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THE SOCIALIST PRESS. Published Weekly In The Interest Of The Working-Class.1 No. 3. FAIRBANKS, ALASKA, July 4-, 1914-. Vol. 1. 4 / Ex-Operator In From The Outside Says Unions Are Hurting BUSINESS. “Throughout the States at the present time there is a general business depres sion, attributable to many .causes, and it is difficult to say where it will end” said E. R. Jesson, upon arriving in town after having-spent the winter Outside. “In the West business is very quiet, and especially in San Francis co,” he continued “where labor unions are perniciously active.” “While I was in San Fran co co, representatives of sev eral large manufacturing plants came there to look over the ground, but before they had even decided to build, the unions made all sorts of demands as to the help and the r egulations they should follow. As a result none of them would consider settling in San Francisco.” The above is the lamenta tion of a gentleman in an in j ter view published in the, 'limes, who is just in from! the outside, and who used lobe an operator on Ester j Creek. It brings to mind a | similar plaint made to the ■ writer during; the strike in this district, several years a go by another operator who denounced labor unions as un necessary, unfair, unAmeri can, ruinous to business, to investments etc., etc. This man stated that he would shut down his works, throw ing twenty-five men out of employment, and would nev er invest another cent in the country; that he would take his money Outside and put it into some enterprise wherein he would be assured ol peace and prosperity. We may re mark parenthetically that Lhisman, so far as closing down and throwing men out of work is concerned, adher ed to his program, also that he kept his word in failing to invest another cent in the country, even in wages, for he failed to pay his men, and his name is conspicuous on the list of worthless securi ties that the receiver of the Fairbanks Banking Company j is advertising for sale. But the point we are gc-t-i ting at is the universality of such dolorous cries on the; Are You One Of The Socialists who Says “^tes I am a socialist—been one for many years—always vote the ticket—but Ido not belong lo the organization.” if you are j in that class, you should get out of it The only Socialists that j count are the oneg that pay their little 25 cent dues per month, and aid in the work of the party organi zation. These are the fellows tnat are making the Socialist Party the great force for the common good in America. The capitalist clase won’t finance our party and we don’t want them to. Its the.twenty-five ; cents per month from its thousands ^of real Socialists that keep the 'Wheels of the organzation going. Come on in and find out how we run things. You will have just as f much to say as another. We have! made it easy for you to taka the! first step—below is a coupon which you should Cut Out, Tear Off And Mail Today.' Io N. R. King, Fairbanks, A. Pozxi, Garden Island or L. Weatenvik Cleary City. ’ I am convirced that I should be amember of the organization you re- i present. I lease send some one to take my application. Name.. Address 1 will be at home part of men who have money invested, or have it to invest, and to ask the question what are they going to do about it? Hardly a day goes by but we hear something of the be hazards that beset caoita cause of the “pernicious ac tivity” of labor unions. Wherever poor, oppressed, harassed capital seeks lodge ment and attempts to multi ply itself for the benefit of its owners by sweating divi dends out of the hide of the workers, it finds an ever-in creasing determination a mong the workers to stand up for their rights and de mand better conditions un der which t > work and a grea'er share in the product of ‘heir toil. Up in this isola ted corner of the earth, al most within the Arc ic circle, where it could be least ex pected, this determination was encountered. Here in an unfavorable environment, with little experience in con ducting industrial warfare, the miners dealt those who were playing the part of cap italiit.-. a blow that mane of of them will long remember. It is met with in San Francisco in the mining regions, in the ma nufacturing centers of the East — everywhere, As capitalim develops the people are driven more and more into two classes, according to their economic interests—the exploiters and the exploited. Class dcmarca'ion becomes more pro ounced; and capitalism is pro ducing conditions that forever force the classes to fight for their existence. It is said that self-pre servation is the first law of na ture. It is implanted in every liv mg thing. Every living thing will fight in its own way for its life. The principle extends to and is manifest in species, and groups and classes of men. Men in ship wreck will insist that women and children be saved first. We call it “chivalry” or “bravery,” but ft is only an instinct looking to the preservation of the race. A herd of elephants when threatened with danger, will form a circle with *he fema'es and young on the inside, that the perpe uation of the species may be safe-guard ed. A consanguineous group cf human beings, no matter how much dissension may have previ ously existed, will instinctive'y draw together when assailed by an enemy. So it is with classes. Capitalism has developed to the point where the working class must fight for its very life, but the tables will be turned and the capitalist class forced to fight for its own life. Even now the capi talist cl ss is unnecessary, but at the same time the need of work ers is bei'-g eliminated. The de velopment of machinery is ren dering thn working class largely r:T.cm.-. It is prophesied by !■ •' ir. • ; . niton to speak autho n'V -! ^'^11 vv W s ii A 1 A •H i* f 2' :'\ r~ ,r\ < A* ^ ’ '3 V ft M sff AfLI Of iftiiodicl ••v i S ft * • > '. V ' ?’ w j *\ .<?■>, . a a r ;j // * -a\ . ... ,T ., , 8 ; • ‘ V'. h 1 j-tiS \^s/ V.W 2-.1 ’^v A',, jti vJL*si *1 ^ ti n i Captain “Jack” Green of; the White Pass Steamer Yu kon was arrested a few days ago on the charge of assault lag a deck hand for “talking | back” or for some other in- j fraction of the many rules made and provided for the proper government of em ployees on steamboats, and brought before the Commis sioner’s Court and fined ibe outrageous sum of $5.00. The case against him was so clear that no less a sum would have been at all com mensurate with the crime. This way cf enforcing di .-ci p'ine among the crew seems to be a favorite one with this fresh water martinet, for he r sorted to the same method last fail down the ri ver on the last trip of his boat for the season; but of course discipline must be main ained, and the dignity of oiiicers protected, and if ihe dignity of . Green is in proportion to his size it must have nur- tery badly to have i punctured. So under die cir cumstances many though; he ought io have been allow ed ;o go tree, but the Court ritatively that in the no great distant future, that all that will be necessary to produce abundant ly will be to touch a button o* throw a lever. What that will mean to the working class with the machinery of production pri vate1 y owned can be easily im magined. Nothing short of their practical extermination. Hence a spirit of class solidarity is sweep-! ing over the earth and binding to gether the hosts of labor in a com mon bond of class interests for class preservation. Not a year goes by but labor shows immense strides toward cohesive action in fighting its industrial battles. Craft unionism, having become impotent in the face of capitalist development, is crumbling away. The sentiment of industrial un ionism-one big union—animated by a revolutionary purpose is be coming universal. Unionism par ticularly in America, is in a state of transition from one form and purpose of organization to anoth er, and must in the near future, emerge in'one solid invincible un ion, embracing every worker, marshalled in divisions according to the industry engaged in. What then is brother capital going to do about it? Capital will be on the defensive. It will be a fight to the death. And again we ask what is capi tal even now going to do about it.' It can send up its wails from the four corners of the earth about the “pernicious activity” of labor unions, but what is g ing on now is but the patter Of the raindrops before the bursting of the storm Capital can be driven away from San Francisco, only to be met elsewhere by the same condi tions that It ran away from. It makes no difference to the work ingclass. It can be exploited in' Timbuctoo as well as in San Francisco. Capital must be repro duced or it dies. Industry must | be carried on to supp'y the da-! ■ mands of civilization, If capital ! refuses to do that, the working class will lose no time in taking ho d and doing it. The working-' class is going to do it anyhow, when they getalitUe wiser. Poor capital. eviden ly took a different view and soaked him plenty.! : JL*J Leaves Money For Socialism.' .Grand Junction,Colo, Wm.1 Sawyer who died recen ly left his endre es'a'e of $20,000 to :hc Socialist par'y upon the dea h of his sister.