The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 18, 1929, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDA SEPTEMBER 18, 1929 FORWARD! RESIST Communist Activities FORMNEGROES Second Week of “Seeds of MASS PROTEST BOSSES’ TERROR INN. CAROLINA Engdahl Says at Grave of Ella Wiggins (Continue One) grave of Ella fallen fighter Fought For Workers. In lite she worked and foug the unity of the ranks of the ers Union has helped merican of the toiling five continents It is in this s gle will go fo: d cally than ever for th of the textile workers Gaston County under class st National Text zation Not only of th and north, orgar anners of the Workers’ U Mobilizes the Workers The International Labor Defense through nation over mobi! g classes for greate uppor Southern textile organize, to rt of effort to self against the undreds” to to win every possible concession from the profit hunger explciters. Thus the strug- gle against the Manville-Jenckes Corporation has only begun Murder campaig: let loose by the fascist “black hundreds” of the Manville-Jenckes Corporation. use ef- forts to outlaw the National Textile Workers Union, the International Uabor Defense and the Communist Party, creating the terror that forced the burial today of our martyr under semi-illegal condi- tions, all these efforts culminating in the attempt even to outlaw the dead, will not avai! before the rising mass protest of the whole American working class, in steel, coal, oil. automobile and the railroad, as wel! as in the textile industries. Mass Protes The International Labor Defense has set aside the two days, Sept. 21 and 22 for mass protests, for the awakening of labor in all sections ef the nation. The martyrdom of Ella May Wiggins will be the central theme of these great protest demon- strations, that will demand uncon- ditional release of the 16 sctrikers’ and organizers now facing death in the electric chair. Forwerd from the grave of Ella May Wiggins to more intensive cf- forts to defeat the attempted judicial assassination of those who again face trial Sept. 30. The grave of our dead calls aloud for ever broader activities, greater energies on behalf of the living, in the words of Ella May Wiggins her- self as she was dying, “The reason Latin-American Electoral Ball. | for special training in the courses he Spanish Bureau is arranging|for Party functionaries at the election car and ball) Workers School are registered dur- or Saturday , at|ing the current week. All members ed to the Party since April 1, re required to register for the in” “Fundame i n is of - * 8 * Night Workers Unit, See. 1. The Night Workers Unit of n revolt in Palestine. ited. An open air mee g in the Arablan section will fol-|} will meet ps 205 ie low Workers nion Square, ee ixth floor, N. B ald will speak Tai Beawcn a: n the Arabian uprising in Palestine : a Sa 10th Anniversary, Boro Park. Section 7 will celebrate the 10th anniversary of the C, P., U.S, A., and the Communist candidates of t/a meeting on Satur- 8 p. m., at 48 Bay 28th program, including an r ist ‘and violinis t All members irged to attend. at 9 sharp. Unit 10F, Seetion 2. Sept. 18 7pm * * Unit 18, Section 2 Thursday, Sept. 19, 6 p. m All See ions ond Units, Note. he r instructs all that each ke sure 2 osen by ill = of unit agit- be tion a e three comrades | h 5 et ep mi, at hosen by each section unit and the!56 Ma Ave., Brooklyn Spartacus Film League. Jcuss the Palestine uprising. W Film League, an|Weinstone, Communist candidate for ueea ction pice will speak in English and t of the Frethe has begun work on Questions and disc eet Fee eee Negeri cues | from the floor will. follow ery n the segregated Harlem section of | Council member must be present.— New York. The League is open for | CEC. U.C.W.W membership to all interested in this For information write J.| m, 36 Park Ave. New York. | * eee ree ee Workers Laboratory Theatre. Meets every Monday, Wedhe and Friday, 8:30 p. . in Room 607, Bronx Park Lecture, |28 Union Square. Workers wishing Dr. Lieber will open the kinder-|to take part in the Gastonia strike garten with a lecture on “Parents|play, “White Trash,” should leaye and Children,” in the auditorium of addresses at the ‘onx Workers Colony x Park East, on Saturda 8:30 p. m. their names and Workers School * Copies of A. B. C. Wanted. | At least ten copies of the A.B.C |of Communism are needed by the eee Brighton Beach Party, Shower. Council 17 of the U:G.W.W. will! Workers School. Any comrade will- give a party and shower for the ing to contribute or sell a copy benefit of the Freiheit-Daily Worker | should bring it to the school, 28 ron Sunday, Sept. 22, 227 Brighton Beach Ave. ree . 8 p, m.,| Union Square, fifth floor, a Admis- | possible. Attention, City Clubs, cae eee | A special conference o: Working Women’s Councils, Note. | Clubs, Inc., executive committe A general membership ing | be h 8 E. 14th St. on Mon- will be ld Thursday, Sept. 19, $|day, Sept 7:30 p. m. Important a Union Squarer, to dis-! matters are to be taken up, ARMED WORKERS 7 BIG MEETS T0 soon cit BURY ELLA MAY PROTEST TERROR Grave Between Mill Toilers Here to Throng will] INTO DEFENSE - ORGANIZATIONS ‘Must Resist Terror of | Class Enemies (Continued from Page One) homes by business men and so-call- ed 100 per cent Americans. Three days after the above, Ne- groes were mobbed in Princess Ann. | Md. | There have beer mob attacks on Negroes in Newark, N..J., Patter- son, N. J., and Baltimore, Md., | where they were heaten up because ithey were members of the Com- ist Party. | Hundreds of Negro work being framed up daily by r their flats, in public places where Negro workers are congregated, and are being sent to filthy dungeons, chain gangs, prison mines, etc. Only a few ,days ago, we wit-| nessed the most brozen assault by police thugs on two Negro students on the Fulton Street elevated, as | well as the brutal attack and mur- der of an East Indian taxi driver lin New York. surely cannot pass the eyes of the |Negro workers without showing them the need of a militant organi- zation, political as well as economic, controlled by the workers, black and | white, in order to restrain the vicious jhand of the capitalist class of America. As a result of all these attacks, the Communist Part; which is championing the cause of the oppressed Negro masses, has been singled out by the Walker- | Whalen police thugs, in their efforts the Negro masses from entering the anks of the Communist Party, and fighting for the destruction of the capitalist state machine. The 22nd precinct police station | has been known for years as one | of the most vicious stations in New York City. This precinct has been | especially vicious in the attack upon Negro wotkers. as well as on the | Communist Party which is fighting | against high rent, police brutality, disfranchisment, Jim-c.ro wism, | lynching and against the entire sy: |tem of race and class oppression. The struggle that is now taking place in Harlem is culminating in All these attacks | |to stem the revolutionary tide of | Freedom famous Leckert episode in the history of the revolutionary move- ment in Czarist Russia is at the Cameo Theatre, where it is now in its second week. As many anothe: Soviet film, “Seeds of Freedom” combines exquisite artistry with stirring revolutionary drama and a grand epic sweep in portraying the mass struggle of the recent past A quarter of a century ago a journeyman shoemaker named Hirsch Leckert made an attempt on the life of one, of the Czar’s satraps, Governor Von ert Ww ummarily sentenced to die. He refused to petition the Gcvernor | for clemency, though the latter hint- | ra A NEW Soviet film based on the | Wahl of | Vilna. The attempt failed and Leck- | ” at the Cameo EVA LE GALLIENNE Who will open her fourth si on. ed that he might commute the sen: | of the Civic Repertory Theatre this ‘tence should Leckert recant and |name his accomplices. Leckert was hanged and buried near the place cf the execution. The Governor or- dered a detachment of the military to trample upon a wide area of the field where the shoemaker was buried, so that no trace of his grave might be left. Vow, the name of Hirsch Leckert | is celebrated in song and legend. | |His martyrdom touched the heart- strings of the workers. Ballads | composed by nameless bards are} still sung ingmany portions of Rus- Defense Meeting Will Be Held This Evening | | | (Continued jrom Page One) ‘lect funds over the week end and show their solidarity with the Gas-| |tonia workers who are now in the) forefront of the labor struggle. Leaflets Off Press. | Leaflets advertising the meeting are now off the press and can be ‘obtained at the LL.D. office, Room 422, 799 Broadway and the W.LR., |Room 237, 799 Broadway, and on the second floor of the Workers Center, 26-28 Union Square, In- dividuals and organizations are urged to secure their leaflets at once and distribute them in their| shops. | Other speakers at the meeting) will be Jim Reid, president of the | National Textile Workers’ Union; J. Louis Engdahl, executive secre- tary, International Labor Defense, and William W. Weinstone, Commu-| ;evening with Tchekov’s “The Sea Gull,” in which she will play the role of Masha | sia and among the Russian-Jewish | workers in this country. Though |not an outstanding revolutionary leader during his life, Leckert be- cume a hallowed symbol of martyr- dom on the altar of freedom. In jcommemoration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of his death, a year or se ago, the local Soviet authorities had a monument erected for him, and it now stands in Minsk where once the statue of a Czar overawed the populance. Leckert’s attempt on the life of Von Wahl followed a wholesale flog- ging of workers who had taken part in a May Day demonstration. It is this episode of the revolu- tionary movement in Russia at the beginning of the century. that has | been made the basis of the superb | pointed to the cheap grey casket,| Soviet film ARTZIBASHEF’S “WAR” OPENS TONIGHT AT INTIMATE PLAYHOUSE Sidney Stavro will open his In- timate Playhouse, 180th St. on Bos- | ton Road, this evening with his new | organization, the Bronx Theatre Guild, in Michael Artzibashef’s “War.” The cast includes Wilva Davis, Katherine Raynor, Margaret Doty, Linda Morton, Frank Jamison, Grover Burgess, Edwin Wilson, Harry Coltoff and Sidney Starvo. Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. AT FUNERAL OF Pelephone: Murray Hil, 6550 | (Continued from.Page One) | over them, the union organizers are jreorganizing their for There will be intensified activity for or- ganization in additional mills, and the extension of the union into fur- | ther fields in preparation for the 7 East 42nd Street, New York Patronze No-Tip Barber Shops Southern Workers Conference in : fs Charlotte, Oct. 12, 13, which Elle | 26-28 EAE Soe May was to have attended, 2700 BRONX bP! K EAST As organizer Williams told the | LephHaRcAlfarts pekveh story of Ella May’s life, the great | crowd of mill workers pressed for- ward. He described the ride into | Gastonia to attend the mass meet- ing, and the attack from the mill- | men’s thugs which caused Ella May’s death. | Before Williams spoke, the min- | | Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 ter wkom the undertaker had in- isted upon bringing along, stepp2d |forward to take over the funeral. | He was brushed aside with a gesture | and the mass of rain-drenched work- ers turned.to their union leaders. | As Williams finished, the min- ister again stepped forward. Again he was interrupted, this time by C. D. Saylor, another organizer, and one of the three men kidnapped by a mob of Gastonia citizens last | | week. | He was coatiess, his flushed face | was set in grim lines. All was quiet as he painted a vivid picture of the | shooting of Ella Wiggins. Then Dewey Martin DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed,, Sat., 9.30 a.m. to 12; 7 to 6 P.M, Tues., Thurs. 9.30 a. m. je'12; Vt sp im @ Sunday, 10 a, m. to 1 p. m. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 —MELROSE—, ¥ spoke. He} jand said, “We have gathered here| for a sad purpose, to say goodbye |to our sister Ella May, who was a loyal worker of our union. She gave her life for betterment of the 3 VEGETARIAN fellow worker. We'll take care of Dairy RESTAURANT omrades ‘1M Always Find It them,” he concluded, pointing to the Wiggins children. For the third time Rev. Black ad- vanced. “I am not sure that I knew this woman,” he began, “but I am glad |you who knew her can say these |nice things about her. You knew jher. You knew life. Let us leave off the tragedy,” he said inoffec- ‘tually. Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PRON INTERVAL 9149, MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant and Union Hall (Continued from Page One) working women, red-eyed from Demonstrations jopen warfare-—on one hand the | Communist Party fighting for the (Continued from Page One) | right of the Negro masses to hold meetings except the one in the Nee-, meetings and demonstrations, and weeping, witnessed the burial of|dle Trades Market will take place Ella May, their fellow worker, who|at 8 p. m. in one red moment became the sign Massacre of Workers. manual of their revolt. Merciless) In a stirring statement issued by as the Manville-Jenckes machines the District Executive Committee and just as efficient in their deadly of the Communist Party, the mur- purpose, gunmen of the mill owners | der of Ella May Wiggins was de- sought and took the life of the nounced as part of the more exten- woman worker whose example urged | sive massacres being planned by others on. Nine dollars was the the uniformed and plain clothes sum slipped into Ella May’s pay en-|thugs paid by the Manville-Jenckes |on the other hand the armed forces of the reactionary state, the police. | The question that confronts the Ne- |gro masses must be to struggle against the police brutality of Har- lem by organizing working class, interracial defense corps for the protection of our lives when attack- }ed either by police in uniform or | hired thugs. We, the Negro workers of the inist Party candidate for mayor of | . New York. | ruling class, to further hookwink |the Negro masses into supporting |thees parties. Only from the Com- | |munist Party, the Party that really | carries on a struggle against these | forces of white terror can wwe expect | | any real. support in the struggle for | liberation from wage slavery. It is | the Party of equality and the right | |of self-determination of the Negro} | masses, wherever they form a com- | pact mass—as in the South. | Actual! LIVING a powerful presentation of Now Playing! Dynamic! The Remarkable Sovkino Film 1763 Southern Blyd., " snx, N. ¥ Right off 174th St. Subway Station RATIONAL | Vegetarian | RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE) UB Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Faod HEALTH FOOD Thrilling! RUSSIA all phases of every-day life in the Land of the Soviets revealing the tremendous Progress and showing Russia at work—at play— in pain and in pleasure |Communist Party, appeal to the| Our slogan must be class against | Negro masses to boycott the Fred |class! Accordingly, Negro workers, ia”. nj Meets rt . |R. Moores, Hubert Delanys and the | support your own Party, the Party ie mony ee hee bhi Tir | Faeroe States) entire slate of Negro and white | of the workers, the Communist | ‘ i chick will Eo. politicians of the Republican and | Par Ys which struggles against your | They knew of the five children|€tS Defense Corps which will pro-| ho ccratic parties, as well as the | enemies, the republicans, democrats | |she tried to feed and clothe on nine tect the workers in their struggles,| cistist party, as betrayers of the|and socialists, and the American | dollars a week. They knew the "ot only Gastonia, but the events Sup- | - + New Ooi Mari aca interests of the white and Negro | Federation of Labor fakers. | | acne she sung. Hla sin aiid egy el cia “thie lescon. | Miasses. In this election campaign, | port the Party that fights side by | sang it with understanding an e 4 * | Negro Republican politicians are no | side with the Negro workers in their I am in the union is to fight for my children.” FRANCE DEMANDS velope every week, The powder|Company. The statement further and lead of the volley that took her| declared that the crying need of the Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. | Phone: UNIversity 5865 | (snsttaasadennsnsasieshentenaieeneaete dl —and on the same program— The First Soviet Comedy WHEN Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SUPERIOR NAVY cold and quiet determination that) The Communist Party, District 2, gitferent from the whites. They | every cay struggles, the Communist , SPA mene DISHES +), marks off the southern born mill/calls upon all labor organizations to| are the lackeys, the decoys, such |Party, and also support the Trade Shere All’ puateancetanee Dawes-MacDonald Still worker from more demonstrative cancel their meetings for this Fri-| a3 DePriest—-who are being used as! Union Unity League: Vote Com- || s02'B. 12th St. “New York Deadlocked on Parity ‘™mistat workers of the North. |day night and to otherwise mobilize) q smoke screen by the rich white munist. wae Clodes B . As they sang there crept into the| ‘heir, membership for the demon » Genuine Humor (Continued from Page One) great stroke for humanity. After the cruiser, the submarine question presents the greatest difficulty.” Italy is demanding cruiser, bat- tleship and submarine parity with France, and the French naval ex- perts are indignantly pointing out that France with her colonial em- heart of every listener the feeling that Ella May will not go un- avenged. Such a simple’ song but so full of meaning the mill mothers song: “We leave our home in the morning. We kiss our children boodbye, While we slave for the bosses, pire requires a substantial superior-| Our children scream and cry. ity to the Italian fleet. Old Quarrel, Too. Authoritative information here shows France and Italy already dis- agree regarding the significance to be attached to the identical limita- tion which was placed upon their respective capital ships by the Washington agreement which al- lotted each 175,000 tons of the largest type craft. Reliable infor- mation indicates Italy will interpret this French acceptance of capital ship parity as an acknowledgement of general naval parity. To this contention, French spokes- men reply that in ratifying the Washington agreement France spe- cifically said the ratio were not representative of the importance of the respective maritime interests and could not be extended to other categories of war vessels. No Agreement. Meanwhile, between worries over the submarine question, (which, ac- cording to MacDonald’s statement yesterday, must be settled before anything is settled, for unless the five powers agree in principle, no further negotiations will go on, and the boasted U. S.-British accord will be expésed for what it is, a dis- agreement, on 15,000 tons of cruiser strength, and the question. of size of guns), the British press lauds Dawes for getting this close to Bri- tish terms, and hopes he will go the rest of the way. DENNET “OBSCENITY” CASE. Mrs. Mary Ware Dennet, who in April was convicted and fined $300 for sending obscene matter through the mail, has been granted another month for the filing of her bill of accertance and appeal. Mrs. Dennet’s alleged offense to send through the mail a let “The Sex Side of Life,” wi the jury decided was “Jewd, and libidinous,” 7 wi And when we draw our money, | Our grocery bills to pay, Not a cent to spend for clothing, | Not a cent to lay away; hee. on that very evening our little son will say, ‘I need some shoes, dear mother, And so does sister May.’ | i \How it grieves the heart of the mother, You every one must know, | But we cannot buy for our children, | Our wages are too low. | Now listen to me workers, | Both you women and men, | | | Let us win for them the victory, I am sure it will be no sin.” Then Dewey Martin spoke, the local organizer of the N. T. W. U. Born of the mountain blood, slim and straight, marked for death by the Manville-Jenckes thugs. Then | Cliff Saylor, kidnapped on the night |of Sept. 9 by the black hundreds jof Manville-Jenckes. Then Wes Williams, chairman of the Bessemer City local of the National Textile | Workers Union, for whom the Loray | | Mill gunmen have been hunting for |days. Hugo Oehler, Southern or- ganizer of the N. T. W. U,, was) there, the workers greeted him like | a man already dead. They wondered, |and they said they wondered that he was still alive, morning. Thru the damp fog, the | gunmen’s cars surged and roared, | and so her fellow workers buried Ella May. Not far from her grave | mer City local of the N. T. W. U. In crude letters the name of the union stands out. All who pass on the highway’ must see it. In be | tween this and the glittering Loray | | Mills is the grave of Ella May. | ') The songstress of working cli _Téyolt in the South... aia stithas. |Ragozin, J. Williamson. A cold gray rain swept down all | 4 is the shattered hall of the Besse- ||p strations at the corners listed above. Speakers at the meetings will in-| clude Bill Dunne, Sophie Melvin, | Ben Wells, and a large list of others | who will speak at the street dem- onstrations as well as at tho Cen- tral Opera House. OPEN AIR MEETS Seventh St. and Ave. B at 8:15) p.m. G. Lewis, D. Morgan, Radzie. Stanton and Christie at 8 p. m. H. Bloom, G, Di Bartolo. | 149th St. between 3rd and Ber- gen at 8 p.m. T. Di Fazio, Rivera,! I. Rothstein. Myrtle and Prince at 8 p. m.) Comrades to report to 253 Atlantic} Ave. at 7:45 p. m. P. Miller, Ray BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, A.M.C.&B.W. of NA. | Office and Headquarters: ||| Labor Temple, 243 E. 84th St. | | oom 12 Regular meetings every first an@ third Sunday, A. M. Employment Bureav open eve day at 6 P. M Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist Orchard 2333. ble with your teeth iF friend, who has Hote) and /Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. Sist 8t.. Phone Circle 7330 BUSINESS MEETING<]] 1d on the first Monday of the month at 8 indastry—One Union—Join and Fight the J Office Open from 9 Intervale and Wilkins Ave. at 8 p.m. Glassford, R. Grecht. | Role of IRD and ILD (Down- town Branch). G. Spiro. Clinton and Court report to 253/fo Atlantic Ave. at 7:30 p.m. Jack Stachel, F. Biedenkapp. maSPEND YOUR VACATION I THE FIRST WORKINGCLASS CAMP — Educational Activities Under the Direction of JACOB SHAEFFER Director of Dramatics JACOB MASTEL i BEACON, N. Y. Telephone Beacon 731, t CAMP NITGLDAIGET 175 New Bungalows - - Electric Light THIS WILL BE THE BIGGEST OF ALL SEASONS DIRECTIONS: Take the Hudson River Day Line Boat—twice daily— 75 if cents. Take car direct to Camp—20 cents. CAMP NITGEDAIGET New York Telephone Esterbrook 1400 POCKETBOOK at Sat night's banquet. Glasae) able to owner. Ad pocketbook. which set FILM | LOS | FOR FOUR DAYS ONLY! _ Sept. 19, 20, 21 and 22 | The Latest Sovkino Achievement In Old Siberia KATORGA Striking Life and Dramatic Struggle of Political Pri- soners in Czarist Russia St. Marks Theatre 133 SECOND AVENUE Corner Eighth Street Prices 15 to 25 Cents Continuous CameO | | 42nd St. and Broadway extraordinary film. Star of “Czar Ivan the Terrible” Fre “THE ACTING 18 STUNNING revealing, telling per- formances by Leonidoft, star of ‘Czar Ivan the Terrible’ in a. dual role,”—Evening Sun. ENTIRELY REBUILT Europe laughing! GUILD CINEMA 52 W. & Street [det 82} SPRing 5095-5090 : - Daily Noon to Midnight Special Forenoon Prices—Weekdays 12 to 2—35 Cents Saturday and Sunday 12 to 2—56 Cents ILEONIDOFF tn a dual role, in the newest Soviet Russian occurrence in Jewish Ghettoes of Old Russia. eds r me Produced in U.S.S.R. by BELGOSKINO EXTRA ATTRACTION! NINA TARASOVA in a group of Russian songs all All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. || 26-28 Union Sq., New York City 2nd Big Week AMKINO Presents Newest Russian Triumph Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 + 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House . Based on actual historical ‘a th at 386) Avenne, edom | Jerome 7000 Union Label Bread! Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop M. W. SALA, Prop. SEE AND HEAR 2016 Second Avenue, New York ® (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Director of Sports, Athletics rovincetown Playhouse in and Dancing - | 5 W. s é wit pci: MAY Panne, um oe “FIESTA” sii MATINEES THURS. & SAT., 2:30 Special Rates to Labor Groups. BRONX 180 St., Boston Rd. ith . Pk. THEA.GUILD gub. “Y" tase’ stes PENS TONIGHT ° Sidney Stayro, Dir. ARTZIBASHEF'S “ ” Mat earpiece 4 RD, 9922 Eves, 8:45. Mats. 2:45. Bway Cast ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE 7th St. W. of Bway. Chick, 9944 Eves, 8:50. Mats, Wed, & Sat. 2:30 JOHN Comedy BIRD i HAND JJ DRINKWATER’S Eves. FULTON W. 46th st. «30 FURNISHED ROOM: Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2:30 in his new Gar M. Cohan jn his Ww AMBLING The Talk of the Town! echmidmldedee ge ith Ave, Evgs. 8:30, Mats. Wed, Sat. 2:30 b0c, $1, $1.50 EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director Today Mate—“THE CRADLE SONG” Tonight—“THE SEA GULL" Tom—"THE MASTER BUILDER” Pst orca Ns hth chad ashen WASHINGTON, Sept. 16 (UP). ~-President Hoover returned today from a trip to his fishing camp in| the Virginia Blue Ridge Mountains. 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.

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