The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 20, 1934, Page 9

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY. JANUARY 2, toi Lie OLLI IENE Cann, ty “GB ‘warn _ Page Mine Long Island Negro| Workers Petition, for Labor School NEW YORK. — Initiated by the| League of Struggle for Negro Rights, | a class in Negro Problems and His- | tory in the United States will be held each Friday evening at 8:15| |p. m., for ten weeks at the I. L. D.| headquarters, 101-09 — 34m Ave.,| Corona, L, I. Otto Hall, arthority jon Negro history, will conduct the CHANGE =~ THE—— WORLD! By Michael Gold : | classes. ‘ Workers Correspondence gh HORine interest in the roie of | i @ Negro workers in the revolution- | Birmingham, Ale. ary movement, as a result of success- | |ful activity of Negro and white | This is @ troubles time in Alabama workers in the International Labor I took my boys out of school as they had no shoes or clothes Defense and Communist Party, has I can hear the Klan mutter about Scottsboro | been shown by an increasing num- And if our boys are lynched there I shall never forget or forgive | 20, Of ae, Neots auc So I am studying to join your party. |from @ working class point of view Having been born and ratsed in Birmingham | would be fulfilled, a petition was cir- I find it the most damnable spot on earih culated to obtain the names of work- ‘ After eleven no Negro must be out of doors jers who would guarantee to attend | }@ class in Negro history. Thirty- five signed. If seen the Slingshot Squad will shoot him ‘They shoot wire staples at his legs and feet ‘They hunt us like wild animals in the brush So I am studying to join your Party. iy * . Indianapolis, Als. We held » red funeral for the child who died of hunger ‘We marched in thousands to her grave, Red roses came from the Communist Party A wreath of lilles from the Unemployed Councils Our banners flashed in the sun But our hearts were dark with sorrow. When like red soldiers at the grave We swore to end the world’s poverty Brave comrades were seen to weep Mothers and fathers of hungry children. - . Ashtabula, Ohio I am resigning from the American Legion It reminds me of a dog I used to have That picked up toads in her mouth And was sick of the yellow acid in their giande But did it again and again, the dumb fool And the more misery and famine and bunk ‘The more the Legion seems to like it But I am not a dog and can understand That now is the time to end capitalism. Ps * Flint City Jail, Mich. Arrested as & picket in @ recent strike I found my cellmate here an Indian chief His name John Thunder of the Ottawas. Once his fathers owned this land Now after ten years at the Buick plant Under Mr, Crowder as an expert fender finisher Chief Thunder is down and can find no job. ‘His family broken, his children-in the asylum So the Chief has worrfed and is low in mind And drinking in a saloon fought a Ku Kluxer And beat up the 100 per cent American So now is in jail waiting for his sentence. He talks of days when his fathers owned this land The Buffalo days when food was shared by all ‘When no one was hungry and there were no rich He bas asked me to write and tell you his tale He wants us to remember the deep wrongs of the Indian Thave.stven him s pamphieb:by-Lenin. * | The Worker’s Child By JEROME ARNOLD | When one reads this little maga- | zine, published by the Central Pioneer Buro for parents, teachers and lead- | ers, one realizes the tremendous role that the children of workers can play in society, The importance of train- ing the child, setting his face squarely on the road to a new Socialist society, is second only to the organization of | the workers themselves, | This fact is duly emphasized in| | the January issue of “The Workers | | Child” by an editorial on Lenin and | |the Struggles of working class chil- dren. To Lenin, “Organize the Chil-| dren” meant another avenue toward | | oiganizing the workers. Children are) ‘much more influenced by bourgeois | teachings than adults, and very often the capitalist ami-working class) ideology does its damage only too well. Is it any wonder that thou- sands of American workers today still have faith in the myth of cap!- talist prosperity and bourgeois “hap- | pines?” | There is a fine review of the re-| | cent strike of school children, mostly | Negro, at the Reynolds School at * Soria oh to save the Scottsboro { » The outstanding thing about Detroit, Mich. | the account is the frank self-criticism Vora drew half a million men here |of Alice Holmes, the writer. The Drove them while there was @ profit | Strike was not successful. Especially Now has dumped them lke old tin cana | did it fail in an organizational sense. But ht beings are not like metal | Just why this was so is fully ex- Sayles ‘plained. But such struggles, although So the crazy houses are full’: | they fail in their objective, serve to And jails and breadlines see the sorrow | build up a book of lessons, a system I have got my own hungry lessons |of tactics for the children and their Life is a war between rich and poor | parents — especially if analyzed as And my reason for living 1s to change thie carefully as they are here. . And some day we'll arrest Henry. * . | } | In fact the entire magazine is a valuable handbook on the problems of workers’ children. Experiences in Pioneer troop leadership, the strike of the bean pickers against N. R. A. wage-cuts, the problems of the farm children, and the children in the In- ternational Workers Order, are re- viewed in an interesting and com- pendious way. ‘This issue is ms decided improve~- ment on the previous ones. The ar- . Cameron, N. C. The tobacco trust gets richer While we farmers have no food ‘This is not justice and my mind is slowly set Tn next county they beat up an auctioneer Who was trying to sell out a farmer ‘They threw rotten apples at the man Which I must say I don’t believe in ‘You can make vinegar of such apples ' PART COULD not but admit that, too, lacked the faculty of understand- ing that, to an enthusiastic soul, the artistic form of a nose should be a triangle, and that the revolutionary pressure of facts should change thi human body into a formless sack placed on two stilts and with two five- pronged forks. Lenin laughed heart- ily. “Yes, dear Clara, we two are old. We must be satisfied with remaining young for a little longer in the rev- olution. We don’t understand the new art any more, we just limp behind it.” “But,” Lenin continued, “our opin- ion on art is not important. Nor is it important what art gives to a few hundreds or even thousands of a Population as great as ours. Art be- longs to the people. It must have its deepest roots in the broad mass of workers. It must be understood and loved by them. It musi be rooted in and grow with their feelings, thoughts and desires. It must arouse and de-/| | velop the artist in them. Are we to! It is easier to sow and to reap where |give cake and sugar to a minority | You have not first of all to uproot; | when the mass of workers and peas-|# Whole forest,” ants still lack black bread? I mean} the literal sense of the word, but also| figuratively. We must keep the work- |ers and peasants always before our/|of our struggle. eyes. We must learn to reckon and to manage for them. Even’ in the sphere of art and culture. “So that art may come to the people, and the people to art, we |must first of all raise the genera] | build better. Illiteracy is incompatible | |level of education and culture. And| With the tasks of construction.” As | how is our country in that respect? | Marx said, it must be the task of the You are amazed at the tremendous cultural work we have accomplished since the seizure of power. Without being boastful we can say that we have done much in this respect, very much. We have not only cut off heads, as the Mensheviks and their Kautskys in all countries accuse us of doing, we have also enlightened heads. Many heads. But ‘many’ only in comparison with the past and the sins of the ruling classes and cliques of those times. We are confronted with the gigantic needs of the work- ers and peasants for education and culture, needs awakened and stim- ulated by us. Not only in Petrograd and Moscow, in the industrial centers, but outside them, in the villages. And We are a poor nation, a mendicant na- tion, whether we like it or not, the majority of the old people remain cul- turally the victims, the disinherited. Of course we are carrying on a vigor- ous campaign against illiteracy, We are setting up libraries and ‘reading huts’ in the small towns and villages. We are organizing educational courses of the most varied nature. We ar- range good theatrical productions and concerts, we send ‘educational tab- Jeaux’ and ‘traveling exhibitions’ over the country. But I repeat, what is all that to the many millions who| lack the most elementary knowledge, the most primitive culture! While in Moscow today ten thousand—and per- haps tomorrow another ten thousand —are charmed by brilliant theatrical performances, millions are crying out to learn the art of spelling, of writing their names, of counting, are crying for culture, are anxious to learn, for they are beginning to understand that the universe is ruled by natural laws, and not by the ‘Heavenly Father’ and his witches and wizards.” “Don't complain so bitterly of the illiteracy, Comrade Lenin,” I inter- jected. “To a certain extent it really helped forward the revolution. It prevented the mind of the workers and peasants from being stopped up and cortupted with bourgeois ideas and conceptions. Your propaganda LENIN ON CULTURE-~By Clara Zetkin | Saturday affect him, must obsess him, for many of the characteristics pres. Lenin replied: convinced certainly! Circuses—all right! is lor less pretty entertainment {maintain the state by their work Vv. 1. LENIN more than circuses. abd agitation is L in be jon falling on virgin-soil. right to true, great art. tion and instruction. cultural soil—assuming the bread as. |more correctly, for a cert Tiliteracy {patible with the struggle for | seizure of power, with the netessity period | with its content. But do we destroy merely for destritc- | tion’s sake? We destroy in order to| leads to freedom, away jwretched plight of their old condi tions of life, characterized so in comperably in the ‘Communist Ma | worker himself, and, I will add, of esto. | the peasant, to set himself free. Our Soviet society makes that possible, Thanks to it thousands of the work- Ne, re learning to work constructively. They | Pure, are men and women ‘in the prime.of | 10. life’ as they used to say in.your| circles. That means that most of-them grew up under the old regime, that is, | without education or culture... And | now they are striving after thent pas- sionately. We are doing our very ut-| people. into Soviet work and in this way to they were skittles. \instruct them practically and theo-| retically. The need for administrative (The End) | and constructive forces cannot be dis- guised. We are compelled to employ | ** bureaucrats of: the old style, and we are getting a future bureaucracy, I | hate it heartily. Not the individual to Speak at Workers’ | weapon in overcoming and uprooting} 0n “Benin, Liebknecht, | 2 7 instructi Sch 35 EL ilar education and instruction, ;School Forum, 3 ae nstrUCHy Sunday, at 8 p. m. “And what are our prospects for the | future? | did institi peasant youths to learn, to study, to} Lenin. | gain culture. But here again the tor- | menting question arises: What is that among so many? Still worse! We Still Room for Students at | schools. Millions of children are in the ignorance and lack of culture Journa of their fathers and grandfathers./ Wo How much talent will be wasted, how | Plicants are many aspirations crushed! That is a| School office without delay. {cruel crime aaginst the happiness of | -——— EASE ES the growing generation and a robbery | of the wealth of the Soviet state ARTEF THEATRE which is to develop into a Commu- HECKSCEER FOUNDATION ae. cE, It is a grave danger for}; With Ave, at 18shonce ¥ Presents In Lenin's voice, usually calm, there | MAXIM GORKY’S was @ growl of suppressed indigna- tatest Drie “YEGOR BULITCHEY” ‘Ballad ar Lenin The farmers should have used stones Balke ats aboeter, Ueiatites, mote. Hi TUNING IN Soon Phe Deal d_ Agricults e e New ‘ane ure — Henry A. Wallace, Sec: ot Child” {s certainly # valuable guide for Parents, Pioneer leaders, students and teachers, Ramsey, Stern to Speak | on Science and Marxism | at J.R.C. Sunday Night) TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS F—66 4 NEW YORK.—A symposium on 6 ture; Rexford G. Assistant Seo- WEAF—660 Ke Feisty of Agrcuiture ” "*™* S| yiatectical Materialism and Modern es Ta + Manley | 9:30—Canaciam Concert Trends in Science” will be held to- 7:80—Cirous Days—Bketch 8 ee Une. morrow night at 8:30, at the John He tee emer eras Musio- 10:00—The Man Who Found the Deyii—/ Reed Club, 430 Sixth Ave. 3:15—Boston Symphony Orch.; @ir enry| io.go6R The speakers are David Ramsey, instructor at the Workers School and rood, Condi necdgee waite (Orebis ‘Men About Town Trio; contributor to the New Masses and eee eee other publications, and Bernard J. eaaaisyoui on the Air eae Stern, Professor of Anthropology. say Harris, Songer yas gad. Webs WABC—860 Ke Jette, Comedy; Senator Fishface, Come-| 7:00 BP, M.—Political situation in wasn-/ I, W. O. Costume Ball | . JAS—Tito Gutzar, Tenor and Concert Saturday | WOR—T710 Ke 1:90_Serenadera Orch.; Phil Cook, Imper- once i y. 7:00 F. M.—Sports—Ford Prick to Hail 4th Birthday USTs Gpachoup Grohe Phillip James;| geesceotinay Laatet cod. wANy. Bilipot, Tae Mewargs pleco NEW YORK—Whai is expected to be one of the gayest proletarian ; judio Orch. Budd, Comedians; | affairs of this season will take place Orch.; Vers Van, Songs at the Costume Ball and Concert, ag sig Band Concert, Edward D’Anne, Com-| celebrating the fourth anniversary 30—Organ Recital 10:00—Rebroadcast Prom Byrd kxpedition|Of the International Workers Order, 00—-Weather Report i‘. sad to Antarctic; Music From New| next Saturday at the 69th Regiment ::09—Tremaine Orch. or] Le pose ‘Ore: 10:30—News Bulletins Armory, Lexington Ave. and 25th St. 12:00—Robbins Orch. 10:45—Leaders in Action—H. V; Keltenborn| Since its inception four years ago ates Bag 11:00—Lombardo Orch. the 1.W.O. has grown from a mem- WJZ—760 Ke bership of 5,000 to its present mem- bership of 40,000. Thousands of new 11:30—Plorito Orch. itis A, M—tyman Oreb, 1:00—Hopkins Orch. members will be at the ball. ra uickeo! Wow LM GOING TO FIGURE Our | WHERE T Saw TAAT MUG CHICAGO BEFORE HEY- Dovéu Live NEAR HERE- Can IGeET Some Hor WATER AND soane SuRk MISTERS SURE~ Comes cint. A few more cuts, though, | might help even more. “The Workers’ | | | | Back in the Race! By LANGSTON HUGHES Comrade Lenin of Rus High in a marble tomb, Move over, Comrade And give me room. I am Ivan, the peasant, Boots all muddy I fought with you, Comrade Lenin. Now I have finish Comrade Lenin of Russia, Alive in a marble tomb, Move over, Comrade Lenin, And give me room. I am Chico, the Negro, Cutting cane in the sun. I lived for you, Comrade Lenin Now my work is Comrade Lenin of Russia, Honored in a marble Move over, Comrade And give me room. IT am Chang from On strike in the For the sake of t I fight, I starve, Comrade Lenin of Russia Rises in the marble tomb: On guard with the fighters forever! The world is our room. (Reprinted from THE ANVIL) YOURE SURE GREASY, MISTER Ave MINUTES LATER-— a Every Saturday and Sunday Evenings SECOND EDITION By GEORGE MARLEN A Communist Novel Against Fascism - ~ - $1.50 REDSTAR PRESS P. 0. Box 67, Sta. D, New York Lenin, with soil. SAVE FAULKNER AND SERGEI! Who Are They? Read THE FIRE TOMORROW, PUBLISHERS 11 W. 42nd St, N.¥.C. Pamphlet 25¢. ed my toil. Dedicated to the building of an eight-page Daily Worker The Eight- Page Club Meets Saturday, January 27 at 6 o'clock sharp, at the Jade Mountain Restaurant for information, write The 8- Page Club, care of Daily Worker, 35 Fast 12th Street, or telephone Algonquin 4-7956 Extension 18 done. tomb, Lenin, the foundries streets of Shanghai. he Revolution I die. jon. How deeply this matter must | I thought, for him to make a speech | Daily Workers to us three. Somebody—I cannot re-| collect who — made some remarks | pleading “extenuating circumstances” ent in art and cultural life, explain- ing them by the situation at the time. “I know! Many people are honestly that the difficulties and dangers of the moment can be over- come by ‘bread and cheese.’ Bread— But | We must not forget that the circus not a great, true art, but a more Do not let us forget that our workers and | peasants are no Roman mob. They | are not maintained by the state, they They ‘made’ the revolution and de- |fended their work with unexampled sacrifices, with streams of blood. Our workers and peasants truly deserve | They have the So, before | everything else, wide popular educa | They are the sured—on which a truly new, great | that, not, as you might think, only in| “WES, that is true,” Lenin replied. art will grow up, a Communist art, “But oniy within certain limtits; or,/ arranging its forms in accordance Our ‘intellectuals’ com-| are faced with stupendous and most the | worthy tasks. To understand and ful- fill those tasks would be 9 tribute to if fi ye s,| the proletarian revolution, for open-| destroy the old state apparatus. EET uy oS te ip ia that | from the | wi ‘T night—it had grown late—we joke of many things. But every- ing ulation, in the most varied | thing else has faded from my memory Sovicis and Soviet belies are new -except Lenin's remarks on. art, cul- - popular education and instruc- | As, in the cool night, I walked | , to my home, I thought how sincerely, | how warmly he loved the working} at ¢ And there are people who /et 8:30 p.m. think this man a cold {ntellectual | machine, a rigid fanatic, recognizing human beings only in their “historical | 323 categories,” counting them and play-|and_ discussion. |most to draw new men and women |; ing!: | JULIET STUART POYNTZ will speak | 1G Witte Sheth MTOR, BH MOONEE TS amin’ Meniorial MASUnE or te 2042 Broad- Young Worker” Editor) Luxemburg, ; bureaucracy is the widest possible/2nd the Youth” at the Workers 1th St. OM |pand; aramati p | This is the second of the lectures We have established splen-|in the special ten weeks series of uutions and taken really good | jectures given in connection with the | jsteps to enable the proletarian and) tenth anniversary of the death of |Room 214-A have far too few kindergartens, | Harlem Workers School |ciup 2115 White Plains Ave, ‘Bron a | children’s homes and elementary iy the play of Maxim Gorkt's| NEW YORK—There is still room | speek on | & | growing up without instruction, with-| {Or several additional students in the| Sut education. "They are growing up| Public Speaking, English and Labor |rorum of st. Eden Workers u classes at the Harlem | F: School, 200 W. 135th St. Ap- | *'s rged to register at the IN MPMORIAL MEETING at the} |Coney Island Workers Club, W. 2%th | ra, District | | Good pro- —|gram. ‘Admission 20c; members 16c. | |" OTTO HALL will lecture on “Revol | tionary Struggle of the American Negro,” THE ROAD)| WHA T BABLEM WoRemEES RED BUILDERS wanted te sell eote. | ae at stores and Apply at City E, 12th St. store, | FILM and PHOTO LEAGUE PaRTT | led om account of Lenin Memorial | eeting. SPARTACUS & C. invited you te their | first dance at their new headquarters, 558 Morrie Av near 149th St. | | em u | Road on Offien, Daly Worksn 86 | hin senomie Crial ‘ton et Brownsrille Workers School, kin Ave. at $:39 pm MNGLISH SPEAKIN |Term—300 W. 106th Ot Students cay |: O mects 6% 142 Sut still register before the firet seevion of |@¢ ¢ Pm. Regis each class, |crow: i WILLIANA BURROUGHS will spe ¢ Open Forum Reason Less B PARTY given b: Branch F.8.U. room at 7 Dm and refseshments. ; HOUSE PARTY given ley Branch LL.D., at fon 250. Apt. 14, at T pm. Fi ERTAINMENT and DANCE st the | Relief and Labor Defe 19 BE. 10th st.|taimment and refreshments, in ‘Admission isc, |DANCE Preliminary to the Big Affair UD L and DANCE {Will be given at the Red Sparks A. < siven by Fordham Branch ¥.8.U. at Hos- | Hall it Somes Ave, nesr Fourth 5 pitality Center, 162 W. 67th at 8:20 | Sa pm. William Dan’ FAREWELL PARTY and oth Aa | Downtown Branch F.5.U LECTURE by “cuban |shock brisader a Situation” at New Coney | for the Soviet Island A DANCE by the Burge: rc y Labor thelr new hea 7 RTY and ENTERTAIN: MENT given by Engda’ ottsboro Br. | LL.D, at 177 Gates Ave, Brooklyn, ad- m 10c, Refreshments. EH given by the Mutualiste Obrere fcano at 66 ©. 116th Good music, admission 26e. FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORC: reheafeal for Lenin M Arcadia Hall, 918 Halsey St., Brooklyn, at 6 pm. Take B.M.T. train Jamas Line, stop at Haisey St. station, Eve member must bring a stand HESTRA norial Meeting at HARRY GANNES will speak on gle Against Imperialism in Cuba, r ¥e W. Fourth Bt. op at the | itor a the School Forum, 36 H. 12th st. DR. PAUL LUTTINGER wil mare Racketeering in Mod | ployed Teachers Assn., |3:30 pm. Admission 1éc. nem 20th St, at MAXWELL BODENHEIM, Stanley Burn- Martha | shaw, 6. Funaroff, Edwin Roife, | Millet and Alfred Hayes, will read their new pocms at ® New Masses poetry recital SYMPOSIUM with David Ramsey and ernard J. Stern on “Dialectical Mate- and Modern Trends in Science, John Reed Club, 430 Sixth Avi | ri | | JEROME HUNT will speak on Lenin, |Liebknecht and Luxemburg at the Open |Forum at Tom Mooney Branch LL. B, 13th St, at 3 p.m. Questio: ‘Admission free, West Side Workers Forum, |near Houston | treshments, enterta’ and Dance by October rm. Contribution Book Shop or scription given # ter, 1157 Bo. B. Sree hat check étrug- |by Unit 2 x Pi Comm. of the Needle Trades an Workers Industrial Unions on 8 p.m. at 10 Beach St. tertainment, refreshments. at CHOW MEIN PA 58th St, at 6 fy DANCE et the ONCERT and PARTY ALL MEMBERS of R. BAND re- |opening of new Work port te olas Arena for Lenin Pigs Ai Rose Pas Me fal Mi 7 7 | 587, . wage a oe {LL.D. at 2642 46th & | Sunday mission 16c. I and WINE PARTY give jection 16 at Icor Ctub, t at & p.m. Purposes e; study elrcie, @ SPAGHETT) Lenin re Tremont Progressive ont Ave., at 3 p.m. Good TERTAINMENT and at Thompson &t. fair held at West Side W ers Club, 108 Bleecker St., at 8 p.m. AG mission 10. COLORLITE Progressive Youth Ave, at 8:30 p.m. DANCE given by Harter Club, 1638 Madiso Negro jezs band, A¢ mission 2c. zt oy Alfred Ru “Cuba? in the Allied Arts Gallery, 182 W. 87th Bt.,| i WRCTURE BY Aitred Tun herryc gated yk tna Coney Isiand Ave., ne . U, 8:80 pir Boston, Mass. SOCIAL and Dance given by Good orch Checking Newark, N. J. SCOTT NEARING will lecture or italist Decline and the Inteliectual day at 2 p.m. in the Griffith A jway, near 100th St. 05 Broad Bt. Auspices Jack Londo in the Path of Leni Artm, 8c. | Admission 10c; unemplo: § ; EDWARD DAHLBERG, author, will | Philadelphia |speak on “Hitlerism and Its Americon| ©, P. Unit 25 will ‘ Parallel,” at the Washington Heights | to welcome its new organi é |Workers Center, 4046 Brondway neat | well to its former organize d progranty 170th St. at 8 p.m, LENIN MEMORIAL Workers Club, MEETING at the 1619 Boston Rd., Chorus of 60 voices; brass ic section and talk by Com- rade Moore on “Lenin and His Teachings.” | Bronx Jat 6:30 pm. HARLEM WORKERS SCHOOL FORU: jlecture by Isidore Begun, Unemployed Teachers Assn, on “A New Deal for Workers’ at 200 W. 135th Bt., 30 p.m. NAT BRUCE, of the LL.D., will speals on the “Outlook for 1934," at the Moshulu |Progressive Club, 3230 Bainbridge Av |mear 207th St., Bronx, at 8:30 p.m, SYMPOSIUM at the Allerton Workers Children,” t “Egor Bulitche A, ROBERT will speak at the Open nter, 2 on “Roosevelt's Admission free. h St, at 3 p.m. 1741) lon Dollar Budget.” on Sunday, Jan. 21 at 8:30 p.m. Gor chestra, 2027 night at 20 ; School Forum Sunday |‘vrcrvint by Dr. merry Warwick on 4 3 jbureaucrat, he may be @ capable Sigur ee * |“Medicine Under Capitalism and in the |3ind St. Musi, Enterlelnineat, Auspice rascal. But I hate the system.’ It) us Soviet Union,” at the Steve Katovis Br. | Chess Group of the Wor Cultura | Paralyzes and corrupts from above; NEW YORK-—Mac Weiss, Editor/;ip, 15 #. Third St., third floor, at | Scort Club. a jand below. And the most important of “The Young Worker,” will speak |s Questions and discussion. | eyed rg & nig Work- cra and Spo! 33nd Bt. Good musi MAS6 MEETING Again up on Sunday at 4 p.m Lenin Br. LL.D. and Wor Sports Club at 2014 N. 520° of the United Workers Bo. Philadelphia on Frida: Jan. 26 and 27 at Garric! 8th &, Adm. 25¢, both ni night, Chicago ANNUAL BAZAAR of the Jan. 26, 27, 28 at Workers Lyceum, Hirsch Bivd. Dancing every nigh Indianapolis, Ind. PILM showing of “War Against the Cen- turfes” on Jan. 24 and 25 at the John Reed Club, 143 E. Ohlo Street Detroit TRE FRUIT Grocery Dally «. Clerks Union of Detroit are spor Pirst Annual Dance, to be Campers Ball Room on Livermo! d 3 Adm. 25¢. AM USE MENTS * MONTE ALLET || MAT. | today | LAST 8 DAYS INN. Y. THIS AFT., Syiphides, Petrouchka, Prince Igor—THIS EVE., Sylphides, Presages, Prince Igor—SUN EVE., Sylphides, Petrouchka, Beau Danube B St. James Thea., {i,t S$, HUROK presents Eves. ine, Sund: W. of Bway Mats. Wed & Sat. $1 to $2.50 ee CARLO RUSSE MAT. today . $1 to 38 700 SEATS. Si and $1.50 SHAN FAREWELL PERFORMANCES Before Returning to India UDAY YHIS TUESDAY EVENIN THIS WEDNESDAY MATINEE in a program of Hindu Dance Dramas ANSFIELD THEATRE , aa and company of Hindu Dancers and Musicians G POPULAR PRICES 50c to $2.00 } (Plus Tex) ith STREET OF B'WAy PROGR |\—————— sovier’s NEWEST TALKING PICTUR: 4 |ENEMIES 16 eK ————— THE NATION sayst — “One of the best that has come out of Russis in m long time.” SED ON THE STORY “THE LAST ATAMAN” PRODUCED IN SOVIET RUSSIA-CHINA. ‘2a \ACME THEATRE (ENGLISH TITLES) Mth STREET AND UNION SQUARE RUGENE O'NEILL'’s COMEDY AH, WILDERNESS! with GEORGE M. COHAN GUILD 2% 524 8t. W. of Bway £y.8.20Mats, Thur. &Sat.2:20 MAXWELL ANDERSON’S New Play —-THE THEATRE GUILD presents—,| THE ANTI-WAR PLAY 7TH BIG WEEK PEACE ON EARTH ALFRED KREYMBORG says: “The one play in_ town not to miss.” CIVIC REPERTORY Yhes,, 14th 8. & 6th Ay. WA. 9-7450. Evgs. 8:45, « Mats. Wed. & Bat., no TAR 30, or 9 $y MARY .OF SCOTLAND with HELEN PHILIP HELEN HAYES MERIVALE MENKEN |] ALVIN fiisiieastas vaorasat230 EUGENE O'NEILL'S New Play DAYS WITHOUT END Henry Miller’s P%ynssiess |E Evenings 8:40, Mat, Thurs. & Sat. 2:40 fra \ AEGFELD FOLLIES with FANNIE BRICE | Willle & Eugene HOWARD, Everett MAR- SHALL, Jane FROMAN, Patricia BOWMAN. [WINTER GARDEN, Bway and 50) | _Matinees Wednesday and Sat i ‘ROBERTA A _New Musical Comedy by | JEROME KERN & OTTO HARBACK | NEW AMSTERDAM, W. 42 St. Evgs. $1 to $3. Plus tax. Mats. Wed.&Sat..50e to $2.50, plus tax RKO Mth St. & | J Jefferson \" S ® | Now | JOE FE, BROWN & JEAN MUIR in “Son of a Sailor’ also:—“BLIND ADVENTURE” with ROBERT ARMSTRONG &# ITELEN MACK SHAN-KA AND HIS ENSEMBLE HINDU DANCERS AND MUSICIANS SATURDAY, JAN, 20th, 8:30 P.M. BIKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC Ashland Place USIC Philharmonic - Symphony TOSCANINI, conductor AT CARNEGIE HALL This Sunday Afternoon at 8:00 Cherubini, Schumann, Strauss, Rossini Thurs, Eve. at $:45; Fri. Aft. at 9:98 3rd PROGRAM of BEETHOVEN CYCLE Sat. Eve. at 8:45; Next Sun, Aft. at 2:0 Bruckner, Wagner, Tommasini, ARTHUR JUDSON Mgt. (Steinway Piano’ B’ C zem, Sotee eae

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