The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 5, 1935, Page 7

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i yg industrialists, however. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 1935 Page 7 ~ CHANGE -—THE — | WORLD! By MICHAEL GOLD - HE purge continues in Nazi land. Over a hundred had been murdered, the papers repdrted this week, and 1,000 arrested in a new attempt to crush the revolt in the Storm Troops. The Weltbuhne, a liberal German weekly, something like our own New Republic, and of which several editors have been thurdered of imprisoned, so that now it is printed im exile, claims that 230 were butchered, and some 3,000 to 4,000 arrested in Berlin alone. But a Nazi paper in the Saar chatges that these are all “atrocity stori¢s,” invented by the prolific Jews. There were only 300 arrested, ‘really, say the Nazi champions, and théy wére homosexual members | Of the Storm Troops. A few weeks ago some 600 other Storm Troop homosexuals were arrested, the Nazis admitted. This is only the beginning of a great moral campaign that will purify Hitler’s movement, they say. Ernest Rohm, leader of the Storm Troops, was murdered on June 30th with many of his lieutenants, and he was also charged by Hitler with being a degenerate, It is truly touching to watch this upsurge of ptirity in the Nazi ranks. Goering, who has been proved by muni¢ipal records in Sweden to have been a morphine fiend and mahiac who spent a term in an asylum, and Hitler, a bachelor whose aversion for women is as notori- ous as his Chaplin moustache, have suddenly come out boldly for sex normalcy. No nancy or pervert will be permitted any longer to gouge out the eyes and tear out the beards of unfortunate Jewish shopkeepers. ‘To smash the teeth of Socialists and Communists, to castrate, flog, torture, hang and drive to insanity the thousands of workers and in- tellectuals held in concentration camps, the Nazis want only the purest of young Storm Troopers. . . Mass Sadism at Work IN THE early days of this so-called Nazi “revolution” there were Many charges madé of wide-spread perversion among the Storm Troopers. I must confess I cat remember reading them with some skepticism. I knéw there was a mass-sadism at work, since capital- ism breeds a degenerate slim group particularly among the middle- class that is always ready for such sadism. We havé the same thing in evéry American lynching of a Negro. We have seen it in the lynching of labor leaders, such as the Frank Little. murder. when respectable saturday-evening-post businessmen castrated the Jabor inan béfore the eyes of their own women and glécful children, then dragged the living, bloody nude body through the streets. The bourgeoisie everywhere is a horribly foul animal when its property is threatened. The working class loses its revolts by being too mercifil, and it is paid for its folly by these white-collared butchers in a perfect orgy of insane blood-letting. Witness the French Com- inthe, where 30,000 workers of Paris were executed in less than a week. Witness China, Spain, Hungary, and Mussolini's Italy. Or even our own San Francisco strike, recently, where wanton murder was plotted and done in cold-blood by the enraged babbitts and rotarians. They will forgive anything but a threat to their property. Then these kindly, Christmas-tree people go cémpletéely mad, and are capable of the most barbatic cruelty. I knéw this, historically, and thought the Nazis no better nor worse than our own Hearsts or Lawrence Dennisés. and the. Chamber of Commerce. But as the evidence piles up, it seems that the Nazis have | got the fine points down better. | Advance or Perish UT why should there be so many perverts among them? This is aii anglé on faatism that perhaps orily a psychiatrist can explain. There may be a class angle ih that “homosexuals are a persecuted end declassed group in modern society, ustially the product of the abnormal capitalist environment. As A gfotip, they hate and despise * society, usually, and are ready for the coward’s road to revenge that the fascist movement offers.. They usually are. “superior” péople, also, with a strong affectation of the aristocrat. They hate the work- ing class, meny of them. A movement like Hitler's, offering them a chance to express their sadism at no dangér to themselves, and also giving them a feeling of superiority to the working class, would na- turelly attract many of them. But perhaps it is best to leave the matter at this: as the disease of canitalism deenens, those who defend it become more pathological. The world is faced with a return to fascist barbarism and degeneracy, if it does not hasten to build a new Communist world, This is the choite presented to us—advance of pérish. * * | . The Betrayed Middle Class Durges in Nazi Germany, however, are not as moral as Herr Hitler would liké them to sound. Many of those being butchered now are either conservative mon- archists and Catholics of the old school, of disillusioned members of | the middle class. The lower middle class really was led to bélieve that they were making a social revolution. Like the followers of the Father Coughlins and Mito Renos in this country, they swallowed all the demagogy, and believed in every promise made them to bring back prosperity, But a few short months after Hitler was given the power, he disselyed the strongest organization of the middle class that had backed him, thé one that had agitated for the end of chain stores and big department stores. He dissolved them, and months later murdered Ernest Rohm and others who were their spokesmen. Por this Rohm, though the foulest pérvert and butcher of them all, had based his personal ambitions on the lower middle class, and rose afd fell with them. Hitler speaks for Thyssen and the big bankers. and Now he is mopping up the lower middle class. / This is the meaning of the recent purges. The lover middle-class flocks to fascism, because it has no histori¢al training. It belicves-that the clock can be set back, monopoly capital- ism destroyed and small capitalism restored on the economic throne. The reformers and prozressives in America have attempted this for years—with their Populist, Greenback, Single Tax and other programs, under leaders like Bryan and Teritly Roosevelt. Every such movement failed, as it must fail. Socialism is the only way to end monopoly capitalism. Until the tie middle-class accepts this historic necessity it is destined to be betrayed again and again by the Hitlers, Mussolinis and Coughlins. sieves evenianapbneneeiondensooehmsrenincceneesesuetgeiseeeeeee MILITARISM AND FASCISM IN JAPAN By O. Tanin and E. Yohan Introduction by Karl Radek, who says: “The present’ work is of great sciéntific and politi¢al value... . It uncovers the fuse which leads to the explosives in the Fer Bast hidden in the cause of peace... reveals con- eretély the roots of the military fascist movement in Japan, and the phasés Of its development; acquainis the reade* with its ideology, organ- ization and the place it o¢cuvies in the complex system of forces which determine the basic problems of Japenese imperialist policy. CLOTHBOUND, 320 pages, $1.75 Iitérnational Publishers 361 Fourth Avenue, New York Gentlemen: ‘I am intérested in your publica- | tions and would like to reesive your catalogue and book news. Name Address Life and Teachings of V.I. Lenin The Daily Worker is printing serially the extremely valuable and popular booklet by R. Palme Dutt, “Life and Teachings of V. | I. Lenin,” published by Interna- tional Publishers. January 21 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 aséaults on capitalism. 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, V. I, Lenin. . . CHAPTER II. The Life of Lenin nL. Yipee victory of the Bolshevik Rev- olution in 1917 was, in fact, no | miraculous explosion suddenly blaz- ing-out as if from nothing, but the culmination of the long previous process of the revolutionary move- ment in Russia within which the thirty years’ tireless preparatory work of Lenin played a decisive part. Lenin has himself written, after the revolution, how Bolshevism or révolutionary Marxism in Russia was the outcome of the entire pre- ceding révolutionary development: “For half a century, approx- imately between the ‘forties and | olutionary work. HIS unique character of the rev- Olutionary movement in Ru its long training in practical r in sacrifice and heroism, theoretical character, revolutio: its profound and its un- | rivaled international background is By R. PALME DUTT In 1887 Lenin, then aged seven- ,| teen, was expelled from Kazan Uni- versity, which he had just entered as a student, for participation in a revolutionary demonstration. Barlier in the same same year, his elder brother, Alexander, had been hanged | | | and existing regime could only be over- thrown, not by individual action, but by mass action, and that the leader of the future victorious rev olution must be the ustrial work ing class. Lenin studied Marx's writings with e oroughnes: so far as it was possible to get hold of them under the conditions | of every great difficulty. At the same time he continued his studies, and took his degree at Petersburg in 1891. For over a year he worked as assistant to a lawyer at Samara. Both at Kazan Samara he took part circles, the first forms of -Demorratic groups before party existed. He wrote his in any first work in 1803, bearing on the| peasant question. In the autumn of 1893 he came to Petersburg. From then his leading political activity began. ‘The first task was to clear the | political line of Social-Democracy and to begin the organization of the workers on the line of Social-De- | mocracy, with a view to the forma- | tion of a Social-Democratic Party. This task was accomplished in the/ years 1894-8. * GREAT confusion of outlooks and tendencies existed at the time in the fi of revolutionary | doctor. LABOR and SHOP bovia ramey THE DIONNE QUINTUPLETS he case of the Dionne quintuplets illustrates the bru mess and super- stition that characterize our presen’ social order in almost classic form. aot played press mother of Musto- physician intimate detail was up by the daily and periodical The fertile womb of (which excited the en lini); the simple coun -Dr. Dafoe; the gracious Canadian government, all came in for their share of adulation. In the hubbub no one méntioned the ¢rime com- mitted against Elzire Dionne, the mothér of the babies the church and capitalist society through their ignorant instrument—the country the The details of the case are given by Dr. Dafoe in a recent issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. He tells of the poverty- stricken lives of the Franch-Canadi- | and whom he attends. To live, “hard | work is necessary” and “actual | money is noted for its soarcity.” The idiocy of existence is excused y worthy doctor. It is because the folk “have been unspoiled by civilization.” Their home life, he tells us, is “remarkably pure.” It is and semi-revolutionary thought activity of a socialistic type On the other hand, there were the Narodniki or surviving representa- | not unusual to find families of from fifteen to twenty, ‘These poverty-ridden farmers and the ‘nineties of the preceding cen- tury, advanced intellects in Russia urider the yoke of the most sav- age and reactionary tsariam, essential to grasp in order to und -)for planning an attempt on the| stand how the ground was prepared | Tsar. These were Lenin’s early | | direct experiences of the revolution- tives of the pré-Marxist movement | workers are told that it is sinful to (their outlook later passed to the! practice birth control and conse- Socialist-Revolutionary Party) who| quently they continue to bring chil- | idealized the peasantry, denied the| dren into a hungry world at the) sought eagerly the correct revoln- tionary theory, following the “lsat word” in Enrope and America with astounding diligence and theroughness, in order to find it. Russia has attained Marxism, the only revolutionary theory, by dint of fifty years travail and sac- rifice, through the greates rev- olutionary heroism, the most in- for the devélopment of strong, un-| distorted and victorious revolution- ary Marxism in Russia before all other countries. Despite the late appearance of the | | industrial proletariat in Russia, | ground was from the first more fully | the prepared in many respects for ad-| vance than elsewhere. The first) translation of Marx’s “Capital” into ary movement, ee HE father of Lenin was an i spector of schools. The two pie and four daughters all studied deeply, and were all revolutionaries. Alexander, the eldest, was the last | leading representative of the old | pre-Marzist revolutionary organiza- | tion, the “Narodnaya Volya” or) | necessity of the development Russia, and saw in the village com- | thune the basis for socialism. | Against them were ranged Marxists. were many of 4 profes revolutionary legalist type (legal Marxism), who embraced the eco- nomic analysis of Marxism to fight | of| risk of capitalism and machine industry in| Dionné is only twenty-five, but looks the! All the children are living except | But among the Marxists | one. sional or non- | reported until she was in labor. Con- the mothers’ lives. Mrs.| forty. She was married at sixteen, and had six full time pregnancies. | Her pregnancies were never sequently there was no pre-natal medical care. She was out of hed five days after the birth of a child. ATORY confinement —one of the “simple” customs of the region. Two babies had already been born, and a third was making its appearance. With the help of two neighbors who acted as midwives, the other babies were delivered. The mother was in a state of severe shock; but the doctor first baptized the babies since he was afraid they couldn't live. He then wrapped the babies in rém- nants of cotton sheeting and old napkins, and for the first turned hie attention to the suff mother Her condition was bad. When she didn't appear to trecover, the doctor began to worry about her soul. It was his “duty,” he tells us, to get ng | @ priest, since no one else was availe able who had @ car. With that brutality that only superstition breeds, he hurried away to get a priest, although he says that “she presented the appearence of a dying woman.” When he returned, after travelling five miles back and forth, Mrs. Dionne had fortunately recov- ered. No comment is necessary upon the conduct of a physician who leaves a patient in & serious condi- tion to gét a priest. For this Gode like conduct the doctor received the acclaim of the Church and the State. AS yet no médical society has commented on the “ethics” of saving a soul at the expense of a human life, although many of them have condemned such things as so- cialized medicine and the teaching of birth control as being “unethical.” A great many things could ba | said about the onse and all that it symbolizes, There are comments to be made about a society which fosters religious superstition, which condemns poor vomen to a life of horror in the name of the Lord, Or one could speak on Dr. Dafoe— a scientist who puts the fetishes of the Church above vice to human- ity. But somehow the facts spéak | i a f ty ls “living credible energy, by unselfish pwr any language appeared in Russia in| peonte's will, which sought to over-| the sentimental idealist anti-cap-| This our simple doctor ca 5 Renita sit, training, education, practical |1872, five years after the otiginal/ tnrow tearis by individual tet. | italist, concepliahs, Hut in practice | Close torthe aol ns iia | cobammetlary. tn oonstaaioh, tienes tests, disappointments, checking | issue of the work, in an edition of} poricm, tended to dtaw back from the rev-| Since the doctor, a fore, Jet us cite Dr. Dafoe’s closing up and comparison with European experience. Thanks to the etmi- gration forced by the Tsar, revolu- tionary Russia, in the second half of the nineteenth century, ac- 3,000, which was almost at once sold out. The first. French translation appeared in 1883, the first English | in 1886, or fourteen years after the| Russian. Lenin honored deeply the memory of his brother and of the old rev- | olutionary fighters of the Narodniki, | who had bequeathed a heroic tradi- tion. But he saw that these meth- olutionary organization of the work- ers and subordinate the workers to | capitalism, and thus became in reality propagandists of capitalism, | as the subsequent evolution of their | the quintuplets appeared. The hi‘ that he is, does not believe in “race suicide,” the Dionnés were not given | birth control information. For the Glory of the Church and Country | tory of the pregnanty as reporie remark. He thanks the government for supplying the family with food and clothing, sométhing that the average worker doesn’t get since he hes not brought distinction to his quited rich international connec- | The first Russian Marxist organ-| ods did not avail to overthrow leaders (Struve, Tugan-Baranoysky) | tor * y| country; and he hopes that the ions, and an excellent grasp of | ization was that of the “Liberation | tsarism. He sought earnestly the t0 lberalism ' revealed. Finally,| by Dr. Dafoe contains too many) “iis lt) Col ae Ure to their the forms and theories of the rev- | of Labor,” founded in emigration by | answer to the problems of the strug-| ‘here were the revolutionary Marx-| détails of her suffering to Te! family and thels county.” olutionary movement such as no | Plekhanov and others in 1888. Tts| gle for liberation. Me found the) its, of by tn tary Aa ed ie Oe yh 1934, the doctor re-| P. 8.—It 8 rumored that Mrs, ran ‘ ve 3 en arrival in Petersburg became the Ma , 1934, tor 1 aad “ ’ poets qther country had.” (V. 1. Lenin, | Second Program, issued in 1887, pro-| answer in Marxism. | effective leader, with Plekhanoy as| ceived @ hurry call, When he ar-| Dionne is pregnant again The “Left-Wing” Communism, an In- fantile Disorder — International Publishers.) First Complete Reproduction of Famous vided the foundation for the pro- fram of Social-Democracy in Rus- ain Frotn Marx hé léatnt the scientific | | approach to thé laws of social de- | velopment: that the power oe the! | the leader in emigration. (To be continued) rived at the household he found that pe asada had been made for! Questions a Question: Where does the expres- | rumor has not been denied. Home life under capitaliem! nd Answers A de mssion of @ special kind by sion “A depression of a special kind” | lowering the living standards of the oscur? Does it mean that the eco-| masses; but this in turn intensifies Interview Between H. G. Wells and Stalin This is the last installment of the interview between Joseph Stalin and H. G, Wells, reprinted in full by the Daily Worker. This conference is the clearest | and at the same time the most effective portrayal of two forcet: One, representative of an extber- ant and powerful revolutionary system; the other, symibolic of those who perpetually apoiogize > | Bourgeoisie Grants Concessions To Preserve Its | Class Rule; These Reforms Cannot Lead to Revolution, Says Stalin should be utilized. I carinot object to your postulate that the present system should be attacked in so far as it does not ensure the necessary order for the people. | proved to he the cleverest, most flexible from the point of visw of | their class interests, from the point | of view of maintaining their power. | Take an example, say, from modern | illegal circles before the revolution. by | At the present time there are in| the world only two persons to whose | opinion, to whose every word, mil- | lions are listening: you and Roose- | velt. Others may preach as much | as they like; what thoy say will | never be printed or heeded. TI can- hot yet appreciate what has been | done in your country; I only arrived yesterday. But T have already seen the happy faces of healthy men and nomic crisis is over?—Student. Answer: The expression was used | by Comrade Stalin to characterize | mal” capitalist solution. e present stag¢ of the crisis. I: signifies that the capitalists able to better their position at the | expense of the workers by increas- | ing speed-up and at the expense of the farmers by continuing the pr ess of impoverishing them. (Stelii Report to the 17th Congress of tine | Communist Party of the Sovist Union, International Publish 5 Tt does not m#an that we are in the midst of an ordinary depression the general ¢risis of capitalism and prevents the operation of the “nore The eco- nomic cutve has followed a zig-zag by a severe reaction. Factors such as mass unemploy- |ment, chronic underconsumption and | the growing intensity of the general | crisis of capitalism all pdint to in- evitadle downward trend of the er0- nomic coureé of development. They are the economic basis of the grow- ing offensi of the capitalists against the living standards of the for capitalism and who desp2rately And, fin: : which will lead to recovety. The| masts, and their preparations for ry y , finally, you ate wrong if you| history: the genéral strike in Eng- women, and I know that somethint hie! i a 2 3 a mi watery parallelisms beotwe } : anc t egpeiel #9 3 ists wa! rom other imperialist war as the only ake water Meili between | think that the Communists are en-| land in 1926, very considerable 1s being done here. capitalists were able to emerge fi posse ty out socialism in construction and a reactionary profit system. The text of the interview was taken by C. Oumansky and approved by H. G. Wells, ve Wells: There can be no revolution without 4 radical change in the éducational system. It is sufficient tO quote two examples: The éxample of the German Republic, which did . amoured with violence. They would be very pleased to drop violent methods if the ruling class agreed to give way to the working class, But the experience of history speaks against such An assumption. Wells: There was a case in the history of England, however, of a class voluntarily handing over power to another class. In the period be- tween 1630 and 1870, the aristocracy, whose influence was still véry ¢on- ‘The first thing anv other bour- geoisie would have done in the face of such an event, yhen the General Council of Trade Unions called for | strike, would have b2¢n to arrest the trade union leaders. The British bourgeoisie did not do that, and it acted cleverly from the point of view of its own interests. I cannot conceive of such a flexible strategy being employed by the bourgeoisie in the United States, Germany, cor ‘ance. In order to maintain their | The contrast with 1920 is astound- | ing. |. Stalin: been done had we Bolsheviks been | cleverer. Wells: No, if human beings were cleverer. It would be a good thing to invent a Five-Year Plan for the reconstruction of the human brain which obviously lacks many things needed for a perfect social erder. (Laughter.) the lowest depths of the crisis to Much more would have} PUeNeL NG 7:00 P. M.-WZAF—Religion in the News Walter Van Kirk WOR-Sports Resume—Stan Lomax | WJZ—The Romance of the Wheel. Drama Depleting Mistory of Trans- portation WABC—One Dollar's Worth—Sketch | CN Tuning in the U. 8. 8. We are glad to hear from workers | who succeed in pulling in the Soviet Union. It is important, however, to know how clearly and how regularly thely receive it; also, the exact tech- not touch the old educational system, | siderable at the end of the eigh- r Stalin: Don’t you intend to stay} id “4 si i and therefore never became a re-|teenth century, voluntarily, without | Tule, the ruling classes of Great |. the Congress of the Sovies WEAR Gyancly Musics ier sion ee! yrs ra tide ay bahar public; and the example of the/a severe struggle, surrendered power | Britain have never foresworn small) Writers Union? | 1:20-WOR—Levitow Orchestra wea te mes (Rasiern Standard British Labor Party, which lacks | to the bourgeoisie, which served as | concessions, reforms.’ But it would Satisfied With Talk Bei tare | en 4. throvahout, the determination to insist on a|a sentimental support of the mon-|be @ mistake to think that these re-| wos. Unfortunately, I have vari- Re Mea ad ee cel oy ag ati radical change in the educational |archy. Subsequently, this transfer- | forms were revolutionary. ous engagements to fulfll and I extra, Sigmund 3 system. ence of power led to the establish-| Wells: You have a higher opinion | (a1, stay in the U. 8. 8. R. only for Romberg, Conduetor-Composer: RNE, Moscow—25 m—12 me — Stalin: That 1s a correct obeerva-| ment of the rule of the financial /of the ruling classes of my COUNEY |, week. I came to cee you and 1| Sei Nast: Coan clgea: | <capenevee aha wide cus aa tion, oligarchy. then I have. But is there a great am very satisfied by our talk. But| enol ew ne weak, quest Permit me now to reply to your thre points. Firét, the main thing for the revo- lution is the existence of a social Second, an auxiliary force is re- Stalin: But you have imperceptibly passed from questions of revolution to questions of reform. This is not jtion and a gréat reform? Is not a reform a small revolution? Reform and Revolution the boutgesisie may sometimes con- difference between a small revolu- | I intend to discuss with such Soviet of their affiliating to the P. BE. N. Club. This i6 an international or- writers 25 I can meet the possibility | WOR—Orghn Recital WIZ—The Modern City—Ceeil Secrest and Julien Noa | WABC=Roxy Revue: Concert Orch, Mixed Chorus; Boloist Courtiand answere, and sometimes music during each broadcast. | Saturday: 10 p.m.: Talk: Our Best Soviet Novels. the same thing. Don't you think hi bulwark. ‘This bulwark of the revo- | that the Chartist movement played | Stalin: Owing to pressure from | ganization of writers fountied by | Apo-wincrate Hares, Seats Pia PR Mis NA lution is the working class. a great role in the reforms in Eng-| below, thé pressure of the masses, |Galsworthy; after his death I al See Clme’ Graniete [re eC oMeT Ont wan were quired, that which the Communists land in the nineteenth century? Welis: The Chartists did little and cede certain partial reforms while came president. The organization fs still weak, but r Orehestta, Male Novels, Next Saturday: 10 pin: Talk: call a Party. To the Party belong | disappeared without leaving a trace. | temaining on the basis of the ex-/ it has branches in many couniries VEAR—Rose Bampton, Contra 7 the intelligent workers and those |" **PP® ge isting social-economic system. Act-|and what is mote important, the | Serapoy Lambert and Pilly HiNipS, | Postal Workers in the Soviet Union, elements of the téchnicol intelli- The Chartists ing in this way, it calculates that | specones of its members are widely WOR RMINDIIY Music fe gentsia which are closely connected Stalin: I do not agree with you.) | Wiz--Radio City Party, With John RVS59, Moscow—59 m—6 me— with the working class. > intel- ligentsia can be strong oly if it combines with the working class. If The Chartists, and the strike move- ment which they organized, played @ great role; they compelled the | these concessions are necessary in order to preserve its class rult. This is the essence of reform. Revolu- tion, however, means the transfer- reported in the press. It insists upon this — free expression of opinion— even of opbosition opinion. I hope to discuss this point with Gorki. I B. Kennedy; Black 1 WABO—Green Orchestra Eastman, Soprano 9:30-WEAF—The Gibson Family. | 6,000 ke. | Every broadéast includes news ana | sometimes music. it opposes the Working class it be-|iuling classes to make a number of | ence of power from one class to an-/ do not know if re | Comedy, With Conrad Th: Sunday: 4 p.m.: Health and Medi- : eT | 1 i Sou SSE creparon Baritone; Lois Berinett, Sopr ine: tional Diseases. comes a cipher. ecncessions in regard to the fran-/ other. That is why it is impossible | yet for that much freedom here... ORS Binihk OFOhbithe | beer Sa bis? Seema Third, political power is required chise, in tegard to abolishing the to describe any reform as revolu- Stalin: We Bolsheviks call it ‘'self- WJ2Z--National Barn Dance i 5 ‘ | we "4 a" h K as a levet for change. The new |s0-called “rotten boroughs,” and in| tion. That is why we cannot count | criticism.” It is widely used in the | WABC—Himber Orchestra Workers. Review of the week. Political power creates the new laws, | regard to some of the points of the | on the chanse of social systems tak-| y, §, 8, R. | ba rat so ee Sivis Monéay: 4 pam.: From Creche to the new order, which is revolution- | “Charter.” Chartism vlayed a not | ing place as an imperceptible transi- | If there is anything I can do to VP AGAE, Obnduerst | University; (1) Maternity and Child ary order. unimportant historical role and | tion ftom one system to another by | help you I shall be glad to do so. | 10:30-WBAF—Cuget, Gtodman cad Murra Welfare. Questions and Answers. What Kind of “Order?” I do hot stand for any kind of compelled a section of the ruling classes to make certain concessions, means of reforms, by the ruling class making concessions. Wells: (Express2s thanks.) Stalin: (Expresses thanks for the Orehetiras (Until 1:30 A. M.) WOR—Richardson Orchestra 4 pm: History of | Wednesday: Movement; Russian Revolutionary order, I stand for order that cor-| reforms, in order to avert ereat| Welle: I aim very grateful to you vieit) Wagocveriety Mucienle (1) January Ninth, Year Nineteen responds to the interests of the | shocks. for this talk which has meant a sents | 11:00-WOR+News | Hundred Five. i : wotking class. If, however, any of} Generally speaking, it must be) great deal to me. In explaining NGTE: This complete inter- Waser ates Mey he | Priday: 4 p.m.: Children’s half- the laws of the old order can be | said that of all the ruling classes, | things to me you probably called to| view will appear shortly in # ST eB hour—school children: on “How We utilized in the interests of the strug- gle for the new order, the old laws the ruling classes of England, both mind how you had to exvlain the the aristocracy and the bourgedisie, fundamentals of sectalismn in the Little Lefty MARYMY WAGES WERE: ea $i2.4 ween! PEEL LIKE We've BIN STRIPPED oF aLmosy ALL WE Possess / INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS $81 FOURTH AVENUE @ NEW YORK, N. ¥. { RuMosr/ BUT we STILL HAVE EACH OTHER! Everything to Fight For! LEFTY AND | AND MOST IMPORTANT pamphlet published by Interna- tonal” Publishers, WE Syitl HAVE # -NOU'VE STILL Got ENOUGH GUTS R “TO FIGHT FOR BETTER CONDITIONS ' | Spend Our Pree Time.” Talk: Youth jin the U.6.8. R. Identify RNE and RV39 by ths announcing phrase. “This is Moscow .” and by the Intérnationale, played at the close of each . | ation requested. | RV15, Khabarovsk, 70.85 m., 4,250 ke., 169 a.m., 7-10 pm. REN, Moscow, 45.38 m., 6,610 ke., 1-6 p.m. The stations “following “are sup- posed to send press néws in English, Confinns tion requesied. 11 a.m.: RYD, Moscow—28.15 m, —10,657 ke. 19 vim.: RAL, Khaterovsk—27.98 m,—10,723 ke, . Oe Special: Watch RNE and RKI on Friday moérhing, January 11. prepare ing for rebroadcast of opera to America, 9:30-10 a.m.

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