The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 8, 1927, Page 4

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to is coe tot mm be ct Page Four » att: se a : — , ¥ . OTHE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1927 THE DAILY WORKER Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO. Daily, Except Sunday 33 First Street, New York, N. Y. Cable Address SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail (in New York only): v Mail (outside of £8.00 per r $4.50 six months $6.00 per years $ ) three months 2.00 three mo: Phone, Orchard 1680 Daiwork ‘Address all mail and make out checks te ? THE DAILY WORKER, 33 First Street, New York, N. Y. ~~ J. LOUIS ENGDAHL WILLIAM F BERT MILLER . -Editors .Business Manager © at New York, N. ¥ under 1879. at the post-c pact of March ‘3, Advertising rates on application. Mayor Walker---Apostle of Fascism. Mayor James J. Walker of New York, Tammany Hall's latest “find,” has become an ardent apostle of fascism and hails Mus-| solini as the greatest figure in the world. It is quite in keeping | with the well-known bombastic vaporings of Walker that he! should shower flattery upon the braggart despot of Italy. De-} fenders of the “new psychology” might see in Walker’s declara- tion that “I am something of 4 fascist myself” evidence of an in- feriority complex. This former writer of popular songs and one of the figures of Broadway night Iffe, a flippant and paltry jn- dividual, admires the Mussolini myth of a powerful dictator. The weakling Frederich Nietzsche was the apostle of the superman— his opposite. Walker, the figure-head placed in the city hall by | Tammany, grovels before Mussolini. It is a good case for the psycho-analysts. But such things cannot be explained as merely individual reactions. The explanation is rather to be sought in social forces. During the Walker administration the working class of New York, or specifically that portion of the working class that dares challenge the despotism of the capitalists, has been subjected to the most frightful police terrorism. The cloak makers, the fur- riers, the window cleaners, the paper box makers, the shoe work- ers and all others who went on strike have faced the fury of the industrial squad, the special strike-breaking branch of the police department. Tammany judges have handed down vicious deci- | sions against hundreds of workers and in general the city admin- istration has appeared openly and brazenly as a terroristic strike- breaker, Walker, as mayor, unquestionably. approves such as- saults upon labor. When he reached Italy and saw the workers suffering in chains and silence under the monstrous oppression | of fascism, he instantly expressed his full sympathy with that sort of “law and order.” \ This praise of fascism is to be expected from a Tammany mayor. However, the supporters of Walker in the Central Trades and Labor Council of New York City will have a difficult time ex- plaining their support of an open apostle of fascism if the mem-| bers of that body who have voted against fascism as a menace to labor have the courage to get up on the floor of the meetings and demand repudiation of Walker. | j Not only would a fight to repudiate Walker do much to expose | the anti-labor character of Tammany. but would be an effective | weapon in the hands of those workers who perceive the necessity for workers to organize politically in a-class party of labor as opposed to the old parties of capitalism. | | Further Attacks Against Foreign-Born Workers | Let no one think that the arrests of the Mexican and other Latin-American workers on charges of possessing explosives and | who are accused of complicity in the bombing of the Brooklyn} court house is a purely local matter. It is part of the nation-wide | campaign that is being conducted under the direction of thé sec-| retary of labor in the federal government at Washington. It is} the signal for a whclesale rounding up of Mexican and other} workers from the Southern republics who were especially singled | out in the vicious attack upon foreign-born workers launched by | James J. Davis, secretary of labor in the Coolidge cabinet. Al- ready the kept press reports that the government is to start this business of terrorizing workers who may be suspected of having crossed the Mexican border in violation of the immigration re- strictions. 4 The weird stores in the press, the reports of policemen and} the general tone of the news stories concerning the arrests of the} Latin-Americans are the familiar trappings of the frame-up. The| legal advisers of the Mexican consul were quick to sense this phase of the case and to declare that they want no repetition of the Sacco-Vanzetti case against their citizens who are working here. This is a case that merits the closest observation on the part! of labor and no one who has the welfare of labor uppermost in his mind should for a moment yield to the illusion that this is an} ordinary case of “bomb plotting.” As a measure toward’ the de- fense of labor in general it is absolutely imperative that all forces capable of being mobilized must be used to stem these attacks upon the foreign-born workers. Registering and finger-printing of foreign-born workers is only the first step in the direction of regimentalizing all labor —cataloging every worker—so that the exploiters will have a complete record of every worker who dares to defend his class interests and is at the same time part of the gigantic.activity being conducted by the war mongers so that in the Shortest pos- sible time the country can be placed on a war-basis. So, in the last analysis, the struggle to defend these alien workers who are in this country, is a struggle in behalf not-only of the conditions | of labor but of the very lives of millions of the working class who are potential cannon fodder for the next imperialist war. CHARLESTOWN Here Sacco and Vanzetti died, Their blood is on those stones, The grim walls heard them when they sighed And mocked their anguished groans. Here barred and grated windows stare With blind eyes at the day As if the horrors of the chair Had driven sight away. Ah, Infamous, the day shall come When on those ruins we'll rear A hallowed shrine, a sacred tomb, To them you murdered there! | —HENRY GEORGE WEISS. \ wn | past year. |of the Executive Committee of the {the month of May. /and instructions to all of the Com. |nishing new experiences, that it wa: absolutely imperative for the maruee les The Communist International, The War Danger and the Role of American Imperialism Speech of ROBT. MINOR At Workers’ Party HIS is in a certain sense a report on activities in Moscow during the But in a practical sense | my report deals chiefly with the ques- | tion of the war, danger, not omitting, of course, the other subjects as in-| dicated in the title. During the past year the Comintern has given atten- tion to some of the most important questions that have ever faced it since its organization. The questions which we faced in the VII Enlarged Plenum ention. Communist International are to a cer- tain extent repeated in the questions which we faced in the last Plenum in Most of what I will have to say relates to the actions of the last..Plenum of the Executive Committee. “First of all this extraordinary ses- | sion vf the Comintern Executive was | not a routine session. It ‘was called, not simply because there hadn’t been | a session for a certain time, but be-! eause of -an extraordinary interna- tional situation requiring. decision munist parties of the world. Instruc | tions for action, not mere theoretical | explanations of some fine-spun points, | but instructions as to what concrete | actions the Communist parties are to | put through in the immediate pres-| ent. There was a series of events of a very startling nature which led | up to the calling of this session of | the Exeeutive. There was the devel- | opment of the Chinese Revolution, a revolution which. broke so many his. torical precedents in the sense of fur to receive an orientation. There was | long: ,a relative increase of its own arma- ments. There had been revolts in a series of countries from Morocco and Syria to Indonesia} and then the great Chi- ese revolution had burst upon the world. Revolts of colonial peoples |were added to the many “small” war incidents &@tween the smaller na- tions chiefly in the Balkans. From these little wars the capitalist imperialist world was rapidly ap- proaching then, as it still is, the great war which we see lying in the future. For that reason it was necessary that the first and thé dominant point upon the order of business of the Comin- tern in this session should be the war and the danger of war. Capitalism has been in the process of what we call “deterioration” since the world war of the past. The cycles of pros- perity and depression have lost their regular course as in the past. There are—no- longer periods, .as * far as Europe is concerned, of long pros- perity ‘with periods of short de- pression. There are now periods of brief, feverish bodms interlarded with and dangerous depressions. Competition for the narrowing field f-world: markets and “sources of raw material is sharper today than ever before and much sharper than even the competition which preceeded the war of 1914. As a result of the con- ditions of the war period national in- dustries had been developed in the colonial ‘and semi-colonial countries which take ‘the place in the world market of many of the home indus- tries of the imperialist *countries. These had served to diminish the field and to upset that equilibrium which is stablished at the times of normal apitalist existence. The equilibrium ich has existed to a certain extent, relative stabilization which we the the intervention in China, the inter-/ have repeatedly recognized in the fense and the leader in revolutionary attack against the imperialist offen4 sive, will be our Soviet Union. On the-other Hand there is thé Chinese national revolution whieh is not an imperialist factor in this way, but on the contrary is an anti-imperialist factor. In such a situation what do we do? In such a situation we find \that it is necessary ,to prepare the working class for different -tacti from the tactics which were employed by the workers in the last war and a different tactic from that which was employed even by the best of the revolutionary workers and leaders in the last war, because this different situation brings an -adjustment of tactics. HE capitalist class, the conscious elements of its leaders of capi- talist imperial policy, are making preparations according to the differ- ent character of the coming war. We find, for instance, throughout Europe and to a certain extent in Amerita the development of a careful cultivation of special bodies, military bodies ex- elusively composed of bourgeois eie- ments or elements subservient to the bourgeois. Some local military units springing up with the conscious en- couragement of the states of the im- perialist powers with the know'edge vhat the war that is to,come will re- quire military cadres which cannot be shaken by revolutionary agitation and revolutionary conditions. We tind throughout Europe a movement of this sort which even goes so far as to undertake with it work among the women of the petty bourgeois and even the working class for the mobili- zation of reactionary elements against the revolutionary circumstances that will come, We find the™ capitalist powers showing every understandir f the differences of the present s | | | —z ~ DOROTHY SANDS May Open at [ Theatre Mosque To- morrow Night | “Revelry” may open at the Theatre | | Mosque tomorrow night. Henry I.) ;Chanin of the Chanin Theatre Corp. | |owners of the playhouse in question, | |made that statement yesterday, fol-| {lowing the closing of the play at the) | Garrick Theatre in Philadelphia. } “Revelry,” which was dramatized by. Maurice Watkins from the book} \by Samuel Hopkins Adams, deals! with certain phases of the Harding | administration, and for that reason) the big moguls of Philadelphia de- jcided that the play could not con-/| tinue. The Stanley Company, owners of the Garrick, closed the production, |following an announcement by Judge} | James Gay Gorden, Jr., in his refusal | to issue an injunction against the} |play, but who denounced it as “false,; * |. . 3 base and indecent.” The Stanley|. 1” “fne Grand Street Follies,” now |Company in a statement following the |CTowding the capacity of the Little closing of the show: stated that they | Theatre. “considered the theme so essentially| |unpatriotic that any further revision would be useless.” Robert Milton, the | producer of “Revelry,” through his. at- > torney, stated he would not abandon i | “Revelry”’ |the production because he is produc-| Little Theatre GRAND ing it'as a good type of play on the | 44!h St. W. of B'way. STREET i i «eq | Event at 8:3 current American séene and for its; Seo Ma FOLLIES dramatic value,” | “Enemies and Lovers,” from the} | Russian of Artzybasheff, will be put | on for special matinees at the Little ‘HILLS AND THRILL Theatre Sept. 20 and 22. Members| eon W. ih Si of the cast of the Grand Street Follies |" “7 “"" N will take part in the production. | TERA Ie {The LA POPULAR P: “Blood Mone Best seats R i, 48th St. Dorothy Day and Vincent Sar Jy., have been engaged for prominent roles -in “Send No Money,” Owen | quiring’ the mobilizatiorr-of-every” re- | | volutionary power of the vention which meant much more than | the crushing of a national revglution | in a single country, even tremendous. important as such would be. There was \the breaking off of diplomatic rela-} tions between the leading imperial-| ist power of the European half of the | world, and the Soyiet Union. There was, in other words,‘an acute devel- opment of a world war-situatior re- working class of the world. The war of 191 proved to be a breaking point or poin of destruction of the old Socialist In- ternational. The world war which is | coming must be ‘met by the Com-| munist parties of the world showing | the workers that they are funda-| mentally and absolutely different | from the Social Democratic parties. Instead of proving the destruction of he Communist parties and their In- ernational, this coming world war os prove the victory of the Com- unist parties and our International. * * | { * | HE situation leading up to this | period is interesting. In the first place enormous strides were made by} our Soviet Union. In the last few months, in only so much as 8 months | for instance, the output of the state industry whieh is such a great test | of the building of socialism, has in-| creased between 20 and 21 per cent in| only eight months. This rate of| progress had been almost equalled in the months preceeding. Soviet Rus- sia is truly being transformed, truly they are building the new society of | which the revolutionary workers for | three quarters of a century or more have been speaking of. The raise in the standard of living of the working class in the last year has been re- markable. There has been an in-| crease of the wages of the workers of the Soviet Union of eleven and| one-half per cent over last year. The significance to the capitalist ‘world system, of the successful socialist construction in the Soviet Union, is a thing which I think is little under- stood. It is not a matter of indiffer- | ence but a matter of gravest concern | to every capitalist power which is in- terested in the question of markets. On the other hand we see the great British Empire, up till now the great-) est empire that ever existed in the} history of the world, an empire which | had enjoyed an undisputed monopoly jn the world market and hegemony | over the world’s capitalist forces. Eng- | land had undergone a crumbling pro- | cess, a process weakening its founda-| tions. England finally reached the! general strike, which in spite of betrayal and defeat was the writing on the wall. England was in a posi-| tion where in the logic of capitalist, policy it was obliged to proceed on a) bloot-thirsty career of war and de- struction in the effort to save its imperial self. But England again secured what it! |we are Opposed, fo imp. | kind of war and another kind. Comintern, this equilibrium proaching its upset, and was even before the Plenum approaching the upset which will result in the world crash, HAT do we Say today is the dom- inant difference, or great differ-| jenee between the present , pre-war period and the pre-war period of 1913? It is existence of the Soviet Union and the existence of. the Chi- se Yéyolution. These great out- anding facts alter the entire situa- tion. they key positions in the whole world situation. From the economic stand- point they occupy territorially the greater part of Asia and Europe. To- gether they mean a hole, a gap in the} capitalist. commercial system, they represent a gap which the capitalists in the approaching world war in the logic of their system will and must attempt to fill. A victory of the Chinese revolution would in the first place effect the British Empire. the imperialist world would mean the final break in the foundation of the British imperial system, the revolu- tionizing of the British working class, the revolutionizing of its colonial de- pendents. That is an explanation of the fact that the Comintern has stated in the thesis which we adopted there that the British Empire first of all is the leader in the imperialist ag- gression of the present period. On the other hand the defeat of the Chi- nese revolution would mean fresh temporary consolidation of the im- perialist system of the leading na- tions and a general sweep of reac- tion throughout all of the world with- out exception. For the imperialist powers, and in the first place in the point of time, for the British Empire, everything is at stake in the crushing f the Chinese revolution. In any event the war for subjugation of Asia by. the imperialist powers lies n the future through the victory of he Chinese revolution or through its lefeat. Now, Comrades, we are not pacif- ists, we are not opposed war, Bust war. distinctions between one It is necessary for us to understand that if we are not to be simply pacifist liberals, if we recall the attitude of Marx, to take for example in the case of the American Civil War where Marx and Engels with the utmost vigor came out, not as pacifists, not as neutrals, but as definite bellig- erants on the side of the union cause in the American civil war against the slave power, if we. re- member these things, if we remember We "draw the difference of time which makes it | now tfuly unthinkable that any revo- lutionist or any decent self-respecting worker could support the United States government in the present era, we understand the thread by which we find these differences. Revolution- ation by doing what they call} Winters’ new comedy, which is due is_ap- | Soviet. Russia and China are! The first effect on} had lost a few months earlier. It|ary class wars and National Revolu- ‘again secured hegemony of European | tionary wars are supported by the ‘continental affairs. England was | Comintern, and this war which is |busy in mobilizing the small border | co#fffi%" has a special character, a | states, Poland, Lithuania, Roumania, | unique character which has never be- and other countries for an encircle- fore been entirely duplicated or peed ea omen a poy oF jequaled in the history of the world. war in the immediate or the early (future, for the destruction of the So- ‘viet Union. There was discovered in |the Ukraine a conspiracy financed by |Great Britain. There were repeated | discoveries of terrorist plans, some of which were executed under the pay| point of view of the revolutionary of the British government, the char- jsvorkers. : acter of which showed that there was | on foot a war movement organized \chiefly by Great Britain with the ob-! \Ject of destruction in the first place jof the Soviet Union and the Chinese | | revolution, ‘ERE had been disarmament con-| ferences, in every one of which the purpose of each of these “pacific” imperialist nations was t® arrive at 7 was a war of imperialisit powers on both sides. No revolutionary worker could support any of the imperialist powers in the last war. All bellig- hat is now looming, is of a different haracter, It is a war’ in which the states engaged will represent differ- ent social classes. Not only imperial- ist powers will be engaged, but also non-imperialist powers will be en- gaged on the other side. For example, outstanding is the great fact that the leader of one side of the war,—not | Look back to the war of’ 1914 which erants were to be defeated, from the | The present war, the war) |fstrengthening the rear.” What do we mean by strengthening the rear? while tiey hurl the working class into the front. For instance, the trade union bill which was passed in the last few weeks aftcr the general strike. A trade union bill which makes it illegal to have another general strike under any cir- cumstances, either in time of peace jor in time of war. We find that bh’!1 put through with the real collabor: tire British nation for the coming war period. We find under the Italian terror against the working class, end- |less laws “nationalizing” trade unions, as they call it. Laws by } Which the working class and so-called working class organizations are made into automatons of capitalist machin- ery are being multiplied. This is the preparation of the rear for the {coming war. The French military law has just passed by which the whole population, men, women, children, and you might say, down to babies, are put under the military discipline of the French military authorities, in the case of declaration of war. That ex- tends throughout the colonies in the heart of Africa. Today we find that when the rulers of France sign a piece of paper declaring war, the rule of the military authorities is auto- matically established over every worker in every factory, who can be shot if he strikes, and over every kitchen and dining room of every French working class home, even to the extent that a women doing her hovsework is under military command during the war period. We find Japan going through something similar. Germany abolished the 8-hour day and preparing laws for the prevention of strikes, fast developing, in the same war. And then we see Eng- land’s flunkey nations (Roumania, ete.) developing their own internal machinery for the prevention and suppression of the national Minority Movements which threaten these gov- ernments in the case of war. the mobilization of the rear. (To Be Continued) That is ship thousands strong in New) York, the Jewish workers in Soviet Russia and thus enable them to become pro- ductive, thrn the Teor Flower Days, Saturday and Sunday, September 10 and 11, Meetings Every Night. all councils are being held daily, sev- eral hundred boxes have aready been passed out to the members with prom- ising results. A mass meeting at the United Cooperative was held by coun- cil 11, Passaic Polish Women Help. and strikers of Passaic have informed the Executive office of the Councils that they cannot collect funds in the open in Passaic but that they will have a picnic for that purpose. Newark Finnish Women. A letter from the Newark Finnish Council also promises support. * United Council Appeals to Other Women. The executive office of the United Council of Workingclass Housewives calls upon the many thousands of women followers to enlist in this work. The Councils all thru New York in every neighborhood have stations. Call all week either to the individual councils of the main office, Room thee coperemsor;, tint: the: Irader: im db. 533, 80 E. 11th St. They want to have peace in the rear) | tion of the reformist leaders, making | a long strike towards tying un in a} tight chain of war discipline the en-} New Jersey, to help collect funds for | Special meetings all this week by | The wives of the Textile Strikers | | Brian Marlow, with Mary Nash, Basil |RathBone, Violet Kemble Cooper and “The Command to Love,” by Ru- Henry Stephenson in the cast, will dolph Lothar and Fritz Gottwald,,have its premiére at the Longacre adapted by Herman Bernstein and|Theatre Monday evening, Sept. 19. What the Daily Worker |x rina: spsinericia, 0 |J. Av Rehin, Springfield, O.... Means to the Workers iv. A. Davidson, Scranton, Pa. : (collected) . 17.00 More Encouraging Contributions {N. Panovitz, Pitts., Pa .5.00 to Our Emergency Fund. !A. Zampogna, Troy, N. Y. .1.00 |A. Reitano, Troy, N. Y. .1.00 A. West, Bridgeport, Conn....1.00 |J. H. Jensen, Los Angeles, Cal.10.00 iM. L. Vawter, Los Angeles, Cal. .5.00 | Women’s Consumers’ Ed. League, Los Angeles, Calif......... 50.00 \J. H. Seitz, Willoughby, O......5.00 |G. H. Lindberg, Compton, Calif. .5.00 iJ, Auert, Ukiah, Calif... 0.2... 5.00 |G. Daubeneck, Caspar, Calif....5.00 | H. Du Verney, ‘Kansas City, Mo.. .2.00 Workers Party Br. Kans. C. Mo..20.00 . here shortly. E. Erickson, Berkeley, C: +» 2,00 -1,00 -1.00 - 1.00 |P. Friedrichson, Carmel, Calif. .$2.00 | A. Kratofil, Norwalk, Ohio. \I. Monsen, Elbow Lake, Minn _T. Miwra, San Francisco, Cal |G) Nickoloff, Toledo, Ohio.. \C. Stereff, Toledo, Ohio |R. Munding, Toledo, Ohio. g | H. West, Toledo, Ohio...... coy .P. C. Reiss, Chicago (collected) .10.00 A. Gloss, Elmhurst, L. I.. 2.00 D. Agalos, Three Forks, Mont...2.00 G.: Mulfinger,: N.. Yeu.) sho 05 1,00 | Amer. Stroit. Pr., M. U.S.S.R.. .42.00 Window Cleaners, Local 8, NYC.5.00|J. Zuparke, Hillside, N, J. . 50 D. Krutis, Elizabeth, N. J. (col.).9.50) A. Anglo, Hillside, N. J......... .50 |B. Bortz, Seattle, Wash. 5.00; T. Tidsy, Hillside, N. J. + 25 Yamasaki, Oakland, Cali Nagura, Oakland, Calif. G. Arness, Pequot, Minn. \C. Ambrozio, N. Y. C..,.. 00 P. |J. Racheff, Cleve., O. (collected) .7.00 | G. 'B. Tillin, Cleve., O. (collected) 12,00) A. |J. Thinschinet, Phila., Pa. ....1.00|J. Buschmann, Pequot, Minn. |E. Wangler, Phila., Pa.. ++1,00 | H. Lawrence, Ft. Worth, Texas \E. Mrvosh, Burton, Ohio. 1.00 | E. A. McCabe, Durango, Colo.. M. Bratinich, Burton, Ohio +1.00 | M. H. Smith, Durango, Colo. By |J. Hranilovich, Burton, Ohio....1.00)S. Kelly, Falfa, Colo....... 1.00 |E. Adamovich, Burton, Ohio. ....1.00 | L. Schooer, Falfa, Colo..... -1.00 J. Grubosich, Burton, Ohio. .00;F. Wride, Durango, Colo... 1.00 A. Melsine, Bronx, N. Y.. 1.00} E, Prichard, Durango, Colo. .1.00 Goroff, Bronx, N. Y.. +1.00 | Geo. W. Swartz, Durango, Colo.. .1.00 S. Feldman, Bronx, N. ..1.00|E, Turner, Durango, BONG o's as 1.00 Lith. Work. All. of A. Br. 68, | A. Druksel, F Hills, L. L, N. Y...1.00 Olifinide, Nd ves, sae ,.5.00| H. Hecker, Glensdale, N. Y. 1.00 |W. C. Boyed, Canon City, Colo. 1.00, W. Reckman, New York.. Income on Affair, Troy, N. Y.. 16.50 | ‘Theo. Neubert, Mas. L. 1.00 fe gare |W. N. Patterson, Zanesville, 0..5.00 M. Fischer, New York -1.00 C. J, Fjelstad, Taylor, Wis 1,00; P. Druksel, New York 1.00 S. Olson, Taylor, Wis... 1,00 | H. Schmidt, Elm., L. L.. N. Y. - 1.00 B. Wood, Taylor, Wis. 1.00 | B. Schutter, New York.. .1.00 A. V. Tukas, Taylor, Wis. .00 H. Kreisig, Brooklyn, N. 1.00 J. C. Lukas, Taylor, Wis.. -1.00 | Alfred Suess, New York.. 1.00 C. M. Hjerlied, Taylor, Wis. .00 B. Noetzel, New York.. .1.00 H. W. Kling, Taylor, Wis. .00|F. Ahlis, Eim., L. L, N. Y. .1.00 F. W. Larson, Taylor, Wis.....1.00!W. J. Hart, Elm., L. 1., N 1.00 |E. Anderson, Tripoli, Wis.» 71.00 |A. Stemmen, B’klyn, N. Y. 1.00 A. Gallu, Chicago, Ill.... -1.00 |'P. Freitag, Elm., L. 1, N. Y. 1.00 C. Krinys, Chicago, Ml -1.00/N. Drecksel, New York. 1,00 G. Owrea, Chicago, Ill... -1.00|E: Britz, New York....... Ngee Mi ¥ | ° T MPECIAL PRICE? } | Two well known books at an especially low rate. / THE PROFITS OF RELIGION j By Upton Sinclair. ‘ wd Twenty-five years of thought and study have gone into this book which has become one of the best known of the many books of the great propagandi COMMUNISM VS. CHRISTIANISM By Bishop Wm. M. Brown. A book that has sold ‘into many thousands of copies and has been translated into many languages. Like the book above by Sinclair, this will prove not only of interest in reading—but also a good bool: to give to your fellow-workar for propaganda purposes, i —.25 Both for 50 cents postpaid. i, Books offered in this column on hand N m in limited quantities. All orders cash and filled in turn as received,

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