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i t Page Two NEGRO WOMEN | IN INDUSTRY Woman Militant Gives Keen Analysis the need for skilled worke cessity eral fill places m fo nen ands were ¢ 2 vacant t Workers Injured Before East Riv ot positions vy lled white men workers . en were sought tc a m. Ere long, howev ‘ en were em-| ployed in every branch of the tex- tile industry, and worked peacefull besides white women work Many | ¥ being drawn into t - | tories, hosiery and knitting factories, in shirt factories, in paper box fac- tor in leather goods, as toy mak- flower and novelty workers. i Unemployment. Bie oa cs | eS * With the close of the war and th he new subway tunnel under the East River from Fulton Street, mn of the soldiers to civil life Brooklyn was holed thru Wednesday. Before the tun of holing thru. er Tunnel Was Holed Thru was cut thru, many workers DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1929 Manhattan to Cranberry Street, were injured. eturers closed down. Photo shows scene at completion 1 hers curtailed their output, t owing out of workers. The Negro women natur- ally suffered most. When they did not lose employment entirel y offered at lower wa: were frequen able work enc s wit = ABANDONS FLIGHT longer 1 Yet factory bosses did not entirely dispose of their labor. } : Th: They preferred to use the Negro Motor Goes Bad W hile woman ‘vorker to crush all woman, Over Coast of Spain workers. They were even retained in th (Continued from Page One) In 1 en’s Bureau of pelin tock off from here on her sec- the Department of Labor, reported cnd that 33 1-3 per cent of included in ing for 1 27.4 per c egro women their survey we: re how orked 9 how in the last trip, militarists and jingoes of all imperialist powers are nailing the flight as another triumph day in military aviation. ‘ine weather conditions aided the and cent worked 8 hour: i. a ; in the union departure, but storms are expected had legal w rs for women |to be encountered on the Atlantic, ep hou lay, one state had necessitating a change in the Pataing bh 11 hours a day and|Planned course. The arrival at Ded unit Lakehurst could not be made before Rove a omen in| Sunday, Hugo Eckener, the com- ie ven, 10 hours mander, said. Be ilare a in the to-| Sixteen passengers, thrill-starved baceo i work 10 hours or Millionaires, will be on board when SaaS the huge Zeppelin a es. orks 21 Hours. see Liptes ae, denavas Jingoes Prepare Reception. S eaying OID KEHURST, N, J., May 16.— e this week, I AtZangements to receive the Graf @ morning and eppelin after its third Atlantic antl Jute meme ssing were ccmpleted today by 7 officials at the naval air station enough to liv ues, women were 1 through the lunch here. this surve found work period, marines were on hand to help handle the crowd of several ‘ me _ hundred thousand visitors expected _ The worse conditions were found to throng here for a view of the big in the glass factories in a state ship. State troopers were detailed | has no 1 to protect its /in extra numbers along highways re these women |leading to Lakehurst and the air in two shifts of 8 station, hours each or 16 hours a day. One which Jn readiness to replenish the fuel woman said that she on one occa-| and lifting gas supply of the dirig- sion worked 21 hours continuously. | it1¢, 900,000 cubic feet of the Blau Bisome ta , in order to pre-' gas’ fuel and 400,000 cubic feet of | cere Be0 of working during |;vdrogen for the balloonets were | work hb water was passed t0 siored at the station. Other sup- the women by a water carrier in @ | plies for the return trip to Germany ucket with a common drinking cup. were at the reservation. Besides the long hours of factory! A ground crew of 270 bluejackets work the working day of the ma-|znd 100 marines will be ready to re- jority of Negro women workers is|ceive the dirigible and haul her to engthened by home duties. For ex-|a safe anchorage either at the big | ample, a woman having five small inast or at the stub mast, depending children, stated that she’ rises at on wind conditions, five o’clock in the morning, dresses snd feeds her children, and is on at six, does laundry, cleaning and| 1 tooking at night and retires past midnight, frequently too weary to OF S10 (nn N00 sleep. Unsanitary Factories. 2 UUW U The standard of working condi- = Ee eies to tor, Taiet facts, (ONE, Official are usually inadequate and unsani- He’d Get Caught tary. Of fifty-nine southern fac- tories which in all employed 5,447) | (Continued from Page Onc) Negro women, there were inadequate |keirs. The wholesale corruption of toilet accommodations. Three plants newspapers by the power interests had only one toilet for 125, 109 and|has aroused not only rival power 100 persons respectively. The sani-| groups, even closer to the govern- tary conditions were intolerable. Inj ment than the I. P. P. Co., but all three plants employing close to five newspapers not in the plot. These thousands women, the toilets had no|latter sce as a result of the expos- putside windows. In tobacco fac- ures a general decline of public con- tories, on account of the heavy dust |fidence in what they write, and are and the strong fumes, the workers |anxious to haye their own names suffered from nausea and loss of Cleared of this particular charge, uppetite. In cement bag mending though not anxious for a general in- factories the dust is suffocating. | vestigation of control of papers by The Boss Tal':s. ether industrial interests, which . would black most every p A southern factory boss speaking ;, as pase iti Sa ol to a federal investigator said: “We ‘ A feep our Negro labor as bound and|,, Head said the company’s rela- Ritatrcieht as possible, because it| Ps With Hall and Leyarre, nev joes not pay to do otherwise. There PAPe* Owners, Are now in a fran eno need of giving them decent tion period, If the two publishers are unable to re-finance the four Fees ec se tn ne Wherever avers they bought with the Power . eager they give us trouble we give them apa ae ine th tough treatment, and that quells) ths . Ages bag arr ac awnile. Rough treatment manently, head said. Papers bought Rare cniy thing that they can une by Hall and Levarre are the Au- Feared | International | \U.S, Business Men Pian | Trade Trip to U.S.S.R. The American-Russian Chamber of Commerce will lead a group of business men on a four weeks’ tour of the Soviet Union, where the group will make a first hand study of Soviet trade conditions, it is an- nounced. The party enter Soviet territo by June 14, While the U. S. S R. is still un-| recognized by the U, American business interests to sponsor the journey. Trade between | to | year, as against | sought to break down the National the two countries $115,000,000 las’ $48,000,000 the previc amounted us year, GASTONIA UNION HOUSE TO OPEN Rain Hinders Cooking; More Relief Needed (Continued frond Page One) by the senate investigating commit- tee, reported yesterday on their trip to large meetings in Gastonia and Bessemer City. They told how in Washington, the local W. I. R, fed and sheltered them, also of a large meeting held at which a collection for the strikers was taken up to help defray the cost of the trip. Funds to purchase food, medicine and tents for the striking textile workers should be sent to the Work- ers International Relief, Room 604, 1 Union Sq., New York City. * + \s Detroit W. I. R. Conference. DETROIT, Mich., May 16.—Rally- ing to the urgent call for relief for southern textile strikers and starv- ing disemployed miners, workers’ or- ganizations have already clected delegates to a city conference of the Workers International Relief here, which will be held Sunday, May 19, at 2 p, m. in the New Trade Union Center, 3782 Woodward Ave., De- troit. Co-operatives, workers’ educa- tional societi lodges and clubs and trade unions will participate in the conference, which will organize a permanently functioning local of the Wei Tag days to raise immediate funds have been arranged for every week- end during May. Detroit workers are eagerly awaiting the arrival of one of the Gastonia textile strikers, who will address the Conference and yemain for a tour of organizations to raise strike relief funds. Collec- tion lists are being circulated throughout the city. Organizations which have not yet | elected delegates are urged by the W. I, R to do so at once, in order to demenstrate complete solidarity of the exploited auto workers with the heroic textile strikers of the south, STRIKE AGAINST NEWARK PAPER ‘Deliverers Demand Pay | Raise, Shorter Hours NEWARK, N. J. May 16.— Newspaper deliverers working for the morning “Ledger” walked out on is expected to | {i PLOTS TO KILL MINE LEADERS Terror Fails to Hinder Convention Plans (Continued from Page One) BCE : S, A., possi-| for control of the graft in Illinois, ovage to America at 5:37 a. m. Dilities of rich trade have forced| came to the jail with Hogan, and in a combination attack, by offers of bribes, wheedling, arguments and threats of murder and lynching, Miners Union leaders and make them betray their union. Threats to Hang. They met with indignant refusals. Hogan cursed and swore like a cap- tured pirate, and threatened to take Simmich out and hang him. He did take Simmich back to me M. U. The organization drive of the Na- \tional Miners Union is in prepara- tion for the District Convention of the union, which ‘will be held on May. 25 and 26 in Ziegler. So wide- spread is the response of the work- ers to the call of the N. M. U. and of the Trade Union Educational League that there can be no doubt but that Illinois, the last bailiwick of the Lewis-Fishwick-coal opera- tors’ machine, will.soon be in the hands of the coal diggers themselves. This will break the backbone of the reactionaries’ strength and put the new union much further aleng. There will be 35 delegates repre- senting N. M. U. locals at the Cleve- land Trade Union Unity Convention. June 1-2, Berld and Wilsonville have already elected. New locals are being organized right along. State Senator Sneed, also an of- ficial of the Illinois district of the U. M. W. A. is taking a prominent part in the attempt to terrorize the miners and keep them from joining | the N. M. U. It was Sneed who tried | | to get the mayor to prohibit the miners’ meeting in Zeigler, May 12, and when the miners met anyway, outdoors, in a pouring rain, Hogan and his gunman guard were there. Arrest I. L. D. Man. When William Matheson, repre- senting the International Labor De- fense, and Nail Bernard went to Herrin after Watt’s arrest to bail him out, they were both arrested, and Sneed took an active part in the bulldozing and threatening of Matheson. Both were released, and deported by force from Herrin after- | wards. The N. M. U. and coal operators’ influence closed all halls in Carrier Mills to the National Miners Union, and stopped the meeting recently scheduled there. Chester, | anwhile sending another stool-|union. This was vividly illustrated eon to him to try and get the| by the recent experience in Newark, of names and members of the! where the Brotherhood of Painters, | Paperhangers and Decorators, re- |fused to admit a group of Negro | unions. ‘unions must be built for that pur- FORM STRONG NEGRO GADRE To Have “Communist Nucleus of Masses (Continued from Page One) bosses, the social reformists and treacherous socialist party leader- ship, we also witness that the semi- illed and unskilled masses aré awakening, showing a mood fox struggle and are resisting the bru exploitation of the employing clas: Already many spontaneous, unor ganized strikes have broken out. In the South, among the textile work- ers, among the automobile workers, steel workers, the oil workers in onne, N. J., rubber workers in | Milltown, copper workers in Perth Amboy. The workers are fighting aggressively against wage cuts, speed-up, shorter hours, and the right to organize. Fight A, F. L. Treachery. The Negro workers, who are the most exploited and oppressed of the American working class are engaged in a number of industries in New York and New Jerse There are clese to 50 per cent, 15,000 Negro workers in the laundry industry in New York. Theye are thousands of Negro workers in the dress, fur and other sections of the needle indus- try. There are thousands of Negro workers as railroad laborers, elec- trie light and power workers, long- shoremen, building laborers and in the large cement, brick, metal, ma- chine and foundry industries of New Jersey and upper New York. It becomes the most important task at the present time to organ- | ize these thousands of unorganized, unskilled, exploited Negro workers. | We know the attitude and the na- ture of the A, F. of L, bureaueracy | and their social reformism. We know that the A. F. of L. bureau- cracy follows a policy of class-col- laboration, eraft unionism and race discrimination, barring Negroes rom membership, deliberately fos- tering race prejudice and hindering the organization of the unorganizea or keeping them off the better paid jobs where they do befong to the painters, by the betrayal by the A, F. of L. and the Negro social demo- cratic leaders of the Pullman port- ers strike, where instead of issuing a national charter to the Brother- hood as a national organization, lo- cal charters were issued, thus weak- ening and destroying the organiza- tion and preventing it from devel- oping into a fighting union. Black and White Together. The Negro workers must be united with the white workers in the new Where necessary special pose and the Negro masses brought in organically into the trade union movement. These great, most his- torie tasks cannot be accomplished by the white comrades only. We must build up among the Negro workers, from the most advanced, class-conscious Negro workers, a Communist cadre, which will be in a position, together with the white comrades to lead and direct the struggles of the Negro masses. We must root out any tendency or any |remnants of white chauvinism, which may yet linger among some com- | rades or left wing progressive work- ers that follow the Communist Party. We must fight mercilessly against any ideas of “tolerating” the Negroes in the unions. We must also fight Garvyism among tie Negro masses. We must put forth and strongly develop the idea among the most advanced proletarian Negro workers that they themselves to- gether with the white workers, must lead the awakening Negro masses in their struggles against white and black exploiters; against Jim Crow- ism, segregation, against the exclu- sion policy of the A. F, of L. and | the social-democrats, for organizing the Negro workers and for leading However, the jailings in Herrin] thom in the stru:; R i: gles against Amer- and the closing of halls has aroused | jon imperialism and together ‘with ers, perfect strangers to the N. M. U, officials, are coming in and lining up with the new industrial union. On the street corners, miners congregate, the new union is the main topic of conversation. It is growing by leaps and bounds. |the mining community. Many min-! the oppressed colonial and semi-col- onial peoples in struggle against world capitalism and internationat wherever | imperialism and for the Soviet Re- public. We must utilize this Negro Week | to especially make contacts among the left wing unions, needle trades, The International Labor Defense | window cleaners, iron workers, and plans to wage a vigorous fight against this coal operator-U. M. W. A. terror, and will demand the right of assemblage for the National Miners Union, SWATOW JOINS |among the longshoremen on the | waterfront. Build Communist Nuclei. Let every comrade, Negro and white, realize that only by building up strong Communist nuclei among the Negro workers, only by building | up a conscious vanguard of the most vanced clags-conscious Negro | a LE SIMIKED Aout Cora ARE FIGHTING SEND CONTRUBL LOCACNEW RS INTE! dem Jenckes Corp. the system. Photo shows Gastonia mill strikers and New astrating in front of the New York offices of the Manville- exploiter of thousands * of both in Gastonia and in Rhode Island. fighting for a living wage and the end of the inhuman stretch-out Demonstration was arranged by the W. I. R. re gigg CITY TRUST CASE DELAYED AGAIN Warder Gets Time to “Improve” Story Definite agreement to postpone hearings in the City Trust Bank- Lancia Motors investigation under supervision of Referee Henry K. Davis was made yesterday following a conference of lending representa- tives in the case. The parley was attendel by S-ul S. Myers, attorney for one of the creditors, his assis~ tant, Joseph Guerin, Moreland Com- missioner M , and legal adviser, Walter Pollak, and Federal Judge Knox. Warder Gains Time. Thus the peculiarly sudden death of the wife of Frank H. Warder, & k witness in the case who was scheduled to answer awkward ques- tions before Myers this week, has again given Warder time to take ad- vantage of lulled public interest, strengthen his witness stand story and continue efforts to “adjust” various potentially-incriminating as- pects of the scandal. The postponed City Trust inquiry is claimed to be made to allow un- trammelled Moses examination of the State Banking Department “until the work commission is well under way.” She York workers textile workers The Gastonia strikers are NEGLECT GAUSED PLANES READY HOSPITAL DEATHS FOR OHIO ‘WAR’ Total May Reach 150 Gi in Cleveland Fire | (Continued from Page One) | poison gas, and wants to teach the local doct Warder, however, is slated to be the first witness to appear before the Banking Commission next Mon- day morning, unless more startling- ly sudden catastrophes occur which afford an excuse for postponement of the “investigation.” It is also considered likely that Warder may not be called again before Myers ant Maneuvers Plan jin the City Trust hearing. Myers claimed yesterday that he had an- other witness who could offer just as important testimony as Warder. Coming War FAIRFIELD AIR DEPOT, Ohio, o 5 16 With ihe. eneivalteont | He referred to Samuel Rauch, a spe- * : Selfridge Field of the planes of the the technique of easing | first pursuit group and from Lang- icial deputy bank superintendent ap- pointed receiver by Warder’s orders | when the City Trust bank was closed the Jast minutes of a man with his /ley Field of fifteen of the storm-'), Warder eleven days after the lungs for doctor aturated ceeded only too well, ng over the ga: drop dead.” Deadly Poison Gas. Hydrocyanic gaz and nitrous com- pounds were found in the blood of | ‘some victims, thus complicating the mystery of the poison’s origin, since the explosion of films in the X-Ray laboratory would account primarily only for nitrous avd bromide com- | pounds hyrodeyanic gas man of prussic acid. chemi ned out. If so, it has sue-| bound bombers gf the second bom-| oath of Ferrari bardment group, the air forces of ~ | the s stituting over 200 fighting planes, tims get enough gas themselves to | wore ready today to begin the great.’ ¢ lest series of war-preparation man- veuvers sirce the last world war. The training maneuvers are expected to begin in spite gales and muddy fields. The ground troops have also been mobilized, and are ready to begin “hostilities” along a fifty-mile area. \ite with a car through one of his These maneuvers, coming at the subsidiary companies, and booked not for the super-deadly time when the struggle for world passages to Europe for Warder’s a chemical kins- | markets among the imperialist pow- wife and daughter, Virginia, jers has become t There have been continual rumors | ever, and when all sorts of vici that other and eyen more deadly | propaganda were stored in the lab- Union have been unleashed by the factor of Ferrari’s “generosity.” Be- oratories and tanks in the hospital, | capitalist press Other witnesses are also expected to explain their audited approval of the records of the bank at the time “Bh ed” and “Blue” armies, con- it was flooded with worthless notes, Under Warder’s supervision of the State Banking Department, Ferrari had been able to accumulate $281,- 000 in forged and worthless notes. In return he had guaranteed rent. of Warder’s expensive apartment on Riverside Drive, presented Warder’s of the rain, fog, more acute Fascist Paper Aided. “Italo Americano,” New York Soviet | fascist newspaper, was another bene- agains the not only in the|sides cash gifts, he kept a million that part of the technical staff, en-| United States but in all other capi- dollars’ worth of jewels in his pri- thused by the mimic war so near the talist countries, are indicative of im-| vate vaults discovered by Warder’s building, and anxious to show they pending war. welcomed the provosed plans to mob- ilize all chemical factories for pro- daction of war gas in the coming | imperialist conflict, were carrying | on experiments in improved and more deadly poisonous gases. Their partially finished experiments may have come to a sudden and prema- ture fruition when the film blaze swept through the building, it is said. Dr. George Crile, head of the | clinic, and some of his staff were offi in the World War. Terrible Scenes. Conditions inside the building are described as absolutely terrifying. | The first victims, who got the full| force of the gas, fell almost instant- ly, clutching at their throats, tear- ing off their clothing, and gasping more and more of the searing poison | into their lungs. They were found | lying in piles of 15 and 20, near | doors they were too weal: to open, | near windows they were too far gone to break, Their bodies turned yel- low first, then green, blue and final- | ‘ly a deep purple, rendering identi- fication difficult. | | Nurses and patients were seen to break the windows, prepare to leap | two or three stories to the ground, and then a whisy of deep orange | gas would spread upwards around | their shoulders and necks, and they | would crumple backwards into the | building, dead. More Constantly Dying. The gas is so deadly and insidious in its work that many who have con- sidered themselves unharmed are ‘dropping dead without warning. A| huge bulletin board erected before | \the hospital bears the names of the jdead, and painters swarm up and) down ladders leaning against it add- | ing to the list every few minutes, as identifications proveed. | The heat of the explosion and the | chemical action of the gas charred | and corroded stair banisters, blew | imen the day after his death. —“A picture one should not fail to see.” —DAILY WORKER 2 comprehensive film-record of the “RED CAPITAL out all connecting doors in the hos- | pital, collected in small rooms and | under the roof until it exploded jagain and blew masonry and roof "3 gusta (Ga.) Chronicle, Columbia strike here today against the vicious i if ioe. oof | hich ee i, ferstand. (8. C.) Leal ied SGigeaahing working conditions imposed on them. lyalepiig toads, fe eiee aaane he material skyward. Outside the wine J} tive’ "OPS" A SOVKINO FILM The Worker Talks. (S. C.) Herald and Journai. Their demands include a reduction Negro Tener A tines dows,. wire mesh used under the} conduct of intimate aspects of Ife in conditions under 1852 The Same Address Over 75 Years 1929 ) ASSETS EXCEEDING $29,000,000 Deposits made on or before the 3rd day of the month will draw interest from the Ist day of the month. Last Quarterly Dividend pai on all amounts from $5,00, to $7,500.00, at the rate of Open Mondays (all day) until 7 P. M. Banking by Mail, Society Accounts Accepted. We Sell A. B. A. ‘Travelers Certified Checks THIRD AVE, Cor 72STs atronize Our & Advertisers © Don’t forget to mention the ‘Daily Worker” to the proprietor whenever you purchase clothes, furniture, etc., or eat in a restaurant NOW PLAYING! Dynamic! Vivid! Realistic} AS GOOD AS A TRIP TO RUSSIA! FIRST SHOWING IN AMERICA! OSCOW IM TODAY official fe of _ the Union of Socialint Soviet Repubiies he- hind Kremlin Walls EMIL JANNINGS as HENRY the VIII A Brilliant Characterization. in “DECEPTION” -Directed by Ernst Lubitsch plaster in the rooms lies over the railings where it was blown when the chemicals stripped the plaster | off it. | Everybody is comparing the gas | horror with experiences in the last | war, and with the Hamburg poison ‘gas leakage in 1928. The hero of the rescue is Robert Yo such brutality and exploitation Afraid to Get Caught. ip Rage renee Gi LGD aga Me ¢ is but one answer. The Negro’ fxamination of Frank D. Come- | w (Continued from Page One) ‘n workers, together with the ford, a director of the International A nasitine aspect of the strike ranks makes We position of the imperialism and for the establish- __.» and white men and white Wo-| Paper and Power Co., and president | situation here is that the workers precarious, for Feng Yuh-siang, the| ment of the proletarian dictator- ‘en_workcrs, employed in an in- of the New England Power Associa- out on strike voted a few days ago| powerful warlord of the north, may | ship. stry where a militant left wing |tjon, disclosed that he objected to for J, Brennan, so-called “labor” in-| any day declare war on Chiang. | jon already exists, must join it.| purchase by the International on a| dependent candidate for police com-| With the aid of the British and| READING ROOFERS STRIKE, they must all together form hgif-interest in the Boston Herald| missioner. Brennan was elected, and | Yankee imperialist forces drawn up| READING, Pa. (By Mail).— A Penetrating Close-Up of the struggles in common _ struggle § . Seething Soviet Capital against American and international —and on the same program— ) committees and organize their /»nd Traveler because he thought it s» They must form new locals | “would be a bad thing for us” if re- \e American Negro Labor Con- vealed to the public. \ the leader of the Negro work-| Testimony, indicating that power they must see to it that they | interests presented at the epoch-mak-| Boston Post for $20,000,000 in cash, | ade Unien Unity Convention | was given the Federal Trade Com- eld in Clevc!and June 1. Y ) all they must join the sole owner of thut newspaper. hich leads the struggle of Grozier said he received an offer ing class for better condi- from Charles O'Malley, Boston ad- ‘sented “the Insull interests.” | police force. sought to purchase the | ion today by Richard Grozier, | je Communist Party of the | yertising agent, who said he repre- | now the newspapers are being de-| in the harbor and in the city, it 1s livered by scabs under the super- ‘reported that the Kwangsi clique ad- yision and protection of Brennan’s | vancing on Canton has been defeat- jed. Unofficial reports said that the Further details of the strike will| Cantonese warlords had captured appear in tomorrow’s edition of the | Waichow and that the Kwangsi Daily Worker. \clique had requested a peace con- ference. The Manchurian warlords, care- Not only hi forged the we death to ttwelfy into existence thy wield thi working elnss—the proletarians.—— Karl Marx (Communist Manifesto). the bourgeoisie 1 ‘will blow, tes a rs 4 | fully manipulated by the Japanese imperialists, are still in the offing, e wenpons—the modern waiting to see which way the wind|Hour, bringing the hourly wage. to Slate, tile and composition roofers employed by Kleckner Bros. here are on strike as a result of the com- pany’s refusal to sign an agreement with the union, IRON WORKERS GAIN. DETROIT, (By Mail),—Organ- ized bridge, structural, and orna- mental iron workers here have won a wage increase of 121-2 cents an $1.50 an hour. Chares, a Negro garage worker, who | held a ladder on his shoulders in the | clouds of gas while inmates swarmed | down over him, and then entered the | building to rescue more. The néws- | papers give him scant publicity, as | the Cleveland city government is a | hotbed of race prejudice. | | Every member an active mem- | ber. Get a new member. Celebrate the Red month of May by building the Communist Party. ia. rection: ymon Gould «film FILM GUILD CINEMA chim 52 W. 8th St. (Just West) Spring 5095 (of Sth Av.) incl. Sat. & Sun. Noom to Midnite SPHCIAL PRIC Sunday .. WE URGE ATTENDANCE AT MATINEE PERFORMANCES IF POSSIBLE, FOR YOUR COMFORT AND GOOD SEATS!