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DAILY WORKER, NEW YURK, SALURUVAL, AUGUDSE 10, 1947 |saw mill workers were present. | “killings” on the stock market are | difference in prices of stocks. When |Paterson Mill Workers This conference decided to send| | today on the rocks and practically |the rate for such loans is suddenly | 1 j SMALL FRY ARE all of their ilk will be forced out | within a few hours. | * * * | WIPED OUT IN” | 1 STOCK DECLINE Billions of Dollars Lost On Wall Street (Continued from Page One) investors. As every active issue declined in one of the most spec- tacular breaks in history the lit- tle fellows were squeezed out wholesale. Thousands of middle class elements during the past few years have sold their small business concerns and entered the ranks of the stock gamblers in the hope of piling up fortunes in a market that they thought would continue to rise. Many of the aristocracy of labor who had ac- cumulated a few hundred dollars also entered the lists and became stock “investors,” carefully scan- jming the financial pages of the jeapitalist press. Today they are sadder but wiser. In the heavy selling of stocks yesterday the issues swung from the weak hands of the little fel- lows into the strong hands able to finance the larger ventures. Before the day closed there was a veritable panic of selling and the stocks declined from one to twenty points. The whole finan- cial district was involved in a mad frenzy of “unloading.” The small fry sold owt their holdings at heavy losses. Never before have so many “sheep” been sheared in so short a time. Those petty stock gamblers who but yes- terday were boasting of their Break All Sales Records. In the first half hour after the cpening Friday, blocks of fron: 5,000 to 10,000 shares were thrown upon | the exchange, until the total fer the | thirty minutes was 1,343,800, a rec- ord for all previous time. During | the opening period on 23 leading i sues the value of stock was reduced | more than one billion dollars. Amer- ican Telephone’ and Telegraph off more than $180,000,000, while General Motors declined $140,000,- 008. United States steels market value fell $60,000,000; General Electric, $98,000,000; Packard, $72,000,000; Westinghouse Electric, $16,000,000; New York Central, $20,000,000; Un- ion Carbide, $40,000,000; Kennecott Copper, $45,000,000; North Ameri- can, $30,000,000; Consolidated Gas, $50,000,000; Dupont, $50,000,000; Standard Oil of New Jersey, $24,- 000,000; Anaconda Copper, $49,000,- 000, and American Power & Light, £22,000.000. Federal Reserve Pressure. The immediate cause of the aston- wipes cut the possibility of realiz- ing profits. This was a deliberate juggling by the Federal Reserve System of the money market in order to liquidate the billions of dollars worth of small holdings and means greater concen- tration of stocks in the hands of the big guns of Wall Street, who will be vble to realize billions in the re- ival of the market. Econcmically a considerable de- | cline in stocks was necessary be- |cause the rapid rise in stocks reached such a stage that industry was not able to produce sufficient surplus to pay interest of the in- jvestments. The gamblers speculated |on futures but the tremendous in- |erease of productive capacity as com- | pared to the world market made it imperative to retrench, so the small | fry get nothing and the big fellows | get everything there is to be had. Labor Exploitation Base. The whole edifice of stock gam- bling is based upon the exploitation | of labor at home and abroad—in the | industries of the capitalist countries and in the colonies and semi-col- | onies. | The annihilation of large sections raised one per cent it freniently |To Hear Schechter and Bush Wednesday Nite PATERSON, , Aug. 9. — Vera Bush and Amy Schechter, both held on second degree murder charges for their activity in the Gastonia strike, will speak at a mass meeting in the hall of the National Textile Workers Union on Wednesday, Aug. 14 at 8 o’clock. | John Jippan, active in the organ- ization of the dys workers, spoke at a successful open air meeting of the Italian dye workers Thursday night at Beach and Cedar Sts. Despite the efforts of the police to inter- fere with the meeting, stopping the speaker on three different occasions, hundreds of dye workers heard of the aims of the National Textile Workers Union, At the conclusion of the meeting, several dye work- ers joined the union. Chicago Workers Handball Teams Tie Score Game, | CHICAGO, Aug. Two teams jof the Workers Gymnastic and |Sports Association of Chicago gave a fast exhibition handball game at in 2-2 ishing decline was the announcement |0f the middle class on the stock |the Joint ILD and WIR picnic held of the Federal Reserve Board that | market only means that,the big cap-|at Kolze Park last Sunday, the rediscount rate of the New York bank was raised from 5 to 6 per cent. italists get all the surplus produced by labor instead of dividing it up The |game was played between the first and second team of the aboye club It was said to be*an effort to cur- | With the little thieves and would-be | to a tie score 2-2. The second team tail brokers’ loans which reached a new peak in the week ending Wed- nesday night as the stock market attracted $60,000,000 in additional credit for an all-time high of $€,020,- 900,000, as disclosed by the Federal Reserve statement. Stock speculators, through their brokers, pay down a given amount of money, according to their ability, on stock issues, then the brokers borrow from banks at a certain rate of interest enough to make up the thieves. The market crashes are of [interest to labor only inasmuch as it reveals what is happening in the jvanks of the capitalist class and sometimes, though by no means al- ways, indicates definite trends in | industry. The lower middle class, the small jmanufacturer, the shopkeeper, the artisan. the peasant, all these ficht |ngainst the bourgeoisie, to save |from extinction their existence as [fractions of the middle cla They are therefore not revolutionary, but conservative-——Karl Marx joutplayed the first in the initial period with superior team work on the offensive. In the second half the first team (blue) scored. their two points while holding the seconds | |(Blacks) at bay. The first team |showed greater stamina and ag- gressiveness thruout the game The working class cannst simply lay hold of the ready-made state machinery, and wield it for its purpose....'This new Commune (Paris Commune) breaks the modern state power.—Marx, i} International Red Day in New York on August I By SAM DARCY Properly speaking it can be saic the whole campaign for Interna- tional Red Day in New York was confined to the latter three weeks of July. Prior to this period there had been occasional articles in the |stration was held, held in a workers quarter in the |many of our language groups and | The next few days were devoted | Bronx. The police tried to stop this ;newspapers which found expression | to a most intense campaign of fac-|meeting, but the several thousand |in their failure to actively support tory and street meetings, and leaf-|workers participating !n the demon-|the campaign and c let and shop paper distributions. (8) On Wednesday night, the eve stration militantly fought back. | This gives the bare facts of the out the aps line in its pol (3) In the early part of the of August Ist, we again held large |Campaign for International Red Day |campaign that is, before the cam- mobilization rallies throughout the | and the demonstrations on Inter-|paign had achi ress on Red Day, which were most-|city at 15 concentration points, national Red Day, \P: hy reprints of general news releases | which rallied a total of about 30,000 | ‘issued by the Comintern. During the three weeks prior to August 1st, | workers. | The demonstration on Thursday, The political results of the cam- paign have tremendous significance for our Party. 1, The entire campaign was however, our New York District en-| August 1st, had been called for a tered upon what may be termed as |little after four, the slogan being the most intensive campaign our |“To Down Tools at Four O'Clock.” é ovat Party has ever gone through. Most |Already at three o'clock, workers | Against Imperialist War and De- other campaigns which are carried |were beginning to pour into the |feat the Imperialist Aims of the through on a large scale, especially |square so that by fifteen minutes | American Government. It is the first the drive to save Sacco and Van- after four, despite a heavy shower, |time in the history of our Party that zetti, were several years in gaining |a total of about 10,000 workers had|We were able to rally such large carried thru under the slogans of Defend the Soviet Union, Fight ed a few successes, |there was hesitation on the part of jsome sections of the Party which |failed to respond immediately to the jeall for struggle. Comrades who \looked upon the campaign as an over-ambitious attempt which did jnot take into consideration the |necessities of moving slowly enough to suit the most backward sections of the Party and of the working class. (4) We found a lack of under- » | Rhineland. ical aspects. | ASSAULT VICTIM. OF A.CW. THUGS four delegates to Cleveland. SNOWDEN SAYS FOSTER TELLS OF HE'S READY TO PREPARATION FOR END HAGUE MEET GLEVELAND MEET on Deal. Expect 600 Delegates Ss on | Speakers Ten delegates wil Kansas City, Mo., packing and coal, | A longshoremen’s Negro “outlaw” | union in Houston, Tex., has elected | one delegate, and a T. U. E. L.} group in Newport, Va., is sending a| delegate. | IS NEAR DEATH Shop committees in Indiana Har- | Teems Attacked Near bor and Gary, domains of steel, | mpire at Conference have elected three delegates. | Amalgamated Office : | Jack Johnstone, Anthony Miner- | (Continued from Page One) . |: of the National Miners Union, | the defense of the Soviet Union, and Otto Hall, head of the Negro| Tour. 1 come from representing | France Relies With U.S. (Continued fr cumstai where (Continued from Page One) ‘e and Brit- tain come to conflict directly on a| to make a real start at trade department of the Trade Union Ed- | 8nd struck Teems two heavy money matter, is thought to be well union work among Negroes, etc, | icational League are all on tours|°Ver the head. The ot prepared for by American-French | ete.” a lat the present time, Foster said, |Plackiack i nhand, stood close negotiations over the debt, ete. |_ The numerous preliminary con-| 574 are meeting with favorable re- |i! o prevent interfere * o¥ * ferences being held s thruout the | sponses among workers in many | Wor er sai Australian Rulers Aid England, [Country in preparation for the | conters. Workers Bitter. Must Form Shop Groups. | Bitter indignation i: i Williamson, assistant national sec-|the Hillman-Chatman mach tary of the T. U. E. L., told of|aimong the clothing work Cleveland convention will not only | select delegates to the convention | but will popularize the tasks to be} undertaken with the formation of |T@ CANBERRA, Australia, Aug. M. Bruce, premier of the Austra- n federal government, stated to- Sy} li who day that the British government had z . {some of the organizational aspects | know that these murderous attacks consulted him on the stand it pro- see nere trade union center, Foster | o"the preparation for the Cleve-|upon militant workers are an at- posed to take at The Hague, and ~~ a jland conference. Over 100,000 |tempt to crush the revolt of the the Australian government had! |, , Tells of Activity. | copies of a leaflet, emphasizing es-|tailors. Never has the corrupt agreed to it. , Foster summarized the activities | pocially the need for organization| Amalgamated machine been so des- 5 caeiae, in cprepereuon for the conference, |o¢ shop committees, have been|perate as a result of the growing 58) Brofes teeta | pti > béing widely circu-|mass movement among the workers. can noee oee About 200 delegates are expected La anwar eo Be ely; : Rea : WILLIAMSTOWN, from the National Miners Union. In| an | The present attack is the second 9.—England’s attitude in the Young |the Anthracite, especially, interest |. “A Weekly organizational bulle-| this week. Last Tuesday, Teem and dpa eet nee (Ue -|tin is being sent out to all T. U. in the convention is high, in view of |!" 18 bony Obs : the preparations for a further at-|E- L. secretaries,” Williamson said, “and close touch is kept on all de- tack by the coal operators upon the | 2nd clos , conditions and wages of the miners, | tailed preparations for the Confer “At the highly successful confer- | factory, ence held recently in Bessemer City,| He told of the outstanding pre- | workers N. C., 50 delegates were picked to |liminary conferences being held in| Working hand cin attend the Cleveland conference. _| the, near future. Two of them, the) 1:0 od the bosses, the “Ben Gold, secretary-treasurer of |Shoe and auto conferences, will lay Pours MC von eee nd the Needle Trades Workers Indus- | the bases for the formation of na~|° esc. i eee had wa trial Union, reports that special | tional industrial unions. The shoe ae Paci civ acaliae thecwanees shop conferences are being called |conferente is being held in New|) 7) Tt sour of the militan within the next week for the pur-|York City Saturday and Sunday, |—° ” 73°) trorowitz, industrial o pose of selecting delegates. Aug. 10 and 11; the auto confer-|Tecm, So) Horo wee mist Pa Auie\Watkara’ Active. ence, Aug. 24; the marine confer-|ganizer of t Me ealee or tea “Ten delegates ‘ave already been |ence, Aug. 17-18. Nine regional am. USOnAIY OMR eee Bes selected by shop committes among | conferences in the metal mining re- | MUN) pee held landee $1,000 the auto workers. Philip Raymond, gion are being arranged; an impor- | Wore cach I aoe secretary of the Auto Workers |tant conference of sjlk workers, ar-|'!8' + ne: aoe . ; Union, is now on a tour and reports |ranged jointly by the National Tex-| Suspend Big Local ae lively ectivity in the districts out-|tile Workers Union and the T. U.| The bureaucrats of the Hillman- side of Detroit. Plans are under |E. L., will be held Aug. 25. |Chatman machine recently st way for a successful conference of | Williamson also told of the unem-|pended the Italian local in Roche dauto workers to held in De- | Ployment conference of the National ter, because of the active opposition troit, Aug. 2 his conference Miners Union in Southern Illinois | of its members to the speed-up t will lay the basis for a national | Which will take up the Trade Union|cies of the Amalgamated Official- |auto workers’ union | Unity Congress on Aug. 18, dom. “A minimum of 25 delegates isl iy 2 one mE Se pera pec fro is 2 iners |ferences are also al % * araaes Woe eames te said. “The Second Metropolitan | phasized the great pore i the 15 separate industrial confer ferences are being arranged at va-|Area Conference of New York and | tp Be hinla in’ Cleveland etree rious points. |New Jersey will be held in New| ences to be held in Bune n conference row convened at The Hague repres.ats the first time a great power has challenged France’ leadership in post-war Eu- ropean diplomacy, declared Profe sor Jacob Viner, of the Univer of Chicago, formerly attached to the tariff commission, at the Institute of Politics here today. Snowden is probably not after a revision of. the distribution of the Young plan annuities, said Viner, but is bargaining for other things, among which are the location of the | proposed International Bank in Lon- don and early evacuation of the four other militant w viciously assaulted by ing leaflets before the Fashion Park which employs over 3,000 PLAN RECEPTION - TO USSR FLIERS (Continued from Page One) | vian, ete.), trade unions and frater- |nal organizations take part in the conference. Rank and file workers who wish to greet the airmen and thus express their friendship for the masses of workers on issues of such |standing on the part of many lead- yr i ” i ‘ ade Union workers and peasants of the Soviet | “About ten delegates are expected | York City Aug. 20. At the same | Toh errr een Union are especially urged to have from the marine workers. These |time he told of other city confer-| robs Grill Grielide taekal taint eee their shops and factories repre-|will be selected at the East Coast |ences being arranged as follows: | ¢ ticcad chemigal Baiting sented. Conference of the Marine Workers| Chicago, Aug. 18; Worcester, nae a ey , > ee ete |League to be held in New York|Aug. 14; Duluth, Aug. 13; Los An-| auto, etc. ees , MOSCOW, U. S. S. R., Aug. 9.—| City Aug. 17-18. |geles, Aug. 17, Conferences are also| A public demonstration in oust The all-metal, bi-motored Soviet | City. Couferenten, being scheduled in Superior, Minne-|the largest halls in Cleveland wi | monoplane Land of the Soviets, com- | | pleted the first leg of its round-the; | world flight to New York yesterday | when it landed in Osmk, in the A |molinsk province of Siberia, four- teen hours after leaving Moscow, covering the 1350 miles at an ay- apolis and St. Paul. |be held on the night of Aug. 31, ddlazates ara eepertad in Clevcc| Hoth Faster| and Willistason eme'tho Gay thet the’ conference, Opens &5 delegates are expected in Cleve- land. These will be elected at shop delegate meetings of shoe, needle | and food workers’ organizations. Various T. U. E. L. groups will also momentum. been gathered. This, in face of the |™as w During the three weeks there |fact that the police had mobilized |# high political level. were: jin the most threatening fashion on| 2. International Red Day has (1) A quarter of a million pieces of literature distributed which dealt specifically with August 1st. (2) The United Front Conference Against Imperialist War and for the \horseback, on foot, and in armed |motoreycles surrounding the square and threatening every move of the workers, groups of workers contin- ued to pour into the square in motor been established in the New York District and the excellent united front body which was organized can now be broadened into a perma- nent united front organization, Defense of the Soviet Union had |trucks and in parade demonstrations | which shall achieve even greater re- close to 400 delegates who came ap- proximately 65 per cent from organ- izations outside the Communist Party and the Young Communist League. (3) For about 15 days prior to August 1st, there were arranged 230 ‘factory gate and street meetings, of which about 55 failed because of ir- responsibility of certain speakers or some committees which did not carry its duties through properly. But many tens of thousands of workers were mobilized through these fac- tory and street meetings for Inter- y afternoon, 26th, after a secret mobilization of several hundred of our most trusted members in the Party, we held a demonstration in front of the Chi- nese Consulate, which actually ral- July |from near and far factory districts. Especially effective was the march jof over 300 Young Communists and Pioneers in their new uniforms which they were wearing for the first time. By fifteen past five, a sults in the coming struggle against jwar. ° among the working class as a fighting organization has been |tremendously raised, {ing functionaries in our ranks as to what constitutes demonstrations. jentirely to use mass and live forms |of activity and where a demonstra- tion even reached several thousand |workers who were trying to carry jon in spirited fashion, our comrades failed to prepare properly with | banners, etc., and the speakers made 8. The prestige of our Party |long speeches which made actual | |demonstration impossible. | (5) We must also recognize a jcertain lack of trained forces for total of 20,000 workers packed the| 4+ The Party apparatus, even|such a struggle. Square, with more coming continu-|some of its sluggish sections, were | These were mainly workers |activized and built up during this struggle now? ally. who had “downed tools at four o'clock,” or who had struck the |whole day. By 5 o'clock, a fierce storm was beginning to develop. A | campaign. | 5. A cons‘derable number of new |members were won for the Party. 6. In the midst of an attempt to What are the perspectives for We have gained thru this campaign: 1. An excellent base for a mass movement in the United Front Con- jference Against Imperialist War large number of workers who did |demoralize the Party thru internal|and for the Defense of the Soviet jnot quit at 4 o’clock, but who would |have come to the demonstration on raised to a very high level, so that! quitting at 5 o'clock, 5.30 or 6.00 o'clock, did not come because of the |storm. But the 20,000 workers who were there, who mainly consisted no doubt of the best fighters that the |struggle, the Party moral was jthe splitters were practically washed away by the momentum and sweep of the campaign, 7. The working class has suc- ceeded in dealing a tremendous blow against war preparations against | Union. 2. We have gained the sympa- |thetic and active support of many |tens of thousands of workers whom |we did not before reach on issues |of such a high political level, | 3. Both the working class and In some places our comrades failed | TOURS to - Soviet Russia VIA LONDON—KIEL CANAL—HELSINGFORS AND 10 DAYS IN LENINGRAD and MOSCOW © TOURS FROM $385. Sailings Every Month NEXT SAILING —— AQUITANIA —— AUG. 21 elect delegates between now and | Aug. 20.” From the Pittsburgh district, in addition to the delegation from the miners, 20 delegates are expected | from the machinists, electrical | workers, steel, ete. At least one | hundred delegates will come from | the Chicago district — represent- ing metal, coal, railroad, and food erage speed of nearly 100 miles an hour, The next stop of the plane, which is manned by four flyers, is Novo-- |Sibirsk, a cqmparatively short hop |of 375 miles. The rest of the dis- |tance to the pacific coast is to be flown in easy stages. It is planned to reach Ticolaievsk in about twelve days, where the Land of the Soviets | workers. will be fitted with pontoons for| The T. U. E. L, has just received transoceanic flight, making stops at word that from California will come | Petropavelsk, the Aleutian Islands, | six delegates, including Mexican | Unalaska, Seward, and Sitka; from | and Negro workers. | there it will proceed to Seattle, San| A district conference was recently Francisco, Chicago and New York. | held in Seattle, at which lumber and | = Visas Guaranteed—Permitting visits to any part of the U.S.S.R. INQUIRE: WORLD TOURISTS, IN 175 FIFTH AVENUE (Flatiron Bldg.) NEW YORK, N. Y. | ‘ Telephone: ALGONQUIN 6656 Hear the Story of the 7 GASTONIA | MURDER FRAME-UP from jour Party gained a wealth of ex-| lied as many as 5.000 workers who;New York working class has pro- swelled the picket line as well as the | duced, left no doubt as to the deter- the Soviet Union in rallying’ such|perience as how to conduct a \]/ AMY SCHECHTER VERA BUSH bystanders who cheered the battle. This demonstration was one of the best in comparison to similar noon hour and week day demonstrations which the Party ever organized. With the use of several innovations, such as a portable platform, picket reserves, etc., six of our speakers * were able to address the demonstra- tors before the police finally suc- ceeded in stopping the meeting, after which the picket line, several hun- dred strong, fought together with a sympathetic crowd and defeated three different police assaults in at- tempts to break it up. The pickets marched up Broadway to the Work- ers’ Center in demonstrative fash- jion, the distance of almost half a mile, during which the police again fruitlessly attacked the march. (5) That same evening mobiliza- tion demonstrations were organized throughout the city at eight Paulas trationgpoints. These were the big- gest Tetings ever held in our sec- tions during any campaign. The to- tal number of workers who attended these ings reached 25,000. (6) The next morning, which was Saturday, witnessed the departure of several hundred Boy Scouts to the Boy Scout Jamboree in Great Britain, which is one of the biggest imperialist demonstrations of its kind ever staged. About 125 of our Young Pioneers, with the aid of about 75 Party and Young League members marched with banners on to the pier and held a demonstration against the Boy Scouts. Fighting the police for half an hour before they were forced to withdraw from the pier, our comrades formed a line Pet march from the waterfront to the Workers’ Center singing songs, “waving banners, etc. (7) Two days later the children’s delegation to the Soviet Union left, on which occasion another demon- |mination with which they pledged to carry on the struggle against imperialist war and for the De- fense of the Soviet Union, and not even the fierceness of the storm was able to budge the mass of workers from the demonstration. After the demonstration was ad- journed, several hundred of the demonstrators, under the leadership of the Young Communists who were in uniform, marched to the head- quarters of the socialist party, two blocks away, took posession of the front steps of the socialist party building, the Rand School, and its speakers addressed some thousands of workers who gathered there to watch the demonstration. The yel- low socialists from their safe perches on the fourth, fifth and sixth floors of their buildings, threw bottles, heavy telephone books, etc., at the workers, all of which had no effect. When the demonstrators had marched away, the socialists got a hose thru which they spurted hot water afjer the workers. Simul- jtaneously the police attacked the demonstration from the front, but our comrades fought their way thru and reformed their lines and finally |marched back to the Workers’ Cen- | ter. By this time about 10,000 workers had gathered in front of the Work- ers’ Center. The police drove their horses, armed mot _ycles, ete., into the crowd and attempted to take away the banners from the demon- strators who were returning from the socialist party headquarters, Re- inforced, our comrades continued a guerrila warfare with the police which lasted for over an hour, be- fore the police were finally able to establish some symptoms of con- trol over the situation. In the even- ing meetings were held throughout the city, the best one of which was large masses for the Defense of the Soviet Union. 8. The splendid resistance of the workers to the police has caused the police despite their brutality to lose some of their ability to awe the workers into submission, this being a step forward in the establishment of an effective workers defense corps, As compared to our Party’s ac- tivities in previous critical moments, we can say that the events have shown the tremendous progress our Party has made, During early 1927 when the momentum for war against the Soviet Union has been highly de- veloped with the murder of Voikov, the raids on Arcos and the Soviet tions betWeen the Soviet Union and several of the imperialist powers, with the masses of troops on the was able to arouse barely a few thousand workers to active struggle. Only a little over two years later, we have been able to get the splen- we realize that these are far from sufficient for the needs of the situa- tion, yet the fact is that the events have proven that our Party’s line as given to us by the Sixth Congress lof the Communist International and subsequent decisions is correct and that following this line, we have every right to expect that our strug- an increasingly large scale. There were many difficulties and shortcomings which were brought to light in the course of our cam- paign. (1) We found that there was resistance from some Party functionaires who looked upon the war danger as something foreign to the struggle of American workers. (2) We found a certain apathy struggle. 4. We improved our Party machinery, overcame much of the hesitation and resistence of sections of our Party and won many hither- to apathetic elements in our Party |to active struggle. With the new forces and new ex- |periences gained and with the in- Take Your Vacation —at- iI. SOPHIE MELVIN charged second degree murder and released on $5,000 bail each Mass Protest Meeting Monday, August 12th, at 8 P. M. evitable intensifying situation, the | perspectives are for greater strug- gle, greater achievements and more | favorable opportunities for building | a mass Communist Party, for rais- | ing the level of the struggle of the working class and for advancing the | revolutionary movement in the U. S. ! 25¢ CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE, Auspices: Admission Internaticnal Labor Defense, New York District Local New York, Workers International Relief 67th St. and Third Avenue Embassy, with the break in rela-| Polish and other borders, our Party | did results we achieved and though | gles for the future will develop on | | ==SPEND YOUR VACATION IN CAMP NITGEDAIGET THE FIRST WORKINGCLASS CAMP — ENTIRELY REBUILT 175 New Bungalows - - Electric Light Educational Activities Under the* Direction of JACOB SHAEFFER cee ANN EEE Ss eI ee oe THIS WILL BE THE BIGGEST OF ALL SEASONS DIRECTIONS: CAMP NITGEDAIGET Telephone Beacon 731 Wingdale, N. Y. City Office: 1800 SEVENTH AVE. Tel: Wingdale 51 Tel. Monument 0111 Newly built bungalows ; make possible accommoda- «(tion for 150 additional ; campers. ‘A New Pump Just In- stalled. Director of Sports, Athletics and Dancing EDITH SEGAL Director of Dramatics JACOB MASTEL Grand Celebration at Opening of New Library This Week. Bathing, Boating, Fishing, Dancing, Singing and Dramatics Take the Hudson River Day Line Boat—twice daily— 75 cents. Take car direct to Camp—20 cents. —BY TRAIN— From 125th St. or Grand Central | Station direct to Wingdale, N. Y. | BEACON, N. Y. —BY BUS— New York Telephone Esterbrook 1400 Today, 1:30; Tomorrow 9 a, m, from 1800 7th Ave., cor. 110 St.