The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 11, 1930, Page 3

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EDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1930 Page Three HYNES, SCALDER, KUOMINTANG BUTCHERS WAGE CUTS, SPIES FOR. | VISCOSE WORKERS HERE, SHOP COMMITTEE | BOSSES ARRESTED PELTZ Rayon Bosses Afraid of Workers Organizing Had Peltz and Holmes Sent Up Getting Ready for Layoffs and More Wage- Cuts for Viscose Workers (By a Worker Correspondent) CHESTER, Pa.—Peltz and Holmes were convicted on the charge of distributing leaflets calling the workers in the Viscose Rayon Mills to a mass meeting. The meeting had been called to protest the arrest of George Carter, Gastonia defendant, and Ray Peltz, who were taken into custody for speaking to unemployed workers in front of the Ford plant. For several days they were held under $10,000 bail on a ridicu- lous charge of inciting to riot, and finally released with a fine of $10 and costs. The Viscose company is fearful lest their employees should read this so-called seditious literature. There are many stories going the rounds about ideal conditions in the Viscose. There is the “model” village, company doctors, dentists, good sanitary conditions and an A No. 1 cafeteria. * This is partly true, but you want to take it with a grain of salt, The Viscose workers know that just like the farmer who takes care of his prize stock so does the Viscose take care of its workers. All for the benefit of the Viscose by the way and if the Viscose is not concerned about the workers there is no S.P.C.A. to interfere. But for all this care the Viscose workers are hankering for or- ganization. Acid fumes and solutions in the spinning and processing looms rot away fingers and bring on aggravating stomach diseases and ulcers. Speed-up and shifting of work to their other mills and the loss of orders to competing firms who hire cheap southern labor result in lay-offs of several days each week, Their other mills are at Meades- ville and Lewistown, Pa., Roanoke, Va., and Parkersburg and Nitro, West Virginia. Reelers, cone-winders suffer from wage cuts in various ways and many cannot make any more than $13-S15 per week. A great deal of hardship results from bad work. A spy system almost equal to the Ford outfit makes life almost unbearable for all. In spite of lay-offs here extensive improvements and additions are being built at Lewistown. It is rumored that much work will be shifted when the Lewistown plant is completed. Recently girls who were sent home for lack of work were sent out to solicit votes for Grundy, the labor-hating mill owner from Bristol, Pa., who is senator from Pennsylvania, and is coming up for re- election this year. The Grundyites were given preference in the mill and many workers were virtually forced to wear Grundy buttons. Grundy, by the way, with the energetic support of the McClure outfit, made a clean sweep here in Chester. As also did Judge McDade, who was running for supreme court judge because he will be needed there now that labor cases are going to come up for review. Luckily he lost out in the state-wide count. Machine workers here were lined up on the fluky argument that “we want to give this bird a better job because he’s too hard on the bootleggers and we don’t want him at Media any longer.” But we workers know why. The General Steel Castings Company is beginning to operate its new plant. The workers say that this is a very well laid out plant. | They estimate that in one or two cases where 12 or 15 men were re- quired to do certain jobs in the old plants one man will be able to do the job. Certainly it is the best organized steel mill in the world, Of course from the workers’ point of view. Already in preparation for a blacklist pictures are taken of all workers in their employ. —G. C. | Social-Fascists and Bosses United Against | Bakers (By a Worker Correspondent) In spite of all demands »y pad bee between the socialist union cockroach bakery bosses, bakers | and the bosses and they are working work from 12 to 16 hours in the|harder than a cat on a tin roof to Jewish bakeries, although the social- | help their class. | ist officialdom of Local 500 boast; But—the strike is in the bakeries of an eight-hour contract, but what|on Alleron Avenue, where it is an is a contract among friends? The | admitted fact that 80 per cent of strike called by the Industrial Food| the people are either Communists or Workers Union for decent working | communist sympathizers and putting conditions brought out the utter|it in the bosses’ own words, “they bankruptcy and sell-out of this so-|are like soldiers and when they are cialist union. jtold not to buy, they will not buy.” A committee was organized made|So of what earthly use is an in- ap of Specialty Bakery Owners of | junction ? An injunction can keey America the bosses) and Local 500 Pickets away—sometimes, but they (the bosses’ labor lieutenants) for| will have to pass some kind of a the purpose of combatting the left | law or force the residents to buy in wing strike, This committee prom-| the struck shops. ised the bakery owners whose work-| A circular was distributed by the ers are on strike all the support! bosses appealing to all the residents they may need—secured for them|in the vicinity of Allerton to buy an injunction, police | ° protection, | in the scabshops, but that does not gangsters and all the trimmings | help. When you ask a right-winger that go along with a regular strike-| about the condition in the Jewish breaking fiesta. The committee or| bakery industry, he will tell you holy alliance of bakery bosses ate ey that the hours are terrible, so-called union men, is welded to-| but he says “The bosses don’t want gether by what may be called B) Sauter union.” But the bosses are “liaison officer.” A former busi-| getting another union. The bakers’ ness agent of Local 500, now/ section of the Industrial Food Work- a boss, is smoothing out any|ers’ Union. friction or misunderstanding that —Baker. Demonstration Is Answer to Police Brutality (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—An open air meeting was held by the Food Workers Industrial Union to expose the slavery and scab system in Schlom and Deutsch’s bakery at 86th St. and Bay Park, where the strike was declared. When the second speaker was about to finish his speech hhe and two others were arrested and taken to the 62nd precinct station and put under $500 bail each. But the arrests did not scare the others, who got up on the platform and replaced their arrested comrades. The police brutally beat up a number of young workers. But this was met by the growing resistance of the young workers, who organized a wonderful demonstration of solidarity in front of the bakery. More than a thousand people joined in the demonstration against the police brutality. After a number of revolutionary songs the demon- stration closed in a full spirited manner —CAFETERIA WORKER. Insurance Agents Also Hit by Crisis (By a Worker Correspondent) BOSTON, Mass.—I have never no-is no unemployment, and we're not |“Going To Be Revolt”, | Says Negro Worker (Continued from Page One) Connecticut and also the Pacific Coast delegations will attend the conference which will lay the basi: for a real mass convention for the | formation of a new union in the very near future, which will discuss | all the present shortcomings of the | | League and establish its real roots |in the shops, perfect its leadership to enable the League to lead its com- ing mass struggles in the industry and accomplish its task of increasing its membership to 5,000. | The convention will start at 1 p. ;m. Saturday, June 14, at Workers’ | Center, 334 E. Federal St., Youngs- town, Ohio. According to the esti- mate of the national office, a great number of delegates will be Negro workers and about one-third young workers, The national office of the Metal Workers’ Industrial League is in great need of finances for the con- | ference, and appeals to all workers jand sympathetic organizations to immediately help in the financing | of the conference by sending in a} small donation to 611 Penn Ave., Room 517, Pittsburgh, Pa. ee a 1,500 Harvester Workers Fired. ROCK ISLAND, IlL, June 10.—/ | Following the lay-off of the entire |night force of 1,500 at the Harves- |ter plant and the complete shut- | down of the Deere Plow Co., the | Rock Island City Council passed an | ordinance requiring a permit for any | meeting, indoor or open-air. | “If something doesn’t happen, | and happen damn quick,” one Negro steel worker told Joe Dallet, district \secretary of the Metal Workers’ League, who is making a pre-con- vention tour of his district, “there’s going to be a revolution.” The steel district of Illinois, In-|}now something about the Daily| the use of the book in future clas- diana and Missouri were covered in the tour completed yesterday. In every steel town the same situation existed, tremendous unemployment and daily wholesale lay-offs, work- ing conditions and wages on. the down grade, but militancy and or- | BUTTE WORKER A “DAILY” BUILDER Police Can Not Down Him in Building Sue Mon 6-2-30. | The Daily Worker, New York, N. Y. | Dear Comrades: I am sending you a photo of my “Daily Worker” car. When I first came out on the streets of Butte with” this announcement of the “Daily” being in distress, the corpor- ation tools got busy at once, and the first thing that I knew, I was in police headquarters thinking it over where I could get $25.00 for bonds on a charge of violating a traffic ordinance. At the trial, the judge declared the act of my arrest | charged. The next day I was headed |into the headquarters again — an- other traffic violation. Again I was discharged and the | sale of the Daily Worker continued.| Dean Johnson said. Now we are starting for the dis- trict convention which is to be held | at Minot, N. Dak., on the seventh of June. We are going with three dele- gates, and the natives enroute will We intend to strike deep roots for the Daily Worker in this corpora- tion ridden town, help our best to collect funds for the $25,000 Emer- gency Fund, get new readers every-| where. | THE COMMUNI “unconstitutional,” and I was dis-| Worker from now on. | S| ganization moving forward with Fuomientans PORIER sepones Prac: Yours for the $25,000 Daily Worker Campaign. Am enclosing Money| gh TH FAOTS DAILY WORKER 4 TRAT HORKLE AGAINS? EXPL ‘Death for Workers Who Read Com- munist Classic (Continued From Page One.) !return such indictments because ory University is in DeKalb, and Fulton County, where his jur- Emi not isdiction ends. He qualified his opin-} ion to the extent that the doctrines of the book must be presented as the} truth. | Workers Claim Same Right. | Referring to the use of the book| | at the University, Engdahl said, “An interesting question raised is wheth er the workers of the state hav the same right to read and studs this important document as well a: the students of Emory University. The question was answered whole- heartedly in the affirmative by Dean Johnson, in whose school the book is recommended as a part of the sup- plementary ready course attached to a class in social reform held every | other year. “I can’t see why they | should not have the right to read the book,” Dean Johnson said. Dean Johnson described the book as “a classic.” “It is a very interesting book,” “Not only do {I suggest its use by the students | of the class in social reform, but | I require it. It happens that we are not holding the class this year, but I have no intention of abandoning mea EL CENTRO LIAR Try Drive Communist Party Underground (Continued from Page Ones |of the Los Angeles police depart- jment’s “Red Squad,” and loaned to the Imperial Valley growers by his employers, the Chamber of Com- merce and police department of the biggest open-shop city, Los Angeles. Hynes recited a carefully memo- | rized story and introduced pam- | phlets, leaflets and membership |cards, only parts of which were read to the jury, to prejudice them and | give them a misleading opinion of the movement. | The trial now assumes definite | character as an attempt to force | developed against the Party. Hynes’ Record. Hynes testified that he joined the Communist Party in 1922. This is a lie. Hynes’ history as a stool pigeon is as follow When the first meeting to organ- ize the Workers’ Party was held in Los Angeles Hynes signed an ap- plication to join, At the first meet- “I might be more correct if I were to say, instead of that we “teach”| the book, that we “study” it. We study it in the same way that other books and other theories are studied in the other departments of the uni-| | versity.” The indictments handed down ‘Assistant District Attorney Smith. Drawn by Alonzo. ing, held a few days later, to pass on the applications, Chairman Gor- man (now organizer of the Trade | Union Unity Council in New York) | the Communist Party underground | and the prosecution’s main attack is | SUPPORT THEIR BLOOD BROTHER, FAKIRGANDHI Chiang Kai Sheks Henchmen Help British Jail Indian Rebels Chinese Masses Sympathize with Struggles of India Workers and Peasants SHANGHAI (IPS).—The Chinese nationalist press devotes con- siderable space to the happenings in India, although little or nothing is said about the mass movement of the Indian workers and peas- ants as such. The sympathy of the bourgeois nationalists is on the side of Gandhi and the Indian national bourgeoisie against British imperialism. The Shanghai organization of the Kuomintang even adopted a resolution of sympathy and good wishes for Gandhi. This friendly attitude of the Kuomintang bourgeoisie towards Gandhi and the Indian revolution, however, did not prevent the Chinese authori- ties from permitting the British police to raid the Hindu Club in Shanghai which on Chinese territory, and arrest a number of In- dian nationali: The sympathies of the Chinese workers and peasants are with the mas: in India. The illegal “Shanghai Pao” devotes a great amount of space to Indian events. The “China Critic” writes: “India offers the interesting spectacle of an unarmed country fighting for freedom against a country armed to the teeth, a Christian country which regards the oppression and brutalizing of other countrie the interests of profit as absolutely permissible, It would be ridicu- lous to expect justice from the British government, even when it i as in this case, a ‘Labor’ government.” The newspaper also expresses the opinion that an appeal to the conscience of the world would be ineffective. in Police Help Reformers to Break Strike WARSAW, (IPS).—This morning at the mineral-water works the police here raided the headquar- The police action is ters of the revolutionary Chemical | Connected with these collisions. The Workers and Packers Union. Forty | Pole declared that they acted at ° | the instance of the reformist trade | persons were arrested and the offi-| union leaders who complained that |ces closed and sealed. C the members of the revolutionary occurred between the strikers and | union interferred with their supply strike-breakers during the wage | of strike-breakers, masses with arms attacked the SIMON REPORT | police, and that on the Northern | frontier the Pathan tribes of peas~ ants (mistermed “Afghans” to give the impression of an “invasion”), angered by the airplane bombs being rained on their villages, were gather- ing in swarms around Khyber Pass. | In London, all imperialist papers, | including the “labor” organ of Mac- | Donald, the “Daily Herald,” approves |of the Simon Report unanimously, | the “labor” organ being thus har- | monized with the Tory and Liberal KICKS INDIA |Storm Gathers As All India Meets Insult (Continued from Page One) being under cover of an agreement on “dominion status.” Even this poor bone is not thrown to the In-| press. Now—More Troops. tically every major steel plant and many machine works in the district | will be represented at the Youngs- against Ann Burlak, 18 years of age,| ached him to stand up when his | dian bourgeoisie, but Order for more subs. —W. L. Wright. | southern represéntative of the IL. |D.; Mary Dalton, 20, organizer for instead they name was called, as is the custom.| are administered what even the town Convention, the district sec- retary found. Auto Worker, ANLC Youngest Political Dance June 13th Prisoner Defends Self | CHICAGO, Ill.—The Auto Work- lers Union in cooperation with the A | American Negro Labor Congress is (Continued From Page One.) |avranging a arise and dance Fri- struggle. Workers’ mass meetings|day, June 13, 8 p. m., at the New everywhere demand the release of | Workers Home, 1343 E. Ferry. Harry Eisman. | The affair is for the purpose of The letter is printed below. The raising finances for the Auto Work- “Alex” referred to is another /ers Delegation to the Fifth Congress brother. i lof the Red International of Labor “Hawthorne School, Hawthorne,! Unions. Wm. Brown, a Negro work- Noy, er, and S. Miller, a white worker, | the National Textile Workers Union; | Henry Storey, 25, and Herbert New- ton (Brady), 20, of the American | Negro Labor Congress, together with |H. M. Powers and Joseph Carr, a | Negro worker, arrested on March 9, included this book as one of these which Georgia considers justify elec- trocution of the arrested workers. | June 19, and the International Labor | Defense is working on the defense of these six, and seeking the aid of sympathizers and workers through- |out the country to protest the use jof these ancient 1861 laws, with | Trial of the defendants is set for| | All saw that the man was evidently | |a policeman in disguise; he wore | rough, working clothes, but he didn’t | look like a worker. His application was referred to | the city central committee, and | other comrades drew him into con- | | versation. His story was no good, | |hesitant and contradictory about matters a worker should have | known. | Hynes was refused a card in the | | Woxkers’ Party by the committee | led by Secretary Levin, now of the Daily Worker staff. He then joined the I. W. W. and became a member | of their San Pedro marine transport | “Dear Herman: The last time I} are the Auto Workers Union Dele-| their death penalty, against the (ig ieee oer, strike committee. Commu- | saw Alex in court, on March 20, he | gates. Wm. Brown will also atterd told me that you and Jack were|the World Congress of Negro Work- sore at me for breaking my proba-|ers in London, July 4. Besides the tion. I don’t blame you two in the! delegates, Jack Stachel and othefs least, for neither of you understand! will speak at the banquet. ticed anything about conditions of industrial insurance agents, who are exploited by the big life insurance companies, True, agents have a steady job, day in and day out, but with the crisis they are suffering too, because they deal mostly with workers, Yes, a steady job means steady pay, $16.00 to $30.00 a week and also commission or money hor- rowed for writing new policies. But at the present time not only is it impossible to write new policies, but it’s impossible to collect for the old ones and as a result many lapse. Lapses are charged against agents’ commissions or wages. The companies make believe there allowed to talk about it in the office. Why, is there few workers out of work, forget them, there’s plenty more that are working like icemen, grocers, etc. the compay says. But they forget that now there are more insurance agents than people work- ing. The companies call all kinds of meetings, conventions, drives, re- ports to use the last ounce of the agents to get something. Insurance agents should also or- ganize for fight against the big companies. For better wages and commissions and againsts the high- pressure speed-up drives the com- panies push us through. -—Insurance Agent. my case, and just why I had to do! what I felt was right. ask yourself what there was to un-' derstand in my case. Well, for this purpose, I am sending you this letter. “You see, Herman, that after I | was released in January by the court until the 10th of March when I was again imprisoned, the courts, school officials, and all other tools | of capitalism were on my heels! with one determination and aim in) their minds which was to get me |back where I am. Every time I) ; Showed up on probation, the proba- tion officer would always try to undermine, even though I had an excellent record, all because of the political views I hold, and because I didn’t partake in any of our dem- onstrations. “A week before March 6, when) I showed up for probation, the pro- bation officer there went so far as to say, ‘You are afraid to go down to those riots because of this.’ (He was pointing at the probation card.) “This was one reason why I went to Union Square on March 6, “This is one reason, but if you look at it in a political way, you | will clearly see that I in no way was a case of probation and when I broke it I was perfectly justified. As far as the court was concerned | you can really see how partial it was fom the first from the fact were permitted to say anything, The trial lasted seven and a half minutes, “During this time I was sen- tenced to six years up here just because I am a Communist. The court expects me to change my views up here. “Those people don’t realize that the longer they keep me here, the more militant I'll be when I check | out. You know that for every reyo- \Iutionist that is imprisoned, so | many more thousands take their | places in the fight against capital- \ism. The time is not far off when all class war prisoners will be lib- | erated by the revolution and then we will try those who are impris- oning us. We will make them pay good and heavy, like the workers of the Soviet Union did, “This is all I have to tell you. I conclude this letter with revolu- tionary greetings. Harry Eisman.” | You may} ~ | sure regular publication of the Daily | that neither Alex, my lawyer, nor I it. ONM. oe |G, Hoffman, 2.00 iJ, Kasper, etroit, ae Three Days Contni forts of workers to inform and educ- | ate, and to organize against indus- | trial oppression in the South. Fight for Work or Wages! butions Halt of Sum Needed Daily The total contributions for thre days to the 000 Emergency Fund | to save the Daily Worker is only one-half of the $1,000 which we set) yt? las the necessary daily receipts for | s 3 Of the) ¥ the rest of this month, | $548.98 contributed in the last three | days, $305.91 comes from the New York District. The campaign to in- Worker, to make it a power that can win against the “investigation” from | stage, that New York is doing bet- | ter than all the rest of the country combined. Your city, your organization, you as an individual must take more in- terest than up to now, if the Daily Worker is to liquidate its own dif- ficulties so as to be able to continue its fight. the working class and against bosses and its terror government, Additional contributions to June 9th. mB) Gerlach, J; Friteh, ‘Trenton, N. J. Collected’ by J, Bartotf, Ci land, JO senes oe Rupert, Salt Lake City, Utah .. M. Marracce " Collected at a meeting by Amikoviteb, Melrose Park, rose Park, IIL .. Victor Palen, collectes ing, Chicago, Hl. P. Biges, Low Angeles, G. Lazarian, Gary, Ind. « A Comrade Baltimore, Md. Collected by B. Shapiro, Cl land, Ohio . Collected by Dub: io Collected Station, P: ve Branch, Intl, Shadyside, Aframentt, N. Y. A, Walters, Bronx, S. 'T, Yhidstys, Rockland, Newark Unit, Newark, N. Paul Ortner, Usrajatas Bocte Washington, D. C., shows at this} . 1.00 i 43.00 Unit t 1, Section v Workers of 3 Journal, N. Benjamin Rosen, 00 Singer, N.Y.C. See, 8, Shavitz, N. Economoe, Spartacus G Fraction, N.Y.C. M. Hyman, Sec, 2, 141°, B. Molinar! ; N. Suekin; Seetion 5, Camp Wi Unit 3F, Section 2 id, Section 3, Nv Marie Spin 1.00 0 ‘ 25.50 2.00 1,00 7% Frida Wor Section 2, 32.80 Seetion 1, 6.00 Unit 12F, 8, Esthonion Workers © Unit 14F, Seetion 3, Section 3, N.Y.C, Section 2, N.Y. Unit 9F, Section 4, Unit B, Section @, N Br kis, N.Y. Groduer Krinker Br, G37, Workers Order, N. Section §, Section 2 Seetion 5 HOM. 505s Collected on list by Alex Lek- Support the Daily Worker Drive! | _ Get Donations! Get Subs! ~ off, Spokane, Wash. Ernest IKoxhe, Aurora Kiolgieff, Chileo, Ida D, K.Georgieff, Chileo, Total . + reeney Fund needed ontributions received . Balance afitt needed © LONE STARK re 00 | jamuel Rosen, N.Y 1.60 9.00 4.00 10,00 | 5.00 Glick, Brom 1.00, Section 7, 150 Celia Bushw! 150 Sympathizer, sane 1.00 Joseph Bricker, Lenin picture, New York Cit 10.00 75| BUCHAREST, Rumania.—Forty- | nists exposed him to the strikers, }and he was eventually expelled by them. | He was then seen riding with the | chief of police, and, later, Gorman, going into a tailor shop to have his suit pressed, saw Hynes there for the same purpose, and Hynes had |his coat off, showing his gun and police badge. Helped Seald Children. Later he blossomed out as chief | of the Red Squad, and has had a prominent part in hounding down men under the criminal syndicalism |law. Hynes also took part in the San Pedro raid of Ku Klux Klans- mien, Legionnaires, police and other hirelings of the shipping companies jand lumber companies on an I. W. |W. entertainment in San Pedro in 1925. The raiders smashed the hall ; and threw little children into an urn | jof boiling coffee. One child, May | Sunstedt, aged nine, lay horribly burned in the hospital for months, Others were so badly scalded that | they crawled for blocks on hands and knees, pieces of skin and flesh | sticking to the sidewalk as they | | moved. | The mother of the little Sunstedt | girl died from shock and exposure, | | sustained during the raid and while | | her daughter lay near death. That’s what sort of a fellow Hynes is, @ main witness now against Im- | perial Valley workers. | | COMMUNISTS GET 2 YEARS. _two Communists got 2-year sen- jtences apiece for taking part in al Communist demonstration. When) the sentence was read the workers | sang the “Internationale.” NTED Comrades |to go upstate to collect signatures | Lincolnshire Regiment Gandhite National Congress organ,| the Bombay “Chronicle” terms as| “an insult to India.” | The Bombay “Chronicle” was, it! is to be noted, a supporter of the Simon Commission when it was ial India. Now it rejects the report.| The Indian “Daily Mail” still fur-| ther to the right than the “Chron-| icle,” terms to Report as a “badly | cooked rice pudding, strongly flavor-| ed with die-hardism” and heads the article “Simon’s Failure.” | Even the “Liberal Federation,” so extremely reactionary as to bitterly oppose Gandhi, are hostile to the) Report. Only the British papers in| India give it praise, at the same time celebrating the near arrival of| the Third Destroyer Flotilla and the with more troops to come. Storm Gathering. | The “Daily Herald,” of course, | trying to cover up its imperialism with the mantle of sophistry, cites the Report’s exaggeration and lies about the “difficulties” of even “do- minion status,” as no reason to “give way to faint hearts” and in general talking as if, in spite of superhuman “difficulties,” MacDonald will “keep up his courage” and in the course of centuries hope for Indian “self- rule”—but now, of course, the thing to do is to send troops to shoot down the Indian masses. The burden of the whole first volume of the Report is that India would be in a terrible fix if British imperialism would get off its back, raking up all the old and some new excuses about the religious dif- ferences between Hindu and Mos- lem, the insulting accusation of il- | literacy (for which England is to | blame) and even burdened its pages | with sexual slander about “child That the Indian masses are seeth-| marriages”—meanwhile British gov- ing with revolt is plain not only in| ernors profit from the extensive the fact that the extreme right wing| brothels they allow in every Indian is forced to reject the Simon Com-| city. mission which they previously help-| ed, but in the admission that “an| air of suspense” hangs over India, while at Chechuahat, near Calcutta, Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent, cat delivers , you only | union drivers, | 100% union a oneery } firm to your mi from us, ‘The milk is fresh and tasty. vince yourself! MELROSE 3863 As Always Spend Your Vacation at Camp Nitgedaiget e FIRST PROLETARIAN '|NITGEDAIGET CAMP—HOTEL Hotel with hot and cold water in every room, Bungalows with electric lights. Tents—to remind you the old days. Rs 1.00 1.50 | “Vv. 20.40 Workers of Greenpoint Metallic Bed Co, NYC. 2.00 John Parde, Brooklyn. 1.00 Yener, Unit SR, Se: 5.00 to put the state ticket on the balloz District Campaign Committee | ~~ Communist Party, yr 26 Union Square, Room 202 PHONE BEACON wa. = ~ BAYL. woun—WRITE TO BOX 75 DAILY WORKER jand building the circulation of the | (fo Cultural Program for the Summer of 1930 Daily Worker. 1 ht ‘ } | er The Artef Studio (Mass theatre with the ; 4 Artef) Comrade Shaeffer will conduct mass Write or call at (Ss singing. the office of the y Cultura! Program—Comrades Olgin and Jerome Athletics, games, dances, theatre, choir, lec- tures, symposiums, etc. CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. N.Y. PHONE: ESTABROOK 1400 By Train: From Grand Central every hour. By Boat: twice daily

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