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ddock, Mine Owner, Who Enslaves Workers Corruption Artie, \Great Soviet Film ‘Two | TWO GIRLS TAKE y= Mm Days” To Open Here Soon pi Ace OF 1) MEN y ke i i in | of flict between White and mer IN AUTO PLANT | which will open the second week in | house passes from Red to White and Packard Has New La- | January at 52 West 8th St. \from White to Red. The father, bor-Saving Machine Page Four DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1929 FAKERS FIGHT MINERS, AID LUZERNE BOSS: Young Workers Paper | BRUTAL PRISON "TERROR REIGNS -— INLOS ANGELES; Say Man “Hung Self” | | in Crowded Room Dangerous Work in Bitter Cold CY X | “Two Days”—the first major pro- his “duty” to his White Guard mas- | duction of the Ukrainian unit of |ters. Sovkino to be shown in this country,| The mansion becomes the center Compacted Fo 49 [rch Diameter: Exposes Conditions | It 1s significant because it creatcs |Played by F. E. Samytschkowski, | (By a W t) LUZERN il). —Had- ned by the | is pay-| and has the for that e they get re working on | better | > is a lot} safety mea- t Besides t of “gas in the n Sin no mpacted’ | the Detroit River, workers using : el cables that will support bridge spun in the world, between |the psychopathic ward for observa- (By a Worker Correspondent) LOS ANGELES, (By Mail).—| Timothy Aecker, 23, of 1404 West | 105th Street, walked into the office | of Captain Morris Stensland at the sheriff's office with a bushel of avacados, which he claimed he had stolen, and gave himself up as a thief—because he was out of a job, hungry and unable to take e of himself, “I purposely went out of the city to commit the crime,” Aecker eta, | “because I didn’t want to be imcar- cerated in the city jail.” Aecker had undoubtedly heard of the horrible conditions in the city jails, in which prisoners are crowded like sardines in a tin can, beaten up and, in many cases left to die with- out medical aid. Aecker was jailed—then sent to tion of his head, I suppose, instead and William S. nd Illino the investigating Vare, elected to the| |Senate from the Mellon barony of | Pennsylvania by methods of graft, | bribery and other forms of corrup-| tion and giolence that almost make the political machines in New York| is look provincial. Reet ereaoeavicedt playing sick while the fake Senate | simple. mily retainer of |splendid characterizations : i hapiry feet ME eon Bia siciole._ Aut old a 4 is torn|members of the cast. The film will thousands more will committee | between his love for his son, who) have an indefinite v wouldn’t think of disturbing a gent-|is an officer in the Red Army, and|Arts Cinema when it opens. He is| | the drama of the individual against | the kackground of the revolution, as distinguished from such mass mo- |tion pictures as “Potemkin,” “The End of St. Petersburg,” “Ten | Days,” as we have been seeing re- cently. Produced by W. U. F. K. U,, Ukrainian film section of the Sov- iet government, Kino Trust, “Two Days” was directed by George Sta- |bovy, who may find himself famous with American film audiences, just | burg.” | Slave Father, Free Son. The story of “Two Days” is |discovers that is son is the leader of the Red forces. A struggle takes | | place in the breast of the old man.| | Which way to turn? Old tradi-| |tiors, instilled by centuries of serf- jdom and slavery dictate that he |must turn his son over to the “au | thorities.” But the young man is |his own son, smiling, brave and de-| bonair. Eventually, however, the jold man does make a choice. This is the stark story of “Two Days,” and, <3 one English reviewer j puts it, it is “tragic beyond endur- as was the case with Hisenstein| ance,” Its intolerable strength is took 10 men and Pudo-:kin, directors of “Potem-| its consistency, and the cumulative | two kin” and “The End of St. Peters-| hyilding of inevitable incident, lead-| ducing gir jing through tragedy to super- tragedy. “Two Days” is noteworthy for the of the un at the Film (By a Worker Correspondent) DETROIT (By Mail).—The Pack- ard Motor Car Co. has a new little machine to speed up the automobile slaves and to cut wages still fur- ther. Most of ihe other labor- ing machines that have been intro- duced in the Packard and other auto plants are giant things weighing hundreds of tons, but not this. This little machine is used to paint the stripes on the automobile bodies. Pefore this m installed it job. Now for the Packard is intro- into the plants at wages helf of what the men get, can do the work of the ten men, Over a thousand workers have been thrown out on the streets so fi future by the machin oo While icy blasts bleu r powerful hydraulic clamps, Haddock is among the what is described as the ongest b the anthracite. Detroit and Windsor, Ont. |Cleveland Banker Not j|At All Sure About A Prosperous New Year Inset shows how the 7,622 wires of re ‘ tales set § 8 7,622 wires of each cable are laid, in $7 strands, eaih three inches in diameter, The in. tense pressure changes the shape of the cable from a hexagon #1 inches across the corners into a 19-inch circle ne panne leman so busy. Albert Fall laid the jot his Ay phir f |precedent for this stunt, and the aay een! 1 Ellis Capps, |(20”t 4% congress always fall for Mnilar caved the Th cePe |it, provided the patient is one of the |28, a sailor aboard the U. S. “boys.” All these rotten condition exposed in the “Miners Light,” mine paper issued by the nucleus of the Workers (Communist) Party. REVOLUTION SHOOK days ago and it had a very good ef- VOLKS. EI | tim lice “efficiency” under fee: i Ae fect on the mings. Since that time, | Z f, BL OID of Halles age Edgar Davis. L A B 0 R S P 0 RTS | CLEVELAND (By Mat) —- Coles there are more kicks coming about | Foc yr ibe ael a pa nei ede etal | Continued Moseow trade unions. Plays like the jnel Ayres, head of the, Clevetang ae oe meters than: ever: be CON TEN ‘a ALS O ELLOW eintoeran tees DeSean | | ‘two of the most interesting the-|‘qzumming of the Rails” and| Trust ST hhe Oe CoEEAGHT tall, even fore. ale os young, ne after he was sent to the General) METROPOLITAN WORKERS | atres in the Soviet Union are the “Storm” brought the factory and| fo. capitalists. He says: Be 0 nave more courage Hospital. |SOCCER LEAGUE STANDING | “Habima,” which plays exclusively| 1, chine on the stage in striking | ; ity in to stand up against the bosses, are 4 5 ths are . j Heb language, and | "& “Continuation of prosperity talking wide-over about the “Miners By G. M. jWorkers* and peasants’ republic,| CAPPS, arrested on “suspicion” of | Division “A” [in the ancl smerny Theatres which| realistic form, and gave the Russian| +999 %5 dependent upon the continu neti’ a i : paper | PHE “New Yorker Volkszeitung,”|the Soviet Union, the Communist |@utomobile theft, was injured in| Ww. L [she Jewish Kamerny Tie vhi Penatgs wee i which ap- Light, praising what a good paper | the -onle Geuuikn Inthe Bale: » Parties of the U. $ SR si jail. The exact nature of his in-|Rob Roy F. - L. D. P.| plays exclusively in Yiddish. The} workers a theatre which they could | ation of credit expansion, W it is. i Mies iL Ay oon ene U.S. 5. R, Germany |e: B et pean eS C.. + 7 1 2 16) caging and acting in both these the-| call their own in every sense. Con-| pears to depend in turn on progres- 5 the United States, which for forty|and the United States, Lore main-|Juties is unknown to the writer. The| Argentine F 40 i | 5 ade to brok- Of course Mr. Haddock did not | oa». had been the voice and mili-|tains that there is not suffici : |police claim that he tried to commit | Hunearia . x 1 9 | atres is of a very high order and) temporary life is reflected by the] sive increases in loans mat edie: like the paper. In order to spoil the |ta nt leader of the German-spaal ie | port from appeals to the bourgeoisie, |Sticide by hanging. The same tale| Martin ae ; 9) strikingly original. They are bi Blue Blouse troupes, of which there| ers by corporations Ge inline effect of the “Light” he had a long| 3... conscious elements in the | T Panay “hick, (Came out from central police station |N. Ne ee. |attended not only by Jews but also) are about 10,000. These travel about | for in the absence of such inen statement made about it and placed Se Pee ees Boy i ss a peaastonpes sveren gee at the time officers ryice Tooke tee Ree s. fa a ane by Russians and foreign visitors who| the country or perform at local trade | the tendency of bank cet a both the mine-paper and his state-|Thy sive of ite pases has been ne. nau a few years ago saw it as its| Hickman, hung at San Quentin eg eae +1 4 0 2) 45 not understand either language| unions, and their repertoire, which| most surely be to contract, with con. ment on the bulletin board near the | duced to that of the “Daily News,” |the ory ao en ered, what Was | short time ago. A red-headed boy| of: 0 4 0 Olnut are impressed by the dramatic| changes frequently, includes songs,| sequences adverse to business. wate, so that every miner ean read| «pie Graphic” and “The Mirror.” ihe only German labor daily in this| ¢ 19 was caught on the street by | D art and the settings. The Habima acrobatics, dancing and satirical) _ ss fei that ‘Jeaflet, he is trying to THAT real Seeeeenea at country, Lore thought, would al- police officers, beaten up and jailed Scandinavian Workers.. 8 1 0 16|was developed by Vakhtangov, who| sketches, All the Russian theatres | 2 E to citleuonie prove that the mine is run on a de-| accompanied by a radical change in Mbrkhe eeu by its paper. But in| a. “Hickman’—although he did not |PTospect Unity .......3 3 4 ee himself not a Jew and had to| are closely bound up with the life| contribute their share to ve ficit and that he cannot pay a penny jits editorial policy. ‘The res Li he was mistaken. Every revo-liooi like the murderer of Marion |Am™erican Hungarian... 4,2 1 9/learn the language of the plays he/ of the country, sensitively respond- | lective effort of building up a hig! hicher, otherwise he will get bank- oad Volkszeitune” ier sae om ene, eo eee ipemaceed PTts at all. Anyhow, after a few |Falcon F. C. +3 4 2 8) was directing. This ee most ing to its methods and seeking to civilization. rupt. ; rps # ig ee a e Paper. stil serves tours he was. reported: dead—-a|Ateeutine Ft C. . 1 2 1 8)/famous production is S. Ansky’s The miners are smart enough not seared eres ea a eat his class interests and he also knows | «suicide, ” the offi ‘al a Wea “ Harlem S. +1 0 8 5|“The Dybuk,” which the Habima 5 AE aaa e miners ar g! |which it will be easy to find new! whether it still deserves his support, DA caoikisiatephi pics ter hnatnd Be i i 53 8 ly in Moscow but also to believe his words and they were|readers....” In fact, it will belOur German ‘soiead bers of | And that in a room crowded with 60 [ungarian Workers.... 0 5 3 8) played not only in Mosco 8 laughing about it and discussing |easy, because this former workers | the Workers (Gactenanias Party, | prisoners. Freiheit F, C.. -0 4 2 2jin several European capitals and in how their millionaire boss is sud-|paper has been reduced to a yellow, anticipating Lore’s departure in the|, AS the man was badly beaten up| Divi New York. The Jewish Be denly talking about bankruptcy. | sordid sheet, full of sensations, com-| bourgeois camp have alread; before he reached the jail, it did not | Spartacus F. C. s+. 7 1 4 18| Theatre is under egaas iene = The facts were too clearly given by | peting with the most notorious bour- | through heavy cacrifiees built ape take much to finish him after all. |Hearlem Progressive.... 5 2 4 14| tion. By eee is ara pear Keith-Albee the “Miners Light” and no bosses’ | geois tabloids for readers, organ of the class struggle, the “Ar- —L. P. RINDAL. | Co-operative S. C. oe ee ae 13 1h acting, ripen y aed Russian f statements can belie them. Mr.| Instead of finding its purpose and beiter,” which in less than one year’s | Soham ae Scandinavian Workers.. 5 1 1 11 | 100 ADEN Oaish elastics like Sholom |(). Beat Film Show A M Haddock knew that, too, so he looked | showing the working class the way existence has grown to be an im- HAYWOOD WRITES: med Sean: S: 12 Bog. 7 Hee te “7 Se Hund d Th In T : OW for ‘help. And he fgund it all right|to free itself from economic and| porters. taetor -amone. : Gertian.| “William E. Borah was at that | Workers B. S. Re ia pean ences ne - L Den Abaca 42nd Street and Broadway in the reactionary local officials’ ideolocal it caters to the lowest level! speaking, class- | time attorney for the [Barbour | Vagabond S. C B80 ae a gel be f ‘ 2 ina ¥ ps 4 who are always taking the side of |of bourgeoisified ideology and Rats gach en teats sted Midieek) Lumber Company, the president |Freiheit S. C... [0 6 0 0 ¢t2’s “At Night,” Goldfaden’s “The FIRST TIME AT POPULAR PRICES 8 > rank. and| monte . j : abhshing ever deeper! oF which in the Ad: | Witch,” a play based on Jules Ro- the operators against the rank andthe workers that they are dumb and| roots in German workers’ organiza-| °f,Which was in the Ada County oes alae | mains “Yves Le Trouhadec,” and the h t Sh k file. jhelpless unless they follow the | tions, | Jail. It seems that the lumber | STANDING OF BROOKLYN I epesith Gat i ae names satire ays a 00 At the meeting of Local 1645, |leadership of a political bankrupt of | The only guarantee that the Ger-| OMPAMY jhad been. fraudulently |WoRKERS SOCCER LEAGUE | «acting to Galdfnden” held last week, which was attended | the type of Lore. y & tee that the Ger-/| locating timber claims. It was oh S according to Goldfaden.’ rid ee 2 = man labor movement of this country | intimated at the time that Borah | W. L. D. P. | In addition to the formal theatres, e hy Jess than 30 men (mostly com-| The thousands of class conscious | will have a strong voice and militant} would likewise be indicted, but | Spartacus S. C. - 6 1 0 12) the Soviet Union contains thousands my-suckers), they put the “Miners |revolutionary workers who have |leader in its struggles against capi-| the ease blew over’. Fine “pi, |Freiheit S.C YS ¥ ist lok tesa’ union? testeencag ! aiicel THE RUSSIAN “BIRTH OF A NATION” fete on the order o7 pees me Bare and upheld the “New Yorker |talist oppression, bourgeois ideology Haywood’s Book,” telling of his | Red Star S. . 2 3 2 6) the workers themselves write, pro-| BY THE DIRECTOR OF “POTEMKIN” began to look ae itn haa ie Ae genta for half a century, and social-democratic betrayals is to| first contact with the present U, |Scandinavian Workers.. 0 3 3 3/duce, and act plays portraying their . _ = pacer. Some of them oe ave Bs banal not been asked whether they | built this organ of the German} §S. senator, who is rumored as a | Atlantic Park S. C..... 1 4 0 2'life under the new regime. The best Thtnize Gulla Productions “=P LITT. 146 W. 57th st nerve to deny that the conditions /like such a transformation of their |speaking left wing, “Der Arbeiter,”| prospect for secretary of state |Mohawk S. C. 0 1 0 0 of these is the MGSPS run by the |( ARNEGIE Noon: to Sean are “not so bad after all as them|paper. On the contrary, their|which is published by the Gelan| nadee Hoover. ss apes | ae a Sareea C A PRICE | BLA THOUGH Fe = See Communists write about.” And, in-|voices of protest lave been stifled Language Bureau, Workers (Com- | ee akg ye 2 | ) 2ND SENSATIONAL WEEK stead of taking up the grievances |and ignored, and ex-Comrade Lore | munist) Party, 26-28 Union Square, DITCH-DIGGER HURT. | GUILD hes. w sea st | “Lucrecia Borgia” one by one and taking the steps to |}even went so far as to act against change the very bad conditions, they |the decisions of the Socialist Co- ‘Started to defend the boss, that “he | operative Publishing Association, an can’t give any more wages, other- organization of workers that owns wise he would lose on the mine and |the “N. Y. Volkszeitung,” which New York City. Read, spread and subscribe to the! |“Arbeiter!” MILWAUKEE (By Mail).—Wal- ter Stanopaki, a ditch digger, was seriously injured in a cavein here. | DIRECT FROM MOSCOW Manhattan Opera House—Tonight 8:30 Mts. Tues. Thur: Wings Over E & t. 2:30 f] rope |) with Conrad Veidt and cast of 50,000, JOLSON ! 7th Ave, & 69th St, ats, Tues.&Sat. Ey th Jd all be without jobs |ordered a public hearing about th % ‘ hay? . By Maurice Browne SERTSON CNGRIL DEORE en we would all be witho | er public hearing abou ° P, D if R . : ep es pI ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER if he would be forced to close it|paper’s situation, ir. which all work- VASES OW) Vy eview 0 | RPERERI TARE orenenoes) MARTIN BECK THEA. | 1 @ musical romance of Chopin down.” ingclass organizaons should have a ove a Several rank and filers got up, | Voice. -pxoving that the grievances as given) This shows that Lore is afraid to by. the “Miners Light” exist and! stand face to face with the working that the job of the local officials is |class because of his betrayal. The not to defend the millionaire boss, | only excuse that Lore has for his ac- | bet to fight for the miners who| tions is that the changes in his paper ARTEF Play ‘At the Gate’ Editor, the Daily Worker: I want to write a few words to express my appreciation of the re- and culture. There is a tendency in our own} Communist ranks to do as the Sun) ISADORA DUNCAN | Thursday BERNARD SHAW’S | || Major Barbara | } | REPUBLIC Thea, W. 42 30 WHITE LILACS Ethel Barrymore in “THE KINGDOM OF Gop” By G. Martinez Sierra have elected them into office. Even | have been made for the paper’s sake. view by A. B. Magil of the play,| 4; hatiiddd-ai ji Mts, Tues. Thurs., & Sat. 2:30 - tee if th f th — some of the company agents were | And thereby he forgets that a labor “At the Gate,” the first progielos Se er cae es ise tel EUGE: LLs peers Barrymore Thea. winieae | 80: agyed 4o admit that many points all right and something should “be. done to change them. But the sleeal officials, who got their orders “From the boss, did not listen to the arguments and instead of deciding to fight against the grievances they After destroying the greater part of a once powerful and militant Ger- man left wing movement through his daily tirades against the first probably drawn up in the company paper exists for the labor movement.|of the Freiheit Dramatic Studio, | \presented by ARTEF | Theatre Association). | : ‘, While disagreeing on a few minor details, I, nevertheless, |Comrade Magil’s appraisal of the | the New York Sun eulogized “At (Workers | work that is ideologically feeble or| }even reactionary. | consider | acknowledging the workers, asking them to accept a) I am moved to write this letter | importance of | the review in the Daily Worker by | gan where a Communist approach | DANCERS Company of 20, with IRMA DUNCAN Strange Interlude| John GOLDEN Thea. seth | . of B’ v RVENINGS ONLY ‘AT 60 || ELMO, Eys. By . This Week: ‘Tues, Chick, 9944, . jfaith that Mr. Haddock will do his | play as a whole and of the produc-| Comrade Magil by another reason | = ARTHUR HOPKINS presen forced through a motion to pass 2 | very best for his employes.” |tion a Communist one and this de-| siey, and this is the fact that the| SUPPORTED BY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA | IDAY neENOTS Light” and elected a committee to Then the resolution, which was | serves praise. It is noteworthy that Daily Worker is our Communist or- | Tickets Now At Box Office, Popular Prices Tene avon Brae. the resolution. ba mh, | office, goes on to say that “the of-|the Gate” as if it were in every|ty a matter of such significence to| Ll catia ad PP mer, Semmes od zpon only by the fi 2 iticized fe thing | respect the last word in art. Our} i Sas | | SHUBERT Thea. 44 st-w.otp'w: suckers, most of the men abstaining |/}¢eTS are criticized for something the Jewish workers is possible. And | [Civic REPERTORY AEE, va. ih ay. from voting, from fear of being dis- criminated against. ‘The resolution appeared on the bulletin board last week, without even being presented to the local for approval. It is the most shame- il piece of paper, making is clear m to the blind that our local of- Is are nothing but agents of operators within our ranks. In name of 500 men they have the to say that “our generous and | employer, Mr. John C Had- ; has done more to make his en contented than any other itor in Pennsylvania . . . he 's responded to our request we believe that Mr. Haddock, ourselves, likes to see better they know nothing about, and in- stead of putting these grievances in a public paper they should have brought them up first with the mine foreman, the: with the grievance committee.” They seem to forget that all these grievances enumer- ated by the “Miners Light” are old ones, They were brought up many times at the meetings, but our offi- cials, who have Mr. Haddock’s pock- etbook at heart and not the interest of the men, never tried to straighten them out. They also threaten with expulsion any miner who is caught with “disrupting and disorganizing the U. M. W. A.,” and attack the writers of the “Miners Light” “who did not have the grit to place their rames to the complaints.” In one Daily Worker, however, told the | truth about the whole matter which is of the greatest concern to the Jewish workers. Because “At the Gate” is most certainly not a play (that is, as it is produced) that con- tains anything substantial—with the exception of the fine acting of our comrades—or that arouses opposi- this is an achievement that should | make every Communist feel proud, | Comradely yours, r | WILLIAM ABRAMS. | the vanguard of | . Attend 1 meeting, Jan- Madison Square “The Party the working cl | tion to our present bourgeois society Garden, POEMS CHINESE REVOLUTION By H. T. (Former Editor of “The Chinese Guide in America’ OF THE TSIANG VOICES OF REVOLT F 4 SERIES of attractively printed books containing the outstanding utterances of pioneer revolutionary leaders, with critical introductions. ~~ Eves. 8: 50c; $1.00; $1.50. Mats, Wed.&Sat.,2.30 | EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Friday Eve., ‘L’Inv! ju Voyage. Tonight, “Peter Pan. | in the Thrilling 8.30 Mati Year's and Saturday, 2:30 Ne WALTER WOOLF Musical Hit _ With HELEN GILLILAND. Singing 5 minutes fro: SEE! By UPTON SINCLAIR. NOW PLAYING at the PROVINCETOWN PLAYHOUSE, 1 Moving to GROVE STREET Thee ‘RE, deci ae tear Jailbirds directed by EM JO BASSHE. m Broadway, organizations, unions and clubs to _ The Red Robe | (ego OPPORTUNITY for workers raine meer on sell-outs. ditions in and around the mines, a few bloc vas Mr. Haddock says, a man’s Volumes Already Published: I. Maximilien Robespierre; I]. Jean Paul Dates open in January, ve are only away from Union Square. For details see or enll word, these stool-pigeons expect our WHAT UPTON SINCLAIR SAYS: Comrade Nap hook very often limits what man would like to do.” one word, these so-called labor ‘leaders zre giving full endorsement it wages in the entire tri-dis- They are crying about Mr, lock’s pocketbook, forgetting hat this capitalist is making a big profit on us miners, that he lives a swell place (and not .in Lu- a), he rides in big cars, ete. dare to say, that, “regardless dalous remarks, we mem- when do they talk in |comrades to expose themselves and ‘their exploiter, who is paying the | to be kicked out, The gentlemen of the local and the Haddock Mining Company are badly mistaken, The Communists working in Haddock will continue to fight for the miners, they will continue to misuse mine papers, levflets, but they will not give the “generous and kind-hearted” fire them. A bulletin will be issued soon, answering both the company’s and local officials’ lies and the fight will be carried on in the interest of the membership?) have ey the miners, Mr. | Haddock and his agents a chance to | which he voices, to the executioner’s axe at home, poetry, the lot of the under-dog. 25e A COPY; This is a voice to which the white world, the so-called civilized world, will have to listen more and mean to this particular young Chinese poet, but to the movement The exploited races of the world are awakening nd demanding the rights of human beings. student whom the American authorities sought to deport and deliver but it is the nerfect voice of Young China, protesting against The poem “Canton Soviet” In this hook Ix about 600 lines long and has | never appeared before. It is ax vivid as a movie. When you read it, you will feel as if you had participated in the Chinese Revolution. Send Your Subscription to the Author Box 465 T. C. Columbia University, New York City more as time passes; T do not Here is a young Chinese What he has written is not perfect (Signed) UPTON SINCLAIR. 5 FOR $1.00 Marat; II]. Ferdinand Lassalle; 1V. Karl Liebknecht; V. George Jacques Danton; VI. August Bebel; VII, Wilhelm Liebknecht; VIII, V. 1, Lenin; 1X. Eugene V. Debs; X. C. E. Ruthenberg. Bound in Boards, 50¢ each. Order from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 35 East 1251H STREET. New York Crry. 133 West 14th Natural and Unprocessed foods all kinds of therapeutic products Maa Sun Lamps. Step in or send dc stamps for Catalog. business manager of New Playwright: reet, Watkins 0588. pdsbsiriswiticecc! WE HAVE GOOD HOLIDAY TIDINGS— Our new “Catalog and Decalog of Health” is being bound for mailing. It contains the ieehs i: eagureenent of Most Nourishing and drinks, to our New Largest Health Food . HEALTH FOODS DISTRIBUTORS 113 EAST 34TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY Phone: Lexington 6926. at moderate prices. Also and health-promoting apparatus, Store (open evenings)