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mie 4 CHANGE | = WORLD! By Michael Gold _ The Devil’s in America, Too iEN we attack Hitler and ‘his: Brown Shirts who are ruling Germany, we must never forget that the same forces are present in America, ready to establish as brutal and ignorant a regime here. The Ku Klux Klan is about the exact American equivalent of Hitlerism. Hitler has attacked modern science and culture, and is trying to wipe them off the earth. The klan ,as is well-known, led in the attack on the Darwinian theory. Hitler is trying to save capitalism by abolishing labor fhions. The kan is also notorious as a scab organization, and has lynched and flogged many labor organizers. Hitler is a frenzied nationalist, and has taught his followers to hate every other race and nation. The Klan ig the same; but where Hitler principally attacks Jews, the kian concentrates on attacking the Negro. 4 Piece of Southern Filth following poem was sent Ine by a Southern comrade. It is a remark- able specimen of southern horror, the emanation of a mind that cannot be thought of as normal. But this ts the mind of many respectable upper- lass southerners: bankers, lawyers, governors, preachers, sheriffs, mill owners, all the white-collar mob-and their ladies. It is circulated through Alabama on“mimeographed sheets, and nobody stops it from going through the mail, as labor literature is stopped. * * A Lynch “Poem” Bos ee ee At the end of it the Rev. Tucker has a little posteript: “Contribute 10°cents or more.” He expects a reward, it veems, for such devil's work, or is he racketeering on the lynching horror? MURDERED (Tune—Little Mary Fegin) Little Vaudine Maddox, She took a walk one day; She went on s christian mission, But didn’t arrive that day. It was her daily custom, To help those who were sick; But the Devil interfered, With « brutal hellish trick Dan Pippin and A. T. Hardin, ‘They lived down on this farm; ‘They planned to kill little Vaudine; Who had never done them harm. ‘Then with rocks and clubs Dan beat her down ‘The confession of the plan; ‘There never was a crime so brutal, ‘That was ever viewed by man. Before he hit the fatal blow, She cried oh; God do come; And avenge my blood on these two brutes. Make little girls safe from harm. Heaven's police Angel cams, And took her soul in hand; And said now listen little Vaudine, T'll make this known. to man, The sheriff lay in, Dreamland, When the Angel and Vaudine came; His soul was stirred; his rest was gone But he vowed, I'll catch that man. The Police Angel Jed the way, With Vaudine in his arms; With the sheriff and his deputies, Down on this poor man’s farm. There lying in the, underbrush, That beautiful form Vaudine; ‘The sheriff and all his deputies, cried ‘The worst we have ever seen. Then the Police Atigel would not go Back to heaven's Portals fair; But with his voice’ of justice, He literally filled the air. Do you love the! Kit Klux Klan? One hundred per cent for law and order And protect your little Mary Ann? CONTRIBUTE 10 Cents or More Rev. Grover C. Tucker p< . . NOBODY prosecutes this Réverénd for inciting to murder. The tederal government jails bootleggers.and kidnappers but it hasn’t any authority to jail a few lynchers like this-Réverend. No! the working masses will have to do that themselves some day. | Thursday DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1934 Will Protest \IT MAY HAVE BEE Destruction of BUT NOT FOR EVERYBODY! 5 | Lenin Murals elt | NEW YORK.—Artists and writers | of this city will protest the destruc- | tion of the Diego Rivera murals at the| | Rockefeller Center at a protest meet-| ing to be held at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place, this Sunday afternoon at three o'clock, under the auspices of the John Reed Club of | New York. The murals—which, because they contained the head of Lenin, had been covered up for months—were secretly torn down on Sunday, it was discovered Monday night. The protest against the Rockefeller vandalism will take place at a meet- ing originally called to expose the war-preparedness motive behind the newly projected “Fine Arts Founda- tion for the Promotion of American Painting and Sculpture.” Speakers at Sunday's meeting will include kart ip eat gens including ter Pach and others, babes “A Jew at War,” Will Be Shown by Workers’ Film League Saturday NEW YORK —The Film & Photo League and the New Masses will present the Afth and final program of the series of film showings on the “History of the Soviet Film” this Saturday, Feb. 17, at the New School for Social Research, 66 W. i2th St. when “A Jew at War” will be shown. The film will be supplemented by q short lecture. Performances will be given at 7 D. m. and 9:30 p.m. Tickets are available St the Workers Book Shop, New Masses office, $1 8. 27th Bt. and at the Workers Film & Photo League, 12 E. 17th St, any evening. Judges for Theatre Competition Sunday Evening Are Selected) NEW YORK.—John E. Bonn, member of | Presidium of International Workres Drama- tle Union, B. Schneider of the Artef, Cheryl Crawford of the Group Theatre, Harry Elion, National Secretary of the L. O. W. T. of U. S. A., and Harold Edgar of the Daily Worker, have been selected as judges for the Enclish speaking, semi-final competition of the Na- tional Theatre Festival to take place at the | Now School for Social Research, 6 W. 12th St. this Sunday, Feb. 18, at 8 p. m. | The participating Groups include: Work- |ers Laboratory ‘Theatre, New Experimental ‘Theatre, Harlem Progressive Youth Theatre, Theatre of the Workers School, Ella May Children’s Group, Aurora Junfor Players, |and American Youth Theatre. WHAT’S O. | Announcements for the “What's On” | Column must be in our office by 11 A.M. | of the previous day. There is = mini- mum charge of 250 for each notice. * . . Wednesday | | WILLIAM LAWRENCE, I. L. D., speaks on “The Role of the I. L. D. in the Struggle | Against the High Cost of Living,” st 702 . Tremont Ave., Bronx, 8:30 p.m. Auspices | Sacco Vanzett! Br. I. L. D. |_ PATRICK O'BOYLE, | Irish Situation and the development of Fas- cism in Ireland.” Jim Connely Br. I L. D., 603 E. 136th St. 8 p. m. Admission free. Questions and discussion. | WALL PAPER DISCUSSION at the Pros- | pect Workers Center, 1157 So. Boulevard, Bronx. Admission free. PAUL MILLER, speaks on “Current | Events” at Tom Mooney Br. I. L. D., 323 E. 13th St Admission free, alscussion, 8:15 |pom | REHEARSAL DAILY WORKER CHORUS, 35 B. 12th St., Sth floor, 8 p.m. Women Yolces_needed. LECTURE BY HOWARD on “The Farmer |and Roosevelt Controlled Inflation,” Wash- | ington Heights Worker Center, 4046 Broad- |way, near 170th St., Room 2, 8:30 p. m. ¥.'L, D. CHORUS meets at 2239 Church Ave., Brooklyn, top floor, 8:18 p. m, | welcome. MAJOR GENERAL VICTOR A. YAKHON- | TOFF, commander—imperial Czarist Army— Kerensky Gov. Lecturer, traveler, author, Point Palace, 953 Southern Boulevard, 8:30 p.m, Ausplces: East Bronx Br. F. 8. U. | CARD PARTY AND DANCE, given by Rail- |road Unity Movement, Pullman and Dining Car Br. I, W. 0, Hall, 415 Lenox Ave., near |181st_ St," Refreshments, muste, dancing. | Contribution 25 cents. | MOVIE “Road to Lite’ with | musical accompaniment at Paradise Manor, lil W. Mt. Eden Ave. Bronx, 8:30 p. m. Admission 15 cents, Auspices Mt. Eden Br. PS U. ‘TENTH ANNIVERSARY of Freiheit Man- dolin Orchestra rehearsal at 106 E. 14th 8t., 8p. m. All members must come on time. Commercial sign-painters, helpers, art decorators and scenic artists are called to an organization meeting to be held at 29 St. Marks Place at 8 p. m, less week th: weather City—143 degr lowest point—man, and others, employ other jobs, painfully a injured. During the same week, se dred of the city’s wealthy, whose large Tesidences on Fifth Av other fashionable thor window-boarded and vacar making merry in the warmth of “gay, brilliant, fasc ing Miami and Palm B seous capitals of the Riviera.” The quotation is from an ad tisement in the New York " Sunday, Feb. 11, which rhap: about the pleasures awaiting and lady in the course of 4 Caribbean cruise. The juxtaposition of stories about the miserable deaths from exposure of uprooted, jobless and hom human beings and other accoun’ festivities held by the rich their winter-season in the occurred in every metropolitan n Paper, without exception. r= s on izes The New York “World-Telegram” | of Feb. 10 ran the headline in Cold Due Tonight; 17 Dead Here Man Collapses in Street; Su Increases in City.” A worker, r ing this page 1 story, might have been impressed with the World- ‘Telerram’s concern with the miser brought into sharp relief by the | spell, had he not turned to nave 12 of the same edition of the paper and read the following over the ph graphs of three semi-clad so damsels: | “It May Be Winter to Some—but | Not in the Land of the Palm and the | Bathing Girl.” Or pick up a copy of the “Herald Tribune” for Friday, Feb. 9, the very | day on which the therometer hit its | lowest point. The page 1 story on/ the cold wave contained the fol-| lowing illuminating sentence: “He | (Mayor LaGuardia) explained that | the armories could not be used for lodging, because it would mean heavy | expense for equipment.” But, on/| page 17: | PALM BEACH, Fis | Miss Mary Brown W: | tertained tonight with a dinner at | | | Casa Maria Marone on this lake front. Those present were the Grand Duke Dmitri and Princess Anna Hynski, Mr. and Mrs. . . .” And don’t think that our deli-| cately-bred families felt the need to | | escape to Palm Beach, or Catalina Island, to make merry. The very * | southern -| But that’s not the point. - | Times that $50,000 will be spent for | COLD—|!F! WERE COMMISSAR daughter n Slocum.” vulga t more of led tocrats S$ papers—The bune, Post, etc. enlightened aders with glimpses York | New Herald- The Daily News, | of ‘Times, its cold | { warm and well-fed gals on the| surf. “Socialites who like | g fine time told its shivering The photographs were | |those of “Ruth Baldwin of New york with her Sealyham. terrier, | | Whisky, at Palm Beach” (you can see} her in the accompanying pleture), | ° { | udience. | OOR, working-class families, it will | be said, also managed to keep | their tiny tenement homes warm, | als with hot, | e, and kept warm under | lankets through the freezing nights. | —By Gropper The point is that our wealthy and| #RANCES PERKINS, R osevelt’s rristoeratic families, nurtured in | : genteel” and “delicate” traditions, | SccTetary of Labor, who pretends to ore inherently the most vulgar and | have so much “sympathy” for the ‘rutal and coarse class in America. | |The vaunted politeness of a famed| hammer and sickles on real union- | will overturn her eafe| ™#de clothing. vkward guest, disappears when she | onfronts poverty. \ She will not consider it at all in- | Jelicate to phone the New York | TUNING IN her daughter’s debut. (Larger sums. as a matter of fact, have been spent | on such and similar affairs.) Nor} ill the “New York Times” (“All the News that’s Fit to Print”) hesitate a | TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660 Ke workers, would have » job sewing | “| turned away from the deception | others, Mare Connelly Page Five L etters Serbs Composition Is | Feature at New Masses Musicale on Thursday NEW YORK.—A’ musical evening “a g 8 n by be performed for America, the Wash: On Thursday evi if If BEING DONE EBrwklyn, N. | ¥ | Comrade Editor:— I have fu Roosevelt fini: Scouts his of America. They were told about the won- talk to the Boy derful thing the Boy Scouts did in |? a F iid in| 3.15 pm. The program has bee r campaign for the selling of | ranged by the New Masses Lecture Liberty Bonds. E sin se This week they are calling Na- a tional Boy Scout Week and are ask. ing the Boy Scoutsto p: E vatious activities, undo! propaganda, I am just wondering | faut: and Asi whether the Communist Party is|and music critic of x going to take the step and distri-| A feature of the program bute circulars to the school boys| production by the Reperto | telling the real meaning of this|house Associates of Alfred pianist; ey the Ni thing called National Boy Scout | borg’s Mass Recital entitled | Week. ica, Ameri h appeared I am not amember of the Com- | Feb. 6 t M: }munist Party, but I read the Daily Worker practically every day and I {have induced quite a number of people to do so and they are now enthused to the extent where they | jare praising it to everyone they | talk to, | Leading Figures of the | Stage to Be at Benefit for Scottsboro Friday |“FOR AN ORGANIZER, THE DAILY CAN’T BE BEAT,” j Bryant, Wash. Helen Morgan, of “Show Comrade Editor:— “Sweet Adeline” sre among | fe | those who will appear. j ‘or an organizer, the Worker can | Others on the program are Bessie Smith {set be beat, and it 1s making a|the great blues singer’ Buck and Bubbles sort of an organizer out of me. I, in| famous through Ziegfeld reviews, Mildred ; | Bailey, the radio stat, and many others my weak way will do all that I can|vietcher Henderson and. bis |} to unite the working class. I find | Benny Cart oe j wherever I have distributed the | ment the regu! | Worker that they are slowly being | and his) oreiestrs lar music ofthe S: The sponsors of the affair include, among author of Cullen, | which the paid press has moulded in their minds. I tell them to con- tinue reading the press and all | other reading matter and then to | compare it and see which is ac-| | cording to their opinion the truth. | stures,” Countee well-known to Brosiway, arthur Gi Hays, the famous liberal lawyer, Handy, composer of the “St. Lor Dorothy Parker, poet and short 7 Rose McClendon, gotress and Art Young, artist, AMUSEMENTS moment in publishing the news of! 7:00 p.at.—Mmartha Mee: to water saliva-dry this vulgar extravaganza, unaccustomed and ates of the hungry, jol men who daily turn des to its want-ad pages. Suffers as All Streets—N. J. Man Frozen GRAIL TRAFFIC HAMPERED delphia, With Scant Relief Due Before Tomorrow By WENDELL P. REYNOLDS This was the coldest da; ever, j z Records Fall. FJobless Collapse in 1 songs | 7:18—Billy Batchelor, sketch | 7:30—Shirley Howard, Songs; | 1:45—The Goldbergs—Sketch Jesters Trio 17 | 2:00-—Jack Pearl, comedian; Van Steendan's | 8:30—Way, “s Orchestra 9:00—Troubadours Orch.; Edmund Lowe, Actor 9:30—Fred Allen’s Revue, and Ferde Grote 10:00—Hilbilly Mus 10:30—The BSuspe: toh 11:00—To Be Announced 11:15—John Fogarty, Tenor 11:30—St. Valentine's Day Program | 12:00—Harris Orch. | 12:80 A. M.—Lucas Orch WOR—710 Ke Sports, Ford Frick medy; Music | 7:80-~Osborn Orch. | €:00—Detectives Black and Blue—Mystery Drama y Jones and Ernie Hare t Orch.; Frank Munn, Tenor; ion Gist, Soprano Air ; Frank Sherry, Tenor '5—Current 10:30—To Be A: 10:45—Sports—Boake Carter 11:00—Moonbeams Trio e Nelson's Orchestra —Harlan Eugene Read WJIZ—760 Ke 7:00 P.M.—Amos 'n’ An “a & Perimutter {3 , Hollywood | 8 ad\se-—Sketch avis E. Lawes in 20,000 ketch 9:30—John McCormack; Wm. Daly's Orch. | reh.; Jesters Trio; Adele Starr, | Songs; Tony h, Comedian 10:30—Tourist Adventures 11:00-—Pickens Sisters 11;15—Robert Royce, tenor Julie Stein's Orchestra Buddy Rogers’ Orchestra WABC—860 Ke. 0 P.M.—Myrt and Merge 3—“Just Plein Bill” 0—Armbruster Orch. Songs News, Boake Carter Men About Town Trio; Jimmy Kemper, .; Burns, Allen : Dick Powell 10:30—News Reports | ; Evelyn MacGregor, , Baritone; Mixed Quintet Little Jack Little'e Orchestre y Orch. Hall Orch. Orch. 1:00—Light Brockion Businessmen Admit “There’s Something Wrong” in se 0. S. Continued from + f ¢ bs 8 ‘sy | —it was Coue all over again. “But suppose things didn’t get bet- ter even if you cheer the college pro- fessors?” Again the long pause, a thoughtful wrinkling of the brow and a dazed: causes of what is happening today. A broad knowledge of the economic forces at work is beyond them.” ”” Meet Mr. Flint wer days when things. syent smoothly, Take Perley G. Flint, treasuiter’' of Field & Flint Co, manufacturéts of high-grade shoes here. Flint is’ the typical, successful business man. He made a “go” of his business—when things were moving slowly. Now that they are not moving slowly he, does not know any more what to do than most of the workers’in his factory. And Flint is bue representative of the other industrialists. eye With the exception of facts, fig- ures, statistics regarding his own particular factory, he is a bewildered man, floundering in the maze of events that caught him as wel! as other shoe manufacturers in the world-wide depression. When you ask him what he thinks can be done to avoid getting deeper into the slough of depression or to increase the pay envelope of his worker he stares out of the window thoughtfully and after considerable pondering announces his conclusion: aaa “I don’t know. I really don't know. I guess the only thing we can. do is to give these college professars run- the country a chance, t's heer for them. Maybe they'll get 1 it of it.” nein There was a pathetic earnestness, a prayerfulness noticed in the Agr and the small business man, the worker and the union business that “maybe something will turn if only “everybody cheered for it.” It was Rotarianism carried to the Nth degree. Somehow, whenever cheered at a Rotary meeting ih She man up” “Damned if I know. We'll sure be in a hell of a mess, won’t be?” “You're a leader in industry in this town,” I persisted. “Men like you are running this city, state and nation. Surely you must figure on what will ‘happen if all the cheering don’t help.” He shook his head ‘ully. “I hate to think of what will hap- pen if things don’t pick up. The hasn't F ton had a $75,000 CWA. We've i kind. No, some way will have to be found to feed them—either through taxation or voluntary contributions. I guess we'll have to arrange things. so that the fellow who gets anything will have to give it up. Maybe big taxation.” “What would be your attitude if the government, to meet its bills and feed the citizens who can’t get work, put a fifty per cent tax on all you have?” Ray “TI wouldn’t like it,” he said simply. His whole air was that of one who would not be surprised if such a move was made. “What would you say to the gov- ernment taking over the whole shoe industry?” “That would be an awful calamity,” Eventually, of course, things seem be tending towards standardization in a a good thing. Maybe it’s our only solution. But I'am opposed to = crnment own . Tt will stifle initiative.” ative and cut-throat competition got) of the Brotherhood) you and the country into,” I sug-| conservative person. They're not gested. |trying to put handicaps on the “That's true. What I mean is I} manufacturers here. Murphy was favor a modified individualism.” | “What's that?” | He shook his head and Shrugged | his shoulders. Though he was a suc- | cessful manufacturer and apparently | had a theory about something or) other the phrase “modified individu- alism” had apparently been borrowed from some paper c® speaker. It was obvious he had no idea of what he | meant by it. “What do you attribute the troubles in the shoe industry to? Overproduc- | tion?” | “Not by a long shot. Under-con- | sumption.” | “How will you increase consump- | ” “TI don't know,’ he said thoughtfully. | “I’m not smart enough.” He sighed, | shrugged his shoulders. | “It’s a vicious circle any way you | look at it,” he finaily pronounced. | Flint’s hope tay in hope. Admits Workers’ Standards Lower On the question of unrest in the community as a result of below- living standard wage, unémploy- ment and the stagger system he was convinced that if had increased | in comparison to what it was, But | his attitude as well as the attitude of other manufacturers and business | men was not one of holy horror) which used to greet the word radi- calism. The shoe industry had been under A. F. of L. Union control of labor for almost 30 years and if a} new union which does not demand | too much was sacrificed, then he was. “The present union—the Brother- | hood of Shoe and Allied Craftsmen | —ts. alright,” he said. “This man} Murphy (John Murphy, President | telling me the other day that they ‘e having a bit of trouble with the radicals in this town but they ere overcoming that. Our people are essentially conservative. The Communists are not making any headway here because the workers in the past who made good wages are hopeful that thing~ will pick up and get better. They're pretty much contented even though what they earn is not sufficient for a lving wage.” At the conclusion of our convyer- sation he asked me what I thought of his views on the economic con- ditions of the city and country and whether the other business men with whom I talked differed much with him. I told him I thought he, and the others, the bankers, storekeepers and workers, seemed to be walking in a daze. He thought it over very carefully and then nodded his head. “I guess we are,” he said finally, “and I'll tell you why. “This whole community is depend- ent upon 15 or 20 factories. Shoe business is all there is to this town. The stores and everything else vir- tually depend upon the shoe business, Buying and selling depends upon the shoe business. Fifteen or twenty fam- ilies are responsible for what goes on in this town—the families that run and control the shoe business. It’s a sort of industrial oligarchy.” “The Damned Depression” “Now when these families — these factories, themselves in a daze it leaves the| whole community in a daze. We had a high standard of living—left over from the old days when high wages these manufacturers find) is a sensible {were paid. Suddenly along comes | this damned depression and people have no money to buy shoes—expen- sive shoes. Out in the middle west they manufacture a cheap grade of shoe for poor people. Here in Brock- ton we've been accustomed to manu- facturing a good, high priced shoe. “Why, when the code came along at all. We've been paying above the code minimum—if they worked a full week. Of course if they don’t work 4 | full week, we can’t pay it. (Note: the | shoe industry, even when it worked jon a 48-hour basis, because of the \ture of the employment, never even in good times average a 40-hour week so the workers never earned a full week's pay over a steady period of time—J. L, 8.) “But the code did effect the manu- fac.urer of cheap shoes. Why, a mid- western manufacturer told me it would raise his payroll 50 per cent lif the minimum wage went into effect. “There’s no demand for the high grade shoe that we've been ac- customed to making, and both manu- facturer and worker have been forced to try to adapt themselves to making a cheaper grade shoe which means adanting yourself to smaller material {and labor costs. I’m in favor of that because then shoes don’t last as long. Tt means a greater turnover of ny “This effort to adapt the industry here in Brockton to wages in propor- tion to the price shoe we're trying turn out has left us in a daze. when the shoe industry is in a daze here, the whole town is in a daze, “And I suppose thet with variations the same thing applies to other in- dustries in other towns, “I guess you're right, We're in a daze all right.” WAR THI Japan Masses Her Armies! Hitler Defies World! Austria Goes Fascist! Mussolini Rattles Sabre! U.S. Pours Billions Into Armaments! | | | } } PEACE® S SPRING?— FIGHT AGAINST IMPERIALIST WAR! SEE EARTH | THEATRE UNION’S SMASHING ANTI-WAR PLAY |Last Big Weeks 30c 45e Be | CIVIC REPERTOR Evenings: 8:45 p.m Matinees: Wednesday and Saturday, 2:50 p. m. LOWEST ¢ PRICES® $150 THEATRE 14th St.-6t® Ave. $1 | HELL on | EARTH | THE GREAT INTERNATIONAL TALKIE! THE DAILY WORKER SAYS: “Fine Anti-War Ploture ..... + Ti Should Be Seen by Everyone Opposed to War and Capitalism.’ with WLADIMIR SOKOLOFF (Moscow ArtPheatre), ERNST BUSCH (now tn extle) fatune | LATEST SOVIET NEWSREEL g=ssséer treyanorsi, ACME THEATRE tsi on sau sae] oe wise ——-THE THEATRE GUILD presents—,/ BUGENE O'NEILL's COMEDY AH, WILDERNESS! with GEORGE M. COHAN | GUILD 2m 2t8h Wot pray | Ey.8.20Mats. Thur. &SAt.2:20 MAXWELL ANDERSON’S New Play MARY OF SCOTLAND with HELEN PHILIP HELEN | HAYES MERIVALE MENKEN |} ALVIN hes, S24 8t., W. of B'way Ev. Thur. &Sat.2:20 EUGENE O'NEILL'S New Play DAYS WITHOUT E Henry Miller’s Thes., 43rd St. E, of Broa: \f Evenings 8:40, Mat. Thors. & Sal | ZIEGFELD FOLLIES with FANNIE BRICE Willje & Eugene HOWARD, Bartlett SiM- | MONS, Jane ¥ROMAN, Patricia BOWMAN. | | WINTER GARDEN, B’way and 50th, Evs. 8.80 Matinees Thursday and Saturday 2:30 Roland YOUNG and Laura HOPE CREWS in \“Her Master’s Voice” | Plymouth tz. "sen. ruare& set, RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL— 50 St. & 6 Ave.—Show Place of the Nation Opens 10:00 A. M. || ANNA STEN in “NANA” || Based on Zola’s Famons Novel | and on the-stage “THE 18T MUSIC HALL REVUE” [ °° Jefferson i 5 * | Now | | ard Ave. | DOROTHY MACKAILL & PAUL CAYANAGH in BACK STAGE MYSTERY Also: “SENSATION “HUNTERS” with ARLINE JUDGE and PRESTON FOSTER |NO MORE LADIES A New Comedy by A. H. ‘Thomas with MELVIN DOUGLAS LUCILE WATSON MOROSCO Thea., 45th, W. of Bway. Eve, | 8:50, Matinees Mon., Wed, and Sat, at 3:45. POSITIVELY LAST DAY MONTE CARL [BALLET RUSSE COMPANE OF 156. ST. JAMES Thea., 43(h St, “Wot Broadway MATINEE TODAY, $1 TO $2.50 700 Seats $1.00 to $1.50 (plus tax) | THE NEW MASSES LECTURE BUREAU — Announces — it didn’t affect us manufacturers here | Slack period due to the seasonal na- | A MUSICAL EVENING Thursday, February 15, at 8:15 P.M, Program Includes: ASHLEY PETTIS, pianist; DOROTHY EDWARDS, con- tralto, SYLVIA SAPIRA, pianist; LILLA KALMAN, violinist; GEOPGE LISITSKY, flutist; and NORMAN CAZDEN, planut. AND A Mass Recital “AMERICA, AMERICA,” Repertory Pisyhouse Associates, WASHINGTON IRVING HIGH SCHOOL IRVING PLACE AND EAST 17th STREET, NEW YORK CITT Admission: *sant On Sale at: SEW Masses, Capitalism Is Dying! Sah set ee mi HEAR THE STRIKING DEBATE ON COMMUNISM ws. FASCISM Retwran CLARENCE HATHAWAY ‘Member, Central Executive Committee, } i ©. F., 0.5. a And wv LAWRENCE DENNIS: Uaader of Fascism in Editor “The Awakener' MECCA TEMPLE 185 W.58th 8t..N. F, 0 Tickets: $1:10, 83 ‘ts, and 56 ts—t1 AUSPICES or cents, ant GUE including tax 22 Tickets on sale at New Masses, 31 E. 37th Street Worker's Book Store—50 E. 13th Street, Cooperative Restanrant—270) Bront Pk. E., Columbia University z i | SUNDAY, March 4th shM.