The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 9, 1929, Page 4

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Four Sixty Daily Wo Outline Plan to Save Paper DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1929 | rker Agen ts Opening with a speech by Daily Worker Manager Ravitch, a mee ing of 60 Da yr age’ held Friday the W in reports of on of the collection of 2 the pa- per, and pledg lans for an extreme effort to be made during the co: ing week. Ravitch in his opening remarks” reminded the agents that it was mai the party membership’s responsibi to see that the Daily W y tinued, and that the Central Executive Com- mittee had decided this to be the main task of the various party units during February. Especially Needed Now. Vern Smith in his report on the political importance of the Daily Worker at the present time, stressed the fact that we were living in a war-preparation period, and on the eve of great industrial struggles such as the needle trades, etc. The Daily Worker has a t at the present mn: time of the so-called peace treaties, and war-preparation plans. The Daily Worker today stands out as the only champion of the workers in the ous struggles. We cannot afford in this crucial time to lose our Daily Worker. We can- not afford to miss one single issue, of the Daily Worker. Quotas Assigned. Reporting on the practical steps, Comrade Ravitch made the follow- ing recommendations: 1.—The Daily Worker must be on the agenda of all unit meetings during the month of February. 2.—Every section must go over the top in raising its quota. The follow- ing are the quotas for the various sections: Section 1, $900 (Raised by section| to $1,000); Section 2, $850; Section 5, $600; Section 4, $600 (Raised by section to $800); Section 5, $850 (Raised by section to $1,200); Sec- tion 6, $300; Section 7, $200; Sec- tion 8, $200; Section 9, $150; New Jersey and other units in New York State, $350; Total $5,000. It is the duty of every section to assign quotas to every unit, and full mobilization made to raise these! quotas. Unless we get all the com- rades mobilized behind this cam- paign, the Daily Worker Manage- ment cannot put it across. Emergency Fund. The widest distribution must be given to the special Emergency Fund cards. Section affairs must be arranged in order to help raise the} money. Comrades must be mobilized to visit the various organizations | and affairs in their section in order to collect funds for the Daily Worker. A Tag Day must be arranged for the Daily Worker on’ Feb. 16 and 17. All comrades must respond. to the call. We are going to print 50,- 000 leaflets advertising the Tag Day and the Daily Worker., Ravitch explained the reasons for | the present crisis. The deficit of the Daily Werker amounts to ap- proximately $1,800 per week. This} deficit is covered through donations | and affairs. During 1927 this was| covered by two financial campaigns, but in 1928, there was a number of other campaigns going on, such as} the miners’ campaign, textile cam-| paign, I. L. D. campaign, and the| election campaign. In view of this situation, the Daily Worker is con- fronted with a very serious crisis. ‘Many bills are long past due, with ino funds on hand to pay them. The printers refuse to print the Daily Worker any longer, unless it is able to settle the funds due them. Meager sums of $500 to $600 per day, are linsufficient to meet even the cur- livent needs of the paper, let alone ijto satisfy all the creditors. ittee. Practical Recommendations. eel.—Discussions to be held in’ all finits on the Daily Worker. | 2—The Sustaining Fund to be ut on a firmer basis. (The same s| Worker j 1ole. The following suggestions were! made as recommendations for con-| “sideration of thc Management Com-| jolas I and who has created in the figure of the vacillating governor a that at the 10.—Recommended next meeting of the Section Daily Agents a general Daily Worker agent for the Sustaining Fund should be elected. This meeting, one of the best in the history of the Daily Worker, i with great enthusiasm and ingness on the part of the vari- Proletarian Writers Give High Praise to Soviet Film The latest Sovkino film, “Two now playing at the Film id Cinema, was yesterday hailed | as a great revolutionary cinema by proletarian writers. ve Olgin, editor of “The | commenting on the pic- | | ture, said: “‘Two Days,’ besides being a| story of the class struggle personi- | fied in a single individual, and apart | from the absolute correctness as far | as the presentation of characters | and action is concerned, is in itself a powerful melodrama. The tragedy of the man-servant, who is torn be- tween love for his son and devotion | to his master, is a human drama of niversal appeal.” Michael Gold, editor of the “New | Masses,” remarked: “Two Days” is | the first Soviet film production | which shows the struggle of the old and new orders in the breast of an individual. On the opening night, before an audience composed largely | of high hats and ermine wraps, it was received in silence, but this is | proof of its class character, andj lass-conscious workers will, I am be galvanized by its tense- cl Melech Epstein, editor of “The Freheit,” in a review which appeared in that paper Thursday, says, in part: “'Two Days tionary picture tragedy of the individual, as against previous Russian pictures where the nameless Mass Played the dominant | It isa film of class revenge | which workers will deeply appreci- | ate. It is done in a remarkable | manner; the fire scene particularly held me spellbound. The work of} the three leading characters is un- | forgettable.” “The Lash of the Czar” | Opens at Cameo Today | is the first revolu- | ich deals with the | A new genre of Russian films is finding its way here with the Amer- ican premiere of “The Lash of the Czar,” which Amkino presents at the Cameo Theatre, commencing today. | Departing from the elements on | which are based such productions as | “Potemkin,” “Ten Days That Shook the World” and “The End of St. Petersburg,” such motion pictures as “Two Days” and “The Lash of the Czar” attempt to follow definite film continuity and screen plots. “The Lash of the Czar” (formerly | titled “The White Eagle”), is based ; on Andreyev'’s famous story, “The Governor,” a type of soft-hearted man who is torn between his desire to please the government and at the same time be sympathetic toward Two Merite V. E. Meyerhold and VY. 1. Kachalov, who play leading roles in the newest importation from the Sovkino “The Lash of the Czar,” film studios in Moscow. The pictu story “The Governor,” and will open at the Cameo Theatre this afternoon for a run. d Artists of the U.S. S. R. | § COLORLESS play that attempts | to be naughty and fails is now at the Belmont Theatre. It is “Be | Your Age,” by Thomas P. Robinson }and Esther Willard Gates. The play is written according to formula and is far from original | either in plot or presentation. The | fine cast used do their utmost to; breathe life into the production, but are not very successful. They are not to blame. Richard Herndon, the producer, should have sent it to a play doctor before presenting it to| the public, though I doubt that even | the best in that trade could do very | much except re-write the entire play and, if that would be worth-while, | is a debatable question. | | GABRILOWITSCH AND MOLI- NARI GUEST CONDUCTORS Ossip Gabrilowitsch is the guest conductor of the Philharmonic Sym- ;phony Orchestra this coming week jat Carnegie Hall. Tomorrow after- | noon he repeats the program he of- |fers tonight at the Student’s Con- \cert, consisting of the ‘“Freischutz” overture, the Tchaikovsky Fifth re is based on Andreyev's famous Last Chance to See Sinclair Play Sunday | Upton Sinclair’s “Singing Jai birds” will close. its run in this city on Sunday evening with a benefit performance for the Negro Cham- pion at the Grove Street Theatre, near Sheridan Square station on the Seventh Ave. subway. This revolutionary play has been immensely strengthened since its first opening several months ago. It is much more dramatic and force- ful and is well worth seeing a sec- ond time. Tickets for Sunday night’s performance may be obtained at the Workers Bookshop, 26 Union Sq., or the Negro Champion, 169 W. 138rd_ St. NEXT NEW PLAYWRIGHTS | PRODUCTION TO_ BE DOS PASSOS’ “AIRWAYS, INC.” | | | Upton Sinclair’s “Singing Jail- birds” the first of the New Play- wrights productions to have a suc- cessful run will close at the Grove Village on February 10th, according | to a statement made yesterday by| Em Jo Basshe, executive director of | the producing group. | “While ‘Singing Jailbirds’ is still} playing to good houses,” Mr. Basshe said, “our policy this year of run- ning two plays a season compels us} |to take Sinclair’s play off to make| room for our next production which} is to be John Dos Passos’ “Airways, | Inc.” 1 “The statement adds that the group | is negotiating for the services of a) director and that he will be named in the course of the next few days. | The ~roletarint of ench country munis¢, of course, first of all settle matters with its own bourgeoisie— Karl Marx (Comunist Manifesto) Yiddish Art Theatre| 14th St, and Union Sq., Tel. STU. 0523 | MAURICE SCHWARTZ, Director Announces Friday, Saturday & Sunday Eve. and Saturday and Sunday Mat. the workers, This results in his death and the various situations which develop toward this climax are extremely interesting as a social and psychological index of the period which it portrays. We are givena penetrating insight into the police spy system of that era. “The Lash of the Czar” is ex- ivemely interesting because it brings to the American screen the foremost actor of the Moscow Art Theatre, Kachalov, who is famous throughout Russia for his unforgettable portrait of the double-faced Emperor Nich- portrait equally significant. A unioue cast is supplemented by Meyerhold. the great Russian stage director who has turned screen ar- f tist for this production, contributing Bs dues.) i ya brilliant characterization of the 8.—Only those who are out 0’ Beotk will get exempt stamps fo: 4 >: ipaying towards the Sustaining Fund. | 7e@¢tionary czarist courtier. 4.—A financial report of the Daily! The cast also includes Chuvelev, rker wili be given at the next| who will be remembered for his re- markable work as the young peas- ant in “The End of St. Petersburg,” .d Anna Sten, whose first Ameri- z Wo | ‘regular meeting of the Daily Worker | dagents. 5.—Unit agents should report to/# 4 eunits of the standing of comrades in|¢@n appearance was in “The Yellow “their payment for the Sustaining) Pass.” ‘Fund, at least every 3 months. The director of “The Lash of the ~ 6,—Section Conferences of D. W.| Czar” is Protozonov, who has at- agents be held regularly every Mon- tempted to create a new method of day. ‘projecting his characters against 7.—City Conferences of agents be|the authentic background of the held every two months. period. _ 8 —Section Executive Committees ‘should have the Daily Worker on! KILLED WHEN CAR SKIDS ‘the order of business at their next) BATH, N. Y., Feb. 8 (UP).—Ed- meeting and should take up and im-' mond F. Underhill, 66 publisher of proceed with planning af-|the Corning Evening Leader, was ributions, ete. instantly killed near here today, ntents of the Daily Worker; when his automobile skidded on a be improved so as to make it more}wet road and crashed into a tree. readable for von-Party workers. |He was alone in the car. New Plays “DYNAMO” by Eugene O'Neill will be presented by the Theatre Guild at the Martin Beck Theatre Monday. O’Neill describes the play ..“the first play of a trilogy that will dig at the roots of the sickness of today as I feel it.” The cast includes Glenn Anders, Claudette Colbert, Dudley Digges, George Gaul, Helen Westley and Catherine Calhoun-Doucet. “THE WHISPERING GALLERY,” a mystery play by Percy Robin- son and Terrence De Marney, will open Monday at the Forrest Theatre. The cast includes A. P. Kaye, Hugh Miller, Charles Warburton, Harry McNaughton and Gwyneth Gordon. |“MY GIRL FRIDA by William A. Grew, will be offered at the Republic by Gerald Bagon, Tuesday night. Richard Sterling has the principal role. i WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S ‘OTHELLO’ | Directed by Boris Giagollin English Synopsis Supplied | ATRL TREES >» & & 4 4 4.4 |GOLDEN THEATRE Tomorrow (Sunday) Evening at 8:30 GRANDJANY LE-ROY In a program of music for HARP and FLUTE Concert Manager lel Mayer, Inc, KRA Vilhjalmur | Singing struggle in America — Thi the play that has stirred AIRWAYS, INC., by John Grove Street Thentre on Fi for house sell-outs now, jand his company from the Theatre| Street Theatre down in Greenwich this season. A SOVKINO PRODUCTION Symphony, and the “Emperor” con- |certo with the conductor as soloist land Hans Lange directing. | On Thursday afternoon and Fri- | day evening Mr. Gabrilowitsch con- CRISTOBAL, Canal Zone, Feb. 7. | cludes his appearances here with an —Lindbergh finished his imporialist | all-Beethoven concert comprising mail route flight on American terri-| the First and Fifth Symphonies. tory today, arriving here from} Bernardino Molinari takes up the Florida in three days. This inaug-| baton next Saturday night and Sun- urates the Pan-American Airways, | day afternoon. The Italian conduc- mail line which was advocated by tor has prepared a program includ- Hoover on his trip thru Latin-| ing “Autumn,” from Vivaldi’s “Four America, as active competition to | Seasons,” Beethoven’s First Sym- projected British mail lines. | phony, Malipiero’s ‘Pause del Silen- zio,” Respighi’s “Pines of Rome,” land — Stravinsky’s “Petrouchka” | Suite. | JOUVET PLAYERS OF | PARIS CANCEL TOUR Arturo Toscanini sailed on Febru- ary 6 on the S. S. Mauretania. His | The proposed tour of Louis Jouvet | First concert will be Thursday eve- | ning, Feb. 21, at Carnegie Hall. | Imperialist Lindbergh Ends Test Mail Flight Louis Jouvet (Comedie des Champs-| ia Bee eae ens Elysees) from Paris, announced by; DOS PASSOS RETURNS FROM the Theatre Guild to begin an en-| RUSSIA. gagement in New York March 11,| John Dos Passos, author of “Three has been cancelled insofar as this| Soldiers” and “Manhattan Transfer” season is concerned. M. Jouvet, inj whose new play “Airways, Inc.” is a communication to the Guild, ex-| to be produced next month at the plains that complications of a busi-| Grove Street Theatre by the New ness nature prevent the engagement | Playwrights group recently returned from Russia, where he made a study The tour will be carried out later,} of the various dramatic groups however, and there is a strong prob-| operating in Moscow and Leningrad. ability that it will be started next! He will supervise the production of “Be Your Age’ Colorless Play; Fails in Try at Naughtiness The play concerns rejuvenation. | Many novels and several plays con- | cerning this topic has been before us the last year or so. In this par- ticular case, Mrs, Merriam, 61, after | gland treatments finds that she is | no more than 30. Feeling full of | pep, she decides to make love to the | doctor who brought back her youth. | The doctor, however, is in love with | Mrs. Merriam’s granddaughter. | If the play had sparkling dialogue | it would not be as boresome as it | actually is. With the exception of | an occasional “wise crack,” the play | is thin, Spring Byington plays the part of the flapper grandma. It is a| good thing that such a capable ac- | tress portrays the part. In the hands of a third-rater, it would | have been awful. Miss Byington | does her utmost to make her char- acter realistic, but does not succeed in doing the impossible. The doctor is played by Rommey Brent, who is highly satisfactory. The old sweet- | heart of the granddaughter is por- | | trayed by John Miltern, while Holli- well Hobbes, a first-rate character man, is wasted in a comparatively small part. Those who have a special interest in the question of rejuvenation and gland operations may want to see the play more out of curiosity than anything else. If they come expect- ing a brilliant play on this question they will be very much disappointed. Ethel Barrymore in “THE KINGDOM OF GOD” By G. Martinez Sierra 7th St.,| Ethel Barrymore Thea. pie fa Eves. 8.50; Mats. Wed. and Sat. Chick, 9944 39th St. & B’dway. Ev. 8.30 CASINO Mats. Wed. & Sa’ 0 THE NEW MUSICAL COMEDY HIT) BOOM BOOM | with Frank McIntyre & Jeanette MacDonald | Thea, 44 St.W.ofB'way. SHUBERT vs. 8.30 Mats. Wed. and Saturday WALTER WOOLF inthe Thrilling The Red Robe Musical Iiit with HELEN GILLILAND. fivic REPERTORY leans 50c; $1.00; $1.60, Mats. Wed.&Sat.,2.3¢ EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director | Today Mat., “The Cherry Orchard.” Tonight, “The Lady from Alfaqueque” and “On the High Road.” The proletarian movement is the self-conscious, independent movement of the immense major- ity.—Karl Marx (Communist Mani- festo). MUSIC -AND CONCERTS season, | the play. | | | | New York, N. Y. IF YOU INTEND TO BUY RADIOS, PIANOS, PLAYER- PIANOS, PLAYER ROLLS, RECORDS, OR ANY MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, BUY AT “SURMA’S STORE at 103 Avenue “A” (Bet. 6-7th Str.) PhilharmonicSymphony | OSSIP GABRILOWITSCH Guest Conductor Carnegie Hall, This Sunday After- noon nt 3:00 ‘WEBER—BEETHOVEN TCHAIKOVSKY Carnegie Hall, Thurs. Aft., Feb. 14, | at 2:30, Friday Eve. Feb. 15, at 8:45 | ALL-BEETHOVEN PROGRAM | | | pines i BERNARDINO MOLINARI | Guest Conductor Carnegie Hall, Sat. Ev., Feb. 16, 8130 Sunday Afternoon, Feb. 17, at 3:00 | VIVALDI, BEETHOVEN, MALIELE- | RO, RESPIGHI, STRAVINSKY (Steinway) | (8th St. and ASTOR PLACE) At 8 o'Clock SUNDAY, FEB. 10 Arthur Judson, Mgr. “Thomas Hardy” American Symphonic Ensemble Conductorless Symphony Orchestra Carnegie Hall, Thurs, Eve, Feb, 28th, at 8:45 Concerto Grosso in F Tschaikowsky Violin Concerto UM BLINDER, Soloist “Nuages” and “Fetes” Prelude Meistersinger TUESDAY, FEB. 12 . DR. E. R. WEIDLEIN “Chemistry in Industry” FRIDAY, FEB. 15 A History of Liberty “Freedom and Perfectionism— John Humphrey Noyes” ADMISSION FREE Handel Open Foram Discussion, r joxes 820.00 and $24.00 ae) ‘Tickets $1.00 to $2. LABOR TEMPLE 14th St. and Second Ave. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10 5:00 p. mi DR. G. F. BECK An Outline History of the Drama —Greek Drama 50 Mgt. Beckhard & Macfarlane, Ine, . Fisk Building LECTURES AND FORUMS THE PEOPLE’S INSTITUTE] AT COOPER UNION Muhlenberg Branch Library MR. JOHN COWPER POWYS Mr. EVERETT DEAN MARTIN; WEEK | Grove St. Thea. 22 GROVE ST—1 block from Sheridan Square—7th Ave. Subway Station (Spring 2772) 5 Minutes from Broadway by UPTON SINCLAIR Don't mins this powerful revolutionary drama of the class country and in Europe DIRECTED BY EM JO BASSH. Matinees Saturday — Performance Sunday Night POPULAR PRICES Call Comrade Napoli, Watkins 6588, 133 W, 14th Street. a SSIN The Rescue Ship THE GREATEST NEWS PICTURE EVER FILMED! Official motion picture of the Soviet expedition into the Arctic and the rescue of the Nobile crew. Never before shown! Introductory Speech by the noted explorer Stefannsen ONE SPECIAL SHOWING ONLY Tuesday, February 19, at 8:30 p. m. CARNEGIE HALL, 57th Street and Seventh Avenue Tickets: 50c to $2.00 at Box Office Jailbirds in in the lant oportunity to see thousands of workers in this Dos Passon will open at the ‘ebruary 10. Make reservations “The Character Drama” 7:15 p. mi— EDMUND B. CHAFFEE “The New Light on Lincoln” §:30 p. m.: FORUM JEROME DAVIS “Capitalinom and Christianity” —All welcome— EDITOR OF THE “U, S. Imperialism Questions and General Discussi “GET THE SUNDAY NIGHT HABIT” LECTURE by Delegate of Soviet American Tractor Cooperative, 4959 Martin Street, Detroit, Mich. on “AGRICULTURAL PROBLEMS, AND AIMS OF OUR CO-OPER- ATIVE IN U.S. 8, R.” st ‘SUNDAY, Feb. 10, at 1 p.m. at MANHATTAN LYCEUM 66 EAST 4TH ST. Admission 25 Cente, WORKERS SCHOOL FORUM, 28 Union Sq. (5th floor) ROBERT MINOR will speak on SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, at 8 P. M. (209 WEST 23rd STREET) At 8:30 o’clock MONDAY, FEB, 11 MR. HOUSTON PETERSON | “Marston and Webster—with H Motifs from Machiavelli” WEDNESDAY, FEB. 13 DR. HORACE M. KALLEN “What Beauty Really Is” THURSDAY, FEB. 14 DR. E. G. SPAULDING “The Methods for Solving Philoso- phical Problems; The Classical 1 Logics The Logic of { Modern Science” SATURDAY, FEB. 16 DR. V. J. McGILL “The Vedas and Power of Words” INGERSOLL FORUM Gufld Hall, Steinway Building, suUNDAY Bon N INGs FEBRUARY 10 MORRIS L, ERNST “Obscenity and the Censor” ADMISSION 26 CENTS FEBRUARY Ww DR. WOLF ADLER “Psychology—Normal and bnormal” Questions and Discussion from the floor, DAILY WORKER in Latin America” ion —— Admission 26 Cents EAST SIDE OPEN FORUM CHURCH OF ALL NATIONS (9 Second Ave. N. ¥, ©.) SUNDAY, FEB, 10, AT 8 P. M. JOHN S. NELSON “Einstein's Latest Theory” Admission Free—Everyone Invited LOCOMOTIVE KILLS WORKER JERSEY CITY, N.J., Feb. 8 (UP) --Ernest Nanenders, 60, of Jersey City, D. L. & W. employe, injured when struck by a iocomotive at the =THFATRE GUILD PRODUCTIONS OPENS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11 EUGENE O’NEILL’S DYNAMO MARTIN BECK {¢ EXTRA MATINEE TUES 5th Street, West of 8th Avenu Mats. Thurs. & Sat, 2:40 (LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY) Wings Over Europe By ROBERT NICHOLS & MAURICE BROWNE ALVIN and Bt see ote orey Eves. 8:50 / SPECIAL MATINEE LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY THEA Mats. SIL-VARA’S COMEDY CAPRICE GUILD 22”: treet, Eves, Matin, y, Thursday S EXTRA MATINEE TUESDAY (LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY) EUGENE O’NEILL’S STRANGE INTERLUDE JOHN GOLDEN THEA,, 58th St., BE. of Broadway Evenings only at 5:30 sharp. THEA., W. 39th Street. Evenings 8:50 Matinees: Wednesday and Saturday at 2 A. H, WOODS Presents FAY BAINTER JEALOUSY with JOHN HALLIDA’ sy EUGENE WALTER from the French of LOUIS VERNEUIL d Now AMERICAN NEWEST SOVKINO PREMIERE PRODUCTION “The [ASH ofthe CZAR’ with KACHALOV, MEYERHOLD, CHUVELEV and ANNA STEN, Russia’s Greatest Artists Worthy Successor to “Potemkin” and “Czar Ivan the Terrible” MAXINE ELLIOTT’S Sho MONTH “The best performance Miss Painter has ever given.” Burns Mantle, News. a9 “Don’t miss ‘Jealousy’ R. Coleman, Daily Mirror. Keith-Albee Best Film Show in Town 42nd Street and Broadway “Tn a class by itself.” —Robert C. Benchley, “Life.” “A joyous revel in which there was much sprightly froth, some vivid characters in a seriously interesting romance, and a cast of players remarkable for the excellence of their acting.” —Percy Hammond, Herald Tribune. ARTHUR HOPKINS presents PHILIP BARRY’S New Comedy with settings by ROBERT EDMOND JONES. PLYMOUTH Thea., W. 45th St., Eves. 8:50 Mats. Thurs. and Sat. 2:35 Extra Matinees Lincoln's and Washington's Birthday —THE SOVIET FILM REVOLUTIONARY WRITERS ARE ACCLAIMING “TWO DAYS’ A WUFKU-AMKINO PRODUCTION The Russian “Last Laugh” A tremendous tragedy of an old man torn in his devotion between th ‘Whites and the Reds—caught in the changing tides of the Soviet Revolution—introducing SAMCHYKOVSKI RUSSIA’S GREATEST SCREEN ACTOR “A MERITED ARTIST OF THE SOVIET REPUBLIC” “<Two Days’ exhibits . class struggle during the revo- lution personified In a single individual, It has absolute correctness an far as presentation of characters and action is concerned, This powerful tragedy is a human drama of universal appeal.” —MOISSAYE OLGIN, “Pwo Days’ tx the first Soviet film production which shows the struggle between old and new orders in the brenat of —MICHAEL GOLD. ix a film of class revenge which worker ¥t ix done In a remarkable manner ore worl an tndividual.” t us the inree nx characters in —MELACH EPSTEIN, Editor “The Fretheit. ‘pHIS REMARKABLE FILM PRESENTED IN THE RADICALLY UNIQUE CINEMA OF REVOLUTIONARY DESIGN FILM GUILD CINEMA , B54 WEST EIGHTH STREET, West of 5th Ave | Continuous Performance Popular Price: Daily 2 to 12 (Box Office Opens 1:30 P. M.’ Saturday, Sunday and Holidays 12 to 12 (Box Office Opens 11:80 A, M.) Direction —PHONE: SPRING 509 SYMON GOULD ED 0000004000000 0000000ER (Workers Then.) PROLAB THEATRE 231’ East 9th ‘st. . PRESENTS “The Cripples” “The Pest”? . $ By DAVID PINSKI C4 By MAX GELTMAN ® Tonight! Lackawanna, yards here last night, died in a hospital hete today. | DANCE AFTER PERFORMANCE! i

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