The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 7, 1928, Page 4

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_DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1928 * PARTY PRE-CONVENTION DISCUSSION SECTION Continued from Previous Page the United States today as a Left deviation. In our fight against the Right danger i its crassest manifest on, the € ral Ex tive Committ following policy: is guided by the eading and responsible the position and support C: elled from the (2) “Rank and be file , who evide 2 anc tiently prole ce } hesi- proletar ganize f be exp: final ac- ring for yism to the Committee, tral Committee shall again Cannon Central and the Ce xecutive decide in each case on the basis of “4 its merits. t persect-ion is ntral Execu as prole elements are the policy of the Ce Commi rank -erned, con- The main fire of the Central Executive Committee is concentrated m the conscious opportuni: whether they appear openly as suc xr whethew they still camouflage heir reformism with Left phrases n the fashion of Trotskyism. The Dilemma of the Opposition. The Opposition within the Party s face to face with a terrible di emma. It charges the Central Exe- utive Committee with purs dolicy “Which makes Trotskyism the main danger of the Party and obscures and weakens the strug- gle against the Right deviations and the Right danger.” Here we ave more confusion in f the Opposition. The ery ary is the case. When he Opposition declares that Trot- kyism a Left danger and the ‘entral Executive Committee is the is main danger, they are the ones who eaken and undermine the fight Trotskyism. The Trotskyist today the danger of a ¥ A member of the Political Committee, several members of the Central Executive Comtnittee of the Party, and of the National Executive Committee of the Young Workers (Communist) League, have already espoused Trotskyism. The Cannon- tes already have two papers in Eng- lish against the Party. Trotskyism has a daily German organ and a Hungarian weekly, Lore, Eastman and the bourgeois press are worki feverishly to help Trotsky attacks on the Party. Consequently, the fight against Trotskyism must be conducted under the leadership of the Central Exe- cutive Committee, Any other atti- tude is the negation of the very basis of a Communist Party. If the Central Executive Committee is the main danger, as the Opposition con- tends, how can any Communist Par- ty member fight to expel Trotsky- ites who help to fight against the Central Executive Committee? Again, if Trotskyism is Left—as the Opposition insists—and if Trot- skyism means a split, as is obvious —then the main fight would have © be conducted against the Left. This would mean a weakening of the fight against the Right danger. But the Opposition holds that the Right danger is the main danger, and that Trotskyism is a Left dan- ger. ™"us, the wrong tactic:, con- fused analysis-and factional blind- ness of the Opposition serve only to weaken the fight against the Right danger and its crassest manifesta- ion, Trotskyism. Clearly, the position sof the Central Executive Committee is cor- ‘eet when it declares that the main ‘anger is the Right danger and that Trotskyism is the most consistent umming up and rallying center of “he Right danger. Therefore, in ac- sordance with the policy of the Cen- tral Executive Committee there is no eontradiction between the fight against the Right danger and the ight against its cra: est expres- tion, Trotskyism. To intensify the ight against the Right danger means to inten: y the fight against Trotskyism. ntensify the fight against Trotskyism means to hasten he liquidation of the Right danger. What is the difference in our arty, if any, between the Trotsky- ist brand of opportunism and the outright opportunism which is sep- arate from Trotskyist ideology? There is a difference. It would be erroneous to identify the one with che other. Trotskyism is that species of op- yortunism which is characterized by he following three specific features: first, ultra-Leftist beginnings; sec- ond, certain special features grow- “ng out of the specific conditions of the Russian Revolution; third, cer- ain international aspects, in that, n the firct period of its evolution it sttracted many ultra-left elements of the Comintern. Our “made in America” brand of opportunism loes not have these features but it shows its own special characteristics ‘rowing out of the concrete condi- ions of this country, Among others hese characteristics are: one, its oots are in the world hegemony of American imperialism; second, its x | social basis is the labor aristocracy rd, Marxism upon our and th ism, The Party and Its Work. Construc its leadership, its policies, is not only the order of the day but is most welcome. This, however, should not be taken #s a fusion and misrepresentation. Opposition. In its rd declaration it states: he experiences of our own Par how that the Right line and orientation of our Central Committee is chiefly responsible for the slow growth of our Par- ty and for its inability to make full use of the favorable factors in the present situation to de- velop a revolutionary conscious- ness and struggle among the ling masses.” Then ge e with recent weeks.” Chief among these alleged “Right errors” are to be found in the supposed failure to as- sume leadership in local mine strikes, to help the Trade Union Educatoinal League, to help build the next textile union, “failure to connect the parliamentary struggle struggle of the series of other failures everywhere. This ac- with the economic workers,” and a whole cusation is thus summed up: “These tendencies which con tute the line of’ the Central Committee of our Party, have the effect of paralyzing the fighting ability of the Party, retarding its activities for de- veloping mass struggle and mass organizations, and hence are weakening the working class and strengthening its enemies.” What does this charge mean? It xecutive Committee with its policies is weak- and In other words, the Central Executive Committee of our Party, according to the Opposition, is a counter-rev- Such an attack was never before made in the his- means that the Centra! E: ening the working class strengthening the bourgeoisie. olutionary factor. tory of our Party. This is not criticism, This is ex- actly the line of attack launched against the Central Executive Com- mittee and the Party by the Trot- skyite Cannon and Company. This is the logical result of the common platform of Foster, Bittleman and Aronberg with Cannon—‘The Right Danger in the American Party.” In the beating back the T. U. E. L. The most crushing proof of the utter baselessness of these accusa- tions of the Opposition is shown in its condemnation of the Party’s elec- worst enemies of the Party admitted that the election campaign was the big- most vigorous campaign tion campaign. Even the gest and our Party ever conducted. It true the Party election campaign Many in its course (California), But throughout the election campaign the Opposi- tion evidenced its total political im- Opposition did not} motion for the| improvement of the election campaign, In fact, cer- tain districts even witnessed Oppo- sition supporters perpetrating Right errors, thru capitulation before dif- in San Francisco—and ex-Comrades V. R. Dunne, Skoglund and others through sabotage of the Party’s, campaign had many shortcomings. grievous errors were made potence. The make a_ single strengthening or ficulties—Comrade Leyine against Shipstead in Minnesota. The Opposition’s estimate of the Central Executive Committee only a replica of the estimate of Executive Committee and the Party made by Cannon and of both these camps of hostility to the Cen- ecutive Committee are iden- misrepresenting in the slightest recognition of the Party’s the Central Company. The methods tral E: tical — belittling, and never saying a word achievements. Compare the tone and methods of criticism of the Central Execu- tive Committee resorted to by the Opposition within the Party and the Trotskyite Cannon Company, on the with the constructively critical tone and method of the C. I We quote from the decision on the American ques- Sixth World one hand, on the other hand. tion adopted by the Congres “The Workers (Communist) Party of America has displayed more lively activity and has taken advantage of symptoms of crisis in American industry, the growth of unemployment (due to the extremely rapid rise in the organic composition of capital and in the technique f production). A number of tubborn and fierce class bat- ‘es (primarily the miners’ trike) found in the Commu- ist Party a stalwart leader. campaign against the exe- cution of Sacco and Vanzetti was also conducted under the influence of the Party; its nihilistic attitude towards y in general or a revisionistic evaluation of Marx- e criticism of the Par- icense for con- Pre- cisely, the latter is the practice of December his document proceeds to Central Executive Com- resh Right errors in Kentucky and Wyoming | local coal strikes our Party fraction in the National Miners Union, was the guiding and driving force in successfully wage- cut attempts of the operators. Much headway has been made in the Par- ty fraction’s effort to make the Na- tional Textile Workers Union a real, living organization in Paterson and| in other textile centers. The Oppo- sition knows that the Central Exe- cutive Committee has been taking the most resolute measures to help leadership of the Party, within which is observed a weakening of the long-standing factional struggle. While recording suc- cesses, however, reference must be made to a number of Right mistakes to committed in regard the socialist party, to the hat the Party has not with jient energy conducted work in the organization of the unorganized and for the organ- ization of the Negro movement, and that it does not conduct a sufficiently strong struggle against the predatory policy of the United States in Latin America. These mistakes, how- ever, cannot be ascribed to the majority leadership alone.” Note the vast difference. We ac- cept unreservedly the estimate of the C. I. We are certain that in choosing between these estimates of the Party by the Opposition and the C. I, the membership will un- hesitatingly and decisively select ; for its platform the decisions of the Comintern and not the platform of the Opposition—whether it . be united or divided, The line of the Opposition, at least insofar as the American Par- ty is concerned, is clearly in con- flict with the line of the C. I. No matter how often the Opposition may proclaim in words its accep- tance of the Comintern line, it will be in deed against the line of the CI until it completely drops its reservations towards the decisions of the Comintern on the estimate of American imperialism, of radicaliza- tion, and of the Central Executive Committee. High Times To Unite All Commu- nist Forces. It is high time that all Commu-/ nist forces should close their ranks to fight energetically the Right danger and its crassest expression— Trotskyism. The charge made by the Opposition that the Central | Executive Committee “attempts to brand the entire minority as being Trotskyites and against the Comin- tern” is without the faintest founda- tion in fact. In its statement of November 16th, the Central Execu- tive Committee expressly declared: “The CEC declares most vig- orously against any attempt to dub the comrades of the Oppo- sition as Trotskyites. The CEC warns every Party comrade against such mistakes.” In the convention arrangements, the Central Executive Committee made every concession to the Op- position, Equal time and equal Party press space is being granted to the Opposition. The CEC also adopted the following as its policy guiding the Party discussion: “The Polcom desires to or- ganize the freest possible dis- cussion throughout the whole Party, giving full possibilities to the minority to present its views before the entire Party membership and gives all guar- antees for fair and adequate ar- rangements in all matters con- cerning the Party convention.” “That the discussion be con- ducted on the freest possible basis, giving ,all possible oppor- tunities to comrades in the Op- position to the Central Execu- tive Committee, solely limited by the statutes of the Comin- tern and within the principles of Communism.” * A most serious obstacle to the unification of all Communist forces for an effective fight against the Right danger and its most consis- tent’ and complete expression, Trot- inal syndicalism persecution for Protest, it is not revolutionary. The | skyism, is the continued insistence others, the complete subservience of Whole idea of “filling the jails” the | of the Opposition to fight the deci- sion of the Communist International relative to the estimation of the world position of American imper- ialism, radicalization, and the esti- mate of the Central Executive Committee. The CI categorically declared that: “The charge against the ma- jority of the Central Committee of the Party of’ representing a Right line is unfounded.” The Opposition must unreservedly | accept the decisions of the Comin- tern. Solely on the basis and in full ac- ceptance gf the decisions of the Comintern, the Central Executive Committee on November 3rd, made a further energetic effort to secure lirium there. In the original it was|0f it altogether. Piscator’s reported | complete unification of all Commu- nist forces in order to crush the Right danger and its worst outbreak in our Party, Trotskyism. The Central Executive Committee then declared: “The unity of all Communist forees against the Right dan- ger and the growing Trotskyist menace is imperative. The Poli- tical Committee calls upon all comrades who are today in op- position to the Central Execu- tive Committee and carry on a factional struggle against the Party leadership to unite with the Central Executive Commit- tea in its struggle against the ) and drop their charge against Right danger and Trotskyism. the Central Executive Commit- “The Political Committee | ‘2.28.9 Right group with Right policies, which charge, as the calls first of all upon those of | ocr stated, is unfunded, and its own membership ‘who stick | unite with the Central Execu- to their reservations to the tive Committee against Trot- World Thesis of the Sixth Con- skyism and the. Right danger. gress of the Comintern to drop The Party has a right to de- these reservations and accept mand from all leaders of the fully the’ line of the Comintern. Opposition within the Party to The Political Committee calls declare publicly that, in view of upon the leadership of the Op- the Right danger and the grow- position within the Party to ing menace of Trotskyism, ihey stop. the factional struggle e willing to fight the Right against the Central Executive Committee ‘for which, as the World Thesis of the Comintern Congress stated, there is today no basis founded on principles, est expre the main danger, and will not concentrate their attacks against the Cen- tral Executive Committee of | the Party, which the only legitimate leadership of the Part; and which considers its foremost duty the unrelentless, uncompromising fight against the Right danger and Trotsky- ism. “The Political Committee ex- presses it most sincere wish to unite all forces of the Party against the ‘Trotskyist Cannon group, which, with the help of the renegade groups outside the Party and the Social Democrats and the capitalist press, aims a’ the destruction of our The Political Committee clares its willingness to investi- ‘gate and remedy all grievances, IMPROVE ON SINCLAIR New Playwrights Present Best Performance of Their Career PTON SINCLAIR'S inging| the wife who died thru ignorance Jailbirds” is not only the New| of birth control knowledge, and in- ights’ latest production but timate that it is Red’s feeling of The scenery is peculiarly | guilt in this connection which causes suitable to a theme which has so him to so readily break down in much of fantasy and delirium in it; solitary (hallucinations after only Manuel Essman has succeeded, by a two days). They contain the road- peculiar use of suggestion in giving house scene where the district at- the illusion that a few widely spaced torney flaunts his persecution of black-painted timbers are a steel|the strikers to his stenographer- tank in San Pedro jail, that a cir-| concubine, and drunkenly boasts cular bird cage of cables is an un-| that in return he “gets ‘his;” cham- derground dungeon. Some improve-| pagne, squabs en casserole, and ment in technique is still needed; it| whatever else he wants. “We, the owners of the world,” he says to Red, in Red’s phantasy, “we know how to stand together all right. We make our will into law, and you obey it. You show your muscles in the slave markets—or your pretty is not conducive to the proper spirit of apvreciation in the audience to have Red Adams look up into the ,sudden white glare of a concen-| trated spot light and remark, “It’s dark as hell” as he does in almost his first speech of the second act. ce in we fostnouste hue ye istri 7 uy you. e’re the masters.” As the District Attorney, Edmund | 2) ¥0"" oe the. stool pigeon Forde is at his best in the burlesque cabaret scene, but here, because the jtable is set in the orchestra, he wears too much make up. Perhaps different lighting would help. The most important defect of a merely technical nature, is of course, that the actors don’t, absolutely do not, know how to sing wobbly songs, and that is peculiarly unfortunate, as the song plays such a role in the drama, gives it its title. ‘Solidarity scene, when the “cutor” boasts of buying up most of the “executive committee” (just what committee is doubtful, Sinclair never would learn technical terminology) and the trial scene, much modified from the original, but mighty good, probably better than it would have been with Sinclair’s bulls and tigers. There are only the hayseed | judge, the “cutor” the bailiff with Forever,” “California Prison Song,” | 2 doll Jarors strapped‘on his back, 3 : ison Song,” and “jack in the box,” the assigned Long Haired Preachers,” “Scissors | counsel for the defense, True. in Bill” and, in fact, all of the I. W.|.). ‘aia 5 fs esataee hp iss spirit however fantastic in detail, nk ipa oh baa heey tone to a superior court of the state of sie ahiigs SRM sf oe | California. Herbert T. Bergman, as never seem to have heard. The} A ., 4 cast last night spoke them, rather |" Judge, deserves -apectal ist |than sang them, jazzily, and much| Then days of delirium, with Sin- too fast, and spoiled the effect. clair in unusual bad taste even for Probably also the songs lacked some! him, injecting one of his dietetic of the fervor of conviction which fads, even here. Red Adams, he the real thing has. | would have you think, goes on hun- But after all, this is New York) 8°" strike because in the dungeon jand not San sean “seattle, and| they feed him white bread! And |the production is so much better he wants health bread! a |than anyone had a right to expect| Then the second most effective | after a reading of Sinclair’s original | S°en® in the play, Red Adams dies, |that it may not be fair to quibble | Still delirious, and with the rats over minor defects. [eens his eyes even before he is i i ; $i ead. meer rie ys tha ‘Bent ‘Bedea| thould say, is the end of the first waterfront strike of 1923. This was! act, with the tank full of men, sing- | almost the last real organized effort |i& 88 they gasp, one by one faint- lof the I. W. W. in America, unless | "8 from heat and lack of air. ‘one counts the Colorado strike,, Well, there you have the play, which was not a typical wobbly | better than Sinclair, but still pri- strike, but an uprising of miners in marily Sinclairish, a humanitarian a company union, and revolting un- revolt against the brutality of mas- der the first outside leadership that ter class rule._I hope that Upton is came along. The San Pedro strike, Still alive when the class war the imprisonment of 600 singing | reaches the next stage, and the real strikers, the attempt to stop their | White terror comes down, for which singing by shutting off the air and San Pedro was only a subdued re- turning on the steam in the jail, the | hearsal. solitary for some of the men, crim-| “Singing Jailbirds” is a drama of |Police Captain Plummer and the| Whole martyr philosophy which in | district attorney’s office to the Ship-| the last days of the I. W. W. as a |owners’ Association, all were as/| force in the American labor move- represented in the play. | ment did so much to destroy it, the The undaunted militancy of the | Whole pacifism and hysteria of non- men, singing and defiant, is true to | tesistance, the idea that the I. W. life. Unfortunately, it is also true| W- is a new religion with its mar- \to the theories prevalent in the de-|tyrs and saints, with a set of clining period of the I. W. W., al-| magic formulae, with the G. E. B. ready set in by the year 1923; that | in the place of Christ's twelve apos- Red Adams could make the state-| tles, ideas against which the old |ment to the district attorney, “You | time, militant wobblies were fight- know we never try to get away, you| ing within their organization at the only have to tap us on the shoulder” | very period in which “Singing Jail- (to fill the jails with strike leaders). | birds” was written, was by Sinclair | After the first act, which deals| Seized upon, and given clearer ex- | with the masses, come two more Pression, more dramatic appeal. which are concentrated on Red|The New Playwrights softens this Adams’ personal sufferings in soli- appeal, discards some of the spe- tary, and scenes indicating his de-| cious argument, but cannot get rid \ three more acts. Em Jo Basche, di-| approval to the contrfry notwith- ‘rector of the New Playwrights, is | Standing, “Singing Jailbirds” is bad to be congratulated on having cut} — out the spiritualistie scenes in which | Red’s ghost converses with his fel- | low workers in the jungles, or near- ly so, The ghost appears in the; | back stage, but attention is concen-| | trated on Red in the hole, and the thing appears clearly as a delirium January 5 picture, and loses the original super- | is the bata tinge. Parts of Sinclair's, ast act are sandwiched into the H 7 | preceding ones, even into the first, | F ifth Birthday with good effect. | The two last acts as played in- of the clude Red’s romance, the story of TROPOLITAN day of the month w from the Ist day of the month. Last Quarterly Dividend paid on all amounts from $5.00 Ay. Y to $7,500.00, at the rate of 2 0 Mondays (all day) unti} ety Accoum ers Certified Checks Nob THIRD AVE. Cor Daily Worker This is an event of the greatest importance to the revolutionary movement. Alt cities and workers’ or- ganizations should make ar- stangements for celebrations. NOW! SAVINGS B t draw interest Accepted 72ST. p é The most effective scene, I} Rothstein Papers Show Tammany Police Graft, .Also Protected Dope George McManus was arraigned yesterday for the murder of Arnold Iothstein, and in continuation of the policy followed thruout the case by the police department ard dis- trict attorney’s office, Judge Man- cus‘ allowed his attorneys 15 lays in which to file motions, after 2 plea of “not guilty.” This an junusually long time to allow for | motions. | Rothstein’s personal files, after being rifled and looted by persons lunknown to the general public at lleast, during the sever] days the | police allowed them to lie around open before they were impounded |for the grand jury, are still said to have enough informacion °n then. to implicate several New Yor: poli men as taking graft fem Rothstein, and to connect the dead gambler | wih the of'«n mentioned. bilhon dol- lar protected drug smugg'iag ring. | propaganda, except in | negative aspects, as a criticism of | the system. | Red Adama, so beautifully acted}, by Grover Burgess, is an unfortu- nate with deep emotionally charged mental injuries; he breaks in soli- tary. Workers will be tortured in solitary in increasing numbers, and |; tho no man can say how he will react when his turn comes, 99 out of every 100 in the past did not \break down mentally even tho ruined physically by literally years | of “the hole.” Militant workers are, and must be, in general harder than | Red Adams was. To make the play |turn so much around Adam’s par- | ticular mental conflict assists those sneering critics who regard all radi- cals as freaks anyway, people to be | cured by psycho-analysis instead of changes in the social structure. —VERN SMITH. NEW MASSES BALL December 7 FROM 9 P. M. TO 3 A, Me Webster Hall 119 EAST 11TH STREET LL The Big Night Is Here! Songs from “Singing Jailbirds” by the cast of New Playwrights Theatre - - - - =~ THE BIG RED REVEL EVERYBODY HAS BEEN LOOKING FORWARD TO DANCING LAUGHTER SONGS — LIGHTS Tickets In ndvance 91.50, Phone reservations at thin price ae- cepted until 8 p.m. Algonaut 4445. ‘The Workers Book be open until 10 p, m. for wt minute sales, RESERVE YOUR TICKETS! $3.00 AT THE DOOR, ‘Tickets on na 39 Union Sq.5 Workers Book- shop, 28 Union Sq,; Rand Book 7 E. 15th St. Modern Rint St. St. its purely) on the basis of Communist prin- ciples and of the decisions of the Communist International, but most exclude the advocacy of de- structive and counter-revolu- ionary views of Trotskyism.” to eliminate all friction and mis- | understandings, to bring about | real comradely cooperation and team-work, to go as far as pos- sible in the interests of the Party as a whole to reach unity with the present Opposition within the Party. The basis of this unity can only be the full accentance of all decisions of the World Congress of the Com- intern, the endorsement of the line of the Communist Interna- tional without any reservations, the uncompromising struggle against the Trotskyist Cannon group and the Right danger without the slightest manifesta- tions of tolerance. With the rejection of this pro- posal of the Central Executive Com- mittee the Opposition declared that it finds it to be perfectly in order to have a common American plat- form with Cannon against the Gen- tral Executive Committee, but finds it impossible to have a common platform with the Central Exec- utive Committee against Cannon. The Central Executive Committee, however, can only reaffirm its policy with all the emphasis and vigor at “The Political Committee calls its command. upon the comrades in opposition to join the leadership of the Party and to draft a joint thesis which accepts as its basis the estimation of the Comintern Congress on American imperial- ism and the radicalization of the American working class, which gives up the fight against the present leadership of the Party as a Right group with Right policies, which concentrates its struggle against Trotskyism and the Right danger. The draft- ing of a joint thesis and the de- fense of the line of the Comin- tern do not exclude, of course, the legitimate fight of the Op- position for the majority in the election of delegates to the Party Convention or any criti- cism of any actions or decisions of the C. E..C. “Unity in the defense of the Party against the Right danger and Trotskyism includes, as a No unprincipled factionalism! Away with the slightest tolerance of any manifestation of the Right ‘danger! For a finish fight Right danger! Out with all those still in our Party ranks who follow the counter- revolutionary, social democratic, de- viations of Trotskyism! For a unified, mass Bolshevik Party in the United States! For the Communist International and the unreserved acceptance of its decisions! | Let’s unite to beat back the sharpening attacks of capitalist and renegade enemies of our Party! Only Bolshevik unity, Party loy- alty, and iron Leninist discipline can build our Party and smash the ring of enemies encircling us in the face of the growing danger of im- perialist war! —CENTRAL against the EXECUTIVE COM- matter of course, the most | MITTEE OF THE WORKERS thorough self-criticism, the most (COMMUNIST) PARTY OF extended freedom of discussion AMERICA. + THE THEATRE GUILD Presents Major Barbara GUILD “hea. bind St | Eves. 8:30, Mats. Thursday KEITH: 4g ST ALBEE BWAY 2d WEEK THE BRITISH “BIG PARADE” “THE SOMME” “GRIM RBALISM”- x. ‘AUTHENTIC, “ABSORBING, CAME w tnd Saturday, 2.30 Times orld ‘Tribune eX ARTHUR HOPKINS presents “HOLIDAY” a new comedy by Philip Barry PLYMOUTH Chea.,W.45thSt.Eves.8.30 Mats. Thurs, & Sat. fIVIC REPERTORY ete 50c; $1 00; $1.50. Mats. Wed.&Sat.,2.30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Today Mat., “Peter Pan.” (Tonight, “Would-Be Gentleman.” | Strange Interlude Jomo GOLDEN Pen, 00 | 1 EVENINGS ONLY AT 56:30 | \ ERLANGER THRA, WW. un st Mat. Wed. and Sat. at 2:30 George M. Cohuns Comedians with POLLY WALKER in Mr Cohan’s Newest Musical “BILLIE” JOLSON "hea fin Ave w oun st Eys, 8:30, Mat. Wed.&Sat. Guy ODBT DE WOLE | ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER in a musical romance of Chopin | CHANINS St. W. ot Bway | 46th St. W. ot Bway Mats. Wednesday and Saturday _ SCHWAB and MANDEL's MUSICAI SMASH with GEORGE OLSE! mMuUsIC. NITE HOSTESS - VANDERBILT THEATRE W. 48th St. Evs. 8:30 Mats. Wednesday and Saturday SRD STARTLING WEEK! KEITH-ALBEE Continuous Noon to Midnight. BROADWAY | “TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK JACK HOLT, snes, | Pop. rae AU asi 1551, in a “AVALANCHE” | — —— Dramatic Story We demand the immediate abolt- and Kelth-Albee Vaudeville, Incl. | tion of all vagrancy lawst protec- LARRY RICH & FRIENDS tion of unemployed workers from with “CHERIE” 14—People—14| arrest on charges of vagrancy. 500,000 Anniversary Edition JANUARY 5, 1929 FIFTH BIRTHDAY RDER A BUNDLE NOW for distribution on the anniversary of the only revolutionary fight- ing English Daily in the world. We must make this Anniversary the occasion for bringing the DAILY WorKER to thousands of workers that we have never reached before. This edition will have additional features, special photos and will be larger many times the present size. Price, $10 per thousand. Order a few days in advance. . Daily Worker 26 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CITY. Pl end Me..-++ . copies of The DAILY WORKER at the rate of $6.00 per thousand, NAMB Dense ne eeeeeeerererssstereensseees een seneeens eens sees, ADDRESS.....400e000+ CITY ; To arrive not later than . 1 am attaching STATE., IAF

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