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Page Fou (By a Worker Correspondent) { PHILADELPHIA, (By Mail).—A} new duty, that of tearing down post-} ¥s tacked up by the Workers (Com- munist) Party, was imposed on the] dready “overburdened” police of this | tity during the last election cam-| paign. | The bulls, what between cracking} their night-sticks on strikers caught] h the heinous act picketing, | breaking up out-door meetings of} Jags-conscious workers, and jugging speakers for failure to shout “glory{ for Morgan,” b | had plenty to do as it} ci And when it remembered } that Philadelphia’s “finest” are com-| to much of their time} sions from the rum| that the bulls ir hand -of graft. | he speed-up has hit. even! smrades who were post nd nd pelled collecti have t it ¢ see nd fences one| neld up by al been shadow- xpensive motor car. the hootch trust) of snatched the rem rs to “beat it.”| 1 the Wor | , a bona fide} heir cause as the demo-j republicans and socialists, Whose bill hed by the police, the dye never ferocity of the uglier. legal yeggs became | “We Got Orders.” “We got orders to rip ’em_ down,| ste,” one of them snarled. He had} no’ answer ready for the question, | and corruption go hand in glove;|held over for a third week. “How is it you don’t have orders to} the state of conditions that obtains|UFA feature, “Feeding the Angels” remove the images of capitalist|here is only a minature of the na-|is also being held over. wWard-heelers plastered all over the} Instead he began to put the} aspects thru a third degree. | puts up the money for these} h d to know. | Du Pont and not Raskob,| nor J. P. Morgan either.” | “Wise guy, eh? Any more cracks ut and we'll give you the} of work: { The placards were subjected to a] close examination; from top to bot- t to right roved the of the law. “Kaiserism.” a | “What this mean?” he yapped on| coming to the slogan, “Against Im-| perialist Wars’—the nearest his| soggy brain could come to under- standing the explanation given was,| “Uh, huh—Kaiserism.” “Down with Race Oppression,” stumped him worse. “Say, are you| guys mixed up with the fellahs what was burnin’ the crosses around here last summer?” he demanded sus- piciously, pictures of Reds and Ku Kluxers befuddled for a moment in| his boozy mind. Bursting into loud guffaws, the workers were in im- minent danger of being clubbed by a crackpot all but foaming at the mouth for fury; but in the end, not seeing their way clear to framing “these goddam Bolsheviks” the} doughty defenders of “law and or-| der,” hopped into their high-priced | car, and were off to the rum agency or police station as it is sometimes called in jest, barking in parting, “Don’t let us catch you around here ” On retracing their steps, the workers discovered that every! last one of the posters they had put| up had been torn down by the dicks. The Higher Up. It is altogether in line with the} new status of the bulls that they| carry out orders issuing from the| office of Max Boo-Boo Hoff, mil- lionaire bootlegger and real boss of the civil machinery, with so much| zeal. For they are no mere tools of| ‘a capitalist caste; thanks to an| tom and f wolfish eye again. graft, they have achieved some mon-| etary standing of their own, and along with it, the shekel-swing slant) might be interesting to those who | on the working class. The grand jury “probe” started by job-hunting political hacks has} ‘brought to “light” the fact that| ‘Philadelphia is and has been for years under liquor law. | On Booze Payroll, | It has been proven in open court} that the police department to a man| ‘ig. on the regular payroll of the} ooze band. Books “confiscated” by| federal agents in “raids” on racket theadquarters reveal that millions in} Iprotection money were “slipped” ‘xangster-cops in the space of a year! or so. Many drew weekly salaries| jand each member of the force had ‘a..price dependent upon rank and frag. One dick profited to the tune| fof nearly a million before the} fury got after him. Another cleaned up so much velvet in a few months spent with a special prohibition “en iforcement” squad that he was en abled to retire, buy up two hotels and a cafe, in the heart of the city ‘and settled down to enjoy life. A eommon patrolman, yet to be called} Suby the “inonisitors,” has purchased : outright a $60,000 country estate on this weekly wage of $30 from the wnicipality. The chief of detec-| ‘tives was well on his way to becom- ng a millionaire when the district! attorney, out of jealou spiked | him. For a police captain to bank $590 at a crack was nothing in the) nre-probe days. (Now they keep it) *m a sock until Judge Lewis and “District Attorney Monogahan having sotten All the publicity they need,| allow the “investiration” to blow) over). Practically all bulls and dicks ‘nave bloated bankrolls, own houses | m exelueive residential districts, and| “te to “erork” in Packards. Grafters Unscathed. As for the men higher ,up, their Akines are simply colossal. Bar a) “ww captains and one inspector, they | ave cone unseathed. which was to| expected, Some dozen cops, who Pore rantont with a bribe 6f five or| on meres now and then, have dees.” ee td PHILA. POLICE HAVE | HANDS FULL--OF GRAFT ing posters, and|since, poor soul. That “stroke” was arty, having as much right} };,, | wor plastered all over towny) 9 work | vest been suspended—cheap jacks of that sort are a disgrace to go-getting keteers and deserve to “get the But the big boys proper, the mag- istrate, judges, congressmen and| other “fixers” in high places, those who shake down a hundred smacks where a beatpounder rakes in one, tight and try to keep a straight face while the political clown-show roars thru the headlines. There is Congressman Golder, for instance, a known partner of Q:ar Boo-Boo, whose name bobs up daily in connec- tion with the infantile proceedings | and is daily suppressed in the capi-| talist sheets. | A Timely “Stroke.” At least two other congressmen | sit on the board of directors of the hootch trust, which does a five mil-| ion lar trade in poison spirits | ly and is linked up with Chi- cago gangdom and the New York} boot sians, Senator Vare was floored | ytic e” on the eve be,” a fined to his Atlan f the “pr tie City bed ever timely, to put it mildly. H Meanwhile Hoff, | ing the district at w Had it been possible for ing class jury to really in- i] | igate the present racketeer-goy- ernment, indictments against every |njoyed during the pa: jlocal job-holé j turned at the f would have been re- t sitting, and the whole pirate crew flung into the “clink” en masse. But capitalism tional scene. City Historv Club Is Peeved With “Gods of the Lightning” THE first protest against “Gods Sof the Lightning,” which has several characters who intimate that all is not right in the judicial circles of the realm, has been re- |ceived. It is from The City History Club of New York, of which Mrs. | 4. Barton Hepburn is president. | ®he honorary vice-vresidents are, among others, John H. Finley, Otto H, Kahn, William Fellows Morgan, Frank A. Vanderlip, Mrs. Jacob A, Riis and George W.. Wickersham. | The letter from Mrs. Hepburn is as | follows: “Messrs. Hamilton MacFadden and Kellogg Gary, The Little Theatre, 238 W. 44th St., N. Y. C. Gentlemen: At the meeting of the Board of Trustees of the City History Club whieh wzs held November 8th, the following resolution was passed: It was moved by Mrs. Wyatt, seconded by Dr. Peterson that the President be authorized to write to the management of the play ‘Gods of the Lightning’ express- ing disapproval of the .offensive and disloyal utterings permitted to be spoken in the text. This motion was unanimously carried.” As a patriotic organization we offer this protest to the disre- spect to our Constitution and flag. Sincerely yours, (Signed) EMILY E. HEPBURN, (Mrs, A. Barton Hepburn, President.)” Mr. MacFadden, in replying to Mrs. Hepburn, intimates that the 8") matter isn't so serious and that a) underworld government lousy with/ research into some of the utter-| ances which attended the birth of these somewhat United States feel that the’ speeches in the play are offensive. His letter follows: “My dear Mrs. Hepburn: I have received your letter of November 9th. In reply, both Mr. Gary and I would like to say that we have produced ‘Gods of the Lightning’ because we know it to be one of the most important pieces of dra- matic writing we have ever been privileged to read. It is not the province of a theatrical producer to question the opinions of char. acters within an author’s play except on the ground that such expressions are not motivated dramatically. We believe that the dialogue in ‘Gods of the Light- ning’ is unusually well motivated. producers, we should welcome ions to where we can find equally stirring dramatic speech, In elosing, may I step out of my role of producer and suggest that the History Club of New York might find interesting a perusal of some of the more im- portant utterences that brought about the birth of this country, Very sincerely yours, (Signed) HAMILTON MacFADDEN.” COTTON CROP WASHINGTON, Nov. 15, — In Arkansas picking and ginning of cotton were sornewhat delayed by showers the first part of the week, but good progress was made there- ufter, a government report states. In all other sections where picking hed not been completed, from the issippi Valley eastward, the weather was generally favorable and gathering the outstanding crop made satisfactory progress. Late bolls are reported as opening slowly in parts of northern Ala: bama. ‘ street.” ] d has been con- | ( THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, $ 3AR |1N SHAW’S “MAJOR E BARA” | 'Tolstoy’s “The Living |THE latest news from the Moscow |* film studies has it that Maxim |Gorki has at last given his consent to Sovkino to film his book, “The Story of the Bock Clasp,” Alexan- dra Khokhlova, one of the best di- rectors of the Sovkino, will wield the megaphone. Of the other new films, already released or almost completed, the | press department of the Soviet film | makers are kind enough to give the following details to the readers of our dramatic columns: | Late this month will be released | a big sporting film, “Spartakiade,” | “shot” during the competition in Moscow. NEW SOVIET FILMS Famous Story New Being Screened TURDAY EMBER 17, 1 . NOV Corpse” and Gorki’s! Mezhrapom Film has __ also | screened a series of scientific films, | | “Sheep-breeding in USSR,” “Skin” | “Mother and Child,” “Elevator,” | |“The Harmfulness of Metal-work- | ing,” and others. Ukrainian Films. Ten groups of cinema workers are engaged in producing cultural films for VUFKU (the Ukra‘nian State Cinema). The following films | are now being sereened: “Colds and ” Tilnes: “Physical Culture and Sport,” “Bird and Fishery Station” (near Kiev), “Along Turcomen to Bukhara With a Cinema Appa- tatus,” “Tractor,” “South Palmira” (Odessa), “Communa” (Life of col- | “Ten Deaths” Started. | Director U. Taritch (author of | | “Wings of a Slave,” “Ivan the Ter- | w=: | ible,” “Bulyat Batir” and “Cap- _|tain’s Daughter”) is producing a! new film, “Ten Deaths.” It is based | on the history of the Rus: {olution and shows the revol nary | struggle of the Russian and Polisk | Winifred Li , who wi in the T rd Shaw's which will open at the Guild Theatre Monday night. 1 play tie role m of ino has also started work on | based on the story of the | writer, “The Quiet Sovkino Film Continues - at Little Carnegie (ci, proletarian Piayhouse |Don,” by M. Sholokhova, which is | oy | very popular among the workers. Due to the remarkable The movie houses report great success of “Exploits in the Ice”) (rescuing expedition of “Krassin | and Malygina” for the “Italia”),| |photographed by the authors with jof its run at the Little Carnegie |Playhouseg “Ten Days That Shook |the World,” the Sovkino film di- HAS rected by S. M, Eisenstein will ye |the expedition. The| Director O. Preobrazhenskaya, di- |vector of the film “Women of Rya-/| an” and “The Bright City,” is eening the picture “Agitation Car,” picturing the participation of | artists in the Civil War. The Cameo Theatre is continuing for a second week “Mata Hari: The d Dancer.” The film, which “Unwanted Hostility.” deals with the life of the famous i is Of the World Wan eneuy |B. Urtsey, director and author of | films, “The Torn ” has been commissioned by | Sovkino to get out the film “Un- wanted Hostility” for the 10th In-| ternational Women’s Day. The} theme of the picture is the promot- | ing of workwomen to responsible \positions and the “unwanted” com- | petition between men and women | workers. In carrying out the campaign | against alcoholism, the Soviet cin- ema plays a particularly important | rele. Sovkino has demonstrated this | point in “Alarm,” where is por-; |tvayed that owing to drunkenness the worker’s productiveness of la-| |bor drops at the factory, and then “Eva and the Grasshopper,” from : en the UFA studios, will have its first [Now after am accident bas die Ne American showing at the 55th|' : Te Birect Playhouse. beginning todays|ics Mo eo ee pate *\“The Crooked Line,” gives an ex- ene ane Te ee Taw J ample of the battles of a workers’ | Chaplin “n-Te Vegan e mand | cu with a public house and the ! Chick tn \victory of the club when the club | Chick Mechans in “Great Moments | jew into its work the wives of | in Football.” Bes ea | PHILHARMONIC Culture in the Village. | That the fight for a new culture | Following a week on the road, the |is not limited to the town, but is Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra :lso carried on in the village, is| returns in time to celebrate the cen-|chown. in the film “Tanka of the tenary of the death of Franz Schu- Rating House.” The film shows} bert this week. Although Willem the struggle of the village social | ; ; the children’s {cuite a sensation when first shown | clove in Europe. Prof, Ivan Pavlov’s “Mechanics of the Brain,” in which he analy: animal and human sbehavior, will be shown the coming week at the Tifth Avenue Playhouse, The Roxy will show two features beginning today: “Napoleon’s Bar- | ber,” frem the play by Arthur Cat- | 7, with Qtto Matiesen, Frank Reicher and Henel Ware in the east, and a comedy with Clark and McCullough. Mengelberg has placed the Schubert C major symphony on the program for tomorrow afternoon, the official crganizations against the Kulaks, and the fight of the village social | workers for a new Tea-House to rather | memorial program is that arranged |for Wednesday afternoon and Fri-| |day evening at Carnegie Hall at which concerts the Atterberg Sym- | phony, which won the International prize in the Schubertl Centennia Contest, will have it world premiere. A feature of the program will be any address on Schafert by Dr. John replace the village public-house. Of the many scientific films re- cently completed, the picture “Al- | cohol” is the outstanding. Its pro- | duction was greatly aided by the participation of N. Semashko, Peo- vle’s Commissar for Health, and | Prof. Fursikova. The picture por- trays the experiments conducted by |Erskine. Balanc® of program in-|ine Institute of Pathological Phy- cludes other Schubert works; the| ‘isiogy and the Institute for the Overture, Entri-acte and Ballet|Se.qy’ of ‘Nerve Activity af the Music from ‘Rosamunde,” and the| sibs headeine “Unfinished” Symphony. easiet od ‘4 Tomorrow afternoon at Carnegie | Tolstoy’s “Living Corpse.” Hall, in addition to the Schubert Re bee on bandana a ied |Symphony, the program will contain | > as olstoy e ing the Sinfonia Overture of J. C. Bach, | Corpse,” Mezhrapom-Film together and the Bruch Scottish Fantasy,| With the German oe tad baie played by Scipione Guidi, econcert-| ton Fromutegs pa Hag 08 8 i: ceanegessher taeda 8 | will be “shot” by V. Pudovkin, of Next Sunday afternoon Mr. Mens | nother” and “End of St. Peters- |gelberg and his men will be heard). D facie he RERGWA, ace |at the Brooklyn Academy of Musi: ses Nata Vatchnandze and Ma- The second of Walter Damrosch’s| rie Yakobin play in this film, The Children’s Concerts will be given)... known Austrian actor Gustav next Saturday morning at Carnegie) neice] has been invited to accept | Hat the role of Karenina, The picture cwill be “shct” in Germany and USSR. WYOMING CLERKS WIN CASPER, Wyo. (By Mail).—Re-| Another film by the same organi- tail clerks union, 202, has forced | zation is titled “26 Commissars,” local merchants to sign a new wage|end will be directed by V. Meier- agreement, thold. Best Selling Book in America The Baker & From a report of ‘Taylor Co., leading wholesale booksellers, for week end! Ing November i2th UPTO Avro OF “A narrative on the heroic scale... . a literary achievement that will inevitably arouse a great deal of controversy.” N. Y, Times “A profoundly moving drama.” Gamaliel Bradford 2 VOLUMES $5.00 lective farmine), and “Culture of a Sugar Beet Root.” During the screening in the vil-| lages; the Soviet cinema expedi-! tion carries on a tremendous cultu. ral work. For example, the group | i C Rev-!of A. Kurduma, «during its two |— months work in the village of Bere- zan (Kiev region) arranged a num- films. iH Music Notes | Mabel Murphy, coloratura so- prano. will give her postponed re- cital Tuesday evening at Steinway} Fall. e In “These Days,” Arthur Hop- | ’ newest production, now at the ATRE GUILD PRODUCTIONS: OPENING MONDAY NIGHT AT 8:30 BERNARD SHAW’S Major Barbara GUILD THBA.. West Matinees: Bvenin te 8:30 Sharp d Saturday! Thu 30 Sharp EUGEN EILL'S PLAY STRANGE INTERLUDE JOHN GOLDEN Dinner Intermission 7 UHIZA., 58th St., . of Broadway Evenings only at 6:30 sharp. 40 to 9 W. 39th St. & Maxine Klliott’s, Thea., . Wed. A, H» WOODS presents ort: Theatre |] “A really stirring and feel- ITALIAN SAILOR KILLED — || ig drama.” FAY BAI NTER MOSCOW, Nov 16 (UP) AN Gilbert W. Gabriel, NY Sun nounced today. ice lines around ‘onsul. a s against the Tzarist auto-|her of performanccs for the -peas- | Italian sailor from the steamer Ca-| |ents aceompanied with lectures and|podado was killed at Nikolayev, on | the Black Sea, Nov. 9, Grace Cornell will give her fourth program of dances xt the Booth Theatre tomorrow night. Dai Buell will appear in piano- MARTIN BECK 45th St 8th Ave. ITE HOSTESS THEATRE, Eves, 8,30. Mats, Wednesday and Saturday. it was an-} fficials said the sailor attempted to cross state po- warehouse } despite repeated warnings. He was Killed by a soldier as he attempted | to enter the warehouse. planation was made to the Italian An ex- rilliantly acted,” Brooks Atkins: N.Y. J Primes. JEALOUSY JOHN HALLIDAY WALTER “The best performance Miss Bainter has given.” Burns Mantle, News. “Don’t miss Jealousy?” R. Coleman, Paily Mirror, aoe os AM ts se Best Film Show CA MEO QND Big In Town 4ind Stregr and Broadway Week car ea ae : MATA HARI == Her lure and charms bereft men of honor and patriotism forte recital at Town Hall Tuesday | afternoon, | Frances Newsom, soprano will | give her recital in Town Hall Wed- | nesday evening, s Juan Pulido, Spanish baritone. | makes his appearanc@ at the Gallo | Theatre tomorrow night, Katherine Bacon will conclude her Schubert cycle with a Town Hall | recital on Monday afternoon, the 100th anniversary of the death of | the composer. Inez Barbour, soprano, will in- URLANGER 7 ee Mats., Wednesday & Saturday, 2.80, EA., George M, Cohan's W. 44th ST Evenings 8.30 — Comedians with POLLY WALKER in Mr, Cohan's New Comedy Mhea., W. 44 Mats.,, Wed. by Mawell Anderson est “Bi Ed? LITTLE Thea. ' GODS of the LIGHTNING h St, Bye, & Sat, & Harold Hickerson. MUSIC AND CONCERTS Musical most sinister woman spy of the Great War—she sent 50,000 French Soldiers to death— sbi ‘Mata Hari: The Red Dancer’ Sensational Cripping Photoplay All New York Is Going to Seet On Same Program: CHARLES CHAPLIN in “Behind the Scenes.” || ““MACHINAL?’ 1S A TREAT FOR LOVERS OF GOOD ACTING «.. WELL WORTH THE COST OF A TICKET.” —T. J. O'Flaherty, Daily Worker. clude the following songs at her} Town Hall concert on Thursday | afternoon: “Bel Piacer, and “Pian- | gero,” by Handel; Zu Freien Im} Maien,” Bach; An Eine Aeolharfe,” | Hugo Wolf; “Schlechtes Wetter” and “Die Georgine,” by Strauss; “Brautfahrt,” Buys. The French pianiste, Lucie Caf- | faret, will give her recital at Town Hall on Monday evening, Nov. 24, Carnegie Hall, This Soloist: SCIPIONE Jd. 8. BACH—BR n, No’ Addrexs: Arthur Judson, Mgr, — (Steinway.) _ LECTURES AND FORUMS PhilharmonicSymphony | MENGELBERG, Conductor G u1D: i—SCHUBERT . Aft, 3 ‘Violin! y, 23%, at 2 . ORTAL PROGRAM | DR, JOHN ERSKINE SCHUBERT — KURT ATTERBERG | “That which gives it distinction is the passionate sym- pathy which Miss Treadwell has felt for the little soul she chooses to depict; the tortured earnestness with which the part is played by Miss Zita Johann; and the whole, fine, compressed and intensely eloquent background which Arthur, Hopkins direction contrives to give the central theme.”—Arthur Ruhl, Herald Tribune. 200 | Int 130 Arthur Hopkins presents “MACHINAL” by Sophie Treadwell. Plymouth Theatre, W. 45th St. — Mats. Thursday and Saturdays. == Little Carnegie Playhouse AT COOPER UNION (8th St, and ASTOR PLACE) At 8 o'Clock SUNDAY, NOV. 18 DR. EARL BARNES “Shaping Public Opinion.” TUESDAY, NOV. 20 DR. HEBER DOUST CURTIS “The Unity of the Universe.” FRIDAY, NOV. 23 Mr. EVERETT DEAN MARTIN A History of Liberty ‘The Citixen and Freed Man.” ADMISSION FREE Open Forum Discus (209 WEST 23rd ST: At THE PEOPLE’S INSTITUTE ~ 3 Muhlenberg Branch Library REET) 8:30 o'clock MONDAY, NOV. 19 DR. MARK VAN BOREN Hleven Humorixts—« Lucia’ WEDNESDAY, NOV. 21 MR. NORMAN HILBERRY “The Spectrometer and Spectro- graph; Their Construction and Operati THURSDAY, NOV. 22 DR. E. G. SPAULDING “The Developments of the Mechan- istie View in the 17th, | “Phe Roman Idea of Freedom —)} 19th Centuries: Newton, Dalton,” 18th and SATURDAY, NOV. 24 DR, E. BOYD BARRETT “Signs and Mysteries In Religion,” LABOR TEMPLE 14th St. and Second Ave. "SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18 5:00 p. m.: DR. G. F. BECK Literature--The Creative Myths of Mankind “The ‘Twilight of the Gods” (Scandinavian) TAS PD. Mi CHARLES C. WEBBER “Traditional vs. Independent Thinking.” 8:30 p, m.; FORUM— Prof.ZECHARIAH CHAFEE, Jr. “Freedom of Speech in Various Anpects.” All welcome INGERSOLL FORUM Guild Hall, Steinway Bullding, 118 Went 57th St. N. ¥. ©, SUNDAY EVENINGS | NOVEMBER 18: | DR. PAUL BAUERDERG i “WHAT PRICK BARIEST OR BIRTH CONTROL,” Admission 26 Cents. NOVEMNER 25: ’ DEB. B “WHO 18 RESPONSIBLE FOR THE PRESENT SEX MUDDLE?” Queations and Discussion from the floor. Ralph Wolfe, pianist, will_ give his debut recital at Town Hall Sat- urday afternoon® Nov. 24, SINGING Beginning 8 P. tt. _ WORKERS SCHOOL FORUM 26-28 Union Square, 5th floor Sunday, Nov, 18, Admission 25 c Spm ents. OTTO HALL Field Organizer of the American re- visit of Negro Labor Congre: turned from a 3 ye: ss, Just ars’ the Soviet Union on “The Negro Quest ion As A » World Problem.” Sunday, Nov. 25 BERTRAM D. WOLFE on “American Varieties of Trota- kyinm.” 146 West 57th Street — — — ClRcle 7551 American Premiere AMKINO Presents ‘TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK the WORLD’ A SOVKINO PRODUCTION 2nd Production of S. M. EISENSTEIN, the Director of Potemkin CONTINUOUS NOON TO MIDNIGHT—Prices, Mats. 50¢; Eves. $1.00. KEITH-ALBEE ‘ BROADWAY at dist St. Civic Repertory | 14th St. 6th Ave, | Starting Sunda: Hives, 8:30, 50c, $1, $1-50.| | J, Pp. MeAvoy's Stirring r -Mats, Wed, & Sat. 2:30) |B story of a Hotsy~ EVA LE GALLIENNE, Totsy Show Queen / Director, REPERTORY FOR WEEK OF, NOVEMBER 19, SHOW 5 Mon, Eve. “The Cherry Or-| | ” ect “Nadimova, Le Gallienne, . Cameton, Hutchinson, Tues. ive. “La Locandiera.” Le With Ali 1 Gallienne, Brecher, Leyssac, Craw- lee White “Howls of Laughter, ley ed. Mat., (The Cherry Orchard.'| |fSeve Of Ghewlen” ~~ Wed. Eve edda Gabler.” Le a ptean SDALS Noms: Galtienne, ley, Leyssac, Ca- pepe i Ba ha 0 chinson. 1 mornurs. Eve. “The Would-Be Keith- Albee 7 Gentleman. Brecher, —_ Roberts, Bitvastiins Cameron, Kruger. 2 Fri, Eve, «The Cherry are Sat. Mat., “L'Invitation oy= a i : ; age.” (In English.) Le Gallien~ JOLSON Phae. A Ave. #, ayth st ne, Cameron, Beck, Mooney. Vv8.8.30, Mats, Wed.&Sat, Sat. Eve., “Would-Be Gentle- Guy ObeTrE - be WOLe man.” 2 x 8 {OBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER Premiere Mon# Eve., Nov. 26, Batpphacieh ie 5 “Peter Pan.” Le Gallienne, Hut- in a musica! romance of Chapin chinson, Brecher, Cameron, Ward, McCarthy. Mat. TODAY: “Phe Would-Be at GALA OPEN “MOL OLGIN: ING of BRONX WORKERS CENTER 1330 Wilkins Avenue (Freeman St, 8 ON tation) “Irmediate Tasks Facing American Labor” November 18, 8 p.m. ee Admission 50 Cents. SOLIDARITY FESTIVAL! of the International Labor Defense, German Br. No. 43 for the BENEFIT OF THE CLASS WAR PRISONERS SATURDAY, Nov. 17, N. Y. Labor Temple 2438 East 84th Street RECITALS DANCING SAM G Theatre, 424 St., West H. HARRIS of 3'way. Eves. 8.30, Matinees, Wednesday & Saturday, 2.80 MUSICAL COMEDY GIT LUCKEBGIRL Arthur Hopkins presents “THESE DAYS” | By Katharing Clugston Gentleman,” TONIGHT: “The Cradle Song.” CBANIN'S W. of Bway 46th St, Byes mt 8 ah Matinees, Wed. & Sat. SCHWAB and MANDE MUSICAL SMASH Godd NEW with GEORGE OLSKEN'S MUSIC. Pacifim is an enemy of the | ye 5 Vhea,, W. 48th St, Eves, 8.30 working elas. The workers mast | CORT: pea We AMEN Se (3 imperialism and imperialist A Red Revel Dec. 7, Friday Webster Hall 119 East 11th Street GAY AND BRIGHT AND REAL ‘Tickets 81,50 now, 13.00 at the door.—On snic at: New Masxes, 30 Untom Square; Workers Bookshop, 28 Union Squnre; Rand Book Store, 7 it 15th Street; New Playwrights Theatre, 133 W. 4th Streets ington Square Bookshop, 27 W. 8th Street, BUY YOUR TICKETS EARLY.