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4 FINNISH SOCIALISTS, POLICE CONNIVE WITH FASCIST TERRORISTS Faseists Abduct Workers’ Lawyer and Police| Become Astigmatic Soeial-Fascists Give Tacit’ Approval of Anti- HELSINGFORS.—During the | aceused of having destroyed the pri in Obo a few moonths ago, the fascists carried out a new coup. Communist Laws Now Pending egal proceedings against the fascists inting works of the proletarian press They kidnapped the lawyer representing the interests of the workers’ press, the Communist Deputy, Asser Salo, and carried him off under the eyes of the police who made no attempt to interfere. Only afterward did the president of the court order inquiries into the whereabouts of the missing man, although, of course, every one knew full well what had happened. In the meantime comrade Salo was threatened, mishandled and finally abandoned in a lonely district and left to make his way back to civilization as well as he could. The violence of the fascist gangs is increasing rapidly and the au- thorities do nothing whatever to maintain their own laws where such fascist violence is concerned. Fascists’ attacks on prominent workers, leaders and officials, the breaking up of meetings, the devastating of workers’ quarters, etc., are rapidly increasing in frequency without the authorities moving a finger. On June 6 a mass meeting of five thousand workers took place in Helsingfors as a protest against the fascist terror and the complicity of the authorities. A resolution was adopted at the meeting appealing to the workers to form a united front for the struggle against fascism. The resolution nails down the responsibility of the social democratic leaders who co-operate with the fascists in parliament and prepare the way for a fascist putsch. The mass meeting also appeals to the workers STALIN REPORTS SOVIET ADVANCE TO SOCIALISM Wages Are Increasing; 11,585,000 in Unions (Continued From Page One.) the proletariat is seeking it in revo- lution. Stalin analyzed the relations between the capitalist world and the Soviet Union. Summing uv; the} Soviet Union pursued a policy of peace, would continue a peace pol iey, coveting no inch of foreign territory, whilst it is prepared to surrender not one inch of Soviet territory. The Soviet Union is developing fom an agrarian into an industrial country. The socialist sector of So- viet economy is growing at the ex- pense of the capitalist elements. Victory for socialism in the indus- trial field is guaranteed. The rapid development of heavy industry per- mits the carrying out of the Five- Year Plan in four years. The in- dustrialized capitalist countries are being overtaken, but the Soviet Union is still far behind. Referring to the three main prob lems of agriculture; grain, cattle of the world to support the Fini against fascism. PARIS, June 29.—War is draw- ing near and M. Tardieu, the French premier, needs $100,000,000 to re- equip the army stock, which have and also to strengthen frontier for- tifications. This money he intends to take from the treasury reserve of $200,000,000. The “socialists” and “radicals” seized- upon the op- portunity to embarrass M. Tardieu and opposed the measure on the ground. of “unwise finance.” The opposition almost caused a cabinet crisis, but M. Tardieu was sustained in @ vote of confidence. Ruhr Workers Wage BERLIN (I.P.S.)—The arbitra- been neglected for some years past, | nish working class in its struggle $100,000,000 to Re-Equip Army in France The French socialists and radi- cals are not opposed to the war | preparations of Tardieu because | they are opposed to the imperialist war; they are merely posing as a sham opposition to court popular favor. It was the socialist leader, Paul Boncour, that proposed the | military preparation law in the |French chamber. The French so- cialists are doing their best to help their masters in the war prepara- |tions. When the war comes, the | French socialists will fight for their jimperialist fatherland as shame- lessly as they did in the last war. s Receive Great Slash | with their colleague in Christ, Ste- tion decision in the wage conflict) gerwald, who is a member of the of 200,000 metal workers in the | Center (Catholic) party. In many Rhine and Ruhr districts, announced | important centers the workers are on May 26, has now been declared | already making preparations to re- binding by the Reich’s labor min-| sist the wage cut independent of ister, Stegerwald. The decision| what the reformist leaders intend provides for a wage-cut of 7% per | to do or not to do. Committees of breeding and technical cultures, Sta- lin declared the first is practically solved; the second about to he solved; the third is registering good progress. The only basis for the solution of the problems is iarge- scale agriculture. The party adopted the socialist solution, already with great suc cess. Stalin gave figures to show} the collectives had increased forty | fold within three years, with tho| Five-Year Plan already exceeded. The collectives tilled 36,000,000 hec- tares supplying the state with half the total’ commodity grain. Stalin showed the improvement in the material and cultural situation of the workers and stressed the | necessity of the speedy introductioy of general compulsory schooling. He | analyzed the difficulties of growth, | declaring the latter could only be} overcome by struggle against the class enemy and the latter’s agents. the right wingers. He gave as immediate tasks: Cor-| rect territorial distribution of indus | try, opening new sources of coal and iron ores in the Urals and Si-| beria rapid training of new indus- | trial cadres, anti-bureaucatic strug- gle, increasing the productivity of cent for 200,000 metal workers to take effect July 1. There is great indignation among the workers, and even the members of the Christian unions are angry MOSCOW (LP.S.).—This morn- ing the first art olympia of the peo- ples of the Soviet Union was opened in the Revolutionary Theatre in the presence of representatives of the Soviet government and of the fed- eral governments of the various re- publies. Twenty theatres of 14 na- tionalities are taking part, includ- ing Grusinian, Armenian, White- i BERLIN (I.P.S.).—Despite the prohibition of the sixth district meet of the Red Front Fighters’ League in the Saar District, 5,000 uniformed Red Front Fighters dem- onstrated on the streets at Whitsun | action are being elected and July 1 | may see bitter wage struggles in |which not only the metal workers, but also the miners, will be en- | gaged. Great Workers Art Festival in Soviet Union Russian, Ukrainian, Tatar, Jewish and others. Various musical en- sembles and dance troops are also taking part in the proceedings. About 1,900 artists will take part. The representatives of the German actors’ association, Arthur Pieck and Margaret Lohden, have arrived in Moscow to attend the first Soviet art olympia. Front Fighters Quell Police Interference in Neunkirchen, A number of | French soldiers in uniform joined | in the demonstration amidst thun- ders of applause. The iron discip- |line of the Red Front Fighters broke all the attempts of the police to interfere. Danish Renegades COPENHAGEN (I. P. S.).—At Whitsun the Danish Communist renegades went over “solid” to the Social Democratic Party of Den- mark. There were only 12 of them altogether. The 12 are former lead- ers and officials of the Communist Join Social Fascists Party of Denmark, including Ernst Christiansen, Herlberg and Johann- sen, who had to be expelled from the Party on account of their right- wing opportunist deviations and their flagrant breaches of Party discipline. Chinese Textile Strikers Clash with Police PEKING (IPS).—Recently a great demonstration of textile work- ers took place in the town of Tsing in front of the police headquarters in order to demand the release of a number of workers arrested for alleged Communist activity a day or so before, The demonstrators were armed with bamboo poles shod with iron. Severe collisions oc- curred with the police, many of whom were injured. The police dis- persed the workers with volleys from their pistols. Many workers were > arrested. ~ Mussolini Fears Arming of Italian Masses Fascist Italy, like the other cap- ‘italist countries of the world, is in the grip of an economic crisis. The government recorded a deficit of $15,000,000 by the end of February and this figure has not shrunk ma- terfally since then. Unemployment 4s growing more acute daily, and is especially aggravated by the res- trietion of Italian immigration, par- ticularly to the United States and Australia. To what an extent Mussolini’s regime stands on a veritable pow- der keg of revolution is indicated in the following statement by M. W. Fodor, in a special correspondence | to yesterday’s New York Evening Post. ] The Italian bosses, according to “Mussolini,” he writes, “does not too much faith in his fascist militia and he is not ready to mob- ilize the nation, for that would mean the arming of peasants and workers, with consequent consider- able danger to the fascist regime.” This is a straightforward admission that the Italian masses are funda- mentally hostile to fascism, and that the rising tide of revolution will receive a strong impetus from Italy also. Franco-Italian Ar ms Race Sharpens ROME, June 28.—A 10 per cent increase of the Italian military budget has just been decided upon by the Italian Cabinet Council, presi- ded by Mussolini himself. This means that an additional 500,000,000 lire (about $26,200,000) will be used for armament building in Italy. It is announced that the increase is a direct response to recent in- tensified French fortications on the eet is spending large amounts side of the budget limits. F ts another important step for ajnew war and fs s Aocton Alpine frontier, and the report that of money for military purposes out- this connection it should be recalled that as an answer to the refusal of parity in the London Conference, Mussolini laid down tons of warcraft. The present increase in the war budget in the race for armaments between France, and the general preparation of the imperialist world tines | Fodor, are not anxious for war.) labor; improve the food supply; eredit and finance reform; accumu- late reserves; develop metallurgy and manufacture; decrease produc | tion costs and improve the quality of | production; socialist rationalization, | increased application of the princi-| ple of individual responsibility; speedy solution of the cattle breed- ing and technical cultures problems; continued development of the Soviet state farms and agricultural collec- | tives; liquidation of the kulaks as a class on the basis of compact col-| lectivization; closer connections be-| tween the administration and the) peasant masses, and solution of the transport problem. He described the work of the Cen- tral Committee of the Communist Party. It led the constructive work in all fields, particularly in agricnl- ture and industry, and defeated anti- Leninist deviations. The Congress must finish off the Trotskyists and overcome the right wing. A con- tinued two-front struggle is neces- sary. The right wing danger is paramount. He analyzed the errors of the nationality problem, the tendencies of pan-Russianism, chau- vinism and local nationalism. The present Congress was the first without organized opposition against the Party policy. Great success has been achieved since the last Congress. Future successes depend on continued pursuance of a Leninist policy. (Protracted Ova- tion.) * (Wireless By Inprecorr.) * 8 | Kaganoviteh Makes Organization Report. MOSCOW, June 30.—Comrade | Kaganovitch delivered the organiza- | tional report of the Central Com- mittee to the Sixteenth Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Four tasks were set: To consoli- date the rate of industrial develop- ment, socialist construction in agri- culture, consolidate the organs of proletarian dictatorship, and im- {prove the Party leadership. The membership of the labor unions hag increased over a mullion, | there being at present, cn the basis | of October figures, 11,585,000 mem- bers of trade unions. The Atheists’ Association gained a million, being now 2,900,000 strong. The “Ossoa- viachim” (society to aid aviation and chemical production) has grown from 2,950,000 to 5,100,000. The labor enthusiasm of the’ masses has awakened. The Party has given it organizational forni. Industrial “shock groups” and so- cialist competitive schemes have | worked wonders and are still grow- ing. Opportunist leadership of the la- bor unions has been replaced and ing. Town Soviets must improve | industrial work. Two hundred and | fifty thousand Party members were recently sent to the villages to as- | sist socialization of agriculture, The political and cultural activ- ity of the masses is growing. Var- ticipation in elections is extremely high. The total newspaper cireu- | ‘ation was 7.000.000 in 1925, while | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, INDIAN MASSES FIGHTING TO THROW OFF YOKE Revolution Is Not Offered on Platter South Bend, Ind. The Daily Worker, I heard over the radio that India | vas going to declare a Holy Religi-| war against the British im-| lists as soon as their harvest o perial |was taken care of. Can you tell me} Union, as they find that only by or- | Union i: about when they have their harvest brought in? Revolution between Labor and Capi- tal comes to the United States. All my neighbors are wise to what is coming and ready to fight. I refuse from now on to don the army uniform to fight for Capital. I am a worker. Page Three i Diinisnd Towel Strike Is ha OF NEW PARTY | Social Fascists Plot in Summer Haunts T PAR J., June 29. ding to Norman Thomas, | who besides starring as a social fascist in the “socialist” party oc- | cupies a similar role as director of | the cl collaboration League for Industrial Democracy (a rival in betrayal of workers to the National Civie Federation), announces that SAILORS JAILED the league will soon open an office Still Going Strong] Philadelphia, Pa. cut and for better working condi- Daily Worker:— |tions. The boss who runs the filthy The ‘Diamond Towel Mill at, place, where his slaves toil locks up Mascher and Diamond Sts. is af- fected by a strike. The owner, who tells his workers he is a socialist, is about is and his hours and the toilets during working hours and | forces men and women to use the same toilet, and when a belt breaks | yellow a one as there|forces the workers to make repairs | slaves must toil longer | without pay and employs young boys receive less pay than|to do the work that men can hardly even a hard-boiled capitalist gives|do. The women employed there them. have been speeded up and told if | The men on strike are members |they would be blacklisted and as | F of the Turkish Towel Weavers’|most of their husbands get such | Union and a number of them have | miserable wages they must work. 3] joined the National Textile Workers’| The National Textile Workers’! |ganizing with a fighting industrial | in thi |work and are trying to break the| other independent unions who will in |strike. ‘These scabs, such as Joe|the future join in a sympathy strike, Yarnall, Alberta Bucht, others, ac-jto broaden the struggle and win the cepted the union’s benefits and even | strike. went as far as to advocate strike and} The scabs who are daily taken| they now act as stool pigeons in-|home by the police are going to be forming the police and plains clothes | affected by a wage cut and speed How does the British worker men who are protecting the boss and |up even they won't be able to stand, | stand as to fighting for capital | scabs, |and talk is going on among them to | against India? The strikers are militant and|join the strikers and fight the Your Reader, |fighting against a 30 per cent wage | bosses. —W. 6. B. A Worker, H. L. S. ns +. 8 P, S—I am a veteran having gone through a war. Editorial Note:—India is a good example of the use of religious dif- ferences by British imperialism to keep the workers and peasantry divided, and thus easier to subject and exploit. In recent years Moslems Joast Needle Workers Driven Hard Los Angeles, Cal. jable and keeps that worker a long Dear Editor Daily Worker: time, lecturing him and raising hell | In the dress shops where I am| We piece-workers have no price | | working we are about one hundred | committee. We have no say as to} |workers, men, women, young boys! how much we should get for our | and girls, mostly American and | labor. Sometimes we work a whole | |can sailors. IN PEST HOLES IN PORTO RICO Kept Incommunicado; Get Bad Food New York Daily Worker Editorial, We are in receipt 0 Finnish speaking sailor imp in San Juan, Porto Rico, when le ing the ship: SAN JUAN, letter of a Porto Rico.—So far going to take active part |the laws of Porto Rico are concerned, | ruggle and as the strikers | the sailors are supposed to have the | |union can they hope to win. A num-|are electing a committee to go to the |privilege to stay on land 60 days| I can hardly wait until this World | ber of stool pigeons and scabs now |teamsters and truckers’ union and | after the: have left a ship. In prac- tice this , not lived up to | Quite the When a sailor leaves his ship, he is immediately dragged in the jail for an indefinite period and held in the miserable, fil- thy dungeons month upon month. Of course the treatment human. Without a soever thus imprisoned sailors are submitted to slugging. And the food! Oh boy! Rice and pea and peaches and rice—twice a d In this intolerable filth the p oners are over covered with all pos | sible small “domestic animals”, one | may think of, and fever is the every dav guest in these dungeons. Here are all possible represented. Here are lish, German, S vian, Amer’ @ ones have spent in Chicago. This is, says Thomas, “to enlist the support of the Middle West for a third progressive party in preparation for the 1932 presiden- tial campaign.” The leagu holding its sum- mer conference on how best to make the workers believe the boss class th friends and how to get the workers to stop striking against such “fr 3.7 John T. Flynn of Collier’s Weekly to be present as a living to the bond established between Sir Henry Deterding, the head of the Royal Dutch Oil, finan- | cial backer of e crop of political | forgeries a the Soviet Union (including Whalen’s and Easley’s), and the anti-Soviet “socialists.” Mr. Flynn has an article praising Deter- n Collier’s Weekly for July 5, are seems | testimony st | quoting without comment Deter- ding’s remark: “I would give your f sts no quarter. I believe in free speech, but not for these unists.” Such is the “democ- of the League for Industrial now with rington working for the Peabody Coal Co. of Illinois as rival fakers to John L. Lewis in betray- |ing the coal miners, spoke here against Lewis as a “racketeer.” David Saposs, a high-brow “his- torian” on labor, also scored “labor racketeers” and graft in the trade unions. Saposs, like others of the League for Industrial Democracy, believes that the unions should be cleaned of graft so they can prac- | tice nice “clean” class colaboration, have been used to act as strike-| Mexican, week without knowing how much We | hore already over six months, others | the workers and bosses getting to- breakers on Hindu workers. | According to the California state | earned, and if one dares to ask the /jo.. and it seems to be almost im.| ether to prevent strikes when the The events in India today that | laws, the workday should be only | price for a garment before pay-| possible to make the respective con-| bosses cut wages and speed up the portend greater revolutionary strug-| eight hours, but as soon as it gets|day he is branded as a “trouble-| ciates to act in behalf of sailors| Workers, thus helping the boss and gles under the leadership of the|a little busy our boss forgets the | maker” and treated rdingly. To | thrown in this hell most dif-| Saving the overhead on_ police Communist Party is not a religious |law, as “bosses are privileged to| get kicked out of the shop for such | Figutt task is to get even a slip of | Sttike-breaking, all for “the eom- war but a war of exploited colonial | defy law,” and increases our work-|a “crime” is no news. |paper to become in position to in-| mon good.” peoples, starved, oppressed, and | ing day one hour, so that we work} We work very hard, because the |form anyhody in the outside world| Morris Hillquit, official chairman choked by British imperialism! pine hours a ¢ This also goes | manager and the forelady are al-| about ones whereabout, And when| of the “socialist” party, spoke on against their oppressors. |for the under-aged worker | ways behind our backs, so that We | ne insists upon ones right to appeal | Political matters, and the biggest The world revolution is not to be| The operators are piece-workers. | never have a chance to take a deep |to the representatives of respective | thing he could think about is the merely awaited. The tasks of or-| They average in season between $18 | breath or raise our eyes from the| states, one may he sure of getting | “morals” of Tammany, insulting ganizing the workers for their day-| and $25 per week. This includes| work without meeting the angry| a most brutal licking from the beasts | ot only the Unemployed Delega- tday struggles is today just as/men who have families to support. | looks of either of them, which seem | called the guards. tion railroaded by the capitalist much a part of the world revolution | The youth workers earn between|to say: “Come on, work faster,| Jt would be a hich time for the| Judges, but also the unfortunate as the fiercer battles of the future. | Workers who recognize the near- ness of imperialist war need to be reminded of the Leninist view of turning an imperialist war into a civil war, when they start thinking about becoming conscientious objec- | tors. To do revolutionary work is turning imperialist war into one against the bosses, lation from the masses of workers, in and out of uniform, means running away from this historic task. ‘The British workers oppressed and starved by the same imperialist’s bankers that are now showering death on the Indian masses through their “Labor” Party government, are | beginning to see the need for united fight against their one common enemy. Those under the influence of the Communist Party see this clearly. 22 today it is 22,000,000. Literacy is steadily increasing. The problem of industmal admin- istrative cadres requires special at- tention. Connections of the Cen- tral Committee with provinces have been improved. The social com- position of the Party apparatus is | improved. Forty-three per cent of the district secretaries are prole- $8 and $12 per week, working very | harder, we need production!” hard. | We have no sanitary conditions, | | We are ordered. to come to the| not enough lights and poor ventila- | | factory before eight o'clock, so that | tion. Though in “Sunny Califor- | when the bell rings we must all be | nia” we have to use artificial lights, be at the machines and not waste | because 4 loft of that kind is a lot any time. When someone happens | cheaper, and the health of the |to come in a minute late, even a/ worker surely doesn’t matter to the | | piece-worker, oh, boy! Don’t envy | bo When a worker of the shop | jhim. Then the manager is right ick for a few days he loses | there, forgets that time is so valu-j his job. -DRESSMAKER. | Marine Workers Industrial Union and for other labor organiza- tions to organize a protest movement against these insults and the e slavement of the sailors and to in- sist the release of us. And further- more it is necessary to spread the word amongst sailors about this manhandling so that sailors know to stay away from her IMPRISONED SAILOR this year. “The production of mation, as follows: “The world economic crisis |merely the last and worst of the | including timber and fisherie periodic crises inevitable under the |row 14 per c-nt above pre wa capitalist system, whose production | ures. Industrial prod ition invariably outruns the demand] pcr cent ubove pre-war level levery. ten years or so, because the| “Freight transport on railroads capitalist producers withhold the|is 93 per cent s.0ve the pre-war | profits from the working popula-| total, and railroads have increased tion and the gradual accumulation | (new lines) 50,000 kilometers, or of this mass of profit becomes | 36.7 per cent. ‘frozen’ at the end of each period--| “Cotton production is 217 per | whereas under the socialist system | cent, as compared with the pre-war | every cent of ‘profit’ is returned ‘o| total; flax, 125 per cent; sugar the workers, not only in the form| beets, 169 per cent; vegetable oils, | of wages but in material and cul- | 260 per cent. | tural construction. Thus in Soviet} “The ‘market surplus’ of grain | Russia there is no frozen money, | from state farms this year is 2,009,- so that supply and demand ace ad-| 000 tons; from collective farms, | justed automatically. | 8,000,000 tons; from individual from “ ; won ott +. | farms, about 6,000,000 tons- ‘Our industrial production this |2.000,000 to 4,000,000 tons will be| year represents 180 pcr cent of the | is | agriculture, fig- gn is available for export. Today in History of the Workers July 1, 1868—Extensive eight- hour strike in Pennsylvania, 1876 —Michael Bakunin, European an- archist leader, died at Switzerland. 1885—Steel rolling mill workers in Cleveland, Ohio, began 88 weeks’ wage-cut. Berne, strike against 1905—Action commit- tee against war in Morocco set up in France by Communist Party. 1922—Four hundred thousand railroad shopmen and some main- tenance of way men_ struck against wage-cuts by Railroad La- hor Board. 19 ixty thousand ims of capitalism who are called “criminals,” by saying that “there is little moral choice between the Tammany judge and the criminal | at the bar.” If a Tammany judge is not a grafter personally, he can railroad jobless workers to prison with the entire approval of the “so- | cialist” party. COMMUNISTS STORM POLISH CONSULATE. | BUDAPEST.—Because of bosses’ | execution of their comrades at Lem- |berg, Communists here, shouting | “Down with imperialism!” and | “Long live the Soviet Union!” | stormed the Polish Consulate. Support the Daily Worker Drive! Get Donations! Get Subs! BOARD®RS WANTED A. SALNER, R.F.D, CONTOOCOOK, Ny od H. FARM IN THE PINES Situated in Pine Forest, near Mt. Lake. German Table. Rates: $16— $18. Swimming and Fishing. M. OBERKIRCH Box 78 KINGSTON, he 4, N.Y. | Sources of Comrade Stalin's factory work is therefore increas- |. e-war level. The vaiue of social- lized production this year was 25,- 000,000,000 rubles, an increase of | 200 per cent since the last Varty convention. The value of private production was 3,250,000,006 rubles, a décrease of 20 per cent sirce the last convention. tarian and 69 per cent old guard | Bolshevists. The Party membership is 1.) 000. At the Fourteenth Congr 25 per cent of the membership were workers; at the Fifteenth Congress, 40 per cent; at the Sixteenth (pres- | ent) Congress, 48 per cent. Inner Party democracy is tremendously js ‘ “The capitalist system means bi satin Pd ideological level | panics, lowered wages and the : : | growth of unemployment. The so- © + Ie \cialist system eliminates panics, More Details On Stalin’s Report. | creates employment und increases Reports through capitalist news | W*8¢s speech} “The growth of at the Sixteenth Congr of the} duction of the Communist Party of the Soviet | the United States compared: Tak- Union give some interesting quo-| ing 1928 as 100 per cent, the United tations said to be taken from Prav- | States shows 95.5 in 1427, 106.3 in da’s report of the speech, which,|1929 and 25.5 in the first quarter awaiting confirmation by receipt of |of 1980. The Soviet Union shows the exact text, we give for infor-' 82.4 in 1027, 124.5 in 1929 and 155.5 industrial pro- Soviet Union and Murder of Rebels Against French Imperialism Belgian metal workers struck. “There are now 11,500,000 organ- | ized workers in the Soviet trade unions. “Real wages have risen 67 cent above pre-war levei. “The death rate has failen 39 per cent, as com;ared with the pre-war |vate, and the child death rate has | fallen 42.5 per cent. Il!-teretes now compose 33 yer cent of the popu- lation, as compared with 62.6 per cent before the war.” | penn (5,000 STRIKE AGAINST WAGE-CUTS IN BELGIUM About 5,000 metal workers are re- | ported to have gone out on strike | in Ghent, Belgium. The workers | struck against a wage-cut which the, bosses tried to pull off under the | {pretext that the cost of living’ has | |gone down. The workers, however, | point out that while the cost of food may have gone down slightly, all | other living expenses have actually per UNITY CAMP WINGDALE, N. Y. CAMP PHONE WINGDALE, N. ¥, 514 A COOPERATIVE CAMP FOR WORKERS Gather Strength for the Looming Fight! Sage iderabty tt | Good Food, Comradely Atmosphere eek eee Proletarian Sports, Recreation and Cul- jout the country. | hi ve: 7 It will be remembered that the | tural Activities. Bathing, Boating, and Fishing in Lake Unity. German bosses with the help of the | \“socialist” trade union bureaucrats | Register Now for July Ath CARNIVAL, BALL, MUSIC AND DRAMATICS jare still attempting to do the same Register at once at thing in Germany. There, over 5,- 1800 Seventh Avenue, New York City. Tel. Monument 0111 or at | 000,000 workers are affected. The the Barber Shop, 30 Union Square. ‘Tel. Stuyvesant 8774, American capitalist press immed-}| iately picked up this action of the} | German bosses and “socialist” trade | | union officials as an excuse for in- | |tensifying their wage cutting cam- | |paign here. No doubt they will also | jtry to use the event in Belgium. | This shows how closely bound up are | the interests of the workers all over the world. Our buses leave 1800 Seventh Avenue, Corner 110th St. Every Fri. P.M. Sat, 1 P.M. Mon. 12 noon, OR BY TRAIN FROM GRAND CE RAL TO WINGDALE, N. Y. 5S SMO A TL SRNR RIEL DARE TTR IS