The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 13, 1934, Page 7

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| CHANGE _——THE — WORLD! By MICHAEL GOLD (Continued from yesterday's column) OR was this lawyer Axtell averse to telling a little lie if that would help him to land a good negligence case. On Oct. 5, 1926, a lifeboat holding three seamen dropped at one end from the Steamship “Hybert” resulting in their death. In attempting to get these cases he wrote to the relatives of one of the dead seamen telling them he was representing the other two men’s relativés, when in fact he was not. With respect to this, the Court in its opinion, said “In all of these efforts to secure a retainer in the McFarland case, there was the suggestion that respondent (Axtell) had already been retained to represent the claim- ants’ in the two companion cases, which, while it might be helpful in persuading cooperation, was contrary to fact. Likewise, in seeking retainers from the Cook and Barford claimants there was the same untruthful. suggestion.” If it became necessary to manufacture a fictitious organization to which. Axtell could act as counsel, he did not hesitate to create it. Thus, for example, Axtell,*in soliciting a death case from a poor widow named Knuth signed a letter of solicitation, “S. P. Axtell, attorney for Organized Maritime Labor Organizations in the United States.” In fact no such organization ever existed. * What Sailors’ Union? LTHOUGH soliciting retainers like advertising is against the Code of Ethics, Axtell used to send many letters asking that injured seamen or their relatives hire nim. The following is a typical ex- ample of the ambulance chasing methods of Axtell: “Dear Madam: Your boy Thomas C, See, died in the Methodist Episcopal Hospital in Brooklyn on April 21. He signed articles as deck boy at $25 per month on March 7, The members of the Sailors’ Union | for whom I am attorney have reported to me certain facts that make it seem to be my duty to let you know that you had a good and meri- torious cause of action. If you will sign the enclosed retainer agree- ment I will take the case up with the understanding that you will re- ceive 60 per cent of the amount recovered from the claim free of all lawyers fees and expenses. It will not cost you anything to go ahead.” All Axtell wanted, to perform his duty to the dead seaman’s mother, was a mere 40 per cent of the recovery. Axtell was not averse to trying to get money out of seamen who never hired him, or of short-changing those who had. In the case of an engineer, McGinnis, Axtell collected $608.60 belonging to McGin- nis and atiempted to hold out $197.60 as a fee, although McGinnis | never asked him to represent him. In another case, Axtell collected $411.25 awarded to a seaman named Pagel and turned over $175, keep- ing the rest. It was only after the Bar Association began to investi- gate Axtell that he turned over the remainder. * . The Great Patriot XTELL, in his own trick way, is a believer in mass pressure. When Axtell was being investigated by Judge Wasservogel for ambulance chasing, the judge received letters of protest from the Marine Fire- men’s, Oilers” and Watertenders’ Union, the Eastern and Gulf Sail- ors’ Association, Inc., and the Associated Marine Workers, objecting to the investigation of Axtell in relation to these unions. Subsequently, it turned out that Axtell was respons‘ble for the sending of these let- ters. Axtell’s excuse in his own words was as follows: “I had in mind this I.W.W. communist business and the fact that probably everything that was said up there or produced would be ped- dled out by them to the union men on South St. and might be dam- aging, because my books did show that I had loaned money to Carl- son (union agent) and that I had paid various sums to various union agents and delegates throughout the United States; and I thought. taat would be misinterpreted and misunderstood, just as my honorable prosecutor has done.” . * . Disbarred! re is what the august body of judges of the Appellate Division had to say about the conduct of the valiant son of the American Revo- lution, Silas B, Axtell: “But his solicitation of business was brazen in its effrontery and his pfofessional ability was nauseating. Conceded that he represented & class of migratory litigants with whom he had to act quickly to get as Clients at all, that does not excuse the methods he adopted to at- tract them to his office. Conceding that he was really zealous to help a class of poor and fri¢ndless seafarers to obtain redress for injuries done them, that does not palliate his breach of professional ethics in following them up and soliciting their claims with a tenacity worthy of a better cause, but always accompanied by a care to see that re- tainers were signed in his (Axtell’s) favor. ... The respondent (Ax tell) should be disbarred.” He is a Valiant Anti-Communist ND it is this cheap shyster and legal racketeer who is now leading his former ambulance chasing union officials in an attempt to be- tray the militant strike of the marine workers by arbitrating with the shipowners. This is the same Axtell who returned from a visit to the Soviet Union in 1927 with a labor delegation and made a minority report of one, as 2 Son of the American Revolution, to the 37th Con- tinental Congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution, de- scribing the “horrible” working conditions of the Soviet worker and seaman. A comparison of working conditions for seamen aboard the Soviet steamer “Kim” or any other Soviet boat and the Americari “Morro Cactle” fings the lie into the teeth of this shyster. The American sea- men of the rank and file must run Axtell and his whole gang of run- ners out of the International Seamen’s Union with dispatch, or they will find themselves betrayed by this dangerous and proven shyster. | NEW PAMPHLETS The Great San Francisco Gen- eral Strike, by William F. Dunne, 10 cents. | Fighting Fascism in the Fac- _-tories—How the German Young Communist League Works in the Factories to Over hrow the “Fascist Dictatorship. 5 cents. | “You Cannot Kill the Working | Second, by Nemo. 10 cents. Fifteen Years of the Communist International—An outline his- tory drawn up by the Agit- Prop of the Comintern. 5 cents. Who Are the Young Pioneers? by Martha Campion, with pic- tures by Mary Morrow. 3 cents. We Are for the United Front, by V. Chemadanov, Secretary of Class,” by Angelo Herndon. the Young Communis: Inter- Foreword by John L. Spivak. SD . Pras 5 cents, Youth and the World War, by T. Mr. President, Free the Scotts- Motyleva. 5 cents. bero Boys!—Various materials | * * * on the Scottsboro Case includ- ing the sta ement of the In- ternational Labor Defense sent President Roosevelt. Preface by Theodore Dreiser. 5 cents. From the First World War to the All the pamphlets listed above can be secured at local Workers Bookshops or by writing to Workers Library Publishers, P. oO. gor 148 Sta. D, New York, N. : STALIN ON HISTORY OF BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION The lcader of the Communist Party discusses here, both in articles written at the time and in the ten years later, the main points of the revolution of 1917. The book is an ap- praisa! of the permanent results of the revo- lution and the tactics necessary to the suc- cessful road to socialism THE OCTOBER REVOLUTION By JOSEPH STALIN INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS, 381 FOURTH AVENUE , NEW YORK, N. Y. Write for Catalogue DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1934 Plotting Sidney Brooks Writes a Letter to The New Masses By JOHN L. SPIVAK Big IGHT your father have sug- gested your joining the order?” “I prefer not to answer supposi- tions.” “Did your father suggest it?” “I don’t remember.” | “When you joined, did you know | it was an organization to spy on Communists and Jews and to spread anti-Semitic propaganda?” “It was represented to me as a patriotic organization.” “Then why was it necessary to take your fingerprints?” “I don’t know.” “You say in your letter that you joined for purposes of information. What do you mean by that?” “That's a broad term. I leave that for anybody's definition.” “The National Civic Federation, too, is a patriotic organization. Why didn’t you join that instead of the Order of '76?” ¢ Brooks’ hand went through his hair. thinner line. | “I can’t tell,” he said finally after | a long pause, “You learn alot from the sen- contact with. Did your father ever ask you for any information?” “We talked about general sub- | jects. Of course, he asked me ques- tions, but they were general sub- ‘ jects—the sort that anyone would discuss.” “Do you know that the Order of 76 is engaged in anti-Semitic work and espionage?” “I don’t know what the organ- ization is doing.” | “As a member, | terested?” “No.” “Then why don’t you resign?” Brooks looked blankly at me for a | moment and at the man still read- ing the same story on the same | page of the newspaper. Finally a sheepish grin spread over Brooks’ face. “I don't know.” “Have any senators or congress- aren’t you in- | Masses articles?” His lips closed into an even | | ators and congressmen you come in | é “r. Farry ¥. | Silver Lest Asheville, mW. ¢, Dear Wr. Steters er » Ad quantity lote or fifteen cents apiece, was /aP 435 yo. Hichiran Ave,, R.2212 Evidence that this espionage orzanization to which wealthy Jews | contributed, is engaged in distributing the “Protocols of Zion” and other anti-Semitic propaganda. | Brooks rose from his chair. , to resign from the Order of '76?” “That's a personal matter. | “No,” Brooks exclaimed bitterly. would rather not answer it. All I/ He rose from his chair. can say is that I never talked to| “I am very busy. the Order of "76. And I never told|I had to say in the letter. I will my friends about it.” not say anything else.” “Why not? Because it was a secret |, -4S Waldman and I walked to the bonase society?” . | broad stairway I looked back. Brooks was still standing there 3 where we had left him, his hand OOKS again looked helplessly! clutching the arm of a chair. The at the man with the newspaper.| agent of the Order of '76 seemed | “I don’t think so,” he said fi-| badly scared. | nally. | oa - | “Now that you know what the or-| gf Homing is the letter from std- | NM segars ney Brooks): | ganization is for, and you state in| - . your letter to The New Masses that | To The New Masses: | you do not believe in anti-Semitism| It may not be necessary BE | * . but I |men talkéd to you about The New/or the interference in this country | hope you will allow me to make | by foreign powers, do you intend! some comments on thé article in| ers to Me ‘THE COMMUNIST, theoretical or- gan of the Communist Party, U. S. A., October issne, 20 cents. cae rae Reviewed by MOISSAYE J. OLGIN “WE must note that the radicali- zation of the workers, farmers, jand middle classes is coming to a high stage, finding newer, broader, |more: political modes of expression.” |says Comrade Earl Browder in. his report to the meeting of the Cen- tral Committee of the Communist year. Strike movements are rising around small economic issues; they broaden; they grow into political class battles; masses hitherto un- difterentiated are drawn, irresist- ibly, into the workers’ movement. The highest expressions of this movement so far have beer. the gen- eral strike and the solidarity strike that sweep industrial localities and even whole industries. Under such conditions the workers respond favorably to the call for a united front against the capitalist offen- sive, against fascism, and war. On the other hand, the captalists and their government resort more and more sharply and rapidly, to meas- ures of fascist oppression. This is, in brief, the stage of development of the mass movement at the end of the fifth year of the crisis that is dealt with in the “Communist” for October. ‘The sit- uation is fraught with broader and sharper movements rising to great- er heights. The Communist Party will inevitably be in the forefront of the movements. It will lead them. It will give them unity of purpose and unity of aim. aie iaer HIS is why we recommend to every worker, Communist or non-Communist, the Ociober issue of the “Communist,” monthly organ of the Communist Party. We challenge any worker to fina a single non-Communist piece of literature that would give in a con- cise and clear language a presenta- ition of the present economic sit- uation, of the meaning of the work- ers’ struggles and of the ways to improve those struggles, such as is contained in Comrade Browder's report which forms the leading article of this. issue. This report 2 Party held September 5-6 of <his| The October ‘Communist’ Vibrant With Vital Worki Supplies Theory and Facts Necessary for a More Intense Mobilization of the Revolutionary Work- | truggle on Its Present High Stage of Developmnt et the Class S | alone, called, “The Struggle for the; Although this resolution, passed United Front,” would be sufficient | at a time when the general textile for any intelligent worker to under- | strike was only beginning, does not stand his own place and his tasks |sive an analysis of the textile strike, in the labor movement at the/this latter can be much better present time. Clearly, soberly, with | understood after a study of the an ones which is born out resolution. of a profound understanding of the | rer ae 4 |social forces in American history ean Lae tg erat eg ea ieee j today, and with a hidden passion | General strike,” is a vivid and which makes every statement /esmest account of a man who, | charged with power, the report | himself, as District Organizer of the jleads you through the various |communist Party in California, was | Phases of the American class front. |. jeader and an outstanding figure The crisis of tiie New Deal; the in all the phases of the struggles. growth of capitalist profits accom-| If the general strike in San Fran- panied by a further lowering of the |cisco was the highest point of the living standards of the masses; the | revolutionary struggles of the increase in unemployment, the out- | American workers so far, then, this look for the winter when, accord-| article gives the history of this I told you when | any senator or congressman about | you first came here that I said all| exactly | ing to official statements, there will be no less than 22,000,000 people on the relief rolls), the reaction of the workers as expressed in the huge strike wave, the lessons of the recent strikes with a special emphasis on the Marine Workers’ strike on the Pacific Coast and the four-day general strike in San Francisco, the role of the Commu- nist Party in the strike movements, its achievements and its mistakes, the struggles of the Communist Party for a United Front, the ten- dencies towards the United Front among the lower ranks of the So- cialist Party “and among the local unions—all this, we repeat, is of immense importance not only to every Communist, but to every | worker. REE more articles in this issue deal with the strike movement— and all of them are full of material which will be stimulating to work- ers. The resolution on the “Lessons of Recent Strike Struggles in the U. 8. A.” adopted at the Central Committee meeting, is really more than a resolution. It is the judg- ment of the Party on the central problem of the life of the American working class. It is a carefui, realistic analysis of the strike movements of last summer with a special view of the general strike in San Francisco and it is a direc- tive for the workers regarding the line to be followed and the tactics to be applied lead it to victories. struggle. It gives more. It points the way for further struggles. The article by Comrade M. Childs, “Permanent Counter Rey- olution,” throws a flood of light on jthe activities of those elements |that call themselves Communists |only to fight the Communist moye- |ment and to hamper the growth of the class struggle. The article ex- poses the role of Trotzkyites in the | Minneapclis strikes, and it should |be read by every one wishing to junderstand what Trotzkyism is in | Practice. | Comrade J. Peters’ articles on “Problems of Party Growth” deals | with the reasons for the fluctuation lof the membership and shows ways lof reforming the inner life of the Party units in such a manner as will decrease that fluctuation by activizing every member and mak- ing the life of the unit more at- tractive. . | pw addition to these articles on current strike struggles this issue of the “Communist” contains the first part of an extended review by Comraces Alex Bittelman and V. J. Jerome of a book by Lewis Corey, | \“The Decline of American Cap- litalism,” and is entitled: “Leninism |Is the Only Marxism of the Im- | perialist Era.” | This book by Corey is in itself a |pheromenon which marks the de- ‘cay of American capitalism. There |Most American intellectuals snob- Little Lefty WwaaT'S "LO UNCLE JoKN— MA WON'T LET ME] the American Pogroms Agent of ‘Order of °76’ | Claims Ignorance | of Activities | your issue of October 2, 1934, ting the American Pogroi ; The Organization of Anti-Semitism | Here,” by John L. Spivak. The first statement to which I would like to refer is that “On March 4, 1934, he (Sidney Brooks) drove to the Hotel Edison and went directly to Room 830 where a “William D. Goodales of Los Angeles,” as he registered, was awaiting him. Mr. ‘Goodales’ was William Dudley Pelley, head of the Silver Shirts, who had come to New York secretly to confer with Breoks and Gulden! After this conference the two went to Guilden’s office where they had a confidential talk that lasted over an hour, during which an agree- ment was made to carry on their anti-Semitic propaganda more ef- fectively.” 1934, I was engaged in my regular ;Work in my office in the Union | Trust Building, Washington, D. C. I was also so engaged from Feb- ruary 24 to March 8 inclusive. I jattach affidavits to this effect. I haye never heard the name of William D. Goodales and to my ; knowledge have never met or cor- responded in any way whatever with William Dudley Pelley. I am, how- ever, familiar with the writings of Mr. Pelley. I read his magazine just as I read The New York Times. The New Republic, The Commercial {and Financial Chronicle, The Na- | tion, Today, and other publications of information or opinion. I never met Mr. Gulden at the | Hotel Edison and never went to | his office in the company of anyone. I have met him at other places and other dates, as stated later. Fellows the statement that “A certain Paul A. Toal wrote a let- ter on March 6, 1934,” after the alleged conference. I have never met any man by that name and had never seen or heard of any -such letter until I read it in your magazine, (To Be Continued) (Reprinted through the courtesy of the New Masses) ng Class Issues !bishly declared that Marx, “an cold iGerman scholar with whiskers” who |died fifty years ago, could say nothing pertinent about “our” United States. The crisis of five years’ duration, the collapse of all capitalist remedies against the ‘“de- pression,” the marvelous growth of the Soviet Union and the increasing influence of the Communist Party among the American workers who are coming forward to the class- battle front in ever greater and |more determined numbers, com- |pelled the more thinking elements jamong the bourgeois intellectuals | to take notice of Marxism- Leninism. | Comrades Bittelman and Jerome have made a thorough analysis of |the book, and carefully point out its fundamental errors. These errors may be classed under the following heads: 1) Mr. Corey fails to under- stand the economics of imperialism, ie, he fails to grasp the very es- sence of the Leninist analysis of the which, among other things, ces it en- tirely impossible for to develop a theory of revolution; |}2) Mr. Corey dces not realize the jacceleration of the tempo of unequal development of capitalism in the various countries in the | present epoch; 3) Mr. Corey fails to |grasp the Leninist theory of the | |inevitability of revolution; 4) Mr. Corey does not understand the Marxist-Leninist theory regarding |the increasing misery of the work- ing class. Comrades Bittelman and Jerome deal with Mr. Corey's work not only | ‘by pointing out the author's errors, but also constructively developing | jevery point in the discussion with | la positive statement of the Marxist- Leninist position on the point at | issue. Thus the article becomes | much more than a review. It is a | |scientific treatise in some of the} |major questions of Marxism- | Leninism. | | Comrades Bittelman and Jerome | jhave rendered by this piece of work a service to the popularization of | |proletarian theory and __ therefore | to the proletariat and the revolu- | | tionary movement of the United | States, and we earnestly recom- | to develop and was a time when Marxism-Leninism | mend to everybody interested in | strengthen the strike movement and was not very popular in America. |Marxism-Leni: m a study of this; article in the “Communist.” I wish to state that on March 4,| Page LABORATORY and S H O P David Ramsey THE STRUCTURE OF . THE CHROMOSOME Dr. Calvin B. Bridges of the California Institute of Technology has at last revealed the details of the structure of the chromosome. Like the atom, the chromosome was thought to be composed o: tinct functional units, but this theoretical hunch has only been proven correct by the recent work of Dr. Bridges. To see the units within the chromosome, Dr. Bridges had to get around the very stuff from which the chromosome takes name. The term is derived from the Greek for the color body. It was given to the small units within the nucleus of the cell when biologists observed that these structures came darker than the resi of the protoplasm upon the application of certain stains which brought out the details of the nucleus. At first it was assumed that the chromosome consisted of a uniform substance called chromatin. But Dr. Bridges went to work following up certain experiments by Professor Painter of the University of Texas, and rev d the usual procedure. Instead of s'aining the chromatin he developed a solution which got it out of the way altogether. Thus he was able to see what was inside the chromosome. It turned out that the chromation was not the impor- tant part of the chromosome; it wa only the outside wrapping. Once Dr. Bridges got a view of the inside of the chromosome he obtained a correlation of the struc- tural. units. with the known func- tions of the cell. He then mapped out the location of the genes, . the atomic unis of heredity, in the chromosome. Previously the loca- tions of the gene: d been spotied on the outside of. the chromosome package. Now that .the internal contents were. visible, strung to- gether like beads on a thread, he saw that each gene sponded to some special |of a bead. It. was always in same relative position and |always the same in all the chro- |mosomes that were examined. | It also appeared that the units of the transparént chromosomes | were sub-divisible. Each bead was | composed of a bundle of tiny rods. These sub-units were so small that | they may turn out to, be single | molecules or groups of molecules acting together. Whether these tiny units are the genes themselves or only the “genophores” (bearers of genes) is not very important. What is important is that they are now visible, and will therefore furnish |a new key to the secrets of life. The milestones in the develop- ment of modern genetics are Men- del’s. disci that genetic units play a large role in the inheritance of characters; Otto Butschli’s dem- onstration of the existence of chromosomes; T. H. Morgan's theory of the gene, and now Painter's and Bridges’ division of the chromosome int> its structural subd+units and their correlation with the position of the genes. was a ACCIDENTS AND THE NEW DEAL The U. S. Bureau of Mines re- ports that coal mine fatalities in- creased both in number and in rate during the first eight months of 1934 as compared with the cor- responding months in 1933. From January through August, 1934, 748 men were killed in the coal mines of the Uni'ed States, This is a total of 2.7 deaths per million tons In the first eight months the number of deaths wes 637, and the death rate was 2.6 per million tons of coal. The cause of this increase in the number of deaths is due in’ large part to the sabotage of saféty ree arch by the Roosevelt regime. The Deal cut down the number of receiving safety courses and the research program of The administration has the big coal operators safety regulations. Conditions are so bad in the mines that Coal Age, the journal of the operaters, admits that precautions are not taken to prevent accidents. It says that “one notes some mines which have a coal dust problem still not all or improperly rock-dusted; one sees gassy mines operated without Proper control of the volume and methane content of the mine air; one sees evidence of leakage and recirculation of the air current; and one cannot but feel that certajn contingencies have not always been adequately safeguarded.” must be remembered that back in 1920 the Bureau of Mines stated that “it is improbable that there are half a dozen adequately rock- dusted mings in the Uni'ed States." Hundreds of miners’ lives are thus being sacrificed to the greed of the mine owners and the curtailment of government efforts to protect miners. helped sabotage all SYNTHETIC VITAMIN CON- QUERS DISEASE Ascorbic acid, the synthetic yita- min C, has produced some striking cures in its first actual use_qn pa- The Bri Association ‘for the Advancement of Science y formed by Professor Szent-Gyor:vi of Hungary that the hereditary dis- ease of bleeding, known as hemd4- ti philia. and several other dis: 5 were seemingly cured by the arti- ficial form of the vitamin The cures were all the. more striking since these diseases had not been connected wiih lack of yita- min. They s that mankind is suffering more gravel from a lack vitamin C of has hitherto been supposed Disfiguring colorations of th skin brought on illness were also made to vanish by using ascorbic cid. The vitamin was employed ‘to bleach out patients suffering from Addison's disease which produced a severe yellow color. The exploration of vitamin C is one of the triumps of ‘¢urréerit s¢i- ence. Within a pertod of two years the vitamin has been identified, its chemical composition determined, and its synthetic form developed in the laboratory. Today the pure ascorbic acid is available for mapy uses in industry and medicine. OXYGEN MADE RADIOACTIVE Oxygen is the latest element to be made .radioactive by atemic bom- bardment. Drs. Stanley and Edwin McMillan of the Univer sity of California d the corés of the newly discov heavyweight hydrogen to change oxygtn from its inary form to a active kind which breaks up spon- taneously. About one atom of oxy- gen was chang2d for every million heavy-hydrogen bullets that were used. These synthetic radio-active clements open up the possibility of cheaper radio-active treatment for cancer, TUNING I 7:00-WEAF—Religion in the News—Sten- ley High WOR—Sports Resume—Ford Frick WJZ—Flying—Captain Al Williams WABC—Dramatic Sketch, With Ar- thur Allen and Parker Fennelly 7:15-WEAF_—Variety Musicale WOR—Maverick Jim—Sketch WJZ—Dorsey Orchestra Songs 7:30-WEAF—Jack Smith, Songs 1:48-WEAF—Floyd Gibbons, Commentator R—To Be Announced ‘WIZ—Piekena Sisters, Songs WABC—The Government's Program to Fight Lawlessn 8 Cummings, U. y 8:00-WEAF—Concert Orchestra: Genera! Sigmud Tenor; Helen Marsha! International Sing tet; Girls Trio; William Lon Philps, Narrator; Richard Bonelli, Baritone WOR—Studio Program WJZ—Three Landscape Painters and a Solitary; Inness, Martin, Weyant and Ryder ry Revue; Concert Orchestra; Martin, Baritone; Sue Read, Songs; Almee Deloré, Soprano; Willy Robyn; Tenor; Vicki Chase, Male Quartet; Mixed Soprano; Contributions received to the credit of Del in his Socialist competition with Mike Gold, Harry Gannes, the Medic: Advisory Board, Helen Luke, Jaccb Burck and David Rameey, in the Daily Worker drive for $60,000. Quota—sso0. Total to date ... . $1.00 Uncle John to the Rescue! —\'M AFRAID TO ASK HER AGAIN ' CRUSE “HE DOG JUST -fooK A Bie OUT OF OUR LANDLORO — SAY, YOUNG FELLER— YOUR HEART'S IN THE RigkT PLACE — WE'LL STICK BY you! | Bob Crosby. N Chorus 8:30-WJZ—Gracie Hayes 8:30-WOR—Organ Recital WJZ—Olsen Orchestra 8:45-WABC—Fats Wallér, Songs 9:00-WEAF—Rose Mampton, Contralto; Scrappy Lambert and_ Billy Hille pet, Songs; Shifkret Orchestra Songs WOR—Orchestra Concert, Augusto Brandt, Conducto WJZ—Radio Par iM John B. Kennedy: Biack Paul Whiteman; Rambéna, Songs; Pet Healy, Songe; John Hauser, Barfe tone; King's Men Quartet WABC—Grete Stueckgcld, Sopranof Kostelanetz Orchestra 9:30-WEAP—The Gibson Family Mu> sical Comedy, with Conrad Thibault, Lois Bennett, Soprerios Jack and ‘Loretta Cleméné, Songs; Orchestra, and ‘Others n String Trio z WJZ—Variety Musicale WABC—Himber Orchestra, 10:00-WOR—John Kelvin, Tenor WABC—Benjamin Franklin—Sketch” 10:15-WOR—Show Bort Boys, Songs 10:30-WEAF—Mercado Mexican Qrchestts) 10:30-WEAF—Hollywood on the’ Air WOR—Richardson Orchestra WJZ—Danny Malone, Tenor WABC—Dance Orchestra 10:45-WJZ—Kemp Orchestra 11:00-WEAF—Lombardo Orchestra WOR—Barnet Orchestra Basi WJZ—Robinson Orchestra | WABC—Syivia Froos, 11:15-WABC—Nelson Orch: WOR—Win: | 12:00-WEAF—Olsen Orchestra 11:45-WABC—Nelscn Orch WOR—Trin! Orchestra prisons WJZ—Dance Music (Until 2 4M) WABC—Dence 2A STARTS TODAY Gorki’s “Mother” (English Titles) Ist Echoes of Russian Revoliition LITTLE THEATRE, 562 Broad St., Newark. Con. 1 to 11 P.M; PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Europa Theatre Market above 16th St. Now Playing AMKINO Proudly Presents — Dostoyevsky’s — “PETERSBURG NIGHTS” With a Cast of Moscow Art Theatre MAXIM GORKY says: “The genius of Destoyevsky, his imagination can only 2e compared with that of Shakespeare:”

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