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sae fe __Page Tw Tw DAILY WORKER. EW YORK; WEDNESD! AY, JUNE 5, 5, 1929 Enlightenment Campaign on the Comintern Address to the Communist Party FURIOUS TERROR RAGES AGAINST CROAT PEASANTS Gover nment Assass Threaten Union es ac Recent repor paper corre give some i terror, sharp, until x ant organiz: assassin‘s | For the although April, the ports that « and that t able signs both leade tian pea ship, were pr and then th 5 near the Spirit Away all the peas have been y 2 rests were made and they we jected to tortures in an ¢ obtain information. The case of Pribit of the Croatian Peasant and Dem ocratic Party coalition, is illuminat- ing, not only for the t em- ployed by the dictatorship, but also of the course of bet al being fol- lowed by these bourgeois leaders of Croatia. Pribitchevitch came home one night to find an assassin in his room, whom he stalled and turned over to the police. The police refuse to prosecute. The following week, vitch, under cover of eal treatment for his Belgrade to seek an the dictatorship over the heads of the Croatian people. Once there, however, he was arrested, exiled to some small faraway village, where his life is in danger. h, leader wife, went to alliance with German Communists Make Great Gains in Rail Shop Elections BERLIN (By Mail).—Partial re- sults are now to hand of the shop councils elections on the German rail- Ways pointing to considerable suc- cess for the opposition. Although the central committee of the refor- mist railwaymen’s union had ex- pelled the largest branch of the union in Koenigsberg founded a new organi its place, the reformist lis ly received 628 votes whilst the oppositional list re- ceived 1,670 votes. The opposition won overwhelming majorities in numerous other districts in Eastern Prussia, such as Interburg, Stallu- poenen and Osterode. The same was} true of Upper Silesia where the list of the opposition reccived 674 votes whilst the reformist list received only 109 votes. In Oppein there was 559 votes for the opposition and 99 for the reformists. In two work- shops at the Anhalter Railway Sta- tion in Berlin there were large ma- jorities for the opposition. In Gotha the opposition also won the majority | of the votes, whilst in numerous other towns such as Dresden, Leip- zig, Opladen and Karlsruhe the op-; position won many new votes and represents a considerable minority.| 19 Milliard Boxes of Matches to Be Made In USSR This Year USS] MOSCOW, the Pp progress has been marked in development of the match in- n Soviet Rus: In: conse- the produc- r is expected or ten mil-| 4.5 million| i During the next ae m of 30 million ruble Du able h factories m In the current new match plants are to and some of STRUGGLE INST EMPIRE, faye sacre n Califor nia RANC 180 0, i ‘al (By y of n cotton down by 1 troops, memorated rin Theatre under the es of the Chinese Labor Group. by Chinese representa- f labor and student groups ed by talks by Harrison | a r of the Pan-Pacific who spoke for the Trade al League and the rade Union Sec: ized the neces- ‘uggle against im- Workers in the ng especially to 2 nee of the All-America -Imperialist League to be held in the near future in Los Angeles. was ¢ Soviet Woman Taken from Train, Arrested by Latvian Fascisti MOSCOW, U.S.S.R. (By Mail).— A citizen of the Soviet Union, the, working woman Anna Kaprova, has} arrived in Moscow and informed the Central Committee of the Interna- tional Red Aid that. on- her. wa: from Germany to the Soviet Union she was arrested in the train by agents of the Latvian police shortly| before Riga, and that with her the} well known Polish Communist Jan Paschin was arrested, the latter| having been on his way to the So- t Union to seek refuge there from the persecutions of the Polish police. Both of the arrested were| then taken to the Riga prison. Anna} Kaprova was detained for five days and then taken to the Soviet fron- tier under escort. After repeated] examinations Jan Paschin was de- | tained in prison. Anna Kaprova de-}| clares that Paschin was threatened with extradition to Poland, and that the arrests had been carried out at the request of the Polish authorities The persons who conducted the ex aminations in Riga conversed to- gether in Polish and declared that Paschin would be taken to Warsaw. According to the latest information of the LR.A., the Latvian authori- ties have taken Paschin to Duena- burg in order to meet representa- tives of the Polish secret police, All| further trace of Paschin has been| lost. Fears are expressed that Pas-| chin may have been murdered. | U. S. POISONS ONE MORE. Appreciable quantities of aldehol, a government denaturant, were found in the organs of Richard Mor-| ris, 55, an alcoholism victim found in a dying condition in front of his home, City Toxicologist Alexander O, Gettler announced yesterday. For a Four Weeks’ Holiday for Young Workers! Jt is the ultimate aim of this | work (*‘Capital”) to reveal the economic law of motion of modern society —Marx, Capitalism Takes Care of Henchman’s Son | art i. veilroading pilin Charles Evans Hughes has served Wall Street well in many of- ficial capacities, and Wall Street has rewarded the old servant of the | big business well, with many fat salaried positions and directorships vin its corporations. Hughes’ son, at whom Wall Street looks upon as 1 prospect in its service, is shown above being sworn in as Wall, 's solicitor general in the Department of Justice. There young’ will receive splendid practice inthe service of -his lagged workers to prison | ganization and \capitalism; MOBILIZE FOR A BETTER PARTY 1 | Our Party has a great and diffi- | cult task to perform. In clear rec- ognition of rapidly sharpening class struggles, it must fit itself more end more for the leadership the growing masses of sahegling workers, for the development of the present struggles of these workers into offensive ones, and for the or- direetion of revolu- tionary ‘action. This” presupposer acceleration’ of the Party’s Bol shevization; it demands a systematic development of consciousness with f the growing cppor- ons fo ruggle; correction m and Lo sant self-c .|% merciless warfare against oppor- the against and reactions within rty, an active warfare the Right danger. To be able to meet this great and diffieu f, ematie purging | ef from all! counteracting influences. The most important of these influences are epportunist tendencies in the lead- | hip, and the disinteg: in- | luences of the long-stan fac- tional strife. The Communist International, in execution of the policies laid down very definitely in the decisions and resolutions of the Sixth World Con- gress, has, in its open letter of Feb- rua 9, called the attention of our Party and its Central Commit- tee very definitely and specifically to its immediate duty of liquidating factionalism, of correcting Right mistakes and of ideologically clari- tying the Party. The correction of | Right deviations necessitated a| thorough recasting of the analysis of American imperialism by all sec- | “| tions of the leadership of the Party, | nd the correction of the Right | tions based on the previous an- J the ideological clarification of the Party demanded a concretiza- tion of the problems of the class| struggle, arising in the United States out of the peculiarities of the third period of capitalist stabiliza- tion, for the purpose of formulating | a clear program of action adapted to the growing readiness of the pro- | lctarian masses to fight against it necessitated a con-| cretization of the Right danger in| the American Party, as an indispen- sable prerequisite for meeting and ldefeating that danger; it presup- posed the speedy liquidation of fac- |tionalism as'a measure of establish- ing and increasing the confidence of | larger masses of workers in the pro- letarian -revolutionary quality of our Party, and as a measure of concen- jtrating all energies and all abilities of our Party to maneuver on the tasks which grow out of its mission as a revolutionary leader of the pro- letariat in the class. struggle. The earnest and well considered appeal of our International Jeader- ship did not get response. The years of factional maneuvers within our Party of group against group had distorted Party conceptions into group conceptions, and had created |a situation of actual subordination | of Party interests to group inter- ests, Whenever and wherever a consciousness of this monstrous reality dawned upon us, we put our | Party conscience to sleep with a soothing argument of identity of group and Party interests in our case. Jt was this fallacious, because | jeclectic theory, which finally led @o the mobilization of practically the whole Party in one form or another against the decisions and instruc- tions of the Communist Interna- tional. The theory that the group interests are precisely identical with | |the Party interests just naturally leads to the conclusion ‘that any > measure decided upon by our Inter- national leadership against our group and for the destruction of it | is a decision against the Party and | leads to the destruction of it. It was with this theory as a base | that we formulated our campaign| of appeal against the Comintern de- \cisions before the American Com- | mission of the Communist Interna- | Htional. It is true that our conscious desire never exceeded the determin- ation to fight against the Commu- nist International decision only up to that deadline where the fight | within the Communist International | turns into one against it. What we refused to see, however, was the fact that our very theoretical ap- proach was already beyond that deadline and, if carried to its log- ical conclusion, would inevitably lead to a physical crossing of this the Comintern, Seen in this light, the last de- cisions and the Address of the Com- munist International to our Party are a smashing blow to the poison- ous group concepts of the past and create a solid base for the unifica- tion. and . Bolshevization of our Party. Acceptance of the decisions and their unreserved application will preserve the Party and assure its growth. It will preserve for it all the valuable forces and’ experiences | developed and gathered in the course jot its * past activities in tho’ class struggle afd’ will rid its’ body and lits policies of all the sickly growths of factional concepts and reuctions. In order to. achieve the. necessary and the desired results for our Party, the practical application of the decisions: of- the. Communist In- ternational: must consist in the’ liv- ‘ling and concrete. application of the deadline into an open fight against | By MAX BEDACHT For a Broad Enlightenment Campaign The Polbureau is desirous of securing the broadest pos- sible Enlightenment Campaign on the Comintern Address and the immediate Party tasks outlined therein. members and particularly the comrades active in the work- 5 in the basic industries are invited to write their opin- Resolutions of Factory Nuclei also she ions for the Party Press. will be printed in this section. All Party Send all material dealing with | this campaign to Comrade Jack Stachel, care National office, Communist Party, 43 E. 125th St., New York City. political directions of the Open Let- Address. If. I have just returned from Mos- | cow. jcorrupt logic, T have there helped to embody in document after document, | in speech after speech, the mon- strous idea that the Comintern plans to break up our Party be |cause it {s determined to break up | “my” faction. Came on May 14 a meeting of the Presidium of the Communist Inter- national. The Address to our Party—as since published in our American Party press—was submit- ted to the Presidium by the Amer- ican Commission for final approval and adoption. ers of our International, There were many comrades whose revolu- | tionary quality had been tested in the fire cf decisive revolutionary battles. the leading sections of our World |Party,gwhose policies we had again and again endorsed and accepted as correct. One after another of these com: jrades arose to give voice to the de- termination of the Comintern to jbreak up and destroy all factional | groups in our Party, thus to unify it. One after another arose to point to the imperative duty of unifica- jtion in the face of the coming bat- war. One after another arose to |show how the pressure from the | Right tendencies and groupings within the Comintern is on the one tionalism, and, on the other hand, fed by it, and how this relationship of factionalism and Right danger seriously threatens the readiness and ability of our Party to fight in the class struggle. One after an- other arose to appeal from the| judgment of our factional concept to that of our Communist conscience so that we may do our duty toward our Party, toward the Comintern, and toward the working class. This discussion broke down in me my will of resistance. The feeling gradually grew in me that to pit my will against the will of my World Party is a presumption not growing out of revolutionary, but out of petty bourgeois logic. I grad- ually began to’ understand that my very approach to the whole prob- lem was in itself a proof of the correctness of the criticism of our leadership by the Communist Inter- | | national, After this discussion in the Pre- sidium, it was clear to me that our . Spurred on by my factionally | There were the lead-! There were the leaders of | tles of the speedily sharpening class | hand feeding the unprincipled fac- | , Part and I, representing the Party |judgment fe ern and carry it out. jallow us to rest with formal execu- jtion of Party or Communist Inter- |national decisions. To accept the |decision means only to aceopt its |correctness. To carry out the de- |cision means to clearly absorb. the ence and reasons for the correct- jncss, To accept the decision, there- |fore. put upon me the duty of burst- ing the skin of factional prejudices to enable me to look upon the prob- |lems through the eyes of the Com- |munist International, | qt The premise of the Comintern |action en the problems of our Party jore the analytical and tactical reso- jlutions of the Sixth World Congress. |In these resolutions the present world situation is characterized as a |new period of post war capitalism, lits third period. In this period the productive forces of capitalism, |which had been re-established and strengthened by the partial stabil- ization of the preceeding periods, have reached a stage of development in which the constantly sharpening contradictions create a new cris for the capitalist order and eats the vitals out of its temporary stability. This crisis takes the primary form |of an immediate war danger, but manifests itself also in a growth of the subjective forces of revolution, in a radicalization process of the working class. Acceptance of this |fundamental conclusion of the Com- intern analysis burdened our Party and its leadership with the duty to fight against reformism, to analyze |American imperialism, to find the jforms in which this crisis of world leapitalism develops in America, and |to establish around what issues and |what slogans our American Party would best be able to mobilize the workers in the United States as |part of the struggle of the world proletariat. The Communist International jcharges that our Centrai Committee did not do its duty in this case. Is |this criticism by the C. I. correct? Consideration of only one problem will give us a decisive answer to the question—the industrialization jof the South. We stressed the con- |tinued upward surge of American \imperiali: This was not in con- |fliet with the Comintern and its an- |alysis. But it was our primary duty Ito analyze how the opposite forces develop simultaneously and parallel |to the productive forces of Ameri- encountered in the Party during Communist International. aeffort leading toward a split in defense of such deviations against Party and the Comintern the role The effort of Comrade Miller t's: Communist International has munist Party. International. tion of international revolutionary would use this position for secret # STATEMENT OF CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY ON THE REMOVAL OF COMRADE BERT MILLER Comrade Miller secretly sent a letter to Party members in various cities attempting to mobilize the membership for an organized struggle against the Communist International. Miller again took the same position as that represented in his “repudi- ated” draft resolution and demanded of comrades to “conduct yourself accordingly and fight all removals,’—this last being not only a false and lying suggestion that “removals” of the party functionaries are in contemplation, for which there has been and is no warrant, but is also a direct incitement to splitting the party. further means in the attempt to mobilize against the Comintern and against the Central Committee of the Party. thus far known to the Political Committee, the Comrades addressed by Comrade Miller in the effort to induce them to fight the Comintern im- mediately reported Miller’s actions to the Secretariat of the Party. In this factional letter Comrade Comrade Miller also used In each case that is The Political Committee decided to expose before the whole mem- bership of the Party this case of Comrade Miller as an example of the most dangerous type of anti-Party and anti-Comintern activity to be the Enlightenment Campaign, now opening, in respect to the Address of the Executive Committee of the | In Miller’s unprincipled actions the Party faces in concrete reality the Communist Party of the United States—a split against the Communist International which (if it could be successful) would inevitably mean the formation of an anti-Com- intern party in this country. The attempt of Miller is a classic example of the manner in which petty-bourgeois deviations (and the organized the Comintern) result in the forma- tion of split-off, anti-Communist groups which continue outside of the of “petty-bourgeois politiciandom” which they could no longer play within the Party. of course has its political platform. ‘The platform is one of defense of all of the opportunist deviations which pointed out in the American Com- Comrade Miller attempts to rescue from the mud the opportunist. theory of .“exceptionalism” in fighting the efforts of the Communist International to eradicate it from the American Party. The platform is one which openly adopts the Trotskyist conception, put forward by the Right wing, of the “degeneration” of the Communist It is a platform of struggle against the Leninist concep- discipline. The removal from such an important position as that of Organ- ization Secretary of the biggest district of the Party, of anyone who organization of a split against the Communist International is an obvious duty of the Central Committec.. The Political Committee expects the full support of the Party in | its prompt action fer the protection of the Leninist unity of the Party. Fraternally, | e can capitalism. Did we do this? No. We have, for instance, the fact that the industrialization of the | South transforms tens and hundreds of thousands of formerly declassed | “poor white trash,’ almost over- | night, into industrial proletarians. And this transformation takes place under conditions of most intense methods tatest inventions and the most scien- tifie systems can supply, Thus the industrialization of the South pro- | dueed its own revolutionary anti- jital t and petty bourgeois concep- ter and the Communist International |in Moscow, had to accept the final |the § petty bourgeois ifetty bourgeois _ politiciandom, dote, an clement of tremendously sharpening class struggle which tends to undermine American cap- m. ‘This should have been the decisive factor for any Communist analysis based on the resolutions of xth World Congr But in and decision of the Com- | our own analysis the decisive factor But the du-|was not this counter-force to cap- |ties of Communist discipline do not | jtalist upward development, but rather the industrialization of the South The Comintern criti- ism, therefore, is correct. And the vee of our error certainly was petty bourgeois opportunism, Was the Comintern justified in condemning us for our unprincipled factionalism, and is the conscious eradication of this factionalism a necessary prerequisite for the prep- aration of the Party for its serious ks in this period? Of course it Factional considerations have in the past acted as a barrier be- tween C. I, decisions and their un- reserved application. The Comin- tern said: “Struggle against: the Right.” We said: “We accept the struggle against the Right.” But we said that the Right danger is the other faction, The struggle against | the Right danger in the ranks of | our own faction was studiedly avoided because it would only weak- en “us” at this moment in our strug- gle against the Right danger of the other faction. Therefore ‘we maintained, in practice, that in order to fight suecessfully against the |Right danger, we could not fight; against it in the ranks of our own faction. The Comintern sai “Liquidate the factions.” We said: ‘ ‘Accepted! Let us liquidate the opposing fac- | tion. our own. That would weaken us in the fight against the <factionalism of the other group. Therefore, our very acceptance of the Comintern demand of liquidating the factions necessitates that we should not liquidate our own.” Thus the corruption of our own logic, wrought by six years of fac- tional strife, led us to a systematic negation of every important deci- sion of the C. I. Can we hope to free ourselves from this corruption if we do not, first of all, recognize its existence and acknowledge the justice of the C. I. criticism? The same corrvpt factional logic illustrated in our reaction to the de- mands of struggle against the Right danger and of liquidation of the fac- tions, manifested itself in our reac- tions to all of the demands and criti- cism of the Comintern, It mani- fests itself even now in the attempt of comrades who do not dare to deny the justice of the C. I. criti- cisms, to negate them by propagan- dizing the Party against its form and against the language in which it is couched. It is true the Comintern does not mince words. Factionally corrupt logic presents to the Party that pleading guilty to the charges of the Comintern means to incapacitate the pleader to leadership or even membership in our Party. But the Communist International only exer- cises its duty when it points out that ecrtain policies proposed were opportunist, certain tactics employed were the tactics of petty bourgeois politicians. To accept the criticism means to recognize these errors in order to re-establish our Communist quality. means to turn these wrong policies, tactics and actions into a system and thereby prove that they were not mere deviations from a correct line, but were a line in themselves. And such a rejection of the criti- cism, such a maintenance of the wrong line, would transform the cul- prit from a Communist into a petty bourgeois opportunist, a petty bour- geois politician and a rotten dip- lomat, The first duty of a Party mem- ber and, especially, of a Party leader, is objectivity. One who can- not subordinate himself to the Party und its needs, its interests, its poli- cies, is not a Communist, but a petty bourgeois individualist. Comrades Lovestone and Gitlow take this non- Communist attitude now. They put their personal judgment over that of our world Party; they put their self-conceited personal integrity above the revolutionary integrity and unity of our Communist Inter- national. Such tactics are in direct and open opposition to the Commu- nist International. They must be discarded or the Communist Inter- national must discard the comrades who seek to apply them. And our whole Party will and must help the Comintern to discard them, Acceptance and unreserved execu- tion of the decisions of the Commu- nist International means an end to opportunism, to to rotten diplomacy. Every fiber of our onergy and loy- alty must be given to our world ge and its American section! a of exploitation, which thej| Of course we cannot liquidate | But to reject the criticism | all exit | a UT. W, SELLS OUT! ANOTHER STRIKE; Only Demand Is That! Its “Union” Stays | (Continued from Page One) and went to Whitmire, where other mill is on strike. State Sends Agent. The Whitmire strike involves 1,- 300 workers. Of these, the speeders, | who started the movement, demand fifteen per cent increase in wages. They have not been‘cut, or speeded lately, as is usual when a strike cause develops in the South, but are on the offensive, and this new spirit is due directly to the lessons |taught by the National Textile Workers Union organizers. As assistant to the sell-out of the} U. T. W., the governor of South| Carolina has sent in H. son, secretary of the state board of | conciliation. His task is to act with the U. T. W. betrayers of labor in the same capacity as Anna Wein-/| stock, of the U. S. department of | |labor, did in Elizabethton, The National Textile Workers Union will send another delegation to the Mills mill to expose the treachery of the U. T. W. | Meanwhile, the strike is reported | spreading. About 1,200 workers at | the Wareshoals Manufacturing Co. | mills at Wareshoals near Greenville | walked out today, This is their sec- \ond strike. The first strike in March was won, but the employers broke |their promise that they would re- |voke the “stretchout” system. A young married striker, Ledford, ran around through the large crowd | [at the mass meeting of strikers in Gastonia yesterday evening until he |found members of the relief commit- | tee of the Workers International Re- lief. His wife was expecting a baby within a few hours, and the doctor demanded $20 before he would take the case. The relief committee hur- riedly conferred, and gave the last/ money it had on hand, The commit- tee also gave absorbent cotton, rub- | bing alcohol, soap and baby powder, | an- |mone of which the strikers alone | would have been able to provide. The Dedford family was evicted some time ago, dnd had been living | in the overcrowded union boarding | house, Need $100 for Shoes. The W. I. R. committee here is negotiating with shoemakers to re- pair a hundred pairs of shoes, and/ needs $100 immediately to cover the | cost. The shoes are second hand, donated by other workers and have holes in soles, heels and guards. The H. H. Mills family was evict- ed in Bessemer City last Thursday. Mills is an active striker, and now is blacklisted everywhere. It is im- possible to rent a house for them, as the boss has bought up all avail- able houses to victimize the strikers, The few pieces of furniture Mills has all stands on Main St. Threaten Chain Gang. Mills has received notice from the police that his furniture must be removed from Main St., by noon to- |day, or he will be arrested as a | vagrant and given a sentence on the chain gang. The employers are de- termined to run the Mills family out | of town. Four other active union) members in Bessemer City have been blacklisted and are being evicted. | They face the same problems as the Mills family. One child of the Fowler family, 5 years old, in Bessemer City has} a bad case of pellagra and needs a doctor, The treatment costs too much for the W. I. R. to pay, for it at present. Other bad cases of ill- ness are developing. The strikers themselves are erect- mystery masterpiece — a sym: Starting This Saturday a al 7 3 weeks with the great: finest chara or we Wea ‘and Thurs., Jui THIRD WEEK—The Pai LZ of mine Fathe q q q q Ee: q ¢ ya sie DISREGARDS PAY. Thomp-| |fred Moon, of Port Jervis, FIRST SHOWING IN AMERICA! “NOSFERATU the VAMPIRE” Inspired by “DRACULA” a psychopathic drama of blood-lust — a thrilling AND A DISTINCTIVE SURROUNDING PROGRAM THE CINEMA EVENT OF THE YEAR! 8 FIRST WEEK -9——T 10-11——F A UST- 3—-PASSION—AS LOUIS THE XIV a M4th—____-sTncer or Sina SECOND WEEK—The Last Laugh, Tartuffe, The FILM GUILD CINEMA 52 W. 8th St. (ust west) CONTINUOUS 2 P. M. TO MIDNIGHT ‘For the Bosses Father and son in the service of alism and the bosses facDonald, head of the British Labor Party, and his son, Malcolm, whom he is training in the service of capitalism. MacDonald took care of his son in the recent elections, picking a soft spot from which to send him to parliament. ing a big new bridge over a gully which separates the National Tex- tile Workers Union and W. I. R. headquarters from the tent colony. This bridge building is in charge of a striker named Lloyd, an old-time mountaineer, Many tickets are being sold for the showing in the Rex Theatre at Bessemer City, Frid. of the Pas- saic Strike film. Strikers will be admitted free, and there is much ex- citement over it. Bosses Fear Union. Many active members of the Na- tional Textile Workers Union in mills in nearby towns have been dis- charged for union activity. The Workers International Relief helps these victims and their families un- til they are able to find another job. + See, New York Workers Help. Many labor and social organiza. tions of New York City are con- tributing funds to the Workers In- | ternational Relief to help feed, shel- ter and purchase medicine for the striking textile workers of Gastonia, [N.C At a conference of the Non-Par- tisan Workers Schools, held at Ir- ving Plaza, $76 was collected after a short talk by Jeannette D. Pearl, field organizer of the W. I. R. She also collected $7.40 at a social at 309 E. 14th St. snd $14.45 at a meeting of the Grub St. Poets at 68 E, 11th St. Derailed Train Kills Migratory Workers, Injures Erie Flagman MIDDLETOWN, N, Y., June 4.— Two migratory workers beating their way were killed and two men were injured when 16 cars of a fast east-bound Erie freight train were derailed in a deep cut two miles north of here late today. One of the men killed was identi- fied as Charles F, Smith of Spring- field, Mass. The other victim was not identified. The injured were Al- bert James of Philadelphia, and Al- a flagman of the train. Communists fight on behalf of the immediate alms and interests of the working class, but in their present movement they are also de- fending the future of the move- ment.—Marx, LAST 3 DAYS! Directed by: phony in sadism F. W, MURNAU Wrecton vor “The Last Laugh? wv Jannincs? 4 REPERTOIRE WEEKS JUNE 8 to JUNE 28 4 fest wereen artist in his eterizations oe ‘HE WAY OF ALL FLESH ———AS MEPHISTO with Pola N ist Command, ares: of Pharaoh, Variety, Sins Vvvvv (of Sth Av, Spring 5095 POPULAR PRICES