The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 16, 1930, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1930 AXON DIET ELECTION tESULTS SHOW GREAT GAIN FOR COMMUNISTS scists Also Made Enormous Gains in the Election cial Democrats and Brandlerites Both Suffer Los he most important result of the | distributed as follows tions for the Saxon Diet, which cratic party e held recently, is the enormous National fascists, 14 (gain of 9); 1 of the fascists, who have won Communists, 13 (one gain); center 766 votes, being the phenomenal and economic parties, 10 (one loss); ease of 27 per cent. The gains |German people’s party, 8 (loss of the fascists are fairly covered by |5); German nationalist party, 5 losses of the German national- (loss of 3); agrarians, 5 (no and of the German people’s change); democratic party, 3 (one ty, which together dropped 242,- | loss; christian social party, 2; peo- votes. The main bourgeois par: ple’s justice party, 1; people's na- lost a total of 360,436 Notes. | tionalists, 1. + social democratic party lost 405 votes, whilst the Communist. pty was the only other party Social demo- 2 (a loss on 1 seat); The right-wing socialists lost their two seats and the Brandlerists again failed to win a mandate, los- [ch won votes as compared with ing a considerable section of their last elections, having increased poll, Their losses accounted for the poll by 10,022 votes. greater part of the Communist fhe seats in the new Diet will be | gai The Striking Miners Will Fight! (Continued from Page One) y ‘hose low wage scale was used as a club to drive the Pennsylvania hiners’ living standards below the subsistence level, following the eries of betrayals by the U. W. A. and the succession of defeats, leginning in 1922 and extending up to 1929, which resulted from the ewis sell-outs. i The article says: “Serious labor troubles are again facing many operators in the in industry. ... For the past six months the policy of the West Vir- inia producers has been to constantly cut wages so that prices could be reduced enough to keep out competition of other fields. With no labor organization to offer serious opposition, the plan worked with a lair degree of success for ... a long period. Since the victory of he Pennsylvania and Ohio producers over the United Mine Workers n the last strike (The Lewis sell-out—B. D.) the Southern operators ave been forced to carry their wage-cuts to such an extent that the item now appears to have reached the breaking point. At present there are strikes at several properties in West Vir- inia, Operators anticipate these outbreaks to become more prevalent s labor dissatisfaction increases. There has been no generally organ- zed effort to bring labor in the old non-unien fields into a concerted | movement. The strikes have been purely local in character and they ave been conducted under the leadership of dominant men at each of he properties.” (This is a very interesting description by a capitalist journalist of the rank and file strike committee of the N. M. U., of the ew forms and methods of struggle of the Red International of Labor Unions and its various sections, that is, the most militant, and conse- quently “dominant,” workers in the mines, in this instance, developing leadership under the terrific pressure of wage-cuts and speed-up with the aid of the T. U. U. L. union in the industry.) THE COAL BARONS’ DOMAIN. The article then gives the following essentially correct picture of the difficulties under which the present struggles are being conducted and thereby unconsciously testifies to the determination the mine workers have shown in beginning and continuing the strikes: “Organized labor has never made much headway in West Virginia and Kentucky. The way of the union delegate has been particularly hard, ... To understand the reason for the failure . . . to make an im- pression on the Southern fields it is necessary to study the conditions at most of the mines. “As a general rule the Southern mines have been opened in regions in which there was no previous industrial activity. All the ground within miles of the tipple is owned by the operators . . . the operator | | has built the houses, owns the stores and has opened the roads. The domination of the operator has been so complete that the company usually owns the police force and controls what local government there | happens to be. A labor organizer cannot come. near the mine without | | being a trespasser. If he is a trespasser he is arrested.” ° But in spite of the unrestricted rule of the West Virginia coal } barons since 1921-22, when the revolt of the miners and the armed march of 11,000 of them was betrayed by John L. Lewis (now busy selling out the last remnants of the U. M. W. A. in the anthracite), in spite of the relentless speed-up, in spite of continual wage-cnts, in spite of systematic robbery by short-weighting the miners, in spite of robbery at the company stores, in spite of feudalistic control enforced by coak company gunmen and the government, the crisis in the industry has déepened. With full power to carry out rationalization to the utmost, with perhaps the best opportunity for driving workers to the limit that ex- ‘ists anywhere outside of the rayon and textile industries of Georgia, the Carolinas and Tennessee, we have here a classic instance of the contradictions of rationalization. DEEPENING THE CRISIS, * The merciless exploitation of workers by rationalization in this coal field laboratory, where working men and women are forced to submit to the scalpels of the efficiency experts of the overlords, has served only to increase the crisis and lay the basis for working-class revolt. To solve the crisis the coal barons propose and intend to drive the weaker capitalist brigands to destruction and at the same time force the mine workers still farther below the subsistence level. The same amount of coal, or even more, from fewer mines, pro- duced by fewer mine workers, working for still lower wages than now prevail—this is the solution proposed. The Snyder article continues: i “No one is making money in the coal business at present. This feas been true of nearly all the Pi(tsburgh district properties for sey- eral years. It is now true also of the Southern mines. Sliding prices have at last caught up with wage reductions.” Then follows the sentence that could very well become the battle- cry of all the mine workers in the United States and that the West Virginia miners have already sent ringing down the valleys where Tie the richest bituminous fields in America: “The operators have reached a point beyond which they cannot force labor to go.” More miners are to be driven out of the industry, powerful of the coal operators will be bankrupted. ‘There is too much coal, though millions of jobless and hungry men, women and children of the working class will shiver with cold this winter while their blue The least | 5) Miners 800 W. Virginia Miners on Strike Against Low Wages Van Voorhis, W. Va. Daily Worker: Dear Comrades:—-Another mine was closed today, 100 per cent. This is the Pursglove Mine, No. 2, at Scotts Run, W. Va. We could close all the mines here. The miners are ready to strike for better wages and working condi- tions, but we are only working part time and nobody has any money. We have over 800 miners out on strike here and a good chance to get 18,000 miners out, but the miners are living in coal company houses and trade in coal company stores. After three days of strike the chil- dren are crying for something to eat and driving the miners back to work. Collect Relief. We were sending cars and trucks out gathering relief from stores, farmers and miners that are yet working, to take care of the most needy families. But we can only take care of a small number, with others going around hungry, and some after so long return to work to save their children from starving to death. The Workers’ International Re- lief did not help us as yet and did not give one cent to help feed the miners. U. M. W. A. Fakers Out. That is our trouble here and keeps us from spreading the West Vir- Spur | ginia strike, and the miners that | are yet working must come out, But | |we are doing all we can to spread |the West Virginia strike against | {wage cuts and the bad condldenn | |now existing in Northern West Vir- | \ginia, District 31. The so-called | leaders of the fake United Mine |Workers are doing all they can through their agents to keep us \from spreading the Northern West | Virginia strike, but they are losing | jground here fast.° Comradely yours, CHARLES S. CLOSE, Board Member of the N. M. U. ae ae Editorial Note:—In leading the growing strike of the West Virginia | miners against starvation wages and | intolerable conditions, rank and file strike committees from the pits} must be the means of spreading and | strengthening the strike. | Relief must be organized at once, and the national office of the Work- ers’ International Relief must ‘be notified of the plight of the strik- | ing miners. | The Northern West Virginia min-| ers are now in the front lines of | the miners’ fight against the hunger |and murder conditions forced upon |them by the coal operators. All miners must rally to their immedi- ate support, for the West Virginia miners, fighting so heroically against tertifie odds, must win their fight. | IN BRIEF— of South Bend. He must be con- fused. How can he be a radical when the pope has a lease on his life, | As an ex-serviceman he ought to know that Christianity was @ fail- ure, as it was all Christian nations Capitalism Has Build- ing Program After All) New York. | Editor Daily Worker: Who says that capitalism has no program? At least in prison build- ing it is farsighted. Gov. Roosevelt of New York State is just now ap- | pointing a commission to work out | that went to war against one an-| other. I wonder why he can’t see through the trickery of the priest- eraft. We are taught that Christ is at the head of this society and the very opposite is the truth. Christian principles apply to Com- munism as he said, call no man| master or father, and did he not | | legislature appropriated $20,000,000 | ship” is far behind the U. S. A. | say in favor of the NUM. a five or ten-year plan for prison | forbid public worship. | building, aceording to the New York! yours for the success of | World. The State Legislature was | party, “more geénéfous than ever before,” N EX-SERVICEMAN AND gays Mr. Cass of the Prison Asso- s roe aay ciation of New York State. The Geka Some Admissions of Boss Press Headlines Brooklyn, N. Y. democracy, for J was told last year | Editor Daily Worker: on a visit to the Soviet Union that Eleven murders in ten days by no more prisons will be built there | millionaire racketeers of Chicago. and that the present ones will be| Russia completes the Turksib | practically empty when the younger | railway which will bring the Soviet | generation has grown up in the| Union an income of 50 million | teachings of Communism. rubles a year and make food cheap | Comradely ‘yours, and plentiful in Central Asia. ONE OF THE EIGHT MILLIONS. 5 dalentneab nd Class Struggle, Not Religious Discussion Our Need Davenport, Ta. the for new and modernized prisons. At least in prison building you must admit the Soviet “dictator- Rebellious women in Denver, Colo. go into a “hen huddle” as a protest against the boredom of bridge and the monotony of the kitehen range. Soviet Russia establishes com- munity kitchens, laundries and/ nurseries so that all women may | have regular hours of work, vaca- Daily Worker:— Dear Comrades: 1 have just finished reading the letter of H. L. S. an ex-serviceman MINERS MUST BUCKLE DOWN TO TASKS OF BUILDING N.MLU. LOCALS More Action Needed in Getting Delegates for the Big National Miners Union Convention Frankfort, Ill. West Daily Worker, Dear Comrades: if we want results and plenty of backing we must do all we can If some of our leading comrades Page Three FISH COMMITTEE “OPEN” HEARINGS (Continued From Page One.) % ie of the “open investigation,” a de- partment of Justice doorman thrust he saw the reporter’s credentials, | anl tated, “There’s no room for you. The reporter looked over the arm and saw within the cubicle wherein | the “public investigation” was pack- ed, a round table with the Fish Committee around it; a press table, | and in about one-third of the space/ three or four rows of chairs for the “public” all occupied by the profes- ;sicnal red _baitei business men, | D. A. R. dames, dicks, and the varie- | gated liars who are to testify. | Plainly a hand picked public. The Daily Worker reporter noti- fied the doorman that he repre- sented one of the very papers under In regards to’ the conditions in | who has read so much of Marxs | investigation, the worke the coal fields in Ill. Strikes | Capital would let some of it soak | #Sainst which the “inves and machinery are coming every | into his Brain. They would not Was leveled, that if the workers day. Eighty per cent of the let the banks go broke with the | Press was barred from this open money. But would try and build up the unions. FUNDS NOW NEEDED. For the national convention we must have funds and we all mus! do all we can to raise funds te send delegates. Every one must get busy now and lose no time Send all donations to National Miners Union, 111'2 West Main St., West Frankfort, Il. Comradely yours, Wm. R. Groves, See. Ill. Dist. N. M. U. ooo ae Editorial Note: Comrade Groves does well to sound a call for more action in the building miners’ are for the policy of the N. M. U. But all they do to put it into effect is to talk and tell you they are for it. We have spent night and day with leading comrades trying to organize ‘ocals of N. M. U. Also put thousands and thousands of leaf- ‘ets for meetings. Only to find a very few who answered the call. Which they would promise to hold regular meetings. But when we went back no one was to be found. This is something that must be stopped. Our mem- bers and sympathizers must not stop at talking. But muét put their thoughts into action and put the locals to functioning. As the national convention is at hand and | and strengthening of the Na- we must have delegates from tional Miners Union. The critical each and every local. The na- growth of our revolutionary unions is marked by a altogether- too-great discrepancy between the real organization strength they can muster, and the cling- ing nebue of sympathizers, sup- porters, that do not lend other than verbal aid. While calling upon the N. M. U. functionaries and rank and file members to buckle down to the tasks confronting them, Comrade Groves must not forget the tasks that devolve upon him as Secre- 'y of the Illinois district of the tional convention will be held in Pittsburgh, Pa., July 26, 1930. ACTION NOW NEEDED. We have in the coal fields | thousands of jobless white and Negroes who are looking to our unions to do something. Every one knows that this is the first real struggle that our American boys have ever seen and they don’t understand just what to do. And the thing for us to do who sees ahead is to send delegates to and also see that others are fighting back. NO SLACKERS” SAYS GROVES. If our comrades had done their duty we could have sent to Chi- cago unemployed convention scores of delegates. For myself I had several colored and white miners who wanted to go. But they were broke and our mem- bers would not give only enough to send four delegates. Our mem- bers must understand that when we have delegates to send that they must not only try to get delegates. But also give all they can and collect funds from every one who will give. Any one who fails to do thi: not a class con- scious worker. Or a_ slacker. Everyone must help get other workers into our ranks. Get the American boys to talking and then we will go forward. And out the duties and work assigned the ceaseless follow up of to day work, exposing weak- nesses and correct them immedi , rootingout opportunist ele- ments that cannot or do not wish | to follow the fighting program of | the N. M. U,, ete. ete. Faced with mass starvation, be | trayed by the Howatts, Fishwicks and Farringtons, having only their own National Miners Union and the Communist Party to lead them, the miners must throw themselves into the work of or- ganizing the National Miners Union, as they have never done before. Only fierce class struggles | against the mine operators and | their agents in the workers ranks, | can saye the miners and their families from slow starvation and increasing misery. On to the Na- | tional Convention of the N. M. U.! The Catholic Church in Malta controls votes by declaring it a free to| ‘mortal sin” to vote for opponents order their own lives as fathers or | of the church. sons or daughters. It is not neces- In Russia a vigorous campaign sary to have a special “day” for|is carried on to free the ignorant the shedding of sentimental tears | and backward parts of the country and the profit of the manufacturers | from religious superstition. of candy and greeting cards. | —MURIEL WRIGHT. | ) tions with pay and economic inde- pendence. Mothers are quite as The following is the report of a miner of the sentiment of mine- workers in Saline County—given in his own words: “T was in Saline County this morning. As some of the miners who thought last winter they could clean out the UMWA has about gave the idea up. I was giving out Labor Unity and the convention eall. Which they asked for and admitted we had to get together and do something. And said they would have to give thinking of saving the old UMWA.” : ‘In Harrisburg I was giving out Labor Unitys and convention calls. Which practically all the miners was glad to get. Also the Howat fakers was there in full bloom to try to scare the rank and file from taking them. But they didn’t have any effect only to hear what the miners had to say about the fakers. Which they had plenty to The miners told the men on the street that the NMU had the crowd today and to their best opinion they would have to stay with the NMU if they ever gained anything. And this is something they can't deny in Harrisburg.” “Not only miners has something to say. But also the farmers and other laborers. They all say it is the worst times they ever saw. And couldn't see any place for relief to come if they don’t take the matter in their own hands. Which in a short time the whole country will hear of Saline County.” | | lips ask for bread. Snyder says, with the cold brutality of the class which gees the whole world only through lenses of profit: “Many of the weaker operators are reaching the end of their ropes. Operators predict that the time is not very far distant when bankruptcy will stari a weeding out process in all fields whieh will reenlt in the ahandonmont of many of the least efficient mines. Harsh, as it may seem, this will be an influence for the ultimate improve- “Saline County is practically all Americans. Colored and white. _And ag soon as they start nothing will stop them only death. Which some ate fearless. And not afraid of nothing when they start.” | THE TASKS OF THE NMU | The spreading of the existing strikes, the reorganization and | leadership of more strikes, intensive work for a general struggle in j the entire industry, the rapid broadening of the NMU leadership, the | ment of the cua! trade. It may prove to be an important factor in re- ducing the enormous surplus of producing capacity.” PARASITISM. Here we have it! Here in the most concrete form is the para- sitism of capitalism in the imperialist period, capitalism, because of the inherent contradiction between production and the market, acting to throttle production in coal mining for the second time in six years. In essence, the program is to drive thousands of miners onto the high- roads as starving beggars in order that a handful of coal barons can more éasily rob the workers still employed, The fight of the miners and their families is a fight for existence —the most elementary form of the class struggle, but one that today has become a political struggle of a high order.” A Negro miner in Rievesville voiced the feeling of the miners the other day in the simplest terms: “I work one or two days a week. 1 get $3.a day. We might as well strike and starve as work and starve.” THE SITUATION IN ILLINOIS. From Illinois come similar statements. “The operators havé reached s point beyond which they cannot force labor to go.” stimulation and leadership of the struggle against unemployment and | mage hunger, organization of action for immediate relief for strikers | .and unemployed miners—the translation into organized and highly disciplined action of the immense resentment against the starvation program of the bosses and their government, the practical application of the new forms and methods of struggle in this period so that they will serve as the lever which opens the tremendous reservoir of work- ing class power and will to struggle that has been accumulating as a result of rationalization and which must be guided into effective channels if it is not to be dissipated in unorganized and fruitless struggles or used against the workers by the social fascists allies of the class enemies of the workers—these are the tasks of the National Miners Union as it prepares for its Second National Convention. For these tasks forces and finances are needed badly. But first of all is the need of food and funds for the mine workers and their families who are already on the class front—as in West Virginia, THE “RADICALISM” OF THE UMWA. ‘The impact of the rising struvgle is shown even in the declaration of the fake UMWA convention held in the courthouse in Morgantown, West Virginia, July 4, under the control of the notorious Van Bittner, ‘The UMWA has no membership and but little influence in this section. But in its efforts to carry out the instructions of the coal barons it has found it necessary to drop its old conciliatory phrases. The “policy committee” of this well advertised convention stated: “There is only one thing for the miners in this convention .o do. With a courage born of despair, we must tell the coal operators, our government and the public in general that we will resist any further wage reductions, any further degradation of our families, even unto death, The time has come to call a halt. We may as well starve | fighting for a decent wage as to starve working for the present low wages.” No better proof of the depth of the determination of the miners to fight wage cuts and unemployment can be had than this hypocritical statement issued by traitors who have proved their treason ten times over. | We must unite all miners against these class enemies, heir defeat is the guarantee of the vietory of the mine workers. AMALGAMATED FAKERS! 100.000 TOOK PART IN TALK OF “CLEAN-UP”, W.LR. en | CHICAGO, Ill. (By Mail).—The Amalgamated national office has sent its Chicago official, Mr. Riss- man, to “clean up” the New York (Wireless By Inprecorr) BERLN, July 15.—One hundred thousand workers took part in the | office, What 4s thé snost recent | Workers International Relief dem- | record of this lily-white uncorrupted | onstration on Sunday at Wedding | Chicago section of the Amalga- Park Rehberge. The Red front| mated machine that justifies its | fighters appeared in uniform and acting as washerwoman in New aroused tremendous enthusiasm | York? | among the workers. During the payment of the “un- employment insurance” used pri- marily to augment the handsome salaries of the Amalgamated offi- cialdom, pay for the upkeep of their $1,250,000 building, ete. it was dis- covered that one of the leading henchmen of the machine, chairman | be possible for the workers to learn | of the Banners Tailoring Company |the exact amount of which they and chief lieutenant of Weinstein, | have been swindled as the present The attitude of the police was etvemely provocative. Banners were confiseated, 60 workers were arrest- ed and blackjacks were used against the demonstrators. of the Amalgamated bureaucracy, |officialdom, including Weinstein, | had been forging <ienatures tojone of Hil'man’s unferlings, is all checks for death herofit and those | for seerecy, Now why could that! 1 who had left the trade, It will not! be? hearing the facts would be brought | before the workers, with the natural | interference that the Fish commit- tee skuldugery wouldn’t bear inspec- tion, except as strained through the offices of the capitalist press. The door man gave an eloquent shrug. He also refused to call his superior. | He “had his orders.’ | ties Admit Boss Reporters. ‘BAR “DAILY" FROM ,; to show that the Communist child jren were “delinquents” or | satisfied because stupid.” They go 0 comfort from the witnesses. Al estified that the Young Pioneer n their schools were “the bright “dis lest we have,” “excellent publi speakers.” They ascribed this t the “devillish ingenuity of the Red: | who pick out such children fo leaders.” One witness testifiec |that the “Young Pioneers can quot Karl Marx better than any one it this room.” Whereupon a congress man dressed like Bryan asked in terestedly, “Who is Karl Marx? The same congressman wanted t know, “whether the Young Pioneer: is a school organization?” The Harry Eisman case came ur several times. His principal said Eisman was a good student. Why They Study. Dotty, first assistant in charge of discipline, opined that the Young Pioneers only went to school in order to learn what they had to fight against. He was much aroused because of a book he bought in the Jimmy Higgins book shop* telling leaders how to interest workers’ children in Communism. He called it a “priceless book” and seemed indignant that he hadn’t been able to get other copies after "| that book store closed down. He said he loaned his copy to the bomb squad and they made a photostat of every page. The “Red Spark,” Young Pioneer bulletin in P. S. 61, was much quoted and misquoted by the wit- nesses. The same for the Young Worker, Young Pioneer and the Daily Worker. The director of extension activi- told of smashing the “John Haynes Holmes Forum,” because it | was penetrated by Communists, When the Daily reporter pushed | also the Civil Liberties forum, and the doorman’s arm from the door|»\i sorts of other organizations. }and started in anyway, Department| The fact that young workers in \of Justice Dick No. 1402 came into | school salute the red flag was men- |action and escorted the reporter| tioned with horror by several wit- |from the door. Capitalist press re- | nesses. All disclaimed knowledge |porters were admitted while the|of any Communist teachers, but argument was going on, and after-| Dotty thought the teachers weré | Wards, | “too liberal” Reports that filtered out of the! Dotty also told a sad story about barred door (barred only to the | taking 100 pamphlets off a student, workers) of the “open hearing” | on whom he also discovered a copy showed the committee most inter-|of “The Saco-Vanzetti Case,” by ested in trying to prove that the| Felix Frankfurter, and a copy of Communist youth were “all foreign- | one of Lenin’s boo! Jers” or that “their parents were | fore; s.” Some va [principale played ‘up to this and) JAIL FOR MANAGERS OF \called them foreigners. Alfred Radko, principal of pub LONDON DAILY WORKER lic School 61 in the Bronx testified, and then asked if he could give his opinion. Fish Speaks Up. Fish, throwing overboard his pre- interested in facts, we want your/ opinion as to a remedy.” Russia. Then, said Radko, they should be deprived of citizenship. Those who testified were Super- intendent of Schools, O’Shea, sup- posed to be the first witness but he came late, Radko, Hazen Chat- field, pringipal of Districts 23 and |24, George Chatfield, director of at-| the tendance, McGuire, principal of Junior High School 61, Dotty, first assistant in charge of discipline; F. M. Davis, principal of P. S. 109 in Brooklyn; O’Neal, a district superintendent of schools, a direc- tor of extension activities, and a| woman principal named Conlan. 300 Out of 1500. The first witness was Hazen Chatfield. Chatfield was very in- dignant and worried over the fact | that on May 1 some 20 per cent of | the pupils of Public School 89 walked out and took their stand in the demonstration called by the | He stated with | Communist Party. horror that out of 1,500 pupils in his schools, 800 were “under the in- fluence of the Communists.” They distributed circulars, and when he suspended one boy, Leo Shapiro for not saluting the flag, “his father came down and defended him.” “The Brightest.” The committee was very anxious | (Wireless By Inprecorr) LONDON, July 15.—Comrades | Priestly, Patterson and Ward, man- agers of the Daily Worker (Lon- | these conventions and other M. U. and of the entire | viously published statement that don), were tried for contempt of places so they can see for them- | N. M. U. leadership. The task | the committee is interested only in|court in connection with the paper’s selves that they are not the only | of secing that each and every facts, eagerly responded, “Of!comments on the sentencing of a ones that is facing starvation | functionar and member carries course, the committee is not only | worker for anti-militarist activi The paper called the judgment on |the case biased and the ‘Socialist” Radko's remedy was that the | Premier, MacDonald, therefore ord- Young Pioneers should all be de-/ered the prosecution. |ported to Russia. The Fish com-| Priestly was sentenced to nine mittee gently broke the news to|months in jail, Patterson six. and Radko that this couldn't be done,| Ward five. The printer was fined as U. S. doesn’t even recognize |200 pounds, plus twenty-five costs. Write About Your | tor The Daily Worker | Worker Correspondent Conditions Become @ AN alone on a farm home to ela cau give | with | prefer: AL |) FARM IN THE PINES Situnted tn Pine Forest, near Mt Lake. German Table tates: 816— | $18. Swimming and #ishing. | M. OBERKIRCH Box 78 KING | Ro nN. | Workers’ Co-operative Camp Wocolona Walton Lake, Monroe, N. Y, Electricity, running water in bungalows, mass singing, camp- fires, comradely atmosphere Sports, swimming, boating, rac | ing, dancing, musical and cultural prograjns $21.00 Per Week 50 Miles from N. Y—Reservations with $5 deposit to be made at Phone: Monroe 89 Monroe, N, Y., N. ¥. Office: 10 Lnat 17th Street, Gramercy 1013 ‘ As Always Spend Your Vacation at Camp Nitgedaiget '@ FIRST PROLETARIAN } NITGEDAIGET 4 CAMP—HOTEL Hotel with hot and cold water in évery room Bungalows with electric lights. Tents—to remind you the old days. Cultural ' singing. tures, sympos: PHOND BEACON Tit By Trains From 6 and Central Program for the Summer of 1930 The Artef Studio (Ma: Artef) Comrade Shaeffer will conduct mass CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. N. ¥. PHONE: BSTABKOOK 1400 VvvvVv » 4 > > > > theatre with the’ Cultural Program—Comrades Olgin and Jerome Athletics, games, dances, theatre, choir, lec- iums, ete. every hour. By Bont: twiee daily Wvwvv —

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