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‘IMPERIALISTS CRY FOR MORE BLOOD AND IRON | IN CHINA; LOSE TRADE | Wall Street Prepares Greater War On Chinese | Workers and Peasants | Bosses Fight For Trade But Are One in Battle} Against Revolutionary Masses S the Chinese peasants and workers increase their victories against the blood-sucking landowners and the petty-bourgeois Chinese lackeys of imperialism, we hear rumblings of greater interventions de- « | Signed to drown the growing revolutionary forces in a sea of blood. A | dispatch to the Wall Street sheet, the Journal of Commerce (July 81) | shows that Wall Street is already setting its machinery in motion to this | end. A questionnaire was issued by the United States Consulate, says co | this dispatch, to the leading U. S. imperialists in China. The question- a | haire was issued “at the behest of some department in Washington.” The answers of the foreign exploiters called for immediate inter- | vention. “They (the imperialists) believe,” states the dispatch from | Shanghai to the Journal of Commerce, “firstly, that the falling off of | exports from the United States to China is but the natural effect of that “laissez faire” policy on he part of the United States and Great Britain, which has resulted in the abandonment of China to anarchy.” | And they insist on a policy with more blood and iron. | When the boss sheet speaks of the “laissez faire” policy being followed in China they overlook the fleet of gunboats, cruisers and U. S. marines in China. On the very day that this dispatch was printed the news was published in all capitalist papers of gunboats on the Yangtze river shooting at and killing many Chinese workers and peas- ants. Without stop for the past four years, American mlitary forces have been waging war against the revolutionary workers and peasants of China. What the bosses want now is a more intensified war against the Red Armies in China. They fear the growing victories of the Com- | munist Party of China, | The slump in trade in China, is a part of the world crisis, The im- | perialists are becoming frantic over their loss of markets. A trade mis- sion is being sent to China and Japan from Great Britain siniilar to the D’Albernon mission which went to Latin America in 1928. The | New York Times (July 31), reporting this fact said: “Britain’s most determined bid for Far Eastern markets since the war was initiated today when the government announced it was dispatching an economic | mission to Japan and China.” | The imperialists are getting worried about their markets, While they fight with one another for control of these markets, they follow the same course in sending more ships and troops to crush the growing revolution of the Chinese masses. The workers in the imperialist The same bosses who | countries must not stand by with hands folde¢ are responsible for unemployment and wage-cuts at home, who pre- pare war against the Soviet Union, want to drown the Chinese revo- jution in a sea of blood. Make them keep their hands off! Chinese revolution. Support the Chinese Red Peasants Groups Grow SHANGHAI (IPS).—The peasant league in the provinces on the East- ern River and in the east of the) provinee of Kwantung are steadily| increasing their activity according to reliable reports here. The peasant leagues in the districts of Tsiochow and Meikang have over 300,000 members. The peasant council in Haifung has 200,000 organized peas- ants behind it. In the neighboring districts there are peasants associ-| ations with 70,000 members. The} illegal Communist newspaper “Shan- ghai Pao” reports that in many areas the peasant organizations have been developed into fighting organizations. The organization of the peasant women in the east of the Kwantung province is proceeding satisfactorily. Peasant women are beginning to take part in the peasant mass meet- ings. There have even been cases Capture of Hankow by China Red Army Near (Continued fram Page One) troops, armed with 45,000 modern rifles, numerous field guns, air- planes, radio, ete., are advancing. ee ee (Wireless by Inprecorr) BERLIN, August 1—‘“Tempo” reports that foreign powers have advised Chinese generals to liquidate warfare among themselves and con- centrate against Communism. ae The fall of Hankow, the second largest industrial city in China and once the seat of a revolutionary government in 1927, is imminent. According to Associated Press re- ports, “Communist troops in |un- known numbers surrounded Han- kow. Consular authorities said de- spite nationalist promise to org:nize a drive against the invaders, the! situation was questionable because the nationalist forces were not strong enough even to support their own pickets.” Reports from several sources indicate that about 4,000 Red troops are marching on Kiu- kiang, a very import Yangtze port lying between Shanghai and Han- kew. With the collapse of the Nanking government, Wang Chin-wei, the leader of the “left” Koumintang, who is now busy assisting the Northern militarists, Yen Hsi-Shan Qand Feng Yu-Hsian, in organizing a new government, has proclaimed his willingness to step into the shoes of Chiang Kai-shek as the champion of the counter-revolution in China. Declaring that “the gravest prob- lem” in China today “is red im- perialism” and that “China’s fight againstewhite imperialism” has be- come a problem “of the past,” Wang Chin-wei has come forward to bid for the position of the chief imperialist tool in China. But if Chiang Kai-shek has com- pletely failed to check, not to ay annihilate, the revolutionary move: ment in China despite his three years of the most brutal terror, it will even be more hopeless for Wang Chin-wei. The revolt in China grows out of the inherent contradic- tions of imperialism and native re- action in China and the ideology of Bolshevism is already so deeply intrenched into the masses that no amount of white terror or other counter - revolutionary suppressive measures can take it out. The cap- italist press has to admit that “dozens of Communist newspap- ers. . . have appeared throughout tha country despite the efforts of ‘ where 80 per cent of the partici- pants at these meetings were wo- men. In the north-west of Kwan- tung the peasant women are armed with rifles and hand grenades and have taken an active part in the fighting. The peasantry in the thickly populated south-west area of the province of Kiangsi is taking an active part in the Communist movement. The peasant defense or- ganizations here have over 240,000 members and 100,000 organized young peasants who do the red army good service. In the Kan River area the red troops have surrounded the Nanking forces and cut off all connection with other troops. Food and ammu- nition supplies have been cut off, A military demonstration took place aleng the Kan River and the red army and thousands of armed peas- ants took part. Spread Fight for Jobless Insurance (Continued from Page One) Bill is in direct contrast to the boss collaboration of Green and the A. F. of L., and the fake schemes of Senator Wagner and his ilk. The Wagner bill, which was ap- proved by Hoover, calls for a com- mission of the leading bosses to “gather information of unemploy- ment.” The unemployed workers do not need this information. They need and demand relief. This the bosses will never give them unless they fight for it. All workers will approve of the Workers’ Social Insurance Bill. But that is not enough. They must come out and fight for it. Present it in all working class organiza- tions. Get other workers to discuss it and demand its adoption by con- gress and the senate. The workers must develop behind this bill a mighty force. Foxbidden to Talk On Sacco Case in Boston BOSTON, Mass., Aug. 1.—Mayor Curley has refused the municipal bandstand to the International La- bor Defense for a Sacco-Vanzetti memorial meeting on August 22, the anniversary of the execution of the two martyrs, “As far as the state and city are concerned,” said the mayor, “this case ended three years ago”—that is, with the execution. But the ghosts of Sacco and Vanzetti ob- stinately refuse to sleep. EXONERATES MURDERER HELENA, Aug. 1.—Negro work- ers got another taste of capitalist justice today with the release of Ed. Hickey, deputy sheriff, who last Wednesday shot Mrs. Cora Brown and her hasband in the back. Mrs. Brown died immediately. Demand the release of Fos- ter, Minor, Amter and Kay- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. the national government authorities to keep them suppressed,” and de- spite the lie of the Trotskyists that not a single Communist daily is published in China, Bolshevism and the Soviet movement is to stay and develop on Chinese soil. Temporary set backs are possible but the gen- eral trend of development will al- ways be upward, WORLD WORKERS |Demand the Dissolution ot the Fish Committee! DEMONSTRATE ON AUGUST FIRST Shanghai (Continued trom Page One) unemployment, the workers in the big iities preparing for revolu- tionary action in revision with the Red Armies. It is also clear that the rapid collapse of the Nanking government and the great success of the Soviet movement destroy whatever illusion the workers have in the Koumintang and thus strengthen their reolutionary deter- mination and enhace their fightiz spirit. This naturally arouses much apprehension on the part of the imperialists and the Koumin- tang. Shanghai is like an armed camp on August 1. Martial law was de- elared. Machine guns were mounted. Barbed wire entangle- ments were built around the French concession and the communication between the French concession and the Chinese city was closed. But, of course, none of these prepara- tions stopped the demonstration in the International Concession where revolutioary and Communist ban- ners were displayed and leaflets distributed, 25.8 (Wireless by Imprecorr) PARIS, Aug. 1—L’Humanite re- ports that trainloads of many com- panies of military guards, etc., were dispatched to the strike districts yesterday. Troops stationed &t Versailles are ordered to Paris to prevent demonstrations. * 8 6 Late capitalist reports state that 200 “preventive arrests” were made. Among the arrested is comrade Florimond Bonte, the managing editor of L/Humanite, the central organ of the Communist Party of France. In addition to the munici- pal gendarmes, 2,000 republican guards, both mounted and afoot, were mobilized and are posted at strategical points. Lak sare) BERLIN, Aug. 1.—The police of Berlin will be armed with carbines, short rifles, and reserves will be mobilized beginning from evening twilight. A big and militant anti- war demonstration is expected. a ee (Wireless by Imprecorr) VIENNA, Aug. 1. — Seventy workers were arrested at Budapest as a preventive measure against Aug. 1. Mass arrests were made in the provinces. * . * Late capitalist reports state that 100 additional Communists were arrested in Budapest, bringing the total number of the arrested throughout the Balkan countries to over 300. Leaflets were distributed in Budapest despite police prohibi- tions and arrests. . * + A big Communist demonstration took place in Vienna, Austria, 5 ke oe (Wireless by Imprecorr) PRAGUE, Aug. 1—The five Communists who were arrested durin ga search of the office of the Communist Party, three weeks ago went on a hunger strike, protesting against the arbitary imprisonment. The hunger strike is also intended as a sign of solidarity with the demonstrators. * * * MADRID, Spain, Aug. 1.—Police and civil guards are ordered by the government to be ready to suppress demonstrations here. * 2 «© (Wireless by Imprecorr) MOSCOW, Aug. 1.—The culmin- ating point in the demonstration to- day is the handing over of fifty modern bombers to the Red Air Forces built from “Our Answer to Pope Funds.” JUDGE HOWLS AT ATTACK ON “CS.” Los Angeles Courtroom Scene of Confusion LOS ANGELES, Cal., Aug. 1.— Pandemonium reigned yesterday in the court where ten workers are on trial for taking part in the April 26 unemployment demonstration here. Frank Spector, Communist Party section organizer, sentenced to 42 years on the Imperial Valley crim- inal syndicalism charge, was testi- fying in his own defense, in the present case. The prosecutor demanded, in a loud and ringing voice, and in an obvious attempt to still further prejudice the already prejudiced jury, if Spector “was not a felon.” Spector answered just as loudly: “No, I do not recognize any convic- tion of the capitalist courts. The working class does not recognize the sentence in the Imperialist Valley trial!” They Don’t Want to Hear. Both the prosecutor and the pudge yelled to him to “keep quiet.” Spector continued, and told of the Imperial Valley fake trial, and the reasons for the railroading to jail of the Agricultural Workers Indus- trial League organizers there. ! | against wage-cuts and speed-up, how | |to fight against the imperialist war | | Big Demonstration At) which the capitalist class is rapidly | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, (Continued from Page One) of workers how to fight for unem- ployment insurance, how to fight preparing. Your work is a part and parcel of the general capitalist at- tack against the working class. Workers can appear before you only as class prisoners before an enemy tribunal. You have in this job a complete united front of all enemies of the workers who have sold themselves bag and baggage to the capital- ists. That agent of the Roman pope, the ignorant and _ obscurantist “Father” Walsh, you invited as your first’ witness to establish how the | terrible *“foreign bolsheviks” are | the Y.C.L., the Young Pioneers and ; 5 ; ne is Beir s Q 9 i the kers - and as soon as he finished testi-|¢ ‘this committee, and of which |!easues, cheered continuously the | Workers Industrial Union,” or “Tex- fying he ran to Rome to report to his boss, the head of a foreign state, on the “good work” he had done in} America.. You invite Matthew Woll, whose evidence shows him to be the |central figure of a conspiracy of white-guard czarist emigres to em- broil the United States in a war against the Soviet Union, and who in his position at the head of the Civic Federation and simultaneously as the real head of the, American Federation of Labor, serves his cap- italist brothers-in-arms equally well, smashing strikes and diverting the working class helpless into the hands of the bosses. Youn invite the professional union-smasher a n d blacklister of workers, Charles G. Wood, that combination of “concili- ator of labor” and police agent, whose “work” has aroused even the protest of more farsighted capital- ists. You make clear to the whole world that the socialists are also your allies, those socialists whose only ambition is to gain the favor of the capitalists so that they can be granted the opportunity to rule “more efficiently” in the interests of the capitalist class. What is really the force that is “undermining American _ institu- tions” today, that brings hundreds of thousands of workers into the street in protest against capital- ism? We have no wish to minimize the importance of the activities of the Communist Party and the rev- olutionary trade unions. But the basic factor undermin- ing the stability of capitalism is that capitalism is unable to feed the masses, capitalism is starving the workers in the midst of the greatest overproduction. You can never make the millions of workers see the “justice” or the “logic” of the present system in which thousands of tons of food in New York are deliberately stroyed every week in order to keep prices and profits high, while hun- dreds of thousands of workers are starving for want of that very food. The workers think the system re- sponsible for those things is crim- inal and idiotic and should be done} away with. This is the force that is undermining American (capital- ist) institutions. Why are you so enraged against the Union of Socialist Soviet Repub- | lies? Because that country is a liv- ing example to the workers of the whole world, that not only is cap- italism a cr:.:inal and idiotic sys- tem, but that it is unnecessary. In the Soviet Union the workers have learned how to get along very well without capitalists, better than they ever got along before in all history. They seized power out of the hands of the capitalists, estab- lished a workers’ government and proceeded to rebuild the economic system on a socialist basis instead of a capitalist basis. In the Soviet Union production increased 30 per cent this year; in the United States of America pro- duction decreased 20 per cent. In the Soviet Union unemployment de- creased 40 per cent; in the U. S. A. it increased 200 per cent. In the Soviet Union the farmers are rapidly passing over to large-scale social- ized machine farming and are em-)| erging from old-age poverty; in the U. S, A. the farmers are being} bankrupted by the millions by the agrarian crisis. The workers of the Soviet Union showed the workers of all countries that it is possible, and they showed how it is to be done, That is why all capitalists, including those serv- ing on this investigating committee, fear and hate the Soviet Union. It is not the “conspiracies” of Moscow that you fear. It is the very existence of the Soviet Power in Russia, an inspiration to the work- | ers everywhere who suffer from un- | employment and exploitation under | capitalism, that you fear. And one| of your objects, besides your fight against the demand for ‘anemploy- | ment insurance, besides your fight to put across wage-cuts and speed up the workers in the shops, besides your desire to outlaw the revolu- tionary workers’ organizations—be- sides all this, one of your objects | is to help prepare war against the | Soviet Union which you wish to destroy. because of its tremendous | influence upon all workers, and be- | cause you hope perhaps to tem-| porarily “cure” your deep crisis by the desperate expedient of war and} by seizure of the Soviet territory for capitalism again. We say openly to you, as we say to the entire working class, that the workers, in order to fight against starvation, must at the same time fight against your damned imperialist war. The workers must defend their only reliable stronghold, the workers’ fatherland, the Soviet Union. And when you force the workers into war in spite of their resistance, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1930 ™ Page Five * So Textile Unionist Is | Arrested at Mill Gate} (30,00 IN N.Y. MANCHESTER, N. H., Aug. 1.— | A hundred workers gathered before | ne es | a mill gate here to listen to J.| in spite of their protests, the | workers 1 proceed stubbornly, step by step, to transform your i ist war against the Soviet Union into a civil war of workers against capitalists. | You raise a cry against the rev-| olutionary workers, charging us with being the bearers of “violence | Krantz, organizer of the National| i R DAY sexe Workers’ Union, expose the| ‘ kg |horrible conditions in the Amoskeag | | ‘mill. K z urged the workers to join the N. T. W. and to come out} Pledge Defense of the! August 1 nd demonstrate against] 2 pee Tae + _|the coming imperialist war. | Soviet Union, China | “After speaking ten minutes, the| ann bt shed.” But it is | ate a police, called by the mill bosses, ar-| and bloodshed.” But it is a matter| (Continued From Page Onc.) _| rested Krantz. He was afterward | of ‘record in this committee that! enter from the north, however, and jreleas of your Te ic vealtae the ele the crowd continued to grow until | tionary work Look at the dead fodies of Hila May Wiggins, Steve | that no police attacks on the actual zalez, Herzel Weisenberg, killed by |T0W4, at Union Square took place. |- the police on the streets or by your| Under a clowdless sky, bathed in ie ienda?™” ofthe: American adorac | glaring sunlight, defying some more | tion of Labor. Look at the mon-{S¥™mer heat, workers with red strous Iynchings of Negro workers, |P2dges and buttons, holding up the Neetatigiclincae Meare weal ia the [ted banners of the Communist Party, |the end. Is: j The demonstration was unique in| Pioneers came with banners and ards, “Defend the Soviet Union” Yot one cent for war,” etc. Se The Jobless Arrive. ne Unemployed Councils of the} various unions marched in from all ponits, carrying slogans in many color: oin the Unemployed Coun- lthere is not even a suggestion of |8Peakers from three platforms, who | tile Workers,” or “Independent Shoe investigating, on the part of cap-|t0ld of the causes of imperialist war,| Workers,” or whatever the union| litalist congress. You are not the|f the plans now being made for) might be. | enemies of “violence and bloodshed,” |e next war, of the meaning of im, un: as themselves appeared i “8 cas the Fish investigation and the em-|_. 3 ¢; | |you are the foremost practitioners I ages ¢ Uni vodnais with their banners, al: Notable | jof violence and bloodshed against |P@78°es on Soviet Union pros * among them was the striking sign | the workers and Negroes. Demand Release of Jobless Leaders. | of the Marine Workers Industrial The Communists help the work- | An enormous shout was rasied to| Union: “In the last war we fought ers and Negro masses to organize and fight against your lynchings, against your violence and blood- | shed, and for complete equality | and self-determination for the Ne- vote to send a telegram of greetings to Foster, Minor, Amter and Ray-| mond, now serving three years be-| cause on March 6 on the ve ot where the demonstration yesterd: | gro masses. took place, a tremendous crowd | The Communists organize the| unemployed and striking wor | workers to fight against wage-cuts | elected them to present demands for for the capitalists; in the next war we fight for the working class.” Speaking began about 5:20. The loud speaker failed to work, and speeches were made as in previous demonstrations from three stands in diferent, sections of the crowd. Sam Dar as chairman, opened the of to fight shoulder to shoulder for the defeat of capitalism and a world Soviet government. Chinese First Speaker. “It is fitting,” said Darcy, to in- troduce as the first speaker a Chin- | ese worker, representing that Chin- ese Soviet movement against which the capitalist powers are preparing attack.” James Low, the Chinese worker, pledged the support. of. the Chinese workers for the overthrow of cap- italism, and demanded.the solidarity of the world’s workers with the Chinese Soviet power. Otto Huiswood, Negro worker, and Communist, spoke directly in answer to the Fish Committee fake evidence that there are “only 50 | American Negro Communists.” “There are many times 50,” said Huiswood, amidst thunderolus cheers, “and there will be hundreds of thousands before long.” Now Organize! Jack Johnstone, speaking in the name of the T.U.U.L. told of the necessity of continuing the splendid spirit of this demonstration in an organized form, in the revolutionary unions and the unemployed councils, “The working class has a powerful movement” he said, and “it must be made more powerful.” Other speakers will be reported in the next issue of the Daily Worker, Word from other citles than Yonkers had not arrived at the time of going to press, because of the time difference. In Yonkers, a badly beaten worker telephoned that the police had smashed the demon- stration, beaten up everybody, and arrested all in charge, |and against the murderous speed-up junemployment insurance to the} administration. | {in the factories. ‘Tammany Hall vorkers N Torle |. ‘The Communists demand that the| Cheering for the jobless slesders| We Oe ne ee |, 7! n | J ; themselves to unite with the work- | billions of dollars being spent for | lasted for several minutes. | ers at Tni | i | 2 F |ers of the Soviet Union and of the | War and war preparations shall be} A similar outburst of cheering, a}| _ Prek 4 whole world to defeat any attack used for social insurance for the | mighty roar that could be heard for | Se ay es = workers, |blocks, came in approval of the|°™ tte First Workers Republic, and meeting with a statement that the Support the Daily Worker Drive! Get Donations! Get Subs! Strike Against Wage-Cuts!~ Demand Unemployment Insurance? The Communists demand and fight | resolution demanding no war on the; for the seven-hour day and the five- | Soviet Union, or on the Chinese revo- | day week for all workers, | lution, demanding the end of the em- The Communists demand the dis- de-| solution of the Fish anti-labor com- mittee. These are the real “crimes” of | the Communists in the eyes of all | capitalists and supporters of capital- | ism. These are the reasons why you! }sent to prison the unemployment | delegation — Foster, Minor, Amter and Raymond. This is why you can- not even depend upon your own} hand-picked juries to send Commu-| nists to prison, but must deny them | their constitutional right, rush them before corrupt and criminal Tam- many judges whose crimes stink to high heaven even in capitalist so-} | ciety, and who, because they are| themselves criminals, rejoice to send Communists to prison on any pre- text. These are the reasons why six labor organizers in Georgia (includ- ing two girls and two Negroes) find the capitalist state demanding the | death sentence for the crime of or- ganizing joint meetings of white} and Negro workers. These are the reasons why seven labor organizers in Imperial Valley, |Cal., are sent to prison for 42 years,| |for the “crime” of organizing an} agricultural workers union. These are the reasons why this investigating committee is seeking for pretexts to enact new laws, new/ measures, to still further and more | effectively suppress the working | class. The workers see growing unem-| ployment, wage-cuts, starvation, and | violent suppression as their lot in | the United States under capitalism. | They see in the Soviet Union a) great country where unemployment | |is being abolished, where social in-| | surance protects every man, woman, |and child, where wages constantly | increase, where all are fed, and where the workers themselves con- trol the government, Can you wonder that they turn | more and more to the Soviet Union, ‘and to the Communist Party which has made all these achievements possible? The Communist Party declares that also in the United States the working class, learning the lessons taught by the Russian October Rev- olution and its great leader, Lenin, will also establish the government of the workers and farmers and abolish the economic system of cap- italism. “If that be treason, make the most of it.” CENTRAL COMMITTEE, COMMUNIST PARTY, U. S. A. The Daily Werker is the Party’s | best instrument to make contacts | among tke masses of workers, to build a mass Communist Party. SAILIN | SOVIET | jobless insurance, | ties, to the war-monger Woll and the | bargo on Soviet products demand-| ing that the war funds be used for Every reference by every speaker to the Fish Committee, to the repub- lican, democratic and socialist par- rest of the A. F. L, bureaucracy, | was met with hearty booes. Buy Daily Worker. Great quantities of literature: Daily Workers, the special leaflet of the Communist Party entitled, “For the Working Class Against the Capi- talist Class—Vote Communist,” La- | |bor Unity, the little pamphlet, “A | |New War Is Coming,” and union | publications, were distributed sold. | A large number of police were on the grounds, and partially hidden up | the streets early in the afternoon. The crowd began to assemble an| hour and a half before the time set, | 5 p.m, The police tried to discourage them. They did not actually club anybody, but they threatened and tried to move them on, The crowds stuck, however, and grew rapidly. There were about 15,000 by 4.45 and fully 25,000 by| the time the meeting started. Manw groups marched in a body to the demonstration. The Young or VIDAOBRERA (WORKERS’ LIFE) Spanish Weekly Organ of the Comunist Party will be issued regularly each week Beginning Sept. 1, 1930 | Subscribe Now! a | RATES: 1 year $2.50; 6 months $ 3 months Tic SINGLE COPY 6 CENTS Bundles of 50 copies or more at 3 cents per copy. Send All Subs and Orders to “VIDA OBRERA” 30 Union Sq., Third Floor SPECIAL AUGUST FIRST AND ELECTION CAMPAIGN IS: JUST OUT, ORDER BUNDLES IN ADVANCE! FARM IN THE PINES Situated tn Pine Forest, near Mt Lake. German Vable Kates: %16— $18, Swimming and Fishing. Our Doors Are Open! Workers of All Races and Nationalities Come! Sanigaibntneeeee wwuwvrwvwvwy WINGDALE, N. Y. Where finest comradeship prevails Well-known place for a long vacation Where food is healthful and plentiful SPORTS-SONG—-THEATRE OUR BUSES LEAVE 110TH ST. 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. Am Ln, im, Li Le, Ar, Comrade KRANESS musical director, requests that all comrades playing in- struments, should kindly bring them along. By Train: From Grand Central or 125th St. to Wingdale, N. ¥. 110TH STREET TELEPHONE: 1 MONUMENT 0111 As Always™ Spend Your Vacation at Camp Nitgedaiget > FIRST PROLETARIAN |p NITGEDAIGET)> CAMP—HOTEL ; Hotel with hot and cold water in every room. Bungalows with electric lights. 4 Tents—to remind you the old days. Cultural Program for the Summer of 1930 The Artef Studio (Mass theatre with the Artef) Comrade Shaeffer will conduct singing. M. OBERKIRCH Box 78 KINGSTON. N. ¥ for the UNION TSF VUCCCVCTVVCVCCCVCT Cultural Program—Comrades Olgin and Jerome Athletics, games, dances, theatre, choir, ‘lec- tures, symposiums, ete. CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. PHOND BEACON 731, N. ¥. PHONE: ESTABROOK 1400 By Train: From Grand Central every hour. pA AA A 24 rrr + For a splendid vacation and an edu- cational trip to the land of the Soviets. vv August 16 New Liner STATENDAM August 27 Cunarder BERENGARIA Join One of the Groups! World Tourists, Inc., 175 Fifth Ave., N.Y. (Steamship Tickets to All Parts of the World) ALGonquin 6656 Ss senate CAMP FIRE AND CONCERT will be given at STETSON’S FIELD TONIGHT, August 2, at 30 EEN AN ATTRACTIVE PROGRAM Hi ARRANGED. ALSO B