The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 3, 1930, Page 3

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a WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, fehl, Page Three LETTE RS EF FR cP sz IE’ Ea = wees SHOPrs BOSS PARTIES ARE IMPERIALIST WAR PARTIES, SAYS EX-SERGEANT “Vote Communist This Nariniber and Save Our Lives and Wives and Families from Destruction,” Vet Appeals to Ex-Soldiers and Workers nel PERTH AMBOY, W. J. Dear Editor: Since I am an ex-soldier and have given a great deal of thought and study to the fake promises given the workers by bgth Democratic and Re- publican parties in America. I have come to the conclusion that there are no hopes for the workers from either party and their promises. War President Wilson If we will glance back to 1918, how well we can remember the slogan, vote for Hughes, vote for war; vote for Wilson, vote for peace; what a lie! Wilson had hardly been inaugu- rated when he declared war on Ger- many. Just let me ask, did any of the soldiers from America have a grudge against any German soldier? I spoke to an ex-soldier about the war, as to what the war was about. I would like to say, comrades and ex-soldiers, the war was a commercial war; the same as the one we are now heading into at present. Bosses Worried by Soviet Growth And the capitalists are now worried by the workers’ government in Rus- sia and trying their damnedest to em- bitter the workers of the world against that government. hereas in Russia the working class gets what they produce, are we, the working class of the U. S, going to fight (the bosses’ war) and lose our lives just because some of our pot-gutted bosses would have to make themselves useful and working for a living, instead of living from our produetion? The Wheat Lie And they tell us that’s why wheat has gone so low. What a lie! Do you notice your bread going down any in price? No. Why? Because the wheat dealers are buying in the new crops now, and they have the wheat all bought in from the farmer then they can jump up prices on their own wheat and take @ clean-up, and at the same time make the farmer believe it is Russia causing his loss. Same as the industrial worker is made to believe that Russia causes him to be ynemployed. We, the workers, must remember one thing—there is but one and only one Party that can be trusted, and that is the Communist Party, who fights for you, We must ali organize ourselves as we are all taught. Must Vote Communist! United we stand, divided we fall. Vote Communist this November and save our lives and wives and families from destruction by the eapitalists, as we have been lied to and cannot believe any bull thrown by the eapi- talists any more. We all know there are millions of men out of employment at present and no hopes for things getting bet- ter, Factories shutting down daily. Vote Communits, fight our real enemy, the capitalists! EX-SERGEANT, J. C. eee Editorial Note—Not only are the chief parties of capitalism, the republican and democratic parties, imperialist war parties, but the dark horse of the party of the bosses, the party, vote their best energies in gear- ing up the war machinery and preparing the masses to go into the shambles of the bosses’ war, especially against the Soviet Union, under a thousand and one jemocratic” guises, The “socialist” party mak of the dope of pacifism to hi war moves of the imperialist Like the black betralal of the workers in 1917 by the “social~ ists” of Europe, the “sociali: administration or apposition party, will do their utmost for their “own” capitalists, The imperialist war prepara- tions must be given a smashing blow by the workers at the com- elections. Every Communist vote is a blow mongers and against the system that breeds war. Odyssey of a Jobless Worker NEW YORK. Dear Editor; Yesterday’ We, my ripping, worn shoes and I, were going downtown- wards job-seeking. At the rear of City Hall was a small, respectful crowd. We asked a man Jeaning on the iron fence to explain the situation. He was look- ing at a picture of a Vote Communist sign painted on the side of a chureh in a scandal sheet. “It's only Walker talking to the newspapermen,” he sald. Jazzy Jimmy Sure enough, he was surrounded by the perverts of the kept press, “Do you think prosperity will return within a year?” or something as childish as that must have been their question, ‘The jazzy mayor looked as though he had been having bad dreams or had sipped too many Tammany high- balls, The slouch hat cocked over the eye and crushing the left ear seemed too much like studied neglect. ‘Then We wandered on, and of found. no job. aR Ill, Steel Boss Refuses Negro Workers Jobs A Vicious Straw Boss Itches for Graft GARY, Indiana. Daily Worker: Mr. Egenberg, the employment agent of the Illinois Steel Co., was approached by a Negro worker, who asked him for a job. Mr. Egenberg's reply to the worker was that he had no job, and that, furthermore, he would not hire another Negre worker as long as he was in the mill. To give point to his Statement he called the watchman and gave him orders to drive all the Negroes off the Illinois Steel Co. property. Refuse Negroes Work days later another Negro approached the employment agent. The same answer was given this worker: “No more Negroes.” The worker asked him why he said that, and told that he had a wife and childyen to support, This straw boss said: “Me and my family have plenty. If you can't feed your family, take them into Wash- ington Park and let them eat grass.” Wants Graft Probably if these Negro workers had slipped $15 or $20 in the grafter’s hands they could have gotten jobs, for two or three days, anyway. About three years ago this “Big Doebelly” was cut almost to death by a Mexican worker for taking $25 for a job, and this worker worked only three days and was fired. Un- fortunately, a Negro worker pre- vented the Mexican worker from killing Mr. Egenberg, This Negro Worker did not get a job, and the Mexican worker was killed in the penitentiary. Bosses Scheme This points out elearly that the grafting straw bosses and the bosses do not give a damn about the work- ers, regardless of their race or color. This is the method the capitalist elass and their agents use to divide the Negro and white workers and try to keep the exploited white workers satisfied with their miserable jobs. c. §. START CAMPAIGN FOR POOR FARMERS’ RELIEF A campaign for farm relief has been started by the Workers’ Inter- national Relief and the United Farm- ers’ League, it was announced yes- terday at the national office of the W. I. R, Room i12, 949 Broadway, New York City. The ever sharpening agricultural crisis and the drought situation in- crease the necessity of intensive work among the poor farming masses. It will be, conducted espeeially- in-the South and the corn and wheat belt areas. The W. I. R. and the U, F. L. will mobilize the farmers for support of a@ bill for relief for poor farmers. The campaign will take the form of calling mass meetings and the or- ganization of the farmers in support ef the bill. Workers’ and Farmers’ Relief committees will be organized, which will demand relief locally. It will make demands upon the local eapitaists and their institutions, sending mass delegations of poor farmers to them, fighting evictions and by generally condueting a eam- paign along the lines of the elass struggle, At the same time aetivities will be eonducted for federal and state bills to give relief to the farim- ers, the expense to be met by the capitalist class. Funds for this campaign are needed at once and should be sent to the W. L R., Room 5612, 949 Broad- way, New York City. Two worker “Main Street” Lousy With Blood Suckers DES MOINES, Oct. 2.—The true nature of the American industrial system, burdened with parasitism and waste, is unwittingly revealed and even praised by the Des Moines Reg- ister and Tribune in a full page ad in Editor & Publisher, boosting Al- gona, Ia, as a “typical Main Street town.” The big lowa business daily an- lyzes the social composition of Al- gona, city of 4,000, and finds that of 1,000 families more than half are en+ gaged either in parasitic lawyerizing or wasteful middleman occupations. At the bottom of Algona’s soctal scale are 300 farm families, 47 labor- ers, 60 skilled mechanics, 17 truck drivers and a score of other useful workers, Imposed on this foundation are ten lawyers, or one to every 100 Algona families, 7 auto dealers, 8 banke clothiers—-one for every 67 families, 84 insurance and real estate agents and an assortment of lesser retailers. Of the 182 families listed as “retired” it is probable that most were former| A few weeks before he was shot in the hallway of middlemen ‘or parasites. ROB FLINT MEN IN FUND’ DRIVE Layoffs Continue in Gen- eral Motors Plant FLINT, Mich. Daily Worker: All the latest news of struggle in Flint. General Motors continues to lay men off in all plants, At Buick’s men have been laid off who have been several years in their service. These men of long service have no chance of ever being taken back to work again because of their age. Man-Killing Speed Most of their jobs have been shifted to young workers who are more able to stand the speed-up. A great many are broken down in health and show signs of premature age, Nevertheless, they are kicked out in the streets to starve. It is now about time for the General Motors to put over their annual rob- ber and imposing game of Community Fund drive. Every worker is forced in all the General Motors plants in Flint to give from three to ten dollars to this fund, The drive is put over by outside interests on a percentage basis, Also the money derived from this source is also used to pay the salary of one Bryon E. Odle, who is a sort of social secretary of the Chamber of Commerce. Fake Charity Hundreds have applied for relief and have been refused on some pre- text or other. A number of depart- ments at Buick used to work about twenty thousand men when working at capacity. But now with the in- creased speed up capacity production can be obtained with about twelve thousand, which means in Buick alone eight thousand have been forced to swell the ranks of the unemployed, EXPLOITED WORKER. A Suicide While Marphy Plots with Auto Bosses DETROIT, Mich.—Joe Pedolek, an unemployed worker of Detroit, has committed suicide. Another victim who could not stand any more hunger and got rid of life, It seems that the empty promises could not feed him, all kinds of fake committees could not give him bread and all the confer- ences called by Mayor Mtrphy could not give him work. In the last few weeks about 10 unemployed workers committed suicide. Well, the workers of Detroit will learn that they have nothing to lose and the only way to get relief is to fight under the leader- ship of the Communist Party, Hoover Fires 750 WASHINGTON, Oct. 2.—President Hoover made further preparation for his speech before the convention of the American Federation of Labor, set for Oct. 6, when on Oct. 1 he eaused announcement to be made that 750 workers employed by the Shipping Board would be dropped. Two hundred of these reside in the District of Columbia. American Sailor’s Story of His Trip In Soviet Union Have Interesting and Surprising Experiences, and Get Many New Ideas of Workers’ and Peasants’ State (Continued) The main subject under discussion was the five year plan and one ques- tioned seemed uppermost in every body's mind. Was there any possi- bility of a war being forced upon them while they were carrying out | the work of reconstruction and would the working peoples of the nations involved participate in it? Was it the last thing in the world the Russian | people desire, but they haven't for- Russians themselves may not as yet realize it, but {t is the writer's opinion that the five-year plan is al- ready an assured success. With the voluntary entbusiasm, determination and energy displayed by the masses, how could it be otherwise? We were a tired, happy and con- tented gang when we retired to our hotel for the night, but the next morning found us abroad early eager to see more of this interesting coun- gotten the armed intervention of the | try. It had been arranged for us to Powers in 1918, 1919 and 1920, Amer- | Visit a model experimental dairy icans they regard as their friends. | farm ran entirely by women, 700 of This was noticeable everywhere. | them, to be exact. Being sailors, we They highly praised the work of the |considered this a stroke of genius on American engineers and technicians | the part of those who were respon at present engaged in Russia, advis- | sible for the arrangements. As at ing and assisting them in the gigan- |Gigant, the place was proving ta be tle engineering projects under con-|® huge success. Similar collective struction, |farms are springing up all over the The New Peasant country. No longer does the peasant ‘At the conclusion of the meeting | have to till the ground with a rude iron hook, with his wife in most cases hitched up to the forward end of it, We saw the,mud hovels the peasants had formerly existed in, The day was a Sunday, but it didn't we were asked to convey the good wishes of the Russian working people to the workers of America, What impressed one was the force and sin- eerity of the people. Just simple lay Ww § peasants, if it is permitted to call|seem like it. We passed one large them that, members of the different | Church, empty, the priest puttering around in the garden. Incidentally, he was the only Russian I encountered on the trip that resembled the popu- lar conception of a bushy whiskered lecal unions, but they knew what they wanted to say, and they knew how to say it. ucation is playing a great part in the plans of the Soviet Government. Fifteen years ago the | bolshevik! As elsewhere in present most backward of the Buropean na- | ay Russia, the workers operate on tions. Fifteen years from now, at|the stagger system, working four days and resting the fifth. (To be continued) their present rate of progress, they will be second to none. | INTERNATIONAL NEWS © GHINESE AED ARMY CONTINUED [To ADVANCES Imperialists Plan to Aban- don Changsha (Cable by Imprecorr) FOOCHOW, Oct. 1—The twen- ty-first infantry mutinied today and killed its Loyal troops surrounded them and dis- armed the mutineers, Fifty were executed. officers. eee Press dispatches from China show that their advance, as well as eonsolidat- jing their position in territories al- under rule. An jociated Press story from Shanghai “A revival of Red activity in jouth Central China foreshadowing possible armed attacks on important cities was reported today in a v: riety of dispatches from the interior.” Despite the reports of cessation of hostilities between the various im- perialist-backed Chinese militartsts, the government reports that ‘but few government troops were immedi- ately available te combat the Reds.” In fact, a cable by Halfett Abend to the New York Times which reported renewed Red army efforts to recap- ture Changsha, says that “The gov- rnment is unable to spare even one on from the fighting line.” The | same cable goes on te report: “Mean- while, the Communist domination of both banks of the Yangtsze continues te grow in seriousness. A British vessel from Shagi reports red flags In evidence on both banks for more than 300 miles. The entire American and British communities ef Changsha are planning evacuation as the river is falling to its winter level, preclud- ing the presenee ef foreign gun- beats.” COMMUNISTS IN BRAZIL BECOMING MORE ACTIVE SAO PAULO, Brazil, Oct. 1 Charges that Communists in the Bra- zillan army and navy were plotting te eapture President Washington Luis and set up a new government was “found te be without basis,” says a statement issued by Pedro Liyeira Sobrinho, chief of police of Rio de Janeiro. Recently hundreds of sailors were arrested and charged with being Communists. The growing mass pressure ef the radicalized workers and peasants forced the dropping of the eharges of a “plot.” The fact remains that the Brazilian army and navy has a large number ef Commu- nists in them, who are winning over more and more of the sailors and soldiers, as well as large sections of the discontented masses. the Red armies are continuing Communist Mayor Walker Shields Murderer Of Rothstein, Strikebreaking King By ALLAN JOHNSON On.the eve of the la&t residential election, erooks was shot as another was about to be Neither Hooyer nor Rothstein have ever been convicted of a crime, but for that matter neither haye any of the Russian Czars, nor the Morgans, nor tice is dispensed only when two or more capitalists are concerned: on the principle that Blackstone makes all capitalists of immune before the law. It is Hoover, then, and not Rethstein whe would be put in the Communist Rogues Gallery if a choice had to be made. Rothstein is important only in so far that he was a prism that reflected the brutality of his capitalist mas- ters and colleagues, the Wolls, and Walkers and factory owners and finan- eiers who used his gunmen to break strikes. Boss gunmen like Rothstein and Paul Vagcarelli and Legs Diamond have @ definite function to perform in capitalist society and are usually ‘granted complete immunity from punishment se long as they remain useful to their Rothstein's sudden death was an accident. the rules of the strikebreaking game, he should now be occupying the high ition in the community granted to Vaccarelli, who is en good terms with Governor Roosevelt, Mayor Walker ,a flock of high government officials and the “socialist"-led company untons. unexpeeted murder was due to the vagaries of his own char- ein was no ordinary cut-throat. employers. posi Rothstein acter, Rot! business man who made more than of Wall Street, When he died, $7,00 his own henchmen. the idle-during IN THE SHOPS doesn't Rothstein was killed. in @ wide bed and probably will be buried in the same large marble mu- seum that will exhibit Grover Whalen's diamond-studded blackjack for edifieation of young Communists in the eoming American Soviet. greater criminal, Hoover or Rothstein? ginning to heads a system that breeds poverty, human misery, is more guilty than the men he uses to carry out his pregram; men, inci- dentally, who are usually infected with the very eancer they are permitted to propagate. jobs, their lives, drugs, Hquor, stolen goods, gambling dens, pool- Yr , fake stocks and dozens of other underworld activities. considered the greatest crap-shooter of all time, although statisties on this matter are rather difficult to procure. He wielded so much power than he was left untouched after he was proved to be the backer of the only $5,000,000 bond theft in the history There is little, if any honor among thieves. Successful Bucketshop Operator Rothstein was the largest single backer of bootleggers in America and 15| the perpetrator of one of the most barefaced bucketshop failures on record. 00 in drugs were found in his apartment. Rothstein might have continued his various activities until the revolution without interference from Tammany if his arrogance hadn't embittered @ day—rich, Rothstein had left the Juxurious apartment ne of America’s outstanding ‘oted into the White House. | W° Very efficient gamblers: by a man who Rothstein thought inal, Ha; Cardinal Haves. gambling figure on Broadway. Soon Capitalist jus- all the deference usually accorded a s' very least, a police commissioner. wealth ual, equally | “the shooting created a furore. equal capitalist justice function smoothly. Hoover will die However, even always Middle Ages, result of the sham battle between underworld figure in New York. the As an immediate result of the ki! Who is the Even bourgeois psychologi are be- dmit that the man who Banton desperately announced that te any ene who would give him any wars and criminality send half of New York's officialdom from the gambler's files after his he thought so but wasn't sure, Trust Bank. George McManus was brought to ti the stand in his own defense. issue. Crain, churchgoing owner of cessful in the campaign. When the According to all guilty than the two latter, mentioned above. Was an extremely shrewd Fee see Ob Care “squealed,” and if he had “squealed’ ten million dollars by traffieking in Why wasn’t Ruth Keyes, present been invited, questioned at the trial He was the stand in the McManus trial? / to Judge Mancuso, a member of Ro provider of striksbreaking gunmen to trial, the gentleman will knows who the murderer is, and isn’t telling. fashionable hotel] for terday deseribed as Frank Fay), of Jim Meehan about $350,000 poorer than when he had entered. all the money had been wen by Nate Raymowd and “Titanic” Beyond question Rothstein's pape! Tammany Hall, revealing all the poisone: When Mayor Walker wants the murderer be brought to trial, but not before. Almost ‘Thompson, “Honored” Like Police Commissioner On Noyember 4, Rothstein was invited to a room ip the Park Central | was George McManus, 4 well-known after Rothstein entered the hotel, he staggered out mortally wounded and was transported te a hospital with tatesman, or a movie actress, or at the Not because it was a shooting, because even manicured police statistics prove that more people are shet in New York every year than were wounded in many & fair-sized war in the but because it was Rothstein who was shot. Even the the two embattled hypocrites, Smith and Hoover, didn’t overshadow in interest the murder of the most powerful “Public” Is Placated lling, a chief inspector was removed, ten detectives were forced into yetirement and twenty officers ef varying ranks were tried for incompetence and dereliction of duty, waving of arms simply fanned public interest and District Attorney Joab This frantic he would grant absolute immunity evidence bearing on the murder. contained enough information to , including its judges, to fail for life. When Banton was asked if any of Rothstein's papers had been taken death, Banton evasively replied that Shortly after, Banten deposited two small files of the most important papers with Judge Mancuso, who pra- ceeded to guard them as he guarded the depositors’ money in the City (It closed its doors soon after). vial in good time, and the case against him was so fimsy that it was thrown out without MeManus even taking The murder then became a campaign @ burlesque theatre byilding, promised to bring the murderer to trial within fifteen days after lis election, if suc- fifteen days were up, instead of nam- ing the murderer Crain asked for the dismissal of the indictments against Heimy Biller, John Doe and Richard Roe, the frst of whom was no more Killer Might Have “Squealed” Why was the murder of Rothstein former partner in a gambling house with William Shea, a Tammany chieftain, never solved? For the reason If the killer had been eonvieted, he might have the roof would have been blown off 8 mess it cov in the raom where Rothstein had had of George McManus, who so far from killing Rothstein, actually tried to prevent the murder? Why was Bridget Farry, chambermaid in the room where Rothstein was called, asked eom- pletely irrelevant questions by the prosecuting attorney when she was on Why did Banton give Rothstein's papers thstein's crooked ring? f Rothstein, gri it New York has ever known, brought Jimmy Jimmy, blood-brother of Rothstein, A Correction (Through an error in Sopyrentinge Larry Fay, milk racketeer, was yes- BRAUN, SOCIALIST, SUPPORTS PLAN OF BRUENING AGAINST WORKERS SIR ESME HOWARD SEES ‘Heavy Increase of All U.S;ANGLO WAR CLOSE) Burdens Proposed for Workers “Hands Across the Sea” a Is a Lot of Hokum (Cable by Inprecorr) is fe BERLIN, Oct. 1.—Yesterday eve- 5 § e Bruening government pub- MANCHESTER,” Oct. 1.--That| its program containing tre- sentimental talk of “hands across the|mendous burdens for the working sea,” between the United States and | masses; cu pensions and salaries Britain is a lot of baloney, was the|¢o. omeials: r tion of the Re gist of a speech made yesterday by| .ibsidies to states and municipall- Lord Howard, former bassador to Washington British A ord How- | ties; reduction of the Reich's unem- ployment subsidies; increased tobacco ard used to be known under the| ;,, med yharaploincent anne monicker of Sir Esme Howard | tributi © the Woekase: fenenaeel He pointed out that in the period | rents of crisis, with war in the offing, the| ‘phe capitalist press approves the talk about the “unthinkable war” and | p, 1. athg: | peoerem: . Srienideenee Anglo-U. 8. friendship wouldn't stop| striving to secure approval of his armed struggle. His speech, which,| program by the Socialist Party under as usual, contained the usual tripe| tne threat of disillusion of the Prus- about efforts for peace, clearly | jan coalition, in which Otto Braun, pointed out that American imperial-| socialist premier, has the leading ism had reached a high stage of de-| j,}, velopment and that their British|” yesterday the Socialist premier, rivals would have to take this into| praun, agreed to vote for the pro- aecount in preperation for the next|eram ‘in the Reichs council. Vor- ‘We. waerts, leading organ of the Social- At the same time, Howard indi-|;<¢s° complains that the Bruening eated the dan to imperialism in| },ozvam won't achieve its object, but the next war Not only would an- cids taking a definite opposition ether cataclysm like that of 1914 en-| ctanq, danger the whole structure of the|" The metal bosses yesterday de- ’ he said, “but it would in- manded a 15 per cent wage cut for all categories of workers, Agree- ments expire Saturday affecting 150,- 000 workers. The reactionary trade union leaders propose arbitration. » revolutionary opposition de- mands a strike. At Leipzig the trial of the Youngs Communist Deputy _| Communists showed that the tndiet~ . . ment is baseless, with no direct evi- In Poland Given Eight sence against the accused. The evi- | dence shows a police frame-up, pers Years on Frame-Up| petrated by poliee spies, with the ald (Cable by Inprecorr) of Socialists. WARSAW, Cct, 1.—The Commun: ist Seym (parliament) deputy, Ze was sentenced to eight years’ labor for alleged possession of arms without a license. Zarski’'s arrest followed a demon- stration of unemployed workers, evitably invelve us, and most E pean eountries, in such an eeonomic and financial disaster that we might well fall, never to rise again.” Any way, Howard, went on, we must in- crease armament: ro- waleh resulted in a collision with the police. Zarski was charged with violating his parliamentary immunity and was immediately arrested on the framed-up eharge. Bishop Brown’s Books COMMUNISM AND CHRISTIANISM 225th thousand, paper beund, 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 hound, 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. 11; History, Vol. II; 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. 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 €0, GALION, OHIO READY “FOR CIRCULATION the following new pamphlets from the International Pamphlet Series No, 6.—SPEEDING UP THE WORKERS By JAMES BARNETT THH SPEED-UP and rationalization in industry..,.,10¢ 7.—YANKEE COLONIES By HARRY GANNES A STUDY OF the Philippines, Hawaii, Porto Rico and other American possessions No, 8.—THE FRAME-UP SYSTEM . By VERN SMITH THE DEVELOPMENT of the frame-up as an em- ployers' weapen in the class war, tald against the baek- ground of famous labor eases sreeees e108 9.—STEVE bar ahd 8 one: Aire AND DEATH By A. B, aa fe aan NORTH A MOVING plographicel: ine ident in the American class UPUBRIO cipssecenrerserenerrees dete eeeeeee rere eenenn ens 1m No. 10,..-THE HERITAGE OF GENE DEBS By ALEXANDER TRACHTENBERG THE STORY OF the development of this famous work- ing class leader and his role in the labor movement. +91 SPECIAL DISCOUNTS on quantity orders Rush Orders for these Pamphlets for use in election campaign to WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 48-50 East 13th Street, New York To Vote‘Communist Against the Deportation, Fingerprinting, Registration and Discrimination Against Foreign-Born Workers!

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