﻿philosophy (idea) is out of tune with the problem. Next day another hour might be chopped off and soon until only half the work-hours remained 
I am quite sure when this ideal is reached the cure shall have been complete, for wise men tell me: “Shorten the hours and wages will take care of themselves”—after all, demand for labor-power is a contributing factor in the encouragement of the boss to boost the wages (assumption is the workers are organized or they wouldn’t have to the shorter hours and unemployment still would be in a state ill-repute.) 
Over 11.000.000 unemployed are still hugging the sunnyside of buildings these cold spring days—say one-third of the workingclass, of the production for use”… 
That’s where they are in this country, on the lea-side of building or wall… over in Europe the unemployed are on the battle field 
The boss, the employer, has a heart that expands surprisingly when he is shorthanded for what ever reason, even so as it contracts equally as much and suddenly whenever the supply of labor power fullfills the demand. Therefor I am convinced that in the event of an emergency his heart would well and he would bid the wages high, temporarily at least. And even if does backslide and his heart shrinks to the size of a sweet-pea it doesn’t mean a thing other than that the workers should thereupon chop another hour off the workday and cause the employers heart to re-swell to the proportions it was before. 
It does him good. 
No. You cannot unite the workers by sticking up additional unions—that is division (I learned in school) and subtracts from the powers of the workingclass. One Big Union is the thing—not only worldwide but international and national; industrial in manned and form. For workers are in direct contact with their own industry and positively acquainted with the conditions