The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 31, 1930, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 31, Page Five AYS FAMINE WILL RESULT FROM T IN SPAIN ARIFF RISE »88 Press Uses Famili ar Cry About “Dumping | of Foreign Goods” iff Retaliation Directed Mainly Against American Imports {ADRID, July 29.—A sharp dis- sion is going on in the Spanish italist press over the tariff rise ‘eted against the United States. ) increased tariffs affect mainly omobiles, razor blades, and other iufactured commodities from the ted States, a Voz, San Sebastian, supports government in its tariff retalia- 1. In an editorial published Sun- ‘it says: The government has taken a nified step with the elevation of iffs. recently, since the action ponds to a state of opinion which how foreign. governments ow their agreements to the vund and reveal their magnifi- t intentions. We must protect * industry against the dumping goods on us by foreign nations es which regard their treaties as scraps of paper.” The cry about “dumping of goods” has a familiar ring. That the rise in tariff in Spain will not be void of its effects in sharpening the class struggle at home is ad- | mitted by Baldomero Argente de | Catilo, former Minister of Supplies. “The increased tariff will have de- | plorable results,” said Argente. “It |may even cause a famine.” Thus are the contradictions of capitalists on a world scale sharp- ened and worsened. Spain is under- going a severe economic crisis, a part of the world crisis. Strikes are raging throughout the country. The class lines are sharpening. The tariff, which expresses the struggle of the capitalist powers in the |battle for world markets, tends to intensify the internal crisis. REEN, HOOVER GREEN WAR PLOT \GAINST SOVIETS Toll For, Slave Labor of U. S. Bosses (Continued from Page One) at Woll did not speak for the F. of L. At the same time Green clared -he would .demand. the ex- tsion of -Soviet ‘coal “and other oducts, The People’s Lobby of Washing- 1, in the midst of the ery against | ‘ave” labor, points out that the | xaconda Copper Co. mines abroad, | e Rockefeller oil fields in Latin nerica and elsewhere, the Fire- yne Rubber plantations in Liberia, d the Ford rubber plantations, e American sugar plantations in iba, and the American tin mines Bolivia. opetily’ use. slave - labor ider the worst conditions, paying uy a few cents.a,day. , About this oll is silent, because he supports ery act of the exploiters against | e workers.” Instead,he character- | es the ownership of industries in j e Soviet Union, by. the workers as, ‘orced labor.” That the ery of “convict or ced” labor is the crudest fake | neocted by the fasist Woll, Mellon, | eed and the Fish committee is | ed by the Journal of Com- erce in an editorial yesterday. It fers to section 307 of the tariff ct, under which the embargo on oviet products is being enforced, nd about which Woll shrieks so vudly as’ beifig “‘caniouflaged as a umanitarian device.” Matthew Woll is receiving praise com the leading exploiters of the merican workers for stirring up ar hatred against the Soviet Union nd the ‘success of .the’ Five-Year ‘lan. The leading organ of the Vall Street bankers, stock gamblers nd labor éxploiters, the Wall Street ournal of Commerce, encourages im and the A, F. of L. for throw- ng dust into the eyes of the work- rs at a time when unemployment s increasing and wage cuts are oeing harded* out to hundreds of housands. “No one can fail to sympathize vith the American Federation of vabor,” say these bankers, stock- yamblers and parasites in their iewspaper, “in its determination to ceep itself clean of the Communist aint.” Thus the A. F. of L. and Woll oarticularly get the highest praise from the worst enemies of the American workers for his part in preparing the ground for war against the Soviet Union. Woll has maintained utter silence m his attempted efforts to get oribes from Amtorg. On page 2 of chis issue of the Daily Worker we publish a reproduction of a letter signed by Matthew Woll and sent to the Amtorg Trading Co. asking for their insurance business. Woll uses every slimy phrase within his grasp to wheedle money out of Amtorg. He has. no objection to “Russian gold” when it goes into his pockets. Yet at the sdme time, it was from the offices of this very racket, the “Union Labor Life Insurance Co.” at 1440 Broadway, New York, that Woll issued his Giana for bi against the Soviet Union. For his rabkotecring and strike-breafting activities, Woll creates fake organ- izations at will. : The Wage Earners’ . Protective Conference was manufactured over- night by Woll to coincide with the wishes of Andrew Mellon, Senator James P. Reed, Hamilton Fish and Lowman of the treasury depart- ment, who undoubtedly informed Woll that war preparations against | meeting will be held tonight with- the U.S.S.R. would be speeded-up. The Federated Press, a Musteite outfit that kowtows to the Amer- ican Federation of Lpbor, in its in- vestigation of the so-called Wage |hard to find. At Washington, A. F. of L. offices, it was said that | they were located at 1440 Broad- | way, New York, but that turned out to be another Woll organization, a life insurance company, and em- ployes said no one there was em- | Powered to speak for the wage | earners conference.” | Woll keeps this organization in |his pocket and gets funds for it | from the very bosses in the United | States who head the wage-cutting campaign and lead in preparation for war against the Soviets. A.F.L. Fights Lumber Workers. Dr. Willis Compton, secretary jand manager of the National Lum- \ber Manufacturers’ Association, | supports Woll in his strike-breaking jand war-mongring activities. It is this Manufacturers’ Association which fights against the American lumber workers and is responsible for the Centralia frame-up. Just now the National Lumber Manufacturers’ Association is in the midst of a wage-cutting cam- paign, Of course, not a word from Woll on this, as his object is to direct attention to war on the Soviet Union to keep the workers in the U. S. from fighting these wage- cuts. No worker should be fooled by the apparent change of policy as announced by Hoover. Not one single change has taken place. The war preparations are being rushed. The basic reason for the quickened war plans, the ‘growing success of the Five-Year Plan in the U.S.S.R., and the betterment of the conditions of the workers there, while in capitalist lands the crisis worsens and the standard of living of the workers is forced down, still exists. Meanwhile, in the United States billions are being spent for war preparations. Cruisers and bomb- ing planes are being built. A huge ammunition plant is rushed to com- pletion in Arizona. The contradic- tions of the capitalist powers grows apace. The election of the Bennett conservatives in Canada sharpens the war danger. Millions more are being thrown out of jobs to face starvation. Wage cuts pile up by the hundreds. The workers are or- ganizing to fight these cuts, under the leadership of the Trade Union Unity League. The attacks against the Communists by the imperialists are growing. More and more workers are being enlisted to fight against the grow- ing war danger under the slogan of “Not a penny for armaments, all funds to the unemployed in the form of unemployment insurance.” Out on the streets on August Ist and into the mass demonstrations against the imperialist war man- euvers. Defend the Soviet Union! ORLEANS SCABS SHOOT PICKET NEW ORLEANS, La. — July 30. — The New Orleans strike for one hundred per cent increase in wages of the river dock longshoremen, led by the Marine Workers Industrial Union, is creating a tense situation. Already there has been firing on the pickets by the bosses’ men and the scabs. A Negro Marine Workers Industrial Union organizer, Alex Reed, is reported shot and sent to the hospital. The strike is very likely to spread to other docks. The Morgan Line longshoremen are favorable. The United Fruit ers are ready to come out. Senti- ment is generally favorable all along the waterfront. The Marine Workers Industrial Union has gained five hundred mem- bers. Permit to hold an open meeting has been denied by the police. The out permit. Monday there were fifteen pick- ets arrested. were arrested. So far, it is known that four ompany dock work- Yesterday forty-five Earners’ Protective Conference said, | have been fined, and their cases ap- “Just where Woll keeps the head- | pealed; four are out on bail, six ar quarters of his tariff lobby (Wage | dismissed, and most of the rest are Formers’ Protective Conferénce) is ‘held for trial. In the Sheet Steel Mills of | Bethlehem SPARROWS, Ind. — With the chief interest of the bosses only to |make as much profits as possible from the workers, it is no wonder |that the Bethlehem Steel Company | Was only too anxious to install new speed-up machinery in the sheet mills of the Bethlehem Steel at Sparrows, Md. The new continuous mills that re- place the old type mills produce 85,000 pounds for the eight hour turn in comparison to the maximum of 40,000 pounds produced on the old; type mills and thus today in the sheet mills the workers are working continuously with but one minute rest and as the type of mill and the name “CONTINUOUS” suggest; that is just what continuous work means where before there were pe- riods of rest spells between heats. The new type of mill required three less men on each crew; that is, the men are forced to produce twice as much with three less men. Speed Up On top of the new speed up, the boss was not content in getting greater production, but with the new type of machinery he also introduced a new wage scale which amounted to practically a sixty per cent cut in wages. On the old type mill the workers producing an average of 40,000 pounds were getting piece | work, but with the new mills guar- anteeing a consistent tonnage, the boss cut out the piece work and in- stituted a day wage rate that amounts to two to five dollars less a day than was made on piece work; but still the tonnage on the mill has increased 200 per cent. Workers Call a Halt The workers rejected the new} wage cut and on the first day of the! new wage rate the workers stopped the mills on the three to eleven turn and began to discuss in groups through the whole length of the mill what action to take. And as here and there groups took up the question, there was a general con- fusion and no definite policy as to what plan to pursue which finally resulted in the most ‘skilled work- ers, the rollers, getting together and going to the office of the Dept. | superintendent to negotiate with the boss as to an increased rate for the rollers only. Of course the bosses were only too glad to negotiate with the rollers and the demands set for- ward on the basis of skill and craft left the majority of the sheet mill workers out in the cold. Boss Calls Cops While men were discussing in the mills »nd not a machine was run- ning, the boss called the police force in the employ of the steel company to intimidate the workers back to the job with the.result that the mills late that night was a menior- able event in the records of the sheet mill workers who will look back on this night as a lesson to show the working class that there is a class struggle and that the di- vision between the bosses and the workers is becoming ever wider. The police with several fat bellied lieu- tenants came into the mill and said “Alright what the hell you fellows going to do—stand and talk or go back to work? And if your not go- ing back to work—get to hell out of here and your fired” which re- sulted in many of the workers be- coming intimidated to the extent of returning to work while other groups of workers went home, Fake Promises A new rate has been promised for August first to the rollers and nothing definite has been suggested to the other workers in the sheet mills. So it appears that on August first the workers will again resume their fight against these wage cuts. But the workers of the sheet mills must not only fight against wage cuts. The American Federation of Labor and the Mike Tighes of the Amalgamated have a policy of craft unionism and discrimination on the basis of nationality and color which resulted in the struggle being sold out to the bosses by the misleaders in the A. F. of L. organization. To strike against wage cuts, the workers must organize shop com- mittees and affiliate themselves to the Metal Workers Industrial League which has the correct pro- gram to fight the bosses. Our pro- gram is to organize all metal work- ers without respect to what type of work he does in the metal industry, as long as he works in the metal industry, that furnishes the basis of organizing the whole industry. There must be complete organization of Negro and white workers. The! bosses heretofore have always tak- en advantage of split between the workers on basis of color which re- sulted in using one section of work- ers against another for lower wages and strike breaking. The workers must organize their shop commit- tees and draw the largest section of militant workers within their ranks and with this shop committee or- ganized correctly they will lay the plans to strike against wage cuts, part time work and unemployment. There must begin immediately a move by the workers of the sheet mill into the Metal Workers indus- trial League and, under the program and leadership of this militant Union fight against the bosses’ policy of lowering the standard of living of the working class. FARM IN THE PINES Situated in Pine Forest, near Mt Lake, German Table. Hates: 816— $18. Swimming and Fishing. M. OBERKIRCH |as the “Poverty” and has always TOLEDO TOOL 0. | SLASHES WAGES; MORE JOBLESS | Mobilize in Shops For} August 1st | TOLEDO, Ohio, — The Toledo Machine & Tool Co., large manu- facturers of punch presses and shears for the auto and metal in- dustry made a drastic cut in wages Saturday, July 26. This Toledo slave pen is commonly referred to | lived up to its reputation, but now | it will have to be renamed “Pover- ty’s Hell Hole.” About three months ago workers in the “Poverty” were given an intimation of what w: n store for them when the system of | the | | time and one half for all overtime | | work was abolished. Following this | a vicious system of speed up was | established. Henry J. Hinde, con- trolling stock holder and General | Manager of the plant resigned as manager and a certain Mr. Green- ing was placed in charge of produc- tion. He at once employed an| efficiency expert to devise ways and means of driving the slaves longer, | faster and cheaper. He has done his masters bidding well. Produc- tion is now 30 per cent higher ari some workers have been laid off. Workers who have worked for the “Poverty” for as much as seventeen years were laid off. This speed-up game, in which the workers were | always “It,” went merrily on and | conditions got steadily worse. | But the worst was yet to come. | Last Saturday the club fell with a resounding whack. Wages were | slashed in every depa t from | 10 percent to 25 per cent w: average somewhere around 15 per cent. In the wet grinder depart- ment the cut amounted to 17 cents per hour. Workers formerly re- ceiving 80 cents per hour now get 68 cents. Heavy planer operators were rewarded for long and faith- ful service with a 15 cent per hour cut. They now make from 55 cents to 75 cents per hour. Lathe oper- ators received cuts ranging from 7 to 15 cents per hour, Shaper hands and drill press hands got cut 12 cents per hour. On the erecting floor the big boss, Greening, and his efficiency flunkey kindly presented the workers there with the news of a 7 to 15 cents per cut in wages. All common help, laborers, ete., were cut 5 cents per hour. All this as a reward for loyalty of years and in spite ef the lying promises of big, fat Herbert Hoover, One more point to show the ex- tent of the never satisfied greed of the “Poverty” is the treatment accorded to the young workers. Young workers are admitted as ap- prentices and must sign up for 4 years. The wage cuts at the “Poverty” are just a sa:ple of what has taken place in every industry in Toledo. In the building industry condi- | tions are horrible. The A. Bently & Sons Co, and the H. J. Speaker Co. are the largest contractors in this part of the state. They have always been open shoppers and try to enforce the yellow dog contract. They are now both cutting wages to the limit. On the Toiedo Uni- versity job iron workers are getting from $20 to $25 a week under the scale, Carpenters on this job were recently cut about 25 per cent. The | laborers union cut their own scale from 5 to 50 cents per hour in order to get more work for their mem- bers. They did not get any more work and they have lost some of their working conditions besides. You ean see how the A. F. of L. aids the open shop bosses in wage cutting. : There are thousands of workers out of work in Toledo. Other thou- sands have had their wages slashed and are expecting layoffs soon. There is a strong undercurrent of mass resentment and hatred de- veloping here. With proper effort it would be easy to get Toledo workers to organize. The sentiment against war is strong. Toledo should have a huge demonstration against Imperialist War and in de- fense of the Soviet Union on Aug- ust first at the corner of Summit and Jackson St., at 7 p. m. Fascist Green August 1 Preparations Rushed in All Cities (Continued fram Paye Ones of town, and on Sunday there were 2,000 at a meeting in Minnesilla Park, all very receptive to the ar- guments of the Communist speak- ers. The International Labor De- fense picnic brought out about 1,000 | with Ann Burlak as chief speaker. | The distribution is being especi- |ally concentrated on Republic Steel | Corporation’s Central Alloy plant, for distributing leaflets were re-| leased through a flaw in the ordin- ance. Practically all plants are closed down here, with promises of re- opening August 4 at reduced wages. The first Massilon, Ohio, will take place this year. Leaflets have been issued. The chief of police “forbids” the | demonstration, but Section Organ- izer Douglas of the Communist Party told him he would be there. Massilon is rtn by another branch of the Republic Steel. ee 2a 19,000 Leaflets in Charlotte. CHARLOTTE, N, C., July 30.— August 1 meeting in| PHLADELPHIA, Pa., July 29. — Following March 6th and May 1st, vhen the demonstrations of the workers put fear into the hearts of Mayor Mackey and Director of Pub- | lie Safety Schofield, these gentlemen tened to declare to the press and > the pink liberals of the il Lib- erties Union that free speech will continue to exist in Philadelphia and that no workers’ organization will be prevented from speaking on the streets. This statement made on the eve of the primaries of course turned out to be a brazen lie, The Mackey busy with going to one vacation after another, when even according to the census 11 per cent of the population is unemployed, when there is not a cent for unemployment relief, but there ar of millions for graft | by th and their agents in CHINA RED ARMY £0? BR TMES GAPITALS OF 2 PROVINCES \Imperialist Gunboats Hasten to Intervene (Continued trom Page One) were robbed and then either slain or roughly handled.” This, of course, is a bourgeois description of a scene that can be easily understood by any class-conscious worker. Almost all the capitalist press are getting hysterical about such le- |} gends as that which insist that the Communists have burned the whole | city, Close examination of the news | discloses the fact that fires began to burn in various parts of the city | the city administration — at such a “at midnight on Sunday before the| [ie tte Mackeys and Rchotields, Gerival of the Red troope” (Herald| 79°°" DY oe stings of ee ber of Commerce, the Atterbu Tribune, July 30). ‘The ame report, and Vares, are course busily en- | Se, ributes ask 7 ‘ | ete aires to stacal Commntnigt| 88824 today to carry out what their - a . ie . nasters tell the 5 sympathizers,” but all who are fa- | Masters tell them to sp miliar with military affairs, know | Fee Speech a Myth | that it is much more logical for re-|__ After the Atterburys and Vares treating troops to devastate th spoke, the “free speech” of Scho- eS lehathies “know th field became a myth. Big police en- y for the would-be victor to de are and on -Timken Roller Bearing. merce batore tua Geeet |'These two run the fascist police | city that will soon be the TEL thos Haeaeek aha. othe force here. Four workers arrested| Despite their desire to see Chan : Sone nee taeeS Is in Kensington. The street cor- sha burn like Nero’s Rome, so th they will have some more “crimes” | 2¢Y allies of the Communist Party | of the Reds to report, the capitalist | 9% broken up and scores of work. | papers are forced to admit that the thrown into jail, all as a proof of anc The Communist Party always ex- ie capitalist freedom of speech ake mblage in Philadelphia. Yale Univer and post office | A cable despatch to the Herald | Tribune yesterday revealed the fact | that out of 5,500 troops garrisoning the city of Changsha, only 2,500 re- treated with their commander, Ho Chieng, while the rest, 3,000 strong, | Communist Party is fighting just as all joined the Red Army, All re-) it does for its other demands, for ports estimated the Red troops at-| the right to use the streets for meet- tacking the city to be 10,000, armed |ings and demonstrations. The elec- with rifles, and under the command | tion campaign rallies to be held de- | of the well-known Communist gen-} spite the police terror, will give us eral, Comrade Peng Te-Huei. | the opportunity to expose the fascist ty Hospi are not on fire. posed the hypoc tions of these capi Communist Party does not beg, like the Civil Liberties Union for the right to speak to the workers. The y of the declara- alist policies. The Open air meetings are being held| The city is so firmly held by the| terror of the Atterburys and Mack- every night in Negro and white| workers, peasants and Red Armies| YS and to mobilize the workers for workers’ sections. There is a dis-| that the capitalist papers, which usu-|St™ugsle. tribution in Charlotte, Bessemer SSS | City, North Belmont, and other mill towns of 15,000 national anti-war leaflets, 3,000 special leaflets from | |the district committee of the Com- |munist Party here, and 1,000 leaf- |lets addressed to A. F. of L. mem- |bers. The National Textile Work-! | ers Union is mobilizing its member- |ship to participate August First in| }a body. The meeting in Greenville will be held in front of the Woodside Mill. . * 500 at Chev Plant. BUFFALO, N. Y., July 30.—A| | very successful meeting to call the | Chevrolet workers to the August 1 | demonstration was held here today. | About 500 participated. The police | arrived too late to stop it. Speak- lers were District Organizer Lustig |of the Communist Party and Dis- |trict Organizer Herman of the Young Communist League. Pre- |parations are going ahead for the | August 1 demonstration at 6 p. m. jat Niagara Square. * * Without Permit in Dayton. DAYTON, Ohio, July 30.—Since | a permit for the John Porter meet- || ialist all in readiness at | WAGE CUTS ADD “TO MISERY OF ~ UNEMPLOYMENT Baltimore Workers to | Fight Both August 1 | BALTIMORE, Md, July 90— While the bosses are spending bf- |lions of dollars for another imper- slaughter, thousands of | workers in Baltimore walk idle un- lable to get work. Even a capitalist judge has to admit that there are | 500 to 600 rent cases coming up | weekly with 50 to 60 families being levicted. In recent weeks, the |B. & 0, railroad shops laid off 5,300 workers, Bethlehem Steel sev- | eral thousand more, with other mills | following close in the race. Wages are being cut right and |left and speed-up increased to an junbearable extent. At Sparrows Point, wages were cut from 4% | to 10 per cent in the tin mills and 22% per cent in the sheet mills. In the Eastern Rolling Mills a cut of 50 per cent took place. The speed- |up at the same time has increased jin some cases (Sheet Mills) over |200 per cent. In the Federal Tin where young workers are mostly | employed, wages are as low as $4 | to $6 a week. Longshoremen Organize. The workers, however, are begin- | ning to put up a fight against these | conditions. This can be seen on | the waterfront where longshoremen refuse to pay dues to the fake junion and rally under the leader- | ship of the militant Marine Workers | Industrial Union, The workers have also shown their readiness to fight when several hundred workers in |Sparrows Point refused to work under the new system of wage cuts and speed-up and where the police | controlled by Charlie Schwab had | to be called in to force them back to work. The Communist Party and | Kiukiang ing to prepare for the August 1} demonstration was refused, the | meeting was held Monday without | that formality. Porter and three| others were arrested and are held) on $1,000 bonds each, which the} court refuses to reduce. The Augus: First demonstration will be held regardless of the re- fusal of a permit. * * Hartford Thousands Listen. HARTFORD, Conn., July 30.—A | yesterday near the Underwood | monster factory gate demonstration Typewriter plant answered the ef- forts of the police to prevent meet- ings by arrests, attacks, ete. Thou- sands of workers lined the shops and sidewalks to hear the call to world wide anti-war demonstration | August 1. The toiling masses of | Hartford know what exploitation, speed-up and unemployment mean. They will come out August 1 at 5) p. m., to demonstrate at Park and Lawrence Sts. The Scandinavian Workers Club has arranged a dance for August 9 at Charter Oak Park for the benefit of the Communist Party election campaign. Demonstrate August Ist! ally seize every pretext to predict] the immediate fall of any Red re- gime are, in this case, forced to grant the Communist control of the] city at least ten days’ lease of life.| The capture of Changsha, in addi- tion to Yochow, which was captured a short time ago, gives the Commu- nists a control of the two key cities in the province of Hunan. This vic-| | tory, together with the seizure of! Nanchang and the imminent fall of | in Kiangsi province, makes the establishment of a Soviet Government of South China an im-} mediate possibility. As a result, the| Nanking government bonds declined} sharply, while the revolutionary ac-| tivities of workers and peasants in} other parts of China redoubled their | efforts. The imperialists are busy rallying their forces to intervene. American consul general at Hankow, Lock-} | hart, “advised” the state department | that they must send “a destroyer or| naval vessel” to Hankow “for the| protection of life or property there} and to insure communication.” Im-| perialist gunboats have also been} despatched to Kiukiang. Fortunate- ly, the low water level of the Siang River which connects Changsha with the Yangtze River, prevents the im- perialist gunboats from reaching VIDAOBRERA CWORKERS’ LIFE) Spanish Weekly Organ of the Comunist Party will be issued regularly each week Beginning Sept. 1, 1930 Subscribe Now! yy R. 1 year $2.50; 6 months 8 months Tic SINGLE COPY 5 CENTS Bundles of 50 copies or more at 3 cents per copy. wa Send All Subs and Orders to “VIDA OBRERA” 30 Union Sq. ird Floor $ SPECIAL AUGUST FIRST A TON, CAMPAIGN ORDER YC IN ADVANC JUST O BUNDLES for play and rest. Write for booklets or phone Highland Falls 340-260 PLACE most unique and attractive for a glorious vacation and week-end holidays. Ideally located at Highland Falls, between Bear Mountain and West Point, overlooking picturesque Hudson and Storm King Highway. A most gorgeous estate and pine woodland ON THE HUDSON Hudson. Caledonia 7165—Long Acre 1247 Beautfiul Music and Nightly Dancing Camp Accommodations $25 to $30 Per Week Also Attractive Hotel Accommodation With or Without Baths at Reasonable Rates. PINE TERRACE HOTEL? AND CAMP Acclaimed by Thousands to be America’s Most Beautiful Vegetaria.n Resort Rooms with and without bath? also open air sleeping solariums and gardens equipped with showers; sun and air baths; a great attraction; all outdoor sports, tennis and handball courts; bathing and boating. Social and athletic activities under competent instructors and food a la Schildkraut served in a most elegant dining room overlooking the City Telephone: the T.U.U.L, are organizing the Changsha, But it is reported that| Workers. for a struggle against | these conditions. “relief parties” have been sent by| land. On August first the workers will The war for the suppression of| show their determination to fight the Chinese revolution has already| against wage cuts and speed-up, begun. This should give the work-| against unemployment, against ers and oppressed peoples all over] bosses wars and for defense of the the world more impetus in the strug-| Soviet Union. The Communist gle against the imperialist war and| Party calls upon the workers to more determination and enthusiasm! demonstrate on August first at the in the anti-war demonstration on! City Hall Plaza, 6 p. m. daylight August 1. saving time, Our Doors Are Open! Workers of All Races and Nationalities Come! > a a bo bo Unity Camp WINGDALE, N. Y. Where finest comradeship prevails Well-known place for along vacation Where food is healthful and plentiful SPORTS-SONG-THEATRE OUR BUSES LEAVE 110TH 87, AND SEVENTH AVENUE: Every Friday at 6:30 p. m. Every Saturday at 1 p. m. Every Sunday at 9 a. m. Every Monday at 12 p. m. Every Wednesday at 1 p. m. a. an. an. Bn. i a, Comrade KRANESS musical director, requests that all comrades playing in- struments, should kindly Erg Hist along) By Train: From Grand Central or 125th St. to Wingdale, N. ¥. 110TH STREET TELEPHONE: MONUMENT 0111 WORKERS’ CO-OPERATIVE CAMP WOCOLONA WALTON LAKE, MONROE, N. Y. (50 Miles from New York) Electricity, running water in bungalows, mass singing, camp= ing, dancing, musical and cul- fires, comradely atmosphere, tural programs : : + 3 37 SOCIAL PROGRAM Excellent Orchestra $21 PER WEEK Aeroplane Rides RESERVATIONS WITH $5 DEPOSIT TO BE MADE AT New York Office: 10 East 17th Street; Gramercy 1013 MONROE, N. Y., Phone: Monroe 89; Sports, swimming, boating, rac- CAMP FIRE AND CONCERT will be given at STETSON’S FIELD Saturday, August 2, at 8:30 P. M. AN ATTRACTIVE PROGRAM HAS BEEN ARRANGED. ALSO BUFFET 1. Box 78 KINGSTON N.Y SCHILDKRAUT’S ON THE HUDSON OPEN ALL YEAR Proceeds Daily Worker Emergency Campaign Fund

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