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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 1935 Change World! “By MICHAEL GOLD HE bourgeois critics of revolutionary writing like to picture our world as a gray static vacuum where everything has been fixed for eternity, and nothing new can éver happen. We are supposed to be dogmatists, who have found a few obsessions to whith we cling bitterly, Tefusing to observe the infinite shadings and changes in the larger world around us. We are a sort of rigid clam, it seems, living happily in our little shells, while the great ocean of life storms about us. We are one-idea men, grim Puritans who speak for a dull god, slaves of an old theorist who died sixty years ago, nutty propagandists, theological bellwethers, cogs in a machine, et cetera, et cetera. You have read all about it at tedious length in the works of Joseph Wood Krutch, Henry Haz- litt, H. L. Mencken, Herschell Brickell, W. S. Canhy, and the rest of the book-reviewing dragoons. This, after many years, has boiled down to their only arguthent against the revolutionary writers. The “liberals” have put together a mangy scarecrow, a Marxian strawman whose vacant eyes are fixed Ofily of the singlé idéa, and what fun they have | among themselves in knocking him down again and again and again. * * On a High Spiritual Plane REMINDS me of a wealthy old maid I happened t6 know years ago in thé city of Boston. Out Of hér boredom, shé had managed to find a kind of escape in dabbling with social theories. In her addled head, carefully washed atid combed every morning by a wage slave, squirmed a veritable snakés’ nest of the most amazing and contradictory ideas. She was as hospitable to every idea as the madam of a bagnio to the male sex, be they crippled, impotent, nervertéd or however foul. Simultane- yusly, this lady was a Gandhi pacifist, a Ramsay Macdonald Sovialist, a Bergsonian evolutionist, a Tolstoyan Christian, a Henry George Single Taxer, a Yogi, a Soviet sympathizer, a theoretical vege- tarian, a birth control advocaté, and a devotee of Walter Lippmarin. She had a food income, invested by her shrewd Yankee father in steél, coppet and war industry Stocks, She Gould well afford to be an eclectic, and flirt with all these ideas. In the long run, they meant nothing to her, but the handiest way of dodging the doom of those who do not nééd to work—ennui. 5 this lady said to me, very kindly, one eve- ning: “Why aré you so obsessed with the cless sttug- | fle? Isn't the world bigger than that?” “Our world at present, isn’t any bigger,” I said, “so what we are trying to do is to abolish the class struggl6, in order that there may be a better world. You are only shutting your eves, and wish- ing to God you could forget it. It bothers your coimfert.” ‘All these libetal theorists are uncomfortable in the face of the realities. If the world were only like that portrayed in the books of Christopher Morley or Robert Nathan—Stark Young, Hervey Allen, and the Saturday Evening Post school of authership. But there are twenty million Americans starv- ing on rélief, and half thé nation, and more, is made tp of the working class. Young people rise up, year after year, who insist on bringing this crude and struggling world to the attention of the comfortable book-reviewers and liberals. And they tell us we are men with one idea. We ate yulgarians end materialists. But they are liv- ing on a higher spiritual plane. They are above the vrebkms of war and starvation, the fate of the people. Rome burns, butitheir delicate souls aré mote interested in the nuances of fiddling. They are the artists, but we are the common mass. They ate the guardians of culture, while we ate the barbarians. How well it all fits in with the sources of their income. Most of them are retained by capitalist journals and newspaners, and the Hearsts, the Ochses, the Lamonts and Whitelaw Reids are care- ful about the literary servants they employ, What use to a millionaire would a butler be who was filled with partisan ideas of the class struggle? Most butlers are chosen because they have the “artist” soul, they are usually as “spiritual” and nétiftal as all hell, . Life as a Nursery Playground THE charge that Marxism spreads a gray twilight in the literary world one can only an- swer, nonsense. ‘ The writer who has acquired the faintest in- sight inte Marxism finds that he has had the dull bourgeois scales removed from his eyes, and that ft would take him several lifetimes to appraise the few world he is beholding. If there is cne truthful charge that might be made against Marxism, it is that it reveals so in- finitely more complex and dynamic a world to the writer, that it often tekes him years to readjust himself. This explains why mahy able writers, on en- countering Marxism, must often go through years of silence. They are serving a new atid painful apprenticeship. The world, they find, is not the easy nursery playground of the liberals, where they had formerly lived. It is more tragic, more humorous, more amaz- ingly interwoven with motif and counter-motif. The men of Darwin's generation were first stunned to despair by his great formulation. When they finally digested it, they were stronger and more complex in their thinking. Dces one have to prove this any longer? No, but one has still to prove, as to children, that Marxism is a science of human behavior, a sharper and more universal tool for the mature writer than the Bible stories that still satisfy the liberals, YOUR OPPORTUNITY! 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 “Daily” for the next two months, for the low rate you allow. Enclosed is my dollar. Name | Little Lefty IT'S THAT NEW KIO 4RYIN' TO BULLDOZE ME OUTA THIS CORNER | Ernst Sent Document to Sweden Fearing | Violent Death | 'HE Paris “Journal” publishes a sensational decument, which for the first time reveals all the details of how the Reichstag was fired by | National Socialists. The document |is a confession of Karl Ernst, Ber- lin chief group leader of the Storm | Troops, shot by Hitler's orders on |June 30. Karl Ernst wrote out his | confession on June 3—that is, nearly a month before his death—and had lit witnessed by two of his friends, Fiedler and Mohrenschild. Ermst sent the document to |Sweden, hoping thus to protect {himself from the attacks of the ; Powerful enemies he at that time | already possessed in the party. This hope proved vain, Ernst was put to death by Hitler before he could make use of this weapon... We give some excerpts from the confession : “I, the undersigned, Karl Ernst, chief Storm Troop leader of Ber- lin-Brandenburg, Prussian State Councillor, born September 1, 1904, in Berlin-Wilmersdorf, de- clare that I give here an account of the Reichstag fire in which I tedk an active part. I do this on the advice of my friends, for there is a rumor that Goebbels and Goering intend to play me a nasty trick, If I am arrested Goebbels and Goering are to be informed that this dczument exists and is outside Germany. This document may be published only if I or one of the two com- rades whose names ate abnended (Fiedler and Mohrenschild) shall order its publication or if I should die a violent death. “f declare that on February 27, 1933,.I with my two subordinate Sterm Treop leaders named here- in set fire to the Reichstag. We acted in the ¢onviction thst we were serving the cause of our leader and the movement. We did it in order to make it possible worst enemy of the German ! | people. . . | Gosting and Goediels “A FEW days after we took power | 1 wes summoned by Heildorf to Goering’s house. I went there ‘| with Helldorf. On the way Hell- | derf seid that the Leader must be | given the possibility to take action | age‘nst the Communists. Goebbels | was present at the interview and | explained his plan to us. Here it | | | | | | is: Brestau, where the Lendet was to | speck, an attempt on the life of | the leader was to be staged as he left his aeroplane, This attempt | was to serve as a signal for an anti-Communist drive. Heines had already been summoned to Rerlin to work out the details of the attempt... . “Two days later we met at Gocring’s place. This time with- ont Goebbels. Goering was against | the idea of an attempt on Hitter’s life because he was a‘raid it might find emulaters. He also said that Gosbbels was vain and would cling to his plan and asked s to dissuade him. The day a‘ter this I was summoned to Goebbels by telephone. “When I arrived, the comrades who had been present at the pre- s meeting had alresdy de- ‘ded to dron Gtebhels’ plan. Goering thought something clse ought to be tried, verhaps to set fire to the roval palacs. Goebbels answered smiling that it would be | hetter to set fire to the Reichstag. We could then make a show of defending the talking-shep. Goer- ing immediately agreed. Hetidort and I cvnoced the plan becauce | of the difficulties of putting it into prectice, but allowed cur- seives to be pettueded Gorbbels. “After a discussion it was de- cided that Meines, Helldorf and 1 shonld lay the fire on February 25, & week before the elections. Goering declared that he could supply us with very effective com- bustible material that would take un very little space. On February 28 we should hold ourselves in rendiness in the fraction room of the party and when the Reich- NEW PAMPHLETS THE ARCHITECHT OF SO- CIALIST SOCIETY, by Karl Radek. A lively appreciation of Joseph Stalin by one of the most brilliant Soviet pub- licists. 10 cents. GUNS ARE READY, by Seymour Waldman. A concrete exposure of the war preparations of the Roosevelt: government, written by one of the Washington cor- respondents of the Dbpily Worker. 2 cents, * . @angerous | at an election mecting in | by | Friendly Enemies! WAIT'LL You GET —mis ice | CANNONGRLL, BABY, You'LL BE ZORRY You EVER STARYE ———— naikeo im f/f NOW LESSEE WHAT | “Td! MUG LOOKS Like Sensational Confession of Murdered Nazi Reveals Details of Burning KARL ERNST Who set Reichstag on fite. Stag was vacated for the day, we could get down to the job. I was put in charge of the preparations. “The next day I saw Goering again. He had though the mat- ter over and was of the opinion that it would be a mistake to let well-known Storm Troop leaders take part in the fiting of the Reichstag. In case of discovery everything would be lost. We stmmoned Goebbels through the telephone and told him this, but he thought our fears were with- out foundation, But our plan had to be given up, because the Com- mufists, whose meeting room was opposite the meeting room of the National Socialists, remained in | conference until 10 p. m.” | Karl Ernst then describes in his | residence occupied by him as Pres- ident of the Reichstag should be jused to gain access to the Reich- | stag building and how he and Hell- |dorf examined the premises. It was | \ | | CHAPTER III. Teachings of Lenin iM. the same time Lenin showed T iA | materialism, which had been the | basis of ¢atly scientists, was in- adequate to comprehend reality in |all its complex character, and | therefore inevitably, with the ad- | vance of. scientific knowledge, left the scientists in confusion and at the mercy of idealism. Only the materialist dialectic could show the way forward. We must understand that no natural science, no materialism whatever, can held out in the struggle against bourgeois ideas and the restoration of bourgeeis philesophy witheut a solid philo- sophical basis.. In order to give aid to this struggle and help to carry it out to its successful con- clusion, the natural scientist muct be a modern materialist—-a con- seious adherent of that material- ism which Marx represents; that is, he must be a dia'ectical mate. rialist. «.« Modern natural scientists will find (if they will sock and if we can learn to help them) in the materialist interpretetion of Hegelian dialectics a number of answers to those philosophical questions which the revolution in natural science has brought to the front, and which cause the intellectual admirers of bourgeois- fashions to “slip” into the reac- tionary camp. (“The Meaning of Militant Materialism,” 1932.) “The decisive thing in Marxism,” declared Lenin, “Is its revolutionary dialectic” (“Concerning our Revolu- tion”). Dialsctical materialism de- | stroys the old barriers between theory and practice. Its essential charac- ter as a world outlook is not only to discover the nature of reality, but ‘to transform reality. Hence its | revolutionary character, This unity of theory and practice, this completely dialectical app:oach to all problems, is most powerfully shown in the whole life of Lenin. | There has been no such example in \history of a completely conscious, jcontrolled and theoretically illumined activity. directed to great objective how the old passive mechanical | also decided to postpone the fire a few days. He goes on: | “Two days before the fire we hid the combustible material in a side passage. We were supplicd By R. PALME DUTT The Daily Worker is printing serially the extremely valuable and popular booklet by R. Palme Dutt, “Life and Teachings of | ¥. 1. 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 wotkers and oppressed to | greater ascatilts on capitalism. Reichstag Building with its motto on the frent “To the German | People.” for the Leader to strike a smash- {confession how Goering suggested | __ st ing blow against Marxism, the | that the passage leading from the | | with the material by Goering. It | consisted of a number of canisters containing a self-igniting prepa- ration of phosphorus and a few litres of paraffin. I was unde- Life and Teachings of Lenin “10 TRERT YOUR - ( cuopLo BEST FRIEND! } ( uve) of Reichstag ‘We Did It to Strike by del WINS Ley; EL, | “TaaT'S @ FINE way | (You | Smashing Blow to | Communism’ cided for some time about the right people to entrust with the laying of the fire. I finally de- | elded that I would have to do it myself with a few very comrades, I succeeded eliab.t Today I believe that they gave their consent only because | they thought that they would thus have me in their power.” The Part Played by Goebbels RNST then describes chose his friends Fiedler and Mohrenschild for this work and made them swear an oath of se- crecy. A few days before the fire to a young Dutchman of the name |of Van der Lubbe who, they had idecs of arson. Through a ceftain | Suaded to enter the Reichstag from the outside and to lay a fire there. The decisive part of the business was, however, entrusted to the Na- tional Socialists who were accord- | ingly equipped with all the re- quisites, “I met my two comrades at 8 p. m. at the corner of the Neue Wilhelmstrasse and Derotheen- strasse. We were in mufti. A few minutes later we stood at the en- trance to the palace, where we got in without being noticed. We | wore goloshes so that we should not be heard. We got into the | underground passage. At 8:45 we were in the Plenary Cham- ber. One of my two com- rades returned to the under- ground passage to get the rest of the combustible material while the other man and I set to work in the lobby before the statue of | Kaiser Wiihelm. We prepred sev- eral fires here and in the Plenary | Chamber. We poured the phos- phorus fluid on the chairs and tables and soaked the curtains and carpets with paraffin, A few minutes before 9 p. m. we again entered the Plenary Chamber. At 9:05 p.m, our work was done and we burried to the exit. It was | high time, for the phosphorous | mixture takes only thirty minutes to ignite, At 9:15 p. m. we climbed over the encircling wall.” Finally Karl Ernst declares that | the versions which were published jin the world press were incorrect, as only three men had fired the | Reichstag. With the exception of Gocring, Goebbels, Roehm, Heines, | Killinger, and later Hanfstangl and |Sander nobody else had any knowl- “democratization of capital.” They | | pointed to the spread of social re- form legislation and to improved standards in western Eufope and America as disproof of Marx's con-| g@ class antag- At the same time they were dis- turbed at other néw dévélopments | of policy which were happening at the same time, seemingly in contra- liberalism,” at the enormous growth edge of the plan. It is said that the Leader himself was informed of the fire only after the event. Ernst concludes: “As to that (ie, the part played by Hitler) I can- not say anything. I have followed the Leader for the last eleven years. I shail be loyal to him till death. What I have done every Storm Troop leader would have done for our leader. But it is in- \diction to this spread of “social, conceivable to think that the Sterm Troops should be betrayed by the | aR lof armaments and militarism, at|Same men whom the Storm Troops p x | | Points the way forward to the new) | type of humanity of the future. | The Theory of Our Epoch— Imperialism | HE basis of Marxist or Commu- ist activity in a given stage is} | necessarily a clear analysis of the |character of that stage, its forces and conflicts, and the consequent line of advance. ~ i In the widest sense, Marx had Jaid bare the character of the capi- \talist stage of human society, had analyzed its laws of motion, hed \shown its advance to increasing| concentration of capitel, division of classes, mass impoverishment and) growing rises, and had shown its) necessary outcome in the prole- | tarian revolution and the dictator- ship of the proletariat to organize | | the classless socialist society. But in the lifetime of Marx this formulation of the proletarian revo- lution and the dictatorship of the | with the sole exception of the ad- | vance indication of the Paris Com |mune—a theoretical formulation for | the future. The practical task to which he had to give his leader- ship was the task of the preparation and organization of the working class forces under the conditions of Still ascendant capitalism. Only after the death of Marx, in the period of Lenin, capitalism en- ters into its final dying stage, and proletariat necessarily remained —| rising tariff policies, at rapidly in- violence in all parts of the world; | these tendencies they deprecated as contrary to the spirit of the age, and due to a mistaken understand- ing by the capitalists of their own interests. Such was the opportunist | th which orthodox Marxism was in conflict. ee . | iT WAS Lenin who first brought out to eccmplete clearness the) character of the new epoch as a| whole, and laid bare its laws of) motion, with final completeness in his Imperialism (1916). (V. I. Lenin, | Imperialism—the Highest Stage of | Capitalism, International Publish- ers). He analyzed all the symptoms of the new epoch down to their basis in monopoly capitalism, The free |analyzed of competitive, relatively small-scale business, had developed, as Marx had foretold it must, by \the constant victory of large-scale over small«scale and increasing con- centration of capital, to monopoly | capitalism as the dominant modern form, or finance-capital: that is to sey, large syndicates and trusts, fusing bank capital and industrial | capital under a single direction, and |working in ¢lose cooperation with | the state machine. To this new stage of monopoly capitalism corresponded necessarily new directions of capitalist policy, the proletarian revolution begins. At first the new stage into which capitalism was entering after the | death of Marx was not Clearly un- tions began to appear, and their underlying principles were not clear; |Many supvosed Marxists began to reversing the old lines of free trade | capitalism: the fight for monopoly all over the world, for exclusive areas of exploitation, marks, con- | derstood even by many Marxists. A/cessions; the division of the world} host of new phenomena in all direc- | between a handiul of Great Powers, | and an aggressive colonial policy; | tariffs, subsidies and quote: port jot capital in close association with trade capitalism which Marx had} put into power. © frustrate the sinister machina- tions set on foot against the Storm Troops. I write this document in order to protect myself against the plots of Goering and Goebbels. I shall destroy beral-socialist” outlook up to 1914,|SHall have received the reward they merit.” PERIODICALS | THE NEW TIDE; stories and poems. Dec.-Jan., 1934-1935. Pub- lished in Hollywood, Cal. 10 cents. a, eer |JHIS is another of those undis- | tinguished little magazines which rear their heads from time to time along the left literary front. Most of them serve merely as acoustic boards for writers of small jtalent and fold up after a few issues. | Sometimes, isnatch-penny publications perform |to young revolutionary writers of |genuine talent. jits current issue because Sanora Those |of The Anvil will enjoy the han- |dling of “Unemployed.” one of the real \left wing authors. la quiet intensity that he | Count Helidorf drew his attention | learned, was entertaining confused | Sander, Van der Lubbe was per- | I confidently be- | |ereasing colonial plunder raids and lieve that the Leader will be able it when the traitors | Granville Hicks discussed | their superfiuity recently in the) |New Masses. however, these a real sorvice by giving a hearing | New Tide justifies Babb’s “Unemployed” appears in it. | who were moved by her} “Dry Summer” in a recent number To this reviewer Sanora Babb is hopes of the She writes with and brooding | beauty which is missing in most | of the hard boiled, out house fc- | tion to be found in the average / Page 7 | Questions and Answers | This department appears daily on the feature | page. All questions should be addressed to “Ques- | tions and Answers,” c/o Daily 50 East | | Worker, 13th Street, New York City. Fascism and the Middle Class Question: Is it true as some writers claim that fascism is a middle class movement to seize power from the capitalists?—P. L., San Francisco, Cal. Answer: Fascism not “a middie class revolie m. Predatory capitalism to ip of the mines, mills and face tories as its last resort. It is the naked terr tic dictatorship of the most reactions ary sections of finance capital which kills, tortures and mangles in defense of private profit From their very beginnings fascist parties are owned and controlled by the biggest bankers and industrialists, and it is they who, in Italy and Germany, bestowed political power on Mussolini and Hitler. Fascism never has to seize power. In any capitalist country power is always, in either concealed or open fashion, in the hands of the bourgeoisie. As Strachey says the fascists “seize” power “only in the sense that they seize it from | under their own pillows.” For example, it was only when the Nazi move- ment was in admitted decline in the fall of 1932 that Thyssen his fellow-industrialists and bankers gave Hitler the chancellotship. It was | the master class which put the countet-revolution- ary terror in the saddle, because they weré afraid of its ultimate disintegration under the advancing wave of working class struggles. It is true that the main social base of fascism is the lower middle class. But it is necessary to distinguish between the mass base and the class content and objectives of fascism. It utilizes anti- capitalist demagogy to direct the lower middle class groups into anti-working class channels However, the middle class finds that once it has helped in the destruction of all working class ore ganizations, that it too becomes a mote helples victim of monopoly capital. In Germany, for ex- ample, one of Hitler's first steps was to order th dissolution of the fascist organization of small shop keepers. The essence of fascism is the open terforistic dictatorship of big business, Under fascism the | pauperization of the middle class proceeds even | more rapidly than before. In winning over the middle class to the fight against war and fascism, these facts must be stressed, to keep them from being misled by the anti-capitalist ballyhoo of the Father Coughlins, the Huey Longs, and the other candidates for the job of being the American Hitler. Laboratory and Shop By David Ramsey | NOTE ON AIR CONDITIONING The Westinghouse Research Laboratories have developed a new air conditioning system which controls body comfort through wall heat. A deme onstration room has been built in which a person's comfort is controlled by regulating the radiation from the body, The temperature of the body is about 98 degrees; the temperature of the person’s clothing is about 80 degrees. When the incoming air is cold it is only necessary to heat the walls of the room to 80 degrees to maintain comfort. The trick lies in preventing radiation losses from the body. To get a cooling effect in the summer it is nec- essary to lower the temperature of the walls to about fifty degrees. Then even though the incom- | ing air is over 100 degrees, one feels comfortable because the body is able to radiate ¢asily to the cool wails. The walls in the demonstration room are heated or cooled by inlaid electric wires or by concealed coils for water through which hot or cold currents can be passed. With the new system it is possible to stay cool in the summer even though the windows are open and the hot air is streaming through. And in winter the windows could be wide open without any discomfort. The new system is based upon a few principles which govern the manner in which the human | body keeps warm or cools itself. Through radia- tion the heat of the body passes through the sure rounding space and is absorbed by cooler objects such as walls, furniture, etc. Consequently by cooling or heating the walls it is possible te govern the radiation from the body and maintain com- fort. | With the new method it would not be neces- | sary to seal all the windows and cool the alr as is | done with present techniques in air conditioning, | Although the new method is still in an experi- | mental stage there seem to be no real difficulties blocking its technical application on a wide scale, | But whether the average home will be heated and | cooled in this manner in a few years is an en- tirely different question, This will be decided by | the vested interests who own the country and de- | cide just what technical innovations are profitable. | TUNING IN | 3:00 P.M.-WEAF—Religion in 9:00-WEAF — Rose Bampton, the News Contralto; Scrappy Lame | WoR—Sports Resume—Stan | bert and Billy Hillpoty Lomax | Songs; Shilkret Orch, WJZ—Jobn Herrick, Baritone WABC—Everybody's Secret ‘WEAF—Jack Smith, Songs WOR—Ionians Quartet WsZ—King Orch. 7:30-WEAP—Variety Musicale | WOR—The Street Singer WJZ—-Radio City Party with John B. Kennedy; Black Orch.; Virginia Rea, Soe prano WABC—Kostelanet# Orch.; 9:30- WEAF — The Gibson Family — Musical Comedy, WABO—Arden Orch.; Gladys with Contad = Thibault, Baxter, Soprano; Walter Baritone; Lois Bennett, reston, Baritone; Beauty Soprano WOR—Hillbilly Music ‘WJZ—National Barn Dance WABC—Himber Orch. 10:00-WOR—Wintz Orch. WABC—Reminiscences—Wm, A. Brady, Theatrical Pro= ducer —Kay Carroll 45-WJZ—Sizzlers Male Trio WOR—Dance Orch. 8:00-WEAF—Coneert Orch.; Sigmund Romberg, Con- ductor-Composer; Bryon Warner, Tenor; Helen 10:15-WABC—Variety Musicale Marshall Soprano; Wil- | 10:30-WEAP—Cugat, Goodman liam Lyon Phelps; Nar- and Murray Oreh. (until WOR—Richatdson Orch. rator | 1:30 a.m.) WOR—Organ Recital | | WJZ — Ireland, the Nation= jess Nation Maker—Poste | WJZ—Art Review—Cecil & crest and Julian Noa | soluti TH WABC—Roxy Revue; Con- master General James A. pee me Frenne A cia | eert Ozeh.; Mixed Chorus, | Farley at Ameriean-Irish | poverty-stricken armers, e| Soloist Historical Society Dinner, |broken white-collar workers, the | 8:15-woR—vacsey Orch. Hotel Astor women and children who fill her 8:20-WJZ—Grace Heyes, 10:45-WABC—Child Labor aims, not drawn from arbitrary Claim that the new facts had dis-/colonicl policy; strengthening of stories are drawn with thy | Songs Amendment—Senator Robs y ene Raster eR aa stibjective notions, but from a|Proved the expectations of Marx,|the bureaucratic and militery mas | sr! insight. The aging aha aok| ae Wor eatroimats, Be ay ees ene } | AOA sce. scasesssceseseseaieeeneeesoseenees igre Warkeet for Publish. || Seentific understanding cf the |and that revision was Necessary. chine; advance to world war for the) tess proofreader whose plight is Madison Square Garden | WJ%—Dorsey Orch. ers, P. O. Box 148, Sta. D, New York City. 1 6: ei -stoel .' Tedivision of the world. “Un WJZ—Olsen Orch. world process and of human needs.! The growth of joint-stock ceni the theme of “Unemployed” is a 8.43-WABO o atacy Courtland, In this way, in the whole character | talism replacing the o'd pers? Teai tragic figure. The rest of New| “songs, Armbruster Orch; | iand realization of his life, Leninjowned business they saw as thei (To Be Continued Tide is uniformly mediocre—H. K. Male Quartet sai WABC—Gray Orch. 11:18-WOR—Ferdinanda Orch. 11:30-WJZ—Barn Dance also WOR, WABCO, astive |