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} Fe 3 leaders in this strike, soo -/ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1929 _ earn Mill Strikers, Facing Electrocution at Mill Bosses FRED BEAL, VETERAN OF MANY BiG © LABOR STRUGGLES; MADE A REBEL BY EARLY SLAVERY IN N. E, MILLS Was in Great Lawrence Fou ext Strike of Mill Workers; ght Labor Misleaders of U. T. W. (Continued from Page One) chines, 216 bobbins to a machine, half of which doffed from 20 to 30 minutes. In n periods, I had to help t rn boy take the filled bobbins from the frames. The work continually changed and Thad to run back and forth to the shed for new My weekly wage was $4.48 for 56 hours a we Often the which run on pul-| und leys all the room would / * break and fly off and hit some one. I was hit one day and knocked un- conscious with a flying belt. The boss would not let me go home and after throwing water on me, forc- ed me back to work. A Boy Who Rebelled. One day, another boy the same age as myself, rebelled against the boss wh kicking us and every- one else around (those days before the 1 great Lawrence strike, the bosses in the mills used to kick the workers and pull their hair), and we hid under a machine not in use and piled boxes around the bottom and stayed there for hours before he found us. When we were found he pulled us out by the hair and kicked us all about the room. We both “jacked” up the job at noon and found work again ‘the same day in the Ayer mill of the Ame: Woolen Co. I stayea@ a while and went to work in the Pacific mills. This was the latter part of 1911, In Lawrence, 1911 Several times I heard I. W. W. speaking on a “soap bo: ide of the mill. I was greatly interested in what they said and read every leaflet they put out. One ‘day when the whistle blew at ten minutes to one the speaker said “There go the bells calling the slaves to work.” This made an im- pression on me that day. In Jan., 1912, the Massachusetts legisla- ture passed a law reducing the hours from 56 to 54. A petition was drawn up by the workers in the mill to present to the boss, stating that a strike would be called if wages were cut as a result of the lessened hours, Most of the workers in my room were either Italian or French-Canadian. I put my name at the head of the petition. The overseer came around to me trying to persuade me to take my name off the list, threat- ening me with the. “blacklist” in all mills for life. I did not take it off. The strike came about and I was one of the first ones out and stayed out for the duration of the strike. I did not take any part in this strike except to attend mass meetings held on the Lawrence common. I heard Big Bill Haywood. | He impressed me on the spot. I heard Gurley Flynn, Etter and oth- ers. I joined the thousands that picketed around the mil litia that drove the made me furious. anti-foreign feeling. Drafted in the Army. After the strike was over, I went back to work in the Ayer mill. I worked in several other mills in Lawrence, among them the Wood Worsted mill, Arlington mill and Everett mills, I took in some so- cialist party meetings from time to time and subscribed to the New York Call. was drafted in the army. I was sent to Camp Devens. Most of those [Lawrence United Front Committee.|fire all the union members and to around me were unwilling soldiers. However, no one dared to kick, I was kept in camp after the war was over to help discharge the return- ing soldiers, They were the sorri- est’ bunch I ever have seen. All of them were of the opinion they would neyer go again, A Soldier Who Picketed. Another strike broke out in Law- rence at this time (1919). I took deep interest in this strike. Sam- uel Bramhall and Joseph Salerno and Rotzell were the outstanding Once I went A. W. O. L. from the camp and picketed in my uniform. There were many returned soldiers in line. In the 1922 Strike. After I was discharged from the army, I went to work in the Pa- ’ cific print works. A twenty per cen wage cut was put into effect in many of the mills in Lawrence and surrounding cities in 1922. The Lawrence strike was carried on un- der the banner of the One Big Un- ion, which I joined. I also joined the Socialist Party at this time. Ben Legere and Bert Emsley, Sam Bramhall were the principal lead- ers of this strike. I did picket duty every day. After the strike was over I became a member of the ex- ecutive board, continuing working in the Pacific print works. About this time I became secretary of the Lawrence branch of the Socialist Party. I collected dues and got new members while at work. The One _ Big Union held street corner meet- ings where I was either a speaker or a chairman, Expose the Fakers. | The One Big Union issued a _ weekly paper called “Lawrence La- % ” tabloid size, which was pretty | circulated in New England. fakerisn. of the Uniteg Tex- I never had any | |tile Workers officials in Lawrence had been completely exposed at this time. In 1925 I took one of the leading parts in the Dover, New Hampshire str! Bert Emsley was the leading figure. The strike in Dover was over the increase of loomage. I was arrested in this strike along with Bert E: imsley. The . strikers picketed the jail which was the City Hall, to get us out. 00 people were on the outside. The next day they brought in machine guns. We held mass meetings every day | and on Sunday we held it in the tre in town, called the Theatre. A Mrs. Dolan was the anager of this theatre and she gave it to us free of charge. She was a fine, pleasant woman with a great lot of courage and love for the textile workers whom she knew were greatly exploited. The Chamber of Commerce, also some of the preachers, U. T. W. officials and the police were constantly after her to stop us| from meeting there. She — stood | against them but finally the police | one Sunday lined up in front of the door and refused to let anyone in, While we had the use of the theatre, many different speakers ad- dressed the workers and people of the town and surrounding sections. One Sunday was turned over to the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense with Mrs. Glendower Evans as the speaker. After the Dover strike I continued my activity in the One Big Union and the Socialist Party. I also helped the Workers (Communist) Party put on entertainments and other benefits they ran for the working-class. I helped them put on “The Fifth Year,” dressing up in Russian costume with Russian boys and girls and riding down the street in a carriage to advertise the pic- ture which turned out to be a great success, turning away a thousand people. { In 1924 the Socialist Party en- dorsed La Follette for President and Wheeler for Vice-President. At this time, Albert Weisbord was national secretary of the Young People’s So- icoalist League and New England | Secretary of the Socialist Party. All the unions (A. F. of L, and Ameri- can Federation of Textile Opera- tives) backed La Follette. However, it was the Socialist Party local in | Lawrence that did most of the work {in the campaign for that city, issu- ing a weekly paper called “The Es- sex County News and Workers Ad- vocate.” The One Big Union did not endorse La Follette because it did not believe in parliamentary politi- cal action. Thomas Nickleson was the principal speaker for the Law- | rence branch of the S, P, He was} an advocate of right wing socialism and put a great lot of time and money he had to the cause, Leaves Socialist Party. After the campaign was over, I left the So ist Party because I thought it did not represent the |hest interests of the working class. Too many lawyers, doctors and busi- | ness men were in control, At around this time I became secretary of the One Big Union, Bert Ems- ley went back to a college teach- |ing and Ben Legere to California | |to produce plays. I took part in| In September, 1918, 1|™@ny minor strikes around this |ton, Tenn., at the time. He wired ‘section. I then formed in 1925 the} he purpose of this Committee was to bring together all the unions then | existing in the textile field. The| American Federation of Textile Operatives, One Big Union, many textile clubs and Mill Committees | joined in this. The committees | were spread in many sections of the north. Albert Weisbord organized the Passaic United Front Commit-| tee (1926), Here the longest and | one of the most important textile | strikes took place. The strike lasted over a year, I worked in the Law- rence and New England section rais- ing funds for the strikers and or- ganizing the workers. With. me at this time were William Murdoch, George Siskind, Anthony Rumulia and Ella Reeves Bloor, better known by the workers as “Mother Bloor,” a grand young woman of 65 years. | Mother Bloor is known and loved | by the workers from coast to coast. | She is now working actively for the defense of the Gastonia framed-up victims. Later, the United Front Commit- tee went into the Textile Mills Com- mittee (T. M. C.). This organiza- tion led the big New Bedford strike in 1926, William Murdoch and I were the leaders of this strike, the WORKMEN’S SICK AND Other Gates open at 1 P. M. | during the strike for my picketing. UNITED BRANCHES OF BROOKLYN AND QUEENS AGITATIONS COMMITTEE and HOSPITAL FUND Grand Volksfest at BROOKLYN LABOR LYCEUM, 949 Willoughby Ave. (near Myrtle Ave.) CONCERT MUSIC in Garden and DANCING in Main Hall MUSIC by OSCAR SCHWARZER, Jr, TICKETS, 25 cents; after 6 p. m. 50 cents—Children Free Millowners Are Left to right, J. R. Pitman, Long, Gastonia mill strii National Textile Workers’ U Inion, thru the courts which they control, will a Gastonia mill worker, Walter 8, and Clarence Miller, organizer for the whom the Gasstonia mill bosses, attempt to railroad on trumped up charges of assault with attempt to kill. first one that I ever led on a big] scale. I learned a great many les- sons in this strike. The strike was | caused through a 10 per cent wage cut. The 26 fine cotton mills were all out. At the start of the strike | the American Federation of Textile Operatives (A, F. of T. O.) had the} larger membership, the U. T. W.| having from two to three hundred according to reliable reports. These unions would only make an effort to organize the skilled, the great mass of unskilled left to the mercy of the bosses. The T. M. C. organ-’ ized these great masses and many of the skilled. A great many mem- bers of the old unions also belonged to the T. M. C. and this prevented their leaders from selling the strike | for many months at least. The} strike lasted six months, I was ar-| rested about seven times for lead-/| ing the picket line. I spent one! month in jail along with Murdoch At one time over two hundred strik- | ers were arrested on the picket line at one time and lodged in the city police station all together. When | we were arrested, we were piled in huge moving trucks. I was leading the line this day along with “Big Mike.” | The latter part of the strike | found the textile workers every-| where looking for a national textile | union, one that would embrace the | militant spirit of the One Big | Union, T. M. C. and past progres- | sive and radical unions and avoid past mistakes. In September, 1928, the National Textile Workers Union was born. Delegates from all sec-| tions of the country—with the ex-| ception of the South—were there. It was the greatest textile confer- ence, Albert Weisbord was elected secretary-treasurer and James P.| Reid, president, The decision of the] Executive Committee was that I go| South and organize the many thou-| sands of terribly exploited textile workers. South I went. My dis- trict is No. 9, taking in all the Southern territory. I started my or-| ganization work in Charlotte last) December (1928). I worked in a quiet way and learned to understand | the Southern workers, who differ very little from their Northern brothers. I organized a local in the Manville-Jenckes (Loray) mill.| The first secretary of the local was) Will Truett and the members met in| his father-in-law’s house. E> was! a night worker. The bosses found| out what he was doing and dis- charged him. I was at Elizabeth- me that the bosses were going to come at once. We held meetings for both day and night workers in his home and it was decided to hold a mass meeting on a vacant lot. This meeting was held the last Sat- urday of May. Great numbers of the workers joined the union and Will Truett was working overtime signing up the new members. The local voted to strike the following Monday if any more members were fired for belonging to the union. Preparations were made. The union office was opened up on Franklin avenue in Loray, The following Monday, April 1, they began firing the union mem- YOU can buy in Meyers- ville, N. J., at low price, easy terms, corner plots, muting distance, and ||) near stores. For further information write OTTO KARLSON, Myersville, R.F.D. Millington, New Jersey DEATH BENEFIT FU Attractions Free Ice Cream for Children |back and forth in front of the mill | spiration, 100x200 feet with com. ||| Beck, bers, one by one. The night work- ers met at once on the lot in back of the hall and voted to start pick- eting when the day help came out. The union hurriedly mimeographed | leaflets that afternoon, calling upon all workers to stand by their fel- low-workers and to strike for bet- ter living conditions. The workers went to the picket line. I led the line this night. As we walked gate the bosses issued leaflet after | leaflet to the workers around the| gate and on the picket line. A few: | a 1 ISON, ONE | Ten Years of Soviet Medicine |G QMMUNISM IS HARRISON in New Picture by Poselskv OF 15 VICTIMS, PASSAIC VETERAN Tells of His Life of Poverty. By JOSEPH HARRISON I was born June 19, 1905 in New York’s East Side about’ half a mile from the birthplace of Al Smith. My parents moved to Passaic when I was four years old, I entered Pa public school and after graduating from grammar school entered high school, but due to the inability of my parents to support me, I was compelled to leave before I had completed my first year. My first job was in the Waldrich Bleachery, Delawanna, N. J. I was plating in the Kiers and on the boxes and earned a wage of $9.60 per week. This was during my summer vacation. I was 14 years old ai the time. The following vacation I went to work in the Passaic Metalware. I was a helper around the machines, |I caught my finger in a machine} called the bodymaker and lost a joint and a half. I left their employ before my finger healed to attend high school. In mid-winter I de- cided to quit school and went to|tute for the study of professional | “JN Old Sike work &s a cardhand in the Passaic Cotton Mills. I worked here until this mill moved South. I then worked in several dye- houses and when the Passaic strike broke out in 1926 I was working ’ Hands, Tell ot Lives of Struggl TWO new pictures by Poselski are| on the way to be released here: *The Struggle for Health” and “Spartakiade.” Poselski has already made a name for himself et the Hague Exhibition with his “Prob-| lems of Diet.” He has beer working in the film industry since 1915, and } |since 1922 has devoted himself al- | most exclusively to educational |1ilms. | “The Struggle for Health” (Ten Years of Soviet. Medicine) is an at- tempt ta skow on the screen the} essence ot the work of Soviet medical science, its fundamental aims and purposes. The chief of these is the |establishment of a prophylactical de- | partment v ‘th control over daily life and industry. The picture centers round this, A great part of it is devoted to showing the work of the latest medicinal discoveries, unknown to tsarist Russia, and first and fore- most the prophylactical departments. The work of the Soviet medical scien- | tist and doctor—closely bound up with industry dnd the life of the worker—is shown to the audience. | Care in the Soviet Industry. the doctor in industry, his control jover the life of the worker, the|/“Fn Old methods of defining professional dis eases and their elimination. Among | other things is seen the only insti-| diseases and their prevention, the Obuch Institute. fessional diseases, the most interest- ing are the night sanitoriums in| which workers sent by doctors spend| ly made use of a number of methods | “BEAL SAYS THE UNION HAS|® The United Piece Dye Works in/ their leisure time. 700,000 DOLLARS IN THE CoM-)L0di N. J. Our mill was one of those | MERCIAL BANK IN NEW YORK| —THERE IS NO SUCH BANK.” “CAN YOU LIVE IN TENTS| WHEN YOU ARE THROWN OUT OF YOUR HOMES?” The bosses | nailed two big signs of oilcloth} painted in red saying: “BE A MAN, DON’T BE DRIVEN.” The latter) slogan was later used by the work- | ers. Lack” of space prohibits telling! the whole story of the Loray mill strike. It is enough to say that the National Textile Workers Union is | making history in the South. The| manufacturers are furious at the | thought of losing their profits. | Their propaganda throughout the | North that “we have good loyal 100 per cent American slaves” holds no more. The Southern worker is awake and will now fight shoulder | to shoulder with his Northern fel- | low-workers. The N. T. W. U. has | done the awakening; that is why we are now, 15 of us, in the Gaston) county jail on the framed-up charge | of murder, If the bosses succeed | in legally murdering us, our just! cause will be carried on by others | in the union just as loyal. | Pe er I was also arrested in several | free speech fights in Lawrence.| Arrested picketing the Boston State house against the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti, I ran for mayor on the Workers (Communist) Party in New Bedford in 1928, “Life of Beethoven” | At the Film Guild) Beginning today, the Film Guild Cinema will present a triple feature program, The bill is headed by a} German film as the “Life of Beet- hoven”, and also includes .the first American presentation of “The Prince of Rogues,’ a drama of the exploits of the German “Robin Hood’, known in his native land as “Schinderhannes”. The period of his activities was during the invasion of Germany by Napoleon. The leading role is played by Hans Stuwe. The third picture is a revival of Lubitsch’s “So This is Paris”, with Florence Vidor, Lilyan Tashman and Andre Beranger. The ‘Life‘ of Beet- hoven” was enacted in the locale of the Master Composer. Fritz Kortner plays the chief role, DR. B. LIBER'S NEWEST BOOK THE HEALERS PRICE $2.00 A novel of 455 pages, cloth, description of all healing professions and quacks, with details about their shortcomings and crim- inal practices and a picture of the SOCIAL BACKGROUND OF DISEASE. OPINIONS of readers, doctors and the press: Unusual, Honest, Courageous, Ab- sorbing, Thrilling, A Revelation, Great In- Sociological Novel, Dangerous , Flaming Sincerity, One Revolution- ary Physician, Great Physician Teacher, Imagination of Artist, Rare Human Being, Serving the humble generously. Some of the New Opinions: “I've come in contact with many schools of healing, but until I read your book had no way of being able to sum them up correctly from a working class point of view.” (8, D.. Nelson Creek, New Zealand.) “Among the piles of worthless, sensa- tional books served daity to the reading public by the big, profiteering publishing houses, your book comes as a gratifying relief. What a wealth of _ stimulating, thought-provoking ideas! What noble sentiments and sympathetic observations in each chapter! So many courageous, yet true opinions! You throw abundant light on an important subject which has been so shamelessly and cowardly neglected. Who has ever had courage enough to start cleaning {n the midst of all our healers? It Im regrettable that your book will just be a faint whisper in the deafening noise of our gum-chewing clvilization, Our modern mental food trusts, such as Tho Book of the Month Club, The Guild, etc., will never turn their eyes on such a bool, How dare they help spread the real truth?" (A, R., New York.) Send no money, but checks or orders to RATIONAL LIVING BOX 2, STATION M, money- that took part in that strike. I was a member of the strike committee and learned to speak at mass meet- ings. During the course of the strike I was arrested several times for picketing. Following the strike ‘I was blacklisted by. several of the mills but I managed to find employ- ment in several of the mills during the busy seasons, During the summer of 1927 I went to New Bedford where thousands of textile workers were striking against a wage cut and offered to assist them during the strike. I remained in New Bedford until the strike was settled. I went back to Passaic and worked in several mills during the winter and spring seasons. I be- came interested in the struggle of the Southern textile workers under the leadership of the N.T.W.U. and finally decided to hitch-hike south so that I could study the southern situation and get first-hand infor- mation. I arrived during the last week of May and was asked to re- main as an organizer and was pre- paring to leave Gastonia to go to upon the tent colony. During the fight, I was wounded, Malterhorn Film At Little Carnegie “The Fight for Matterhorn”, a new Garman film actually produced on the famous Alpine peak, will be the chief attraction at the Little Carnegie Playhouse beginning this Saturday. Dr. Arnold Franck, who directed the Ufa film, “Peaks of Destiny”, supervised the making of this film. The story of this film is based on the cuccessful effort to reach the peak of the Matterhorn, Peter Voss plays the role of Edward Whymper, the first man to conquer this moun- tain. Clifford McLaglen, brother of Victor McLaglen, is starred with Voss. Marcella Albani plays the female lead. JUST OFF July Marxism: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIALIST WAR H. M. CONGRESS WM. Z, THE YOUNG PLAN CYRIL (Continued) vb by FRANZ REVIEWS AND BOOKS NEW YORK CITY 39 EAST 125TH STREET my post when the raid was Lea slaie’ GHGS Ge aha oa T demonstrates prophylactic work against the social diseases—tuber- | | culosis and veneral dispensaries. The consultation for pregnant women and | mothers, lying in hospitals, creches | and nursery-schools, under the con-! trol of doctor-sociologists, are vividly | illustrated. Of special interest are | the pictures showing the teaching of | the ABC of hygiene in the schools. | Physical Culture Encouraged. | “Spartakiade” is not without in- ternal connections with the first .pic- ture. Physical culture, regarded by Soviet medicine as one of the most | important prophylactical means, | developed in our country with ex- a sort of review of these forces, Sport, which has such a profes- |sional character in many countries, is regarded in the Soviet Union as| |relaxation for the workers. Thirty- six nationalities were represented in the Spartakiade, in which there were | six thousand participants. The task | efore the producer was to illustrate | takiade, and to show our achieve- ments in physical culture. | TORTURE FASCIST FOES. BELGRADE (By Mail).—It is re- ported from Zagreb, that the ar-| rested Dr. Loevy and his companions |are being dreadfully tortured in | prison, that their screams can be | heard from the neighboring streets. | | INGERSOLL FORUM | PYTHIAN TEMPLE || THOMAS JEFFERSON HALL 135 West 70th St. SUNDAY BVENINGS SUNDAY, JULY 28 , Clement Wood “REAL LIFE IN THE | MIDDLE AGES” i ADMISSION 25 CENTS | THE PRESS Issue The Communist A Magazine of the Theory and Practise of -Leninism STRUGGLE AGAINST IM- WICKS THE RIGHT OF REVOLUTION—AN AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY TRADITION A. LANDY RIGHT TENDENCIES AT THE TRADE UNION UNITY FOSTER GASTONIA—THE CENTER OF THE CLASS STRUG- GLE IN THE “NEW SOUTH” ‘WM. F. DUNNE The Reparations Conference and the War Danger A, FRIED The New Reparations Plan, by G. P. FURTHER NOTES ON THE NEGRO QUESTION IN THE SOUTHERN TEXTILE STRIKES BRIGGS CAPITALISM AND AGRICULTURE IN AMERICA LENIN ECONOMICS AND ECONOMIC POLICY BE. VARGA LITERATURE AND THE CLASS STRUGGLE MEHRING hs Price 25 Cents WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS NEW YORK CITY i Vi Conductor h | program at the Joint Defense and} | Relief The first part shows the work of | today in Pl WELCOMED BY _ SOUTHS SLAVES) - ‘Party Leads Toilers Says Knight By RUSSELL D. KNIGHT | (One of 15 prisoners charged witt murder in Gastonia jail). At last the long oppressed textile |slaves of the South have awakened |to the realization cf what Commu. nism means. For years they have been carefully taught by the bosses that Communism was a_ bugabg| |something to be avoided as tl would a plague, because of its “: structive” qualities, In all of. thé! attacks on the Communist Party th: bosses have never given the work | ing masses of the South an intelli gent definition of Communism, ‘anc the people who have been forced in "| to the factories at a very early agi sting | and have heen deprived of the schoo ing that they were entitled to haven’t had the opportunity to learr it, of Orchestra the inte will add to arity Demonstration, | t Bay Park, Bronx. i\Continue at Cameo’”’ Among the de-! at the partments for the prevention of pro-|of J. The second part of the picture | the prilliant ¢ Czars an dshows the brutality, the jinhumanity the torture and anguish that fell to the lot of prisoners, the enemies of Czarism and the dom. traordinary rapidity. There are now | Popoff as Chief over three-and-a-half million mem-| yak; P. Tomr | bers of physical culture circles. The | the political p: Spartakiade held last summer was) as Ostrobeylo, the new warden; and POPULAR PRICES Cc IN OLD SIBERI “Very Interesting unusual But now, things have taken on a! | different aspect. The workers: now have learnt that Communism means the struggle for the interests of the workers, and it is only thru the’¢com- bined efforts of the workers*‘that * they can ever hope to achieve éfan. the work | cipation. In the Gastonia strike, thd ct Russia’s| bosses flooded the country wit} “Siberia” Will release Cameo Theatre . Reiseman, Sov no | | | Prontinent! young: tlm: atrector. leaflets of all sorts, condemning them | 1 He has very intelligently and apt-| union and trying to break up its ac tivities by slurring the Communis! | evolved in Soviet cinemato: | Party, and lying about Russia ~~ iF roup of expe: These strikers had become wise t: { The film testifies to the director’s | this method of the mill owners andi | | artistic tact, his sensitivencss to sub-| were determined that the bosseq gE | tile values and search of new] should not put an end to thei |’ means of eloquent screen expression. | struggle for better conditions by \d The czarist penal system known | such high-handed methods as handy | as Katorga is depicted with power-|ing out a pack of lies to them. I 8 ful eloquence in “In Old Siberia”.|Communism meant the minority | |It takes the spectator into the Si-| these leaflets would never have bet f |berian hard-labor prisons under the | distributed because the bosses ret), 4 ize that they themselves are tl)}, minority, and once the worker: |realized this fact in its true light | they would not cease struggling un til they had won their strike. And these workers have at last learn{ the political ie champions of free- The all Russian cast contribute! this secret that has been so closel ] gripping portrayals, they include V.| guarded by the bosses and they ard Overseer, Chern- | putting up a real militant fight and as the warden of |they know that their struggle is add | oners; V, Taskin,|ing another step toward their vic | tory as well as helping to make thd | P) |B, Lifanoff as one of the political| Communist Party a real success itfe |T | prisoners. America, | si ™ ac *AMUSEMENTS>|- in ‘ARTING TODAY! a GALA F TRIPLE-FEATURE hr PROGRAM ‘| |g | A Cinema Event i for Every rs Music-Lover! iot jin fr: . th j Life of BEETHOVEN} |: " in atc peasy ing An authentic screen biography of the Immortal Symphonist enacted | F* in the actual locales of Vienna... notable for the moving portrayal [| ‘iv of the Master-Composer of the Ninth Symphony by Fritz Kortner,Mm|‘¥ remarkable both because of his uncanny resemblance and his con Ca veyance of the tremendous enérgy which gave force and direction! *'* to Beethoven’s dreamings. ie —and on the same program — Pa, “THE PRINCE OF ROGUES” ) ——“SO THIS IS PARIS” I —a vivid drama of a “Til 4 Lubitsch’s scintillating sa- [0 Eulenspiegel” —a German tire on French life, but “Robin Hood” » fax M GUIL I a FILM G D CINEMA sf. 52 West 8th Street JUST WEST OF FIFTH AVENUE, SPRING 5095-5090 pee Continuous Daily 2 p.m. to Midnight i REFRIGERATED AMEO 42nd St. and Brcadway 2nd Big Week “3 STAR FILM” Daily N NEWEST RUSSIAN MASTERPIECE ; | (KATORGA) “Powerful suspense elim- “In Old Siberia’ » ‘tir camera touches.”—Times ax and acting.”—Tribune psychological study.” T —Daily Worker ithe near NINA TARASOVA ¢y? ne tsAN CHO Bein way a Ey an is a Lehi nigh pen atronize Our @ B.F: ea) Advertisers © BF: avi ‘ith Don’t forget to mention the “Daily ial Worker” to the proprietor whenever you ae purchase clothes, furniture, etc., or eat it in a restaurant he