The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 17, 1930, Page 3

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l , 1930 ————— re E- ee CY Lowell Workers Hold Demonstration Sept. Despite Police Lowelt, Mass. Tactics Daily Worker:- On Labor Day this year the workers of Lowell held a demon- stfation against unemployment and the rotten conditions that prevail | in the mills of Lowell. The demon- stration was called by the National Textile Workers’ Union. Hundreds of workers were pres- ent at the demonstration which was scheduled to take place at the South Commons. The demonstration was broken up by the police shortly after it started, and the chairman, Rudolph Glines, was arrested and charged with speaking without a permit. The demonstration continued in a hall. Glines was held under $500 bail, his case coming up yesterday in Lowell Court. The International Labor Defense supplied counsel and defense. He was declared guilty, but the case was placed on file. The International Labor Defense and the National Textile Workers’ Union are arranging a_ protest meeting Sunday, Sept. 14, at Crof- ton Hall, 212 Merrimac St., at 2 p. m., to demand the right of the workers to organize for better con- ditions. —L. A JUDGES, GUNMEN, AID LABOR FAKIRS Tammany Enlists Forces Against Taxi Drivers (Continued From Page 1.) union’s books. be submitted iy the association at large on July 21. Becker and Ro- senberg, who hadibeen chosen as the accountants via the phone book method, read the report. No class- conscious worker would have been surprised at the contents. He has ben taught through brutal experi- ence that his only protection against thieving leaders who will grasp at any means of selling him out is te join the Communist Party and the Trade Union Unity League. 1 SHOW UP 1 EVE, i The report was to} DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNE! es RE oe CHARITY RACKET Is Grow Fat Workers Siarve W hile = | mine Cleveland, Ohio. To the Daily Worker:— Since the existence of the asso- ciated charities of Cleveland, they collected by force and other tcick- ery about $20,000,000 to be used ‘for “charitable” work. During this eight or nine-year period they prac- |ticed they divided the money among \the churches to provide shelter to ‘the unfortunate. We never heard of a penny being given by any of the churches |to any of the unfortunate workers (jobless and starving) out on the | streets and sleeping in the parks. | But we see that every religious ‘parasite has a beautiful mansion. The total value of the entire church properties would amount to about 1,000 million dollars. During 1929, when there was no unemployed to the extent of 9,000,- 000 people, the Cleveland workers contributed 41-2 million dollars. In 1930, because of the wholesale starvation on hand, the goal was | set for 41-4 million dollars. Set- ting the goal of $250,000 less than | of said institution, because they clearly know that they could spend for the needy people 20 times as | much as in any of the previous years. Even rich hospitals are patron- | izeed by the charities, and the Y. |M. C. A. the Y. W. C. A, the K. ;of C’s and all kinds of anti-labor | organizations. Neither of these or- ganizations offered shelter, not bread to any of the Cleveland | 75,000 unemployed. | The Cleveland Y. M. C. A. has {about $6,000,000 to $8,000,000 in ing house competing places. The only free thing they ever give is the air and bunk. Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill, because their end is clearly seen if the workers win a success, EWE RS Children a ad the year before shows the hypocrisy | even a cup of soup or a slice of | bank reservees to build more room- | These are the forces opposing the | The members of the Amalgamated | are still naive to this necessity— although the costl yexperience they are now going through is teaching} them something—and they raised a godawful howl when they heard the | and we must stick to the force that | will make it a success. A pleted a perfect job. The motion to oust the officers had never been voted upon, thanks to the turmoil report. | sb a Ad the gunmen when it was Whi Is $141,000? aeaias Briefly the Sccoantants de«|_ The finishing touch to the hold- | up occurred when one of the ac- countants asked Putnam for the epee uel Hig aieciats thy difference between the $7,000 in organization in 1922, Of this sum, | the association's bank account and $141,000 had been spent, leaving a the $12,000 that the books declared balance of $12,000, of which only | ¥@5 the surplus remaining in the $7,000 was in the bank. Now, how | treasury. Putnam answered that was the $141,000 spent? Was ene celal vee 308 bank under vacation camp acquired where the his own name and that he intended members might spend two or three | pat the little nest egg remain weeks during the summer at rela-| tively low rates? Was money do-_ nated to other unions whose strike | funds were being so terribly de-) pleted in bitter fights spur aca that all the officers, except Don- cious bosses? Were there sick| Mella and the secretary, be tried benefits, [or unemployment fasunc | 20" malfeasance of office. It was clared that $153,000 had been col- Officers Hire 150 Gunmen An auditing committee elected by the members then recommended > KN, pene re so that anyone could a meeting to be held on August bas ..|4 When the members arrived at The meeting started, a motion | the appointed hour they saw about | 150 new faces—hard, brutalized | i f |faces—gathered in front of the Immediately the motion was made,| hall, almost surrounding the offi- chairs and fists began ilying, with cers who were to be formally ac- the hard-boiled gunmen getting the cused that night of being the most better of it. Someone yelled for vicious form of crooks. The 150) the two cops who had been paid) guests were gunmen and strong- $15 each to keep deaf, dumb and | arm men, hired by the accused blind while the meeting was in officials to prevent by force if! progress. They proceeded to stroll; necessary—and it was necessary— toward the meeting room at a|the passing of the resolution call- funeral pace. They took about five | ing for action against the officials. minutes to traverse the 50 feet or} No resolution was passed that so of hallway and the three flights| night and no other business was of stairs that lea io he hail, and) transacted; the “gorillas” created leisurely inquired of one of the|so much disorder that the meeting gunmen what the noise was all) ended in an uproa. about. — | The audit committee thereupon Tries to Murder Member. ‘went to the office of the state They then proceeded to “irisk”| attorney general and lodged a com- one of the most harmless looking|plaint against the officers and of the members, who looked as if! trustees. sst. Atty. Gen. Broulard, he would be as unhappy with a gun|51 Chambers St., then called a as a cop would be without one. hearing to take testimony. A While the cops continued their stroll! week’s postponement was re- around the hall, glaring at every-| quested by Edward O’Brien, attor- one who didn't look like a cut-/ney for the accused officials, and throat artist, a “forilla’. who he got it. Considering O’Brien’s couldn't have measured an inch less| career, that wasn’t in the least than six feet three picked up a, surprising. O’Brien was formerly member who had brought up the! a district leader in the Bronx—in motion ‘to oust the officers and| the very same district, a mat- diligently proceeded to throw him ter of fact, that is now the| ove. the banister to the haliway,| private hunting ground of Com-; three floors below. Only by int | missioner of Licences, Geraghty, of frantic struggling did the cab’ one of the most efficient crooks in driver, who was about five feet Tammany Hall’s highly efficient five, free ehimself. ; Rogues Gallery. Meanwhile, two detectives O'Brien: Gets Fake Order. had arrived at the meeting at Don-| O’Brien appeared at the hearing, nella’s request were being refused|a week inter, but not with the re-| admission| to the meeting room, | quired affidavits. In its place he was again proposed that the offi- cers be deposed from their jobs. who | | | decided to bring up the charges at| |a meeting of the entire organiza- | to be called to order, the members They didn’t protest. There was none of the fierce swinging of blackjacks that is such a common sight on Union Square when un- employed workers assemble to de- mand work or bread. The detec- tives politely left when they were told they weren't wanted—by the gunmen. One of the detectives was kind enough to remar! that he didn’t have his badge with him, anyway. ‘The meeting was now over. The gunmen, cops, detectives and for- mer district leader, O’Brien, who had attended the meeting, had com- ‘had a “show cause” order signed | by none other than Supreme Court) Justice McGeehan, who when pros-| ecutor, tried so hard to convict| Grfeco and Carillo, and a clove! friend of O’Brien’s. The burden: of proof now fay on thé members | who had been robbed of their !§146,000, It was discovered later that O’Brien didn’t even have a technical right to the show cause order because’ the section under which the action was brought didn’t justify it. When the members’ lawyer ap- DAY, SEPTEMBER 17, fa Coal Bosses’ Police to Intimidate the iry of the New ~A Story of Soviet Youth A Written Version of the Russian Movie For American Working Class Children Day| i o2®&ePws o Militarisis in| AMERICAN OIL BO SS ACCUSES THE Page Three Militant Mine Workers (Continued) |thigs, these days. But for me, no ( } ; O ad iy « Worker Correspondent) For that very morning Anna sat) “There is a class which meets WEST FRANKFORT, Ill.—Po-| Weeping and pleating in ibe 1n-| every Tuesday and Thursday night ass UuUvaerxrs Bet eben Renert Lce vf this mining town in their) 5Pector's office. m an old tady.|in a workers’ club house five : = 6 . dapertion is ipl heads in be.|Had a hard life” (sniffle, sniffle).| blocks from where you live,” he i = ngth He Wants State Department to Battle for Oil Well coming open murderers of militant “I didn’t know any better mister.”| continued. “You'll find others just Rare: aetie eat Presents Which Leguia Gave Him workers, The actual evi- Sores, ney ue We are alll like Soursele (tiers 20m) | O1NEs | ovement South China, the pets ah nis ‘dence of this is the following in- and Ubesthers oy) Cite gomae vouueet Une) teacher in Wal os, of warth Ching “have : dx cident: . “Yes sir—I_ mean, com-/ worker from the Red Putilov eek ets oF ae i a 2 Ns NEW YORK.—Moré proof that , from , Washington that _ William By walking on the sidewalk 1) ade.” With one end of her dark! works who devotes his evenings to qaiation!! of militant onkers aj the overthrow of the Wall Street Randolph Hearst, expert forger of have noticed that one big police Steen shawl she wiped her eyes! this work. After the lessons there ae oe dieeto aU P Sik: puppet, Leguia, in Peru was engi- documents against the Soviet auto following a little green ma-|amd nose. “My dear niece—all &|are games and singing.” Anna SAGE Hon BRine : neered with the co-operation of| Union, has large interests in the Jehine so close as to nearly touch’ Mistake . . . never do again, mis-|shrugged her shoulders. “Here's| P&tch from Peiping. | British imperialists is containedin| Peru mines where 15,090 workers \it, Finally the police from the|ter—excuse me, sir—comrade.” | the address on this card for you. Jh@ same dispatch frankly ad-\4 statement by Warren C. Gra-|are on strike. This also bring: | big machine ordered the driver, The inspector looked at her. Was! Give it to the comrade at the door mits that even cee who are “re-' ham, president of the Graham En-| out the fact that the request for jof the little car to stop. ‘The little) she really sorry for what she had)and he'll take you to the leader.) May sustecee 0! Sennechlgineerng Co., 67 Wall St. New| troops against the strikers also machine stopped as did the big) done? True, she had had a hard! You'll find many friends there.”) “ith Toe asia gue Dein Rel’ York, which has just been issued.| come to a great extent from Mr one! life. A victim of the old system.|Anna reached for the card and put| i" J#il or executed. Graham’s statement, which was | Hearst. Police Thugs. She must be drawn into the new) it carefully inside her blouse. “I Se ia sent to the state department, + eit Three policemen from their jlife. “Well,” the inspector said) don’t says V'll go,” she protested. reads The Strike in Peru came out and with clubs in their/#loud, “maybe you did and maybe) 4. i. 5 \ «1 specifically charge English hands ordered the three men from| You didn’t know any better. But y BDL OEE RE) ed aL \oil interests with supplying the By ANDERSON |the little car to step out. When I) at any ae ee pe a ve ina FSi eae financial backing to Cerro in his; (Worker Correspondent) { another chance to do the de- : y rs eater i ‘ % | reached the scene one of the po-| Yor ae thing by ae little beg or sell. She must be free this RUN THE WOR! p! overthrow of the Peruvian gov-| Those strike riots at the lice was searching the little Ford.) 7-0. jou ewe shall watch overSummer to play and join in the eit W elernment headed by Leguia. This] american owned mines (Cerro de {The other 2 police were question- ae ay vay bes wen wae i her | Young Pioneers’ activities. In the was done solely for the purpose| 5.) = ; ‘ : z er carefully, and if you sen¢ Se —— aa ai . =e ‘acos) in Per er oth signifi aa Litmaue’ ie fang Gu to beg or sell again, we shall have fall, she must go to school. You Capitalists Starving Toiler Bee samenican aBine [cant and bai ne “We i a oo r jittle car (as ‘ound out) bi . 5 7 fay oe ue alists Sta Si through our company, obtainin e and qui > re i trom ee ear 'taby t fne| to take her away from you andj Must find work in her place. Shame De: ie thet cat aoneasIe T perg. fer| formed in en Associated Press dis jlater the two men. were two miné/ place her where she will recetve|/" you, an able-bodied woman in to Death : Tepe ho. HeTnel ath etch Eran then Gapitaliey ‘mpcwes the! workers—Louis Joick from Orient | oe right treatment. For we are|the prime of life, living off the : aes | thirty-two years. BAS HORELKHORE: EER a ae and driver of the Ford and An-| joined that every child shall| labor of a little child! I will hetp (Continued From Page 1) | “For more than a year these| cating were taking dase at Gn drew Simenoff from here. Also have the chance to grow up aj¥oU get work, and your son shall| be cut off from the little bit of un- English interests have been en-| mines Wat thet Be ie aan ie a there was a young fellow by the healthy, happy, and all-round indi-| have a chance to learn a good employment insurance they've been deavoring to obtain this monop-| peruyjan pace ee ae 2 name of Harry Rice, as I under “1 01°’you see, Comrade Anna, a| ‘rade. It's up to you, Comrade| getting, and that the workers who oly. They had every reason te llapeedils aucnetaced ies Grantee stand, an organizer of the Young! 77 "aay thas begun in Russia for|Anna, to help these two children) work have to take a wage-cut—all expect and believe thai they| oF eras p wppressed sel | Communist League). all of the laboring eople,” and he and not let their lives be wasted of them. would obtair it until the entrance Havi f ib | Threaten Miners. explained Fre rea length what|@S yours has been, up to now, I Gat porn Th capit into this field in Peru by the com-| aving been over every mile of | A tall policeman, namely, John (ii cant. She must do her share| Will take these matters up at once’ management. That's it in Ger-/pany of which I am president.” | that particular territory, the |Wheary, cursed and threatened AAG gab unre at tbe benEnits, and come over to your place to-| many, where the fight is just be Of course, Graham and the Tegel nce meee peal ae |Joich with the following remarks:/“ yo tel! me you never had aj Morrow. In the mean-time thin’ ginning over the question: Fascism other U. §. imperialists in Peru Jette the ee ohne \“You dirty redneck son of. . - - 1 ice to go to school? How would| Over what we've said here, and|or Bolshevism? And don’t be | squak becausc Lequia had handed| py. nine Hae susrees was j What are you trying to do? You soi like to learn to read and Plan to join the Down With Mite-'fooled by any of the bunk you sec|them most of the oil lands, and| PY ;Sbsent treatment. oe know that we arrested you re. ite?” Anna looked at him side-|Tacy Club. in the capitalist papers supposed to| they fear that Cerro, in return for| eel renga gently 2 tell. yon: tnet “you wu) T've heard tell of such (To be continued.) lshow that the capitalists are British support will no Enel Toe ree peepee 00 Galles . v,| ways. “I've heard tell o | d ; s tha apitalists a itish s rt will now swing the! but the Cerrc Deseo: mites are | get pumped off one of these "© is eas Gis GET aar ——————_ | “against” t fascists. pendulum the other way. Vee te eee co nines a | days. [Combe ef tae “Germian masses 16] “a German Communist Party | Se: iis, ee Ge aecue ois sa tai the social-democrats and the fas-) shows that the fake “socialists” and} Meanwhile, revelations come of th ag 4 th aa John McRunels, cursed Simeonoff ; ae ( Ho01H jof the activities, where the min- | p f cists. Both the Wall Street Jour-| fascists are working together, help. | Fa 3 aes. i e s S 2 ig }ers were supposed to be “dyna- ith the eomiateey ow, morn ie nal and the Journal of Commerce ing each other against the German, j : ; | Fe jcupbosed’ i) be avns you tell and talk to those miners ; Sater: Whe G ist Party of French Workers Fight miting,” etc, is just a 14-hour at that mine. You deserve that| console themselves with the fact) Workers AP pare i z ee Baeiai Sell Out |e. the Meiggs Railway. |chunk of coal to kill you.” | that the social-democrats, despite) peT™mMAny is a distasteful subject Extension of Sell Outitima is a tropical city at sea | Workers Will Fight Back. — | (bets losers still aueintainve: latpo| ses caer p eon ed ee > nl MHAmIa (Ee GNIS rkers of | vel, and, the mines are located | f ‘ , : . repr ion i ichstag, r editors i ARIS (LP.C.).—The workers of | 18,000 feet above sea | Jeor; A ea x ie Seonany: are OLEniie Abe. cule. blow agains : ia) cae i everything in the car. He will Soviet Germany [heavily on the social-fascists say-|G@ermany are opening the guts of/blow against the maneuvers of the |made the journey a dozen times ything | make a good rat dog. ing that it “has been loyal in its|@¢rman capitalism and the whole| reformist leaders, who called for|and I'll admit I am mystified as | ‘The police took three magazines (Continued From Page 1.) | support of the government in the) ‘@Pitalist world shiver See eee ce work on the con-|to how these Peruvian troops from these miners. The maga-0Pen class nature of the present) debts settlement and other im-| American capitalists hate to| ae dictated to the capitulating | “speedily” suppressed the strikers, zines contain the actual pictures|St'ugele, making it extremely diffi) povtant matters.” While the| think about those 4,600,000 votes; Workers of Lille. The workers of | unless the striking miners either of industrial construction in the|‘Wlt for the socialfascists in the | Joumal of Commerce is thankful|the Communist Party of Germany| Atmentieres, whose overwhelming |ran out of dynamite or had noth- |Soviet Union. And that is| “Socialist” party to mislead the work- | that @ large section of the Ger-| Won in a “democratic” election. W hee Ae with the revo-|ing left to blow up, or retired enough to cause headaches to) Ts: : man petty-bourgeoisie did vote; want to remind you of them. We Tay trade “unions, resolutely | through sheer exhaustion from world imperialists and their dogs,| A United Press dispatch from Ber- for the “socialists” since the “Com-| Want you to vote Communist here, rejec beh the proposed compromise | their fourteen hours of patient namely, the police. \lin shows why the world bourgeoisie munists are reported to have made| too. But voting Communist is but and called upon the worker adher- | waiting for the troops —A WORKER OBSERVER. |!s so apprehensixe over the results| serious inroads upon the socialists.”|@ part of the fight. It’s only a/ents of the reformists not to return} Capitalist press dispatches re | foe ee -\of the German elections. They rec-| The real nature of the fa way of telling the Communist|to work. For the rest the situation | ming us of Heywood Broun—both | the bill of particulars demanded by|ognize in it the tightening of class | party as a capitalist party, friendly | Party that you're ready to fight for is unaltered on the strike front the| ane intanaed leant ene eae Justice McGeehan they discovered forces and the bringing forward the {4g Wall Street and other imperialist its program. hea renin ie jand all workers are advised to that Justice McGeehan was to pre- issue of “class against class,” f@S-/ masters, despite its demagogic| In Germany capitalism is so rot- i, SaaS | ° al id hi i d that h rt lic. Ss A : | put on a gas mask before ap- side at the hearing and that he| cism or a German Soviet Republic. phrases was clearly brought out by|ten, so fallen to pieces that the) Write as you fight! Become a | proaching either Broun or the cap- immediately gtanted his good:In this fight, the socialfascist na-|none other than Dr. George W.|question of the final fight for| worker correspondent. italist prostitute press jfriend O’Brien a Postponement ture of the “socialist” leaders is too Edwards, economist of Stone &| power is become clear. It is put ears GS POMS ee cavern) Ete when he requested it. When one apt to come to the fore, for the con- | Webster, leading Wall Street | up to the workers of Germany this nd can twiddle pated gout i venience of the car ene ‘An antl-| Bankers. D®. Edwards said that Sees | ¥ capi ‘Marxian’ un- 7 - ta un x! z Se een ene ie onan | tee. fascist party fs “really im eat=| “took gt the world as capitalism i i pee i Ba Bevin nee Meher ‘ ists,” and at statements “tha ae i 0 fight for! ] I "y ‘any as De a BT office and telling him im effect to| Otto Braun, leader of the social- this party aims for the expropria- eee Late eA O) Ly rw oO MORE W EEKS LEF I go to hell—O'Brien simply refused |tascists, Premier of Prussia, has al-| tion of capital are entirely incor-| vou fight for fascism or Bolshe- TO THE GIG mie to participate in the hearings. The|ready issued a statement promising | rect,” because the fascists have| YOu Leh £ | HE GIGANTIC lacamien tat aad ners Av / | rect,” be scists have! yism? Will you miake it a fascist members’ representatives continued the imperialists that the Young Plan | the ‘support of “many industrials,” |Ganany we Syeiet Gormane, ound j with thehearing and proved to!would be protected and German capi- |Broulard that the accused officials, 'talism supported to the last ditch by | were using the organization’s funds |the social-democratic leadership. jin much the same manner that|/ Braun said the socialists would Secretary of the Treasury, Mellon} participate in a “big coalition of | uses the U. S. Treasury, as a sodt/ sensible groups.” He tried to be- of semi-personal bank account. —_| little the Communist gains, and as- The “Strange” Injunction. | sured the parasites who profit from The audit committee then called | the Young Plan that there is “no menace to the republican constitu- tion for Sept. 2, at 62 E. 4th St.| tion, the public safety or the for- One hour before the meeting was eign policy.” The two .parties to which the were served with an injunction! foreign imperialists as well as the signed by Supreme Court Justice German bourgeoisie look as a bul- Dyke, restraining them from hold- wark against the revolutionar: ing the meeting. } eaters: sient The arrogance of the Tammany | @ttend. . | courts didn’t stop there. When, AS the situation now stands, the members, restrained by the in| members have been robbed of junction from holding a business| $146,000 by a league of supreme meeting, adjourned to a hall across) Court judges, Tammany leaders, the the street to talk over the situa-| police and labor leaders. One hun- tion, Mike Donella, who led the| dred and forty-six thousand dollars demand for the ousting of the) is @ lot of money for cab drivers crooked officers, was adjudged in) Who must freeze in winter, steam contempt of court for violating the; in the summer and dispute with | injunction! | brutalized cops always, to earn! Another meeting was called for| from $25 to $40 a week. What are Sept. 8. Again the gorillas packed| they going to do about it? the meeting. More than 160 of| These cab drivers must learn them were stationed around the Sooner or later that the only wea-| entrance to Teutonia Hall, in the, pon at ‘heir command to fight their! hallway leading to the meeting, bosses, whecher they be judges,| room itself. The meeting had been| gangsters, ‘abor fakers or cops, is called for 7 o'clock, the officers) to join the Trade Union Unity knowing that the cab drives; League and the Communist Party, | waved, hesitate to lose the profit-| the only organization that have any | able supper hour trade by lezving| conception of the struggle of the their cars idle at that time. | workers against their exploiters and Nevertheless, almost all the|can lead them in a victorious fight members made it their business to! against them. Vote Communist! | ~ DETROIT Workers, rally to defense of class war prisoners by coming to the OUTING at WORKERS CAMP This Sunday, September 21 A Good Program Has Been Arranged DANCING—GAMES and many other interesting featurce n case of bad weather come’anyway ag the program will be held indoors. ADMISSION 25 CE Auspices: peared at the hearing to answer International Labor Defense | and is distinctly a “pro-capitalist” party. The German elections are al- ready having an effect on the| shattering stabilization of world! capitalism. That the war danger! has been immeasurably heightened | is shown by the way the French| and British imperialists view the} election results. In and out of | parliament among the wide strata/ of the German workers in the shops, factories and in the arm the Communist Party will continue its revolutionary struggle for the Bishop Brown's Books COMMUNISM AND CHRISTIANISM 225th thousand, paper bound, “Like a brilliant meteor crossing a dark sky, it held me tight.” MY HERESY This is an autobiography published by the John Day Company, New York; second printing, cloth bound, 2 “The most important book of the year 1926.” THE BANKRUPTCY OF CHRISTIAN SUPERNATURALISM Six volumes, paper bound, 256 per volume, stamps or coin. These boks are primmers for children, yet a post graduate course for collegians. They are written Vol. I; The Sciences, Vol. II; History, Vol. III; Philosophy, Vol. IV; The Bible, Vol. V There are twelve chapters of about twenty pages in each book. The first and second volumes have will be ready in September and six Send fifty cents for copies of Communism and Chri: and the first three volum. Christian Supernaturalism. with ties of unbreak. ble steel to the Soviet Republic of Workers and Peas ants?” Really, that’s a question workers everywhere have to answer soon or late. And one look at the way capi- talism is running things makes the Soviet Union seem a guiding star for every worker in the world establishme lic in Germany. 247 pages; twenty-five cents. WORKERS AND Send in immediately articles, pages; price $2.00, Union Square, New York. pages each; twenty-five cents TICKETS FOR from the viewpoint of the Trial, DOWN TOWN Daily Worker, 26 Union Sq. Morning Freiheit, 80 Union Sq. Sollin’s Restaurant, 216 E. 14th Street. Brederman’s Book Store, Second Avenue. Muslin’s Leather Goods Store, 335 East 10th St. | Needle Trades Workers Indus- | trial Union, 131 W. 28th St. ‘ociology, Vol. VI. been published. The third volume the other three at intervals of months, 184 tianism es of the Bankruptcy of DAILY WORKER Morning Freiheit VOTE COMMUNIST! B A A A nt of a Soviet Repub- L MADISON SQUARE GARDE Thur., Fri, Sat. and Sun. October 2, 3, 4and 5 WORKERS’ Bazaar Journal to the National Bazaar Committer, 30 The time is short! Get to work at once! THE BAZAAR CAN IN THE FOLLOWING PLAC HERESY This is Bishop Brown’s quarterly magazine. Each number consists of one of his lectures on the greatest and most timely among ¢ rent subjects. So far they have been as follows: January, 1930, The American Race Problem; April, The Pope’s Crusade Against the Soviet Union, and July, The Science of Moscow and the Super- stion of Rome. Send for a free sample copy. Subscription 25 cents per year. Single Copies 10c¢ each, THE BRADFORD-BROWN EDUCATIONAL CO. GALION, OHIO | Food Workers Industrial Union 16 W. 21st St. | | Harlem Health Food Vegetarian Res- | taurant, 1600 Madison Ave. Jewish Workers Children’s Schools, 148 E. 108rd St. Esther’s Scientific Restaurant 1606 Madison Ave. ORGANIZATIONS! greetings and ads for the BE OBTAINED Bronx Bronx Coop. Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park East “No Tip” Barber Shop, 641 Al- lerton Ave. (Coop. Colony) Rappoport & Kuttler’s Book Store, 1310 Southern Blvd. Messingers Restaurant, 1763 Southern Blvd., near 174 St. Brownsyill Goldstein’s Book Sutter Avenue. Rozetzky’s Grocery Store, 778 Sutter Ave. E, N. Y. Brighton Beach. Perlmutter’s Restaurant, Brigh- ton Beach Ave., cor. Coney Island Avenue. Coney Island. Cohen's Delicatessen Mermaid Ave., cor. W. Store, 413 Store 30 St.

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