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Page Four ‘Rea, Head of Yellow Dog Ass ciation in Eliza DAILY WORKER, EW YORK, TU SEPTEMBER 3, 1929 bethion, Applies to Join the U.T. et e + — NOT ONE-FIFTH . OF RAYON SLAVES IN SCAB UNION Misleaders Want Com- pany Man in | (By a Worker Correspondent) ELIZABETHON, Tenn., (By Mail)—The bosses’ agents of the Glanzstoff and Bamberg Corpora- tions have come to the realization that after all the American Federa- tion of Labor and the United Tex- tile Workers Union are not their enemies. Quite the opposite; they (the A. F, of L, and U. T. W.) are the bosses’ friends. Scab Leader May Join U. T. W. Dr. 8. C. Rea, who was the chief of the “Loyal Workers League,” the seab outfit during the strike of the 5500 rayon workers, has applied for membership in the United Textile Workers Union. Rea is a chemist in the Bemberg plant. During the strike he was bag and baggage for the yellow dog contract which the company forced on the workers of | * Gastonia-Evicted Strikers Gastonia, High Shoals and Elizabeth- ton, Tenn., textile worker correspondents write on this page to~ day. Above, evicted textile striker and her children, | the Elizabethon and Johnson City plants. * Fakers Want Him. The United Textile Workers fak- ers would gladly take him in the Union. However, the anger of the rayon wo-kers has held the appli- cation up, although the fakers are strongly considering it. if the Gastonia (By a Worker Correspondent) GASTONIA (By Mail).—I am a - e * young striker of the Loray mill A New Slave-Driver. | (Manville-Jenckes Co.) of Gastonia. W. G. Kummer is the new head of | We came out on strike April 1 and, the Glanzstoff and Bemberg Corpo-| comrades, we were forced to strike vations. He succeeded Dr. Arthur! on account of the rotten conditions | Mothwurf. Kummer was formerly of the will’ the German consul-general in Port-) We worked from 12 to 14 hours ugal. SF 4 pe eBcing a so-called diplomat, Kum- a day in the plant, with all the win. | mer is showing “diplomacy” in Eliz- dows and doors closed, with the dust} abethon. The first thing he did after/and lint so thick that you could arriving in town was to present the | hardly breathe. local chamber of commerce with) From 5 a. m. to 6 p. m. we slaved} 2. like dogs; that wasn’t all, either A so-called “employee representa-| we were speeded up until we would | tion” scheme, a new approach to @/have to run to keep the bosses from company union, failed to fool the \cussing and firing us; we were do-| workers. It was started by Kummer|ing twice as much work as before! and soon fizaled out, the speed-up. Worst of all, our| re , wages were cut in half. New Schemes To Fool Workers. | The second day we were out the The fake employee representa-| International Labor Defense had to! tion” scheme having failed, a new/go to taking us out of jail and also scheme to fool the workers is being | had to begin feeding us. The bosses tried. A magazine is published by |tried to bar us off the streets, but | the company and is being circulated |they didn’t have enough force, so} among ‘the rayon workers. In the|the Manville-Jenckes Co. sent the latest issue the plant officials state | mill-owning governor, Max O. Gard-| that if there should be-any labor | ner, word telling him that they: had t trouble in the future, the concern to have some help, and the governor will cause its $52,000,000 building sent out the state troopers, his na-| ~ programme to be cancelled. This is| tional guards, to help break our * allso designed to make sheep out of | strike. | Workers Thruout World Lose| electric chair the workers all over the world will lose, but if the work- ers mobilize and save these work- |ers then we will win and the work- ers all over the world will win. Ww. U the workers. * Ferced To Reinstate Meu. Due to mass pressure by the) yorkers, E. T. Willson, the person- | nel director of both companies, who was brought to town at the end of | the strike, was forced to re-instate | the workers who are now under charges that grew out of the strike. Only about 1000 out of the 5500| workers belong to the U. T. W This proves that the bulk of the workers have no faith in the U. * * While the guards were there the company thugs came down to our union hall and destroyed it. Thej darn thugs also smashed our relief stores and destroyed about $500 worth of relief which the W. I. R.| had there for us. Then we decided to build a hall and tent colony, as we were thrown out on the streets out of the company houses. We passed out a leaflet calling on the national guards to lay down ‘\their guns and not treat their fel- |low-workers like they had been do- ing. So that evening when we went | with Maiuccoro on the night he was Me |to the picket lines the guards re- Paul Fuller, of the Workers Edu-|fysed to carry out the bosses’ or-| cational Bureau, is teaching the| gers as they had been doing. The workers of Elizabethon the A. F. of | Manville-Jenckes Co. sent the gov- Prisoners Die. leaders was shot down like a dog and two city police were shot also,| and one of the dirtiest, lowest gun-| men and thugs that ever was born was shot also. And now, friends, the bosses have sixteen of the strik- ers charged with murder. Comrades, the International La- bor Defense is defending these strikers. Comrades, if the I. L. D. is to defend these comrades the workers all over the world must come to their aid and help the I. L. D. save these workers by aiding the I. L. D. and W. I. R. and sending all they can collect to the I. L. D., 0 E. 11th St., New York City. Comrades, friends and fellow- workers, if the workers let the bosses send these workers to the Textile workers, join the N. T. ELBERT TOTHEROW, A Gastonia striker. Rich Ex-Contractor Tried for Passing Counterfeit Money John Maiuccoro, 45, married, once a wealthy contractor of Utica, New York, was tried today in federal court on a charge of passing coun- terfeit money. | Elizabeth G. Giblin, 43, who took | an automobile ride for a “thrill” arrested, testified against him, Giblin, who was for 22 years a stenographer in Utica, said that the automobile ride became exciting when Maiuccoro bought fruit at Newburgh and got change for a $10 federal reserve note. She knew the note was counterfeit and was sure that the fruit vendor had telephoned police. They were stopped at King- jOfficers salaries . {Office expense . MINE FAKERS LIVE HIGH IN ON DAIRY FARM SUBDISTRICT IN LONG ISLAND But Miners Will End/Boss Cheats on Wages All That | Promised Workers By a Worker Correspondent | (By a \idathedtaitlestbewdy a | Jacob Blum is the owner of a dairy WEST FRANKFORT, Ill. (BY farm in Middle Village, Long Island, Mail). — Here is how the United at Metropolitan and Cooper Aves. Mine Workers’ officials are robbing} This is the place I have just quit the members in subdistrict nine: working in. It is one of the worst |places I ever slaved in and I wish| Income for April, May |to warn other workers through the and June, 1929 . - -$25,643.15 | Daily Worker against being trapped Subdistrict 9 Expenditures for Same | into slaving at this dairy farm. Period. I was hired on there as a milker __|and a handy man, I was supposed $6,199,80 to get $60 a month. The first week | 5,765.29 was there Blum handed me $8.75, 2,116.68 | and I had to run around and chase | 8,868.08 him to get that. I was supposed to milk five to seven cows. When one} 957.35 | of the milkers left I had to milk 10] |to 14 cows. | Together with the slave wages,| Blum is supposed to give us food| and board. The food is terrible, stuff, meals unfit for a human be-| ing to eat, although this is a dairy farm, there was never a drop of milk for the workers. As to the | board, the building furnished the) men to sleep and live in is nothing | but a hog pen. It is an old two |story wooden building, dirty and un- \Sanitary. It was so rotten a house | that I slept in the barn rather than stay there. You have to slave like a dog on this farm. When one milker leaves the job (and they leave very often, because it is so rotten to work there) | they don’t get another man for a stop this robbery? The miners will|while, but instead the other milkers settle their own cases at the mine |have to do the work of the man that | under the National Miners Union.) left. | I soon was told by some of the Did you say that this could not be! done? Well, we did this think for|fellows working on the farm that Of | Blum sold booze to the men, taking Officers’ expenses Special expense .. Total Pretty good for one subdistrict. Men working April, May and June, | 10,499. Practically three-fourths of these men worked only a few days each month; just about enough to miss exoneration. We note that these subdistrict officials’ expense ac- counts would suggest that they were going day and night the entire three months, handling cases, although every miner knows that there were very few cases handled at this time. How many were there at your mine to handle cases? Ask your local} president or pit committee how many times the subdistrict officials were there. Don’t you think it about time to years in the U. M. W. of A. course this can not be done in the |it out of the wages if the men bougnt U. M. W. A. now that the operators |his booze. have complete control of every offi- | To give an idea what sort of guy cial from the subdistrict up to the |the owner of this dairy farm is, I International office. Wake up, | need only tell you that he tried to brother and rub your eyes, Look/!sell an old shirt for $2 to the work- | around you. |ers whom he paid only $50 a month. | ILL, Miner.' —WORKER. Potato Sacks Ave the Onlv Clothes of Marques Workers We conclude the letter from a | given you an idea of how the Portu- worker correspondent in Louren- | guese imperialist govermnent has} co Marques, the Portuguese Col- | “civilized” the people of Lourenco ony in East Africa. He tells of |Marques, whom the Portuguese the forced slavery there. }came here to enslave. I close with} The men of Lourenco Marques,|™y best regards to the American | living on their small farms in the | Workers and sign myself, yours for world Communism, |movement. Before the war he was a L. brand of trade unionism. —J. A. R. | Will Form Industrial | Food Union in Chicago After Unity Convention CHICAGO, Sept. 2. — The base a militant industrial union of food workers will be planned at a con- ference of the Chicago Progressive Food Workers to be called here as soon as delegates return from the August 31 Trade Union Unity Con- vention in Cleveland. The conference will be attended by cafeteria workers, waiters, wait- resses, cooks, pantrymen, yardmen, bus boys—all workers employed in handling, serving or the preparation of food. ‘The exact date and place of the meeting will be announced later, the Progressive Food Workers report. (By a Worker Correspondent) HIGH SHOALS, N. C. (By Mail). —In the mill owners press I notice ‘that a Mr. Vally writes against the mill workers. The article is full of and High Shoals mill workers ‘ rer these lies through the Daily Worker. _ It states that I, Sam Costner, am a worker in the Manville-Jen- Co. High Shoals mill. Well, a worker in'the High Shoals il up to the time that I organized committee of a hundred and fif- workers, declaring our support he Gastonia strikers, the work- ; whom the mill bosses trying ocute, and the National Tex- ) Workers Union. ‘ now live in Gastonia, but I 1 to live in High Shoals. I wish MILL BOSSES TELL LIES Answered by Workers of High Si-o ils te that the High Shoals Pelee lernor word to take his guards away, ston, When Maiuccoro thrust a \as they were about to. go on strike|roll of counterfeit money in her with the rest of the workers. |hands, Giblin left thé car and threw | On June 7 the scabs in the mill/the bills down a drain. They were lsent word that if we picketed the recovered and presented in court |mill that evening that they would | today as evidence against the for- come out and join our strike. The|mer contractor. |bosses heard of that and ey sent} Sil baat) a bunch of their thugs down to} break up our meeting so we couldn't Heat Wave Makes picket the mill. They fired shots | Los Angeles Sizzle and threw rotten eggs ret el {but we strikers ran the thugs off.| = b When the meting was over we) LOS ANGELES, Sept. 2.—No re- formed our picket line and started | lief from the heat wave which sent toward the mill, but the thugs, with | thousands of persons to the beaches the help of the city police, succeeded|@d the mountains over the week in breaking our picket line after| end was seen today. beating up ten or twelve strikers., After reaching a sizzling 96 Then the strikers went back to Saturday, which placed August 31 the tent colony and went to bed.|on record as the hottest day of the All at once the tents began falling | hottest month Los Angeles has in and the ropes were cut and bal-|known in 52 years, the mercury \lets flying through the union hall|/ weakened yesterday and could do and tents, the women and children/no better than 92 pom eeerine: | Yesterday was the 20th succes- In the struggle one of the strike | sive day to show a temperature of ek at | above 80 degrees. No fatalities were | Penorted. woods, are captured by the Portu- guese governmen and sent to the city where they slave for meagre wages, In the city the men are forced to work for wages varying from two to five shillings a day or from 50 cents to $1.25 a day. lings for every head, this money be- ing paid by the companies who man- slave the men. Thus we see the Portuguese government selling hu- man beings on the market just like any commodities. If the"worker dares to complain to the government he will be thrown | into the terrible jails for at least six days as a punishment. Potato Sacks For Clothes ! The only clothes on the backs’ of | these poor workers ar» potato bags, with holes on the bottoms and one hole in each side of the bag as! sleeves for the arms. This is so) that the thing that is called a “civ-| ilized lady” does not have to see th workers’ skin. Longshoremen Slave all Hours. The longshoremen work from sey- | en in the morning until five, six, eight and even ten at night. Their starvation wage is two to four shil- lings a day (50 cents to a dollar). From this meagre wage they must pay three shillings every year for al licence for them to come to the city | and work. | If the workers are caught in the| city without this licence they are arrested and jailed for six months. The Portuguese government said it was going to “civilize” the workers of Lourenco Marques, so therefore it is building up a new prison with about 2000 cells, for that purpose. Church Aids in Enslaving. Then, to help in the enslaving of | ELECTRICIAN KILLED. | CHATANOOGA (By Mail).— | Ernest Pickel, an electrician was | burnt to death when an oil breaker circuit exploded. He was a Ten- nessee Power Co, line.man. Workers Asked to Send Their Gastonia Petitions in at Once ers will do all they can for the Gas- tonia prisoners. You can depend on us 115 High Shoals workers to help smash the Manville-Jenckes Co, attempt to railroad the 16 to the electric chair. It is our opinion that this Mr.! \Vally who writes lies for the mill bosses is a spy for the mill bosses, ® the people of Lourenco Marques, there are the Roman Catholic church and the protestants with their missionaries trying to save ithe souls” of those who slave from six in the morning to all hours of night for two meals of cornflour, and ‘one shilling. But some of the inhabitants believe that they are be- ing taught only prostitution by the church, Many of them cannot be- lieve the missionaries any more. The workers here see with their own eyes that all these ‘missionaries In order to send the mass pro- test petition, with the hundreds of thousands of workers’ names attached, to the state authorities of North Carolina, demanding the freedom of the Gastonia textile workers, all petition lists are asked to be returned at once to the national office of the Gas- tonia Joint Defense and Relief Campaign Committee, at 80 E. just a common spy for Mr. Hardy end the Slaveviile-Jenckes Co. What we call on all the southern mill workers to do is to save the Gastonia prisoners, help defend the National Textile Workers Union against the mill bosses who are trying to smash it; fight the Manville-Jenckes Co. SAM COSTNER, JOHN BOSTIC, Kk. racer workers of High Shoals, N. C., KIVIS PULASKI, Textile worker | Git, St Foom 402 New York of Long Shoals, N. C, ipa etna are not doing what they said they were going to do. The missionaries tell the people of Lourenco Marques not to have any connection with young girls! But the workers here do not see the missionaries them- selves obeying the rule they so hy-| pocritically make. The catholics and the protestants are charging two shillings a month for every Negro worker or member of his family to go to church. The government collects five shil-| \cated G—a Portuguese worker who for- | merly slaved in the United States. Big Industries Will | Locate in Lawrence To Exploit There LAWRENCE, MASS., Sept. 2. — | Sale to a New York syndicate of the | |Everett mills property here—repre- ! jsenting approximately 34 acres of \floor space—was announced today by | the Lawrence Industrial bureau. As result, at least 20 individual concerns eventually will move their] plants to this city, it was said. The New York syndicate, which was not named, is engaged in the electrical and radio field. The deal was described as “the greatest single industrial move in the history of New England,” it was said to involve the transplanting of an entire specialized industry to one central point, with 20 plants now lo- in New York, Brooklyn, Newark, N. J., Poughkeepsie, N Y., Buffalo and Detroit consolidated un- der one roof. 9 Killed, 10 Injured In Apartment Fire WINNIPEG, Man., Sept. 2.—Nine persons were killed and ten others were injured when fire swept thru Midway Court, a three-story apart- ment building. The flames broke out suddenly be- fore daybreak and gained such head- way before firemen arrived that most of those killed were burned to death in a blazing inferno that en- gulfed them so rapidly they had no chance to escape. 3 of Crew on Yacht of Parasite Burned NEW LONDON, Conn., Sept. 2. —Three members of the crew of a 45-foot eabin cruiser, owned by L. D. Cleveland, of Stamford, were burned today when the gasoline tank aboard the boat, exploded in the lower harbor, \ JoJhn O. Elison, of Stamford, was the most seriously injured. He was confined to the Morris Hospital kere. TRAIN DERAILED. FONDA, N, Y., Sept. 2.—Derail- ment of four freight cars early to- day caused a ticup of two hours on the main line of the New York Cen- tral Railroad. Trains, carrying La- bor Day crowds, were detoured to Comrades and fellow workers of a ae een ae United States, I hope 1 have the West Shore Line by way of Schenectady, |pendents to whose left wing he also | belonged. When the independent so- 1 BAS past season f+ the Mahach- Kala State Theatre was marked by the first important work of sea- sonal theatrical troupes, The foundation of a permanent theatre in Mahach-Kala played an enormous role in the organization of Daghestan national theatrical life by creating a Daghestan theatrical studio. This studio was founded three years ago, since when it has been under the control of the actors N. P. Shatrov and B. I. Baikov who also are the directors. The studio consists of twenty-seven native stu- dents, living and working in two towns; the senior group in Mahach- Kala an dthe junior in Buinak. The work of the studio is much | hampered by the lack of plays in| the native languages, limited funds, the difficulty of getting native women to act (owing to local tradi- tions) and lack of assistance from | social bodies. The studio works in three jan- guages—Turco, Kumik and Avarian | —and Dargin and Lak groups are) being organized, | The studio made an extended visit last summer in the Buinak, Hasay- | Yurtov,and Mahach-Kala districts, | with three plays, one of which was | a translation from Gogol’s ‘“Mar-| riage,” in Kumik. Altogether these | plays were attended by over 11,000 persons (from the mountain souls), who welcomed the performances with enthusiasm. A grant of 10,000 roubles from the People’s Commissariat of Edu- cation enables the studio to cover all the expenses of these tours. In the summer of 1928 twenty-one vil- lages were visited in 40 days, and delegations came to the studio from Aouls where performances had not been scheduled, begging for a visit. During these 40 days the per- formances which were held in the open air w-ze visited by over 32,000 mountain-dwellers. This year for the first time there | will be women in the studio—five | women from mountain aouls. In April and May, the studio produced | its first consignment of graduates. The Daghestan national studio is) the first stone in the future na- tional theatre. Hoellein, a Leader of Communists in Germany, Is Dead BERLIN (By Mail).—Emil Hoel- lein, a member of the Communist Reichstag fraction, died suddenly at the age of 49 years. Comrade Hoel- | lein was a toolmaker by profession } and one of the best fighters in the German revolutionary working class member of the left wing of the Ger-| man social democratic party, and during the war he joined the inde- cial democratic party split in 1920 Hoellein went over with the majority of the party to the Communist Party and became a member of its general committee in 1921. He was a most) popular and brilliant speaker and a great favorite of the workers. In} 1929 he was arrested in France at the order of the Poincare ministry and spent several months in the} Paris prison of “la Sante” on a charge of treason against the French | Republic. Hoellein was also the author of a series of political, economic and socio-hygienic works. His persistent | struggle against the paragraph pun- ishing voluntary abortions is well- known, In the years 1921-1923 Com- rade Hoellein was a member of the editorial staff of’ the “International | Press Correspondence.” Today’s ses- sion of the Berlin-Brandenburg dis- trict leadership of the Communist Party passed a resolution of sym- pathy with Comrade Hoellein’s de- pendents and expressed its appreci- ation of his devoted services to the cause of the proletarian revolution in’ warm and moving words. Com- rade Hoellein was active to the last in the cause of the oppressed and exploited and was in charge of the French translations at the recent world congress of the League Against Imperialism in Frankfurt. 20ShipwrecKed Seamen Afloat in Open Boats 3 Weeks Before Rescue ST. PAUL ISLAND, Bering Sea, Sept. 2.—The crew of the fishing schooner Elisif, beached on the nor- thern Siberian coast Aug. 10, has been picked up on Little Domino Is- land in Bering Straits by the U. S. coast guard cutter Northland, which wirelessed yesterday that it was taking the 20 Arctic castaways to Nome. At the end of their 520 mile trip in small boats, the seamen had only two gallons of drinking water and a few provisions left. They started out in four boats but had only two launches and the clothes on their backs when finally rescued. Anti-Zionist Meeting in Detroit, Thursday DETROIT, Mich. Sept. 2—A mass meeting will be held here Sept. 5, at Labor Lyceum, in the fevening. Maloch Epstein, the spcaker, will tell of the use of the Zionist movez:cnt as an agent of British imper‘alism. ; IMILKERS SLAVE Daghestan National Theatre ‘ACID FUMES Welcomed b % y Fill Dwellers IN “SWEET ADELINE” Irene Franklin, one of the princi- pals in the new Arthur Hammerstein musical show “Sweet Adeline,” open- ing at his theatre this evening. THEATRE GUILD TO SEND OUT TEN TOURING COMPANIES Next week the Theatre Guild be- gins activities for the coming season. With ten touring companies sched- uled for the coming season, and eight productions planned for. New York, the last of this month and all of September will be one of activity and the stages of the Guild, the John Golden and the ‘Martin Beck, will! be utilized for the preparation of the various plays. Monday “Pygmalion” begins re- hearsing and two days later “Major Barbara” starts. Dudley Digges will direct these rehearsals. Ohio Theatre, Cleveland. The other plays to go on tour in- clude “Porgy,” which will begin a} four week engagement in New York | prior to the road engagement; “Strange Interlude,” with Judith An- derson, Tom Powers, Glenn Anders, and Richard Barbee; “Caprice,” |Wings Over Europe,” “Marco Mil- lions,” R. 'U. .R.' and “Volpone.” Coal Dust Explosion Injures 4, Endangers 300 Renton Miners RENTON, Pa., Sept. 2.—Four coal miners were injured and 300 others had narrow escapes when an explo- |sion took place in Mine Number 3 of the Union Collieries Company here. Two of the miners injured may die. The blast was confined to one clamber of the mine. The injured men were © the vicinity of this chamber when the explosion oc- curred. The others, warned by a terrific blast of air thru the tunnels, made their way to the shaft and were hoisted to .1e surface. These “Major | Barbara” opens September 16 at the | MAKE IT HELL ~ IN RAYON MILL |\Speedup for Girls in | Cleveland Plant | (By a Worker Correspondent) CLEVELAND (By Mail).—We | work 9 long hours a day in the In- | dustrial Rayon Mill with only one- \half hour off for lunch and we are |forced to stand in front of our |machines all the time. ‘The speed- up is unbearable. We must always |be on the move to keep up,with the | machinery. | These hot days the heat is un- |bearable. The hotter it is the better it is for the :‘lk. That is why we are not allowcd to have a breeze, Good silk means money for the bosses. It means suffering for us and T. B, Mary of us faint. The acid fumes are’ so bad here that even those who live near the mill complain. Imagine how bad it is in the chemical department where they work +" the acid all the jtime. Many of the men get it into | their lungs. | The bosses are doing away with the reeling and lacing department | and are speeding up the girls in the | coning even more. The girls operate |95 spindles in twisting. Should we | not fight! ‘Attempt to Kill Workers’ Deputies Is Made in Poland WARSAW, Sept. 2. — Two white- | Russian members of parliament | visited their constituency and called |a meeting in the market-place of | Korewier, a small town in the No- wogrodek district, were nearly killed by police. Shortly after the meeting was opened the police chief appeared \in the market-place and ordered the two deputies to disolve the meeting. This they refused to do. None of the assembled peasants left the market- |place and Deputy Gawriluk econti- |nued his address. The two deputi | however, suddenly found themselves |surrounded by plain-clothes police jagents who violently assaulted them, |Gawriluk was knocked down by a blow on the head from the but of a revolver, uniformed men then turned against the crowd and fired. Many persons were seriously injured, among them both the deputies, whose injuries proved, on examination, to be bullet wounds caused by shots from police revolvers. Fifteen peasants were ar- |rested on a charge of “activities in- jimical to the state” and savagely beaten. The plain-clothes and © miners themselves rescued the in- jured workers, The explosion was said to be due to coal dust. | FIND AIRMAN’S SKELETON. SANTIAGO, Chile, Sept. 2— Travellers in the Cuchipuy Moun- aie; tains reported today that they had ELEPHANTS GO WILD. found the remains of an airplane ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Sept. 2.;and a human skeleton believed to —tThree elephants went “Berserk” | have been there more than 15 years. and terrorized thousands of holiday |The skeleton which was found in | pleasure seekers here while they|Colchagua province is thought to were being taken by trainers from! be the remains of Alejandro Bello, a a performance on a pier to their! military aviator, who was lost on a stables, | flight in 1914. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday BaAzaa MADISON SQUARE GARDEN October 3—4—-5—6 GASTONIA Citadel of the Class Struggle in the New South By WM. F. DUNNE A HISTORICAL PHASE in the struggle of the American working class analyzed and described by a veteran of the class struggle. To place this pamphlet in the hands of American workers is the duty of every class-conscious worker who realizes that the struggle in the South is bound up with the fundamental interests of the whole American working class, (plus be. postage) 15 cents per copy . Place your order today with the WORKERS [LIBRARY PUBLISHERS and all Workers Book Shops 43 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY | f k |