The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 12, 1928, Page 4

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| WORKERS PARTY IN MINING Prosperity Talk Fails ¥* to Deceive: Miners THE DAIL’ Days When the Capitalis s Trembled Above is a scene from “Ten Days That Shook the World,” the Y WORKER, NEW YORK, MUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1923 _ “THESE FEW ASHES” VICTIMS OF BILL BOSSES FACED BY 112 YEARS PRISON | Boston Rally Sunday | to Aid 662 Strikers | Broadway “Exposed” Again WORKER'S WIFE A NEW play, “Tin Pan Alley,” by Hugh Stanislaus Stange, at the Biltmore Theatre is another theatri- cal expose of stage. night club life and bootlegging behind the scenes on the Great White Way. the / Since unusual success of “Tin Pan Alley” at the Biltmore Is Another Tale of “Wicked” Night Life straight and narrow path despite outward appearances. love-making on the part of the boot-| legger. “path. Enter husband now threatened HAD KEEN. EYE sec: TO SPOT FINKS the cirl’s part to tread the righteous Incident of the Textile Struggle Told More furtive | with consumption on account of no longer caring and neglecting to take By.a Worker Correspondent) viet film now showing at the Little Carnegie Playhouse, 57th St. The trial of the 662 New Bedford | “Broadway” it was bound to follow i ili By a Worker Correspondent # recent article of the New| The film tells the story of the early days of the Bolshovik Revolution, |strikers which is scheduled to take | that the present day playwriters (are of him ue ghee tl TeERTON Mesa. (By y= William H. Hill, chair- . : place next week has filled the docket | Peak would repeatedly seize on the same #7 the night club te meet at the I want to tell you of a textile mill toy ew York State Hoover-) ——— : “ - a a |in the superior court. There are | a oie econ dramatic elements to stir up further Quit Gnieay ae ae be te committee meeting we held here | Gi Campaign Committee, stated 16 classes of offenses set forth in| : ie concoctions for the consumption of Colorad et booth abe joel ing some time ago, and which had some Pe cn the gout OLD AGE ef S A TRA GED 7) the appealed cases of the New Bed-| witie Baker plays one of the im-|theatre-goers. “Tin Pan Alley” is tat tis prey is escaping, calls in his Very interesting consequences, but and that generally the youth ford strikers; Of these 865 are! portant roles in “These Few Ashes,” neither the best nor the worst of ¢ i147 henchmen and a deliberate Which I did not get a chance to tell d support the republican party. same issue of the Times FOR WORKERS OF U. S. cases in which “rioting” is charged. 7eonard Ide’s clever comedy at the There are 67 strikers charged with Booth Theatre. : | such successors. Briefly, the story concerns itself you about before. The meeting was held in Taun- murder is planned. In an excellently stage-managed scene at the train Sigee Young Democratic. Clab i releictiges here pac ogame jwith the efforts of a chorus girl pate the attempted murder takes ton. Weisbord, secretary of the Na- ™26'debate with the Young Republican| Moisha was a millinery operator were furious; to think that after | Be see teoeeis " bein i Fabien ti ata mae ee tips first ee eee Lae cone the ae deere “tab of New York on the subject! for 16 years ; pecans i Bee: aypnaliae dha sen eed or being Children as Traffic writing husband, In act one we first “mm. scene here, shifts back to the to speak, He arrives. The hall dors ae nl me gh 2b0) ao ct for 16 years. He wasn’t a very|@ man had worked-nine years in the | “dle and disorderly;” 13 are charged | ~ see the girl coming to a night club ie oy G ie shi : ae tue’ |are locked. Police, spies, finks, Resolved, That Alfred Smith, rath-' jeasant person, but nevertheless he !@¢tory he should be discharged be-/ with “obstructing an officer of per-/ COPS MN Qakland; New in search of her errant husband to Meht club and at last “virtue leveryahere: 2 Tora: with) Weisherd Herbert Hoover doe eee rete rend worker He worked cause he was weak after an opera-|formance of his duty;” 12 are "6 learn that the owner of the club, a ‘Tiumphs and the wily villian is en- | €verywieee Ne: seel/ind @lected President of the United W#S 4 Ver EEK esa free Metal with “iauinidedon” aaa 12| COP. OF Oni “babor » ® tangled in the meshes of the law. [on the sidewalk, We seek informa- ates.” The debate, one must con-|f0F ine years in our shop. Then |" i charged: with “Intinidagon sn feuper-gangman and bootleeger, i8 Good acting.is provided by es-|tion. Finally we get it, The mayor a n , one mus he became sick and the doctors de-| .4 Strike was called, every branch | with “assault and battery.” Other unsuccessfully in love with her, for g bel and the police chief have banned an excellent pastime for cided’ ati ane OBER: of the factory being organized. The charges are: Breaking glass; incit-| (Special to the Daily Worker) | lin spite of everything the girl is pecially Claudette Colbert, Wray and Norman Foster. | the textile mill committees’ meeting. lege youths who go to “edu- operators, trimmers, cutters and |in ; i thaw OAKLAND, Calif. (By Mail). —| ; : Tae ee : Z ee Siren ey y ‘s, g to riot; obstructing the sidewall! . i ‘ IL I ith her hysband H ¥ ae institutional to prolong ene besuh et panties Si blockers all went out en masse. The violating an automobile law; dis-|In line with the story of the Junior i benbonidaine aes hive to bcs If you liked “Broadway,” “Bur-| ‘The officials have threatened the lescence and between i | Dass d him good », telling boss realized that he. would have to turbing a school, and misuse of the | League of the Ku Klux Klan, in the| = Peony. 0m Cone se lesque” and other offerings of the hall lease with permanent closure. sp eee that in Ae a mt ve Money snd ee bei give in. It took a few days and flag. | Daily Worker of November 1, is the |" oo ts of the act shows the saa genre, Pde ma like “Tin Pan 1 ees 0 ae is ae “ there is an election campaign. Also N€@ get his J ate SS : ever’ y was job, in- : is ci raw Altey.” though it is not partic- man dressed like a worker ay everybody was back on the job, in-| The sentences imposed total 112| latest attempt of this city to d douplets tarnialgiel fine 4hes aaa y e! Pp We letke He the statement of Wm. Hill that Hoo- vér will claim most of the votes of mth will hold a little water bat not much, because pfosperity republicans is too common for ouths and the democratic was well again. The operation was not quite successful, and for sev- eral nights the men of the shop took turns at watching at his bed- side, for Moisha was expected to die. After being in the hospital for cluding Moisha. Moisha worked a few days, fainted at the machine, was taken home and in a fews days was dead. A theatre benefit was jarranged and now his widow and years, range from fines and from the boys into the forces of “law and two months in jail to as high as Nhe ate 3 ‘ three years imprisonment. William the militaristic, / ruling machine T. Murdoch has already served two | While at the same time the children months in the house of correction, |®%¢ being exploited for the so-called order,” and so make them a part of | morning with a domestic row that) |results in the couple parting, same | having been engineered by a con-| federate of the night club owner. | A month later we are at the night proaches, he listens. ularly original in theme or construc- . He limps on one tion, the play provides some excel- lently played scenes that grip the audience. Incidentally “Tin Pan Alley” re- joices in many of the naughty words jis all attention. leg. | October 9: a knock at the door. |A_ well-dressed gentleman stands |there. I am unemployed. Do I want college three children have a few hundred |, . 3 benefit of the taxpayers of Oak- promises of a “foaming beer glass” three months, he recovered. He | dollars, agg Bred i Beal: as eee CO eae ee aan ae club again with the girl resplendent |that the success of “The Front|a good job in Bridgeport, Conn.? Tee ta eet om Torney although he. was only. about a ot| ngdiyee™ cPerators & strong and| new ‘Textile Workers Union which “Law” Enforcers. in new finery but still pursuing the! Page” set a style for this season. |Good conditions. | No strike. He Bee fe vic and seay all the| 48 yeare old, hovlocket lita an li Prauty, young Garey as taken was organized in New Bedford dur-| Since last spring, the boys of high, - hea re be cpr ihre T khowsas outh of our “glorious” land would|man. Our boss took one look at him | n> PiMCe~SALLY. jing the six months’ strike recently junior high and even grammar EVA GALLIENNE TO Ga ag and’to ahd oot” Would they be in schools and colleges. But un-and decided that he didn’t want him (Written for the Worker Cor- |endet:,, Against Murdoch thers are/ schools are being used as “Junior | @ T0 PRESENT “PETER PAN” £0? in prosperous America,|@nymore. He told him to go. respondence claes in the New York our charges of loitering, a charge | Traffic Officers” in front of schools acation of the youth is limited and at a very age they are sucked by the capitalist whirlpool into the The other workers in the shop | Workers School.) DEFY DARKNESS. of disturbing the peace and a charge facing principal streets where traf- |of being idle and disorderly. On the fic is heavy and the little children last charge Murdoch was sentenced cannot safely cross alone. jin the lower court to six months; The boys are sworn into office TRY CROAT CHIEF “Peter Pan,” James M. Barrie’s fantasie, will be the fourth new pro- duction of the Civic Repertory The- |“A fink,” she whispers, “remember on the sidewalk the night Weisbord came?” I remember then. He limps “Tell him Bridgeport |” Wife calls me out of the room. weatshops and factories to add to es 4 ‘ i + + jon one leg. the building money bags of a few imprisonment in the house of cor- by the chief of police, trained by a atre, and will have its premiere ati. too far away.” I usher him out. ee sittanthtop: |rection. Beal is charged with dis-| traffic officer appointed to the duty|___ «_|the Fourteenth Street Theatre on| [ater the same evening, a sup- There’s the rub. The republican turbing the peace, and was found cf Jooking after the junior squad, Violent Outbreaks IN| Monday evening, November 26, ac-| posed sympathizer calls. Buys Vote rity bluff and the democrats se booze may go with the col- youth, but the working and g youth cannot be lured on omises because they have 1 a good taste of prosperity and promi ee IS “BUNK” AFFAIR Communist Speaker Is OF SOUTHERNERS Atheists Reopen Fight guilty in a district court twice of | ornamented with fancy caps and left violating a city ordinance., He was |to their own devices in regulating also sentenced to six months im-|tyaffic and getting the children prisonment in the house of correc-' goross the streets, tion on a charge of rioting and an| All for “Civic Duty.” additional six months imprisonment J A Fr | Starting with two schools in the Provinces BELGRADE, Nov. 9.—The Bel- grade regime announced today that it would prosecute the leaders of the cording to an announcement yester- Communist buttons. “‘When is the day by Eva Le Gallienne. inext rally to be held? Will I tell ; : 'him?” I think, “The makings of Bethel LN ce parrie's master- Communist.” I tell him about the A | other, about my wife’s detection. He the title role at all performances. listens, he asks questions, he de- democracy in the last few years Not Invited on Arkansas Law on a charge of being idle and dis.| SI «Croatian peasant party and the in-! Other roles will be played by: Egon hese Bspecially the youth miners from | | orderly. | spring term they are now operating ldependent democratic party, Dr.|Brecher; Josephine Hutchinson, |" y inform him by card of the next he coal fields who have faced de-| (By a Worker Correspondent) |DEFR DARKNESS NO. 1 .. ....| Jack Rubinstein among other|i™ front of fourteen schools. | TRS stachek and Svetozar Pribichevitch,|Charles McCarthy and Vernon| necting. fle fails to come. Then mocracy and starvation would like, Recently there was a symposium) LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Nov. 11.-|charges on which he was found guil- aise eda ‘Asbaclatiog, the for their writings and speeches’ Jones. . [I think, just where and bares the subject of the debate That both parties vepresent id and that the Workers (Commuist) the only true representative of young miners have joined the ranks of the Young Workers (Com- munist) League but there are con- crete examples to show that the youth are breaking away from “par- @ntal” organizations and* that these ®rganizations are losing théir in- diuence among the young workers. he bunkum of the boss controlled ; public schools may have powerful * thfluence and make good loyal re-| spublicans and democrats but the| > jverurn the atheist literature taen |under the auspices of the Interna-| asked why Captain Hanson Outley, ive resistance policy urged ———E m A | al strike (court injunctions, beat-| PANT" speaker was Mrs. Block,|{fm Sirith waen wrested, (tional Labor Defense, This meet-|an American Negro citizen, NOW |e ee sead nthe Tegeslay regine| The Workers (Communist) Party ialing — ee Eee bony rngs and unjust arrest) has opened ¢ aselaliak: , d Cowardly Vriends. ing is the first of a series which | serving as military instructor to the | has been able thus far to run rough-| fi#hts for the organisation of the ease ’ 1 { the eyes of the working youth an¢ { has made many good Communists § The fact that young workers who { for years have been regular church 1 goers (one case where a youth } walked three miles to church and aever missed a Sunday for six years) and now have joined the Young Workers League and have severed of the presidential candidates at the) Arkansas having passed by refer- Community Church forum. To myjendum. the bill against teaching tically same interests surprise John Haynes Holmes, the/ evolution in the school, and it having tenced to six months imprisonment | minister, announced that a Com-|thus been decreed by popular vote munist representative had not been/that god made Adam from general reached the socialist party. agitating against This same minister on various) was before the electorate, plans, occasions has claimed that he is 8) with others, to reopen an office and fighter for the working-class and 8/ continue the fight, champion of the common people. On| giith, who went hk the first page of the church calender). 7 Fah p KS ae the following is written—“The par.| *tike for 17 days in jail before pose of this church is for Service| *’™¢ unknown perton paid his fine, of Humanity, seeking truth and free-|2!8° Sought to appeal the old sen- \ against him, but the courts | tence jrefured to take his appeal. In ad- the bill while it dom—knowing no sect, class, na-| tion or race.” Why, then, this dis- i 2 : P crimination against the Communist | itis. the chief of police refus-d to She described the re-| publican and democratic parties ar} ne cutstanding feature of the grafters, how “public ownership” | case is Smith’s anger at the coward- would be the remedy and pointed|liness of his supposed supporters. eloquently to the wonderful work) He said yesterday: which the socialists are doing in| “The organized opposition to the Europe. | bill was insignificant in extent, and Congressman H. Fish then spoke/wreteched in character. The cow- for the republican party. He tried|ardly, hypocritical compromisers ty in a district court as a result of | ‘his work in the strike, was sen-|East Bay Safety Council and the school department as inculcating a sense of “responsibility and civic on a charge of rioting and was a| . e re |duty,” while the police department second time sentenced to six months | leave them free for other duties and thus save the city thousands of dol- jars. Child labor? What else? U.S. Army Aviation School Bars Negro WASHINGTON, (By Mail). Secretary of War Davis has been \for being idle and disorderly. | A mass meeting will be held in’ |Boston tomorrow, 7.30 p. m., at |Credit Union Hall, 62 Chambers St, jto protest against the attempt to \railroad these leaders of the textile {strike to prison for many months. |Norman H. Tallentire of New York, | |assistant secretary of the Interna-| | tional Labor Defense, will address the meeting.’ The meeting is being held Liberian Frontier Forces, was re- fused admission to the U. S. Army aviation school. |will be addressed by Norman Tal- |lentire in the near future in large |eastern cities in which the New Bed- |ford cases will be discussed. Work- lers’ organizations are urged to or- ganize mass meetings of protest |against the New Bedford arrests in \their cities before November 20th. |Mass meetings of the International ter a school in Berlin, when noti- fied that America granted only white men, air pilot licenses. Captain Outley was forced to en-| directed against the Serbian regime of oppression. The newspaper Pol- itika was suppressed yesterday for the third time this week. The Belgrade parliament still clared that they will no longer con- sider the laws passed by it as per- | taining to them. All efforts to sup- press the autonomist movement ii \the provinces have failed, and violent \demonstrations of Croatian peasants and Dalmatian workers are reported to have broken out again. The peasants and democratic par- ties have formed a coalition against the Belgrade government, but due to shod over its opponents. We demand the establishment of public kitchens by mi to provide free meals f employed workers and th entitled Miss Le Gallienne also announces|how did I meet him? that she has under consideration for | Slowly I decide. Another fink. Two production next season a new play of a kind. Exit credulity, up goes “Spindrift” by Martin | wife’s stock—H. C. “Children of the ) Flavin, author of , especially the youth.” invited because the forum had no|construction material taken fr |imprisonment on a second charge of |frankly stated at the first tha it ” ‘ : < ae ’ Eyes Opened. time to listen to any “minor” party,| clay bank, Charles “Smith, the Nee Pre res In addition he Rana would release a number of officers ea ee aaah ted ats fi: |Temianka In Violin it a fact that hundreds ®"4 he therefore stopped when he York atheist who was jailed for|tenced to six months imprisonment |sed as traffic regulators and so/ Ft ists have de- VAUDEVILLE PROGRAM AT, Recital Thursday Eve THE BROADWAY THEATRE : eae: | Henry Temianka, violinist, will The vaudeville artists upon the appear in recital at Town Hall next Broadway Theatre program this Thursday evening. Because of an week are: Mayris and Edward Fox; jerror, Temianka’s recital was an- Director Haven Mac Quarrig in anounced in Saturday’s Music Notes demonstration of how talking pic-|'gor the afternoon. tures are made; Cardini; Marie Walsh and Frank Ellis; Leland and St. Claire; McCloud and Ketrick, and the Five Jansleys. MURDER SUSPECT FREED, STAMFORD, Conn., Nov. 11 (UP) —Paul G. Lambert, suspected of unorganized workers. Keith-Albee AME ai tione srith the osc to show how prosperous America| would neither fight nor let others | ripe ‘ oe we ia een has become under Coolidge’s leader- | fight. There are not three men in |-®>0 Defense membership will also es vi aencald | “clutches of bourgeois ideology is Ship; no unemployment, and a high| Arkansas who would dare declare | efore ovedibee a0 phe tee aed eee 42nd Street and Broadway & yreak 5 | The fact that The Daily Worker ant-the Young Worker is as prom- iment as the bourgeois papers in the | mining towns shows that the miners know the lies of the capitalist press | and look to the official organs of} the workers for correct information| on their problems. One of the most are of age to vote Communist. | is pleasing to note how the| delicious bits of news from the min- | Bruere then spoke for the| ing the laws before the U. s.| (Red Aid Press Service) 26-28 UNION SQUARE SEE THE SENSATIONAL FILM THAT STARTLED ALL EUROPE ing section is the news that many| | 07° it ity fhe’? praised Supreme Court, Mh nee era emis Yas- NEW YORK CITY po nn orn ccrere emer ee ne neces nein pearance eid rn Pan mtn | 5 Siiev rat tinal : : 7 fi cunski, iversi . V4BtethAy. (“Young miners who for the first time| sinith’s accomplishments as gov-| The Civil Liberties Union states |¢¢ Chadgm adds Waliignen ela bag 4 poled saseezd0 boo te rar . h e s 50c; $1.00, $1.50. Mats. Tues.&Sat.,2. ; - This is the kind of bunk the work-|ning to urge anti-evolution laws on |}, ‘ EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director al P algal | labor for bein; be : ee et chains he pcan ee |ers are forced to listen to at a public| many states whose legislatures meet | commamintat Party. Mirutnais ~ Tonight, “The Would-Be Gentleman.” Sa by "| forum, which advertised itself as|in January. The Civil Liberties | Yascunski is only 26 years old but phe Ee aly Re een dee meee q | I! ] = When one lives on relief for eighteen months and faces the winter with life in poorly built barracks he loses | Sefaith in republican “prosperity.” hose Tare and oxpone thetn:t r Dr. Yascunski admitted being a tae ‘ shi t ‘or what | fore the higher courts. ry ¥ri. Eve. . ) y ings, free speech is prohibited by “law,” and one is picket iine for demand'ng better | spondence class in the N. Y. Work. he loses faith in dem- beaten on the} standard of living for the workers |openly that Adam and Eve are He, said that Coolidge and Hoover) mythical characters.” were entirely guiltless of any graft! tm New York it is announced by or corruption during the Harding/th. Civil Liberties Union that the that Hoover knows the farmers’! organization is looking for a school administration. He ended by saying|teacher in either of the three states needs because he was born on 4! where anti-evolution laws exist farm, and the other candidates dc| sere not because they were born in the (Tennessee, Mississippi and Arkan- |sas); who will file a test case to ernor and his wonderful personality.|that the fundamentalists are plan- jupholding truth and free speech. No| Union does not propose any “noto- | wonder they did not invite a Com-|riety like the Scopes case,” seeking munist; he would rip the mask off solely to get the “legal issues” be- NORTON GOLDING. | _TO APPEAL SYNDER SUIT. (Written for the Worker Corre-| an appeal will be made from the | decision of Justice Jeremiah Ma. that all workers send contributions \to the national office of the Inter. | national Labor Defense immediately. j scsi |4 Years Prison for | Being a Communist |has been sentenced to 4 years hard has already won a reputation as a very promising scholar. | ganizationally active in the work of | the party. The sentence has caused | great indignation in Warsaw even! Distribute PRESS, Inc. ‘MATA HARI = The Most Sinister Women Spy of the greatest war in history . .. whose charms bereft men of all honor and Patriotism .. . and whose perfidy sent 50,000 French soldiers to death... ‘Mata Hari: The Red Dancer’ —FACED THE FIRING SQUAD WITH A SMILE Tues. Eve.,, “Phe Master Builder.” Wed. Mat.,-The Cherry Orchard.” Wed. Eve.,’“L’Invitation au Voyage.” Thurs. Eve, “The Cherry Orchard.’ THE bloat yd GUILD FAUS GUILD * . Thur Strange Interlud John GOLDEN Thea, s8tn \VENINGS ONLY AT FAY BAINTER in | , » econditions, MMe Withoct doctt. thers te al ; jhoney voiding the $95,000 insurance amongst circles which have nothing | mAE NAL age | E A LO US Y” marked change in the coal fields of | FOOTBALL STAR SHOT. _ a icy ae oar a Pig eat to do with the revolutionary move- W Treadwell ; with JOHN HALLIDAY | De: 1 ia and Ohio. Not only 4 rown, mother o: rs. Ruth Snyder, ment. | v u H POE Pennsylvania an . Not y CHICAGO, Nov. 11 (UP).—John : ; | é | MAXINE ELLIOTT’S Thea, W. 39 St. fre the older workers “up in arms” |G, Archer, fullback the N who together with Henry Judd Gray saad hth’ Mats. Wed. & Sat Eves, at 8:40. | et the he Aeteracy Raa tie een orth-| was executed for the murder of her We demand the tmmediate re- | x st: THRAL w en [es AN a : | against the sham democracy western University football eleven jushand. An announcement to this) ™@¥"! of all restrictions tn all | ERLANGER eel Mra | | igo the parties of |was shot and seriously wounded early| q ‘i trade unions against the member- SS — Rvenings 880 —~| Little CARNEGIE. PLAYHOUSE, ced ron whe bare Wonca 8 ly wounded early! effect has been made by Joseph «hip of Negro workers nnd equal 3 Mats, Wednesday & Saturday, 2.30. | , 141 W. 57th Bt. | een lve litigated iaredlng a ak par scenes Leonardo, attorney for Mrs. Brown,| 9p Portuntty for seniors O union meeting, affair or labor event George Me tens Comedians | “TEN DAYS THA Midnight, B s ac e a nig! of celebration 0: e Purple’s bf 4 4 al orking co! le ry a . bs (00) in thes miners’ struggle have begun | victory over Purdue. P | Irish Republicans tions for Negro and white workers, should pass without the distribution of ah ve BB lM herrea sion THE ican SHOOK to expose and fight against the en- - a a bundle of Daily Workers, The Daily Comedy Pop. Prices, Circle 7551 | tire rotten exploiting system. With ABANDON FLIGHT. Worker, the collective organizer of the “cc ” " | hie same determination that built (By United Press.) | labor movement is the best fighter for BILLI E Weith-all ME— \ a new miners union they will fight | Roger Q. Williams announced lat =, sy the organization of the unorganized work- PAGS as t under the leadership of the Young | right that he and Pierre Bonelli had Shenae mae Hp ie Salen ' LITTLE "iets, Wea, e sats 330. | (Broadway (GANGSTER? Fe is * ist) Lenguesand) abandoned until’ 1 ‘opet ; s aiaatiieatibn tine atte oma érs, for militant trade ‘unionism, against ats, Wed. en | roa way Workers (Communist) rs abando’ ext spring their ‘ han in ‘ " with June Collyer f guidance of the Workers (Commnu-| plan to fly to Rome in Charles A. Lei See amen siete a dt le GODS of the LIGHTNING Seen ae oy ae ee \ nist) Party to build a new govern- | evine’s trans-Atlantic airplane Col-| ist wars. x 18, CHANEY r by Mawell Anderson & Harold & FOX, ALSH & ELLIS ment of the workers and farmers | umbia. ‘ Hickerson a ot the United States. Pinas as : QRDER your bundle a few days in wage base HARRIS 1 ey aes 5 t ) be, Miarhece Party Not by following the political crooks | ) advance of your meeting at the special pe dadtbrabdatld sae aiciniey | Matinees, Wednesday & Saturday, 20 " th the exposing of the U.M..|but by’ the tacti Es , y RIVE VE : prod at me ON Shay FWA. corruption and misleadersbip, | ship of the Communist Parte ni | pees ete diel gh So ig grime ia neon ee ae Rey aa taal b Hand trade union leadership general- this be possible. The first steps | COMING OUT OF THE Cligston, to open at the Cort LI ICKEE GIRL Be de ‘et ae : sey ¥ pel eene towards a workers and farmers gov- ie bit Ng Mlelehds ta | press, schools, churches anc “|ernment and a new society is the f how in Ave @ | itaiscenattitemeneateneme | Sient have been unearthed as tools organization of a strong work-| ! Daily Worker : JOLSON hy 35, sat AGSKt/CHANIN'S 46th St, W. of Bway KE nm the hands of the bosses. pore ers party. Every new member | H 26 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CITY. canon ont 4 ¥ un WRI | Matinees, Wed. Fgh vrei ed f ola must be taken out of the hands | jy added amunition in the fight | \ { nw muster romance oF Chopin | SCHWAR and MANDBL'S f i f ie Pegs ong put ae a con-|ygainst capitalism and for a work- {© Please send me ; couples of Phe Daria WUls bit | i MUSICAL SMASH | [chem in the interests of tha work: |(Communint) Part, Tokttne Geaeg| CUTIES ARE URGED T0 BEGIN MAKING ARRANGE. |; AJOOD NE ; ig majority rather than an exploit-| Workers (Communist) League. Join MENTS FOR CELEBRATIONS NOW. i iF Naar ed heh sdee ttl rs ————— | with GHORGE OLSEN'S muUSIO, h ing eee ‘ ee fight and wie the aed meat Fag three H ADDRESS. OMmnr. sees STATE. LAST WEEK! | |. uation to build a new miners’) organizations will lead the prole- {Po arrive net tater than s.cce vada dans ineaaeate HAVE YOU | _, ‘Mion and a new textile union, It|tarian family to the dictatorship of ! Cam attaching » remittance to cover same SEEN THE LADDER |. ll take fight and organization to|the proletariat and a Communist IN JTS REVIEHI FORM? | sin control of the government and | society. si R’ shit ag a Maca +) |. at it'fnto the hands of the workers. | 4 —PRANK HENDERSON, itt r il einchtenatneiansccohis lala

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