The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 23, 1930, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

EDNESDA Page Three HEAR REPORT ON USSR: DONATE TRACTOR TO IT DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, W Y, JULY 23, .1930 SHARP ECONOMIC CRISIS ED UNIONS MEET GRIPS JAPAN; TOKYO ‘CITY TREASURY EMPTY | Tokio City Employees May Get No Pay; City Museum Cannot Buy Curtains Tokio Railway Company Is Carrying Out Drastic Lay-Off Policy TOKIO, Japan, July 22.—The Tokio Railway Co, has recently dis- charged over a hundred station masters and other émployés. drastic policy of lay-offs is said to campaign of rationalization which the growing crisis. The burden of on the shoulders of the workers. This be merely a part of thé nation-wide the: bosses have instituted to meet the crisis is, of course, thus shifted Japan is so hard hit by the crisis that the treasury of the Tokio municipal government is empty and the city employes are said to be facing a situation of not getting their wages. The city authorities are negotiating a loan of 4,000,000 yens (about $2,000,000) from the local bankers in order to meet the daily expenses of the government. Another instance which shows how seriously the crisis has affected Tokio finances is that a million dollar museum which was built by the Tokio government not long ago has its doors closed for the lack of curtains. The Tokio municipal government, which was rich enough to Spend 2,009,000 yerts (about $1,000,000) for a new museum a short timé | i 3 ago, has been so hard hit by the crisis that it can not even afford fo | merit, which, we comrades know, is Spend a few hundred yens for curtains for the museum. FISH'S HIDDEN HOUSES FOUND Evades Amtorg Facts, Threatens to Deport (Contirmed From Page One.) to the ditention of the Worker that Fish himself was far from being frank in the little mat- ter of read estate. When Woster was nominated for the office of governor by the Com- munist Party he stated in his ac- ceptance spéech in prison that Fish ‘Was an owner of tenement houses. Fish stood up in the committee meeting the next day and solemnly branded this statement as false, adding: “I don’t own any real estate at all.” Real Estate. It appears now that at 52 Wall St. is a real estate office with the name of Hamilton Fish on it. This office rents houses, among others, at 23-25 E. 4th St., 768 Bever St., 810 Fifth Ave., 326 Seventh Ave., 65 E. Tith St. and 39 Third Ave. It is not claimed:that this is a com- plete list. All these houses are re- corded under the name of Florence D. Fish, care of Hamilton Fish, Jr. That is the riame of the congress- man who heads the Fish committee, the man who accuses Amtorg of “concealing facts.” There is also a Fish corporation lurking some- where in the backgrourid and it is evident that the inherited estate of old Hamilton Fish, also a congress- man, is slightly hidden now behind the skirts of 4 woman and the thin body of a corporation—but that Fish was far from frank when he said he “owns no real estate.” It's True Much has been done toward the verification of Foster’s remark in prison. The conduct of the Amtorg in- vestigation yesterday was quite dif- ferent from the genial and gentle- manly dealing with Whalen, Lyons and other assorted liars, who tes- tify to what the congressional com- mittee wants to know. Bogdanoff, in particular, was bullied. He identified as correct a biography of himself translated from the Russian encyclopedia, tell- ing of his long and heroic struggle since 1902 against czarism and his membership, until the time of his departure for America, in the Com- munist Party of the Soviet Union. Deportation Threats. “If any American official knew of this record when he allowed you into the country he acted contrary to law,” said Fish. It was also brought out by read- ing of testimony before the Fish committee in Washington that the department of state refuses to grant visas to Communists coming to America. This is an extension, without form of law but by arbi- trary executive power, of the pro- vision that anarchists shall ve éx- cluded. Anarchists, under the law, are defined as persons who oppose all organized government—a charge never made against the Commu- nists. Nelson, during the quizzing and cross-examination of Ohsol, let the true nature and purposes of the as- sdult on the Soviet Union and the already évident whooping up of a war propaganda against it become still clearer. Anti-Soviet War Plans. Nelson asked: “Will not your pur- chases of machinery in the United States and elsewhere make Russia, ‘under the Five-Year Plan, econom- ically independent?” Ohsol’s answer was merely to the effect that there would still be room for trade, but this query clearly in- dicated at least one motive back of the whole crusade against the U. S. S: Ry and the Fish committee’s animus against Amtorg. It is be- cause the Soviet Union, the first workers’ state, is succeeding, abol- ishing unemployment, building a so- cialist commonwealth without mil- lionaires and soon to be beyond the rédch of Starvation blockades, such as was Uséd in the first few years of its existence, that it must be crushed, the capitalists think. They fear the tremendous example of a live, vigorous workers’ state, with standards of living continually ris: ing and the workers rimning indus- try. Against this plain war plan, the TO OK PLATFORM OF GP IN CHICAGO | State Ratification Con- vention July 27th CHICAGO.—On Sunday, July 27, | 2457 W. Chicago Ave., Chicago, the Illinois State Ratification Conven- | tion of the Communist Party will | be held, to which will come dele- | gates from working-class organiza- | tions of all types in every part of | the state. : | Every important shop in the in- ‘ dustrial area of Chicago and its én- virons, eyery important miné in the coal fields of Southern Mliticis, every mass trade union, every workérs’ fraternal society, has been invited to send delegates to ratify the slate of the Comunist Party to be pre- sented to the workers of Hlinois in the November elections. The last year has witnessed great strides in the development of the influence of the Communist Party upon workers in every branch of in- dustry. The Party has proven itself the champion not only of the in- terests of workers engaged in indus- try, but has for thé whole year stood out as the one working-class organ- ization which has carried out 4 con- sistent and militant fight against the capitalist disease of unempléy- ment. A Political Fight. Especially today, in the face of the critical position in which the American working class stands, with increasing unemployment, speed-up and wagé-cuts menacing the life of every worker, in the face of the new wave of strikes sweeping the coal fields of Southern Tilinois, it becomes necessary for the working class to recognize that their | fight against the conditions under which they suffer is # political fight against the capitalist form of gov- ernment and that there is only one party which can give them a mili- tant leadership in the conduct of their struggle—the Communist Party. The Communist Party asks the working class as a whole to send delegates to the State Ratification Convention, so that the whole Amer ican working class can give expres- sion to its support of the candidates of the only workers’ party—the Communist Party of the U. S. A. workers of America, with those of all other capitalist countries, pro- test by mass demonstrations Au- gust 1, nine days from now, | Amtorg officials and their attor- |neys, who were in court with them, Louis Connick of Simon-Thatcher & Connick, and John Marshall, had provided full documentary informa- tion on Amtorg, which is a New York stcte corporation, with its capital stock of $2,000,000 owned by the Soviet Bank of Foreign j Trade in Moscow. Full details of its $100,000,000 trade last year, and $87,000,000 trade up to June this year, had been provided. Its per- sonnel was listed, together with ar- rival and departures of 552 tem- bers of Soviet Union trading com- missions last year, and 484 mote up to June 10 this year. Everything any _ investigating committee could want to know was prepared in advance, by heads of de- partments in the huge Amtorg establishment. Amtong officials’ reason for ap- pearing was to criticize, as they had béen promised they had the privi- lege of. doing, the clumsy forgéries that Whalen atid the white guard agencies in New York had launched against them. Evade the Facts. Bat Fish and his committee neither wanted the facts, nor did they wish to expedite in any way an examination of the Whalen for- garies, ‘ ‘ They calmly waved aside the de- tailed information offered them about Amtorg, and insisted upon dragging out as much of this al: veady freely provided matérial as they could from the two officials before them, With expressions of triumph, with insults directéd at the memory and veracity, of the witnesses, they got here a frag: merit ahd there a fraitinefit of the facts alneady wfittén out for them. ! Ditily Worker: * | the youth conférence to be held in Daily | at 10 a. m., at People’s Auditorium, | yiepis Miners! Strike Against Cuts! , Miners; Rally Eldorado, Ill. DedY Corfradés:—Here is some information of what is going on in! thé mining s€ction of Southern Illi- nois. In Saline County, No. 1 O'Gara has spread its strike to No 12 and to No. 10, under the leader: ship of the “rank and file” move- an undercover movement for Lewis, as Lewis can’t bother Illinois on account of the injunction. This “rank and file” movement don’t let any of thé “progressives” have a voice in its meetings. Anyone can séé that this is the iron rule of the Indianapolis chief. Hold Open Air Meets. | We have had three N. M. U. open- air meetings, two of them well at- tended by sympathizers. Last night we had @ N. M. U. local meeting | members who elected delegates to Ziégler on July 20. Also, all of fhe members challenged each other to sé@ who caw Have the most men to joy thé N. M. U. for which they are working among the masses. No. 1 O'Gara has been on strike for a féw days on account of the | miners aiming to have another mass meeting. This is the game the op- erator’ try to put over on the min- ers, The U. M. W. A. has just about | proved to the miners that it has no power, ag the miners have not very mutch’ faith in the rotten thing. But the conditions the miners are in is going to force them to act soon. For hundréds are hungry now. Some can’t éven' get one loaf of bread at the company store. Times are horrible in the Saline Courity section. This would be a good placé for the big poodle dog Jovers to dump their food instead of dumping carloads in the river, as has been doné in New York. And if the captain of the poodles don’t dump something here soon thé workers will get wise. For their brain box (stomach) is just about émpty. Miners, Join the N. M. U. We are having another meeting tonight in Harrisburg. Freeman Thonipson, Nels Kjar, Arthur Her- chey and some local comrades will speak. The seeds of the N. M. U. have béen sown too deep in Saline County fot the other fakers to fool the miners, We aré spreading our forees over the district, organizing for the Second National Convention to be held in Pittsburgh, Pa., on July 26. Comradely yours, WILLIAM R, GROVES, Til. Dist. See’y N. M. U. | Whenever Bogdanoff or Ohsol in- | sisted they did not know some minor | employe im some minor department | of the Amtorg establishment, or some date of arrival or departure | of a@ trading expedition, Fish, or Nelson, of Bachman would snarl: | “Well, you ought to know. Do you} mean to tell me that you are this | or that high official of the Am-| torg and you don’t know that?” Eventually the lawyer manage to intervene with the full facts read from the statement which the committee had so far re- | fused to accept, whereupon the | glory-hunting Fish would yell:) “Well, why didn’t you admit chis at once?” Want to Smash Amtorg. ! The committee made a desperate | effort to connect Amtorg with the Conimunist Party either here or in| the Soviet Union. At one point | Bogdanoff refused to be drawn into | a political discussion about Com- | munism. He said he came to testify to the facts about Amtorg. | He was then threatened by Nel- | son with being declared in con- tempt. After considerable parlay, the quéstioning went on, with Bogda- nof? agreeing to answer questions about Communism as an individual and not as an expert or for the Amtorg. Thé committee then ceased to ask stich questions of him. They did try hard to make Ohsol talk about the Ogpu. They asked him what it meant. He said it meant “State Political Administta- tion.” ey practically called him a liar and jeered at him. They wanted to make*him call it “state secret police.” ~ Forgery Errors. The only time the Whalen docu- ments were allowed to come before the meeting yesterday was When a list of persons mentionéd in them, or by Bessedowsky, ~* handed to Olisol to identify as many of them as he could. He pointéd otit that the names of many were mils- spelled in such a ffanner as those supposed to have writteri the letter could not have done, and that line | of questioning eéased. They insisted, without avail; that hé sh6uld identify as employes of Amtote nittherotts fictitiots jersdtis fentished if the fofrerias, notably “Copitade Tiga’ Thow wae'ad hint té say that Anitorg imports Com: and we took iri @ small number of! + | Mass Hunger Grips Illinois to the N.M.U. A group of miners children at a timé when they were a litt! healthier dnd happier than they are now. For hunger now stalls the mine fields of the riches country in the world, and the bosses and their agents are fore ing the coal diggers, their wives and kids to starve. Miners, or | ganize into the National Miners Union and prepare bitter strike struggle to from the bosses for yourself and your starving children. for CHICAGO TRIBUNE HAILS RENEGADE LOVESTONE Chicago, Ill. To the Daily Worker: The Chicago Tribune the jingo| The mine committees are not to be paper of big business, printed last] permitted to bring matters to the week an attack against the Commu- nist Party of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics by the renegade, | Lovestone, made at a conference of | openly and viciously whatever they New York. the Lovestoneites in The special correspondence from New York was displayed prom- inently with big headlines quoting a speech by Lovestone himself! On Friday, July 18, the same) jingo newspaper came out with an | editorial based on the activities of | Heartneady, who was president of Mr. Lovestone, also attacking the Soviet Union and defending the “soundness” of the renegade. Says the yellow sheet about the yellow renegade: “Mr. Lovestone adds that the popularity of the Communist Party in the United States is not to be estimated by the occasional success of the comrades in bring- ing the police down on them... . Mr. Lovestone . . . knows that the police can be irritated into the use of banana stalks or their clubs and nothing except irrita- tion is revealed thereby. . . .” Congratulations; Mr. Lovestone! | At last his true value is being rec- cent of the original fighters have would | ognized by the capitalist class whom | been killed or died of miners asthma he serves so well, ‘If there are any rank and file Lovestoneites who doubt it, let them read the editorial in the Chicago Tribune, the world’s greatest capitalist mouthpiece. RANK-AND-PILER. BUILDING IN MOSCOW AMAZES TOURISTS Reports received from Moscow by the World Tourists indicate that American workers arriving there are amazed at the intensive construc- tion activities in the Red capitol and in the Soviet Union generally. There is no unemployment. The building industry suffers from a shortage in qualified labor. Last Wednesday the World Tour- ists sent off the seventh group of visitors to the Soviet Union since the beginning of this season. The next group sails July 24, via S.S. Europa. munist literature and the Sovkino films. He told them Sovkino was something else again from the Am- torg. At the beginning an hour was taken up trying to maké Bogdanoff take the oath. Hé wanted to af- firm, and he did affirm. Amtorg is still on the stand to- day, and the evidence against the Whalen forgeries is still not off the committee records. Asidé® from Djaingaroff, the go- between for Fasley and Whalen and the Fish cofimittee and the Russian | monarchists in U. S., there were in| the eoiimittes room yésterday the | portly publisher of Novoe Russky | Slovo, the Russian monarchist paper in New York, and an individual who called himself Gregory Pernadsky, and styled himgelf “president of the Research Publishing Corporation.” This fellow acted as interpretot for the cétifMitte® to eheek of Mhsol, Who interpreted for Bogdanost. wrest bread | SPEED-UP SELLO Crganize Into Nation Miner of Fight To the Editor: Mike Hartnex tempt to sted in the John Lewis miner nother uncle, so did two of r produced coal. So I feel IT ha | unusually large claim’ on the an cite coal fields. Because Le $ doing his damndest to forestall niy claim and thousands of others, I feel it my urgent duty to raise to the surface the dirtiness, the treach- éry, the cality that Mex beneath the tentative agreement antiounced as being accepted by the bosses and the boss union. More Work for Miners. Lewis agrees to increase the out- put without a decrease in pay. Imagine the absurdity of the sta ment. A’ miner gets so much per| yard for driving a chute or a breast, or a gatigway. To increase output a miner will have to cut more cubic feet of coal.. Now under the system of paying for yard or car, the in- eréasé in output should mean an in- crease in earnings to him. But the contract specifies he rfiust increase output to get the same pay. Mean- ing he must work a longer day and| cut more cubic feet, which means | receive a cut on the yard or car.| | Actually it means a cut ow car, yard and docking for rock and dirty coal. To Throttle Militancy. It says the miner must produce |a car of coal, meaning a larger in- crease of dead work. They also agree to prevent mine committees from fighting for every individual case of discrimination, | cticating and contract violation so | notoriously indulged in in the past. | attention of other miners in the col- ‘lieries. Lewis promises the coal operators that they can do more desire to the miners, the union. the contract, without any protest from the bureauc of the union. The Fighting Union. As one of the original organizers of the rebel Tamaqua local, I had many an occasion to meet Mike the sub-district in Panther Creek Valley, and he always acted as if he ; Was the perfect lord and master of | the miners there. He was always primarily interested in collecting | dues and how he used to sweat to | collect high initiation fees from the | hard working miners, Now the com- | panies agree to do that job for him, | if he will do a few favors in ex- | change. Mike is getting old now and will thoroughly appreciate be- | ing relieved in this way. Miners, Organize Into N. M. U. I notice he never did succeed in killing the spirit of that rebel Ta- | maqua local, although ninety per | while working for the Lehigh Coal ‘and Navigation Company, Heart- | neady’s original bosses. My latest information from Tama- qua and vicinity is that the boroughs are selling miners homes for a mat- ter of being back in taxes a hundred dollars or so. The National Miners Union must get many more effective leaders in throughout the district, to build a} real good effective fighting spirit | in the miners themselves. It can be done, the miners are willing. ~A CONSTANT READER. * * # Editorial Note: The worker who | Sent in the above letter is asked to | call at the editorial office of the | Daily, Saturday, August 2 at 8 p. m.| UT TINTS MINT THP NING TO TUUL Chicago, MI. | | To the Daily Worker: | My experience in the Tllinois coal | fields dvting a short stay in the | first week of June taught me that the coal miners are read+ for or- |eanization They are militant and | sre turning to the Comminist | Unions. Talking to miners and shéaking | ot mass meetings in Johnstone City, | Fldoreda, Harrisbureh, and Zieg- ler, T found the miners esger |to jlisten to the program of the Trade Union Unity league, They are for | militant struggle, Rut so far leading cadres are lacking. They must be built up. The material is waiting to be welded togther, Minaeg Ast Ahotit Soviet Workers. The meetines at which I spoke prere distributed at the last minute of the days on which meetings were held. Tn spite 6f this in Johnstone City lone ove* fifty wrrkers attended | onk meetin, Some Lewis hoddlums ry ANTHRACITE WANER UT $ Wl IT AE ie Must Fig ht Thousands of miners who are now face to face with starvation, unemployment, blood- sweating speed-up in the mines and the treacherous agents of the bosses . in their ranks, the Lewises,’ th “progr ves” Howatt and Co., have in the National Miners | Union their rank and file con- trolled organization to fight. And only bitter struggle under the leadership of the N.M.U. against the bosses and their agents will save the miners from slow death by starvation. , PAY LESS FREQUENT THAN BOSS SHOP PAPERS Chicago, Ill. To the Daily Worker:— A Many of the big factories are | publishing regular shop papers in| order to keep the minds of their workers enslaved, especially the! open-shop bosses, who are afraid | their slaves may join the unions, are doing it. The Western Electric, the Chicago Bell Telephone Co. and many others have their so-called “house organs.” But many of the smaller slave-driving joints, who cannot afford to publish their own poison sheets, are making use of | the special shop papers published by the Y. M. C. A. One of such sheets is printed by the Ravenswood branch of the Y. M. C. A. and is} called Ravenswood Industrial Oil Can. Attempting to be funny, it states that it is “issued not too often, like pay checks.” The truth! of the matter is that pay checks | in the Ravenswood district are not issued very often these days, the factories working five days with about half of the forces or less. | Real revolutionary shop papers, published by the workers them- selves, are needed in this district to counteract the poison of the bosses and their lackeys of the Y. M. C. A.| WOODWORKER. side of the door. The crowd re- sponded to the speakers, Kjar and| Brox. They were éspecially inter- ested in hearing about the progress of workers in the Soviet Union. Dynamite Thrown Into Hall. As the meeting came to a close, | and Ithe speakers were about to | answer questions, one of the Lewis | fakers, sticking his head through | the door, shouted: “What's the matter with the Lewis union?” At the same time another Lewis hood- | lum threw a stick of dynamite into | the hall. Someone cried A bomb! | A panic followed. Everyone in the hall ran for the doors. Had the hall been packed somebody might have been killed in the rush. The , dynamite did Inot explode so we went back into the hall, picked it up, and put out the fuse. Naturally the crowd was frightened away. | The Lewis henchmen disappeared. Nothing is too low for the crooks | who sétve their bosses, the mine operators. Whether they belong to | the Lewis union or the Thomas- | Fiswick - Farrington - Peabody Ma- chine—nothing is too low for them. | We must organize! —NELS KJAR. March from factories, shops and mines directly after work on August Ist to the demonstrations against war and unemployment, Rally your shop mates under the slogan: “Not one cent for arma- ments: all funds for the unem- Salao came, but kept themselves out- ployed!” | | FOR STRUGGLES Lays Plan for Intense Activity (Contemed tram Page tome, go unemployment convention) er 1,300 delegates attendinz —these are the outstanding sig \of increased radicalization and the | willingness on the part of the work lop a counter-offensive Up Fisher $ s took up the str r Body plant: in Flint, Michi- “The Flint strike presents: to our entire T.U.L movement. one f the most out ng lessons, The 1 front policy from below, the dependent leader- tion committess, p committees: arid @ commit- t primarily led) work- blishme’ p based. u ng up ¢ sections of ort and resolu- well as in the discussion, n nent of new s in the T.U.U.L. by drawing young workers who have shown readiness and have actively p icipated in the struggle of the T.ULU.L. | The resolution adopted pointed | out the growing crisis wort! capitalism, and the rapid rise of socialist construction under the Five-Year Plan in the Soviet Un It pointed out the rapid war prep- arations of the bosses against the | workers’ fatherland, as well ax |against each other in the struggle | for world markets, growing out of the sharpening imperialist antagon- | isms. | devel of | Fight Against War Danger. — | “In the struggle against imper- jialist war preparation,” reads ths resolution, “the revolutionary unions: have a tretnendous task to perform, especially in our struggle against | th» fascist and social-fascist leader- | ship of the A. F. of L. who are act- ing as the open agent of the boxses te militarize the rank and file mem- bership in the old unions behind the wa~ policy of the bosses and its gov- | ernment. It must be the task of} |the T.U.U.L, to intensify our ac-j | tivities within the A. F. of L. unions | through the application of the united | front policy from below, in accord- ,ance with the line of the Red Inte: | national of Labor Unions, by build- | ing up anti-imperialist war commit- | | tees, composed of T.U.U.L. mem- bers and rank and file members in | the A. F. of L. unions. All this |must be based upon the policy of | | open struggle against the A. F. of | L. officialdom.” | The preparations for August Ist | were taken up at length. Shop or- | ganization was made the outstand- ing and immediate task for all see- tions of the T.U.U.L. “From the! shops to the anti-war demonstra. | tions on August First,” must be | made into a living reality. “Release Unemployed Delegation” “The national T.U.U.L. executive | ;board must immediately make the| | Necessary preparation to build up| the unemployed movement,” the res- jolution goes on, “and around it a |campaign for the immediate release of the New York unemployed dele-| gation, William Z. Foster, national | secretary of the T.U.U.L., Robert! Minor, I. Amter, and H. Raymond; and for the T.U.U.L. membership recruiting drive.” It was pointed out that the en- tire T.U.U.L, must be mobilized for | these emergent tasks, Report on Jobless Convention. Wm. F. Dunne reported on the Chicago unemployment convention. Comrade Dunne reported that in spite of the shortage of time for holding the convention, and the many shortcomings in the prepara-| tion for the convention, that it was an achievement for the T.U,U.L.! sader- | 4 CHICAGO, Ill., Jul —In spit of the hottest day this summer in (100 in the’ shade) packed the Peopl the Audi- ay, 18, to of the Workers’ Soviet Union. on the Red Army celebration in s the hun- ned work- hat there Chicago workers Day “Tow trust the a little re- the that * the convention, re to do any- 1 week or ten days before the convention. J sported on the n in the mining industry. 1 the situation was one of strikes broadening out into The main task of small larger struggles. the union is to unite these strikes into a general struggle. The min- ing industry is one of the first to feel the severe effects of ration- alization. Struggles in the Anthra- cite are still in the hands of the | elements hostile to our program. The. situation in Southern Mlinois, where we have almost a complete following of the workers, must be | @ relentless fight against the United | Mine Workers of America. Activi- ties in the miners” union must be drawn to the attention of all T. U. U. L. members, The National Miners’ Union con- vention which is called for July 26 has the task to immediately de- velop a counter-offensive and to prepare through intense organiza- tion for the development of a gen- eral struggle in the mining indus- try. “Organize and strike against the increased system of wage cuts and speed-up, as well as to struggle against unemployment is the task of the second convention of the N. M. U.,” said Comrade Dunne, Soviet Union. The defense of the Soviet Union was made a special point in the re- ports and discussions. Comrade Sehmies and others pointed out the rapid fulfillment of the five-year plan and the building up of social- ism, which means for the workers in the Soviet Union better living conditions, increased wages and shorter hours; while, on the other hand, in the capitalist countries the workers are suffering the brunt of the economic crisis, with its mass unemployment and drastic wage euts. These facts must be brought out to all workers, The Fifth Congress of the R. I. L. U. was taken up in detail. Es- pecially in line with the policy of the R.LL.U, it was brought out the necessity of struggling on two fronts within the revolutionary unions: against right wing tenden- cies, and “left” sectarianism, which is nothing else but an attempt to cover up the struggle against the main danger, the right danger, Demonstrate August Ist! | FARM IN THE PINES Situated in Pine Forest, near Mt. Lake. German Table. Rates: $16— #18. Swimming Ft and the various unions and leagues, being the third important step in M. OBERKIRCH R. 1, Hox 78 KINGSTON, N, ¥, b As Always Spend Your Vacation q FIRST PROLETARIAN > NITGEDAIGET CAMP—HOTEL Hotel with hot Bungalows wit! q q Cultural Program for The Artef St Artef) Comrade Shaeffer will conduct mass singing. < q 4 Athletics, gam tures. symposit CAMP NITGEDAIG PHONE HwACON 7a | 4 Ws Train: From Grand Centent every hour Gy Bont: twice dally Tents—to remind you the old days. Cultural Program-~Comrades Olgin and Jerome at Camp Nitgedaiget and cold water in every room. h electric lights. the Summer of 1930 udio (Mass theatre with the es. dances, theatre, choir, | ums. ete. E11, BEACON, N.Y. Y. PHONE) WNTAMHOUK 1400 VVVVVVVVVVVVVVYV

Other pages from this issue: