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Page Four FIRE IN (By a Worker Correspondent) WILKES-BARRE, Pa. (By Mail).—The summer home of Rin- aldo Cappelini, former president CAPPELLINI DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 19297 ——— which he conspired to have deeded to him in his days of glory, and where he lived for a while. It is not known whether the local has succeeded in getting this property mated to have been worth about $20,000, was only one owned by Cappelini, and not the main one at that. His main residence is at Hilldale, near here, estimated to United Mine Workers of America, | automobiles, valued at more than | SUMMER HOME EXPOSES MINE FAKERS’ the | mobiles are alone worth about | $56,000.00 it is obvious that Mr. Cappelini obtained money by other means. His great friendship for the coal companies is a good indi- $6,000. He was promptly presented } Where did Cappelini get with a new expensive automobile | money? He was apparently penni- by the General Grievance Commit- less when elected president of Dis- tee of the Pennsylvania Coal Com- trict 1. He served approximately pany, which is controlled by his four years at a salary of $4,000 The question natural by the name of Boylan, who is at present president of the district. Cappelini has ambitions to be elected again. Boylan wants to keep the profitable job for him- self. United Mine Workers of America AFT ACTIVITIES IN PENNSYLVANIA is selling them out to the bosses, helping to put over the wage-cut and not fighting against unem- ployment. It makes no difference whichever grafter is in office. The National Miners Union. of District No. 1, United Mine be worth more than $30,000. In back from him. henchmen, and who raised the per year. So, if he had not spent | cation as to where his money came The National Miners Union in miners must fight against all of Workers of America, located at addi it is believed that Cap- Several months ago, the garage necessary funds by an assessment a cent of his salary and saved it | from. District No. 1 and the entire An- th hich th ‘ae Bethavt Harvey's Lake, a summer resort _ pelini is the owner of the hall and | in the rear of his Hilldale resi- _ on the unemployed and underpaid | all, he would have had $16,000 to | Cappelini is at present having | thracite region is pointing out to bec Mii cane bm nsinadwote’ 3 for the rich, burned down early on _ building of the Hilldale local of the | dence burned dow= y.ith two of his | workers. invest in his property and autos. | a court battle with another nee the hard coal miners that the | their local union affiliate with the May 28. This house, which is esti- Ch DISCRIMINATE AGAINST NEGRO arises— | Since his two homes and the auto- azo Packinghouse and Stockyards’ asses Attempt to Create Race Antagonism Soviet W orkers. Answer Lies of Capitalist Press WAGE IN SURPASS FRUIT SHIPS ARE ISM2AWEEK IS [CREWS OF UNITED AW That Is Left of “The Way of All Flesh” Is the Title ‘SLAVED IN MILL 3 WEEKS AFTER Dear comrades:— | | | The management of the Film IN “LITTLE ACCIDENT” We, Russian workers, wish to organize the interchange of corres- | q [cone hey tormanted these days, It pondence with American workers. | | pneet mnow rit) Hoy ueny anaes is sale ig 24 | | jcan... pardon—Has Emil Jan- Shop Committees Are Organized ing houses here are beginning to wake up. The Trade Union Educa- tional League is tal organizing these workers. Form Shop Committees. Two shop con have ready been organ’ plant, another in § for organization in the dustry is ripe. The conditions in the packing plants are such that the workers, Negro and white, can stand them no longer. No Protection Against Fumes. Many of the workers Mex- icans. Here are the conditions i the glue factory of Swift and Co. In the fertilizing department, where the fumes and odors are rank and poisonous, -o masks are furnished the workers by the company. Th give the w rs just a piece of flimsy cheese cloth, to cover our noses, but this does not protect us at all. The company refuses to fur- nish masks to the workers in the fertilizer department. Speed Men Up. The foremen work the men al- e money he will make, so the k the employe gets about $7 or bonus, to start hi fter the they cut the bonus to $2 or $8, sometimes less, and work him harder. We know that the bourgeois press in your country caluminate the ip of proletariat in Soviet Russia. dictator: re in our letter we give you the exact provisions of our Soviet Labor | d conditions of work as far as railway workers and other workers | S. R. are concerned. | We have an eight hour working day and some factories and works | work already seven hours a day. Telegraphists work six hours a day, after which they have 24 hours of rest; after the night duty that lasts | 12 hours, they have 48 hours interval. Such workers as miners and others on hard work have six hour working day also. All workers and aii the employees get professional clothing free of charge while those who work in tne denserous departments receive | so different fats, such as milk, butter, etc., to preven 2engerous con- quences of their work. In our factories and railway shops we have an interval for lunch which lasts no less than half an hour. There are special dining rooms at the factories where we can get hot or cold lunch. Tea is free of charge. If a worker misses a working day or is late to work, he is not dis- charged or fined. For the first time he is reprimanded. Then he is told} that if he would not work well, he should be dismissed at last; as a result of this system of reprimanding he becomes a punctual worker. In case a worker is very much guilty at his work, he is brought to the court of justice, the chairman of which is a worker, and jury consists of elected workers too. Therefore we very rarely have unjust or severe sentences for workers. t ALL IN UNIONS. ] All workers are members of Trade Unions. We have an industrial | type of Trade Unions. That means workers and employees of the given| factory belong to the same Trade Union according to the basic industry | (of that factory; thus wood workers or clerks employed in the metal | works should be members of the Metal Workers’ Union, | Each member of the Trade Union pays 2 percent of his wages for| be permitted in some special cases only and by an inspector of labor only. | Overtime work is paid one and a half or two times higher than the usual | work. Special tariff conflict committees and reconciliation chambers that consist of wo and representatives of the management solve con-j} | |nings created better work ia Europe iy, or America? (2) Which of Jan- Tannery Slaves Work Negro Workers Slave jnings’ haphctnesdint ie hie eae Amidst Poison | to Load Boats —and why? Result: A referendum | Cle dt and an essay contest. And to re- | (By a Worker Correspondent) fresh the movie fans’ memories, the I was a waiter on the United Fruit | Guild aS Soe dennings reper- The Surpass Leather Compar ship Calamares, a freighter and pas- | ‘ive for a period of three weeks. Tenth and Allegheny Ave., spe senger boat. This boat is just back | The first revival, “The Way of All izes in the turning out of glazed from Costa Rica with a load of ban- | Flesh,” was shown Saturday, and kid. anas. |Sunday. It has been advertised Whether or not the glazed kid| The conditions for the workers on |52™meWhere as “a powerful tragedy really lives up to the trademark, |tho ship are rotten. ‘The food served |°f the capitalist system.” Indeed, it “Surpass,” is a moot question. Like |the workers is not fit for human be- |™iht have been that in the hands of as not, the kid glazed here is about ings, The quarters of the men are |@, “rector less concerned with Jan- the same as elsewhere. And, as for jrotten, the bunks full of bugs and |™88 &8 an actor and with a little the other leather tanned at this tan- | other crawling things. hee ag preoccupation for background nery, which employs 800 men and fi is ie \and action rather than an over- women workers, the products of this Unsanitary Conditions, emphasis on individual rsychology. plant, too, are probably no better| Sweating in hot weather, the | (A shortcoming even more evident nor any worse than the products of | Workers have no facilities for wash- |in “The Last Laugh.’) other leather tanneries in Phila-|ing. One pail is supplied for every} Hollywood was over anxious to delphia, }12 men. Disease is spread among lexploit the German star “to the last But it is not for nothing that all the crew and the kitchen help by the | drop” and the result in “The Way of around the blocks of buildings the |tnsanitary conditions of the bunks |All Flesh” is an endless series of word “Surpass” stands out on the |@nd of the rotten food and the lack | close-ups of facial expressions that signs, as it does on top of the tanks [of washing facilities. cause the story to take on a second- of the factory. For the entire crew the million- |aty character and give unnecessary No, indeed. For when it comes |aire United Fruit Company supplies | prominence to Jannings as an artist. to exploiting the 800 workers here, one shower—salt water—one pump, | Moreover, an otherwise good story the Surpass Leather Company cer- | which is, as a rule, out of order, and | Was weakened by patches of puerile tainly surpasses, antiquated toilet that is a relic |Sentimentality. We refer especially Px $12 ‘a Week jok the sailing ship days. The toilet, to the scenes in which the father Gite Ace too, is generally out of order. jlistens to his son playing a cradle{ But the Surpass Leather Com-) |song at a concert. This sequence is pany gets much of their's for $12 $45 a Month. a most unfortunate break in the and awaits eagerly the opportunity; The wages I got were $45 a/ film and flavors of all that is rotten (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA (By Mail) “job” at the Surpass, They refused | to tell her how much she would get | a. week, but since she had previously worked at other tanneries for $15 per week, assumed it would be the same. Resides, she needed work Negro Slaves, |petents in whose hands rests the In Costa Rica mostly Negro work- |fate of the American cinema will ers load the boats; most of these |learn to understand the medium they slaves are imported by the United |are handling and will free it from |Fruit Company from the island of jall the historic prejudices that are Jamaica, in the West Indies. They | hindering its further development. If re : - Katherine Alexander, who plays the chief feminine role in “Little Accident,” the comedy by Floyd Dell and Thomas Mitchell, now at the Ambassador Theatre, ‘STRANGE INTERLUDE’ TO END LONG RUN SATURDAY The O'Neill drama, “Strange In- terlude,” closes this Saturday eve- ning. This is quite a record, with 432 performances to its credit. Tonight will mark the 175th per- formance of “Follow Through” at the Chanin 46th St. Theatre and Sat- urday’s matinee will be the 300th performance of “The New Moon” at their next production will be a mu- sical play written by Frank Mandel in collaboration with Oscar Ham- merstein and Sigmund Romberg. 112 Hours a Day for $1.25 in Gastonia (By a Worker Correspondent) GASTONIA, N. C. (By Mail).— For the last ten weeks we strikers of the Loray mill have been fight- ing to better our conditions. Con- ditions here for the mill workers certainly are in poor shape, for we are forced to slave for $12 a week, 12 hours a day. The Loray mill is cne of the worst of them all. I am the mother of four children and I want you all to know that we can’t make a living, can hardly buy any food at all for the children, I |have to work 12 hours in the mill and do the housework and the cook- ling. I went to the mill when one lof my children was only two weeks’ Jold, so you can see how bad it is |for the mill workers down here. Only two weeks after the birth jef one of my children I was on my \feet working 12 hours a day for cnly $1.25 a day. Now, as the re- |sult of that, my health is so far |gone that I can’t work half the time. I say we workers welcome the Na- |tional Textile Workers Union to the {South, for we know it is going to end once and for all the slavery |that we mill workers were made to most to death. The t week that]. a .. Sah ; |to inflict even lower wages upon month, which is surely little when|and hokum in the average run of|the Imperial Theatre. ‘kk under, cy starts to work they tell ets Bley sre) cot lected sy: aston: Ccllestors,clecten by) ror kata. aah these hard-pressed leather workers. | you consider how I was driven on | Hollywood films. . 3 TORAY ‘STRIKER (FANNY HL). " he amare He works th a cha | Recent. y r the ship. i ‘ pyc thet the more He. works. the The overtime work is prohibited by the inspection of labor. It could i ce ae ae sere ee oe Perhaps some day those incom-| Schwab and Mandel announce that Communists fight on behalf of the immediate aims and interests of the working class, but in their present movement they are also de- fending the future of the move- ment.—Mar In the tripe shipping department patie such h; n between workers and administration of the factory |badly, having been unemployed for | Jave like hell for practically no|that day ever comes, perhaps we . the foremen mistreat the men, us-| OT Mull. many weeks, jwages, They work over 12 hours | will be spared the torture of seeing ¢ A M ul sf E M E a r ¢ ® ing foul language. You run back VACATIONS. At the end of the week her pay |. day. |a thousand-dollar-a-week star hug- ; and forth all day long, and still the s = envelope was handed her, $12. She | Uk: Haevelin the heat ek N | ging a camera for five long reels. forem re never satisfied with Each of us get every year a fortnight leave; some categories of immediately raised a rumpus, so) 6 Aseabaren yd ee vf pe We might add parenthetically that your kers such as blacksmiths, telegraphists, etc., in short, those whose work |that the foreman came out to pla- A “ fc Se aD re en ae 1 sid lat such @ time that movies will not| f HEAR and, SEE BASIL DEAN’ You are forced to work so hard is especially hard and enervating get a month leave. During both a|cate her. He took her aside, told | '0 8° on Baalae Siero laicacee Raverta rel on aieak acceen are with TALK Sana of MARGARET that the sweat runs from you—yet fortnight and a month leave full wages or salary are paid to the work-|her to “be good,” and he'd see to it nous. Every time the Calamares | tt, i is! f O'S great mocet pies ; 4 és sails there is an entirely new crew | tists” for their success, But this WARWICK DEEPINGS gre. they send you to the freezers. ers. In case when getting his leave the worker wants money, he can|that she received $13, not $12. She hosed: tt th iti |leads us away from our subject—/ CONSTANT Ti any of the bosses is bru- get his wages from the office in advance; he can get them in the course refused to be assuaged, threatening | 702%", SO rellon are the conditions. | in fact, as fi he Soviet |. e The f Z ae : ghd 4 | é |Booze is sold the crew so they won’t | leads us, in fact, as far as the Soviet | if they are not/ of a year as well, if he needs them for some pressing purpose, the foreman with exposure. | thi fs Tune | Uni d the di i f the| NYMPH Z ey : 5 ; Naa think about their exploitation and| Union and the discussion of the ed. There are in our Soviet Republics very many homes of rest and| Other workers had gathered) jo ta ty fight it. ‘Th | great things that have been achieved Long Hour: sanitoria that are situated in the best places of the U. S, 8. R., as far|®round, and the foreman, fearing | . a i a el Ps LITTLE + PLAYHOUSE ¢ es leita ¢ at places 2 U.S. S. Ry a vokers would he “tontamie |is all unorganized, The only time | there. Civcle Carnegie ite Mvect ; are long, from 9 limate is concerned. They are mostly situated in the Caucasus and |'tese workers would be | contamin- | 11 oy take a job on a United Fruit| A short quotation gives us Samuel RApio- 7551 Sith Street . Wages run from nea, famous through their summer resorts, jated” with the discontent of this |‘'°Y ¢ q bag ee a bs ; CA k, and women work- 3 Re jas ‘ | militant worker, rushed out of the |Ship is when they cannot get any |Butler’s views on questions of THEATRE 4254ST. @ SWAY . 5 A great parent of ur are ee arng their dates gitar to the room for the help of the superin- ther work. That’s how rotten the {morality but fails to elucidate for us } omes of rest, (those who need rest only after a year of work), or to the crews of United Fruit boats are | the need for borrowing “The Way of Thea., 44th, W. of B'way THEA., W. 45th St. Evs. 7 ria toes eae a Gee ae of medical ae): a case aes sep onebetigd feat. jal Flesh” as a title for this picture. Shubert ‘Evenings 8:30 MOROSCO Sinai.” Matinees: ‘Wed., : : m of their health demands longer cure, eir stay in e Fake Promises. ee . But that is perhaps the least. . . :|Mat.: Wediesday and Saturday 2:30 5 ie 330. ‘ ‘ ck- ; * . The exploited sailors of the Cala- | Bu perhap’ \ | ; ee yee oe Ar aa ee * nator ‘am cau be prolonged. Both in homes of rest and in sanatoria work-| These two “worthies” soon re- |mares and other United Fruit boats |On the same program is an early The New Musical Comedy Revue Hit} JOHN DRINKWATER’S Comedy Hit | M aie who form about | T° et good rooms and very good food—at least 4 meals a day. They have |{urned and again made an effort to|chould join the Marine Workers’ | Chaplin, “Sunnyside,” worth seeing A NIGHT IN VENICE BIRD IN HAND Nae : rieat ot the teed Sua Bouse there theatre performances, concerts, lectures on different questions and| “placate” the aroused worker. League, at 28 South St., to organize even if it means sitting thru the 6 ] ing! about race antagon-| 5° °D- The special staff of physicians and nurses look after them, \“Look,” said the superintendent, “I! and fight their slavery. main feature before you can do so. ‘ ; fess and play up any little incidents When s to the homes of rest or to the sanatoria workers get/will seo that you get $14 per week SEAMAN. —S. B. 1 Behn! end: to divide the kers| everything there free of charge, and get wages as usual, |to start. Maybe, later, you'll get | (cote eam g and keep them satisfied with the When the worker falls ill he gets his wages full from the social |$15, and even $16.” _ sos Lo Li e slavery. | insurance department and has a free medical assistance. : “But, when?” said the worker. Municipal Workers 3 8 Angeles Police —Just Off the Press! Discrimination. Women workers in the time of pregnancy get a month leave before| Well, after a number of weeksand) Strike in Germany; | Arrest Workers on n Negro workers are paid less for) the ehild is born and a month after. “Thus they have a two months leave|Providing Yow, dont tell the other) “ A 10 Ana” 4k Oe Guess Work, Says Chief y the same work that others do. In| and get during this time their wages in full. pence hoes ete i 7 ch er 10,000 Are Ou : RED d : ARTOONS f one instance, two workers, Negro{ le worker thoug! ab NOUHINg: F i doi white, who pull the same eens EQUAL WAGES FOR WOMEN. could be done. So she took the $14] poprin (By Mail).—The work- oie Perens es alba ni ' whi i: 4 é i j fe he Np sire eng in a f the white worker gets $4 a day, the) We hope, you know that working women in U. S. S, R. have equal |"4 ieee ORL eA lly jers of the Municipal and State | formed the police commission that F ) Negro worker $3.60. Sanitary con-| wages with men, and the same rights in everything. E Workers Union in the Rhein-Main |“my officers are enforcing city penal Se ditions are unbearable in all de-| partments. Out of this exploitation Armours Besides two months leave a woman receives an extra allowance to | preepare linen for a new-born child and during nine months ‘after it is | born, money to buy milk for herself and specially prepared milk for a jers in her department and told the |district are on strike after an arb jforeman where he got off at before The | tration decision granting a wage in- all of the assembled workers jerease of 3 pfennig an hour was re- workers were much pleased with the ordinances simply on common sense, and on a guess basis because the de- partment has no up-to-date compila- A BOOK OF 64 PAGES SHOWING THE BEST CARTOONS YEAR OF THE STAFF CARTOONISTS OF THE “ablated Co. sien) ee prone: | child from the Mother and Child Ambulance, where medical help is given| militancy of this worker, and told |jected, Ten thousand workers are tion of ordinances. This means that ORBER ¥ jwift and Co. reported for 1928 8/4, mothers and their babies, her thet 4¢ thay, hadaitow like her {ou Frankfurt am Main alone. |the police are interpreting “crimes” 1 i profit of $14,813,182, and Armours | r that if they a | The strike is solid and eevn the per-|to suit themselves. Workers who Fred Ellis % ee Pe RI ' $11,326,425. Must Organize. These rotten conditions exist be- cause the workers are not organ- ized. To prevent organization, the bosses are trying to play American born workers against foreign-born; white against Negro, Poles against Lithuanians, etc. The main groups of workers are Polish, Lithuanian, Negro and Mexi- can workers. In the past there were very few Negro and Mexican work- ers, and then Polish and Lithuanians started to come into the stockyards. The bosses then used to try to start antagonism between these groups. Now the bosses play up the antagon- ism against the Mexicans and) eee) * Fy m * r | 1 ry important cultural work is carried on at our factories, mills |roussel around and around until the | I H E R E Vi I A | I ( ) V ( yF 1 9 7 hacia U. E. L. Active. | a railway shops. There are organized clubs for workers and their fami- skins are dried, This continues end- | I 1 / Be hyo) Seve] j lies. The task of the clubs is to educate and develop mental and social lessly all day long. The Trade Union Educational) °°"... : reherid be: eens V I LEN N Rago in the first, organisation tn capacities of workers; therefore there are organizd such circles as: wire- Filthy Shop. by e I. I Ih the industry with the slogan, com- mon unity among the workers of all races and nationalities in the pack- od ST patie apart kage Worker correspondents write for their factory wall newsp and|*2inst all health regulations, full (De luxe edition—2 vols. eac! N BEAUTIFUL WALTON LAKE in the united struggle against wage cuts ‘0 the central or town newspaper. This cirele holds meetings together of insects and vermin. CAPITAL by Kart Marx. Ramapo Hills, at Monroe, N. Y. Modern and the speedup, and against the fake company insurance plan, from which the workers not only do not get any benefit, but are forced to) pay for it. All stockyards and packing work- ers interested in the organizational drive should get in touch with the Stockyards Organizational Commit-| have there our own workers’ drama circles ar artists come fro: i i it tion re membershi Fpsayies * ten 7 m great | Surpass Co. got men to do it for | AZURE CITIES (Stories of New Russia)... $2.50 | iP. tee, of the Trade Union Educational | city theatres. Besides workers get tickets for much reduced price to|$25, And aey they are gettin CEMENT by F. G ‘ , 50 | rik. ry League, 28 South Wells St., Chicago.| drama and opera theatres, crohid 46°do st tow Gulp SiR wLweek: | 1 MENT by F. GLApKov. $1. Fifty miles from New York. Route 17 or Erte RR. ‘Wot has the bourgeoisie A * i » whi the Si Co. find ee tae nas tae RTO |wages'a sldlled worker end & lavores gels indispensable, get only $28 0 week f° COMMONWEALTH COOPERATIVE, Inc. fimto exisfence the men who are to for a Yong hour week. But these | WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 799 Broadway, New York City wield those weapons—the modern a me class—the proleta eal | Old workers or invalids get social welfare pension and are divided | into 3 groups; those who belong to the first group are full invalids and | get 75 percent of their last wages, the second two-thirds of the first} | category and the third one-half of the first. HEROES OF LABOR. There is also a category of workers who are called “Heroes of Labor.” | These are the workers who had worked for 35 years or performed seme revolutionary acts or showed themselves from the best side at their | work. “Heroes of Labor” are paid full wages after they have left their |work. If they continue to work, then besides their wages they get | half of their pension. | The unemployment benefits are different in different parts of the U.S. S. R., because it is divided into 6 so-called “belts” according to the cost of living. Unemployment benefits depend also on the number of | years an unemployed worker had been the member of the Trade Union and had worked at the factory; if he or she has a dependent family a | special additional sum is given to each member of the family. | less circle, foreign language circles, sewing circle for working women and workers’ wives, singing circles, photo circles, social science circle, litera- ture circle and many others among which we have also worker corres-| pondents’ circle. | with workers and representatives of the management to solve some burn- ing questions and problems of factory life and criticize the work of the | wall newspaper, The wall newspaper has the following tasks: struggle against red | tape and bureaucracy of administration of a factory as we! as against | laziness and missing of working days by workers and drunkenness that | we had inherited from the time of tsarism. In our elubs we have drama performances and moving pictures. ‘We ; Dear comrades:—We are very much interested to know about your life and work. We wish to know how many hours a day you work, what With comradely greetings, $ | Worker Correspondents; DOGADOV, SEROV, RASSCAZOV, VOLKOV | workers here get $12, $13 and $14 i fw Cc. R. Se ne 06 Bigontareny =n bet week, 1 they could start a strike. “But I|r,.mances of the municipal theatres can’t stay here for $14 a week, when}... had to be cancelled, The ee iene ouragens id oeuie jie ater and oe trade z i “/union leaders are trying secure yourselves, as none of you set more ithe official ratification of the arbi- than $12. I was the first to get |tration decision which would then be- more by fighting for it. come binding and finish the strike. Hard Slavery. berm ea wD The work done by these workers is very hard. At 7:30 they must be at work and quitting time is 5:30, | with only 30 minutes for lunch. | The work consists of lifting heavy | 4 skins out of a vat of black chem-| icals, carrying the skins to a cor-| traption similar to a carroussel, | placing and stretching the skins on | the carroussel, then turning the car- | 2 Volumns each The conditions at the Surpass per Leather Factory are very bad. The toilets are indescribably vile and the | | The “ladies’ rooms,” where the women workers are compelled to eat | their lunches have large roaches j. running up and down the walls. Jt is impossible to eat in these rooms, {) for the appetite, hearty as it may be after a forenoon’s hard work, is spoiled by the filth and bugs. This job once paid $35. Then the. of this classic. and Tactics 1893-1904. Even the skilled cutters and trim- i | 28 jobs are few. Most of the ‘i 3 were IY PRESTR ESM w throw of the Tzar in’March 1917 to the first con- flict in July are contained in the volume: Translated SELECTIONS FROM LENIN . The Fight for the Program—Party LABOR AND SILK by Grace HUTCHINS... (Also in a $2.00 edition) | LABOR AND AUTOMOBILES by R. W. DUNN....$1.00 (Also in a $2.00 edition) { (Also in a $2.50 edition) Write for our detailed Catalogue today! 43 East 125th Street ihbae Bias | have been imprisoned here during strikes and meetings were the first to find this out.- It is the ultimate alm of this work (“Capital”) to reveal the economic Iaw of motion of modern soclety.—Marx. A new and improved translation of the first volume E, and C, PAUL. by New York City | ssc mern, + pe meemarrwrn ergy eae [| Jacob Burck With An Introduction By the . Brilliant Revolutionary Journalist PRICE Joseph Freeman Edited by SENDER GARLIN $ 1.00 Sold at all Party Bookshops or Daily Worker, 26 Union Sq. For Your Vacation or Week-ends A WORKERS’ COOPERATIVE CAMP bungalows, running water, electricity. Good whole- some food, tennis, swimming, boating, other sports. Dramatics —— Lectures —— Musicales SPECIAL JUNE RATES: $23 a week—$4.50 a day A $5 deposit is required with every registration. Special low rates to members. Write for informa- to Monroe, (For trains call Barclay 6500 (Erie R.R.) New York Phone—Stuyvesant 0015 Camp Phone—Monroe 89 aR SANTEE TY