The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 4, 1929, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

» Page Two == MISERABLY Worker Correspondent.) 2Y¥ CITY, N. J. (Ry Mail) here are about 600 workers in the two plants of the American Can Go, in Jersey City. Their conditions are unbearable. In Ave. pl the plant on Communipaw there are 300. or em- ed. The other plant is on Day and this plant employs about HYDE FOR FAKE BANKERS WANT Proposes Federal Board of Bankers so LO the same nu of workers as the Commu plant. This plant moved from Brooklyn about the first of the year. W S are very low in the American Can Co, plants. are so low that the chuuffe th any went on strike starvation rates paid any over two weeks | ago. W WAGES IN AMERICAN Although the company paid them only $39 a week, they had to work very long hours. They would he sent on long routes and before they got back and finished the day's work they would have worked long past 8 hours. The wages they are striking for is the union scale of $42 a week. And they demand $1 an hoxr for DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1929 | overtime. Labo; at the American Can get the starvation wage of 40 cents an hour. They work an 8%-hovr day, from 7:45 a. m, to 5 p.m. The company shows how “generous” it is by giving a half kour for luneh. | Among their work, which | heavy, is packing, love is ig, ete. | Porters also get 40 cents an hour, There are many young girls working for the Americen Can Co. | in both plants. There are about 100 in the Day St. plant and nea that many on Communi- paw Aye. They get $12 and $13 a week, for very dangerous work, | eperating punch presses. Many | accidents occur, because the com- CAN COMPANY; CHAUFFEURS STRIKE | pany does not provide the proper safegua Recently thr the rotten y co; 23 any longer. The help the company and the work very This will result in specding se ns un and making us ‘FOR AN INCREASE | had their fingers cut off w seabs, for there are about 20 cops | work twice as hard. work, around ‘h plant and six autos What should we do to get de- cents an of detectives in the garages. cent wages and conditions? We | 80 to 85 Conditions are rotten here, and | are all unorganized; that is why | they will soon be worse unless we | the bosses can put things over on The chauffeurs went out on | workers do something to protect | us. We must organize into a strike two weeks ago Menday, in | curselves. The company has fighting union, led by honest | aselid body, They could net stand threatened to put us on piece- | leaders. TIN CAN SLAVE, ubsti- alleged finan- hi h the try have smashed. that the new federal sated should have to work out all duties would finance led farm tives. “Our farm co-operati in need of capital with w acquire furthe: pand their activities.” one of the most smen who has tary of iculture, that th ever been secre- does not state ‘ch to /all working cl facilities and to ex- the purpose of laying plans for the Hyde, who sending of help of all kinds to these tionary busi- | Struggling workers. It will be held on Ashland Auditorium, Van Buren. The W. I. R. ask hows part of the crowd which ga After Explosion thered after ex- Kinloch mine in which miners lost their The ed to hide its guilt in neglecting mea s for safety of 8 by a claim that “anarchist bombs” were responsible for Destihite Miners Receive Clothing, Shoes trom WIR CHICAGO, IIL, April . I, R. is calling a conference of tions for Sun 21, 2 Ashlan at and se that his hains of The following ‘ased | ceived from m Southern Illinc si y that he appreciation of hing sent them was not spe: by the Cl zo office of the Work- ay Rock Crusher Combine Controls California Prices ertusher e3 in Calif aation.” The m interests in this state have eeeeded in turning past “investi- t2) ” into far S2-NEW DIESEJ. ENGINE. HOBOKEN, N. J., April 3 (U.P). el engine may revolutionize railroading, was brought back from Copenhagen, Denmark, toda ers Inter Lincoln Street. the following : of A. have not made a i © Hoping you will keep my name on ional Relief, 20 South} Clothing Badly Needed. From Pittsburgh, Kansas, comes a Received shipment ing and shoes O K with than’ I am giving them out to all who call for them and there will be a great many relief soon, as the mines are ¢ and others will follow next month. The men who have been working this winter under the non-uni open shop scale of the U. M ra your list, will cl with best wishes for success of New Miners’ Union and W. I. R.” From Harrisburg, Illinois, home by H. C. Hallings,| of Wasson, operator of one of the ntative of Danish) worst of the Southern Illinois coal motor builders, who arrived aboard| mines, come the following two let- STs cain =a ON? EE RR ge om the Scandinavian-American _ liner | te United States. Child Sends Fighting Letter. The new engine, which is from “Dear Comrade: We had a let- 16 to 15 per cent lighter than the ter from the secretary, saying usual di notor, is now being tried that she was sending bundle: ives in Den- so far has been -fifth as expensive present steam loco- ral loco: nark, he a found to 4 Steel Workers Are Hurt in Slag Blast PITTSBURGH, Pa., (By Mail).— Four workers were injured severely in the Southside plant of the Jones and Laughlin Steel Co., when a pot of slag, being dumped in. the Mcn- ongahela River, exploded. The shock - of the blast was felt thruout the Southside and Oakland districts. Imperialism is at the same time the most prostitute and the ultimate ate power which nas- ans Society had com- borate ax a means of menced to its. own emancipation from feudal-_ ism, and which full-grown bourgeois society had finally transformed into! n menns for the enslavement of labor by capital.—Marx. ‘him, We received them. Four families shared with these things to the best of dad and mother’s acknowl- edgement. Dad tries to do the square thing; he has that name all through the country. Dear comrade, I wish you would send us some clothes for women and g I myself need stockings, dresses, or bloomers, or anything that can be cut for children.” “Dear comrade, I am 11 and a sister 9, brother 7, one 5 and one 3. See if you can find them something. I am going to send you a picture of the man’s home that owns the mines and his son | later on. I wil Isend you a pic- ture of one of the shacks that he rents to his men that work for | He charges $10, $12, $14, | and $20 work or play. “Oh, gee, I wish I was big enough and old enough to be in the fight. I talk to other boys and girls about it. I heard dad | | { “LABOR AND SILK” OUT Describes Lives of Silk, Rayon Workers. “While the silk and rayon indus- try was reporting its success in millions and billions of dollars, silk workers were striking for ean in- crease in pay of one cent per yard woven,” writes Grace Hutchins, the author of “Labor and Silk,” pub- lished today by International Pub- The recent strike of aisles rayon workers, who wor a meager received before, to $9 to $11 a week now, makes the arpearance of this | in the Labor end Industry Series | announced by International Publish- | ers. These books, written espe- cially for worker readers, are pre- pared by the Labor Research Asso- ciation: « Writ from the workers’ view- point, this book describes the silk industry, the capitalists and corpora- itions that profit from it and the vowing plants. capital of America, and the bitter * that have been fought “in ik.” Tt tells of the shift the daughters of coal miners are Wi towhs. jinternational cartels that control it. lishers, 581 Fourth Ave., New York. |and the relation of this industry to * . war preparations, The vast profits |P?oved working conditions. of th ve itali: ‘ Megs hands von rilvteo a mad ber reclaiming and ebonite dust increase from $8 to 10, which they |against the exploitation of low manufacture. workers who make the artificial sil workers who toil in weaving and |tr It gives the full| the various workers ound of Paterson, the silk for at $2, Labor “Jiahes ead Auiomob Pennsylvania, ert kes-Barre and a hundred other The hook tells of the rayon in-| dustry, one of the industrial mar-| vels of the 2 1 rubber workers of the John Fergu- aii Pee ae aoe |son and Sons, Ltd. factory here, are lon strike, demanding wages and it tell mother that there was going to be hard times for people around here. We are behind with our rent 27. Makes me feel good to have someone to help us when we need it. My poor dad lost his job about 8 months ago just be- cause he asked for justice for his family. Well, I guess I will write you more next time if you like my letters.” Another letter reads: “Esteemed comrades: acknowledge receipt of clothing sent to my address. Four sacks in all came by express prepaid. This will Eight families were present at division in my home. All were | pleased. Workers Militant. “We happen to be endowed with enough brains to understand we are slaves, simone-pure slaves, and will be such, i. e., a bunch of starving, pecked, bruised, and bleeding wretches, eeking out a bare existence, until the masses can be aroused to action. And by the eternal god, I am glad to notify the cockeyed world, I will go all the way, anytime, any- where, and do anything to stir up and get in action the masses to the end that this hellish sys- tem may be changed, that 98 per cent of crime, suffering, and pre- mature deaths may be abolished and that justice may cover the earth, like the waters cover the sea. “No need to say, we have a certain amount of pride and self- respect. But god, O, god, can we help ourselves, can we make the plutes give us work, can we slaves force down the vrices in the commodities of life? Could you get, would you expect to get. justice if you brought the devil to trial in his own court, hell? “But we understand the situa- tion and after the U. M. W. is established we aim to scrap for a labor party, a workingman’s gov- ernment, and the complete eman- cipation of the toiling, sweating, bleeding masses. Yes, we will be fighting for better things, better conditions, when Lewis, Fishwick, and their whole damn tribe are in hell. Please stand by. Children’s Clothing Needed “Pp. S. Children’s shoes are needed. Little boys’ clothing and men’s pants, coats, and shoes. The rule holds true with us min- ers, the women are less needy than the men and children. “Our appreciation and undying loyalty are agsolutely unexpress- able and when and where oppor- tunity offers, this group will not be found wanting. Hell, words are idle and I have started out raving again. But please remem- ber these rantings are coming from the heart’s-core of a red- | blooded, he-man, not a damned image.” \Unorganized British exploited in the plants of Allentown, ‘Rubber Strikers Aim ‘for Higher Wage Scale LONDON (By Mail).—About 150 The strikers were engaged on rub- Th> men received 10 Many books have been written |Pense an hour and women only 23 book especially timely and signifi- about silk production, but this js Shillings a week—about 20 cents an cant, It is one of the first books |the first book written in any lan- hour for men, and $5.75 a week for guage that explains the situation’ Women. : and demands of silk workers who | Workers are compelled to work with- jhave struggled for better conditions °Ut a break for 8 hours straight. (ever since the industry began in the | United States, 90 years ago. toric strikes, dramatizing this strug- gle, are described in a spirited chap- ter. His- A special workers’ edition of “Ta- $1. This book is aad Industry Dura. Unorganized, the rubber \Co. Neglect Kills California Miner DOWNEYVILLE, Calif. (By bor and Silk” can be secured direct | Mail).—Steve Martin, a miner, was ‘om International Publishers, or at killed, and another miner, John O'- ’ hook stores.| Donnell, severely injured, when a The cioth ediiion is priced | skip in the shaft of the Brush Creek m the same Mino near here, jumped the track, ios with |hurtling down the: sheft 60 feet. The ‘~ Rob-|tzack was kept in dis charge. ers repair, min Louisiana House Beats Move to Block Action BATON ROUGE, La. April 3 (UP).—Having disposed of a con-| certed legal attempt to prevent or delay impeachment proceedings against Governor Huey P. Long, leaders of the majority insurgent group in the Louisiana house of rep- resentatives proceeded to organize today for a speedy hearing of 19 charges of misconduct pending against him. By a vote of 64 to 23, the house last night upheld its action in seek- ing impeachment of Long after after receiving an opinion from Attorney General Percy Saint which declared) ; the proceedings were legal. | Administration supporters had! protested the entire procedure on the ground that it did not conform h a statute of 1855 which, they said, required that a private citizen vender an affidavit of impeachment} before such action against a high | official could be taken. ANTLWAR MEET HERE SATURDAY. Workers Will Expose, ‘ JTmperialist Plans | (Continued from Page One) Nicaragua, and Mexico, the cam- paign against the Soviet Union, should open the eyes of all workers to what the war barons are prepar- ing. The murderous capitalist competi- tion rapidly ripening into armed conflict, in which American imper- ialism tries to maintain its bloody | leadership, finds its expression in a reign of union smashing, speed-up, wage cuts and more intensive ex- ploitation in the United States. In these attacks upon the workers, American imperialism has the ac- tive aid of the reactionary trade union bureaucracy, the A. F. of L. land the socialists. In New York| thousands of workers have already ; SOVERNOR LONG ORY LAW REPEAL Socialists Concentrate on Beer Issue on the referendum vote on the pro- (Labor Research Association) -—SPEEDHEARING OF BIG MAJORITY IN. \Lador Spy Tells Bosses of MPEACHMENT OF WISCONSIN FOR. Growing Communist Power | “Each member of the nucleus, in| A striking tribute to the growing | turn, gathers around himself in the power of Communism in the United | factory a little group of non-mem- | States is paid by a labor spy writing | bers whom he trains to follow him |for the bitterly anti-union employ-|in thought and deed. Thus the ef-| ers of the National Founders’ Assn, and the National Metal Trades|munists in any plant is magnified .| fective striking force of the Con | Assn. The leading article in their|to several times the actual party| organ The Shop Review, for March MILWAUKEE, April 3.—Returns is on “Communist Propaganda—the It is written| the dye Foreman’s Problem. ,| membership.” As the shop nucleus “contains only | -the-wool, blown-in-the- TORALLY PUPILS IN MILITARIST ESSAY CONTEST Aviation Society Gives Big Prizes As part of the campaign to bring |the youth into line behind the war hibition issue show an overwhelm-| by Harold Lord Varney, formerly a/ bottle, twice-tried and trusted Reds; | prohibition and keep them from en- |gaging in struggles against the cap- ing victory for the “wets.” In 1,800|leader of the I. W. W., and editor of the 2,771 precincts of the state|of an I. W. W. paper, and now a 211,126 votes were cast in favor of |spy and informer for the bosses. repealing the prohibition laws, to 125,742 opposed. For the preposal | what he has learned, partly from the to legalize beer the vote was 198,-| Daily Worker and other Communist u42 to 116,342. Sie < | imagination, about “The Red Men- Shpas ds: Avoid Real Issues. | ace.” He finds the spread of Com- The proposal to abolish the pro-|munism so alarming that he urges ee iy sie ak by the £0-/ the bosses to detect and fight it in cialists, who based their program its early stages at their plants. The on the heer issue, avoiding all econ-| foreman, he concludes, is the tool omic issues in this way. State | to be used in weeding out the Com- Senator Thomas Duncan, Milwaukee | munists; he “is the first line of de- socialist, who introduced the bill |fense in industry against the new for the referendum, asked the vot-| Communist drive.” ers to “vote as you drink.” He Tribute to Party Success. claimed that the wet majority would| Discovering that the shop nucleus be greater than 100,000. is “the organizing core or axis of Decrease in Wet Vote. | the MH eben rata aS ie 9 | Pays his tril gan A ae ay Hans | shown in “the increased slanted and imi RSAEe ca ey fi activity of the party members, . . of the most active campaign car- | ing labor executives Sasa ian eee ried on by the’ socialists, who at- and uneasy poeny 2 pee oo tempted to focus the attention of | eeme-ecale industries: ode: % a + Varney continues: “According to he yoreers On Ube ABne aeatnet the last authentic report there are | 30,000 trained Communist agitators |now operating inside the industries jof this country. These are the shock r | troops. In addition to this inner LANSING, Mich., April 8.—Wet | circle there is an outer fringe of leaders in the Michigan legislature! several hundred thousand other today stated that they will introduce wage earners who compose the Com- a resolution for repeal of prohibition | munist following. The 30,000 are in this state. \divided into ‘nuclei’ which are scat- ‘tered strategically through the vital Cuban Statue ‘Liberty’ industrial plants of the country.” Arrives in Havana as ; Workers Linger in Jail Says Censors Cut Out ‘Revolutionary Scenes italists. * * HAVANA, Cuba, April 3—A/ % A fifty foot statue of Cuban liberty| from the Film, “Aelita” has arrived here from Spain. The} statue will adorn the grounds of the) The following letter, stating tha new $16,000,000 Capitol building “Aelita,” Soviet film, had been cen- which has been erected to house | sored and rendered ineffectual, was “Butcher” Machado, the president. | received by the Daily Worker: The statue is commented on deris-| ] think that your reviewer's opin- ively by Cuban workers, the prin-|jon about the Russian film, “Aelita,” cipal sufferers from the reign of js neither just nor competent. What taken up the capitalist challenge. The needle workers, after a success-| ful strike, have organized thousands | into a new militant union, pledges! to the struggle, and have rid them- selves once for all of the treacher-| ous leadership. | The prenarations and imperialist designs will be met by new power-| ful organizations of the working class, and April 6th, the Red Satur- |day, must be marked by the draw-} ing in of thousands of other work- lers into the struggle against the bosses—the organization of the| longshoremen and marine workers the traction slaves, the metal wor! ers, and the millions of unorganized workers, Workers of New York, come to the open-air demonstration at 110th | St. and 5th Ave. on Red Saturday. April 6th, at 4 p. m. Demonstrate against the imper- ialist war preparations, for the or-! | ganization of the unorganized work- ‘ers into powerful, industrial unions, for the freedom of all oppressed peoples, for the defense of the Soviet Union, the workers’ father- ‘land; against the S. P., the paci- \fists ,and the reactionary labor of- \ficials, for a Workers’ and Farm- |ers’ Government and the overthrow | of American imperialism. | District Executive Committee, New York District. Communist Party of U. S. A. Soviet Theatre World, Savs Da “I can say without hesitation that the Soviet drama is the most inter- esting, vital and alive of any in the world.” Tt was H, W. L. Dana speaking, interviewed at the Daily Worker office after two years abroad. Twelve months of this time he had spent in Moscow, the capital of the Soviet Union, studying the great | renaissance that had rebuilt the Russian drama from its old czarist decadence to its new revolutionary fire and vitality, A study of the contemporary theatre in the prin- cipal capitals of Europe had con- vineed him of the superiority of the Soviet drama. “The Bolshoi and Maly Theatres, together with that of Meyerhcld and the new Left theatres, are the most impressive, I think, of all. Un- afraid, as American and continental theatres are, to ruin box office re- ceipts, they throw themselves whole- heartedly into genuine experimenta- tion. Their methods are evolving a newg: nd more vivid theatre; their stag? ure plastic, lending them- ats has instituted in the country. \this picture can be very truthfully terror which the dictator Machado! was said in your review concerning | it constity':s a sort of pretorian| guard of professi>za! revolutionists. | | Only the elite of Communism are| these nuclei.” | “But below the nucleus. . .is the |thecugh all industries, who follow | Communist leas hip, who read Communist li::rature, who subscribe to Comzunist fur vyho swell the | crowds at Communist demonstra- tions, and who will inevitably be found in the Co-aunict ranks in any crisis of political or irdustrial! ecatroversy, There. are prebably | half a million such workers in Amer- | ica today.” | Role of Foreman. | The shop foreman has a special | |role in detecting and reporting on) | the workers’ discontent, Varney’s | jarticle concludes. “The natural! | fault-finding instinct of the workers | is well-known to labor executives.” | But the foreman must be able to distinguish between this instinct |and “the Communist ‘type’ so that he can weed out the nucleus of | trouble-makers from the body of his loyal employes.” The foreman is the industrial iteys| man, according to Varney. “As the Communists succeed more and more | in their program of planting ‘nuclei,’ | the need of such preparedness on the part of our industrial keymen| will become impelling. The foreman is the first line of defense. . .and America depends upon him to hold |his sector.” ‘College Girls, ‘Curious’ ‘About Poor, Ill After ‘Tour Thru East Side Ninety college girls, fashionably | clad and rouged, last night boarded Pullman cars, slouched languidly into their comfortable chairs and returned to the swell educational | institutions where they were being | |trained “for Life.” The girls had | just completed three days of altru-; listie sight-seeing on the East Side, | ‘plans of United States imperialism, the American Society for Promotion of Aviation announces cash prizes Varney xeports to his masters) admitted to the party and hence to)aggregating $500 to high school boys and girls throughout the United States for essays on “How May |papers and paztly from his own) great army of workers, scattered! America Most Quickly and Effi- ciently Promote Aviation in Every Community?” To give this militaristic contest the proper romantic touch, it is an- nounced that the prizes are being conated by Forrest E. James, father of Richard E. James, the 17-year- old Flushing high school boy who recently flew from San Francisco to New York. First prize in the contest will be $100, with two second prtizes of $50 each, ten prizes of $10 and 40 prizes of $5. Teachers in the high schools throughout the country will be mobilized behind the contest, pro- viding patriotic dope in plentiful quantities. The judges will be a committee of aviators who took part in the last world war. Chilean Fascists Arrive in Panama on World Cruise COLON, Panama Canal Zone, April 3.—A group of financiers, who will represent the Chilean ‘fascist government at the American and European conferences on nitrate in the United States, has arrived here. The Chilean financial mission will tour the United States and Europe. Pablo Ramirez, minister of finance, who heads the commission, said that his main purpose in rela- tion to the nitrate situation is to re- duce “distribution costs in’ view of the increase in world consumption.” He told how in February, 1927, it had been possible to produce only 75,000 tons a month. In February of 1929, 280,000 tons were produced. Nitratet is essential to the mod- ern warmakers who are buying it in tremendous quantities. It is at the hottom of the dispute between oe Peru for the nitrate-bear- WwW They recall that it was the Cu- ban government of “liberty” which struck down Julio Mella recently in the streets of Mexico City, acting then as always for American in- terests. They also recall the recent terror drive which threw a num- ber of working class leaders and several opposition bourgeois lead- ers into Cuban jails from which they have never emerged. |British Unemployment Increase — But Gov’t Figures Underestimate LONDON (By Mail). — The num- ber of unemployed workers regis- tered at the labor exchanges last week was 1,268,800—198,500 more than a year ago. The figures include only those reg- istered by the exchanges, but the actual numbers are much greater, for those over 65 have been stricken off the rolls by the government. Others are automatically forced off the registers when their unemploy- ment “benefit” cards expire. n decny and finally f of modern in- jt is ite special p-oduct—Iarl Marx Man.festo). Most Vital in na in Interview selves more easily to difficult and novel interpretations.” ana praised highly the work of the’ Workers’ Dramatic Clubs, the Blue Blouses, for the inimitable gusto with which they have thrown | themselves into their work. “Through their efforts,” Dana said, “the Soviet drama is becoming accessible to workers and peasants in places never visited by the theatre before. Rural districts are being covered by these Blue Blouses, and the theatre is playing a significant part iv the education of the peasants.” In his lecture at the Workers School, 26 Union Saute, tomorrow evening at 8 o’clock, Dana will take up the first of the four topics which make up his series, “The Soviet Theatre.” In it he will describe his impressions, formed by careful study, of the new revolutionary dra- matic art. s In subsequent lectures, on Friday evenings, at the Workers School, he will take up, in the order named, “The Russian Revolution Drama- tized” and “The World Revolution applied to those fragments which have been shown to us at the Film |Guild Cinema. But the whole is greater than any of its parts. We cannot pass any judgment which is based on disconnected scenes and distorted titles. The mutilation of this film can be accredited to censor- | ship—both Russian and American. In this process the picture has been shorn of its best parts. It was produced in Soviet Russia in 1921, in time of famine and civil war. Therefore when Aelita looked down upon the earth and saw Mos- jcow, she saw the detailed scenes of war and hunger horrors. This ac- jcounts for the omission of one of the best features of the picture— ‘censorship probably on the part of |the Soviet Government. The Soviet government does not want to create |a falsely unfavorable impressicn in the foreign countries. Since the date of the production is not men- tioned, these scenes may lead to a complete misunderstanding of Rus- sia’s living conditions of today and will give the enemies of the Soviet |Union a chance to jump, with joy at the further proofs of its “lack of ability” to manage its affairs. For some reason the roles of the characters have been also changed. The character who is introduced °> as a stowaway is in reality a Soviet militia man, The paper that he dis- |plays so frequently is not his pass- |port, as we are given to understand, but a warrant of arrest of the \seientist who leaves the earth con- trary to the wishes of the Soviet /government, Such a change robs \the film of any sense or coherence. The cutting out of the revolt of the robots is undoubtedly the work of the capitalist censorship. It leaves us without the main point of the picture for the same reason that has deprived us of some of the most revolutionary and impressive scenes in “Ten Days That Shook the World” or “Potemkin,” The picture las lost its body. What we can see is but a few of its feathers. And after all the Fire- bird was far more brilliant and beautiful than the feather which Ivan found. Comradely yours, Valentine V. Konin. STRIKING CLEANERS SOLID MINEAPOLIS, Minn. (By Mail). Many workers in the city are aid- ing the striking workers of the Kro- nick Dry Cleanin-; Co., who have been on strike for over a month. The plants here and in St, Paul are being picketed, wl where fancy clothes and expensive “ |complexions run many risks. Now ing sections around Tacna and it was all over and once more their: a minds could revert to the momen-| sarap eee y tous contemplation of college proms, | HURT IN AUTO MISHAP. J |sororities, petting parties and similar TAMAQUA, Pa., April 3 (U. P.) 2 | pursuits of the delicate daughters of Mrs. Helen Callie, 775 Third Ave. the “upper classes.” | Brooklyn, N. Y., is in a serious con- 5 The girls came Monday morning ‘ition at the Coaldale hospital to. | from Smith, Vassar, Mount Holyoke,| @@%% from injuries suffered wher | 4 Elmira, Wells, Wilson, Tufts and| 9" automobile in which she was rid- | © | Adelphi- Colleges. These are fash-| im& overturned. ; fi jionable female institutions of what! Two other persons in the car, res- Js is supposed to be higher learning. | idents of Summit Hill, were slightly ts The only working’ class girls that injured. a ever manage to get in are the cham- u | ber-maids. | z " n, | The girls spent three days of ex- eo ee ee i haustive study. They visisted the! || COOperative Association { | Fulton Fish Market and were sur- requires qualified men as 3 | prised to discover that fish gave off follows: u a smell rather different from the) fancy Parisian toilet waters that | they were accustomed to. They were | going to go to the Bovory, having heard so much about this romantic | there instead, But the girls would not be daunt- | ed. They insisted on visiting Riving- | ‘ton St. personally and glimpsing | | poverty in the raw. And of course they did not forget the charity so- | cieties. | Last night the 90 girls were on| theiz way back to the academic halls, They had all felt so sorry for the! ing impeachment of Long after few days. Many showed the effects of the terrible strain. Another SOVKINO Masterfil AN AMKINO RELEASE qFLAM { SCHEV, tho Russian POTEMKIN, revolutionist, 4THE VOLGAD) DIRECTED BY JURI TARITSCH who produced “CZAR IVAN THE TERRIBLE” A powerful realistic drama depicting the Re- volt of the Volga Peasants against the Oppres- sions of the Czaristic Regime under Catherine the Great... .. Enacted by a Cast of 5000 Introducing such famous characters as PUGAT- “Robin Hood,” GENERAL BULAT-BATYR, the great peasant film guildcinema 52 W. 8th St.” (Just West) . Daily, ine. Kdays . Saturday & Sunday Builders to build houses from cement blocks rough Carpenters, and finished. Every member must pay initi- ation fee of $25.00, and $750 for membership, and is re- quired to pay his own trans- portation charges to U. For further information and By-Laws send 25¢ in stamps. Soviet American Tractor Cooperative — Association 4959 MARTIN AVENUE DETROIT, MICH. Now Playing! Im! ES Onp> SPRING 5005 x 7 2-6 p. 50c; 2-6 p. m, | section where hundreds of men actu- Gasoline Engineer. ( ally on the verge of starvation can Electricians. be seen. But someone informed, 4 > * them that they could really learn || Traetor Mechanics. all about the Bowery at the Y, M, |} General Machine Repair- ; C. A. on E. Third St., so they went ers and Plasterers, iF

Other pages from this issue: