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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1934 a | ee WORLD! | ——— By MICHAEL GOLD RELY there must be some playwright around our “Y movement who will see in the great and terrible drama of the self-entombment of the twelve hundred miners in the pits in Pecs, Hungary, the material for a profoundly moving proletarian play. Out of the heroic struggle of these diggers, who for one hundred and ten hours in the blackness and poisoned air of the pits, re-enacted part of the history of the whole working class, he could write a drama that would not only stir the hearts of workers but could draw for them also an invaluable political lesson. Against the pale and enfeebled caricatures of the Broadway play- Pots, this proletarian work would loom powerful and intense. It would Stand as a searing indictment of the brutality and inhumanity of capitalism, and be a lasting monument to the irrational and desperate courage of those simple miners who preferred to shut off the air pumps and blow the mine and themselves to pieces rather than submit further to the slow, tortured death of exploitation. * * * All Were Bes ten and Choked by the | | Police By EDWARD NEWHOUSE EVEN out of ten unemployed workers were found guilty on | October 16, of unlawful assembly | before New York's Welfare Depart-| ment on Lafayette Street. The sen- | tences to be pronounced October | 30th will have been based on one | of the most blatant judicial farces ever enacted off the stage. The ten defendants had been ar- rested in the course of an unpro- voked attack by police on an orderly Picketline. The grand jury had re- fused to indict them for lack of evidence but the District Attorney's office had them brought before Special Sessions for another hear- ing. Three judges, Solomon, Wal- ling and McInerney, set mutely | through the testimony of seven Ppatrolmen and a police inspector | and shot questions at over twenty | witnesses for the defense. All of the defendants had been beaten on May 26th. The crime of three of them consisted in aiding | Mike Poliski to his feet. Poliski had | been lying on the sidewalk, uncon- scious. A billy had opened a gash on his head and a pool of blood was forming around it. Cecil Alexander was arrested for asking a cop not to beat his mother. Joseph Schind- Their | ler, one of the three defendants who were acquitted, has sworn to the following statement: Ty In the Darkness for one hundred and ten hours they crouched in the galleries. The Space from wall to wall, and from the floor of the coal seam to the propped roof, was so small they could not stand upright. They braced against each other’s knees, and slept, like this, humped up, twelve hundred men. In the darkness there was nothing except hunger, thirst and the slow poison @f the underground air. There Was only this—and the bright, unextingtishable light of their class courage. It burned like a torch in the darkness of their voluntary tomb. It was with them, it sustained them and fired their souls, when they knew madness creeping on them out of the dripping shafts, when their comrades perished, raving from hunger and thirst. Above them, on the surface, the mine owners raged, the govern- ment officials ran like rats from office to newspaper agency frantic to conceal this climax of terror and starvation. At the pit mouth, squadrons of soldiers and police with machine guns, were drawn up, waiting. But there was nothing to shoot, nothing to club. terror was helpless. * ° . * Of Defen = 2 Rae billy is the bosses’ first answer. | of fascist terror. William Muldoon and he commands respect until he opens his mouth. As grammatically as could be ex- Beaten and Choked by Police “After I was arrested, I was taken to the rear of 50 Lafayette Street. | At that time there were four other | workers there under arrest. Shortly | jafter, the police brought in the| prisoner whom I later knew as Core D'Amicis (also one of the defend- The Devil as a Social-Democrat yor terror could not conquer the diggers, the bourgeoisie of Hungary invoked that old traitor of the workers—the socialisf and trade union flunkeys. One can see them, timid and crafty, descend- ing into the mine shafts, wheedling these men who were holding their own lives in their hands like a bomb. The schooled mouth spoke the old lies and the crafty language of betrayal. But they failed, ants). He was bleeding from the The miners, enraged, seized them as hostages, as the ambassadors | head, of the enemy class! | “All of us were beaten and Goemboes had invoked the devil of the working class, the Mephistophelian betrayer, who had sold to the bourgeoisie the souls of working class afte: working class, in Germany, England, France, America, But in the pit the devil failed his master. They knew, | the miners, that in the end there can be no compromise between | ested we were beaten and choked é . by the police, We all asked for worker and boss, Sadivent Visas ann mine poreer medical attention which was denied “After we were booked we were | kicked by the cops. Carlson, who was bleeding from the head and| mouth, they tried to put head first | into an ash-can. When we pro-| Not Only in Hungary (THEY went mad ‘there-in the darkness, ‘They almost died of thiret,. | taken upstairs ae While T was and hunger. The weak collapsed. The strong continua. Hour | UPSstairs, D’Amicis was brought in. afte: hour went by. The soldiers squatted at their guns. The news |:°; They grabbed him by the hair jand hit him with clenched fists. | of their threat to commit mass-suicide was flashed around fhe world. | While he was lying prostrate on the pected he outlined the version of the disorder. Without so much as a mention of the police guns, bil- lies and) horses, he produced two| foul-looking sticks studded with three inch nails claimed to have been used on placards. The de- tails he gave contradicted the tes- timony of his own patrolmen and | both contradicted that of Detective Duffy. Cops Contradict Each Other Duffy testified that he saw Of- ficer Kandler assaulted in the door- An Exhibitia Guild Artists and Cartoonists 'HE Newspaper Guild’s show of paintings and cartoons at the When the unemployed demand bread and work, the policeman’s struggle in defense of workers’ rights can stem the tremendous growth | Judicial Farce Enacted in Conviction CHANGE | dants in May 26 Demonstration ; Cops Tell Conflicting Stories on Witness Stand endants by tified nine of the ten name, saying he had never seen either before or after the demon- stration. After him, Patrolman Peragallo took the stand to state that defer David Jenkins singled out Sergeant Haggerty. walked up to him in the presence of eight policeman and knocked him bleeding to the ground That was the general run and competence of police testimony. After their disastrous experience with Duffy, the judges let bad enough alone and confined them- selves to the fewest questions pos. sible. On the other hand, when the defendants took the witness chair, Judge Solomon bombarded them with leading questions. He tried repeatedly to establish that they | had been sent to the offices of the | Welfare Department by some sinis ter, unknown power. | Built Wiring in Tombs Prison | Joseh Schindler in the chair. “How long have you been out of | work?” “Four years.” | “What did you do before that?” “I had been an iron worker for 22 years. I have worked on | staircases in this very building. I | built the wiring in Tombs Prison ' where we were confined.” Not one of the ten gave slightest sign of cringing. = | told of the conditions which caused way of 50 Lafayette Street. Kand-| them to appear on Lafayette Street | ler said it all happened in the gut-| May 26th. They gave bold answers | ter. Duffy was given one of the, 27d stood by their action. alleged placard sticks and asked to eee aes identify it, URING recess Schindler said to “Yeh, that's the stick,” he said me, “I’ve been around courts immediately, before. I was with the Brownsville “How long is it?” Judge Solomon; Unemployment Council when we inquired for the sake of the record.) put back an evicted old lady's fur- “About two feet,” said the observ-| niture and went to the relief cen- ant one. ter to ask for a rent check for her. “What do you mean two feet?”| They'd been cutting down on rent The stick was at least four. checks and Mrs, Wallace refused to “Well,” Duffy said, placing the| see the delegation. About 25 of us stick against his leg, “about twice| went in and placed the desks and the length of me feet.” chairs against the door and would | Later, the same detective not come out until they promised to pay the checks. Then the emer- gency squad came and a few of us were pulled in and the judge says to Mike Davidoff, Will you promise not to do it again? Mike says, I wouldn’t promise any such thing, and he got three days. But the same day they handed out about 20 rent checks and the old lady stayed right where we put her.” Sang Internationale in Jail Only the broadest, organized mass the They iden- by N ewspaper his skill. His forms are not truly worked out as such. | the |; People were shocked and sickened. That men should threaten to kill | floor, the lice and detectives ‘ | themselves for $1.50! The “good” people could not understand it. | kicked him about the body. They Miles a Newhouss 5 Callericg, 6174 The whole barbarous rottenness of the Goemboes regime burst open on | pulled hair from his head. , .. One| Madison Ave., is an exhibit of the the world. But the American liberals have nothing to be proud of. Their own master class is stained with the same filth and stands convicted of the same brutality. Not so many months ago, Pennsylvania’ mine | police bombed and dynamited abandoned holes in the hills out of | which starving and cold Pennsylvania miners were digging a little | coal to use or to sell. This was the “humane” labor policy of the American masters! la Out of Darkness Into Deceit | taverns they came out of the pits. They had ordered 375 coffins to be lowered into the mine for the dead. They had threatened to blow up the works, sacrificing themselves as a protest against op- pression. It was this that made the mine owners agree to grant some of the demands. « Not the lives of twelve hundred men, but the loss pocketbook. But when they stood on the surface of the earth again, the miners knew they had been tricked. The grants had been withdrawn. Not wage raises, but bonuses when Christmas came. When Christ’s charity descends once more on the children of men, the bourgeoisie of Hungary | and the British exploiters, shall, out of the goodness of their withered | and blackened hearts, return to them an infinitesimal fraction of | the profits the sweat and blood of the miners of Pecs tore from the earth. - ” * a The Lesson MAGhe eese and terrible was this deed of the diggers. It lit up, like a burning and unfailing light, the deep sources of courage and the desperate souls of the proletariat. It showed to what extents of sacrifice and heroism the working class will go. It showed to what inhuman depths the capitalists have pushed the life of the masses. | And yet, this was not the correct path for the workers to follow. It resembles more that custom of the Oriental who cuts open his own stomach on the doorsteps of a state official as a protest against in- Justice. Shall the workers of the world commit a monstrous act of universal hari-kari on the doorsteps of capitalism? Shall they merely shock the bourgeoisie with the terribleness of huge suicides? There is another road. It leads up a steep and difficult path. It demands the same heroic courage, the same unflinching will to sacrifice. It is the road that leads away from the passive resistance of the miners of Pecs to the mountains of revolutionary action the workers of Russia climbed. At its head marches the ranks of the fighters of the Com- munist Party. This is the road the miners of Pecs, and the workers of the world, in time, shall follow. | « FS . Contributions received to the credit of Mike Gold in his Socialist competition with Jacob Burck, David Ramsey, Harry Gannes, Helen cop, spitting in his face. said, ‘I don’t | | blame Hitler for his treatment of | the Reds. I would like to see this! country like Hitler's,’ | blood from his hands in prepara- | tion for finger-printing him. While | of the mine pricked the soul of the bourgeoisie where it lies—in their | forcing him to dry his hands on his | brought downsteirs for | medical brought to police headquarters Placed in a cell. | the same cell. I stayed up all night, | | eine ni. eo was no bedding | Tat eae hee 5 env ed get and when I asked the keeper PALA V4 Ww N { “gf ‘him die.’ I begged for water and al c ant me Real Stories Say doctor for him, and the keeper an- | set ‘Let the red son of a bitch | peas, Schindler, \d | accused and listened to Inspector | Wall's righteous and vague charges, Wall is a fine figure of a man, built along the lines of the late difference between looking and see- ing. Artists from the Times, the | World-Telegram and Associated Made Him Kiss Cop's Feet | Press paint and their products hang “They grabbed him by the head|on the gray drapes, a little dull, nd forced his battered, bleeding|Tather unimaginative and some- | mouth to the feet of 2 cop, making|times competent. Then you stand | him kiss the cop's feet. | lunged a kick at his mouth. The cop arrested by the work of a man who | sees and you don’t have to look into “D’Amicis, a mild-mannered Latin,| the catalogue to know that this is | said, ‘I do not mind kissing his feet. | Burck or Del of the Daily Worker. He is a human being. I love all) people.’ Burck’s painting “The New Deal” hangs without a title. It is a terri- fying canvas of a militiaman bayo- neting a striker and it is a bold de- sign, full of movement and a bold conception, full of relentless hate. “They then made him wash the | own clcthing, they kicked him. | Burck has all the sweep and range “After fingerprinting, he was|of a major artist. In his painting @ second! he remains’ essentially a cartoonist and we were! and this prevents him from letting and | the trees obscure the forest but also hipaa _. |it keeps him from exploiting his D'Amicis and I were placed in| medium to the degree warranted by attention, blanket. he snarled at me, ‘Let | + oe * | NEW PIONEER, monthly magazine Alexander | for children, published at Box 28, and Poliski sat among the ten! Station D, New York City, Octo- ber issue, 5 cente, Reviewed by MYRA PAGE full of youthful pep as ever. From the Hallowe'en cutouts by Scheel of Frances (cat), Perkins and whiskered pirate Morgan, to the science column, cartoon strip, and | stories, this October issue pulses |and “clicks.” -No wonder grownups “Lion and Unicorn” Editors Add Their Bitto D. W. Drive Oct. 18, 1934. like the magazine, as well as the Edito> kids. Daily Worker. | Are your boy and girl having the Dear Comrade: The need for a militant work- |fun and education this magazine affords? And the other kids in your | neighborhood? If not, find a nickel ‘HE New Pioneer is as lively and | Working in black and white, he has attained a pictorial mastery proportionate to the remarkable conceptions afforded by his revolu- tionary training. Ten of the Daily Worker cartoons are hung and to- j gether with Del’s three drawings i they have literally shamed Hey- | | wood Broun into rmingly la- menting the feebleness of the other | representations, including his own. Del is less graphic than Burck and he seeks more gentler and insinuat~ ing effects. His “Capitalist Press” shows three bloated monkeys squat- ting over the New York skyline, hearing, seeing and saying nothing. “Happy Herlem” has a young Negro brooding among the garbage cans before an emptied Home Relief Bureau. Heywood Broun has five paint- ings, curious and well-done exten- sions of his literary personality. There are several skillful car! tures by H. H. Knight and a nude and some studies. | Children in October ‘New Pioneer’ , “How to Make” and Sports features | recommenced. | Two main problems for the mag- azine continue. These are stories and sufficiently lively and pointed | news about and directives to Young | Pioneer and other children’s groups. Young readers are insistent in their demands that “we want more real stories.” And they are right. Writers, attention. Some stories, | like Louise Whitney’s “Miss Whir- ten’s Watch,” and “Young Pioneers | in China” by Heiang-Yu are real | stories. But some cthers are not so | successful. Of course it is not easy | |to get the right kind of stories, but haven’s we had enough of these) mechanical “made-to-order” things} which pass as a story, but where | characters and situations don’t come | Cecil Alexander appeared to be Judge Solomon's best bet to estab- lish as an agitator . He had curly black hair and wore a gray shirt and gabardine jacket. Trouble was, Alexander se@med perfectly willing to be identified as an organizer of the Unemployment Councils. Further quizzing dis- closed that previously he had been employed as reporter and art critic. During recess Alexander said, “After we had been beaten up, Jen- kins and I were put in the same cell and my mother managed to slip a single sheet of the Daily Worker through the bars and after we opened it, we saw Ernst Thael- amann’s picture near the top. You} don’t know how that made me feel. I started singing the Internationale and one by one people in the other tiers, people I didn’t know and couldn't see, joined in.” Over twenty witnesses testified that the picketline had been orderly and that mounted police had rid- den on to the sidewalk, swinging billies. Not one detail of their mass of evidence contradicted each other's statements. They all told exactly how the police had emerged from their hiding places around the| building. charged in flying wedges and fired shots. Again the judges tried to iden- tify witnesses as members of the occult “ou e mention was made of the stories of capitalist newspapers which de- scribed the white marble of the de- tention place as a “slaughter-house, spattered with blood.” “Daughter of American Revolution” | Testifies A pale. handsome girl in the wit- ness chair. “What organization do you be- long to, Miss Olandt?” “I'm a member of the Daugh- ters of the American Revolution. My people came to this country in 1620. When .. .” “Never mind all that,” Judge Solomon said. Cecil Alexander, Mike Poliski, David Jenkins, Jeremiah Lynch, Page F LABORATORY and SHO By P David Ramsey SCIENTIFIC RESURRECTION A dead dog ¥ Professor 8. $ the Central ogy and made an incision in hest and placed a clamp over the heart valves causing the dog to “die.” At this point an a h ‘auto injector” was co! arteries of the anima seconds the dog bega sneeze and show sig: mal reactions. A few the artificial heart was di: and the dog’s heart began to func- tion normally. These experiments have been confined to animals, so far but the will be perfected to the point wl it will be possible humans. MEDICAL CARE FOR WORKERS hi w to use it Dr. M. N. list of Chicago re- poris, after a 4 y, that the medical care whi yen to vic- tims of industrial accidents is far below requirements. He says that only 55 per cent of the medical de- ments of the 1,122 industrial es- tablishments which he studied have complied with the minimum stand- ards recommended by the Amer- ican College of Surgeons. It significant that Dr. Newquist tries to wheedle higher standards out of the employers by telling them that good medical service costs less than poor medical treatment. If a capitalist can ever be made to do anything for a worker, it is only be- cause it will save him money. THE MUSTACHE AS A HEALTH PROTECTOR There is an upper lip health risk that justifies the mustache, accord- ing to Dr. Frederick A. Coller of the University of Michigan. It seems that an infection such as may arise from a razor cut or from kissing is much more dangerous potentially, than an infection on the lower lip brought on by spitting through one’s teeth or using a toothpick ineptly Broadly speaking the upper lip area includes much of the upper face. Infections in these areas when they spread reach the facial veins and infect each side of the nose, the eye and the “cavernous sinus” located on the floor of the skull. Once the infection reaches this part it can kill the victim quickly. Considering these risks it seems logical that shavers would protect thmselves by not shaving, and con- sequently they could send the money they save to the Daily Worker Fund (These kind of tips will be featured every week until the colfimn fulfills its quota.) A VACCINE FOR PERITONITIS Two Boston physicians, Drs. H. L, Johnson and Eward L. Young, Jr. have developed a vaccine for the prevention of peritonitis, the great- est risk in surgical operations. The vaccine, the scientists reported to the Clinical Congress of the Amer- ican College of Surgeons, is known as amniotic fluid. This is a sub- stance which is present in both humans and animals. By injecting this fluid into pa- tients from four to six hours before operating, the, mortality rate from peritonitis, following a bowel resec- tion, was reduced from 30 to 2 per cent. Twelve years ago Dr. Johnson conceived the idea of using this fluid against peritonitis. At that time, however, he used the fluid only in cresarian operations, because these were the only cases where a supply of the vaccine was avail- able. Experiments were then begun to determine whether the fluid could be gotten from animals and be used with beneficial effects on ists believe that the technique GERM ELECTRICITY to the recent meeting ical Society, Dr, a Cornell rold A. Abr Medical School are found on ife mmersed in a water solution. icroscopic ase organisms and the tis- body. It appears that ical charges play an im- t role in bringing about the Process of agglutination. The process of agglutination is the clustering or clumping of bac- under specific conditions which ce their activity in the body, ps the body fight disease. VE CHEMISTRY A chemical is reieased in the nerves of the body every time the brain commands a nerve to move a a The chemistry of this proc- oss s been described by Sir Henr Dale of the British National t Medical Research. 1 that carries the message of the brain is acetylcho- line. Infinitesimal amounts of. this substance are released whenever there is a thought that com- mands a nerve to do something with a muscle. In an active person, according to this theory, extremely small amounts of the chemical are produced every second. If this theory of how the nerves control our mus cles should fit all the facts, then acetylcholine will be recognized as one of the most important sub- stances in the human body, with great potential usefulness for medi- cine. MEDICAL NOTE Dr. William N. Walsh, a hospital consultant of Chicago, reports:that venereal disease in the Soviet Union has been reduced by 50 per cent in the last decade. He makes the point that Soy surgeons are doing ex- cellent work that compares with the best in the world. He also says that the children are getting such fine care that the coming generations will have but little need for hos~ pitals. In marked contrast to the picture that Dr. Walsh paints of hospital conditions in the Soviet Union, is the black report that Dr. Donald M. Guthrie of Sayre, Pennsylvania, gave out on medical conditions in Germany and Austria. The medical profession has fallen into great dis- repute in these fascist countries, Charlatans have taken possession of the field, and medicine is on the verge of sinking into a bog of absolute inefficiency. The poor worker, of course, is the first to suffer from this product of fascist barbarism NOTE ON BIRTH CONTROL At the recent meeting of the American Public Health Associa- | tion, it was estimated that some 15,000 to 17,000 deaths a year were caused by faulty abortions, because hypocritical capitalism denies work- ing class women adequate instruc- tion on birth control. These deaths are entirely unnecessary and are largely due to lack of knowledge of birth control technique, This need- less sacrifice of life is another of the barbarisms of capitalism that necessitate its swift destruction and the extermination of its rotten practices, Contributions credit of David Ramsey in his Socialist competition with Jacob Burck, Mike Gold, Harry Gannes, Helen Luke, Del and the Medical Advisory Board, in the Daily Worker drive for $60,000. Quota—s250. D. K., a Bio Chemist $3.00 received to the human _ beings. Anonymeus 1.00 Finally, the research workers de-| Vincent Phick .. . 1,00 veloped a concentrated fluid which! Bessie S. ......... i) is obtained from cows. This is now) Hyman Hirschhorn ...... . 100 used “for the purpose of mobilizing | Previously recorded but not the defense mechanism before pos- | listed, from C. White .... 1.00 sible contamination of the perito- | neal cavity.” Total to date .......... $7.50 7:00-WEAF—Picken: isters, Songs 1 WOR—Larry Taylor, Tenor | WOR—Sp 2. Ford Frick WABC—Alexander Gray, Baritone WJZ—Amos ‘n’ Andy—Sketch | Elizabeth Lennox, Contralto; De | WABC—Myrt and Marge—Sketch Wolf Hopper, Narrator; Mixed :15-WEAF—Gene and Glenn—Sketch WOR-—O'Brien and King, Songs WJZ—Plantation Echoes; — Mildred Chor: | 8:45-WoR—H Arden Orchestra terical History—Sketeh VEAF—Fred Allen, Comedian ing class paper cannot be over- emphasized. The splendid work of the “Daily,” particularly since 9:00- Luke, Del and the Medical Advisory Board, in the Daily Worker drive Ww for $60,000, Quota—$50¢. ‘and get on the job! |to life and anybody can guess the) Harold G. Keithline, Charles Will- In New Pioneer readers’ confer- \end from the very beginning? |iams and Sam Miller were found ‘OR—Footlights Echoes WJZ—20,000 Years in Sing Sing —. Sketch, Bailey, Songs; Robison Orchestra WABC—Just Plain Bill—Sketch | 7:30-WEAF--Uncle Ezva—Siketch | jonymous .. ‘ences, the children tell how they’re| The kids are right: “give us real! guilty. Core D’Amicis, Larry Carl- y atile On | WABC— no austin: ener Regtalae pce dah Mass, x ase | cal Btls a os cn new édi- |/ using the “Science and Nature” stories!” This is a challenge which | son and Joseph Schindler were ac- otk tee maretuds netz Orchestra ree ar tee : ap 1 prectattoi, ‘© show our ap- |/ column in their school classes and | John Reeders can’t pass up. | quitted. aq MABC—Paul Keast, Baritone ore ese sie ae Mr. W iG ki I . “ | ie |on bulletin boards, horrifying some} We need in this country a flour-| After the verdict was announced, either ieee eps ates WASO—Gettge Bune (od Gheelk r. W. Scholz . ~ 2.00 We enclose two dollars with |! teachers but winning plenty of new | ishing children’s literature. Good! Judge McInerney said, “I wish that wit [Deneerous: Paradise Bketch Allen, Comedians 8, Chamson .. : 50 || best wishes for the success of |! readers. Bert Grant, science editor, | stories both for the New Pioneer and. instead of you the people who sent WABC_B: Carte OR Variety Musicale 702 E. Ath St. .... 1.00 || Your drive. has been with the magazine since|to appear in pamphlet and book | vou to the riot would be up here for {:00-WBAT Saturday's “Children Barnes, Narmetor ns ee Michael Halapy . 2.00 | Faithfully, it started and is doing a fine job.| form. There is Williana Burroughs trial.” Lic tanita Went eee WOR—Campaign Talks—Governor Ne Bena igs 3 1.00 | Some day these columns ought to|and on the art side, Bill Gropper,| Workers will have a chance to WJZ—The Fog Has Ears—Sketch | Lehman and Others ee 159.73 +++ 8168.73 Previously received .. FASCISM AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION | By R. PALME DUTT “Byery reader of the Daily Worker must read this book to un- derstand the most important political tasks before the whole work- ing class."—HARRY GANNES | “Incomparably the best book on Fascism that has yet been i written."—JOHN STRACHEY i 296 pp., $1.75 Available in Workers Bookshops er direct from INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS 381 FOURTH AVENUE NEW YORK (Write for full descriptive catalogue) The Lion and Unicorn ALVIN SCHWARTZ (for the editors) _be brought together into a book. Many young readers have started agitating for a chemistry section. Good; and I would like to see the Little Lefty UNCLE JouN Has DISPLAYED AN INTEREST IN “HE Case OF Leery's pac, he Ute NEGRO Boy WHO, WITH HIS FOLKS, (6 ABOUT Mo Be Evicreo FROME House C'MON Scenery — WE AIN'T GOT No ime Lose / AROUND “Tye CORNER — oO, as well as Martha Champion, N. P.| show what they think of this con-/| editor, and Helen Kay. But more} are needed. Communicate with the| New Pioneer. 3 viction when sentences will be pronounced Oct. 30, in the Special Sessions Court. WABO--Easy Aces—Sketch 8:13-WABC—Edwin ©, Hill, Commentator 8:30-WEAF—Wayne King Orchestra WJZ—Lanny Ross, Tenor; Salter Or- , chestra Leave It to Uncle John! LISTEN PAL- C'MON WITH ME — | KNOW MY UNK WILL HEL? YOU IF HE KNOWS: YOUR Story / Kor Srune! Leap ME ‘fo |IM « by del UNCLE JOUN-TAIS 1S MY FRIEND PEANUTS” JOHNSON - SET DOWN SON — NOW Let's HEAR WHAT “THiS 1S ALL ABOUT] WJZ—-Dennis King, Songs WABC—Broadcast to and From Byrd | Expedition; Warnow Orchestra 10:15-WJZ—Scenes From Anne of Green | Gables; Mme, Sylvia, Narrator | 10:30-WEAF—The President's Conservation Flan—-Robert Fechner, Director, | Emergency Conservation Work WJZ—Denny Orchestra; Harry Riche | man, Songs WABC—Mary Eastmen, Soprano; Evan Evans, Baritone > 11:00-WEAF—The Grummits—Sketch, with | “Senator” Ford Ps | WOR—Moonbeams Trio | | WJZ—Kings Guards Quartet WABC—Belasco Orchestra 11:15-WEAF—Robert Royce, Tenor |. WJZ—Coleman Orchestra | 11:80-WEAP—Dance Music (Also WOR, WJZ, WABC) | 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—$500, J. Fishman +8 25 Total to date ...,..85.50 Previously received .