The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 4, 1929, Page 2

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_Page Two _ RAYON WORKERS LEAVING Ul, T. W. OVER SELL OUT 5,500 in Elizabethton Realize Betrayal (Continued from them ta These t today. n up by com . the | f the bos Wilson Is Job Czar. son, the “impartial arbiter” of sell-out contract, which the majority of the accepted, but which was foisted up some of them at a mass meeti week ago by the Unit Workers Union chief's been prepared in secret by Vice- President Kelley, of the U. Anna Weinstock, labor sy sonnel manager of the F and rules who can work and can not. who of th The formal opening of on th is expected soon; other i running with a small fo Most of the strikers are 0 com- pletely convinced of this t ‘al by now that the meetings called by the U. T. W. chiefs, often addressed by special American Federation of La- bor speakers, get out a handful in the audience. They never have more than 200 any m e. MOVE TO WORK SHOALS FOR WAR Senate Gets the Norris Resolution Again (Continued jrom Page One) idge. It apparently was sent in again partly because of the oppor- tunity of registering a harmle tack on the power trust, man: ators having been badly compro- kers have never ‘Negro Hero ‘of Clinic Explosion to Speak in Cleveland on,Thursday CLEVELAND, June 3—W. B. Jackson, Negro worker who saved BILL DEADLOCK ee many lives in the Cleveland clinic duit Secrecy on Tariff explosion at the risk of his own, ~ 2 will speak at a mass meeting under to Rush Program the auspices of the Workers Inter- — racial League at Spirio Hall, 3804 (Continued from Poge One) Scovill Ave. at 8 p. m. Thursday. are to blame, for’ they will build} The meeting is being conducted battleships and c and there-|by the League to enable the work- fore America must also. ers here to learn of Jackson’s hero- But now comes a politician, prob-|ism which had been carefully ably the next prime minsiter of Brit-| “played down” by the local capital- ain, who says exactly the same ist press. Without a thought for thing, only with the names reversed. | his own safety, Jackson had rushed A whole sickening parade of these to the rescue, saving those still alive sentiments at one fake naval confer- and then staying on, although dazed ence after the other is on the pro-| by the deadly gases, to bring the gram, and Hoover, as chief agent of dead from the building. CASE OF BAKERS of v lict as easy for the generals and admirals as possible, has to take conference with his advisors and ap- pointees. Rush Tariff Bill. JERSEY CITY, June 3—Waving down all attempts of the attorney of the workers to present their side, Acting Judge Markly, in First Crim- inal Court here today passed up to Meanwhile there is as much need as ever to whip perspiring congre men out of the idea of a nice three months’ vacation, and force them to pass the tariff and farm bills thus clearing the way for the naval and military measures. It is vitally necessary, too, to rush the farm bill, Guns Show Hypocricy of “Memorial” for War Victims DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1929. While huge guns proved Wall Street's readiness for an- other imperialist war, the above cere- monies were held to “honor” the sailors vho were sacrificed for Wall Street in the last world war. Speakers shouted for a@ huge navy for an- other imperialist war. 400 STRIKE IN PORTAGE MINE National Miners Union Leads Walkout (Continued from Page One) miners were addressed by Pat Too- hey, national secreta reasurer, and Tom Rodgers, district president jof the Central Pennsylvania District National Coal Miners Union. Those present, numbering more than 100, voted unanimously for a strike. With unparalleled efficiency, the National Miners Union set to work. A committee went from house to house all night informing the men of the decision to strike and mobiliz- ing for picketing. Early this morn- ing a mass picket line of more than 100 miners was thrown around the mine, When those minets who had not yet been informed of the strike came to work and were informed of the action, they immediately joined with the picket line. Between 500 and 600 men congregated near the. railway tracks and Pat Toohey spoke to them from the top of a pile of railway ties. A vote was taken and the miners present unanimously ‘STRIKER OF 14, ABLE ORGANIZER SPEAKS AT MEET YoungCommunistsHail Textile Militants (Continued from Page One) izers of the National Textile Work- ers Union, spoke on the demands of the strikers in Gastonia, and the need of organization to carry through the struggle. Many workers from nearby mills who were present joined the union and the child workers joined the Youth Section of the 1. T. W. U. Greetings were received by the Youth Section of the union from the Labor Spc=ts Union, ard copies were distributed to the crowd. | 1,000 Meet in Cranmerton. Yesterday afternoon a mass meet- ing of a thousand textile workers held in Cranmerton, a nearby nill town, The. workers were very enthusiastic for the union in spite of the many bosses present to spy out the militants, The Gastonia Gazette had said |that if Beal dared to speak, he would be thrown out of town, but the crowd | was determined to hear him and pro- |tect him. A strong local of the Na- tional Textile Workers Union was organized. Need More Tents. | The strikers in Gastonia are con- | tinuing to enlarge and improve their tent colony, building floors for the increased number of tents which are | needed, and which the Workers In- ternational Relief is raising funds t to purchase. Nothing but these tents, | |arranged in streets and making a| little city of their own, stand be- ;tween the evicted strikers and the | weather, which is generally bad at this time of the year. Donations for tents for the Gastonia strikers and |their families should be rushed to | Workers International Relief, One | Union Sq., New York City. | * © «& | GREENVILLE, S. C., June 3.—A| committee of strikers from the | Loray mill in Gastonia came through | this city, where a strike of 500| To Precede Call for a ment, all workers are urged to come A Flight to Boost Wall Street in Peru Rising discontent of the workers and peasants of Peru with thair slavery under the Leguia Wall Street puppet government, has resulted in a “good will” flight from the U Jnited States to Lima, Peru, as an attempt to boost Wall Street’s puppets.’ Above, Capt. Pinilles (left) and Lieut. Zegarra (next to last) before taking off. , with Peruvian military attaches FURRIERS IN BIG MEETING TONIGHT General Strike (Continued from Page One) ‘0 the meeting. Stirring Call. The call follows: ‘Fur Workers: “Today, Tuesday, June 4, right after work, the fur workers will | gather at the huge mass demon- stration, at Cooper Union, in final mobilization for the coming gen- eral strike! “The mass meeting will start promptly at 5:30 p. m. Let no honest, class-conscious worker ab- sent himself from this most im- portant and final meeting before | time. | ing fur workers before the gen- cral strike call is issued. All honest and class-conscious workers, all active and loyal union members who have built the union and have helped to win the glori- ous strike of 1926, are called upon to help the union in the final strike preparations. Urge March En Masse. “All fur workers are called upon to come to the Cooper Union meeting! March in organized groups from your shops to the Cooper Union mass meeting. Demonstrate your unity, your de- termination, your readiness to fight for union conditions! “Registered and non-registered fur workers! Forward to the meeting! Forward to, the strug- gle! Come en masse. Come on Let no one work overtime tonight. Let every fur shop be emptied. Let the fur industry come to a standstill tonight at 5 o’clock, Do not permit yourselves to be misled by the bosses. not permit yourselves to be mis- led by the traitors and spies of Do | BALDWIN LIKELY “TO QUIT TODAY:. NacDONALD ISIN New Cabinet to Be a Den of Traitors (Continued from Page One) % enough to convince one of this |Ramsay MacDonald, once before | premier in a labor government, has a record of workingclass betrayal behind him that has already been {put in the rogues gallery of social traitors by revolutionary workers, There is talk of either Henderson or Thomas being the administratovs of British imperialism abroad, Thomas is already fulfilling that function as head of the labor department of the League of Nations, where he has done his bit in the campaign of ter~ ror against the colonial workers and in jailing the leaders of the Indian | workingclass movement. In the same position his aid to the British im- perialists in aggression against the | Soviet Union has been noted and ad- mired by the imperialists. Arthur Henderson, in his job as home secretary in the last labor cab- inet, and in his whole record as one of the leaders of the labor party, has entitled him to the most prom- inent place in the den of British labor fakers, Snowden Takes Pains, Snowden, who has taken especial pains to reassure financial circles jof his sure service to them—an as- | surance which the bankers and in- |dustrialists have been quick to ap- | preciate—will probably be finance minister in the labor cabinet. It was | Snowden who said that Baldwin is not getting enough out of the Ger- man workers. Sir Oswald Mosely, jof “noble” origin, the benighted laborite fake, is being talked of as |replacing Lord Cushendon at the League of Nations, thus assuring | full support of British reformism to |the organ of British imperialism in lits aggression against the Soviet , Union and the colonial masses, It is this new “den of thieves” _that is being envisaged by the im- perialist Schenerezade that will en- 1 c 1 I A Fk f i i ” intbedl x y by expoatte ot ies the Si Jourt the ‘c eRe liaaas i |workers in the Mills mills started| the strike. | the Joint Council seab agency!” |tor upon a new series of working ote for West, and Lenroct, both| 224, keep the farmers fooled until| Pe,fcats, Court the cases of TK. derided 0 cupport the strike Alvriday, and the United ‘Textile| “Fur workers! Your living con- | Ee remnpene ta |elass betrayals, ower trust intees. Voting for |". 0 “4° Vat Program is being car-| tinion; Peter Green, Rudy Falk and|°~ =s | Workers Union has organizers who| ditions, the welfare of your fam- | . Pern | a ] power trust appointees. Voting for | ried out, for wheat is falling, end 1 ; » Rudy with the coal company. | ‘ af : | NAPLES, June 3.—Vincenzo Bat-| The last few returns of the elec the Novris resolution will help their | siready under oar eee S| Gerhard Mark. sie Gh ab arintaaihshts Kan srdleoastyl ney AASHUR toe seo eae cat 40, rad Siusligd/ C8 death ate [lone plaee-enbio# CialO dnrapbrted records among their constituents. The senate finance committee to-| Although the strikers had brought | called in the Coal and Iron Polise, ey, o) 2 Sarre Lif ierecwsl get dA and liberties, depend en- | tera huge stone which slid down|seats with the. conservatives. ‘The Trust Wants It. day unanimously agreed to report | 10 witnesses who were ready to tes-/ Qne of the biggest shareholders in sietene hate cS + ns eh pap chars Ayal Pat pets t es * Ithe quarry located near Torre Del | standing now is: Labor, 287; Con~ Pee cay tha Besact paasietian eutent tify in their behalf, the judge ar- so ee ye ee G Luigi Bambrosio, 30, was servatives, 254; Liberals, 57; Na« enator Norris, reporting the res- moot resolution extending from “fy in 4 M the Sonman Shaft Coal Company is| he Gastoni trike eh ian | H f Liberation.” |Greco. Luigi Bar » 30, ervey A elution, stated: “Muscle Shoals is|Aug. 1, 1929 to May 1, 1930, the fitrarily refused to allow any of John H. Powell, the owner of the| ,1ne Gastonia strikers extended | our 7 eration.“ |roported in a serious condition re- | tionalists, 3; Independents, 4; Prow | Sakeot tHe causee for the attempt Maturity date of France's $400,000,- them to speak. ., Boston Braves Baseball Club. eae oat ee playa cae | “The one for your liberation | sulting from the same accident, _ hibitionists, 1. F of the great combinations of power 000 war supplies sent to the United |. Mueller, now free on $1,000 bail) me wage cut proposed by Furi told RAH tOV dE in VERMEIL . companies to buy up the editorial States, provided the Mellon-Berenger 8 charged with “criminal libel” and). oony is as follows: La WEHlg TTR RET ee ! licy of many newspapers for the | “ebt agreement is ratified by France “Conspiracy” in connection with the |™Pany is ter nal Relief. | power you will force the bosses | LAST 4 DAYS! s Poy Saficmdnc citlic ote’ | by ths. PSamee Cate strike at Hendel’s Pastry Shop, 511) Pick mining reduced from $1.01 to} When the Mills workers decided | to recognize and concede to your | FIRST SHOWING IN AMERICA! <3 ‘ ee eencing. public’ opin) : Palisade Ave. The walkout, which )85 eee) machine mining te-|to strike, H. A. Lignon of Spartan-| rightful demands! | ( 5 gt Tae began May 2, was called to demand) duced from cents to cents per|kturg, president of the company, “For two and a half years you | The committee’s.-report on the| WORKER BURNT TO CRISP. . |union recoynition, more sanitary con-|ton; Day rate reduced from $6.00 toldrore to the mill, locked the nan hiv ssuttered terkornivenploite- | “NIOSFER. A I U : resolution, however, gives an even) LONDON (By Mail).—Covered’ ditions, shorter hours and an in-| $5: ers out and made a speech in which tion, hunger, need and slavery. | t more important reason for pushing with blazing chemicals, Albert Wit. | crease in wages. The company had previously put|he pled poverty and ignorance of| Your unscrupulous bosses have | 99 ¢ government operation of the Shoals. |mey, a worker at the East London Demand Better Conditions. across a wage cut by increasing the|the speed-up system. | made use of the bloody attack, | the VAMP I The first argument is that it will |Chemical Works, dashed to the river-. The strikers have been working size of the cars without increasing} The Mills strikers demand a wage| Jaunched by the ‘right gang’ | ? ieeseetore crest eee of ni- side and threw himself in. He died | 10-14 hours a day, at wages ranging the rate per car. patra of bes cent and potees against the furriers. to their own | Inspired by “DRACULA” a rates tor explosives in the coming | later. from $22 to $36. They demand the of the “stretch-out” or speed-up sys- advantage, Now the time has \ hiierialist w. aie ans : foe | . cae athic drama of blood-lust — a thrilling Directed by peeeraist pelts ma thd Sues ie Gane a day and a minimum wage nth, power of the bourgeoisie eats | fm. Pa Nata ae | finally come when the revolting | sonrsy canteens — a symphony in sadism Cy ha a I r tion, r nations . 5 $36. alone ato ; . 5 ae ; defense,” and the production of| t* distinguishea by this—that 1; Mueller is charged with having ar-| "von ts strong intermational couner’| STORM HURTS CROPS. | a pchaiey ae none oaee AND A DISTINCTIVE SURROUNDING PROGRAM ‘The Last Laugh’ power will be purely incidental. Mare nablticg ‘class antagonisms. | ranged for the distribution of a cir-|kanit, om the force ef mall fedestre;| TOULOUSE, France, June 8—A| metre pogrom and the shame- | : : ‘ ig necessary,” states the report on | into wo gremt and directly contra- | ‘ditions in the Hendel shop. The) ives birth Yo enpitalism and bour- Yards crops was predicted today as| “Tonight is the final mobiliza- | THE CINEMA EVENT OF THE YEAR! the Norris resolution, “it ought to| posed classes: bourgeoisie and pro- ‘other workers were jailed for DICE eee verae brake ncaet a result of a two-day storm which| tion meeting—the last demonstra- | ww be a subject for congratulation.” ‘ ing the place. nism). ‘did extensive damage. tion of the oppressed and suffer- Emil r Ste Si Dae ate | i | Q ‘ : ele BANMINGS? | } izaDethton, Lenn. Nayon Workers Keject 0 nion ¢ viccaaiepaglilscs ent ' . od ‘ @ > JUNE 8 to JUNE28 p> 0 |professional men and other middle} The Fakers Arrive. | The Fighting Mill Workers. | doubtful- if the workers believed at, That strike may come in a week, in pe RS a ARETE A TR RIT (Continued from Page One) elemer They have done| The United Textile Workers Union| But the strikers had other ideas. |the time that they had won anything. |a month or in six months. But there weeks Wifinest characterizations > ; are coming in and prosperity is here | well. Their 100 per cent American- | officials, especially the Muste wing, They wanted more wages. They | But they were stunned by the sud-|is going to be another strike—more | FIRST WEEK . for every one of us.” ism, strengthened by its mi f | scenting initiati : afar, | wa i | | rmi i f of us. ism, strengthened by its mixture of | scenting initiation fees from afar, wanted a union. They were ready to|denness of the proposal and organ-| determined, more conscious, more THE But bus fare, grocery and meat Dixieland patriotism does not pre- sent down an organizer. The Ameri- fight for more control over their | ized resistance did not develop. It| bitter and more decisive than the! 4 ee es cede: it be wermetak 9th > ql bills and rent left nothing out of | vent in any way their daily worship|can Federation of Labor executive job conditions, They continued the|took much persuasion and outright | last, | ‘Wed. and Thurs June 12-15——PASSION——Af LO eS panoeey wages ranging from $8 to $13.44 per at the twin shrines of the potent|and President William Green, like-| strike. Hoffmay and McGrady did | lying even to get the vote for ending 7 f Friday, June 14th. STREET OF SIN—a stark drama of Week, The last word in modern fac- | Hebraic-Teutonie deities—Bemberg | wise scenting a chance to do a little everything they could think of to|the strike. Had the workers known | THe Tayon mill workers have ad- ANObiri WRELIEAe alt SaaeA, rattunte; tone Eee One eane : tory organization and technique and Glanzstoff. | business, and also feeling the neces- | discourage the strike. They told the|that the employment of Wilson as| vances Spee on LY ne pceedes i eo Vad ¢ ‘f ne ¥ when they were first built, the Bem-| The magic phrase in Elizabethton | sity of keeping-an eye His Majesty’s| workers to stay home. They were| “personnel director,” which was put | Of the class struggle in the last six! € we ea eee ee » 4 berg and Glanzstoff mills carried |is “monied men.” In the barber | loyal opposition in the U. T. W., sent against mass picketing. The work-| before them as a great advantage to | Weeks that they did in the previous 1 forward steadily all features of the shops and restaurants, on the strect down McGrady. Owing to the politi- | ers picketed in spite of them. Seabs | them, was actually a symbol of the| {ive Years. i : speed-up. corners, the main topic of conversa- | ¢al backwardness of the local patri-| were few and far between. The|blacklist system, the strike would} They will never be sold out again. TILM GUILD CINEMA ee Welded Into a Proletariat. tion is of “monied men from the | °ts, and the failure of Hoffman and | ranks of the strikers were solid. | still be on, | They may be defeated by the com-| F i 4 The mill workers recruited from north.” Tn the old days of the boom |MeGrady to explain clearly that they |The millowners and the business. | Betas date bined forces of the companies and 52 W. 8th St. (ust West) Spring 5095 “ the countryside were being welded cities of the west the talk was of Came as harbingers of permanent men began to be impatient. They did) 8 gs ‘e the state and national governments CONTINUOUS 2 P. M. TO MIDNIGHT iz into’ a proletariat—a group of work- “eastern capital.” Here the foun-| Peace in the rayon industry, some | not question the good intentions of} In the first few days after the but no union official can ever sell NEED se | ers still closely connected with the|tain head of the golden stream is in te ite a Seaavetn aah es Hoffman ba McGrady, but they strike ended 1800 workers out of| them out again, POPULAR PRICES Je theless. At first the tendency was,|mect—the type that can always be | : ; ; P' sly (out, the mill did not reopen. The/that, In the first place, they know| ~ = = jv when conditions in the mill could found hanging around the courthouse nd taken out of the city. The fact spending thousands of dollars daily | workers stopped registering and be-| tha rol of shana’ oe of L, and the | o no longer be borne, to return to the in a small town—and one will say: | that Hoffman is Jewish and Me-| paying the state troops and special’ gan to think and talk. They decided | y, T, W. from Gchteate == erlariaé, f Reentry: But goon the workers “{ hear there’s some monied men |@tady an Irish Catholic probably had | deputies on duty at the mills and in| that they had been sold out, taihaine Epes th val fee | found out that once a worker, always |from the north in. town.” In a{Something to do with the case in a| Elizabethton and Johnson City, é ‘ nay se erp Speake WITH A YEAR’S SUBSCRIPTION TO THE COM- C a elaay : ; community where the Ku Klux Klan| ; Disgusted with U. T. W. She Mabgral Les ey ane eee nied MUNIST YOU HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF a worker. They found that once moment they are speaking of the |‘ % The Sell-Out Agreement. Th . . which fights on the basis of the class U a torn from the soil and swallowed by future glories of Elizabethton with |#8 by no means a vanished memory. | The sell-out was arranged. Anna | att, p care peeing ne ie Raine | struggle | EITHER OF THE FOLLOWING jr modern industry the farmer is no the fervor an evangelist reserves for; Green Reassures the Bosses. i i eee Ce tees nan oa) workers: A TWO SETS { h ¥. tag ‘ i Weinstock, one of the vamp type| The officials—Hoffman and Kelley! Watch Elizabethton, Tennesse longer a farmer. The whole country- the subject of heaven when speaking} ‘The mill workers struck again. of federal stool-pigeons who are/—denounced ‘the “reds.” They ® cn N side has changed. The giant mills to underpaid workers. |they had no great faith in Hofrman | maintained by the department of| warned the wotkersto “have nothing ear * * | ‘4 haave changed ‘it. Only those too, “Own Your Home.” |and MeGrady but they figured that labor to “conciliate” workers into ac-|to do with these dangerous people Reminiscences of Lenin by Zetkin y t young and those too old to work in! Long before the rayon companies |if the mill owners and the business-|cepting the terms of the bosses, who came here “to make trouble.” 4 ‘4 the mills remain on the farms. Like | began construction, the real estate men were hostile to them that may came to Elizabethton, She worked | Kelley said they did not want any, ee e Program of Communist International ij @ huge magnet, the mills draw in| sharks had gobbled up all available be there was some good in them. It! with Hoffman, McGrady, mill offi-| Communists kidnapped because it Visit Russia 8 the poor population from all direc- | yesidential sites, Elizabethton is/was not long before the babbitry cials and others for about two weeks, might be used against them. But he Paris on the Barricades b Geor: S iro » tions. surrounded by real estate sub-divi-|1recognized that they had made a| President Mothewurf of the Glanz- advised the workers to treat any AT . y ge sp * Before the mills came Elizabeth sions. “Own your own home week” |grave error. They found that they stoff company agreed to tone down|bolshevik rough that tried to taly| LOWEST PRICE OR 3 ton a small, sleepy community—a ceremonies here have almost the had attacked representatives of one his hardboiled attitude in public.|to them. | 8 : 5 typical, southern mountain village. same sanctity as religious rites. But|of America’s outstanding institu-| This is all he did agree to, Mean- i 7 $ *. ‘ 2 4 Today it is bustling—and new.|no one has as yet explained success- | tions—The American Federation of |while the company spies were busy Hata bad Aiea rei Eager Revolutionary Movement in Colonies q ‘ Hardly a building in the business fully how workers are to buy homes Labor. This was explained to them| in the ranks of the strikers. sonfiderice the spore’ had in this cow and return, * A : : section is more than six years old.|out of an average wage of $10.50 per in great detail and with a wealth of) The problem for Hoffman, Me- | tosdership has been dest sah by th incl. all expenses Marxism by Lenin 1 One can almost smell fresh mortar, week. Many, however, are trying patriotic phraseology by . William! Grady and Weinstock was to Put | sellout, vie pa Nid it's Uulted Gredgaet iy 3 ¢ paint and varnish. It has a chamber |the experiment with an optimism Green and others at a mass meeting! over the blacklisting of all active Textile Work oa if A in this ‘con First time since the re- Building Up Socialism by N, Bukharin 1 : of commerce and all the babbit or-| which brings joy to the realtor sec- held to weleome back the deported strikers and the establishment of the | gidence is t snide tier atete This volution that you do not i ganizations which usually eluster| tion of the chamber of commerce, | martyrs. MeGrady likewise did his| blacklist system as a permanent in- {idence 18 to 2 because its role is tof need previous visa ap- ( around this institution. On the lapels/ It was in such an atmosphere that | bit to reassure the businessmen. He stitution in the mills, to put the buateoy the horale G2 thecal wank: plications. : This special offer will hold good dur- of the passers-by are to be seen the | the strike began—started by girls\eaid at this meeting that he came| strikers back to work without a “ast send thin back to érk uns ing the months of April and May only emblems of the various secret) The local press promptly denounced |to Elizabethton to “pacify”. the | single concession being made by the der the blacklist system with all Jane 20—Levi * 1 “fraternal” orders. Modern barber | these hot-headed young persons but | workers, not to foment strikes, company and at the same time to|jnown vtltta t Gaal eke kept July Brohevienn a $2. 00 he | a shops and beauty parlors are plenti-| the rest of the workers, with equal| The babbitry took Hoffman and| make this appear as a victory for) out of the ails, The U. acd Vv. sued con ‘4 Hf $s ful, The stores stock the standard |promptness, struck in . sympathy | McGrady to its breast. Here were the strikers, At least it must appear feadership ‘Here’ 1s part’-of the Free Russian Visan; Stopover | e merchandise, | ‘The picture palaces /with them. ‘The workers were with. men of alien stock, it was true, but| as a vietory long enough for the|,aQcrshi where is part of ria ly Mail your sub to t _ display the latest triumphs of Holly-| out experience in organization and men who stood for the same ideals. | strike to be called off, Lies roma ni ad th i 1 chica 8 wood’s blondes and brunettes. Auto-| they had no leadership. The whole With such leadership the workers) This was a difficult task. It is alana: ae ae acl 8 WORKERS LIBRAR Y PUBLISHERS 8 mobiles fill the principal streets, weight of the middle class com- would not come under the influence tribute to the skillful stool-pigeonism ee a $ The merchants are prosperous. munity was thrown upon the strik-/of bolsheviks as in.Gastonia. There|of this choice collection of company National Union Will Lead. American vs Russian 43 East 125th Street New York City v Upon the backs of some 5500 mill|ers. By lavish promises they were vas balin in'Gilend once more. Now agents and government spies that| ‘The next strike here will be led by i ate peachy Lt ‘ : FE lize stout 5000 merchapfs,' induced to go back to work, . ‘the strikers would go back.to work.| they were able to put it over, It is!the National Textile Workers Union, || (O%-Sth Av» Chel. 4477-6124, N.¥.C, t \ . . Cn oe

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