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| { { yore will be THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized Against Imperialist War For the 40-Hour Week Eatered as second-clase matier at the Voss thee ws Ne wy York, N. ¥, ander the act of March 3, 1879. FINAL CITY EDITION Published daily except 8: Company. Vol. VI, No. 221 jay by T Ive. 26-28 Onion Square, New York City, N. ¥.a>2 Comprodally Publishing Outatde Ni SUBSCRIPTION RATES: In New York. by mail, $3.00 jew York, by mail, $6.00 ver ye: Price 3 Ce NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1929 Raise the Banner of Militant 700 USSR Mill |NDUSTRY SLUMPQUASH GORMAN Legionnaires JRIGLER MINE CONFERENCE Struggle! Build Rank and File Committees of Action in the Dress Industry! Smash the Social-Fascist Conspiracy of Schlesinger and Company! The program of the bureaucracy of the International Ladies’ Gar- ment Workers’ Union is a program of organization of the bosses against the workers. The workers are to be driven into bosses’ unions which the bureaucracy, backed by the s and their police and courts, will convert into efficiency agenc’ This program is a fascist program. It is the program of social fascism and its leaders in the ranks of the workers are socialist or former socialist party bureaucrats. Their unity with the biackest forces of reaction is manifest. Can we he contented merely with exposing the anti-working class character of the maneuver now under way in connection with the fraudu- lent “strike” proposal made by Schlesinger and company and which is sponsored by the garment bosses and the city and state authorities? Certainly not! Neither can we consider as anything but a tumble into the trap set by the bosses and their agents such statements as “remain at work,” or the still worse elaboration of this statement into “stay on the job in the shops we control”—statements made by some left wing comrades who apparently think that this is a clever way to out-maneuver agents of the bosses whose main objective is precisely that of destroying, by wholesale deception and betrayal, the will of the masses to fight mili- tantly for higher wages and better working conditions, for the ousting of traitors from the ranks of the labor movement and the building of revolutionary unions. Only by struggle can the agents of the bosses, the bosses them- selves and the whole anti-working class conspiracy be defeated. The proposed strike of the Schlesinger forces is an attempt to get workers to take active part in their own destruction. It is designed to place the Schlesinger gang and the whole pack of social reformist fas- cists in such a strong position that they can continue to delude and betray the masses of needle trades workers. Against this the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union must raise the banner of struggle and must mobilize the masses for it. Car- rying out the program of the Trade Union Unity League—the American section of the R.I.L.U.—the leadership should undertake at once the or- ganization of rank and file committees composed of members of the LL.G.W.U., of unorganized workers and of members of the revolution- ary union. Under no circumstances can every effort fail to be made to win the workers for struggle against the fascist reaction. No pas- sive or negative policy will succeed. Workers are won for militant unionism exactly because ha learn that inevitable betrayal and defeat is the keystone of reformist strategy and tactics. The slightest concession to the policy of substituting com- plicated inner-maneuvering for struggle based on the daily needs of the workers will result in further confusing the masses and thus play into the hands of the bosses and their agents. It can easily result in the left wing leadership being discredited, creating a feeling of hope- lessness among the workers and thus making much easier the invasion and domination of the whole industry by social fascism. The Communist Party of the United States bases its policy on the masses, They will respond to the call to organize for struggle. Such a_call must be delayed no longer. The rank and file of the needle trades workers, with militant leadership, will smash the Wall Street-inspired conspiracy to make Schlesinger the Simon Legree of the cloak and dress industry. Build rank and file committees of struggle! Build the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union! Mr. Henderson Hesitates Again? Again there are signs that the “labor” government of the British capitalists may find a way out of keeping its pledge to the working class of Great Britain to recognize the Union of Socialist Soviet Re- publics. Both MacDonald and Arthur Henderson, foreign secretary, immediately after their election, showed themselves to be the com- monest liars by attempting to force upon the workers’ Soviet govern- ment certain “conditions” for the recognition of “His Majesty’s” gov- ernment. Now again Henderson finds what may prove to be an excuse for the repudiation of the pre-election promise—the proposition that recognition does not take effect until the actual exchange of ambas. sadors which may be postponed indefinitely. The British working ela: will learn a lot in seeing a “labor” government bargaining with the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics to secure a “guarantee” to the British capitalists against any contacts of the British workers with the revolutionary International of the world’s working class, which has its headquarters in the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics. The great “democrats” of the yellow “socialist” labor party would like to per- suade the government of the only country in which the workers rule to suppress the revolutionary Communist International by violence—just as MacDonald and Henderson would suppress it if it had its headquar- ters in London. It can’t be done. SOUTH SENDS 50 TO BIG NTW MEET IN CELEBRATION Militant Union Leads! Of Young Communist Scranton Strike League Sunday The textile workers of the South) Ali members of the Central Com are making preparations for the Na-|mittee of the Communist Party i) tional Convention of the National |or near New York will attend th Textile Workers’ Union, to be held celebration of the Tenth Anniversar: from November 28 to 30, in Union/of the Young Communist Interna Hall, Paterson, N. J. A minimum of tional, 7:30 p. m. this Sunday at thc 50 delegates from the southern mill | Workers Center, 26-28 Union Square. centers is expected at the conven-| William Z. Foster, Max Bedacht, tion. Robert Minor, I. Amter, Bill Dunne Mill workers from Charlotte, and other leading members of the . Homestead, Cramerton, Belmont, |Central Committee of the Party, and Dallas, Monroe, Bessemer City and members of the National Executive Gastonia, North Carolina, from Committee of the League, will speak. Greenville, S. C., from Danville, Va., | The celebration will be opened by and from many other southern mill a banquet. A dance will follow. ‘centers have already elected their) The National Office of the Young ‘delegates. jCommunist League has received Reports from National Textile | wires from Boston and Philadelphia, Workers’ Union organizers in Geor- |stating that League delegations gia indicate that delegates from |will take part in the celebration. many large mills in that state will | attend the convention. | ‘ . : ,|the action of the workers of the en- The National Textile Workers’ tire night shift at the West Park Union yesterday reported ‘that @/<i1k mill in Scranton, Pa., in strik- mass meeting of Fall River milling against persecution for joining workers, at which Fred Beal was to|the N.T.W. The West Park strikers, speak, was prevented py police, who ted by the National Textile Workers’ closed the hall in which the meeting Union, are also demandi.~ higher was to be held. s wages. + An indication of the many strug — Seranton mill workers will gles to come, in which the milf work ‘ny deleg. led by the N.T.W,, was,|vention. send # lo the Nationni con , Chairmen Now to Su berv ise Lominadse Admits Er- ror or Poor Peasantry (Wireless By Inprecorr) , MOSOW, Nov. 20.—The “Pravda” | publishes a declaration signed by {Comrade Lominadse, admitting that |he and Shatzkin committted an er- |vor in proposing new organizational forms for the poor stratum of peas- antry, and especially in making the | Proposal before consulting the Cen- ; tral Committee of the Communist | Party. The Centrai et Labor Unions and the Supreme nomic Council, have issued joint jorders for the promotions of the jchairmen of the 100 factory coun- jcils to the post of Vice-Directors of | factories. SIBERIA TOILERS | GREET ILD HERE Hail Victims of Boss Terror Drive | From far-off Siberia today came |messages of greetings to the poli- \tical prisoners and working class fighters of America. The following cablegram, signed by the chairman of the district or- ganization of MOPR, Taitiisk, Kha- kassk national district, was received today in New York by the Interna- tional Labor Defense: “Dear Comrades in Combat: “From far away Siberia we send you our heartiest fraternal greet- ings. ‘follow your every revolutionary movemest. We see all the tortures which the bourgeoisie make you un- dergo, and your heroic fight with hated capital. We are sure that in ithis struggle the workers will come out victorious and that the day is jnot far-off when tyranny will re- iceive its sentence of death from the jworkers of the whole world. “We are on the eve of the 12th anniversary of our*triumph, of the \12th anniversary of the victory of |October, and we are sure that a uni- iversal October is to come. This fes- tival we celebrate in peace. Our in- dustry and agriculture grow from (Continued on Page Two) PUSH FIGHT ON HAT LOCK-OUT Chicago Left Wing Fights Zaritsky | CHICAG Nov. 20.—The fight on the millinery bosses and the re- ‘actionary Zaritsky clique of the Cap Union, a fight being led by the Need- ‘le Trades Workers Industrial Union, is being broadened. The industrial Union has called a Council of the So- | We, members of the MOPR, | WORRIES HOOVER CASE: NOW TO ANDBIG BANKERS SAVE ACCORSI! Equipment Plan Shows. ILD Calls Nation-Wide Drastic 50% Cut Conference to Aid for Future Italian Workers Offer Fake Programs File Woodlawn Appeal \Defendants Arrested (for Having Literature WILKES BARRE, Noy. 20. Charges of sedition against Jennie and Dave Gorman, each held under 00 bail by Wilkes Barre authori- in the Anthracite region, Penn- sylvania, were quashed today, at- torneys for the International Labor Defense announced. Both had gone on hunger strike in protest when | they were arrested. They were held under heavy bail }since August 1, when they were | jailed for distributing leaflets to j; coal miners calling for demonstra- tions against imeprialist war and for defense of the Soviet Union. ‘Crisis Meetings Show Imperialists Rule WASHINGTON, Nov. 20. — {Hoover will meet with the |finance imperialists, the Wall Street |bankers. This is the second step in the economic crisis conferences. Yesterd the ‘vailorad bosses |ployment on a mass scale was be- coming a fact. In an interview with | capitalist press correspondents, Hoover said that one of the main jobjects of his conference was to combat the specter of unemploy- ment by pepping up industry. The railroad executives refused to take any steps. They passed the ‘buck to other organizations. Rather| Jennie Gorman was first arrested jthan increase expenditures for the | and when her husband came to in- {coming year the best estimate they | quire at the police station, he, too, could make was a reduction cf 50|was clapped in prison. Both were per cent. |held incommunicado for several The capitalist press reports that | days. |the railroads promised to spend} The two then /$1,000,000,000 during the coming) strike in protest. | went on hunger The police au- year to help stem the economic | thorities promised them freedom if jerash. In “normal” times, they | they would promise to leave the re- {spend $1,250,000,000 for material gion. The two workers refused. | Thereupon they were warned by | the chief of police that he would send them up for sedition. The International Labor Defense, and supplies, and $750;000,000 for capital investment. During the present depression ef- | {forts are being made by the Inter- | jstate Commerce Commission to | (Continued on Page Three) Continued on Page Three) Harlem Tenants League Calls for Rent Strike Against Ratse Smug Tammany officials of New }-clerks stated yesterday that there | York announced today that they ‘are 2,000 dispossess proceedings a | would not appeal the rent law rul- | month, and now they expect at least ing of the state supreme court. The | 3,500. dispossessed tenant has no money} Miss Anna Craig, attorney for a for an appeal. Scores of Negro | number of Bronx tenants stated tenants went to the Seventh Dis-| yesterday that a large number of trict Municipal court, 320 W. 125th | notices of rent increases had already St., to ask that something be done. | been sent out by the landlords. Clerks of the court told them t Immediate struggle against the | shut up and go home, and pay what- | raising of rents in the working class (Continued on Page Two) “LIBERALS” BAR NEGRO SPEAKER |no redress in that court. These Harlem Negro Toilers'| |Organize “Nat Turner” Labor Defense Branch The memory of Nat Turner, heroic | leader of the Negro slave revolt in) 1831, has been honored by the Har- | lem Negro workers who have or-| ganized the Nat Turner Branch of | the International Labor Defense {with an initial membership of about 30. The branch will conduct an ac- tive recruiting campaign among the Negroes of Harlem. Turner, who white slave-holders Nov. 11, “Socialist” Silently Approves Action WASHINGTON, Nov. 20.—How the so-called liberals, the “socialists” and the A. F. of L. misleaders are aiding the bosses in spreading race prejudice is revealed in the action of executed by the 1831 through its persistent attempts, suc- | ever the landlord asks—they have | quarters of New York City will be} COMMUNIST CEC ’\the George Washington University millinery bosses have locked-out the | “2° ! th 2 i Negrd masses, -Liberal Club in refusing to accept as crs of the oppressed Negro massc* {the invited speaker from the Inter- workers who refused to sign a yel-| ialdtionist; fought low-dog agreement which would pre-|He Was # true revolutionist, Sought national Labor Defense, Rothschild vent them from belonging to a union. |without compromise and died brave- | ryancis, Negro editor, who has been ) touring the country for the I.L.D. ais ‘ lly without a murmur on his lips. The militant women needle trades aed ; In this discrimination the club re- i a8 New branches of the International |workers will make plans to aid in|tabor Defense are being organized | |the fight on the millinery bosses and throughout the New York District ceived the tacit approval of two “so- the Zaritsky clique, at a mass meet: |as part of the intensive campaign to |Cialist” and A. F, of L. leaders pre- ing of all progressive working wom-| secure 8,000 new members in this Sent. In the face of protest from jen of Chicago, called by the Wom- district by Jan. 1. Arrangements |Members of the Communist Party jens’ Committee of the Joint Coun-|are also being made for the District Present when it was learned that icil of the Needle Trades Workers Conference, to be held Dec. 15 at the club would not let Francis speak, \Industrial Union, for Sunday, De-|19 a. m. in Irving Plaza, 15th St. Lawrence Todd, a prominent “social- jcember 1, at 3 p. m., at Peoples Au-| and Irving Place. ist” and McGrady, notorious labor strike in all the shops where the |+akes his place beside the great lead Offer to Help Kill | Strikers MARION, N. C., Nov. 20.—The American Legion post here, made up of business men and those im- mediately under their influence, has | offered its aid to Sheriff Adkins if ; he should get orders to kill some | more strikers. Adkins led about 20 | Marion Manufacturing Co. thugs | (who had been made deputy shi iffs) when they killed six pickets and wounded 20 more before the gates of the mill. The trial of four ikers and A. Hoffman, United Textile Workers Union organizer, continues before Judge Fowler, on charges of ‘rebel- lion, insurrection and rioting.” Ad- kins is not being tried for anything. Hoffman Innocent. The evidence given against Hoff- man proves conclusively that this is a one hundred percent frame-up lon him. Hoffman urged the strik- ers to picket with bibles, not guns, {made them put a scab’s furniture |back in his house, told them not to do like the Communists at Gastonia, where a police chief was shot while leading a murderous raid on the strikers’ tent colony, and sold out the strike at the first opportunity. The “evidence” of his “rebellion” consists of such expressions as this, which he is alleged to have used: “We want you strikers to give the boss men hell. If we can scare them into leaving, the others will join the union”; “Somebody is go- ing to the chain gang over this, if |they are scared they had better pull jout”; “If you have to steal, steal from the non-union, and borrow from the union.” The judge has al- ready stated that most of this testi- mony seems to have little to do with the charge of rebellion. The state finished its case today. R, F. Barnes, a county official, tes- tified he heard Hoffman tell the strikers, “The Marion mill can’t open its gates for hell or high water.” E. J. Ross, grocery clerk, corroborated this, and said Hoffman told the strikers to obey the law scrupulously. SPREAD BUILDING SERVICE STRIKE Walkout-in Bronx; Is Reply to Betrayers | { Engineers and firemen in several Bronx apartment houses have walked out in response to the joint call of the Window Cleaners’ Protec- tive Union, Local 8, and the Amal- gamated Building Service Workers’ Industriai Union. The two unions are conducting a drive to organize |the building service: workers, with higher wages and the five-day, 40- hour week as the chief demands, The first house to go on strike |was the so-called co-operative | apartment house run by the Jewish National Workers’ Alliance, an or- ganization of Zionists an ocial- ists.” The workers answered the | strike call 100 per cent with the ex- ception of the superintendent, and active picketing is taking place. The Jewish National Workers Al- Hance promptly called upon Local (Continued on Page Two) Dental Mechanics Vote at Strike Meet Tonight meeting called by the Dental Labor- atory ‘Workers Union at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Pl. VOTES TO STRIKE BOSSES WHO REJECT THE DEMANDS Enthusiastic Gathering from Two Counties Plans Quick Action Against Check-Off N. M. U. Invites All Miners to Local Meetings on Grievances; Strikers Will March call through to bring ir 20.—Three |back to their locals these special meeting ZEIGLER, Il, Nov. hundred miners, assembled at Lib- erty Hall here in the Franklin and |to them every member of the N. M Williamson counties sub-district con-|U. and its sympathizers, as well a ference of the National Miners’|rank and file miners who still sup Union, voted with enthusiasm to/port either the Lewis or Fishwich start an offensive to win the de- |factions in the U. M. W. A., anc mands of the Belleville special dis- | there take up the al grievance: trict convention called by the N. against the companies M. U. Strike for Demands. | Mass delegations from Zeigler, W. These meetings will send commit Frankfort, Valier, Sesser, Coella,/tees to serve notice on the com {Buckner Benton Royalton, Christo- panies that the demands must be |pher, Herrin, Marion and Orient granted and the ch ff stopped {with fraternal delegates from S: line county mines and the Women’s |be called at the mine, which the Auxiliary of Eldorado, after a full!National Miners Union will spread discu nm, voted unanimously to go|to a sections of Illinois, and into adjoining districts. Once a strike ; Starts at a mine, the strikers will march to the next mine, calling on | REFUTES WATT If a company refuses a strike will the miners to come on out and join the struggle. eanwhile the sub: district and district offices will be notified so that all N. M. U. locals can get into the battle. The immediate purpose of the Miners Showing How Zeigler conference was to mobilix the forces and popularize the poli cies of the National Miners’ Union among the broad masses of the min- ers in this region, to Run Own Union STAUNTON, Ill., Nov. 20.—At a jmeeting of the N.M.U. local 535) here all decisions of the Belleville} (Coal miner after coal miner took Convention and Staunton Sub-dis- | the floor urging immediate strike trict Conference were adopted by an | and calling for solidarity within the overwhelming majority, including ranks. Conditions in the mines were the resolution repudiating Watt and |forcefully exposed by the miner: his splitting policy at the N.M.W.| who are revolting and beginning ar | Belleville Convention, and they also open fight against the coal opera endorsed the letter against Watt’s tors and their agents. The intensifi- disrupting policies sent out by the | cation of the speed-up, the introduc- | District Grievance Board. Morgan, | tion of more and faster mechanical |the leader of the Watt faction in devices, the abuses of the miners on | that local, is completely isolated and | these machitivs, lowering of wages |has no support from the rank and indirectly, no pay for dead work. |file any more. |the docking system, the penalty Meeting Saturday. clause, the bug lights, impossibility At the same meeting it was de-|of earning a living on the division cided to call a mass meeting for|of work, the operators’ refusal t: |Saturday, Nov. 23, at Kollar Hall, |recognize pit-committees, and score lat 7 p. m. at which Gerry Allard, | of other abuses and rotten condition young fighting miner of West |imposed by the bosses came under Frankfort and Bill Gebert wil! | fire of the rank and file miners. speak, Gebert will speak in Polish.| Miners pointed out that condi The membership in Staunton and | tions are worse than ever prevailec the Illinois members of the N.M.U.|in Illinois before. There is prac- ‘point with pride to the fact that tically no pay for dead work. Min- this local is rank and file controlled }ers have to dig post holes and take and that to the N.M.U. goes the (Continued on Page Three) ‘honor of repudiating its highest of- — |ficial, the national president, on the floor of a convention by the rank and file membership when he tried to carry out a policy against the interests of the miners. They Mean Business. WorkingWomen ane SUGAR TARIFF ‘i AnniversaryTomorrow Protect Bloody Rule of Machado in Cuba A living newspaper, monologues by Victor Pecker, actor and ente' tainer, speeches by M. J. Olgin, edi- WASHINGTON, No 20° —- |ditorium, 2457 West Chicago Ave. | The Joint Council of the Needle | Trades Workers Industrial Union of (Continued on Page Three) misleader and a member of the A.| The meeting is called by the Dental F. of L. executive committee, both | Laboratory Workers Union. present as speakers, refused not only to cancel their engagement but NEWARK FOOD STRIKE. also refused to make any protest.) NEWARK, N. J., Nov. 20. — Four On presenting his credentials to | hundred produce truck drivers struck the secretary of the Liberal Club, |here today because they were being Francis was told that the club did | forced to load trucks after the truck Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! Southern Workers Must Have *2',x= vt i os a Daily, Says N.T.W. President” ccs ois | The National Office of the Inter- ‘d if . national Labor’ Defense yesterday Reid Tells What Fighting Paper Means t Leaksville Strikers @ denounced that action of the Liberal Club of George Washington Univer- | sity in refusing to permit Rothschild Francis to address a meeting. It was You have heard the plea of W. E. Gibson, one of the 200 striking "nounced that the 1. L. D. locals workers at the Leaksville, N. C., Woolen Mill, that the Daily Worker 1" Washington and New York would he rushed to the Leaksville strikers immediately. hold protest meetings against this Now listen to what Jim Reid, president of the National Textile %¢t of racial discrimination in the Workers Union, and leader of the Leaksville strike, has to say about Very near future, the necessity of the Daily Worker being rushed to the Southern mill workers. “The Leaksville workers’ strike is only a hint of the big struggles ‘o come in the Southern mill sections under NTW leadership. “The Leaksville workers had their National Textile Workers Union local organized in perfect order, all ready for the struggle against low wages and the speedup system, quite some time ago. “The work of organizing the Leaksville workers was started by red Beal early this year. fense, “Beal it was who introduced the Daily Worker to the Leaksville ° bd * ‘ vorkers, “Ever since they saw their first copies of the Daily Worker they have heen asking to get it regularly, for they recognize it as their ayn paper, AID GASTONIA SEVEN. CHICAGO, Nov. 20.—A number »f girls from the millinery workers section of the Needle Trades Work- ers Industrial Union have contrib. “he Gastonia events occurred. (Continucd on Page they read in the mill bosses” Three) 'day, Nov. 16, rm loaders had gone out for higher wag- es. They have tied up $2,000,000 worth of food. More sent to the Central yards, tor of the Freiheit, and other work- ing class leaders, music and home- made refreshments will be among entertainment features at the sixth anniversary celebration of the United Council of Working Women tomor- row night at 8:30 in Stuyvesant Ca- sino, Second Ave. and Ninth St. Sylvia Bleeker, a leader of the The question of a general strike millinery workers’ struggles, will the National City iwill be voted on tonight by New speak for the Women’s Department 000 to lobbyists who are in special York dental mechanics at a strike of the New York District of the | favor with Hoover senators to get Communist Party. Other entertainers will be Ida Tulman, elocutionist, and I. Gusan- kin, violinist. Tickets at 50 cents are on sale at the Council office, 799 Broadway, Room 535. | WOMEN FUNCTIONARIES MEET. I. Amter, New York District Or- genizer, will address the Women’s Functionaries’ conference 1 p. m., Saturday, at 2 Union Square. This corference is called to discuss police are being the war danger, membership drive, jailed R. R. of N. J.| “Working Woman,” delegate conferences, building of Mine Faker’s Idea of Battle Is to Sell Out at Conterence protect bloody puppet in Cuba, Governor Machado, the National City Bank admitted “donating” $10,- 0v0 to sugar tariff lobbyists National City Bank is the largest imperialist power in an investment of It ,000,000. Interests has closely associated with Bank paid $ the righ tariff. A resolution is being circulated among members of the Foreign Re- lations Committee for intervention in Cuba. The authors of the resolution have not been revealed, but it un- doubtedly was the work of the “in- surgeni.” senators to bluff action in favor of the rich sugar beet farm. ers in this country, Machado has been very loyal to thing done by them in the his imperialist masters. He has over i workers, and | of militants, including Julio } editor of Cuba Libre. Another Ford Plant Closes; 800 Workers Thrown Out in Colo. DENVER Cole., Nov. 20. —The ‘arrington Tells of Lewis’ Betrayals, Omits "0"! «sembly plant was closed to- His Own; Big Graft Goes On in U. M. W. A. Over 800 workers were thrown out on'the streets. Emory Afton, “From a prideful, militant union|Back in the Illinois district again, ‘!¢ manager of the plant, announcer fficered by prideful, militant men having been readmitted by Fishwick, {!#t there will be an indefinite shut Wage agreements to be had .. .” Farrington is perfectly serious. | ing what he knows about Lewis. Gontinued on Page Three) | ) uted $25 to the Gastonia Defense with the guts and the ability to/now its president, as soon as the 0W?: drive of the International Labor De “eet the operators in joint confer- split with Lewis developed to a cer- ence and battle them for the best tain point, Farrington is busy tell- The closing down of production due to a saturation of the et. ‘This is one in a series of ms The Followers of Nature, a hik- Says ex-president Farrington of the He doesn’t say much about his own ™&ny utomobile| plant stoppages ing club, gave $104 to the Interna. Illinois District of the United Mine |betrayals. He doesn’t mention the ®"4 ives the lie to Hoover's opti- tional Labor Defense for Gastonia Workers of America, speaking of fact that once when he was battling '!Sti¢ ‘leclarations Defense, the proceeds of a banquet the decline and fall of the U.M.W.A. | militantly—at the conference table. held at the Unity Cooperative, Satur. |nder International President Lewis. |not leading the fight in the field Ee Build Up the the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises!