The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 23, 1929, Page 4

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{ Page Four A. F. FORM “BLUE SKY" LOCALS TO KEEP THE MEN DIVIDED Me Davitt Establishes fachine (By a W CHICAGO, The ex-| Cy and Waitresses’ | tel and Restaurant | | ly no de is con- completely just a few are orga d. We} ons in the city | of not more than | re are about 50,000} ers in the city. - Don’t Care. pts are being made, not} re being laid for the the unorganized food | . John D. McDevitt, the otels are so-called international organizer is here for over a year. His activities were confined to establish his own| “machine” as against Stokenberg’s (there are two factions within the international, with no difference inj} policy, however.) In this fight, in order to get the best of one another, | they were compelled to expose some of their own crookedness, by ex- pelling a business agent for corrup- tion and the sell out of the workers. What is McDevitt doing at pres-| ent? Worrying about organizing | the unorganized food workers? Of} course not. He establishes new lo-} cals by withdrawing members from | the existing locals and putting them | into new ones. He established a new Waitresses’ Local by taking out} members from the Waitresses’ Lo-! cal 484, T is being done (the | chartering of blue sky locals) for| the purpose of getting a few more | delegates of McDevitt’s faction to) the convention, which will be held in August in Kansas City, Mo. | Of course the usual trick is being | played by McDevitt to play the men against each other by supplying fa-| vorites with jobs, thus lining them up for themselves, and letting the} rest do the best they can. He is do-| ing these tricks because he is not| certain as to who will be the victor | at the national convention—he may | not be any longer international or-| ganizer. He is already approaching | some of the men in the waiters’ lo- | cai on the question of a local job} here, at the small sum of a hundred | ot L. Mis (By a Worker Correspondent) LADELPHIA, (By Mail).— , All paving cutters in this city who |not are citizens of the United States |have been excluded from work in the city of Philadelphia. This action was taken by the city officials of leaders Ware DAILY WORKER, NE W YORK, THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1929 1 in Food Union the public work department in the city, after two reactionary mem- bers of the union had been up in City Hall and presented a petition list signed by 64 members of the union, demanding that only citizens | be employed on the street repairing work. By this action about 75 men have lost their jobs. But the most important fact is that for the last 10 years in which repairing work has been done in the city, the question of citizenship never has been raised by the city officials, and it is first raised now when two of our own union mem- , one a former socialist, go to officials demanding that their | “union brothers” (non citizens) be [denied the right to work in the c be | e Jo ; that this city ordinance shall be eri- foreed. It is also surprising to know that the same so-called “union brothers” have had a collection amongst them- selves in order to hire a capitalist lawyer, and have him use the legal machinery of capitalism in order to stop the pay of the non-citizen work- ers who happen to obtain work for Busy Fighting Among Themselves in Chi UNION FAKERS KEEP NON-CITIZEN PAVING CUTTERS JOBLESS IN PHILA. SCRUBWOMEN IN a contractor a few days after the] action was taken. And it is more surprising that | | the same socialist and a member of I. W. W. made contribution for the same purpose. There will be action taken by the non-citizen paving cutters of this city also, but not through the city | | officials, or capitalist lackeys, but/| cago through the whole International Paving Cutters’ Union of the U. S. and Canada. There will be an ap- peal to the membership to judge in this case, and it is then most likely that this bunch of reactionaries in our union will have to sit up and learn a few lessons in working class solidarity, and real unionism. —PAVING CUTTER. ‘SWELL’ BUILDING SLAVE FOR $10 Inspectors Keep Speed- ua» Soviet Tvpists Form Clubs, Student Circles in OFFces BOSS IMPORTS, HIGH IN KITCHENS The office workers in the Soviet Union are enjoying a new life since the revolution. from a Soviet typist follow Dear Comrades: I shall try to of our Soviet tyr and shorthan upon myself too much and speak take as example our small Bureau «ar bank where all the typists and *ork) where I work, the more so, t They are all organized into a union. A letter satisfy your curiosity as to the life nd typists. I do not want to take about typists in general, so I shall of Typists (that is the section of shorthand-typists of our institution hat we are united not only by com- mon work but also a series of other common interests. I shall begin with conditions of our work, are 6 persons—2 shorthand typists with a half an hour interval for } go to have their dinner, remain in t at this time, drink tea, have their and books, ographer—consists of writing under ferences, etc. Perhaps you are interested in The work of shorthand writers—I am In our Bureau there and 4 typists. We work 61-2 hours, unch or dinner. Those who do not he room, which is usually ventilated lunch, read newspapers, magazines, myself a sten- y dictation, taking down smaller con- our salaries. Well, I can tell you, that a typist receives about 85 roubles, and a shorthand typist, 100. All typists and stenographers are interested in questions, con- nected with particularities of their work. Very many of them receive the magazine, published by our trade union, “Typing and Shorthand.” Together with treating theoretical questions of these two branches, the magazine carries on a serious stenographers and typists. Now I shall speak about the life of typists. difficult to speak of typists in ge! old and young, married and unmarried typists. I shall base my information on th these differences are not so sharp. Social work takes a considerable place in our life. participation in the work of several commissions of our Local Commit- tee, such as: Commission of Defenc Cultural, ete. BOYLSTON MILL WATERIS ANKLE Crude Propaganda in “Kit. Tebbi,”” Fascisti Picture FOOLS WORKERS Find Slavery, Hovels to, Live in | (By « Worker Correspondent) EASTHAMPTON, Mass. (By Mail).—The rent on the company houses recently went up $1 to $1.50 weekly. expecting soon. Some of the tenants raise a pro- test on the unsanitary, dirty houses. The Boylston company told them: “We cannot afford to fix them for | the rent we get for them. We will give you paint and paper to fix up, if you want to.” Because they can- {not stand the unsivhtly dirty walls, many are painting and papering | Those not raised yet, are 1 OF SCHRAFFT CO Workers Lunch Eaten Near Garbage Cans (By a Worker Correspondent) I am going to tell of the condi- tions in Schraffts’ Stores at 11 and 5 West 34th St., New York City. e Schrafft stores are a large chain of restaurants owned by the F. G Shattuck Co. To the customers outside the stores look pink and bright. But see the conditions inside where the workers have to work. In thig store several hundred are employed. In the kitchen most of the time the sewer pipe is clogged. There is a float in the kitchen on "| justification of the war of aggres- the walls themselves in their few) .rich the workers have to work or spare hours on Saturday afternoon | and. Sunday nia | workers have to eat their lunch in | working until 10 p. m. us every | the kitchen among the garbage cans. spare moment of the workers 8) The tables are filthy and dirty. In given to the company in this manner. | the same table where the workers | Under the smallest prtext they are | eat they open and clean the chickens. | told to move if the boss wants to.) while eating lunch the workers If the family living in one of these} have to stand in water because they work in defending the interests of Here it is especially neral, because there are among us Therefore here also e typists of our institutions, where It consists of stand in water up their ankles. The | e of Labor, Economical Commission, Typist Club. Our institution has a club. more or less active part in its work and circles. In one of the circles we study We all are its members and take a , by participating in its commissions the German language. Many of us study in the sanitary circle, in political, trade union circles, dramatical, ete. ployees themselves, Our club has a library of its own, which is served by the em- Very many of us are united in the circle of Art and Excursions, which works already for the 2nd year. the circle organizes excursion in m ing to a certain plan. Art—pictures, sculpture. We like wait with impatience the successive A very interesting work is car listen to lectures on all kind of themes, enjoy concerts or dramatic performances, which are often given by theatres or studios. the club plays an important role in Our family duties take very Every fortnight, on Sunday, useums or picture galleries, accord- The aim is to make us understand and love our circle very much and always excursion, ried on by our club. There we can houses have children, they also must (work in this mill. Otherwise “out with you.” Recently a worker’s wife, having rheumatism was compelled to | stay at home. They called her to} | work, but being unable, she told the | boss that she will stay home until) her feet are better. This did not | satisfy the boss. Going to her house to tell her she must come in to work, found her washing her family clothes | (compelled thru necessity). This | made the boss so mad, that she could | | be washing, but could not come in} |to work that they were ordered out | }of the house. Her husband was| |layed off shortly after that. | The workers live here like slaves, fearing to move about for fear of | | angering the bosses. | Into such dirty hovels, the new} Therefore the life of our employees. much time (some of us devote to Sick- | per week, of course. them more time, others less). Though they are ver numerous, I McDevitt is not the first so-called organizer—several fake drives simi- | lar to the one McDevitt is carrying on now in Chicago have been started, but it was nothing more than fake. The food workers of Chicago have no illusions any more about the ac- tivities of the international. The Trade Union Unity Conference in Cleveland will have to lay plans for the starting of a real drive of or-| ganization of the unorganized culin- cipal occupations, interests which your life, ete, . 8 With fraternal gzeetings, don’t think they differ very much from yours. I shall wait for your letter with greatest impatience. tremely interested in conditions of your work as well as in your prin- I am ex- take the most important place in —A. VASSILIEVA. . A group of Soviet worker correspondents wrote the letter which will appear in the next worker correspondence section. of the Soviet worker’s opinion of the renegade Trotskyists. They tell ary workers in Chicago. The field| is ripe for a real union based on the O U; h L t fee citugzle, and it is, tha New| /IUE OU LEVY Trade Union Center established at the T. U. U. C. conference in Cleve- land that will be capable of doing it. The progressive food workers of Chicago are calling a conference for May 23rd to elect delegates to the | Cleveland Conference and for the establishment of a definite section of the T. U. E. L. —CHICAGO\FOOD WORKER. (By «a Worker Correspondent) | Once I read in the Daily Worker |that the Upholsterers’ Union, Local 44, A. F, of L. union of New York, does not organize the workers, but |helps the boss. I will list the fol- Local Has Another Fired from Shop and brought about five men from Local 44. These workers who were laid off were told they were going to be next on the job. Local 44 sent more men to work there. At last employees were brought in. ness pread quickly. Grip, scarlet} | fever and measles were the order of the day. There was more cases of | | scarlet fever among the children in | town this year than ever before. | | At times the schools were attended | lonly by one-third of pupils in the} | grade schools. | | Many of these imported workers | | (especially Portuguese) are layed-| | off and starvation is facing them. These workers were to get good) pay. Many of them are working for $13.05, some get $14.50 and few on spinning get $17.20. Weavers aver-| | age under $20 | | The free transportation promised |them was a lie It was taken out |of their pay Those moving here with families and furniture are in- debted to the company a good deal and are virtually slaves until that) jis payed off in small amounts to the | company. After deducting rent and trans- have no chairs for the workers to sit on. There are a few hundred workers but only about a dozen chairs, When a female worker is em- ployed the very first thing she has to do is to buy a uniform, cap and hair net and for these the company charges $2.10, much more than it is worth. It may happen that a wom- an may be discharged the same day she was employed. The money for the day’s work is taken for the uni- form. The waitresses’ uniform costs $5 and must be purchased from the company. There is another profit for the company—when the cus- tomer’s dress and had to pay $7, ager keeps them for several weeks and then sells them to the employes. | When a waitress serves a cus-| tomer and accidentally has a spill roduced by the Aida Company of Rome under subsidy from the ‘Mussolini government, “Kif Tebbi” lrepresents an attempt, the Fifth | Ave. Playhouse folder says of its| current film, with which “Italy hopes to recapture the position in the film industry it held prior to the war.” | There are interesting scenes per- |formed by members of native Arab |cast. But while the Tripoli locale lends itself to good photo graphic effects, the film, however, has all the of a cinematographic | weaknesses sion waged by the Italian govern- |ment against Turkey for possession of Tripoli in 1911, Italy, repre- senting the spirit of European | “progress,” aims its cultural cannon ‘against the Turk-controlled for- | tiess, Turkish “brigands,” scowling in the folds of flowing cloaks, are {conveniently shown to be chiefly in- | | terested in rape and loot, in defense | of which prerogative they resist the | “liberators.” The chief recommendation of | |Donatelle Neri, playing the role of |Cambra, the blind girl of the tribes who loves Ismail, the son of a Turk- lish official, is her undoubted beauty. Of course, the nature of the film de- |mands that her love for the gallant \officer be returned. It is, and she | gets her place in the fade out. ) | Ismail was nearly shot by his jraore aggressive brother officers for his partiality to the “liberat- ling“ Italians. The source of his |non-resistance, the caption says, lay ‘in his “learning to appreciate Euro- | | pean civilization through his studies | in Italy.” | The cinema technicians of the fas- \cist government will have to pro-| |duce more arresting films than “Kif Tebbi” if they want to realize their reported ambition. On the same program is an in-! teresting film showing the progress of Jewish peasant families given access to the land under the U. S. S. The |R. land colonization scheme. Up Going (By « Worker Correspondent) I have read in the Daily Worker about the struggles of many kinds of workers but I believe that we are the victims of w conditions than exist elsewhere. Of course, we have no standing | of any kind and are considered just | dirty and lowly scrub-women and cleaners. Together with about thirty other | women, I work in the swell Fifth Avenue Building at 200 Fifth Ave., N.Y. My job is to mop, scrub, dust, | clean and to see that the business offices are kept spick and span. Each woman is given a section of offic | Lvreport about 4:30 p. m. and work jon to 8:00 p. m. Then I must re- | turn at 4:45 next morning and finish | up until 8.00 a. m. Inspectors look over our work twice a day and they see to it that | we don’t rest a second. If they find fault we are fired without warning. For all’ this hard work twice a day I get the grand sum of $10 per week. Sometimes I get,an extra of- fice or two and am rewarded with | 20c for each office. I have to make four trips home Margaret Wycherly, in “Strange | each day and many times I have to Interlude,” Eugene O’Neill’s drama | rest in bed as a result of my hard now in its final week at the John| work. Think of it, $10 per week! ! ! Golden Theatre. | Most of the women are middle- i “ " +37: | aged and some old, but we are push- ‘PAWN OF DESTINY” | ed to Lees working without a let up. NEXT FILM GUILD |'The owners have no mercy and they threatened that they have a long list of women waiting for our jobs. Please print this letter, but I can- not sign my name. IN “STRA} GE INTERLUDE” PRODUCTION) “Pawns of Destiny,” featuring | Olga Chekova, the noted Russian ar- tist will have its American premiere | at the Film Guild Cinema commenc- | ing this Saturday. The motion pic- | ture has been photographed in the Crumbling Mississippi ti les of Russi actual’ locales o: ussia, Poland, /F ayee Threatens Flood Austria and Paris. In the support- ing cast are Hans Stever, and Henry | Danger Thru South —A VICTIM. Baudin. On the same program will be pre- MEMPHIS, Tenn., M: s s H “ st B +» May So sented a short film Lufthansa; | serious is the flood danger which Germany in the Air.” There will also be a short Chaplin film “The Rink.” On June first, | threatens workers and farmers in | the neighborhood of Mounds Land- ing at Mississippi that engineers the postponed were obliged to fight for “permis- American premiere of “Nosferatu | the Vampire” inspired by Dracula and directed by F. W. Murnau, will take place at the Film Guild Cinema. | sion” to exploit convict labor in the | task of repairing the 1,000 feet of crumbling levee there. Unless aid | is rushed immediately, reports say, the company ruling makes her pay film begins with shots of desolate, for half of the damage. A girl | waste land and the arrival of the spilled a drop of water on a cus- | colonists who aim to develop it. tomer’s dres and had=to pay $7,| It concludes with illustrations of | which was supposed to be half for | the growth of collective agricul- cleaning, but they never showed the | tural achievements possible only on waitress the bill. These conditions |the basis of the Soviet worker-pea- | show we must organize into a fight- sant alliance. M. M. ing union—like the Hotel, Cafeteria and Restaurant Workers Union of | viously working full time, gave their the Amalgamated Food Workers. | employes a “vacation” for Easter of —SCHRAFFT’S SLAVE. two and three weeks duration, and | only promises for the future. | Other factries, chiefly in the metal | , UNEMPLOYMENT | trades that were working full blast jin February are now back to three | and four days work a week. | Most of the tool factories here are | i 2 now working on curtailed schedules, | and even a firm like the Mitchell | | Speciality Company, which only two (By « Worker Correspondent) | months ago was seeking workers of PHILADELPHIA, (By Mail).— | Skill is now working most of its de- | Three months ago, while employ- |Pattments four days a week. | | vails on Mississippi work, is crum- the men who were laid off were told | Canada Already Uses jlowing proof: The firm of J. W. Sloan in FRish- they would be sent back for trial, | portation charges there isn’t much but this was a false alarm and they | left to live on from these small pays. were never even put on trial and) Out of 50 workers who came from | | Clinton only about a dozen remained. | But is must be said that the men| After getting their first pay (one | whom Sloan kept were workers in| week’s pay is held back, so that the their prime from whom the greatest first pay comes in two weeks) and *t*4 \ing, Long Island, was an open shop : z Customs to Prohibit) inj istely they have begun to give °°, till out of work. Revolutionary Papers |piece-work. Seeing this, Local 45 in Brooklyn took advantage of it) TORONTO, Canada, May 22.—|and organized the shop of which) ood could be gotten and those laid The MacKenzie King government of Canada is already enforcing, through its customs service, the prohibition of revolutionary literature which President Hoover of the United States is arranging for under his new tariff scheme. The Communist Jewish language paper, Freiheit, of New York, has been barred from most cities, as also issues of the New Masses. e For a number of months the La- bor Morthly, published in London, England, has been held up, likewise the Communist Review, also pub- lished in London. Many books and pamphlets ordered from Great Britain by the Worker Publishing Association, have been held up. After months of investigation by the customs department these books and pamphlets have been returned to England. These books arrived on the following dates: Feb, 23, March local has no charter and Local 44 of New York would not grant a charter, but it has members and they have to pay $2 monthly dues. On Nov. 9, 1928, Watson told the men |to be prepared for a strike the fol- ‘lowing Tuesday. But on November 10, four of the upholsterers were laid off and the rest, not knowing what to do, worked ahead. In a few days they were told by ‘Watson that they should stick to the job and to come to the meeting, |where they were told that the Sloan Co. had signed up with Local 44 and would become a union shop Jan. 1, 1929, and those upholsterers who would not jjoin before that date would be fired. It was a great shock when the union men were laid off and those who did not join the union were kept. Mr. Watson is the organizer. This} 16 and May 3. After Jan. 1 a new foreman came PHILA. JOBLESS DUPED Fake Ads to Spread “Prosperity” Lie (By a Worker Correspondent) “What ad?” said the boss. | PHILADELPHIA, (By Mail).—| A dozen of us showed it to him. | So acute is the unemployment crisis “I don’t know anything about it, in Philadelphia that the capitalists |I don’t need any help—beat it or are publishing fake employment ads. | !'ll call a cop,” the boss answered. The following is typical and was | I went to the Inquirer. “It’s a in the Philadelphia Inquirer for four | mistake,” they said. That was four days: “Wanted, Young Men as /| days ago, and the same mistake was off were either very young or older jmen. It shows how the A. F. of L. | fakers take care of the older and weaker workers. Members of Local | | 45 of Brooklyn should take this as | an example and demand a charter; seeing the amount they are to re- ceive, they hooked rides and others walked on foot back to their town, cursing this company town. These outside workers helped open the eyes to local help by making them realize that the conditions here |ment was not obtainable in textile | and many other factories, there was |a demand for skilled machinists and mechanics in the metal trades in Philadelphia and vicinity. Now, despite the fact that spring is here, and employment should be plentiful, conditions are even worse, for even machinists are no longer in demand. On the contrary, tho all the local capitalist papers claim there is a |decrease in unemployment, these \claims do not square with the facts if they cannot get it should organ-| are beyond comparison in the whole|in any working class section of ize an independent local. —UPHOLSTERER. Militant Workers Are ‘Determined to Keep) \Daily Worker Fighting As illustrations of the determina- tion of the class-conscious workers | | that the Daily Worker shall go on )fighting, the following letters have |been received by the Daily Worker: | San Francisco.—Enclosed find $6 |money order for a year’s subscrip- |tion to the only English Daily that | tells the real story of the working’ class. | For a worker, $6 is a lot of money, ‘but when it comes to support the Daily Worker against the attacks of the workers’ foes it is well spent, considering the capitalist press that poisons the minds of the workers. The Daily Worker has a tremendous task, worthy of itself. J. M. *~ * Wichita, Kansas.—Have read the first installments of Gladkov’s great novel, “Cement.” It is so good that |high board fence and believed to I want a copy of the book, which I note you are giving with each sub- up and low pay. A shop bulletin was distributed here by the N. T. W. Union local. The workers greeted its appearance thruout the mills and copies are passed from hand to hand. They done soon, as the conditions are un- bearable. Many are so terrorized that they are afraid to join now, might be taken away by the bosses from them. But the avalanche is coming inavitably, and then these of. | Organization of a local N. T. W.| | Union in Easthampton is a sign that | western Massachussetts workers are | awakening. —ANNE ALDEN. ‘Hotel Clerk Killed by Gang in Booze War HAMILTON, Ohio, May 22 (UP). |—A machine gun cached behind a |have been manned by gangsters, shot | 12 bullets into the body of George | are all hoping something will be’) fearing that even this meagre lot} |of New England, if even the un- | Philadelphia, where misery is daily |employed will not stay on this speed-| increasing, and where, the workers | say, jobs cannot even be purchased. And further, many factories pre- “The acute ‘depression has also hit | the field of distribution. Wanamak- | jer’s, the largest department store } | in the city, has laid off many work- ers. Before the Easter holidays, workers were told in these depart- ments that they would be kept on until Easter, that it was spring now, and that they would have no dif- ficulty securing new jobs elsewhere | and to look around in the meantime. | One worker, formerly of Wana- maker’s, “looked” all right, and found an advertisement in the paper of a small place wanting one man, | and when he got there early in the | morning, there were already two hundred in line ahead of him. || WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS || SOrRis | | 43 East 125th Street | New York City slaves will show what they are made | ANNOUNCES— We will henceforth supply all German literature | printed abroad. This includes a full lme of the most recent writings on revolutionary theory and practice as well as the very best in revolutionary fiction. We have in stock at the present time some of the finest writings such as for instance Lenin’s Complete Works, Theory and Practice of Rationalization by Er- manski, History of the English Labor Movement, etc. All books are sold below cost price and readers are seription to the “Daily Worker.” It | Murphy, night clerk at the Grand Clerks in Store, 4613 Frankfort St.” | I went there and it proved to be! a tiny soda and lunch place, and} about 20 unemployed young workers | were ahead of me. The boss came that there is plenty of work, when) to the door and said, “What do you’ fellows want?” “We came to answer this ad.” | ict . still in and about 100 more. Duping the unemployed workers this way is common in Philadelphia. The bosses do it to pass the idea the truth is that work is scarce as hell due to the rationalization. |happens that my subscription is \paid to October, 1930, so I got out {and rustled another. | I enclose check for $6, with the |name C., W—-, Wichita, Kansas. Please put him on your subscription list, and mail me a copy of The Communist Party is the po- | “Cement,” Fraternally, litical leader of the working class. e sy W. FL K. 4 talin, Wt | Hotel here, today, Murphy came here several months | ago from St, Louis. Police believe | he was killed in reprisal for high- jacking of liquor, | i ‘ urged to place their orders with the WORKERS LI- BRARY PUBLISHERS, sole American agents for Ger- man revolutionary literature. We also solicit subscriptions for German Inprecor and Communist International (German edition). the Mississippi River will break over and flood a large area. The situation is stated by a city |engineer tos be “the most critical {which ever threatened the district in | ten years.” More than 250 workers fought |hard to repair the levee in their battle against the rising waters of the flood. MISSISSIPPI NEAR FLOOD. MEMPHIS, Tenn., May 21.—Ten| miles south of Hickman, the old) Reelfoot levee, erected under the grafting. contract system that pre- bling and the high water threatens to inundate thousands of acres of lowland. ’ THEODORE DREISER Hails— VILLAGE ? SIN First Sovkino Film Directed by A Woman “An excellent film; with the best cinema photography I have ever seen; among the best so far achieved by the motion picture ad- ventures anywhere.”—(Dreiser Looks at’ Russia.) Little CARNEGIE PLAYHOUSE, 146 W. 57th St., Circle 7551 (Continuous 2 to Midnite.) Have you seen NOW PLAYING! “MOSCOW TODAY” ——AS GOOD AS A TRIP TO THE SOVIET CAPITAL—— Presenting the leading Soviet personalities in the Kremlin. FILM GUILD CINEMA, 52 West 8th Street TAAME! Throuhsne| GLANASt.Follies “CAMEL Ede A | with Albert Carroll & Dorothy Sands By FRANTISEK LANGNER || BOOTH Thea. W. 45th St., Evs. 8.20 MARTIN BECK THEA, Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2.30 45th W. of 8th Ave. Evs, 8:55 THEA, W. By, Mats; Thurs. Bae dG” || MOROSCO THEA. med Sato JOHN DRINKWATER’S Comedy Hit BIRD 1N HAND | a eee Chanin’s MAJESTIC, Theatre 44th St, West of Broadway | Eves, 8:30: Mats.: Wed. & Sat. 2:30 JACK PHARL, PHIL, BAKER... AILEEN STANLEY, SHAW & LEB In the Revue Sensation PLEASURE BOUND | | | ARTHUR HOPKINS | HoLipaY Comedy Hit by PHILIP BARRY | PLYMOUTH Thea, W. 45 St. Ev. 8.50 ———————— Mats. Thurs, & Sat. 2.36 LAST WEEK! CAPRICE A Comedy by Sil-Vara GUILD ‘hea... w. Eves, Mats, Thurs, and Sat LAST WEEKS! Strange Interlude By EUGENE O'NEILL John GOLDEN Thea., o8th E. of Bway EVENINGS ONLY AT 6:30 st Among all the classes that con~ front the bourgeoisie today, the proletariat alone is really revolu- tlonary—Marx. 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

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