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{ | | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1935 Page 5 » | —-— By MICHAEL GOLD lege that sounds both amusing and historic. It is ten- tatively named the “First Museum of Capitalist Decay in Commonwealth is in the rugged Ozark Mountains, at Mena, ansas, and furnishes a rugged and almost self-supporting Mey appraise it one of these days, and find it good or bad, I don't know. But it has a vitality of its own, and this museum is an idea — IHEY are opening up a Museum at Commonwealth Col- America.” education to working class youth. Some of our educational experts that ought to be copied in some of the big cities. Anyone who has visited the Soviet museums knows what a dra~ matic role they play in mass education. Museums don't have to be Mmausoleums where culture is buried, as they are, generally, under capitalism. This museum in Arkansas, if completed, ought to send a shudder down the spine of every bourgeois curator and the bloated bankers who pay his wages. “Here we are building,” says the advance publicity, “a complete record of the collapse of capitalism while it is still in process and the records are at hand to preserve and classify. “We are doing this in the knowledge that it will not only help hasten the day but become a permanent archive of research and educa- tional amusement to the ever-growing class-conscious of America.” They want the workers to send in exhibits for the museum, and list some of the possibilities. It reads like a Chamber of Horrors, and yet it is only part of the truth of our times. A Study in Contrasts | Me example, the contrast between the increasing poverty of the workers and unemployed, and the increasing extravagance of the wealthy. In the first division, the Muséum wants material on the use of human beings as draft animals, photographs or actual samples of the harness used, also the use of steers instead of horses, mules or tractors. Pictures of the slum areas wheré the city workers must live, and the dreary, broken shacks of the sharecroppers and poor farmers are wanted, as well as photos of the numerous hoovervilles where the un- employed live. Samples of the rags children wear these days, press stories of child hunger. The usé of substitutes for clothing, the use of old tires that are cut up into shoes, the flour bags many of the women among the unemployed now wear for dressés—‘the depression style.’’ Pictures of pellagra victims, and other nutritional diseases—kids with stomachs swollen from hunger; men in the breadline and flop- house, waiting for stew. Contrast all this with some of the advertising material in the luxury magazines, such as Fortune, Esquire, the New York and Vogue. Pictures of yachts, expensive streamline autos, lavish apartments, pent- houses and castles, bridge players, gaudy containers for expensive cos- méti¢s, scientific golf sets, toilet seats de luxe, delicately perfumed toilet paper, $10,000 fur coats, Florida palm trees, exclusive dog ceme- teries, fine imported wines, ete., etc. In other words, on these museum walls, Mrs. Gloria Vanderbilt in all her gilt-edged beauty will hang site by side with the picture of a weezened southern child, his belly swollen with famine. It’s a coarse, ugly, savage, impolite idea, and the Vanderbilts will object, but nobody seeing the two pictures will fail to understand the filthy heartlessness of the system under which we live, nor fail to want to change it. Instruments of Torture 'AMPLES of the instruments of torture used against the workers under capitalism—blackjacks, chain gang implements of torture, tear gas bombs, rubber hose used in third degrees, etc—what a pretty exhibit this will make. It will be placed side by side with texts from the religious leaders, Billy Sunday, Aimee McPherson or Father Coughlin. Also portraits of their homes and their bank books, if possible, Brother Tom’s suite where he goes to after preaching to the Bowery unfortunates, Evange- line Booth’s estate, with ali its assembled butlers, maids, chauffeurs and gardeners. Alongside of this, diaries, last notes, and other records of those who haye killed themselves because of unemployment. * . * High-class Pandering 'HE commercialization of sex will have an exhibit of its own, richly decorated with movie posters, True Story and confession magazines, and the Listerine and Lifebuoy ads and the like. What a racket this has become. Shrewd money-grabbers have analyzed every human instinct, including s¢x, and pander and vulgarize and befoul humanity for the sake of profit. Pimping is carried on today on a mighty scale, by hard-headed modern scientists. Only they call it “merchandising.” The medical fakes, patent medicines, breakfast food claims, will be exhibited; examples of the commercialization of sport, the greater concentration of wealth, the increasing use of drugs and the increase of insanity; the decline in the quality of newspapers, and samples of capitalist propaganda in the news; the race for armaments, with photos of the last world war, and the smaller ones like the Chaco, Manchuria, Hitler's terror, the Spanish fascist terror, etc. Samples of fascist papers and insignia in the U. 8S. A—reports of this movement which is the last symptom of capitalist decay and a certain sign that the end is near... * Scholarships for Best Exhibits yeu can readily see that such a museum would be worth visiting. Gathered in one spot, such an array of evidence should make clear to anyone that a civilization has reached its end. How can capitalism survive much longer, when this is what it has made of humanity? And does it deserve to live? The rags of hungry children displayed in such a museum next to a $100 flash of milady’s perfume ought to startle even the least conscious mind into indignation. Commonwealth has hold of a good idea. I hope they can build an exhibit that can be taken from city to city, and shown to millions of workers. The college’ is offering two free scholarships to the person send- ing in the best all-around exhibit; and to the one who suggests the name finally chosen for this interesting museum. * For the First Time in English LUDWIG FEUERBACH The classic exposition of dialectical materialism, for Beginning today, the Daily Worker will print serially the extremely valuable and popular booklet by R. Palme Dutt, “Life and Teachings of V. I. Lenin,” published by International Pub- lishers. January 24 will be the eleventh anniversary of the death of Lenin. During these ten years the teach- ings of Lenin have spread to ever wider sections of the globe, inspir- ing the workers and oppressed to greater assaults on capitalism. | So powerful have become the | teachings of Lenin in this country | that the vilest yellow journals of Hearst are forced to try to distort Lenin’s works in order to stem the | rveolutionary development of the American masses, | The Daily Worker considers it a | great service to its readers to be able to present this clear and ex- cellent portrayal of the life and teachings of the great leader of the working class, I. Lenin. CHAPTER 1 | The Epoch of Lenin | ENIN was born in 1870 and died | in 1924. His life thus covers the | last quarter of the nineteenth cen- tury and the first quarter of the twentieth. His active life covers the last decade of the nineteenth cen- tury and the first quarter of the! twentieth. | This period was a period of de- | cisive change, a turning-point in| human history. The War of 1914| and the Russian Revolution of 1917 | are the outstanding signs of this} turning point, whose full meaning | is only beginning to be understood. | Lenin's life activity stands at the | very center of this transformation, | Lenin's strength, which marks | | him out from all the other political | | thinkers and leaders of this period, | was that he alone, from an early | point, on the strong basis of Marx- | ism, from well before the end of | the nineteenth century, saw with | | complete clearness the whole char- | acter of the future period, prepared | for it, drew the practical, concrete | conclusions, and was alone adequate to the demands of history when the | | time came. | What gave Lenin this unique strength to see clearly, accurately and far into the historical move- | ment? He drew this strength from the basis of Marxism, which he brought to new life, réscuing it from jthe hands of pedants, philistines | and routine politicians, into whose keeping it had fallen. | JX ORDER to understand the work | of Lenin, it is therefore essential to understand the basis of Marxism, } ;on which he built, and the charac- | ter of the epoch in which he acted. The essential character of Marx- ism is that of a single scientific | world outlook on the whole of na- ture, life and activity. Marxism grew up in the second | quarter of the nineteenth century. | pratreres 6 In previously reporting the now famous interview between Joseph Stalin and H. G. Wells it was in- | correctly announced that the full | conversation was bet.g published, whereas actuaily only a third was printed in the Daily Worker. Below, for the first time in the English language, the complete official text of the interview is re- | produced, This is the second in- stallment. This conference is the clearest and at the same time the most effective portrayal of two forces: One, representative of an exuber- ant and powerful revolutionary system; the other, symbolic of those who perpetually apoiogize for capitalism and who desperately make watery parallelisms between socialism in construction and a reactionary profit system. The text of the interview was taken by C. Oumansky and approved by H, G. Wells. * . * a8 WELLS: I object to this simplified classification of mankind into voor and rich. Of course there is a category of peovle which strives only for profit. But are not these people regarded as nuisances in the West just as much as here? Are there not plenty of people in the West, for whom profit is not an end, who | own a certain amount of wealth, who want to invest and obtain profit from this investment, but who do not regard this as their main object? They regard investment as an in- convenient necessity. Are there not; plenty of capable and devoted engi- neers, organizers of economy, whose | activities are stimulated by some- thing other than profit? In my opinion there is a numer- ! ous class of capable people who admit that the present system is unsatisfactory and who are destined | to play a great role in future so- cialist society. During the past few | propaganda. At that time the basic contradic- tions of existing society had come already strongly to the front. The long se: of middle-class revolutions of the preceding period had established the political power of capitalism in the leading coun- tries, especially in England, France and the United States, Capitalist relations dominated the world. Ma- chine industry was opening up its gigantic expansion, The conceptions of lib 1 capitalism, which had re- ceived their ideal insurgent expres- | sion in the Rights of Man and the; slogans of “Liberty, Equality and Fraternity,” and then reached their consolidation in the framework of the national states, constitutional government and international trade, appeared to the new rulers, to the bourgeoisie, as the apex of human development. But the negative side of the rule of capitalism was already appearing. For the masses of the working pop- ulation the slogans of “Liberty, Equality and Fraternity” revealed themselves as an empty pretense, covering only the substitution of the rule of one class by that of another; the masses remained in conditions of grinding toil, poverty and servi- tude. The anarchy of production and distribution; the recurrent crises; the limitless extremes and ever-widening gulf of wealth and the wild scramble of com- mercialism and pr seeking all over the world; all were revealing the inner contradictions of capital- ism. poverty; HE rising new social force of the future, the working class, on whose labor the wealth of capitalism was built up, was now beginning to appear on the social-political scene as an active independent factor in gathering mass revolts, confused at first, but already showing an increas- ing political aim and consciousness, most notably in the early move- ments of revolutionary trade union- ism and Chartism in England. The bourgeoisie now turned more and more clearly from its former revolu- tionary role to a counter-revolution- ary role, as the defender of the existing order against the new forces. Alongside the beginnings of work- ing class revolt, the critique of capi- talism began to appear. One school turned to medieval hankerings (Car- lyle in England) or vague human tarian aspirations (Sismondi). An- other school endeavored to look for- ward to a new social order and evolved the early theories of Uto- pian Socialism (St. Simon, yaaa Owen), The Fate of a First Complete Reproduction of Famous Interview Between H. G. Wells and Stali Country Is Decided by the Toiling Masses, Who Produce All the Things Society Needs, Says Stalin conducting propaganda in favor of |socialism and cosmopolitanism among wide circles of engineers, | airmen, military - technical people, ete. It is useless approaching these circles with two-track class war These people under- stand the condition of the world. muddle, but they regard your simple class war antagonism as nonsense. Rich and Poor STALIN: You object to the sim- plified classification of mankind into poor and rich. Of course there is a middle stratum, there is the tech- nical intelligentsia that you have mentioned and among which there are very good and very honest peo- ple. Among them there are also dishonest and wicked peonle, there are all sorts of people among them. But first of all mankind is divided into rich and poor, into property owners and exvloited; and to ab- stract eneself from this fundamental division and from the antagonism between poor and rich means ab- Stracting oneself from the funda- mental fact. I do not deny the existence of intermediate, middle strata which either take the side of one or other of these two conflicting classes, ar else take un a neutral or semi-neu- tral position in this struggle. But, repeat, to abstract onself from HW between the two main classes means ignoring facts. This struggle is going on and will continue. cutcome of the struggle will be de- years I have been much engaged in termined by the proletarian clas the working class, and have thought of the need for | | ‘They understand that it is a bloody | WELLS: But are there not many people who are not poor, but who | work and work productively? STALIN: Of course, | small landowners, artisans, small | trades, but it is not these people who | decide the fate of a country, but} | the toiling masses, who produce all | the things society requires. “Different” Capitalists WELLS: But there are very dif- |ferent kinds of capitalists. There | are capitalists who only think about | profit, about getting rich; but there ; are also those who are prepared to j make sacrifices. Take old Morgan, for example. He only thought about | profit; he was a parasite on society, |simply; he merely accumulated | wealth. But take Rockefeller. He jis a brilliant organizer; he has set an example or how to organize the | delivery of oil that is worthy of |emulation. Or take Ford. Of course | Ford is selfish. But is he not a | passionate organizer of rationalized | preduction from whom you take les- | sons? I would like to emphasize the |fact that recently an important jchange in opinion towards the | U.S.S.R. has taken place in English- speaking countries. The reason for | this, first of all, is the position of | Japan and the events in Germany. But there are other reasons besides those arising from international pol- itics. There is a more profound this fundaraental division in society | reason, namely, the recognition by | and from the fundamental struggle | many people of the fact that the | system based on private profit is breaking down. Under these circum- |not bring to the forefront the an- tagonism between the two worlds, but should strive to combine all there are) Life and Teachings of V.I. Lenin By R. PALME DUTT The Utopian Socialists criticized the evils of capitalism and advo- cated a cooperative social order, but without any clear conception of so- cial development, addressing them- selves primarily to the governing bourgeoisie, who had no use for them, and deploring the class strug- gle which could alone realize their aims. T THE same time, the develop- ment of thought and philosoph showed that the conditions were ripe for a new stage of advance. Bour- geois thought reaching the limit of its development and begin- ning to exhaust itself. The c ina- tion of bourgeois classical philos- ophy was reached with Hegel in the first quarter of the nineteenth cen- tury. Hegel achieved a profound revolu- tionary work in destroying the sub- jective idealisms, dogmatic presup- Positions and empirical skepticisms of his predecessors, and establishing for the flirst time a critical, objec- tive understanding of the universe, life and society and a systematic interconnected process of develop- ment, advancing dialectically thru contradiction and conflict to new forms, the laws of which process could be understood and mastered of the process still in the mystical ideal sphere; just as he left the state mystically outside and above the civil society of which it was in reality the outcome and reflection. was His philosophy thus still suffered from idealism, was not completely critical and scientific, and inevit- ably ended in mysticism and reac- tion, as a buttress of the Prussian | monarchy. Nevertheless, his was great philosophical system of the bourgeoisie; after him, bourgeois philosophy (apart from the left Hegelian, Feuerbach, the material- ist) passed to irrational subjectiv- ism, empiricism, eclectic piecing to- gether of fragments, and a good deal of charlatanry. the last IN THE same way, the culmination of the school of classical econo- | mists of the bourgeoisie was reached with Ricardo in the first quarter of the nineteenth century. The classi- cal economists had endeavored to) work out a scientic analysis of the economic basis of the new society. But they were tied by their uncon- scious presuppositions of the bour- geois order, which they assumed as a natural eternal order, and became in consequence hopelessly entangled in the inability to discover a scien- tific explanation of rent, profit and interest. Thereafter, bourgeois abandoned the attempt to be a science, and confined itself to the) empirical level of market calcula- | tions, with the consequent complete impotence to understand or predict major economic processes, which has made it a laughing-stock today. (To be continued) the constructive movements, all the constructive forces in one line as |; much as possible. It seems to me | that I am more to the Left than you, Mr. Stalin; I think the old system is nearer to its end than you think. Opposite Poles STALIN: In speaking of the capi- talists who strive only for profit, only to get rich, I do not want to say that these are the most worth- less people capable of nothing else. Many of them undoubtedly possess great organizing talent, which I do not dream of denying. We Soviet people learn a great deal from the capitalists. And Morgan, whom you characterize so unfavorably, was undoubtedly a good, capable organ- izer. But if you mean people who are prepared to reconstruct the world, of course you will not be able to find them in the ranks of those who faithfully serve the cause of profit. We and they stand at opposite poles. he is a capable organizer of pro- duction. But don’t you know his attitude towards the ‘king class? Don’t you know how many workers he throws on the street? The capi- talist is riveted to profit, and no power on earth can tear him away from it. Capitalism will be abolished, not by “organizers” of production, not by the technical intelligentsia, but by the working class, because the aforementioned strata do not play an independent role. The engineer, the organizer of production does not jwork as he would like to, but as he is ordered, in such a way as to serve the interests of his employers. |There are excentions, of course; there are peonle in this stratum who have not awakened from the intoxication af capitalism. The tech- nical intelligentsia can, under cer- The | stances, it seems to me, we must|tain conditions, perform miracles | and greatly benefit mankind. But it can also cause great harm. (To Be Continued) economics | LABORATORY and SHOP AN EXAMPLE OF TECHNICAL RETROGRESSION ork Times reports an inter ng of technical retrogression on by the economic ¢i seems that in Belgium bu rms are getting rid of computating machines and ters. These are being re- low-paid clerks g steel The extent of the r que can be gauged that two years ago B: treat mail consisted almost entirely of typewritten letters. Today fi per cent of such correspondence is handwritten. The tendency toward using pens instead of typewriters steadily growing. For private quill pens are once again in style The steel pens are being tuted for typewriters because they are more economical for the em- ployers, at the present low level of business. The wages of the clerks using pens, needless to say, are much lower than the highly skilled operators of computati ni and they receive even typists were paid This needs no comment THE SOVIETS CONQUER THE NORTHERN PASSAGE The Northern Passage across the top” of Europe and Asia has been conquered by Soviet scientists. Voy- aging over the 6,000 miles of frozen wastes has passed the experimental stage, Safe routes for shipping across sections of the Passage have been established as the result of the findings of Soviet explorers. In 1932 the Northern Passage was navigated in one season, from Ar- changel in Europe to Vladivostok, by the ice-breaker-Siziryakov, under Captain O. J. Schmidt. The same feat was almost repeated by the Chelyuskin, which got as far as Bering Strait. But before it could | round the Bering Sea and sail south to Vladivostok it was caught in the grip of ice floes. This year the ice-breaker, Theo- dor Litke, commanded by Captain Nikiolayev, reversed the trip. For the first time in history a ship navigated the west hound voyage from Vladivostok to Murmansk in one navigation season. In 83 days the sturdy ship completed a voyage of 6,000 miles, 1500 miles of which was through solid ice. During its trip the Litke released three ships which had been caught in the ice in the preceding year on an estuary of the river Lena. She also towed a river steamboat from one stream to another. Professor Wiese who was in charge of the scientific work aboard the Litke discovered that there is a warm current from the Pacific in the Chukotsk Sea as well as a cold curent from the Northwest. Slowly the heroic Soviet explorers are penetrating ever further into the frozen north, opening new re- gions for socialism, and mastering | nature in the interests of mankind. | BACTERIA AND CLAY It has been found by Dudley P. Glick of Colorado State College that the presence of bacteria in clays im- proves them for use in pottery mak- ing. Pottery workers have long held the theory that bacteria caused an improvement in the strength and | Workability of clays that had been s incident Questions and Answers By David Ramsey aged wares before Mr being molded into Glick’s researches were ing the validity of the theory. He divided freshly prepared clays to es. The samples in se. were sterilized and all of re then incubated at tem- peratures favorable to the growth of bacteria. He discovered that the quality the unat zed clays im- in one week as the ‘Oo ~months. Bacterial act was greatest in clay having an organic matter con of from five to six pér cent. Glick reported that other in- but their ef fect is slight when compared to the ac of the bacteria A NEW STREPTOCOCCUS A new member of the dangerous germ family—the streptococci, has been found in the throats of per= sons suffering from rheumatic in- fection and a certain type of kidney disease, Drs. P. H. Long and E. A, Bliss of the Johns Hopkins Medical School report that the new strep- tococci are much smaller than the other members of their family. But the-frequency with which they are found in the throats of victims of the diseases méntioned above in- dicates that they may be as harmful as their larger relatives. It had been thought that the larger strep- tococci were the causes of rheu- matic infection. this particular kind of kidney trouble and various other diseases. The Hopkins investigators found in two instances that the sole cause of pus infections was the smaller streptococci. They were found in the throats of four-fifths of a group of patients suffering from a par- ticular kind of kidney disease, and in the throats of Nalf the patients having rheumatic infection. They were rarely found in the throats of patients ill with chronic diseases or acute infections. In people who are well the number of the small strep- tococci is only from one-third to one-half of the big germs. But in persons suffering from the diseases that have been mentioned, the min- ute organisms greatly outnumber the larger streptococci. It is thought by Drs. Long and Bliss that their findings may have considerable im= portance in determining the causes of the kidney disease and the rheu- matic fever. FLYING AND ICE HAZARDS In the midst of winter pilots have to face ice weather which may force down planes due to sudden conden- sation on the wings. The weight of the ice that is formed is not so se- rious as the change of airflow which robs the plane of its lift and in- creases the drag on the ship. Some planes are equipped with distended rubber covers over the leading edges of the wings. In ice weather these blow up and deflate about once a minute. As they col- lapse the ice cracks up and is beaten off with a flapping stick. This de- vice has ‘been found very successful, But weather forecasting is still of primary importance to the pilot. With air mass analysis it is possible to communicate to the pilot what regions to avoid and how high to fly if he must pass through a dan- gerous locality. proved as much rile Mr. fluences are at work | | Question: Can a Russian worker ; Who does not belong to the Com- |munist Party of the Soviet Union vote for representatives in the | Soviet government?—Socialist Sym- Pathizer, Answer: Article 68 of the Consti- j tution of the U. S. S. R. says that | “the right to vote and to be elected at the elections for the Soviets |shall be enjoyed irrespective of sex, |religion, race, nationality, residence }and so forth by the following citi- zens of the Union of Socialist | Soviet Republics who shall have at- | tained the age of eighteen years on the dete of the election “a) All persons who earn their livelihocd by engaging in produc- tive, socially useful labor, and all persons who are engaged in house- hold work which enables the afore- {mentioned persons to perform their productive work “b) The members | Army and Red Navy; of the Red | EOE NL NG ‘c) Citizens who belong to any category enumerated above but who are unable to work owing to dis- ablement.” It: nth ..ore be seen that the right to vote and be elected is en- joyed by all citizens except those fragments of the old Czarist regime who are socially useless, or hostile to the workers’ state. But the |restrictions against these elements have been progressively removed as | they reeducated themselves and be- came useful members of society. So broad is workers’ democracy under the proletarian dictatorship that the right to vote and be elected is extended to foreign born Workers engaged in productive labor in the Soviet Union. At the recent Soviet elections in which ninety per cent of the citizens voted many foreign workers including Ameri- cans were elected to the Soviets by their Russian comrades in recogni- jtion of their efforts in behalf of socialism. IN | 7:00-WEAF—Pickens Sisters, Songs | WOR—Sports Resume—Stan Lomax WJZ—Amos ‘n’ Andy—Sketch | WABC—Myrt and Marge—Sketeh 7:15-WEAF—Martin Oreh. | WOR—Lum and Abner—Sketch Plantation Echoes WABC—Just Plain Bill—Siketeh | 7:30-WEAF—Gould and Shefter, Piano WOR—Harry Stockwell, Baritone; | Basil Ruysdael, Narrator | ‘WJZ—Red Davis—Sketch WABC—The O'Neills—Sketch | 7:45-WEAP—uncle Ezra—sketch WOR —Lévitow Ensemble WJZ—Dangerous Paradise—Sketch WABC—Borke Carter, Commentator Little Lefty OH 'LO MR. JONES - 11'S MY FauLT t The Reward of Virtue! I'M A CHECKER IN THE SHIPPING DE - by del CANNED ME “TO Ger 8:00-WEAF—Play—Three Cornered Moon, t with Mary Pickfore, Actréss f WOR—Lone Ranger—Sketch | WdZ—Penthouse Party; Mark Hele | linger, Gladys Glad; Peggy Fiynn, Comedienne; Travelers Quartet; } Coleman Orel Ruth Etting, Songs | &:15-WABC—Edwin C. Hill, Commentator 8:30-WEAF—Wayne King Orch. WOR—Variety Musicale WJZ—Lanny Ross, Tenor; Salter | Orch.; Consuelo De Lamar, Songs WABC—Everett Marshall, Baritone; | Elizabeth Lennox, Contralto; | Mixed Chorus; Arden Oreh, | 9:00-WEAF—Pred Allen, Comedian; Jame | Melton, Tenor; Hayten Oreh. | WOR—Hillbilly Music WJZ—20,000 Years in Sing Sing—- | Sketch, with Warden Lawes WABO—Stevens Orch. | 9:30-WOR—Sandra Svenska, Soprano | WJZ—John Charlés Thomas, Barle | tone; Concert Orch. “aT NEWJOS oF MINE HAS ME DIZZY ! TALK ABOUT SPEED -VP! -ANO ALL FOR 12 MISERABLE ¢ bucKS . VJ |PRRTMENT OF THe STONE CHAIN} || a CHearer worker! y SO “HIS 1S MY 7 PROMOTION AFTER I2 YEARS OF FAITHFUL SERVICE / the first time in complete, ungarbled English transla- tion. It includes other meterial by Marx and Engels on dialectical! ma- terialism. Lenin recommended Feuerbach as “the hand- book of every class-con- scious worker,” rating it with the Communist Manifesto. INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS 381 Fourth Ave. New York, N. Y. ——— SSS 4 yy WABC—George Burns and Gracie | Allen, Comedians | 9:45-WOR—Garber Orch, 10:00-WEAF—Lombardo Orch. WOR—Literary Justice—Sketch WJZ—Paul Wittgenstein, Piano WABC—Broadcast To and From Byrd Expedition 10:15-WOR—Current Events—H. E. Read WJZ—Beauty—Mime. Sylvia; Speaker, Kathryn Dougherty, editor, Photo- play Magazine 10:30-WEAF—One Man's Family—Sketch WOR—Variety Musicale ‘WJZ—Denny Orch.; Harry Rich- man, Songs WABC—Mary Eastman, Evan Evans, Baritone 11:00-WEAF—Berger Orch. International Publishers 381 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y. Gentlemen: I am interested in your publica- tions. Please send me your cata- logue and book news. ‘Soprano;