The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 12, 1929, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

eee Peed Belleville, Ill, ‘Miners Strike Against DRRSET of 2 ‘Workers on si a NATIONALMINERS Fraternal Organizations’ RED NIGHTS TO UNION LEADING MASS PICKETING Men Were > Fired Fighting Fakers Sept. 1 Oak Hall r 2 N impo the against t w and Pol their xpulsion 0: from the U. M W.A. tant activities agai ffect of the vent it from spr “The mines will never operate u: 1 all men are put William Bradshaw, pit committ man at the mines and active in t N.M.U,, said tod WORKERS SPEED 2 DAY CAMPAIGN Thousands in the U.S Sign Gaston Pledg: (Continued on Page Two) hody, every organizi tor the biggest ma have ever had!” ion with a wi s ‘collection v The workers throughout the land are ming pledges promi narticipate in the two da: vhich will include collections hops, mills and mines, house house collections, in labor orguniz: jons, in tag days, which will di ly lead to acquainting the mas: workers with the issues involved the Gastonia case and mobilize thei n protest ainst the fascist te rorism of North Carolina. In Philadelphia, Baltimore, Wach- unemployment fund. The fund, he teacticnary officials of the A.|Campaign Committee statement de- ington and San Francisco, the In- jjlitant tailors point out, is a fake, *- of L. will be stepping into this|clares, is an attack on the rights of ternational Labor Defense andj, no relief is ever given to unem- situation. They will send their|beth Negro and white workers, and Workers International Relief locals are calling into conference ali sym- pathetic labor organizations. assistance of all labor organizatio not in touch with the I. L. L R. locals is being enlisted. Tho|sion to discharge whoever they of Labor and William Werner, offi-| St. and 14nd St.; on Seventh Ave., cities are divided into sections and|wished. Those fired included some|eial of the bus and trolleymen’s| at 122nd and 137th and 140th. Sts. each section is establishing a col-|of the oldest workers in the shop,|union sold out the Public Service| The meetings will be addressed by fection station to w ing in that section their tag day es, ete. Most workers not participating the two day drive are giving a daj may wages for the defense of the Gas-|the shop delegates conference calle tonia prisoners. Shoe Workers Union Hold Meeting Friday * A general mem! he Independent S will take place: Fri at. Cooper Union, ip meeting Workers Uni lay at 6 p. Third Ave. a Zighth St, to mobilize the workers gainst the federal government's at- tack on the-union members. During the last few wecks agen of the U. S. Department of Labor ave sent letters to all union shops | a New York calling upon the e: iloyers to break their agreements | with the-union. U. S. labor depa: dent operativ accompanied Tammany Hall policemen have also|day under the joint auspices of the |textile strike, the < isited the shops and have attempted | Anti-Faseist Alliance and the Inter- | ‘ers in Gastonia, N. C. and in other o have the workers fill out ques-! *ionaires stating when they entered, are | Park, the country, whether they ‘itizens and other questions of similar nature. Build Up* the United Front of | the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! i LIVING in the Land of the Sovie through a new and origin: Hilarious - Clever Humor which set all Europe laughing! Introducing a great comedy team— Anna Sten and ._ Kowal- Samborski FILM GUI 52 w.8 st. (Pet pag a Kemarkable Double Feature Russian for ES nte ational | 2, Jack, | © diser back to work,” n rect- aha Wnt OF IetalAy ll all its forces, if necessary, to defeat is jby th ies gainrechs jout and defeatir. your strike. this attack. On Friday night, meet- | Discharge Old Tailors. “Look at how Arthur Quinn, | ings be held at the following | The union gave the firm permis-| president of the Jersey Federation| points: On Lenox Ave., at 138th D. or W. collection list § STARTING THIS SATURDAY, SEPT. 14 3 A colossal cross-section of the every-day life —and on the same pr The First Soviet Comedy Continuous Daily Noon to Midnight Spesial Philo by Prices—Weekdays 12 to 2—35 Cents day and Sunday 12 to 2—50 Cents Workers Laboratory Theatre, Office Workers Dance. chearsals will begin soon on the] ‘The Office Workers’ Union vill 1 White Trash.” a every Monday, | at 28 Uni TO THE STREETS, Defy Attempt to Bar| Communist Meets ing a Workers School Sept. = ks Pee | Concert, arranged a concert 14, 8:30 p.m. in| t of Jewish | i} af Y. fy isher- are on the pro- ; Union, the combined attack of the | capitalist state, the employers and reactionary union officials on the militant unions, and the joint gang- isterism of the socialists and Zionists. Owing to the increasingly aggres- sive mood among the working mass- , these enemies of the working lass are sharpening their attacks on the militant organizaitons of the workers, especially on the Com- munist Party. Among the manifest- ations of this is the gangsterism of | the Jewish fascists—carried on un- | der the protection of the police and| | the ine! % police terrorism in this’ city, ch was particularly sharp in the last few weeks in the | Negro section in Harlem. The brutality of the Tammany police against Negroes is well |Imown, and found expression a few days ago in the shooting of a Negro | student by a patrolman off duty as | a result of an altercation which took | Esperanto Course, short but complete ‘c internatior lar in the Workers Sept. 30. “Teor” aturday H the The will he given ol beginning with ABD, Drug Clerks. (Continued from Page One) * ressive Youth hike for Sun- | 1 bers and sympa- will meet at 1492 Madison at § a.m. At the end of the there will be bathing and boat- r- e H he Banquet and Cone w York Worke’ and conce: fl 14, at its sradford St., Brook- n 50’ cents, ‘lyn. . Coming Activities: | Agitprop y | eles a meeting of unit place between them when the Negro BD te of Section Cu,it| dared to take the seat next to the _ mG Membership, ™ patrolman on an elevated train. The | Tammany police declared that the Communist Party cannot hold meet- {ings on Seventh and Lenox Aves.,! in Harlem, in the Negro section, | |The Communist Party, the only Party which really fights against |b race discrimination as it fights gainst every oppression of the workers, must not carry its mes- sage of struggle and class solidarity to the Negro workers, is the edict of Tammany Hall. | Beginning with Aug. 10, the police | have repeatedly broken up meetings of the Communist Party and Young Communist League held at 138th St. and Seventh Ave., arresting the speakers and the comrades in charge of the meetings. More than half a dozen meetings were thus broken up by the police, resulting in a total of over thirty comrades placed under arrest. That there is no justifica- tion for this police action even un- der the capitalist Jaw, is proven by the fact that all the speakers were | either discharged by the police court | or their cases were postponed time and again. e “Red Night” in Harlem on|{ Friday is an answer to this terror- | m. This Tammany terrorism, the he | see be 129th § the op n. District “m. FORCE SPEED-UP HETAL STRIKERS IN WITTY BROS. FOLLOW T. U. UL. Urge Industrial Union | at Carteret Plant | (Continued from Page One) |“You will have the support of our organization in your struggle as SE Se eat |well as the Internatio a1 Labor De- When Witty Bros. refused to pay |fense and the Workers International its share to the unemployment fund | Relief, to defend your fellow work- of the union on (he grounds that €P8 and give them relief when neces- the workers do not produce enough, | * the union officials told the firm that it could harge 10 workers and have the others do as much work as the 125 dic, provided that Witty Bros. paid its quota of the = 10 Old Workers of Shop Discharged (Continued from Page One) ed to do much work as il, we in to of in ™m r- agian in his speech hit the bonus system, describing it as a scheme to *“Je the wage cut and speed up the workers. “You must know,” he said, “that pretty scon representatives to Cateret to dis- the Communist Party will mobilize cover the best way of selling you ployed taiicrs, the money being kept -|one having been with Witty Bros.;employees by a fake vote. A Negro ‘s, another for more than| striker as well as other workers \from the floor addressed the meet- for fighting this betray- ling urging the workers to stand York tailors will be |S0lid until ye demands are won. | Members of the strike committee prominent speakers, including Wil- liam Z. Foster, William Weinstone, | Otto Hall, Richard Moore, Robert i A. Markoff, Harold Williams | Meth injal of ew s\taken up Saturday at 11 a. m. at/ Saturday night will be “Red q|from the mechanic’s department at-] Night” in the downtown section. by the Amalgamated Section, Trade | tended the - -rning meeting. The] Meetings will be held at the follow- Union Unity League, which will be COMPany st: ted a propaganda} ing corners: Tenth St. and Second | held at Stuyvesant Casino, Second “tive yesterday among the men| Ave., 7th St. and Second Ave., 7th Ave. and Ninth St. Delegates|@gainst the TUUL representatives} st. and Ave. A, 5th St. and Ave. B, on the grounds |not wanted.” that “outsiders are | senting many tailor shops are Many strikers said|{ ted to attend. and 6th St. and Ave. C. The speak- ers include Robert Minor, J. Louis Bae ate ape Ry the.” contarane this morning that the real intention | fnedahl, William Weinstone, Alcx- {will be William Z. Foster, general of the company is to fight any help | ander Trachtenberg, Jack Stachel, 4 secretary, T. Ben Gold, sec- Spuyes from he outside fcr the| Sam Darcy and others. nd retary, Needle Trades Workers’ In- |Site, while the same company OEP LN | dugtrial ‘Union; Sate Liptaen; lnc ore a en AerON "to| Rall Latin - Amer | 2 Niacin ee actionary “outsiders” sent in to| ally Latin - American . 4 if break the strike. Overgaard and| = |Kaplan were followed up after the Workers at Ball Sep.28 meeting this morning by a local} 1 : 4 motoreycle policeman who told them| he Spanish Fraction of the coe he had orders from the chief of|™Unist Party is arranging an elec: tion campaign rally and ball at the police to run them out of town : Harlem Casino, 116th St. and Lenox | id one of the young- rn rt-| NORTH BERGEN, N. J., Sept. “ i Ave., the evening of Sept. 28, to | ept.'er strikers, “that you fellows have popularize the Padty. caudidavan by | 11.—A picnic will be held here Sun- | | been in the leadership of the Passaic among Latin-American workers of ght of the work- New York, who have turned out in great numbers to the Harlem open air meetings and among whom over 2,000 signatures were collected in the first three weeks of ie signa- ture drive. Cleaners, Dyers Will Hold Meet on Monday An organization mass meeting of cleaners and dyers will be held Mon* day at 7 p. m. at the Workers Cen- ter, 26 Union Square (it was for- nts i-Fascist I. L. D. Picnic This pane | An m- | ‘national Labor Defense at Zeman’s|to put Palle Si ‘ngesiane |tion in the preser' strike,” a young a| The pfogram will include Italian | |striker told Overgaarde ar ' Kaplan. |folk dances, refreshments and| Most of the strikers see that the {local police, ‘ trying to run the jother features. To reach the park|/miyyy, representatives out of town, |take the Hudson Tubé to Journal|are company tools. The next step Square, then bus to 38th St. pee the police will be to break up the scattered picket groups in front of |the organized plants and start ar- resting strikers, They must bee answered with mass picketing before the plant,” the TUUL declares. ‘Fur Workers Beat Up \Right Wing Gangsters | | (Continued from Page One) to give the impression that the police were impartial. | When arraigned in Jefferson Market Court before Magistrate Rosenbluth, on charges of felonious assault, all were given suspended sentences, | The workers ‘arrested were John | Demilas and Sam Greenberg of the | Zucker shop, also Louis Demai, A. Maples, B. Powell and C. Kenigs- berg of the Defense Committee. The arrested thugs were Finni, Tasman, | Grossman anl Tepper. ° a RUSSIA be held last Monday). .The meeting has been called by ‘the Cleaners and Dyers Section of the Trade Union Unity League and | will take up the question of organ- izing shop committees to fight for better working conditions | Office Workers Dance This Saturday Night Plans are being completed for the Fall Roof Garden Dance of the Office Workers’ Union at the Heck- scher Foundation, 104th St. and 5th Ave., this Saturday, Sept. 14, at 8 p. m., at which John C. Smith’s Ne- gro Jazz Band will play. Ample refreshments will be on hand. ts graphically shown al technique. ‘ogrant— Genuine LD CINEMA | ROOSEVELT FIELD, 1. 1,| Not only has the bourgcotste Sept. 11.—The Fernie tandem-| forged the weapons thi '} SPRinz 5095-50¢0-171¢ ‘wing monoplane, a machine designed| @¢ath to ftaettr te ,to do away with “stalling” in merly announced the meeting would + M.W.A. Orders Dramatic, at EEDS OF FREEDOM” is the) story of Hirsch Lekkert, the | young Russian Jew who shot Gov- Jernor Von Waal in Vilna some 25 |years ago to avenge the persecution of his revolutionary comrades ar- rested during a May Day demonstra- tion. The film was produced by the Soviet Belgos- kino and directed by G. Roshal. The print pro- jected at the Ca- meo is apparent- ly of some age and therefore rather hard on the eyes. Added to this the film suffers from oth- er technical defects that are ab- sent from Russian productions of recent date. Jerky iris effects, poor dissolves and what is known in the - Leonidoff cinema as “luminosity” or the loss of detail through overemphasis of shadow. The Soviet cinema in its |infancy with a world to say and insufficient means with which to say it. Vestiges of the “star” sy: tem isherited from the stage. Those days are long over, however. What | a long way from films like “Poli-! kushka” and “Seeds of Freedom” to “Ten Days” and “The General Line!” You will, nevertheless, be greatly impressed b ythe stark tragedy of the story pictured in “Seeds of Free- | dom.” It is not merely the story of | |the death of a tyrant at the hands | of a young worker who was able to see no other way to avenge the bloodshed of his fellow-workers. It is at the same time a fine pictur- ization of the conditions and causes British Jobless, Lured | | To Canada, Starved and \Deported Under Guard Under armed guard, subject to ar- | rest if they leave their cars, 63) farm laborers are being deported through Ottowa back to England from whence they came, lured by false promises, and starvation at home. Interviewed by Ottawa papers, the | deportees stated: | “We want work, but we won't work for $10 and $15 a month.| Thats all we were offered. We! were told back in England we| ,could get $40 and $50 a month at farm laboring over here.” The majority of the deportees de- } clare that they do not wish to leave | Canada if they are given an op-| portunity to earn a living here, but} that they have been forced to choose | between the alternative of starva-} tion and deportation. They also) complain that in order to obtain! their passage ome, they have been | required to sign statements certi- fying that they have refused to ac- cept employment; and that these statements will debar them from) obtaining unemployment relief on their return to England. About 200 more are on the way to Ottawa for return to England. State Officials Laugh At Charges Carpenter Wage Scale is Flouted ALBANY, N. Y., Sept. 11—At- torney General Ward has under con- sideration a request for a thorough investigation of charges that pre-| vailing rate of wage law and other labor statutes are being flouted in New York City The request was in the form of} a letter from Frederick L, Hacken- burg, formet assemblyman, repre- senting Charles A. Judge, president | of the District Council of Carpenters } in New York City, backed up by a} personal visit of Hackenburg | ICOR CONCERT SATURDAY. The Icor concert will take place Saturday at 8:30 p. m. at Town Hall, 118 W. 48rd St., to aid Jewish colonization in the Soviet Union. The program will include Nicholas | Karlash, bass-baritone; Victor Peck- er and Wolf Barzel in recitations and comedy and Yasha Fisherman, pianist. Tickets can be obtained at the Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Square. INDIANAPOLIS (By Mail).—! This city has’ been selected as the! site for the 1980 convention of the; misleaders of the State Federation | of Labor, Is There a Pogrom or a Revolt in Palestine? M. J. OLGIN will answer this question on Sunday, September 15, 1929 AT 2 P.M, at the Ambassador Hall 3861 Third Avenue Lecture arranged by Section 5 Communist Party U. 8. A. ADMISSION 25 CENTS How to Reach the Place: ‘Third Avenue “L” or Enst Side Sub- way to 149th Street Stati here change for the Third Avenue at Claremont Parkway Station, Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor New York 1818 + 7th Ave. bombers, made a half hour suc- cessful flight here working class—the proletarians— Karl Mars (Commuaisy Manifesto), AA0390K WOIE 390I1G — ESJ30NY UT Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House ‘Seeds of Freedom’, Tense, |Russian Grand Opera Company will ‘orthodox fanaticism of their elders {genius and the interpretation is bril-| |many of us. | #iuenced league, and reduce the im-| \that ought to be clearly stated.” He | (Star of “Czar Tyan Patronize | ‘SCHOOL 70 OTN SE ROT Cameo Theatre Age STRUGGLE] » Fata | NICHOLAS KARLASH | Estabrook 3215 ~ Bronx, "N, ‘UNION LEADERS. a. ‘Problems of | Movement in Course | Y. |“For Any Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY ‘elephone: Morray Aili 5550 _The Trade Union Unity Conven-/7 Rast 42nd Street, New York tion showed the tremendous fp ee bilities for the building of mass m tant trade unions, but the lack of | efficient organizers, agitators and | Patronize other Jending workers is greatly | 2 hampering the movement; in order | No -Tip Barber Shops to %elp overcome this condition, tho | | Workers School announces a series | 26-28 UNION SQUARE (i flight up) |of special training courses for the} up development of trade gnion func- | 2700 BRONX P/ “K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) tionaries. The noted bass-baritone of the be one of the principal features at the “ICOR” concert Saturday night at Town Hall, | Among these courses ate: His-| tory of the American Labor Move- | ment, given by Vern Smith on Fri- | day evening from 7 to 8.20 p. m.| Under the direction of Robert Dunn, | a symposium course on American Trade Union Problems‘ for every | Monday evening from 7 to 8.20 p. m. | | will be given, analyzing the condi- | tion of the various industries in re- lation to their national or interna- | tional character, the extent of mer- ger and the monopolization in the industry, the degree of boss organ- | ization, and the program of the re- voultionary trade union movement. For this class leading writers and trade union organizers in each of the industrial fields will address the class. that led heroes like Lekkert to com- mit individual acts of terror. It is also the story of the rise to class- | consciousness of the younger Rus-| sian-Jewish generation at the be- ginning of this century—against the Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 BE. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel, Rhinelander 3916 and against the oppression of czar- m, And for this reason this film well worth seeing. There are many fine touches of directorial FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Cor. 110th Street Tel, Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number of tenants were compelled to leave the city, we have a num- ber of rooms to rent. No security necessary, Call at our office for further information. liant throughout. The Soviet cinema has spoiled} We have come to ex-| pect only “Potemkins” and “Ten Days” from the Russian studio and “Seeds of Freedom,” “Power of| Evil,” ete., do not quite satisfy us.| But you'll enjoy it immensely just] the same if there is any taste for) the cinema left in you. Tn addition to the above classes there are courses offered in Marx- ist-Leninist theory, Labor Journal- ism, Public Speaking, English, and a course for secretaries of organi- zations. Very nominal fees are charged. Students can register at the Workers School, 26-28 Union Square on the fifth floor from 10 ja. m. to 9 p. m. | LEWIS’ LOCAL IS | FOR NEW UNION ‘National Miners Union| Head Speaks There On the first anniversary of the birth of the National Miners Union, Sept. 8, over 1,500 miners of Pan-| jama, Ill. home of the local wiltery | John L. Lewis, president of the de- | funct U. M. W. A. holds his mem- bership, heard John Watt, president —S.B. British Imperialism Steals March on U.S. In “Peace Offensive” | DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST’ 1 UNION SQUARE Rceom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Press correspondents in Geneva have been told “authoritatively”| that the British delegation, headed by Arthur Henderson of the labor) party, will this week or next antici- pate the American peace offensive | by one of their own. The Bri | imperialist move will be a motion to have the League of Nation’s preparatory “disarmament” commis- sion convene in November, before their U. S, rivals can act. This will tend to give control of | jthe negotiations to the British in- Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STRERT Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed. Sat., 9.30 m, to 12; 2 to 6, M. Tues., Thurs. 9.30 a. m. to 12; 2 to 8 p.m. Sunday, 10 a, m. to 1 p.m. ‘ Please telephone for appointment. portance of U. S., and any prestige |‘ Telephone: Lehigh 6022 that may result from calling the conference, which of couese will not | actualy “disarm “any. imperialist °f the militant union, tell of the] | NET ROSE owers, great progress made in the urion’s . short life. | Dair VEGETARIAN The preparatory commission is} Y RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALB “We will capture his own local union almost to a man, excepting ewis, for whom we have no room our union,” Watt said today. “The National Miners Union is Pies growing by leaps and bounds, partie- State Backs Britain. | ularly in the State of Illinois, where Patrick @cGilligan, foreign min-|the introduction of machinery on a ister of the Irish Free State, and tremendous scale has made sn im- \its representative in the league as- | mediate problem, and more and more |sembly, stated yesterday that he| miners are joining our union daily would vote for the British proposal|to meet it with a united offensive. to give financial assistance to states| The squabble for the remains, be- whose wars the league approves.|tween Lewis, Frank Farrington, | This is further support fo> Hender-| former union official who now draws son’s form of the conspiracy against | pay only from the Peabody Coal Co. expected to propose supervision of | war budgets, and international con- trol of war materials, two thin lit is believed the Hoover admini tration wi'l never agree to. 9149, “Free” MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., 1 -onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station the Soviet Union, and Harry Fishwiek, the completely RATIONAL ® cei ak ' _ discredited Illinois district president, | ; : rime Minister Ramsay Mac- | 28* bad. the Seuiauate BagoE Vegetarian Donald of the British Labor Party yesterday declared in a speech at) Durham, England, that “we are| ae pine Seas |making ‘no alliance with Ameriea,| WALL STREET “GOOD WILL'— SLAVERY. jalluded to the possibility of failure} LIMA, Peru, Sept. 11.—Col, Pablo| of the Dawes-MacDonald negotia-|Sidar and Lieut, Arnulfo Courtez, tions on arms limitations, expressed|the Mexican fliers who are on a pious hope that they would not fail,|South American tour, left today for | and then said: “We are not going| Arica. The flight is backed by Wall | to run like a bull at a hedge,” in|Street as a so-called “goood will”) speeding up the negotiations. gesture, f sition, he pointed out. | RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE]UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian » RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 ered Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES a ae ee ge | American 2 % ¢ : ' EO vee NOW 302 B.12th St. New York AMKINO Presents Newest Russian Triumph LEONIDOFF In a dual role, in the newest Soviet Russian extraordinary film. Based on actual historical oecurrence in Jewish Ghettoes of Old Russia, eds @ On All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant /558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx 42nd M and Broadway Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City A * & Freedom Preduced in U.S.8.R. by BELGOSKINO the Terrible” Hotel and Restaurant Workers: Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers | 133 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 7836, BUSINESS MEETING: EXTRA ATTRACTION! NINA TARASOVA :.: QUAKE IN ECUADOR. GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador, Sept 11. —A strong earthquake was felt in this region today, causing great alarm. The quake was registered at th 3 p. industry—One » UtionaJoin Fight the Common Enemy? Office Open from Ba mr to 6 De mae ewer SER & nwan in a group of Tel.: DRYdock 8880 “FRED SEITZ, Inc. NOW AT A ‘Secon: AVENUE (Bet. ist a 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions Ce ANNA AO ATTA NT ETHEL BARRYMORE THEA. 47th St. west of Bway Eves, 8:30 Matinees Wednesday and Saturday JOHN DRINKWATER’S Comedy BIRD IN oth ie REDUCTION ‘TO READERS |” 2:20 a. m, Peasants’ huts were dam- F THE DAILY- WORKER aged

Other pages from this issue: