The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 15, 1934, Page 7

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| , || ——THE— || WORLD! By SENDER GARLIN [X HIS special message to the Rhode Island legislature, Governor Green said that “we must take prompt, strong and drastic action to save the property of our citizens, to save their very lives.” It is highly significant that the governor stressed Property—the property of the mill owners—for that is Precisely what he is out to protect. “The state,” said Frederick Engels, the famous co-worker of Karl Marx, “the state consists of police, soldiers and jails.” The truth of this statement has been shown in scores of strikes, and it is being shown again in the present courageous struggle of the textile workers against the slavery and starvation imposed upon es by the mill barons. * . Strikers Always Called “Rioters” HEN the railroad workers, revolting against continued slashes in | their wages, struck back in 1877, the capitalist press shouted “vandalism,” and “anarchy,” just as it does at the present moment. When the workers of the country, led by the militants in Chi- €ago, ed in a movement for the Eight-Hour working day, the same hysterical cries were heard. the preachers, the lawyers—all the representatives of the vested in- terests of the capitalist press denounced the move for the Kight- Hour day as an “attack upon our very civilization.” They denounced the leaders of the movement against interminable hours of labor in the shops and factories of the country as “anarchists” and “agitator en the steel workers fought the Carnegie corporation in Home- Stead, the same frantic cries about “law and order” were heard. For the strikers to defend themselves from attacks by the hired thugs of the company—this was characterized as “lawlessness.” When the gun-thugs fired into the ranks of the pickets—this was in defense of the sacred principle of “law and order.” President Cleveland called out federal troops to smash the Pull- man strike led by Eugene V. Debs. Using the subterfuge that the strike was “interfering with the U. S. mails,” Cleveland ordered the troops to the strike zone and smashed the heroic struggle of the railroad workers, “Protecting the People” i bane other day I saw a primer used for youngsters in the public schools. It contained a picture of a policeman who was shown leading a child through traffic. “The policeman is our friend,” was the caption under the picture. This is the kind of role that the capitalist press and the state and government officials are trying to ascribe to the National Guard and the federal troops. They froth at the mouth in the face of the resistance to attacks. by the textile strikers and shout that “law and order must be maintained.” What is the meaning of this “law and order?” It is nothing more than the protection of the rights of the capitalist class to exploit. the workers. In every struggle between the workers and the bosses, the majestic role of the state is revealed in all iis brutality. Newspaper reports from Rhode Island and other textile centers seek to convey the impression that the strikers wantonly engaged in acts of destruction. The facts are so colored as to picture the strikers as irresponsible vandals, with only one aim—‘rioting.” Just what does this “rioting” consist of? Workers go out on strike. They seek to make their strike effective by maintaining picket lines. The bosses, eager to break the strike, bring in scabs and professional strikebreakers. The first task of the employers is to smash the picket line. When hired thugs fail in their efforts to smash the picket line, the national guard is brought in; when these prove themselves to be ineffectual, the federal government is called upon to send in troops, with all the deadiy, murderous weapons of modern warfare. When workers resist the armed attacks of the bosses’ soldiery, it is called “rioting by a mob.” When the soldiery shoots into the ranks of the strikers and their families, murdering and maiming, it is called “maintaining law and order.” Although in this connection Governor Green of Rhode Island is unusually candid when he says that “we must take prompt, strong and drastic measures to save the property of our citizens, to save their very lives.” . * . Protecting Whose Property? YY “PROPERTY of our citizens,” the governor undoubtedly refers to the property of the millowners, for the textile strikers have no property to protect. But when the governor talks about “saving the lives of our citizens,” he is following the formula of Gov. Rossi of San Francisco by implying that the labor struggle is a war be- tween the strikers and the rest of the population. The struggle in Rhode Island as well as the rest of the textile centers is a struggle, not between the strikers and the “public” (for the textile strikers are the majority of the public); it is rather a war between the mill workers and the bosses. All the propaganda of the capitalist politicians and the press seek to hide this basic fact. Haye national guardsmen or federal troops ever been ordered out to shoot employers who order lockouts, and thus throw thousands of workers out of jobs? Have national guardsmen or federal troops ever been ordered out to shoot landlords who evict families unable to pay rent? The conception that the armed troops of capitalist society are maintained to “protect the people” is revealed as a fistion in every struggle between workers and capitalists. It is revealed with the greatest clarity in the present strike of the textile workers. * * * Strikebreaking Copy | ten lesa as many thousands of persons must be, at the shame- less manner in which the various capitalist groups, including the press, are trying to place the blame for the Morro Castle disaster on Communists, a reader suggests that newspaper workers should refuse to set what he calls “strikebreaking copy.” The writer of the letter, who signs himself “A Newspaper Worker,” says: “The Morro Castle disaster and the textile strike, and the way both these events are being treated in the newspapers point to the urgent necessity of initiating intensive work in the newspaper in- dustry. The slogans, ‘Don’t set a line of strikebreaking copy’ should be brought home to linotypers and compositors on the dailies. Press- men should also be mobilized to refuse to handle strikebreaking copy. This should be the goal of an intensive campaign initiated in this important industry. Unions should be approached with a view to getting them behind such a move. The sympathetic aciion of the Mexican printers with the textile workers should be cited as an in- spiring example. . “Printers should be made to realize that they have a personal stake in the winning or losing of any major strike and that strike- breaking efforts, successful today, will strengthen the hand of the employers and the state when the standard of living of newspaper workers is assailed.” The writer makes concrete suggestions for organizing this move- ment, He says: “Leaflets distributed at shift changes in the various newspaper planis can have a very fine educationa: effect even if they do not produce immediate results. Sympathetic shon workers and shop chairmen should be approached wherever possible to spread’ this important doctrine of the newspapsrmen in the class struggle. The Newspaper Guild should certainly be made aware of its strategic role in this struggle. Hearst: workers should be particularly sought after in this work. There can be no doubt of the utmost and im- mediate importance of this job. Althcugh I em not a member of the Communist Party, I am taking the liberty of making these sug- gestions which I hope will give stimulus to such a campaign.” ~ The newspaper editors, the politicians, | DAILY WORKER, W YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER ‘CHANGE ‘T Love the Working People’, Says _ Evangeline Booth, Salvation Army Head, As She Slaves Homeless Men Pays Wages of $1.50 a Hour Day —- |t By JERRY ARNOLD | LOVE the poor. I love the | working people. But I cannot help feeling that I have a peculiar and particular love for that poor| ¥ | being, the Child of Man, whose |mame was written upon every sky as the poor man’s friend.” That's Gen. Evangeline Booth’s way of hailing her election to the | Post of international dictator of the} Sreatest racket in the saving souls business in the world—the Salvation | Army. | And on a bulletin board in a dank, dismal corridor of the Sal- vation Army Industrial Home, 176th | St. and Park Ave., the Bronx, a |framed notice transmits the “Child | of Man’s” message to the $1.50 a | week workers of the home. | | “If you do not attend services on | Sunday, 50 cents will be deducted from your pay And if you do attend, the tam- |bourine is pushed under your nose t Home, 176th St 6: Week for Eight- in April wagon from seven in the morning old N.Y, Picking seeds f: Commander's a flows him when he very particular about my pla paid by the Salvation Army dustrial Home. and Park Ave., the Federal Transient Division He worked on the collection © four in the afternoon. was week, the Y next, eighty so on until the regu spinste’ He vy He worked rom six to six. ou dare break a leaf or Evangeline cautioned Started work. “I'm nis. His wages were still $1.50 a week, In- welve hours a di “Don't He told his “boss,” the gardener, jand you reluctantiy drop a coin into |} the collection box. | “I’m for the man who, even after |we pick him from the gutter, falls | again and again,” is one of General Booth’s favorite slogans. | Exploiter of Destitute Men But the “man in the gutter” will | teil you that she is one of the |foremost exploiters of destitute men| —that her whole organization is’ saddled on their backs for the ex-| |press purpose of grinding them} |down deeper into the gutter. L The pride of the Salvation Army is its “industrial home.” The aim of these homes, the officials say, is | to make the unfortunate “self-re- specting” and not dependent upon charity doles. Self-respecting? | The Bronx industrial home houses about 75 to 100 jobless men, who work eight hours a day col-, lecting old clothes, furniture and_ paper, or repairing the collected (materials in the home. They do |the work of skilled workers—paint- ing, sewing, carpentry and cleaning. |. Their wages for a week’s work | is $1.50. | If they do not attend services Homeless men from the Goid Dust Lodge in New York City, vation Army headquarters. The wor! and feod, and an end to the police spy ystem in the ffop house. a Salvation Army controlled flop house, demonstrating before the Sal- rs demanded decent lodgings jon Sunday, 50 cents is deducted, Death Benefit Racket the worker dies in the home. | But nobody ever dies in the Sal- | jy, | vation Army Industrial Home. | Let a man become incapacitated» to work and he soon finds himself | outside of the home—on the streets. | The only way he can derive the| death “benefit” he pays for is to) die suddenly, before the Salvation | Army officials have a chance to| throw him out. | The work is hard. The pay 1s! miserable. The “Starvation Army” | as the men call it, is notorious for | the green, moldy bread and decayed | food it feeds the workers’ and for its filthy, vermin-ridden beds and | | toilets. | And the products of the mene work is sold to poor workers by retail outlet stores throughout the | city and country. | ee * | JAMBE. DONNELLY, 50, was sent | to the Salvation Army Industrial | [TUNING IN| | 7:00 P. M.-WEAF—Baseball Resume | WOR—Sports Resume—Ford Frick WJZ—Stemp Club—Capt. Tim Heely | WABC—Oharles Carlile, Tenor | 7:18-WEAF—Homespun—Dr. William H. | Foulkes ‘WOR—Danny Dee, Commentator i} ‘WJZ—Flying Captain Al Williams | WABC—Savitt Orchestra 7:30-WEAF—Martha Mears, Songs WOR—Robert Bedell, Organ | WJZ—King Orchestra | WABC—Jack Smith, Songs } 1:48-WEAF—Floyd Gibbons, Commentator | WABC—Rhoda Arnold, Soprano; = | Concert Orchestra | | 8:00-WEAF—Bestor Orchestra WOR—Orchestral Concert; Brandt, Conductor ‘WJZ—Rochester Civic Ore! Fraser Har WA3C—Roxy Revue; Sue Rend, 80- prano; John Evans, Tenor; Aimee Deloro, Soprano; Male Quartet | 8:30-WEAF—Canadian Concert | WOR—Organ Recite! | WsZ—Northern Lights—Dramatic Sketch; Major Leon Richardson, Augusto Narrator | 5-WABC—Fats Waller, Songs | -WEAF—Mercado Mexican Orchestra WOR—Della Baker, Soprano; Charles | Massinger, Tenor ‘Wsz—Radlo City Party, With John B. Kennedy; Black Orchestra; Charles Winniger, Mary Lou and Molasses ‘n’ January WABC—Stevens Orchestra | 9:30-WEAF—The Gibson Family—Musical | Comedy, With Conred Thibault, Baritone; Lois Bennett, Soprano; Jack and Loretta Clemens, Songs; Voorhees Orchestra, and Others WOR—Lane Orchestra WdZ—Variety Musicale WABC—Benjamin Franklin—Sketch 10:00-WOR—John Kelvin, Tenor WABC—Dance Orchestra 10:15-WOR—Pauline Alpert, Piano 10:30-WEAF—To Be Announced WOR—Barnet Orchestra WJZ—Barn Dance WABC—Michaux Congregation 10:45-WEAF—Siberian Singers, Direction Nicholas. Vasilief, Tenor 11:00-WEAF—Lombardo Orchestra WOR—Weather; Block Orchestra WABO-—Sylvia Froos, Songs 11:15-WABC—Gray Orchestra 11:30-WEAF—Whiteman Orchestra WOR—Trini Orchestra WJZ—Martin Orchestra Deputy Fails To Halt Daily Worker Builder LANCASTER, Pa. Sept. 14— Harry Davis, local Daily Worker agent, is today selling papers to textile strikers again aftcr a tussle with one of the sheriff's deputies | who attacked him on the embank- ment adjoining the American Silk Mill near here. i The deputy attacked the Daily} Worker agent after the latter had) refused to quit selling pape:s. Both | clashed and fell over the embank- | ment. When they rose, the depui | sheepishly walked away. Davis s fered slight injuries. He sells about 100 fancrs a day, mostly to textile workers, | that he wanted a dollar a day for, Home and get another man,” she Five cents is deducted every week | the work. The gardener told the | said. for “funeral expenses”—just in case | Commander. To make room for “If he's not satisfied with what | Miss Booth turned the dog out of! e’s getting, send him back to the! his kennel and set him up tn the Every Party Unit Must Build Its Own Library pers the coming weeks every unit of the Party will acquire the first set of pamphlets and other material to be used for the build- ing of a unit library. The Party membership will at once see the importance and value of this proposal. In the approaching winter months, the Dis- tricts and Section of the Party will carry through ‘periodic and systematic discussions on current questions of the class struggle and Party policy. Steps are also being taken for the organization of systematic Party classes in the units. This work will be greatly helped by the existence of libraries in each unit, containing the most important reference material on questions of Party policy and program, The unit discussions on the Party Anniversary, which are now being organized, will also be greatly helped by the acquisition of the set of pamphlets recommended in the outline for these dis- cussions, and listed below. The prices given are retail. The units will get in towch with their Sections, which will sell the complete set of this material at special, reduced prices. Fifteen Years of the Communist Party, by Alex Bittleman 10¢ The Communist, September 1934 issue, the article “Approach- ing the Seventh World Congress and the 15th Anniversary of the Founding of the C. P., U. 8. A.” by Earl Browder 0c The Communist, July 1934 issue, article “The Socialist Party Convention—A Communist Estimate,” by V. J. Jerome 20c The Communist, June 1934 issue, article “Some Problems in Our Trade Union Work,” by Jack Stachel, and “The Farmers Are Getting Ready for Revolutionary Struggles,” by H. Puro 20c Report to the Eighth Convention of the C. P., U. 8. A. by Earl Browder 10¢ The Way Out, A Program for American Labor—Manifesto and Principal Revolutions of the Eighth Convention of the C. P., U.S. A. 10¢ Stalin Reports to the Seventeenth Congress of the C. P. 8. U 10c Theses and Decisions of the Thirteenth Plenum of the E.C.€.1. 5c Fascism, Social-Derorracy and the Communists, by V. Knorin 10¢ We are Fighting for a Soviet Germany, by Wilhelm Pieck 10c An Open Letter to All Members of the Communist Party le The Road to Negro Liberation, by Harry Haywood 10c The Communist Position on the Farmers Movement—Resolution of the Extraordinary Party Conference of the C. P., U.S. A. 5e The Revolutionary Movement in the Co'onies—Resolution of the . Sixth World Congress of the C. I. 10c Revolutionary China Today, by Wan Ming and Kang Sin 10c These pamphlets should be ordered through the Section and District Literature Departments. If otherwise unavailable, order from Workers Library Publishers, P. O. Box 148, Station D, New Ernst Thaelmann in the front ranks of the Red Fizthters before he was imprisoned by Hitler, One of the pictures in the fiims smuggied cut of Germany, to be shown at the 28th St. Theatre, 28th St. and Broadway, from September 19th to 22nd, Donnelly, | |Ho uses Worker on Estate in Dog Kennel mansion. Donnelly slept in the dog kennel and wasn't allowed to go into the mansion. | Every day his food was brought to him in the dog kennel. }_ Donnelly worked there two weeks. In that time he had picked all the seeds off the plants. | * . | PJURING the two weeks he was | at Miss Booth’s summer estate he had occasion to observe the life of devotion led by the world- | famous evangelist. Every morning at nine o'clock he saw her dressed in a riding habit ter out on her beautiful brown ion, She returned several hours later, dressed for dinner and then entertained guests on the lawn. Needless to say none of the guests were working people whom she “loved so dearly.” Evangeline is attended by a staff of workers including a private chauffeur for her car, Japanes valet, cook, chambermaid, house- lady, kardener, stable boy and pri- vate secretary. They are all paid by the Salvation Army. Any extra help she needs she gets free from the Industrial Home. Thus is the humble life of the saintly evangelist—a life devoted to the cause of the “Child of Man.” Her great work for humanity has | been recognized by the United States government who “in appre- | |ciation of her services during the war,” awarded her the Distinguished Service Medal, and by the National Institute of Social Sciences who presented her with a gold medal last year. In 1928 she received the Eleanor Van Rensselear Fairfax Medal for eminent patriotic service from the National Soicety of Col- onial Dames Congratulated by Roosevelt Last week in London Evangeline Booth was elected to the post of in- ternational commander: A cable of | congratulations sent by President Roosevelt read: “Please accept my sincere con- |gratulations on your election as |General of the Salvation Army throughout the world. In these |troublous times it is particularly important that the leadership of all |good forces shall work for the amelioration of human sufiering and for the preservation of the highest spiritual ideals. Throughout your efforts as Com- mander-in-Chief of the Salvation Army in the United States you have | jearned the gratitude and admira-| | tion of millions of your countrymen. | |I am confident that under your | |guidance the Salvation Army will! |go steadily forward in its services to the unfortunate of every land.” | While down at 517 East 14th St.,| the headquarters of the New York | Lecal of Unattached Men, her name and the name of the Salvation |Army is a signal for a flood of j;curses. The “unfortunates” have jtasted of her “services to human- jity” and her “high spiritual ideals” and have found them bitter indeed. |STAGE AND SCREEN |“Mass Struggle,” New Soviet | Talkie Opens Today at Acme In the new Soviet talking film, “Mass Struggle,” which opens today at the Acme Theatre, V. Kavaleridze, well known Ukrainian sculptor- artist, has dramatically presented | the story of how the great peasant |rebellions of the 18th century were | betrayed by the false leaders the peasants followed. | Kavaleridze has re-created the historical figures of the two out- |standing leaders of the Ukrainian | masses, one Gonta, a great Cossack landowner and Ataman, and Zhelez- niak, also a landowner and a fiery | nationalist. Both men were ardent national leaders, to whom the freedom they | fought for meant freedom to possess their own peasants and not to pay tribute to a foreign power. | “Mass Struggle” presents the _whole drama of the peasant revolt | and its betrayal by false class lead- lership with unequalled power and | intensity. Its movement is on a vast | seale, spacious and wide as the land | of Ukrainia itself. ; The characters in this picture | | actually speak the language of their | | | nationalities—Russian, Jewish,) Ukrainian and Polish. The picture | has English tities and a_ special} musical score consisting of Ukrain- | ian folk melosiies. | Ernst Thaelmann Films | The masterly work of the under- |ground Communist Party of Ger- many will be seen in part in the| new film “Ernst Thaelmann—| | Fighter Against Fascism,” which will | |be shown at the 28th St. Theatre, | | 28th St. and Broadway, from Sep- | | tember 19 to 22. | ; Smuggled out of Germany at the} | risk of life, the film includes strik- | jing examples of the illegal literature jwhich is being spreed by the anti- | | tascist masses under the leadership | of the Communist Party and the| | way they are distributed. | | The Theelmann Liberation Com- | mittee, which is presenting the film | |for the first time on any screen, | | Succeeded in obtaining hitherto un- | | available pictures of the barbarous | reign of terror of the mad dogs of | Hitler fascism a3 well as material on | |the rising tide of mass resentment | |and oppcsition to fascism not oly | jin Germany but in many other | | countrics. An original musical score, written | by Lahn Adchmyan of the Workers | Music League, has keen synchron- | ized with the film. The score is| made up mainly of German folk and revolutionary songs and will be | blended with a mass vocal chorus | jsinging the new song “Free Thacl- | | mann,” \ |John A. Kingsbury of the Milbank |8rown synthetically in chemically | jtreated trays arranged in tiers in-| Z be Page Seven | LABORATORY AND SHOP By Health and the Second Five Year Plan Before the October Revolutio: there were less than 20,000 ph cians in the present territory of th U. 8. 5. R. By the end of th Five Year Plan, the number | increased to over 76,090. There vy also a tremendous increase in the number of hospitals and sanitary stations. But this tremendous advance did not satisfy the needs of the wo ers and peasants. At the Comm nist Party Congress last January Stalin pointed out that medical training in the U. S. S. R. was deficient both in quality and number of students. Consequent! the remainder of the second Fi Year Plan will see an even gr development in this field heretofcre, An insight into what is planned can be obtained from a comparison of the numbers of medical stude In 1928, the total number of students was 28,000. On Janua: e than 1 DAVID KAMSEY Only small q used and no eartt though the process is still experi has already been fo: a necess and supply the neces. The name of the compa discovery ure the he ions, it Ltd pensive way tion sy as been patented u “Kwick Grow. of id der . a Like most substitute Kwick Grow” is proba Electrification and Capitalism Electrifii is the growin r needs will make ed prod basis e name ties of water are is req in mental stage, a company ned to manue millions, in order to have it on hand during the next war. of If capitalist ine stem is a prime necessity. 1934, the number was 48,000. In fore, highly significant the coming academic year, the plan n_for one super-power provides for an additional 15,000 | SYS * England was advanced students; next year, 24,000 more;|>Y Professor Francis G. Bally bee 30,000 in 1936 and 33,000 in 1937. fore @ meeting of the British As- By the end of the plan the number | S0ciation for the Advancement of of medical students will total more |Science. He proposed that all gen than 100,000, ting planis in that country be The number of hospitals in. the id together. Professor Baily cities will be increased by 44 per ed out that under a national cent and in the rural districts 98 per cent. While during the firs Five Year Plan,4 4,500,000,000 rubles by were spent in hygienic needs, the | for budget for the second Five Year | en Plan calls for expenditures of | at 19,609,000,000 rubles. Walter Duranty reporis that two eminent public health authorities, Memorial Fund, and Sir Arthur Newsholme, formerly the chief public health officer of Great Brit- ain, told him that the Soviets were laying the foundation for a public health service on a scale not even contemplated in capitalistic coun- tries. Chemical Gardens Included in the preparations of the imperialists for the coming war are desperate efforts to make them- selves agriculturally and industrially self-sufficient. Ersatz (substitute) products are being hastily rushed through as the break-down of in- ternational trade becomes more complete and the imminence of war even greater. From England come reports that crops of maize and barley are being im) wai side metal cabinets. The resulting | fodder, it is claimed, is even better - than fodder grown in the earth. The special process that is used was discovered during the war by Dr. Paul Spangenberg of Lubeck. The report says that he made his/| discovery by analyzing rich soil and | duplicating its nutrient content in | & chemical solution. It is this solution that is fed to the seed. re that class capitalism are such that it will be very difficult, if not impossible, ta put the plan into operation. Con- flicting interests, the inevitable rise in prices of the low-grade fuel, ‘etc., impassable barriers until the actual outbreak of will vithTullio system the lowest | other forms of cheap power could be production By thus generating power cost of trans- Portation would be eliminated. Today, a large part of such po- tential power is destroyed on spot since this is the cheapest way of getting rid of it show, Professor Baily said, that it is three times as cheap to transmit electrical power than it is to ship coal capable of yielding an equiva- lent amount of electrical energy. Professor Baily’s plan is obviously the result of military need. present now wasted the erey. the mines, um efficiency. despite need, the constitute Fr the this almost, of grade coal and hich utilized electrical the The figures The confusion of competitive Power-plants must be overcome, if the war machine is to run at max- It is interesting urgent ruling contradictions of —— RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL 50 St. & 6 Ave.—Show Place of the Nation Doors Open 11:30 A.M. GRACE MOORE in “One Night of Love” plus a Music Hall Revue Amusements ‘A Columbia Picture *s “Peculiar Penguins” A SOVIET Talkie in Four Languages: RUSSIAN UKRAINIAN Produced in the JEWISH POLISH U.8.8R. by Ukrainien Pilm of Odessa Starting Today — First American Showing! The Birth of Internationalism! Special Musical Score of Ukrainian Folk Melodies (English Dislogue Titles) ——ACME THEATRE, 14th Street and Union Square——\ | RE-OPENING OCTOBER. Ist THEATRE UNION’S OUTSTANDING DRAMATIC HIT! STEVEDORE You Must See It At Least Twice For Benefit Theatre Parties We for $1.50 set Me fo- 6c s 3 Ge for $1 80c for 45 Call seats; seats WaAtkins 50e for Te seats; 2e for 20c seats You may have your choice of any combination CIVIC REPERTORY THEATRE, 14th St. & 6th Ave. The DAILY WORKER Ssys: “Creditably brings the The NEW YORK TIMES ays: “Gripping picturization of Old Russ sented in the best Soviet film tradi lc 2 31. EAST OF “PETERSBURG NIGHTS” enius of Dostoyevski to the screen : &@ worthy addition to the Soviet works of art.” + Picture is pre- 25 A SOVIET Super Talking Film (English Titles) MassStruggle 9-2050 SPECIAL REDUCED RATES for Parties of More Than 50, are: TILL IPM. EXC. SAT. SUN.EHOL. WEW MANAGEMENT | “HELL ON EARTH” “The Greatest of Anti-War Films”—Henri Barbusse An International Film Banned by Hitler | With a Cast of Anti-Fascist Actors Exiled by Hitler || Playing at 28th ST. THEATRE and BWA Monday and Tuesday, September 17 and 18 Continuous from 9:50 a, m. to 11 p. m. After 5 p. m. 35e, Film and Photo League, American League Against War and Fascism | | | Morning 15 ¢. | | Auspices: | Afterncon 25 c. The Thaelmann Liberation Committee PRESENTS “ERNST THAELMANN Fighter Against Fascism — A Film Smuggled Out of Nazi Germany — AT 28th ST. THEATRE AT BROADWAY SEPTEMBER 19, 20, 21, 22 Continuous Performance from 9:30 A.M. to 11 P.M.

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