The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 25, 1929, Page 3

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3 = ee se 2 -@ * | ee NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1929 Page Three Soviet Socialist, Advance a ‘Textile Youth Convene{ WORKERS’ CORRESPONDENCE -- FROM THE SH OPS “PRAVDA* GIVES Deadly Blow to Capitalism yew or iypiaN The Electric Plow on Soviet Farms Along With Tractors; Capitalist Experts Admit Five Year Plan Danger Signal to World Capitalism; Tasks of Whole Five Years Being Finished Before Time by Creative Energy of Masses MOSCOW (By Mail).—The fol- lowing is a summary of the report on the Five-Year Plan, its accom- plishments and prospects, as given before the Central Executive Com- mittee of the Soviet Union by Com- rade Krshishanovski: “Our Five-Year Pla.. meets with complete understanding and enthu- siasm amongst the workers of Eu- rope and the United States, not to speak of our own workers. other hand, the bourgeois econo- mists and the social democrats are faced with a riddle. They utterly fail to understand what is happening in our country of the proletarian dictatorship, “The present period is an epoch of proletarian revolutionary crea- tion which has no equal in the his- tory of the world. It is an epoch which is not only decisive for the Soviet Union, but for the whole world. Danger Signal to Capitalism. “Progressive bourgeois econo- mists who have grasped with dif- ficulty the meaning of our efforts declare that if our Five Year Plan is carried out to the extent of 75 per cent then this will be a danger signal for the capitalist world. We are not satisfied with carrying out our plan 100 per cent, not to speak of 75 per cent, and we are exceeding our own achievements everywhere. “In the second year of our plan we will have fulfilled many of those tasks which actually belonged to the third year of the plan, With regard to agriculture we are already reaching the figures contained in the fourth and even the fifth year of the plan. “A fundamental socialist trans- formation is already taking place in agriculture. Instead of the planned 3,000,000 peasant farms in the collective undertakings, we al- ready have 5,000,000 peasant units in the collectives in the R.S.F.S.R. alone and 178 connected territories have been collectivised. The number of soviet farms totals approximately 2,000, Capitalism Can’t Do It. “The national jincome for 1929-30 will rise by 20 per cent, a thing un- paralleled in the history of labor. Our efforts have made such a deep impression upon progressive cap- italist economists that there is even talk of a capitalist five-year plan. The Japanese Politician Viscount Goto, who visited me, declared: “You know I must confess that although I have travelled all over Europe this is the only corner I have found where work for human- ity, as a whole, is being carried on. I would like to create such an insti- tution for planned economy for Ja- pan, but I am afraid that is impos- sible owing to the relations of the political parties in Japan and the general economic system there. “Figures which seemed utopian even to some of us are now becom- ing hard reality. Many of us doubted whether the Five-Year Plan could give us 80 milliard rubles, but the year 1929-30 alone will give us 17 milliard rubles, and of this 12 milliards will be expended again for agriculture, about 4 milliards for cultural work and only 1.7 milliards for administrative expenditure and the defense of the country. Electric Plow at Work. “This year we will produce 500,000 k.w. hours of energy in our over- land stations, We are carrying out Lenin’s plan of the electric plough. This year the electric plough will commence work side by side with MacDonald to Plan Imperialist Role (Continued from Page One) England and America, heralded as negotiations for peace by all the apologists of capitalism, and par- ticularly by the socialist party, are nothing but breathing-spell ‘negotia- tions for the purpose of better prep- arations for a bloody fight. to the finish between the two imperialist rivals, While the fear of losing the domin- ions, the spectre of colonial revolts, the pressure of a financial and econ- omic crisis has forced England to avoid an immediate conflict with its American rival and to grant it naval parity with itself, neither the British capitalists nor their parliamentary agent MacDonald has the slightest intention of going a step beyond, and of allowing supremacy to pass to America. . .aacDonald merely expressed the nyietion of every British imper- ialist when he stated that England's navy was England itself and that the sea was its security. The econ- omie and political struggle between England and America at the naval sonference will take the form of a technical struggle, in which the fight over tonnage, over the calibre of guns and the speed of vessels is only a technical expression of the oasic struggles for the control of sea routes, of sources of raw mater- ‘als and of markets for the sale of xommodities and the export of capi- ial. MacDonald will make every effort 0 get the greatest advantage for 3ritish imperialism from the latest Jevelopments in technique. , The British capitalists have nothing to ‘ear from MacDonald ‘in this respect. de has served them well in the past, ind he will not betrdy them in the Jnited States in the future, On the the tractor in the collective district of Kashira. “The existing electrical stations are receiving new equipment; new stations are being built on the Volga, and the electrical backbone of the Caucasus, the work ‘Riongos’ | will come into operation. This year | we shall produce 52,000,000 tons of coal, 41,000,000 tons from the. Don | basin alone. This is twice as much | as before the war “And then in our economic system | we have a decisive wonder-working | accelerating factor, and that is the | creative impulse of the masses, aj| factor which exists nowhere else in | the world. This year the industrial | Nehru, criticized the MacDonald} working class of the Soviet Unio will total 13,000,000, and this revo- lutionary proletarian army is capa: ble of achieving unparalleled vic- tories. “Our country, economically most backward of all the great powers, has taken over the task of the build- ing up of socialism without outside | aid, and from its own alone. Can it succeed? “We have the millions of work- ers on one side, that is our trump card. The country is covered with | a network of socialist competition, | the towns vie with the countryside | in socialist effort. On the field of | the labor process new and powerful | resources forces are developing, and they will | tions of the proletariat and drawn | give us the victor; @ T.U, CONGRESS Mass Pressure Forces ‘Right’ to Dissemble Referring to the congress of the Indian trade unions in Nagpur, the “Pravda” declares that the attitude of the reformist leaders which took part in it was interesting owing to the fact that mass pressure pre- vented them from coming out whole- heartedly as the agents of capital- ism. The executive committee of the congress adopted a resolution cal- ling for a boycott of the Royal Com- mission sent by the “Labor” govern- ment, and the congress chairman, the “left-winger,” Javahar Lal government and even declared that his “ideal” was socialism. When, however, the time came fr action, these “left wing” dema- gogues showed their political im-/ potence and maneuvered between the open traitors and the revolu- tionary elements. This vacillation was shown by the fact that at the suggestion of Nehru the congress decided to affiliate neither to the Amsterdam nor the Red Interna- tional of Labor Unions, The revolutionary wave in India was particularly clear. The power- ful wave of strikes which had swept through the country during the last two years had embraced broad sec- them into the capitalism, struggle against The political nature of the recent | struggles and the increasing lead- ing role of the revolutionary ele-| ments in the working class move-) ment compelled the reformists to| ample: The public utilities bosses | @dapt themselves to the given situ- | promised Hoover, at their confer- ation. This explained the revolu-| ence with the imperialist chief in| tionary phraseology of Nehru and} Washington, that they would in-| his friends on the one hand and crease their expenditures for 1930. | their efforts at “neutrality” on the The Edison Co. of New York, a| other. large slice of the utilities industry, | declares in its budget for 1930*that it will cut expenditures $3,000,000— mainly on wages! | A picture much different from | che glowing one painted by the seab Economic Crisis Grows, Wage Slashes Proceed (Continued from Page One) Build the United Front of the | Working Class From the Bottom | Up—in the Industries! | UMW Tries Expulsions| and Extend Activities) (Continued from Page One) and formulate a fighting program of youth demands and carry on spe- | cial activities (sports, educational, jete.), which are of special interest | to the young workers, and at the same time, participate in the work of the union as a whole.” | They're Active. The main resolution of the Na- tional Youth Conference points out that the young textile workers have participated under the leadership of |the N.T.W.U. in sharp struggles, in which they were in the front \lines in New Bedford, Ludlow, | | Seranton, Gastonia and other parts | |of the country. Special youth con-| ferences hald in Charlotte, in Fall) River, and being arranged now in Connecticut’ and Paterson, organizational | side. ism is that the | youth section is too much merely | a skeleton and not enough of a mass | movement. Young workers | been so prominent in the N. T. W. struggles that seven of them are | sentenced to twenty years in the | Gastonia case, and one, John Porter, in a federal prison for activities in the New Bedford strike. A spe- cial resolution demanding release of all these was adopted by the Youth Conference and the convention. For Each Territory. The youth conference resolution considered the main sections of the | country one by one. New England requires youth organi: where youth section contacts ex These recommendations apply to other ter- | vitories as well. | In Paterson, mass meetings and intensive organization among the | sion to Passaic, Elizabethton and | other cities. In New York City /the knitting mills are especially important, and the immediate task is to hold a city conference, In Philadelphia a youth organizer is needed, to start the elementary work. there are N. T. W. mill locals, youth sections must be built. More Negro Youth. The skeleton of a youth organiza- but | tion exists in the South, where there are organizers in Bessemer City, Dallas, Mount Holly, Gastonia, Leaksville, Belmont, and other cen- ters. Special efforts to draw in young Negro workers must be made have | silk workers is needed, with exten- | In Scranton and Allentown | nerder, Green, and his master, Hoo- ver, is given by the December re- port of the Department of Com- merce. It says: “Industrial activity, as indicated by operations in steel plants, was lower than in either the preceding month or November of last year. Acivity in the automobile industry, | as reflected by figures covering De- | troit factory employment, was also lower in November than in either the preceding month of the same | period in 1928. “Petroleum output was substan- tially lower than in October, but was still above the level which pre- | vailed a year earlier. The move- | ment of goods into consumption was slightly lower than in November of | last year. | “The volume of building contracts awarded during the month was run- ning lower than in either the preced- | ing month or the same period of | 1928.” The Wall Street stock specu- lators have very grave doubts about the “recovery” of American | imperialist economy. A financial | writer in the ‘Wall Street Journal | (Dee, 24) says: “Judging from comment heard in| speculative quarters, there is con- siderable doubt in the financial dis- trict regarding industrial condi- | tions.” } Steel production continues to drop | in every line. Production averages 50 per cent of capacity with very) little possibility of a big upsurge— because the main feeders are suf- fering a severe crisis, the automo- bile industry and building. There was a drop of 100,000 tons in the production of sheet steel for November, according to the Na- tional Association of Flat Rolled Steel Manufacturers. Sales are 43 per cent of capacity and produc- tion 65 per cent. One capitalist paper says: “There should, be a substantial | reduction in the output of steel next week. The holiday shut-down this year will be more extensive than in several years, because de- mand from consumers is smaller and steel mills will not resume as quickly as they have in normal times.” One of the best guides to the trend of the depression is freight ear loadings. Even capitalist) sources admit these are very gloomy and show a sharp decline. For the week ended December 14 (in spite of the Christmas trade), the num- ber of cars loaded was 40,428 under the same week in 1928, and 13,585 cars below the preceding week this year. This covered all lines of produc- | tion. Adding to this undeniable picture of sharp depression, the Harvard Economic Society, which is quite “optimistic about the future,” says: “Manufacturing output, for ex- ample, has already dropped far more sharply than in 1923, and in much less time.” In this situation, unemployment is extremely severe. In Detroit, the capitalists recognize this and are preparing to attempt to forestall demands for relief put forward by the Unemployed Council, under the leadership of the Trade Union Unity League and the Communist Party. In Oklahoma, the commissioner of labor, says there is a vast army of | | and any race prejudice energetically to Break Mine Strike | exposed and climinated from the | youth sections. (Continued from Paye One) The national youth organizer and are all sons of the rich business men | the national youth committee have and coal mine owners.’ The author- | the task of building up a real ef- ities feel that too much exposure | fective central office, and of exten- to the ideas of the N.M.U. is bad nel enters, such as Chicago, Cleveland, their strike-breaking weapon, the| Pittsburgh, ete. militia, and that professional kill-| The national youth committee of ers, old hands in the game, are bet-|the N.T.W. must meet at times ter. In this they follow the prac-| when the national executive board tice of the cotton mill owners of | js in session, and may have to hold |Gastonia, who found the militia sid-| emergency meetings at other times. | countries have been arrested ing with the strikers, and took them | L m| The general need is for better out to make way for their own pri- | planned work, co-ordinated with all vate army of professional thugs. | the activities of the union, and con- Victimizing Corbishley. | tinual recruiting of new members. Great indignation prevails over Children’s Auxiliary. the attempt to force Henry Corbish-| yt was voted to establish a chil- ley back to prison to serve 12 year’s | dyen’s auxiliary for the very young more of his 14-year sentence re- | workers have their special problems. ceived after the Zeigler frame-up.| The Workers International Relief Corbishley was arrested by the pa-| antidote to the Boy Scout move- role officer, in retaliation for his| ment, the Relief Scouts was en- activity in the strike. The principle | will be establshed if the Illinois | | dorsed. A special resolution against | cration was forr Write to the Daily Worker, 2 26 Union Square, | ew York, About Condition in Your Shop. ~ Workers! T HESE letters from mill workers in Georgia, South Carolina and Tennessee show how the mill workers in the South are turning to the National Textile Workers’ Union to lead them in the fight against stretch-out stem, wage cuts, and long hours. They say they do not want the fakers’ U.T.W., which works with the bosses. They say too, they want the Negro workers in their union, so all can fight together against the mill bos: To all southern mill workers who read these letters: Write letters yourself to the Daily Worker, which is your own paper. Knoxville, Tennessee Mill Workers Join The National Union (By «@ Worker Correspondent) KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (By Mail).— We have a 55-hour week, 10-hour day in the Brookside mill.” The con- show |ditions are so bad that we're not going to put up with them much |longer and so we're organizing un- der the National Textile Workers Union. Loom fixers, the best paid help, lget $24.20 a week. Quill cleaners |get $9 a week. Doffers are getting $16. Weavers get $16. | We had experience with the U.T. W. and we’re through with them. | They organized us in 1912, called a \strike in 1921 and then left town, leaving us to the bosses’ mercy. There are 3,000 workers in o' mill, and 60 per cent of them are | women, All 3,000 of us have to get \in the National Textile Workers Union and then we'll better our con- | ditions.—C. |Mexican RulersTorture \Militant Cuban Toilers | (Continued from Page One) {section of the Anti-Imperialist League and the International Labor | Defense. | “Fiendish torture, the government of such as only Wall reet could conceive, is being perpetrated | }upon Mexican and Cuban wor' jin Mexico. The strongest of work- jing-class leaders has become insane with the pain. Murders are the jorder of the da | Wall Street imperie | “The rule of American impe Jism is being intensified in the Latin- pamneriean lands, especially in the | Caribbean section. For the past few |months we ports of ssinations of workers, |deportations and torture. About one jyear ago the Yankce terror, strik- jing through Cuban agents of ‘But- \cher’ Machado, president of Cuba and tool of Wall S shot down Julio Mella, outstanding working- | class leader. | “Since that time the terror has |swung upward, taking the toll of |many outstanding leaders among the peasants and workers. |today of the furious increase in the murder plans of former Ambassador |Morrow. Twenty-three work \class leaders in Latin-Ameri | Mexico City. “Rogelio Teurbe Tolon, Cuban | political emigrant, has been arrested }and brutally tortured. Sandalio Junco, Negro leader of the Cuban workers, active in the anti- imperial- list field and especially im the or- |ganization of the new revolutionary trade unions, with their hi be- \ginning in Montevideo, last May lwhen the Latin-American Confe d, will be deported 5 ‘ | child labor was adopted. ito Havana, where certain death mine owners have their way, that) ‘The capitalist school system, | awaits him. ce in a strike is violation of | which tries to make scabs of the| Barreiro and his entire family parole. aa 1g children was exposed and denounced. |has been arrested, He wi the Seb Aen ais | The chairman of the youth con- leader of the tobacco workers of PITTSBURGH. ‘Pa. ‘Der 24/derence was Emanuel Per Cuba and has been sought by Ma- Gest tasaece tee “Or | River. The secretary was Edith chado for some time. ‘Torture has olds cha MOD coat te 9 a ©. | Eisman, a hosiery mill worker in|set him insane, In the past two lack of finances the Re: x: ; | New York, working in a mill where there are 600 young workers, Reports were made, discussed and adopted on the Trade Union Unity League Youth Department by D. | Mates; on the national youth com- | mittee of the N. T. W. by Sophie | Melvin; E. Totherow on the South- | {ern District Youth Organization; | and W. Albertson for the Labor Sports Union. ecutive Board of the onal ners Union is again making an ur- gent appeal for immediate funds. | “The courageous Illinois miners,” | the appeal says, “are facing all the} agencies of terrorism allied on the side of the operators. The N.M.U. is waging this gigantic struggle al- most barehanded. The union must have funds at once to carry on the struggle. At the same time the| basis must be laid for a vigorous weeks more than 100 M n work- ers have gone to prison and 20 ha’ been killed. Since former-Amt a- dor Morrow has tightened the rule | of Wall Street over Mexico, the reactionary governments of both Mexico and Cuba are working hand in hand. Since Julio Mella and Rodriguez, leader of the Mexican peasants were killed a year ago, Machado has been murdering Cuban organizational campaign in prepara- tion for the national general strike | of the coal miners next Fall. The, need is urgent! Send funds at once to the J” ‘ional Miners Union, Room | 410, 119 Federal St., N. S., Pitts- | burgh, Pa. | Write About Your Conditions | for The Daily Worker. Become a | Worker Correspondent. Buffalo, the commissioner of uDpr reports drastic unemployment. Everywhere unemployment is the | rule. ers’ Union Convention in Paterson, | was—unemployment! | With this proceeds wage-cuts. | At the head of the wage-cutting brigade is the American Federation | of Labor, acting hahd in glove with | the bosses, promising no strikes and no moves for increased wages. | This is merely the job of holding the organized worker on the execu- tion block while the capitalists in Hoover’s “grand fascist council” drain his life’s blood. The Communist Party is organ- izing the resistance of the workers For unemployment they put for ward the revolutionary demands of immediate relief on the basis of full wages, paid by the state, unde workers’ supervision. They deman the unity of the organized and* un employed and employed to preven the capitalists of playing once against the other in the interes’ against wage euts, At the samc time, they fight against the imper- | ialist war danger that grows out) unemployed roaming the state. In of the sharpening contradictions | within the capitalist system, 4 r 4 4 | Daily Prices at the behest of | have had a series of re-, We hear | Join the National Textile Workers’ Union! NEORO AND WHITE WORKERS TO- | GETHER, SAYS GA. MILL HAND (By a Worker Correspondent) ! FORSYTHE, Ga. (By Mail).— We've got 10 members in the Na- tional Textile Workers Union in the Trio Cotton Mill Forsythe, and watch our union grow from now on. I am a doffer in the Trio Spin- ning Mill. I work 12 hours a day, from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. There are 75 workers on the night shi on the day . Fifty on the da 50 on the night are women. Th are about 15 Negro workers on each “Raise NTW Banner High” Greenville Mill Hand Says (By a Worker Correspondent) GREENVILLE, S. ©. (By Mail). | Young workers I want to know how |many of you are taking part in our National Textile Workers Union jand t to make it stronger. Now, y g workers, we have all got to get together and work hard to organize our union, we just can’t | let it drop. The Southern workers are in too bad condition. If we don’t fight for our rights there will be no one to fight for us. We young workers ‘do just as hard woi the older ones and get less pay. shift in the cardroom. a week. When running full time the di fers get the miserable wage of a week, but right now, on short time, we're getting but $7 a week. The mill’s ¢ 1 and its running three nights a week. | vi all got to get into the nd we know from the way .W. acted at Thomaston that » for the bosses. So it’s Negro and white mill hand together— They get $6 5 We've FORSYTHE, I HANDS | ARE Y TO U.T.W. By a Worker Correspondent FORSYTHE, (By Mail).— There are 200 to 250 hands working in the Ensign Mi They work 12 hours a d Wages are never more than a week for the hands. We're joiningsthe National Union, which fightsefor us, for we’re wise to the U.T.W., which sold out the mill workers over at Thomaston. We'll run those fakers out of town if they try to fool u: | The same slavery exis! Is of the Forsythe Mfg. the Trio mill. One thing we have to do is take in all workers in our union, and we're doing that—white and col- ored, men, boys, girls and women. So long as they’re slaving in the mill, they’re welcome into the Na- tional Union. —FORSYTHE MILL WORKER. Yen Adds Another to List of Pledges for Loyalty to Nanking G ts in the Co, and m Shanghai dispatches tell of what is probably the 47th pledge of loy- alty to Nanking given by Yen Hs! shan, the northern “model” militar- ist. That Nanking is beginning to hold faint doubts of the value of such pledges appears from the haste with which it is building a heavy em of defenses between Yen and anking, at Chuchow, across the emigres, in Mexico, by aid of the | American controlled agents. The Foreign Relations Committee | of Congress is ‘investigating’ Cuba at the request of a few millionaires fied with certain conditions threatening their profits. But it will not take the slightest considera- tion of the mu of Cuban wo ers and peasants, especially inten fied while this investigation was on. “It is up to the m of Ameri- can workers to demonstrate, to pro- s the slaugh- ter, the torture of their fellow work- ers in the Latin lands. We must decl in no hesitating voice, that es, a We young workers work as long NEGRO AND WHITE MILL \as the older one and it looks like WORKERS OF FORSY E | the more work we do the more the INTO THE N.T.W.U. bosses want us to do. Young work- \By a Worker Correspondent) ‘ers, I noticed a piece in the “Green- FORSYTHE, Ga. (By Mail).— We white mill workers of Georgia, and the whole South have been told from childhood that we were to shun the Negro race. But we've now come to the conclusion that the boss wants to kéep the white and colored mill workers separate, so that we'll fight against each other instead of fighting together against the bosses. our home-town paper, where it said president Hoover was \trying to help the workers. Do you believe he will? I don’t; if he in- \tended to help us he would have ‘already done so; he has been in of fice plenty long enough to help us if he intended to. We have to help | ourselves and there is only one way |to do it and that to boost our {union and push it forth in spite of That’s been our trouble, not work- | the bosses’ teeth. ing with the Negro workers. But| Young workers, it is very few that’s gone now. We'll all be to-/athletes you see come out of a cote gether in the National Textile Work- | ton mill, Why? It is because u¢ on, and fight together. | | young workers are worked to death in Forsythe there are three |and work almost twice as long as mi le Sree aoe Nene ie we should be, and when we develop white workers alike—the Forsythe, | into manhood we are nothing but Ensign and the Trio Spinning Mills. | punts, . White and colored—all workers in} Now, fellow workers, the bosset the mills here are working 12 hours | are going to try to draw our atten. a day on both shifts, for $7 to $12 Ition off of the union by getting uy a week. That's why they've all got} baseball clubs and so on, don’t let to join the N.T.W.U, them do this, let’s all make it a rule | —FORSYTHE WORKER. {our union first and then pleasure, ease Ml or we can get up ball clubs of our ly j own and leave Mr. Bossman entirely n- | out, so let’s raise our union banner American imperialism scored an- | lcs ) cther point yesterday by having the | high and march right on through the king government outlaw the | Struggle. ; Nippon Dempo News Agency, a Ja-|_—By a hard-working lad of Green- | panese news service. The agency is |Ville, S. C. Seventeen years of age. |charged with circulating “malici- ous” reports during the recent (or | present) fighting when Nanking | was almost if not quite knocked out. ville New along the Tientsin-Pukow TH Enlist Your Shop Mate in the Drive for 5,000 New Member Anniversary Daily Worker SEND our comrades in Latin-America must he freed from th itches of Wall Street assassina Down with Street! | Down with the rule of Butchers Machado and Gil! | Down with the imperialism of U. S. A. that is murdering workers and peasants! rule of Wall the MEXICO CITY, Dec. 24.—Tristan Maroff, Bolivian writer, was ar-| rested today by the Mexican govern- ment, when he tried to interview the | arrested and tortured Cuban work- | jers. The Mexican rulers do not ; want any publicity on their electric- chair tortures. || Sixth Anniversary Celebration SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA among other numbers will play “STENKA RAZIN” by Alexander GLAZOUNOW NAOHM BENDITSKY, Cellist DORSHA, Interpretive Dancer TAYLOR GORDON, Noted Baritoiz- in a group of Negro songs ROCKLAND PALACE 155th Street and Eighth Avenue. : 75c, $1.00 and $1.50 Saturday Evening, January ith Fourth National GREETINGS FROM THE WORKERS IN, THE SHOPS AND _ FROM YOUR UNION, YOUR _FRA- TERNAL ORGANIZATIONS, | DISTRIBUTE _ THOUSANDS t shop, mine and mill gates, wevkingclass neighborhoods. Place Your Order Now! get subscriptions Ask your fellow workers in Convention of the International Labor Defense Dec, 29, 30 and 31 Opening Mass Demonstration SATURDAY NIGHT | in North Side Carnegie Music Hall every party unit. (Federal and Ohio Streets) ye pee ; Convention Sessions | celebrate LABOR LYCEUM | : : 35 Miller Street | in your city Sunday, Monday Organize a mass meeting, hold and Tuesday a concert, an affair of some kind to celebrate the Sixth |COME GREET— Anniversary of the Daily | The Gastonia comrades Worker. e striking Illinois miners} Salvatore Accorsi Elect Your and other class-war heroes ‘ af ia mass ene, Daily Worker Representative | workers who live next door to | you for’subscriptions. Subserip- | tion blanks have been sent to Delegates, report to Pittsburgh Office of the I. L. D., 119 Fed- eral St.. Room 205, N. S., upon arrival. While the I. L. D. meets the class war rages IN THE MINES IN THE TEXTILES Every Barty trict must have a Daily Worl er representative. Every tive. | All this to build a Ma Rush Funds to the I. L. D. INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE 80 East 11th Street, Room 402 New York City. DAILY WORKE Your tasks in connection the Party Recruiting — Daily Worker Building unit, section, dis-| where the party has member-! ship must name a representa- your shop to subscribe. Visit’ rf

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