The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 26, 1933, Page 5

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WORLD! By. Michael Gold ; Etiquette Notes : bea old lady who runs*thé’ Etiquette Column for that organ of “liberal” Profiteers, the N. Y. World-Telegram, was recently asked the following question by a puzzled sap.who signed himself T. O.: “Is ib proper for a man to guide a girl by the arm as they walk down the street?” The old etiquette iady, (or maybe néwspaper drunk), answered as follows: “Not unless the sidéwWalk has bu.n torn up and there is danger of her falling, or unless he. fs steering her through @ Communist demon- stration, He may, however, take her elbow at street crossings as a sign of chivalrous interest in. her safety.” 3 Wow! So the classtwar has even entered the etiquette columns. The young White-collarbvob who worries whether it is proper to take his girl by the elbow. has a new fear added to his timid days, He may accidentally steer his girl into a Communist demonstration. A cop might slug her or ride her down. with his horse, or a Communist might whisper Something evil in her little ear. So what? So John Whitecollar Boob is advised to clutch her elbow and gently”steer her thréugh. Even if his own heart of a Caspar Milquetoast is beating hard-he must remember to be a World-Telegram gentlemnan and save the women and children it is just another young maie Yorn Up Sidewalks -iableeind ‘from mételyan old thigh bone that has been dug up in a fartéfs field, anthropologists can reconstruct some prehistoric dinosaurus or, other monster that lived many thousands of years ago. From.the. little item above, historians of the Communist future will be able to reconstruct something of the life of New York. The sidewalks were always being torn up, and girls were always falling. Why did they fall? They probably wore silly clothes and im- practicable shoes. What did this mean, comrades? They were not work- ing pits, but members of an idle class. There were many Communist demonstrations in New York at that time, and it is obvious they were dangerous. So that if one of these » delicate females who was always falling down on torn sidewalks hap- “pened to wander into done of these awful demonstrations and was in danger of losing her all, it was then, and only then, that her Caspar *S"Milquetoast escort could grasp her by the elbow. The elbow evidently had some sacred importance in the sex life of the bourgeois boobs. It was to be touched only on the most vital occa- Mons, as a -sort of rite, because obviously, to really save your girl friend from accident-you should grab her firmly and honestly under the armpit. pAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1933 Try to Mislead Teachers in South (By a Teacher Correspondent) Lynchburg, Va. Dear Comrade Editor: I am & teacher in a Southern high school. | Tells How Bosses | At the county teachers’ meeting at the opening of school this fall, we were addressed by a member of the loca) Chamber of Commerce—a fat baby- faced Babbitt who urged us to be loyal to the N.R.A. and to tell all the children what a glorious thing it is. One of the teachers got up and asked | an embarassing question, “Why is it,” | he said, “If the N.R.A. is such a good | thing and we are supposed to praise it | so much that teachers don’t get any | benefit out of it?” } | This threw a bombshell into the | meeting. The fat little Rotarian was | dumbfounded. He stammered and | spluttered, and eventually came forth With this, “Oh, no government em- | ployes, whether federal, state, or Municipal, get any direct benefits from the N.R.A. There can’t be codes for them. The governments must balance their budgets, get out of their deficits. You will be benefitted by | the general improvement of the! country.” But who is it that gets the benefits? Where is the general im- provement of the country? Why are workers everywhere striking against NRA. codes? “Teachers are not supposed to be | materialistic like ordinary workers,” | said the little bourgeois. “No; you ate self-sacrificing; not like the coal | miners who are striking and always thinking about money. The knowl- edge of the service you perform is Your reward.” Thus the contemptible | little Babbitt tried to divide us from | our comrades, the workers in indus- try, by making us think that we are made of finer clay than they. But we can’t eat our knowledge of the Service we perform any more than our comrades in the mines. We are not fools! We too are wak- fhg up. Here is a teacher who spits upon the N.R.A. It is up to us to fight these vile oppressors by turning their schools right under their noses into Red SMOLNY-- A Poem by Alfred Hayes “Under the old regime a famous convent-achool FR ae hat Smolny’s foundry’s hot tonight But now the north is wailing snow Knouts of wind lash Petrograd, Flog the Neva dark below. Streets whirl blinding hails of white What a wtnd’s abroad tonight! Marusha’s hands are lumps of ice. No feelings left, dumb with pain. All bleak autumn long she stood For her bread through mud and rain Now the winter's come to freeze. What, Marusha asks herself, Was the Revolution for? Bread is nowhere, hunger grinds Same as with the Czar before . . us Marusha bites her stone cold hand Tightens her shawl about her head ‘We didn’t end the Ozar’s career To have Kerensky starve us dead! And Parfin crouching in the trenches Begs the bitter northern blast Peace! with shaggy snow eyelashes ‘Trigger finger frozen fast. ‘What's the Revolution fort? Parfin asks, Peering with his blinded eyes Across the wire-tangled front, Here we're dying as before— To hell with what Kerensky says! We want Peace! To hell with bosses’ war! Peace! ‘We've enough of war and guns See the cripples crawling home ‘The legless and the blinded ones! What's a victory to us? Home again, we sweat and toll Grinding out the black machines Breaking backs on worked-out soil! Enough of us are lying dead Who shall count our comrades slain? The Eastern Front is trooped with death for the danghtors of the Russian nobility, Smolny | Institute had been taken over by the revolutionary or- | | ganizations of workers and soldiers,”"—JOHN REED. | Smoking Smolny blazes bright Smolsy’s fouhdry’s hot tonight Welding steel of soviets Forging power of the mass How the northern wind is wailing What's below? What bending riflemen are those? Whose armored car spits swerving flame? That’s the Red Guard down below, Kids with guns that weigh them down Every brat with eyes aglow Double-quicks through blinding snow Brother, now’s no time to rest A cartridge belt around your breas No sweetheart éver held you close Endearingly as one of those! A Mauser for your horny fist, No pal as true as one like this On to the Winter Palace! All her thousand windows blaze No ball-now shakes her clfandelicrs But turret guns that crack the earr Lord howitzer will dine tonight Under. the huge high candle light! And guests! Here’s a crowd! Never seen their likes before ‘Woltzing down this parquet floor Bulking peasants in bast shoes Factory harids in leather coats Working womien in market shawls | And what @ multitude of guns Bristle to Czar Peter’s walls! Buried are the bitter centuries Buried hunger, want and fear Smolny foundry hot tonight Hammers time’s new shining year | Hammers out the world October i Hammers out new days and men. | O Bolshevik, our red star glimmers | North star of struggle until then! } Till then! The Past’s still with us, rots | It’s exiled days away in white guard plots. { The Grand Duke’s fattened after fifteen years | The bourgedisie turns eyes on your frontiers 1 The bdlackshirt nightmare howls for Ukreifie | The time draws near—the day returns again— | , be r Page Five | From Moscow to Siberia | Soviet Engineer Yermilov’s Brigade By WALT CARMON This is the third of a series of six articles by Walt Carmon, the first of which appeared om Page One of last Saturday's Dally x Worker. * S we step into the Kumetsk Coal Preparing Plant in Stalinsk, a tall, ily mustached guard in sheepskin nts to see our passes, He knows the comrades in charge alright, but he’s in charge here himself. He puts down his rifle and looks over our passes. he grunts a Russian O. K. This is the first step. The Siberian Steel giant begins to walk here. The coal is prepared in this plant, goes to the coke ovens to fit itself to turn tons of ore into Bolshevik steel. A million and a quarter tons a year when the plant is completed in the spring. Comrade Boroshin, Party represen- tative, brings us to Yermilov, one of four engineers in charge. We stop over tracks where Prokopievsk coal is dumped over grates into bunkers and we follow the coal underground, Here below, over the belts, con- veyors and stairways, the vaulted ceiling and the roar of machinery creates the atmosphere of the New York subway. Four boys, all uhder 21 are working on a motor. A year or two off the Siberian steppes, all of them. They were peasants before. They are repairing a motor now. The coal is crushed, and then it begins a journey along a conveyor. The first step is up an incline about a hundted yards high, and we follow it up. Half way up @ young girl sits, her eagle eye on the watch for unslit- able coal and stone. My mind goes back to the young boys in the Penn- sylvania mines, hollow-cheeked, un- dernourished, on a similar job. In a single glance this girl is not like them. Underneath the coal smudge there is ® round chubby face, speaking well for the way she is fed, MEMBERS OF THE BRIGADE Up on the landing young Pushchin Carefully, laboriously, Finally | dered form. A magnetized dr | rolis under it and ans it of ste | particles. The con or carries along }110 tons of coal an hour. And ali | this time we see but few people. The | latest inventions of man take the load off human shoulders. | As we step out of the butiding we | See that we were in a silo. A coal |silo, It is cylinder in shape, one of | nine of them grouped together, for all |the world like those you see on the | plains of modern midwest American farms. In each of these, different |grades of coal are prepared to be | blended in an adjoining building. The j coal is ready now for the heat. Like @ boxer that has gone through care- | ful training. Engineer Yermilov has the last | word. “Mechanization,” he says. He |lights his cigarette, flicks away. the match and adds, “In these silos we jsupply all the coal the coke ovens need with only 25 men and women, ‘The same process without mechaniza- tion would require from 200 to 250 people.” ‘We shake hands with Soviet en- j)@ineer Yermilov, He has prepared }coal for coke ovens as carefully as @ mother feeds her child for some 15 years now. And as proudly. Every day his brigade moves the Soviet steel giant up another step towards Social- ism, The Coke Ovens of Kumetsk We follow the coal now to the Sery~ ice Bin where it rolls up an incline 180 meters long. The Service Bin holds 2,800 tons of prepared coal. It feeds two batteries of coke ovens, 55 ovens to each battery, These 110 ovens feed blast furnaces No. 1 and 2. Another 110 coke ovens are nearly ready to feed two more blast furnaces being completed. We step up on top of the ovens. ~ But that was'done only: among the lower classes, probably, who were And butchery sticks in our brain. j4s in charge of the motors and the} A “Charging Larry,” four huge eylin- j Academies! Long Live the Red a The night whereof I sing 7 re fan closer to life aid reality: School Houssi We've enough! 3 apes dl repaid ders of coal on a moving trolley, stop 6 * * War is made When-Smolny’s blaze through Russia flared As we talk to him, Bngineer Yermilov ket at ba ton We can a ase A Word to-T. 0. res - officer in braid, Till the soldier at the front | Stops up to tell us: “Pushchin is a real | flames dancing madly at @ heat of ISTEN, T.'O. to a word of advice from the Daily Worker expert on on ne GN et tenes Felt bis lifeblood pulsing strong, | Shock-brigader, the best we have.” No | 1,300 degrees centigrade. The prepared x mrades, Wakéhéd were the women’s eyes, mere pat on the back this. He says| coal is fed to the hungry oven and a tiquette." Y Bei er ker of by the World-Tel Stage and Screen ery oven and a © etiquette. You are being made a sucker of by the World-Telegram. Remember what the leaflets satd Loud their mouths with battle song this warmly, wholeheartedly, about | brown cloud of smoke shoots up and | To begin with, the best etiquette to follow is that prescribed by Mother | All factories to the workers And down ‘the Nevsky Prospect marching— one of “his boys.” We see what high| envelops us, In 17 hours this oven | eo ae You like a girl and she likes you, there Is no reason why, Jane Cowl To Play Leading All land to the peasants ‘The! Aurora boomed her gun — pet Dl we srk sd of | will produce 11 tons of coke. on a-fine evening, you should not put your arm honestly under hers And t e four brigades under four different : {| and .walk that way. She will understand your motives; there’s really Role In “Come Of Age” Leaad sisting opel Sailor, Peasant engineers, Yermilov’s is the best. wae, "aie ok the — ee 4 Rothihg ‘wrong‘in this Gort of friendliness. Peace’ Matthedes Cost Darys aewyekove works tnder|ovens to be cleaned of impurities. \ And ‘if you fun info a Communist demonstration consider yourself | Jane Cowl will return to Broadway sf : young Pushchin. She is in charge of |The gna is returned then to be re- } ducky and don't run away. Take your girl firmly by the arm and stand 2 “Come ey a See play ig Lidia nissan senncnaectinaaainaent fe igh UIE iate koe ae used here or sent on to the blast fe }) there and listen. You may learn something that will help you. You lemence Day, whic! pre* » 7 o ie | furnace. o may learn how to live Jike a man, and not like a white collar slave, nay eae pakseee cae: eae THE NEW FILM hs | Change Made in Two oe Suet Ge Ear tae ayes On our right, below us, is a “push- a surrounded by. foolish fears and empty conventionaliti¢s, fhe airection of Min D: Harlem Dept. Store Co Workers’ | herself. she comes from Kazakstan, |€t.” A car on tracks, a long steel arm © A real girl likes tobe treated with consideration, just as does any | ‘Cer the diteetion o} rae By IRVING LERNER R Busi urses at Workers’ pre act Rusnetsk only a year|Derore it. ‘The arm opens the door | other humauf‘being, mitlé’ Or female. She wants you to be a friend, | “Talent” the new Rachel Crothers| | GOING HOLLYwooD, a musi- ||Rejects Business|) School in New York azo, at fit she meted eg ayer | of the coke oven. Tt is then pushed ie ** bub she doesn't want you to treat her as if she were Queen Elizabeth |Pl8y, which was scheduled for this) cal film by Donald Ogden Stewart, Letter from “Daily” worker,” & common laborer, on con- | ito the oven forcing the glowing coke * and you Were Sir Walter Raleigh A Gears Pt oe eet Pa Lyiselay heen pene tne efor r y NEW YORK.—The names of the|struction. Together with other Kir-|OUt Onto the other side. Here it falls || 4 ee ¢ alsh, : i - 2 “ Ske ;probably,has, more sense than you, and has to work for a | Royale Theatre some time next week. peered Acsteoccroldyn-Maager, courses in Marxism and Leninism|shia, Tartar and Russian Siberian oo Sets a tae ce ee s living, and all that old-fashioned chivalry annoys her, She knows what |Mady Christians; Paul McGrath.) at the Capitol ‘Theatre, with the NEW YORK.—A letter. sent to for the Winter Term of the Work- pet peptone’ She “prepared her- quenching tower where water is ne | a fraud it is.."Bosses have no chivalry; they exploit women more than | Pedro De Cordoba, John Litel and| fonowing cast: Marion Davies, Bing || ‘he advertising manager of- the | mid fee 5 Prd “ hy Bete! ENE ares ike cient ra pemeetan tite ally poured over many more tons of coke fo men. She knows that ahybody on clerk's salary who tries to buy |MAtherine Stewart are tn the east. | Crosby, Fifl D'Orsay, Stuart Irwin, ||Lenox Depattment Store, 937] | Cpanged fo Marxism fespectively, in | up onto this landing tn charge of the | 2F the Making of Bolshevik steel, To $4.40 seats for musical ‘comedies and expensive flowers, candy and so forth, ot ee = heneiee bork open @| and the Three Radio Rogues. Lenox Ave. Harlem, soliciting ad-}/ order to emphasize the unity’ of |motor. She’s quite satisfied now comn_| Produce machinery. To provide the 8 48 a typical Amenican show-off, one of those guys who thinks it more Porty-Bighth Street Theatre. Het] tenth rate musical comedy film! |Vettisine for the 2% pave, tenth) Marxism and Leninism. The char-|pared with her former life in the vil- mens Of ite tor one Se, important to iihpress others-than to be honest with himself. program of character sketches in-|in which Mr. William Randolph anniversary edition of the Daily Boe ot the courses have also been mit Her ug works in the same sighed es worker is master of he She Knows that a man with real brains doesn't worry about the |ciude “The Loves of Charles 1f,"|qearst continues his demagogic “Buy | Worker, was returned by the:.post | | “hanged as follows: uilding on the floor below. Her two : 3 | little: things: of etiquette: It is the big things that count. Tt is better |*Hotel Porch,” “Lynch Party” and| american” campaign, by abtacking | ~filce to the business office of the|| Marzism-Leninism I has for its anak ton at school, Her old (To Be Continued) : t that “you eat soup without’ sucking it up noisily, and you oughtn’t pick | “Being Presented.” foreign movie stars. The film is filled ‘Daily,” with “REFUSED”: stamp- purpose the study of the correct re eeps house and was never powvee your teeth in public. But more important is that you be a man who Max Gordon announces the pre*/} with stupid acting, with Bing Crosby's | cd on the unopened envelope. haere ts Folentine ae ppier. Send your greetings to the 24- understands what the world is about. A man with a vision of life, A jsentation of “Nearer Than J,” by the crooning, and all of the trimmings || tt is apparent that the manage-| | {f° TENE OF its histotical develop, || We follow the coal preparation over| page Tenth Anniversary edition of man with 2 great goal. That's the kind of men real women prefer, and |Snglish playwright, Keith Winter, | that go with the rest of tho Holly-|| nent of this department ‘store, on | | {he asic economic polities! and | Weocns, Stairs and various rooms.| the Daily Worker. Rush them to ' not the. petty elbow-grabbers. early in February, with Gladys | wood musical films, If you've seen | |seeint the name “Daily worker” | | > Lesophie dost y Sate. Sn Machines pound the coal into pow- us before Dec. 30. All this etiquette is good within limits, but it has been mad Cooper in tho leading role, Mr. Gor) 50 musical films before, you've seen |3n the envelope, rejected the let-| | cc). Tenin and Stalin, and’ thelr » nia Rh 4 en made % | don will also offer Sidney Howard’s|“Going Hollywood” fifty times. ‘er without even reading it as an||.° 5 Akingien | | fetish by the bourgeoisie. It’s all most of them have to live for; but adaptation of Sinclair Lewis’ novel,} yf it were possible for you to see} |indication that it would have Secontin ve is tel iss | A M U S E M E N BG NY underneath they do not practice the real etiquette. Who is it that exploits | Dodsworth,’ which opens its out-of- nothing to do with a newspaper | | 1; p7ciStion of the proletarian class j| millions ot children in factories and farms? These polite people. Who |town tour ‘in Washington Jan, 29 Feline (ites Wadia’ imbues: wtheont| (Santi, Jor ibe, sienie oe the (erattal ter 8 thw laa eeee ete AMERIOAN PREMIERE! is it that inakes war and depressions? They do. Who forces 17 million | With Walter Huston and Fay Bainter | paving to the rest of the film,| | vorkers. . oer seagi\ ibe Ke eet : TRWAA Gheke tae Ht GIG canoe |Daving to tee the x e film, ing to the Proletarian Revolution, IQ 6ONPIRAGES 99 unemployed to starve in America? They do. “p bs I might recommend it. the Dictatorship of the Proletariat, J Wake up, T. 0.; don’t let the World-Telegram kid you into being |"°W,Play starring Mary Pickford late and the classless society. De PARIS a cheap socfal ‘climber. Don’t let them make, you feel infertor to the |" February. In Marsism-Leninism II will be Wet tad ens vine Oe Peel ae he Bee ee Polite money-grabbers of Newport and Palm Beach. Be yourself, hang Guy de Maupassant’s “He,” At discussed the unity and continuity Added 76th Anni : t i : " 7 nniversary Celebration in Moscow around a few Communist meetings, learn something about a higher 4 of the teachings of Marx, Engels and Feature etiquette than elbow-totiching. . “ 56th Street Playhouse | Jenin, fentsiam, waich ther A CME THEATRE “cml | y + oe TS SE hatin ae ism of the epoch of Imperialism and & UNION ty 5 : “He,” based on Guy de Maupas- | | | Proletarian Revolution, will give the RA 4 , « . DIO CITY MUSIC HALIx, 66 . s sant’s story. “The Rosary of Madame + | {student an understanding of the |\ “tHe cHeATRE GUI rent vie —o | ust eren oviet nion ”? Husson,” will have éts first American : theory and tactics of the Proletarian EUGENE O'NEILL COMEDY" {/|| Direction “Rosy” "oeuct Sean eaten | | 9 |showing at thy 55th Street Play- TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS | @:5—tndividuat Rights ond the 8. & A—|Revolution, hammered out and tested AH, WILDERNESS! DOLORES DEL RIO- FRED ASTATRE tn \ ae house today. The leading roles are —wne Dean Isidor Loeb, Washington Univet~|in tho yeats of struggle throughout | with GEORGE M. COHAN “FLYING DOWN TO RI0” } Says Noted French Author Dlayed by Fernandel and Collette WEAF—660 Ke OF Cohembia Guiversiig: Dene Woner the world, constituting the general- GUILD igs t 52a La fe iy 1 ihe a ; ‘ i Darfeuil. The film was directed bY] 7.99 p, m.—Mountatneers Muste Shepard, of Ohio State University {zations of international révolution- schlvicgadhertng catanbihr domes tusienie Saas Le oes i ie sae : an ies ape alae : Bernard Deschamps. TAS—Billy Bachelor—Sketch Tub—String Quartes ary exnetienoes. Tie alte will in-/f yonrene’s coszby writ MusIC letRivcon dhniPtnen chives rb inc Rass? ee ee te ‘esial Fe “Little Women,” a sereen version | 7: um afd Abner bam f Ma tate? clude also a study of the nature of | hool fo! bands Tonight—Trade Union Night — i gag wi gat ee hot Presides of Louisa M. Aleott’s novel. is now in| &:pfuile Gunderson na Prank Crimi, onder bs esc ners ni impevillak wat, the | eae Math tune eatin ach Ge Be bs is | at Meeting to*Gicet Worker-De The pleture 1 nyine Wa i Bons eS agrarian, — National Colonial || EMPIRE ‘s.toniztscrmurs.asat: TH 6 | Meeting. to*Gie ee a cama e a mae| ae ae an mnie tp ome [AE rat oag scons | EMPIRE semicon || PEACE ON ATI EPs eee — , . iq 5 . 2 i 2M 3 | By JAMES PECK anxiety and di which they feel |Kathertne Hepburn plays the leading | 10:09—cruise of the Seth Parker -Dramatic| 9:30-—-Men of Daring--Dramatic: Sievcn tatorship of the Proletariat, the ques- | F SC AN man oe ae ne Ps in_ relation to the present society, | role. Sketch 10:00—Joy Oreh.; Syd Gary, Songs: Sydney| (ion of Socialist Construction and the | MARY OF SCOTLAND Ove an, aT: eee | x The most important literary prize of Many of the most important pro-| toew's State is ni ow ahowiti 10:30—Beatity—Mme. Sylvia Mann, Soprano role of the Communist Party as the with HELEN PHILIP HELEN Evenings Bast Mats. Wed, & Sat, 50 in | “the yoar, the Goncourt bs wtih te |fessors of the state, physiologists, |“Dencing Lady” with Joan Crawford | cigg crower, Summons. ‘Tenor Be me tn Ad vanguard of the proletariat. HAYES MERIVALE MENKEN |} wa. 9-[150. PRICES: 800 to $1.50, Ne tax o | cently awarded to Andre Maltaux, di- | mathomaticiat re i ¢ 11:15—Anthony Frome, Tenor | A. Markoff, Harry Martel, and I, ‘Thea., 2d St., W. of Bway vy ns, ete., have joined the}and Olark Gable. ‘The staze show 5 2 é : | “rector of Nouvecie Revite Franchise, for | Commtmist Pariy and participate in ig headed by Lee Si ana ti 11:30—Whiteman Oren. 11:30—Harris Orch. Stamler will conduct classes in Marx- pkecetractetegdecridearaiacen es OBERTA ; | “La Condition Humetne,” a colorful] the daily agitation. ‘Th aia lomay | 12:00—vailee Orch. 1:00—Ash. Oren. ism-Leninism I. Sidney Bloomfield, | "i and forceful novel of thestiardships| sont or ine stents Ob ee eee aE | Bailey. 12:30 A, Me-Aartin Oteh. 14:30 A, Mo-Sosalck Orch, land George Siskind, “Agitprop Dic pa™™ AVE PLAYHOUSE, near tah ST, A New Musical Comedy 5 A E Xeorge Siskind, i ot Chinese workers. On the sate|tanced nedagovieal inetituticn Re rey oa ee |rector of District 2, will conduct Kuhle W ampe? | 327 Sas TeRnan, Theatre, West andl 8 ese % ed pedagorical institution of WOR--710 K : Eve, $1-83; Mats. Mon., Wed., Fri. @ Sat. ’ day that the:bourgeois jury awarded | France, the Ecole Normale, are mem- WHAT'S 0 y c WABC—-860 Ke: classes in Marxism-Leninism II. enthen >, meted ieee | een \ the prize; together with two S ON 09 F, M.—Spotts—Ford Frick Registration is now going on f a (06 pany io Evecings |f RKO Jeff lath 8. & | Ni H bers of the Party or thizers. fl eet going for 30¢, 1 $0 6 p.m.; 400 Evenings erson ow “well-known painters, Fernand Leger een $—News—Gabriel Heatter 2:00 BP. M.—Myrt and Marge the Winter T Bra Ava. and Amedee ‘Ozenfant, presided over ae Jord cipniae ews how apooe ro itis; Prank Shi Ts Taocpel cam pea? ah dase . bs ot RUTH ants a M GEORGE BEET: : he wi spo! Dress} crenraT® THE l0rH patty worKER | 7! arco Girls; Prank Sherry, Tenor) te rye ge | Sb PARTY NETS i ‘F ALE’*® organized by the Friends 8: Ofch.; Jean Sargent, Songs;| 7:48—News—Boake Carter HOUSE PARTY NETS $18.1 in q ; «Ob the Sovlel Union to-celobrate ihe [Uere, o8 him, made the following See ean's Se ee Te DEO, | Urankar menor | Abt —gtadlo Orch | prmestrtt, Be tails The 8-Page Club LAN DINKEWART & VAIO retumof the twenty worker-delegates ert be ready to defend Rus- | Bex Coliseum. “SHR AD FON PHOGRAN, | 830—Frank and’ rio. Gongs Sus-Nems—eawin o, 2 arg setting aged mga nw Be | with ALAN DINEHWAR' & EVALYN KNAPP Cie “the Sov si) e end Rus- | RATION ts ANG | 8:3—T0 Bo Announced lee of rience at the elen Morris, Mo- Ceacapmanennd from the Sovlet Union. sia, the only country in the world in | tariom ‘workers echool, 200 W. itsin Se | #e—Ralph Grosvenor Si5—Fray and Bengelott, Piéno Duo |hegan Colony, brought $16.10 for the | WILLIAM BELL ‘past two years ‘ah increas-| which the significance and the dig- | Room 2128. 16:00—Teddy Bergman, Comedian; Betty} 9:18—Alexander Wootlsott—The ‘town crie:| Daily Worker to help it install its) OFFICIAL Optometrist °F T™ i nity of the worker is realized, bf Pircing = s ngs; ao) 4 9:80—Evelyn MacGregor, Contralto; Evan} New press. The party was sponsored Ww, case of war we must not tate to! Tuesda: 10: 15 oun a ‘ive toate sent Read Evans, Baritone; Kostelanetz Orch. by the Peekskill Tait, C. P, q i ‘rent mt larlan Bugene iy 8 ei el no. PY turn toward. the Soviet, Union.” pone on AY given by YO, Unit 7, |12:e—BAdy, Brown, Violin; Concert Oreh, 10:00-Grky Qoh.; Irene Taylor, Somes; Teo, DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY ne Glde, “Henri “Burbuse and Lous [SS eh mtrtactee Aliases | g¢-Meemenms on is-gercune Wane, sooge Dally Worker continue.” You ihe | ,207 BRISTOL STREET wwited. 12: 1 h, 11:30—Jones Orch. 2 ved “] » |] Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves. Brookiyn VETERANS MOBILIZATION RALLY of ae : ie See See Daly. 106 EAST 14TH STREET WESL Post 1 at 208 B. 18th St on WJZ—760 Ke. vs =| Support it with your dollars, Rush PRONE: DICKENS 2-s012 MARTIN ‘Thursday at & P.M. Urgent, ——+. 7:00 FP, M.—Amos ‘'n’ Andy ere’s a Ratty Odor Somewhere! ; -. them today. oe bv QUIRT 8-10 Office Hours: M., 1-9, 6-8 P.M. N. ¥. 6. 8287, APSF RRRY RT Viner eee renew ew Workers Cooperative Colony. 2700-2500 BRONX PARK EAST has now REDUCED THE RENT |. (OPPOSITE REONX PARK) ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS CULTURAL ACTIVITIES Kindergarden; Classes for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasiom} Clubs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED || SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE ‘Take Advantage of the Opportunity. 4 \\ AAT A PRETTY LITTLE. DoG- GERE PUPPY PUPPY PUP— SEE IF TMQUE IT RIGHT? * STINKO DETECTIVE AGENCY- 12 Y TOUGH STREET -CHICAGO ret. SEND OPERATIVE ACQUAINTED WITH SPORTS STOP REPORT 1976 CROOKED LANE SIX 1S PRETTY GOOD, CIISTER’ 3S ¥ (Paras aN WW a 7 — lea \ NY Lexington Avenue train to White| Office open daily Plains Road. Stop at Allerton Avenue| Friday & Saturday Station, Tel. Estabrook 8-1400—1401! Sunday

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