Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW YORK, TUESDAY. Page Two HGQVER STALLS ON FARM RELIEF Brookhart His Pal in This Fake Issue (Continued from Page One) promis interpreted them, at the White House Hoover's request, nmittee to start nery which is ex- ont a bill before et informed me the committee would have no difficulty ining hi: speeches ai not ira as to kind of a bill, the president . He told me, however, that the work ‘of the committee pro- » will cooperate.” said. ne at Does That Mean? manifested ailure of the down a specifie pro- to le Senator Caraway, Democrat, president posal. aid he ha d experienced in ascertaining dent meant in his s during the re- In answer to a question by Cara- y said he did not believe any statement op- specific plan of farm Brookhart, Hoovers’ Pal. “Before we conclude these hear- ings, if the president has not volun- teered vefore then, I we ask him if he has any ions to make,” Senator Heflin, Democrat, Alabama, said. The argument was ended when Senator Norbeck, Republican, South Dakota, announced that Brookhart, who’ ¥ to be the first witness, o the presi- and there- was “doubtless cl dent than any one cl: fore him. Hil LOWT FIRM ADMITS FAKERY Printer’s Mark Shows “Minutes” Too Fresh Page One) evidence. She ion and only after her req was reinforced by that of Judge Whittaker, did the socjalist. Hillquit permit her to ex- amine the minutes. On the minute book, Miss Cohen notiééd' the inscription of the printer who ‘made the book, and-then the fun began! Because inquifiés at the printer disclosed the (Continued fron minutes . offered a: was. refusi unfortunate (for Hillquit) fact that the minute book which was to have been re- posing in Hillquit’s office for over two years, was only sold by the printer February 18, 1929—or—only 2 days before the hearing held about a month ago, Feb. 27, 1929. Disavows The Forgery. Attorney Boudin promptly sub- poenaed this printer, the owner of the firm of Broun-Green, 44 John St., who was ordered to appear as witness at yesterday’s hearing. But the printer promptly told Mr. Hill- quit that he had been ordered to court and why. Knowing that the printer on the witness stand, with his business records open to cross examination by Boudin would clearly bring out things discreditable to his office, Mr. Hillquit thought fast, and told his partner Umhey to go to court and declare that Bluestein’s testi- mony about the age of the minutes be changed. Umhey, therefore, be- _ fore the hearing, got up and declared that Bluestein made a serious error at the last hearing, that the minutes were not written when the “meeting of the corporation” was held two years ogo but that the minutes were written only on Feb, 18, 1929, and that Mr. Hillquit’s office had the minutes only since then and not for, two years. He forgot to mention that he himself had been in court when) Bluestein testified so “incorrectly” | and that he—Umhey—had forgotten 1 to correct him on the spot. H . Hillquit Stays Away. In asking for the stand to call his own colleagues a liar, Umhey made i sure to rush to the stand as soon ' as possible, before Boudin was given the opportunity to call the printer to testify. titude from his | |Giant Plane Dwarfs Qthers Both in Size and < Bombing Potentiality Al ASH POSSIBLE The huge “Patrician,” at + his trans-ocean flight. of 10,000 feet in 20 minutes. Si TO APPEAL CASE OF TAPOLCSANY! Labor Defense Calls on Labor for Solidarity (Continued from Page One) cr of;which is the Third Communist International, then you will be my brother and fellowman.’ ” This is the basis Zor cancellation f Tapolesany’s citizenship, and he is now facing the danger of deporta- tion to Hungary, where he would be imprisoned or executed by the Hor- thy regime. Part of Hoover Policy. “The decision in the Tapoicsanyi case,” declares the I. L..D., “sh the policy of the Hoover admi iration in its efforts to crush the |i: militant labor movement, and which at present is centered ially on \the foreign-born workers. This case is of tremendous significance, as it is a first step in the move to de- ve al! foreign-born workers in the Communist Party of citizenship. The government is co-operating with the fascist governments of |Kurope with this threat of joss of jcitizenship and deportation of for- cign-born workers who fight egainst fs ” was obtained by the Hungarian cen- sorship, which intercepted the letter from Tapolesanyi to his brother in Hungary. The letter was *+urned over to the United States depart- {ment of justice, with the result that the Federal District Court in Pitts: burgh has cancelled Tapolesanyi citizenship papers, which he took out in 1920, on the grounds of “belief in Communist principles.” Werkers Resent Decision. The decision of the Pittsbureh |Federal District Court. revoking the citizenship of John Tapolesyani, a harber of Harmony, Pa., because of | “belief in the principles of Commu- jnism,” has aroused intense resent- ment among thousands of workers here. Speaking in the nanie of 40,- 600 workers and affiliated organiza- tions, the New York District of the International Labor Defense, through Rose Baron, secretary, yesterdey de- clared: “This decision of the Federal Dis- trict Court is potentially one of the most serious blows ever struck at the American working class. If this decision is allowed to stand, it {means that tens of thousands of militant foreign-born workers, what- lever their political affiliations, face \revocation of their citizenship papers and deportation to their na- tive countries. Italy, Hungary, Poland, Rumania and other fascist countries practi- cally means death, I. L. D. Condemns It. “John Tapolesyani has been a citizen for nine years. His citizen- iship is now being revoked at the |direct instigation’ of the bloody Horthy-Bethlen regime of Hungary. Once more we see the close connec- tion between the ‘democratic’ United States government and the openly fascist governments of other coun- tries. The New York District of the International Labor Defense condemns in the strongest terms the unprecedented action in this case which has as its ultimate aim the disruption of the militant working class movement in this country and the deportation of thousands of workers, “All workers must be alive to the danger that threatens them. This decision of the Federal District | Court must be reversed. Tapol- csyani must not be deported, Only | the workers, under the leadership of the International Labor Defense, jean force a reversal of this out- |Tageous decision, This is not only |a blow at the foreign-born workers. ‘It paves the way to outlawing all | The “Patrician” And deportation to | Another humorous aspect of the|militant working class activity. We matter wes that Hillquit didn’t have |call upon all class-conscious work- the nerve to appear in court after so crs to repel this attack on them, De- a son of the scab union head Schles- inger to court instead | Taking cognizance of the spread- ig unemployment and seeking to n it to the benefit of his own op for the dispensing of religious pium,” Rev. C. Everett Wagner gi the Union Methodist Episcopal Church on 8th St., Sunday advised jobless to pray heartily. “It will ju the necessary strength to employment,” said the well (priest, as he looked over his ation. his does not mean that prayer thought of as a job-insurance YS apd in itself,” con- e preacher, “Not for s much bungling and sent a law clerk,| mand the restoration of citizenship te Tapolesyani! Fight all efforts to deport him!” | JOBLESS TOLD TO PRAY {Let ‘em Ask God” Priest Tells Bosses minute do I believe that the people who pray have the jobs, and that it is those who do not pray that are jobless. But when prayer is con- ceived as one’s consciously putting himself in fellowship with the Infinite, it gives him stamina to look for more jobs, spurs his intel- ligence and sustains his hope.” As Wagner’s flock contains a goodly number of employers his re- | marks met with a welcome. Prayers performed by the unemployed are so |much cheaper than unemployment insurance, paid for by the bosses, the comment ran, as they shook his hand after the ceremonies. DAILY WORKER, right, towering beside a plane of the same type Lindbergh used for t a world’s record by bearing 36 passengers to an altitude are used for army tran rt. imil plan The Open Letter and the New Party Line By HERBERT The open letter which the Amer- ican Party has received from the Communist International is not an isolated incident in the activities of Comintern in the last y is untess the resistance of the working el to the reduction of their stand- ard of living and the speed-up and the intensification of labor, is over- come. The capitalist class realizes full well that if the training of the connection with the young workers as participators in . The pi received | capitalist rationalization, in the ra- open letter tly tionalized factories is begun early, from the present wi this process is carried on system- capitalism which ha: ly, their hopes are that they the third period of post- wa: alism. Only if we view the line in the cpen letter and relate it properly to the analysis of the third period, will we lly understand what the new line is, which this let- ter formulates for the American Party. The present period represents for pective for greater, more d struggles, struggles not confined to the boundary of one country, ‘but reverberating thruout the system of capitalism, In recent years we have already seen some indication of these strug- gles, and if we relate them and clas- sify them, we will see that there has been a tendency for these strug- gles to repeat themselves on a world seale and to constitute a general in- ternational conflict and sharpening drawn into the factories in all de- contradiction within the capitalist | partments, replacing the adult work; stem as such. For example, if we | ers, replacing even formerly skilled examine the coal mining industry,| and semi-skilled workers. We can, we find there a whole series of gi- therefore, see that in the present pe- gantic class conflicts riod, in every direction in which we have not been accustomed td in the|/turn, we find the young workers period following the period of severe,| playing a tremendous role. The acute outbreaks. We had a mining question that our movement will strike in England which, for dura-|have to answer, which we are an- tion and intensity, set a new mark! swering already at this minute, is in the class struggle in England and| whether that role will be for the which resulted in the first general| workers, for freeing the workers strike in any important country in the present period. But this conflict in the mining in- dustry was not confined to England. We have seen similar struggles, not of the same duzation, not of the same intensity, not involving equal- ly large numbers of magses, but con- flicts of the same general charac- ter, in Czechoslovakia, in Germany, in Poland and in the United States. Therefore we see that the line of the open letter means for our Party, means for the Communist movement in the United States the mobiliza-/ tion of the Party and its prepara- tion for leadership of the workers in the struggles which the third pe- . riod is bringing out, against the war danger and for the struggle for the interests of the working class. The New Line and Youth Work. | ment. This new line has significance not| Ratioualization Drews Youth Inte only for the Party, but also for our} Industry. youth movement which follows the] Comrades, the process of ration- same general policy as the Party. alization itself creates the basis for And we will have to understand the| {he winning of the young workers problems and tasks of the youth to the class struggle. That is one of movement in the light of the open | the inevitable contradictions of capi- letter and the line formulated there- | talism in the present period. The in. Any other analysis would not only fall short but would actually | miss a correct understanding of the} role of the young workers in the present period and of the tasks that confront the Communist movement in this connection. This matter was discussed at the Sixth Congress of the Communist International and at the Fifth Con- gress of the Communist Youth In- Ss di een charac- | at: a working class as to permit the lans being carried out successfully. Furthermore, we know that one of the consequences of rationalization is substitution of youth labor and of child labor for adult labor. I have seen some of the proofs from a book in the auto industry, that I believe that the International Publishers will soon put out, and there the process of replacement of the adult workers by the young workers is recounted in great detail, and it is a very interesting study. The auto industry in this respect is a pioneer in capitalist rationalization insofar as measures the capitalist is already putting in. Young young girls, are being the capitalist class. As Marxists, we know that it is inevitable that the working class, and consequently also the young workers, shall eventually align themselves in the struggle against capitalism. But we are not fatalists. We know that this process |must be accompanied by conscious action of the most advanced section of the working class organized in the Communist Party. We know that it is possible, thru proper mo- bilization of the working class, to accelerate certain processes in the capitalist system. And our business is to organize and to so direct our efforts as actually to accelerate this process and to ensure winning over its position—and even a success in the economic strengthening of capi- talism, inctease in production, etc., —this is leading to an extension of the general crisis, to the general erisis, to the general contradictions in the capitalist system. And we see that the rationalization in its eifect on the young workers actu- ally accelerates the process of win- | ternational, and at these two con-|ning the young workers to class gresses the analysis resulted in the | struggle and provides the objective | general formulation that in the pres: basis for us to win the young work- lent period one of the outstanding ers t> the Communist movement. features in all the struggles in which Let us state very briefly what these we will engage will be the struggle results are. | between the revolutionary movement |and imperialism for the youth. This |is not based on any sentimental ap- |peal to the young workers or to/| the youth because of the youth, but | is based on the requirements of the | _ present situation. | The Sixth Congress gave more de- First of all, large masses of young workers azz being drawn into indus- iry from various categories, from among the youth which pre- | tailed and firmer instructions on the ‘question ef winning the youth to \the Parties than any previous con- (gress or plenum of the C. I. has done, The problem of winning the) youth follows directly from the war danger und the process of ration- _ alization bound up with it. We know that no talk of preparing for the | war danger and against the bour- geoisie on the part of the working class is possible unless the factors which will be engaged in the com- ing war are analyzed and the pre-_ parations made to align those fac- tors on the side of the working class against imperialism. | War Danger, Rationalization and | the Youth j The bourgeoisie knows very well | that in the war of the future el well as of the present, it will be) the youth, the young workers, who will fight that war. Their efforts are in the direction of preparing the young workers for participation in this war as efficient soldiers for capitalism. Our efforts are in the direction of preparing the young workers for participating in the war as efficient soldiers for the working class, And therefore there is this fundamental conflict over the youth. In the processes of rationalization it is required that the workers, the labor forces shall be well trained, efficient and docile, Capitalist ra- tionalization cannot be successful tribution in press, Send in your DAILY WORKER 20 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK Plea: NAME woeee ADDRESS.. To arrive not later than, will train such a labor force, such | from the capitalist system, or for) Te ee ee DISTRIBUTE A BUNDLE OF Daily Worker Order a bundle of Daily Workers for dis- in union meetings and all other places, where workers congregate. ‘This is one of the best means of familiar- izing workers with our Party and our ORDER A BUNDLE TODAY! -coples of The DAILY WORKER at the rate of $6.00 per thousand. % 4 I am attaching a remittance to cover same, ON “I'M ALONE” Dry Law Sinking Up-}| held by Congressman (Continued from Page One) | adds a further strain to a situation already strained by the belligerent | use of shipping board ships to drive | British lines from the profitable Havana trade, and the Still more ir- ritating commentary on both sides that followed. Chairman O’Connor of the ship-| ping board stated flatly a few weeks ago that the U. S. regarded trade with Cuba as a U, S, field, and would not permit British competition | to win anything there. The British shivowners essociation has decresd that no old British ships shall be sold to the U. S., but scrapped in-| | Stead, no matter what the expense. | Comment amon¢ interested offi- cials of “neutral” lezations here runs to speculation as to whether. law or no law. the I’m Alone would have sunk if che had flown the U. S. flag. Pee ne) “England’s Another.” Rerresentative Hamilton h of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs stated today: “If the boat was outside the 12- MARCH 26, 1929 polic: bus Stick” policy. Among the reporters was Louis French Fascisti Here Mourn A committee cons French government preparing the dead imperialist general. Foch’s Death ing of representatives of the reactionary @ letter of sympathy to the widow of “Peace?” Quit Your Kiddin’, Col. Stimson Tells “Daily” (Continued from Page One) be the greatest problem facing the Philippine: “To maintain free trade them,” he answered quickly: Succeeding Maj. General Wood as governor-general of the Philippines, Stimson immediately substituted the conciliating the native | “Big of class for Wood’s with peasants—miserably exploited, ter- | rorized and ground under the iron heel of American imperialism. The interview ended, we were ‘ushered out of the library. “Sorry I can’t be vocal now,” Stimson said hypocritically, Oar * with the brisk- politician. Medium Stimson is brisk, ness of the Looks like a hardware merchant in Northampton, Mass. Wore gray, al- jheight, hair cut like a schoolboy. | ITALY WORKERS “Will Vote Mussolini Out With Guns” (Continued from Page One) really count {n Mussoliniland,” he | added. Defend U. S. S. R. “No, we do not want war! We want to deferd with all the weapons at our disposal the Workers’ Fath- erland, Soviet Russia, from the at- tacks of capitalism and fascism the world over! We want to break down forever the yoke of fascism and the capitalist regime with the weapons of class struggle! “In the attempt to rofl up a biz vote, by hook or crook, for fascism, the catholic church was used, and the agreement with the vatican had as one of its purposes making an active ally out of the church. From the renorts that have reached us of the voting we can see that the high officials of the church were. in many instani the first to cast their votes, thus helping to enroll more yotes by setting an example to their followers. Gun Instecd of Ballot. “That the election shows weakness and not strength is evident from the mile limit when first ordered to| Lang, old-timer and “political” re- Leeda 2 al- fact that not only 136,000 voted ‘no,’ heave to, our coast guard officers | Porter of the American, ae igs rae Se a ures in spite of the minimum penalty of e iar fs “Say, colonel,” he said informally, | aceareg Sithiend ees sane ave RIS | plackli tracism, but also be- in their zeal may have exceeded | y Po Lapues’ oth sbuttating, Shave DESAI eee eee their powers, but at that no serious objection could be raised by Great | '° come around your way Britain, which during the world war | seized neutral shins on the high seas | on the very susvicion of the ultimate | destination of cargoes. ‘Epstein, Olgin, Abrams | to Speak from WKBQ|>» Milech Epstein, labor editor of | the Freiheit, wil! speak over Station W. K. B. Q. at 10 o'clock tonight. William Abrams, also of the Frei- heit, will give an address from the same station on Thursday at 5 p. m., and on Saturday, at 2, Moissaye Olgin, editor of the Hammer, Yid- | dish Communist magazine, will speak. | ‘Hold District Pioneer Conference Saturday | Tasks of the Pioneer movement | will be discussed at a conference | arranged by the District Bureau of the Young Pioneers of America on Saturday, 2 p. m., at the Workers Center, 26 Union Sq. The confer-| ence will be continued Sunday. |__ Representatives of Pioneer groups, | | Young Communist League and Com- | | munist Party units, Women’s Coun-| Protective Union, Local 8} vester-| \cils and language bureaus are ask-|/day continued picketing open shop | |firms employing non-union window cleaners. the union were arrested. jed to send representatives. | viously did not engage in industry, | from agricultural youth, clerical oc- | cupations, etc., and also from youth | industrial occupations. the young workers for the working ly, the young workers are being|the 47th St. police station. jclass, for the revolutionary move-j drawn into the heaviest, most basic! were Joseph Cohn, Wiliam Boyko, industries in the country, precisely | Leo Kimmel, Jack Brown and Harry | those industries where the contradic-| Homleck. Boyko has been arrested |tions of capitalism express them-|six times in the last three days. |selves in the sharpest form, as inj ae textile, and in mining, where Ninth Precinct police court, where the proportion of young workers is|they were arraigned before Magi- | | already very large. |this we notice various other Pro} | cesses which working together with the processes of rationalization bring | tion to about the same general result, (the| cleaners from picketing non-union | | shifting of industries to the south} shops came up before Judge Ford | for. example), the industrialization | in the Supreme Court, Special Term, |of the south, the attempt of indus-|Part 1, yesterday, the motion for try to move from the large into |~ he corrected. | strate Goodman. “how did you get this fellow Quezon | on (Manuel Quezon, leader of Filipino senate, who betrayed the in- |dependence movement to American imperialism.) Stimson laughed. “We just gave |him a square deal,” playing with his | watch chain, “How soon do you think hilippines will get their independ- \ence?” he was asked. “Oh, you mean self-government,” “You know there’s a lot of difference between independ- ence and self-government. You see, first we must teach the Philippines to take care of themselves, and that, | imperialism as of course, will take a long time.” | wrapped in a bundle under his desk. cai SCO Imperialist agent for U. S. cap- italism. Has big law practice, and |doesn’t give it up, either, while lerushing millions in the possessions of the American empire. Lawyers, law clerks, stenographers and office boys scuttle through the many in- |ner offices. Millions in fees. Stim- |Son was former law partner of Elihu Root. the the pe ee | Stimson leaves this morning for Washington to “report to his chief,” a man who has shown himself to be Stimson’s former \chief, William Howard Taft, under as staunch an exponent of American | cause millions of the ‘no’s’ have not been exvressed in the ballots, for the workers know that the best way to express their ‘no’ is with a gun and the overthrow of the fascists. | “From exverience in previous elec- tions in Italy it can fairly be deduced that most of the 8,000,000 ‘yes’s’ were obtained by coercion, both by actual force by the blackshirts at this election and by the example of |previous elections during which the |terror exerted by the blackshirts served as an example for anyone who dared to oppose the fascisti at an election. Workers Enraged. “There are no reasons to indicate With that Stimson disposed of the| whom he served as secretary. of |that the workers can possibly be ;Subjection of ten million of Filipino! war, CONTINUE PICKET Five Union Members Arrested | te ERE A | WINDOWWASHERS ‘tisca scainst chicago Journeymen Barbers CHICAGO, March 25.—Efforts are being made to mobilize “public |sentiment” against the union bar- | hers and prevent the journeymen |from obtaining their demands | threats of $1 haircuts. The journey- Members of the Window Cleaners men barbers are demanding a five- Five active members Concentrating on the Roxy and ee was engaged in various non-| Capitol Theatres in Broadway, five Consequent- pickets were arrested and taken to They The workers were taken to | lished with youth labor as the main| five strikers were remanded until | efforts of capitalism to strengthen | Source of labor. In connection with April 8. eee When the hearing for an injunc- | window | restrain striking small cities, the establishment of |= | new industries, the agrarian crisis, | ‘the shut-down in immigration cut- | | ting off large supplies of unskilled | \Tabor, All these have the same gen- | ‘eral effect as the yationalization | | process, | | (To Be Continued) { Of all the classes that stand face | |to tee with Cie bourgeoisie. today | | the pro-etar a really revo- | lutionary class—Karl Marx (Com- | munixt Manifesto). front of the large factories, Workers Correspondence and crry * seeeeeeenaee What Is to the body? Rhuma-Jell circulation. from RHEUMATISM, HOW DO YOU APPLY IT? — You smear the salve on piece of cloth, and apply the same way as you do plaster. For Only $1.25 (the price of a jar) You can convince yourself of this wonderful salve, what it does, and what a quick help it is. Send a check and we will send the salve to you. If not, come for it personally, or telephone Rhuma-Jell Chemical Co., Room 1703, 1440 Broadway New York. Cor. 40th Street. Tel. CHickering 3795-6. Boyko was given | New industries are being estab- a suspended sentence and the other | Rheumatism Sufferers — huma Jel Can you pump out blood, warm it, and give it back the wonderful salve, warms the blood, and brings normal Take away the greatest pains in 24 hours. You forget that you suffer anty. The threat of raising the price of haircuts from 75 cents to $1 of neymen barbers. ‘The Dictatorship of the Proletariat powerful enemy, the tenfold after its overthrow, even though overthrown in only one coun- try.—V. I. Lenin (Left? Commu- nism). the the restraining order was denied. made by the Commercial Window Cleaner Company. i cinema La AND ON SAME. POTEMKIN The Sereen Classic film gui 52 West 8th St., bet. 5th & 6th THE PROGRAM books a it a Improved Edition) Heading for War 3§ EAST 125TH STREET by is the fiercest an@ most merciless war of the new class against its more bourgeoisie, | whose power of resistance increases hoon dishanded by Mussolini, al- FIRST SHOWING IN AMERICA! “AELITA” , THE REVOLT OF THE ROBOTS The Russian “R. U. R.” Daily incl, Sat. & Sun, Noon to Midnight—Phone, SPRIng 5005-5090 Special weekdays: 12 to 2, 35c; 2 to 6, 50c; Sat. & Sun., 12 to 2, 50c Coming this Saturday: “FLAMES ON THE VOLGA”—a remark- able Soviet drama of a peasant revolt during the reign of Catherine the Great The following is a list of new come off the press in the past two weeks:— Communism and the International Situation—1 5c Revolutionary Movement in the Colonies—15c The Program of the Communist International— The Proletarian Revolution by V. I. Lenin—50c Reminiscences of Lenin by Klara Zetkin—35c _ (Prices To Be Announced) Wage Labor and Capital by Marx (New English Revolutionary Lessons by Lenin ‘Women in the Soviet Union Ten Years of the Comintern (Postage Prepaid On All Orders, 5 Cents) SEND IN YOUR ORDER TO WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS |pro-fascisti. They have suffered |wage-cuts and are suffering more wage-cuts. Unemployment is ram- pant and is used as a weapon of \punishment. The eight-hour day for |which the workers have fought for 50 years has been abolished. Even |the fascisti organs admit that there ‘are 800,000 workers completely un- employed. The general economic crisis has not been solved but post- |poned at the expense of the workers | who have had to take wage cuts and longer hours. “The workers’ organizations have | day week and a higher wage guar- |been entirely disrunted, Workers are ‘not allowed to hold meetings of any isort. During the destruction of despite the present high rate of pro- uniots no less than 10,000 workers fit, is being used against the jour-|have been killed and at least 15,000 are in the prisons and in exile. This plays a great role because the Italian jlabor movement has a strong tradi- qin of independent organization and activity. Even the Confederation of Fascist Labor Unions has recently though it represented nothing but a framework of fascist officials, but jhe even seemed to fear the form |which might kindle the workers jimagination. The only unions which The demand for the injunction was can exist legally now are not unions jat all, but only organizations of fas- leist bureaucracies.” -NOW PLAYING! A Sovkino Film THE LAST LAUGH The Perfect Motion Picture Id cinema Aves., Continuous Popular Prices and pamphlets that have (in pamphlet form) 15c¢ » NEW YORK CITY SHUN FASCISTS