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DAILY WORKER, _ NEW. YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2 » 1930 Page Three Le TtirHLR Ss E- Ee aq,» ra ‘KX’ Ea EE i 6&6 ETOP S41 MKEESPORT TIN SPEEDUP BOSS A TRICKY ONE Spies on Workers All the Time | McKeesport, Pa. Dear Daily Worker Editor: | I am going to tell you and the rest of the workers that read this | paper how nice of a boss we have in the McKeesport Tin Plate Co. I am working in the Opening Dept., being a sticker puller. One morning I was sitting on a bench | waiting for it to be six o’clock so I could start working, the nice boss | by the name of John Resenberger | came up to me and told me to start | working, I did because he was the | boss, Plays Mean Trick. I worked for about 10 minutes, the superintendent came up to me and asked me why I was working. I told him the boss told me to start working. He looked at his watch and told me, “you fool it isn’t time to start yet, it’s only 10 minutes to six now and you start at 6 o’clock.” Bad Toilets. | ‘That isn’t only one dirty trick he| pulled. When we workers go to the toilet or go get a drink of water the boss runs to us and says, how long have you been down the toilet. I} had a good notion to tell him to go} in the toilet and see how long he could stand it in there. If anything | they need bad is clean lavoratories | in the mill. Many workers complain | of getting sick in there. When we are working John Res- | enberger is hiding in back of a pile of iroi. or in back of something and if he sees you are taking a spell or) talking to a worker beside you, he runs over to you and gives you hell and plenty of it, and he don’t have any cursing out either When it is near quitting time, say about 3 or 4 o'clock if the openers have a pile of iron yet to open and he thinks it will take the openers a few hours to open it, } he tells them to go home and come in early in the morning about 3 or 4 o’clock and then fin- ish it because they work piece work and it doesn’t mean nothing to them. Graft In It Too. One day John Resenberger came up to me and several other workers and ‘told us to hurry up and work because we get pay by the hour 50, cents. I told him I was working | just as fast as the rest of the work- ers, so he started to give me hell for talking back at him. I had to| keep quiet. So when he left me a/ worker came up to me and said,| “why don’t you pay him $2 every pay-day like I and several other} workers do to keep on good side of him. I told the worker I would sooner throw the two dollars in the| river than give it to that half pint of a boss, A Real Straw Boss. The only reason he is nagging us and giving us speed-ups and hell is this: He is a salary man and the sooner he gets us out of the mill the better it is for him. That is why he is on our backs telling to hurry up. We must work over 10} hours a day in order to make some of that lousy money, and the boss don’t like to stay in the mill that many hours, Workers for your own sake wake up and get organized. There is a Metal Workers’ Industrial League in McKeesport, get in touch with it and join it. A STICKER PULLER WORKeR. Job Sharks Busy Cutting Workers’ Pay (By Worker Correspondent.) SACRAMENTO, Cal. Redy (employment agency) sent a letter to a Japanese farm owner by the name of Mr, Cono, Gudley, Cal., stating, “you are paying $3.50 for help when we can furnish as good men as ever went on a job for $2.00 and $2.50, but the Japanese owner turned him down. They (Redy) put 5 more slaves ‘on another ranch with their wages cut. —J. M. VOTE COMMUNIST! ‘Pisturbances in Your Kidneys and Bladder pas of cp hig It’s dan- rere fase, Ni “ge Png a back - aches, sativa ee be auickly St Midy ( ron for popes a cen- ™m nan Nate aieuias dgegtniay chee. Santal Slave Driver Ford Lays Off 500 Men, Green Island, N.Y. (By Worker Correspondent.) GREEN ISLAND, N. Y. Ford’s plant here is producing 7 springs and radiators and being this is only a small part of the automobile. Five hundred work- ers were laid off recently. The Ford workers are exploited more than any other factory workers around here. And even though they know how they are exploited they are afraid to ex- press their opinions because the straw bosses are working full time. In order to do away with all this speed up system the Ford workers must organize in the Auto Workers Union of the Trade Union Unity League. Auto work- ers, awake and vote as you strike against the bosses. Vote Com- munist! G.S. R. Make Sacramento Jobless Work Off “Donation” (By Worker Correspondent.) SACRAMENTO, Cal.—I under- stand that the city of Sacramento is donating a fund to provide meals and lodgings for the unem- ployed men and women. And I read in the paper that the Com- munity Chest is handing it to the Salvation Army. Now the Salvation Army is go- ing to open a woodyard and make men work for the bread and slops they call stew. Now where is the money going to that the city do- nated for that purpose. Don’t you think that money donated by the ci sufficient to feed the hungry if the city wants pay for that money give the unemployed work and they will pay for their own. —G. E. D. If Seaman Would Have Three Wishes (By Worker Correspondent.) —Abroad § S Coness Peak. The following conversation be- tween two seamen aboard this dump freighter tells more than a book full: : Mike: “What would you wish for if you had three wishes, Shorty?” Shorty: “I’d wish I was a sea- gull with three rotten eggs under my tail, Then I I’d fly up over the snotty bridge and rop ‘em down; one on that pot-bellied skipper, the next on that yellow-livered mate, and an extra dirty one for that belly-rob- ber bastard of a steward.” B, T. PS.—I’ve been feedin’ Shorty the Daily Worker for a couple of weeks now and he’s sure with us. CH. NEEDLE WORKERS RAISING STRIKE FUND CHICAGO, Oct, 22.—The Organ- ize and Strike Fund campaign is LEGION, “VETS” BUREAU TURN DOWN VETERAN | Jobless and Sick, Will | Fight New 7 ork, Nieys Dear Sir: When the war broke out I en- listed in the infantry. I put in 17 and one half months, during which time the lousy grub they handed us ruined my stomach, They put me in the hospital 3 times but each time, instead of treating me to cure me, they handed me pills and salts and put me out again. | I’ve been out of work for 5 months ‘now and I’m sick, worn out. The _other day I went up to the veter- an’s buro. ernment policy and after they kept waiting two weeks they made me a ly refused to send me to their hos- pital. They said it was only for | “emergency” cases. Today I went | Bichel. I figured they were just as crooked 1s the other crowd but I wanted to be convinced. They had one of their doctors go over me, but he handed me the same line. They couldn’t do anything except for “emergency” cases. I’m sick. I can’t get work. I have no home. What do they call an emergency, I wonder? Good Enough to Fight. I was good enough for, the bosses ‘to take into the army when they needed me, but now that I’m sick | I’m not worth patching up even. To Fight. What is necessary for all of us workers that yput on the uni- form and fougift for the bankers and big manufacturers is to get together with the rest of the work- fight for the Workers Social In- surance Bill, $25 a week to every worker unemployed or unable to work because of sickness, accident or old age. Make the bosses pay the bill out of all the money we made for them. Yours truly, EX-SERVICEMAN. EVEN BEARS ARE THINNER GARRISON, Mont. (F.P.).—As a result of the industrial depression which cut tourist travel through | Yellowstone Park last summer, the jbears are a good bit thinner ‘than lusual. They used to feed on the ‘park hotel garbage, but this year pickings were lean. But | To the Editor of the Daily Worker, | I showed them my gov-| small loan on it. But they complete- | ers, employed and unemployed, and | ‘BILLIONS FOR WAR) IS BOSS PROGRAM. While Unemployed Are, Given Clubs | (Continued from Page 1) Unprecedented profits for the big bankers and bosses were promised by Payne. Army purchases in the first twelve months of any future major conflict will exceed ten bil- lion dollars.” That the huge war plots of Wall Street are maturing fast was di- vulged in the admission that already fourteen thousand manufacturing plants are ready to begin their as- signed work as soon as the imper- ialists start their world slaughter. The recent wild attacks against |the Soviet Union by high govern- ment officials indicate the meaning of these war preparations. Now more than any other time of the imperialists must be fought. In addition to starving nearly 9 mil- lion workers and their families, and slashing wages for the others, the bosses are preparing a new robber | war, a new world slaughter for the American working class. Workers, Fight this system of hunger and war! Get behind the Communist Party which leads this fight. In the coming elections vote Commun- ist! MEETING SUN. Trachtenberg and Wortis Speakers NEW YORK, Oct. 19.—Alex- | ander Trachtenberg, Communist candidate for congress in the 14th | Congressional District, and Rose | Wortis, candidate for State Senate, will address a meeting of Ukranian |workers at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St., next Sunday, Octo- ,ber 26. Comrade Trachtenberg spoke yesterday before a meeting of Italian workers at the same hall. The votes of the Italian Ukrainian workers in the 14th Con- ‘gressional District have been sold to Tammany politicians by their own traitors and robbed of their | votes whenever they tried to vote for the Party of their class. The |workers in the sections populated by Italians and Ukrainians must mobilize for a determined fight against Tammany and the Fascisti, for a fight for the candidate of the Communist Party, the organizer of jthe working masses, the Party that \fights for unemployed insurance, |the Party that fights capitalism. WANT TO MAKE WORKERS PAY FOR CRISIS ROCHESTER, N. Y. (F.P.).—A modified form of unemployment in- surance, in which the jobless would be supported by an assessment levied on all employed workers, is jpredicted by Newcomb Carlton, ; president of the Western Union| Telegraph Co. Some plan must be worked out, Carlton says, whereby in periods of depression the day UKRANIAN RED | |up to the American Legion, J. C.| and | DETROIT TOBLESS ALL OUT ON FRI Fight for Immediate Jobless Relief (Continued from Page One) have refused to permit the demon stration. He does noi want hi fakery exposed. Despite the order: of Murphy, the Unemployed Council will hold the demonstration to de- mand relief from the city treasury to the unemployed workers, and to rally hundreds of thousands in a struggle for the pas- sage of the Unemployed Insurance Bill. Several days ago the faker Mur phy, who harps a great deal on free speech, and who is being praised by the socialist lackeys as a “liberal” immediate in a talk at the People’s Forum not surprising that today the mem-| lutionary {miners mentioning | bership of the labor party is 2,082, Circus Park as one of the places | 000 or praised “free speech,” where this was permitted. Permission Denied. When the Unemployed Council demande d permission to hold ed a refusal. unemployment relief. Empty prom- ises of capitalist demagogy won’t | | feed any hungry workers. | employed Council is agitating in the shops and factories for a huge turn- |out to give the workers’ answer to| |Murphy, Hoover, Thomas, and to |speed the figrt for real unemploy- | ment insurance. Pittsburgh Pioneers Welcome Returning Delegates to U.S.S.R. PITTSBURGH, Oct. 22.—An en- thusiastic welcome was given to |Comrade Goldie Dobrinec, Pioneer delegate to the all-world slot held in Berlin, at a mass welcome held by the Pioneers. Of a crowd of over 100 present |more than one-third were children | who made up for their small number |due to difficulties of reaching the |hall because of lack of car fare, by peppy cheering and loud Pioneer singing in which adults joined in. Of the children present, 8 joined the Young Pioneers and 4 adults offered their assistance to build up the Pioneer groups by instructing jthem in first-aid, dressmaking, story-telling and sports, A collection of nearly $10 dollars was made to assist Goldie on her way home. worker will not be the first to suffer. its | with the labor government. mass demonstration, Murphy order- | one His action in this ployed figures have increased by respect, is like the rest of his bo-!/almost a loney about “unemployment relief.”| Henderson and Morrison will un- HeH makes all sorts of phomises, | doubtedly si | but his action is always the reverse. | ence dead with long-winded speeches 1 All Out Friday Noon! Despite Murphy’s action, all un- jing masses will believe less and less employed and employed workers are | jin their hypocritical socialist phrase- called upon (o rally at Grand Circus | ology. Park Friday to demand immediate | thoroughly of the “fruits” of a labor | The Un-| INTERNATIONA w« eR EwWS ae Sco res| 30, 000 FRENCH MINERS Fg scists in A Inpeviction, | of fot the eecokh Culneee te sup- port of their demands was carried through everywhere solidly. About MOSCOW.—The “Pravda” points | 900,000 men took part in the strike. ut that the report submitted by the xecutive Committee to the confer- nee of the labor party admits that the labor party admits that the labor government has not carried! out one single promise made by he labor party with regard to the mprovement of the situation of the 3ritish workers. After this it is | Despite the attempts of the re- formist leaders to prevent any ac- tion apart from the old tactic of “folding arms,” the miners demon- started on the streets with red flags in Sallaumines, Henin, Lietard Wazieres, St. Etienne and man other towns and villages, Ev where the red banners of the re union were in janes | evidence. about 50 per cent less eda \it was 1921. Those who still re- jmain within the ranks of the labor | party are beginning to express their discontent more and more freely | During year of labor rule the unem- Czech Workers Strike When Red Leaders Are Fired by the Bosses PRAGUE.—On the 4th of Octo- ber Comrades Soukup and Tellin, tive to talk the confer-|red shop stewards elected by the workers of the Skoda Works in Pil- million. MacDonald, about the world crisis, but the work- “confidential session” of the factory government. The working masses; council in “Skodovak” the organ of are beginning to recognize that the|the revolutionary workers in the leaders of the labor party are work-| Skoda works. The real reason for ing together with the leaders of the|the dismissals is that the manage- |capitalist parties heart and soul to |ment wants to clear out the class- save British capitalism. Our brother | conscious leaders of the workers in party, the Communist Pary of Great |¢rder to dism: Britain which exposes the treacher- |¥e-organize various departments for ous nature of the labor party, will | War production with the co-opera- | sen were instantly dismissed by the management on the ground that} The workers have tasted | they had published a report of at Ausiria Plan Bigger Attack VIENNA—The fascist Heimwehr has issued a manifesto signed by its leader Prince Starhemberg the pres- ent Minister of the Interior for Aus- tria. The manifesto points to the danger that the present state of political intrigue might drive many ‘'people into the camp of the reds Jand declares that the Heimy hr has entered the governnient not in order to support the Christian social party, but in order to get a firm grip on the helm of state in the in- terests of the Heimwehr ideals. The Heimwehr would not loosen its grip for any red majority. The manifesto concludes, “today the Heimwehr is in the government; to- morrow the Heimwehr block must capture parliament, not in order that its members should make themselves comfortable in its easy chairs, but in order to build up the new Heimwehr State on the ashes of party political parliamentarism.” This manifesto of the fascists speaks an open language. Should ie coming elections give no major- y to the Vaugoin-Seipel-Starhem- berg government then parliament will be pushed aside by virtue of the armed forces behind Starhem- berg. Starhemberg in the Ministry of the Interior and his fellow fascist Hueber in the Ministry of Justice are already busy exploi joffices in order to mobilize the masses of the workers |tion of the'social fascists. |Heimwehr and persecute its ene- for a struggle against the bour-| The social fascists are trying to| mies. Hardly a day passes but geoisie and against their social re-j| throttle the indignation of the w what some newspaper or publication formist agents. ers with a “protest” to the arbitra-|is fined and suppressed for attacks tion court. The Communist Party|;on the Heimwehr government, Z appeals to the workers to fight| Yesterday the “Allgemeine Zeite Workers in Legion energetically against this provoca-|ung” a bourgeois newspaper was tion of the management. Today the | sup, d for reprinting an article Protect Red Speaker ROYAL OAK, Mich., Oct. 22,.— Last Saturday night, for the first time in Royal Oak, there was held an unemployed mass meeting with abount 500 present. This town i and the Ku Klux Klan. Comrade Leo Thompson, youth organizer of the T.U.U.L., spoke on the conditions of the unemployed and the necessity of organization. The workers present, who were also members of the American Legion, listened attentively to the program presented by Comrade Thompson | and expressed full agreement and readiness to struggle. When the police arrived at the meeting, the working men and women booed the police and protected the speaker. |The workers expressed their readi- ness for organization and many filled out applications to the union jand the Communist Party. The po- lice had to return empty handed, and the meeting went on, followed by questions which were satisfac- torily answered. Vote Communist! now beine conducted by the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, is developing rapidly. The Chicago needle workers, as well as the needle workers throughout the country, recognize that the way to solve the present problem in the industry, is the speed up, wage cuts, and the treacherous activities of the richt wing company unions, is by strike. They also recognize that to have a successful strike, preparations are nedded. To help the fund, a cabaret and dance will be given on Christ- mas Eve, at the People’s Auditor-| ium, 2457 W. Chicago Ave. This at fair will be the closing point in this Organize and Strike campaign. The union asks all working class organ- izations in Chicago not to arrange) any other affairs on that date—to support this Christmas Eve affair, thus assuring the needle workers in Chicago that their quota will be raised. “A Chicken in Every Pot, an Automobile in Every Garage” Such was the slogan of the Hoover campaign in 1928. What it really meant was wide-spread unemployment, wage cuts, ex+ ploitation, misery, starvation,— and additional fortunes for the parasites. Smash the capital- ist fakers! Vote Com- a, Midy munist! _ (This is the 25th article in the series on Tammany Hall) By ALLAN JOHNSON Police court reporters for the boss press declare privately that about ninety-five per cent of influential lcriminals habitually buy their way out of convictions. The remainder ‘either try to hold up a bank, and ‘this is never forgiven by the rich, who demand immediate and drastic punishment, or are caught red- |handed about the time the capitalist parties are gently pushing each other around in a sham election \campaign in which crime is one of jthe “issues.” Since almost all professional criminals are influential it follows that the vast majority of them pay for their crimes by aiding Tammany at election time, and that only the poor and the ignorant criminals ever see the inside of a jail, barring miracles. In the midst of a “crime wave” orders go around that arrests must be made, Since the influential criminal is immune it means that the petty thief or street corner “hard guy” is corralled and charged with crimes committed by men who sometimes accompany the detectives when they arrest the “punks.” The methods used by the police in fore- ing these small-timers to “confess” to crimes they never committed is what is known as the “third degree.” It is almost never used on a power- ful criminal. The Catholic Church, admittedly expert in developing the most un- believable forms of torture, was not more ferocious then say Grover Whalen, who used to boast to his friends that he invented the “ice controlled by the American Legion | - |dismissed shop stewards spoke to the Skoda workers. They were ar- rested by the police. The workers | of the mechanical departments then |went on strike as a protest against {their dismissal and subsequent | arrest. published by the great German bourgeois daily newspaper the “Frankfurter Zeitung” on the situa- tion in Austria, Today the social democratic “Abend” was confis- cated for publishing an attack on ‘the government. ‘Exposes Mellon’s Hand in Pennsy Boss Party Machines By HENRY ROBINSON This particular internecine strife Rock-ribbed Republican Pennsyl-| between Pennsylvania plutocrats vania is no more. The arch of Key-| will be waged with millions of dol- | stone State Republicanism is split|lars; enough to feed the army of | asunder. All the “boys” of one side | unemployed in Philadelphia or Pitts- | are calling in united chorus all the | burgh for two or three months this |“boys” of the other side grafie: coming winter. crooks, hypocrites. The other Pinchot in his listing of the 8 is repaying in kind. And when this |specific frads perpetrated by the jhappens in Pennsylvania it means | V tterbury machine is correct. | direct, unconcealed involvement of |The Vare-Atterbury’s outfit charac- |the Liberal and Democratic parties, | terization of Pinchot is correct, also, |For while in other states it is evi-| Although why Pinchot lists only 8 dent to every class conscious worker | fradus instead of 8,000 is a mystery. | that there is a tie of some sort be-| To go into the history of Pinchot tween the Republican, Democratic,|and his satellites or Vare and his Socialist, Liberal, and what have| Satellites would require many vol- you “political” parties in Pennsyl-|Umes. And to go into\the history vania, for a generation or more all| of their feudal. ;industrial backers, political organizzations, excepting| Grundy and Atterbury would re- quire many more volumes. now the Communist Party, are sub-| servient to and subsidiaries of the} dominant Republican machine. To workers only certain things |must be remembered, Grover Whalen Boasts of Inventing Torture in Police “Third Degree’ box.” The “ice box” treatment of necessity is reserved for winter. It consists in putting a suspect in a room in which the steam has been turned off for weeks. The prisoner is disrobed, the windows opened and the furniture removed. The “treat- ment” often lasts for days and usually ends up in Bellevue Hos- pital. List of Third Degree Methods. Among the more common forms of torture used in the “third de- gree” are blackjacking the victim into unconsciousness, beating him with a rubber hose or part of an auto tire (a hose leaves no marks after a few. hours but the pain often lasts for months), beating him with an ordinary cop’s club and with a revolver butt, cracking head of prisoner against walls and floor, burning back, chest, soles and eyes of prisoner with lighted cigarettes and cigars, firing blank cartridges against temple of prisoner, refusing to give thirsty prisoners a drink even though a glass of water is brought to within an inch of his mouth, beat- ing soles of prisoner’s feet until they swell, forcing the prisoner to run a gauntlet of 30 or 40 cops, each of whom comes down heavily with a rubber hose or club, forcing victim to remain awake three, four and five days, hitting prisoner over Adam’s apple with blackjack, having dentist grind sound tooth of pris- oner with a rough burr, and crack- ing jaws of victim together in such a manner that often the broken tones cannot knit properly. It must not be forgotten that only the uninfluential are tortured in this manner. Some of the reasons for the immunity of better known p gang It is, therefore, with ease that the| 1. The Atterbury interests are Atterbury and Mellon interests,|¢verything that Pinchot says they worthb etween them more than a are—and ibis billion dollars, can come out for the| 2-_ The mountebank, Pinchot, ap- paragon of Pennsylvania politics, |Pealing to the “peepful” is an adept John M. Hemphill, at one and the |“ using sentimental buncombe to same time “conservative” yet “pro- |delude the same “peepful”—and an sters have been enumerated. An- other is that cops as a group are as yellow as all bullies are and fear possible retribution at the hands of | the gunmen who have been “given the works.” The same gentle treatment is ac- corded the criminal who through one of the accidents described above finds himself in jail. need suffer no discomfort if he has either influence or money. There is a fixed scale of prices for these privileges in all prisons. In Tombs jail, New York, the price list is as follows: Morphine and heroin pills—$1.00. Shooting craps in jail corridors $2.00. Extra blankets—$5.00. Smuggled letters—$10.00. Whiskey, one drink—$1.00. Cigarettes, one pack—$1.00. Cigars, two—$2.00. Visits at night friends—$100.00, Walking in corridors to prevent stiffness—$1.00. Visits from friends and relatives with female | $25.00. Former Borough President Con- nolly, now spending a year in jail for stealing $20,000,000 from the city treasury, is allowed every lux- ury except an automobile, and he may get that before his term is up. Brindell, crooked A. F. of L. lead- er, was allowed to go outside the Sing Sing prison walls regularly to A prisoner | visit his family and continued to rule, or misrule, his unions’ from his cell as Connolly rules Queens today from his “apartment” on Wel- fare Island. Cops, like judges and millionaires, ;rarely pay forced vacations in jail, although they shave been convicted | for the robbing and killing of peo- ple they have been assigned to pro-! tect, working with thieves and “fences,” and stealing the recovered | proceeds of a robbery. Cops Beaten for Honesty Whenever a cop displays a desire to remain honest he runs into a wall of+corruption that starts with his sergeant and ends in Wall Street. Cops have been beaten by their of- ficers for insisting that certain gangsters stay away from their beats. Others have remained pat- rolmen until they were retiréd be- cause they have refused to become “regular,” that is, ally themselves th the criminal element without whose aid Tammany would find it more difficult to exist. A police captain has put the mat- ter succinctly. He once told a police reporter: “Honesty is all right in its place, but there are joints in my district that I couldn’t raid without immediate banishment and punish- ment. If the people who own or operate these places that I am for- bidden to raid insist on voluntarily giving my wardman (graft collect- or) weekly contributions that run into a thousand or more a week, and if this money is deposited in a ‘vawer in my desk, I would be a darned fool to turn it over to the ‘Lost and Found Bureau.’ I would like to meet the church deacon who would refuse to take it under the circumstances.” If a tendency to. oversimplifica tion is forgiven the captain, such for example, as his statement that the graft is “voluntary,” and that it is deposited in his desk rather than in his outstretched hand, his state- ment can be accepted as the truth. os ve,” and running simultan-| on the democrat and liberal | tick ets. 47 of the 48 ward leaders, the Band of Brothers constituting the huge, corruptedly contented Philadelphia republican machine, desert the Pinchot part of the re- publican ticket and at the behest of their master, the arch exploiter, W. | W. Atterbury, come out in favor of Hemphill. Liberal in Pennsylvania means beer, and movies on Sunday. | It is with the same sort of ease | that the slippery Pinchot, at the| same moment that he is accepting $10,000 checks from Grundy, in- | famous child labor exploiter, is en-| abled to send to every singl one of the registered voters of Philadel- phia a letter charging 8 specific thieveries to the Philadelphia repub- lican organization. Pinchot, mil- lionaire demagogue, finds a ready alliance with Grundy, who in addi | tion to being internationally known | as an exploiter of children in his mills at Bristol, Pa., also controls in the approved Pennsylvania style, many important county repub machines, chiefly in rural, anthra- cite and bituminous Pennsylvania. He also holds in the hollow of his hands hundreds of up-state manu- facturers, exploiters of cheap labor {who will contribute liberally to Pinchot’s campaign. Why are the Pennsylvania poli- ticians with their armies of political parasites so worked up over this veritable Tweedledum and Tweedle- Because there is adept at successful flunkeying to the powerful mining, manufacturing, commercial and banking interests while in office, That the socialist party, as ividly shown in their “administra- tion” under Maurer and his cohorts at Reading, Pennsylvania, is as like unto the capitalist parties powers, |as peas under a pod. 4. That the only Party in the state representing the working class is the Communist Party. |Remember Katovis, Levy, Gonzales, Weizenberg! They have been murdered by Tammiany, by the Garvey gang, by the A. F. of L. underworld. Charles Solomon, “socialist” can- didate for state senator in the 8th District, Brooklyn, was the Miller's injunction lawyer for Do not vote for the murderers of our comrades! dee campaign? On with the ham- mer and sickle! \ much at stake. The state treasury itself, the enormous state patronage | wielded by the winner for governor | is much larger than that involved | in the cause of many a war or revo-| lution in Latin America or the Balkans. WORKERS! VOTE COMMUNIST NOV. 4! Administered by Against the Lynch Terror—Against the Injunctions. the Workers and Jobless! Vote Commu eens