The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 22, 1930, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YOR) LETTERS ae = ae a PSs“ =- Ee ar ms FREEMAN THOMPSON, JAILED MINE LEADER, SEES NEED FOR MORE WORK Is Not Pessimistic But Says More Real Action Building Union Necessary Orient, Ill. Daily Worker: I have received a letter from Freeman Thompson, the mine workers’ leader now serving a sentence of 90 days-—a leader who never urged the mine workers to abide by the bosses’ injunction, but to step on it. Because the letter is very significant and full of inspiration to the | workers—especially the mine workers— I am asking the Daily Worker to publish it. ee tae County Jail, Taylorville, Il. Dear Comrade Joich: Your comradely welcome letter received. Replying thereto will say personally I am fairly well. It is “-- those dependent upon me that worries me. Not Pessimistic. Comrades, I do not see how you could have gained the impression that I am growing pessimistic. To tell you the real truth I am more determined today (even tho I am sitting here in this cell) than I ever was in all my life. However, I must say to you there are many things going on within our movement that I feel could be much improved. When I Say our movement I mean the Communist movement, in alll its various forms, ineluding the rey- olutionary unions, among them the M. 0. S. W. I. U. More Work Necessary. I am anxious to get out so I can carry on the much necessary work I know is facing the move- ment. Our opportunities were ne- ver so great as what they are at present. The whole of the anth- racite is seething with discontent. In many localities organizers from our union can get before the local meetings of the U. M. W. A. Our men run around organizing som kind of affairs so as to get their names in the newspapers, especially the Daily Worker. If they spent the same amount | My motto is instead of organ- izing to make a big noise we | should organize the masses and let them make the noise. Everywhere, throughout the coalfields the miners are ready for some kind of a move. If we fail to give them our program somebody else will give'them one (fake one) and they will accept it. Workers Rising. The workers of the whole world are in a restless mood. Imperial- ism is on its last legs. Revolution is on the lips of the masses in | every capitalist country through- out the world with the Far East workers taking the lead. For 26 years I have been fighting to bring the revolution. From the way things look now I believe I will live to get to see it. My mail is not censured. You can write as you please. What- ever you and other comrades may do in the way of helping the family financially will be much appreciated. From the way things look now I will be here 60 days from tomorrow. Give my best regards to all the comrades. Comradely, FREEMAN THOMPSON. * * * ‘Cleve. Kitchen ‘Men Must Toil in Stench, Dirt Cleveland, Ohio. Editor Daily Worker:— Just a few lines to let you know | the conditions that a few kitchen |men and helpers are under in the employ of Schultz, Inc., at the Colo- jnial Arcade Building on Euclid St., this city. ¥ in Work Long Hours. The writer has been working in this kitchen for the past three weeks, starting at 7 a. m. and working till 6:30 p. m., six days | a week, for the sum of $2 per day. The workers get no breakfast, | only a cup of black coffee, and | work under a_ slave-driver until | about 3 p. m., when you are allowed | about 15 minutes to eat. Then you |continue your work until quitting | time, but get no supper. } Unsanitary Kitchen. The kitchen itself is unsanitary, | and the chickens and turkeys they | sell at these bargain counters are | not fit to eat. | | | From Saturday till Saturday, | while preparing for these special | sales, filthy blood and water is {lying stagnant on the floor, with a | stench that is unbearable. | Inform the workers of this fact. I have worked in kitchens for the past 20 years from coast to coast, but this is the filthiest one that I | have ever seen. A. F, | BIG NAVY MAN REPORTS TENSION | (Continued From Page 1.) | |sion that war is the order of the) of effort and energy, organizing the miners they would hear the echo of’ it through the thundering might of the masses which would put their names indelibly in the minds of the working masses that would spell credit to themselves. | i} The significance of the above let-|day among the capitalis powers) ter speaks for itself and it needs | refers only to Europe, every work-| no comment. We, the workers, must | er can see even faster war devel-| raise our voice of protest and de- opments in the United States. Brit-| mand the release of our leader and | ain is very quick to point out that) comrade, Freeman Thompson. “the French fleet demonstrations} —L. J. |at Toulo ndirectly overlooking Italy HYDE AND FISH | were nothing more nor less than| -A Story of (Continued.) | Now it was afternoon, and time) for the show to begin. Everyone,| parents, children, neighbors, young and old, were on hand to see the marionette show. The courtyard was crowded with smiling people, busy drinking their Russian tea and eating the cookies which the | Pioneers and children served them, Behind stage, all was ready. The made and learned to operate their; marionettes. (miniature people who! dance and act, through the use of invisible strings which are attached | to the marionettes’ nacks and onto. human hands, which are, of course, | behind the scenes). Vanya was sit-| | ting by, with her notes in her lap. | She was the “voice” of the marion- ettes, which not only act but talk and sing as well. | “Is there any news of Fatima jvet?” she asked Nick, “No news of Fatima yet,” the| | committee came behind stage to | whisper its report. “Keep search-| ing.” Just then Gurk, as hungry as his little mistress, and smelling the food, dashed up the stairs and | straight up to a Pioneer munching |@ bun, grabbed it in his teeth and was gone before they could catch jhim. “Follow him. Maybe he’s | with Fatima,” said Vanya. But | there was no trace of Gurk to be ing the bun in the basement and crowding away from the water | which now stood an inch on. the floor. “Nick,” Vanya whispered, and Tash look in the basement again. Fatima must be somewhere close b K, MONDAY, SEPT found. He and Fatima were munch-| We'll keep the show go-| BER 22, 193) (Children of the New Day Soviet Youth A Written Version of the Russian Movie For'| American Working Class Children ing.” Stepping into the cellar Tash gave a quick look around and called out: “Is anybody here?” But Fa- tima was out of sight, crouched into her dark corner. Tash walked out and reported to Nick: “Noone is there. There’s water all over the floor, so it’s no place to hide in.” As the two started back upstairs Tash said: “Oh, I forgot to shut the door; just a minute,” and, running catch-lock sprang into place. Fa- tima and Gurk were locked in and the water was spreading fast. The Marionette Show. The show opened with a peasant song and dance by two of the chil- en in costume. This won a big applause, especially from the older folks, many of whom had danced this dance themselves before they came to the city to live. Then the marionettes made their appearance, The children squealed, and necks eraned as the curtains parted and the tiny figures pranced in a funny, dignified way across the stage. Just then a woman pushed her way through the audience to where the caretaker sat and said to him in a loud whisper: “Come, some- thing has happened to the water. There’s not a drop to be had, and| | Celebrate Intl Youth Day in Soviet Union MOSCOW (LP. 5 The tions of the sixteenth international celebra. day of youth opened in Moscow with a joint plenary session of the Mos- Pioneers, the previous spring, had| back, she slammed it to and its|cow Committee of the Communist |Party of the Soviet Union, of the| | Young Communist League and of| the Moscow Soviet. Yaroslavski greeted the session in the name of} the Central Committee of the Com- munist Party of the Soviet Union. | The greetings of the Executive! Committee cf the Communist Inter- | national were expressed by Com- | rade Lenski, | The walls were decorated. with | red bunting, flags and posters. A streamer announce “In 1919 the, Young Communist League had | 96,000 members. Today it has| | 2,741,000 members!” Deputations | |from various factories greeted the meeting and reported on the prog- ress being made, The representa- tives of the “Dynamo” works re- I want to finish washing my Ported that their quota of the sec- clothes.” “A little later,” he an- ond year’s production had been ex-| swered. “Yes, I'll come as soon as|°eeded to the extent of 105 per the show is over,” and he sat back to enjoy himself. The water-pipe jhad burst! Great torrents were | Pouring into the basement, wetting| | Fatima to the knees, while she | pulled and knocked at the door. “you| Unless someone came soon she and | | Gurk would be drowned like rats jin a hole. (To Be Continued.) Tammany Exposes Show How Boss Press Is Bribed Continued From Page 1) four per cent more in 1927, than it was before the war, when its assessment should have been in- creased at least 100 per cent. What's “Law” To Tammany! It must be remembered that there is a New York law, that re- quires buildings to be assessed ac- cording to the market value. Let us not forget that. | answers to the constant rattling | Then let us take the N. Y. World, HOBSON ADMIT Der srtecaaliniin cwoce | whose “criticism” of Tammany has | But he fails to let the American | "ever been so harsh as to harm | workers know that U, S. imperial- ism is sending naval and military advisors to most Latin American) 19 per cent higher than be- |a hair of Tammany’s head for dec- ades, its assessment for taxes |unemployed from national, JOBLESS MARCH ON HOOVER Continued From Page 1) ; Sent to Hoover a copy of the Work- ers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill as proposed by the Communist Party and endorsed by the Trade Union Unity League. This com- mittee will demand the enactment of this bill. Other demands of the workers which this committee will present are: 1. Immediate relief for the state and city treasuries. 2 No evictions of unemployed workers and their {cent in 11 months. The quota of | 40,000,000 roubles set for the fac-| tory for the third year of the Five-| | Year Plan had been increased to| 44,000,000 by the workers them- |selves after examination. Eight) |shock groups and one commune| had been formed by the works for| the International Day of Youth and 150 young workers had joined the! Young Communist League. The Central Committee of the| Young Communist League of the} | Soviet Union has decided to send! 30,000 young Communists to the} | Don Basin mining area in order, to} {make good the great lack of labor | | power and to bring the level of | production up to the necessary fig-| |ures laid down in the second year| | of the Five-Year Plan. DETROIT JOBLESS FIGHT EVICTIONS. Continued From Page 1) |sible to make the bosses stop evie- tions. INTERNATIONAL NEWS. Strike Movement in France Grows Despite Efforts of the Fakers f PARIS (LP.S. The strengthen- ing of the ike movement in France, which was noticeable at the beginning of the week, is be- ing maintained. There are hardly ny instances of a return to work On to record. the contrary, nu- merous workers have joined the ranks of the strikers. In Lille, where the workers have been handed over to the employers bound hand and foot by the ri formists, the discontent is particu- larly great. In this district the struggle is being continued in the factories, as a result of which the) united front of the workers is be- ing strengthened. The persecution of the striking} workers is increasing, side by side with the maneuvers and intrigues of the employers, the authorities and the reformi: The central strike leadership has been prosecuted for having posted up placards “inciting to breaches of public order.” The strikers are now being prosecuted in groups on account of alleged violence. Yesterday further collisions oc- curred between striking workers on the one hand and the police, strike- breakers and the Garde Mobile on the other. The collisions were caused by an effort of the Garde Mobile to drive off the pickets. In connection with the Congress in October, which is to prepare a counter-stroke on the part of the workers, the revolutionary trade unions are carrying on a broad agi- tation and propaganda. In general, the strike situation may be said to| have improved considerably to the benefit of the striking workers. BELGRADE WOOD WORKERS STRIKE ON*WAGE CUTS BELGRADE.—Early the workers of the in Teslitch went on strike to defend this month woodworks their standards, as the owners wanted to impose a wage-cut of 25 per cent. Fifteen hundred work- ers took part in the strike. The strikers are all unqualified work- ers, mostly foresters. The qualified workers did not take part in the; strike. The works are guarded by strong forces of police, Large) groups of workers are patroling the | er’s Page Three ‘Socialists’ Spy or Cops On Hungry Labor BUDAPEST, Hungary (LP.S.). In their struggle against the Com- munist movement in Hungary the social democratic leaders do not hesitate to turn informer in order to hound Communist workers into the hands of the police, where tor- | ture and perhaps death await them. It has happened on many occasions already that Communist workers have been arrested by the - slice as the result of denunciations made by the social democratic leaders. The infamous social democratic leader, Karl Peyer, who was thor- oughly drubbed by the workers dur- ing the demonstrations on Sept. 1, is now relieving his feelings and revenging himself by denouncing alleged Communists to the police. He publishes “information” in the press according to which the Com- munists hold secret meetings in two places in the Remetegasse and in Istvan St. in Budapest. According to Peyer, “the leaders of the insur- rectionary movement on Sept. 1 were constant guests here.” The police eagerly took up Pey information and raids were jmade on the two addresses given jby him. Five workers were ar- rested, but were afterwards released as not a shred of evidence was to be raked up against them. It tran- | spired that at the addresses given by Peyer a nationalist sharpshoot | ers’ organization held its meetings. VOTE COMMUNIST! Have You? SOLD TICKETS To The Workers in Your Shop for the DAILY WORKER FREIHEIT BAZAAR which will be held in the ATTACK USSR, Continued From Page 1) JOBLESS GROW (Continued From Page 1.) families, 8. Free carefare, free| All the workers were invited to citina tae aaa are a ee Oct. 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th school supplies and lunch in school the meetings of the American Ne- | Pickets. io Terms trade union i for workers’ children. 4. ‘The gro Labor Congress meeting that /¢@ders are trying to gain the lead Madison Square A zs |fore the war, though in spite of ated Oe the trot stat ac| this “inerease” it is still hundreds| Argentine, Peru, Bolivia, Mexico, °f thousands of dollars less than | els of sales per day on the Chicago wheat exchange, the short sale of | 1 5,000,000 bushels spread out over | ing it to its foundations. the whole period from Jan. 1 to date by the All-Russian Textile Syndicate could have had absolutely no effect on the prices, and (3 short sales of grain for the purpose of “hedging” on purchases made even in other lines of industry by a buyer | is a regular and normal process of commerce in the United States and other countries and is entirely le- gal and normal, under capitalism. It is, in fact, a duty of agents who desire to shield their principals (in this case the workers and peasants | of the U.S.S.R.) from possible losses | through sudden market changes. The political basis of Hyde’s at- tack is seen by the fact that im- mediately after his statement, cen- | tering around a telegram sent by him Friday night to A. Brunnell, | president of the Chicago Board of Trade (which operates the world ence with Hdye as to the for anti-Soviet propaganda. Fish then issued the following statement: “Secretary Hyde suggested that our committee make this the sub- ject of immediate inquiry and this we will do,” Representative Fish said. “We will ope nthe in- vestigation in New York on Sept. 27 and learn from agents of the Boviet Government and grain op- erators just how far-reaching the selling has been. We will resume the investigation in Chicago on Sept. 29 and call before us the of- ficers of the Chicago Board of Trade. “Nothing has developed re- cently that shows better just how far the Soviets are willing to go to carry out their doctrine and injure business and governments elsewhere.” Wants to Hide Facts. Fish admitted the present legality of Soviet agency transactions on t he wheat market,*and thought, | ! | | | vinced that market known as the “Wheat Pit”) | did not hold good. American Com-| demanding an investigation of short | munists sales by the All-Russian Textile | Moscow two years ago that Amer- workers—a bloodbath to put the SHyndicate, the head of the Fish | ican prosperity was distressingly| last. World War into the shade. | Committee held a lengthy confer-| real and showed no signs of lan-| With 8,000,000 unemployed in the) best | guishing. method of capitalizing the situation wise, and Stalin happened to be, ing billions for war. | ing system. italism is presented with a fundda- f | Chile the antagonisms between the mental contradiction which is rock- U. S. and Great Britain are fast approaching a war stage. A review of Hobson’s book, writ-| «Ty preparation for the next) ten for the New York Times | war Europe is spending $6,000,000 | (Sept. 21) by Harold Callender of) day.” (always “Europe”! What} London makes very many inter-| about the billion dollars spent in| esting admissions. “It is thelthe U, S.2 What about the big theme of Mr. Hobson’s esay—| airplane building program here? which could hardly be made more! What about the constant war man-|! timely by events—that a pro-!euyers in the Caribbean and Paci nounced tendency to overproduc-| fie carried out by the entire U. S.| tion is a permanent feature of the|ay»my and navy?) economic system generally, more| Prepare War On U, S. S. R. marked in the advanced industrial) Britten concluded his war inter- | countries,” says the reviewer. view by saying that “to predict He goes on to point out that/that armaments and war prepara-| “So sound did America’s prosper-|tions will be increased rather than | ity seem and so great was its opt-| diminished in the near future is) imism that even the Socialists and| but a logical conclusion when one |} Communists (the renegade Love-! understands the distrust the vari- stoneites), whose prophets have! ous nations over there (how abot| always held that capitalism must! over here?) have for each other?” be destroyed by its own inherent} Not a word about the boss prep- disequilibrium, were about con- arations for a war against the in America the rule! Soviet Union. | This is what the bosses the| informed world over are preparing for the (Lovestone) Stalin thought other-| United States the bosses are spend- Britten will right.” go back to Congress and repeat his While Hobson admits that the)speech to prove that more should facts of capitalism “does not sup-| be spent for war so that the Amer- port a favorable answer to this| ican bosses can win their share of question” of its ability to override) markets and colonies in the next its everworsening crisis he has war. The bosses are preparing for) great hopes for the rotten, decay-| War, and their lackies admit it.) The 8,000,000 unem-| The meaning of Britten's words} ployed in the United States, and | should sink deep into the minds of the 25,000,000 jobless throughout) every worker. the world think differently. | War Instead Food i Thus from a caupitalist source) Only the working clasé by its again we see that the struggle for| Militant and revolutionary action j | i | unemployment insurance must be! °@” stop these war preparations) war value. ‘+ he actual war being planed by | speeded up, and that it is a ques-| md t & e P y tion which confronts all workers, | the bosses. Millions of workers | employed and unemployed. jare hungry and starving and the| Conihodiche Rig far ff Hob. | bosses give them war. Unemploy-| son’s iene Mr. Callender ne Ene OMA Lele ah a ing Melele “be a teetetas et ers to suicide and insanity and the omist of the welicinal Bilaay ot td hee nothing for, fam but our (capitalist) system—read, per- Meee te om aoe on Bas to haps, in connection with Stalin’s| ° bl er nitiad This ie ar eees speech to the recent Communist! °™ rea hi ee bed sie mye: Party Congress (of the Soviet| ‘e™ beled ldots be agttt gy tae Union)—is “highly enlightening as ties, the republicans, democrats and to the most important things that are happening today.” vaguely, that something should be | done about it in the way of new, Jaws, He also wants a law against ; the publishing of information about political use which Hyde, Fish and the huge grain crop in the U.S.S.R. the republican administration make on the stock exchange tickers. It of them, Bunnell’s short telegram is obvious that accurate informa- | notifying Hyde that he would in- tion intended for businessmen and vestigate demands that the United gamblers contradicts and makes States government decide whether ludicrous the official bunk of dis- “Russian agencies have a right to aster and collapse in the U.S.S.R. trade here or not,” and ends: ~ on which Fish and allied war mon- , “It shoukl be remembered that gers rely for ptopaganda agianst' the Chicago Board of Trade is the Soviet Union. recognized world market and Bunnell and other leaders of the, hedges protecting grain in all board of trade of Chicago show | positions over the world are cus- some irritation at the attempted tomarily placed here. socialists stand; and they ask the | workers to vote for it in the aul tumn elections! The alternative; | before the working class is clear veut. Only the Communist Party and its fighting program, only the example of the Soviet Union can help the working masses of the ' United ° States. The Communist Party demands that all war funds be turned over to the unemploye It calls on all | workers, employed and unemploy-| ed, to demand the passage of the : Unemployment Insurance Bill, it should be. \ Now, the Sun. This bright Sun of Tammany civic virtue, was ac- tually assessed less. than one-fourth as much as it was before the war, although several hundred thousand dollars of improvements were put into it. The assessed valuation dropped from $450,000 to a mere $100,000. The Sun must “have something on” Tammany. Then let us see that pardgon of press prostitutes, the N. Y. Times. “All the news that’s fit to print” is its slogan. Let us recall that the Times reported that Lenin was dead, something over a hundred times before he died; that the Sov- iet Government was overthrown daily for years—in the Times; that only recently it had “authentic” reports of an “armed revolt in Odessa” with “the workers holding, the barricades” for days “against the Red Army.” Let us look over the Times, whose columns were filled only yesterday with featured fairy tales of “Soviet propaganda on the tick- er of the Chicago Board of Trade” and Hyde and Hamilton Fish—| lies quite consciously meant for ‘war propaganda against the Soviet Unio nand for suppression of the Communist Party and the Daily! Worker. | This sanctified old harlot, sits at 42nd -street and Broadyay,known as the geographic center of the world’s wealth. It made in net vrofit last year a sum of $5,000,- 000. But while property across the street got assessed three times its. pre-war value, the Times is as- sessed 20 per cent below its pre- Verily, “all the news that’s fit to print” is strained through a bribe of Tammany to the Times. Let us finish up with the Herald Tribune. It was bought off only last year. Just before the elect- tion for mayor, when La Guardia, the “republican,” was running against Walker, the Tammany “democrat” the Herald-Tribune which was supporting La Guardia, got its tax assessment reduced, It immediately told La Guardia to) “Jay off” any real exposures. And) La Guardia, the “republican” and “opposition to Tammany” laid off! But our picture would be incom- | plete without the “socialists”. The Reverend Norman Thomas occa- sionally scolds Tammany. The “socialists” try to ake the work-| ers believe that capitalist corrup- | tion and graft can be eliminated) by electing “good men,” and with-! out a revolutionary overthrowal of capitalist rule, | Fight against the boss war prep- arations! Defend the Soviet Union! Vote Communist! “Me, Too!”—Say Socialists, This unspeakable capitalist press, | about which Marx said that it| and “plots” cooked up by Hoover) i | renegades T-hour day and 5-day week, with| was taking place two blocks away no reduction in pay. 5. No wage-/that night. After the workers left, cuts, | four constables appeared and threw Sept. 28 Conference. ‘the furniture out again. The next The call to this demonstration | 44¥ that is, on the 17th again, the has intensified the interests of the| Unemployed Council got on the job workers in the Sept. 28 conference | 8" once more they took the fur- called by the Trade Union Unity Miture back ito the house, That League and many organizations Tight two uniformed police offi- have announced their intention of C'S came, with a few detectives, sending delegates to this confer-| having sawed-off shotguns and one ence where among other points )@ving a hand machinegun. At further plans for the Oct. 2 dem. the point of the guns they forced Biatcaulon wllabe- worked ioak. the workers to carry the furniture poets oe out into the street. This was done during the night time. The Unem- whats and’ strike against ployed Council is planning a big = |mass meeting at this place. See —_———-—— | _ At two more evictions, Lilly creates more myths than all the) Tower on 1044 Farnsworth and | Christian mythology of history, is' another place at 4566 St. Joseph, | helping the “socialist” party to| the Unemployed Councils have been | come forward as a false channel carrying the furniture back and of mass discontent against capi-| holding protest meetings, The talism. And the the “socialist”| Councils, on the basis of this ac- party is up to its neck in alliance tivity, are growing very rapidly. with the Tammany-bought press. The Unemployed Council of East In a letter dated June 5, 1930, Ferry Ave. is holding a meeting signed by Marx Lewis, executive! every Monday and Thursday after- secretary of the “socialist” party,)/noon at 2 p. m. in the Workers’ this harlot press and Home, 1843 E. Ferry Ave. Ad- the practical alliance) mission is free and everybody is It says: The metropoli-| welcome. tan press, reflecting public inter-/ The Unemployed Council at 8890 est, has continued to use our press Copland Ave. is holding meetings releases regularly.” lat the Copland Hall of same ad- Likewise all the renegades from dress every Thursday afternoon at Communism are linked to Tam- 9:39 p, m. many through the capitalist press. The harlot Times gives acres of: space to the anti-Soviet ravings! of Lovestone. The Hearst press specializes in the counter-revolu- tionary lies of Trotsky. The Fish committee, about whom both brands of renegade opportuni: blabber about “united fronts,” i openly incited by the papers which open their columns to the from the Communist movement, the Ozarist monarch- ists and exposed counter-revolu-| tionists who “resign from the Am-| Collect Greetings | | with it. “Por Ali Kinds of Insurance’ | ((ARL BRODSKY Velephone Murray HIN 55 7 Kast 42nd reet, New Yorh torg. 7 THE NAN ‘ ‘Tammany Against the Workers | FOR THE NATIONAL PRESS All the dark forces of reaction} 7 are sheltered under the wing of BAZAAR Tammany. But the workers—ah,| if the workers of New York, job-| less and starving, gather to de- mand unemployment insurance, as on March 6, there are hundreds of ammany police thugs to blackjack them. There are Tamany courts to railroad to prison their leaders, Raymond, Foster, Amter and Minor, Foster is candidate for Governor of New York. Minor and Amter are also candidates against the TTammany machine, against re- publican and fake “socialist” par- ty upholders of capitalism. Vote Communist! Vote against capital- ism! Strike against wage-cuts; de- mand social insurance! | which will be held at the | . | Madison Square | Garden Oct. 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th Organization | ~ Greetings! | Individual Greetings! ONLY SHORT TIME LEFT! ACT AT ONCE! in the strike in order to throttle Garden it. | This is the third great strike Sell your tickets, settle for them at which has broken out in Yugoslavia | the Bazaar office, 30 Union Square, within a few days. The others were at once! And get another batch the strike of 350 workers in Zagreb | of tickets to cell. and the strike of 1,500 workers in Banyaluka. Send greetings to the Soviet workers and peasants for the Thirteenth Anniversary of the Successful Russian Revolution, through the Friends of the So- viet Union. These greetings will be compiled in an artistic red album and sent to the Museum of the Revolution in Moscow as a token of solidarity be- tween the American workers and farmers to the Rus- sian workers and peasants of the Soviet Union. Price of Greeting is 25c, Unemployed 10e. Send all your greetings to FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION 175 FIFTH AVENUE, Room 511, NEW YORK CITY Bishop Brown's Books COMMUNISM AND CHRISTIANISM 225th thousand, paper bound, 247 pages; twenty-five cents. “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, 273 pages; price $2.00. “The most important book of the year 1926.” THE BANKRUPTCY OF CHRISTIAN SUPERNATURALISM volumes, paper bound, 256 pages each; twenty-five cents per volume, stamps or coin. These boks are’ primmers for children, yet a post graduate course for collegians. They are written from the viewpoint of the Trial, Vol. 1; The Sciences, Vol. 11; History, Vol, III; Philosophy, Vol. IV; The Bible, Vol. V; Sociology, Vol. VI. There are twelve chapters of about twenty pages in each book, The first and second volumes have been published. The third volume will be ready in September and the other three at intervals of six months, Send fifty cents for copies of Communism and Christianism and the first three volumes of the Bankruptcy of Christian Supernaturalism. HERESY This is Bishop Brown’s quarterly magazine, Lach number consists of one of his lectures on the greatest and most timely among cur- rent subjects. So far they have been as follows: January, 1930, The Americar 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

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