The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 27, 1929, Page 3

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Seer DAILY WOR By FEODOR CEMEN GLADKOV ‘ Yranslated by A. S. Arthur and C. Ashleigh All Rights Reserved—International Publishers, N. Y. r, returns to'his town on matov, Red Army Commis: tne Black Sea after the Civil Wars to find the great cement works, whore re had formerly worked as a@ mechanic, in ruins and the life af the iawn disorganized. He discovers a great change in his wife, Dasha, whom he has not seen for three years. She is no longer the sonventional wife, dependent on him, but has become a woman with a life of her own, @ leader among the Communist women of the town. One evening Dasha tells Gleb the ‘story of what happened to her when he went off to join the Red Army: The town was in- vaded hy white guards and Dasha and her small daughter, Nurka, were scized and tortured. They are released and Dasha gets a job LETTER TELLS OF GRGWTH OF CHINESE PARTY | Deseribes War Lords) | Persecutions | (Continued from Page One) there is no hope for its rising. Although there is the well organi- zation of the Anarchists, yet it is | not strong enough to be called a |party, much less for it to exarcise | |influence on the masses. The Third Party—the party of opportunists| fo» the children. A view of a stre Page Three — — KER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, Where Workers and Families Swelter t in the East Side on a hot summer day forms a contrast, to say the least, with the fashionable beaches Photo shows Orchard Street, with tens of housands of workers and their familes sweltering in the heat—with practically no playgrounds THOUSAND A DAY NEFDED 70 SAVE MILL WORKERS Defense Reports Much Help; Not Enough (Continued from Page One) 2 workers’ organization, , with a promi nat more would’ be col- lected; $9.10 from the Curtisville, Pa., local of the I. L. D., composed mostly of miners, many of them un- employed; from Julius Deter of Louisville, Ky.; $15 from the Ben- like Wang Ching Wei and Chen gis a ifield, Ill, I. L. D., anothew miners’ Black Haiti | By JACQUES DICHARSON Jacques Dieharson is a young seaman who has spent the greater part of his adult years fighting for the working class. He was born in San Francisco, but was brought up in Paris. He came back to San Francisco in 1921 and took part in the big San Pedro strike of the Marine Transport Workers of the I.W.W. in 1922, He wae one of the large number of strikers rounded up and thrown into jail im the government's effort to break the strike. Later Dicharson became an organizer for the M.T.W. in Mobile and New Orleans. In 1926 he went to Kingston, Jamaica, and began organizing a branch of the M.T.W., but was railroaded to jail and kept there five montha. On his release, Dicharson, disgusted with the tactics of the 1.W.W. left the organization. He svent most of the next three years in Hattt, Santo Domingo, Porto Rico and St. Thomas, suffering untold perse- cution at the hands of the agents of American imperialism because of his militant activities. “Black Haiti,” which has been written for and is appearing exclusively in the Daily Workey, is an unusual human document that Poet ‘ Kung Po—is dying out. The Kou- | arrested or beheaded.* Beheading is Aa = |local, with a promise to send mores) is animated by the spirit of the clase struggle. It it all the more i canis + cer cet ret organ- ri : . be . i : 5 ts 7 04 fr, Sa Pe RR : y e in the Co-operative in the bakery depurtment, doing secret m0 mintang is d into many fac- |strictly “forbidden” by the Nanking SOVIET CROPS |$24 from the Hungarian Workmen’s| significant in that it is the work, not of « professional trained weiter, ization work under the supervision of Efim, an old soldier. She |tions, fighting bitter fight against |government, but in dealing with the We Sick and Death Benefit Societg of | i but of a worker relating his own experiences and observations.—Bdq i Jarrested again together with Efim and others, and all are tor- |one another. Not only the workers Communists, the law reserves its : Trenton, N. J.; $16.20 from the St. K ard peasants are dissatisfied with |yight, Two days ago, several Com. | Paul I. L. D.; $5 from the Japanese digs) joles ic “dl : | c branch of the I. L. D. in San Fran- y had just left ship. I could still feel the blows that the cowardly first | Koumintang, cven the petty bourg-!munists were arrested in Tsinanfu, : Ns eoisie and radical intellectual are be-| the capital of Shantung provi CiRGo. mate had dealt me without justification. I was battered and bruised, And again they fell upon Efim with their whips, and he turned |coming gradually disillusioned. Sar | according to the law or regulation eee A small I. L, D. branch in Ash The S. S. Seatonia had entered the harbor of Port au Prince that 1 head first to one side and then to the other and was silent. And |Min Chu Yi or the Three Peoples’ |enacted by the Nanking government, Cine‘ Ty. Reports bua 0. sends $19 and writes: “En- | morning. I had wanted to go in the eity to buy some medicines, The asha felt the great sacrifice and the terror which lay in the silence |Doetrine of Sun Yan Sen hecomes'ihe authority in Tsinanfu should Grain Trust Reports closed is our answer to the bosses) mate had objected. He had said that I was not aboard ship for the : the moustachioed one. And she realized that only one thing was |» thing of the past, and people get jtelegraph the government for deci-| Bie Gains Jand their treatment of the textile} pleasure of touting but work. I knew that well. I had experleneed ecessaty: to be silent, even until her ribs cracked; to be silent even |tired of talking it. To many people |cion, However, the local authority, Pee Sn trikers at Gastonia. This is all that| it before. More than once. He continued candidly, saying that he did £ it suffocated her heart. jit has even become disgusting. - | on ground that it would be too late,| Soviet spr s were in good|this organizatién has in the bank, not have any use for me as I was a sea-lawyer or “bolsheviki agitator.” | 4 condition ea according ” “Well, speak, woman of the devil! What kind of goings on have | As to the Chinese Communist ieee ve comrades Angee To ae af = ecpeding | I didn’t are if he had any use for me oy not Didn't expect hile you had with this rascal? If you tell us we won't bother him any |Party, it has made marvelous pro-|show the terrorism against our com- | to M. 1 Trust),|, Ella Reeve (Mother) Bloor, be-! to, but I told him that I had come off watch at four o'clock that morne i in organization, and in influ-|rades in China, I wish to tell you | Soviet no loved labor fan, has Blveady| 3 Peed i more and we'll let you go home. . gress in organization,, 2 1 which operates over two score | jfoved labor veteran, has already) ing. That it was not customary for a man coming off watch at that } ence among the masses, though it |cf another ruthless massacre in Can- | ee ve Tinian ac, (started her tour thruout the country | t rk 1 st i $ “{ don’t know about any goings on—. I’ve been left without my | ig still working underground. In| ton. A middle school in Canton was farms in the Soviet Union. Kal- ; Bee eel Le EME ke cetlors Sec ree, tore, cueved in Bot) 8 e0 Gera husband with my little daughter. . . . Why do you torture me 0?” south Chirfa the revolutionary com- | suspected of having in it some young pea! pre au ak Anas in hen vt: “She ie Nee ie Teer pine bil ae Fee Satu xu Bi in the Waren Again an unbearable fire burned through her. Her heart seemed /munist wave is intenee, and the ~e-| Communists. Without any previous | "0 Coin iy’ cane 8, the dave of (companied by two young textile| I hada right to go in town. (I thought I had a right. A ser? bla¥. i |volutionary movement is rolling on| warning, the authority dispatched | Teceived up to . Mjencumentic A lstttkers who have just come from! ing under the existing conditions of this present system has no rights, oe an ee eee Ther amen wan tins | Gadtonia,” OA Tuesday hight Mother| except the ones that his master is willie to give hit) Bloor and ‘Ae two strikers will speak to burst, she cried out shrilly: “What have I done to you? Why do you beat me so?” : “Speak! Just one word and we'll let you free.” and Kuangtung provinces. Even in jand ail the students arrested. The |*pring was in excess of last year's,|;, pittsburgh in the Labor Lyceum, | He hit me. I had no time to ward off the blow. I fell. He struck ‘As soon as Dasha heard these last words she realized that they |Shantung province, the Party is en-| students were carried to the out- pace ee ae ort ae we Kal, 25 Miller St., on Wednesday they will, ™e down again, as I attempted to rise. I lost consciousness, (Some ing great popularity and is grow- | skirts of the city, and with machine mee es fessor M. M. Wolf, {be in Youngstown, ., and on)Thurs-| *¢#ders may think this to be a little exaggerated or too raw, but it ieee i 5 t taken |ing in strength. In Peiping, former-| gun, all the young children were Manovich and Frote Depo NOEs (tae Gens pa is only the common treatment that a merchant seaman receives at cause they had done so on the previous occasion. They shad no’ 7 /member of the Presidium and head @4y in Erie, Pa. | " ad aa ital or bf He. Aeeanitgral Sections of the|. hes tial. cf) the 1d workers the hands of the organized servants of capitalism. Woe to the man n that attempts to strike an officer back on board ship. I’ve seen with unusual rapidity, especially in |many armed sold 4 ano Hunan, Kiangsi, Fuchien, Kiangsu,| night, had the school surrounded dicated that the area sown this knew nothing about her business. They had arrested her only be- | ji fs ; i fe i SMe re- | mercilessly killed. Mass muri a the other women. Ah, but Fimka? Fimka was different: it jly Peking, the conservative and re-| merci y ae ase st her brother. Probably they had taken her by accident | actionary centre in north China, red |like this is not at all unusnal 4 ; | Gospli ; anning Com-|charged with murder is only a little : , thi : ; ct th | feile ir|Kwengtung. According to the re-|Gosplan, the State Planning Com- |¢ sagehs 3 them beaten and kicked into a bloody writhing mass by the rest of th in her home. “Dasha understood this now, and her blood flowed again (Bpooeasess. ragulasiy fee sneke alt of investigation. the total Filied | mission, who arrived simultaneous-|over a month off. Funds are needed | y paneh ty 7 - in her veins. ' y sul stig i a | 11 ined 4 the i at once to save them. Rush all con-, Mates, then thrown in the lazaret on bread and water for the rest deck ti ; a Howes ase in- | ly, outlined two o: most impor-|at once to s . Rus - j fee Lueley de ; ‘e , , wecks. Particularly in the months hose who were more or less in. s on the Soviet program |ttibutions to the National Office of of the trip. Lucky is he, if he is not shackled to one of the stanchions.) “Stop torturing me. I work and don’t interfere with any one.’ (¢# May, communist leaflets are |volved with the Communistic activ-/ tant proje “Give that fellow another ration! Let him have it! Harder! Make | founq daily. In spite of the dif-|ity—are over two million persons. for the reconstruc him grunt!” ficulties confronting them, they have| Concerning the forms of torture ages ‘eens Soke Dae . |perfeeted the art of propaganda to |towar’s the Communists, there arc FIM’S body lay in the mud already shuddering in the preliminary |@ great degree. [taking off ‘nails, cutting off nose, convulsions of death. The Cossacks, tired out, covered with sweat, | At the Sixth Congress of the Chi- ears, tongues, d ntinued to flagellate the bloody flesh. Their whips scattered drops blood and minute morsels of raw flesh. ion of agricul-|the International Labor Defense, 80| se 6 \E llth St., Room 402, New York I had one dollar and fifty cents as I made my way up the Bord de | “The Zernotrest cultivated about | City: Mer. I didn’t stop to gather my meager belongings or to ask the 1850,000 acres of land this year,”| P | skipper, as the’ captain is called, for the few cents that I had coming. fisted Mr. KaliGmovich at the/ok| BAR JOBLESS PAY, No, I knew better than to do that. I knew how the captain would + fices of the Amtorg Trading Cor-| MADISON, Wis. (By Mail)—Un-| stick by his officers. I had played the game and lost, so I went 1s ety | Poration. “It was formed last year employment c ion for Wis-| ashore. t : ese e orbaulve hs erate large grain|consin werkers was turned down in ‘ ntion. Despite that the Com- |p? 783" aly ue helen Me leh abbte” enemy. ent I eluded a few natives that wanted to show me where the post igging out eyeballs, se Communist Party, a resolution j ete. The cruelty and bar |was adopted, in which local upris- | torture towards the Commun’ > ing is strictly prohibited. Instead | des The body of Fimka’s little brother Petro fell with @ moan of ter- jot Jocal uprising, the Party is pre- ; é f munists are not intimidate’. On the | ag a | office was. They were mostly sad puny little girls and boys, clad in vor into the gory filth, beside Dasha. Covered with mud, with animal paring a large-scale uprising, an|contrary, they become mure de-| yy" quan Caunied on at 16 out of the| MINER KILLED zags, I turned into a side street and I came on the Place Getfrard. terror in his eyes, he jumped to his feet, slipped and fell again; again prising on a national-wide scale. termined, and more class-conscious. 7 Sener on : i | ae , i by y The Place Geffrard was before Wall Street occupation the meeting he bounded up and began to run with naked feet in the mire. The |The Party is conducting at present | E z the Zernotre t. Among them is the) TAYLORVILLE, Ill. (By Mail).—| place of the Haitian bourgeoisie. It seemed at present like it had been . e nats howled with hi: : A y One more thing to tell yov, that |“Giant Farm” in the Northern Cau-| Julius Oges, a coal miner died here . ; i i oF Cossacks leapt after him, their whips raised. Petro howled with his ay energetic campaign against the ie tie method Gt ged paracda ct dial easds: Witte WHlLivaHee need of Euoclaatee elke | i | forgotten for many years. The little kiosk in the center was overrun whole body. He escaped them once more, and ran, blind and lost, in the imperialists and the Koumintang. Camaiual ae Sitnsting: i ‘ous goea (DOU ceees “The Af os bas a ve a iat struck by a Wabash rail-| hy weeds, Things that undoubtedly must have been statues lay shat- i SS amen Ad . oR beating Se ane Rar sOG.: OD | SORG, Vrgins et tered on the ground. ... A horde of vandals must have passed there and left them in its wake.... irecti jumping in his path, whooped and ap | c f | eee eran ere Ger aniche onthe knece, petro howled like a |, ¥or fear of a new rising of the|to buy a hook on sex, he finds the/|this state farm lasted efly 9 dayo,| epee Bie 8 Blow we = Communist Party, and much scared |contents are Communist under the | 650 tractors being employed. This | hy its growing influences and cover. Frequently people tou ht |is undoubtedly the world’s largest| dog and fell down heavily on his belly in the slime. For Any Kind of Insurance” I learned that the American colonist did not believe in restoring With dead eyes, Dasha looked at the torturing of her comrades. strength, the militarists have adopted | Pit Three Peoples’ Doct: : | e, er|farm using machinery exclusively, | the Place Geffrard. It was too close to the harbor. The meeting place Dumb, with bursting brain, she could not turn her gaze from them. |much more severe measure against | bulletin issued by the government, | | of the rabble. No, they were developing the National Park. It is She saw only blood which boiled and bubbled like the moving sea. In it. If you read the newspapers of |and fovnd out the contents deal with | ‘ emong which are Hsien Tai nar much further up-town in front of the National Palace. The natives the air was blood, and blood was in her brain; behind the dusty window- Shanghai, you are sure to find al-|Communism. Because of the above- shop, Chuang Tsao Sheh, ard s | are not allowed to come there unless they have shoes on their feet. . | holes was blood. |most every day and in every Hsien} mentioned phenomenon, many pub-/cral ethers. Also recently sev ral} East 42nd Str: x, As the majority of the Haitians are too poor to buy shoes, they can’t : ¢ ‘ e(district) “some, Communists were/lishers have been recently closed, sckouls in Shanghai have been or- i East 42nd Street, New York | listen to the concert played there twice a week. . sees i Perse pecan yomere me eee reed —— — —— ‘dered to close. Let them gc vi = oes i Gerett te ‘clo t them go on with Of course this suited the bourgeois element fine. They did not have to mix with the laborers as they had been obliged to do in the “But I know nothing—. Nothing at all.” ° A M u $ E AM E Re T § e past. This was the reason why it looked so sad and pitiful to me as “Didn’t you recognize that lad or that girl?” Messinger’s Vegetarian T gazed on it that morning, | and Dairy Restaurant ee ay Fimka and Petro. I’ve known them ever since they were Ethel Barrymore to Open New | Tw icers, as yourig as he, whispered something in the Colonel’s S . AY ii t Sz. tf . M “ie éar. “ae ae Fe ach then sucked in his cheeks. CASON in CAI (Z 1SLEY ary “Give her to us, Colonel; we'll disinfect her a bit.” ears Straight into her face, grimacing, they breathed horrible words, Lee Shubert tells us that Ethel more painful than the whip. Barrymore’s next play will be a She threw herself in the corner of the room, her hands extended. dramatization by Daniel Reed of “No! No! I would rather die! Don’t!” Julia Peterkin’s Pulitzer prizer novel, ., , as ; “Scarlet Sister Mary”, in which Miss The Colonel raised his hand, smiling. Mamata phn ae Aadiad A ae “All right, it won’t happen if you will only tell the truth. Come | jojo, here and tell us.” A new comedy from the pen of “What shall I tell, when I know nothing? What do you want | John Drinkwater, noted British pl from me? Aren’t you ashamed? You are still young——.” |wright whose “Bird in Hand” is so The Colonel leaned against the back of his chair and screwed up popular at the Morosco Theatre is his eyes spitefully. promised New York in the near fu- = ture. The play is called “Laying . the Devil” and according to the 3 Tee two officers seized her under the arms and dragged her into author is much more sophisticated another room. They flung her on the floor, dragged the clothes | than “Bird in Hand” hia current | from her shamelessly and violated ‘her. American production. Till midnight she lay, half-naked and half-dead, in the cellar. As they had thrown her so they left her. Fimka crawled up to her, Herbert Ashton, Jr., the author of moaning, then without speaking laid her head for a moment on Dasha’s | “Brothers’ now current at the 48th AGATE eo en: ae | breast, and then crawled away. Twice she seemed to see Nurka: the | Street Theatre, is busy writing a new | Lae ‘hiel brs Jhich ahs i iA | child was stamping with her little feet, dancing the wild Hopak dance, |comedy which Roy Walling will pro- | More's vechicle, in whic * oP tipsily. Dasha stretched her hand towards her and shouted in terror | duce in the fall. [Dearing at her own theatre on Forty- Telephone: Murray Hil. 5550 HE recovered consciousness in that bright room where the Colonel was sitting, frowning, smoking and vindictive. “Well, young woman, how do you like our kitchen? Now tell us what you know.” this!’ Some day they will find the | ;same measures turning against them! Comradely yours, | ‘LOWEST COST=—=—= || EXCURSIONS TO RUSSIA S. Leviathan, MEET YOUR FRIENDS at * 1% * OISTEROUS laughter attracted my attention. I noticed across the street a huge sign proclaiming to the community and the world at large that this was the American bar. A fat, well-fed Européan, apparently a German, was presiding over the counter. I entered the place. It was chock-full of marines and naval sailors, They seemed | more or less under the influence of Bacchus |] 1763 Southern Blvd., ~ >nx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES oS. S. Leviatha J NEW YORK—LENINGRAD— MOSCOW Co ete AM Expenses @ FREE Soviet Visas No Documents Required Poor comrades! ... In a way they were more to be pitied then blamed. They had wanted to see the world. The beauty and lure of | Soest iatenorenere | the tropics had been promised to them by the harlots that had re- a neet ; 302 E. 12th St Now. Yorks cruited them when they had been broke and hungry, somewhere in ‘ Yaa : My Frisco or was it Battery Park? ... Their souls had cried for the better things of this farcically conventionalized world of ours ... They had found the dreary routine and common sordidness that are forced upon BRONSTEIN them here in Haiti, They take to drinks ... Why not? .,. It isn’t allowed, but the higher officials‘close their eyes. It’s just another Vegetarian Health way to keep them under the yoke . . Restaurant * . 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx All Comrades’ Meet at See your steamship agent or American-Russian Travel Agency, Inc. 100 FIFTH AVE., N. Y. CITY Phone: Che! HM IN “SKIDDING” | | | ie was in. there that I met George Hey. George was a young En- glishman a few months out of England. A wonderful little fellow. | I mention his name here, as hé helped me a whole lot. Helped me when I was in the verge of despair in the hands of the dirty capi- talist. When I was lying in the hospital near death. When déctors, sisters, even the capitalistie god had turned me dowt and had séemed to rejoice over it. * * * : RATIONA Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE. UE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food Betty Lee Carter, ih “Skidding”, | now in its final week at the Bayes | Theatie. Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER | Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor | | | 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and illth Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House The stifled atmosphere of the little mining town where he had seen birth. The gros# injustices his comrades were feceiving at the hands of the wantons of society. The prevalent misery. The diseases, | and all the drab things connected with a mining town, had been more and disgust: ‘ |Seventh Street, is now in its final} ws ——— | than deciding factors in his coming to Haiti. “No, don’t! Don’t, little Nurka!” Another shed oa Saturday eu week, Miss Barrymore. will begin | Coohcratora: EATHORIER Meet your Friends at eg 4 ’ prrkiae : ir [be “Skidding”, the longest run play ~ of Duel” and “Th j Bees | She was crawling towards her, like Fimka, imploring in despair | : sf a tour of “The Love Duel” an 3 ” S I entered, I mad way to the farthest end of for she knew not what, Then Nurka came no more into her mind, |°" Broadway. The play will go to| BERGMAN BROS. | GREENBERG’S A e my way to the farthest end of the counter. I ‘ ‘i 4 Boston in August opening at the She saw no more of her as though Nurka were the extinguished image Iiymouth: Theatre’ on August (28; ee Today Only! cm, VARIETY | tried to draw the bulky German into a semblance of a conversa- tion as I ordered a beer, but to no avail. I had left ship with dun- garees and a blue shirt on, Undoubtedly my appearance did not élaas me in with the wealthy parasites. I turned to go after gulping down the lager, and bumped into a small underfed fellow about my own age. The suit of whites that he was wearing hung loosely about him. With his sallow face and sad eyes he seemed entirely out of place in the American bar. The outstanding feature I then noticed about him Was | his nose. It looked similar to what Italy does on the map of Europe. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. || BRONX, N. Y. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—979) Kingdom of God”, opening at! | Pueblo Col. on July 8, Bakery & Restaurant —— 939 EB. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx of a dream. After midnight—she remembered it as though in a dream—she vas brought to herself by the noise of a motor-lorry. She lay upon ts wooden floor among others who crouched and lay there. Bit by it she recognized Fimka, her little brother Petro and Efim, the mous- ‘tachioed one. Around them stood officers: and Cossacks with rifles in their hands. All were silent, benumbed like corpses, Only one thing remained vivid in her memory: the many-colored =| | an intense drama of BAMMMINGS | ean Pat . + VEGETARIAN “ » 1 i fi she ‘This Saturday—Dostolevski's “CRIME AND PUNISHME: se Dairy saosraunane | I beg your pardon,” I said, patting him on the shoulder and j stars which seemed to be so near, within arms’ reach? FILM GUILD CINEM hk “eo ily 52 West 8th Street |) MIDWIFE deldil wil Always Find tt making my way toward the door. * * * |] 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Gay "SOUTHERN BLVD, ee | “Don’t mention it, old man,” he responded, grinning good-ratutedly \, HE had no fear. She knew she was going to her death. The lorry Shubert Tea. 41th, W. of Bway | Tel. Rhinelander 3916 tac Athi Be stations at me. “You're a stranger here, aren’t you?” would stop and they would be thrown out, and: they would be led vO N. Y, THEATRES ‘Evenings 8:30 | PHONW: INTERVALE 9149. “Yes, Jack’s my name. I’m an American. I just came’ out of one of the boats that was here this morning,” I replied. “I’m pleased to meet you, Jack. I'm a Britisher from merry old England, and George’s my name.” “Would you mind having a glass of beer?” he asked. DE ANDTHE BRONX ||! stat; Wedresday and Saturday 2:30) |The New Musteal Comedy Revue Hit | Wrz) | A NIGHT IN VENICE. SLU} to the seashore—then she would be no more, She knew this—but she | had no heart, only a block of ice. There was no terror, only this unbearable coldness in the heart. It was all so simple as though it had no existence in reality; and yet quite ordinary, the tedious pro- gress of a dream which one does not credit while dreaming, knowing Cooperators! Patronize SERO/Y || HEALTH Foop Vegetarian | CHEMIST i +46 ‘ that these images will soon pass. Nurka was forgotten, as though IGE RATED ND AND | Without waiting for me to acquiesce he took me by the arm, and . ae had never existed; then suddenly her image flew past her, with @2 NAL | 657 Allerton Avenue RESTAURANT back we went to the bar. ‘little hand outstretched and one short outery: “Oh!” This shook her | 1 dubheabiennwh: Mverpihinn Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. 1600 MADISON AVE. * 8 ¢€ like a blow of the whip in the cellar. Then Nurka disappeared again | Mins << "Chaurs, — MODELS | 424 STREET irs time ae and was forgotten like a dream long past, = and BROADWAY # 3 | Phone: UNIversity 5865 “WIL 7 | Va) | VASE gm’ (DR. J. MINDEL oes soni pave || SURGES BENET UT Ng Tip Barber Shops RRANATING cose | 1 UNION SQUARE - ORLY > Rea et | abe ll other office (1 flight up) “you see,” he continued, “there isn’t much that one can do here, except to drink if one is inclined that way. The Tropics ate not what they are advertised to be at home,” he sadly concluded, After we had refreshed ourselves, George took me by the arm and 4 led me to the street. We came on the Rue Republicaine or Grande ‘ Rue as it’s often called. He asked me if I ever had been in the : Tropics before. I told him that I had just come out of Jamaica, and that it was a wonderful little place, providing it could break away ) | | The comrades lying on the floor of the lorry were shaken about like corpses: it was Efim (he had been thrown into the lorry like a corpse) and Fimka and Petro. Dasha had no pity for anyone; her neart was no more than a lump of ice that could never melt. ‘ When the car stopped, Dasha was no longer alive; it seemed that her life had ended with the motor’s movement. When she was pulled psn r if it i i . off the lorry to the ground she stood as motionless as she had lain. ||] Au WHEK — FOR WOMEN AT vy 2700 BRONX P/"K EAST from the claws of Bond Street and its cliques Close to her stood Fimka, shivering with the cold, catching hold of [i xy ATIONAL Theatre, Second ROOMS, all __ improvements, (corner Allerton Ave.) As we went on a little farther I notice! the contrast between the Dasha’s dress, and pressing herself close to her like a child, The Av. & Houston garage, 2 family-house, 18th | Avenue station, West End Line, rent Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF few well-fed Americans and foreigners @.d the masses of natives. i a f TODAY — AT y long-moustached Effim lay at their feet like a corpse. But Petro was | SURGEON DENTIST Most of them were walking bare-footed, apparently in a haze, Others F | stati F elakily in one place, disfigured by the whipping and turning || PROSPECT bg on adoaapled *:1!| reasonable. D. ZACKARKO, 58 Bay 240 BAST 115th STREET AMALGAMARED were leading rachitic she-asses. They looked as if they were auffer- % his head—his face was black with blood—howling, spitting, grunting. 4 SHOWS DAILY, 1—3—7—9]||| 11th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. bia Wha an lll peal ne bid Meets Int suturday ||| ing from the pangs of hunger. Some had open sores on them. Poor ts em. 0.12; 9 to6 PM in the month at #86111) devils. . . . One or two of them at one time or other would stoop y SOSESUIE WEEE E NT nEIU TEL ON ‘9.30 a, m. to 124 # to 8 p,m Sunday, 10 a, m, to 1 p.m Please telephone for appoint Telephone: Lehigh 6022 erson) whispered hurriedly and sternly into Fimka’s ear: MEN Only silent and silent and silent. Silent and silent, Blind, dumb |] ac prospnor—trt., sat. & Sun. Ruild Up the United Front of i gtientt” ‘ és At NATIONAL—ALL NEX'T WEEK |] the Working Class From the Bot as silen i (Tobe Conemiuetss x 4 ALL SEATS (hoth theatres) 50e ean . Bronx, Ne down to the gutter to drink or wash himself in the polluted water that her Fel. Jerome 7096 1/| was stagnating there. Some of them had shirts. Others it appeared Pe fen never had such a luxury. . t ubne"radaabeast,|| "ever (Ta Be, Continua a ged ni rz then Dasha (but it seemed to Dasha it was not she, but some | tom Up—at the Knterprises! \ \ . tab A

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