The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 9, 1933, Page 5

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nities: DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK. THURSDAY.NOVEMBER 9, 1935 | WORLD! By Michael Gold What Is Human? O. RAVEN, a curator in the American Museum of Natural History, has just reported that chimpanzees can be educated to behave like civil- ized human beings. z “Nieshic, a female chimp, has been living in his suburban home since he brought her from Africa in 1929. She is nearly five years old, weighs “4T pounds, and is*one of the household, Aihen she was two years old,” writes Mr. Raven, “she wanted to be pickedtp and held most of the time. Now, although she likes to embrace het hiiman friénds occasionally, she is more independent, and wants to : run about seeing things for herself. She tirelessiy investigates whatever sheseaes; walks: with poise and assurance. She can free herself from almost any knots pedaling like-an expert, a kiddie-car. She frequently has luncheon in the Mitsui restfuratit, not using fingers but a knife and fork. She eats what- evel we haye, and loves sweets. When she is finished eating, she unfolds thermepkin and wipes her face with it.” 5 or other bonds; she rides, | $0, this is Mr, Raven's definition of a civilized human being, one who rides.a kiddie-cay and eats with a knifeeand fork. Superficial, Mr. Scien- tigh. [yds said that Hitler also eats with a knife and fork, That does not | ‘cimakesiim a human being, nor even a clean and decent ape. Alen Are Brothers & af the most difficult psychological adjustments a thinking man has 6 make in this modern world of wars and revolutions, is in the atti- 41UdS! tS*mansiatighter. ia (ransision period. On the one hand, millions believe in the social wiion, and expect to fight in it. At the same time, these millions bel- ifeve andenvly’ im jeece and the brotherhood of man. They oppose every- | one man from another—they are enefnies of lynching, predatory imperialism, the snobbery and Yup an international classless society. | ce will kill its mortal enemy without any qualms of after- conscience. But a human being who has glimpsed the glorious ‘Id’ brotherhood and Communism does not find it easy to He is not a killer. Only Fascists make a cult of violence and ommiunists are builders. + there it is, the great paradox. The psychology of the Soviet Union is interesting in this light. The Russians are ready to defend the last inch of their territory, and if fascist Japan or Germany attacks them | ‘LoriGi®6w, the imperialists will find themselves battered to pieces on the | “grainit? Walls of the Red Army—the most remarkable army the world has | yet seen, an army of intelligent, class-conscious, consecrated men and women--an army like Cromwell's or tnat of Spartacus in spirit, an army thaf.,-has also read Marx, Lenin, Tolstoy, Gorky, Walt Whitman and John Reed, The Soviet Union knows how to defend itself in case of attack. But \ it is willing to make any sacrifice for peace. It needs peace, I heard a great, Soviet leader say, as one needs air. Géitimunism means a world of peace and labor and creation, not a world of war. Each day is a fresh victory for Communist construction— is another step on the high road to a new system of production, where there will be no classes, and the formula will be, as Lenin stated it, “from each actording to his ability, to each according to his need.” As the world is constituted today, however, the price one must pay for a new system is battle. Those soft-minded people who think you can take its bone away from that ferocious dog, capitalism, without a fight, are not to be trusted. They really don’t want anything hard enough to make sacrifices for it. And they are nearly always of the upper bourgeoisie —living softly far beyond the terrors of unemployment and starvation, ‘They simply don’t know what is going on. They are not realists. * * ke Was “Buy Labor Arbitration OM bared ‘are the people, too, who back up General Johnson and Gerard Sivdfe and Mussolini, saying that strikes are unnecessary, and that all labor disputes can be settled by arbitration, © As % principle, arbitration can be condemned, because it fixes labor in a pérmanénf<slave status. It is a form of recognition of the eternal stability of capitalism. India has lived under this kind of thing for cen- turies—it is the caste system, where *h caste has its fixed position. But we wanf.to destroy the caste and class system, and refuse to admit that exploiters and’ prdfiteers have any rights that are equal to those of the productive worker, and therefore can be arbitrated. In ‘practice, also, arbitration is one of the worst traps that has ever enshatéa the triiSting working man. Arbitration boards are usually con- stituted as follows: Labor, one vote; Capital, one vote, and “the Public,” || “one vote. It does not take a high order of intelligence to see that this ‘always “boils down to Labor, one vote; Capital, two votes. For the men appointed by the capitalist state to represent that myth so beloved of lib- eralism, Mr. Public, are always men with a big stake in the capitalist order, ‘They are never men with the interests of Labor at heart—Labor, somehow, is never cofsidered as being the Public. And so on these arbitration boards in the past we have had the lu- dicrous. spectacle of such “impartial” representatives of the’ mythical “Public” as John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Yes, friends, the little man who ordereditthe massacre of the miners in Ludlow, Colorado, is what capi- talists"mean by the “Public.” Who would such an arbitrator vote with— the workers or the bosses? The answer is so plain that even a liberal ought to séé if. ae a Byt, they don’t. They never will. They are far away from the realities, » where .workers’ children die for need of a glass of milk, and pickets are ~ gassed and beaten and annihilated like vermin. THe: liberals, not ever being hungry, can’t understand that at a certain * point. arbitration between a million dollars and $10 is a bloody farce. dollar. away from a million dollars and nothing serious happens. - Cut. a | dollar off the $10 wage of a worker and it means hunger for some ‘J child, [iw ‘here is such @ thing as a starvation level, a living wage, and it is _ something that cannot be arbitrated, The bread and milk of little chil- dren is something that cannot be played with by shyster lawyers. Wage problems are problems of life and death. No liberal ever understands this _ simple, ‘tact. Helping the Daily Worker through Michael Gold. , Contributions received to the credit of Michael Gold in his Socialist competition with Dr. Luttinger, Edward Newhouse, Helen Luke, Jacob ‘Burck and Del to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Daily Worker Drive: at Ow et 4 ( forse are ‘ fbr A Ra deta +-$2.00 Norma Rosenberg ....... * Mataist’ Forum” .. 5.01 John Reed Club, Detroit . | “Of L. & G, 1.75 Previous Total . | i im TO DATE . “DONT BE FRIGHTENED, QR SNEEK. TUsT TELL IN YOUR OWN ~WORDS WHAT YOU Saw / war dom WERE TH | High speeds with small motors may | be possible there because of low air} XK was on MY CANE To THE PLACE How the Soviet Union Conquered the Stratosphere| tase and Screen |Commander ‘Deseribes) Flight to “Daily” | Correspondent By VERN SMITH MOSCOW, U. 86. 5S. R—Com- mander Prokofiev of the Stratostat “U. 8. 8. R.” grinned all over his broad Russian face and ran his hand over his brown hair. “We did it,” he} said, “we workers, men and women, of the Soviet Union, with the scien- ‘tists and chemists and our new tech- | Mical equipment we made ourselves, we have demonstrated that we ean and will overtake capitalist science in all fields, that we have overtaken it in this field. We do not adver- tise our achievements because work- | ers do not need to boast. But we) made this flight to the stratosphere for the advancement of our science and its practical results to the work- ers.” Prokofiey sat with Godunov, the engineer on the expedition, and gave this interview to the correspondent of the Daily Worker and corre- spondents of other workers’ papers, | The two fliers made up two-thirds of | the crew of the historic flight, the other member being the radio op- erator and pilot, Birnbaum. On Sept. 36 of this year, the Stratostat “U. 3. 8. R.,” essentially a huge balloon, ascended to a height of 19,000 meters. That means 60,000 feet, or nearly 12 miles, right up in the air over Moscow. This carries one well into the stratosphere, the space of very thin air above the atmosphere that we breathe. “What practical results from this record breaking flight of the U. S. 8. R.?” the correspondent demanded. “It is the beginning of systematic study of the stratosphere for one thing.” The stratosphere, the fliers ex- | plained, is closely connected with the lower atmospheric weather condi- | tions, and must be investigated for that reason. Furthermore, the possi- | bility of airplane transportation in the thin air must be investigated. resistance, whereas in the lower atmosphere increase in speed means bigger, heavier engines with more air resistance. The other line of discovery was the registering of radiations of cos- mic and other rays in the upper air. Cosmic rays were just discovered a few years ago; they penetrated ma- terials as X-rays do, and seem to come from outside the earth, from empty space or the stars. One ray, called “Gamma,” grew stronger above a certain height, until which the machines carried had been registering it weaker. Prokofiev sug- gests that there may really be two “Gamma” rays. The whole question of analyzing such data is in the hands of the experts in the Soviet Union, and findings will be pub- lished before long. Some use will sooner or later be found for these discoveries, ger via? 5 “QUR stratosphere flight tested out conditions for other flights to follow,” the fliers said, “and a real study of the stratosphere means sys- tematic flights at all times of the year and collecting of a mass of in- formation. “Flights in winter possible?” “Oh, yes.” “Can "hight go higher than this one did?” \“Yes, but our stratostat was con- structed with a 20,000 meter maxi- mum altitude in mind, and we car- ried out strictly according to plan.” Both Prokofiev and Godunov de- scribed at length the construction of the stratostat. They got practically no help from Piccard’s flight. Pic- card's instruments left no record they could use. Plccard’s balloon was built in different countries, one part in each, and when he made his first unsuccessful attempt his repairs required a delay of eight months. The first flight of the U.S. 8. R.” was planned for Sept. 24 and weather conditions forced the deflation of the big balloon. The actual flight was only six days later. In this connection it might be noted that the British “Daily Mail” and other capitalist papers com- mented sarcasticaly after Sept. 24, but were quickly silenced when the record was smashed on Sept. 30. Se Ne | itera id balloon took two years to build. The “U, S. 8, R.” was ordered built last November. All work done on it was in The nature of “social work” in addition to the regular tasks of the engineers, scien- tists, Red Army commanders and factories constructing it, all of which had their full quota of “ordinary” work to carry on. They rejected as @ personal affront any ‘ions to pay them overtime for this building of the stratostat. Every effort was made to econo- mize on the cost, which totalled only 260,000 rubles, instead of the “seven or eight million rubles” estimate cur- rent in A brs European and Amer- ican newspaper Prokofiev declared that Engineer Godunov deserved a big share of the credit for this first planning, .as well as for construction later. Construc- tion lasted from February to May, with every bit of material used being of Soviet manufacture. It is this fact as well as the courage of the crew and brilliance of design that After ihe Stratosphere Flight Was Over Vern Smith, Daily Worker correspondent in the Soviet Union, pho fi (right) and Godunov, who reached a height of 12 miles above the earth in their Soviet-built st loon, “U.S.S.B.” pears on this page. makes the stratostat significant. It marks the emergence, as both fliers pointed out, of the Soviet Union into the field of technical construction, science and scientific manufacture. In this respect the Soviet Union, one country with one united working| class, was easily made to demonstrate the superiority of its system over; that of capitalism. Such an expedi- tion would not have been dreamed of in pre-revolutionary Russia. It would have been impossible. There would not have been the technical base for it. Godunoff and Prokofiev paid high honor to a whole group of workers and engineers who labored on the| building of the stratostat. Tiere! were workers, men and women both, | who spent all night sometimes on the intricate calculations and experi-| ments, and at critical stages of the building of the gas bag and gondola. | They mentioned especially the woman foreman, Kirilova, in the Cauchuk factory, where the gas bag was made, and the woman worker and Young Communist League mem- ber, Malevich, who not only worked overtime so much that they had to be stopped by administrative order, but made many practical proposals for the adaptation of new materials to the use of the stratostat. So much so that the chemically treated bag of Soviet grown and manufactured cotton stood every test. Though on the flight, many samples of other materials special tissues, chemico'ly prepared according to receipts of So- viet chemists, were carried along, for comparison, and improvements may still be made. Prokofiey and Godunov mentioned again the workers of the Scientific Institute of the Rubber Industry, who worked with such enthusiasm pre- paring the rubberized coating of the fabric of the gas bag. They told how two other women engineers, Levitina and Kusma, refused to leave the job for 24 hours, while they were putting special compounds on the fabric of the balloon. These two women in- yented this chemical treatment. Its importance lies partly in the fact that | the very strong radiations of the sun and presence in the stratosphere of other rays that-do not reach the earth, may damage ordinary sub-} stances that might be used. (Inci- | dentally, who ever heard of women | engineers in America?”) HE two fliers paid tribuie to the scientists who, invented, on new principles, the; automatic machinery that kept a-permanent record of moisture pressure, dens tempera- | ture of the air;and the strength of | various rays at alt times during the | flight of the stratostat. They likewise lauded their fello member of the’ crew, the radio pert, Birnbaum, who kept in const |touch with the earth. They poin' out that this wasthe first time a radi | Spparatus (it was a short wave |had ever been earried to the strat sphere, One -of,-their findin: | that radio communication clearer the higher they y | bepame |@ voyage of diseovery into ur seas. The actual flight started at ) 8: 740 a.m. At.8:45 the first entry in | | the log was made by Prokofie | meters high; Birnbaum at the radio, while Godunov,,and I watch flight. The only nois cover and the registering machines. Then, every fiye or ten minutes, new entries, the height, the tempera- | ture, which remained fairly constant | within and fell rapidly outside the | gondola. Birnbaum continually was | busy. with the radio. rapidly to 16,500 meters, where a balance occuréd. between the lifting | power of the gas and the weight of the stratstat. Throughout: the flight they could see Moscow clearly, could identify rivers and canals, could look off! across the country without glasses to} 4 distance of 45.or 50 miles. The lanky, creased balloon filled | out, as pressure outside diminished, until it was a round ball. They were continually informed by radio that they could be. seen very well from observatories on the earth. The in this upper region was a dark violet color—they even had a mechanism for measuring the coloration. The only accident on the flight was | the bursting, ftom air pressure from TUNING IN | NEW YORK.—The Workers Short, Wave Club will meet tonight at 8:30| at 740 Prospect Ave. (basement), Bronx. TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660 Ke 7:00 P. M.—Mountaineers Music 7:18—Billy Bachelor—Sketch 7:30—Lum and Abner 7:45—The Goldbergs—Sketch 8:00—Vallee Orch.; Soloists ptain Henry Show Boat; Winninger; Lanny Ross, Tenor Mp0) aeons Orch.; Deems Taylor, Nar- rator 11:00—Viola igo Soprano 11:15—Merof Or: 1 30—Madrievers Oren, 12:00—Ralph Kirbery, Songs 12:05 A. M.—Calloway Orch. 12:90—Denny Oreh. WOR—T10 ‘Ke 1:00 P. M.—Sports—Ford Frick 7:18—News—Gabriel Heater 1:30—Terry and Ted—Sketch ‘7T:45—Al and Lee Reiser, Piano Duo; Mazel Arth, Contralt 8: Lego oa Sisters; Frank Sherry, & site Old New York—Harrison Grey ske 8:$0—Lone Star Rangers 9:00—Jack Arthur, Baritone; Ohman and Arden, Plano $:18—Frank’ and Pio i Music, tanley Meehan, ‘Tenor 3as—Talk Perey Waster 10:00—Saxophone Quartet Charles 11:00—Weather Report | 11:02—Moonbeams: Trio 11:30—Childs Orch. 12:00—Bestor Orgh. Wd! 2760 Ke. 7:00 P, M.—Amos 'n? Andy 1:15—The Three Musketeers—Sketch ‘7:30—Michael Bartlett, Tenor; Alfred Lust- garten, Violin 7:45—Mario Cozzi, Baritone 8:00—-Captain Diamond's Adventures— Sketch 8:30-—Adveniures._ jn Health—pr. Bundesen 8:45—Revelers Quartet 9:00—Death Valley Days—BSketch :30—King Orch, 10:00—Canadian iif@hange Program 10:30—Archer Gipsor, "Organ; Mixed Chorus | i} 11:00—Three Scape! Songs 11:15—Poet Print 12:30—Marie Drebaleys. 64th Birthday Party, Herman | From Holly oye, 12:80 A. ey ne oh. WABE=860 Ke T:15—Just ‘Plas 1:30—Jeannle Ls Denny Or 7:45—News—B 8:00—Elmer Ev 8:15—Singin’ Sai :30—Hall Johnson sleeker: Hopkins Orch. 9:00—Kostelanetg"Oreh.; Evan Evans, Baritone 9:30—American Red Cross Program 10:00—Deep River, Orchy 10:30—Phil Regan, Songs 10:45—-Concert Oreh.; Gladys Rice, Soprano 11:15—News; Joneé--Oreh. 12;00—Nelson Orsh, 19:30 A. M.—Lucas Orch. Mypeeend Marge ‘ketch ter ¥ess—Sketch 10:15—Current. Bente Harlan Eugene Read 10:30—The Jolly Russians 1:00—Light Oreh. end Paul Smail, Bongs; | } Smith’s interview, in which the Sayiet selentists tell how the flight was accomplished, ap- f a glass t called a The other i cted, una ait d to which stop c Tuments were out a little of it, y had provided 8) THEY cote |Daniel Frohman, Maurice \Balloon Was Built! Schwartr, To Produce Eng- Completely With lish Version Of “Yoshe Kalb” | Soviet Material Deniel Frohman, who signed by Stalin, Molotov, Voroshilov pagan and Kaganovich, notifying them that | Tint Be Mil Poctn these leaders would propose to the | ‘i ass “y ai “re “4 Central Executive Committee of the | cat te Peas tat in ms Cee kee recelve | month with a cast of s stds asd iogiat tors, directed by “You can say that the French| pachsh version was prepared by F Radio Agency’s report that our in- struments were wrong and that we 17,000 meters instead | Blocki and has twenty. Yiddish version is now went up only on week days at the Yi of 19,000 is just rubbish,” Prokofiev} Testes, ears caMtaie Meie Siekea by | ck Bipes: Bon!” Bnew rs ments carefully made, checked by | age te the best scientists, but some of them| Allan Scott, will be pro Guthrie McClintic some time later this season. McClintic is now direct- ing “Romeo and Juliet,” “The Bar- we placed outside the gondola and} ond the reach of any member of the crew. To open the hermetically 0 e : retts of Wimpole Street” and “Can- é , 4 oa fi sealed gondola,” he had explained in’ aide” for his wife Katherine Cornell, LSPA args ema | who will take the three plays om has i tour. hen,” he added, “the stratostat| “rennox Robinson's new comedy, was in view and under constant ob-| urs Tife Worth Living,” will have its servation ‘tro ae Cae a American premiere this evening st rom the earth, and by | the Masque Theatre. Robinson, who is the director of the famous Abbey {| ‘Theatre in Dublin, staged the pro- ulation used) Guetion. The principal players are in astronomy, | whitford Kane, Margaret Wycherly, ge finding for artil- | Jerome Lawier, Octavia Kenmore | is quite accurate.) ‘The fig-| 50a wary Ricard lated by astronomical meth- | “Birthright,” a new play by Rich- ander Prokofiev | ods from the ground showed that at| ..4 Maibeum, i¢ announced for the tostat bal- | the top of the flight we reached @| week of Nov. 20, at a Broadway n 9,000 meters. They agree | theatre. Sylvia Field, Thais Lawton, v the of the instruments | Harold Filioct and Alan Bunce head in the stratostat | the cast. — i and Godonuv smiled| The New Amsterdam Theatre will en a news item in Izvestia| nouse “G s By Roberta,” the new an in- haro- mentioned, which said that the rican Lieutenant Settle hoped to sphere the next week, pect to beat the So-| It spoke volumes for the Soviet technique in the | musical play by Jerome Kern and | Otto Harbach. The musical, which is based on a story by Alice Duer Miller, will open on Nov. 18. tic e the cabin ; victory year 1933, do, and for * * laughed outright when in-| formed that first reports in capt-| of “Only Yesterday” Opens At Radio City Today “Only Yesterday” is the new screen “How did you feel?” the corres-|talist papers called both of them| | pondents ed. ? heroreasora’” feature opening today at the Radio “Just the way we do now," laughed | “We are workers,” they said, “work- | Clty Music Hall. Margaret it | Prokofiev. He explained that they |ers of the Soviet Union have shown | S0° "0 bs did not need artificial light, the sun-|that they can do what capitalists | : | as even a little too strong for | think only gray-haired professors are | es amg) aoe eae zee - com “Next time we'll take dark That is because of the| five scenes, is principal: seam capable, of. feature this week. The number was | glasses.” | conditions here, where workers, scien- | pect e About 11 o'clock they threw out |tists, and Red commanders can work | designed vert relemtsarernye ballast, and rose to the maximum,as friends together for a common| director of Radio City Theatres, an height... ‘The tog reads: |goal, and where the Communist will have Belle Flower, Viola Philo, ifd:Re pane. Fueanive 4017. t6180 | Party and the government give every | al ballet and the ensemble in the -s (of mercury), The indi- | °PPortunity for them to do 0.” Thvitations are going out today for altimeter varies nearly | Pressed to tell of their own lives, ‘ pr Mole re | they gave a few details. he special invitation showing 01 1 these lac tablished a th P earth! Shortly » and land ded at record, , and near a factory whose eted them warmly. Strat- | ondola both, and | Commander , were in’ per~ st fect cond: A couple of days later the crew re- They went up| ecived a message of congratulations | WHAT'S ON | Thursday FIRST LECTURE the of the z. ene at |THE RED HEAD” 72%, 75" 2Days|— “POIL DE CAROTTE” — . 100. LE Hit | In Power’ gast Side Workers Club, 165 West $8.0. Adm. 50c. at Gordon, Artists, WORKERS _ Labor: ory. cept tush to 42 E. 12th Bt. Cleveland nic words they. es-| ever flown above the | afterwards they began of a series (near Fresman St, Fi ‘Tremont Ave, kon Tasks of Rigpla “Aolosed Counell of areater ‘TOO MUCH HARMONY? m ‘After 10 Months y Max Bedachi, | member of Central Committee Communist Party, at | African Balalaika Orc! 8:30 p.m, Auspices F.S.U. Theatre | held back. Will glad- | or on Iberal payment. Please ‘iday night of the new Soviet Yid- dish talkie, “Laughter Through Tears,” which will open this Saturday at the Acme Theatre. Prokofiev said: “I was grown and a up in the Young Communist League and the Communist Party.” |He was through with school in 1918. to| | He was sent by the Party to work in the army as a political commissar. He studied military science like the other political leaders in the army, and was finally transferred to be a the highest | | Unit Makes Record Unit 5, Section 1, Communist Party has raised $145 for the Daily Worker and is still going strong. Unit 5 wants to know what is the matter with the other units in Section 1 that they are so slow in the Drive to save our Daily Worker. R. Babchik, member Women's Council No. 49, Brighton Beach, N. ¥., collected $2.40 for the Daily Worker at a celebration of Louis Ber- kovitz’s great grandchild Berkovitz, who is 90 years old, gave the first quarter. Only your support can help the Dally Worker continue. You like / the enlarged and improved “Daily.” Support it with your dollars. Rush them today. AMUSEMENTS _FIRST AMERICAN SHOWING! OPENING THIS SATURDAY AT ® A.M. First Picture of the Yiddish Mark Twain Sholom Aleichem’s Comedy “LAUGHTER - THROUGH TEARS” with MOSCOW ART THEATRE PLAYERS PRODUCED IN THE U.8.S.! YIDDISH DIALOGUE—ENGLISR 5 pm. near | southeast of Godunov spoke up: “I want to say |that Commander Prokofiev was the | nerve center and leader of the whole construction and flight of the Strat- ostat.” Prokofie¥ is 31 years old. Godunov is 41. Godunoy is slightly the small- er of the two, very energetic. He | graduated from the Military Aero- | mautics Academy, and has been an |engineer ever since. His father was a peasant in the Central Black Soil | Region. | Birnbaum was a private in the | Czarist army, is also a graduate of | the Aeronautics School, after the revolution. ds of Sacco-Vai TLES lith STREET and UNION SQUARE “THEATRE |});-RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL- SHOW PLACE of the NATION Direction “Roxy” Opens 11:30 ADM. “ONLY YESTERDAY” Margaret Sullavan—John Boles colorful “Roxy” stage show m,—85e to 6 (Ex. Sat. & Si Greater Show Season EN MINUTE ALIBI A New Melodrama ws herewith recommended tw the highest terms.” | ETHEL BARRYMORE THEA. W. ‘arth St. | Eves, 8.40. Mats, Toes. Wed. Sat., 2:40 ACME RKO Jefferson Me sa | Now | BING CROSBY and in ‘AN TASHMAN in| | Also: “BROADWAY TO HOLLYWOOD” with | ALICE BRADY & FRANK MORGAN NOW PLAYING! SERGE EISENSTEIN’S “THUNDER OVER MEXICO” also: Boon AMERICAN SHOWING STEIN IN MEXICO’ th ir etal Playhouse ‘¢ tilt 2 p. 5 «25cm: =. Bronawey, Just East of 7th Ave. Dancers. | \—-THE THEATRE GUILD _presents— EUGENE O’NEILL's COMEDY AH, WILDERNESS! | with GEORGE M. COHAN GUILD 222524 St. W. of Bway Ey.8.20Mats. Thurs. &8at.2.20 Webster Hall, Philadelphia PHILKINO = xanxer St MARKET 8T. Now Playing THE 4g" needs MOLIERE'S COMEDY WITH MUSIC | || The School for Husbands |} | With Osgood PERKINS—June WALKER Hi ‘Thes., Bway & 40 St..£v. ae eee EMPIRE sacsiaterhors.asat.i0 ; . “on Sunday, A Soviet Film Epic E waren © E ROT WAS SHOUTING — Too Fasy? Another Guess Coming! VY ALOT OF MEM WERK BREADFULLY AND THAT Manv-ER- TAMES MARTIN, WAS SWRARING AWD FIGHTING JUST 400 de GoT ain Aad TOOK AIS GUN away — FROM UIS RIGHT Aano COAT POCKET — YES3IR, FROM HIS RIGHT HAND coat Pocket! / Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has now REDUCED THE RENT (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS CULTURAL ACTIVITIES Kindergarden; Classes for Adults and Childten; Library; Gymnasium; Clubs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED »9EVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE _ Take Advantage of the Opportunity. | Lexington Avenae to Whit | Plains Road, | Station. 7, train t Fo ee eepmmpere s wetene \

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