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DAILY WORKEK, NEW YO! RK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1930 - Ee ay se | FARMERS RESENT LEGGE ATTACK ON THE SOVIET UNION Bosses Give] No Thot to| Farmers’ Plight | Pekin, N. D. | Daily Worker: | egge, while speaking at the Fargo | (N. D.) state fair recently, took oecasion to slander the farmers of Soviet Russia, at the same time that he feared Russian grain com- petition. He said it would be hard to compete with Russian labor at only 17 cents per day. | I think the facts show entirely | different. In Russia today real | wages of the workers have already inereased by 67 per cent over the| pre-war level and the cultural ad- vance made since the revolution started is enormous. In Russia today real wages are steadily ris- ing and the cost of living is going down! Can Mr. Legge show any- thing in the United States or any- where else to compare with this stupendous progress? Legge thinks of Czarist Russia when the farmers there were slaves. He will not realize that they now are free under Soviet rule. The farmers of Soviet Russia will soon surpass the farmers in the most ad- vanced capitalist countries, in effi- ciency of production as well as in earning capacity. Collective farm- ing, the big state and collective farms haye already proved their superiority over the small, “inde- pendent” production unit. Yes, the farmers in the land of the Soviets will show Mr. Legge something. The Stalingrad plant with 50,000 tractors a year capacity is now in full operation, other plants are under construction in other places. In five more years Russia will have more tractors, trueks and combines, and produce. them in larger quantities than the | United States; in two more years 95 per cent of the peasant farms will have been collectivized, while tens of millions of acres will be culti- yated by the state and Soviet farms. All this is truly amazing, but such efficiency will not mean 17 cents a day, as Legge slanderously state, but mueh higher wages, much higher living standards will prevail. —FARMER. f RULERS OF AMERICA NAMED Capitalist Director's Control Government (Continued from Page One) hem Steel Corporation. 1 Rr WARNER, president, Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc. ADOLPH_ ZUKOR, president, movnt-Publix Corporation. WILLIAM H. CROCKER, president and director, Crocker ‘First Na- tional Bank ‘of San Francisco ar officer and director of many 1: railroad, mining and lumber organ- izations’ in the West. “THE VAN SWERINGEN BROTH- ERS’—O. P. and M. J. VAN SWER- INGEN, officers, directors and heavy investors in the Missouri Pacific and many other v. W. Para- rairoads. w. ATTERBURY, president, Pennsylvania Railroad. — ARTHUR CURTISS JAMES, direc- tor of several railroads and one of the largest owners of railroad securities in the world. CHARLES HAYDEN, of Hayden, Stone & Co., financiers. i DANIEL ©. JACKLING, president, h Copper Co. ARTHUR ¥, DAVIS, president, Alum- inum Co, of America. P. G. GOSSLER, president, Columbia Gas and Blectrie Corporation. R. G. HOLMES; president, Texas Cor- poration, oll producers. se JOHN J. RASKKOR, a director of Gen era] Motors and’ other corpor: and chairman of the National Committee. “THE DU PONT FAMILY.” including P, §. IRENE. LAMOT, HF. BUGENE, A. PELIX, and’ RUGENE FB. DU PONT; all officers or direc- tors of the’ EB. L du Pont Nemours & Co. or allied concerns. EDWARD J. BERWIND, financier ‘and director of many large corpor- ations. DANIFL WILLARD, president, Balti- more & Ohio Railroad, SOSTHENES BERN, chairman. Inter national Telephone and Telesraph Cornoration. WALTER 8. GIFFORD, chairman American Telephone and Telegraph Corporation. OWEN PD. YOUNG, chairman, General Fleetrie Company, GERARD SWOPR, president, General Blectrie Company. THOMAS W. LAMONT, a member of TO Marcon & Ch. a. director Guaranty Trust Company and offi- cer or. director of a number of nther firms. ALERT H, WIGGIN. chairman of the hoard, Chase National Bank. CHARLES B. MITCHELY, chairman, ‘of the beard. National City Rank. SAMTIBT, INSTT, president, Chien ro Hdison Company, the Common- wealth Edison Company. the Insnil Utility Investments, Ine, and an officer in many. other "concerns. One of the largest owners of pub- lie utilities in. the canntry. OPAR TISHRR RROTHERS OF THR FISHER RONTES CORPORATION OF DETROT, includine the seven Fisher brothers, PRED 7. HARLMS (h, TANP ENCE P., WIT. TIAM A.. RNWAPN B. ATRERIN J, and HOWARD FISHPR: founders and orieinal owners of the Fisher Rodeos Corroration, and now offl. cars or Airactors In the Gonerp! Motors Corporation and other large concerns. MPANTRE, CTIAGRNEEI pnd wT PAM TORR I Dash My erect RIM and Mr, LOEB are financiers and have heen. or nye, offienra ar directors of mining and utility com: es, art, resident, mohareo Comnany, APOLPH S. OCHS, publisher, ‘Thr EL Aad. memsan wirrnenes Meher_pf the 1 niamincinneen ROBERT R. McCORMICK, editor and Amertean ene nets Haverhill, Mass. To the Daily Worker: Here in Haverhill as all over the shoes. Union Misleaders. The shoe workers throne. All shoe workers that I for nothing. ers many times, saying be plenty of steady work. The work- world workers suffer the conse-| quences of unemployment. Maybe worse than other cities because | ‘3K’ 2az E—_ Shoe Fakers Made Workers | Take Cut After Cut Quietly ers took the euts but results always | the same as before, No work. Must Organize Into T.U.U.L. The bosses’ paper is always throwing stones at the workers and) still the workers read this rotten) here have a|July until Labor Day, from Labor union called the Shoe Workers Pro-| Day to Christmas and so on but the tective Union with a king on the| work never picks up. The workers here to better them- had an opportunity to talk to admit| selves should drop this Shoe Work- that the mentioned union is good| ers Protective Union and reorganize Bosses jointly with|a new one, a militant one—the In- the union leaders fooled the work-| dependent Shoe Workers Union, z if they | filiated with the Trade Union Unity ; would take cut in wages there will| League. —A WORKER. 4 U. §. CITIES Join Demonstration (Continued Prom Page One.) ton, Toledo, Youngstown, Akron and Canton. Michigan: Detroit. Illinois: Chicago. Minnesota: Minneapolis. Washington: Seattle, California: San Francisco, Angeles, San Jose, Oakland. Los Missouri: St. Louis and Kansas City. Connecticut: Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport, South Norwalk, New Britain, Stamford and Water- bury. North Carolina: Charlotte and Gastonia. South Carolina: Greenville. North Dakota: Minot. New Jersey: Trenton, Newark, New Brunswick, Elizabeth, Pater- son, Passaic, Perth Amboy, Berke- ley Heights, Maryland: Baltimore. Virginia: Richmond. West Virginia: Wheeling. Rhode Island: Providence. New Hampshire: Nashua. Preparatory Meetings. All these demonstrations weeks, and particularly yesterday. in Chieago, and more than 20 in New York, ete. ides mobilizing for the Sacco-Van- | zetti demonstrations today specif- lically condemned the murder of the \Chinese worker, Wong, in Cuba, of |James McInerney, one of the de- fenders of the Lumber Workers hall in Centralia and just killed by tuberculosis in Walla Walla peni- tentiary, and the lynchings of Negro workers every week in both the South and North, auspices of the International Labor Defense, which aided in the defense Sacco and Vanzetti from the elec. trie chair. Many worke: called on their members and all sympathizers to demonstrate today. Among them are the Communist Party, International Workers’ Order, the Provisional National Committee for the Protettion of the Foreign Born, the All-America Anti-Imper- ialist League, the Trade Union Unity League and all of its indus- trial unions and national industrial leagues, the Workers’ International Relief, and hundreds of workers’ sports educational, defense, anti- fascist and fraternal organizations. The Trade Union Unity League in its call to’all workers and unem- ployed to join the demonstrations emphasizes that they must be ready to demonstrate Sept, 1 also, for abolition of the eonditions whieh those who killed Sacco and Vanzetti try to fasten permanently upon the working class, The Sept. 1 (Unem- ployment Day) demonstrations are for the building of militant fighting industrial! unions, to help the accu- mulation of a “Strike and Organize Fund” of $100,000 and to demand the passage by the national con- gress of the Communist, Party’s “Workers’ Social Insurance Bill” SS ublisher Chicago Tribune, OSEPH = MEDILL PATTERSON, editor The Daily News and Liberty Magazine. JULIUS — ROSENWALD, Sears, Roebuck & Co, CYRUS H: CURTIS, president, H, K. Curtis Publishing’ Company. HOY |W. HOWARD, publisher of the 8-) ard newspaper: presideint of he United Prove, 4 and president, been prepared for by hundreds of | > | factory gate and open air street | wages that in some cases amounted | meetings during the past two|to only $6.50 for a 65-hour week Nine meetings were held yesterday | ‘only 75 cents on the dollar, These preparatory meetings, be- | he demonstrations are under the | ae |ers railroaded through to conviction | and last minute attempts to save | ’ organizations have| All Militant Group S| Bessemer - Strikers | have | cents. | | }born workers here, and all are be- TO PROTEST IN GASTONIA BOSS’ GANG FLOGS 3 in Demand For Raise (Continued From Page One.) gang last year, is now openly in- viting lynching and is working up a lynching spirit. The workers are organizing for defense, The National Textile Workers’ Union and the rank and file strike committee among the 1,500 Ameri- can Mill strikers here are especially hated by the employers and their police agents, The strikers begin to see that the local Holy Roller preacher who has been agitating for “ousting -ll the Reds,” meaning to fight the Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union, is not following the right policy. The, N. T W. calls for contro] of the} strike by the workers themselves, through their rank and file com-| mittee, for spreading the strike, for workers’ self-demense against mur- derous assault by the police and the employers’ gunmen, Demand Increase. The strikers now demand an in- |crease to 85 cents and $1 for cloth previously woven for 60 and 90} The wage-cut of 30 per cent announced by the company reduces for an adult woman. The company has been paying in orders worth | The Goldbergs, owners >f the) American No, 1 and No. 2 mills on) trike here, and of several mills in| Gastonia, made an offer yesterday | to rescind the wage-cut for a ten-| day trial | back to work. This offer the strik- | ers refused. Demand Release of Seven. The workers and strikers here are | indignant at the action of the No:'h Carolina supreme court in uphold- ing the savage 20-year sentences | against the Gastonia striker lead- | in the Charlotte courts last year.| They see the decision rendered just ow, when a new strike starts in| he Gastonia region, as an attempt at terrorism. Here, as inal] other parts of the world, the Sacec ‘and Vanzetti Day | demonstrators tomorrow. will de-| mand the release of the seyen work- ers convicted in the Gastonia ease last year and will pledge to organize and fight for economie demands and against the lynch gangs. DRIFT TO CITY INCREASES NEW YORK.—Farmers are leav-' iug the soil in this state and drift- ing to the city at a rate which is five times as fast, during the period between 1925 and 1930, as it was) the five years preceding the above time. to provide among other things that all war funds be used for unem- ployment relief. * 6 Cleveland Demonstrations. CLEVELAND, Ohio., Aug. 21,— Tomorrow the workers of Cleve- land will participate in Sacco-Van- zetti memorial meetings at the fol- lowing places: Public Square, 61st St. and Quincy, Kinsman and 147th St. Market Square (which is at West 25th and Loraine), Mayfield Road and 128rd St., St. Clair and 76th St. Cleveland is a center of factories, unemployment, wage-cuts, and speed-up. There are many foreign ginning to realize that the fate of Sacco and Vanzetti is one that may befall any fighter for his class. for, / MOTHER/ and /the Do You Know? Ow firm delivers milk to you only with anton drivers, tn 100 h rt vince rici Rost 3865] GERARD'S LIST | OF U. S, RULERS The Real Government of United States (Continued From Page One.) the highbrow breed, and from 1913 to 1917 was American ambassador to Germany. He ean hardly be ac- cused by 100 per centers of some- how having been corrupted by the wily “Huns,” as he run out of Germany by the kaiser and wrote two books against Germany. | Gerard’s naming of the 59 men| who rule America came about be-| here is practically one industry—) sheet. For the last few years, work- | | ers wait for jobs to pick up from | C2Use he had recently written Easter to 4th of July, from 4th of| a} pamphlet circulated in England fa- voring Lord Beaverbrook’s new em- | pire party and its campaign of free | trade within the empire and a high tariff against the rest of the world. In it he had said: “Give the forty men who rule | the United States ten years for the development of this industrial empire (the British), and no coun- try on this earth could approach | it in per capita wealth.” | Of course this is a cockeyed bour- geois idea of what “great men” can | do with economie forces which make | them, rather than being made by them. But it mentioned that “forty men rule America.” So someone | asked Gerard who they were. He thought it over and added 19 more, and issued a statement nam- ing the whole 59 as the “invisible empire” or “power behind the throne” which Woodrow Wilson in |1913 admitted to be the real ruler of America. Again, of course, Ger- jard uses false bourgeois estimation of these “great men” by saying that they rule “hy yirtue of their abil- | ity.” Naturally they have ability, but that is not the source of their) | power, as many others have similar | ability, but no power. They rule America by owning or ccntrolling the capital engaged in production. Gerard himself admits | that “as a class the bankers exert the greatest influence, because they control the purse-strings of the na- tion.” While again talking nonsense when he says these 59 real rulers of America are “too busy” to run for political office, Gerard is correct in saying that-——“Their influence, finencial, industrial and semi-polit- ical, determines the men who shall go in office.” | We thus see that from the mouth of Gerard, himself a capitalist, comes the proof of the statement |made by the Communist Party that the government is owned and con- trolled by the big capitalists. Hoo- ver is the mere office-boy of Recke- feller, and is not eyen mentioned by Gerard, who however names Andy Mellon as second in the list of rul-| ers of America, not because he is secretary of the treasury, but be- cause he is head of great banking systems, coal and iron companies and the aluminum trust. While Commanists welcome this confession of a capitalist dictator- ship ruling the United States, they | ‘point out the stupidity of Gerard’s| | could make declining British imper- | ialism flourish Itke a green bay tree. re In fact, for all their cleverness, these capitalist dictators of Ame ica are in the midst of a catastrophi economie eri right now which! they do not, know how to get out of, | but which they ax® trying to throw| the burden of onto the shoulders | of the working class with wage-| cuts, unemployment” and spezd- p.| This capitalist dictatorship, which | through the Manufacturers? Asso-| ation is fighting against the} Yorkers’ Social Insurance Bill pro- posed by thé Communist Party, will not give a cent to the starving un- employed, the disabled and aged workers, ur’ess forced to by revolu- tionary, pressure of demonstrating masses, who must ultimately go on through struggles of class against class to overthrow the capitalist dic- tatorship and establish a Workers’ and Farmers’ Government. Work- ers! Force these monopolists to pay unemployment and other sociai in- surance. Demonstrate on “Unem- ployment Day,” September 1st! | Only Communists will fight for the | Workers’ Social Insurance Bill, which | provides for adequate insurance, | paid by the bosses, to unemployed | gs workers. Vote Communist! Demand the release of Fos- ter, Minor, Amter and Kay- mond, in prison for fighting | for unemployment insurance. NEVIN BUS LINES 111. W. Bist (Bet. 6 & 7 Ays. ‘Tel, CHickering 1600 PHILADELPHIA } HOURLY EXPRESS SERVICE $3.75 ROUND TRIP. 6 A.M, to 8 P. J 9.30 P. M11 P, and 1,30 WAY ATLAN#IC CITY Direct via Lakewood. $3.25, $2.00 Boston $4.00 Detroit $15.50 St. Louly 22.50 Everywhere. Return trips at greatly reduced rates. 84.505 SSO; 1250) | local INTER Be. Page Three NATEO Rel EW S&S ©. INsEPTENBER AL Shanghai Hankow Workers SHANGHAI (By Mail).—The in- surrection among the peasantry continue to grow and the labor movement in the towns of China grows simultaneously. Reports come from Hankow that over 10,000 workers are organized in the Red trade unions here. Strikes have be- come increasingly frequent of late. A “week against white terror” was recently organized in Hankow. The authorities are increasing their repressive measures against the revolutionary workers. During the last three months over 300 work. ers have been arrested and impris- ored. In the workers’ quarters hcuse seazches are frequently made. In Shanzhai over 2,800 women textile workers of the Loihu fac- tory have gone on strike under the leadership of the General Council of the Red trade unions. They dem- onstrated in the vicinity of the fac- of the Afridi tribes on Peshawar calls forth extreme signs of unea ness in the English press. The papers report depressedly that the air bombazdment of the insurgent villages has not had the desired ef- fect and has failed to suppress the rebellion, The army of the Afridi tribe, now counts 10,000 men and Build Revolutionary Unions ;tery and esisted the attempts of the police to disperse them. The workers of the Schihua also went on strike. In many of the other | textile factcries of Shanghai agita- |tion is going on for a general strike |of the textile workers. The work- ers of the power station, the water- | works and the tramways attack the | strikebreakers on trams, beat them, orga’ rrieade fights and at- tacks on the municipal committee of the Kuomintang. The -sorkers of some of the textile factories or- ze demonstrations, fight the po- > and attack the factory build- It is the first time that such recurrences tak. place since the fall ot Chang Kai-she The Red trade unions enjoy a very high presti among the wo: masses, rs openly recognize the lead- ership of the Red trade unions in ‘the class struggles. | British Bosses Uneasy Over Afridi Uprisings LONDON (I.P.S.).—The advance} is appro: Peshawar, The Eng- lish authoritie. are taking hasty steps for the defense of the town. Conflicts are taking place petween Afridi and English troops ‘n the vicinity of Pesaawar. The district |is being constantly watched by mili- tary airplanes. The English air | squadron is preparing to bombard ‘the women and children remain. SHANGHAT (LP.S.)—In Shanghai an anti-imperialist association has been organized and has issued an appeal to the proletariat of Shanghai. The object of the association is the organization of the bread masses in the struggle against the war danger, the imperialist inter- yention in China and for the defens association haye been formed in the colleges of Shanghai. e of the Soviet Union. Nuclei of the The asso- ciation has appointed special committees for work among the Chinese and foreign soldiers and among the Anamite police on the territory of the French concession. 440,000 Unemployed in Berlin BERLIN (LP.S.).—The labor of- fice of the province of Bradenburg publishes the exact figures on un- employment for the time bet ;Of these, 347,882 fall to Berlin alone. The situation of thess whose | unemployed benefit has run out is especially catastrophic. The num- Ween her of these between June 16 and| July 16 and July 21 of this year.| Jyly 15 totalled 70,767, as compared | The number of employed in the | with 8,321 last year, an increase of | prevince of Berlin-Bradenberg stands Boss’ Sheet Would End) Mooney Case Scanda! NEW YORK.—The New York 79 per cent. These figur how |at 444,559, a drop of only 4,000 as| the seriousness of tke situation in |compared with the previous month.| the labor -rarket. CHICAGO UNEMPLOYMENT ‘Soviet Y.C.L. Backs New School Plan MOSCOW (LP.S.).—The Central Committee of the Young Commu- nist Leninist League of the Soviet Union has published the following decision: Remembering the lesson of Lenin, the Young Communist Leninist League must be a single great | shock troop which can take the} initiative and assist in all under- takings. The Central Committee has decided to take over the lead- ership of the introduction of com- pulsory schooling in the Soviet Union. It is therefore our task to mobilize the creative for the initiative and the enthusiasm of millions of adults, youths and child- ren in order to overeome illite y and carry out the compulsory schooling scheme. The youthful and adult workers must organizc special voluntary working days in order to equip the schools, provide the in- ventory, prepare heating materials the winter months, provide for building materials for new school buildings, ete. From the 2utumn of 1930 to the spring of 1931, the youth must have sown 100,000 hec- tares of new land whose yield will go to providing the sums necessary for the village schools. | tribes, now joined by the Oraxay|the Afridi villages in which only|Soviet-Italian Trade | Agreement Important | Anti-Imperialist League Formed in Shanghai; Move Says “Isvestia” | MOSCOW (By Mail).—‘Izvestia” | commenting on the trade agreement | between Italy and the Soviet Union} signed on August 2 in Rome and| the resultant extension of trade re- lations between the two, countries | and the government credit guaran-, tee granted by Italy, says: “The agreement signed in Rome! must be welcomed as a new step| |to extend the trade relations be-| tween Italy and the Soviet Union,) The relations between the two coun- | tries have grown and extended on| the basis of the agreement con-} cluded in 1924 and have heen fur- |thered by a number of favorable economic circumstances, one of which is that Italian industry has | developed very successfully during recent years and is in a position to| compete with the industries of the! | most powerful capitalist countrie | As a result the import of industrial | ;goods from Italy to the Soviet! DEMONSTRATE Demand Immediate Passage of Bill (Continued From Page One.) and enemies of all workers. That the attack of the Manufac- turers’ Association is direeted against the Worke ‘ocial Insur- ance Bill, which provides for social insu; ce for all workers, is clearly shown by the crux of the whole pamphlet, issued by the bosses. They state: “Do we wish to estab- lish in the United States a eom- plete system of publie social insur- ance? That is the real issue.” Make the Bosses Pay. The bosses know that the cialists” try to hoodwink the wo: e to a fake form of social in- urance in which the workers pay and not the bosses. Hence the full brunt of their attack is against the bill advocated by the Communist Party, as this hits the bosses, and is based on the needs of the unem- ployed workers. he Bill. *s0- The Workers’ Social Insurance Bill, whieh ma’ a minimum de- mand of $25 a week for all unem- ployed workers, no matter for what reason unemployed—old age, sick- ness or lack of job—is advocated by the Commynist Party, and all Com- munist candidates are campaigning for it in their election drives, One of the first demands of the bill is that the billions being used for war purp be turned over to a fund for social insurance imme- | diately, to be administered by a }commiitee of workers, The bill goes on to provide a capital levy on all fortunes of $25,000 and over; a graduated income tax on incomes of $5,000 and over to create a fund to provide the social insurance de- man ‘ed in the bill. The rich, under the terms of the bill, who have extracted huge pro- fits fron: the workers, will be com- pelled to provide funds for the maintenance of the workers who are unemployed. This is why the A. F. of L. and the bosses so viciously fight against the bill, The bill is a struggle of class against class, and is in the interest of the work- ers and against capitalism. short of certain very important raw materials for industry, for instance, petroleum and ores, The import of these necessities from the Soviet Union is therefore a necessity for Italy’s economic system. A fascinat- ing factor is that excellent sea transport ways exist between the two countries. As a result of the present agreement which supple- ments in various points the agree- ment of 1924, Soviet orders in Italy will be doubled, particularly as the CHICAGO.—Employment in the| Union has increased. On the other| Italian government has guaranteed jindustries of Mllinois has reached | hand, Italy is interested in obtain-|a considerable portion of the credit the lowest level since 1921. paring June, 1930, to June 1929, em- Telegram, a capitalist paper, makes | Ployment has dropped over 10.9 | one the situation that develops in every of the clearest statements of if the strikers would come | 2°tion that these same “great men” | labor case in an editorial yesterday. | It says California can do one of three things in the Billings case. It can leave them in E on where they have been 14 years; it can give them a parole and try to dodge the issue, or it can pardon them. . The Telegram points out that if either of the first two courses is followed, it is probable that the case will continue to agi- tate the “liberals of the world.” (Which means the wor! will con- tinue to fight for their release, and to expose capitalist justice in this case.—Ed.) But the Telegram ad- vises that pardon be given and hopes that then, “the Mooney-Bill ings case will be buried.” Mooney and New York City spends $600,- 000,000 yearly—the Communist Party demands relief for the un- employed—yot- Communist! FARM IN THE PINES Situated in Pine Forest, near Mt Lake, German Vabie Untes: 816— $18. Swimming ond Fishing M. OBERKIRCH N Box 78 i R41 N.Y |per cent and payrolls are 18.4 per | cent lower. Organize and | wage-cuts! strike against VIDA OBRERA (WORKERS’ LIFE) Spanish Weekly Organ of the Comunist Party will be issued regularly each week Beginning Sept. 1, 1930 Subscribe Now! —_ RATES: 1 year $2.50; 6 months 3 months Tie SINGLE COPY 6 CENTS 50 copies or more $1.25 Bundles o at 3 cents per copy All Subs and Orders to ‘VIDA OBRERA” | | w~ | | 30 Union Sq, Third Floor BUILD! i SOUTHERN WORKER Issued Weekly by the Communist Party of the U. S. A. The only paper published in the ers against the bosses, and white work, Workers! Farmers! Support it! Build it! Spread it! in every mill and mine, in every city and town, all over the countr; The paper of and for the Negro SPREAD!| HE South that stands with the work- ers and farmers, side. Order Bundles for Sale and Distribution Bundles sent by mail to all parts of the country. 1 cent a copy in bundle orders. SUBS Get your fellow-workers to subse: CRIBE ribe. $1.00 a year. 50c¢ a half year, Send all correspondence and funds to SOUTHERN WORKER BOX 85, BIRMINGHAM, ALA. | { from the Soviet Union. Italy is Spend Your Anti-imperialist Directed by Libretto by ...... Musie composed by Dance movements by . ARTEF Scenario .. Dramatic direction . Musica] direction . Scenic effects ... Cast ........ART Scenic and costume effects by .... STUDIO ! Com-|ing a series of other commodities | necessary to finance the trade rela- tions between the two countries. Vacation at FIRST PROLETARIAN NITGEDAIGET CAMP—HOTEL Accommodations to suit the taste and desire of every camper HOT AND COLD WATER; ELECTRIC LIGHTS; SWIMMING POOL; TENTS; BUNGALOWS; HOTEL ROOMS. A Variety of Cultural Activities EVERY DAY SOMETHING NEW Athletics, Games, Hikes, Excursions, Dances, Theatre, Chorus, Lectures, Symposiums, ete. Sbecial Feature Programs for Week Ends GALA PERFORMANCE Saturday, August 23rd The Outstanding Cultural Event of the Season PROGRAM: IL “TURN THE GUNS” pantomimic spectacle, NO SCHNEIDER ...V, JEROME .. ADOHMYAN -EDITH SEGAL FRITZ BROSIUS SISTED BY CAMPERS It. “HOLD THE FORT” Revolutionary Song Dramatization. V, JEROME NAGOSHINER u. ADOHMYAN tee RITZ BROSIUS S ASSISTED BY CAMPERS “VANZETTI IN THE DEATH HOUSE” Documentary Dramatie Episode. Performed by MILTON GOLDSTEIN (Artef) CAMP NITGEDAIGHI, BEACON, N.Y, PHONE BEACON 731 nN. Y. PHONE: ESTABROOK 1400 _ By Vrain: From Gran ntral every hour, By Bont: twice daily