The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 12, 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)

Lt | enemy hands.” | was one of the leading centers for | war preparations, and that the big | industrialists KER, N LLERS WAY OUT nited With the City Toilers For Fight Minot, N. D. ily Worker: This man Legge certainly is some | pviour” of the farmers. He was ing to “stabilize” the price of | eat. He has succeeded so well) t the price of wheat, since he} an his stunts of “saving” has fopped from $1.25 to 65 cents per ‘shel! Of course, this fellow, as 11 as the whole coterie of cap-} plist “saviours* can’t do anything | jr the farmers. They are not there | x that purpose. Their only mission | to serve the rich, those who rob | Will Reduction Help? Legge says now he has quit buy- (ig wheat, Discovering he made a} ss of it, losing millions of dol-| 's on millions of bushels he bought ist fall. Now, Rowever, he has an- her “sure” remedy which calls for reduction in the wheat acreage of per cent. When millions of work- s in this country, in China and her places, unemployed, getting w wages and starving, the capita]- ts have no other remedy but to t them starve. Some remedy! Acreage reduction—of what value | it? Since 1915 the world acreage | wheat has been increased by :000,000 acres. Production last | ear was 3,888,000,000 bushels of | heat for the whole world; this} ear it will be 4,080,000,000, Some nore “surpluses.” Other countries vat need wheat badly and that ean | ise wheat are certainly not going | » reduce their wheat acreage be- ause Legge says so. Legge Is Wall Street Man. | t is the result? The result ve that Legge’s plan even he might succee! in reduc- | wheat acreage in the U. S.) flat. Farmers will not be| and our people, not even all or farmers will be fed. | [oover and Legge were also go- ng to “help” the eotton farmers. he result of this “help” Ras been | drop in cotton prices. Now despite he fact that tens of millions of | orkers and poor farmers do not have the vlothing they uced, there | s move to reduce the cotton age. ‘ stein--a system that is | led to curtail wheat produc- | when millions of workers do jot have enough to eat, and that! must advocate a reluction in the! sotton acreage when other millions | of workers and poor farmers do not | have enough clothes on their backs is an insane em and does not deserve the workers’ support. —FARMER. ILL, NATL GUARD) _IN WAR TRAINING | Maneuver for “Attack on Reds.” CAMP GRANT, Ill, Aug. 11.— |War maneuvers were carried out on a grand scale here recently, when | Maj. General Frank Parker, com- | |manding general of the Sixth Corps area, visited the Ill. National Guard camp, The soldiers are encamped for 15 days of intensive training. In the maneuvers it was stated that “Chi- | cago is theoretically in the hands of | Red foces,” and that the “blue | forces,” represented by the National | Guard would make an atack to “at- tempt to wrest that section from Recently the Chicago Association @f Commerce, in an article in its ficial organ, declared that Chicago and bankers were proud of their part in advancing military development. PHILADELPHIA SHOE WORKERS MEET FRIDAY PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Aug. 11. The shoe workers here have already elected an organization committee which is to conduct a very ener- getic campaign through the press, leaflets, mass meetings, shop gates meetings, Puilding of shop com- mittees and other means of organi- zation. A mass meeting of shoe and leather workers has been ar- ranged for Friday evening, at 1208 Taser St. The leather workers, whose wages during 1930 have been cut to al- most half, are also actively on the job, A meeting of representatives of several shops has taken place re- cently in which all the delegates reported unbearable conditions in the shops and the desire of the workers to build an organization. Organizer Lippa of the Independ- ent Shoe Workers’ Union was pres- ent and when the floor was granted to him, he suggested a concrete plan to be carried out immediately. His suggestions were fully accepted by all those present and he was elected organizer of the leather | the ever growing increase of speed- | distriet, of Youngstown, ete. FORD LAYOFF workers, by the Provision Leather Workers’ Organizarion. Committee. Steel Workers, Help Distribute Special Steel Workers Issue From the steel plants of the South, Mid West and the Wesi Coast have come letters telling of up, of wage cuts given in different forms, of growing unemployment. The steel workers are beginning to look up and demand organization- On Saturday, August 16, the Daj- ly Worker will have a special steel workers issue to help mobilize the sieel workers for organization. The Daily Worker special steel! workers issue will reach the steel! workers of the steel towns of East- ern Pennsylvania, of the Pittsburgh Steg] workers, get your local Dai- ly Worker agent to immediately or- der a bundle for distribuiion at your mill. Start the drive for or- ganization with this special issue of your Daily. Organize a worker correspondents group in your mill. IS EXTENDED More Speed-up Plans) Up Ford’s Sleeve A Chester, Pa. Dear Comrades: After a two week’s lay-off at Ford’s, in Chester, expecting to go to work this morning, we find that this lay-off was extended to August 11. Only a very smal] number of men are working, putting in new conveyors, so that when we do go back to work, if we do, they will be able to use less men, the rest will be thrown on the streets with the rest of the eight million unem- ployed. This is an example of Hoover's capitalist “prosperity” that we work- ers are getting. With the recent attack upon com- mercial relations with the Soviet Union we have nothing to look for- ward to but more lay-offs. Are we workers going to stand for this? Previously we have been shipping a steamer load of trucks to the So- viet Union. If they break off com- mercial relations with the Soviet Union the workers who have been working to fill this order will be thrown on the streets, Workers! It is our duty to pro- Speed-Up, Layoffs Give Lie to Sanctimonious Ford Bunk | Daily Worker: The publicity agent of the Ford Motor Co. paints the picture of working conditions in the Rouge plant in the rosiest of colors. These systematic drive departments that keep the workers going at top speed under a constant check» and belt system where exactly so much work is calculated to be turned out per minute and failure means the gate. Ford Lies. Ford declared that reducing the number of men employed per unit of output by substituting machine power for hand power had made for more employment and not less, at least not in the Ford industries. He also declared that none of his men would be thrown out of work. Men and women workers are worse off than they have ever been, Let us see what has happened in Department 401. We are bull- dozed continually by Toppa, boss and foremen. Two years ago there were some 160 men working on job No. 1379 and 1380. One man used to turn out 82 pieces of A 1379 and 1380 tire carriers in eight hours. After deducting our wages it gave the company $39.08 clear profit. Now after the false promises of a raise and intimidating speed- up a man turns out 350 pieces in Typewriter Company and Bosses Work Hand in Hand to Fleece Girls New York, N. Y. Editor, Daily Worker: One of the greatest instance that capitalism is all washed up is in the payment for jobs at a typewriter company. They have all become very efficient in their employment department and to fool the young girls who apply for positions now- adays they will talk of a test. They give the test and make the applicant feel kindlier toward the company and more in a humor to pay the fee. It is only $5 now for a position below $20 per week and $10 fer a position over $20, When one con- siders that the typewriter companies have been the main clearing houses for office help for the large cities of the cauntry, one may see what a source of revenue can be gotten though the employment department since the sales have caught up with “progress.” History of the Typewriter. The history of the typewriter has been short in years. Not so long ago young men clerks were the ame- nuesis of business men, and they used ink and a quill. When the Typewriter was invented its exploit- lis plainly evident. They are afraid BOSS GOV'T KILLS, S-DAY WEEK BILL FOR POSTAL MEN Postmen to Organize Into T.U.U.L. Brooljyn, N. Y. Daily Worker: Several months passed and the leaders of the postal laborers did not call any meetings and the reason of the masses to whom they made such great promises of geting a raise from the U. S, Congress. At first they came with a wonderful story that Mr. LaGuardia will get them the raise—of a full two hun- dred per year. LaGuardia and others made speeches but those speeches were !made only for the sake of speechmaking and to be used in the next election campaign. They knew that Mellon’s government will not give a laborer a dollar. Kill Five-Day Bill. The leaders came back whispering Negroes and Jews can’t expect a raise but we will get fifty dollars a year. $1,550 is more than $1,500. | And it would make some recogni- tion of the demands of the postal laborers. But we soon learned the fifty is not coming. The bill for five-day week is killed. At all post office stations the laborers feel discouraged, There is no hope for the laboring man. It seems all odds are against him. The entire government machinery is; made to keep a man down. Some say let’s go to William Z. Foster and let us ask him what to do. There is hope in this. If all the postal laborers will learn the way to fight through ways and means of the Communist Party. Through one big organization of laborers, clerks and custodians and no more lobbying with the high hat gentlemen of the congress. seve tect against the bosses’ attack the Soviet Union and the Five-Year Plan, and demand the recognition of the Soviet Union, the workers’ fatherland. Workers of Fod’s! Join the Me- tal Workers Industrial League as only through organization can you gain better conditions. Come out on a mass protest against unemploy- ment on September 1! Show your solidarity with the unemployed workers of the country. —FORD SLAVE. Detroit, Mich. the same time but this gives the company a profit of $500.. Some time ago Ford stated “the money I have accumulated is not the product of downtrodden underpaid, bloodsweated labor.” We say this is a damnable lie! Here is one incident to prove it. Having speeded our- selves out of work, in addition to this we have discrimination, unsani- tary conditions, accidents, plenty of dust fumes, smoke and very inade- quate ventilation. Floors were never serubbed but once in two years, oils and grease around machine is un- speakable, stock fills the place and in case of fire it would be mass murder. Cranes carry their loads over workmen’s heads. T came to the opinion that as long as men are economically enslaved, they cannot be politically free. It becomes clear to me that the work- ing class would never bring about a form of society guaranteeing work, bread and a happy life by means of the ballot. Men of labor arise! —NALOB. ation of labor was not ds cruel as it gradually became. Speed and more speed were de- manded of the operators, and fin- ally girls alone, because they could work cheaper, and promise more of ar adventure in the business men’s office, were used. The Typewriter companies gave this service as a “courtesy” to the customer. But just within the last few months in all the history of the Typewriter companies, the girls themselves must pay for going into bondage. Let me prophesize that this fee is just a tentative move on the part of the typewriter companies and within a short while one week and two weeks wages will be demanded. Each day their telephones are busy with outgoing calls, checking up on the girls and soliciting busi- ness, and it has always seemed that business houses have been in league with paid employment agencies to become quickly dissatisfied with help and ding a ling, another week’s blood money of a wage slave is handed over to the employment MILITARY INTER. VENTION IS U. POLICY IN CHINA Execute 46 Hankow Communists in Week | od | (Continued From Page One.) Koumintang regime at Hankow are | not only threatened by attacks by | the Red Armies from outside, but, | as a Federated Press dispatch from Washington reports, “foreigners in Hankow fear that they may, at any | moment, be confronted by a seizure | of the city by the Communi: from revolt within the city. The great success which the work- ers within the city have attained in| their preparation for a seizure of | the city can be seen from the faet, which was reported by the Ne Yorw Times on Saturday, that] workers in the city waterworks and | telephone anc telegraphi¢ com-| panies are very actively preparing to paralyze the water supply and telephone and telegraph communica- tion of Hankow as a preliminary to seizing the city. The Koumintang government Hankow, supported by imperiz | warships lying in the harbor, is| using the most brutal white terror | against the workers. A total of | 46 Communists were beheaded within the last week. The imperialist powers are still busy in bringing about joint mili-| tary intervention. A United Press| dispatch from Washington, ob- viously inspired by official sources, tries to hide the interventionist pol- icy of the Hoover-Wall St. govern- ment by spreading the fairy tale | that the United States government is resisting proposa)s to “change its | hands-off policy toward China,” and to participate in a joint interven- tion in China. What a Wall Street “Hands Off | China” policy! Like all such fla-| grantly obvious typoceracies, the | truth is exposed before the lie is finished. In the next paragraph the same dispatch reveals that, as | stated by the state department, the | United States “always will be ready | to permit its military forces to act in concert with other powers when an emergency threatening foreign lives and property in China can be ‘met in no other way.” So this is Uncle Sam’s versign of a “Hands Off Policy toward China.” The workers of America judge the imperialists, not only by their hypocritical words, but by their ac. | tions. The imperialist military in-| tervention against the Chinese Rev- olytion is an established fact. Amer- ican workers, under the leadership of the Communist Party of the United States, are launching a tre- mendous campaign against the in-| ervenionist policy of their own Wall Street boss government. The | New York District of the Commu- | nist Party has already arranged | more than a hundred Hands Off China open-air meetings and dem- onstrations on Wednesday. The All-American Chinese Anti-! Imperialist Alliance, an organiza- tion of all Chinese anti-imperialist elements living in the United States, Canada, Cuba and other Latin- American countries, have just is- sued a manifesto, denouncing the. “Republican Hoover government of Wall Street,” the “MacDonald labor government of Great Britain,” the “Tardieu bourgeois government of France” and the “Mussolini fascist dictatorship of Italy” for their at- tempt to “drown the Chinese Revo- lution in blood.” The manifesto calls upon the “workers and toilers of America” to “wage a powerful struggle against Yankee imperia!- ism and for the defense of the Chi- nese revolution,” and concludes by urging the workers of the United States and other American coun- tries to organize “Hands Off China Committees and fight “For the turning over of all war funds to feed the unemployed! “For the tmmediate independence of the Philippine Islands, Haiti and Porto Rico! “Against the imperialist lackeys and fascist dictatorship in Latin America! “Hands Off China! “Demand for the immediate with- drawal of U. 8. marines and war ships from China! “Refusal to transport arms and imperialist troops to China! “Defense of the Soviet Union! “Defense of the Chinese Revolu-| tion!” at | UNIVERSITY, Va.— President | Magnus W. Alexander of the Na-! tional Industrial Conference Board, | open-shop outfit, threw choice pearls of wisdom before the Institute of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia while discussing industrial relations. Reductions in wages, he said, “would be advantageous to} both business and wage-earners in| this country.” Lower wages, he said, would enable American capi- taiists to compete better with low | wage countries and afford work. ers here a “better hope for regu larity of employment.” Alexander declared that “labor | policies must be left primarily to) the individual judgment of business | executives” and that workers should | “understand and appreciate man agency, Office Worker, — agerial policies and work cheerfully under them,” per ci farm; In the German —_— “American investments in Argen-| Volga Republic 2,000 individual | ¥ : e a 2 0 is yea arnfs joine The cess is con- Workers-Peasants Win ‘it¢ 4¢ the beginning of this year! farnts joined up. The process is con jof July in the districts of Kove} | $1,860,700,000 to $4,140,104,000, an} charged with the special task of di-|°f teen vegetables into the sea to| | | involved. Page Three 'W YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1930 EIN TERNATIONAL | Bruening Gov't WAR DANGER IN LATIN AMERICA IS reatens to) prieawreurn py cien Five 5000 More HEIGHTENED BY FICHT FOR MARKETS (Wireless by Inprecorr, |Dr. Winkler Declares BERLIN, Aug. 11.—Coming hard} An 1-U,S, Rivalry Internationa upon the heels of a growing unem- Se ; ployment situation the threat of the! Will Sharpen Notes Bruening government to dismiss| — five thousand municipal employes| 9, 7, ere will increase the number of unem Battle For Argentine PRAGUE—Comrade Schwab, sec- ployed in Berlin. "=vectments, Markets! retary of the Communist Party Dis-| Bi BP MD. cae rict lin Znaim for dis- LEIPZIG, Aug. 11.—Kar! Lichev. nee of Wales’ trip to | tribut ski, editor of the Communist dai , z sharper bd | Tribune wi entenced yesterday by at Britain an > Communist editor the supreme court sitting at Leipzig Latin Amer- eived a two-year for an indeterminate number of )j zo n-| Sentence on the charge of “betray- years in the fortre: The charge: ment le| ing military He had pub- brought against Comrade Lichevski ty Dre Mas Winkler: vis pondence in a were in connection with two articles nt of Bertron, Griscom & Co., | ¢ appealing to the workers to organ- estment bankers, Dr. * ize political strikes and demonstra- ing authority on MOSCOW—The Leninist Young tions, Wall Str Ce e and Young Pio- Se menis. r s iet Union sent their HAMBURG, Aug. 11—The Com- Winkler quotes warmest gr to the Second munist election drive opened yester- show the bitter World Child: Meet which opened day with two mass meetings here, in Berlin July one addressed by Thaelmann, noted in investments and ma German Communist leader. Profiting greatly from this proc SHANGHAI—A strike of rick- athe: 3 Winkler does not hawmen in Tsingtau, Shantung, KOVNO, Aug. 11.—The minister danger, and the f took place recently. The police ar- of the interior has ordered the with-| perialist rivalr -| rested the union lead The strik- drawal of the privilege of receiving | ing to w ers demanded higher wages. books, parcels, and leters from one In 1929, says Dr. W er, British . . ai hundred and y political prison- trade with Argentine increased] MOSCOW— In the Armavir, Kub- ers for one month as punishment! 191.45 per cent over 191 an and Salski districts no less than for the anti-war demonstrations on) j tments there increased only 15} 7,0U0 pe: nt farms have joined the August First. f. collectiv ry > 4 aggregated $658,689,000, ec | in Polish Election | with only $40,000,000 in i914, a gain| of more than 1,546 per cent. I) t- | WARSAW (IPS). — The Seym| ments of Great Britain in Argentine elections took place in the middle| advanced in the same period from | tinuing. Greet Five-Year Plan Indus and Svenciany. Only 27 per cent of|inerease of slightly more than MOSCOW (IPS).—The new state the total electorate went to the poll| Per cent. Whereas United-State industrial loan “Five-Year Plan in in Svenciany and only 18 per cent| Argentine commerce f show-| Four Years” has been received by in Kovel. 40,000 votes in all were ed an increase. th 1913, | the polled in Kovel and 28,500 of these of more than 238 per cent, Anglo-| with were given: forthe workers and| Argentine trade advanced only 91.45 | peasants bloc “Selrob.” The bour- | Per cent.” rs of the Soviet Union t enthusiasm. Numerous affs of factories and institutions igned blocks for the loan before geois Jewish-Ukrainian bloc of na- |, The imperialist leaders of both| its emmission. The workers of the tional minorities received 10,000 "obber powers, Great Britain and) Amo automobile works signed votes, the United States, during the past blocks amounting to 250,000 rubles, | In Svenciany the Polish author-| few s have ine ities declared the list of the West| tle for Latin American markets, and and other factories likewise. In Leningrad alone the workers have | COAL SLAVERY, CONTRACT SIGNED AT GRAND ORGY Militant Miners Gird For Great Struggle (Continued From Page One.) load bigger cars, and take more time cleaning the coal, for the same wages. Only six miles away from the | Seranton celebration the miners of Old Forge and their families are starving, many not having worked a day in the last six months. Bosses gathered to sign the agree- ment they have obtained from the U.M.W. boasted of the cutting down in their payrolls that would follow importation of the recently perfected mining machines, now operating on a 45 degree pitch in Wyoming. The steep pitch of the anthracite mines has hitherto kept operators from using much machin- ery. The contract is not signed by the operators as a body, but individu- ally. This is because many mines, even under the old scale, had man- aged to cheat their miners out of all pay for dead work, for placing timbers, rails, ete. Even where it is paid for, the wage is usually $3, to be divided among the six men required. The miners help each other put in the timbers. The rea- son for the operators signing in- dividually is to allow for cutting the wages and worsening the conditions of all down to the level of the worst. The Mine, Oil and Smelter Work- ers’ Industrial Union (formerly National Miners Union) took up the anthracite miners at its big Second National Convention, July 26, in Pittsburgh, and calls on the miners to join with it in repudiation of this Lewis slave contract. It urges hard coal miners to get in touch with the M.O.LS.U. at 611 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Room 512, or at Scran- ton, 602 Linden St., Room 314. It urges formation of rank and file pit and strike committees, to take up the struggle against wage-cuts and | worsened conditions without regard | for the U.M.W. misleaders, Organize and | strike against | wage-cuts! already taken up over five million | | rubles. Strike against wage-cuts; de- mand social insurance! i CAPITAL ELECTION COMMUNIST for the list. The list of the Polish! Ness. This was followed on the part | | n 1981 and a visit by the Prince | tivities in Latin America. With the NEW YORK.—The last meeting) | uation and tasks of the unions af-| FARMERS socialist party received 6,000 votes, | of Great Britain by the D’Abernon \in of W | growing crisis and shrinking mar-| of the executive bureau of the Trad White Russian workers and peasants | especially Argentine. Hoover per- bloc to be invalid. Despite this fas-|Sonally visited Buenos Air cist trick, 10,000 votes were given ous to his inauguration, to win bus pia aele be |commission which carried away an $89,000,000 contract. They are now | T U U L BUREA IN following this up wiht a 40-day fair ial : ales, who will be graced by |the title of “Commissioner Extra-| | Now Dr. Winkler point out that | Wall Street will intensify its ac- Record Gains; Shows i |kets all over the world, this effort More Must Be Won | will heighten the war preparations | jand narrow the road to war, e| Union Unity League worked out a general analysis of the present sit-| filiated with the league. It found there is more unemployment. Wage cuts are more frequent and more severe. . There is no change in policy ° quired now of the T.U.U.L. unions. SDeculators Doubling The slogans, “Organize and figh’ ae = re “Strike against all wage cuts,” are, Pi lees In Cities still correct, as they were at the) previous board meeting. The reason | Five The prime duty of every (Continued From Page One.) the T.U.U.L. unions have not had| the American Railway Executives, organizations. Write the success they should have had,/0ne of the worst pro t gouging ee d ’ bunches in the country, called on ee, yeiteae le aa fa yon, | Hoover to say that, while the rail- WORKERS LIBR. ; 7 ; ig road companies we ready to co- 39 EAST 125TH STREET because of a failure to completely | operate in every way,” they were carry out the program attached to anxious not to “lend any assistance poeta eg fe any profiteering in distributing | More Could Be Dene. livestock feed.” Which means that But the bureau considers inex-|the railroads will not cut freight cusable the failure of the T.U.U.L.|rates if they can help it—and if} — unions and leagues to win more ¢ they do it will be for profiteers who | 10,000 new members in the recru lit the steal with them. ing campaign which ended June 30, Congressmen say that Kentucky instead of the 50,000 quota set. It}corn and garden crops are prac- sees the union leadership too hes-j tically ruined, and tobaceo dam- itant, too much inclined top: aged, while Louisiana cotton is two- sivity in the face of great oppor-| thirds destroyed, hay and corn al tunities for service to the whole | total loss and sugar cane six weeks working class. |late. But these may be. exaggera- There have been, along with these | tions usual to congressmen, fundamental right wing mistakes, aeL some ultra-leftist errors, such as the br failure to carry on completely the|°f the publicity about the drouth, work inside the A. F. L. unions. |New York commission merchants, Its executive board is now|Who in June dumped 150 carloads NEW YORK.—Taking advantage] {hold up consumers for high prices je-|2r@ raising these prices as high as| a i these prices as high as| ay there | recting the organization work es ially into the South, among the groes, women and ‘young. workers, | 100 Per cent, because they : the most exploited sections of the |/* ,* Shortage “due to the drouth.” working class, The fight against | toove Be turday sail that there the Musteites and socialist party |)" "° Tr ny of food stuffs, and leadership of the revolution ary | cities the robb of the workers never allowed to fall into! a6 putting the screw their treacherous hands. |to rob the working $s which has | es t jthus to reduce its already low Today in History of | standard of living due to unemploy- ment and wage cuts, | the Workers Although the Health Department | jof New York City says there is August 12, 1805—Karl Johann plenty of milk, the Dairymen’s| Rodbertus, first scientific Social. | League. which milks farmers but ist economist in Germany, born at ;°t cows, added another cent on the Greifswald, 1889—Great success- ful strike of London dockers and riverside workers began, 150,000 1922 —“Arbeiter Zei- tung,” Independent Socialist paper at Bremen, Germany, suppressed by Social Democratic government. 1924—Left wing of German Social | Democrats joined Communist | Party. 1925—Hundred and fifty thousand textile workers of Sax- | ony, Germany, struck, « ,| Brice of each quart of milk Monday, | With the excuse of “the drouth.” ee FARM IN THE PINRS Situated tn musical director, that all comrades playing struments, should bring them along. forest, near mr |) Rates: M. OBERKIRCH Rox 78 KINGSTON ON Ba. >. Lin, in. ae, Soavnsstuanseensnaneinredenscarcny Comrade KRANESS requests kindly WORKING CLASS Against IST CLASS Is the Main Election Issue of the Communist Party PLATFORM PARTY U.S. A. Cents y revolutionary worker is to place a copy of this Election Program in the hands of worker in the shop, factory, trade union and for orders and quotations to: ARY PUBLISHERS NEW YORK CITY Our Doors Are Open! Workers of All Races and Nationalities Come! ,aa"_-,_ i i i WINGDALE, N. Y. Where finest comradeship prevails Well-known place for along vacation | Where food is healthful and plentiful SPORTS~SONG-THEA TRE OUN BUSES LEAVE NOTH ST. AND SEVENTH AVENUE: very Friday wt 6:30 p.m. Every Saturday at 1 p. m. Every Sunday at 9 a m. Every Monday at 12 p. m in. | Every Wednesday at 1 p.m By Train: From Grapd Central or 125th St. to Wingdale, N. ¥ NOTH STREET TELEPHONE: MONUMENT 011%

Other pages from this issue: