BoC WORKERS. NEWS peice |.
Page Two
= . ef Britain, Canada or U.S.A. Im- | a
Directory of Unions Se N = ot ee SHORT JABS 9
a E LE | perialism?
and Organizations ott € = ANSWER: The U.S.S.R. policy YP Bill WOMEN S KIDDIES CORNER:
Sa consists first in refusing to invade By O ;

Workers’ Unity League Council—
Meets first Wednesday in the month
at 305 Cambie St., at 8 pm. Execu-
tive committee meets every Wed-

mesday at 2 p.m. Send ail com-
munications to the Secretary, 305
Cambie St.

€.L.D.L. (Sam Carr Brench)—

Meetings first and third Fridays in
the month at 2 pm. Whist every
Saturday at $ p.m. at 414i John St.
“Vancouver.

Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League
in Wanucouver—Meets every Wednes-
day at 8 p.m. at 122a Hastings St.
West. Hall open every day. Secre-
tary, B. Liss, at above address.

For the purpose of teaching the
Russian Janguage to any worker
who desires to take up this study,
a class has been proposed. Com-
rade Waldman, who is a competent
teacher, has undertaken to be the
teacher, the condition that
enough students enroll. Those who
wish to attend the class should ap-
ply to either E. Lucas or T. Nelson
at Room 28, Flack Bide.

on

New Westminster
Unemployed

Unemployment having become a
permanent phenomena here, the
unemployed workers have shown a
readiness to participate in the day-
to-day struggle for improved condi-
tions and the necessities of life. This
radicalization of the jobless workers
thas manifested itself in the activities
of the unemployed in New West-
maiinster.

Having won $1.00 increase for their
‘children through mass pressure, they
realized the necessity of a perman-
ent. body to carry on the daily
struggle and to give guidance to
their many and varied problems. In
accordance with this decision the
“Relief Workers Union came into be-

dng. Having a clear-cut policy, the
wrganization grew for several
smonths. During this period of ex-

Pansion a number of grievances
‘were won and minor concessions
wrung from the reactionary
council.

August ist signified the culmina-
tion of endless discussion with the
city fathers over a fifty per cent in-
crease in relief. All attempts of a
conciliatory nature proving fruitiess,
the workers haying no other course
Jeft open to them, called a strike. Of
short duration, the strike brought no
eoncrete results. Failure to consoli-
date on the gains made has had a
telling effect on the less militant sec-
tion of workers, both from an or-
ganizational point of view as well as
ideologically.’

With the coming of winter, which
always means greater misery and
hunger to those on the bread line,
the men on relief prajects petitioned
the council for an issue of winter
clothing. The council agreed on the
matter and voted the sum of $3600.
After much bickerins as to how this
money was to be administered, the
city relief committee, in whose hands
the matter rested, sensed the lack of
determination of the workers to get
this needed clothing, and finally the
whole thine was dropped. Delay and
uncertainty, coupled with the failure
to rally the major portion of unem-
ployed workers around this just de-
mand, contributed greatly to the
foregoing results.

Every unemployed worker of New
Westminster should rally to the
fight for this much needed winter
elothine. Utilize this initial struggle
as a step towards the fight for full,
free jobless insurance.

city.

Meet ‘“‘Mr. Hawthorne’’

Editor, B.C. Workers News:

A few weeks ago the S.P.of C.,
Carleton Branch, rented a store as
an addition to their hall. A worker's
wife had rented the suite of rooms
behind the store and their lights
were connected to the store meter.
She offered the 50 cents allowed by
the relief as she was going to use
mostly one light, but “‘Howthorne,”’
president and big gab of the branch
refused her requests. He paid the
B.C. Electric $1.50 to change the
wires of the store to the S.P.of C.
meter, and also had him cut the
wroman’s wires off. The W.P.A. heard
of it and sent a delegate to look into
athe matter. She had already sold
ther wedding ring to raise $3.00 to
have the same two wires put back
on the same meter. Much has been
snid about Howthorne’s quotations
an the C.C.E. unemployment confer-
ences, but his actions out here belie
is words. A few of his followers in
the S.P.of CG. are wise to him,
jt will be better for all when they
all get wise.

but

—Strugeler.

When you have read this paper,
pass it on to your friend.
Tf you don’t subscribe to this

batting, but not in preventing.

(classmates) of declining capitalism.

power,
fascism and war.
is
eiass
Spain on October
only a step, and not an end in itself.

Replies With
Wise Solidity

International Experience
and Keen Pentration
Compel Attention

Editor's Note.—The editorial board
of the “B-C. Workers News’’ sub-
mitted six questions to Scott INear-
ing on the occasion of his visit to
Vancouver with the request that he
answer them in writing for publica-
tion in this paper. The letter was
lost in the mails for a time, but
through the kind offices of Dr. Lyle
Telford the letter has reached us.
The questions and aswers follow.

QUESTION: In the interview
With you quoted in the “‘Common-
wealth” of January 4, you are al-
leged to have stated that “The
Communist Party of the U.S.A-
will give way to the Workers
Party of the U-S.A., which includes
in its ranks numerous Trotsky-
ites.’ We are anxious to know on
what basis you arrive at this con-
clusion.

ANSWER: This is an absurd mis-

quotation. I never said, and never
believed that the Communist Party
in the U.S.A. will give way to the
American Workers Party. On the
contrary, jnterview with the
“Commonwealth” representative, J
made it yery clear that with the ex-
ception of the ““‘Muste Group” the
constituent elements of the A.W-P.
has no mass following, whereas the
G.P. of the U.S.A. has not only 2
considerable mass following, but a
very extensive influence. In the in-
terview I tried to point out that the
A-W.P. is making its appeal and
winning its support among college
students, professional people and
similar elements. It is in no real
sense a rival of the C€.P. of the
U.S.A. because it is hardly in the
same field.

QUESTION: The Saar. What is
the position of British Dmperialism
in regard to the Status Quo? Is
British Imperialism taking the side
of Hitlerism or on the side of
French Imperialism in this ques-
tion?

ANSWER: Very hard to answer. I

think British Imperailism would like
to keep the Saar under League tutel-
age—mneither French nor German. At
the moment France is the most seri-
ous menace to British Imperialism.
Every effort will therefore be made
to strengthening France. On
the other hand British Imperialism
dare not go too far in strengthening
Germany. Above all, British Im-
perialism with its 1933-1934 peanut
revival (1049 of 1928 and 859 of
1913), wants to keep the peace until
the Capitalist System has ben fur-
ther stabilized.

QUESTION: Is the strike weapon
(either in one or two important
War industries or a general strike)
effective in combatting the rise of
and repelling the war

in my

avoid

Fascisni
danger?

ANSWDR: Effective in com-
Fas-
eismi and war are both functions
So long as the business class holds
the masses may expect both
The strike weapon
effective aS a step toward wider
assumption of power—as in
4, 1934, but it is

QUESTION: Is the peace policy
of the U.S.S.R. a correct policy to
prevent or hold back a world war
and in what respect does it differ

or conquer foreign teritory, or to
engage in any other imperialistic ad-
venture.

Second,
sults (as from Japan for example),
rather than go to war.

Third, in signing pacts of friend-
ship and non-ageression with all of
the neighboring countries.

Fourth, in strengthening interna-
jdional action
ferences, etc.,

in tolerating a host of in-

jn disarmament con-
against war.

Fifth, in seeking compacts
as that between Jugo Slavia and
Hungary before they reach war pur-
This general policy has been
pursued by the Soviet Union since
the Revolution.» (See the “Soviet
Union and Peace.”” Introduction by
Henri for demonstrative
evidence on this point), The peace
trend of the U-S.S-R. is quite de-
structive and unique, as is te U.S.
SR. No other nation has 2a peace
trend in the same class. The U.S.
SR. is today by all means, the Peace

QUESTION: What is the solu-
tion for the exploited masses ef
people in the struggle against
capitalism and for final emancipa-
tion, 11 Canada? Do you consider
that Socialism can be attained
through pariamentary action alone,
through industrial action alone, or
through the policy advocated by
the Communist Party—seizure of
power, setting up of the Soviets,
and dictatorship of the proletariat?

ANSWER: Experiences in Ger-
many, Austria, Sweden and Britain
would seem to be conclusive proof
that parliamentary alone
(gradual, parliamentary road
to power), will lead not to power, but
to fascism.

Experiences in Italy in 1920 when
the factories were occupied, but did
not seize the state, would seem to
point to the same conclusion, re-
garding industrial action alone.

I believe that recent history
abundantly supports the Marxian
formula: Working class
seizure of power by representatives
of workers, farmers, and other class
allies; a proletarian dictatorship; so-
Cialization of the means of produc-
tion, an@ socialist construction under
the direction of the working class.

In countries like the United States
of America and Canada, there seems
to be no other road open. Whether
in Great Britain there is another
road will probably be tried out de-
cisively in the next ten years; Marx
noted that if there was one place
in the world where a workers’ so-
ciety could be built by parliamentary
action, Britain furnished that ex-
ception. It would be unique but not
impossible historical development if
the British workers were to set up a
proletarian dictatorship and call
upon the Prince of Wales to lead the
procession.

Scott Nearing.
Jan. 3; 1935-

such

poses.

Barbusse,

action
legal,

unity,

OBITUARY

The funeral was held last
Wednesday, Jan. 30th of little
Comrade Kuhochi Eowata, 38
years old. She was a victim
of the greed of the Capitalist
Class, imasmuch as she was
drowned, in a pool where chil-
dren play, due to the fact that
there not’ enough play-
ground for the ehildren. This
littiie Japanese comrade was a
miember of the Children’s Sec-
tion of the Maxim Gorly Club,
and very popular with the
young pioneers. A large gath-
ering attended the funeral, in-
cluding the Young Pioneers,
Japanese Organization, mem-
bers of Ukrainian Organiza-
tions and others

is

for instance with the foreign policy

facts Us bbe

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i

BELOW

9

3 months, 50c.

for one ye

Veterans Win Eviction
Case Thru Mass Action
Comrade Bingley received an evic-

ta his
from the

vacate home.
Pickets were called for,
Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League,
and obtained from the Centre, Bur-
paby and Mount View Branches,
conjunction with the Women’s Labor
League and the W.P.A. Wednesday,
Jan. 30 at4 pm. Alderman MacDon-
ald arrived and wished Comrade
Bingley to move right away to a
house the city had provided. Pickets
held a meeting: and decided it was
far too late in the evening to move
a man and wife with eight children,
the youngest being only six months
old and sick at that. When the truck
the pickets ordered it to
“come back in the morning.”

tion order

in

arrived

The next day delegates visited Mr.
Paton of the Canteen Fund, to see
about some bedding and clothing for
this family as they were badly in
need of same. Mr. Paton promised
to have the Victorian Order of Nurses
investigate, at the same
time promising financial support.

The house picked out for the
Bingley family was 1092 East 63rd
Avenue. Three rooms and a kitchen,
a flooded basement, to the rear a
big gulley (a constant danger to
young children) and to add to this
ideal situation, its next door neigh-
bor was a piggery of 160 hogs. This
was the mansion, “three rooms and
kitchen,” for ten people, chosen by
Alderman MacDonald. Refusing to
the Bingleys to move in, our
pickets sent delegates to the city,
pointing out that they had located a
six-room house with bath, toilet, etc.,
belonging to the city, in a more suit-
able location on 60th Avenue.

sent to

allow

About 3 o’clock the delegates re-
turned with permission to go ahead,
but not before having met with
strenuous opposition from: Alderman
MacDonald.

The Bingleys are now safely en-
sconced in their new home and eager
to help others, Mr. Bingley having

joined the Mount View Branch of
the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s
League, which has been newly

formed out of veterans who took
part in the picket lines, in this and
the Clement case. Eleven members
met and formed the Branch, each
pledgine to bring one more with him
to the next meeting.

Veterans, unite and fight eviction!

Mr. Darby Comes Thru

A delegation of Ex-Servicemen
from the W.E.S.L. visited Darby re
his threatening to cut Comrade Wil-
liamson off relief because of his ac-
tivity on behalf of his less fortunate
Comrades. Mr. Darby promised that
our fellow member will get his re-
lief.

Remember Mass Pressure always
wins! Join us and strengthen the
Business meetings are held
Wednesdays at 8 p.m. at 122A Hast-
ines Street West.

League.

Last Sunday afternoon Comrade
Gargrave of the Young Socialist
League spoke at our Open Forum on
“Morals and Ethics.’’

2
2

Next Sunday at
mont wil speak, Next Saturday at
8 p.m. a social will be held by the
CiL.D5L. and W-E-S.L.
8 p.m. Mr. Coulter
Bx-Servicemen
veterans are

p.m. Glen La-

Sunday at
will address the
All

on Pensions.

asked to attend.

Discrimination was shown to cer-
tain Ex-Servicemen in the matter of
“Special Relief’ during the cold
snap. We understand this was to be
issued to married and also to single
men who A
Small pensioner on applying for same
was turned down. How about it, Mr.
Zulke ?

were housekeeping.

Future Activities

Renfrew Street Branch of the
W.=.E.S.L. report a recruiting dave
and gaining several new members
popularizing the League. A
raffle and dance is being held Satur-
day, Feb. at the Olympia Hall,
corner Hastings Street and Garden
Drive. Auspices of the W.P.A. and
W..S.L. Tickets first sold were for
1605 Renfrew

and

4)

Street.

Readers are
asked to note the change of hall, but
a dance will also be held at 1605 Ren-
frew Street and arrangements have
been made for those presenting
tickets to be admitted.

A well attended anti-war meeti
¥y Dight at 1224 Has

mas held Sunda

s Street West under the auspices

fF  OWesns Sa -dind” CDE. Mrs.
Matheson and Isen.
: War

muestiens

asked,

were

1asse are awakenine

Deadly Parallel—E£Extract from the

report of the Deputy Minister of
Laber, British Columbia (@farch,
1934):

“The total payroll of the province
for the year under review Sis
amounted to $99,126,653.28, a reduc-
tion of $3,830,420.72 from the 1932
due entirely to wage reduc-
tions and theer were more people
employed in 1933 than during the
previous year.’’

Wow here is the bright side, from
the “‘Sun’” editorial of January 9:
“Officials of the Pioneer Gold Mines
report that during 1934 the total
production of the mines was $3,045,-
800.00, but the total profit from the
mines was $2,250,480.00, and the
same proportion between production
and profit prevails in every produc-
ing gold mine in British Columbia.”

Tigures,

Coal miners in the British-owned
mines in Pecs, Hungary, went on
a hunger-suicide strike three months
ago. About half of them starved to
death before the bosses gave in. In
Polind a month ago 60 miners in the
Pabrowa embarked on the same kind
of Strike and now the capitalist press
reports that 4,000 of the miners in
Pees haye resumed their suicide
strike because the owners have not
fulfilled their promises. This savors
of the pacifist won-resistance of
Ghandi and was the inspiration for
the following little piece of real
poetry published in the New York
“Daily Worker”:

Workers on any job,

Buried in a bosses’ pit;

Eyes filled with hopelessness

And stomachs filled with grit—

rIGHT—for the right to live!

FIGHT—for the right of bread!

Bring your fight above the ground!

The grave is for the dead.

According to figures quoted in the
Stevens probe, Woodwards made five
million dollars in the past five years.
This did not stop them from docking
a days wages from their employees
who were prevented from getting to
the job through the inefficiency or
greed of the management of the B.C
Electric on the day
This is a real loss
paid and intensely
and could have been avoided if the
street car company had put spew-,
plows and sweepers out when the
snow started—but that meant a few
hours’ extra crew's wages.

of the big snow.
to these under-

exploited girls,

Talking of the snow storm—the
store girls were not the only people
to suffer from it. Our local Trotsky-
ites’ headquarters at the Wailing
Wall was deserted during the whole
period of the snow dnd to cap the
calamity their concentration
was absolutely
closings

work
smothered by the
down of Cons for repairs.

Some of the pot-bellied bishops
and other ¢hureh dignitaries seem
desirous of emulating their Lord and
Master in the business.
Jesus fed a multitude on five loayes
and three small fishes and Canon
Heathcote here is trying to feed 800
Chinese unemployed workers on little
more. The writer had the unfortun-
ate experience of seeing and smelling
handful of stinking fish dished
out, at the stomach-robbing charity
racketeering graft known as the An-
elican Mission on Pender Street Bast,
as a whole Chinese
gave them
fish was prob-

miracle

a

meal for a Sick

worker. Jesus at least

some bread and the
ably eatable.
Since Woodsworth,

the lead er of

the C.C.F., returned from the Ori-
ent, he bas been boosting for closer
friendly relations between Canada

and Japan. He has praised the ef-
ficiency and up-to-dateness of Im-
perialist Japan. Here is something
he did not tell us of. In the Japan
“Advertiser’’ of November 18, 1934,
an English paper circulating for the
convenience and interest of Ameri-
Can and English business in Japan,
there is a column of editorials trans-
lated from the native Japanese press.

One item is an editorial from the
newspaper “‘Asahi’ of November 17.
It tells of the hardships of the
farmers in the “famine stricken’’
districts whose only means of
getting a livelihood is to sell their

daughters to houses of prostitution.
“The government authorities have
under contemplation a program for
the relief of daughters of poor farm-
ers. It calls for the accommodation
of cheap loans to farmers who have
no hope of supporting their families
sending their daughters to
prostitutes.” ... “The plan
would meet with general support if
it were not for the fact that there
too many poor farmers with
daughters to sell into shame for the
sovernment to hope to provide for,”’

without

work as

are

GORDON GRANT

29

163 West Hastines St.

SOLICIEGR FOR THE C.L-D.L.

COLUMN

Conducted by
Peggy , Harrison

Scientific
Starvation

Obese Officials Prepare
To Cut Famished
i Girls

At the gequest of the Y. W. C. A
menus, shopping lists and recipes
have been prepared by the Nutrition
Committee of the Greater Vancou-
ver Health League, for single girls
on relief. Their purpose, as pointed
out by the committee, is to help in
getting the ‘‘best balanced diet for
the amount aavilable now.’’ The diet
is known as “minimum diet,” and
just how “‘minimum’’ they are
shown by the samples below.
First is the shopping list, which
ealls for four pints of milk a week,
half “a Gozen eggs (to last two
weeks), one-eighth of a pound of tea
per week (costing 5 cents).
When you read the diet prescribed
you realize how the poor single girls
are suffering. Five cents of tea calls
for making tea twenty-one times in
the week. Four loaves of bread, and
these are the principal parts of sev-
eral meals.
The recipes are: Rice boiled in milk
and sugar, no flavoring and no eggs,
but it is called rice pudding In
making Scotch broth, a substitute is
found for meat, which is a table-
spoonful of lard.

Need for Organization.
This is not the sort of help re-
quired for single girls. When these
girls ‘were working, they were
credited with enough intelligence to
spend their wages without interfer-
ence or advice. What girls on relief
need is not a fromula for scientific
starvation, but a fi
tion to gain better
now receive.

is

ghting organiza-
relief than they
Employers are allowed
to deduct $5.75 a week for
wages. Why is
the gap so great between that sum
and the relief allowance for the
same period? Single woman on relief
are asked to get in touch with the
Womens’ and Girls’ Club, which or-
Banizes and leads the fight for the
needs of the single women on
lief.

by law

meals from a girl’s

Le

No Maternity Grant
Without Strong
Organization

It is reported to this column that
the husband of a woman who is re-
eeiving the $5.00 maternity grant,
had $1.00 taken off his grocery scrip
last week. When he remonstrated,
he was told that he was getting
extra The W.L.L. is
touch with this case. Any others of
a like nature should be reported at
once and they will be taken up by
the grievance committee.

anyway. in

Organize
and maintain every little concession
we win.

Correction
Vancouver Heights Branch writes
in to correct an error made in last
week's report. The W.L.L. gave
financial aid and a couple of mem-
bers assisted at the children’s treat.
Everything else was done by the
Young Pioneers They
made

themselves.
a good job of it too.

YOU AND I

I Joathe to live in a rickety shack
With a sway-back roof that leaks,
With drafts seeping in through many
a erack,

And an old

warped door that
ereaks.

I am tired of sweeping a slivery
floor
With a broom that is fast going
bald,
Of wearing clothes in a state to
deplore,

And of darning socks—so-called.

I am tired of shoes with run-down
heels;

I am tired of spuds and stews;

I’m tired of skimping my children's

meals;

I’m tired of it all. Aren’t you?

and brick
are seen.

make it no trick
To keep them spotlessly clean.

and wool
For clothes,
neat;

are full,
So why go with unshod feet?
There plenty of milk
and meat

is

| Room
{
i
i

There is plenty of lumber and steel

To build houses where shacks now

There are vacuum cleaners; t'weuld

There is plenty of cotton and silk

that are decent and

Of shoes and stockings wareliouses

and fruit

52

4

Bed-Time Stories .. . |

Right Up-to-Dat

By SIMPLE SIMON
Once upon a time there was :
nice family of six little Kiddies. Th |
whole family were C.C.F.ers, ani) :
the mother was a big goat in fh}
C.C-F. She was a speaker at C.Ca) q
meetings.

Qne day she said to her kiddie |
“My dears, I am going to a meetin:
Be sure to stay home quiet. Loe
the door and bar it because there |
a big bad wolf prowling abou |
Don't let anyone in the house. Whe |
I come back you will know my yoici

bkoapyh

and then you can open the door.” peck!
“All right, mother,’” said all th” ee
little kids. They locked and barre |!

the door and began to play the

favorite game. This was called “Gi (
operative common place,’’ and tk 2
winner of the most common plact | ue
was allowed to recite them over th ag

radio. All the kids were enjoyin |=

a gruff voice calling from outsid |
“Let me in, kids, [Tm your mothe}
come home again.” ‘No, no,” the: i
all shouted, “you're not our mothe
She has a nice smooth yoice,
yours is deep and gruff. You
the big bad wolf. Go away.
won't let you in!’

the game, when suddenly they heat i

cheb

So the wolf, whose name was R. fl’
Bennett, said to himself: “Aha!
fool them.’’ ; :
Then he chewed some gum flay
ored with Radical Phrases calle [|
Pure Demagogy. He didn’t like
taste of it at all, but he knew
it made his breath smell sweet
his voice sound Woodsworthy.
Then he went back to the kidi
house and cooed under the windoy
“Let me in, children;
mother.”’ ;

All the little kids (except on é
thought he was their mother thi-
time, and then ran and opened ¢
door.

In came the big bad wolf, an

three more wolves with him, tif
before the kids could say ‘“‘Co-opers
tive Commonwealth Federation’”’ the
were all swallowed up.

But the sixth little kid had bee
playing with some Communist kid
who were friends of his, and he wa
wise to the tricks of the big bad woll
So when the kids opened the dog
to the wolf, he climbed out the wilt
dow and was ont of sight in no tint
So you see, children, that chewin).
um will fool you if you don’t wale:
out! |

I'm you

re

1

Ed. Note.—This bed-time story |
Sood for kiddies and adults, but 4
must tell it. The Communist kid
are wise alright, but they don’t ski
out of the window and leave the)”
brothers; they organize them an
chase away the Bennett Bad Wolf.

So what is the reason we should nf”
eat i

The goods that to each one aj
peals?

Oh, let me tell you, my toiling frien!
What our Comrade Lenin said!
And let us to his message attend,

And follow where he has led, i
He said: “In organized ranks wW

possess
on ad

ab sandihow

A weapon—our only one.’

But its strong and trusty,
he laid stress;
With it our cause can be won.)
So Jet us unite, my workine-clas
friend; :
Weld this weapon that’s tried an

true,
And in the struggle, I’ll
Shoulder to shoulder

gladly stan
with you. :
—S, J-ED

JOHN DONOVA

Typewriters and Adding
Machines Supplies
and Service

WNew and Used Machines
from 310.00 up
—-See US First —

432 W. Pender St., Sey. 282

Hotel Pennsylvania
Hastings & Carrall Sts.
SPECIAL WEEELY WINTER
RATES
Our New MTadies’ Refreshment
Parlor is one of Canada’s Finest
Phone Sey. 86

ITALIAN WOREERS’ €LUB
GRAND CONCERT
and DANCE

at ORANGE H45E
Cor. Gore & Hastings St.
FRIDAY, FES: 8th, at 8 FAW.
Concert § to 10 Dance 10. to |
Two Prizes Given Away.
Ist Prize—Tea Set.
2nd Prize—i2 months sukseripus:
to “B.C. Workers News.”
Tickets 15¢

For variety in our meals,