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w DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, Mi Page 5 \Farrell’s Fourth Book AY, OCTOBER 8, 1924 * ‘CHANGE Prominent Writers Vigorously Protest p: = ' : ; Collects Short Stor United Fruit Co.’s Reign of Terror | CE eae oe THE ‘ | { RB | ri in Last 7 Y 1 | on aC - | Written in Last 7 Years | | LY gams anana W orkers tn Costa R ica ana 6 3° ; CALICO SHOES and Other Sto- which they were written and pre- ( ——- —— By MICHAEL GOLD a — a ries, by James T. Farrell. New Pared for publication. . . r pass ° Py Ft 4 Ng | York: Phe Vanguard Press. $2.50. " i se) Hf H. LEWIS is a Missouri farmhand, who spends half | Editorial Boards of New Masses and Monihly Review Join Authors in Protesting Shooting of Strike see e privge ainpamenpetsctc * his time shovelling manure and the better half writing Leader Cerdas and Threatened Expulsion of Communist Deputy Mora eat w jing the pre-1929 crisis bitter poems against the American kulaks and bankers | Sc cegl é cae = = pba oe) Does EDWIN ROLFE oe = for be ] it hi —l a4 JAMES T. FARRELL has struck | Petty-bourgeois and lumpen-pro} who exploit him. IW, ZORE. Protests demand-| temp FREEMAN has written desire to protest vigorously against (medical attention at the cost of genuine themes and peonle more | t@Ti@n. Such material might suftics We are seeing the rise of a factory-worker literature |,0€ ‘Be ond of the reign of terror |J ‘the following protest, which is|the shooting of Cerdas, a leader |the employers; hygienic conditions | \,,%° Ry othes wfivend, (fOr @ number of books, but “all in thi nt : Sas sean been 68-305 S86 idle that eumeaente (in instigated by the United Fruit Com- |also a call to action to all “pro-| Of the banana strike, the proposed |in camps and plantations; tools to leaning writer. His three ER ES writers face danger in Mmiting n this country, ut there has bet yet xp pany, acting through the puppet |gressive men and women of the | expulsion of Deputy Mora from the|be furnished by the employers; “Young Lonigan ” “Gas- * hemselves to the exploitation of life of the revolutionary farmers, government of President Jimenez, | United States”: “I desire to enter | Congress gf Costa Rica, and the | prices at the company commiss leS | Ginty” and “The Young Ma single phase of life. e \ tumpy” Lewis is the first American poet to pioneer in this field. | against the heroic strike of the |a most vigorous protest against the| bringing of charges of ‘sedition’ |to be posted and not to be higher lof Studs Lonies cea gins to run dry. It young, savage and undisciplined, but through his crude and often | 25,000 banana workers in Costa |reign of terror now being conducted | against him because of his partici-|than those at private stores) in- | the dregs of a we' credit that he has ‘) ss lines one receives an authentic blast of the prairie blood and | Rica, have been flooding the Costa jon behalf of the United Fruit Com-|Pation in the leadership of the | cluding the payment of wages in| adequately treated SERROES, | SARCN 6 ne ee fecen a te; and Lewis is a poet of desperation | ican Embassy in Washington from |pany and American imperialism by | Strike. We protest vigorously against | cash, and not in scrip as before, | pie, i quasi- and potential gangster j ne farmers are desperate; ant s is a lesper: intellectuals and workers in the |the present government of Costa|the terrorism used against the|recognition by the government of | American society, ie hroughout three—and, if “Calico ' and fury, United States, according to a state-|Rica against the workers and|Strikers, including the deportation | the revolutionary trade union Ce eee ty sag Shoes” is included, four—entire’ He lets his anger run away with him, yet it is real. Can one find jment made by the Anti-Imperialist (Peasants of the republic. The |Of Nicaraguan workers. We see in|the banana workers, the Atlantic | ‘Aaraacas eam 4 Sccgeehcagech volumes, His next novel, tt in the most polished art anything better than such reality? I have | League here today. The strikers are |shooting of Cerdas, leader of the this the hand of the United Fruit | Syndicate of Workers, etc. eae etal nian Sipe ee last of the Lonigan trilogy, will also always preferred flesh and blood, with all its imperfections, to the most |SuPPorted by the sympathy strikes |banana strike, is an unpardonable | Company, guiding the actions of its) “This agreement was forced upon deal with his familiar scene. It ia- classic statue of marble. I am stirred by the workers’ correspondence |9f the railroad and dock workers, |crime committed in the interests | "banana empire. employers directly by the mass for this reason that I think “hé ic statue of marble. I am sI y The protests also demand the |Of those who exploit the people of| “We demand the fullest freedom pressure of the thousands of sup- | |should have exercised greater se« that appears in our Communist newspapers infinitely more than by any | dropping of action to expel Deputy | Costa Rica... .” |for negotiation of settlement of the | porters, workers and intellectuals, lectiveriems tn: ia: naw vole at stale, slick literarious essay of a “Kit” Morley or Branch Cabell. Mora, one of the leaders of the} Malcolm Cowley has sent the fol-| Strike by the workers and their |of the heroic struggle of the banana , see 2 Z Bi More technical skill and “art” of a sort went into the construc- | strike, elected to the Congress of |lowing protest: “I have been deep-| lected representatives, and the full-| workers. It was signed by Deputy x mee of “he singe, ee tion of Grant's Tomb than into the rambling shack of a poor tenant |Costa Rica on the Communist |ly disturbed by the accounts I have|@st freedom of press, meeting,|Mora for the banana workers. The Sane! oe are, as I have meee farmer. But who wouldn't rather live and struggle in this shack than | ticket, as well as of charges of |been reading of the strike of| Speech, and organization for them.”|United Fruit Company refused to Segoe ey are ‘stories ch. to repons an arene “sedition” brought against him. |banana workers in Costa Rica, and < - zs | sign this agreement; the strike was | sd Ferrell pete ps hand Lewis. Any young Harvard fascist who writes poetry can tell you en eee ao pub «ty iis conde it ie SeeUrtly tacks upon the workers, the at-| ened the backbones of all the other a kind which can discredit the en- J that. But Mr, Eliot has the fatal weakness of being a corpse, while | Cowley (an editor of the New Re. \charged that Costa Rica is past of | epee: ee aerrtee slab es fascist | employers and of the government, tire volume and which, I feph | Humpy Lewis, darn him, is noisily, furiously, and even irritatingly, | public (author of Blue Juanita and |the ‘banana empire’ of the United gttiee ene as tein ial ie ac-| which now wages a more savage should never have been included. 7 alive. Exile’s Return), Joseph Freeman |Fruit Company, Your government, | oan tly, call pon ai sue |and intense terror against the Farrell, it seems to me, has come } . . . (co-author of Dollar Diplomacy, jin the present strike, seems to be | dividuals and soreniuetion: pone ahndsata ‘ to a dangerous point in his career A One-Sided Duel Voices of October, and author of |¢ting so as to support this charge,| test immediately and vigorously | es oe en ened as a writer. He hes written four siawadises pales halt f th insulting letters | THe Soviet Worker), Michael Gold |>Y favoring an American owned! both to the Minister of Costa Rica, |UD‘ mow, through the organization |books, two of which, the noyeis AVE received recently helt a dozen of the most insulting letters | (author of Jews Without Money and |°OmPany at the expense of its own| Washington, D. Or aed on ene |of the Anti-Communist League, a 7s: | “Young Lonigan” and “The Young- from this prairie poet. T had criticized him mildly for certain of his |120 Million), Granville Hicks (au-|‘itizens. ‘The shooting and arrest Prat Gombany, ©” | Veena aye, Cts tascaabe tetra ots | : rit, |Manhood of Studs Lonigan,” are Javoriie complexes thet: sealed to) ma Papeieee an. ie Way Of iis de~' | hue oe Mme Great Sealine) md~'| ef, Camas Sileider of: the strikers,| “oo. statement sot they Atco oe ee ee ee | bape aiinerton paethie coulsiouiicns velopment. I used a peashooter on the indignant cowman, and he an- |Win Seaver (Editor of Soviet Rus- |!5 an especially flagrant abuse of |, 1; list Li orth ne ene) Bribledin- | afraid. of tne. mass, support given | , | literature. His new volume of short + to \al Toda 4 * | power.” perialist League, exposing the role} the Communist Party; afraid of| mercenaries of all kinds, strike- | ‘ ‘ ‘the 1 swered with an overwhelming barrage of Big Bethas, each loaded to ay Tee Paces i3 of The Com ata G of the United Fruit Company and|the coming elections; afraid of| breakers, 100-percenters and fas- |S! ero nacre es the muzzle with cowflop. Was this fair, Comrade Lewis? om ae a rae a (author of ; |the significance of victory, con-|the growing strength of the work-|cists. In writing these three novele, good stories included in i, joes no an ie Temptation of |(“RANVILLE HICKS, Michael Gold, | ¢ roar ” a cith indicate progress, but merely a H. H. Lewis occupies an important place in our emerging young St. Anthony), Orrick Johns (author Isid rises s »|tinues: “An agreement was settled | ers... .’ | Farrell presented a startling native lcompletion of the catalogut 5 proletarian literature. Thirty years from now he will probably be in | of Asphalt and other volumes ft Gitte doen ae th between the representatives of the| The Anti-Imperialist League asks | counterpart of Gorki's “The Lower | his eee work—a sort of pre nt al] the red anthologies alongside of Joe Hill. The Soviet American poetry), and the Editorial Buatis | Bente or tha New Matos fe cake ee pda Mec, and of | thet all organisations and protests, Depths.” Occasionally, in the midst taking. 7 School children will solemnly discuss his limitations, and point out that |of the New Masses and the Month-|of the Monthly Review have| tory for the workers, smeametconeg | fogs, oy rate pomee of the |of this morass of ignorant youth |""“Herten has until now been oop all pioneers blazing a new path had of necessity to have such flaws. |ly Review. \signed the following protest: “We!higher wages, poi ‘conditiens | Hane roadway, for iar Fe atte i pal acer centrating on but one facet of his Perhaps, on his birthday every year, the cows on all the collective | __ we A e ease baie a ee CBSIRRAA Ohatanies Here. daa variegated experience. Only rarely, farms will be hung with garlands, and the young farmer poets will re- < Boe — here’ has risen from the swamp |i? *7*ing of this side, has he gone member their mud-stained granddaddy Lewis in sojemn and heroic \ \and projected a dream of a new so- | Pevond the role of the good a ; verses. Things stranger than this are happening in the Soviet Union E A MERICA \Giety-e new aife, ‘But dis bas becn oe rea cee, han 9st 1 ‘any | al jfare in Farrell's work. |forces ‘which shape the lives of his Meanwhile, the long white beard of a bard does not yet decorate The publication of “Calico Shoes” | characters. The intrinsic interest the grim face of our poet, and he writes one needlessly insulting let- nN Let ¢- Se — makes necessary a thorough reval-|of his material has resulted in suc- ‘i By JOHN L. SPIVAK ters. I think it might be interesting to bring the discussion I had with uation of Farrell’s work. Such a re- | cessful books where less vital ma- him out into the open. It has certain elements that go beyond any per- (Reprinted through the courtesy of the valuation is doubly needed because, | terial would have meant failure. sonal feud (not my feud, but. his). mer peg despite the rapid forward move-| But today he should Toe As * 3 = 4 ment of revolutionary literature in| think of himself as a novelist who Down With New York! ee | America, Farrell seems to be stand- | achieves thorough objectivity in his as ks . tinued: |ing relatively still ideologically. The | writing, who can see his characters. Cc BEGIN with, the son of the Middle West has the custormy hatred * i | stories in “Calico Shoes,” although | with eyes more penetrating than of New York. In his case, it has even degenerated into a belief that Riel are ee in -any way | some of them are in themselves ex-| those of the characters themselves. the New York revolutionary writers are engaged in a conspiracy to | Sonttic ‘oroncmnae a eed anti: cellent pleces, seem to be merely|Farrell’s novels and stories have | ignore and suppress him. This, of course, is nonsense; but it is an in- try? The Noe as you ae id | by-products of the greater and more | been Called clinical records, To a Gication of how far he is from any Marxian understanding of the re- | like to take it out on the American | painstaking labor which went into | certain saat kcigt Heol oe lationship between the city workers and the farmers. Jews for their boycotts and protests ee pres ot He Be ia anos erally rage Stes Pen ‘from’ The Fascists of Italy, Germany, Austria and other lands rallied the | against the way the Jews are | hich axe amended to each of the this level to the higher and far peasantry to their banners by playing on their prejudice against the | treated in Germany.” hatoeied but by the hasty and, in| more significant sphere of vital city. Today, in the Middle West, we can see our American fascists using ate ae i connection with | |some stories, careless manner in| revolutionary literature. the slogan of Down with New York as a mask for their own schemes. wi ie poi bree eee “ontnfemietesee 10 + SGetfieleeng: Celephen 21972 + Verlag: Celaphor 21630 Every demagogue-governor of a farming state makes this one of his an ‘American Uraarientenes y Seecotes crraitings 11— 12 Whe © PoRfhrttemte Nirnierg Roamer 105 chief planks for winning votes. At the same time he works for the local} at that moment, with the perfect Sui é bar’sers and exploiters against the farmers. timing of a dramatic ‘stage en- d A “ow can a Communist fail to see through this fascist lie? It is | trance, a well dressed man of about uestions an nswers true that Wall Street is the bankers’ capital of America. But it is a]so ty, fae a Aes fee erie W./Schn. | true that New Yorir i ctarian city. Over a million workers here | the entrance door, stepped to the aa : a Ve i 1 ich ti i QUESTION: The American Work- | against the only true line whic are on the relief lists; sterving, in short. The city is torn with strikes | Goorway of the private office where | Dear Sir, ers Party is always saying that the| can establish a workers and farm-. end demonstrations; it is a city of class warfare. brought his feet together with a membership of the Communist | ers government, the line of struggle | “evolutionary farmers like H. H. Lewis should support New York x Your letter of the 24th ult. ¢ ats Party has dropped from the year| for the dictatorship of the pro- | click and raised his hand in the ats of same duly noted.- It is i he f f Soviet power. j in their struggles, for they are fighting the same enemy who | Nazi salute! always healthy to heer critici:., ... >:urs 4s of ouch a nature aa 0 convince 1919 from 60,000 to 26,000. Is this | letariat in the form o! Rae poner i exploits the farmers. But Lewis succumbs to the fascist tactic that | Gulden and Hemple looked at me. ue that you are quite ignorant of the true state of affairs in our comtry true, and if so, what is the reason | He repudiates not only the TX "oul i i Lad for it? Is the American Workers |ist-Leninist line of revolutionary would split up the united front between farmer and worker. This does | Both of them smiled embarrassedly. Party a fascist organization? If | struggle for power, but at the same not mean that he is a fascist, anymore than I am one, of course. But {1 couldn’t help letting out a loud Sur object is to open the eyes of our countrymen to the real character of the not, aie sort of an organization is |time attempts to defeat the day | it does mean that he is as politically backward as thousands of his |J@ugh. My two hosts did not stir, fens and their terrible, bloodth‘raty ritualiem and 4f our revelations are not it?—G. 5. |to day fights of the masses through | neighbors whom he should be leading to revolution. eemmen my hand in an answer- ‘ a Awe to your cotmtrymen, eo Te isa sure sign thet you and your ANSWER: The information spread | the fostering of illusions regarding | it is unforgivable that a leader should be trailing at the rear of 1 “sei Hitler!” I said dryly. nua lo not yet realise what a danger the Jewish race is to human civili- ae yar Workers Party | the Teformists in the A. = os the jee But that Hug Gs ants ale ie this percnlas ques- | “He's from The New Masses,” — about the drop in the Communist nies Dae beceindis ion of city versus country. ere woul e Russian Revolution have | Gulden explained quickly. Re d seck Party membership is not only : + Party, thus ended if Lenin in Moscow had not been able to overcome this same A flush spread over the new- or eg MLL eae eerie bso tarps) and whether it suits you wholly false, but is spread in a are not tie lgeeee doubt that. White Guard propaganda among the peasants? Stop this slander, |comer’s face. Without a word he REG For poner Te Is wy Tine Sete rish erimers deliberate attempt to stop the grow- | his main purpose is to side-track- Comrade Lewis; New York may not be America, but neither is Wall | turned and walked out as though Reerealgas oateceatey ta See ST subition to cleanse ing influence of the Communist | tne rapidly growing militancy. of Street New York x fleeing from some pestilence. I bo Pear thet rote bate fb every chyiiizer nation 0 she See wish pest. We have Party and the increasing move- | tne american working class into e 2 looked at Gulden and started to 7 8 ce ie quarter.- | ment of American workers into its ‘ ‘lk ‘ : : harmless channels. His strikes laugh again. ranks. 4 be Manure in Literature gs iy ” 1 said, still chuckling, T extend you a hearty invitation to come over to Germeny, where a warm welcome ‘Phe Amprcan, Workers Party de-|Ciscer ne cha roles recon rf ne . , . an 4 at tx * _,The American Wo: y played in the Toledo strike where 'HE esthetic fault Lewis has is almost rious. It is - | “isn’t Col. Edwin Emerson, the Nazi jays awaits you an we the sincere desire of y uy as sel shared, curi- ¥ ta ¢ explaining you the real mo- liberately uses the 1919 figures for| he helped to send the workers back ously enough, by many bourgeois writers who swing over to the agent in this country who first or- ve 0: y action.- Awaiting the pleasure of making your pergonal acouaintence the entire membership of the mass | without any gains for them. revolutionary cause. eal anti-semitism here on a a assuring you of a safe conducts wherever you may go in Germany, I an, dear organizations around the Commu- | Today, the Musteites are dickering They are sick of the bourgeois world; its false gentility, its cul- me eee LT GL ALB As ne ae aelilies eset dat aie |with the counter-revolutionary Trot- ture, its futility. They want to find strength and purpose, and of course, | Gulden hesitated a moment and 2 skyites, whose anti-Soviet hatred this is to be found today only in the revolutionary working class. then nodded. Respectfully yours fares witha Party fe bases and interventionist Policies make: What makes the revolutionary working class superior to the capi- “And you have a member by the am today and gets’ its wholly false re- | lessitatra vanguard of the countere~ talist class is ntellect. The workers have a superior philosophy of life. | hame of Sidney Brooks, who is with Sa Nidiic sult. The facts are that the Party |” = They understand the meaning of these wars, depressions and famines. | the Republican Senatorial and Con- ~\ membership today is about 24,000 = The capitalists grope in a fog, understanding nothing, and hoping to wears aa MIG ie Ohne £6) [compared with less than 10,000 in| e muddle through, They have lost every ethical and moral value, they qomnea,”" hh Interrupted rauikty: . ne Edfung der Judenfrage teine €cléfung des Deutihen Voites! iain 3 ne ee ae a eatlon TUNING IN are decadent. But the workers have a new proud confidence in life, “and you know that as member atthe Se eee TwitTEhe ‘60, 000 5 and know they will make a new world. This is what makes a Com- |of this organization he made mys- rsa a; lin. these organizations in 1919 we * ur Ntoh- 4 The letter which accompanied each copy of the magazine “Der Stuormer,” thou-and: f which paves i munist ditch-digger superior in intellect and character to any fascist | terious trips to 17 Battery Place, » “houcands of witich were jfnd that the present membership college professor. where the German Consul General) smuggled in on German ships and secretly disseminated throughout the country by Hitler agents and {is about 500,000. More, the Party| 7: SS ber an Maha g Also, the fact that workers must live in mud, manure and filth, | a8 his offices?” Americans working secretly under their direction. |today has moved a good way to-| WJZ—Amos ’n' Andy—Sketch t doesn’t mean that this is the basic fact about them. H. H. Lewis likes | ,,°T don’t know anything about |wards becoming a Bolshevik Party, WABO—Myrt_ and Marge—Sketck ‘as fi vv istry. = n—Sketcl to shock the bourgeois ladies by using all the unprintable words, and |‘! mae eno ia ar yor bic Bed i GE acct L ae el ee aes foe ee } ) rubbing their delicate noses in the manure he knows too well. But | pwr. GULDEN was on the defen- pepe iectaerpet ger a hey cae wide WJZ—Mildren Bailey, Contraltop 4 D. H. Lawrence and dozens of other bourgeois writ 01 organizing an espionage system, do, “I don’t know!” he exclaimed ir-) Gulden looked worried. He did | i i aa ; Are eluent obec F ol urge ers have done the sive, his face a little paler than | yoy?” itably. ‘ ks a id} q specialist in his own kind of | WABC—Just Plain Bill—Sketch © | same. You cannot defeat the bourgeoisie as a class by shocking them. jits normal hue. Mr. Hemple had “y tae y: ee ag, a peo vou: $0.) nob: agswer. |‘left” social-fascism. Muste’s work | 7:30-WEAF—Minstrel Show a That is one of the old romantic and dilettante ideas. lost his superior smfle and leaned| 51,055, it the Department of | ask me all pepeiedag is ee “Isn't it rather strange taat this |in the labor movement is to pretend} WOR—Mystery Sketch “ As for the workers, they know the manure too well, and don’t | forward, studying me with a puzzled |‘ detested’ in finain th ea hundred percent ‘patriotic’ organi-|to be a critic of the A. F. of L. WABC—Paul Keast, Baritone; Orch. need to be constantly reminded of it. They are trying to climb out of | it: That's fine—but you don’t really | Preece in um ars oe from tor, {ation is so close with German spies | bureaucracy the better to defend| 1:48-WEAF—Frank Buck's Adventures ~ the manure, They want more than photosraphy. ‘They want, in their “And you knew that this Brooks know anything about organizing an | 7 y you are ge faces age for-| and secret service men in this éoun- | this bureaucracy against the resent- | Oe ee ce baradia ee : EY hts 3 photography. v s is really the son of Col. Emerson,|€SPionage system, do you? What ite Sea to carry on anti-/try in the dissemination of anti-| ment of the workers. He also spe- | Wieo ceca Gnitee, Osman Uterature, not only the manure that is undoubtedly present, but also |and this Brooks brought Pelley of |I'm driving at is that you got somite propaganda in this coun-| semitic propaganda?” cialises in helping the capitalists | g:09.;WEaF—Himber Orchestra ae the bright flame of the future Soviet world that will blossom -in this the Silver Shirts to you to merge—” | SOmeone to direct this spy system | ‘*¥! “we will te ith sane | BY trying to stop the growth of} WOR—Lone Ranger—Sketch soil. They want the things expressed that they feel in their hearts, the | “We never merged with the Silver |for you didn’t you?” x never got a nickel fram the) wn: wilt vhelp to drive out “ane | (ie Communist Party on the ground| —Ws2_—Jan Garber Supper ut beauty, the hope, the courage and sacrifice that goes into the birth of |Shirts!” Gulden exclaimed. “I can| “I did not!” Germans|- 1 -wish 1 Had|* che -¢x-| Tier nestl” he said vigoroual, | sat the Communists are not. suf-| 4.9 Wits ais OF onl Conmentatll Communism. Prove it to you! I’m even willing to) “Didn’t Emerson send a man|‘laimed. Gulden rose and began to | "°WiS Pest!” he said vigorously. iciently “American.” | 8:30-WEAF—Symphony Orchestra; Gladys . . . let you see our corre: lence |named Fritz Duquesne to you?” pace nee ee ves room. It} “Then you are cooperating wii In this way, he seeks to separate Fel eg ae : ae with them. There is no such letter) Gulden did not answer. Was quite evident that the secrecy| the Nazis?” ne American an peaks, B i Contributions received to the credit of “Change the World” in or document—” . “Did you ever huet Dububice, the iN which the society had veiled its “T didn’t say thatl” he international revolutionary Won dana rai Bareld Aches its Socialist competiton with Harry Gannes and the Medical Advisory “The letter regarding that is not| German war time ” movements was not so secret. | r vement, and fosters the chauvin- Hoffman, Candidate for Governor, spy? « tir | Board in the Daily Worker $60,000 drive, in your file,” I assured him. “I have| “Yes he came up here one day.”| “How long did you spend with| “YoU have them distributir ism that plays right into the hanas | esa wr Gibby Needleman ....... $10.00 Le “what for?” Duquesne?” |anti-semitic propaganda smugglc of the reactionaries. ka Wis bane eee So Previously Received ..... 45.68 len’s washed-out eyes seemed! “Oh, I don't know. He just! “Oh, maybe ten or fifteen off Ge: ips, haven’ » |the growth of Fascism. In his ; Concert Orchestra ~=-~- TOTAL TO DATE. $55.68 to water. A haggard look appeared| wanted to look me over, I eee minutes.” “ | apterciak Pees Dares: Vout program, he speaks “radical” phrases) 8 45-wiz—Prom Schooner Seth Parker in them. Hemple sighed audibly.| “ should he want to look you! “Actually you were with him for about “revolution” and the “over-| , |, ,O% Panama; Sea Shanteys 1” ‘You don’t know anything about! over?” two hours, weren’t you!” (To Be Continued) throw of capitalism”, but he fights) °°" Sivver, Tenor ‘ | FASCISM: AND = a, . A es | WABC—Rosa Ponselle, Soprano; ; ’ A Little Lefty CAPITALIST COMICS GET A SHOCK! e by del... Remeanns, orca Novis, Tenor; Frances Langfora, SOCIAL RE \ OLUTION WHO ARE You, AND waar POP Se ee ties ane " WOR—Lum’ and Abner- eh | | DOES “hig MEAN? WJZ—Pul-eeze! My Operation— + i : Sketch | | By R. PALME DUTT ; WABC-Oluskin Orch.; Block ae f | Sully, Comedians; Gertrude Niesen, | “Every reader of the Daily Worker must read this book to un- sb WOR ete Be ae wae derstand the most important political tasks before the whole work- MY NAME 1S ae rir Orchestra; Lullaby », ; Male Quartet § “tnmapriy hs ie bok oR sk pened “Incomparably the on ism as yet been roadcasting ' ”, Affairs—Harold L. Ickes, Secretary” written."JOHN STRACHEY NOW ON I'LL BE of Interior, at "Fourth National. : Convention’ of National Advisory 296 pp., $1.75 WHE pies Rl Counell on Radio in Bdue., Oneaga: i ‘ WORKER | WABO—Wayne King Orchestra f Available in Workers Bookshops or direct from = 10:15-WOR—Current Events—H. E. Read... 10:90-WEAP_Premiere of Bt, Louls. 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