The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 2, 1930, Page 5

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| ie } A ‘ R, NEW YORK DAILY WORKE ,» WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1930 TRIKES INCREASE IN RANCE; TOILER: SHG W) SHO? GATES IN citcaco HEIR FIGHTING SPIRIT evolutionary Union Takes Lead; Tramway- men, Miners, Founders Out on Strike eactionary Press Calls for Terror Against Striking Workers PARIS, (IPS).—The tramwaymen in Dunkerque have gone on trike. They demanded wage increases and the management offered | m increase of 1.50 Francs a day, but the socialist municipal council ‘efuSed to countenance the agreement on the ground that a tariff in- | ‘rease would be necessary. The fight is now on between the “social- | sts” and the striking workers. The revolutionary trade unions held a mass meeting in Paris against the new social insurance law. The meeting was addressed by | Comrades Monmousseau, Bonnefons and Raynaud who described the | deductions from wages under the new law as robbery of the workers. The assembled workers adopted a resolution undertaking to organize mass demonstrations in the factories and force the payment of full wages at the first attempt to make deductions. Despite insufficient preparations, 75 per cent or about 7,000 of the potash miners in Alsace followed the strike call of the Central Committee of Action, On the second day the number of ‘strikers in- | creased considerably. ‘the authorities have drafted extra police and detachments of the Garde Mobile into the district, and are seeking to xercise administrative pressure on the numerous foreign born workers | 1 order to force them to act as strikebreakers. They have had no uecess. The strike of the 1,800 workers in the Adour foundry in Boucau is being continued. ‘The strikers are in charge in the town and free movement is impossible without the written passes of the strike com- mittee. The petty-bourgeois shopkeepers are in sympathy with the workers. The reactionary press is howling furiously and calling on the authorities to put an end to the “terror in Boucau.” The Commu- | nist mayor of Boucau, Comrade Perse, has been suspended from his | offiée for 4 weeks by the authorities. The police have prohibited all meetings and.demonstrations in the open air. The strikers demand an -all-potind increase of 4.20 Francs a day, the strict maintenance of the 8-hour day, and paid holidays. 4 * "Phe building workers in Toulouse have decided to go on strike for a wage increase of 5 Francs a day. The decision was taken at a meet- ing called by the reformists, but taken over by the representatives of the revolutionary union. Party Conference Closes; Greets Stalin MOSCOW (LP.S.).—The second conference of the Moscow Party district organization closed cently. A message of greetings was adopted for Comrade Stalin with the following text: ences that it will not only maintain “The second conference of the | and consolidate the iron unity of “Moscow district organization of the | its Bolshevist ranks under the lead- mmunist Party of the Soviet | ership of its Leninist Central Com- aion has completed its work. The | mittee, but will lead the working conference sends you, the leader of | class to the final victory of social- ruthless fighter against all forms of opportunism and against all at- tempts to revise the lessons of Lenin. And now, on the eve of its Sixteenth Congress, the whole Party declares through its confer- re- our Party, the best pupil of Lenin land the closest folower of his les~ sons, its Bolshevist fighting greet- ‘ings. On your fiftieth birthday the Communist International and the | whole working class demonstrated heir unshakeable confidence in you, heir friend, their class comrade, ism in our country and to the vic- tory of the proletarian world rev- olution despite all difficulties, de- spite the desperate resistance of the class enemy and despite the oppor- |tunist agents of capitalism. The Party is convinced that in your| | great and difficult work you will al- cheir experienced and reliable | ways find powerful support from sader, tried and tested in the strug- | the Moscow Bolshevists. Long live le, the leader of our Party and of | the Bolshevist Central Committee! ne working class, the merciless and Long live our comrade, Stalin!” 0,000 Erfurt Communists in Great Demon-| BERLIN (IPS).—Forty thousand Red sportsmen in their athletic ostumes paraded in the main square in Erfurt on Whitmonday and vere supported by about 20,000 sympathizing workers. The square vas black with heads and red with flags and banners. Comrade Thael rann spoke on behalf of the German Communist Party and his words sere listened to with approval and great applause. Although the columns of workers mached through the streets of xe town for several hours before finally meeting in the square, no isturbances or collisions occurred. °f without untowad incident. Near Naumburg a motor-lorry bearing workers sportsmen to Er- wt was attacked by national fascists and a number of workers were jured. Frick also did his best to interfere with the Whitsun cele- ‘ations and arrested three lorry anywhere and the meeting passed loads of sportsmen. BANY OPEN AIR MEET ON ELECTION ISSUES ALBANY, N, Y., July 1—Open- + the Communist election cam- ‘gn up-state, Sadie Van Veen and iy Fields of the Young Commu- it League addressed an enthusi- tic crowd of over two hundred rkers at an open-air meeting re, While the police grumbled dis- Use This Blank! GO TO WORKERS, ASK THEM TO HELP contentedly at their failure to break up the meeting during the time | when the speakers were addressing | the workers, they attempted to dis- perse it to prevent the workers | from giving their names for fur- ther activities. Unemployment is now rife here, with wages being slashed in the large plants. A wage-cut of 15 per cent has been forced on the work- ers in the Troy shirt factory, it has been reported here. KEEP DAILY WORKER GOING AND GROWING! Use This Blank At Once! Get Donations Quickly Name f Amount Address SELLING “DAILY” AT CHICAGO, fll.—We have achieve- ments to report, although we must say that the work of reaching the masses in the industries here is not going forward as fast as it should,” writes L. Litt, Daily Worker repre sentative “We have many nuclei selling Daily Workers in front of large shops. In front of the Harvester and General Electric 150 copies are sold daily. A group of unemployed comrades sell | 150 a day.” “We have placed our paper on many newsstands, especially in the Negro workers’ neighborhoods. In some sections small carrier routes have been established. But we can- not be satisfied with the improve- |ments we have made on past activ- ities.” OUTLAW INDIAN NAT'L CONGRESS British Bargain With Indian Bourgeoisie SIMLA, July 1—The National Working Committee of the All-India National Congress at Allahabad has been outlawed, its headquarters closed, and its president, Pandit Motilal Nehru, and its secretary, Sayed Mahmud, arrested by the MacDonald “Labor” Imperialist Gov- ernment in India. This incident, which superficial, liberal, opportunist observers would consider as an evidence of the revo- lutionary position of the Indian Na- tional Congress, is actually a tacti- cal move on the part of MacDonald to force a better bargain from the Indian bourgeoisie. It is a well known fact that, though still paying lip-service to the fight for independ- ence, the Indian national bourgeoisie have repeatedly stated, either ex- pressly or impliedly, that they would be satisfied with dominion status. Therefore, the real issue between MacDonald and the Indian bourg- eoisie is the question of dominion status, and not that of independence. However, the policy of British im- perialism in India is essentially em- bodied in the Simon Report and the Simon Report does not even mention dominion status. It falls upon the social fascist MacDonald to carry out this policy of British imperial- ism and MacDonald is now, by brib- ery and intimidation, forcing the Indian bourgeoisie to give more con- cession to British imperialism, while at the same time, sparing no vio- lence and cruelty to suppress the revolt of the masses. The closing of the national head- quarters of the Indian National Congress and the arrest of its pres- ent leaders represents merely one of MacDonald’s methods of intim- idating the Indian bourgeoisie and forcing a better bargain for British imperialism. It is interesting to note that the outlawing of the Na- tional Working Committee does not necessarily mean the outlawing of the Congress Committees in the provinces. The door is still left open for the Congress leaders to make further concessions. This move will, perhaps, strength- en the British position in the secret negotiations which have been going on for some time between Gandhi and Co. and the British imperialists, but it will have no significant ef fect on the mass movement in India which are more and more marching forward in their struggles under the independent leadership of the Com munist Party of India and the Revo lutionary trade unions. BUILDS UP ROUTE FOR “DAILY” IN OKLA. CITY OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla.—Party sections in the large cities contain ing hundreds of members and not a single Daily Worker carrier route of 100 customers in any of these cities. and a carrier route of 135 customers in full swing in Oklahoma City, Okla., established by the effort of one comrade, Frank C. Wilson— this is the situation today. Every district organizer, district Daily Worker representative, section com- mittee is called upon for an explana- tion. Why can one comrade estab- lish a carrier route of 135 custom- ers in a little city out west, while Party sections, some of them with as many as 500 Party members, have failed to establish even one carrier route in any of the big in- re neneenenennnnnssnenennnntnsnneenetennnttnniennannensnnstencnmeninenentnnetemnnee: vtmemmnene | dustrial centers. “T deliver 185 Daily Workers on my route, and we have another route now with 29 customers. I got all ————neeeenenntnnanernneomneesennnnntneetenenteantnantenneaneteantemntntrtinineneneesssrinimsnmsennnnamrnunmnene |Of these customers for our paper ———nteennnntntttnnnttnninnntnartnninmnnnninnninnstinmnninnnnnnnnnnanean | 250 every day. * Total The total amount in donations appearing above has been collected by: TMG h apeossssoseceeesenss with the exception of five. I am ——emememenemnnnenrnenaneneennnnenretnnnenenerienasenernnenneneeveemanennnnmnininninenaneneneernenininninimunmmmnnnnneee | FOiIng to put paper boys on the Our order now should be I get my customers in the evening, as workers sit oy their porches after a hard day’s work. I deliver to railroad men. blacksmiths, tailors, garage em- ployes. The mail men and express men are watching our movement closely. I am getting them to talk about our Daily and our movement at the corners and at restaurants streets. uf ADDRESS teem neeeeeeuee eee Geceveseecessseresscccsecsesecsecesagm | Where Workers assemble, Daily Worker, 26 Union Square, New York City STATE soeeaen eeerer err e eer eer i) | “There are lots of reliable men and boys who would like to earn in the Chicago district | |ed 5,000 FISHER BODY WORKERS WALK QUT ON WAGE CUT |Auto Workers Union in Leadership (Continued From Page One.) the A. F. of L. representative to mislead the striking workers and betray them to General Motors, the Auto Workers Union quickly expose: the role of the fascist American Fed- | eration of Labor. Already the Morgan-General Mo- tors government agencies have start their fascist attack on the strikers by making many arrests. Amidst applause, workers the Buick plant present at the gen eral strike meeting pledged their support to the strikers. Restive, suffering under the lash wage cuts, the auto workers of the Buick, Chevrolet plants here are fol lowing closely the Fisher Body strike, in an atmosphere surcharged with strike talk. Standing firm under the leader- ship of the Auto Workers Union the striking workers not only de- mand the immediate revocation of the wage cut received by the metal finishers, but the abolition of piece work, a genera] wage increase for all workers, the eight-hour day, un- employment insurance, dismissal of the speed-up foreman, regulation of conveyor speed, and recognition of shop committees of the Auto Work- ers Union, affiliated to the Meta! Trades Industrial League of the Trade Union Unity League. 2 ee FLINT, Michigan, July 1.—Todav the strikers in the Fisher Body plant, under the leadership of the Auto Workers Union, again clashed with the police in a mass picketing demonstration. An army of police broke the picket lines at noon. The police were final ly defeated. Robert Woods, secre- tary of the Auto Workers Union spoke to the workers. Police and dicks did not dare to arrest him Several more departments joined the strike. The Union declares that the strike will win under the leader- ship of the Auto Workers Union. On several occasions auto loads workers in an attempt to batter down their militancy. Several strikers were beaten up and 15 were arrested including Philip Ravmond, organizer of the Auto Workers Union, and Steve Miller, delegate to the Red International of Labor Unions. The strikers are fighting against wage cuts and have presented de- mands for shorter hours, more wages, and better conditions for all Fisher Body workers. INDIA TRADE DECREASE MAKES FOR CRISIS. BOMBAY, India.—U. S. and Can- | ada shipped, in 1929, 27,000 trucks | and private cars to India. As com- has dropped 47 per cent. ish bourgeois paper says: headed for a crisis.” Gratters’ Drive Convention ws the great National Unem- ployed Convention gathering in Chicago this week, the police scan- dal of graft, murder and booze cul- minated, as predicted in the Daily Worker, in a drive against the un- employed, or, as they call it in the capitalist press, “a drive against crime.” The city hall’s police inquiry, which was started after the killing of “Jake” Lingle, a reporter for the Tribune and close friend of the de- posed chief of police, Russell, and his chief of detectives, Stege, as well as the friend of the notorious gangster, Al Capone, was suddenly dropped. It was getting too hot. Ald. Tonan stated: “I never saw an investigation which bore freit, and the taxpayers always paid dearly.” Ald. Albert was more frank: “The whole thig can be de- scribed in one word—whitewash.” This from the lips of the capitalist politicians themselves, The investigation into the murder of Lingle revealed so far that he was gambling heavily on the stock exchange, in dog races, etc. He borrowed money from city politi- cians, policemen, gangsters and others. He took a check for $500 from Police Captain Daniel A. Gil- bert, he got $2,500 from Major Car- los Ames, head of the civil service commission, and others. When a gangster wanted protection for his gambling joint, he called up the Tribune office to speak to Lingle about it. Lingle had a gunman, Anthony Kissane, as a bodyguard and handyman. Since when do newspaper reporters need body- guards! In the wholesale arrests of unemployed workers in the fake drive against crime Kissane was ac- cidentaly arrested while carrying a gun, Now is « bad “psychological” moment to get arrested with a gun, and Kissane got a year in jail and a fine of $300. The funeral of Lingle was attended by the police band and the band of the navy. ‘India is During the war he was in the “in- money by carryint and selling The| telligence service” of the land navy Daily Worker I find.” stationed at Great Ii” from | of cruel speed-up and threatened | of dicks and police have made sav-| age attacks on the 700 striking pared to May, 1929, this business | A Brit- | (PROTEST ATLANTA 6 | ARRESTED IN CLEVELAND CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 1.— Several thousand workers demon- | | strated in Public Square here under the direction of the International Labor Defense against the impris- onment and threatened jud lynching of the six workers at At- lanta, Ga, | The climax of the demonstration | was reached while J. Louis Engdahl, | j general secretary of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, was speaking, | | when it was voted unanimously to forward protests to Atlanta, at the same time greeting the prisoners, M. H. Powers, Joseph Carr, Mary | |Dalton, Herbert Newton, Henry Story and Anna Burlak. It was also voted to send greetings to the unemployed Delegation, Foster, | 'Minor, Amter and Raymond, in| ison in New York City. | | Engdahl is leaving here for De-| | troit and then will go on to Chicago | |to attend the July 4 Unemployment | Demonstration. | | HONOR CLASS STRUGGLE DEAD |Call Sacco-Vanzetti| Meet August 22 | Setting aside August 22, the an- | |niversary of the Sacco-Vanzetti | murders chusetts for country-wide demon- strations against the Mulrooney murders of the Negro worker, Al- fred Levy, and the Mexican worker, Gonzalez, both members of the ; Communist Party, as well as against | the government’s carrying through | such attacks with increasing fre- | quency throughout the country, the International Labor Defense issued the following statement: “In New York, Union Square has already been reserved for the dem- onstration, which now has new | tragic cause to repeat the now his- | | toric scenes of August, 1927, when | hundreds of thousands came to | raise their voices in denunciation of the persecution of Sacco and | Vanzetti, two victims of class jus- tice. “The murder of the Communist, Gonzalez,” says the International Labor Defense, “three days after the beating to death of the young | Negro, Alfred Levy, at the hands of the police, constitutes the con- sistent policy of bloody brutality followed by the United States gov- ernment and city officials through- out the country “The government is making all efforts to stamp out working class protest with reprisals of sedition laws, criminal syndicalism laws, | criminal anarchy laws, anti-foreign- | born legislation and the imposition of vicious sentences for the mere | expression of political opinions. “Today at the funeral of Alfred Levy the workers lift their voices | jin thundering denunciation against the savage attacks against the working class made in the name of | legality. The memory of Katovis, Levy, Gonzalez and the New York Unemployed Delegation, and thou- sands of others, will only spur us on to greater struggle.” Against the ot Unembloyed In order to distract attention fro mthis scandal into which the j names of high city officials, racke- teers, bootleggers, gunmen and other similar gentry were dragged in, a fake drive against crime was | started. It began with the “shake | up” of the police department. Po- lice captains and detectives were transferred around and the investi- gation of the police department dropped at the same time. Next came the order to “clear the city of hobos” and “vagrants.” Meetings of unemployed were raid- | ed, interfered with or disrupted. In | explaining the drive against the | unemployed Captain Martin E. Mul- | len, in charge of the Desplaines St. police station, stated: “Chicago has enough of its own unemployed with- out having the problem further complicated by these droves of ho- bos and bums. I have told my men to do all they can to get rid of them, I have especially detailed two of my detectives, Sergeants Frank Victor and Joseph O'Malley, | to make a clean-up around the em- ployment and labor agencies, Their next clean-up will be directed at the lodging houses and cheap hotels.” Any one that has no home, who is unemployed, is a “vagrant,” and they will force him to leave town or will jail him. This is the way the capitalist city administration is “solving” the unemployment prob- lem. At the same time it is the prep- aration for the unemployed conven- tion. Meantime, while the police are busy staging the fake drive against crime—hold-ups, robberies and mur- ders continue as usual. Suicides of unemployed also continue, Secret conferences between Col. Robert Isham Randolph, chairman of the secret “six” of the Association of Commerce, are also taking place as | world gangs by the state of Massa-| : d |cause it would “impede traffic’— | es the Day | FOR UNEMPLOYED) §= With $500 Remittance TO OPEN JULY 4th Right to Union Park Claimed By T.U.U.L. (Contmued from Page One) | mate connections with the under- ers are known to be| as close as his connections with the employers, says he upholds “Ameri- | can traditions and institutions” and, | himself being a leader in the boot- legging underworld, thinks it a great insult to call the Unemployed Convention delegates “skim milk | Americans.” | Contradicting the Chicago Tri-| bune story that “Leaders of the Chicago committee arranging the convention have been refused per- mission to-conduct a demonstration in Union Park, Ashland Ave, and Washington Blvd., on July 4, the ade Union Unity League declares that J. W. James, speaking for the West Park Commissioners,’ states | there is no objection to the dem-| onstration. | The Chicago Tribune, evidently using its link with the police and underworld to give advance propa- ganda for the attempt by police anc gangsters to break up the demon stration and the indoor convention as well, quotes Police Captain Schram as saying that the demon- stration would be prohibited be- though held in a park. — The purpose of the demonstra- tion, the convention and the nation- wide organization which will come | out of it is to forward the struggle, | jointly of employed with wmem- ployed workers, to force the bosses | and their government to give real, full wage support to the unem-| ployed, to fight for the 7-hour day, 5-day week, against eviction of job- less workers from their homes for ‘non-payment of rent, to struggle against wage-cuts and speed-ups. While the government means to do nothing, as Hoover proves by | trotting out his moldy old lie about | “construction work” in a_ radio | speech to the conference of govern- ors at Salt Lake City, Governor Roosevelt of New York proposes that there should be unemployment | insurance, but that the workers must pay for it. He admits that “under this system,” by which he means the capitalist system, “there is no cure for unemployment.” The Chicago Convention, and the | continuous struggle afterward, b, organizing mass demonstrations 0: employed and unemployed, is the only way to compel the lying presi- dent and four-flushing governors to establish unemployment insurance at full wages and at the cost of the bosses and their government. What- ever the gangsters and police do in Chicago, or any other city, the Un- employed movement will go for- ward. We publish below remittances, for our fighting fund received up to June 26. The $500 from the Chicago district went a long way towards relieving the pressure, to: wards making it possible to pur- chase a supply of paper for several days’ publication. A number of days ago L. Litt, Daily Worker representative in the Chicago district, wrote: “We con- tinue our work for the Daily Work- er fighting fund with great pe tence. Our Lithuanian comrades have decided to raise $300 and have challenged our Jewish comrades They have already raised $158 as against $22.25 collected by our. Jew- ish comrades. Comrades in language organizations and work are taking up the campaign with energy. Our Party organization department is cooperating in our) drive for new readers and has sued a call to the membership call- ing for 500 new mail within the next short per The contributio: below tivity in other cities. Denver made other cee su collections at both outdoor and in- door meetings. A family outing in eel town of Ambridge netted Our earnest appreciation goes ward to all who contributed, Those who have not yet helped are again called upon to speed up. The total reported below is $810.59. These are the total con- tributions for five days from the immense territory side of the New York district. Not enough, comrades. Where is that $1,000 a 1? at family outing by Mary » Ambridge 8 leveland Picnic at Minona Park July 4 CLEVELAND, Ohio.—The annual picnic of the Communist Party will be held at Minona Park July 4. The The official opening of an intensive election campaign will be the fea- ture of the day. The Communist candidates will address the workers present. I. O. Ford, candidate for | Governor, will be the main speaker. In addition to this treat there | will be a complete program of | sports, games, refreshments and | dancing. Directions to get to the Minona | Park: Take West 25th State Road | Cc The Bronx and the Detroit atives each sent $50. Sioux) ¢ busy, as are our miner com- in the Illinois mining f by Ca by ernac, Neffs, 0. . Clark, Chi- Coll. Coli Chicago, + Gego, ULN.T.O. sip, N. M. Union, Be mi ; sigaw ase GH: Coll, by Pete Atatanio and Pete chowski, Atnunton, IL. 5.00 ax Cooperative, < 50.00 ° Mich 2.00 ich, Detroit, M : 1.00 John Sjodin, Boston, § A 5.00 Richard Bjorbacka, W. ord, N. 1.00 from b. Bronx, N. Y. 50.00 Simon Huck, N, ¥. 4.25 so Claude, Whit rt by Pe Jos. Olive indoor meeting, Den- Colo. railroad workers, Col. by FE. Wendk, Boston, Konvaloff, Se Unit a Nal Bee ree) cy Fund needed... to date 5 $1 Take _ Applications for Phila. WIR Camp PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—All ar- rangements are now completed for the opening of the Workers Inter- national Relief Scout Camp at Lum- berville, Pa. The camp is situated in one of the most beautiful parts of Pennsylvania, overlooking the Delaware River, and is well known to Philadelphians as an ideal camp site. The camp will open on July 6, with a big open air festival which is being arranged by the first group of scouts to occupy the camp. Balance still needed . car, change to dinky ca “ide to the end of the line. . Spend Your Vacation As Always= at Camp Nitgedaiget FIRST PROLETARIAN |NITGEDAIGET before. The motto of Chicago today is- “Business as usual.” But the National Convention of the Unemployed will tear the mask from this “business,” DEMONSTRATE IN & HUNGARY COURT : 7,000 Metal Workers if g This is the third day of the trial |/ of the first group. The accused)’ Strike Against Cuts (Wireless By Inprecorr) BUDAPEST, July 1.—The second group of twenty-six workers were brought to trial today. The chief accused, Bela, shouted: Long live the Comintern. The prosecution then demanded the exclusion of the public. The court acquiesced. The prisoners refused to participate vol- untarily. The prosecution filed new indictments against the accused for shouting with Landor. withdrew statements which they made to the police, as they were extorted by torture. The only proof against the accused electrician, Sido, shows that the latter dis- patched a telegram of protest to the American embassy against the execution of Sacco and Vanzetti. Others were given leaflets by provocators immediately prior to their arrest. * (Wireless By Inprecorr) BERLIN, July 1.—Seven thou- sand Krupp Essen metal workers struck against wage-cuts. A thou- | sand foundry workers joined the strike. Strikes are also reported in Dortmund, Bochum, etc. The exact numbers involved are unknown. Insull Cops Break Up Communist Meet CHICAGO, IIL, July 1—At a| street meeting called under the | auspices of the Communist Party vu | present the workers’ position on the Traction Ordinance, the police were | called by representatives of the Chi cago Surface Lines. For years this corner, Belmont and Wilton, has been an open forum at which the | Communists and other groups spoke | frequently without interference, FARM IN THE PINES Situated in Pine Forest, nenr M1 Lake. German Table. Rates: 16— | $18. Swimming and Fishing. |) M. OBERKIRCH | Box 78 KINGSTON, N.Y. CAMP—HOTEL Hote! with hot and cold water in every room. Bungalows with electric lights. Tents—to remind you the old days. Cultural Program for the Summer of 1930 The Artef Studio (Mass theatre with the Artef) Comrade Shaeffer will conduct mass singing. Cultural Program—Comrades Olgin and Jerome Athletics, games, dances, theatre, choir, lec- tures, symposiums, ete. CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. PHONE BEACON 731 N. ¥, PHONE: ESTABROOK 1400 By Train: From Grand Central every hour. By Boat: twice dally REGISTER NOW BEFORE IT IS LATE! UNITY CAMP WINGDALE, N. Y CAMP PHONE WINGDA A COOPERATIVE CAMP FOR WORKERS Gather Strength for the Looming ‘cight! Good Food, Comradely Atmosphere Proletarian Sports, Recreation and Cul- ‘tural Activities, Bathing, Boating, and Fishing in Lake Unity. Register Now for July 4th CARNIVAL, BALL, MUSIC AND DRAMATICS Register at once at 1800 Seventh Avenue, New York City. Pcl. Monument 0111 or at the Barber Shop, 30 Union Square. Tel. Stuyvesant 8774. Our buseS leave 1806 Seventh Avenue, Corner 110th St. Every Fri. 6:30 P.°M. Sat, 1 P. M. Mon. 12 noon. OR BY TRAIN FROM GRAND CENTRAL TO WINGDALE, N. Y.

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