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Sat Page Four $1 ENSLAVE eIRLS After Day of Slavery—The | IN CORRUGATING 22%ce fall for Working Girls j “pRIME” TQ SLAVE IN MILLS. HELL INWESTVA, Bosses Try to Crush Workers’ Efforts (By a Wo WHEELIN -The Wheel independer ranging is trict. rs slave in ofits of this 000,000 in $1 were according over King of the Valley. The Whe Steel Corporation dominates part of the Ohio River V exploiting mercilessly part of the » especially munist and other militant of this tion have had of its reac- es, esp ly residential election Jozen of our meet- p with several including lackeys ot arrests of our ers, Scott Nearing, this open shop corpo ion. In spite he huge profits and the tremendous expansion of its new plants in Steubenville and Wheeling, the worke these plants are suf- fering all sorts of privations and miseries. No Union to say the not a ves- tige of n left since the big strike of 1919. e steel slaves are compelled to work long hours and to accept wage cuts. The conditions are unsanitary and inhuman. The working hours are different in every plant, each having its own system. In no plants, however, are than 10 a day, and ne Wheeling plants the hours are as high as 15 a day. Young Girls Slave. Wages s low as 25 cents an hour for unskilled labor, especially in the Wheeling Corrugating, where about 1,500 young girls are employ- ed at low wages. The sanitary con- ditions are also of the worst descrip- tion. Dining rooms and toilets are in the same room. ¢ In the Martins Ferry plant just across thé river from Wheeling the steel magnates are,scared to death on account of the activities of the Cofmmunist Youth League and the Communist Party. As a result of this fear two League members lost their jobs and several Party mem- bers were fii But these measures did not dis- courage the Communists from issu- ing more shop bulletins calling on the steel siaves to form shop com- mittees, to organize the toilers to resist the speedup system, the wage cuts, to fight against the prepara- ion for a new imperialist war. —NICK. 5 More Hungarian Communist Workers in Prisons of Vienna VIENNA, (By Mail).—Today a DAY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1922 —— 9,000,000 Wheeling Steet Corp By a Worker’ Correspondent) ] PHILADELPHIA, (By Mail).—At first sight the public dance hall seems a far cry from the sweatshop and all its miseries. A sickly amor- ous glow sifts down from the chan- deliers hooded in peachblow tissue; the jazz band enthroned on a poop| at one end of the huge and barren Indeed the management, instead of excluding the drunks, welcomes them, for they are the heaviest buy- ers of stag tickets. These sell at 20 cents apiece and entitle the holder to a dance with any professional “partner” who may strike his fancy. And besides, the box-office finds it easier to short-change a boozy “pa- room stutters a raucously maudlin| tron” than one who shows up cold| mating-call; coupling bodies wheel | Sober. The girl’s cut on the dance is| and jounce over the glossy floor in|10 cents, so that, to make $2.00 a a seeming frenzy of animal spirits.| night, the highest possible wage, she This, apparently, is the very place to forget the speed-up, the wage-| cuts, the slave conditions and the vicious exploitation of shop andj factory life. But appearances mean nothing. Behind its tawdry show the dance hall too takes its toll of working class flesh. As a case in point con- ler the Parkway Dansant at 1624 Arch St., one of the most prosper. ous halls in Philadelphia. In addi- tion to the jazz band, whose mem- bers earn more or less regular} wages, it employs from 12 to 20 girls as dancing teachers and pro- fessional “partners.” They are paid nothing but what they can get out of the male “patrons.” These girls, without exception, be- long to the working class: they spend their days in sordid mills ai health-sapping drudgery. But this being the Hooverian age, they find jit impossible to live on the sleazy returns of one job and so are driven into taking on another. There is an 8-hour “law” for wom- en workers in Pennsylvania. There is also a saying to the effect that the world owes everyone a living. In order to collect that debt these young women must work all day and dance all night, putting in a mini- mum of 15 hours toil daily. Strive and succeed! Second Shift at 7. The “dancing instructress” reports to the Parway boss at 7 p. m., after a 9-hour day in the mill for a starter. If she hopes to attract any “cus- tomers,” she must be dolled up like a society wench, her hair fixed in a $10 permanent wave, her face all smiles in spite of the shattering life she leads, She sits on a bench along with her sister slaves; the “stags’’ drift by and leer at the harem, try- ing to pick out the most appetizing legs and breasts. When a “stag” (a man who has roamed into the hall without a part- ner) approaches one of the “house” girls and asks her for a dance, she dares not refuse, no matter how re- pulsive he may be personally, Even tho he is dead drunk and barely able to stand, she has to fall into his | arm swith a fetching simper. has to endure 20 dances, pawed over by all sorts of rowdies, suffering under obscene talk, putting up with the insulting advances of drunks and pimps, Doesn’t Dare Refuse. Sometimes a girl is given a “tip.’”’ She needs it badly enough, “god” know: but if she takes it her part- ders that he has bought the see her home.” On the other hand, if she turns it down there is the danger of being reported for “discourtesy” and‘ fired off the job, which, miserable as it is, helps keep her in food. boss, holding this threat over her head, slowly but surely eggs her into prostitution. He knows full well that once his dancing slaves get a reputation for being “good com- pany” and “fast steppers” his dive will attract whole herds of dissolute stags. Therefore it is a sound busi- ness policy to drive the young wom- en over the brink of so-called “de- cency” without delay. The brutal system of making them dependent on dances rather than paying the girls a straight salary is the direct proof of this white- slaving policy. On a “good” night a “dancing instructress” may earn $2 but her average wage is far below that figure. It is not uncommon for her to wind up the nightly ordeal with a “profit’”’ of less than 50 cents. One slave recently had only two dimes to show for her 6-hour stretch, an average of 3 1-2 cents an hour. Under such conditions a dance hall serf having no daytime job would be absolutely forced into prostitu- tion, And to the greater advantage of the boss. Usually the Parkway closes at one o’clock in the morning, provided a crowd of after-theatre parasites does not stagger in at the last min- ute, in which case the young workers | are kept on the job until two or later. Then, footsore and half-dead with weariness, they drag them- selves home to grab a few hours of sleep before taking up the mill grind at 7:30 the next morning. Such is “prosperity” in the haunts of the “good time.” —N. B. | BO.08.S LET TOMORROW COME. By A. J.| Barr. W. W. Norton & Co. $2.50. Nothing much written about prison life is worth reading Hate. despair, shame, resignation, utter futility; these the major emotions engendered by the sadistic treatment accorded “guests of the state” are hardly the stuff fine writing is made from. Convicts face too harassing an actuality to unbiasedly do any authentic literary work. This fact added to the vicious censorship em- ployed in the bastiles is largely re- sponsible for our prison informa- further Hungarian Communist was| tion coming from such sympathetic arrested, making in all five arrests. | sources as, “The Saturday Evening In violation of the regulations which | Post,” “Editorials in the N. Y. Provide that an arrested person| World,” and learned tomes from the must be brought before a magistrate | pen of Lewis Lawes present warden within 48 hours, the prisoners are|at Sing Sing. still being detained. A similar vio- 5 | lation of Austrian law was the fact| Grim Haven, by Robert Tasker that the process material was today |S¢rVing time in San Quentin Peni- shown to the leader of the Buda-|tentiary a sincere book on prison life | pest police Schweinitzer who ar-|™isses the mark because of the! rived in Vienna today. It is clear | author’s lack of understanding and | that the whole action was carried interest in the economic forces which out at the request of the Hungarian | Put the “rap” in for the “so-called” police. The Austrian police admit |¢timinal, It narrows his view solely | that all the arrested are quilty of | to personalities losing the wide sym- | is false registration, the penalty of | Pathy necessary in dealing with aa which is 48 hours arrest. The bour-_|cieties’ outcasts, | geois press is utilizing the affair; A. J. Barr’s challengingiy titled| for a furious campaign against the | “Let Tomorrow Come,” is the cream Communist Party, jin the froth that has emanated as/| See ae |yet from so sour an institution as a JUVENILE STAR RECOVERING. penitentiary. Reminiscent of a hell |in a jail with he-man adventure! GLENDALE, Calif. June 4.— Jackie Coogan child film star was reported recoving rapidly today from an operation for acute appendicitis performed Saturday at the Physi- cians and Surgeons Hospital. SOLIDARITY IN | hole in the middle west that played notorious host to a group of class war prisoners during the late war it is a corking combination of art and propaganda (so dreaded by the aesthete). Propaganda on prisons 3 RIVERS Mill Strike Won by Sticking Together (By a Worker Correspondent) THREE RIVERS, Mass. (By Mail)—In the mill here a little while ago the spooler girls went on strike. They did not know how to organize and many did not know what a union was. Yet they knew something should be done against the speedup and the five per cent cut in wages handed them, as it meant more rapid grinding away of their Strength for starvation wages. - They left their jobs and held a meeting to decide what they should do. They asked for union organi- zers. At first the boss threatened to shut the mill and move it out ‘and stood large moving vans to ware ‘the workers. iach on te a cS a and what is more the other depart- ments of the mill went out in sym- pathy and because of shortage of work, A union meeting was called but the bosses got so scared they gave in on all the workers demands and gave increases instead of cuts, stopped speeding up, and were only | too glad to open the mills for work again, The workers returned victorious after a week of strike. They are not blind to the fact that the National Textile Workers Union got them their victory. S¢éeing the workers’ determination the bosses had to give in, If all the workers understood it is not enough to have union help only in a strike, but that it is neces- sary to organize now the conditions in the mills would be different. | eaieisssia, —MILL WORKER, eae i can become maudlinly distorted hammered out with heavy hand. Eased to the reader in the terse, well balanced form Barr employs the} most stylish of the literary stylists | might even raise a supercilious eye- | brow and concede “not so bad.” Racy songs of the “Wobblies, the jargon of the “pete man.” Mons- trous rats emerging from sewers human flesh in the stinking tanks, the screaming excitement of the building of the “battle ship” as a| direct action protest, the handsome latin murder singing “La Paloina”| to the casual strumming of his guitar after imposition of the death sentence, the heart breaking picture of men legs shackeled stumbling to the train that carries them to the | “big house.” It is there. Beautifully, brutally there. A stinging indictment of the | use that the masters put their power | to. This is no apologetic “softy” | glossing over the sordidness of life | stuff, The author of this book has | been through the mill. The snarl of his words ring, true. Literary high lights of the realis- tie school need no longer try to! “break into the can for a two week search for local color. “There is lots | of color and a number of finely drawn sketches in “Let Tomorrow Come” that makes the average book on crime so much Beatrice Fairfax. —ABE MOSCOW. USSR Plans to Study Agriculture Abroad MOSCOW, U.S.S.R. (By Mail),— The State Planning Commission pro- poses to set up in foreign countries a network of special bureaus for \the study of rural economy abroad. ie particular such bureaus are pro- | posed to be opened in Germany, Czechoslovakia, Italy, Denmark and The dance hall! PICKETING IS CHILDREN OF 9 © ‘Decision’ at the 49th BOSSES’ COURT OF $0, CAROLINA Food Worker Writes from Tombs By a Worker Correspondent. THE TOMBS, (By Mail).—I am ng from behind prison bars and have 20 days more to look forward to. All around me are confidence men, pickpockets, drunk- ards, dope-fiends, ete. I am trying to figure out what I have done to be locked up with these hardened criminals, and treated the same as they are. ick-up men, A “Crime.” I went out on strike seven weeks ago to try to better my conditions and that seems to be a crime in this “glorious land of the free.” I thought I was doing what I had a right to do yet here I am in the pen aftet being slugged by the cops and gangsters of the bosses. The judge | who sentenced me said that work- ers have the legal right to picket. That was all that I did. The courts make a mockery of the law. The jjudge admitted that wages and hours in the cafeterias are terrible. But he robs us of our right to fight for better conditions. I suppose he |thinks that we should pray to God to give us higher wages. He knows that no boss will hand you the 8- hour day and decent wages on a silver platter. You have got to foree bosses to grant better condi- tions thru a strike led by a union. There is no other way. | Keep Up Fight. A few months ago I did not think this way. I was a “100 per cent” American worker believing all the bunk that President Hoover and the capitalist papers told me about this country and the bosses. I thought | that if I worked hard and saved my wages I would get my chance to get out of the exploited class. But that is a lot of applesauce. You workers that are still out of jail should keep up the fight. As the I. W. W.’s used to say, we are in here for you, and you are outside for us. Show the bosses and the courts that workers can fight for their rights. If the strike is still on when I get out I will be back on the picket line with you. —A COOK. |Vienna Police Imprison /Many More Hungarian |Communist Workers | VIENNA, (By Mail).—The police |have made further arrests of! Hun- garian Communists here so that now |four are under arrest. The arrested |are accused of having falsely regis- | been in possession of false pass- ports. The bourgeois press is al- ready writing of “a great action to At Times Work Weeks for Nothing (By a Worker Correspondent) GASTONIA, N. C., I wish to write of conditions in some of the mills in South Carolina, in oration Rules Ohio River Valley in West Virginia NE of those plays that you won-|her quarter of a million, der why the playwright ever | Her mar- | |ried sister and her husband even go | wrote, and then wonder twice as/|to the extent of attempting to have | much why the producer ever went |the children taken away legally on | to the trouble of putting it on the stage, is now at the 49th St. The- atre. It is called “Decision” and is iby Carl Henkle. The first two acts are uninterest- ling to an extreme degree and only (By Mail).— by a last minute rally in the last Nancy free groceries for the last | lact is the play able to receive any favorable consideration. |the grounds that Nancy has been living an immoral life. Yes, and in | |the state of Massachusetts of all) |places! | | It seems that a small-time hick, th —__|JERSEY CENTRAL St. Theatre Uninteresting MAKES MEN RUN AFTER THEIR PAY Finally Get $2.16 for Night’s Wage (By a Worker Correspondent) Ly the name of Jim, has been giving} (By ; { While walking along the Bowery fon years without being paid. Ac- | I noticed an employment ag |cording to brother-in-law, that is! sign saying that 16 trucke: which I have worked before going| Jt seems that Nancy Lane, who to the Manville-Jenckes Loray mill here. My first place in a mill was in Clinton, S. C. My boss was E. E. Smith. I went in on the morning of June 6, 1914, and I asked him what I was supposed to be making, He said, “You are making nothing right now.” So I went to work and had worked three weeks when due to the rotten treatment I had a run-in | with the foreman, and being excited, , I threw a weight at him. I missed | him and hit the clock and broke it. | The boss said, “Look here, you little devil, that is going to cost you | something, I am going to dock your } pa I said, “I don’t see how you} n dock my pay when you have} paid me nothing since I have been here.” | Fights Fureman, The boss then said he was going |to pay me 25 cents > day, and docked me the first $1 I made. A week later | the foreman began to beat a little orphan working in the mill, slapping the child’s eye, and being an orphan | myself, I couldn’t stand for it, and I hit the foreman. I was only 13| then, and the child was 9, so you see the ages we work in the mill. I left there and -went to Chester, S. C., where I worked on a farm. The next mill job I had was in the mill at Rockhill, S. C., where the wages were less than $1 a day and the hours 12 a day. Little children worked there, too, After that 1| worked in the Aragon Mill, where I | was taught to run drawing. There | I was forced to work three weeks | \for nothing. They said they could | pay me nothing, and as I was doing | the job and the boss was getting | the pay I quit. | Then I worked at the Manchester Mill at Rockhill, S. C., where the wages were $1 a day. The condi- tions were awful there, same as in the other South Carolina mills. Low pay, long hours (12 a day), nothing but slavery. | Inext worked in the speeder room at Lancaster, S. C., getting only 75 cents a day, or $4.50 a week. There I learned to run frames and they gave me a set of frames. I ran them about a year at $7.50 a week, but| |I could not support my family on| | this. These jobs showed me a union | was needed, —P. P. jg tered themselves and with naving Berlin Policemen Scoring Brutality revolutionize Hungary” which the arrested are alleged to have organ-| BERLIN, (By Mail).—Today the ized. It is also said that the ar- political police in Berlin confiscated | Seize Pamphlets | | | Moscow and in particular with Bela |Kun. One of the arrested is even jalleged to be “an organizer of the |1921 revolt in Central Germany.” | The attitude of the bourgeois press | shows that the whole affair is a joint jaction of the Vienna and Hungarian »|rested maintained connections with |! the remaining supplies of a pam- phlet issued by the Communist Party jand bearing the title “The Bloody May Days in Berlin.” The pamphlet contained a terrible description of the police brutalities in Berlin du- ring the first days of’ May. The |pamphlet was issued in an edition of 50,000 copies and was practically | Vienna and police who are playing into each| . is others hands in order to persecute |Cxhausted, having sold like hot ca- the Hungarian fugitives living in| Kes: 8° that the police haul was if possible extradite |Y°TY Poor them to Hungary. A high official of the Hungarian police has already arrived in Vienna in order to ex- amine the letters found on the ac- cused. | | STATES ARGUE RIVER RIGHTS. WASHINGTON, D. C., June 4.— Whether the waters of the Gila River in Arizona shall be added to those of the Colorado in determining the total to be divided among the lower basin states will be decided by commissicners from Arizona, Cali- fornia, and Nevada who opened for- mal negotiations for a tri-state com- pact today. Sign Tacna-Arica Pact. in Which Wall Street) Retains Full Control | LIME, Peru, June 4.—Represen- tatives of the Peruvian and Chilean governments signed the ‘Tacna- Arica pact, negotiated by former Secretary of State Kellogg and com- pleted by President Hoover, settling a 45-year-old dispute over the pos- session of the two border provinces end reaffirming the Yankee imper- ialist control of Peru, Chile and Bo- livia, The treaty was signed by Ambas- sador Emiliano Figueroa-Larrain for Chile and Pedro Rada y Gamion, foreign minister, for Peru. The main provisions of the treaty return Tacna to Peru and permits Chile to retain Arica, while leaving a loop-hole for Bolivia to get a port | in one of the provinces, should the | Yankee imperialists fail to beat the | British in the dispute over the | NOW U.S. A. in a restaurant atronize Our § Advertisers ® Don’t forget to mention the "Daily Worker” to the proprietor whenever you purchase clothes, furniture, etc., or eat Chaco area and getting an outlet through the Paraguan River, By train: Grand ENJOY ROWING AND FUL jlives in a suburb of Worcester, Mass., has been mothering the two |erphan children of her dead sister for the last ten years. She has starved herself and made sacrifice after sacrifice so they could be brought up in a regular petty-bour- | geois manner. Then one day, like a flash out of a clear sky, an announcement is made that some uncle had died and left the children three-quarters of a trillion dollars and little Nancy. the other quarter of a million. The small country house where Nancy has been living for all those years without ever seeing anything except the little pussy cat that ap- pears in the first act, suddenly be- comes as crowded as a Bronx ex- press at seven in the morning. All the relatives of Nancy come and tell her how she should invest Unemployed Ave Hoaxed in Saskatoon (By a Worker Correspondent) SASKATOON, Canada (By Mail).—About 400 laborers after a rumor was spread around that there was work at the Canadian Northern Railway depot, marched in a body to the C. N. R. depot, where according to a “tip,” they were to get, jobs on extra gangs. The bosses of the C. N. R. told them there was no work for any of the laborers. The men were foreign-language speaking work- ers, who had been attracted to Canada by lying advertisements spread on the other side that there was plenty of work in Canada. This was done in a col- lusion between the bosses and the foreign governments. The foreign governments wanted to reduce the number of unemployed in their countries, and get rid of them by sending them to Canada. | The bosses know, that with thou- sands of unemployed workers here, it would be easier for them to cut wages to the bone, The men were pretty sore when the C. N. R. boss told them there were no jobs. Many of them told me they had had nothing to eat for days, and were unemployed since they were fooled into com- ing over here. One said he had had a farm job which he had kuit because they would give him no food for several days. They have to work 16 hours a day for $40 a month on the farms, The police then broke up the crowd of workers at the depot. This shows how conditions are here. —CANADIAN NORTHERN WORKER. TRY FASHIONABLE DOPESTER LOS ANGELES, June 4.—Dr. I. Jesse Citron, fashionable Beverly Hills physician, pleaded not guilty to a charge of issuing false narcotics | prescriptions to Alma Rubens, film actress, in federal court today. Ruben’s purchases are said to have helped swell Rothstein’s fortune, Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! THE CO-OPERATIVE Unity Camp WINGDALE, N.Y. is the best time to spend your vacation in a proletarian camp 50 New Bungalows — Additional Boats Central Station, or 125th ‘Street Station to Wingdale, New York Unity buses are leaving at 1:30 this. Aft. from 1800-7th Ave. BATHING ON THE BEAUTI- LAKE ELLIS ge REGISTER AT ONCE Children’s Colony for Workers’ Children The Unity, Camp has established a children’s colony for workers’ children $13.00 per week—$130.00 for the season New York Office: 1800 Seven ‘110th Street—Telephone: / Avenue, Corner jument - 0111-0112 pore immoral. The country dumb-bell is always | on the verge of proposing to Nancy, | | but somehow loses his nerve. He |portrays the Cal. Coolidge tyne per- |fectly. He is the exact sort needed in the White House. | To get back to the.play. In the end our hero proposes, the villain- ous brcether-in-law is defeated and everything turns out for the best. | What more could anyone ask than | that? | The cast is only fair, but they are not to blame for the condition [of the play. Margaret Barnstead |plays the part of Nancy, Edward |Martin is Jim. Others in the cast lare George Neville, Francis Keeley, | Nellie Gill and Roy Bucklie. | | Vaudeville Theatres PALACE. Helen Kane, former star of “Good Boy,” in a cycle of songs; Bill Rob- inson; Harry Carroll Revue, featur- ing William Demarest; John T. Mur- ray and Vivian Oakland; The Ran- | gers, and others. 81ST STREET. Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday: Jay Dillon and Betty Parker; Harold Yates and Cooper | Lawley; feature photoplay, “A Dan- gerous Woman,” starring Baclanova, supported by Clive Brook and Neil | Hamilton, Thursday, Friday and Saturday: Feature photoplay, “Square Shoul- ders,” co-starring Louis ~Wolheim and Junior Coghlan; vaudeville pro- gram, F. ALBEE. Baclanova, star of program, ap- pearing both as the vaudeville head- liner in person and also on the screen as the star of “A Dangerous Woman,” which is the feature photo- play. Supporting Baclanova in “The Farewell Supper” is Nicholas Sous- sanin, Paul Decker and Ivan Marr. Others include Corinne Tilton, the Norman Thomas Quintette, Block and Sully and “Broken Toys.” |-AMUSE wanted by the New Jersey Railroad in its Jersey Ci The agency picked up 16 men and sent them from the Jersey Centra! ferry house on West St., Manhattan to Jersey City, where we signed uy with the Jersey Central. | It was, we found out, to be a one night job. We started to work as truckers at 7 p. m. and we slaved away until 11:30 p. m., when v wére each given $1 to get eats. restaurant was on the railroad prop- erty, and we were allowed a half | hour to eat. We had to be back at | midnight, and slaved until 4 a. m. | trucking cement, loading it onto | barges. In emptying the carloads of ce- ment on the barges our clothes were | ruined by the powdery material. The, wages were to be 49 cents an hour, we were told, which would figure }up to $4.16 for the night. Going home they let us each have $1 again, and we were told to come back next day at 7:30 for our pay. We were given a slip of paper, and coming back the next day at 7:30 a, m. we had to wait till 10:30 before they would even see us. Then they made out an order for $2.16, having de- ducted the $2 they gave us before. |and told us to take the orders tc | Pier 11, North River to a Mr Irvin Getting there at 11:30, we had tc wait until after 12:15 before we fi- nally got the miserable $2.16 for the jnight’s slavery. We lost two days |trying to collect wages for one | night’s work. he —G. B. |McFADDEN STARTS ANOTHER DETROIT, Mich., June 4.—Det roit’s fourth daily newspaper, The | Detroit Daily, a morning tabloic published by Bernarr McFadden made its initial appearance here to- day. The executive staff of the paper | was recruited from McFadden’s New York and Philadelphia tabloids. Not only has the bourgeoisie forged the weapons that bring death to itself; it has also called Into existence the men who are to wield those weapons—the modern working class—the proletarinns.— Karl Marx (Communist Manifesto). MENTS-| THIRD AND FINAL WEEK! \ “Among the best achieved so far by the motion picture | adventures anywhere,” says THEODORE DREISER in his book, “DREISER LOOKS AT RUSSIA, Village of Sin’ First Sovkino Film Directed by A Woman Little CARNEGIE PLAYHOUSE, 146 W. 57th St., Circle 7551 (Continuous 2 to Midnite.) First Showing in America! Directed by F. W. MURNAU, director Now Playing! “NOSFERATU the VAMPIRE” inspired by DRACULA A powerful psychopathic drama—A symphony in sadism— —A thrilling mystery masterpiece— of ‘The Last Laugh’ FILM GUILD CINEMA, 52 West 8th Street Continuous Daily 2 p, m, to midnite. MOROSCO THEA., W. 45th St. Evs. 8.50. Matinees: Wed., Thurs. and Saturday, at 8:30, BIRD HAND . The lower middle class, the oma the ‘ight to nave tence as They are therefore not revolutionary, but conservative——Karl Marx (Commu- pe: + bourgeoiaie, lion their ex ARTHUR HOPKINS presents HoLipaY Comedy Hit by PHILIP BARRY PLYMOUTH Thea, W. 45 St. Ev. 8.5 Mats. Thurs, & Sat, 2.3 Thea., 44th, W. of Biwa Shubert ‘Evenings 8:30 Mat.: Wedaesday and Saturday 2:3 The New Musteal Comedy Revue Hi | A NIGHT IN VENICE | your Newsdealer to carry the Daily Worker Pa ar a a a Buy An Extra Copy Get Your Friend and i Shopmate to Buy It See That It Is Dis- played Properly Give It to Neighbors vvvvrwwv ewww If your newsdealer desires to get the “Daily” or increase his order—fill out the blank below DAILY WORKER 26 Union Square Now York ai y ADDRESS “Distributor . Inspector. “Information in reference to distributor very important. kiven you by the newsdealer, : d t — =