The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 24, 1935, Page 5

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the By MICHAEL GOLD T is old, this tale of the poet who creates beauty while starving to death in an at- tic. It is one of the favorite romances of the soulful bourgeoisie. One would imagine they could see what an indictment it is of their system. Robert Burns, Verlaine, Walt Whit- man, Edgar Allen Poe, and a hundred other geniuses received nothing but a beggar’s misery as their pay from this system. The bourgeoisie is proud of its culture, but it always persecuted and degraded those who created culture. Poetry has no cash value in a world where steel and coal are king, some may tell us. They blame the machine age. But here is another curious fact: the very men who created this machine age, not the merchants, nor the factory owners,-nor the bankers, but the inventors—they, too, have suffered the in- gratitude of capitalism. Inventors have been as starved and neglected as the poets. The histories are full of pathetic tales of the misery of the inventors. Men who created literally billions of dollars worth of new values lie buried in pauper’s graves. It was always some shrewd speculator, as incapable of inventing any- thing as of writing poetry, who cashed in. Under the profit system, the creators are always poor; it 4s only the predatory exploiters who can thrive. A Dangerous Disease | eh is a sort of bug that stings and buzzes in the mind, and gives no peace, It is a creative lust as ardent as that of the artist, Really, there is no line between all the branches of creative thought; and many inventors I have known were more tem- peramental than any poet. Inventors have to invent, just as mothers have to have children. In America today, I would advise, however, any budding inventor to think twice be- fore hé embarks on this mad career. If after years of costly and painful and patient experiment, he will stumble on something valuable, his troubles will have only begun, Every large corporation has a swarm of slick patent lawyers who specialize in legal robbery, As soon as the isolated inventor files his patent, it is their property. If they want it, they commence a series of legal maneuvers that are amazing in their bold synicism. They file all sorts of counter-claims, they establish priorities and claim infringements, they have a whole bag of tricks. The result is, the poor inventor’s hands are tied. He hasn't the unlimited funds to hire slick lawyers; he can’t fight the corporations in court. Very often, he is glad to settle and for a small sum lets them keep his brain-child. I knew of one such case; a young inventor friend of mine, who, after three years of litigation, found himself inthe position where the corporations threatened to send him to jail for having made his inyention. Think of it, they took his invention, and then were going to punish him for it! It sounds incredible, but it is true. My friend went into a courtroom and apologized to the corporation for having infringed on “their” patent. He didn’t want to go to jail, and so he told a humiliating lie. He is now clerking in a grocery store, and is cured of this dangerous disease of invention, Rewarded! HEY boast of their “individualism” in America. But in Hollywood there are hundreds of writers who work for wages in what is a kind of factory chain belt system. Because it is still a gold-rush industry, they. receive good wages, but hundreds of inventors who work for the big corporations are glad to get thirty and forty dollars a week. Before they are given the job, they must sign a contract which turns over everything they invent to the corporation. I knew a group of young in- ventors who worked for a big radio corporatin, One of them devised an invention that was worth several million dollars a year to his firm. He was raised to fifty dollars a week, and glad to get it. * Where Invention Flourishes 'HERE is a great creative force in the masses that is crushed and never heard of under capitalism. It is surprising to go through a history of invention and to see how many originated in the minds of obscure factory workers. The process still goes on; hundreds of workers file their claims yearly, but nothing comes of it. Only in the Soviet Union has there been a whole set of new laws, rewards and safeguards that en- courage and protect the worker-inventor. Tt has resulted in an inventors’ movement such as America and the world has never seen. Billions of rubles have been saved the Soviet builders by the work of these men and women, Oswald Garrison Villard tells of visiting a single plant in the Soytet Union, in which no less than 1,400 labor-saving suggestions and inventions had been turned in by the workers in the course of a year, The Soviet inventor has the law on his side; he is richly rewarded with money and honor, and what is most important to an inventor, he is al- lowed the legal right to see his invention through the process of manufacture and use, TAKE ADVANTAGE! Special Trial Subscription Offer TWO MONTHS -- $1.00 DAILY WORKER, 35 East 12th Street, New York, N. Y. COMRADES :— I am anxious to subscribe to the “Daiiy” for the next two months, for the low rate you allow. Enclosed is my dollar. Name AGArOSS «1. ce eecer cree e sense sseeenetnerseseenene Change) ; | Little Lefty DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1935 To the Rescue! by del| You HAN i | wall i UOTE 7A ON TRE MISERABLE| AFEW DOLLARS p me? NOv “TALK LIKE | “THAY WHEN You KNOW ~WE SeoT UM IN! eae Seca How CAN | mary /! How cAN WIcANy ) WIYH NERVES STRAINED 10 THE BREAKING RUN He R.. | PRY “THE | “HE ARGUM ; LANDLORD oR) GROCER wih EXCUSES} -POINT THE ARGUMENT BECOMES MORE FURIOUS AND BITTER] NEVER HAS LEFTY WITNESSED SUCK ANGER BETWEEN HIS PARENTS “The only way of maintaining ee March 5, 1917. | TO THE PRESIDENT: ‘THE inquiries which I have made here about financial conditions | disclose an international situation | which is most alarming to the| financial and industrial outlook of | the United States. England has not Jonly to pay her own war bills, but | |is obliged to finance her Allies as well. Up to the present time she has done these tasks out of her own | capital. But she cannot continue | ‘her present extensive purchases in | the United States without shipping gold as payment for them, and | there are two reasons why she can- | not make large shipments of gold. | “In the first place, both England | and France must keep the larger | part of the gold they have to main- | tain issues of their paper at par; | and in the second place, the Ger- man U-boat has made the shipping | of gold a dangerous procedure even if they had it to ship. There is | therefore a pressing danger that the Franco-American exchange will | be greatly disturbed; the inevitable | consequences will be that orders by | all the Allied governments will be | reduced to the lowest possible amount and that trans-Atlantic | trade will practically come to an | jend. | “The result of such a stoppage will be a panic in the United States. The world will be divided into two | hemispheres, one of them, our own, | will have the gold and the com- | modities: the other, Great Britain | and Europe, will need these com- modities, but it will have no money with which to pay for them. More- over, it will have practically no | commodities of its own to exchange | for them. The financial and com- | mercial result will be almost as bad | for the United States as for Europe. | We shall soon reach this condition unless we take quick action to pre- | vent it. Great Britain and France | must haye a credit in the United | States which will be large enough | to prevent the collapse of world | trade and the whole financial struc- | ture of Europe. : | + | THE United States declare war against Germany, the greatest help we could give Great Britain | and the Allies would be such credit. | If we should adopt this policy, an | excellent plan would be for our gov- | ernment to make a large invest- ment in a Franco-British loan. An- other plan would be to guarantee such a loan. A great advantage | would be that all the money would | be kept in the United States, | “We could keep on with our trade and increase it, till the war ends, and after the war Europe would purchase food and enormous supply of materials with which to re-equip her peace industries. We should thus reap the profit of an uninter- rupted and perhaps an enlarging trade over a number of years and we should hold their securities in payment. “On the other hand, if we keep nearly all the gold and Europe can- not pay for reestablishing its eco- nomic life, there may be a world wide panic for an indefinite period. oo “MF COURSE, we cannot extend such a credit unless we go to war with Germany. But is there no way in which our government might immediately and indirectly help the establishment in the United States of a large Franco- Famous Marx-Engels Letters to Be Issued In English Edition When the correspondence of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels was published in 1913, Lenin wrote: “In this correspondence it is not merely that Marx and Engels here stand out before the reader in striking relief and in all their greatness. The extremely rich theoretical con- tent of Marxism is unfolded most vividly, since Marx and Engels again and again return in the letters to the most diverse aspects of théir teachings, emphasizing and explain- ing—at times discussing with each other and proving to each other— the most recent (in relation to pre- vious views), most important and most difficult points.” Publication in early February of an English edition of this famous correspondence by International Publishers will give United States readers an opportunity to study the most important sources of Marxism | which Lenin valued so highly. The letters cover the period 1846- 1895 and were prepared by the Marx - Engels - Lenin Institute. V. Adoratsky of the Institute writes the introduction. There is a sub- ject index and letters are provided Position . . . is by declaring war on Germany.” with notes relating to persons and events mentioned in the text, WHY THE U.S. EN of America’s Entry into the World War on A The Real Reason March 5 @ our present preeminent trade —Ambassador Page. | British credit without violating armed neutrality? I do not know enough about our own reserve bank Jaw to form an opinion. But these banks would avert such a danger if they were to establish such a credit. “Danger for us is more real and imminent, I think, than the public on either side of the Atlantic un- derstands. If it be not averted be- fore its manifestations become ap- parent, it will then be too late to save the day. “The pressure of this approaching crisis, I am certain, has gone be- yond the ability of the Morgan financial agency for the British and French governments. The financial necessities of the Allies are too great and urgent for any private agency to handle, for every such agency has to encounter business rivalries and sectional antagonisms. “It is not improbable that the only way of maintaining our present preeminent trade position and averting a panic is by declar- ing war on Germany. “The submarine has added the last item to the danger of a financial world crash. There is now an un- certainty about our being drawn into the war; no more considerable | credits can be privately placed in the United States. In the mean- | time a collapse may come. BALANCE SHEET a yo Millen | | Fein 26 mite | 9 prdliov ere 5 milli seve ye mllen rors womecens RETEOH STATEMENT BY Dr. HARRY F. WARD Dr. Harry F. Ward, chairman American League Against War and Fascism, issued the follow- ing statement upon the publica- tion of this cable in Fight: “This is the clearest exposure we have ever had of under- lying forces in the modern world that shape events de- spite the desire of idealists and with ruthless disregard of the well-being of the millions. The contrast of these facts with the slogans under which we fought is a startling reve- lation of the gigantic process of deception that patriotism || has become.” “PAGE.” settee Jafar Serries iv! “TOMORROW, SPUNKY, YOU N'ME ARE GoNNA SELL TERED THE WAR | Revealing Cable Sent to Walter Hines Page, U. S. Ambassador in Great Britain, to President Woodrow Wilson, on the Eve pril 2, 1917, Reprinted from the February Issue of FIGHT What They Told f § “We have no selfish ends to serve quest, no dominion tions for the sacrifices we FROM PRESIDENT WILSON’S WAR MESSAGE TO CONGRESS, APRIL 2, 1917 ““THE world must be made safe for democracy. Its peace must be Planted on the tested foundations of political liberty. We have no sel- fish ends to serve. We desire no conquest, no dominion. We seek no indemnities for ourselves, no ma- teria compensations for the sacri- fices we shall freely make. but one of the champions of the rights of mankind. We shall be satisfied when those rights have been made as secure as the faith and the freedom of the nations can make it.... “We are accepting this challenge of hostile purpose because we know that in such a government, follow- ing such methods, we can never have a friend; presence of its organized power, al- ways lying in wait to accomplish we know not what purpose, there can be no security for the demo- cratic governments of the world. “We are now about to accept gage of battle with this natural foe of liberty and shall, if necessary, spend the whole force of the Nation to check and nullify its pretensions and its power. We are glad now that we see the eT eae By R. PALME DUTT 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 Inter- national Publishers. January 21 was 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. CHAPTER II. Life of Lenin xv. T the same time, it was neces- | saty for the international work- ing class movement in the new) period from 1921 to make a turn) and “organize the retreat” prepara-| tory to new advance, The newly- formed Communist Parties were re- quired to pass from the previous directly revolutionary situation to the task of building up and organ- izing their strength in the daily struggle and winning the majority of the working class. To this task) the Third Congress of the Commu- nist International was devoted in the summer of 1921, under the close leadership of Lenin. In December of the same year the policy of the united working class front was de- veloped under Lenin’s guidance. How long would this new situa-| tion of the “balance” or “breathing- space,” with the necessary tasks of organization and preparation of the working class forces, last? It was impossible to foretell. At the end of 1921 Lenin declared: “A balance has been attained, a highly unstable one, but cer- tainly a balance. Will it last long? I don’t know; nor do I think that any one can tell. We must, there- fore, show the greatest possible woeriness.” (Speech to the Ninth All-Russian Soviet Congress, De- cember 23, 1931.) And again in November, 1922, at the Fourth Congress of the Com- munist International, in one of the last speeches that he was able to make to the world, Lenin said: “Now for the first time we have the possibility of learning. I do not know how long this possibility will last. I do not know how long the capitalist powers will sive us the opportunity of learn- ing in peace and quietude, But we must utilize every moment in which we are free from war, that we may learn, and learn from the bottom up. ..-. “I am confident that in this sense we have to say, not only for the Russians, but for the for- eigners as well, that the most important thing for us all in the period now opening is to learn. We Russians have to learn n the general sense. You have to learn in the special sense that you may gain a genuine understanding of the organization, structure, method and substance of revolu- tionary work. If you do this, I for the world revolution are not | merely favorable, but splendid.” ‘These were among the last words | of Lenin. Already in the spring of | 1922 the fatal illness that was to end his life had shown itself in the paralysis of his right arm and leg. He fought it through; he resumed work; but he had to complain that he could no longer win the same response from _ his oyerdriven physique and brain. In the spring of 1923 came a second and heavier attack. In May, 1923, he wrote his last article, “On Cooperation,” point- ing the way forward to the “es- tablishment of a fully socialized | society” for which “we have all the means requisite. . . . Of course we have not yet established a socialist society, but we have all the means requisite for its establishment.” | The unequal battle for life and | consciousness dragged on _ over months. On January 21, 1924, he died, AA aa HE work of Lenin’s last period, the period of the leadership of the world revolution, from 1917 to 1923, is like a gigantic torso. In the previous periods he put forward each time at the outset a precise formulation of the task to be ac- complished, which appeared to his contemporaries at the beginning like a madman’s dream, and ac- complished it with exact complete- ness. He formulated the conception of the Bolshevik Party, of a workers’ revolutionary party, rising to the full heights of political revolution- ary leadership, yet never turning into a sect, but linked to the masses and their everyday struggle and life by a million ties. This conception was realized {n the Bolshevik Party, when in every other country social - democracy turned either into the slough of op- portunism or into sectarian dogma- tism. At the beginning of the War he formulated his conception of the transformation of the imperialist war into civil war from the over- throw of imperialism. This trans- formation was realized with exact completeness in 1917. At the begin- | riod he formulated the task of the | Life and Teachings of Lenin formulated his conception of the ad- vance to the second revolution, to the establishment of the Soviet Power, of the dictatorship of the proletariat in alliance with the peasantry. This second revolution was realized with exact completeness in the October Revolution. At the beginning of the last pe- simultaneous advance to the world revolution and the building of so- cialism in the Soviet Union. This task he could only begin, laying down the lines and methods of ad- vance. At the moment when his leadership was reaching its greatest height throughout the whole world, to transform the whole world, death It remains for | cut short his work. others to complete his work. CHAPTER IIt The Teachings of Lenin LIKE in direct theoretical expo- sition, and in his practical life, Lenin gave a clear answer to the problems confronting humanity in our epoch. He did not invent this answer as a new discovery out of his inner consciousness; he was no | fabricator of a new system, sect or religion. He built on the entire previous work of human thought | and culture at its highest point in Marxism. But he brought Marxism to new lif in relation to the living prop- lems and tasks of the present epoch. He found Marxism endangered and even enfeebled by a suffocating overweight of pedants, cowards and small philistine minds such as were incapable of carrying forward its mighty work. He left Marxism a stronger revolutionary power than ever before, the recognized strongest power of our epoch, and already realizing itself in triumphant reyo- lutionary practice. The teachings of Lenin, like those of Marxism, of which Leninism is | the continuation in our period, can- not be confined in any closed system of formulae, Not only is their rich- | ness, many-sidedness and life lost in any such summary: but such for- mal treatment is directly contrary to their dialectical character. The dialectical approach analyzes every living concrete situation in its own | distinctive character and relation- ships, and draws out the under- standing of the general social laws | of development in the particular concrete manifestation and the con- sequent specific tasks of action. That is why the understanding of Marxism and Leninism can only be reached, not through any textbooks, but only, first, by the close study of Marx's and Lenin’s lives, writings and activities in relation to the con- crete historical situations which they handled, and secondly, by direct participation in the revolutionary movement, consciously breaking with the old forms of thought, and | fighting to carry forward their prin- ciples to the living present situa- tion. Lenin and Marx left no hand-books of Leninism or Marx- We are | and that in the} | the principles that gave her birth | we desire no con- - we seek no material compensa- ” shall freely make .. . —President Wilson. facts with no veil of false pretense ; about them, to fight thus for the ultimate peace of the world and for | the liberation of its peoples, the German peoples included; for the) rights of nations great and small | and for the privilege of men every- | | where to choose their way of life | and of obedience. .. . ! “T AM not thinking of the loss of property involved, immense and | |serious as that is, but only of the | wanton and wholesale destruction | of the lives of non-combatants, | men-combatants, men, women and children, engaged in pursuits which | have always, even in the darkest | periods of modern history, been jdeemed innocent and legitimate. Property can be paid for; the lives | lof peaceful and innocent people | cannot be. The present German | submarine warfare against) com- merce is a war against mankin4. . . “Our object now as then, to} vindicate the principles of peace | and justice in the life of the world as against selfish and autocratic | really free and _ self - governed peoples of the world such a concert of purposes and of action as will henceforth ensure the observance of those principles... . “But the right is more precious than peace, and we shall fight for the things which we have always carried nearest our hearts, for | democracy, for the right of those who submit to authority to have a | voice in their own governments, for | the rights and liberties of small na- tions, for a universal dominion of right by such a concert of free |peoples as shall bring peace and | safety to all nations and make the world itself at lest free. “To such a task we can dedicate | our lives and our fortunes, every- | thing that we are and everything |that we have, with the pride of those who know that the day has come when America is privileged to | spend her blood and her might for and happiness and the peace which | she has treasured. God helping her | she can do no other.” | Broadway Night’s Enter- tainment | FLY AWAY HOME — Comedy in | three acts by Dorothy Bennett | and Irving White; produced by | Theron Bamberger, staged by Mr. | Mitchell; at the Forty Eighth | Street Theatre. | N ine one is pre-war stuff, old and | tried—unluckily, not of vintage | years and beginning to turn sour. |Its formula has been termed “‘so- Phisticated” since the good old days | of Queen Victoria. | In reality, it is a fairly harmless | little piece, enjoying its own, un- | varying little jokes on the theme of | present day youngsters’ knowledge | of biology—the four of them range | in age from twelve to nineteen— and their parent’s shocked smug- | ness. The rather diffuse story of the | plot will not bear retelling; we can- | not take it more seriously than the | authors who used it only as a thread upon which to hang their sometimes laugh-producing, some- times flat gag-lines, The best acting honors go to the youngsters, and particularly to Joan | Tompkins as Linda Masters and | Edwin Philips as Corey Masters, the | two older children of the distracted | father. Their playing had fresh- | ness, self-assurance, pace, variety. As for the star of the evening, Mr. Thomas Mitchell in the role of the father, I found his deliberate pace | distinctly annoying. It slowed down a play that was none too exciting | at its best, and that sagged com- pletely to rest in the middle act. | Another sign of the times: that Communism and Soviet Russia have to be dragged in even into a play like “Fly Awey Home.”—L. A. Concentration units: A regular Daily Worker seller before your concentration point will teach workers the value of organization. Make this an integral part of your unit activity and increase the Daily Worker circulation, of definite urgent problems in con- crete fields of human practice and | theory. | In consequence, any short notes | | that may be here given on a few of | |the main conceptions of Lenin's teaching cannot be treated as in| any way a summary or substitute | for the real teachings of Lenin, ism; they revealed their principle am confident that the prospects ning of, the Russian Revolution he 9 1 only in the course of direct handling i power and to set up among the} Page 5 Questions and Answer This department appears daily on the feature page. All questions shouid be addressed to “Ques- tions and Answers,” c/o Daily Worker, 50 East 13th Street, New York City. The Hillsboro Decision for the Hillsboro defendants agree to a compromise in the case? By Question: Why did the lawyers accepting 4 compromise the lawyers for the de- fendants belittled the honest coal miners who looked to them for help.—Illinois Worker. Answer: Because of the wide-spread interest in the Hillsboro case and because of the complex nature of the issues involved, the department is printing the official statement of the Chicago Dis- trict of the International Labor Defense in reply to the question. The statement follows It must be understood, in the first place, that it was not the attorneys who settled the case. This was done jointly by all the defendants and the In- ternational Labor Defense. The lawy only en- tered into nega ions with the prosecution. The some five of them, a latter made several proposals, before the last one was offered. These included the Sentencing of five of the defendants to a year in the penitentiary on the treason charge; the sentencing of Jan Wittenberg and John Adams alone, who were not from Montgomery County; and so on. The prosecution was anxious at the time of the arrests to sentence all the defendants. But due to mass pressure and the exposure of the county offi- cials in a pamphlet by the I.L.D., the prosecution was forced to retreat. The people in the county started to object to spending money for the trial. We took advantage of this. But from the beginning to the end of the case we stood for the acquittal of all of the fourteen defendants. This is proved by statements in the | Chicago press which came out at twelve o'clock on the day of the trial. They said that “the defense in the treason case in Hillsboro did not accept the Proposals made for a parole of the defendants and the case is to be called to trial this afternoon.” We had a large following, but the question of an acquittal was not certain. By accepting the pro- posal (which was very much modified due to the pressure of the defendants) we made many friends in the county, who would have come out against us if we had refused and gone on with the trial. The thing to remember is that the treason charge, the So-called violation of the Illinois Criminal Syn- dicalist Law, was dropped. This was a victory for the defendants. The prosecution wanted to put the defendants in jail, but they felt the pressure of the workers and People of the county. In order to avoid the respon- | sibility for the case, they wanted to show that the | defendants would not accept a parole, although they had been given plenty of opportunity to go free, We felt that we were in a position where a parole | of the nature that was offered, a parole of nine | months on a plea of not guilty, was the best that we could get. If the trial had actually taken place, there was no certainty that we could get the de- fendants off. | Our lawyers were not “belittling” the coal miners. | The lawyers did very little of the work. It was the | defendants who settled their own case. The twelve defendants who came from Montgomery could have gone scot free if they had accepted the jailing of Wittenberg and Adams. They were the coal miners, and it was they who decided unanimously that “all were to be free or none.” We are very proud to record this fact, especially since one of the twelve is a member of the Socialist Party. It is true that the case ended only in a partial victory. It was not entirely won. To win greater victories, it is necessary for all workers in Illinois, regardless of their political opinions, to join the fight to repeal the Criminal Syndicalist Law. We ask the comrade who asked the question to help | send delegates to the mass conference to be held in | THEATRE | Springfield for the purpose of repealing this anti- working class act. Prosperity Notes By HARRY KERMIT NEW YORK—Huddled in their squalid three- room flat in a fire trap tenement building at 181 Butler Street in the Red Hook district of the city. six members of a destitute Porto Rican family wera asphyxiated here by gas escaping from a water heater in the kitchen. The victims included five adults and an 11-year-old boy. The water heater was the only means the family had for warming their wind-swept home and they had left it burning after closing all the windows be- fore going to bed. None survived the night. Three were found sprawled on their faces on the front room and kitchen floors, indicating they had tried to reach a window during the night but had col- lapsed in the attempt. The flat was cold and barely furnished when the police arrived, showing the extreme poverty of the family. The bodies were taken to the morgue, Burial will be in the Potter's Field plots which the city reserves for the homeless and moneyless. TUNING IN 7:00 P.M. - WEAF — Denny Orch. WOR—Sports Resume Stan Lemax WABC—Gray's Orch.; Ans nette Hanshaw, Songs; Walter O'Keefe 9:30-WOR — Little Theatre Tournament WJ2—Harold L. Ickes, Secs retary of Interior, at Am, Road Builders Assn. Cone vention, Willard Hetel, Washington, D. C. WABC—Waring Orch. 10:00-WEAF—Whiteman's Mus sie Hall; Helen Jepson, Soprano, and others WOR—Channing Choir WJZ — American Composers WJZ—Amos 'n’ Andy WABO—Myrt and Marge TAS - WEAF — Jack &mith, Sones WOR—Lum and Abner WdJ%Z-—Concert Orch WABO—Just Plain Bill 7:30-WEAF—Minstrel_ Show WOR—The Street Singer WABO—Nick Lucas, Songs ‘T:43-WOR—Comedy; Music WdZ—Nichols Orch.; Ruth Concert; Rochester Phile Etting, Songs “ harmonic Orch., Howard WABC—Boake Carter, Com- Hanson, Conductor mentator 10:15-WOR—Current Events— HE, Read 10:30-WOR—Kemp Orch. WdZ—Bank Credit in Relae tlon to Recovery—Charles O. Hardy, Brookings Instie tution; Fred Garlock, U, 8:00-WEAF—Vallee’s Varieties WOR — Motor Boat Show Talks WABC—All-Girl Orch. and Chorus, Direction of Phil Spitainy 8:15-WOR — Little Symphony Orch.; Philip James, Con- S. Dept. of Agriculture WABC—Stevens Orch. (To Be Continued) ductor; Alex Young Ma- 10:45- WABC —~ Voice of the ruchess, Viola Crusaders WsZ-—Jesters Male Trio 11:00-WEAF—Talk—J. B, Kens | 8:30 - WJZ — Charles Sears, nedy | Tenor; Ruth Lyon, So- WOR—News prano WABC—Little Orch. WABC—Johnson Orch.; Ed- — WJZ—Dance Oreh. ward Nell, Baritone; Ed- 11:15-WEAF—Berger Orch, win C. Hill, Narrator; WOR—Mconbeams Trio Speaker: Charles L. Sohr, 11:30-WEAF—Dance Music Pres, Natl, Petroleum As- (Also WJZ, WMCA, WOR, sociation WEVD) 9:00-WEAF—Captain Henry's | WABC— Meridian 17-1212 —~ Show Boat Sketch WOR-—Hilibilly Music 12:00+WABC—Dance Music (te Death Valley Days 1:30 AM.) ; |

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