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WORLD! By Michael Gold ‘aolening Pools and History & recent vacation I decided to go down to Washington and inspect the DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1938 New Masses Art | Exhibit and Sale| Will Open Today NEW YORK—Many of America’s foremost modern artists are repre- sented in an unusual exhibition and sale of paintings, original drawings, ; etchings, sculptures, water colors, lithographs and photographs, which opens today for a ten-day showing at the Allied Arts Galleries, 152 W. 67th | Street. |__ The fair, held for the benefit of the |New Masses, which after more than The following is the fourth of a series of six excerpts from “Mem- ories of Lenin” by his wife and lifelong comrade, N. Krupskaya, | which we are reprinting in connec- tion with the approrehing Lenin Memorial in January, 1934. ‘These memories, which give an‘in- timate portrait uf the great leader of the international working class, the members of the | Poletaev and I. P. Pokrovsky, MEMORIES OF LENIN By N. KRUPSKAYA Third Duma, took | part. At this conference tt was de- | cided to publish a popular newspaper | abroad | Gazeta, (Workers’ Newspaper). to be caled Rabochaya Plek- |hanov played a diplomatic game; | nevertheless, he wrote an |the first number of the article for paper en- | titled “Our Position,” | dendies in the Development of Rus- sian Social-Democracy,” and No. 51 contained an article by Martov on “Russian Discussion and Russian Ex~- perience.” Vladimir Ilyich replied to these in an article entitled “The His- toric Significance of the Internal Struggle of the Party in Russia,” but the editors of Neue Zeit, Kautsky and Wurm, refused to publish it. Markhlevsky (Karsky) replied t Lectures Sunday Steel, Page Five Soviet Film Showings Planned in Midwestern Metal Centers CHICAGO.—The Steel and Metal Workers’ Industriel Union has booked @ movie for one week, which}will be shown in the neighborhoods of steel and metal workers—Crane €o., In- ternational Harvester and Majestic Radio in Chigago, as well-as.in Chi- cago Heights, Haramond, Indiana The movie to be shown is “Ten Days That Shook the World,” a his- tory of the Russian Revi olution based on John Reed’s book. e sais , | 20 years of appearance as a monthly| sre taken from Volume WI of the | After the Copenhagen Congress, hres % The following are the places and government, There are thousands of visitors to the capital every day, | ,207ine, will come as a peckicereosid “Memories,” published hy Interna- | Ilyich went to Stockholm to see his sen e winner: peg afver dates of the showings:‘Thureday, doing the same thing. They go home with the most amazing impressions. | ary weekly at the end of this year,| tional Publishers. jmother and sister Marla Tlyinishna | COPUIODS yee e Kamo atnived in Dec. 14, Society Hall, Ames and Returning on the bus I heard a woman with the hard face and severe | including work contributed by such af NR ep | and spent ten days there,” This was Parle” Be. qag tha, GoniEsHe WEN. wan Howard, Hammond, Ind; Friday, ayes of @ church-going Babbitt’s wife say to another woman: “And I saw pecggereeistis ot qs A. 8. Baylin- PARIS Fe init rae ey, eal one ne gente in Bene te Maes while care Deo, 18, Italian Co-operative Hall, ‘4 son, Maurice Becker, George Biddle, ¥ ad. wi 314 E. 14th St., Chicago;--Saturday, hale swimming pool, we Prosdent's swimming |20u%8 Block, Jacob Burck, N. Clkov- (1909-10) [ith sad and wistful eyes that he | FO" vent in «German pxison for | ee ae Make | | Deo, 16, West Side Hall, 2244 W. 28rd Ghat they # ught, to see the President’s s sky, i : . % Zo. $0 ‘that’s what they go for, I thought, to see the Preside sky,- Stuart Davis, Adolph Dehn, (Continued) he returned to Russia seven years|OVer eighteen months, and while John Strachey, noted ‘British Place, Chicago. pool, But the other woman said she had been to the top of Washington as to which was more Arthur Dove, Fred Ellis, Wanda Gag, | Hugo Gellert, Henry Glintenkamp, Sick of the squabbling, a number of | later, in 1917, she was already dead. there he pretended to be insane, In Publicist, author of “The Coming There will be two showings each Monument. ‘There followed a merry old debate | Qctober, 1909, he was deported to| Struggle f. P “The |Night. First at 7 to 9 Paty, ‘second syd I, Klein, D. Kreymborg, Louis Lozo-|the comrades went away. Lozovsky,*| On his return to Paris, Ilyich re-| Russia, and there spent another six. ‘age! og. Bower’. ane eC | at @ to 11. pam. important from the tourist point of view wick, W. Meyerowita, Emest Fieno,|for example, gave himself up en-| iated that he had managed to have|teen months In the Metebh fortress | Menace of Fascism,” who will mi I wanted to interrupt and say, “Ladies! O bourgeois matrons! don’t you kfiow that history is being made at Washington, and that big books willbe written 100 years from now trying to explain it all? That's what one ought to try to see in Washington!” But I didn’t say it, and they discussed Mount Vernon, and the Mint, ‘where all those lovely dollar bills are pri d, and the taxi fares and bad food,.. Just as thousands of placid citizens of Petrograd went to the movies as usual onthe night the Winter Palace was taken; just as in @ certain Village 20 miles from Waterloo there was a peasant wedding in full blast while the battle was on. The Great Cemetery of course, where humanity lives and | Jose Comente Orozco, Boardman Rob- | inson, O. Zoglow and W., Zolack. | ‘The show will be open daily from 10 a. m. until 10 p. m. except Dec. 16 | and 22, when {t will close respectively at 7p. m, L nn se Comedy “The | First Apple” Coming To Booth Theatre Dec. 22 Stage and Screen { tirely to the French trade union movement, We, too, longed to come closer to the French movement. We thought it would be useful for us in this connection if we went to live for a time at the holiday camp organ- ized by the French Party. This camp was situated on the sea shore near the village of Pornic on the famous Vendee coast, First my mother and I went to live there, but we were not happy there. The French people kept too much to themselves; each family kept aloof from the others and their attitude towards Russians was somewhat unfriendly. This was particularly the case with the man- from Tiyich the the a good talk with Lunacharsky at the Congress, Dyich always had a strong liking for Lunacharsky. He was greatly charmed by the letter's talent. However, soon after, an article by Lunacharsky entitled “Tactical Trends jin Our Party” appeared in Le Peuple, in which he treated all the questions Otzovist point of view, read the article and said nothing. Eut later, he wrote an ar- icle in reply, Others. who attended Intarnational Congress wrote their opinion on it. wrote an ungigned article in Vor- rts, in which he severely attacked also ‘Trotsky in Tiflis. The ¢ m_ doctor came to the conclusion that Kamo was hope~ lessly insane and had him transferred to the Mikhailovsky mental hospital. He escaped from the hospital, stowed away on a ship bound for France, and finally arrived in Paris to talk things over with Ilyich. He was ter- ribly upset when he heard that a }Tupiure had occurred between Hyich and Bogdanov and Krassin. He was very much attached to all three. Be- sides, he did not understand the situ- ation that had develoned during the | years he was in prison. Ilyich told | him all that had occurred. ‘to Establish New speak on ‘Culture and Fascism” Sunday at 3 p.m. at the City Col- lege Auditorium, 23rd St. and Lexington Ave, The lecture is un- ba “hed auspices of the John Reed ‘a Workers Bookshop Lending Library ‘The proceeds will go td the or- @anizational fund of the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union. Classes at Chicago Workers School Will Begin on February 18 CHICAGO, — Registration for the Winter Term of the Chicago Work- ers’ School, which ovened Dec. 8, will continue until Dee, 18, when classes begin. Full preparations have been made for material, oftiines and ASHINGTON isn't a real city “The First Apple,” the comedy by tb th |the Bolsheviks and praised his own! Kamo asked me to buy him almends.|. NEW YORK.—Responding to thou-|{mprovements of the library to in- works and dies. It's @ great mausoleum, where corpses of the demo- | Lynn Starling in which Conrad Nagle | 98° hs ot gs ciRene FOES Vienna Pravda. Plekhanov, Lenin and | He woud sit in our kitchen living room | sands of requests, the Workers Book- Sue she Reet | poseiiia «aaa oe cratic dogmas lie buried. G 's walk the*streets among the mortuary | is starred, will open at the Booth ‘There were hardly any workers a Varsky sent a protest to Vorwarts eating almonds as he had done ati! shop, 60 E, 13th St, is installing what ‘orces during the winter, Revolu- building and monuments. They look like flesh-and-blood creatures, but are really burea: ats and Congressmen and the like. There are no in- dustries in or about Washington. There is also no working class, out- side the federal clerks and other government employes, It is a city of deskmen, and has the moribund calm of all bourgeois suburbs, that terrible atmosphere which suggests nothing new or unex- pected can happen. Anything is better than that, as William James once pointed out in his Bitter essay against the Chatauqua, Yet, when one reflects, the city of Washington is perfect in its kind. It was intended by the Fathers of the Republic to be a capital of merchants and traders, and was removed from the scene of production so that the proletarian “Mob” might not in- fluence legislation. America has always been run by lawyers and bankers, not by farn ” workers. ‘The architecture of Washington is exactly that of the court- room and bank, with a solemn touch added of the whited sepulchre to suggest government I wonder how our efficient Daily Worker Bureau can go on function- ing in that atmosphere, It takes a Bolshevik will to remember, in this droning-graveyard of bureaucrats, that there is a real world outside where miners get shot down on picket-lines and mothers of hungry children Theatre on Friday, Dec. 2: cast include Irene Purcell, Spring Byington, Nana Bryant, Albert Van Dekker and Dudley Hawley, The pro- duetion is playing this week in Boston, A. E. Thomas’ new comedy, “ |More Ladies,” is now in rehearsal | under the direction of Harry Wagstaff | Gribble. | “Whatever Possessed Her," a farce by Hardwick Nevin, which will be pro- duced here by Raymond Moore, goes into rehearsal today, Owen Davis’ new play, “Jezebel,” with Miriam Hopkins starred, is an~ nounced for next Tuesday night at the | Ethel Barrymore Theatre. “Ten Min- ute Alibi,” now housed at the Barry- more will be transferred to the Bijou Theatre on Monday. | “Birdie,” by Claiborne Foster, re- | Kenneth Webb, in which Molly Picon will make her first ap- arance on the English legitimate stage, will have its premiere on Dec, 22, at the Selwyn Theatre, The play jis having its tryout this week at the Others in Savvushka, Vperyodists, the camp, and they immed a@ row with the manager. Then we all decided to move to Pornic and} board together. My mother | a the coast-guard, Soon Ilyich arrived. He bathed in the sea # great des d —he loved the sea and the breezes—and chatted cheerfully on all sorts of subjects with the Kos! enjoyed eating the crabs whic coast-guard caught for us, act, our landlord and his wife took a} great liking to Ilvich. The stout loud-voiced landlady —- she was a laundress—would tell us about the She had a little son who attended the secular school, and si youngster was a clever and boy, the priests tried to pe! mother to allow the boy to be edu- cated in the monastery and promised to pay the boy a scholarship; but the laundress indignantly showed the sea, | conflicts she had with the priests. | hing this article, 1903 when Trotsky made his ‘ance abroad, P! Kkhanov was | already hostile towards him. Before } the | } }@ seriot the Second Party Congress they had | would s dispute on the question o: ublishing @ popular newspaper. At Copenhagen Congress Plekhanov | signed a protest against Trotsky’s ac- | As far) h ome and would tell us about his | arrest in Berlin, about the way he d simulated insanity, about the sparrow he tamed in prison, ete. Hyich listen and feel extremely ‘or this exceedingly brave, childishly |naive, warm-hearted man who was capable of performing heroic feats, but who now did not know what work take up. The proposals he made re fantastic, Ilyich did not contra- ict him, but carefully brought him han to earth, talked to him about e necessity of organising the trans- ort of liters ure, etc. Finally it was ied that Kamo should go to Bel~ m to operation performed he Was yed, and led spies to identify him very | ily), and then make his way to the south of Russia and from there to the Caucasus. mining Kamo’s coat, “Have you got a warm coat? You will be cold on deck in | this one.” Whenever Ilyich traveiled ona the deck incessantly. When it turned TY | Marx's ner he walked up and down} will be the largest proletarian lending library in the United States. The Xbrary will contain books like “Capital,” all the available volumes on Marzism-Leninism, and on all phases of the class struggle. The latest proletarian fiction, poetry, ete.,, will also be available in the new lending library. In embarking on this new venture, the Workers Bookshop hopes to ro- ceive the co-operation of the work- ers and students of this city. Tho rge for all books borrowed from the lenci‘ng library will be three cents % day. Further information on tionary mass organizations*in Chi- cago, and the Communist Party units have chosen their students, and many scholarships will be given-by organ- izations. All indications:neint to a mass attendance during the winter. To accommodate the ‘gféat need for trade union functionaries and methods of developing work in the basic industries and shops, three courses will be given in trade union and strike strategy on Monday, Tues- Gay and Friday evenings, Principles ef Communism will be given every night, as well as Marxism-Leninis:n, Political Economy, ete. All workers who are handicapped, because of lack of knowiedge of the English Janguage, in their work among the native born rules of the new library ean be had it the workers bookshops at 50 E, 18th St. and 699 Prospect A .. Bro! AMUSE workers, are urged to take the course “English for Workers,” which will be given Monday and Wednesdays, MENTS ie see : Majesiig in a Brooklyn, priest the door. She did not give | out that Kamo had no other coat, 5 i 3 birth to a son, she said, in order to 1 {t gray cloak which ; The Historic Essence | “Road To. Life” Opens Today | make a despicable Jesuit of him, And other had giv ha as a present | The story of Sienka Razin... The- most At Fifth Ave. Playhouse | this was why Ilyich praised the crabs hile in Stockholm, and of which he romantic revolutionary hero of old Russia, WANDERED through the beautiful parks of this smug marble city, T : —- so highly. Ilyich arrived at Pornic fond, and e it to Kamo. : went up ia the Washington Monument, and had some glasses of beer Ror rnatine a erage Perirsns on neh 1 fey id the bikin with Ilyich and Tiyich’s and, saw a fiffh-tate burlesque show and saw Lady Frances Perkins and | Prosuced li Pion k wens chgaee eat te hed tie alae petieghlint nae ness soothed Kamo. Years after, General Hugh Johnson. Am I brash in thinking I managed to extract the today at the Sth Avenue Playhouse. of the International Socialist Burequ | .et artists at work on a Lenin decibels Gy BA ya Spa historic essence of this great period in Washington? ‘Road To Life” tells the story of the|and the International Socialist Con-| monument. | pole saltuelel at Neeeignes Me : eC . * Te "the Department of Commerce there are hundreds of acres of desks homeless waifs of Russia who were|gress, In describing the work of the! 1:4. without a word. In retallation, | that when we adopted the new eco-, f orphaned by war and famine and who) Congress, Ilyich wrote: “Differences | —°*. >" ws Seu a icy. ‘he ay 4 5 5 and filing cabinets, and thousands of nervous clerks and their chiefs, spin- ocd the Jand in lawless bands| with the revisionists are looming, but | 170K started a campaign against | nomic policy again went off the: American Premiere Today g.miles of red tape, This is the headquarters of the N. R. A. admin- | uneit the Soviet government gathered| the revisionists are still far from a|the Rabochaya Gazeta, which the |rails and kept talking about wanting RKO. eR F; ay “t , Rain: a Bolsheviks were beginning to publish. to go to school, dreaming all the while ts 22ND STREET Mee J \- istration, an amazing factory. them in children’s homes and collec-} declaration of their own independent ts Sgt : 2 Te iy He declared that Rabocheya Geaxzeta{of all kinds of expi its. He died at ‘ ‘ ‘ tives, where they learned trades, and| programme. The struggié against} & BROADWAY 1P.M. Some of the more shallow newspaper liberals like to call N. R. A. a \ tater turned fate taethl caens * vr. revisionism has been postponed, but Was a narrow fraction organ, and he | the time of Ilyich’s last illness, He ri “revolution,” amd when you see the headquarters you know what they | Zero,” in person, as moderator of the this struggle is tnevitable.” The Rus- | also delivere: ed a lecture on this sub- | was cycling down the Veryesk slope in oe meen, ‘The N. R. A. is a revolution that has succeeded in taking thousands ' Cineforum, will present the film which|sian delegation at the Congress was | Ject at inet cub, Eger (ae , ran into an automobile and was LAST © DATS uapeemecnenmesnginmennians of white-collar workers off the breadlines and giving them jobs stacking is the principal attraction of a pro-|@ large one—twenty in all: ten So- sani ag atin tek a tee it aes | SHOLOM ' “LAUGHTER up-tons of red-tape for the N. R. A. gram that includes “Art and Culture | clal-Democrats, seven Socialist-Revo- | qv otsevist Pravda to which he had Lesser canary tse dy | THROUGR a na in the Soviet Union,” the Piatnitski|lutionaries and three trade-union de- Seen os tad after th Peete { ’ « “But, of Course, this is not @ real revolution. Fifteen million and more | Chorus and Russian newsreels. legates, The Social-demooratic group | Prony’ Pompe pants cone fiatae ten | E E TEARS” Americans still are waiting for the Blue Eagle to visit them with food and ooo contained Tepresentatives of every | iy a vee sinwenged ie? "Trotsky's | ¥iadish Comedy (English Titles), A Sovies Production ; © fobs Wicks toSpeak at Four 2xthino vatsey: Maroy carat: | campaign, and they, too, began a | AT’S ON hen | SOVIETS SING AND DANCE y * . i . gi campaign agains Rabechaya Gazeta, 24th st. Mon, Lots of Charm and It \M eetin gs in Detroit molleiad ote jie in «agian frtiag ounes Mink ey mare. Bere CELEBRATE THE 10TH DAILY WORKER ACME THEATRE atom ig | te ek Bay Calg on of ANG 6 | WithMarx-Lenin Show | with consultative votes.* During the ae a paiatices zoe Bae a NNIVERSARY ON SATURDAY, DECEM-' - — , THE THEATRE GUILD: presents—, WAS permitted as a journalist to listen in at N. R. A. conferences with Congress a conference took place in | Yo o¢ ai principle: conciliation Wath | oee,20, fam # P.M. to 2AM. st the 1 RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL—|' YUGENE O'NEILI’s COMEDY j | Be ‘ cha ; iation with | bronx Coliscum. SEE RAM, [50 St. & 6 Ave.—Show Plnce of the Nati The Roosevelt administration has adopted American sales- | DETROIT.—The iecture pang which Lenin, Plekhanov, Zinoviev and jody, which in his| wntrer TERM WORKER'S SCHOOL — || Direction “Rosy” ” Opene dhese tee ||| AH, WILDERNESS! manship as_one of its major weapons; and the President’s Cabinet just | Michigan, beginning at Grand Rap- aia | opinion was tantamount to surrender-~ Rogistzation ts now open, Room 30, 35 F. Ann Harding GUILD ‘Thea. St Ww {s.bursting wif charm and personality. The Lady and the General have | ig. J ee ene med totes ing ee postion when the battle was | 1th St. in “The Right to Romance” Ev.8.20 Mats a It, lots of this new governmental It | Arrangements have been made for] 7° . ‘ oe mies ce . i Aes i tae pe Thursday and 2nd_week of “Roxy's Scheherazade” ||| MOLIERE'S COMEDY WITH s a a Re . BS Bi a | four lectures in the city of Detroit 6. the rigi fo speak but ni eue Zeit, No, 50 o! , contained) yrrsr MEETING of Edith Berkman Br, ‘or pigneral Jonson: wes fatherly with the newspaper boys. Me 'snewered | oy for dishlaying ‘hie Mack-Tania| YOO 24 an article by Trotsky entitled “Ten-|1LD. at new eadguarters, Boro, Park | The, School, for Hus e, - their, a jn a tired, but tolerant voice. One of the boys uttered a |S hinit that is shewn in connection Workers Olub, 704-18 Ave: ah 6:30 p.m, | Bastnalns Today for One Weak Only RE ih; Bimay #40 5t.2r. wisecrack, and the General smiled benignly. ‘The reporter wagged his | Sith the lectures, 1 — Fansen| a atele oe Suma eae Drama of Russia's “Wild Children” ||] MPI S.A0hats Thors@Sat240 with delight. at being noticed. When the conference was over, the On Thursday, Dec. 14, at 7:30 p.m, | | Say ge techn Ape Ml og “ x90 MAXWELL ANDERSON'S Néew Play General put his arm over this reporter’s shoulder, and this time the tai) | Wicks lectures in Detroit at Yemans | | vor Against. the Jews” at the Paredis MARY OF SCOTLAND beaj-a zeal tattoo, That's how most news gets reported impartially from | Hal!, 3014 Yemans, oa “The Histor- | | | ergs hy er fenn rege 2 ames ae mela i ‘it HELEN > PHILIPS JmRLEN Washington. ical Devetopment of Marxism.” On Friends of the Soviet Union, tb eso HAYES MERIVALE MENKEN ‘Friday he lectures on “Imperialism”; | vill 10 “ i near Eady Perkins’ was as gracious. “We have a big class today,” she | at the wWorken Conten ioste Dix! | | | oRBRQDORE BAYER, wit store on, ope | Fifth Ave, Playhouse ss ||] ALVIN | smiled-as the-boys and girls filed in and took their seats in what was | Ave. On Saturday evening, Dec. 16 at | Serre ——~_| | 2042 Broadway (at 00th st.) at 9 pm. | 80c 1 to 6 — 40c¢ Evenings reer rr } like a classroom. 30, he lectures on “The National) TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS | WJZ—760 Ke Aa 9 siege ar hs wa usa PEACE “ON. EARTH ] | on,” at Fer Hall, 1343 East i S Son 1} at the Tom Mo Spee { ‘Then ske read a paper and commented on it. It was the announce- {| The Hoc) jeceata is on Sun- ee 7;30—Cyrena Van Gordon, Contralto Br. LL.D. 108 E, 14th St. Chalk talk on : i 9 EB 745—Wugineering ‘Thrills--Sketen Scottsboro, Refreshments. Adm, free. by the. authors. of MERBT-O NOU i ment of the”plans for soctal housing under the N. R, A. ‘day afternoon, Dec. 17, at 3 o'clock, WEAF—660 Ke par aay Pg MM EES AEM ls Py GRE he W. I R. BAND CONCERT JOUN HOWARD LAWSON says: “Ht Is he | Z most exciting event of % ‘ Where had Tifieard all this fine sociological patter before, so scientific, |S the Finnish Hall, 5969 14th St, at! 7.09 p. xc —sountaineers Muste gansen ovals MraseeHagia Miu ne eu: (Gee feces—Exeelient Program Civie Mepertery Thentve, 14th | Ww. McGraw. 4:1S—Billy Bechelor-—-Sketch $:30—Adventures in Health—Dr, Herman|at 8:15 p.m. Martin Chancey, instructor, a he Reanaiary Thenteh eth are so siteeth?). Why, it was the settlement house talk I used to hear as a j at all four places the Marx-Lenin’ 7:30—Lum and Abner Bundesen will lead the class on ‘The Family; Past, FRIDAY, DEC. 17" 3: Bands wa hae aloes ‘ack bv ua boy-ou"the East Side. The ladies were going to abolish slums, and sweat- ‘ exhibition will be shown from 10 a.m,/ 7:45—The Goldbergs—sketch is urpaaition of Progress—Lowell Preeenk and Futana’ Members free, non , AY, DE 8:30 P.M. shops, and profiteering and war—sll by means of morris dancing and to 6 p.m, each day, and also in the| fp concin Heney ares Boab Convert | 9:00—Death Valley Days—Sketch SOUNG AMATO art ena ied wens FINNISH HALL Hae Mote More OEE * | evening. 10:03 Whiteman Orek.; Deems Taylor, Nar- | .2:30—Wayne King Orch, way Hall, 113 W. 57th St. Dr, Alfred Adler ‘Her Master’s a bt f : } 10:00—-Canadian Exchange Program will speak on “Bodily and Mental Weak- 15 W. 226th STREET priced vere ae R-used Gechdifove in them ap-ta my 16th year, and then permanent | Soviet Jewish Fil 11:00~Viola Philo, Soprano Joep Areber Gbiada Organ; Mined borag nesses, of People” ab 6:30 p.m. Plymouth fir M0 St bre doubt set in. So Lady Perkins left me only suspicious. Seymour Wald- | “OVIet Jewish Film = |: al Oren 11:t5—Morley Singers” Friday man asked her 2 polite little question as to the fate of Frank Borich, . |12:00—Ralph Kirbery, Songs | 11:30—Seott! Oren, STRAY HEUBAREAD 6c. Where wenn Cea x Rha ae a Sey? A een one! 12:00—Olsen Orch. cert, Dec. 15. All members must report at the-militant coai-miner her department wants to ship back to fascist 12: :20—Denny Oreb. | 12:80 A, M.—Dance Orch. 7 Bia, at ae Text 4 08 uh ‘St. Jugo-Slavia, The Lady turned pale and cold with fury. That was set- any | Miata ® anitk pie ew. auth, Bt ot! i tlementrhousy. (00. One was never, never permitted to ask real ques- | WOR—710. Ke | WABC—860 Ke callechsiaroeramn- of clabslaat acre euvoraiien: First gaan of 2 satel Z tips. e | | 00 Bo ary music; 2 Jaz Bai pa tigas:of- those: ladies, ' 7:00 P. M.—Sports—Ford Prick 78 June Fiala SECOND Anousl Consely, ind Senes a ees! ’ 5 A<cavalry General and banker who administers economics and a | U:15—Nevis—Gabriel Heatter 7:30—Mildred Batley, Songs dP wembley! AE sy! ha net i Te | :30—Terry and Ted—Sketeh U45—News—Boake Carter at @sthonian Club, 27 W. 118th St. Dancing *. - lady“ Siberal and ex-Socialist who deports cqal miners—isn’t this the | 7:45—Maverick Jim—Sketeh 8:00—Elmer Everett Yes:—Sketch to New York's best orchestra, Exceptional Ee spirit of Washington in its N..R. A. phase? When the showdown comes | B: iE—Maris Gerard, Songs; Willy Robyn, palate ey o Hi e Fhe a a la Repeal, Cold buffet. Drama — Chorus — Ballet — Dance : fi co ‘enor ret Oreh.; Alex. Gray, F ee —_ ~ “and the bloom. is off the demagogy these people always forget to be | 8:30—Dramatized News Songs; William Lyon Phelps, ‘Nasrator | LECTURE by Charles Alexander on ‘The Spaghetti — Refreshment charming. ‘They turn the machine-guns on the working class, lg gg Bay Reiser, Piano Duo; John S:00-PRD AGREE Oreh., Leopold Stokow- | Res pat Lara Wate, be iroesg: yp ca Club, SUND AY, DEC 17, 8 P. M. to 1 A M NL PON SEER ott pareve Gren; Marry, Breuer, Xylo-| 9: :15—Kostelanets Groh; Evelyn MoGregor, || ENTERTAINMENT and Dance ‘even by is eae bil id 3 5 ‘alter ens, Bari ontralto; Evan Evans, Songs ernations ‘or Defense at in] h Helping the Daily Worker through Michael Gold 9:30—Do Marco Girls; Prank Sherry, Tenor | 9:45—Juseph's ‘Coat—-Sketci Tie-aoth Bt, Brooklyn. iaehaty STUYVE SANT CA SIN 2 9:45-—Talk—Percy Waxman 10:00--Gray Orch, Irene Taylor, Songs; Do| LECTURE under auspices of Ocean Bide Contributions received to the credit of Michael Gold in his Socialist ras ee hcisiais a aaa 10 20 News pulletins ie ai Ainsrities an: the: Sor viet sien a a 140-142 SECOND AVE, N. Y..C. 4 3 le" hu onal ‘it e viet ion” at ‘ competition with Dr. Luttinger, Edward Newhouse, Helen Luke, Jacob Scene from “Laughter Through }10:15—urrent Eventa—Harlan Eugene Read | 10:45—Hall Johnson Singers; Wopkins Orch, |the Cheerful Cafeteria, 113 Brighton Beach Admission 30c, at the Door 35e | © Burck and Del to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Dally Worker Drive: Tears,” the Soviet Yiddish comedy | 10:30—The Jolly Russians 11:15—Phil Regan, Tenor Avenus. " ’ Y screened from Sholom Aleichem’s |11:00—Weather 31:30—Jones_ Oreh. HOUSE PARTY given by the N.8.L. Chap- novels, now in its last two weeks | 119%-Mocubeams ‘Trio 14:00-—Brigode Orch. ter of Hunter College at 1000 Simpson. Bt. TOTAL, TO DATE.......0.secceccsecceeseseecen es $006.81 at the Acme Theatre. be i ee ae Oe nn ee aren ESSELTE ES er eres Se = Sade SEA BVA vi NAN SER bs _ JIM MARTIN The Prof. Does Some Remarkable Thinking by QUIRT 6th ANNIV. C ANTON COMMUNE: - P WE OFFER Our Yas is «Uf AM ~ Kae MIN DES 1 (7 wo APOLOGIRE— WE THINK — | GRATIFYING! | TO TAKE THE WORKERS Tranareod Rant feo one Over aed THIS) “ay MNO IS #: sYOUR PLAN IS FINE~ GIOR Ju eLL, uN FORGE SMa au, ER~ TOWN TO ANOTHER PAR~ SUPERB~ NO us THR DR TAILS WILL OE TaIL™)|'TeeeriGal ae Mean TICIPATED (N GY WORKERS- FATIGUE AFTER “A realistic play of Chinese revolution = B SAY WE GET TO-GETHER. cms Pees ie WINNERS Plat boy acted by @ Chinese cast WITH THE CHAMBERS WE CAN THR MER- ta : } A ; ts j 4 OF COMMERCE OF CHANTS TO GWE TUR Ss NEGRO JAZZ ORCH.—FLOOR SHOW--DANCE. . oi } PUNKTOWN A@AdD~H PRIZES SOIT Won't : 4 Chinese Refreshments at Proletarian Prices Sunday, Dec. 17 at 6:30 p.m. Program starts 8 p. m. sharp 3 IRVING PLAZA vine Pt. ana win st. Tickets: 356 on sale at Workerv Book Shop at door: 45e 50 E. 13th ST. Auspices: Chinese Vanguard . a Cost You MEN A Cent: “Sila \: wrinial is any ye