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Many Working Girls Are S GET MONEY (fF COMPEL CADILLAC AUTO SLAV (By a Worker Correspondent) “The employes are giving Mr. Uppercu a present for his 25th an- niversary. Do you wish to contrib- ute to the fund? If you do, please write on this card the amount you WORKERS WITH PROMISE OF JOB DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1929 windled given out to every worker at the jevery day, really threatening him, service and repair station of the Up-|‘you don’t have to give, but you |percu Cadillac Corporation at 70 /had better give at least 50 cents, or Columbus Ave. New York City, |that amount will be taken from where 120 to 150 mechanics slave |your pay,” And, sure enough, 50 and over 500 work all together. But |cents was taken from the pay of it is a lie that the workers are not/those who did not help give Held by Contract, Girls Are Victims (By a Work CHICAGO (B cago th i school led school ‘at- working girls by t the prospec- en a job and udying in the tract bind: £175 in week pletes the s wish to give and turn this card over to Miss Manning. Remember, there nothing compulsory about this. The giving is purely voluntary.” ao compelled to give this “gift” to their |a banquet to Uppereu, the boss, who slaves and oppresses them. Thus reads card which was of his business. If a man refused a .., |to give to make a feast for Uppercu, |afford a full dress suit, they were | to 1 When a clerk came around with |the clerk would keep bothering him|un hour ‘in idle time—that is, be-|now they are as low as $18 to $25 a|ness agent of the Machinists Union this card he said to the workers: |and many gave because they feared {tween jobs, when we were not idle. they might lose their jobs if they did not. The clerk told the workers who |gave contributions to the banquet: |“Of course, you can’t come to the} banquet, at the Astor Hotel, dressed in ordinary clothes, You will have jto buy a dress suit.” ss, U i v] - |is celebrati: i | Heats SU RPO re, ie Ta ee a nace een When workers said they could not ES TO PAY FOR BANQUET TO THE BOSS told to go to a certain place where|But they made us do all sorts of they couid hire one. Besides giving | dirty work in idle time—wash the the contribution each worker kad to| walls, paint, ete. Now they have |buy a $5 ticket to the banquet. The | abolished the 35 cents an hour and contributions will also help to buy |pay us nothing and make us do the |Uppercu a compass for his new|wall-washing and painting, anyway. yacht. The men are unorganized. W The mechanics at the Cadillac-|once had a strike when piece-work Uppercu work at piece-work, The/was introduced, but we lost after wages used to be $40 a weeek, but|/one day. We appealed to the busi- ® week. We used to be paid 35 cents |to organize us, but he did nothing. he New “Progressives” in the' ELECTRICIANS ‘PLANE GO. ENDS American Federation of Labor TURN DOWN LOW LUNCH HOUR IN By EARL BROWDER. |before us, at last for examination, Someone has defined a “progres- | that “progressivism” which has been sive” as being one who, when elected So legendary and elusive in the e in the trade unions, would | American labor movement. What not run off with the treasury. That does it mean? Is it a call for new n has hitherto been about the only| struggles against the reactionary “|generally accepted criterion for |bureaucracy which has destroyed all | judging who is a progressive. This traces of a militant working-class | , now to be all changed. character in the old unions? | for the of that t the exa) given a 4 sition as a graph op entitled to tered the sub However, contract contains rt of the chool or any g¢ in ature of | a guarantee. The new pupil, dazzled by the hope of the lo ought-for job, gladly gives her signature plus, of course, a down payment, and im- mediately becomes disillusioned. the nothing binding on the . menifesto published in “Labor Age.” | (summed up by them as “the Com- s jeditors of that magazine and their|the most active leading elements). - friends in Brookwood Labor College. | The program is a mask, from behind | The ‘ gressives” are going to, No, this is not a manifesto against | “clarify their thinking, define their the bureaucracy. It is an attack} purpose, and- organize their efforts.” | against the Left wing, against the | At least so we are promised in a|/Trade Union Educational League February issue, in the name of the|munists” because Communists are It became of some importance to|Which can be continued in the S| properly estimate this new effort of | period we are now entering, the vism,” what it is, why it|treacherous role of the “progres- played by them uninter- role generally in the labor movement. |Tuptedly since 1924. The “Left” and what attitude towards it must|phrases are revived, because the re- be taken by revolutionary trade |actionary deeds of “progressivism”! rnionists. jin the last years have destroyed all. Wha tis the New “Progressi »» |its influence among the masses. building Co. Hazardous (By a Worker Correspondent) Another difference between the electric welders and the Sun Ship- j building and Dry Dock Company re- sulted in the discharge of six em- ployes on Wednesday, Jan. 29. | The Sun Ship Company picked seven men to leave the shop, which | is the boiler shop, snd go to Pauls- boro, N. J., on an outside job. These men have been receiving 70 cents per hour and were expected to work for the same price. | The workers had found out that | the job nad been let to the Be!mont | Tron Works, @ local firm at Eddy- | stone, adjoining the Baldwin Loco- | | WAGES ON JOB GREAT SPEEDUP iWork for Sun Ship-|2 Wash Sinks for 400 Workers (By a Worker Correspondent) TRENTON, N. J. (By am writing to tell of the condi of those who work for the Keystone | forget his or her troubles for sev- Aircraft Co, The whole factory has on!y two wash sinks for the 400 men who|4nd, when all is said and done, the s no closet for | P!ay is of no more importance than | work there. There the men to keep their cloth and lunches in, in the whole plant. There are only six water closets for the 400 men. The men used to have lunch from 10 to 12:20 a. m. and in the efter- noon from 3 to 3 teken the lunch time away. alto- gether. The most speeded un de- 0. Now they have | As soon as the girl enters the school she is confronted with the sign that she has not been sold a job but a course in telegraphy. “However, they will help her find employment,” which they don’t even try to do! They take not the slight- est interest in her except to demand their payments. The girl rassed and worried over her lz unemployment, is thrust into a class where she learns practically noth- ing at all. Instruction is given in| a poor, unsatisfactory, hurried man- | ner. Not the least bit of desire or interest is shown on the part of the instructers to make the work more comprehensive for the pupil or to help in any way whatsoever. She soon finds that according to these methods of teaching it will take her an endiess time to com- plete the study. The school does not care whether the pupil is mak- ing headway, how she struggles with | the subject, whether she is in a class | too advanced for her capacity of | learning, whether she is employed, } whether she is prompt.cr slow, or | whether she exists at all! | But—she must pay her tuition. } After being a slave to her employer | she must be a slave to them—pay | them her hard-earned money in re-} turn for “the privilege of being their pupil and merely visiting the school.” And this is an example of your fine American capitalism; this is law! The government allows this corruption of its social institutions without lifting a hand to stop it. Legitimate robbery, impe: ist style, and yet thi: nly one of the many countless ways in w! they take advantage cf our working class youth. A WOMAN WORKER. ism”? | The new program for progress | Why the Manifesto Comes Now. The “Labor Age” group have not \explained why it is just at this mo- eS is summarized by “Labor Age” in| a list of sixteen points, as follow: “1. Organize the masses of un- skilled and semi-skilled. 2. Ap- peal primarily to workers instead of to emplovers in organizing ef- forts. 8. Exnose and fieht Na- tional Civil Federation inflnence in the labor movement. 4. Insist | that union membership shall not be denied because of race, or nolit- ous views or affiliations. 5, Fieht for the rieht of a minority or op- position to exist in the movement 6. Fieht injunctions and yellow- | dog contracts. 7. Camnaign for motive Works to the north. I be- lieve the Belmont also has offices in| {New York City. Also the workers | ment that they call for a revival of |had found out that the iron work- “progressivism.” Their socialist |¢TS 04 the job would receive $1.35% party wing and connections (the ge hour, |\“New Leader,” Oneal, Norman| The electric workers thought that |Thomas, ete.) fill this gap, Ex-|hecause of the extremely cold lamine some of their testimony. weather and the extra hazzard that | | In “The New Leader” of Feb. 2,|the job was worth more money. The | |James Oneal reviews his services to tetms of the men were $1 per hour, |the A, F. of L. bureaucrats in their jtime to be from leaving until re- |wrecking of the needle trades unions t¥"ing; they were not to lose time |in New York, in their panic-striken 7 account of delays not caused by efforts to destroy the Left wing them. ‘ which had gained the confidence o*| After two conferences, which oe »|were before the vice-president of |partments are the tinshop and the |‘Kibitzer”’ Is Weak in Logic But Is Strong in Amusement SPRING BYINGTON ROBABLY the most amusing | comedy of the current season is now playing at the Royale Theatre, |It is titled “Kibitzer,” and is the |product of Jo Swerling and Edward G. Robinson, Gales of laughter sweep through lihe andience on West 45th St. And, in our judgment, the comedy will continue to entertain audiences for | many nights to come. If] has the blues and wants to | h nothing better than} can be recommended. ie’s Trish Rose” or the musical edies that. bring in the shekels | for their pi year after year. | The play is first-class entertainment and does not pretend to be anything else. I, Lazarus owns a cigar store on | Amsterdam e., New York City. [He is the ki er. Every night a |crowd from the neighborhood visits In the new comedy, “Be Your Age,” at the Belmont Theatre. GOGOL'S ‘INSPECTOR GENERAL’ AT YIDDISH ART THEATRE The schedule of the week at the Yiddish Art Theatre will include: This evening, Gogol’s comedy, “The Inspector _ General” in Fake Telegraphy Trade School in Chicago ‘SPEEDUP GROWS: WN ADVERTISING " PLANTONCOAST Work Less Than Half the Time (By a Worker Correspondent) SAN FRANCISCO (By Mail).— |Several times lately when coming jout of the Foster and Kleiser slave pens I have noticed several com- rades distributing Daily Workers at |the workers entrance and also at the joffice entrance. | The slaves of this outdoor adver- tising plant, which has a virtua) monopoly of the whole Pacific Coast from the British Columbia line tc |the Mexican border, are as yet un- | awakened to the class struggle. We work at what is known as s |“searcity” trade. This is so-called |because work is scarce and few can do it. Speedup and efficiency methods have been adopted; we are told to paint “masterpieces” but |“bat”” out the work, and are promptly |laid off. I work less than half the jtime. Strangers looking for work jare given the “bum’s rush.” | Iam not working but am sending |$2 to help the Daily Worker. —AWAKENED SLAVE. EES tub venison a and twice on Sunday, Maurice Schwartz will give performances of \the theatre’s newest production, |“Major Noah,” a play of American | Jewish life a century ago, by Harry jcovering.and tube room. |and the speed-up there has lately been doubled. |50 to $0 cents an hour. | them get less than 70 cents on heur. | partment, they have begun to t: on men at only 35 cents an hour. the cigar store and plays pinochle, {bets on the races, prize fights and s the stock market. Lazarus, The women work: an hour. s get £0 cents Those who slave there a | ' Hong time get 35 cents an hour. The |jiving up to the Jewish term of men in the covering and the tuhe ves advice, most of which room get 40 to 50 cents an hour, S$ wor s. It he tells a friend to bet on a horse, that is almost a jsure sien that it will not win. His advice in the card games is equally nable.” Through a certain odd turn of the pest of Amsterdam Ave. its a millionaire and is able to ve his life by putting a waste cet on the head of the man who ‘The wees in the tinshop are from Most of | Recently, in the exampling de- | f Three months ag9, several of the | I jmen were badly burned when a pss-| wants to kill him. Of course, it is senrer plane burned. Th tupid, but the amusing dialogue “Revizor”); | Sac Tuesday, Peretz Hirshbeiws orn | Fae Blacksmith’s Daughter”; Wednes-| day evening’s bill will include three | one-act plays; Thursday evening, | Isa Kramer, lyric singer, and a per: formance of Rolland’s “Wolves.” On Friday evening, twice on Saturday SHOVEL WORKERS STRIKE WYOMING, Pa. (By Mail).— Shovel makers of the Wyoming Shovel Co., 150 in number, have struck against poor conditions, movement enti-imnerialistic and |that it is necessary to find new | anti-militaristic. 14. Assert the |Methods of regaining influence. The princinle that lahor must be in- |Masses have “gone Left,” and only ternational in its spirit and a . |2 “Left” mask will enable this to ities. 15. Develon a labor party |be done, Woll and Co., by their open based on moss organization of ine |Teection, stupidly hinder this. task. dustrial workers, 18, Sapport a | Even more disturbing to the bro: workers edueation move- “progre®ives” is the criticism ment hased on progressive con- the liberal bourgeoisie, who cepts.” sharply critical of such stuyi Here in each point is an echo of W exposes the bureaucracy, and the program of revolutionary union- accelerates tl lism, reduced to terms as abstract masses toward as possible. but still recognizable, It) Thus Oneal spenks of jis “near-Left.” and it is a program|in ‘The Ch Century’ which toucl every field of working- Was especially bitter, so bitter tha*| lclass activity. In short, we have We do not care to quote it.” And e “Left wing. Automobiles an ° he speaks of the 1 of thi ialist of T.U.E.L. in Labor Unive oe |prehension the words of ‘that able advocate of trade union philozonhy,” Professor Selig Perlman, a Norman Thomas quotes with an- d New Form “The socialists ceased altogether to’, movement of j \the masses. But “we were grieved, lene compaiy, :thavceiwe ain tases | . m} , they mi - social insurance. &. Encourae co- |S@ys Mr. Oneal, when these services | pany y overative enterprises. 9. Em- |Were rewarded by a kick in the face phasize labor’s goal as a social or- |fom Woll, Green and €o., who de-| der controlled by workers. 10, /Rounced Brookwood College andj Work out effective methods of col- |Prof. Dewey in the New Orleans lective bargaining and of union (Convention. “We talked to trade control, without sacrificine the |Unionists who were gloomy. It| union’s indenendence. 11, Strug- |Seemed that reorganization of unions | gle for the five-day week, hieher |it_New York would be hampered.” | wages and better conditions. 12, | In short, Oneal testifies that the Advocate recoenition of » Soviet’ }m2sses of the workers have lost all} Russia by the United States. 18, /eonfidence.in the A. F.of L, bureau-| Work to make the American labor |¢Tats and their socialist agents, and cess, as the vice-president said that | his hands were tied in the matter | and he could do nothing. ‘ The foreman gave the men. their discharge slips. On the slip given to the spokesman was written, “DO NOT REHIRE.” The spokesman of- fered protest to this, citing his ree- ord of eight years of service and stating that he did not think it fair have not been able to re: yet. At this time, the comr tried to do away with extra pay for over- time, but did not succeed. Since then the company’s straw-boss in the covering department has tried to do away with extra pay for over- | time several times. We work five days a week hours. In the wing dep: sent qvite a few Mondey ordered man, as he had been chosen by the bs work. Saturday at men to represent them. In the aft- Thee rare pre of ernoon the men were represented ok Relate ee by two others, and at three o'clock in the afternoon the men left the yard with all their money. Another one of the men had been in the Joy of the company for straps at joints. The New York office of the mont has asked what is tying up|, the job, The clause in agreement— forfeit money to be paid if not con- structed on time is conveniently over- come by the counter clause (unle: prevented by labor trouble). } Some remarks made by chairman | of company union: “The foreman is | partly to blame, because he hasn’t jthrough country week, or 57 hours, Outbre Vance vs. The e thous: latter, poorly armed followers, peons, is mai roads, Cedenos aims to reach the Pa- | lenque ranch, belonging to Gomez, | cn which Gomez has imprisoned at all The Undying Example of Proletarian Heroism! s one forget how unreal it is. | is a worthy tribute to the play- | Thet | wrights. | | Edward G. Robinson, one of the |authors of the play, portrays the | Actual! |vert of the kibitzer. Whenever he appears on the stage the audience | snows that they are going to be | 4, and they are never disap- ted. The su WHICH pporting east is excellent s Jacoh Katzman, Alexi- Jeanne Greene and Eu- THE SENSATIONAL POLAR DRAMA Now Playing! Authentic! SHOOK THE WORLD ! A Sovkino Production—An Amkino Release 'E OFFICIAL MOTION P RE OF THE SOVIE’ UXPEDITION WHICH SAVED THE NOBILE CREW — and on the same program — “A DAY WITH TOLSTOY” AN ACTUAL FILM RECORD OF THE GREAT RUSSIAN ilmguildcinema 52 W. EIGHTH ST. (bet. 5th & 6th Aves.) Continuous Performances. Popular Prices. Daily (incl. Sat. & Sun.) from 12 to 12. SPECIAL 12 to 2 p. m...35¢ ie Direction “The autemobile industry has pre-| policy, the T U. E. L. organization- sented an idyllic picture for the/ally remains as vague, as uncrystal- capitalists. Tremendous profits, ‘con-| lized, as indefinite, as it was in the tented’ workers, no labor unions or old days when it was purely a pro- strikes, absolute autocracy by the | paganda organization, employers, an open shop paradise.! “Such a situation is intolerable. What more could the employers ask! It calls for the most drastic and re- on this earth? All over the world | Jentless overhauling, review, and re- they boasted that in the magic/formulation of the organizational formula of mass production and|tasks of the T. U. E. L. in prepara- thigh’ wages they had found the|tion for the coming National Con- solution of the labor problem. Not! ference of our organization.” Marx but Ford, they said, pointed} He proposes a change of name, to jeriticize the union leaders and jeagerly participated in any and|the proper dignity and command to jevery tentative political grouping,|court the respect of the men and provided their sworn enemies, the allows them to develop an attitude Communists, were not permitted to|of independence. This has become take part.” a ja habit with the men.” Thomas is worried. “No zeal on’ Employment man said: “It would the political field,” he says, “can have been better if they had been wipe out of men’s minds the impre+-| ‘ized two weeks ago, when they re- sion we shall have made by our ac- | fused to work overtime.” ceptance in the unions of the leader- iship of men who openly flout the jideals we have professed”... “When socielists in those unions! Beleian Cuarrymen the way of progress for the workers. And the social democrats of the| world, at heart agents of the capi- talists, re-echoed their slogans and helped to squeeze the workers into the speed-up programs of the em- ployers,” says Wm. Z. Foster, na- tional secretary of the Trade Union Educational League, in the February issue of the League’s official organ, the illustrated, monthly magazine. Labor Unity. “But now the whole situation changes,” says Foster. “Trouble is brewing in the automobile industry.” Part of the trouble comes from the steady reductions in the num- ber of jobs, thru rationalization and flooding of the market. Part of it is the battle between auto manu-| facturers, Foster explains: “The workers need organization. The beginning is made, with the con- ference of delegates from 35 organi zations, representing 15,000 work- ers, held in Detroit last month under a auspices of the Auto Workers’ inion.” “The organization of the auto workers is the task of the Left wing,” says Foster. “It can be ac- ‘complished only in the face of the ost powerful opposition of the ployers and the government, and those agents of American imperi- m, the A. F. of L, leaders.” Earl Browder writes of the need- organization of the T. U. E. L. says: Im anita of itn plear and dofinita “Trade Union Unity League,” dues more departmentalization, more at- tention to Negro workers, more em- |phasis on the international aspects, |that the T. U. U. L. appear in the |organization of new unions in its own name, and that “the new unions shall be known to the masses, from their inception, as sections of the broad national movement (the T. U. U. L.) which is in process of becom- ing a new national trade union cen- ter, and which is itself in turn a section of the international class trade union movement (the R. I. L. U.).” Other articles in the February is- sue are: Soviet Unions Guard Workers Health, by Albert Coyle; The Anthracite, by Pat Toohey; Latin-American Workers Unite, by Harrison George; Mella, Cuban Communist, Murdered; Left Needle Workers’ Union Prepares for Strug- gle, by H. Koretz; The U, S. Pre- pares for War, by George Pershing; John J. Walker—Labor Faker, by Wm. Z. Foster; The Machinists’ Uniogs Urge Struggle; W. N. Doak, Election, by Wm. Simons; Soviet Capitalist Agent, by Sidney Bloom- field; T. U. E. L. Greets Mexican Workers; Smash the Terror of the Jugo-Slavian Military Clique, and Editorials. The magazine is beautifully illus- trated with pictures showing indus- aon paying, centralization of finances,, trial scenes and militant labor lead- € openly or silently supported almost anyone who would damn Communists loudly enough they played into the hands of Communists. Indeed, we are compelled now to face the sorry fact that the nominal support of jsome so-called socialist unionists hrs hurt the party more than helped it |because of the tactics they have em- |“Our desire to cooperate as far as possible has gone too far. We have jlost, not gained, influence in the A. F, of L. and among the unorganized workers . . . I have found a kind of scorn of us as a result of our sup- posed complacence in accepting Woll’s leadership.” Is comment necessary upon these quotations? Is it not clear that we are dealing here, not with the slight- est change in the policy of these “progressives” and “socialists,” but merely with the development of new tactics, forced upon them by the fact that that the workers ue any longer to believe in them and fol- low them? es The next installment of this ar- |tiole to be published tomorrow, will diecuss the background of the “pro- gressives,” their attitude and ac- tions toward the new Left wing unions, and in the recent strikes led by the Left wing and Communists. Socjaliam {a but the holy which the priest conse the henrtburnings of th —Karl Marg (Communi Christian water \ployed in their own organizations.” |the entire 19 months. All workers |will be taken back. © ating it bell Win 19-Month Strike | BRUSSELS, Belgium (By Mail). -—After a strike of 19 months, the quarrymen of the Ourthe and Am- bleve Vaileys has won an increase of 2 per cent. The strike was con- ducted with great militancy and vicket lines were maintained during} ANoy uw T$ d1eM UoW 943 JO sUII0} The proletart movement the nelf-con «, independent movement of the immense major- | Ao i Marx (Commaniat Mani- lento). To All Labor and Fraternal Organizations, Trades hard Jabor several. hundred rebel- {Hous students. These prisoners were jforeed to build the road by Gomez from Maracay to his ranch, Ce- denos hopes the students will join him ifhe can take the ranch-prison. The traveler reports that the Ce- |deno revolt is financed by “Colom- ‘bien business houses interested in ithe overthrow” of the Gomez re- lime, though these “Colombian” business houses may turn out to be British oil interests who are dis- [pleased at the most valuable conces- siens being given to American com- | panies. Gomez, by conscription, has now 15,000 soldiers, Gas Mantle Plant Lays Off Over 100 Workers. GLOUCESTER, N. J. (By Mail). -- Over 100 workers of the Welsbach Gas Mentle Co. were laid off re- cently, A number of the workers laid off had been working in the Welsback plant for 20 years or more, The, Welsback Co. has laid off hundreds in the past year or 80° Workers Party Sections and Affiliated Organizations! ; SCHEDULE A PERFORMANCE AT ONCE OF— Airways, Inc. JOHN DOS PASSCS PLAY OF A GREAT MILL STRIKE Opened Feb. 20 at the Grove St. Theatre Make $240 for the Daily Worker and the Needle Strikers, Call Paxton or Napoli at WATKINS C588 for Arranzements, ur Amterica—nam 'C. Johm Dos Passos attaekn boldly the ely, the cla workers awakening to class major problem nin An, the play consclonaness.” ——MIKE GOLD. an war, New Playwrights Theatre, 133 W. 14th St., New York City | SYMON GOULD Best Film Show . In Town Renna r>S Sts SPRING CARNIVAL NEXT FRIDAY March First at Webster Hall, 119 E. 11 St. ————— Sensational Attraction! THE SAVOY WILD CATS THE PRIDE OF LENOX AY. GEORGE GANOWAY and BERTHA VANDERBILT in a dance selection “Scrambled Feet” and GEORGE SNOWDEN and PAULINE MORSE in their interpretation of the HARLEM STOMP VERNON ANDRADE Renaissance Orchestra Dancing till 3 a. m. GET YOUR TICKETS EARLY In advance $1.50) at the door 50 Union. Sq. (phone orders ceptedz-Alg. ‘Theatre Guild Productions EUGENE O'NEILL'S DY NAMO MARTIN BECK THEA. 45th W. of 8th Axe. Eva. 8:40 Mats, Thurs. & Sat, 2:40 SIl-VARA’S COMEDY CAPRICE GUILD Thea. Ws bzna st GUI Dves, 8:50 Mats., Wed., Thurs,, Sat., 2:40 Wings Over Europe By Robert Nichols and Maurice Browne ALVIN THEATRE bend St, W. of Brondway, Hives. 8:50; Mats., Wed.& Sat. EUGENE O'NEILL'S Strange Interlude John GOLD. ‘Thea., 58th EN; of B'way EVENINGS ONLY AT 5:30 ers ace we . FOR WEEK DAYS: —PHONE: SPRING 5095 Kelth-Albee CAME 42nd Street and Brondway WHO MURDERED THE HUSBAND? in the AMAZING SENSATIONAL PHOTOPLAY “Tht MURDER in BERLIN” American Premiere—Direct from its long run in Berlin 2 to 6 p. m...50¢ NOW yf ARTHUR HOPKINS —¢ 7 presents OLIDA Comedy Hit by PHILIP BARRY PLYMOUTH Thea. W. 45 St. Ev, 8.50 Mats. Thurs, & Sat, 2.! Chanin’s MAJESTIC Theatre 44th St. Wert of Eyes. 8:30; "Mates Weds & Suey The Grentest and. Funniest Re Pleasure Bound! {IVIC REPERTORY pes 50c; $1.00; $1.60, Mats, Wed.&Sat.,2.30 Tonight, “Katerina.” Tues. Eve, “Peter Pan,” No sooner is the exploitation of the Inborer by the manufacturer, Marx (‘@simunist Manifesto). EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director bad