The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 12, 1931, Page 2

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’ Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YO NTWU Proposes Unity o All | Workers to Win Silk Strike Parade of Strikers and Families to Show |M RK, WED NESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1931 REVOLT AGAINST FUR CO. UNION RISING HIGH Collect for Mine Relief in Resorts, Catskill Mountains A comm ains f he purpose of cc ief for the striking min 01 c Relief Quarters Are Opened | in Paterson The Workers International Relief and the National Textile Workers’ Industrial Union have opened a headquarters for the distribution of relief to the striking textile workers TO PROTEST JIM CROW CITY POOL Elizabeth aR orkers List New Stations In Harlem For the Relief Collections There have been some changes in the addresses of Striking Miners’ Re- lief Stations situated in Harlem, The GARY NEGRO WORKER SLAIN BY POLICE ¢ etermination to Win Their Demands [succeeded in obtaining the following , ab io SIDE Bes Baseeaen, “MAW ges Demonstrate Sat. geiiricg se, tas corres Secale: ase 2 pies } amounts odge, $1 Ree ee ) . my eee i et pene 3 e. io ; oof | GSR ce Furriers Rout Gangs. Te textile workets are waging; a mace ae. [Slst St. Italian Worker’ club, 2278.|Clubbed for .. Hours to form the committee |™@ns 1.7 poatutngs : j y a bitter fight against wage cuts,) ELIZA “Tbe held irk. Sut. |106 St; the Spanish Center, 110 W. j : eee iy of Guerillas Sent speed-ups and police terror and are| monstration will be held this Sat-| ito Vigtt ghenmn cents 10 WT Then Shot Down in Pr tibiae tear cae pce be EN shman, $3.50 Against Them pin Sacchi tant vc ta eh wits poe rete cree se Home, 15 W. 126th St. Preparations Cold Blood to work W.U. to bring about ualty among |OaiAD $68.80; Lock “Roy ” . Pool. ‘The demonstration will be-| {0% the securing of a relief station in se ne | the. workers. in oer-an we aiex take Hotel Werni NEW YORK.—Yosterday afternoon | *5-Year Plan,” Soviet | gin at 1:30 pm, and will be held at | UPPet Harlem are under way GARY, Ind, Aug, 11—A Negro sadigien of 0 | PR ORR ERS: 1 CRUE i vam OLE are a group of gorillas sent by the Kaut- | x1 . M Pema ; Rush Funds, worker was murdered by Gary police re | strike plus Fil in S nd Week| the swimming pool, East Jersey and meer a and bo: nian-Ste' company union by pre-| 1M In Seco! e Front Street. p Workers are urgently requested to | Jast Saturday morning. The worker pila acne amc up to vious arrangement with the boss at Cameo Theatre} “7, «., i | Collect food, clothes, tents and money | was shot by Policeman Sam Bolden | “aio ame Nos etic Pat the Sirens pale, This morn- | "Evictions are occurring daily in the {came up to Prince Bros., 325 Seventh rissa aoe tt sl aes ye tor ma {2nd rush to the above addresses for | after two hours of brutal clubbing DNV OEATA Uniby OTe SUR Ie [ane Oe tie: Reteny OYe erOey i INOKRE |e aide: Rial? Eerith,) 2600 in an effort to terrorize the| The Special Committee to Hlimin-| POO! and is supposed to be for the| ‘ne reilet of the 40,000 mines whe | and kicking by Bolden and is feline d for @ real settlement. ‘They | line of twenty was met by a patrol |! Ly use of all residents in Elizabeth. Un- aaaitinss denibSas’ ta |e y rere a chars to {Money to the Striking Miners’ Reliet | workers into paying dues to the com-| ate Illiteracy has just published a : are in desperate need of relief. Work- | officers. not sacrific unfavorable ize and vented They fighting spirit tion that have pre he F. of L.-Associated ore openly proceeding to sell- that de A the workers the n which the A. F. of L. has settled ate complaining openiy to members of the N. T. W. U. In the case of the York Silk Mill the work- ers were merely ld by the offi- ciais to return to work. hout even being told of the ter The boss called the workers asked them to show their Associated book and announced his terms. The prices he offered weré much below the union deman The workers openly ex~ press disgust with the tactics of the A. F. of L. and want to know how to bring about with the N.T.W.U. To Form Unity Committee The United Front General Strike Committee | decided upon a de- finite mode procedure to again | attempt to bring about unity with the rank and file of workers who are still under the domination of the fake union. A committee of fifteen was elected by the strike committee this afternoon to present a program of unity to the rank and file work- ers of the Asscciated-A. FP. of L., the chief points of which are that a com- mittee of twenty-five rank and file shop wWerkers from each union meet to discuss mthods teo obtain unity. that th basis of discussion shall one tinited strike committee, one united picket line and a united front shop committee in each shop. These proposals will be issued in leaflet form and given the widest distribu- tion among the workers, after which the workers will be approached by their unity What’s On— WEDNESDAY Friends of the Soviet Union There will be a regulat meeting of the Prospect Park Br. at 12 Crown eet in the b: is August at & p. A lL ba given Red Villages by Wm. Wales and George Conna_ recently returned ma months stay in the Soviet fon will give a talk oe Bath Beach LL.D. have meeting tonight 28th St, at 8:30 p.m mae Sates * Brownsville Workers Center All delegates to be present at a important meeting this August { 118 Bristol St. A final report v 48 Bay at wagon before they had a chance to start picketing and bundled them off to jail | Nineteen were pulled in, seven of | them young militant workers. { The cops tried to punch one of the workers in the wagon and it was the | alertness of the of the picketers who surrounded the intended victim that this young worker escaped being beaten up. All the arrested were taken to the Criminal Court and were bailed out The language mesting was held last night. Qne Lithuanian worker and a number of Jewish workers both reaffirmed their confidence in the policy of leadership of the N. T W. U. and pledged their continued | support. At a rank and file discus- sion from the floor at the Jewish meeting, members of the Associated | were preséht and practically all of them expressed their keenest desire! to find some means of getting to- | gether on some basis of unity on| which the strike could be won | A meeting of the Italian workers | will be held Wednesday night at | Turn Hall at 8 o'clock to take up the same question of unity. Prepare Mass Parade. | Tt was decided to hold a mass{ meeting Thursday afternoon at Turn | Hall with prominent speakers to} prepare for a mass parade through } the city of thousands of strikers. A| committee was elected to get a per-| mit for the parade. This parade is| intended to show the workers of the | city that the strike is holding fast | through its determination to win its | demands and that the workers will not stand for a fake settlement | reached between the officials and) the bosses behind their backs. This meeting will involve not only the strikers themselves, but their wives and children and all neighbors will- ing to help the strikers win. It will be a tremendous demonstration of | determination and fighting spirit. The relief committee is pager store collections of food on Friday | and a house to house collection for | money and food on Sunday Al truck is being sent on Thursday to farmers near Paterson for food. Re- 29 EAST 14TH STREET | NEW YORK | tion cannot be overemphasized | ty endorsed by the bosses must be | exposed as union kers of the shop arose from their seats and drove them from the st As soon the workers of other shops learned what was taking place in Prince Bros., a huge crowd gathered in front of the building de~ termined to drive the gangsters out of e fur center. In order to save the gang from the wrath of the workers, the police arrested three of hem. Before they reached the police ion they were promptly released. This incident at Prince Bros. shows the mood of the fur workers and their readiness to fiyht against the company union agents of the bosses. After this incident occurred in the shop, the workers came down to the Industrial Union, held a meeting and organized themselves to defend their conditions in the shofs against the boss and his company union agents. The movement against payment of dues to the comyany union has spread out through the entire indus- try. The workers feel that the time has passed when the boss could com- pel them to maintain the Kaufman- tetsky gang of parasites who extort money from the workers. ‘The rank and file opposition of the Joint Council is arranging a mass meeting in Irping Plaza Thursday night. In their call for the meeting, addressed to registered workers only, they state that the meeting will take up the question as to why the Stetsky and Kaufman permit overtime for single time when thousands of fur workers are unemployed; what the Joint Council means by the fake slo- gan “One Union”; why the Council is ‘afraid to call membership meet- ings. Committee, Room 330. 799 Broady at 11th St.! ELECTION MEE’ IN SECTION FIVE AY Plan Drive Wednesday at 569 Prospect Ave. New York.—On August 28, 1931, at 569 Prospect Ave. 8 p.m.,9Section 5 of the Communist Party will hold an Election Campaign Conference. All workers organizations should send two delegates to this conference. The importance of the present elec- At this time when conditions are get ting worse each day, when the com- ing winter will be one of the worst winters ever known, our fight thru- out the electio ncampaign must be for Unemployment Insurance, for immediate relief. The Socialist Par- the betrayers of the working class. ef is becoming an urgent question and the relief committee is success- fully involving the strikers them- selves in the collection of fobd ‘and money. However, the workers need more support than they can rally locally and appeal to workers throughout the country for assis- tance Weisbord Tries Deportation. At the mass meeting this morning im & packed hall one speaker after another soke of the continued need for large and militant picket lines The meeting was proceeding peace- fully when an attempt was made by an expelled member of the N. T. W. U,, Albert Weisbord, to get the floor. After a short disturbance. the work- ers effectively showed their resent- ment at his presence and although his henchmen among the workers tried hard to get the floor for him the meeting proceeded peacefully to the end in time to go on the picket line this noon. In order to prevent any more such disturbances, the strike committee City Iron Workers Pool Pennies and Dimes for Relief Workers of Claremont, Madison, and Builders’ Iron Works pooled their pennies, nickels and dimes to send-a donation of $11.45 to the heroic min- ers who are carrying on a. bitter strike against starvation in the mine fields of Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky. The 40,000 striking miners appeal to the entire working class to help them defeat hunger. Rush funds, and tents to the Penn-Ohio Striking Miners’ Relief Committee, Room 330, 799 Broadway! this afternoon elected an additional committee of five which will pass on all speakers who want the floor with the exception of actual strikers report showing the rapid disappear- ance of illiterate people in Soviet Russia today under the Five-Year Plan. In Czarist Russia less than one-fourth of the population could read and write. By 1930 the Soviet Government had made two-thirds, of the population literate. Last year alone over ten million persons were tailght to read and write, and the Five-Year Plan provides for the en- Tollment in literacy classes this year of twenty-five million more. Thou- sands of workers and peasants of the cities and villages have been taught to read and write during the first half of this year, half of them being women. At this rate, the Five- Year Plan will be crried out laong this line in about two nd one-half yers, since the number of persons trained this year will be higher than that originally called for by the last year of the Plan, 1933. This aim has been accomplished through th establishing of travelling Schools, as well as high schools, and the results of the cultural revision being carried on in the Soviet Union under the Plan are remarkable. The building of clubs, libraries, and hos- Pitals, and the freeing of formerly oppressed nationalities from cent- uries of tyranny and superstition, are other aspects of Soviet cultural dey- elopment fully provided for in the Five-Year Plan, and are being car- ried out far ahead of schedule. “The Five-Year Plan: Russia’s Re-~ making,” synchronized with a talk in English which ‘gives the back- ground and significance of the vari- ous phses of the Five-Year Plaf, shows the amazing progress made in the Soviet Union during the first half of the great Socialist Construc- tion. It is now in its second week at the Cameo Theatre, where it is Playing for the first time at popular der various pretenses, ‘however, the city authorities try to prevent the Negro workers from using the pool. A gang hired by the city to keep “order” at the pool makes it a prac- tice to attack any Negro worker who tries to use the pool. Saturday's demonstration against this vicious discrimination is called by the League of Struggle for Ne- gro Rights, and the Young Com- munist League, with the co-operation of the Communist Party. These or- ganizations are putting forward the following demands on the ciyt au- thorities Free use of the swimming pool for all workers. * No discrimination against Negroes Abolition of the city-employed gangs at the swimming pool. In their struggles against starva- tion and evictions, the workers of Elizabeth are learning that only uni- ted action by both Negro and white workers can break down the boss terror against the working-class, The white workers are rallying under the leadership of the revolutionary movement to the defense of the Ne- gro masses and the fight for equal rights for Negroes. Brooklyn Committee Meets Wednes. For Fight on } Deportation NEW YORK.—The Brooklyn Com- mittee in charge of arranging mass meetings for the national anti-de- portation week, which runs from August 23 to August 30, will meet Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock at 382 Cumberland Street, Brooklyn. This committee will make detailed arrangements for meetings which are ers should remember that the fight of the miners against starvation is a fight for the entire working class and that the miners can win only if im- mediate relief is sent to them. If it is inconvenient to send your collec- tions to any of the above addresses send them to the Penn-Ohio Striking Miners’ Relief Committee, Room 330, 799 Broadway. NTWIUDRESS DEPT OPENS SHOP DRIVE NEW YORK.—With the approach of the season in the dress trade, the dress department of the Industrial Union is organizing the rank and file organization committee and starting a’ drive to unionize the open shops. A call has been issued by the dress department asking all workers to bring their complaints to the union, to organize themselves in the shops, and on a united front basis take up the struggle for better prices and union conditions. Workers are urged not to leave their open shops to look for better jobs but to report these shops to the Industrial Union and with the assistance of the Indus- trial Union unionize them. The dress department is planning a& membership meeting during the coming week where the pians of the executive councfl and the trade com- mittee will be acted upon and the organizations drive launched. Two pickets, Mary Britten and Bella Zepner, were arrested yester- day in front of a striking dress shop, 327 W. 36 St. Both workers were to be held during that week in South Brooklyn, Williamsburgh, Benson- Prices, hurst and Long Island. released in the custody of the law- yer and will come up for trial on Thursday. AMUSEMENTS THE First Time at Popular Prices! See Soviet Russia Smashing Its Way to Socialist Success RUSSIA’S REMAKING—A Talking Film “If you want to see a vivid film-talkie ex- hibition of what is going on in the Soviet (in English) We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME® FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY Between 12th and 13th Sts. The worker's cries could be heard in the neighboring houses and in the streets, where hundreds of Ne- gro and white workers, attracted by his cries, had gathered and witnessed the police beat and murder this un- armed, defenseless worker. The workers of Gary are thor- oughly aroused by this outrage, com- ing shortly after the Chicago police massacre of unemployed workers. The Communist Party is planning a series of demonstrations against the police terror. The International La- bor Defense has collected the names of witnesses to this brutal assault A significant feature of the police attack was that the police deliber- ately opened the windows of the house so that the workers could wit- ness the assault. This fully ex- poses the terroristic nature of the attack, which was plainly carried out to terrorize the Negro and white workers who have been uniting to- gether in the struggle against un- employment, and have united to de- fend Ulysses Mack, a Negro worker framed up by the Gary bosses. Mack was sentenced to burn in the electric chair following a farcical trial and a “confession” extorted from him by the most brutal third degree meth- ods. Cooperators' Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 5215 BRONX, N. ¥. Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR Work Done Under Persona! Care of DR. JOSEPNSON All All Gomraaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 655 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Patronize the Concoops Food Stores Swe w be granted in the new building. q ‘ NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES Union, see the Five-Year Plan. AND . * * Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 er) EAST SIDE—BRONS —DAILY WORKER. t a HS SES Pete apt Weloaity © Full Lite ot Gottlieb’s Hardware ee Restaurant t nembership meeting of the 0.W. h is to be held at the Labor le, 244 E. 14th St, at 7 p. m. STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES | 19 THIRD AVENUB Near 14b St. All kinds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Stuyvesnnt 5974 YEAR): EXTRA—First Russian Cartoon— With Sound and Music Produced by Soyurkino THE Brownsville Drug Store B. ESECOVER 2700 BRONX PARK EAS1 “Buy in the Co-operative Workers Ex-Servicemen League for Organizations | PHARMACIST Store and help the Left Branch 1 |} Cutlery Our Specialty a | | OS ge ° Wi ” ill be an Executive Com- | 4 y 3 | mimer Pri =O S ; 3 ing Movement. ating of the -W Bi. Au. JEFFERION | Wednesday to Friday Pp f be brs 459 Stone Ave., Cor. Sutter 9 at 7:30 p,m. at head- | ane RKO | | heron BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Aly ie peteel Cll | | ae sage a WORKERS’ HEADQUARTERS— {| 8 acre S| LA 1PM. Steve Katov iLL. D. John Ss Restaurant sinimes TceR | 4gna ST. and BROADWAY | 1 P.M. Ee : Unusual Wholesome Dishes Will hold open-air meeting at | mmpmes Eaceh Me. 1780) Made of ath Street and Avenue A, Avwuse 1%, SPRCIALTY: ITALIAN ag | L A BO R TEMPLE 25°! Lew Ayres (Wis, 1780) Popular Prices fea 50 UTCHERS’ UNION FRESH VEGETABLES & FRUITS t 8 p.m ef A place with atmosphere ‘ ‘) | and Local 174, A. M0. & B, WW. of N. A. AFTER THEATRE wHurspay’ * fone oa rie or 15 WEST 126th STREET ||sun. ana not. “Office and Headquarters: SPECIAL LUNCH 500 International Labor Defense Boro 302 E. 12th St. Sen ces POD eed ea 71-5750 Joan Bennett EY GREED sal HULLIVAN@OW IEF" Cre aaa ee ee iix pie ale Ahab ty Tih ine it es ~ a . POOL ROOM ; LISTIC SURRO 3 his A 13 a lecture will be " , vs " a R a ay elven on Cia rh Injustice and the Role STEAM BATH, SWIMMING M RRIRcrcsate dyin ning One, SUPERNATURAL OPERA seuittibied Sungayel0 A, Me SANE ODE of the I. L. D. will be given by Wm. POOL, HALLS FOR RENT FOR LEWISOHN STADIUM “ Employment Bureau open every aay ¢ Paterson at 133 43rd St. Brooklyn, J AL d . or “The Me at 80 p.m. Al workers invited deal ALL OCCASIONS centr an Co. in Austordam. Ave. abd Iaith. St. RUDDIGORE 2c Tse» at 6 /rufood rs. a "5 . EVERY NIGH AT 8.30 . See BERGER C7. eta BUSINESS SCROOL - Menter.& Ttey | Uricen: 2e, 5oe, St, (Cirete 7-7575) || “Thrift” Prices Err, 906 te #2, Wed. EGETARIA Will hold ah outdoor ridiy at tab Bp 5 Poraen en Vibra ee Mountain | *8bott \ SLIP’ Mats. 50e to ‘$1.50 Street and Sth Ave. at 8:30 p. m, ; . sass » quiet rest lace, f Jack Ma After which there will be an indoor Commercial—Secretarial Courses || $13.50 weiklp—AVhits yang tice three Aaiei- MANY A sth ave, {| CREANGER THEA. W. 44th Street |] gavertise Your Union Meetings RESTAURANTS PON Sig Sorts: Halk eee : ean Meantion HiPPODROME a asa ae Ho Wick, bee Phe Made? Ske |] Here. For information Write to 153 West 44th Street vet Pst A LP rf Individual Instruction — % By ie e Mikado’ 5 4 or! ex-! all IUGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK All workers ex-servicemen are ea Sean ces entte yeas — - ino}, ; MON. Aug. 24 Renay Advertising Department te ea Seale oyeee Sthye, Matevis Bases T,X 0h 14th St., at 2nd Ave., N.Y.C. PLEASANT BAY PARK WESTCHESTER, N. Y. Ber A Holy Terror GIVE YOUR ANSWER 70 Hoc. || The DAILY WORKER [JJ rene poo ts ine Key to eaten | rai neve an open air niiace t: TOmpkins Square 6-6584 < JED GEORGE oBRIEN VER'S PROGRAM OF HUNGER, 50 East 13th St. New York City j 7:30 p.m. All workers inyited ANNUAL DOOLEY SALLY EILERS WAGE CUTS AND PER: f rls sh d SECUTION! } Worker Ex-Servicemen’s Leagne Branch 1 nm open air meeting at nue and Pitkin Street, 8 m. Will hold Hopkins Brooklyn, a Plumbers Helpers See. T.U.Usn Meeting to be held August 12 at 108 B. 14th St., 4th floor All plum- bets helpers are asked to attend, Joe Hill Br. 1.0.D. There will be a membership meet ing of the J. H. Br. ILD at P 26 St. at 6:30 p.m. sharp. * ss Boro Park Workers Club HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 68A5 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAL PICNIC of the Daily Worker SUNDAY, AUGUST 16 OUR BATTLE IS GREAT, OUR FIGHTING IS VITAL PROLETRIAN CAMPS MAKE US READY AND STRONG PROLETARIAN CULTURE, SPORT AND RECITAL TEACH US TO FIGHT WITH A SONG COME TO WOCOLONA COME TO NITGEDAIGET COME TO UNITY AND KINDERLAND— Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and t3th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian food MELROSE SyGxan Jlevebunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist OM BAST MPA STREED (Corner Second Avenue) ‘Tel. Algonguin 2246 Will have a meeting this August 4 ia ih THEY ARE ALL WITHIN THE REACH OF YOUR HAND SPEND YOUR VACATION atT:—] | Babiitcioa. the Aall-paoen aticr he Li 1 : BIGGEST, BRIGHTEST, GAYEST Automobiles leave for Camp Unity every day 9 40 10 am, and 2.30 p.m. DAIRY xestauwant “The Farm in the Pines” | | meeting ; inel Cafeteria GREATEST EVENT OF YEAR te 1 Bat DD eameadge Av, Alnarn Find arm in the Fines | | x ¥ 1, ' ‘ —9 to 10 a. m. and 6 p. m. ‘ nt ine at Onr Place, i ‘his is the last chance vo soin the |] Tpegroou ae ber cent Brisidaite 1/1) Workers! Come Prepared to Have the Time of Your Life! SATURDAY—9 a. m. to 10 a. m. and 5 p. 1, M81 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronz ||| Vics oe sane, nas, Nod dos fo | , x ear 4 St. » RED. be BE cate. avin, tap entices Soda Fountain AMONG THE MAIN ATTRACTIONS WILL BE A FIELD ~ STNDAY—9 a. m. to 10 » m. TELEPHONE, INTERVALE. vous have already registered. The great- est difficulty is to get the children to come back after they have spent Several weeks in camp due to beau- tiful surroundings. The rates are within reach of every worker. Not at all charity the camp receives its 830 BROADWAY Near Uth Street Support from many organizations. MEET ARRANGED BY THE LABOR SPORTS UNION, N. % Fill out the following entry blank and mail it in to the LABOR SPORTS UNION, 2 WEST 15th ST., N. Y. C. BE- FORE FRIDAY, AUGUST 14th. You may enter as many of the following events as you please. SENIOR MEN: Running broad jump, high jump, 12 pound shot put, discus throw. javeline throw, ‘obstacle races. We also take passengers to Kinderland Headquarters for Children—143 E. 103rd St. for information call at the office of all 4 camps 32 UNION SQUARE, ROOM 505, TEL. STuy. 9-6332 LIVE IN A~— M. OBERKIRCH, Kingston, N.Y. WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK 2800 BRONX PARK EAST Comradely attosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find “a library, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs | and various cultural activities ‘ Tel, Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue WOCOLONA WOCOLONA IS IDEAL FOR VACATION ‘THIS WEEK IT AIDS THE DAILY. WORKER'S GRIP GIVE YOUR PRESS AND CAMPS FULL CO-OPRATION TO MONROE, N. Y., ONLY $2.60 ROUND TRIP se Pr rai 4) Rate $17.50 and $21.50—Red Press Week—No Collections ‘ LLL, SOOO KINDERLAND a KINDERLAND IS EVER GREEN AND OFFERS MUCH FOR OBSERVATION, KINDERLAND IS A DESIRED PLACE FOR HEALTH AND OBSERVATION Rate: $17.50 and $19.50—No Collections. NITGEDAIGET NITGEDAIGET MOUNTAINS REFLECT IN THE HUDSON, NITGEDAIGET OFFERS JOY AND GENUINE REST. NITGEDAIGET RECEIVES YOU LIKE A COMRADE AND TREATS YOU LIKE A GUEST. Rate: $17.50—Red Press Week!—No Collections. JUNIOR BOYS AND GIRLS: Potato race, three legged race, chicken race. SENIOR WOMEN: Running broad jump, high jump, 8 pound shot put. Also many other “open” events. wish to cnter the UNITY UNITY IS OUR SLOGAN, UNITY 18 MIGHT AND OUR CAMP BY THAT NAMB IS BEAUTIFUL AND BRIGHT. Rate: $17.50—T.U.U.L. Week—No Collections Uffice open frome 9 a.m. to 8 p. every days Df am io 5 po Saturday 1 9. m, bei op m Sunday

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