniten-| and as an obedient puppet of im- |tiaries of California. It ‘is known | perialist and militarist policies of | to everyone who is not impervious| the United States, Jenks sees a jto the truth, and has made any| movement towards Cuban “natioral- | reasonable effort to get at the facts inva? |that these men are wholly innocent é | of the crime which was used to put! them behind the bars, and that they| are kept there not because of guilt upon their part, but because of their activities as labor agitators.” The National Office, stated Abern HARRY FREEMAN. authorities for approval.” Any “de- cent” person would not have writ- ten such stuff, but Mr. Dan did so, iacheff, both of the Supreme Eecon- omic Council of the Soviet Union, ar- rived here yesterday to purchase >ing my work; it does not prevent @ now, neither will it prevent me . the future. As an old bird-catcher, lis intensifying its campaign on be- \half of Mooney and Billings. It is necessary to develop a greater mass Moreover, in perfect unanimity with the anonymous writers he yvaises a hue and cry about the “bru- |tality’ of the workers’ and pea- ‘en when I do not see the bird, I tow what its song is. I also know wat ‘reforms,’ for instance, reforms ! Peter I, were also condemned by sople who wanted to lead ‘the old fe.’ “But today not Peter the Great is orking in the Soviet Union, but van the Great—worker and peasant mnbined, and it is not a question yw of ‘reforms’ but of a radical iange of all the foundations of the life. This explains the condem- ition heaped by the lovers of the yod old days on the head of the orkers’ and peasants’ government | hich leads steadily the mas sw life. “I know that in Russia there was ad still is much that is bad, and I every reason to assume that I iow more about this than the au- toa ‘ors of the anonymous letters, But| At the same time an enormous num- | test ywhere and never has the good P¢ yen as good as it is now in Ruséia, id nowhere and never has the bad en so relentlessly exposed, no- here is such an energetic fight put | 3 against the bad as in the Soviet) nion. * * *# Admits Mistake, “The authors of the anonymous i and together with them Mr. well-known Menshevik) af machinery for the paper manufac- turing plants Every new reader of The DAILY WORKER 18 a potential soldier in the coming battles of the workers. the “Sozialistitcheski Vestnik’’ want ‘to know why I speak now differ- ently than in 1917. |In 1917 I was mistake eorely afraid that pr |tatorship would lead to the disper- jsal and downfell of the politically educated working class Byishevi the only truly revolutionary fore Jand that their downfall would for a Tong time obscure the very idea of \roeial revolution, Everyone knows that I was not the only one to be | mistaken at that, that many Bol-| |sheviks were in the same boat as I, yr of intellectuals realized that they had «so been mistaken when they looked upon themselves as a | revolutionary force. Ten years have passed since then and during this period labor and creativeness, although | this work has been and is being im- |peded by “cultured” Europe, whose bourgeoisie is encouraged in this ly Russian emigres, people who an dic-| wonderful work has been|In fact what would you do if you |done in Russia, in all the spheres of | were not such “have been mistaken” and-are dis-| thought it necess; pressure upon the authorities. A rotogravure pamphlet, profusely il- lustrated, is to be issued in the ftext couple of weeks by the National Office, and it is hoped to give the widest distribution to the Mooney- Billings case in this manner. sants’ power, forgetting evidently the recent past, the mass shooting of workers, the “Lena incident,” the |Jawish pogroms in 1903, November |9, and many other incidents of the same kind -— the road to the Amur region, the tens of thousands of ople condemned to penal servitude, gusted with their mistakes and also Oe dessinahle war bi 1914-18, and with the recognition of their own fina!!y what White generals did in insignificanee. Russia with the benevolent partici- Freedom of Slander. , pation of some Russian “revolution- | y isto ant flattering the workers’ | ists” and a considerable number of {ane pecans, Boa ss espe @n- | “highly qualified” intellyctuals, Dan city 6 dnenice people with ioveces evidently fails to understand that labor and creativetans:, View do wae there is brutality which arises in the |like my enthusiaam, It would. be | Pe0Ple from @ feeling of revenge for been anxious to “please” anyone and | there Maia a eptellby, Orletna tine: particularly people of your frame |? the self-defence of a people sur- of mind. I do not, of course, pro- |ToUnded by secret and open traitors, | against the petty-insults, by its irreconcilable enemies. This |threats and against the lies and| brutality is not without cause, and |slanders which you hurl at me sim- | ‘his is its justification. vly beeause you have “nothing bet-| , “But there is a brutality of para- ter” to do. I know that freedom. of | ites who, being accustomed to live |slander is your slogan and delight,|by the labor of the enslaved, are again endeavoring to enslave the people which has won liberty and freedom. Such brutality has no jus- tification. “I remind Mr. Dan of this, of course not for the sake of polemics but to teach him a lesson, M. GORKI.” adepts at lying? ey | In his article Dan pointed out that |prior to publishing my congratula- tions to the workers’ and peasants’ power in the English newspaper “I to send it to the. - wealth and power, their manners im- for the part they were playing in| peccable, flaunting bright agreeable|the New Bedford textile strike. | | smiles. | | . eee. sa * 8 A fine drizzling rain began to fall) Matthew was right. It was the as I left the dock. A newsboy thrust) Communists and the Textile Mill} a New Bedford Mercury in my face. | Committees that had forced the call-| Strike news. Joseph Costa, a young, ing of the strike. It was they who! striker, had entered a classroom) had rallied the nearly 30,000 work- when the teacher was absent, had ers, given them fighting slogans and| denounced the American flag and|demands that were not merely a urged the children to pledge al- servile begging for crumbs. We! legiance to the Red Flag of the| want not only the revoking of the) workers. The teacher and the prin-| ten per cent wage-cut, but a 20 per! cipal were indignant. Joseph Costa|cent increase, a 40-hour, five-day would vay dearly for his blasphemy. | Week and the abolition of the speed-| Strike news. ‘The‘end of the tex.) Wet Passe what the strikers say, | tile strike was near and leaders of 974 they are saying it thru their the Textile Council were reported) R¢W Union, a real fighting union, considering favorably the new the New Bedford Textile Workers’ | “specialization” plan which the more| Union of the Textile Mill Commit. progressive mill owners were ad-, ‘¢¢s: vocating and which was absolutely} The little Scotch weaver, Bill necessary if the New Bedford in-| Murdoch, the hulking Yankee, Fred dustry was to survive. Mr. Batty) Beal, the Passaic veterans, Eli Kel- and Mr. Binns repudiated the stand | ler, Jack Rubinstein and Ellen Daw-| of the Communists and the Textile|son, Samieras, the eloquént Portu- Mill Committees, ete. |guese, August Pinto, the picket lead- Former Judge: Panken, “the poor | er—these are the heroes of the New | man’s friend,” is coming to sprinkle | Bedford struggle in the minds of the poor people of New Redford with |the workers. And the respectable some of his friendship. A pity so |citizens, Batty and Binns, are the few of the poor people will be able |hated renegades, to benefit by the Judge’s kindness, as only a handful of them ever at- tend the Textile Council meetings. But at least the socialist party is ake Toe Yes, the Communists are active in| |New Bedford, tho there wasn’t a sending its choicest fossils to drum jingle Communist there before the up trade for Mr. Batty and Mr./strike. Now there is a Party Pinns, who are compelled to while | branch with over a hundred mem-| away the dull hours playing poker | bers, nearly all of them mill work- at their headquarters in the New|ers, a Young Workers League with Bedford Labor Temple. jabout 90 members, and a branch of IL |the Young Pioneers, embracing sey- eral hundred strikers’ children. | IE milli d (Be muller, ue buadies tgusay LT attended a meeting of the Young human beings earn their bread |, Beg 4 ig; Workers League. Young bi d | 1 |W cag wz boys an by slaving in the textile mills of tht ie, practically ‘all of them strik- country. This is a larger number| 4 Dit explorer infers putes basic |S learning the elements of the industry and they constitute one of pass Sirugele—a term which pro-| the most ruthlessly exploited 820-| petare ‘ey x * em had even heard) tions of the American workingelass. | °° 5 LC: i Only about 30,000 of these 1,100,000; S°me of these Portuguese girls are organized in the official A. F. of |9%¢ Strikingly beautiful. One of L. union,-the ‘United Textile Work-| ‘hem, who seemed to be quite con- ers of America, which has been in| Slows of her, good looks and her existence for some 36 years. (With | Prilliant smile, was unusually quick the defection of several Passaic and|®t @"Swering questions., Comrade! New York locals at the recent U. T. Therese is so gay and radiant, she W. convention in New York, the doesn’t look at all like a person who membership of the union has been 8 Spent many hours of her 17 greatly reduced.) Out of the more | Years behind bleak mill walls. than a million textile slaves 28,000,,, Later I was told: Comrade| have been thrust into the center of | Therese must go away; she must the stage in one of the epic struggles | !@Ve for the west at once. Com- of the American class war—the| rade Therese has—T. B. Comrade New Bedford textile strike. At the Therese is so gay and radiant... ./ time the strike was called only a| Ill. few thousand of these workers had been organized in the American) Federation of Textile Operatives whose Textile Council in New Bed- ford has since affiliated with the WT Ws: William E. G. Batty, secretary of Several of us piled into the bat-/ tered automobile of a comrade and| he took us around the town. As we sped along thru the South End, he| | pointed out the various mills to me. | Here was the Taber Mill, an ugly the New Bedford Textile Council, |Sullen structure, owned by John| and Abraham Binns, treasurer, had| Sullivan, president of the New Bed-| for years been honored and re-|f0rd Cotton Manufacturers’ Asso-| spected members of the New Bed-) ciation, and chief spokesman for the | ford community. Mr. Binns was| bosses. Here was the Nonquit Mill, | elected Justice of the Peace, for|the Potomska Mill, the Whitman) which office he was eminently fitted | Mill, where only a few weeks before | by his years of dxperience as a ser-|@ huge picket demonstration had vant of the mill owners. And in| been held at which 256 strikers were truth, it has been the sole endeavor @!tested after an attack by mem- of both Mr. Batty and Mr. Binns to | bers of the National Guard wielding promote peace in the New Bedford| bayonets. Here was the Page Mill, community even if the mill workers |'" every day to grovel before the |had to accept a dollar or so less a| Where about 65 scabs were sneaking | week, or work an hour or so longer, bosses and do their bidding, traitors or operate a machine or so more, |‘ their class, 7 |My. Batty and Mr, Binns were much| And here is the Kilburn Mill. I esteemed by their fellow-citizens and|look at it with surprise: a fine, more than once evoked the praise|modern building with ivy climbing | of press and pulpit for the spirit of |up the walls. service which animated all their|sce the inside!” says the comrade at activities. the wheel. | Even so did Mr. James Tansey,! Mill after mill Z | president of the A. 'F. T. 0., com:|slave-pen, all of tancante ahi port himself in the neighboring | ing: come in, we give you our dust town of Fall River, So that in time |and dreaviness the endieas white of |his fellow-citizens chose Mr, Tan- | our machines, ‘he long brutal Read { jsey as Commissioner of Police, in|of tgil, the ache, the tired ae which office he spared no efforts to|darl® shadow ensori bey, a ' ¢ covering all your lives, quell with neatness and dispatch | Come in, come in, we gi | a iy i. give you walls every attempt of foreign hoodiums | of ivy—and T. B. and agitators to create violence and ‘overthrow the government and in-! | stitutions which the founders of this) .,(The second article by A. B, country had established for the! Magil on New Bedford will ap- good of all. pear i an early issue.) And it was certainly very em- Te barassing to Mr. Batty and Mr. FLOODS IN MEXICO Binns when the members of their), MEXICO CITY, Sept. 20 (UP),— union insisted on taking a strike|Flods in the Panuco River region | vote on the ten per cent wage-cut have caused abandonment of home: | which the mill owners had decided/1aneches and oil wells, a dispatch to present to them, But Mr, Batty | from Tampico said today. The dam- | and Mr. Binns would see to it that! age was reported to be the heaviest things should turn out as they in years, Rail service hetween Tam-— should. Even as Mr. Tansey had pico and Monterey was suspended scen to it in Pall River where the|for three days, ‘ | Be | | “But you ought to J) By EDWIN ROLFE. Knowing (as John did) nothing of the way men act when men are roused from lethargy, and having nothing (as John had) to say to those he saw were starving, just as he starved, John was like a workhorse. Day by day he saw his sweat cement the granite tower, (the edifice his bone had made) to stay listless as ever, older every hour. John’s deathbed is a curious affair: the posts are made of bone, the spring of nerves, the mattress bleeding flesh. Infinite air, compressed from dizzy altitudes, now serves his skullface as a pillow. Overhead a vulture leers in solemn mockery (knowing what John had never known: that dead workers are dead before they cease to be). cag ; wera. Sl 42nd St. and Broadway HIT| 31G week “THRILLING—REALISTIO"—NEW YORK TIMES “Q SHIPS” AUTHENT! ACTUAL | il | ALBEE EXTRA ADDED FDATURE— “KILLING THE KILLER” A Cobra and Mongoose Fight to Death THRILLING SUBMARINE WARFARE! ONE SOLID YEAR--423 Performances in N.Y. WOODS Presents z Arthur Hopkins Presents “Pleasant ‘intelligent | | ¢ , and entertainment | entertaining NEWS AMERICAN A new play in two parts and ten scenes by Sophie Treadwell Plymouth Thea. W.45thst.bves.8.30 PREUCN DS aes Sat., 2:30 On BATTEDSON eee a genuine comedy hit/ | HUDSON West 44 St. Hives, at 8:30 Called LOVE} —Alison Smith, World. Ay EDWIN BURKE vaye.xot THE LADDER VIOLET HEMING & MINOR WATSON CORT ee ak EORM? |, anda brilliant cast 8:30" MATS.WEDS SAT, fon ‘A Clean Hit’, Winchell, Graph. ‘Thea, 44,W.ofB’way.Ev. | = Mts. Wed. & Sat. Money Refunded if Not Satistled With Play. GUY OPETTEH DE WOLF) with CLAIRBORNE FOSTER ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER St.B pF W.44thSt.Bves.8.20 in a musical romance of Chopin UTTLE Mats. Wed. &Sat.2.30 WHITE LILACS i ‘Thea..48St.88Av.Hvs. Martin Beck 8.40.Ma,Sat., Wed.2.40 Golden presents a Comedy Drama Evenings at 8:25 Mats, Wed. & wat NITE HOSTESS ( SCHOLL MAREE | by Philip Dunnin, CHANIN'S46th St. W. of Broadway | Staged by Winchell Smith OOD N EW | You're in the fight when you with GEO. OLSHX ana nis music | write for The DAILY WORKER. Domestic/ Okeh & Odeon ‘ G Moonlight Sonata B Bartered Bride (The) Battle Symphony ....... (Beethoven) Blue Danube Waltz A Boheme (La) Cc Nachtbummler (Der) Naila-Intermezzo. oO Old Folks at Home Old enealy, (The) . Parsifal Peasant Girl's Dream Caprice Viennois .. Cavalleria Rusticana D Danse Macabre Dear Eyes... Dear old Munich Don Juan-Overture Raymond-Overture Rigoletto s Serenade (La) Metra Silent Night ... 5 Sirenes (Les) . * Southern Roses (Waltz) Swallows of Austria £0) der Herrlichste von BNO aim d gta Hstudiantina-Waltz rt | 8822) Swallows of Austria ...., Faust-Waltz Fair Rosemary Forever,or not at Forget-me-not Tales Woods as: Tosea Selections . Traviata (Selections) from the all Goldshower Waltz Venetian Barcarolle Von ewiger Liebe Eternal) Hawaiian Chimes. Humoresque (Dvorak) w Weaner Madl'n (Girls of Vienna) ete anes Wedding of’ Sleeping Beauty (The) A Light Cavalry Linden Tree Lohengrin Love Waltz Tunes ™M 3187 When Lights are law’! 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