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DI AIL Y¥ ee eee Twa iv PROPOSE 10 IVE “So Was "Naboleah” Light MILITARY DRILL Farce at Harris Theatre N N, Y, SCHOOLS. Syractise Comes into its own in & \SCENE FROM | SOVIET FILM, | iMa ke Big Increase i . RAIL UNION #«AKEKS FEAST B. & 0. BOSSES; "5. “22 Basset FAKE JOBLESS PLAN) | While the appropriation bills fot | CONCERT and FAVOR CRUISERS j INSTEAD OF BIG | icy <tves don 1 USELESS SHIPS) rs Wes Vones 15, — public works, which was supposed to be the backbone of the Hoover hiilding proeram, was cut by sev- | rollicking comedy called “So Was Napoleon,” now at the Sam H. Har- Glenwood Loc “al, Hits Attempt to Extend eral million’, the army bill, part tis Theatre. It is written by Jack SOUNC ‘i Collaboration With Magnat j|of the war preparations, was | O'Donnell and John Wray and is Na ae rete ollaboration With Magnates passed with a big increase. Cw orkers iGuilca Upon based upon a prize-winning short Different ~ Armaments va ee eee The total allowed for putting | |story by Mr. O'Donnell. | Workers Center But More of Them Misleaders Celebrate 20 Years of Slave-Driving THs Jal Ge A the plot is t6) | 38 Union Sq. | the U. S. Army on a war footine/| to Fight War Move | RE Sn ey eS me : | was $457,043,886. | ereate as many foolish situations as bal 4 4 4 by Railroad Head Daniel Willard | This was an increase of $2 || (Continued from Page One) | possible, also to spring one wise plandon dispatches feport the Mac- ADMISSION 35 CENTS —_——_—— | 012,000 above the amount report: ' |in sweatshops, the government finds | “Tc after another on the audience. voring the “abolition of bc hil "\\!\ll@0U__[[[———— BALTIMOR E 1 Md. Pres yuestion. In my opinion the basis | ed by the committee. The original | | Sienty of furds for war putposes.|. It must be admitted that the play ships, but not at all for “disarma- lard of the Baltimore « of the Baltimore and Ohio labor || @mount was several millions ||, funds for so¢ial insurance | 15 Very sucessful in ite particular |ment, and only because they are ex-| “For All Kind of Insurance” voad was a is best described as a state | above the last appropriation. — | | against unemployment; no funds to| field. 1b te sure to bring out an | pensive and their efficiency is PES él aire | The bill provides for Heath y help underfed childten, but plenty eerie of laughter. : doubtful as airplanes and subma- ARL BRODSK and other A. F. I Resistance Rises jm Philippine troops; Reserve Of- | tor the war mongers, and those who| , Littleton Lopney, celled Little tines have made big boats compara- ition on that road The Glenwood local of the ma- ticer liitary ‘Tenn and Citi- | are planning another imperialist | apne By ie ue My a P| tively useless. Many more “cheap,” el ae ae vas der the ex ts’ union, comprising those | {#en's Military Training Camps. | | vp. te est Jo Chi wice af Cartvience: | xt OMA Podelsnaya, who has. the ¢ruisers will be just as good or bet- een o te arte, g on the B. & O., where the Mi ll Mel S kx) When workers fight. for decént | 79 ish foun ME ad tang thades principal role in “Demon of the |ter fot war, MacDonald feels. \7 Kast 42nd Street, New York t first introduced have Miller, vin, Speak .caitions they are arrested and] pnd iitle bratan aro never'realjzes |St¢PBeS.” a new Soviet film, which | Méanwhille, at Geneva, Hender- | —— the labor d another trick of their With Shifrin at Dinner sent to jail by judges, who are con-/ that he is bein fade to look ridic- | Wil! have its first American show- | Sn, the British foreign minister | Plan” for ex eaders to “‘eo-operate” further with nected with gangsters and the un-| yous, . e ing at the Film Guild Theatre this was Making a demonstrative Speech || Cooperators! Patronize road and ne bosses solving the unemploy- for Defense, TONI ght derworta like Judge Vitale. When ee evening. that nothing could take the place of | jobs. problem with sixty-day fur | One day, some aunt or uncle dies, he Li f Nati t the ex- . By : NeUBY —- they appear in other courts the the League of Nations, not the ex-| Will e then pres s for part of the men—with Clarence Miller, Gastonia case de- | judge threatens to beat them up. arid leaves Bim $15,000. Kaowing | | pected “agreement” at London, nor dent of the union, Johns The proposal of the mili- fondant, who was sentenced to 20 |jike Judge Sabatino. i he hed a been a Li ire in a apr aie of Commerce members | eyen the Kellogg Pact, in fact the CHEMIST Wai caine é for the five-hour day it) years and is out on bonds pending | yracuse, he decides to go to France decide to continue to have their fun. | British were anxious to utiderline | 657 Allerton Avenue Through some of their associates, radio messages are sent to the cap- tain of the Leviathan signed by de the work. ‘The latte carried in the loca arge majority. Before the state legislature are | and hope for the best. | Estabrook 3215 appeal, six bills, according to which the} When Loone vii Westie y is on the Leviathan, the National Textile Workers Union, | srosecuting attorney may challenge and Sophie Melvin, one of the three | any worker who does not take the | preparation for the coming war. |the fact that the League and not the Pact was the basis of British dip- |lomacy. the plan men’s which Bronx, N. Y. also secretary treasurer of proposal was — se \Labor and Fraternal | the brutal application of Paragraph | all forms, calls on the workers to Hugh O’Connell, who was so suc- |ave going to the naval conference ns ean When the takers attenipiad : 1 es not Governor Roosevelt, Mayor Walker,| — Bri ‘ he ae ae the eg detahnee iin cleanee women charged with murder in the stand, thus impugning his honesty| Workers of New York! Answer and others of like calibre, ee Leake oh The ihe en oe "(1 Wo. R. CLOTHING STORE i} or defended the Communis ith ofganiser for the'N. T. W., and innocence. The judge may di- these vicious attacks on the workers jhim to give special attention to| later and rather disowned his own 542 BROOK AVENUE § and accused the fakers of al- ii) speak at the Gastonia-Shifrin. '°ctY interfere. in the trial, thus of this city and state! Let the Looney, pointing out that he is aj child, by saying that the Kellogg PONG pROGS AROS Heres 1 ways talking in favor of the bosses. “\ineile Defense Banquet, tonight, king the judge and proseeutng di- bosses know in unmistakable terms |prominent politician and engineer in| Pact’ had merely an “oratorical Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing 1 A mass meeting is being arranged The dinner is given at the re-opening \rect participants in the jury. Capi-|that the workers will fight no mat-| Syracuse. Of course, they are all| character.” High Class Work Done by the Metal Workers Industria! |o¢ the Co-o Radian Restaurant, 26 | ‘list justice is a mockery. When|ter what terror the bosses and their |faked, but the unsuspecting captain | ‘The French Sacouskpba by Bete cine care meen Geman: League of the Trade Union Unity |{inion Square, and is at 8 p. m,|sudges connected with the under-| government adopt! {falls for every word of it. ‘The pas-|jsh veafirmations favoring the|| “" "and their familie League in that territory for the! Other speakers will be Shifrin and world are those who would judge! The Communist Party tears the sengers, too, are taken in and Looney League, hope, probably with little || sHow YOUR SOLIDARITY ? purpose of completely smashing the | ftalian workers out on bail of $5,000 ‘Pe, Workers, then we have reached) mask off the face of capitalist jus-|is beseiged with attention. basis, to get British support at the ey eee ' times tried to find an answer to that |B, & O, plan in its place of birth. |and g¥00 cach. ‘Tickets can be had |‘? stage at which capitalism has /tice, and shows it up as it is. It is) The Syracuse sap is again taken London conference. French im- le the International Labor Defense thrown off its mask and openly fascist justice and the workers must/in with the other morons. Looney | perialist opinion is trom dak hold. | Lenin M ial office, 799 Broadway. Tights GHG WOFRINg CiAss. |prepare to meet it. jimagines himself a second Napoleon. | ing on to the big navy building pro- 1 ICKETS DEFYING. enin Memoria) Pere : Following ines these Hee frontal; The Communist Party fighting |The idea lends itself to much quick-| gram, and rejection of Italain de- || WORKERS’ CENTER | Meet in New York! attacks on the working class, comes |for the interests of the workers in fite comedy situations, laande tue “gattty” "Shia tune we BARBER SHOP (Continued from Page Orie) the completion of its plans for mob- ilizing the. student body for partici- pation in the Lenin Memorial Meet All students are urged to be at Madison Square Garden between | TRESS SHOP COPS Huge Mass Meeting at Cooper Union Tonight ing. 30 and 6 p. m. on the evening of ithe demonstration to help man the hall_as ushers, literature distribu- tors, ete. The directors of the pageant “The Belt Goes Red” released yesterday the detailed program for the pa- geant. The pageant is arranged in eight scenes as follows: Scene 1 The Belt (dance group). Scene 2.— An American Federation of Labor vention, Scene 8.—Revolt (dance | up). Seene 4,—Organization! | cene Strike (dance Continued from P One) the Needle Trades Workers Indus- vial Union.” Pickets Arrested. Two pickets were arrested yester- jay at the “L. and A.” Dress Com- pany shop, 361 West 36th St. and sharged with disorderly conduct— for picketing. They are Rose Chintz | C and Sylvia Yosuike. Judge Walsh, of the Jefferson Market Court, s tenced them to one day or $2 fine, and they chose jail. | 7.—Memorial March (dance group) ‘A. boss, one Perlman, of the, Scene &—Towards struggle! These Frankmore Dress Company, tried | scenes are all a dramatization of the | yesterday, to frame a wor under rent struggles of the workers. Several hundred workers are par-| ticipating in the rehearsals under the direction of Em Jo Basshe and Edith Seigel. In a call issued by the Communist Party to all working class organiza- tions and to all unorganized workers | to participate in the demonstration | the Sullivan act and for attempt to kill, He arrested Sam Kugler on the picket line, and charg him with having a gun and making threats against Perlman. The union attorneys showed in cross-examining Yerlman that the boss was lying outrageously, and the judge had to dismiss the case. ployment and war prepatations are adding tremendous burdens upon the workers, the corrupt Tammany clique and City Hall are plundering the Treasury, shifting the burden of taxes on the poorest sections of the population thereby adding sti!l xreater burdens to the greatly ex- loited workers. The leaflet reads as follows: “For us it means that our families will be homeless and starving—that the landlords will evict us. Already many hundreds of thousands are in | this condition in New York. The} millionaire Tammany politicians are plundering the government treas- | uries. ment have raised their own wages by much as fifteen thousand dol- | lars per year while many families were acquitted. | can’t get ten cents to buy a loaf of | Yesterday, in Brooklyn County | bread. The graft and corruption in Court, three pickets in the furriers’}the New York City government is| strike, months ago, came on trial|as great as the number of capitalist Zor felonious assault. They were j leeches wha have attached them Willian! Karbusas, Mike Karvelas | selves onto the backs of the working and Philip Cagner. All, were ac- | masses sucking our life’s blood from | quitted. Cagner, however, us. teased. He is in Sing Sing, serving ‘one year and two months, having | been framed up by McGrady and the | posses. The Industrial Union is do-| ing: all in its power to secure the release of this fellow-worker, and | calls on all workers to assist. Arrest Fairway Pickets. At the Fairway Hat Company, 49 West 37th St., where Local 43, Mil- sinery Workers, are picketing, the boss has applied for an injunction. This was enough for the police to charge the picket line as soon as it appeared yester » and arrest pickets. The police called the bo: to bring charges against them, a Prances Sch vas fined sence against the other four suspended. Nine pickets arrested last week before the Baum Rose Dress Shop, | where the industrial union continues | picketing, and will continue until the strike is won, came up in Jeffer- zon Market Court yesterday, on sharges of disorderly conduct. All was Mass German | Jobless ss Fight Cops (Contini.ed ofrtn + Page One) | employed, They fired into the mass {of unemployed workers indiserimi- | nately. In spite of the fact that the shops, who attended the special | jobless were unarmed, the demon- meeting called by the Needle Tradés |Strations were not broken up. | The ssAustrial inion, Youth Section, | 8” med police around public buildings adopted a resolution after a talk by | lin all cities have been doubled. Sen Gold, and discussion. The reso- | Unemployment is especially severe “ution calls on all other young |in Germany with 600,000 more out workers to follow the example of |Of work ‘an in 1929. The steel in- these sixteen and join the N. T. w. Lu | Young Workers Join. . The young workers from the dress | Public buildings in Berlin has com- | pletely shut down, due to a financial lerisic All capitalist agencies ad- |mit that the 2,000,000. mark will be lexceeded very soon. * * *.C.L. INTER- RAC TAL DANCE SATURDAY. The Third Annual Inter-Racial ‘ance of the Harlem II Unit of the| 4 cable dispatch to the Journal | ing Communist League will take |}of Commerce dated January 14 * group). |; Scene 6,—From the U.S.S.R. Scene |! | stokes, directing. + * it.is pointed out that while unem- ; Walker and the city govern-|_ | imperialists; |ism and the American Negro. dustry is in a state of severe crisis. 66 E. Organizations Hundred Volunteers. sell Labor Defender, at Lenin | L To ‘or eal Stuy? | tition! ae Council No. 15, y, Jan. 16, 808 Adee Ave. elick, speaks on 5-year plan. | * Women’s Conneit Spethers Class. Thursday, Jan 130 p. m., 80 B. ith St, Room 5 * General Rehenrsal Lenin Pageant, E bands, chorus, lem Youth Club, | 7.30 p.m. ore comrades needed, | No experi- nee necessary. Also Freiheit Gesang- verein, MON, 3 Workers ‘Theatre, y 8 p, m. top floor front, ‘Twenty-five needed for mass recitation Womens Day. R. * | No. 24, Monroe Womens Council Thursday, Jan. 16, Avé., Bron: t°8.30 p. m, Spiro on Five | Year Plan. | ae Women's Council Functionaries Class. _Thutsday, Jan. 16, 8:30 p. m. 26) nion Square, ee 3 Women's Council Banquet Committee, With organizers and secretaries of Nl councils Friday, Jan. 17, 8:30 p. . $0 B, Hith St. Room 535. * * Shiftin-Mineola Chicken Dinner. Thursday, Jan, 18, Cooperative Res- ant, 26 Union Square. AN de | ndants will speak. * * Drug Clerks Union. | All jocils meet tonight 8.30 at 142] second Ave. +. 4g Barn Costume Dance. | siveh by Cooperative LL.D, Satur- tay, Jan. 18, 8 p.m, at Cooperative itorium, "2700 Bronx Park East. | mission 50 cents. | . . | Brighton 1.L.D. Concert, | And. vetchereinka, Saturday, 8, 227 Brighton Beach Ave. tis. VE 3 Jan | Concert and Ball in Bronx. Freiheit Gezang Varein, Sature n. 18 at Lorraine Palace, 449 eoth Bt. * * * | Harlem Progressive Youth Dance At 1492 Madison Ave., Sunday, J 19, 748 pom, | * * Taxtattation and Banquet. Harlem Progressive Youth S* tion, Saturday, Jan. 18, 1492 7 on Ave Communist Activities Conference. . 7,7 p.m, at Work For all'Unit Agitprop Dir nter. rs, Literature Agents andsthose a ‘= shop paper work, * * * Unemployed Women Comrades. Of Party, League, Council must 1 6 Union Friday, Jan, 17, m. * #& + Workers School, Spring Term. Opens new classes: Doonping or | Haessler on Shop Pa- pers; Trachtenberg on History of C. | P. of Soviet’ Union; Revolutionary Movement in Latin Aimerica; Capital- Regis- | ter now, ; ee Unit 16F, Section 2 | Educational meeting at Worker: Center on Thursday. Harlem Y.c.d. Tatergnetat Dance And Welcome for N. Plenw jSaturday, Jan. 18, at, linperial Hal Tao Weat istth St. “‘sonn c. Amith “Harlemites.” se eed 75 cents. * Section 1 Maxs Meeting. To discuss Walker raise, Vitale gcandal, Sabbating outrage, Friday, Jan, 17,8 p,m. at Manhattan Lyceum, p. it. Unit 1F, Section 3. Thursday, 6p. m., 1179 Broadway. Unit “Yar, Section 2. Thursday, 6 p. m., 1179 Broadway. is «the bdourgeotale poms that bring it han alao eniled eee Saturday, January 18, at the | says: “It is evident that during the mperial Hal,, 160 West 129th St.|last fortnight of the year there was | t this dance the participants in the | substantial increase in unemploy- “enum of the National Executive | ment. Belief is current in well in- vaumitvee or the League, who | formed cricles that during January “ing gvectings from all the dis-/and February the total unemployed, siets, will also be welcomed. according to official figures (always : below the actual number) will sub- WORCE TO SPEAK ON 1. W. W.| stantially exceed 2,000,000. . . .”| Ak the Sundey forum of the Work-|They certainly do not indicate any School on Jan. 19, 8 p. m,, at|@teat improvement in the general Workers . Center, Harrison business situation in Germany dur- | will speak on the history of | ling the past year. | | W. W. George, who is now | N. G BANK CLOSES \¢ inber of the Central Committee | te Communist Party, belonged to) FAYETTEVILLE, N, C., JaJn. 13. The Lafayette Bank and Trust W, W. and was editor of one Company here was closed |B fficial papers in the day® it Was areal militant organ ond worker and farmer depositors | the working class. Ad- were told that there had been too’ 5 cents, méay “heavy withdrawals.” ie Mars (Commonin aaeeneea: Correct Dangerous Pals Bladder ana “@ea~ Kidneys Don’t negle bi ceinge paintul ol “aliination bg rmful irritation. Take the advice of famous doctors. Correct such ailments at iy len Fog ae more weshiptcas fast from i ceataey, Seas Samal Midy | |600 of the code, dealing with con: | adopt resolutions, to demonstrate |tempt of court. This is being used | | against in a most vicious fashion against | Workers, tell yotr children to re- are defying injunc-|fuse to accept the military training! workers who tion. Masses Are Fighting. The further |dicalism laws, and other repressive | measures indicates the fact that the|and old, men and women! bosses are preparing to meet the|The time for fight has come. | growing offensive of the masses, the |ganize and demand: |growing cries of hungry jobless men land women, thé demand of the work- ers for decent conditions, It demon- :|strates that the imperialist govern- ment is adopting all measures in Cooperative Restaurant Service and Self-Service WILL OPEN | | —and on the same program— AT 6 A.M. Union Square Cafeteria, Inc. 26-28-30 New York City ’ ;parents consent. use of criminal syn-| fight against the vicious conditions! Union Square cessful as the drunken reporter in “The Racket,” and “Gentlemen of the Press,” plays. the title role. He is miscast and although he tries his hardest, never seems convincing. these fascist methods. Children, refuse to drill even if your Young workers, Workers, white and colored, young | retary of Looney. Others include |Sydney Riggs, Jack Raffael and Ruth Donnelly. Or- Communist Party of U.S.A. | Young Communist League, | Young Pioneers of Amerita. District Buro. | Distriet New York. A SOVKINO FIRST a powerful di in a titanic SARY OF Showing o, Played the nartyred sailor POTEMKIN ‘rection Symon Gould, vecla) Forenoon Pricek—Weekda: ‘Red Comma A POWERFUL DRAM! ACME THEATRE 1 Continuous Performances Daily 9 \“~ Thentre Guild Productions “METEOR” By 8. N. BEHRMAN GUILD ©. 5% Eve. 8:60 Mats, ‘Th.&Sat. 2:40 “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky abth Street MARTIN BECK 48t street Eves, 8:40. Mats, ‘Thursday and Saturday at 2:40 JOLSON’S tet thurs Nad Sate d “The Prince of Pilsen” Musical Comedy Favorite By Gustave Luders & Frank Pixley ves, 8:30 Mats. ‘Thur, Sat. 2:30 IC: Oe $1 $150 | BVA Le GALLIENNE, Director Yoday Mat.—‘MLLE, BOURRATY | Tonight—Tt SEA GULL” | Pom. Night—*MASTER BUILDER” | | eae ‘American Opera Company ' @LYRIC DRAMA IN ENGLISH” it nt-S8:30.. , Mareia fe of ft ave, dtm. 17,, mdn oi it. Aft, Jan. hy Mme. Bat terry 18 ‘Aunt Sat. Eve, dan ASIN‘ 30th Street and Brondway ¢ (0 Bene 8ia0. Sat, Mat. a0 + Seats Now at Box Office Elsa Ersi, cast as the sweetheart, | is pretty to look at, and Mary Mur- | ray is charming as the private sec-| DEMON which a woman-leader plays the leading role ¥A and the Cossacks. he remarkable So- viet actress with @ SPECIAL splendid. cast, including “CELEBRA STALIN, FILM GUILD CINEMA 2W. 8th Street [te Continuous Daily Noon to Midnight 12-2, G0e || 7 TWw Extraordinary Doubl Feature Program! A PROLETK am tose 250, after 5 P.M, LVIC REPERTORY {4th st |prepared and resolute,” Journal de Debats, the Paris organ of the French right. WASHINGTON (By Mail).— More of the “wonderful state roads of the South” will be built by Negro prisoners from Atlanta, 200 of) | whom have been drafted over to the |job by “contract.” They will work in Chatham County, Georgia. “AMUSEMENTS - STARTING TODAY! SHOWING IN AMERICA! DYNAMIC! TREMENDOUS! REVOLUTIONARY! of the rama of the Russian Revolution in struggle between the Red Army ADDED ATTRACTION! TION OF THE 12TH ANNIVER- THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION” KALIN' VOROSHILOV and others, ye 12-2, 35e—Sat. & Sun. 0 DAYSt nder’s Bride” A OF.THE RED ARMY REVOLUTION East 14th St, Between PSton Broadway and 4th Ave. ie ne vy Sidalest, Prices: from 9 3c. ins" 35¢e, CAMEO Wdoi & BWAY PAUL WEGENER in Stirring, Dramatic Photodrama “THE SURVIVAL” Superb ictus ention of Balzac's Nove! | RUTH DRAPER in her Original Character Pi atohes (INCLUDING 6 NEW ONE! | Every Evening, Ince! | (Except, Mon COMEDY Matincer Thara Very 00d ‘NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES » Loew’s “Big 2” NOW, ee all \ | PARADISE | Grand_ Concourse Bronx Pitkin Avenu: Brooklyn ON BOTA SCREENS CECIL B. DeMILLE’S “DYNAMITE” ALL TALKING CONRAD NAGEL KAY JOHNSON M-G-M PICTURE Stage Shows—Both Theatres from writes the | | | X22) SPRing 5095-5090 | Moved to 30 Unton Square FREIHE!IT BLDG.——Main Floor VISIT For Pleasant Moments The Chocolate Shop 1559 PITKIN AVENUE Brooklyn, N. Y. IMPORTANT FOR CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS Typewriting, Mimeographing, Multigraphing Translations in and from ALL LANGUAGES COOPER-TISHKOFF 108 EAST 14TH ST, ROOM 200 Telephone Stuyvesant 9507 REASONABLE RATES |—MELROSE— Dai VEGETARIAN AIFY RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find it Pleasant to Vine at Our Place. || 1787 SOUTHERN wee ech STEPPES |- otpeat 174th St. Stati ONE INTERVAL! s o14e RATIONA L Vegetarian 1 RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE: UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 enataeiatnaeettinaminaeieee ed Phone: Stuyvesant 8816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 202 E.12th St. New York AU Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bront DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 6188 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTST 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Seeond Ave. New York + DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for ‘Telephone: Lehig! Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel & Restaurant Workers Branch of the = Amalgamated Fr Workers, if Qtat Kt. Ne Ke Phone Chelsen 2374 of ete, med oe) bg ‘i fons! tmest in Aa ionday of the month, brett ve: joard » meetings—every Tuesday Raiblatty at 5 o'clock. wiry! One Union? jue “sehen the Common I Enem: eal Office upen from 9 a. "FURNISHED ROOMS iceberg CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY 4 iva sma ei kagome xe , way, Tel,