The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 27, 1930, Page 3

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DAILY WUKKEK, NEW YORK, TUE: COLUMBUS, 0. POLICE KILL HUNGRY NEGRO WORKER; TOOK LOAF the Greatest Yet in History Unemployment ; of Columbus Increasing Layoff and Short Time in Local Plants; Wages Slashed COLUMBUS, Ohio.—Unemployment is the greatest it ever was in the history of Columbus. Even the A. F. of L, officials admit this. The I. L. D. is carrying on a campaign of protest against the brutal murdering of a colored worker by the police. Robert Burney, 28 years old, was killed by the police as he attempted to steal a loaf of bread for his starving family. The police shot and beat him to death. Then they gave out a story that he had died eating raw dough. They were afraid of the protest this would raise among the colored workers if the truth were known. But the I. L. D. will carry on open air protest all over the city. Now about the conditions in the factories. The Jeffries Mfg. Co. normally employs about 3,000 men, Now a man works about 5 or 6 hours a week, since there isn’t enough work. Hoover’s prosperity, you know. In the Columbus Auto Parts Co., employing 500 to 600 men, mostly young workers, the night shift works 12 Hours and the day shift works 10 hours for an average wage of $25. Negro workers are dis- criminated against, getting 35 cents for what the white workers get 40 eents an hour. The highest a man can earn is 54 cents an hour. The Bedoe speed- up or efficiency system has just been installed. The sixteen women who work here had their wages cut from 70 cents to 50 cents an hour. Sanitary conditions are bad. The air is filled with oil, and infec- tion is common because of this. The workers almost went on strike but they were unorganized and a few suckers were able to hold them back, The TUUL should get on the job organizing the auto parts work- ers here. —COLUMBUS WORKER. Gassed Midland Miners Must Hunt Own Doctor (By a Worker Correspondent) TAYLORVILLE, Ill.—Miners’ con- | sician and had to hire a private doc- ditions at Taylorville are worse than | tor as long as he had money. He} at any other mine in Illinois or even | was out of work close to two months in West Virginia. No use talking / and on February 1 last he felt bet about non-union fields. We've got|ter and the country doctor that he them right here. An empty pocket | had !ast, gave him a certif-ate to} . —that’s all. Yes, we see, but too | go to work. But instead of giving | ore alien do Sata Gb late! Last fall they cut the dues a/him the job back, he was discharged, | Brothers, don’t talk about bad con- | little down, because they smelled | what might come a few months/ ditions down in the south of this later. Too late, fellow. | state. Come over here. But if you I read the Daily Worker of Feb- | are not a good doctor for yourself, ruary 3 about Eldorado, Ill., and the | better don’t come to Midland. poor conditions there, about laying} An Eldorado miner wrote about off two days and that they won’t/ little dog holes every 60 feet to get recognize a doctor's certificate for! into, 1 worked here for many years being sick. Here in the Midland it! and I didn’t see any such hole yet, | If a mi gets hurt or “overcome | of Illinois, effective July 1, 1927, by bad air” they won’t even furnish | page 40, section 15a and page 41d him a “slip” to see the company | says: keeping refuge places clear. doctor. But he must go on his own Well, we haven’t any. The question is if he has got money, | they should have according to the if he hasn’t, cure yourself. If a| State Mining Law, and that’s the miner gets hurt in the wash house, | reason that the boss don’t let you they tell him that the company | go home in case a miner has noth- doesn’t pay any compensation to, ing to do in the afternoon. They one who gets hurt outsid of the | know that the miners are not safe, mine, | going home on a single track with- A while ago I heard of a miner: out refuge holes 60 feet apart and who got injured, “overcome by bad | whitewashed every six months. Look air” in the mine. They took him to out, if a miner does not obey the the hospital for four days, to take | bosses’ law and goes home before the poison out of his lungs, and on quitting time. The next day the poor the fourth day the company doctor | devil must answer all questions in sent him home and advised him to the office before a bosses’ i: go to the mine and ask for a “slip” | They might send you home a 60 that he could furnish him medi-| you not to come back any m | cines. All that he got at the mine | put you in the dirt gang for a | was “No.” He didn’t know what to | days, fo and was 14 days without any phy- | —MIDLAND MIN Sell Wildcat Steck to Farmers Under State Protection (By a Worker Correspondent) ST. LOUIS, Mo.—Young Bros., a! books were juggled until they wer high-powered brokerage firm in St.'no longer able to make them b: Louis, has filed a petition of bank- ance, and now after the bankrup: ruptey, the old, old way for refus-' sale, the Youngs are planning to ing to pay debts. These men sent go into business again. their high-powered salesmen into, In fact, they have already rented FOSTER, FROM PRISON, CALLS. _ FOR CLASS WAR Accepting Nomination) | Urges Election-Fight (Continued From Page One.) | tesist wage cuts, increasing speed- | up and exploitation. On the contrary, the coming elec- | | tions offer a splendid opportunity to | organize the masses of discontented | workers, to awaken their class con- sciousness, to unite them under the |leadership of the Communist Party |for struggle against capitalism. For the first time our Party was ac- cepted by great masses of workers Labor Faker a ce \otod. The mug above belongs to Mar- garet Bondficld, whom Britis ‘Labor? Party put in charge of unemployment. She has had the same “success” as when she took @ joy ride to America in 1926 to |(over a million) as their leader. The | “collect funds” from John artv must enter the present elec- Lewis for the striking Bri |tion campaign with the utmost vigor.) ™iners. Margaret is just too sweet for words, and “helped” | American and world capitalism today, in a deep economic c which capitalism can’t solve. Over 7,000,000 workers are now unem- ployed and the number is increas- ing. Millions of men, women and children are forced to starve. New the unempleyed by proposing that that their dole be reduced. She felt deeply grieved, don't you know, that the poor, dear capi talists had to pay so much taaes. these, over 1,000,000. The lies of Hoover and his agents can’t conceal this crisis. With the approach of fall and the shutting down of out- side work, undoubtedly industry will drov into a far deeper sag than that world. workers Communist Party. York state has its full share of over capitalism is definitely estab- lished before the workers of the/| Such achievements can only be possible under the rule of the and farmers led by the While the masses of American SDAY, MAY 27, 1930 ingland, the La Party now shows the classical role of the socialists and is trying to drown the Indian revolution in bl | In Berlin, on the f of Maya y ago, the Socialist chief of police, Zoergiebel, completely outdid Wha- len by having his police murder thirty demonstrating workers. The Socialist Pa n every capitalist |country is the bridge to the estab- | lishment of the fascist dictatorship of capitalism. The Communist Party is the sole Party which defends the interests of the working class. It alone ha: program both to defend the interests of the worl:ers now under capit and to ultimately smash the ca) ist system and emancipate the work- ers. The Communist Party is the American Section of the Ce ist International. The election program of our Party represents the b: in- terests and demands of the wo. It is a program which every cla: conscious worker should support. ‘While fighting for the immediate interests of the workers, the Com- munist Party warns the American workers not to have any illusions that capitalism can be reformed or ; that the misery of the worker an be completely abolished under the rule of the bosses. Only the pro- letarian revolution can completely emancipate the working class. The coming elections must there- fore serve as a mobilization and pri paration of the American wor! to prepare themselves for ~ against capitalism. In this election a sm REA | ployment, insurance, for social in- j surance against old age, sickni campaign we must fight for unem- COMMUNISTS IN -FLECTION FICHT Push Program (Continued from Page One) talist war and defend the Soviet Union. A Ford worker from Buffalo re- |lated how the Ford bosses have re- \duced speed up to a seience, brutal and life-wrecking, while a seama from Buffalo, telling of rationaliza- tion in shipping also spoke of Ford, | provoking uproarious laughter at his tale of how a worker dreamed that Ford had died, and six workers were ‘called as pall-bearers. But Her Ford, according to the story, rai the lid of his coffin and protested “What x men! Put wheels under my coffin and fire five of these fel- lows!” Comrade Hoffbauer, an iron work- er, was followed by a woman textile worker of Utica. She had worked since she was 11 years old, but fail- Jed to get the million dollars sup- | posed to be the reward of yee jtoil. The mills kept laying dd fin rs 0} left working three day charity. “The capital of money; let them pi TO FREE JAILED Delegates Pledge to, off workers, then collecting from those s a week—for ts have lots she said, | Many other workers spoke, one from the Youth Section of the T.U. of last winter. The bosses are putting the burden of the crisis on the workers. The unemployed are forced to starve. The speed-up is increasing. Wages are slashed. The tax burden is more and more shifted by direct and in- direct means on to the backs of the workes and poor farmers. To |break the resistance and militancy |of the workers, to destroy their spirit of struggle for better con- | ditions, the bosses are resorting terror and suppression. A wide campaign of terror and lynching is | initiated by the bosses against the | Negro workers. To the demands of the millions of unemployed fighting under the |leadership of the Communist Party | Phillipines, ete., the mas jand the revolutionary trade unio for work or wages and social ins ance, the bosses have answered with is @ little different, a little worse. even though the General Mining Law jan investigation of Communist ac-| decay. Millions of toiling masses | tivity in the United States. This U.L. Paper Bag and Box Makers, a girl worker, a farmer from Troy, driven into the shops as a prole- workers are preparing for bitter) accidents, protection of women, struggle to resist the attack of the| For the seven-hour day 5-day w bosses the millions of the colonial |The six-hour day for young workers people in India, China, the Philli-) We must fight against the in | tarian; Harrison George directed at- pines, Haiti and other American col-| tion, the criminal syndicalist law, | tention to the fact that the Commu- onial possessions are rising in re-| for the right to strike, picket and | "ist message must be taken to the| volt against American and world | defend themselves from the attack farming population of New York imperialism. The Indian workers | of the bosses and their thugs. We | State, just as well as in the Da- and peasants are now engaged in a| must demand the release of all | Kotas. But the biggest ovation was rev-Intionary struggle for emanci-| political prisoners. The abolishment |Siven to Comrade Thundervoice, pation and independence against| of all criminal dicalist laws and | Iroquois Indian chief when he came British Imperialism and its tool the all other class legislation prepared |!" delayed but happy to take the labor government. lby the bosses against the worker:,| Platform. He, the most genuine of On the Eve of the First Chi Americans, was the only one search- Soviet Coneress, millions of Chinese | , On¢ of the great tasks that now ed by the police! | Bo riioncand weateats ate sow ti faces the American workers in this Comrade Thundervoice Speaks. | ling with the Chinese Red Army |‘lection campaign is to fight against] “Didn't find any bombs or even against world imperialism and its|*8¢¢ discrimination, segregation and /a tomahawk,” he said. “Wish I’d |native militarist henchmen. In the |! discriminatory laws of capitalism brought my tomahawk. Might have | American colonies, like Cuba, Haiti, |USed against the Negro workers. We /done a little scalping! Talk about | are ris. | Must fight for the vigorous suppres-|a free country! We're free to starve. | ing in struggle for complete eman-| Sin of lynchings. The defense of | I've worked in factories. | cipation from the yoke of American| the Negro workers against the ter-|dians cannot live on the land we Imperialism. World capitalism is in| "0° of the white ruling class must have. Now the Snell Bill is pro be the task of the entire Ame posed to take away what little we working class. Against the feve have left. Capitalism is robbery. war preparations of the bosses we | We are all workers, and all worker | are now engaged in a bitter struggle | against capitalism. , Page 'Ihree ITALIAN FASCISM AND | BRITISH IMP IN WAR MANEUVER \British Seek to Establish 15 to 7 I France in Small Cruisers | French Imperialism Objects Because B Proposal Favors Italy While Mussolini wa houting war t ts to France from Italy, nego. iations were and are going on in Geneva, where the diplomatic ser- vants of French imperialism are bargaining with British imperialism or more cruisers. British imperial- ists are reported to be trying to e: tablish a 15 to 7, 8-inch gun c’ ratio for France. France of course objected, alleg- ing that since Italy already France, 8-inech-gun i y the Medite ranean, would have only one of th big cruisers left for the whole At- lantic coast and oceanic colonial routes. Here the extremely lationship of British foreign policy on the notoriously noisy antagonisms between France and Italy can be \ ficant re- | c S we for Ratio seen. | Ran er’ ten cpo war by p nceful peaceful E friend ar ements an i eration and his between Palestine Terror on Militant Workers JERUSALEM (IPS).—The authorities conc ” ts Over 100 workers were arrested. @ protest ag treatmeent of proletarian political prisoners (which recent in the death of a young girl) 117 proletarian political 7 er: various parts of Palestine have now gone on |} r Th the third hunger strike of the political prisoner he re of the religious Mr. Ramsay MacDonald, in order t hu treatment. {the working ivit Anna ' 2] tained yesterday. | Mary Dalton is a charter me er of the Office Workers’ the labor movement there —_ years prior to becoming a Powersrand Carr Case) yin yan Sis aco Put Off to June 17 (Continued From Page One.) We In- Storey, an active member of the At-| lanta Branch of the American Ne- gro Labor Congress, and Gilmer Brady, national organizer of the C. are in jail, without bonds, waiting the attempt of the capital But we are | expense and hunt a private doctor. | safer here, because they know what | is only a part of the general cam- paign of the bosses to defeat. the} In the coming elections the work- workers by crushing the revolution- ing class must organize under the ary leadership of the working class, | banner of the Communist Party and the Trade Union Unity League andj} the revolutionary trade unions and particularly the Communist Party. |fight for their interests, The Free speech and free assembly | democratic, republican and the so- have become only memories. The} called “socialist parties are the right to organize and to strike arc | parties of the bosses. To vote for being rapidlv linuidated. When the | these parties means to vote against | workers strike, they confront injunc-|the very interests of the working |tions, police, and armed private|class. The American Federation of | thugs. Their leaders are jailed by | Labor, an organic part of American hundreds and given ferocious sen- | capitalism, in calling upon the work- tences. Powers and Carr in Georgia | ers to vote for the candidates of actually facing the electric chair for these parties, shews again that this organizing white and colored work- | fascist strike-breaking organization ers, while the Doheneys, Falls, etc., the tool of the capitalist class. ‘cbbers of hundreds of millions, go| The Socialist Party and its so-call- vee. The courts brazenly show | ed Muste group in the American heir capitalist class character. | Federation of Labor is also a part of When the unemployed dc:mand re- | capitalism, but it disguises its essen- ‘of they are ridden down by mounted | tial capitalist character under the yoliee or insulted by Governor | pretenses of radicalism. However, Noosevelt’s pauperising old age pen- | Where the Socialist Party goes into “on bill or by Wagner's hypocritical | action it openly exposes its anti- vill to take a census of unemployed. | Working class program and policy. Night sticks bread lines, jails, fake | The Socialist Party has nothing to -tatistics, are the capitalist answer | offer to the working class. It open- ) the unemployed. In New York ||y acts as the third political party of he Tammany Hall administration, | the bosses. expression of t*» reaction and| In Reading, Pa., and Milwaukee, icrror of the bosses is clubbing and | Wisconsin, where the socialists con- |iilling workers because they dare| trol the city administration, the |to demonstrate against unemploy- | Police clubbed the unemployed work- smal towns, where they painted offices in an expensive office build-| ment. Whalen, the Chamber of | ers as brutally as Whalen’s cossacks |must mobilize the toiling masses to fight imperialist war, and to defend the Soviet Union. Tho the bosses succeeded in put- ting me and other members of the New York delegation of the March |6th Demonstration of the Unem- | ployed, together with hundreds of other working class fighters, in jail, | they will not succeed in breaking our revolutionary determination an d loyalty to the working class. While we are kept in jail we see ship of the Communist Party and | the revolutionary trade unions con- tinuing the struggle against canite! j ism and for the program of the | Communist Party. No matter what | brutality and terrorism the bosses | might use they will not succeed in | breaking our confidence in the |heroic revolutionary struggles of | the masses. The workers must answer the {bosses by joining the Communist | Party, by making this Party a mass Communist Party of revolutionary action, and by building up the Trade Union Unity League. All the bosses’ terror and reaction | will be wired aside by the revolu- ‘tionary struggle and sacrifices of the workers, and in the place of the blood- thirsty oppresive capitalist ; the working class, under the leader- | are robbed. “T see the government is going investigate. There are lots of Reds here. The capitalists don’t have to go to Russia to find ’em. “We're all proletarians, pale faces and Indians alike. We shed our | blsod and gave our lives on the fields | Now the| {of France to end war. |capitalists pull off this fake “dis- |armament” conference at London. But the nations will never disarm }until the workers control the gov- | ernments.” J. Louis Engdahl and Richard B. Moore, the two candidates present to make acceptance speeches, vigor- ously dealt with the issues of the jcampaign as outlined in the plat- |form (Foster's letter of acceptance |is published in another column of {this paper), and after all business {was done the convention adjourned with the singing of the Interna- | tionale. Demand Release of Jobless Leaders HANCOCK, Mich., May 26.—The International Labor Defense sec- tion conference held here on May 18, adopted a resolution demand- jing the release of Foster, Minor, | Amter and Raymond, leaders of the ist class to railroad them through |the prejudiced Atlanta courts to the electric chair on the same charges. | They werd arrested on May 21 at |an American Negro Labor Congress meeting here. | oe 8 Protest Grows. Intensive and large scale protest campaign by the workers of all sec- tions of the country can alone save the victims of the legal lynching spree on which the bosses of Georgi have embarked, states the Interna- tional Labor Defense. A huge meeting held in Moose Hall in Minneapolis demanded the immediate release of the six militant workers, | Resolutions demanding their re-| \lease have been passed by the Min’ leapolis Finnish Workers Club, | Ukranian Women’ jeapolis; Icor Branch, St. Paul and the St. Paul Central Branch of the | International Labor Defense. Active Organizers. Further information relative to uxiliary, Minn-} zer of the National orgar | Anna Burlak is a textile from Bethlehem, Pa., 18 jage, and was former district organizer of Prior to that she w director the Young Pioneers in the Bethle- hem district. Several months 2 she was tried on seditio in Bethlehem and was ac Funds to defend the s facing death in the electric and also other class war pr r ar needed at once by Rush contributions to th A= ,tional Labor Defense, roon | East 11th St., New York ( | Engdahl Goes South J. Louis En: tary of the I.L.D for the South to tI T.D. hl, nation arts imme ad the campa e for release of class war pris $ there. He will stop in Winston Sa- lem, I.L.D. headquarters for the Jarolin: and will be in Ra N. C., Wednesday, the date on lich the North Carolina state supreme court is expected to render the de- cision on the seven Gastonia defend- ants. Sngdahl will be in Atlanta during |the Powers and Carr trial, and will continue on to Birmingham, to ral the steel and coal s there for defense of the right to organize on a class basis and a basis of racial equality | = Fight for Work or wor! Wages! rosy pictures of twelve per cent and future independence to workers and farmers, many of whom invested! their life savings, and in return, the protection of Seeretary Becker, reeeived gold engraved stocks and! and a few others. In spite of the bonds which were not worth the fact that all this is known to the paper on which they were written. | judicial department here, the City and state officials knew of Youngs are not yet indicted, and this wholesale robbery, but Secre-| Becker’s word has not even been tary of State Chas. U. Becker, to | questioned! whose campaign Young Bros. had! In direct contrast is the arrest contributed some hundreds of dol-|and conviction of Minor, Foster, lars, was loth to stop the stream of | Amter, and other militant Commu- workers’ money that was pouring| nists and organizers, the immunity into the brokerage firm’s coffers.|of southern lynchers, the employ- Inetead, in return for the campaign | ment of Mr. Whelens to keep down eontribution, Charlie indorsed ajthe much-heralded “frée speech,” gtoup of spurious stocks which|which is as much a mockery as the were immediately launched upon an| word “justice!” unsuspecting public. The company 6G. D. H. ing, and will probably in some other illicit way pick the péople’s pockets, Cleaning Boss Keeps Workers In from Hearing T.UUL (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—Yesterday, at 5} from hearing the speakers of the p. m., I passed by a cleaning plant | union, and he even went as far as at 148d St. and Brook Ave. and found there quite an assembly of people. Upon inquiry I was told that the Cleaners and Dyers Union of the T. U. U. L. was to hold a meeting there at 5:30 p. m., when the workers were supposed to leave the factory. I waited together with the crowd until 6 p. m., but no one came out. The boss had his slaves work overtime, to prevent them make doubly sure. The temperature was 70 degrees. The meeting was openéd anyway with much applause by the listeners and quite a number of Daily Workers weer sold there. Measures such as these only serve to open the eyes of tl Mroe power to the Trades Union Unity League. —A FELLOW-SLAVE. Boss Has Pick of $10 a Week Office Workers| (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO.—This is my sixth) Communist principles gnd of course week out of work and no job in sight. fired. The bosses here are offering I have applied for work at places $6 a week to experienced office help offering 15 a week and when the |and are getting them. has to boss ley the rete applicants live. you know. he hired one for $10. Iam a former our day, and I hope that slave of the Kellogg Swbd and Sup- | comes soon. bi ila ply Co. .1 was suspected of having | ~-A WOMAN WORKER. knowing as they do, that they have | Some day it will he | | Commerce, and all other agencies of the bosses have forged documents in Party and to create war sentiment against the Soviet Union. In the present bosses attacks against the workers they have in- listed the support of the American Federation of Labor and the Social- ist Party. The American Federa- tion of Labor, the vice-president of has united with the most bitter open shop and fascist enemies of the working class. The American Fed- eration of Thor and its history of countless betrayals of the struggles of workers, has today proven very clearly and definitely to the ~~tire American working class that in its policy and reactionary leadership i‘ is an openly fascist and bureaucrat organization working hand and glove with the bosses against the working class. While the United States is the scene of paralyzed industry, mass | unemployment, and growing fascist terrorism, world capitalism shows a to close the windows and doors, to | Similar picture of crisis. The vari- | | ous capitalist countries driven on by internal crisis and an insatiable thirst for markets and world con- trol, come into violent conflict with éach other. They fight by building | tariff walls against each other, Ly workers. ! building up larger armies and navies | and ruthlessly suppressing the col- onial people. They are now partic- ularly preparing a war against the | Soviet Union. The London Naval ‘onference has definitely proven | that the bosses are preparing for war and that disarmament is im- possible to achieve under capitalism. goes deeper into crisis, the workers lof the Soviet Union almost daily j startle the wi with their great successes, the building of Soe ism. The standard of living of the Russian workers is continuousty ris- ing. The superiority of Socialism order to discredit the Communist | the American Federation of Labor | 1 Meanwhile, as world capitalism | {did in New York. In the New York | cloak and dress strike the Socialists, at whose head stands the pious Rev- erend Norman Thomas, made a solid united front with the employers, Tammany Hall, the underworld, and the capitalist newspapers, against system, living upon the sweat and | New York jobless who demonstrated toil of the millions of workers and | March 6. The resolution also called farmers, there will be established | for the release of Powers and Carr. a Workers and Farmers Govern-| ‘The conference also adopted a ment. resolution condemning the Halonen With Revolutionary Greetings, right wingers in the local Co-opera- (signed) WILLIAM Z. FOSTER. | tive movement. PROLETARIAN NITGEDAICET Hotel with modern improvements in every room. Bungal- ows with electric lights; tents, showers, swimming pool. WOODLAND — BEAUTIFUL MOUNTAIN SCENERY | | } | Special Opening Program: | CAMP FIRE — REVOLUTIONARY MASS SONGS DIRECTED BY COMRADE SHAEFER — PROLETARIAN PANTOMIME —- SOVIET MOVIES — LIGHTNING CARTOONS BY COMRADE GROPPER AND KLEIN — UNIQUE ENTERTAINMENT BY COMRADE YOSEL KOTLER — MOPR POSTER EXHIBITION — ATHLETICS — GAMES MUSIC — DANCING — LECTURE — COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE. | Prices for Three Days—$9.00. DIRECTIONS—BY TRAIN New York Grand Central to Beacon every hour. BY BOAT Hudson Day Line to Newburgh twice daily. CAMP NITGEDAIGET | BEACON, NEW YORK Telephone BEACON 731 | New York O! PHONE EASTABROOK 1400 | For the Entire Week—$17.00 CAMP DEPARTMENT STORE NOW OPEN ALSO BARBER SHOP OOS ae Register Now for Decoration Day! GRAND OPENING UNITY CAMP Decoration Day, May 3/ Musical Program — Dancing — Boat Racing Camp Fi Other Attractions Registration ope all at 1800 Seventh Ave. Tel. Monument 0111 ar Down Town: 3 nion Square, Barber Shop, Tel. Stuyvesant 8774 \ SPECIAL PRICE FOR THREE DAYS—$9.00 ot 'TIONS:—Buses leave from 1800 Seventh 6:30 P. M.; Friday at 8 A. M. and 6:30 P.M; By Train: Grand Central or Ave. Thursday at Saturday at 1:30 P, M. 25th Street Station to Wingdale, N. ¥. ICAMP WOCOLONA WALTON LAKE, MONROE, N. Y. Will Open for Decoration Day Week-End Special rates: $12.00 for week-end, $4.50 per day. Musical and Educaional Attractions Boating and Athletics Reservations with $5 deposit to be made at NEW YORK OFFICE: 10 EAST 17¢H STREET Phone Gramercy 1013 REDUCED RAILROAD TICKETS OBTAINED AT OFF 3

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