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E> RT A DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1930 Page Three [FOSTER TELLS |SACCO-VANZETTI | & RYH OF THE ROLE OF DEMONSTRATION. “ja THE SOCIALISTS, IN MANY GITIES i\Mect On Aug. 22 Defend Workers (Continued LETTERS im & EOP PENNSY FIRING | MANY WORKERS BR AFRION Ber’ British in © Rumania Plot Against USSR (Issue Call For cuT WAGES AT ‘Calls For a Militant BUDD MF, CO. Fight | | (Continued From Page One.) | Oakland Shipyard Workers Expect Layoff Soon rom Page One.) Oakland, Calif. | ONDON.-A. J ~ On September 7 Philadelphia, Pa. | what the country is coming to. Philadelphia, Pa. The capitalist give this open sup- \eports due: in Boston, Boston 1 a e Amsterdam |nist League of the Soviet Union has ste ab RUNGE ES: : ist party by drastically ruling out| Office of the International Labor e JNDON.— : Sentiment For Union “The parks and the Skid Road are| Men DUSETE GUID CCl ai ciacvs on dual body dating the| Defense, annousies Gatco aud’Vans| , rie tae siriead Be aRaAw Gn The Ceatral : ; ; | i Fish’ Commission “investigation.” | zetti demonstrations for August 22 |,“ cable dis eeiiek JOSS OIE cr eee aes Among Men sure jammed with unemployed | ~— From Big: Layoff bartels eG cmon ane Lae Avena 2 | Buchacsst, repzesentative, | Com: Young Commu- | workers. Workers are wondering | _ id id York S i hich Cook de- | Daily Worker:— I talked to a number of workers | Daily Worker:— port to the socialist party because | Commons, 6 p. m.; New York, Union i vas be- sent a circular to all its subordinate them to ructing The railroad men of the Pennsyl-| a¢ the Mare Shipyard. They told| On the fourth floor in Dept. 5 the | they realize the insufficiency of the) Square, 5p. m.; Philadelphia, n vania R. R., maintenance men, sta-| ye that they were expecting a lay-/drip molding operation, which paid A. BF. of L. with its weak organ-| Buffalo, Elmwood Music Hall; and co- Sixteenth Interna- tion men, road work, etc., are being | j¢¢ What the Trade Union Unity |$4.30 a hundred, was cut 30 cents | ization ani openly fascist policies, | Pittsburgh, Scranton, Wilkesbarre, ; y of Youth on September laid off every week with no union || eague should try to do this coming|a hundred. Also, on the fourth it cannot effectively control the rap-} Minersville; Cleveland, Public ke lon Daily Her The chief task of the day will to fight for the men. Just as much | \inter is to form hunger marches. | floor, a pinch welding operation was | idly radicalizing masses. It needs)Square and five other meetings; ae th aes the exposure of the treachery of for Cook, Ta work is done by the remaining men at no extra pay. | That would show the bosses that the workers are fighters. cut 15 per cent and the clinching | jiggs were also cut 15 per cent. On| reinforcemer ‘2. The socialist party is thoroughly fitted for this, with a Detroit, in several sections of the city; Chicago, Peoples Auditorium; Rumanian protec shevism,” St secret that bottom. with Cook’s| cial democracy. | The Central Committee points out program basically the same as that] Minneapolis, Seattle, San France: in-{of the A. F. of L., but decorated! tos Angeles, Kansas City, Cincin. | that the achievements of the League lin the work of building u psocialism The Pennsylvania Railroad com- pany union and the fragments of jhe side panel truck an additional ‘operation was added without —SAM BARMAN. important an the brotherhood which the Pennsy | ‘creasing the rate (this amounts to| With deceptive radical phrases. The) natti, Hartford, New Haven, transported it from D, Czechoslovakia.—After| have been tremendous and places ble to get rid of always echo ab Bis + employers count upon t pseudgs | Bridge t, Si N alk, New ’ 2 ne sea der revolutionary leader-| rther series of tasks i . ihe opirtaiat dei baanes irene jRSWARS Se: Saas radicalism of the socialist party to pace stanford banal pep-oberauon bebe ; ting two weeks, the water | q saeco Reanies a tele i en aiaht jobs | Sig Lay-off. | deceive the masses, to demoralize| Gre tiie Moth Carine Cue | Rumanian service is said to h a oe Uh oraa ne : HUB CSpO eo anes? AuOve Sy une: en: the pretense of abolishing the jobs, humoet weisciees Cuiuat-are Stoo tse A ee titan them tie | cratlotte, North Carolinas Court) existed for many month rs of Uzhorod have won al |ightenment of the broad masses of are firing men, particularly those ere y et aes |" elouse stepas, Greenville, .South| “nari this correspondent’: increase of 20 per cent. the working class concerning the men who are within a year or two of being pensioned, having been in service 18 or 19 years. Men Scrapped. After having paid into the relief fund for years, these men are now thrown on the scrap heap. We do not get a cent of unemployment in- surance st fired and left to starve. After the company has fired the men in service a long time it hires new young workers, paying them less, of course. Formerly when a worker was fur- loughed for a while the union that then existed tried to get the same job back for the worker, in the meantime- giving him some relief. Now no such a thing exists. Porters Not Paid. Red-cap porters are not paid a cent and are driven like slaves by the captain, who is the only one get- ting a wage. ‘The porters dare not sit down during their shift, even though the bags they carry cre too heavy for a mule. All this clearly shows the need of an industrial union for us rail- road workers, a union affiliated to the Trade Union Unity League. --PENNSY SLAVE. Crisis Is Not Real, Big, Camden, N. J. | Daily Worker: | The Golden Age of Pericles is |now with us again. This time it is not Athens, but the rather dirty in- | dustrial burg of Camden, New Jer- | sey, home of champion police slug- | gers of workers, judges who know |how to sentence workers who fight \for their rights, and home of every {kind of beer garden, brothel, gam- bling joint and vice den conceivable. Only four cents on the ferry from Phila. Modern Sage. The modern sage is Mr. Shoe- |maker, one of the “heads” of the | RCA Victor Radio Co. Says this | renounded philosopher: “Depression, there is no depression. The pres- lent depression is only a psychologi- cal one. It is not real at all. The R.C.A. Victor is going to hire 7,000 additional men beginning August tat” This is the essence of Mr. Shoe- 28. On the day the plant reopened only 25 per cent of the workers were taken back. The rest were told to come back on August 4. A few days before August 4 notices | {place for the whole plant, the plant |to a program of waiting. i A jbeing closed from July 21 to July It’s All Bunk. Budd’s not to report for work until further notice, The workers that are now working employed are toil- ing from 5 to 8 hours a day, 2 to 4 days a week. The reason for the wage-cuts is that a slight increase in production took place. Because of this increase the foremen sent for additional men, but the employment department re- fused to hire them. In order to in- crease the production without the additional men, wage-cuts, as well as increasing the operations and cutting the prices on them, was re-| sorted to. Post Fake Sign. Before the lay-off took place, a notice was placed on the clock which tread: “Men don’t get discouraged.” The plant has not been working regularly, but don’t get discouraged, as things are getting better and we'll be working full time around the first of August. It’s now past the middle of August and the plant The employers are not fooled by | the socialist party chatter about so- cialism. How could they fear a par- ty with the Rev. Norman Thomas lat the head of it? Have they not \were sent out to the workers of|scen in practice the active working alliance of Hillquit, Woll and Com- pany? Did they not see the Ger- man socialist party shoot the Ger- |man revolution to pieces and save | European capitalism? Do they not now see the MacDonald “socialist” government’ murder Inidan revolu- rialism, as the New York Times says, even more effectively than the conservative government could have }done? Do they not see the world- | wide socialist party war propaganda | against the Soviet Union? They rec- ognize it and use the socialist par- |ty as a capitalist tool. Significantly, it is exactly in New | York, where the demonstrations of the unemployed are the most mili- tant and where the Communist in- fluence is the greatest that the em- ployers make the most active use of the socialist party. There the bosses have most assidiously culti- vated the “socialist” unions in the |needle trades; there they are most tionaries and defend British impe-| Carolina; Richmond, Virginia; Gas- |tonia, North Carolina (on August to Bessarabia a wee ba 2 A i |no reticence whatever ative to 23, at 3 p. m.); Minot, North |the important movement of seeking | Dakota, Canton, Akron, Youngs-|q second Trotsky to turn things up- | town, Dayton, Toledo, Ohio; Wheel-| side down.” F ing, West Virginia. | Stevens tells of a British fleet Defend Foreign Born. | which ted Rumania as part of | The Provisional National Com-| the anti-Soviet war preparaions. | mittee for the Protection of the| Foreign Born Workers, consi | INTERNATIONAL MEET at its last meeting endorsed the | NEW YORK.—The general | International Labor Defense Sacco | ecutive board of the Needle Trade: Workers’ Industrial Union has |and Vanzetti demonstrations andy ssue a special call to| all organizations represented in the [committee to participate in the |. — ; | dentonstrations with banners pro-| ‘old to send Ben Gold, an. offi- [testing the attacks against foreign ‘ial, of the union and malitamt | born workers. the tie workers, in many | In Scranton, Pa. the demonstra-|*"Ugeles in the past, to the Inter- |tion will he held gt Gea me mata; (national Needle Workers Confer- | the Bublie Parks in Old Foe Pas | ence to be held in Moscow, imme- | there will be a meeting, and in Lu.|‘imately after the present Fifth |zerne the Sacco-Vanzetti_ demon-| World Congress of the Red Inter- \eerael a rs : national of Labor Unions. | stration will be held at Italian Hall, | “iyO% twit hae tuo delegates | at the R.I.L.U., Congress, Helen | MeLean and Benjamin Caplan. | Oliver St., at 7 p. m. | New Jersey Meets. | Newark will hold one Sacco-Van- They will attend the Needle Con- actu mass meeting at 8 p. m. on! ference with Gold, | | Friday, Aug. 22, at 93 Mercer St.,) Revolutionary needle trades work- jand another meeting on Saturday! ers will meet Friday, at 8 p. m., at | o these was | decided to \decisions of the Sixteenth Congress of the Communist Party of the Sov- jiet Union. M demonstrations of he working class and peasant youth rust take place throughout the Sov- BERLIN.—The landworkers in Dittmarsch have gone on_ strike. Many threshing machines are idle. Efforts to carry. on work with scab were unsuccessful. The work-|iet Union on the International Day ers are demanding higher wages|of Youth on § ember 7. and extra pay for overtime. a +. 8, BERLIN.—The social-f: experiments with poison gas pistols | to be used against workers’ demon-| strations. Police chiefs in Leipzig and Berlin have received large num-| "~ bers of gas pistols. — HANLONG, _ Indo-China.—Three workers were killed during the Au-| gust 1 anti-war dsmansitations | | |Mediterranean Fleet Strengthened here. The police attacked the dem-| In an article printed in the most onstrators, firing into the crowd. Yecent issue of the Journal des De- Ten were seriously injured and 20, bats, the noted French naval expert, arrested. The police also announced | Rene Labruyere, reveals an impor- that they broke up a demonstration| tant aspect of the feverish war in Annam and that a strike tookppreparations between France and place in Vinh. \Italy. The article brings out the sok oe fact that the French Ministry of MOSCOW.—Important potash de-|> ine was engaged in a general posits have been discovered at the|Scheme for strengthening the base of the Ural Mountains, situ.|Ftench position in the Mediterran- ated betwen Perm and Tscherdyn. | °*™ Phosphate deposits were also dis-| After an extensive maneuver and maker’s recent interview, printed; is still dead. The men are begin-| systematically building up the so-|at 1 p. m. at Military Park. |Manhattan Lyceum, to give Ben|‘0Vered. This is very important for |Teview, according to the article, the widely in all languages of the bour- ning to say it was only another of lcialist party. The socialist party New Brunswick will hold a meet- |Gold avfine send off. the Soviet Union, as potash is used |full Mediterranean fleet has reas- sembled at Toulon, the most impor- PROVIDES REAL Hoover’s promises. Dissatisfaction|and its Muste group in the A. F.|ing at 11 Plum St. on Friday. | jfor fertilizers as well as many in- of L. unions is the most insidious} Elizabeth will hold its . meeting dustrial uses. The Soviet Potash |t@nt naval base in southern France, | pat geois press late in July. Few Hired, grows among the workers daily. If S Strike against wage-cuts; de- SAE pie . In | RFI \EF Workers from Cleveland, New|the unusual happens and there is|and dangerous menace to the rev-|on Friday, as well as Paterson, at) mand eetiel qagucancer, betaaimaaa Niu installing machinery to| With “all br larity er PUOLE Ba lyork or other distant cities, need|® full day’s work the bosses inter- | olutionary organization and strug-|205 Paterson St. In Passaic, the| | work these vast. deposits. peek LEST WAS eae ue Boston AFL Fakers to Dine With Bosses (Continued From Page One.) lect garbage for food. When a re- porter from the Chicago Daily News visited his home he found that this unemployed worker had brought home a dried loaf of bread he had picked up in an alley. The bread was scooped out in the center. This was the family’ food for the day. A seven months’ old baby is given some dirty water as food. The father has been looking for work, but like the 8,000,000 other unem- ployed there is none to be had. What the Bill Provides. The Workers’ Social Insurance Bill, which the bosses fear so much and use their best tools, the “social- ists? and A. F. of L., to fight against, provides for social insur- ance for all unemployed. It pro- vides a minimum weekly payment of $25 to jobless workers, no mat- ter for what reason they are unem- ployed, whether due to lack of jobs, illness or old age. The bill demands that the billions set aside for war purposes by the government immediately be handed over to a fund for social insurance. In order to keep up the adequate un- employment insurance payments the bill goes on to demand that a capital levy be made against all fortunes of $25,000 and over; that a gradu- ated income tax be placed on in- comes of $5,000 and over. The ad- minisvration of the insurance fund is to be in the hands of the work- ers themselves, and not in those of a few boss-class, fat-bellied poli- ticians. The bill is being widely popularized s~.ong all workers, in the shops and factories and among the ranks of the unemployed. Communist Election Demand. In many states, where the Com- munist Party is running candidates jn the state and congressional elec- tions, the demand for the passage of this bill is one of the most im- portant campaign issues. The Com- munist candidates are exposing the real causes of unemployment under capitalism and demanding ..e im- mediate passage of the social insur- ance bill. Against this, the “social- ists’ and other capitalist parties are attacking the Workers’ Social Insurance Bill, as they want to fas- ten the burdens of the crisis on the backs of the workers. Rush Sept. Ist Plans. The Trade Union Unity League is rushing plans nationally for a huge demonstration on September 1st to mobilize masses of workers from the shops, mines, factories, mills and from the unemployed ranks to demand social insurance. In Boston, where the T. U. U. L. and the Unemployed Councils have called a demonstration on Septem- ber 1 at 3 p. m. at the Parkman Bandstand, Boston Commons, the A. F. of L. fakers are attempting to counteract this call by arranging a “social affair.” “Labor Day” is planned as a gala event for the leading fascists of the A. F. of L. in Boston. They will extoll “prosperity.” They have not rush to Camden looking for a job for they won’t get any. Very few of the 7,000 have been hired, and very few are likely to be hired, though thousands have applied with- out results. Bosses Will Do Him Honor. Universities no doubt will now rush to honor the Sage of Camden to confer the usual degrees. It is admitted that such gems of wisdom are rare indeed. But such gems will not fill the stomachs of hungry men and women and their children. You can’t eat “psychological depres- sion,” whatever in hell that is. The unemployed workers will an- swer this boss, Shoemaker, by turn- ing out in masses for the big un- employment demonstration to be held under the auspices of the Trade Union Unity League on September 1st. —RCA WORKER. Unemployment Big in Northwest With Wages Being Cut Mt. Vermont, Wash. Daily Worker: The unemployment situation is very bad here. Log camps are closed and saw mills are either closed or on part time. Wages have been reduced in some mills to 28 cents per hour. Prices for dairy products are down 15 to 20 per cent for the producers, An unusually heavy crop of cher- ries must be marketed with a cut of 30 per cent in the price. Some varieties of the cherries the can- nery interest would not buy at all this year and the fruit is rotting on the trees although in the cities close by the workers are unable to buy fruit of this kind. A local vegetable cannery sent out word they would employ an ad- ditional 60 workers and 10 times that number applied the next morn- ing, although this is not so bad as in the cities I guess. The. report went out that a Stone Webster pow- er project would employ some more workers and the workers came in at the rate of 500 per day in tin lizzies and all kinds of ways to find out the report was a fake and no jobs for anyone, —Worker Correspondent. filled their pockets while the mil- lions of unemployed starve. Mayor Curley will speak at the A. F. of L. swilling contest and the speeches will be broadcasted. A banquet will be held in the evening—but the name of the hotel where the fat fakers of the A. F. of L. will cine while hundreds of thousands fight for the Workers’ Social Insurance Bill is being kept a deep secret. The T. U. U. L, in Boston is ex- posing this “Labor Day” travesty of the fascists in the A. F. of L. They are calling upon all workers to give their answer to this by par- ticipating in the -mass demonstra- tions called by the T. U. U. L. on “Unemployment Day” and demand the passage of the Workers’ Social Insurance Bill, so that the millions Of starvine w-estawnd aan ant fere and complain about every little thing, with threats of firing. —BUDD MECHANIC. COURT UPHOLDS GASTON VERDICT 117 Years in Prison to Terrify Strikers (Continued From Page One.) nearby Gastonia. | Workers in other mills are suffering from un- employment, speed-up and wage- cutting and may rally to the strike in the American Mills. Certain local leaders are urging the work- ers to repudiate all unions, and to make the struggle a narrow, limited one. eh eae New Attempt at Terror. NEW YORK.—“It appears that the courts have been mobilized in the Gastonia case to terrify the tex- tile workers in their new strike struggle at Bessemer City,” declares J. Louis Engdahl, General Secre- tary, International Labor Defense, that organized the defense in the Gastonia case. “The conviction was secured last October, after Judge Barnhill had declared to the jury that the testi- mony of witnesses could be im- peached if they expressed a lack of belief in god. He also declared that Communists could not expect the same fairness in his court as a republican “or democrat. It was these instructions to the highly prejudiced jury, resulting in the judicial lynching that followed when the guilty verdict was returned, that formed the basis for the appeal to the North Carolina Supreme Court. Jail For Opinions. “This court has now upheld the lower court, which means that any worker failing to register the proper religious and political quali- fications in the courts of North Carolina can be. railroaded to the electrie chair or to long terms of imprisonment, no matter what the facts in the case may be. “Originally the Gastonia case con- stituted an attempt by the textile mill owners’ courts of North Caro- lina to send 16 strikers and organ- izers, including three women, to the electric chair. This attempted wholesale murder of workers was frustrated by the world protest or- ganized under the leadership of the International Labor Defense, that reached nearly the proportions of the world campai, to save the lives of Sacco and Vanzetti. Same Atlanta Six. “The North Carolina Supreme Court decision will be appealed immediately to the United States Supreme Court. At the same time the mass protest campaign of labor everywhere will be mobilized against this vicious decision, that has its reflection in the attempt to send six workers to the electric | gle of the workers. | Win the Masses. lace becomes especially keen. The socialists, with their capitalist sup- port and lip-service to the slogans |of unemployed insurance, etc. are | making great efforts to draw under | their political control the masses of workers who refuse to follow the A. F. of L. line of voting for the | candidates of the republican and | democratic parties. In substance the capitalists, by luring disinter- ested workers to their third party, the socialist party, hope to keep them from the dreaded Communist |Party organization and leadership. There is a real danger that mas es of workers, deeply discontented at the intolerable economic condi- tions, will walk into the trap of the socialist party thinking that thereby they are dealing a blow at their class enemies. But little ex- perienced politically, they will be deceived by the radical phrase-mon- gering of the socialist party. It would be a serious error to ignore or under-estimate the socialist par- ty in this campaign. Militant Action. The situation is one requiring the most militant action by our Party and all sympathizing organizations in the election campaign. The work- ers are ready for action. They will try during the election to find ways to give vent to their fighting spirit and to\bring forward their demands. In order to place ourselves at the head of the masses, to organize them, for the election campaign and for the other great impending strug- gles, we must greatly intensify our election activities. And above all, in every stage of the fight, we must not fail to keep our fire centered on that most insidious capitalist tool and class enemy of the work- ers, the socialist party. chair in Atlanta, Georgia, because of their activities as labor organ- ia The North Carolina decision will be encouragement to the courts death verdicts against M. H. Pow- ers, Joe Car, Henry Storey, Herbert Newton, Mary Dalton and Ann Bur- lak. Here also, therefore, all labor will intenifsy its protest and de- mand the immediate liberation of these workers.” Vote Communist! Ad No. 16A Correct Dangerous Bladder 4, Catarrh Burni assages, painful elimina- tion, mene rising Hes be the warn- hg a eee gobo piss may al your entire ith. e ste) | Sate Sec eaL en's \ ist. For @ century, it has | been prescribed by ‘doctors th | out the world for rapid relief. ‘Santal Midy \ workers will gather at 25 Dayton| | Ave.,and on Saturday Perth Amboy|has been impossible to hold meet- | amounts to saying to Mussolini, “We are all ready, come and fight jeley Heights Camp, at Berkeley Heights, New Jersey, will demon- | strate. | International Labor Defense ac- | tivities in New Jersey received new |impetus during the past month in j the outrageous sedition cases car- ried on against leaders of worker | protest, and the workers of New |Jersey are forging new bonds to | struggle against the persecutions | visited on them by capita | ters. In Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh District, Interna- tional Labor Defense, announces |that-on August 22 a series of Sacco- | Vanzetti-Georgia mass demonstra- ist_mas-} | In the coming elections this men- | (Smith and Elm Sts.) and the Berk-| ings of a radical nature at all. | However, the I. L. D. recently Llc : mass meeting, the first to have been | |held by any labor organization since 1919, and with such good results |that the may now refuses to grant a permit for the August 22nd} | demonstration. However, prepara- j tions are going fcrward and the | demonstri ‘ion will be held, permit cr no permi * * CHICAGO, Ill, Aug. 20.—The |numker of factory gate and street ; meetings here tomorrow to mobilize for great Sacco-Vanzetti demonstra- | | tion Friday night at Peoples Audi- torium, has been increased from | | seven to nine. | the camp. Bedacht To Be At Boston Camp Outing Max Bedacht, Communist Party of the U. S. A., will speak at the Outing to Camp Nitgedaiget this Sunday, August 24. Also a vecher- inka will be held Saturday, August 23, to greet Comrade Bedacht at Buses and cars leaving New International Hall, 42 Weno- ‘nah St., Roxbury, at 10 a. m. Tt is under the auspices of the Workmen’s Educational Institute. ACCIDENTS 75% PREVENTABLE WASHINGTON.—The _ bourgeois department of labor admits that about 75 per cent of the accidents it out!” The war danger between France and Italy, which is one of est expressions of contra- jdietions betwecn the imperialist | powers, is much more imminent | than generally realized. Austrian Monarchists | Hold Demonstrations | (Wireless By Inprecorr) VI A, Aug. 20.—There were |monarchist demonstrations all over jAustria on the former Austrian |Emperor Franz Joseph’s birthday. |The Austrian Communist Party called a meeting in Vienna, con- |demning the imperialist intervention of Georgia to proceed to render} |tions will be held in this district. igh Sea The meetings this year w'll be Baltimore Demonstration. jheld in the following cities: Am-| BALTIMORE, Md., Aug. 20.—| | bridge, named after the Ameriesn | The Saceo-Vanzetti demonstration Bridge Co., which controls that | here will be held Friday at 7.30 city; Avella, a mining town in which | p. m., at Holiday and Baltimore Sts. two strikes have recently occurred | There will be prominent speakers over wage-cuts and where the I. L. ote D. defended two workers arrested| Detroit, Mich., Aug, 20.—There | for picketing; East Pittsburgh, con- | will be street demonstrations on Fri- trolled by the Westinghouse Elee-| day (Sacco and Vanzetti Day) at tric Co., and at whose factory gate|7:30 p. m. at the following street | a noon-hour demonstration will be| corners: Lumpkin and Davison, held; Johnstow controlled by the| Alexandrine and Hastings, Plamer Carnegie Steel Corporation, and|and Hastings, Chene and Ferry. Eee the home town of Andy| Michigan and Cecil, Russel and | Mellon. Hague, Chene and St. Joseph, 30th | and Warren. arn ee a en CE 2 Eee nO aaa In Johnstown, until recently, it Our Doors Are Open. Workers of All Races and Nationalities Come! _—_——— vwuvovwvvwvw | nity Camp WINGDALE, N. Y. Where finest comradeship prevails Well-known place for along vacation Where food is healthful and plentiful i ' SPORTS-SONG-THEATRE , Ummm [oie ier seme | Every Friday at 6:30 p. i Comrade KRANESS | Evers Saturdny atl pom” {i Every Sunday at 9 a, m | musical director, Tequesis } Every Monday at 12 p. m. that all comrades playing in Every Wednesday at 1 pm fi struments, should kindly bring them along. h St. te Wingdale, N. ¥ HTH SIRCKT TRLEPRONE: MONUMENT 0112 ——$ vented. There are 16,000 accidental Jagainst Soviet China and the star- jvation offensive of the bosses deaths and 2,500,000 non-fatal acei-|*@tinst the workers in Austri dents each year. The bosses must have profits and—aside from delays | in production—the loss of life and} limb among the workers is no con- cern of the bosses. in the United States could be pre- FARM IN THE PINES Situated tn Pine Forest, near Mt Lake. German Table. Rates: 816— $18. Swimming and Fishing. M. OBERKIRCH Box 78 KINGSTON, N. Y. | | Organize and strike against wage-cuts! . ! R41, Spend Your Vacation at FIRST PROLETARIAN NITGEDAIGET CAMP—HOTEL Accomodations to suit the taste and desire of every camper HOT AND COLD WATER; ELECTRIC LIGHTS; SWIMMING POOL; TENTS; BUNGALOWS; HOTEL ROOMS. Cultural Program for the Season The Artef Studio; Mass Theatre; Mass Singing—J, Shaeffer and L. Adohmyan, Directors; Dance Plastique, Edith Segal; Sports Director, Saul Fisher; Educational, Olgin and Jerome, Every Dav Something New! Athletics, Games, Hikes, Excursions, Dances, Theatre, Chorus, Lectures, Symposiums, etc. Sbecial Feature Programs for Week Ends GALA PERFORMANCE — SAT., AUGUST 23 An Entirely New Proletculture Program. The First Time in Camp Nitgedaiget. An Anti-Imperialist Mass Spectacle, with over 100 campers participating. Music, Dancing, Mass Reeitations, etc. Daring, Experimental, Proletculture! Rates: $17.55 per week. Week End $3.50 CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. PHONE BEACON 731 HONE: ESPABKOOK 1400 every hour. By Bont: twice daily Dy Train: From Grand Central