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Page Three é @ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, ‘AUGUST 31, 1929 * Lower Austrian Peasants Union, Joining Fascist Heimwehr, Shows Coming Coup VIENNA MAYOR ‘SOCIALIST’ BANS WORKERS MEETS Bourgeoisie Unite in Plan for Coup (Wireless By Inprecorr) VIENNA, Sept. 1—The Heim- wehr movement, the fascist move- ment which is depended on by the Austrian industrial magnates and the imperialist powers to stamp out the rising tide of militancy of the Austrian workers, is developing rapidly. Various signs point to a fascist coup in the air. The executive of the Lower Aus- trian Peasants’ Union yesterday de- cided to affiliate with the Heim- wehr. This action represents a new step of the fascists towards win- ning the bourgeois parties and or- ganizations on its side for a united struggle against Austrian workers, whose militancy has grown so great that they are becoming disgusted with the social democrats. Today the official organ of the Austrian Young Communist League, “Proletarier Jugend,” was confisca- ted by the police. “Proletarier Jugend” sharply attacks mayor Seitz of. Vienna because of his prohibiti of demonstrations against the Heim- wehr by the workers, and termed the social democrats social fascists. KEMAL LINES UP AGAINST U.S.S.R. Will Be Cog in Attack By Imperialists CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. -1.— Turkey has at last been definitely lined up by the imperialist powers as an important cog in the plan to attack the Soviet Union. shown in the attitude in the last few days of both the Kemal govern- ment and the official and semi-offi- cial press towards the Soviet Union. More and more slanderous to- wards the U.S.S.R. has the attitude of the Kemal press been in the last week. It indicates that Kemal’s policy towards the Soviet Union will from now on will take a new hos- tile complexion. The Soviet-Turkish commercial treaty of 1921 has been the target for bombardment by the imperialist powers, and Kemal now indicates that he will scrap the treaty. The reason, Kemal and his press states, is “because of Soviet propaganda.” With the signing of the Franco- Turkish accord by the French envoy to Angora, Count Chambrun, with the signing yesterday of a French- Turkish commercial treaty, and with a treaty between Mussolini and Tur- key, the Turkish press has begun its virulent campaign against the Soviet Union. The official “Milliet,” the na- tionalist organ, is leading the pack in slandering the USSR. It blames “Soviet propaganda” for the in- creasing militancy of the Turkish workers and “or the many recent strikes, and calls for more arrests to follow the recent sentencing of Communists at Smyrna to four and a half years. “Ikdam,” the paper This is! American and Canadian Fascists Join Hands American Legionnaires and Canadian Legion members u pledged th both countries at the above parade on Warriors Day, avon held in Toronto. eir solidarity against workers of Trial of the Gastonia Strikers |. (Continued from Page One) | “All of them are guilty!” This innocent, I believe they were exer-|Was the verdict of a prominent mer.| cising their constitutional rights. I|chant of Charlotte, W. E. Moss, believe they were intimated and in-|Fair-minded man, tho, he had no| terfered with and had a perfect “prejudice” against “certain kinds | right to shoot in self-defense.” In|0f labor unions.” a sharp, clear voice C. H. James, a te adlee | young mechanic, once a member of Shei eit : the International Association of |Jotiee foe en Lee orate jMachinists, threw this into the worked in the plant of the Foul heavy jowls of the Manville-Jenkes| Motor Company ‘in this cite. for 1s jlegal battery. The defendants smiled|years, Worked in ae cote will. broadly, the mill workers in the|30 years; was a union member, “All| spectators’ seats wanted to applaud, | killin,’ self-defense or not, is anlaw jbut remembered they were in @ ful in the sight of God.” At leva {court room. The prospective juror | 13-14 of the lot are guilty, ‘he igs jis “excused” by the state, and he Henig |walks from the courtroom, | a eats | | uae iyiThe tingleader Beal is guil | : : ve made up my mind on that.” W. BiG gy cn al asda apne E. Patterson is tall, thin, with an His ‘acid Bel i " ees was er bsirate detective for | ago ae preity ut Ane tbe ee ie Loray mill “about five years! now. Ww. F ao 5 orked as a telegraph opera- | ago.” | Defense attorney Jimison|tor for the Southern Railway for | asks: “If it should develop in the! :he past 25 years, jcourse of the trial that the defend-|_ ae Fs ants, or any of them, have religion} ww, eee . radically different from your own,| ,,yy0"6,YOu born in this country bs have x religion at all—would| ¢'m soore, @ foreman etre | that prejudice you against them?” Os SPpetaatate beak Harkey blandly admits that it|Det factory in Charlotte for over 20 would. “One who has no religion,” years, thinks that some of the de- her declares, “is\ more apt. to pa fendants must be guiity, and is sure wit-iurdar:"* ; that Beal ought to be electrocuted. But the judge ruled that in spite | * ® * of this admission of prejudice Har-| It is warm—a Carolina summer— key is a competent juror. The de-|in the courtroom. The same ques-| | | fense took exception, then eliminated | tions. The answers seldom vary. Harkey with a peremptory chal-|Judge Barnhill, the quiet-voiced lenge. . |‘jedge” from Rocky Mount declares ae Pie a ten-minute recess. The defendants, A dapper young fellow, Theodore | !¢4 by Beal, walk from the court- L. Thomas, works in a Charlotte in-|00™. They pass the chairs of the surance office. “Are you prejudiced er een oe ee trae The sromn against labor organizers?” asks de- fense attorney. “Against certain | Leary, Jr., one of the loyal agents types—those creating strikes and|0f the bosses and their government riots.” Thinks the “ringleader,” {0M the “liberal” New York World, Beal, is guilty. |trusted son of Tammany Hall; Bee | Joseph Shaplen, who propagandizes in the court room and in the streets imi: i | Attorney Jimison asks a printer|o¢ Charlotte for the mill bosses. employed in the Charlotte News: 5 5 tee | “Have you read the editorials in that |DT2v°, fighter against Communism , —the lad, it happens, was invited to cane Des on a ehey Maks |Ieave the Soviet Union several years | y impression on your mind?”| a5 for consorting with |counter- They had not, he answers. Was) 4. ‘ , ; na revolutionaries. member of the Printing Pressmen’s | "vo U40n@ ppc te: | Union 15 years ago. Challenged by! ‘How are they usin’ you,” Leary | defense after a consultation of coun-/#8KS Clarence Miller. The young sel with group of the Defendants. |Workingclass fighter, veteran of of Hamdullam Subi Bey, chief Na-| d tionalist politician after Kemal, also | Beal, Schechter, Bush, Miller, calls for mass jailings of Commu-|Robert Allen, and Red Hendry. nists and a rupture with the Soviet * 8 8 Union. Attacks on the USSR have fallen | flat as far as the peasants are con- was sold out by the U, T. W. when they deserted a strike in Charlotte cerned, for they know how well|in 1921—that was clear from his the Turks of the Azerbaidjan So-|answers. Dropped out of the union viet Republic have fared while the yin 1921 when the “strike went bad.” Turkish peasants suffer under) Bured by the fact that Hicks was major struggles, Paterson, Passaic and Gastonia, passes quietly by. | * ee | Sidelights on the Charlotte FRENCH WARSHIP SAILORS MUTINY 14 Leaders Are Shot on Way to China Paris, Sept. 1.—“L’Humanite re-| ports a mutiny has taken place upon the cruiser and admiral’s ship “Wal- deck Rousseau” which left Toulon| two weeks ago. Even before the! ship left Toulon, the sailors. pro-| tested violently when they heard| that they were being sent to| strengthen tk> French naval forces | in Chinese waters on account of the conflict between China and the So- | viet Union. The ringleaders were arrested and left ashore for punish- ment. In consequence of the inhuman work, the tropical heat and the bad food, an epidemic commenced among the crew and 19 sailors died. The cruiser coaled at Colombo where the sailors and firemen were compelled to work for three days almost with- out sleep. The despairing sailors mutined. The mutiny was suppressed with extraordinary brutality and 13 sailors were shot. The extent of the revolt is shown by the punishment | lists which have just been published. Numerous stokers and firemen have been sentenced to terms of im- prisonment up to two years. ] | | Machete. SUPPRESS “EL MACHETE,” AND iAIL EDITORS Gil Govt. Fears Reds! in Election | MEXICO CITY, Sept. 1.—With} the reign of terror against Com- munists and all revolutionary work- ers and peasants raging thruout Mexico unabaited, the latest step is the suppression again of the fight- ing and widely popular organ of the | Mexican Communist Party El | The police, sent by the Portes Gil | |federal government, raided the| |printing plant of the Communist | |Party here last night, smashed the |plant up, and forced the suspension jof El Machete. The offices were closed by the raiders and four Com- munists, among whom are Gonzales Lorenzo, editor of El Machete, were Where Arab R { arrested. El Machete, because of its con- tinuous and unswerving opposition to the Wall Street robbery of Mexi- |co and because of its attacks on | Portes Gil and his government of | Wall Street flunkeys, has been sus- pended by the police several times lin the past few months. The latest | |Suspension comes in the midst of the presidential campaign, from which the Communist Party, looked workers and peasants as their ban- ner bearer in the elections, has been | debarred by the Gil government de-| claring the Party “illegal.” | 5 YOUNG TOILERS SHOTINSHANGHAL Kuomintang in Fear of | Youth Demonstration SHANGAI, Sept, 1. — Fearing great demonstrations of the Chinese | |young workers during the celebra- |tion of International Youth Day, the | | Shanghai of“‘cials have executed five | |young workers, all in their teens, | for giving out leaflets calling on all) young workers to demonstrate on | Youth Day. All the executed were | members of ize Communist Youth League of China. | The close collaboration between JAPAN BUILDS MORE CRUISERS Britain, U. S. Will’ Counter at Caucus TOKIO, Sept. 1—Japan moved | forward in the imperialist race for armaments when, on the excuse of the strength ef British and Ameri- can navies, the Navy Department submitted a $188,000,000 plan for cruiser and destroyer construction. Four vessels of 10,000 tons each, fifteen first class destroyers and numerous submarines will be built in accordance with the plan. The cruisers will replace smaller and| more obsolete craft. 1 The estimates are made for 1930 I. W. Hicks, a cotton mill worker, | instead of 1931 when existing pro- | The U. T. W.| isn’t the only grams expire. ‘union” that leaves scars. V. G. | Templeton, a farmer of 65, said he ae dee le was not prejudiced against labor; LONDON, Sept. 1—‘“A Gentle- unions. “I got no use for farmer’s | men’s agreement” to caucus against unions, tho,” he said. “I belonged to | those powers advocating battle craft jone some years ago, and I haint for- disliked by both Britain and the Kemalist rule. GENERAL STRIKE TIES UP TSINGTAO Japanese Troops May Re-enter City TSINGTAO, China, Sept. 1.—The city of Tsingtao, which has been under Kuomintang rule for three/ months now since evacuation by the Japanese troops, is almost com- pletely tied up by what amounts to avgeneral strike. In the nine large Japanese-owned textile mills in this city, not a wheel is turning, due to strikes. Over 35,- 000 Chinese workers have walked out in these mills. The strikes in the cotton mills have been. followed by strikes in Japanese-owned sawmills, tobacco factories, and other large industries. The fact that most of the industries in Tsingtao’ are controlled by Japan- ese capitalists leads to the opinion current here that Japanese troops will soon re-enter Tsingtao. “All was quiet and orderly while the Japanese troops were here,” is the phrasing of the foreign business men in Tsingtao in the demand for the return of the Japanese troops, SOUND MOVIES FIRE WORKERS BERLIN (By. Mail)—Due to sound movies, ten of the largest movie houses have dismissed their musicians in Berlin with dozens > ee from the famous tryant, George ca ee Pected to follow. jonce a member of a_ respectable uinon, that attacks the N. T. W. U. | the prosecution accepts him. He is| |the sixth member of the jury. | * * 8 If you want to buy or rent a | house, negotiate for the transfer of a building in the business center in Charlotte, L. P. McKinsey is right | there to take care of you. He weighs _about 190 pounds, has a sharp, an- |gular face and wears the steel- rimmed glasses of an earlier decade. “Yes, I think they’re all guilty of the killin.’ The leader, Beal, es- pecially,” he admits. “Would you carry that prejudice into the jury |box, Jimison asks? “Expect I would, expect I would,” is the answer, An ideal juror for Major Bulwinkle, but the defense uses one more of its premptory challenges. “ 8 Two Negro proletarians, wearing their working clothes, actually walked right into the court and be- |gan to look for seats. No words are spoken, but the two Negroes are unceremoniously ushered out. They were the first to make their appear- ance since the general expulsion from the Jim Crow balcony on Mon- day morning. I leave my seat and hustle out into the corridor. “Why did they shoo you out?” I ask. They show confusion at my question. “The man says it’s only for white folks.” “Why don’t you complain to the sheriff?” is the rhetorical question, “You all is from the North, ain’t you? You see, down here, we folks don’t have much voice.” They walked down the stairs, passed the monument declar- ing the independence of North Caro- Il, into the street =~ | gotten about it since.” + % * 7 |_ “Some of them must be “guilty! | This was the pre-jury verdict of H. |W. Helms. If you're ever in Char- | |lotte you can buy your groceries | from this solid citizen. He’ll treat | | you right. “Never believed in unions, | and never will.” * * . Thaddeus A. Adams, defense | lawyer, looks the “spittin’ image” of | Eugene V. Debs. Alert, keen-minded, and knows whose boy each prospec- tive juror is. He had several Black- stonian tiffs with His Honor today. | Pa ore | | “They’re all guilty,” one of pros-| pective jurors announced. Arthur Garfield Hays, calls: “Sophie Mel- vin, stand up!” The New York law- yer turns to the Charlotte citizen, challengingly: “Do you think she’s guilty?” Solicitor Carpenter rises from his seat: “I object, if your Honor please. Attorney Jimison is) questioning now for the defense, | your Honor, if your Honor please, | and not Mr. Hayes, if your Honor please!” United States at the “disarmament” conference is expected to be made between the two leading imperialist | powers as a result of the Dawes- MacDonald conversations. This agreement will be a neces- | sary preliminary to any world naval | conference which might be called, the London press stipulates, Commenting on the latest Tokio | move in the frenzied race for arms, Secretary Stimson tried to brush aside its importance but at the same time admitted that “the new de- velopment must te considered.” Build German Planes in U. S.; Jingo Ties for War on British Empire BERLIN, Sept. 1.—The Metal Flying Boat Corp., with a capital of $2,000,000, has just been formed in the United States, it was announced here today, to construct Rohrbach | seaplanes of the Romar type, fitted with four air-cooled motors and able to carry 45 passengers. Dr. Rohr- bach, head of the Berlin aircraft plant, personally conducted the Polish Frontier | Guards Shoot Down | Those Going to USSR WARSAW (By Mail), — The frontier guards on duty on the Polish-Russian frontier take partic- ular pleasure in hunting down pea- sants who cross the Russian frontier. Frontier guards fired on a pea- sant named Nikolai Sankoff who was found working near the Soviet frontier. Sankoff was very seri- ously injured, ¥ negotiations which led to the forma- tion of the new company. The chief aim of the Wall Street backed com- | pany, he said, will be “to establish a closer contact with American air traffic” in prepa: tion for the loom- ing imperialist war between the U.| S. and Britain, in which the German empire is expected to side with Wall Street, LIGHTHOUSEMEN SEEK RAISE. | LONDON (By Mail). — Light- house workers in England are de- manding a wage increase and may strike for it, the imperialist powers and the Kuo- |mintang is shown by the fact that) five young workers wez2 arrested | in the International Settlement and | handed over for execution to the rebellion. FENG AND FAMINE DECIMATE KANSU in Starving Millions SHANGHAI, Sept. 1—Famine is numbering its toll of prisoners in Kansu by the millions and in one city, Anting, has reduced a popula- tion of 60,000 to 3,000. the work of decimating the peasants of Kansu are the depredating mili- tarist war lords. Rain has not fallen for four years in Kansu. As if this were not enough to work havoc with the Kan- su peasants, the troops of Feng Yu| Hsien, quartered all over Kansu and |Shensi, are seizing all foodstuffs ‘and leaving nothing for the pea- Sactr. The famine and the robbery of the peasants by the troops of Feng, the ruler of this section, has caused the Mohammedan inhabitants there to rise in revolt. They are fighting the war lords fiercely. It is reported that fully 2,000,000 of the 7,000,000 © habitants of Kan- su have died in the famine. To add to the horrors of the famine, a strange new disease has appeared, which causes peasants to suddenly totter and fall dead, and doubles workmen up at their work, the workers dying without preliminary symptons. Kuomintang. The latter “tried” and | T executed the youths in less than TA LK OF WES J two hours, b This measure having failed to halt | the militant Chinese young workers in their plans for Youth Day, extra cordons of police and troops have been placed on duty, ready for mass | murder, | FRENCH TROOPS LOOT MoROcCO Huge Reinforcements For Imperialists PARIS, Sept. 1—With huge in- creases in reinforcements, the French troops in Morocco have ad- vanced deeper into the middle Atlas region, killing and plundering in-| discriminately as they advance. The French have occupied and are now fortifying Cedar Springs and Two Springs Hill, in the Arballa sector. They have succeeded in buy- ing off several cheftains, but the re- sistance by most of the Moroccan tribesmen is as strong as the day recently when the latter ambushed the imperialists, defeating the in- vaders. RELEASE CZECH | RED IN VIENNA Smerda Jailing Showed Fascist Solidarity | VIENNA, Sept. 1.—Smerda, mem- ber of the Czechoslovak parliament has at last been released after hav- ing been detained without the sha- | dow of a legal basis for nine days. | Smerda had been accused—on | ground of the lying statements of | police spies—of “having approved | actions prohibited by the law,” but | which as it happens were not pro- hibited at all. In addition no war-| rant for arrest may be issued in the | case of an offense falling under’ paragraph 305 of the penal code, which is the only article of law ap- |plying to this case. The detention of Smerda was a arbitrary act of pure terrorism com- mitted by the Streeruwitz govern- ment to oblige the Czechoslovak re- actionaries by preventing the return of an active Communist member of | parliament to Czechoslovakia at leas! | for some time, INDIA DOMINION \Stronger Base Against United States KINGSTON, Jamaica, Sept. 1- The West Indian capitalist press, most of which is subsidized by British imperialism, agrees on the view that the West Indies British colonies will probably in the not too |distant future be fa¢erated into one | |large British colony. | The West Indian “Critic and Re-| staunch British imperialist supporter, says the federation will be put thru within a decade. The idea of a West Indian dominion is looked on favorably by the imperial- ist officials, as a stronger base against American imperialism. view,” WIREMEN GAIN. VANCOUVER, B. C. (By Mail).|trical power station in Leningrad) —Electrical rs of Vancouver have gained a wage increase of $9.40 beginning January 1, 1930, altho the old $9 a day rate continues till then. LYNCHING IN JAMAICA. KINGSTON, Jamaica (By Mail). —An unknown Negro worker was found hanging from a tree at the roadside near Spanish Town. It is thought whites lynched him. ebellion Started 2% ea wi A scene in Jerusalem, where the Arab workers reduced to starvas tion by British imperialism and Anglo-Jewish capitalists started their ‘CARIBB TOILERS AD GASTON 16 to by tens of thousands of Mexican) War Lords Aid Hunger Pledge Solidarity in | Fight to Free Them Expressing the determination of jhundreds of thousands of Latin- American workers in the countries |bordering on the Caribbean Sea not | 1 Aiding in! to allow the electrocution of the 16 Gastonia mill workers and organ- izers now on trial in Charlotte, the Caribbean Secretariat and the Mexi- can Section of the Red Aid Inter- national have sent cablegram to the International Labor Defense pledg- |ing the solidarity of the workers and |peasants they represent in the fight to free the strikers, One of the signers of the cable- }gram is Hernan Laborde, the fight- jing Mexican Communist Party ‘leader, who, altho repeatedly elected to the chamber of deputies at Mexico City, was recently debarred from jtaking his seat by the Portes Gil henchmen in that body, under the influence of Wall Street. The cablegram follows: International Labor Defense, 80 East 11th Street, | New York City: | The Caribbean Secretariat and the Mexican Section of Red Aid In- ‘ternational (MOPR) express their | solidarity with campaign initiated |by International Labor Defense in {favor of the Gastonia comrades who face the danger of being murdered. Thousands upon thousands of work- ers from Cuba, Mexico, Santo Dom- lingo, Haiti, Guatemala, Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, -Colombia and Ecuador |stand back of the United States }Proletariat. On this 23rd of August we protest against this new legal crime of our common enemy Yankee imperialism. Our secretariat has sent thousands of circulars and leaf- lets to working class organizations {and we keep on agitating in favor of the arrested comrades, as well as |giving our full support to the fight |which International Labor Defense lis carrying on. We demand liberty lfor the comr-des who are now fac- Long Live Soli- ah ing the electric chair. International Working Class darity! —The Caribbean Secretariat and the Mexican Section, MOPR, Laborde-Vivo. VOLUNTEER FOR U.S.S.R. MOSCOW (By Mail).—A group lof foreign-born workers at the elec- has appealed to the Soviet govern- \ment through the “Pravda” for per- mission to organize a company of foreign-born workers. The appeal declares: “Should the bourgeoisie at- tack the Soviet Union, we will be the first to answer the appeal of our workers and peasants government to take up arms.” REFUTE HORTHY WAR PRISONER’ ANTLUSSR, LE ‘Part of Plan to Attack | Soviet Union -* In an attempt to slander the So- |viet government, the Horthy gov- ernment has raised a demand for | the “rescue of 10,000 Hungarian war prisoners still held in the Soviet Un- \ion.” This latest slander against the Soviet Union is being spread by the bloody-handed fascist government jof Hungary, not only through Eu- rope, but in the United States, by the Horthy agents here. In answer to | Anti-Horthy League of filiated to the International Anti- Fascist Committee, characterized |this slander, in a statement yester- day, as part of the war preparations {now in full swing against the So- |viet Union. In the imperialist pow- ers’ attack on the U. S. S. R., the League points out, the Horthy gov- ernment will be d The statement fe this slander, the America, af- os mee “Count Csaky, war minister of Hungary, made a statement in the parliament and in the international capitalist p: , according to which ‘there are still 10,000 Hungarian war prisoners suffering in the jmines of Soviet Siberia.’ Horthy |calls upon all Hungarian ‘to lend moral and material help in rescuing these war prisoners.’ The fact is, , in Copenhagen; » in Riga; on Oct. 3, Riga, and on March 19, , in Riga, the governments of the So- viet Union and Hungary definitely (4 jliquidated this question and all the war prisoners have been returned to Hungary At the same time Hun- garian class war prisoners were ex- . changed for Hungarian nobles. |There are no war prisoners of Hun- |gary in the U.S. S. R. For years the Horthy government kept silent about war prisoners, and it is no accident, that just now, when the counter revolutionary war against the Soviet Union is almost an ac- complished fact, that the fascist gov- jernment takes up this anti-Soviet jwar slogan. “Today, there is the world con- gress of all Hungarians going on in Budapest. The congress demon- strated for Mussolini and Horthy. Horthy took up the anti-Soviet war slogan of: the fascist government. This.‘congress follows a congress of the same character of the Polish fascists, held recently in Warsaw, where the Polish fascists barred the delegations of Polish workers liv- ing in the Soviet Union. There are fascist delegates from the United States, who when coming back will laud the fascist rule and wil propagandize the anti-Soviet war slogans amongst the Hungariar workers in this country, just as the Italian fascist delegates will do jafter they return. “The Anti-Horthy League will ex- pose these war preparations at its mass meeting to be held Sept. 8, on |Sunday, aty 2 p. m., at Yorkville Temple, 157 E. 86th St. Hugo Gel- lert and D: . Buechler, from the | League; L. David, former war pris- joner in Siberia; E, Schaffer, former political prisoner in the dungeons of Horthy, and L. Kovess, delegate to the Anti-Fascist World Congress held in Berlin, will be the speakers. |Tom De Fazio will represent the Italian Anti-Fascist Alliance of | America.” (Stolen Church Jewels \Found To Be Big Fake NAPLES, Italy, Sept. 1—The nillions of dollars worth of price- \less jewels” stolen Wednesday from the church of Santa Chiara were re- covered by the police today—and turned out to be worth about $3. They were all paste, evidently sub- | stituted for the originals that dated from the middle ages by some needy clericals at some time in the last thousand years of church history. mamSPEND YOUR VACATION IN CAMP NITGEDAIGET THE FIRST WORKINGCLASS CAMP — 175 New Bungalows - - Electric Light Telephone Beacon 731 Educational Activities Under the Direction of JACOB SHAEFFER THIS WILL BE THE BIGGEST OF ALL SEASONS DIRECTIONS: Take the Hudson River Day Line Boat—twice daily— 75 cents. Take car direct to Camp—20 cents, CAMP NITGEDAIGET Director of Dramatics JACOB MASTEL BEACON, N. Y. New York NTIRELY REBUILT Director of Sports, Athletics and Dancing EDITH SEGAL ae Telephone Esterbrook 1400