The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 29, 1934, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1934 Page § CHANGE | WORLD! —— By MICHAEL GOLD aoe. oa McFadden Uses ‘Order | of °76° to Mail Out His Speeches This is the second instalment LIKE to think that a copy of “The Left Review,” the new English revolutionary was delivered bootleg to Henry James in Hell. Henry James, that insufferable bore of a middle-class American who tried to crash into English and continental aristocratic society, is condemned to of brimstone and to talking to fat duchesses who turn into third rate novels before his eyes. By way of explanation for workers who have had the good fortune not to have read Henry James; this Harvard snob spent his life writ- ing tiresome and empty books about country estates and drawing- He was really using his books to buy his rooms and the best people. way into the drawing-rooms in w! cousin. Henry James illustrates that vicious and killing veneration of upper-class tradition of which T. S. Eliot is the new high priest. Henry in Hell ELL, let us imagine Henry in Hell receiving his copy of the Left Review. The London that Henry remembers was a very exclusive, very upperclass and very snobbish London. Everybody was snobbish within a radius of fifty miles of Westminster Abbey. and Wels, were very snobbish about their Socialism. They couldn’t trust the rough and unkempt proletariat to make the Revolution. The litterateurs were very snobbish about their literature. @ group of mystical snobs called the Pre-Raphaelites. They were very snobbish about old tapestries and Later, other little snobs became snobbish about forgotten and unap- preciated fifteenth century poets. parties for some Hindu mystic who was frightfully full of oriental This wisdom was contained in a series of oriental books ‘The Vedas were very ancient books, and full of wisdom. called The Vedas, good sayings and wise things, and full of a serene quiet curing which Enter the Left Review HAT was Henry’s London. Why “Left”? Ah, thinks Henry, theosophical group who practice Leftism? but the world moves so quickly once you leave it. He flips the pages like a man waiting in a dental parlor. WRITERS INTERNATIONAL page 38, he reads: TION). page. He reads: “There is a crisis of ideas in the capitalist world today not less considerable than the crisis in economics.” My god, thinks Henry, what kind of theosophy is this? And he reads further: “The d of English literature and the theatre cannot be understood apart from all that separates 1913 and 1934. companying the collapse of an economic system.” The Twitching of a Monocle y’s monocle is Well, Review. The Left Review? he thinks to himself. A strange name! Henry by this time is very curious. of the fifth article by John L. Spivak of the series “Plotting the American Pogroms,” appearing weekly in the NEW MASSES, In the first part Spivak produces evi- dence that Congressman Louis T. McFadden of Pennsylvania, who launched a vicious atack upon Jews from the floor of the House, and then had this speech distrib- uted by the thousands at gov- ernment expense, has been closely connected with the anti-Semitic Order of 76, and the Silver Shirts. magazine now on sale here, In Hell, wearing a burning monocle, spats By JOHN L. SPIVAK Be ERMANY, because of the pro- tests aroused in this country by her slaughtering and torturing of Jews, was very anxious to counter- act Jewish as well as Gentile pro- tests. The best counteraction was to carry the “hate-the-Jew” creed to the American Jew so that Amer- ican Jews would have their hands full with their own worries. It thus became important not only for the secret German agents to organize anti-Semitism on a national scale in this country but to disseminate hich he always felt like a third . The Fabians, Shaw First there was antique furniture and theosophy. Or they held little exclusive tea | Congress by McFadden. with organizations working hand in glove with secret German agents, A. member of Congress has the how to fast and how to become you did nothing very wisely. to his constituents and others. The Congress of the United States also gives the Representative the priv- ilege of stamping his name on the envelope to avoid payment of post- age. McFadden wanted to flood the United States with his attack on the Jews. he opens up a copy of tle Left perhaps it is a new organ of a Strange, Henry thinks, On (BRITISH SEC- His eye files down the would not print as many copies of his speech as he wanted so the Speeches were printed at some one else's expense! in this article, has been such as to cast doubts about his paying for it. It has been McFadden’s custom to “borrow” money, not to spend it. This anti-Semitic speech, designed to arouse race hatred in the United States, is marked “Not printed at Government Expense” but countless thousands were mailed out at Gov- lecadence of the last twenty years It is the collapse of a culture, ac- twitching. the attack on the Jews made in Let us how this anti-Semitic propaganda was disseminated and whether there was any connection right to get copies of his speech printed by the Government to mail ‘The Government apparently Who paid for the} printing I do not know, but Mc-| ¥Fadden’s whole life, as I shall show} i | Mr. Royal Scott Gulden, One Last 53 Street, New York, New York. Dear Mr. Guldent te you this morning. Z shi let me know when you recei til sacks as they are pro; McFadden’s secretary informs September 28, 1993, ‘Two mail s4@%s, ome containing four bundles of five hundred speeches each and the other containing two bundles of five hundred speeches eech, were sent sll appreciate it if you will ve then. Also, pleese turn over to your postman the tro perty of the U. S. Government. Sincerely yours, ae Secretary. Royal Scott Gulden, head of the secret espionage Order of 76, that bundles of the anti-Semitic speeches made by the Congressman are being shipped to be remailed by Gulden who is working with secret Hitler agents in this country, Iowa, a gentleman who always Places the Hitler swastika sign after jhis name signed to official letters. . Pee S EVIDENCE that Congressman race-hatred speeches to organiza- tions working closely with secret Hitler agents, so that they could distribute the material without pay- ing the government postage, I offer the letter dated Sept. 28, 1933, sent Bittner, McFadden’s private secre- tary: Dear Mr. Gulden: Two mail sacks, one containing four bundles of five hundred speeches and the other containing two bundles of five hundred speeches each, were sent to you this morning. I shall appreciate it if you will let me know when you receive them. Also, please turn over to your postman the two mail sacks as they are the property of the U. S. Government. Sincerely yours, (Signed) JANE C, BITTNER, Secretary. The Order of '76 not only mailed copies to individuals but also shipped them out in bundles. Everyone was having a grand time with the gov- ernment’s postal facilities, since by using McFadden’s name on the en- velope one did not have to pay McFadden sent bundles of his) to Royal Scott Gulden by Jane C.| here, indicating that they were | mailed at Grand Central Station, New York. Possibly someone is tying them up in bundles with one | address on the bundle and they | get untied. I understand the Post Office is not authorized to accept | packages in that manner. Maybe | you can give me some light on | this. Iam returning to my home and shall be glad to hear from you. Sincerely yours, (Signed) L. T. McFADDEN. We now see the definite connec- tion between this Congressman and | secret espionage organization which is working closely with Hit- | ler anti-Semitic agents in this coun- jtry. Let us now examine the en- |velope in which this amazing flood | jof “hate-the-Jew” propaganda was |Sent out—without paying the gov- |ernment for postage. The envelope, in order to get the |Propaganda across as well as pos- |sible, carried the following legend: | “Gentiles have the paper while | Jews have the gold and lawful | money.” | This legend, upon which he based | his attack on the Jewish people, |gives us the right to examine Con- |gressman McFadden’s past, to de- termine whether he has any evi- dence to support his assertion or |whether, like so many dishonest |People, he makes an accusation to | stop a charge of exactly the same | postage. It got so that vast quan-|nature against himself. I shall now present evidence that Plotting the American Pogroms Fleeces Both Jew and Gentile Through | Worthless Stock ing oil corporation known as the ‘Two Talented British Poets Find Source of Strength in Communism I longed to forgive them, yet they never smiled.” He addressed his own generation? Poems by Stephen Spender. Ran- | se. $1.50. 68 pages Ww. Auden, Random House, $2.50 Reviewed by STEVE FOSTER HESE two poets are of aristocratic origin and a radical poetr an individual, group, are registe: ly in poetry, and poets revolt against it a clear indicatio: ility of leisure-cl Marr Oil Corporation. McFadden learned that this company was a money-maker. He became a di- rector of the corporation and worked |his way up to become Chairman of jthe Board—a job he held up to! | August 30, 1923. (I go this far back So as to show that Congressman | McFadden’s crookedness is not a jTecent aberration. I can go back | | still farther but the illustrations I| values represented by the {shall offer will be sufficient.) aristocracy. _ | W. H. Auden descr “a world | ribes that has had its day”: “Romans had a language in their There was another director on |this corporation named Rottenberg. | in August, 1923, Pat Marr, in con- day |versation with Rottenberg, said he’d| And ordered roads with it, but it like to sell his corporation and sent | had to die.” Rottenberg to Washington, D. C.| And he pictures this dying world (where McFadden lived) to get the| “...the roads have almost Congressman to go to New York} vanished and the expresses never and negotiate with a reliable oil| run: jcompany for the sale of the prop-| Smokeless chimneys, damaged erty. Pat Marr trusted McFadden| bridges, rotting wharves and and Rottenberg—after all, McFad-| choked canals, jden was “an honorable Congress-| qramlines buckled, smashed man.” | Rottenberg and McFadden tried | to make the deal with the Southern | | States Oil Corporation, through an | official of the latter company named Ferris. Ferris told them the South- ern States Oil Corporation was not willing to pay cash for the Marr Oil Company but would exchange trucks lying on their side across the rails; Power stations locked, deserted, since they drew the boiler fires; Pylons fallen or subsiding, trai ing dead high-tension wires. . He declares that “It is time for destruction of error. “Financier, its stock for the Marr Company.|. ++ The game is up for you and for Rottenberg objected to the proposi-| the others” and the financier cannot |tion. Ferris thereupon suggested | escape. that if the deal were put through| in exchanging the stock, the South-| ]N The Dance of Death, Auden jern States Oil Corporation would | es from a definite Marxist give McFadden and Rottenberg| viewpoint and presents “a Picture of }$100,000 and an additional amount’ the decline of a class, of how its of 10,000 shares of Southern States| members dream of a new life, but stock over and above the number | . ap a ‘ ae ig of shares they would get anyw secretly esire the old, for t a | xt id death inside them. We show yo | McFadden, honorable Congress- es man from Pennsylvania, then went | ‘Pt death as a dancer,” The dz a eid NY! represents capitalism. {n mv to Pat Marr and gave him a glow- jing account of Southern States Oil, |urging him to take stock for his | company, saying that he had known | Ferris in Congress and that the man was absolutely honest. To make a long story short, Pat Marr was persuaded to sell his com- pany for Southern States Oil stock. When McFadden and Rottenberg appeared for the bribe, Ferris doublecrossed them a little, saying that he did not have $100,000 but | would give them $50,000. So the two boys took the $50,000 and divided it between thmselves as well as the shares, * jcomedy form, Auden parodi | pretensions and philistine virtu the upper class. At the conclusion. | Karl Marx enters with two young Communists and gives the final | verdict over the dead body of the dancer. “The instruments of pr jduction have been too much {er |him. He is liquidated.” The Dance of Death provides good |satire and entertainment and can be easily performed before worker audiences. The Workers Labora~ jtory Theatre and dance groups |should interest themselves in the | work and undertake a production é | of The Dance of Death. Of the two poets, Auden is tecn- BY THIS time Henr: ernment expense! The reader’s at- | tities of the race-hatred speeches “There are already a number of writers who realize this. They tention 4 fled to’ th |were returned to the Congressman, | Congressman McFadden is crooked desire and are working for the ending of the capitalist order of society. | in Saturday's face e illustration and he wrote a letter of Piguey | rate ae ae peel naegedess ay They aim at a new order based not on profit and property but on | Nor were these anti-Semitic bei SRS NOCS gael lawful money" while eave co-operate effort. They realize that the working class will be the | speeches mailed to citizens Dear Mr. Gulden: |both Jew and Gentile holding builders of this new order, and see that the change must be revolu- /|directly by the Congressman. His | tionary in effect. Even those to whom politics are secondary desire to ally themselves more closely with the class that will build socialism.” And when Henry reads that the membership of this Writers In- ternational will include those “who see in the development of Fascism otfice sent them out by the sack- | |load to the espionage Order of '76| which in turn mailed them—with-| out paying postage—to carry on anti-Semitic propaganda. Sack- Evidently some one is mailing | Worthless paper. out my speeches from New York | Fad unaddressed as a great number of them are being returned to me | . HERE was a man named Pat Marr who had a wealth-produc- hi, Eaecgetae! quietly added the $25,- | 000 bribe to his income tax re- port! Pat Marr eventually was sent |to prison for misusing the United States. mails. When the former oil | man got out he learned how he had |been double-crossed by the Con- |gressman from Pennsylvania and | sued for the return of his company. nically more proficient, he is more | Mature, more observant and realis- tic, and intellectually more brill- | jant. Stephen Spender’s work is of a | lyrical nature and his poems conve: \@ more personal note. He, two, | writes of his disillusionment with the old world, and he describes the new with romantic ardor. He re- calls a scene from childhood the terroristic dictatorship of dying capital” and “a menace to all the best achievements of human culture;” who “will use their pens and influence against imperialist Soviet Union, the State where the foundations of Socialism are being laid,” I can well imagine the monocle falling completely out of his head. England’s New Intellectuals 'T WOULD be impossible to conceive of writers of the stamp of Henry James joining with this group of the first time in England an organization of left wing writers. History has any effect upon Heil James is already firmly planted on that road of cultural reaction loads, too, were shipped to the head of the Crusader White Shirts espi- war and in the defense of the |Omage organization in Muscatine, CORRECTION In the article on Upton Sinclair, by Karl Radek, printed in yesterday's paper, an error was made, in the sentence read- ing, “Hence if circumstances compel the latter party to ad- vance a demagogic program of combating big capital and grap- Englishmen who have formed for If at all, in that deep region Henry | | Questions a nd Answers This department appears twice a week on this page. All questions should be addressed to “Questions and Answers,” Daily Worker, 50 East 13th St., New York City. Question: I have noticed of late in the “Daily” a slogan “Vote Com- munist for a Soviet America.” Are that leads to Fascism. And on earth, in his London, his inheritors have carried on for him. Their work smacks more and more of death. They are the champions of church and storm troopers. They dream, in their withered and property-heayy souls, of “The Leader,” the Oswald Mosileys who will lead them out of the threat of a working class uprising safely into the arms of the bankers, those “defenders” of culture! But in the Left Review another group of Englishmen appear and others will come to join them. The ranks of the English intellectuals who have joined hands with the workers for a better world, the ranks which already include the best of the new English writers and thinkers, men like Strachey and R, Palme Dutt, will continue to swell. There pling with poverty, the petty bourgeois masses are sufficiently gullible to fall for such social demagogy, especially if its ex- ponent is a man who is energetic and without the personal pe- cuniary ambitions of Roosevelt.” The name “Sinclair” should be | substituted for Editor’s Note, Le Philadelphia Workers “Roosevelt,” — is a deep revolutionary tradition in England. There is a long heritage School Opens Tonight we forsaking the violent overthrow of the capitalist system for reliance in capitalist “democracy?” It seems so when this slogan is raised alone. What is the difference between the | Socialists who say, “Vote Socialist for a Socialist America,” and us, if | we use the same slogan? I know that of late the C. I. has stressed that the C. P. in every country acquaint the masses with the slogan “Towards Soviet Power.” But it seems to me to be counter to Communist principles to just say, “Vote Communist for a Soviet councils through the smashing of the capitalist state.” On the other hand, the Socialist slogan, “Vote Socialist for a Social- ist America,” is based on the So- cialist Party theory, expressed al- most every day by Norman Thomas, that the abolition of capitalism and the building of Socialism can be) accomplished purely through legal,| electoral means; that is to say, by voting capitalism out of existence. This theory is in direct contra- diction to the fundamental teach- ings of Marxism, and violates the entire experience of thé class. For Marx and Engels, basing | themselves on the analysis of the capitalist State showed that the proletariat can: never abolish the rule of the capitalists without smashing the capitalist.state power through revolutionary mass action. ! It was then that the whole story | |of how Congressman Louis T. Mc- |Fadden was bribed came out. (To Be Continued) |TUNING IN ‘My parents kept me from chil- dren who were rough And who threw words like stones and who wore torn clothes. They were lithe, they sprang ont behind hedges Like dogs to bark at our world, They threw mud | And I looked another way, pre- tending to smile. “oh young men oh young comrades it is too late now to stay in those houses your fathers built where they built you to build to breed money on money it is too late oh comrades . advance to rebuild . advance to rebel . concluding poem he declares? - .No man Shall hunger: Man shall spend equally. Our goal which we compel: Man Shall be man. Our programme .. . Death to the kill life. These poets have gained strength from Communism, from the working-class movement. They ve found in Communism the vital ecessary for a healthy, living, and growing modern poetry. And bringing to their this new influence in the field of poetry in Eng- land wh te, Auden, Spender, . have been popularly acclaimad, has had” in turn effect upon individuals and popes comrades scoff at poetry as an effective medium of change and revolution. Actually, they attribute to poetry those emasculated mark the decadenc culture and the le with which poetry has been identi- fied. Their scoffing tends to belittle the accomplishment of young working-class poe their own ranks when t need the utmost encou der to continue wor! which they are and which is so deprecatec But the poetry of revolution is a poetry of change and not of aesthetic stasis, In England, led by the afoze- mentioned three poets, a new poetry movement has arisen and has, to a marked degree, changed the in- tellectual cast of the younger gen- eration, and move particularly, the literary generation, the new voices that express the sentiments of a people and agitate for its ideals, It has won over new poets, writers, and artists, to the cause of Com- munism. It has stimulated and aroused nation-wide controversy and interest concerning the fundamental issues and contradictions of cap- italist society where formerly a widespread lethargy concerning so- cial issues existed in belles- and middle class English Society. | There is a growing group of pro- letarian poets whose songs will be heard in America, and the noisy sneers of philistine prejudices must not subdue thi voices. ir features which Contributions received to the credit of David Ramsey in. -lis Socialist competition with Jacob Burek, Mike Gold, Harry Gannes, Ann Barton, “Del” and the Medical Advisory Board, in the Daily Worker | drive for $60,000. Quota—s250. Game of Michigan Rummy $& 55 Boston Sympathizers 2.00 Previously received 13.80 $16.35 Total to date 7:00-WEAF—Ray Perkins, Songs WOR—Sports Talk—Ford Frick | WJZ—Amos 'n' Andy—Sketch t and Marge 7:15-WEAF—Gene and Gleen—Sketch WOR—Comedy and Music | WABC—M: Sketch \J.R.C. Artists Group Reon niz working | WJZ—Plantation Echoes; Mildred Bailey, Songs; Robinson Orchestra WABC—Just Plain Bill—Sketeh 7:30-WEAF— nce Music WJZ—Dangerous Paradise—Sketch WABC—Boake Carter, Commentator 9:00-WEAF—Himber Orchestra WOR—Lone Ranger—Sketch | WJZ—Jan Gerber, Supper Club | WABC—Bar X Days—Sketch | To Work More Closely With C. P. The artist group of the John Reed , of $2 per month was made for this Club has undertaken a complete | class but for Party members a lower reorganization with a view to ful-| price will be arranged. The im- \filling its function more adequately | portant feature of this class is that both on the cultural front and in| Work done and discussed will be an {close and active participation in| actual assignments and organized |the work of the C. P. This will| for production, with special em- {be done through organized units | Phasis on the mimeographing. in the various craft subdiyisions,| Production of good leaflets is a 8:15-WABC Edwin C. Hill, Commentator | special service units, etc. major political task and must not 8:30-WEAF—Symphony Orchestra; Gladys The work of the John Reed | be underestimated. of political literature. Equipped with Marxism, the Left Review will heighten and enrich this heritage. Meanwhile in Hell, Henry James The whole history of the struggles) | Swarthout, Soprano; M of the working class has proved (idee lati gla Speaks, Soprano; Frank Chapman, PHILADELPHIA. — The Philadel-| America,” without explaining that Club covers a very broad field of |_ The Board of the John Reed Club : s is jactivities, i.¢., art school, exhibi- | School therefore proposes that every can prepare to move over. There are friends of his coming to join |phja Workers School opens tonight) this slogan is not to be taken ae that. The recent ees in tout WOR ce Cae pale Re eesact |tions, trade ution work, the theatre,|Party unit designates one of its him very soon. at its headquarters, 908 Chestnut | @lly but in the sense that we Com-| many, Austria, Spain have con: Moses, Republican Candidate for | chalk tall is artist unt - | Members to take this course. Bee Shale . : Street, a splendid location in the|'™unists must have more mass sup-| firmed it. Governor feet rarglv ional pebridigvagt bone IRICEN RS ernie f ce ae port in order to prepare for the final! Therefore, the Socialist Party WJz—King’s Guards Quartet lications, posters, lectures, etc., etc. | ; heart of the downtown section of the city, with a remodeled building made suitable for school purposes. The school committee announces Contributions received to the credit of Mike Gold in his Socialist competition with Jacob Burck, David Ramsey, Harry Gannes, In the Home, Del and the Medical Advisory Board, in the Daily Worker drive for $60,000. Quota—$500, WABO—Mario Chamlee, Tenor; Con-| An estimation of the present | 4nd experienced staff for this course sont Orchestra forces cannot begin to meet the | and adhe of its importance a 8:45-WJZ—From Schooner Seth Parker owing needs of the revolutionary |the revolutionary movement wi 9:00-WEAF—Gypsies Orchestra; Frank Sar | give it all the necessary support. struggle—the overthrow of capital- ism and the establishment of a So- viet. America—a workers’ and farm- ers’ government. V. S. theory of the electoral, peaceful path to Socialism actually serves to disarm the masses through illusions, | Parker, Tenor Baal PriedMan se. ysis cts eet eee S$ 50 that there is still opportunity for late-comers to register for all the through failing to organize the masses for the revolutionary seizure WOR—The Witch's Tale WJZ—Minstrel Show One of the largest and most pop- The solution lies in organized | work and growth through activity | Answer: The slogan, “Vote Com-| of power. WABC—Rosa Ponselle, So 3 i 5 ae a 1 er alii . apes classes, and should there be @ larger) munist for a Soviet America,” does| The use of capitalist legislative | ae ‘Rostelanets ounataicn. jie aa for the revolutionary move je comes Sane si oe ane i ‘ a eae number of applicants than can be) not mean that a Soviet America will| bodies is part of the revolutionary! %80-WEAF—Joe Cook, Comedian; Donald 2 A - > the| ~veolt mE Collected by Leo Fisher . + 100 handled in the classes already pro-|be achieved by voting. This slogan| strategy of the working class. The! ae aes oe te vite vee by siete Panes ied br ts Soa “i pu Ore ae Previonay eon reyes bi to vided for, special arrangements will/ means that to vote for the Commu-| Communist Party conducts its cam- WOR—Lum and Abner—sketch | oon be an Mimioesiate cen in seine lee Sree wiewpoink ane. Graetae ake be made to increase the number of | nist Party is to express support for) paigns in a revolutionary way, con- MAES: Ghatin’ Grcheltra: dying the lack of forces and can closer to the movement the mothers Total to date $196.32 the idea of Soviet It. does| stant! ing the capitalist dic bee Tait rare Gr creatine pad wine des eer reeraa ts | i , fo classes. e ide: Power. loes| stantly exposing the capi c~ and Silly, Comedians; Gertrude |help to achieve the ideal organiza-|of the children. Children are very Besides the standard courses in| not mean to imply that Soviet power | tatorship behind the trappings of Niesen, Songs; Chiquito, Songs tional set-up of Party units, that/interested in drawing and the Principles of Communism, Political __|Out Today| CONGRESSMAN MCFADDEN JEW-BAITER AND CROOK By JOHN L. SPIVAK Economy, Marxism-Leninism, Prob- lems of the Negro Liberation Move- ment, Trade Union History, Trade Union Strategy and Tactics, Organ- ization Problems, etc. there are classes on Sign, Poster and Leaflet Making, Parliamentary Procedure, especially for members of A. F. of every week in the school building. Friday might forums will be held can be achieved by any other means than through mass revolutionary struggle. In this sense, in the sense of support for the idea of a Soviet America, do we use the slogan, “Vote Communist for a Soviet America.” The Communist Party combines with its slogan, “Vote Communist for a Soviet America,” its other | proletarian dictatoyship,” “For the capitalist democracy. The Socialist Party in its election campaigns, by failing to expose the class character of the capitalist dictatorship which is hidden by the trappings of elec- tions, voting, etc., only serves to strengthen tinis capitalist rule by striving to blind the working class to its essential revolutonary mis- sion, to smash the dictatorship of majority over the exploiting minor- setting up of workers’ and farmers’ Little Leftv A story of a $25,000 bribe taken by the Hon. McFadden; of the Con- gressman’s intimate contact with secret anti-Semitic organizations; UNCLE JOKN HAS — Course Your uNK isa Smarr GUY N'ALLO HAT BUT HOW DOES HE EXPECT —10 po So MUCIE ity. -WOR—Breckinridge Campaign Talk -WEAF—-Eastman Orchestra; Lullaby of making each Party unit an ade-/ mothers usually come with them Lady; Male Quartet WOR—Campaign Talks — Governor Lehman, Lieut. Goy. M. William Bray and Senator Royal 8, Cope- land, at Yonkers WdZ—America in Music; Methods of Transportation; John Tasker How- ard, Narrator WABC—Wayne King Orchestra 19:15-WOR—Current Events—H. E. Read 10:80-WEAF—1934 Mobilization for Human | quate propaganda machine. | The School Board of the John |tering for posters, placards, leaflets, ning classes will be formed as re- WABC, WJZ) quests come in. WOR—Variety Musicale A special price Here’s How! Lemme Siow Ya! SupPogin' Youre “th! LAN'LORD AND ANY ONE OF MY FINGERS || ~2nnnrs ciguRE —o 1S #ENSNT- WE CAN'T HURTCHR— by del, -Bot ‘Sposin’ he + Y OeeTHER — f | Reed Club School of Art as a first|liminary investigation, step has decided to form a Poster|such children’s classes conducted in | Design, Lettering, Shop Paper, and} Workers’ Clubs throughout the city | Leaflet Design class. The work will) would cover all phas2s of designing of let-/ ganizing base. and call for them. The Board, as a result of a pre- feels that constitute a splendid or- It is, however, important ‘that and mimeographed shop papers, etc.|they be properly organized. To do L, unions, English, Russian, Spanish, | pasic Slogans, such as, “For the/the capitalists and set up its dic- Needs; Play—Society’s Business,| The class will meet on Sunday | that it will be necessary for clubs Origin of Man and Civilization.| overthrow of capitalism,” “For a|tatorship, the dictatorship of the) With, Miriam Hopkin's: | Speaker. | morning from 10:30 to 1:30. Eve-/to confer directly with Comrade Pearse, Secretary of the Art School, In anticipation of a response to this proposal the Board has begun @ training class for instructors. The John Reed Club and the ichool Board invite suggestions. Socialist workers — workers in the A. F. of L—we must unite 5 . GET TOGETHER our ranks. The Roosevelt New ee aheapploateies pecan iy as WHEN WE IS Jo DARN WERK? AM (RIGHT? LIKE HIS— oneal | Deal is hanger and war deal Also in This Issue: OELEGATIONTO Show your color—stand with your THE ALL-AMERICA ASS by ROBERT FORSYTHE SEE “he LAND— class. Vote Communist! Join the - Why President Frederick B. Robinson of C. C. N. Y. is the outstanding candidate for this title bitingly told. WHY WE VOTE COMMUNIST An editorial analysis from the Marxist viewpoint of the election. credit of Del in his Socialist. H, L. MENCKEN and ROBERT HERRICK, OS PROTEST hee competition with Mike Gold, by GRANVILLE HICKS COMING EVICTION || Harry Gannes, the Medical An examination of the two writers’ attitude tuward pro- OF HIS NEGRO |] Advisory Board, Ann Barton, letarian literature by a noted critic NEIGHBORS Vi Jacob Burck and David Ramsty, Criticism — Editorials — Cartoons % in the Daily Worker drive for NEW MASSES LORD, HOME— RELIEF BUREAU, ANO ALDERMAN OF —THe DISTRICT — 10¢ AT NEWSSTANDS Communist Party! Contributions received to the $60,000. Quota—s5oo, Total to date

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