The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 9, 1933, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE STORY SO FAR: The 8. S. crew is Slim, of the Marine Worke: voyage across the Atlantic, stopping at Copenhagen, Helsingfors, Finland, and Leningrad. Slim has been talking to his fellow-workers about the olass struggle and what they can do meer up with the M.W.LU. In Leningrad, the sailors of the Utah are continually being surprised by the new life they witness in the Soviet port. Through conversations with grad, they learn what the lies in the bosses’ papers kept from them ‘for many years, They return to their ship with a new slant on things. ‘Now read on: * * INSTALLMENT 24 * “If You Ain’t With Us, . You’re Against Us!” 'ER dinner, as soon as they had} finished eating, Gunnar called! Slim up on to the poop, and took him to one side. | “Say Slim do you know they're | going to turn us to this afternoon, | cleaning out the holds?” “Where did you hear this?” , “Third was telling the second, up in the chart-room.” Gunnar continued: “You know; - MICHAEL PELL Illustrations by Philip Wolfe Utah, one of the members of whose rs Industrial Union, has made the about it. He signs the Chief Engi- American-born workers in Lenin- * to be at the bottom of it ail. “You, | too, I guess, hey?” “what?” asked Slim innocently, “Refuse to turn to?” “Sure thing,” answered Slim. “This is Sunday, the day of our Lord Je- sus.” The bos’n sat still a minute. “You know, fellers, I got to take my or- ders from the mate. I ain’t saying nothing, If you don’t’ want to turn to, that’s your business. But I’ve got to go up and tell the mate, that’s all.” DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1933 \ S y) v Ay — SO WHEN I ASKED For YouR DAD THEY The Mystery Solved bok Lire ~, THE NEWSPAPERS PRINTED THREATS AGAINST DAD'S » SOWHEN You BaRGED IN WILO-EYED— WHY ~ TOBY UR, you stE — —from a womb of darkness to a challenge on their lips and in the line of their backs, nursed back to life, back to KENTUCKY-1932 By EDWIN ROLFE They sprang up out. of darkness, shouting @ black world wnderground— suddenly erect after ages of stooping: remembering Greene—the midnight encounters among the hills, the wounded that their women courage; A Sad Story About A Boss and Words on Strategic Walls NEW YORK.—A sensational event occurred in our factory several days ‘ago. The president of the corpora- tion, as even a capitalist would, found ft necessary in the morning to visit the lavatory to make an obeisance to his god. If he expected to find one of his highly-paid employes there in the act of smoking a ciga- rette, he was disappointed, for the room was as silent as a tomb. «DICH man, poor man, beggar- man, thief—all are subject to human prejudice, No matter how respectable or cushioned a man may Hays’ “Trial by Prejudice” Is Not Without Prejudice Hard Facts of Class Struggle Cited in Book |12ss for justice than the rest of us?” Refute Flimsy Thesis of Lawyer By SENDER GARLIN. about the capitalist system, but I recognize that it is the only one we have.” (Not true, Mr. Hays. There’ve been piticosy wieele abi aan a jou } “People, Or Bosses?” Discussing the Mooney frame-up, | Hays asks rhetorically: | “Are the people of California cruel, hard, and vindictive? Do they care - People my eye, Mr. Hays! Mr,’ Fleischacker, leading banker of Oali- | fornia, who, it is reported, holds the mortgage to Gov. Rolph’s |shipping concern is damn prejudiced against Tom Mooney. So is Judge Matt Sullivan, Byington and ‘the whole tribe of legal flunkies for. the power interests of California, So is the prostitute press prejudiced the solitary stand against their masters with only the blue grass, the trees and the hills to aid them— seem to be, he is still in danger unless there is a cool impartiality to all in the judicial system. This He got up and started to go. Slim what I was thinking? I get | eT ee, all Get catlea ater the born. together and refuse to turn to. To other social systems before and aj against Mooney. And no phoney Wading through a sea of cigarette y 3 : superior one to the capitalist system | probings into “psychology” will ex- stubs, he glanced angrily about him. — ge with them; we got to get some sléep.”” | Slim considered. Gunnar called} Stanley up, and broke the news to| hith. ‘Nothing doing,” said Stanley, firmly, “they don’t get me to turn to’again today. And this time I’m standing pat.” Slim advised going down and talking the thing over with all the mén. They had to be quick about it too, so as to be prepared. The three scattered and quietly called all the deck gang into the fo'castle.! Slim motioned to Fritz to come in| too. Everybody was present ex- eept the Swede, who was at the wheel, and the bos’n. Stanley stood watch at the door, and Gunnar spoke up. “Fellers, they want to make us turn to again this afternoon and clean out the holds. I heard the second and third talking about it up in the wheelhouse. What I say is, they made a monkey out of us this morning, but now we all stick together and refuse to turn to. ‘What do you say, fellers?” #0. K. with me” chirped Stanley. | “Me too” added Slim. “And me three.” This from Eddi They looked ‘at the little Fin “Wh-t do you say?” | “Sure I’m with you if all the men) stick together.” a That made five. Lag was lying| jn his bunk, half asleep. Slim shook him. “You with us Lag?” “Whet?” asked Lag. He seemed to rant to dodge the issue. | Gunnar pushed Slim aside and| addressed Lag: ‘Listen, we ain’t| “Listen here, bos'n. We don’t want | it to look like we're going against | you or you are going against us. You are part of the deckgang yourself; you belong with us. How about you going up and telling the mate that | | the whole deck gang including your- | self refuses to turn to?” “Atta boy!” called Eddie. “What | do you say, bos’n?” | “For Christ’s sake, you want me to go up there and tell that to the| mate and then I'll get the blame for the whole job! A hell of a note!” Slim sprang up. “I'll go up with you, or two of us, if you want.” Again the peak slid over the bil- liard ball. The bos’n saw he was in a tight corner. “Naw, this ain’t got nothing to do with me. I'll just tell him what you fellers said, that’s all.” levelled against the dark the stay-at-homes, buried them Asphyxiation of years in their and the soil was no longer the stay-at-homes passed laws on the map and levelled the woods; the work of wires for life and their children’s A hundred years is a long time, But a century is long enough Out of darkness, out of the pits claiming the mountains in the shouting! and then the voices, the soft office voices condemned them to underground imprisonment and Daniel Boone: the axes clearing the wilderness, the long alert rifles before the soft men, under mountains of laws and greenbacks. . memory, and a golden moment of sun remembered— their small farms sheltered by trees and brooks, the long grass drying in the autumn days, crisp in the sun over the rolling hills. And then the little soft men wrote words on paper theirs; in their legislatures and mines ulcerated the hills; they built railroads spanning distant dots tall slim pines became a@ pattern of poles supporting a net- children . 4 « Men die and their grandchildren totter on aged limbs. for the blind to see and the steepers to awake! now— foreigners only to the light of day— sudden glow of battle, welded in a mass array, For an instant his glance rested upon the red-lettered No-Smoking sign. Then it moved to what he had opti- mistically thought to be a clean, white-washed wall. To his dismay, however, he could not see the wall at all for it appeared that some persons had written a symposium and used the wall as their manuscript and none other than the president, him- self, as the subject of their genu- flections. But their worship seemed unreal and insincere for the lan- guage and expressions employed were so abusive that the man recoiled in terror and disgust. And there above his head, large as’ life, were the words, “Workers of the world unite!” Rushing out dazedly yet defiantly, the president approached the detec- tive of our factory, a worker em- Ployed to betray his comrades, and whispered a few words into his ear. Ten minutes later a porter was ob- served entering the lavatory, draw- ing after him a pail of water and a mop. Throughout the entire morning he worked and at intervals of twenty seconds or so the detective ap- proached the lavatory and looked in suspiciously. (During one of these intervals, he almost caught me smok- ing, but. I saw him in time.) Well, the porter worked industriously. He even gave the walls a new coat of whitewash. But about five minutes after the porter had completed his job, the detective walked into the lavatory. The room was empty, but someone had written another exhor- tation on the wall, even more severe | than the last. Now. the detective sits in the lavatory all day, the presi- dent serving him with lunch at noon. our Constitution guarantees. (So did the Constitution, by the Dred Scott decison, guarantee slavery— S.G.). But neither constitutions, laws, nor systems of procedure can assure even-handed justice. Only a recognition of the frailties of human nature, a realization that emotions are compelling and the ‘will to believe’ dominant, a decent respect for dissident opinion, and most of all tolerance, will tend to- ward a situation where trial by law will supplant trial by prejudice,” This is the credo of Trial by Pre- judice,* a book by Arthur Garfield Hays, general counsel for the Amer- ican Civil Liberties Union. ‘The 358-page volume contains a discussion of some 15 outstanding and typical cases in which the element of prejudice, according to the author, played a dominant role. More than a third of the book is taken up with the Scottsboro case; other much-pub- licized cases include Mooney and, Bil- lings; Centralia, Gastonia, Angelo Herndon, Leo Frank, Sacco-Vanzetti, McNamara; Herrin, Ill.; Haywood- Moyer-Pettibone, Greco and Garillo, and finally—Charles E. Mitchell—a case where the “public,” according to the author, seems to have revealed a terrific prejudice against a poor, harrassed banker, the former chair- man of the National City Bank who was charged with defrauding the gov- ernment of $850,000 in income taxes, (P. S.—The banker was acquitted), This Mysterious Prejudice already exists—in the Soviet Union.) Attacks LL.D., Communist Party Swathed in this convenient, lucra- { tive, easy-going “philosophy,” is a deliberate, venomous and not too sub- tle attack upon the International % ARTHUR GARFIELD HAYS Labor Defense and the Communist Party. Under the cloak of unctuous Ubertarianism, Hays seeks to discredit the effective mass defense policies of the IL.D., which thus far has suc- ceeded in saving the Scottsboro boys (for whom Hays expresses such patronizing solicitude) from the Ala- bama electric chair. Hays naturally gives the treacherous National As- sociation for the Advancement of plain this prejudice. | Karl Marx, himself a student of the law, in his preface to “Oritique of Political Economy,” wrote: “I was led by my studies to the conclusion that legal relations as well as forms of the state could neither |be understood by themselves nor ex- jplained by the so-called general. | progress of the human mind, but that | they are rooted in the material con- ditions of life... P | “The mode of production in ma-: terial life determines the general \character of the social, political and | spiritual processes of life. It is not | the consciousness of men that deter- |mines their existence, but on- the |contrary their social existence - de-- |termines their consciousness.” A To many of us, at least, Marx's’ * analysis of “prejudice” will be found much more revealing than the one offered by Arthur Garfield Hays, who _ himself was written a violently pre- judiced book. Help improve the “Daily Worker.” » send in your suggestions and criticism! . Let us know what the workers, in, your shop think about the “Daily”. ny Amusements _ RADIO CITY MUSIC SHOW PLAOR of the NATION Direction “Roxy” Opens 11:30 AM, “Lady for a Day” : Warren William—May Robson - got no time to lose. You heard) ye hurried out. This is our land, we planted its first seed! ay iis ie iat that 2 Fite gous Bava Nt ie tong a Colored People a perfectly clean bill if pega Migr dL what I told the fellers. Are you! Gunnar called after him: “Remem- ‘These are our mines, our hands dig the coal! ine of it. ‘4 fae) only from seven {Something that is “inherent in human of health, and leads his readers into poe ee a” Sener. oe with us?” ; ber, bos’n, if you ain’t with us, you're These roads are ours, the wires across the land to -thirty, Just half an hour,|2ature?” Is it some malevolent qual- the blind alley of that impotent li- ||] 38e to 1 p.m.—sSe to 6 (Ex. Sat. & Sun.) ‘This tone made a dent. “Sure I! against us!” are ours! THIS IS OUR EARTH! soph * |ity that exists in a vacuum, irrespec- beralism which finds it possible for RKO Greater Show Season ——~{] ~ am” responded Lag, adding in self- defense: “don’t you see I’m sleep- ing already, and I ain’t getting up until ifs time to take the wheel.” “Tht makes six’ said Gunnar| alond. He turned to the Ordinary | ang the Professor. “How about you} tw?” The Polack spoke up first: “I’m with the rest of the gang.” Young Eddie was excited and went over to the Professor: “Now’s the time to show your guts, Prof. The Professor pretended to be in- sulted. “Of course I'll stick with the gang, no matter wHat happens. Now Slim spoke up. “Listen fel- lers, let’s stick to our word now. Nobody wer kone. agreed?” Pade tciedips nodded. Slim ad- vised Fritz to mosey around | midships and see what was going om there. Stanley opened the door (CONTINUED TOMORROW) Free Tuition Offered by Workers School to Ousted CC Students NEW YORK—The 21 students who were expelled from the College of the City of New York last spring by Dr. Frederick G. Robinson, presi- dent of the college, for their part in staging an anti-war demonstra- tion, have been offered free tuition for courses at the Workers School, 35 East 12th St., the School an- nounced yesterday. These 21 students were expelled for steging a counter-demonstration to an R.O.T.C. military display going on at the same time in the Lewisohn Stadium. On seeing the demonstra- Under the smoke of bullets and the gray sky reddening to dawn, spring to their places! One by the dead awaken, the old ones Under the blood and the lead, hunger, gaps appear in their ranks, but others one quicken with anger and life! The moving ranks surge like the smoke of the coal they dig in solid, unconquerable phalanx! Assassins’ bullets, bankers’ laws— these cannot stop their sure advance! their feet pound the old mountains. Under the night of stars of a fading era, they light the blazing signals of a world in birth. * (From “We Gather Strength,” 2 book of poems by Herman Spector, | Joseph Kalar, Edwin Rolfe, 8. Funaroff, Introduction by Michael Gold.) | yet I worked seventy hours last week, including all day Sunday. I see that it is past my bedtime so I shall say good-night. I am sending you a reminder of the lavatory epi- sode. Between puffs of smoke, keep ® close watch about you, for the de- tective may be lurking somewhere in the brush, WHAT'S ON-- | Saturday CONCERT AND DANCE for young dele-| gates to the Youth Congress Against War and Fascism. Quirt chalk talk, plano recital and others at Ne ¢ Group, 23 W. 17th) St. Refreshments served, Admission 150. 8:30 p. m. GET-TOGETHER DANCE AND ENTER- TAINMENT Cuban nite and Cuban talent. tive of economic and social forces? There is prejudice against the Ne- gro in the South, Mr, Hays assures us. But is that prejudice just a hu- Tesult of the economic basis of south- ern economy by which 9,500,000 Ne- groes are viciously exploited on farm ahd in factory? The Italian worker in the New Eng- land textile mill is looked down upon as a “wop”—the result of prejudice, Mr. Hays would undoubtedly explain. But the same swell folks who consider Italian immigrant workers “wops” break their backs in genuflexions when in the society of the Italian bourgeoisie, Hays’ discussion of the Scottsboro frame-up is a competent though un- inspired summary of the facts and the law in the case, the most vivid Portions obviously being quotations man quirk, a mere caprice, or is it a/ him to support the Roosevelt-Wall Street government in a spirit of high enthusiasm, “The International Labor Defense convinced the mothers of some of |the defendants that every hand was raised against them except those of |mothers (he adds with unconcealed | malice) bobbed up in various parts lof the country,” insinuating that | these tortured women were imposters. The hard facts of the class struggle which Mr. Hays must necessarily | record in the discussion of the various |Cases he cites sharply disprove his American Premiere— “An Hour W ADDED |] ATTRaction the Communists,” Hays writes. “These | with IVAN MOSKVIN and Moscow Art Theatre Players PUDOVKIN’S “MECHANICS OF THE BRAIN” by Prof. L. P. Paviow of the Russian Academy of Science STARTING MONDAY:— “96 CGMMISSARS” KO 4th St. & 4 RKO Jefferson 30" 3. * | Now HELEN BAYES & ROBERT er fs in “Another Language” and “THE STRANGER’S RETURN” | LIONEL BARRYMORE & MIRTAM HO! | 800K YOUR DATES NOW || At FIFTH AVENUE THEATRE | Broadway and 28th Street | | For CONCERTS, LECTURES, PICTURES, | | THEATRICAL ‘PERFORMANCES, ETC. | | Large stage, fully equipped, 1500 seats. | |For particulars phone BOgardus 4-9608 | w Soviet Masterpiec th Chekhov” : + tion, Dr. Robinson went towards from the testimony of the witnesse: Rt nd sprang into his bunk. It was Beer and Pretzels free. N.S.L., 583 Sixth y 0! e eases 4th Street and. |, five tKinutes to one. Gunnar took pe Serves Spee Ro Pie eek Up Ave. 8:30 p.m, Admission 200, at both the Scottsboro and Decatur|} wine, MCME THEATRE Wiss] > his shoes off and got under the sheets. The ordinary and the Pro- sequently expelled. BY JOHN REED ARTIST at Empire Garden, fepsor followed suit. Slim started “yey of them, informed of th | Couneli Upper Harlem: “Admission ibe.” | owing heavily (without acknowledge- | WEDNESDAY SEPT. 13th, at 8:30 P. M. ading. A couple of minutes any of em, in of the ment) from Ernest Jerome Hopkins’ | - * « ry Bisesitie Workers School's offer, have already A Soviet Film Version of Gorki's Famous Novel “MOTHER’ passed and sure enough the bos’n turned up, scratching his dome with’ the peak of his cap as usual. This time he hed a new line. | “God damn it, I think I'll become | . bolshevik myself. Work, work, work, that’s all you get on these damn cap- | italist ships. You know what we got’ to Ho now?” | the meeting. The students were sub- expressed a desire to utilize the Schools’ courses and are speaking of it to their fellow-students. “Daily” Chorus Will Start Fall Activity Howard Barlow will present Bee-) thoven’s immortal Symphony No, 3 WJZ—760 Ke * 7:00 P.M.—John Herrick, Songs 7:18—Bthel Waters, Songs CONCERT DANCE AND .CHALK TALK | _ CONCERT AND DANCE BY NAT TURNER | BR. L.L.D., at Unemployed Council Hall, 459 E. 171st. Hot music! Admission 5c. PARTY AND ENTERTAINMENT, Y.C.L. ‘Unit 4, Section 5. 1447 Wilins, Apt, 64, Bronx. Admission 10¢, GARDEN PARTY BY BATH BEACH WORKERS CLUB in Comrade Scapes’ gar- den, 8665 21st Ave. trials. He adds little that is new in his chapter on the Mooney case, bor- dramatic book, “What Happened in the Mooney Case.” ‘The same goes for the sections on Centralia, Sacco-Vanzetti and the other famous labor frame-ups which have become the particular contribu- tion af the American capitalist class to Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence. “1905 aa Also “BUILDING SOCIALISM IN U. S. S. R.” and “LENIN”, the great revolutionist in action Dancing After the Movies — Admission 20c; at Door 25¢ Masterpiece of the Great Soviet Director. PUDOVKIN | (Eroica”) as the highlight of the; /'s\—ei, ce | _ BATH BEACH WORKERS CLUB, ATTEN-| Implying that the Communists are WORKERS’ CENTER, 35 EAST 12th STREET Bes ieee ke fr Poet coke |_ NEW YORK.—Not later than Wed- | Symphonic Hour broadcast over mr Bketoh; Jesters Vocal ‘rio;| ZION: Unit, party benefit Daily Worker. not interested in defending individ- |} Auspices: Sec. 2, Communist Party—50% of Proceeds for Datly Worker, back a laugh. The bos’n addressed | Nesday, Sept. 13, the Daily Worker WABC and the Columbia network, 4.59 Seilcctio Oreh Birmund Spaeth; shir-| BOOKA. Bring triends. | Admission 100, ae rian hi he Beviecaed yr Ks himself to Slim: Volunteers Chorus will start its fall tomorrow from 3 to 4 p. m. ley Howard, Son; g A ocian bebo ae Da ere (primarily interest hip ocsee ceo etree CE Seana “We got to clean out number four | and, five holds today yet. What do activity. After a period of ten weeks, during which Lahn Adohmyan, con- In addition to the Beethoven sym- Lid 8:30—Brown and Liew: 1» Com Sat Huubilly Songs asad 9:00—Tales of the Titans; Agnes’ Strick- DAILY WORKER ADVERTISING WILL ning recruits for the fight against capitalism, Hays declares that: PHILADELPHIA, PA, "9 | | WITH T.U.U.L. UNIONS, mass — ——___—___— — think of that, comrade? ductor of the chorus, was at Camp | phony, Barlow will direct the orches- bee a cceeate = os is “It is a mistake to leave the fight - 5 out e . ” A 8, 3; Mary Steele, .| port the “Daily.” Send all information to| - ot ay ate Fe give midships the Tittee of the Daily Worker Volun-/ spirited Hungarian March, ___tralto; ‘Edward ie: Mentone the business office, §0 F. 13th St. (8th floor)| rial as propaganda to flaunt our PHILKINO THEATRE, 2222 Market Street tae “\teers Chorus recruited many new We ake sd 10:30—Cuckoo Program, with Ray Knight | oF telephone AL. 4-~ hypocricy and to condemn our in- chance to say he had } Jeader. When he came back into the fo’castle, the bos’n and Gunnar were Fou heard me!” Gunnar was say- members, ‘The aim of the Chorus is to develop two new sections—one in the Work- ers Colony, 2700 Bronx Park East, TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660 Ke 12:00—King Orch. ‘12:80 A.M.—Childs | EATS, ENTERTAINMENT, 693 Sherman | Ave., Bronx, Apt. 6, near Concourse, Ad-! mission 10c. MEMBER OF EAST BR. FSU, just re- turned from 8.U., report on trip at 1330 stitutions. We who believe in toler- ance should be the first to battle for the victims of intolerance, even though we loather their views.” Opening Attraction “THE PATRIOTS” ADMISSION Exclusive showing of all Soviet Russian Feature Films and Short Subjects: ‘A DAY IN MOSCOW’ | 2e and 30 % and another section in Harlem. On! 7:00 ¥.M.—Davis Orch. hai oes Wilkins Ave., neat Freeman St. Also con-| Mr. Hays urges a fight for individ- |] Greatest Soviet Sound Film to date.) Cam hony of a Red Cit; Sand that goes for me, too," added | Wednesday at 8 P.M. all the new| 7ab—issk snd tortie Cements, aes, | |; © WMCA—B70 Ke dos ban ‘ckcoing, uals in order to save “our institu: Senbinions weplormAndé tin tee aber ae Bs Ms ™ “ ley. and old members will gather at the with George Frame Brown ‘RIS P.M.—Mildred Bailey, Songs; Bton| SPAGHETTI PARTY, 9 p. m., by Unit 16,| tions,” but charges the Communists Saturday & Holidays 11 A.M, to 21 P.M, ‘The bos’n looked up towards Slim.|club rooms of the Daily Worker Vol- 00—Lucille Peterson, Songs Boys Quartet; Orch. Section 2, West Side Workers Club, 210 W.| with making propaganda when they It was plain that he Slim | unteers, 35 E. 12th St Register Now for Fall Term! WORKERS SCHOOL CLASSES IN’ Soctology-Psychology Historical Materialism Science and Dialectics History of Class Struggle Revolutionary Journalism Revolutionary Theatre English and Russian Langeages 1:30—Elder Michaux and Congregation 68th St. Entertainment, chalk tall. Admis- fight for individuals as part of the 8:00—Evan Evans, Baritone Ton fee. All ROSIER the Gd ASK ABOUT SPECIAL DISCOUNT TICKETS THRU DISTRICT OFFICE. Foe Late Ganadeoaro ian) tibsGray Orch. Rae is for Daily Worker. | sont against the system which frames Mourenux, Soprano; Ludovle Huot, oe a ae Orca ematles fainment., Chalk talk, drama, group, musteal| REM. i i ” bbber a " ‘ 3 , mustea Bass r; Concert yo as Le Carlile, | ie songs, te. Featuring Denne Mannan | It 1s, of course, quite superfioug Connecticut—Take Notice 8. Cohen, President Atlanta, Journal, and Others; Musle by New York Are ists 12:00—Ralph Kirbery, Songs 18:05 A.M.—Gerston Orch. 12:30—Fisher Orch, ee 8 WOR—710 Ke 7:00 P.M.—Sporte—Ford Frick Tis—To Be Announced 9: 10x 10:30—Prom Montreal, Canada — Bingi “Strings nt find music marvels at Manhattan Youth | Club, 114 Ludlow St. Admission 25c. REGISTRATION NOW ON FOR WORK- ERS SCHOOL. Fall term. Office 35 E, 12th ‘St. Room 301. ry ALL GREETINGS for Party anniversary edition should be sent to business office of Daily Worker immediately. HOUSE PARTY at French Workers Club, 40 W. 65th St. 8:30 p. m. Admission free. OUTING TO CAMP NITGEDAIGET— Auspices Food Workers Industrial Union. Buses leave Co-operative Colony at 6 p., m. Return Sunday night. Register in advance For information call Che. 3-0505, for Hays to inform the reader that he is not a “radical.” He's been ac- cused of “incorrigible opportunism,” the Civil Liberties lawyer says, with an attempt at whimsy. But that charge apparantly doesn't faze him in the least for, says he: “To me this means taking the world as I find it, I am not keen “Trial by Prejudice,” by Arthur Garfield Hays, Covici-Friede, $2.50. SAT. SEPT. 9 Tolstoi Club | 706 Hallet Street Bridgeport, Conn. 6 and 8 pm, EXCITING—STARTLING—STIRRING = New Soviet Film Based on ” ty M. Gorki’s Famous Novel “Mother Masterpiece of the great Soviet Director J ents oer PUDOVKIN ROYCE touring for the “Daily”, |. XN History of the Russian Revolution cette Spmpnony Oren. Poster ater, ee Phi ae wOx: See Wd ‘will speak ot all showings i History of American Labor Movement Bass; Philip James, Conduct junday Added Attraction et Quickly. D ‘ . 9:00—Holst_ Orch. “Needle Worker’ Out First Gala Concert 9 . rcs Get Ne Deseript we Booklet a ster ” i das—John De Buerls, clarinet; Josephine| Ben Gold and Louis soot Bu re ui ra pe RADE. The Litile Ci sNews Rede Sa ee Disappoin' lew D ve Register Now! imagine eget i y ren ee ae Truck leaves 10 t. m, sharp from 210 W, aizgstyh ted Bader cag atte Cinema ism in Soviet Union, WORKERS SCHOOL, 35 E, ith STREET, 3rd_ Floor || 19:00—Helene Senet : Saar oe ae Worker | CAGE pichtas” dla 'op tub aeeanian pen lke eee % Howe Street ~ PRONE: ALGONQUIN £4 Duo; mat : e which is just out. The articles deal | workers Club, Sunday, Sept. 10, MW SATURDAY, SEPT. 9th Revolutionist in Action. / WARLEM BRANCH WORKERS SCHOOL 10:30—-Organ Ri mainly with the Dressmakers’ Gen-| s. m. at Witsel Park, 2nd Ave. and 10th ‘d ‘! New Haven, Conn. i oa i Leeoout orn eral Strike, but also give reports on | Street, tig Rr yey Ged | Agee em el bond ped nt dg cont. Start 2 BENEFIT OF THE ‘DAILY WORKER J / Registration now’ on at 1102—Gerston Orch. les led by the Needle ‘Trades | Directions: Take Corona line to Flushing PROSPECT WORKERS Meeeng, Mars 9 Eee, 900 WEST 125th ST., ROOM 2128 Re aga ge Aira Ur in tis er jn get them College Point street car to 1157 So, Boulevard, Bronx

Other pages from this issue: