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Page Two DAT.Y WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 1929 Negro Workers Roused to Action on Gastonia; Pledge Aid for Defense and Relief | jlives next door to the headquarters | n AY that were raided. She admitted she| ASTON DEFENSE |trade unions must be brought more Lh |sent the call to police headquarters | jactively into the defense campaign. |} \f LL.D. DELEGATE T0 when Loray stool pigeons tried to The old unions must be penetrated. PARTY Lee Our Struggle Against the Right Danger ;tent colony. The new class struggle STATE WITNESS | \break up the meeting and attacked | | ‘The two-day drive starts in two | 6 0 N TR A D | |Miller. weeks. These must be two weeks of The state failed entirely yester-| intensive preparation. |day in its attempt to implicate spe- AMB SH THEORY \cific individuals in the alleged on ff PQ N PROTESTS j{spiracy to shoot Aderholt, or to} produce any evidence that any con-| spiracy existed. | Labor must awaken to the danger of the insidious campaign waged by the employers’ press, lauding the | “fair” judge, promising a ‘flair’ |trial, predicting the jury will be In our Finnish Daily in Astoria,|dead benefit society is now greater ,character of the sick and dead bene- | Ore., “Toveri” there appeared in its|than ever before’—leaving out the/fit societies. Hé mentions the fact | issue of August 26 on page 6 a re-| Party demands for social insurance |that the republican and democratic | port about a picnic of a fraternal or- Police Fail to Break, Protest Meets “The response among Negro and ganization at Tongue Point, As- toria, Ore. This local correspond- ence is in sharpest contradiction to the principles of the revolutionary 1; struggle. The statements re- benefit societies. To and fostering illusions among the| parties are capitalist parties, but he . jworkers about the sick and dead/has nothing to say about the so-iCharlotte Prosecution i strengthen | cialist party and its role. And about these petty-bourgeois illusions he |the working class Party the Com-| added: “the society as an organiza-|munist Party, we cannot find a| | tions is not politically partisan”—i.e. | single word. Roach Under Charges. Under fire of examination by At- |torney Hayes for the defense, the state’s witness, Charles Roach, one Fails to Stop NTW (Continued jrom Page One) Under such cireum-| ‘Nationwide Campaign Sept. 21-22 (Continued from Page One) “fair.” These are the tactics of the profit- |taking class to stifle discontent and unrest among the workers, when de- whi Pr n KS - Fe} i i holt, ad- aA jcisive action by labor is most needed White workers to my talks on Gas- ported show a pure and simple bour- he confirmed the hypocritical state-| stances the words: “the local is|that he and Gilbert took no part int aie ransiediil a Sat ‘olice | {2ctory, and. shop collections and/+. biast the employers’ conspiracy, i Min Wont wan cacettent.” 20088 standpoint on the part of the ment by the previous speaker about leaning towards the working class”|the breaking up of the picket line |fo,0¢ before the raid because of ser- | Cuune the Ten-Day Drive, Tag Pays s..5 the imprisoned strikers and i oe Worker L7St Speaker, “Brother” Thompson, the political “neutrality” of the so-|becomes meaningless, when the ist before they went to the union |i... charges pending against -him.| por ail those’ activities, like the Comtinue the organization of the Ee sh eee ee ths He ae 1 and a liberal pure and simple trade- ciety, a direct lie to the workers} speech of Comrade Hakola from the |lot. Hord said that all of them took | 76 denied. he Had. baw! dotividted| ut al ese activities, Niki ‘ millions of unorganized workers in & orannlnes te ee Se union standpoint mixed with half/present. But not satisfied with this | beginning to end is leaning toward /part in dispersing the strikers. He|11 40 times for bootlegging, but the | workers Se Te otee sas aheaphichs the South, & ee er 4 ia ae rin ae syndicalist phrases, on the part of | he goes fu: her and proclaims: “If|bourgeois constitutionalism. said, “Nearly every officer in town Gétenie “produced a pend record he eh of the South, marks y| ‘An unceasing, counter-attack must i a ca sas 54 a the second speaker, K. K. Hakola,| this mutual aid society wants to suc- 7 was there,” but denied beating them ‘ i ae e beginning. pike hak Ghee aerate ) on a speci for the Gastonia feo 5 | We have during the last weeks had ‘i it |proving his three convictions. 7 : be waged against this undermining | te spi dee fen abe ip |member of our Party and member |ceed in its efforts it has to remain | to many opportunities to correct | UP oT threatening to “shoot the sons- a 2 The mounting danger to our com-| propaganda, That is the object of | oint Defense and Relief Committee! of the Board of Directors of the x of-bitches.” The six state witnesses today |rades on trial admits no let-up. It|} } purely a mutual aid society’—a covered cities as far apart as Bos-|«Toveri.” NN ‘ = here alee | political statements made by our lwere evidently badly coached, as ‘i : our tireless publicity manifesting {te AERC ae Sara Toveri.” Not a single word of statement directly playing in the| papers, eg. “Freiheit,” and other Had Shotgun, eee: AGES TERE Gennes fee eee renee ttn. last? 'in a ‘muldfplicity” of. forms, Ree per comment did the editors make onjhands of the previous capitalist|napers on the Palestine question,| Hord said he didn’t see Beal or|<;4., p It is for this reason that the Two-| Carried on by the Joint Campaign and Omaha Cit “One my best meetings, from of view f of and white—attended sting. The police tried to bre p this meeting, but the workers in the! mentioned the working class char- the standpoint expressed by either of the two speakers. Comrad Hakola in his speech did not, as i was his Communist duty, attack or criticize the first bourgeois speak- er, “Brother” Thompson. He only speaker. the sick and dead benefit society at the beginning of his speech he later outlined a political program for the is ch from the declaration “duty bound to acter of the fraternal organization; but in the same breath he denied | Denying the political character of non-party organizations and now same, @ program nc: at all different | Party is not ideologically prepared | act in support of the government of | leadership, \sides making statements conflicting |Bush at the union headquarters and/with their previous affidavits and that he didn’t see Mason on his “4 ' : testimony under examination by de- ithe “Toveri” expressing social-|front porch. He admitted that he) tong, i reise, before the Coal |democratic views on a very impor-|had a shot gun, which the other offi-| sta teq, |tant question. This shows that our|cers denied. | ‘ | i f | Admit Colony Peaceful. Officer Gilbert, another of the| All; Howavar, badd “ state’s witnesses with an unsavory 4 ars MAO Nees WD One nS oi : ~~ |important point, that there was no “ rning. | Fepuba does aan Ose od | |trouble whatever at the Workers |the “Tyomies” on our relation to Our former Gitlow, for the Third Period. Lovestone, |Day Drive of September 21 and 22 comes so close on the heels of the Ten-Day Drive just closed. There are other reasons. The | preparations for the historic confer- jence of the Trade Union Educa- tional League, resulting in the or- {ganization of the Trade Union | Unity League at Cléveland, Ohio, | through the sympathetic labor press, |the Negro press that is taking an increasing interest in this case, farmers’ publications, the press of | other lands. This requires funds. | The dimes, nickels, quarters and even pennies that come in through lthe Tag Days, the house-to-house he rev ” his country” of “brother” Thomp-! Wolfe, and Pepper did not after the | d de- collections must pile high in order to the hall prevented them. its class-interests on the iti ‘ y P olfe, an PP ' Ne | He also has a poor memory and de: ; f | R we? colle Pp tars political son, Says Comrade Hakola, play-|Sixth World Congress diseminate in |International Relief tent colony) engaged the attention of many mili-],,.y foy the staff of defence lawyers Aroused Over Gastonia. field. This impermissible action by ing the role of a liberal bourgeois: | th re fense counsel had to-producé court) 14s tne police atrived. Roach waa| tant workers during July and’ Au. |?” <°% te Hall reports that Gastonia had roused more of mass feeling among the Negro workers than any other recent event. When he told of how white textile strikers, members of|the editorial board of the paper. the National Textile Workers Union, saved him from lynching at the hands of Manville-Jenckes hirelings, there was always enthusiastic ap- |a Party-member should immediately |have been refuted by the “Toveri.” The complete failure to do this shows a very serious shortcoming of “The citizenship means the giv- ing of an oath to follow the con- stiution and not to follow a certain group in power. Imperialism, which is served by the American government at its present stage, tramps under its feet the consti- tution, and when this happens, ‘A few quotations from the speech delivered by “brother” Thompson | |shows its character: the Party a clear analysis of the records to prove that he was in- : ‘ Third Period and did not concertize | gicted for drunkeness and assault in| #180 forced to admit that the raid- \the issues of the Third Period for| 1999 when he had a fight with the |in& party of which he was a member our Party in America. The Party chief of police of Maiden, N. C. Gil- | Stopped on its way to the union cannot tolerate this ideological un-|hert was found guilty on that oc- headquarters to break up the picket ipreparedness in its ranks. This| casion, and had to pay $125 costs. |line. He also admitted that he was politica Iconfusion is a result of in-| Roach claimed that he could iden-|"°t deputized, -but was carrying a |fluences from other classes upon| tity McLaughlin and McGinnis as | SY" all day. He denied that he was ‘the Party. Only through maintain-| .¢s;cerg who fired first, although the |dtunk, although he is now under in- gust. They were unable to give their stimulating support» and en- thusiasm to this drive, It will be different for September 21 and 22. The object will be to mobilize the widest sections pos- sible of the working class for the | two days of gigantic mass collec- energetically combatting the two full squads of arrayed legal forces fighting viciously and tenaciously \for the lives of our comrades, Hun- dreds of witnesses must be taken care of, paid for waiting in the wit- ness room, day after day until called to the witness stand; an endless army of financial demands daily laut, | “These festivals are Fall-festi- | the mouth of the people is gagged |ing the strict Communist line can|night was dark, and he admitted he|dictment for drunkenness and as-|tions that will feature this new fighting for attention, These must aa haem vals without any other fundamen- | when the people expresses |we successfully combat all these and! jaq seen them only once before. Sault upon a restaurant keeper on| drive, Mass meetings will mobilize|he met. This is the situation. In Wheeling, West Virginia, Hall| tal principle than brotherhood and | opinions opposed to those in jother tendencies imported to us by} Gilbert and Roach each blame the the afternoon of the raid. and register workers everywhere.| Help free the Gastonia prisoners! spoke before a large group of Negro! love. If the brotherhood takes power.” the agents of these tendencies, the|iner for starting the assault on| This indictment has been side-| Special literature will be prepared|No death sentences, no prison sen- members of the National Miners) upon itself to carry out principles | These are words that can be|renegades and ccnciliators. Every|Metion a few hours before the|tracked. The United Press cor-|for those, and they still number |tences! Defend the textile strikers Union. A group of Negro miners,| of some political group, our days jfound in any American liberal | paper must be mobilized to fight the| June 7 raid. Gilbert’s story contra-| respondent said in a release of Au-|many millions, who are not yet ac-|in their struggle to defend them- members of a glee club, volunteered to go on a tour and raise funds for the defense. Workers Protect Speakers. Besides pre-arranged meetings in| the principle of collaboration re-|constitution against the American|on again:t the renegades and their public halls, Hall spoke at many street meetings and picnics. Police | of greatness will be counted.” | paper of the “Nation” or “New Re- | Here we have the hypocritical) public’ brand. Here Comrade jbourgeois “neutrality” proclaimed,|Hakola appears in the role of a de- |the negation of the class-struggle,,fender of the American bourgeois |flected in the phrase: “brotherhood 'd| bourgeois government. and love” covering the fact of capi- Under such conditions what does |conerete manifestation of the Right Danger, showing it head all to! often not only in the press. A | merciless struggle must be carried dicts Roach’s and Mason’s as to who/gust 24: “It is possible that the al- fired first, and the identity of the|legations of the defense are true, guard he disarmed. He denied see-|that the prosecution is doing all in |ing Hord with a shotgun. its power to keep records of the of- Smash “Ambush” Theory. |ficers who were with Aderholt as {clear as possible. The fact that Gil- In the afternoon paar hn and Roach were not tried dur- |eoncealed supporters in the Party. |No concilliation, a merciless direct |quainted with the issues of the G: |tonia police attack on the strikers’ two days, his iife threatened, and finally told he would be “taken for a ride.” He was taken out of town, threatened that if he returned he selves, their homes, their tent col- ony, their union and relief head- quarters. Support the Southern textile workers in their effort to organize inté the National Textile Workers’ Union and build this class struggle attempted to break up many of these ‘alist exploitation and bourgeois|it mean that he stresses the class-|fight against the right danger and /dsy the defense teen the ntate's| ing the last term of court resulted | would be killed, and released, trade union throughout the entire meetings, but in Philadelphia the|Political maneuvers. Mr. Thomp-|character of the organization? It| against all its expression. e ay oi One of the stories'i" much speculation, but the solici-| At North Belmont there was a_ industry. Negro workers gathered at the|S0n states that the brotherhood|is nothing else than a phrase, un-| are ae aerae “the past two months|t Said that the witnesses could not | good meeting last night. The speak-| Forward to September 21 and 22. meeting prevented the police from|must not “carry cat principles of |der cover of which Comrade Hakola —AGITPROP OF THE CEN- hous es esto oe tbat A derholt | Pe found, However, Pedro Mellon,|ers were Hugo Oehler, southern or-|Protest! Collect! In masses! interfering. In Kansas City the meeting was broken up by police before Hall arrived, 20 workers be- ing arrested. Hall was present as International jsome political group” but already in| denies the political bourgeois class |the next moment he declares: as American Finns we are duty-bound to act in support of | the government of this country.” Calling upon “leading bodies of the Parfy and League to carry on TRAL COMMITTEE, who is the chief witness against Gilbert and Roach says he has not been away from home at any time.” Charlotte Conference. was lured to his death by strikers) who telephoned him to come to) |the class struggle. lunion headquarters in order to | Every move, every step of Love-|shoot him. This story was branded | ganizer of the N. T. W. U., taking Beal’s place while he is in jail; and Hubert Carrol, with Harris as chair- man. The meeting was arranged by | Workers International Relief, | Ludwig Landy, secretary. National Textile Workers’ Union, |Jim Reid, secretary. While the trial is going on the | National Textile Workers Union the A. F. L, painters’ local at North| International Labor Defense, J. Belmont, for the express purpose of | Louis Engdahl, secretary. drive leading toward the Charlotte | hearing International Labor Defense| Gastonia Joint Defense and Re- Z ret ; ‘ SSC: i i i i ii the |as a lie by the testimony of Mrs. Labor Defen: a entative at the} Thi thi Ise than th ain|@ Yruthless campaign against the | stone, is now directed against “ y 7 ieweland SConvenuan ce who the | “principle. of ie? ‘political group” | followers of the renegade Love- | working class in an open and bra- | Grigg, a witness for the state. She Trade. Union Unity League was|called the capitalist class. His politi: | Stone” and his agents, Sophie Mel-|zen fashion, unparalleled even in| conference is gathering momentum. | speakers on the Gastonia case. | sq ‘4 re pep . | vi i v1 | . The/unity has never been greater than 4 formed. Among the delegates there|tical “neutrality” is nothing else|Vit and Clarence Miller, two of|the dark pages of renegacy. The | i I hodenty The conference will be held Oct. | w; ‘i svéke ba Neees ae tee from the| than capitalist political srataghade. those on trial at Charlotte, yester-| actions of the Lovestone “gang” on today with the imperialist attacks) i913 in Charlotte. With the re. was attended by 125 workers. It |lief Campaign, Alfred Wagenknecht, i director. basic industries, who promised to carry on an active campaign for the Gastonia prisoners. | This whole talk against “some politi- {cal group” is directed against the °° |Communist Party, the Class Party tional | of the workers. Party. Jay Lovestone’s robbery at the Na- Office of the Communist jday issued a statement denouncing |the question of Gastonia — proba- against the Soviet Union now under | bly the greatest national issue be-|way in Manchuria and the imper-| \fore the American working class jalist attack against the working) \since the war — are calculated to/class in Gastonia (which is an in-| help electrocute the thirteen work-|tegral part of their plan for attack | turn of the delegates from the Cleveland conference, organizational work will be extended to new tex- tile mills. | TOURS to { i bs ve” They are joined in their declara- 7 le, " pease Cleo Tesseur, who was discharged e \ Eckener in Apology leas aes oe oT tion by four fellow members of|ers now facing the electric chair. against the Soviet Union). He who by iis nulll-Bops at Foncamonnre te : \ to USSR for Dod in \ state sph! bir ae - * at the Young Communist League. Lovestone stands convicted before |carries on factional activities today for membership in the N. T. W. U., r@) V l e |? H ging se a | DONE SeMRE OND. WHILOS cra, a pateniont Saown the entire working class as one of |commits a crime against the work-| went back Wednesday to get. his . lt Moscow onWorld Hop | this « nd ibis, rede ighti ded i the henchmen of Manville-Jenckes,|ing class; he is a counter-revolu-| yaoes and was arrested. He is e y fees he ave a0, o' - Fiera red sci ees Foy nace woe the Face|.. one of the hands eager to” pull | tionary. a charged, with pasting No) W. . MOSCOW, U. 8. S. R., Sept. 6—|(2™" Gane for the “reds” to of the Electric Chair. the electric switch in the conspiracy| The struggle to mobilize the stickers on the balding and thea u Ss & ] a Hugo Eckener, Pie ne sae Oreanleanons ae Lovestone’s latest action— that/of the Southern capitalist class |workers for the great class battles! Commander of the Graf Zeppelin, in a telegram dis- patched to Soviet authorities today, expressed regret that because of un- favorable weather conditions he was inable to fly over Moscow on the lirigible’s recent world flight, and leclared that he hoped to make a pecial trip to the Soviet capital ome time in the future. He also expressed gratitude to the workers and peasants government for all measures taken by it in assisting the light over Soviet territory. small Pay for Those Working on Subway At a hearing held yesterday on wages paid carpenters employed on ubway construction, held by Comp- ‘roller Berry as a means of pub- iat *y would soften the blows of the Party) Bs 5 é 3 ‘city for Tammany Hall in the com- colored with the poison of _ Na- steal the Red Trade Unions and the | against Lovestone. They h 874 Ghion: pellsing’ «nowt trade pete 1 ANNUAL PICNIC The Best Time for Vacation if ng city election, it was disclosed|tionalism, Finnish and American, | ynion property from the workers of moved over to the right and are iantar thet will: onganika, the beste of the i that the workers are paid 80 cents an hour which is much less than vaid elsewhere. One carpenter, Peter Podneek, said he was fired be- cause he would not work on Sunday. the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! Our own age, the bourgeois age, fs distinguished by this—that it bas simplificd class onisms, More and more, society is splitting ep into two great hostile camps, tra: ito two great and direct!: loitation. Comrade Hakola JOHN C. SMITH’S Se tists “The need for the sick and NEGRO JAZZ BAND 8:80 TOWN VICTOR PECKER WOLF BARZEL in New Original Acts, Reeitations and Comedy TICKETS—“ICOR” 799 Brondwa: JEWISH COLONIZATION IN THE SOVIET UNION Saturday, September 14th, 1929 118-128 West 48rd Street Admission 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 wi Teleph and MORNING TREIMEIT, 30 Unto | the “whites” | as long as they do not|of robbing the national office of combat or challenge the political our Party of all confidential docu- |hegemony of the “whites.” These! ments, of using some of these and henchmen of the American capitalist | o¢ forging some others for use |government maintain this hegemony | against the Party of the American |in the name of political “neutrality.” | working class, the Communist Par- This “neutrality” sanctions “red/ty — is just a continuation of the raids” against the revolutionary | desperate, anti-working class, right workers all over the country, 4 wing line of Lovestone and company. strike - breaking government, an The attack on the directing center jenemy of the working class, a gov- | of the Party, when part of the field ernment responsible for the murder forces of the Party are facing a of Sacco and Vanzetti and a govern-| charge of murder, can be intended jment at present trying to railroad only té’disorganize the work of the |16 workers in Gastonia to the elec-| party and open the front to the jtric chair. The red workers are wel- | class enemy. Thus, it is a direct at- |come to all organizations led by the | tack against the comrades now fac- | bourgeois, but in the name of politi- ing murder charges in Chariotte. cal “neutrality” they are duty-bound | This is in line with the attempts to act in support of the government! of the international right wing to of this country,” i.e. against the in- | wreck the parties of the proletariat. terests of the working class. Hais and his strike breaking crew, This sort of propaganda is also! with the aid of the police, try to and our Communist daily “Toveri” |Czecho-Slovakia, Lovestone, with has not a word to say; neither has |the aid of underworld characters, the Party member anything to s@y | steals Party material with which he who followed his “brother” Thomp- | may craw] up to the American cap- son as speaker. : 1 italist class and gain their favor. Comrade Hakola just mentioned |The similarity of their actions fol- are used to mobilize the exploited workers against their own class politically, and how these organi- zations add burden upon the shoul- ders of the workers by providing as- sistance to workers who have been wrecked by the system of capitalist ican imperialist hang-men and elec- trocutioners is a natural one, Petty bourgeois opportunism flows natu- rally into fascism under pressure of P.M. HALL FAMOUS RUSSIAN TRIO VICTOR KUTCHERO—violin BASIL BELAIEFF—cello JOSEPH MARANZ—piano uyvesant 0867 re m=mSPEND YOUR VACATION INS CAMP NITGEDAIGET 175 New Bungalows - - Electric Light Educational Activities Under the Direction of JACOB SHAEFFER CAMP NITGEDAIGET Telephone Beacon 731 ey Af Pai hi % passing. He was jailed, tried the |against militant unionism. |ahead on the line of the Comintern| 70.4 morning, and eee da Ghoite | We, members of the Young Com- (whiclt has been vindicated @ thou-| between leaving the state for three | munist League now on trial for our |sand times in actual life), to defend months or serving for three months lives in Charlotte and those of us|the, Soviet Union, to free the Gas-| 0, the chain gang. in the field as a¢tive workers, fully |tonia workers now on trial, demands} 47. refused to leave. When threats | endorse the actions of the Central the cleansing of the ranks, A strug- failed to terrorize him, the au- | Executive Committee of our Party |gle against Lovestone and all ee thorities let him go with a suspended |in the expulsion of the associates who aid him, either consciously or) sentence, His demand for an I.L.D. of Lovestone (Gitlow, etc.). We unconsciously, is a pre-requisite for lawyer was refused. The I. L. D. is further endorse the actions of the|a real mobilization of the American taking charge of the case, and a NEC of the League in expelling | workers on all these burning issues. | joatlet js being printed calling the Rubenstein, Silvis, Welsh and Lurye,! We call upon the N.E.C. of the Kingsmoyntain workers to a mass the Lovestone agents in the leading League to continue further its pol-| mecting next Saturday night, ranks of the YCL. [ey of peak oo aol Arrested Threatened. i ag | ONS SEMEN IB. WOE: 2S ©! At Marion, Stevens, of the N, T. ot ee een at Past ey corey (call upon the N.E.C. to act even| w. white distributing N. T. W. leaf- Labegtleniy arty to Carry! more vigorously and more sharply gt = | ‘i the |; : : lets, was seized by a gang of U, T. jon a ruthless campaign against in the immediate future against) ‘ , [followers of the renegade Love-| = W. Organizer Hoffman's profes- : |these elements. With the purifica-| ional thugs tt by the strikers. stone, ‘The same sort of determing: |tion of the Party and the Y.C-L. of/ Stevens was held without food for tion must characterize the struggle these corrupt, degenerate elements jagainst the conciliators, those who) we will be able to go forward to now taking the place formerly 0¢-| masses of the American workers, jcupied by the International Right. defending the Gastonia workers, A struggle against them is a neceS-|inilding a mass Party and League sary part of the atruggle against|tnat will lead the workers to the Lovestone and his crew of strike-| successful struggle for the over- -Freiheit Singing Society TOMORROW must not be fooled into letting Love- stone agents remain in the Party by the use of a proletarian clo: The necessity for inner-Party SI GERSON. MICHAEL HARRIS. DAVE BANCROFT. LILLIAN GANNES. Playing and Singing JACOB SCHAEFER Conductor JACOB MASTEL Stage Director Tickets in Advance 35 Cents At the Gate 50 Cents of the chorus, TO THE PARK: Director of Sports, Athletics and Dencing EDITH SEGAL Director of Dramatics JACOB MASTEL TUDOR INN PROGRAM THIS WILL BE THE BIGGEST OF A ILL THE GGES LL SO’ NICHOLAS KARLASH YASHA FISHERMAN THIS WILL BE THE BIGGEST OF ALL SEASONS Bass-Baritone *; Great Soviet Pianist in Russian Folk Songs and in DIRECTIONS: Take the Hudson River Day Line Boat—twice daily— 75 Restaurant Opera Arias New Soviet Compositions cents, Take car direct to Camp—20 cents. 113 East 14th Street 1 to visit us We serve special luncheon plates from 11:30-3 p. m. bie Prices ¥ OUR SPECIAL INDAY DINNER! BEACON, N. Y. New York Telephone Esterbrook 1400 VIA LONDON—KIEL CA | | | 175 FIFTH AVENUE | 66 ” Grand ICOR Concert THE FIRST WORKINGCLASS CAMP — ENTIRELY REBUILT Beng 4 ap henvlgpedgiial in Camp Unity. Unity Camp Will be Open During the Month of September WINGDALE, N. Y. Camp Telephone: Wingdale 51 N. Y. Office: 1800 7th Ave. Tel: Monument 0111-0112 Buses leave from 1800 Seventh Avenue TODAY, AT 1:30 P. M. Spend a few days of the “Indian Summer” #e?| Pleasant Memories! NAL—HELSINGFORS AND 10 DAYS IN LENINGRAD and MOSCOW (First Class Travel and Hotels in U. 8. S. R.) | TOURS FROM $385. Sailings Every Month NEXT SAILING —— BERENGARIA —— SEPT. 18 Visas Guaranteed—Permitting visits to any part of the U.S.S.R. INQUIRE: WORLD TOURISTS, INC. (Flatiron Bldg.) Telephone: ALGONQUIN 6656 NEW YORK, N. Y. IMPROVEMENTS: Open-air theatre A new sport field A new writing room is being built. A fine library oases breakers. At the same time we he Nis: avbtem- aad’ é daneos eed ome Po ag ied the class-character of this sick-and-|jows from the similarity of their|must make every effort to expose bare Uadied sen fi Vataiees' Pleasant Bay Park death to itself; it has also called |dead-benefit society; but he failed|}ine — one which is now objectively, |the true counter-revolutionary role gaverniabins on lite fules) Bronx wie there, ween Lot gellera Bog to show how such organizations are|_ strike breaking, counter revolu-|of Lovestone to such proletarian ele- Excellent P, \ i elass—the proletarians— |always used as political instru- tionary line. Lovestone’s degenera-|ments as may have been misled CLARENCE MILLER. ecenemt E rogram “Build Up “ihe United Front. of ments for i!.e bourgeois, how they | tion into an accomplice of the Amer-|temporarily by him, However, we! SOPHIE MELVIN. New Songs