The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 11, 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 i ‘ERMANS ADMIT GENEVA FIASCO Joover Praises Gibson for Arms Illusions resemann, admitted ti steps mament are ‘oncerned, no’ plished. No Real Disarmament. “If we do not achieve disarma- nent in all essentials, elements on and and sea and in the air, any oretended ‘solution’ will be only a sham,” he said. “Yet it seems as if Geneva was heading for just such an outcome. There can be no real ng of disarmament if trained army reserves and war material are left out of consideration.” New Illusions. WASHINGTON, May 10.—Pres!- jent Hoover and Stimson, secretary of state, have publicly congratulated Ambassador Gibson, U. S. represen- tative, on his work at the Geneva arms conference, in an attempt to hide from the world the American responsibility for failing to adopt the various disarmament measures proposed by the Soviet Union. Stimson, speaking for Hoover, thanked Gibson for having “awak- ened new hopes,” though in whom they hope to awaken these illusions was not stated. Make every factory our fortress. Organize shop nuclei. Issue shop papers. Build the Communist Party. SCHEME HAWAII AIRMAIL, GRAFT Big Bankers Push Plan; Has War Importance WASHINGTON, May 10.—Wall Street bankers are pushing a plan to establish air mail service to Ha-| waii, with a big government sub- sidy as the plum. The cost of car- rying mail between San Francisco} and Hawaii will be increased 20 times if this graft goes trrough and at the same time militaty communi- cations will be strengthened greatly. Mention of this latter fact is care- fully avoided in the capitalist press. The Goodyear Zeppelin Corpreation | ha& submitted to Postmaster General | Brown its proposals for the new air! route, through retired Commander | Jerome C. Hunsaker, who is now technical adviser to the corporation and is using his former navy con- nections to get these lucrative con- tracts. They are willing to build one or two dirigibles, provided the govern- ment subsidizes them. The plan calls fora subsidy of $20 to $30/ per mile for each mile flown, and) would ificrease the cost from the présent $150,000 to $2,000,000 or $3,000,000. A congressional appro- priation would probably be neces- sary. Among Wall Street bankers who are interested in the plan are Leh- man Bros., the financial backer of the §200,000,000 Aviation Corpora- tion, the recently-formed holding | company which is promoting air- craft mergers. For a Four Weeks’ Holiday for Young Workers! | For a Six-Hour Day for Under- groand Work, in Dangerous Oceu- | pations, and for the Youth Under 18! PowerCompany’s Plans to Control Newspapers | Include Cities in South’ WASHINGTON, D. C., May 10.— Hall, and Lavarre, publishers, were revealed as southern agents of the International Power and Paper Com- pany in its campaign of financing four southern newspapers and to purchase nearly 20 others, in testi- mony before the Federal Trade Com- mission today. President Graustein of the power company gave Lavarre a free hand to pay for the newspapers which the power company agreed to finance, it was declared. The prices were covered by a sum of $870,000. “In- cidental” expenses were covered by) a modest $40,000. Thirteen papers had been ap-| proached, and although not all of} .them completed sales, the way was! paved for later approach. “Inter- _ national Paper and Power Com-; pany,” Lavarre said, has agreed to) back us to the limit in purchasing _ amy papers where we think we can _ make money. Telegrams revealed in evidence were cited as examples of the close relations existing between the var- jous papers and the power company. Yet Lavarre weakly denied that the) ‘company influenced the editorial of the papers under its finan- control. The same excuse was by Graustein, that the power was interested only in the 3 aspect of the relations with various news| and did not ek to control editorial policy. It admitted at the first hearing, , that a publicity agent for r company had written the editorial of a Bos; ‘ Japanese Students, Learning War Game, | | An explosion on this Japanese mine layer several nanai students learning how to lay mines in preparati r coming im- perialist war. Call ‘for | First Congress of Worker Correspondents (Continued from Page One) A powerful, organized army of worker correspondents, serving as the voice, the advahce guard of the workers in the fight against the speedup, the reduction of wages and lowering of conditions, will strike terror into the ranks of the bosses. Through such an orgaittized army of worker correspondents, hun- dreds of thousands more workers will be awakened into joining the fight against the capitalist system. | On June 1 and 2, at Cleveland, the history-making Trade Union Unity Conference for the establishment of a revolutionary trade union center will be held, under the lead of the Trade Union Educational League. Hundreds of thousands of workers will be represented at this con- ference, thru delegates they have elected from the workshops, mills, | mines and railroads. Preceding this epoch-making event for the whole American working class, thefe will occur another historie gathering in the First National Conference of Worker, Farmer, Soldier and Sailor Correspondents, in Cleveland on Friday, May 31. The purpose of this conference will be to draw up a program where- by the great power of the worker correspondents can be broadened and most effectively organized. Worker correspondents, show your power. Let every shop and factory choose a delegate to the Trade Union Unity Conference, who shall at the same tithe act as a delegate at the first National Correspondents’ Conference in Cleveland on May 31. i | | 1, 192 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MAY 1 Kile TYEL PROGRESS TILE BOSS SHUTS IN DISTRICT 3 Expect 54 Delegates to Cleveland Conference PHILADELPHIA, large D ehta the Philadelphi n Unity Confe 19, on the to revr riet , to of the e in the mittees in actual work done formation of shop many important indu: Besides the work done in Phila- phia proper, related in a previous ve to build the Com- nas also won over an following in other citie in the district, and with the Com- munist shop nuclei as leaders, shop eo commit have been organized. egro Longshoremen. The Longshoremen’s Union of , all the members of which Negro s. has already ed delegates to the Philadelphia from which the dele- will be sent to the National onvention in Cleveland, June 1. a elect: conference, In Cantden, it is expected that by | the time of the conference a shop committee wiil be functioning in an important talking machine company. emploving 2,500 workers, which will send its delegate, Ford, Baldwin, Shipyard. Due to the fact that a shop nucleus in the Ford plant in Chester is fune- tioning well and has already issued a shop bulletin, that plant is cer- tain to be represented. In addition, Chester will also be represented by a representative of the workers in Chester Sun Ship Yard and in the | Baldwin Locomotive Works. | | In addition there will be a dele-| meeting in large numbers, pate from a rubber factory in Tren- | ton, New Jersey, and ftom the Roeb- | ling, N. J., company town. | 54 Delegates, | Bill Murdock, Philadelphia organ- izer of the Trade Union Educational | League, states that 54 delegates ate expected to attend the Cleveland conference as representatives of 9 ‘GATES ON TALE. Workers Enthusiastic for Organization s of the American En- ng Company of Maurer, the . noon-day le Union Educa’ ucting at the yesterday t ers in the plan’ , refusing to allow| ; them to come out to the noon-day ineet turday the T. U. ribu- ted leaflets in front of the plant ling upon the workers to organ- ize and fight for the 8-hour day, time and a half for overtime, double time for Sunday and holidays, and for 25 per cent incre ih wages | Coolidge, Smith Get Both Calvin Coolidge and Al rendered the bosses by being mad Smith, at left, is shown sha nt of the Consolidated Insw hown with Darwin Kingsley, Co surance Rewards From Big Business for ser wrance com- Smith got rewar le directors in big in king hands with John F. Gilchrist, vance Co. Coolidge, at the right, | head of the New York Life In- LABORITES WANT MOONEY EXPECTS jex VESTRIS SAILED <. WITH FOUR LEAKS Continue to Whitewash Company Guilt LONDON, May 10.—The liner Véstris probably sprang four leaks - from the time she sailed from Ho- boken until she went down off the Virginia Capes last November, with a loss of 11 lives, Gustav Wohld, carpenter of the lost Lamport and Holt vessel, testified today at» the board of trade’s inquiry into the dis- aster. Thomas Scanlon, counsel for the ational Seamen’s Union, in cross- mining Wohld, suggested that she might have sprung four leaks, Wohld agreed, + Held under the jurisdiction of es for all workers. Monday afternoon Alcen and Gondar, the bo | “visited” the home of James Szep- esy, a worker, who has worked as }a kiln man helper for three and a FULL DEBT PAID | these interests striving mainly to | whitewash the guilt of the Lamport and Holt Company, owners of the vessel, and the British shippine board, which passed on the fitness TO BE OUT SOON |half motiths in the plant and gave him his money, firing him. The T, U. E. L. issued a leaflet Tuesday morning calling upon the |workers to fight for the reinstate- | ment of the fired worker and to con- its leader, Ramsay MacDonald, has | teen yee |vawest tinue fighting for the above de- mands. Also announcing its noon- day campaign. For Tuesday’s meet- ing the workers responded in large numbers. The bosses in addition to having two cops at the meeting brought down one Mr. Hatfield, the secretary of the local Industrial As- sociation (the bosses’ spy organiza- tion) to try and disrupt the meet- ing. ‘They failed in this. Wednesday again the workers responded to the , and after) the meeting coritinuted for about! five minutes. It became so hot for Mr. Aleen that he ordeted all the| workers away ftom the meeting and into the plant. | Wednesday the boss fired two more workers, G. Nikituk of the) | press room, and M. Bensinger a kiln| burner on the Bisquit kiln. Thurs- | Conferences should be called immediately by authorized cominittees Workers in vatious industries in the | gay the bosses again refused to al- of worker correspondents. This conferences should discuss the ac- companying agenda and elect delegates. | Send all communications and requests for information to the Worker Correspondence Editor of the Daily Worker, 26-28 Union Square, New York City. —COMMITTEE FOR THE ORGANIZATION OF THE FIRST NATIONAL WORKER CORRESPONDENTS’ | CONFERENCE IN THE UNITED STATES. | “i THE AGENDA FOR THE CONFERENCE. The agenda for the first National Worker Corresponde ence, to be held in Cleveland on Friday, May 31 is as follow 1—Report on the tasks of the worker, farmer, soldier and sailor correspondents in the present period in the United States. 2—Report on the Fourth World Congress of Worker Correspondents | and the international tasks of American worker correspondents, and their connections with the worker and peasant correspondents of the U.S. S. R., as well as in capitalist countries. 3—Organization Report. 4—Inter-racial problems in the sheps; conditions in the shops. 5—Shop papers, wall papers, ng newspapers. 6—The establishment of an official organ for worker correspondents. GIVE WIDE PUBLICITY TO THIS CONFERENCE. NOTE—All Communist, left wing trade unions and sympathetic publications are urged to publish the above call immediately and to make appropriate editorial comment, as well as to give space to all | other publicity regarding this conference. HOOVER RANKS UNION “KNIFES” SPLIT ON TAXES FRAMED STRIKER * ts’ Confer- | Group Interests Clash Teamsters’ Chief Will Philadelphia District. will represent steel and shipyard, 10 coal, 10 textile, 7 3 transport, 3 leather, 2 food, 1 build- ing trades and 4 general. Of these delegates, 5 will be Ne- gro workers, 8 women and 15 young workers, WITHORAW SUIT AGAINST UMWA Coal Co. Now United With Reactionaries FORT SMITH, Ark. May 10.— The peace pact of the defunct, re- actionary United Mine Workers of | America with the coal opetatives was consolidated in the Federal | OF these, 14° jow the workers to attend the noon- Churchill today |day ‘meeting by locking the doors. heedle trades,) Many workers were seen looking through the windows anxious to know if the T. U. E. L. speakers were there again. MacDonald De mands, Germany Be Bled DONCASTER, England, May 10. The British labor party, through taken an ever more dichard pdsition on the reparations question than | have the Tories. It insists on bleed- ing Getmany for full payment of war debts, and threatens to end the present p ‘super-generosity.” | Addressing a political meeting here today, MacDonald said: “The other day, in Patis, the pro- | posal was made that we again show | eur special good will on the matter of reparations and that more bur- dens be placed on our shoulders, “Tam sorry to say that the ar- vangements made heretofore regard- ing reparations have not yielded’ the good fruit expected, “This nation is not going to con- tinue its policy of super-génerosity, which has characterized it hitherto.” s * British Reject Young Plan. LONDON, May 10.—Winston | announced in the’! house of commons, after a session of the cabinet, that he rejected ab | solutely the reparations proposals of Young and Morgan or any other) scheme which would mean a dispro- Has Bought Civilian) Suit of Clothes SAN QUENTIN STATE PRISON, Calif., May 10.—Tom Mooney, thir- in prison after one of the | frame-ups on a murder | charge that ever was perpetrated, has bought a suit of clothes to lerve | the prison in, “Yes, I’m going home,” he reaf- firmed with a smile. “For thirteen years I have waited for the moment I know is near. Dur- | ing every waking hour of that time | when not assigned to prison duties | I have toiled to perfect the docu- ments which are now in the hands of Governor Young. “A three thousand word petition, | written by myself and bound here | lin the prison, has been presented to | him, | “For several years he has failed | io act. But every shred of evidence | |Against me has been proven framed | or perjured. Public sentiment has reached its highest pitch, and the in- | fluence behing the movement for my rardoh commands widespread re- spect. “If awakened _ public interest | doesn’t suddenly die out I fee! posi- tive that I shall walk the streets of San Francisco again before the close | The workers of the American En-/|pottionate sacrifice for Britain and cf 1929 a free man. | caustic Tiling Company are bitterly|her dominions, as contrasted with| “If public interest does die out it then, as before, actually the General exploited, girls get $15.00 a week the much more favorable terms the | will take thirteen more years.” for 9 hours a day, 5 1-2 days a| week; many of whom are working here already 4, 5 and even as high| as 7 years, still getting the same wage as when they started. | Kiln burners get 47 1-2 cents an hour for a nine hour day 7 day week, Straight time for Sunday and | holidays. They get one day off every) | three weeks, but for even this they | pay up by working an extra nine American representatives for the United States. The three capitalist parties in England, the tories, liberals and la- bor party, are united in the attitude on the American reparations propo- sals, The French and Belgians are also protesting loudly against the reduc- | tions which the house of Morgahy | represented by J. P. Morgan,| propose The International Labor Defense has conducted a nation-wide drive for release of Mooney and Billings. | | More “Enquiries” for | Grafter Hague June 21 JERSEY CITY, May 10.—Mayor| Frank Hague was served today with! a subpoena to appear before the hours on a Sunday. Kiln burner|thomas Lamont and Thomas N,| joint session of the New Jersey helpers get the miserable wage of | 40c an hour on a 9 hour 7-day week. Men in the glaze and press rooms | get.45¢c an hour for a 9 hour day, 5 1-2 day week. Men in the grinding | Court today. room where the sun never shines in After an involved legal process be-|—it being dark an4 dusty all day, gun ten years ago by the Pennsyl-|and électric lights vurn there all vania Coal Company against the U.|day so the workers can sée what M. W. A., in which the minihg com-| they are doing, get for this work pany asked $300,000 and charged | 50e an hour. A very select few get the workers with conspiracy to re-|more than 50c an hour. strain traffic in coal by strikes at} These are the miserable conditions Jamestown, the suit has been closéd | against which the workers are fight-| by the company. | ing with the help of the Trade Union| The case had been twice tried in| Educational League which is organ-| the Federal District Court, twice ap- | izing them. The American Encaustic | pealed to in the Circuit Court of Ap-| Tiling Company is one of the big-! peals and denied review in the/| gest tile concerns of the world, It Perkins, propose. MORE ‘INQUIRIES’ INTO POWER C0. Boston Commission to! Get $25,000 for Job BOSTON, May 10—A sum of $25,- | 000 will be placed at the disposal of an elaborate commission which will begin investigation of the ac- legislature June 21 in connection with an inquiry into conditions in Hudson County. The , enquiry is being put through in the interests ’s political enemies. of the rotten vessel to sail from |port, the so-called investigation con- tinues to be a farce. In spite of the bulk of evidence pointing to official guilt and crim- inal negligence, observers indicate that no definite action will be taken in England, just as in the investiga- tion in the United States last De- cember. Go Thru Form of Voting Raskob Back on Gen’! Motors Finance Comm. John J. Raskob is now openly back on the finance committee of the Gen- eral Motors Corporation, At the last regular meeting of the directors, he was formally reinstated it was an- ' nounced yesterday. To be sure, he is not yet recognized as head of the ' committee, and therefore of the enormous labor-hating corporation, but for a time will appear, as a mat- ter of form, as a subordinate to Don- aldson Brown, whom he installed as chairman of this committee when he went through the necessary camou- flage of resigning last year to be chairman of the democratic party campaign committee, All during the election the Com- munists charged that Raskob was Motors man, and that the strike- breaking and company unionism which have made him notorious would go on while he attended té the political interests of his crowd, Repel the Socialists, the Right: Wing Distupters Who Are Under- | mining an Independent Revolu: ' tionary Leadership of the Class Struggles! j and |that “the legislature pass a law to} of Hague’ Hague is expected to escape as lightly from the June 21 “enquiry” as he did at the recent McAllister committee, which, after hearing damaging evidence from 335 wit- nesses telling of the widespread graft systems organized by Hague his followers, recommended make waste in payrolls more diffi- | cult.” Reading | } Reading and studying if your eyes are in good con- May Appoint Roosevelt Over Tariff Duties (Continued from Page One) stated a minority report would be ment hallway, following an argu- | Sufficient pressure on the union | 200 workers. filed attacking many features of the bill. Forces Split. The democrats are outnumbered hopelessly in the house as far as party lines ate concerned, but they believe they will be joined by suf- ficient farm bloc republicans to alter the administration bill. Republican representatives of 12 western states ate to hold a conference tomorrow to determine their course of action. They frankly say they are dissatis- | fied with the measure. A similar meeting is to be held by the regular republican, but dis- satisfied Pennsylvania delegation. Fight for Fig Tax. There 1s every prospect for a sharp clash of capitalist group in- terests over certain provisions of |the bill. Nine republican congress-| after the chauffeurs struc Not Aid Dying Worker (Continued from Page One) ment with a strikebreaker who was} driving a truck of the streek com-} pany. Martin Lacey, organizer of the! International Brotherhood of Team-| sters and Chauffeurs, last night told the Daily Worker that he “déan’t| find Smith’s name on the union| | books,” and would take no action in| the matter. Told that investigation! on the part of the Daily Worker led) to the conclusion that Smith was being framed up for his strike ac- tivity, and urged to issue a state- {ment in his defense, Lacey repeated | |that he “won’t have anything to do | with the matter because this man |is not in our organization.” Smith was a laborer at the Storm |plant, having been employed there |for over six months. A short time about men from California served notice | three weeks ago, Smith was instru- on the republican party caucus that! mental in effecting a sympathy ff long staple cotton, figs, dates and | strike of the laborers, hides were not given a protective) This knifing of the courageous tariff, they would vote with the worker is expected not only to democrats to send the bill back to! strengthen the police frame-up of the ways and means committee, |Smith, but is a blow at the strike The democrats are wild over the of the 12 chauffeurs and 30 labor- provision in the bill to abolish the! ers at the Storm Lumber Company. bipartisan character of the tariff)yhe workers there are fighting for ommission, and allow Hoover to put recognition of the union, wage in- in whomever he pleases, certain to creases and shorter hours. be his own loyal henchmen. They} According to Lacey, over 1,200 are also attacking the flexjble tariff|teamsters are at present involved clause, which allows Hoover, through | in strikes in vatious parts of the exercise of his proclamation and| city, and especially on building treaty making power, to modify the | jobs, duties within a limit of 50 per cent of their totals. FIRE ALL AMELI ASSISTANTS. WICKERSHAM LEADS “QUIZ.” | WASHINGTON, May 10—Hoover | has appointed Geo. W. Wickersham, WASHINGTON, May 10 (UP).—| former attorney-general under Taft Resignations of th: assistants in the as the first member and probable Brooklyn, N. Y., district attorney’s| chairman of his prohibition law in- office were requested today by At-| vestigation committee. Wickersham torney-General Mitchell to give act-|is an equivocal dry, said to be ing District Attorney Howard W. | against the Jones Act. Ameli a “free hand in reorganizing his staff,’ Mitchell said. The Amsterdam International Supreme Court. When the suit began, the company was confronted with a militant rank and file which was able to exert machine, which at the time had not yet jockeyed itself into control by wholesale expulsions, The real fight against the opera- tives in the coal fields today how- ever, comes from the new National Miners Union, whose growing power is being fought by the coal com- panies in conjunction with the U. M. W. A., the group with which it has just concluded its ‘legal’ peace. Struggle Against Imperialist War! Get Ready to Turn an Im- perialist War Into a Class War! Warrant for Sacrifice Witness Is Issued at Michaelson Rum Trial KEY WEST, Fla., May 10. — A warrant was issued today for the arrest of Walter Gramm, brother-in- law and sacrifice witness for the “dry” Representative M. A. Michael- son, during his trial here as a rum runner. The juty obligingly white- washed the reputation of the con- gressman by taking Gramm’s word for it that the truriks supposed to be Michaelson’s, were Gramm’s. Michaelson claimed the right to entry without search, as a congress- man, and afterwards in some of the party’s baggage, a leaking bottle disclosed that one trunk contained liquor. For the first time in the case, at the trial of Michaelson, after witnesses had testified that Michaelson tried to get the trunks released from custody and threat- ened to bring pressure from “higher ups,” Gramm came forward and said they were his, The jury ac- quitted Michaelson. Michaelson has been a strenuous worker for stricter penalties fot violations of the prohibition law. NTE SS | is Connected With the Capitalist Join the Party of your class. | League. of .Nations. Struggle Join the Communist Party of the | Against All Forms of Class Col- Us A | laboration$ | The Communist Party fs the highest form of the class organi- zation of the proletariat —Stalin. Build the Communist Party, has a plant in Zanesville, Ohio which |/'Vities of the International Power éinploya over 3,000 workers, & plant 274 Paper Company here; the resolt- |in Los Angeles, Calif, and this one |i" of the House Rules Committee | lin Maurer, which employs about "Ported today provides. One senator and three members | jof the House of Representatives are | Recruit members for the Com- |°" the commission, and three men munist Party at factory gate meet- (will be appointed by the governor. | ings. |Tehy will examine, it is stated, “all | | te es phases of the power situation.” Re- | EXPOSE TRICK T0 ported power propaganda in the| 0K. BANK LOANS schools, however, will not be dealt | | with. | Warder’s Rivals Speak) in Hearing Interests to the extent of thous- | ands of dollars in newspapers thru- jout the east were admitted by Pewer |Company President Graustein before the House inquiry recently. He ad- mitted that an editorial in a Boston paper in which his company was) largely interested was written by a} | publicity agent for the company. | |His company’s interest in the news- Damaging charges against Frank \papers, however, he declared in his| |. Warder, former banking saper- lengthy “explanation,” was due only intendent, on the witness stand yes- to the desire to ensure a continual | terday in an investigation into his demand for news print, connections with ahd corruption in| the defi City Trus | 3 | were made by Dr. AH. Geen, (Brooklyn Hospital for Insane Overcrowded by | chairman of the board of the Bank | of America, | Porto Rican Governor | WASHINGTON, May 10.—Presi- | dent Hoover is considering the mili- tarist, Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, for some office, but reports that he had been virtually agreed upon to succeed the notorious Horace M. Towher as governor of Porto Rico, were not confirmed at the White House today. Roosevelt, it is understood, has the support of the New York Pa-| tronage organization for the post. Every member an active mem- ber. Get a new member. Celebrate the Red month of May by building the Communist Party. Dynamic! AS GOOD 2 comprehensive film-record of the RED CAPITAL STARTING TODAY! dition is a pleasure. If, however, they are defective |f or strained, 1t is drudgery. A pair of rest glasses will relieve the strain and jf keep good eyes well. OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 A. M. |] TOO P.M. ] Formerly Polen Miller Optical Co. OPTOMETRISTS — OPTICIANS 1690 Lexington Ave. Corner 106th » N. Y.-C, é Vivid! Realistic: AS A TRIP TO RUSSIA! intimate aspects of life in Mons- cow, giving a vivid iden of conditions under FIRST SHOWING IN AMERICA! OSCOW The investigation arises in part from Warder’s connection with the City Trust Company, to which he sanctioned loans of $3,000,000 at the time it was owned by his friend, the late. Francis M. Ferrari. Giannini testified that Warder, who recently resigned as state bank- ing commissioner, sent auditors to the branches of the City Trust Com- pany to obstruct the examination made by Giannini’s own auditors, Despite these difficulties, Giannini’s Men soon discovered that the bank status had been misrepresented. Giannini said he had been pre- vailed upon by Warder, the officers and directors of the bank, the Ital- jan ambassador and a Tammany leader to take over the bank. When he agreed tentatively he was given a week's option, and it was during this week that his attempts to learn the true status of the bank were blocked by Ward's men, Women Workers and Young Workers! Join the Ranks of the Struggling Workers 387 Per Cent, Reported ALBANY, May 10—Further itt | dication of crowding in state hos- pitals for the insatie was reported today in a statement covering the acting governors inspection of the Brooklyn state hospital at Brook- iyn and the state hospital at Creed- more, L. I The Brooklyn institution he de- seribed as in “very bad repair and constitutes a serious fire hazard.” As eniployes are housed there un- der what are deseribed officially as “very unsatisfactory conditions,” it is diffieult to retain competent as- sistants. Recreation rooms and small service rooms are being used to house patients, contributing to the overcrowding of 37 per cent. No Wavering, no Hesitancy, no Deviation From the Policy Laid Down by the Red International of Labor Unions, Which Will Lead the Workers in the Coming Class Struggles, Will Lead Them to Vic- tory! t . which workers live conduct of official life of the Union of Socialist Sovie: Republics te- Kind Kremlin Walls I and on the af A Brilliant Chi in “DECEPTION” -D film FILM 52 W. 8th TODAY A Penetrating Close-Up of the Seething Soviet Capital EMIL JANNINGS as HENRY the VIII SPECIAL MIDNITE PERFORMANCE TONIGHT AND. TO- MORROW (Sunday) Night. — We urge attendance at Matinee performances for comfort. A SOVKINO FILM me program— aracterization. irected by Ernst Lubitsch GUILD CINEMA St. Gracy. Spring 5095 Cont, Daily, incl. Sat. & Sun, Noon to Midnite a SPECIAL PRICES tection: and Sunday . 12 to 2-+-45 cents en {ng PY Weekdnye .ieiecssssees 12 to 2oned5 conte

Other pages from this issue: