The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 8, 1934, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 8. 1934 \| Souvenirs of 1938 THERE were many funny things happening in 1933, the year just gone down the sewer of history. It’s hard to remember them all, but here are a few I picked out: It was the year in whieh the Biue Buzsard brought prosperity to America. Never was there such a ballyhoo, and never did so many liberals flock to their newest medicine-man and greedily swallow pink pills and rattlesnake oil. Some of them now find that the old belly trouble per- sists despite the quack nostrums, and a few of them are quite ready for the next tall and picturesque rapid-fire talker. 1988 was also the year in which Hitler exhibited his statesmanship, The murder and torture committed by this Neronic perver, are not humorous, of course, but crimes to be punished in due time. He and his gangsters will pay in full, we can assure them. But what was funny was the workings of Hitler's great program. It has not saved the German middle class, as he promised them, but has led them deeper into bankruptcy. Bourgeois Hitler’s Germany has mas- sacred the Jews, and left the League of Nations, and slaughtered and im- prisoned thousands of workers. It has destroyed the trade unions and jailed and murdered their functionaries. All this has been done faithfully, according to Hitler’s orders. But where is German prosperity? Why has foreign trade sunk to its lowest point? Where are the Jobs Hitler prom- ised? Why are the bankers back in power? No, this peculiar hash of Ku Klux-Fascism hasn't worked in Ger- many; it never works anywhere; it is one of the bloody jokes of history, Hitler is one of the classic buffoons of all time, another Huey Long bel- lowing his way to the leadership of a lost and hysterical class. J.P. Morgan and a Dwarf 983 was also one of the years in which American bankers were cross- examined by petty politicians eager for publicity, but determined not to do anything to end the banking system that oppresses us. The farce has taken place again and again. Nothing happens. This time, however, there was one bit of new comedy. A circus dwarf appeared at the investi- gation n Washington and sat in J. P. Morgan’s lap. Why, or what for, nobody could understand, Some said it was one of Mr. Morgan’s press agent's bright tricks, a little joke to make him seem-almost human and help people forget his enormous thefts. Bernard Shaw came to New York in 193%, and made a bit of an ass of himself. Nobody knew what the trouble was, until recently when Shaw lias begun to speak kindly of Hitler. Is he senile or merely a Fabian So- cialst carrying out the logic of his class? On March 4 of last year every bank in America closed down. This was something neither Roger Babson, Stuart Chase or Hamilton Fish had believed possible in America, Only the statisticians of the Commu- nisi International had predicted something like it about six months before the event. Calvin Coolidge died, and also Texas Guinan, the famous New York madam. The first was mourned by the Daughters of the American Revo- lution, and the latter by a son of the revolution, Heywood Broun, Breasts among the idle femate rich, according to Vogue, were being worn high and pointed. A Century of Progress P . . RESIDENT ROOSEVELT made many eloquent speeches on world peace and also announced a program for the biggest navy in American his- Chicago celebrated the fact that it contained almost a million un- ed by holding a world fair named the “Century of Progress.” A new magazine was brought out called Esquire, “as masculine as pipesmoke,” to Sell expensive fashion clothes, socks and neckties to bourgeois dandies by means of “red-blooded” stortes written by Ernest Hemingway and other he-men, A A German scientist announced a method of making bread out of wood, Helena Rubenstein, the beauty merchant, introduced a tooth enam- el, designed to tint the teeth of rich useless ladies with the colors of rose or silver. Mussolini issued a manifesto against the siesta and gave the mother and father of 23 children a medal and his thanks for so much good cannon-fodder, Hitler also urged the German booboisie to breed fast and often, and offered bigger and shinier medals than the little Musso. People began to marvel at this bedroom war between these two great, strong, brainy dictators. The Lord Mayor of London declared an Enjoyment Week, during which everybody was urged to enjoy himself. He forgot to furnish the means, however, and so the unemployed just went ahead feeling as glum as ever. But ping-pong was placed in the curticulum of the University of Iowa, and President Roosevelt offered the rubber dollar and the coinage of silver as a cure for thé ‘crisis. The school teachers of Savannah heki a prayer meeting to avert proposed salary cuts. A Milwaukeean named his new-born babe Franklin Delano Blue Eagie Knapinski. One wonders whether the father has found & job as yet. \ Cracking Down on Hughie NE of the funniest events was the hurried crawfishang of the “liberal” N.R.A. government on.the. matter of trade unionism. They bravely announced that under NIR-A.the workers had a legal right to organise and collectively bargain with the employers. But J. P. Morgan and the Steel Trust “cracked down” on General Hugh Johnson, and he wes soon yelling that strikes were not only un- necessary but illegal. With. the aid of John L. Lewis, Ed McGrady, Sidney Hillman, and similar labor"fakers, the General is trying to set up a kind of N.R.A. corporative state;-in which employers and tame, government- run unions will work together. It's funny, because it won't work. The Steel Trust, it seems, won't allow Hughie even this little piece of skullduggery. They prefer to run their own company unions; they don’t need to buy protection from the John L, Lewis-Sidney Hillman racketeers. And the workers are waking up, and striking and organizing, anyway. = * Misunderstanding in Potash fal then there is the story of the radio fan in British Guiana. He had been Kistening to the Potash and Perlmutter hour, which {s sponsored. by some sort of health drug. He wrote them as follows: “Messrs. The National Broadcasting Company—Through you, please allow me to acknowledge with thanks the very useful information T picked up while listening in from British Guiana during the talk on potash and perlmutter. “And to further ask you to put me on to the party or parties concerned, especially because it being on the strength of what I picked up, and after very serious and careful medical reasoning I on the next morning got some potash (I don’t know what-perlmutter is, however, or if it is obtainable in British Guiana) and started taking it. “Well, it seems to have done me more good for the most acute over= acid stomach from which I have been suffering than all the other remedies and useless cures I have been trying. : “The complaint is not quite better but it | ers Union. Three strikes, led by three | different types of unions; each thor- Theatre Chain Makes Slashing | NR A Pay Cut NEW YORK.—Loew's Theatres, a | chain of movie houses, are slashing | wages of ticket sellers, ushers and | other non-professional employees deeply under the N.R.A. code for the motion picture industry, Under the President's Re-employ- ment Agreement there was a mini- | mum pay of $15 9 week for these em- | Ployees, but according to the inter- | pretation Loew's is putting on the | | mew code, these workers will get a | minimum of $10 and a maximum of | $14. They will get an average of | $11.40, a reduction of $3.60 a week. | Ushers will in no case get more than $10 & week, 25 cents an hour. The January “Labor Unity” By HY KRAVIF Issue after issue, Labor Unity, the | i monthly magazine of the Trade | Union Unity League, continues to im- | prove. And the more it improves, the more one feels the shame of the | fact that this live trade union mag- | azine of struggle, the only one of its kind that we have, is not a periodi- | cal with a circulation of scores of thousands. | To begin with, from the technical | aspect Labor Unity is one of the best magazines we have ever seen. The covers are excellent, the type clear, the many class-struggle Pic- | tures excellent and clear. The range of, subjects covered in any issue of Labor Unity offers a well-balanced picture of the current struggles of the working class. Let us examine the January, 1934, issue. There are very excellent articles on such important recent strikes as those of the shipyard workers, the packing- house strikes, the Brockton shoe strike (last month Fred Biedenkapp | reviewed the New York shoe strike). The shipyard strike was one which the American Federation of Labor Officialdom led and betrayed; the packinghouse strikes were strikes led by mi‘@tant industrial unions; the | Brockton strike was led by the new | independent union of shoe workers in that town—and was called against the N.R.A. forcing the workers to join the A. F. of L. Boot and Shoe Work- oughly gone into, lessons, methods of struggle, results, tasks examined by Charles Rivers, in the case of the shipyards strike; Jay Rubin in the packing and Janet Seabury in the Brockton strike. Jack Stachel tells of the fight for unity of the miners—how it must be conducted, the part the National Miners Union is playing and must play. In preparation for the National Convention of the Unemployed Coun- cils, Herbert Benjamin has written an instructive article on the question of unity of the unemployed, in which the part the Musteites play is well shown, The struggles of the workers in the West are not ignored in Labor Unity. The conventions of the fish- ermen and of the lumber workers, which were tmportant revolutionary Jandmarks on the Pacific coast, are described by a fisherman and a lum- berjack, respectively. Other impor- tant articles are: “Hail Araki—Ja- pan’s War Cry”— written by Sen Katayama just before his death; Fighting News from Germany; What's Behind Civil Works; the T.U.U.L, and Shoe Amalgamation; and Two Coal Codes, by Anna Roch- ester, describing the workings of the bituminous code and the proposed anthracite code. There is also a short story of workers’ life, Pierre Degeyter Club to Hold! Special Meet Tonight NEW YORK.—A special meeting of the Pierre Degeyter Club will be held tonight at 9:30 p.m., for the purpose of hearing Carl Hauptman, Executive Secretary of the Allied Professional Committee to Aid Vic- tims of German Fascism, who will talk on “The Situation in Fascist Germany.” Admission is free. The general public is invited to attend. At 7:46 p.m., sharp, the Executive Committee of the Club will present some very important organizational matters for the approval of the mem- bership. Only members will be ad- ae to the early part of the eve- ning. FOR A THEATRE LIBRARY NEW YORK.—The library depart- ment of the Workers’ Laboratory Theatre, in order to aid the political and artistic development of its mem- bers, requests all friends of the the- atre to contribute any books, pamph- lets, or magazines relating to thea~ tre, dance, music, etc., or any general literature which would be of value. For further communicate with the Workers La- boratory Theatre, 42 E. 12th St, JIM MARTIN WHAT THE HELL'S is about 7 per cent more so than it ever was. Yours faithfully.” : . Little Caesars » fare it was a funny year, Its chief humor or tragedy, as you wish, was the spectacle of millions of bankrupt middle-class people misunder- standing the potash and perlmutter farce which is called Fascism, and oe it for a path to socialism and a cure for the wowd’s economic isease, They have swallowed the bitter potash and ballyhoo; and believe like te man in British Guiana, it has helped them some 75 per cent. But Potash is @ caustic that burns the skin and emulsifies fat. It was once used in surgery as a cauterizer. If taken internally it may end in death. Fascism, like potash, can cure nothing, but leads to a painful lingering THE 1DEA? death, Fascism will fail, and’ that is the biiter humor the ener/es find in | praising little futile Caesars like Hitler and Mussoling 'TO THE MURDERERS|Woerkers School OF HARRY SIMMS | By JOSEP Harry Simms, Communsst, Harry Simms, Dreamer. We'll make a poster about We'll hang it up on the walls of your rotten Tat devoured world. We'll hang it up where the rust of dark dead days will never gnaw the least small word, We'll hang it up where we so that the thought of you and you and you, will always be a retching 4 of your decaying world. Surely today now the frog Surely, surely you are today of your minds im the unwashed spittSons of your world. Surely, surely the hog jaws “We got him, we got the bastard, we got the Red it was rich, wasn’t it, the wouldn’t let him in for an until the bill was made good, | and him lying there, bleeding at the guts. Surely today now your world of bills, hunger look very good to you, doesn’t it, gentlemen? 3 And if the sun shines Fighter. H KALAR 19 years old. that. | Murdere can always see, in the foul gutters moutas of you are smiling spitting the foul phlegm of you are slavering today way the hospital hour and death |Ford, Allen to Teach | ploitation. | deal of orig Winter Term to Begin Tonight NEW YORK.—TI the Workers School be; 1 o'clock at 35 East ord | ter term of tonight at} » With DRIVING AXLE By VY. lyenkov | . . all class: In order to accor on, ‘goon to be States vy ditional classes students can still be accept these classes if they regist the ion. The cla. olutionary Tradition: People, taught by J ority on this que and has room for a dents. 's of imperialist capitalism. And | here we find the masterful men and }women that snap th trings—the | heroic Soviet working class, | The story op fittingly with Two Classes on Negro | mich, an old pe dW “ a4 fectionately cailed by the tov | Liberation Problems | “boss.” It shoots out into a great | sie alesis | chain which touches the lives of NEW YORK.—The Workers School | hundreds of other people—workers, | is offering two courses on the Negro | engineers, party functionaries, intel ; 4 which | ectuals, pioneers peasants, etc. It} Question in the winter term, which | jives the full-blooded pounding heart | begins today at 35 B. 12th St. of this industri Ww. Ford the Negro g with v the Ne- groes, and the m and organiza- tional forms to win them to the rey-| Upon them at their work, Like a| olutionary struggle for the self-de- | great torch the workers of the town | termination of the Negroes in the | burn their way thru the mess and Black Belt and against capitalist ex- | clean out the enen: will = pive James | Town Rotten Wreckers | The discovery of the wreckers is no | Jeasy job, They have bored them- who has done a good | James Alle: | OE rch work in the The Wreckers Are Smashed; A New Novel from U.S.S.R.. FIELD e workers by using ocus-pocusst*It as metal "8 one engineer. “You all imow the railway bridge-under the Molova River. Let us place a violinis under the bridge and let him pla the same melody with ‘the san tempo for a month—ang @SSt hat the bridge will ‘fat.’ Syr netic vibration will, cause” me gue— yes—the bridge will fall/ But the workers’ —instingts sound. They know that techn’ can be Bolshevik. Olya, who-tums * - crane, shouts, “Who is it that; playa that caused.,the metal { was the .cause.af the wreck? The hell with metal fatigue!’ And so it is the workers, Kuzmich, the old-timer among them, who leads 8a) | the party with his last spurt of life to find the fiddling liquidate them, New Problems and Achiévéments The importance of this novel, like other Soviet products, cannot be overestimated. It presents new. prob- engineers. and | lems and achievements in. the. tech- nique of the proletarian novel, It cuts away with a great brushhook the old tangles of driving axle. of the revolution—the working ¢lass and its Part: sat “Driving Axle” explains in terms of human beings, dramatically, how it is that Soviet Russia, isoutstrip~ 2ing the capitali licking the wounds of our toil with warm soft and if the clouds sail gracefully before it, and the stars shine, and grasses soft under foot remind us that the world is good | and life is very beautiful, still we shall remember the cancer of capitalism gnawing at the heart of this, our warm beautiful world, vongu And the softness of the days shall not rust information please | | WE DON'T LIKE YOUSE SEE the steel of our hearts nor the iron of our purpose! - STAGE “Days Without End,’ New Play By Eugene O'Neill, to Open at Henry Milier’s “Days Without End,” Eugene O'Neill's new play, will be presented by the Theatre Guild as its fourth production of the season this eve- ning at Henry Miller's Theatre. The drama, which is described as a “mod- ern miracle play” will have Earle Tarimore, Stanley Ridges, Robert Loraine, Selena Royle, Ika Chase Caroline Newcombe and Richard Bar- bee in the cast. I. J. Golden's new play, “Re-Echo,” dealing with family life in New York, will have its premiere on Wednesday evening at the Forrest Theatre. The cast 1s headed by Carlotta Nillson, Thurston Hall, Harry Davenport, Phyllis Povah and George Walcott. Mr. Golden is the author of “Pre- cedent,” the Tom Mooney play. “Come of Age,” by Clemence Dane, based on the life of the 18th Century poet, Themas Chatterton, will open at the Maxine Elliott Theatre on Fri- day night. Judith Anderson heads the cast, which also includes Stephen Haggard, a British actor. Miss Dane wrote “Will Shakespeare.” “The Piccoli,” Vittorio Podrecca’s life-sized marionettes, will return to Broadway for a second visit, presented by S. Hurok, this time with an all new program, opening this evening at the Hudson Theatre, AND SCREEN — Revival of “Salome” at the Metropolitan Opera Sat.; Debut of Lotte Lehmann Richard Strauss’ music-drama | “Salome,” which has not been heard | here since 1907, will be given a spec! performance on Saturday evening at the Metropolitan Opcra House with Goeta Ljungberg, Karin Branzell, Max Lorenz and Friedrich Schorr in the cast, Bodansky will conduct Other operas of the week will be: history of the American Negro, and who has written a number of pamphlets and articles on the ject, will give the course in “Re | tionary Traditions of the Negro Peo- ple.” This course will cover the history of the Negro people from the African slave raids and the colonial period to the present day, with special atten- tion to the Civil War and Recon- struction period, and recent develop- ments. Special emphasis will be placed on those historical conditions which laid the basis for the present- day Negro question and on the revo- lutionary traditions of the Negro peo- ple which have been bi geols and i Markoff to Address “Daily” Celebration in Detroit, Sunday DETROIT, Mich. will celebrate the Workers here tenth anniverasry ly Worker next Sunday 1 Hall, 5969-14th St., with Markoff, Director of the New York s’ School, as the main speaker. celebration will start at with music and s lowing the addres: Markoff, {scheduled to begin at 1.30 p. m. there ill be question, discussions and | Ip. m. “Tannhauser,” tonight, with Mueller and Melchior; “Cavalleria Rusticana” and “The Emperor Jones,” Wednesdi evening; “Manon” a special matinee on Thursday with Bori and Schipa; “Die Walkuere,” Thursday evening with Kappe, Lotte Lehmann and Melchior; “Rigoletto,” evening with Lily Pons and Martini and “L'Africana,” Saturday afternoon with Rosa Ponselle and Martinelli. “Peace on Earth” Will |Continue Run at Civic Repertory Theatre NEW YORK.—Despite offers to move “Peace on Earth,” the George Sklar-Albert Maltz anti-war play, to an uptown theatre, the Theatre Union will continue to hold out at the Civic Repertory Theatre on 14th St. and will maintain its present low-price policy, it is announced by 7:00 P. M.—To Be Announced 7:15—Billy Batchelor—Sketch 0—Shirley Howard, Songs; Jesters ‘Trio h WEAF—660 Ke ;30—Lawrence Tibbett, Metropolitan Opera Baritone; Concert Orch.; Story of ‘Tron-portation—Harvey 8. Firestone Jr. Cypsies Orch.; 0—Ship of Joy, With Captain Hugh Bar- ett Dobbs stman Oreh.; id, Narrator Lullaby Lady; Gene A. M.—Olsen Orch. 12:30—Sosnick Orch, 38 WOR—710 Ke P. M.—Sports—Ford Frick ‘Terry and Ted—Sketch 8:00—Detectives Black and Blue—Mystery Drama 8:15—To Be Announced 8:30—Renard Orch.; Olga Albant, Soprano; Edward Nell Jr., Baritone 9:00—Alfred Wallenstein’s Sinfonietta; Mina Heger, Soprano 9:30-—-John Kelvin, ‘Tenor 5—The Witch's’ Tele 10:18—Cusrent Events—Harlon Eugene Read 10:30—Dance Orch, Weather Report ‘Moonbeams Trio 11:50—Vhiteman Orch, 12,00—Lane Oreh, 2 TUNING IN | James Melton, Tenor Charles R. Walker, John 1. Fogarty, WJZ—760 Ke M.—Amos 'n* “Andy Rose Marie, Songs Potash and _Perimutter—Sketch :45—Frances Alda,’ Soprano 8:00—Morin Sis f Van Gordon, Contralto 45—Red Davis —Sketch :00—Minstrel Show 9:30—Pasternack Orch.; ‘Tenor 10:00—Mareel Oreh. |10:30—Henrl Deering, Piano 5—Planned Recovery—Harold L, |. Secretary of the Interior |11:00—Roxy’s Gang |12:00-—-Martin Orch. 12:30 A, M.—Elkins Orch, WABC—2860 Ke. 00 P, M.—Myrt_and Margo 16—Just Plain Bill—Sketch 30—Travelers Ensemble Rodrigo, Baritone; Concert Ickes, | | ef jt: | 73 :45—News—Boake Carter 8:00—Green Orch.; Men About Town Vivien Ruth, Songs 8:15—News—Edwin ©. Hill 8:30—Bing Crosby, Songs; Hayton Oreh.; Mills Brothers, ‘Songs 9:00—Philadelphia Studio Orch. :15—Talk — Robert Bonchiey; Marsh, Songs; Kostelanets Orch. 9:30—Gertrude Niesen, Songs; Jones Orch. 10:00—Wayne King Orch, 10:30—News Bulletins 10:45—Evan Evens, Baritone; Concert Orch. 11:15—Boswell Sisters, Songs 11:30—Little Orch. 12:00—Redman Orch. 13:30 A. M.—Lyman_ Oren 1:00—Light Orch. Trio; Howard Priday | ¢ | entertainmen' From 5 to 7.3 be held in the a dinner will | | im of the hall ub artisis are | de event. A | pro vocel num- {bers will be pr At 8 p. m, tl and sing v troit will in the large ai ditorium of the hail. Dancing to the music of orchestra will start at 10 p. m., and will last until 1 a. m, American Debut, January 12 premiere ballerina, and of the Ma { will_ mak Ger the direction of Columbia Con- certs Corporation. Vecheslova and Chabukar at their appearance, will offer outstand- ‘on fame in Soviet Rus- stay is limited to four Mme. Vaganova, tress of the Ma y bukani is a Georgian, born in Tiflis, and is also 23. He studied in Tiflis with Periri, from La Scala in Milan, and later in Leningrad with Pona- marioff. t e, Cha- Lord Marley Writes In NEW YORK.—Lord Marley, Vice- President of the House of Lords, writing in the January number of “Fight,” the monthly magazine pub- lished at 104 Fifth Avenue by the American League Agsinst War and Fascism, coming off press this after- noon, scores the “Nanking Govern- ment under the domination of the Japanese, who provide it with arms and money” to carry on the present war in the Far East. Lord Marley was chairman of a European delegation to the Far East anti-war conference held at Shanghai last fall. The conference was forced to meet underground because of the hostile attitude of the Chinese gov- ernment. OWTHER The Farmers to the Reseu URY BOB, T THINK THERE'S GOING TO BE 4 FIGHT . OuT THERE el Vwaats Gow low Govs ? cad comk owl selves, these white ants, into every beam and girder of the plant. It seems that the whole town is rotten with them. They turn out defective castings for the axles and wheels. |They drink themselves sick in their | at the sweaty workers. We see them | conspiring for a counter-revolution whether he'll be made Secretary of Commuications in the new govern- ment. As a result of their intrigues, | well-furnished quarters and poke fun | with one of the engineers wondering | t world ¢n heavy in- | ng of building ma- j terials are 125 per cent and ore 109 | ber cent of the Five-Year: Plany and freight carloadings reached # seeord jot 58,094 last week in Russias? A picture of Socialist: reeeistruc- | tion, this novel proves’ there’@an be | No true reconstruction withouf\s re« jconstruction of the worker” The | molders, the welders, the-honest en- | dustries. Loadin | Sineers, all these break through their | old skins to emerge as better Human beings in the ging. Fol- | rie a good | | First Soviet Dancers To Make | Jan. Issue Of “Fight” || there is a horrible wreck. An e, fe end. “Whé* "Young stamped as perfect, breaks. A loco- | are manganeséin the motive a train of cars roll down| Rew steel. And beyond’ thé’ Bound- an emb) ent. Four workers are | aries of Soviet Russia are. the work= eco Stee ‘ ers of Poland, Germany,’ antivother n their first tremendous efforts to tries wh . z industrialize Russia, the workers|(oo,, “"° 9%@ 8lso spiking: down | were compelled to turn to the intel-|"e ‘*cks for the tite Whe the ligentsia and to foreign engineers for | Who) 1 will be jacketed. with j assistance. And ain, so the} red s | novel hammers this point on a grea’ ringing anvil, at the mercy of such enemies only so long as the workers |are divided among themselves. So long as the Mokhoys are drunkards | Pioneers, too, and the Zaytsevs think merely of Sisitiineiaiipiiasinhinas | themselves and the Korchenkos, the | ~ | plant manager, saw empty air and | Monday .| are not honest with the workers, only WINTER TEE so long are these enemies powerful. night. Few And they re crushed to powder fin-| 12th St. Third floor. ‘ OPENING — CLASSES BEGIN — Complete gistration at 1855 Pitkin Ave, Btooklyn, |ally only when the workers are able | to correct their mistakes and to pro- |} | duce their own Red engineers from | their own ranks, | After the wreei on AMUSEMENTS PIERRE DEGEYTER CLUB—Speciaj. mem- bership meeting 7:45 p, m., members only— ead oes | at 9:30 talk on “Conditions in Gatiany.” K the novel reaches | admission free. 5 E. 19th St. a ) THEATRE GUILD Presents EUGENE O'NEILL'S COMEDY AH, WILDERNESS! - with GEORGE M. COHAN GUILD THEATRE 24 5t., West of Broadway. Ryenings, 8:20 Matinees Thursday & Sgturday 2:20 MOLIERE'S COMEDY WITH MUSIC THE SCHOOL ror HUSBANDS with OSGOOD PERKINS and JUNE WALKER «: EMPIRE THEATRE ("yn M0 Spt, Sees MAXWELL ANDERSON’S new play MARY OF SCOTLA with PaILIP HELEN ND MERIVALE MENKEN Bend St., West of Broadway. Evenitigs 8:29 ALVIN THEATRE Matinees Thursday & Saturday 2:20 ENGENE O'NEILL'S NEW PLAY DAYS WITHOUT END RY MILLER’S TSEATRE. dara x. of Broadway, Matinees Thursday and Saturday 2: HEL LAST ® Days FEDOR OZEP Noted Soviet Director) Mirages de Paris “Definitely Recommended for Charm, Wit and Tenefulness.” — DAILY WORKER, French Talkie with English Titles COMING — WEDNESDAY), :p——— OF PROGRESS NEMIES Spee, Added EISENSTEIN'S: Produced in Soviet Russia—China Feature ‘ROMANCE SENTIMENTALE’ | English Titles ae x 14th STREET and | THE VANGU CME THEATRE cnton square | OF CULTURE RADIO CITY MUSI rae ta 8 50 St. & 6 Ave.—Show Place Direction “Roxy” Opens 34:88 a.m, in Irene Dunne, Clive Brook, “IF I WERE Fi . ETHEL WATERS in “Bubbling @ Brilliant New “Roxy” Stage: RKO Jefferson Mth St. & | Now | Sed Ave. GEORGE BRENT & MARGARKT LINDSAY in ‘FROM HEADQUARTERS’ Also: “DAY OF RECKONING” with RICHARD DIX AND MADGE EVANS 7 \BGFELD FOLLIES ~ with FANNIE BRICE Willie & Eugene HOWARD, Everett MAR- SHALL, Jane FROMAN, Patricia BOWMAN. WINTER GARDEN, B’way and 50th. Evs. 8.30 Matinees Wednesday and Saturday 2.30 Tonight — Trade Union Night THE ANTI-WAR PLAY 7TH BIG WEEK) PEACE ON EARTH | SCOTT NERAING says: “Every Theatre goer who wants a thrill should see ft.” CIVIC REPERTORY Thea,. 1ith 8. & 6th Av. | Wa, $7460, Bes. 3:45, Bins to $y. 50 NO Mats. Wed, é Sat., 2:30. TAX | ‘ Zell Ey Roland YOUNG and Leura HOPE ©) in “Her Master’s Voice” Plymouth "Sz “Sven: cane Mancini t TONIGHT AT 8:30. SHARP MONTE CARLO BALLET RUSSE COMPANY OF 64 DANCERS” REPERTOIRE OF 22 PRODUCTIONS’ FULL SYMPHONY 0) we ST. JAMES Thea., 44th St, W. Eves $1 to §3—Mats. SE td $2.50 Every Eve. ine. Sun., 8:30. Mts. mi. sharp. Brownsville (Workers School. | |

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