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Page Three # ore DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1929 | British Are Forced | | BRITISH COMMUNIQUE ISSUED IN ‘FACE SAVING’ LANGUAGE TO HIDE DIPLOMATIC DEFEAT Former Insulting Terms of MacDonald Ar Discarded, Veiled e Wording Reveals Mass Resentment at Delay and Ecnomic Crisis Forced Reformists’ Hand LONDON, Sept. 29.—The foreign office issued a communique today in- dicating representatives of Russia and England had decided on re- sumption of diplomatic relations as a step towards resumption of trade. The communique said that during a two-hour conference today Foreign Secretary Henderson and Valerian Dovgalevsky, Soviet ambassador to Paris, reached an agreement on sub- jects “to be settled by negotiation on resumption of diplomatic rela- tions, including an exchange of am- | oassadors.”” | Relations between the tw ocoun- tries were suspended by Great Brit-| ain in May, 1927, The British had insisted that dif- | ferences, including their charge of ‘red propaganda” be settled first, % What to Do for the Defense of the 23)| Gastonia Prisoners | The 16 Gastonia prisoners go | | | on trial again inside of ten days, | | | Sept. 30, while workers through- | out the world are demonstrating jon their behalf—demonstrating | | jagainst their imprisonment and | against the reign of terror in the | South. The trial of the seven other workers, charged with as- | | sault, also will start soon. But not enough has been done! | You must broaden the base of | | the united front! || You must bring into the protest | | movement millions of workers who have not yet heard of Gas- tonia, From today until the trial re- opens every worker in America conscious of the class struggle in| | Gastonia should do the following: 1. Broaden the base of the united fronts in all cities by call- ing all local trade unions and other workers’ organizations to a delegate conference before Oct. 15. 2. Send speakers to all local trade unions and other workers’ organizations, explain the issues in the Gastonia case, ask for do- nations. test meetings, but pay special attention to street meetings and factory gate meetings. 4, Induce every labor organiza- tion in your city to pass a protest resolution and send a telegram of greeting and solidarity to the Institute shop, mill and mine col- leeticns. Organize neighborhood j collections. Plan an affair during the month of Oetober and begin selling tickets at once. 6. Build the International La- bor Defense and the Workers In- ternational Relief into mass or- ganizations by securing members | | for both organizations. | No let-up in the Gastonia cam- | | |paign until the défendants are freed, until the Southern textile bosses are defeated in their at- ANOTHER TEXTILE ORGANIZER SHOT Boss Gunmen Attempt to Kill Bellow (Continued from Page One) the terrific beating given him by the fascist gang who kidnapped him from his home in Kings Mountain. His wife in Kings Mountain has re- ceived letters similar to the one sent Bellew, threatenink that they would kill Tessneair if he did not quit or- ganizing. The workers have estab- lished a guard for Tessneair and they ie in the house with him, armed with shotguns, in North Carolina. He went to Baltimore to work, but returned when he heard there was a real union trying to organize the mill workers to fight the bosses. Guerd Headquarters Recently another gang of mill thugs tore down the union over the Bessemer City N. T. head- quarters. Workers painted another, and the reporter saw one old mill worker guarding it with a shotgun, He said that he felt that if another gang came to tear this one down he felt that several of them at least would not walk away from the place, whatever happened to him, personally. | Two hundred mill wiorkers of | North Carolina gathered at the) union hall Thursday, and haerd Gerson, Carrol and Bankoff speak. 3. Continue city-wide mass pro- | before relations would be resumed, and the fact that the British com. munique declares that relations will be resumed first and negotiations of “subjects” will come afterward, in- dicates that Soviet diplomacy has won its point. MASSES PROTEST GASTONIA CASE Frisco Workers Defy Police; Many Meetings (Continued from Page One) ers to defend themselves. “Help establish the right of the workers to orgenize. “Demonstrate your solidarity with the defendants and strikers.” In Berlin a meeting of the shop councils in the textile industry has been held to discuss Gastonia. A resolution of protest against the at- tempted repetition of the Sacco- Vanzetti murder was adopted and sent to the American ambassador in Berlin. Several other protest meetings have been held during the past few days in Germany. The Berlin branch of the I. L. D. in conjunc- tion with the W. I. R, and the Berlin Branch of the Organization of “Red Women and Girls” held a meeting at which two members of the Ger- man Reichstag, Ottomar Geshke and Helene Overlach spoke a pro- test resolution was adopted and sent to America. The German branch of the Ar- beiter Radio Bund, also held a pro- test meeting and protested the at- tempt to bring militant workers to the electric chair. In Austria; a number of factory meetings have been held where resolutions were adopted and sent to the American Embassy, Workers are demonstrating before the dif- ferent American consulates of the land, The Norwegian -branch of the I. L. De has issued a call for sup- port and has: sent a protest resolu- tion to the American Consulate in Oslo. In Switzerland, the workers ral- lied in a big mass meeting in the market place in Basle to protest. In Mexico, in spite of police ban, workers have met in twenty cities Gastonia defendants, Mecklen-| | and protested against the Fascist burg County Jail, Charlotte, brutality at Gastonia. N.C. ; Cablegrams and resolutions from 5. Continue mass collections. workers the world over are pouring | into the office of the Gastonia Joint | Defense and Relief Campaign Com- | mittee, at 80 East 11th Street, New Famous Writers Aid Famous writers, including Upton Sinclair, Henri Barbusse, Maxim Gorki, members of the central com- mittee of the Workers International Relief have issued a call for the support of the 28 Gastonia strikers, 16 of whom go on trial at Charlotte, N. C., next Monday. Others who signed the call were Prof. Alfred Goldshmidt, George Ledehour, Wil- tempt to smash the National] | jj, Munzenber; d Carl Lindh: i i ‘g and Carl Lindhagen, Textile Workers Union and) | 4 copy of the call was sent to the ee unionism illegal in the! | Gastonia Joint Defense at 80 East outh. 11th Street, N. Y. C., Room 402, Woll Wants Lynching President Green, evidently some- what awed at the world-wide pro- test going up against the attempted murder by legal chicanery of the Gastonia case defendants, has writ- ten a letter to the Nation, disavow- ing the appeal to lynching contained in the International Labor News Service, which has always meen the official spokesman of the A, F. of L, bureaucracy, Green takes refuge in a technicality, and says “The I. L. N. S, is not published by the A. F. of L.” He forkets to mention that Matthew Woll, vice president of the A. F, of L. is president of the International Labor News Service. This service recently carried the following suggestion for the mur- der of the Gastonia defendants and other union organizers: “In Gastonia some Communists are to be tried for murder. If Americans—or Russians—tried to do in Russia what these Reds tried to do—or threatened to do—in America, there would not be any tri There would be just some quiet shooting.” D. F. McDonald was chairman, and several local workers took part in the discussion which followed. The workers indignantly rpudiated the barrage of malicious lies of the cap- italist press, the bosses, and the blic officials. This campaign of sses’ lies is whippirg the capital- ist agents and middle class to a frenzy of hate and violence against the leaders of the N, T. W. U., but its effect upon the workers is neg- ligible, Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! to Resume Relations with the Soviet Union on Soviet Terms ‘British Photomaton | Head NearlySmashes | | Market with Swindle | LONDON, England, Sept. 29— |The dramatic bankruptcy of the |Photomaton Parent Corporation, valued at $50,000,000 with the fol- lowing arrest of Clarence G. Hatry, | its principal owner for fraud has} shaken the London stock market. | | A number of brokerage houses are | |known to be seriously crippled, and may fail. Hatry’s scheme, it is charged, was to borrow from the Portchester | Trust, Ltd, $750,000 on City of | Wakefield bonds, printed in exces }of the amount provided by the city, GASTONIA TRIAL REOPENS TODAY Organization Goes On Despite Terror (Continued from Page One) October, the intention evidently be- ing to get them sent to prison as soon as the Charlotte case is over. Many Were Arrested. These defendanst are all that re- main out of the mose than seventy jarrested during the reign of terror |by Manville-Jenckes gangsters htat followed the raid on the strikers’ |tent colony, April 7 and afterwards. |Many of them were not charged at jall, but those charged with assault | with intent to kill and dismissed at or before the hearing are: J. 0. | Hinsley, Dewey Ward, Sam Bou- jknight, Wm, Siddell, James Meln- nis, J. L. Brewer, Harold C. Curry, Earl Tompkinson, Caroline Drew, Edith Saunders, C, Miller, Clay Runner, Gladys Wallace, C. M. Lell, Roy Butler, Horace Lloyd, D. Sailors, H. H. Miles, W. prouse, Talk of New Trick. Continued rumors that the prus- ecution staff will reduce the charges or eyen the number of defendants continue. The prosecution thus shows the weakness of its case, the International Labor Defense points out, but is no less dangerous. For \it is openly admitted by the pros- ecution attorneys that the main pur- pose of such a plan, if it is carried out, as it is by no means a surety that it will be, is to reduce the number of peremptory challenges, and permit more easily the packing \of the jury with prejuriced business |men who will conyict regardless of evidence or lack of sevidence. With 18 defendanst charged with first degree murder, and three with second degree, the defense had in the first Charlotte trial 168 peremp- tory challenges. With these they were able to secure a jury suffi- ciently unbiased so that when the prosecution had exposed its case, put its most important perjurers on the stand, the jury was ready to acquit. Three-quarters of the jurors \eame voluntarily to the defense af- iter a mistrial was declared on ac- count of the insanity of a juror, and stated that they would never have convicted on teh basis of the prosecution’s case. This first trial ended Sept. 9, having started the last of August and inyolyed exhaustion of three lyenires of prospective jurors. Dur- ing the course of the trial, prosecu- tion witnesses turned out to be very untrustworthy, contradicting them- selves and each other. Witness Mason, a man with a criminal rec- lord, tried to say that the police did |not fire at all, during the raid of |Chief of Police Aderholt and his followers on the strikers’ W. I. R. tent colony June 7, and that Striker McGinnis fired the first shot, This contradicts other prosecution wit- nesses, who said others fired first. | Doctor Smashes Own Story. Doctor McConnell contradicted his lawyers, when he told of the angle of shots striking Aderholt. Policeman Adam Hord, one of Aderholt’s followers in the raid, failed miserably to identify any- body, but said enough to contradict Policeman Roach in regard to their preliminary raid on the picket line | when they beat up and choked strikers, and announced they were going to the tent colony to clean it out. Hord also admitted he car- ried a shotgun on the raid, a mat- ter that the other police denied. Policeman Roach and Gilbert, placed on the stand, had to admit they were under indictment for shooting up a refreshment stand a few hours before they took part in Aderholt’s raid. Each blamed the other for starting the affair. Jackson Tangles Case Witness Jackson, a hireling of) the Manville Jenckes bosses, testi- fied that he heard Beal's speech before the picket line was formed June 7, and contradicted the other prosecution witnesses when he claimed to give Beal’s words order- ing the pickets to get out the Man- ville-Jenckes workers. A woman witness for prosecution, who was bribed by being made a! private secretary at the Loray mill) of the Manville Jenckes Co,, testi- fied to seeing things she could not) have seen unless she could look through a house. While the jury was out, the de- | fense witnesses testified to torture of McGinnis and others, in order to extract statements from them after they were arrested. These are wit- nesses the prosecution will use again in the present trial. Mistrial | On Sept. 9, Juror Campbell be- | came a raving maniac, He had been SHARP WARNING ‘CA TO IMPERIALIST JAILED ON ORDER in Ens LIF. WORKERS Mahon Aids Insull Scheme (OFFICERS RULE 4 1 Enslaving Carmen ¢§ § ‘STEEL ORE’ (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, (By Mail),—Perhap no better method of plundering a )$1 from each pay day for a period of 48 pay days, until each unit is paid in full. We are to receive no interest until our units are paid in 1S WITH THE CLUB CHINESE TOOLS OFWESTINGHOUSE body of workers has ever been dis- covered than the one employed by Mahon, president of the Amalga- full, Insull wants us to invest our Captain Controls the Cites 28 Invasions of Slave Conditions in USSR in 18 Days | BERLIN, Sept. 27.—That the Red| (By a Worker Correspondent) Army will punish decisively any; OAKLAND, Cal. (By Mail).—In further invasions of the Soviet/the Westinghouse shop in the city frontier by Chinese troops and Rus-|of Emeryville, two workers, sian white guard detachments and|andKarl Walker, were found out tol will take firmer steps to prevent| be members of the Young Commu- their recurrence is seen in the warn- | nist League and were fired, Condi-| ing to China through the German |tions are none too good in this shop foreign office. In part, it states: |and the boss feared a revolt, so they “Soviet military authorities will| found it necessary to dispose of be compelled henceforth to take all | these workers who were organizing | necessary steps to combat .the at=/the workers in the factory. A leaflet tacks and prevent their recurrences. | was “Instead of making a serious ef-|ers j fort to terminate these actions, the | two Emeryville | n the Westinghouse why these workers were fired and Nanking government resorts to dis- | explaining the necessity of the work- | S8id to its employees, “Let us invest torted information respecting the |ers organizing, to better their con-| actual situation on the frontier and | ditions, dares, without any foundation, to| protest against alleged aggressive actions by Soviet troops. “The full responsibility for the existing situation and possible fur- ther complications, as well as for the losses incurred on the Soviet border, is placed entirely upon the|two misdemeanors, for which the Nanking and Mukden governments.” ‘19:1 is never more than $50, if you As proof of the deliberate and|j¢ not a Communist : continuous character of the attacks : | The next day they went out to distribute the leaflets at this plant. |The manager in frantic rage called the police department to arrest the workers and hold them on the |charges he made out and at a bail that he had set. The charges were | {mated Association of Electric Railway Employees. Mahon, a true 100 per cent Amer- jiean, does not look on street car transportation as being a great in- Street an: d|money as he sees fit for four years and he has in the contract what he calls the 10 year clause to he ef- fective in all cases of “hard times.” We do not know what interest our Shop Chest Robs I wish to relate a few things on board of one of America’s cargo ships on which the sailor is being Fight Frame-up, Terror (By a Worker Correspondent) HOMILTON, Ontario (By Mail CY ‘dustry and accordingly refuses to, money is to bring us nor what the treated Jow and rotten. Such condi- Fred organize it on an industrial basis, par value might be at the end of|tions exist on thc Steel Ore, Instead he is trying to peddle to|that period, but we are told we are owned by the Ore Steamship Com- tus workers the Mitten plan. This!to become exploiters too. pany. I will relate a few daily oc- Jardent hater of Communism, who| Mahon says Insull is a shrewdjcurrences that happened on our {has all “guilty” of Communism business man. trip to Chili, |thrown out of the union, preaches; In closing I urge all workers to| The food consisted of stew at “craft unionism.” support our great Daily Worker,|least twice a day and usually for Mahon is sure there is no class/ which champions the cause of labor. breakfast we fot liver oF | some Ba vies york. (Struggle, and raises instead the I also urge all street car workers to Chops that would make you sick. 4 issued pointing. out tp the wark |slogan of class collaboration. Re-|fight the Mahon misleadership of |few fellows did get sick from this ‘also (cently the Insull traction company |the carmen’s union, and to look for|f00d and the treatment re guidance from our new trade union|¢eived when reporting sick was lyour savings. You are to purchase |center, the Trade Union Unity, #stounding. One was shackled and from us investment units at $50|League. |several others were threa d by leach, $2 from your first pay and| —CHICAGO TRANSIT WORKER | the first assistant w ve lan- pad guage and with clubs The captain has charge of the Hi 5 , ship chest and charges anywhere amulton Steel Strikers pee raphe reece jall things he sells, the profit being by law ten per cent. things he sells is sugar, milk, coffee, tea and cocoa, so if a man wishes Among the bei : But being members of the, Young | ring made across the frontier On| coomunist League the boys’ bail|—On September 4, about 350 work- | was $600 each, and was later re-|ers employed in the steel and erec-| duced to $400 on condition that the|tion department of the National boys stay out of Emeryville, that stoo] town where the gallant police are ever ready to protect the bosses’ interests and receive tokens of ap-| preciation from the bootlegging | : dives and the palaces of prostitution | dsedarsnioyed the rade Union Unity avs jsold de |League. Harvey Murphy, national pes pas i hes the state. secretary of the Auto Workers In- wo other comrades, coun —A\’ | dustrial Union directed the work of drafting a slate of immediate de- the peaceful population, the Soviet note cites twenty-eight separate in- vasions of Soviet soil in the 13 days between September 10 and 23, de- tailing the accounts of several in which Red Army soldiers were killed defending the Soviet frontier and| Soviet citizens, citing the killing of | many civilians and the robbery and | terrorization of others by bands of White Guards. | driven insane by the prosecution’s illegally bringing in a ghastly ef-| figy of the chief of police who was | shot during his attempt to disarm the strikers’ guard at the tent col-| ony, in preparation for the mur-| derous attack of the Manville Jenckes “Committee of 100.” The case was declared a mistrial, and reset, to come before the same | judge, Barnhill, tomorrow. | The Lynch Gangs. Before the trial was over, on Sept 7, a murderous gang tried to ly Hugo Oehler and other National | Car Corporation, Hamilton, | struck against a 50 per cent wage cut. They immediately set up a} strike committee under the direct |tended with the greatest interest, district organizer of the Young) Communist League and Archie Brown several days later went out to the Westinghouse to tell the workers who were beginning to ask | why their fellow-workers had been} fired and then arrested. They held| a noon day meeting which was at- until the police arrived and arrested mands which the company flatly re-|__7 jand fused to even look at. Mass Picketing Ties Up Piant. The strikers of the steel erection deparment called on the rest of the workers in the plant to support the demands of the strikers and by mass picketing and enthusiastic parades the speakers, John Little and Archie | through the town on the third day Brown, who were taken to the town | the entire plant, over 1,400 workers, | hall upon instructions of the gen-|had struck. Over 800 workers had eral manager of the plant. lined up in the industrial union | When the charges were being pre- | formed in the first few days of the ferred the cop not knowing what strike. Lithuanian, Polish, English, | them and has freed two of them. Relief Needed. he strike has been on a month, that will take in every steel worker|‘®, “rink something besides lye ) cal pe ere cntay water as is made on this ship he Police Terror Fails; Frame-up Used. his Ten ei : ae More than Valtepi thevHamiton|ac0 aioe oe oe eee ey police force, including all the motor-|*#ks cleaning them out which cycle police, are on continuous| "derstand should be done in dry |strikebreaking duty, attempting to|%9°K» when we go for supper ‘we dutiinitiaie ihe ner ave! atthe venme AB nove but old rotten stew and pany has succeeded in framing six|*'%° WiC trom had strikers on charges of “intimidation, Conditions are getting from ba and assault” of scabs. ‘The Cane(# Worse on American ships and dian Labor Defense is defending | WBE? & complaint is made the reply jis “nothing can be done about.” Something should be done abut such ships as these. Join the Marine Workers League and help to biuld the Communist Party leading|up the only organization that is them, the men have fought the|fighting for all seamen, regardles tricks of the bosses to break the, of creed, color or race, Join it now! struggle—police, scabs, A. F. of L., frame-ups and the “Red Scare” have failed. The strike must be won. The Canadian Labor Defense has organ- ized much support. The Hamilton ot | HONOR PAVLOFF. MOSCOW, Sept Proffessor Ivan Pavloff, member of the acad- emy and dean of the worlds physi- “crime” had been committed told the | |sargeant at the desk to charge them | with the same charges as the others date on, one lynching outrage after Were, meaning Fred and Karl another followed, the mill bossos’|Walker. After being held in the| black hundreds simply going wild| town hall for an hour we were as soon as the mistrial was declared, | transfered to the county jail where Police Shooting. |we were finger-printed and forced The defense had no opportunity to strip to the skin and were to present evidence in the first Searched for “concealed weapons.” Charlotte trial, but has many wit-| Here we were held for over 27 nesses who will testify that a series |hours until we were bailed out by| of outrages by the Manville-Jenckes the International Labor Defense. gangsters, aided and protected by |The conditions in this jail are ter-' militia, and the Gastonia police, eul-|rible. In the first place it is over- minated in a planned attempt to | crowded to the extreme. We were create another Ludlow massacre on |compelled to sleep on the floor. The June 7. The Manville-Jenckes gun- food is not fit to be eaten and the men met in the Loray mill, and hav-| vermin is plentifull. ing “liquored up” nad distributed| At the same time that this was arms, started to march to the col-| happening Fred Walker and Jack ony. The police, who had brutally | Miller went out to Neilson’s Can- assaulted a picket line a short time |nery with the cannery shop bulletin. before, preceded them in a ear, and Here they were also arrested and began to struggle with the guards held for over twenty-four hours on to disarm them. The “Committee of “investigation.” They were released 100” raiders were temporarily de-|to the LL.D. lawyer without any layed by a freight train at the|charges being preferred against crossing, and did not arrive until |them. the police had retired. | This is only the beginning, We Aderholt and his followers ad-|will see if workers cannot speak to mitted when they came on the union |other workers at any time and any} grounds they had no warrants, and|Place. We are going to fight for prosecution witnesses admit every-|the right to hold factory and street thing was quiet there when they | meetings in this locality. The work- arrived. Nevertheless they strug-|ers are beginning to see through gled with and disarmed Harrison,|the bosses’ tactics, and to resent a workers’ guard, and while this|the terrific speed-up forced upon was going on, Policeman Roach|them. This was evidenced by the went toward the union headquarters | workers coming up and asking for and opened fire on the strikers with|the Young Worker and the Gas- his pistol. This started the shoot-|tonia leaflets, ing, in the course of which Ader- holt was killed, and other policemen Textile Workers Union organizers when he attended a mass meeting in South Gastonia, and from that trial in Gastonia, but the preju- wounded. Harrison was also wound- ed. The attack by the mill gang- sters came later, and mass arrests. dicial actions of the mill bosses had been so notorious that a change of venue had to be granted to Char- An attempt was made to hold the | lotte in Mecklenburg County. GASTONIA Citadel of the Class Struggle in the New South By WM. F. DUNNE ag | HISTORICAL PHASE in the struggle of the American working class analyzed and described by @ veteran of the class struggle. To place this pamphlet in the hands of American workers is the duty of every class-conscious worker who realizes that ihe struggle in the South is bound up with the fundamental interests of the whole American working class, 15 cents per copy ( e) Place your order today with the WORKERS [LIBRARY PUBLISHERS and all Workers Book Shops 43 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY Scotch, Ukrainian, etc., workers} showing the greatest solidarity and | laying the foundation for the union! OE eee $3 to $6 a Week for 17-Year-Old Worker, | | Bessemer City Mill? (By a Worker Correspondent) | BESSEMER CITY, N. C., (By| | Mail).—I am a striker in the| | American Mill Number 2, Besse- mer City, and I with the other strikers am facing death from the mill thugs, All the mill work- ers of the South ought to join) the National Textile Workers’ | Union and come out on strike. Then all us southern mill work-| | ers will haye better conditions. To show you what the slayery | %| | Strike Relief Fund headquarters is/ologists, celebrated his eighteeth at 16314 Church St., Toronto, 2, Ont. | birthday today. | The council of peopies commis- | sars announced it had assigned _ + RILU CALLS FOR for his research work. Pavloff re- . cently returned from the United States. make effective protests now, these Gastonia textile workers will be le- (Continued sem Rane Ona) | Gastonia textile workers will be le. gally murdered by American im- of thousands of exploited workers,” | perialism.” the appeal declared. ae ee “Every agency of the capitalist | Great Protest Needed. world is mobilized against these vic-| The call declares further: “The tims of capitalist oppression in order \I. L. D. is conducting the defense. to convict them. These valiant| The American capitalist class must fighters will be burned alive in the | feel th epower of the international electric chair as were Sacco and/ solidarity of labor, The workers Vanzetti unless the working elass,must arouse themselyes to the mag- and all friends of labor immediately | nitude of the crime about to be per- rally to their defense,” the Profin-|petrated against our brothers and tern message further declares. It) sisters in the Gastonia case. explains the reign of terror, the role| “Unite in protest against this at- of the capitalist inciting to lynch |tempt to murder the leaders of the rule, and states “Unless the class American textile workers.” is like in the American Mill No. 2, just see what I had to do. I) swept sixteen spinning frames for) | $6 a week and carried out the white and black waste and I was} also brush rails boy for $6 a} | week. I weaved for $3 and $4 a| | week in the American Mill No. 2.| Iam 17 years old. We are not going to let the mill bosses’ thugs keep on doing what they haye| | done, killing a woman, etc, | Yours for the union, | —Bessemer City Striker. | | eo & The Octboer Issue —a Full Book Number of NEW MASSES SHORT STORIES — DRAWINGS REVIEWS bq Scott Nearing, Michael Gold ARTICLES — POEMS — BOOK Em Jo Basshe, Joseph North, Jack Woodford, ns and Wm, D LENIN ON WORKING CLASS LITERATURE 15 cents—$1.50 a year. New Masses, 112 E. 19th St., New York Answer the Attacks of the Social Fascists Against the DAILY WORKER MORNING FREIJHEIT by getting behind the its BAZAAR MADISON SQUARE GARDEN Eighth Avenue, 49th and 50th Streets OCTOBER 3, 4, 5, 6 Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday Le ave all your buying for those days because Madison Square Garden will be turned into A Thursday, October 3rd, F October 4th. Saturday, Oetoher 5th. Sunday, October 6th,., Total.....,., FOUR-DAY DEPARTMENT STORE Combination for all four days $1.25 ET ET IS TD vee $1.00 50 eee $2.50 On Sale at Daily Worker, 26 Union Sauare. New York