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Page Six THE DAILY WORKER THE D ORKER. steel workers who produce a surplus value of $240 Ww ea essions of Enlarge ecutive of the Mailched te Wha Hine WORKER PUBLISHING OG {In connection with this it is enlighte: to re- Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING OO. ghtening 1118 W. Washington Bivd., Chicago, UL view the recent convention of the Amalgamated Seer P paign; this should be utilized aed ie A. F-ot Zs pporting amerioan ie ane Seren sero ‘ 8: f { (Phone: Monroe 4712) Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers held (Continued from aa issue.) Hetce chs GeRUAE ines ape far tie ASMOE Ie’ pullite badk dnel-ihes- constitute the -bogianise. oe tna ‘ j ee in Pittsburgh: ‘The steel trast secretarpoot:labor,| | MOSCOW, AbeMaredmy‘MalL)—| 2°" 0 oe Oe a taaonld obs. made |e’ the “Apnea? Iaigeeeineal te] Galen unity, ( apne er James J. Davis, addressed the convention and| AT the evening session a ae to the different ‘#éetions. order there to combat Soviet Russia} The Vorwaerts is already Dimas ”, Y rged “industrial peace.” t on the question of trade union R and the left, wing. our analysis of the world situation to 6.60 ear $3.50....6 months $2.00...8 months | urged “industrial p 5 ESHKE (Germiny): Both in the |: : ) Seguagiad By mail (in Chicago only): In New York City the other day William Green, | “™'tY 18 continued. trade unions and’ in the factories,|| The speaker hopes that * pe ree a leaped: dlynsiellcnins f $8.00 per year - -$4.50..6 months __$2.50.-8_month@ | ident of the America’ i r,]QEMARD (France):‘ In France @]tne social democracy is fighting |left wing will be formed in the ution is a 4 Federati f Labo : i mony rola ie ie ear aal reat compaign for unity was start- ii th ity campaign with all |0f L., thereby neutralizing the latter.| But the social democracy is shouting A@dress all mail and make out checks to took lunch with the Civie Federation, of which ni oo Sia ernie ag eatewntat |e La " a Ha oe Pi ie rian TN ls ‘cloalig: wpestic’ Ouiithie| Law | munk top early. «It we soanage th Ab THE ONLY WORKER Elbert Gary is an active member, and also urged leaders bt sabotaging the campaign; acoiat democratic party carries on a ovsky states that the Amsterdam|@ good day’s work during the rela- EIN W. Washington ‘Blvd. GWoago, WMilnele | «industrial peace.” but there is no doubt as to the sym-) more bitter fight against the Commun- | International is in reality no inter#a-| tively short period of stabilization, te : Gry ‘ dominated by | then the prose of the daily tasks will 3, LOUIS ENGDAHL | Well, putting two and two together, it is not] pathies of the workers. The speaker | jot Party of Germany than even the|tional at all, for it is dominated by becceie tha peels ob tie aculal sone: WILLIAM F. DU Lig fern eek |hard to see that the steel trust can afford to sub-| gathers from the yarious reports bee reactionary forces. Those who had pores: isc noe hoya eta ey one le poetry MORITZ J. LOE! woe Business Manager Alaa » leader: ; : e in some countries the unity campaign | peen expelled from the trade unions ‘e want unity not fo! , 4 eres idise labor leaders to talk of Industrial pees when | (oer tate ina and Trotskyist. | fornied, under the Brandler eentral|but as a fighting organization. The| (1OMRADE SAUVAGE brings in the Entered as second-class mail Sept. 21, 1928, at the Post- | peace due to the weakness of labor organization out many deviations, committee, indépent unions, which, |right wing ‘combats the ‘unity cam- following resolution in the trade fice ‘at Chicago, Hil, under the act of March 8, 1879. | makes it possible to rob each’ worker ofigust twice| 1: ip our task to'stetarthen ‘the lett under the’ leadbcahiy”"At Shumacter, | paign not only thru agitation, but also} union question: dvertising rates op appcation | what he receives in wages. 4 wing in the reformist trade unions.4 have rejected thé’ unity campaign. thru organizational ance Bhs i ue dana ba Les pone Pee <> 290 Voi avhonuad | As an antidote to the slimy servility,of the labor | In this. way we shall be able Perit). Peating come stea) end Untireunete, | Mnee neee Seerer CAuy Reales cee Bl Asicaranticy of the. Fitth Congtiee bongs seca fa read the program for the workers in the| ver gradually, forty, fifty and morejly also workers, had to be expelled | expulsions: po! Hittin t OF the alae i é i t P. t d | , 2 per cent of the workers, thus com-|from the party. In the independent Up to ‘the present our unity cam-| The present development oi le class The M exican Communis: ar y an | staal industry published by the Trade Union Edu- pelling the reformist leaders to effect| unions certain finetionaries are still|paign was’ too abstract. The propa-| struggle strengthens the urge of non- A I I ialism cational League. It will be quite plain, then why unity. It is necessary. to create frac-| opposed to unity. ganda for’ unity must be combined {Communist masses to. on, under merican Impert ;Gary and Green unite to fight the Communists| tions everywhere, and to point out |rVHE clarification of the trade union | with sitch besiae prone: AS ae emir Antneheee: ihe wecah The convention of the Mexican Communist Party |and the left w ing which they lead. on the basis of the program of apn 2 problem ai new nde to Rac ate iste oe aie Aid fea ine necessity of carrying on a . demands that without unity, not even|the party. Polemising agains: ara has outlined a campaign inst American im 2 the daily immediate needs of the pro-| Zetkin, the speaker declares that the | uation. a eyatanays Aampalen He phe perialism and one would expect that in its cotin- | Fascist Propaganda letariat can be satisfied, figures cited by Zetkin were not cor-|/J\HE plenum will adopt a general| the strugg! ‘e ‘or. par ae ne ie try the officials of the trade unions would consider | : st 3 Ss be-| rect, and that she has fallen victim resolution, also concrete recom-| against the bourgeoisie c 1 th a move one of the greatest importance to We have received a copy of a leaflet issued by the Neen agitation £9p iti must-be be to an unscrupulous machination. he | endations and practical resolutions for | eys. yee em lean which ie de alia exploited—by native | Mussolini government in districts take from Aus-| + gun in those countries where an results of the shop council elections |every country. The reformists are|* “The plenum ascribes much import- been de — ae stay raed si pee tria. This particular leaflet was distributed to the ane cea Mim eciria cat are not bad. It is true that the party | opposed to unity because they know pilose 1p a per eg nating ned je apie we a by a . te officialdom of the! PUPiIs of a confiscated school and is printed in Cane pais Te akdiios ‘a crisis ts a Jost oY aon pagcuti pas ‘: ia see saps te goceseargn Caan oy maria Seine hoes teencis puL this 1s not the case, : Ps: ali "renc ; + gaine new ones, The report of the . 2 Mexican Federation of Labor is tied neck and crop Italian, Hrenchy English and German. For brazen on the threshold, and large mass British trade union delegation has | sary to fight not only the reformists | conference. "i tl 4 liey of the American Federation of Labor|!Ying it is hard to beat, but the most interesting] movements are to be expected; done much to counteract the social|but also their organized machines.| “It calls upon the workers of all a x es ati eo “th ; Pan: Ri cebieee Federation | Part of it is the close connection shown between| this must of course be any advan-| jemocratic lies. Factory delegations |The reformist leaders dgmand good | countries to support the srention Gee Bee er ee tool, he itesieans inhor ‘ement| the fascist government and the catholic church.|'#&e of .In these countries # er saa.{ Wish to go to Russia in order to find | treatment from us. But it is not a/ Anglo-Russia trade bea 2 - 4 of Labor, prepares the Mexican labor movemen ihe leafet iauetiliewa task to discredit the reformist lead- out whether Purcell or the Vorwarts | question of politeness, but one of em-| fight energetically or internationa! for its daily sacrifice on the Wall Street altar. . : 7 _ }ers. In France the masses grasp the | ;, telling the truth. phasizing the essence of the .strug- | trade union unity. if : In Italy one works serenely and quietly: the coun: despit igned thi In the old days when the Aztee priesthood ruled significance of the campaign, despite | “7, approaching crisis will accele- | gle. The resolution is assigned to the n t he old days wh L 5 ne P é : - Richens try does not interest itself with the politicat-etrife of | the attempt of the reformists to dis- rate the unity campaign, but it would The coming conference should be | Political commission. what is now Mexico, prisoners of war were . ic oe a negligable minority. credit it as a mere maneuver. In be wrong to disregard the great diffi. | neither overestimated nor underestim- OMRADE ARISOV (Roumania) ed by the tho 2 nds to honor a number of blood- The national government presided by Benito Mus- | Germany the unity campaign is more culties in our way. ated. The conference will be an his- greets the plenum in the name stained deities. They were. led up to the top of| solini, prides itself in the faith of the crown,/senate | difficult, because there the social dem-| ~ Qpoy (America): The American | torical eveng, since for the first time, | of*five million oppressed workers and the teocallis—the gigantic pyramids on which the| nq house of parliament. ocrats still have considerable influ- Federation of Labor is 4 compara-|the most important organization of| peasants of Bessarabia, He protests ceremonies were conducted—stripped, bent back No incident has ever disturbed for months ana | °2°° tively small but strategically import- | Amsterdam ta mapa Ay the nies against the false appeal ae Bou over the sacrificial stone, their breasts cut open| months the public order or the public services. For T is necessary to fight against a|ant organization, because the A. F.|ian trade unions as to the methods|manian government to istorical ; A ‘ arts ker 7 i large number of trade union cen-| of L. wants to return into the Amster- | of conducting the struggle. rights,” and asks for the support of and their still beating hearts plucked out by the| years, Italy has never past such a period of quiet inl i - ters. In every country propaganda |dam International. At the time Wil-|/[VHE negotiations will not deal with |the Comintern, expressing the hope priests. bedhead should be carried on in support of|son was in favor of the . league of questions of principle in relation | that under the leadership of the Co- * ceremony ‘similar in many respects to the) A’ ie penuary voles Wutett bays Goan civiped. live os uaMe eee, oe Bes | Wallin Comes eet |e Communism, but par-; mintern the oppressive yoke of the ancient customs, was performed at El Paso. The} abroad are produced trom the dark maneuvers of | and the Russian trade unions. league; but when the American bour-| tial questions—which circumstance | boyars may be broken. (Applause). Mexican workers were led across the Rio Grande, our enemies, and adversaries of the church who are The capitalists everywhere support | geoisie opposed the league, Gompers | signifies great progress in the ques- The session is adjourned after Sem. ate we : ; Whe Sn, ele | trying to speculate on the exchange, and to dissuade the reformists against the unity cam-! followed suit. At the present time tion of unity. ard’s return of greetings. the high priests of Wall Street, garbed in the} rg ; habilime 3 f labor, dedicated them to American) he faithful from the jubilee pilgrimage. - ha yn ime nts of la ry he @ a Prat GAIT Ask to any honest person of your confidence for in- —— = tr pe ar tad lees nereifal than | formation and you will have the full confirmation Scol l NEARING Communists Unite Against U.S. Imperialism SOVIET RUSSIA TO in chains, to a death slower z ov chensgrdis - of such news. mate A aha —_- ~ apy Rakes poral have} _ The situation in Ttaly and its subject territories (Continued from page 1) lished with the working and peasant INCREASE "EXPORT I : ee ee can tae a not a sible to| must be one of great tension when a government gress here, pointing avin necessity | Masses, especially in Tampico a the TRADE WITH TURKEY ow : eo ze 2 Ritdke a dhove and their clank.| {@e!8 it necessary to‘descend to such puerile propa- of immediately taking up the wdtch-|states. of Vera Cruz and Michoacan. 4 be udieag i: . js Wall ‘Sieck where it causes great ganda as this. But another thing is also evident. B E AUGR ATS word of “Bolshevization.” The Mexi-}El Machete, the party’s excellent MOSCOW, April 20.— The peo- ing is heard in Wall § : “"| It is that under fascism’ Ttaly is going’ back to. the can party is greatly lacking in dis-|weekly organ, has a larger circula-| ple’s commissariat of foreign joy. dark ages when it was necessary only to brand a y t cipline and in» Marxist-Leninist- edu-|tion than any other labor Paper in| trade has actively taken up the * 7 ici e Mexican labor movement y - Leetiiadie "4 h x. a pgm grrr ‘tts che ait movement ag an enemy of the church to put it out- Education Conference Is “ape Papeiitase cee 2 sel: Herat wes eS the program of pars wer pebosnagngreng slegest ee gs a . side the pale. . M3 : z i ie ae -ell-nai siti i have to be taken up in this congress Bolshevizatie di t th - | centers of Turkey, such as Smyrna, ave T pa ns 9 vege peas Wi ee ee Re In connection with this leaflet it is well to re- Ruled by Reaction under the head of Bolshevization. Loy = gt erscepicctinnnthy | ‘Trapezund, Saméun, e' with a ot eas col - 5 s - .y;member that Musolini Has postponed the elections betiy neg Calles Disarms Peasants. M education, sadly lack-| view to promoting the developrhent ; It is for this reason that they look with @N8TY lio the chamber of deputies ors request of the (Continued from page 1) In the discussion on the immediate Le srl paper rary will be vc of Soviet export trade with Turkey. H eyes on the campaign launched by the Mexican ; pointed by the president of the A.|tasks of the party it was shown that 7 ee © by 3 : ion diverted iat dui vatican as the latter feared that the inevitable} p of L.,.three by the, international |the Calles gévernment is proceedin; eb ts eet ne tt * M4 c soaunist Party—a campaign di struggle would interfere with its jubilee celebra- unions, one by the central state labor | systematically toward the comptes Larrea} ee a the |Communists to Gain paymasters. ak 6 tha Mikicad labor tion. federations, and two Hy’ the present | disarming of the peasants. The party a fi . “in Second Poll In | penvoment rel Loh Pia si eee ath eee eka Stiri over Italy, howers but it is not the yellow te be ousted Cele scien * prevent this, It will insist ee een Fhooel Bii on : aaa epee e labor sacideaieint has | ight of the jubilee candles, It is the red flame of School of New Yorks ne ‘enn. kaa ‘ana deganacata tise the railroad workers, who are now| GERLIN, Germany, April 20.— Ths eign shed by the leprous hand of the agents of |7¢V0lt held aloft by the Communist Party of Italy| A resolution favoridg the recogni-|a farce it will also take up the|face to face with a life and death |name of Ernst Thaelmann, Commun- peeee toueed by. the tenes i that blights what-| “Bich in spite of ‘the horrible persecutions of its| tion of Soviet Russia bypthe American | watchword of abolition of private | Struggle, as a result of the determina, |ist Party candidate for president in American imperialism, the hand tha p) igh s a members, has steadily carried on its work of win-|8Vernment was, of co} defeated. | property in land. tion of the Calles government to break |the coming German elections, is ever its fingers clutch. In the United States, its ning the masses for the overthrow of Italian ca President William G@ of the A. F./ here is a noisy religious contro-}d0wn the railroad unions preparatory | printed on the list of candidates with ' agents in the ranks of labor are preaching uncon- ii Plot L. made a plea for “industrial|versy going on in Mexico between |to handing over the national railways |the occupa'on “stevedo70” following ditional surrender to the master class. In Mexico |italism. peace” and deprecated strikes, while |“romanos” and “sismaticos,” the lat-|to private owners. The Communists |his name. y have delivered the labor movement to the oil Professor Shotwell, author of the in-|ter being a newly organized schis-|are taking the lead in trying to gal-| The Communists are expected to they have de' aver ve v “ ‘Trad le Uni ‘on Uni ity 9 famous Geneva protocol, guaranteeing | matic body on a national basis, de-|Vvanize the leaders of the unions @to| materially increase their vote cvor copper and timber barons. — a the frontiers of all the quarreling mili-/ manding complete separation of the|Tesistance to the wage cuts and sys-|the two million cast for Thaelmann The Calles government is a creature of Wall We have receivéd the first ew # of Trade|tarist puppet nations éstablished by | catholic church from Rome. It is be-|tematical scrappling of agreements|in the first elections in March, when f Street and wars on the Mexican working class.| Union Unity the new English magazine, devoted | the robber “peace” of ‘Versailles and | tieved that the schism is to a con-| which characterize Calles’ war against |no candidate polled a majority-of the y> S g . The labor Judases give it a protective coloring a to speeding up the drive for unity of the world the hostile bloc against Soviet Russia, | siderable extend fomented by the goy-| the 75,000 organized railroad workers. | votes, necessitating a second elec- } fool the masses who fought and bled for it, believ- P fas tdited by Ak 11 id spoke for “security fof France and | »rnment. Nevertheless, it is another}But the Communists are not relying | tion. a ee ee union movement, edited by A. A. Purcell, president protection of the British Empire.” {sign of the disintegration of the| blindly upon the leaders. Members of| Wilhelm Marx, the candidate of the ing it belonged to them. : » of the International Federation of Trade Unions| To this policy Scott Neating rose in church, The “sismaticos” are relative-}the party are agitating in the local | socialist-catholic-republican bloc, has It is under such conditions that the Commu (Amsterdam), Edo Fimmen, secretary of the In-} criticism, declaring himself in favor ly few in number, but include masses{unions for the fmmediate establish- declared in favor of the annexation Party of Mexico holds its convention and r ternational Transport Workers’ Federation and ne med’ oe See F dele Hu Sopub unist pte ment. os operons > —— a of Austria, By) sd pretences the standard ‘of war against American imperial-| oyoeytiy, bos fe , of t i ) exico wi ake advantage of the! preparation_for the nation-wide rail- | measures. indenburg, can . Was tha ade urine 46 meats the cake perse-| Fy oe - np one rata — _— ne eal peace” was fatal to the interests of |situation'to point out the decidedly{road strik& which has been put off|the fascist-monarchist right wing, . gi tate in the United Bistel ave icks Of the Building Workers’ Union: o} reat} the workers and that the Workers’ | “unholy” intrigues of both groups and} several times but which all believe to] who dreams of a return to a mon- cution that Communists in the United States are] Rritain, also board member of Amsterdam, Edueation Bureau and the A. F. of L.|to popularize the‘ slogan of: Religién| be inevitable. archy or a fascist dictatorshtp, 18 say- familiar with, but it operates in a country w her ©! ‘The first number contains articles by Fimmen, | ' following such a policy played into} is the opium of she People. Calles Wars on Railroad Workers, | ing little, and has made no speeches the working class has been reduced to a colonial Purcell, Will Thorne, general articles on the world rote ie Pras adihal to Bulla ‘Bt The Calles government, with the |!" Berlin. status and its task of exposing the pagar ie | trade union situation and news of the support of in avo og toe a ov oy yaad al yi rong Mexlan Party. open support of the bureaucrats of the iced pital ia olga aden as labor union officialdom before the masses is that) ine world unity movement from a half dozen coun-| pers, attacking Nearing and asserting (Special to The Daily Worker.) Regional Confederation of Labor, ia hr The , aealare the pr Aso h easier. fe; th: tl ‘i lid fight th forcing the railroad workers into a y i much ee a ab wieottns didi ee : Hloyere. bee ap aeEUMS ee | MBMICO. Gry, April. in/— ay] mineremenee they must either |Cam be dealt with if Marx is elected, i The important thing is that the } ——— ; ay, The magazine is a distinct contribution to trade te prepa ener suede Miil,)—Willingndes to, fase and actve strike or give up ail the hard-won {and will more readily keep the work. ‘ munist Party has understood the nature o i union literature and its aggressive tone is indica- fa he Goan pie ey be obr "| practical problems confronting the gains of recent years. This is part of |°°S from a revolt than could Hind- task and has attacked Mexican reaction at its) tive of the seriousness and sincerity with which Educate LeadsveOnly. Mexican workers, a firm determina-| calles’ policy of conciliating foreign Seis ge Songianton Rosh ihe | weakest point. the British trade unions have thrown themselves .| tion to stamp out opportunism in the] investors. ; fused to put up a fight agains ; Lot ke AE TERE They declared thatiworkers’ educa-| party itself absi f tacti Dawes plan, and have declared that ¢ % into the work of building a powerful, fighting move-| tion was solely to trafifleaders for co- Lapa ae pesca aa gi ; bowtie yet Rept “be foreign policy must remain un- “ M i 0 ation with the ers around importan' asu! I ndustrial P. eace ment of the organized workers the world over. The a tetenes tales pene di to lead| 2¢e for a united, homogeneous or-| the coming strike. The slogan adopted |¢hanged.” the Gary plant of the United States Steel corpor-| fist issue carries messages of sympathy and sup- strikes,’ Thapataaa ‘that Communist ganization marked the congress of the “Bverything for the big railroad |~ 1" @ speech ‘before the reichstag, v e te P\ekt ea tor apaudlien last month.| Port from members of the general council of the phen cei “pernicious .,.work” every: Communist Party of Mexico, which| strixe!” Foreign aniee hemtcags admit- ie “es os can Pale . thon tons of steel | British Trades Union Congress, like R. B. Walker, | where and that they would not allow pete pera rot after nearly a week} Quit of the congress comes a decided hoe on pge a etn” re mine tahiti bea in addition to 224,000 tons of pig| Secretary of the National Union of Agricultural | them in the workers’ tion move: | ° feb ice prone per tai ob Ake poo ee tarp eee nt. & eectn Intiisibe: Gris eho. rere ricate F 22 te ’ . ‘ Q exico is in’ great m iron and 300,000 tons of eoke, in round, figures. Workers, who was a fraternal delegate to the Port- ay keynote of the. convention is |°?8tess, who lefti his post in the} against American imperialism. "Phis|@Ver is elected president. This production was in excess by 50,000 tons of|!and convention of the A. F. of L.; Ben Durner, one via ra for the favored of the Mexican Young Workers’ League last| is pérhaps the most important feature ‘iid ? pe nioif@ll in 4d history of thé plaht; president of the National Union of Textile Work- bureaucracy and the, philosophy of | ear to take over ‘the secretaryship| of the congress. Stronger and stronger Millions Stolen aE or ; of steel at prevail-| ers; A. Conley, secretary of the Tailors’ and Gar- pure and simple trade gnion technique |! the party in an emergency, Was Te-| bonds of union are being formed with | so Let ns well thes ie re OF Oe aver-|ment Workers’ Trade Union, and ‘Mary; Quaile, | no class struggle and no special work-| lected national secretary by an al-!the Workers (Communist) Party of} from Government by. ing pig iron prices and thus strike a general aver- o 1 Workers’ Uni peidhgpradbiynaes gover education |™ost unanimotis"vtoe. In one short] america and -with the other Com Sct b, Is \ age for the entire production. Pig iron is selling aa — paints ke 4 1d Jabo . [only year he has established himself a5] munist' parties of the continent and wab, \ 5, 2 : See et ae fe eae | Mi raetical” Cha No Practical one of the two or three most capable] q. basis of common action against he Gary plat and its subsidiavieg employ 24, Ment launched by the Red International of. Labor |?" , ret Communist leaders tn the country.) Americatt imperialism has now been |, NEW fone ZA regs gen- ih 5 . prefore, 15 t Unions has, as Trade Union Unity shows, enlisted] paul Fuller, in charge of the chau-| Blected with hii onthe new national definitely “éstablished. | ° ' 000 me Each man produced, therefore, 15 tons D eral of the shipping board emergency men. I . executive committee are: Manuel he close of the co s, the yr i i most powerful unions in the|tuaqua work and labor classes told At the close e congress of finished steel. At pig iron prices this amounts |the support of the ‘i fi If. Not the least in-| 0 how in District 2, of the U. M. W,| Ramirez, Bertram D, Wolfe, Javier] fraternal delegate from the United |" corporation, used his govern- | : Amsterdam International itself. Not the least in- » tos tGusetero, D. A, i ment position as a dollar a year man } 360 per man, . iqueiros and Carlos xican party to “id eg sa oo main 4 > 2 i ound | teresting of the contents are the wails emanating of Ay Be had taught gpveral “pr ite Rendon. ah har Rol ica eed be . te to hop next |‘ turn millions of dollars worth of The average wage in the steel plants is aroun } : students “practical” economics as “re- send a fraternal delegat Seacta’.to. paboldlariga Ree ‘ oy Bach wi -jfrom the right wing organs dominated by the |jatoa to the min try.” The third congress of the party] .onvention of the Workers (Commun- | °°” corpo- $4 per day, $120 per month. Each worker there 5 ated to the mining industry. rations which he headed, is charged Pie fl cor tion exactly three | Dawes plan socialists reprinted without comment| But both there and in Massachu-|may be considered in some ways its ist) ae of America. . fore delivered to the steel corporation exactly magi. eri setts, where John Van Vacrehwyck,|first. For the first time the party ap- rare by, ‘the United States governments times as much steel as he got paid for. ie Bes ut cin We vice-president of the State Federation | peared as an established organization, Corredtian: In our “news story! |, The Sovernment has sued the Beth. Each worker averaged $120 for the month, but| From time to time we shall reprint,extracts from of Labor, had also found terrific un-|with actual locals in most of the im- a ; hai! lehem Shipbuilding corporation, of the steel trust, at the most conservative estimate, |this and other publications devoted to world trade employment, neither could explain |portant industrial sections of the| fom Mexico printed in yeste| Jwhich Schwab is the head, for $15, hace $240 from each worker employed. union unity. There is no more interesting and | how to teach the workers who sought |country. Numertéally, however, it is} DAILY WORKER, it was stated beads panes vs Psi boss Bas is fo the steel trust met yesterday | important movement on foot in the world today |to learn the cause: and solution of | still very weak ‘and altogether too that there are 325,000 peasants or- |’! e The'stockliolders fo the steel trust met ye bry. ‘ . unemployment," any ther “solution” loosely organized. “Organization re-| ganized/ins the “Liga de .Comuni- | Schwab has filed a counter suit for and President Elbert H. Gary reported a surplus |and upon the ATerican Communistsyis:the-respon- than to improve production, which has |mains the priniitry task before the} dades Agrarias” of Vera Cruz. This | $9,000,000 which he charges (ot 4 of some $517,000,000 after all charges had been | sibility of linking up the American “te@de union been “imptoved” so SUNON aivendy that | party, q was due to an error in'the compos- |due on ships his tia es Hele ee met and exten dividends paid. This is an evidence | movement with this drive that is diveeted right only 35 per cent workers of Paper Has Circulation. ing a cee, a figure should be | government. ‘The ships. in rad of prosperity, but little of its sifts thru to the!at the heart of capitalist reaction. Massachusetts are full time, | Important cof te have been estab- “pf # ; 4 [the cost plus basis, | “ 3 . o :