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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1934 a a a a Page 7 | CHANGE ——THE-— WORLD! ———— By MICHAEL GOLD RT YOUNG is the most beloved of American cartoon- ists. His wit and humor spring from the American soil; he belongs in the tradition of Mark Twain, Bob Ingersoll and Abe Lincoln. More years ago than many of us can remember, Art Young discovered the working class revolution. Immediately he en- listed on the side of the workers, and has never stopped for 2 moment turning out his famous. and powerful anti-capitalist cartoons. Art Young is now rounding his 67th year. His friends are celebra- ting the event this Sunday night. The old Civic Repertory Theatre on 14th Street, where the Theatre Union gives its plays, will be bulging from cellar to roof with some of the grand army of Art’s admirers. This ageless veteran, with his whimsical chuckle, his pert blue eye,.. and that humorous profile of embonpoint he has drawn in so many auto-libellous portraits, deserves such homage as this. No other man in the first rank of American cartoonist (ex- cepting Robert Minor, of course) can show as long and consistent a record in the revolutionary movement. Art Young’s talents were not overlooked by the capitalist press. To my own knowledge he has been for years receiving regular offers from Arthur Brisbane and other syndicates. They wanted to put him on a yearly salary that often went as high as $20,000 a year. Art Young had no prejudice against such a salary, and he never felt like a martyr, but he just couldn’t take time off from his own job to do the picayune things these others wanted of him. He was born to fight Mr. Fat. He was born to be one of those artists who help build a better world. And so Art Young continued his chuckling, good-humored little war against the Fat Bully, capitalism. He showed Mr. Fat frying in an Americanized hell, he showed him eating like a hog, making war like an ape, crushing the bones of children, shooting down workers and their mothers and wives, Underneath all the good humor Art Young always had the great cleansing hate of the true revolutionist. It is out of great love that such hate is born. Because Art Young loves the American people so much, with all their little follies, weaknesses, idiocies, he is savage in his contempt of the capitalist system that is destroying this people. Some of his cartoons have the monumental gloom of a Dore, the illustrator of Dante’s Inferno. * | Apes, Tigers and Hogs ANY legends are told of Art Young, one of the best known being about his trial for sedition during the war. The judge was about to sentence him to twenty years in jail, when a snore was heard in the courtroom. It was Art Young. He had become bored with all this phoney legalism, even though he himself was on trial for his life. And he still goes on making legends. The best one is this latest one, of the celebration this Sunday night. Believe it or not, this celebration is the result of a united front by Communists and Socialists. The circular letter that went out to organize the affair was signed jointly by Norman Thomas, leader of the Socialist Party, and Earl Browder, secretary of the Communist party. It is the first time such a joint appeal has been. seen. Among the groups sponsoring the affair are the Socialist periodicals, the New Leader, and Arise, and the Socialist club, “Rebel Arts.” Also appears the John Reed Club, the New Theatre magazine, the New Masses, and the League for Mutual Aid. Art Young must be feeling fine to have this celebration taking Place under such auspices. He has always been a travellirig one-man united front in himself: It is indeed a tribute to the universal affection he inspires that his | Paul Reveres Work in Connection With Nazi Agents This is the eighth article of a series by John L. Spivak on “Plot- ting the American Pogroms,” ap- pearing weekly in The New Masses, through whose courtesy the Daily Worker has been given permission to reprint them simul- taneously. In his previous articles, Spivak produced overwhelming proof of widespread and organ- ized anti-Semitic activities in this country, closely linked up with Nasi Germany, operating under various disguises such as the Order of "16, Silver Shirts, etc., and in- yolving individuals like former Congressman Louis T. McFadden of Pennsylvania, Ralph M. Easley, chairman of the Executive Coun- cil of the National Civic Federa- tion, George Sylvester Viereck, active Nazi propagandist and Viola Hima, head of the Youth Movement. In this article Spivak turns his attention to Nazi prop- aganda in our“schools and ecol- By JOHN L. SPIVAK L Mos? colleges and universities throughout the United States have witnessed, since Hitler got into power, a rising tide of anti-semit- | ism, Most students and professors, Jew and Gentile, are amazed, un- able to account for this sudden development. That there had been &@ more or less latent anti-semitic feeling in many universities is recognized. Harvard's action some years ago in limiting the number of Jewish students was the first open move on a racial basis. It was an isolated instance which brought it the condemnation of the country. That Jewish students are dis- criminated against in admissions is too well-known to need proof in this article Many of our leading universities have limited admissions without announcing it as openly as Harvard did. That few Jews rise to full professorships in the univer- sities is also well-known. The evidence of racial discrimi- nation is so overwhelming that more than one article could be written about that alone. At pres- ent I am interested in explaining the activities behind the sudden rise of anti-semitism in our leading uni- versities and colleges. What the vast, majority of students and pro- fessors do not know is that in our universities and colleges there is a secret anti-semitic organization di- rected by German exchange stu- dents to carry on pro-Hitler prop- aganda and develop the “hate-the- Jew” creed for the sake of “pure Aryan culture.” Working with this secret organization are Nazi agents who came here ostensibly -to study, and one hundred per cent Ameri- cans in the “patriotic” organizations which are distributing anti-semitic propaganda in cooperation with secret Hitler agents in the United States. the Jews, so he published a 24-page working with and through native pamphlet, “The Plan in Action,” a! American students. bitter, vitriolic attack on the Jews, and signed it “by Earnest Sincere.” The authorship of this pamphlet has been kept secret even from the leading disseminators of anti-semit- ic propaganda, Countless thousands of this vicious attack on the Jewish race have been distributed through- out the length and breadth of the country. One of the chief distribu- tors is Royal Scott Gulden, head of the anti-semitic espionage Order of 16. Gulden himself, though in con- tact with Col. Hadley, does not know this “patriot” is the author of the pamphlet. about Col. Hadley and his “patri- otic” activities, but I think this is sufficient to show the type of man who heads the Paul Reveres and INTERNATIONAL BOR DEFENSE The Body of ANARCHY lurches forward by using first the leg of SOCIALISM and then the leg of COMMUNISM. COMMUNISM is supported by the foot named INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE. SOCIALISM is advanced by the foot called AMERICAN CIVII. LIBERTIES UNION. The sustaining blood stream of this hideous destroyes is provided by the Garland Fund and other financial aids for radicals, * THE LEAGUE FOR INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY — the diseased Gall Bladder — is the organ developing the unhealthy doctrines that pollute our educational institutions. ADEPTS, those having guilty knowledge of the purpose of ANARCHY, constitute one arm of the demon. DUPES, the gullible and unsuspecting victims of "A NEW SOCIAL ORDER,” make up the other arm of ANARCHY THE PARLOR PINK appears as one face but the GUTTER RED is the true visage of the monster ANARCHY. Designed and Distributed by THE PAUL REVERES NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS 120 South La Salle Street CHICAGO Early in 1934, Hitler agents in the United States headed by Guenther Orgell, head of the Nazi secret po- litical service in this country, de- cided that an espionage organiza- tion must be organized in the uni- versities and colleges. A young stu- dent whose name, I am sorry to; say, I do not know, arranged a meeting with Rudyard Uzzell, Jr., a student at the University of Penn- sylvania, the son of Mrs. R. S. Uz- zell, 8812 165th St., Queens, in| Royal Scott Gulden’s office, head- quarters of the espionage Order of | 16. The readers of this series will! recollect that Royal Scott Gulden, head of this “patriotic,” order is working in co-operation with Nazi | agents here. Gulden, the reader will recollect, merged his organization with the Silver Shirts, headed by William Dudley Pelley. The two worked to extend their spy and propaganda systems. It is in Gulden’s organiza- try has become aware of &/tion that I found members of the particularly bitter feeling on the/ United States Military and Naval Jewish and radical questions in| Intelligence, detectives and big bus- New York City colleges, New York | iness men and it is Gulden’s organ- | There is much more to be said their anti-semitic activities in our universities. . (THIN recent months, the coun- jization under This secret organization is known University, C. C. N. Y., and Colum- | ization, too, which has been most | bia especially. What caused this active in disseminating former (he Plotting the American Pogroms Special “Contact Men” Form Secret Nazi | Cells of Four between these “patriots” and Nazi secret service agents. HE young woman who arranged this meeting is the head of the jespionage division of the Paul Re- vere branch at Cornell University Uzzell had been exceedingly active jin organizing espionage and anti- | Semitic groups in various colleges achieving his greatest success at the | University of Pennsylvania. Uzzell, after his meeting with | Gulden, asked to be presented to Orgell, who is ostensibly head of the United German Societies, but de- | votes most of his time to directing | Hitler's secret service work in the | United States and the smuggling of janti-semitic propaganda off Ger- }man boats which dock in New | York. Uzzell wanted to discuss with | Orgell the combining of Nazi and | American anti-semitic activities in | the colleges. This hopeful young Nazi, aided by jhis mother, is apparently deter- mined to make anti-semitism and |espionage through the Paul Re- veres his life work, for he has in | his home in Queens one of the larg- lest card indexes in the country of , Prominent people who can be won ;over by proper propaganda On April. 3, 1934, Uzzell and Guenther Orgell met at the Friends of New Germany headquarters. Or- gell told his visitor that he would be glad to use him in an advisory ca- pacity in college propaganda work, | but the man in charge of the Paul | Reveres had been more than satis- | factory in establishing Nazi cells in | the colleges, Uzzell asked him who the man | was, but Orgell would not tell him. | Uzzell and most of the student | members do not know to this day | who he is. For their and the pub- lic’s information, the man is Fred | | Wetzel, 240 East 86th Street New York. City. This student has se- | cretly organized twenty Nazi cells at C, C. N. Y. alone. These secret Nazi cells within the student body | follow the German method of four students to each cell. IN ORGANIZING these cells the work is carried on with extreme |caution.“®Members of the student espionage and propaganda organ- strict orders from | German agents like Orgell, do not approach possible members directly. Instead there is a special group of students who act as primary con- tacts to feel out the prospects. Usu- | ally each university and college throughout the country has one special “contact man.” In New York | City the contact man is a Columbia University post-graduate student, St. | George Bissell, the 3rd, son of Pel- ham St. George Bissell, Municipal Court Justice of New York. He lives with his father at $70 Park | Avenue. Bissell has been active in promot- jing Fascism on the Columbia cam- | pus, but none of the students knows |that this man is working not only with the Paul Reveres, but fre- quently consults Royal Scott Gul- LABORATORY and SHOP _ divia ramsey A SIMPLER TREATMENT FOR PERNICIOUS ANEMIA Dr. Willim P. Murphy, dne of the trio of American scie! s who were awarded the Nobel medical prize for research in pernicious anemia simplified the liver treatment that disease. He has developed a new liver extract, with the coopera- tion of Dr. G. W. Clark of the Lederle Laboratories, which is a cheaper and more effective method for controlling anemia The new liver extract is injected in a muscle once a month does away with the old meth where the patient ate quarter to half a pound of liver daily or swallowed three doses of li tract a day. About 11 pounds liver had to be eaten monthly for of the patient to keep well, or 84 doses | of extract. The average cost of the liver was about $5.50 and that of the extract around $17.00. Now the new Murphy-Clark ex- {tract which only has to be used once a month will sell for about $1.20. This is a great saving, but Dr. Mur- phy has given no reason why the commercial Jaborator sibly will manufacture the new prep- aration, has set this arbitrary fig. Formerly, it was the packers who| pofited from the rise in the price of | liver, Will the Lederle Laboratories now cut in on this racket? This is no problem in abstract economics. Figures given out by the Metorpolitan Life Insurance Company show that the death rate in individuals with pernicious anemia has been cut in half by the use of liver. And Dr. Murphy has himself declared that there need be if no deaths from the disease, patients regularly take liver in form as prescribed by a physi But unless the treatment can be cb- tained at a nominal fee, then the penniless patient will continue to be a needless victim of the disease and of the greed of our profit eco- nomy. A NEW REFINING PROCESS The engineers of the Socony- Vacuum Oil Company, which is part of the Rockefeller set-up, have per- fected a new method of oil produc- tion. It is claimed that the new method makes it possible to obtain standard or even quality oil from many types of crud¢ petroleum, whether of high or low grade. The new process is based on physi- eal happening rather than on the older chemical method of using su!- phuric acid. The impurities in the crude petroleum are separated out from the desired products, as one separates sand from sugar in a} mixture. Water poured on the sand and sugar would dissolve out the sugar, leaving the sand behind. In the re- fining process solvents act in some- what the same way. One type of solvent extracts from the petroleum those substances which tend to form carbon in a gasoline engine. An- other type of solvent which has little effect on the cavbonizing ele- which osten- | jduced on a large scale, since the plant is so mechanized that only j three mechanics can control the production of 2,000 barrels of the new oil a day. |ANOTHER PRODUCT OF THE PITUITARY GLAND Two scientists at the Courtauld Institute of Biochemistry of the | Middlesex Hospital in London ane nounce in The Lancet that they |have discovered a new glandular product from the hind part of the | Pituitary gland. In this substance | which may be a new hormone from the master gland of the body, there jis the possibility of a clue to the jcause of stomach ulcers. | The substance seems to stimulate |the stomach to pour out increased amounts of hydrochloric acid. Cone | sequently a disorder of the pituitary may turn out to be the cause of stomach ulcers, since excess hydro- chloric acid is found in such cases. This excess acid is believed by some scientists to be a cause, or part of }the cause, of this condition. The discovery also ties in with the finde gs of an Ame: n scientist, Dr. | Ha: Cushi He repo:ted thet mulating the base of the brain where the pituitary is located may produce stomach ulcers. The British investigators believe that they have found a new hore mone or a new property of a hore mone that is already known. The editor of The Lancet considers the substance as more likely to be an entirely new hormone. BLUE LIGHT BENDS PLANTS When a plant in a window-box or potato sprouts in a dark cellar bend toward the light as they grow, they are not responding equally to all the colors in the spectrum. They will not bend toward red light, but to certain wavelengths in the blue re- gion of the spectrum, they are especially sensitive. Recent experiments at the Smith- sonian Institute have picked out those wavelengths that are most potent in stimulating plant bending. According to Dr. E. 8. Johnson of the Institution’s staff, the most effective wavelength is a very narrow band in the neighborhood of 4,400 Angstrom units, which is in the blue part of the spectrum. From this point, the effectiveness of the light in producing bending falls off to a point near 4600 Angstrom units, which is still in the blue re- gion. Then it rises again to another peak at 4,750 units in the greenish blue hue; from there it falls off completely as the red region is reached. A CHALLENGE TO SCIEN- TISTS For the first time, Lab and Shop makes way for In the Home, missing out by $4. This event will tend to prove that science is not as powerful as we've been given to understand. We welcome a test by Comrade eruption mystified not only the peo- , was defeated in the Nov. 6 election) | den on the best methods of devel- ple, but most of the student bodies Congressman Louis T. McFadden’s magic name was engugh to break down the wall that has separated the h 4 , oping is espionage an anti- workers and weakened them so long in the fight against Fascism. Ramsey's followers—in concrete examples of dollars and cents. as the Paul Reveres and is headed by Col. Edwin Marshall Hadley, | ments in the oil, is effective in re- May the magic spread. May the united front go on. And may there be at least 40 more of these yearly celebrations for Art Young. I want to see him hobbling around at the age of 107 in a Soviet America. He will be chuckling, I am sure, at his own rheumatic pains and the funny crick in his back. He will draw pictures of himself looking like a jolly, fat old Father Time. Best of all, the Soviet American youngsters will be around him always. And Art Young will tell them stories out of the dark ages, funny stories about the crazy capitalist system they fortunately had never experienced. And then he will get out his drawing pad and make pictures tor them of all those prehistoric monsters, the fat apes, tigers and hogs who once ruled the world. . People’s Artist cE the Soviet Union Art Young would long ago haye been given the highest title in the gift of a workers’ republic, that of People’s Artist. Millions of workers would have celebrated his jubilee through- out the nation. But our New York celebration will be good enough for America, It will have a historic fiavor. Workers from the waterfront, the clothing factories, and the offices, will unite with the New York intellectuals to pay homage to this People’s Artist. Heywood Broun, president of the American Newspaper Guild, will be the chairman, Socialist singers and Communist dancers will join hands in laying a gay wreath of affection at Art's floppy and be- wildered feet. May this united front go on. May the dark curse of disruption be shattered forever, after this night with magical Art Young. And may our People’s Artist flourish and laugh and blaspheme against Mr. Fat for many years. And if I may close with a suggestion to the committee in charge of this celebration: Let us have a solemn moment there, when in the name of the So- cialist and Communist Parties, Art Young will be crowned as the first People's Artist of America. If ever a life in art merited this great title, it-is the life and deeds of Art Young. GOLD GETTING THERE—BUT NOT FAST ENOUGH Losing by a shock of hair, Mike Gold yields to Harry Gannes in today's contributions. We feel he should have made the grade by this time, but we give him to Dec. 1 to finish. Karl Harry and Rose r Sidney ........ ssseeeeeee$ 5,00 Previously received . Jack London Club, ' Bayonne 80 Total . SS A Marxist. Stud: A Call to Struggle FASCISM and SOCIAL REVOLUTION ; By Palme Dutt “Impossible to review,” many critics say—they want to quote pages, chapters, the whole book! Not only a scholarly an- alysis, but a ringing call to struggle against “the organ- Ization of social decay.” CLOTH $1.75 INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS 881 FOURTH AVENUE @ NEW YORK, N.Y. International Publishers 381 Fourth Avenue, New York Gentlemen: I am interested in your publica- -| tions and would like to receive your catalogue and book news. with headquarters in Room 1911, 120 South La Salle St., Chicago. The Paul Reveres have branches in almost every university and college and their professors. None of them | anti-semitic speeches in Congress. ! dreamed that it was caused by the | I give this brief summary so the cunning operations of Nazi agents! reader will understand the relations in the country, including the larg- est like Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Cornell, Northwestern University in Chicago, and Columbia. This or- ganization, with a special espionage division, has given particular at- tention to the colleges in New York City which have a great many Jew- ish students. In addition to these various colleges and universities, the Paul Reveres have recently extend- ed their activities to the high schools, again especially in New York City. . 'S student espionage and prop- aganda organization works in cooperation with Nazi agents who entered this country as German ex- change students, The primary ob- ject of the Paul Reveres is ostensi- bly the development of “patriotism.” Its original organizer and secre- tary was Mrs. Albert W. Dilling of Kenilworth, the author of “The Red Network,” which listed Mrs. Frank- lin D. Roosevelt and Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia as “Reds.” Mrs. Dilling, however, does not seem to feel that all Jews are Communists or “po- tential Communists,” and when she learned of Col. Hadley’s anti-semitic tendencies, she wrote to him in pro- test. Col. Hadley replied (March 6, 1934) : Regarding the “Jew angle” pa- triotic movements can be handled by them in a body much better than in mixed groups, so please see to it that the chapter (a divi- sion of the Paul Reveres) is kept strictly a Gentile organization, This can be handled without pub- lic'ty by your membership com- mittee. Mrs. Dilling’s hatred of Commu- nists halted at the injection of the race issue, and she resigned. The Paul Reveres, though continuing their drive for members on “patri- otic” grounds, asked all applicants whether they were Jews. Col. Hadley did not dare to come out too openly with his hatred of Se Little Lefty WATCH: “Tis ‘UNL PEANUTS — I's GONNA KNOCK ty For 8 Loop / enjoyment of the performances’ of the finest players is somewhat off- set by his knowledge that the hard- earned cost of his ticket goes prac- rich, the enemies of his class, and of their fascist activities, rectly to the struggle AGAINST the fascist peril and for the aid of its Sinbaliet Concert To Aid Anti-Nazi Fighting Fund (EZ worker who is also a lover of music must often feel that his- personal reactions on his own part of such intensity. Music is one thing played to a hall dominated by overfed connoisseurs but quite an- other to 10,000 heroes in the great- est struggle in history! tically in its entirety straight into the pockets of the already very from there partly into the coffers of organizations that make no secret But here, at last, is a concert by one of the greatest living masters of the violin, the proceeds of which will go di-|: victims! And the worker will NOT be listening to an artist who he knows hates him, his class and its struggle for a better world, but to one who has suddenly come to a keen realization—at least in mu- sical terms—of what the revolution means, Efrem Zimbalist was born in Rostov-on-Don in 1889 and has not been there since 1911—that is, until last summer, when he made a concert tour in the country that must, by that time, have become almost unrecognizable to him. He played before all kinds of au- diences. He found (quite contrary to the vicious propaganda of the cap- italist press) an artistic life more intensely alive, broader and deeper, than that of any other place he had seen. Several concerts, at~ tended only by shock-brigaders who received their tickets as part of their reward for heroic achieve- ment, numbered 10,000 persons. Zimbalist makes no secret of the EFREM ZIMBALIST Noted violinist, who will play for the Anti-Nazi Fighting Fund at Car- negie Hall, Sunday night, Noy. 18. The concert sponsored by the United Front Supporters is at Car- negie Hall this Sunday evening, November 18th, at 8:30 p.m, Let us show Efrem Zimbalist that we not only admire his musicianship but also his awakening to the semitic organization. Bissell con- | stantly moves in circles of secret Nazi agents and provocateurs. On March 29, 1934, for instance, a secret meeting was held at the justice’s luxurious Park Avenue apartment at which Gulden ex-| plained the need of organizing stu- dents “to be ready to do the bid- ding of the Paul Reveres in attack- |ing Communists and Jews on Union Square.” The justice was present when the meeting was called to or- | der, but left after a f2-7 -inutes without saying anything. i These activities have developed | open race hatred on the campuses | of the various universities. In some, as at Harvard and Yale, open or- | ganization of Nazi groups is directly traceable to the activities of “pa- | triotic” American students working | with German agents. Cooperating with these Nazi groups are the German exchange students, like Detlof von Sahm, son of a former Mayor of Berlin, who was active in organizing anti-semitism at Wash- | ington University in St. Louis, work- | ing under the direction of Consul- | General Gyssling of Los Angeles. | When the New Masses tried| to get in touch with this Nazi stu- | dent to ask for an explanation of | his activities, he left hastily for | Berlin, will not come back. Other students not only carry on propaganda here, | but organize “good will” tours to Germany which are “extremely in- expensive.” These tours are for students and professors. In- Ger- many, Nazi students act as guides. One such “good will” tour was| the Open Road, 56 West 45th Street, erous hospitality they (the Nazi students) are enjoying at American Universities and Colleges.” During this summer's trip abroad the pro- fessors and students were filled with Nazi propaganda and many of them ceme back to deliver enthusiastic lectures about the fine conditions in Germany, especially the lovely way meaning for music of the victorious fact that he never before received ‘revolution! é such ovations and never experienced —<. 8. the Jews are treated over there. He has not and probably | organized under the guidance of} 7:05-w3z- “in order to reciprocate the gen- | moving those substances which break down at the high tempera- tures developed in engines. The engineers maintain that hun- dreds of thousands of road tests indicate that the oil made with the new method will last 25 per cent longer than the best of the present- day oils. The formation of carbon in the engine is prevented along with the removal of sticky valves and piston rings. | In the new method the dangerous use of sulphuric acid in oil refining is completely eliminated. And so rigid is the control of the solvent process that crude oil ranging from the cheap Texas grades to the finest Pennsylvania types can be used with equal success. A standard high- grade product is obtained, by ad justing the quantity of the solvents to the particular crude oil that is| used, Tests on the viscosity, or free flowing qualities of the oil, show that it flows far more freely at tem- | ¢ peratures below freezing, and yet it! keeps its body at the high tempera- ii that of “Prince” off, who, All experiments in reaching the $250 quota to end Dec. 1. Previously received . Total to date ....... THEATRE Second Rate Vaudeville | SAY WHEN—A musical comedy in two acts and ten scenes, produced by Jack McGowan and Ray Hen- derson. At the Imperial. Theatre. ork S musical comedy, this is a sec- ond rate vaudeville show. There is a fairly amusing bit of spoofing t the radio and the banks. The ndividual honors go to a dancer | Who stopped the show, not for the |grace and rhythm of his dancing | but for his agility which seemed to defy the laws of gravitation. But he outstanding performance was Michael’ Roman- in spite of his famous tures encountered within the en-| aplomb, seemed to be decently em- gine. | barrassed at finding himself in The new method will be intro-|such company. -L A TUNING IN 7:00-WEAF—Religion in the News—Stan- ley High WJZ—Frank Lloyd Wright and the WOR—Sports Resume—Ford Prick International Style—Cecil Seecrest WJZ—Football Scores arly American— ; Arthur Allen and Parker Fennelly ohn Herrick, Baritone 7:15-WEAF—Kogan Orchestra WOR—Maverick Jim—Sketch WJZ—Dorsey Orchestra 7:30-WABC—Jack Smith, Songs 7:45-WEAF—Floyd Gibbons, Commentator Sid Gary, Baritone ckens Sisters, Songs WABC—Presservation of Constitutional Liberty Under the New Deal—Don- ald R, Richberg, Executive Director National Emergency Counc WEAF—Concert Orchestra; Sigmund | Romberg, Composer, _ Conduc Byron Warner, Tenor; Helen Mar- shall, Soprano; William Lyon Phelps, Narrator 8:00- (To Be Continued) WOR—Show Boat Boys, Songs; Pauline The Reward of Virtue! SRETCHK YouR ARMS UP 70 THe LORD ANO HE WILL Give UNTO “ou+ by del YOUR BALL BACK? 11:15-WOR—Ferdinando Or ———————__., Concert Orchese ; ; Soloists; Twelfth iversary Program OR—Veczey Orchestra 8:20-WJZ—Grace Hayes, Songs 8:30-WOR—Organ Recital WJ2Z—Olsen Orchestra 8:45-WABC—Mary Courtland, Songs; Arm- brus rchestra; Male Quartet 9:00-WEAF—Rose Hampton, Contralto} Scrappy Lambert and Billy Hille pot, Songs; Shilkret Orchestra WOR—Variety Program WJZ—Radio City Party, With John B, Kennedy; Black Orchestra WABC-Grete Stusckgold, Soprano; Kostélanetz. Orchestra 9:30-WEAF—The Gibson Pamily—Musical Comedy, With Conrad Thibaulty Baritone; Lois Bennett, foprano WJZ—National Barn Dance WABO—Himber Orchestra 10:00-WOR—Dance Orchestra WABC—Concert Band, Edward d’Ann& Conductor 10:30-WEAF—To Be Announced WOR—Osborné Orchestra WJZ—Kemp Orchestra WABC—Dance Orchestra 11:00-WEAS—Lombardo Orchestra WOR—News Bullets WJZ—To Be Announced WABO—Michaux Congregation tra FROM A SOCIALIST MEMBER Del, who left the Socialist Par- ty to join t..e Communists, re- cently reecived a $1 contribution from a present S. P. member who added: “More power to you and your excellent comic strip section which my wife and I look for- ward. to. every day.” Del has $367 more to go before Dec. 1! Helen Florentz .... ....$ 1.00 Previously received .... 132.48 Total to date .......... $133.48.