The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 29, 1929, Page 4

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Page Four *"-— “=” DAILY WORKER, NEW YqRE. WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1929 “TO HELL WI to put me (By a Worker Correspondent.) Then they got a man ned Johnstone to run the mill GASTONI y Mail). Fellow wor work- nd the first thing he did was to ing in textile put me to work running four When I e frames, and cut my wages 20 per first I went t cent. They made me _ work fice longer hours, running two | Ever since, I haven’t had a de- | cent meal, or clothes, for after my rent and fuel bills were paid I had only about $2 left. So you can see I did not have much to buy food with or clothes for my wife and babies, and if they got sick | and I asked if I could have time off they would say, ‘No, we can’t TH SLAVERY IN THE LORAY MILL”, SAYS STRIKER; “ wife is sick,” and the boss would | say, “I can’t help that, you just have to work or quit.” So there you are. I haven’t got money enough to move on so I have to slave for the bosses or get out. Well, I slaved for a while longer, but after a while what do you | let you off.” I would say, “MY | think barpened here? The union | open our relief store and threw our food on the street. came here, and the union men called us on strike @d showed us we did not have to steve for the Next they broke up our picket mill bosses like we v We found | line and beat up old women and out that this was the right kind | locked them up. Well, that didn’t them out of their homes.” { They took us to court, and you know that the judge was for the mill bosses, so they started to throw my furniture in the street and my wife was sick. They said they would not put out sick people, but you can bet they did. Here I worked for them all this time almost for nothing and they WE’LL STICK TO UNION TO END” put me out in the rain, and my sick wife too. } Well, they found out this was only,making people sore at them, so they went off and told people lies to get them to work. But that didn’t work, for despite all they have done to us we will stick to the union and to hell with Loray —L, K. ~ of union, and the mill bosses tried work so they had to study some to break it up. First they got the other scheme. Here’s wHat it was National Guard, and then they got | —they passed a law that we could a masked mob and sm 1 out | not picket. Well, that wouldn’t our union headquarte broke | work, so they said, “We will throw Penowa, Penn. Coal Miners Strike Against INFLUENCE OF LEWIS MACHINE. NOW DISCARDED National Miners Union Leads Struggle to them. * Dear Comrades:— (By a Worker PENOWA, Pa. work 7 hours a day. Our bicycle factory in Kharkov on January 1, The worker in the Kharkov bicycle plant who writes the letter below tells how the workers won the seven hour day for themselves, | at the same time increasing employment as well as production. These Soviet workers are eager to hear from American workers. Write * 8 | 1929, began to | The preparations for the change were made by the factory management as well as by the workers. FIGHT T0 END Score Local Press for Lies (By a Worker Correspondent) GASTONIA, N. C. (By Mail) — W More Employment With \GASTONIA MILL CAROLINA PRESS Witchcraft Film Shows ihe 7-Hour Day in the USSR STRIKERS WILL SPREADS LIES OF Lewis a Seale in J the men, not a bunch of t it was ized rar dicker wit A special commission was created, which investigated everything, after which the question was discussed at the workers’ general meet- ng and at the production conference, where all the workers expressed opinion that the factory can adopt the 7-hour day and that we shall be able to fulfil the tasks which confront us—the reduction of the cost production, the raising of the productivity of labor and an increase he output by more than 100 per cent. manding ch rifttees, etc. cessful in a nm might while spending less energy and earn more. All appliances for ict that went back under such arrangements. The c pany adhered to the agreement up to May 21, when they notified the miners’ check-weighman that not allowed upon the tipp! Jonger. They thought th Tipe, for ; the coal ist who tries to lengthen the work- nmee_—th workers for his own profit. that since the men went back they had organized a local of the National Miners Union. workers perform their duties very When the ck-weighman was notified that would not be per- mitted to remain on the tipple, the officers of Local Union 10: N. M. U. called a meeting immediately of all men employed in the mine. of Long live the Communist Pa: class! Hail the world revolution! The unanimous decision was to strike. Local 105 is leading it. R. When at the mee the policy of ——_—_—_—_— the N. M. U x) A this is a th Si, ? fifteen nev S$ é aves and the p e that every | | Be Hired (By a Worker Correspondent) “It’s smart to be thrifty.” This Macy’s slogan, and, as I have learned, their practice. Macy’s is the big department store in New York City. There was an advertisement in the “Sunday World”: “Wanted— Typist; night work. Apply Macy’s, 84th St.” I was looking for night work, man in the mine will join the Na- tional Miners Union. The spirit is good. The men are in a fighting mood. No cree! of gcing back at any wages. The | men are determined to go back onl ler the condition that the che ¥eighman remains;,and no wage- euts or discrimination. H Some of the mesi"wh6' were under the influence of the Lewis machine “lie that the National Miners Union was organized with the help of the | Pittsburgh Coal Company to smash the United Mine Workers of Amer- | i¢a, and the strike of 1927-28, convinced by this prompt act Local Union 105 that the Nati |for, they say, the early worm |catches the bird—or job. I squashed myself into the subway. At 34th installed, the premises are'light, warm and spacious. Despite the adoption of the 7-hour day, the number of the workers has not diminished. The piece-rate worker is earning even more, be- cause of the rationalization of labor. the same wages as when the 8-hour day prevailed, All that proves that the workers are the owners of their factory, and there is no exploitation of the workers as the case with the capital- All the work in our factory is directed by our own workers who have been promoted from the ranks and who with the support of the All that clearly proves that only under the dictatorship of the proletariat can we gain an improvement of the conditions of the work- ing class. Working only 7 hours at the factory, the workers can devote their spare time to social and cultural activities. Wait To For that purpose a new factory building was erected, to which the mechanical and enamelling shops were transferred. building have been installed new machines, in order that the workers In the new increase the productivity of labor | the safety of the workers have been The time workers are getting day and to reduce the wages of the | well. ty, the vanguard of the working . BITENEK, Worker Correspondent. at R. H. Macy’s |she would say, in cultured accents: | “We may be able to place you, come around some other day.” I stepped |up and told her I was applying for |the night typist’s job. She gave |me an application and told me to |fill it out and then wait for a Mrs. | Chadwick. : | Probably, as I deduce from my ex- |perience, about five youths were |hired today out of about four hun- | |The guard turned and spoke to an applicant, saying: “Some of the Miners Union is the only union that really fights against wage-cuts and worsening of the conditions in the mines, This is the first real outbreak of the old fighting spirit in this dis- ivict, and will be a basis for nev struggies of the Western Pennsyl- vania miners under the leadership of the National Miners Union. The mine is 100 per cent on strike under the leadership of Local Union jguys go from store to store during St. I allowed myself to be pushed |the week. She knows some of them off. I flowed along with the “white |and just turns them down without collar” mob to the particular en-| any consideration.” trance in that gigantic building} In about a half an hour, getting which opens to the stairs that lead impatient, I asked the guard where to the employment office. I climbed | Mrs, Chadwick was. In answer he the stairs. jtold me to go through a gate and The females are separated from |{c sit on the other side of the sort | the males. There is a sign which |of fence. erik Men applicants and another | I was now seated where I could which says “Women applicants” on! watch the girls being “hired.” What the partition at the top of the stairs. might be called a pretty young thing j 165 of the N. M. U. Not content |The partition forms an alley, the with discharging the check-weigh-|wall on one side, and the partition, man, the company has made a bi, vhich is of wood, on the other. It cut in wages as well. Machine min. darkly illuminated up here by ing has been cut from 52 cents per | electric light. ton to 46 cents; pick mining from 85| Then I was initiated to the em- cents per ton to 65 cents; machine | ployer’s game of “You Wait.” The dutters from 10 cents per ton to 8/game is this: You stand in line and cents per ton; day work from $5|wait—while they take their time per day to $4.50. The N. MU. local about seeing you. There were about is holding regular daily strike meet- 200 young men in the booth, which ings. The company has commenced |is an imitation of a room, that I ~-eyictions at this early date. Sam reached after standing in line for Mancuso, president of Local 105, N./ about an hour and a half. "ME U., was the first to be served @| Some of us were making out ap- seven-day eviction notice. The na- plications—a very few of us. These tional headquarters is making ar- | ypplications, I am to discover, re- vangements to extend the strike tolquire enough information to send other properties of this company in |one to life-long slavery in Macy’s, an attempt to effect a complete tie- jor, for that matter, any other ex- up’ of all its operations. \ploiter’s shop; or to send you up to ran Ler eaeacmmmd | jail for life if you try to form a ; union, “destroy” property, or do not \ Sheriff Agent of Vare, jexactly do as you are told. You to Tell Source of Cash jalso have to sign to give them per- —- |mission to dock a part of your pay PHILADELPHIA, Pa., May 20.—/for their Mutual Benefit Associa- j — me patie poubengey of peter mien is a ules welfare Bheri: jomas ve unningham,|scheme, You pay—the bosses say. jvho yesterday was named In a U.| Finally, came my turn. The fel- ~\ S..Supreme Court decision saying w-senate had a right to arrest him unless he disclosed the source of £50,000 he contributed to the cam- paign funds of William S. Vare. said today the sheriff was willing to tell about the money. Women Workers and Young Workers! Join the Ranks of the Struggling Workers! %. |lows would be held back about five feet from the woman by a special lcop. The woman would then signal |the cop to release one of the vic- |tims as soon as she was through with the last victim. All the woman {was doing was to look at the vic- tims as they took the three steps necessary to stand before her and as they mumbled their plea, “I am an experienced chauffeur and so on,” “LET’S STICK TO UNION” » Gastonia Mill Strikers Defy Evictions i (By a Worker Correspondent) i GASTONIA, N. C. (By Mail).—I want to tell you of our struggle in the Loray mill. I have worked for shelter and Manville-Jencks is still piling furniture out today on the street, Poor old crippled women |are put on the street without shelter _ 22 years in the spinning room in|and some are crying because _ Loray milland they make you do so| their children are without homes. much work with small wages and | But we’re still going to stick just the ‘that is why I am out today on strike | same if our things are out on the to better our conditions in the i street. So stick to the union all you ‘mill. Now my furniture is out ly-| workers. on the strect I am without, -A WOMAN WORKER, J. F. was the interviewer. Sweet in her way. She had a different job. All) she had to do was to number the applications. Macy’s hires mostly girls. They work cheaper and longer. | But, they were not hiring many to- day. At least I did not see them being hired. I saw the girl-workers with applications, being interviewed, but not hired, not allowed to slave! |Some of the workers were told to | wait. They joined the rest of us waiting. | These girls were told to wait for \a Miss Randall or someone . . . and so on, As I sat, I watched three girls near me for one hour before this Miss Randall came around to “interview” them. She “‘aterviewed them in this manner—First Miss R. |stared the applicant in the eyes. Then she showed her pearls of teeth by teething a pretty smile. Ig a cluttered tone she spoke saying, “How do you do?” “What can I do for you?” The applicant answers, according to their character. Some earnestly and some besearchingly, but all humbly, tell their tale of ability. The answer is inevitably |the same, “Come around some other jtime, she says, we will be able to place you.” Finally, some other gray-haired ‘woman comes around and takes our applications. There were, I dis- ‘covered when they gave in their ap- ;Plications four other men of varied ages, going for the same job as I. We sit, again to wait . and play |“You Wait.” It was 12:45 a. m., approximately three and a half hours since I came there before Mrs. Chad- wick came around and gaid that the | typewriters that were we were to use “in a test for speed and accuracy were in constant use and that we might as well go home as there would be no opportunity for the use of the machines that day.” That is the way the exploiter is allow to treat the producer, the ex- ploited in the capitalist epoch. Fel- | We want you to please put this in the Daily Worker for us. We be- lieve that the union is the best thing that ever came to Gastonia, but it seems that everybody that has lots of money is trying to damn our union, The business people of this town don’t want the cotton mill workers to have anything, but they want us to work hard so they can have plenty. There are people right here in our mill village that haven’t got decent clothes to wear, on account of making nothing in the mill. I know why they speeded us up so fast. get as much yarn in two or three days as they did before in a week. When speed was normal it took six hands to run the work that three hands now do. If that’s not speeding the work, what do you call speeding the work? Rich Are Enemies. We have just been waiting to see what the rich in this town would do. They have done nothing but criticize the poor laboring class of people. People like me have to get up at two o’clock every day to do house work and then go to the mill and work all night. It is eight o’clock in the morning before I can get to bed. How do you think the editor of the Gastonia Gazette, the paper which has been on the bosses side in the strike, would like his wate or mother to work like that? “What,” he will say “I wouldn’t let her.” Well, that’s what we are trying to get, so that the husband can make a wage to support his family so that the wife and children won’t have to work, How do you think any man can make a living for a family on $7 and $8 a week? Why is it that the senators from North Carolina don’t want to have any investigator down here? Be- Well, Monday, bright and early, dred applicants for all kinds of jobs, | Ue they know they will find our conditions just like we say they are. Let them come right down to our homes and see for themselves what we have to put up with. We don’t have cake and pie to eat Jike W. T. Rankin or editor Atkins of the Gas- tonia Gazette, but we want to be able to eat in order to live, Children Slave. We noticed in the paper about the | children’s nursery. That is just be- cause we can’t make enough to get the kind of food they need. Also we saw in the paper about criticizing the editor of the Gazette. I don’t guess that there are many mill em- ployees that know the editor, he don’t want to know the hands that work in the mill. Why are the chain gangs full to- day? Just because the mothers have to go to work and leave the children when they are little, because the father can,t make a living for the family and they are left to go out in the world. If we had had a union in Gastonia things would be better. We want our rights and we intend to have them if we have to fight for them. —WORKERS OF THE OZARK MILL, “NICE WOMEN” OPENS IN BROOKLYN, JUNE 3 L. Lawrence Weber’s new play “Nice Women” a comedy by William A. Grew, will open at the Majestic Theatre, Brooklyn on June 3. Robert Warwick and Sylvia Sidney are fea- tured. The cast also includes Verree Tearsdale, George Barbier, Lotta Linthicum and Hope Drown. The play is due on Broadway a week later. “Pleasure. Bound,” is now in its three last weeks at the Majestic Theatre. The revue will move to Chicago about the middle of June with the present cast intact, May Murray has joined the cast of “Little Accident,” Croaby Gaige’s comedy now at the Ambassador Theatre. Miss Murray was last seen here in “Paris Bound.” CHARGE BIG OIL SWINDLE. PITTSBURGH, Pa., May 28. Partners of J. C. Trees and M, L. Benedum have filed suit against the latter, charging they swindled their associates in the J. C. Trees Oil Co., by telling them that the Standard Oil bought them out for $4,150,000 whereas the actual price paid was low workers, organize in the shops. Join the Communist Party. How much longer are we the exploited to stand this oppression and exploita- tion by the parasites of the bosses class. sw OG isk: | $6,000,000. They say Trees and Benedum simply pocketed the dif- ference, Aalits. . Beh teh all the classes Bo ald cn proletariat slows ie really "revel donary—Marx, we “Witchchaft Thru the Ages” at the Fifth Avenue Playhouse turned on inspection to be an interesting and praiseworthy attempt to explain the reasons for the superstition which killed its millions all throughout hu- e man history, and now under the Side cowl of Mellon’s policy of keeping | the inhabitants of his state of Penn- | (By a Worker Correspondent) sylvania in the mental state which STONIA, N. C. (By Mail)—The makes for low wages, has but a few TEXTILE BARONS Worker Tells Slaves’ strike in Loray mill has exposed the | months ago, taken another victim. rotten conditions not only in Loray mill, but also in all the mills. In one mill the bosses feared the | workers would get some understand- | |ing of the union and elzo find out | |the rotten conditions in the other | Benjamin Christensen, director of the film, did not show “witchcraft through the ages.” He made no at- tempt except for a few flashes from old engravings and rock carvings, to show really ancient or primitive They did this so they could | fle by a “trike in| Witch doctoring. He did not bring pee a aed a Ae ee | out the close connection between the against orders in the mills to read, | tthodox spook chasing priest, whose |They tell us that the Gastonia | °Perations in every age and clime Gazette is our “community paper and | have been legal, and his submerged |best friend,” but it is the bosses’ best, brother, frequently the formerly fiend: orthodox priest of a conquered cult, It gives only one sidz, the com-| WhO has to put up with the title of jpany’s side, Stewart W. Craner| “witch” and practise in secret. Much |stated in the Charlotte Observer that] Teligious history, many deaths and we skilled laborers in the mill at|UMtold human misery has resulted Cranerton made wages ranging from trom “the, competition af these. a0! $13.50 to $24 a week. He said that | tk forces, the accepted religion cardroom unskilled labor made $13.50 | 24 its no less ridiculous, but illegal, and spinners made $18.84 and that | Witeheraft” reflection. There is good evidence to show AMINE GE Ee HES for 60 hours. that a real witch cult existed during The Workers’ Side. th idl en eeaar 1 Well that isthe bossesvside-ofit,| tc) sae eect meee eian eer I worked in the Cranerton mill and **Y 4 Tevolt of the “benighted” mas- ses, who preferred to the horrors of christianity the remnants of a some- what less austere and gloomy cult, made up of the relics of badly re-| membered paganism. | The picture does show, however, how the half crazy, clerical ascetics | of the church, saw witches on every | side, where there were not even any) who pretended to be witches, and/ gives the story, taken directly from| old German court records, of the) destruction of a whole family and} several other innocent victims,| staunch believers“all of them, in one} frame-up case after another, in which horrible tortures conducted by priestly fanatics and hypocrits got confessions of guilt, and confessions implicating all the personal enemies} of the confessed, on a wholesale scale, One young mother is provoked un- der pain of having her baby executed, to betray, on promise of release for herself and child, a knowledge of witch spells, common to the whole population, and is burned alive as a result. The picture is enlivened by photo- graphs of several ingenious medieval devices, intended to show the gro- tesque nightmares of what awaited in hell the cursed persons who tried to compete, unorthodoxly with the prevailing and hallowed, Catholic myth makers.—V. S. if any such conditions exist, no one knows any thing about it. If you! want to find the truth about our ‘conditions go from one worker to an- other and you will be surprised at what you find out. The workers work for $12 a week of 60 hours, Men with large families | work for $12.60 a week. The paper | prints only what the bosses want them to print, and I have sent sev-| eral pieces to the Gastonia Gazette, | which they didn’t print. They say only the lowest grade) of people will join a union, but some of our best people around here be- long to the National Textile Work- | ers Union; what they call low people | is the best people forced down by the mill bosses to a low standard of | near Comrades: living. (A letter from John Taylor, cafeteria striker who was sen- tenced to six months in the work- house on May 20th, by Judge Ed- ward Weil of Jefferson Market Court, for the “crime” of pic- keting.) Riker’s Island Dormitory No. 5 Number 98150 Keep Frighting. I have reached my new “home” We'll keep fighting for our rights,| Where I will have six months to under men of courage like Beal and | “think it over.” Every dormitory is Pershing. Workers with common |2 separate wooden building. At sense know that what the bosses | least we have plenty of room and fight against is for our benefit. We | fresh air, so it is not quite as bad will all fight for an 8 hour day and | 2S I expected. I'l rather be here a wage that can give our families | than in one of the sweatshop cafete- a decent living and our children an | terias slaving for 12 hours a day education. I hope this will reach for starvation wages. I was lucky home to every worker, not only in| ¢nough to land a good job here when the south, but also throughout the I arrived, in the storeroom. But be- world at large. | lieve me I have to be a “good boy” —GASTONIA WORKER. _ +o hold it. Se | Misses the Comrades. - Iam going to be lonesome because ‘Copley, Publisher, to 1 don't know a single one of the | *. *. | prisoners here. It was not so bat ‘Testify About All His in the Tombs where the strikers were |Power Trust Holdings always coming and going and I could | see the comrades and find out how WASHINGTON, May 28,—The | the strike is going on. But maybe Federal Trade Commission today |S0me more of you will be sent up summoned Col. Ira C. Copley, Il- | here as the judges are getting worse linois and California publisher, to|every day and soon the strikers will appear before it June 13 in connec-|be getting a year in the coop for tion with its investigation in the ac-| picketing. I don’t wish any of you quisition of newspaper stock by pub- | any hard luck, but if you get a jail lic utility companies. bit to do, I sure would be glad to Evidence developed at the previous see you here. It would make it hearing disclosed Copley was for-| easier to pass the time. But don’t merly a substantial stockholder in| get in a hurry to come here because mid-western utilities. Recently Cop- | once you are here it isn’t so easy to ley advised the commission that he | get out as to get in, had disposed of all his power hold-| I wrote you a letter from the jail ings. ibut since then I took a boat ride to CAMP FREILACH STORM KING, N. Y. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF THE FOURTH SEASON ON Decoration Day, May 30 A number of new improvements have been made. We have engaged SOLOMON GALOB, the famous Jewish poet and composer, as the educational and entertainment director. We have arranged a new program for every evening this weekend, Registration Is Open Now at Reasonable Rates For information and registration call Bronx Office, 946 Ave. T NTer: 9790 01 Second Ave., Tel. ORC! Visitesoecesooees Soviet Russia VIA LONDON—KIEL CANAL—HELSINGFORS AND 10 DAYS IN LENINGRAD and MOSCOW TOURS FROM $385. Sailings Every Month INQUIRE: WORLD TOURISTS, INC. 175 FIFTH AVENUE (Flatiron Bldg.) | NEW YORK, N. Y. Telephone: ALGONQUIN 6656 CHICAGO—Sce us for your steamship accommodations—MOSCOW Keep Up the Fight Writes Food Striker trom His Cell my new summer residence here, so | I thought I had better let you know |my address. I will be glad to hear from you comrades. Don’t forget to keep up the force \fighting against the Consolidated | Cafeteria 36th St. and 7th Avenue | where I got arrested in Monday’s |mass picketing demonstration. Do | me a favor and give the boss hell. “Fight Like Hell!” Give my regards to all the boys and especially the girls! Tell them discouraged. We will teach the bosses that they can’t scare us with a damned injunction. I hope that long before I get out the strike will be won and you will make the bosses sign on the dotted line. It is a little discouraging to sit here and not be able to be in the fight against the exploiters. But |I am sure all the comrades will do | their duty and fight like hell. | Your comrade, —JOHN TAYLOR, | 64 KILLED BY QUAKE. | PARIS, May 28.—Sixty-four per- | | sons were killed and 72 were injured | jin 74 villages in Central Asia, |shaken by an earthquake Saturday, | to keep up the fight and don’t get! age Cu t: F ight to Retain Checkweighman CATCH GASTONIA Faith That Kills Wholesale spy ATTEMPTING TOPOISONWATER Strikers Rocognize Stool Pigeon (By a Worker Correspondent) GASTONIA, N. C., (By Mail) — I am always proud to write for the Daily Wevker about the Loray strike in Gastonia, because I know that the Daily Worker will print just what a worker writes. We strikers of the Loray mill aze going through a lot of struggle, fighting avainst the ong hours, low wages, against the bosses and capital. And we are having some hard time of it, we have to guard our headquarters and tents every night. Just today we had a)spy in our union office. He had a blackjack, and two bottles of some kind of medicine. A striker from Bessemer | City was here at the time. She | stated that the same man was at her home in Bessemer City one night this week, after midnight. His business was that he wanted a drink jof water. They gave him a | drink of water and he still wanted to argue, so they had to drive him from their home. Later in the morning the strikers became suspicious, that he might have poisoned the water,/} So, they had the spring tested, and’ the doctor said that there was some-'} thing wrong with the water. But it would be three or four days before |they could tell what it was. We |turned the man over to the city |police. They came into our office |with a frown on their faces, and | acted as if they did not want to take the spy. The spy was very happy all |the time, when the police arrested him they looked at each other and smiled. Of course that shows what the police are. | —A. D. Reap the benefits of the May Day demonstrations by getting into the Communist Party work- ers who participated. Mayor and 22 Floaters Indicted for Fraud in Illinois Town Election CHICAGO, May 28.—Election, fraud conspiracy indictments were reported to have been returned by the Cook County Grand Jury today against John Comise, mayor of Specialville, and 22 alleged mem- bers of the “floater army” of “Mike De Pike” Heitler, vice lord. The-true bills were reported to have charged conspiracy and viola- tion of the election laws in the elec- tions as Specialville, April 16. Heitler, who escaped indictment,, was arrested with his “army” at. headquarters in a pigsty, after rival political leaders had complained of, & ” ‘i t! Sconomie law ef motion of medarn eosters.” . Comise was defeated | society.—Marx, for re-election. | dispatches from Angora, Turkey, re- | port. | It is the ultimate aim of this | work (“Capital”) to reveal the THEODORE DREISER Hails— 2nd BIG WEEK! . 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.) t W. 45th St. By! THEA., MOROSCO 8.50. Matinees: Wed Thurs, and Saturday, at 8:30. JOHN DRINKWATER’S Comedy H ARTHUR HOPKINS presents HotipaY Comedy Hit by PHILIP BARRY PLYMOUTH Thea. W, 45 St. Ev. 8.50 Mats. Thurs, & Sat. 2.35 ‘Thea., 44th, W. of Biway Shubert ‘Evenings 8:30 Mat.: Wediesday and Saturday 2:30 The New Musical Comedy Revue Hit A NIGHT IN VENICE BIRD NHANT Chanin’s MAJESTIC Theatr |» 44th St. West of Broadway Eves. 8:30; Mats.; Thurs. & Sat, 2: JACK PEARL, PHIL BAKER, AILEEN STANLEY, SHAW & LE), In the Revue’ Sensation PLEASURE BOUNI 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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