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| eee LITTLE LEFTY All Washed Up—With Dirty Willie! by del * A Chan Ch wasnt TUL See You fone mine SuNK DEEP YOU Sip 177 L. [AND “WAT NOT AIL —AND “THAT “ae REAL way @ > iy @ Se ti ab nm Ss SWELL HE WAY LATER So we WHAT HE SAID ABOUT I'M GONNA FIX “THE WORKERS —aKe = MO FIGHT IS ro ORGANIZE | | h UNCLE JOHN EXPLAINEDf=g CAN WORK HIS || DIRTY WILLIE HEARST THAY RIGHT) | PoweR CAN we C'MON - USE UB OUR OWN NEWSBOYS UNION HI | and | the EVERYTHING ? IDEAS OUT gy | AND Hid FILTHY GUTTE a} sey EXPECT IDEAL WORKING) } SOME ELBow ~ tht By MICHAEL GOLD HE liberals tell us there is no danger of fascism in America. But in how many states of the union does one find a criminal syndicalist law operating? Isn’t this law a long step toward fascism? The criminal syndicalist law makes membership in any radical organization or the reading and possession of radical literature a major crime punishable by twenty years in jail. The law originated during the Red scare after the war. It was used mostly against the foreign- | born, members of the I, W. W. and the Socialist and Communist Parties. Mass raids, deportations and trials spread across the nation. The atmos- | phere was that of Berlin and Rome. It was worth one’s life to read a pamphlet by Karl Marx, or be DAILY WORKER, EW YORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1935 * (CONDITIONS 5— J GREASE |) re, a Rex Book on Japanese Militarism Indispensable For Understanding of War Moves in Far East Page 5 This department appears daily on the feature page. All questions should be addressed to “Ques- tions and Answers,” c/o Daily Worker, 50 East 13th Street, New York City. The Black-Connery Bill ms to the for a thirtye still hold for i in the present ton re led by the i hour week without in weekly earnings, the new Block-Con- ch a provision. But it is hedged ptions and modifications, m work- GE: aD —-— -% a 2 | ers by ine pay envelopes & member of even a radical co-operative grocery. | Militarists Regard the Fascist Organizations through spre Hundreds of workers were dragged out of their | —————— | These points stand out reading the beds at night, slugged, tortured, finger-printed, | jailed or deported. The war millionaires cheered | Soviet Union As | Main Enemy \ A Trying To Create Mass Base can be granted exceptions to the 1g to the president. Past experience it all. It was Americanism—a la Hearst. Then | SES 1 ces he workers that Roose’ always come the heavenly ecstasy of the great boom set in. MILITARISM AND FASCISM IN| ———— state GE che Taveneas 1y such demand. Secondly, if an em- | Open terror of the post-war crisis was unnecessary | JAPAN, By O. Tanin and E. —— issued in a pamphi i cut hours and wages at the same during the boom. The millionaires could afford | Yohan, with an introduction by —s| ibution, is already fore- | e no provisions for g him id F é Karl Radek. 320 pages. Interna- ——— Stak he tka | oa he das such ans { their workers the little luxury of some free speech. | tional Publishers, $1.75. | ——= book by the analysis of | nees to the fa ts a | Now, in the depths of the great depression, the | Gstlewea ae . | —— | the ex eme sao ae most ! ite a misdemeanor However, criminal syndicalist laws are being revived. When | HARRY GANNES ——_——| | reactionary section c he J pane s shown, employers can violate monopoly capitalism is strong, it is liberal. When | | | | military. A sample is the following ements y. The government it is depserate and sick now, it turns to fascism | and fascist methods. E is not the slightest doubt that the rulers of Japan are now | manifesto issued May 16, 1932 “Japan is even now ready to tead of prosecuting them, help in tying paring | # insti ts to bad working conditions and pre; ‘3 major war move in. the crash, If reforms are not insti- . : Bex3 bi . * Far East. The pa bah movements tuted immediately then Japan miserable pay. Thirdly, the act is to be effective The Rattler Has Fangs of the army is but one indication. | will perish, People! Take arms only during a period of “national emergen This le ; gs [Surveying the world situation, as| | and arise. New the only way to | means that Roosevelt could terminate it, any time 'HE Illinois workers have had a recent example well as the internal crisis in Japan, deliverance is through ‘direct he decides the emergency is over. | the Arakis, Hirotas, Hayashis, the Aji | action.” There is no other way. ag? sey cat Pach cian ile chiatric ete Se | war and diplomatic agents of the | fe People! In the name of the Em- Hidden in the bill is a joker which reveals the There is a clause to forbid the importation Mitsui and Mitsubishi trusts, have decided that a major blood letting real purpose behind the measure. which peror put to death the evil offi- boro were arrested, and faced a sentence of twenty cials of the imperial court, kill allows years under this fascist law. Roosevelt | must be risked. | the plutocrats of the present of any commodities which endanger manufacturers i “ i j, mle. | litical parties, which are the in this country. Of course, the phrase is not so | Widespread indignation spread among the people || The taking of Manchuria has not Politic t | against this obvious frame-up. Protests poured in, | brought the Eldorado that the Jap- | enemies of the people. Punish | piunt. But the practical effect would be that he janese landlords, capitalists and fin- | | there was mass publicity, which makes fascists janciers expected. Instead, it inten- those who misuse power, kill off could order higher tariffs, or stop completely, those the traitorous privileged class. Paes fas be scurry in fear like the things that crawl on the | sified the crisis in Japan. The mili- | Peedcate 2 eae ie the foreign products which endanger the profits of bottom of an old boulder turned to the sun. tary cost of taking and holding | fats dead pave any ay American manufacturers. Thus under the guise The Hillsboro defendants have been forced out | of the fascist hands. But the Criminal Syndicalist | Jaw is still on the statute books of Illinois. | Let no liberal tell us that there is no fascist danger in America. Let him wait until he has helped wipe out all these criminal syndicalist laws | from the statute books. If they aren’t of the real essence of modern fascism, how else would you describe them? It is true they are still used mainly against Communists, but in Hillsboro, this law was used against the unemployed of all political be- Manchuria has hit Japan like an| earthquake. It now seems like the Japanese |Yeactionary-military clique which | rules the country for the finance- | |capitalists has decided to meet the much talked of crisis of 1935-36 by | attempting war against the Soviet | Union. The Japanese militarists | reason it is futile to try to build a| colonial empire on the border of | the Soviet country. They have de- cided the Soviet country touching | Key > | } Japan... Wake up, arise, let us create a true Japan.” This sort of “anti-capitalist” demagogy, for the sole purpose of speeding the imperialist war plans of the leading finance-capitalists, is ably seconded by the reformist trade union leaders and the Socialist Party officialdom. In fact, when the militarists had prepared a plot for the establishment of an open fascist regime in 1931, the Osaka of helping labor, the monopolies would be given a powerful weapon with which to increase their profits and control. The bill would not help the workers. If hours were cut, they would be speeded up, and against this there are no provisions. The bill would in- crease the profits the manufacturers and would not better the living standards of the masses. It is being offered to the unemployed masses as a substitute for adequate relief and unemployment insurance. But in practice it would increase speed- s ‘i RRILWAVS ert EE LER OE trade union leaders offered thei up, and consequently increase unemployment | liefs. Men like Hearst have already indicated they |0n this colony must be destroyed. | NEWLY a i i “ 7 : i : ; } as | setae SSR ee a OI cooperation to initiate riots’ What the workers need is a thirty-hour weck would use such laws against even the mildest lib- |The long-range perspective of | Sur P c. h erals. Must the liberals wait until Unitarians, Free Masons, birth controllers and readers of the Nation are given twenty years in jail for their opinions, as in Italy or Germany? Why are they so indif- | ferent to the young rattlesnake? It has fangs, my friends, and shortly you may feel them, too, | Japanese imperialism has always been to take Siberia up to Lake | Baikal. Now that perspective be- | comes an immediate one for which | Japan is preparing every day, every | hour, every minute. | finance-capitalists, the rich land- | owners, and their most aggressive | MILITARY uigHuoAY Where Hull Wants to Provoke War reactionary officers In the Japanese | This was written two years before ) To achieve this end, the Japanese | army, published in full in this book. | the incidents of the last few weeks. | | But Relentless War Plans Keeping in mind the recent Jap- remark with what clock-like regularity and accuracy the march with the army apparatus—con- eretely, with the commanding staff of that military unit which was composed out of the popula- agains the liberal press so that the military could take the dominant hand. Split in Socialist Party ‘The Japanese Socialist Party, as a result of the Manchurian events, was split, and later, under the guidance of the Right Wing, reor- with a guarantee against all reductions in pay or increase in speed-up, They need a bill which has no loopholes for the employers to increase their profits through indirect wage-cuts. Such a work- ers’ bill would increase the incomes of the workers at the expense of the bosses. All these measures the Black-Connery bill does not provide for; that is why the Communists urge the workers to fight sired me ized and merged with other re- if this rattler is allowed to grow to full age. jmullterists “are planning a more | anese attacks on Chahar at ‘ishi- | of events are now proceeding in the | tion of the given district BEE clean Seiko caaked,|ankliatrike doe st genuine weduclion 1a Sanecae ee « * . jopen, more brutal fascist regime. ‘ow, near the Great Wall, as well|Far East. In and is 7 enuine increase in pay. as the advance to the border of the and out of the army the re-|movement. At the end of 1932 it] g e in pay Incipient Japanese Hitler Fascism in Oregon 'HE state of Oregon {s also disgraced by this Nazi law on its statute books. In Portland, at vresent, militant workers are | Corliss Lamont, is now serving five years in the penitentiary under the law. Edward Denny was also | on trial. His crime was that of organizing the | jobless single workers who live in flophouses and | souplines, and organizing them to picket during | the recent waterfront strike. | Den Cluster, 20 years old, was convicted and given a year’s paroled sentence. Earl Steward, a former school teacher, John Weber, manager of a workers’ bookshop; Manley Mitchell, leader of the Marine Workers’ Union, and the two Austin | brothers, marine workers, also face trial. | | American publishers have been is- | Recognizing the importance of Ja- | | Pan’s present moves in the Far East, | suing a slew of books on Japan. But none of them begins to ap- | the editors of the Soviet. newspaper | Iavestia, remarking on the “great | scientific and political value” of the book, indicates that the authors have been influenced too strongly (in their estimates of the chief al- legiance of the imcipient Japanese Hitlers) by the historical develop- ment of the Japanese financial magnates from the feudal-land- owners, The Japanese ruling class, on more than one occasion, has been brutally frank in its imperialist | Mongolian Peoples Republic at Lake | Bor Nor, the following quotation from the book shows how persistent, definite and relentless are the Jap- | anese war plans: and foremost as a drill ground for | the war on the Soviets. For this reason, the higher army circles disapproved of the operations which the navy began in Shang- hai, and were slow to support it, for they felt that the use of the navy would automatically bring Japan in conflict with the United States and Great Britain, when attention should be principally centered upon war preparations against the Soviet Union. For these groups, Manchuria is but the The authors begin their work with @ short, but adequate history of the development of Japanese capitalism. They then trace in detail the rise of the numerous reactionary so- |ination overweighed and made a thousand-fold more unbearable by the most brutal imperialist struc- ture, Role of the Army The role of the army, its eco- nomic and political connections, its links with the rich landowners and the most powerful imperialists, are dealt with fully. “In no country in the world,” write the authors, “does the mili- tary training of youth in the whole network of education oc- |cruits and the officers are guarded, | Organized, propagandized for im- | Perialist aims. Yet despite the al- most holy awe of the army, despite the incessant tirades and terror | hundreds of Japanese soldiers re- | fused to fight against the Chinese people. In Manchuria, Japanese soldiers are killed almost daily for their refusal to carry out the com- mands of the officers. “The Com- | munists carried on propaganda in the First Aviation School, Tokyo,” | says one of the quotations from the Japanese magazine Nippon, quoted jin the book—“they issued a pub- | lication The Soldiers’ Friend, organ- | ized @ special brigade which carried |on its work during last year’s announced its “program of foreign policy,” which was for full support to Japanese imperialism in Man- | churia. Because of the rising wave of gravated financial and economic crisis, various Japanese fascist or- ganizations are struggling to create a mass base. But the inner conflicts of the Japanese ruling clique, of the widely differentiated strata of the bourgeoisie, is making this difficult. The guiding force in all fascist de- velopments is the army and navy leading staffs. They believe that by precipitating more and more open warfare in China and Manchuria, and by a major stroke against the Short Wave Radio |Cieties which sprang up particularly | against dangerous ideas, numer i xtensi i ae ; et | a s a ‘ous | discontent in Japan, the extension } feeling the bloody teeth of this law. Kyle Pugh |Proach Militarism and Fascism in) tarefinential circles of the mili- | after the World War, against the | instances of mutiny, of Communist | of the starvation of the pesantry, 5 Pa | of Medford, Oregon, whose “crime” was. selling rises by O. Tanin and E. Yohan, = ase Dede he Soviet regen wp |STeat upsurge of worker and peas-| propaganda, of anti-war activity. | the unrest among the proletariat | THE 8. W. R. C. of Manhattan meets Fridays: 7:30, | . wo Russian Orientalists. The in- eir immediate enemy. eir i x Ys ‘ % fi 4 | pamphlets and literature, among them a book by | troduction by Karl Radek, one of | view, Manchuria must serve first ant struggles against feudal dom-|are cited. In the Shanghai war,]and the petty bourgeoisie, the ag- code practice; 9, business meeting; 10, lecture; 10:30, discussion; 11, official adjournment, rag chew till midnight. All activities now take place at the full-time headquarters, 124 West 2ist Street. Last week's call to readers of this column still stands: if you have any radios, radio parts, furniture or partitions, kindly drop the club a card. * * ‘HE American Youth Club radio group of 1813 Pitkin Avenue, Brooklyn, meets Tuesday nights, It boasts of four assets: forty dollars grant from the club for the building of a ‘phone xmitter, twenty members, girl members, and an electrical j Soviet Union, they can achieve their i 4 cial f i " i Dirk De Jonge was sentenced to seven years on \declarations, as for example in| first link in a chain, the other | CUpy such an important place as | maneuvers in Kansai, organized | political purposes — at home and] €ngineers-commercial operator for an instructor. one indictment. I met him at the congress for [the Tanaka memorial to the} hed of which, in order, will be | in Fae ip aled is ‘respect | nuclei in certain units of the army, | their imperialist aims abroad a a x j » | i jehol id Chahar, th and love’ for the army so assidu- | ile the i s i f Japanese 'HE Williamsburg Club meets this week on Sunday, { unemployment insurance in Washington, While | Emperor Hirohita, in which| J and Chahar, en Outer iy sidu- | while the navy section almost suc: For an understanding o! Di + & 3 | immediately surrendered on the second Criminal | * | e | Syndicalism indictment and am now out on $1,000 iF ebruaryP loneer — Broader . oor bail. My voluntary surrender to the sheriff's office | i j T A stop light, the huge truck,)to move a mountain, The truck, this trip. I'll lose a hell-of-a lot of b ect of created quite a senSation as the bourgeois press Off ersNumerous |4% double trailer dragging, slows) off the road does not budge, The| time hanging around till the boss O ] he was on his way there, another indictment had | been framed against him. The bus he was riding | in was searched by sheriffs at Minneanolis, but Dirk wanted to get to the congress, and didn't help them to find him, naturally. | Here is a letter I have just received from him: | “Got back in good shape from the congress, and | had ballyhooed the lie that I had run out on my seven year jolt when I left Oregon for the Congress. “Ed Denny was sentenced to three years. We |aration for war against the Soviet Baron Tanaka outlined almost in| blueprint form the present depreda- | tions in Manchuria and the prep- | Union. But there is hardly a more | blood-and-thunder manifesto than that of General Araki, former Min- ister of War, and idol of the most | Lively Features. Mongolia, and finally Primorye, the Amur district and the Chinese Eastern Railway, then Outer Mon- golia and after that Siberia.” TRUCKI down. The air brakes hiss and the wheels hold tight. A young man standing at the curb goes over and ously and so thoroughly culti- vated, Nowhere is the local civil administration in every village, district, ete., so closely connected NG = = A Sketch by Burt Gary cable snaps. Nothing more can they do now. He'll have to S.OS. his company in the morning. The other | ceeded in setting up a unit in the admiralty itself.” Extreme Demagogy The open fascist proposals of the Sends some one down to get me out. All on my time, too.” The manifold glows white through imperialism today, its complicated forces and organizations, its war moves, and fascist developments and the struggles of the heroic Communist Party of Japan under the’ most difficult conditions, this pook is indispensable. Reorganization 2p. m., at the home of I. Phillips, 138 Floyd Street, Brooklyn. HE Bensonhurst-Bay Ridge Club meets Fridays, 9 p. m., Sundays, 12 noon, and Wednesdays, 8 Pp. m. at the home of M. Starkopp, apt. D-3, 30 Bay 25th Street, Brooklyn. The lecture tonight is on vacuum tubes and circuits, e broad cast from Moscow with a Russian program performance by the orchestra of the All-Union Radio Committee, under the From 9 till 9:30 A. M., WABC brings a short-w must arouse the people of America against these | NEW PIONEER, February, 1935. A shouts above the motor, “How about] trucks pull out. ; the hood. “A little gasoline over Wes League of Workers Meee leadership of Nikolai Anosoy, and by soloist Vera Dukhov= fascist-like persecutions of the Oregon workers. magazine for workers’ and farm- | @ lift? “Sleep's the drivers bug-a-boo.! that—wow!,” The young man has recently been reorganized as | 200°), ay _werar—cugat WABC—Edwin C. Hill, Com= “I know that the Daily Worker and yourself | ‘iS Children. Twenty-four pages, | Joe Miller, truck driver, turns his| Sleep at the wheel. That guy’s! thinks, A farm house is dimly visi-| the New Theatre League following Orchestra mentator can be of great help.” DIRK DE JONGE. Now Playing in Baltimore | CHAPAYEN | Soviet Union’s Greatest Film Epic! ++ figure of truly heroic proportions.” —Daily Worker Tes Conts Mt The Auditorium Sutter: Patty trom 31 43 illustrated. Five cents. Published at Box 28, Station D, New York | City. ' te men y Bits New Pioneer for February is | out this week with an unusual cover by Mary Morrow, showing one of the activities of the Pioneers, that of selling the magazine to a worker's family. ‘The magazine this month is full of splendid material. “Stand Up and Fight” is an outstanding story having special meaning today. The head with a tired effort, “O. K.” The young man climbs in. “If you won't bum cigarettes. Can’t afford it,” Miller says. The red light changes green, Mil- ler shifts gears, the small slick motor pulls away the truck and double trailer. “Someone who'll listen helps to get the light poles past.” The motor grinds without letup. The manifold glows white -hot through the slits in the hood. Small up and down hill is no cinch.” lucky he picked a soft spot to fall asleep at. bad places along this route,” Miller tells the young man when his truck is rolling again. A big fast motor car passes, its clarion horn blowing a powerful blast through the night. “Go tovit, you bastard. I’m as much in a hurry to get there as you are.” The red tail light of the fast car bounces up and down like a rubber ball as the car hits the high spots There are some pretty} | ble a short way off the road. “The wife has to work her fingers to the bone cleaning the rooming- house; and still we ain't got any- thing to show for a rainy day.” “Jeez, I think I'm with the fel- ! lows.” Miller's head nods. He jerks up with a start, slapping a huge yawn, ° . . H es road turns sharply. Miller Wheels the truck in a wide curve so that the last trailer keeps the the decision made at the National Festival last year. The reason for this change is that the original pro- gram of the League of Workers Theatres was designed primarily for theatres of action, and was not wide enough to include and guide the many elements from the small art theatres and the professional stage who were attracted to the new so- cial theatre. The present organi- zation will embrace all the socially progressive elements in the theatre and weld them into a united theatre the American theatre to its highest 3:30-WOR—Katzman Orch.; Lucille Peterson, Songs; Choristers Quartet WJZ—Goodman Orchestra; James Melton, Tenor; Bob Hope, Comedian WABC—OCourt of Human Relations 8:45-WEAF—President Roose+ velt, Prom White House, - Addressing Boy Scouts of America Silver Jubilee Circus, St. Louis WABC—Same as WEAP 9:00-WEAF—Lyman_ Orch. Frank Munn, Tenor; WOR—Uncle Don dren's Prog-am WJZ—Los Angeles Philhar- monic Orchestra, Alfred Wallenstein, Conductor WABC—Navara Orchestra 6:15-WEAF—Ranch Boys, WABC—Bobby Benson— 3:30-WEAF—Press-Radio News WOR—Resume, Hauptmann ‘Trial ‘WJZ—Press-Radio News ‘WABC—Current Events—H. V. Kaltenborn 6:35-WEAF—Jack, Clemens, Songs WJZ—Gale Page, Songs Chil- Loretta Vivienne Segal, Songs WOR—HIIbilly Music | pass jeeping :45-WEAF—Billy Batchelor— | WJZ—Beatrice Lillie, Com= | adventures of “A Boy on the Road,” hitaked anges ce Hipeeigdicsl A the road. Soon it winks away|P@vement. The road straightens| front for the support of the mini- ie i Pap gt ag read medienne; Pierin “Oopnae | % into the dark ahead. out again. The night is as quiet}mum program of the New Theatre| Woz Lowell ‘Thomas, Com- Cavaliers ‘Quartet | as told to Pioneer Norma Getzoff, “Pulling twenty-five t of crap a @s @ vacuum, the steady dof entator WABC—March of Time | Dee re ne ee ee oe West to Hast, tomorrow East to ea reo ow: Sout Serikes, the motor stir! th ae i Daschle WABC-Beauty—Margaret 3:30-WEAP—Bonime Orch.; | Just Out United States of a boy who is| Wes! 2 buddy? Miller asks, Then he be- ing through it. The) phe minimum program is Brainerd Pic and Pat, Comedians | _ typical of millions looking for | West. Holding this truck with) comes busy with the gears and|2UM of the motor like the hum- briefly: for mass development. of |5:55-WABC—Press-Radio News | WOR—Al and Lee Reiser, | work. cd double trailer on a narrow road, brakes, preparing for a steep hill ming of ether. No strength to break - ? 7:00-WEAP—To Be Announced WJz—Phil Baker, Comedians | - “ .” be way. Gradually sleep overtakes A rs WOR—Sports Resume—Sitan Gabrielle de Lys, Songs; U | ‘One Horse Town” is the first ahead. The motor, in low gear, artistic and social level. For a Se Benaies, Orch: H N G E R part of a continued story for older | , 8 : ft isola he holds back on the driving axle; the| ‘he tired body. theatre dedicated to the struggle] waz—Amos ‘n’ Andy WABC—iollywood Hotel Teaders, in which an N, 8. L,| the road, a row of green lghts) braces hiss at the wheels. “Hey.” yelled the young man,| against war, fascism, and censor-|_WABC Mort and Marge obec Mie Firurent | branch is formed around a protest | Sbove the cab. ae drivers srcoat “Hell of a place for anyone to| Making a grab for the wheel. ship. ee ee Gnbay erice Rice | and against firing the school janitor. ste ena t means, “Hello| take a few winks of snooze.” oe was no more time than! The national office will obtain and | wor—bum and Abner 9,45- WOR _éingin’ Sam Little Lefty, Del's marvelous bss - Se ae yell, “Hey.” A white stone wall| publish a better ret rtory. Plays of | WJ2—Plantation oes: :00-WEAF—John Brown, fel ~ creation, who has come. to typify |_ “Chicago to Cleveland is a long truck rolls over a narrow] coming at the truck. A terrific re-| the high level of excellence of Robles Orch Seattten F won ean cee | / e the entire children’s movement, re-| Pull on the axle. it takes a nel] 2 bridge at the bottom of the hill;| port in the night, the truck burst| “Stevedore,” “Welting for Lefty," WABC—Just Plain Bill | WJZ—Dramatic Sketch Cartoons by BURCK ports to us in thrilling fashion on the National Unemployment Con- SS. An important new feature is the company begrudges us 65 cents an hour, take it or find something bet- the road flattens out again. “Some of the fellows are think- ing of going out on strike,” Miller says. He lights a cigarette with into flames. Miller and the young man pinned in the twisted cab. There was a large crowd gath- ered when the firemen took the two “Newsboy,” and “Free Thaelmann,” will be supplied to the new theatres. National tours are now being ar- ranged for otustanding companies 10:15-WOR—Current Events— H. E. Read 10:30-WEAF—Symphony Or- chestra, Frank Black, Conductor; Mixed Chorus 1:30-WEAF—Hirsch Orchestra WOR—Mystery Sketch WJZ—Red Davis—Sketch WABC—The O’Neills—Sketch 1:45-WEAF—Uncle Ezra— 4 w WOR—Variety Musicale sports page, conducted by Phil pep signe, an expert flip of a match. His face,| bodies, burnt to a crisp, from the| of the NTL. Wie Dace berann WsZ—Jewish Program: BA JOO nates ame Tue dition 4s limited to |} | Wolfe, which ofters competitions | AHEAD now there is a mile of red,jin the flare, is strained, his eyes| wreckage. A black smudge on the| "the exesutive elected for the New| Wozabansei? “Carter, Com | Rabbl Tarael Goldstein 100 numbered and signed copies. Printed on hheavy art paper, in large folio size and con- taining 248 pages. Bound in heavy buckram boards, attractively stamped, Orders accepted now. Five dollars, postpaid. betwen troops and which will con- tinue in future issues and follow the sports of the seasons. The Pioneers themselves have a large hand in the issue with pic- tures, a prize poem on the Scotts- green and white lights. Ten or twelve trucks are parked along the road. One truck is in the soft ditch, down to the rear axle. All the drivers hang around to help him get his truck out. Miller has a hanging onto the small paich of lighted road fifteen feet ahead of the truck. “Jeez, I don’t know,” he says. The motor hums without let-up. “The company wants to cut us stone wall would remain even after the wreckage was dragged off. When the Traffic Manager heard about it the next morning, he went to the main office of the company to make his report. Theatre League includes Mark Mar- vin as national executive secretary, Anne Howe as national organiza- tional secretary, Phil Barber, form- erly assistant to the late Professor Baker in the Yale Dramatic School, mentator 8:00-WEAF—Bourdon Orch.; Jessica Dragonette, So- prano; Male Quartet WOR—Lone Ranger—Sketch WJZ—Dramatic Sketch, with Irene Rich, Actress WABC—VYaricty Musicale WABC—The O’Flynn—Mup ical Drama 11:00-WEAF-—Talk—George Holmes, Chief Washingtom © Bureau, INS WOR—News W5Z—Nelson Orchestra 11:15-WEAP—Ferdinando Ore boro Boys, an illustrated feature |theavy wire cable in his cab. Two beat’ Claim they me losing money.| “The aca bastard!” the com-|as secretary of the repertory divi- Det Ghar Leibert, foes Bae: e * telling the truth about Washington | trucks are doubie hitched to pull ing money hell! I’m carrying] pany said, thinking about the com-| sion; and Harry Elion, Ben Blake, gan; Armbruster ari joonbekans - 50 ATE WORKED 00 BAGH St NY.) ie tinein seo wey chee ee ee oe Fee ane eg eet now, | Blaint. from. thelr-silents over the] Vic Cutler, John Bonn, and Herbert |. Gianiari Moots Tatas | 1 Sata eae oe ee | mentioned KAY GRAY | the two new “Auto-Cars” seem able' and if the-road inspectors catch me delayed cargo, Kline, Quartet WABCO, WEVD) 4 oy } ,