Alice Blue Gown

Alice Blue Gown is a popular song written by Joseph McCarthy and Harry Tierney. The song, which was inspired by Alice Roosevelt Longworth's signature gown, was first performed by Edith Day in the 1919 Broadway musical Irene. In 1920 the song was recorded and released.

Artists who have recorded the song include Duke Ellington, Martha Wainwright, Kate & Anna McGarrigle, Glenn Miller, Wayne King, Frank Sinatra, Chet Atkins and Lenny Breau.

The song is about Irene's favourite dress which she wore until it was worn out, and begins:

In When the Cold Breeze Blows Away, it will be sung in chapter How I Can Help Make the World Great by kid heroes before Paul White interrupted the applause with him hitting the glass rapidly with his spoon and began to sing the Soviet anthem with everyone else, including the kid heroes too, similar to an Arthur episode, "Messy Dress Mess," which was once sung by Ladonna Compton.

He's the one who interrupted the applause after Alice Blue Gown (the song that he hates) and made all of them sing the Soviet national anthem instead as a protest against the song.

Later on, it was officially banned by the government of the Unified Soviet Red Assault Command, all according to Yuri Motovov's Book of USRAC Laws (due to the glorification of capitalism via mentioning of gowns, which are also forbidden by the USRAC).

Other than the kid heroes, Anatoly Fyodorov is a USRAC conscript who sings this song, only to disobey the USRAC's laws.

Observed by Viktor Nazarov who reminds the Unified Soviet Red Assault Command Army of the policy that all "capitalist babies" will be severely beaten (which was revealed later on), he goes on a "capitalist baby hunt" by ordering the composer to start playing Alice Blue Gown one last time in order to see who would be the first person to start singing to be determined as the culprit. All the same kid heroes who once performed the song all together struggle not to start singing to that song again, after General Nazarov starts singing it to all the kid heroes, causing all of them to feel nervous, water their eyes and sweat themselves out while fighting the urge to sing to the song, and they are only saved when Anatoly (as mentioned from the above of this paragraph) and his fellow teammates burst out in song. The other soldiers begin beating them, allowing all the guests, staff members and kid heroes who sung this song to join in to beat Anatoly and his comrades, thus sparking the Walkervillian Revolution.