The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 26, 1930, Page 3

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D ATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1930 eee Three LET TH LS TAsanos i INTERNATIONAL VND INTERNATL =- Fe acy ras a SHOPRW Ss 3x’ Ea —E 'DODYEAR BOSS ‘LANS BIG LAYOFF Production Dropping to New Lows Akron, Ohio. ] Daily Worker: Weekly production of tires in lant No. 2, Goodyear, at Akron, las cut from 55,000 last week to ),000 this week, and the schedule or the next two weeks is 15,000 and $500 from then on. t The past two days foremen have ken going the rounds making in- airies as to who is single or aarried, how many children, ete. [t intended, at least it is so reported, gat the single men are to be layed Kf and the married with children pt to the last. This big slump in- ticates that ‘here will be another tut down within a month or six ceeks, They shut down nine days or inventory the first part of July. } Furthermore, married women are © be laid off in all departments as ] complete census is being taken of Ill employees. Noise But No Jobs. { A big noise was made in the local fapitalist press in July that Good- lear was going to solve the unem- Nloyed problem for their former vorkers by rehiring those laid off fince January. Each employe was © lay off one week in eight but this was exploded inside of a few | give us IN BRIEF— Young Auto Workers Are Active Daily Worker: Detroit, Mich. The general crisis that is effect- ing the whole world today, does not workers in the United | States a smell of the rotten capital- | ist system, but we are getting a| pretty damn big bit of it. Especially in the auto industry, we find a road to build a mass organization such as the Auto Workers’ Union, greater now then ever before, The Young Communist League realizes this opportunity and they are concentrating all their forces on building the youth section of poe | T.U.U.L. especially of the youth sec- tion of the Auto Workers’ Union. A series of shop-gate meetings are held every day and they are having great effect on the workers. In several instances when the union and its,demands were mentioned the workers applauded and yelled. In spite of the arrest of us comrades, the workers see that it is dangerous | to attend our meetings because you can’t tell when the flat-foots will rush in and try to break up the meetings, The workers attend in great numbers, and show a great deal of interest in what we have to say. —A YOUNG AUTO WORKER. ays when the men re-hired were iven notice on their first day on the job that they would be laid off gain in two days. Goodyear forces n Akron dropped from 15,000 to 4,000 workers during July. Their hormal force in Akron is 17,500, but n 1929 it reached almost 19,000 em- ployes. With newer machines and _ still kreater speed up the few workers jeft on the job are forced to get but the same production in four days that the full force did last year in ive and one-half days, Then some vorkers are doing week off and veek on and then only four days. No wonder that when you talk to them about how to solve the prob- em they imitate the sighting of a ‘ifle—““Shoot, that’s all.” —D. W. BOSSES. FIGHT SEPT. | MEETS Millions Starve; Rich 0 Pay Social Insurance (Continued From Page One.) vosses says: “We are in for wage veductions!” The bosses, who reaped fortunes nut of their exploitation of the workers, are now attempting to make the workers suffer the whole purden of the crisis. They want the workers out of jobs to starve. They think this is a good way to get rid of them. But the workers must not stand by and starve, They must fight. By the millions they nust line up behind the demand for social insurance, as advocated by the Communist Party. The Bill. What is social insurance, against which the whole force of the cap- italists, their government and the fascist leaders of the A. F. of L., is directed? The Workers’ Social Insurance Bill advocated by the Communist Party demands that the boss government immediately urn over for unemployment insur- lance the billions it is spending for war. The Bill provides a minimum weekly payment to all unemployed f $25, With millions unemployed, the bosses do not want to part with their swollen profits. They will not part with them until they are \foreed to do so by a mass move- ment of the workers, solidly united under the leadership of the Trade Union Unity League and its unem- stewed councils, Other Demands. The Workers’ Social Insurance ‘Mill goes further, Recognizing that junemployment will grow worse as ‘the cisis deepens, the Bill demands ‘that a levy be placed against all fortunes of $25,000 and over, and an income tax on incomes of $5,000 and over, to create a necessary fund to cover the regular weekly pay- ments for the unemployed. The hosses with their billions, | will eing forced to, is to protect the bosses that the A, F. of L. and “socialist” party cook up their fake schemes on “unemployment insur- ance?” What is the gist of these schemes? That the workers should pay, not the bosses! This is a remedy—for the bosses, Those al- ready employed are having their s cut, They do not get enough ‘to live on, let alone being forced to give up part of it for a fake “un- employment insurance” schem Under this scheme, how are those millions already unemployed to benefit? The “socialists” are not much concerned about this, as their interests lie with the capitalists, - The Workers’ Social Insurance Bill, of the Communist Party, con- siders the needs of the workers. It polite out the fact that the boss Jobless, Not Militant, a Suicide Cincinatti, O. To the Daily Worker: Enclosed find clipping about a bless worker committing suicide. “Fred Gerhauser, 27, automobile mechanic, of 412 West Twenty-sec- jol | Soviet Union among the workers in | the I, W. W., while on the other hand you will find these same individuals LEGION AND LWW, IN-FASCIST ROLE But Toilers Are Ready| for Them Seattle, Wash. Dear Comrade: There is in the ranks of the I.W.W. members of the American Legion who are agitating the rank and file members of the I.W.W. into open fascist methods against the Communist Party, trying to start open warfare between the members of the 1.W.W. and mem- bers of the Communist Party and the Trade Union Unity League. They have succeeded in getting j | drunkards to attack speakers on the) Communist soap-box with the in- fight. But workers with sober minds don’t fall for such crude traps | as the American Legion hav for them which will give the police | an excuse for stopping workers speaking on the streets of Seattle. These American Legionnaires dress in longshoremen’s clothes to carry on their lies and slander against the Communist Party and the T.U.U.L. and also villifying the | uptown, dressed in the latest fash- ions of the seasons, wearing in the button hole of their coat lapel the} American Legion buttons. These} rats are pugs and sluggers and are trained for pugilistic encounters. However, they seem to have a yellow streak, because they get weaklings to do their dirty work and never back them up. Members here are ready for them. —D. W. PG EO eee ond St., Covington, Ky., blew out his brains in the cellar of his home | late yesterday afternoon ina fit of | despondency induced by his inability | to find employment.” —CORRESPONDENT. New Speed-up Means More Jobless Pittsburgh, Pa. Dear Comrades: Enclosed you will find a clipping which will illustrate how the bosses are trying to “solve” the unemploy- ment problem. The story tells how 500 men will complete a double wall in 13 days, we know that after 13 days these 500 men will be on the street “help- ae the other thousands to -find a Job. ‘ This is the only solution the bosses have for unemployment, the introduction of new machinery, speed-up and wage-cuts. —WORKER CORRESPONDENT. MILLIONS FOR BOSSES! STARVATION FOR WORKERS WASHINGTON.—The amount of the secret bonus received by the president of the Bethlehem Steel Co. last year was $1,623,532. If the big boss worked 300 days a year he received the average of $5,446 a day! class is lousy with wealth and profits. It organizes the workers for struggle, as a class, to use its mighty power to wring the demand for social insurance from the boss government. All Out September Ist! As a first step in this mighty movement for social insurance, the Trade Union Unity League has or- ganized huge demonstrations all over the country for “Unemploy- ment Day,” Sept. 1. This day has been set aside by the A. F, of L. and the boss government to glorify their rotten system of exploitation. The fakers will work overtime to attempt to make the workers pleased with their lot. As a con- trast, the T.U.U.L. will expose the bitter conditions of the unemployed, the mass wage-cuts, and the grow- ing struggle for unemployment in- surance, In nearly every industrial center |. in the United States there will be demonstrations for the Bill, under the leadership of the T.U.U.L. Kensington. In the Kensington, Pa., district the textile workers have joined in support of the Workers’ Social In- surance Bill. A mass meetistg, held in MePherson Square, was ad- dressed by J. Louis Engdahl, Emil Gardos and Betty Gannett demand- ing the passage of the Bill, The hundreds of workers present voted unanimously to carry on the fight for its passage. Milwaukee. A mass demonstration is being called in Milwaukee, Wis., at Red Arrow Park, Sept. 1. In a leaflet issued by the T.U.U.L. the fake scheme of the Wisconsin Federation of Labor for “unemployment insur- ance,” is exposed. The leaflet states that this is @ fake promise holding “out the false hope of a few crumbs so that we should not fight for the wages we are entitled to. The un- employment insurance proposed by the “socialists” of Wisconsin and the Federation is the same kind that the workers of France are now striking against.” The workers are forced to stand the burden of the measly payments, while the bosses | hang on to their profits. WEALTH, POWER ARE IN FEW HANDS |Wage Cuts _ Go With) More Unemployment (Continued From Page One.) Bethlehem Steel Co., and supposed even by the stockholders of that corporation to get $12,000 a year salary, actually was drawing, in addition to this “salary” $1,623,753 a@ year as a “bonus.” Grace is one of “the 59 rulers of America” ac-| cording to Ex-Embassador Gerard. If we go further than these 24 parasites getting an average of $1\),- 000,000 a year each, we see that in got a total income of $14,214,359,- 822, or about one-sixth the whole | income of 24,000,000 families. And we must remember that in 1927, only 2,978,704 persons, that is only about one-eighth of the number of families, got over $2,000 a year, al- though $2,000 a year is even below. tce minimum standard of living for a family of five according to the) government statistics. Tax the Rich and Feed the Poor! It should be everywhere known, | that the 375,356 people who got $14,- 214,359,822 out of the 1928 national income of $89,419,000,000, paid taxes of only 7.7 per cent which is only one-fifth of the rate that the rich are required to pay in England, where at least something, although far too little, is given to the un- employed in social insurance. If these few hundred “thousand rich (375,356 capitalists) were made to pay the same rate of taxes as the rich of England pay (who pay it and still remain rich), there would immediately be a fund of close to $5,000,000,000 with which to estab- lish the Workers’ Social Insurance Fund demand by the Communist Party and the Trade Union Unity League. The Workers’ Social In- surance Bill to establish this fund provides a minimum of $25 for all workers unable to earn a living through being jobless, disabled or ‘aged. Make Them Pay It Back! It is to force this perfectly pos- sible demand from the clutches of the 59 rulers of America, that the Trade Union Unity League is call- ing all workers, employed and un- employed alike, to demonstrate in every city of America on Sept. 1. The workers created all this wealth and deserve it all, not mere- ly a part, The Communist Party, which pro- posed the Workers’ Social Insurance Bill, appeals to all workers not only to demonstrate on Sept. 1, but to| vot» Communist on election day, so that Communist congressmen may | arrested Comrade “DEMONSTRATION |Demand Release of All Class War Prisoners (Continued Ton. Page One.) Not Fay ie” SHANGHAI. dreds present at the meeting at} Roosevelt and St. Louis. But as though to prove our speak- | Jers’ charges of police brutality and persecution, on this evening alone} there were over fifty workers ar-|Communist communal functionaries troops, rested. Police Armed With Shot Guns. At 26th and Homan, the police arrived with shot guns at seven! o'clock. At Belmont and Wilton, a| corner long given over to street meetings, the detectives covered this corner. They decided that the workers were thoroughly intimi- dated and left, whereupon the I.L.D, held its meeting. The police later returned. By this time the meeting rested. At the Western Electric noon-day e set|meeting our speaker was arrested | and one of the workers in the plant was taken. Through the good of- fices of the police his foreman was notified of his militant attitude and today he has joined the unemployed. The meeting held at North and Washtenaw was broken up and over sixteen workers spent the night in jail and four of them are held on! charges of disorderly condu Throughout the Chicago di: Gary, Milwaukee, St. Louis riet— and | |Rockford as well as Chicago—mass | Polish, meetings were held to commemorate Sacco and Vanzetti. ® Many Meets In Pa. The Philadelphia district of the | pternational Labor Defense ar. ranged ten demonstrations all over | the district. In Wilmington the Po- | | lice broke up the demonstration and Gittelman. In Baltimore many workers joined the LL.D. as a result of the demonstra- tion. Allentown, Chester, Trenton and the Anthracite region did not report yet the results. be Philadelphia a night before e demonstration six open air mass sy were held in working class sections. At these meetings about! 1500 workers participated. Friday, the 22nd, at 7 p. m., the) main demonstration was held at} | Jefferson Square. Over 1500 work-' ers participated actively in the dem- onstration. In spite of the score of Philadelphia policemen who aimed, to intimidate the crowd and the speakers the workers enthusiastical- ly cheered and applauded the speak- ers. A resolution was adopted de- manding the immediate release of | all class war prisoners. The speakers included: A. Fried, \chairman; J, Kingston, secretary of the A. N. L. C.; Louis Scott, dis- | trict organizer of IL. D.; S. Lee, colored candidate for lieutenant gov-| ernor on the Communist ticket and| |tary of the Communist Party. At the demonstrations Thursday and Friday 70 workers, about 40} | pemscent Negroes, joined the I. L. D.,| Czech workers took place. many signed the petition list pri ture was sold. 3,000 in Milwaukee. In memory of Sacco-Vanzetti, three thousand workers came to the Court House Square, Milwaukee, to protest against the vicious persecu- jtion of the militant workers throughout the country, particular- ly against the persecution in the jouth. Although the “socialist” school | board granted a permit for the meeting to the Milwaukee I. L. D.| the police, detectives and stool pigeons were on hand to prevent the sale of the Labor Defender and other literature, as well as to pre- vent taking a collection. In spite of their threats, the workers con-| tributed and bought literature as they left the demonstration. As a result of the meeting many Italian workers signed application cards, as well as Negro and white cas SACCO-VANZETTI, NE AP a Communists in Germany Will ee Plants in Jaban Are Virtual Jatis| Briefs From All Lands -According to re- nee, a Red |ports from Kiangsi provi (Wireless By inprecorr) Army of 10,000 men under the PrOKIO, ie women BERLIN, Aug. 24.—In Zentral| ership of Huan Kun-la is advancing sociation has made a study of fa Germany, in the cities of Hallem-|on Kiang, on the Han River, 200 tory conditions of Japanese work- jerseburg, Greppin, Teuchen, the | kilometers south of Nanchang. Red |i vomen and describes them as under Chu Teh, are ad- “appalling.” Of 800,000 women | have declared their refusal to collect | vancing on the town of Iyang, about} workers, the greater number of | the dictatorship taxes and have ap-/|120 kilometers south of Nanch ang.|them are between the ages of 15} ;pealed to the population to refuse | a and 20. Those be the ages of |to pay. LENINGRAD.—A Soviet textile|12 and 15 number no less than The public prosecutor has threat-| worker named Grinev, who is em-| 115,801. ened proceedings. |ployed in the Textile Trust here,| 1h wally contiacted | In Lower Silesia, all workers were |invited to attend an election meet- ing of the fascist national socialists at Bunzlau. jattacked the Communists A: 0 The bourgeois state party has| party, conservative people’s party and economic party. MEETS HELD AT GERMAN BORDERS ' | Austrians Fraternize | BERLIN, ings took place in Germany. A | four- country meeting took place in | Singen and 3,000 workers had jour- |neyed to it from Baden, Wuertem- |berg, France, Switzerland and Aus- tria. The police attacked a pro- jcession of workers from Stuttgart | in a wood. In all 5,000 workers | took part in the meeting which was addressed by Comrade Kaspar for | the German Communist Party. A similar international meeting took place in Stolberg and was at-| |tended by German, Belgian, Dutch | and French workers. About 20,000 | workers took part in the demonstra~ ‘tion in this industrial district. | | Representatives of the various coun- jtries spoke and Comrade Brown (Great Britain) also spoke and was greeted with great applause. A demonstration of 3,000 workers took place in Lauenberg. Repre- sentatives of the German and Polish Communist Parties | workers amidst scenes of great en- | thusiasm. An international meeting also |took place in Sonderburg and Ger- man and Danish workers frater-| nized and pledged themselves to |fight against imperialist war for 1928 tltere were 375,356 people who| Betty Gannett, organization secre-|the overthrow of capitalism. The international meeting in Seb- | nitz was prohibited by the police, | ut a big procession of Saxon and It was broken up by police baton charges, |testing against the Flynn Sedition | but formed again and again. Laws, and a large amount of litera- | Fight For Social Insurance! spoke to the) | has constracted a machine for pack- Police | girls will |was concluded but two workers who | fired on the crowd killing three and| streets, but will be given new jobs | tentions of starting a “free for all” | were talking on the corner were ar- | injuring 48. joined in a block with the people’s | 193 jishment for their anti-war cena | feet by three French, Swiss, | stration on August 1, Jan extremely critical point, to work in the textile plant nts, They are forced to work for bly mise ing yarn rolls. His invention has a capacity of 34,000 dozen roll low wages for a term of y | 8 hours and replaces 8 packers. Un- virtual slavery. Many of the The national socialists | like capitalism, however, these cight who «me from the country, mnt hed tiane into the h their three-year terms in the | factory only to return home to die. Recmniding ap aotlaliata: Their health is invariably shattered to ereate profits for the bosses. . £ * LGNINGRAD!—By October 3,| sresvora They ore plecte tay meee , ninety-two undertakings em-|Naye a month’: The sromvn'e meat loying 300,000 workers in Lenin-|cjation report states: “In most fac will have introduced the 7-hour | tories, they are not allowed out their | day. This represents 92.7 per cent! rest d special guards being | of all workers in this city. posted at the big mill | Bates, as| eee ee |though before a prison, to see that KOVNO, Lithuania.—The minis-/no one leaves who has not got a try of the interior has ordered that) special card of permission. Sleeping 160 proletarian political prisoners | condi s are bad, 10 or 11 to a} ail here shall receive no books,|room, occupying usually one and a! parcels or correspondence as pun-| half mats each—a mat being six HOLD ANTI-WAR MEET IN HUNGARY st “Gov cugiune Jails 400 ee ee MOSCOW,— ers? The German work- delegation and the Canadian | (By Mail).—Sunday, | working women’ s delegation visited | August 4, five international meet-|the worl rs’ model colony “Trech-| gernaya Manufaktura.” The dele-} gations also visited the Lenin rest | | home neac Moscow, where they were warmly welcomed by the workers} R) ¢ staying there. \F ascis * * BERLIN.—At a meeting of house- holders of Danzig the minister of/ BUDAPEST, Hungary (I.P.S.) justice, Bredt, declared in the course|—The streets of Budapest were pat- of his speech: “We are standing at! rolled by strong forces of mounted com-/and foot police until late in the/ parable only with the situation in| night on the 1st of August. Despite | jall the terrorist measures of the government, a crowd of several | com-| thousand workers managed to as-| mittee for the convening of the en-/ semble on the square, ins front of | larged plenary session of the central|the main telephone office. The | committee of the Kuomintang party | workers came in groups of about 80 has sent a telegram to General Li| accompanied by workers on cycles Chi Tschen, the commander in the|who distributed Communist leaflets | province of Kiangsi, calling on him|and were away before anything to send troops immediately to Han- could be done to arrest them. Red kow to defend the town against the| flags were unfurled on the square TOKIO.—The preparatory * * Red Army. |and shouts of, “Long live the Soviet ae 8 |Union! Down with Imperialist LONDON.—Reports from Syd-/ War! Long live the Communist ney, Australia, on the August Ist| International!” sounded. anti-war demonstration declaze that| Everywhere the police were fever- fine demonstrations took place in jishly at work, Sham demonstra- Adelaide and Sydney. In Adelaide! tions were organized at various | a great procession marched <hrough/ Points with a view to drawing off | the streets of the town to the gov-|the police from the actual demon- ernment buildings, where a deputa-| Stratton point. In all 400 workers, tion demarded an interview with, both men and women were arrested. the prime minister. The police at-| About 100 have since been released tacked the worke~s and severe street | and the remainder are being held. fighting occurred. Mounted police! The bourgeois press reports with | workers present. Resolutions were adopted to send telegrams to the governors of New York, North Carolina, Alabama and | Wisconsin demanding the release of political prisoners jailed for their | working class activity. Sonia Mason, organizer for the} | Young Communist League, and just | released after serving three months ;|for participating in the March 6th) demonstration, spoke for the five! workers who were released with| her August 22nd. She called upon | the workers to join the I. L. D. and | fight for the release of Fred Bas- sett, serving a one year term and threatened with another charge, Leo | Fisher, Max Kagan and John Per- lich,, who are serving sjx months terms for leading Milwaukee unem- SPECIALOFFER FOR THE MONTH of AUGUST THE FOLLOWING PAMPHLETS FREE WITH EACH YEARLY SUBSC MUNIST, Official Organ RIPTION TO THE COM- of the Communist Party of the United States (Yearly Subscrition Two Dollars) Another War Coming 05 Death Penalty Demanded—The State of Georgia Against the Communist Party Why Every Worker Should Joi Chemical Warfare, by D. A. C: Work or Wages, by Grace Burnham.. Modern Farming: The Soviet fight the capitalist government fov this demand right in the halls of | congress. No one but a Communist would make a fight for it. | Insist on Social Insurance! Re fuse to starve in the richest land | on earth! Demonstrate Sept. 1 and | vote Communist in November! FARM IN THE PINES Situnted (nm Pine Forest. oenr Mt Lake, Germap Valle Hates: *10~ FI8 Swimming and Fishing M. OBERKIRG u for Ts Strong War in the Far Hast, by Henry. Hall. Out of a Job, by Earl Browder. Soviet War on Religion ... Twenty Million Unemployed . Southern Cotton Mills and Labor, by Myra Page..... Rush your Two-Dollar cash, money order or check and get the COMMUNIST for one pamphlets FREE WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street 05 05 10 10 in the Communist Party... ameron. nee by ‘Anna Louis +10 10 05 10 05 25 year and the above list of New York City finally succeeded in clearing the|horror that on August Ist, Com-| streets. Collisions also occurred in|munist leaflets were distributed in| Sydney. ‘the soldiers barracks in Szegedin. Played in demonstration for “work Steel Bosses to Slash Old Forge and Perth Amboy, Wages of Workers. Lawrence, More than 600 workers were pres- ent at the Sacco-Vanzetti demon- stration in Old Forge, Pa. The po- lice attempted to terrorize the work- ers. After the workers had gath- ered, the captain of police broke up the demonstration on the excuse that no permit was given. Many white and Negro workers | attended the demonstration in Perth Amboy, N. J. The workers were urged to participate in the Sept. 1st demonstration for the Workers’ Social Insurance Bill. Close to 700 workers gathered at the City Com- mon in Lawrence, Mass., Aug. 22nd, to commemorate the murder of Sacco®and Vanzetti. (Contmued trom Page One) League is now conducting a wide campaign in all the leading indus- | tries in the country. To advance this work at a rapid tempo a drive is being made to se- cure a fund of $100,000. In put- ting forward its campaign program | to all its affiliated bodies, the) Trade Union Unity League states: | “Every mine, mill and shop must | | reverberate with the slogan ‘Or-/| ganize and Strike!’ All workers | must be brought closer to us, into} our movement, as an outstanding achievement of the campaign. All| workers must be asked to join us| and contribute to the $100,000 fund, | Spend Your Vacation at «IRST PROLETARIAN NITGEDAIGET CAMP—HOTEL HOT AND COLD WATER; ELECTRIC LIGHTS; SWIMMING POOL; TENTS; BUNGALOWS; HOTEL ROOMS. Everything Ready for the LABOR DAY WEEK-END No Advance Registration Necessary Come Earlier and Get Better Accommodations SPECIAL FEATURE PROGRAM FOR SATURDAY, AUGUST 30 Outstanding Cultural Event of the Season “TURN THE GUNS” FIRST ACT Direeted by .... Anti-Imperialist Pantominie Spectacle : STRAUSS . YY. JEROME » ADOHMYAN " 4 CAMP NI + BEACON, PHONE RES nireods ‘ins Brom Grane Ceutral every hour By + twive dally jin subje ENDORSE ‘LABOR’ POLICY IN INDIA Support Boss Fake Dis- armament Talk ZU sae H, The Execu Second In- here, perialist tish, Labor labor party in India In a res¢ dealing with the question, it pu amp of its approval on the round-table con ference which is the labor party’s | device of keeping the’Indian masses tion and supplement a fake proposal and endorsement with for ‘an early amnesty” and reechoes bourgeois traitors, suc Gandh jand Co., by a suggestion to call off the disobedience campaign. During the discussion, W. made a shameless defense of Br policies in India which, he s: istent with socialist ideal ¢ Brocky fake sna: of wing t pre- party, fi tended to foc worke: de- nouncing the or + government policy in India finally agreed |to the position mentioned in the resolution above, thus virtually en dorsing MacDonald’s policy in India. a su antial service to the social { sts and their bourgeois masters by playing with “left phrases,” other thing that occupied the attention of the social fascists of the Second International is a great deal of talk and gestures about “disarmament,” magic word of the Paeeeols peeees and social is, of course, quite be- eile the Pa fascists to act as the propagandists of the bour- geoisie in spreading a smoke screen on the issue of war danger, by at- tempting to delude the workers into believing that disarmament is possible. New (a 000,000 yearly—the Communist Party demands relief for the un- employed—vot> Communist! Pesce debate tala he ila) she spends $600,- York aa UNITY CAMP WINGDALE, N. Y. Register Now for LABOR DAY WEEK-END at 1800 Seventh Ave. Monument O111 A special program has been arranged Gods of Lightning a drama about SACCO & VANZETTI Wonder Trio Unity Gezang Farein Directed by Kraness ELECTION CAMPAIGN J. LOUIS ENGDAHL RICHARD B. MOORE and JACK PERILLA Campaign Manager Election Debate- A Surprise CAMP FIRE where our camp fire newspaper will be read, and you know what that means. Don’t miss. CARNIVAL and BALL with a large orchestra Added features are be- being arranged Make your reservations BOW: t Huses leave 110th St. and Seventh Aye, on the follows ing a DALSDAY

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