The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 9, 1934, Page 7

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j *. to those papers which subscribe to the service, but the ee __ By MILTON HOWARD ____. | CHANGE ——THE— | WORLD! By MICHAEL GOLD OMETIMES the capitalist press doesn’t appreciate its own geniuses. Why wasn’t the following dispatch printed more widely? It came over the United Press wires ~ kept-press boys didn’t seem to like it enough to print. So here ‘it is. Of course, merely sneering Congress and the parliamentary ~ system is pi of the fascist campaign. Their theory is that capitalism can more efficiently enslave and crush the people of a country by means of a personal dictator like Hitler or Musso. Communism attacks the parliamentary system because it is a form of sham capitalist democracy. . = In its place we could have not less democracy, but infinifely more— @ real democracy in which the millions of producers would actively participate—mass rule, in- short; Soviets. But here’s the little gem sent me by a sympathetic newspaper man, and who ever said Mark Twain left no heirs? The Indignant Actors By HARRY FERGUSON (United Press Staff Correspondent) WASHINGTON, May 23 (UP).—The actors at the National Theater have gone on a strike because they were asked to act, in “Both Your Houses,” the Pulitzer prize play which makes Congress lock like—well, Congress. They said the opera heaped ridicule on the Iawmakers and that it would be exceedingly unpatriotic to make funny cracks about a digni- fied legislative body, crammied with statesmen like Huey Long, who are very, very busy furling and unfurling the sails op the Ship of State. Careful. inquiry today brought the information from Mr. John McKee, the director who tells the actors whether to smile or cry, that none of the Bernhardts or Booths had ever made the journey up to Capitol Hill to find out whether Maxwell Anderson, author of “Both Your Houses,” knew what he was talking about. That may explain a lot. The play depicts the lawmakers as doing considerable log-rolling and pork-barrelling. Everybody knows, of course, that there has been no pork-barrelling Congress—not since yesterday. .For the benefit of youse lucky guys who can vote for a Congress- man.and.then forget about him for two years, it might be well to explain about pork-barrelling. That is a quaint device whereby one Congress- man says: “T’ll vote for an appropriation to build a bridge in your dis- trict if you will vote for one in mine.” Did you ever notice that America iB about the best-bridged country in the world? The actors were. starting rehearsal on “Both Your Houses” when -Romaine Callendar, who was to play the role of Senator Solomon Fitz- * maurice, was forced to say: “The American taxpayers are so dumb and sleepy they ought to be gyppad by an elected few of their more cunning fellows.” Then: he had to go on and say: “There is nothing except store whisky that I hate as much as I do an honest politician.” < That was too much for Mr. Callendar. He threw down the script and cried: “I object to uttering these speeches. I consider them an affront to the Congress of the United States and a reflection on the integrity of our legislators.” The rest of the actors said they objected, too. They said they wouldn’t play in “Both Your Houses.” Mr. McKee thought it over, and decided he guegsed he would object, too. They decided to change the lay. ; ‘ * And so, ladies and gentlemen, the National Theater players will present. in the week beginning May 28 a three-act opera entitled “Jim- mie’s Women.” It’s about love in the suburbs. * * ’ Another Joke ND here's another “humorous” incident of life’ in America today: Comrade Michael Gold: es : f It is in the name of sweet Charity that Iam writing to you. It is.to expound the cause of such “sweet Charity” of the charming First Lady of‘the Land and her kind friends: Mrs. Randolph Hearst and Mrs. Vincent Astor. These charitable minded women have decided that in the fifth year of the depression there might be a few unemployed girls who actually cannot afford to buy lunches so these philanthropic souls are running a June Ball to raise money for the maintenance of Mrs. F. D. Roosevelt's Club for Unemployed Girls. * The. first time, another comrade and I went to try our luck. We “went into the lobby expecting to find welcome home signs on the walls. The only things thet surrounded us were nice comfortable sofas, so- ‘rority dames and uniformed attendants. We decided that we had in- ‘vaded the wrong place and we departed. with empty stomachs, which, fortunately, had hecome accustomed.to missing the afternoon meal. ‘The “Evening: Journal’ came out again with a write-up on this ‘club and vepeated the address. This time we went up in a group of five, “Teady to take advantage of that splendid institution of charity which fe this capitalist system makes possible. This time we went to two ‘small rooms packed with girls, but we got no further than the entrance, for a sweet young thing at the entrance asked us if we were registered. When we replied in the negative, she told us she was very sorry but that she could not accommodate us for the club only could hold 75 girls and the quota had already been filled. We asked her when we could make out applications and again she told us that she was sorry, but she could » Not take any more applications. One of us asked her what we were supposed to do and she murmured very sweetly that she really did not know what we could do. We tried to speak to some of the girls who were standing near the door, but they were quite reticent about the whole matter and we de- cided we would forget about the affair. But the rank hypocrisy was too much for us and we decided that a bit of an expose of these lousy charity rackets, might open up the eyes of some of the unemployed youth who are being-focled by just such schemes. G. Y.c. “Memorial Day, 1934 “And let not the bourgeoisie blame us if on the morrow of the - outbréak of such a war against the U.S.S.R, they will miss certain ‘of the governments that are near and dear to them.’—Joseph Stalin at the 17th Party Congress of the C. P., S. U, Hes * - 7%, ete! a . The sun glint on Roosevelt's glasses The teeth glint, the famous honey smile And flowers of commemoration fall Fall, fall, petals fall, blood soaked snow, ..The shrapnel falls, the flying. steel that tore The guts of Private X, unknown soldier, Chosen as a sample from the big meat pile In Flanders field where poppies grow. Listen, Roosevelt, listen Stop listening to your hoss, J. P., for a while The Cabinet gentlemen gird for war - (Our sacred honor, the ancient lies, our interests) Listen, sleek, smiling vulture (Woodrow Wilson used to smile) It is the ten million rising from their graves The crushed mouths are screaming, the sightless eycs Burn soundless hatred. Listen, Roosevelt (Morgan can wait awhile), Listen to us, to me, cotton-picker of Alabama To me, crack coal-heaver on the docks of New Orleans And Me, working class son of the cities, Suckled under Pittsburgh smoke, lulled By the auto belts of Detroit, Listen, White House boy, listen . . . -. You won't get away with it. Not this time. - Guns can turn two ways. Lenin taught us that, . We see, we sce. Se yi . ‘Byes burn hatred, living and dead, Listen, Roosevelt, the proletarian army . The tread, galvanic tread! DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1934 | Writes on Thaelmann | | Noted Communist writer; au- thor of “Under Fire” and other works; a leader of world anti- fascist movement. Paul Peters Joins in Demand for the Release of Ernst Thaelmann Paul Peters, co-author of “Steve- dore.” the Theatre Union play now at the Civic Repertory Theatre in New York, adds his voice to these j}of the hundreds of intellectuals in demanding the immediate release of Ernst Thaelmann. Peters, who, as a newspaper man in Germany, personally witnessed the Hitler “Beer Cellar putsch” in 1923, says: “There is no doubt that Hitler and the German fascists hate and fear Thaelmann, and will attempt to destroy him, because he repre- sents the workers, who, as a class, must sooner or later rise up and wipe all fascism off the face of the earth. It is especially necessary for workers and intellectuals in Ameri- ca to protest against the threat to Thaelmann’s life because the same sort of barbarism that Hitler stands for in Germany, Dolfuss in Austria, and Mussolini in Italy, is rapidly being introduced by Roose- velt and his banker friends in America. “The fact that it comes under the guise of ‘fighting for democracy, against beth Communism and fas- cism’—as expressed by that arch- jtype of fascist, General | makes it all the more insidious and |calls for more alert and vigorous protest and struggle on the part of the working class. Every worker, | every -honest intellectual, must ta up the cry: ‘Down. with fascism “PAUL PETER: 3 7;:00-WEAF-—Baseball Resume WOR—Sports Resume WdJZ—Flying—Capt. Al Williams WABC—Belasco Orch. 3-WEAF—Homespun—Dr. William H. Foulkes WOR--Talk-—Harry Hershfield Wae—Pickens Sisters, Sons 7:20-WEAP—Himber Orch.; De Marco filsters, Songs; Eddie Peabody, Banjo; Joey Nash, Tenor WOR-—Sast Orange American Legicr Band WsZ—Bestor Orch. WABO—Betty Barthell, Contralto; Melodeers Quartet 7:43-WABC—Looking at Life—Roy Helton 8:00-WZAP—Teddy Bergman, Comedian; Betty Queen, Contralto; Bill Smith, Baritone; Sern Orch. WOR—City Government Talk WJZ—Spanish Musicale WABC—Rich Orch.; Morton Downey, Tenor; Mary Eastman, Soprano 8:15-WOR—All Star Trio WJZ—Bevarian nd 8:30-WEAF—Floyd Gibbons, Headline Hunter; Shilkret Orch. WOR—Warren Orch, WJZ—Canadian Concert 9:00-WEAF—City Symphony Orch. of Philadelphia; Dr. Thaddeus Rich, Condustor ‘WOR—Preddy Farber and Edith Handman, Sons ‘WJZ—Rochester Centennial Celebra- tien; Philharmonic Orch. and Speakers WABC—Grete Stueckgold, Soprano; Kostelanetz Orch. 9:15-WOR—Dance Orch. 9:30;WEAF—Real Life Problems—Sketch; Beatrice Fairfax, Commentator ‘WJZ—Duchin Orch.; Edward Davies, Baritone WABC—Dramatic Guild 9:45-WOR—Studio Music 10:00-WEZAF—Hayton Orch.; Saxon Sis- ters, Songs; Male Quartet WOR—Doella Baker, Soprano; liamt Hargrave, Baritone WJZ—Tim Ryan's Place—Sketch 10:18-WOR—Studfo Musicale 19:30-WEAF—University of Chicago Inter- Fraternity Sing; Speakers, Gov. Henry Horner of Mlinois; Robert M. ~ Hutchins, University Palme Dutt, Editor Of Labor Monthly, Writes Book on Lenin wil- Lenin’s politics rather than iso- lated incidents from his life are emphasized by R. Palme Dutt, fore- most Marxist journalist and editor of the British Labor: Monthly, in his Life and Teachings of V. 1. Lenin, released by International Publishers. Dutt defines his approach as an attempt “to present the significance and role of Lenin, not primarily as a Russian leader, but as a world leader at a critical turning-point of human history; and not pri- though he was that, but as the lead- @ world movement of dirceS influ- Bound in cloth, the book costs fifty cents and can be ordered from the publishers, 381 Fourth Ave., or frem Workers’ Library Publishers, Box 148, Station D, New York, or Workers’ Bookshop * | personified this proletarian crowd. lohnson— TUNING IN | 8:45-WABC—Fats Waller, Songs 3 President of the marily as a unique personality, al- | er and responsible representative of ence and cignifiecance for us teday.” HEN I pronounce this Red name,¢ which, despite everything, |spreads out over oppressed Ger- ;Many, when I recall this fighter, | whom the enemy has seized upon as its most hated and most impor-| tant victim, whom it has kept bar-| barously hidden in some dungeon | for the past year, while waiting for |@ parody trial—this prisoner of | whom it may be said that he has been officially condemned—I see | him as I have seen him many times, |in the environment where he was | formed and where he grew up: at | Hamburg, among the workers. It was at a huge meeting of work- ers and war veterans. The immense hall was jammed: five, six thou- sand workers. I fraternized on the platform with Thaelmann. I see him and I hear him. A powerful figure, a healthy and solid frame, strong voice, the fine, plain, expres- sive face of a worker conscious of the power of his class, strengthened by his revolutionary theory, un- shakably confident of victory. | The audience heard him with at- | tention, with love, What struck one | was the resemblance between the | speaker and those who listened to |him. He spoke to them; it also seemed that it was they who were speaking with his voice. He truly He had been modeled and built to- } gether with those who were there. And it was not very long before | I saw him again for the last time. | It was at Paris, in the midst of a crowd of workers, at the Bullier | Hall, towards the end of 1932. They | Were celebrating the fifteenth an- niversary of the Russian Revolu- tion. In the midst of indescribable | enthusiasm he appeared on the platform. He was always the same —hbig, broad-shouldered, his face calm, his eyes clear. Leader of the German anti-fascists and anti-cap- | italists, speaking to the French proletariat, he cried out: “Com- tades, the Geman Communists are | the venguard of the world prole-| tariat in the struggle against fas- cism. Our struggle is your struggle.” The cheers which answered him demonstrated that in Paris, as in Hamburg, Thaelmann was under- stood as well as he was loved by the workers ennobled by the spirit of their class, The Worker Thaelmann | The Parisian workers cheered the man who had fought against the re-arming of Germany, the man who had created the workers’ com- Mittee of the French, Polish, Czechoslovakian and German work- ers for struggle against the policy of imperialism. They cheered the anti-imperialist | Ernst Thaelmann. Thaelmann has always been a| worker. His example shows what a | worker can become. | ar ilies is forty-eight years since Ernst | Thaelmann was born in Ham-| burg. His childhood was in no way different from that of millions of workers throughout the world. His father was a worker with socialist views, which did not make the life | of the family easier; black-listed, he | passed from trade to trade, buffet- ed by chance, but never deciding to become “well thinking” for his own interests. The humble home knew cruel privations and misery. It was in that environment that the in- fant opened its clear eyes. Ernst was a harbor worker, a transport worker, ever since he could. use his hands. At the be-. ginning of his life there is drawn, as on a fresco, the picture of the athletic worker loading cargo from the dock to the ship, from the ship | to the dock, in one of the busiest ‘and most important harbors of old | Europe. Pia eee T the age of sixteen, in 1902, he | entered the Social-Democratic | Party. The next year he became a | {member of the German Transport Workers Union, in which he was to remain nearly thirty years. He left | Do You Know Thaelmann? By Henri Barbusse ES=FFFET Page Sever — it in 1931, not of his own will, but expelled by the reformist adminis- tration—against the wishes of the workers—for “revolutionary activ- | ity.” Taken for military service, this | internationalist who did not hide his attitude toward patriotic idol- atry well enough was looked upon with disfavor. His period in uni- form was hard for him, but good for propaganda. The Militant | life, propaganda | again, intensive. Nothing could be done about it; he was incorrigible. | The idea of social justice was riveted to his body. He had a red | spirit just as one has blood. Before beginning his day’s work, he under- | took to show his comrades on the job why it was to their advantage to| throw themselves into revolution- | ary activity, despite certain sac- | rifices involved. And in the evening, | when the gang was breaking up, all tired out, he ran about here and there to convince others about this. In the next thirty years there were few years without campaigns and struggles. From this time on ther was not an incident of the great working class movement which did not cheer him if successful, or bruisé him if it met with setbacks, Very soon he had tasks and re- sponsibilities within the Socialist Party and the trade union move- ment, and he acquired a great deal | of practical experience in trade| unionism. His position in the Party | very soon. became clear and d cisive; it was that of a thorough r | olutionary, No extremsm, no utopian lack of realism—a revolutionary realism against opportunism and| bureaucracy. He always stood direct- | ly face to face with those two vicious and deceitful opponents: op- | Portunism and bureaucracy. Is there any need to add, today, ; when we have been taught by what | ERNST THAELMAN jthe road. to victory if the masses | democratic bureaucracy (one of the forms of reformist mummification), which was disturbed by the revolu- be this proletarian danger! Thaelmann also found bureau- art How evident is now the clarity of | — his line, the correctness of the road he took—which would have been had followed him! Thaelmann is| solidly for maximum revolutionary | activity, for positive conquest on the positive plane of class war. With the clarity of a man who is rect, | profound, and strong, he rejects and sweeps away all the casi of combinations, or arrangements, |. of “cautious evolution,” of the “les- | Fred El Americ become well known to | ers not them is ternational claim The uistry | urged its readers and workers gen- Moscow Is Becoming Art Center of World Bela in is'a medal winner at a wo) fair. He is a widely known craft tionary activity of the young work- man, always digging into all art jers and took measures to restrain possibilities, and with a deep knowl- edge of the history and theory of . His paintings done over coated racy across att the tra presets path’ in the trade newspaper have drawn more tha union con , where he dealt it fae is = Sree many a blow in the name of the | OTdinaty interest. His excu apposition 1 ae mag. | into technique are again seen opposition ¥. ers. (The Red Trade a series of new a ings which |! Union Opposition did not exis eghit r : Ep alias eee et exist untill jas brought back from the V Uitz is secree onal Union of ich Romain Rolland sa hard lines one feels A book of his of painters ion for a poster on ince the death of Le Tr can now be seen in foreign artists come y stream to Moscow will soon be exhibits of Japan and French artists. They come to Moscow from ail sections of the world; of a chools and varying in a ¥ , of the world See the Fleet with the Daily Worker Excursion Toda hg Daily Worker has already ly to visit the fleet now anchored | Ser evil,” which hides all the traps | in the Hudson River and to frater- | and all the-surrenders that permit | nize with the enlisted men aboard |@ brutal and clever class enemy to | the batt! ships, cruisers, destroyers, hich eventually re- | submarines, ete. Those of you who | | organize itself, sulted in a temporary setback for | have not already done so, can still See the fleet and at the same time |the working class in Germany, and which has now led to the setback spend an entire day and evening of real pleasure by getting your tickets |of the Austrian workers. Thaelmann Was always truly the man of the masses. this tough and formidable fighter. | His opponents (who thought that! everything was permissible. for them) even had the audacity to attempt to corrupt him. One of | these stories is well known, an 1 deserves to be mentioned in passing. | 24 The idea originated with the lead- ers of the trade union movement. He was offered a well-paid Post, where he would be free from need i and from the political struggle in| which his rough hor as for One should tell about all the | Moonlight Excursion to Hook Moun- jefforts made during the pre-war | ‘t@in on the steamer Claremont to- period, from all sides, to get around | 94% We won't short-change you by promising that you'll see the wo: less lads to join the na will see the fleet, ancho: sades, all way up to Yonkers you'll see a good bit of the Hud and the beautiful h | side that line its shores, as w the Daily Worker Day and our militarists do to dson, in the shado’ An is and cow to eat, dancing; games of all sorts, Q5 well ag several hoi of sun, di ing which you can acquire the s tan w generally eludes workers living in New York City. And—as an added feature—the big baseball game of the season: the D Worker staff vs. the Younz Communist League! The Y. C. L. is keeping its line-up secret, but you have already read about the Daily Worker's team which Manager Fuchs has announced as follows Hathaway, catcher; Gerson, pitcher; Burck, Ist base; Reeve, 2nd base; Rolfe, shortstop; Ross, 3rd base; Raymond, center fie! Arnold, right field; Howard, left field. There'll be a host of substitutes for the Daily’s team on hand, in case the regulars get tired chasing | flies, or Gerson’s arm gives out, or a mass hay-fever epidemic makes its appearance. Dig down for the dollar, and sce tie2 fleet, the sun and the moon! In addition, once the boat reaches | Swim, dance and play aboard the has taken place, how this clear and | uncompromising position was the | only correct one, how this point of | dangerous to some of his immediate neighbors! He would be handsome- | nesty made him its destination, there will be swim-| Claremont ming for wh ver feels like it; lots today, Tickets are going fast. Get yours now! ly paid, on condition that he carry out the “decisions of the presidium” without opening his mouth. ... It is needless to say what recep- | tion Thaeimann gave this treason view was the only fertile one? .., He became a member of the mu- nicipal council of Hamburg, which | was a city partly autonomous in its| administration. Then he played a| Proposed by traitors (who were more central role in tie Iabor move- | POOr psychologists, besides). Dis- ment, as a delegate from the local |Ciplinary measures against him | followed; his name was at the head of the blacklist. When the World War broke out, he had been without work for a year. (To Be Continued) Trades Union Council, and above all as an active member of the Youth Sections. He organized the Youth Federation, and here also he had to struggle bitterly against social- The Legion in Minneapolis: ; A Criticism and a Reply Series on Detroit by Erskine Caldwell? New York Editor Daily Worker: Dear Comrade, In your June 5th issue of the: Daily Worker there appeared an article by Sender Garlin on the strike in Minneapolis. This article in one paragraph Slandered the veterans to such an extent that I feel as a worker and a member of the American Legion a retraction should be made. The article pomnts out that the Chief of Police asked the Comman- der of the Fifth District of the American Legion to supply 1,500 men as special deputies. This re- quest was asked after a bunch of cops, etc. were sent to the hos- pital (where they belonged). Then Garlin goes on to say that the legionnaires couldn’t serve as dep- uties because it was “against the constitution of the American) Legion.” In other words, the only reason, | according to Garlin, that the legion | wasn't used was because the mem- bers were frightened at what was done to the police. One gets the idea that members of the legion would have become scabs and strike |breakers only the thought of that fight kept them away. This is nothing short of slander. The vetcrans for a number of years now have been showing in plenty of strikes, demonstrations, etc., that they are not so willing to be used against their fellow workers. The real reason these vets were not used is the same why the National Guard cf Minneanolis and Toledo” were not used. The bosses were afraid to call them out knowing that these workers sympathized with those on strike. Among the truckmen, who are American workers, there are a large amount of vets, many no doubt, who are members of the legion. It is safe to say that in- stead of being afraid to face strik- ers these vets were on the firing line with the workers against the special cops, How Did You Like the ||;—™8® THEATRE Gum presents— A comedy ERNEST TRUE: ETHEL BARRYMORE |} Theatre, 47th Strect, W. of Broadway AMUSE MENTS « MAXIM GORK?’S 7 “A STIRRING DRAMA OF 1934” with BATALOV “ACME THEATRE —Deily Worker. “MOTHER” ( 61905” ) Directed by PUDOVKIN (of “Road to Life’) 14th STREET and UNION SQUARE JIG SAW DAWN POWELL with SPRING BYINGTON The same story holds true thruout . 5 |) Evgs. 8:40. Mts. Thurs. & Sat, 2:40 the American Legion and other vets esac od re Paty Nieeees nas m acer i oe organization. The vets are getting espgtially Detroit workers, are MAXWELL ANDERSON’S New Pley || sick and tired of being used by the bosses in strikes. I beli¢ve that dur ing ‘strikes, etc., special attention || should be paid to the vets. A stecl| strike is coming on, the bosses are already mobilizing the gangsters, | invited to send in their com- meats on the series on Detroit by Erskine Caldwell which has just concluded on this page. We shall publish as many letters as GUILD as MARY OF SCOTLAND” || ith MARGALO STANLAY BEL GILLMORE RIDGES MENK 4 St. W. etc. How about organizing vets in these strike areas to support tifé strike? How about the organization of the vets who are on strike into a veterans committee so that they may be in a position to get vets over ‘on their side. CARL CARLSON. See oe A REPLY There is no doubt that sympathy space permits, jtional Guard was used in Toledo, | | killing at least two workers, injuring and gassing scores of others; the reason the National Guard was not called into action in the Minnea- Polis strike after being mobilized, was largely because Gov. Olson and} his Farmer-Labor regime feared to | show their hand before the work- |many rank and file members of | for the strikng truckmen among the Legion was one of the factors | in the decision not to act as dep- | uties. This should, perhaps, have been more strongly noved in the| article. However, Comrade Carison’s |-tional Guard into a letter contains a number of incor- rect’ statements, He says, for ex- ample, “Garlin goes on to say that the logionnaires couldn’t serve as deputies because it was ‘against the constitution of the Americcn! Legion’ ” What the writer said wes that “After a short delay Bo- quist (commander of the Legion) informed the police chicf that the legionnaires could’nt serve as dep- utiss because it was ‘against the constitution of the American Lo- | gion.’ Here the writer was simpiy | quoting the official excuse, with aj touch of irony which, unfortunately, was lost on Comrade Carlson. I insist that the spectacle of an army of hired deputies getting a vigorous shellacking from the £11 ers had a most salutary effect many of the legicnnazize:—p2: larly the brave ex-office: Comrade Carlson says that “the is the same why the Nationcl Guerd of Minneapolis and Toledo were not |ment, thus freeing him from the} ers of the state, nad particularly the strikers. Moreover, was bending all his ene tling the’strike by a. st -out agro embarrassment of calling the Na- jon against | the strikers. Undoubiedly, many of the guards- ; men sympathized with the strik ci but that was not the major reason why they were not called into} action, | Finally, while it 1s true that! thousands of rank bers of the A refuse to participate in strikebreak- ing, Comrade Carlson should not ONLY and file mem- 25c SEATS i Ne to1 P.M. N. Y. ALL SHOWING 25¢ —— THE THEATRE UNION Presents — The Season's Outstanding Dramatic Hit slevedore OIVIC REPERTORY THEA. 105 W 11 St. Eves. 8:45. ues. & Sat. ©2345 800-400-600-75¢-$1.00 & $1.50. No Tax GLADYS ADRIENNE RAYMOND WALTER HUSTON in Sinclair Lewis’ DODSWORTH Drematized by SIDNEY # SHUBERT, W. 44th St. 8:40 Sharp Matinees Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 8:15 P RA CARMEN Castagna, Errcile, Farber TOMORROW EVE.....RIGOLETTO Pasquaic Amato, Director 25° 35° 55° 83° 99° ee Tonight, Worker in the Grisis”” RSDAY, JUNE 14,8 PM. Manhattan Industrial Trade School, 22d St. & Lexington Ave. Proceeds to go to United Children’s Camp. Committee Daily Worker gives you fuil news about the struggle for unem- ployment insurance. Buy the Daily Worker at the newsstands, forget thet this is en officer-dom- | inated organization financed by the! big corporations. In many cities the} Legion posts are the leading strike- breaking agencies. SENDER GARLIN. | | P. S—If Comrade Carlson means | to make a point of the fact that | the National Gu 1 used in‘! j the Toledo strike e not natives | \of the city, it might.bs pointed out thet the authorities Ke a practice | of using out-of-to guarésmen in Al jabor situationc—for obvious rea | used.” As a matics of fact, the Na- sons, Herndon Protest Meeting Wednesday, June 13 $:00 P. BL Imperial Elks Hall 180 West 129th Street DON WEST : ANN BURLAK FICHA® MOORE AUSPICES: Herndon Defense Commitice ard New Masses | Adinission all preeseds for the difense of Angelo Herndcn. Tickets at Fifth A Room 334, ue; LL.D. 0 Bway; New Masses, 31 E. 27th St. iE

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