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| | ‘CHANGE In Memory of Sergei Kirov: Bolshevik LABORATORY [wm WORLD! ——-—— By MICHAEL GOLD [ SEEMS as though the plays running in New York are agitating a great many people. Today, comes this lengthy communication, from one of our most talented poets, about the Theatre Union’s present play, Friedrich Wolf's “Sailors of Cattaro.” “I want to voice my appreciation of what I consider th: most important political play as yet produced in America by any revolutionary organization. I refer to the Theatre Union's current ‘Sailors of Cattaro.’ “It seems to be that the ‘Sailors, both as a piece of dramatic workmanship and as a political document, stands head and shoulders above either ‘Stevedore’ or ‘Peace on Earth.’ “The variety and actuality of working class characters, the subtlety of its understanding of the differences within the bourgeoisie itself, the clarity and depth of its understading of the problem of revolu- tionary insurrection and, above all, the unswerving realism with which the whole plot is presented, mark it, for me, as the outstanding pro- duction of the Theatre “Inion to date. . + The Sailors of Cattaro *qoue of the people who have seen the play, while granting its tremendous dramatic power, argue that the problem it presents is of limited appeal to the American working class They argue, for example, that the theme with which the play deals, the revolt of the Austrian sailors in the bay of Cattaro in 1918, and its analysis of the causes of the failure of the insurrection, does not have the same appeal to American workers as would a play dealing with more specific American problems, with conflicts based upon the actualities of the contemporary American scene. “Nobody will deny that if a play of the same dramatic force, with the same leyel of political development, were to be presented in America dealing with the problems of the American working class, the ‘Sailors of Cattaro’ should have secondary consideration. But the actual productions to date of the revolutionary workers’ theatres tes- tify to the fact that a play with these qualities and playwrights with the understanding of Friedrich Wolf of the basic problems of the revolution do not as yet exist here. “Our playwrights are only heginning the initial spadework of building the architecture of a revolutionary theatre. They are aware of and concerned with, as yet, only the more elementary problems of political stagecraft. Their plays represent only the first awakenings of political and class conscioysness of both the author and the audi- ence. “But does it follow from this, that, if a foreign play exists which rises to a higher level, and is concerned with deeper, more fundamental aspects of the struggle for power on the part of the world working elass, this play should be buried from sight and not produced until the American workers, like the Austrian, have had their insurrections among sailors in the Panama Canal or a revolt in the Pacific Fleet? “The same consideration would blot out for the American workers those noveis which have appeared in English translation, like ‘Bar- ricades in Berlin,’ or ‘Storm Over the Ruhr,’ which deal with the harricade fights and the civil wars of the German workers. Qne could argue that these books should not be published because as yet in America workers have not mounted barricades, nor armed them- selves for the insurrection. * * + “Potemkin” and “Sailers” bis problems of tie working class are fundamentally identical all over the world. And what the Austrian sailors faced in the Bay of Cattaro in the war year of 1918, when sick of slaughter and hungry for home they revolted and took over command of the Austrian sailors for a week, the American workers will also some day have to face, And what they learn today from the experience of the Austrian sailors will tomorrow be of incalculable benefit in solving their own problems. “So far I have only defended the play’s right to be produced, and indicated the value of its political message. But, besides its under- standing of the basic shortcomings of the sailor's revolt, besides its ‘lecture’ qualities, of great importance as these are, it is primarily as a human document, as a dramatic instrument that the great strength ef the play is revealed. “Properly, the play should be compared with Ensenstein’s ‘Po- temkin.’ Both deal with the revolt of sailors, both are revolutionary documents, both are epics of the class struggle. Of course, the play ar necessity must lack the swift moving, dynamic, inclusive force which the film possesses. This is an advantage the medium of the film holds over the stage. It has a greater visual range, a bigger canvass, it can atnieye more monumental quality. Nevertheless, as a piece of drama, as a work which shows the conflict of the various forces he- tween and within classes, I prefer ‘Sailors of Cattaro,’ ‘ + * A Fine Play “™N EISENSTEIN’S work, there was little differentiation among the types of sailors, and among the officers of the ship. One saw the class struggle in a simple, black and white scheme. Officers versus sailors, bourgeoisie versus proletariat. In ‘Sailors of Cattaro,’ how- ever, Wolf, probably because of the greater political experience he had had, probably because of the fact that he was a direct participant in the struggles of the workers (he was jailed and sentenced to be shot in 1920 when the Kapp putsch captured the government for a few days), reveals a greater knowledge of the internal struggle among the sailors themselves and among the diffsrent class-types of the officers. “You see among the men, fed with rotten food, driven to useless deck-scrubbing day after day in order to ‘discipline’ them, bottled up in the harbor for year, a wide range of characters; the hos’n, the leader of the revolt, strong, yet weak, indecisive, knowing what is right yet unable to make the final decision; men, superstitious, weak, bewildered, anxious to avoid unavoidable bloodshed, anxious to be home with their wives rather than carrying the struggle through to its inevitable, iron conclusion; scabs and deserters, and loyal, far- seeing workingmen. And among the officers, the lieutenant, a typical } martinet, a product of the nayal schaals, a slavedriver, and the subtler, aristocratic captain, no less determined to keep power, but shrewder, cleverer. These are all characters one meets in the struggle whether in the Bay of Caitaro or in the strikes in Toledo. “And above all the action is kept clear and vital, the acting simple and enuvineing for the most pert, and the settings excellent at- mospheric backgrounds for the moyements of men. It is a long time, I think, before any of our own playwrights will be able to produce @ play as fine as this. All the more reason why we should see this one nov. “ALFRED HAYES.” HAIL THE DAILY WORKER! Iith Anniversary and Lenin Memorial Edition SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1935 I send revolutionary greetings to the Daily Worker, the organizer of the American working class, the leader in the fight for a Soviet America! Gity ... (All greetings, which must be accompanied by cash or money order, will be published in the Daily Worker.) , State. ‘: Dedicated His Life to Creation of a | New Society By KNORIN INE of the best leaders of the Leninist Party, a brilliant mass organizer, one of the most prom- inent collaborators of our great | | Stalin— Sergei Mironovitch Kirov| | has fallen at the hands of vile mur- | \derers. The name of Kirov calls to | mind the whole history of the| struggle of the working class for the | October Revolution and for the con- struction of socialist society. Ile- | | gality, imprisonment, exile, . work | | again in the building up of the Bol- | |shevist Party; then organizing of the October Reyolution, civil war in | Astrakhan, Zariczin, Baku, Then | the construction af Soviet Azerba- jan, construction of Soviet Trans- caucasia, triumph oyer all opposi- tion, first Five-Year Plan, building | | up of Socialist Leningrad. This is | | the life story of Kirov, but it is also the history of the Bolshevist Party. The hard, difficult struggle against | | the class enemy, against the Russian | and foreign bourgeoisie, trained | Kirev and placed him in the first ranks of the Bolshevist Party, in| the first phalanx of the comrades- | in arms of our great Stalin. As an irreconcilable enemy of the least deviations from Bolshevism, Kirov ‘fought in Transcaucasia for the Leninist line of the Bolshevist Cen- tral Committee. The Party placed him, as the best mass organizer, at | the head of the Leningrad organi- zation. He became a member of the Political Bureau of the Central | Committee and its secretary. | “Bach of us must be imbued with the firm discipline of the Party; every member of the Party must give the Party everything he pos- sesses, and everything that he re- ceives in the way of training and self-education must serve the cause of the Party,” declared Kirov two months ago, at the Plenum of the Leningrad District and Town Gom- mittees of the GC. P. S. U. He was filled with that spirit of Bolshevist | discipline which must serve as a model to hundreds of thousands of Bolsheviki. He was filled with the greatest determination and joy of life. | 'HEN at the Seventeenth Party Gongress of the 0. P. 8. U. he| declared with enthusiasm that it| was “a joy to live in these days,” the foreign agents, the Russian | White Guardists and their hangers- on asked: How is it possible for a worker to say that it is a joy to live | at a time when thousands of prole- | ,tarians are pining in prisons, when death sentences are daily occur- rences? However, Kiroy was fully justified in declaring that it is a joy | | to live in these days, for we liye in a time when the old order is passing into oblivion and in the whole world a new order of society—the order of the proletarian dictatorship — is| | being born to the accompaniment | of the greatest birth pangs. | Kiroy was justified in saying that | today it is a joy to live, for the past | is disappearing, and with it every- | thing that for centuries oppressed the peoples of the largest country lof the world. Kiray was able to say | | that it is a joy to live today, be- cause he was creating with his ewn hands a new society, a new happy | ‘life far the 160,000,000 people of the | ' Soviet: country. | ‘This joy of life was and is an ex- pression of Bolshevist confidence in ) Socialism. , Kirov was bound by the closest | ties to the broad toiling masses of | the Soviet Union. He embodied its | flaming enthusiasm, its great belief ‘Significant Issues | Tnvolved in the Saar Presented in Booklet The American Committee for the Status Quo in the Saar announces the publication of a very important pooklet “The Saar—Powder Maga- zine of Burepe.” This is the first | publication presenting in unified fashion all the various issues in- yolved in the Saar question. The significance of the recent Franco- German pact, the status and strength of the United Front, the recent formation of the German Christian Pront composed of Cath- olics, Protestants and FORMER MEMBERS OF THE NAZI GER- MAN FRONT, indicating the de- moralization of Hitler's forces in the Saar, the significance of Hitler's po- sition in Germany with reference ' to the outcome of the plebiscite on January 13, and many more related phases of this extremely important issue are ajl clearly and compre- hensively treated. All workers and enemies of the Nazis should read this pamphlet in order to be fully acquainted with the vital situation in the Saar. @opies can be obtained at the Workers’ Bookshops at five cents a copy, Little Lefty \ the entire population with Leader and Brilliant Mass be COMRADE KIR OV Murdered by class enemies December in socialism, the firm will of the | working magses of the Soviet coun- | try to fight for the setting up of the | new society. Questions and Answers This department appears as a daily feature on this page. | All questions should be addressed ta Questions and Answers Depart- ment, Daily Worker, 35 East 12th | Street, New York, N. Y. | Question; What is the significance of the abolition of the bread-card system in the Soviet Union? Why was the price of bread raised, if the abject is to raise the living stand- ards of the workers? —F.'M. | 2 Oy Sip Answer: The abolition of the bread-card system of rationing bread in the Soviet Union is based on the increased demands of the workers as their standards of living progressively rise. Before the coliec- | ization of agriculture in the U. 8. S. R., the bread-card sys necessary because the small indi- vidual peasant farms were unable to mest the greater demands, not only of the city proletariat, but of that section of the peasantry en- gaged in raising so-called industrial crops, that is cotton, flax and the like. Now with the socialization of agriculture, the collective and state farms are in a position to supply bread | without the mechanism of rationing. In 1933 there was a record harvest of grain; and in 1934 despite a severe drought in certain sections of the Soviet Union, the crop was only about two per cent lower due to the increase in the sown area, the use of irrigation methods, etc. | Consequently the Soviet Govern-| ment now possesses more than | enough grain to meet the increased | demands of the workers without the) ration system. As V. M. Molotov) said in his report on the question to the November plenum of the Cen- tral Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, “the abolition of the card system is evi- dence of the new successes of sa- cialism. . . . We are abolishing the card system because we want to take a new step forward in improv- ing the supply of the population.” On January Ist the ration scheme ‘will go out of existence, and the population will purchase bread in state and cooperative stores with- out cards. At this time uniform retail prices will be established in the different territorial zones of the U. S. S. R. To meet the advance in the price of bread that this en- tails, the wages of workers and all! sections of the population have been raised by 10 per cent. The increased price will not pre- vent the worker from satisfying his increased demand. Paradoxically enough, the increase is part of the; technique to meet this rise in de- mand. Until now there were two prices for bread. The first, a low |100 per cent, price often below the cost of pro- 1, 1934 Placed at the head of the great proletarian State of the Soviet Union, Kirov did not allow himself | any rest; he devoted all his forces duction, was the ration price. The other was the high price that pre- vailed in the open market. By establishing wide distribution at a government price much lower than that which was the level in the open market, the government driyes down open market prices to the scale set by the cooperative and state stores, and in addition does away with the sources of specula- tion in bread. ‘Thus the rise in wages will enable the worker to meet the rise in the price of bread. And then the low retail prices in the stores will wipe jout speculation, and enable a freer flaw of bread to the entire popula- tion. The lowering of bread prices will lead to the lawering of other food products. In this connection it is important ta note that the Second Five Year Plan will increase the real wages of the workers by over This will be accom- plished by raising wages and lower- ing retail prices so that in 1937 the worker will he able to buy twice as much with his wages as he did in 1932, Already his real wages have gone up 35 per cent since 1932, ac- cording to V, V. Obelensky-Ossin- sky, vice-chairman of the State Planning Commission (Gosplan). It is significant that the Soviet workers and peasants solyed the “bread problem as they solve all such problems through the socialist planning of industry and agricul- ture. The basis of such planning is the overthrow of capitalism and the setting up of a Soviet govern- ment, a government of workers’ and farmers’ coyncils. In a Soviet America workers would not go hun- gry while granaries were bursting fram excess supplies as they do now under capitalism. Question: Is it true that Comrade Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, during the course of the textile strike made the statement that “the Socialist Party leaders were hired by the bosses?”—G. J. H. ee 4 Answer: Comrade Hathaway cate- gorically denies making any such statement. His views on the tex- tile situation can be found in his pamphlet “Communists in the Tex- tile Strike” where he discusses the Communist position in detail. G, J. H. and all workers should be on the lookout for persons and groups spreading the kind of distor- tions made above. They deliberately spread sueh misinformation in order to block the moyement of workers to the Communist Party. Commu- nists always use facts in proving the correctness of their analyses and tactics. Only their enemies resort to slander as a political weapon, since they are afraid to debate with Communists on questions of policy and strategy. WHAT A PAL! Organizer Assassination Will Rouse Millions to New Struggle to working for the benefit of the toiling masses. Read the speeches of Kirov! There is not a. single problem of the Bolshevist Party on which Kirov has not expressed his opinion. There is not a single ques- tion concerning the masses which he would not have decided. The ex- ample of Kirov shows what great deeds every Bolshevik is capable of who bases himself upon the will of the toiling masses and upon the theory of Lenin and Stalin, and dedicates himself unrese! y to the service of the Party. Kirov was a brilliant organizer. Only such an organizer was able to j lead the Red Army to victory in Astrakhan and Baku. Only such an organizer was able to restore indus- try in Baku. Only such an organ- izer was able to weld together with a firm hand the Leningrad Party organization, restore the Leningrad industry and secure the brilliant successes of the collective farms of the Leningrad district TROV was a brilliant propagandist and agitator, who knew how to talk in Bolshevist language to the masses about their misery lead them forward. Only such a | Propagandist and agitator was able to explain to the masses of the Red Army men the necessity of fighting agflainst White Guardist Denikin |bands to the last, to rouse the |masses of Turkish workers and peasants and rally them round ihe Party, completely shatter the in- fluence of the Trotskyist opposition in Leningrad and weld together the Leningrad working class into a Balshevist whole for the struggle for the victory of Socialism Kirov has fallen at the hands of |}a vile murderer. The defeated and | shattered class enemy is no longer | able to frustrate socialist constryc- tion; he is already incapable of waging an open fight against the | power of the working class. The | foreign bourgeoisie is supporting the remnants of the class enemy, who | are attempting to take revenge on |the yicterious Bolsheyist Party. | These remnants of the class enemy are incapable of destroying the work of the Bolsheviki, but they attempt to kill individual men who | led the country to victory. Great is the sorrow of our Party, of the country, of all workers and peasants engaged in building the | socialist society. However, Kirov's death will rouse fresh sections of the working class te take up the ruthless fight against the remnants of the hostile class, and strengthen still more the- will of the toiling masses for the struggle for the con- struction of the classless socialist society. The secret agents of the Russian and of the international bourgeoisie will be ruthlessly anni- | hilated. Kirov’s life aim will triumph. Close the ranks still more firmly ‘round the Leninist Party! Rally still more closely ‘round our great leader Stalin! |\Revolutionary Poet Hails ‘Foundations’ in Huge 10¢ Edition | By ISIDOR SCHNEIDER Revolutionary will the American workers have. But revolutionary knowledge we still lack. To cireu- late basic theoretical material among the masses of workers is a task to which every class-conscious worker and intellectual should dedj- cate himself. This 100,000 - copy edition of Stalin's “Foundations of Leninism,” especially calls for our devotion. In of the greatest achievers of the world revolution are brought to us, For Leninism is Marxism of the im- perialist stage of capitalism, and Stalin is Lenin's clearest and most creative expounder. From my experience of nearly twenty years in capitalist publishing houses, I may add that, at 10 cents, this book of nearly 69,000 words a full size book, is a triumphing of publishing for the peeple. |93 Dutch Tntelectunis The 9 Scotisboro Boys NEW YORK.—A copy of a tele- ‘gram to President Roosevelt, de- manding the freedom of the Scotts- boro boys, sent by the Holland Scottsboro Committee, with head- quarters at Amsterdam, has been Labor Defense. The Committee, of which G. Mannoury, well-known professor of mathematics at Amsterdam is chair- man, has enlisted the support of 93 prominent intellectuals, includ- ing manv writers, artists, university professors, pnysicians, and lawyers, for the Scottsboro campaign. and to} it three of the greatest minds, three | Demand Roosevelt Free | received here by the International | and SHOP By Dayid Ramsey SOVIET INVENTION j The number of inventions ir italist countries has been decreasing during the crisis yea Secretary of Commerce Roper in his annual report to the president boasted of the fact that in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1934, th ber of patent applications had only decreased from 179,882 ta 79,690 in contrast to the much greater de- crease of previous crisis years. But it is significant that there was still an absolute diminution, and trend seems to be in the direction of a falling rate of invention. A con- the | tracting economy must call for “a moratorium on invention.” Scien-| | tific activity has more and more been canalized into war preparation Decaying capitalism has become a_| i fetter upon further scientific prog- ress in the larger aspects of the| term. What capitalism is really in- terested in can be gotten from Sec- | retary of Agriculture Wallace's an-| |nual report. He made a fervent | plea for “research.” Then he went on to outline the kind of research that the department is conducting. Prominent among the research jobs was a Study of the causes of tax delinquency. | The capitalists are more ested in such questions than are in subsidizing fundamental re- search.. This illustrates how the| | profit drive is paramount. and how) ‘everything else is subordinated to it under capitalism | In the Soviet Union the destruc- | tion of capitalism has brought about | a tremendous increase in all forms | of creative activity. The Qctober| | Revolution tapped the latent talents of workers and peasants. The past seventeen years have demon ed | | the profqund insight of Lenin when he called these latent talents “an | untouched spring of great qualities.” He pointed out that canitalism had repressed these talents “by the most | brutal exploitation, excessive hard | labo, unemployment and miserable | wages.” The revolution, in Lenin's words, “brought out these qualities. | demolished all obstacles, and led | the toilers out upon the broad road of the independent creation of a | new life.” | The outburst of creative activity can be gauged from the increase in the number of inventions. In 1913 under Czarism. 5,398 patent applica-| tions were made, and of this small number 75 per cent were from for- | eigners living abroad. In 1932, how- | ever. there were over 20.000 patent applications, and only 1.36 per cent! were from foreigners. This does not exhaust the number of inventions. Melnichanski, chairman of the} | Committee on Inventions of the | Council of Labor and Defense, paints te workers’ proposals, some ef which are of the greatest im- Portance, as constituting an enor- | mous source of invention. In 1931] | there were 677,392 such proposals; | in 1932, they had increased to 811,-} 000; and in 1933 there were over | | @ million such suggestions. | | In other words inyention has be-| | came a mass movement. The All-| | Union Society of Inventors has over | } 800,000 members. It provides in-| inter- | they ventors with material and technical help, pushes important ideas, and represents the inventors before gov- ernment bodies. It has done much to raise the technical qualifications of its membership. To stimulate this mass creative movement the government set up the Committee on Inventions of the Coun f Labor and Defense. This body issues certificates of discovery and patents. It is the clearing house of technical information for r ies on the lookout for the latest technical innovations. The government further facilitates invention by setting aside fifty per cent of all savings realized f t discoyeries and rationalization pro- posals. Of these sums, ten per cent : ¢ Society of Ine ventors; devoted to solve ing research problems. The significance of patents and certificates of discovery differs in the U. S. 8S. R. from the customs prevailing in capitalist countries, There are patents similar to those in capitalist countries, but these are issued principally to foreigners. The | Soviet inventor does not become the private owner of his discovery. But he is rewarded, in addition to hay- ing permanent economic security and never heying to fear that his invention will be stolen or pigeon- holed. He receives a certificate which testifies to his being the d coverer of the particular innayae tion. As soon as it is applied in- dustrially, he receives 25 per cent of his premium in advance and the rest when it is determined how much it saves and so on. There is no monopoly of inven- tions such as prevails in capitalist countries. Every invention is made available to every industry that will find it useful. For this reasan if a patent is granted to a Soviet cit- izen, he must make it available for industrial application within three years. After that time the patent is voided. and the discovery is ap- plied without compensation to the inventor. As with all other fields of Soviet activity invention is very carefully planned, and is an important part of social economic planning. The problems canfronting industry are posed in an organized manner, and they are worked out in conjunction with the inventors’ organizations, The most important problems of the moment are widely published so that every worker knows just what innovation is most urgently needed by industry Besides the work of special insti- tutes and inventors’ organizations the suggestions of individual work- ers in the plants and factories are immediately picked up. They are furnished with technical assistance, and the discovery is put en a prae- tical hasis with their active par- ticipation. If the worker-inventor shows special promise, he is sent to technical schools where his gifts can be trained for a higher degree of utilization. It is significant that half af Professor Joffe's world- famous staff of research assistants at the Institute of Applied Physies are former worker-inventors. ‘Working Woman’ | The Working Woman announces thet in its January issue, which will be off the press in a few days, | there will be published, the first | American proletarian love story to be written collectively by a group of warkers. The story, named by the workers themselves “Stockyard Stella,” was written collectively by | workers of the Chicago stockyards who have based the story on their own experiences. | | The story will run in three issues |of the Werking Woman, beginning with the January issue. The work- ers wrote it by meeting at least |once a week in one of the houses jin “Packingtown” near the stock- yards. Each week additional work- | |ers came, some of them simply to |observe and say nothing, others te participate actively in the writing | TUNING | | | 3:00 P. M.-WBAP—Pickens Sisters, Songs WOR—Sports Resume—Stan Lomax | WJZ—Amos 'n’ Andy—Sketch WABC—-Myrt and Margs—Sketeh 7:15-WEAF—Martin Orchestra WOR—Lum and Abner—Sketch | WJZ—Plantation Echoes, Mildred | Bailey, Songs; Robinson Orchestra WABC—Just Plain Bill—Skeich 7:30-WEAP—Gould and Shefter, Piano WOR-—Levitow Ensemble Je WABC—The Q’Neills—Ski 7:45-WEAF—Unele Bara—Sketch WOR—Sid Gary, Baritone WJZ—Dangerous Paradise—Sketch WABG—Boake Garter, Commentator 8:00-WEAF—Play—Rehecca of Sunny- | brook Farm, With Mary Pickford, Actress WOR—Lone Ranger—Sketch WiZ—A Cyclone Shot—Sketch WABC—Variety Musicale 8:15-WABC—Edwin ©. Hill, Commentator 3:30-WEAF—Wayne King Orchestra WOR Variety Musicale Salter Or- th. Songs Baritone; ann Be WABC—Everett Marshall, Wen s uN . Ks by del GEE ANOY/ “THANKS! HERE'S Your SLED-YourR! A REAL PAL /* 7 Will Publish First Collectively Written Love Story of the story. “Stella would say it this way” they would tell one another, The workers first saw the Werk- ing Woman when a woman writer for the magazine brought it te their attention, and interested them in the idea of writing a leve stery, based on the lives of the young men and girls who work in the stockyards. “We could picture Stella's love for Eddie, the tractor man,” one of the workers writes, “because many of us have fallen in love with young men who work in the yards, driv~ ing tractors and trucks, cutting meat, etc. And for a villain—one does not have far to search when one works for a big bully who grinds profits from the lives ef workers.” IN Elizabeth Lennox, Contralto; Mixed Chorus; Arden Orchestra 9:00-WEAP—Fred Allen, Comedian; James Melton, Tenor; Hayton Orchestra WOR—Hillbilly Musie WJZ—20,000 Years in Sing Sing — Sketch, With Warden Lawes WABC—Nino Marti ‘Tenor; telanetz Orchestra 9:30-WOR—Sendra Swenska, Soprano WJZ—John Chales Thomas, Bari- tone; Concert Orchestra WABC—George Burns and Gracie Allen, Comedians 9:45-WOR—Garb: Orchestra 10:00-WEAF—Lombardo Orchestra WOR--Literary Justice—Sketeh WJZ—To Be Announced WABC—Broadcast To and Prom Byrd Expedition Koss | 10:15-WOR—Ourrent Events—H. EB. Rea@ WJZ—Beauty—Mme. Sylvia 10:30-WEAF—One Man's Pamily—Sketch WOR—Variety Musicale WJZ—Denny Orchestra; Harry Riche man, Songs Eastman, Soprens; Ki WABC—Belasco Orchestra, | 11:15-WEAF—Rebert Royee, Tenor ‘ WOR—Moonbeams Trio 11:30-WEAF--Dance Music (Also WOR, WJZ, WABO) — PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Market above * 16th Street yrseete the film epic of the Progress of a great nation ee 3 Songs About Lenin” Hear Lenin's Voice for the First Time on the Screen EUROPA THEA. Amkino birth an LAST DAY Direeted by GZEGA VERTOV © Musie by SHAPORIN