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FOR COMMUNIST PARTY NOMINEES AGAINST C Worker ry API E REGISTER, THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized Against Imperialist War For the 40-Hour Week THIS TALIST PARTIES! FINAL CITY EDITION . ander the act of March 3, 187%. Price 3 Cents 184 cpt Sunday by The Comprodaily Pablishing ew York City. N.Y. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: In New York, by mail, $5.00 per year. Outside New York, by mall, 86.00 per year. Published daily & Company. tne. Vol. VL, N Not Gastonia Cases But Dead ' SARMAMENT’ Gadsden, "Alabama Goodyear UNION OFFICIALS MORE PROSECUTION LIARS Workers Is Slogan of Left CONFERENCE TQ Textile Workers Want ‘Daily SELL OUT STRIKE IN CASTONIA CASE ADMIT ee. eR OF TRUGKORIVERS BEING BOUGHT BY COMPANY Get Hostile and Eva- Madheas ik Hest Countyalgines Tee Bill town ‘owned iocu, | OL. Bett ayal, Urged sive Replies stock and barrel by the Goodyear Rubber Conipany. . | Rank-File Fight ® Seeking “cheap labor,” the Goodyear Company recently opened up pk oe a huge mill in Gadsden, in which 3,000 workers slave. | So fierce was the speed-up at the Goodyear plant, and so miserable Follows Secret Meet were the working conditions that the workers there, totally unorganized, a | most of them never having heard of a union, struck spontaneous! Workers Must Rush the Daily Worker to Mill Slaves of Rubber. Trust Alabama will be a base of the coming great struggle of the Southern mill worl led by the National Textile Workers Union, against their exploiters, the mill barons, hes dried on the , the agehts of ation of Labor, jood of the murdere ill gates in Marion, North C 2] reform 2p ere again on the job, planning ne that was cent in by the mill owner i d The identical state militia ‘Policeman Gilbert Boasts of Pay from Lor: Hord Admits Previously Killed Man, Boy Southern Textile Workers Conference Starts or 0, Max Gardner, to pro- from reprisals s, has been ap- Brookwood graduates stitution of class betrayal, al reformist [he militia y f of William Ross, ite of the dean of that Tuste, leading figure of ‘left” ed to protect Ross’ heuse. Itakan Press Caustic 4 and fa and policemen or | | |“unofficial” statement given out in| ate militia to protect od e mill owners, whether they r leader e of Ress, also an official of the n place his organization ray the mill slaves of into the’situaticn, not to defe the inte of the workers, but be- More Warshivs for All Is Certain Result LONDON, Det. 8. Oct. 8—The offi Unorganized, the Goodyear mi | the unlimited resources of the Rubl A former Gastonia textile wo: some copies of the Daily Worker. that the Daily Worker be sent t ill workers proved helpless against ber Trust. rkers brought with him to Gadsden And now demands are coming to us o Gadsden every day, hundreds of 8-Hour Day, Overtime Demands Sold Adding one mbre black deed to the \record of the A. F. of L. betrayals, ' With Bie Mass Meeting Saturday | CHARLOTTE, N. even to a conservative, fundamentalist jury of land owning farmers hat the testimony in the Gastonia case produced by Oct. 8.—It must be apparent today the mill bosses’ prosecutor; a mass of contradictory perjur | regard to the “five-power conference | Dailies. . the misleaders of the International 3 Seton : lon armaments” remarks veil- “Tie Goodyear Rubber Company hired 3,000 of us Gasden workers Brotherhood of Teamsters and] It mut also be evident that nearly all of the state’s w jinformed sources lined to com-' when said open shop company came here and opened up a big plant | Chauff Loz] .92, yesterday sold| nesses are Loray hirelings. Mrs. Connie Neal, for instance, has ment on the ,possibility of Anglo-| recently,” a Gasden textile worker writes. out the strike of the 2,000 fruit and| openly boasted about being rewarded for her testimony. Grace American difficulties, but believe that Britain may be influenced by | “The workers couldn’t stand the fierce speed-up gaff, so they soon went on strike. |vegetable truckmen which had ef- |fectively tied up the local produce Buffy has been promoted from the job of a low paid steno- “secretary.” s had revolted agz yous agreement with the attitude of the dominions’— “They didn’t have any union, but they just had to strike anyway. |market since “aturday. grapher to one of a highly paid Marion mill owners that vietir | which is one way of making Amer-| The company was working us 12 and 14 hours a day. | The Mctropolitan Area Trade| Policeman Gilbert, one of those who followed Aderholt in These so-calle ‘can imperialism feel the forces of “They tried to bring .in scabs from other mill towns around here | Union Unity League in a statement, the raid on the strikers’ tent colony in Gastonia June 7, and ict niterests in the) but couldn't. , ; copies of which were distributed | helped start the shooting which resulted in the death of Ader- : erm of demands for no wea’ “Then they got scabs from P'!ccelphia, from a strikebreaking |2mong the rs eo in the — fe - ~Ghalt fod which the NG yorizers on the public of British naval power. lv aeones: Gey eke: warned against the impending haces le ee After the m participated | From Paris, where Briand says “Well, we were unozganized, and the papers around here were all sell-out in the following wor MUST DEFY ALL tional Textile Workers’ Union in the murderou s for a num- jhe accepts hte invitation “on prin-; for the boss. 2 “ou must not and cannot rely upon members are being tried for ber of strike: rebellion against the | ciple” reports state that France's | “We didn’t know about the National Union and the union paper, | your officials who are ready to sell | murder, yesterday naively told There is a certain | p¢cepance will bes‘‘a qualified, con-| the Daily Workers, then. 5 jout your demands. You must imme- | of his close connections with Brookwood graduate | ditional” one, and that France will “But we've heard about what they both did in Gastonia. So we want diately take the situation into your 0 HAL ; ke Lea Sl QE AT i. Hoffman hastened to | not “well receive” any question on| a union down here—and the union paper too.” own hands. You must immediately | the Loray mill management as nent that reveals (the abolition of snbmarines. \ “We want the union, and the union paper too.” set up your own rank and file strike Wiough “They ‘were ‘someviny aa |. Prom Italy, the most caustic com- This is the keynote of the scores of letters reaching us from mill committee and defz:t the attempt REGI T All N boast of. Gilbert says he served ss ough down in Marion trying ent comes on the inxitation as well| willages throughout North and South’ Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, to betray you.” special deputy, paid by the Loray ainst Sheriff Adkins and his as on the MacDonald-Hoover con-| Alabama, Virginia, and further-off Texas too. | Neither the eight-hour day nor mill, for a year, then was promoted plot— of the “left or the lid and prevent the wor! murder. His job is not to ‘ainst wage cuts, unemployment and all the other ef hd” so the employer: the speed-up, le: ke of 100 per cent Nordic native ting on the lid to prevent ederation of. Labor to sit on ng themselves against wholesa e ganize the workers for a militant struggle gthening of hours, the black-list, of capitalist rationaljzation, but can continue to exploit and oppress \ western ‘are called to fulfill a di lof material and idealistic redemp- | appearing versations, caricatures ishermen drag- howing the two as no warning of this new imperialism wrapped in humanitarian principles as fierce and unreasonable as puritanism and animated by the conception that they ine mission “There ring on just how t oword the text Militant workers wiwll not disregard the southern mill workers | appeals for the Daily Worker. | dies of Dailies regularly. of 25 daily workers will be sent to $5 means that a southern mill Daily Workers for a week. They must see to it that a southern mill village receives its bun- $2.50 a week from a workingclass organization means that a bundle a southern mill village for a week. ll village can receive a bundle of 50 $10 will send 100 copies of the Daily Worker to a southern mill |time and a half for overtime, the |demands for which the struggle was | wright, prezident of Local 202; Mar- jtin Thompcon, secretary, and repre- |sentatives of the contractors or boss truckmen and the fruit merchants. | | The crass nature of the betrayal | was heightened by the fact that the |strikers had complete control of the | E WASH 3 Workers Register Now Low response to yesterday’s alec- tion registration is just one indica- tion that New York workers are re- treating from support of the demo- jeratic, republican or socialist par- ties. The Communist viewpoint on the na class. He wants the workers helpless and defenseless be- |tion. We refer to Amcrican im-) village daily for one week. jsituation, as was admitted even by|returns was told by the Daily ‘The defense thi teré the’avmed thugs of the state power and the mill ownrs. This de- |PeTialigm, which threatens our an-, “We héard-some National. Textile Union organizers here after the |» (Continued on Page Two) Worker y-sterday by. “Retezealont the ‘remarl group of “left” social reformists frown on self defense for the clent civilization. ea tart eanthe: | U.T.W, sold us out the first time! They gave out Daily Workers, and | —_ Grecht, campaign manager. state’s witnesses are onl ¢ class. They don’t want Gastonia cases, Gastonia heroism, Gas- | Japan is reported to confer-| ve liked them. Can you keep sending the Daily Worker to Elizabeth- Only 167,257 city voters regis-|remember two or threc to the Gastonia city police force. the mill owners and their, ging Italy, France and Japan into| They must rush funds at once to the “Rush the Daily Worker to |called, were granted the drivers : Alarmed by the fact that the de- > net. “I Tever” gave the general! the Southern Mill Workers” Drive. lunder the a-retment signed yester-| “to Vote Communist ifense was showing the close con- 7 resentment saying: | Every workingeless organization must adopt a mill village! day afternoon by Joseph Hain- — nections of prc with the Manvill the state’s vyer warned the rest of the v to admit such connections, rewards, and promotions. So this morning prosecution witnesses denied stool pigeons and hirelin ses tonia defiance and Gastonia trials in which the hideous mask of capi- 3 | ton?” WH | T |tered, as compared with 270463 last |from the speeches of Beal talist cemocracy and justice is ripped asunder for all the workers to oe the: reply’ 7 net an abe tel This is froma rayon worker at the Glanzstoff mills. |year. \of them remember exactly the same ncepitance''-— yennea nepure Tey. 0" : alleged sentences: “Go to the mill a, the police, the working class. Wi@t these companions in flunkeyism with the state forecast by the present instruction given Japan’s ambassadors at Lon- What shall we answer these workers? struggles is proving to many New | “Bitte rexperience in their strike and go into the mill and drag them © pasaig gee) 1s nok Gastonia cases) Dat Mesh eae ‘Gor and: Washington to emphasize | To the Daily’ Worker, M A R | ON KILLERS York votcrs te folly of-vsting for|out. Shoot and shoot to k an, Hoffman clearly reveal the real role |Sspan's demand for an increase in| 26 Union Square, New York, N. Y. | ang of the political groups repr These sente have been re- of the “left” social reformists—a direct agency for aiding the capitalist her naval armament to reach a 10-| ! Z z — ing them, Greel + said. fe peated by eve witne thus far, class and its state power in a struggle against the workers, aiding in | 10.7 ratio, It is also rumored that The southern textile workers cannot go without the Daily Worker Hoffman Says Duty Isp, Voeesthins phrases from pasvotlike, with new variations capitalist rationalization and trying to crush the increasing resistance-of |. yenly on this demand may be| in their preparations for the great struggles they will soon go through. ; : " Tammany Hall mean nothing to|when some witness forgot his lines. eeene | 1 am sending my contribution to help rush the Daily Worker to them. to Restrain Labor __jmilitant workers—they know how! ‘Today J. D. Cooper, step-father sought before Japan gives any reply the Tammany’ police club and black- The mill workers of Marion ers everywhere should scorn | p¢ all. : ce fe ‘ammany P ek- ‘of Grace Duffy, told about going to thy leadership of : citea quel cant teal only. | Mathes ApmneeMMURSecen Ee edll| TERE ie agg pment et eke ET ssef I’ MARION, N. Oct. 8.—The | jack ‘befriends’ them on the picket /the union lot to hear Beal speak. to betzsyal and 1 beatin pidecieeclvatn tevectllena-dh | Audvenearfieniurty wabti i Muwe.-.vgs ss Steep oe sesesedeesees (deputics who per Mar- he added. hemoaned Lo. tenied that he was s Tt ‘ not hav fidence in these any “agr t” as well as 30,000 | massacre, a from 7 ions bemoanc ville-Jenckes Co, as a Tas testleer sectmot ‘have CORE dence an (ADEs | SOY er ment oy ye A | City csc iceccssccescvcncocescess* State ...+- yee crane nie ee h five strikers have died, and! by the republicans show that repub- He quoted Beal as wat agents of capitalism, but must repudiate them and rally behind the jtons of other naval craft; and as | others till di a rf pilling on Tammany graft ; i militant banners of the Nationa! Textile Workers’ Union. , The South- | Britain is to continue construction! 4 mount $....cccccesseeeees ane may Ou a are: being: of = tion ae sine SER We ay thugs thet if they tr ern Textile Workers’ Conference that opens in Charlotte Saturday [on seven cruisers now building and . * . F | bs v he ae ed. aire ; of Be ae tke eeiie rh Bacay t zak up the meetings, the sti should receive the support of all workers in the slave pens of that part |three more planned, the “disarma- FOR ORGANIZATIONS 4 Smeets Ss set arom all aDerens s Sittei@ne BS os Seeeateives ers’ guards would put them off the of th country. The reply to the capitalist murderers of the working | ment” conference, or even confer- ry ed rik he ize ey Ne who is betes aa inlet Sr SGPAtae ae lot. class must be an immediate determmed fight against capitalist ration- |ence on “reduction” of armaments, | We,” wseveccees A ce si o conduct hearings on Sldiee ar ict eter Tht na 2 id Geoper witnessed the attempt to alization and the increasing misery, suffering and poverty of the work- | can be clearly seen to be*a swindle isae of Organization) ptt Enis idicul feat feuaritative Held : : break up the meeting on the - ing class, and for the building up of a powerful union, the creation of | and a lie before it begins. Pi CHE Age TEtRE AUR ee Tea ee hat savty. outtateipe ve (Tam Oe Tae, He sald Thiag Soe eee ic jenieac of the We Cer meee al | ee Oli ane Beate pags aye PAS aaa isp s eras Make eck oak lagainst the strnk “2 that ‘Alfred publicans and democrats. It wants /1y05, a Heals ae ne i i ut fr : movement of the social reformists of a | / DEANE Sie UES ! oyretbnnn: Se Wants thrown at Beal and Buch. Then Hee ue Sa ee ee i DOW WIPERS’ | wish to adopt a southern mill town or village, and see to it that the Hoffman, partner in the betrayal of mere oe ea ie mteeg {there was a shot.” Cooper said he Pie hale re i ae a workers there are supplied with.......... copies of the Daily Worker |‘he Elizabethton and Marion strik-|nee Nev. Norman Thomas, bs praise. |was with Grace Duffy on the porch, 3 3 vs pha s if eit a Waka We tucleee ¢ ers, indicted along with them, | onal sit les as “a non-partisan a | oat didnt hear the remarks’ she Urs> i109 P. C. Walkout Hismen, in Detention, {enerr day, Seta eh ee sak tara | oe ees ee ee didate.” The Citizens Union is only |quoted yesterday in the attempt to ; Ta jnad Sh Go son H nger Strike t Kindly send us the nee ie lag yo Ps Ss, ‘iery Workers Federation, part of Soe ° je pastor-politicians’ back- prove conspiracy. He saw the of- In Happmess onep, aW : a 5 ds| MAS | cor we wish to communicate with the workers there. the United Testile Workers, but was ie tons fieeP® ative. later, and admitied Nort ; F i i | $ sats s lent to the U. T. W. main office be- Undoubtedly bureaucratic ter- Coe ne habtime Forty Workers Strike an ins His Demands | 7 ; f i Cy UW scetlce vba ia wapurcec y » bubesuce there was no trouble at that time. Mi Negro, White Workers | Fascists of Austria cause of his known expertness in rorism is used to discourage those te saw the officers seize the guard, Harry Eisman, militant N. Y. Pio- A stoppage involving about 600 window cleang's throughout the city |, Get Worst of It in the sell-out. | work who intend to vote Com- 1 mu ” says he heard someone yell, “Turn The 200 employes still at work in E . ; OU dae raga "sa ; irr the Happiness Candy factory at 431 Neer serving a six months sentence|may start tomorrow as a result of Protest Terrorism on A ty apeareae Press reports Hoff- eal: lathe sake rebace i aeete him loose,’ heard shooting, which Hudson St. were called upon to join in a Jewish reformatory at Haw-|the insolvency of the Empire State Them, Meet Tomorrow Clash with Workers | RESP ey eh sort a? je erS | EGMIdabedt ahd expressithalé atippott, \he said came from the front and their 40 fellow workers in the Hard) heen New on $05 per iouaane Marea ere Coe an or- we7 oe | PERL BRE auth enough down in’ Marion trying to|not of the republican, democrat Al He ees he could not identity candy department who have been on nonstra’ against the Boy/ ganization which is supposed to pro-] Race and class prosecutio! will! , Oct. 8.—In the last ew | orevent armed insurrection against, socialist parties, but of. the party any of the men on the union lot that strike for over a week, in a leaflet issued by the Youth Committee of the Food Workers Section, T. U. U. L., copies of which were distributed at the door of the factory yesterday. The leaflet pointed out that the workers must stil together 100 per cent in order to win the higher Scouts on July 20, has gone on a hunger strike against the censoring of his mail by the reformatory au- \thorities. The strike lasted one day yan das a result Mr. Klein, the head of the children’s jail granted his ‘demands. Now Fisman gets his ‘mail, but yith “places cut out.” vide compensation insurance for window cleaners injured while at work, This was the announcement made by officials of the Window Cleaners Protective Union at a mass meeting last night of organized and unorgan- ized workers at Manhattan Lyceum, not go unfought by Brownsville Workers, who will meet with white workers. in mass protest against brazen lyhch terror at Dunbat Cen- ter, 605 Hetkimer St., Brooklyn, at 8 p. m. Thursday. * 2 . The mass demonstration will be ‘day snumerous collisions between |workers and fascists have taken place in Austria, for instance at Modeling where the fascists were ‘soundly thrashed; at Fuersteénfeld, | where three persons were seriously ‘injured; at »Haidach, where three | werednjuxed; at Payerbach, where a | Sheriff Adk’s and his armed thugs. Leading a strike of 100 percent Nor- {dic native southern largely an exercise in totting on the lid to pre- ivent them “ ng the vio- ilenee of the mill owners and their sheriffs in Kind.”, « for their interests which alone figh —the Commur Party Nanking on Defensive Against Rival Armies HONGKONG, night. He knew for we at headquarte union.” It v Defense that the he and Grace Dui!y w 1 to : Da ehew A ; under the auspices of the Browns- | _ posi This gives a gocd indication of the Oct: 7%. Fro r wages and better working conditions, They are kept in strict discipline |66 E. Fourth St. The meeting was | ,; he American Negro fascist was seriously injured; and). bien va," ect, _ { — rom | ness the shooting is so situated that for which the spontaneous strike and on the slightest misdemeanot |called-to mobilize the workers for ville) local sob: Soa eee BO at Kapfenberg, where worker ath- waichfillness to the bosses of the| Nanking government sources re- only a few fect of the union grot was called. It urged the immediate organization of a strike committee lo : rarce Peg president, Fred Makel- lto the rant: and file who really | arrived at © : finale representing all departments, with six or eight weeks. vicinity, which will probably be ae Other speakers will include Wil-| er Wanted at win ahs atfilte, GE ake etcetera tae be ae deser nor heard what was the following demands: a minimum ed at the expiration on Oct. 15 of liana Burroughes, of the Congress, loakn audchis teenda will be lentihitly | nob to detiter Kwaret Thi te Dan Hord, who has beer a po wage of $20 per week for young workers; 20 per cent increase for those receiving $20 or over; the 8- they are given a “ticket” which pro- longs their stay in the “Home” for | While in the reformatory the chil- dren are fed full of patriotism and ‘religion. There is also a Boy Scout troop there who are givén all sorts the general strike of all window cleaners of Graeter New York and the present, agreement with the Manhattan Window Cleaning Em- ployers Protective Association. Labor Congress, which will be repre- sented at the meeting by its local and J. Louis Engdahl, candidate for borough president of Manhattan for the Communist Party, whose plat- letes fought the fascists and sent | six to the h.aspital. \Women Workers Back Communist Party in U. T. W. officials in Marion and /assures them that whatever happens dealt with. The case is the first of its nature | |to be prosecuted since 1878 ¢under | ports state that reinforcements loyal |to Nanking (at this moment) have proviso illustr#tes the weak position Nanking feels before the threat of Kwangsi—a defensive position. were in their line of oa. Thi could neither have seen what man for 35 years, couldnt id any defend shot out of a i ntify He told of taking osite the union 2e 0 hourday. and. the five-dag-week: of privileges and are the pets of| The stoppage tomorrow will affect| form, incidentally, includes the de-|Oct.,17 Gastonia Meet | inws pasted by tho northern cakpet-| Ne Be lot. It will be s time nad a half for overtime and the jail. » Nevertheless they are con-jonly those employers carrying in-lmand for,full social, politieal and — .,|beggarsto suppress the native south-| Build Up the United Front of. “it recognition of the union. sidered equals when it comes to the (Continued on Page Two) economic equality for Negroes. New York working women Will) orners after the Civil War. the Worki Glass? * gun. He n the tree The Happiness Candy workers are “tickets.” The International Labor demonstrate in solidarity with the LiGebbiasaake Sb ayer ted were b s | mnt among the most exploited in the | Defense is ee 3 ort, een ‘ Gastonia strikers aot Hele a e to show th kill city, getting an average wage of Fisman out cf this hell hole for cl il- W k D | te t U S S R their support to the Party whic! N t l M e Aderholt as the doc onlv $18 a week. dren. They want letters of protest or. er e. ega Ss 0 eWeWe @|consistently champions their inter- a iona 1ners hion oves the chief of po 5 The 40 strikers are men, the ma- against the baci) nee Te q ‘ ests—the pig eal Paty at s i 4 shot. As Hord hin jority of the other workers being man to be sent to Mr. Klein, hea t See 5 Y PL W k imass meeting at Irving za Hall, t th I R removed “Il-the shot fro girls who make as little as $12 of the Hawthorne Boys’ Home, Haw- 0 ear an y or ing Irving Place and 15th St., a8 p. m. 0 rganize e ron anges where Aderholt fell, ther weekly. | there, N. RS Thursday, Oct. 17. y to show w ne an these a ‘ * * T ity of supporting the ¥ were from Hord’s gun or not. EOD eae a ee: ‘Norfolk Workers Hear Actual Visit to U. S. S. R. Will Refute Lies of Comteate candidates William w. Unemployment, Speed-Up,:Low Wages, Finger Hord contradicted Sherif? Lir A general meeting of all Party Capitalist Press and Socialists Weinstone, for mayor; Otto Hall, Printing Rouse Militancy of Mesaba berge rby saying that he took Mac- food workers, hotel, restaurant, cafe- teria workers, grocery clerks, butch- ers, bakers, Amalgamated Food Workers, A. F. of L. locals, will be held on Wednesday, October 9, 1929, 8 p. m. sharp at 26-28 Union Square, ‘Schechter, Hampton | NORFOLK, Va. (By Mail)—Amy Schechter, who recently faced elec- |trocution by the Carolina mill The workers and peasants of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics, confident tha tthe actual facts of their socialist reconstruction of the “Working Men Women! “Workers of all Races, and Creeds! “Industrial and Land Workers! *and Working for comptroller; and Harry M. Wicks, "for aldermanic president— will be explained by prominent Par- ty leaders. “Not only in Gastonia, but right Plans for organizing the famois Mesaba Tron range into the National Miners Union are going fotward, according to Pat Devine, writing in jorganization will be of no ayail against the rising discontent of the wotkers and their determination to fight for better conditions. Ration- Laughlin, one of the strike defend- ants in this t Shelby and Linebergt who too gether with Carte from Gostonia to nined his confession. aid th ss the one t he w Ma ‘bosses, spoke at the Norfolk work-|country they control will answer] “While the bourgeoisie, with the/here in New York, workers whola recent issue of The Coal Miner. |alizati i Pee cede LM awh esaiege ae jers Gastonia Joint Rech iar any amount of slander by imperial- help of the socialists and the whole struggle for better ' conditions are | The Coal Miner is changing its nae | wha-wate Ath et kya ian third. ai vas me stan eee Pp ¥ ‘here Sunday, Oct. 6. Del Hampton, |ists and exploiters abroad, are in-|capitalist ptess are increasing daily |cruelly attacked and terrorized by|with the next issue to something typical of all industries in the the qoute “conteanicia from the urged to he present and on time as a rol! call will be taken. Guild Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- _ tom Up—at the Enterprises! | jae also was on trial irt Charlotte, also spoke. Over 250 workers were present. A resolution for the Gas- “tenia prisoners was adopted and sent vo the seven still held, and to Gov- ernox Gardner of North aCrolina. ‘is as follows’ viting another group of workers from America to come and see, and to celebrate the 12th year. The invitation is extended through the Friendg of the Soviet Union, and » ga slander againgt the Soviet nion and spreading lies about the building of socialism, for the pur- pose of killing the growing sym- pathy of the workers towards the (Continued on Page Three) the united forces of the bosses, the government, the capitalist political parties, and the reactionary labor fakers of all stripes,” the Party de- P ib me in its appeal for qmass sup- Port of the meetings _ atincain. else (suggestions now being re- ceived) because the N."M. U. is en- larging to take in metal miners as} we'l as those in the coal industry. The article states that the ped \Trust spy system, Inog a barrier to United States, is especially, empha- sized in the metal mines. | The introduction of machinery on | the Mefaba Range has reduced the | number of men employed from¢]8,- | saat Continued on Page Three) two strikers, that they had fired, Hor dadmitted that they had no warrants on the night of June 7, He denied that he had been in- dicted a number of times fog’ illegal _ (Continued on I Page 2,