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ni Aine ain ain snacdchm THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1927 C..... F ° ° ° . gf fii Master ork iiss. or Leninism -— Against Rob Waldemaras House | ; / =) iii / Columbia W /Columbia\ T k : | Of Val ; | wable Documents; |) fe of Al =i rotskyism oe || K CLIES The Great | SR OE Suspect Polish Agents | Coooe on ak \ Composers Two Letters of Lenin Written {proletariat and the fate of the revo- | WAR - || ee AT HAVE FOUNDED THIS EMPIRE, fe ane en oe ion, é During the October Days, are Put | lution, To stake all this on an action] |...) °* see ties + 9.—Thie | COMMODORE VANDERBILT: An Epoch of American Achievement. By 34, ymphonie Fantastique, Opus 14, Before the Readers of the DAILY |in the next few days would be an act| |; vPPOScC'y _ politically anepiced) || Arthur D. Howden Smith. Robert McBride Co, $5. 35. BRAHMS: Quartet in A Minor, Opus 51, No. 2. Workerty This: ta;the: Birst.. ‘The. |of desperation”, | Valdeioavetage Lithuania while be| | TE great wealth accumulated by Cornel ; 26 MC + Garnier 7 pie. UE aS Second Letter of Lenin Will Be | The reply to this proclamati lear reee ae Be aa Sea peal dh taste ays eA has so awed Amer- 36. — Sonata in A Major, Opus 100, for Violin and | Pabtahed tn’, Momuuceaw's Daily bieeeeereaaey ae PE Panes was. in Siaeaaeaniiea to the) | ~ ican v ie that few of tl : WORKER. aya) Zhient) was Lenin’s letter to the| |e suse ese aces onl |i tavus Misses then 37. BRAHMS: Sonata in F Minor, for Pianoforte, Opus 5. $ i rae arty members, which constitutes a! aes agit ae pepere somes see ere seit dates 88. BEETHOVEN: Sonata in A, for ’Cello and Piano, S is-to be seen from the text, the|document of extraordinary, historical] | Sorted’ from Keron tadays || d builder” who “opened the contir Op. 69 letter from Lenin printed below | importance. felis More. tha? # siti persons | | ; sk was written exactly a week before; The letter is written in black ink| | ye, fe Snes: 39, BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 9 (Choral). tha Oetaber dgheaval eT land occupies four closely written] | Tere Teboreed, (9 have been arrested | s | 40. SCHUBERT: Quartet No. 6, in D Minor. The circumstances preceding the| Pages with hardly any deletions. | | ileyEne Wes inspited. by| | 4 ieee Senay ee ue econ 41. SCHUBERT: Symphony No. 8,in B Minor (Unfinished) beets She talewhar, Of penal , The Lenin-Institute. | | leaders of the pro-Polish faction, ae adapta paver cH the sree al to On the con- = : hae aaa ‘ utline, t ¢. 23,| * techie anaes ee faechae the author follows the present fash: in bi and devotes 42, MOZART: Symphony No. 35, in D, Op. 385. i087 (Ooh 10 by. tis old: Riaslan |POMRADES' E'tave ‘not yet been| lee ee self mainly to a study of the “soul” of the Comn hich mea || 43. MENDELSSOHN: Trio in C Minor, Op. 66. |style), Lenin, at the risk of falling|% able to obtain the Petrograd news! @——— ___¢,| that much of the book consists of petty personal de the author 44, SAINT-SABNS: Concerto in A Minor, 'Callo and Or- jin the hands of the counter-revolu- | papers for Wednesday, 18th October.|U.-who have been defeated in a de-| has gathered with the p se of “illuminating” character of his % as |tionary espionage, arrived in Petro-} Wh vas inf. y 7 3 S Rintoas ie oie subject. Among these details ar any page: f inary chestra, Op. 33. lead ead aopeeeedl at the moestine ot “ I was informed by telephone |cisive struggle in a meeting of tic! tions | iG 1 ih eata! oy pape iginary conversa e pe e ss ae Exwanrntas ICCC poi Z | Ss een “Cornecel” a is “Ma” ch a ae | 45, BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 2, in D, Op. 36. |the C. C. of the Russian Social-Demo-|mation ‘by Kamenev and" Zinoviev | longing te the Karte iy eens, Be" | easily have been sacrificed tor wees tinporeitaiegeial ae 46. BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 3, (Hroica) in E Flat, |]/<ratic Tabor |Party (Bolsheviki),| published in the “Novaya Zhizn”, ajtack Farty decisions which have no. ese Op. 55. Bl ety cane speek e wee paper which does not belong to the|been made public.” This halogieal t ; BS jase i : i ed upon the inevitability of|l-orty, I could not believe it. But all| Let the ild 3 : is “psychological” treatment has its value, however, for it shows 47. BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 4, in B Flat, Op. 60. insurrection and the necessity of| doubt was impossible, and I therefore | Our worker: Pangea: Buen the mentality of one of our most famous “captains of industry.” The 48. BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 5, in C Minor, Op. 67. ane ie er fees make use of the opportunity to send | iwill only gaini thereby. wa autiae ee him as a coarse, foul-mouthed, ignorant person, who was. ‘ 4 tk or it, C i abers ae . 5 rate a ev rea at " ‘ Fi 49. BEETHOVEN: Quartet in F Major, Op. 59, No. 1. against the tis ares of pee these lines ae she members of the) When ail documents are publishec Siac stot a never Tole sertcus 0k: care pelever 7) aaa B mee Fe st th Party on Thursday evening or Friday |the strike-brea f Zinoyie. co doctors and thought he could destroy his enemies b = 50. BEETHOVEN: Quartet in E Minor, Op. 59, No. 2. and Zinoviev, adopted the resolution| morning, for in face of the fact of{and Kameney wilt be rend Zinoviev | muring incantations over a photograph or a lock of their hair. He was 51. BEETHOVEN: Quartet in C Major, Op. 59, No. 3. drawn up by Lenin which declared | such a monstrous act of strike-break- | more plain fi. the seas eee niggardly, cheated his friends, exploited his wife, and Shi ‘helwas Heat | 52. BEETHOVEN: Trio in B Flat, Op. 97. that both the international situation |ing, silence would he a crime. ever, there may arise before the work-| Cr per ‘trust her into an insane asylum. At first he was igngsed by the 8 .Q . eRe ia ; of the Rus-| The more serious the’ practical re- lowi tones society of his day but his great wealth s 2 vide i 53. BEETHOVEN: Sonata in A (Kreutzer Sonata), Op. 47, ||| sian Revolution “placed armed revoit) sult, the more Seananathicand reds hata eesoent Ae a | all the social lackies. Bene Sev Sh: SURO Ne 4 | Let for Violin and Piano. on the agenda”: thi 1 yho hav AOR ES GIN Id a aN ae bell Rote Ss : . | “Recognizing that armed revolt ihe ee Beg ke committed | utive Committee of the All-Russian ee 4 ( onata quasi und fantasia, (Moon- |} ;, ind eltalio enh ARE Ls Giee te ane es hs Pe iS wn ; ing, the more|jederation of Trade Unions had de- In describing the methods by which Vanderbilt accumulated his for- 54. BEETHOVEN: ( light Sonata), Op. 27, No. 2. || fully ripe for it, the Central Com: |siceliy the stdieebreskers ment be | {ee After months of discussion anc | [Tee uhe, Author attempts to place him in as favorable a light as possible, ( Sonata Pathetique, Op. 13, for Piano- ||| mittee, instruets all Party organiz- |chrown out and the ee e | by a majority of over 80 per cent,| He a mits his selfishness _and unscrupulousness but also declares that se D: ‘0 d the m ; ‘ u s Nt out ai fore unpardon- | ecaen : ; | “Corneel was a buil i ( Tarte ations’to let this serve as the guid- |able it woald be to hesitate on Palliat preparations must be made for : y a vuilder. Whether consciously or unconsciously he sought 55. BEETHOVEN: Se f ing line and to consider and solve |ount of former “services” Vandaredite: strike, but that nothing must be i ue ad public.” And again: “He was honest in his dealings with all vo. : Quartet id FE Major, Op. 135. | all practical questions (the Soviet | by the strile-breake ieee public regarding the time fixed 4 fad Ge auet: go to any extent to make good his-word; he tried to pam 56. BEETHOVEN: Quartet in F Minor, Qp. 95. | Congress of the Northern district, | One can hardly believe it! It is |." the Stee Oo en lle eee, Let Finer ad po ris Services.” There is nothing in the record of Vanderbilt's 57. BEETHOVENY Symphony No. 1, in C Major, Op. 21. || the removal of the troops from | well known in Party circles that uel ‘s assume further that two members, | h pape reciane even in the castrated form in which they are told , : i 2 |under the dishonest pretext of hav ere to justify such statements. i i : | Petrograd, demonstrations of th 5 a ing bs . Again and again the auth rd: 59, BEETHOVEN: Quartet CM , n |Party has discussed the question ofjy + intone: stan iratic: ° ; 3 er econ sae et in Minor, Op. 18, No. 4. peaplavet Moaepw and Mikey trom |zevaie a eet }a ‘separate opinion,’ after the de- ces of piratical attacks, blackmail, broken faith, bribery of opponents, 60, BEETHOVEN: Quartet in B Flat, Op. 18, No. 6. | this view-point.” cexolt since September, Nobody es cision, not only write to local groups| ¢oFruption of legislatures, wrecking of rival roads, and looting of public 61. BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 6 (Pastoral) in F, Op. 68 Gute telling dag. Auth (odin lest meatier atthe ce teal regarding a reconsideration of the de- funds—any one of which acts if performed by a worker against a member 63. BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 7, in A Major 5 io | Getober, Zinoviev and Kamenev, whollparacns in question. “Now, however iene but also have their letters pub- of the ruling class would result in his being branded as a criminal. a MEROHOVE : ip. y a ‘ajor, Op. 92. ||| were in the minority, appealed to the| one can ayy OF the 6¥¥ of ‘the Soviet pee a the press not belonging to But the author calmly enumerates them and calls the perpetrator an i N: Symphony No. 8, in F, Op. 98. Harger Party organizations with the|Congress, two well-known Bolsheviki hey ing eee - assume, finally, honest man—for justice after all is only class justice. As for Vanderbilt 65. BEETHOVEN: Sonata Appassionata, in F Minor, Op. | well-known leaflet: “For the present|come forward against the majority | cisi an sari ives Ae the de-| serving the public, there is this to be said: where previously there were a 57, for Pianoforte. [Bement a this socuets eon-/and, what is quite clear, against the | cision ie aot BGR Ee i on a Rytiaa indiscriminately looting the resources of the steam: 4 m trary to the decision of t . C., the: egy ep eV ger os Yt st aioe z : » and oats and t il Is " es i * 6 66. BEETHOVEN: Quartet in G Minor, Op. 18, No. 2. chetietically opposea eevale i ee witha Deiat watever aL down the strike in face of the | more refined ro gan png TR gee tay Re ae abs A hae fi ® F : a , > | capitalists.” . ; ’ ons wi § c, 67. DEBUSSY: Iberia: Images pour orchestra, No. 2. | to the ges the question of te. seventer dailies! to she chides, feectal eine Cranial ier fees fal poosine freight and passenger rates, giving rebates th: the. great roa volt acqui Vv 5 i ious : , e} an ifi icy tow Pchasht f 7 i : Quartet in C Major, Op. 54, No. 2. On the 16th (29)October there took} It is quite clear from the text of breakers trom thelr midst?” direction and the improvement he made in the cadets end ae bes 70. BEETHOVEN: Quartet in B Flat, Op. 180. place a conference of the C. C. of the| the declaration of Kamenev and Zino-| srry regard to th : cost an infinitesimal percentage of the money looted god rolling stools | 71. MOZART: Concerto for Bassoowand Orchestra [Russian Social Democratic Labor|viev that they have turned againut |W . e question of re-| Many of these improvements which il i Eran ] , Op. 191. ieee volt * the railroad was obliged t . ; A |Party (Bolsheviki) with responsible |the C. C., fof otherwise tnac 7 | “" volt at the present moment, on the! itself accordin i ‘ iged to make 72. MOZART: S: Cc otherwise tneie trould ig to its chart er : Symphony No. 41, in C Major (Jupiter). iparty workers, at which, again|be no sense in their declaration; but |°%? of the 20th ‘of October, I cannot| And the only cost to Vanderbine ah pas oF out of the public treasury. 73. TSCHAIKOWSKY: Trio “To the Memory of a Great |{|against the two votes of Kamenev|what decision of the C. C. is combated |24ge from a distance to what extent] among the legislators in Albany. Coe oe Artist,” Op. 50. and Zinoviev, the resolution proposed|by them i i the cause has been injured by the . ‘ ip 0 Pp yy them is not mentioned. ' é ‘ There are a number of i i issi H by Lenin was adopted, that “the| Why? at ah proclamation in the the distortions Beaty st iis Maser atom ons and omissions. One of meeting welcomes. and fully supports F és i press not belonging to the Party. It ra 7 s what happened during the Civil War. Smith WE WILL SHIP YOU C.0. D. PARCEL POST ANY OF THE ABOVE |||the resolution of the Central, Com. c oh «ARE ‘publish a pec the]is beyond all question that great| ™Kes out Vanderbilt to have been an unselfish patriot. ‘The truth is that - MASTERWORK SERIES OR WE WILL BE MORE THAN GLAD TO ||| mittee and calls upon all organiza-| What situation arises here? practical damage has been done. In| he robbed the government of millions of dollars by supplying rotten trans- SEND YOU COMPLETE CATALOGUES OF CLASSIC AND ALL |||tions, as well as all workers and| In the most important fighting | Tet ‘0 Teetify the matter one must) Det® at exorbitant prices, and in addition endangered the lives of thousands FOREIGN RECORDS. soldiers, to-make all-round end Saten-|question, two. “noted Bolehevila,". on above all set up the unity of the| ° sh liers who were compelled to ride on these transports.. The documents ~ eva oheparation 268 tha waped devalt like eve a Ric’ eriical day Hed ras Bolshevik front by the expulsion of | i” this scandal are given in detail by Gustavus Myers. The only answer ; c allt £5, sopport:the ‘eeplee Web an: for top v A c the strike-breakers. : that Smith has to the charges are that Vanderbilt was already t Z. al h European Ameri R d Co. \this parpecs by the Central Cotnmit: | ory Bonin the Bress not belonging! The weakness of the ideological| t? have done such a thing. ly too wealtgegs p can Record Co.' [ts pervote by the Cents Committ the Farts and in fac in a rapt! rgument agai the reve wil oe ie ~ INU: pee id convic- | which in the given question goes nand aid : PAK a. | 86 — 2nd AVENUE (Dept. C) NEW YORK CITY. |} tion that the Central Committee and|in hand with the bourgeoisie cgamst |y/, (Pe more striking when we drag| | Ce eee is of the part played by Vanderbilt in the looting the Soviets will indicate in good time|the workers’ party, an attack on alpen”. the light. A few days ago as aren road—one of the slimiest pages in the history of American aaah 3 the most favorable moment and the|decision of the Party Central which 1 sent an article on this subject to the| Capital, Smith makes out Vanderbilt to have been the honest man while ee ‘. ‘ WANTS NA most suitable means for the action”.|has not been published. Rabotchy Putj,” and if the editor Gould and Fiske were the villains. He admits that Vanderbilt bribed the Reactionary Mexican VY GRAFT PROBED. | As the practical centre for conduct- i i [does not consider it possible to pub-| legislature and worked in collusion with the malodorous: 9 That is a thousand times more con: lorous’Boss Tweed bi WASHINGTON, Dec. 9, — Rep.jing the revolt there were elected:|temptible and a million times more iy suena Party members will he excuses him on the ground that the other fellows used thé patie taco : Leader Is Executed pela (D.) e erates today |Sverdlov, Stalin, Djershincky, Bub-| injurious than, for example, all the sacle Sera an Sapien thy its The most important omission is his failure to dis Vanderbil ‘5 roduced a resolution in the house|nov and Uritzky. roclamations of a Plech: Ge ee ee ee eee? labor policy. Th i i ecuss Vatideltnies EL PASO, Tex., Dec. 9. — The ex- tae Gs of a special} On the same day there was formed renee Tot beloAbiHe: eine cies ma ae ret a {pardon the] down Ne Wiiee as peeved AHN ripley grain beat ecution of the counter-revolutionary | Committee to investigate the charges|the Military Revolutionary Commit-|the years 1906 and 1907, which the| 7.) S™suments proceed along two} work them long h i i e could from them and leader Mercedes Ganao by Mexiean|™ade by Rear Admiral Thomas|tee in the Petrograd Soviet. Party do sharnly Saale’. "At that tines: First, on the “expectation” of] boats Myers raya: FSR a ts when he was interested in steam- federals near Saltillo removes the last | Magruder, deposed commandant of| In these days, so decistve for the) time, however, it was only a question the Constituent Assembly. Let us! ers toiled for him fourteen to ie ply eg append othen ae possibility of rebel disturbances near the Philadelphia navy yard. Magruder | revolt, there appeared in the “Novaya |of an election; now, however, it is a wait a bit, perhaps we shail be able to years.” The same policy was co eee eure a day at $1.50 a day for many the United States border, according charged ‘waste and inefficiency”, ex- | Zhizn” of the 17th (30th) of October | question of insurrection aiming at the hang on. till then. That: is, the whole the result was a rebellion i epee anal he switched to railroads and to a dispatch from Saltillo today quot- isted in the navy, in a magazine ar-jan article by W. Basarov discussing| seizure of power! argument. Perhaps we shall be able} the old Ne ion in the year 1877, one year after the death of ing local Mexican officials. ticle he ae. No action was taken; the contents of the leaflet issued by} Can one think of a more treacher- a dragon with the hunger, with the After the death of C i is i rite sanual letters fohilaned: by an on the resolution. “two noted Bolsheviki” against an ous, blacklegging daly 62 woting than, Apsley oe ee exhausted hk Whe tne Prciieea ornelius his ill-gotten gains were passed on to his action, and on the 18th (31st’ ¥ ;’| patience o e soldiers, with the Fs anner doubled the famil El Paso Mexican newspaper today (81st) of Oc-|in such a question, after the adoption A derbilts are h ily fortune. Today the Van- told of fighting between federals and| WON’T HANG FOR KILLING tober there appeared in the same|of the decision by the Centre. to com- measures of Rodsjanko to go over to are among the bluest of the blue blood, large owners of stock in o 4 2 atee a ante he IAwione priate ion 4 a the Germans (perhaps with lockouts)!| the great trusts that dominate the country, int ji i . reactionaries near Degollado, Jalisco, SNOOPER. pap y Kai v on the “ac-| bat this decision, which has not been} p, A ¥, intermarried with the royalt - and Nombre de Dios, Durango. g HAGERSTOWN, Md., Dec. 9. — tion”, in which he declared in his own | made public, in face of the Rodsjan- is nage perpen sa ed poh te geoceae th eae economic power and social prestige to pervale Mexican federal forces operating in | Reginald B. Walters, slayer of Hunter and Zinoviev’s name that it was|kos and Kerenskys, in a paper which | ;1 Spee " pias a famil t ita BORER GY CODER eee Mtl Stout the ayaa ihe inter! F ing rein. |B. Stotler, prohibition chief of their duty, “in the given circum-|does not belong to the Party? the Reuaane WY. GOURD eeneecaey, Cu Dues. the interior of Jalisco are being rein- | E. » prohibition chief of west-| «+ noes, to protiounce against: afly at- eiong, yt Secondly, loud-crying pessimism. forced. }ern Maryland, was found guilty early testi hs tien,‘ hie inftialivs x ale onl te Gtiame for me were} with the bourgeoisie and Kerensky : a " ve 2 t $ wi he a , > x * 2 pie) us everything is bad. Wi i- E Save Greco and Carrillo! ‘was out one and a half hours. cea eae Aelia a le a e concen them. I at right | lists Remind is agaaeetily ore: BALLYHOO! By Beth Brown. The Dial Press, $2.50. 8 , out, that I no longer regard these two Hy 1 Aa yi a ip comtadeay and x ill fight with pared, with the workers everything is BALLYHOO serves not only as a title for this novel of carnival life, but 7 eae seco. fae ipl hi oad, The “pessimists” shout them- does also describe : a all means, both in the C. C. and at v the contents. The plot, tho oft used, is bl 3 3332 S| the Coiizteas, dos: the eecdlaicn af be Hogras: Sebstang eee tery On the eve of her wedding, finding her prospective iabby. in on these two from the Party. fr bee : Ned je matter, while je} one of her bridesmaids, the poor thing (but of an old southern famil: For a workers’ Party which life oe hatly erectile ts Uayesey biti ee varae oe carnival, the lowest rung of theatrical life. y) confronts more and more frequently| <¢yie-breal ‘ - p iserable wages force the girls to—well you know what—but b ‘ with the necessity of a revolt is in- Seer cui eae Seieane ing tells!’ She remains unsoiled and unsullied to the very happy pipe. capable of solving this hard task, if| ’ : ; FS “Y| end that finds her name in huge glittering lights on Broadway. Which mupebiarad decisions of the Centre,|apRIOUS times, serious tasks, seri-| ®°°S *® Prove something. : “ ‘ after their adoption, are combated in| J , . Perhaps this explains it: sy ty “ Ve Be pe : t ! . ps this explains it: Beth Brown is “the auth ar 1 We want to distribute a million copies of the press not belonging to the Party, Aah Ja tak will be solved, the ical books, a well known writer of short stories rae pilaf a i ; the taaflét Every District Executive bringing vacillation and confusion workers will rally together, the ‘pea- scenarist.” I’m sure the publishers are not deceiving us. This story- / 5 5 into the ranks of the fighters. , im-| Could well have sold to one of the current women’ i Hs j f Every City Executive Let Mesare: Zinéy ond i y{3ants’ revolt and the extreme im A n’s magazines and the j < . Py Every Section and Sub Section yi bate ot ere Miss Act patience of ‘the soldiers at the front plot is the very same one of a thousand “successful” movies. 3 W - Every Shop and Street dozen people who “have lost thetr| "wl (#l#0 do thelr share! We will close The jacket tells us that “carnival life has never before been dt i Down ith Govern: ry ? Nucleus nent é dat nt SHARE om vd " +e 2p the ranks more firmly, the pro-| a novel.” I'll go further. It has not been done yet.—W. aad i ¢ : ! ng Dp mdidates for! teriat must tridinph y ALT CARMON, ' ° ¥ the Constituent Assembly. Workers | ~ ment By Injunction! | Must Get onthe Job Now! | ns on, fie vars. for "tt er INSIDE DOPE ON “THE FATHERS” 4 a baad ae Wie, "Thi aa bs! \. : : Reo mera Z “ft fs permitted members of the C Aomahe rea aisinel » eiaely JOHN PAUL JONES: Man of Action. By Phillips Kussell. Brentano, $6 J + . sys, bb <3 os i Amely nt in the struggle against the Let us distribute a million leaflets a TT >uti’’ of Qct. 19, 20 and 21, Tae book is less the story of John Paul Jones, adventurer, than an insida | Injunction! i Bouck What Are These? 1927.—Kditor. picture of the backstairs politics of the American revolution. : Vs * * * Boston ave bought " ri e j ‘ As a study of an individual, Russell's book, despite the thoro and. Hel rh Detroit 50 000 More Than 260 Foreign very competent research in d, somehow misses fire. It is a scraps elps organize a movement to smash the ’ errs A bag of incidents in Jones’ life, gleaned from Jones’ writings, from previ+. f : edie pecialists in Employ : : : : Bs, P { Injunctions! ig New York sach (for cash) x ous biographies, from the records of the continental congress, from the 4 é < Of USSR Ficures Show military and naval ives of the United States, France, and tussia; bub i n 2 4 ? wostow. ne t it inno way fuses these incidents into a clear pictyre of the man Jones, f . Exposes the A, F. of L. bureaucracy that is What AreYou Go ng to Do? whan, 14 Sende ihticten tab. bop iigd das ibideba ad teppinre Pepe helix ge eda : anton’ With: lip’ wekvinn-feyithe A A OStGe dovtatet Be rtd K picture of the intrigues, the petty jealousies ete., of period, presented, . iia p : ice in the face of the ana techie by HOY gh Mapper not in the form of the Harry Elmer Barnes type of iconoclasm, but in an. iggest union smashing campaign in the his- Order Thru Your . by Way of consul-a-| honest informative way.—H. F. tions, expert advices, invitations of in- tory of the American Labor Movement. - A * * dividual foreign engineers and tech- 2 District Office nicfans to work in the Union, etc. a * * * dena ves ; At the present time, according to BOOKS RECEIVED—REVIEWED_ LATER. 3B) = ¢ bal isti - : oar . Tq Our Party Must Take the Lead in the Strug- exit ocang IOP eri me cescalae 2 oh of National Gernay atu s "8 One ued eas well chit By F ye With An Introduction = if . ; S r ‘ Marry y Henry Morgenthau. Association 8S. ee gle to Save the Unions. R., there are over 260 foreign special- is eis { A Freiheit acicoe dresses up for the| ‘ts, ineluding 127 engineers, 62] Money Writes: An Accusation. Ry Upton Sinclair. Albert & Charles ©) DAILY WORKER-Freiheit Ball on| skilled workers, ete, working in the Boni. Also published by the author, Long Beach, Cal. Illustrated December 17th: He is met in fron: |Union. The average month}y earnings of a rummage shop by a DAIL‘ |of foreign specialists — engineers WORKER feature writer who regis-| ‘orking in the U.S.S.R. amounts t: ters mild astonishment. Who ar} 511.5 roubles; foreman—about 250 those two celebrities? You will mec: | roubles, and skilled workers — about them at the ball, 170 roubles. Marching Men: The Story of War. By Stanton A, Cobientz, by Arthur Zaidenberg. Unicorn Press. Wedding: A Novel. By Melvin Levy. Unicorn Press American Policy in Nicaragua, By Henry L, Stimson. Loud Speaker: A Play. By John Howard Lawson. Macaulay Co. Workers (Communist) Party, National Organization Dept. 43 E. 125 St. N. Y,