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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1930 Page Three | Op >is wes ws > > TAMMANY THROWS OUT WOMAN, FOUR Conn. Police — HUNGRY CHILDREN ON STREETS TO DIE) Rout Jobless Strike a Smashing Blow Against the System That Breaks Up Thousands of Workers’ Families, Vote Communist Noy. 4th! (By a Worker NEW YORK.—Mrs. Lillian Shea, with her four children were thrown out of the house Mrs. Shea was calied to appear at the 88th Street court for her eviction case. The court, always at the service of the bosses, handed out the eviction notice to the landlord giving five days’ time to Mrs. Shea to vacate. At the same time the court threatened to arrest Mrs, Shea’s husband for to find a job. Mrs. Shea, returning home, told the judge’s story to her husband and the latter, afraid of the court’s treatment, disap- peared from home the same night. Steal Furniture, At the end of the fifth day, the landlord returned to Mrs, Shea’s place and asked her to pay for the three months’ rent for which Mrs. Shea was unable to pay, so the landlord, with the help of a gang- ster, took the furniture away and Mrs. Shea was unable to see where | the furniture was brought, and un-| able to find it as yet. Separated From Children. Mrs. Shea applied for help to the municipal lodging house but was refused because the house was over-| crowded, but her children were) taken to a charitable institution, Now, the Downtown Unemployed | Council elected a committee to find| out the whereabouts of Mrs. Shea’s | furniture. Workers of all races, unite to- gether and vote for your Party, the Communist Party, against the graft- ers and politicians. —ANDY H, LEWIS. eee Editorial Note: 72,798 eviction Ford Launches Attack Workers ‘ New York. Daily Worker:— Looking for a’ job, my husband went to Edgewater, N. J., where is located a big new plant of Henry Ford. He reached that place at 7 and waited across the tracks like a miserable beggar till 11 a. m. A tall, nice looking, private policeman of Henry, wearing a badge, No. 67, announced that there was nothing to do. He learned from that fellow that no foreigner could get a job there, only citizens. It was a watch- word from Henry, who has built up his fortune with the sweat of foreigners, especially with the help of Spanish people. I don’t know, but if that is the watch- Correspondent) situated at 323 East 75th St. non-support for not being able notices have been served upon jobless workers’ families the first six months in 1930 in New York. More workers are being evicted now than ever before. 150,000 families are expected to be evicted by the end of the year. Tam- many the government of the bosses, with the most brutal dis- regard for the health and the very lives of workers, their wives and children, are daily throwing the jobless into the cold streets to suffer untold misery. While these roistering grafters evict jobless they riot in every luxury and laugh at the miseries of the evicted workers. Will you jobless and working workers vote for the damnable parties of the hosses—the parties | from Lodgings New Haven, Conn. Comrades:— While the capitalist newspapers throughout the country are de- nouncing the “Reds” in China for destroying Yale in China as they call it, it is just as well to know how “Yale in New Haven” is .conduct- ing itself, We all know very well that our patriotic capitalists turn over millions of dollars in cold cash every year. I would like to tell of a little in- cident that occurred here a few weeks ago. Police Plan Raid. In one of the buildings that Yale was demolishing a small army of unemployed workers used to crawl into for lodgings at night. The po- lice were informed of this and a raiding party was planned by the police of No. 1 Precinct: At four o’clock in the morning the place was invaded by a squad of cops. Fifty workers were cap- tured. They were lined up and searched by the cops. Out of the fifty workers how much money was found on the fifty men? Now guess, fellow-workers. Why, three cents! Now, just imagine, three cents on fifty men. “Hell of a Country.” ~ Now, I don’t think any other state in the union can beat that. One cop, I hear, was more sympathetic than the others. He was heard to of hunger misery and death—the republican, democratic and “so- cialist™ parties. Or will you make a real fight for your life, for your wives and children and rally to your party—the Communist Par- ty—the party that alone can lead to the overthrow of this murder system and -stablish a workers’ society—with bread, peace and security for the masses. Against Foreign Born word all over the country, the for- eigners who have families and are facing starvation, are compelled to raise hell and protest against this crime, never thought by Hoo- yer and his dreaming prosperity. Foreigners have built up the United States and its population is cosmopolitan, .Besides, during the war these foreigners have heen brought here and today they have no chance to live. What to do? Haven't they the right to protest and raise hell side by side with their brother American work- ers, who themselves face star tion? Haven't they fought 1914? —HELEN. in “SOCIALIST” PARTY DISGUSTS WORKER (By Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Oct. 13.—While for many years I never heard anything about the “socialist” party, last week I found in my mail box a cit- cular with the title: “What is So- cialism?” issued by the “socialist” party of Chicago, Reading it over carefully I found that “Our teachers, professors, speakers, newspaper editors and writers, and even ministers, doctors and all professional men are more and more at the mercy of the capi- talist system and dependent upon it’... Wondering why the social- ists should worry about ministers, editors, etc., I reminded myself that the national leader of the socialist party is a minister, Rev. Norman Thomas, and the editor of the Lib- erty magazine and co-partner of the Chieago Tribune, Captain Patterson, is a former socialist. “The “socialists” themselves ex- plain it as follows: “Many of the most devoted be- lievets in the golden rule and the brotherhood of man have discovered that socialism is the program by which their hopes may be realized.” «.+ And so is the House of David, Sister MacPherson of Los Angeles and the Holy Rollers. Reading on I was informed that “The socialist party, while it is revolutionary in its final aim, is none the less distinctly evolutionary and constructive in its method.” And to prove how terribly revolu tionary they are in their “final” aims, they state on the next page: ... “Such measures (capitalist reforms) can stop some of the mis- ery caused by capitalism, but the main reason for our favoring such meastires is that, if logically car- ried out, they offer the possibility of peaceful, lawful and orderl, transformation of society... .” I was shocked by such “revolu- tionary aims, and began to see Red «+» when I turned around to the red hot stove into which I dropped the “final aims” of the “socialist” fak- eT. 5 oo MARTIN SAILOR. MANUFACTURERS SAY CRISIS IS JUST HUMAN NEW YORK.—Among the re- markable series of propositions presented by the officers and coun- sel of the National Association of Manufacturers for guidance of the members in convention assembled were the following: 1, Industry has become national and even international, and is so complicated that one mind can hardly grasp it. 2. The unemployment problem must not be handled by the federal ot state government but should be left to the trade, the business, the plant, and the municipality. 8. Business is bad over nearly the whole world, and depressions may be expected to réeur until human nature changes. 4, The function of our govern- ment is political not economic. 5. The association’s lobbyists worked for the (Grundy) tariff bill. 6. Some European countries might be more prosperous if they repealed their tariffs, The association’s economists startled outside statisticians with the proposition that business im- proved in September and will con- tinue to improve. Send-Off Affair Sun. for Jobless Delegates Sunday, Oct. 19, will be a full day for the Workers’ International Re- lief delegation to the anniversary of the Rusgjan Revolution, and to the meeting of the International Executive Committee of the W. I. R. The afternoon will be devoted to the showing of one of the finest Russia npictures, “Arsenal,” and the evening will be spent at a splen- jy |did affair in honor of the delegates. All memibers of the W. I. R. and sympathizers are urged to attend and give the delegates a rousing| i send-off. Afte rtheir stay in Moscow, the delegates will go to Berlin to at- tend the meeting of the Interna- tional Executive Committee, > remark this is certainly a hell of a country. Three cents on fifty men, Why didn’t Hoover and Green| state that there is $37 per capita for every person in the United States, Don’t this prove that they know what they are talking about! -wW. L. Deroit Promises Jobs for Unemployed | Who Survive Winter DETROIT, Oct. 18.—Four million dollars was appropriated for school | buildings here and as soon as bonds | are sold and the plan goes into op-| eration it will be around “Aprit+ when nearly 2,000 men will be em- ployed on construction work.” And! in the meantime the unemployed ean live on the promise of a job some time in the future. In De- troit there are nearly 200,000 un- employed and all thees measures| are but fake moves on the part of| the bosses to stem the growing re- sentment of the workers. Work- ers, don’t wait on Murphy’s prom- ises, demand unemployment insur- ance rigth now at the expense of the bosses. Fight for the Commu-| nist Social Insurance Bill of $25 a week, DEMONSTRATE AT’ N.Y. CITY HALL, Board of E stimates| Meets on Thursday (Continued from Page 1) | ment to the same bloated financial | giants who, meeting a week ago in national conference in Cleveland, applauded Hoover’s lies that the crisis was about over, and listened to the police clubs rattling on tne skulls of starving, demonstrating thousands of workers outside the} hall | The unemployed of New York de- mand for their own food and clotn- ing and the preservation of the lives of their hungry families that $196,306,716! No Money for Killers! Another huge sum the Tammany | board proposes to appropriate is $61,785,969 for the police depart- ment, to pay for the uniformed gun- men who have killed Steve Katovis, | and other militant workers, who have clubbed and jailed thousands of workers on the picket line, who | smashed with brutality the unem- ployment demonstration of 110,000,- 000 workers here on March 6. For police to club the hungry un- }employed and workers striking against wage cuts, the police de- partment gets $7,846,281 more this year than last. The bosses know the jobless will fight, not starve! The Jobless start their fight now, with a demand that this money, in- tended for more murderous blue coats to kill and club them shall instead be turned over to their re- lief. Huge sums are to be appropr}- ated for more armories, to house 2 militia who may be called out against strikers and the jobless at any time! The jobless demand for them for relief instead. Tammany office holders’ salaries, including that of the Mayor and other members of the board have been raised. They swill in luxury while 800,000 New York jobless starve and sleep in the streets— streets soon to be full of drifting snow. The jobless demand half the bloated salaries of the city officials be turned over to them. Food from the garbage pail, and suicides, big funds for clubs—that’s how the workers’ heads—that’s how the capitalists want to solve the un- employed problem! Don’t let them get away with it! When you work- ed you made all the food and eloth- ing and houses that you are now barred from! Fight! Demonstrate Thursday before the city hall and the Tam- many board of estimates for immed- iate relief! a CINCINNATI I. C. 0. R. MEETINGS. CINCINNATI, Oct, 12.—The Cin- cinnati I. C. O. R. branch meets every first and third Sunday at the Odd Fellows Temple, CINCINNATI, Ohio, Oct. 12— NOT SUICIDE, BUT STRUGGLE Support Communist, Party! (Continued from Page One) ganda, being now made about Sov- iet Russia in this country, merely i e smokescreen, behind | e the most terrible con- | that have been “mant ditions, ¢: tured” in the most prosperous coun:| Make Repeated Drives| Socialists Pave the try of the world. I have told § ator Wagner, that the demoer; party is as guilty as the other one (the big brother) the republican party, if same does not act to rem- edy the horrible conditions, but merely makes a political issue out | of the situation. | I am exhausted, because not long ago, I had undertaken a health cure, eating up all my funds, and I have before me nothing, but empty words and promises, but no work and no food. I do not want any alms, I want work, and that’s all. What did I do, that I have to offer my- self on the labor market like an ex-convict? What is the govern- ment going to do to create some starve? I have studied economics in Eu- rope, am an intelligent man and I have to go begging—however, I rather will be a suicide, than do this. Don’t I have the same right to live as so many others of my prosperous fellow citizens? And has this country, this government, to whom I have been a faithful, loyal citizen no obligations towards me outside—of referring me to the poor-house? You may publish this article for justice’s sake. I have no bad in- tent, but after having appealed to whomever I could without any re- sult, I am exhausted. Dn P. * * * The above letter tells its own story. In all directions we see the small enterprises and the lower middle class being pressed to the wall by the operation of the economic crisis of capitalism arid the efforts of the big bosses to Save themselves at the expense of all other classes. In this situation the lower middle class has no other alternative than to support the demands of the revolutionary workers. Not suicide, but militant organ- ization and revolutionary strug- gle against the capitalist system is the solution of the dispossessed classes. The Communist Party leads the struggles of all op- pressed masses. Support the elec- tion campaign of the Communist Party. Vote for a fight against the starvation policy of the bosses. Vote Communist! FAMILY STARVING, RE- NEWS! “My family is starving. | All I can spare is 50 cents for one month’s subscription for my bible Workers at the Ford plant here are working only three days a week, but they have to produce as much as they did formerly in five days, | —the Daily Worker—and that is taken from our stomachs.” C. 0. D., Mt. Clemens, Mich. SUBS BUILD THE DAILY. real relief for thos ] r ,{the service of 1 Hooke) WAG CGMOALY | reunites theldttics of the ‘author-|Satehianding of the sights of the WAR AGAINST U.S.S.R. IN MANCHURIA on Chinese Eastern Railway LONDON. —Harbin reports number of fresh White Guard ct-| Braun government resolved to car if tacks on the Chinese Eastern R. way. Recently a band Guards, under the leadership of the v, OC- on sina, the western of the Chinese line arrested by the authorities, or they would wreck the enger train. the Chinese police ized representatives of the Trans a ern Railway, laying before the| ¢lection, ese commander the ultimatum | P! i of releasing a member of the band | &nactments. leader of the attack on the Soviet |cwning c' Way in Germany for Fascist Dictatorship BERLIN.—The Otto Prussian out the emergency enactments of White| Sued by Bruening under Article 48, | the poll-tax, the municipal beer and | Pi municipal traffic taxes. It is not by accident that the so- cialist. government, soon after the resolves to carry out this lage with the aid of dictatorship The socialist shows hereby that it the path for the fascist dictutor- On Sept. 13 the White Guards in| Ship. The permanent committee for the people’s representatives was called Balkan Railway at Mandschuli,! by its president, the social democrat | forced their way into the building | Henke, on the third day following and searched the rooms. This|the Reichstag election, in order to search was carried out on the or- | onfer on a demand drafted for a ders of the chief of police, Schao,| taxation gift of 60 millions for the The Communist INTERNATIONAL | NEWS. WHITE GUARDS TRY TO PROVOCATE |Crisis Is Worse In Peru; Mass Unrest Grows fascist headed by Cerro, ousted the | Wall Street puppet government of Leguia, is now faced with a wor- |sening of the economic crisis in Peru. The Sanchez c que, which A ew York Times dispateh from Peru, states the “econom- revolution is just beginning “It is a fact,” says this same re- port, “however, that Peruvian bonds have been going down steadily on the stock market in New York, Ex- a, y| change rates of the Peruvian sol on the American dollar have also been declining. The effects are wide- | spread in a country like this, which produces little, imports much and depends on one or two staple crops for livelihood.” The great mass unrest, which | aided the overthrow of Leguia, will not be quieted by the empty phrases jof Cerro. Meanwhile, the Cerro forces are trying to deflect the |mass discontent by either instigat- Consulate in Harbin in May, 1929.| representatives brought in opposing|ing or permitting so-called anti- The ntatives. New White utmost powers of General transferring their troops vicinity of the Soviet frontier. Diederich ties of the White Guard organiza- tions have gone unpunished. _ The White Guards in the employment of the police and other government in- stitutions take an active part in these activities, and an important role is played by the newspapers published in Manchuria by the White Guards, and openly support- ing the armed attack on the Soviet Union being prepared by the White Guards. Ohio Workers to See CINCINNATI, Oct. 12—A movie showing the White terror in Ger- many and other capitalist countries will be shown in a church on Ken- yon St., on Oct. 18, under the aus- pices of the International Labor De- fense. In addition to the movie there will also be a concert, ‘Socialists’, Judge Vause Steal $485,000; Thomas Blesses Culprits’ Organization By ALLAN JOHNSON For reiterating the simple truth that workers are everywhere held in slavery by bosses who will never stop exploiting them until the work- ers overthrow the government of these capitalists and establish one which shall be governed by and for workers, a Communist may be—and ften is—booked on every charge in the criminal code from obstructing traffic to questioning the ancestry of Alexander Hamilton. The capitalist laws that sent Sac- co and Vanzetti to their death for opposing war, among other things, permit the capitalists who start these wars to make hundreds of millions, The laws that permit Rockefeller and Sinclair to steal billions in oil land, are designed to jail a starving worker for taking a bottle of milk from the doorstep of one of these pirates, As Anatole France, the Communist novelist, de- clared, “the law, in its majestic im- pattilaity, forbids the million- aire and pauper alike from sleeping under bridges and begging for bread on the streets. Law Is “Sanctified” Capitalists endow these laws with an air of sanctity which is calcul- ated to make the working class be- lieve that if there is anything more holy than a law, it is another law, and that to observe the law—mean- ing capitalist law—is the primary duty of every decent-human being. It is an axiom that under capital- ism the greater the thief the greater his honors. Millionaires do not die in jail, nor will they while capital- ists and their representatives make the laws. Tn order that the holy attitude toward the law may best be pre- served, all sorts of hocus-pocus sur- Younds the appointing of judges, and if a worker looks at one cross- eyed, he may find himself clapped in jail for contempt of court. It is for this reason that judges can com- mit almost any crime without fear of punishment, for if judges are caught breaking the law, workers will obtain an insight into the real nature of capitalist justice. Judges Rarely Go to Jail When by some miracle of capital- ist stupidity a judge is caught red- handed, a veil of mystery is hung about the case and the chances of the judge being tried are about one in two or three million. As for a judge being jailed, a diligent seatch among dusty records has revealed only one such anomaly, and he was quickly pardoned by President Har- ding. Let us take the case of Judge Vause, who is no more of a thief than most of the judges in New York and less so than many of them. In 1927 the Columbia Finance Corp. was started with a total cap- ital of $128. Two years later the company failed with an indebtedness of 485,000. The difference between the two sums is approximately what Judge Vause and hi sfriends pocketed for lending their names to the enterprise, which, like the ven- tures of Judge Martin, were organ- ized for the one purpose of mulcting the investors. Forged $2,500 Note Judge Vause’s methods were somewhat more crude than those of his colleagues. Whereas most judges are wise enough to confine their crooked deals to friends or business- men whose interests would be harmed if the transactions were made public, Vause was so careless as to forge a stranger’s name to a note on which he “borrowed” $2,500 from his own company. It was because of little “slips” of this nature that it was discovered that Vause, while he was on the NEGRO WORKERS! VOTE COMMU a bench, was given $250,000 by the United American Lines for negoti-) ating the transfer of piers 84 and} 86. But if would be a mistake to be- lieve that Judge Vause clung to the entire $250,000. A large portion of the loot went, through necessity, to Mister John MeCooey, Tammany leader of Brooklyn, who sees to it that very little graft is transferred in Brooklyn without some of it sticking to him. An untouched biography of Mr. McCooey, who is the living compo- site picture of every bartender -in| the world, would place him high in the ranks of the great robber-ban- dits. McCooey rules Brooklyn as no feudal lord dared rule his fief, and his work is duly appreciated by the 4659.” As a consequence, the entire turn for a $250,000 bribe, but for tax evasion, Thith charge was ob- viously picked because there was a good probability that the jury would not convict, and if it did, the pen- alty would be relatively small. Furthermore, it doesn’t sound near- ly as bad for a judge to be sent to jail for dodging taxes—every good capitalist considers that a duty —as it does for robbing a widow, or taking a $250,000 bribe. Judge Vause’s associates in the banking concern which started with $128 and ended with an indebtedness of $485,000 are as revealing as his own corruption. The president of the mon Cruso, The secretary was Harry before being convicted in the Colum- | White Terror Movie, Columbia Finance Corp. was Solo-| divisions have been formed and the|t Rarbin White Guards are doing their! social welfare benefit has run out! 4 tight hold on Peru, The Terro to increase the fighting|and the immediate convocation of | by | the newly elected Reichstag. to the} | The consul general of the Soviet | Communist Union in China, Comrade Melnikov,| democrats were prepared to vote has addressed a note to the Chinese |for a part of the 60 millions to be authorities, pointing out that up to| given to the owning classes by way} the present the anti-Soviet activi-|of taxation, and were in principle Cruso. Both are well known “social- | ists. Sol. Cruso divided an office) persons’ tax, officials’ n aid of the unemployed whose The social democrats joined the bourgeois parties in rejecting the motions. The soeial not opposed to the whole proposi- tion, only suggesting a change of date for the enactment. ‘MORE JOBS THAN | MEN IN U.S.S.R. Compare With 8,000,000 Starving Jobless Here! NEW YORK.—~At the same time} that reports all over the United States show worsening crisis and increased unemployment, A. M. Tsikohn, Commissar of Labor in the Soviet Union, declared that there is a severe shortage of workers in the U. S. S. R. In construction work alone, Tsikohn states, there is a lack of 300,000 workers, and in July throughout all Soviet industry there was a shortage of 500,000 workers. This included both skilled and un- skilled. With the rapid advance of! the five year plan, and the build- ing up of socialism, the shortage of workers in the Soviet Union has been steadily growing at a faster pace than unemployment grows in| the capitalist lands. As a result of the labor shortage, the Commissar of Labor has issued a decree that workers who cannot immediately find work in their spe- cial trade, must accept work at other trades or at unskilled labor. Here is the sharp contrast of what is happening where the work- ers rule, and are planning and build- ing up a Communist society in the interest of the workers, and what is going on in the capitalist coun- tries, with conditions worsening daily. Vote Communist! increasingly frequent White| motions, demanding the immediate | American riots, which are mass dem- White Guard attacks on the west-| resignation of the Bruening govern-} onstrations against American im- ern line of the C. E. R. and the ef-| ment, the cancelment of the emer- | perialism. forts of the White Guards to pre-| gency enactments on poll-tax, un-| vent the railway traffic are due to| married the arrival of the White Guard gen- | emergency tax, reduction of unem- eral, Diederich, who has sent the| ployed and sick insurance and war White Guard bands his personal rep-| disabled pensions, the remittance of | Guard | 300 million marks to the municipali- | The change of government does | not mean any change whatever for the mass of peasants and workers, whose conditions were brought to a miserable level under Leguia, The world agrarian crisis, which is espe- cially gripping Latin America, has government, based on the petty- bourgeois imperialist tools who | squeeze as much as they can from | the masses, will have hard sledding. |The masses will not rest content with empty promises, Furthermore, imperialist antag- onisms are growing sharper. Wall Street handed Leguia millions of dollars for building roads in far- away mountain passes. The bank=, 's are beginning to become fright- ened at the fall of the bond quota- tions, Added to the situation in Peru is the growing unrest through- out the rest of Latin America, and the increasing danger of war be- tween Great Britain and the United States. FORD EXPLOITS BOYS ~ AT 15 CENTS AN HOUR | DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 13,.—Ford, | the philanthropist, employs boys 12 to 18 years old at a scale of 15 to {40 cents an hour. There are now | about 5,000 boys at the River Rouge | plant, Federated Press was informed by boys who work there. Some of the boys seem to be younger even than 12, but they go to work at the same time that the men do and can be seen sleeping in the street cars on their way home from work in the evening. According to the Ford system, | these lads are employed when 12 at 15 cents an hour, ‘alternating two weeks of work with one of school. Whether in school or in other de- partments, these youths actually produce parts of the machines and tools and although Ford claims he makes no profit on them, workers jare insistent that they turn out work of greater value than their meager pay. During the industrial depression, | while men with families are being fired right and left, the number of boys employed has actually doubled. ] Vote Communist! READY FOR CIRCULATION the following new pamphlets from the International Pamphlet Series No. 6.—SPEEDING UP THE WORKERS jbia fraud, with Baruch Zuckerman, | | BY JAMES BARNETT jleader of the Paoli Zion, a Jewish( blame for the pier lease steal was The Speed-up and Rationalization in Industry.......++ seeese born by Vause. There is only one} McCooey but there are many Vauses—almost any judge could do as well. Better, if anything, for he would steal as much and probably! wouldn’t get caught. Fleeced Widow of $63.000 Vause’s great heart enfolded all humanity, especially that part of it! that was wealthy. When he was) asked to take care of a widow's $63,000 estate, he declared his sense of duty wouldn’t permit him to re- fuse. The widow’s estate is today worth somewhat less than the post- age stamp it would take to inform her of the fact. Desperate attempts were made to keep Judge Vai rom going to trial. He feigned insanity and ac- tually tried to bribe the alienists who were delegated to examine him. When he was finally convicted it was not for fleecing hundreds of get-rich-quick investors, nor for forging a stranger’s name to a note, nor for robbing a widow of $63,000, chauvinist organization; one ist” party and connected with yel- meeting last Saturday, his blessing. Included among the “notables” who were business associates of the Cruso, both of wh m admitted in court that they looted the Columbia Finance Corp., are Jacob Fishman, Zionist and former partner of Pan- ken, one of the leaders of the “su- clalist” party and Mayor James J. Walker, who announced, when he re- turned from a recent vocation in Havana with one of his lovliest friends, that “I know Judge Vause to be a fine fellow with a splendid record at the bar.” No doubt Judge Vause’s “splendid” record is what is keeping him out of jail despite his conviction of the tax evasion nor for selling city property in re- charge. editor of the Jewish Morning Jour- | nal; Morris Rothenberg, well-known | | of | | low socialist Forward. When the na-| | tional socialists held an anniversary | Norman} Thomas was present and extended} | No. 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 developmnt of the frame-up as an employers’ weapon in the class war, told against the back.gro,ynd of famous labor No. 9—STEVE KATOVIS: The Life and Death of a Worker By A. B. MAGIL and JOSEPH NORTH cident in the Amrican class strug- see aeteteee tee 100 No. 10.—THE HERETAGE OF GENE DEBS By ALEXANDER TRACHTENBERG The story of the development of this famous workin leader and his role In the labor movement SPRHCIAL DISCOUNT ON QUANTITY ORDERS Rush orders for these pamphlets for use in election campaign meetings to WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 48-50 East 13th Street, New York = class NIST! VOTE AGAINST THE BOSSES LYNCHING TERROR AND MASS UNEMPLOYMENT! VOTE FOR FIGHT ON LYNCHING AND FOR SOCIAL INSURANCE TO EVERY JOBLESS WORKER!