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24 “whe THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized Against Imperialist. War For the 40-Hour Week Entered ax second-cins> ma(ter at the Post Office at New York, N. ¥., under the act of March 3, 1879. Published Company. ly except 5: Vol. VI., No. 171 day by The Comprodaily Publishing e, 26-28 Union Square. New York City, N. Y, Bes NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1929 FINAL CITY EDITION od SUBSCRIPTION RATES: In New York, by mail, $8.00 per year. Outside New York, by mail, $6.00 per year. Price 3 Cents Workers of All Countries, NANKING TROOPS Land of Soviets Primed ‘BIG MEMBERSHIP CONFERENCE OF TEXTILE _ to Hop Aleutian Isles MEETING OF N.Y. UNION ORGANIZERS PLAN Turn Eyes to Gastonia! The protest demonstrations in Denmark, England, Germany and elsewhere in Europe and Latin America in behalf of the Gastonia pris- oners as reported in our columns yesterday, show that the struggle of the working class of North and South Carolina against capitalist ra- tionalization has acquired not only national but international sig- nificance, The trial of the 13 workers for murder, of three others for second degree murder and of seven for assault, workers who had sought to defend their union against the attacks of the mercenaries of the mill owners and the government, has focussed the attention of workers throughout the United States and in other countries as well upon the struggle that is going on in North Carolina. This broad significance of the struggle was brought out in the Manifesto of the Communist Party of the United States, published in the Daily Worker on Thursday, Sept. 19, and emphasized in the spe- cial editorial of Saturday. It was shown that North Carolina has becomegthe cockpit of the capitalist drive for even more intense exploitation of the workers, by which means the capitalists hope to solve the contradictions between expanding productivity and shrinking markets and at the same time make safe “the rear” of their armies in a new imperialist war. North Carolina typifies the whole struggle of the international working class against the capitalist offensive, typifies the new on- coming tide of the revolutionary proletarian movement. Hence, the eyes of the workers in all countries at this moment are beginning to turn towards Gastonia; and there is heard the voice of protest that must swell into strikes of protest and mass mobilization. There in these mill towns and mill villages of the newly indus- trialized South, where beside the company mills rise the company- owned church and the company-owned schools, a grim struggle goes on unceasingly, Toiling, long hours (the eleven-hour day is permitted by law in North Carolina—and no severe penalties will fall on any employers who stretches it to 12 or more), living in miserable hovels, earning Jow wages ($9 a week was the pittance on which Ella May had to sup- port five children), deprived of adequate schooling (many workers have not been allowed to learn to read or write), split up and subjected to 2 continuous capitalist propaganda to turn the white workers against the Negro workers, starved, evicted and shot down in cold blood if they stir a hand in their own behalf, these workers are eager to be organ- ized, eager to join in a common struggle of all the workers against their oppressors. Out of the misery of their exploitation they look to the formation of a militant union as the means whereby they will break their chains; they look to the Communist Party to help them build their union and -to lead them in’ their struggle. 4 Therefore the whole might of the, State of North Carolina becomes an engine of the bosses to crush the rising spirit of resistance and to strike terror by the trial on a murder charge of those who sought to build and defend the union. “Therefore the might of the state is reinforced by the fascist bands of armed thugs, who nightly rush through the villages of North Caro- lina in their automobiles, ready to murder or torture any militant worker, s Therefore, too, it is that the working class, under the leadership of the Communist Party, takes up the challenge of the American capi- talist class. On the workers’ side, on the other hand, as the Manifesto of Thursday states: “The working class under the leadership of the Communist Party takes up the challenge of the American capitalist class,” and-answi capitalist rationalization and terror by the slogans «of struggle for the seven-hour day, for unemployment insurance, for higher wages, for the right to organize, for the right of workers to-de- fend themselves and their organizations; For building our Party and our Party press irt the South! For building mill committees in every mill, for Workers Defense Committees in*every mill and mine, in every shop and ship, in every’ center ef production, for the disarming of the fascist thugs, for the preparation of strikes of protest in support of the workers* of North Carolina and to save the Gastonia victims from the electric ehair. JEWISH MASSES REPUDIATE ZIONIST SWINDLE AND FOLLOW PARTY . LEAD ON PALESTINE The thousands ‘of Jewish workers who packed New Star Casino Sunday and the hundreds, perhaps thousands of others who could not get into the crowded auditorium, showed clearly that the class struggle cannot be obscured by the racial or religious appeals of the Zionists and the other elements of the Jewish bourgeoisie. These thousands of workers, with one voice, denounced the writers, editors and contributors to the Jewish Daily Forward, the Day and the Morning Journal, as agents of imperialism who were trying to aid in the capitalist sup- pression and exploitation of the Arabian masses and Jewish workers in Palestine. The demonstration took the form of a mass trial, with sfokesmen for the Communist Party presenting a devastating indict- ment 6f the Zionists as pliant tools of British imperialism. The masses realized the true significance of the Zionist swindle, as its utopian mask was ripped off and its imperialist, features exposed in all their hideousness, “Zionism, trying to deceive the Jewish masses with talk of a social and national paradise in Palestine, is in reality an instrument by which British imperialism carries’ on ‘a campaign of expropriation against the Arabian masses, driving them from the land on which they and their ancestors have lived for centuries and enslav- ing them on plantations. It was shown conclusively that no Jewish state. has been established in Palestine; that the Zionists aid British imperialism in stifling every movement for political independence of . Palestine. The “left” Zionists, the Paoli Zionists, were exposed as the most vicious enemies of the toiling masses and the most virulent agents . of imperialism who even sink so far as to prostitute Communist slogans * and demand a “Jewish Soviet republic” for Palestine. This is nothing other than a demand for a dictatorship of a minority of Jewish elements over. the vast majority of Arabians in Palestine. A Soviet republic must. be based upon the whole toiling masses of .a country and can only be brought about by the overthrow of the exploiting class and of every form of exploitation. Against the demands of the Zionist agents of imperialism the * clear Communist demands were put forward for support of the revo- . lutionary. movement against imperialism and its Zionist agents, for an independent Arab republic with full rights for all national minorities, including the toiling Jewish masses, for the return of the land stolen “from the Arabs, for a federation of Soviet republics of Arabistan and for a urtited front of Jewish and Arab toiling masses against world imperialism. % The Communist program was unanimously endorsed by the class conscious Jewish workers of New York, who have been through bitter class conflicts in this city and elsewhere. These workers could not be deceived by the reactionary nationalist and religidus appeals of the Zionists. ‘ At the same hour the trial of the Zionist agents of imperialism was being held, there was staged in another hall a demonstration of Jewish capitalist journalists, editors, doctors, lawyers, manufacturers, lers and retailers, peddlers, musicians, who passed resolutions against the Communists and affirmed their “most. sacred faith in Jew- ish culture, in the Jewish masses and the Jewish people.” No one would expect these elements to speak of the working class. The Jewish masses recognize in the apologists for Zionism who “passed résolutions against the class struggle and against the liberation movement of the colonial victims of imperialism, the same identical _Jewish needle trades bosses and their associates and labor faker tools and gangsters who fight with all their power against every attempt 7 the Jewish needle trades and other workers to improve their con- itions. 4 The Jewish working masses understand that their emancipation is te be sought not by following the chimera of nationalism into the camp of imperialism, but by fighting the class struggle in the ranks of the 3 ‘ working class. LOOSE IN FIRST YANGTZE BATTLE “Reorganizationists” Reported Close to Chiang’s Capital " More Attacks on USSR Red. Army Annihilates White Guard Raiders Firing started yesterday in a new war against the Nanking military government, centering about Ichang! in the central province of Hupeh, | according to a United Press cable from Shanghai. General Chang Fa-Kwei, dismissed by President Chiang Kai-shek for | ordering unatthorized movements of his so-called “Ironsides” troops, con- cealed a battery of artilley near| Itu, twenty miles from Ichang. The guns opened fire on a Nan-/} king troop ship moving up the Yang- | tze river towards Ichang from Han- kow, killing a Chinese newsboy and wounding forty soldiers on the transport, according to advices reaching here. Seven shells struck the ship. | The newest Chinese civil war cen- tered about “reorganization group,” ‘headed by Chang Fa-Kwei, who was ,reported to have allied himself with the Kwangsi faction in a southern drive designed to capture Canton. (Continued on Page Three) POLICE SMASH PATERSON MEET Nine Workers Jailed; One Given 15 Days PATERSON, Sept. 23.—Morris ur Soviet Fliers Face Dangerous Flight Over Uncharted Volcanic Region in Fog, Rain Route Only Twice Attempted; USSR Celebrates Landing on North American Soil Fo SEATTLE, Wash., Sept. 23.—The | ship of the . S. R. plane, Cap- globe-girdling monoplane, Land of tain Cochrane’s message, sent from the Soviets will leave Attu, outer- | Dutch Harbor, which is 752 miles most island of the Aleutian chain from Attu, refuted previous reports off Alaska, for the Dutch Harbor, that the four Soviet fliers had taken Unalaska, some time today, accord- | off yesterda: ing to a radio message from Captain The Pacific Northwest was blan- Cochrane, commander of the U. S.|keted in a heavy fog today, with a light rain falling at Unalaska and the barometer down to 29, the re- port said, adding greatly to the hazards of the flight over the Aleutians, which are studded with treacherous volcanoes, some over 3,000 meters. high and perpetually covered with snow, The route followed by Commander Semyon Shestakov and his three daring comrades, across the North Pacific, has been attempted only twice before, once by British avia- tors, one of whom met disaster, and Semyon Shestakov % army world flight plane, which was forced to turn back before reaching Japan. on ee | MOSCOW, U.S. S. R., Sept. 23.— All Soviet Russia is rejoicing be- | cause its pioneer international air- 4 ae plane Land of the Soviets, is now coast guard fleet in the Bering Sea, | over North American territory, and who quoted a dispatch from the So-| the most difficult part of the long viet cutter Krasny Vympel, supply’ (Continued on Page Two) N. J. Metal Strikers, COAL AND IRON ‘Back; Many Realize Sound TUUL Strategy CARTERET, N. J., Sept. 23.—Be- trayed by skilled workers on the! strike committee, who participated in a company-controlled vote, most | Try Hirelings for Kill- of the 2,000 workers of the U. S. e : |Metal company here returned to| ing Barcoski |work yesterday following recent | verbal company promises conceding | PITTSBURGH, Pa., Sept. again in 1924 by one of the U. S.| 23.— DISTRICT TONIGHT To Discuss Sharpening Struggle; Right -Danger Weinstone to Report Importance of Meeting Is Stressed The general membership meeting of the New York District of the Communist P: y, which will be held tonight at 7.30 p. m. at Webster Hall, 11th St. and 3rd Ave., will dis- cuss the growing sharpness of the class struggle and the tasks of the Party. The inner situation of the Party, the struggle against the Right dan- ger and its crystallized form, the renegate Lovestone group, will be likewise reported upon in the light of the recent developments in the struggle with these opportunists and in accord with the 10th Plenum of the Communist International. The intensification of Party work in view of the many struggles facing the Party and the favorable pros- pects growing out of the radicaliza- tion of the masses, will likewise be |discussed in the report of the Dist- rict Committee. William W. Wein- stone, district organizer, will report on the tasks. The meeting will be lopen to good standing members of | ‘the Party, showing their member- ship books. Members of the Young Communist League will likewise be admitted. In view of the importance of the matter to be discussed the District Committee yesterday stated that every member of the Party without exception is expected and urged to attend. Immediate Formation of Workers Defense _ STRATEGY FOR STRUGGLE Defeat Terror and Build Organization for | Strong Charlotte Conference, Oct. 12, 13. Textile Workers Destitute in Georgia, Reports , Woman Organizer; Strong Demand for Union CHARLOTTE, N. C., Sept —Following the conference of all organizers of the National Textile Workers’ Union held here Sunday, a complete program to smash the mill bosses’ attempt to uproot the union from the South by their campaign of terror was agreed upon, Hugo Oehler announced today. The Charlotte textile conference was the principle point on the agenda. One woman organizer who returned a few days ago from Georgia, reports that families of workers there are destitute and walk the roads looking for employment. Production has ~been curtailed in the mills, and GAME TO SHIELD WAR PROFITEERS work. The mills, she said, are being flooded with copies of the Gastonia Gazette, in an effort to poison the minds of the workers against the National Textile Workers’ Union. However, the union has distributed McKeller in Attack on | British Navy the workers there are asking for : more organizers. The senate at Washington is still} Fully 75 per cent of the Gastonia conducting the “inquiry” into the ac- | azette’s pages are devoted to lies \tivity of the bie nary advocate) Wil: jabout the union, relief and defense pie rok organization’s policies and activities, liam B, Shearer, in an effort to cov-|'This mill bosses’ sheet through the facturers, particularly Charles M.|White, that the union is organizing |Schwab, chairman of the board, and| Workers for vicious purposes, and Eugene E. Grace, president of the |20t in preparation. for struggle Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corpora- @&ainst the starvation wages and tion, who made millions as war prof-|Stretch-out system. The “Gassy iteers in the last war and are out-| Gazette,” as the workers hereabout standing leaders of American im- Characterize it, is known as the thousands of pieces of literature throughout these Georgia mills, and er up the jingoist’c activities of the |insistent repetition hopes to con- ship builders and munitions manu-|vince workers that black is really Liss, one of nine workers arrested! Weekly instead of fortnightly pay,| ‘Three of Andy Mellon’s henchmen, perialism’s preparation for another |™outhpiece of the mill barons’ and Saturday night when police’ broke up an open air meeting at Main and Bank Sts., was sentenced to 15 days in jail when arraigned before police | time and a half pay for Sundays and | ‘lung irecorder Joelson this morning. The | holidays were refused. The element-|tant of the district attorney, has of participants to the Metropolitan| the case been relegated. The pro-| Area Trade Union Unity League, is) charge against the other eight work- ers was dismissed. An effort wilf _be made to release Liss on bail while his conviction is being appealed. Altho chief of police Tracy had |given the National Textile Workers’ Union,: the Communist Party’ and the Young Communist League |permit to hold the meeting, it was broken up by a large squad of po- lice, despite the protests of 1,000 workers who were present, This is the second meeting on this corner \that has been smashed within two weeks. Wheh a committee of the union, the Party and the League called on Chief Tracy this afternoon to in- quire why the meeting had been broken up after he had issued a per- mit, he at first ordered the com- mittee “to get the hell out of here.” When they refused to leave the po- lice station, Tracy gave them an audience and issued a permit for another meeting, which will be held next Saturday night at Governor and Bridge Sts. It is planned to make this a big working class dem- ' onstration. ‘ Those who were discharged in court this morning were Martin Russack and George Siskind, N. T. W. U. organizers; Gertrude Welsh, | R. Goldberg, Sol. Greenberg, Minnie Donzinger, Eddie ' Swaysal and Aaron Leib. SECTION & UNIT INDUSTRIAL | ORGANIZERS’ MEETING. | A very important meeting of the ‘section and unit organizers will take place on Thursday, Sept. 26, 8 p. m., at 26-28 Union Square, Important matters relating to ‘our trade union work will be dis- ‘cussed. All comrades are instructed to. be ‘on time. : |the right to.a grievance committee | system. |and the elimination of the bonus! | brutal murderers of Jobn Barcoski, | goon “trial” in criminal court here t Demand’ for wage-increases and | today. | (Continued on Page Two) CANADA ‘WORKER’ DEFIES BANNING TORONTO, Ont., Sept. 23—The | Worker, oficial organ of the Com- |munist Party of Canada, re-appear- \ed this week following police confis- jeation of its previous issue just as lit came off the press. This issue, however, was prepared in the face| ‘of further police edicts threatening sedition proceedings against print- ers handling the paper. | The onslaught on the Communist press is coincident with the cam- paign, of repression initiated by To- ronto police against militant work- ers’ organizations. Eight'workers face charges in the higher courts arising from their ac- | tivities in the Party's fight for free speech and freedom of the streets. Five are to be tried for “distribu- ting literature advocating the vio- lent overthrow of constituted author- ity,” an indictable offense entailing |a possible jail sentence of twenty jyears each, 'Try ‘Frisco Workers ‘Arrested ‘at Plant SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 23.— Two members of the Young Commu- nist League fact trial on charges of “vagrancy and disturbing the peace” following their arrest for distribut- ing a shop paper outside the West- inghouse plant in Emeryville, near here, . The two ode Fred E. and Karl Walker. They have been released on $400 bail each, John Little and Archibald Brown, /League membersy arrested at a fac- tortory gate meeting also face trial on the same charge. Krestintern in International Move to Free 13 in Gastonia | Heading the list’ of international | protest of the Gastonia defendants jand strikers is a resolution from |the International Farmers Council, \the Krasintern of Moscow, appeal- ing to the millions of farmers and | peasants all over the world to dem-| onstrate for the freedom of the 23) strikers. ’ as | “Most of these workers are the |sons and daughters of poor farfnerg | ,of the vicinity of Gastonia” the resolution states, “The farmers ana acai = -", World Farmers Council, Latin-American and German Workers Demand Release of 23 share-croppers of that part, of the United States, as everywhere els are groaning under the pressure of capitalist exploitation, and,. choked by debts and crushed under the weight of unbearable. taxes, are compelled to send their children to the mills and factories where they! have to bear inhuman exploitation. The government of the United States, the executioner of Sacco and Vanzetiti, is preparing another grue- (Continued on Page Two), \ Co. plant here, secution of cases pitted against workers with charges half so serious, are almost invariably handled di- rectly by the district attorney here. The selection of the jury has al- j ready been begun. These coal and iron police em- {ployed by Mellon thru his Pitts- burgh Coal Co., dragged Barcoski jout of his home on the night of | Feb. 10, to their barracks, clubbed ‘him to the ground, stamped upon | (Continued on Page Three) | | Norman Thomas. Aides Beat Up 2 Collectors for Gastonia -Defense Members of the socialist party assaulted two workers collecting funds for the defense of the Gas- tonia prisoners in front Hall, Sunday, where Norman Thom- he as was officially notified that was socialist candidate for may at a meeting attended by right wing union officials, gangsters, Zionists and business and professional men, | When the meeting ended, Martha Gold and S. Fotinos stationed them- selves by the door and urged those leaving to “help free the “Gastonia prisoners.” A mob of socialist thigs | surrounded Gold and hit her in the | face and almost dragged her to the | next block. At the same time Fotinos was hit several times by the social- | ists and zionists who attempted to take the collection box away from |him. ILGW Strikebreaking Is Being Studied by \the League of Nations Raymond V. Ingersoll, chairman |of the Cloak and Suit Commission, the strikebreaking agency appointed | with the connivance of the scab In- ternational Ladies Garment Work- ers Union to reduce the wages and lengthen the hours of the cloakmak- | ers, has returned from a five week’s trip abroad, | hile in Europe, Ingersoll at- |tended the sessions of the League of Nations and discussed with the League’s International Labor Office the machinery his commission uses }:to speed up the needle trades work- vers here. He deposited in the yarchives of the labor office copies | of the agreement the company union | signed in July, when it sold out the cloakmakers. | REMINGTON MACHINISTS MAY STRIKE. ILION, N. Y., (By ®Mail).—Ma- chinists, alleging discrimination | against union men, have threatened to strike in the Remington Arms ~ of Town} ‘Committees Is Urged cea All shops are urged to immediat: ly form Workers Defense Commit- To Roy T. Clung, a minor assis- tees and send names and addresses, |a statement issued by the TUUL yesterday. With the constant attack on worl ‘ers’ meetings and demonstrations |by the police, socialist-fascists and jright wing gangsters, the statement points out, the need of,a strong workers’ defense corps is of major importance. All shops are requested |at once to choose at least two work- lers in their shops for this task. | Members of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union can regis- |ter with Irving Potash, 131 W. 28th ae millinery workers with Sylvia Bleeker, 4 W. 37th St., and shoe | Workers at the office of the Inde- |pendent Shoe Workers’ Union, 51 E. }10th St. Other workers can send |their names direct to the local T. |U. U. L. office. [Five More Days Are Left to Register at the Workers School With only five days left to regis- ter before the Fall Term of the Workers School upens, it was an- nounced yesterday that classes are rapidly filling. Many of the new members in the Communist Party have not yet reg- jistered and although practically all candidates for the functionaries course, most of the functionaries have not yet registered at the School and the units have, in many cases, not yet appropriated the necessary ‘funds to cover the unit share of the scholarship. Also those trade unions have awarder scholarships or have had members chosen for the School have not yet turned in these regis- trations. All organizations are urged to send these in immediately. Thursday night, at 7.30 p.m. on the fifth floor of the Workers Struggle against the party, the fake progyessive group ‘of Muste, and the whole body of so- the workers, acting as_ insidious agents of the capitalist class within slogans at the Communist Campaign Rally to be held Friday night, Sept. 27, at Central Opera House, ac ing to a statement of the New Fe nel oc ne e- the units have already elected their | which | world war. | The employment of Shearer by the |war-mongers as “observer and re- |porter” at the unseccessful Geneva arms conference in 1927 was the subject of the investigation (?) yes- \terday, when S. W. Wakeman, vice president of the Bethlehem Ship- |building Corporation and Frederick P. Palen, vice-president of the New port News Shipbuilding and Drydock |Corporation, testified before the senate, Tries to Act Dumb. Wakeman’s job on the stand was to try to support the statements of Schwab and other war-mongers who {testified Saturday by taking the blame for hiring Shearer. Instead of admitting that Shearer was at {Geneva ‘with the knowledge of Schwab and Grace and unofficially |representing the United States gov- ernment, Wakeman said that he hired Shearer because he thought he could get “an angle on Geneva that would be different from that of or- dinary newspapermen.” Senator Shortridge, examining Shearer, revealed by his questioning ct that capitalist ne’ men at such conferenc e regard- ed as part of the spy system of the United States government and of the big shipbuilders and munition Continued on Page Three) the Center, will be held 2 meeting of all unit and section Agitprop Di-| | rectors to check up on new members and candidates for the functionaries courses for each unit. The office of the school will be jopen to registrations this entire week from 10 in the morning to |9:30 at night. Those wishing to jregister are urged to report during these hours. Those units who are ready to re, tionaries and the new members who wish to register, but who have not |had the opportunity to come to the school to do so, will be able to do so at the membership meeting to- |night, at Webster Hall, 3rd Ave. and |11th St. Those workers not mem- |bers of the Party will be able to register at the school office tonight. Rally to Mobilize Workers Against Social Reformists Weinstone,. Communist Candidate for Mayor, to Speak at Campaign Meeting Friday socialist’ District Election Campaign Com-) | mittee. William W. Weinstone, Commu- | ties in the fied class present period of intensi- struggles, especially the American imperialism and the boss class offensive against the workers. cord- Other speakers will include leading tonight at Irving York) g¢ (Continued on Page Two) ogy \Pl. and 15th Ste gister their chosen func- | the enemy of the workers. Deny “Gunmen” Yarn, Commenting on the most récent charge of fantastic murder plots to do away with the Manville-Jenckes attorneys by importation of gunmen from New York City printed in the local papers which insinuatingly linked up the name of William Z. Foster, general secretary of the |Trade Union Unity League, in the | (Continued on Page Two) CONFERENCE ON TUUL WORK OCT. 1 'To Discuss the Recent | Struggles, Program A conference of all delegates of organized unorganized indus- tries will take place Tuesday, Oct. 1, at 7 p. m. at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl. The delegates representing the various industries of New York, New Jersey, and vicin- ity will report on the historic Trade Union Unity Convention, which was held in Cleveland Aug. 31 to Sept 2. The New York conference and its affiliated organizaztions sent ap- proximately 100 delegates to the Cleveland convention. Each of the industrial delegations will report on special mass meetings of their industries, on the program worked out at the Cleveland Con- vention and how to apply it in their respective industries, At the Oct. 1 conference, a gen- eral report of the work of the Con- vention will be given. There will be a review of the recent strugglés in New York, New Jersey, and vicin- ity, a report of the work of the local council, which held several meetings where important decisions were made, All delegates of New York and , New Jersey must make every effort |to be on time as the conference will begin at 7 p, m. sharp in order to give the delegates a chanc *° ‘Sar oughly discus th. »e- and Bets Metal Workers Meet ~ Tonight to “Discuss Industrial Problems John Schmies, associate secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, Benjamin Lifschitz and Andrew cial reformists, who today repre-|nist candidate for mayor, will ex- Overgaarde, secretary of the Metal sent the most dangerous enemies of pose the role of the capitalist par-)/ Workers Industrial League, will speak on the program adopted at the Cleveland T. U. U. L. conference the ranks of the working class, will part played by the socialist party in|and ‘lead discussion on the problem be raised as one of the principal support of the war preparations of|of developing a militant Metal | Workers Industrial League through- out the industry at a mass meeting a Hall, Irvi; b toes Se iT