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VAILY MARINE INDUSTRIALUNION MEET 10. <ORM BASIS FOR Will Eleet Delegates to Cleveland from Page One) Pontinued cia. over any others will come reprgesntatives of ship comn The dele hea: repoxt$ of the intdlerable cor: aboditd the s iate Meabks to iiib¢t the < who Erte y confer inning 7 p. m.. ¢ erence, ittees, ete reports on situggion.in the marine orgaizationa Itasks, supplementary | ta : repoft ion shop committees, supple- | this a thre: and mentary institutes missfon report on sion, report on th defense of the Soviet Unio: eport, re and Lat Electric Workers, Printers at N. Y. Meet. Delegates attend the Metropolitan Area Trade Unity Conference, to be held Tues- day evening at Irving Plaza, Irving | Pl. and 1’th St. are being elected by many groups of unorganized to Second 3 workers of New York and New Jer- e sey, the Eiiecuti Trade Union Cent night. The workers of the Western Elec- tric plant of New York, the Stanley machine shop of Paterson, N. J., and the shop committee of the New York Evening Journal yesterday notified the conference ‘arrangement com- nittee that they would he sented at the conference. - Dock com- mittees organized on piers ind 36, New York, have Council of the announced last factory, the Berkshire underwear ylant and the Perth Amboy C Works, Perth Ar Nu 5, jent in the nam ‘0 the Biiecutive Council. Traction Delegate. 6 The Button Workers Union of |these meetings w Newark, and ees of Yon hey will be tates. The Paters rs will also he conference, sate: n, N. J. traction work- election of -. greetings | omic industry and ¢ on press, has Union | » 15 Relief of their delegates the represented by dele-| sive, of the Gas Remember This D: Aug. 18! ate| Pleasant Bay Park, the place big carnival! 18, the day of the big carnival! Will it be the biggest affair in years? If preparations for entertain- ment, athletic features, food, dancing and what not mean anys thing, it will! For your own.sake keep date open! And watch for further nouncements in the press! Remember Sunday, Aug. 18! this WIN BY STRIKE Says TUEL Statement Urging Fight ye One) ; £ pass- sloyees will be the tion of the arbit ges for con- e Pu has been workers to fight f nt g that ‘did not the de- Jeserv n the usion that permanent relations with your organi are, for ause of co! control, extremely impossible to mai: militant worker sees co in t to smash unionism and the open shop.’” ‘hting attitude of the Trade institut The f Union Educa' onal League is bound | |to make inro: among some of the union rank and ‘ile, the Newark |Evening News in its is: sue of Aug. 14. The ‘News,’ how- hile printing much of the 2. L. appeal, omits the section describing the poor conditions of the workers and answer to the lying propaganda of the Public Service Companies,” adds, HUGE GASTONIA RALLIES AUG, 2? + Sacco Meets to Fight New Boss Plot (Continued from Page One) American workers to demonstrate repre- next week. The Joint Gastonia Defe Committee, with and dous in the history of labor. To Rally for Big Campaign. It strikers, with the of the two 112°t: commemoration and Relief Committee. In Philadelphia, “the city |, CARMEN WILL "|Myerseough, W~’-h, Ae I the League statement | i | national | lage Dor eady fe-/hendquarters at 80 East 11th St.,|?evenue officials attempted to col- ected deelgates for the conference. | declares that the wave of protest | lect the taxes with the «sistance of The workers of the White luggage ‘next week will-be the most tremen- | Police officers. 1 combine the protest against | Sants " ctrocution of the Gastonia | Chased them out of the village. In America | intention of paying no more taxes be the vantage |until the, government does anything several shop commit- point preparing for the campaign!to alleviate the terrible burden un-| have also stated |for funds Aug. 24 to Sept. 2 inclu-|der which they are struggling, The | onia Joint Defense|zovernment on the other hand of |of the peasants by brute force and | ve one delegate at | brotherly love,” where police terror-|is sending military to the area in| Which will elect dele-|ism has been combatted by the cou- | question. to attend the National Trade |rage of the workers, the city hall Jnityzconyention to be held in Cleve- | square will be the scene of the Sac-| and, beginning Avg. . Coal Miners Elect. Of the quota of 50 delegates from he Pittsburgh district to the Trade Tnion, Unity Convention in Cleve- ind, Y@ have already been elected. ‘his @formation was received by te Tide Union Educational League esteBay ‘from Pat Toohey, of the jatiofial Miners Union. co-Vai Aug. In New York the ma will be held in Union Square. Huge Chicago Meet. tti-Gastonia demonstration The joint Sacco-Vanzetti-Gastonia |tory were arrested. demonstration will be on Aug. 23 in Kansas City. memory of the Haymarket martyrs still in the minds of the working eet Moe ba rom ‘tts, the vast demonstration will en miners will come from| he held in the Ashland Auditori entrg Pa, the T. U. E. L. hears,| Aug. 22 ye Sena ad rgm, the Ohio district. The > Tome’! Kecitiary of the National (inex (Union has already elected » wwen® flelegates. The ~ finerg will pick 25 delegates to ;; the letter from Pitts- | where Amy Schechter and Vera Bush will speak. Boston, re police reaction has grown steadily since the Sacco-Van- orial meeting Aug. ben. In hundreds of other 22, despite police centers, these meetings will be held and definite organizational programs will be earried out. ff the coming Cleveland con-| Will be held in ‘the iron range on he Ae arghibays. Mei hile, Anthony Minerich, of | ie Boral Miners Union and a} em! of the National Committee | ! thal U, E. ©, is continuing his | ur ii Speaking on the signifi- ince mtiog to the miners for whom the |AUg. 25, it is reported ie ition of the new trade union | mte! i$ 9f especial significance. lid * * , mference in Duluth. Los Angeles Meet. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 16. — The city conference in preparation for DULUTH, Minn., Aug. 16. — A} the Cleveland convention will be conference |held here tomorrow. Nine delegates have already been in- 1 2 preliminary c * Cleveland convention was ld e, om Gary steel plant in Duluth, dlros workers, carpenters, ete. wo delegates, one a dock worker id other a railroad workers, tre elected to attend the Trade ion Unity Convention. ‘The final T. U. E. L. conference with several delegates | elected to attend the convention, | cluding one Mexican and one Ja) nese laborer, Fift- > thousand leaflets, point- ing out the significance of the forthcoming convention, have al- ready been distributed among the workers of this city. All Daily Worker Agents to report to the picnic grounds In Chicago, with the | ss meeting | banned in Nancy. anthracite | zetti etiecution, will hold the mem- | industrial | | | The N tee of the al Executive Commit-} Young Communist League | The Splitting Activities of Lovestone’s Agents in the Y. State of the National Executive Committee of The, Young Communist League | 1 interests of British imperialism. The heads of the French, Italian, Belgium and Japanese delegations tc the reparations conference decided POWERS TRY 10 . * | unanimously at a meeting tonight r i |that it would be impossible to re- (a) The anti-Party and League CONCEAL DE H possible : e Oh . The de- , statement which | |model the Young Plan, ‘The de they jointly to the N. E, C. (b) The majority atements in Moscow of nd May 14th. presented \cision shattered all hopes of sat ling the demands laid down by S: delegation’s | May 9th | of U. S. A. endor: unreserved! the cable of the Young Communi: International condemning the at- tempt of Lovestone’s agents to carry his splitting anti-Comintern struggle into the League and cor-|,, = rectly stating that support of the|¥- ©. I, a violation of ee Grtidisongupacaga sax ~|mous decisions of the Fifth Nat of the for themselves voted and in tible with membership jn {€Mtradiction to their own vote en- Convention which they y jal League ment presented to the y Ivis, Lurye and Welsh dorsing the C. I, Adtress and co: demning Lovestone’s and Gitlow’s The C. completely endorses | splitting policy on May 20th when the cable of the E, C. C. I and the|they were ca ng on a cowardly statement of the Central Committee | and concealed struggle against the of the Party c: Lovestone’s split-|Comintern decisions. ting activities which makes clear that the “open renegade character of the Lovestone group which tries to organize an anti-Comintern Par’ the Lovestone’s agents in the League jnot only put forward Lovestone’s Jentire right wing platform in the makes belonging to this group and y means of the statement equally political and ideological sol-|0f Rubenstein and others which idarity with it and also, any con-|Condemned the C. I. Address Te and cealed or open support of it by |made an anti-Party and anti-w members of the C. P. U. S. A. in-|ing class platform of all the d jcompatible with membership in the |CUlties of the movement at the pres- Cc. P. U. S. A. and G. The N, |ent time, but they have tried to); C. endorses the action of the |¢atry into the League all of Love- arty in expelling Gitlow Miller, |Ston activities directed at the de- jmoralization and disruption of the Zam, Benjamin and Nemser from|movement and have collaborated the Party as the official leaders|With these activities in the Party. aiding Lovestone in his anti-Party | Rubenstein, Silvis, Lurye and Welsh “ |while still members of the N. . |have carried on factional activities in violation of all Communist disci- pline, Rubenstein, Lurye and S: White, Wolfe, activities. Lovestone’s agents in the League have cartied on a factional activity im support of Lovestone’s splitting |*, ; . ‘ - policy violation of the decisions |ViS have spoken in lower units of of the Fifth World Congress of the|the League against the C. I. and Huge Tire Factory To Be Constructed in the Soviet Union The Amtorg Trading Corpora- tion announced yesterday the con- | URGE WOMEN 10 BACK TAG DAYS ¢ ting graph Le as th have untr New Bedford). The N. E. C. decides to expel form |<#lled conciliators contained in the | : cessions from the United States in the League Jack Rubenstein, Mir-| Tenth “lenum thesis and in the ©.) Both Sides Stand Firm. | the way of a lowering of the Amer- lam. Siivie® Minnie Gereooand aoe atement as “cowardly op-| ,) st a ts be aga ak soot ie rare ae soli. | Portunists who are not carrying on| The Serman ie al pe bhai aha can ee eee Saaremaa a dariged theineclves with Lovestene |@0Y Teal tight against the Lavestone- |Slliance: with: the avowed icapleailas | sie import : is and have been the official leaders | in the ‘ Germany is directed against Eng- ages ‘fi, | f0r all defeatist moods and opportu- | England. horhmaae Wa 3 : forty-eig’ urs they specifi- : yee ‘ satis ationa cally, endorse the decisions “ef the mist views. In regards to all those| On the other side, Phillip Snow-|land and, while it satisfies national Tenth Plenum of the C. C, [| League members who have failed|den, chancellor of the exchequer in| @Spirations of both Srance and ti recognize the political correctness of the i the latest reply of the E. C and the I, C. Lovestone and unless they repudi in themselves from, ate |More Deportations of Raid on Humanite ,, PARIS (By Mail).—Two Polish} and one Italian worker arrested dur-|of our own Fifth National Con- st the Party. estone and the other anti-Party ocuments of the Lovestoneit League (Lurye cago without perm ement supporting Lovestone in the New York D. E. C. | (ce) The scurrilou tional doc- They are circu-|uments that are being circulated sague the mimeo-|throughout the Party, such as the| appeal of; treasonable and counter-revolution- ary circular about the August Ist h | demonstration. cireular on Red Day. They| (d) The political content and the ent organizers throughout the | printing of the appeal, y without the permission of} _(e) ‘The cable answer to the de- ing for Chi-|cisions of the Tenth Plenum regard- ion of the N.|ing Lovestone’s appeal. The N. E completely agrees with the characterization of the so- | Franco-German Alliance. | The adroit manipulations of the . representati Break Is Held to Bere posing as unofficial “observers,” Inevitable es of Wall Street, who but who in reality carry out the policies of the House of Morgan, have succeeded in widening the rift between France and England and swinging the French capitalist clas toward an ailiance with Germany. within the Leag and printed (Continued from Page One) the United States. Meanwhile pres- ure will be brought to bear on Brit- jish finances, which, instead of solv- ing the problem, will only still fur- Rhine Evacuation. ther infuriate the British imperial-| The Germans demanded the ev ists and their social democratic) uation of the Rhine as their 1 agents who. comprise the MacDon-|and it was accepted by France. ald government. jonly after France had obtained con- @ and Rubenstein to Boston and | But ites, like Lifshitz, who, while for- | 8 statesmen of France, Italy, | products of French industry. Thos so) |mally accepting the Address, have | Belgium and Japan, are standing | two-year-old fight was finally ‘set= i-Party and | ton in practice supporting the op. (firmly for the Young plan, devised |tled yesterday to the satisfaction of and| vortunist line of Lovestone.” These PY J- B. Morgan, Thomas W. La-|both countries, according to the an- ofl conciliators are the mouthpiece for mont and Owen D. Young as an a noe ee eae eae mires “withi > |strument of American imperialist | volved. a Gale, a geahrraubene aggression against its great rival,| This alliance between France and League of his an king class activities, Yablan, also a member E. C., who introduced , unless with- to take a firm stand in support of|the cabinet of Ramsay MacDonald,|many, also plays into Stee ot the line of the C. I. and Y. C, I,{and Arthur Henderson, foreign min-| American imperialism, which is en- against Lovestone and his agents |ister of the “labor” government, are|saged in organizing a bloc of na- |within the League, the N. E. C,|unyielding in their defense of the tions against Britain. instructs all bodies of the League | NOW PLAYING to put the following political con- ditions which have been put to the *... greater than the Village of Sin...” expu ion of Lovestone and Cc. I. C. to the answer of writing and disassociate so-called conciliators by the Tenth} | Plenum of the BE. C. C. I. and by| |the C. E. C. of the Party as condi. soe for membership in the Party | or League: 1, To recognize the correctness of e Address of the C. I. and the Tenth Plenum Thesis and decisions jas well as the unanimous decisions Workers After | of LOVE introducing | | : a re summation of a contract between : < Qaoya ing the raid on the “Humanite” offi- | vention. oe | to Save gig ne markable Soviet 3 : the Soviet Rubber Trust and the Raise Funds ‘ ji ces where they had Gome for advice |, 2: Openly and decisively to cut|f ccreen artiste A Sovkino Production Seiberling Rubber Company of Gastonia Prisoners | some dispute concerning their | themselves off from Lovestone and i bes saaptake th a ra jhis agents in the League recogniz- EMMA e tA: phone ttn trom bia Aaron, Oh, an cera wre.|_ ‘The United Council of Working |Working conditions, were expelled ing the correctness of Lovestone’s || 7ESSARSKAYA ase) aaaey Berane which the American firm wit, pr;|Women yesterday issued an appeal |from French territory with a speed | expulsion. sh ermgte end aunerh pare the designs. afd /all plank AND) ite ineniber! to partieipate if the| brharwi bw he bureau-| 3. To carry out, not in words, but ru ing . . . beautiful photo- ay to its me P iF th ise unknown to the bureau . ful specifications for the construction s i ‘ z deed header brs | “How luniinous her mS graphy + powerful Hee ciees, foctors in tee Soviet |t@& days for the defense of the|catie machine and immediately |i deeds, an active fight against the |) ,cifi@™ luminous her os granny ui Mg ede ar Nik fotov, Chair-|Gastonia defendants beginning Au-| 1 4 tie Belgian frontior, Ag|T&Bt deviation in the American ing fleare «.. a great “ge ‘<The Berlin Press. man of the Rabber Trust, is. at|@ust 24 under the joint auspices of | "xen to — “"_ S|Party, openly represented by the|f “rhe German Press. - . present in this country. The tire factory, to be constructed probably at Yaroslavl, is to have an output of 3,100 automobile tires, 9,000 bicycle tires and 480 motor- eycle tires per seven-hour shift. | Several foreman and workers of the | Soviet Rubber Trust will work for a time in the plants of the Seiber- ling Company. Two Soviet en-| gineers will participate in the de- signing of the tire factory. Greek Fascists Send Troops as Peasants Fight Hard Taxation ATHENS (By Mail).—In the vil- of Domakini near Patras) the Workers International Relief. Gastonia textile strikers. working women must know about it live. Every working woman in the kitchen in the tenements must be| reached. | “It must be remembered that the lives of 16 workers are at stake, | “Much money is needed, The raising of huge sums of money will prove that the workers are deter- | |mined <» fight for the framed-up | Gastonia textile strikers, to save them from the clutches of capitalist | justice. | “There will be a tag day under the auspices of the I. L. D. and I./ W. A. beginning August 24, con-| tinuing until over September 2, “Do your utmost, comrades, in the council. The peasants’ re- fused to pay and when the police! proceeded to use violence the pea-| shot at tiem and finally | The peasants have signified their | Come to the Press Carnival, ad- mission only 35 cents. is | determined to break the resistance WHEN YOUR BACK SEEMS BREAKING ARRESTS IN NANCY. osetia : 3 (By Mail).-All Commu. | Backathes arising from stooping ot reclining Pagrany ig Aen Oras Commu: | often mean kidneys need help. Aid them by nist leaflets and booklets have been) ,.oiding meats, spicy foods, liquor, and take : Comrades Hoe-| SantalMidy capsules, Theyalsohelp irregular, quart and Gilain who were distrib- | sity oy Danni Pomme ted oiling, uting such literature before a fac- | nightrisingfrom ladder weak | ness. Genuine bear sig | nature of Dr.L.Midy | Come to the Press Carnival, ad- mission only 35 cents. | Mp Risen ae ‘Workers Int’] Relief Tours to SOVIET RUSSIA Guests of Moscow-W.LR, Nov. 7 to celebrate the 12th Anniversary of the November Revolution Auspices: In cooperation with: PERNATIONAL $30 World pnd Tourists Includes Inc, Sort Union | 175 Fifth Avenue { Free Visas New York Free Travel Free Entertain- ment Tel. Algonquin 6656 Similar Trips for MAY, 1930 ON SPECIAL PART PAYMENT BASIS 1 Union Square New York Te.. Algonquin 6650 Factor- the International Labor Defense and | the Belgian frontier police has in- structions The appeal says: “You are surely|portees from France to enter the Jaware of the conspiracy against the | country, Knowing | either be forced to re-enter Fran that you are doing your utmost,|where they must expect a serious |carry them out without. reserva- | more must be done, not only must! conviction for “unauthorized return” | tions, our members do their utmost; more|or else ly cil is situated, where the members|authorized entrance” cil is sitlated, where the members | country. | Carnival Lovestone group. 4, To submit themselves uncondi- tionally to all decisions of the Cen- tral Committee of the Party and | the N. E. C. of the League and to not to allow any de- Film Guild Cinema . Fitth and’ 52 W. Sth St. Coa SPRing 5095-5090-1716 Continuous Dally—Noon to Midnite these unfortunates will slip into Belgium clandes-|roR THR and g:t the same for “un- in that] NATIONAL TIVE COMMITTEE, N. E. C. BURO. EXECU- Special Prices—12 to 2 Weekdays—35e Saturday and Sunday—1z to 2—50 cents PRESS and First Election Campaign Rally Weinstone, Wicks, Engdah!, Olgin, Gold, Bidenkapp, Rebecca Grecht, Rose Wortis and Others Will Speak PLEASANT BAY PARK Fifth Avenue Buses will take you from 177th subway station to park Sunday, Aug. 18 FROM NOON TILL DAWN Entertainment — Sports Dancing—Refreshments JOHN SMITH’S NEGRO ORCHESTRA ‘ my The Finns will be there in a program of games, pyramid building and other athletics Soccer games between the Scandinavian Workers Athletic Club and the Spartacus Admission 35¢ only Let’s Gol We'll All Be There!