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D 17,000 OF NEARLY 35,000 ALLENTOWN WORKERS ARE WITHOUT WORK Textile, Auto, and Jobless Workers There Shattered Idea Allentown Workers Won't Fight Prepare to Send Big Delegation to National Unemployed Conference March 29 ALLENTOWN, Pa.,—The idea that the Allentown workers don’t fight and can not be organized has been well shattered by the response of the workers to the first unemployed meeting called on Thursday March 6th. While only one day was devoted for the preparation of the meet- ing hundreds of workers gathered around the workers center and the hall was filled to its capacity. Spies, stool pigeons and all forms of element came for interview. But the workers came to find a way out of their misery and starvation. The city authorities estimate the number of unemployed at 13,000 while the unemployment number is well over 17,000, out of the city’s 35,000 working population. Textile workers, Mack truck workers and workers from various industries joined the unemployed council. Allentown the sleepy city of labor is waking up. The unemploy- ment campaign is just beginning in Allentown. Workers are fighting back now. Preparations are on the way to send a large delegation of the unemployed workers to the national unemployment conference March 29 in New York. Peabody Co. Speed-Up Kills, Maims Miners (By a Worker Correspondent) TAYLORVILLE, Il!.—I am a vi there was a man killed by the iron |bar. timized miners and used to work in| There is an average of one hurt ap pa each day in the Taylorville mines Renbedya ve ace her yyviler and one killed each week. When | I shall tell of speedup and condi- the men do get hurt they are maimed | tions here in the Illinois coal fields. | for life. There was a young fellow The speedup is so bad here that ajyiding trips who was hit by the re-| man wanting to get a drink of water volving chain of a Jay loader which | is not allowed to do it, as the miner /proke his leg in four places and must keep shovelling. tore a chunk of flesh’ out of his hip. You can’t stop working for a min-| He is expected to die. The speed- ute, The same is true when you/up caused that accident, and not need to fill your lamp. The boss!carelessness as the operators and the crey Also Fraternity and Justice Greek Seamen for Red Unions (Mar, 6 Iny committee of ek ships lying in the harbor of Odessa organized a joint meeting of in order to discuss the situ- ation of the Greek seamen. Many seamen deserihed the miserable working conditions, the exploitation of the sailors hy the so-called Sail- ors Home in Piraens, and the terror exercised by the V elos govern- ment. A resolution was then adopted corr Mail), — Ti AILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, M PRAVDA ON THE WORLD JOBLESS DEM SIGNIFICANCE OF INT’L JOBLESS DAY BATTLES UNITES STRUGGLE WITH EMPLOYED Elect More Delegates Than Expected Workers Fought Bosses, Fascists and the Social Fascist Agents |The Fight Was Also Against the War Danger and for Defense of USSR | (Continued from Page Onc) 5 ‘i to unite them in comm MOSCOW, U.S.S.R. (Mar, 6, In-yand the struggle of the workers ‘!wggle with the employed workers, for “work or wages, precorr Mail).—The “Pravda” de- against it was increasing. claves that the great significance of| The contradictions between the the International Day Against Un-| Soviet Union and the imperialist employment is that it is not only a| world system were increasing. Ir day of demonstrations of the unem-|the capitalist countries a growing paid for by the employers or the overnment and administered by he unions and the councils of ihe unemployed, for the seven ployed workers, but a day of strug-| industrial ¢ in the Soviet Un. "our day and five day week, gle of the whole working class|on the victorious advance of social the speed-up, ete. against the bourgeois order of so-lism. ‘The social basis in the capi-. .,,,,wdsing For Delegates ciety, Class agair-t class was the |talist countries was becoming small Oe Ua iCalls oavallay slogan, for the unemployed problem er and the sympathies of the work te fo eno) HAVE was a problem which could only belers for the Soviet Union growing, Booey Ieee Apa Tine solved in the course of the general whilst in the Soviet Union the crea. "tly the National office struggle of the proletariat against |tive enthusiasm of the masses was |/° S& Phone Watkins 101 : hy 7 isi pee - necessary to find lodgings for the the bourgeoisie. building up socialism. Hence the |Our ot oan delog ae The bourgeoisie mobilized all its/new burst of furious hatred from! oy neti Co eee 1 the Mareh forces against the workers, and in|the bourgeoisie and its social fas- particular fascism and social fas-| cist lackey ee . in the draft. program cussion tomorrow will is of the growing un ment situation and ‘ake relief plan ance against the jobless ployed we -the em m, thus the demonstrations of the unemployed were directed also against fascism and social fasci The social fascists and their ass ants, the right and left wing rene |e : The significance of International |, Day against unemployment was that * in all countries the masses followed | o¢ the call of the Communist Parties which thus exercised an organiza the tripl nd em ers, the jarm the proletariat for the period of August Ist showed that the Com. £OY™” AB Seep Nie |the crisis. In order to defeat the| intern was the world party of Pte Conheaiceniad. bourgeoisie the social fascists would! revolutionary action able to mobil- Haeuit Resi ie [first have to be defeated. The in-|ise tremendous masses and’ lead | yj r Soo AE aici anal [ternational day of unemployment] them into the struggle. The 6th|vomn, vremployment Mass Cor jwas| thus a struggle against the| March was once og Pat 2 aero ees ‘ain a demonstra- ment a national organic character. trinity of the bourgeois state, the | tio inst-class, . ‘ i \capitalists and the social fascists ee ae Sara lass: ‘i ae sour It is proposed that the confer- Le Whe Wbialilas aes A inecnapege ae amore poe the bour- ence elect a full time national or- 2 Hed tee teats (seoisie, against fascism against canizer and a national committee crisis intensified the imperialist con-| social fascism, against the danger op unemployment to direct work does it and you must keep working. | U.M.W.A. officials say. Also they are building the pit cars! larger and more dangerous. They have an iron bar that goes clear around the ear which extends out as much as 4 inches. The other d DETROIT, Mich.—Recently in the a worker was hurt ,the bosses post “Every man who was injured recently ment office and we will be giad to So some of the men who have be a while came in response to the offer of the bosses. to the employment office, this is th “Now men, the men who have been ii then we will arran: not state the wa: Let’s organize into the Trade Uni of stuff as well as for better wages and hours and against unemploy- ment.—U. S. Rubber worker. How Boss Buys LL. | (By « Worker Correspondent) Just a line to let you know a re- cent happening in the dress trade. On March 5, S. Phillips and Son, 500 Seventh Avenue, New York City, advertised for cutters. Thi shop is an I. Lb. G. W. U. shop. | Upon’ my applying for the job which specified union men only, I was offered the princely sum of $25 for a 44-hour week. Now the union scale is $50 and 40 hours | a week, and on my telling him so the boss replied, “You are not working on the union scale, but the Phillips scale.” On hearing this, I and four more cutters who had also applied for the job, left to report this to the International Union. The busi- ness agent told us he would in- vestigate the matter. The following day the same ad appeared again. I was rather sur- UTW Won’t Let Rank and Filers Open Mouths (By a Worker Correspondent.) GREENVILLE, S.C—I want to tell the workers up North} just what kind of fakers the A.F.L. | is. There was on open speak- ing in the court house of Greenville supposed to be for the workers and when they wanted to talk they were thrown out, and for a show the big fat faker Bill Green wanted thera to stay but you feller workers know that he did not want us up there| but he was afraid that the workers | might learn the truth about his big fake organization the A. F. of L. Wholesale Arrests of (By a Worker Corressondent) SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.—Because of the militant struggle of the un- employed workers, by organizing into unemployed councils, demon- strating and demanding work or wages, our noble Gov, Young of California has ordered the police department to start a reign of terror against the workers. So far the police have arrested about 500 work- ers and charged them with vagrancy and gave many others 24 hours to 12-Hour Day, Low Wages in Laundries (By a Worker Correspondent) The laundry workers have been working under the most miserable conditions for so long that they have become used to it and do not real- ize it any longer. It is hard to make any worker believe that we are working 10 and 12 hours a day for $12 and $14 ¢ week. Men who do only union fighting against these ac- cidents for it also fights the speed- jup which should and must join it. U. S. Rubber Bosses Show “Kindheartedness” By a worker correspondent } ge to give you fellows some kind of a job Well, the men came and they gave them a job at 50 cents an hour for 2 or 3 days a week, 2 or 3 hours a da: who were injured compensation of any k lin the U.T.W., but in the National \Textile Workers Union, for the U. The National Miners Union is the it. All miners —L.B. causes shop of the U. S. Rubber Co., after ed a sign, which read as follows: y in this plant come to the employ- help him.” en working at.the plant for quite When they came they heard. ured call at this office at | e stor in place of paying the men ion Unity League against this kind | G.W.U. Fakers Off prised to see this and decided to investigate. When I arrived I found a crowd of 50 cutters await- ing the boss’s pleasure. He fi- nally selected a man at a wage of $25 a week. Now, what Ym driving at is that while waiting for the boss I happened to see a card of a delegate of Local 10 of the I. L. G. W. U. under a blotter on the desk in the lobby. This led me to the conclusion that, he had called to see about our complaint. I met a cutter who works for Phil- lips, and he said he had heard the boss say to this delegate, “All right, send up your wife, and I will fix her up with a nice dress.” They shook hands, he says, and Katolka (not sure about the spel- ling) left. This event opened my eyes, and I am going to apply to the T. U. U. L. for membership. CUTTER. So, fellow workers, when you hear a faker like Green or the other A. F, of L. and U.T.W. men tell you you must organize, say yes, but riot T.W. will sell you out, like they did in the Poinsett Mill and just like the Brandon Mill was. We want the real, good union, the N.T.W.U. And if you are unemployed join the Trade Union Unity League and then you will be a member of a union that the leader will fight by your side. —A. C, Jobless in California leave the city. In Sacaramento the same con- ditions exist. The police have ar- rested about 400 workers and gave many 24 hours to leave town. The Governor has raised his personal guards from one to ten because of the acute struggle between the un- employed and the masters. Then unemployed workers, aided by those working, are going to keep up the fight against unemployment. S. F.. UNEMPLOYED WORKER. srecently a laundry worker were beat- en up by bosses for speaking to other workers at the Mott Haven laundry, 403 Concord Ave., Bronx. ‘jhe police were inside the laundry, and after the hesses beat the work- er, the police arrested him. I want to call upon all laundry workers to organize under the lead- very hard ard unhealthy labor get as low as $18 a week. When we try to organize, the gov- ernment sends the police to help the hoss and to beat up workers. Only ership of the Cleaners and Laundry Workers Industrial League. Let us condemning the reformist unions, tradictions. The world situation was| of imperialist war, against capital- the International Red A and in particular the re ormist tion of the seamen’s demands, pro-| testing against the dissclution of} the revolutionary Trade Union Fed- | eration and of the Gr ection of | and other proletarian organizations, and de- manding the release of ell proletar- ian political prisoners and deporiees. | The sailors then joined the Red Aid collectively and the meeting clozed with the singing of the “Int on- al” and cheers for the Cominunist Party of Greece. | | Dynamiter Is Head of Anti-Soviet Plot (Continued from Page One) The arrested comrades were taken} to the police presidium and que tioned for five hours, after which they were all released except’ Com- rade Packer, who was escorted home where another search was made. “Open-Shop Woll” Again. NEW .YORK, Mareh 2 thew Woll, fat-boy bureaucrat of the A. F. of L., and simultaneously | club-mate of the open-shop, labor- hating billionaires in the National Civie Federation, is working over- time in an effort to speed up the anti-Soviet campaign of his capital- ist masters. “Can we not get other nations to act with us, to refuse all credits | until the Soviets return to the foll of civilized humanity?” cried Woll in a letter to the anti-Soviet meet- ing in the Metropolitan Opera House Tuesday. That is, until the work- ers’ republic has been crushed in blood and the robber capitalists have taken the industries back from the workers and saddled themselves | on their backs once more. | Chee, ean PRINCETON, March 26.—Speak- ing before an audience of Princeton University students and professors Jast night, Prof. Harry Elmer Barnes declared: “There is complete freedom of) worship in Russia, Houses of wor-| ship are retained although the state no longer gives financial support.” Green "Shows Self Up Before Mill Hands (By a Worker Correspondent) GREENVILLE, S. C.—The big labor faker, Bill Green, made a speech here recently and was shown up by two of our leaders. He started to knock the Commu- nists and Trade Union Unity League. He was stopped by loud objections on every side. One of our members told him he would a damn sight better be led by the Communist Party than be led by Tom McMahon. At that time El- bert Tetherow from Charlotte, N. T. W. U. organizer, popped up and said that Bill Green is just a big r faker, and then the law came in and threw out L. C. Me- | Curry and Tetherow. That McCurry is a mighty mili- tant man. He has fought for the N. T. W. U., and he has been blacklisted, but he does not care, and will fight to ,a finish. We textile workers know what the U. T. W. will do for us; it sold | us out at the Poinsett and the Brandon and the Mills mill. We) say, “To hell with the U. T. W. and Bill Green.” We know him, to our sorrow. We have our Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union. POINSETT MILL WORKER. Gitions, and against firing of work- ers. | If we are organized we can pro- tect ourselves and we can fight for , better conditions. The boss can fire one, but he cannot do without us) all. Join the Cleaners and Laundry | Workers Industrial League, 18 W.| fight for the 8-hour and 5-day week, for a living wage, for sanitary con- 17th St. —A LAUNDRY WORKER. not so intense since the world war | -Mat- 3 Jism and for the Soviet Union, the men’s union, demanding the adop-|2%4 the intervention against the pro-| fatherland of the international pro- letarian revolution. The war dan-|letariat and the country of <ocial- ger was more and more imminent ism, Push Bill for Jobless Insurance in France PARIS, March 26.—Demanding unemployment insurance for growing army of ynemployed workers in France, the Communist depu- ties yesterday supported a measure providing for unemployment relief.” The measure was bitterly attacked by the capitalist and socialist depu- ties, arguing it was against the interests of capitalism. The new Tardieu cabinet is again under attack, and shows extreme weakness, as developed the finance of the by 16 votes to 13 the appropriations for a new undersecretaryship demanded by Tardieu. when commission upper house xefus 65 Years Hard Labor in Belgrade VIENNA (March 10 Inprecorr|hard labor each, Zreten Zuyoviteh i » monster trial in Bel-|six months’ imprisonment. The re- grad go-Slavia, ended on March|™aining accused were acquitted. 6. Momtchilo Georgiviteh _re-| It is interesting fo note that the ved 12 years’ hard labor, Anton|names of three of the accused are i and Goiko Semardtchitch 10|not mentioned in the reports either hard labor each, Branko So-/as having been sentenced or ac- laviteh, Vukota Labitch and Ivan/quitted. The three are the lawyer, Miliutinovitch six years’ hard laboe|Raiko Johanovitch, the metal work- each, Marko Creshkovitch five years’ |er, Josef Belontchek, and the tailor, hard labor, Anton Klementchitch 4) Trajan Yovtchevitch. Have the: years hard labor, Dragutin Petro-|men been murdered by the polic vitch two years’ hard labor, Rado-|No reports have been published con- slav Liumovitch, Dragutin Kostitch |cerning the proceedings whi and Danilo Raushevitch one year|been kept extremely secret. The Sixth ef March in Soviet Union MOSCOW, USSR—(March 6 Inprecorr Mail).—Mass meetings (i place in almost all factories in Leningrad and Moscow in support of the International Day against Unemployment. Resolutions in support of the revolutionary workers in the capitalist countries were adopted. The workers of the Dynamo works who were addressed by comrade Losovski adopted a resolution calling on the workers in the capitalist countries to follow the example of the workers of the Soviet Union, and promising full support in their struggle and the carrying out of the Five Year Plan in four years. Similar resolutions were adopted by the workers of the factory “Frunse” and by the workers of the “Red Putiloy Works.” Hindu Strikers in Mass Picketing BOMBAY, March 26.—Thousands! The strikers have determined to of strikers on the Great Indian Pen- carry on a campaign of mass pick- insular Railway clashed with |eting and are resisting the brutality scabs employed by the British im. |°f the police, railway officials and seit, ee ise per. |8¢2bs: When the station master and Perialist railway company. Six per: |a group of scabs tried to smash the sons were severely injured, including | picket lines, they were resisted and the station master. beaten by the strikers. Communist Election Victory in Thuringia BERLIN, (March 11., Inprecorr Mail)—The municipal council elec- tion in Hohenleuben in Thuringia yesterday showed the following results: Bourgeois Bloc 337 votes, Communists 244, Business men 157, and Social democrats 102, Since the last election in November 1929 the Social Democratic Party has lost 40 per cent of its votes, whilst the Communist Party has gained 50 per cent. Southern Cotton Mills and Labor By Myra Page 96 pp. 25 Cents, EARLY REVIEWS “Myra Page is well qualified to write of Southern textile workers. As a southern woman herself, she has lived and worked in mill villages and knows the situation at first hand. “SOUTHERN COTTON MILLS AND LABOR” should be read by every worker in order to understand what is back of the great sttuggles in the southern textile field,” —GRACE HUTCHINS, author of “Labor and Silk.” “, . . The author performed a surgical operation upon a portion of the body of American imperialism, an operation which discloses in detail the misery of the masses. This is no ‘study’ by a social welfare worker. Sympathy and un- derstanding are there, but primarily it is an incision, sharp and merciless, by a scalpel with a Leninist edge.” WILLIAM F, DUNNE. Order from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street .New York City Discounts offered on orders in quantity lots of organizing the unemployed and Iding committees of action of jobless and employed workers. Demonstrations. Part of the program is a whole series of mass meetings and demon- | Strations in all cities, and these demonstrations shall damand, in ad- dition to relief, shorter work day, ete, the immediate release of the elected representatives of the un- employed workers in New York, and se of those sted dur- ce attacks on the March 6 yment demonstrations. The workers facing speed-up and wage cuts and the workers thrown out of work, partly by th speed-up and by longer hov mand real relief, and demand s\ er work day and no speeding. Tammany Grafters Try to Fool Jobless If the seven million unemployed, especially the ge proportion of them in New York cits for four more years, a few of them might get jobs, if the grafters don’t get all the money that might be jappropriated for building work, a cording to the “plan” of the Wal Whalen Tamma government as ve|expressed by Comptroller Be Berry said that a four-year p jgram “probably’ would be work- }ed out amounting to $2,900,000,000. This should remind the starving job- less of the brilliant Hoover $3,000,- 000,000 building program concocted in 1928—which disappeared com- 'pletely when mass unemployment arrived. ILLINOIS INDUSTRIAL WAG WASHINGTON, March 26,—Ac cording to the Women’s Bureau of the Department of Labor, the aver- age weekly earnings of women in 5 industries in January , 1930 $19.70, as compared with for men. Women re highest in the fur industry $ a we For men the best wage was $50.90, paid in the lith |graphing and engraving. shops. W: |men in saw planing mills averaged | pay $6.02, and in cotton and woollen mills $9.79 a week. Men in the boot land shoe factories averaged $20.40, |and in fruit and vegetable canneries, $20.44, CHILEA ADMIT CRISIS. SANTIAGO, Chile, March 26.— \Acknowledging the sharpening world jeconomie crisis which has hit farr ers in Chile, the Cabinet today vot fake relief measures.. The plan of the “relief measures” are designed after the American Federal Farm Board, which aids only the big bank- ers and grain gamblers. y will starve { Page ‘Ihree ‘Many Facts \JOBLESS SMASH Prove Crisis WOAN'S MEETING Grows Worse ra) SEIZE PLATFORM (Continued from Page One) & | So Ue |b curtailed, but other automo-| 4 ce builders have generally fol-\California Socialists’ lowed suit in reducing require- : tay ape eee Call in Police unemploy and especially | tno nuch advertised | oa. increasi (Continued from Pa m too, and m > out with a capitalists for more fort “What May Happen!” “The conditions leda “directly to trouble and more trouble,” said the One) arres' ge to the ng pro- duction—Fords! Operations in independent steel dropped ste comy ha: to 66 per capacity from 68 per cent a Leader. “If allowed to continue. and 70 per cent two there is no telling what may hap- reports the New York pen. There is an infallible way 1930). to nip revolutionary propaganda St in the bud and make it fruitless, eel Corporation ¢ y|tion this week, Pr and the employers have the power jentire industry i to do it. Let them stop over-eat- capacity as compared to 95 per cc ing and basking in Florida and of capacity last year—or a drop of | California sunshine long enough to 22 per cent! act.” reliable indication of the; Then, after that, Hoan went t hha of the present crisis is|California to insure action, leay | : ar loadings, |ing his socialist police to look over Hoover and |the loot taken from the Communist i r the week and railroad to jail th a drop of |leaders of the joble the same| The Milwaukee jobless are un- terrified. Not only on March 6 did they defy the police, and the so- ij cialist administration, which came DICH | against them with clubs, motor ears, ou § i jcavalry charges and threatened them OEE & & with Thompson machine guns, but they marched all over the city. They are still organizing and building up a mightier demonstration for May |1 while the workers and jobless of California show what they think of the American imitator of Zoergiebel. IN MISSOURI ) Refuse to Work for Horrible Food | chisel ste Banquet April First Honors Brave Gaston Strikers Anniversary The first strike called by the Na- tional Textile Workers Union in the ORSON CITY, Mo., March ven hundred and fifty pr rs in this hundred-year-old bi revolted the hor food and over today, 2 and mass hall and go back to work. South will be commemorated at a The m was called out, and) Gastonia Anniversary Banquet un- ins menace the strikers der the of the N.T.W.U. at The prison board of the state was|the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East in session at the time, but instead of | Fourth St., on Tuesday evening, taking any mez On that date, a year ago, asure to improve con-| April 1. ditions, it issued the order to call|1,500 men and women, employed by out the national guard. the Loray mills struck simultane- SE REE IS ously. 7 7 . . As ‘a result of this strike the mill New NIW Districts | workers twice engaged in battles 3 ae : against masked mobs. Established in: South eerie the areatees ab ths Sel: ELIZABETHTON, Tevn,, Mar, 96,| YeTS8¥ banquet will be Fred Beal, RAR CeRLaiue ING vt of the | Oe@anizer of the union, sentenced to I ratte: ecie Ris ordered all |22, Years in prison; Clerence Miller, ackating in the Clann este ent, | secretary-treasurer of. the mn Fain hal ste, | William. Z. Foster, seeretary. of ‘the oy the United Tew,| Trade Union Unity League; W. J. a drive out all thay | Fords of the Negro department of ‘the U. T. W. has been | the Trade Union Unity League, and 5 ay wall bu ea ead representatives of the mill workers Sc : | in the South. | jit started, March 3, against discrin lon ae: Fair takes the place of Sheritt| March 6th in U: S. Was Moreland, who said, when resigning ionifi he had heen ordered to kill the of World Significance Dee BOND cdi Tener eta e | BERLIN, March (SyecMail) To Bee Deccous vacown <n 2) valuating the. signieancel iat: the strikers’ meeting was from the ars- Co. | March 6 demonstrations in U. S. A. of the Rote Fahne states that the day ~|of March 6 was for the American labor movements an historical event of world significance. It marked the beginning of a mass Communist . 2 $4}, | Party in the U. S. A. School April 18 With) "n2 Rote Faine peints out that J. Reed Club Program the main prerequisite for the great success was the merciless cleansing which the|of the ranks of the American Com- conducting to munist Party from right opporunists. hreefold ex- ‘hool receiving co-operation of the cnal and bore the markings C, 117 Infantry, National Tennessee. |Banquet For Ww orkers $10,000 s’ School drive in h IRE TOWN JOBLESS PENISTONE, England (By Mail) —A complete lay-off of all workers close on April 19,|in the steel works, deprives almost On April 18 a banquet will be held every workingclass family here of at Manhattan Lyceum, ‘at which means of livelihood. time a report will be made. The John Reed Club, which is also co- operating, is preparing the pro- m, one of the features of which ill be a Red Revue, directed and written by artist members of the | club, pan the enthasias student body. The drive wi Doctors Warn Against Bladder Weakness game It often indicates that your bladder and kidneys ‘TALK to your fellow worker in your shop about the Daily . zs b are in a very unhealthy Worker. Sell him a copy every condition, threatening an oe day for a week. Then ask him to | yourentirebodily health, n’t run the risk of serious sick- ness. Take steps at once to correct bladder and kidney trouble. Get from your druggist at once Santal Midy become a regular subscriber. The Daily Werker is the Party’s | hest instrument to make contacts | among the masses of workers, to| ibuild a mass Communist Party. | MARCH 30 Admission 50¢ for roo eT OW WY N Detroit Attention! Come See Big Sovkino Film “ARSENAL” Flaming portrayal of the heroic battle of the workers and peasants Red Army of the Ukraine against the counter-revolutionary armies of the bloody Petlura STUPENDOUS! HEARTGRIPPING! REAL! MARCH 28 ° at Ferry Hall, 1343 East Ferry, Near Russell MARCH 29 at Yemans Hall, 3014 Yemans, Near Jos Campau All performances from 7 to 9 and from 9 to 11 p. m. at Martin Hall, 4959 Martin, near Michigan adults, Children 15e.