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|| CHANGE | -—THE— | | WORLD! | By MICHAEL GOLD EHIND the barred and towering windows of the House of Detention, next to the Jefferson Market Court, lie thousands of women who have been arrested as prosti- tutes or on other “morals” charges awaiting trial. The building is a high, gloomy modern structure of steel and glass. It was built as a “reform” prison, A “reform” prison is one where you have electric light while you pace up and down the narrow cage of your cell. If one looks closely, one will see, carved into the cement of the cornerstone, the name of the one-time Mayor of the city of New York, James J. Walker. Today, Walker is conducting a “wit column” in a London paper. He is well known on the Riviera, in the gambling dens, and on the beaches. During his term of office, the city of New York was robbed of millions of dollars by a ring of organized graft headed by Tammany Hall, with Walker as its “front man.” For this “grand larceny” ‘Walker was never hauled into court. For many years, it was well known that he was living in what the bourgeois courts call “illicit relations” with a well-known actress. Yet nobody ever dragged him | into a “morals court.” The “morality” of the Mayor was different from the “morality” of the girls who lie in the House of Detention, A criminal Mayor is addressed as “His Honor” and is privileged to erect a House of Detention, a prison ward, for women whose crime was, in the majority of cases, the crime of being hungry. . * . The Victims of Society HERE are no giamorous kept mistresses of stockbrokers here. No courtesans of utility magnates or bankers, In this dungeon with its high towering windows, its bars, its guards and matrons, its medical examinations, lie the daughters of the poor. Some are young, kids yet, eighteen, nineteen. Some are new at the grisly profession. Others are drunkards, old timers, hardened and calloused performers. They're not a pretty sight, the old, drunken, broken-down, professionals who have grown old in the game and forgotten a long time ago the way they started. But old and young, hardened and still tender, those who swear like troopers, get soused with bad whiskey, or those who hang their head in shame before the bar, all of them are victims, not criminals, of society. Their crime is a heinous one in the eyes of the good people of the city. They are hounded and pursued by the social, blue-nose welfare boards; tricked and exploited by the vice squads; humiliated and brutalized by the doctors and jails; driven into strange sexual perversities and abnormalities by their way of life. Disease begins to eat them. The prisons destroy them. Their ends are identical. A horrible and brutal death. . . * The Women’s Day Court 1 Ra Women’s Day Court was established to judge the morals of these women. To protect society, to shield the innocent, to stamp out this “ourse,” the fathers of the city established the court. A court is supposed to administer justice, “Justice” is a slippery term. The Women’s Day Court reversed the ordinary procedure of the ordinary capitalist court. In the ordinary court, a man is sup- posed to be “innocent” until he is proved guilty. This is just a dis- guise of capitalist democracy, which the absurdity of panelling a jury exposes. But in the Women’s Day Court the girl arrested or brought in by a dick of the Vice Squad is assumed to be guilty until she is proved innocent. In bourgeois society, one can start from the premise that in the courts of justice and law of the capitalist class, the guilty person usually wears the black robes, is solemnly greeted as “the Honorable Judge” and conducts the case. The innocent person, nine times out of ten, is the one who has been arrested and charged with the crime. During the Seabury exposure of the Vice Squads, a few years ago, for example, the whole administration was found shot through with the most brutal and amazing methods of graft and the framing of women. Yet, only one out of a hundred cases was convicted and the greatest malefactors were let go. In the Women’s Day Court, a new reform is supposed to have taken place, the old practices of the Vice Squad are supposed to have been eliminated, and a new liberal scientific treatment of the question of maintaining the city’s morality been instituted, * . * Magistrate Kross | MONG the Judges who have been receiving the attention of humane societies and reform city editors is Magistrate Anna Moskowitz Kross, a woman Judge who presides in the Women’s Court and has been openly critical in many instances of the practices of social jus- tice in this court: According to Magistrate Kross, the Women’s Day Court ought to be abolished altogether and in its place substituted an informal medical-sociological commission concerned chiefly with the health aspects of commercialized vice.” Vice, the Magistrate contends, will exist as long “as there is a demand for it.” In other words, what causes prostitution is man’s evil nature. If men weren't animals, women wouldn't be able to practice the trade. ‘Therefore all one can do, says the Magistrate, is try to control the spread of venereal disease among the population. This is what is known as the liberal “reform” in the Women’s Court. If one were to reason like Magistrate Kross does, about James J. Walker, society would be afflicted to the end of time with grafters and crooks of Walker's type. The Magistrate, in true liberal style, dodges the basic point: that if capitalism was wiped out, it would be impossible to have grafters like Walker and Tammany Hall; and if poverty were wiped out, the social cause of prostitution would be eliminated. And so the House of Detention will continue to exist, with its grey towering barred windows, its miseries, its horrors in a “modern” setting. Liberals will put clean bars on prison cells, but they will not destroy the prisons. They will worry about the spread of social disease but they wil not destroy the origin of the vice. And meanwhile, in the upper tiers of our society, the “honorable” type of prostitution will continue without investigations from the poiice. The women of the upper class will continue to sell themsélves for industrial empires, military alliances and pedigrees. This con- stitutes not prostitution but an “honorable marriage.” FIRST AGAIN! Mike Gold re-captures first place today in the Socialist com- petition among the features, getting ahead of Ramsey by two pez cent. Vincent Eterno +8 34.10 Bill Porter and Tom Cermak 1.00 Carl Freeman ... S| wena Frankie . 1.00 Party at 41a Clinton St. 3.1 Student of Vassar College . 1,00 Geo. G. Gamm ... wa Previously Ree’d, ...... .. 781.50 WORE vinasads ccna ys ais sieaetacucougesea 7 SOONG 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. STAGE AND SCREEN Peace On Earth Now Playing & Los Angeles Stevedore to Open in Philadel phia Los Angeles workers will have an | opportunity to see that excellent anti-war play Peace on Earth, which had its opening on Dec. 5, at the Musart Theatre, 1318 South Figueros Street. This play showed to over 100,000 workers in New York City last year when the Broadway houses could hardly muster up au- diences. Organizations should ar- range theatre parties so that the message of this play might be spread most effectively. When “Stevedore,” the Theatre Union's exciting drama about the New Orleans waterfront, arrives in Philadelphia for a two weeks en- gagement at the Garrick Theatre, beginning Monday, Dec. 10, it will be greetedwby an audience composed of members and friends of the! United Workers’ Organizations Against Fascism*on Tuesday, Thurs- day and Friday nights, Dec. 11, 13| and 14. Praise for “Stevedore” has | come from many sources and there was universal response to the fine qualities of the play in New York, DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1934 Page 5 Friedrich Wolf: Exiled German Worker |Perplexing Problems |Led Army of Workers » Against Fascist j Kapp-Putsch By MORRIS GROCE “[J1TLER recently had burned all the books of Jewish, non-Aryan and proleterian writers. He has also banned production of our radio- plays and films, thus violating the Berne agreement. All German pub- lishers and theatrical producers have been forbidden to pay any| royalties to us Jewish and prole- tarian writers. We are consequently utterly helpless today; it is not our | fault! I myself am being persecuted —my wife was refused a visa to see| me and my Postal Savings account | where I had a little savings was} seized and confiscated, so that my wife and children are destitute.” | In these words Friedrich Wolf, | revolutionary German dramatist, | now in exile in the Soviet Union, described the treatment accorded | authors in 1933 who dared oppose Fascism. Wolf, whose most popular drama “Sailors of Cattaro” has its Amer-| iean premiere at the Civic Reper- | tory Theatre, Monday evening, un- | der the sponsorship of the Theatre Union, has taken an active part in| the struggles of the working class, | so that instead of inhabiting a “Red | ivory tower” and writing vicariously | of strife, he creates out of actual} experience. During his forty-six | years, he has been sailor, soldier, worker, and physician, as well as author. He ran away from home when he was only twelve and shipped to sea, first as a cabin boy, and then as he settled down to the study of Medicine. But during his summer vacations he shoveled coal in the} “black gang” of a Dutch steamer. When the War broke out, he en- listed immediately, and served four! years as a battalion physician in| the Eastern and Western armies, | Once, he was severely wounded, and | twice shell-shocked. Refused to Serve in Army From March, 1918, on, he refused to serve any more. He was court martialed and railroaded to an in- sane asylum. But he did not re- main in the asylum long, fer by militant action he forced his release. In September, 1918, he joined the illegal, independent Social-Demo- | cratic party, and plunged himself into the thick of the revolutionary movement. He took an active part in the No- vember revolution, was elected to the executive committee, arrested after the murder of Rosa Luxem- jbourg and Karl Liebknecht on Jan- uary 15, 1918, and later released by amnesty. After this, Wolf went to Rem- schied, in the Rhine-Ruhr coal country as chief physician. He was building up the medical service of the city when the first Fascist Kapp-Putsch took place. The Whites under Major Lutzow captured Rem- schied. Led Workers’ Army Wolf himself led a section of men in the army of workers which bit- New Masses Art Critic Calls J. R. C. Exhibition ‘Most Inspiring in N. Y.’ This is the last week of the ex- hibition being held in the John Reed Club, 430 Sixth Avenue—Rev- olutionary Art—1934, It is still one of the most popular exhibits in the city. To date more than 2,000 peo- ple have come in to look at it. Stephen Alexander says in the Noy. 27 issue of the New Masses: “This is by far the most success- ful of the Club’s exhibitions and marks an important advance over its previous exhibitions in both ideological development and tech- nical quality. Tt is the most ex- citing, inspiring showing in New York. “One of the most striking differ- ences between this and most bour- geois art exhibitions is the complete absence here of any work which concerns itself exclusively with technical problems. You find here no still-lifes, no landscapes (as such), no “nudes,” no abstractions ...in short, no ‘art for art’s sake.’ “Every artist represented here has used his technical equipment to ‘say something,’ to mean some- thing more than just decoration or technical display. The reyolution- ary artist is trying to make a living commentary on the world in which we are living and fighting, to ex- press the basic realities of our time, to depict some phase or aspect of that intense drama .. . the class struggle.” The following exhibition, begin- ning Dec, 14 is a Memorial Show for Diana Gellerman, who was kill- ed by the police in a picket line in Boston. On Dec. 28 a print show will open at the John Reed Club. Little Lefty both by actors and audience, an able bodied seaman. Eventually, |} And Brilliant Revolutionary taro” by Friedrich Wolf (insert), opening at the Civic Repertory Theatre | en December 10th. terly resisted the White invasion. He and his men were captured, court-martialed and sentenced to be | Shot. An hour later, and just a few minutes before the time set for the execution the workers, armed with} hand grenades and machine guns, stormed the prison, drove out the 8,000 Whites, and freed Wolf and his comrades. In 1921, Wolf entered a syndicalist settlement for war veterans set up near Wormswede, Germany. The colony was built up with the great- est efforts by the soldiers themselves. Wolf dug peat as his share of the work. But the government with- Stuttgart, and became active in| party work there. It was not long before he was framed on a charge of violating the Paragraph 218, which deals with the penalties for| abortion, Mass demonstrations by workers | in Stuttgart and all over Germany| forced his release, | All during these years as a physi- | cian and a revolutionist, Wolf had | j been writing. His first play, “This| \Is You,” was performed in Dresden, | | Amsterdam, and Vienna, and was }one of the first expressionistic | dramas. His next play, “Poor Con- | rad,” a tragedy of the German peas- ant revolt of 1540, was suggested by | | and Stuttgart. Outside of Germany,| Dramatis Sailors of Cattaro Still Playing in Moscow of Cattaro,” Wolf t play, took Place simultane Berlin at the Volksbuhne, in the Schau- spielhaus in Breslau in 1930. In Ber- lin, it was a sensational and political success. A Berlin critic ended a four column review with the words: “a tremendous victory for the author. | A tremendous victory for the thea-| tre, a first and tremendous victory for the political idea.” The critic of the “Welt am Abend,” Berlin wrote: “The sym- y of the public was understand- x because, although this play is with the revolt of the sailors at Cattaro, in essence it is the tra- gedy of the German November Rev- olution. In a certain sense it may be said that on this night judgment | was passed on all reformism and op- | portunism, all half-revolutions. It} was a strange experience to see peo- ple seeking to assure themselves, in the midst of frenzied applause, with @ cry of ‘theatre’ But it was no longer theatre—it was brutally real |to the spectat who expressed hemselves in this way; and con- act between the public and the} stage was not so close for years as jit was on this night of the ‘Sailors of Cattaro.’” In Berlin the play ran a half| year, and then werit on to most of} the important German theatres, in-| cluding Breslau, Dusseldorf, Man- heim, Cologne, Frankfort, Leipzig, the drama was played in Zurich, | Amsterdam, Copenhagen, London, | Vienna, Prague. It was produced in} 1931 in the October Festival in Mo: cow and together with Pogodin’ “Mojdrug” was designated as the best play of the season. Still Playing in Moscow “Sailors of Cattaro” is still being | played in the Theatre of the Trade| Unions in Moscow, three years after | its premiere, and has also been pro- | duced in Odessa. Kharkov, and as far East as Vladivostok. | In the winter of 1932-33, Wolf or-| ganized a group of actors into the “Troupe Southwest.” which toured | southern Germany in motor trucks} presenting “How Is It On The) Front,” “From New York To Shang- | hai,” and “Farmer Baetz"—agit- prop revues written especially for the Troupe by Wolf himself, Some ninety performance had been given, when in March of 1933, A In Trade Union Field Analyzed in C.L. No. 22 THE COMMUNIST INTERNA- TIONAL, Vol. XI, No. 22; Nov. 52 pages; organ of the Committee of the Com- International; 19 cents munist per copy, $2 per year. Reviewed by MARGARET COWL In a brilliant article, in the form of questions and answers, Comrade O. Piatnisky, one of the leaders of the Communist International, helps solve many difficult problems facing us in our trade union policy. His article, “Problems of the Interna- tional Trade Union Movement,” published in “The Communist In- ternational” magazine No. 22 (out tomorrow), gives answers to burn- ing questions which confront the working class today in the United States. The article is published in the section for discussion of ques- tions for the forthcoming Seventh Congress of the Comintern. When our Party recently empha- sized its main policy in trade union work to be that of building the rank-and-file opposition within the A. F, of L. unions, it raised a ques- tion in the minds of many of us How should we proceed with the united front tactic in the trade unions, a tactic which involves unity in an organizational sense, differing from unity of action on | certain specific demands? Comrade Piatnitsky gives a clear answer to this question. He em- phasizes that it is necessary to carry on work in the factories to explain to the workers, organized as well as unorganized, the need for the united front and unity of | trade union organizations. He points out the changes which have taken place in the working class and in the labor movement since the Sixth World Congress of the C. I. (1928) which makes it necessary to make our tactics more concrete, to mod- | ify them somewhat and improve the methods of work. This, however, does not mean that the tactic of the united front from below is re- jected. “The united front from below has | always been, and still remains, the fundamental form of the united front,” emphasizes Comrade Piat- nitsky. Reading this article, one sees clearly the guiding principles in the application of our united front pol- icy at the present stage of the struggle. What does the united front bring to the workers? What is the piat- |form for creating a united front drew its subsidy, and that was the|Friedrich Engel’s monograph “The bitter end of the experiment. German Peasant Revolt.” Convinced of the futility of such} One of his most succesful plays efforts, Wolf then returned to the | was “Cynakali.”. He had carried in practise of medicine. He might have} his mind for years the memory of they were officially banned by Hitler.| trade union movement? How should A month later Wolf had to flee the| the question of a united trade union country. movement be raised in countries He lived in Paris for several where Red trade unions exist (such | had a lucrative city practise; instead) he chose to go out among the small farmers and poor weavers of South- ern Germany. He lived with them, worked with them, doctored them. Jcined Communist Party A few years later he joined the Communist Party and moved to Short The interests of the ruling class, as expressed through the instrument of the present amateur organiza- tions, are opposed to the interests of the scores of thousands of worker amateurs, . se 'HILE looking over old files, the following part of a letter struck us as being of sufficient importance to deserve publication: “The trans- | mitting amateur has certainly been | discriminatd against all these years, | and is being highly militarized and | sold out by the American Radio |Relay League. . . . When I was | active in the radio amateur field, 1) | was president of the Radio Amateur Club and quite well known among transmitting amateurs in the section of the country near ; Minn. I also held a commercial sec- ond class operator’s license up until | Octobez, 1933, at which time it ex- Pired. ... We can save a lot of | dissipation of energy by getting the | movement going on the correct basis. zon, there is certainly no time to be lost.” Let us have more discussion on this basis, Comrade Spec’s. Your letters are urgently requested! Mean- while please work along the plan below. A Plan of Action—Every worker with radio leanings should at once begin carrying out one or more of the following activities (in the order of importance): Handle traffic. PSE QSL. (2) Organize hams and/or Would-be hams. (3) Teach and/or study the theory and practice of radio communications, (a) traffic handling, (b) theory of radio, (ce) practical work in construction. (4) Do technical work, such as building, constructing, installing transmitters and receivers for clubs, and so on, | the underpaid, half-starved~ metal | workers of Remschied, raising large |families they could never support, jand so he wrote “Cynakali” ad- | vocating legal abortion and birth | control. | “Sailors of Cattaro” | The German premiere of “Sailors | Wave Radio News | is hereby made to Washington, D.C., and Chicago, Iil., hams to volunteer for traffic handling. PSE QSL OM. | Write to this column. All commu- | nications will be answered without | delay. | Radio Clubs.—The New York Club, meeting Friday nights at 42 Union| Square, one flight up, is sure to obtain a 250-watt rig; the lads are! doing their best to raise the dough. The Cleveland Club writes the fol- lowing good news: “There are eight of us planning to get amateur li-| censes. Several will probably get | licenses this January, Two will| begin building a transmitter soon.” | Indications we have show that there should be a club in Chicago, but they haven't chosen to write to us yet. Flash: A club is being formed at the Boro Park Cultural Center, 1280 56th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. | Workers’ Schools.—At present, we. With fascism and war on the hori-| know of only one w. s. where a radio | course is being given, the Cleveland | Workers School, at 1524 Prospect Avenue. During the summer term. the Sacramento Workers School gave a course, but as we haven't their current catalogue, we can’t tell whether it is still given. In response to last week's call for New Yorkers interested in a radio communica- tions course, only five have re- sponded so far. The course would possibly take up the following: In- struction and practice in sending and receiving signals in Continental Morse Code, use of standard abbre- viations, procedure in handling traf- fic, manipulation of reecivers, laws governing the transmission, recep- tion and use of radio signals, rules and regulations of the Federal Com- munications Commission. If it sounds good to you, do something about realizing it; write to us your- self and find others who would be Red Trunk Line.—A special appeal interested, The Strategist months, and then took up residence | | in Moscow. It was some times be- fore his family were able to get out | of Germany and join him. | Wolf has entered with full zest |into the activities of a Soviet au-| thor; he writes prolifically for the trade union publications and news- papers and at the same time keeps up his creative work. Editors Hail 100,000 Edition of Stalin’s | “Foundations” at 10c/ Responding with enthusiasm to | the recent publication of the Tenth Anniversary low-priced edition of 100,000 copies of Joseph Stalin’s “Foundations of Leninism,” the fol- lowing comments were received | from Alfred Tiala, president of the United Farmers League, and from Lowell Wakefield, editor of the “Voice of Action,” militant weekly | published in Seattle: “The Northwest’s I. W. W.-syn- dicalist background makes para- mount wide study of basic revo- lutionary theory. Mass poverty dictates low price as prerequisite to mass distribution. A 10-cent ‘Foundations of Leninism’ will fill the bill all round. We will back | it to the limit, It should go over with a bang. “LOWELL WAKEFIELD, “Editor, Voice of Action.” “The masses of workers and | farmers are seeking a way out | of the capitalist crisis; but lack- ing a knowledge of the theory and practice of Communism, they are still losing themselves in the mazes of reformism and dema- gogy. And many who have al- ready aligned themselves with the Communist Party lose faith and drop out solely because of insuf- ficient theoretical knowledge; for enthusiasms without a foundation in sound theory are short-lived. “Therefore such a pamphlet as ‘Foundations of Leninism’ at a low price in a large edition is most timely. It acquires added impor- tance from the fact that it has been written by Stalin, whose historical mission it has become to guide the building of the struc- ture of a Socialist society on the Foundations of Leninism.” “ALFRED TIALA, President, “United Farmers League.” as in the US.A.)? How shall we approach the ques- tion of recruiting into the reformist | trade unions? Should the opposi- tion in the trade unions be built up as an organization (with a member- ship and so on) or as a broader, less definitely shaped movement? Every Party member and every militant worker should be able to answer and apply the problems raised in all of the above-mentioned | questions. Comrade Piatnitsky an- swers these and many other im- portant questions in his character- istically clear and direct manner. Every trade union opposition should order a bundle of “The C. I.” No. 22 to sell to workers as a way of getting them to join the oppo- sition. Every militant worker should | use Piatnitsky’s answers on trade union problems as a reference and | a guide in his or her work. | For Soviet Power | Wherein lies the root of the idea | of the united front? | How can we connect our daily | work with the idea of the struggle | for Soviet Power in the ranks of the | working class? | Answers to these questions are|| Total to date found in the editorial, “For Soviet | TUNINE Power Clarity cond e the attacks of bourgeoisie upon the ng dards of all who toil, for the successful carrying through of the united front in the sense of arouse ing greater numbers to the unde: standi hat p anent happine: and peace can be realized only un- der Soviet rule. Lessons of October Rich in quotations from Lenin and Stalin about the valuable ex- periences of the Bolshev Party in the preparations for the victori« ous October Revolution, the edi- torial points out how the develop- ing Communist Parties in other countries took their strength from the victories and achievements of the Soviet Un The toiling population in capital- ist countries, stooping under the weight of the capitalist crisis, begin to see clearly what Socialism, blos- soming forth in the Soviet Union, means to those who work. “The masses of the people have not yet reached the stage when they are ready to storm the citadel of capi- talism, but the idea of storming it is maturing in the minds of the masses—there can hardly be any doubt about that.” (Stalin at the Seventeenth Congress of the C. P, S. U.). This statement is as true for the U.S.A. as it is for every capitalist country. International Slogan Read the editorial in “The C. I.” No. 22 and you will understand why the Communist International raises the slogan of Soviet Power as the central slogan today for all capi- talist countries. However, says the editorial, we must adopt suitable methods and approaches for popu- larizing this slogan to the broad masses. The editorial contrasts the application of the slogan of Soviet Power in England, which is eco- nomically developed but backward in a revolutionary sense, and in Spain, which, comparatively speak- ing, is economically backward but developed in a revolutionary sense. Read the editorial to learn what are the prerequisites for the real- | ization of the slogan, Soviet Power |—the independent leadership of the Communist Party; the struggle | against all compromise with the | bourgeoisie, against Right oppor- | tunism, social-democracy and coun- ter-revolutionary Trotsk: ; what forms and slogans were used in the seizure of power in Russia, how these forms were changed under altered conditions, etc. Other Articles Unfortunately, the limitations of space do not permit us to describe adequately the other excellent ar- ticles in “The C. I.” No. 22. Under the discussion section, there is an article by K. Roncoli entitled, “Basic Lessons of the Struggle of the Com- munist Party of Italy Against Fas- cism Under the Conditions of the ‘Totalized’ Regime.” This article gives us information on something of which most of us have known very little—the situation and con- ditions under which our Italian brother Party has been working. There are also articles by two well-known international leaders of the revolutionary movement: L, Madyar writes a satiric article, “A Speech That Hitler Failed to De- liver,” and G. Safarov analyzes “The Congress Socialist Party and the New Maneuvers of the National Congress of India.” INHERENT SUPERIORITY! His “inherent superiority,” said Ramsey yesterday, will put him over the top ahead of his rivals. Take a look below! Received Today ........$ .00 ++ $204.14 I 7:00-WEAF—First Year of Prohibition Re- peal—Henry Morgenthau Jr., Sec- retary of the Treasury WOR—Sports Resume—Ford Frick WJZ—Amos 'n’ Andy—Sketch WABC—Mgyrt and Marge—Sketch 7:15-WEAF—To Be Announced WOR—Front-Uage Drama WJZ—Plantation Echoes; Mildred Bailey, Songs; Robison Orch. WABC—Just Plain Bill—Sketch 1:30-WEAF—Hirsch Orch. WOR—Mystery Sketch WJZ—Red Davis—Sketch WABC—Paul Keast, Baritone 7:45-WEAF—Uncle Ezra—Sketch WOR—Dance Music WJZ—Dangerous Paradise—Sketch WABC—Boake Carter, Commentator 8:00-WEAF—Bourdon Orch.; Jessica Dra- gonette, Soprano; Male Quartet; Football—Grantland. Rice WOR—Lone Ranger—Sketch WJZ—Jewels of Enchantment— Sketch WABC—Easy Aces—Sketch 8:15-WJZ—Dick LiLebert, Organ; Arm- bruster and Kraus, Piano; Mary Courtlandt, Songs; Male Quartet WABC—Edwin ©. Hill, Commentator 8:30-WOR—Katzman Orch.; Lucille Peter- son, Songs; Choristers Quartet WJZ—Goodman Orch.; Dwight Fiske, Jane Froman, Songs WABC—Court of Human Relations 9:00-WEAF—Lyman Orch.; Frank Munn, Tenor; Vivienne Segal, Songs WOR—Hillbilly Music wAIt {! YOU TWO by del f ! GET ourT//, You'Re FIRED FoR, INSUBORDINATION ! FoR INEFFICIENCY GET OUT / You DIRTY, CANNED FOR GivIN' US A BIT OF exraa Foon / \ LET'S USE OUR HERDS / TONIOKT WE ROUND VP ALLHE KIDS // AND ~THEIR PARENTS AT OUR FREE, FOO0-FIGHTERS CLUB AND MAKE cHuMes! You CAN NEVER HELP MISS GOODHART THIS ") ) THIS A REAL FIGHT — WJZ—Harris Orch.; Leah Ray, Songs WABC—March of Time—Drema | 9:30-WEAF—Bonime Orch.; Pic and Paty Comedians WOR—Lum and Abnér—Sketeh WJZ—Phil Baker, Comedian WABC-—Hollywood Hotel—Sketch, With Dick Powell, Jane Williams, Ted Fio-Rito Orch. and others; Carole Lombard and George Ratt, Guests 9:45-WOR—Garber Orch | 10:00-WEAF—Dramatic Sketch WOR—Larry Taylor, Baritone | WJZ—Minstrel Show | 10:15-WO¥ Current Events—H. E: Read 10:30-WEA The Employe in the Change ing World—John L. Lewis, Presic dent United Mine Workers of America WOR—Variety Musicale WJZ—The Message of Isracl—Rebbi Jonah B. Wise WABC—Kate Smith, Songs i 10:45-WEAF—Gothic Choristers 11:00-WEAF—Geotge R. Holmes, Chief Washington Bureau I. N. 8. WOR—News WJZ—Denny Orch. WABC—Nelson Orch. 11:15-WEAP—Ferdinando Orch. WOR—Moonbeams Trio 11:30-WMCA—Dance Music (Also WEAP, WOR, WJZ, WABC, WEYD) adie Peanuts and Little Lefty, declares Del, are very, very busy spending all their spare time rounding up as many lecture-goers as possible for |next Sunday and for a good reason, |too! | Mrs. L. Hauge Western Penn, Dentist R. Morris . Previously received . Total ..ecceecceeseee eens, $3644 ¥