From Berlin All Mall and Make Checks to STARTED French-Spanish DEFENSE HERE Allied Invaders HELP of His I

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

From Berlin All Mall and Make Checks to STARTED French-Spanish DEFENSE HERE Allied Invaders HELP of His I Page Four THE DAILY WORKER liEDanywonKß Franco-Spanish Chiefs FOREIGN-CORN Demand Rifling Give MILL STRIKERS Published by'the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO. Up Captives to Allies A Washington Banner 1113 W. Blvd., Chicago, 111. Phone Monroe 4713 j (Special to The Daily Worker) SUBSCRIPTION RATES . GRATEFUL FOR By (In COUNCIL mall Chicago only): By GETS TAOURIRT, Morocco, April mall (outside of Chloago): 20.—Si 13.00 per year • $4.60 six months 16.00 per year $3.60 six months Mohammed Azekans, head of the Rif- 12.60 three months 12.00 three months flan peace delegation, has issued a public statement declaring that the Address out From Berlin all mall and make checks to STARTED French-Spanish DEFENSE HERE allied invaders HELP of his I. THE DAILY WORKER, 1113 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago, Illinois country included in their terms for the declaration J. LOUIS ENGDAHL [ of an armistice two THE SECOND CITY manors Will Send Delegates to conditions which the delegation be- United Front Committee TO LEADING ; £ WILLIAM F. DUNNE f lieve will MORITZ J. LOEB Business Manager ' not be accepted by Abd-el Washington Krim. These are that all Spanish and Thanks I. L. D. Entered as second-class mall September 21, 1923, at the post-office at Chi- French prisoners held by the Riffians 111., cago, under the act of March 3, 1879. The Chicago Council for the Protec- shall immediately and unconditionally In a telegram just received by tion of Foreign Born, representing 390 Advertising rates on application. be released and that the Spaniards James P. Cannon secretary of the In- over 40,000 workers, organized April and the French be permitted to occupy ternational Labor Defense, the United 18, is conducting an Intensive organi- certain position now held by the Rif- Front Committee of Textile Workers, I jfc May Day Celebrations zation drive for additional affiliations flans. The declaration joints out that thru its secretary Gustav Doak, ex- from trade unions, fraternal and other if the invaders are granted these de- presses its hearty appreciation of the Arrangements jare now complete for nation-wide celebrations of labor organizations. Four trade unions mands and no agreement is reached in work of the I. L. D. in connection International Labor Day, the First of May. In every center have affiliated with the Chicago Coun- Uje negotiations the Riflikns will have with labor defense in the Passaic tex- great cil since the They advantages of population conference. are lost all their gained in the tile strike. thruout the whole country gigantic meetings in the Carpenters' Local 13 and 416 and bitter months of fighting. “The United Front Committee of biggest halls have been arranged so the workers may assemble and Machinists' Locals 390 and 478. This Abd-el Krim’s delegates have been Textile Workers,” says the message, review the achievements of the past year and prepare for new strug-' brings the total of unions affiliated to given five days in whicli to bring back “representing the sixteen thousand date up to nineteen, gles in the future. Even in the smaller centers of meetings with considerable his answer to tips astounding and in- strikers, wishes to express its warm- hundreds possibilities for more. The I. L. G. W. solent proposal. The appreciation gratitude the been trench loaned est and to have arranged with appropriate programs. joint board affiliation Includes the the Riffians an airplane to carry them International Labor Defense for its May Day is exclusively the day of militant labor. In Chicago, seven I. L. G. W. locals.* back to Agadir, from whence they will action in taking up the defense of historic battle ground of labor's struggles, the Coliseum, the The executive committee elected at make their way int*> their native coun- Brother Weisbord and all the other circularizing largest auditorium in the the conference is the local try. workers to the number, to date, of two city, has been secured with an array of trade unions and other workers’ speakers will or- hundred and sixty four who have been that depict the struggles and problems of the working ganizations not yet represented, ex- arrested because of their activity dur- class. In New York and Brooklyn a series of gigantic meetings will plaining the anti-alien bills before con- ing the strike. The efficient help of be held. Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Detroit, Minneapolis, Kansas City- gress and requesting them to affiliate PARSONS, LAST OF the International Labor Defense has with the Chicago Council. The execu- a San Francisco and all other important cities will be scenes of great taken great load off our shoulders tive committee at its meeting Sunday, and has given us greater strength and A BANNER FROM THE * BARRICADES! meetings. up | .* :l April 25, took the matter of Issuing JOHNBROWN BAND, courage to keep up the fight. ’ y • • • - Ir 4' Long ago the officialdom of the labor movement abandoned the petitions in protest against the pas- We appeal to all workers to support TTHE German workers have experienced revolution. They celebration of International Labor Day and tried to substitute the sage of these vicious bills against the the nation wide protest movement fought workers. have on the barricades. They have made working nationalist travesty on labor day which is observed the first Mon- DIES which the I. L. D. is organizing and class history. Will Send Delegates to Washington. INJANSAS to contribute to its defense fund. The day in September. May Day is exclusively the day of the militant The enlarged executive committee Old Abolitionist Died at bitter persecution we have suffered 0 section of the working class\here and a revival of the old spirit in- of twenty-one members will hold a during the strike and the attempts to The Communist Party of Germany has led the glorious fight. dicates an increasing militancy on the part of the great mass of special session on May 9 to select del- 93 Years railroad our leaders to prison have The German workers, suffering particularly from the vicious labor. egates to the National Conference of shown us clearly the great necessity Dawes Plan, find the efforts of the American revolutionary Foreign (Special to The Daily Worker) for the International Labor Defense. Unquestionably this First of May will the greatest demon- the Born Council to be held workers a strong bond of comradeship. see at Washington, D. C., some time in SALINA, Kan., April 26.—Luke Par- We give it our unconditional support strations in this country since the high tide of the labor movement sons, the last survivor of John and endorsement and hope it will be * that culminated in ihe great May Day mass demonstrations of 1919, cago Council to send three delegates. Brown’s hand of Free Staters, is dead built into an ever stronger shield of The efforts of American workers in building their Com- the working class. munist DAILY WORKER, where hundreds of thousands of workers battled against the full A number of contributions have come at 93 years of age. Parsons was one of standard bearer, The is to Ger- into the Chicago Council to develop the ten picked men Yours for solidarity. “United Front workers a great step in which they join full heartedly. ' power of the armed forces of capitalism for their right of John Brown’s man to assemble, the future work. small army, organized to fight the Committee of Textile Workers.”— with Cleveland and Boston as notable scenes of heroic struggles Gustav Doak, secretary. At the organization conference an Missouri raiders, who sdught to estab- Following the foot steps of the Communist Party of Moscow always occupy place in lish Robert W. Dunn, of the American that will a the history of American labor. enlarged executive committee of slavery in Kansas. While Par- the Party of Berlin will twenty-one was elected with a small sons was day clerk the famous Civil Liberties Union, and one of the Communist award another silk "at city working executive of seven members. Free State Hotel Eldridge at Law- defendants, declares: banner to the reaching the second highest percentage in Belgium's Debt Settlement The council selected its chairman, sec- rence, Kansas, the MiSkourians raided “The textile bosses have simply put the national BUILDERS’ CAMPAIGN. retary and treasurer. The executive the town, burned tho;> Jiotel and de- their local government puppets to Belgium has settled its indebtedness to the United States gov- committee of twenty-one Is consti- stroyed the printing presses of the work in a more obvious manner than usual. Those who know the unspeak- ernment- It really amounts to a cancellation of all the on tuted as follows: Free Staters. A BANNER FROM interest J. J. Uhlman, business agent Ma- •Type Make Shot*. ably corrupt and venal administratioh BERLIN! the war debt and is the most liberal settlement accorded any coun- chinists’ District Council; The type of this print shop became of so-called law in Passaic and Bergen try. In order that the real terms of settlement might be camou- Gross, Local 5, International Ladies’ famous later on by being turned into counties in normal times are not sur- x BRING IT TO YOUR CITY! prised played by Nirinho, flaged a debt contracted after the armistice was signed was in- Garment Workers. two cannon balls, whifcti were used ef- at the part Perner, Machinists’ Local 337. fectively in the attack on the border Hargreaves and the others who serve You can do it easily by getting subscriptions cluded in the war debt. It was divided into parts: $171,700.000 pre- M. for J.
Recommended publications
  • Art Young and the Cartoons of American Socialism
    Radical Art: Art Young and the Cartoons of American Socialism Arthur Henry Young (1866-1943), known to the world as Art, was arguably the most widely recognized and beloved cartoonist in the history of American radicalism. A working cartoonist for sixty years, Art Young drew thousands of simple black-line drawings with biting captions that appeared in big-city newspapers, liberal magazines, and, most importantly, in the socialist, labor, and radical press of the early twentieth century. Starting in Wisconsin shortly after the end of the Civil War and ending in the midst of World War II, Art Young’s life, art, and activism span the Age of Monopoly and the Great Depression. At the peak of his influence, Art’s clear yet stylish cartoons helped give a visual design and humo rous edge to a wave of anti-capitalist social movements—socialist, anarchist, communist, Wobbly, feminist, labor, and Black radical—organized in opposition to the unchecked power of monopoly capitalism, Wall Street finance, government surveillance, and racist nationalism. For these reasons, after the passage of a century or more, Art Young’s cartoons strike us as surprisingly relevant to our current era of inequality, ecological crisis, police violence, and war. Formally educated in art schools in Chicago and Paris, Young chose graphic and cartoon art from an early age as his “road to recognition.” Art recognized that painting was singular and slow, whereas, in his words, “a cartoon could be reproduced by simple mechanical process and easily made accessible to hundreds of thousands. I wanted a large audience.” Young published his first cartoon in Judge magazine in 1883 and thereafter learned his craft in the editorial offices of Chicago and New York’s biggest papers, working for a time under Thomas Nast, the most important American cartoonist of the nineteenth century.
    [Show full text]
  • V5n08-W53-Aug-1922-Liberator.Pdf
    TO MY LITTLE SON cannot lose tbe thought of you SOME BOOKS It haunts me like a lit tie song, It lllcnds with all I ee or do Ea'b day, tbe whole day long. Are worth while - others are necessary T he tmin, tile lights, the engine's throll, And that one stinging m emor y: Th(' follo7.u illg titles cO lllpl-ise a list which, by gen­ Your llra,'e smile broken with a sob, Your face pressed close to me. eral co ncession to the needs of clea'r-cut workers' edu ca tion, are classed ill the ca tegory of 'necessities: Lips trembling far too much to s peak; '1'h e arms tbat would not come undone: The kiss so salty on yonr cheek; DICTATORSHIP vs. DEMOCRACY '1'he long, long trip begun. By Leon Trotzky. Cloth $1, paper 50 cents. I could n ot miss you more i t s erued, But now I don·t . know wbat to say . It·s harder tban I ever dreamed BETWEEN RED AND WHITE \\'ith you so far away. By Leon Trotzky. 50 cents. NEW POLICIES of SOVIET RUSSIA By Lenin, Rutgers, Bukharin. $1.00. BARS and SHADOWS ABC of COMMUNISM By N. Bukharin. 50 cents. a book of prison poems THE RAILROADERS' written by NEXT STEP-AMALGAMATION By Wm. Z. Foster. 25 cents. RALPH CHAPLIN Write for new price list Lite?'atttre Department an at·tist, wt'iter and member of the I. W . W., who was convicted under the EsPionage Act aJtd is now serv­ ing a twenty-year sentence in the F eclet'al penitentiary WORKERS PARTY .799 Broadway, Room 405 New York City The book also contains an Int roduction by Scott Nearing Dare You Read This Book? Ralph Cbaplin has pent five consecuth'e Christmases in :len who 'will face any danger are afraid to r ead it! jail becau e tbe o pinions wbich he held and expressed were Why? Is it because Joseph Lewis has opened t he distasteful to the authorities.
    [Show full text]
  • HOUSE of REPRESENTATIVES House Is Requested, a Bill of the House Thomas A
    1956 CONGRESSIONAL ·RECORD -HOUSE · 10413 To be Foreign Service officers of class 5, vice COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY authorize the payment of mileage allow­ consuz.s of career, and secretaries To be Assistant Director of the Coast and ances for overland travel by private con­ Charles w. Brown, of California. Geodetic Survey, with the rank of rear veyance outside the continental limits of the Edward H. Brown, of Pennsylvania. admiral, for a term of 4 years, effective United States: Joseph F. Christiano, of New York. August 10, 1956 H. R. 6268. ·An act to facl11tate the con­ Thomas w. Fina, of Florida. Robert W. Knox struction of drainage works and other minor items on Federal reclamation and like proj­ Wayne R. Gilchrist, of Missouri. The following persons for permanent ap­ Walter T. Kamprad, of California. ects; pointment to the grades indicated in the H. R. 7679. An act to provide for the con­ George R. Kaplan, of Massachusetts. Coast and Geodetic Survey: Earl A. Kessler II, of Oregon. veyance of certain lands by the United States Mrs. Elvira L. Lawyer, of the District of To be Zieutenant11 to the city of Muskogee, Okla.; Columbia. Donald L. Campbell H. R. 9390. An act making appropriations Miss Margaret McDonald, of South Dakota. Robert C. Munson for the Department of the Interior and re­ Miss Alice c. Mahoney, of Arizona. Gerard E. Haraden lated agencies for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1957, and for other purposes; Miss Colette Meyer, of California. To be lieutenant (junior grade) Miss Helen J. Mullen, of New York.
    [Show full text]
  • Communist Editorial Cartoons in the 1920S and the Issue of Race
    Black and White and Red All Over: Communist Editorial Cartoons in the 1920s and the Issue of Race Alexander M. Dunphy Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts In the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2016 © 2016 Alexander M. Dunphy All rights reserved Abstract The U.S. Communist Party’s (CP) fight for racial justice is one of the most important and neglected chapters in the history of civil rights struggles in the United States. When it is studied the focus tends to be on the 1930s, however this conventional periodization ignores the dramatic growth in the Party’s understanding of race during the 1920s. A focus on this period forces a reexamination of the relationship between the CP and the Soviet–based Communist International (Comintern). Rather than dictated from Moscow, the CP’s understanding of the issues facing African Americans evolved through a dialogue between Communists of all races around the world. This challenges the assumptions of the “Cold War” historians, who paint the Party as puppets of Russia, as well as “revisionist” histories, which tend to ignore the Comintern by focusing on the Party’s grassroots. By neither denouncing nor ignoring the relationship between international and domestic Communists, I show how this exchange provided a catalyst to the CP’s changing position on race. This not only has implications for the historiography of the Communism, but also sheds light on current debates over the feasibility of the political left as a vehicle for addressing issues of race. In this thesis, I address this omission by analyzing previously unexamined editorial cartoons from Communist Party publications during the 1920s to highlight the CP’s changing views on race.
    [Show full text]
  • Cartooning Capitalism’’: Radical Cartooning and the Making of American Popular Radicalism in the Early Twentieth Century
    IRSH 52 (2007), pp. 35–58 DOI: 10.1017/S0020859007003112 # 2007 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis ‘‘Cartooning Capitalism’’: Radical Cartooning and the Making of American Popular Radicalism in the Early Twentieth Century Michael Cohen Summary: During the first two decades of the twentieth century, a mass culture of popular radicalism – consisting of various socialist, industrial unionist, anarchist, Progressive, feminist, black radical and other movements – arose to challenge the legitimacy of corporate capitalism in the United States. This article considers the role of radical cartoonists in propagandizing for, and forging unity within, this culture of popular radicalism. By articulating a common set of anti-capitalist values and providing a recognizable series of icons and enemies, radical cartoonists worked to generate a class politics of laugher that was at once entertaining and didactic. Through a discussion of the works of Art Young for The Masses, Ryan Walker’s cartoons for the socialist newspaper, Appeal to Reason, and the proletarian humor of Joe Hill and the IWW, this article argues that radical cartooning did not merely provide comic relief for the movements, but was an active force in framing socialist ideology and goals in a revolutionary age. There can be no question about leftwing humor being ‘‘radically’’ different, for that is precisely what its creators intended it to be. It is humor invigorated by the hope of human progress, satire enlivened by the passion for social justice, and wit aimed with unerring skill at the stupidity or indifference of those who cherish the strange delusion that this is ‘the best of all possible worlds.’ International Treasury of Leftwing Humor (1945)1 It’s just that cartoons are most aesthetically pleasing when they manage to speak truth to power, not when they afflict the afflicted.
    [Show full text]
  • Professional Groups for Browder and Ford
    COMMITTEE OF PROFESSIONAL GROUPS FOR BROWDER AND FORD ■ROOM 438, 80 EAST N th STREET, NEW YORK CITY ROCKWELL KENT Chairman JOSEPHINE HERBST Treasurer September 28, 1938 F. M. VAN WICKLEN, JR. Executive Secretary Committee includes: Maurice Becker Mr* McNamara, Albert Bein Box 25314, Marc Blitzstein San Quentin, Calif. Alter Brody Bishop William M. Brown Dear Mr. McNamara: Kenneth Burke Robert M. Coates Jack Conroy WITH EVERY OUNCE OF SINCERITY AT OUR COMMAND WE ASK YOU Aaron Copland TO READ THIS UTTER -- EVERY WORD. W1 ASSURE YOU — YOU Prof. H. W. L Dana OWE IT TO YOURSELF. Ben Davis, Jr. Leon Dennen Robert W. Dunn It will reach you, this letter, at what may well be the Kenneth Fearing decisive hour in the whole history Of the world. Who can deny Waldo Frank that the monstrous forces of reaction, of war and fascism, are Joseph Freeman Hugo Gellert rushing forward fiercely, thirsty to impose upon all humanity Lawrence Gellert such slaughter, destruction and terror As was never seen upon Robert Gessner this earth. Michael Gold Joseph Gollomb Harry Gottlieb You have seen the ruthless murder of thousands of unarmed Grace Greenwood Negroes in Ethiopia, out down by machine guns, shell fire, Marion Greenwood poison gas, killed in their tracks as they bravely defended Horace Gregory their homes! You witness at this moment a Fascist onslaught William Gropper Henry Hart against the people of Spain which for sheer cruelty and bar­ Josephine Herbst barism Is as yet unmatched. War preparations, on an incred­ Granville Hicks ible scale, are rushed furiously. Hitler brazenly armed to Langston Hughes the teeth, threatens the whole world with war.
    [Show full text]
  • Lib000083 Lo.Pdf
    Sn “TH COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL” The monthly organ of the Executive Committee of the Comintern. Six hundred and two (602) readers of “THE LIBERATOR” subscribed to “THD CON MUNIST INTERNATIONAL” during September. We knew that the readers of “The Libera- tor” will enjoy reading this world renowned publication, what one of them say Mos, Sepeaé, “It is very seldom that I pay any attention to newspaper and magazine 2 ments. It may be because I am from Missouri. I did, however, follow you: per the September Liberator and consequently received the MUNIST INTERNATIONAL three days ago. I have been reading it T can say without hesitation that it is one of the most interesting and instructive magazines I have come across for a long time. The subscription price is a profitable investment for my own education and enlightenment. Iam not a Communist but 1 want to know what Communism offers to society. Thanks for bringing it to my atte Sincerely yours, JAMES McMILLAN. We have many other letters of praise from the growing list of readers of “THE COM- UNIST INTERNATIONAL.” It gives us pleasure to offer you a publi of international ignificance, read with concern by those who fear, those who want to know and those who love the revolutionary movement led by the Communist International, Part of con 4 THE LENIN ENROLLY G. Zinovi FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEMS ORLD TRADE UNION ‘A Losovsk z BSTIONS CZECHO'S! , Karl Ki bien THE THE THE ANTS' COl THE DOCTRINE OF Si ‘MINATION HOW THE CO! THE FIRS INCE, G, Zinoviev Workers Party of Amer 1118 Washington Blvd, c Date enclosed scription’ please (12 fin Name St.
    [Show full text]
  • The Courant Sponsored by the Syracuse University Library Associates ISSN 1554-2688
    pecial Collectio n of the S ns Researc lleti h Cen A Bu ter number five fall 2006 THE COUraNT Sponsored by the Syracuse University Library Associates ISSN 1554-2688 Exhibition on the Painters and Poets of the New York School Will Travel to Lubin House The Special Collections Research Center is currently exhib- iting material from the recently processed Grace Hartigan Papers, as well as from the university art galleries, the Grove Press Archives, and our extensive holdings of art and liter- ary magazines from the 1950s. Entitled Imagine! Painters and Poets of the New York School, the exhibition is now open at E. S. Bird Library and will be available there until 15 December 2006. It will then travel to the Louise and Bernard Palitz Gallery at the Joseph I. Lubin House in New York City, with an opening reception there on 22 March 2007. Grace Hartigan (1922–) was a major participant in the explosion of creative energy that was the New York artis- tic and literary scene of the early 1950s. An important ab- stract expressionist painter, Hartigan was included in the famous show Twelve Americans at the Museum of Modern Art in 1956. Her friends and correspondents included Frank O’Hara, Larry Rivers, Barbara Guest, and Joan Mitchell. The exhibition will highlight Hartigan’s collaboration with poets, especially with Frank O’Hara and Barbara Guest. The Persian Jacket by Grace Hartigan. This silkscreen print on paper from 1953 is a variation on the artist’s oil painting of the same name that was purchased by the Museum of Modern Art.
    [Show full text]
  • A Finding Aid to the Hugo Gellert Papers, 1916-1986, in the Archives of American Art
    A Finding Aid to the Hugo Gellert Papers, 1916-1986, in the Archives of American Art Megan McShea Funding for the processing and digitization of this collection was provided by the Terra Foundation for American Art December 21, 2006 Archives of American Art 750 9th Street, NW Victor Building, Suite 2200 Washington, D.C. 20001 https://www.aaa.si.edu/services/questions https://www.aaa.si.edu/ Table of Contents Collection Overview ........................................................................................................ 1 Administrative Information .............................................................................................. 1 Biographical Note............................................................................................................. 2 Scope and Content Note................................................................................................. 4 Arrangement..................................................................................................................... 4 Names and Subjects ...................................................................................................... 5 Container Listing ............................................................................................................. 6 Series 1: Biographical Material, 1917-1982............................................................. 6 Series 2: Correspondence, circa 1920-1986............................................................ 8 Series 3: Writings, 1916-1970...............................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Bohemian Bolsheviks
    James Madison University JMU Scholarly Commons Masters Theses, 2020-current The Graduate School 5-8-2020 The bohemian Bolsheviks Dale Cook Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.lib.jmu.edu/masters202029 Part of the Political History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Cook, Dale, "The bohemian Bolsheviks" (2020). Masters Theses, 2020-current. 60. https://commons.lib.jmu.edu/masters202029/60 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the The Graduate School at JMU Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses, 2020-current by an authorized administrator of JMU Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Bohemian Bolsheviks Dale Cook A thesis submitted to the Graduate Faculty of JAMES MADISON UNIVERSITY In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Department of History May 2020 Faculty Committee: Committee Chair: Evan Friss Committee Members/ Readers: Michael Gubser Steven Reich Table of Contents Table of Contents…………………………………………………………………………ii List of Figures ……………………………………………………………………………. iii Abstract .............................................................................................................................. iv I. Introduction ......................................................................................................................1 II. The Masses ....................................................................................................................13
    [Show full text]
  • Lib000075 Lo.Pdf
    American banking and business in- terests are collecting large sums for German relief. At the same time they make large loans to German industrialists. These loans will have to be repaid with large interest by exploiting the German workers whom the American bankers are now feeding. This is famine relief WITH CONDITIONS. Gompers is collecting for German relief with the purpose of feeding only those trade unionists who hold certain political views. This is fam- ine relief WITH POLITICAL DIS- CRIMINATION. -s (i. HELP | ESTABLISH AN Pet Millon German Wailers | AMERICAN ARE STARVING | °°? STcu NTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY With Germany’s Workers Famine Relief Without Conditions Famine Relief Without Political Discrimination 3 D_YOUR_ CONTRIBUTION, TODAY. = =) ! Friends of Soviet Russia and Workers’ Germany ! 132 So. Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill 1 S $500.00 initial outlay and sg Enclosed Garay ae i cegrcunts to help Se open a an American $2,000.00 monthly will onen L STARVING Woilaitg uid wives "SND cHIEDREN and support an American I eatin tor The" shintenance” af Ghanem, coment 188 Ow ‘Send me a MEAL COUPON BOOK. (Yes or no?) 9 Soup Kitchen in’ Germany. NAME ADDRESS. oF Profession COMMITTEE FOR INTERNATIONAL WORKERS’ AID -— Look to your neighbor's a e reading! y s e Next in importanee to your own reading is your neighbor's reading. f It is true that what we read determines what we know and what we know determines how we live. If we are to progress in applying our knowledge, how- What ig Miso Recessary for our neighbors and our friends to interpret eorreetly koe happening all about us, eee 7 When you finish reading this copy of The Liberator hand it to your hor or give it to your friend.
    [Show full text]
  • TOOTHY of and Methods of Warfare of Different Coun- Matists! and Corruption
    THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MAY 12, 1928 Page Five ELLIS OUTSTANDING Hugo Geilert's Cover Design for “Red Cartoons” ! The STOCK EXCHANGE IN “RED CARTOONS” OF ART-MODEL 1928 RED CARTOONS, 1928. by need hardly be Edited added that Ellis never By art even has its Walt Garmon. With introduc- has and probably will receive MICHAEL WEBB. The industry an never middle-men leap from tion by Robert Cover De- the Pulitzer prize for the best who “poverty” Minor. cartoon MODERN painting is organized on to riches, like the obscure boys who sign by Hugo Geilert. Daily of year.) Work- the a commercial basis, "like the cleaned in the bull market er Publishing Co. I say that Ellis’ work has up recent sl. should jproduction and sale of pictures,” ac- in New Yolk. Thus Andre Salmon something more than a touch of geni- Reviewed by A. B. MAGIL. i cording to Louis Lozowick, the well the French critic has a us. And he is something more than a art collection jknown left wing artist, who has just worth millions. Fis did not THE publication of the annual book great political cartoonist. He is a “shares” | returned from Paris. Lozowick cost him a cent, since is the of Red Cartoons should be an event revolutionary artist who in a society it. custom stopped off in Paris on his way home painters, in the life of our movement. It has in which even revolutionary art rarely of unknown French whose ¦ from the Soviet Union, where he ex- are future, pre- been noted often enough to have be- escapes some taint of the febrile es- prospects all in the to hibited some thirty of his drawings sent critics with of their work.
    [Show full text]