The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 17, 1934, Page 5

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| WORLD! ——— By MICHAEL GOLD HERE are few people in America today who deny that the country is in a crisis, or that the middle class has been shaken to its depths by the “mysterious” breakdown of capitalism. Anyone with ordinary political eyesight can see it Plain. All the Rooseveltian maneuvers, often convulsive and irra- tional, like the writhing of a fatally wounded animal, are part of the evidence. Yes, it is surely plain enough to everyone but H. L. Mencken. That smug old Philistine remains the chief Babbitt of our time. If any youngster who has grown to maturity in the years since the crisis began wishes to know how the comfortable middle-class felt before the Great Collapse of 1929, I would recommend that he buy a copy f the Saturday Review of Literature, for October 6. He will find there an essay by H. L. Mencken, in which this old seum piece of Babbittry repeats his stale monologue. This time 3 the rumor of a proletarian literature that has reached the ears ne aged reactionary. He denies that the thing exists, or can ever ne into being. The arguments he employs to prove his case are 0 pathetically shallow, that I am sure the youngsters will be amazed. Was this the literary critic who dominated the American intel- ectual world for a decade? Yes, children, it was; because he was yeaking for the most shallow, self-satisfied, illiterate and vulgar class Philistines history has yet known. Never had there been a rul- 1g class with so much material power in its hands, and with so little culture. Today, it is shattered; the best members of it are awakening to Communism; others are in complete despair, and live on public relief; others dream of an American Hitler. Few have been spared the bitter lesson of catastrophe. They are definitely changed, all but their slightly ludicrous Fuehrer. A thousand miles in the rear of his army, he gives the old commands. And nobody listens, except to jeer. nsolent Ignorance R. MENCKEN still preserves, like a withered courtesan, traces of his former gaudy style. It amuses no longer, since insolent ignor- ance is often forgiven to a young and beautiful girl, whereas in a painted old fiapper it becomes somewhat obscene. With all the ignorant valor of a haughty debutante Mr. Mencken sets out to prove the following points: 1, There is no proletarian literature in America, despite the “loud There has been a large effusion of emetic short ies about life on the one-crop farms and in the steel mills.” Proletarian writing is dull, and will always be dull and un- eadable, “If you doubt it, go to the nearest bookshop specializing 1 sexology and revolution, and take a look at the current radical eriodicals.” 3. There were a few lively revolutionary authors in the days of the old Masses, “but all these bright lads have been purged from the movement on orders from the Moscow Habbukuks, and their successors show none of their engaging liveliness. The New Masses, indeed, is one cf the dullest sheets ever heard of, even in radical circles.” 4. These younger writers are such nonentities that even Moscow, which bosses them around, has little use for them. “Indeed, they seem to be debarred even today from the cataracts of champagne and the caviar as big as golf balls of the Soviet Embassy. They may be entertained there, but if so it must be in the garage.” i 5. They are failures, these proletarian writers. Most of them tried to write for the Cosmopolitan magazine and make money, but failed. ‘The poets could not write sonnets, and so turned to revolutionary free Vv The chief poem of this “Volga school” is the composition of “an elderly and immensely respectable gentleman who is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and a Litt. D. of a Bey t. university.” 6. Its literary critics, “so-called,” are even more plainly inferior. Most of them are young men with disinclination for a steady job. But they failed to impress the world of money-literature. A choice was oven; either to become hack journalists, “with maybe an occasional check from a pulp magazine,” or to turn “Mormon or cannibal,” (mean- ‘ng Communist). 7. Since Communism is the latest fashionable fad among the youth, ust as once Imagism was the magic word, then the New Humanism, then Anglo-Catholicism and religion, then Technocracy, and finally Sexology; these young failures are adopting Communism. It is a con- venient fad with which to cover one’s nakedness. &. But it won't last. “Probably not more than a few years. Long ago I drew up and printed a chart of American quackeries, including the literary.” None of them lasted for more than a few years. 9, And the revolutionary literati who have rich fathers will return to safety, but the others will vanish from the scene, They are cowards. “Their job is not to fight, but to think. They do it badly, but still they prefer it to carnage.” . A “Passing Fad” AND there is your essay on proletarian literature by a leading bour- ¢% seois critic of American letters. Not one proletarian book or theory has been discussed. The man simvly does not read. His mind is a hash of newspaper headlines, and little else. It is thé mind of an inferior reporter on a tabloid newspaper, sensational, flashy and abysmally ignorant of all the pro- found life-and-death issues, To answer such an éssay in detail is a waste of time. out!ined it here to furnish my readers with a spectacle. This little pot-bellied Philistine ,with his little bank-account, and his little private conviction that nothing can ever happen to him, thinks the social revolution is a passing fad. It will blow over in a few years, as will its literature. There was never a World War, a Rus- sian and Chinese Revolution, or a world crisis of capitalism. All this s the invention of a few dull writers who have failed to have their ‘ieces accepted by the Cosmopolitan magazine. Why do they try to care him with these “emetic” fables? Back of it all, of course, is fear. A few years ago Mr. Mencken begen to accumulate property, it is reported. All his thinking is now saturated with the complexes of a property-owner. Ii is signifi- cant that he never attacks the Fascists with this same scorn. There, evidently, he finds nothing to fear. * * I have . Contributions received to the credit of Mike Gold in his socialist competition with Jacob Burck, David Ramsey, Harry Gannes, Helen Luke, Del and the Medical Advisory Board, in the Daily Worker drive for $60,000. Quota—s50e. Dr. G. O. Vennesland . “ 8 1.00 Joan Goodrich ... 1.00 Rose Gottlieb . Site 50 A, FP. cise. 3.00 Previously received . $101.98 Total to date ......... Seow teeessgereesree sess QhOIES aren | Was Repeatedly Beaten | During 1% Years | Imprisonment | IRNST THAELMANN during his present imprisonment was beat- | en repeatedly with leather whips | and steel rods. Workers who have been in the Nazi concentraticn camps, relating | the horrors they saw and experi- | enced, tell first-hand stories of how the heroic leader of the Commun- ist Party of Germany has been repeatedly and often beaten during | his imprisonment. | “In June, 1933, two prisoners, after they had first been fear- | fully tortured, were brought to a barn in which there was already another prisoner. In the evening this barn was burned to the ground. The camp prisoners con- stituting the fire brigade were not allowed to open the barn. The | charred remains of three corpses were rescued from the debris. Among them was that of a Jewish artisan from Nuremberg by the name of Schloss.” Sm * ‘HIS is one of the sworn state- ments made by victims of the Nazi terror and collected in a pamphlet—“Letters from Concen- tration Camps,” a book shortly to be published. The statement in this case is that of a peasant, B. H., who was arrested and taken to the Dachau Camp. Among other things things he declares: “On August 1 seven Storm who were accused of being sym- pathetic to the Communists. They were given the same ‘treatment’ as the Communist functionaries that are brought to camp. “The Storm Troopers, Amuschel and Handschuk, were beaten on the soles of their feet, then Soviet emblems were branded on their flesh with burning cigars and cigarettes, and their sex organs | were burned away. | “When the Brown fiends had had enough of the pains of the | tortured victims, they applied | water hose to their rectums in | order that the strong stream should tear their insides com- pletely. “Amuschel could no longer walk, | he had to crawl on hands and feet to camp, which was soon to be his camp of death. Amuschel died on August 2 and Handschuk on August 3 as a result of the frightful tor- tures they had been put through.” eer mae ba twenty-six-year-old Ruth M. relates: “On April 18, 1933, I was arrested at my house by 20 Storm ‘Troop- ers and two policemen and brought to police headquarters. On April 28 I Was taken from there to the dungeon on General Pape Street. There I was locked up in a cellar | and severely maltreated.” She was then kept in a cell with | six other women, “We had only two blankets with which to cover ourselves. We were punched every day and beaten with leather whips. In order that we should feel the strokes all the more, | Water was poured over us and our clothes were fully drenched. “But the most terrible thing was that we were compelled to witness | the scene of several women. being | strapped to a wooden horse (hobby- ' horse). and right before our very eyes raped by Storm Troopers.” 4 em P., a clerk, ,who for six weeks was dragged about through various Storm Troop dungeons in Trade Union Articles In New Issue of C. I. NEW YORK —The October 5th issue of “The Communist Inter- nationay’ (No. 19) contains two more articles on the strike struggles and trade union work in the United States. There is also in this issue | | i} | | Union Congress, one on the Soviet textile industry, and two book reviews. The full contents of No. 19 are: The Struggle Against Company Uniors—by B. Sherman. The British Trade Union Congress at Weymouth—by A. Lozovsky. The Background of the General Strike in the Textile Industry— by Sam Brown. Organized Struggie Against Spies and Agents-Provocateurs (From Experiences of Illegal Party Work in Germany)—by Albert Muller. A Book on Soviet China—Reviewed by L. M. “Vom Kaiserhof Zum Reichskan- mel!” By Goebbe!ls—Reviewed by L. Madyar. The success of the Daily Worker $60,000 drive means a better, larger newspaper. Donate and get dona- tions today. Send the money im- mediately to the “Daily.” Troopers were brought to camp | an article 6n the British Trade | AAs OV UANARAURS, GT UU TY Berlin, follows: “After my arrest I was brought to’ the Viehhof- Storm Troop bar- relates his experiences as racks. I was beaten at my ex- amination. I was then taken to the cellar. There I had to stand in @ hole filled with water. Later my hair was cut off, that is, it was practically torn out. “During all this I was constantly beaten. One day I was brought to a different room, where I was strapped to a trestle and fearfuliy beaten with oxhide whips and rub- ber truncheons, I fell unconscious. DUB, NOU, VURUDEMR 14, L904 Bestial Torture of Ernst Thaelmann - And Other Workers Told in Sworn Statements by Former Nazi Victims ERNST THAELMANN “When I came to about 40 Sterm Troopers were standing about me. ‘They were drunk for the most part. Each of them took some water in their mouth and then spat in my face, at the same time yowling and laughing with joy.” The same witness tells how: “In September, 1933, five workers from Berlin-Reinickendorf were brought by the field police to police headquarters on Alexanderplatz. The finger-nails were torn out from the unfortunate victims with pin- cers. But the worst and most dis Oct. aha Unity’ i Vital a Issue for Union Workers LABOR UNITY, official organ of the Trade Union Unity League, October issue, 5 cents, Cake peal Reviewed by LEO THOMPSON lO worker, and especially no trade union officer or active worker, can afford to miss reading the Oc- tober issue of “Labor Unity,” offi- cial organ of the Trade Union Unity League. From beginning to end this issue is filled with articles and informa- tion vital to every*worker and trade union functionary. The movements and struggles in the basic indus- tries are thoroughly covered. Ar- ticles on textile, marine, steel, coal, food and needle trades give a rep- resentative picture of the events, the developments and the lessons in each of these industries. The feature article, by Jack Stachel, Acting Secretary of the T. U. U. L,, on “The Great Textile Strike and Its Betrayal” examines in detail the rise of the strike movement in the textile industry and its culmination into the great national strike. “The factors mak- ing for the strike, the issues and grievances, the role of the rank and file, the sabotage and opposition of the trade union bureaucracy, are taken up in detail. Stachel analyzes the role of the Government, the N.R.A., of Gor- man, MacMahon and Green & Company and explains how it was possible for these forces to knife a strike the size and importance of which the country has never seen before. At the same time the role of the Lovestonite renegades (Kel- ler, etc.) and the Socialist Party leadership is taken up. The character of the “se‘tle- ment” and its meaning for the workers and the role and activity of the left wing forces in the strike, as well as the section dealing with the lessons of the strike and the tasks facing the textile workers now, makes this one article a docu- ment of outstanding political im- portance. * * ITH hundreds of seamen on strike in North Atlantic ports, led by the Marine Workers Indus- trial Union and the Joint Strike Preparations Committee, ihe article of George Allen detailing the is- sues in the strike is extremely im- portant. The problem of company unions, which becomes greater every day, thus far has received little at- tention in our trade union press. The article on “The Growth of Company Unions—and Our Tasks” by Bill Gebert raises some funda- mental questions regarding our attitude, approach and activity within these company unions in our effort to win the workers to real, fighting unions. Gebert de- tails some valuable experiences of the Chicago comrades in this work. With the increasing importance of work within these unions as a major task facing us, the article of Gebert is indispensable for an | understanding of some elementary ; and political tasks facing us. The article “For Unification of the Trade Union Movement” like- wise is a document of profound political importance and establishes the attitude of the T.U.U.L. on the basis for unification of the trade union movement. The tasks and the perspective before the Amer- ican labor and trade union mov ment are raised very sharply in ; this article. * * * 'O articles discuss the anti- working-class activity of the Communist refegades and “left” reformist misleaders, in the story of “The Knitgoods Workers Strike” by Ben Gold, and “Muste Misleaders in Southern Illinois’ by Ralph Shaw. With the danger of war and fas- cism creeping ever closer the con- tribution, “Fascism and the Trade Unions” and “War Threatens the Youth” are timely and valuable. Andrew Overgaard writes of the decisions and work of the Second National Convention of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, and Nat Ganley describes the victories forced by the De‘roit food workers. Workers’ organizations in steel, coal, marine and textile in- dustries should order special bundles of this issue for widespread distribution, as well as in the needle trades. It is well worth the price of five cents. Order from Room 326, 80 East 11th Street, New York. the | |Refu: s Journalists’ | Offer of Favored | Treatment ng tort e. a the cam stialized wretches 1 urinary canals. | TT MAY be B a definite im: Selected sadi: S$ were in ch: 1a pecially human creatur the Hedemann Hell. Several names of these Brown t ts whom I have not forgotten s to the world. The torm Troopers Ehlers, Merk, Bergmann, Pohlens and Kain, 4 | “Troop Leader of the Berlin | Storm Troop section, Ernst, knew and knows of these tortures, for he very often came at night for inspection and saw our faces | covered with wounds and drip- | Ping with blocd. He saw that the | walls of the rooms were covered | with blood. “He also knew the punishment |system. This included the ‘counted loft’ blows, 25 to 50, upon the cov- ered or bare body. There were the ‘Tunning up and down’ blows from |head to soles of the feet. There was {the ‘rubbing down’ with (1) bare | fist, and (2) fist with brass knuckles. “There was the ‘Gleichschaltung’ (unification), which meant that the prisoners had to whip each other. During the ‘rubbing down’ we had to sing military marching songs at the top of our lungs. If we no longer could sing, loudspeakers were installed in order to drown the cries of the tortured.” 'HESE accounts are full of almost animaginable horrors, but there more than horror in the courage vhich they reveal. In spite of all tortures it is but rarely that pris- oners can be forced to give infor- mation There is, among other things, a ‘ord of Ernst Thaelmann, who has been imprisoned for a year and a half, and repeatedly beaten with leather whips and steel rods. A harness maker, Kantoy, who was held for ten months in Storm ‘Troop dungeons and in the Sonnen- burg Camp, writes: “Once I was informed by the at- tendant that the leader of the Ger- man Communist Party, Comrade Ernst Thaelmann, who was also be- ing held in custody at the central police station, had been visited by foreign correspondents. The gentle- men of the press wanted to photo- graph our leader. “But he refused and remarked: ‘If you do want to take photos, you might photograph those vic- tims of fascism who lie lacerated and mutilated in the other cells, Go there and do your photo- graphing.’ “When these gentlemen declared their willingness to help provide him with better food, he refused their offer with the remark that he would accept no treatment which would render him an exception to his comrades. He would eat the same food as his comrades ate.” Even in chains Thaelmann re- mains the leader of the German workers. The fight for his release is a fight to help all the sorely tried thousands of Nazi victims. It is a fight to rescue the German masses through the destruction of fascism! Imperialist War Plans Featured in ‘Economic | Notes,’ L.R.A. Bulletin NEW YORK.—Three topics con- | cerned with imperialist war feature the current issue of Labor Research Association's monthly Economic | Notes, just released. These are arti- cles dealing with the expansion of chemical plants, chemical company profits in the last war, and a sum- mary of the munitions industry | hearing in Washington. | L. R. A. also, in this number of | Economic Notes, summarizes its original compilation of “New Deal” expenditures, showing the exact amounts of money thus far proured out by the Roosevelt government for the “relief” of bankers, indus- trialists and rich farmers as com- pared with the meagre “dole” given the unemployed. Present economic trends—produc- tion, consumption, prices, employ- ment, wages—profits of leading companies and the background of the banana workers’ strike against the United Fruit Co. in Costa Rica are other high spots of the bulletin. Twelve subjects in all are cov- ered in a factual way useful to speakers, organizers and other ac- tive workers. Obtain copies of Eco- nomic Notes at 5 cents a copy from your local Workers’ Book Shop or directly from Labor Research Assn., 8 E. lith St, N. Y. C, LABOR and SHO ATORY By P David Ramsey SCIENCE AND THE the whol ity sh ing. The endeavor t this sabotag ad Ss for war and c ression of unde: ed v the £0 the by was sts for capitalism d nored such facts as unemplo' among technical and workers; they passed deliberate contr Instead there w ction a great deal of deal would bring crisis plenty. After twen! deal the scient ef the administra v admitted that the scien’ been completely ignored by Roos velt. Unemploy nt among tech- nicians is larger than ever. In New} York City example, 98 per cent | of architects are unemployed. The | chemist who is lucky enough to land a job works for a bootlegger } or for a pirate gold and silver con- cern engaged in smuggling precious metals into the country. At one large engineering schoo] the grad- uates of the last four ciass ave been unable to get a single en- to nle. gineering position. HE situation has become so desperate that certain of the reactionary scientists who are di- rectly connected with the adminis- tration cooked up a very preten- tious plan to put scientific research on its feet again. An examination of this plan which is called the Recovery Program of Science Prog- ress reveals that it is nothing but a futile gesture, designed mainly to ‘y on the illusion that the new deal has something io offer to the technician and scientist The plan was sponsored by the National Research Council and various technical societies. It was drawn up by Dr. Kerl T. Compton of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Alfred D. Flinn, the director of the Engineering Foundation. The underlying concept of the plan was taken from the planned direction of scientific research in the Soviet Union, with the funda- mental difference, that it is un- realizable in a capitalist economy. It was the purpose of the Recovery Program of Science Progress to put unemployed scientists to work solv- ing important technical and scien- tific problems. Over a period of six years the modest sum of $16,000,000 ‘as to be spent. The term “mod- est” is not inaccurate when one remembers that the German trust spent almost as much mor in developing synthetic indigo for commercial purposes. And by com- pa: with the $250,000,000 that the Soviet Unicn spent last year for research purposes, the sum de- sired by Compton and his associ- ates was certainly not staggering. Nevertheless, even this modest pr 1 was turned down by the administration on the grounds that it had no authority to spend money on research. This is the same ad- ministration that gave the big bankers and industrialists billions HIS was to be expected f social system that kills wor r to save a few pennies. not interested in the at prob- lems that confront sci It ich can only be solved scale rch 1 operative effor ent and ome te ian: tend to blame this act is a y sideration of interests pers. It farmers’ g troduce social and economic plar ni d also plan the orga: tion of scientific work. The examp! of the Soviet ion proves this conclusively. Ti science is ap- field to build social- ism, and in turn the building of socialism is the material ba the planned reconstruction science itself. It is ironical that the capitalists who sabotage the advance of sci- ence raise the bogey that social means the death of sci c thought. They claim that in the Soviet Union the theoretical sci- entist is discouraged But the facts show that it is under capitalism that theoretical arch is discouraged unless it has the promise of bringing in quick profits. The Nazis as always are the frankest about this matter. They say bluntly that they are not interested in theory, that they want no relativity Jew like Ein- stein. Their science students must specialize in all branches that have All other is, they a direct bearing on war. fields are non-Aryan, thi cannot be used to kill peopl IN the Soviet Union, on the other hand, there is intensive work in all fields. The workers realize that all branches of science are inter- related. To stifle certain phases of science means eventually to destroy the basis for further entific progress. Consequent!: is no field of science which does not receive large sums of money and in which remarkable headw is not being made. The scientists and technicians America must demand that they given jobs on scientific proj that will benefit the workers, fa mers and the poor middle class groups of the country. But in their fight for jobs and economic security, they should remember that the tru liberation of science from the fet- ters of capitalism awaits the pro- letarian revolution. In joining the working class in this struggle to overthrow capitalism, they are also taking the only course that will ensure intellectual freedom for themselvés and establish the foun- dation for boundiess progress in science. Lab and Shop was slow to enter into socialist competition with the other features of the paper in the Daily Worker drive for $60,000, because the column appears only twice a week. But the editor assures the column that it is regarded as one of the regular features, and with this encouragement Lab and Shop rushes into the fray with an appeal to its readers to raise $250 in the name of socialist science. Thus while the column appears but twice a week, Lab and Shop starts out to raise half of the quotas set by such big shots as “Red-Eye Mike” Gold, the hard-bitten veteran of the culturai frent. If we pull together, comrades, we can raise our quota before the other features attain their goals, despite our late start. Let’s go, comrades and fellow-scientific workers! TUNING IN 7:00-WEAF—Danny Malone, Tenor WOR—Sports Resume—Ferd Prick WJZ—Amos 'n’ Andy—Sketch WABC—Myrt and Marge—Sketch 7:15-WEAF—Gene and Glenn—Sketch WOR—O'Brien and King, Songs WJZ—Plantation Echoes; Mildred Bailey, Songs; Robinson Orchestra WABC—Just Plain. Bill—Sketch 7:30-WEAF—Uncle Ezra—Sketch WOR—The O’Neills—Sketch WdZ-—Red Davis—Sketch WABC—Paul Keast, Baritone 7:43-WEAF—Frank Buck's Adventures WOR—Studio Music WJZ—Dangerous Paradise—Sketch WABC—Boake Carter, Commentator 8:00-WEAF—The Patsy—Play, With Mary Pickfort, Actress WOR—Lone Ranger—Sketch WJZ—Execution Alley—Sketch WABC—Easy Aces—Sketch {4 MARXIST CLASSIC . | Not only a wealth of biographical detail, but important expositions of fundamental aspects of Marxism with special reference to the Paris Commune For the First Time in English ARE PROVIDED IN Letters to Dr. Kugelmann Ry KARL MARX - Introduction by V. I. Lenin Order from INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS, 381 Fourth Ave., N. Y. COMPLETE CATALOGUE ON REQUEST didi aad daneauidah Poniomatonide Little Lefty — UNCLE JOHN 906 MAY Sums UP FOR. “THE DEFENSE, HE WEIGHS HIS WORDS CAREFULLY, FOR his 15 & CRITICAL MOMENT” INTHE RATA WILL DEYERMING “HE Fave oF tHE STRAY 006 LeFrY ON Werk THE TRIAL o—> “he PROSECUTOR FATES “aT KEEPING HIS Be TROUBLESOME. PERHAPS - BUT 15 “HERE ANYTHING WORTHWHILE IN LIFE “Hay CAN BE GOTTEN WITHOUT EXPENDING, SOME. errorr? E What A Summation! — IN RETURN FoR A FEW TABLE SCRAPS —THIS ANIMAL WILL GIVE OUR LEFTY A PRICELESS LESSON IN LOYALTY FNO DEVOTION // —MOREOVER, HE WOULD PROVIDE & GOOD LESSON Mo US GROWNUPS — BATTERED FROM PILLAR “IO POST, HUNGRY N'THIRSTY HE STILL HAD ENOUGH FIGHT 10 Bir OUR LAND — wor cua // Whar A Sreecu/ by del HE CASE 15 NOW IN “HE HANDS OF “HE JURY / See rmorrow for the verdict | 8:15-WABC—Edwin C. Hill, Commentator 8:30-WEAF—Wayne King Orchestra WOR—Larry Taylor, Tenor WiZ—Lanny Ross, Tenor, chestra. WABC—Everett Marshall, Baritone; Elizabeth Lennox, Contralto 8:45-WOR—Hysterical History—Sketch 9:00-WEAFP—Fred Allen, Comedian Salter Ore ght Echoes Years in Sing Sing . With ; ‘ABC—Nimo Marti Kose telanezt Orchestra 9:30-WOR and Abner—Sketch ‘WdJZ—John McCormack, Tenor WABOC—George Burns and Gracie Allen, Comedia 9:45-WOR—Variet: 10:00-WEAF—Lombi lo Orchestra WJZ—Dennis King, Songs WABC—Broadcast to and Prom Byrd Expeditions: Warnow Orehestra 10:15-WOR—Current Events—H. E. Read WJZ—Beauty—Mme. Sylvia 10:30-WEAF—National Forum WOR—Variety Musicale WJZ—Danty Orchestra; man, Songs WABC—Mery Eastman, Soprano 11:00-WEAF—Kemp Orchestra WOR—Moonbeams Trio WJZ—Comedy Sketch WABC—Nick Lucas, Songs 11;15-WEAF—Robert Royce, Tenor WJZ—Coleman Orchestra WABC—-Dailey Orchestra 11;30-WEAF—Coburn Orchestra WOR—Dance Music WJZ—Foreign Trade—George N. Peek. Foreign Trade Adviser to President Roosevelt, at Export Managers’ Club Dinner, Chicago eae a RA REMAND Contributions received to the credit of Del in his Socialist competition with Mike Gold, Harry Gannes, the Medical Advisory Board, Helen Luke, Jacob Burck and David Ramsey, in the Daily Worker drive for $60,000. Quota—ssoo, Total to date Harry Riche $2.55

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