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oS eae DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1 | CHANGE | cee WORLD! By MICHAEL GOLD t | No Notices on This Page After June 4th Beginning Monday, June 4, no notices of social and cul- tural events will be published on this page. This change is made necessary hy the fact that publicity notices make it impossible to publish numer- ous features of general inter- est to readers throughout the of Kidnay Frank Norman Lured j; With Story of Florida Organizer’s W Te ife Tells ing, Possible Murder \“I Now Join Struggle, Taking the Place Death on the Pennsy R.R. Tracks After 29 Years in Steel Mill By ANDREWS country. After June 4th or- Lynching | of My Husband Q CHICAGO Lois Minar 3R, some years ago, drew an interesting ganizations are requested to é = y ae cbake a ae 4 ILL GROPPER ig e é ESAs hin iaesact send notices direct to the (Editor’s Note. —The following up until several days later. I have /Of steel mill experi ey cartoon showing a fat old uncle shielding his eyes in WMG ata Ont ccldmin | Bale: || sites ak the Slanaplie ‘aula wens | |tried to get these facts into the | reason he horror after listening to a young skinny soapboxer, and || Worker, 50 E. 13th St. The || pected murder of Frank Norman, Lakeland papers, but without suc-/he was hurt in an F charge for single insertions is || International Labor Defense or- cess. pee scene NY tes saying: * Frid in I FI I realize now why all this hap- Plant 7 ig s z i || 35 cents except Friday and ganizer, in 1 : ja., Was s ei By gar aia wl “My God, in such a rich country he wants to make a || Saturday, when the chage is || written. by his wife, who. with pened and the reason my state-| Wednesday they picked Louis ; secolutiontt! a0 canes their five-year-old son, survive ments have been refused by the nee up on the tracks of the Pe ution! : i fait chor oreaniaer, |Lakeland papers. There is only one | SYlvania railroad throat , Communists are supposed to be a lot of wild-eyed peo- a ee leon ths cen ok newspaper the workers can rely on| cut, his w i - : : ee . fles . | 3 rigen ages § k the truth, that is the|A train had cut ple who like nothing better than to kick and complain over trifles. . | the ruling class, lay in his active to speak Pag nee Baa gcc a lack Minute Movie carlsigewon aud icederstin cat Dally Worker. It is this newspaper |ing food workman, 9 | i : ss van i : te which is fighting for the same cide kill hims 4 } Well, we are bellyachers, and damn good ones; but, as it happens, ue eee ce Doutbers Notre cause for which my husband died, | botch the job t mnething worth bellyaching about. eviews and white workers for the righ ea It started with the accident here is something ing . : to organize and fight for better | Piro isocodr-oy wei the 1 > j Certainly, the fact that 16 million people are unemployed in . Avni ae | camaitiaie ‘aeatnit himeec and : | “I Now Join the Struggle, Taking SUmmer that p im in the vre 4 America—which is just a polite word for STARVING—is something to Jf mass unemployment, against |” ee SK te gee eee es eT Wy, “Miasbastie: tae” vital It wasn % his firs bad i sine that 4 t. a of course. He had been biacki that make ‘» speech about. | STAND UP AND | lynching and the bestial national | Mrs. Frank Norman and Her AM a citrus worker, born andjafter the strike O19 - 7 7 ig ne: y | i the Ni s * * stri in and h A world ys is uae Lape eee sheep will not CHEER (Fox) | ee et ee Segre Pani 5-Year-Old Son b salsed in, the Routt and ber had to leave Pennsylvania and work ij 3 complain over being led into this e! i | A ae a efore was it so clear to me that|in South Chicago. The accident r | r : writes: “I now join this struggle, — “ sent ‘ee | tala F | Under the N.R.A., as Clarence Darrow recently pointed out, the | FROTHING political - musical! faking my husband's place as best Sats : janes the present system the poor | laid him up a while, and the com- 4 big monopolistic trusts are finding it easier to squeeze the little busi- conceived by Fox Fil d| I can and call on others to join |Next day I called the police asking | Working people have no choice but | pany gave him a little help d the worker and farmer to the wall. baa Tchr a ences Laon Gn ile etree ’ them to come to the house and ex- | S'"usele for their rights. I now join) Finally the head surgeon of the | a a an ay shen ae ee nae | dedicated to the N. R. A. Suggest- xe we : h 6 ¥ this struggle, taking my husband’s | International Harvester Co. (Wis- all we § vi iS . The truth of the matter is, the Communists are the BRAIN and HEART and VOICE of the great masses of America. They speak out, before the others have even begun to see what is jing that unemployment and mass, misery is a state of mind that can| be overcome by organized campaigns | of song and dance against depres- | |amine the footprints left, by the ab- | Place as best I can and call on By MRS. FRANK NORMAN Lakeland, Fla | ductors, Sheriff Chase did not show ! others to join me in the struggle. consin Steel is a subsidiary of Har- | ,, vester) sent him a letter telling him that he could go back to work, but that he would be given an easier , . AM trying to write something of T : * | fob, since he wasn’t as strong as| 7 3 happening. They are always a little ahead of the procession, which is | sion and gloom. Warner Baxter in| Rite sheata: Giiestidnk Eitan aan W ar. | Bl , P is Boeite une apse peter r where an honest leader belongs, and not, opportunistically, in the rear. | the role of Secretary of Amusement |the minds of everyone recarding the arden al awnox rison ry eden de we ea cat’ ane q - . . . appointed by the President to make | : a Facts Are Enough OMMUNISTS know what they are bellyaching about. They have the facts. They don't make these facts up, but read them in the capitalist press, and are smart enough to put two and two together. | America laugh-conscious even if he ‘has to use laughing gas against the | | workers to make them stand up and | cheer—for the N. R. A. Leads up to |& huge parade of happy, prosperous | workers (hypnotized off breadlines band, Franck Norman. Frank was always on the side of | the working people, regardless of race or color. We both, being work- ers, felt that we had a right to live. | | “mysteriot kidnaping of my hus- | | |The conditions of Lakeiand are, as Bars Revolutionary Press By CARL HACKER admittance in the future. And when “| HAVE decided not to distribute | 4¢cused on more than one occasion right back. Louis hurried to the plant, be- cause he had a lot of bills and his two kids and his wife needed money to live on. Besides, the building and loan company was getting tough will again conduct the Children and schools and for educational purposes, and Entertainment. Solo Rumbs Dance. | Orchestra, 8 p.m & = 3 visi about the interest. bs ; jand home relief by Baxter's ta a sof the S the New Masses, Steel Worker, | (uring the visit of the delegation coe Here are some newspaper clippings sent in recently by readers of | qancers, vere tate Pit sc flgget ete ene Labor Unity, Daily Worker and f already having made up his mind fhe hin oa vee linet to should vABC™ Boake Carter the Daily Worker from all over America, ‘A marching side by side with the| vantages are the citrus works. This, or Detender: +; to Edward poe xpitplen dr epee go home and wait till he was called. | s BLD DcGidon | comiastca: \ismasioe * $ military and police and shouting /of course, lasts only about six or | Sherwood, meet oe ot Sam | ous and insisted that he mavet heve| Instead of calling him, .though, tte, Boprano; Revele ‘A Cow Is Warm requiescat in pace depression. |seven months out of the year. In ae teu Balan las time to, think the matter over. they sawed the lock off his locker, OMRADE L. K., of the industrial city of Charleroi, Pa., sends in this | Bologna as tough as this should | these few months the workers are) inci ‘nersonal belongings to he _ Three days later the letter in which Packed up his tools, and sent them little -DBtenent been: be spewed right out in the theatre |Supposed to earn enough to last) deivered to them upon their re- | he set forth his decision was re-|to his house on a truck. That: is, reo psi have been sleeping nightiy beside a cow in a stable lo- | >Y moviegoers aware of whats hap-|them 12 months. | lea” ceived by the secretary of the Na-|the cheaper tools; they stole his ' Found vo. have been sleeping Bight ther, abandoned |Pening in the country today. Inci-| Peat This was the answer of the | tional Committee for the Defense better ones. They told him then . cated on Lock Hill, North Charleroi, a 75-year-old mother, abandoned | dentally this is just the beginning! Tells How Husband Joined |warden of Blaynox Workhouse, of Political Prisoners. that he was through 4 by relatives, today pleaded that she net be returned to the Washing- [of Fox’s coming campaign of films Communist Party | Robert H. Braun, member of Paint... The International Labor Defense| Louis didn’t lie down and_ ers 2 ton County Home from where she fled several months ago, taking up | glorifying N. R. A. IRANK was always reading. study- | rs and Paper Hangers Union (A. F, 1mmediately after the visit sent di- out a He put up cute a fight 4 her abode in a littered stable with a cow as a companion. io ae a ee Baicacee e ig (Of L.) to the workers of western|tectives to all its branches in the He went with committees from the ; | beled faa a “ ‘Mr. Avnie Bed ing and wondering how this | pennsylvania in their demand for| Pittsburgh district, together with a|Steel and Metal Workers Industrial | Dissatisfied with life at the home, the woman, Mrs. Annie Sedor, 17 Bey TEVED IN jcould be done when the pay Was 50 | eee eee eae litient nisca’| form resolution to be sent to the| Union and the Unemployed Coun- | left there several months ago and secretly returned to North Charleroi, YOU (F small, Frank later joined the Com- | eee ea ion of political prison- warden tachaly inne up his ¢ils and won relief. But the relief 4 making her home jn a stable owned by Nick Chupasko, Highland ave- (Fox) munist Party because he could see |“ potently a delegation of repre-|™ind,” in deciding this important | kept cutting him off for one ex- 4 nue, North Charleroi. . | FOX again foams at the in Irena ge ait aeongeon sentatives of various organizations | Westion. merce another. 2 slept alongside the cow to keep warm throughout the winter months. —_| show that radicals and Communists] The C.W.A. came In, which gave |'e for the Defense of Political Allakhens Gonna tad epenteaat There came a time when there “The discovery was made yesterday by County Relief Investigator | are shiftless parasites who prey/a few days work to the workers, | P'S0Mers. Pittsburgh branch, called casone a” he aseutke. geen wasn’t any more grub in the house " = John Ferry, of Charleroi, after neighbors revealed the woman's needs. | Upon honest workers for the finan-| put was soon exhausted. Then they cea tate ous at Rinne ic striking coal miners, must be made| and the ooal ran out. ss ba ea ag or omg oo 5 1 Members of the Chupasko family provided the woman with food and |Cial gain to be derived out of or- |resorted to relief, which was 80) Driconors ‘four of whom wore ton|the center of a constant bombard.| He was ready to kill himself then. y Orchestra 4 castoff clothing, although they are wards of charity.” Ganizing them for struggle. And! small one could hardly exist. The| Previn that institution at cher time | ment of protests, resolutions and de-|Maybe the sock on the head he got | 10:0 4 : i ‘ . woe to the young and innocent who| Negro workers suffered even more | pe recognized as political prisoners mands for political prisoners to re-| in the accident made him a little \ | i are caught in thelr trap with no/|than the whites, as we all know of| ahd that they be permitted to re. ceive working class publications.|crazy. But mainly the trouble was | 1 | In Re Father Coughlin wealthy John Boles’ nearby to show |the jim-crowism and discrimination | Caive literature of their choice Protests must be sent from every|that he didn’t know what to do;|,... WABC_Variety ' | (OMRADE ROBERT COLE, of New Britain, Conn., sends in this local eee oe way to fame and ea [Practiced in the South. Frank | “The delegation was made up of Section of the country. he couldn't get work and his family 17 oe erent ene ne. Lana 4 rec e film opens with Victor Jory, | would always explain t ie white 2; i The splendid achievement of the | was starving. His home was threat- BGnets: opraho 2" 4 ti ; e 2 \oarae representatives of such z \s ‘D is | Mann pr Tan ae ou is Wall Street blowi berries at | Pohemian-humanitarian, wearing an | Tuling class is spreading race hatred | @ the Society for Boole tegiaia National Committee for the Defense| ened. He pulled a razor in the 10:30-WEAF--Jack Benny, Comedian ‘ | ‘That off-stage noise you hear is Wall Stree ne te z artist’s bow-tie and standing on a/| between the Negro and white work-| tig, the League for = | of Political Prisoners in Sing Sing headquarters of the Steel and Met- Jon, Onsts 7 : mn, th for Peace and So wor | Father Coughlin for his silver purchases. The boys got ® special kick | soapbox somewhere in Western | ¢Fs, 50 as to keep the workers from | ciat’action, the International League 2nd Great Meadows Prisons must be | al Workers Industrial Union in car Geceet, teats from the fact that such a prominent advocate of high margins to curb | Penna., ridiculously appealing to the Seeing their common enemy, the | tor Peace and Freedom, the Stee]| duplicated here in the center of South Chicago one day, but the WJZ—String Symphi 4 | speculation did his own investing on a 10 per cent margin basis.” |miners to stop work and go on eae wea ee rete t and Metal Workers Industrial, Vicious coal and iron ae same hors: talked him out of it, and got jc Piece Songs 4 | What is meant by this, of course, is that Father, Coughlin has been | strike. The miners naturally re- | 5 eee onto And whe, Union, the International Labor De-| Tesults can be achieved if sufficient him relief again. ; BC_—Confliet Dramatic . i ching so-called currency reform, and the use of more. silver, in all |SP0nd by pulling him up. Later we| 'Mited for a better standard of liv-| tense,’ the League of Struggle for Pressure is mobilized from all, That’s about all. The relief cnt vEAF_George R. Holme 2 | Sie ae pci ob Id cure America’s economic woes, said |8%@ Presented with s picture of the| ins. PAA CNY @ |Negro Rights, the League Against Sources. him off again. Things got even | or eathington, Puresy J. <i : pe TARY Os Pest ark Dene ae Oe ne "i decadent, life of this “professional | és War and Fascism, the National I. L. D. Prepares Next Steps | Worse; he was old. desperate = Wiz cThres Seampe ‘Trio = i this loud-mouthed priest who fooled so many workers. — agitator” who dares to break in on| Fascist Terror Supported by — | Committee for the Defense of Politi-/ The Pittsburgh district Interna- he went up on the Pennsy tracks at WABC—The Republican 4 2 i Now the facts have come out that Father Coughlin has invested | 4 peaceful mining community with | Authorities cal Prisoners, and other organiza- tional Labor Defense as its next im-| 106th St., Wednesday, slashed him- Rep. ©. ©. Bolton of Ohio heavily in silver, with a lot of other Wall Street speculators. He stands | his radicalism. ti | tions, with a total of 14 representa-| portant step in the development of} a Reta eee 3 3 ae esi fibro da an tiltimindting We oF E International Labor Defense tive this cAinpeiee will tana acieela cats ; | to make millions of dollars if his “idealistic” sermons ‘favor - ere is an illumina of con- of Lakeland, with tely es. x is campaign sen lelegation | | ver are carried out by Roosevelt, as they may be. versation between two “organizers” | 199 Spewiarn pide Atle cetrbeed The Committee also had as part of 25 workers to Blawnox. These A M U S E M E N fb S } th - both wearing flowing bow-ties and ed in its functi se of }f its program the plan of visiting workers will make the demand upon Ege aa | And the good Father, who has preached so many valiant dema- ‘ per in its functioning because o} = i esti sipping wine in a Greenwich Village | the terror directed against them. Tn | all of the prisoners, This demand, Warden Braun for the recognition A : 3 j gogic sermons against Wall Bigs’ combing on margin (that is to say, den, set forth by Fox to expose the | Lakeland there is a stronz Ku Klux | 85 refused. However, the warden of political prisoners. Included in|] “Stitring Drama. . . Story of the Struggle of the Russian W bide AY } 4 | paying only 30 or 40 per cent down of a certain stock, on the chance | inside workings of Communist or-| Klan. There are also other fascist | ¥@5 finally forced to admit four of this delegation will be members of 9 | 4 | 4t will go up in price, and one can cash in by re-selling), well, this good | ganization: “Well, comrade, how was| organizations, These bands are well| *?e delegation to visit the four pris-/the Painters and Paper Hangers M A x J M G re) R K I § he r | Father was buying carloads of silver stock on only a TEN PER CENT | the pickings in Paterson?” “Not s0| protected by the city government oners. They were all allowed in at) local union, in which Warden Braun SELEAGEH C steEe 4 | margin. good, comrade, the workers aren’t|and serve the bosses in terrorizing | the same es ey Peioubary Lenehan eaaty ane ‘ “Mother” ap saps a gas 4 i] That’s the kind of frenzied little gambler he is, this priest who | Shelling out much these days. Where | the workers. Every attempt on the | On art amass Visit, Ht sad ee | 5 nthe meantime «proves! ears AS “1905' ; \ Sinila onufols “elt soab Jaber and Jose pal of the Nani Con- | YoU been?” “Oh I've been in the coal | part of workers and their organiza- ta ea eg ee ¥ f Side ne Se an pie A eo ae renee. be Eas Sa ere ce ceed tebe) 4 HY buil — oe seab labor, is a cl region, not much dough there either.| tion to carry on a struggle for bet- taporen concession won from the SOUR ne a Very, arese Ubon | ME EATRE, 14th Street and Union Square i ssman, ughlin. g | iv! itions ie . | l — : gt | eit “Of course, he never fooled us old-timers for a second,” writes this, te pte tees oe ewan SORT TORS 40-Year-Old Rules Govern |every other penal institution in the TO Ay erente— ||| =- THE THEATRE UNION Presents — “ : “ eee ae In the course of the discussion it| country. JIG SAW || The Season's Outstanding Dramatic Hit q i 2; Comrade: Cole, ‘but he did fool shousands‘ot the other workers: “The , x |was revealed that the rules of the| The fight for the recognition of|| A comedy by DAWN POWELL with || | 2 | most noticeable thing about this Coughlin exposure is that the capi- the’ dipistorship Z the prole- | Norman Exposed Misleaders; | institution had not been changed| the status of political prisoners 1s|| BRNEST TRUCX—SPRING BYINGTON || stevedore 7 i talist press made so little stir about it. Are they shielding the ‘Cru-| fariat must he @ State that em- Rejected. Bribe |in the last forty years and that|on! ‘This fight must be intensified. | FE THEI. BARRYMORE || : u ily 7 | - sale Fy i yard i a a his ca 2 y wi heatre, 47th Streat. W. o: vay ||| CIVIC REPERTORY THEA, 195 W it st.'| ~ T read several capitalist papers macs mention of Coughlin’s treachery possessed; and a new kind of ek the beg on) ee WOreere. ce niteeg sees eRe Suvipe a eit Be OOPRTR REE OE : re 4 eee irs cans Hei fiage hg Pyrat ia q until May 5. Once again has it n proved to me that the Daily | dictatorship. against the bour- | a meeting of the unemployed, ce ae : bs fies * Ss relict ci Last Week-EUGENE 0’NED Comedy | st he offered the “solution” that all} This former misleader of labor the country, and also of every work- TL) ' 7 | Worker prints the news, while it is news, and correctly interpreted. geoisie—Lenin. Jobe be given to whites and the Ne-| didn’t have courage enough to state|ing class organization, as well. as an MULDERNES S| DODSWORTH ; | $ . % : | |groes cut off. My husband got the|in the presence of the committee those sympathetic to the cause of | .__ Tea BEE ae wha Dramatized by SIDNEY HOWARD , iI i i | etii that he would refuse the literature! political prisoners, GUILD Fv.8.20 Mat. Wed.Thurs.Sat. SHUBERT, W. 44th St. Rvs. 8:49 Share Sat. i ey a Eleni hrops tage an ereen IDR IAEA Diet ahd a nat Matinees’ Wednesday and Saturday 2:20 : NEW YORK reader sent in this spicy little note regarding a beauti- this attack on the unity of the aa: SSE = pee? WALTER HUSTON in Sinclair Lewis’ : i ful old lady philanthropist who endowed hospital beds, supported working class. A large number of “MARY. OF Sco TANK? Nelle sear tae . | elean government, visited convicts and loved children, but whose mil- | “Little Man, What Now?” | the workers responded to my hus- W H A T , S O N | ere OF SCOTLAND” ||Rapio crry MUSIC HALL— : : Highs % * . band’s appeal. This displeased Mr. | with HELEN PHILIP HELEN |] S0th St. & 6th Ave.—Show Place of the $ | Mons came out of the manufacture of MUNITIONS—out of the very At Radio City Music Hall ¢, HAYES MERIVALE MENKEN Nation--Opens 11:30 A. M. i ; ‘ash and the bosses. | pose eesti seh Bs | 1D! | Thea., | traffic that fills the hospitals with mountains of shattered men, that On another occasion, my husband| tue pay 1s DRAWING NEARER—June Subscription 30c. Proceeds to Venemueten | ALVIN» Miasoanrecetl a 5 | destroys “clean” government, and produces arson, murder and pillage, “Little Man, What Now?", a new| went with some fellow workers on | 9th—Daily ‘wo a and Moonlight Bx | Political prisoners : pas | coy St capac Ri 1 {i | cursi Sports, Tennis, Dancing, CONCERT ver ir. ae a4 r | More than the work of any convict: the war industry that left millions | Dinivetsal Bictate, Os the new screen |the C.W.A. to the head official to | fiiMend more,” Ger sour cketernow ai |LWO. Followers oF ihe att “irviee | Tell your friends and shopmates|| Little Man, What Now? ; | 9f little orphans after its last burst of big profits: | Bat che of e halen on fee Racal Laker eee seven heer i ge Book stores. Piaze ‘Hal, Irving Place and sth étreet. about the Daily Worker. Let them | biroritie me ee i “On April 26, the New York Times ran an editorial entitled ‘Helen | by Hans Fallada and has Margaret |and was threatened by the officials |/7@ay many more, After program dancing til 2| read your copy. | en ‘ 4 eae ‘ : 7 son an * 5 8 5 p = ‘ t | Hartley Jenkins.’ Interesting quotations from the article are: Sullavan in the leading role. The|for his “agitation of the workers.”| sthers at June 1 damboree a monsiesanes | oitiy, Mam: 28c. Proceeds to CP. Org. | ; ““The daughter of Mercellus Hartley and the granddaughter of | stage show feature this week in-|They offered’ him better treatment, | casino, 198th St. and 7th Ave. Auspiees PIERRE DEGEYTER OLUB presents une 3rd... Another 3 | Di > Robert M. Hartley, both of whom are remembered for their generous | cludes ‘Fiesta Mexicana” with the |if he would stop “his agitation.” — Comm. Defense Political Prie- | Edith Friedman, planist, Program modern | 4 support of welfare movements in this city, earned a distinction in her | full Music Hall cast. t 1 ce bee ee Lie aad | ne veoh nd Sntertatnment at anes | Sore nieces, Bieneeer fetes rik NEw A “ ” | Union, 7. 1Bt , 8:30 p.m. Adm. 25¢. | § : B50. own right as a philanthropist. . .. Like the women of the Proverbs, she es oe Habe de Bante ne (eels | Paton, LW Bee Bt 8:90 vim. Adm. 266.15 E. 19th Bt Adm, abe i i ; _ “reached forth her hands to the needy,” but her understanding and | film drama, ig he etree 8 | |“What Trade Relations with the Soviet| Saturday | a active concern went much beyond immediate relief. She gave gener- poem eee eae a Lured to Death With Story of | Brion, Means to ihe American arenas GRAND Dance, and, Entertainment at (Stars of Broadway, Harlem and 14th Street) i a ‘ + a - . German Workers’ Club, 79 yt it. * | ously to support of higher education, notably to the founding of the | yatheson Lang play the principal Eynohing Aven Brooklyn, 2:30 mm Auspiees: WU-| solo dancer, proletariat songs, surprises. @ 3. NEW PLAYS by Workers Lab. Theatre 4 School of Nursing in Columbia University. .. . The hospital in Banner | roles, |"THE bosses then decided to dis-| I. BEGUN, expelicd from the public sys- | Serr wag’ @ DIMITROFF by Group Theatre Members i 1 1 ‘;|_ ANTI-WAR Rally and Track and Field | Elk, N. ©., stands as evidence . . . faithful support of clean govern- | ‘The Jefferson beginning Saturday| 1 pose of him. So some of the eae derome. Ave, Bronk Gan timy | Meet. Max Bedacht, speaker. Movies, @ ARTEF Scene from “Yegor Bulitcher” 1 _ ment ... gave to study of traffic problems . . . visited convicts . . . | will present “Success At Any Price”| yellow dogs came and lured him| st). 8:30 p.m. Auspices: Mt. Eden’ Br, ee gg ages At en eee en @ EULA GRAY, “Songs” prison welfare work .. . deepest concern was for the welfare of children.’ | with Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and/into a trap with the story that a/F5.U. Adm. 0c, | workers clubs and at gate 25c. 1 £ @ H. W. L. DANA, Chairman | “On April 26, the Dally News ran an item in its Obituary column, | Colleen Moore, and “Hell Bent For |Negro hed been Iynched on the), ¢°Sesting ot ew headquarters, "1905 | , SPRING FESTIVAL given by West Side|) Ultra RAN euheree - o39 age ji i S 1993 | Br. F.S.U. at Hotel Newton, 25: ‘on c c » "tg Interesting quotations from the item are: Love,” with Tib McCoy. , Beroy na sony eal foe Meee Jerome Ave, near Burnside Ave, 8:30 Dm. | way (94th St.) 9 pm, ‘Delightful concert, ||“ KYKUNKOR” or “THE WITCH WOMAN i e ington Arms pany, lesday night at her home rte | wanted Frank to come along and Hinks AvecAde 10 eet, PARTY and Dance, Excellent Dance fe Pi “ td Moritown, N. 3. «Har father, the late Marcellus Harley, was one | fay at the Palen ‘Theatre. Sammy Gently hth, Z wished to eo lone | east eatin ore tage ae | Mrs Run, Og” dy, at | Remrve Tikets at: 25e, 35e, 55e, B3e, 99e, Inc. Tax | of the country’s foremost munitions manufacturers,’ wh is q| With him. but this the luring party | 504 LW.O, at Irving Plaza, 8 p.m. Nomina-| 5:39 p.m. Auspices: Mt. Eden Br. F.8.U." 3 “COMMENT IS UNNECESSARY,” the stage shows nt en objected to, saying it was “no piace |"on eh otter ss on oaiy-| SPRING PARTY atti We iam ar, aa0|| Now Theelss £8, wn et. Nee FIFTH AVE. THEATRE fe. | ‘ s for 8 lady.” Frank was @cccmpe- | tory of Russian Revolution,” at 247 Lex. | Dru yon OF Stevedore, G. Shop, 50 F, 12th Bt, Th. Box Office. Sunday 8:30 P.M. 28th St. at Boway | i a Maurice Schwartz, director and|nied by Mr. Surrency, who was Ave., nt. 34th: St., 8:15. p.m. Aus-| Cut wenene Me wie a ae X sis leading player of the Jewish Art/sharing our home, while I stayed FSU. Grand Central Br. Discus-| CONCERT and Ball given by Br. 4 1.W. | — err ee = Theatre, has signed with the Metro-| at home with our baby boy, Frankie. sae i Geis aitas on “How | Q:: Celebrating the Red Wedding. Irving | ; Goldwyn to write and stage a num-| Five blocks from the house, they | Women and Children Are Treated in the|hiaza Mall. Irving Place and 15th Bt. ia é Coal Sears ber of films. He will also appear in | drew guns on Frank, put Mr. Sur- | Soviet Union," by Mrs. Susan H. Wood-| "ARTISTS. gune Dance at Irving Plaza, | oO n L een some of the pictures. rency out, telling him to keep go-|{it/; at Harlem international Br. FSU. irving Place and 18th St. 8:30 p.m. Red | ‘ pad : Hot Negro Jayz Band. Refreshments. Sub-_ i Fi aan he r ‘wished to remain SRBRAAN AAO Wali Sri etare on |B Noe bios Lepieie: Artua: oon } fd i i a in Problem in U.S.A.” jora Py * ey IN| Phitharmonie Orchestra |heaitiy.” as the car drove off, Mr.| reve Pibie b,O5.4 ah Bae Pa : sT Br at Plans For New Season gun. Rowing wus eon heen fad See Sank i alaerene Seeeautianarh Rneany! f fe - PRISONS, Police and Punishment in the | ; y iy pres) : : viet | sents Symphony Concert and Frolic, Suns ‘ 5 ‘You can tell a miner by his scars ‘The’ Phitharmonio-Bymphony or: |% "== eee ed a. Mele at Eon wr | de7, ‘Sune 2, at Irving lass, frving Pisce | x : They are dark ashen spots under his skin chasicay whidh closed fis boas in Peace te es cibcooms, ST Hemlock 8, “Brook: | #84 1518 St. $:30 pm. Subscription 35. | GROUCHO MARX-BILL ROBINSON me ‘ : April, announces its plans for a ey et ge ‘ophe | Department because of increased business | : P 3 If you're a complainer, not in good with the boss, thirty weeks season beginning Oc- WR Se eng Negio As a Nation’ at Moshiaiu Progress | has moved to larger quarters at. 85°. 12h | remind you that you're coming to the i ‘You lift your coal in three feet of water tober 4. According to the announce- police Interviewed Mr. Sur- | sive mss a0 Bainbridge Ave., Bronx, 8:30 ee aaa tect ig sora ay Na sgfcon % And you can’t see cracks and the chunk breaks open, ment, Arturo Toscanini and Bruno rency, but did not come near me. | Ph eo ean | that ‘books and niet + a Slices your wrist and bits fly hard in your face. Walter will again direct the prin- AntieSeraitisn Be oa8 Se ee on sale. at the ‘Workers Book Bhop, | Air Cooled RENAISSANCE 128th St. & 7th Avs 3 cipa classic repertoire. Toscanini lyn, 8:30 p.m. Comrade Buchwald will| 50 E. 13th St. | om ral You can tell a miner by his scars will conduct the orchestra for ten PROTESTS CLOSING OF speak. Auspices: Williamsburg and Bridge | Boston, Mass. | Mara Tartar and Other Broadway Stars 2 By the color of skin thet has never felt the sun weeks, His plans include a Brahms LIBRARIES PUUMEATRE Collective at Labor ‘Temple| JOHN REED OLUB presents a sympo- | 4) Cycle of six different programs.| NEW YORK.—At a recent mass| Theatre, 14th St. and 2nd Ave. “Marion | Menace” Speakers: Aieor ake Leven | WILL SEE YOU THERE! 4 Jack-hammer drills raise hot dust in the chambers, Walter will direct for six weeks, fea-| meeting arranged by the Brighton| Mods Inc. £45 bin. Adm. 300 and 580:| Socialist Party, John Webber. Ameriean : ui on a series of fi | League Against War and Fascism, and a mer poly F ses on applicati : Choke the lungs into all-night coughing, turing on his tetas ira ‘4 Ties of| Beach Parents, Teachers and Stu-| meets at 35 E. 12th St. Room 304, 4.30 League Against War and Liver the AE reds eT erent we) ea eee eee 3 j Rot the jarring guts into cancer, ‘Wagner concerts with soloists, | tents Committee, resolutions were) p.m, interesting lecture, Adm. free. All in-| tions association. H.W. to Bana, chatt- Nat'l Committee for Defense of Political Prisoners _ i : bat Other — directors include unanimously adopted protesting the | "" Sh ogresstve workers Culture Club,| Mami Sunday Eve. June 3, 8 p.m. at 8 a q And seven-pound batteries press the kidneys in, Klemperer, who will direct the first closing by Mayor LaGuardia of ten 134 Toone Ae. ‘ curs | Rolston St. Contribution "$e. GROUCHO 156 Fifth Avenue (20th St.), Room 534, Chelsea 2-9593.. i ‘| ‘The sulphuric acid leaks and eats the flesh. four weeks of the season; cee | public libraries and demanding that om "Menace of the Movies" by Leo Bure | Perth h Amboy, N. J, | richest “A. datie: abe eobcnitilbian: Citiae ead eee ' q Rodzinski, Werner Janssen, ins|the money appropriated for war) ¥iZ, 4:30 pm. Adm. 100 YOUTH 'W.0. First Enter- m sale at Committee & orkers ; ‘You can tell a miner by his scars Lange and Ernest Schelling, who | CHOW MEIN Evening at Chinese Work-|tainment and Dance at Workers Home, : i preparations be used instead to build! os Center 22 W. iith St., 8 pm, Dence| soa By —— General Admission (incl. tax): Se { By fingers or hands ot feet missing | ers Center, 8B im St, on Saturday, June 2. Good q