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U (ee STEEL JOURNAL ADMITS FLIMSINESS AS OUTPUT Based Largely Upon "Expectations of Large War Orders from Navy; Auto Production Heading for Sharp Decline _ NEW YORK, July 27.—The latest issue of the “Iron Age,” leading trade journal of the steel industry, adds the latest piece of evidence to the ever more frequent admissions that the “boom” in the steel industry has little foundation in any funda-| mental consumption demand from heavy industry. The “Iron Age” makes it clear that the speculative pressure from the largest recent buyer of steel, the automobile industry, is already showing the inevitable weakening as stocks of automobiles, newly- manufactured in anticipation of in- flation purchases, are fast piling up in the hands of the dealers. War Preparations And most significant of all is the frank admission by the “Iron Age” that the steel industry’s operations, described by the Roosevelt govern- ment as a sure index of returning prosperity, are based upon the war preparations of the Roosevelt gov- ernment, particularly the Navy. Reports from the main steel cen- ters, as well as the government re- ports of the Labor Department, con- firm the fact that the increase in employment resulting from the in- creased steel operations are far be- hind the increase in production, due to the application of the most in- tense methods of speed-up and ra- tionalization. Japan Buying War Material The statement of the “Iron Age” is as follows: “The automotive in- OF “BOOM” DECREASES dustry continues to press for deli- veries against contracts, but it is placing little new business. Retail sales thus far this month have not | been up to the June level, and it is feared that they will suffer a fur- ther reduction because of the,sharp | break in the stock and commodity | markets.” | “Expected shrinkage in the steel requirements of the automotive in- | dustry may be counterbalanced by larger demands from the heavy in- dustries. The Naval program will soon result in plate orders.” | The statement then goes on the| say that the price of steel scrap) has risen to the highest levels of the year. Steel scrap is an essen- tial ingredient in the manufacture of explosives. The full meaning of the rise in} steel or scrap is given by the in- formation published in last week’s issue of the “Iron Age” which re- vyeals that Japan has enormously in- creased its purchases of steel scrap. The figures for 1933 as against | 1982 as follows: 210,933 tons im-| potted by Japan during the first | five months of this year, as com- pared with 82,440 last year, an in-| crease of almost 300 per cent. | The “Iren Age” reports that Japan is buying steel scrap at any price. This means the most feverish war preparations. It is upon this base that the industry hopes to maintain its activity. BURLAK EXPOSES BOSSES’ CODES AT WOOL HEARING WASHINGTON, D. C.—Ann Bur- lak and two Lawrence textile work- ers voiced the opposition of the Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union to the proposed woolen code at the hearing in Washington this weex. Surround- ed by 50 manufacturers, and M@ Mahon and Gorman of the United Textile Workers Union, president and organizer respectively, the only real representatives of labor at the hearing flashed back replies to all objections raised by Deputy admin- istrator Whiteside and to the sneers of the bosses and their company union. agents. ‘The employers spoke first at the hearing. They have already agreed on the code in preliminary confer- ences with the Recovery administra- tion. The hearings are mere formali- ties with the government and the bosses already determined to put over starvation standards on the workers. But some employers come forward with the demand that the eodes allow for longer hours and lower wages although they know they can easily evade the standards established in the codes. McMahon Offers to Make a Deal McMakon is called upon and is given as much time as he needs to present his report. He declares that the union now represents 65 per cent of the industry, a manifest falsehood. He asks an $18 minimum we)|> with the same scale for the Nojth and South. When Whiteside, A.C.W. Gangsters, In 'Fight on Militant Shoe Union, Stab Worker NEW YORK.—Gangsters employ-| led by officials of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America stab-! bed one worker, Joe Rimus, in the face and groin, so that he had to be taken to a hospital, and beat up two others, at the Friedmann Sportswear shop at 40 W. 17th St. yesterday afternoon. | | This attack is part of the cam-|/ | paign announced recently hy the) A.C.W. leaders, to enter the leather leggings field. The Shoe and Leather Workers | Industrial Union has already made | organizational progress in the Fried- mann shop, and it was when a com- mittee of the Industrial -union--was | about to conduct the Friedmann | workers to a meeting that the | A.C.W. gangsters came upon the scene, and ordered the Friedmann workers to come with them. When the workers showed no inclination to obey these orders, the brutal at- tack followed. The Shoe and Leather Workers | union, in a statement issued later! in the day, declared that no amount of gangster terror by the bosses or their agents will block the workers from joining a union of their own! choice. fe DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1933 SIGN OF BOSSES’ CO-OPERATION Sy MEMBER WE DO OUR. By Limbach RT PA WHAT’S ON Friday Special 20 per cent sale on all books and pamphlets, now going on in all section headquarters. This sale open to all indi- vidual workers and units. (Harlem) Big concert and dance, Finnish Hall, 15 W. 196th St. Csadata Dafora Horton and) musicians from Sierra Leone, West Africa; | ‘ Read Parker, Negro tenor, and “Liberator” | chorus of 36; Red Dancers: Pioneer theatre | a ir nion ee! group; Carl Winter, speeker; Dancing. | Tickets 20 cents, at Workers’ Bookshop and at doc=. Atspices Unemployed Council of | Harlem. The government officially endorses | Jim Crow practices and discrimina- SELINE FUR DYERS—Meeting tonight (Friday) at.7 nt 131 W. 28th Bt., to make final arranzemeats for general strike. (Downtown) “ Industrial Recovery Act{o., 0. as Re wa ‘the Second Five-Year | wae, Admission 10c. Auspices Boro Plan,” lecture by Peul Miller at Labor | Go aa LW. Tomple, iéth St, near Second Ave, Aus-, Saturday pices Downtown Branch F, §, U, Adimis- ston 15¢. ; | Mass Meeting of ~Bookbinders, organized | and unorganized, to’ discuss the Bookbind- | ers’ Code, Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Ath} St., 6:30 p.m, | (Bronx) | Open Air Meeting, Lydig and Cruger Ayes. Auspices Pelham Parkway Workers’ Club, (Brooklyn) Zetkin-Btokes Memorial at American Youth Club, 407 Rockaway Ave. at 8 p.m. Membership meeting, Tiatbush Workers’ Club, 1907 “Sings Highway. Members are urged to attend, | Downtown Branch of A, T. L. Avti-Hitlér Mass Protest Meeting in Boro; “August First Anti-War Demonstration,” Park, I .W. QO. Center, 1373—43rd St., at! talk by Pollack at 3068 E. Third St., Brigh- :30 p.m. Dr. H. Warwick and A. J. Musteton Beach, Auspices Branch 618, L. W. 0. Outstanding and extraordinary Proleta- Yter Gocial Erentof the Summer. Apart- ment 33, 810 E. Sixth St. Breakfast will be served for those who stay that long. Party and Entertainment for Class War Prisoners recently released from San Quen- tin Prison, given by Alfred Levy Branch IL. D., 1776 Pitkin Ave. Admission 10c, Movie’ and dance tonight. Eisenstein’s ‘Ten Days That Shook the World” shown at City Club Council Center, 2863 W. Fitth St, Coney Island. Dancing before and after picture. Refreshments. Cuban Party, Anti-Imperialist League headquarters, 90 E, Tenth St., 1 flight up. Cuban Rumba Orchestra, refreshments, en- tertainment. Admission 20¢. Auspices Government Jim-Crow Policy Bared at Wool Code Hearing WASHINGTON, D. C., July 27.— tion against Negro workers. This was admitted at a meeting of the Advisory Board on the woolen code. When Ann Burlak presented a de- mand in behalf of the National Tex- tile Workers’ Union that a» clause be inserted in the woolen cede guar- anteeing that there shall be no dis- crimination ageinst any worker be- cause of race, sex or nationality, the committee emphatically rejected this demand declaring that the Southern manufacturers would never agree to such a proposal. Burlak pointed to the clause in the textile code which discriminates against Negro workers in the South by exempting cleaners and outside workers from the minimum wage scales. The majority of these work- ers are Negroes The Committee in refusing to accept Burlak’s demand proved clearly that discrimination and Jim Crow practices against the Ne- gto afe a conscious government Policy, that the government is also Opposed té équal pay for equal work for women and supports a policy of discrimination against the fereign- born. |ASSN. FORCED TO j erators, | whieh was signed last week, by lock- | day, LOS ANGELES FUR'Roads Can SIGN WITH NTWIU Needle Trades Union Wins Demands On Pay, Recognition Eastman, Roosevelt’s the Emergency Railroad Trans- portation Act recently signed by Roosevelt does not in any way guar- antee railroad workers from was clearly LOS ANGELES, Cal., July 27.—The Fur Garment Man- ufacturers’ Association com- prising 25 manufacturers signed an agreement with the fur department of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union tonigh yielding on all ‘points demanded the fur workers. Fur workers in t shops gain the 40-hour, 5-day week, and a guaranteed minimum scale of $40 a week for cutters, $30 for op- $25 for nailers, and $22.50 for finishers. The workers will get five legal holidays off with pay. The agreement also provides for equal division of work, time and a indi- mary y Jos nator was formed at action in the workers, Rifkin re- it of the Fur Trim- g A d negotiation: a conference was immedi- half for overtime, no discharges after Golden B: one week's trial and recognition of | sixth week the shop committee. Overtime in the| unbroken. workers ar rmined to win busy season is to be no more than 14 hours. Rifkin Violates Agreement Rifkin & Sons violated their agree-| _ ment with the Industrial Unio! their ing out the workers when’ they re-|| JOBLESS R. R. WORKER fused to work on Saturday and Sun- TAKES OWN LIFE and when they demanded the raises agreed to in the terms of set- tlement. This action was instigated||a job for more than two years, by Levitt, local Forward manager, and| | and unable to endure starvation Pinkofsky, leading member of the| | any longer, William Steele, 35, LL.G.W.U. local here. Rifkin is a) | joblecs brakeman, shot and killed member of the Workmen's Circle and | | himself today. He had worked on is close te Socialist Party circles | several of the largest railroads in The lockout was answered by 4| | the East, militant strike. A mass picket line | : PITTSBURGH, July 27.—Out of _N. Y. TRADE UNION NEWS | WASHINGTON, D.C., July 27.—That | r sum- | § Page Three Fire Men Under Co-ordinator Act Rail Czar, States that sion. ely after the passage ‘of e Brotherhood chiefs dili- red the illusion among rkers that from now no more lay-offs Eastman’s statement falsity of all these {on there couid on the roads. exposes the 1| claims of the Brotherhood chiefs. Roads May Fire at Will Eastman emphatically denies that ;the Railroad Co-ordinator Act con- is anyt g that can be con- strued as prohibiting the roads from many workers as they that the bill does is to » power of the co-ordinator off men from the rail- 2 said. tman's statement is as follows: “Judging f any letters which the co-ordi has received, there seems to b common impression ailroad employees that this of the act protects them from dismissals or fur- among paragrapt absolutely jther furl hs after the effective date of t act, In e opinion of the co-ordinat this is not correct. The r 2 any action which ma: he co-ordi- nator or the commission .. . they do not y, in the judgment of the co-ordinator to any lawful action t individual carrier or the Railroad Co-ordinator lar to the Industrial Re- y (Slavery) Act. It aims at gearing the railroad industry to run at the maximum efficiency with the | minimum number of employees. |Trades Union Council FUR UNION WINS Hear Hyman, Power: TRIAL TRANSFER 4! Workers Invited NEW YORK—The Trade Union Judge’s Bias Exposed | unity Council will hear reports on at the two code hearings tonight, headquarters of the Building Trades League, 37 East 13th St The reports will be made by Louis In Injunction Suit | NEW YORK—The Furriers’ De-| partment of the Needle Trades Work- | Hyman, president of the ers’ Industrial Union scored an im-| Trades Workers Industrial Union, pertant point in its fight against an | and George Powers, organizer for the injunction which threatens its very| steel and Metal Workers Industrial existence when an energetic protest} Union. Hymi will report on the on the part of its attorney, Louis B.| code hearing, at which he presented Boudin, obtained a transfer of the) the demands of the cloakmakers, case from Judge McLaughlin, former| ,nq Powers will tell about the ship- Lahde Hepes ad ne peels builders’ code hearing, at which he ney of the Bronx, to ano’ BP: | resent s ahipward ‘workers' dbs pede lestity webeTaeekngal (Precis Te AMPyArS. ‘Torte’ s ‘As soon as Boudin opened his ar-| ie gument which immediately estab- | All workers are invited to attend. lished the collusion between the em- ployers’ Associated Fur Manufactur- ers’ Association and the A. F. of L. paper union, the Joint Council, Mc-| The temporary injunction which Laughlin began a series of interrup- | the Industrial Union is fighting to tions charging the Industrial Union| have rejected called for a virtual with kidnapping, violence and other| outlawing of the Union by forbidding illegal activities. | employers to hire any but “Joint Boudin pointed out that the re-| Council” members. Fillmore, lawyer marks made it impossible. for the| of the Associated Fur Manufacturers, case to be argued without outside|Inc., was in court supporting the prejudicial issues entering, and in-/plea to retain the injunction sisted on the transference which he| “against” his own organization. finally obtained. A. F. of L. Entering Basic Industries o— to Act As Strike Breaker Needle | IRON AND BRONZE WORKERS UNITING Inside And Outside Workers Organize an Iron Worker Correspondent Friday, July 28 | NEW YORK.—On Friday, July 14 a meeting of Inside Iron and Bronze workers was held at Labor Temple. East 84th St. During the discussion it was pointed out that the treacher- ous policy of the A. F. of L. officials kept the iron workers divided into different local unions. This was to | the advantage of the bosses. It is therefore no wonder that the proposition made at the meeting to build one Union of Inside and Out- |side Iron Workers, was adopted with |great enthusiasm and the Joint | Committee elected to carry on the | organizational work, was so warmly |greeted. On the very same evening another meeting of a small group |of iron workers was held in the |Rand School, called by some Inte: | national admirers with the infamous politician, Mr. Karlin, in the leader- |ship. They told the iron workers, |not to unite with local 52, because \it is expelled from the Interational |for the terrible crime the members committed of ousting one of their corrupt officers who had misappro- ipriated tens of thousands of dollars | of the Union's treasury for his own | purpose. They tell the workers that } by receiving a charter from the Ime ternational, they will immediately get recognition from the bosses and better conditions. By lel .=2 omen me Roith and South. When, Whitete-/ Disguised A. F. of L. Company Unions Pro-| | Workers Anxious for Organization Can Be scale for unskilled labor McMahon F yently chided him for not consulting posed to Prevent Building of Genuine Organized Into Militant Unions Against | him prior to settling the code. “We Working Class Unions | the A. F. of L. Leadership and Trusts had suggested previously that if we od | | Tid: Be Sona we ona Date A. F. of L. has taken another historic strike-breaking step to con- | ak! lled labor.” form to the plans of Roosevelt under the industrial slavery act, ‘nn Burlak demanded a guaran- especially to penetrate the basic industries. teed minimum number of ‘weeks’ | In a statement issued to all the capitalist papers Green announced work per year with a minimum that the A. F. of L. would organize “Federal” unions, confined to spe- yearly wage of $720. She opposed the | cific plants in the basic industries such as steel, auto, rubber and lum- differences in wages for the North| ber, without affiliation to an international union, but directly linked and South. She pointed out that; up with the A. F. of L. central body. These would be in fact company the Crd Perk Ax Ushas) Reo oes unions with an A. F. of L. label. up an Tel out practices, lead- | In explaining just what these “unions” are, to be and for what pur- ing to further unemployment, that) poses they are organized, Green tries to hide their real purpose. But we | ‘The Tron and ironze workers will | not allow themselves to be misled. | They will brush aside‘ the Karlins }and his kind and proceed to or | ganize one union of inside and oute side iron and bronze workers which crisis is unimpeachable by Wall Street, and (2) from the dues of the workers who would have the A. F. of L. leaders as negotiators for | will be able to defend the interests | thom in: slashes in real wages. | i of all the workers in the trade, | “Thus, the A. F. of L. executives, always sensitive to the program b> Oomke 0 the meeting called We ah of Wall Street in the crisis, see in the industrial act a great advan- | Joint Committee on Friday, July 28 tage in preparing in advance the fascization of the unions—drawing at Labor ‘Teiools Baath’ Gt. aid them to closer control by the state apparatus of the bosses, closer show your solidarity with ike eae to the decisive trusts in the basic industries. They thereby expect af the ton Bea blames eee. to hold a more powerful weapon against the growth of class struggle | s Py ; trade unions and against every effort of the workers to stave off the | smashing blows hovering over their heads.” | This is a clear forecast of what is actually happening now through | Workers on Iron and it does not prohibit night work for women and for minors of 16 and over, nor does it guarantee that the parents of children dismissed as be- ing under 16 years of age be cared for or that the children be main- tained. Burlak then presented a substitute code (printed in the Dai- ly Worker of July 24), The Workers Will Strike ‘The bosses snickered when men- tion was made by Burlak that the workers will not wait to get im- provements from the government codes but will strike against its abuses and for better conditions, Burlak turned to them and said, “You may laugh but the workers will strike and win.” Hathaway, Ford Speak In Camp This Week ‘WINGDALE, N. Y¥.—Clarence Ha- thaway, editor of the Daily Worker, day morning on the NIRA. Unity has just finished adding a| volley ball'and a handball court and the athletic facilities along with swimming in Lake Bilis, provides plenty of recreation for the worker guests. Come to Unity this week and help the T.U.U.C. Strike Victorious can get an accurate idea of them from Greey’s official declaration as well as from his interview with the capitalist newspaper reporters, 10 which Green says more than he did in his official statement, * . * IREEN, referring to the latest move of the A. F. of L. said: “As a matter of convenience and practicability, Federal labor unions will be established at different plants if conditions seem to make it neces- ) fairs. . | of Labor is not in any way departing from the form of organization and policy is the only one by which the workers can become organized and of the industrial recovery act.” It is true the A. F. of L. is not departing from its strikebreaking traditional policy. But what is new in this announcement? It is a step towards establishing, with the understanding and agreement of the bosses, plant unions—in effect company unions—with an A. F. of L. label. What is particularly important is that the A. F. of L. is energetically moving into the basic industries with the help of the employers. . ‘ . IREEN now points out it is necessary to organize “plant” unions—a-very thin disguise for company unions with an A. F, of L. label—in order to get the benefit of the industrial recovery act. But thé industrial recovery act was supposed to give the workers the right to choose their own form of organization. Green says this is not so. It must have a special type, built on the company union, plant idea, for the. “workers convenience.” It is very significant that the A. F. of L. officialdom sketched out this type of A. F. of L.-company union for the basic industries, and for a very good reason. symptom* of major ‘strike battles in steel, coal, rubber, lumber looming. Under revolutionary trade union leade ‘ship, steel workers in Gary, Buffalo, Monroe and other places have emphatically shown their resistance to the slave codes and the company union, The bosses are pushing forward company unions to put over their slave codes, The A. #’. of L. tries to come to an agreement with the big bosses, proposes to form the com- pany unions for them, using the craft and skill of the officialdom in | strikebréaking, and its past ability to mislead the workers. . . . sary, so that the workers may conveniently conduct their business af- the traditional policy which it has pursued from the beginning. This | enjoy the benefits of collective bargaining as provided for in Section 7 | Sharp struggle is developing around the basic industries, with every | H “In following such a plan of organization the American Federation | the workers. In his statement, Green talks about general organization in a plant. But to the capitalist papers he talked about organizing only the skilled workers in each plant in the A. F. of L.-company unions.The New York Herald Tribune referring to Green's “Federal” union idea said: “They embrace all skilled workers in each factory, instead of separating these according to their particular trade.” . IN the steel mills it would mean organizing a company union, with the A. F. of L, seal, among skilled workers to use them against the vast majority of workers in the industry who are unskilled. This is only half the story, however. We the real intent of the “Federal” unions, and the strategy of the A. F. of L. in its new strike- breaking policy, from the ljberal “New York World Télegram,” which is quite favorable to the A. F. of L. officialdom, . . . E @ special interview with Green, Ruth Pinney, special Washington writer for the Scripps-Howard papers, writes as follows about the new program, fresh from a talk with the chief strikebreaker himself: “The new plan is a long step toward concession by organized labor to the demand of industrial leaders that they only bargain with em- ployes. This was one of the principal demands made in the steel code calling for company unions.” From the very beginning of the adoption of the industrial “recovery” act, the Daily Worker hes pointéd out that the role of the A. F. of L. would be to aid the leading exploiters put through the slavery codes by whatever means needed by the bosses. ‘ . . N June 29th, under the headline: “Green Wants A. F. of L. to be Chief Company Union to Support Roosevelt's Program Under Slavery Bill,’* att Games in his series of articles om the industrial recovery act wrote as follows: “An ambition, long latent, has been stirred anew in the breast of the A. F. of L. leaders by the industrial reeovery act. That is, to become the official labor agents of the big scab corporations. the new move of Green and the A. F. of L. id every basic industry the workers will now be confronted with a strength- ened company union plan, headed by the American Federation of La- bor. This does not mean, as Green emphatically points out, that the A. F. of L. is going to disclose its real policy to the steel workers, the auto workers or the rubber workers. It does not mean there is a full agreement | with the bosses, or that the bosses have accepted the A. F. of L. unions in lieu of their own. The A. F. of L. will make many pretenses of struggle, and especially where the mood of the workers has reached the striking pitch, the A. F. of L, will try to lead the strike, including as one of the demands recog- nition of the “federal” or plant union, in order to make the boss see the necessity of the A. F. of L.-company type of union, In the interview with Ruth Finney, Mr. Green mentioned two plants specifically where this plan would be tried, the Goodyear Rubber Co., and the Briggs automobile plant, indicating that he has already some agree- ment to enter these basic industries with the A. F. of L.-company union, ‘ANY workers can be fooled by the A. F. of L. label, and even by the shadow-boxing struggles that the A. F. of L. may be forced to enter into. ore Hence, when we talk about entering the basic industries, developing struggles from below, building the united front, establishing the revolu- tionary trade unions, we are already face to face with the A. F. of L. ina united front with many of the bosses. Our slogan of “concentrate on the basic industries” comes at a time when mass struggles are developing, when the most favorable opportunities are here, but when the A. F. of L. and bosses are more conscious of the discontent of the workers, are devising many forms of crafty deception in | order to defeat the workers. HAT is the role of the militant unions, the steel unions, the coal union, the auto union affiliated to the Trade Union Unity League in the face of this new step of the A. F, of L., aided by the bosses, into the basic indusiries? We must proceed to the most energetic organization campaign of the revolutionary un‘ons to smash these attempts. We must realize the danger and be able to cope with it by a most detailed and painstaking exposure of the policy of the A. F. of L, We must urge the workers to form their own unions, deyelop the initiative of the workers in all plants in the basic industries, stimulating the formation of struggle com- mittees, elected by the workers themselves, the drawing up of demands in each shop for higher wages, for lower hours and better conditions. Bronze Meet Tonight NEW YORK. — The next mass meeting of inside iron and bronze workers of Greater New York and | vicinity to weld the unity of all fron and bronze workers will be held tonight (Friday) at 8 p. m. at Labor | apple: 283 East 84th St., New York | City. | The Committee of Nine, elected from the ranks of the shopmen at the last mass meeting, and the Ex- ecutive Committee of the House- | smiths’ Local No, 52 have met jointly and worked out a program jof unity, with plans for discussion | Workers are warned against the | racket union being set up by the Socialist Karlin. While the Jewish | Socialist paper, the Forward, admits | the A. F. of L. International union | and its agent Shilling constitute a racketeer outfit, Karlin is working | with these misleaders to split the | ranks of the workers, Levine Bros. Infants’ Wear Strike Is Won NEW YORK.—Twenty-five work- lers at the Levine Bros. infants wear shop won their strike yesterday, |under the leadership of the white goods department of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. | The workers received an ffierease of |$2 and $3 a week, and reduced the | working hours from 48 and 54 to a | 44-hour week. The workers, some of them who had experience with | local 62 of the International Ladies WEST NEW YORK, N. J, Jaly : othe pres of tee ed ANY times before the A. F. of L. has made bids to the big trusts to “William F. Green, president of the A. F. of L., in praising the We must lead the struggle against the slave codes, and against the A. | oL 0 workers Uniien, pledged the Gould & Rosenberg mill, mak- Py vy nit them to organise their workers on say terms. Bat now many act, complained mildly of only one feature. The act recognizes the biaeetghi ty baad [ta ncobth tape tegrated irg tries. wcanize the | themselves to join the Needle pola s, egg y ace | oF of Ie te paren Raptr bi) Hedvctigel plant wee of company unlons, and permity the stéel trust and others workers in the militant trade unions, calls for a simultancous struggle | T’ades Union seer, geniffll Embroidery Work. | Goodyear Rubber Co, Why ia this? Because the work s besbiaiog Se ee openers ae ate eee adie ae arainst the American Federation of Labor in all of its shadings. are ur eg ee Se Union, affliated with the | to fight and reject the company unions. The revolutionary trade unions, much better Necsens Gebioplng the jit as geared Forge Bee ee ee ee Gia er we ealare shee wed Carts era oa, Needle ‘Trades Workers Industrial | affiliated to the Trade Union Unity League are beginning to lead moth trusts, they could more ably allay suspiclon. Besides, there ix eeiaek Tins ot sreseaie epee he Os Sena one Staoe ct ceene | 2Y ; ‘ Union, today. work- strugs! ‘workers beginning to learn id f pid creation of the workers’ own organs of struggle ; by the Needle Trades Workers In- ers ia a0 oe cent Porat, in | to nae, Tt toil aie toting tc A. at hed tow. ateater graft possible from two sources (1) from the new cor- and the basis for a mass union, under revolutionary leadership in all of | dustrial Union to be near their shops wages and a 40-honr week. company unions, with A. F. Ot. new to'entench she porations which tarn their company unions over to the skilled the basic industries, | Saturday to see that mo overtime is » F, of L, lnbels anf A. F. of L. help against hands of the labor leader whi wage-cutting record during the i} bove all, there oan be no delay. We must act now—and every day. | worked. yw '