The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 20, 1931, Page 3

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Vail 2d, 1931 Page Lhree FURNESS PRINCE LINE FORCES STEWARDS TO DO STEVEDORE WORK Get Paid $1.50 a Day and Three Skimpy Meals; Load Supplies and Chandlery Conditions Aboard British Boss Owned Ships Bad All Around (By a Worker Correspondent) Instead of hiring longshoremen the Furness Prince Line, at 34th St. and 12th Ave. at Pier 74, North River, is forcing the stewards on the M. S. “Western Prince” to do much of the stevedore work in loading supplies. The stewards are paid $1.50 a day and get three scimpy meals and must work from 8 till 5 in the evening loading coke, heavy tools, soap and other such supplies. They were also forced to load 100 Ib. sacks of flour. For this they receive tea and bread and butter for breakfast, pork and beans and B, & B, for lunch and potato chips and one pork chop and coffee for dinner. ‘They are forced to supply their own cups and knives | and forks, which causes a great deal of inconvenience to the men. | Refuse to Load. When one of the stewards refused | to load the flour, saying that it should be done by regular longshore- men, the second steward said: “You must be a Communist.” ‘The delegate of the International | Longshoremen’s Association was around and appeared pleased with | the situation. When his attention ; was called to the fact that the Fur- | ness Line should hire stevedores at regular wages, he snarled: “Mind your own business. The stewards are slave-driven for navy, and the class lines are drawn very tight. | The stewards are forced to do} many other odd jobs and are very much discontented. Officers Get Best. In contrast to the hard lot of the | workers the officers eat of the very | best and act as “gentlemen.” following menu, taken from the of- | ficers' mess, gives one an idea of how high they live: Luncheon. Soup—Potage St. Germain. Fish—Fried filleted corbina. Entrees—London hot pot, corned pork, Boston baked beans. Vegetables—Potatoes: Chipped. Grills (to order, 15 minutes)— Filet steak and onions, Cold Buffet—Roast tongue, roast beef. Salads—Chou rouge. mutton, ox long hours for $45 a month. Work | Sweets—Delaware pudding, lemon from 5 in the morning until mid- | pie. night is not uncommon aboard this Cheese—E iam. ship. The officers maintain a near- Fruit—Meion, military discipline, as in the British ‘Tea and coffee. | Many Rockford, IU, Road Construction Toilers Are Laid Off Editor, Daily Worker: We were also speeded up like hell, The city of Rockford, Il, has | been employing few of the city’s | unemployed workers in some kind of a sewer job, and for a very low pay. Last week 35 | especially in one gang, the straw | boss in that gang is a real mad slave driver. If someone happens to look up then he is over there right away, and asks if we haven’t got anything to do. A couple of weeks ago half of the crew out there was laid off, The job is soon finished, so the rest will soon be going too. Some probably will be transferred over to | another city or county job. | ‘The county used to give out milk free, for some of the unemployed workers’ babies, but last week they even shut this off. Maybe that some few’still get, but the majority got their milk shut off. 5 men were re- placed by machinery, and probably more will follow. The Winnebago County also has a road construction job going on. A month ago about 200 were em- ployed there, Forty cents an hour is all the workers there get paid. The working day is 8 hours, and 3 days a week, Twenty cents a day is deducted for transportation. Some weeks we were only about to work one or two days, but just the same we were expected to buy food, cloth- ing, coal and pay rent out of this Organize, in the Unemployed money. Some of the workers have Council and demand and fight for a family of 8 and 9. real relief. —C.R. Albers Flour Co. Shuts Down Plant Completely | OAKLAND, Calif.—Albers Flour for this? Wages are so low we can Co, recently laid eff all men, shut- ting down the plant completely. | Now they have apened it up with | only keep the spark of life within the body. Our vitality is being snapped gradually and we will be on the scrap heap shortly. Let's fight wage-cuts! Organ- ize! Get in touch with the Trade Union Unity League at 369 Ninth St. ~WAGE SLAVE. a limited force of workers and cut our pay of 50 cents per day, re- gardless of what we were getting before on our different jobs. How long will we workers stand TEN MORE DAYS TO SECURE SUBS IN “1,000 BY MAY 1” CAMPAIGN Ten days more for subscriptions | to come in during the 1,000 by May 1 drive. How many subscriptions did YOU get? Have you approached workers in your shop, your fraternal organizations, your neighborhood? Do 30, and tell them that the Daily Worker is the most advanced, the most vital paper in the present strug- sles of the masses, both employed and unemployed. Tell them that their subscription will help it to continue leading exploited workers and will table it to achieve greater circula~ tion, for upon subscriptions depends the financial stability of the Daily Worker. glad to read it. But now I want to sell it here.” He's getting 5 a day, and also wants to sell literature to Portuguese, Italian and Spanish workers. Good opportunity to pro- mote feeling of unity between na- tive and foreign-born workers! Donations Help Too Donations now and then help us fill the holes in our financial ap- paratus. J. Doroff, Syracuse, N. Y., ee MADE DENT IN R. L. | from the viewpoint of the southern REFORMISTS AID LYNCHERS Support Court Room Lynching of 9 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the last two days. Under the leader- ship of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and the International | Labor Defense, a Provisional Scotts- | boro Defense Committee has been | formed in Chattanooga, and a con- ference called for May 3 in that city. Break Thru Mlegalism To Protest In Birmingham, Ala., despite police persecutions and boss laws illegaliz- ing the Communist Party and the Young Communist League, the two lead a militant protest demonstra- tion yesterday in East Birmingham, against the shooting down of Babe Dawes, Negro worker, by police last week, and the Scottsboro legal lynch- ing. A telegram was sent Governor Miller of Alabama demanding imme- diate release of the nine boys and pledging the masses to a militant campaign to stop their murder. ema Negro Reformists Support Boss Lynchers NEW YORK. — In the meantime, the Negro reformists and their press continue their open co-operation with the southern boss lynchers, in spite of unanswerable proof that the boy: are innocent of any crime, that they are not even the ones who had a fight with the six or seven white men on the fregiht train, in whose company the two prostitutes who are supposed to have been “raped” were traveling. The attitude of the Ne- gro reformist press is clearly expres- sed in an editorial in the current issue of the Chicago Defender which quotes with commendation the praise of T, H. Alexander, a southern boss editor, for the court room lynching at Scottsboro, The. Negro World, the Amsterdam News, the Pittsburgh Courier, the Afro-American and others continue to report the case | landlord and capitalist lynchers. The National Association for the Advan- cement of Colored People, the Na- tional Urban League, the Universal Negro Improvement Association (Garvey Movement) continue their silence and acquiescence in the legal lynching. Reformist To Support Lily White House In Washington, this coming Wed- nesday, Dr. Moton of Tuskegee In- stitute, T. Arnold Hill, of the Urban League, will confer with President Hoover in a move to boost Hoover's presidential campaign for 1932. Noney of these reformists will raise their voice against the thirteen lynchings which have occurred so far this year, or against the Scottsboro court room lynching. Wall St. Prepares War on Nicaraguan People; Rush Army (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) an national guard. Anti-Imperialist Fight Advances. Meanwhile, the Nicaraguan Army of Liberation advances in Nicgragua. A United Press dispatch from Puerta Cabezzas, Nicaragua, tells of a San- dinista force at Sacline preparing for a march on Puerta Cabezzas. Sa- cline is about 30 miles from the United Fruit Company's railhead in the interior where the Nicaraguan workers are forced to labor under slave conditions. Many of the work- ers have taken up arms against their imperialist exploiters and the troops which keep them in Nicaragua. All Out May 1! The American workers who starve on the breadlines, 10,000,000 of whom are unemployed, enjoying the “pros- perity” of imperialism, the tens of millions who will soon have their wages slashed still further, must de- mand that the Wall Street troops t out of Nicaragua, Support the struggles of the Army of Liberation! Smash the atrocity lies of the cap- italist press! Stamp out imperialism in Nicaragua! The fight of the Ni- caraguan masses is a common strug- gle against the enemy of the Amer- ‘Ten days, more for overdue sub- scribers to open new accounts with aew subscriptions! Ten more days ‘o visit for renewals those readers whose subs have expired! Workers who see the Daily Worker once de- nand a second, third and fourth sopy. They want it, so go after them ind gat their subscriptions.at once! PICKER, OKLA., ON THE MAP” “Just got Picker, Okla., going and ave a right enthusiastic young fel- ow who thinks he can dispose of 25 ‘opies a day,” says W.0.G., new sec- ton organizer who promises action ‘so in Webb City, Mo., part of “3 owns with about 8,000 Negroes in cad mining district,” Grand Rapids; 3 i Nick Worzella, bright spot in Manville and Providence, R. 1, rounding up orders for newsstands. “We'll make a mark in R. I. that some kind of working class paper exists in America.” fich., reports “better plan of work or D.W. sales and closer check-up n D.W. income,” assuring us they ‘ill “pay-as-we-go and work ener- etically to pay off old debts also.” ‘ good reminder to other districts, Mmemployed Councils, Red Builders, te, that payment of bills must go and in hand with bundle orders and wired §20 on March 26, $40 a day later, “collected through the efforts of local unit of the Communist Party, $27.50 of which came from Ukrainian Toilers Alliance’ Then came con- tributions from the Brooklyn Prolet- cult group of 126 E. 98rd St. who sent $8 “to pay for extra bundles sent to anthracite miners” during the re- acreases. Likes Daily—Wants to Sell Ed Z. of East Boston writes, “Re- seived first copy of D.W. today and cent strike. We appreciate both con- tributions, and hope other workers’ organizations will continue to send their little bit toward a better, more widely circulated revolutionary daily. ican workers! Demonstrate May 1. Factories Challenge Each Other in USSR for May Day Showing MOCOW.—The workers of plant No. 1 in Tula have addressed an ap- peal to the Soviet proletariat to call upon the works and factories of the whole union to organize a roll-call on the Five-Year Plan. This appeal has awakened wide echoes among the workers. In many works and fac- tories improvised moetings have been held, at which the appeal of the Tula workers has been discussed. ‘The-workers’ initiative in Tula is welcomed everywhere, especially the appeal directed to the Donetz basin to promise to respond to the roll call at once. The workers of many un- dertakings have chosen April as a month of proletarian preparations in the masses for the second anniversary of the socialist competitions and for the May First celebrations, “Force is the midwife of every old New Gov't of Spain Promises Aid to Big Landowners,Church Prepare Terror for Masses; League of Nations Fears Effect of Spanish Revolution in Further Upsetting. Stabilization One of the first acts of the pro- visional government of Spain, be- sides attempting to suppress the workers’ and peasants’ uprisings un- der the leadership of the Commu- nists, is to assure the Catholic Church and the big landowners that they would be protected in the own- ership of their huge landed estates and in their right to exploit millions of peasants and workers. A cable dispatch on Sunday to the New York Times states that Minister of the Interior of Spain Miguel Maura emphasized “that there is ab- solutely no intention of confiscating properties belonging to the church.” TheCatholic Church in Spain is the largest individual landowner, ex~- ploiting millions of peasants and receiving from 60,000,000 to 70,000,000 pesetas yearly in revenues. The an- nouncement of Maura is further proof that the feudalists have little to fear from the new government. Even the so-called separation of church and state, Maura said, “will not be carried out with a high hand.” Every concession will be made to the feudal landowners and to the church, Terror and murders will be the lot ; of the workers and peasants. May for a constituent assembly. The object of the constituent assembly, according to spokesmen for the pro- visional government, will be the drawing up of a constitution, All parties are advancing candidates for this election. The Communist Party is pointing out the fact that the cap- italist republicans and the socialists are protecting the interests of the feudal landlords and calls upon the masses to mobilize for a workers’ and peasants’ government. Dispatches from Geneva, seat of the League of Nations, tell of the fear of the leading imperialist pow- ers arising out of the overthrow of the Spanish monarchy. While they have full confidence in the new gov- ernment, the leading imperialists do not like to see the masses stirred into action. The effect of. the overthrow of Alfanso “will be seriously to in- crease the existing uncertainty in Europe, especially coming as it does on top of the growing political un- easiness caused by the Austro-Ger- man customs union agreement.” Thus cables Clarence K. Streit, New York Times correspondent in Geneva. He also points out that in order to keep themselves in the sad- dle other monarchists and fascist dic- tators will drive to war. This strug- | gle to war and the spreading of the Elections are being planned for} mass discontent is making it more difficult for the capitalists to get out ofthe present world economic crisis, Protests Against Legal Lynching of 9 in Alabama Grows In Last 2 Days During the past two days the fol- lowing additional working class or- ganizations added their protests to the growing wave of working class indignation: Negro Workers Raise Protest in Churches The Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League, Branch No, 1, New York City, the Greater Boston May Day Conference representing 22 organi- zations and embracing thousands of workers; the Youth Section of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union; the Philadelphia Polish Sec- tion of the International Labor De- fense, and mass meeting of several hundred colored and white workers in the Hippodrome Hall, New York. In the Detroit district where the campaign to save the nine youths had apparently reacher a higher form than in any other district to date, the following organizations have sent protests: Detroit Rallies Tremendous Protest Movement The congregtion of the First Bap- tist Church of Detroit (Negro) sent resolution and telegram, with $1.10 donation to defense; First Baptist Church of Hamtramck (Negro) re- solution and telegram with $3.70 do- nation; the students of the Auto Mechanical Schools, resolution and $4.20 donation; Detroit Working- men's Co-operative Restaurant, reso- lution and $5.10 donation; Workers’ Camp Conference, representing 42 workers’ orgnizations, resolution and $5.62 donation;; Workers’ Camp of Detroit, resolution and $5.00 dona- tion; South Slavic Ruthenberg Branch I. L. D., resolution; Mass Protest Meeting of 500 white and Negro workers, in Hamtramck, Mich., resolution and telegram; Mt. Carmel Baptist Church( Negro) resolution; The Jewish Dramatic Studio of De- troit, resolution, telegram and $1.00 donation; Russi nWomen’s Progres- sive Club, resolution, telegram and $2.00 donation; Macedonian Baptist Church, resolution; Unit No. 6, Com- munist Party, resolution and $1.05 donation; Bulgarian Macedonian Working Women’s Krupskaya group, resolution and telegram; Young Communist League dnce of 400 young Negro and white workers, resolu- tion; “Young Worker” Conference} representing 7 youth organizations: resolution: Hunger Marchers Voice Resentment, The Pennsylvania Hunger Mar- chers also sent their protest and are supporting the campaign of the ILD and LSNR for a mass protest meet- ing, Wednesday evening, April 22, at the Pythian Temple, 2008 Wylie Ave., Pittsburgh. Following the uncovering of a mass of evidence clerly proving the frame up nature of the case against the nine youths, the following telegram was sent to the governor of Alabama; by a mass meeting in Chattanooga: Goy. B. M. Miller, State Capitol; Montgomery, Ala, ‘We, 150 Negro workers assembled here, protest rail-roding eight young Negro workers to electric chair in lynch court at Scottsboro. Demand immediate release all nine. New trial with Negroes on jury.” I. L. D. Take Steps For New Trial. The International Labor Defense lawyers are taking immediate steps for a new trial in spite of the fact that the boss “defense” appointed by Scottsboro lynch court ready made such motions with deliberate intent soclety pregnant with a new one. It is itself an economic power.”—Marx: of hampering the work of the ILD lawyers. These motions were lost. Buafflo, | The ILD is making its motion for a new trial on basis of new evidence proving innocence of the nine boys. The ILD investigators today dis- covered a Negro worker, serving a workhouse sentence who was arres- ted less than 2 weeks before alleged rape in house of prostitution with Ruby Bates, the prostitute upon whose unsupported testimony, the youngsters were sentenced to edath. Workers’ Answer Bosses’ Threat! ‘The expressed determination of the Alabama bossess to go through with the railroading and lynching of these innocent youngsters must call forth the greatest efforts on the part of the workers to smash this court room lynching. Funds must be rushed im- mediately to the national office of the International Labor Defense, at 80 East 10th Street, New York City, so that the defense is not hndicap- ped. More and more protests must be sent the governor of Alabama, more and more meetings must be held to mobilie the entire working class against this h orrible frame-up. Preparations for the May Day dem- onstrations must be intensified ten- fold in order to bring out huge masses of workers on the street in militant protest against this horrible frme-up against starvation, wage cuts, and for defense of the Soviet Union, Providence Workers Prepare for Big May Day Demonstrations PROVIDENCE, R. I. — A United Front Conference called by the Na- tional Textile Workers Union was held Tuesday, April 7. It was decided to hold a noon- time demonstration at Monument Square (which is forbidden by city ordinances to “non-paytriotic” or- ganizations). Mayor Dunne was conveniently out of town when a committee elected by the conference visited him, but it will visit him again Monday, April 13. ‘The mill workers of Pawtucket and Olneyville will be particularly mobilized this year for the May Day demonstrations both in the daytime and evening or for two indoor meet- ings. An indoor meeting is being held in Pawtucket under the auspices of the National Textile Workers Union and one in Providence, under the auspices of the May Day con- ference, Use This Map to Order May Day Editions g \ Ph of nc CE ya wee a DAT Pick out your state on this map and order your May Day edition for the date indicated. Large bundles §8 a thousand. for individuals, etc, 1 cent per copy. GERMAN FAKERS SCAB ON STRIKE Fascists Kill Worker; Injure His Brother (Cable By Inprecorr) BERLIN, April 16—The Berlin building trades workers’ strike was | called off by the revolutionary lead- | ership owing to the systematic scab- bing of the reformist leaders. Sev-| eral jobs are still on strike against} victimization, The reformists have| allied themselves with the employers | driving revolutionary workers from jobs. The owners demand a reformist | union card as conditions for employ- ment, | The building trades workers’ strike | in the Ruhr is also broken for the} same reason, Building trades strikes | in other provinces are proceeding strongly, including those at Halle, | Magdeburg, and Dresden. | The revolutionary union opposition | fs leading the strike of the Rhine| shipping workers. The Mannheim| docks are paralyzed. | In Oberholm, near Mainz, following | collision between the Stahlhelm (steel helmets) fascists and workers, where- by the fascists were defeated, the fas- | cists shot the work~’ Hans Kraemer dead, and seriously wounded his brother Fritz. The murderers and} two of their accomplices were ar-| rested. 110 Her Marchers Leave Pittsburgh On |; Way to Harrisburg (CONTIN PAGE ONE) through working-class sections, stop- | ping traffic, following an open-air | meeting at West Park, N. S. They had taken part Friday night in the mass meeting attended by many hundreds of workers who filled the Irene Kauffman Auditorium, The Pittsburgh workers, giving a rousing send-off to the hunger marchers, en- thusiastically applauded the | ment it de- | Maxwell No. 20 Colli SHAMOKIN, Pa., April 19.—The capitalist press reports the strike in | District 9 of the U: Mine Work- ers here as hav grown to about 11,000 men, District President Mar- | tin Brennan made still another at- | tempt to drive the men back to work, but they would -not list to him. The strikers demand equal tion of the work. The National Min ers’ Union urges fight for the hour d no wage-cuts, unemploy nce and that the mine: and committee in federate the committees the 2 themselves, 1 eye for such local who the elect a rar each local, and conduct with a vy fakers as tho: Glen Alden strik eae Glen Aden Men Rebellious WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Apr betrayed rs of With clenched fists the mi the Glen Alden Co. Buttonwood Col- rd speakers of the National | Miners’ Union core the treacherous | sell-out of the strike bj s, Boy- | lan and the General Grievance Com- mittee gang, and voted to continue | the battle for the rights they have won in previous combat. It appeared as though the whole town of Buttonwood, men, women | and children, had turned out at the | meeting. The speakers were M. Zal- dokas, Joe Weber and Tom Myers- cough of the N. M. U. Miner a Suicide. Frank Kzonzek, work: the Glen mands outlined by the speakers for | Alden Coal Corp., committed suicide the passage by the state legislature of the unemployment insurance bill | and the immediate appropriation of | $42,000,000 for unemployment relief. All speakers denounced the Jim- Crow methods used by the employers | of Western Pennsylvania and ex- posed the frame-up of the nine Scottsboro, Ala., Negro young work- ers. The hunger marchers carried dozens of placards with slogans de- manding unemployment relief and | urging organization into the Na-| tional Miners’ Union and the Metal | Workers’ Industrial League. Fatal Eviction. While the hunger marchers were preparing to leave for Harrisburg, Andy Susko, a jobless steel worker of 82 Main St, Fair Oaks, Pa., who | lost one leg in the steel mill, was | forced to stand by and see his wife | and seven children dispossessed from | their home. As the last of their fur- niture was taken out of the house, | Susko's starving wife drank disin- | fectant and is now lying seriously ill | in Sewickley Valley Hospital. Susko went to the office of the McClintic Marshall Co. plant in Leetsdale and demanded immediate employment or food for his family. He was told to get out and detectives were immedi- ately put on his trail. The police claim that Susko drew a revolver, whereupon they threw tear gas bombs at him, overpowared him and dragged him to jail in handcuffs, where he is now.: M. Stern, district secretary of the International Labor Defense, is now in Ambridge, investigating the case and preparing to take over the de- fense of Susko. The Unemployed Council of Ambridge, together with the Metal Workers’ Industrial League, is mobilizing the workers for a pro- test against the jailing of Susko, and is securing relief for his family. The shunger marchers, at the open-air meeting on Saturday, protested against this outrage against the job- less workers. Defend Jobless Leader. The I. L. D. is also preparing im- | mediately to fight the frame-up | which has been placed on Eddie Sheradowsky, along with ten more steel workers preparing to come to Pittsburgh from Ambridge to take part in the hunger march, was ar- rested at the railroad station and accused of having broken into a CHILD LABORERS LEAVE SCHOOL Washington reports from the De-| partment of Deportation, sometimes | | called the Department of Labor, has| a “childrens’ bureau” which admits | that boys and girls who leave school} in the lower grades go into factory | work, while those whose parents can} afford to keep them in school longer tend toward salesmanship, clerical po- sitions and skilled trades. It is very| careful not to say anything definite regarding wages and hours of these} child workers. | A| jewelry on Frid: st fight will be made to release him at | once. | night. is the continuation of the hunger | Avella section, who tramped to Washington, Pa., the county seat, on | Friday, to demand relief. Nearly 300 Avella miners marched 20 miles from county authorities. ation won them the right for their committee to talk to the authorities, and nothing to eat. gro miners, marched 20 miles fur- ther to Pittsburgh, to the send-off mass meeting, where an ovation was given them. | the mules. | rible defeat. The hunger march, which began | 7" = from Pittsburgh Saturday morning, | ‘rough no fault of his own. Avella to Washington, to be met by | state cops and refusal to see the | Their determin- | who gave them the usual promises | Seventeen of these miners, among them many Ne- | PENNA. MINERS’ STRIKE GROWS; GLEN ALDEN MEN REVOLTING AT SELLOUT One Betrayed Miner, Starving, Kills Himself; Conditions Not Improved, Growing Worse Whole Town of Buttonwood Turns Out to Hear NMU Speakers; Vote for Struggle after receiving $7 for two weeks’ work, The conditions causing the suicide of this miner are the same that caused the Glen Alden miners to go out on strike only to be sold out by the agents of the coal opera- tors running the U. M. W. A, The local press daily publishes numerous suicides, accidents and others killed in the mines as the re- sult of the speed-up methods being applied in all the mines. Talk New Strike, The conditions precipitating the recent strike have not been solved, but, on the contrary, are worse. The entire field is seething with discon- tent and rumors of another walkout. in various mines. In the No. 20 Mine of the Glen Alden Co. the miners are talking of triking again, because no extra time is given to harness and unharness This was the grievance which precipitated the recent strike. The Rank and File Committee are demanding the replacement of all of the grievance committee with mili- tant rank and filers. Militant Program. Resolutions which the local rank and file committee are adopting and proposing to the locals point out the justification of the strike even un- der the Boylan-Lewis agreement, for the company itself broke the con- tract, They score International Presi- dent Lewis, District President Boy- lam and the local fake opposition, Fomicheck, Maloney and Davis and | others, for turning what could have been a successful strike into a ter- They say: “We know the conciliation board, before which our grievances go, too well as a graveyard in which they will be buried.” They demand removal of every faker in the coming elections and fight for the following demands: 1—Uniform scale throughout the anthracite. 2.—Pay for all dead work. .—No topping of cars. 4.—No contract work. 5.—Delivery and unloading of al supplies at face by the company. 6.—No check-off. 7.—No discrimination against mili- tant miners. 8.—Consideration wage where and when miner fails to make shift 9.—Immediate settlement of all march of 17 coal miners from the | 8tievances by the mine committee. NITGED AIGET CAMP AND HOTEL PROLETARIAN VACATION PLAGE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultura! Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $17 4 WREK CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N.¥ PHONE 731 Small bundles Rush your orders. All bundles must be paid for in advance or they will not be shipped. ‘They are strikers. They fought with and for the workers as mem- | TDAYS | MOSCOW— | LENINGRAD— | Soviet Union eS & VISIT THE TOURS AS LOW AS NEXT SAILING SS 8. 8S. NEW YORK §, s. Ticket | MAY 7 THE TOUR INCLUDES STOP-OVERS IN HAMBURG-- HELSINGFORS, AND THE SOVIET VISA—VALID FOR 30 DAYS—PERMITTING VISITS TO ANY PART OF THE SOVIET UNION AT THE TERMINATION OF THE TOUR ——INQUIRE—— WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. 175 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK, N. Y. ‘Telephone ALgonquin 4-6656, 8797 and return 8. WORKE RS! NEGRO AND WHITE! MAY DAY!

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