The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 19, 1929, Page 2

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Fs Page ‘lwo = 3 SPEED UP HUGE The esults of DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK. . MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1929 the Plenum of the E.C.C. L'gAsTonia YOUTH! “Holy” Quack : peer TRI-GITY POLICE | g [Leading Article of the “Pravda” of Eee leer ) One of the most important al N BIG AFFAIR TERROR AGAINST 1) July 21, 192 | tions at the Plenum was the trade nud : mle We ‘ A ‘ ‘ Ame a the ' | aon cc. eadin« rtic “<p. " ” ra Tea union question, The tact of t } | Fighheladed th work, ot ticle of the “Pravda” in the Issue Of | aepenient leadership of the strike hae : 7 y struggles of the working class, | adopted decisions of extreme Jae Saw ; : TRIAL WEEK OFF rob ten oe rermauictal July 21, 1929 which has been laid down by the ts a ———_—_—_— = ae Fourth Congress of the R. I. L. U.| eee: | — : : 7 Sixt Vor! Yongress: | 2 14 Tavle, Aled . Parties consist the fact that|Trotskyism, the differences of opin-)and the Sixth World Congress; the . Soweto % \Fail to Halt Workers’ Sacco Memorials to Be .|they (or. some m) might limp|ion between the rights and the|setting up of fighting committees| Melvin to Speak, and EL, Meets Yastonia Rallies This analysis confirmed to behind the developing revolutionary |Communist International are becom-| Which are to comprise not only the! Boyino to Feature TU eets Gastonle ve : re fullest extent the line of the advance (as, for instance, the C. P. ing programmatic differences. The | ovganiz y hat also the unorganized ie | errs ‘ 4 sig Pag ) World Congress, The Plenu 3 under the line of the rights is in numerous) Masses; the tac:'-s of putting up) |, ¢. ieecene! ROCK I , IL, Aug. 18— (Continugd from Page one Ere choveud i Re ace a ae de and ‘Thal-|Parties becoming incompatible with |independent lists of car didates Fo oe ie adane in the | Despite official proclamations from Ce ae Unie | ti ie Geaietua oo Re cee mer). Therefore the task of|membership of the Comintern,|the election of tie trade union ex.; Melvin: So Year ON OC at case | the mayor and strict police orders Rig da lee ca itics ot that Gapitalist ‘cous g the right des‘ations and| Alongside of these elements there |¢cutives and at the factory council pe Youth Organizer for the Na-| to prevent any open air meeting Ba to tists mem veaa OO | eecicoad chin conciliatory tendencies which clopi nother process of elections; simultaneously with in- and Youth Urgent for ion and | from taking place as advertised— Ste ae eevee La etree taken oie Sixth ld Congress placed |right deviation of tl conciliatory |Creased work within the reformist) UOT “Sho poonts,” Southern police orders that were printed on Se SSDS RES eerie Pa n the center of <tention, is still/and vacillating elements, who up to|Unions, was fully confirmed in the SApScRnatios: chbsLar aternational the front pages of all the capitalist ere ieee euethor +? t present it is a re y could not resolve on oppos- | decisions of the Plenum. Their suc-/FoMCSCh eV” nt. the principal papers of Davenport, Rock Island Prepare Sacco Meets. The Eats re corded a further ernrathae Oona: t né to that of the Sixth ful carrying out liberates the mean a big affair to be given| Rev. James Empringham, national |and Moline right up to the evening Nev oyene he th Le cence a aun mY re 3 om the tail politi-!Congre: who attempted to hide acebe apsLuboge gee by the Youth Section of the Loray | superintendent of the Temperance |of the meeting—the rade Union ba rte vee even, cote ie te peek rtunist, semi-social their differences of opinion with erdam trade union bureaucra- ITWU this Saturday Society ,of the Episcopal Church, |Educational League, Tri-City Unit, sent by the Communist Party, de- ions (in spite of the Paris ortunist, semi-socia nf hae: By sche (ey; itis the only méang of debirov. Hote Of hee is Saturday | Society , s Bate ied SeriArkeh Woation maveebele laring: “This week marks the anni-|Conference and of the MacDonald nents who will not|the Comintern, defended the rights | CVs as t only ee of destroy evening at the Bessemer City Union | whose “Health Educational Society” |held their street neeeg ‘ se claring is week marks the anni- erence an e MacDona | ‘ Sia g the reformist trade uni oi bi Bee tees Te “ SS 5 Whe, audienve abo ive : mie neseigonaey ads |i 1 and cowardly form, ing mi de union ap: . in New York is charged with being |uled. The audience of abou of murder of Sacco and| government), a er deteriora- uring revolutionary ad. led 2 nnenad dar sai rether | Srounds. : é s | & anes ‘eer a na final seek before (Hon oBPhe volssning of Ehe wockiag |Fauce Gor ‘ate’ incapable, (of sccing dare to solidarize with Pas i oract to weld together |” Besides the speaking there will be |a quack institution. These are the |hundred, mostly shop Se Ronis Cia n which the burdens of |it)» who are not able to lead the TT onare anes OF the organized |» xing matches and a dance. James | “holy” men who aid in drugging the |tened very attentively to the local | stonia t ae ch the ur ns ot anc ot . endous impor- y work w the week possible m leg der to mobi against the contemy ders.” ize ated 1 working class meetings and 23 into joint Gastonia defense and relief rallies. 2 Vanzetti and Gastonia mur- |t rationalization are being recorded a further in- the war danger and be- attack upon spite of t developr 1 sinee the working class in the coming revo! layi talism and who tion down the ney of has been so full of vents as that h World Congress. It is characterized, on the one hand, -| ‘These elements are now taking eft vacant by the rights stence upon their errors and deviations, their-denial of t' shakiness and rottenness of capital- ist stabilization, the cloaking is, their police; yerman conciliators to the May events) will certainly lead them to f| cision nist Parties (the attitude of | 1 unorganized proletarians not only for the economie struggles but also for the political, revolutionary fight, for the overthrow of capital- ism, The Plenum adopted a special de- bourgeois and social-democratic governments, who are preparing a new world slaughter, will certainly lorganizer of the T. U. E. L., S. A. | Krieger, for over an hour as he out- |lined the local organization plans of \the League aim of worker |ship of industry. Ss. Robinson and Walter Passmore, | workers for the bosses. both members of the Loray Youth Section of the N. T. W. U. are} slated to box four rounds apiece. | The proceeds of the affair will be} divided between the Gastonia De control and owners ees sending a delegation to the Third | National Convention and Third Na- tional track and field meet of the | Governor, Federal ate et regarding the struggle ‘fense Fund and the Labor Sports Rasa jeamectie pages ar convert the mass |i y any period in the inner| disturbing the revolutionary mass |@gainst the threatening war and the| Union, Southern District. The| ee See a J tree ne Sacco an ti emoration ife of the Communist International actions which are organized by the nstrations on First of August./Southern District of the LSU is workers workers not gathered around the platform ladder as soon as it was set up, and pressed close to the meetings are to be held in all sec-|j irection y the strengthening and inner con.|Where the rights have arrived, i. e. all their efforts to prevent Labor Sports Union, to be held in) Commission in Grab eae aa Foon ae seamen aeERe tions of the country: New York,|seen by “Yorld Congress. ation of the Communist Par-|0Utside of the Communist movement. | our demon tions. They will not New York, starting | August 21sb.| . Warelouuhandits prevene than ese: Philadelphia, Boston, Kansas City, |/But séme changes have taken plac® ties and their simultaneous clegns- ialis SURSee Ale: The Labor, Sports Union has pledged). ‘WASHINGTON (D-.G) Aug IB To cia wave Gaqucationsbly ine San, Fran kee, ete. since the Sixth Congress. The Sixth ing from the opportunist elements, } ee, sre esses OF, Socialist com-| masses are aware of the|2),PeF cent of the proceeds of its/An attack upon the contract Pines | aerated aa atobeanenadthenorer Mother Bloor is in charge of ac- Congress recorded the left de and on the other hand, by the con-| pees ae Seca wee tiecatening * way danger; the war| Coe) National crack, apd ield | by) Governor “Wlem'D: fle) ba) ie too confused by the size of the tivities on the Pacific Coast and has |ment of the working mas solidation of the Party leadership |snite of the desperate resistance of | horrors still live in their memories. Meet to the Gastonia Defense Fund. | Kentucky has handed over the Cum-)t00 confused by, gathered so arranged meetings all along the |capitalist cour The extent of {on the Bolshevist linevof the § spite of the desperate resistance of | a we berland River Power Company, a| coast.to raise funds and protest for this left di alread: the capitalist elements, are playing The social fascist governments, with quickly, to know what to. do, . ‘silane i Menaehy | | ti specially formed by s ‘ a “gee Bee eel it Congress. The Communist Parties! an ever greater role in the weld-|Whose help the bourgeoisie is pre- leeeaey Tarall: mente magnate, to, The next open air meeting ts sAEL0 ain arginine ripe Gane CAN ahaa aaa SL ; Germany, Czecho-Slovakia, Amer-| ing together of the revolutionary | paring the war, are exposing them- take the falls over, was yesterday Planned for Saturday night in Moline Pome snowing. condinions there, Are glatio advance, especially injica, France and Poland have heen| forces of the working class in.the|selves too obviously, \ The recent ee caoty ¢|Where the mayor has already an- also being shown throughout the|such countries as Germany, France. a Pay) aes 3 2 : ore : i i ; made by Attorney Genera! Camnack s : seen s oo ies as Germany, France, most strongly affected by this pro- capitalist countries against imperi-|events on the Chinese Eastern Rail- of Kentucky. Camnack, in a com-|0unced that no meeting will be al- Bet En. 4): Grows aaah and Poland. cess. But there are also » number|atism. if, however, the policy of | way, by which the Chinese generals, Bat 9 lowed. Two shop committees have The International Labor Defense is growing in the South, repor from the section showing increased numbers of the workers are joining at each meeting of the organiza- tion. The meetings at which Vera Bush The strikes in the Ruhr, in Lodz, and North France, the mass actions of the Berlin workers on the Ist of May, the May demonstrations in Germany, Péland and in other coun- tries, the brilliant successes of the an Party d the factory council el agricultur the 1] of r Parties in which this pro- cess is only beginning or even has not yet begun. The Plenum empha- sized the necessity of a further de- termined struggle against the right and conciliatory elements in all sec- tions of the Comintern. the C. P. S. U, constitutes a pow-| erful factor which is consolidating the forces of the Comintern, if the | foreign Communist Parties are fol- | lowing the exam;’e of the C. P,|of a new imperialist world slaugh+| S. U. and its general line in adapt- jing their policy, tactics and organi- acting on the dictates of interna- tional imperialism, ate impudently provoking a war against the Soviet Union, clearly signalize the danger ter. The decisions of the E. C. C, I. baa Mees that the falls alteady been formed in the largest were about to be destroyed “for the| factories in Rock Island and Moline sake of a power plant that would|@t the International Harvester .Co. only stand as a monument to our 8d John Deere Plows Co. | short-sighted folly.” | A Tri-City conference and organ- i i : izatign mass meeting of the TUEL Camnack’s attack on the handing | wit take place on August 20th with NEW PROPOSAL Snowden in Imperialist Blast at Hague i} | zati itions h o hi = Continued from Page One) |over of the falls to Insull is thus Taek Jokoat th a aneale > Se sre ed a A a The Plenum of the E. C. ©. I.| zation to the conditions of the devel-| Plenum, which analyze the economic} ( u m ack Johnstone as the main speal Bias talenuacta teee thoueee strikes in Poland are facts which drew up the political and economic |oping revolutionary advance, then|and political situation of the pres.| tions, Premier Sra Brae Suspected to be due £0 the fact that 'er. At least four delegates will be Pipa ay go to prove a growing revolutionary | balance a spantad, at lanwardie cotta sillating ele-| e i Phi ‘ | hurriedly called a conference of his |he is backi r sts | Cit are being attended by thousands Senate in the bie caitalitt pete: balance for the whole period since |all inwardly rotten, vacillating ele jent period, which enumerate the| ) s sent from the Tri-Cities to the everywhere, and wherever the story of Gastonia is heard there is an im- mediate response with funds and or- ganization. Alfred Wagenknecht, secretary of the Joint Gastonia Defense and Re- lief Committee, stated yesterday: a ferment which social democracy, | the main support of capitalism with- in the working class, can neither |check by the social-fascist methods of Zorgiebel nor by the lying, fraud- | ulent “revolutionary” phraseology of the whole left wing. the Sixth Congress. On the basis of the rich experience of this pe- riod the Plenum pronounced judg- ment on the right elements, part of which are outside of the Comin- tern, while the other part are on \the way to being outside of the Co- ments in all Parties of the Comin- munism to social democracy, as well | next tasks of the Communist Par- | tern which are slipping from Com-|ties in the situation of a maturing revolutionary advarce, will play a as the opportunists who have been|tremendous role in the mobilization expelled from the Comintern, are|of the revolutionary forces of the orientating towards the right and Working class conciliatory elestorts in the C .P.|masses in the capitalist countries | and of the toiling disconsolate colleagues where it was |than the Insull controlled subsidi-| Gey ejand Convention’ decided to try a new scheme to get | aries. | Snowden to back down. The other} He revealed many devious work- creditor nations asked Snowden to /ings, however, in the handing over agree to the appointment of a com-|of Cumberland Falls to Insull. He| mittee of so-called experts, to try |stated that altho the contract was{ to put a new wrinkle in the Young |signed October 8, 1928, he never DONATE FOR GASTONIA. Workers at an open air meeting held at Washington and Claremont Parkway, Bronx Thursday night |collected $5.47 for the Gastonia de- s well as its ultimate] \| “fn” every city where there are| mintern, The position of these ele-|S. U. This fact the Plenum has|and colonies, in the consolidation of | Plan that would be acceptable a knew of its existence gr, ezaentionltenac and adopted a resolution’ de- | ravthes of the 1. LD: andw. | In the present circumstance the! ments is no longer a tactical devia-|once again revealed with gicat }the Communist Parties on the Bol- Britain, Snowden accepted and the | until a public meeting of the Federal |manding that the Gastonia prison- R.; the secretaries, executive com.|™#i" danger for our Communist |tion, As has been the case with ' clearness, committee will meet tomorrow. |Power Commission here in Decem- mittees and delegate bodies of these organizations must join hands in to Sept. 2. It becomes their first one tremendous campaign Aug. 24 task to unite for the Gastonia cam- paign.” As a result of the campaign to date, a nation-wide leaflet drive has been . inaugurated. Immense city mass meetings, street’ and factory gate meetings, are being held regu- larly. Unions—all working class or- ganizations—are being visited and told about Gastonia and are con- tributing. U.S. CORNERS HELIUM FOR WAR LAY BASIS FOR FIGHTING UNION '72 Delegates Attend;/ ? Plan More Meets (Continued from Page One) improving the economic conditions | ig of the workers, but as a force to de- |feat the imperialist war plans. Foster talked of the rising tide of militancy among the working | class in many parts of the country, | |mentioning specifically the strug- gles in Gastonia, New Orleans, the |shevist line of the Comintern, | ber Schechter Tour for Gastonia alii GASTONIA FILM | IS EXHIBITED Depicts the Conditions That Caused Strike of Moving pictures Gastonia, graphically depicting the emaciated workers of the textile mills, showing the families of Loray strikers when they lived out on the streets after eviction from the company-owned homes, are being shown in five dis- ican imperialisms, that is at stake. | |so weak that the time has now come | for England to resume her place in ers be freed. The meeting was held |by Section 5, Unit 5, Communist | Party. Snowden also gave away the real|ber, 1928. reason for England’s bitter hostility} Thus the Federal Power Commis- to the Young Plan. The $10,000,000 | sion, to which Camnack is “appeal- yearly, which is only one-fourth of | ing,” seems to have been a party to one per cent » the British budget, the Insull grab of the falls. is merely the pretext; actually, | Snowden indicated, it is “national | prestige,” that is, the life and death | struggle between British and Amer-| oa ited |land embracing the falls and lake An anlysis of the contract shows|created by the proposed dam. The that the Kentucky Park Commission} Park Commission possesses. no pow- agreed for the Cumberland River;er to hand the fall over for “such Power Company to take title to the a mess of pottage,” said Camnack. Wants Aggressive Policy. “England’s foreign policy in the past few years,” he said, “has been} CT, NOW PLAYING * ... greater than the Village of Sin...” HER WAY of LOVE international relations to which her position in the world entitles her. Other nations have taken advantage | of her weakness, and the moment | has come to change that.” Thus Snowden gave notice that the “labor” government intended to | introducing j tricts of this country and in Eu-! defend the interests of British cap- a re- |auto workers, etc, He emphasized ee ital much more aggressively than|l ssertatie “Rogie t jthe importance of the Trade Union ¢ did the previous tory government.|f screen artiste A Sovkino Production Controls Important) Unity Convention, to be held in One of the films that has at- s Coline isainent : Cleveland Aug. 31-Sept. 2, declaring tracted much attention on the trip eae Soa : EMMA < i alas 4 eh Aircraft Gas that the organization of a new trade : of Mother Bloor along the Pacific! Meanwhile the collapse of the |f Fi.4.poKaya Sac sue oe — junion center, will co-ordinate and! . “e % |Coast is now in California where | Hague conference seems imminent. ie tragic end... nuperb WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 18.| guide these various struggles of Workers in many cities will hear Amy Schechter and Vera Bush, | much activity is taking place for the| Britain, maneuvered into a corner oe ee ne Woanent pesos —Though the United States govern-| the workers, | released on bail after long imprisonment in Gastonia jail on murder |campaign, Aug. 24 to Sept. 2 of the| by the U. S., which has lined up|} | ‘How luminous her ytd Spanky 3+ = vewertut ment will shortly begin to produce Pick Delegates to Unity Meet. charges made by the Gastonia mill bosses’ lackeys of the law. They {Gastonia Joint Defense and Relief | France, Japan, Italy and sate Ing figure +. ..0 great re crbe Berlin Press, over twenty million cubic feet of] The conference elected three dele-| will speak on behalf of the Gastonia defense campaign. Vera Bush | Committee, whose national offices'ton its side by holding the crei irons |] “rhe German Press, = aaa ig helium gas annually at its huge |. +. to attend the Trade Union Un.| 1 shown above at a recent Central Opera House meeting, in New |are in room 402, 80 E. 11th St., N.|whip over their heads, is trying to plant near Amarillo, Texas, and |8°'© n Cleve.| York, where she spoke to thousands of workers. ws extricate itself from the corner by ¢ ity Convention to be held in Cleve- land Aug. 31-Sept. 2. Resolutions were passed on the war danger, Gastonia, the Cleveland Trade Union Unity Conference and the All-American Anti Imperialist thus will control the great bulk o: the world’s supply of the gas, none} of, it will be allowed to leave the| country for exportation. | - The secret of this rule lies in the | nature and use of helium. Helium, | aE the lightest gas known, will by | -AeUe: : : im. |. Resolutions were also passed on Bae ce ces cstaples, in the net Se dhe “Marine AWorkste Volos! ‘Labor oo oe scribed the working of ship com- armed guard, a series of mass meet- | jyrich 18 @ child. of the Mouse of | to 2-50 cents y “aed ee government t°n,| Unity and Church institutes and mittees in various ports. “The ship nerals as after the legal murder of |ings in Gastonia, the wretched con-| ,wers “into an anti-Soviet Maeda oa tn build the dateeet oes of | Clubs. committee must be the basis for our |Sacco and Vanzetti. The defend-| ditions in the workers’ settlements a new fighting Marine Workers Union. One of the most significant re- ports was the one made by Hines, organization if it is to grow into a a delegate from Baltimore, who de- | | and the need for the organization of|to organize a militant union, the|New York, and in the use of the| | shipping companies will use similar |tactics, aided by the government, >to prevent the workers from organ- | izing. “I have said often and will say | again: ‘We want no impressive fu- ants, both Southern and Northern, bolting. The conference has result- ed in a sharpening and a crystalliza- tion of the struggle for world mas- tery between Britain and the U. S., with the U. S. greatly consolidating its positions. The purpose of the Young Plan, which is a child of the House of Others are in Chicago, Detroit, | Gastonia Joint Defense and Relief | Committee. The scenes, clearly depicted on the screen, also include the ruins of the union headquarters, the workers’ |ene hand and into an anti-British Film Guild Cinema 52 W. Sth St. (Bertone Sixth Aves. SPRing 5095-5090-1716 Continuous Daily—Noon to Midnite Special Prices—12 to 2 Weekdays—35e Saturday and Sunday—1z “The Atlantic Coast Conference,” | pacar chaniair wariceath PNGB +6 gesolution off the Clayeland Chi | and portray the emaciated appear- | due to the fact that helium is also }ance of the mill workers, many of | bloc of the U. S. and its debtor allies | who were deliberately selected by on the other hand. veal fighting instrument,” Hines non-ifflammible, whereas hydrogen, thesecond lightest gas, is so highly ql tible that it is one. of the uses of disasters to ditigibles al loons. helium produced at the gov- ernmé@nt’s Texas plant will be for use Guly in Navy and army war f Talore of the feverish prepara- tibns‘for imperialist war is furn- ed in the race between the im- riatist powers to improve the pro- ction of helium, especially in cost. Vhen helium was first produced in the United States it cost $2000 a bic foot. At the Forth Worth overnment plant it cost 34 cents ubic foot in 1926, and the cost not. The Los Angeles requires 2,600,- 0 cubic feet of helium, the Graf »1 Eg three to four million cubic get, and one of the huge air ships being constructed by the Wall St. government will need 6,500,000 cubic feet of helium, ROUND TRIP FLIGHT ROOSEVELT FIELD, L. L, Aug. 18. — The Sun God, first plane to attempt a round trip non-stop jour- ney across the continent by the re- fueling method, arrived here at 4:45 Pp. m. today, completing the first half of its long test. now down to two cents a cubic} jference says, “recognizes that the marine workers cannot carry on | their struggle alone. We can only {hope for success in the fight for better conditions if we are organiza- tionally linked up with militant workers in other industries, Cleve- land is a tremendous step forward |for the American workers, leading |to ever sharper struggles and the | ultimate victory over the ship own- ers and the bosses.” Cables of greetings were sent to ions, pledging solidarity with the seamen of all countries, and espec- ially to the marine workers of the Soviet Union which now faces an | imperialist attack upon it; to the | British Minority Movement conven- tion which opens Aug. 24; and to the Pan-Pacific Trade Union Congress now in session in Vladivostock. A wire of greetings was also sent to John Morgan, organizer of the Marine Workers League now serving a six month sentence following his atempt to organize the men on a Standard Oil ship. Discuss Conditions on Ships. Actual conditions on ships in many ports and the tasks now fac- ing the seamen were discussed by delegutes after George Mink, secre- tary of the Marine Workers League gave his report. Mink discussed the world situation in the marine indas- | the Red International of Labor Un- | A et | that the defense of the Soviet Union said. The model of ship committees he declared, was to be found in the | Soviet Union. | Harry Summers reported on the growing war danger, and for the | defense of the Soviet Union. | pointed out all the forces that bring ‘an imperialist world conflict ever | closer, Pledge Defense of USSR. Following Summer's report, the | following resolution was adopted: “The Atlantic Conference declares must become one of the basic tasks of the Marine Workers League. ;Numbers of marine workers have | elready shown by their response to Marine Workers League and other organizations that they are deeply in sympathy with the Soviet Union. The Marine Workers League must see to it that this sympathy is broad- ened and give it organizational form, co-operate with all other werking class organizations for the realiza- tion of the great slogan “Defend the Soviet Union.” Amy Schechter, one of the three Gastonia women defendants, was given a big ovation. The delegates were deeply stirred by her simple and moving story of the Gastonia |struggle and the conspiracy of the mill owners against 23 of its lead- He | the demonstrations arranged by the’ | the bosses because they played lead- |ing roles in the strike, must be sav- jed now, to continue their work of organizing the South.’ “The fight to free the Gastonia defendants,” Schechter said, “should | be especially the task of the seamen | | gathered here toni-:.: to lay the ba- sis for a new, fighting industrial un- ion, because it is above all a fight for the right of workers to organ- ize into militant unions in the United States,” Find Auto in Which Girl Was Murdered | MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Aug. 18. | —The automobile in which police be- lieve 12-year-old Dorothy Aune was kidnaped and murdered was found today abandoned on a little fre- |quented road near the suburb of Hopkins, Police said they believed the dis- covery would lead directly to the arrest of the fiend who attacked Dorothy, mutilated and murdered her. In the automobile was a brown toupe (Dorothy’s slayer is said to have been bald), Several yards of twine like that with which the girl’s body was trussed up, and clothing similar to that worn by Dorothy on the day she was kidnapped, whom are suffering from pellagra. “This film of one reel length is being used throughout the country to rally the workers behind the cam- paign of the Gastonia Joint Defense |and Relief Committee which is mak- jing a fight for ‘a broad, united front of all workers’ organizations, It is a splendid help to put across the story of Gastonia at mass meet- ings,” states the International La- bor Defense, CORRECTION, In the review of “Paris on the Baricades,” printed in Saturday's Daily Worker, the name of the pub- lisher was, due to a misprint, given as “Workers Literary Publishers,” | and the address as 55 E. 125th St. The publisher of “Paris on the Baricades” is the Workers Library Publishers, at 43 E, 125th St., New York City. (This review appeared in Monday’s National Edition), Help save the Gastonia strik- ers from the electric chair and from long terms of imprison- ment. Volunteers must report to the office of the I. L. D., 799 Broadway, room 340, to help address and fold literature. We must mail out 100,000 let- Announcement of Courses Fall Term WORKERS SCHOOL “Training for the Class Struggle” ECONOMICS ENGLISH HISTORY * INTERMEDIATE PEASANTS FIGHT FASCISTI. ATHENS (By Mail).—The terri- ble ‘distress among the peasants near Patras and the continual pro- vocations of the government give |rise to daily conflicts between the authorities and the peasantry which is trying to vindicate the last ves- \tiges of its ancient rights. Thursday 3rd Group Courses for TRADE UNIONISTS NEGRO WORKERS ~ WOMEN WORKERS LATIN-AMERYCAN WORKERS YOUNG WORKERS C.P, FUNCTIONARIES * YOUNG PIONEER FUNCTIONARIES 26-28 UNION SQ., NEW YORK IMPERIALISM MARXISM-LENINISM POLITICS SOCIOLOGY 'TRADE-UNIONISM ETC. ETC, ELEMENTARY ADVANCED | | Registration Sept. 2 to Sept. Write tor Catalogue 30 Friday 4th Saturday 5th Sunday OPENING NIGHT Third National Convention of LABOR SPORTS UNION WELL-KNOWN SPEAKERS showing of SPARTAKIADE FILM Wednesday, August 21, at 8 P. ‘It prepared to take on gasolineytry, growth of tonnage, growing ers. “The terror that has been used BLAST HURTS 16. |fy ters within the next 2 weeks. and other supplies and then head | rivalry and conflicts, the thousands |against the textile workers in the| NEWCASTLE, Eng., \ug. 18.— | Addressers will be paid their into the west on the return to Spo-| of unemployed, the role of the naval | South,” she said, “is not peculiar to |A terrific gas explosion wrecked af] ¢xPenses. Do not fail to pec _ kane, Wash., which it left Thurs-! reserve, the corruption and treachery |textile workers or to the South. As building here, injuring sixteen peo- |} i" answer to this urgent call! day even’ of the International Seamen’s Union, !soon as the marine workers start | ple, several of whom may die, PROGRESSIVE HALL 15 W. 126th Street, New York ADMISSION 50 CENTS WATCH This Space for Further Announcements

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