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1 pif eae Four DAILY WORKER, NEW Y Workers BUT RICH FIRM PLEADS POVERTY Force Company Union on Workers (By a Work d Steel Co, here n slavery in its . The ordinary Dominion Iron ave inhuman. Hur worst form exists } a ‘day. as a matter of fact, the men work li and even 12 hours a day on the fay shift, and 13 and 14 the night shift. We forced to ssork these long hours seven days 4 week—making 84 hours at least for the, day shift and at least 102 hours_ 2 we: on thé night shift. of Dominion Steel Co. ORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1929 Know (By a Worker Correspondent) BROOKLYN (By Mail).—In spite the i sed earnings of the | mn. nhattan Transit Co., as rted in the papers, it is harder than ever for the subway workers to get the time that is rightfully | coming to them. The company forces its time-keepers and dispatch- ers to do everything possible to| tch away what the men are| rightly entitled to. One has to argue | and there are so many complicated clauses in the company union agree- ment that the company can easily cheat the worker out of wages if he does not watch his step. For the least little infraction of any of the hundreds of rules the subway work- er is taken out of service and—has to see the boss, and often loses two or three days pay besides. ing ‘Union. There is a law in New York State supposed to prohibit the jbosses from forcing the working women to slave more than 48 hours |T. is permitted by the law to work |the ticket collectors 63 hours each | wegk. What good is the law? It is good for the company, but not for | working women, who are cooped up a week, Yet the slave driving B.-M. | | way. Since the Amalgamated and the A. F. of L. are unwilling and unable to organize the traction workers of ew York, Worker is and since the Daily always in the fight What Real Slavery Is---102 PROFITS SOAR, STRONG TRANSIT UNION IS NEEDED TO FIGHT ROBBERY BY COMP It is now time that the iransit]% hours a day, 7 days a week in a!ypeal for transportantion workers to | ever again sign up with the A. F.| always to try to get what he earned, workers were organized into a fight- | little booth 5 by 6 feet in the sub-|fcrm a union under militant leader- \that organized the National Miners | interests and not desert them, as | workers connected with transporta- |R. 4 A jtion, such as taxi drivers, chauf- wherever the workers’ interests are |feurs, motormen, conductors, guards, uffected and now is the time for | shopmen, trackworkers, etc. traction workers to organize, 1 wish | sonally, I know many workers who to publish thru the “Daily” the ap- | will never under any consideration re | of L., but yet are willing to join a} real union, which will fight for their | | the Amalgamated has so often done. | Come on, you workers of the I. M.T. and taxi drivers, let’s send your letters to the | Daily Worker so we can start to | | build the strongest union New York } ever saw. | | ship, the same sort of leadership and Textile Workers Unions. Such a union would take in all | | get bus; Per- —BUTTON PUSHER. Cold Drives Workers to Bosse s’ Helpmates Hours A. Week LACKLIST FOR MILITANT COAL'Y MINERS OF PA. Need for Free Daily Subs Is Great (By a Worker Correspondent) YUKON, Pa., (By Mail).—Because War Zeppelin Over Miami Within Reach of Latin America LURE WORKERS “TO STARVE IN ARIZONA CAMPS. ‘Sick Workers Die Like | | Rats in Desert (By a Worker Correspondent) | I took a leading part in the fight \of the miners for a living wage and jdecent conditions, I am now black- |listed all over this section. In the jlact four weeks I started to work in four different mines. Each time \I was dismissed, and no reason was given. Each time the’ foreman in the mine told me he did not know I was being fired. This is hap- pening to other comrades who fought with all their might for the miners. The ~rines around here are working \three or four days a week, and the average pay is $15 for two weeks. Aftet a day of day duty, the work: SHOmNEE Shue (Beets) |In no case is it higher than $20 for Bea are oo tired they just flop Arizona is a fake as far as getting | two weeks. re dow: if the day shift men feel {a job is concerned, and cae a With the temperature hovering way below freezing point, charity h ie ete ae ae ab tye at the end of the working poverty here are heartbreaking. Al-| jays capitalism because it protects the capitalist class from the | have been mos what torture the night shift men have. The work here is the heaviest labor I have ever done. We work in gas fumes, smoke, and intolerable heat. The heat indoors is unbearable, but the hundreds of workers who have to work outdoors are exposed to the elements, and freeze in the winter. they are drenched to the skin. During the last two years, the company’s surplus has increased to $8.700,000. But the company claims that the reason it forces the men to work such long hour: because it cannot afford to lower the hours in the rain | U. S. dirigible Los Angeles, which has just flown to Miami, Florida from Lakehurst, N. J., for participation in celebrations about the opening of a new imperialist air route over the Caribbean, and to be handy if some Nicaraguan villages or Haitian peasants are to be blown up. DECLARE BURKE Carpenter Misleader Tries IS OIL C0. MAN, to Take Away Men’s Jobs (By a Worker Correspondent) In an attempt to strengthen his though the weather is mild, it is so} cold at night that it freezes a bucket | ‘of water solid. For a couple of | jhours a day it is a little warm, but |not like the fake ads which entice | poor consumptives, sick and in most cases broke, to come to Arizona for | their health if they have any T. B. working class organizing and figh bread to unemployed workers at charity organizations are the tools to the absolute need of their own tem which keeps them unemploye ting for more than stale bread and weak coffee. Above, you see Urbain Ledoux posing for a picture (he took care to have a sweet smile on his face) while handing out some Zero’s Tub. Zero’s Tub and other of the bosses, blinding the workers class organization against the sys- d and hungry. germs. The cold will freeze them, and if they have any money the! cockroach business men will steal it. | Even if the workers are able to| work, they can’t get work. In Ari-| O’Neil’s Plays of the Sea at Say Standard Involved | in Indian Frauds position as a graft office holder, the new business agent of Local 791, of the Carpenters’ Union, Brooklyn, (the local from which Rosen was ex- FRANCE RUSHES | - NAVAL BUILDING zona is a line of second hand stores | run by the descendants of Jesse | James and Captain Kidd. These} \the Sea, by Eugene O’Neill, now the seamen, the Provincetown Playhouse 8. S. Glencairn, Four Episodes of, with bourgeois sentimentality over ary activities. At present conditions jare so bad that they cannot help in ithe struggle financially. The miners here have always read \the Daily Worker as the only Eng- Hlish speaking daily paper that fights |for the workers. But we are unable |to subscribe to the Daily now, for |we have no work and no money. We find it very hard to go without jour fighting paper. It is very hard |for me that circumstances force me to go without the Daily, as I have been a reader of it since its birth. | So please send me the Daily Worker. —M. J. B. i ; anes WASHINGTON, Jan. 16 (U.P.). | z e leeches wait for a worker to come in| A é ft ‘ bi " . . . eves, veticr wages. The wages are) 55° 2: ‘the general opinion in pelled for being a left winger), is| to sell his tools and clothes. If any |Showing at the Provincetown Play-| The same is even more sickeningly | yy pQR’g NOTE: The need for low, averaging under $20 a week |711 WES 0 the Standard Oil Co, (Panning to sacrifice 40 innocent | +44 [worker wants to buy the finest and| house, makes you wonder how! true of the second episode. The sea- | free subscriptions for the miners The workers here have been forced | ee eee ee a Commissioner workers, by preferring charges| Chamber Adopts Bulb ica: @: -socaadona to Phoenix, Eugene O’Neill could ever have been |men find Smitty queer, suspect him | lg vaiy great aa the letean: Pet to join a company union. The of- ficers of the company union form the “Workers Council.” The officials of the “Works Council” are of course for the company, not for the men, There is great dissatisfaction here among the men with their con- ditions end with the company union. The mer must organize into a real, honest-to-goodness fighting union. —k. D. PEKING WORKERS HOLD FASTORIES Demand Higher Pay in Rug Mills PEKING, Jan. 16.—Workers, en- wed at the refusal of the employ- rs to grant them wages above the starvation level and at the unful- filled promises of the Kuomintang labor officials, have taken posses- sion of four rug factories here until they should get the increase in wages. Military authorities, who have | hesitated to interfere due to fear of | Burke, Merrick A. Whipple, Tulsa, Okla. attorney told the Senate In- dian Affairs Committee today. Whipple said he judged from con- versations with Senator Pine, re- publican of Oklahoma, that the sen- ator wanted Burke out of office al- though he never heard a direct threat made against the Indian Com- missioner. 78 Burke, charged along with former jagainst them and having them thrown jobless out on the streets. Here is what happened. Two weeks ago the Abraham-Strauss Depart- ment Store in Brooklyn called up the E. H. Hamburger Co., 189 Emerson St., Brooklyn, for men to do a reno- vating job, such as removing count- ers, etc., the work to be done after 5 p. m. After the work was done, the business agent, who is a reac- for 18 Warships PARIS, Jan. 16—The construc- tion of 18 new warships and the lexpenditure of 989,000,000 francs |for this purpose to be distributed lover a period of four years, was | authorized by the French Chamber of Deputies today. The French government immedi- |tionary, stated that he would bring) stely notified its naval bases to pre- | charges against the men, for work-| pare for the rapid ‘construction of Ariz, The camps are full of families | broken in health, and their money, | tools and everything gone. One sees them walking along the desert miles and miles in the cold, 3,500 to 5,000 | feet above sea level. Some die like hundreds of them, men, women,| sometimes families with children, | sometimes 15, 20 miles | houses. At night they camp along the side |“The rats, pleading, begging for a lift, ;eatlier pl: between , Ones. called a great playwright, even ajof being a Germany spy, catch him! bourgeois one. These episodes are with a box which they think contains | taken from his four plays, “The|a bomb, and open it to find the love | Moon of the Caribbees,” “In the | letters of the mooning penitent. The Zone,” “Bound East for Cardiff” and|men realize their mistake and the Long Voyage Home,” all curtain falls in the midst of the| ays, and supposedly more soft atmosphere of a Greenwich Vil- realistic, closer to the life of the lage studio, where some long-haired | workers on the sea than his later |“artist” has just confessed his love | In these plays many critics |to the chambermaid. today see the “promise of a budding} In the third episode one of, the genius which was later to flower” seamen dies from a fall. His buddy ete. stays with him to the last moment Secretary of the Interior Fall with | ing overtime without a permit. Why | the warships. fraud in the disposal of a million | did not this labor faker tell us about} dollars worth of oil lands belonging |our not being allowed to take the) },.,; to an incompetent Indian named | job without a permit, before the job) Barnett claimed today before the|was begun, for he knew all along | ding of one 10,000-ton armored cruiser, six torpedo boat destroyers, | = Pies : ns senate committee that the whole} that the men were going on this job. ited bat ak tae lich niin * | 7 Ps rine mine-layer, two oil tankers and thing was a frame-up by Senator | The reason is, because this self-elect- | ‘ feat? fi | . two dispatch boats. The type of Pine to “get” him, ed faker wanted to make himself | warships are in accordance with the Assistant Federal Attorney Selby |Strong with the outside carpenters, jjan of naval construction in the of Oklahoma stated several days|by exterminating the inside 1 sngio-French naval pact. ago in the committee that he had a| ee ae rire in the shops’. Ee | — grand jury ready to indict Burke, | Wants to get his own gang in the . Fall: a then: hen the pfealite [jobs ‘dees he wate te Lote | Starvation, Great of the Interior Work conspired with |from the men in the Hamburger) i Attorney General Sargent, to quash |Shop. This faker could have stopped | Unemyloyment 10, the case. |the job before it was done, but he} Big Italian Port preferred to throw us on the street, | to make his politician’s job stronger. | ROME, (By Mail).—In the great The charges will be brought up this | war harbor of Pola ten thousand Friday, Jan. 18, before the District |workers were formerly employed. Building Trades Council. Each man there are only about a thousand at M faces a $50 to $200 fine, if the work at present. The highest wage /Duncan Dancers Here | for Another Week in Interesting Progra The program provides for the |; of the road—no shelter from the!“ |bitter cold, not even water, as even; : A f there was any they could not get | healthier plays, not so mystical, so jit. What water runs in the rivers|™uch a part of bourgeois decadence lis not fit to drink, and what comes |®S his “Strange Interlude,” but still \from the wells you must buy—they full of that ungrounded pessimism, | won't give it to you. jand hopelessness of one who is a ro- | Arizona has no industries as yet, | ma ntic suddenly come into contact {but when she has the workers’ lot with lite and unsble to; grasp ¢ Sod Isat be’awptl., The: wages’ paid Just | oe oe Dae teeks Wan ioe now are $2.50 a day for labor ten to ipsychology of the petty-bourgeois, ‘twelve hours, and $3.50 for machin- 204 4 sentimental one into the bar- lists, ten to twelves hours a day and|®™™ z |jobs not to be got. Here one sees} The first episode shows the crew Jalso a reminder of the world S¢tting drunk, and enjoying girls slaughter for capitalist democracy— |brought on board from one of the large veterans’ hospitals, hundreds islands in the West Indies. Tlis of younz men, former specimens of Scene is very unconvincing and health, now pitiful wrecks, suffering stilted and is entirely spoiled by the from poison gas attacks obtained my - lost - sweetheart-I-can! t-forget- during the war, with the terror of you-so-let’s-drink” character of Smit- T. B. clutching them. ty. What we say here holds good \for the other three These could be called O’Neill’s| listening to the dying words of his friend. And the last vision of Yank is a lady in a black dress. The scene is boring and coated with sentimen- tality. The bourgeois audience must have liked it. The fourth episode is the best of jand the most realistic. It takes place in a dive on the London waterfront jand shows how a sailor, just paid joff and ready to return home to for the cruelest of all ships that ‘sai’ |the s-a. Again the Swede is made \sentimentally unreal. O'Neill, however, has added some- |thing to the bourgeois stage—a {stifled sense of reality and a turn- \the four, being the least sentimental | Sweden to his farm, is shanghaied| the above worker correspondent shows. Workers are urged to aid these miners who have fought for years by sending in a subscription for a miner. ing to harsher aspects of life. But at most he only has an inkling of the life of his seamen, and hints in some of his plays at some power of penetration. But his plays are | amateurish in the sense that they are only surface plays, skin-deep and coated with bourgeois romanti- cism, which as he develops becomes }more and more pronounced, until it |ends in the inevitable decadent mys- | ticism, sex and the problem of the | self. The plays are produced with very | realistic stage-settings, which far from helps the play along since it makes the mopping lover look all the more foolish. The characters are highly idealized into types one reads about in books and in plays such as these but which one rarely ever meets. The last scene, with its touch of burlesque, is the best acted of the four. —S. A. plans of the misleader succeed. \for qualified workers is 20 lira per If any 100 per cent young man or episodes— | Ba about the life.of the seamen, but} 20 |grafts on them some sentimental, | extraneous matter which he makes | | the central point of the play. There | \is nothing in the life of the seamen | that he is sufficiently impressed by to make the central theme. Instead’ he puts some mollycoddle aboard, | I am going to leave Arizona and | and appeals entirely to a bourgeois | father or mother wants to ewione Sone Bob, mee ye,. Mie ADRES) their patriotism let them come and see the effects of the last mass mur- der here. Let them see men in their prime, coughing, splitting their lungs Students in the Peking University | The performances are being given in| to be held, and the rank and file at | Pola is unemployed. The possibility out—this is their reward for fight- farejalso in possession of the build- Wallacks Theatre, 42nd St., west of large was not told of it. Thus he|of emigration is very slender. |ing for their capitalist masters and ings ih protest against the govern-| Broadway. This is a small, inti- was “elected.” | Amongst the peasants there is also exploiters, merit which has not paid the teach- |mate theatre, where these remark- | great poverty. The fascist demon-| erstand workers in the university able young dancers from Moscow making the Nanking government| So great has been the interest in| This business agent is not truly day and for unqualified workers eyeB more unpopular among those the Isadora Duncan Dancers that elected by the rank and file of the | about 6 lira a day. It is reported ‘workers still influenced by Kuomin-|they have postponed engagements in, union. but put himself in office this | that a further 600 workers will be fficials, are now reported |cther cities and are now appearing| way. He notified only a handful of | dismissed in the near future. The to oust the workers. \during this we2x in New York City.| his followers when the election was! majority of the working class in| ee THE @ N OF BEAUTY LILY DAMITA in “FORBIDDEN LOVE” yj" Theatre Guild Productions SIL-VARA’S COMEDY CAPRICE 7 Thea. W. b2nd St GUILD Eves. 8:40 Mats., Thurs. and Sat._2:40. jmonths. 5 Ian Unusual Program ay, January 22nd unusual program has been ar- for the Harlem Revels Soli- lemonstration Dance, which wee next Tuesday evening, ding the program will be the Johnson Negro Choir, interna- famous for its fine interpre- of the Negro spirituals. The il the personal William Gassner, on the program are Doris om, song bird of the Al- 3 Elizabeth Welsh, one of the popular members of the cast “Blackbirds”; and Paul and Meeres, tango dancers. for the affair are on sale Workers Book Shop, 26 Union 3 New Masses, 39 Union 3 Tattler, 2396 Seventh Ave; Benzine Ignites Gracco, 16 years old, of 154 St., was badly burned yes- when benzine with which she ning a dress became ignited. of a loft in the 24th the Lefcourt Manhattan at 1412 Broadway. an alarm had been turned) JERUSALEM (By Mail),—Altho tions in revenue placed in effect by, cerns, bringing to the peoples No Worker Should Miss It—Many Come Back to See It Again young girl worker was|a child labor law was enacted in|‘th Phone company, death, hunger, disiilustonment, bar- DIRECT FROM MOSCOW POPULAR PRICES f one by a physician. | Palestine a year ago, violations, al- ari oieey ih Aue slasanen cas pour ipa aa hapa nioogs ba ’ E fi 1 ously » insane profits.” From 9 Seaicien cata ae! ae Sees be Wraith mine “ working clans.”—-Lenin. Attend | gpeech by Lenin in Leningrad. Popular Prices Buy In Advance Far information call, Comrade, Napoli, ‘Business. Manager of ‘New for life, "gro Champion, 169 W. 133rd/ ployed by Charles Armour | dress manufacturers, whos is now asking another year of life can be seen at better advantage. The Duncan dancers are appear-| jing every even'ng this week with! | formed before is being given. The) program als) includes the famous | |“Impressions of Revolutionary | Russia” which made such a “hit” at the Daily Worker anniversary and | |at the other performances of the | Another Year to Shield | Monopolies It Made WASHINGTON, Jan. 16 (UP).— | | Commissioner 0, H. Caldwell of the | | Federal Radio Commission voiced opposition to a bill which would ex- tend the life of the Radio Commis- |sion one year when he appeared | today before the House Merchant Marine Committee. He proposed | that the commission should auto- matically expire March 4 and its work be taken over by the Com- | merce Department. ae The Radio Commission has made ‘its main purpose the creation of vested interests in the best wave lengths by assigning them to big | trust like corporations of broadcast- |ers. When inventions for transmit- |ting power by radio are perfected, these best wave length monopolies | will be of untold value. The smaller | companies discriminated against are | suing in the courts and violating the regulations, and the commission to enforce its rulings, | VIOLATE CHILD LABOR LAW. laughing stock among the bosses. | Murdered ex-White Guard General Was Soviet Instructor (Wireless By Inprecorr) MOSCOW, Jan. 15.—The_ ex- Wrangel General Slashtchev, mur- dered here yesterday by a man named Kohlenberg, who declared that the assassination was in ven-| geance for the execution of his to the Soviet Union when he showed | that he regretted his counter-revo- lutionary past, and would work loy- ally with the Soviet Government. WILL DYNAMITE ICE JAM. NIAGARA FALLS, Ont., Jan. 26 (UP)-—Preparations were being made today by Niagara Falls auth- orities to break up a massive ice jam in the Niagara River between Queenston, Ont. and Lewiston, N. Y. The authorities indicated that dyna- mite would be used tomorrow to tear away the huge blocks of ice that have caused the river to rise four feet above the docks of the Canadian Steamship Company and the wharves of the Queenston plant of the Ontario Hydroelectric Com- pany. PHONE BOOTH OWNERS OR- GANIZE. CHICAGO, Jan. 16 (U.P.).—The Telephone Users’ League, which will handle public complaints and opin- ions on service and rates in adjust- ment of differences relating to tele. phone matters, was organized her today. The organization is an out growth of the protest made by drug stores and hotels against the reduc Lenin memorial meeting, Jan- ary 19%, im the Madison Square |strations are boycotted by the whole become one of the hundreds walking | audience with strains of parlor love, | |of the population. Approximately home across the desert, broke and | extremely idealized feelings, and the t n n sty, unless I get a job. If I get | extraordinary. True, he has a back- | in connection with the/a job, well, I eat. If not, well a|ground of sailor life—but that is| |50 people took part in the memorial | meeting jined by the chief of the local fascist | militia as to their reasons for not | appearing. A number of workers | were dismissed. Booth, With Grip on LONDON, Jan. 16. — “General” tion as head of the Salvation Army. had asked him to resign. The present situation leads to a fight in the courts, if Booth per- sists. As head of the organization he controls millions of dollars worth of property. It was to get control of this great treasure that a revolt against him was engineered hy his sister, “Commander” Evangeline Booth, of America. |CHURCHMEN NOW SNOOPERS. | PROVIDENCE, R. IL, Jan. 16.— A plan to make every Protestant Church member in Rhode Island an active informer in the governmental prohibition enforcement system has been adopted at the first annual Rhode Island state citizenship con- vention, “Like the German capitalists, ended by their crowned murderer Vilhelm, so the capitalists of all ints, for world rule. f billion of capital have | ested im profitable con- Lenin memoria} meeting, January 19, In Madison Square Garden, a Bramwell Boothe today refused ab- | |solutely to step down from his posi- | The grand council of the “Army” | hun; —wW. C. P. “Let us take Amerten, the freest and most civilized country. Ame: fea is a democratic republic. A shamele: | | | rule af democracy in accomp! by an anndulternted savage bai | ftry. We understand the true ture of so-called | From speech by Lenin to Moscow factory workerm in 1918, Lenin . memorfal_ meeting, January 19, Madison Square Gardi rule of a clique not of | millionaires but of multi-million- | |matinee performances today, Satur- march on Rome. The next day the |, ist 1 f t i MARTIN a on \m 1 . ommunist learns from past experi-|only seen as a background, not TIN BECK THEA. Harlem Revels on Ess é eae ne rere nae |workers in the factory were exam-|ence wha! skipping meals means. | grasped intimately, nor comprehen 45th St. West of 8th Ave. The New WALLACK’S Matinees: SAT. & SUN., at 2:30 ISADORA DUNCAN DANCERS Company of 20 with IRMA DUNCAN Wings Over Europe By Robert Nichols and Maurice Browne Evenings 8:30. — Matinees Thursday & Saturday, 2:30 BERNARD SHAW’S Major Barbara REPUBLIC Thea. w. 42 t., Evs.8:30 sively. His character Smitty, swoon- ing with love memories, is like Eugene O’Neill himself, swooning BILL Jonn GOLDEN ‘Thea., 68t: $8.50 and $2.50 — Order GOLDEN hen tet HVENINGS ONLY AT 6:3¢ your copy today from the ROLIReN| fIVIC REPERTORY 'St.tinay uo Eves, 8:30 60c; $1.00; $1.50, Mats, Wed.&Sat.,2.8¢ EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight, “The Cherry Orchard.” Fri, Bye. “Hedda Gabler.” Source of All Revolutionary Literature Workers Library Publishers 35 KE. 125th ST., NEW YORK CITY Thea., 42 St. W.B’y Tonight at 8:30 medzaze vecogni- mm by he United Staten government? Grove Street Theatre e e ‘ Singing By UPTON A Powerful Revolutionary Play GO TONIGHT! 22 GROVE Sheridan Square, 7th Ave. Sub, Station (Spring 2772) 5 Min. from Broadway WHERE ALL NEW YORK RADICALS MEET TO SEE Directed by Em Jo Basshe and Presented by the New Playwrights Theatre MATINEES SATURDAY—PLAYING SUNDAYS Playwrights Theatre, Watkins 0588, Thea, 44 St.W.ofB'way. | SHUBERT Eve, 8.30 Mats, Wed. an Saturday WALTER WOOLF in the Thrilling The Red Robe i 5 ee " ‘i | i . | 5 Matinges, Wed. & Sat. 2:30, }| Musical Hit at the Renaissance Casino, | troupe. Tickets are being sold at| brother by order of Slashtchev in Peer eed tgies Mensa snrtaaght are HAYWOOD’S BOOK— || Wed. . To RPL AMiiS Bth St. and Seventh Ave. under | Popular prices. 1920, was an instructor in the Mos- pl aa eS ash, i ‘orton and work, the Manis \ BUGENE O'NEILL'S ee i ion | _ . | cow Military School. all the riches of the nation he pate “eunulmas wenlaliy ke § In | de : ot ee ree Radio Co qacintt Aale yale io rs me RE ays he Won esign | fe,the capltalints tf, wy nde of | The DAILY WORKER—is trange ter uae Ethel Barrymore : . on-| Kradlo COMMISSION ASKS id a perpetual enslavement of mil~ | available in two editions In “THE KINGDOM OF GOD” By G. Martinez Sierra 47th St. Barrymore Thea, 47) St, Mats. Wed. and Sat. | Ethel Eys. 8 i] W. 5Sith St. ARNEGIE Noon to Midnight PLAYHOUSE | Popular Prices 4TH SENSATIONAL WEEK “Lucrecia Borgia” with Conrad Veidt and cast of 50,000. FIRE THREATENS CHILDREN. LAKE, Wis., (By Mail),—Fire in the Lake School, in this little town threatened the lives of 160 farmers’ children. All escaped. STREET—1 block from Jailbirds SINCLAIR. of the Class Struggle in Americal