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xu = EDRs EF Ee cy ea ‘x =a E—_ mm & Ei Gd EE $s 4 NEWARK COMMUN ST PARTY SCORES “NON-PARTISAN” A. F. OF L. VOTE SELLING TO BOSS HUNGER PARTIES AFL Would Make Morrow, Wall Street Banker and Imperialist, Workers “Friend” By TOM MYBRSCOUGH (Worker Correspondent). NEWARK, N. J.—Dwight W. Morrow and Alexander Simpson, candidates of the republican and democratic parties for U.S. senator from New Jersey, have been invited to speak at a meeting of the Non-Partisan outfit of the A. F. of L. to} meet in Newark on October 26 Through the medium of the capitalist press, Morrow and Simpson have been asked to answer a series of five questions which are as follows: Election Stuff. “What can the workers of this community, who are the overwhelming majority of the citizens in this community, expect from you in case you are elected? “What is your plan for the relief of the present business depressfon and the ever-growing unemploy- ment situation? “What is your attitude on an old ge pension system for this state? “What is your attitude toward the injunctions that are used agatnst labor in industrial disputes? “Are you in favor the passage of a law that will prevent the employ- ers from depriving the worker of his constitutional rights whereby he exacts a pledge from the worker that he will not join a labor uaion, commonly known as the ‘Yellow Dog’ contract?” Vote Selling. Of course, wide awake workers, who have seen the fakers in action before, know that these questions represent the so-called non-partisan body’s request for “highest bid” for their pledge to support at the clec- tion. The New Jersey state election campaign committee, Communist Party, therefore takes the opportun- ity to send the following-open Iet- ter to the “Non-Partisan” so-cal- led labor group: “As the only political party in the present election campaign that stands unequivocally op- posed to capitalism and which has a platform built with every plank a labor plank, we are com- pelled to frankly criticize your open request for the “highest bid” for your so-called support at the coming election from the republican and democratic senat- orial candidates. What About Jobless? “Does not every official act of the two parties these men repre- sent convince you that labor can expect nothing from either of them. Does not the 8,000,000 un- employed workers in the United States and the quarter-million in New Jersey convince you that labor can expect nothing from either of them. Does not the fake promises of prosperity for the workers and the speed-up, wage cuts, and lay-offs, which was what actually came to the work- ing class to enhance the bosses profits, prove to you that you can expect nothing from these represen‘atives of the two major .capitclist parties. And when are you “non-partisans” going to learn that labor hes no friends outsice its own ranks? As for the five questions you ask we can give you the answers of both Morrow and Simpson. * “To the first question the an- swer is NOTHING! and ditto for question number two. To the other three questions they will make answers which, while pre- tending to be favorable, will be so | evasive as to be obvious that t!cy do not intend to do anything. “More than this, a reading of the labor planks in both repub- Tican and democratic platforms should convince you that they in- tend to €> nothing for labor. Compare those then with the plat- form of the Communist Party, of which every plank and every shay- ing is labor out and out. “If you are laboring men and not of the kind that conducts a political pawnshop, you will vise those over whom you profess to exercise control to go to the polls on Nov. 4 and cast their votes for the only Party of the working class that is participat- ing in this campaign, and that Party is the Communist Party. Votes for the republican, demo- crat and socialist parties are votes for capitalisr. . “Vote Communist!” TAMMANY COPS AID GANGSTERS Furnish Them Machine Guns Continued From Page 1) which New York cops engage in today are dope-selling, operating stot machines, policy slip rackets, acting as bookies, selling, running and guarding booze, arsonists, _ ‘running speakeasies, “framing” prostitutes, strikebreaking, selling revolvers and machine guns to gangsters, selling immunity to Baumes law violators, operating gambling dens, burglary and high- way robbery. Beit In some af these ventures magi- strates work hand in glove with the cops. Im others the magistrates keep their silence upon the payment of tribute, and upon all of them the magistrates keep a watchful eye— for graft. The most widespread criminality occurs, of course, in the booze racket, but the framing of prostitutes is by no means the least, involving lawyers, court clerks and bondsmen as well ac cops and magi- strates. There are more than 50,000 speakeasies in New York, and every one of them pays heavy tribute to several members of the police de- partment. Every police captain has a “legman” whose duty it is to visit all the speakeasies in the pre- cinct and collect the weekly boodle, The police tax on booze varies in the different districts, but it gen- erally hangs around the same level. In midtown New York beer sells for $8 a barrel at the brewery. Be- fore the beer leaves the brewery gates a $2 tax is collected on each barrel by federal agents. The mid- dle man obtains his beer in “drops” which are garages owned by the beer racketeers in every district in the city. These wholesalers are forced to pay an additional $2 tax and consequently have to pay $12 a barrel. The wholesaler in turn sells the beer to speakeasies at $16 a barrel. , The speakeasy owner pays $1 more for every barrel that the brew- ery truck drops at his door, bring- ing the cost up to $19. In addition, the owner of the “speak” has a weekly bill to pay of from $20 to $100 to police executives and dry ‘agents, depending on the sales. High Officials in Racket Officials high in the city and state governments are involved in ike racket. Al Smith is part owner of a brewery and Charles Tuttle, the church-going dry, was not averse to doing a lucrative business with bootlergers while he was fed- eral prosecutor. Mayor Walker’s former secretary, now Commissioner of Sanitat.on, Charles Hand, was blind if he didn’t know that Michael Laura, deputy street cleaning com- missioner, was running rum on gar- bage scows owned by the city, and Commissioner Hand is not blind. Bill Dwyer, Master Gunman. The master bootleggers who used the city’s garbage fleet to run rum into the city were Bill Dwyer and Paul Vaccarelli. Dwyer is quite the toughest gunman in New York and could chase Al Capone around the bloch even though botn trigger fingers were encased in thick band- ages. When the capitalist news- papers wanted to say chat Dwyer was behird the scenés ix. the garb- age rum-running, they said “it is believed that a former Atlanta con- vict is the financial genius in the rum-ring.” Well, if Bill Dwyer is a genius Einstein is a bootlegger, but here is no doubt that Dwyer served time in Atlanta. Why didn’t the capitalist papers mention Dwy- er’s name? Were they afraid that Bill would shcot up their editorial rooms or wore they loath to speak of the close friendship existant be- tween City Hall and the master gunnan? The other of the “financial geni- uses” involed in the rum _ scows, Vaccarelli, alias Kelley, is the con- victed gunman and strikebreaker whose career has been described at length in these articles. Vaccarelli is the organizer and head of the A. F. of L. Garbage Trimmers and Sorters Union and as such is able to call on Bill Green, president of the A. F. of L. as well as the whole New York police force, whenever he wants to engage in a little extra- legal business. : (Tomorrow’s article will continue ‘to discuss “Graft in the New York Police Department.”) { NEGRO WORKERS! VOTE COMMUNIST! 4 4 $18 Weekly Wage in Corrigan-McKinney (By Worker Correspondent) Cleveland, Ohio. I want to tell you about the chipping department at the Cor- rigan-McKinney steel plant in Cleveland. We are working 3 or 4 days and make $15 to $18 a week. Many of us have 4 or 5 children and we live in the most miserable houses and buy the worst food. Our rent is not paid and we can- not catch up with the grocery bills. Some of us have wives who have been able to find work, that is the only way we can manage at all. To make matters worse, there is a terrific speed-up in the de- partment. The young foreman is a real slave driver. Whenever a man has to leave his job for a minute, this slave driver hounds him like a blood-hound. One chipper was ruptured a few weeks ago because of this. —Yours for a Union. EXPECT BIG “RED” (By Worker Correspondent) ST. PAUL, Minn.—With regards to our election campaign I want to say that I think we are going to pull a very heavy vote in St. Paul this year. Whether we get credit for all the votes will be something else because we have a powerful machine here in the Farmer-Labor Party. This bunch of fakers are around in this section with a lot of “left” phrases and the usual promises of relief for the workers. There is a rumor here in regards o their gubernatorial candidates. Floyd B. Clsen and we are waiting now for a little more information on it and then we will be ready to expose this faker for what he really is. 1 can promise you re- sults here in a few days. A great mystery has been solved in St. Paul. We started selling the Daily Worker a few weeks ago at the Swift Packing Co. here and the first day we sold 87 copies. The sales fell off 15 per cent the next day and have been on the down grade ever since. We are lucky now when we get rid of 25 a day. One of the comrades went out yesterday and only sold a very few. The committee found out the rea- son for the decline in our sales at this particular shop. There is quite a distance from the plant to the street where we sell the Daily Worker. The bosses of Swift and Co. have a spy system and here’s how it works. The fore- men in six departments form a “Snitching Corp” and stand in one of the upper windows overlooking the street. Their duty is to observe by means of field glasses just who the workers are who dare to “cor- rupt” their minds with a lot of “red propaganda” while they are on the payroll of the Swift Co. - Engdahl Presents Jobless Demands (Continued from Page 1) replied Lealess, “demanding ‘Work or Wages.’” "Te i “Why, they wouldn’t work if you gave them a job,” said Walker. “They haven’t got brains enough to work.” “There are no jobs,” cut in Lealess, “and besides they have brains enough to produce the wealth of the country that the parasites eat up in profits.” “We demand relief—” Two more cops came up and were going to drag Lealess away. He was shoved to the back of the room. But he did not ¢o out. Engdahl, despite the fact that he was constantly interrupted, and finally rushed from the Board of Estimate’s meeting, presented the following demands of the Unem- rloved Council of Greater New York: That an emergency relief fund be created immediatelv by the city of New York to be made up of the fol- lowing items that the Tammany grafters have on the budget: (1) $196,306,716 for bonds; (2) $7,000,- 000, additional for police; (8) $30,- 000,000 for “emergency purposes”; (4) $56,000,000 in the treasury, as well as 10 per cént of the city in- come. A demand was also made that all the grafter’s salaries be cut to not more than $5,000 a year, and that funds for the national guard be cut out. The statement also put forward the demand that no evictions be made against the unemployed work- ers, that they be given free gas, electricity and rent during the per- iod of their unemployment, and that this go on pending the adoption of the Unemployed Insurance Bill by the federal government which is to provide a minimum of $25 per week for all unemployed workers, for whatever cause they are out of work—lack of jobs, old age, illness, ete. VOTE IN ST. PAUL DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1930 Page Three COPS VICIOUSLY BEAT JOBLESS Nessin Demands Funds Immediate Relief (Continued from Page 1) full view of Walker and grafting politicians. his delegation was beaten. Several other workers who stood in the hall were set on and beaten. They were pushed down to the basement of the city hall. No reporters were allowed down there. Screams came from the direction of the basement. Fresh contingents of cops went down to finish off the slaughter. It lasted for half an hour. The unemployed delegation were paying with their blood for telling the Tammany grafters to their face that they were filling their pockets with millions of dollars while the unemployed workers, 800,000 of them and their families in New York City alone were starving to death; that the grafting Tammany judges were evicting unemployed workers and their families by the thousands. All the while the slugging was going on, Norman Thomas; social- fascist, waiting for his turn to offer to defeat the demands of the unem- ployed sat two feet away from where the Unemployed Delegation wete being viciously slugged. He looked on, smilingly. He kept his mouth shut. He approved of every blow the Tammany grafters handed out to the unemployed rep- resentatives. He did not move from his spot. He just looked on; and smiled. The delegates were dragged out. Screams could be heard in the hall, But Thomas stood his ground, and made no protest. It did not matter to him if the unemployed delegation was being murdered. He had nothing to do with that. When Maude White, the Negro worker, was shoved out into the street, a Negro cop was sent after her to push her on. In the press room the capitalist reporters were in a quandry. They were concocting stories about the “riot” being started by the unem- ployed delegation. They talked with one another on how to conceal the truth, They admitted it was a “nasty piece of business.” They agreed on the story that the “un- employed delegates started the riot.” They will do all they can to sup- press the fact that Walker ordered the slugging, and sat by and watch- ed every bit of it that occurred in the assembly hall. Someone had to hold Walker by the sleeve to keep him from joining in the slugging. Nesin started his speech when Walker called out the point in the budget dealing with an additional contribution to the police depart- ment, Here is Nesin’s speech word for word, taken down verbatim: “TI am secretary of the Unem- ployed Council, and I speak here on this important point, in the name of 800,000 unemployed workers, We demand that the $7,000,000 that is assigned for police, be assigned t an emergency relief fund for the unemployed. “The police department of this city is being used for the purpose of clubbing the unemployed work- ers, is being used to arrest unem- ployed workers and their leaders. They arrest workers who strike against wage cuts and for a reduc- tion in their hours of labor. “Our delegation here represents the 800,000 unemployed workers. We have all workers represented; a Negro worker, a Spanish-American war veteran, a steel worker, and a food worker. “The polce are used to chase un- employed workers who sleep in the parks out of them, like dogs. We ask this money be used for unem- ployment relief and not for cops to slug the unemployed. “Your cops attacked the March Sixth demonstration when 110,000 unemployed workers fought for re- lief. You jailed Foster, Minor, Am- ter, Raymond and Lesten for want- ing to present the demands of the unemployed. “Every grafting Tammany poli- tician who steals millions is left free, while the unemployed delega- tion is sent to jail. The grafting judges are left free—” Walker got red in the face. “Who is a grafter?” he shricked. “You represent the grafting Tam- many politicans,” sad Nesin, “Who do you represent?” cried Walker. “I am here for the Unemployed Council, and I would rather be here Tepresenting the unemployed work- ers, than representing the grafters as you do.” 5c at Newsstands ) All the way down the stairs the} as more cops rushed after them. The New “YOUNG WORKER” OUT TOMORROW! Read all about the young worker-boxer who smacked Max Schmelling around! Write: YOUNG WORKER, 43 East 125th Street, New York N. Y. MASSES STICK AT CITY HALL \Defy Mounted Police} Charge; Demonstrate (Continued from Page 1) being held, the two women were re- leased. At 4:15 when the beating up of \the delegation in the Board of Esti- | mate room began, the crowd realized that something was happening there, and brushing aside all oppo- sition from the cops, rushed up to the steps. The demonstration had begun at about 2 p. m. rather quietly, except when delegations from the seven| noon mass meetings marched in. At 2:20 the square from Broad- way to Center St. was jammed full, and the unemployed councils’ dele- gation marched up the steps to enter the open hearing by the board of estimates on the more than $600,- 600,000 city budget for bankers and Tammany hirelings. The spokes- men of the jobless marched on into | |the board of estimates room with |enormous cheering, from the crowd. | March and Sing. Masses of police wedged into the crowd and drove it part east and part west. The section driven east marched around the south end of city hall park and joined the crowd on Broadway. ° The crowd marched south on Broadway, clear around the square up Park Way and Center St., over to Broadway, singing and shouting slogans for unemployed relief, and with the police trying to cut off fragments and drive them out of line. There were about 10,000 in this parade. Near 8 p. m. several thousand of these masses entered the park from Broadway just north of the city hall, were charged by police from the city hall north steps, and held their ground, wedged in between the iron railings. Jessie Newton, Atlanta defendant started to speak, and were pulled down. This crowd was finally driven out when three police began blackjack- | ing in the center of it. Then came the rush to hear Engdahl and the attack at the Woolworth building. NOON DAY MEETS © DEFY COP ATTACK Eleven Arrested; Force) Release of One (Continued from Page 1) of the unemployed council of the Needle Trades Workers. At this meeting the following were ar- rested: June Koll, Dina Lamkin, Anna Cohen, Anna Lee and Morris Fein. They were taken to the West 30th Street police station and from there to the Jefferson Market Court, and in Jefferson Market Court they were charged with disorderly con- duct. The case was adjourned until Oct. 21. Against June Kroll and Morris Fein they brought a second charge, which charges said two individuals | with inciting to riot, which is the same charge with which Foster, Minor and Amter were charged with, & June Kroll and Morris Fein were held without bail by Edward Weil, magistrate. Force Release The meeting called by the Office | Workers Unemployed Council at) 23rd St. and Madison Ave. was at- tacked, and the speaker, Santomin arrested. The crowd forced the po- lice to let him finish his speech, and then followed cheering for him for a block towards the police station. The police released him at the end | of the block, Walker jumped up. He threw down his gavel with a bang. Every cop in the hall outside ran into the meeting room. Walker had given the signal. The whole crew of | grafting Tammany Hall fakers in the room got up. A bunch made for Nesin. He was grabbed by the arm and slugged, right in front of Walker. The crowd of dicks in the back of the room made for the other mem- bers of the delegation and began their veritable slaughter. This was Walker’s answer to the demands of the unemployed work- ers of New York. This was. the answer of the Tam- many grafters who sat down to di- vide $700,000,000 between them- selves, when the voice of the unem- ployed workers made itself heard in a capitalist city government. 75¢ for Six Months ‘Celebrate 2nd ENTE RNATIONAL 38h Ews Finnish Fascists Keep | Up Their Provocations Year Success . oS Pan eo & | Soviet Union and its neighbor Fin- 7 . {land in an article entitled, “Sense- | MOSCOW.—On Shock Brigade jes; provocations.” The article| Day hundreds of factories were ' ‘. 2 : were points out that the anti-soviet cam- able to celebrate the fulfillment of paign in Finland was accompanied | the program. Hundreds of thousands | pos. nish fhactsta’ have driv ee of collective agricultural undertak- | vs merable ia ng class ings have directed red grain columns over the frontier into the Soviet 10 re, Collective centers and 87) Union with the tacit support of the the new harvest ‘The organized |Timnish authorities. In July the e new harvest. The organized | soviet government handed a pro- advance guard of the proletariat,| ¢ 04 note to Mitland calling for dertakings are rallying the millions | @tions of Soviet Sigler aes to overcome the difficulties which | Pimnish fascists with the support 0 : Finnish officials. The answer of are still ahead on the way to so- the Finnish government was a rare |today from the provinces is a dem- onstration of the persistent work of Soviet government snd made no 2 persi answer to the proved cases of Fin- these brigades to improve the quan-| nish official complicity in the fron- tity and quality of production. |tier violations. After the Soviet Thanks to the shock brigades the | note the frontier violations con-| Lenin repair works in Rostov on the | tinued, the fascists threatening their |Don have increased their capacities | victims with shooting unless they | |fourfold. ~n Poltava the waggon|cross the Soviet frontier “voluntar- | building department of the railway |ily.” The Finnish reply contained |works there has exceeded its plan|a baseless attack on the Soviet gov- by 82 per cent and at the same time| ernment and at the same time re- taken in tow the backward goods | ferred to the victims of the fascists | wagon department. The shock bri-|as criminals. The frontier viola- gades aim at mobilizing the masses | tions must stop. The Finnish gov- | ernment is well able to put an end) of the workers in the socialist com- | Against Soviet Union A Cachin Exboses New Drive Against USSR PARIS (I. —Under the title, ‘A New Wave of Poison Gas!” Com- rade Marcel Cachin deals in an are their program for the second year|) ee] ne | ticle in “l’Humanite” with the la~ of the Five Year Plan. Many fac- by ' cruel Bl Ak AA ewes PPT campaign of incitement against tories and works ha cobaded: the against all active workers in the the Soviet Union. 13a orapramua i hee Mt aga as Finnish labor movement, that ee : The campaign was reminiscent of the Kutiepov affair or of the Papal ical. The socialist “Popu- laire” was particularly prominent in this campaign. Paul Faure was in charge of the attempt to warm up the old hash co-operation between the Red Army and the German Reichswehr in connection with the vi of the Zeppelin to Moscow, whilst his co ue, Rosenfeld, had been told off to stir up the dregs of cialism, The shock brigade move. lexdmiple of deliberate distortion of |? lie opinion” ag ainst the execu: ment is hardly a year old and al- she. cnows uw a caabenly tion of the counter olutionary. jready it has developed into a mass|‘'°., “nOwn truth and carelu"'y | foodwreckers in the Soviet Union. |movement. The material published |®¥°ided answering the numerous)" yo14iof himself had entered the | 2 sapeed F pubmenec| documented cases quoted by the . ‘ . F campaign against Soviet “dumping” with an appeal to the discipline to protect itself against the Russian grain fleet. “Quotidien,” “Figaro,” “Intransi- geant” and the misnomer “l’Ami du Peuple” were already talking of war against the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union was allegedly attempt- ing to undermine and disturb the world economic system and by ruin ing public and private fortunes thus pave the way for mass unrest with political aims. This new campaign, which was in Taft, Young Pioneer and Herbert | petitive scheme for the carrying out of the industrial and finance plans and for the opening up of new possi- bilities for the development of the whole economic system. In the brigades were successful in raising the productive plan from the 22.5 million mark to the 82 million can mark. Many factories have carried sut their programs before time, thanks to the work of the shock brigades. The “Pravda” writes: “We are approaching the third and decisive year of the Five Year Plan. The three extra months obtained by ex- tending the present economic year until Jan. 1 must be utilized to over- come all backwardness in the vari- ous branches of industry and to work up @ new socialist swing in order to reach and maintain the tempo laid down for the third year of the plan.” Thomas “Socialist” Smiles at Slugging (Continued from Page 1) ants that fled from the hell of cap- italist “justice” of the south to Sov- iet Russia, would not go bail for any member of the Communist Party. Thus encouraging the capitalist courts to intensify the persecution of the Communists. This, these “socialist” hypocrites did under the excuse that the Civil Liberties Union might be handicap- ped in its cases deyoted to “free speech”, to which it pretends to be devoted. But here in the Board of Esti- mates room, with four workers alone confronting hundreds of detectives, Lenin canning factory, the shock | |to these senseless provocations if ri it will. The whole responsibilit ders of the Finnish government. & wore the hundreds of thousands of statv- ing jobless tried to present demands |for relief, .-1d were set upon by what \ amounted to a lynching mob led by |Mayor Walker—Thomas, the “so- cialist” sat silent—smilling! And outside, at the front of the thirsty Tammany police were brut- ally beating women and men indis- criminately, another “socialist” fiend, well-dressed and _ well-fed, wearing a “Heywood Broun” cam- paign button, shouted encourage- ment to the police: “By God, they got it coming!” These, workers, are the “social- ists”! Brothers of the “socialists” of Europe, where in England they forced a wage cut on 200,000 tex- res in India. Brothers of the “so- cialist” party of Germany, pledged to support dictator Bruening in cut | ting wages of all German workers | and robbing the jobless of the little relief they have previously been get- ting. This, workers, is the social-fascist “socialist” party! The most despic- able capitalist political party. This, workers, is one more reason why when these workers, representing you should Vote Communist! 225th thousand, paper bound, Six volumes, paper bound, 256 for collegians. They are written Vol. I; The Sciences, Vol. II; Hist The Bible, Vol. V; will be ready in September and six Send fifty cents for copies of This is Bishop Brown’s quarterly rent subjects. So far they have Subscription 25 Bishop Brown's Books COMMUNISM AND CHRISTIANISM “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 per volume, stamps or coin. These boks are primmers for children, yet a post graduate course There are twelve chapters of about twenty pages in each book. The first and second volumes have been published. The third volume 247 pages; twenty-five cents. pages each; twenty-five cents from the viewpoint of the Trial, ory, Vol. III; Philosophy, Vol. IV; Sociology, Vol. VI. 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 of one of his lectures on the greatest and most timely among cur- 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. cents per year. Single Copies 10¢ each, THE BRADFORD-BROWN EDUCATIONAL CO. GALION, OHIO for the consequences of continued |* provocations must fall on the shoul-} Woolworth building, while the blood-| tile workers and carry on massac- | any case a new proof of the grow~ ing strength of the Soviet Union and the steady development of so- |cialism, was an integral part of the methodical ideological and material preparations for war against the first Workers’ and Peasants’ State, However, the proletariat was | awakening more and more to a ree alization of the acute danger threat~ jening the Soviet Union, Yesterday’s |demonstrations in Belleville were a |proof of that, Every reference of j the Communist speakers, Comrades jSemard, Sadoul, Thorez and Cachin, |to the tremendous achievements of |the Soviet Union were met with |storms of applause in the two great election meetings. The stern action of the Soviet Government in defense jof the prolétarian revolution met with the complete approval of the French working masses. | When the Communist speakers compared the executions in the Sov=* jiet Union with the executions dur- |ing the great French revolution and jquoted Marat’s famous dictum, “It jis just and humane to shed a few ‘drops of unclean blood in order to prevent pure blood flowing in streams,” the masses burst into a storm of approval with shouts of “a la laterne! a la laterne!” whereby |they demonstrated their uncondi- |tional approval of the measures taken by the Russian revolutionaries in defense of the Soviet Union, the fatherland of all the toilers! | PARIS.—An official communique from North Annam, Indo-China, States that new measures have been | adopted by the general gouvernor | against the revolutionary movee | ment. A number of revolutionists | have been arrested. More bloody sentences are expected. DEMONSTRATE MADISON SQ. GARDEN nes. October 21 7 P.M. GREET FOSTER MINOR Buy Your Tickets Today! TICKETS CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE FOLLOWING STATIONS: MANHATTAN Communist Party District Office, 38 Erst 12th Street. Broadway ° . 216 E. 1th St, Riderman Bookshop, 182 tnd Ave. Needle Trades Workers Ind. Union, 131 W. 28th St, Moslin's Lenthergoods Store, 335 EB. Tenth Street. HARLEM ©. P. Section 4, 908 Lenox Ave. Int'l Work. Order Schools, 143 B, 13rd Street. Health Food Restaurant, 1600 Madt- son Avenue, RONX C. P. Sec. §, 549 Prospect Ave. Bronx Coo; taurant, 2700 Bronz Park East. BROOKLYN C. P. Sec, 6, 68 Whipple St. C. P. Seo, 7, 136 16th st. C. P. Sec. &,'105 Thatford Ave, Goldstein's Bookstore, 413 Sutter Ava Tickets 35¢ in advance 50 cents at the door Contribute to the Communist Cam- paign! Bring Your Contributions to the Garden; Vote Communist Noy. 4! _ VOTE AGAINST THE BOSSES LYNCHING TERROR AND MASS UNEMPLOYMENT! VOTE FOR FIGHT ON LYNCHING AND FOR SOCIAL INSURANCE TO EVERY JOBLESS WORKER! rape