The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 6, 1928, Page 4

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ye Z Page Four Spee HOW TRADE) UNIONS IN USSR WORK SOVIET TRADE UNIONS. By Robert W. Dunn. Vanguard Press. | $.50, Reviewed by JACK HARDY. | Te Soviet regime is organized and administered in the interests of the Ryssian workers and pea- sants, - ‘These workers protect them- selves and practically all of their major life interests through the heir professionalniye tide unions. In giving us a pic- ture, therefore, of the position, ac- tivities. and power of the Soviet trade“ unions, Robert Dunn has, in yeality, measured for us the degree of suuccess which has accompanied the aims and objectives of the Soviet | economically advance medium of soyuze, or state. The donbt, one of the most important so- ieee tial forces in the Soviet Union. - a They have abandoned the eratt| Soule Writes a Bow principle entirely and are built upon | thé basis of industrial unionism. Afound the slogan of “one factory, one union,” their membership has grown from 1,475,000 in the first half of 1917 to 8,418,362 in 1921 fnd to over 10,250,000 at present. This membership, the largest of any country in the world, is em- braced in only 23 national industrial WAGE ARBITRATION. (S Cases 1920-1924.) By Soule. Macmillan Comy Reviewed by JOHN I HE author begin posing the que purpose of a be SHERM «anions. These, in turn, are united | tions?” in a single central organization, the} ‘This is a bad begir All-Union Central Council of Trade | avowed disciple t Unions. |method. Purpos: The daily life of the Russian|all, “dogma”—these worker “from the cradle to the|led to believe hav« grave” is centered around his union | thinking of the nev organization. Here he acquires|scientists. F Mr lessons in co-operative activity. He|rapidly sketched also learns to understand and ap-|out to explain the preciate the power which is his, and | book. to-exercise his responsibilities as a| Jt must be remarked that member of the ruling class. of his|/not unsuccessful in country. the attempt os us cases app of sentimenta’ reas' but in a quite different way th —_- he supposes. . | * 8 Emit y Of Ele | 2 ex repay accomast * 4 Jerature on the labor move S d the social forces, which is th CANAINQAVIAN, | cF the ripening of the | S . U; . mind, this book occupies a unique ) place in that it attempts t facts, the raw material of a MOSCOW, (By Mail).—The idea | still to be. of @ Scandinavian Soviet Confer-| tt is a case book, the author t ence arose when the delegates of the|ys, “To investigate a wage two Danish unions attended the|is one excellent way of lea Eighth Congress of the Leather | good deal about economic Workers’ Union of the U. S. S. R.|tions and the way they wor During the Congress preliminary|we have selected for negotiations were held between the|wage arbitration. From these pr¢ @elegates of the Danish trade unions|sumably we are to draw some con {who were empowered to conduct clusions—about what? such negotiations) and the leaders! Soule is careful to avoid tel of the LWU USSR. After the Dan-|us, exactly. Yet he must mean th ish delegates had left Moscow, the |conclusions are to be drawn, els Central Committee LWU USSR why the posing of the que: |i up a Draft Agreement on to the purpose of the book? yy and Friendship, proposing | * ” . nf) # conference be arranged in Co-! writing in “The Indep > to discuss this Draft! yyy 5, 1924, shortly ae & 0. Plan had been int \ initiative of calling such a| Soule fell all over h grence was taken by both the of the scheme. Long | wanish unions. The Scandinavian had any opportun Union of Harness Makers and Up-|the plan pragma he had ¢ holsterers immediately agreed to ready jumped from the narrow this, while the boot and shoe opera-|ledge of “unbiased’ t tives of Denmark decided to put up|the slushy stream this question for the decision of praise. the Northern Secretariat (Cartel)| That the left wingers and Cow of Boot & Shoe Operatives. At the|munists condemned the scheme in meeting of the Secretariat held in advance, on a priori groun tay, 1928, the Swedes demanded| for him a compelling ot only that the initiative of call-| drawing the plan closer to his bos: ing a conference should be given up,/and denouncing them for the but that all participation in it|“dogma” of the class struggle. So should be renounced. lhe writes in July of 1924: The result of this meeting and| “The story of #ie spread of the the pressure brought to bear by the|plan to the Canadian railroads is ‘Scandinavian and international re-|instruetive and exciting. It might formists was that besides the initia- |seem that such a plan might be wel- tors—the Scandinavian Union of|comed by railroad employes eve: Harness Makers and Upholsterers where. But when it was proposed and the Leather Workers’ Union of |in Canada, new obstacles were en- ; the USSR—only the Finnish Leath-|countered. These arose from the ter. Workers’ ion participated in/left wing elements of the labor Conference. There were two|movement. . .” points on the agenda of this con-| The bad left wingers evid y ference: (1) On the LWU USSR | would not wait until 1928 for the antering the Nuremburg Interna-|pragmatic Soule to discover just sional (a point raised first of all|how “instructive and exciting” it »the Union of Boct and Shoejcould be! gratives) and (2) The Draft) “The left wingers charged that Agreement on Unity and Friend-!the unions, having been defeated in ship. At the request of the dele-|open combat, chose this plan as a gates of the Russian unicn the first | weak way of establishing themselves removed from the agenda, |by selling out the wor to th of it was totally /employers. . The left winger wupértiuous ir of the very det-|charged that the plan was merely inite and clear attitude of the LWU|a device for speeding up whic USSK to this question. With re-|would bring in piece work, gard to the second point on the|bonuses, pacemakers, and all agenda, the Draft Agreement pro-|rest of the anathematized paraph wused by the LIV USSR was|nalia, which the worker convention- adopted unanimously with certain|ally understands by ‘efficiency.’ hanges and signed by the repre-|was easy to deny this, and the | Sentatives of all three unions. was supported by a letter from the ‘MIKE GOLD TO LECTURE Series on Drama at the Workers School Michael Gold, editor of the New) house up to the latest gangster Masses, and one of the directors of | melodrama on Broadway. O'Neil, the New Playwrights’ Theatre, will | Anderson, George Abbott and Anne give a special course consisting of | Nichols will be treated. Gold will six lectures on Social Forces in Cur-| invite prominent actors and direc- rent American Drama, at the Work- | tors and playwrights to lead some yrs School, 26-28 Union Square, | of the discussions. Wednesdays at 8:30 p. m. The first) This course will be followed the session of this class will be held Det. 10. _ The course will consist of a series af lectures and discussions to ex- mine from a revolutionary view- int the current American theatre mm its first days of modernist lay og the Provincetown Play- wie | class in Socim] Aspects of American | Literature, with Joseph Freeman as | the instructor. Workers gnd_ stu- dents are urged to register at once. For copy of the free catalog write to the Workers School, 26-28 Union | Square. b Ire > th | second half of the fall term by a! ? YEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1928 A tedious, grandiose _ historical drama waddles its way thru six- teen long, lugubrious scenes at the Yiddish Art Theatre on Fourteenth Street. ““Kidush Hashem” is a rather heavy-hoofed dramatization of a feeble novelette of the same name by Sholom Asch, who happens to be one of the outstanding Yiddish |prose writers. | The play deals with one of the early class wars in Poland, the re- volt in 1648 of the oppressed Ukrainian masses against the des- end landowners. In this war the Jews, who occupied a favored mid- dle position and received many priv- ileges from the overlords, played a something less than glorious role. Under the guidance of their reli- gious shamans and other pious, | well-to-do leading citizens, they ee ealTHUS A PRAGMATIST PROBES LABOR with a Purpose And It’s Not Hidden cials on the Baltimore and sath all the specific ob- the theorists was the e ‘class struggle’—that the ¥s and masters have nothing . Yet the new plan ly safeguarded, from view of the workers’ group interest, that an exposition of operation disarmed this suspi- poir This has been quoted at some h in order to show just how ate the estimate of the “left s” really was. Of course, will not admit this—yet. His must be remembered, ends 1924! The B. & O. Plan is ated in it. Fortunately even abid B. & O. eulogists, Mr. Soule himself, have pressed their doubts about eriment, Evidently was not “sufficiently safe- ule ok, with ilroad workers, particular- he 100,000 who have been forced f jobs by the new “ - & tudy, pursues the old ill get at the facts. r among different from time to time. tions are changing con- Only don’t set down a a program, a dogma of ac- of struggle! ndustries or rather sections ies were chosen for exam- by Mr. Soule, the Book and Printing trades in New York the Chicago packing house railroad cases; the Cleve- ses. Detailed ex- ries of the argu- iployers, the unions, and of the arbitrators are , and some value, of course. for instance, to arguments of the union s in some cases prepared e’s own labor bureau in mpt is made to extend ond the debate over e cost of living. This times when the print- rs were making from t to 50 per cent profit and when thousands of union mem- bers were out of employment, It f course, beyond the province labor bureau to fundamental the- tructive, was, ©: of re So when the cases of arbitration of the Chicago packing house cases teriously with the year 1921, yond the province of Mr. union-smashing campaign of. It is beyond the Soule to point out ong unions fare better in ar- bitration than relatively week ones. For the Communists to under- stand the purpose underlying the wage arbitration and class collabora- now being advocated ers. and labor fakers icant than to know the which are resulting schemes, > we consider the facts What is called the Gym- dogma, but what is really analysis of the has been built on just h a structure of facts. The prag- ts that there has not yet sufficient data to enunciate a tiple of class struggle. The s, the steel workers, the tex- workers ial proces: everywhere know better. When they are inclined for a moment to forget, their kind masters with the aid of the police undertake a gentle re- minder! And so it is that Soule can gath- 300 pages of data, stuff gath- ered presumably to help chart the course of labor’s advance without finding it negessary to indicate that wage arbitration is impossible in the case of large masses of unor- ganized workers. He does say that arbitration is the outgrowth of col- lective bargaining (a rather doubt- ct, by the way) but nowhere icates the utter ludicracy of bitration as a principle to be followed by the labor movement in a country in which 90 per cent of the workers are unorganized. This is not Soule’s purpose. . 8 om What is his purupose? The an- efforts to crush the revolt of the Ukrainian masses. And as often happens to middle-of-the-road peo- ple, the Jews wer ethe first and the greatest victims. Betrayed by their “friends,” the Polish nobles, they were left to face the fury of the | Ukrainian peasants, who, goaded on by their priests and _half-barbaric leaders, slaughtered thousands of Jews. It is this slaughter of the Jews, rather than the class significance of the Chmielnicki uprising, that of course occupies the attention of the average patriotic Jew. The mere mention of Chmielnicki’s name is the | signal for Zionists, rabbis, socialists, cloak manufacturers, etc., to put on their praying shawls and stand me- taphorically at the Wailing Wall of Jerusalem, beating their breasts in loud lamentation, And Maurice Schwartz, collaborat- ing with Sholom Asch, goes in heav- ily for this religio-nationalistic tear- squeezing in “Kidush Hashem.” The |play has been done in spectacular |fashion, Every scene is fortissimo. |Fully 50 actors, lavishly garbed, | wander in and out of the 16 scenes. | And yet the general effect is tawdry jand inept. The play has no unity; |it merely rambles—until it finds its wy to god. |swer is, to befuddle, to sidetrack, to thwart the advance of the work- ing class. Does he do this con- |sciously, intentionally? | That is for the pragmatists to discover! It is sufficient to say that the |book finds its place in that rapidly accumulating literature the purpose jand result of which is to help dis- arm the workers, to preach to them the dogma of class collaboration rather than of struggle—in short to serve the capitalist system. | Music Notes Watt W. Webber, tenor, who makes his debut at Town Hall Thursday evening, will sing a re- citative and aria from the oratorio Jeptha by Handel, a group of Ger- man songs, two French songs and a group of English songs. | | Rita Neve, English pianiste, will appear at Town Hall recital on the | the Yidd ish potic rule of the Polish feudal lords | § supported the Polish nobles in’ their | “Kidush Hashem” Opens at SUNDAY NEWSPAPER IAS -A' SOCIAL FORCE Art Theatre STAR OF “BILLIE” ee Sunday editions of the Amer- iean press are nine or ten times as large as the daily editions, and contains so much reading matter that most people can only afford to read part of the paper. A sample of the kind of edition which the larger papers publish on Sundays is that of the New York Herald- Tribune of September 16, which consisted of 240 pages. This is somewhat larger than the usual number of pages in the Sunday Herald-Tribune, giving the paper an ‘opportunity to publish a self-con- gratulatory article on the achieve- ‘ment, but on the whole it is typical of the larger Sunday papers, such as the New York Times, World, and American. In this particular issue, there were about 800 columns of reading matter and illustrations and | Polly Walker, who has the pria-| 764 columns of advertisements. |cipal role in George M. Cohan’s new! ‘The Sunday Herald-Tribune is ‘musical play, “Billie,” which was| divided into thirteen sections, as ushered in at the Erlanger Theatre | follows: (1) general news of the this week. 8 |day; (2) special cable articles, gen- ~ |eral news, editorials and pages deal- |ing with finance, shipping and avia- ition; (3) news articles and automo- Z hile news; (4) sport news and clas- The Film Arts Guild announces | itiog advertisements; (5) real a foutth week at the Cameo for “Q-SHIPS”. IN FOURTH EER AT CAMEO. estate; (6) news of “society,” clubs, country resorts, travel, a guide for shoppers and school news; (7) news of the stage, music, cinema, paint- ing and sculpture; (8) radio sec- tion; (9) rotograveur section, con- sisting entirely of photographs; (10) the comic supplement—four pages of colored cartoons; (11) special magazine section for chil- dren; (12) the literary section; (13) the magazine section, consisting of special features, articles, fashions, recipes, etc. In order to print this edition, 1,200 rolls. of paper from 1,200 to 1,400 pounds each were run through the presses, and 17,000 pounds of ink ere consumed. One copy of this hanes weighed three and a half pounds. Nine modern presses, each with a capacity of turning out 36,- 000 thirty-two page papers an hour, were operated for 27 hours to tyrn out this edition of about 250,000. The printing of this Sunday news- paper begins Friday morning, when the magazine sections go to press. The news sections begin to go to press at 6 o’clock Saturday after- noon, and go on until about 4 o’clock “Q Ships,” the New Era production! |which depicts the thrilling part which the mystery boats of the Brit- ish navy played in their campaign against the U-boats during the world Sunday morning. war. Another item which remains on the Cameo program is “Killing \the Killer,” a Ufa short special de- | |picting a fight between a cobra and | mongoose. | The next attraction at the Cameo | | will be a program consisting of the} first Soviet comedy “3 Comrades and 1 Invention” and a Sovkino docu- | mentary film, “A Shanghai Docu-| ment,” which is a closeup of Chinese | life. . | “Mother Machree” takes posses- | |sion of: the Roxy sereen today. Vic- |tor MeLaglen and Neil Hamilton play the principal roles. pathy which Miss Treadwei she chooses to- depict; The Capitol Theatre’s first sound | |picture “Our Dancing Daughters,” | la new Metro synchronized film, star- | Arthur Hopkins presents Plymouth Theatre, W. 45th St. ‘co- | ’ attitudes, now entertain | , the militant workers | evening of October 18. Ernest Davis, tenor and Ivan Steschenko, basso, appear in joint recital at Town Hall on Saturday af- ternoon, October 20. Guy Maier will give a concert for | Young People at Steinway Hall, |Friday afternoon, October 26. Gina Pinnera, soprano, will give | |her recital at Carnegie Hall Monday levening, October 22. Workers School Course. on American Gov't. to) Be Given This Term) ‘One of the most important courses | that workers should take at the| Workers’ School in the present | \period of the Election Campaign is | “Study on American Government,” to be given by Joseph Brodsky, New | York labor lawyer, on Thursday | from 7 to 8:30 p. m. | This course is especially designed to prepare workers of foreign origin | for citizenship; to acquaint workers | with the nature of the American | Government, its constitution, struc-| ture and functioning; to clarify the | role of the various political parties; | and to explain to workers their) “rights” and status, whether as citi- zens, aliens, strikers or pickets. Such important concrete questions as| |naturalization, election laws, pro-| |jeedure regarding enrollment and |registration in Election Campaign. |This course in reality will be a | course dealing with many important |problems facing the workers. “La-| connect this fact with the|bor and the Law,” “Civics,” “Na-|Cconcert on the 1ith, the Beethoven turalization and Citizenship” and | “American Government.” | Anyone desiring further informa- tion concerning courses to be given at |the Workers’ School, 26-28 Union Square, can write for free catalog, or call at the office of the school. Mother, Facing Hunger Attempts to Kill Self) and Children; 1 Dead CLEVELAND, Ohio, Oct. 5 | (U.P).—A younug mother was in | the prison ward of City Hospital today accused of killing one of her three little daughters and attempting to end her own life | and those of the other two chil- | dren with poisoned ice cream. | She is Mrs. Anna Kemp, 28, who became estranged from her husband three months ago and it | is charged, chose death for her- self and her children rather than face a life of poverty. | Baby Mary, the youngest of the daughters, died early this morning, The other two, Julia, | seven, and Margaret, six, were | recovering. Mrs. Kemp's condi- | tion is critical. 17 Are Hurt, Five Wreck in Canada | HAMILTON, Ont., Oct. 5. (U.P). |The International Limited, Cana- ‘dian National Railroad’s crack ex- | press, was derailed near Aldershot |at 8:05 this morning when it was fide-swiped by a Canadian Pacific Kailroad freight, Seventeen persons were injured, ‘five seriously. | will have its first New York hear-| Seriously, in Rail | Two or three scenes of “Kidush | ring Joan Crawford, will be offered | Hashem” are excellently done and|at this theatre today. Harry Beau- the settings by S. Ostrowsky are oc-|mont directed this tale of from an casionally, as in the synagogue scene, original story by Josephine Lovett. executed with real imagination. But the intrinsically bad play is made| The Fifth Avenue Playhouse be-| oven worse by pretty terrible acting ginning today will show the latest by some members of the cast which cinema achievements of Robert is hardly redeemed by the good work | Florey, a young director of French | of Yedhiel Goldsmith, Bina Abramo- origin. These films are ““The Love vitz and the two unusually talented of Zero,” “The Life of 9413,” orig-| children, Hirsh Seidman and Rose jinally known as “The Suicide of a| Ellenberg. The play suffers, too, | Hollywood Extra,” and “The Cof-| from the characteristically chaotic |fin Maker.” : direction of Maurice Schwartz who | ‘gives a competent, tho uninspired, | PHILHARMONIC | Two new works will be presented | performance as the mystical Little | Tailor. | rae ‘, |by the Philharmonic-Symphony Or- | The incidental music by Joseph °? Lik Gace Beant’ Wee Achron, while far above the level of |hestta this week, Berni amen the play, lacks interest and distine- | "Pe" 0) ae Srinhg Aas The Bene gi te i |former will be played this afternoon, | preceded by the “Coriolanus” Over- ‘ture and followed by Mozart's Div-| ertimento and Strauss’ Till Eulen- Season Opens Next spiegel. Mr. Mengelberg has sche- | | duled the latter for-his Thursday af- | Thursday | : r |ternoon and Friday evening poe The Beethoven Symphony Or-|grams, together with the first | chestra opens its second season on| American performance of fragments | Thursday evening, in Carnegie Hall. | from Handel’s “Alcina,” and Tchai- Georges Zaslawsky, conductor of the | kovsky’s Symphony No. 4 in F min-| orchestra, has chosen the following |or. Next Sunday, Oct. 14, marks program for the occasion: Brahms |Mr. Mengelberg’s last appearance Fourth Symphony; “Enigma” Var- | until Thursday, November 1. | iations by Sir Edward Elgar; Stra-| Walter Damrosch takes up his vinsky “Petrouschka” and Howard baton for the first time this season Hanson’s “Nordic Symphony” which|on Saturday afternoon at Carnegie Hall, at the opening of his series of | six Symphony Concerts for Youn~| People. The program comprises: | Goldmark’s Overture “Spring”; the | first movement of Beethoven’s “Pastoral” Symphony; the Largo from Dvorak’s “New World” Sym- phony; Debussy’s Afternoon of a Faun, and a Polka-Gallop, “Thunder and Lightning,” of Strauss. LECTURES AND FORUMS Beethoven Symphony ing. Dr. Hanson, who is the direc- tor of the Eastman School of Mu- sic, will be present during the play- ing of his symphony. In addition to its Carnegie Hall Symphony Orchestra, Georges Zas- lawsky conducting, will play on Sat- | urday eyening, Oct. 13, at Water-| bury, Conn., with Erna Rubinstein, soloist. On Sunday afternoon, Oc- x Eves. 8:30. 50c,_ $1, . Mats. Wed. & Sat. EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director. REPERTORY FOR WERK OF OCTOBER 8 Mon. Eve., Oct. 8—“L'Invitation au Voyage.” Le Gallienne, Came- ron, Beck, Mooney. Tues. Eve., Oct. $—“The Would- Be Gentleman.” Brecher, Morr! Cameron, Kruger. Wed. Mat., Oct. 10—“Hedda Gab-~ ler.” Le Gailienne, Crawley, Leys- sac, Cameron, Hutchinson. Wed. Eve. Oct. 10—“The Cradle Song.” Le Gailienne, Brecher, Hutchinson, Kruger. Thurs. Eve. Oct. Would-Be Gentleman.” Morris, Cameron, Kruger. Fri. EXTRA HOLIDAY MAT. OCT. 12—“Hedda Gabler.” Le Gal- 11 — “The Brecher, lienne, Crawley, Leyssac, Came- ron, Hutchinson. Fri. Eve., Oct. 12—“La_Locan- diera”. Le Gallienne, Brecher, Leyssac, Crawley. Sat. Mat., Oct. 13—“L’Invitation au Voyage.” Le Gallienne, Came- ron, Beck, Mooney. Sat. Eve., Oct. 13—“The Would- Re Gentleman.” Cameron, Kruger. Brecher, Morris, (Mat, Today—“Hedda Gabler,” Tonight—“L'Invitation au Voyage.” “MACHINAL’ IS A TREAT FOR LOVERS OF GOOD ACTING .. + WHLL WORTH THE COST OF A TICKET.” —T. J. O'Flaherty, Daily Worker. “That which gives it distinction is the passionate sym- ll has felt for the little soul the tortured earnestness with which the part is played by Miss Zita Johann; and the whole, fine, compressed and intensely eloquent back- ground which Arthur Hopkins direction contrives to give the central theme.”—Arthur Ruhl, Herald Tribune. CHINAL” by Sophie Treadwell. — Mats. Thursday & Saturdays. BACK WITH A SECOND SMASH SUCCESS GEORGE JESSEL IN A NEW AMERICAN PLAY THEWARSONG NATIONAL 23ss3s35e E t 8,30; Pop. Mats. Wed. & Sat. CARL LAEMMLE'S Talking Motion Picture “LONESOME” with Gienn Tryon & Barbara Kent BEN BERNIE Himself & His Hotel oosevelt Orchestra ‘B.S. MOSS Bidway and 53rd St. OLON Matinees: 5c - 50c Cont. 1 to 11 p.m. “THRILL REAL —N. Y. Times 42nd_Street_and_ Broadway CAMEO Fai goge WEEK “Q SHIPS” ‘THRILLING eg AUTHENTIC — ACTUAL SUBMARINE WARFARE! EXTRA ADDED FRATURE— KILLING THE KILLER” A Cobra and Mongoose Fight to Death tober 14th, the organization will play in Bridgeport, Conn., at Fox- Poli Palace Theatre. INGERSOLL FORUM Guild Hall, Steinw: Bullding,. 118 Went 57th St., +o. SUNDAY EVENINGS Oct. 7—Save Arkansas Rally CLEMENT WOOD “Intellectual Assassination— The Arkansas 0) ge. Shall Rigots Bind the’ Minds of Children with the Bible?” (The first state-wide referendum Doris Humphrey, with Charles | Weidman and a group of dancers, | announces a recital at the Civic] Repertory Theatre, Sunday evening, October 28. MUSIC AND CONCERTS $1 $1. CHAMBER MUSIC Six Friday Eve, Concerts — Nov Dec. 21, Jan, 18, Feb. 1, March 1 April 5. The Lets Quartet; Sittig Trio; Mr. & Mrs. David Mannesi Hart House fever held to outlaw Evolution oc- Quartet; N. ¥. Chamber Musle Societys) fcurs in Arkansas Nov. 6. This, Strinj Ensemble. meeting is held to protest against the Foundamentalist infamy and to raise funds to defeat the fanat- les. Charles Smith, president of the 4A, leaves the day following for, Arkansas, his native state, to con- duct the campaign against the ref- erendum bill. Money is needed for | {the fight.) $1 ARTISTS’ RECITALS $1 Six Friday Eve, Concerts — Nov, 16; Dec. 14; Jan. 25: 15; March 8} rit 26. Api Horace Britt; Buy Ney; Russ! phonie Choir Mieezysiaw Munz; Erna Rubinstein; Michio Ito, Wahington Irving H. Irving Pl. Admission this night $1.00. and 16th St. $1 for subscription to Reserved Sents $1.50, EACH series of six concerts, Both IF YOU CAN NOT ATTEND THIS RALLY, WILL YOU NOT SEND 1,00 OR MORE TO HELP SAVE. ARKANSAS TO: Woolsey Teller, Sec’l, 119 East PhilharmonicSymphony | !----—-“*-"=-*->- MENGELBERG, conauetor | Carnegie Hall, Thin. Aft. at 3:00 | series $2. Mail orders to People's Symphony Concerts, 32 Union Square (Stuyvesant 9687), Also on sale at Macy's and Wanamakers, LABOR TEMPLE 14th St. and Second Ave. Beethoven; Strauss; Mozart; Wagner} Carnegie Hall, Thurs, Aft. Oct. 11, 2.30 Friday evening, Oct. 12, at 8.30 + SUNDAY, OCTOBER Sth, ‘Tchaikovsky — Whithorne || 5:00 p. m.: DR. G. F. BECK || nway Piano || Literature—The Creative Myths of ind—] 5, oan a Sear Mankind—“Parsifal SONG RECITAL Wa't W. Webber Concert Manager: Dantel Mayer, Inc, Steinway Piano— 7:15 p. m.: “Labor Temple Night” SPEAKERS: Dr. Beck, Dr. Chaffee, Dr. Schmalhausen and others. Special Music — All Welcome. 4 ree A ae SHUBERT Thee. 44,W.ofB'way.Ev. $:30;Mats, Wed.,Sat.2.30 GUY, ODETTE DE WOLF ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER in a musical romance of Chopin 29th St.&B'way. Eves. $:30 CASINO Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:30 MUSICAL COMEDY HIT LUCKEEGIRL CENTURY Thea... Central P: w. & #2 St, Eves. Mat.: Wednesdays & Saturdays, 2:30. SUNNYDAYS ‘The Musical Comedy Sensation w “THE WAR SONG” cuantns46th St.¥ of Broadway Mats. Wed. & Sat. with GHORGE OLSEN’S MUSIC, “atroxe” THE LADDER IN ITS REVISED FORM? Thea., W. 48 St. Evs, 8: CORT. ‘vtswea'e Bau” 8? Money Refunded if Not Satistied ‘With Play. Every new réader of The DAILY WORKER ie a potential soldier in the coming battles of the workers, KEITH-ALBEB AT4i st Starting LOVE - DRAMA PASSION ~ INTRIGUE Victor Hugo's | CONRAD VEIDT « MARY KETWAUEE ACTS Gul. omy LARRY RICH tom cite maemo ANS Omen ERLANGER THEA. ‘W. 44th ST. Evenings 8.30 — : Wednesdays & Saturdays, 2:3& George M. Cohan’s Comedia with POLLY WALKER in Mr. Cohan's Newest Musteal “BILLIE” LYCEUM eer, Went ate 2.80 WALTER HUSTON in Ring Lardner’s Ringing Hit ‘ELMER THE GREAT’ ‘Then. W. 44 St. Eves, at HUDSON Then Wed. Sat. 2:30 The funniest play the Nugents have _writte: “BY REQUEST” with ELLIOTT NUGENT Martin Beck jnssreteAcey NITE HOSTESS by hoy, Dunninj Staged b; ones, ine Maal —

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