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Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1927 UB OOK SW | Anacond TWO REVOLUTIONARY LEADERS. SPEECHES OF FERDINAND LASALLE (Vol. III, Voices of Revolt). In-| = ternational Publishers. Fifty cents. | The Anaconda Copper Mining SPEECHES OF KARL LIEBKNECHT (Vol. IV, Voices of Revolt). Ta Com Onay aueare tte ieee ternational Publishers. Fifty cents. melting and refining company : 2 Lassalle and Liebknecht each stand at the head of a historic movement | Worl with its pay otipege ihe in the German working class. They were of those gifted individuals that are j14ccn the working class and the thrust above the ranks of men by the tides and crises veial conflict to] a°'G Mf ‘The A.C. M. has many im. represent the needs of a period and a class. While both of th mw ere popular I narkanenhotdinesn ite tates and acteris: , their per leaders of the workers’ tionary moveme: ties were alm y dissimilar. I men; Liebknecht was thoroughly the m ingly vain, a f almost ¢ also owns mines and property in other countries. At Butte there 5 mines, covering an area of 5 mile: with shafts varying from 800 to 350( knecht was none o' a dozen ¢ re |1eet in depth. and yrous interests aside from his labor acti 1 S were , Pp and amorous interests aside from his labor activities, and his 4 ae rn an ee princes, princesses, mona s and diplom s well as worke dieb- a : face jehecht tely: Inmieededsin the revolt y movement and was an| The copper king, its holdings and inseparable the class with which he fought for freedom its profits that have been so well ; guarded has been, is and will be the j center of political battles that rage jaround Butte and Helena Its methods, controlling all forces of so- ciety from the workers to the gov- ernor, are the same methods that the jother great concerns use and a story | of them would fill volumes that would take the reader to the depth of slime and ‘corruption from trade union t of the two men than this: L: y six weeks after the formation of the Association, almo: essential we ng the worke nouncing with p: om the defenc :d in a Berlin court that he had prevailed upon Bismarck (!) to pr im universal and direct suf- frage; ire of Liebknecht, at the most furious point in the v appearing at tzdamer Platz on May Day, 19 surrounded by his stalw rebel youth, to call upon the thousands to make war against the imperialist war of the Kaiser There is no sharper con for Switzerland on a long holida eral German Wc d the same La nd the p But there have been greater contrasts in history, each period of which | fields to city, county and state politics | takes whatever is best fitted for its needs, for there were also many similar-|as well as‘ to the offices of finance ities in cht was a splendid o a man who could | and indust move the onate eloquence. lle was adjudged, even | The Workers’ Heritage. by a re time. George B been invented f and sing separating t newspaper obituary, the ¢ st orator of his | le that the word agitator might have m; Liebknecht was perhaps even more tirele: ersistent | the workers are the best pages in the pokesman for his ideas than Lassalle. Like a Moses | yistory of Butte and the class strug- : aters of the Red Sea, Lassalle wielded a flaming sword to |gle of America and these strugglest split the srs from the_bourgeoisie and lead the former on the firm | the~same time show corruption ground of independent proleta n action; Liebknecht hacked his way through diGerreeet ancrnnike von sheisieere the black mass of: social-democratie betrayal in order to open a lane for the had Had cate source one che Gehidlooe onward march of the revolutionary worl ne caer \(A. GM) * * fs see 4 ; Bill Dunne, the Butte Bulletin and " These two Tew books ane eae ee nacHons ae both a ee alee | ‘ail that owas connected with) these Pcners ceninses, ane teers tone hears a ee aye a .. |avents and struggles are pnforgotten. work. poe iself the task of divorcing the German prolet t, which } 79 revolutionary workers of to- was already begin ing to take definite, solid, immiense-proportioned shape sie Ge deus Wadia ice Poa after the revolution of 1848, from the German bourgeoisie, from lhevilaee unflenthe sks Ws at) haesite > “libe “ He had that rare ability of expounding e, ith cl probl nea hich from ‘the ips of mthers re. | power and fears. ae +f hensible and abstract. In AY eect aa olemic Frank Little is dead, but fact re- main complicate P > and abstract. argument a em. ¥ e ae 44g : ee cated teres, : : i P mains that the spirit of militancy, of with the opr brilliant, swiftly perceptive, and merciless. BS i e “hi. ee + ts . Frank Little is pushing for expres- All th speeches, however, runs not only an annoying tone of | -. ae * ; 131, kan a 1 ion, to break asunder the chains of egotism an incredible ssorance of leadership, but also the lithe A 6. false notes of h nd policies, for which Marx on more | °° 4: & than one occasion lle, v time placed the period| Huge Production By of labor’s fir opposed to proceed to-| The Butte mines produce about one- wards it I ation of Productive 2 of workers to under-|third of the copper mined in the mine capitalist production by collective werk and ange. The financial | United States and over one-sixth of support for these hopeless associations were to come | rom the State. Lassalle’s c nt attacks opon the ‘jchaff” of li in order to | duction three hundred million win the “wheat” of the working class, together with the misguided negotia- pounds of copper, one hundred and tions with and reliance upon Bismarck which compromised him, brought |} seventy-five million pounds of zine upon his ec charge of “reactionary” from the liberal bourgeoi |twelve million ounces of silver and the integrity alle and the magnitude of his service io the ixty thousand ounces of gold. This roletariat is i ardent revolutionary, a virile hater of |yast wealth is produced by about ten ice and m. He v one of the most brilliant leaders of |thousand Butte miners, four thousand , and its first great organizer and spokesman. | workers at Anaconda and about two Eis |thousand at the Great Falls works, duction, which largely discusses the relation of Lassalle to Marx. It is true | I re Se er aie pianuaie that Marx valued highly and praised the qualities of Lassalle, despite the | ,!" fe cea if, the I. W. W., that latter’s frequent plagiarisms of his work. But it is impossible to estimate ie eae See aisle pi es RE Lassalle correctly by minimizing his differences with Marx. They were un- fare Bags v ot, re of a : fortunately too profound for reconciliation and no one knew this better than | Ab ed es we ee es ae ie Marx. The evil of many of the Lassallean theories, whch had their first |St¥ongly organized considering the direct effect on the social-democratic party in the program of the Gotha unity | relative Position of the organization congress of 187 till apparent in the work and program of the German |!" America. i Pare social democracy today. It can be said for Lassalle, however, that much of | _,But as for the miners, the majority what he said and wrote against the timidity and unreliability of the bour-|°f the workers, the most important geoisie of the last century applies with as incisive force to, the dodas role section, the backbone of the Montana of the social democracy today. workingclass, are unorganized and Karl Lieb ht’s was a voice that directed the German working class | the local unions of the A. F. of L. out of the black swamp of betrayal into which they had been drawn by the |27¢ not feared by the A. C. M. either official social democracy. It is a curious coincidence that he was born dur- |f"0M numerical strength of today or ing the F that waa |future prospects. 7 able, forty y to command for its imperialist Weltpolitik the cor-| 1” fact the A. C rupted leadership of the party of Bebel and Wilhelm Liebknecht. Lieblnecht, | °°Sanization at the together with Rosa Luxemburg and those kindred spirits who became Spar- as the stormy petrel of the struggle against the poisonous corruption that was eating the heart out of he revolutionary movement in Germany. | His spéect antly called attention to the growing sharpness of the militarist danger. At party congresses, in’ mass meetings, to his favorite audience, the youth, he pe: tently pursued ‘his task of awakening the work- | ing class to the fate which was to overtake it unless it was alive to the | of combatting the many-headed hydra of imperialism and its child, | m. F eeches to the youth are filled with warm appreciation for their receptiveness, insight and courage; his speeches against the jingoes of his own party are filled with the burning hatred of treason that comes with the love of the revolutionary cause. * * * Liebknecht has left the working class and the revolutionary movement a tradition of glorious and honorable struggle, rich with courage and ardor. With the knife of the reaction in his back, Liebknecht could say, like Las- salle’s Ulrich von Hutten: “To future ages I bequeath an avenging.” In this period of revolution, the locomotive of history, the few years that have passed are akin to ages at other times, and the enging of Liebknecht will c€ome with the app ing victory of the w The heroic battles of the past, waged by the militant leaders and | icompre ‘ough his Workers. neipation five ce gan the German working The L alle book is unfortunately marred by Jakob Altmaier’s intro- war, which established the German empi M., knowing the r Great Falls plant - A SHORT COURSE | of ECONOMIC SCIENCE By A. BOGDANOFF MAX SHACHTMAN. } COMMENT. Upton Sir ir plans to write a novel around-the lives-of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti. He said so the other mmie Higgins | §} Book Shop when he stopped in te buy some late publi ie’s too busy |f) Revised and supplemented by and active to be voyaging around the world like his f in Lewis,(/8| Tear ae Duele: tly a a neane: hh the author. Trans- luted by J. Fineberg. 6(QAOMRADE BOGD! he said. “I’ve just completed my new book, “Money Writes” and soon I'l be|f) 4°" Going to New England to gather material for my. novet Saccacand Van- | getti.” } Sinclair has remained in the East ever since he came in from California.| ANOFE'S nprehen- to do battle w the Boston cops over their critical inter p: ion of.con- | and popu intro- temporary literature. The police declined to arrest Sinclair and almost |} Pete Satie simultaneously he wisely decided he would prefer not to spend a lonely year on Deer Island. Anyway, the moral forces of Boston are holding for ran- | Pe ares som John Grimm, the cherubic 20-year-old book clerk who sold a copy of Facts tee the a “Oil,” and his trial for violating the statute prohibiting the distribution of | be vin ya ed a “lewd, lecherous, lascivious and disgusting matter” is soon to come up. mandes a if net Dhousanday The innocent victim of the whole affair is, of course, Upton Sinelair. | of party schools and study As a result his novel is being bought up with feverish haste by thousands of |f/ ‘ireles mow functioning In gentle readers curious to know just what,it was that shocked the Boston cops. | : The fir edition of ee ed book was published in Those who fear that elegant writing has disappeared from the political | gag ae a dr eee A journals of the land will undoubtedly be reassured by the following para- 1923—this new edition, just graph salvaged from a f issued, is the second “The East River page election story in the socialist New Leader: | es of | a Copper Mining Co. and the Workers # #vco omer — the workers they will recognize them. As for the officialdom and their policy, the A. C. M. has no fear and ays so, but they do object to known sof progressives who have made cere attempts to organize a mili- ant union instead of one they can control. To prevent this the A. C. the Butte movement flooded with stoolpigeons. This seems to be an »pen secret, even as to names, and he continual branding of ordinary rade unionists, as “reds, bolsheviks and undesirable foreigners” is a Weapon used by the “company men” jat all times. Unions with Two Wage Standards The different craft unions of the city of Butte have one wage standard for the workers of the city and allow the workers of the union to work for the A. C. M. at another and lower | Wage standard. | If you are a member of the union and work for the A. C. M. your wages are about-half of what your brothers who work in the city get. All crafts jare allowed to work in peace at the M. has | A. C. M. by the Company and only a | dvive for a real organization not con- | trolled by: the.A.C. M. among the miners is fought. How Plan is Justified. The’ international and local union- ist uphold the dual wage plan by tell- ing you that those working on the hill are employed all year, while those in the city are unemployed many weeks and, too, there is a training period on the hill. This reason is not even slop for the hogs. In the first place the wages of the steady workers are below that of a decent standard of living as well as the trade union standard. In the second place, the mere fact that the A. C. M. tolerates the crafts (that work for less) and “will commit murder to keep the miners unorgan- ized” is enough to convince any one whose who in this little unofficial ar- rangement of A. F. of L. crafts and A. C. M. And last but not least, those who put up the above excuse have only the world’s output. The annual pro-| another way of saying that the A. C.| [M. jis ever Powerful enough to control hing it comes in contact with. so shows impotency, subjection jand lack of leadership on the part of these officials who tolerate this | scheme, Comparative Wages. The wages of the workers of the crafts are as follows: A.C. M. City Carpenters »$5.25 $10.00 Plumbers - 5.25 12.00 | lacksmiths . 5.25 8.00 says that if they get 50 per cent of) bs a “The Machinists . 5.25 8.00 Engineers e : Firemen of the city get 165,00 a Milne’s New Play With month. | Teamsters ..... 5.00 6.00 | Henry Hull at the f The members of the Mine, Mill and} Smelter Workers Union who were re- | ferred to in the above lines have a} real grievance with the other crafts AUAONG nesta MapearsoneB nas of the city. Hundreds of workers | z F é |way this year bears the interesting carrying cards in crafts of the city at |title of “The Ivory Door” and is being |periods will get jobs at the mines as ; 38| produced by Charles Hopkins at the miners and do not transfer into the |ineatre with an excellent cast headed union. This has been taken up with by Henry Hull. the Executive of the A. F. of L. and| * | “The Ivory Door” is located in the the feeling of resentment and class- | ys 6 2 : ing’s Palace and a legend has ling as scabs of these workers is grow- |“ - x ; |ing stronger while the communication | ere Ue OAR COERIDE 30) penleles He still lays on the table of President | P@¢ome a gosper to the people. hen Green’s office, who has not answered | the young king, acted by Henry Hull, if a th jlearns the truth about the door and hehe ia te fee 4 |seeks to ‘dispel the legend, he be- he abeenise 1 miner of Butte |¢omes a victim of their faith in it and | therel i 7 lwork at $4.75 a day, but under thea, a ee, ee {contract system that all are work-| ! play is jing eee obtain by speed-up | (vite modern the author has preferred methods about $7.00 a day for work |° clothe the plot in an allegorical that is worth far more. | fairy tale and the actors in antient jcostumes. The moral of the play is Under the system the majority of | : workers*do not know what they |the conflict between Truth and the His conceptions of receive until payday. Payday | Will us Believe. Re has been changed from Monday to|®" artistic construction of the play, Safarday fm order to give them a|™ade it neces ry for the author to chance to spend their money and to |close his play with “The Will to Be- | be back for work on Monday morning | eke ees es oye a ae ae oes bootleg Joints | impse of the future finds the same Pastas thorns: | legend still being perpetuated that the In the speed up system, if a fast | Prologue first acquainted us with. | worker makes a dollar too much, ac- —V.S. |cording to the companies’ standard, a wee : |the price is reduced all down the ae : une Oine as heat will | Diminishing wages, high prices. eee ne ene 22 Tehekov's \frantic efforts, half wild fools will nree Sisters” tomorrow night. at |increase the work endeavoring to keep | their Fourteenth Street playhouse. jup With the reduction. The faster|= >" x | Oo Charles Hopkins Te perennial fruit of the pen of th 4 | prices of piece work go. | Some of the workers have becom wise to the speed-up system and have Ivory Door”. _ ISOBEL ELSOM In “The Mulberry Bush” a new comedy by Edward Knoblock, open- ing tonight at the Republic Theatre. “Among the Married,” the new comedy by Vincent Lawrence which is scheduled for the Theatre Masque for next Tuesday, opened a week’s engagement at the Auditorium The- atre in Baltimore Monday night. Louis Calhern, Katharine Alexander, and Warren William are prominent in the cast. | - “The Mulberry Bush,’ Edward Knoblock’s new comedy opens tonight at the Republic Theatre and “Escape” by John Galsworthy will have its ‘premiere at the Booth. }gauged themselves accordingly and} |keep pace. They are in the minority and in spite of their comméh sense they are losers on account of the pace setters. |they work the lower they make the BOOTH W Mats. Wed. WINTHROP AMES presents JOHN GALSWORTHY'S Last’ Play with LIE HOWARD Pace Setters. | The A. C. M. have “huskies” who |— jare given good places and good con- |ditions and who are transfered from| |mine to mine as pace setters. Work- | ling fast, setting a new high mark| |that gives the bosses a’ chance to |make a general reduction that speeds |up the workers in order to keep their | | former wage level or drop below the | The Actor - Ma presents Lord HAMPD in Ibsen’s comedy existence level. “AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE” i ‘i 9. Thea., B'way at 62d St. The Ingersoll and Sullivam drills Hampden’s tate ace jused and handled formerly by two men | Matinees Wednesday and Saturday are being now used by one man. All| - ae ee through the mines less men are doing | Wm. Fox presents the Motion Picture more work for less pay. SUNRISE: WW MURNAU 30 | Economy Plans Made By |Communists in Moscow | (Continued from Page One; the Political Bureau in the publication of the manifesto and of the manifesto | itself, while the members of the Op- | position at the plenary meeting voted against the manifesto. | Confirm Reporters in Congress | “Furthermore the plenary session adopted a special decision regarding the discussion and confirmed the list |of reporters on the questions of the ‘agenda of the fifteenth Party Con- | gress.” i e * * = Publication of Thes MOSCOW Oct. 25.—The Plenary | session of the Central Committee and |the Central Control Commission |passed the following resolution: “Approving the decision of the Political Bureau of the Central \Com- |mittee and the Praesidium of the Cen- | tral Control Commission of the eight |of September 1927, referring to the | “platform” of Trotsky, Zimoviev and Moralov and.others, the Joint Plenary 'sesstom of ‘the Central Committee and the Central Control Commission re- ves that the theses of the Central ;Committee regarding the agenda of the Party Congress should be pub- shed within a month of the Party Congress at the latest and in accord- ance with the resolution of plenary meeting of the Central Committee end the Central Control Commission of August 1927, the theses approved by the ent plenary session should be published immediately after the work of the session is completed for discussion at Party |the Party press Correct Party Criticism. “The basis of the resolution of the plenary meeting of August 1927 will bs published in a supplement of the Prav regarding the ‘discussion leaflet? in which will be published the |counter-theses amendments to the Central Committee’s theses. | “The discussion will be conducted ‘along lines following the Tenth Party | Congress, ‘itt boing necessary that ry Party organization strictly see By HERMANN SUDERMANN : Symphonle Movietone Accompaniment What the Daily Worker Means to the Workers Laat Thea., 42d St., W. of B'way | Times Sq. ewicr DAILY, 2:30-8:30 More Encouraging Contributions to Our Emergency Fund. od Grossman, New York City ..... 1.65 A. Gresenthe, New York City ..1.00 Fodes, New York City Coney Island Br., Coney Island, EES UES TE Ra RR TA Oo Jersey City N. J. | Women’s Council, New York City 5.00 “Audience Quaked Delightedly.” —-Woollcott, World. RACUL eywest Saudder FULTON 8a. 46 8¢ Eres. £30 BUILD_ THE DAILY i WORKER Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2.30 |Brough, New York City ed) | Leo Kling, New York City - 10.50 | Machover, New York City . 2.00 (TELEPHONE J. Klarin, New York City 20.00 | A 2 C. Tollinson, New York Ci 1.25 Wm. Beck. New York City ....2.50/{! S. Smith, New York City . G. Maynard, New York City. Cloakmakers Council No. 2, New | } \ | | . York City Women’s Council No. 2, York {City <scoss J. Neise, New York City . Zorin, New York City . #3. 220.00 IF :| The NewPlaywrights Theatre 40 Commerce Street, near Sheridan Square Greenwich Village | YHE ONLY HOME FOR LABOR PLAYS IN AMERICA ——— Presents Paul Sifton’s play 4 i The first modern labor play to debunk company unionism and the | so-called prosperity in the Ford factories. < i 1 REPUBLIC Pes ST. | Mats, Wed.&Sat The Mulberry Bush with James Re , CIVIC REPERTORY THEA, ea 14 St. & 6 Ave. Prices 50c to $1.50 “ EVA LE GALLIENNE Tonight—“THE GOOD HOPE” Matinee- RADLE SONG" | The Theatre Guild Presents PORGY | Guild 2.3 ‘The Desert So | with Robt. Halliday & Eddie Buszell | 11th Month ae 2nd St. and Central Park , |Century West. Fyenings at 8:30. | Mats. Wed. and Sat., 2:30. Fhe LADDER: ! POPULAR PRICES. Best seats TRE, 48th st. | $2.20. CORT T. | E, of Bway. Eves. 8:30. Matt- | nees Wed. and Sat. at 2:30. | | i Theatre, 41 St. W. of B'way |National Tysa'50. ats Wed.eSate oo “The Trial of Mary Dugan” By Bayard Veiller, with ANN HARDING—REX CHERRYMAN WALKER 5786. i BELT Bakers Local No. 154, New York C0) RET SA alae So OR 20.00 Bakers Local No. 1, New York City (iach) BEB 25.00 | #) John Momoila, Cleveland, Ohio 1.00 |}) E. W. Theinert, Valley Falls, speed-up system devoting one’s life to the interests Henry Samek, Clifton, N. J. ... .5.00! | Polish Workers, Hegewisch, Ill. 15.00 | Louis Estness, Chicago, Ill. ....5.00/ H. Levin, Str. Nuc. No. 30, Chi- | What T. J. O’Flaherty says of The Belt in the Daily “A labor play that shows the havoc created by the industrial the evils of class collaboration, and the folly of BS) cae ae pean ae sonra Gis mica esas 5.00|4| of artists that nave undertaken the task of producing labor plays | Wm. Theinert, Valley Falls, | should be supported and encouraged by the worker | R. 1 fevseek ah sk | Help support this theatre and The DAILY WO tickets at The DAILY WORKER office, Worker | \ \ of a ‘benevolent’ master, this group RKER by buying | 108 East 14th Street. | CERNE OS ee eh see 2.00 B. Grenadier, Sir. Nue. No. 2 + Chicago, Ill. ..., +1.00 Pete Hartounian, Chicago, Nl. 2.00 M. Paulanskas, Chicago, Il. ....5.00 B. Grenadier, Str. Nuc. No. 29, Chicago, ll. A. Johnson, Chicago, Ill. .... W. D. Bratton, Chicago, Til. ., Margurite Miller, Str. Nuc. No. 6, Chicago, Ill. Helen Judd, Str. Nue. Chicago, Tll. (Communist) Party is waging a fight? Gus Wagner, Chicago, Tl. About two weeks remain until! Election Day. The Workers campaign to enlighten the worke ers on the vital issues that are involved. Are you collecting money among your shop-mates for thts What have you been doing to help this work? j like a glistening eel separating the ma that criticism of inner Party de-|Edward Hirschler, Chicago, Til...109|,. The Workers (Communist) Party needs your help at once. human caviar on its shores. The world-famous lower East Side is $ 1 (O01 @) » Which is absolutely necessfry,|7- Krawetz, Bayonne, N. J. ....1,99, Much work must be dene in the comparatively short time that mirrored. The beauty of squalor. has’ miraculously revealed itself. | * jSeneral analysis of the Party line,|J- Shaffer, San Antonio, Texas 1.00/remains—the printing of literature, the arrangement of ifidoor One would suppose that these unfortunate creatures would rise in | ELEMENTS OF POLITICAL | K taking of its practical experi-|Sam Sunshine, San Antonio, ‘ rallies, special editions of The DAILY WORKER and The Freiheit, * rebellion, that a prophet would spring up among them, stir their | EDUCATION —By A, Berd- ence, verifications of its déeisions and Texas 1,00 x blood and lead them to assault the strongholds of their masters. | nikov and A. Svetlov. the correction of its mistakes be H ete. A . Once such a thing did happen. Charney Vladeck* captured the | | Paper, $1.00 Cloth, $1.50 | directed not by groups formed around Don’t wait—do it at once, Thirty-fifth district for the socialist standard, .. ,” LENIN ON ORGANIZATION e | | Cloth, $1.50 ‘platform’ but by all Party mem- | Barkowitz, San Antonio, Texas hath Fill out the blank below with your contribution and forward ” S. Lifshitz, San Antonio, Texas bers. ” 4 - | a i it " UP Nts ee eateat business manager of The Jewish Daily For- | SSS ee “The Political Bureau of the Cen-| 1 Shaffer, San Antonio, Texas 10 ie eke ig bine so ge rege “ meee ward. ote—-S. G, + a | ena }| tral Committee and the Praesidium | John Gataveckas, Carnegie, Pa. 1. MAHER jy came are ign Liha tie ' ; HUNT i dv 4 , Carnegie, Pa. 1.00 . » : —SENDER GARLIN. || THE DAILY WORKER of the Central Control Commission, } Anna Gataveckas, Carnegie, Pa, 1.00 Enclosed please find my contribution of, seeesssfor the election ; Hel ares ns PUB, CO must see to it that discussion be con-| J. Zukauskas, Carnegie, Pa, . M4 This column will appear again on Saturday. Incfided among the | * . Jucted within the limits and the tone|M. Minevich, Carnegie, Pa. campaign.) My name 1) 65 6:0. vig sa WE Nen oyu cas eae adnias reviews will be “The Life and Death of Sacco and Vanzetti,” by Eugene | 33 First Street, New York. ompatible with the fact of Party! Geo. Lukosaitis, Carnegie, Pa. ..1.00 Lyons; “Henry Ward Beecher,” by Paxton Hibben; “Selected Papers,” by | nembership and the relations of com-| Walter Grusch, Plainfield, N. J. 1.00 Address 0.0.0... sseeeseeeeeeeeeeesee union affiliation , Bertrand Russel!. radeship.” E. Antkin, Plainfield, N. J. ....1.00 - Make all checks payable to Wm, W. Weinstone.