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DAILY WORKER. YEW YORK, Xx NDAY, yYEMBER 26, 1 934 Page § THE WORLD! By MICHAEL GOLD ESIDES his health culture magazines, his True Stories, his gymnasium for tired and gouty business men, his tabloids, Bernarr Macfadden has now given birth to a new monstrosity—the Macfadden Weekly. The Macfadden Weekly is a typical hash like all the Macfadden publications. It contains the horrible dish of sex stories, the gibberish of the Voice of the People columns, the cash prize con- tests, the photographs and the cartoons of all the other trash. But with one important difference. More than any of his organs. this one has been deliberately foufided as a “political” paper, to deal with social and political problems of the masses. It is an outright, but cleverly manipulated, piece of demagogy to confuse and to mislead the thousands of readers who read nothing but the tabloids. An Expioiter of Minds |ACFADDEN is an old student of the art of demagogy. There are millions of workers who read and believe the vile falsehoods of his editorials. There are millions of shop girls who read avidly the inflamed sex stories at eight o’clock in the morning while traveling down to work. Macfadden has grown rich on exploiting the minds of the workers just as Rockefeller or Morgan or any capitalist has accumulated wealth through exploiting workers’ bodies. “The Weekly” continues the tradition but in a field in which Mac- fadden has devoted only part of his time previously. This cleyer and unscrupulous publicist has always been quick to catch the shifting emphasis in the lives of the workers. He has played the workers to his own advantage before, and he is playing them now. Wall Street and Capitalism 'HE first awakening of the workers to the fact that the system under which they live is one of continual misery and hunger usually takes primitive forms. They become violent haters of particular capitalists or particular capitalist institutions, and do not recognize the funda- mental causes of their oppression. During the five years of the crisis, the first primitive forms of political awakening, the first expressions of mass résentment were, and are still, directed towards Wall Street. It was Wall Street against which the workers’ hatred turned. They saw in the Wall Street bankers the sole cause of all their misery. They thought that it was only the unscrupulous greediness of the ! big banking houses which had caused the crisis. Millions of workers still think so today. ‘ What they do not see is that Wall Street is only the more spec- tacular expression of the whole system of capitalism which is firmly founded on the private ownership of the factories and the mills; which is supported by the army, the navy, and the police; and whose affairs are administered by the government. Millions of workers and ruined petty business men and profes- sionals and white collar workers have come to believe that it is only by reforming the bankers, and subjecting them to government con- trol, that the crisis will be solved. It was in the belief that Roosevelt was the enemy of Wall Street, that Roosevelt was against the big bankers, that the millions of Americans voted the Democrats back into office. Roosevelt has cleverly exploited this. He has pretended to “drive the money-changets from the temple,” but in reality, he has only driven them to a private room where he could talk business without the masses hearing the deal. The Macfadden “Cure” IN THE same way, Macfadden has sought to channel the resentment and anger of the people away from the truth of the set-up of the government and industries, to the “Wolves of Wall Street.” Macfadden would have the masses think that the crisis is the result of grafters, greedy bankers, and bad laws. When these are remedied, all will be well in America. Macfadden proposes to cure capitalism of one of its outstanding curses: the centralization of wealth. This is the pretty scheme. In the first place, he says, it would be difficult to divide the fortunes of the rich equally among the masses. That would mean that each would get only a few hundred dollars apiece. Furthermore, large fortunes could be divided in the form of stock only. And lastly, that’s not a good idea, because capitalists are also workers, and if their fortunes were taken away trom them, it would lessen their en- thusiasm and destroy their business, They are business geniuses, and should be encouraged in every way, because they help build up the community. * Breaking Down Huge Fortunes 'HEN Macfadden proposes to de-centralize wealth, to break down huge fortunes, by this technique: A capitalist should remain a capitalist: we should support him: but when he dies the government should auction off his business to the highest bidder, i.e. another capi- talist. The dependents should get enough to live on comfortably. The scheme goes on, I guess, forever. So huge fortunes will be broken down and wealth decentralized, maybe! Let us assume capitalism is like Macfadden’s idea; then it follows that instead of de-centralizing huge fortunes, his plan would only créate huger fortunes and more centralization. The biggest capitalists would buy out the business, more and more industries would be con- centrated in the hands of fewer and fewer capitalists. Macfadden’s little trick would result in assisting the growth and concentration of monopoly capital. Monopoly capitalism brings with it war, huger un- employment, more misery, more exploitation. It would seem then, that the little tabloid Mr. Macfadden edits in the name of the people, is the worst enemy of the people. Instead of Macfadden’s fantasy, there is only one way of taking the huge fortunes out of the hands of the rich; the source of their wealth, which is the power to exploit and to enslave the workers. That way is to take not only Wall Street, but the government, the factories the mines, the railways, every source of prcduction away from them and have these run by the workers. (And that means Communism, Mr. Fascist. Macfadden.) * . THE PUBLIC KNOWS WHAT IT WANTS TODAY! Another gloomy day for Gold. Burck captures the public's support today! S. Membrau +++ $1.00 HEA, 0... sess 0 Previously received -616.59 TOTAL .... a sere ee $618.09 To the highest contributor each day, Mike Gold will present an autographed copy of his novel, “Jews Without Money,” or an original autographed manuscript of his “Change the World” column. ee te ee A Marxist Study 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 381 FOURTH AVENUE @ NEW YORK,N. ¥. ar er a Intérhational Publishers 381 Fourth Avenue, New York Gentlemen: I am interested in your publica- tions and would like to receive your catalogue and book news. Address .. This is the second instalment of the last article of John L. Spivak’s series, “Plotting the American Pogroms,” which have appeared weekly in the New Masses, and have been reprinted in the Daily Worker. In these articles, Spivak has produced overwhelming proof of widespread and organized anti-semitic ac- tivities in this country, closely linked up with Nazi Germany, operating under various disguises. He has uncovered the anti-semitic propaganda of organizations such as the Silver Shirts, Order of '76, the Paul Reveres, and individuals like former Congressman Louis T. McFadden, Ralph M. Easley, George Sylvester Viereck, Viola Iima and others. In Part One of this article Spivak proves that Milo Reno, leader of the Farmers’ Holiday Association, worked with the “Crusaders of Economic Lib- erty” to spread anti-semitism among the discontented farmers, until advised by Secretary of Ag- riculture Waliace to break this open connection, which he does through his resident secretary, Vanderlyn, By JOHN L. SPIVAK Il. February 15, 1934, Vanderlyn wrote to Fulliam, head of tie espionage and propaganda service, as follows: Dear Mr. Fulliam: I deeply regret that the trend you and Mr. Christians have taken in the last three months must result in the cessation of all cooperation between us. As I told you in the summer of last year, while I agreed with you concern- ing the international bankers and concerning the necessity of keep- ing the fundamental tenets of Christianity alive, nevertheless, I thoroughly disapprove of any- thing smacking of the Hitler and of Nazi philocophy. The fact that you have distributed German propaganda authorized by a group of downright reactionaries, Ham- ilton Fish and his crowd, has been the last straw. [Vanderlyn is re- ferring to the anti-semitic book, “Communism in Germany,” im- ported into the United States by George Sylvester Viereck, Nazi agent, and distributed by Ralph M. Easley of the National Civic Federation.—J, L. S.] I am authorized by Milo Reno | to inform you that there can be | no possible tie-up between the Crusaders for Economic Liberty and the Farmers Holiday Asso- ciation. Mr. Reno is of my opin- jon that the essence of Chris- tianity does not lie in inciting racial and rel jus prejudice. When the Crusaders made the | statement: The Golden Rule in- Plotting the American The Jewish Tole, o/o The Boston, } Gentlemen: anxious, in an open fight 4n the cour: stand for this sneaking, undi think we mean what we say, find out who is who in the Ci Yours in GHC: ka CHATTANOOGA, Hy CRUSADER WHITE SHIRTS TENNESSEE > wareh 7, 1934 SP he Stee W. Christians, » Crusader Waite snirse CC Letter from the Head of the Crusader White Shirts to the Jewish Telegraph Agency threatening underworld retaliation. for Economic Liberty are willing to change their tactics, to aban- don the foolish idea of Fascism, and truly preach the Goiden Rule, they will find the Farmers’ Holi- day Association more ready to co- operate with them. Until then, we must consider ourselves on entirely separate paths, LEON VANDERLYN, Resident Secretary, Northeast- ern Farmers Holiday Ass’n. IR. VANDERLYN’S indignation, after Mr. Reno's anti-semitic propaganda in the Mid-West, is easily understood when the confér- ences between him and the Secre- tary of Agriculture is known. Per- haps Mr. Vanderlyn, as well as Milo Reno, will understand the sudden |change of the American Fascists | into e body intensively preaching the “Hate - the - Jew” creed when they learn that Fulliam, at this period, was in close touch with Nazi If you have printed it would very | much appreciate your sending me a copy for my file and reference. Will be glad to remit for a copy of same. | I have followed with great in- | terest in TODAY magazine about | the Nazi activities. I would not worry much about such articles | if I were you. Every knock is a boost because you know and I know that they do not tell the truth. I treat all such that at- tack the crusader movement with scorn and contempt and am en- tirely unruffled and unmoved by | their ravings. | You can do a great deal for | American Liberties and Institu- | tions and trust that I may have | the pleasure of hearing from you. | | dawn of a New America, | Yours in the fellowship of Aryan freedom. (signed) C. F. Fulliam. P. 8. Enclosed please find copies of three letters I wrote America is awakening. Hail the | Pogroms times does not always sign his let- ters “yours in the fellowship of Aryan Freedom.” The word “Aryan” | is used only in communication with Nazi agen’ But no matter how they sign their names, the White Shirts are among the most prolific distributors of anti-semitic propa- | ganda in the country. | ee | 0x of their chief propaganda ac- | tivities is the dissemination of the discredited Protocols of Zion. ! This attack upon the Jews is mailed out in vast numbers, each copy con- | taining a letter from George W.! Christians, the eccentric head of this organization, explaining the! urgent need to read the book and understand its philosophy. | Christians, ever since he and Fulliam started to work with Nazi agents in this country, has gone to extreme measures to show his loy- alty to the Nazi agents. One of Christians’ close associates is Oscar | C. Pfaus of 1446 W. Edgemont Avenue, Chicago. Pfaus is one of the chief Nazi leaders in Chicago who has been active in carrying on the “Hate the Jew” campaign. Be- sides making his vicious attacks on the Jews wherever he has an op- portunity to speak, Pfaus’ main Nazi activity in the Middle West has been to try to consolidate the var- | ious fascist organizations into one | powerful body to carry on th -anti- | semitic” activities from central headquarters. His “official” job is j being president of the German | Alliance of Chicago. Pfaus’ anti-semitic activities | aroused considerable antagonism | not only among Jews, but among, {many gentiles and the Nazi leader | | communicated with the head of the | American Fascists complaining ci | “persecution” by two Jews, Julius Klein and Robert Baum. Not know- | | ing how to get in touch with these two men, despite his espionage sys- tem, Christians wrote to the Jew- ish Telegraph Agstncy, care of the Jewish Advocate in Boston, Mass., | threatening them with Chicago gangsters. This warning was written © March 7, 1934: ‘ Gentlomen: I have been informed that Mr. Oscar C, Pfaus, 1446 W. Edge- mont Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, a German citizen, is being per- secuted by underground methods by a pair of rats by the name of | Julius Klein and Robert Baum, because of his sympathetic atti- tude toward the Crusaders White Shirts, and his approval of our | Economic Liberty program. Now we are well prepared and perfectly willing, and in fact anx- ious, for publicity purposes, to d>- fend Mr. Pfaus’ rights in an open fight in the courts, but we do not propose to stand for this sneak- | ing, undercover nonsense. If you | stead of the Rule Gold, they were on the right track. When they changed their name to American Fascists, they alienated the strongest element which could have come to their support, the Farmers Union and the Farmers Holiday Association. When our Master threw the Money Changers out of the tem- ple, he did not enter upon a cam- paign of religious persecution, and the warfare against Wall Street and the Chicago Pit does not im- ply a campaign of religious intol- agents in the United States, sign- | jing his name in the special letters |to these agents with the Swastika | sign of allegiance to Hitler. Let me quote a sample letter. It was written on April 24, 1934, and addressed to Reinhold Walter, of the Friends of the New Germany, | | the leading organization in dis- | | seminating anti-semitic propaganda | |in the United States. The letter | arrived at Walter's home, 805 Fair- | mount Place, New York City: | Dear Mr. Walter: | A week or so ago I sent you in | care of your publication a copy | | | | | | don’t think we mean what we say, which might interest you. The | just make a few inquiries and | Jews in America may have fright- | ened a lot of you American citi- | zens of German birth or descent | but here is one American citizen with good German blood in his veins who is not ashamed of it. I say what I please and advocate | what I please as granted me in my constitutional rights so send some of your New York Jews out here in Iowa and see how far find out who is who in the Chi- cago Underworld. Yours in the Fellowship of Freedom, (Signed) George W, Christians Commander-in-Chief, Crusader White Shirts Simultaneously the patriotic Mr. Christians wrote to T. O. Bushee of Tampa, Fla., to “use your under- ground connections to see that Mr. hook at Lg ich mi Hegel Piaus gets the protection that he The “American fascist or the needs so that we can keep this scrap Book by Anti-Guild= City Editor Slanders Honest Newspapermeti CITY EDITOR, by Stanley Walker. Fredsrick A. Stokes and Co. New York City. $3. Reviewed by HARRY KERMIT 'TANLEY WALKER is no guardian of a How naive ¥ ment a word to City Editor Ged Walker is “the ful and to fill City da. sfimulating no’ that post on a the Chapin w ipped off to S for the murder of his el t to Just to illustrate how sti: e newspaper newspaperman here is a quotat entitled Notes on a bes im almost every= the efforts inionize themselves, ing a set of handcuffs to “Publishers come in gaudy end in- exvlicable pattern Some are| f men who do friendly peas-nis at heart; others) firing.” argues Mr. Walker, “it may appear to feel t God has called| eventually hurt the workers them- them. to their h: estate. But most} selves ... The men may learn, als0, that the services of a great many of their numbers are far from in- dispensable. The lishers, if sa minded. ca plow under one- d of the crop.” of them are decent, and always have been decent, to their report: at times Here jis another from a chapter tatged Sermon on Ethics TOR a number of years now Stan- ctually the conscience of the} »: i perman bothers him little! lev Walker has been the whife- Seldon is he called upon to do| haired bov among New Yorks city rs. Spuriously he acquired a reputation for independence and in- cisiveness and many working _re- norters fell for his reputed glamour, enything which really grates upon | his sense of provriety.” Now when Stanley Walker de- clares mest publishers are decent to| their employes he lies in his teeth | In Tecent months, with his open hos nd he knows it. In the vast few! tility to the American Newspaper ars his own paper—the New York Guild, editorial employes have seen Herald Tribune — cut wages there | h!m for what he really is, a smug. times, ten per cent each time. He| ®4vocate of the status quo: knows that on other papers there Tt is doubtful if he (the req were wholesale lay-offs and several| Porter) wants to ally his calling pay cuts for the remeining mem- with the labor unions.” this stimu- bers of the staff Jating city editor concludes. “If he. Nor is that all. He slanders the | 1 really a good r honest reporter when he says his conscience bothers him little and he lies once again when he states| the newspaperman is seldom asked orter, he remem- up quickly alon; hers a truth p the d way. by all Don't labor leaders.” anley Walker ma observant bet on or not be aware permen have truths along y. Their fights for better liv- ing conditions in Newark, Staten Island and elsewhere have taught them thev- belo: as allies of labor of th yet, but nex otha rquirmed at the falsified the police” by unarmed relief mes broken by tra zedy, Stanley Welker knows o: unions. The other truth they haye too. well learned is not to ket on Stanley “ONSIDER a few more quotation: from Stenley’s primer on jcur- nalism: “One of the oldest laws of t SCIENCE—0 was recei Nothing d to the ~~ edit of David Ramsey for his | Fourth Estate is the one which f mrs pain ee Dail tee | bids faking. There are few editors || Grivo, i as who deliberately would print a Total to date. $91.23 item which they kr fo be fal : | ‘Culture Fu Worlds’ Acacias By Bucharin in Latest Pamphlet “Fascist ‘order’ is the ‘order’ of from the left and from the right; military, political and economic! do not understand thet tho formial barracks; it is the mili cap-! ter alone (“dictator= italist system of a state of ‘emer- 1), which they un- gency’.” Id rrectly at that, does not decide anything; the importart thing is its class meaning; its con- Thus Nikolai Bucharin, brilliant tatorships and Hitlerism. If at any time the Crusaders | Poor M was riding home in the subway late Saturday night. There was the usual late Saturday night crowd —young fellows who live in Brook- lyn riding their girls home to the Bronx, a couple of well-dressed drunks, two children leaning against each other asleep, their mother and father sitting on either side of them with tired, serious, abstracted faces. In the middle of the bench opposite mine, a man lay asleep. Nothing bores me so much as rid- ing in the subway. My eyes and my thoughts turned unavoidably to the sleeping man, He was lying face up, uncomfortably straight, as though afraid of rolling off the woven-straw top of the bench to the concrete floor of the car, His rigid body fooled the eye into see~ ing him as a figure of unusual size in comparison with the sitting pas- sehgers near him, When you see a man asleep in public these days you think of one of two things... drunk or homeless. I could see that he wasn’t drunk, He was breathing deeply and evenly. ‘There was nothing limp and lifeless about him, as there is about a sleep- ing drunk. It was obvious he hadn't fallen asleep by accident, because his coat was neatly rolled up under his head as a pillow. I could see the steeping man’s chest rise and fall with the slow swinging rhythm of his breathing. His slightly opened mouth showed fine white teeth. I tried to imagine | just how tired I would have to be! not only in body but in mind, be- fore I would deliberately put myself to bed under the gaze of hundreds of unfriendly eyes. | | erance, and the trappings of dic- | Little Lefty SUGARS AND STARCHES INTHE. FORM OF CAKES AND PIES ARE GOOD For Vou- of a statement to the press by the Department of Propaganda, Crusaders for Economic Liberty. A asleep. Especially a poor man, The rich have greater security even in their sleep. They are surrounded by burglar alarms, armed guards, watchdogs, servants, “do not dis- turb” signs. Their richly appointed beds soothe their fevered skins and their exhausted nerve cells. But a poor man, a worker... whatever perils he faces in his wak- ing hours are redoubled at night. .. Fire and smoke may roast and suf- focate him before the crackling tim- bers of his outmoded shack or fire- trap tenement wake him. The ac- cidental twist of a gas-cock may slowly substitute deadly gas for life- giving air in his recuperating lungs. The flimsy lock on his door will not keep out those of his predatory brothers who have lost their social identity through exposure to more misery than he himself has suffered. And though he escapes these threats can he avoid as he prepares to sleep, that vague, depressing unrest which, when it rises to the surface of his consciousness asks, “what about to- morrow?” . AUGHTER jarred me out of my reflections. I looked around to see what caused it. At first I couldn’t understend. I couldn’t see anything that would make people laugh. Then I saw it right under my eyes. Some- one, I hadn't noticed who, had placed a cigarette on the upper lip just under the nose of the sleeper. His regular strong breathing caused the cigarette to roll slightly evesy time he exhaled. It was a neatly calculated trick. When the heavy breathing of the sleeper would roll 2 * | White Shirt or the Crusader jor | im the open and get all the publicity | Economic Liberty or whatever else | Possible.” (To Be Continued) | he may call himself at different Soviet publicist, sums up capital- | ism’s last defense in his lastest | pamphlet “Culture in Two Worlds,” | a five-cent addition to the Int national Pamphlets series. In characteristic style Bucharin| trounces liberal apologists who,/| seizing on the most superficial “sim- ilarities” between fascism and Com- | | tent—mater‘al and ideslogical; the dynamics of its developmont; its re- lationship with the gencral current ef world histerical develcpment. Only imbeciles can fail to under- stand that the dictatorship of the proletariat and the dictatorship~of the capitalists are polar opposifs, and that their content and histor- an’s Sleep - - - By Philip Sterling MAN is so helpless when he is ; the cigarette over the gentle slope he turned slowly and swept face af- of the upper lip it would land in the slightly opened mouth ‘and would awaken him, I looked about me. A couple of | girls were simpering. One lusty young fellow was roaring with laughter, another dressed in his week-end finery, and slightly drunk, was grinning gleefully and pointing at the sleeping man for fear some- one in the car would miss the fun, Two middle-aged men in working clothes looked up from their news- papers and frowned. A young wo- man glanced up from her book and flushed with embarrassment. She put the book up close to her face and tried to read again, The ma- jority of the passengers, however, | were enjoying the spectacle and the | suspense, Would the cigarette roll the way it was calculated to roll? Bitterly I thought . . . poor man’s {sleep . . . not only insecurity .. . | danger, discomfort . . . indignity, too. The fun might have gone on in- definitely, but something happened. A lean, shabbily dressed man, about 40, suddenly rose from his seat and made his way to the side of the sleeping man as fast as his anger and the swaying of the train would permit him. Slowly he bent over the face of the sleeping man, and gently, ten- derly, with infinite care, so as not to disturb him, he lifted the ciga- rette its perch, The eyes of every person in the car were on him. Straightening up again, he crushed the cigarette in his hand and flung it to the floor in an un- controllable gesture of anger. Then Food for Thought! | ter face with a withering glare. I | caught his eyes for a fleeting in- stant. His face was creased with |hheavy lines, , ae ! | HE train was slowing down now. | 4 It was making less noise and a/ | loud voice could make itself heard | above the wheel-clatter through most of the car. “Aren't you ashamed,” he shouted. He was incohorent with rage, “It’s all right to play tricks on a drunk . +» but a homeless man... he’s got no job... that’s why he’s sleep- ing here. . . “Aw sit down, shouted back. “ . fun.” The man paid no attention. By | now the train had come to a stop. | “Why are you making fun of him? He might be your brother in Chi- | | cago, or Philadelphia or Detroit or | | Frisco .. . there’s 15 million like | | him.” i | No one moved. No one spoke. | The doors of the car opened. The | man stalked out. When he stopped | talking I could see on his face the | pain that must have made him | speak out, i A new crowd of passengers shuf- | fled and jostled into the car. The | door slammed and the train rolled on again, The sleeping man stirred | uneasily. I looked at him. .. Poor man’s sleep .. . discom- | fort, danger, insecurity . . . but not all poor men sleep at the same time | . . some of them always stand alert, guarding the rest .. . ready to rouse them to defense against danger... to struggle... | | pop,” someone | . . Just good clean ‘as hostage. munism, attempt to identify the| “dictatorship of Communism” with the “dictatorship of fascism.” “These miserable people, Buch- | z arin writes, “who receive blows both | ical significances are entirely dif- se who cannot—or will nd this will be inevi- d and plunged into the se of history.” WABC~—Boake Carter, Commentator | 8:00-WEAF—Himber Orchestra WOR—Lone Ranger—Sketch n Garber, Supper Club Buckaroos Hill, Commentator hony Orchestra; Rich- Tenor; Mixed Chorus Musicale TUNING 7:00 P. M.-WEAF—Ray Perkins, Songs WOR—Sports Talk—Pord Prick WJZ—Amos 'n’ Andy | WABO-—Myrt and Marge—Sketch | | 1:15-WEAF—Gene and Glenn—Sketch WOR—Comedy and Music WiZ—Plantation Echoes; Mildred Bailey, Songs; Robison Orchestra WABO—Just Pisin Bill—Sketch 7:30-WEAF—Minstrel Show WOR—My: Sketch | aires Quartet WJZ—Red Davis—Sketch | hestra; Aida WABC—Paul Keast, Baritone; Orch. | ‘a eo 1:4$-WEAF—Uncle Ezra—Sketch | Steen ae WOR—Dance Music WJZ—Dangerous P: “The White Devil” At Newark Theatre adise—Sketch 9:30-WEAF—House Pa: Scheff, Soprano; | With Pritat | Baritore; | | rad Thibault, Excellent scenes and some fine acting é Goodman Orchestra characterize “The White Devil,” an in- WOR—Lum and Abner—Sketch teresting story of a Caucasian leader's WIZ. Und je Woman—Sketch conflict with the Ozar Nicholas, which WABC~Gluskin Orch; Block and | Sully, Comedian; Gertrude Niesem; opened last night at the Little Theatre, | Newark, N. J. | ‘When the mountainers of the Caucasian slopes refured to recognize the sov of the Czar, one of tie:> leaders, Ha Murat, traps the C: battalions in re- | venge for having destroyed his village. | He incurs the jealousy of another leader, | Shamil, and 1s forced to fly his home, lav- ing his son and mother behind. | He soe: to Ot. Petersburg, where the Czar to enlist his services. There he me Eaira, a fellow-country-woman in the Im- perial Ballet, whom he later marries against the will of the Czar, who decides to force Hadschi to lead them to the| Caucasian stronghold, keeping his wife Hadschi escapes with Saira, but is mortally wounded in covering his retreat. The tribesmen arrive in time to Grive off the troops and take Hadschi to| die in his own home. Burnett Orchestra 10:00-WEAP—-Eastman Orchestra; Lullaby Mele Quartet WOR—Frank end Fio, Songs W4Z—America in Music—John Tasker. Howard, tor ne King Orchestra it Events—H. EB. Read ration Movement in liam L, Austin, Direee iety Musicale ercado Mexican Orchestra WABC—Preventive Medicine—Dr. George H. Bigelow, Dir. Massie chusetts Gen. Hospital, Boston 10:45-WABC—Emery Deutsch, Violin ”'*" 11:00-WEAF—The Grummits—Sketch WOR—News. WJZ—Martin Orchestra WABC—Gray Orchestra 11:15-WEAF—Jesse Crawford, Organ | WOR—Mocnbeams Trio 11:30-WEAF—St. Louis Symphony, Viadle mir Golschmann, Conductor WOR. by del | GUESS “HE LUNCH— =| ROOM SUPERVISOR \i NEVER HEARD qLL—Hic/ COME ACROSS, POST 191! Uncle John. succeeded in get- ting a splendid radio for buddies in Post 191 of the Work- ers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League. “The Post wishes to assure you,” they write to Del, “that at every open-air meeting we hold from now until the New Year, one collection will be made, and will go to the credit of Little Lefty.” They promised collections when- they first asked for the radio, but nary a penny have they sent in! Total to date. + S199.24 Del will present a beautiful colored portrait of his cartoon characters every day to the highest contribu ony ana" eres ogee TTI