The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 1, 1931, Page 3

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‘ { Ee ee eee ee OF a D ATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, TH RSDAY. JANUARY 1 1931 Join the Council of the Unemployed; It there Isn’t One, Organize One KVE KX XT E> Ke Ss Ex Seattle Seller Goes to =- wre ay reese SE’ Ea EE PELLAGRA HITS CHILDREN OF THE \Breadlines 1n |SCRAP IRON MEN | | Duluth, Minn. CALIF. JOBLESS Grow Daily | By a Worker Correspondent.) Fool the Workers Into} DULUTH, Minn —Conditions in our | eity are miserable enough without Great Misery the city council bluffing the workers ( a ‘Worker Cor Correspondent} | with promises of work. From day to ia Cal.—Several ae day there are fake registrations of WORK 104 HOURS | FOR MEASLY $15.60 Negro, White Workers Must Unite (By a Worker Correspondent) DETRONT, Mich—Just a few words Everett Sells 500 in Week; Small Cities Boost Orders) «cows: | with the Wor! surance B | mand Encouraging “Feports of pally Worker activity in the smaller cities is contained in the following note from’ L? Scott, Daily Worker repre- sentative in District 12, Seattie: “Comrade Ed Lange is official Daily Worker representative in Ta- TS THE Sop Have The Day WERKER On MUR SIDE Whitr/ You Discuss Economic, QUESTIONS against such as 2 ago an agent came to the Social Ser- | the jobless workers. The breadlines vice in Richmond in order to “help” jare increasing here daily and now out the unemployed in that city | Humber over 400 at the ethel Mission, where the unemployed situation is Where the homeless men are sent, intensified by the curtailment of the| There they are made to saw wood oil production as Richmond is an oil | for their board and lodging. They center. He offered to take workers | saw wood for as much as three hours | down. to the cotton fields, where they |for a bowl of soup and three slices ae =a lots ae sper a a eo of bread. only 30 minutes for lunch. We make ‘On, le pro! 8 Sanilary; while the community fund was | 15 cents per hour and work 13 hours housing, plenty of good food and won- | eben their drive I i etm to|Per night and 7 nights 2 week, and pdb working conditions and that | ork at the leading hotel where they | still we look to get laid off at most helr meals and transportation would made their headquarters. They spent | any time. be provided. When one worker men-/ g17750 on luncheons and dinner| And when a man gets hurt he has tioned he had three children, the| ng $2,0000 other expenses without | to wait so long before he can get agent said to take them with him counting the other good times they first aid, as they have no medical pe yes aa where he could | neq at another leading hotel of this | department at all, This worker fell for the story and |" wai te Hees oe was daken to the fields. The par- lers about organizing and they say | ticular location of the ranch was near BI ESS Ny | KEP y 3 Chowchilla, which is over 150 Bear! T(} Ave that’s the only way out of it. We south of Richmond. They left at 8 | all are colored workers, but there are olock i | four white workers. We are given | g a0 She ‘morning and éid not IN ( ‘AR STATIONS the worst jobs and least pay. I} | thin! arrive until 8 at night. When they ' ik it's time that we as workers | Sie 2000 82 Was pivasiend them should wake up to the true facts of tl were told by the commissary if tay did not have any money they Join the Fight for J ob-| life and stop fighting against our about the conditions here in the Bab- cock Iron Co, The work is hard, the | conditions are rotten, the hours are long and the pay is very small. ‘We have to work 104 hours to get $15.60. We got to work at 5:30 in the afternoon and have to work until 7 o'clock in the morning and have coma. I have given him the instruc- tions and the program for Tacoma. Comrade Lange was one of my best newsboys in Seattle. “T just came from Everett, Wash- ington, Max Major is Daily Worker agent there now. He sold Jast week 500 Daily Workers in this new town. Now Everett wants 100 cop~ jes daily. Everett gives a challenge to Tacoma. 200 Dailies soon and also Everett. | ‘Tacoma is not going to get away | do you say, Tacoma? “The District 12 Daily Worker go out into all the towns and vil- lages in the district and get your Daily Worker in the small town. Stamp the Jocal address in red ink they can buy the paper in their own town.” “SELLS PAPERS IN FEW HOURS” IN SAN DIEGO “On the 15th I sent you a buck for 5 bundles of 20 each,” writes O, Ewaardt, San Diego, Cal. “I got the | first bundle and sold the papers in| a few hours. Enclosed find $2.10. | Send 35 daily for 6 days. Send also | some sub blanks.” Or bankers by taking the payments to on » and turning it over to S of joble: | administer as and wo: ~ | relief, that there be - | shutting off | jobless wo: 1 not Ss q that the job shark swindle “Tacoma is talking about modi with that stuff’ says Everett. What | : | BE agents wants all district agents not | te look at the center only, but to Jana hope to record more progress in | Mayor Rolph of San promised that the jobles: taken care of when the demonstration was held. Rolph has ——— | now been elected state governor. He | has broken all his promises, and the Masses will call him to account. “We are now beginning a sub drive . . . Detroit March. | a short time,” writes E. B., Lawrence,| DETROIT, Mich., Dec. 31.—Thous- |Mass. “Please deduct 10 copies of | ands of workers will demonstrate the Daily from our bundle and send | against the ‘unemployment, misery them to Manuel Perry, Lowell, Mass. | and want existing in Detroit. They NING SUB DRIVE [IN LOWELL, MASS. so that new readers know where | we want to try and establish the | will gather at Grand Circus Park, Daily in Lowell by putting it on a | January nd at 1 p.m. Here the workers will voice their indignation | against the fake charity d “en- number of stands.” L. A. F. writes from Flint, Mich.: | forced labor” of the Mur admin- “There are two girls who are going | istration. Before Murphy was elect- to start with 25 Dailies each and .| ed mayor, he promised jobs and re- | try to build up a news route.” lief for all unemployed workers, “am sending for papers for one i eee tation on Jan- |week. I think we will do better as | ie x 7 cee a committee soon as we get organized. Our or- | oO ay ie dem sae of the un- ganizer was to be here Tuesday, but | employed workers to the city auth- The mass orities. would have to wait until they picked before he could give them any food. ‘The next day when the worker ask- ed about sending his children to school he was told that there was no way to send them and that they had | better work if they wanted to make any Money. So the father and three children were forced to work together in order to make any money at all. For two days’ work the four of them together made a total of $4.36. A glaring example of high wages that we hear so much about but never actually see. As to housing conditions: were forced to sleep in drafty shacks with almost no sanitation. A child died and another is in the hospital with pneumonia due to exposure. The worker who told me the story had a chance to come back and did 60. Others are still working, trying to get. enough money to get out. The; store refuses to advance any more credit, only giving them food and Supplies for the amount of cotton *pleked. At this time of the year _there is a heavy fog every morning {n this region which makes the cot- ton unfit for picking until about noon, How will these families ever get enough to get out? As the season progresses the crop gets thinner and consequently the pickers make even less money. Pellagra Spreads They | | less Relief (By a Worker Correspondent) 125th St. subway station. Walked the platform back and forth in order to keep warm. Got a chill instead. The sight my eyes beheld could bring the chill to anyone with red blood in his or her veins. Men in Tags, worn out shoes, no socks, torn coats (no overcoats), ripped pants, | caps pulled down over ears. White sleeping posture on thé benches of the station. fur coat wrapped tightly around her form, glanced at these men and re- on the poor men.” the cold to awaken pity. Stand up | brother side by side in the ranks of ings, for your bread and shelter. Do} ery—capitalisin. they are needed to work in the fields BRONX, N. Y.—It was a very cold| duced and we are really in need of three o'clock December morning, on | iS to bind ourselves together with a my way home frob a down town | SOlid bond of unity and by doing this meeting. |Having to change trains at | We Will proceed on to progress. | and colored bundled together in a| A sweet little creature-in a costly | marked to her gallant escort, “Pity | What I wanted to} say to the men on the benches was: | Men, wake up, do not lay here in |like men, in line with your colored | the Communist Party, the only Party | fighting for your right as human be- | away with the cause of all this mis- | ~| on Second and K Sts. | fellow-workers and fight our oppres- |sors. The only way to stop hunger, | the only way to get back some of the | things that we as workers have pro- COMING EVENTS IN JOBLESS CAMPAIGN .DETROIT—Hunger March, Jan 2, assembles at Grand Circus Park, 1 | p. m. and proceeds to city hall. Dele- gation to state legislature, Jan. 7. | | Foster mass meeting, Danceland Aud- itorium, Jan. 11, CLEVELAND—Hungar march, Jan. 5, assembles in three places, 30th St. and St. Clair, 30th St. and Central, 25th St. and Lorain at 6:15 and marches on city hall. Foster mass | meeting Jan. 12 at 8 p. m. at Slo- | venian Hall, 6417 St. Clair. Second United Front Conference, Jan. ‘9, South Slav Hall, 5607 St, Clair Ave. PITTSBURGH—Hunger march in Ambridge, Jan. 5. Hunger march in | Pittsburgh, Jan. 10. SACRAMENTO—Hunger march jon | state capitol, Jan. 7. Delegations from all over state meet at 11 a. m. | CHICAGO—Ratification mass meet- | Bronx, Harlem, Downtown, Williams- | | Special Red Sunday to collect signa- | This situation is not confined to chilla District alone. The same litions prevail along the cotton which extends from Merced to in order that the families may exist. | ing, Foster speaker, Jan. 9 at Chicago | The hunger, toil and exposure due to | Coliseum, 14th St. and Wabash, 7:30 the miserable conditions they are| p. m. Second United Front Conger- | forced to live under, make all the! ence, Jan 11. Hunger march on city | petaereanny never got here.”—T.-J. B., Decatur, WANTS TO SELL IN I. Some typical examples of the kind CARLSBORG, WASH. aS a, Jof relief furnished to unemployed ©.C. C. of Carlsborg, Wash., writes: | BOSSES WANT COSSACKS. | workers and their families are as “I want to start selling the Daily HELENA.—The Montana Crime follows: Worker here in Carlsborg. You may | Commission recommends that a State Pen iaton ere Bre five every day. And | 4 . ae amily of 4, living on Greely start sending me v cossack system be established. Strike-| 41. “the father must work 3 di = if I can get you more subs I will or- | breaking Pennsylvania cossacks are Hope to hear from | held up as an example. for the city, coe) check of $7 per week. for which he receives a He der more later. you real soon.” “SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY” IN BINGHAMTON, N. “There is a splendid opportunity to establish a Daily Worker route in this territory, probably even sev- eral routes. I wish you would send me a bundle of each day for the beginning. However, as I am un- employed, I cannot pay in advance but I do hope that you will trust me for at least a week.” (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 0} unemployed that unquestionably the next few months will see hunger riots in various American industrial centers. capitalist world, strongest center, A Future of Struggle. The perspective for capitalist. society in America in 1931 is one of sharpening and deepening class struggles. The same holds true for the capitalist world ‘as a whole. Nineteen thirty-one will bring a great intensification of the revolutionary struggles in China, India, Latin-America and Europe. The developing mine and textile strike in England are the struggle symbol of the coming year. Nineteen thirty-one may well see disaster to the capitalist system in some countries. Advance of the Soviet Union. While capitalism plunges deeper and deeper into crisis, the Soviet Union blazes forward from victory to victory in the building of Socialism. Its success | strikes terror to the heart of capitalism and is a grow ing inspiration to millions of hunger-stricken workers in the capitalist world. Every capitulist paper con- tains articles and statements by leading employers and Politicians that the capitalist system in this crisis is now on trial and fighting for its life. The openly recognize that the real issue, growing sharper every day, is—Communist vs. Capitalism! smash its great Jan, 12, Two hundred open-air meet- ings, Jan. 13, 14, 15. Indoor meetings means to smash The general sit burg, Boro Hall, Brownsville, to elect | delegates to Washington. House to house canvass for signatures to Un- employment Bill, Jan. 16. PHILADELPHIA — Foster mas6é meeting at Broadway Arena, Jan. 14. | is rotting at the tures, Jan 4, between 9 a. m. and 4p.m. BOSTON—Foster mass meeting at Ambassador Palace, Jan, 15. YOUNGSTOWN, N. J.— Hunger} march, Jan. 5 at 7 p. m. NEWARK, N. J.—Hunger march, Jan. 16. Second United Front Con- | our revolutionary | the midst of a f against each oth its armies against the working-class must prepare by all revolutionary revolutionary worker to renewed efforts. ism is flourishing in the Soviet Union. are awakening everywhere. for the great revolutionary struggles looming ahead of | us is militantly to fulfil the every day tasks. redouble our €fforts to build the revolutionary unions of the Trade Union Unity League, to secure unem~ ployment by militant str | was this year that France had chosen to begin the doesn’t even receive car-fare and must walk miles to get to his work Less For Negroes. A Negro family of 6, living on the same block. The father has been out of work for y per week and up coal on the In two child per ho He gets only $5 aildren must pick roads the father of 10 hours at 4 day a week. a little more co! for one thers show sideration for a family of 12. The man gets 1 1-2 days work, shoveling ashes at 40c per hour The mother of a 17-year-old girl was told by the Welfare Department that ought not to worry about taking care of her, but should throw her out into the stre! take care of herself mother refused, Murphy's tment refused further aid. Thousands of families who are in | dire need receive no aid at all. As for single workers, the ones receive the equivalent of 20c a food and sometimes a miser- en welfare onl. luc WORKERS STARVE, DIE WHILE PARASITES REVEL Extra amounting to 1,000 were used to guard the jewelry of the para: police tic revelers, was a protec- tion against theft parties in hotels, restaurants Ret the re the bowery and ers on for a place to flop.. in line F and out. perhaps, a hi The Plaza, the Astor, the Club St. Regis, the Marquette Club, were filled with the city’s 400. Thou ds of dollars were spent in bringing forth debutantes. Miss Bourne and Miss de Camp were two of those entering “exclusive” society. At the same time Michael Abate, 58, hungry, homeless, unnoticed and out of work, discarded by the bosses as too cold to work, leaped in front JOBLESS TO MARCH ON CALIFORNIA = HOOVER BACKS CAPITAL; DETROIT MARCH JAN. 2 RAIL BOSS PLAN Gov't for “Boss Profits Against Rail Workers WASHINGTON, Dec. 331—An at- tempt to avert a severe crash in the leading railroads of the. country, and to protect the profits of the railroad magnates at the expense of the rail- road workers, Hoover has come out full force for the proposed merger of the four big Eastern lines The whole scheme is 9 move to stir up “optimistic” sentiment, while at_the same time using the govern~ ment apparatus to help a cembijne that will result in greater. profits to the bosses and more unemployment for the rail wotkers. Some of the capitalist politicians are coming out against the merger. Leading among these is millionaire Senator Couzens of Michigan. In an attack on the plan issued by. Gouzeze Wednesday, he calls it “unethical” becaus2 Hoover is unduly influencing the Interstate Commerce Commission which is supposed to pass on the plan. Couzens’ main line of attack is not so much against the plan but he is afraid the masses will see the se connection between Hoover and a so-called “impartial govern- ment body” on the one hand, and the big bosses on the other. of a He was not killed Another Anna Gill, aged 22, committed suicide by drinkink poison at her home at 1114 Ward Ave. A worker's family of 11 are forced to live on $10 a week. The tiniest member of their family, the five months old Marie Elder, died of pnuemonia, and undernourishment. The family lives at 147 114th 6t., in south Jamacia. The father has been unemployed for more than 6 months. Thousands of dollars were spent in revels and orgies that the rich might make merry, thousands were spent in “bringing forth” a few school girls, money tnat was taken from the backs of the workers, while the workers starve. | 193] WILL BE A YEAR OF SHARPENEDCLASS STRUGGLES | armed invasion of the Soviet Union. This murderous | conspiracy was defeated by the Soviet Union. But the with American imperialism as its is eagerly seizing on every issue and | every situation to bring nearer the moment when, in an attempt to liquidate its own internal crisis and to revolutionary enemy, it will launch the Soviet government. In 1931 the war plottings of the bosses. Growing Tasks of the Future. uation is one that must inspire every Capitalism heart throughout the world. Social- The workers The best way to prepare We must s and above all to build Communist Party! War Preparations Increase. Nineteen thirty-one finds the capitalist nations in feverish program of war preparations er and against the Soviet Union. It ference, Jan. 18, at 2 p. m., in Slovack | ial Valley. le families slaving for just about enough to exist on. Not enough to) buy clothes, nothing for medicine. Where there are schools for children, fn many cases they cannot attend because they have no clothes and —— In every field are | workers an easy prey to all diseases. | Pellagra has made its appearance here in Sunny California. to take its toll. hall, Jan, 12. NE WYORK—Hunger marches on When | Brooklyn and Bronx Boro Halls, Jan. | sickness comes, the families have no| 8 money for medicinal purposes and/| Hall, Jan. 19. can do nothing but to wait for death! Green and Walker, Jan. 11. Hunger march on New York City ee N.Y. Se Commmittee, Mass trial of Hoover, | | Hall, 52 West St. ment of their meetings and hunger Second | marches. They should do so at the | | earliest possible date. Condemned Meat Sold After Graft Payment; - Mayor “Saves” 25 Millions on $8,000 Salary (Phis is the fourth | in the series of fallen and the cuspidors wer clean | many saloons, and when night had | Meat Condemned In New York. The other transaction of Davis also | articles on A. F. of L. and political | and the customers were full, Frank has to do with the deliberate killing “corruption in New Jersey.) By ALLEN JOHNSON. Al Smith’s good friend, Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City, is to New Jersey what Al Smith is to New York: 2 consummate hypo- crite, crook and grafter who rose to political prominence on the backs of the workers and then utilized this prominence to sell himself, as well _as the life blood of his con- stituents, to every corporation in New Jersey who was willing to pay for his services—and they were all willing, without exception. In the past ten years Hague has “saved” not less than $25,000,000 on his sal- ary of $8,000. How has he done it? Twenty-five ‘years ago. when the | , Russian workers were still suffering the tortures of Czarism and the | American working class was little getter off then it is today, Frankie \ listed, hard-bitten youth, was thrown i feat car by an equally hard- \ bitten conductor. While Frankie was ' wurtling head first through the air, t revolver fell out of his hip pocket, Frankie and forcing ulm to Ieave the scene in a hurry. ind te say that Frankie was em- varrassed is to say a great deal, for ‘is ability as a blackjack artist, with fl that goes with the profession, had any sensitivity that he had een born with. Hague Once 2 “Bouncer.” could always be depended on to |strong-arm any obstreperous pals who | rich parasites. | insisted on talking loudly, if not cley- | erly, It was in the caurse of Hague’s wanderings as a saloon porter that he met the politicians who were to teach him so much—and to whom he | | taught so much in later years. ' | Hague’s apprenticeship in politics | took place during the regime of Bob | Davis, one of the first of New Jer- | Sey’s democratic bosses. There was | little to distinguish Davis from Jesse | | James, to hide his banditries, whereas Davis carried out his various deals in the | same manner that made Hague, his pupil, famous: that is as “a friend of the people.” Two of Davis’ transactions are of scious workers, inasmuch as they give an inkling of the character (and the friends) of the ignoble great. It was Bob Davis who elected Woodrow Wil- son governor of New Jersey and made it possible for that greatest of all demagogues to become president and draw us into a capitalist war which resulted in the death of more than @ hundred thousand American work- ers. In this war, incidentally, ex- | actly as many new American million- aires were created as American sol- diers were killed, and it is therefore not stretching the meaning of words s ‘ B | Particular interest to all class-con- | \ Yague,.a drunk and disorderly double- | and whatever differences | | there were must accrue to the benefit | of James. For the latter never tried | of workers for the benefit of a few An enormous ship- ment of meat in the Bush Terminal in New York had been condemned as unfit for human consumption, The | meat wholesaler, of course, was not discouraged, for after all he was a meat wholesaler and was in the habit, ' of selling meat, laws or no laws. refusal of the New York authorities to allow the meat to be sold is no indication that they were unwilling to take graft: it simply was an in- | dication that the meat was so bad they didn’t think it paid—especially | when there was always graft to be had for*permitting such harmless things os watery milk to be okayed. | The wholesaler began making the rounds of nearby states. Ris first try, in Jersey City, was im- mediately successful. Bob Davis was willing, more than willing, and, what is more, was extremely effi- cient ‘about the entire matter, go- | ing about it as calmly as a medieval priest setting fire to a “heretic.” First Davis summoned a man who was employed by a Jersey City slaughter house as a2 meat expert, He asked the expert to examine the meat and tell him what it was worth in its state of putrefaction. The expert did so and reported back to Davis, who told the whole- saler that his price for permitting the meat to be sold in Jersey City would be $15,000. The money passed hands that day, Hague has often boasted that he never held other than a me ‘The | | job. As we know, he was exaggerat- ing slightly, but it is true that he be- came a constable soon after reaching 21 and-has held political office ever since. His incumbency as a constable | was enlivened by several characteris- | tie incidents, as might be expected when a blackjack artist, becomes an “oficer of the law.” One Red Dugan was being tried in Boston for passing a bad $1,000 check. Dugan was distinctly a third- rate gangster, for he was always get- ting in trouble with the police over matters which any moderately shrewd out difficulty. Perhaps it was Hague’s sympathy with Dugan's stupidity that caused him to travel all the way to Boston to perjure him- self for the forger. It was more | than likely, however, that Hague was | motivated by some entirely different reason, for sympathy with unfortu- | outstanding qualities. | Hague testified that Dugan slept in ton cops chased Dugan just after the forger had passed the check. The fined $100 and told to leave town on the next train. (ited Boston. The last time Hague | visited the city, it was as the hon- jored guest of the American Legion, |then assembled in convention. ‘The Legion gave Hague the keys to the city. Who is to say what Hague would have done if the keys would actually have fitted any of the locks in Boston, or that the Legion would not have been accomplices to the loot- dl ~ ‘The Campaign Committees in many towns have not sent in the announce- | gunman could have avoided with- | | nate human beings is not one of his | In any event, | | his home the night a half dozen Bos- | Perjury was too raw, and Hague was | ‘That was the first tine Hague vis- | Friday, Saturday and Sunday JANUARY 2, 3, 4 JOINT AZAAR NEW STAR CASINO 107th Street and Park Avenue Large Assortment of Articles Will Be Sold at Low Prices A RESTAURANT WITH BEST OF FOOD PREPARED BY MEMBERS OF WOMEN’S COUNCILS PROGRAM: Friday Evening W. I. R. NIGHT—RED DANCERS—Under leadership of EDITH SIEGEL—Dancing Until 2 A. M. Saturday Afternoon CHILDREN’S DAY—Special Plays, Games and Dances Saturday Evening | NEEDLE TRADES NIGHT—COSTUME BALL | Sunday | WOMEN’S COUNCIL DAY—American Laboratory Players, Coun- | cil Drama Group, Women’s March, Final Sales—Dancing till 2 A. M. WORKERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION UNITED COUNCIL OF WORKINGCLASS WOMEN Admission: Friday, 35e; Saturday, 50c; Sunday, 35¢; Children—10¢ only Combination. Ticket $1.00 (will admit three people any night) Auspices: YOUNGSTOWN AND NEWARK MARCHES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE | vails among thousands of unemp. men and women and their chila, About 300 working men are cor. | pelled to lodge in the~incinerato. |, | sleeping in the garbage, feeding o”. the same. There are about 1,000 |men and chiJdren on the soup lines | daily existing on @ bowl of rottom | soup they get once in a while. | Newark March Jan. 16. | The hunger mach in Newark, N. J. will be on Jan. 16, | The Newark Unemployed Counci? | is holding regular meetings at 2 p. m. Tuesdays and Fridays at 93 Mercer St. The Newark Campaign Committee for Unemployment Relief has sent eut a call for all workers’ organiza- | tions te send two delegations eaci. to a united front conference on’ | unemployment, to meet Jan. 18 at Slovack Hall, 52° West St. Newark | to speed collection of signatures for the Workers Unemployment Insur- ance Bill and make plans to choose delegates to go to Washington for presentation of the bill to congress on Feb. 10. FIRST ANNUA DAILY WORKER CALENDAR FOR 1931 sr. are lu ae ae ee Views of the bigest strikes demonstrations in the U. Five feoasie nad cartoons of the class strugele. peagrvige Lge bet ss of the class ot Important ealites from Mars, Engels, Lenin, ete, 18 pages—one tor each PHBtet da eed oohie on bias tolnd, “ggsstaatate ta ototy i. Indospengible Red worker's bome. FREE ith x month's ten Sr renewal. Get, zour a worker to sul ie = calendar, te tole one Without subscriptions price Bo (Only ong calendar ta each worker. DAILY WORKER 50 EAST WH STREET, N. ¥, ©. oe rt % a, iteide Map- * . “ethuttan and’ Bronx. Manhattan and Bronx, one month Yer 2 months, 81.50; 8 mantis, $2.25; 6 months, $4.50; 1 year, $8, CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDAIGET PRODETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIBE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity ) oo

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