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" Millionai (Editor’s Note:—This__inter- view with Percy Vanderfeller, heir of John Vincent Vande millionaire oil magnate, w covgred by A. B. Magil among the les of the Old Misleader, weekly rgan of the socialist party. Young Vanderfeller recently became a convert to up-to-date American so- cialism and he was interviewed es- pecially for the Old Misleader by its star reporter and candidate for many offices, McAlister Wood- man.) e * 8 By A. B. MAGIL Let me tell you these millionaires certainly know how to live. It is a fine place, that sumptuous Van- home on Park Ave. It te a little and wish I scar Ameringer were with me, with his inimitable wit and presence of mind, ‘hen e big ui hove into sight as we old han two servants ush- ered me up to Percy Vanderfeller’s private den. I noticed their livery at once—it had that distinctive Van- Aerfeller touch. Young Vanderfel- wer was reclining on a sort of divan evidently waiting for me, He wore ati exotic dressing gown that im- mediately transported me to realms far from the traffic and travail of ‘hig mundane world. He at once shook hands. It was so character- stic. Percy Vanderfeller is a dem- yerat to his finger-tips. “Pardon me, old fellah,” he said, yawning and gazing muddily in my direction. “Didn’t realize it was three o’clock already. Pulled in a trifle late or rather early this morn- ing and haven’t ‘had breakfast yet. Adolph!” ee * inscrutable-looking servant entered. He also wore the distinc- tive Vanderfeller livery. “Break- fast, Adolph, and—a little some- thing for the gentleman.” The serv- ant bowed ard left. The efficiency of it captivated me. I sat and chatted with him just An as if the person before m@pwere| ¢,. 10NS; | ent our side in tne proper way. Once | litical field, to demand federal laws not the heir of fabulous mi but any ordinary mortal like you or me. After exchanging the usual commonplaces, I immediately went to the noint. “What made you join the socialist party, Comrade—eh, pardon me—Mr.—that is, I mean Comrade Vanderfeller?” tended that he hadn’t noticed the slip. It was so characteristic. Just then Adolph re-entered with a tray of food. “Just a little snack,” young Vanderfeller mur- mured. The plate was loaded down| with bacon and eggs, mushrooms on re Tells Why Socialist Party Is O. K. bought from a salesman on Four- teenth St. for 15 cents. But mine had been labeled For Men Only. “Got them all in Paris,” the heir to millions explained in a matter of fact tone. I knew, tho, that one so |sensitive as he could not but appre- ciate to the full all these art treas- ures. “Percy,” I said (by that time we had become very intimate and be-/ gun calling each other by our first names), “what do you think of Nor- man Thomas,” “Every inch a Princeton man,”/ he replied with that modest yet un- flinching assurance which is so characteristic of this scion of one ofthe wealthiest families in the! world. “But good horrors,” he added, “what the devil made you fellows pick such a running matei| "4 the peace o; t Why, I understand Maurer is a for-| of the Soviet Union affords them mer plamber!” game of chess at their culture elu I blushed, but had to confess that| ‘evding the Prgvda, central organ % ei 2 The drawing it was true. “But Jim's a good fel- the Daily Worker, low,” I pleaded. “Really one of us.|_“"® 7@'Y MT orner. THE DAILY In a Workers’ Culture Club | PCP C.R, After their day of toil, the workers above are using their leisure ‘of mind that the first wo: is by William Gropper and“ was made especially for SDAY, NO WORKER, NEW YORK, TU IBER 6, 1928 SHOWS NEED OF ‘ORGANIZING ALL “WORKING WOMEN |Anita Whithey, Red) | Nominéef in Call | By ANITA WHITNEY. (Communist Candidate for Governor of California) Woman’s entry into industry in| |constantly increasing numbers as | well as in more varied lines of work | than formerly makes it of the ut-, most importance that the Workers | (Communist) Party should make a} special effort to interest and draw |into the Party the women of this) | country. | |. Women work’ under the double} |handicap of belonging to a partial- |ly submerged group. Until_recently | |they had no political expression and | because of the isolation of their! |lives in their homes they had no op-| | portunity to develop a knowledge of | ers’ and peasants’ republic to solve the knotty problems of a wb. Note the worker on the right of the Russian Communist Party. He’s perfectly respectable now. And anyhow we're softpedalling on him in this campaign just for that rea- son. No use prejudicing people against you. Now Norman Thomas really represents the best that’s in No use raking up a fellow’s past. C 1 TS tion, savoir faire, so to speak. Good By V. Q., Chicago. ‘Every inch a Prince.| This is an appeal to machinis ton Man,’ is an ingenious character- | Primarily to members of the Inter. ization.” national Association of Machinists. I suggested to young Vanderfel- Communism is not new to. you. ler that in the next elections it would |Our Grand Lodge officers have re- be appropriate that he himself run/ ferred time and time again to the for some important office. “No, no, | “danger” from Communism and the no!” he demurred, blushing a deep | Communists. red. “Yes, yes, yes!” I counter-de-| _ What have you to fear from the murred. | Communists? Let us analyze for a| jthe value and possibilities of or- FANNIE BRICE. The comedienne is the chief play- er on the vaudeville bill at the Palace Theatre this week. “THE CHERRY ORCHARD” AT YIDDISH ART THEATRE This Wednesday evening, Maurice Schwartz's Yiddish Art Theatre will SUCCESSFUL EXPERIMENT Conductorless Orchestra Enthusiastically Received In First Concert at Carnegie Hall |THE music lovers who were fortu-| without the aid of a conductor. The nate enough to secure admission players also showed by their force- to crowded Carnegie Hall on Satur- Een gather! the afte of a day night, were treated to a thrill) rehearsals. In the’ slow movemen' which seldom is the fortune of the and the sherzo the players again music enthusiast. For the iret Este by their tempo and technic time in the history of musical art ite t ae we of tine Se in America an orchestra appeared | ship. e rendering of the finale and performed without a conductor. | was an accomplishment and ‘was 3 The American Symphonie ia aed in its vigor and earnest- le, a newly organize gr | 4 talented musicians, following closely| The accompaniment for the solo- the idea of the now: famous con- ist was a further surprise. Although ductorless orchestra of Moscow, the|Max Rosen gave the impression of Persimfans (First Symphonic En-|being somewhat nervous in his bacon gave be alae of aia Basbegs; the first mre |the season—an all-Beethoven pro- ment of the concerto showed the | gram—with Max Rosen as soloist. | possibility of the many opportuni- | The experiment proved highly ties of a conductorless orchestra. successful in every way, The pro-| The rondo was especially refreshing |gram offered was not only of sete ore sh Rosen. Altogether jimportance: the “Eroica” Symphony, | his work o: e evening was mas-~- |the Concerto in D-major and the terly. |“Egmont” Overture, but the per-| A word or two of the personel |formance was spirited and played| would not be amiss here. The mem- | with understanding by the Ensemble | bers,of the Ensemble, which is co- | without the usual conductor. | operative, combined their resources | In its seating arrangement, the|in the expenses of the experiment. | American Symphonic Ensemble fol-|The funds for hall hire, manage- WORKERS TO VOTE RED the socialist party. He has distinc- 1 G | ganization. present Anton Chekhov’s “The Cher- J. | Now that they have become a fac-/ry Orchard” for the first time in |tor in industry, they must be shown! Yiddish. This is the production ee necessity of cooperation and which Leo Bulgakov, now in “Gods | ae under which they live, and lia Adler, daughter of Jacob Adler i iseetog land one of the original members of The Grand Lodge officialdom are! Women as a group, like Negroes |the Yiddish Art Company, appears | lined up either with the elephant or|as a group, can be and are used to as Mme. Ranevsky. A second per-| with the jackass. In Chicago, Charles W. Fry, business agent of | Lodge 126, the boss of the district,| break down the standard of wages formance will be given Thursday of the workers as a whole. With | night, and then the repertory group the improvements in machinery and/reverts to “Kidush Hashem” for organization in bettering the condi- | of the Lightning”, has directed. Ce-| and slugger in chief recently against | technique they can easily replace | |the progressive elements, has be- , |men and, in times of strike, as} |come the chairman of the Chicage | workers without class consciousness | Trade Union Committee for Al/or organization, they can be effec. Smith, tively used as strikebreakers. | Fry, with a salary many times} Again no strike can now be won| the weekend. The presentation of “The Cherry Orchard,” is in honor of the Moscow Art Theatre’s thirtieth anniversary. many things which tend toward de- He finally conceded the point. “Ay. | moment the program of the Com-| that of the ordinary machinist, lines | unless the women, as part of the | cent sanitary conditions in our right, if-you insist.” It was so char-| ™unists and the other political par-/up with the democrats. Business | industrial world, as well as women | cities. acteristic. ties, and sce which of these offers “T believe,” he said, “that we | Solution te our problems. ought to try to interest more of the A Program for You. people that count in our party.| The Communists urge you to de- There’s no reason why the republi-|fend your interests. To see that the} can and democratic parties should | machine industry is organized to in- have a monopoly of all the million-| clude all workers, to smash injune- jaires. It seems to me that the so-|tions by mass picketing in order to He pre-| jalist party really has more to of-|win strikes for better conditions, to All that is needed is to pres-| build up a party of labor on the po- they realize that we are much more |for social legislation, ‘for old age exclusive, much more aristocratic | pensions, unemployment insurance at than either of the old parties, I’m|the expense of the government and sure they'll flock to us.” |the employers, the government to He paused for breath. A servant|raise its share by inheritance taxes held out a box of imported cigars|and taxing the swollen incomes of and I helped myself to a brown,|the rich. To establish industrial gold-banded fellow. unions through the amalgamation of We chatted on amiably, discussing | the craft unions in the metal indus- socialism and conditions in America. | try. And I discovered that Percy Van-| These are some of the immediate derfeller has a heart that is as soft|measures the Communists have as lamb’s wool. | those poor people on the East Side!” | You have are not new to you, either. “To think of all|urged and urge you to adopt. These! < | Agent Uhlmann of Chicago was) home-makers, stand with the work- lined up last year with the repub-|ing class as an understanding and licans. These apostles of class-col-| solidifying force in the strike move- |laboration quite naturally fall into| ment. the employers’ parties, But the in-| Organize and educate the women. terest of the rank and file machin-| Organize and make class conscious jist lies in a fundamentally opposite| the women in industry. | | direction. | Organize the women in the home What of the S. P.? into Housewives’ Leagues and| |Councils of Working Women to| And what about the socialist|fight against exorbitant rents, for| party? Grand Lodge officials in| better schools, clean streets and the | |former years, before the war, car-| - Organize the girls who will swell the ranks of one or the other of the labor group. Organize all the wom- en into militant, intelligent, class conscious groups who will work shoulder to shoulder with the men, until the workers of the world united, organized, class conscious, take control of the industries and seize the apparatus of the state in order. to form a Workers’ Soviet Republic. ried red cards. Jt was a “socialist” | "Tes and fights for a new system cf, union. Can the socialist party lay|S0ciety, run by the working -lass;| claim to support from machinists? | it is a revolutionary party. It openly) | Led by the Reverend Norman Thom-| declares this final goal. | as, backed by the millionaire cor-| It does not ask for support mercly| poration lawyer, Morris Hillquit, it|°" its immediate program; ityddes| has become a defender of the ex ist-| not hide its final goal for fear that) jing order, trying to “reform” capi-|S0me may not vote for it; it does) |talism. It is lined up with the fak-| nt conduct its campaign as a vote- jers in the labor movement. It op-|C@tching campaign. | poses the rank and file membership, It states openly thatthe system) | | in the mining and needle trades | fanpot be changed by the ballot; conquest of state power. It is con- fident that more and more of the machinists will be allied with it in future struggles. Call to Militants. Machinists, with a past record of | | militancy, must support a militant party, with a fighting policy, and aj] membership that fights for that policy. ‘As one machinist to his fellow] | workers, I urge machinists, mem- |lows the plan of its Moscow con-|ment, advertising, ete., temporary. The members are seated of their individual pockets. As they in a semi-circle, with the violins are workers, and many of them out seated with their backs to the audi- ence. In the centre, the space usu- ally occupied by the conductor, is seated the concert master, who is the real leader of the group; in such a position where all the players can see him and watch for any signals. Of the performance, the highest praise can be given here. Many sceptics in the audience, who no doubt came to jeer the experiment, were compelled to join in the enthus- iastic reception of the others. The opening passage of the “Eroica”, which opens with a clean attack of E.flat chords was a masterpiece. It was more than a brilliant per- formance. The players gave an interpretation of the Beethoven sym- phony which not only showed their thorough musicianship, but also proved the possibility to perform the most difficult of compositions Ee Ge came out |of employment, the sacrifice for the undertaking can be appreciated by their fellow workers, As Oswald Garrison Villard, editor of The Nation, who made a brief |statement following the symphony, |said, “The leaderless orchestra, in jits interesting experiment proved the possibility of co-operation and |democracy. They were not paid hands, but musicians who believed in the co-operative spirit.” Altogether this was the most in- teresting event of the musical sea- son. The idea of a conductorless or- chestra will no doubt bring music closer to the workers of America, as it has done abroad. Not only Rus- ia, but Germany, Switzerland and | France has its leaderless orchestras, who bring music to the workers at (a fraction of the usual cost. of the jold organization. 146 West 57th Street American Premiere DYNAMIC TEN DAYS That SHOOK the WORLD | 2nd Production of S. M. EISENSTEIN, — — — CiRele 7551 Sovkino’s Masterpiece the Director of Potemkin DRAMATIC -—,, ‘at the owners of wealth will not bers of the International Associatior jfakers, and finally had to establish voluntarily give up the source of|of Machinists, to vote for the can-| |new unions. The socialist party lost their power. It rallies around its|didates of the Workers (Communist) unions, who struggled against the} Acclaimed by European Critics:“Accurate as a} Erices, Mats, 50c, | 1 7 con”? $1.00; contin. News Reel of the Russian Revolution’ |neon to midnight ‘ces> The Little Carnegie Playhouse is entirely different from any other Theatre in the world. toast very distinctively prepared |he sighed, sipping his absinthe.| heard them advocated in the lodge and many other delicacies approP-|«Horrible! Not one of them can af-|room. Is not this a correct pro- riate to the station and refinement| ford to send his son to Harvard or|gram? Will it not meet the situa- — “Isn't it perfectly terrible? of Percy Vanderfeller. came another servant with a tray containing caviar sandwiches, a bot- | to enroll their children in City Col- tle with a warm green liquid and sevetal glasses. “Pm frightfully out of sorts to-|paq.” day,” young Vanderfeller moaned. or Tho slightly mystified, I nodded|to attend football games. assent. Behind him! | Princeton, I suppose.” I told him |that some were actually. compelled | lege. He gasped. “Good God, I |didn’t’ realize conditions were so “You know,” pause. he said after a “I think that’s why I like It makes tion? Of course, it will. Reactionaries’ Program. But the Grand Lodge officialdom has a different program. They re- fuse to organize the masses of the unorganized; they maintain the union for the skilled workers prim- arily, despite the changing industry which is undermining skill. Injunc- \its rank and file membership many| @Mner all fighting elements for the years ago; it has also lost its claim| final struggle. The struggles con- to be a working class party. What happened to the former “so-| | ducted by the Workers (Communist) | Party lead up to the final goal, the) 1 Party —all candidates — beginning with the standard bearers, William | Z. Foster and Ben Gitlow. Vote Red! cialist” leaders of the I. A. of M.?) Former President Johnston led sen- timent for a labor party into a blind |} alley through his many Conforences: NOVEMBER i | Mat. and Modernist Lounge. civic REPERTORY 148t.6thav Eves, 8:30 50c; $1.00, $1.50, Mats. Tues.&Sat.,2.30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Today, “The Would-Be Gentle- ‘There is an entire evening's entertain- ment in the Ping Pong Court, Ball Room, Bridge Room, Art Gallery CAMEO *! "NOW Bway —American Premiere— Emile Zola’s for Progressive Political Action. He SHADOWS OF! {me feel that I too am one of’ the| tions are permitted to break strikes, {was among the first to push the| COMMUNIST “And I thought that at last We | masses, part of that ineffable surg- were going to have a winning team./ing force that makes the whole Harvard’s my alma mater, yoU/world kin. To be one of that cheer- know, and no one but a Harvard ing throng is to partake of a pro- man can appreciate what it means./ found human experience. What’s your college?” x ; I was ashamed to say University of Pennsylvania, so I murmured Yale in as indistinct a tone as pos- sible. He made a deprecatoty ges- ture. But—it’s | terrible when Harvard loses! You're not a Harvard man, so you can’t understand.” And again a look’ of ineffable | melancholy came into his eyes, im- |parting to his face that touch of I thought it was about time to/nobility that stamped this young spring my question on him again. | convert to socialism as a Vander-| “What made you join the socialist feller to the manor born. | party?” ._| The absinthe was really excellent He thought a while. And on Ais | and we were both in a mellow mood. face appeared that look of medita-|T told him about some of the lead- tive austerity that is so characteris-|ers of our party, men of brains and tic of Perey Vanderfeller and|vision—about dear old Algernon makes him seem infinitely older) than his 23 years. “Really, I don’t} know,” he said slowly as if pon-| ering each word. “Only I thought there is so much more opportunity for a man in my position in the so- ‘cialist party than in any other, You see, the other two parties have no ‘tone, if you know what I mean. There’s something unspeakably vul- gar about them. The socialist par- | vy is really the only party with the aristocratic old-world flavor as it were. I don’t see how anyone who considers himself a gentleman can thelong to any other.” * cid ae fYoung Vanderfeller nibbled deli- bately at his food as he talked. I Inoticed at once that his manners were impeccable. self with’ the sandwiches caviar jwhile a servant poured out two| asses of the greenish liquid. “Ab- | inthe,” young Vanderfeller said in g-voice full of emotion. “I got this in Paris.” | The mention of Paris was like a magic incantation. Instantly the barrier between us was broken down nd before long we were chatting like old friends, swapping stories fabout Monte Carlo, Vienna, Berlin fid all the capitols. He had been in over and it was really a delight to talk to him, his conversation was $0 cosmopolitan. I learned too that young Vanderfeller is a young man ‘of a decidedly serious cast of mind and while in Paris last summer he did considerable research work in the Montmartre. As we were talking of this and that, Vanderfeller pointed to a pic- ture on the wall. I had been eyeing it for some time. To me it looked like General Custer’s Last Stand, but Vanderfeller assured me it was a genuine Picasso. He showed me an- other painting which he said was an early Gauguin, sludve photographs which were sur- I fortified my- |i Also some ex- | Lae, who is such a charming per- son and sits all day in his office in the Rand School thinking so hard. About August Claessens, our hectic and bald-headed city secretary, and about Morris Hillquit, who is one of the leading lawyers in the city, a man of intelligence and refinement even tho he does have an unfortu- |nate accent. All of this the young heir to fabulous wealth, eager to learn about socialism from A to Z, drank in thirstily between sips of absinthe. “We are really a party of young people,” I told him. “Norman Thom. as is 44, Algernon Lee is only fifty- odd and Abe Cahan isn’t much over 60—all of them youngsters really, full of youthful energy and enthus- He was obviously pleased | | sked him how he was getting on with his articles for the Old Misleader. He assured me tnat ne enjoyed doing them very much.| “Yes, and some foreign or Jewish or something like that socialist newspapers asked me to do a piece for them. It seems they run a weekly English section as an educa- tional feature. “Oh, you mean the Jewish Yellow | Forward,” I said, | “Yes, that’s it. I’m glad they had the good taste to mention in their advertising that I’m the grandson of | the famous oil man. Such details al-| |ways count with people. And I’ve| hit on a fine name for my article. | I'm calling it: “Why I Became a| Socialist or the First Hundred Mil-| lion Are the Hardest.” | “Lovely,” I said. | “I'm glad you like it. It took me| a long time to think that one up,” It was getting late and I arose |to go. Again he held out his hand. | “Goodby,” he said as the other hand | |fluttered vaguely in the direction! of the absinthe bottle. That’s Per-| ey Vanderfeller all over. A demo-! like several I had bandh gt there ever was one, J ? the union appealing in vain to the courts. This happened in the Amer- ican oven strike in Chicago, when the bewhiskered democratic poli- tician, J. Ham Lewis, was hired by the Chicago district lodge of the I. A. of M. and the Chicago Fed- efation of Labor. The result: a lost strike and nothing accomplished. The last convention of the I. A. ef M. in Atlanta, Georgia, defeated the proposition of a federal law cov-| ering the entire country for unem- ployment and old age insurance, vot- ing instead for state laws. Workers) are to pay one-third of the expense cut of their meagre pay envelope. The convention, exceedingly reac- tionary, voted down amalgamation; it extended the term of office of the Grend Lodge officers from two to four years. The union has become the private Property of the ruling clique. Elections and referendums are counted by the Grand Lodge; how well they can count is demon- strated by 1925, when they stoie the Grand Lodge elections to keep them-} selves in office. Which Program? | Which of these programs will you support? The Communist program) for increasing the power of the working class to fight for better con-} ditions? Or the Gifand Lodge policy| B. & O. Plan, a company union. The} so-called “socialists” had around to the reactionary position cf their former opponents. A mor-| | swung jf CONTENTS— | ganatic marriage took place between the “socialists” and the hard-boiled |conservatives. They support the! capitalist parties. The socialist| | party is no more entitled to support |from militant workers than the re- |publican and democratic parties. —The Sixth World Congress of the Comintern “by Jay LovesTronr —The Workers (Communist) Party in the South by Wo. Z. Foster Guy || KOBERTSON of the B. & O. Plan, the policy of| surrender to the employers? The} Communist program is the program) of the progressive elements, of all! honest workers inside of the I. A. of M. Which Party? The Communists have their own ticket in the field. The Grand Lodge officers vote for republicans and for democrats. You know the Comniv- nist stand on these questions. But how about the other parties? The old parties, the republicans znd the democrats, have done all they could to crush labor. Under their administrations crushing in- junctions have been issued. The Railway Labor Board has been an instrument in the hands of the labor barons, as was admitted by the of- ficers’ report to the Atlanta Conven- | tion. Both old parties are supported! |i by the worst open shop companies. The Atlanta convention adopted the traditional A. F, of L. policy, of “reward your friends and punish your enemies.” It did not endorse any candidate for president, urged the members to study the rec- ords of the candidates. On that basis, which candidate is more de- serving of support by machinists than the leader of the great steel strike of 1919, William Z. Foster? ||] But it is the program of the parties that-is vital; the candidate isa sec- | | but i The Workers (Communist) Party | Read thé November Election Issue LABOR UNITY SEE FRED ELLIS’ fine cartoons showing FOSTER and GITLOW! —ALso——" ing Class— by TOM O'FLAHERTY Chinese Labor and the Militarist Factions— by CH U YANG, of the P, P, T. Statement of the T. U. E. L. on the A. F. L. Convention— | Expelling Progressive Carpenters by MIKE ROSS Greetings to Soviet Russia’s 11th Anniversary— “Kuzbas”—Kemerovo Today— by EDMUND GRANTZ “Peace and Prosperity? in the Anthracite— by B. K. GEBERT The Seamen’s Clubs and the M. WW. P. L— | by GEORGE MINK Marine Workers Progressive League on the Pacific— by LEONARD EMERSON Aspects of Class Struggle Abroad The Red International— by HARRISON GEORGE The English Trades Union Con- gress— ‘ by HARRY POLLITT Review of Events— Textile News— by International Comm. of Pro- paganda and Action i: eS icee a LABOR UNITY is a monthly, il- | lustrated magazine for militant workers. Published by The Trade Union Educational League at 2 West 15th Street, New York C'ty. Single copies 20 cents (in bund- les 15 cents). Subscription retes: Why You Should Vote for || For the Candidates of the Work- | —A gainst the Theory of “Decolonization” 4y Joun PEPPER —On Threshold of the Twelfth Year by MotssayE J. Orcin —Eugene Victor Debs by ALEXANDER TRACHTENBERG —Self-Study Corner —Books WORKERS LIBRARY 43 East 125th Street Order now PUBLISHERS New York City Tonight Wed. 8 “La Locandiera.” .. “The Cherry Orchard.” .. “Phe Would-Be Gentle- ‘he Cherry Orchard.” anbler.” # “Improvisations in June.” Mon. Ey., Noy. 12, “Would-Be Gentle- man,” JOLSON Thea.. 7th Ave. & 59th St Eys.8.30 Mats.Tues.&Sat. ODETTE DE WOLF MYRTIL HOOPER in a musical romance ot Chopin saM HARRIS Theatre, 42d St., West of B'way, Eves. 8.30. ill| Matinees, Tuesday & Saturday, 2.30. MUSICAL COMEDY HIT FEAR A Startling Tragedy of a Woman's Unfaithfulness. THE THEATRE GUILD Presents FAUST ‘Thea., W. 52nd St. GUILD Eves, 8'30; Mats. Thursday and Saturday, 2.30 Strange Interlude John GOLDEN Thea., 58th BE. of B'way EVENINGS ONLY AT 5:30 endary consideration, $2 gees $1.25 for sia Spread The DAILY WORKER E of the best methods of carrying on election work is to see that the DAILY WORKER is placed in the hands of as many workers as possible, During, the period of the Hlection Campaign we will sell the DAILY WORKER at $6.00 per thou- sand. No meeting or campargn rally should be . without a bundle of DAILY WORKERS. Order Now! <e jusand, NAMB ADDRESS.....+ To arrive nut later than 1 am attaching careers copies of The DAILY WORKER remittance to cover s: | LUCKEEGIRL if CORT Thea., W. 48th St, Eves. 8.30 M | Money Refunded If Not Satisfied CHANIN'S 46th St. W. of Biway SCHWAR and MANDEL’S. G MUSICAL SMASH OOD NEW with GEORGE OLSEN'S MU: NITE HOSTE Mats. Election Day and Saturday. LAST WEEK! “sce THE LADDER SEEN N ITS REVISED FORM? PLYMOUTH sisi ts Extra Matinee Blection Day. ERLANGER THEA. W. 44th ST, wa vatcnnel Evenings 8.30 — Mats., Tuesday & Saturday, 2:30. George M. Cohan's Comedians with POLLY WALKER in Mr, Cohan'’s Newest Musical ‘Comedy “BILLIE” TT Thea., W. 44th St. Eve. 8.30 LITTLE Mats., Wed., Election Day and Saturday, 2:30 GODS of the LIGHTNING by Mawell Anderson & Harold Hickerson. latinees, Wed. & Sat. With Play. Eves, at 8 26 Matinees, Tues. & Sat. 3 THEATR Eves. MARTIN BECK Vote as you striket You strike against the bosses and their serv= ants—vote against them, 45th St. 8th Ave. THE . fies NEW PLAYWRIGHTS THEATRE WILL OPEN ITS THIRD SEASON ABOUT DECEMBER 1ST with a production of a revised version of SINGING JAILBIRDS UPTON SINCLAIR at the PROVINCETOWN PLAYHOUSE SINGING JAILBIRDS is a dramatization of the grent California marine workers’ strike of i923. It has been jed Sinclair's mas terpiece, No other American play has so well ught the spirit of that daring group of revolutionary workers—the Wobblies. Their «pirit.of uncompromising class struggle gives SINGING JAILBIRDS n furious tempo an ie KONES ax compored and sung by them on the battlefront of labor make this play a never to be forgotten experience in the tre. Productions of lay in the revolutionary theatres of Austria, Germ , Crecho’ Slovakia, Russian and France have been eminently successful. Telephone or write at oncefor reservations. Theatre parties must be scheduled in advance. Liberal rates for organizations, m Apply to Daily Worker, 26 Union Square.