4 Page Four THE DAILY WORKER DISTRICT EIGHT Meetings | Workers (Communist) Party | Resolutions SCHOOL MEETS Opportunities for Shop Nuclei Work WITH SUCCESS MiNEYtitiCYmSCONDUCTED - »V WORKERS LEAGUE shop to shop in the same industry. to the workers on that basis the class slstance for the greatest possibility pro- Circuit Classes Are Com- By ARNE SWABECK. Furthermore, arbitration or adjust- nature of the present system of of success. Naturally, this problem ment boards are very frequently cre- duction. differs widely organized in un- POLITICAL BANKRUPTCY OF YIPSELS ARTICLE 11. in and ing to End ated by interference of governmental Shop nuclei members should gather organized shops. In case of the for- Violations of Working Argeements. authorities and a fight for the elimin- the necessary statistics to explain the mer the measures must be proposed The Milwaukee class in the first SEEN AT FINNISH BRANCH MEET system helps only rates by is mainly a problem of organ- ation of this not difference in brot about both thru the unions while in case of the term of Elements of Communism con- to expose the nature of the capitalist open and veiled wage cuts, make a latter the ability the Communists Friday evening 1 attended a meeting of the Y. S. L. Finnish branch, THISized enterprises. Bosses as a rule of tinues its sessions every Thursday P. government but also organize the comparison with the neces- will be put a test. Spontane- York, an make no agreements with unorgan- to amount to real evening. The question of Imperialism, New where informal debate was scheduled to be held In the club workers politically. , sary for an ordinary standard of liv- ous strikes are frequent occurrences its basis, and Kautsky’s Theory of room of the Yipsels. A prospective member, Zeke Anton- ized workers. Moreover, union bus- — 4. The Fight Against Wage Cuts. ing and also, if at all possible, the in unorganized shops but very often iness representatives are often apt to Uultra-Imperialism were considered son ' 01 tpm munis tie tendencies, was to defend his opposi- Altho wage cuts are not daily amount paid to the workers, the they fritter away and naught I B overlook violations, for reasons well oc- come to during the last two sessions. This ’.lon to the socialist program against the star debater currences in the shops they surely of- amount required for raw material because of complete absence of organ- I I known to them. The leadership of week, the Collapse of the Second In- ,f the Y sels to fer the best opportunities to overhead expanses, etc., pro- ized direction 'P who was persuade the Communist nuclei members in fighting against some of and the and failure <jf maximum ternational will be the subject. After B B t 0 feeling fit, pocketed by forces. ■KM >f the futility of Communism in America, or anywhere violations must have a double purpose arouse the class and class soli- the owners of the in- mobilization of the workers’ missing four sessions, the class has 1*65 darity of the workers. Sometimes dustries. This not only gives the nu- Communists should rally' the resist- fl -’lse in the world. both to fight against such conditions cuts swung into line, with an average at- are made outright by posting'notices clei members better understanding ance of the workers the § Brother Antonson, my fellow student at City College, and to eliminate the lax bureaucrats. a \>ecome tendance of 20 for the last sessions. B in shops reducing the hourly of the methods of capitalist exploita- organizers of such strikes, only Nuclei members should not only study rate, There is no doubt that this will show § BmMI? md I, both cut our classes in the evening session, and other tion, to that, if and undestand the agreements and be times in the form of reduction but it also enables them ex- but Communists also take an increase in the near futfire. attended the Yipsel meeting. There we found a col- of piece work rates or so-called plain this system of exploitation to the initiative in creating the instru- B BTaIBBS B able to interpret them from the point read- 1 The South Bend class came to a lection of jolly good fellows in a well .accoutered social justments. Members of shop nuclei the workers proceeding from a con- ments which may fully represent the B BwWP B of view of the workers but under- close on Wednesday, Jan. 13, with an ::lub room called the young peoples socialist league, but should make particular point of crete basis. interests of workers and pro- g |BjysK£ stand the nature of violations which a these average of 10. Ib this class If studying the nature of the cuts Workers become readily responsive ceed to organize the unorganized. attendance aBBSaIBsIf not bearing the sign of being a working class institu- in most cases mean wage reductions and there were many who were not mem- the method of putting them to resist wage cuts. The big prob- These last few points Will be dealt tion. The thing that even remotely suggested labor in reality, even tho not ostensibly. over,so bers of the Workers (communist) they may be able properly to explain lem, however, is to organize this with in another article.7 .* was the distribution of the American Appeal, the socialist bi-monthly sheet In clothing factories workers must re- Party. One of them said after the with Introduction by Gene Debs. Otherwise the talk, preliminary to the often carry too heavy bundles or do course: “I did not think that there an liberal literary certain turns not specified in agree- was so much difference between the debate, was confined wholly to’ that cf any petty and social ments which increase the standard of socialists and\the Communists.” The club. Sherwood Anderson, the latest variation of the Charleston and similar production, coal miners are often com- Attend the Lenin Memorial Meetings discussion on the collapse of the Sec- topics, ran the gamut. pelled to load heavier cars than Schenectady—J. O. Bentall and Nat Yorkville—Miners’ Hall, 4„ Williamson, ond International, based on Lenin’s Now comes the real farce. A well dressed gentlemen with a distinguished specified in agreements or workers Kaplan, Jan. 29. \Jan. 24, 7 p. m. name, MASSACHUSETTS. \ Neffs—J. p. masterful pamphlet of that air, the educational director of the branch, was master of ceremonies. He in other places carry or prepare NEW JERESY Williamson, Jan. 24, 2 m. Quincy—Jan. 24, Malnatis Hall, 4 Liber, Trenton—Jan. 24. Palace Hall, S. Broad Toledo—Robert Minor, Jan. 16, 8 p. m. opened her eyes. Introduced the two opponents and hoped that Comrade Antonson would be their own material not specified in .ty St., 7:30 p. m., Eva Hoffman. St., 2:00 p. m., Tallentire. Lorain—Jan. 17, 2 p. m. The Trenton Tallentire, 24, 1 E. Liverpool—Brahtin, Jim. 3p. m. Workers’ School class has topic was, agreements thus reducing piece work Maynard—Jan. 24, Walham St. Hall, —N. H. Jan. 24, retrieved for the American method of the social revolution. The 35 St., p. p. m. ’Steubenville—Brahtin, Jan. 24, Bp.m. seized the imagination of the students, Walton 2:00 m., J. P. Reid. Bellaire—S. “Resolved, that socialism is the best means of revolutionizing the United rates. Lawrence —Jan. 24. Ideal Hall. 18 PENNSYLVANIA Amter, Jan. 24. 2 p. m. inside and outside of the party. The • Essex St,, 2:30 p. m., H. J. Canter. Chester—Jan. 22. Sons of Italy Hall, Neffs—Jan. 24, at 2 p. m„ at Dernack States.” Antonson led off, showing, by means of the knowledge acquired in Discrimination against workers in Fitchburg—Jan. 24. Suomi Hall, 801 3rd and Verlin Sts.. 8 p. m. Hall. Speakers: John Williamson, Con opportunity of an instructor coming Erie—Local speakers. Okraska and R. Sepich. Marxism, the true of proletarian and showing also the shops is always practiced to or Man St., 7:30 p. m., local Finnish com- from Chicago each week comes so course revolution ex- more ade. Philadelphia—Lulu Temple, Broad and INDIANA degree, against Spring Garden, Jay Lovestone, Ben Git- seldom, that in their to treme divergence of the socialists from Marxist theory and practice. He less particularly those Boston—Ford Hall, Ashburton place, Gary—Turner Hall, 14 and Washington, desire show Bert D. Wolfe, Jan. 22, 8 p. m. low, M. J. Olgin, Jan. 23, 8 p. m. who do a little thinking of their own. Erie—J. O. Bentall, Jan. 23. Tom O’Flaherty, Jan. 24—7:30 p. m. their appreciation, the comrades are postulated international Communism as the best me%is of revolutionizing Newton Upper Falls—Russian Club, 48 South Bend—Workers' Home, 1216 Hol- Today the one, and tomorrow the High St., R. Zelms in Russian, Jan. 24, Pittsburgh—lnt’l Socialist Lyceum, 805 arranging an entertainment and dance the United States. He pointed out the extremely bourgeois elements in the James St., A. Jakira and D. E. Earley, fax Ave., Tom Bell, J4n. 24, 2 p. m. other, and if not resulting in actual 7:30 p. m. E. Chicago—Columbia Hall, McCook for the benefit of the school. Lanesville—Finnish Workingmen's As- Jan. 24, 2:30 p. m. American socialist party with its preponderance of petty liberals, socialist Pittsburgh—Jan. p. and Vernon St., Max Salzman, Jan. 24, lay-offs, then, in assignments to less- sociation Hall, 1060 Washington, L. 31. 8 m., at the p. Comrade Simons win give the next say Labor Lyceum, 35 St.
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