The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 8, 1929, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Out Stewart and Childs; Big Finance Tighte LOVESTONE IN Pont Knock Militant Fighters in the Dressmakers’ Strike ns Grip Rockefeller and Du MUTINOUS OL | of the strike. The union’s leadership | BARON OUSTED BY TWO TO ONE Powder Maker Agents Crush Chain Builder WHITING, March 7.— Rockefeller n back the Star 1 Oil of Indiana. Tho the votes officially tabulated for . Col. rt, Rockefe! manager of 2 , concedes the} to the Rockefeller dynasty. | reharged with per- between the holders voted place Wm, Merriam} the sha: The general atmosphere was that Rotary Club, § called speakers and officers by their knames as he introduced them, nicl But then the fight began. | Buil 00 of The Memorial S built with $600, ‘kefel-| Ske The American Women Workers and the Revolutionary Struggle CEC REPORT ON PARTY'S WORK Negro Workers Head Two Commissions (Continued from Page One) |discussion were ‘Frank Borich, an- |thracite miner, who was applauded | yociferously when he urged the dele-| gates to stand solidly behind the present Gentra] Executive Commit. |tee. Applause greeted his statement |that although he was unable to ex- jpress himself in the best English, | |he knew how to fight in the class | struggle and how to express his! support of a leadership deserving Andanoy, a worker from District 7 (Cleveland) also declared his com- plete support of the Party leader- ship and urged the ending of the factional struggle. Di Santo spoke on the role of the South in the econ- | omic life of the eountry and in the, coming imperialist war. His speech Women Athletes of the Workers’ Republic DRESS STRIKE IS TERMINATED BY INDUSTRIAL UNION |Win 40-Hr, Wk.; Union Plans Fur Strike (Continued from Page One) employers, many signing up in the first two weeks, The employers’ ‘press was very soon compelled to yvint the truth of the victorious set- ‘lements made, Speaking for the General Strike Yommittee, Rose Wortis, its seere- ary said: “The victories won by the dress- 1akers in this strike by which union onditions have been established in | | | : ; ot early four hundred sh rk: president of the An enthusia meeting of striking dyessmakers. Women workers, who form a majority in the | \the unfailing loyalty of every Party Paine are "i selenite wentor of the patent-| 2288 trade, have been among the most militant fighters in the str They have refused to be member because of its correct poli- f the left wing needle trades pani Veritas” avale ail, cowed by the police and many of them have been arrested on the picket line, j tical line, rs. This is the fisst of a series f strikes to be waged by the new idustrial union against the sweat- hop in the yarious branches of the arment industry, The Furriers De- artment will be the next to call a trike at the beginning of the new eason, this Summer. Our victory ler funds was c¢ guarded | ended with the same sentiment re- has eiven enconragement to all nee- against anyone entering who did! ec eae Z tne garding the CEC as was expressed | Women. workers in the Soviet Union are learning the importance dle trades workers, and has resulted not own stock or carry a proxy of| BY JULIET STUART POYNTZ, | the « aided by the bours|must develop a special apparatus|by the other speakers. | of building their bodies, At the Spartakiade in Moscow last year the |'™ se aperanne oad: increase in the a stockholder. [STER JATIONAL V n of the Woman’s|for this task of organization, aj] When Lovestone entered he was| performances of women athletes were outstanding. Photo shows the ee hag ~ ‘i a eo It in the auditorium was!4 a sida Minimum wage laws for wo-| special department and ecommittee|greeted by prolonged cheering, | finish of one of the races. edna SRE NON only 20F Le empioy- with microphone to carry the voices of leather chairs and a the wrangling financiers to all| parts of the building, to the lounge} rooms and gymnasiums where the overflow crowd was to be seated. | The trouble between Rockefeller | and Stewart, which Rockefeller! camouflaged as a “purity campaign” | because of Stewart’s connectisn with! Teapot Dome, was really oyer the Indiana company’s insistence on competing with Rockefeller owned/| oi: companies in Kentucky, Spain,| and the Near East. i Rockefeller, as a stockholder in Standard Oil of Indiang, was also disgruntled over Stewart's allian::| with Sinclair in the Teapot Dome! business. | History of Crime. In November, 1921, Stewart aided Sinclair to form the Continental | Trading and Oil Co., which bought! oil from A, E. Humphreys of Tex-| as at $1.50 a barrel and sold it to| Sinclair Crude Oil Purchasing Co.) and Prairies Oil and Gas Go., imme-| diately for $1.75. A profit of $3,| 000,000 was created, of which Stew- art is. said to have got $700,000, Some of the rest was used to bribe cabinet officers. and other officials and the rest just disappeared, Stew- art was tried for perjury: and con- tempt of the Senate during the in- vestigation but could not be con- victed. { * * * Barber Votes Childs Qut. William Childs, founder and owner of the $37,000,000 oe Of Childs’ Kestaurants, was thrown out of con- trol by heavier money bags yester- day, in the annual stockholders’ meeting in New York. It is known that DuPont capital, entrusted for action to a stockholder named Wil- Nam F. Barber, held proxies and owned stock outright to the amount cr 60 per cent of the total, and voted in its own board of directors and the officials that Childs dis- charged a few saonths ago. The Childs’ restaurants, which cater co the struggling gentile lower middle-class, professionals and white collar slaves trying to be “respec- table,” make ordinarily about $2,- 000,000 a year profits, but less lately, because of Childs’ attempt to turn vegetarian. This was used against him in the fight for proxies. “RALLY TO AID SUMMIT STRIKE Meeting in Newark at 8 o’clock Tonight Workers of Newark are called upon to attend a mass meeting where plans for aiding the silk strik- ers of Summit, N, J., will be worked cut, The meeting, to be held under the joint auspices of the National Textile Workers Union and the In- ternational Labor Defense, will be held at the Workers Progressive Center. 98 Mereer St., Newark, N. J., at 8 o’elock tonight. Prominent ppeakers will address the gather- ing. The « strikers in Summit have been waging a heroic battle for many months against the silk bosses of that city. The small town au- | thorities, anxious to protect their) open-shop “benefactors” and very | agile in offering the local police and | courts for the use of the bossee, | have been condueting a vicious ter- ror of arrests and jailings. Recently. the National Textile Workers Union took over leadership a it by the workers, who had the traitorous officials of | sceiated Silk Workers Union| the sjtuation. The N. T. W. ilizing all its strength behind it of the workers there, Renin noc! Lom meth 4 ated lahor » to working wemei internationa 2 gle of labor against the ca) offensiye in all countries, imperialism and the war danger. Millions of working women will be represented in the meetings and demonstrations that take place in 1 countries in the International! Women’s Day campaign on March] 8th and during the entire month of March. They will come together on the call of the Communist Intern tional as the revglutionary of the great masses of wor men toiling in the facto; workshops under terrible cond: of exploitation, working at home bearing and rearing their children in a struggle with destitution and the ever-growing cor; of liying. In tlhe year 1929, Women’s Day is a demon: tremendous mpo: of capitalism is broaden deepening. The imperialist rivalry of the great capitalist powers for markets, for world trade, for finan- cial domination, is growing ever more intense and jeading inevitably to another world conflict, while within each country capitalist ration- alization brings a greatly intensified speed-up in the factories and a re- international |duction in the standards of labor, wage cuts, lengthening of hours and the open shop drive. Force Women to Factories. Capitalist rationalization, the in- creased mechanization of industry, and the growing importance of un- skilled and semi-skilled workers in the labor force is drawing women} workers into industry in ever-in-| creasing numbers, while the worsen-| ing conditions of the working class| in general; growing impoyerishment, wage cuts, unemployment, are fore- ing women out of the home into the shops and factories. The number of | women wage earners in America has increased from 8,000,000 in 1910 to| probably about 12,000,000 today. In clerical pceupations and trades they constitute more than half of all the) workers, while in industry they are from 25. to 80 per cent and continu-| ally increasing. Married women and) mothers are an ever larger propor- tion of the women workers, already 2,000,000 in 1920 and today much more. Do Work Men Did. Women workers during the last world war took the places of men} at werk neyer before performed by| |women—in the heavy industry and industries manufacturing war ma-| terials, steel, rubber, auto, airplane, ete. In the present period of ration- alization and preparation for new) wars women workers are on the in- erease in all the heavy industries and are ever more exploited; they will play an all important role there in the eyent of a war. The great masses of the women) wage-earners in Ameriea are work-) ing in this land of Hooyerian “pros- | perity” under terrible conditions of | exploitation, uzxder-payment and) over-work. Starvation wages are the | rule everywhere. More than half the| working women in leading industial | ej men »F thave | 8-' court. Eyerywhere ; employers have undertaken a drive jternational against the dressmaker: workers and child labor law |for work among women, with propa- en wiped out by the suoreme | ganda literature and organizational urs are being|forms adopted te their needs, Work- le ened, new “e iency” systems |ing women’s delegate conferences installed to intensify labor, to in-/|must be built on the basis of factory troduce benus and piece-work 5) reles to draw in unorganized wom- tems and set up standards of produe-|en workers, to train them in the tion. The number of looms assigned |class struggle and lay the basis for a textile worker is being doubled and! unicn organization. tripled. The travelling belt or con-| ‘Phe struggles of working women yeyor | duced in many|in the industrial field and around factories keep e to work at top speed |the workers such as the high cost Women Unorganized. of living, labor defense and relief, ployers in their attack etc. must be linked up with the reliance upon the unorganized|Wider political issues, with the tion of the women workers in|Struggle of the workers against the ica where only about 2 per |capitalist system as a whole, against cent are in unions as compared with |¢apitalist imperialism and the grow- 10 per cent in England and 25 per|ing menace of war. cent in Germany. And where the} Fight Pacif:-+ Illusions. women workers have organized or| Working women as the objects of f are organizing, as in the needle |the worst exploitation under the re- trades and the xtile industry, the | gime of capitalist imperialism and : é jrationalization, as the mothers of to smash the unions and defeat the|the working class which is used as strikes with the aid of the traitor-/eannon fodder for capitalist wars, ous A. F. of L. and socislist official-|as the tools of capitalism for the dom. |manufacture of war materials and The American Federation of La-| munitions, haye the most powerful bor not only neglects the organiza-'interests in fighting the imperialist tion of unorganized women workers|war system. And they are coming but it places eyery obstacle in their|to realize that it is only by deter- path. And its petty-bourgecis ap-|mined revolutionary strugs’> that pendage, the Women’s Trade Union this system and its wars ean be League, follows the ‘safe policy.| wiped out. The close combination of reaction- Working women must combat the ary forces, the government with its illusions of pacifism and reformism, court injunctions and police, the cor-|of class collaboration and social rupt A, F. of L, and socialist bur-| peace with which the capitalists are eaucracy, the open shop employers, trying to neutralize the great reyo- are all driying toward the same end, |Jutionary force of the working wom- to prevent working women from or-/en masses. The bourgeois feminist ganizing and to smash their unions |and pacifist women’s organizations when they do organize, |as well as those which are openly The drive of the Zaritsky Inier-| fascist and reactionary, are all uni- national to smash the Miliinery|ted on a platform of national de- Workers’ Union, of the Sigman In-jfense and official pacifism, support f the League of Nations, the World ot the Shiplacoff-Waldman socialist Court, the Kellogg peace pact and gang against the paper box makers, |all the pacifist apparatus of im- 0, the Batty clique against the New perialism. Working women’s organi- Bedford textile strikers; these are|zations must take up a determined \all activities in the offensive of boss- | struggle against these pacifist smoke es nd bureaucrats against women| screens for the eoming war and ’ organizations, ‘against the efforts of the bourgeois L. to Organize Them. | Women to corrupt and mislead the The organization of unorganized | Yorking women inte the pacifist women workers thus becomes the “*™P : task of the Left wing and its leader,|* The Communist Parties of all the T.U.H.L. and is only possible in Countries recognize their special the new unions which are being|t@8k in mobilizing and winning for built in the present struggles of the|the class struggle the masses of women workers, | eerie wore Hie ppprenieg. su The offensive of the emplijers) Po;""" Sections of the working finds an ever-increasing detecmina- |e And working women, as they |develop class-conscjousness realize tion for struggle on the. part of the) women workers as is shown by their| (pa te i peepee ne See heroic resistance in the New Bed- pcainst the whole capitalist system, fod strike and by their determined | ‘They “find leadership for such “ struggles in the needle trades, bY | struggle only in the Communist In the participation of women in the | ternational the defender of the miners’ strikes in the most violent | i o.¢ exploited and oppressed, the | , struggles. 3 \organizer of the unorganized masses, The working women in _ these )\the leader of the world proletariat, struggles have shown themselves to lmen and women, in the conflict with be brave and perseryering fighters’ world capitalism, in the struggle meeting the attacks of the police, against the war danger and the gangsters, and mounted constabu-|¢=pitalist offensive, lary on the picket line, conducting | Working women haye always been streets demonstrations, undergoing | revolutionary force of prime im- arrest and prison sentences—organ- | portance, It was the revolutionary izing relief apd defense, energy of the working women of states get less than $10 to $15 a| This growing mood for struggle} week, while in the textile states of @mong the masses of unorganized | the South, half get less than $8 and | Women workers opens new possibili- | $9 a week—wages of $5, $6 and $7 ites for the building of new militant! are common everywhere, junions, The fighting spirit shown Irregular and seasonal employ-|by the women workers in strikes! ment, especially prevalent in indus-|@nd on the picket line and in the tries employing women, reduce these | persistent struggle to maintain these starvation wages still further, while organizations is the necessary basis lengthening of unlimited hours and/0n which the new fighting unions speed-up are universal. So-called must be built. It is from sych strug- labor legislation for the protection|gles in Passaic, New Bedford and of women workers, laws limiting|in the dressmakers’ strike that the hours ‘and night work, minimum new unions in the needle trades and wage laws, ete., have proven a farce |the textile industry have grown, in capitalist America, as also anti-/The task is now to utilize the fight- child-labor laws and measures for|ing spirit of the women workers, protection of working mothers, So-|their mood for resistance to the eial insurance is non-existant. Un- | bosses’ drive, to widen and strength- limited and unrestra‘ned exploita- jen these new unions and build them tion of women workers is the rule,0n @ broad mass foundation. Paris demanding bread, that struck the first vital blow in the French revolution. Sersag women worked and fought and died side by side with working men, in the Paris Commune. Working women have played a heroic part in the Russian revolution, fighting in the vanguard against czarism and the bourgeoisie, struggling against famine, blockade and civil war, toiling and building in the construgtion of the new go- cialist society. Chinese women works ers have been massacred by the thousands by the cut-throats of im- perialism, Women Chief Victims. Working women are the chief vie- tims of capitalist society with its inhuman exploitation, its prostitu- everywhere, Bosses Cutting Wage. The employers, however, are con- ducting a drive today to pare away even these miserable conditions. Wage cuts are the rule in all indu: tries employing women and especia' ly in textiles. Systematic drives to lengthen hours and wipe out labor tion, its exhaustion of woman end child life, its brutal oppression and terror, its machinery of universal war and destruction, Working women are therefore @ tremendous poten- tial revolutionary force, Their free- dom and their future, and that of their children, are bound up with the social revolution, and as Com- rade Lenin said, “The revolution is Special Apparatus, The organization drive to organ- ize the unorganized women workers must be extended to other industries and pa? \:cularly to the heavy indus- tries and those manufactyring war materials, to those which like the auto industry are particularly sub- ject to capitalist rationalization. worker jumping issues of immediate importance to| clapping, waving of banners and the singing of the International. His report, which combined two points on the agenda—1) the report of the and the tasks facing it; and 2) the| report on the Right danger and} Trotskyism—lasted three hours and| ; 3 was a most thorough account of the| ,, 22anins the common fats with) subjects it covered. Due to the im-| their eve in other countries, Hid portance of this report and the im- Chinese women have since time im-| paragraphs, it will be printed in full |. dae: < al faginning ina <dawy of ty0, |intellectually, and otherwise, They | eg Ain Sa | were bound from cradle to grave by| The fifth business session of the|eruel customs and absurd conven-/ Convention opened last night at | tions which, for instance, demand| 8:30 p. m,, with William J. White,|that a girl when young must obey| steel worker, in the chair. The ses-|her parents, when married must) sion opened with the report of the| bey her husband, and in case her Young Workers (Communist) Lea- husband died, must obey her son, gue by Herbert Zam, secretary of | Again, as a wife, the Chinese woman | the League. Following his report,|W@S liable to be divorced by her) which will be printed in a later| husband on any of the following | issue of the Daily Worker, was dis-| grounds: disobedience to husbands, cussion by the delegates on this re-| Patents, bareness, adultery, envy, in- | port and on that made the previous | curable disease, talkativeness, and) evening by Jay Lovestone, executive| theft. And divorce of course was | secretary of the Party, on the poli- | absolutely a one-sided affair, Aj tical and economic situation and the; ™¥tiad, such instances may e | activities and tasks of the Party, | enumerated. In short, the Chinese Publication of this latter report will) Women have been an oppressed and |exploited class. The causes for this are not far begin in the Daily Worker soon, |to seek, Old conservative philoso-| the great masses of working wom-}phy, superstitious religion, blind en.” __ |publie opinion, all haye been respon- The bourgeoisie realizes the im-| sible for the dirty deal given to the! By J. CHAN. | n THE CHINESE WOMEN first signal of revolt of the younger generation against the old. At the same time, thousands of women began to pour into factories and work side by side with men. In 1922, during the Hongkong sea- men’s strike, which was the first successful proletarian revolt against capitalists and imperialists in China, the Chinese women gave moral and material support to the strikers. The Chinese women, both workers and students, played a very impor- tant role in the textile workers’ strike in 1925, a strike that was fol- lowed by the notorious massacre of May 30th in Shanghai, and the Sha Men massacre near Canton. These massacres were conducted by the British imperialists, in which hun- dreds of Chinese workess were mur- dered in cold blood. Many of the strikers were women, In the same eventful year, the famous Hong- kong strike took place. In this strike, the Chinese women helped not only with propaganda but with financial and material contributions, When the Kuomintang began its eampaign against the Peking goy- ernment in 1926, the Chinese wom- portance of working women as a revolutionary factor and is using Chinese women. But fundamentally, the reason has been economic. It en, thinking that the Kuomintang would fight against imperialism and eyery possible method to delude|was the economic dependence of the them and turn them aside from the) Chinese women on their husbands revolutionary path, The church is that kept them in feudal subjection | one of the chief instruments of be-/ and exploitation. fuddlement, and its influence over New Era, | great masses of the most backward! But a new era has been opened up} working women, particularly in| in the life of women in China. After | America, is a dangerous reactionary|the war, industrialism has had a} force. |steady growth in the Middle King-| The schools and the strong influ-| dom, New ideology, radical thoughts | ence exerted by them on the family} have penetrated the wall of dead| through the children, the bourgeois | tradition, and there has awakened | press, the “movies” and the radie,)a new generation of womanhood. | the women’s organizations, pacifist) Nowadays thousands of girls have} and patriotic, all these influences|left their kitchens and harems and | are being used to keep back. the work in factories or study in schools: working women from the revolution-| This is not all, this younger set of | ary struggle. the Chinese women has become part Socialists Try to Betray. lof the driving force of the revolu- | The socialist party, which long tionary movement in China. Right since abandoned all pretense at lead-|after the World War, in 1919, girl) ing the working women in the class | students were given equal credit, for | struggle, is now seeking to revive | the radical movement which was the | its influence over them, The Brus sels international socialist confer- ence this year, as well as the Amer- A IAT | na find its base in the factories, | instead of among the housewives. | eapitalism, joined in the campaign with cheer and hope. They served not only as nurses, clerks and secre- \taries, but acted also as propagan- dists, orga.tizers, and even in the actual fighting. Betrayed By Kuomintang. But their hope was not realized. After the Nationalists turned their back definitely on the revolutionary movement, and began to conciliate | with capitalists and imperialists, the Chinese realized that in order to fight against oppression and ex-| ploitation, they must fight with the workers and peasants, Many young Chinese women are now loyal and daring comrades. During the Can- ton uprising many women workers were arrested and killed by the re- actionary militarists who treated women Communists in the most barbarous manner. It was reported that more than five hundred women workers fell in the uprising, But! } the white terror still failed to stop | ers but for the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union, which stands exposed as a company union, reduced to impotence and bankrupt morally and financially.” In commenting on the strike, Charles S, Zimmerman, vice presi- dent of the union, denounced the I. L, G, W. U. for cooperating with the employers and the police in try- ing to break the strike. “There have been a number of clear cases in which it was evident that the I, L, G. W. U. had framed up our strikers,” said Zimmerman. “Ben- jamin Schlesinger has accused our strikers time and again of being gangsters in the effort to secure a severe jail sentence and heavy fines for them, These charges haye in- variably been proven groundless,” Zimmerman declared that in ter- minating this strike the first phase of the struggle has come to an end but that the second phase will begin immediately, The gains made in the strike will be backed up by a campaign to organize those shops which have not signed agreements with the union. This campaign will continue thru. the present season and will be intensified at the be- ginning of the next season in the summer. The gains made by the union in- elude the 40-hour 5-day week, the minimum wage scale, recognition of the union, the right to the job after a trial period of one week, no dis- charge except for misbehavior. Louis Hyman, president of the N. T, W. 1. U., left today for a tour of all needle trades centers includ- ing Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Vancouver, Chicago, Cleve- land, Detroit, Boston, ete. This tour is part of a nation-wide organ- ization drive which began with the dressmakers’ strike in New York, Ben Gold, general secretary-treas- urer, is in Philadelphia today to begin an organization drive among the needle trades workers there. CALL MONEY RISES. Call money went to 12 per cent yesterday, rising from 8 per cent |when the New York Stock Market | opened in the morning. Stock prices \declined, Radio fell off most, a loss |of 18 points. § Louis Gartner} NOTARY PURLIC : | {usa5 BROADWAY, New York City (Entrance N. W. Cor. 86th Street) — First Floor — ican soeialist party convention, have taken steps to win over the working | women to their false slogans of re-| formism and pacifism, | The Workers (Communist) Party! of America has a great task under | these conditions to win the masses| of the working women for the rev-| olutionary class struggle and for) the Party. The leading task of the Party in the work among women, is to organize them for the struggle against the war danger and imperi- alism and against pacifist illusions. | The working women must recognize | the necessity of a revolutionary struggle against the war danger end the transformation of capitalist | The social composition of the wo-| men in the Party membership must} become predominantly industrial. | Such changes will be an important Right danger as it manifests itself in women’s work, where it arises largely from the backwardness of the women masses, the petty-bour-| geois elements in the Party, and the | mass organizations. Here is found the sentimental, reformist, pacifist ideology which is a dangerous ob- | stacle in mobilizing the women! workers for real revolutionary | struggle. Communists Will Lead. | The Party must be the leader in | NOW is the time to have your factor in the struggle against the |x the revolutionary movement of the young Chinese women. They keep on working for the revolution, Federal nnd State Income Tax Re- turns prepared and filed by experts .A full supply of forms on hand —The Soviet Film Epic of Proletarian Heroism! LAST DAY! = war into civil war, for the establish-|the struggle of working women) ment of the proletarian dictatorship. | against the war danger ard for the | The Workers (Communist) Party |defense of the Soviet Union. The must devote all efforts, during the| growing antagonism between the International Women's Day Cam- |capitalist world and the Soviet| ign in the month of March, to! Union, the open conspiracy of the laying the foundation for work|British Empire against Soviet Rus- among the broad masses of working |sia place a vital responsibility upon women, to building up an effective }{he workers of all countries and Party apparatus for this purpose jespecially upon the working women in all districts, to conducting an/|to organize for the defense of the ideological campaign, to convince all | Soviet Union. , Party members of the importance| All these struggles of working of this work. All remnants of pre- |women against imperialism, against Judice against work among women 'yatfonalization, for organization and must be done away with in the/vesistance to the bosses’ offensive | Party, all remains of social dem-| are part of the class struggle as a ocratic views in underestimating the | whole, the struggle of the working importance of women's work. Ener-|class against the capitalist class getic efforts must be made to reach |which is being waged by a united | o- FILM GUILD CINEMA 52 W. RIGHTH SP, (bet. Sth & 6th Aves.) — Phone: SPRing 5095 Continuous Performances, Daily (incl, Sat, & Sun.) from 12 to 12. —~- POPULAR PRICES — SPECIAL for Week Days: 12 te 2 p. m...35e; 2 to 6 p. m...50e STARTING THIS SATURDAY: “HOMECOMIN A powerful, honest dramn of war prisoners in women in industry particularfy, to penetrate large factories in which women are employed, to draw them into shop nuclei, to organize factory circles and working women’s dele- gate conferences, to build new fight- ing unions including women workers, Industrial women must be drawn into the Party and into the leader- international proletarian front un- der the leadership of the Commu- nist International. Working women must rally to the banner of the rev- olutionary international of the workers of all countries on Inter- national Women’s Day, must join the ranks of its American section, of the Workers (Communist) Party, ship of the Party and its women’s anysr tne month from the int day to $7,500,00, at the rate of in Mondays (all day) wi manting Pg eh aceite, the leader in tho battles of the legislation are being conducted by |The Trade Union Educational League] impossible without the support of’ work, which must be proletarianized | American working class, ~ Ip Nol THIRD AVE ‘Cernitiea " ASSETS EXCEEDING $29,000,000 , or before the 3rd ‘ will draw terest of the month, meth na a sai Cheeks Cor

Other pages from this issue: