The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 12, 1933, Page 5

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Illustrations by Philip Wolfe THE STORY SO FAR: “The crew of the 8.8. Utah, after the boat has stopped at Copenhagen, felsin) turn to their boat, deeply fitipressed by what they have seen in the Soviet port, as contrasted with the when they are awakened a *. for an hour before beginning’ work; . on Sunday, their day off, they,refuse. In this move their leader is Slim, ’ @ member of the Marine Workers Industrial Union. Yesterday you read | ‘how the seamen organized themselves for strike. * * * INSTALLMENT 26 is The Men Stick. didn’t have to wait’ Jong. Rigged out in his dress uniform and most offical manner, the mate came into the fo’castle, followed by the bos'n. It looke d like the mate had put his Sunday uniform on to »Make an impression on the men; ~ “What's wrong here?” Silence,-““The bos’n tells me you men refuse to turn to, What’s the matter?” ~ Gunnar spoke up. “Plenty. Get us up 4:30 in the morning on a Sunday and then keep us standing over.,an hour for nothing. No coffee made or nothing. are “ The mate broke in: “I gave orders 1 that the mess was to have,.soffee made for you. And if the tugs didn’t show up, that wasn’t my fault either. We, the skipper, myself, and, all of us—had to wait around, just, like you. did.” : He stopped, waiting for Gunner to answer, but Gunnar said nothing further. The mate turned,.to, the bos’n: “Who started all this,anyway, him?” Sart The bos’n shook his head. “I don’t tmow anything about it, except what T told you.” “All “right,” “we'll see.” ‘ Turning to the first bunk/*Avhich was Slim's, he asked: ple promised the mate, “You, Rogers, do you refuse to turn to?” “Yes,” answered Slim, crisp-’ as toast. 108 Next was Lag. “Zoi?” a “Yes, sir.” my Next, Gunnar.rHe didn’t bother asking Gunnar “but Gunnar id “Yes” anyhow. Next was the little Finn. “How about you?” raey “Well, I'll do whatever the.others do,” answered he. The first crack in the ice. Next) was Eddie. The mate started to ask him then changed his mind: “No, you were night watchman. You get some sleep.” * Next was the Polack. “How about you?” = -"T’m with the rest of the gag.” And last came the Professor:“The mate almost considered it unneces- sary, feeling sure he had the S= sor in his hands, but asked anyway: “And you?” me * ‘m with the rest of the “ellérs, Be. The mate, Mr. Charles Calder, @pened his eyes wide. “What, .you, too? Well, YOU ought to be . jramed of yourself!” * The Professor had at first “looked as though he was, but this remark, in front of the whole gang, rubbed him the wrong way. He wasn't’ ¢lass- conscious,—he didn’t reaily belotix to the working class,—but he had pride. He surprised everybody by fitriging back: “Never mind about my being ashamed of myself. As iung a yarn back here, working and li? ‘with these men, I'll stick with thy »:.too.” That stopped the mate. Tais all- around militancy took him down a/ peg or two, but he quickly recoyered himself and resumed his stern;-effi- 2 ciel tone. “Very weil. Cap! word, I shall report this to in Hortense. This is your final it?” . He waited to see if anybody “wolld | change his mind. But nobody ,qid. The mate turned and went out..And the Bos'n followed him uke the. tail between a do: legs. -“Th's Ain’t No Bolsheyik Ship!” “ waited a minute, then n ley started off: “Por Christ's’ sake, Gunnar,, What was you telling. him aout cofiee and all that? What-we want. is a dollar an hour overtinie.” “Yeah,” added the Polack,..‘fyou gummed-up the works,” o ier Gunnar tried to defend himself-by declaring the mate cut him off. Wait a minute,” called Slim. “There was nothing lost in, Jetting him know about this morning,,,too. | We'll get plenty of chance to about that dollar an hour yet.” “What do you think the skipper will do?” queried the Professor, Slim smiled quietly. “Put. us in irons maybe.” eos But the Professor wasn’t © d. Eddie jumped over and shook’ him by the hand. Fritz came in, looked around, then signalled out the alley- way. Bobbie pretended to be going into the toilet. Fritz motioned him to come in, Tthen came Shorty, ms a mug of coffee in his hand as a d. ‘They wanted to know what had taken * place and the men explained. Stanley covered the door again. “Fritz, you take a walk up to the galley and see what you caiii sé,” ordered Slim. Then on ‘sécdiid thought: “Wait! Take a couple of empty beer bottles or something go up to the boat deck. See / tpurks is doing.” i 0 Pritz smiled ahd whispered. “You're giving me all the sweet jobs! | it do 7 get for it?” His anarp. i eyes were sparkling with excitement. a shoved him good-naturedly through the door: “You're a comratie, ain’t you?” pho Slim turned to Shorty and Bobbie. “You fellows better clear out. Know what to do now, don’t you?” © ~ “well. I don’t know if I can get the others,” offered Shorty, “but I'm with youse.” “Me, too,” added Bobbie. “But I'm going down below now. I'll talk to the other men, but how will we know whet happens?” = act) ane “Eddie will come gpwn and keep * you men informed,” ‘EZ machinist and firemen left. Ec die started to protest about nc being on the committee but this w: nat 130 one morning and have to wait around DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER JIM MARTIN IT can't TELL you HOW soRRY TAM TIMMY— BELIEVE ME , THOSE cops gfors, and Leningrad, U.S.S.R., re- ports in the other countries. So, and when they are ordered to work Now read on: 12, 1933 What! A Job? f OU, X GUESS YLt FORGET (T, AR, BROWN— FT MR. Me SMooF. DOING ALITTLE WORK IN TOWN MEAN CHIEFS J SUPPOSE You ARE LooKiNnG FOR WORK -—' (Mc SaooT MIGaT HELP You ALITTLE now impossible since he wasn’t called | on to work, and Slim explained that he had other very important duties. “The first thing you must do, Ed- die, is when the Swede comes off the wheel, tell him what took place and get him to strike with us. In case they want you to relieve him at the wheel, you refuse. Can you steer?” “Yes, last trip I steered.” “Well, this trip you don’t know how, understand? Deck boys ain’t supposed to steer anyway, according to the Shipping Rules.” ‘The men began to have more confi- . seg hay Te psae yom (This is the second of three, ROBE The Life RT MINO Story of New York’s Communist Candidate for Mayor By Philip Sterling | | “Such incidents, common in the newspaper artist, put his self-ac- “But the main thing, Eddie, is to pull the blackgang and stewards out | in case anything happens!” | The kid suddenly realizea what | | serious job this meant, and looked} | embarrassed. Slim proposed that Ed- die be allowed to choose someone to articles dealing with the his- tory of Robert Minor in a se- ries discussing the three lead- ing candidates of the Commu- nist Party in the approaching ybody came up for air. Stan- | replace him on the committee. The Rage . een liked this democratic procedure | municipal elections.) and agreed. The kid looked on the| * s * | |deck a minute, then walked over to! OBERT MINOR has for twenty- five years been writing, organiz- | ing and agitating against the en- slavement, jim-crowing, social in- equality and persecution of Negroes. | |He began to do this shortly after | joining the Socialist Party in 1907.) But, he says, the Socialist Party | policy made it impossible to accom- plish anything in this direction. Real work began only after the Commu- | | nist Party was formed and had clari- | | fied its policy. | For five years he was head of the | | Negro Department of the Communist | Party’s Central Executive Commit-_ tee of which he is a member. | Absently and incessantly drawing | the Roman letter S, a habit retained from his old sign-painting days, Mi- | nor sat at his littered desk and re- | viewed his early interest in the liber- | ation of the Negro masses from their | | Position as the most phasis bedi tt | " . |section of America’s working class. Nobo Ene oe eg ones The present situation in New York “Til show him if I'm ashamed of | City has stimulated this inter-| myself or not.” Bes anew. Relief, public health and | | | Fritz rapped on the door. He stuck | | his head in and said quickly: “The |mate’s coming again. He and the| | skipper and the Baltic pilot have| i * ee }nicipal problem, been putting their heads together Up | Minor’s “Error” the Projessor. “Him!” | This was a surprise. The Professor | was perhaps the most, surprised, but | he jumped out of his bunk: “That's a go witn me, if you men don’t object!” York are to him and his party a ma~ | there. ks i ing.” | r | So Dacaeat leas agen Minor relates that during his early | | Fritz ducked, The men resumed | thei itions: | days, riding back toward home from | , + tise, Title isin wong Pogy, was, taut. |e railroad bridge-gang Job he hed | stereotyper on the San Antonio Ga-|McGrady, and the writings on. So- | quit, in a box-car he made the ac- |quaintance of three bs bootleg- vised him, “and don’t say nothing.” |8¢TS, old-style. Three or four Negro Mr. Mate came in again, suit end | Workers hopped onto the same box- tight-lipped as an admiral. ‘This time |C@" 8nd when Minor produced some his tail remained outside the fo'castle | COoKies from his pocket he commit- door, |ted the error (for the “white man’s’ “Well, men,” he began in # court- |South) of offering the cookies to the i f | Negroes first. A quarrel followed in ee Voice. “You still refuse to tum | which Minor saved himself from the 02” | | ty | Nobody answered. Slim was on the Bowie knives of the bootleggers only | i is | point of speaking up, but decided to Decause he Ee meee et Jet the enemy spin himself out. i i “Nobody change their mind yet?” repeated the mate darkly. | Silence. Everything was tense.| Gunnar squirted an oyster into the | spittoon. | “Very well, then!” He sounded threatening. “You will each take the consequences, This ship is at sea now, | and the captain has commanded ey- | ery man who refuses orders to re- port to him at once!” | | phe Now Slim spoke up. “The crew has | | elected a committee of three men to| MOSCOW, U.S.S.R—One hundred | represent them. This committee will| symphonic concerts will be broad- go up and see the captain,’ | casted the coming fall and winter The mate raised his eyebrows. “So | season by the Radio Center of Mos- | that’s it, eh? You and your God-| cow. Two of the symphonies, Haydn's damn bolshevik agitation started all| “Seasons of the Year,” and Stravin- this, hey? Well, we will see about] ski's “Sacre du Printemps,” will re~ you!” The mate became ferocious | quire an orchestra of 400 to 500 mu- and shook his fist. “To hell with sicians. To perform these two sym- your Goddamn committees. This ain't phonies it will be necessary for the no bolshevik ship you're on now!” | Radio Center to employ the orches- tras of the Bolshoi Theatre and Mos- : Turning to the men he scowled: | jnwery man here who's standing with | 1 (Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra) besides that, of its own. | this bolshevik, every man who re- nervous. He looked sick. “You better lay down,” Gunnar ad- Moscow To Broadcast 100 Symphonic Concerts jor campaign issue and a major mu- | . | Nigger we lynched at San ‘Angelo,’ | Teading Marx and Engels because | On Air This Season | life of the Southwest, forced me to| quired skill in drawing won him an | think,” said Minor, “and some years | opportunity to do what he wanted |later, when I became a Socialist, I |most to do then, draw cartoons, | believed for a while that I had found| Meanwhile he came into contact | the real instrument for overthrowing | with a man who, he says, did more |the conditions under which Negro | to influence his life than any other workers live. But during all of my | except Lenin. “It was Leo Caplan, a early youth I worried and wondered tall, gaunt, serious Jew, and the no- about this strange question of peo- | blest man I had ever known. At last from him I got, to understand the Socialist movement.” Caplan, a doctor, got Minor inte: ested in the trial of William D. Hay- wood, general secretary of the Wes ern Federation of Miners, who was| at that time on trial for his life in| the Colorado labor wars. Minor read | avidly, and whensthe Haywood-Pet- tibone-Moyer frame-up stirred the American labor movement to r doubled struggle, Bob Minor joined the Socialist Party, became a Tegu-| -- |lar distributor of the “Appeal to Rea- | = |son,” and after a while became a} | member of the City Central Commit- | | tee of the St. Louis S. P. local, | | Wanted to Read Marx | | Once in the Socialist Party, Minor’s | | torturing interest in the question of | | Persecution of Negroes reawakened. | | He volunteered to organize Negroes | as members of the Socialist Party of St. Louis and sought to interest the other socialist leaders in the problem. There were no Negroes in the Party. The beginnings of his dis- ROBERT MINOR AT A DEMONSTRATION ple who were not treated as humans. | illusionment with the Socialist Par- One of the most terrible and disturb- | ty, however, came almost at the mo- medical facilities and improved hous-| ing moments of my life was when I) Ment he joined. The green, small- ing for the jobless Negroes of New| was 16. A white man showed me a|t0wn Texan heard of Karl Marx and shrivelled object that he carried as| wanted to read his. works. Otto Paul, a pocket souvenir. ‘It’s the ear off aj local leader advised him against they were “out of date.” Instead he Stereotyper at 20 | offered such works as “Socialism and At 20 Minor got a job as assistant | the Family,” by the Reverend Father said the man.” zette on the strength of his state-| Cialism of another preacher, Rev. ment that he could make cartoons, | C-_H. Vail. : His cartoons, published by the pa-|_ Still Minor remained active in St. per with neither credit nor extra | Louis. But when the Socialist Party pay for him, won city-wide popu-| divided into two camps on the ques- larity and when one of his fellow- | tion of “direct action,” and “Big Bill” workers suggested that he ought to | Haywood was expelled from the Na- go to St. Louis and try to get a job|tional Executive Committee, Minor as a regular cartoonist on the St. | ‘topped out, too. Louis Post-Dispatch, Minor quit his | 7 job and headed northeast, (Don’t miss tomorrow’s install- His first assignments on the Post- | ment of this fascinating life-story Dispatch were the routine of any! of Robert Minor.) ty ENE —— SS The sparkling Overture to “Der Freischutz” will open an_ all- Weber concert to be broadcast by the Columbia Symphony Orches- tra, under the direction of Howard Barlow, tomorrow, from 10:45 to | 19:00 ms 11:15 p. m,, over the WABC-Col- | 20:35 —Gurrent Bvente—Hatlan Eugene Read. umbia network. The Overture in-| 11:00—Time; weather, .:. cludes a beautiful horn quartet, }1:%5—~osea uns" which does not appear in the op-, 12:00—Dantzig Orem « era, as well as the familiar themes | * PRLoRF ANA which form a prelude to the story. | WJZ—760 Ke lers Revue. 9:30—Footlight Echoes, 10:00-—Organ Recitah -— 0: | drive. | fuses to do duty now, go up and re- port to the captain AT ONCE!” | A couple of the men started to get |up out of their bunks. The mate turned quickly on his heel and went out. His tail, surprised and worried by this unexpected stubborn mili- ‘talk | tancy, drapped limply behind. (CONTINUED TOMORROW) 500 in Los Angeles Put Back Furniture of a Sick Negro Los ANGELES.—Five hundred re- lief workers and members of the Un- employed Council put the furniture } | | .| back into the home of Mrs. Rose Finelsen, 1511 E, Adams, an unem- ployed Negro worker who had been evicted from her home, while she was sick in bed. The workers turned on the gas, lights and water and the next morning sent down a large com- mittee to the welfare office and forced the county to pay the rent and furnish medical aid. They also got the gas, water and light bill paid and a grocery order, When a worker came to the meet- ing of Local 7 of the Relief Workers Protective Union and reported that a sick worker had been evicted and was lying sick in the street, the meeting was adjourned end about 500 workers vent en masse to the evicted worker’ yome and put the furniture back. Workers from several other locals of he R. W. P. U. also came and dem- onstrated, ——_—————— BANQUET IN PROVIDENCE PROVIDENCE, R, T—A Commu- aist Party banquet to celebrate the l4th anniversary will be held Sunday, ‘eptember 17, 8 p.m. at Swedish oll, 59 Chestnut St. Comrade N, darks, district organizer, will Speak. sere will be good food, music and oncing. Two-Year Advanced Study Course Offered By Workers School NEW YORK —In line with its policy of providing a more thorough training in Marxism-Leninism for its students, the Workers’ School is offering in the fall term a two-year course of study. Special records will be kept and students will be required to pass an examination after the completion of each term. After two years of study, the student will re- ceive a certificate from the Workers’ School. The two-year course will include Principles of Communism, Political Economy, Marxism, Leninism, His- torical Materialism, Negro Prob- lems, Imperialism, Trade Union Strategy, Organization Principles, History’ of Class Struggles, Social and Political Forces in American History, and Revolutionary Jour- nalism. Students who complete this two- year course will be equipped to teach groups and classes, Mass organiza~ tions, unions, and units of the Com munist Party and the Young Com- munist League are urged to assign members immediately to enroll for this two-year course, in order to fill the great need for theoretically- developed comrades in these organi- zations. Registration is now going on at the Workers’ School office, room 301, 35 E. 12th St. ITALIANS ORGANIZE PROVIDENCE, R. I.—For the sec- ond consecutive time Communist Party meetings on Feral Hill have gone thru unmolested as a result of mass sentiment for the Party in this Ttalian section. An Italian club has Seen formed here and promises to grow rapidly Weber's attractive Larghetto! 7:00—p, M.—amos“mn*7Andy. will be played as a violin solo by en se ge Alar may ; chairman U. Wil Service Commi Eugene Dubois. Other orchestral sion; Professor ‘Clye'L. King, chairm: numbers include the famous “In- Public Utilities-Commission of Penasyl- i T 7 vania. monte vitation to the Dance (and the 1:45—Dog Chat—Don Carney. imaginative Overture to “Oberon, 8:00—Crime Clues~-It Qouldn’t Happen. one of the most remarkable com-| 3:30—Adventures in Health—Dr, Herman binations of fantasy and_ techni- cal skill in 19th Century music. . den; speakers, Generql Hugh 8. Johnson, NRA Administrator;’ Governor A. H. Moore of New Jersey, Governor Wilbur L. Cross cf Connaotéout and cthers. 10:00—Koestner O: Edgar A. Gue: 10:30—Miniature Thedtre. Bundesen, s « W. C. Spain, M. D. Associate pate of Medicine at the New ork Post i School of Golub if aa adage aaa Rens al nc had as be the speaker on the Academy of 1 Pe uss Fal Medicine program to be broadcast + Seri ui over WABC and a nationwide Col- 123004 Meher (0—A.M.—Fisher Orch, uinbia network, Thurrday, Sept. Bee: m 14, from 11:45 a, m. to 12:06 Noon, | WABC—860 Ke. Dr. Spain will discuss the disease, - asthma, 7:00-P.M.—NRA Talk. TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS | 7 {0M Brothers, tones WEAF 660 Ke | 8:00—Boswell Sisters, ‘tongs. 8:15—Singin’ Same + 8:30—Votce of Experience. 7:00—P. M.—Mountaineers Music, 7:15—Chemistry and Modern Life—Dr. E. Howe, editor; Dr. J. M. Bromstead of Denmark, 7:30—Lum and Abner—Sketch, 1:45—The Goldbergs—Sketch. ia ome Sanderson and Frank Crumit, 83. 8:30—King Orch, 00—Bernie Orch, 9:30—Voorhees Band; Male Quartet; Eddic Esst and Ralph Dumke, comedians; John Hale, tenor, - 10:00-—Lives at Stake-Major Whittlesey— | sketch. | 10:30—Né ¥ | : iit cen |Famous Painter Does 11:15—Meroff Orch, New Pamphlet Cover i:80-ralkie ‘Timo—sketch. :00—Ral 3 i is Orc! a: BN oe Me Mas. ‘the well-known American __ pai » contributed a WOR—710 Ke. photo of his painting on steel work- ers to be used on the cover of “Dan- gerous Jobs,” by Grace M. Burnham, %:00—P. M.—Sports—Ford Prick. 7:15—Purdy Brothert—sketch, which will be published soon by In- ternational Publishers 8:45—Kate Smith, Songs, $:00—Weetphai Orch, 9:15—Poetry Readings, * 9:30—Nino Martini, telor; Symphony Orch. 10:00—California Melodies. 10:30—Belasco Orch.;,Sports—Ted Husing; Barbaro Maurel, songs. 10:45—Light Opera Gemo—Ruddigore, 11:15—Phil Regan, tenor, 11:30—Freeman Orch, 12:00—Gerun Orch, 12:30—-A.M.--Hamp: Orehy 1:00—Ruseell Orch. 4. 7:30—To be announced, 7:45—News—Gabriel Heater, 8:00—The Jewish Pageant, 8:45—NRA Mass Méetinig, Madison Sq. Gar- | Widow of Wilson Calls for Higher Prices Under NRA | By JEAN LANDIS. | “In 1917, when the men of our country were asked to take up arms and go into the trenches, how gal- lantly our women met the sacri- | fice is one of America’s epics that | has never been fully told.” | | tales. aise a This quotation is from the letter of Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, the widow | of the President who was elected “to keep us out of war”. No word here of the campaign promises of Wilson that there would be no war if he were elected. No word here of the killing and wounding of hundreds of | thousands of Americans in “a war | to end all wars”. To Mrs. Wilson the | wives and mothers of America took | the news of the death of their loved | ones “without lament or repining.” “One Big Family.” And in the same spirit she calls upon the women of America in this letter, made public recently, to carry on behind Roosevelt and the NRA In the same spirit of self- crifice which she says character- ized the women in 1917 are they to Sacrifice today, so that the Blue Eagle can make certain the profits of the bosses. To Mrs. Wilson we are all one big family, the bosses, the profiteers, and the workers. She wants us to forget that the Blue Eagle is the bird that protects the profits of the employers, she wants us to forget that this bird is driving his beak into the bodies of our chil- dren, that his wings are used to | beat back the resistance of the work- ers to wages that cannot keep up with the cost of living. She wants us to forget that this bird gobbled up the Massachusetts law which pro- hibited night work for women and that in this bird’s shadow six strik- |ing pickets were arrested for fight- | ing for higher wages. Raises Cost of Living. | She wants us to forget that these | | Same NRA codes are the instrument for raising prices on necessary foods that our children need. The price of bread has already gone up under the Blue Eagle. The cut in 6 percent in gas and electric rates in New York City has been stopped because the public utilities claim that their | profits will be eaten up under the NRA if this cut goes through. Borden and Sheffield, two large milk com- panies, have already announced that they will raise the price of milk from 13 to 15 cents a quart. These are the blessings of the NRA and the Blue Eagle. This is what Mrs. Wil- son wants the women to fight for. For higher prices for the boss, for wages that do not meet the cost of living, for higher prices for clothing, end higher rent. The Women’s Answer. But working class women are learning which side their bread is | buttered on. They are learning, as |the women in McKees Rock, Pa., | Showed during the recent successful | strike that they belong beside their | | husbands on the picket line. They | are learning that by proper organiza- | | | tion, as in the St. Louis women nut- | pickers’ strike, they are solving the | problem of how to get higher wages, | better working conditions. Their side | is with the working class against the | Blue Eagle, and, not with it on the side of the bos and the police. That lis their answer to Mrs. Woodrow | Wilson. WHAT’S ON-- NOTICES VOLUNTEER Typists Wanted! Congress Acainst War, 104 Fifth Avenui Room 1507, Call World| . * WILL CHARLES and Lilie Zvonik get in touch with their mother at once. Com- municate with her at 22471 Nicholas Ave, Euclid, Ohio. _ Tuesday | mya Bronx for Paris De- | | legate Norkers Club, 1157 So, Blvd. Marg h h, N.¥.U. Profes-/ to Paris, will n slides. All in- sor, Thomas he ‘chief spea ‘vited, {EETING Will take place at New Lots Club. | | DAILY WORKER Advertising Depart. | e with TUUL Unions, | units for the | r. Ads help | OPEN AIR 771 Seekman St., Brooklyn. upbuilding of the to support the ‘ mation to the busir (8th floor), AL, 4-7955, REGISTRATION NOW on for the Work- | ers School, Fall term. Office, 35 E. 12th) St. Room 30. | | REHEARSALS of the Mandolin Group of | Brighton Progres: Club, 129 Brighton Beach, 8.30 Free mandolin class formed. New members welcome. ALL GREETINGS FOR THE PARTY An-/ niversary Edition shouid be sent to tho| business office of the Daily Worker im- | mediately, 60 E, 13th St. (8th floor), nee Ce LECTURE “The Present Situation in Cuba” At 1220 Shakespeare Ave., 8:30 p.m. with B. P, Greene of the Anti-Imperialist League. Wednesday DAILY WORKER VOLUNTEER CHORUS is beginning the rehearsals at 35 E. 12th St. Workers and students are invited and asked to bring their friends with them, irl e ye WHAT 18 THE NRA— Open Air Rally, Speakers, Robert Minor, Grace Hutchins, Alice Trepst at Intervale and Wilkins Aves. Auspices, Friends of the Soviet Union, than Ria 1905" MOVIE SHOWING, Workers Cen- ter, 50 E. 18th St. Auspices Section 2, 50 per cent, Proceeds to Daily Worker. Page Five . —SS by QUIRT sure’ T cad i FIy You UP i witd 4 JoB- %z > ALL LOADED Dowd WITH AN EXTRA-Goop JoB— IVS AN ILL WIND - asTHE Stage and Screen We Shall | «Her Man Of Wax,” Conti | nental Satire On Napoleon, Not Forget | To Be Staged Here 7 Tr EK es “Her Man of Wax,” @ satirical play pate e Batiow, District Or- 1) with Napoleon as the leading charé ganizer of the Communist Party, }| 7 0° hoon & tl murdered by police in Fort Worth, || 2°'e", Will be produced here shortly inekan xs by ‘Lee Shubert with Lenore Ulric in % the role of Josephine. Julian Thorip= By WALDO H. COFFMAN-——4) ; vade the adaptation from) the | Ge olay by Walter Hasenclever, called “Napoleon Intervenes.” ‘The production goes in rehearsal iy under the direction of Arthur Lubin, The plains you loved lie parching in the sun, | The streets you tramped are sweltering in the heat; The fertile fields are arid with the drouth, | who staged the play in Pasadena yea cently. Eda Heinemann, Marjorie Marquis and Elisha Cook, Jr., are the latest. additions to the cast of “Ah, Wilder« ness,” the Eugene O'Neill play which the Theatre Guild will bring to. the The forests thick with | : : Guild Theatre on October 2, George smoldering fires and smoke. M. Cohan will play the leading roles “Double Door,” a melodrama “by | Elizabeth McFadden, recently tried Re nd de % | out on Long Island, is announced for o d a us indie me production here on September 20, un- Wanton breeder of dis- der the sponsorship of the Shuberts, content—. Mary Morris and Granville Bates arg? 2 7 in the cast. t That is what they called | “Nusic in the Air,” the musical play? you— | which was scheduled to close last: Saturday, will remain another week at the Forty-fourth Street Theatre, Following its closing here this Sat- urday the play will begin an exten- sive road tour in Boston on Septem- These cowards, who con- demned lawful assembly And hide themselves Not only behind masks and ber 18, cloaks Pe Ee as ae IE LE But behind all the armored | Screen Notes ; positions “Berkeley Square,” screened by Fox from the play by John Balderston, will have its premiere on Wednesday evening at the Gaiety Theatre with Leslie Howard, Heather Angel, Valerie Taylor and Colin Keith Johnston in. the cast. ‘The screen feature this week at Loew's State Theatre is “Tugboat An- nie” with Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery. The Roxy Theatre is now showing & new Fox picture, “The Man Who Dared,” in which Preston Foster and. Zita Johann have the leading roles. “Penthouse,” the film version of” Arthur Somers Roche’s story, is the new picture at the Capitol Theatre, with Myrna Loy and Warner Baxter heading the cast. Janet Gaynor and Warner Baxter in “Paddy, The Next Best Thing,’ Of property and prejudice | and the law. Staunch friend and comrade, Soldier of Solidarity— Like some bitter magic The tale of your tragic death Has spread thruout the land And from a million minds Has torn the last shreds of doubt Concerning Might and Right. Young and virile and _ Strong— is the screen feature at the Palace Like grim sentinels they Theatre this week. The stage show stand is headed by Bernice Claire, Frank as fe Gaby, Jeanette Hackett and Dan Awaiting each opportunity Carthay. To break another Of slavery’s chains. _Amusements ~ RADIO CITY MUSIC H SHOW PLACE of the NATION Direction “Roxy” Opens 11:80 AM. “Lady for a Day” Warren William—May Robson Guy Kibbe—Glenda Farrell - and a great “Roxy” stage show 35 to 1 p.m.—So to 6 (Ex. Sat. & Suit For whatever stroke is needed They are preparing. So shall you be avenged. Within our hearts is smolder- ing a heat Fierce than that which parches fields and plains; Your memory, like a torch, shall light the Flames | Of Revolution! We shall not} forget! | *%° Jefferson 1m st * | Now « HELEN HAYES & ROBERT MONTGOMERY. in “Another Language” and “THE STRANGER’S RETURN” with LIONEL BARRYMORE & MIRIAM HOPKINS RETURNS BY POPULAR REQUEST ———_—___—— The DAILY WORKER says:—"To see this picture is to be | | THE WORKERS, @ sptectator, a witness—more, a participant! —In the mo- | A Cc M E ba § mentous struggle of the Baku workers——a picture which r no worker should fail to see.” THEATRE i TH STREET UNION SQUARE, Added Feature “JEWS ON (Fins? JEWISH TALKIE Are you interested in seeing the life with the famous Soviet chi Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday | BRONXDALE AIRDROME Pelham Parkway and White Plains Ave, | See the best films in the open air. A SCIENCE and HISTORY only book needs in tl stamps or condition, The Bradford-Brown Ed 26 Commissars | “THE RETURN OF NATHAN BECKER” * In person: Famous stage and radio sensation, the “JOLLY TRIO”—Judah Zvie Schooler, Michel Rosenberg in a jolly program FOR GIRLS and BOYS Iclaim that this is the first book of its kind for the youth of the world and that it is the) A $1.50 book for 25 cents, five copies for $1.00, Money refunded if after examination the ook is not wanted and is returned in good” SOIL” ‘FROM SOVIET RUSSIA of the Jews in Russia today? See aracter-actor, 8. Michaelis Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday BARNES AIRDROME Barnes and Allerton Avenue Children 10 cents. mission 15 cents, By William Montgomery Brown which meets their greatest cultural :,+| his revolutionary century.—W.M.B,. - . * * coin; paper bound, 320 pp., 27 chap. * . > ucational Co., Galion, 0, COME AND ENJOY. F . INTERNATIONAL CABARET and COSTUME NITE - New International Hall, 42 We: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 ‘ BOSTON, Mass. nonnah St, ROXBURY, Mass, Dancing; Floor Show; Costumes; Refreshments; Guest Artist SUBSCRIPTION 2c - - = = Auspices: American Workers Chore \ Se haere saint

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