The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 7, 1930, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, Page Three Latest Report of Dailv Worker $25,000 Emergency Campaign On July 18, 1930, a final appeal was made by the Central Committee of the Communist Party for the liquidation of the ten thousand dol- lars deficit on the emergency fund for $25,000, Since July 18 the fol- lowing report shows that $1,749.29 1 was collected, leaving a balance of $7,787.57 still to be raised. Although over $15,000 was raised for the em- ergency fund of $25,000, how- ever the balance should be raised in order to make possible to spread Section 5, Harris. ....... Rl, Sec. 1.. Nitgedaiget Koenigsburg . Sec. 5, N.Y.C. . Sec, 3, N.Y.C. Unit R2, Sec, 1, N.Y.C. Italian Workers, Staten Island. Sec. 4, N.Y.C. ....... Fraternick, N.Y.C. Unit 7, Sec. 5, N.Y.C. G. A. Scherf, N.Y.C. ... Alex Svidovitch, Detroit, Section 7, N, age a & ‘ i Section 6, Unit 3, N.Y. 3) more effectively the Daily Worker |Camp Ney Leben, N.Y. On| and give the every day hammer |‘ N.Y.C. 60 blows to American imperialism and | + their fascist agents—the Greens and |S the Wolls who are now carrying on| an open attack against the Soviet | Union. 5 Comrades, send in all available) funds, send in your subscription lists, liquidate the balance due on the $25,000 emergency fund. The following is the report of!s donations received since July 18 and} § collected to July 29, 1930: aaotion Walter Bweeay, Sioux City. Benticn Section Section } 25|H. Janove, Bronx, n Mawr Summer Schi tion 5, Unit 5, N.Y. . Unit 1F, N.Y, , N.Y. * tion, A i Modi Percy Quick, Orange, N. 2.00 gamp | f solder Allentown 30] Bretton a 5 ection 1 Sunnie, Phila. ie 1, eo H. Gold, ‘Trenton Garp Unity WY Unit 201, Phila. Recent oma, tion 1, Unit 302, Phila. . Hection 4 4 Unit 101’ (Freed), . ONY Unit 103, Phila. ’. Xa peytler, NYC. Section % Phi ‘amp Unity Winedale, M. Novak, Phi Mateo, Staten Island Section 1, N.Y. Anna Kronhardt, NY. | sale raids and arrests have been |zave was that he had discovered -0 | ment.” | Chinese workers to his | misa in which 9 were killed, ; | fake character of the nationalist op- Hy position, ‘| says the sugar situation in Cuba “FACES JAIL FOR BLOODY MACHADO JAILS 100 TOILERS IN CUBAN RAIDS Fears Mass Uprising) As Crisis Deepens | HAVANA, Cuba, Aug. 6.—Whole- carried out here against revolu- tiqnary working class organizations by bloody Machado, president of Cuba, and puppet of the National City Bank of New York. Over 100 workers were arrested, including 50 Chinese, The excuse which Machado “a plot to overthrow the govern- This is about the fiftieth plot which Machado’s fevered brain has concocted within the past year. Twenty-one of the arrested work. ers were brought before Judge Jose Vivances, a Machado puppet, and held over for indictment. Bail of $3,000 each was set against them. Machado is preparing to deport the blood- brother, Chiang Kai-shek, where certain execution awaits them. At the same time, Machado declares an amnesty for the “nationalists” who were involved in the clash at hp e also grants them the right to form a political party. This shows the * In Cuba a severe crisis is shaking the Machado regime. Mass discon- tent with Machado, and his Wal! Street cohorts, is increasing, The U./ S. Department of Commerce has become acute, “business gener- ally is pictured as being at a very low level.” Six sugar mills have closed down for a year. Five more declare they will shut down. MARRYING WHITE Negro Worker Victim; vee iu Camp Nitzedniget, Heneon, NY. ignnn mt ioe iN 6) WE +120 Clifton Unit, Phila. . 8.40] Ukrainian , Unit 303, Phila 280 Seetlon 4 Baronah, Phila. 3. Section L. Gittelman, Phila. 7.00| Seetion Camp Tax, Phila. 40,82 mection M. Gittelman, Phila. 2.25] section 1) Unit 102, Feduck, by . = Unit 102, Tulinsky, Phila. ... 1: Unit 308, Phila, ...... PICS aes M a dees Unit 304, (Sunny) Phila. 1.89 G. Russ, Phila. .... 2.75 German sees Phila. rip Emergency Fund Hee Ambras, N, J. ...- 2.75 ‘o July mi FEE cae Phila, ort Balance still needed ‘aylor, 5 a _—_—_— Unit 302, Phila. = ape I, W. 0., Branch 82, Phila. .. 20.25 A R Workers of Camp Harmony . 20,00 Boroff Chichagoff, Alaska .. 5.00 Willie Peck, | Food Workers Union, N.Y... 1.00 VILLE Collected by Joe Zielinski, | Chicago, Ill. seaseseeeees + 7.00 Russian Prog. Women’s 4 M. Aid Society, Chicago ... 25.00} Repulse Lewis’ Thugs John Fiocchi, Minois . Workmen’s W. Frankfort, Colorado . W. Zubyk, Rochester, N.Y... 1.00 Hungarian Workers S. B. Association, Colliers, W. Va. 2.50 Aaron Spivak, Jacksonville, Florida ..sccscesseeesees 1.00 C. Rosenbaum, New Haven, Conn. ...-seeeeveeee seers 10.00 (Working Women’s Council) C. A. Baucard, Oswego, Michigan ..-+:...ccssss+s 10.00 Workers’ Club Picnic, West Allis, Wisc, .......- 35.00 Mrs. Marie Pasterazqk, Hegewisch, Ill. ....-..-.+. 4,00 Eteepain Coop. Society, Worcester, Mass, (Contributions received).. 199.50 Matt Foulianovich, | for the defense of the Soviet Union. of Capitalist Hate HAGERSTOWN, Md., Aug. 6.— Because Charles A. Boe, 24-year old Negro worker, and Mary A. Cleary, whi, fell in love and got married. Boe today faces a term of ten year jin the pen for having transgresse: At August 1 Meet one of the vicious laws by which saps | capitalism degrades and isolates the MINERSVILLE, Pa., Aug. 6,— Negro race. August First was a real red day in| Under capitalism, 29 states have | Minersville, Pa. In spite of threats|!aws which make marriage between | to attack the meeting by the Lewis| Negroes and whites illega] and pun- machine, the miners enthusiastically | ishable with imprisonment, Mary- rallied at the first anti-war de-: land is one of these states. The monstration arranged by the Com-| white bourgeoisie pretend that these munist Party with Chas. Mitcheli, of |laws are for the purpose of con- New York, as the speaker. In two serving the non-existent “race pur- hours he outlined the Party pro: | ity” which they prate so much about gram for struggle in the present | and practice so little, but in reality period against imperialist war and| the laws are used to sear deeper the brand of inferiority against the The miners receive it enthusiastic-} Negroes and deprive Negro women | ally as their way of action agains: of any comeback against white men the bosses and the tools of the Mine- |, who rape or fool them. owners, the Lewises, Wolls and the} The Communist Party denounces Greens. all discriminatory laws against the Minersville, Pa., has been known| Negro workers and demands the | I.W.W. Aids Bosses As Phila. M.W.I.U. Prepares to Fight | | Cuts Against Longshoremen | 4 1 d Wh aris Daily Worker: The I. W. W. is being used by dores in Philadelphia to split and betray the workers who tojl on the The Marine Workers Industrial Un river front. so many of the longshoremen that the bosses and their tools—the I. L. A. have come to an agreement with the 1, W. W. to split the work- ers, At present the boss stevedores are making preparations to cut the wages of the workers and cut down the gangs and increase the size of the drafts to be loaded on the ships. And the men are aroused over the Betrayal policy of the bosses’ unjon, the I. L. A. who will not fight for the interest of these oppressed work- ers and urges the men to work in cooperation with the bosses. I. W. W, Splitters, Even now the I. L. A. is pre- paring a sell-out. The longshoremen are joining the M.W.I.U, and are going to hold a strike conference. Alarmed at this the bosses and their tools, the I.L.A., have now invited the LW.W. to, split the workers and the I.W.W. has responded to the call of thejr masters—the capitalist ship owners and stevedores—and are issuing leaflets calling on the workers to beware of the Communists who are actively engaged in organizing the} tongshoremen. Bosses’ Agents, Nothing in the LW.W. leaflets tells of the rotten working condi- tions or the wage cuts of the thous- ands of unorganized longshoremen on the coastwise seabord whom the LW.W. and the IL.A. refused to organize, nor do they point to the fact that before the M.W.I.U. came to Philadelphia the wages of the longshoremen were cut, gangs cut down and when a worker bought a button in the I.L.A. to work he had to bribe the delegates and foremen, to get hired. Yet the I1.W.W. who at the present is like the A. F. of L., a tool of the bosses, never came near the river front in Philadelphia. But now that the workers are faced with a strike and a sell-out by the bosses’ union, the LLL.A., the LW.W. is stepping in, splitting the workers and attacking the Communists be- longing to the Marine Workers In- 'Seamen Expose Sbtes On Boats’ | New York. Philadelphia, Pa. | Daily Worker: | The second day out of the S.S the capitalist shipowners and steve-| Imlay, of the C. D. Mallory Steam- ship Co., a stool-pigeon, by name ion has been lining up| Leo Tucker, showed a M.W1U. —— - —— | card to the captain and pointed out] the delegate on board. This stool | Ul the officers mess. | | | All seamen are warned against | | him. He is about 5 feet 8 inches in | height, dark cor plexion and speaks Spanish and Rnglish. —M.W.LU, DELEGATE, BEGIN ORGANIZE Start Drive to Unionize Fields Pittsburgh, Pa. | ‘ | er: | Carlson, the bird that testified at | the Fish Committee, was in Balti- | | more last winter. He was starving Comrade Editor jand we took him in, fed and gave | Now as our Second National|this spy a place to sleep, Miners Convention passed by with-|. We found out later that he went out even a police break-up, and with| t® the Daily News and gave some such a success, let us start concen | !\'tid stories about certificates show trating with the metal miners in a| ing birth in Texas but he doesn’t greater way. As the coalfields have | know anythin, about that section of Aone it the country, He has an A. B, ticket ‘As we see the coal fields are far | With his name over an erasure tnat ahead of us metal miners. For that | ™ust have belonged to someone else. dangerous metal as I call it and as —SEAMAN. it is with the metal miners in this position. Not organized far enough west and not strong. Now keep in consideration this one point, comrades. The steel that makes the strong war firing weap- ons and the dangerous copper that tore up so many a man, these metals will be used in the imperialists’ we With the success in building the | | Metal Miners Union strong, we are |helping build the coalfields strong If we succeed in this, we such will not fail in bringing the whole coun try into a militant organizati —I. R. HAIE Old R. R. Man, He Must Work 16 Hours to Keep His Job Callicoon, N, Y. laily Worker: “Yes, the company has been pretty fair to me.” This was the introduction of the 63-year-old sta- tion attendant at Callicoon to a de- scription of his working conditions. He takes care of the staton prem- |ises at the Erie railroad depot at this little mountain town in the Catskills. “Of course, I work a | little too long—16 hours a day. You justrial Union. But the workers on the water- front in Philadelphia are joining the fighting Marine Workers Industrial Union and are going to fight under its leadership against the coming wage-cut. The M.W.I.U. calls on all workers to support the Philadelphia longshoremen. All workers engaged in the marine industry must join and | build up their own union—-the Ma: rine Workers Industrial Union. —JOE GRALICH. Little Demand For Harvest Hands With Farmers Broke Bismark, N. D. Daily Worker: Workers who come west, expect-|whac conditions prevailed a year |t? do without working anyway. ing to make a “stake” in the harvest fields, find their hopes shattered. The labor supply is much larger than the demand. When work can be had, wage: average not more than $3 per day, which is considered very low. In order to get work, some are work- already talk about what the times will be next winter, remembering |ago. The coming winter will be ten | times worse, they say. This is a “free” country we are told. Everyone has a chance to hift for himself, make his own |“mark.” But this was only true in | the eighties and nineties of the last know, I’m supposed to work only 12 | hours, but there are so many things to do I can’t get them done in that time. What’s that? Oh, sure, I |get paid for only 12 hours. Yes, | 84 cents an hour. But the company | | has been pretty good to me. At my | | age I'm lucky to have a job. I take care of the mail, keep the station clean, tend to the water pump and | |run the switch engine, Yes, it | |takes up my time. I’ve got only a} few more years to live and I guess Vl) pull through all right if the company keeps me at work. So far they’ve been pretty nice to me in that way. Conditions could be bet- ter, of course, but from what I hear |i’m lucky to have a job. What? Oh no, the Erie doesn’t give us a pension. , I wouldn’t know what Well, yes, I'd rather work only 8 jhours a day but I’ll tell you, we’ve | sot to take what the company gives We've got no union. Oh, I Goodby.” —I. G. | us. guess I'll get along. HAITIANS GET LESSON ON HOW NOT TO FIGHT YANKEE IMPERIALISIM Hoover’s Open Flouting of “Accord” Alarms Foolish “Opposition’—That Doesn’t Oppose x V -kers, Peasants Must Have Revolutionary Policy, Rejecting Bourgeois Misleaders By HARRISON GEORGE. The Haitian Patriotic Union, of bourgeois “nationalist” reformist tendency, is feeling the first breath of the disappointment which is coiaing to it for its servile belly-crawling before U. S. imperialism and its present chief, Hoover. The Haitian bourgeoisie, which disclaims that there is any such thing as a bourgeois class in Haiti, though the caste system is rigidly observed besides the outright economic class differences, went into spasms of delight at the Hoover Commissjon and the provisional pres- idency of the imperialist agent Roy who took over the job of betraying the Haitian people when Borno could no longer do the job. Now a rumored “threat to resign” by Roy is giving the H.P.U. new quivers of apprehension, and they are seeking in all corners to speculate on a supposed conflict between Roy and his Yankee bosses. It is undoubtedly true that Hoover, whom the H.P.U. groveled in front of in wordy admiration when he appointed his Commission, has begun to double-cross them, as the All-America Anti-Imperialist Lea- gue said he would, and since they cannot get Hoover to resign, they can at least speculate that Roy ought to. i The leading complaint of the H.P.U., although not the leading com- plaint of the starving Haitian peasantry, is that Hoover has violated the sacred “accord” between the U. S, A. and its tools which are termed “the Haitian Government,” by appointing a certain Carl Colvin as head of the “Service Technique of Agriculture” of Haiti, when the “accord” provides that he “must be an agronome engineer” while Colvin con- fesses he js nothing more than “a M. S."—whatever this might mean to the Haitian masses. It is added that “the act of nomination has always been considered as a special Haitian privilege.’ Which reveals the longing of the colonial bourgeois intellectuals for a share in the spoils of office— ready to exchange real national independence for part of the imperialist robbery of the masses. “Special privileges” do not, however, exist for colonial peoples, even the petty bourgeoisie, when the interests of im- perialism are at stake. The Filipinos are learning the same thing in Hoover's appointment of Roosevelt. As a sort of amendment to such complaints, the H.P.U. is a rather belated discovery that the Haitian peasants are being robbed of their land by American companies by a “law” apparently made by General Russell of the U. S. Marines in 1926. Nothing has been done about this since that time, and all the H.P.U. reccommends to do about is— nothing. It’s just too bad, that’s all. In reality this doing nothing is doing something, something that objectively helps imperialism to continue its robbery undisturbed, The H.P.U, is also disturbed at General Russell’s proposed return to Haiti in September, to remain—ah, how significantly !—until “the election of Haiti's new president.” The H.P.U. bewails this is some- thing that wasn't in the holy “agreement” with Hoover. Also, that it will “be an incentive for strife and disorder,” though without strife and “disorder” to the imperialist “order,” Haiti will remam in the clutches of imperialism. The Haitian workers and peasants have imperative need of forming their own Communist Party, supported by militant workers’ organiza- tions, trade unions and peasant unions. Without such, and with such real obstacles as the H.P.U., the Haitian masses will gain their inde- pendence only when the proletariat of the United States takes power. You Must Not Miss the Following PAMPHLETS of a Series Prepared by the Lapor ResEARCH Associa- Tion and Published by InTeERNATIONAL PAMPHLET! 0 WAR IN THE FAR EAST, dy Henpy Hau............ . 10 This important subject treated by a newspaperman in close touch with current political developments in the East CHEMICAL WARFARE, by Donato A. CamERon. 10 A discussion of poison gas in the coming war, not as imaginative fiction, but as a scientist’s statement of facts MODERN FARMING: SOVIET STYLE by Anna Louise STRONG ........05...-...< A description of the agricultural revolution in the Russian village Crosby, Minn. ...... teens 1.00 wee nee of the reactionary | abolition of laws against inter-mar-| ing for only $1.50 per day. sree fin ae ach hh de NA WORK OR WAGES, by Grace M. BurnuaM........... 10 Warren Shank, Reap River, outfit, "and yet it company union) riage and points out to the Negro Very few farmers—only the rich-/ Today this “free” talk is all bua || FARM IN THE PINES The author has made a special study of unemployment and social Minois : + 50) niners and their familing were mtr | Workers that only by the overthrow | est—hire any harvest help. Because | anda miserable lie. Only a few. | Situnted tn Pine Forest, near Mt insurance and brings together the latest information James Miller, Baltimore, Md. 3.65) (O08 eir families responded] of the capitalist system can the|of the bankruptcy of the farmers the rich parasites—have it good | Wake. German on this vital subject M. Brown, Branch 52, te Con red per cent to the call of| Negroes achieve full emancipation, | and the terrific drought which has} while the suffering of the mass B18. Swim Econeg, Mich .. 2,00 ieee anata Party, and demon-| with the abolition of lynching and entirely ruined the wheat crop over | js increasing. i M. OBERKIRCH THE STRUGGLE OF THE MARINE WORKERS Akron Tag Day .. 1.25 | view deseacth all discriminatory laws. Only under| wide areas, there is not much de- FARMER Ro 1. Box 78 KINGSTON N.Y GIONS PARES) <A Ania omicupercr. fran aie 20 Collected by Muganis, ised ach luring the meeting organ-|Communism can the workers be! mand for harvest hands this year. of ae Former ed f the Marine Workers? Voice, tlle of the 1 alii Oakland, Cal. .....sces00+ 4.00 | zed attempts by groups of gang-| really free. The, combine, too, of course has itor of the Marine Workers? Voice, tells of the little- sters were made to break it up, but the militancy and determination of the overwhelming majority of the 2 | miners, who rallied around the plat- form, compelled the thugs to aban- Bulgarian So. Slovak Picnic and collections, Gary, Ind. . 24.57 Workmen’s sick Benefit, Branch XI, Chicago, Il. tone Collected by J. Hirss i : don their plang and disa veland, Ohio ....... sees 8,50 4 Pi and ppear. Ustaee Satie: N.Y... 2,00] , This huge rally included practic. Alvie Lipple, Meachone, Ore. 1.00 ally all of the miners here, with L, Neibrif, Brooklyn, N.Y... 5.00|8 Population of 5,000. It shows that 0. J. Arness, Minot, N. D. the roots of the arty are beginning Collections 5.00| t© deepen among the rank and file M. Bultorac, Ironton, Minn. ., 3.001 '™ ners. - Outing proceeds, Chicago, Ill. 25.00] _The Mine, Oil and Smelter Work- Camp Wocolona .... . 39,66 | ¢r8 Union and its militant program L. Katz, Belmar, N. J. 5.00] °f immediate demands will have a Collected yb O, Grenewieh, fertile soil here and its coming into Chicago, II. .......4 Piccas 19,97 | this field cannot be delayed. . Quota of Nucleus, Whiting, Indiana ......+++ Secoecs - 5.00 N.S. Reichenthall, Los Angeles, ASS PROTESTS CB)y. cio ececsecenes . 00 W. Toeffer, Toledo, Ohio 1.00 M. Goldenberg, Roscoe, N, Y. 11.00 S. Matsin, Oakland, Cal. .... .50 W. Kalish, Springfield, Mass. 2.00 Collected by E. Levitt, —_— Portland, Oregon ......... 20.00| WAUKEGAN, Ill, August 6.—In Nick Gegincich, John Odak, spite of threat of police and military Mingo Junction, Ohio . 4,00 | intervention and terror, over a thou- Ukrainian Russian Club - 5.00/sand Negro and white workers held Ex-Soldier, Allentown, Pa. ... 1.00/a splendid demonstration here on Carl Isaacson, Wilkes Barre, Penna. . Camp Wocolo! August 1, The meeting was a great victory for the workers, as it broke the terror of the bosses which has Wadi othe see Re Pen existed for years, and was expressed Collected by A. J. Johnson, in the local papers which an- MONICAMOs lls ahewe's ay ce + 10,00}nounced in large headlines: “Police Tag Day, Cincinnati, Ohiv .. 1.78] Will Halt Red Demonstration,” and 8. Saknan, Brooklyn, N. Y. .. 5.00] in which the Chief of Police stated Brighton Workers, banquet . 10.00|that the Legion, militia, army and Section 2, Unit 13F, N. Y. .. 13.50/navy officers and the entire police Serge Vershicz, N. Y. - 5.00|force would be present, Wasserman, N, Y. .... +, 41 The well-organized defense corps Sect. 5, Unit 7. and the unbroken solidarity of the Sect. 5, Unit 13F . + 5,00) workers prevented any attack on the Sect. 7, Unit 1. + 2.88] meeting. Freshman, N. Y. C. + 5.00 ba Walaa Geo. Tolley, N. Y, C. + 5,00] KENOSHA, Wis., August 6—At- A. Springer, N. Y. C, + 2.00} tempt was made to break up large Anonymous, N. Y. GC, . + 1,00] August 1 demonstration of over a Russian Benefit, N. Y. C..... 5,00| thousand workers, here when the Prospect Workers, N. Y. -75| police and fascists of the American P, Brenner, N. Y. C. .. Sect. 7, Unit 1, N. Y. C, Ukrainian Toilers, N Unit 10F, N.Y.C. sesseee Legion attacked the demonstration and arrested four speakers. The workers resisted militantly for over two hours, and were very much 500 DEMONSTRATE IN READING, PA, Socialist Chiefs Rage Over Exposure READING, Pa., Aug. 6.— Ap- proximately 500 workers partici- pated in the August First demon- stration in this city. Included amongst those present were the leading politicians of the local so- cialist administration, who waxed very hot when they heard Solway and Max Harris, representing the Communist Party, and Lawrence Young, representing the Young Communist League, expose the role and tactics of the socialists in the last world war, as well as in the present city administration of Read- ing. The workers listened attentively to the speakers, and eagerly bought up the Daily Worker and other liter- ature sold at the demonstration. Many of the workers present, mem- bers of the jialist party, ap- proached the speakers and voiced their agreement with the sentiments expressed. Many applications for Party membership have been - mitted by workers who were former- ly members of the socialist party. The August First demonstration was but part of the general activi- ties inaugurated by the Communist Party in Reading. It is planned to run local candidates in the forth- coming elections. Definite organi- zational steps amongst the unerh- ployed, organized and unorganized workers will immediately be instit- uted. A city-wide drive for Party membership will be carried on. aroused by the brutal treatment. A protest meeting is planned. thrown thousands of migratory werkers out of work. Terrible Winter Ahead. Both workers and farmers here Ger DOS RG a hc la ae eens Uses Workers’ Money For Personal Needs NEW ORLEANS, August 6.—“I used the money to remodel my house. I didn’t steal it. I just bor- rowed it,” J. D, Butler, treasurer of Winter Capital lodge No. 595 of the (Negro) Elks, explained when he was taken to task for embezzling the lodge’s funds. This is typical of the Negro petty bourgeois leaders in the Negro fra- ternal organizations, who isolate these organizations from the strug- gles of the Negro masses against lynch terror, unemployment and op- pression and utilize the funds of these organizations, which are large- ly composed of workers, for their own personal interests. The Negro} workers must learn that petty bour. | geois leadership (of whatever race) is opportunist and treacherous, that only genuine working-class leader- ship, with a working-class viewpoint Tens of thousands of work All Communist Party organ: and sympathetic organizatio1 thereby help the Communi SPECIAL PR 100 Buttons 500 Buttons 1000 Buttons Order from the Communist F Order the ‘VOTE COMMUNIST’ BUTTON HELP THE COMMUNIST ELECTION CAMPAIGN! The “Vote Communist” Button Is Just Out! mediately place an order for the bottons. requested to place their order for these bottons and (Larger Orders by Special Arrangements) ers should wear this botton. izations are requested to im- All fraternal ms and trade unions are also ist ELECTION CAMPAIGN. RICE OFFER: $ 4.00 + 15.00 25.00 25th St., N. Y. C, Party, 4 of militant struggle against imperi- alist oppression, can furnish depend- able leadership. | WORKERS’ CO-OPERATIV Santal Midy | prescribed for years for jf] Blectricity water in e OIE Ey, bungalow nging, camp= Kidneys 4g El tires ce Eeupbers. soci Excellent Orchestra Rates reduced for me Bladder Back aches, night rising, burning pas: | sages should be corrected before they | become dangerous. Neglect may be | serious Goa ek to Tone Cabana | the original Santal Midy, used ugh | out the world for half a century. | Santal Midy Regular RESERVATIONS WITH $5. New York Office: 10 East anv} WOCOLONA WALTON LAKE, MONROE, N, Y. (50 Miles from New York) L PROGRAM Unity League to $17 per week MONROE, N, Y., Phone: Monroe 89; E CAMP ating, Face and cal- 1 Aeroplane Rides mbers of Trade Union Rates $21 DEPOSIT TO BE MADE AT 17th Street; Gramerey 1013 known conditions under which seamen and longshoremen do their work and struggle for organization Send Your Orders to the WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 east 1251H sTREET NEW YORK CITY (Special discount rates to organizations) Our Doors Are Open! Workers of All Races and Nationalities Come! ——_. vywuvwvwvvwvw 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 10TR ST. an Ba Ln. A. AND SEVENTA AVENUE: Comrade KRANESS musica! director, requests that all comrades playing in- struments, should — kindly bring them along, Wednesday at 1p, m. By ‘Train: From Grand Central or 125th St. to Wingdale, N, ¥. 110TH STREET TELEPHONE: MONUMENT 0111

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