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| “spirited and revealed that produc- 40,000 WORKERS GO OU ON GENERAL STRIKE IN BOSS CORRESPONDENT ADMITS GROWTH OF CHINA-SOVIET POWER, *, Admits Failure of Feudal and Bourgeois Gov- ernment to Stabilize China Renegade Press Ignor es Facts About China| in Order to Fool Workers The recognition of the utter fail- ure of the feudal remnants and bourgeoisie to unify and stabilize China and the realization of the his- torical necessity of a “far to the | left” regime in China by a section | of the foreign and Chinese intellec- | tuals are admitted by Hallet Abend, correspondent of the New York} Times, in a feature artigte in Fri- | day’s Times. He says: “Many thoughtful Chinese and) . foreign observers who live in that} unhappy land are today convinced | that China must go far to the ‘left’| before it can evolve any stable form | of government and finally settle) down to the ways of unity and peace. To date neither the mod- erates nor the reactionary conser- | vatives have shown any ability to | eope with China’s domestic prob- Jems.” China is now actually traveling | fast on the road to a real left re- gime, the Soviet regime of the work- | ers, peasants and soldiers, the only | wegime that can bring about unity, stability and prosperity for the eountry and emancipation for the toiling masses. Describing the rapid successes of the revolutionary mass movement that are bringing | about this regime, the same corre- spondent writes: “Capture of city after city by the ‘Red’ forces has been chronicled in the recent news from China, and in case after case local provincial authorities have re- ported to Nanking that the Com- munists are so strong that further resistance by the government rep- | resentatives has become useless.” Again he says: “The area at pres- ent under Communist domination comprises large portions of Fukien, ) Kiangsi, Kwangtung, Kwangsi and Hunan provinces, and smaller por- tions of Hupeh, Honan, Kiangsu and ekiang provinces. This geogra- phical distribution of the Commu- ni who now claim to have in the field armies totalling about 145,000 men, seriously jeopardizes the posi- tion of the Nanking government, both at Nanking itself, in the lower | Yantze Valley, and at the isolated |southern foothold, the rich and im- |portant city of Canton.” The impending collapse of the r-revolutionary regime in |China is so obvious, the revolution- ary movement is proceeding at such a quick tempo and the achievements of the Chinese Communists are so great that both enemies and friends of the revolution cannot afford to ignore the facts as they are. The capitalist press recognizes | the facts of the onsweep of the rev- olution in China as the “Red men- ace,” as a warning to the boss class. The revolutionary press, including the Daily Worker, hails the success of the Chinese Revolution in order to rally the American masses to the support of the revolution. Only the renegade press, the Mili- tant and the Revolutionary Age, ete., ignore the facts in China. This is because it has a specifie function to perform for the boss class. It ig- nores facts in China not because of ignorance, but is doing it with the specific intention of confusing the workers and the farmers by all sorts of lies and legends, thus trying to prevent them from supporting the Chinese .Revolution. The renegade press thus plays a complementary role to the capitalist press and can properly be considered as the ap- pendage of the capitalist press. MASS, WORKERS AD ELECTIONS To Collect § Signatures| ‘for Communist Party BOSTON, Mass., June 23.—All workers of Massachusetts, workers in shops and mills, sympathizers as well as members of the Communist Party, members of revolutionary trade unions or revolutionary work- ers in reactionary unions, all are invited to participate in collecting signatures to place the Communist Party on the ballot in the coming elections. Workers who know from the bey vengeance against Sacco and fanzetti, from the wage cuts and speed up and unemployment they suffering under at the hands of = capitalist class in Massachu- setts, and from the fight for the working class put up by the Com- munist Party, will know also that all aid should be given the Party to overcome the difficulties put in the way of the Communists getting on the ballot. The Registrars of Voters in the cities and towns will make all ef- forts to keep the Communist Party off the ballot, and many times the number of signatures required by capitalist “law” must be obtained to overcome all trickery in disquali- fying signatures on one or another pretext. All requests for blank petitions to gather signatures must be made to Stephen Puleo, Campaign Man- | ager, 3 Harrison Ave., Boston. A State Ratification Convention, to be held on August 24 at Boston, will also attract delegates from all kinds of workers’ organizations, revolutionary unions and Shop Committees. Workers in the shops and local unions of the A. F. of L. and from revolutionary unions are asked to support the Communist Party in the election campaign, to organize delegations to the conven- tion while organizing in the shops for struggle against wage cuts, un- employment and speed-up. CHELSEA SHOE WORKERS BEGIN TO ORGANIZE CHELSEA, Mass.—A meeting of hoe workers held in this city was addressed by Fred Biedenkapp and M. “Slarfield. Although only 15 yere present the discussion was tion is only 25 per cent of capacity, that the still employed workers are forced to buy company shares and sign “yellow dog” agreements, The group of workers agreed to meet regularly and take steps to build shop committees and take steps to prepare for a New England conference of shoe workers some- time in August, A small committee was elected to direct future ac- tivities. Write as you fight! Become a KLAN EXPOSES BUSINESS BASIS Workers ‘Give Answer to Fascist Gang BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (By Mail)— Several thousand leaflets distributed by the masked parade of 500 Ku Klux Klansmen through the Negro section of this city last Thursday are unique confessions of the busi- ness interests back of this attempt at terror. The leaflets, printed in red ink, with an A. F, L. union label, on cardboard, read: “KU KLUX KLAN TO NEGROES! “Foreign and northern agitators are in Birmingham teaching social equality among whites and blacks. “Alabama laws guarantee the supremacy of the white race by prohibiting mixed marriages. “A vast majority of southern negroes know that social equality doctrine is “bad business” and are advising their friends to leave alone the Communists and their like. “The agitators should be sent back to the north, or to Russia. See that they go! “Alabama is the best state in the Union for good negroes, and one of the worst states for bad negroes. “Thing It Over—Act!” The Negro workers are openly told |the “white race is to be supreme.” They are threatened, “Alabama is one of the worst states for bad negroes,” and the remark about “so- cial equality doctrine is bad busi- ness” gives away more than is meant. It is “bad business,” bad for the exploiting business men and landlords of the South when Negro and white workers unite to fight low wages, and lynch terror, Threaten Death For Equality The parade was conducted in au- tomobiles and carried an effigy of Tom Johnson, Communist Party dis- trict organizer and Oscar De Priest, a Negro republican congressman. The Klansmen labored through the Negro sections of town: Graymont, North Birmingham, Barmash and Northside, having started from the center of town within a block of the Federal building. It stopped at Collegeville school, a Jim Crow pub- lic school for Negro children, and on the school grounds burned the effigies at the stake. Over the ashes were erected signs: “Here lies the body of negro Oscar DePriest—He believed in social equality”; and “Here lies the body of white Tom Johnson—He believed in social: equality.” The Saturday following the par- ade, the Negro and white workers of Birmingham answered this threat by mobilizing in hundreds on Capi- tal Park and cheering speakers for ae Communist Party and the T.U. worker correspondent | Support the Daily Worker Drive! Get Donations! Get Subs! ‘GREET BURLAK “ATTTH NATIONAL CONVENTION Ua bi a8, (0° the S ho"p Ss" Chief Slogan (Continued from Page One) | opportunists tried to split the Party, | pelled, and that 137 of these were in New York, shows how Lovestone failed to shake the iron unity of the Party and shows the weakness of his organization the country over. As the Trotskyite “left” op- portunists were dumped out before the Sixth Convention, this has not been a disciplinary problem, only three being expelled for Trotsky- ism since March, 1929, Fourteen were expelled for white chauvinism; 27 in the cleansing of the Party from opportunists who followed Halonen in the Minn. Dis- trict; similar tendencies caused the expulsion of 20 Ukrainians in De- troit; 27 for various persistent Right deviations, and 87 for unre- liability, indiscipline, refusal to do Party work, ete. If any Lovestone- ites remain, they are of no conse- quence, and the main fight on the Right Danger is the cleansing of its ranks of those who reveal op- portunism persistently in practice. A number of recommendations were made to improve the function- ing of the Party financially, and strict responsibility will be had by new accounting supervision. No more loose handling of dues or lit- erature. Hathaway on Youth Work. Comrade Hathaway delivered a report on the Young Communist League in the name of the Central Committee. The Party can win the majority of the working class if it organizes the workers on the basis of their daily demands. Special groups have special demands, and among these the youth. The Party has seriously underestimated the role of the youth, and the reason that the C. C., and not a represen- tative from the youth is making this report is that by this the Cen- tral Committee is calling attention of the whole Party to its duty to- ward the youth and its political leader, Y. C. L. The Party must not look upon the | Young Communist League as a cul- tural organization. It must not con- sist of students, as in the past but of actual workers. The census of 1920 showed there were 11,000,000 young workers, over one-half in factory industry, 25 per cent in the auto industry. The belt system causes the young workers, in spite of their energy, to be totally ex- hausted at the end of a day’s work. the adult workers. This is a part of the general attack on the work- ing class by the bosses to cheapen production and compete on the world market. While it is true that young workers supplant the adult workers, yet this does not mean that the young workers do not suf- fer from unemployment. Many of them have to maintain families, yet it is estimated that one-fourth of the 8,000,000 workers now unem- ployed are young workers. In those industries where young workers predominate, such as the radio in- dustry, unemployment is great. The radio industry laid off 28 per cent of its workers in March alone. To Organize Negro Youth, Within this mass of specially ex- ploited workers is a great group of even worse exploited, the young Negro workers. All these objective factors make the situation ex- tremely favorable to build the Y. C. L. Yet the Y. C. L. is lagging be- hind even more than the Party. It is isolated from the masses and in a very serious situation because of this. The League has progressed, how- ever. It was nearly ruined during the factional fight and real progress has been made in getting it really organized. But all this is insuffi- cient, its composition is bad, only 60 per cent are workers and only one-fifth of these in heavy indus- tries. Also its national composi- tion is in the main Finns and Jew- ish, there are only fifty young Ne- groes in the League and there are no figures on Americans. It has very few shop nuclei. “Left” Phrasemongering a Danger. Our chief weakness is the cover- ing up of a lack of basic work by revolutionary phrases, a deep left sectarian tendency to substitute for action. The right danger is the main danger in the League, as in the Party. The leaders fought op- portunism, became confused and viewed the main danger as coming from the left. At one time they tried to convince the Central Com- mittee that it was the same in the Party, but this was checked. The whole Party must under- stand the importance of the youth and the political role of the Y. C. L. Resistance has shown _ itself against forming youth sections in the Red Union and the American Negro Labor Congress. Also there is resistance from Party members against their children joining the Young Pioneers. This is a social- democratic idea that “children don’t| belong in the class struggle” or “let them grow up first.” Meanwhile they are taught by capialisin to op- t the fact that only 220 were ex-| Yet they are paid lower wages than] DAILY WORKER, NEW Es TUESDAY, JUNE nz 1980 ONLY UNITY OF WORKERS OF ALL RACES WILL WIN Bosses for “Divide and Rule” San Ysidio, Cal. Dear Si You say that our differences of opinion arise from the fact that you, one of the leaders of the Com- munist Party of America, do not! recognize boundary lines, that no Communist can recognize national boundary lines as a barrier to workers, no matter what color or race. Providing these foreigners do not scab against their fellow-work-| ers either in their own country or a foreign country. Now, what would happen in Rus- sia if Stalin would open the borders | to all coolie and cheap Asiatic labor : and allow them to invade Russia and | cut down the standard of living the Soviets are trying to improve? I'll tell you the result: The moral con- fidence and patriotism the Russian people have for their rulers would vanish. Now, in the Daily Worker for June 6 you admit the white lettuce packers got 60 cents per hour and the Filipinos were doing it for 25 cents ‘an hour, and a few of the Fili- pinos, six in number, joined the Trade Union Unity League and be- came six scabs, You can't tell them anything else, they joined the T. U. U. L. and scab all they please on the whites. Now, the purpose of the Commu- nist Party, as I understand it, is to better the living conditions of the workers of the world, not to| endorse wholesale scabbing by these people because six of these mili- tant scabs joined the T. U. U. L., and that is the condition in the entire West and is evidently en- dorsed by the C. P. of A. and if you are acquainted with the West you know it yourself. —H. A. MeGRIFF. ae Editorial Note:—H. A. McGriff may not realize it, but what he says | is exactly what the bosses say in order to split the workers, and in this way to get them fighting against one another instead of unit- ing against their real enemy—the bosses. Precisely because the white work- | ers have been poisoned by race| hatred and the Filipino and other eastern workers have virtually been made social outcasts the bosses can employ them for lower wages | and play them off against the white | workers, Now what should be the attitude of every intelligent worker? Cer-! j ete. Vagrant Bill in D. C. Is Aimed At TUUL Organizers Daily Worker:— Headlines in a local sheet here: CITY’S HEADS URGE CONGRESS TO PASS VAGRANT MEASU Bill Would Allow Capital Police to Jail at Will Suspected Criminals. When this bill passes the Hoo- ver gang will be able to jail any member of the Communist Party or Trade Union Unity League as soon as he puts his foot across the district line. I will send you a copy of the bill as soon as it is printed. —J. M. Washington, D. C. To ‘the Daily Worker: | The hypocrisy of the bosses in ng to fool the workers to put r wage-cuts and lay-offs some- | times goes to the limit. Take the | case of the leather goods shop of |Morris White, where 600 workers | are employed. Morris White, the boss, put a full- | |page ad in the Times for April 22, | in which he says: “I solved the prob- \lem of depression for my own or-| |ganization. My answer to slack“ |ness, under-employment and unem- | ployment is—what it always has | |been ... greater employment . ‘bigger volume . greater turnover . intensified selling . . . promo- tainly not to oppose the organiza-| tion! tion of all these workers to fight] y, BiEte volun en Oak ohn for higher wages, better conditions, aoe de and night, Speed-up ei As long as you demand the|+ho White shops is now a fine art. exclusion of foreign workers from We were speeded up terrifically to the country, no matter on what] coan up on the bosses’ orders by grounds, you are really siding with | : {June 15. the bosses, Why? Because your action only) poston CL.U (AF, of means that you are giving up your class interests, you are taking the path of fighting against your fel- Resol low-workers from the foreign coun- tries, instead of uniting’ with them against the fruit growers for better! BOSTON, Mass.—That the A. F. conditions. | of L. policy is the policy of the em-| On the other hand, the bosses will ployers is seen clearly in their ac- import all the foreign labor they | tivity as far as the conditions of want as long as they want it and | the workers are concerned. The if it is profitable for them to do so. | Central Labor Union of Boston is a You are living under an illusion if| part of the A. F. of L. and they are you think we workers can control | following their leaders, Green, Woll or even influence the immigration| and company, in some cases, they | policy of the bosses. Even when| outstrip their chiefs. During the they have passed restriction laws|{last needle trades strike the officials in the past, they have always broken | have worked hand-in-glove with their own laws when they found it) Mayor Curley, the “friend of la- necessary. bor,” the police, social-fascist party, Now, instead of dividing the| socialists and underworld. The un- | employment question they settled by asking everybody to help carry forces of the working class and fighting against windmills, the speed-up the women workers have to put up with low wages. The mis- | cellaneous workers are non-union | | and get below the union scale. | Thus the bosses “solve” unem- | ployment. By speed-up, wage-cuts and lay-offs. Our answer must be fight against speed-up, for the | T-hour, 5-day week, for social in- (By @ Worker Correspondent) white workers showld do everything to unite with the Filipino, Japanese | and Mexican workers into a revolu-| tionary agricultural workers’ union under the leadership of the Trade on the census and by adopting a resolution demanding from the Wall) | Street government to build more | | battleships and give more work for | | the navy yard workers, Upiop Unity League, which will| Only the militant element—the really fight the bosses and for the| rank and file in the A. F. of L. are workers. | for militant action to fight capital- Don’t let yourself play the game| ism with all its parphanelia. S. of the bosses without knowing it!|"Winekur, a member of the paper- If foreign workers were to come| hangers union, A. F. of L., intro- into the Soviet Union they would | duced a resolution at the last C.L.U. join the trade unions and work un-| meeting, June 2, 1930, calling upon der the same conditions as other! the C.L.U. to protest against lynch- | workers—because the rulers are the | ing of Negro workers in the South, workers, because there are no bosses | terror and persecution of workers in| there to import cheap labor to com- | the United States. The resolution | pete with the native workers. Cer- | called for united action of white and tainly, every intelligent worker will| Negro workers, to fight unemploy- understand what can and must be| ment, wage cuts, speed-up, ete. It done in this country is to organize| called for organizing industrial all the workers for a united fight | unions in a militant class program. against the “cheap wages” forced|It demanded a mass conference to on the workers by the boss |fight for the above demands. pose the interests of their class. Better relations between the Party and the League are neces- sary. There are remnants of “van-| guardism” which say that since the) youth are the most revolutionary section of the working class the Y. C. L. must try to lead not only rae working youth but the Communist | Party. On the other hand, the, Party must regard the youth seri-| ously and give real aid to the Y .C. | L. as the political leader of young workers. Following the report of the Cen- tral Committee and Central Control Commission and! report on youth, discussion began from the floor. Comrade Connelley, metal worker of Pittsburgh, said that factionalism had been wiped out. We must work in the shop rather than in front of it. There is no reason for workers being afraid for losing jobs, they are losing them anyhow. Let’s lose them for something. Let’s build fac- tory nuclei. Away with pessimism! Winning Negroes for Party Steven Kingston, Negro of Phila- delphia, ten months a member, said that when he joined the Party, there were only four Negro Communists in Philadelphia. Now there are fifty and active too. Winning of negro workers requires building a mass organization among negroes, This must be the American Negro Labor Congress. The C. C. report is ab- solutely correct. We must have conscious, planned work and carry out decisions, Sam Nessin of New York said we must bridge the gap between our influence and our organization by turning to the shops for recruiting. We must have collective work, not functionaries acting as individuals. Unemployment sets us our tasks. Comrade Uchida of New York said that the crisis is far reaching, but that we were lagging behind for two reasons; first, social-democratic ideas, second looseness of organiza- | |factory work. Leadership must be | tion. The factories must be our fortresses, but we don’t have enough fortresses yet. We must be dis- | \ciplined. The idealogical level of the | whole membership must tc raised. Party Must Not Lag Behind Comrade Lambless, steel worker of Youngstown said that the re- |ports give the correct line, but few |members understand this line. A Party member, totally exhausted by the speed-up still contended that everything is all right in his shop. There is a rain of protest strikes, but the Party is lagging behind. William Simons of San Francisco stressed organizational strengthen- ing. Colonization is necessary in in the shops. Edueate our members, Concentrate on the negro masses, Latin American and build the Anti-| Imperialist League. Coal Miners Moving Comrade Schmies noted that the coal miners were beginning to fight against both the bosses and the Lewis machine. On the. eve of the Fifth Congress of the Red Interna- tional of Labor Unions, we must answer the questions as to what ex- personal and not by circular. Work Spend Your Vacation among Latin Americans and Asiatic workers is most important, as seen in the Imperial Valley strike. Pre- parations for August 1 should begin now. Ed Williams, Negro from Cleve- | land, declared too many underesti- mate radicalization of the workers. New members need class education | * right away. White members must! / also do Negro work. We need women workers, not housewives. Ow district is full of factories, but the T.U.U.L. is limping on one leg. 1 am a new member, was not in fac- tional fight, glad I wasn’t. Let’s roll up our sleeves, white and bi: and get to work. Comrade Li of New York, declared anti-imperialist work of the Party was improved, as seen by the demonstrations for Mexico and Haiti, The Daily Work- er published special editions on China and India, splendid compared to the British Daily Worker which did not even notice the Soviet Con- gress of China. But our weakness is not enough anti-imperialist work, not enough non-party masses mobil- ized. The Party underestimates importance of Colonial revolutions, hence it cannot explain Imperialism Hotel with hot Cultural Program for singing. Cultural Program—Com PHONE BEACON 734 nN. 4 ,|0f the |is a crisis of growth, we cannot As Always= FIRST PROLETARIAN NITGEDAIGET| | CAMP—HOTEL Bungalows with electric lights. Tents—to remind you the old days. The Artef Studio (Mass theatre with the Artef) Comrade Shaeffer will conduct mass Athletics, games, dances, theatre, choir, lec- tures, symposiums, etc. CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. By Train: From Grand Central every hour. By Bont: twice daily Boss “Solves” Unemployment | | Throws 600 on Streets And now June 1 . we were thrown on the streets, indefinitely, the reward of the volume” “bigger scheme of White’s. s, all 600 of us thrown out indefinitely to live as best we can on what we haven't Ossip Wolinsky, the “socialist” and former manager of the union (run by right wing fakers), is now a manager here and a speed-up ar- tist to boot. Conditions here are bad. Besides surance, etc. Throw the damnable lies of Morris White into his face! —TWO SHOP WORKERS. L.) Spikes Anti-Lynch ution The resolution committee, among whom a socialist of the Typographi- cal union, Mr, McBride was one of them, brought in a motion to reject the resolution because the A. F. of L. has always been against lynch- ing, and therefore there is no need of passing resolutions. This, the workers of Boston and elsewhere must remember is an open approval of the lynching system. This is a part of the fascist policy of the A. F. of L. Winekur then made an amendment to accept the resolution and spoke in favor of it. In his speech he pointed out the misleading policy of the officials of the A. F. of L. and | branded them as open uncovered supporters of the capitalist policy of lynching, and exploitation. Mi- chael J, Flynn, a redy baiter, who just returned from the big lobby, | argued that since we had no lynch- ing in Massachusetts state then there is no use. —s. W. tent we have carried out the policy R.LL.U. The masses are moving forward and we must give leadership, independent leadership, no longer do we “bring pressure on |the leaders” of the A.F. of L. Our work in the reformist unions must be intensified, pointing out to the workers that their leaders are fas- cists. There is a crisis within the Trade Union Unity League, but it take advantage yet of our influence. Our district leader: bilize the Party for the building of revolutionary unions. Comrade Schmies asked pointed questions of many delegations as to why they have failed in specified work, We must build the unions and we can do do so on the basis of struggle. The organization of the unemployed movement must be the center of our activities. The most qualified comrades must be given to trade union work. Only thus will we build'a mass Communist Party. at Camp Nitgedaiget and cold water in every room the Summer of 193: rades Olgin and Jerome Y. PHONE: BSTABHOGI 1400 SEVILLE, SPAIN fage Three STRIKE CRIFPLES CITY AFTER COPS KILL WORKER Demonstrate Workers As Police Fire A general st involving 40,000 workers broke out in Seville, Spain. June pitalist 7 d according to The str hes. called after the death Su a’ woman worker who wa the day before the charged a cro¥d of women working in the olive industry. The women had appeared in front of the pro- 1 civil government palace, pro- g against working conditions. Ant Vargas F mother of four children. d expecting the birth of another, was knocked down by a police saber. S ed Sunday. 1e strike, it ted, left the c without b: A cabs and otherwise paralyzed Seville. A group of workers tried to get women work- ing in the publishing house and editorial department of Novelas to |strike: But the nm back by the gun fire of the police. Two were arrested. Latest dispatches indicate that many workers were wounded Mon-~ day hen the police fired into work- ers’ demonstrations. The di on to call a general strike was made by various work- ers’ organizations. The civil gov- jernor, Count San Luis, issued a statement attempting to" justify the action of the government. |\SHOE WORKERS OF LYNN ACTIVE LYNN, Mass.—A_ small, but enthusiastic meeting attended by 24 shoe workers was held in Lynn Wednesday, at the Workingmen’s Cooperative Center, Klarfield, the district organizer for the shoe and leather workers organization com- mittee, and Biedenkapp, the nation- al organizer, reported on the local and national situation. A majority of the workers present participated in the discusison. It was reported that the situation in Lynn is becoming worse from day to day. There are less than 30 per cent of the shoe workers em- ployed at present. Many shops have closed down to force the workers to buy shares and sign the “yellow dog” agreement. The Boot and Shoe of the A. F. of L. is trying to come | back to Lynn, but the workers re- | ject it. The “United” Muste outfit has convinced the shoe workers of Lynn as elsewhere that by following a policy of collaboration with the bosses, using radical phrases, that under such leadership a struggle against the bosses is not carried on. The “United” outfit knows that the workers want an industrial union and are now trying once more to fool them. This time arranging for a conference to unite with the Pro- tective of Haverhill to organize an “industrial union.” This is a lot of bunk and a wide ideological cam- paign must be carried on among the shoe workers to expose the new scheme of betrayal. v After the discussion it was de- cided to form a permanent group in Lynn, to meet every week reg- ularly, to carry on an ideological 1 |and organizational ca i ip fails to mo-| ganizational campaign among the employed as well as the un- employed shoe workers, to build shop committees, and organize the workers for the district conference to be held in August CAMP A Resting Place for Proletarians Restores Vigor! DIRECTIONS: Central Wingdale, N. BY BUS: m 1800 Seventh Avenue, meidays ae uated in Pine Forest, near Mt. e. Gern Hable, Rates: S6— S18. Swimming and Fishing. M. OBERKIRCH Kt. 1, Box 78 KANGSTON, N.Y.