The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 2, 1928, Page 4

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cage Four i — NEWS ee ~ OVEMBER 2, 1928 Inhuman Beatings, Orde BLIND AND GAS PRISONER WITH AMMONIA GUN Crooks With Influence Have It Easy ker Correspondent) (By a Wo I was v lad to see your re- cent edito: comment on. prison viots which occurred during the last mont The Daily and the Workers Party have paid too little attention to prison problems and prison work. -prisoner and a Commur d-like to see the Worke arty def the victims of a most brutal tem re- gardiess of whether they act blind- ly or organizationally. It is not nough to state that workers who vi e the capitalist laws and fall into the hands.of the guardians of private property are victims of a Vicious system. You must show how ‘and why. Brutal N. Y. System. I also want to take exception to the impression that the New York system is less brutal than ewhere. No doubt there are ex- of cruelty in other parts of nited States, but the New York stem is brutal enough, even the respected Mr. Lawes. I was not long in Sing Sing, but while I was there a little. storm occurred. It was on the morning when Ruth Snyder was brought to the prison. In. the excitement they forgot to! sook the beans for dinner, or per- haps they thought that the satis- faction of having airplanes circling about the place and photographers | hovering around would do for a meal. ay, they served the! beans half raw, and nothing else besides. Well, there was a clang of | metal and crockery in the mess-hall, and b-o-o-o-s loud enough to be| heard outside the heavy walls, In the afternoon the largest prison | shop, the knit shop, the shoe shop,| and some others struck. Why, bless| you, your Warden Lawes did what! the brutes in Maryland that you| mention in your editorial are doing. | All the prisoners were promptly locked up in individual cells and the leaders were taken one by one to the | office and intimidated and cajoled all day long. Well, the difficulties were somehow settled, but Warden! Lawes made up for the fact that he| has no dungeons in Sing Sing (even| the ordinary cells are dungeons by sending a goodly number of the dis- “Health Day”—Sc In the schools of New York the cramped, inadequate and A sham “Health Day” unsa staged on 12-1 » the health of the nitary schools provided for the: nee a year, when the children’s thousands 0, health f school children are endangered by m by the Tammany graft administration. r of the Day in New Yor hool Children Go Thru Annual Farce ‘Examination’ is “examined.” 6 HOUR DAY: — $8 MONTH IN CHIN. The Chinese worker lives and la- bors “under inhumanly hard condi- tions. The European or American worker could harc imagine that such cond ns actually exist, The Ch worke works from 12 to 16 hou: sometimes more. In S| instance, j time, when the new cocoons ady for reeling off silk, the ach up to 20, while in the silk industry, mostly women and children are working. In the mining industry, there exists a double shift of 12 hours each. Often it may hap- pen that the miner works within the bowels of the earth all the 24 hours and sometimes he remains there 48 hours dnd more at a stretch. Only in a few enterprises a break of half an hour for meals is allowed, and in many enterprises even that break does not exist, so that the worker is obliged to eat while the machine is running at full speed not having a second’s rest from work. Sleep On Ground. Such a long working day in ad-| dition to being semi-starved exhausts the man to such an extent that often he is unable to go home, if he has one, and falls asleep somewhere on| the pavement near the factory. A! large number of workers are obliged to sleep in the street, in the dust, under the open s Not only be- cause of exhaustion are they unable after work to walk four or five miles to the workers’ barracks but often the reason is also that they have no money to pay for shelter because, as we shall see below, their wages do not enable them to obtain cover even in a dirty, stinking and over- crowded den which would neverthe- less still be a shelter. are re hours $8; egetables, . § heating and lighting $1 condiments $1.50; rent and taxes $2; clothes $2; and miscellaneous expenses $2. Thus, it totals up to § Consequently, such a family is suf- fering a shortaze of from $3 to $4 a month in order to cover their sub- sistence minimum, And if only one member of the family is working and earns not $11 but only $6 to $8, then naturally the position is much worse. And such is the state of the majority. These are the conditions under which the Chinese worker lives and labors, and it is this that he fights against. It is because’ of this strug- gle that the capitalists are trying to drown the Chinese worker in his own blood. Reaction Sets In. The coup d’eetat of Chang Kai- Shek in Shanghai in April 1927 and the June reaction in Uchan drove the revolutionary trade unions un- derground. The bourgeoisie, personi- fied by the Kuomintang, united with the international imperialists in or- der to strangle the revolutionary | trade union movement. The British, Japanese and French police are ar./ resting the active trade union work-| ers as well as the more active rank| and file workers and are handing them over to the Kuomintang author. ities who are murdering them on the spot without trial. According to in- |complete information, the number of |0r best for ypu to return to the murdered workers only for the year 1927 reached 38,000, Still, even this white terror proved powerless to break this movement. The revolu- tionary trade unions of China are, continuing their struggle for the in. terests of the toilers under unbear-| 63, T00 OLD TO SLAVE IN YALE Aged! Worker Laid Off! “For Own Good” (By a Worker Correspondent) The enclosed letter was to a work- ing woman, working in the Yale | University dining room, where she | worked for the last ten years, and | now she is notified “that it is for | her own good that she should not | come tro work this season,” and | that “she will appreciate very | much” this notice. | She has been working like a regu-| lar horse, doing the heaviest work in the dining room of this factory | for the production of goose-step- | pers, and now she is too old to work | as hard as she used to, She “would | be very glad to hear” that she is | placed in the scrap pile of the cap-| italist system: * | ‘Yale University, New Haven, Conn., The Dining Hall, “Office of the Director. “Sept. 24, 1928. “Mrs. Ellen Blew, 181 Frank St., New Haven, Conn. “My dear Mrs. Blew: “I am very sorry indeed to write you that I do not feel that it is wise Gining hall this year. “Your work has been more than satisfactory and we greatly appre- | ciate the contribution you have | made, but owing to your general | health we don’t feel that we can per- | mit you to assume so heavy a re- |that the Russians have always met HORACE BRAHAM ‘LABOR’ LAWS IN. CALIFORNIA ARE. MEANINGLESS | H urt in Flood Camp, | No Aid for Worker (By a Worker Correspondent) | LOS ANGELES, Cal., (By Mail). |—Met an old friend of mine today. | Said he had been working in a flood control camp lately, about 10 miles! |from San Gabriel, Calif. Told about| his back being injured while work-| ing in a wet hole, 40 feet deep. |. His sickness was a bad case of |lumbago, he said, and the cause of it was forced over-work and the| dampness of the ground, etc. “Gods of the Lightning,” the In The| tense drama based on the Sacco- | state industrial accident commission! Vanzetti case now at the Little jrefused t6 grant compensation, he| Theatr |declared, in spite of favorable re-| ports from company doctors. His! injuries may be permanent, the worker feared. Hesvas around today trying to find something “easy” to do. But that is next to impossible at all times in Los Angeles. At least one man was killed and| ye |a number of workers were injured during his stay in the flood contro) camp, my friend said. But the local press, advocating peculiar “indus- trial freedom,” have had nothing to} say about it. 000 more votes than last election, The so-called labor laws, signed/tut gain only one seat more. The by Hiram Johnson as governor of| Catholic Party made the greatest California, are as teethless as those! successes, gaining four more seats. who made them are labor-baiting/The conservatives and democrats Hooverites, as a rule. both lost votes. —L. °. RINDAL. British-Soviet Break Costly to Britishers| - KANSAS CITY, Mo. Nov. 1 LONDON, (By Mail).—The Bri- | (UP).—Speaking to .an audience of tish Commercial Counsellor in Ber- | men only, Dr. John Roach Straton, lin, in his report for the year end-| pastor of Calvary Baptist Church ing June, 1928, and published by the | of New York City, challenged Gov- Department for Overseas Trade,/ernor Ritchie of Maryland to de-| after citing the new contracts for! hate on the moral integrity of Gov- goods made by the Soviet Union in|ernor Alfred E. Smith, democratic Germany during the years, adds: _| presidential candidate. OF the husiness relasions betweet' St stan nad. aauodnded! tine his | the two countries, it may be said expose of crime conditions in New ; Paes " | York would be such that only men | their obligations punctually. |should hear his talk last night. A | Russian imports from Germany | oowd of 5,000 men attended. | rose from 12,400,000 pounds sterling | in 1926-27 to 20,900,000 in 1927-28.) RY Earthquake in USSR Changes River Cours mmunists Win 2,000 More Votes But Lose Seat in Switzerland BASLE, Switzerland, Nov. 1—The sults of the Swiss elections so far show that the Communist Party has polled 15,000 votes, a gain of 2,000 since the last election, but involving the loss of one seat in parliament. The social-democrats gained 16, Roach Straton Opens ports from Great Britain fell off| from 8,700,000 pounds sterling to 3,-| 600,000. A é Soviet imports from America| | GROZNY, U. S. S. R., Nov. aa and France increased considerably,|4 few days ago there was an earth- | In the same period Russian im-| k State Prisons, Correspondent ‘|intuitive understanding of his peo- ‘For Men Only’ Show | “Ton Days That Shook the World” at Carnegie Playhouse & YOUNG WORKERS IN OHIO RALLY ‘Open Shop Police Are Defied WHEELING, W. Va., (By Mail). —In the most vicious open shop company-controlled town in the Ohio Valley, scene of brazen attacks upon all labor organizations and brutal suppression of campaign meetings of the Workers (Communist) Party, the Young Workers League branches of Eastern Ohio held a joint open air election campaign rally in Martins | (NE of the most dynamic and dra- matic films ever made will have \its American premiere upon the oc- |easion of the opening of The Little | Carnegie Playhouse, 146 W. 57th St., |tonight. It is the epic picture, “Ten |Days That Shook The World,” the second production of S, M. Eisen- | stein, the director of “Potemkin.” |. Based upon the late John Reed’s moving book of the same title, the |picture treats of the ten epochal days which preceded the overthrow |of the Kerensky government. | In directing this film, Eisenstein, |has done superb work. Chiefly. his ple and their monumental problems has given him his primary equip- | ment in the sheer conception of the picture. Added to this, his mass movement, depiction of types and }uncanny symbolism achieve the Ferry, Ohio. The meeting ten held | startling reality of an actual news Opposite the Hungarian Hall, scene jreel of the revolution. Among, of a brutal attack upon an election meeting a few weeks ago when po- lice drove workers from the hall with tear gas bombs and arrested several speakers. Big Turn-Out. Despite the cold weather a large crowd turned out for the meeting. The police were present at the open- European critics “Ten Days That Shook The World” has created a sensation and both in cinema tech- nique, photography and profound mob psychology they have placed it |above “Potemkin.” | A second feature on the program | will be the revival of “Queen Eliza-| beth,” with Sarah Bernhardt and i ing x jing and as the crowd increased a ian Tes Zee eas ae colon) call was sent to the headquarters re- 'ZOLA’S ‘SHADOWS OF FEAR?’ sulting in the appearance of a pa- | trol wagon and additional forces. Re- COMING TO CAMEO | gardless of these methods of the po- BSE |lice to intimidate the workers an | The Film Arts Guild will present, |enthusiastic meeting was held and |commencing this Saturday, at the} much literature was sold. |Cameo Theatre, the American Pre-| John Buksa, active in the coal miere of “Shadows of Fear,” a First! _, °. a1 the Youn; | National production, WR Reie ORL, sonal directed by | : ille, opened | Jacques Feyder and based on Emile| Workers League of Yorkville, op ii ted as chairman. Zola's famous novel, “Therese Ra-|the meeting and acte quin.” Frank Henderson, sub-district organ- \izer of the League was the first speaker. He was followed by Joseph Weber, sub-district organizer of the Party who was the principal speaker. Jacques Feyder, who is remem- bered for his “Crainquebille” with Maurice De Feraudy and “Carmen” with Raquel Meller, has reached! new heights here with his direction, i lighting and atmospheric back-| which Max Davidson i: ground, and has assembled an inter- -players. 3 national cast headed by Gina Manes) Following the presentation. of and Wolfang Zilzer, who play the| “Shadows of Fear,” the Film Arts husband and wife in this film. | Guild will present for its American On the same program will be a| premiere “Mata Hari, The Red comedy, “Jewish Prudence,” in| Dancer,” a German production. is one of the i= Little Carnegie Playhouse =; 146 West 57th Street — — — CIRcle 7551 turbers away to other prisons where | Many, and /bly hard underground |and the London Herald points out quake in the village Chechne-Shatoj, || American Premiere Saviino'a Masterpiece conditions. | sponsibility. It is not possible for they will receive their punishment. ospecially workers ‘Mhanteee yag And why is Sing Sing a little bet-|¥ i en ey ter ruled than other places? Not | Tible Beene hae ung tO | because Warden Lawes is there, but | themselves oe cee pies because it is near New Yo jemes some bamboo huts and they DR istics, 2k elne te te | Aileen thereon fhe cersuta, tab och aristocracy of the underworld, those|theY ate under cover, until the police! who have connections with politi-|fet fire to whole streets of such cians and big lawyers, those who Othe nee ee have money and pay their vho are working in ine ee peeled {i ltha’tagtorles, gtisee famertice te privilege of staying in Sing Sing. | Chinese industry is very high, have Be thse? the piieoerd ate cece (NO Dlaee to leave thejr tiny ‘pis ca and only those who have some con-|‘Herefore take them along to the| nection remain there. I have seen|‘#ctory and hang them in cradles c ; jover the machines and leave th ee ‘ . gs s em Prisoners who were on the list to bel there until late at sight cntil they sent away handing the principal | th® i ed Mes tidal Utila win, to nc taken|fiish work. Dust, dirt, noise of the off the list, and this in spite of the|™&chines, blows, hunger—are the fact that inmates are not allowed|°OMditions in which the workers’ to have any cash. Ask the Defense|‘Mildren are growing up. The cap- Committee of the Furriers and they | ‘lists in China are very widely re- will tell you whether the principal | ®°"ting to child labor. Thus, for in- Keeper takes money. There are only|St#"¢e, in Shanghai children under| le tow thiate Who are inete cone | the Ame Of 12 th Chinese efitarprlacs moners. I myself was there a few|™Ke up 13 percent of all the work- | months to be operated, because in| €T® in the British enterprises 17 per- the other prison where I was there|©¢nt and in the Italian and French were no accommodations for such | *terPrises ba percent of all the “<a |Workers. In China, the capitalists I can tell you some brutal inci-| find it easy and simple to resort to dents in other prisons in New York| extreme exploitation of the workers. | state, similar to the ones mentioned | Starvation Wage. in your recent editorial. I remem-| The wages of the Chinese work- | ber a fellow, Joe Bourett, in Auburn, |/€TS are extremely low and do not| who refused to go to the dark dun. |Cover the physically necessary mini yzeon, who was blinded and gassed|™um of life. with an ammonia shotgun and then| It is calculated that if in a family Siaieed by his fect dewn a flight |of 4 (man, wife and 2 children) there of stairs and through a long hall to/@'@ working man and wife, which| the dark cells, his head beating| happens very seldom, then they earn against the stairs as it fell each time| the average only from $17 to $18 fhe jailers descended a step. That|# month (11 and 7). In order to sub- he lived after the treatment was a|Sist at least in a semi-starved con- miracle and not the fault of the jail-| dition, such a family has to purchase | “ 30 kilogrammes of rice, which cost In Great Meadow Prison, Com-| ~ : uP URRsamaraae stock, N. Y., they handle inmates| Physical punishment are on the or- in a different way. The inmate is| der of the day. usually taken to a cell and beaten| Perhaps it would also be of in- by a gang of jail keepers. The leader | terest to mention the company union of the gang usually is an officer by|SYstem’ they have in some of the the name of Muldoon, an ex-prize| Prisons, in Sing Sing and in Auburn, fighter. The mildest punishment is|By means of the so-called Welfare being taken to the warden and given| League the warden makes one part an ex sentence of ‘anything from| of the inmates act as guardians and ten days to six mont and some-| terrorists against the rest. I have times the inmate is locked up in ad- dition in a dark cell. The dark cell punishment is worth a little atten- tion. In Comstock they have no spe- cial cells for punishment, the build-| offi ‘ng was put up in this century and|ficials interfere and punish the they did not make any provision for| Strong arm squad, but those who dark cells, so the authorities divided| are beaten are taken before the off one end of a gallery with boards| warden and either punished or cal- and wire screens and made a number|!ed down, just as in the courts of| of cells dark. The cells have no beds| New York where right wingers al- or bedding. The ventilator at the|Ways go free and left wingers are | top of each cell is covered, The| insulted by the judges. I remember| water faucet and toilet are stopped oney who was lead- up. The inmate is given three times| ing an ‘opposition ticket for the a day a small slice of white bread| League who was terribly beaten and and a cup of water, that is if the|cut up in the office of the Welfare officer in charge is not too busy or| League with officials of the prison does not forget, all around and not interfering, Mem-| But the most terrible of all prisons} bers of the opposition who dare is the one at Clinton, N. Y. There| criticize are framed up and punished, they send those who will not be| while the ganz who does the dirty vuled by any of their means. There| Work for the warden get patronage, | good jobs for themselves and their| friends and other favors. —AN EX-PRISONER—S, B, witnessed many cases in Auburn, | where it is a daily affair, of prison- ers being beaten up and bleeding| by the hands of the Welfare League | officers. Not only do not the of-| they have all the refinements of the other prisons and in addition the ‘\eepers are tough and beatings and ‘Dance of Knitgoods The yellow state trade unions that) us to lighten the work and we feel were created by the reaction in a that it would be a great injustice number of districts, do not dare to!to the cther workers for us to do struggle against the revolutionary |¢o, ' i trade unions and the whole leader-| ; | ship of the working class movement ‘I am sure that you will be able is in the hands of the latter, The |‘ Secure work in a private family | influence of the revolutionary wnions tt Will not be so hard, and will is particularly strong in the cities PY equally as well as the position | of Shanghai, Canton and in the pro-| eT: | vinces of Hunan and Hupei, “I deeply regret that it is not In Hunan and Hupei the revolu.| possible for us to have you with us, tionary trade unions were closed) but I am certain that you will ap- | | | | down in May and June of 1927 and |preciate that it is for your own are all the time underground and|good that I am suggesting the| entally Persecuted; nevertheless, change. the te is no doubt of their strong in- fluence on the workers. In Uchan, Hanyan and in many smaller towns of Hupei and Hunan, many strikes are being carried on under the lead- ership of the r volutionary against the Kuomintang. In a num- ber of towns of Hunan, the workers are uniting with: the peasants and are jointly capturing towns and are| TWO Workers Dead gene up their own worker-peas-| in Dam Cave-in | | in California “Very truly yours, | CORA C. COLBURN.” Pee ae (Note:—The woman to whom the above letter was sent is 63 years | unions | old. oI MITCHELL. | (By a Worker Correspondent) Workers on Noy. 28. Los ANGELES, Calif, Nov. 1— | Two workers are known to be dead The annual ball of the knitgoods| and several others may be buried in Workers will be held this year on a cave-in of earth that occurred dur- Thanksgiving Eve., Nov. 28, in Web-| ing construction of the Dalton Dam ster Hall, 119 FE. lith St. |in Big Dalton Canyon, near San The newly-organized Knitgoods| Dimas, Calif. it was reported to the Welfare and Culture Club has ar-|sheriff’s office here. ranged this affair for the purpose! Sheriff’s sub-station No. 8, at San of bringing into closer contact and Dimas, said it would take several | relations the progressive elements in| hours _ to determine whether any the trade. All workers have been in- other workmen were buried in the vited to attend. ' slide. L. P. R. AMERICA PREPARES THE NEXT WAR by JAY LOVESTONE THE UNITED STATES IS PREPARING FOR ANOTHER WAR. WHY? —The role of American Imperialism —United States vs. Great Britain —The Significance of Peace Pacts —The Role of Reformism -—The Role of the Communist Party This pamphlet should be in the hands of every worker interested in a clear analysis of America today and the attitude of the Workers (Com- munist) Party toward the coming war. 10 cents» WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 43 East 125th New York City | | Stree that the Baldwin government’s ac-| Grozny region. | tion in breaking off relations with) At first there was heard a sub-| the Soviet Union has cost England | a huge trade loss. Before the break | trade with Russia was growing, but! first shock. since then it has lost $25,500,000 in| snow covered the ground. It was! one year. found that the landslide on the Chi: Jewelry Workers Will Hold Dance Saturday The Jewelry Workers Welfare ing through the new channel. Hl Club will hold its first concert and SPRL mE hen ball this Saturday evening at the) HANGAR FOR DIRIGIBLES. | New Webster Manor, 125 E. 11th St.| FRANKFURT, Germany, Nov. 1} A feature of the evening will be the | (U.R).—The municipality has started recitals of Gregory Matusewitch,|a popular subscription fund to build Russian concertina virtuoso, and a revolving hangar for dirigibles Harry Fratkin, violinist. ‘here. | 1852 THE SAME ADDRESS OVER 75 YEARS 1928 which then became impassable. The its course from the left shore to the [ETROPOLITAN SAVINGS BAN "ASSETS EXCEEDING $29,000,000 yi Deposits mude on or before the 3rd day of the month will draw interest from ¢ Ist day of the month. Last Quarterly Dividend paid 1 on all amounts from $5.00 U/, o/h to $7,500.00, at the rate of 2 (6) Open Mondays (all day) until 7 P. M. Ranking by Mall Society Accounts Accepted We Sell A. B. A. Travelers Certified Checks The buttons for are now ready, hundred thousand w November 7th. — & lon Anniversary ot the Russian Revolut n of which is reproduced above. One s should wenr one of these butions on very Party Member! — Every Militant Worker See That You Wear An Eleventh Anniversary Button K' For to do this means Support and defense of the Soviet Union! Fight Against American Imperialism! Fight Against Imperialist War! Building the Workers (Communist) Party! Voting As You Strike—for the Working Class Against the Capitalist Class! For A Workers’ and Farmers Government! International Proletarian Solidarity! Buttons Sell at: 100 or more 5c each — less than 100, 7c each. Order from NATIONAL OFFICE, Workers (Communist) Party, 438 Bas 125th St. New York, N. ¥ rennin Workers (Communist) Party of America. 43 Kast 125th St. New York NY Knetoseo tind Please send... niversury Bultour to | Addreme......0... terraneous rumbling which gradual |} became louder and then came the | Next morning deep! | kin Rock had fallen on the road)| Chenga-Argun River has changed I right shore and the water is rush-| 4 TEN DAYS That SHOOK the WORLD 2nd Production of S. M. EISENSTEIN, the Director of Potemkin DYNAMIC DRAMATIC Acclaimed by European Critics:“Accurate as a he eae News Reel of the Russian Revolution” |noon to midnight tae The Little Carnegie Playhouse is entirely different from any other Theatre in the world. ‘There is an entire evening's entertain- ment in the Ping Pong Court, Ball Room, Bridge Room, Art Gallery and Modernist Lounge. Keith-Albee AME 42nd Stree? and “Broadway By Popular Demand RD BIG Best Film Show WEEK In Town THE FIRST SOVIET COMEDY “Three Comrades and One Invention” EXTRA ADDED FEATURE— RUSSIAN NEWS REEL Direct from Moscow. €ivIc REPERTORY eae 8c, $1.90, $1.50. Mats. Wed.&Sat.,2,30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Extra Matinee Today, “The Cherry Orchard,” Tonight, “The Would-Be Gentlema) Sat. Mat, “L'nvitation au Voyag: Sat. Eve. “Phe Cherry Orchard” ‘Phea.s5St.&8Av.fvs, Martin_Beck 8.40.Ma.Wed.,Sa2.40 NITE HOSTESS “A Shanghai Document” “A Crackerjack Film” —Dally News. THE THEATRE GUILD Presents FAUST GUILD Thea. W. 52na st. EB ves. 8:30; Mats. Thursday and Saturday, Strange Interlude VENINGS ONLY AT 5:30 wi Aedes te Mba ss eng Philp, Dunnin 1 1th Ave, & 69th St. wed by Winchell Smith JOLSON cae heath Hy og Produced by JOHN GOLDEN. auy ODETTE DE WOLF : ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER | PRL ANGER THEA. W. 44th ST, in @ musical romance of Chopin . Eve Matinees, Wednesday & Saturdi MUSICAL COMEDY HIT LUCKEEGIRL —e — Evenings 8.30 — Mat.: Wednesdays & Saturdays, 2:30, George M. Cohan’s Comedians with POLLY WALKER } | i Mr. Cohan’s Newest Musica} | Comedy | | | “BILLIE” LI Thea., W. 44th St. Eve, 8.20 TTLE Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2.30 GODS of the LIGHTNING HAVE YOU by Mawell Anderson & Harold SEEN THE LADDER (* Hickerson, IN ITS REVISED, FORM? M Thea., W. 48th St., Eves, 8.30 CORT * hen nees, Wed. & Sat. Money Refunded If Not Satisfied, With Play, CHANIN'S . W. of Brway 46th St Eves, at § 25 Mats. Wed, & Sat. SCEIT 60 ond Ww ANIERLIS. MUSICAL SMASH OOD NEW with GEORGE OLSEN'S MUSIC, MUSIC AND CONCERTS Conductorless Orchestra MAX ROSEN, Soloist CARNEGIE HALL ‘i SAT. EVE. NOV. 3, at 8:20. ‘Tlekets $1.00 to 82.50. Mat. Beckhard & Macfarlane, inc, Pt’ ~~~ GAS KILLS THREE. | Alb Hy q Three persons were found suffo- alte sa Richard Dix cated today in their apartment in Breedirar and Rew! Eg in HMORAN OF 4 at dnt St. MARINES™, IRENE VERMILLION & Co. “A NIGHT AT THE CLUB” O11, Brooklyn. Four gas jets wére open when police forced their way into the apartment.

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