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4 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1934 Page 5 CHANGE | <—— Tn ir WORLD! | ——— By MICHAEL GOLD EN make their own history, Marx wrote, but they do not make it of the whole cloth; they make it out of conditions on hand. But men do not make their own history, Hollywoods “theorists’ now contend. Holly- wood makes it for them. Take Sol Lesser’s version of Upton Sinclair’s dis- |'single unemployed men in Toledo, “We'd Like to Do Something for You Boys, But We Just Haven't the Money’ Toledo‘Death Marchere’| F Write Commissioners Over Phone Bill = Joint Action Committee on Unemployment, the united front committee which is leading the heroic strike and picket line of the took up the matter of payment of telephone bills which the County and SHO SPLITTING THE ATOM 30% Raise Demanded For All Unemployed r. + , It is not con known that 5 | In Lucas County | Soviet scientists are doing some of ae the most importa) work in the The flop house was called out| rica of atomic research on strike. Twice the men marched] the field of theory and exp |on the County Court House, The| ; ae ce County Commissioners were forced | to accompany the men to the State| work is watched w relief a oe ee men Pre-| by the foremost phys in Eng sented bond deman| ‘ .| land, France and America Once» the men w Minto At the moment, the Radium In- three dow! , ordered tortion of Sergei Hisenstein’s million-foot film of Mexico. The thou- sands of Americans who got their knowledge of the history of the Mexican revolution from Lesser’s chronicle, or from that other great | Relief Commissioners had incurred | when the single men barricaded | themselves inside the Court House hearty meals, and told the proprie- tors to charge it to the county re- lief cmmiss is building an of the atom that wi { document, Wallace Beery’s “Viva Villa,” conceive the Mexican revo- lution to have been a combination Wild West rodeo and a night club | floor show. During the revolution, according to the historians of Hollywood, | cities were taken merely by striking up a few bars of “La Cucaracha.” | When the fighting was over, Diaz driven out, and the new regime instituted, life in Mexico became a Paradise for the former peons and Indians and mestizos. Singing the Cockroach song, while close-up shots were taken of happy bronzed Mexicans looming over new in- | dustrial machines, the Michelets of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer closed their | chronicles on a joyous land. And thus history was written. | Enter the Truth | IRTUNATELY for those happy-go-lucky Gibbons of the studios, | the social realities have a way of de*troying the pleasant little lies | the movie boys create. Their Mexico was all celluloid: And today with the anti-church riots, the distegration of the government ruled | by Calles, the intense poverty and hunger of the Mexican masses, | the spreading influence of the Communist Party as attested by the | last elections, the truth of the betrayal of the peons becomes all the clearer and sharper. It is perhaps a strange thing for American workers to understand, but nevertheless true, that all the parties in Mexico today carry the word “revolutionary” as part of the party name. This is so even of the most reactionary, even of the fascist party. The National govern- ment party of Calles, is called the Partido Nacional Revolucionario, the National Revolutionary Party. The reactionary independent parties call themselves the Revolutionary Confederation of Indepencsnt Parties. The Fascist, the newly-organized Gold Shirts, supported by French interests and tolerated and aided by the government, also | addresses itself as Accion Revolucionaria Mexicanista, | To some, this tacking on of “revolutionary” to the party name, may appear as simply part of the peculiar tropical temper of the | Mexicans. American workers see peasants walking about Vera Cruz | with belts of cartridges around their breasts. But in order to under- stand why the official and the reactionary parties assume the word “revolutionary” it is necessary to understand the history of Mexico | during the last ten years. * . . Calles’ Socialism dees Calles government was swept into power in Mexico on the wave of the tremendous uprising of the peons and Indians. Poverty- stricken, land-hungry, bound in serfdom to the church and the great landowners and exploited by the Yankee oil and industrial powers, the masses clamored for land reforms, for land on which to live and work, It was this that Calles promised the Mexican people. And more than that, He spoke a Socialist rhetoric, he promised six-year plans in imitation of the Soviet Union, the speeches of the public officiais were filled with a Socialist demagogy. The public build- ings were even adorned with the hammer and sickle. Walls of the | public buildings were painted by men like Rivera and Orozco with | murals of the down-trodden peons and with figures of workers in rebellion carrying the red flag. But this was a Socialism all of words and not of deeds. Land reforms were never carried through. Today, after ten years of land distrisution some 26 per cent of the peasantry have received about, 2's per cent and less of the area of the republic. In other words, about nine million peasants are still bound down to the large plan- | tations and ¢states and are virtual peons; about three million have | and telephoned their relief demands te State and Federal officials. The letter of the single men to the County Commissioners follows: November 7th, 1934 County Commissioners County Court House Toledo, Ohio, Dear Sirs: It has come ot our attention that the sentiment of your body that the telephone bill run up by the Unemployed Single Men in your offices November 6th is caus- ing you considerable concern. We are glad to learn that the county commissioners are becoming con- cerned about somethng, even so remotely attendant to the relief problem in Lucas County. It might relieve you to learn that although we feel that in making the telephone calls to Roosevelt and Hopkins, etc., the Unemployed Single Men were doing the job you should have been doing long ago, and every} __ day if necessary, we are certain that those responsible for placing the telephone calls will not pre- sent the County Commissioners with a bill for their services for performing the duties of the County Commissioners. However, if you must present a bill of some sort to some one, we suggest you try the offices of Lieut. Thompson, Lucas Co. Re- lief Administrator, and General) Henderson, State Relief Director, | for they were the ones primarily responsible for the Unemployed Single Men being in your office Nov. 6th. In the event that Messrs. Thompson and Henderson doles and forced labor. while the men continued the long so in this New York breadline an the men to drop from lack of food. ignore your request for payments | as they have always done the unemployed, then we suggest that the County Commsisioners try} picketing their respective offices, But if you decide to send the bill to any of the unemployed or- ganizations who participated in the mass petition in your offices Noy. 6th, we are glad to inform | you In advance that you will ob- tain the same reply as the unem- | ployed single men have obtained | from you in the matter of rent | relief and grocery orders in cash— in the famous words of the County Commissoners, “We'd like | Marx and Lenin | On Initiative Of the Masses According to V. I. Lenin in his introduction to “Letters to Dr. Kugelmann,” “the historical initia- tive of the masses is what Marx) values above everything.” Lenin THE NEGRO WORKER, official organ of the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Work- ers, for sale at 2162 Seventh} Ave., New York City. Five cents. Reviewed by CYRIL BRIGGS Militant ‘Negro Worker’ Haunts Reformist Leaders The struggle of the unemployed single men in Toledo is by no means an isolated fight of the single men against starvation hunger As in Toledo, where an ambulance stood by grind of day and night picketing, ambulance stands in readiness for to do somehing for you boys, but we just haven't the money.” Yours sincerely, Joint Action Committee on Unemployment FRED J. VOELKER, See’y. ey Oh ae ORE, than two months ago single men were cut off relief in Lucas County and told to either | shift for themselves or accept the| louse-ridden flop in the city-owned shelter and three wretched meals in return for twenty-four hours a | week. About 5,600 single men are/| involved. and of-the co-operation. of Negro misleaders with the imperialists, both at home and abroad. Not only have the imperialists tried to bar) “The Negro Worker’ from the colonies, but the Belgian impcrial- ists have attempted to ban the Chicago’s Drama| | fy ati | most effective a | fter ali their appeals for re-| nits in operati of the | lief aid had been ignored, the men| apparatus, seit started their last d j has j a ant electro- magnet, weighing 40 t: The magnet will have a tension of 15,000 to 20,009 Gauss units, and administration. | Pup tents and first-aid tents were| its action is expected to attain ivalent of 10,000,000 volts. set up on the court house lawn. | egy Ambulances stood by as the men! tons (the positive ions of hydrogen) continued their day and night pick-| brought within the influence of this eting, At the head of the line| magnetic field are expected to marched an aged man on crutches.| attain speeds of 30,000 to 40,000 Besides him another aged ma@n,/milos a second, approaching the twisting his crippled log forward at| speed of light which is 186,000 miles jeach step, carried a huge banner,| a second decked with black crepe and’ bear-| q+ is with these speeds that the jing the slogan: “The Living Dead) protons will hit the atomic target | March On,” | and disintegrate the nuclei of the | j atoms that the investigefors are FTER one hundred and twenty|pombarding, With an apparat hours of continuous picketing | that could only develop a few hun- the men advanced upon the court) dred thousand volts, Soviet physic house and took over the offices.|ists in Kharkov succeeded in spli Behind barricaded doors the men|ting the lithium atom. The new sent their appeals to Washington,| weapon, it is believed, will be far to the State capitol, to Roosevelt | more successful in tearing different | Federal Relief Administrator Hop-| components away from the atomic kins, Governor White of Ohio, State} nucleus. Relief Director Henderson. The| story was sent to the Daily Worker} ANOTHER MATHEMATICAL over the commissioner's telephone.| MACHINE ture—continuous picket: building which houses the relief The picket line continues. Splen-| The influence of technology | did response to their appeals for} upon the advance of science hé |aid have come from the working! been an important one. Tech- class of Toledo. The Central La-| bor Union has endorsed their fight. | Numerous unins have contributed} to the funds for continuing the sruggle. | Theyt do no ask very much in the form of relief—less than a dol-| lar a day for all their relief needs— $8 monthly cash rent, $3.50 weekly | cash grocery order, $5 monthly for} clothing, and medical aid. But for the unemployed of Lucas | | County, 91,000 people of whom are on the relief lists, they demand a |} 30 per cent increase in relicf, and} no evictions for any unemployed} worker. nology helped increase the preci- sion and power of science’s attack upon its problems, and in many cases it posed questions that led to important scientific discoveries. The process was an_ interacting one, with science, in turn, speeding up the development of technique. Even in the most abstract of the sciences—mathematics—techol- | ogy promises to help create meth- | ods that may lead to the develop-| ment of solutions that are not possible today. Of course, these | are only tendencies and their full} realization waits upon the reor-/ ganization of scientific research, | and the planned direction of scien- tific activity, of the kind that characterizes science in the Soviet Union. These thoughts come to mind one reads of the construction ‘Union Ready for | . a new mathematical machine Fall Production tne wessachusetts tnstitute Technology which is capable of CHICAGO.—The Drama Union, | Solving what mathematicians call . 3 ,.| Simultaneous equations. These i t ow | following in the path of New York's equations entyr into the work Theatre Union, announces its suc-/| cessful organization, and the com-| pletion of arrangements for the of designing complex engineering structures, and consequently the! new machine in grinding out an-/ swers to problems that are too | snake with t been giver: an infinitesmal part of the land on which to starve out their lives. . . . A Comedy of Socialisn. ( regime of Calles can most aptly be called a comedy of Social- ism. The oniy real socialist act, afte: years and years of talk of nationalization of land and industry, by the Mexican government, that I know of, was the socialization of the gravevards in the State of Tabasco. The socializaticn of the graveyards was perhaps the crowning irony of the rhetoric of the Calles regime. In the State of Tabasco, the governor, an apt pupil of the “left language” of his master, de- creed, with the support of the Legislature, the socialization of all the cemeteries in the State. This consisted of ordering all tombstones, crosses and monuments to be replaced by small numbered blocks of stone, bearing no mark or inscription! Thus was achieved the nationalization of corpses! * . . Correcting History Bo the government is growing apprehensive about its ability to continue to yoke the masses with its flowers of socialist speech. The peons are as oppressed as ever; Mexico continues to remain a semi-colonial country, exploited and oppressed by Yankee capital. The words such as the President-elect Cardenas recently uttered, “No Mexican worker will go hungry or be without work, and if the em- ployer should close his plant workers will occupy and exploit it for their benefit” are ceasing to have the old hypnotic influence. At the last election, Hernan Latcrde, railroad worker and a militant strike leader, polled several thousand vetes as candidate of the Worker- Peasant Bloc. The votes were counted by the Calles government. I began this column with the revisionist statement that Holly- wood makes history. I wish to amend it now, at the close, by saying: But workers correct it! . . . 69-YEAR OLD MOTHER’ CONTRIBUTES “I am over 60 years old, but I hope to live long enough to give all my energy to the revolution and to the dawn of a new day . . .I am very poor, and cannot help very materially, but here are $2.00 (listed Monday) in the competition. Your ‘Change the World Column’ is splendid. Bravo!”—Mrs. Meria Foss, Springfield, Mass, W. Laukshtein ... Hewilt +8 25 For a Soviet America . Welfare Relief Worker ...... 30 A Friend -... Bill Haywood Br. No. 5 Peter Savage (gets book) ... we 2200 M. Lowder .. Proviousiy received 343,46, Total to date LSE SOTO SMES EVE p eats, $369.93 Quota... _For the First Time in English LETTERS TO Dr. KUGELMANN : by Karl Marx V. 1. Lenin’s introduction enriches the theoretical treas ures of this brilliant correspondence. Here is Marxism in its widest ap- rPrrcccce plication: Discussions on the labor INTERNATIONAL theory of value, Lasalle and other | pare Ave. New York. writers of the day, the defense of the Paris Commune, polemics against Duhrine, etc. I am interested in your publica- tions and would like to receive your catalogue and book news. NAME s INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS 381 FOURTH AVENUE NEW YORK emphasized his point particularly for the benefit of the Russian) Mensheviks led by Plekhanov, who, at the “defeat” of the Revolution of 1905, had complained that the insurgents “should not have re- sorted to arms.” Snatching a handy quotation from Marx’s writings on the period just | before the Paris Commune in 1871, and forcibly tearing a sentence away from the living spirit of | Marxist, revolutionary working-class theory of which it was a part, Plekhanov had hinted, Lenin wrote, that Marx himseli “also put the breaks on the revolution in 1870.” Such a hodge-podge of “rea- soning’—a mixture of cheap Men- shevik swindling and hopeless ped- antry—aroused the most burning scorn in Lenin. And Marx's great- est disciple proceeds, in his intro- duction, to tear down the lies of Plekhanoy and present Marxism again as the only theory that en- ables the revolutionary working class “to storm the heavens” against the rule of the bourgeoisie. “In September, 1670,” says Lenin, “Marx called insurrection desperate folly, but in April, 1871, when he saw the mass movement of the people, he treated it with the great attention of a man participating in great events which marked a step forward in the world historical movement, . ..” “Marx looked upon this history from the point of view of those who make it without being able to cai- culate exactly the chances before- hand, not from the point of view of @ moralizing intellectual and phili- stine who says: ‘It was easy to foresee . . . they should not have resorted to... .!’ “Marx was able to appreciate the fact that moments occured in his- tory when the desperate struggle of the masses even for a hopeless cause is necessary for the sake of printing of the magazine in Bel- presentation of “Stevedore” on De- cumbersome and even impractical! Te Negro Worker,” is well on its way to becoming a very disturbing, nay, tormenting “gho: for certain Negro reformis: lead: It was but two weeks ago that the Pittsburgh Co r had the magazine snugly shrouded and buried—‘at the orders of Moscow,” ) of course. But, alas, the militant | magazine, variously buried by im perialist oppressors and Negro mis-} leaders alike, inconveniently fuses to stay “dead.” It has aj disconcerting knack of regularly | turning up in the very vanguard | of the world struggie for Negro) liberation, to confound the wish-} fathered lies of the bosses and} their agents. Its latest issue, dated for September, was received in this country just a few days ago. In addition to a leading editorial which has an important bearing on the Courier’s report of its death which. to quote a famous remark of Mark Twain, “was greatly exag- gerated,” the magazine contains much rich material on the condi- tions and rising struggles of the toiling African masses. In this is included a trenchant exposure of the development of fascist terror by the agents of British imperialism on the Gold Coast, West Africa, and of the heroic resistance of the Negro masses to the fascist attacks; an analysis of the bitter rivalry of) the imperialist bandits for control of Abyssinia, and articles on the growing danger of a new world war, with reports of the anti-war and anti-Fascist struggles of Negro and white toilers throughout the world. The pretensions of Japanese im- perialists of “championship” of the “darker peoples” are exploded in another article, Pigs ceed ITS leading editorial dgals with the new sedition law in British West Africa, and the attempts of the imperialists to bar the magazine from the colonies. The Gold Coast sedition act and the attacks on “The Negro Worker” are doubly the further education of these masses and their training for the next struggle.” Little Leftv SHE NEIGHBORS HAVE PUY THe FURNITURE BACK INYO “HE You Sia significant, both as an indication ef the growing imperialist offen- sive against the colonial masses House //\ Tete THAT MO IS IN AN UGLY MOoD/ YER OTHER TENANTS” IS GETTIN Goose PIMPLES N'MOVIN' OUT + wHey'S THE IDE Poucusnss 777? ARE You TRYING To EMBARASS ME — 7 DON'T FORGET GOT_INTO © C= a gium, whither it moved after the Hitler regime drove it out of Ger- many. In this the Belgian im- perialists are guided both by the: own slave interests in the Congo, where there have been frequent up- risings during the past five years, and by the frantic demands of the British imperialists for the sup- pression of the magazine. The attempt of the imperialist re-| powers to suppress the magazine) was the real, but unrevealed, source of the Courier’s story that “Mos cow had ordered the magazine closed.” tradition of whitewashing every crime of the imperialists against the Negro people (Sco' at once distorted the fac’ to slander the Communist Inter- national. “The C. I. was betraying the struggles of the African peop! "i the Courier wailed with a sucdde “interest” in the liberation struggles of the African masses, and in the} manner of Judge Hawkins of Scottsboro infamy shedding croco- dile tears as he pronounced the death verdicts agains the innocent Scottsboro lads, The Negro people were “being betrayed again by the C. 1,” the Courier tearfully lied in an attempt to whitewash its imperialist masters and at the same time saddle their crimes on the C, I. EANWHILE, in London, Sir P. Cunliff-Lisier, British Colonial Secretary, pays an unconscious tribute to “The Negro Worker,” with the statement to a Gold Coast delegation. which wect to England to protest against the S:dition Act, that “thousands of copies of this foul and obnoxious tract” (produc- ing a copy of “The Negro Worker” which he engvily flung on t floor) were pouring into the colo The hatred of the imperialists and their Negro agents is the best tribute to the effectiveness of the work of “The Negro Worker” in rousing the colonial masses and giv- ing them guidance in their struggles. O.K, GENTLEMEN - I'LL. POSTPONE, The Courier, true to its} cember 26th. The first production | of the season, in a Loop theatre, will be “Peace on Earth” by George | Sklar and Albert Maltz, which had an eighteen week run in the Civic; Repertory Theatre in New York. It is the intention of the Drama | Union to present plays dealing with significant contemporary | themes, using a professional com- |pany of players. The prices will} be low, ranging from thirty-five cents to one dollar and fifty, with attendance of the unemployed sub- | sidized by contributions. | The Drama Union is a coopera- tive association of all elements in the theatre: playwrights, scene de- g technicians, directors, actors, | and audience, Through coope: ation | | with trade unions, fraternal socicties. cial organizations, cultural, pre to be handled otherwise, will play | an important practical role in this | engineering work. } The new machine is the latest mechanical device developed at M. I. T. for the solution of math- ematical problems. It was built by} Dr. John B. Wilbur and consists of a maze or pulleys and steel tapes. The operator sets scales corre- sponding to the values in the equations, and after the machine is operated, other scales give the| answers, The machine reproduces me- chanically through its pulleys and | steel tapes the mathematical con- ditions of the equations. Its im- portance lies in the fact that the] labor involved in the solution of large numbers of these equations has stood in the way of the suc- LABORATORY By P David Ramsey problems. The machine in giving a rapid solution of such problems v nish engineers with an in- strument that will facilitate search into problems of engine design. THE TEMPERATURE OF THE UPPER ATMOSPHERE In the c' nt issue of the Ph ical Re' Dr. E. O, Hulbert of the 1 Research Laboratory prese! a report on tems perature of the upper atmosphere. He presents proof that the layers of ionized atmosphere, ranging ‘om 62 to 124 miles above sea have a fairly coi nt tem- Tre, regardless of day or night season. He also reports that new data by investigators all over the world in- dicates that the temperature at these altitudes seems to be around 80 degrees. This is a preliminary report based on observations taken in many places during the solar eclipse. A NEW ANESTHETIC Gezman scientists have devised a white t less crystalline powder $ a patient to sleep in a er even less time. In this is called evipal, and evi- pan in Europe. Evipan in the form of a solution injected into a vein and the Patient falls into a restful sleep. There is none of the excitement. and nervousness at the beginning of the anethesia, or the vomiting and nau- sea that come with an anesthetic |like ether. The patient awakens quickly from the anesthesia which usually jlasts about twenty minutes. When i s necessary to have a longer period, some doctors repeat the dose ef evipan, while others utilize ether or nitrous oxide. The new anesthetic is not excreted from the bedy by passing into the air through the lungs like ether. It is gotten rid of by chemical breakdown in which the liver plars an important part. For this rea- son evipan is very useful for opera- tions on patients suffering from lung disease, but should not be used in childbirth, according to some authorities, or on people suf- |fering from liver or gall bladder disease. ULTRAVIOLET DESTROYS SNAKE VENOM Dr. David I. Macht, a Baltimore pharmacologist, has destroyed the toxic venoms of deadly snakes like the cobra, copperhead and rattle- ultraviolet light rays, The rays were effective when focussed on the poisons collected in a test tube. But they had no an- tido‘al effect on animals who had been inoculated with the poison, A beneficial effect was obtained only when the rays e focussed on the venom in an open wound, CHEMIST DEPLORES WAR H. H., of Brooklyn, N. Y., hear- ing a radio program glorifying war, reacts by sending $1 toward Lab. and Shop. “As a chemist, I realize that many of my fel- low chemists are making muni- tions for new slaughters for their fellow workers,” he writes. “I consider your column valuable and instructive,” he writes Ram- sey, “showing the technical man as a member of the working class, and pointing out the rela- tionship between modern scien- tific discovery to conditions un- der capitalism.” Public School Teacher .. 1.00 Previously received .... 38.24 Total to date . ALA Quota $250 ‘, essful si y i tant | fessional, and student groups, men cessful Analysis of many important |and women’s clubs and church as- | sociations, to which it will offer ad-| vantageous terms for group acdmis- | | sions, the Drama Union will make) jits theatre a part of the resources) | of these organizations. Arrangements for the coming} season can be made by communi Pen and Hammer Wants | Revolutionary Poetry | i} NEW YORK.—The Arts commit-| jtee of the Pen and Hammer is en- will be welcome. M. Vetch, Pen and Hammer, 11 W. 18th St., N. Y. C. Those who have become en- deared to Little Lefty and his pal “Peanuts” will undoubtedly ap- preciate the picture next to this box. It’s a hand- seme 9x12 portrait, beauti- fully hand-colored, mounted, and |] autographed by the artist him- self! Presented each day to the |} highest bidder—man, woman ro child—eager to give Little Lefty a boest toward his creator's $500 quota. Joseph (Burck’s 2-yeer- and-10-month-old son), wins Del's first prize offering (pg. 7). He prefers Little Lefty to his old |} man's cartoons! Total to date se eteede $119.63 by del WHAT A SPECTACLE | WHAT AN OUYRRGE |! WHY — Sour! sPUT/— MISS MIGGS | raKxe RLETTER YO The TIMES - | cations with the Drama Union, 123/ gaged in the compilation of an an- | West Madison, thology of proletarian revolution- | Taki aiaaee aida }ary poetry. Ail contributions of | HERE’S THE SURPRISE! pociry, published and unpublished, TUNING IN 7:00-WEAF—Pickens Eisters, Songs WOR—Sports Resume—Pord Frick ‘n’ Andy—Sketch and Marge—Sketca 7:15-WEAP—Gene and Glenn—Sketch WOR—Marion Chase, Songs Echoes; Mildred Rebison Orchestra | WJz—Plantation i Bailey, Songs; | WABO—Just Plain Boll—Sketch | 7:30-WEAF—Uncle Bzra—Sketch WOR—Veezey Orchestra } WJZ—Red Davis—Sketch } WABC—Pau! Keast, Baritone 7:45—WEAP—Frank Buck's Adventures | WOR—Dance Music gerous Paradise—Sketeh sC- ake Carter, Commentator 8:00-WEAF—The Curtai Rises—Piay, with Mary Pickford, Actress Lone Ranger—Sketch rt—Sketch | WABC—Easy Aces—Sketch 8:15-WABC—Edvin ©. Hill, Commentator 8:30-WEAP- e King Orchestra iety Musincale nny Ross, Tenor; Salter Ore rshall, Baritone; . Contralto; Rachel Carlay, Songs; Mixed Chorus 9:00-WEAF—Fred Allen, Comedian WOR—Footlight Echoes WJZ—20,000 Years in Sing Sing-— Sketch, with Warden Lawes WABC—Nino Martini, Tenor; telanietz, Orchestra | 9:30-WOR—Lum and Abner—Sketch wsZ—John Charles Thomas, tone; Concert Orchestra | WAEC—George Burns and Gracie | Allen, Comedians 9:45-WOR—Garber Orchestra 10:00-WEAF—Lomberdo Orchestra; Barnes, Narrator WOR—Sid Gary, Baritone WZ—Dennis King, Songs it to and from Byrd Expedit * 10:15-WOR—Current Events—H. E. Read WJZ—Mme. Sylvia, Narrator *0:30-WEAF—Netional Forum WOR—Variety Musicale { ‘WJZ—Denny Orchestra; Harry Riche man, Songs Koa Barie Pat t WABC—Mary Eastman, Soprano; ‘ Evan Evans, Baritone; the Amerie ' can Red Ore 1 Hoover, Mrs. 1) 00-WEAP—The Grummits—Sketch =, | With “Senator” Ford WOR—News Bulletins WJZ—Kings Guards Quartet F WABC—Belasco Orchestra 4 41.18-WEAF—Robert Royce, Tenor > WOR—Moonbeams. Trio WJZ—Colemen Orchestra . 11:30-WBAF—Dance Muste (Also WOR, ‘WJZ, WABC) ) ~{ ? \