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HAYLY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUBSUAY, DECEMBER 24, 1929 rage Ines WORKERS’ CORRESPONDENCE --- FROM THE SHOPS Write to the Daily Worker, 26 Union Square, New York, About Conditions in Your Shop. Workers! This Is Your Paper! an Trade Union Congress !mPctialist Powers Indi "operate Power. (AFRICAN NEGRO Joins Pan-Pacific Movement, Unite Against USSR. PEVOLT RISING 7 ae : ’ WASHINGTON, Dec. 23.—The| s remendous Swing of Masses to Left Forces Right Wing fight for naval armaments between P Retreat; But Danger of Reactionary Maneuver Exists, {Japanese and United States im- Says General Secretary Browder of P.P.T.U.S.; perialism, which the capitalist press ig . |tries to palm off as “friendly dis- WV SOME EXAMPLES OF “PROS- ERITY” FOR PHILA, WORKERS (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (By Mail) —An example of the “prosperity” 2 DAILY WORKER GRO WORKERS. r,Correspondent) ) (By Mail).—En- ) SPREADS TE Fight Boss Thugs; j*swon (By a Wor { x OVER CONTINENT! Build NTW in South eee eee ae Real Left Must Lead \eussions” continued yesterday in| the Philadelphia worke: e enjoy- ey the discussions between Stimson |],9 ‘9 Give ing: The Warner o., building ma- and one is a donation from myself. ‘The swift political development {ed to an important leading position |and the Japanese delegation. oks to U. S. to Give ‘terials, have shut down _ their Sea cs ae Beene of the working class of India, indi-|of the congress. The conversations were kept se-/ Aid and Guidance _ [Bridesburg Yards completely, throw- CHARLOTTE, N. C. fiat. gave chickeha to aut earner cated by the enormous spread of| “Should this report prove correct, |cret. The information given out by ing about 350 yard men, mixers, event ak are starving and on top of this and Fellow Work- |Republic Steel Co, cut the wag strike movements and mass demon- |it must be taken as a sign of tre-| Stimson was in line with the Hoover | vers out of By WM. WILSON. be arge men and truck dr ar Comrades The ever ons The Negro workers are the first strations against British imperial-}mendous movement of the masses to | “peace” propaganda which is aimed | The flame of colonial revolt has work. Thi ecjalizes in Seven must hit the cold ism, is registering a new stride for-|the left, struggling courageously |to cover war preparations. reached Africa. The inflammable ;cement and gra This reflects} A few words from the South and share to woe the working: go out and I have given them The ward if the veport be true that the |against the right-wing trade union | ‘4s material of the ruthlessly oppressed |the depression in building in Phila- the Charlotte and Gastonia area. if the working cla*s | Daily Worker for a week free. We All-India Trade Union Congress has | officialdom hitherto in control of the, LONDON, Dec. 23.— Admiral| African Negroes has been touched delphia, The work is great considering the | their id ahowsthat they, waul eo ony, y sympathizers to the affiliated to the Pan-Pacific Trade All-Indian Trade Union Congress, | Beatty in the House of Lords de-|and the conflagration bids fair to “The Edwin H, Titler Co, the long ed on our fellow /t9 join shoulder to shoulder and | 7OVe™ : ome Bee ee Union Seeretariat. who work hand in hand with the/clared that British imperialism has |sweep the whole continent. largest cordage works in Philadel- | worker ids of the bosses’ | fight a winning battle ithe 2, and ask for The Daily Wore Last year the congress was still |League of Nations, British imperial- |no intention of even discussing “dis-| The British imperialist press of phia and making every conceivable | gangsters which included most all i chele' eocoriment andigtial| Ce hey ee oe ae as dominated by the Right Wing, which |ism and the native capitalist class. |armament.” Beatty said that the|course, sees in this a “Moscow plot” kind of rope and cable, employing higher ups bosses and petty and | , 3efore I close I am going to say that if we spread The Daily W President wished to harness the Indian prole-| “Under no conditions must there | British imperialists need a vast|against the Empire. The London normally 1,000 men, is now working |some that never were no good for L. and his | t># The tariat to the international of treach- | be any illusions of a change of heart | navy to keep the colonial masses in | papers speak of the unrest as com-| on half time—C. R. 4anything except to peddle booze to it is easy to build the mov ery at Amsterdam and to the “La-|of these right-wing and so-éalled |slavery. — |ing from organizations in touch with — the bosses and do their dirty work. told me that they | rae bor Office” of the League of Na- | “left” bureaucrats. For the, the de-| Les laine |the Communist Party and “instruct- We call them bums, but the bosses tORaaC RRC One: A ce = ‘ tions. But even then the tide of |eision of the congress, if true, is) BERLIN, Dec. 23.—Great Britain |ed by the Communist International.” TUUL EXPOSES have been using them in their o "At sears in Concord HOW ‘TWO WORKERS JOINED rvolt against the Right Wing was | nothing else but a maneuver to de- is proposing that the German capi-| The “Manchester Guardian” is a |ganized gang to break the N.T.W. ae Beant bine t6, Gime THEIR OWN PARTY so strong that, in spite of organiza-|ceive the masses now, in order to \talists send a representative to the forced to admit however that “a seri-| But they have just caused the union W.cate’south aud then (By a Worker Cor spondent) tional stupidities which prevented | betray them later. |London race-for-armaments confer- ous and wide-spread revolt” | to settle more solidly in the South, |the bosses knew that the time had|, CHICAGO (By Mail).—We are anything like true democratic ex-|. To the Masses With Policy! {ence in the capacity of an “observ- against virtual slavery. | AFL in SOUTH for the N.T.W. is not a Northern! come for them to put a fight, for lookin » for work. George pression of the yanks reaching or-|° “Therefore the truly wing and/er.” An effort is being made by the | Passport laws subjecting the na- wfiion but a union of all textile! thoy knew what kind of a union was | 8!£ have been doing so f ganizational form in the congress, | revolutionary elements in the Indian | big capitalist powers to draw Ger- tives in ae own country to every | workers that are willing to help | here SEHE AER don sie Mee ks oom ra the right wing could dare no more | Trade Union Congress must immedi-| many closer in the alliance against conceivable restriction by brutal) q ate Ss : , | build a | union that will gain bet- nat othe: N, it for more than five months be- than postpone all action on interna-|ately initiate a broad explanatory | the Soviet Union, which will be one |police, confining them to native Shows Fakers Aid BoSs jter wages and living conditions and au a i 2 ee is 2 labore r and I ae tional affiliation. campaign emphasizing the opposite | of the main objects at the Five- “compounds” at night in cities; poll | gel . ry keep these conditions after they have | }ocses fa uheaiecd ow that we led mech: , and he was laid It appears that since then, the |class position of both prsuparon all | Power meet on January 21. jtaxes forcing them off the land and Attack on Wor kers won, ha : h ae ason that We | off sooner than I, and he is s | Left Wing, upon the background of |fundamental. questions of the revo- | we finto mines where they are paid in| (continued from Page One) Like the Leaksville strike; coming | The bosses of Marion were anager tirn tg intensified oppression by the “labor” |lutionary and trade union move-| “ +499 |company money and known by a Gf opal 1 |after the raids and long sente TW. and not the U. something to do with it too. Fe Tan eae ea ak MERE. Tho tancera rant bo, bow | Cod ee Hae Leftist”, | number; the eolor bar keeping them |months ago. ‘Tho A. F. of L,, well /Att te, Talis ont Tone. conten Pepin ariant air ates We stop at the Merchandize Mart symbolized Ly the Meerat trials of (that the right wing and the fake|Leads- Traitor Attack jfrom schools, libraries and theatres; | called by the workers the America® 144. shut-down and’ a continued re pers ates a8 Building, the biggest of its kind un- 82 trade union leaders, has pro-|lefts have been-and remain the al-| ta \the Native Land Act which reduced Fakeration of Labor, is coming to BN Cinco orcheccline annie Gut sa mor Hie ronse der contract in the world. It isn’t \ gressed far rallying mass support |lies of imperialism and agents of UPON British Workers the area in which they are allowed |the South at the call of the bosses. og thine to go on but solidarity | the ai i oicmiaei halt Hnished yet) bat) tok so ee to the motion made at, last year’s | the native bourgeoisie. At the same | to live so that no possibility exists | Thelema Bins eure tha cunion and tele fallow, wvork-| unions) that the workers could wea |s0me fv dead and. scores: maucas aganda, following statement issued by Earl Browder, General Secretary of the .. PP.TU.S. “According to reports from India, as yet unconfirmed, the All-India Trade Union Congress voted to affi- liate to the Pan-Pacific Trade Union Secretariat, and that Bose, a Left-|lish their own actual leadership in | Wing trade union leader, was elect: the masses, and, above all, the inde- |pendent leadership of the mass j struggles against British imperial- ism, the native bourgeoisie and their agents in the trade union movement. | “The revolutionary elements must | now strive more than ever to estab- the trade unions.” Textile Union Board Is Planning Struggle strike starts. Workers International Relief and} \International Labor Defense branch- es in the area to be struck must be- gin even before the strike, if pos-| Miners Stop UMW The formation of | Which he is London dispatches remark tapon | of their making a living at farmin erally aid British The primitive agricultural meth- ing out of the worke compete with imperialist particularly the United States. This sort of treachery to the /lotted, The reservations are dense- | workers was agreed to by the union |ly packed with people and the con- ly | bureaucrats by voting for the re-|sequence is that disease takes fear- imperialism to | | sible use of the inadequate land al- out and speed- up systems. “The A. F. of L. shown as a bosses’ organ en it refuses to organize the | port, and the motion to adopt the|ful toll, with infant mortality ex-| Negro and white workers but in- report was made by none other than | tremely high. stead Jim-Crows the colored work- Here share cropping, quit rent,|ers, thus following the practice of dividing the ranks of | the fake “leftist,” A. J. Cook, who | jless than a year ago denounced that |and other feudal and semi-feudal | the bo: doing today as treach-|forms of tenacy are usgd by Dutch | the workers, ‘They do not want to but|and English landlords to increase stir up the race issue,’ says the {exploitation and profits. Unable to| Greensboro News of the 17th. This | meet the excessive demands of land- | is lords by labor, the desperate natives| A. F. of L. will continue its Jim erous. It is still treacherous, | Cook has adopted it. rivals, |ods used does not allow even the pos- the worsening of the vicious stretch- further plain- yery plain. This means that the from the work The workers will see the ‘ey nce between an organization controlled by agents of the bosses Hoffman, McMahon, year officials and fighting tions controlled by the workers themselves, like the N. T. W. U.N. BL U., ete. F. of L. besides helping the bosses to speed up the worke’ and break strikes, is active in help- ing to force the American workers i new world war for Wall The leadership of the A. F. of L. has not uttered one word Green, them or its product: “Well, George, you and I are both to be blamed for we are slackers from the Communist Party whose program is just what you said it is —everything to the, workers “they produce—but we like to hear radicals talk but we don’t help to achieve what they teach us.” And George and I are going up to the district office and ask to be ad- mitted into the only Party that is cution” in the Soviet Union “is the | fighting for the workers only. And most cruel and bitter since the Ro-| When all the unemployed will do the man empire.” same the wheels of industry will religion in the Soviet Union, can be looked at from more than one angle. s meeting seems to have been called to counteract the effect of the big pow-pow h in Rome, where the Pope “beatified” a few hundred Catholics who wer illed by these hypocritical protestants in Crom- well’s t Thi d of takes the edge off Viscount Brentford’s lying remark that the supposed “religious pers | congress to affiliate to the P.P.T. | time, a most resolute offensive mus ; ; Ree ence vetoes hte nownks the $e EO en cou eee | ftom rs. : : | U.S, the trade union center uniting |be carried on pertain culat, | the significance of a conference held | these outrages the “Guardian” eauti- the Trade Union Unity League and eaoine tail Beant Ge ina, Ne Ge aed choise etetie |, We tom machines working. Bless i all trade unions of the gigantic Pa |reformists ,for the liquidation of | between the representatives of “la-jously admits “might create dis-|its affiliated unions like. the Na ee Brute Lat tp all workers every. | which was like all the other strikes (ie, #98 cutting the lumber, con, cific basin in struggle primarily | their influence upon the masses. | Por” and capital, the “labor” angle | trust”! Pals Dexa Workers, Unibhy ee here and shouid’cause all workers handled by the (T.W ons | veying belts carrying the bricks and a anced: invari. “The participation of Bose, or any | Peing represented by the social! But even this picture is incom- National Miners Union, ete. The /MM0r Ot dheix support. ‘They have DEWEY MARTIN, | Mortar excavating machines were | Pan-Pacifie T.U.S, Comment. other true left winger, in the lead- | fascists of the British Trade Union |plete. The depth of poverty and ) 0-0 and their newspapers. are : humane ! WEY MARIS: _| digging out foundations. 3 niin ‘iniona were the chief eveat ling body of the Alldindia T.U.C.,| Congress, to consider the report of |misery in the country-side is in-|aviek to recognize this. The Greets | =O aa E I said to George, “We are not :| national group in the Pacifie area | presents an important problem to|the “joint imquiry” initiated by Lord |describable. Here the Negro natives |boro News for December 17. states eal, Clarence Miller and the others|Rritish Church Kicks |wanted, for here are the machines if which had remained until now iso-|the Left Wing. Considering the | Melchett (Mond). =. |phigieally. attached ‘to’ their. frites |4/-. if the tiflnance of the Comma-jof the Netional Terie Workers | 5 ¢ iet. Union Only 22,2 the ok” . Tot BAAR Idk Ven DagteieY Wedel pranent composition. of the conan This conference put the official |are herded upon reservations of the {nists ‘can be eliminated...” The Union and they will understand At SOVI nion Only|""«giy.” George says to me, “How Union Secretariat. The significance |and its leading body, such tici- | Seal of approval on the collabora- | poorest land, their native customs | Greensboro News plainly states which leadership is theirs. Hyp criti eal Prete is it that workers have brains enough antigen: festa Bia ouhenae” . i | fore i what the purpose of the coming of| “The workers will re how LLY pecritica evense ee tena ‘ Of the reported affiliation and the | pation is permissible only on condi-| tion between the trade union bur- |forcibly abolished and the people | What the purpose e coming ‘The workers will remember how é to build nice buildings but don't | perspectives it places before the|tion of the complete political inde-|c2uctats and the employers to ra-|subjected to the imperialist exploit- |the A. F. of L. into the South is— the A. F. of L. deserted them in! London dis telling of a fer- | think themselves" good enough to ) aerer ee vevolntionary elements of |pendence of the revolutionary. ele-| tionalize industry and speed up the jers’ demand for cheap native labor. |to fight against the militant unions |Gastonia in 1921, in Charlotte at! vent religious meeting there in pro-| live in them? And workers make j the Thdidn onfons {a'aeb forth inthe |ments, their most.active work.among | Workers, out the wages and gen-| Feudal Forms of Robbery. affiliated to the Ae a see 7 me time, in dozens of other test against alleged persecution of the machines but they don’t own 4 (Continued. from Page One) = |r” i are offered a “helping hand” by Crow policy and help to keep down) of protest 2’ the sending of ma ious freedom in the capital- | turn not for the bosses but for us to the council, removable at its pleas |“, thane ,.| Seabs; Penal iz e [usurious money-lenders, and once in| the Negro workers, the most oP- yines to. er the revolt of the| ist world means to persecute Bie the workers—A, S. eee OP oe tare, a apuioos. ond 0 Zeigler Mam eerssiuches the mative tenant is| pressed section of the working | Negro workers and peasants of than the orthodox kind of dope for css eid eal eeatt sina lala of the NU, and tepredentec| eigier an |bled to death. < : class. pote | Haiti. No! It approves of all these| that particular country if possible, | Soviet Union, is an equal right for i - tives of the WLR. and LED. uit | ; | In industry the “color bar” has Know It of Old. acts, because it follows slavishly|and to utterly outlaw atheist ex-|athest expression, because the athe- The council has elected an execu-|tives of the WIR. and T.1.D. must) (Continued from Page One) | barred solidarity between black and) “The workers of the South will the dictates of Wall Street and the|pressiom; as we see in the United |ists always win. So these hypo~ Bea poet Las sine seprapenianre mornedl |frame-up. In the Zeigler, local |white worker. The attitude of the remember their own bitter experi-| Wall Street gwernment in Wash-|States. What both the Catholics |crites don’t want real religion free- of the whole field, which is to hold monthly meetings, between the ses- sions of the national council, and to keep immediate contr@l of all cam- paigns, organization drives, strikes, ete. The chairman and secretary of the executive board and of the coun- cil are to carry on somewhat the same work as the president and sec- strike, slogans of a general nature are to be used during the prepara- tion of the strike, such as “Prepare for Struggle,” “Form Mill Commit- tees,’ “Form Committees of Action,” “Organize Workers’ Defence Com- mittees,” “Smash the Fakers of the In addition to the immediate local | some i i i years ago, the Farrington ad- | white workers toward the native and ences wth the A. F. of L. The demands of the workers ready to jministration of the U.M.W. District | colored workers has been one of open | workers will remember the sell-outs in Elizabethton, in Ware Shoals, in} of Illinois, sent in members of the | hostility. Certain menial jobs have |Ku Klux Klan and other gunmen |been “Kaffir work” and no white | Greenville, in Marion, and in other to raise disturbances and eject the | man would engage in them. Where | places where these misleaders had |Left Wing leadership of the local. employed at the same work, the | a chance to betray the workers. The |During the course of this struggle wages of the white worker were | workers will compare these m \the Farrington gangsters started often three or four times those paid ers to fighting leaders like F shooting, and one of them killed al the black worker. Negroes were : i ad- red ington. fs T. U. U. L. Will Organize. | “The T.U.U.L. will go on with | the work of organization of the {great masses of workers in the Seth, The T.U.U.L. will constantly that their |point out to the worke retary of the union under the old U.T.W.,” “Join the N.T.W.U," |Left Winger. |rigidly excluded from trade unions ee ie Paes re ky Sea constitution. The chairman is James| All parts of the union and all pos-|_ No attempt was made by the of white workers. rapidly), is the Communist Party.) Gree % We atuetes (ti "Hoft- P. Reid, formerly president of the union, and a veteran of the Law- rence strike, the Textile Mills Com- mittee and many other struggles | sible sections of the labor movement, courts to punish the murderer, but through the T.U.U.L. and other | several of the Left Wing were | of the native is a living death. There |jst) is aware of this and hence a agencies, shall be drawn into the (charged with murder and framed up, | js no need to look to Moscow to find | whole system of police terror, fas- support of the strike, and support of j with legal representatives of the |the cause of unrest. While there is|cism and military repression is be- Such is the backgéround. The life;The Hertoz government (National- | mans, especia”y the Muste type, for they use the most deceptive phrases and the biggest users of fake fight and protestants complain of in the ! dom at all. SEND GREETINGS TO the WORKERS IN THE in between and since. The secretary |the strike shall be made a part of; U.M.W. aiding the prosecution. | friction Ew bourawoid poll: {3 . Silat ee en ty ac, |Darcccs but in deed are the biggest | PAiie Gescain Clatanes Willer, who lite cayular werk of all N/T W. locate |Ameng. others, Corblahley was sen {tise Re aE tha ean ante oe ee is ne | was secretary of the convention, and|in other parts of the country. All|tenced to prison. Paroled in ac-|of the Dutch farmers and the South ae th eee gon haat eee “The 7.U.U.L. will strive to un iavorle'bf the “Gastonia” defendants, |the beat élements among the workers |cordance with the law he flung him-|A¢rican party of the colonial bourg-|tancitle nrocf of the correctness of (t2C, Tank and file workers of the stiiteticed’ to 20. yeara and out on|in the stenck mills must be drawn self back into the strogele, becom-|eoisie and the imperialist Chamber \ths Communist International ness OF | A. F. of L, throug. thi T. U. U. L, ponds during the appeal of his case. |into leading politions in th li National Miners |o¢ Mi HE RASBAC Aa ouar the Communist International estima-| wien tho workers in the unions af i ppea ase. | i Pi e struggle. |ing a leader of the National of Mines, this friction is overshad- tion of growing colonial struggle. | at officers of ne ae anes | Picketing and Self-Defense. Union. This is now inesipisted by | owed by the conflict between the na- |The upsurge i bd prondinee to Sears | filiated thy T.U.U.L. .nd the 0 a provision o: ie new constitu- aie i \the state authorities as “violation | tiy, i ttalist class AG GP propa’. Fh ne Ma od + orkers ‘in one common : Ae ‘ : tion, cease drawing pay when a ae eee ee the pee of parole.’ They will now try A paces ea ich ana lect ot me dark Senp nee It! front against the bosses and the A special printing of the Sixth Anniversary strike is on in their district, and picketing, in Which vietimize him by sending him back vas OT Boi Mercia clone ; the Issor move-| ‘Edition of the Daily Worker, in the Russian a ‘ get necessary expenses only. Other members of the executive board are Fred Beal, Lawrence, New Bedford and Gastonia; Pitta, New Bedford; D. Martin, South; J. Rappaport, N. Y.; E. Mendez (a woman worker), New Bedford; M. Russak, Allentown; Summe, South; Burlak, Scranton; E, Totherow, South and Youth; Lieb, Paterson; Salzberg, Paterson. Protest Strike. _The convention voted for a gen- eral one-day strike if the North Carolina supreme court upholds the class verdict of the Charlotte trial court in the Gastonia case. Thou- sands of workers will shut down the mills that day to protest against the railroading to prison for terms up to 20:years of the seven workers sentenced because Gastonia strikers defended their tent colony from a murderous raid of mill-boss hire- lings, led by the Gastonia chief of Police last April. But wide-spread strikes will take place for economic demands. The question of a great silk strike is the first order of business in the executive board meeting today. The convention itself adopted a resolution summing up the lessons learned so far from the strikes led by the N. T. W. The resolution, a guiding principal for the board in its present - deliberations, emphasizes the need of preparatory organization and prop- It points out that strikes should be led by rank and file strike committees, elected by organized and unorganized workers in the mills, end this includes the rank and file breaking concerns as the United Textile Workers Union, Associated Silk Workers, etc, But no official participation in the strike commit- tees is allowed to the bureaucrats of those unions. The strike committee is a united front from below. : shall begin, vie collections ae mill gates, ctc., and among workers of young and old, women and men, and \the strikers’ families particularly, at times on especially important mills, or around particular areas. The workers must know the dan- gers of gangsterism by the bosses, and be prepared to defend their right to picket against mill owners’ thugs and their hired police. The resolution on strike strategy points out that the N.T.W. demands particularly in the South; disarming of the terrorist, black hundred bands, the right of the workers to organize and arm for defense, and to defend themselves against mill bosses’ ter- rorists; the right to organize, to strike and to picket; and the right to free speech and free agsemblage. Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. British Get Contract in Greece Against US Dispatehes from London give jub- ilant statements of the British at having gotten a $30,000,000 reclama- tion contract from the Greek govern- ment “in the face of keen competi- tion from American contractors.” The British firm of Henry Boot and Sons of Sheffield, get the con- Be oes, | wants, reagtlh aerike. (rere to drain the plains of Thessaly and Epirus, building a seven-mile tunnel to carry water through the mountains. The contract, of course, indicates that Greece has no inten- tion of breaking away from Britain, to which it has long been subject as nearly a semi-colonial country. GREET YOUR PAPER. Sixth Anniversary of The Daily Worker. Send " greetings from as well as sympathizers in other | lines of work, take part. The tactics | f; of picketing are to be suited to the |¢ting in Taylorville mines were re- occasion, but all picketing is in the |leased today on their own recog-! nature of a demonstration of | nizance. 0 strength, with special concentration | tested today for picketing. leity. \stecl, has caused a sharp decline in) to prison. i} j | A hundred and ten of those ar- rested during early days of the pick- | the native masses. |join the Communist Party and schoo! “Only the Communist Party!” (themselves in practical task The only organization with a pro- ership, fitting thems gram for solution of the native prob- | guidance to the revolutionary mas: lem and the problem of the poor jof Africa. Long live the African whites (whose numbers under capi- |revolution, a part of the world revo- talist rationalization is increasing !lution, Daily But four more were ar-| ee Need Funds. | “Scores of families are hungry | and practically destitute. You must act quick.” This telegram, signed by Pat) Toohey, William Boyce and Free- | man Thompson, three of the leaders of the National Miners Union, was | received yesterday by the National | Office of the Workers International Relief. Ludwig Landy, executive secretary of the W.LR., has issued | a call to the entire American work- | ing class to reply to this telegram at once. Rush all funds for the re- | lief of the Illinois miners to the Na-_ tional Office of the W.LR., 949_ Broadway, Room 512, New York} City. | aie PITTSBURGH, Pa., Dec. 23—A_ large number of mine delegates are | expected to attend the district con-| vention of the Trade Union Unity League of Western Pennsylvania to | be held in this city Saturday, Janu- ary 4, at 2 o’clock, at the McGeah } Building, 607 Webster Ave., this | The intense rationalization and) speed-up, particularly in coal and | ’ tcl, has caused a sharp decline, NAOHM BENDITSKY, Cellist uction and is alarmingly in- R eels thé Aeiny of anemployment, DORSHA, Interpretive Dancer the official call for convention, signed by John Kaspar, district organizer of the T.U.U.L. declares. | Representation to the convention is based on one delegate to every five members. The convention will take up the following major problems: Organization of the unorganized; | fight against speed-up; building the T.U.U.L. in this district. For further 155th Street and Eighth Avenue. Prices information, write to Trade Union Unity League, Room 250, 119 Ied- 5. Pittsburgh, Pa, Sixth Anniversary Celebration CONDUCTORLESS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA among other numbers will play “STENKA RAZIN” by Alexander GLAZOUNOW TAYLOR GORDON, Noted Baritone in a group of Negro songs ROCKLAND PALACE Saturday Evening, January /ith ment, from Green to Muste. “The T.U.U.L. will not stop its tion work until the south- e workers ore organ sto s struggle and until the workers have ver katter-c: litions and freedom.” : 75c, $1.00 and $1.50 language, containing greetings from all work- ers and organizations will be sent to the work- ers in the Soviet Union congratulating them upon the success of their Five Year Plan, an- nouncing to them that we are mobilizing to defend the Soviet Union against imperialist attack. THOUSANDS OF STEEL WORKERS THOUSANDS OF MINERS THOUSANDS OF TEXTILE, AUTO AND OTHER WORKERS ALL WORKERS ORGANIZATIONS ALL PARTY UNITS AND DISTRICTS ALL PARTY PAPERS AND MEMBERS SHOULD GREET THE FIRST WORKERS FATHERLAND AND HELP BUILD AND PROTECT IT! by making the Daily Worker the mass organ of workers in all industries in United States. Greeting lists for organizations and for the collection of greetings from workers now ready. Send for a supply immediately, GIVE CONSIDERATION TO THIS TASK AS PAR’ OF THE PARTY RECRUITING AND DAILY © WORKER BUILDING DRIVE! ; DAILY WORKERR 26 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK