Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
CHANGE = WORLD! *. By Michael Gold Potamkin on_the Theatre HEN Harry Allan Potamkin died at the age of 33 last summer, the revolutionary movement lost a highly gifted writer. Potamkin’s out- Standing and origihal work as a movie critic has somehow obscured his qualities as a fine Writer of children’s stories. His book for children, “Our Lenin,” which was completed just before his death, is now available, and T hope to read it'and say a few words about it in this column soon. The response of sa.many thousands of workers to the Theatre Union's sroduction of “Peace on Earth” gives added interest to the following nitherto unpublishedyessay by Harry Potamkin. It is called “For a Social Theatre.” i “The crisis in the theatre is a reflection of the social crisis. Its inertia cannot serve;the active need, and therefore the audience, espe- clally radicalized intellectuc*; and class-conscious workers, made more socially critical by ‘the economic crisis, has turned away from the pro- fessional offerings of the stage. However, this audience awaits the satis- faction of its inquiries. This satisfaction is the task of the newly formed Theatre Union. Not the fatuous innuendoes of sex—these are anti- quata@ social attack; not the vacuous revival—that is a populistic nos- talgia; not the meré momentary excitation to be followed by weariness, nor the cliche of the third act, nor the egotistical rant of playwright and actor—these are ‘not designed to satisfy the intellectual and socially conscious playgoer. He wishes to be a participant in a drama of mo- Mentous conflict, contemporary and far reaching, “His drama is the drama of the major currents, of the attack on the very status quo that has created the theatre which no longer satis- fles him. His theat¥e is the social theatre. He will be satisfied only as he is given this theatre—this theatre of profound motivation in the Social conflicts, whose denouement is persuasion to positive social action. The social theatre is a positive theatre, unvacillating, never quibbling, never vicarious—no arena for the prima donna to thwart the unit. It is a theatre of ideas—but no abstract ideas tantalizing the audience to no purpose; itdsea theatre of effective ideas, ideas in action, and ideas closely connected with the class struggle. * . . Baas the creation of this theatre a number of professional young people—critics, playwrights, actors, directors, designers, stage tech- nicians—have joined...They, too, have felt the need that the conscien- tious audience has-exhibited by its rejection of the stage in its present condition. They, too; have reflected the theatre of inanition and the theatre of eclecticism.’ They feel the need of a theatre which will pre- sent revolutionary ideas effectively. They are prepared to unite their telents without the thought of personal vanity, removing thereby one great obstacle to the advance of a social theatre, which will be no place for strut of egotistical ambitions. As they are prepared to devote talent, time, and energy tothe operation of the theatre, to the creation and productiwn of plays, so they call upon the potential audience for support in the immodiate establishment and development of this theatre.” Riot-Call Che swing of-club, the swish of blackjack— Through the-drifting tear-gas Like a frightened belch From the mouth of bank and safety-vault Splits the heads of workers 3ut cannot-xeach the fire of motion Jailed and writhing in their minds, Nor touch the discipline of anger Rimming steel to link their heart-beats. Pain is the-blunt inheritance of slaves, But pain, delivered back, alone Can make them free, when every worker’s fist Answers chib, revolver-butt: When every worker’s shoulder Pressed against the shoulder of his comrade Marches forward in a living wall Of thoughtvand hatred splintering The clubs 6f flunkies and avenging Centuries»ofiworkers’ blood In field and gutter strung throughout the earth. —Maxwell Bodenheim. The Wail of the Unemployed -R.A. they have today, gives me an awful Tap. uls my shoes, it steals my socks, if steals my coat and hat They told ime it would give me work so I could earn my chow, Tustead’ ef that it’s cut me down to quarter rations now. ‘hool so much, but still I learned some tricks, T know that when you're drunk enough that two and two, make six. Sut I wouldn't ry-to prove it, nor can I calculate, And I won't believe the man that says that two and two make eight. So please svop. blewing bubbles, put inflation on the shelf, When you give iis buying power, prices will adjust themself. You may not. like this story, you may even be annoyed. But you can’t puttall the burden on the helpless unempioyed. Tim not a Mail@n-eolly ape, nor a Morgan-atic tool, Now yet am I an idiotic economic fool. So Tl make you a suggesting, knowing economic ways, I’m sure t'would-end depression in not over 60 days. Jusi drain the Water from all stocks, and do the job complete, Cut out the festering cancer spot, that gamblers call Wall St. Just shoot the old blue buzzard, cut out the ballyhoo. Os: ‘ancel profiteering debts, and you'll hear the whistles blow. --WM. RICHARDSON, (An ‘Unemployed Miner.) i TUNING IN a TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660. Ke. 7:00 P.M.--Plano Duo ©! 15—-Billy Bachelor—Sketeb 7:30—Shirley Howard, Songs; Jesters Trio 1:43—The Goldbers etch 8:00—Vallee Orch.; Soloists 9:00—Capt. Henry Show Boat Concert 10:00-—-Whiteman Orch. ...j, 11:00—Viola Philo, Soprano 11:15—Norman Cordon, Buss 11:30—Madriguera Orch: 12:00—Ralph Kirbery, Sangé) . HE son Hood—Sketch ‘30—The New Deal in Public Welfare— Commissioner William Hodson sensi sea Gardel, Baritone; Concert ‘ch. 0—Capt. Diamond's Adventures—Sketch (0—Adventures in Health—Dr. Herman Bundesen :45—Sizzlers ‘Trio ‘00—Death Valley Days ‘30—Duchin Orch. See Program cher Gibson, Organ; Male Chorus 0—Cavaliers Quartet 15—Anthony Frome, Tenor 0—Stern Orch. WOR—710 ‘Ke WABC—860 Ke 7:00 P.M.—Sports—Ford. Prick 15—Comedy; Music" :30—Lone Rangers—Sketeh 8:00—Jack Arthur, Baritone 8:15 —Book ‘Talk " #:30—Dramatized News |’ a:45—Al and Lee Reiser, Pikho Duo P.M.—Myrt and Marge 5—Just Plain Bill—Sketch 30—Serenaders Orch. 5—News—Boake Carter ‘00-—Mildred Bailey, Songs 8:15—News—Edwin ©. Hill eOo—Redfern “Hollinshéad, "Tenor; Della aaa Wu ak pene he aeee Baker, Soprano 1k 3 9:30—Elsie Thompson, Orgay;;Frank Sherry,| 9:0¢—Philadelphia Orch. 9:15—Howard Marsh, Tenor; Mary East- man, Soprano; Kostelanets Orch. Py icin tod nl Melodies :00—Gray Orch.; Irene Taylor, Songs; 10:30—News Repo: e sah eee 10:45—Warnow Orch.; Connie Gates, Songs; Ciubmen Quartet 11:15—Charles Carlile, Tenor 11:30—Jones Orch. | 12:00—Nelson Orch. 12:30 A.M.—Lyman Oren 1:00—Paneho Orch. ‘Tenor 9:45—The Witch's Tale’ 15—Current, Events—Hariat “Eugene Read 10:30—The Jolly Russians . 11:00—Moonbeains ‘Trio 11:30—Coleman Orch. 12:00—Berger Orch. 1G WIZ-—760' Ke 100 P.M--Amos ‘n’ Andy DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1934 Porto Rico, U. S. Possession, _ An Island of Hunger, Want | Delegate to Unemployed! ; Meet in Washington Tells of Struggles } By CARL REEVE | “PORTO RICO, United States p. | 4 session, is the land of unempic ment, with 41 per cent of its pop | lation totally jobless,” declared L Vergne Ortiz, here as a dele: from the Unemployed Council | San Juan, Porto Rico, to the N tional Convention Against Un: | ployment to be held in Washinct on Feb, 3. | “There are 650,000 unemployed | Porto Rico out of a population « 1,600,000,” said Oritz. “When th | United States took possession of th< island after the war with Spain, 35 years ago, 17 per cent of the popu- | lation was unemployed, and this was | now grown to 41 per cent.” Porto Rico, 100 miles long and 40 miles wide, lies 70 miles east of Haiti and 500 miles southeast of Cuba. Its Wages 80 Cents a Day, Luis Ortiz Says in Interview and othi | 30,000 work: fe yed, only 30,- are put at @ week.” s has rapidly increased iin few months,” Ortiz ex- artly as a result of the s cf the last general strike and t led by the chauffeurs, The organized a committee Tuck against the charge of 25 cil companies, including the Stan- S a bitter one. Traffic was para. ed. The strike began in Maya- | guez and spread to San Juan and other towns, The strike was so effec- LUIZ VERGNE ORTIZ population is largely engaged in agri- | sentative, could not travel without culture, predominantly on sugar| Labor leaders before the workers, |Dermission of the workers’ commit- plantations owned by American | ortiz pointed out. | tee. The workers won a victory when bankers, with some tobacco fruit and coffee. Its factories are principally | sugar-processing plants. “The San Juan Unemployed Coun- cil, first Unemployed Council in Po’ to Rico, is but a few weeks old,” Ortiz, en route to Washington, told the Daily Worker. “One unemployed demonstration has been conducted in Porto Rico, a year ago. The workers began the march in Sunoco (named from the American oil company), a section of San Juan, and marched The Socialist Party, whose leader | the government was forced to issue a is Santiago Iglesias, is careful to do| Proclamation reducing the price of or say nothing to offend the yasoline to 20 cents.” can bankers controlling the The Communist Pariy, Ortiz said The Federation of Labor, wi! ar old, and already Alonzo at its head and the Soc i |has 11 units throughout the island. Party ik cl ogether and have |The Communist Party is leading the The Nationalist |movement for the organization of n|the unemployed, and is gaining in- fluence in the fight against the domi- verlalism, guards the interests of the | nation of American imperialism. Porto Rican employers. “I want to go back from the Na problems of the} tional Convention Against Unem- through the streets of San Juan to | Unemployed Council of San Juan are; ployment,” Ortiz concluded, “and the capital, where the legislature | s'milar to those of the United States,|*eln b' a national movement of was in session. Heavy police cor-j except that the poverty | the unemployed along stronger lines, dons with rifles guarded the capi-| Rico fs more striking,” esa result of the lessons and ex- tal. Delegations were sent in by the} plained. “A great g perience gained from the Unem- unemployed to the house of dele-|been carried on by P. R. M nioyed Councils of the United gates.” head of the Department of Labor, Wages 80 Cents a Day States.” draining swamps, for a ‘wage’ | e militancy of the workers and | cents a gallon levied by the foreign | dard Oil and the Shell. The struggle | e that B. Long, the N.R.A. repre- | If Bill Gropper | Were Commissar —By Gropper Al Smith would be a janiior of the Empire State building. | English Literature | Course at Workers’ | School on Saturday | NEW YORK.—A course in the His- tory of English Literature from the | Histo: Materialist Viewpoint will | begin Saturday, at 3 P. M. at the Workers School, 35 E, 12th St. | course will be given by M. Vetch, Na- tional Secretary of the Pen and Ham: mer, and author of a number of arti cles n literary subjects, Registration is still open. The wages of the peasants work- ing on the sugar plantations are 80 cents a day, Ortiz stated. “When the new contract was recently signed between the suger rrowers and the peasants, N.R.A. Director Long, rep- resenting Roosevelt, was consulted, lathough he stated he could not take STAGE, AND SCREEN Return Engagement; “Legal time, appears in the film playing his | TOO MANY BIG WORDS | Brooklyn, N. Y. I am writing to you once again and I hope I will see the day when |the majority of the workers will write Marx, who was in Moscow at the|to you. I hope I am not making a/mer is the est of myself. You have asked for The} any action regarding agricultural > * favorite instrument, the harp.|it, so here goes, pursuits, However, he took part in| urder” Opens Next Week | speeches are mostly’ in English. I have critized you before on the working up this contract. When it} ,. 8 e; juse of big words and now I will ote was finished, the Porto Rican Fed- Biography,” the S. N. Behrman! 4nnq Sten In “Nana” Opens'*ie'ze you on the way some article: eration of Labor (connected with the | Comedy which ran all lest season in are fi F of the New York and has toured this season, Tonight At Radio City will be presented here next Monday} night by the Theatre Guild at the] A. F. of L.) had approved a con- tract which called for 12 hours a day in the sugar processing factories. Long praised this contract. None of the factory workers, except the highly skilled, makes over a dollar a day wages in these factories,” ticles; it is on |Against Pacifisr written on Mon-| Samuel Goldwyn’s production of|day, January 15th, 1934. Ambassador Theatre for a return en-; “Nana,” with Anna Sten in the lead-| isjudge me on the gagement of two weeks. Ina Claire! ing role, will have its first New York|way I criticize, or write my letter. retains the leading role, and other| Showing today at Radio City Music|I am not so well educated. members of the original cast includs| Hall. The film ts based on Emile| I think your paper is worth more This infamous contract, which con-| Charles Richman, Jay Fassett and|Z0la’s famous novel. The screen yer-|than all the go'd in the world That demned the sugar workers in the] Arnold Korff. Shepperd Strudwick' Sion was adapted by Willard Mack It is a jfactores and on the plantations (wil have the role played last year| and Harry Wagstaff Gribble. Dorothy blessing to humanity. If I would be- alike to a miserable existence, did|py Earle Larimore, who is now ap-| Atmer directed the production, uld ‘God bless jee in God, I |much to exnose the federation of |Potamkin’s Operetta you,” but I d 1 bless y |I have a lot that I would like to |write and say, but as my children are pearing in Eugene O'Neill's “Day: Without End,” at the Henry Miller Theatre. | VHAT’S ON ° is “ ar” ‘ disturbing me at the ent time, I “Strike Me Red,” in ‘Legal Murder,” by Dennis Dono- | will close, with the i . N k Thi s d See ee ENDER GARLIN, of the Dally W ‘om the bottom » and ewar! is Sunday | Scoitsboro case, will be presented next perce Mo Besa) Oy atin roan (BbCeaS. to-yOUr: tx which Y | Monday: night by. Aller: Productions | fac: tout UP discussion on the press hci ov. re Daily Worker Volunteers, 35 E. 12th|/T will try to make mir at the President Theatre. The cast! St, Fifth floor, tonight at 8:30. | is headed by Heyes Pryor, Marjorie | FILM SCHOOL of Film and Photo League A e Warfield, Marion McLaughlin and|mects at new headquarters, 12 . 17m st. | International Concert Burt, Cartwright br. ‘Biephen Gaver at te 8 ianme’| in Chicago Feb. 11 t a4 “? r. Stephen al en & ry | 4! Pag le Milton Herbert Gropper’s play,|114 W. 21st St. at 8:30 p.m, Open forum) ties wae. bs ais “Sing and Whistle,” is announced for| discussion will follow talk, "7 ‘f 2 ay 7 next ‘Thursday night at the Fulton| DR. SILVERMAN will lecture on “Infa-| ave Numerous Features | & aie. . {ticn—How It Works” at regular meeting of Theatre. Ernest Ruex, Sylvia Fleld,| irred Levy Br. ELD. Br., 233 Shemeld ave. Donald MacDonald and Dorothy|at 8 p.m. Admission free. All invited. Mathews are the players. | SPORT SECTION of Harlem Prog. Youth i Club starts class on Thursdays in Cal- Latest Soviet Newsreel On Jesthentcs, wrestling and boxing under the | Singing so | |leadershpt of Sol Fisher. Harlem Prog.| STcups will appear at the Interna-| | 1638 Madison Ave. at 8:30 p.m. Aeme Theatre Program | “SOVIET CHINA—Its Economie Poly,”| February 11, at 3:30 P. M, at the | NEWARK, N. J.— The proletarian j Operetta, “Strike Me Red,” by the late Harry Alan Potamkin, which has been performed before large adult and children’s audiences in New York, will be presented at the Y.M.H.A. | Auditorium, High and West Kinney | streets, this Sunday afternoon, Feb. 4, | at 2 o'clock. |. The operetta, which is sponsored by the Young Communist League and | Young Pioneers of Newark, will be | presented by the original New York) cast. | CHICAGO—The Armenian, Czecho- | Slovak, Italian, Russian, Jewish, | Mexican and Ukranian proletarian tional Concert and dance on Sunday, } | lecture by J. F, Ho at Friends of the Chin- aa ‘ Fi i | Presented as part of a campaign 7 q|ese People, 188 W, 23rd St, Room 12, at|~oPles Auditorium, 2457 W. Chicago! | against child misery, the operetta will As an added feature to its showing a6 oes ke ae, : . | Avenue. of “Hell cn Earth,” the international | This Concert und Ballet is arranged! MEMBERSHIP MEETING of ' Mooney! i bs secialn “AD gen talkie, the Acme Theatre is now show-|p.'Tu.p, at 229 E, 18th St ot 8 ome wniks| by the Communist Party, District 8. ing the latest Soviet Newsreel which | Williams, of Williams Defeuze Comm., will! —— has just arrived from Moscow. High|spesk. All invited. Adm. iree | OTE Yesterday we printed a ietier on! Points of the film give a close up of |, MAURICE SUGAR, will speak on ‘An ; a | his page asking whether it is against : merican Looks at Soviet Russia” at West | the farewell reception tendered to the| Side Br. F.5.U., 2642 Broadway at 100th St.| r Russian Ambassador to U. S. Troya-|#t 8:30 p.m. Adm. 16¢. | the law to place Daily Workers in novsky by the American colony in| hae! Sok Balen a | letter boxes. The editorial note ap-/ Moscow on the eve of his departure | Marks Pl. at 8 p.m. Important report wili| PeNded to this letter was omitted. | for the United States. Short speeches] be given. We have been informed by our at-| are made by Karl Radek, Troyanov-|, =DITH BERKMAN Br. LL.D. open meet-| torney that it is not illegal. | ing—educatic 1 — | | obtained at 7 Charlton St., Newark. | sky, Louis Fischer and others. Harpo; Workers Club, 470eoieth ree Brookiya, at] | i | 8:30 p.m. | eer = | MEMBERS W.I.R. Band report at st./ | Nicholas Arena, 66th St. and Broadway at| }7:30 p.m. Bring stands. | | BAZAAR given by the East Side Workers} | Club, 165 E. Broadway, ter the benefit cf Morning Fretheit. Friday night—Concert, ) Saturday Cabaret night. Refreshments, en- tertainment, bargain galore. NURSES ‘and Hospital Workers League meeting at Stuyvesant High School, 345 E. | 15th St. at 8:30 p.m. | Friday | LECTURE at American Youth Federation, 323 E, 13th St. at 8:30 p.m. Subject: “Shall | Birth Control Be Legalized?” Speakers: Mrs, FP. Robertson Jones, Honorary President of \the American Birth Control League. tions and discussion. LECTURE by Harry Gannes on “The| }Cuban Revolution” at ‘Tremont Prog. Club, | | 88 E. Tremont Ave. at 8:45 p.m, WM. L. PATTERSON lecture on “Why| |unemployment” under the auspices of the| | Powel and Sutter Assembly, 1813 Pitkin Ave. Brooklyn, Adm. 10c, | Chicago | STOCKYARDS Workers Masque Bail, given by the Packing House Workers Industrial | Union, Saturday, Feb. 3 at 322 E. 43rd Georgia Crooners Famous Orchestra, mission 20c. : | Hammond, Ind | | SovrEr FILM showing of “War Against | | the Centuries” on Friday, Feb. 2 at 8 p.m. ai ‘Trinity Hall, Howard and Ames St. A | mission in dvance 15c, at door 20c. { Cleveland, Ohio 60th BIRTHDAY of I. 0. Ferd, Banquet on Sunday, Feb. 4 at 5 p.m. at Oak Pythian Temple, 70€ E. 103th St. Interesting pro- | gram ararnged. Philadelphia, Pa. LENIN-LIEBKNECHT-LUXEMBURG Me- morial Meeting Saturday, Feb. 3 at 8 p.m, at Kensington Labor Lyceum, 2916-24 N. Second St. Adm. 25c. F. Hellmann, main speaker, Choruses, Dram, Sec., Concert Orchestra, Benefit “Der Arbeiter” and “Daily Worker.” Auspices: Anti-Fascist Front, offer a striking contrast to the series \of fairy tale operettas presented by bourgeois organizations. A conference of working class or- | Sanizations on Feb. 16 will map out a | campaign against child misery. All workers ate urged to attend the per- |formance and bring their children. | Admission is 30 cents for adults and | 15 cents for children. Tickets can be | Ques- | Ad | | Lackawanna, N. Y. MASS ~{EETING called by the Buffalo Ex- ecutive Comm. 1.W.O., I.W.O. City Central Comm. of Lackawanna; Envlish Br. 1722; Ukrainian Sec. Br. 764, and Russian Mutual Aid Society on Sunday, Feb. 4 at 7:30 p.m. at Friendship House, 527 Ridge Road. ngthen the Fight | * ties, orchestras and ballet} ___ Stirring Songs of Struggle in International Collection Thirteen Songs from E in Book Pui Out by M By ©. 5. m quoted duction, which of revolu- tionary mass singing not only in t daily struggle of “peace,” the course of imperia’ : “How is song to ised for these purposes?” asks the International. | “One of the most essential and fective slogans of the fight against | |imperialist war still is and remains | “Force of Solidarity. the slogan of defeating capitalist government imperialist war. The your own pression of | |the flaming desire of the defeat of {one’s own governm and, simul ly, one of the strongest | revolutionary agitat Ts of the enem: |the singing of revolutionary songs jinstead of the patriotic songs of the | fatherland. | tionary songs, but even more so foi jthe songs of the prolet: | country which has become yo' jtary enemy, due to the d {of imperialism at our task to de to such | }a stage that in the future imperial- ist war the sounds of ‘Red Wedd should be from one of | ‘enemy’ knows—over the r: . {ply to this call for proletarian esity the n ‘New Carmagnole’ in | ITH this aim | "from eight countr: jand the texts view, 13 songs | s e selected | ted into thre | | languages * German | Russian. There are two from F |the “Song of the Youn ond the “Now Carmagnole. typical caref: | French 'have as |herds and s s—a kind of | i@ that can have revolutionary ignificance only through continued | sociation throuzh use in the cl: S | truggle. It is said to be very - ar in Fra such an j ‘ion may, in the course of ti |bullt un. The other French son {on arrangement of two of th {famous songs of the old Frenct | revolution -—the “Carmagnole” and | “Caira.” | “Cominte-n? in. Collec | Wolpe's “ a harbin- ay of le. “3 “0 | perhaps one of the} known and best-loved of |rroletarian 5 |} tern” follows, } most widely {the whole colie | Huneai “Labour © Ha Risen” is folk in a character well known to Like the “New | Carmagnole” it e long asso- ciation and use to make it sound to j the occupants of an enemy trench exten-| r | n ight Countries Included usic Bureau Interna the German dy rh: Tannenbaum” formerly used for the words. Two Japanese Songs two Jani and Japanese styles Tropean in every w: movement is strong stronger. Music e part in it. W his music. Chinese “Red Sol Chinese Tt gives one a new kind of gracing the to American e Three American Songs There are three Amer T first, Lahn Adoh: of Hunger Is hing,” be better known here. True it is more Euroy n in form; but surprises he end as does the Wolpe h by differe technival The second, “Hold the Fort,” S one of s which, thou: nuch of the ev: the Salvati iv the Ame! hat it has spe On the le, the e 2 most difficult one. qualities in tunes of thi that they should be natio: lection marks an ning of a task that w: more important w he whole world e united and 1} their chains forever. New types wil evolve. They are now e' The time js not far tant wheil, upon hearing a new song for the firs; time, we shall immediately be ° to place it as revolutionary or the En h, German, an, Chinese or.Japs or bourgedisie: ize job for you, composers! It can, and proletarian will be done. MENTS HOW: PLACE.OF THE NATION FIRST MUSIC HENRY BARBUSSE says:— ACME THEATR THE GREAT INTERNATIONAL TALKIE! iin Produced in 4 different countries—spoken fi “HELLOnEARTH” i languages, mainly English, with Wladimir (of the Moscow Art Thea.) iend Buseh (now in exile) “The Greatest of anti-war films,” Also:—Latest Soviet Newsreel See and hear—TRONAYOVSKY, KARL RiDEK and others With STREET AND UNION SQUARE AMERICAN | PREMIERE © Theatre Union's Stirring Play THE ANTI-WAR HIT 8rd Big Month PEACE ON EARTH CIVIC REPERTORY Thea,. 1ith S. & 6th Av. | WA. 9-7450. Evgs. 8:45. 0° tos] 50 NO Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:30. TAX Arrange Theatre Parties for your organiza- tion by telephoning Watkins 9-2451 ZJEGFELD FOLLIES with FANNIE BRICE ‘Willie & Eugene HOWARD, Everett MAR- SHALL, Jean SARGENT, Patricia BOWMAN, WINTER GARDEN, B'way and 50th. Evs. 8.30 Matinees Thursday and Saturday 2:30 JUDITH ANDERSON,, Come OF ACF » CLEMENCE DANE & RICHARD ADDINSELL | MAXINE ELLIOTT'S Thea., 39th, E. of Bway Eves. 8:50, $3.30 to 55¢, Mats. Wed. a Sat. KO Jefferson \s% 8. & | Now W. ©. FIELDS & ALISON SKIPWORTH in “TILLIE and GUS” also:—"BIG TIME OR BUST”? with REGIS TOOMEY & GLORIA SHEA Book-jacket design for “Karl Marx’. ‘spilal’ In Lithegre oo we by Ray Long and Richard Smith. This * by Hago Gellert just important book will be reviewed in the Daily Worker soon. sn. nt |No MORE LADIES | A New Comedy by A. E. Thomas with | MELVYN DOUGLAS LUCILE WATSON BOOTH Thes., 45th, W. of Bway. Evs. 8:50, Matinees Wednesday and Saturday at “Her Master’s Voice” —THE THEATRE GUILD presente EUGENE O'NEILL's COMEDY AH, WILDERNESS!” with GEORGE M. COHAN —* >= GUILD staecseeeee MAXWELL ANDERSON'S New Play — MARY OF SCOTLAND | with HELEN PHILIP HAYES MERIVALE ALVIN 72-824 St, W. of Ey.8:20.Mats. Thor. EUGENE O'NEILL'S Now Play DAYS WITHOUT END- Henry Miller’s 2:4) Evenings 8:40, Mat. Thurs. & Sat. 2:40 Roland YOUNG and Laura HOPE CREWS 4 ‘Thes., W. 45th St. vs. F ‘ Plymou'