The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 3, 1934, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| CHANGE —THE— | WORLD! By MICHAEL GOLD OMEWHERE in Vermont: I am writing this in a train moving through the pines and birches of rocky old New England. A drab veil of snow and hail covers the hills. Bleak weather. Puritan weather. The native stock of this north- erm region enjoys such bleakness. They have lived here since the days of the Revolution, wringing some sort of existence out of the impoverished soil, ‘hoarding their money and their emotions, until now the soul of petty bourgeois New England can easily be engraved on the head of a pin. If one were to describe the reaction in such sections as California or Georgia in terms of pathology, one might describe it as the hysteria of an over-active lunatic suffering from delusions of persecution, The middle class is fairly virile in those regions, and crazy with fear. But the New England middle class reaction has much of the apathy of senile melancholy. Thse people have a glorious past, a shabby uncertain present, and an almost hopeless future. So they draw more and more into dark recesses of their memories and cling to what is dead. They have the horrible death grip of corpses on their fading possessions. Outside of the South, this is the only region where genealogy, the record of one’s family tree, is a revered and active science. Boston is the only city in America with a daily newspaper that has a page devoted every day to these fantastic and useless problems of genealogy. The D. A. R. is a political factor in these strange and forgotten parts. And in the hills of Vermont and New Hampshire one finds whole vil- lages populated by the old stock, so inbred that often they resemble communities of the feeble minded. So much for genealogy. The industries are leaving New England too. The textile industry was the major base of prosperity, and it was lured South even before the depression. The shoe industry as I have heretofore reported, is growing restless, and may follow one of these days to some similar haven of “cheap contented Anglo-Saxon labor,” as the Chamber of Commerce lovingly describes the South. Flashes of Real Life |; baie and there in New England one finds flashes of real life, how- ever. The old tradition of American Democracy, the socialism and abolitionism of Thoreau, Emerson, Walt Whitman has not died, but found a new home. It has moved out of the fine old Cape Cod houses of death into dingy union halls like those of the seamen and the shoe workers and textile weavers. Yes, many of these workers are of foreign stock, but I am sure Ethan Allen and John Brown, the revolutionary farmers; Wendell Phillips and Theodore Parker, those revolutionary agitators; and Walt Whitman, Whittier or Thoreau, any of that company of bitter fighters would feel that they were the comrades of these foreign workers, and not of the decrepit fascists who call themselves Daughters of the Revolution. Professor Harry Dana should certainly be a joy to the fascist geneal- ogists since he has all the marks of New England royalty, being the authentic grandson of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Richard Henry Dana. But Dana, this unusual New England son of the American Revolu- tion, still defends the principles of that revolution, He is active in every fight for the rights of the working class, he is a valiant de- fender of Soviet culture. It is rumored that the old lady genealogists are looking up his family tree, and are whispering that Harry Dana probably has some Negro or Jewish blood in his heredity. 2 * . Two Old American Names HE New England mossbacks must have been deeply alarmed in the recent elections to find at least two old American names heading the Communist ticket. Mrs. Elba Chase, a farmer's wife, was the Communist candidate for Governor of New Hampshire, and Thomas Boyd, thé novelist and historian, was the Communist candidate in ‘Vermont. Vomrade Chase has been a Communist like her noble. husband, Fred B. Chase, whose recent death was mourned by many of us who knew his loyal and fearless work. Thomas Boyd is a new recruit to Communism. He is a war veteran, and fought through many of the major battles of the last world slaughter. His novel, “Through the Wheat” is a picture of that capi- talist nightmare as reflected’ in a brave and sensitive mind. He is just finishing a biography of Fitch, the first inventor of the steam- boat, whose just reward was stolen from him, as from most inventors, by the financing and money pirates of capftalism. Boyd wants to do next a history of American revolt—Shays’s Re- bellion, the Whiskey Rebellion, etc. He is also completing the second volume of a trilogy of which his war nove! was the first. In this new novel his veteran hero goes through the post-war years of boom and depression, and finally discovers Communism. During the war Boyd’s protagonist was a pessimistic rebel, he could never understand what he was fighting for. But when he is shot at the gates of a factory, where he and thousands of others have come looking for a job, he at last knows what he is fighting for in the class war. In the third novel Boyd wants to take this typical American deep into the stirring organization work of the Communist movement. Boyd is a first rate talent, creative, vital and productive. And he has the familiar complaint of many of our Revolutionary writers— the Communist movement tends to swamp him with too much ex- ecutive and organization work. It is high time many of our comrades learned: to value the work of our authors. Such writing as Boyd’s is an integral part of the movement. Think of what it would mean to us if we had a Gorky here! We must not strangle our future Gorky’s at the first sign of their talent. That is what has been done in a number of cases, not deliberately, but thoughtlessly, and it is really a crime. I wish some of our people would read Lenin's letters to Gorky and learn what the attitude of an active revolutionary organizer should be to his best. ally—the active and loyal revolutionary author. . ' * HE’S GETTING THERE, TOO! It’s a steady climb for Mike Gold. He’s reached 70 per cent of his $1,000 quota and doesn’t seem to be breaking under the strain, either. Jack London Club, Newark . «$15.05 Shirley Stein ....- Previously Rec'd. ... Max Shepanski .. Red Hat Collection Irving Yourke Noah Minkin H. Shames ... senses 108 Previously received .. 694,70 bo) eer rce eat anes see eeee eee c ees $708.20 Gold will present an autographed copy of his novel, “Jews Without Money,” or an original autographed manuscript of his “Change the World” column. For the First Time in English LETTERS TO . _ Dr. KUGELMANN by Karl Marx V. I. Lenin’s introduction , enriches the theoretical treasures of this brilliant correspondence. Here is Marxism in its widest ap- Crtrtrcccccoo plication: Discussions on the labor I theory of value, Lasalle and other [ATIONAL 381 Fourth Ave., New York, writers of the day, the defense of | fentiemen: the Paris Commune, polemics anand wouie wee i tele voor against Duhring, etc. \ catalogue and book news. % i] NAME ..... paicterinieet seeeeesecensens, y e NTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS 381 FOURTH AVENUE NEW YORK DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1934 Personal Letter of Spanish Soldier Tells Reactions During Revolution Offered by Renegade In Book on Revolution That within the regular Spanish army itself are forces which | eagerly hoped for the triumph of | the workers, which here and | there deserted its fascist leader- ship, and which finally aided the | revolutionary cause by freeing prisoners, sabotaging the execu- tion of workers taking part in mass demonstrations, etc., is terse- ly portrayed in the following let- ter written by a class-conscious | soldier. His phrases are neither | literary nor speculative. But writ- ten as his army reluctantly | trudged toward the Soviets of Oviedo, his words bear two domi- nant feelings: bitterness at his part in putting down a workers’ revolt and the grim certainty that the second revolution will be here “almost tomorrow.” The letter is addressed to the writers brother. Naturally, his | name is omitted. ee tee Oviedo, Spain, Dear Brother: 1 Greetings. This is to explain that because I was sick, as you already know, I did not move with the army, at the same time this was the reason that I was not ordered to Asturias during the first days of the struggle between the workers and the bour- geoisie. } On Oct. 10 I was discharged from the hospital. From that day I passed from a semi-defender to a complete defender of the exploiters. At first I was assigned to guard bake-shops, then telephone and tel- egraph centers, etc. During the night of the 18th we received orders that at 4 o'clock we would march for Oviedo. | What deep grief I experienced | upon learning the order! Given Tobacco and Wine At 4 o'clock in the morning of the 19th we arose and at 5 o'clock we started in the direction of Oviedo, not, however, before the chief colonel gave us a patriotic lecture, a package of tobacco, and, in order to divert the attention of the soldiers from the real situation, | they gave us a litre of wine, which I refused when I realized its pur- pose. All this was done to make us sol- diers believe that the officers were our good friends! At the same time this was done in order that we} might better “defend” ourselyes. | When I think of the stinking sur- roundings in which we lived during the period we were stationed in our quarters, and all the humiliation and brutal treatment we suffered in’drill. . . ! ' Revolutionary Prisoners Treated With a Cruelty Reminiscent of Czarist Russia against and ca misery and unemployment which we had endured all our lives. Before we arrived at Oviedo we were detained for three days at an Asturian town called Grado — this town was in the power of the revo- lutionists for 14 days—and later we The college of Oviedo brought revolutionary Soviets, were billeted with other troops in the town. Shortly afterward we departed for Oviedo and here we are for the present. Shooting Class Brothers I, as well as the group with me, have not taken part in the struggle, for the battalion preceding us took| ers and no less the anarcho-syndi- | soldiers told me, is full of revolu-| Oviedo by assault, bombarding and shooting down our class brothers, the workers. ‘As you know, the army is com-|four or five days; on the other) Czarist Russia. It is said that the) hooks like The Bolshevik Theory in the army, espec = officers. During the journey I explained| struggled for a better life, and for} Several soldiers and officers to a comrade how our exploiters|the same soldiers who shot them | Regiment No. 3, stationed in Ovi | utilized us to suppress the exploited | down! Morevover, the soldiers re-| have been arrested, including a car- and what purposes we serve through | moved the clothes and shoes of the|bineer. All th our ignorance; and that we were| corpses and waving them in their inciting an insurrection. n going to “defend” the slavery and| hands, they mocked at the clothing) 4 soldier in same regime me, one soldier and a sergea | and belongings! That was horrible! sentenced to be shot, and perhap The present struggle is so bloody , that I believe never has any con-|by now they h | flict been carried on so cru in Cruelty of Czarist Russia | Spain as this one between the work-| Also, in Gijon there is—or was— Jers and the bourgeoisie. the cannoneer, “Churruca.” They If the chief Socialist misleaders,! say that he left one night with 300 to ruin by aerial bombardment while Asturias was in control of the and a little What hap- j instead of throwing the masses into | the action without first organizing |them, would have prepared the | masses, with the fighting spirit that they had, victory would have been | achieved, Where the Socialist lead- imprisoned workers later he returned alone. | was told that this happened at different times. The “model” jail in Oviedo, other calists, held the hegemony over the | tionary prisoners who are cruelly | proletariat, the struggle lasted only| treated with a finesse reminiscent of pened to them I do not know. I} Page 5 Semi-Fascist Way Out HOW TO MAKE A REVOLUTION. HE by Raymond Postgate Press. $1.90. Reviewed by DAVID RAMSEY HROUGHOUT the hi: revolutionary movemen have been renegades of one pretense or sold out to the ene: subsequent actions subsequent actions. in every possible way, bo r and as thinkers. Examples can be cited from every period and every country of these deserters Vanguard They The from the camp of the revolution, |§ who began with false critic: and then proj ively deteriorated to | the most vicious maligning and cor- |rupt maneuvers against the prin- ciples and the movement which for- sueely they had upheld and fought or. None of the renegades can escape the consequences of this iron law. The logic of events drives them into the arms of the enemies of the workers, and they spend their lives attempting to block the growth of revolutionary struggles. Since these traitors know the literatui tactics of the working cl: ment, they are far more mistakable hatred and m mistakeable hatred and mailed fist are out in the open. That is why it is so important to ip off their hypocritical masks and reveal the menace to genuine revo- lutionary action that they conceal behind their false rhetoric and | | pseudo-radicalism. All of them pro- | claim their undying love for the working class. Their common point of departure is the premise that it | is “necessary and principled” to at- | tack those nasty Communists. But | their ultimate function is to serve j@s the storm troopers of the} | counter-revolution | | wit hues R. Raymond Postgate is an iriter- esting specimen who illustrate: | the law of degeneracy. He was oncy |@ serious student, and in his ea and the posed of rich and poor. Well, it did | hand, in the sectors where the Com- | prisoners are first ordered down into| and Out Of The Past, he performed not surprise me that the rich de-| munists held control, the struggle| the court-yard and that presently,| the useful task of conveying some fended their privileged position as | still continues, notwithstanding the| when ascending to their celis, the | conception to English and American | well as their government, which de-| sovernment agents who proclaim| Civil Guard butchers wait on the| audiences, of the forces that oper- | fends their interests and permits them to live in ease at the cost of intense hunger and exploitation for the working class... . I often think of a field adjoin- ing our camp—they told me this— where about 100 workers who had been killed are buried. They had the | that the fight is over. stairways to strike prisoners As you probably already have| with clubs and rifle butts until they been informed, the revolutionaries) are unconscious. | confiscated all the war material in| All this happens as a result cf the | the arms and munitions factories | exploiters’ desire to keep workers in Trubia and Oviedo; as a conse-| under the dictum of the Lord: “You | quence they had plenty of modern] shall earn your bread by the sweat | weapons. Also they had all kinds! of your brow.” C. I. 22 Answers Vital Questions On Trade Unions In the latest issue of “The Com- munist International,” No. 22 which will be on sale Thursday, there is an exhaustive article by O. Piatnit- sky on “Problems of the Interna- tional ‘Trade Union Movement.” In this article, which appears under the section devoted to discussion for the Seventh World Congress of the Communist International, Comrade Piatnitsky takes up questions he has received, selects those which are most important at the present mo- ment, and gives detailed answers to each. Another article in the discussion section. of this issue takes up the struggle of the Italian Communist Party against fascism, and the less- ons of that struggle. This article throws light on the conditions un- der which our Italian brother Party is struggling, something which is very little known. The editorial; “For Soviet Power” draws lessons from the experiences of the October Revolution, for the coming battles of the International proletariat against the capitalist rulers, for the establishment of World Soviet Power. There is an article by L. Madyar, written in the form of a speech which, had Hitler set himself the task of telling the truth, he would have delivered to the Sixth Con- gress of his Nazi Party at Nurem- berg. The last article is on the question of India and the maneuvers of the National Congress in that colony of British imperialism. The total con- tents for No. 22 are as follows: 1. For Soviet World Power! (Editorial) Discussion for the Seventh World Congress of the C. I. 2. Problems of the International Trade Union Movement—by O. Piatnitsky 3. Basic Lessons of the Struggle of the Communist Party of Italy Against Fascism Under the Con- ditions of the “‘Totalized” Regime —by K. Roncoli 4. The Congress Socialist Party and the New Maneuvers of the National Congress of India—by G. Safarov 5. A Speech That Hitler Failed to Deliver—by L. Madyar. Little Lefty \ ASKED PATSY Smit 10 SRR DROP AROUND — SHE'S ONE OF HOSE PIONEER GALS. MEBBE SHE CAN HELP US FIND A Joiny SQ ouR'FREE FOOD FIGHTERS CLUB’CAN MEET, WORLD of Modern Russia Through Bourke-White’s Camera THE RED REPUBLIC, Margaret Bourke-White’s Film Record of Soviet Baku and the Caucasus; “Life in the Congo,” Ben Bur- bridge’s Expedition to Belgian Congo; “Melody of the World,” an international medley directed by Walter Ruttman; all playing at the Acme Theatre. Reviewed by DAVID PLATT |ARGARET BOURKE - WHITE'S agile camera takes us this time along the Caspian Sea, where at Baku, great oil center once domi- nated by British, French and Amer- ican capital, we are given a glimpse of the modern workers’ apartments equipped with that “phenom- enon American call showerbaths.” While here, we are shown the signi- ficant part played by women and women shock -brigaders in the pro- duction of oil and other necessities. Freed of household drudgery and other thousand-year old forms of Physical and mental slavery, they appear to be everywhere, in every field of endeavor in Soviet Baku and all along the way, working, learning, playing, living like no other women in the world. From Baku we go on to Tiflis, birthplace of Stalin, whose aged but strangely youthful mother makes her first appearance before the camera in front of her home. Pass- ing through the fine Georgian vine- yards we are initiated into the custom of drinking wine in horns which requires the last drop to drip onto the thumb for the good of the wine. The dedication ceremonies at Dnieperstroy (lit up at night by the famous slogan of Lenin—“Commu- nism is Soviet power plus electrifica- tion”) and other remarkable evi- dences of socialist progress in So- viet Georgia, wind up this interest- ing if brief travelogue of Miss Bourke -White’s. Pa ears Wax Andre Gide, noted French writer visited the Congo several years ago he found famine, hunger, disease, sickness, death as the re- Special Rates the MOVIES | Offered by J.R.C. —' Writers School sult of cruel economic exploitation | of native blacks by foreign imperi- | A special rate of $5 for any course alists. As the result of his expose|in the Writers School and a six in “Voyage au Congo” he lost many | months’ subscription to the New friends and made many enemies. | Masses is now being offered by the But when Ben Burbridge returned | John Reed Club. Ordinarily the fee |from his two year expedition to the |for each course would be $4, and same region, he reported not hunger | for one-half year's subscription to and disease, but man-eating lions, | the New Masses $2. Also a combina- man-like gorrillas, man-eating and | tion rate of $4.50 for any course and elephant-eating cannibals, strange native dances and customs, and his own special prowess as a bare- handed ape wresiler. As the result of these not-un- worthy achievements he won the| lasting friendship of British and | American rubber manufacturers for | opening up new avenues of exploi- | |tation; the undying enmity of the | gorrillas for disturbing their age-| |long peace; and plaudits and medals | |from several scientific institutes in| | Europe and America for his courage | and audacity as an explorer. | | One subtitle in the film reveals perhaps better than the film itself, the nature of Burbridge’s expedition. “To avoid mutiny among the blacks, the 125 Safaris who carried provi- sions for two years were recruited from many different tribes speaking as many different dialects.” So ex- |ploration under capitalism is only |the front view of the coin; flip it | around and you have the back view, which is exploitation. * ee 'HERE is good photography but nothing else much in this brief effort of Walter Ruttman, which sets out to prove that the rhythm of life, the melody of the world, is classless, affecting rich and poor alike. Whether India, China, Amer- ica, Europe, the melody of song, dance, sport, battle, work, sleep, is strong enough to break down any possible barrier of race or class, runs his baseless argument. What he really succeeds in pre- senting is a vague jumble of events and places, whose content might easily be adapted by Fascism to prove its position as “protectress” of the melody of the world. Signi- ficantly enough Soviet Russia is the only nation not represented in the a year’s subscription to Partisan Review ($1) is being offered. Further information may be ob- tained at the John Reed Club, 430 Sixth Avenue. Registration daily from 2 to 5:30 p.m. Classes — will begin January 2nd. Mass Protest Forces Cancellation of Lecture By Fascist Youth Head COATESVILLE, Pa. Dec. 2— A militant campaign of mass pro- test has forced the local Y.M.C.A. to cancel a lecture scheduled for today by Viola Ilma, exposed by John L. Spivak, as working with Nazi agents to organize an anti- Semitic and Fascist youth move- ment in this country. A Scottsboro-Herndon meeting organized by the International La- bor Defense, and addressed by Ruby Bates, who is devoting all her time to exposing the vicious frame-up of the Scottsboro boys, adopted a resolution earlier in the mhonth demanding the cancellation of Ilma’s lecture. THEY DO HIM PROUD “Here is $3 which I hope will stimulate little Left's left and help him win by a knockout in the last round,” writes George Marion. Lefty and Peanuts are champs again today, beating Mike Gold by 15 cents. Del's chest is expanding these days! Geo. H. Gordon .......$ 20 Y.C.L,. Unit 4, Boro Pk 13.00 George Marion ............ 3.00 Previously received 245.29 Total =. 261.49 Del will p beautiful colored portrait of his cartoon characters every day to the highest contributor. potpourri. This Is Home, Sweet Home! “WIS 1S MY PAL PEANUTS Jou! WE WAS FiGI HOWTO Ger Vo verry! MEETIN' PLAC: WHO'S YouR FRIEND 27 NOY USE OvR CLUBROOM C'MON OvEeR }} ANO I'LL SHOW (V1 Nou / NSON VRIN! |!) a | € FoR ial = AND I'M SURE TRE ate in a revolution. Now as a | deserter from Communism, he| | grinds out books that tell you what | | Marx really meant, and in this par- | |ticular volume he demonstrates in| jolie pages just how to make a |revolution. Where once he dealt | with facts and their elucidation, he| |now specializes in what Lenin called | | “renegade sophisms.” Like all renegades, he accepts jeverything that is “valid” about | Marxism except its | content, its methods of struggle, and | its way of training and preparing | the masses to overthrow capitalism. | | His book fulfills one useful purpose. | ‘In the space of a short volume, he | | has managed to squeeze in nearly | | all of the nonsensical misinterpre- | | tation, malicious innuendo and falsehoods that has been directed | j against the teachings of Marx and) Lenin and the world tactics of the | Comitern. Unfortunately, while the book is thus a masterly collation | of the crude distortions that he has | gathered from the rubbish heap of | history, this one positive feature makes it necessary to have a pretty | | strong stomach to finish the book. | Postgate bases his suggested revolutionary action on the false) premise that it is Communist ac- | tivity that brings on fascism. It is| not the policy of “gradualness in reverse” of the labor bureaucracy that helps pave the way to the terroristic dictatorship of fascism, | but it is Communist agitation that | disillusions the workers and imbues | | them with the belief that fascism is | | inevitable. | This is the old canard that the {efforts of the Communists to! achieve the united front of all work- ers against the menace of war and fascism cannot do anything but | hasten the development of reaction. | But Postgate contradicts his own argument. For on the one hand, | | he claims that Communists believe | that a fascist dictatorship is an in- | evitable stage. On the other hand, | he insists that their militant ac- tivity against fascist developments | tatorship of capital. 7:00 P. M.-WEAF—Ray Perkins, Songs WOR—Sports Talk—Ford Frick WJZ—Amos 'n’ Andy WABC—Myrt and Marge—Sketch | 7:15-WEAP—The Situation in Europe— | James G. McDonald, High Commis- sioner for Refugees From Germany WOR—Comedy and Music ‘WJZ—Plantation Echoes; Mildred Bailey, Songs; Robison Orchestra WABC—Just Plain Bill—Sketch 7:30-WEAF—Minstrel Show WOR—Mystery Sketch WJZ—Red Davis—Sketch WABC—Paul Keast, Baritone; Orch. 7:45-WEAP—Uncle Ezra—Sketch WOR—Dance Music WJZ—Dangerous Paradise—Sketch WABC—Boake Carter, Commentator by del, MEMBERS OF THIS TROOP WILL WANT “10 FIGHT Witt You! | ai 5d revolutionary | hastens and brings on the open dic- | EON TN G the matter is that inists point out to the fascism is not inev- ts development can be 1e united actions of the 1 Obviously, to urge not to fight against fascism, sue tactics that would hand rs and their organizations over to the murder gangs and con- centration camps of the fascists. opposed to the of the Com- cannot suc- it because they To bolste the Co! ble for failure of the Hun- garian and Bavarian revolutions, although later he admits that the tern was not organized until ese events took place. He is ‘a fundamentally democratic and libertarian change.” This would obviate the necessity of having to let loose “the sa n of working class toughs.” The solution that Postgate offera would be amusing, if its embryoni¢ fascist content were not so danger- ous. He proposes that the minor officials of the trade unions and the Labor Party in England organize themselves into “the storm troops of labor.” By some undisclosed means this elite is to vote a labor government into office. And then over the heads of the reactionary bureaucrats th “organization of storm troope! is to make social- ism by carrying out “necessary re- forms.” significant that Postgate is vague about every point ex- cept the necessity of lining up an elite of petty officials. He urges that they operate on the cynical theory that the customer is always right. In other words, the “revolution” is to be sold to the people by catering to every prejudice that can be cap- italized on. It is the usual fascist tunt of promising everything in order to deceive the masses and make them swallow the pseudo-so- cialist rhetoric of the fascists. Postgate comes out openly on this question. The elite are to win over the younger generation “who wish to do and to be told what to do, not to contemplate.” Not reason and facts, but blind obedience to the elite, this is the program that Post- gate wishes to substitute for the revolutionary tactics of the Com- munist International. It is not only embryonic fascism, but it plays into the hands of the reactionary labor bureaucrats whom Postgate is sup- posedly undermining. He calls upon the minor officials of the trade unions and the Labor Party to lead the fight against fas- cism. But these elements, with no organization of their.own, vacillat- ing, confused, and at present the tools of their reactionary leadership, cannot be the vanguard of the reyo- lutionary struggle for the over- throw of capitalism. As Lenin pointed out time after time, and as the experience of the Russion Reyo- lution proves, it is only the Commu- nist parties all over the world—the organized and disciplined vanguard of the working class that can lead the broadest, united front struggles against war and capitalism. For as in the struggle against the last im- perialist war, the present fight against fascism must eventually drive towards a revolutionary Civil War under the leadership of the Communist Party that will destroy capitalism. THANK YOU! Ramsey's lofty position over his competitors today is chiefly due to Mrs. Newhouse, who raffled off among her fellow- workers of Eta Gowns, Inc. her son’s newly published book. .. . You guess it! Edward Newhouse’s “You Can't Sleep Here.” (We suggest that Ramsey now hold Newhouse up for a contribution for the free ad!) N. G. Platform $ 130 Chas. F. Faubel 5.00 Martha Bowman 4.00 A. School Teacher 2.00 Mrs. Newhouse 850 Previously Received 154.41 Total 175.21 IN 8:00-WEAF—Himber Orchestra WOR—Lone Ranger—Sketch WJZ—Jan Garber, Super Club WABC—Robinson Buckaroos 8:15-WABC—Edwin ©. Hill, Commentator 8:30-WEAF—Symphony Orchestra; Gladys Swarthout, Soprano; Mixed Chorus WOR—Variety Musicale ‘WsJZ—Variety Musicale WABC—Concert Orchestra; Melton, Tenor 9:00-WEAF-—Gypsies Orchestra; Frank Parker, Tenor WOR—The Witch's Tale WJZ—Minstrel_ Show ‘WABC—Rosa Ponselle, Kostelanetz Orchestra 9:80-WEAF—House Party, With Fritd Scheff, Soprano; Conrad Thibault, . Baritone; Goodman Orchestra WOR—Lum and Abner—Sketch WJZ—Taken for Granted—Sketch WABC—Gluskin Orchestra; Block & Sully, Comedians; Gertrude Niesen, Songs 9:45-WOR—Burnett Orchestra 10:00-WEAF—Eastman Orchestra; Lullaby Lady; Mele Quartet WOR—Sid Gary, Baritone WJZ—America in Music—John Tasker Howard, Narrator WABC—Wayne King Orchestra 10:15-WOR—Ourrent Events—H. E, Read 10:30-WEAF—Celebration of Opening New Station KYW, Philadelphia WOR—Variety Musicale WJZ—Mercado Mexican Orchestra - WABC—Mass Prosperity and Medical © Care—Edward A. Filene, Boston - Merchant : 10:45-WABC—Emery Deutsch, Violin 11:00-WEAF—The Grummits—Sketch WOR—News WJZ—Coleman Orchestra WABC—Gray Orchestra : 11:15-WEAF—Jesse Crawford, Organ ; WOR—Moonbeams Trio 11:30-WEAF—St. Louis Symphony; Vladie ” mir Golschmann, Conductor . WOR—Dance Music WJZ—Coburn Orchestra WABC—Miller Orchestra 12:00-WEAF_—KYW Celebration WJZ—Dance Music (Also WMCA, WOR, WABO, WEVD) James Soprano;

Other pages from this issue: