The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 24, 1930, Page 3

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| SS LE ETH RS Children of the New Day INTERNATIO --A Story of Soviet Youth EF Ee CP ee DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1930 Page Three EK’ E=a EE LEGGE CALLS ON ROBBERS TO ‘HELP’ THE MORTGAGES FARMERS OF U.8.A, Wants More and More Rationalization of Farms . Which Means Ruin to Tens of Thousands To the Daily Worker I note Legge is inviting the calls upon the mortgage bankers t can be sure such “improvement” will not be for the benefit of the| poor farmers but almost purely to Legge also says wheat farms Belden, N. D. robbers to “help” the robbed. o “improve farming practices.” He We help the bankers. should be made larger in size by “consolidating small farms,’ a very difficult matter, I think, because of the way land is owned and oc- cupied under capitalism. The cap- italist system is not, and nevr can be, so efficiently organized that cor- poration farmirg will be a success to any appreciable extent. Easily half of the nine or ten corporation farms in the co intry ac- cumulate deficits every year. Appeals Also to Bankers That Legge himself is extremely skeptical concerning the er ever being able to make a go of it, is shown when he says ‘that growers raii less than 300 acres are ‘hopelessly handicapped’ by high production costs.’ And Legge appeals to organize bigger farms, the amental purpose of which is to place the bankers—finance capital— in a more favorable position to con- tinue to rob the poor farmers. Farmers, neither the bankers nor Legge are going to do anything for us. We must do our own fighting. Conditions are tough and nothing but open struggles will help us now. Farmers, let us accept the militant program of the United Farmers League and spread the United Farmer!—FARMER. Boss Only Interested In Profit (By a Worker Correspondent) Chattanooga, Ten. My husband worked in the U. S. Pipe Shops five years. He would get off at 5 a. m., go back at 7 a. m. and then get off when he could. He did two men’s work and got a salary of $18 a week: He took ill July 29, but con- tinued work until Friday night, ‘August 1. He was confined to his bed August 2, taken to the hospital on August 3 at 6 a. m. and died at 10 a. m. on the same day. His boss never helped him at all, or aided his people with fun- eral expenses after five yeare labor in the shop. I want the people to know there is no ben- evolence in the boss. —A W N WORKER. Postal Workers Insecure In Job New Editor Daily Worker: I read your article on Postal York. Workers and will say it’s true. The} speed the men are worked at re- sults in many accidents. The men are then charged with negligence and forced to pay for any property | which may be damaged. The work- ers do not kick because every man! can be fired, as they get more mail| than they can deliver on one trip and must carry some over for the next trip. If an inspector finds some mail in their bag on the return trip it is a breaking charge. To obtain a certain amount of security the men must join the republican party, and then charges against them are| dropped when they obtain influence.| The men are kept under close sur- veillance and are discharged if they give any information to newspapers on the grounds. Post office busi- ness is not to be given out to the public. Many workers are expressing themselves and no longer give a damn if they get fired or not and| to conclude, boys, it’s no use going} to the fat boy Heywood Broun for help. Write in the Daily Worker which is fighting for us. . —POSTAL WORKER. Trainmen Now On Short Time New York. Dear Editor: Prosperity has come now with the speed of a tornado and struck the New York Central right be- tween the eyes. Our bunch of extra trainmen are now on two and sometimes three days work a week. I advised them to vote Communist. —TRAINMAN. Many Jobless In Vancouver, B. C. Joyce P. O. Vancouver, B. C. Daily Worker: Dear Comrade: Enclosed find money order for $2.00 for my renewal to the Daily. I am sorry I cannot send more money but conditions in Vancouver are worse today than pre-war and the job I happen to be on is pretty precarious like all jobs under this system, There are contractors in Vancouver who have been getting laborers for $2.00 a day and the employment bureaus are swarming| thousand | smal] farm- | therefore | the bankers to| fund- | |Workings of Cal. 'Slave Markets | Sacramento, Friend Worker: Let me call to your attention | some of the workings of the | slave markets run by the state | of California. | First, in San Francisco the boss who happens to be in charge, | by the way he is in the Masonic Order, Mr. Kearney is his name, has a rooming house and if you stop at his hotel you get a job. If not, you don’t get-a job. This is a known fact to all who crowd the place looking for a master. | —B. C. TAMMANY IS | ANTL-LABOR (Continued From Page 1.) | of capitalism as “democratic” Tam- | many is. Cal. | hungry for graft, organized another | gang in those old days ta fight the “O’Connell Guards.” In the summer of 1835 the two gangs waged a regular battle all over the East Side and every cop in town was out—naturally to help Tamany. So the Tamany gang- sters won the battle and since then the boastel “democratic forms af changing administrations’ have prevailed—but left Tammany rule unchallenged by armed revolt. When the Tiger Plays Possum. Reform parties have occasionally swept the town. But on such oc- casions the Tammany tiger simply played dead until the “reform” ad- ministration itself gat angled up in | graft, when Tammany summoned the “Honest citizenry” to raise in j its might to uphold “righteousness” |—and Tammany. | By the middle of the last cen- |tury the sources of graft had all ‘been systemized. Every cop paid | $200 for his ob. All other posi- | tians were sold at comparable rates. There were about 10,000 saloons in New York City, about 3,000 houses |of prostitution and around 7,000 |gambling dens. The places not owned outright by Tammany lead- fers paid a ‘xed amount weekly. The brothels, thaugh not “illegal” at that time were under police jurisdiction for extracting graft. The same thing applies today, the! “egal” prostitutes being a mon- opoly for police graft. Then, the regular patrolmen had the privil- ege of grafting from street-walk- ers, much as at present. The gambling halls were the big source af graft, however, and none could hope to get far in Tammany pol- ities if he didn’t own at least one. Walker Fears Bolshevism. It is interesting to note here, Tammany’s rttitude toward Negro slavery. With the same fear against a rising of present day wage slaves which caused Mayor Walker in a recent speech to say that “something had to be dane” about unemployment, or we would “have Bolshevism and an end of us all,” Tammany in the days of Negro slavery was viciously against the abolition movement. One of Tammany’s leaders issued a manifesta in which he declared ; that slavery was a divine institu- tion. Tammany Hall produced a learned doctor who “proved” that Negroes were not men, because, he said, the Negro’s facial line was not at a right angle with the ground, but like that of animals, at a smaller angle. | This was the time, incidentally, | that New York City was run by a Board of Alderman which became famaus under the name of “The Forty Thieves.” Mayor Wood who, like Walker, sold offices to the higheost bidder, and about whom a pamphleteer of the time wrote a tract entitled: “A Biography of Fernanda Wood; a History of the Forgeries, Per- juries and Other Crimes of Our Own ‘Model’ Mayor,” on > declared in an address he made concerning Negro slavery: Profits Justify Slavery. “What will become of our great cammercial interests that are so closely interwoven with south- ern prosperity, if slavery is with men looking for jobs and it looks as if a great many won't get them, but they will get a lot of education on the rotteness of capitalist society and the need of —the world commune. —A. P. Elton Laundry Boss Has Many The Daily Worker The Elton Steam Laundry, Brook- lyn, employs about 100 workers, mostly Negro women. I want to tell you some of the schemes of the boss to make us work for nothing. work until late in the afternoon. On the other hand, when he makes us come in Lalf an hour or an hour earlier and makes stay an hour or more late, we get nothing for that. At the sa ie time he has a clock which is in the habit of | getting about 15 minutes slow to- wards the end of the day. At the end of the week, when it gets a little slow, one of the mangles is shut down and the workers laid off, while the others are made to work double quick. . Besides working such long hours and getting paid almost next to nothing, there are many other evils in the laundry. For instance, the wash room is not separated from the rest of the workers, and when the machines are opened all the steam and strong corroding odor hits us all in the face. We are always choking and coughing all day. There is no safety means at all. have to jump to get out of the way of being killed or injured. The mangles are not covered with hoods to draw the heat out. The heat | from the open mangles is terrible, so much that in the summer some fainted on the job. There is no wash room, no place to put our clothes, no place to eat. The toilet is simply shocking. We have to throw our things around. We have to eat amidst the stacks of laundry, which is full of chemicals. The cleaners & Laundry Workers League has been speaking to the workers in the laundry through meetings and leaflets. Some work- ers are enthusiastic for organiza- tion, and are ready to join the League. If all the workers join in the movement, we will soon be able to force the boss to give us a living wage and lessen the terrible exploi- tation—A LAUNDRY WORKER. abolished: What will become of the hundreds of millions of northern capital invested in southern factories, the wealth of which is now accumulated by the peaple of the north, and es- pecially of New York, out of the labor of slavery? Whet will be- come of the profit, the luxury, the comforts, that are to be ob- tained only by the continuance af slave labor and the prosperity of slave owners?” How neatly this fits today, to the Walker remark about Bolshevism making “an end of us all”! How nicely it dovetails into Whalen’s army af blackjackers who brutally beat the unemployed in Union Square and who jailed ‘he Unem- ployed Delegation lest “business suffer”! How well it compares to the statement of Tammany’s Pros- ecuting Attorney Crain, owner of the Irving Plaza burlesque “the- atre,” who declared that the rail- roading af Foster, Minor, Raymond and Amter to prison was the “most important decision in ten years”! The fear of a rising of the slaves, which might deprive these crimi- nals and their capitalist allies of “the profit, the luxury and the comforts obtainable only by slav- ery” is the reason the Camunist leaders are at this moment im- |prisoned by Tamany. Vote Against Slavery! But from prison Foster, Minor, Raymond and Amter appeal to the workers to Vote Communist to vote against this whole damned system of capitalist exploitation,, robbery and crime! To vote against Tam- many, whose exploits today eclipse a thousand ways the crimes of “The Forty Thieves” about whom we will tell more tamorrow. And not only to vote against Tammany, but to Vote Communist because the Communist Party is the Party of working class revolu- tion, a revolution af a class, the onty class which can sweep away every shred of capitalist crime and corruption with capitalism itself. 15 Executed in Nanking for Being “Communists” SHANGHAI (LP.S.).— Fifteen persons have been executed in Nan- king including 2 women, 5 soldiers and one officer. They were charged with having been members of the Chinese Communist Party. The soldiers and the officer were also charged with having conspired to cause mutiny amongst the govern- a new and better system of society| ment! troops. A severe collision occurred in the Chinese qurter of Shanghai between | revolutionary leaflets. Tricky Schemes Brooklyn, N. Y. | But envious capitalist politicians,}The belts keep on breaking and we | | | (Continued.) | By MYRA PAGE. | And what happened to Anna and Mishka, you ask? Contrary to what happens in the old fairy tales. Fa- tima’s aunt who had mistreated her so badly, was not eaten up by a tiger or struck by lightning. Neither was she sent to prison, which in the Soviet Union are not really takes off for every hour when we | . : do not work, but he does not pay|Punish working people when they us for overtime. For instance, Mon-| 40 Wrong but to make them good day, when we do not work a full | Citizens. Since Anna had gone to | day, which is 10 hours, he pays us | only $1.20 for half a day, though we} work much more than half a day.) : e | The same for Saturday, though we| Wrong she had done the two chil- prisons but Labor Communes, for the comrade inspector, Vanya, and We are supposed to get $12 to | her enhes at the club, all agreed | $15 for the more skilled work, eee the best way to change Anna we never get that much. The boss | Jay in another direction. And in the Soviet Union, the idea is not to work, was taking a great interest in learning to read and write, and begun to realize what a great dren, who were now quite safe, the Soviet authorities agreed that Anna should continue her present life,| under the supervision and enccur-| agement of her new friends. As for Mishka, he turned out to be a bright lad, who Jearned quickly, once he set himself to it. The last news of him was that he was making good progress as an apprentice at the Putilov works,| A Written Version of the Russian Movie For American Working Class Children Great Lack of\|Briefs From ‘Canada White getting ahead in his studies and) CU Lh ad IL b All L d i@ dd: f fig nie pag me ORE LavOr ands| Guards torma sports. . . . . . . Think how aitterently overs 779 SOVIEL UNION) viewna—the execution ot xe Malitary Unit etmey would haves turned Sout 3 |four Slovenian workers by the fas- Fatima, Anna, Mishka had lived - leietandil Uirtestaehnat caused: sawave under a goverment like the one) MOSCOW—The Soviet press de-| o¢ protest throughout Venezia-;| TORONTO, Canada—The recent- we have in the United States, The Ss much space to the question of | Julia. Open demonstrations against | formed counter-revolutionary reformatories and prisons of this! the i labor and the im-| the fascist regime have taken place| gne of British Ukrainians for country are filled with peor work-| portance of speeding up the supply| at a number of points. The peas-| the Emancipation of Ukr: in ing people like these, who have! of trained labor power and trained| ants left the fields and went into never had a chance. Only under aj engineers and technicians. Com-| tho woods were illegal protest meet working people’s government where| rade Kalinin, the chairman of the Eve FRANCE-ITALY | WAR NEARING Continued From Page ) an imperialist globe, moldy to the core. Not only is there increased arma- ment, open antagonisms, but the parasite investors in foreign bonds are beginning to feel the war dan- | ger in their sensitive pockets. There is the biggest liquidation of foreign bonds since the last World War. This is just one of the indicators | showing how near actual conflict is. | Reparations bonds which were | floated at 90 early in the summer, have now dropped to 81, | “The factors which make war in| the Balkans appear almost inevita- | ble have grown out of Italy’s rela-! tions with France and with Jugo-! slavia and other Central European countries,” explains Mr. Fedor. “Hatred of the fascist regime in | Jugoslavia reached a climax recent- | ly when four Slovenes were exe- | cuted for treason in Italy.” | Despite the fine phrases about “agreements” between Italy and France on naval questions Fedor blasts these lies stressing the fact that the negotiations “have reached | an impasse.” | In all war talk the Soviet Union looms large. The imperialist pow- | ers, whatever differences they have, however close to war between them- | selves, find plenty of room to agree on hostility and the desirability of war against the workers’ republic. Mr. Fedor, capitalist correspondent though he is, is forced to blast the propaganda ahout the Soviet Union’s belligenerency. “Russia, which is busy with her five-year plan,” he says, “and her economic reconstruction, is hardly the country “to start a war in Europe.” No, this trick of the bosses about Red Russia starting war, falls ut- | terly flat. The Soviet Union is busy building up socialism. It is not asleep, however, to the danger of imperialist attack, and its red army, | navy and working class is ever ready to repell any imperialist on- slaught. The American bosses are spend- ing billions for war, while 8,500,000 unemployed face starvation. Post doesn’t want to arouse the American workers. But it is up to the workers to fight the imperialist war preparations. The Communist Party has repeatedly pointed out the war danger, showed that the issue lies in the power of the work- ing class. It demands: “All war funds be turned over for unemploy- | ment insurance.” “Defend the So-| viet Union!” “Vote Communist!” Have You? SOLD TICKETS To The Workers in Your Shop for the DAILY WORKER FREIHEIT. BAZAAR which will be held in the Oct. 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th Madison Square Garden Sell your tickets, settle for them at the Bazaar office, 30 Union Square, at once! And get another batch of tickets to sell. police and a group of Communist workers engaged in distributing | port the huge U.S.S.R. wheat ex- | of the workers if an attempt: jg | Sums for loans on wheat, buying | | porters, Canada, U. S., Australia,|@7d in cotton on Liverpool. | veady, Monday, come out with a it. The papers for mass consump- tion in general suppress this last sentence of Legge’s. “Too Silly to Be Funny.” 500,000 tons of shipping to trans- port surplus to European markets. ings were held. India telling of a Meerut prison, India. | group of militant trade unionists night ar- everyone is earnestly working to| Central Executive Committee of the! rests of anti-fascists take place in the United States and in build a socialist society, would Fa-| Soviet Union publishes an article in| Trieste, The basis of this army is tima, Anna and M which he writes the following. * * * the Ukrianian nationalist opportunities they are getting now, ; a shortage of] AMSTERDAM.—A mass meeting. + organizations affiliated to the to begin a new life of cooperation’ labor power in literally all branches | organized by the Communist Party sch.” The pre: memberhsip and knowledge and genuine dem-| of ind Even the bureaus and|o¢ Holland took place recently here| of this organization is 30,000 but ee es tote who Ne by : Our | 28ainst the new naval draft. u- | Wire-pullers hope with the nec heir labor. Doesn’t it make you) short o! Ui sands of rs t led the want to help bring about such a| labor exchanges are practically | mesting. zs coreneed. tee government in this country also? problem of unemploy-| Communist Parties of Belgium and THE END. ; |Germany were present. Comrade Sat solved bef |Palme Dutt spoke for the Commu- We would like to have letters | has bee: |nist Party of Great Britain, from those who have read this, and this if ek as to how they liked it, and what | pectations | BERLIN.—Comrade Heinz Neu- other stories they wish the Daily Comrade Kalinin recommends all/mann was arrested at a meeting machine would run for American-working | factories and undertakings to Day|of the workers of the Bochum nes class youth. Also, any stories | special attention to the question Of|Vorein. The meeting was dispersed written about and for workers’ | training new labor cadres and ap-| by police ca een founded children will be welcomed. Send | peals to the workers to raise the) i bs i s white army is communications to Saturday Fea- | level of the productivity of labor BERLIN.—At a_ meet In case of a war .ture Page Editor. | still higher than it already is Plauen in Vogtland, 56 th my is to be ] Veta Ek CAGE ah enlain|Joined the Communist ssa or at some ot convenient | J | of the low prices. Legge, however,|h&@d been a member of the socia Tan oan aa nae Ber) | IMs ted P thew rif St. Journal | democratic party of Germany for etrating into the Soviet Uk- pepo wae el ee -.|26 years. Eleven young workers as ending his remarks: “While this joined the Young Communist ited States imperialism is also statement is a general one, I have reeene plan, and = . no official foundation for it.” a i * * » Ary atte | That is, Legge is just bluffing, LONDON.—The British rife, hed Continued From Page 1) and among business men, admits! woxer has received a cable renades, mac uns and two mutiny the! bi There. are a in teries of field tillery for the Sitsch manoeuvers which took place recently near Detroit It is stated that sales of excellent | 4 |now in the Meerut jail. They have} The Ukrainian sections of the Soviet Union wheat on the Liver-|..T he Wall St. Journal states!teen there over 18 months, await-| Canadian and American Communist pool exchange have already reduced| editorially yesterday: ing the conclusion of their trial.| Parties are extremely active the price of bread to the starving} “The Agricultural Marketing Act,| «Conditions of the prisoners in| amongst the ra of Ukrainian and exploited workers of England| administered by the Farm Board) Meerut, jail,” writes the Daily| toilers in the two countries in order and financed by the Government cf lowest price in 16 years. | the United States, has been impo-| Holland, a largely industrial| tent to reverse economic _laws.| country, fears so much the reaction | Notwithstanding the outlay of vast to 13 cents per quarter loaf, the made to cut their standard of liv-| Wheat, loans on cotton and later} ing by an embargo on Soviet wheat|Telieving co-operatives of their) that its delegate at the League As-| speculative transactions in the} sembly frankly told the Roumanian| futures market, wheat and cotton landlord agent that Holland would| have followed the world situation] not bar or interfere with the sales.|@0d declined. Two courses were) England is silent so far at the| °Pem: one was to admit the failure| League Assembly but the head of| the new law and the other ‘was | the National Farmers Union (big | t© find somite other explanation. titled landlords) calls for embargo| . or protective ae 8°) sia had sold some wheat short on| af Hits Others Too. ‘ 2a France is non-commital. | have been neither surprising nor The Roumanian spokesman fur-| arming. Chicago is a free market ther weakened his chances for i-1-|i” Which all the world trades. mediate united action by including} eee eee in his tirade the oversea gsrain ex-| Wheat on the Winnipeg Sees nd South Africa. Australia and| Russia sold wheat in Chicago it} South Africa immediately attacked| i# would have to make delivery} his position and demanded the| ‘here by buying a corresponding right to export whet to Europe. }amount of American wheat deliv- Presumably, however, they, and|Cted at Chicago. The allegation| U. S. and Canada, would not ob-| that such Russian sales aggregated| ject to keeping oat Soviet wheat| £:000,000 bushels, later revised to which compete successfullly with| 7,500,000, Was too silly to be funny, theirs, Premier B me il hat amount seriously) depressed ze pcnusty bat al rides, why. did oust: the “Hoard in } Worker, “have been so unbearable that it is not in the least surpris- ing to hear of a revolt. that it thinks the “short sales” are! | part of a Communist plot and will) not only question Chicago dealers | grain brokers Saturday during sessions in New York. | the Chicago Board of Trade should) the Soviet Union looms more men- mass demanstration at Star Casino | next Sunday, Sept. 28, at 2:30 p.m.,| which will show the imperi plotters at Washington, that the| workers are ready to defend the| Soviet Union at all cost:.” The | ' statement that his government will |assist Hyde’s investigation in all | ways possible, and that he will |repreent the Canadaian wheat pool in the forthcoming imperial con- |ference which he will attend as representative for Canada. The European proposal for united tariffs against Soviet Wheat is clearly a move of big landlords to | make money in a period of depres- sion by raising the price of bread | for the industrial workers. | But the U.S.S.R. has not tried |to lower whet prices | Hyde's Proposition for interference |with the sales of Russian wheat ee the Chicago market is furthe | by capitalists |among themselves, in their own journals, and by the liberal bour- |geoisie as a giant “red herring” | stunt, entirely hypocritical, and in- | tended, aside from its war mong- | ering use, as an excuse for the {farm board. in U. 8.| | purchases of about 70,000,000 bush-| els raise prices, or why does it not) buy more now if prices can be so} easily influenced?” | Fear “A Boomerang.” | | The New York Telegram, Scripps-Howard chain, in a front | page feature article yesterday de- clares: | “Leading grain brokers here not anly believe Soviet Russia has the) |right to sell wheat short on the) Chicago Board of Trade, but would | not hesitate to take such orders, | they said today. | |_ “Most of the brokers said the | 7,765,000 bushels involved irf the| All-Russian Textile Syndicate’s| ransactian was so small in propor-| ion to world production that it jcould have little or no effect on| jthe price. Whatever effect it} might have would be counterbal- | anced by the purchase to cover the} short commitment, they cantended. “Even orthodox Republican edi- torial writers are pointing out that short sales of 17,500,000 bushels could hardly affect the market ad- |versely in view of the fact that | the purchase of more than 50,- {000,000 bushels by the Federal Farm Board failed ta improve con- ditions. Republican politicians not ‘in’ on the program to make the | Soviet an issue on November 4 openly express fear the strategy will prove a boomerang.” The Fish Cammittee announces | Legge Admits Fake. Alexander Legge who was placed by Hoover as head of the farm board because Legge is head of the Interntional Harvester Co, the monopoly on farm machinery which more than any other one capitalist | institution fleeces the farmers, tries to use the “short selling” at Chi- cago to excuse the failure of his board to prevent. the collapse of wheat prices. He issued yesterday THE UJ ELORE CONFERENCE, THE NEW YORK HUNGARIAN WORKERS ORGANIZATIONS AND SOCIETIES are giving thelr annual great VINTAGE FESTIVAL SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28TH . in the Bohemian Hall Second and Woolsey Avenues, ASTORIA, L. I. Moving Pictures Will be Taken of the Festival FIRST CLASS ENTERTAINMENT! BOWLING MATCH—NA- TIONAL COSTUMES AND DANCES — MUST — GRAPE STEALING AND OTHER INTERESTING FEATURES DOUBLE UNION ORCHESTRA i Tickets in advance SO cante—at the Box Office 60 cents. DIRECTIONS :—Take Astoria “I.” or Subway to Hoyt Ave, Station, The Hall two blocks from sheen # - to counter the imperialist plans of Collect Greetings FOR THE NATIONAL PRESS BAZAAR which hicago but will sum non three} will be held at the Madison Square “Behind Secretary of Agriculture| | Hyde’s wheat racket, and the Fish| “The alleged discovery that Rus-| Committee ‘red’ baiting, the threat} an economic blockade against Garden acingly each day, declares a state-| Oct. 2nd, 3rd, 4th, oth the Soviet Union, N'Y. Districu| Organization Individual Greetings! ONLY SHORT TIME LEFT! ACT AT ONCE! list war | 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 10c. 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 Six 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. I; The Sciences, Vol. II; 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 Séptember 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, Each number consists of one of his lectures on the greatest and most timely among eur- 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

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