The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 4, 1933, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1933 Page Three Some Conclusions E HAVE no reports as yet regarding the role of our Party and the Trade Union Unity League in the strike of the Chicago stockyard workers. We are, therefore, in no Stockyard Workers Strike (AN EDITORIAL.) from the Chicago underestimation of the role and influence of the Amer- ican Federation of Labor. Even up to the end the leading comrades in the District Bureau were not aware of the extent of the A, F, L. organization among certain | sections of the workers in the stockyards and the role | that they would play in any struggle. This was called | “Bankers Trust Co. ke | Stole My Savings” Crisis Slashes Bank Macy’s Praise “Liberal” NRA Code, Devise Wage Cutting Stagger System Deposits by Two Billion Dollars Never More Than 41| Per Cent Had Any Bank Accounts NEW YORK, Dec. 2.—Refiecting | | All Department Store Workers Called to Meet Tuesday, to Organize Union of aS: ASS White Collar Workers to the attention of the comrades on a few occasions position to draw the final lessons from our |the narrowing income of the lower | participation in the strike, or to help fi in the solu- but it seems was not taken with sufficient seriousness | I sections of the ulation, there was ee Fs tton of the problems we are faced mee even to cause an investigating the situation, We con- | Siutien arn at cseeea aitons in = ys Diner Wate ? S Bus main purpose in writ of the situati tinued to be isolated from the workers, and remained | \the amount of savings bank de The introduction of the N.R.A. code at R. H. Macy's, the world’s largest rs = iad ve unaware of the actual developments. As a result we | posits at the end of June 30, it was | retail store, has worked to worsen conditions and to make the minimum és wt Sle ane Me yiew: cE me lack of Knowledge of the |) 7 onnectione with these organised workers, and | announced today. This is a drop of} salary stipulated in the code the maximum salary. Mery’s had already - vole of the Communists played in the strike is to could not influence their course, not to speak of or- |11 per cent from the same period) taken advantage of the depression to lower wages all it had dared—nntil 3 aharply raise the question of our whole trade union pes reevoisiees oppositions within the A. ¥. L. last year. N. R. A. gave them new daring. When the retail code of October 4th was i hoard adhe Sort Nic. td he laps real ad unions and develop the united front policy. The analysis of the decline pub-| ~ —— ~ ®signed to the lip-smacking satisfac- strittee of the stockyard workers, oP fi lished by ‘the American Bankers | | tion of New York Department Store ewe er | Lae |Journal admits that the drop in| Pre are J bless Cwnere Pace Meee wet tee the outstanding lessons of the Chicago UT doubt the situation revealed in the stock- |savings was due to increased ex- D 30 hel R. H. Macy & Co, praised house workers’ strike? yard strike is characteristic of the whole trade union penditures by the workers forced by | a . for its “liberal” articles—and prompt- Loco ; work in the District, The slightt progress made recently the rising cost of living. Co nven ti on With ly bolstered merchandise bought. or First and foremost there stands out the isolation of | i, the trade union work has been limited almost en- Since 1928 the number of savings AL} contrasted for, before the Code for- & our Party from the main body of the workers in | trey to a few of the lighter industries both as far bank depositors has been declining, tally begenoveraon a4 odes Ais age Chicago, The strike took our Party by surprise. We have in the city of Chicago a mebbership of 2,500 in the Party, but yet such an important struggle could develop without our Party in any way being prepared ‘or it. That this is socan be seen from the participa- tion of the Chicago comrades in the National Packing- house Conference andthe meeting of the District as the T.U.U.L. unions are concerned, as well as to the work in the a. F. L. We remain isolated and have made no progress among the basic sections of the un- organized and the more important industries among the workers organized in the A. F. L. unions. The leadership does not steer a decisive course in the trade union work and only a small section of the Party is so that today only 31 per cent of! the population has any savings ac- count, as compared with 41 per cent four years ago. The average ac- | count is now $62 per person as com- pared with $232 then. At no time did more than 41 per cent have any deposits at all. “Hunger Hearings” fa) West Bklyn, Plan Meets to Expose Poverty tting tember Macy’s begins to p to meet the anntlal Late in AUGUST In early S on new son. ey emani Side, Harlem, |\tey wap siGrep THE BLANKET CODE CALLING FOR A $14.00 min- imum wage for sales and maintén- e help, so that when the seasonal Bureau immediately following it. This results from the taken. w; ™ A nia a increase of hands occurred, Macy's ip with trade union work. | The effect of the crisis has thus — ; 2 4 following facts: The Party is n et. composed of the popes gent ‘a ‘ EW <—Fichts * free 6 not only got new help at a new low . eagle It ix necessary for the Chicago comrades to discuss been to slash the meagre savings of | NEW YORK—Fights for free coal put cou > their compliance ‘ decisive sections of the Chicago proletariat, it has not yet drawn the membership into the trade unions (only 20 to 25 per cent are in unions and these are in the the queitions here raised and to further elaborate them in the District Committee. Perhaps it would be | the masses by over 80 per cent per| for the unemployed, against red tape capita. The decline in deposits is even in the Home Relief Bureaus, and open hearings to expose the widespread the code in their displays and newspaper relea: for its advertising Id use it to further their lighter industries); the leadership is not sufficiently a | ®@visable to hold a special general membership meet- | greater than the official figures in-| Poverty in workin* class neighbor- Se Cane aia driving force for trade union work and the Party | ing to dramatize the importance of the whole question. | dicate, since the figures for the lat-| hoods throughout th> city—these are F hing of the right- This meeting should then be followed by a discussion jest deposits include the interest ac-| some of the activitics being guided ness with which it might raise although recognizing the growing radicalization of the workers in resolutions does not draw the proper con- clusions from this growing radicalization of the work- ers especially in the basic industries which include large ‘tions of Negro workers. The second outstanding-lesson is the failure of the District leadership to make serious efforts to carry hrough the concentration policy with the resulting im every nucleus and every important trade union fraction. These meetings should be utilized to explain the line of the Party in the trade union work in the | light of the sharpening class struggle and to deepen the understanding of the membership on the concrete recent developments (deepening crisis, crisis in the N. R. A, growing fascization, growth of strike move- ment, role of A. F. L. bureaucracy and 8. P., growth of Picketing the bank on Wail Str ect that had rebb-d him of life's savings, a worker, determined to expose the crooked bankers, is shown walking up and down Wall Street, where such cases are the rifle and erued to the deposits, thus mini mizing the actual withdrawals of! deposits during the last 12 months. News Brief. by the city Unemployed Council to prepare a fighting base for the Greater New York Convention Against Unemployment, Dec. 10, 10 a m., at Irving Plaza. Five thousand leafiets in five guages were distributed by the V Side Unemployed Council to prepare prices As to all big business, to R. H. Macy & Co. the N.R.A. is a blessing. Cun- ning manipulation of daily hours of labor under the vicious stagger ¢ tem and judicious spreading and crease of lunch hours, brought the need for new help down to a minj- mum. The large stores contrived to serious consequences of this failure. The packing in- trade unions, A. F. L., T. U. U. L., ind 4 nae? for an open hearing on Unemploy- ea 3 , A. F. L., T. U. U. L., independent unions, not the exception. a j "a | "4 n-| Set along with as little help as befor pletinof “the Gente “rs cece bey bee 14th | etc.) and to draw the membership into the trade | Volcano in Hawaii Erupts | ment at St. George’s Church, on Sun-| fe “0 duction of the forty-hour Pi the Central Committee was recognized a8 | unions. | ILO, Hawaii, Dec. 2—In what is! Week -—even discounting speed-ups, the main industry of concentration in all resolutions adopted he District Committee. But has this policy The District Bureau should at once further elaborate the tasks in the concentration industries (packing, Billionaires Urge Wages reported to be the most violent erup-| g | tion since 1903, Mauna Loa, Hawatian | A “Hunger Hearing” will be held at Pp. m., Monday, Dec. 4 by the Upper which are a tradition at Macy’s. Soon after new clerks were hired in Sep- Beetl ‘carried into life?e' Were really serlous offerte k : ; Harlem Unemployed Council at the | tember, old clerks were discharged, 2 Unfertunaiely even the District Bureau will | Se Tailroad) and among the more important A. F. L. aa ents villige Tee eee headquarters of the Internatoinal| replaced by lower salaried newcomers. unions (metal, transportation, packing, etc.). é | Workers Order, 415 Lenox Ave.,| But not until after Christmas will readily answer in the negative. ‘The District Bureau has.even after the Open Letter neglected to take up the work among the packinghouse and stockyard workers as 4 central task. The serious danger to the whole Party and the immediate effect upon the membership from making repeated decisions that remain on paper are, we are sure, obvious to you it you only give the question a moments’ notice. Any explanation that you did not have the forces, finances, etc., can of course not be seriously advanced as an It is necessary to perhaps re-assign the leading comrades to special tasks on the basis of the concen- tration program to provide guarantees that the plan will be carried through. It is necessary to renew the work among the un- employed, among the Negro masses, the work of the fraternal and language organizations to bring this | work in line with the concentration program. It is especially urgent to undertake recruitment into the Party and the building of the circulation of of Employed for Charity VERYON 2 asks why cies. , with these great Govern. ment relief funds—Federal, State and City—it is niceessary to give to private Family Welfare Agen: That question must be answered and it is |tions took place in the Pacific. Lindbergh to Fly from Africa | to Brazil | BATHURST, British Gambia, Dec. | 2—The Lindberghs will hop from| West Africa to Brazil, a distance of | |2,000 miles, weather permitting, it was | |Teported here today. Brooklyn unemployed will attend a/ hearing at 8 p. m., Wed., Dec. 6, at 1777 Atlantic Ave. Home Relief officials have been challenged to attend the hearing Those who reply will learn they are not before a polite social service sur- vey that begins and ends in life-less recitals of “figures” and “cases.” On every hearing will be "No grievance discharges of those receiving “exces- sive” salaries become wholesale. For the yearly emergency of Christ- mas hiring, the Department Store Code has thoughtfully provided. The codes allow working hours to be in- creased for three weeks of each year. from forty hours to forty-eight week- ly; commencing Dec. 4th, everyone, | the contrary, the guiding slogan of} and especially those hired only for the brief tenure of the holiday season ediniates ity is pine ay od ones famtgte the Daily Worker in such a manner that we at least | anaiveted in Sie papier. | Warey soa Gets Ten expgsed without a fight to remedy| to be ia Gee Pe Sad % » astablish the contacts with the most important strata 4 th th. 8 | it.” The role of Forced Labor in at-' compelles wor! ours ove! e a number of experienced and leading forces including of the Chicago proletariat, especially among the native | “3 Leste NEW YORK. — “Waxey” Gordon, | tacking the living standards of work- each week. Far from receiving extra, members of the C. C., @ number of important Party | white and Negro workers. | cuarged with income tax evasion, wag|erS Will be exposed. As opposed to| Pay, the seasonal help work for two daily papers in Chicago, an English Party bi-weekly, numerous mass organizations (fraternal, language, un- employed councils, etc.), embracing tens of thousands ot white and Negro workers among whom without doubt there are broad connections among the stock- “ yard workers, The third outstanding lesson is without doubt the It goes without saying that im the first place this whole program must take into account the immediate situation in the stockyards. We urge the District Bureau to at once discuss these questions and to more decisively develop and carry out a line which will lead to a strengthening of our work in the basic industries. All Comrades Meet at the \NEW. HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Prices © &. 13TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER-——| Home Relief Funds Stopped in Kenosha (See Advertisement Below) DUE TO THE MANY REQUESTS—WE ARE COMPELLED TO TAKE OVER THE BRONX COLISEUM INSTEAD OF THE ST. NICHOLAS RINK KENOSHA, Wis.—With the ex- cuse that “it is impossible at this time to furnish relief funds,” the City Council here voted to dis- continue all public relief beginning Nov. 30. i A complete refusal to shoulder the burden of the starving workeas in the city was incorporated into the resolution voted upon, with the statemen that the city is without TH DEMONSTRATE WITH US AT THE 10 DAILY WORKER ANNIVERSARY BRONX COLISEUM, 177th Street SATURDAY, DEC. 30,1933 ADMISSION; In advance 400; at the door 40c; Red Press Fund 1c 35 KE. 12th Street; Workers’ Book Shop, 50 East 13th Street Dance Till Dawn TICKETS for SALE: Daily Worker (Store), In » Program of New songs | Sergei Radamsky | authority or power to raise funds for the continwance of the relief work. NR.A. Continues Use of Store Scrip WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 1— Scrip which was to be banned from | use after March Ist in accordance | with the provision of the retail code, | is to be continued to July Ist, 1934, “i2th Annual by NRA decision, Employers are able to compel workers to trade in com- pany stores and fleece them of their Saturday Night, Dee. Sth ST. NICHOLAS ARENA 66th Street near Broadway The Proletarian Cartoonists of the Morning Frethett YOSSEL CUTLER VS. BILL GROPPER In a Wrestling Match in Cartoons and Chak Talk ELLIE KING DAVID’S Negro Jazz Band Orchestra ADMISSION AT THE DOOR — 50c TICKETS IN ADVANCE ONLY — 35¢ Tickets on Sale at Workers Book Shop,50 E.13th St. OLEVELAND For the Benefit of the “Daily Worker” ie ae J. P. Morgan, Mrs. Belmont and Felix 2 arburg save their swollen fortunes but ask workers to support jobless out of their N.R.A. sliced wages. |fined $80,000, and sentenced to ten| years in prison. Seven Kansans Indicted in Million Dollar Bond Fraud TOPEKA, Kan., Dec. 2—Carl Mc- Keen, President of the National Bank jof Topeka, was indicted today with Forced Labor the Workers Unemploy- | ment Insurance Bill will be brought forward. | Right up to the conference date, | neighborhood hearings will continue | to bring out block issues leading to | struggle which will elect delegates to| the National Convention Against Un- | employment which is meeting in| NEW YORK—Uniting in a common plea for contributions from em- | Six others by a grand jury, which in-| Washington, D. C., Jan, 13, 14 and 15. | ployed wprkers, J. P. Morgan, Felix Warburg, Owen D. Young, Mrs, Bel- mont, all multi-millionaires, urged workers to make a gift of 2 per cent of their meagre pay for ten weeks, to the $4,000,000 Family Welfare Drive. These workers, themselves in dan; | part time, are asked to shoulder the burden of unemployment created by | these selfsame exploiting millionaires. According to an announcement made by J. G. Blaine, chairman of the Welfare Committee special con- centration for funds will be made on employes of department stores, com- munication lines and 80 utilities com- panies. “The success of the cam- paign,” he added, “now hinges largely on the contributions from employes.” Just as last year when workers were compelled on threat of losing | their jobs to contribute to charity drives, pressure will again be exerted | on workers badgered between rising | prices and wage cuts, both instituted by the N.R.A. ‘The pamphlet, signed by the multi- millionaires, speaking of the force 1 labor program, says that “the govern- | ment could do that much and no more.” These multimillionaires would certainly be interested in making the government do nothing else. ‘Thi explains their intense opposition t the Workers’ Federal Unemployment and Social Insurance Pill w thrust complete responsibility for care of starving unemployed workers on their shoulders and off the shoulders of the workers, NEW YORK.—Splendid co- operation by needle trades work- ers to spread the Daily Worker among their ranks is reported by S. Wishniak, Daily Worker Red Builder, who has been given per- mission to speak about the “Daily” at union meetings. Sales of the Daily Worker among needle trede workers have already shown an in- crease as a result of this. All other trade unions are asked to extend similar co-operation to Daily Worker representatives and thereby help further their own struggles by sceing to it that the “Daily,” organizer and mobilizer of the workers, is more firmly rooted among the trade union masses, RED BAZAAR Fishermen’s Union Affiliates to TUUL ger of losing their jobs, many working |vestigated the state’s million dollar) bond forgery. They are charged with | flooding the state with fraudulent) |bonds which they claimed were/ \ backed by the State of Kansas. Has your unit, club, union, T.W.0. Branch, your organization held a collection for the Daily Worker? Help save our “Daily.” | EDITOR’S NOTE: This depart- ment of the Daily, appearing each | Monday, will be glad to answer | any letters requesting information on specific problems confronting the workers who are issuing shop, mine, ship or dock papers. “THE WINCHESTER WORKER,” is- sued by the Steel and Metal Work- ers Industrial Union, Noy. 1933, New | Haven, Conn. >a | Reviewed by GERTRUDE HAESSLER Back in 1927, when, together with workers in the Wright Aeronautical | Corporation in Paterson, N. J., I was | editing the “Wright Propeller,” I used |to consult quite frequently the is- sues of the “Winchester Worker,” get assistance, and the “Winchester Worker” was very helpful. The “Winchester Worker” is an “old faithful” among the shop papers in the country, and we were glad to get hold of the November 1933 issue, It is somewhat mystifying to see it being issued by the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Unton. A copy of the Sept. 1930 issue, shows it be- ing issued by the\’Winchester Shop Committee of the Trade Union Unity |Leegue. Were these constant trans- fers from one organization to an- other made with the consent of the | workers concerned? And was the | transfer announced? Or was jt that the Communist nucleus abandoned the paper, and the T..U. U. L., and | then later the S. & M. W. I. U. saved |it from oblivion? If so, then it was juny for either organization to adopt the same name which the Com- munist Nucleus had used. This question of who issues a shop |paper is by no means an academic jone, But this question will be handled in the near future in an ar- ,artifically. Each one is carefully | linked up with, and based on con- |crete shop conditions. Unemployment Insurance is linked |up with continuous layoffs in the shop, with rising prices in New Haven. The N. R. A. article cites lay-offs, and contrasts the boss's claim that he |can’t afford to keep so many work- lers, with the million dollars profits |of the company during the previous lyear. In the Russian Anniversary article, the security and absence of unemployment in the Soviet Union tare contrasted with the increasing |layoffs at Winchesters and in New | Haven in general. The article on war preparations is jlinked up with the manufacture of munitions in the plant, Its weak- ticularly inexcusable in a munitions plant, where the workers will be called upon to play a specific role in the coming war, and where the backward and _ unclass-conscious worker may feel that wat will be a blessing to him by giving him more work and high wages. The broader working class issues must be con- |stantly explained. and the organiza- tional policy carefully outlined. In fact, in not one single article in the paper is the organizational policy in the shop made clear. In the ar- | ticle on Unemployment Insurance, the demand is well brought forth after the issues are explained, but what is the organizational directive? The paper says: “Join the fight for it! |Get in touch with the Trade Union Unity Leacue and learn how to fight for it.”. Why not teach them in the paper how to fight for it? That's exactly what the paper is for—noit only an agitator and educator, but primarily an organizer! What is the organizational con- clusion in the article on the N. R. A.?| ances of the workers in the shop are merely mentioned here and there, jand in the N. R. A. article there is \a whole paragraph of them jumbled together. If the paper could just single out one small grievance. which the workers feel strongly, |give the workers leadership on how to obtain a cencession from the boss on it, the workers would know that the organization issuing the paper) knows what it is talking about. If |the paper could initiate one success- | ful struggle, even if only in one small | department, the news of the $s | would sweep through the plant like wildfire, and the prestige of the paper }and of the Union would rise im- measurably, The only organizational solution be built up, how they carry on strug-| gles, how they can protect the worker. | Workers Correspondence The paper does very well in stimu- | lating the workers to write. Every- where possible the workers are urged to write of their conditions, and the | jaddress is clearly given. There is/ |one very good letter. on the company | union’s inactivity, to which the} Editor's note is, if meant seriously,| | a little too hair-splitting, or, if meant | fiippantly, not quite suitable for this |letter. The worker is worried, He |wants to know what to do. The |editor should explain carefully what | the worker must do to build up or- | ganization in the shop. The other | letter, on sudden firings of worker: {has a little better note—the near |we get to concrete organizational |directives in the whole paper, but jnothing is said on how the depart- |ment group, which the paper ad- | vocates, is to be built up, or what its function is, By the way, letters from workers should serve as the basis to three dollars less than the old wage and for only one-fourth the commis- sions. Besides these new attacks inspired by the N.R.A., the Macy worker has inherited grievances of long standing. He is compelled to contribute to a Hospital Fund called the Macy Mu- tual Aid, which is used for the upkeep of a so-called clinic. The Hospital is used largely for the jeare of the customers seized with ill- ness or accident, for the examination of prospective new help and for peri- odical health studies of employees, whereby anyone found to have symp- toms of debilitation due to the ter- rific strain of a great store and to the speed-up, may be fired before he becomes a case for insurance. No pay may be received for illnesses con- tracted by the employee during the first six months of his employment. To maintain this outrageous spy-anti- insurance system, the Macy worker ust contribute one per cent of his monthly pay. Due to the shortness of the lynch hours grudged out to most of the | clerks, they are compelled to eat ‘in | the company lynchroom. Prices are maintained at a level of 15 to 25 per cent higher than the average outside cafeteria prices, with portions meas- urably smaller. The effect of even @ small mass protest was attested to recently when a flood of letters from indignant Macy workers to the man- agement, letters sponsored by the “Macy Worker,” secret bulletin of the Macy Seciion of the Office Workers Union, protesting the lunchroom out- Tage, brought some slight decline in prices. Ostensibly maintained for the benfit of the workers, this lunch- room is a source of great profit to the grasping organization, a The Macy group urges its fellow workers and sympathizers to come | to the Open Meeting of Department important point of explaining the forms of shop organization of the T.. 0. Dy is ‘Technically the paper shows that the greatest care was taken graphically to make it look neat, but it lacks the illustrations, cartoons, and small items which serve to break up the massive appearance of columns and columns of typed material. Head- ings of articles are monotonously alike. We presume that there is no local artist available to help in livening up the paper. Make an effort to find one. Ask for copies of other shop papers issued else- where, for from them the most in experienced amateur can trace suit- able illustrations onto the stencil Send to the National Textile Workers Union, at 1755 Westminster St., for a copy of their “International Braid Toiler,” which has just begun to ap- . It is sprinkled full of the most resting and amusing illustrations. paper will be reviewed in full next Monday. in conclusion, here we have a shop bad Come Away From the Noise and Rush of the City SEATTLE, Wash. Nov. 30.—A | ticle by itself. “What must be our answer to this, ‘ ane manvfacturing munitions, with FOR REST, QUIET - - AND A LITTLE FUN AT decision to affiliate its 8,400 mem- | Now as to this particular issue.) Winchester workers? ORGANIZE! | for the clisay Dapet, and show Ce working conditions, A little more xe BARGAIN . SALES bers to the Trade Union Unity Politically the vaver is stron, Or-| Fight against wage-cuts, against lay-| be segregated on one boxe. as “Let-| thought can orientate the paper z League was made by the delegates | ganizationally it is weak. Here we| offs, against rotten conditions. Write | ters from Winchester Workers. around the strategic issue of the war CAMP NITGEDAIGET CONCERT Rates: $14 per week (includ. press tax); $13 for IL, W. 0, and Co-Operative Members Cars Leave Daily at 10:30 A. M. from Co-operative Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST TEL.: ESTABROOK 8-5141 Prospect Auditorium 2612 Prospect Ave., Cleveland of the Fishermen and Cannery of the militant trade union move- ment and maintain its fighting | ing instructions that current political organization for the everyday de- mands of the workers, have an article on the N. R. A. on are not merely mechanically fulfill- [Bayt paeyectie be ine’uded in shon paper material They are not stuck in| question af shop grievances. Griev-| thoroughly done, except for the yery| ers will be called upon to play, union cannot remain independent | don't make a mistake — the articles| how to form any united front body | swered. whatever, how to fight on any specific | analysis of the difference between | en grievance? ‘ And so we come to the burning to us. Tell us about your conditinns, | The paper very skillfully picks to This month we have an} |the A. P. of L. Unions and those af-| | fillated to the T, U. U. L. — very) danger, as the central issue, with- i ia ta eee ae ponseuaremeapsitie DANCING Workers’ Industrial Union at its | Unemployment Insurance, on war|Let the Stecl and Metal romere i piesa ee Lenton orga Nese A aly Playing down the peber, tse Hot a running water in 60 steam heated rooms—plenty of tasty, nutritious recent first national convention in preparations, on the present strike| Union help you organize.” | and Labor,” and contrasts it with the} material already included. pr ie food—See the newly decorated social and dining halls. Saturday, Dec. 9 Seattle. wave, on combatting the boss com-| Organize what? Fight how? Where | class-struggle policy of “The Win-|near—we must prepare the workers ALL THE SUMMER FUN WITH WINTER COMFORTS i? es The decision was made by uuan- | pany machine, on the Anniversary of | is the organizational leadership which | chester Worker.” The “Question-) to play their revolutionary part, Per~ Sports—Parties—Lectures, ete. Sunday, Dec. 10 imous vote of the delegates who |the Russian Pevolution, on the Com-| will teach these workers how to build| Box” Department is excellent. Each|haps previous issues of the paper Come for the Week-end—You Will Want to Stay the Week! expressed their conviction that a | munist Party Election campaign. And|up their own grievance committees,, month we have some question an-| » this point, but that is no for slurring it over in Nove Every single issue must bear down on the war danger, and the strategic part these munitions worke excu: SPTES SRINR TRAST PERE SAAT T POSS sn PORE & RAG APRSRIRORS Bere ees wages through higher prices by ee “4 is the fact that it does not|now offered by the paper is: “Write dl means of scrip. i her porcrad cat ee ayia Glearly explain the class issues, but|to the Steel and Metal Workers spent py ist pareys eae MO R N ] N G F REIHEIT players to abolish the provision ia the || Needle Unions Help || imporiant New Haven munitions shop.| st Tae ee Ee ee eetreerel (heat he ue, Unen support Of Inent store workers on Tuesday, Dec. s . v ers, withou' a i" ,. | 5th, at the Christ Church, 344 W. 36th wn retail code banning scrip and Presi- Boost Sales of the Te Faberscn: We WARE eoreeua green tion, with the question “What part|group of non-union workers, Ab- : ‘ : Gent Roosevelt 1s expected to appoint ¢ pa aity Wo Seoile'g Meenas, Dare will ‘you play in the next bosses’ war?” | solutely no explanation given on the St. at 6:30 p.m. COST E BA &@ committee soon to review the ques- || “Daily” to Members || “cet many shop papers in the| 2070" Posetchy approach is par-| forms of organization in a shop sup- i UM LL y country at that time from which to|Such a sketchy app aes fee, Coop aeeee 8 shop Pup. F

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