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«ee roar DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY APRIL 24, 1933 ‘i DEMON BARRI IN BERLIN BY KLAUS NEWKRA ILLUSTRATED BY WALTER 9 CADES) Printed by Special Permis | on of INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS, 38! Fourth Avenue, New York City All Workers are uraed to trond this book snd spread NTZ UIRT it among theit friends THE STORY THUS FAR:—The Wedding, in Berlin, are preparing to the ban issued by the Socialist Police worker, Kurt Zimmerman, an active discovered that the owner of an ice-c spy. A telephone wire is attached secretly to the store. workers of the proletarian district, demonstrate May Day, 1929, despite Chief, Zoergiebel. Anna, wife of the member of the Communist Party, ream store on their street is a police Meanwhile, pre- parations are being made at the police-station to crush the coming de- monstration. Wullner, a veteran poli iceman, who is a member of the So- cialist Party, is astonished at the military preparations which he wit- nesses in the police station. e did sa mpts street al passions . ground of his p This lousy swine, he calls the Day celebr on ‘political passions’ Bricklayer Tolle flung the paper he had been reading to the ground furi- ously and wiped his broad hands on May his trousers as if he had touched filth. Kurt turned to him. What was this? “Fritz, just give it to me, le have a look,” he said. Olid Tolle he knew was a member of the S.P.D. “Haven't you read it yet, Kurt?— the Police President of Berlin to his people?” said Tolle bitterly as he picked up the paper again. “I feel ashamed as hell to think that such a swine belongs to my party.” He spat the juice of his tobacco through the open door of the hut Kurt took the Vorwa: he read fw ercame him. “ .., So according to the will of the Communists blood is to flow in the eets of Berlin on the 1st of May! That must never be! And therefore I again point out with the greatest emphasis that the existence of the ban on all open-air demon- strations in Berlin is due in small de- gree to the complicity of the Commu- nists. Whoever in defiance of this ban attempt: the streets the playground cal passions must fuliy understand that he runs grave risks for himself and his fol- 3 urgently to the id while of lo other workers looker r cer for the re opposition and had al of respect among Committee Kus. ped the paper and looked up. “Boys! th a fine fellow. He wants to shoot us down and an- nounces beforehand that only the Communists are to blame!” THEY ELECT. DELEGATES Outside the whistle of the foreman sounded. Some rose and went to- wards the doo $ ait a minute,-chaps,” called ‘The boss can t a bit ust got to set- The men and looked at him. “1 suge we of our firm go the Police will and have ‘d_ with “Go to the ‘ in, that would be the t Tolle rose slowly. It was p it was not easy for him to speak. “Mates,—Kurt is right. Propose that all workers are called together dur- ing the lunch interval in order to elect a delegation to go to the police office and submit a last protest there. I believe that he will see us and I believe that it mfy be of some ust “That's what you think, Tolle!” “Bevier go your to your com , rade.” “**- Tolle turned slowly to the yo worker and replied gravely: “Very well. I will go myself with the delegation . . . if you ask me to.” The foreman’s whistle was heard a second time, sharply and impatiently. “Calm down—calm down, old boy, the work won't run away.” “Good, tell the others. At dinner time we all meet in the large hut.” Kurt put on a working cap thick with cement dust. He knew only too well that this step would have no practical results, by politically Speaking that was preci the point of it. Old Tolle——a decent chap—was to see for himself, what game was be- ing played up there. The sacks weighing a hundred- weight and a quarter felt lighter than he had expected today. He said a few words wherever he met a fellow! worker. By lunch time all the workers on the job had read the article of the Police President in the Vorwarts. “EVEN Jagow that better unanimously decided to send a dele- gation from the job to the Police President. Old Tolle, another worker unattached to any organization, and | Kurt, were elected. The foreman} looked surprised when the three men| asked for an hour's leave, but what could he do? VISITING THE POLICE CHIEF On‘ th: Alexanderplatz the steam hemmers roared and thundered on the work of the new underground construction. "Buses rattled over the bridging logs and underneath work- ers were crawling about the exca-| vated gangways. Through the narrow passages between the hoardings) swarmed the crowd. Local trains/ rushed over a railway bridge—| propped with enormous beams—to pull up with screeching brakes in the station. Alexanderplatz—the madly- hammering pulse of work uninter- rupted day and night, Alexanderplatz, couldn't have done with smoke, dirt and noise, hing crowds f the sq is the ; and say: “Good-d: block of the re with ramifica of this city wi inhabitants: card i dexes, files din the cold gr cifices photographs and finger prints. Here were the offices of the Political Department IA, with the names of all prominent Communists carefully indexed. four million The red-brick building on the| swarmed with vermin and h officials. “Bug Castle” the Ber- lin population called it. Once the Red Police President, Emil Eichorn, had ruled here, hére Spartacus had fought, here countless revolutic:.ary workers had been tortured and sen- tenced, and here today lived and ruled the man who wrote: “ So. blood is to flow in the streets of Berlin on the first of May!” The policemen on duty at the en- trance of the headquarters looked suspiciously after the three workers who had walked past and were dis- appearing in one of the long corri- dors. Perhaps he ought not to have let pass without examination those three suspicious-look figures on the eve of Ma. ILL AT EASE Old Tolle did not feel at ease. The t. many doors with their incomprehen-| sible, maddening name plates made him nervous. Gentlemen with sharp, rimless glasses ran through the pas- sages and looked strangely at the] three workmen. A police officer with- | out cap and belt looked out of the} door of a room and called a clerk} who turned at once and ran back quickly. “Pardon, sir ! ” the civilian! clicked his worndown heels audibly. Tolle had never before seen an of- ficer without a helmet or cap on. But here these gentlemen were at home, after all, he himself would not run about with a hat on in his own) home. But somehow this shihing bald head of the officer disturbed him They did not like to ask for the oom of the Police President and vent straight on as if they knew the great building as well as all the others did. The heavy boots of the} three building workers resounded on the stone floor. They were lucky, for suddenly they found themselves in front of a big grey door, to which a small white cardboard notice printed with shin- ing black letters, was affixed: POLICE PRESIDENT Enquiries: Room 209. Tolle looked for the paper in his; pocket on which they had carefully and neatly written the resolution of prot He was furious with himself. Damn it all, the Police President was only a party comrade whom they had; themselves raised to his present posi- tion. He would just go into his room di comrade Presi dent, we want to present this reso- lution to you. Look here, comrade I'm sure you will be inte know what a social demccratic work er thinks of your proclamation. Th: sort of thing is really impessible, comrade President... !” (TO BE CONTINUED) STUDENTS PROTEST FOR HENDERSON 300 STUDENTS RALLY FOR HENDERSON. NEW YORK.—300 Columbia Uni- versity students rallied at mass pro- test meeting Thursday around the Sun Dial, to demand the re-appoint- ment of Donald Henderson, former | economics instructor who was expel- | led for his activities in the working class Movement. Preparatory to the meeting stu- dents picketed the offices of Dr. But- ler, head of the university, carrying large placards reading “Reappoint Henderson” Speakers at the meeting included Barnard J. Stern, Asst. Prof. of An- thropology, Dr. Addison T. Cutler, instructor of economics, John Dono- von, all of Columbia University and students. The fight for Henderson will be extended on a National scale that will make Columbia a focal point in the fight for “academic freedom” an- nounced the National Student Lea- gue. A conference for joint action in the Henderson case will be held to- day at 4 p. m. in the New School for Social Research, East 12th Street, near Sixth Avenue. A United Front of all national stu- dent organizations has been formed to carry on the campaign. 100 E.W.B. WORKERS KE RELIEF DEMANDS NEW YORK. — 100 workers dis- charged from the Emergency Work Bureau relief jobs, supported by the Downtown Unemployed Council dem- onstrated in front of the offices of the Bureau, 22 and 4 Ave., Thurs- cok demanding jobs or adequate re- lief. A delegation that placed these de- mands with Houston, head of the Bureau, reported to the workers that he received the description of their plight with indifference, Angered the workers pledged a de- termined struggle to build their or- ganization and win their demands. The City Committee of the E. W. Workers which is leading the uggle is 799 Broadway, Room 303. B. | Washington Senator ; Launch Scottsboro Gives Huge Sum of 5 Cts. for Scottsboro enator C. C. Dill was leaving the hurch in Harlem evening when he was hed by a Scottsboro De- collector. The senator had addressed an audience of Negro workers, calling upon them | to support his bill, which is aimed at splitting the ranks of the work- ers. The bill provides that Fili- pino and Japanese workers, who like the Negroes are lynched and oppressed, shall be ousted from any jobs “heretofore id by Negroes.” The senator's “deep concern’ with the plight of the Negro mass- es prompted him to respond to the appeal of the collector. He reached into his pockets and pull- ed out his change. Carefully sort- ing the handful, he dropped his “bit” for the Scottsboro Boys into the box—a nickel! just Tag Days as 1,000 | Parade in Bronx NEW YORK.—Hundreds of torch ights lit up placards and banners | with slogans demanding the release of the Scottsboro boys as more than 1,000 workers paraded through Upper and Lower Bronx Friday night in one of the most impressive mass demonstrations witnessed in this sec- saat PART OF PARK AVENUE relief. seldom mentioned. Park Avenue, New lionaires, but a short walk from the homes of the wealthy parasites can be found th and many others like it. A leaky makeshift shack of one room for the whole family. Outside stands one of the thin, ragged children, chief sufferers in the vile discrimination practiced against Negroes in jobs or ONSTRATE MAY 1 FOR THE SCOTTSBORO BOYS’ FREEDOM! Seb ese see | THE OTHER END OF PARK AVENUE York, is kno j NEW YORK. for the interests of his class,” writes | Tom Mooney from his San Quentin prison cell to Samuel frame-up victim of Tammany Hall! received by the Weinstein Defense Committee. | the only effective retaliation in such | cases is the militant mass protest of | the working class in defense of their | victimized brothers,” Mooney adds, mindful of the new trial which the ure of the working S organizations has forced the} California courts to grant him after} nearly 17 years of imprisonment. Framed in Strike | Samuel Weinstein, leader of a Fur-| :niture Workers Industrial Union strike in Brooklyn, was framed on a} | charge of assault and manslaughter on February 20. He is now serving |a two to four year sentence in Sing | Sing. The International Labor De- jfense has filed notice of appeal, but | |funds to combat the frame-up are} | lacking. The Weinstein Defense Com- mittee, 80 E. 11th St., has organized n 2s the sireet of mil- is Negro worker’s heme tion of the city Intense mass feeling against cap- italist lynch law marked the parade, |the ten open air meetings held in its line of march and the indoor dem. onstration at Ambassador Hall which | |was jammed to overflowing, many | standing up. The parade and the in. door mass meeting were held under |the auspices of the Bronx Section, |New York District International La- | bor Defense. | Tag Day Drive On ‘The Tag Scotts>oro Day Drive will continue till and including Thurs- | day, April 27. The following are the Tag Day stations: Bronx: 792 E. Tremont St.; Har-/ Bureau station canned at 36th St.,® lem: 77 W: 131st St.; Liberator Of-|petween Eighth and Ninth Aves. fice, 2149 Seventh Ave.; Finnish Hall, 15 W. 126th; 119 W. 195th St.;_Up-| town: Spanish Center, 1413 Fifth! j.ckea by the child's own’ father Ave.; Esthonian Hall, 27 W. 15th | ynite waning tor ithe Wemieeeeney St.; Hungarian Workers Home, 350) work Bureau packing and distribut- E. 8ist St.; Czechoslovak Hall, 347 E. | ing +he cans of poisoned meat. 72d St.; Italian Workers’ Center,| He had been unemployed two years: 115th St. and Second Ave.; Midtown: |two years of hunger and privation 109 E. 26th St.; Downtown: 15 E. 34 /and insurmountable red tape in get-| St.; 818 Broadw: Room 340, 80 E. | ting relief. Finally several days ago llth St.; Brooklyn: 1813 Pitkin Ave.; /he was given this job dispensing what 261 Schenectady; 197 Humboldt St. |the city calls “relief.” They gave {him food to carry home as pay. Not| HUNGER BRINGS milk, not fresh food but deadly corn WORKERS DISEASE beef for his babies. NEW YORK.—Workers and their children, their bodies sapped of strength due to hunger and poor | housing conditions are dying off more | rapidly each week unable to with- | stand the attacks of disease. 85 more | were buried the week ending Satur- | day, April 8, than the previous week according to the latest report of Shirley W. Wynne commissioner of | ‘ health. ‘The younger children are being es- pecially effected by illness. 2,400 of them were down in bed last week from measles and 14 died. Father Got Food As Pay. The food that killed the child was NEW YORK - Kuhle Wampe, a German sound picture, now playing a vulture, took the lives of 172 people |and intelligent last week while 344 others are batti- ing with the disease, Wynne’s report | reveais. ough to keep them- selves untainted by Hitler's “river of dung.” The picture's central theme 1s co! Diphtheria cases have increased. 78 cerned with the individual emotio new cases reported last week an in- | problems of the young workers crease of 34 compared to the previous | Problems which grow so agonizing as | week, | —_— | GIVE RELIEF IN HARLEM; WORKERS | COME ORGANIZED | NEW YORK—Two workers were | given food and rent checks at once jand special investigators were sent to make immediate investigations of | other cases when a delegation of 75 workers led by the Upper Harlem Un- employed Councils made demands at | the Home Relief Bureau at 235 E. 125th Street Thursday. The officials had to promise that all cases investi gated would be given relief Friday | without the usual red tape, | One of those who received aid was a mother and child who had been | sleeping in the subways for two weeks! | The delegation was joined by other workers at the bureau and a com- mittee of five was admitted who vigorously made the demands while the workers outside made themselves heard by shovting. SALVATION ARMY COLLECTS DOLLARS TO PROMISE PIE IN THE SKY” NEW YORK.—The Salvation Army (better known to the workers as the starvation army) “took unto itself” $126,710 as the first installment in 2 drive for over a million, promising to bankers who contributed that it would stifle the workers’ cry for bread with poisonous soup, and their rising militancy with promises of “pie | in the sky when you die.” TREMONT WORKERS CLUB CALLS MOONEY CONFERENCE FOR TONIGHT The Tremont Workers Club is call- ing ® conference of delegates of workers’ clubs in upper Bronx, for tonight, 7 p.m., April 24, at 2075 Clin- | ton Ave., Bronx, This conference is | Pr for the purpose of electing a. delegate anip Ga ee to represent such workers’ clubs at the Mooney Congress in Chicago on | April 30. the structure of capitalism disinteg- rates. cies of the “success” slogans of the STUDENT AGAINST WAR TRAIN- ING; EXPELLED NEW YORK, — For distributing leaflets against R.O.T.C. (Reserve Of- ficers Training Corps) and against war, Morris Oshataz was expelled from at it,” and “keeping things from the neighbors,” visit their growing per- plexities upon their bewildered chil- dren. perate under his fathers upbraiding, the New Utrecht High School,|commits suicide. The , April 3. | Annie, finds the weight of the whole are organizing action to | situation upon her own shoulders. demand rve-instatement, Evicted from thelr squalid home, the | tical condition. Pneumonia the dread illness that|at the Cameo, tells of young German | follows low physical resistance like | workers, those who are strong enough | It is the purpose of the film | j to show how these individual tragedies | amusement parks, and camp sites of | are solved by the new vision and in-/|clubs, benevolent organizations, etc., spiration of the workers’ comrade-|now defunct, BULLETIN NEW YORK.—Four-year-old Jimmie Gourley died in Roosevelt Hos- pital yesterday. He was the second child of James Gourley, 439 W. 52d St., to die of the poisoned food given by the Home Relief Bureau station. NEW YORK.—In a room of the home of James Gourley, at 439 West 52nd Street, is the dead body of his three-year-old son Samuel. The police and relief bureau officials said he died ef ptomaine poisoning | after eating canned corned beef given to the family by the Home Relief The officials say “died.” The work- ers say murdered—murdered by a/By the time it arrived Samuel was} murder. dead. system of charity which instead of giving them unemployment insurance and cash relief to buy their own food, ‘2 CHILDREN DEAD, 1 DANGEROUSLY ILL FROM POISO.\OUS NEW YORK CHY ‘RELIEP FOOD six, the stricken to raise these funds and arouse work- | ing class pressure for Weinstein’s re- | lease. Like Mooney, Weinstein proved that he was miles away frofh the scene} |of the crime with w |charged. Just as Mooney p; “— —-— ~ | photographic evidence that he was far third child is home in bed} removed from the place of the Pre- with stomach pains and|paredness Day dynamiting, so Wein- i fits. | stein proved that he was at. strike| When the children became ill Fri-| headquarters a few minutes after an| day night Gourley told the police| alleged assault on two scabs in the , 2 y - and an ambulance was called. With| Bronx, more than eight miles away.| class in defense of their victimized the usual cynical indifference to the|To cover the distance would require | brothers. ‘The workers are beginning lives of workers and ti | ce thi x the dectors administered some inef-| scabs, the sister of the boss whose|case it was*not an individual who fectual |children writhed in pain and con-! result of having been pushed or fallen | it is symbolical of |vulsions, growing worse. One of the} eir thildren,}an hour and a half. medicine and left. The! factory was on strike, later died as a} Again the| down stairs. Weinstein, arrested on; “It is becoming clearer daily that| terests of J ‘ONLY MASS DEFENSE CAN SAVE. BOSS’ ‘VICTIMS, MOONEY WRITES WEINSTEIN ‘Letter from San Quentin to Sing Sing Showd Class.Nature of Franie-Ups ‘Your frame-up isent, and with an approaching ne- another illustration of the fact that| tional Free ‘$m Mooney Congress to the masters of finance and industry} be held in Ghicago April 30 to May will stop at nothing in their efforts|2, I have he@n simply swamped and to rid themselves of any militant| utterly unable to answer my corres- worker who fights uncompromisingly | pondence. “Prov¢és Your Worth” “Your frame-up is another illustra- Weins‘ein, | tion of the fact that the masters of finance and industry will stop at courts, in a letter which has been|nothing in their efforts to rid them- ives of any militant worker who | fights uncompromisingly for the in- is class. It is becoming clearer daitthat the only effective “SAMUEL WEINSTEIN _ retaliation {n“such cases is the mil- itant mass-'protest of the working more and thore to see that in my was discrimifiated against, but thay the whole rotte: The frame-up i: frame-up system. \frantic parent colled the ambulance.| the picket line, was charged with|the most despicable weapon in th intimidated by the police. gives them canned corn beef prob- | ably years old that some packing company had sold through the Tam- many graft channels. James Jr., 4, Samuel’s brother is I have given all the information I C8 in the Roos elt Hospital in a cri- A fitting “name for a hospital thet may send away the lifeless body of an 8 year old work- ands > | der ers child murdered by the “new deal president's hunger policies. STAG iamily moves, aided by Fritz, who nterested in Annie, te Kuhle Wampe. The advance notice of the film warns us not to confuse Kuhle Wampe with the. American Hoovervilles, be- cause Kuhle Wampe was once a re- sort and still ins many of its re- features. These feat are nog e in the film itseli, v striped tents are the features referred to. fused lives, These are more num- ‘erous in the southern parts of the family is shown | country, where the climate is not too falling into the pit of destitution.|severe to allow the camps to be used, The parents, saturated with the idio-|by their new occupants, all the year. At Kuhle Wampe we see a con- old regime, “trying hard,” “keeping | stantly recruited mob of people, dis- cards from various crumbling class- | groups, thrown together by their des- | \perate necessities, The son, exhausted by his|from each other by prejudices still fruitless search for work, and des-|retained from their old lives. In this atmosphere, surrounded by daughter, the beautiful country scene, spring comes to lure Fritz and Annie into | further confusing their already con- Tt waa at this point in but held apart A manslaughter charge is still hanging over him. Red baiting was freely used by the prosecuting attorneys in obtaining a verdict of When the Daily Worker reporter | guilty for assault on the dead wom-/| The parents have apparently heen) camo to the house for further in-| an’s husband. | iormation all Mrs. Gourley would say | Tom Mooney’s letter to Weinstein | is “I can’t give you any information, | follows: ‘Just Whose World Is the World?’ Ask Young dl picture makes very few s|even, When the timet: comes the to those imag‘nations | Fritzes. been weakened by The argument on the train, as the cewerage Which flo young workers are returning from | if ihe young American patron ex- their own camp, so gloriously unlike | pecied to cee Annie sweoaing under} Kuhle Wampe, :3 a high spot of| Fritz’s wooing, he . comedy which ends dramatically with | There are, indeed, many such laces in the United Staves, former “T am very sorry that I have not| ” Her eyes were red from erying.| replied earlier to your letter, What ‘Tie Unemployed Council at 419 W.! with the attempt being made to se-/| vd St. is already prepairing thous-| cure a new trial for me, with the or-| of leafiets to expose this mur-| ganization of a huge mass meeting | nd the responsibility of the city| in San Francisco last Sunday, March } 19, at which 15,000 people were pres- | hands of the-ruling class when deal- ing with those workers who are true and loyal totheir class interests, and | who cannot.be bought, sold, or ex- changed. The'fact that you have been selected by:the master class as one of their victims is a credit to you. It proves your worth and effectiveness. “T extend:to you my warmest pro- letarian greetings and urge you never to yield or falter in the sacred strug- gle for the rights of the working class and for the abolition of the whole frame-up system, TOM MOONEY, 31021” E AND SCREEN Good Satire and Fine Acting In “Three Penny Opera” at Empire Theatre | In 1750 John Gay, an Englishman, ‘wrote “The Beggars’ Opera” a bitter; Hittle-piece of. satire, with pleasantly | jingling tunes, slapping alike at the| sium proletariat and at the conven-| he picture that one young American | - boy, at the Cameo on Saturday, ex- | velves, building themselves, and they imed: “There's too much syn:bol- | know how to draw into their move- film.” It is true, the |ment the storm-tossed Annies, andj ism. in this | Annie’s declaration of change, her | full awakening shining from her eyes. ‘The young workers sing their song, | “Just whose city is the city — Just | whose world is the world?”, and they |themselves and their comrades all jover the world are the answer to | their confident question. It is their jelty; it is their world, and they are; preparing themselves to seize it. | | ‘The music cf Hans Eisler, foremost | sroletarian composer of Germany is superb. You will not soon forget | | the triumphant power of the closing | | chant of the marching workers. | There is also a talkie symposium | |in which Clarence Hathaway of the | Communist Party talks about the | {meaning of Fascist terror in Ger-! any. —Wiod ROW with 1000 Acwasing World-Wide Attraction: Thciuding the DURBAR,ColossntSpectecl: | { | Obildvea under 12 Male Price to reserved Seats Every Aftornoon and Night ex- cept Saturday, BEATTY Batiliag 40 Rew LIONS Lier Reserved Seats $6 $1.50, $5, 42.40 Incl. Tos Canter Box Seate $3.00, including tor 8,000 BALCONY Seats unre- 30c %: served afternoon. and night aah TICKETS NOW at Garden, Gimbel Bros, . x and Agencies. The interval of seduction wes em- : ployed by scenes of woodland beauty, while a voice sang of immemorial re- plenishment in the spring. The point was that both Annie and Fritz were | seduced. After this the camp life rises to a note of shrill imbecility. The be- trothal party for Fritz and Annie is @ maniac feast, where horror laughs. “A SECOND REAU GESEE” | COMPLETE ENGLISH TITLES— worrters ACme Theatre ITH 8ST. AND UNION SQUARE Annie, ee one, cannot bear it, Bae |Learn How To Sing and asl ie meets Gerda, She is Speak Correctly ‘The power and certainty with| | Sclentitic, dtontat Way of Singing and Stammering and all YVolce ved perma: Metropolitan Opera. House Studio 1425 Broadway, N. ¥. C. PENN 6—2084, SPECIAL REDUCTION TO COMRADES. which Gerda and Karl, and_ their young comrades of the Labor Sports Union are shown training themselves and each other to change a world which as Annie later says, they “don’t like,” brings the picture to a thrilling GLOS PUSTYNY (THE VOICE OF THE DESERT) | tions of the British middle and wp- per classes. ‘But its jabs were mostly for the proletariat. Recently Bert Brecht, author of famous German film “Kuhle Wampe,” a story of the unemployed, with aj strong revolutionary trend, took this “Beggars’ Opéra,” brought it up to date and cofsiderably changed it« | emphasis. They are singing it now at The Empire Theatre on Broadway under the title “The Three P-~nv Opera.” It is possible that the Ame~ rican producers have again cnanged | the emphasis: a little, back towards what it was before. As it appears in English, atthe Empire, it is a queer mixture. It is still full of sarcastic jibes at the professional beggar, which in this period of unemployment, can help furnish, weapons also to those who like to ‘consider our 17,000,00 jobless merely lazy bums who won't work, If you are looking for a revolu- tionary musiéal comedy, this isn’t it. But there 18, insinuated, creeving sly- ly through it, a certain working class point of view, brought in by inference. by double: meanings, obscured by 3 kind of Greénwich Village raillery and pessimsim: Technically “it’s grand. The stage settings are’surprising. The acting is wonderful, though just why the daughter of’ Peachum, “the beggar’s friend,” should sing with a Hungarian accent I don't: know. It doesn’t sound badly at that» The tunes are so en-~ ticing that ‘the audience age | sings too, + “MADISON $0. GARDEN | The German Proletariat Speaks The Truth of the Commu- nist Struggle in Germany “KUHLE WAMPE” (WHITHER, GERMANY") with HERTHE THIELE R OF MAPDCHEN IN UNIFORM” Complete English Dialogue Titles) TD pp BY MPOSIUM ON HITLER EXTRA! » Dahlberg, "| ‘Thomas and others, ag Dialogue Titles in English EUROPA, 154 W. 56th, Cont. from 11 A.M, FRANCIS LZDERER & DOROTHY GISH in AUTUMN CROCUS 65:24; 0, $3 PricésAlt performances $1, 46TH ST. 'THEATRE, | Evgs, 8:30. Mats, Wed RKO JHEP HRS West of Thurs. and 8 yp 1th st & DME ave, NOW Frederic Matoh, and Claudette Colbert. tn | “SIGN OF THE CROSS” ADDED FEA®ERE—“GRAND SLAM” with RETTA YOUNG and PAUL LUKAS. he Chicaro Mooney Congress, April 30 to May. 2, will be a big step climax, They are educating them- toward my freedom.”—Tom Mooney.