The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 10, 1928, Page 4

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Page Four DAILY Ww ORKER NEW YORK, MONDAY, BOOST SALARY OF PRESIDENT; MANY JOBLESS Misleader Is Head of Iron Boss League (By a Worker Corr spondent) JERSEY CITY, N. J., (By Mail).—Some ago the Inter. national Iron ers’ Union held ¢ convention, and Theodore (Czar) Brandle, boss of the building trades New Jersey, millionaire man, banker, and one of spokes in the Hague aft machine in Jersey, on in nsurance the ma democratic ¢ had } If elected as a delegate. His pals d fellow grafters and/ misleader ney, Newman, and} O’Brien, al d themselves elected delegates. hired a private car for the trip. had a wonderful time at the convention—on the hard-earned wages of the iron work- ers, They came back telling of the wonderful time they had. At the convention they were instrumental the salary of the grand president $7,500 more a year. When c#ar Brandle came back, lo and be- hold, he raised the monthly assess- ment f $7 to $9. 1 more than half of the iron workers, my- self included, haven’t been able to get a lick of work for the past three months. That’s the kind of crooks we have in charge of the Ironwork- ers’ Union. Teddy, as Brandle’s intimate friends, the politicians and the open shop bosses of New Jersey call him » has been able to control the build- ing trades of New Jersey for so many years because he has all the thugs, all the police, all the corrupt politicians, including Mayor Hague, the arch-crook of them all—behind him. Brandle has helped Hague to vise from a corner saloon hanger- on (gnd I remember seeing him thus) to a multi-millionaire who owns a good part of the real estate of Jersey, and several chateaus in France besides. And Brandle has not let little Teddy grow poorer while Hague was getting rich. Brandle has sold out near strike of the building trades northern part of New Jersey. He always appears at banquets of the open shop bosses’ associations, where he makes speeches say that he does not believe in strikes, and where he pats the bosses on the shoulders, and they pat him in return—with the only pat that talks to Brandle—cash. Brandle was presented with the office of president of the New Jer- sey Iron League, the association of | the open shop bosses of New Jer- sey, early this year, at a salary higher than $25,000 a year. “We are rewarding Teddy Brandle for the splendid services he has ren- dered the iron construction indus- try, by preventing all industrial un- rest, and keeping harmony between the iron employers and employees.” So sajd the construction bosses at the banquet given to Teddy when he was made the president of the structural iron bosses’ association. When the housewreckers of Jer- sey City wanted to organize into a progressive and fighting union, Brandle personally supervised the wrecking of the union. He brought in men from New York, who were snown to have acted as scabs, to scat. on the Jersey housewreckers. He supported the scabs against the strikers of the Goldberg Wrecking | Corp., a few years back. Whenever | a representative of the rank and| file of a union wants to call on! Anniversary Edition | Z need help. DECEMBER 10, 1928 ‘Getting Nearer to Imperialist War; Here’s One of Wall Street Aces | Needless to say, a fleet of ten by We ha ng just been completed. Brandle, in Brandle privales dhe ious suite of offices at the Labor Bank, he is met by a pretty, bu t| haughty stenographer, who noticing | his clothes are not of the same cut | that Teddy’s friends, the bankers and politicians wear, tells him that | Brandle is in conference. If the| worker wants to wait, well, he can| cool his heels in the ante-room un- | til he gets good and tired. Some other soft jobs of Brandle, | besides being the head of the struc- tural iron bosses’ league, and head | of the building trades are: head of the Hudson County Building Trades Council, head of the Branleygran| Corporation, a big real estate and | insurance concern, and official of | the Jersey City Labor Bank. cushy jobs. Now, the politicians go around| saying, “Teddy’s our friend, he’s a good fellow.” Of course he’s a| good fellow, to the building trades | bosses. Then the politicians’ little toadies and ward healers go around | passing the word to the workers of | Jersey, “Teddy’s a good fellow, he’s our friend. Look at him, didn’t he | rise from a poor fellow, just like} are now, He’s a good man to be on the right side of. Teddy’ll see that you get helped when you're | in trouble.” And so thousands of | Y | Jersey workers have been fooled by these lying words, and keep think- ing that Brandle’s a good fellow, and that he'll help them—until the time comes when they really do| Then they find out, like the Goldberg housewrecking strik- ers did, like the thousands of build- ing trades workers out of jobs are doing, the jobless who get a $2 in- crease in their monthly assessments, | just so as to pay for Teddy’s plea-| sure trip and good time at the In- ternational convention; just so as to help pay for the $7,500 raise that the International president of the Tron Workers’ Union got. Even tho} Brandle and his friends control the | politicians, the police, and the| thugs, the building workers will do| away with these crooks, And they’ll | form a fighting, honest union. —C. D. Two Workers of Crew | of Five Saved After Yacht Burns, Sinks | MELBOURNE, Fla., Dec. 8 (U.P). —Two men, out of a crew of five who manned the yacht Aero when it burned and sank nine miles off the coast Wednesday night, have been rescued. Leslie Royal and Edward San- tinover, the survivors, told a tale of hours of hardship*and horror in | ‘water after the ship sank. | JANUARY 5, 1929 FIFTH BIRTHDAY RDER A BUNDLE NOW O the anniversary of the only revolutionary fight- ing English Daily in the world. We must make this Anniversary the occasion 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. Baily Worker {Please send me at the rate of $6.00 per NAME ADDRESS To arrive not later than .... 26 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CITY. -copies of The DAILY WORKEK jousand, | for distribution on | for bringing the DatLy Some! ,, | rate of 50 miles an hour. | fam attaching » remittance-to cover same. giant Ford planes one of Lindbergh's rewards \ARGENTINE FASCISTI — THREATEN WORKERS RING TAXICAB DRIVERS STRIKE : \Intolerable Conditions the Cause WORCESTER, Mass., Dec. 9. ‘Can you blame us for striking,” asked one of the 15 Ring Cab Co. | drivers who, dissatisfied with their | wages, left their cabs after refused improved conditions. This decision to demand an in- crease was the outcome of a meet- | ing held by the 34 Ring drivers who came to the conclusion that condi- tions were becoming intolerable, and a committee was named to interview the management. One example cited to demonstrate th unfair manner in which the Ring Company treats its drivers was that of a drive who said it cost him $8.50 for the privilege of working for the being |company for cne day. “Under present conditions,” he said, “it is impossible to get a living wage as a Ring driver, For in- stance, a driver has to pay $5 a | day for his cab, $2 for gas, $1 a k on his uniform and 50 cents a installment to pay for his wi week cap. _ Impossible Task. “Por the r, there is actually but of the 12 during which he can do any busi ness and one can imagine how many trips one can make from West Moun- tain Street to City Hail and get anything out for himself at 35 cents a trip. In order to make a fair wage it is necessary to get a job every 15 minutes and travel at the This.would mean $1.40 an hour for 6 hours, or $8.40 for the day’s wages. “In addition to payments by drivers to the company, are installments on liabili: made there msur- jance and payment for all repairs due to accident ating to less thea $50. Tho ¢ e of $5 a da: f.r the cab must be paid even though the cab isn’t vsed. “The labor turnover, conditions, has been due to these tremendous, sevo:al changos ia drivers occurring every day, and much dissatisfaction is expressed by all drivers with whem I have come in contact. Some | drivers get by either by overcharg-| | ing, while others are fortunate in |feated in the last election. getting | e tips.” Discnss Organizing. Questioned if any means had been taken to organize and hope to rem- edy conditions in that way, he re- | plied this had been spoken of at their meeting. The taxi situation, caused by the advent of the Ring Co, in Worces- ter, causing much turmoil in les, this including a greatly reduced ineome from fare on the Consolidated Street Railwa; Employes of the latter company | as well-as those of other taxi com- | po | pas. .cs wh» receive better wages, are most critical over the unfair tactics practiced by the Ring Co.,) when, which they say, if continued,’ may be the cause of throwing a goodly num 2: of men out of employment. ‘Buys’ 30° of a Boxer; Sport Is a Business The deal by which Anthony J.! ull Street to kill the workers in the coming imperialist war. One of these big Incidentally, was to be made chairman of the technica! adviscry board of this fleet, at a fat salary. ant ~-GAPITALIST U. S, Sent as ‘Public Charge’ o Slaughter-House (By a Worker Correspondent) When I, a worker, suffering from | tuberculosis, went to the Federa- tion of Jewish Charities in New York City, a few weeks ago, and | asked that they have me sent to either the Otisville or Raybrook state sanitarium, this organization, | which asks the workers to give from their hard-earned money to help support it, told me that people like me belonged to Bellevue, the city slaughter house, and that they dé “not help bums out.” Just because |I was a worker, they called me a jbum. This is an organization that | seeks support to “aid the poor of New York.” And this is how they uid the worker. I did not come there seeking charity, but to get them to refer me to a state .tuberculosis ca Argentina” sanitarium, because this is the only pported by the Way a worker has a chance of get- so-called “ n Nacional de ting to a sanitarium. But they | Trabajac (National Labor A: called me a*bum and sent me to tion) which is actually an organiza- Bellevue. tion of the most reactionary anti-| After the Federation of jewish union manufacturers, in a state-| Charities had shown me that they ment to the press, declared that it were not out to help the worker, I confidence in the ability and went to the Board of Health, at 505 desire ‘of the new president Irigoyen|Fearl St. I was not seeking char- | to repress labor agitation and that | ily, but that which I was entitled | it must therefore prepare to take|to, admission to cne of the New| matters into its own hands as in York state sanitariums, which are | 1919. svpposed to be in existence for the | ” won't be despised planes is shown above, his services to imperialisia for The “Li organiz: a Patriati an ion ia- During the previous presidency of | treatment of any tubercular person Irigoyen in 1919, a general protest who cannot afford to pay the huge strike in Buenos Aires developed fees that the. private san‘tariums, from a strike for higher wages in which are only for the rich, charge. one factory, when strikebreakers and hey referred me to the City of New police killed striker In the strug- York Tuberculosis Hospital Admis- | gles which followed, lasting several | sion Division. days, the “Patriotic League of Ar-| There a doctor gave me a few gentina,” having recruited andj)taps on the chest end examined me armed students, sons of bourgeois,|no further, as if he had no time to gainsters and the lumpen-prole-| examine a worker. I asked that I| tariat, attacked the buildings of the|be sent to either Otisville or Ray- trade unions and the labor papers,| brook, which are supposed to be| destroyed them and burned them to|run for cases like mine. “No,” said eand ¢-|this political flunkey of a doctor, tive assistance of. the police. In these | “you are too far advanced to go to fights several hundred on both sides} sanitarium.” .Which was a lie. were killed and the January week in| After being treated like a dog at| which this occurred is known in Ar-| this city clinic, talked to roughly, gentine history as “bloody week.” °|{1 was given a slip, referring me to Though the workers were defeated | Metropolitan Hospital, on Welfare | in this unequal struggle against the | Island, which is notorious as ‘one police, and the armed bourgeoisie, |of the worst slaughter houses among | Irigoyen negotiated with the leaders the big chain of city slaughter | of the labor movement for the cessa- houses which go under the names of ition of the general strike and |“hospitals.” On this blank I was | promised to force the manufacturers | referred to as a “proper public | against whom the original strike charge.” A “proper public charge,” had started to accede to all the de-| when I had come there to obtain mands of the strikers. He also|what was mine by right—admission promised to release all workers of |to a state sanitarium. But no, If I the several thousand arrested in the | had political pull of course I would | course of the street fights. Under | have been sent to Otisville or Ray- these conditions—promises which|brook. But, being a worker, what Trigoyen kept, the Regional Federa-|I was iold amounted to, “Go, you Gog. and be thankful that we even tion of Labor (Fora) called off the general strike. |send you to that slaughter house This incident contributed to Trigo-| of Metropolitan Hospital.” | ;yen’s popularity among a large part| That is the treatment given to | Other players include: EW Theatre Guild Ee ey Ae Wace Over Europe,” will fea- | ture the openings of this week—no_ jless than five in number. “Wings Over Europe,” which | opens at the Martin Beck Theatre | this evening is the third production | this season. This play will mark the Guild’s occupation of the Beck} | Theatre. The cast is headed by Ernest Law- ford, Frank Conroy, Alexander Kirkland, Hugh Buckler, Joseph Kilgour, Grant Stewart, Robert Ren- idel and A. P. Kayg The play is jby Robert Nichols, one of the younger British poets and Maurice Browne, whose Little Theatre in Chicago years ago, gave that mov e- | ment its name, Another evening is |Gould and S: have its postponed opening at the Lyceum Theatre. “Tomorrow,” by Hull “Sign of the Leopard,” a London success by Edgar Wallace, will open tomorrow at the National Theatre. Campell Gullen who played the chief role in the London production, will be seen in the same part here. Flora Shef- field, Blsa Shelley, Warren Wil- liams, Murray Kinnel and Thurston Hall. David Belasco will bring his newest production “Mima,” to the Belasco on Wednesday night. ore Ulric is the ster of the play which is an adaptation of Ferenc | Molnar’s “The here es Mill.” TEXTILE DRIVE THROUGHOUT PA, Tour Many Cities in Campaign With many of, the youth, espe- cially girls and women relatives of the coal miners working in textile factories, manufacturing all kinds of cloth, from silk stockings to rugs, the National Textile Workers Union is touring an organizer through this almost totally unorganized region. Sgnia Kaross, the organizer, reports on some of the successful meetings held and on the meetings scheduled. Meetings have already been held in Scranton, Wilkes-Barre and Ed- wardsville. A meeting is to he held tonight in Luzerne and, acccrding te present arrangements, six more towns are to be covered in the pres- | ent tour. The organizer reports that arrangements are being made for the opening of local offices in Wilkes-Barre. At present commu- nications can be addressed to S. Karross, 180 Lee Park Ave., Wilkes- Barre, Pa. The following meetings | |are to be held: Dec. 4, Plymouth; Dec. 5, Hazle- ton; Dec. 6, McAdoo; Dec. 9, Shen- | | play scheduled for this m Kling, which will | Len-| . CHARLES FARRELL { Featured with Dolores Del Rio in “The Red Dance,” showing at the! Broadway Theatre this week. PALACE Rae Samuels; Henry Santrey and his orchestra, with Harry Seymour and Mary Horan; Fannie Watson and Kitty; Russ Brown and Jeane Whittaker; Homer FP. Mason, and | Marguerite Keeler; Lew Castleton and Max Mack, and Sandy Lang,} | with Emeralde Sisters and Patti Lee. BROADWAY The Four Camerons; Hal Neiman; Frank Mullane and Ghretta; |Charles Sargeant and Burt Lewis; and Paul Jordan. Feature photo- jplay—“The Red Dance” starring | Dolores Del Rio and Charles Farrell. RIVERSIDE Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday—Vanessi; Leo Beers; Emory Manely; other acts. Feature photoplay—“The Avalanche’’ starr- ing Jack Holt. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday—Freda and Palace; Zelda Santley; Yesterthoughts; others. Feature photoplay—‘Love Overnight” starring Rod LaRecque. Port Official Takes Part in R. R. Battle | Julius H. Cohen, legal counsel for the Port of New York, argued to the state chamber of commerce yester- day that New York would continue | to lose commerce to other ports on! | account of high port expenses until | a@ union freight terminal was built | on Manhattan island. At present only the New York| Central has a warehouse on Man- hattan, and through its monopoly | jforces other roads to pay for pas- sage over its tracks or to unload in| New Jersey and ship by lighters. WORKER IS ADOG “Wings Over Europe” Opens WORKER CAUGHT TOHOSPITALS OF | at the Martin Beck Tonight 7p iy BELLEVUE HOSPITAL JOB Is Shunted “to Another Slaughter-House (By a Worker Correspondent) Seaview Hospital in Staten Island is one of the hospitals run by the City of New York Welfare Depart- ment, where the workers or mem- ‘bers of their families are sent when ‘they are so unfortunate as to have tuberculosis. Tuberculosis is one of the easiest things in the world to set for a worker who is cooped up all day in a sweatshop. But I am a worker who got tuberculosis by doing work right in a hospital, where I was a porter. I had to clean uv the messes which would turn the stomach of anyone. Bloody tandages, filled with green and yel- low pus, and salves soaked with matter which came out of wounds; 'T had to clean up the vomitings of patients; I had to clean floors cov- ered with the sputum of patients suffering with tuberculosis and even venereal diseases. And I did all this for $40 a month and food and quarters. The food was vile and full of vermin. The quarters were filthy, old, and fire- traps. We got the same food served |to the patients, who are all poor workers who cannot pay for a pri- vate hospital. So I got T. B. work- ing in Bellevue. I reported the clinie for examina- tion. After waiting for hours, and being barked at by the registrars and nurses with political jobs I was finally given the once-over by & doctor. When I claimed that I caught the disease while working in Bellevue, he said, “Nothing doing.” He refused to make out any slip certifying to my having contracted T. B. on the job, so I was thus eypped out of any chance of col- lecting compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Law. I vould have gotten $5 a week under this law for afew weeks; small enough. | I was kept in a Bellevue ward a few days, where I was seen by @ doctor once only. I was lucky, for other patients never saw a doctor while I was there. Then I was shunted off to Seaview, another city hospital. The same story. Rotten |food, rotten treatment, neglect. I | got no better, in fact, worse, after |a few weeks, so I left.- | |Negro Teachers Are Vastly Underpaid | Forty-three Virginia counties pay | | Negro teachers less than one-half the salaries paid to the white teach- ers, and Negro children attend schools under unsanitary and un- | healthful conditions, in frame |of the workers and the lack of con-|the sick worker in this paradise of |andoah; Dec. 10, Pottsville, and Dec. |The new move may be considered a| shacks, it was revealed at the an- fidence on the part of the powerful | capitalism. I told these political | ionary Argentine manutactur-|flunkeys that I would rather die in association, bearing th: name} the street from tuberculosis than be ional Association of Labor.”|sent to 2 city slaughter house, This organization opposed the can-| where I would be fed the rottenest didacy of Irigoyen and supported |food, receive the rottenest treat- with large sums the candidacy of | ment for my illness, be kept a pris- the “conservative concentration,” an | oner and be allowed to die like a dog. | alliance of the remnants of the old B. B. conservative party and the right — wing of the split “Radical” Party, the so-called anti. personalisig/French and British (against the leadership of Irigoyen)| to Hammer on German or “Alvearista” wing, which was de- ‘Reparations at League PARIS, Dee. 9 (UP).—Political in- terest in the 58rd session of the} | League of Nations Council at Lu- gano will center almost entirely on |war reparations problems. The council agenda will be of secondary importance, observers believe. French and English delegates are | expected to spend most of the time concentrating on Foreign Minister | Stresemann of Germany, in an at- tempt to bring the German view- point around to what the former} : allies describe as a “more realistic again passing through convulsions, attitude on settlement of repara- under appearance of labor move-| tions.” ments, as it had to suffer in 1919,| * * . dae to unpreparedness and! Capitalist Delegates Gloomy. ‘elegats3 of foreign| BERLIN, Dec. 9 (UP).—The Ger- | e almost on the verge| man delgeation to the League of ‘blishing a regime and a gov Nations Council left for Lugano to- | Fascist Threat. | The manifesto of the “Argentine | Patriotic League,” headed by the| famous strikebreaker, Carlés, says: “The brigades of the interior sent| to the Central Committee of the! Argentine Patriotic League declara- tions of adhesion to the resolution | put again in force the measures of security adopted by this institution in 1919.” | “The brigades of the interior point out at this juncture the neces- sity of preventing the couatry from the sur’ countr of es ernment based on the Seviet organi- night. Dr. Gustave Stresemann, zation. foreign minister, headed the delega- “Tf this is again intended now, | tion. then it is well that the foreign agi-| The attitude: of the delegation tators and those who re-aain im-|was gloomy, although Dr. Strese-| ; passive during their activities, | mann hopes to clarify numerous Drexel Biddle, Jr., millionaire sports- | *hould «now that the Argentine peo-| questions in connection with war) |36 per cent interest in the Belgian | middleweight. Biddle purchased thirteen and one- half per cent of the contract held by Lou Burston, De Vos’s manager, and |the other 16 2-3 from De Vos him- |man, became part owner of Rene vle are solidly organized to meet) reparations revision in his conver- De Vos’s contract was completed to- | 4NY emergency. {day when Biddle paid $25,000 for, self. Jimmy Bronson, chief second | to Gene Tunney in both his fights with Jack Dempsey will represent Biddle, DeVos is an 8 to 5 favorite over Hudkins to win Monday night’s bout. SCRANTON, Pa., workers federal labor (FP).—Meter union 18045 | has been admitted to the Central Labor Union. Its members read | WASHINGTON, Dee., ” | sation with Aristide Briand and It is a threat of the Argentine Sir Austen Chamberlain. Sources fasc:.t organization against the la-| close to the foreign minister said | bar movement and against the gov- jhe was bitterly disappointed by Te-| ernment if the latter is not success- ‘cent blows to the “Locarno spirit,” ful in stppressing the workers, | which he interpreted as calculated, _to undermine the position of his| government in reparations settle- | ment. | $25, 000 Bail Set for New Issue Treasury Notes to to Stop Loans| 9.—The Treasury Department today an-| Stealing 1 Lone Hat nounced the offering of $500,000,- 000 worth of treasury indebtedness! Although charged with stealing certificates in two series both dated | only one hat, in this era of pros- and bearing interest from Decem-| perity. three men were held in bail ber 15, 1928, at the rate 8f 4% per of $25,000 for grand robbery com- cent One series for 9 months and|plaints in the Harlem Court. The the other for <2 months, |three men, all of whom are Ne-| This is an attempt to tighten! groes, molested Frank Josephs and | federal reserve control by “sapping relieved him of his top-niece, If | up” loose cash now used for call) you don’t steal a lot iu this coun. loans, \try, you can’t get by, ‘ 11, Mahanoy City. Labor organizations in this region are asked to take note and give all assistance possible in order to make these meetings successful. The majority of the textile work- ers here are youth, They are work- ing under most miserable conditions, | |50 hours weekly, for the lowest pay. Lately a new speed-up system has been introduced. The workers will be still more oppressed and intimal: | | dated. y ‘ Interstate Commerce Commission Asks for Power Over Mergers WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.—The In- terstate Commerce Commission re- port today asks for more powers in| ‘dealing with mergers of railroads,’| the ultimate aim being the grant- | ing of arbitrary control over merg- ers, so that the board can allow the min certain cases and reject them in others. They ask now that | |no mergers at all be allowed with- out the commission's consent. The report states that during the | preceding fiscal year, cases of ac- | idents to employes coming under | its supervision amounted to 1,284 | | deaths and 28,157 injuries, January 5 Fifth Birthday of the Daily Worker This is an event of the greatest importance to the revolutionary movement. AN cities and workers’ or- ganizations should make ar- rangements for celebrations. NOW! \fight between New York Central and | other reads, business men say. | nual meeting of the Virginia State | Teachers’ Assotiation. TEL OED ENG eel | Best Film Show | In Town 42a Keith- AME Street and Brondway Albee NOW! PREMIERE AMERICAN DARING! “YELLOW SENSATIONAL! Another Remarkable Sovkino Production TICKET” By the Producers of “END OF ST. PETERSBURG” | | WingsOver EUROPE| MARTIN BECK THEA. 45th St, West of 8th Ave. Major Barbara| GUILD Ae Be W. fund St | || Strange Interlude 330, Mats, John GOLDEN nine 68th Thuraday “nd Harurday 29 B. of Bway 6:30 EVENINGS ONLY AT LITTLE Noon to Midnight ARNEGIE 346 W, 57th St. “UNEASY MONEY— - THE AMAZING ADVENTURE OF | A BANKNOTE” Produced by KARL FREUND THRA, W. 4 ST BRUANGER ov avectnge 140. = Mat. Wéd. and Sat. at 2:30 George M. Cohuns Comedians with POLLY In Br. eee Speer Musical | MBILLIES JOLSON Then th A. Wh Ave. & 59th St. Bys. 8:30, Mat. Wed.&Sat. Guy OPETTE DB WOLKE ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER 10 @ Musical romance of Chapin PLAYHOUSE Popular Prices) | ARTHUR HOPKINS presents “HOLIDAY” a new comedy by Philip Barry | PLYMOUTH Thea.,W.45thSt.Eves.8.30 Mats. Thurs. & Sai | CHAN W. of 46th St. Eves, wt bed Mats. Wednesday and Saturday SCHWAB and MANDEL’: MUSICAL SMASH OOD NEW with GEOKGE OLSEN'S MUsiC, | | | | : NITE HOSTESS VANDERBILT tip iad W. 48th St. Eve. 8:30 _Mats, Wednesday and Saturday it itt Be’ atc at | GIVIC REI REPERTORY !st.tthav. Eves, 8:30 } 60c: $1.00: $1.50, Mate, Wed.&Sat.,2.30 | EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director | Tonight—“Would-e Gentlem { (Tues, Eve.—“The Cherry Orchard.” KEITH- ALBEE BROADWA' STREET DOLORES CHARLES DEL RIO & FARRELL '* “THE RED DANCE” end 7 Keith-Al FOUR CAMERONS — HAL NEIMAN and other acts \ AT 4isT . | RICHMOND, Va., (By wt

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