The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 20, 1932, Page 2

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Ce _Feee Twe DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1932 WHITE LYNCHERS WELCOME NAACP) = Working Class Honors Memory of ASSISTANT HANGMEN TO CAPITAL; Kansas Senator Lyingly Prates of Economic Conditions” sands of Negro Une “Better While Tens of Thou- mployed and Ruined of Farmers Starve When the Notional Association for the Advancement of Colored People holds @ convention up in Washing- ton—in such high consideration are they held by the imperialist oppres- sors of the Negro masses that Luther Reichelderter, “big chief” of the Board of Commissioners, gives them | “the key to the city. Not only are these betrayers of the Negro masses welcomed and feted by the lynch class, they are also a dressed by one of its spokesmen, S ator Arthur Capper of Kansas. Did Senator Capper speak to this gathering of misleaders about the ac- tual miseries and lynchings of the Negro masses? Not at ail! But he did tell them Negro should be against the imm gration of foreigners. He did lyingly proclaim that since laws were tightened the economic condition of the Negro was “better.” And Senator Capper, like all hypo- erites before him, then Lescoeani to tell his audience of bourgeois groes—how good natured the Ne that every | the immigration | | race is, try,” that as a race he has m wonderful progress,” and that by having faith in their “leaders” (the | lynch and by being patient | obeying the capitalist laws, thet they how true he is to “his cour de | would finally reach the “top.” Then, with the slimiest kind of| jfakery, Senator Capper “regretted” | |the lynching of Negroes. the nine inne- | Not a word about |cent Scottsboro boys condemned to die. Not a word about the Jim- | Crow system of the white bosses. No | word about the thousands of Negro| and white workers and farmers star- |ving because capitalism has deter- mined that they starve. Senator Capper told the N.A.A.C.P | jokes instead, the usual tripe at all | capitalist conventions. And, by de- liberately ignoring the real issue, he gave them the assurance that he will co-operate in keeping the masses in misery—that he will abide by the} | capitalist lynch law e-| On this note, the first day of the N.A.A.C.P. convention ended. | | ANOTHER BERGER STORE CLOSED ket Arvested ntene 2 Suspe onded Pi: Se NEW Y on ap the and 87th Si of RK.—Five police pounced of med Bell, in front ce shop 2 ger Ser: exington d him Street to the 57th magis wh! Service with its 50 shops and finish- ing plant is paralyzed George Kneller day dis office yes- before in th y by the becse: spoke at a very cnthusiastic strike in Irving Plaza Hall of the Berger Service strikers. Other speakers were John Steuben | the strikers, | and the attorneys for Taub ana Schwab. A representative of the Interna- tional Labor Defense offered its full support to the strikers, and the Rank and File Committee in the A. F. of L.| memberss strike in other pressed solidarity. (CORRECTION.—By accident, Ber- kowtez, president of Affiliated Clean- ets and Dyers, was wrongly described in the Daily Worker as president of Berger Service.) shops ex- Neighhering Workers Join Mass Picketing at Powell Underwear | NEW YORK.—On Wednesday hun- dreds of workers from the neighbor- heed gathered in a mass picketing demonstration to assist the strikers of the Powell Undergarment Co. An open air meeting was held in which | the issues of the strike and the sup- port given to the strikers by the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union were reported. The police, at | the instigation of the boss, arrested | four workers. They were released | the following day. The Knitgoods Department of the Industrial Union is arranging an en- tertainment to raise relief funds for these militant strikers. The enter tainment will be held May 21st, 8 P.m., at 313 Hinsdale Street, Brook- lyn. Workers of Brownsville are ealled upon to support the strikers on the picket line, 441 Blake Avenue. Brooklyn, and to come to the affair 60 as to help raise sufficient funds to jenable these girls to carry strike to victory. Ben's Luncheonette at! Larger Store; 50 P.C. of Ist Day’s Take to Daily Ben's Luncheonette and Soda Foun- | tain will open today at new and larger quarters. The new store is on 12th Street and University Place, | right next door to the old store. Pitty per cent of the first day's; proceeds at the luncheon counter and Goda fountain will go for the benefit | of the Daily Worker. What’s On— FRIDAY apes Ben Gold will speak at the ‘Tremont Workers’ Clad, 2075 Clinton Ave., Bronx, at 8 p.m, All workers are invited. sade % DeBénten wil epee on the wean Ray Br the Bride Plaza Work- Iney Bt., Brooklyn, at 8 The Harlem Progressive Youth Club will bership neotios at 1898 Madl- have on Ave. at 8:30 ree 8 A concert an@ lecture under the auspices ‘4¢ the class tn colonial problems, Workers’ Echool, will be Held at 35 B. 12th Bt., sec- mad floor, at 8 p.m. Admission te 25 cents Comrade Donsld Henderson, will speak fe the stadent Movernan the Work. Pr the Prospect ‘workers Center, A Spoutnern Boulevard, Bronx, at § p.m. ‘Yeish Workers’ ‘au will _have a: on; ri and Pe at Finn’ , ib workers are urged to But! their | (FSU PLAN HUGE | ANTEWAR DRIVE Hold Discuss Campaign Mass Rally to} NEW YORK, May 19--At a mass bilization meeting at Irving Plaza | night, 300 members of the © of the Soviet Union planned | ys and means to increase their bership and strengthen their or- | Frien ‘ ganization. | Realizing the extreme nearness of | n attack upon the Soviet Union, the S. U. are increasing their efforts | to show the workers the necessity for greater activity. A Shock Brigaders Club was one of the important things discussed. By | Y| volunteering to get a given number! lof new members, visiting a certain | |number of old members, getting a| quota of subscribers to “Soviet Russia Today,” a member becomes a Shock | | Brigader. Marcel Scherer, in an analysis of | the present Far Bastern war situation, | pointed out how close is the danger | U. S. S. R. He called upon the mem- | bers for more concerted action in| bringing to the dockworkers the need | for stepping war shipments to Japan. nI view of the present situation the work of the F. 8, U. becomes more and more important, he said. | Liston Oak, managing editor, “So- |viet Russia Today,” explained the| importance of the magazine in re-| | futing the lies and distortions in the | , capitalist press. He urged those pres- jent to make every effort to spread “Soviet. Russia Today,” particularly | among workers in factories. | i |Food Workers Meet Takes Place Tonight ‘The “Food Clerks” section of the| Food Workers’ Industrial Union is | holding a special membership mect- ling tonight, May 20, at 8 p.m, sharp, | lat Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and! | Irving Place. ‘The importance of this meeting is |evidenced in the fact that a new | turn in the work of the entire union | towards the larger sections of the | industry is taking on concrete form. | Important proposals with regard to the inner situation in the section | will be brought before the member- ship, as well as the election of new | | organizers for the trade section | All butchers, fishworkers, dairy, | | fruit and grocery clerks are urged to| attend this meeting without fail and on tinie. | SIBERIAN PATROL” IN SECOND | WEEK AT CAMEO : ian Patrol,” the new Soviet motion picture with English sub- titles, adapted from the play “Ar- moured Train,” is now in its second | week at the Cameo Theatre. As a| | Special added attraction during this| | continued engagement, the Cameo is j offering Sven Hedin’s film, “The Liy- ing God of the Mongols.” ‘This pic- ture shows Hedin’s journey acr »s the | great Gobi desert of inner Asia. The| | latest Soviet Newsreel, an exclusive | showing, is now at the Cameo. |_ “Symphony of Six Million,” the Fannie Hurst screen dramatization of New York, which has just completed a thirty day engr .vment at the Gaiety | Theatre, will move to the Mayfair) this evening. Richard Cortez and| Irene Dunne are co-featured, sup- ported by Gregory Ratoff, Anna 7 | Pel and Noel Madison. Jackie Cooper, the screen's noted | youngster, is coming to New York for the express purpose of appearing at the annuel “Press Agents’ Show” |at the New Amsterdam Theatre on | Sunday night. 58th St. Theatre—Saturday to ‘Tuesday: John Barrymore in “State's | Atorney,” with Henel Twelvetrees and! | Jill Esmond. Also “Lena Rivers’ | film version of Mary J. Holmes’ novel, Wednesday to Friday: Doug- Jas Fairbanks, Jr., in “It's Tough To Be Famous,” with Mary Brian. Also “The County Fair,” with Hobart Bos- worth. Be St. Theatre—Saturday to Tues- blood of | Lenox Ave., | United Front | Daily Worker today. Negro Revolutionary Leader Today he Haiti who, in the latt 18th century rose in arms brutal owners. In a s bic les extending 0} i tee the enslaved Negro feated the armed forces of the s owners, smashed the horrible insti- tution of chattel slavery in the |land, and successfully defied the ef- forts of the whole bourgeois world to re-enslave them. They successive- ly defeated the veteran armies of Memor ial Meetings | in New York, Other Cities E and, “Sptin and Prence. I'he Haitian Revolution is the first 1 only succ ssful slave revolt in ecorded histo One of the out- | standing leaders of this revolution was L'Ouverture, whose memory is being honored today by Negro and white workers in a num- ber of memorial meetings throughout the country. In New York City, a parade will be held in Harlem this evening under the inadesin of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. |The parade will be followed by a | memorial meeting at, St. Luke's Hall, | 125 West 130th Street. The Memorial | meeting, held in honor of one of the {greatest Negro revolutionary will be addressed by Negro and white revolutionary leaders in the present day struggles of the exploited and op- pressed white and Negro toilers | against the imperialist enemy. Among the speakers will be Charles Alex- ander, Negro orator and revolution- ary, and William Z. Foster, proposed |} Communist candidate for president. NATL YOUTH DAY PROGRAM INN. Y. ARRANGED To Begin Wi th Track Meet at Mcoomdam Park, Sunday NEW YORK.—The United Front} Youth Committee, which is leading the preparations for the Second Na- |tional Youth Day in New York on| May 29 and 30, has arranged the |final program for the Harlem ac- tivities for the two days. On Sunday, May 29, trucks bring- ing the youth from the various sec- | tions of the city will converge on meet will be held, and white athletes will participate. In the evening a banquet will be| given for Lucille Wright, sister of two of the Scottsboro boys, at 6 W. 135th St. On Monday, workers will May again 30, all at Seventh Ave. and 142nd St. The parade will end in lower Harlem, where the demonstration will be held} | at 110th St. and Fifth Ave. The full line of march and the marching or-; der for the various organizations and clubs will be printed later in the Daily Worker. In the evening a dance has been ararnged at the Westminster Hall, 73 near 113th St. This af- fair will conclude the program for the two days. In order to raise funds for Na- of armed intervention against the | tional Youth Day, two city-wide tag) days have been arranged by the Unite¢ Front Youth Committee.| Thesetag days will be held on Sat- urday and Sunday, May 21 and 22. Below are listed the tag day stations in the various sections of the city. These stations will be open from 9 a.m. till 9 p.m. on both days. Bronx—1323 Southern Boulevard and 569 Prospect Ave. Harlem—6 W. 135th St. Downtown—142 E. Third St. and 16) 'W. 21st St. Brownsville—1813 Pitkin Ave. Brighton Beach—140 Neptune Ave. Williamsburg—61 Graham Aye. Borough Hall—73 Myrtle Ave. All boxes must be turned in no} later than Monday noon to the National Youth Day Committee at 80 Fifth Ave. (care of International Workers’ Order, 15th floor), Bricklayer Officials Enraged at Exposure of Their Treacheries NEW YORK.—A great many of the building workers on the Radio City jeb at 50th.St, and Sixth Ave. went |back to work yesterday. Carpenters told the Daily Worker reporter that they had “taken” $16 a week cut The bricklayers’ delegate, Johnny McGrail, tried to identify the mem- bers of Local 34 who bought the McGrail’s ire ‘was aroused by the Daily Worker's report of the refusal by the Inter- national, to this local, of strike bene- fits. Significantly, the Daily newsboy was threatened by the cop |on 50th St. and told: “You can’t sell this paper on this block.” Bricklayers, wire-lappers and oth- ers have not gone back to work as yet. Police were reinforced yester- day as if the fake leaders and the bosses expected reprisals from the workers for their betrayal. Worker day: John Barrymore in “State's At- torney, Wednesday to Friday: Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., in “It’s Tough To Be Famous.” in which Negro young | gather for the| | start of the parade through Harlem | Communist Candidate |for Congress to Speak ‘Ww YORK.—All workers’ organ- | izations should support and attend jthe Communist Election Campaign banquet and ball May 21, at 8 p.m, in 46 Ten “Eyck Street, Brooklyn. Emanuel Levin, Communist Party candidate for Congress in the Seventh of the Daily Worker, will be the main Speaker. There will be a splendid program, featured by singing by the | Lithuanian Workers Chorus. Both |halls of the Laisye will be oecupied |by the banquet and ball. Admission ; is 50 cents to the banquet and dance, | or 25 cents to the dance alone. Take | the B. M. T. 14th Street or Broadway McCoombs Dam Park (near the| train and get off at Lorimer Street | Yankee Stadium) at 12:30. A short| station. {reception will be held. There the, 'Counter-Olmypic track and field] FORCE RELIEF BY WARNING OF HUGE DEMONSTRATION WIR ‘Demands Feed- ing Station Be Aided By Bureau .NEW YORK.—Faced with the warning that if relief wasn’t imme- diately forthcoming that 200 children would be mobilized in front of the doors, the Home Relief Bureau, Branch 18, yesterday was forced to give relief to three starving workers’ families and to pay the rent of the families of Sales, McDonald and | Shaffer. This delegation, mobilized through the Unemployed Councils, was headed by Michael Burd, District Secretary of the W. I. R., John J. Collins, mem- ber of A. P. of L Pocket Book Work- ers Union and representative of the | Council, and Odessa Green, Negro | child representing the W I. R. Pio- | neers. | ‘The workers militantly demanded a hearing | Bureau head, Mrs. Kaplan, and re- fused to be intimidated by the pres- ence of policemen called in by that | Official. Miss Marshall, an aid of |Mrs. Kaplan, revealed that t he Home Relief Bureau is in a chaotic condi- tion and that “no ‘tickets for relief @e being sent out to the needy.” She advocated “patience.” The Workers International Relief demanded that the Home Helief Bu- reau subsidize the child feeding work on 53rd Street and presented @ list of 103 children who are receiving daily solidarity aid from the W. I. R. ‘The misery and starvation existing among workers’ children in the neigh- borhood will be exposed by a mother receiy | Confererice Starvation, Manhattan East 4th Street, 1 pm. June 5, All working class organizations are urged to immediately elect two delegates to that conference, which will take up plans to strengthen the feeding work and organize for the opening of the W. I. R. Children’s Camp -at igi dale, N. Y. eee REDE on Child Misery and CLASS STRUGGLE NEWS REELS! MAY DAY, 1932 SCOTTSBORO DEMONSTRATION FORD MASSACRE RENT STRIKES NATIONAL HUNGER MARCH Obtainable for Workers’ Organizations FILM DEPT. OF W. I. R. 16 W. 21ST ST., N. Y¥. C. ——— WHOLE FLOOR, 6 furnished rooms and bath; sublet cheap all or part till October. Inquire 4th floro, 338 East 19th St. or D. W. business office. “TWO DAYS” appreciate. . “Sino-Japanese Curse” —Si Manch ‘TRE WORKERS’ vemmeADsorbing Soviet Film!—Today, Tomorrow and Sun. A GRIPPING STORY OF THE CIVIL WAR IN. SOUTHERN old and new orders in the breast of “Two Days” is a film of class revenge which the workers will deeply ——-ON THE SAME PROGRAM— ACME THEATRE Mth STREET & UNION SQUARE RUSSIA the first Soviet flim pro- the struggle bet “TWO DAY! duction which shi individual. . . "MICHAEL GOLD —MORNING FRETHEIT. cenes from the conflict in uria Nhs p at Workers’ Banquet | in Williamsburg, | Congressional district, and manager | Block Committee of the Unemployed | from the Home Relief] , of one of the many children who are.” ng solidarity aid at the W.T. R.! Lyceum, 66 ; RELIEF OFFICIAL ADMITS COUNCIL Statement Made When Downtown Council Brings Families NEW YORK.—The head of the Association for the Improvement of the Conditions of the Poor and one of the leading figures in the relief apparatus of New York, Matthews, yesterday admitted to a delegation of the Downtown Unemployed Counejl that whatever relief has been given in this city was due to the organiza- tional activity of the Council. The delegation took six families to this charity outfit and demanded im- mediate relief, since the Home Relief Bureaus no longer registered workers. A couple of the families were given a dollar to hush them up and an jinvestigation of their cases was promised. Matthews then said: “If it weren’t for you people (meaning the Unem- ployed Council—Editor) there would be no relief given to the unemployed in New York City. Nor would the Board of Estimate have appropriated two million dollars for the Home Relief Bureaus: The bureau was scheduled to close on June 1.” It will be. remembered. that,as soon of this city bureau for the relief of the unemployed was made, the Un- employed Councils of New York or- ganized a demonstration at City Hall, which was brutally attacked. Some of the workers arrested are stil. held in jeil and face three years in jail. The day after the demonstration the city voted $2,000,000 to keep them j; open until August 1. More intensive | organization will, as admitted by Matthews, force larger grants and the continued granting of relief—and more adequate relief at that. Smash the illusions of the pacifists in the struggle against war. Learn to struggle in the revolutionary way against war, Read “Revolutionary | Struggle Against War versus Peci- fism,” by A. Bittelman, five cents, heroes, | FORCES CITY AID, | voted to the purpose of unemploy-| as the announcement of the closing! TO DEMAND AID FROM BOARD OF ESTIMATE TODAY Delegation of City So- cial Club Will Present) Petition NEW YORK.—A petition will be| | presented today at 10 o'clock to the Board of Estimate by a delegation of 25 or 30 workers representing the City Social Club, | This club, composed of Emergency Work Bureau employees, both em- ployed and dismissed, decided to send a delegation to the Board of Estimate with a petition demanding that the {sum of $60,000,000, named by the Welfare Commission of New York as the minimum necessary for a com- tober, be immediately made avail- able, that the sum set aside in the current budget for payment of debt banker-creditors of the city, be de- jment relief; that the $231,000,000 schedule of public works, eliminated from the 1932 budget, be resumed. In addition the petition demands: (1) No dismissal of Home Relief | Bureaus employees or other work re- |lief beneficiaries merging of relief agencies; speed-up as a result of the reduc-) tion of working time; (3) no discrim- ination in the giving of any form of relief; (4) endorsement by the Board of Estimate and the city gov- ernment of the Workers’ Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill at full wage rates and at the expenses of the federal government. FOSTER TO SPEAK MEETING TONIGHT Will Commemorate the Great Haitian Leader William Z. Foster, proposed presi- dential candidate for the Communist Party, will be greeted by hundreds St. Lukes Hall, 125 West 130th Street, This. meeting. will also mark the 189th anniversary of the death of the great Haitian slave leader, Toussaint | L'Ouverture. The aninversary is under the au- spices of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. VOLUNTEER TYPISTS Needed in the Daily Worker Business Office.—8th floor, 50 East 13th Street, AMUSEMENTS HELD OVER 2nd WEEK! “NOT 10 BE MISSED ,. . . Stands and ‘The End of St. Petersburg.’ ” —Howard Barnes, Mer. Trib. 42ST, MEO. Opening of Giant Soviet Plant TTOGORSK Hockey Gime, between Moseow & Leningrad (in Moseow Stadium) ne ith the very great Russian films, as ‘Po temkin’ TEE THEATRE GUILD 00 TRUE TO BE GOOD A New Play by GUILD THEA, Eve. #30 Mat Vhe Theatre Guild Presents REUNION AN APL ERNS By nopent’ a FReuwoun Martin Beck fra’. fue By 8:40, Mts Th., Bat, Tel. Pe 6-6100 COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW ty With UMAR RICE. PAUL MUNI Then, W. 45 St. , ae Plymouth ac 'rhore, a ene, 220 *oMAY FAI Rs FANNIE HURST'S — “i SIMON 0 MILLION” | (First Time at Popular Prices) alll THE THEATHE GUILD present BUGENE O'NBILL’S Trilogy 5:30 to 7 pm. Neg Haunted,” New Prices: $1, $1.80, 82, $2.50, $8 ALVIN THEATRE. 524'Si., West of West of Brway “The struggl against ‘iilitarism is an extreme form of the clasi struggle against war and against the political power of capitalism.” —LIEBKNECHT PROLETARIAN SPRING FESTIVAL Friday, May 20¢h at 8 p.m. NEW STAR CASINO—107th Street and Park Ave., N. ADMISSION 35 CENTS (in advance) AT DOOR 50 CENTS Auspien: Leroxanentre Labor Detense—New hale District prehensive felief program until Oc-| service and interest charges to the | in the course of} AT LOUVERTURE of Negro and white workers at the) at 8 p.m., on Friday, May 20. | Mourning Becomes Electra | (CONTINUED PROM PAGE ONE) condition the hunger strike will mean |my death if continued any longer. In these letters the workers pledged | themselves to intensify the struggle for my release. “The hunger strike, backed up by mass activities, exposed Doak’s strike- breaking deportation policy as a means to help the boss class and | their agents, the A. F. of L., to put | over wage-cuts and speed-up. Be- cause of mass protest, which the hunger strike aroused, the U. 8. Cir- hand down their decision ‘(even though adverse), which they delayed, intending thus to weaken the mass campaign (by passing the buck from: |the Department of Labor to the | courts). “I am confident that the workers of this country, while organizing against wage-cuts and for unemploy- ment insurance, will strengthen the | fight against the Hoover-Doak-A. F. jof L. policy to divide the workers |into native, foreign-born and Ne- |groes and terrorize them with jail- ings,deportations and lynchings. increase their activities for my re- lease, the release of Mooney, the Scotsboro boys and all other war prisoners. “I am ending the hunger strike, I am carrying out the wishes of the workers who want me free and healthy so that I can come back to take my place in our struggle against starvation and misery, “Comradely greetings, “EDITH BERKMAN.” , Meee en (See columns 1 to 4 on this page |euit Court of Appeals was forced to| ral (2) NO) am confident that the workers will] class- | Edith Berkman Discontinues Hunger Strike After Thousands Appeal to Her to Save Life jfor the letter of the representatives of 18 workers’ organizations asking’ Edith Berkman to end her hunger | strike.) 2 FURNITURE STRIKES WON More Pay; Recognition at Royal and Model NEW YORK.—The workers of the Royal Upholstery Co., at 356 E. 149th St. and those of the Model Uphol- stery Co. of 158th St, and Amsterdam Ave., have won their strikes. They | get increases in pay, equal divisien of |work, no discrimination, recognition ef the shop committee and reeegni- tion of the Furniture Workers’ In- dustrial Union. The union calls on other workers | to do as well. Shoe Strikers Will Have Social Evening NEW YORK.—A “Get Acquainted Evening” for all young (and adult) strikers of the Paris, I. Miller and Andrew Geller shoe shops will be held on Saturday night, May 21, at the Bridge Plaza Workers’ Club, 285 Red- ney St., Williamsburg. The werkers of the Eleo Shoe are also coming down to celebrate their victorious set- tlement. Splendid program of music, dramatics and dancing. free, and no collection. Admission Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices —Come to the— Spaghetti Party and Entertainment Arranged by Units 2 and 18 Jugoslay Educational Club 131 WEST 21st STREET Sun., May 22, 7:30 All Proceeds go to Daily Worker ADMISSION 25 CENTS RUSSIAN MEALS For Poor Pocketbooks KAVKAZ 332 E, ith Street, N. ¥. ©. Workers for Decora Proletarian Camps Ready to Receive Thousands of {ntern’) Workers Order. DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE bth FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persona! Care of DR, JOSEPASON Concert and Lecture under auspices of COLONIAL PROBLEMS CLASS. of the Workers School 35 East 12th Street, 2nd fl. Fri., May 20—8 p, m. Concha Michel, Mexican revolu~ tionary artist Albert Moreau will speak on “Why Study Colonial Problems?” Admission 25 Cents International Solidarity Day Celebration—Carnival Sunday, June 12, 1982 At STARLIGHT PARK EAST 177th ST. STATION, BRONX Shoring “CANNON OR TRACTORS”. Sport Exhibitions Red Pageant am Admission 250 Joint Ausplees? Workers I®ternational Relief. Trade Union Unity Council RE SC LT tion Day Week End Decoration D. Nitgecaiget Beacon, N. Y. Hope wel Per Week . Org. Tax Press Ta Total The Management of each All Camps have reduced rates for entire season and Kinderland) Unity Come and Celebrate the Opening ALL CAMPS HAVE UNIFORM RATES priate programs and a variety of prolet play and entertainment for the week end “DECORATION DAY”, ay Week End NM June, N.Y. | Yungdale, N.Y. Rates for the Week End Ome Day wiceercee oss 8328 Two Days .. +. 6.00 Three Days ... oes R50 Camp is preparing appro. MONDAY MAY 30th Enjoy three full days in atmosphere the country in your own Follow our further gram and tr for six weeks beginning June 15th. who can, accomodate witheut ci Specify whether 35 East 12th Street announcements for details on pros ——-ROOMS WANTED—— Rooms aft needed for students of the Central Training Sehool that por'od, please report immediately tor— THE WORKERS SCHOOL, ‘ansportation Party members and sympathizers Fre one or more ¢ male or fema!> __Telephone ALg. AAI ui

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