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JIM MARTIN Tut Just Hoe OVER THE Gack Fence __ Illustrations by Philip Wolfe THE STORY SO FAR: The S. S. Utah, one of the members of whose crew is Slim, of the Marine Workers Industrial Union, has made the voyage ‘across thé Atlantic, stopping at Copenhagen, Helsingfors, Finland, and Leningrad. Slim has been talking to his fellow-workers about the class struggle and what they can do about it. He signs the Chief Engi- neer up with the M.W. In Leningrad, the sailors of the Utah are getting the surprise ‘of their lives, watching the new society in action. Particulatly surprising to them is their discovery of the Soviet Union's Now read on: “new woman.” INS * * | TALLMENT NINETEEN a Sigh = ; ae TENE Cp = a / ‘The Son of’a Banker in ble, hoisting a heavy caterpillar tree: | if Your Dollar Under Roosevelt? tcture Pamphlet Lionel Barrymore Mor e Thun d er . Russia»: jor out o! ‘umber old, snapped, | yess) young’ Winchester had nothing to do, he didn’t go ashore much in Leningrad. THé place looked too dirty to. him, ‘The! mate's wife agreed. These two,’arid some of the and the machine crashed down into | the hold. The mate, who saw this happen, got excited and mad as hell. | “You god a sons of'b——! You ignorant Hussian bums!” he screained. | He added more fout abuse, standing \“Your Dellar Under Roosevelt,” by Anna Rochester. Workers Library Publishers, New York, 2 cents, | eer Tare | Reviewed by MILTON HOWARD they are his chief concern.” She goes on to explain what Roose- velt's program is and how it the capitalists and ‘cheats the wor jers. Roosevelt knows that the hand- Deals With Youth During the Crisis “Ii Happens Every Day,” A Story In Over Mexico Last week there was a preview of “Thunder Over Mexico,” at which mage 3 Il the tim the deck. The Rus- How mrch ~""' > > dollar buy next | iM out of federal credit to the capi-| Pictures, by Phil Bard, Introduction only the esentatives of 1 - seen ant pa eaelin wide and sian’ fdreman ‘rushed down into the month? Next yar talists has weakened the treasury | by Lloyd Brown. Youth Publishers. tallet peeas: ware preaige Evidently vodka, ahd telling ‘smutty stories, | hold to see if anyone was hurt. Luck- And waoai «ss inflation mean checking a °.| Price 5 cents. the management wanted to get They related many “a joke about the dumb Riissians. They‘had it all fig- ured out, that there were a few big shots in“ the Soviet®“Union getting all the fine pickings, ‘while fooling the workers with talk‘about better times after the Five-Year Plan was ily no one was. Then the foreman blew his whistle calling alk the work- €rs out of the holds. When they were gathered he ‘addressed. them in Rus- sian. Meanwhile, the deck gang, upon hearing the crash, rushed out, only to see the longshoremen gathered to- INTERNAT LONAL LITERATURE, No. 2, 1933, English Edition of the Organ of the International Union of Revolutionary Writers. 35 Cents. anyway—to workers? to the capital- ists? Why does the capitalist class want inflation now when it did not want any cheapening of. the dollar three years ago? Does my getting a Job at low wages under N.R.A. have anything to do with the value of the The treasury is still being drained to provide aid to banks and railroads. To offset part of this drain, wages of federal employees have been cut, aid to veterans has been reduced, and thousands of federal employees have been thrown out to join the masses of unemployed workers. | Reviewed by STEWART CARHART | Phil Bard has cone an excellent |job inthis pictorial presentation of | the life of a young worker from his infancy until the present. | Without giving | from one a words Bard lache 288 reaction. They hoped that these re- viewers would all fall for the butch- ered v n of the Eisenstein film. However, it seems that “Que Viva Mexico” has been so mutilated that even these men, writing for the boss press, smell the rat, John C. Cohen, over. e JALTER SNOW dollar in the foreign market? | 4 ray Py x | Jr. movie critic for the New York “Look,” said youhgs Winchester to | gether. The Polack went to listen in By WALT! ig |. These questions, which every work-| 1, ,Zzflation peer nee dot. [WERT through the early sof | Sun, is the first to publish his reac- prove this point. “Dé°you notice they|to what the foreman was saying.| Not since Jack London wrote his er jg asking as he reads the news- > i Schooling, shows us the mother with | take only foreign mioney'in the Torg- sin stores? Know why that is? They're getting ready’ for the col- lapse that’s coming’ soon, and then the big shots will-takevall that for- eign money and beatuit out of the country. And the little fish who are working ‘their heads off will be left Soon there seemed to be a vote taken by @ show of hands, and all the long- shoremen together with the women winch drivers, marched off the ship. The mate meanwhile eased out of sight, as some of the longshoremen had cast significant glances in. his direction. best Alaskan stories has any fiction about the Far North approached the intensely human and picturesque | Odyssey of “Vasska, Red Partisan,’ a | novelette-length extract of a new! eas Soviet novel by R, Fraitx is the feature piece of “Ii Literature,” No, 2, | Paper headlines about rising prices, about the “gold standard” and the cheaper dollar, are now answered simply and clearly in a new pam- phlet, put out by the Workers Li- brary Publishers, called “Your Do lar Under Roosevelt,” by Anna Roch- ester, It is the first popular explana- lar which pushes prices up, has fol- lowed as part of this program. Under the Hoover and Roosevelt crisis poli- cies, which have run true to capital- ist form, inflation could not be avoid- |ed. Most of the cavitalist groups now want inflation because it will give temporary help to the capitalists at the expense of the workers. They ig—be Somebody,” Deftly the artist: shows us the ideals that are implanted by the schools—the determination to be for his country, right or wrong ‘The other influences in his educa- tion are brought in. He may not | tion in the issue of Sept. 2. After dismissing the beautiful pho- tography with a sentence, he goes on to say: “There is nothing particularly communistic about it. It might be, at casual glance, any one of those nu- merous uprisings down there (Mex- ico). It might even be a capitalist ‘ I” The men asked the Polack what it} We. meet the pig-tailed Vasska| tion trom the Marxist vi int, of | : }play With Negro children, Bolsheviks | ie e Hf , | wlumph as far as its vague ending nine, t atoeutkeck gots sett was all about. waking up in his fish-odorous, man-| many under the “New Deel,” et even have the vain hope that infla~) fre beaded men with bombs. | we Dee ee earl f the City | 8.concerned. Or a fascist revolution. That was*just about;-the size of it,| ‘The foreman told the longshore-|.churian hut in the dim half-light of| every worker can understand it. tion will be a way out of the cri Then—his big day, graduation.| film now showing at the Radio City | or at the windup we see Mexico all right. One evening;;young Win- chester did go into town, with the two Cadets as bedyguards. He told all -about’ what happened to the mate's wife later..The, other officers had gone. to: visit, some friends on another -ship. ‘ “You know, these,.bolsheviks are awful. anxious to-make, a good im- pression on foreigners.” “Yes?” asked the mato’s wife. “Yes. We ‘were trying’ to find the Europa. Hotel but couldn't, so we went into some builaing-to. ask. But not one of the men there could talk Eng- lish! That's another sign how ‘‘edu- men that the mate had insulted them with dirty names, He explained that it wasn’t their fault because the ca- ble was old and too light for such heavy loads. And even had it been their fault, the foreman said, no- body had a right to talk like that to freed Soviet workers.” “And where did they go?” asked Gunnar, “They took a vote and decided a Winter’s morning. A simple-minded Gilyak tribesman, scratching _ his .fleas, unaware of the outside world or his miserabie poverty, grieved only because he was swindled out of his best sled dog. We follow Vasska on a 1onely hunt for a “cross fox, the color of forest twilight,” meet his fellow villagers; become aware of the ex- ploitation of these tribesmen by Ozarist traders, but understand why the Gilyak blunders on gropingly in ignorance, He hears that vhe Red Partisans are fighting the Japanese but knows nothing about the causes of the conflict. graphic details as to make any ex- Discuss Important Questions. Under the following headings, Comrade Rochester takes up the question; How the Trouble Started: A New Deal for Capitalists Only; Money in “Normal” Times; Capital- ists Raid the Treasury; Capitalists Raid the Gold Reserves; Real Infla- tion Begins; Capitalists Want Infla- tion; Where Inflation Leads; The Only Way Out for the Workers. “The ‘New Deal’ uses the same old cards,” she writes, “and continuss the same old game. But Roosevelt is a ekillful demagogue. His program is Why it is not and cannot be a way out of the crisis is then explained by the author in an argument easily understood by all workers. Even those all about the complicated question cf currency in relation to production and markets and unemployment will find this pamphlet a help in explain- ing to other workers why the cheaper dollar and higher prices are the re sults of the economic crisis of capi- talism. This brief, 24-page pamphlet should be widely circulated among the workers. It is one that will ap- who think they already understand ; Armed with a diploma, he sets out| Music Hall. with the idea that he will succeed, | be Somebody. i Then the Crisis But, CRASH, and the lid is off! ; The crisis is here and with it un- employment for his father and starvation for his family, Finally, he’s off to hit the road. ‘There the lessons come faster’than | in school and less time is required to, forget the little “truths” about | race superiority and the greatness of | America than was required to learn them. Here the artist brings in the plight th | Stage and Screen Have American Premiere at the Acme Tomorrow Commemorating the 25th anniver- sary of the death of the Russian “An Hour With Chekhov” to} concerned with ‘industrialism, with marshaling youth in sports, marches and parades. Mr. Cohen goes on to say that, “ac- cording to this ending, Mexico may be interpreted as a happy monarchy, a land ‘liberated’ by absentee owner- ship of American capital, or a dicta- torship—even a dictatorship of the capitalist class... , But then, know- ing the theories of the Soviet and its leading citizens, hardly meant this lyrical ending.’ Sinclair and his backers can no longer shout about the unfounded Eisenstein's film. John 8, Cohen, Jr., 3 #3 ¥ eBieen wees : gs in Bt | rit feirab- | 07! " ! i long hunt, told |@tafted to serve th2 capitalists but | peal to American-born workers of the | of the fa: Jim-Crowing the Ne- | Writer, Anton Chekov, the Mejrab-| claims of young fanatics who are pro- aaa ee pi erg wae us regen rer ae section of |it includes an elaborate apparatus to|very groups we are beginning to] grees, ti -down of the in-|pomfim studios have produced ®| testing against the “mutilation” of wanted they put an-automobile and wi fool the workers into believing that’ reach. | dustrial. sys the forced labor | feature film, “An Hour with Chek- chauffeur “at our’ service, and he drove us over to the Rotel! And when \\ + I offered to pay:Nim,* he wouldn't take anythifig! Now ‘don’t you think that was all just for show?” “Thy of cours2,” agreed the mate's tel Europa is supposed to be one of the best hotels here, but it can’t hold-the candle to any of ours.” woodsman homesick for a pair of skiis, a Winchester and a fox trail gcross the wilderness torests. No less absorbing is Vasska’s encounter with the Red Partisans led by his fisher- man friend, Makarov, the Gilyak’s battles with the Japanese as a mem- ber of the skiing corps and his evo- lution into a Bolshevik organizer. Narrated without any exaggerated “Soviet Russia Today” : Iss ued by Canadian Friends of USSR SOVIET RUSSIA TODAY, No. 1, Plies some good data on this latter camps and the growin repa- | hov,” drawing on his best short sto- eRone: all ‘hones the” seontipely | ties for material. The unforgettable simple pictures of the story. ‘*Death of a Government Clerk, “Fight Your Own Wars!” “Chameleon” and “Anna Round His The quick-moving ssenes in the | Neck,” are among the stories chosen CCC camps are especially effective.|by the Soviet studios for this pro- Especially the last, where the boys duction, The cast has been assem- the camp, telling the army of- | bled from the leading artists of the ficers, “G'wan, fight your own wars! | Moscow Art Theatre and Ivan Mosk- We've a meeting and a fight of our | Vin, internationally famous artist of { also says “that there has been mutila- tion is perfectly obvious.” To even call this film “Thunder Over Mexico” is misleading, for “Hol- lywood has made it safe and is dis- tributing it. They have made it safe, safe as safe can be.” The closing paragraph of Mr. Cohen's article is significant: “From ; i ip.” i leet rr | a e seen i | this mutilated version, however, one “ ” | unanimously to strike on this ship.’ become a new| Vol. 1, Published Monthly by | phase. The myth about Soviet dump-|own to attend to! the group, is to be seen in the role sie Fer er da ons coun-| Stanley whistled. That was a se- ake pape ic lag Friends of Soviet Union, P. 0. | ing is still going strong in Canadian| One point of criticism. Though the of Cherviakov, the government clerk. | a the ee Revie = tzy at all! I came here with an open|tious matter! Eddie laughed. He hen: Ntbeleg: wad feeeesk Box 322, Toronto, Ontario. capitalist propaganda, especially the| pamphlet is put out by the Young| “An Hour with Chekhov,” which | i mS re bd bye ss ~~ transe iP mind, --but. honestly,,,there’s abso- | didn’t mind being tied up in Russia bn ata : SA AS alleged dumping of Soviet lumber./Communiss League and carries an| Pens today at the Acme tS oncnadog PPireedh —— ry threnigh pre <dutely nothing here.that I can see.| {fot a month or two. Pretty soon the| But it occupies only 24 pages o! By GEORGE LEWIS It happens that Bennett, the Cana-|.application blank to the League on | recreates with all the rich observa. | letarian eyes, And: E-don’t know: why there's so|skipper came dashing out, looking | this hefty, 160 page cornucopia. ¥us- hs ebadia s ee dian premier, has personal interests | the back, there is no mention in the | tion for detail that was Chekhov Bs much fuss made aboyt this country!” | nervous. He hurried down the gang-|sdo Hayasht contributes a little gem ileal in the Canadian lumber industry. sherply turned portraits of old Rus- | “Oh, well, we'll soon: be out of here, thank goodness!” exclaimed the mate's wife. “Yes, thank God!” ‘TH this, they found themselves at the end of their eptiversation, fagtens and the “Where's Captain rest?” v4 “Oh, Captain Tilden’ ‘iving @ par- ty over on his ship; they’ve all way. Later the Polack got the story from one of the longshoremen and told the fellers: “The skipper went to the shipping commissioner and begged him to get the men to go back to work. The Commissioner had to go to the Long- shoremen’s Union, because the men had put in a complaint against the mate. The longshoremen held a meeting right there with the skip- per present and the men finally de- of an emotional story, “Cocoons,” about Japanese school boys and a working ciass mother whose life was being arawn away like the silk from cocoons. P, Pavlenko gives us a dy- namic picture of Karl Marx in Lon- don during the Commune days; Har- old Heslop, a tale of English miners, and V. Stavsky, a story of an OGPU agent tracking down a murdering sabotager. “Our Spring,” one of two poems by Friends of the Soviet Union has just issued the first number of its maga- zine, “Soviet Russia Today.” Ameri- can workers will greet with interest and warm sympathy this important venture of their brother workers in Canada. A report of the Canadian workers’ delegates to the Soviet Union, an ar- ticle contrasting the conditions of youth in Canada and youth in the /U. USS.R. and an account of state Both in this article and in an ar- ticle called “Bartzr or Bayoncts,” it is made‘ clear to the workers that the policy pursued by the Canadian bosses of shutting out Soviet goods and blocking Soviet orders is a policy by which the workers are made to capitalist trade war against the R. The Canadian bosses, it is pointed bear the burden of the Canadian’ pamphlet cf how the Y.C.L. fights | |for the interests of young workers. | The program of the League is only | vaguely. hinted, never brought out | squarely as a hope for the youth. The pamphlet is valuable, though, | and the best of its kind yet out.| Through it many young workers may decide, in the words of the introduc- tion, “that although ‘It Happens Ey- jery Day’ it has happened too damn | | Jong.” sians and old Russia. This film, di rected by J. A. Protozanov, director of “Holiday of St. Jorgen” and “Jim- my Higgins,” has caught the mood and spirit of the master writer; the rhythm of his stories have infected this film. Contribute to the Daily Worker Sustaining Fund! Help to keep up the | 6-page “Daily”! | Workers’ Rational Living Library Workers’ ‘Moons Teacher | 2 | gone over.” a Langston Hughes, ranks with the|Planning in the Soviet Union and | out, are particularly interested in de- | Taisen Seer | Ready: “Aw, shoot, what can-we do then?” Se Ea ig copa ti best of his revolutionary lyrics. |the Soviet Union farm program, are|siring that the contradictions be-} A 4 : a cota | geciN@ got something to drink,” sug-| peniy to the men for intulting them, | One cannot even discuss it without |@mong the articles which give the tween American and English impe. | UStCc No. I gested the mate’s wifer “Oh, fine!” They went into her cabin... . About. three hours: later, as the footsteps o: the .skipper and the mate were hearu on the gangway, the and that the skipper be made to pay the longshoremen for the three hours | lost.—And the skipper agreed to ev- erything!” This incident impressed the men more than any argument they had being tempted to quote the entire piece; it is flawless, emotional, tri- umphant. Another American, Hugo Gellert, contributes seven of his il- lustrations to Marx's “Capital,” done with rugged power and perfect reader some idea of what is going on in the workers’ fatherland. This 16-page magazine not only undertakes to tell what is going on in the U.S.S.R., but it contains sey- eral good articles analyzing the role rialism be solved by a united: capi j talist attack on the Soviet Union. The Canadian bosses are therefore among the most bitter in the capi- talist world in promoting plans for such an attack. The Friends of the Amusements Aida” To Be Presented by the. Chicago Opera at Hippodrome on Thursday | | i |j-RADIO CITY MUSIC HAL’ SHOW PLACE of the NATION _|“How Is Your Stomach?” Food, Indigestion, Constipation No. 2 banker's aon busrisd sur end dashed hae of Canadian imperialism in the cap- | Soviet Union in Canada have an im- | Rekaseagctaa =e ap I sas Baad | | into @ nearby room. Upset anid Ateeie lnles. “neil t geese SR Articles SEL ee eae ey, cetemes ot | rie poricays ak ee eppanee | tn "ONE MAN'S JOURN “Sex and Health” | : Aer ner: fi * + : _ | ers’ fatherland. j the U.6.8.R., and this first issue of | Opera Company at the Hippodrome, and 2 “R ina “We're Not Slavés Any More!” |oim $2" choos Husslan tongeh bey | tase eummications aorbid, any, de" xole of Canadian Imperialism | their magazine is an ent “ot int | previously announced to basin Mon- |] 550 (o'1 pimssse t0 6x deloch. Sadncconhion’ poemtambs ta | Ts Leningrad lon; shoremen were |—him dressed in his uniform, and articles, the three autobiographies of ‘Canadian Capitalists Foster In-| portance to the workers of all coun-| day, September 11, has been ad-! tor’ Show Adults and Boys and Giris ever 15 mostly recruited from the back-| them. practically in rags—I ‘could|Soviet authors (Alexey Tolstoy, Vera | tetvention,” by E, Cecil-Smith, sup-' tries. bagi ox bacaad Alfredo Paleeys. ; NEW ROXY isl] wo. 3 ward peasants, who had been freed | hardly believe my eyes!” Inber and Alexander Serafimovich), ee : a ORES mrevenie Sour eee Perit | KATHARINE HEPBURN heroes from the land by the introduction of | Eddie was enthused. “And thatthe six letters from writers in capi- oF pe i peers ae ken Sangli by a | ° s ” tractors ‘and mode iethods. Here | foreman’s answer in English!” talist countries (including Granvule ) oi je sive if Bhan acer lag psf bie me Sex Life and Marriage they were put under the leadership | Stanley imiteted hime “We're not Hicks, Fielding Burke, Edwin Seaver, ; S pevoninole acai iae Glee Gatun, | Feamnane of “shock brigaders” who taught j slaves any more! We are freed work- | and a comprehensive summary of the abating rs ity 'B aa “dh atbeoles Theat Broadway pity thera deccenapa ach at them the. work irae? them with | ers and don’t permit anybody to talk | English literary situation by Harold — | Soprano; Mme. Bruna Castagna, con- || 5th Av. eatre — « astn st : S85 J See Tone Ee ee enthusiasm to fill share of the work, 2 Bi “ten ‘dhe morning, an accident occurréd."The winch ca- to us like dogs!” “Man, he rubbed that mate’s nose in dirt, and I don’t mean maybe!” (CONTINUED TOMORROW) Wy MUN i TONIGHT’S...PROGRAMS WJZ—760 Ke. Americans Sparsely Represented edy films were in style, Metro an-|Swashbuckling © adventurer and| men” will be resented, rin ~1:00 P.M,—Amos 'n’ Andy Although the current issue does not | nounced that they were making a|gun-runner! The text of this ab- oe. “en, bof ips ted py rp ee prea M WEAF—660 Ke. 7:18—Baby Rose Marie, Songs equal the remarkable No. 1; although | super-super technicolor production |surd movie is that humanitarian Wo-Chi-Ca Child | eath of a Government Clerk,” wi van Moskvin t canes 780—Golden Oreh.; Mary McCoy, Soprano; | a couple of the minor fiction pieces |about the early years in American peace-loving, blood-loathing, dollar-| VV O-\/M-Ua, uaren | “Chameleon” and “Anna Round His Neck” 100 Baer oManaias naGeD, Afusle Grartiaea wit, 52788: Sports Talk—| are somewhat sketchy and there are | vaudeville. They imported from the | hating, South American’ rulers Will Hold Reunion at pivekshdin hs dius; Besrlak veaatoa ba hie aie anes ot Fel a ee a a 8:00—Germinal, Drama no new contributions by L Babel and | east a great number of these old tim-|would be able to inaugurate vast Se Tt Sears ae bed an’ 7:45—Tho ‘Goldbergs;’ Sketeh 8:00-—Drematic Sketch :00—Gypsies Orch.; Pratik! Parker, ‘Tenor 9:30-—-Racketeering in: Bus tel C. Backeie a -Business— Dan! \ uy VPYZZZ7G TES OF 8:30—Potash and Perlmutter ‘Tenor 10:00—Sanford Orch.; Lucille Manne So- prano; Fred Hufsmit! ; 'Theo- Stone and Heslop), and the profusely illustrat- ed, 34-column chronicle ~ section, which is the most complete survey of international literary events ever at- tempted in any magazine and really a whole periodical in itself. Generous space is given to the American cul- tural front, Walt Carmon, formerly on the New Masses, who is serving as Sergei Di- namov's assistant in compiling this magazine, wrote the present reviewer that he wished this issue was more international in scope, that it had more Mig and sparkle, He prom- ises that third number, already made up, will be greatly improved. Bela Illes, or none of those eagerly section is rather weak; American writers are sparsely represented (but “Broadway to Hollywood” Js Movie of Three Generations of Vaudevilie Actors ‘Broadway to Hollywood,” a screen drama, by Willard Mack and Edgar Allen Woolf, directed by Mr. Mack and presented by Metro-Goldwyn- Mayer at the Capitol Theater. with the following cast: Alice Brady, Frank Morgan, Madge Evans, Russel Hardy, Eddie Quillan, Jimmy Du- rante, : Five years ago when musical com- ers like Weber and Fields, and Fay times the amount of the regular pro- cess) they shelved the film. For the of the film. Only one scene of the original technicolor fil is inserted. Is is outstanding for its primitiveness in staging and color technique. the early portion of tlhe film as is Frank Morgan, A newcomer to the films, Russell Hardie as Hackett the second, is a capable actor. And, as T said before, its too bad Jimmy Du- rante has but a brief moment, —IRVING LERNER. Laughing at Life Starring McLaglen, star of doz- ens of marine recruiting films as a reforms for the people, if the to be misled by “adventurers” who use them to make Alice Brady is yery convincing in | | tralto; Messrs, Francesco Battaglia, | Giovanni Breviario, Bernardo De Muro, Franco Tafuro, Alessandro Zi- liani, Alfredo Lattara, tenors; Messrs. Benvenuto Franci, Pietro Soprani, Carlo .Tagliabue, Gaetano Viviani, Ettore Nava, baritones; Nazzareno De Angelis, Biagio De Corabi, Guide Guidi, Eugenio Ruffo, bassos. The new conductors are: Alberto Bacco- lini, Pasquale Rotella, Karl Reidel and Arthur. Rosenstein. TODAY TILL. SATURDAY Clarence Darrow's MYSTERY OF LIFE Continuous-z9:30 A.M, to 11 P.M. clution Theory | ®K° Jefferson 1» st. & | Now LIT DAMITA and CHARLES MORTON in “GOLDIE GETS ALONG” and “DON'T BET ON LOVE” with LEW AYRES and GINGER ROGERS In preparation: “Mental Health” and “Shall We Est Flesh?” 20 cents s copy (no stamps) Address: Rational Living, Box 4, Station M, New York City As you see, we are forging ahead and we are making progress, in spite of the de- pression, ot because of the depression. As our books are saving the readers’ health and money, they are more and more im demand. Ask your bookseller or order The four’ preliminary operas are: Thursday and Saturday evenings. “Aida.” In Saturday evening’s “Aida,” the colored soprano, Caterina Jar- boro, wilt have the title part. On Friday!,and Sunday evenings “Car- -Central Opera House | some time during the summer at the ame Starling Today — American Premiere AMKINO Presents the New Soviet Masterfilm “An Hour With Chekhov” Chekhov's death a 8:45—Otls Tirado, Tenor awaited critical articles by Dinamov,|Templeton, After shooting thou-|masses would give the government biedal starherrtat dit ae gg Pepaben Pernt sda R80 Sizalers THO igs oa eon dg OE the magazine sses any of the|sands of feet of film in technicolor |time—just a couple of decades o: etd etorhagins. ko: j= ‘Thibeull, Baritone; 'Grofe| 9:30—Pasternack’s Oreh,; John Fogarty, 1932 numbers, ‘Tree, ‘the Soviet Life | (this costing about four|so — and not allow thatnueloost NEW. YORK.—Children who spent wr: ACME THEAT RE Union Square Workers. Children Camp (Wo-Chi- 1 for- at Poniitrea dore ‘Webb, Baritone; the third issue will bea 50 tl audi had grown tired of musical |tunes for th persona: Ca) near Wingdale, N. Y., will hold ‘Roma! gen Smolen, Piano per cent | audience gr mi nes for themselves, a reunion at the Central Opera Somedasy conraa hie, Meh HGe—Feet Paes German of French authoss’ presen | Holiwood “ls turning iis, astention | gd yy OSE a NOTE, accord-| House cn, the evening ot Sept, 8 LARGEST PROLETARIAN GATHERING ef Songstaine Se ME u:30—Hahn fnotig except for a short letter trois Andra|onoe tnore to. these musical filma, ies Me: fae oaoe ks this film, | Over 150 children will participate in too EFS! QBREN ANG AuieD, Plano Duo | 12:00—Narris Orch, Gide But the style of these films has | Anerrot he Tuli e ies of South the skits and other events on th |ISE VENTH ANNUAL :00—King Orch. eres M.—G a fe fortune: le 11:45—Rogers: Orch. ee o 8 ee Be aed shapa (A i oa we Pichia gl cy ao bagh oeg by. parcelling off the land to Brit. mr teat of the affair will be the ® DAILY WORKER WABC—860 Ke ries of cinematic pictures contrast-|had a “Cavalcade.” So “The March |prait” erican imperialism, but first showing of a movie taken at | .12:00—Hellywood on the, Air (2:39 A.M.—Meroft ‘ore . ee WOR—710;.Ke. i100 Fatthe Witeh’s “Pale. 1:45-—News—Gabriel . Heat! * 8:00—Detectiyes Blagk and Blue, Mystery Dratii ductor, on Mall,,Central Park '30-—Robbins Orch. | f 2—Holst Oreh. 30—Aaronson Orch; © :00—Gerston Orch, .. On Saturday the Daily Worker has R pages. Inercase your bundle order ~ féz Saturday! v9 vad wae ~%:15 P.M.—Denny Orch.; Jeannie Lang and ‘appy Lambert, Songs 7:30—Martin Orch.; ‘Travelers Quartet 1:45—News—Boake ‘Carter 8:00—Green Orch.; Men About Town Trio 8:15—Singin’ Sam ragglott!, Piano Duo 9:00—Labor Day Address— Frances Per- kins, Seoretary of Labor; U. 8, Ma- prano; Evan 10;30—Jack Little, Songs ymphony Orch. S—Phil Regan, Tenor ‘80—Labor Day Address—Dsnald R. Rich- A berg, General Counsel, National Re- covery Administration 00--Belasco Orch, A.M.—Rapp Orch, —Conn Orch. Baritone ne A Rrqeets pri of the So- let Union Pessimistic ste- rility of France, There is an X-ray analysis of the self-disrobed Chalia- pin by M. Koltsov; an epochal sur- vey of “Fascism and Literature” by Anne Elistratova, which is @ com- plete book and 20 years condensed in @ single article; and scholarly studies NAZI KILLS 2; GETS 4 YEARS VIENNA, Sept. 1.—Four years’ im- it was the sentence given yesterday to Johann ‘Thayer, a young Viennese Nazi, who threw a —is its falseness and over-sentimen- not musical comedy, it is not history, musteal comedy, it is not history, it is not drama, and it is seldom com- bomb into a jewelers’ shop, killing the owner and another man, edy. Jimmy Durante appears in an of Time” became “The Show World” and finally reaches the Capitol Thea- ter as “Broadway to Hollywood.” I mention “Cavalcade” because the film as remade now pretends to tell the story of the Hackett family through three generations of hoofing it on the vaudeville stage. The film is overlong—very much so—and we successful Hollywood ble with this film—besides its length tality. It is not convincing. It is it is not drama, and it is seldom small “adventurers” who use the masses as foils in their attempts to get control. A more distorted picture of the South American un- declared wars, is yet to be seen on the screen. The rulers are de- picted as noblemen, the masses are idiots, and revolutionary leaders as gangsters. See it for yourself, Se CULTURAL GROUPS the country are invited to send news of their activities to the Daily Worker. Send ,news to the Editor, Feature Page, Daily Worker, 50 East all-too-brief scene toward the end 13th St., New York City, Cultural organizations throughout | the camp, which pictures a typical day at Wo-Chi-Ca. @ Play an Instrument - @ Amuse Do something at gathering to help save the Dally Worker and keep it as a 6 and ge newspaper. All tajent 1 “of the” Daily (store). gister with Work e elty office er, 35 E, 12th Bt. ® MORNING FREIHEIT © YOUNG WORKER BAZAAR FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY * FE al sinfonietta 9:30—Theatre of Today—When the World| Of ‘(Marx on Esthetics” and Engels |finally see Hackett the third, as a —D. P. $—Horatius at the Bridge Table, Sketch ” . ‘The 'trou- October 6, 7, 8 :30-—-Naumburg Concert, Leo Barzin, Con-| 10:00—Iosteleneta “Orch, Giaays Rice, s0-| sake ata mic pe yd at the MAIN HALL OF MADISON SQ. GARDEN (Not in Basement) FOR INFORMATION SEE OR WRITE TO: New York City, (6th floor) National Press Bazaar Committee, 50 E. 13th St.