The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 2, 1934, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY. MARCH 2, 1934 gs Page Five ‘Sister of Slain’ Understanding | wars ox | Mississippi Farmers Talk j | CHANGE ‘Cropper Tells Sie we DoH Pa : ——THE— |Her Own Story es Seo eee ae & of Revolution... By JOHN L. SPIVAK BROOKHAVEN, M By a Worker Correspondent | ——— By MAXWELL BODE DADEVILLE, Ala. — Dear Com-| WORLD! By Sender Garlin EIMANN'S Bar and Grill had rade: I am @ faithful worker, and a Be ene gah After talking to indepé< = Sieg | electric-sign in orang: gle his eye farmers. share re ers strong believer in the Communist| |, red without life, and a windo do for | farmers, share cr Party. and I believe it is the only| Sor 1 a i Meet Mr. Dennis’ Dear Friends! lo Fgh AL working class.| beer and wine. It was located near munist Party, I belisve is the oniy| ‘© exact center of Manhattan, on a ass \ 4 % I reported an interview with crowded side-street. The place N:WESTERDAY'S column i Way out to true freedom and eman-| recently opened and it was shiny with | Lawrence Dennis, U. 8. Fascist leader, who meets Clarence ge Sor Soe sipere peeve, What white tile tables, oak-varnished | been er Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, in debate at Mecca | ye Centuries, I believe if oth | chairs, and a counter of glass and ed wood 1 i Oth | nickel, but the equipment was cheap Temple, 180 West 56th St., New York, this Sunday afternoon | white and Negro will stand up si | Saen, ae Wae eoleasens wee Ces y 5 * i ; | by side, and fight together as one) ® ‘ - di % at 3 o’elock (not at 3:30 as previously eons ‘ aaishiep’ an ne Chas Inara | i é would Begin £0 | look artes, Cet y Y i a associ- | ib we vill | ¢ 2 Today I should like to present some of Mr. is’ interesting of the Communist Party, that we will such establishments always s ates'on his paper, “The Awakener: A National Organ of Sound Opinion,” | gain and have the great victory of | with a blar uuyenirs and whose twin slogans are 'e—501 ness men and politicians | I am convineed that not crime? “For the Americanism of the Right;” “Against | freedom of all the working class. In| Tait. and-blue bunting — and then| farmers and eroppers,. 4. ‘ Ay . | 1931 was my first view of the great} | machines ¢ ‘Ae ot fais r of the ‘Left’; which, of course, Mr. Dennis means Com- | bs ually allowed the food and ser-| machines ie other side- | . _— ered sax aa by | moral for the well-being of people, | Sradual a wate while the prices | walk He d And listened to one | < gont dea Mag dest x ‘ot ma Nes a As Haroia | SPecially the negro people. I/ crept up, @ dime or #0. Then, after |of the workers op the platform. The Jone if ithe gov cince the depcesion, TS ‘The Editor-in-chief of Dennis’ “Awakener” is none other than chanced to get in touch with a great) tne trade fell off, the bosses packed| worker was young and roughly | ment Beene eee ee began to. pour | everything fron Lent Verney, and bis executive editor and general tastotue (oath ‘names | speakey, tp the person of Jim, snd the place with more fake customers, | dressed, and his, widt- listened te him attentively, and I was 7 yling Sc a¥e on the masthead of the paper) is Mr. Joseph P. Kamp, Oy" etbtned te Ge eee | tar fe three days, and allowed | scowling. ; Vege ore Shese to late? gave him my name, and age that them to be inspected by gg 0 jee Leite Harold Lord Varney was an I. W. W. during and after the war, At | 1 would do all I could to help him to Saag ee hag = igosuihed the time of the Great Steel Strike of 1919, led by William Z, Foster, he | get in touch with other people. Jim menced the same process of swindling | ae at telenane adopted splitting tactics, slandered Foster, and engaged in strike-wrecking | appointed me as an organizer of the| 4 his own hook. Ne fe only hs mel Bg Bes activities through “The Metal Machinery Workers Industrial Union” of seetion in the neighborhood where iris tine wan @noeall: & Goa eid (ten we kote: to. 8 ! flam! ultra- | lived where I succeeded in building ; i age pag the 1. W. W. His writings were distinguished by @ flamboyant, a club. One or two meetings before, | the air raw with lumps of ice seat-| we win this lipped face was | here, elsc, they cid no’ next sack of four the “Eighteen of The who did net.pay income | leftist style, and he was capable of turning out “copy” six times as fast | the sheriff snd thugs ran in on us,| ‘ered along the walks. Frita Kandler | have disayjpeared, but we cana ai 40 oa millignaires avho ,.eeemed...to .be -work- had—so a former associate of his in- *| stopped before Heimann’s and looked |a damn. We're going to ag Sigg I" ing hand -in glove .with..the higgest as any editor the Wobblies ever a that was on July 14, 1931, when the inte the window. He had been work- | gether and w Heims mer grhom JOBN L/SPTVAK ae Seas maaan i to meet on the represe sgate of mind ‘I. di interesting isolated ¢ might stumble jacros ‘They! told me of pitt: “"#l over the of how the unemployed in th: for ‘the ‘South; together sand si unemployed ha tribution of gevernment w whieh, lack 2! it off. “his -sepse. of has ‘been edimed.. only as one | slightly. by:. government..;relief,,. for He | those who most needed .relaefegpi, the nl Jeast as--subsequent- . arhicles-.qbout area -ayill show, Intense Bitterness > This bitterness against miliionair ticians is one Of +the n unced sentiments.here.«. Wess ceaas aetinett: tt where-~among the sae ety paar thé" tash “renting fi mobbed 'the -C.°W. «A. thead-'| 11, \siate-etopper, ithe 7amallatown quarters. ‘Ehey were armed swith -bats business ‘rier: : Sct sen a: et Diane Lincom Countyis~typiea of 1M lecture on ““Pro- | fore things quieted down; -the ix ssiaph except for sthe Delta "rea Moshoiu -Prog. Club, | :,., ¥ pare : ve | which thes particuldnly rich en - | infil veonle in the tom had |, Aloud tite -Missf a | to with ‘them before the fury ate (tis fear: niente |-of ‘the jobless and “the hungry was | 20 ooo 8 Pe jority ,are ich portion out forms me. first terror started. z } We : i ling in a rooming-heuse as a. janitor, | eyery rotten t TH 1920 he publicly turned renegade, dropped his membership in the I and my friend Miley was the | with the Siero the job changed | he can’t do I. W,W., and hit the sawdust trail for capitalism with a series of well- | first to be brutally beaten, and we|to “superintendent,” a slight joke | to throw a b id -“expose” articles in Mr. Hearst’s New York Sunday American and haye scars ef the wounds on our| originated in the time when office- | so he gould bi the “American Magazine.” The articles rehashed the stale stuff of heads that will be there till we are|boys heeame “junior-clerks” andj he cofild Wobbly “sabotage” so serviceable in justifying the Criminal Syndicalism | °#Ted to our graves. kitchen-drudges “were aes to laws2-at stori¢ genera’ fourth-cooks, so that the bosses iollas lee ee, Eareeg; pelwering Of: Weha: OWe : 8 ayy | Fee Ca the Tallow ing might may, Greener. could placate the yanity of their | are ‘married men, too. ferred to his former compatriots in the I. W. W. as “murderers” and “cut- | Ralph Gray was brutally beaten, then | -o76 backward workers. A week pre- | meuried man and his throgts,” paved, then killed and carried away’ vious he had been fired hecause his | nine dollars 2 week? : : rome, and thrown out in the | hoss had secured another man will-|to pay a rat His natural evolution led him, in 1920, to become one of the publicity | yard of the jail house as if he was a ing t K for two dollars less—|his window because menofer the National Republican Committee which was in charge of | dog, or poison serpent. Among the eight gprs week ani now he | hé can break eae putting the sainted Warren Gamaliel Harding and his oily Ohio | great number that were railroaded to was down to his last fifteen cents. |¢n soueezing the money gang,into the White House. He turned out copy for Harding just as fast td I ang my oldest son were two of | weil, ten of the fifteen would buy a|iesh and blood . as lie,fiad done for the Wobbltes, Fea Cauca eee ae Saniaty, SEUBy. el and |' Fhe worker nett * 5 2 ig a clambered the Varney disappeared from the scene for a few years, and in 1926 he | lawyer, came to the jail and told us| fro in front of the restaurant. The ee “th are soaie turnéd ‘up in the Anthracite region of Pennsylvania where fhe left wing | that those who were in jail from the| picket. was a short man with slim| oo Ring ei So FeO was engaged in a number of strikes and putting up a bitter fight against | terror, and he was sent to defend us,| put iron limbs, and 2 stone jaw be- Esra gr lges the Lewis U. M. W. A. machine. the sheriff and judges came to us| low his steady eyes. His clothes wete|he had a ga prisoners trying to persuade us not to 5 i eved fa A-couple of years latex this worthy became attached to the “Italian | have anything to do with the Chata- ‘poe oe gee beck narrow-eyed fac Historical Society,” a fascist outfit. It was only natural therefore, that | nooga lawyer. I stood out and told/nouncing that Heimann’s had re- ain. ‘Sinve one of a general then | and t 3 jy and a Be wore a dark Suit, well-pressed, and his shoes were ‘Lbin. ense as shiny 2s. airy After he} Thing have bi pretty tense rw hire adhey. wheu-bewrence Dennis went into business for American fascism that | them that if T had any case to be| fused to pay its workers liying-waves | had resched the eueb, he lalierea Ane | | higne, aut it wad ike sinlar sporadic coopera titers Varney, fresh from his apprenticeship with the Italian fascists, should ea cae pests Se ar heh ih them decent Cen gione ant a time, and then pushed his way Pe iiss | utbursis reported from wariaus se ark eben Joi es with him. A ey were on ritz | with an oyer-confident mien, into | cc “ nd Russien | ions of ‘the country and jin addition, | yen stheue ey ane ycheate nde : : Would not consent to the Sheriff and| hesitated and then slouched into|one knot of the. alidienos pressed itp, "| this was-more ‘of an sinsustrial com |Cve0, teush sthey ane 1cheased ts ° e Judge to do what they asked me,| Heimann’s. Aw, what did all these | against the left side of the pletform. Patk Unem-|-munity than adarming one. Though | of (Necroessto whit: Want'a Strike Broken? they imprisoned me and my son in| strikes mean except a cop's club on| His voice was flat and —| it showed a tendency on the part of yen’ anicart iat salina bie om Jail for two months. Your face, and then the same lousy} “They're ly v ‘and / Some jobless sin the “South, still it > avith. the Negroes pr iO 18 Mr. Joseph P. Kamp, Executive Editor of Dennis’ “The As soon as I got out of jail, and| Wages after you lost the strike? He | listen to them, Mallia got to where I could walk again I| was hungry and he had to eat. of dirty reds and yaken : Se é started out te work among the peo- orde: ham-: cause they ¥ ‘This fellow is the head of a vicious, anti-labor racket called the | pie io get the movement started gait sta Oe aye trying to ruin our place. | could not fairly be eonsidered -repre- tative of the farmer's attitude or Ss for-best | of conditions in the state. —This,-teo, DAINMENT and Dance at German| WS far from ‘being “revolution” so| The rest inating: ‘ Resentment AgainstGovernment Of . the “istate- “coBsists “American Constitutional Educational League” with offices at 118 West | afoot again. I began to have small| punched h: paying them t d fitter Club, FE. 10th St., 2nd floor.| I -pigeon-holed »the incidents in my of small farm “owners,” @s 42nd ‘Street. oe as I was afraid to have very fa any Lr ee aor een Jars a week, and we e as jpg 15¢. | me as isolated. ad coumiy, men who eta to Red’ ‘ large ones, and began organizing f i food, but they didn’t y ee Bree e farmer got off at the second |‘from 20 to 40 antl'in some"istatices, _ The proeedure of this outfit is to hold “anti-Red” meetings in front of glimpses of the opposite side of the : ye eet stop the train made. Another ‘farmer 100 acres. ‘The ‘first *titing “Wwe'find L, K. Luganov id Rolseritta. Adm. nd faptories where workers are on strike, and before strikers’ homes, and | 9297 in the best way I understood. | street. The eyes were frightened and |1™ tellin you, thes All that were willing to fight for! trying to hide it. . Fritz gat at 9 |¥meh of rotten— n-tanned, \raw-boned, jun- | among the independent /farnier themgorin to the boss and pass ¢he hat. their rights gave me their names. | yaca: ae te 4 os Dive der | the erepper, is a deep resentment arn mes, nv rear-tablp dire ont bf | "BRe -yoice ended, wa: petits ~apscial POT 3 . " “Diiting a strike at the I. Miller Shoe Co. in Long Island City last | That was the way I began organizing| the kitchen a yee fe, Feet his | roar from the hearts, the ice: anaes: i 5 ‘There against the ‘Tederail anata cee May’ this gang distributed the following handbill: after I got out of jail. | handwich. In the middle of the eat-|™ouths, of the rushing st mbaeerd| aa pains set life he Saat ane wf jobs = 8One of your neighbors has decided that your neighborhood and When M. came down to help using he happened to glance down, and | Three workers fe the oratorio on| tured to conditions in ‘Mississippi |-which pays -them more “than “fhey " p out in the summer of 1932, I had sent | SPied @ monstrous cockroach over two | Of People a this‘country is not good enough for him to live in . . . You are to him in Birmingham over a thou-| inches long. The cockroach fiddled | flayimg him ‘invited to attend a meeting i protest of his attitude which will be we began | With. the sawdust in a crevice where.| him, scarcely eble to held in front of his home, The disloyal citizen is Max Stolar, 7816. ~ “pf the §,| the’ Wak"MEP the floor, and‘ fien the | ftsts’ Emma * -Bym-| Brogk- L Boe,” 7c, | Sets to their ja {Them Bolsheviks And I jheard | earned working for ‘farmers. |The re- mainder are living von @overhment ¢harity- “Local “¢harity*coftribut ae f |. scarcely enough / to" iner “Memorial Street.” C. U., and I was appointed by the iesh darted ipo the kitchen with | “WE know him—don’t let him ploved Coun-| land and don’t I to pay no taxes | Hon, ne afin a Here we have the cabinet of Mr. Lawrence Dennis’ nasceni fascist creer Ad A ag to — ue BAe The ae es arte ye Ra & He 2 e's : ared|| they .can't afford.” ‘They talked a| Poverty"‘has reached such’ depths adififfistvation: Dennis, a trained intellectual, Haryard-educated who nen D:-OR BeROURE OT ated od c ‘Group. | Steat deal, about the government, |here not only among -eroppers,” but fen rage: 5 : ae , 2 ee of my actiyity in the union the land- n ‘ and the kitchen was not |and break up ov i “a e | politicians, ‘the way ‘everything was\among many sma ideyendent adipires the big trading classes;” Varney, a renegade I. W. W. and @ | lords, and bosses, and stool-pigeons| °Ver-Clean. Gagged, Fritz was re- can kee | being taken from. the moor and given | ‘atmers ‘that anything séemie-preter- cheap prostitute, and Kamp, a strike-breaking racketeer. haye been trying to make it hard for juctant. to. deyeur the remains’ of 1 We know to ‘the «millionaires lable to present conditions, at ow han the sandwich, but -hig.by ~ }That's his fath <In@ symposium before the Foreign Policy Association at the Hotel |™e& ever since 1931, when’ they fst ‘4 er per 8 his “father, : ‘lled brother T fi . sisted and he ate them, his face | standing rieht over th Astor¢on December 9, last, Dennis summed up hig speech with the dec- Bae ty & of, ve the we ey steeled and @ jittle angry. His ap- | way! Look at him, there hi ‘aration that: bosses won't let me and my boys pee ae SUI unsatisfied, since he | Fritz looked acuoss the si . fascism is a cult of government and the best traditions of — | work on the R. F.C. and C. W. A, 1| u8d had no food since morning and] the rest of the er the group. It wit be Christian, American, Nationalist, and anti- walk from one place to another until fag fie pecan ee buy ‘oi font jaan Bb aS sill. he man, h: Brookhaven, . | during this period that the-first loud dian, I again | talk of “revolution” ‘started: «They open talk .of revolution ,and |eve mo “faith ‘in’ the “promises of is town whose life depends ypon | Politicians “and “officials; “loeal,- .state cotton and those who grow it, Dheard'| or notional. “They have deen end it again and again and.ecain, Byery-||fervent belief ‘that the. politician CONCERT nj _ Communist,” T am bare of clothing and am bare-| 5, $ a 1 jend agent. :to whom ithey “‘thenistives Geet) tfunc- at foot. Because they think I’m work-| ®,CU? Of coffee just before midnight, | hanging cheels. The +) Danker ihere agrees that Brookhaven |itions solely f efit” hi In short, the unmasked, brutal dictatership of Wall Street! ing for the union they keep me ree intended to tramp back to | ing forward. The x is representative of a s pen ton | Nee me eT nem ae oe ee . . . asta out a apes aad then| gee enerept Where ae eePh on 8 at happened | *_ 8 See ey i So won't give me no aid from the R. F. i t—temporaril cause the sion and what |THE tion “naturally = yhy Japanese Imperialism and the “Daily” , and the C. W. A. The bosses and Apert Rouse was a friend of eople think ‘is fairly. Nebeeherie | thats, ees Faaiesincinat my K While on the subject of fascism: The U. S. and Japanese govern- i a ae trying i ing Ppa could only sneak him in at ee mest $0 ths st oe ‘wale ‘state iChat the deep |hhave “asked “that question: ef “4 bagel yy trying “ em. af e South t elt. heard this talk |ifarmers wh ii Jyents, which are engaged in a feverish armament race, are united on at | make it hard for me. Since 1931 I moment aera and stood a | of the cockroach e Philadelabia ho might cones Metin ee wounebeee” 7m ‘least one issue. And that is, barring the Daily Worker from Japan. have had more threats from the i ainly. .A cop, tall and | He presved ag i sist of their replies is that there . surly, ws ; S "oi md + ‘A gentleman by the name of J, J. Kiely, who 1s the postmaster of the | bosses and landlords, and you little|and® hen the blake eae EO eat e 0 WsSapastoffice in New York, has just written the “Daily” e letter, stating, | ROW of what they threaten to do to| second, to whisper to passerby, the | cence, saiced” > . But I “ with’an air of obvious approval, that the Japanese government has con- ele A ccs a rerio ond soy bellowed: ‘Hey, move on, you! | His hin. fiseated’ a number of copies of the paper. What is more, it intends to off, but to mean to work until Death moving before I crack you seize any other copies of the “Daily” that might arrive “regardless of the |under the leadership of the Com. one!” The picket resumed the march, |Colege A nger, but from | Mo.one else to vote for.except ‘Repub- icials who know these men, ,licans, and these are generally Gi: | liked and the name of ‘Fiodver is nasitively bated. ‘To -thig-net be ;/added the important fact ‘that me gets @ chance even to ‘vote War Group i. to -Ald | lege of ragister a onMarch 4} with rage 4 i 7 volume and the number.” i aerid eal for it has done more eee Be thee, Fite te | Holds Benefit r\palldgiaus ‘eth atlesengee "the en is 5 a | "he A: cS ce i vi ist : ie N ‘The copies of the Daily Worker had been sent to regular Japanese sub- | OT the Negro and the working class 12:00— cing ah scinaegpecdtadly olitigians with ieee te . We sates “4 pee. Levee Bes ij sae hi scribers, including the Literature and Law department of the Kyushu Im- then ae eae ee ever! 12:20 ph onat ate eae pipe at ee ae hcg cant Pp rarer [St <Ohenusar, As Fn ie pre vetia University In Pukuoka; to the Prefertural Offe, and to various in- | eg! UE, ff "Peace on Earth foe Perera ralgtit Ree een be diyiduiais in Yokohama. : ? WOR—110 Ke. {277 Theat P tea taae og black SO-T8¥ as‘RiSVote is concerned. oie * . . | TAS P.at.—Psont-Page Dramas iy Rao on Sunday at3 pm He, too, is “disfranehised Meatise he ‘They“Even Have a Law | x Tago tor ets See eareseuiee is Detroit. Mich. io ear dhe i TUNING IN 090 Be Announced ratte apy DANCE givan by “Hotel nd ‘Restauant |'t0 Pay. the pollvtax che cannbt vote. ArTER informing the Daily Worker that notification of the suppression L a5 and Hare, Songs | LOOK OUT FOR GROPPER! SS Bi sccper te rh iy shila oe Te iad cee oe the postoffice authorities in Yokohama, _ 2 ferrin ee, Mais es _Aeosricnn Een egies 32 | Cos, SOVIET Fi he ,|89 to ‘321 Tor ‘ihe month of Misch the U. S. officials explain c :45—The Old Ne 's LBS P Film tthe Centuries" | saat: Seats eith si TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS | Silt—#:c: Artur, daritone. {noe eee Ps xeh 9 at Gaaperntive aan, |‘ Ausust. inclusive, ant_end the sea- “This communication stated that the printed matter was confis- oat Vpriety arcing Pane Sherry, Tenor - pe ee | re ean or tomer aaa ea Seed : jariety Musicale | War Paint No. 2 oe * the-eounle of dol necessary to pay cated in accordance with the stipulations of Section 2a, Article Ry 1. MILMAN 10:00—Teddy Bergman, Comedian; Betty | 2 * Minneapolis. 2 the poll-tax-and-thns have ttespriye- ui oe bod With the worst storms over, the short| y9., Use Sense; Rondotlers Quartet | bab BS pL eangl Pee Iege San oa Victims “of German r 7, At Humbeld Hall, 1317 Glenwood, Ave. No. | ‘¢ ‘balléé. fee Adm. 15c, 8 p.m. (To Be Continwed): ss: AMUSEMENTS: nn THEY SHALL NOT DIE t Thea., 45 St.,W.of Bry. Ev.8.z0 | \ Royale Mats. Thurs. an@ Sat. 2.20 e ,theirsprotest:arith of the Universal Postal Convention, as it falls ler 10;15—Current Ei | it under the prohibition Wave fans should be prepared for good re-| 19.33 00 He Sree arian, Bugene Read | specified in Section 1 (g) of the samp article, In this connection, tt | fla teried” te cons ‘Ot Steal | 1248—Spert>—Boate Castor 5 nbeams ‘Trio snug volume, , Feb. I , may, | entioned Section 1 of Article 45 of the Universal Postal hae Pasa rad rl at SF gig ie U0—WNelson Orch, “Cofivention starts with the words ‘It is forbidden to send by mail’ hour I could barely hear the station, on the| '*:?0—Eane Oren, sm aaa gy ; second hour, from 5 to 6, it cleared up a bit, ON ae and“ttem (g) said Section reads ‘Any articles whatever whose 7 sould hear a man talking. On the end WIJIZ—T760 Ke. | entry or circulation 1s prohibited in the country of origin or that | joved'by the Intersationt Since nes sing | 1:00 PA-—Awroe i” andy of di ion,’ Furit , Section 2 (a) of said A le ds in by a chorus. A few members of the 14th! 7:15—Don @ilixote—Sketeh St. Branch happened to be it hi us 7 ™ port as follows: ‘The articles enumerated under letters (a), (d), (e) _| they listened ta'fe- On Peh.33, sb Sis‘om.| ores” GESBRIB, Plano; Concers | a| 7:45—Eddie and Grace Atbert, Songs { oe We picked up again the Moscow station, | and (g) of Section 1 above are treated in accordance with the do- man was speaking {mn English about the! 8: | : " 8:00—Walter O'Keefe, Comedian; 3 ‘ ‘ . recht meétic regulations of the Administration which discovers their | “ssiné Sovernment. Shults, Songs; Bextor Gran | RUGeNe oxetius comms, 1) = “DAVID HARUM oe Wo recelved several tetters trom com-| 8:30——Danzcrous Paradise Sketch | AB, WILDERNESS! Al Anda great MUSIC wan REACH Bt presence.’ rades asking for the code on RI to R9. For| 8:45—Red Davis—Sketch | with GEORGE DM. .c . a 2 their benefit we are printing this key: RI,j 9:00—Lech Ray, Songs; Harris Orch. i Sa Thea., 528 St., Wot Bway |, RKO | ath Bt. —"The'New York faint signal: R2, weak signal: R3 30—Phi] Baker, . GUILD vy ont a0 |] Jefferson hf postmaster concludes his letter to the Daily Worker aati: Di nan Tb ha A g at nr 9 pray ee. oesian: Martha Mears, NY. ats. Dhar QS Ats'2:20 ti Sed Ave with'the information that “the post office at Yokohama also asks that it | easily understood; derate to 10:00—Feii:. Salmond, ‘Cello; be recéthmended to you to discontinue the sending to Japan of this pub- Siena: Ro, good iene Er, 00d, sizons sae nay ra Postey essere Heation in the sete as it is to he raniiwatedt regardless of its volume foot tm Theater coe rene ees a oe Spee ee Pee Men and nu +» » Tt was also stated that even though the publication is | s!st#l. ‘The ;. radio eall Letters will) 11:00—Three ‘camps, Sones | be u, nnouneed terna-| 11:15—Anthony F found, and confiscated hereafter, no communication will be sent here re- | toni Raa Sewn” vie ictenaiivd RC Eee tap oe abet | EVANS “a MAXWELL ANDERSON'S New Play © |) MARY OF SCOTLAND. ||” ** psn ey with JMBLIN Pear fest a ARDE | VIN Tice. ‘Sed erga of Biway | = AL’ Ev.8:20.Mats.Phur.&Sats:20 || questing that sender be advised in the matter.” NOTICE: comrades Be gers Orch. rapa ees Ret ag Bonne Sattad wt] 89 AN Hedetiorn Or 7EGFELD FOLLYES “ae. attend the next membership meeting, tls ® Ifthe imperial Japanese government has any illusions that it can | for which they will receive post cords will WABC—860 Ke with FANNIE BRICE . 5. | bar the political program of the Daily Worker by confiscating the paper, | %,b# counted es members any moze. Ke. ' | Wille & Kugene HOWARD, Bartlet ‘St | i | MONS. Jane FROMAN, Patricia BOWMAN. | WINTER GARDEN, B'way and 50th. Evs. 8.30 Matinces Thursday and Seturtisy 2:30 The Los Angeles Bi th of the W.S.W. B eS } seeaaoaly mistbn, Por spe of he most complete feudal law | ne mises every Monday at @ pon, at 8106| $48 Susi Bata uncceaee %:30—Armbruster Orch; Jimmy Kemper, | ‘HEAR (CANTOR in “DE DREAM OF ir Pee 4 fluenee‘of the Japanese Communist Party continues to grow, not onl preteens Waid | | ) among the masses ‘of workers and peasants, but among intellectuals, ; EAD O50 Xe. iie-Gres Orch Ben foot orn Toe | ‘N° MORE LADIES || ~SPBCIan: Aispup FBATURE— \ paps (and os 8 recent sensatioug trial chowed) even among officers | £- M-aiysime ip Outre ae) farueren ope, ‘ MEGVIN DOUGLAS “LUCILE WATSON | i . samy. Economie Council 9:00—Philadelphia Orch, MOROSCO Thea., a W. of Bway. Evs. | - ‘ * tea Mea ae to eae re ; Oren oF, 8:50. Mats. Weilnesday -an® Saturtlay 285} Others ‘Tried It Before! Soprano; Male Quartet Songs; Deany Orch. ‘Theatre Union's i % Oreh.; Frank Munn, Tenors} 10:09 Olsen end Johnson, Comedians; Kos- | LAST WEEKS HE i ; Mi nick Orcit Posten eT The “Czar of All the Russians,” whose army you defeated 9:30—Maude blag nig Sketch— niga, Bary Eastman, Soprano; Concert PEACE ON EARTH in 1905, also tried to bar “dangerous thoughts.” Do you know the re- Re ed Pan sn ian ie: | j E amera, t—8k :00-—Rich Orch. | sult, dpanese imperialists? Do you know, Mr. Kiely of the U.S. post- | 10:02—Semere righ! ; Ab ONews Ronosts { | oxvic say. | 5 office B REPERTORY Thea. $4th S, & 6th Ay. 0 vad Oo—The. Lively Arts—Jobn Bstkine, Au- Heise Os | [WA 9.1450, Tves. 8:45. gaye to $4 50NO. | ‘A New. Musical Comedy er rch. | Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:20. . TAX) JEROME KERN “HA i saoaaew: iG ahecaan HeDanes ore 18:90 4. Hopkins Oro [Arrange Theatre Parties. for sour onganiza-| NEW AMSTERDAM, W. dee bisngia ba eottt Orch :00—Pancho Orch, ton by telephoning Watkins 9-2451 Matinees woaanstiy Pe

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