The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 6, 1930, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1930 Page Three = Be o> ee S& EO YP Ss ‘EX’ 2a = Monday a 16 Hour Day in Elton’s “Hell Kitchen” Brooklyn, N. Y. Editor Daily Worker, read the article you printed in the Daily Worker about the Elton Laundry, Elton St. and Glenmore Avenue, Brooklyn. I who am work- ing in the place can tell you a few more shocking things. Is there another place that keeps workers working for 16 and 17 hours with- out even a half an hour for lunch? Well, the workers in the Elton kit- chen, that is the washing depart- ment, start to work Monday morn- ing at 7 and work till 11 and very often 12 o'clock at night. eW don’t stop to eat, but do it while working, the smell of the chemicals mixing with out food. Tuesday and Wednesday we work 10 hours with only a holf an hour for lunch. What is the result of this speed-up? By Thursday most of us are laid off and less than half of the usual number remain to finish the week. There are workers who have to work these long hours in the cellar, where part of the washing is done, with no ventilation at all, except for about 4 small windows half sunk in the ground, With all this speed up, long hours, and little pay. Do you wonder that we are anxious to organize and fight? We have already started to or- ganize. Speakers from the Laundry Workers League, 16 West 21st St., have appealed to us and many join- ed, .A shop committee has been or- ganized, and as soon as we take in more workers we will tell the boss that we will not stand for these shocking conditions any longer. All join the Laundry Workers League, 16 West 21st Street, New York City. —A WORKER IN ELTON’S “HELL KITCHEN.” SEARCHED JOB 2 WEARY YEARS While Boss Grafters Raise Their Salaries -Brooklyn, N. Y. Daily Worker, Dear Editor: Being a marble worker, after hav- ing spent 5 years to learn this trade, now I’m-unable to find’a job, and for the past two years I only worked for five months. Being convinced that nothing could be found in my trade five months ago I started to go hunting for different positions in the facto- ries, subways and employment agencies all over the city but in vain. Stand Hours in Line While the high salaried politicians and grafters talk about studying unemployment and investigating the “red” activities, millions of ex-pro- ducers are starving like me, For the past two weeks I stood in line for hours at the fake city em- ployment agency, but up to date I failed to get in because too many were before me. For many days I tried to get a job at the Rosoff Subway employment office at 289 North 8th Street, Brooklyn, but here too the crowds amounted to hundreds daily. While the government gives mil- lions as a tax refund to all the big millionaires and at the same time the city administration raises their own salary from $25,000 to $40,000 a year and so on without mentioning all the graft made out of the poor taxpayers, for example like me. Fellow workers of all races, wake up and answer all the politicians of the bosses and grafters by voting Communist on November 4th! —AN EX-MARBLE WORKER N.Y. WHITE 60008 FAKERS REVIVE COMPANY UNION Use Tammany Cops to Terrorize Girls New York. Dear Comrades, We would like you to print this letter in the Daily Worker, so the whitegoods and underwear workers in New York will hear the latest about the fakers in Local 62 of the International Ladies Garment Work- ers. They have just taken back Samuel Shore as executive supervisor, This same Shore whose long record of graft that was printed in the Frei- heit some years ago, and who used his position as manager of the union to sell silk to the manufacturers and at the same time sell out the work- ers. He was always known as a “sheik,” and still is even tho he is near 50. He spills big words when he talks which the girls cannot un- derstand, but it’s all part of the effect. Fat-Salaried Guy No one can understand why an executive supervisor at a fat salary is needed for this shell of a union. It is known that even the die-hards of the executive board were against taking him back, and so was Snyder, the business manager who is afraid of his job.’ But the orders came from “higher up.” - At the general membership meet- ing which was called for Shore only 100 were present. No discussion was allowed. Snyder admitted this was the first meeting in three years, and that the “union” had done absolute- ly nothing, and lost many members. Start “Campaign” The fakers said they would start a campaign. eW found out very soon what kind of a “campaign” they mean. Snyder told some manufae- turers at 185 Madison Avenue, that they must lock-out their girls be- cause they refused to join the union. A “union official” together with the boss appeared before the girls at the M. H, Rosenberg shop, just as the power was stopping for lunch, and told the girls they should all join the union, The boss had prom- ised to stop the power 15 minutes earlier the next day so they could go to the union meeting. The boss said he did not know how to make a speech but approved of everything that was said. The workers saw through the fake and refused to go to the meeting, whereupon the “union official” ap- peared before the building with two cops to terrorize the girls. The Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union issued a leaflet ex- posing Shore and all the fakers. The Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union i§ organizing the whitegoods and underwear workers on the basis of militant struggle against the wage-cuts, miserable conditions, long hours, existing in, the trade today. The Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union is the only union which will lead the needle workers in militant struggles for improved conditions and a living wage, and which is organizing the unemployed workers into unemployed counuils. —A GROUP OF WHITE- GOODS WORKERS. Boss Goy’t Aids Oil Co. Gouge But Not Oil Workers Martinez, Cal. The Daily Worker: Ten more men laid off at the Shell refinery at Martinez, Calif. Shell and Standard Oil agreed to raise the price of gas from 20¢ to 21c a gallon, and immediately. the newspapers printed stories about the government investigating these price-fixing monopolies. In two or three days the whole flurry died down and no more was said about 2lc gas. Why? Because the big companies control the government and tell the officials just what to do and no to do, The newspapers are controlled by the big bosses, but they think they can keep the workers buncoed with stories about “investigations,” ete, That one-cent raise in price means more millions for Shell Oil, but it dosn’t mean any fewer permanent layoffs ro any fewer wage cuts. On some excuse or other our wages will be cut and more continually laid off, and the workers will not even know the wages are’ cut. Shell workers, we must organize into the Mine, Oil, and Smelting Union and demand a stop to these continual lay-offs, demand a greater share of Shell’s huge profits. Are we cattle that we can be herd- ed on and off the job as Shell Oil sees fit, or are we men? We must organize with the jobless to fight for unemployment insurance for them and no layoffs or cuts for us. That is the way we can keep the Shell Oil Co. from running us work- ers thru the Shell plant as tho it is a sieve. —OIL WORKER. BOSS GOV'T SIVES VETS NO AID, CARE Don’t Vote for the Boss ' Parties, Vote Red National Military Home, Wis. Editor Daily Worker: As an ex-serviceman disabled by. serving in the capitalist army pro- tecting the bosses’ wealth I was and am treated like a pauper in a poor |house. I was refused medical care bythe Bureau saying my disabilities wete not connected with my service and my illness does not carry 103 fever near death to enable me to get in their hospitals. Soviet Cares for Ex-Soldiers In ‘the Soviet Union the ex-sol- diers are treated with the best humane care, particularly the dis- abled ex-servicemen who served the revolutionary cause for establishing the workers’ and peasants’ govern- ment of the Soviet Union. Communist Party Your Party All you ex-servicemen who fought the bosses battle and walk the streets hungry searching in vain for work. All you disabled heroes who paid the price with your health to protect the bosses’ wealth and re- ceiving a few dollars to keep you on bread and water or nothing, I advise you to organize under the Communist Party leadership and de- mand social insurance éf'25 dollars a.week for unemployed and disabled as advocated by the Communist Party. No “veterans” organizations like the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars will win your battle. The leaders of these organizations are ex-officers and you know how they cared for you when you were in service. Organize and yote Com- munist! —EX-SERVICEMAN. JOBLESS RALLY AGAINST HOOVER Demonstrate as Herb Addresses A.F.L. (Continued from Page 1) gan. In August the number rose again to 24,700 and cuts averaged 10.5 per cent—the highest yet.” 7 Vote Communist, Against this capitalistic plot of Hoover and the bosses and the A. F, L. bureaucracy the Communist Party issues a clear call of “Vote Communist”; fight for the abolition of the capitalist system of misery for the workers, fight against star- vation by voting for the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill. This bill proposes to take all war funds as part of a $5,000,000,000 unem- ployment fund out of which $25 a week unemployment insurance shall be paid through councils elected by the workers to each of the jobless. This wave of wage cuts is deli- berate breaking of the promise the corporation heads made at that Hoover conference that if there were no A. F. of L, strikes, there would be no reduction of wages nor mass discharges. The A.F. of L. chiefs kept their promise, and still keep it, but do nothing about ‘the capitalists’ breach. But the jobless of Boston will demonstrate against Hoover and the A. F. of L. plot as did the Cleveland jobless. Mass Meeting Thursday. Those who want to fight for the Communist Party’s Workers Unem- ployment Insurance Bill, for shorter hours and higher wages, against lynchings and who mean to organize and strike and demonstrate against the wage cuts and unemployment will also rally in the mass meeting called by the Trade Union Unity League for Franklin Union Hall, at 8 p. m. Thursday. Speakers are: John Schmies, assistant general sec- retary of the T.U.U.L., Net Kaplan, district organizer of the Communist Party, Pat Devine and Fred Bie- denkap. Meeting here, also tomorrow, a visible armed threat against the job- less whom the A. F. of L. is seek- ing to swindle and trick, will be the national convention of the American Legion. Bosses’ Courts, Police Help Lynching Terror (Continued on Page 3) Police. That he was delivered by the prison authorities to his mur- derers, a capitalist press from Atlanta, appearing in the New York Times for Sunday, openly admits: “According to authoritative infor- mation, half a dozen men, apparently unarmed, went to the jail and were admitted. A depuyt unlocked the cell of Clark, and the mobbers Jed him away.” Court Tried Legal Lynching The despatch practically admits that the local court was openly en- gaged in railroading Clark to the electric chair, and had exposed its vicious purpose by (1) insisting in having Clark’s defense conducted by lawyers of its own choosing, (2) \at- tempting to freeze out lawyers hired by Clark himself, ordering that no one be allowed to see him except the lawyers appointed by the court, and in moving up the trial a day without notifying Clark’s own lawyers; (3) denying a change of venue and (4) when the lawyers retained by Clark forced a delay in trial, rejecting their request that Clark be removed to Fulton County Tower, Atlanta, the court stating as its reason for rejecting request: “There is no danged, and the good people of Carterville would be of- fended if he were removed.” Before sunrise the next day, Clark had been lynched by an unarmed group to whom he was delivered by the capitalist prison authorities— and the capitalist courts! -Workers! Fight against lynch- ing by bosses’ mobs and bosses’ po- ilee and courts! Vote for the Party that leads this fight! Vote Com- munist! A. F. L. OFFICIAL LOOTS SOCIALIST By ALLAN JOHNSON. As part of the nation-wide drive against labr unnins instituted by capitalists in 1920, the Lockwood ‘Committee was appointed in New York to investigate racketeering in the building trades. The commit- tee no more wanted to involve crooked labor leaders with corrupt city officials than Tuttle wants to reveal too much about Tammany to- day. Every blw at Tammany is a blow against capitalism, which can- not exist without corruption in gov- ernment, just as every blow against crooked labor leaders loosens the noose which capitalists have fas- tened around the neck of labor with the aid of labor’s misleaders. But the “59” decided then—they have become wiser since—to wage sedate, temiee tle deeeer ot rack ite weakening the faith of the A. F. of L. workers in tehir officials, The labor racketeers had become so ar- rogant that they were holding up the capitalists themselves—were de- manding graft from them as well as from wofkers. The” capitalists learned their lesson then if they never learned it before, They larned that labor leaders demand a ea huge price—for leading A. F, of L. wi by the nose into the ws the most intelligent and courageous of the workers have learned that only the Communist Party and the Trade Union Unity League can lead them out of it. LaBor Leaders Found Grafting. The Lockwood Committee found that scores of millions of dollars were being grafted by crooked labor leaders in,league with police and city officials, The pegety courts were forced to send Brindell, the building trades “czar,” to jail along with dozens of minor union officials. They were cnvicted of bribe-taking, price-fixing, “contract rigging” and eelling strike insurance. The strike insurance was nothing but a guar- antee to exploiting employers that workers would be prevented from going on strike. Despite the fact that the A. F. of L. supported Brindell and the other thieves—and thére is no lower, form of thief than a labor misleader, un- less it be the capitalist who hires him—they all went to the jug for brief terms. Brindell was sent up for five years. Actually he stayed there three and a half years, And what three and a half years they were? Special food, an expensive radio, the latest fashions in clothes, a servant and frequent excursions with his family and other friends prison walls, And camp of the capitalist enemy. And|throughout his entire term “in prison ” of course, he continued to control “his” unions, - Every charge that was ever made against Brindel]l in 1920, every form of graft, corruption, and downright thievery that existed then, is rife today, multiplied a thousandfold, Brindell died recently but his old associates still carry on—the job of misleading workers and _ stealing their dues in the bargain. These charges are true of every building trade union in New York without exception. One Gang Replaces Another. The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers is an example of the general situation, After the Lockwood Committee’s revelations, H. H. Broach, vice president of the International body, was sent to New York to “clean up” the union. What he actually did was evict one crew o fgangsters and replace it ‘with another just rapacious. He put William Hogan, who had been sent to Sing Sing by the Lockwood Com- mittee, back in his old job as secre- tary. Last year he imposed a $50 assessment on each member—a to- tal of $400 000—and raised the dues $100 a year. He has instituted a long and varied list of fines which are slapped on union members with little or no provocation, _ * The Arson Ring formed by the plasterers and wood lathers’ unions UNION OF $10,000; LEADER DEFENDS LABOR RACKETEER is another example. Here the links at and Tammany, A, F. of L. officialdom and gangland, are plain- ly visible. Vaccarelli, gunman, Tammany chieftain, and rum-run- ner_ working behind McCluskey, business agent of the A. F. of L. Woodlathers’ Union, who has looted the union’s treasury of more than $10,000. Last year McCluskey was sent to jail for “extortion,” but Vaccerelli, under whose aegis the Ring operated, is still the president of the Loyal Labor Legion, to which almost all the members of the Ring belonged, and still remains the friend of ‘Gov. Roosevelt and Jimmy Walker. Gangsters in Control of Unions. At least six unions in New York today are controlled outright by gangsters, with the direct aid of the police department. In one of these unions, a gangster was named who when searched was found carrying marked money — graft, He was never even indicted. In another union conditions are worse now than they were in tMe old sweatshop days. Wages are lower than for similar work in non-union shops and the treasury is kept depleted, to use that excuse to discourage strikes. In all of thrése unions there have never been any strikes since gangsters took control. In all of these unions the officers are supported by the BRAZIL UPRISING NOW SPREADING |\Struggle Between US4| British Imperialism (Continued from Page 1) invest $250,000,000 in the rich iron| ore deposits in the state of Minas | Geraes, The ising” in Minas Geraes is particularly severe. Ford has- 3,700,000 acres of rubber lands in Brazil. Prestes, who is a tool of British imperialism, was elected in the early | part of 1930, against the candidacy of Gertulio Vargas, “liberal” candi-| date, who was liberally backed by Yankee capital. Several armed] clashes and assassinations marked the election. Effects of the Crisis The deep-going economic crisis in} Brazil has been undermining the | Prestes, pro-British regime. At the} same time, British imperialism’s| dominating position in Brazil has attacks of Wall Street. Over 70 per cent of Brazilian ex- ports consist of coffee. The price of coffee has fallen precipitously, and the valorization scheme to prop |up prices, has crashed bringing down with it the value of the Brazilian currency. For the masses this meant wors- ening of already bad conditions, and jan impetus to the revolutionary temper of the workers and peasants. Military Misleaders In the varlous states, which have their independent armies, the petty- bourgeois misleaders, under the guise of “fighting imperialism,” by which they meant British imperial- ism, have exploited the discontent of the masses and have advanced the interests of American imperialism. Communists Active. While the Communist Party of Brazil, which was formed in 1922 has existed either semi-legally or in total illegality, it has carried on |mass work and participated in the llast general elections through the | | Workers’ and Pleasants’ Bloc. The| | Communist candidate for president | was a Negro workers Minervino de Oliveira, a marble worker and general secretary of the General Labor Confederation of Brazil. Out of the 42,000,000 population of Brazil over 9,000,000 or 83 per cent are Negroes. Yankee Imperialism. Since 1920 American imperialism has been making rapid strides in Brazil at the expense of British im- perialism. Financing of imperialist projects come more and more from Wall Street instead of Whitehall, | London, British trade has dropped rapidly with Brazil, while American trade has increased. The major portion of all raw materials (rub- |ber, qoffee) produced in Brazil go to the United States. American trade since 1913 has increased 104 per cent with Brazil, while at the same time British trade has de- creased 20 per cent. John Bull Declines. British investments increased from $1,161 500,000 in 1918 to $1,- 418,589,000 in 1929, or 23 per cent; while during the same period Wall} Street pushed up its investments from $50,000,000 to ,$576,040,000 or 852 per cent! Plan Fascist Regime. | The Brazilian bourgeoisie who) back the Yankee imperialists will) attempt to emulate the Uriburu re-| gime favoring Wall Street. This | will not be so easy, however in Brazil, where the masses have car- | ried on a more determined fight | against imperialism and in the in- terest of the oppressed masses. The Brazilian “uprising,” which follows those in Bolivia, Peru, Ar- gentina Chile, and the one now pending in Cuba, against hte Ma- chado regime, show the revolution- ary perspectives in Latin America, | the great seething unrest among the masses, and the growing war dan- ger between the two leading imper- ialist powers, Great. Britain and the United States. national officers of the A. F. of L, The labor racketeers work in the following manner, although there are variations. One William El- linger, a racketeer, tried to “pre- vail” on Joseph Okonowitz, a con- tractor and glazier, to enter a} glaziers’ and sellers’ association. Okonowitz refused because of the $100 fee. Shot by Racketeers. | Ellingen then proceeded to. give Okonowitz a thorough beating. Oko- nowitz eventually recovered and for- got the incident. He knew it would be futile to report'the assault to the police, because Ellinger would never have administered the beating with- out certain knowledge of police pro- tection. A few weeks after the beat- ing, Ellinger returned to Okono- witz’s office and shot him without preliminary conversation. Ellinger’s aim was poor, and Oko- nowitz recovered. When he did, he decided to prosecute, Tammany re- fused to support Ellinger because he was causing it some embarrass- ment, and Ellinger was convicted. While the case was being appaled by Morris Hillquit, eminent “social- ist” leader, Ellinger levied a tribute of thousands of dollars from paint- ers and glaziers all over America to help fight the case, Ellinger finally went to Sing Sing, despite Hillquit’s influence with the Tammany judge and his remarkable power of sur- rounding his words with demagogic dropped rapidly, thanks to the heavy | EINTERNATI ONAL SOCIALISTS TO AID BRUENING | MAINTAIN POWER | 9/ | Fascist Murderers Trial Starts (Cable by Inprecorr) BERLIN, Oct, 3.—No official re- port has been issued concerning y.s- terday’s Bruening, Wels, Mueller negotiations, but an informed source | hat the S: lists agreed | to refrain from introducing a nen- crx fidence motion and give passive support to the Bruening government | and its program against the work- mn The Reichstag convenes on the ih of this month. The government conomice Party demands the inlro- ction of national labor, ser is, forced employment of k | arzour je Today the trial began here of six fascists charged with killing the jrevolutionary worker Razetch on |June 28th in reprisal for the death of Wessel. The accused stabbed Razetch to death before the eyes of his wife. ‘ Tschintchuk was appointed Soviet ambassador to Berlin. In Leipzig the trial of the Young Communists revealed the stool-pig- |secutor Hoelder visited the accused |Hauberneisser in his cell, introduc- ing himself as a defender. The |prosecutor was compelled. to admit | this trick. The government medical expert declared that the star witness for the prosecution, the Socialist Beyerdson was “thrice in an insane asylum and shows definite signs of mental inferiority, is an hysteric, unable to formulate his thoughts clearly, is vengeful, avaricious, and his evidence is untrustworthy.” Food Workers Fight Wave of Injunctions (Continued from Page 1) workers in unorganized sections of the food industry, A. F. of L. Gets Injunction “Where the boss is unsuccessful in framing up sufficient evidence to obtain an injunction against us, the business agents of the A. F, of L. or of Amalgamated Food Workers | step in and help them out. For ex-| ample, Heller and Rosenzweig of Local 338 of the Reta! Grocery and Dairy Clerks Union of the A. F, of L., and the United Hebrew Trades, | under Socialist control, made, affi- davits accusing our members of vio- lence, and were responsible for the} arrest of hundreds of workers. | Belsky and Laff of the Butcher} Workers Union affiliated with the A. F. of L. and the United Hebrew Trades, as well as Epstein and Bor- son of Local 302 Delicatessen Work- ers Union also collaborated with the bosses to stop us from organizing. Socialist lawyers represent the bosses against the militant workers in the courts. Lehman, Tammany Hall secretary of Waiters Union Lo- eal No. 1, secured an injunction for | the boss against our union during a| strike at the Paramount Cafeteria. | He did not attempt to secure union | conditions for the workers, and the shop had remained unorganized. The | injunction resulted in a brutal beat- ing for the strikers, over 80 arrests, and long jail sentences for the mili- tant workers. Hundreds Jailed “Arrests are more frequent and sentences are becoming longer with} the recent use of section 600 of the} Penal Code of the State of New| York by the employers, making vio-| lation of the injunction a criminal act in which the worker is railroaded to jail without trial or jury in the presence of a judge who is also a prosecutor, Greet the Workers ‘and Peasants of the Soviet Union oo the jeon methods of the prosecution, Pro- | | Austrian Black Shirts Threaten Armed ‘Putsch’| (Cable by Inprecorr) | VIENNA, Oct. 8—The Fascist) Heimwehr (private army) issued a| sensational putsch appeal signed by Starhemberg, minister of the in-| terior, declaring that parliamentar- ism was bankrupt, and that the Fas-| cist Heimwehr intends to remain in} the government against the red elec-| toral majority, if necessary, and that} the elections represent the Heim- wehr offensive along the whole line. | Communist Int’ | Greets German Red | Election Victories| MOSCOW.—The Executive Com- mittee of the Communist Interna- tional has sent the following tele-| gram to the Central Committee of | the German Party, referring to the| election victory of the CPG, on 14th September, “The Executive Committee of the} Comintern sends fraternal greetings to the Communist Party of Germany which have gathered round their! banner 4% million proletarians at| the Reichstag election, and have lealt the social-democrats a severe blow. The victory of the C.P.G, is of the greatest importance that it has been fought on the basis fo the clearly developed program of pro- letarian revolution, and of the slogan of. the struggle for a Soviet Ger- many. Your victory is the only real vietory at this election, for it has been won on the basis of the pro- letarian class struggle. “The great success of the Fascists is a success gained with the aid of radical phrases employed to deceive the masses turning away from the parties of the big bourgeoisie. The success of the Centre Party is only temporary, for it is based on an at- tempt to organize class community to deny the class struggle. The C. P. G, must continue to fight with all possible energy against social democracy, which has still many fol- lowers in the working class. It must finally unmask the National Socialists and the Centre Party, and struggle to win over the workers HIT NANKING LIES ON RED ARMY IN CHINA Advance on Changsha and Liling SHANGHAI (I.P.S.)—The Nan- king government is spreading. re- ports on defeats of the Red troops in the Changsha district. These re- ports are the customary misrepre- sentations of the real situation. In spite of the series of “brilliant vie- tories” allegedly won by the Nan- king troops over the Reds, even the official Nanking Kuomintang agency is forced to admit the extraordinary tenacity of the Reds in the Chang- sha district. The Kuomintang Agency reporta that about 2,000 Red Army soldiers are advancing in the direction of the town of Liling, 30 kilometers from Changsha. Other Red troops have occupied the Chucho district, 30 kilo# meters from Changsha, where the governmental troops were supposed to have gained a “brilliant victory.” The Kuomintang Agency also ad- mits that small troops of the Reds are advancing actively in other places, so that the minister of was has found it necessary to order the organization of local troops, which are to reinforce the governmental forces. must intensify its work among the unemployef, its work among the agricultural laborers, and must fight indefatigably for the conquest of the majority of the workers in the works and factories. “In Germany the political crisis is maturing rapidly. The class front becomes clearer day by day. The role of the C. P. G. grows rapidly as decisive factor of the class struggle, We are firmly convinced that the Party will concentrate its revolu- tionary proletarian forces on the broadest development of the econo- mic and political struggle, and will consolidate by means of organiza- tion the results achieved. “Forward in the struggle for Sov- still following these parties. It Train Yourself for COURSES FO. Leninism, Functionarie Active Revolutionists. History of the Comintern, including EARL BROW M. J. OLGIN, For Information, Registr: Fifth Floor Register Now for the Fall Term! WORKERS SCHOOL English, Public Speaking, Russian, Spanish, Esperanto, Trade Union and Organization. Economics, Fundamentals of Communism, Marxism- For Party, YCL, TUUL, Negro, Women Workers and History of the Class Struggles. BEST INSTRUCTORS Workers School, 26-28 Union Square Telephone: Stuyvesant 7770 the Class Struggle! R WORKERS s Courses. C. P. USSR, C.P, USA and DER, MAX BEDACHT, A. LANDY ‘ation and Catalogue Call iet Germany!” 225th thousand, paper bound, “Like a brilliant meteor crossin; This is an autobiography publis! New York; second printing, clot! Thirteenth Anniversary of the Bolshevik. Revolution The Friends of the Soviet Union will send a Red Album to the revolutionary museum in U.S.S.R. as a message of intenatiornal solidarity with the names of all militant workers in the United States ‘also a short history of the labor struggle in the indus- trial centers where the names are collected. Price of Greetings 25 Cents Unemployed 10 Cents - Friends of Soviet Union 175 Fifth Ave., Room 511 NEW YORK CITY _ Bishop Brown’s Books COMMUNISM AND CHRISTIANISM 247 pages; twenty-five cents. ig a dark sky, it held me tight.” MY HERESY hed by the John Day Company, h 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, s' These boks are primmers for chi for collegians, They are written jtamps or coin, dren, yet a post graduate course from the viewpoint of the Trial, Vol. I; The Sciences, Vol. 11; History, Vol. III; Philosophy, Vol. IV; The Bible, Vol. V; six Send fifty cents for copies of This is Bishop Brown’s quarterly of one of his lectures on the greatest and most timely among cur- rent subjects. So far they have been as follows: January, 1980, 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 Subscription 25 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 months. Communism and Christianism and the first three volumes of the Bankruptcy of Christian Supernaturalism. HERESY magazine, Each number consists sample copy. cents per year. Single Copies 10c each, THE BRADFORD-BROWN EDUCATIONAL CO. GALION, OHIO

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