The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 20, 1930, Page 3

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THE VARE GANG PREPARES BIG VOTE THIEVERY Chuck Out Communist Votes Everywhere (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—So that the Vare machine could run this election in Philadelphia as the “Band of Brothers” desire, 500 vot- ing machines were rejected here to- day after a ruling by the complais- ant republican Judge Harry S. Mc- Devitt. Although the voting machine is used in many other cities and states, including New York City and was approved by the Secretary of the Commonwealth for use in Philadel- phia, Judge McDevitt ruled “that a deaf, dumb and blind man could cheat on these machines in their present condition.” Even Dead Men Vote Here. All of which may be true but the Philadelphia Vare gang finds it much easier to manipulate the elec- tion returns on November 4th with- out machines. The usual course of procedure is to permit one vote in each of the 1590 polling places for the Communist ticket. That is in those where any are allowed to be counted at all. In working class neighborhoods the election judges are more “len- ient” and permit 2 or 3 Communist votes to be counted in the returns. Workers Must Watch. But the usual rule is 1 vote or none counted thus disfranchising thousands of voters. The workers in Philadelphia can counter these wholesale frauds by acting as watchers in front of the polling places for the workers’ only Party, the Communist Party. Apply at headquarters, 567 North Fifth St. for full details and help do your share election day, not only by voting Communist, but also by action as accredited watchers for the Party. —Cc. R. ZELGREEN, AFL JAIL PICKETS Conference October 23 Against Injunctions NEW YORK.—After being brut- ally beaten and knocked unconsci- ous by a drunken police man on the picket line at the Zelgreen cafeteria strike, Napoleon, a militant food worker, was held for felonious as- sault'at the Jefferson Market Court under $1500 bail yesterday. Tresca, another picket, was also severély beaten up when the police, assisting the Zelgree bosses and the A. F. of L. misleaders ordered him to march up and down the curb away from the passing crowd. The club- bing resulted when the picket re- fuséd to do this. Police become more brutal as the time for the injunction hearing draws near. Epstein, business agent of Loca} 302 of the A.F.L. union to- gether with the Zelgreen manage- ment have jointly secured an in- junction forbidding further picket- ing. The hearing will be held at the Supreme Court, New York County on Monday at 10 a. m. Workers should attend the hearings en mas- se, The Trade Union Unity Coun- cil has called a special delegate con- ference on October 23 to lay plans for mass violation to smash the in- junctions. Three militant food workers, Sid- ney Roth, Louis Rotman and Carl Epstein arrested for violating an injunction taken out by the West- chester Avenue Markets, were held for special sessions yesterday un- der section 600 of the Penal Code. They were placed under $500 bail. Charges under section 600 will in- evitably result in a jail sentence of 60 days or longer. Workers are railyoaded to jail without right of jury trial or appeal by this vicious méthod. The only remedy for this growing menace against militant workers is the smashing of injunc- tions together with section 600 by mass violations. 10 Placed by “Job” Bureau Sttll Jobless (By a Worker Correspondent) BROOKLYN, N. Y.—Exposing the politician vote catchers and the lying New York Times for printing that the fake city employment agency found work for 356 in one day. This scab agency sent, J. Moncay as a solderer to a radip place at 829 East 134th St. and told him to ask for a Miss Pessoni. Other Applicants. ‘When he got there they said they were sorry because the job was given out already. Six more solder- ers and handymen were sent by the Same agency to the same place but all had the same fate. This company used to pay 50 jcents an hour before for solderers jand now the scab agency furnishes | this company with men at 36 cents an hour. Maybe the New York Times and the Tammany politicians count these ten men as employed but they are still out of work. Moncay applied two weeks ago as a laborer because his three chil- dren are starving. Workers, it is about time to wake schemes. Vote Communist. —Andy Lewes. ‘SEDITION TRIAL IN PHILADELPHIA Lawrence Faces Court for Election Speech PHILADELPHIA, PA., Oct. 19— The trial of Bill Lawrence, Trade Union Unity League organizer here, on charges of sedition which carry ten year sentence on conviction, be- gain Thursday. Lawrence was arrested two years ago in the election campain, when, speaking for the Communist Party, he called on the workers to organize against capitalism and criticised the grafting policies of Mayor Mackey and the city government. Lawrence is defended by the In- ternational Labor Defense, through its attorney, David Levinson. The prosecution is trying desper- ately to get a conviction. The jury was selected after eight challenges. The jury.and the judge are both hostile to the defendant. LAWRENCE ON STAND Lawrence took the stand today, joutlined the campain issues of the ‘Comraunist Party, against the fake lican parties who collaborate to sup- port the employers drive for low wages, long hours and unemploy- ment. He told of the growing unemploy- printing and registration and lynch- ing terror by the bosses against the foreign born and Negro workers. In court room he called for mobiliza- tion of workers against the coming imperialist war, and for the defense lof the Soviet Union. Tuesday, Oct. 21., there will be a mass meeting of protest against this attempt to gag the voice of the workers, ,to send the workers’ lea- ders to prison. The meeting will be held at Garrick Hall, 507 South Eighth St. It is an election rally for the Communist Party campaign, and speakers will urge the workers to organize and strike against all wage cuts, to demand unemploy- ment insurance, and immediate re- (lief for the jobless, whose leaders are released on that date in New York after serving a term in prison. HATES TAMMANY GRAFTERS AND COPS ‘New York. The Daily Worker: Gehtlemen: I am not a Communist, at least “not "yet”, though I may vote “Communist” on next election day. I have read of the latest out- rage of the most brutal police force in the world, a police, whose only duty is, to protect gangsters and grafters, particularly the Tammany Hall gangster Curry and consorts. I wish, the day would be near, when they would drive that big- gest bluffer from citf hall, that Tammany gangster, mho thinks he can quiet everybody with his silly jokes. Then, that guy should be driven out with blackjacks and rubber clubs blowing down on him, as it is being done now to those, who only seek relief and honest work, With all good wishes and suc- up and answer to all Tammany | issues of the democratic and repub- | ment and the deportation, finger | Page sree NEW SLAVERY FOR WORKERS Green Also Has En- slavement Plan (By a Worker Correspondent) GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.—Yester- day this advertisement appeared in wanted at the Keeler Brass Co. ment office. had worked there for six months in the copprous laden atmosphere of | this slave-driving hell-hole and had quit in order to save what was left / of my health. But now in despera- | tion after months of fruitless search for work and a long series of meat- | less and eatless days and weeks I though I knew that wages had been greatly reduced and the speed-up intensified during the last few years. The employment manager appears | line,” he shouts. He is answered by a chorus of “I am.” Then he asks, “Did you quit or get laid-off?” of one after the other of the avowed old molders. New Slavery Methods. For years, the term “layed-off” has been a very ambiguous one among. industrial workers. When, you begin to drop on the job and lag behind a little bit, or if you get a little careless in the rush and make too many unacceptable mis- takes, the boss is apt to slip up to you just before quitting time some night and quigtly inform you with a blank expression on his face that he is very sorry but he will have to “lay you off.” In this sense, it is only a polite form of the word “fired.” So in spite of the fact that many workers have learned espe- cially the lear or so that the words, “layed-off” are also used in their true meaning, nearly all of the molders answered that they had not been layed off, but had quit. We have always considered in the past that voluntarily quit- ting a job was an honorable meth- od of’ parting ways with an em- ployer. But the employment man- ager’s answer showed us that we had another guess coming. He said that only those who had been laid off would be considered and that those who had quit of their own accord would not be hired. Green In It. William Green, the well fed president of the American Federa- tion of Labor, has a similar pro- posal for.making workers bond or chattel slaves of the bosses. His Proposal is to pay the workers by the year. The worker and the boss sign a contract which keeps the worker as the bosses’ slave | for a year. This is the first step towards tying him up for life as the slave of an individual boss. But we workers, under the lead- ership of the Trade Union Unity League and the Communist Party ue have something to-say about this. —Jobless. Red Candidate and Harper Beaten Up CHICAGO, Oct. 19.—Two leading Negro Communists were attacked and arrested last night by a yellow flivver squad, Brown Squire, Com- munist candidate for Congress from the 4th District in Chicago, and Sol Harper, Distret Negro Work Drec- tor, were on the pont of entering Squire’s home after having ceturned from a meeting when the police of- ficers drove up. The attack was made upon the porch of the house, Harper being severly beaten up. Both workers were taken to jail, but when the LL.D. attempted to find out what had happened and how badly they had been hurt, they were moved from police station to police station to provent the I.L.D, locat- ing them. The cause for the attack is a mys- tery, except insofar as it is part of thé general campaign of terror being conducted by the Chicago police against militant workers, It is be- lieved that the two Communists were followed from their meeting by police spies. Pe where the most prominent crooks of this city meet and make up their plans to to how to fool the people. Sincerely yours, An Ardent Sympathizer. cess, and the desire, that you get with your demonstration next time right into Tammany Hall, ny VOTE COMMUNIST] DARING TO QUIT) the Grand Rapids Press, “Molders Only former employees need apply.” This morning found me in the job- less line at the company employ- A few years ago I was willing to go back again even| “Any of our old molders in the COPS STEAL BEER; HOOVER BOSSES SELLITIN STATION, PREPARE FIGHT Policemen Come. to |Admit Winter Wil] Blows Over Graft | Bring Hunger, Cold (Continued from Page 1) | (Continued from Page a Communist demonstration by two | tect the profits of the bosses against or three cops working together @5/the demands of the jobless for un- they never work when a burglar is | employment relief to come out of the in view. 5 war budget, and a special levy on Compare the average size of big incomes and fortunes. the cops themselves. Notice that | - after every demonstration the pris-|_ There is not a single difference oners will include about 30 per cent |im Hoover’s latest broadside from women, about fifty per cent work-|his November, 1929, program. Not Jers under five feet five in height, | one cent is provided for unemploy- and the remainder boys and girls| ment relief. Hoover talks about under 18 who will be charged -vith | Public building works. The fact is assaulting’ a six-foot cop from be-|that in spite of Hoover’s “efforts” hind and biting some part of the | building activities this year have cop’s anatomy. |gone down 19 per cent, and more with which a Rothstein. is carried | trades workers are out of work. to a gangster’s death bed, with the; He urges the local grafting poli- torture that was visited on Steve; ¢ 4 r |ticians to handle the question, so Gatovis when this militant worker | that the war funds of the federal lay dying from a shot in the back) sovernment xwill not be touched. by a Tammany cop. How the local politicians are handl- 20 Million in Police Graft. ing the subject ean be seen from the If the impression has been given | repeated clubbing of the unemployed |that all the money allowed the/in New York City, and the threat | police department by the City! of Murphy, mayor of Detroit, to jail |Budget is spent on salaries for | all unemployed who dare to come to |cops and on new and more fiendish |Detroit. Hoover praises both the methods of mowing down militant | “organized efforts which the Mayor workers, it was not intended, for|of Detroit,” and the Tammany about one third of the department’s| grafting “committees created in | $63,000,000 allowance is pure and aA ° New York.” junvarnished graft. | Secretary of Commere Here is an example of how the | , Ae ats tey York, New York Police Department, whose ork, where he had a conference detectives are so acute that they | ors, “discover”—about every two weeks | T Jens —that Soviet Russia sends over| ee ee of Commerce, the hundreds of billions of dollars to the) day before Hoover issued his state- Communist Pe=mitetthe U. S. A. via | ment, stated that taxes must not go submarine, airplane, and donkey |¥P to pay for unemployment relief. cart, have never been able to dis-| The bosses are entrenching for a cover just where these erasers can | fight to save their profits and force And then compare the reverence|than 50 per cent of the building | who heads this latest grouping of | |Aseee mete ae i hae gabe a, | bosses to fight against the demands | ertain car eraser: lof th 1 N bought at retail for 35 cents. The! Ln et Be dee | with the leading Wall Street bank- | CHI. COPS ATTACK | NEGRO COMRADES: be bought for 35 cents and conse- quently pay $5.60 for them. Let us take a quick look—a longer | interior ‘and we can determine, to some slight extent, the type of men who more than $63,000,000. First let us peek into the 40th St. | Police Station. Here, suite recently, | 40 cases of choice liquor were stolen from the cellar. Then in the 126th | St. Station, where a brewery re- cently delivered an entire truck load of beer to the station’s bootlegger. And then in the Oak St. Station, where the police sold on the prem- ises a truck load of beer that they stole from a warehouse on South St. And from there to the 104th St. Sta- tion, where a shooting took place recently—and it wasn’t a prisoner who was shot. Then let us continue to the West 20th St. Station, where lost jewelry that had been turned in by a worker who found it, was stolen from the lieutenant’s desk. And let us end the little tour with a glance at the West 30th St. Station, where two sergeants recently almost killed! each other because one wouldn’t} | split the graft evenly, and the West | 40th St. Station, where two lieuten- ants did the same thing for exactly | the same reason, j And if we had the time we could call on Lieutenant Fitzgibbons, who caught stealing $46,000 from the Police Glée Club, was fired by Com- missioner Warren and immediately reinstated by Commissioner Whalen at the request of Cardinal Hayes, friend of Owney Madden, convicted murderer and gangster. BOSSES COURT CONVICT MURDOCH Make It Crime to Ex-) pose A. F. of L. DANVILLE, Va., Oct. 19—Wm. Murdoch, National Secretary for the National Textile Workers’ Union has been convicted and sentenced to 120 days imprisonment for expos- ing in a leaflet, distributed to the Danville mill strikers, the treachery of the A. F. of L. leaders in the conduct of the textile strike. The International Labor Defense is appealing the case through their attorneys in Danville, and rousing mass action against the mill owners tools, the courts of Virginia. The official transcript of the charges is clear proof of the class character of the ourt and the role of the A. F. of L. Charge 1 reads: “He did falsely write and publish of and concerning the said Francis Gorman, “Gorman is a liar.” Gorman is an official of the U.T.W., the A. F. of L. organiza- tion leading the strike. The second charge reads: “Returning of the 10 per cent wage cut stolen from the workers in February, meaning by this that the said H. R. Fitzgerald of the Riverside and Dan River cotton mills had been guilty of theft.” Fitzgerald is one of th emill own- ers. A militant fight will be put up by the International Labor Defense against the mill owners courts who are directly protecting the interests of the mill owners and their com- one would be too sickening at the) of a few police stations, are entrusted with the spending of | jthe workers,to stave. Every worker, unemployed or em- ployed, must answer this attack against the demand for unemploy- ment relief. Fight for the Unem- ployment Insurance Bill, advocated by the Communist Party! Vote Communist! ENGDAHL SCORES SOP THROWING Demonstration Forces Tammany Promise (Continued from Page 1) day’s board meeting when he gagged and ordered the arrest and beating of the members of the Un- employed Delegation declaring that the unemployed question had al- ready been taken care of in the budget, and that it was merely ‘wasting the time of the board’ to continue raising this issue. Inade- quate and insulting as the action taken by che Board of Estimates | Proves to be, the question of unem- ployeb relief has crashed its way into the budget, in spite of police |attacks and Tammany Hall ‘blood baths’ against the working-class.” Must Fight Even For Million. “The 1931 budget, however, will prove to be a mere scrap of paper, to be torn into shreds, unless ade- quate action is taken on this burn- ing question. The only program that takes up this vital problem seriously is offered\by the Councils of the Unemployed, as presented to the Board by its delegation” “Even the million dollars offered the unemployed, at the very moment when there is an increase of $7,000,- 000 for the police department that organizes the beatings of the job- less, will be wantonly wasted if it is spent by Tammany Hall city offi- cials.. No plan is offered by the Board of Estimates for spending it. The program of the Unemployed Councils demands that the admin- istration and distribution of the emergnecy relief funds it proposes shall be by a City Board ‘composed of workers, from factory shop coun- cils, these to be elected directly by the workers. This applies very con- by the Board of Estimates while the struggle goes on for full and ade- quate relief for all unemployed. ADMIT AFL. JOBLESS FIGURES ARE FAKED NEW YORK—When Green issu- ed his Semptember fieures on un- employment, thé Daily Worker ex- nosed them as fake. Now, one of the Wall Street newspaners. very anxious to believe Green’s fakery, is nevertheless forced to admit that Green's fieures are worthless. The Friday's issue of the Journal of Commerce says that the “im- provement” found by the A. F. L. in the Sentember employment situ’ ation among trade union members is hard to discover in the report inst released by the United States Bu- rean of Lahor Statistics.” What is more, it is harder to find amone the ranks of the A. F. of L. itself, which are fecline the heavier hand of unemplovment every day. pany union the U.T.W. WORKERS! VOTE COMMUNIST NOV. 4! But that is what Green is paid for, to Ife and mislead the workers about cretely to the million dollars voted! } | Meet on End of Second By ANDREW ROTHSTEIN MOSCOW (By Mail).—October 1, the day of the ending of the second year of the Five-Year Plan, was \“Shock Brigade” day in the Soviet Union. The bare recital of the different forms of mass initiative in the fac- jtories is sufficient to show that in |the Soviet Union there exists today ‘a new kind of working-class—in- \ spired with the spirit of mastery, of | responsibility, of determination to | build and to rule in its own house. | First, in point of time, come the ‘ rationalizers’ groups — groups of active workers in each shop, who| | meet in their spare time to discuss | practical problems of rationalizing | production in their own shop. Next come the planning and operative groups. These, as their name implies, represent a step fur- | ther. Instead of tackling isolated | problems of rationalization, they | strive to improve the general plan ‘of production of the shop as a | whole. The Vast Mass Drive. As the continuation of, and sup- | plementing this system, came the | vast mass drive known now all over the world as the shock brigade movement. Groups of workers engaged on different parts of the same job pledge themselves to co-operate as ja unit in fulfilling and surpassing \the programme of output, raising | productivity per head, lowering lcosts, utilizing raw materials 100 |per cent, ete. In many cases, when the output planned was not being reached, e.g., in the mines, at the docks, shock brigades acted as voluntary break- down gangs. Hundreds of thousands of workers have entered these shock brigades, entering into friendly rivalry with one another known as “Socialist competition.” But the shock brigades in their work come up against difficulties— a sudden lack of some essential raw material, metal or spare part, an unaccountable delay in delivery of a new machine, a hold-up in the shop for several hours because some INTERNATE ON 1b Year of Plan to Devise Methods for Increasing Efforts other shop is behind hand in deliv- ering its semi-finished article. To meet this situation two kinds of organization have been devised. One, where a single job is under way, is the temporary control com- mission, composed of one worker at the bench, one works or shop en- gineer, and one worker sp lly re- leased from the bench to act as president, and paid by the manage- ment. This control commission, while it lasts, acts as a speeder-up on behalf of the job engaged upon; utili every method of publicit pressure, up to going a tion to the Supreme Econom cil in Moscow, if necessary. Industrial Volunteers. For more permanent working, some months ago, one of the Lenin- grad engineering works devised the continuous shock brigade. Its con- continuity consists in the fact that it is composed of workers in every shop through which a big job has to pass in a complicated process of production, especially on the con- veyor system. The appedl of the Central Com- mittee of the Communist Party, on September 3, for exceptional efforts to complete and exceed the Plan for 1929-30, has produced a still higher development of the shock brigade in puta- Coun- industrial volunteer battalion. In this the shock brigades come together with a mutual pledge to remain in the factory until the end of the Five-Year Plan, to co-operate in training the unskilled workers newly brought into industry and to fight against all disorganization caused by workers (chiefly those fresh from the country) passing from factory to factory in search of higher wages, irrespective of class interests. This account would be incomplete without mention of the “community tow,” into which a works which is carrying out and surpassing its plan takes one of its subsidiary factories on which it relies for some detail or material, and which is failing to keep up to scratch. HALL DENIED FOR FOSTER MEETING Bosses Try to Block Newark Meet NEWARK, Oct. 16.—Returning a check for the amount deposited as | security on Kruegers Auditorium for the Foster meeting on Sunday, | November 2nd, in Newark, N. J., | the management of that institution |has stated that it is impossible for | the hall to be had on that date. The excuse given is that the per-/| son holding the lease at the time the hall was secured has now given up the lease and therefore the owners | disclaim responsibility. Also it is claimed that the owners are not going to run thee hall themselves but are trying to get another lessee for the place. This is the hall where Wall Street’s candidate for the U. S. Senate from New Jersey, Dwight W. Morrow, held his pow- | wow last Monday night and the same vlace where Alexander Simp- son, agent of the notorious Hague machine of Jersey City, will speak tonight. The committee in charge of this meeting is now seeking another hall and in spite of the fact that all printed matter for the original hall has been printed and some already distributed, the working class will answer this sort of attack with a| larger hall and a much larger! crowd. unemployment so he can fight a-| gainst unemployment insurance, VOTE COMMUNIST! | ||| Full Picture ot Circulation COMPLETE YABLES sHOW- ING THE CIRCULATION st- TUATION IN EACH DISTRICT TODAY AND SIX MONTHS AGO AS WELL AS PROGRAM FOR BUILDING THE DAILY WORKER CIRCULATION TO 60,000 WILL BE PUBLISHED WEDNESDAY, DON'T MISS WEDNESDAY'S PAPER! ANTI-LYNCH MEET IN STAMFORD, Conn., Oct. 19. A mass Anti-Lynching Conference called by the American Negro La- bor Congress will be held here next Thursday, Oct. 23, at the Blackstone Hotel, on Gay Street, at which del- egates will be elected to the national convention of the ANLC in St.Louis Nov. 15. Herbert Newton will be one of the speakers at the Stamford Confer- ence. Another speaker will be Wil- liam G. Hearing, former secretary of the Central Labor Council of Stamford, and member of the ‘Mold- ers Union. a number of the biggest works—the | STAMFORD, OCT. 23| SOVIET WORKERS’ SHOCK BRIGADES “Red Deputies PLEDGE CARRYING OUT 5-YEAR PLAN feght Bruening Hunger Plan BERLIN.—Very soon in the Reichstag the Communist fraction will the rejection of the Bruening program which plans to obtain 5,112 million marks at the cost of the toilers, and make the following counter-proposals: Immediate stoppage of all Young Payments, 2,000 millions; Striking of all Reichswehr expenses, 750 millions; Striking of all civil war rmaments for the police, 600 mil- Special 20 per cent tax on ‘onaires, 1,800 millions; Special per cent tax on dividends, 320 ; Special 20 per cent tax on 200 millions; Special t tax on all incomes ex- 000 marks annually, 380 Striking of all subventions, lions; Cuts for salaries and ns over 8,000 and 6,000 marks respectively, 200 millions; Striking of all expenses for censorship, the church and arbitration, 300 millions, Making a total of 7,150 millions. Referring to these proposals “Rote Fahne” writes: “Supported by 5 million voters the Communist Party puts forward the demands of the working people against the hunger program of the Bruening government which is supported by the fascists and social fascists. The Communist Party calls for the for mation of a great anti-capitalist anti-fascist united front of the working masses!” DAKOTA FARMERS HEAR COMMUNISTS Knutson, Loesch Tour; Call to Organize JAMESTOWN, N. D., Oct. 19.— Alfred Knutson of Bismark, N. D., for years a leader of the farmers here, now candidate for congress in the Second Distriect of the state, and K. P. Loesch, of Montpelier, N. D., prominent militant farmer, |Communist candidate for secretary of state, are on a speaking tour, urging the farmers to Vote Com- munist and to join the United Far- mers League. Facmers are now becoming dis- jgusted with the capitalist Farmers Union, the “Non Partisan League”, and the fake progressives (Nye, Frazer, Sinclair, ese.) | Knutson }and Loesch point out to them that the Communist Party is the only one in this campaign defending the in- |terests of the poor farmers. The United Farmer, militant farm paper, is being widely distri- buted. The remaining speaking dates of Knutson and Leesch are: Gockle, Oct. 27; Litchville, Oct, 28 Edgeley, Oct. 29; Kulm, Oct.80; La Maure, Oct.31; Valley City, Nov. 1s Courtney, Nov. 3. move Vote Communist! MY H These boks are primmers for chi Vol. I; The Sciences, Vol. I1; His! The Bible, Vol. V; The first and second volumes hav Christian Su The American Race Problem; A the Soviet Union, and July, The stion of Rome. Send for a free Bishop Brown's Books COMMUNISM AND CHRISTIANISM 225th thousand, paper bound, 247 pages; twenty-five cents, “Like a brilliant meteor crossing a dark sky, it held me tight.” This is an autobiography published by the John Day Company, New York; second printing, cloth bound, 273 pages; price $2.00, “The most important book of the year 1926,” THE BANKRUPTCY OF CHRISTIAN SUPERNATURALISM Six volumes, paper bound, 256 pages each; twenty-five cents per volume, stamps or coin. for collegians. They are written from the viewpoint of the Trial, There are twelve chapters of about twenty pages in each book. will be ready in September and the other three at intervals of six months. Send fifty cents for copies of Communism and Christianism and the first three volumes of the Bankruptcy of HERESY This is Bishop Brown’s quarterly magazine. Each number consists of one of his lectures on the greatest and most timely among eur- rent subjects. So far they have been as follows: January, 1980, Subscription 25 cents per year. Single Copies 10c each. THE BRADFORD-BROWN EDUCATIONAL CO. GALION, OHIO ERESY ildren, yet a post graduate course tory, Vol. III; Philosophy, Vol. IV; Sociology, Vol. VI. e been published, The third volume pernaturalism. pril, The Pope’s Crusade Against Science of Moscow and the Super sample copy. For Unemployment Insurance Paid for Out of the War Funds and Administered by the Workers and Jobless! Vote Communist Against the Lynch Terror—Agginst the Injunctions,

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