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7 Page Four Women Workers of the Mongomery- Ward Company in Cha (By a Worker Correspondent) CHATANOOGA, Tenn. (By Mail).—The Montgomery Ward Co., the huge mail order chain store corporation, recently opened a branch in Chatanooga. ‘This con- cern cares nothing about the state laws of Tennessee concerning working women. And the state DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1929 j law concerning workin evidently not suppos against such corporation Ward Co. The women worker: the new Mont here sl i long as 1 ing to the Tennessee state la to operate | sists of 10!4 hours in any one day of 57 hours a week. No chairs, no stools of any kind are furnished the slave-driven wo- men workers in this company. One Sunday recently the women were instructed by the bosses to c to work as usual to take in- ventory. On the previous day the as the Mo: women is | the working day for women con- | young women workers had slaved | they were getting a holiday on from 8 a. m. to 11 p.m, For their long, killing labor, on that day these women did not receive a single penny of extra pay for overtime. The firm gave as its reasons for making the women work on Sunday “because they came late to work they must work Sunday.” It also said that since | the Fourth of July they must make it up by working on Sun- day. No extra pay for this extra day of work, of course. No ice water is given to these workers who have to drink plain river water on very hot sum- mer days we have to slave thru down here, in chokey basements, | tanooga Forced to which gives the workers a feeling of choking. However, the com- pany says that its slaves “have the privilege to go out any time they desire for cold drinks.” One young woman worker was told “not to run around too much” when she went to buy a cold drink. State officials so far have done nothing to see that the laws re- Slave as Long as Fifteen Hours a Day garding women workers are en- | theaselves into a strong indus- forced. Meanwhile the conditions | trial union and only then will they of these Montgomery-Ward wo- | be in a position to fight on behalf man workers have not improved | of their demands. in the least, on the contrary the —MONTGOMERY-WARD Speed-up gets worse every day. SLAVE Sooner or later the workers of Montgomery-Ward will learn that the only way they can improve Build shop committees and draw the more militant members into the Communist Party. to organize their conditions “You Will Be Called On Some Day for Strike Duty,” Soldiers Ave Told by Officers REVOLT SPIRIT BEGINS TO GROW IN THE ARTILLERY Bad Treatment Makes Them Think (By a 2nd-Year National Guardsman) On this page to- day worker corre- spondents tell of the slavery in the auto plants. The top j photo shows wreck- age of the Mack-In- MILL WORKERS ~ TASTE SUSTICE’ Girl Defended Herself | Against Forewoman | (By a Worker Correspondent) LONG FOR GREAT LAKES WORKERS, ‘Low Wages for Men | on: Boats | (By a Worker Correspondent) in the USSR Film Indusiry JANE COWL UBLIC interest in the film in-| dustry began to crystallise into definite forms in the Soviet Union in 1922, In 1924 the Association of the Revolutionary Kinematograph (ARK) was founded for the purpose of uniting all active workers in the revolutionary kinematograph under the slogan: “The kinematograph is the strongest weapon in the struggle bese rea indancers Awe Worker ALLENTOWN, PA, SLAVE DAY IS Workers’ Interest Grows Fast FORD, WESTERN ELECTRIC SLAVES MILITANT IN NJ ‘Over 4000 Daily Seek Work There (By a Worker Correspondent) Jf any worker still has et in ternational Motors |_| ALLENTOWN, fa. (By Mail).—| BUFFALO, N. Y. (By Mail).—I|for Communist Culture.” The young UNION CITY, N. J. (By Mail)— his Sh signs ue ee ae plant in Newark ie am Sonora aa Phe! Aveadia ey am a worker on the Interlake | organization was forced to try and |I heard that there was a possibility 1 a Wore Wal) pe Joe ee after a series of ex- |here and a member of the Arcadia| Steamship Company Great Lake jattract wide public attention to lof getting a job at the Ford aute Fee ermal Guare are cae B plosions which has |Mill local of the National Textile | hoats, and I wish to tell of the con-| questions of the kinemgtograph, to Se es ee Rogan alee he eet Senne year ARC ‘senons Tine wrecked the plant | Workers Union. I will tell an in-/| ditions the workers on these Great|see that its skilled rs raised Pop lhsds at camp as a National Guardsman. I belong to the 212th Coast Artillery (Anti-Aircraft). I’ve just come back from camp at Fort Ontario, Os- wego, N. Y. and, want to tell the readers of the Daily Worker some of the things I saw. : up. The equipment is often rotten. but the buck privates always get the rotten equipment. Those who do a and threatened the , lives of women and girl workers. Blast was caused by com- B pany neglect, Below, workers at a Ford plant, waiting for the population d previous years. Isn’t that a demoe! ng that campaign was greater than that of the \cident, concerning my arrest here. On Monday, July 22, Mr, Reinhardt | called the police to the mill and had |me arrested because I dared to de- |fend myself against a most out- jrageous attack that Alice Nask made on me, All the girls on the UNITING TOGETHER IN THE ARCADIA LOCAL OF THE NA- TIONAL TEXTILE WORKERS |Lake carriers slave under. First off, I will say that about | 1,000 workers on the Lakes boats their qualifications, to train up new bodies of workers to replace the old ones, with their pre-revolutionary were recently thrown out of work | traditions, unsuitable for the new in this region by a consolidation of | Soviet Kinematograph, which, in all the independent steamship com- | form as well as in subject, had to \to five boats each, —GREAT LAKES COAL PASSER |be renewed. These tasks were ful- Who will be seen in the leading | nearby plant of the Western Electrie Co. Having been walking the streets vainly looking for work I decided to try the Ford plant. After waiting for about an hour a man came up to us with an indif- years’ cultural plan of the Soviet Union. Under this is understood the multiplication of picture-houses | —AND ON THE SAME PROGRAM— “Life of BEETHOVEN” | “The Prince “So This <a; ; nies, “For Future Strike Duty.” dispensary treatment | Winding floor know how this woman |", 1... ; filled by special campaigns, organ- | Hi . ferent air looking us over sharply. ‘° Up at Fort Ontario we were given after being injured | treats the winders. There isn't a| Conditions on the ships are bad! tons of lectures ‘and frequent role of “Jenny,” @ Rew play to be |e then starten to beckon to some ‘ p at Fo ri were's' A <71' in. shi f ill who1/0r the workers. Wages are very | .. i j produced here later in the season i i two weeks of intensive training. Our| by flying parts of |girl in this part of the mill whoj) mo wages for coal passers |*i/m shows and discussions, to step forward, selecting the most iting consisted! of work on the machinery.® Auto |doesn’t hate Alice worse than poison. | OW __ >? head A. Be and ial! iad by Brady and Wiman. docile and ragged, ignoring the ' inin ne! ssie'g | All she needs is a whip to make her | 2%¢ 972-50 a month, and A. B,’s an Work Specially Organiz i x A hi } anti-aircraft (75 mm.) guns. Other workers must organ 8) is a whip | fi me chaid: 105,00. a month, Negro workers, of whom there were : ead i hi ize into fighting auto | 100k what she is—a slave-driver, | (Temen ave paid giv. '| ‘The organization was divided un- i about fifty. : batteries wor ed on tl je machine riceve’® ‘ fi Alice was picking on me for a| Some coal passes are forced to des two. nechione: “fadaitelal and | DY preliminary picture shows, before a s guns, transporting ammunition, lay- Rie ete WOR te |slave 12 hours a day, on a basis of | i 5 ‘ | the public release of films, and by| The Negroes were clad in ragged A couple of days because she thought | ture-house sh The first was ‘ 1 ing down telephone lines, etc. Be- Cale fo 08d TAGES (| SPE etree Union, Nowe 1 | 8ix hours work, six hours off, and |Pichirc House Snows. ne att pre. | the frequent readings and’ discus- |<lothing, and you could see that they sides the regular work of an ar- conditions. % Serr, oh ig ete fee nen Back again to six hours Papier aes into three eral YO"! sions of scenarios. The picture |had been starving for some time. ; tillery regiment we had infantry drill Med 0 ae ee at bee after pepsi |ducing and operating, inclu ing @c- | uses aca; conttiiied she nteans: of | Out of 400 to 500 men only about 18 more or less regularly. Now, it) nists bbe 5 ce moe be ee tia pate ersaneieteroaes the | (orm, mboratory and) srenasio-writ-| | anizing the’ audiences themacives, |Wete selected, andthe rest of us might be asked, why should an ar- : 2 pg bee oe id not Nido tana qotaiaa ee the hives for | 28 (including scenarists, rogues | aad giving frequent lectures and re. | Were ordered to move on. tillery regiment worry about in- Pee S eee on eonaay ANG tia amen ‘ " J jand actors, working jointly on orts to the public. In this w: The Ford plant in Kearney em- *. f ee my I was fired, That wasn’t enough |@ worker can never get more than scenarios). The sc nd was sub- |?! he Pp . is way Di y « fantry drill and the use of a rifle? | foe The dirty thine t e }a few hours sleep when working | giyi ti i a Rie er the ODSK ascertains the attitude |ploys about 10,000 workers and the ( Our officers told us why—because we re her. The dirty thing began to/|@ | divided into two groups; picture) ¢* the andience, and enables the|meager wages paid by the “benevo- may be called out some day “on| insult me, and when I talked back/|this way. house (including directors of auch, | Yinematograph industry aot ya feet Ford are $25 fe $30 a pant : strike duty or riot duty.” | aie aaa erent hands. | ae cat Gates ad Adages tor isesg pone dea and pales: workers) jpeating any errors that may have | This includes night work arranged i1 ASRS) any self-respecting gis] would have [than for others on sore boats who and crebestra conductor) ASelen: |e made. |= two weeks shift i * Gin tuakion:, Disc . ] vi |and orchestra-conductors), ‘ien- : i gt pins Oeae hack ae rant The | l ISSR ] extile W orkers Life done. I’ve got three bad scratches | work eight hours a day. The abuse | tific-Methodological Bureau was Finally, the ODSK is interested in| I then went to the Western Elec Sictslen of War’ were Sarin on my neck to prove how blood-|from officers on the boats are really | formed for the concentration of such | the creation of new bodies of work | tric, where 15,000 workers work, in- gain yon Sean HAS un wo that We ; ’ . |thirsty that Alice is, My sister ran | unbearable. They bring their friends | work from representatives of all| tight through the industry from | cluding many girl workérs, There I | might never forget we were under Is Answer 0) / votzky S Lies | over to protect me. lon the boats’ who act as stool pig-|these groups with special “cabinets” | the mechanics to the producers, A |and many others enjoyed a two hours| ok cf tha U.S. ney, The — Then the boss called in the police,{eons against the other workers,|for methodological, sociological, ex-|body of producers and _scenario-| wait before being finally told by aj er ints Wks cavvied on unl fe ee ee and I snd my sister were arrested.|running to the officers to tell of| perimental and propaganda work.|Writers is required, with knowledge | slick-haired perfumed white collar} Betes that every worker there‘could The following letter from a Soviet textile worker tells of the life | They couldn't hold my sister, but |all that they have heard. For a/Of late similar kinematograph asso- | °f contemporary life and experience | man, “I’m sorry, but we cannot place} « vealize that this was open prepara-| in the factories, and how the workers participate in the elections: I was fined $10 while Alice, who|man to be reported by one of these | ciations have been forcing into other | Public demand, The work of train- | you. As many as 400 men seek fa for war. saa Dear Comrades: I am writing you this letter because the columns | Should have been sent to jail, wasn’t |spies as having been overheard to| towns such as Leningrad and Tiflis.|ing up these latter is partly done |jobs at the Ford and Western Elec-j Harsh Treatment for Men. the capitalist press has opened to our ex-revolutionist Mr. Trotzky for |Charged with anything. |grumble against the slavery means Chief Directors in ARK bye cormeepontent Sinsmatageanh ie Denia eVsry ess: tnos er mien a Rag “ie Ling,| Bis fictions about our Soviet Union and Communist Party. The judge was 100 percent on the | that he is fired. __|eourses, for scenario writers, pro-| being turned away. t ” re ey genera y spe ing, It is not for nothing that the most “respectful” Mr. Trotzky got |Side of the Arcadia Company, and| Of course, the workers on these| The importance of the ARK will |ducers, mechanics and photograph-| Both factories speed the workers ! Ee 6 “scab nte oe A fonae tens of thousands of American dollars. The stupidity of your bour- |J've come to the conclusion that|Great Lakes boats are all unorgan-)be shown from the fact that the ers. |up at a terrific rate. Only those that — “ato wit! ponent Any ee! geosie attained such an extend that it buys from Mr. Trotsky such THERE IS NO JUSTICE FOR|ized, The American Federation of |!eading Soviet producers belong to} The above remarks may serve to |enjoy the peak of health can endure with ‘nea Blpoes Titoy or tee thin water, namely his prattle about “democracy.” Evidently they like | WORKERS IN THE ALLENTOWN | Labor has never made the slightest |its administration, including Eisen- | give some idea of the vastness and it, and that is short-lived. Most of vases of two fellows in Headquarters the hog-wash and enjoy it when it is rotten and when it smells. Trotzky |COURT. The judge tried to tell me | attempt to organize us. The only |Stein, Dziga Vertov, Pudovkin, Ed-| scope of work undertaken in the |the workers in the two plants are Battery. Th fellow a is generous in spreading these hog-washes, Well it is better for us |*hat I should not belong to the Un-| way the workers on the Great Lakes |Ward Tisse and L. Kuleshev, and) ¢ 0504 union by the Kinematograph, class-conscions, hate the companies, ry. iene e “ke were ie and worse for him, ion, He talked just as if he were a| boats will ever end the slavery, the | that interest is felt in its activities ” °BraP™ /and are eager to join a militant _ Bsns anise h dng DEMOCRACY FOR WORKERS boss of the Arcadia Mill. He also| low wages, the six hours split shift |in foreign countries, as well as in|@nd the large part played in this| union, : they <n m jours aulere. A day Nua ea benuasalesbal Are Deriekdnl hd if in the cascubareey told me to keep still about this | systems, the long hours, and abuse |the Soviet Union. There are many | work by the public itself. —oC. C. i or evo a ea tae rere sen! sue one Sane cuiters Gere 3 2 saasethy eee eaten Level affair and not tell anyone. It seems| from officers will be by organizing |kino-journals and periodicals abroad | > a rete! “They it squctiy re appeared ale di fy An S symparay Bas isto me us if the Arcadia and the| into a union which must take in all |Which follow the work of the ARK| | ye geome cle Saha bopet Bielaal ha: cagen at seagibtal ‘ > “ Court are afraid to let the workers |the workers on the Lake craft, and|With close interest and frequently | | Ls fused to go and were immediately hd n the pages of the bourgéois newspapers Trotzky defends “demo- know how they treated me. You can then having ‘a general: strike of all |refer to it in their columns, Leon ed A M a sf E M E N T sf Ps ey shoved into the guardhouse. 4 cg tees cake eroar et bet that I’m NOT going to keep| Great Lake workers. Mussinak (France) gave a lecture} | Graft and Favoritsm Reign, AG ann demnesnee tee workers and peasants but for the “fists” atill. Companies affected by the merger | °° a recent ARK evening in Moscow, | | ~ _ The whole damned National Guard) well-to-do peasants) we have not, and never will have it. The first thing I did after getting | making so many men jobless are the | and alm.st all kinematograph work- NOW PLAYING! « is ,shot thru with graft and Recently in ou: tory Yartzevo in Smolensky, as well as in out of the Court was to JOIN the! tutchinson, Tomilson, Becker, Bar- |°"S from abroad, whether critics or Se Z | 5 5 : , i taforitism. Every top sergeant towns and villag e in the USSR. the re-elections of the |fne mane omy, Way we can de-|tum, Boland, and Cornelius Steam-| Producers do the same. GALA TRIPLE—FEATURE PROGRAM! yAries to get his little bit and that) goviets alas Ped ca i end ourselves from the bosses and | _). ps The “kino-fication” of the country Ment is ot tad” Wig ‘oviets took plai In our factory all workers and all peasants in |their blood-thirsty fore-ladies is by | *PiP Companies, and about 11 other |. Macsixé , . 4 CINEMA EVENT YOR EVERY MUSIC-LOVER! N stunt is of course repeated higher! the villages took part in the pre-election campaign. The activity of Verte adies is bY | smaller lines that have from two|is an important feature in the five little “handshaking” (bootlicking) Certainly it is, but not one of Mr. Troteky’: UNION. a ‘and the attraction of the popula-| 2 4 Eessip a: og tie we i eegere v0 “ELECTING THE SOVIEES. a0 “ Be ee 'Provineetown Players ah ay ee aaa e at turn | _ 2 vice cal PP yt . be gossip among the men in the regi- "hie. Bourpecik poole et tfiate tT hav, i 19” ; logically leads to a great develop-| yy Lubitecl , ment that some of the guns in use| no right bia : : or saabet to va EET toa eee 7 oe d Siberia | To Give M ich ae ] ment of kinematography and proto- || FILM GUILD CINEMA ontinuous Dally 52 West 8th Street fi are very old and should have been| if he is not compromised by any shamful behavior. ‘The candidates tor | 22 Third Week Gold’s “Feista” sceph amateurs. Workers, atudents, Serie far ore 5 retired long ago. These guns have shot more rounds than they are sup-| posed to and today are a constant, menace to the men. They may ex- plode at any shot right at the breech, Men Getting Wise. | But many of the young workers | jn the National Guard are beginning ‘tovrealize its nature. The treatment given us by the officers makes us| see very well that the officers come | frem a different world from us. We | are mostly workers. The officers are rich business men or men in comfortable jobs. They have money, | the new membership of the Town Soviet in our factory were chosen by us. Every worker if he wishes could put on the list a candidate's name. Such lists were put on the walls in all factories. At the general meet- ings of the workers each candidate was discussed. The deputies of the Soviet have to give accounts to the workers, of their work in the Soviets. We do not understand any other democracy. PRODUCTIVITY CONFERENCES. In order to increase productivity of labor in our factory twice a month, production conferences are organized. The members of ad- ministration of the factory together with workers consider ways of perfecting the production. Different motions are put forward, for in- stance the better use of cotton, of spinning, etc. During such conferences the most eapable workers show themselves and they are appointed for leading work or sent to one of the Higher Technical Schools. At Cameo Theatre Y anita were periods when the Czar’s jailers, particularly in the smaller Siberian prisons, relaxed somewhat in their treatment-of po- litical prisoners, For a time it be- came a@ general practice not to lodge the politicals in the same wards with criminals, In many instances the jailers even showed a measure of respeet for those men and women of strong will and spiritual nobility, But as the struggle against Czarism became more general the reprisals against revolutionists became more ICHAEL GOLD’S “Fiesta” is an- | nounced for early production by the Provincetown Playhouse in their new home, the Garrick Theatre, on West Thirty-Fifth Street, which the | players will oceupy this season. | |James Light will direct the produc- | tion, “Fiesta,” a play dealing with a) political revolution in Mexico, was chosen by the Harvard Dramatic | Club for presentation in December, 1928, but was banned by the Cam- | bridge police and by Mayor Nichols | in Boston after its initial perform- |the ODSK nuclei, employees and peasants engage in photography under the direction of and there is searcely a club without its photo- graphy section, ° The public control of the ODSK over the kinematograph is carried out | YOU can buy in Meyers- an expedition flim through Mongolia—the acete of the prenent Rustiauet REFRIGERATED AMEO 42nd St. and Broadway 3rd Big Week: “3 STAR FILM” ville, N. J., at low price, easy terms, corner plots, 100x200 feet with com- and muting distance, near stores. Nort NEWEST RUSSIAN MASTERPIECE , IN OLD SIBERIA education, social position, etc, They | The interests of the workers of our factor i H move in a different world from us.! of the Factory Committee, or, as it is called aR ee protection fierce. The Central Prison Depart- | ance. The officials who censored Far Seether tutor marion write (KATORGA) ’ i it | h kas Bored 1, -” In the fac- |ment in St. Petersburgh started aj the play because of its dialogue ir ” ee “ . a 4 They, in short, are bosses, Thus it) tories there are professional trade bureaus, All differences between | rigor i ai rf Si- | were condemned at the time by The | OTTO KARLSON, oka Bevan crtnee | aatned sane nT vivenolbeicgt etude is"easy to see that the struggle of/ workers and administration are to be discussed at the Estimate-Con. |hecticn lite tee trot ye won 2 ; Daily Worker the enlisted men in the army against | their harsh officers is just a counter- | part of the old fight of “Cl Against Class.” —COAST ARTILLERYMAN | flict Commissions. These Commissions are composed of a representative of the professional Trade Bureau or of that of factory committee and of worker's representatives. 90 per cent of the cases are settled in favor of the workers. —G. SIMONEKOV. (To Be Continued) bertian liberties. Instructions went forth to all the prinson wardens of the empire to deprice political pris- oners of. all special privileges, A new formula was declared; “There are no politicals and no criminals; there are only Katorga (hard labor) Harvard Crimson, the student daily paper, Four other plays, two of them by Paul Green and Thomas Dickinson, will be gvien during the coming | season by the Provincetown Players Myersville, R.F.D. Millington, New Jersey SEE, & HEAR NINA TARASOVA 3h?xne sovmetors SPEND YOUR VACATION IN A HUMAN SCRAP PILE» arrus cup omema "e's ee AT FILM GUILD “In Old Siberia,” newest Amkino | 1 CINEMA production now in its third week at INGERSOLL FORUM | ‘ Starting this Saturday, the Film ha rare eB wy sens lara > Les ‘ , od of intens reaction in the | PYTHIAN TEMPLE A Grows at Dodge Automobile Company «xita Cinema will present the first|prisons of old Russia. The new|]| THOMAS JHFFERSON HALL |) e N it (Bp rer me eee [American showing of “Through the warden Ostrobeyle is, as he. director | 5 0 pak Went Torn Be || THE FIRST WORKINGCLASS CAMP — ENTIRELY REBUILT young fellows to take their place | Death-Deserts of Asia,” a film which Bis va Te menIOn | r | ° . DETROIT, Mich. (By Mail).—The | at a lower rate but the greater gepj puts it, “a composite of historical | sUNeanT eee | 175 Ne if t i ht ; Motor Company believes in| speed~ fl " itions |CPicts the unique aspects of the | and notorious jailers,” | Dr A | EW DUNLALIOWS - - Eclrvic 1g them young and worting| wil me thess you wosken age SY2? Hedin selenite tip through |" ™ ANS ‘thi DAM UOete OF 8 ! ' Loe oer ar are worth, = at an even faster rate than their Tibet and Monngonlia over a period nit UP the Unitea Frent, of | THE CLERGY” Pancationa ALINE UOT: iC sie Kamasicet, Petre of Sports, Athletics ; & erent up and so rotten | predecessors. ¢ only solution to | of two years, ie Working Class From the Bot- is i is 4 ¢ are working conditions that the|the problem is to aise the weike oO : brmbaraaot 0M etapa lb JACOB MASTEL fang 4 ¥ Chrysler Motor Co. some time fap a J k On the same program the Film JACOB SHAEFFER EDITH SEGAL t E refused to hire men over 4B years| youth and their service to, auto. |Strceg etme Sill be & film called : to- | « hig the Great Gaxvaca” wate ee ee of age. mobile corporations whose only in- | ; eae B 1, of Lond THIS WILL BE TH BIGGEST OF ALL ASONS Now Dodges, too, is beginning to|terest is increased profits, This |Warning Shadon hal a E SE i ; ia tery film, I lay off men on account of a. nd | protection can be secured by think- © a A edt! ‘ ey hair. Three men who have ine of your interests aed seit fel. i f “NOW-A-DAYS,” a play by Arthur F. Brash, will be presented by DIRECTIONS: Take the Hudson River Day Line Boat—twice dally — 75 at Dodge's for seven and |low workers’ interests by organizing The Fight for Matterhorn,” Ger- William A. Brady at the Forrest Theatre on Monday night. cents. Take car direct to Camp—20 centa, nine years on the night shift were | yourselves, old and young, into the 4M film produced on the famous The cast is headed by, Mayo Methot, Melvyn Douglas, Irene not allowed to be transferred to the organization which is out to see Alpine peak, will remain for a sec- Blair, Beverly Sitgreaves, Edw: rd Pawl yh P Y Shi I I dsy shift by E. A. Sampson in/that your interests are considered, |0Md week at the Little Carnegie “ 5 act ha in ha ley and Peggy Shannon. CAMP NI GEDAIGE charge of maintenance. Now these! Look over the demands of the Auto| Playhouse, “IT’S A WISE CHILD,” a comedy by Laurence E. Johnson, will be - a hree men find themselves laid off | Workers Union and see for your- — David Belagco’s first production of the season, opening at the BEACON, N, ¥. > because of grey hair and old age,| self wlat we are fighting for in re-| “Nana,” the Frene! film ve-sion Belasco Theatre én Tuesday night. Minor Watson, Mildred Teleph Ben 731 New York T otten in the service of the Dodge| gard to workers who are past their | of Emile Zola’s novo’ * "> held McCoy, Sidney Toler, Helen Lowell, Harlan Briggs and Leila elaphone con lew York Telephone Esterbrook 1400 Motor Company, prime, and unemployment insurance, | over for another weer ofth Bennett the chief players, Dodge Motor Co. will hire some Join the Auto Workers Union, Street Playhouse, ahi @ « 3 on satihg a ne LA ATA REGIE Te nt ceemenatiiegpeie