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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK ONDAY, AUGUST 21, 1933 JIM MARTIN $O YOURE A READER OF THE DAILY. WELL, WERE GOING TO SPEND ALOT OF TIME Getting Acquainted by QUIRT and NEWHOUSE | A White Mother Fights for the Scottsboro Boys COURSE THERE ISNT A HECK OF ALOT To SAY ABOUT MYSELF. couLD Pur, IT (N A FEW WORDS BuT (TS TCaN TELL YOU-THE ONLY REASON MY PEOPLE DION'T | COME TO THIS COUNTRY WITd THE MAYFLOWER 1S BECAUSE tia IWAS BORN AT AN EARLY AGE, MALE AND SINGLE, IN HICKTOWN INNEW ENGLQND. I Gota COUPLE OF OPINIONS THAT | By BELLE TAUB ; aeEY 1 / PeRDete Sect GAVE A GABIT OF GETTING ME EUEC CUSSER URE Boat | NEW YORK.—Twenty-five hun-) peal by a White Mother for ti Q INTO TAMS WHERE MY | dred Save the Scottsboro Boys| Scottsboro Boys,’ and the ministe ANCESTRY FIGURES, BUT... | penny stamps is the record sold by| read this from the pulpit, while one person, since the inauguration | watched the black men and women | of this campaign by the Interna-|to see how they would respon | tional Labor Defense early in| Later I talked with them out o March, just before the trial of | the church and they said they wer: Heywood Patterson. | deeply impressed. ‘But how's tha This record was made by Leah| going to help, materially, in gettins | eusoe ssan” otter his death, has a son Ps * e }0—Pasternack's Orch.; Phil Duey, fa: ; | centers, or workers’ correspondence, | | 85¢ to 1 P.M.-bde to 6 (exe. Ist mess.) the benefit°of the ordinary folks by | whom he hates and later loves; a 7 * tone Hs ee | Performance of “Butterfly,” which is| should not do away with the neces- | the new six and eight page | mds CAREFULLY COOLED ome ‘ none other than the producer him-| wife whom he loves and later hates:| © TODAY’S PROGRAMS br) Scheduled under the direction of Ciu- | sity of writing an article on this storm |] Dally Worker? a tusNEW ROXY 7%" ra self, Jesse L. Lasky: “ ‘The Power and) » paramour whom he loves-hates- S—Poet Pris re center ;the great steel strike o! ‘MIDNIGHT CLUB’ with George Bat thet *Glory’ is. the first marratage| loves-nates, and a male secretary WMCA—570 Ke oH “Orch. ' yer in thee aad i Roe ier From the Pittsburgh district!| DO YOU WANT mir a eee! seréen“play-éver made. It embodies| whom he | loves-loves-loves, Think| 1:00—trish ‘Tenor 0 A bstaee dish there is a possibility that. opera will| there is little, and certainly not the OA eaareidi; 1A ten eben zbacn A odo . the action of the silent picture, the| I’m kiddin’? Even William Boehnel,| 7:15—News—Dr. Frank Bohn ee 9 Bre be given with the regular symphonic | survéy of the field necessary at this ep P | $ reality of voice, and the searching] who knows how to be awfully charit-) 7.{2-Marsuerita Padula. Cohtralto an pa Ree asanore’ Tila’ cast in- | time. Pesca et || 8X0 Jefferson ji 8. * | Now % MUN REOTE OLA. ee ane ie. paired pre i. his 8:00—Max Polikoft, Violin; Jose woht- Students Pr test U. S cludes Anne Roselle, Dimitri Onofrei,|. Every bpd ee et WELL! THEN HELP SYLVIA SIDNEY and DONALD by iS See tc we in, Pia ” le ta opy the .gtay ‘. this: powerfel<etory to the “amertean and the Glory" has something of the 5.b0—Mademe rambosk i I * “4 * rnic| Paras Gramar Hiroeh and Bompili | apart Tino for tie enonmates| by bringing in to the City Office }/ 1N JENNIE GERHARE rT publié? | wearing monotony that might be} "—Qpgrmolselle 2 Boprano; Concert ssue of Hitler Book Malatesta, Other workers interested in the de- of the Daily Worker, 35 East [| also, “IT’S GREAT TO BE ADIVE,"*with | wife said would you please pass the |cheese and the limey’s eyes popped ford got up and proposed a toast. “had kept him ‘from ‘attending church these last years. But he editor on the hand with her finger! FLASHES is mother of five children sixty four year old white When I first heard of this case} I immediately felt that I could not} rest until those boys were free. As a mother, I know how it feels to have children and to watch them | grow, tenderly. I constantly place myself in the place of the Scotts- | boro mothers. Their children are just as dear to them, their hearts those boys free,’ I thought “Then I bought 100 pamphlet “They Shall Not Die,’ and went fro: store to store in Harlem, barbe hops, grocery stores, restaurant with my message. Many promise me they would carry on the work fc defense of the Scottsboro boys “But you must remember thos: were the days when I was not ye aware what a powerful weapon the International Labor Defense was anc out of his head for the liquor which] always contributed to the church, ' |beat exactly the same as mine,” |I thought that the Scottsboro boys wasn’t there. He turned in disgust} and in fact, to all churches. “I be-| she said today in an interview in| simply depended on help from well to the steward and asked if there|lieve in the church,” said he, “I be- d \ 4 the national office of the Inter-|™meaning men and women like my- was any English mustard aboard. | lieve in it as a social and spiritual an Hl national Labor Defense, Room 430, | Self. @ @ “ENGLISH mustard, mind you,” he} institution which helps to bring| | 80 East 11th Street ‘ Joined the I. L. D. . |insisted, meaning: this as a dig at|faith and courage to the masses of | CLOSE = UPS | : " “One day, while trudging around a |the Captain. the people, especially in such try-| Arrived 40 Years Ago he Harlem streets with my pamph- American heamon |. After the soupe, Mr. Ben Haw-/ing times as these. By LENS “Over 40 years ago a lets, a Negro worker whom I had an kins, the lanky editor from Hart-| Old Mrs. Seaham tapped the | | | this country, a young | approached said to me—‘Are you a eae A ‘ : ; Metr ushin roduction on girl. In my little hamle member of the International Labor - MICHAEL PELL * that is, it would have been a toast| tips. “There you are speaking like | tgoviet. , . Wherein Jean, Harlow Vilna, I had heard of A »| Defense?’ Then he went on to tell /if there had been anything to drink.|my dear old father, may his Soul) j°°an American communist, Clark| |wonderful land of happiness’ and|me that he was and to describe the Illustrations by Philip Wolfe | But the proper thing had to be said] test in peace.” She sighed gently./ Gapie an American engineer under | joy. T came here, and found misery,| Work of the branches, their plan of ustra i] ‘Pp 4 and done anyway, and Mr. Haw-|“He was a great believer in the} contract in the Soviet Union, and eiacs AR MIRIRE CHEE Wooancee all workers in. their “THE SO FAR: Sli member of the Marine Workers | kins, as a prominent citizen of his|Church. We are Southerners, Mr.| watlace Beery a copiously whiskered bitter disappointment. I began to for defense, and. “thus THE STORY : Slim, a i ity, had th : "i aed work in a factory, an exploited | ‘ Raton : ; Industrial Union, aboard the S. S. Utah, starts a discussion with the | Communi ah > a S ore pingtd Fo: member of the G. P.U.... | STEEL and METAL hgeeatot! son men’s. ahict While | ® z out into oe sec dis- . * : ig perience for such occa: 4 ‘or, Se: ap - Py oper nel shirts. al ven throughout the éntire ether. salons stuns, tte ‘dsfense ot she. Puyiey Unions aware wee Ue laa: all: the: fassongérs soon: “got. to| | RIALTO THEATER WiLL sHow | WORKHR, August-September | sewing seams on the machine, my| Country and thoneaas bevand. the Worker and handing out several copies. He is bawled out by the cap- |; now, Mr. Hawkins was a member | A LESSER - SINCLAIR - CRANE | issue, Official Organ of the | mind ran back to the dreams I had| geographical boundaries, that the In. tain and his revolutionary literature is stolen from his bunk. But in- (of the Chamber of Commerce and|‘ FILM CALLED “THUNDER OVER | Steel and Metal Workers In. jin Czarist Russia of a new free) ternational Labor Defense was the terest in what he says grows among the other sailors, whose working | Rotary Club of Hartford, as well as MEXICO,” FALSELY PUBLI- a esta Sines "| world, America. Suddenly this| American Section of a world wide conditions make them feel that something is wrong somewhere, Now |being Chairman of the Fairview CIZED AS BEING THE worK. |-(UStrial Union. published at} vision was interrupted by the fore-|movement. Apd from him 1 leafed. read: on: | Reienenae! tie dite 4 aera OF THE SOVIET DIRECTOR |80 East 11th St., Room 238, | man’s voice, sharply piercing my| “{ too become a member of the <ENSTALLMENT SEVEN “The Captain’s Dinner E, UTAH? was in Copen- hagen “Monday, so the Captain due | stuffed olives, cheese in all colors, and printed menus. The Chief Stew- ard stood still as a statue in his white uniform. The stewards stood at attention at each door. They Member of the Order of Masons, and brother-in-law to the Vice Presi- dent of the First National Bank. Rising gravely to his six feet two, this personage now orated: ‘“Cap- EISENSTEIN. In making the | announcement Variety adds: “Un- | less several political snags are | cleared up during the next couple | | days, however, Arthur Mayer, oper- | | ator of the house, will drop the | | New York City. | By HARRY GANNES A fult réyiew ts given in this issue | ears. ‘Hurry! Hurry! Hury!’ ‘Rich! Rich! Rich!’ we are making the boss, I said to myself. A few rich parasites, a multitude of oppressed men, women, children International Labor Defense, but I asked to be assigned to a Harlem branch, where I would be working shoulder to shoulder with all the friends I had made for the Scotts- boro boys. Ze “his” had butterfly collars on and looked|tain Hortens, I am sure I am ex- thing. of the “Steel and Metal Worker” of| “The years p: I saw very| 4 b Soar PAO yet Sea thy aan like the aid of the world. The/pressing the sentiments of the rest ae 8 oe che soe? of the workers around| clearly Czarist Russia and demo- ark et erent: pe gat day, the Chief Steward waddled| honeymoon couple from St. Louis |of my fellow passengers, as well as i Write in for proof that the blue yr eel code. cratic America had police, . aintancse, catreatine eee around giving orders, quacking im-| broke the spell by exclaiming “Oh|my own, in conveying to you our hawk-eagle” NRA bird is a ard ml ta eaviven Period of demise, the paper | militia, starved workers and rich s of the past, and awakening portantly. Ewen the passengers | how lovely.” appreciation of, and thanks for, the Reid awful bit of kicking ne im- aoe ne in @ livelier, more powerful | bosses. It’s the same all over, I them to the terrible danger Sising 1 é 0} un ‘ient - ‘ork 3 ; a Ns peat pan Beane hd Snead caik. ths HEN the soup was brought, in. ‘ian, and fue your uAtaly bring- f} mere $10,500 for appearing in person| ers’ Industrial Union, and especially |° J°%, for the exploited poor. | steep flights of stairs, knock breath- weatirer, sat in front of the dresser) Special soup spelt “soupe,” with ing us across the high seas to our Hawkins, you know, on the Capitol stage for a week. . . the. major struggles going on in this | “Then came the Russien Revolu- | on the door, greet some old ; the yolk of an egg floating in the ination.” My father | Calling Seymour Etern, editor of the| ace.of basic industries. tion, A new freedom, a freedom d, talk to her for hours, just to for over a nai Ate ne middle of each plate. Everybody ark aie ink jowls turned | °¥"¢4,large plantations in Louisiana) exclusive Experimental Cinema, last| ‘The story of the exposure of the| for workers, a Reece struggle |#@t 2 chance to sell” some of the oT eats out OMe Hareld |Degan to talk about how lovely the| tne old m modesty. and ‘he bent | 28d, Tennessee, and do you know,| seen dashing madly up and down|Morgan‘and other trace ctves code, | against greatest odds. I joined the}. 8¥¢ the Scottsboro Boys” penny Thitise Bentley, the -bald-headed lhis head as if taking the pope's |e built over 600 churches for his| Manhattan Island trying to locate| and the contortions of the bosses| Friends of the Sovict’ Union de, |St@™D : English bookmaker, manicured his) 4.7 'D| wlessing. Negroes during his lifetime! the headquarters of an organization) when John Meldon, secretary of the| voting all my time to winning into ther, as I told you be- “You don’t say!” y : eg Naor ie ; f sped Mr.|called the Workers Film and Photo| union, sought to call Frank Palmer, | \ : wu , fore, of five children. And Ihave EL eta oe alin He perites| Fe ‘aeatheee ey Sander Ge ante ep ge deed OF. cf fiecough i League . . . 220 East Fourteenth, | with his brief case full of spy faces, in Bed ce Nagata Pegs jmuch work Ne do. But sometimes, ally considered the Captain to be a made wonderful time; the service epee y He Gooey cost | Comrade . . . | 48 told in full in this issue. On an- i t so absorbed in my work that I “sills old ass,” but was hoping he} was wonderful all around, and I am but a few dollars to put up one of those little Negro churches. You The Italian barber in_ “Smart other page are some of the spy facts. | —to see an end to starvation amidst et the time, and get home too * * e r ” ward Robinson | | riches, tortures of loyal fighter |late to prep supper for my, chil- Mbit: ee8 ‘wife, an English girl] experienced aad highly “Gelightful all whitewashed inside, with a few Nicholas Bela, a member of the | struggles around the chi they ‘he \the young and leave the old to|I was only helping those mothers at Te eRane ate PeeereaE AiG captaincy.” poe a a little alter We front. | Workers Film and Photo eagle. “\\wit acre of the bait eae dee mourn. An end of the system of|of the Scottsboro boys—and they had a weekness for playing the r | . ter all, one worships the Lord Jimmy Cagney, that swell guy who | George Powers, chairman of the ship. | destruction, a beginning of the sys-| Understand. fined lady, spent most of the aft noon *stowing away her 180 pounds of sassorted delicacies in all kinds of: belly bands, brassieres, corselet- tes, and pantaleties. The Old Man oe |AVING heaved this line, Mr. Haw- kins made fast to his chair. | There was a sort of embarrassed silence after this speech. A couple of the passefigers started clapping. from the heart as my dear old father used to repeat, and it mat* ters not, if the floor be of humble earth, Oh, as a little girl I attended many of those church dedications with my father. |rose sky-high in popular esteem | since his open support of Thomas) Mooney, finfs it harder to sock his tough dames and molls nowadays . . . Neuritis in his right mitt... yards delegation, to the Washington | hearings. Both the steel and ship codes, pre- sented by the workers, are printed in|. . full and make this issue of the great- | I came to all urged, pleaded. Then tem of construction. my friends, I heard about the Scottsboro Boys | . and I could not rest. Then she asked for another thous- and stamps, and was gone. Telephone Girls | Fight | ; I Read E thi © himself, drawing the curtains over | 5% The Chief Engineer's nose twitched |joyeq and erecias hae yet Warner threatened Jimmie with all| est,importance for winning over steel|. “] read everything I ranula find. | National Recovery Act the rameoiss bid cabin, ae : ane \s bas Hept aya from laughing! such @ consolation to them to have| the ite ibites of Fee pen they one py eee behind the Steel. Then I tried to tell everyone about SO ei ace aie RN jout, loud. e eaptain, Tose and) somewhere to go to pour out their| learned of his intention to at-| and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union.| this horrible erime, the inhuman| BOSTON, Mass, Aug. 18—More arnfpits and raised hell generally | A \" \\ \ said thank you, and the stewards | woes and sorrows!” tend a Mooney mass meet in Los| On the discussion among thousands | () 7 oes of these young innocent |t#an 500 telephone operators met with his salty old carcass. i " \' \ \" served the fish. Mrs. Seaham, “Yes, yes,” agreed Mr. Hawkins,| Angeles . - - of steel, workers on the union's code boys, the anguish of their mothers.|2>USday in” a protest meeting Finally the gong struck, and they ; TRA atk across the table from Mr. Hawkins, i * * * there is a very fine story concerning | ?°¥* gui 5 allsamarched in. deeked out with the flags of all the ports. of call—except the flag of the Soviet Union. What use had such-refined company for a Hammer and: Sickle? - The tables were decor- ated «with swell cold cuts, celery, The saloon was |} trip had been, and what lovely wea- ther they had had. Old Mrs. Sea- ham fluttered with her finger tips and said she’d just love to sail on congratulated the orator on his speech, saying it reminded her of her minister. Upon which the con- yersation turned to the church, and Mr. Hawkins had to confess that his strenuous work as a newspaper- iman, together with his many social and on and on like that. The mate’s looking at her diamond rings. “Yes indeed, the Négroes are a truly re- ligious folk. Mrs. H. and myself enjoy so much to listen to their spirituals, which are so full of rhythm and expression.” CONTINUED TOMORROW Film Review Ne ither Power Nor Glory in Jarratage” Picture at Swanky Gaiety The other night a solid bronze tab- | living friend whose words coincide with the visual reconstruction of the dead man’s life. Old wine in a five- | gallon bottle, that’s all. “Flash- back?” No. That sounds too old. “Narratage?” Yes! Didn't the Soviet | directors gain fame throughout the | world with “Montage?” ‘The final) “tage” ought to do the trick... . That’s all it requires /to proclaim “a | Four thousand foreign actors | | are stranded in Hollywood . . These include 200 stars! . . . | * * * | Take a swell tip from Australian movie audiences . . . If they don’t \like a picture they simply count it out . . . Someone in the audience} yells out “one!” and those sharing | | his sentiments about the film con- | tinue the chorus up to ten . . . By that time either the house manager | will have caught on or the majority | | of his audience will have-walked out. | I wonder whether there will be any reference to the Tuscaloosa lynchings duction “Chloe—The Romance of the | dents: “The code submitted for the Secretary of Labor Perkins and the code, Handed a copy of the code, she told 50 Washington correspon- “When my children came home, in the evening, I thought of those Negro mothérs, waiting for theirs. When I saw a child talking to its| | against the National Recovery Act | code appiied to them. This code is iron and steel industry by the Steel | mother, I thought of those mothers, supposed to cover some 5,000 opera- tors in the Greater Boston area. The meeting ufanimously agreed that the code was an infringement on ‘their and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union, is a rational, reasonable proposal, al- waiting with aching hearts to talk | conditions under which they had been to their children. “What can I do for them,’ was my constant thought. “] though, of course, some of the terms| may be debatable, as in all codes! submitted, and it should have the — ¢ for defense funds. To the “Struggtes Ahead” | capitalist newspapers, appealing to Having-gone through the steel mills, | their readers for help. On April 11, she couldn't sidestep a code so popu. |the World Telegram published part lar with. -the workers themselves,|0f my appeal, under the heading, Asked by a reporter: “Isn’t it too | ‘Plea to Help Save Accused Scotts- wrote letters to my friends, | | working for years. They also made it clear to the bosses that they un- derstand that the payment for a 40- hour week in place of the full week as before meant a reduction of $4 to $6 weekly for operators earning less than $35 weekly. The girls are or- ganizing into a union of their own and are making plans to fight this official wage-cutter, the National Re-~ covery Act. in Marshall Nilan’s forthcoming pro- | radical?” .she answered: “If that| boro Boys.’ A few days later, the} etwas unveiled in the lobby of the| revolution in the talkies” in Holly-| Sou!"-n4"? . . . C. B., of Brooklyn, |,code were LSet Mb cepted benic aa | ahr Daily. reals ae pene To keep up a six-page “Dally Work- Gaiety Theatre on Broadway to com-| wood. j | _ With today’s tssue, the Dally Worker be-, 9:00—Alfred Wallenstein's Sinfonietta | S€"” TA hame 0% Conttance Ben- |" siere,in..a aplendid editorial ool lotdan, Nene” Sony ee Nan, | et” the cleculation, inant be Aoablad memorate the world premiere of “a| And now briefly about “the drama | sins the regular announcement of programs 8:15—Horatius at the Brien sonics nett as he: rominat‘ov for the world’s | | vere i ae 5 “ jterdam News, New York Negro| 9° your share by getting new-stb- drama so great that it required a new) so great... blah, blah ...” Tom| casting statines, occa Nem YOrk Broad-| 9:30—Wilbertorce Quartet worst actress, and adds almost de-| Sttuggles Ahead.” telling of the| weekly, gave space to my letter. vite technique to bring it to the screen.”| Garner's rugged individualism has] the provrams given begin only at pene | 10 teen Mees, Tale n-,q\fiantly: “And never mind the {Pid growth of the SM.W.IU. and} “But long before that, I had be-| Seribers. Now, the use of super-superlatives | bts SOE One rush Bugane Rr | in the usual hysterical wave of pub- ltetty sattendant upon the appearance of @ few ‘picture is something that) most innocent among us| have learn@d to accept with several’ evsw the grains of s{t. ;But here was some- thing different. Something that made’ ; a lot of pessimistic and tired film fans sit up and lend ear. None of the well-known passion-thrill-mys- tery-love-jé@lotisy-hotcha-legs stuff. sir, SArt!” ““Narratage!”’ “A Revolu- tionaity Téchnique!” And then a learried few words of explanation for And naturally enough the “Ameri- can “public” responded by staying away :in”such huge droves that the night after the “courtesy pass” open- ingy-the swanky Gaiety Theatre held more empty seats than Congress dur- ing, &*filibustering session. And: how a few. words about the “new technique” that had to be re- » sorted.to inorder to “bring so great a drama to the's¢reen.” If the method Enarid in “The Power and the ory’ is new and revolutionary, then So. is,my grandmother's hoop-skirt, “The ;Face-on- the Bar-Room Floor,” and...9. bioycle-built-for-two. None other, than David. Wark Griffith dis- covered it around the year 1908, to- gether.,with a score of other then reyolutionary cinematic forms that are jp use today by Hollywood, often under the fraudulent pretense of be- made him a railroad president from a track-walker. So rugged is his in- dividualism that he manages to direct the slaughter of over 400 railroad during a strike. (There is a \ ed strike-leader in the film , who harangues the strikers. Almost uct cate of the “red” in “Heroes for Sale,” foreign accent and all.) Yes, a tough he-man, our hero, who defies the strike-leader and squelches the men, Hitler fashion. That isn’t all, of course. This murderer whom the officiating minister eulogizes as “a, pehieved by a scene of drunkenness | that lasted throughout a picture...” —SAMUEL BROD’ Stage and Screen Brady To Open Season With Novello Play “Love And Babies” at Cort Theatre “Love and Babies,” a farce by Her- bert McCormack, is now scheduled for Tuesday night, opening at the Cort Theatre with a cast including Ernest Truex, Glen Anders, Linda Watkins and Ruth Weston, “The Chalk Circle.” a ‘Chinese f: tasy by Klabund, with the Englis version by I. S. Richter, will have its ‘This 18 done for several reasons. 1—Space considerations prohibit publica- tion of complete programs, . 2—Most workers are too busy during the day to listen in on the radio, 3—Jobless workers who sometimes spend a day at home (that is, if they have a place to stay and a small radio) report that most morning and afternoon programs are made up of dull, uninteresting exercises, boring advertising speeches and fifth-rate music, Radio comment will appear in this column from time to time. Readers are urged to write to “Tuning In on matters of interest to worker radio fans. 9:30—Bob Fram and Eddie Burke, Songs 9:45—Stlverbell, Soprano 10:00—Ozark Mountaineers 11:00-Hill Orch. 11:30—Koht Oreh. 11:45—Talk—Bide Dudley 12:00—Frank Hazzard, ‘Tenor 12:18 A. M.—Mills Band 12:30—Dance Orch. 12:45—Nalda Nardi, Contralto; Elmo Russ, Organ. WEAF—660 Ke 7:00—Mountaineers Music 7:15—Red Davis—Sketch jers Trio s—Conrad “Thibault, Baritone; Grofe Orchestra 9:00—Gypsles Orch.; Frank Parker, Tenor 9:30—Crime Must Go—Major ¥. W. Brown, Superintendent of Police, Washing- ton, D. Cc. 10:00—El Tango Romantico 10:30—Haenschen Orch.; Arthur Horan, Co- 10:30—Robbins Orch. 11:00—Time; Weather 11:02—Hagelston Orch, 21:30—Aaronson Orch, 32:00—Trini Orch, WJK—760 Ke . Song: lary McCoy, Soprano; Betty Barthell, Songs; Sports Talk i mee id Rice :00—Tours Orch.; Henry Neely, Narrator 0~-Potash and Perlmutter—Sketch, s—Gould and Shefter, Piano Duo ‘00-—Minstrel Show | §NEW YORK.—A sharp telegram protesting against the American pub- lication of Adolph Hitler's book, “My Battle” was sent to the publishers, | Houghton Mifflin Co., in Boston, by the Brooklyn Evening chapter of the National Student League. The telegram declared the stud- ents would do all in their power to spread a boycott of the publication, declaring that it serves as an impetus to Fastist propaganda and the. sup- pression of workers’ and students’ rights in this country. DENIED RELIEF GRETNA, La—Sidney Cormouche applied for relief at the Emergency Relief headquarters and was told that easons!” | Music “Butterfly” To Be Given At | Stadium Tonight — Iturbi Guest Leader Wednesday This evening opera will be given for | the first time at the Stadium. If the | The Metropolitan Opera > | Company Chorus will be used. In case of rain the opera will be post-! poned until the following evening and Willem Van Hoogstraten will substitute his orchestral program of the 22nd in the Great Hall. Van Hoogstraten will conduct his last concert on Tuesday. The pro- gram: Wagner's Prelude to “Dic Meistersinger”; Bach's Air for Sirings from Suite No, 3; “Fledermaus” waltz’, of Johann Strauss, the Ravel Bolero,” and the Brahams First Symphony. {| Jose Iturbi will again appear at the Stadium on Wednesday as guest con- | ductor, directing the Schubert “Un- finished” Symphony in B minor, the Mozart Piano Concerto in E flat (Koechel 482), and the Beethoven Symphony No. 5 in C minor. In the Concerto he will act in the dual capa- the bitter-tasks confronting the union. | The paper is attractively made up, has plenty of workers’ correspond- jence, original pictures and features. Disproportion of News There is one very great dispropor- tion. Two. full pages are devoted to} New York, important as a metal cen- | | ter, but small in comparison to Pitts- | burgh and Chicago-Indiana districts, | | which get only one page. So far as | the Chicago-Indiana districts are concerned, there is a great void. Even the lack of direct news from these velopment: of the struggles in this de- cisive issue can learn a lot from the Steel and Metal Worker. Mrs. Roosevelt in Mine Area Praises Starvation Gardens. MORGANTOWN, Va., Aug: 18. —Mrs. Roosevelt has just com- pleted a two days tour of the north- ern West. Virginia mine fields and is returning to her palatial estate at Hyde Park. The President’s wife | expressed great satisfaction with | the subsistence gardens kept by the unemployed miners. These gardens are called by the | | | gun to work, Appealed to Negroes “Two years ago I went to a| prominent Negro church in Harlem. | I wrote an appeal, called ‘An Ap-| | Workers’ Amusements J["RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL SHOW PLACE of the NATION Direction “Roxy” Opens 10 A. M. Katharine HEPBURN Organizations! DO YOU LIKE 12th Street All Monies and Tickets due the “Daily” from recent Picnic. The Call Is Very Urgent Please give it your immediate attention! the in “MORNING GLORY” And another great “Roxy” produced stage show. GLORIA STUART and EDNA MAY OLIVER MUSIC TADIUM CONCERTS" GIUSEPPE BAMBOSCREK, Conductor TONIGHT AT 8:30—“MME. BUTTERFLY” PRICES: 250, 50c, $1.00. (CIrela 7-757! LARGEST PROLETARIAN GATHERING SEVENTH ANNUAL © DAILY WORKER ® MORNING FREIHEIT © YOUNG WORKER ing. ething. new under the movie | delayed opening this Tuesda: 7 evening median; Conrad ‘Thibault, Baritone; | 2 48 not physically fit for work.|city of pianist and conductor. mifiers “existence gardens,” since ™ “gun "in movie Ia it 7 Songsmiths Quartet;. Girly’ Trio.| When he saw the section chairman hei: ist- b as the ae eke aed Hater ny ft isles kien cea pr hans Ohman and Arden, Piano Duo and asked for work in the. office or they are enough for their exi 11:00—King Orch. Police Put Torch on ence. Unemployed miners havé interrupting the ordinary chronolo-| Adrienne Lachamp heads the cast Rogers Orch. on the committee this was denied + | been living on these ‘gardens” for leat ‘evelopment of the narrative| which also includes Herbect Seemdine” Behn Oreh . | him, ‘He was told to send his brother Jobless’ Shanties| "2" Wine 0%, these earns’ for FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY and~“flashing back” to some other action” or events. “flash-back” as used in “The Power’ and the Glory” differs from itsise’in many other films you heve | seen only insofar as it is consistently | applied to the whole film to form its baéis rather than just as an oc- casional expedient. Events in the life of a dead niin are “narrated” by his} Esther Pinch, Paul Byron and John Hamsa, On Wednesday evening William A. Brady will open his current season with the London play. “A Party.” a comedy by Ivor Novello, with Mrs, Patrick Campbell in the chief role. Others in the large cast include Lora Baxter, Cissie Toftus. Mdward Cran- dall, J. W, Austin and Nita Naldi. 12:30 A, M.—Cole Or WOR—710 Ke 7:00—Sports—-Ford Frick 7:15—Johngon's Music 7:30—The Count of Monte Cristo—Sketch 7:45—Jack: Arthur, Baritone 8:00—Detective Black and Blue—Mystery Drama 8:15—Veronica Wiggins, Contralto 8:30—Morros Musicale ch. ;to work. When he complied the chairman threatened the brother if | he appears here for work, Carmouche is an active worker and is secretary of the International Lab- or Defense here. aes Help improve the “Daily Worker.” send in your suggestions and criticism! Let us know what the workers in your shop think about ‘the “Daily.” HA?TFORD, Conn., Aug. 18.— Over 100 shanties where homeless workers lived were put to the torch by police today. People living in the “squatters colony” at South Meadows stood shivering in the rain as even this cover over their heads was de- liberately being set on fire by the police, seen nothing but green le: fried in lard everyday in their which is praised by the first lady. | WHAT'S ON Monday I..L. D.. “Current Events and the World ‘We Live In” at the Tremont Workers Olub, 1061 Prospect Ave., corner of Tremont. Taft speaker, October 6, 7, 8 at the MAIN HALL OF MADISON SQ. GARDEN (Not in Basement) FOR INFORMATION SEE OR WRITE TO: National Press Bazaar Committee, 50 E. 13th St. New York City, (6th floor)