The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 20, 1928, Page 4

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Page Four pbb ! OPEN SHOPPERS RULE NAUGATUCK VALLEY SECTION Copper, Rubber Trusts Oppress (By a Worker Corresnandont The Naugatuck Valley in the state of Connecticut, which lies 2~ tween New Haven and Watert is one hell hole for the worke! @ gold mine for the capitalists, stands out as a monster, with its tentacles gripped around the necks of the workers and their families, who happened to get caught by this blood sucker of the capitalist sys- tem. The valley, at the head of which stands the city of Waterbury, the blackest of it all, insofar as the conditions of the workers are con- cerned, is the most developed in- dustrial section in the ste and is one of the most industrialized sec- tions in the country. the house committee on election blom, Illinois, and Frederick R. The valley as it stretches between | —— ~~ SLAPS AT LABOR eludes the following cities: Derby Shelton, Ansonia, Seymour, Beacon| Throws Out Appeal for Stone Cutters Falls, Naugatuck and Union City,| Continued “om Page One each having a population of five to ten thousand, over 80 per cent of which is either foreign born or of foreign descent. As one enters into this territory, he feels as if this portion of the land does not belong to the United States. It is completely cut off Association of North America and its national officers from a drastic anti-trust injunction, charging a conspiracy to keep non-union made | cast stone out of the New York metropolitan district, was dismissed today on a technicality. The appel- lants failed to give a formal lower from the rest of the country, geo- graphically, with long chains of court separation from the New York | local union officials, who were also mountains, like prison walls stretch- ing on each side of the valley, be- ginning a little ways above New named in the lower court’s injune- tion, The national union and officers Haven, ending past Waterbury, and by the very disinterested, tedious and monotono life, undisturbed except by. its inner economic con- tradictions, which at times seem hopeless. The whole object of life in this challenged the lower court, finding that the evidence show they con- spired with the New York and 2 Newark unions of stone cutters and _The very trains and freight ve- the West Chester Building Trades hicles that pass by here, only come | Ccuncil. They also sought to bring | here to pick up and take away the part of the country seems to be to work in these huge shops and fac- tories, to produce wealth for some- one whom we never, see in all our lives. THE DAILY WORK This Is An “Investigation,” Not A Joke! z Now that Wall Street has had Hoover safely elected as its chief liaison officer in the White House, another one of those periodic “investtyations” has been started, this time into the $12,000,- 000 that were spent by Big Business for its two chief candidates. Photo shows the membérs of expenditures who are doing the “inv right, Representatives John. E. Nelson, of Maine; Loring M. Black, Jr., } Lehlbach, New Jersey, chairman, ER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1928. § IN |“The Squealer,” Melodrama LOW PRICE IN CALIFORNIA |Prosperity Boast Is | Shown as Lie (By a Worker Correspondent) LOS ANGELES, (By Mail).—The | slave market has the following jobs to offer husky workers this morning, Armistice Day. Carpenters, $5 a day. Must have «ar. Cost $1.00 a day to run it. Real wage $4. Carpenter helper, $15 per week, travel to and from the beach 75 cents a day, 1.75 left to starve on. Young man to do chover and drive car, ete., $20 a month, eat with chickens and sleep with |the cows. Young¥man to pick and peddle fruit and do chores, $10 per month plus some eru..bs to eat (if he has the time) and a barn (or some | other corner on a 160-acre ranch) as’ sleeping quarters. Circular saw man, sre vestigation.” They are, left to ew York; Carl R, Chind- | Hoax Unemployed. in En8land With Lie of Jobs in London LONDON, (By Mail). — Wide- spread unemployment, steadily grow- ing more acute, has brought a daily influx into London of thousands of unemployed workers from the rest of England. The hopes of these workers, a large part of whom are miners, of finding work in London, have been dashed to pieces by the fact that unemployment is worse here than elsewhere. The influx into {London is laid at the doors of the authorities of the other sections who hoax the unemployed into thinking that plenty of jobs are open in, Lon- don. Since the government dole is de- nied to single men, thousands haye had to marry before they otherwise would, in order to receive Poor Law help for the wife. Papa of Teapot Dome $18 a week and “eat himself.” Jani- tor for school, $85 a month, with chauffeur license, another combina- lion, speed-up and starvation job. Crossing watchman, $75 per month; \can’t afford to eat; plenty of long | hours, however, so he is liable to go | to sleep on his post and permit peo- ple to get killed right and left. Cot- ton pickers, $1.50 per 100 pounds; only experts (workers born under a cotton bush in the south) can pick thane bs 2 |100 pounds a day—from sunrise to SYDNEY, Australia, Nov. 19—| sunset. Southern cotton is a little Premier Stanley M. Bruce’s coali- Jeasier to pick than the California tign. government, which made one | and Arizona varieties, A man needs been teturned to office, having lost (more children, his father and mother . . J ‘and seyeral uncles and_aunts to make some seats in parliament to the re-| 4 decent wage for one person in the following linecup mm the -hawse: Nae treater” jcallfomia, and in, the sage tional Party, 28; County Party, 18; |presn state Of democracy, copper Labor Party, 29: doubtful, 5, S |yignapere-Arizena, 6s The government is a national-| om Dec. 2, 1918, to the montl countiy party coalition and thus re-| at 2: ‘ Jo hr thfnn @ialeKy malsHee: |c. Maren, 1923, the writer made his home in Arizona, He worked two years as a mechanic for the South- jwest Cotton Company, Phoenix, U.S. Supreme Court |[07,, the tast season ae the head of Rules Against N, Y, | 2 roll-making work for 17 long staple cotton gins, including those REACTION WINS IN AUSTRALIAN POLL White Chauvinists Lose Some Seats up the question whether the acts of finished products, which are the re-| President Michael W. Mitchell and sult of our hard toil, and leave raw material for us to turn it into more Joseph Wall of the union’s executive hoard in the alleged éonspiracy were Klan in Appeal Case | WASHINGTON, Nov, 19.—De- spite the pressnre exerted by the President, Is Dead SANTA ANA, Cal, Noy. 19.— crerated by “my” comp. y in the Imperial Valley, Calif. He is there- fore well posted on the misery in the cotton fields in the southwest. SLAVE MARKETS | 2% Old, Opens at the Forrest IN EUGENE WALTER PLAY. A NEW ten-twenty-thirty “meller- drama” has opened at the For- rest Theatre. It is best to deseribe the offering by using the subhead# ing that appears under the name of the play on-the program—A Melo- drama of the Days When the Villian WAS a Villian and the Hero Had a Heart of Gold. | | Concisely, at- the rise of the cur- tain we are confronted with Charlie Wong’s Oriental Palace, known as Frisco Charlie’s, Pacific Street, San | Francisco, in the fateful April, 1906. A description of the locale is suffi- cient for the audience to expect what is about to happen and what does happen in a series of highly colored instances of gun-play, opium fiends, abducted white slaves, Chinese gang war, ete., with our heroine moving through all unscathed and our hero always arriving in the nick of time. The deadly machinations of the as- sorted villians with several murders | thrown in for good measures in the following act. Climaxes, anti-cli- maxes Sand sub-climaxes, follow close upon each other, with the “drama’”’| brought to a close by the fateful happening, which occurred in San |Francisco in April, 1906, And then the “trick” denouement, | t 0: Shades of A. H. Woods and his old days at the American Theatre, when he sponsored and, incidentally, made a fortune in such offerings t before he discovered that there was | more profit in plays with beds! If one lixes his melodrama joshed and kidded about, “The Squealer” provides such an evening's entertain- ment. In the large cast Ruth Shepley and Robert Bentley are featured as | the boy and girl, while Robert Har- rison parades about as a Chinese | villain. The production is presented by Jeck Linder and is by Mark Linder. | Enough said! | Enoug! hs | Lindbergh andMatador Hobnob at Bull Fight MEXICO CITY, Nov. 18.—Rodol- | fo Goana, bullfighter-de luxe, is the | most favored companion of Colonel | Charles Lindbergh, American “good will” flier in Mexico City. | Goana accompanied Lindbergh at |the aviator’s first bull fight recent- ly. in at be a th in Theatre. Fay Bainter is the star Little Theatre Opera which it would not be fair to reveal.| Company Open With | if the sum of $2,644,185 was pany, a new group especially or-'the price of a copy of the Los An- ganized to present opera comique | zeles Record, a “liberal” sheet which son last night with “Robin Hood,” Fifth Avenue. De Koven’s tuneful opera has not brought back memories of the well- |known production of the Aborns, | rible conditions in the dungeons of ae did the piece here some years the labor-baiting Chief of Police ack, excellent cast, its melodies captivated | mitted to all this week, with a matinee on Saturday. director and William J. Reddick is Bat,” by Johann Strauss on Decem- ber 11; “Merry Wives of Windsor,” Nicolai; “Djamileh,” Bizet; “Phoe- ‘UNEMPLOYMENT -GAUSES WORKER TO TAKE LIFE | |Imprisoned, Worker Hangs Self (By a Worter Correspondent) LOS ANGELES, (By .Mail).—An unidentified man, about 73 years of lage, registered as Pat Smith at 512 | Crocker St., was found dead by the landlady Nov. 12. Suicide by gas, |the police reported. The aged man ig | had destroyed all marks of identifi- |eation, He left a brief note stating that he was broke and wanted no | charity. | The Community Chest’s drive for | $2,644,185 has started. There are |550,000 orphans, cripples, sick, old jand destitute people at present on this “oasis of abundance,” according ; to the press. To complete the pic- | ture, at least 50,000 unemployed men |and women must be added to this figure. That makes 400,000 “down jand outs” in this city of “prosper- ~ | ity,” or one-third of the population, |said by the Chamber of Commerce to be 1,300,000; 4 a) John Halliday, featured player “Jealousy,” Eugene Walter’s ense drama at Maxine Eilliott’s f the production. equally divided, each of these 380,- “ {. ” Robin Hood”, 600 people would get $7.50 to starve jon for a whole year—or, in other The Little Theatre Opera Com- | words, a daily allowance of 2 cents, English, opened itg current sea-| stated this morning that “Los An- |geles was proving ‘itself a generous |city throughout the early hours of today.” The idle workers will get nothing en heard in these parts for many out of the contributions—jails for year. The revival last night |them, of course. And when the | prisons are unable to stand the ter- the Heckscher Theatre on upper As sung last night, by the| James Edgar Davis, they are per- kill themselves. . Fred Concha, 46, of 2016 Marengo Ave., |a prisoner in one of the city jails, | yesterday hanged himgelf with a |leather belt. The worker had been” larrested for “vagrancy.” Several | other similar (or worse) “accidents” |have taken place in the last few months and reported to The Daily Worker, Now, two cents a day is hardly ie large audience. The company will give the opera Kendall K, Mussey is the e musical director. The operas planned include “The finished products for the train! binding on the national union. The again to come in and take away. |cther unions named in the injunc- The industries that predominate tion did not appeal. in the valley are but three in num- The injunction asserted the labor her: brass, copper and machine|odies conspired to establish mon- shops; textile, and rubber, The “'. i pee spoly by means of threatening con- 8. Rubber and the American Brass t-cctors, calling strikes and intimi- are the biggest of them all. The|“*°t" ° New Haven Copper Co., owned by|(#ting builders. . the Anaconda Copper, is the third % ' biggest, Each one of these con 22 Are Injured, Many cerns employ between three and . « “ ) four thousend workers. One other SeTiously, in a Train) needs mentioning, the Waterman- Collision at Lowell Ideal Fountain Pen Co., situated in| = Seymour, which employs at the present time ove 00 workers, The, central LOWELL, Me Nov. 19. (UP). —At least 22 persons were injvred Dr. George Harding, father of War- ren G. Harding, late oil-smeared president of the United States, died here today at the home of his daughter, Mrs, E, E. Remsberg. Dr. Harding suffered a stroke of paraly- sis Friday night and failed to re- gain consciousness. He was 85 years old. The body will be taken to Ohio for burial. Vaudeville Theatres : PALACE. Belle Baker; Louis \and Charles Mosconi, assisted by Dorothy Van entire national organization of the Ku Klux Klan, fear of arousing the | ire of. Catholic and Jewish elements éaused the United States supreme court today to uphold the New York State Ku Klux Klan lgw. The law requires membership corpora- tions to file lists of members and officers with the secretary of state whe decision ‘was given in a habeas corpus case appeal from the New York court decision by George Ww. yant. Buffalo klansman, who challenged his arrest on a violation of the statute, known also as the Welker law. The law had pre-. viously been upheld by the New York state supreme court and the As reportcd in The Daily Worker at the time, the Mexicans won their | 19 salute the blue, red and white,” -.¢ (partly at least) in the melon flelds last spring. Another victory | 22 50% “but wot for mel Instead . : ‘ eer aan in this state for the migratcry work- | of Bn over-dege oF caplbaiies “demos hy ferred to hi "2 € «in the bean and fruit fields this | {hive to eat, “Although shell-shock- fall. Now, what the badly exploited |q on the battlefields of France 10 ee ae intend ‘to do remains | years ago, I have not received a bus and Pan,” Love,” Donizetti, and “The Choco- jlate Soldier,” by Oscar Strauss. MOVIE GETS PRIZE. Bach; “Elixir of “Seventh Heaven,” a Fox Film | Corporation Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell, has been awarded Photoplay’s 1928 medal of honor as the outstanding picture of the year. production starring enough to live for. And the flag | under which such rotten social con- ditions exist is not worth dying for either. The workers, instead of kill- ing themselves or permit their ex- ploiters to do the job for them, are going to kill the capitalist system one of these days. So keep on living and fighting for the immediate and final programs of the. Workers (Communist) Party of America! —L. P, RINDAL. fy > pees .,| Single cent from the’ government Prosperity” is here to stay, it/that promised the soldier eyery- seems, Little or nothing to do—| thing,” he pointed out to the job- even at open shop wages. The slave | seeking crowd. A sky pilot had market, missionized soup-joints and something to say about Jerusalem the jails are all over-crowded, | Slim, but the A, E. F. man told him An ex-service man told a crowd to shut up—and he did, (Applause.) THE THEATRE GUILD Presents : c the entire some seriously, when a Boston and! lst, Berna Doyle and the Aida valley, both in industry and in popu- Maine passenger train side-swined Kaufman Girls; Vanessi; Lester lation, is Ansonia, surrounded by another passenger train near Hale Crawford and Helen Broderick; “The Derby, Shelton, and § A : Street Bridge this afternoon. you enter the ci a, you Two passenger cars and the ex- are immediately attracted by a press car of a train bound fro | beautifully decorated billboard wit h | Lowell to Boston were badly the insignia, “You are now enter- damaged and derailed. ing Ansonia, the Industrial of the Naugatuck Valley Heart Police ambulances were sent t, the When scene and the injured were taken to leaving the city, you are again con- three Lowell Hospitals. fronted with a similar sign, “Come Again.” Similar signs found along the roads, mark the boundaries of the towns, which is the only way of knowing in what town you are. The whole’ Naugatuck Valley is one huge, contiguous town, consisting of scattered houses all over the hills, in which workers live. | U. S. Marines Build Airport Near Costa- Rica-Nicaragua Line AN JOSE, Costa Rica, Nov. 19. Si Sad Case of Mary Dugan”; Hazzard, and W. H. Groh. HIPPODROME. Frankie Heath; Eddie D Company; Reed and Dutiers; Bob and Gale Sherwood, and the Four Eastons. Feature photoplay, “Sin- ners in Love,” starring Olive Bor- den, BROADWAY. Jack Burke and Company in a new revue; Ray Shannon’s musical com-| edy “Oh Props”; Benny Burt and Factories} In Nicaragua just over the frontier | Wally Lehman; Tom and Polly Ward and chimneys and church steeples from Costa Rica, at Conventillos, | Kenneth; Terrell and Verne Hanley, prominently stick their heads above| United States marines are busy con- |The Crackerjaecks; Camilla’s Birds.| the workers’ hovels. there is a clump of houses togeth- er, This forms the “Main Street,” Movie houses and stores, ete., form the center of the outfit. Invariably the shops and factories are bunched together, as if purposely located to protect themselves against the silent monster that surrounds them in all directions, the workers’ homes. In the midst of the stores and houses stand out the bank and the city hall, In some places | representing the club with which! the workers are compelled to sub- mit to a merciless exploitation and oppression, The numerous churches structing a great landing field for airships. Feature photoplay, “Show Girl,”| |starring Alice White. | Hap ; state court of appeal. Bryant, in his appeal, charaetér- d the Klan as similar in many vities to benevolent orders, and asserted that “an attack upon this institution is an attack upon the hest citizenry of the country.” Though the patriotie justices of the supreme eourt did not question this last statement, they thought if ex- nedient not to buek the anti-Klan law, AMERICA Any Kind ARL BRODSKY Telephone Murray Hill 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New York ———_$._ of Insurance per Co., while the town clerk of the city is the official accountant for| the only bank in the town, where he| “works” in his spare hours. He} also acts as the chairman of the board of directors of the bank. This bank in turn has as its board of directors members of the manage- ment of the American Brass Co., a branch of the huge brass company | in Waterbury, a Guggenheim con-| cern, and the Forrel Foundry and Machine Co., a braneh of the Amer- | factory making $13 a week. This family’s wages are no exception, but are the average thruout this part of the country. Every man has his| wife working, and every family has | to send the children to the shop as| soon as they reach the age of 10 or,12, in the entire Naugatuck Valley thru the aid of yarious schemes con- stantly drive the workers into fur- ther and further exploitation, which is reaching the lowest ebb, and ex- tract maximum profits, No Union, There is not a trace of labor or- today and the attitude 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 PREPARES Thursday ¢nd Saturday, 2.30 Strange Interlude John (OLDEN Thea. 68th B. of B'way EVENINGS ONLY AT 6:30 (IVIC REPERTORY 145t.sinay Eves, 8:30 B0c; $1.00; $1.50. Mats. Wed.&Sat., EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight, “La Locandiera.” : Wed. Mat, “The Cherry Orchi ., “Hedda Gal Thurs. Eve. “The Wow man,’ Fri, Eve., “Phe Cherry Orchard.” Sat. Mat., “L’Invitation au Voyage.” Sat. Eve. “Would-Be Gentleman,” Premiere Mon. Eve., Nov. 26, “Peter Pan.” on the street last night that that| Well, it is about time for ite 7 " MATA HA : by millionaire stuff in the minds of idle councils of the unemployed and the M p B b » workers and explioted wage slaves is foreign-born workers to get busy ajor ar ara {8 ‘The RED DANCER vJl bunk. “Tomorrow they want us | again, GUILD hea. w. buna se | de tionds Piveiae Phetonly Eves. 8:15; Mats, ¢ 424 ST. eWay KEITH: x CAMEO CHAPLIN ‘8642, on same negun H©STESS ERLANGER THBA, W. «th sr. ———————er — Evenings 8.30 — Mats., Wednesday & Saturday, 2.30. George M. Cohan’s Comedians with POLLY WALKER in Mr, Cohan’s Newest Musical Comedy “BILLIE” ARTHUR HOPKINS announces the LAST. WEEK OF “MACHINAL” by Sophie Treadwell. PLYMOUTH Thea.,W.45thSt.Bves.8.30 = Mats. ‘Thurs, & Sat. Thea., 1th Ave, & oYth St JOLSON Evs.8.30, Mats.Wed.&Sat GeuY ODETTD DE WOLF ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER ' & musical romance of Chopin of the Workers (Com- The general rule applied in all of| ganization whatsoever in the whole the factories along the valley, on| valley, although there are “marks” the part of the employers is also to| of great labor struggles of the re- see to it that the husband does not| cent past. One thing which is mani- work very regularly so as not to festly noticeable everywhere as a munist) Party toward the coming war. 10 cents WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS The two significant facts that stand out which are of immediate importance in our efforts to drive home class consciousness among the workers are the low percentage of bourgeoisie in these towns, the in- ter-connection between the local en and state officials and| local company officialdom. This | fs of course typical of the Amer- jean small company towns, but the extent to which this is true in the towns under discussion is unequalled a@nyywhere else in America. For example, with the exception of one two the whole officialdom of the Blumenthal Mills in Shelton are in| way or another also officials of city administration in Shelton,| and vice versa; all the officials of the city administration are con- nected with the Blumenthal Mills, which employs from 800 to 1,000 workers, In Shelton the bootleggers are extremely popular among these two sets of officials, The major-| bebween 24 and 26 cents an hour. domo of the stool-nigeons, the head} Their weekly wages run between of the Weavers’ Club, a company | $10 and $13 for 5 1-2 days a week. Woutfit, is said to run a booze joint! The pay envelope of a woman quite openly in the town, by which| whose husband works in the same Ions in te whatever small change is| factory, was marked $10.80, whieh of the various factoriesxand shops, | at the last election the vice presi-| dent of the Seymour Brass Co. was elected to the state legislature. As to local officials, they are so closely linked up with the local factory of- ficials that it would take a magni- fying glass to distinguish between | them. What was said for the above | three cities could be very well du- | plicated in all others without any exception. The conditions of the working class throughout the Naugatuck Valley are among the worst in the entire country. The average wage paid to the! adult worker is between 30 and 32) cents an hour, making about 18 to) 20 dollars a week in 5 1-2 days. Sometimes even to get this much, most of the workers must work) three nights a week, two or three| hours overtime. Women and young. workers are getting on the average in the pockets of the workers, | was for 5 1-2 days for 9 hours the mayor and the|work a day, Her husband makes e are closely identified $18 to $20, Their oldest child, a - girl df 13, also works in the same In Ansoni |bosses use to further break the and movie houses also serve their ican Foundry. become “independent.” They sive) result of these struggles that the purpose in brow-beating the work-, In Seymour, besides having the| periodical “vacations” “in order to| workers have had, is a general dis- § ers in their “spare time.” officials of the city act as officials| give a chance to the unemployed to| gust towards the old leadership earn something.” This “giving a chance to the unemployed” is a measure used first, to.terrorize the workers into submitting to worse conditions of work and second, to compel them to accept the lowest wages possible. The saying, “the unemployed hang like a millstone over the necks of those employed, always threatening to pull them down inte the abyss” is the coldest reality to these workers, which they experience in their everyday life. One other method which the morale of the workers is the con- stant firing of old men and the re- hiring of them anew after a short lapse of time. In hiring these men back they give “preference” to the married men and women and to those longest unemployed. But this is done not because of “humanitar- ian motives” as the company “stools” are instructed to spread among the workers, but because first a married man, especially one with a large size family, would submit to greater exploitation and show less resistance, and second, the longest unemployed worker faced with further starvation and misery would accept a job for less wages than others would, which is generally the case, Thus the bosses| x 43 East 125th Street ,. New York City Little CARNEGIE FAP EGrNR Continuous Noon to Midnight. |“TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK | THE WORLD”, Pop. Prices. Circle 7551. Matt | which has betrayed them on various | occasions. | There is, however, a new | | spirit of organization and struggles | against these conditions developing among the workers, But this new spirit of struggle must be met with | a new militant, honest and cour- | | ageous leadership, which must arise | j out of their own ranks with a dif- | ferent outlook and perspective ypon the whole capitalist system. The basis for the new organization of the workers, trade unionism in the Naugatuck Valley, which takes in from fifty to sixty thousand work- |ers in basic industries, must be the | mill and factory committees, and into powerful industrial unions, which shall include every worker in+ a given shop or factory, which will | establish a real solid front of the | workers against the powerful em- | |ploying class and its agent, the | capitalist state. | Only the left wing, the Workers | Communigt Party, will provide the | | leadership, and fighting ability plus | jthe program to organize tl | workers, The first steps. are being taken, There is every indication that the slaves of the American | Brass, U. S. Rubber will wake up, |and show examples of solidarity” and struggle. ‘ , CHARLES MITCHELL, at From ® report of The Baker Taylor Co. leading wholesale booksellers, for week ending November i2th achievement that will deal of controversy.” The Best Selling Book in America “A narrative on the heroic scalq.... a literary “A profoundly moving drama.” 2 VOLUMES $5,.co & TON inevitably arouse a great N. Y. Times Gamaliel Bradford G nees, Wed. & Sat. SCHWAB and MANDEL’S MUSICAL SMASH OOD NEWU. with GEORGE OLBEN'S MuUsiC, J.P. MeEvoy’s Spark- ling Story of a Show iQueen— “Show Girl” with ALICE WHITE 7 fseith- Albee B8roadway at dist St. & 7 Keith-Albee-Orpheum Attractions REMEMBER JHE MURDER OF SACCO & VANZETTH SAVE SHIFRIN SEND YOUR DONATION AT ONG MITTEE. ROOM 403, 26 U TO SHIFRIN DEFENSE CoMm- N SQUARE, NEW YORK CITY. NEW MASSES BALL Is Almost Here-- Buy Your Tickets —_—— BETTER THAN EVER — — GAY AND FREE — — COLORFUL — — — UP TO EVERY EXPECTATION DECEMBER 7th _ WEBSTER HALL, 119 EAST 11TH STREET Tickets ngw $1.50—At the door Ui Square (Phone rencryations aceepted): Workers Bookshop, 28 Union Squnre; Rand Bookstore. 7 1. 15th Streets New Play- wrights Theatre, 183 W, 14th St. ™. 83.0°—On sale att New Manses, 39 Fn Bookshop, 850 BE. Sint St, ‘

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