The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 27, 1932, Page 2

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DAILY. WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY.27, 1932 \_ * Page Two To Demonstrate June 4th in Defense of Soviet Union As _ Japanese Tr eh Front Committe Aggressive Act Japanese and | United and Ty rey ear USSR Calls for Immediate st Criminal S) Imperialist Makers ers in at Woelen Manufac at a meeting called to discuss nounced wage cut, 88 per in favor of strike meeting was t American Federatio: Workers Union st stated that the vote would be re to the A. F. of L. for approval nt voted nt at the esentative of the abor Rubber diately erred Pre: Local members of the Trade Union | Unity League call upon the workers not to allow private negotiations be- tween the employers and A. F. of L.| officials. Mass picketing, a strike committee with rank and file representatives of all departments on strike to lead the activities will be the surest guaran- tee for victory, 3,000 Vote to Quit Amalgamated in Anti-Hilman Revolt! TORONTO, Canada, May 26— Three thousand tailors meeting in the Montreal Arena here yesterday decided to quit the Amalgamated Clothing Workers and build a new union. The left wing opposition is making an attempt to unite the tailors on the basis of immediate struggle for better conditions. Hilman tried to corrupt some of the leaders in the revolt against his reactionary leadership and prevent the vote to leave the Amalgamated but was successful. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 2. Against Hoover's wage-cutting Policy. What’s On - FRIDAY Branch 615, I.W.0., Island Ave., Brook- Comrade Harry Raymond will the Bath Beach Workers’ Club, y and 23rd Aves., Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. ,Sub, he ‘Role of the UW. 8. Tn. the’ Coming war. There will be a general membership meet- | ing of the Marlem Progressive Youth Club at 1838 Madison Ave rede, Morgen will speak at the Ben- Branch at 6720 20th ‘opm Comrade Jerome will speak at the Tre- mont Workers’ Club, 2075 Clinton Ave. (100jh St), at 8 pm Prof. Edward Zabrisk! will speak on “Present Day Russia” under the auspices of the Newark, N. J., F. 8. U. at the New- arkLabor Lyceum, 704 8. 14th St. Admis- sion free. Comrade Cary Brodskj will speak under the auspices of the Union Workers’ Club at Prospect Mansion, 722 Prospect Ave., Bronx, at 8:30 p.m. Prof. H. W. L. Dana will speak on ‘Drama in Europe and Under le Soviet” in the auditorium of Co-operat: No, 2, 3451 Giles Bronx, near 2381 and Broadway ‘Admission is 35 cents door, 25 cents in advance. Council No. 17, U.C.W.O.W., will have « lecture at 3159 Coney Island Ave,, Brighton | Beach, at 8:30 p.m. Subject: “The Role of Women in the Coming War. Counell No. 8, U.C.W.C.W., will have a Bronx. | mass meeting at 3882 Third Ave. Council 3%, U.C.W.C.W., ture at 808 Adee Ave, Counell 38, U.C.W.O.W., will have @ lec- ture at 2006 ‘70th St., Brooklyn at 8:30 p.m Sergie Radamsky wit give @ song recital at the Rada: Studio, 66 Pifth Ave, at 7:30 p.m. for the benefit of the Children’s Campaign of the WIR. an open-air mass inet. the Scotsboro ing to protest ai ‘The Tom Mooney Branch, LL.D. will heve @ lecture at 216. 14th St. at 8 pm. Couneit 13, vewew.. ture ab 390 6. 8:30 pam, adi gt patie? « meeting of League wi! ‘ Plazs. E. 1$th St. and Irving will be will have a lec-| Bronx at 8:30 p.m.| Waverly and Carlton 8ts., the resolutiol action, and th st the Chinese 1) know that es of hae United organizations of the city. Remember the time and date— turday, June 14th, 12 o‘clock noon, at Whitehall and South Streets. Pieinsneeatiens Win Relief Fer Starving Family in St. Louis LOUIS, Mo., May 26.—A family ve at 1921 Franklin was starv- The Provident Association gave of milk, for the wohle for one day’s meals. The efused to pay the rent of on the excuse there was money The Unemployed Council sent a delegation to the Provident Associa- tion and took the pint of milk and held meetings with the pint as an exhibit in various parts of the city. As a result, the charities mover the | family, paid the rent, and gave re- | lief. Open air meetings were held in the neighborhood of an eviction of an- | other family at 1817 Division St., | Block Committee was formed as a | result of the meetings. | BroachMachineBurned 900,000 Worth of Receipts, Is Testimony | NEW YORK.—Some of the inner details of the operation of the Broach |machine in the International Broth- erhood of Electrical Workers are coming out through a legal mess into which the officials have got them- themselves. Testimony before Ref- eree Marsh Wednesday and preceding days showed most of the money of Local 3 of the I. B. E. W. being handled by an “Organization Com- mittee.” Jacob Solomon, secretary of \the “Organization Committee” testi- |fied that receipts showing how one jand a half million dollars was spent between 1926 and 1931 were all de- | stroyed, and no itemized records kept. The offhand answer of the Broach henchmen when asked where such |and such a half million dollars went, or what they did with that hundred | thousand dollars, is, “Oh, we spent it for legal services.” According to the | committee, $528,000 was given as law- | yers’ fees to former Assistant District Attorney Smith between 1927 and 1930. Other large sums were given, the committee claims, to a long list of other lawyers. will have a regular | |Kentucky MinerWrites : Enthusias tically from ithe Land of Socialism ‘Boy, the May celebrations was sure | great,” wrote Tilman Cadle, the Ken- |tucky miners who was sent to the | Soviet Union with the May First | delegation. | I would like very much to stay | over here”—he stated after describing ithe parade in the Red Square—“but I realize we must change the system over there and it’s going to take plenty of good bolsheviks to do it.” In a letter to his friends and com- rades in Kentucky, where the striking miners are shot like dogs. Tilman Cadle pledged to take advantage of | the opportunity offered to him by studying the profound transforma- tion now going on in the Soviet Union |and thus preparing himself for the |class struggle here in America ‘Help the Alteration Painters Picket! NEW YORK.—The painters’ strike against Sol Cohen .& Co. is solid. The boss, who is a millionaire land- lord, has called the police to terrorize the pickets, without success. Where @ man was put on at 485 Jackson Ave., a committee of strikers per- suaded him to quit and now he is helping the strike. All painters are urged by the Al- teration Painters Organization Com- mittee to report to its headquarters at 1130 Southern Blvd. at 8 a. m. every morning to help piket. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: ainst Hoover’s wage-cutting | | cock, 0 |MILL OWNERS URGE DEPORTING | OF E. BERAMAN National Youth Day in Lawrence'Will Demand Her Release LAWRENCE, Mass., ay The “Citizens Committee” here has wired Commissioner Tillnghast urg- ing that Edith Berkman be deport- | ed, and Mayor White of Lawrence has endorsed their demand. The “Citizens Committee” is a strike- | breaking organization of business men formed during the textile | workers’ struggle against a ten per | cent wage cut last year. Workers’ demonstrations to de- mand that Edith Berkman be set free instead of being deported or longer imprisoned, will be held here soon, Especially on National Youth Day, May 29 and May 30, will these demands be made. HANCOCK, Mich., May 25.—The Young Communist League of Han- ., at its last regular meet= ing wired a resolution of protest to Mrs. Anna Tillinghast, and de- manded the release of Edith Berk- | man. against the Soviet | t tolerate Soviet Unton ‘ople. | ion is being held Austrian Masses Rally to Defense of Scottsboro 9 Huge Crowds Greet Mrs. Wright in Vienna A dispatch from Vienna, Austria, to the New York» World-Telegram admits that Austrian workers and many intellectuals are rallying to the world-wide fight for the release of the nine innocent Scottsboro Ne- gro boys. The dispatch says “Vien- nese crowds were stirred by the im- passioned plea made here by Ada Wright, whose two sons are among the eight Negroes sentenced to death at Scottsboro, Ala.” 4 It reports that protest resolutions have been adopted at many meet- ings in the Austrian capital, de- nouncing the murderous frame-up of the boys and demanding their immediate release. Mrs. Wright has just concluded a successful tour of Germany where, in spite of the attacks on the Scottsboro defense campaign by the socialist police, inspired by the United States government, tens of thousands of German workers ral- Hed to the defense of the Scotts- boro boys and the Negro masses of this country. “ee From the distant Canary Islands, a Spanish colony off the coast of Af- rica, comes an addition to the world wide protests against the infamous Scottsboro frame-up. The members of the Federation of Workers of La Palma, the prin- cipal town in the islands, unani- mously . adopted a resolution de- nouncing the lynch verdicts and de- clffaring their support of the world wide fight against “the crime which capitalism is trying to commit against our fellow workers who have been guilty of nothing save the act of looking for work.” The. resolu- tion demands the unconditional re- lease of the nine boys. A copy of the resolution, signed by J. Dalero Debasse, chairman of the committee charged with drawing it up, has been sent to the United States. “ROAD TO LIFE” The famous Soviet film “Road To Life,” the very latest Soviet News- reels, and the demonstration of the shoe strikers at the I. Miller\plant in Long Island, will be shown Saturday, May 28th from 1 to 11 p. m. con- tinuously at the Fifth Avenue Theatre, Brodway and 28th Street, New York City. SHOE WORKERS FORUM On Sunday, May 29th, at 11 a, m. an openforum will be held at the Cooperative Colony Auditorium, 2899 Bronx Park East. Comrade I. Girsch of the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union, will speak on the “Present Shoe Strikes.” VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: Against Hoover's wage-cutting policy. NEW YORK.—With thousands of workers in the many Workers’ Clubs jand International Workers’ |the amount of signatures collected by these organizations is y small. | According to the reports received by |the United Front Election Campaign |Committee, there are yery few or- for this work, the best of these being |the Bronx Workers’ Club, Boro Park Workers’ Club and the Brownsville outh Center. Where are the rest of the organizations? Some of the clubs report that they have started petitions and ar organizing their own collections, but also very few. The City Election Campaign Con- |ference pledged itself to mobilize the hundreds of organizations and shops that it represented to secure all the Order, | ganizations that aer as yet mobilized | work on their own, gotten their own | necessary ‘signatures in the shortest possible time and to assure the placing on the ballot of the Com- munist candidates. THIS PLEDGE MUST BE MADE TO MEAN SOME- THING. This pledge must not be permitted to remain on paper, must be carried out as the most im- portant revolutionary duty of workers’ organizations. Section 15, which takes in the Up- per Bronx Section, has pledged itself to collect its full quota of signatures by the end of next week. How about the other sections? ers’ Clubs and I.W.O. branches? Do not teh few clubs mentioned above beat yeu to it? Mobilize your or- ganizations, intensify your work. gt the slogan be “for the lergest | possible number of signatures—in the shortest possible time, Australian Fakir Aids Fascists In Slandering Reds SYDNEY, N. S. W., Australia— Jock Garden, secretary of the Sydney jeTrades and Labor Council, who has for years used his position in the labor movement to break strikes, and has used the worst social-fascist demagogy to disorganize the ranks of the workers and pave the way for fascism claims he was attacked last Saturday by a group of fascists. His social-fascist comrades in the labor party charge that Communists aid the fascists in such attacks. It is doubtful if Garden was attacked. The story of the attack upon him was probably concocted in an at~ tempt to gain sympathy for Garden, who is utterly discredited among the decisive sections of the New South Wales working class—especially the railway, tramway and timber work- ers whom he has betrayed time and again. The vile slander that Communists work with fascists is only an attempt to confuse the workers who are ral- lying in tens of thousands in an anti- fascist front under the leadership of the Communist Party, which alone fights the now notorious New Guard, a fascist organization created with the aid of and under the protection of the “left” social-fascist govern- ment of Jock Garden’s political boss, Premier John T. Lang of New South ‘Wales. THEATRE GUILD TO PRESENT “THE GOOD EARTH” The Theatre Guild will open its fifteenth season with “The Good Earth’ a dramatization by Owen and Donald Davis of Pearl S, Buck's Pulitzer Prize novel, on October 3 at the Guild Theatre, Philip Moeller will direct and Lee Simonson will, design the settings. The second pro- duction of the Theatre Guild will be “The Pure in Heart” by John How- ard Lewson, which will be directed by Theresa Helburn in which June Walker will play an important role. The Civic Repertory Theatre of which Eva La Galliene is the director announces that Josephine Hutchin- son will appear as Jane Austin in the new play “Dear Jane,” by Elea- nor Holmes Hinkley, at the Four- teenth St. Playhouse in November. This will be the first of four new plays to be included in the repertory. “Dear Jane” is founded on the life of JaneAustin, tho novelist. The Civic Repertory will open early in October with a production of “Lillium,” by Molnar. “Alonz,” the sound film directed by Kozintzev and Trauberg, producers of “The New Babylon,” is now at the Cameo Theatre. This production boasts a musical score written by Dmitri Shostakovitch, foremost So- viet composer. Cameo is also showing the latest news events of Soviet Russia, shown in the current issue of the Sovkino Newsreel. Due to the enthusiasm of the visitors to the Acme Theatre the past three days the management has de- cided to hold over “Ten Days That Shook the World” for three days, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, “Ten Days” is based upon John Reed's thrilling book of the first few days of the revolution, and was produced Einsenstein. The latest W. I. R. Newsree] with scenes from the work- ing-class front, is being shown at the Acme as an added feature. Eisenstein’s Great ADDED FEATURE: The Worker's Mth STREET & UNION —Grand ITAL, A MEMBER OF LAST TWO DAYS—TODAY & TOMORROW "10 DAYS THAT SHOOK rH: WORLD” LATEST W.LR, NEWSREEL ACME THEATRE for the benefit of “L'ORDINE” and “STATO OPERAIO” Sunday, May 29th, 1932 at 2 p. m. MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 E, 4th St., N. Y. C. fs ——PROGRAM—— FREIHEIT aricInG SOCIETY—UKRAINIAN DANCING BALLET ORCHESTRA (Of Italian Center bai! Harlem) ©. ©, WILL SPEAK Russian Film Epic From John famous story of the early days of the Russian Revo- lution 9 ALM. to 1 P.M, TSC he Sie Sun, Mt SQUARE show Concert— ma by the brilliant Soviet director Sergei™ Wicks Debates Budenz Webster Hall, June 3 O) NEW YORK.—“Which program shall the American workers follow”? will be the subject of a debate be- tween Harry M. Wicks of the Daily Worker staff and Louis Budenz of the Conference of Progressive Labor Action, when the policies and pro- gram ofthe Trade Union Unity League and those of the so-called progressives in the American Fed- eration of Labor will be analyzed. The debate will take place Friday, Sune 3rd at Webster Hall under the auspices of the City Committee of the Jewish Workers Clubs. To Show ‘Old and New’ in Harlem on May 28th The Harlem Section of the Com- munist Party, with the help of the Unemployed Council and other mass organizations, has started a campaign to raise funds for the establishment of a. Harlem Workers’ Center, which will be the center of all revolutionary activities in Negro Harlem. As a first step towards this end, a show- ing of the Amkino film, “Old and New,” has been aranged for Satur- day, May 28, from 2 to 11 p.m. As an added attraction they have secured the news reel of the New York, 1932, MAY FIRST DEMON- STRATION. There will be five dif- ferent, showings of these two fea- tures and prominent speakers have been secured to speak after each showing. Comrades Amter, Alexan- der, Shepard and others have al- ready accepted to speak. Admission will be 35 cents at the door, or 25 cents in advance. the | And the Work- | ‘Start Workers’ Competition in |MASS PROTESTSTO Election Signature Drive! DEMAND RELEASE Thousands of Workers Pledged to Help Put) OF COM. STALKER Communists on Ballot; Need Action Now! Communist Organizer Is Held For but | Deportation | OMAHA, Neb.—George Stalker, or- ganizer of the Communist Party is being held in the county jail at |Omaha on a deportation warrant is- | sued by the Immigration Department. | All efforts to secure Comrade Stalk- er’s release on bail: have failed so far, due to the technical objections and obstacles raised by the Immi- gration Department officials Comrade Blakely, Negro worker, has been arrested on framed up | charges, and. has been badly beaten jup and given a 30-day sentence. | Monday, Comrade Harry Smith, act- ing section organizer, and Ellen Al- |len, Y.C.L. organizer, were arrested, {held several hours for investigation andthen released with the warning that they will be pinched every time detectives run across them. Mass protest meetings against the capitalist terror in Omaha, and de- manding the release of Stalker, are being held throughout District 10. Workers’ organizations all over the United States are urged to send wires and letters, protesting against the attempt to deport Stalker. All protest resolutions and wires should besent to A, J. Hayes,. Immigration Department, Post Office Building, Omeha, Nebraska. “Alone”, Film of A Teachers Life in Siberia at Cameo There is a fine film at the Cameo, another Soyuzkino production, re- leased inAmerica by Amkino. The story is simple, but intensely interestifig, as a record of the ever- lasting fight in the far corners of the U. S. S. R. against inefficiency, bu- reaucracy, priesthood, kulakism and the forces of darkness generally. The photography, by A. N. Moskvin, is of the usual high type of the Soviet films. There are amazing scenes of the Mongoloid tribesmen at work and play, and square miles of snow cov- eered hillsides. A feature is the musical scoreby Dmitri Shostskovitch, which is not just music but singing, too. Some of the songs are translated on thescreen, while the Russian words strike the ear, VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 6. Against imperialist war; for the defense of the Chinese people and of the Soviet Union. The demonstrations against im- perialist war on the Second National Youth Day May 29 and 30, this year promise tobe much larger and to be held in many more places than those of last year. Cities which last year had to send small delegations to dis- tant points are today holding their own athletic meets as finals for the counter-Olympic, Meet and demon- strations against war. With im- perialist war not a possibility but an existent fact this year’s meets will distinguish themselves from those of last year with their fighting tone. YOUTH DAY IN MANY CITIES MEETS TO SURPASS LAST YEAR’S PITTSBURGH, Pa., May 24.—The Pittsburgh district National Youth Day meets have been changed to McKeesport where a picnic, ball games track meet, dancing constijute the program on Sunday and a road run and demonstration will be held on Monday. gt aed TURTLE CREEK, Pa.—The best factory gate meeting in months was held at theWestinghouse plant today. The enthusiasm for a real fight against the coming wage cut ran high. The workers of the plant greeted the announcement of Na- tional Youth Daq with cheers. AMUSEMENTS The Vhentre Guild Presents REUNION IN eRe A Comed -By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD. THEATRE, 52nd St. GUILD West or Bway Ey 8.40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Co 5-829 Extra Mat. Monday (Dec. Day) With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth tate Teare, & sat. “study the 14th Plenum Resolutions. Get a copy of the new Pamphiet, “Toward Revolutionary Mass Work” COUNSELLOR- -AT-LAW N. Y. Times cable from Moscow says: “Methods of photography and music of Shostokoviteh lifted this fiim to the level of a fine art. AMKINO’S NEW SOUND FILM SUPERB MUSICAL SCORE BY DIMITRI SHOSTOKOVITCH EXCLUSIVE SOVIET NEWS REEL: Raising British Submarine for Red Navy Academy of Science in Session Planting Scenes by Plane ‘Training Korcans of the U.S.S.R. NOT TO BE SHOWN IN ANY OTHER, NEW YORK THEATRE CAMEO fail sce sat PHONE Operated by the Belle As beautiful as in May, as Bailin’s Mapledale Hotel ROSCOE, SULLIVAN COUNTY, N. Y. ROSCOE still more convenient with an augmented staff and management RATES ARE AS LOW AS $20.00 PER WEEK AND UP All sports, conveniences, music, theatricals Beaverkill River flowing through the premises Special for Decoration Day Week-End For the three days beginning Friday—-$10 and up Railroad Fare Return Ticket $5.00 City phone for reservations—Penn 6-1777 ©. 8Y2 Inn Assn. (Unioncorp) picturesque as always—only NEW YORK.—The Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union points out through a recent report on its ac- tivities made by Rose Wortis, assist- ant secretary, that although this is a “slow season” with lots of unem- ployment the needle workers, led by the union and fighting with deter- mination, have won a number of strikes. They have stopped wage cuts, abolished bad conditions, and gained increases in many shops. Some of the typical struggles are listed below—all taking place within the last month. Claire Knitting Mills. A shop committee of the NTWIU existed in’Claire Knitting Mills, 1434 St., Bronx, but most of the 40 work- ers were unorganized. The boss de- clared a wage cut. The shop struck solid under the shop committee’s leadership, and after two days won withdrawal of the cut, recognition of the shop committee, equal division of werk and no discrimination. Magun Fur Co, The Magun Fur Co., 242 W. 30th St., belongs to the association. The strike was against wage cuts and an attempt to make them take out working cards. After seven weeks’ fight against the company union gangsters and the boss, the strike was settled with increase in pay and recognition of the NTWIU, The fur workers of Cooperman & Strikes Can Be Won Even in Crisis; Here’s Proof Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union Lists Some of Its Recent Victories Greenburg, 224 W. 30th St. struck against piece work and wages a8 low as $15 a week for 50 hour weeks. Af- ter three days the union scale was won and the boss agrees to pay three per cent toward the unemployment insurance fund. P. Barlow ‘The fur strike in P. Batlow, 281 W. 3(th St., an asvociation shop, was against cuts pelow the minimum scale, After a short strike all re- ceived $5 increase, and the floor ‘boy got $6 increase. There have been $5 strikes in the past month in the fur department. Barsha Dress Co. Among 40 workers of the Barsha Dress Co., 545 Kighth Ave., there was a shop committee of ten. Ten work- ers were fired and a demand for # 5 cent increase was refused. The whole shop struck, and won a two ard a half cent increase. Nume-ous Victories. Other dress stops settled within & single week are: Getty Dress, Co., 134 W. 29th St.; Irving Silver, 54 W. 21st St.; I. J. Dress Co., 146 W. 24th St.; and Paris Dress Co,, 253 W. 26th St. In addition to these strike victories, there were numerous stoppages, such as at Goltar Dress Co., Schwartz & Dorfman, where the workers re- ceived 10 per cent and 15 per cent increases, tle! —— 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 ABOLITION TEA for the benefit of the GILBERT LEWIS GROUP of the LEAGUE of STRUGGLE for NEGRO RIGHTS Saturday, May 28, 1932 At 8 P.M. at 241 W. 113th St., Apt. 3 Hear the Story of the First Liberator Rear the Old Meloden Used by the Abolitiontst SPECIAL LITERARY PROGRAM DANCING and REFRESHMENTS Admission 25 Cents ‘Three Great Invent! \ALONE FOR UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE! “Never-Sag” Webbing — . Cordless spring mounting. 2. Spring inserted in turn of canvas and webbing. 3. Manufacturer, repair shop. M. STADTLER 187-58 KALMIA AVENUE ‘Tel. INdependence 3-7891 Flushing, L. 1. LECTURE BY Comrade Carl Brodsky “Two Worlds—Communism vs. Capitalism” FRIDAY, MAY 27th at 8:30 P. M. Prospect Mansion—722 Prospect Ave., Bronx AUSPICES: UNION WORKERS CLUB 857 Westchester Ave., Bronx Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persona! Care af DR. JOSEPASON RUSSIAN MEALS For Poor Pocketbooks KAVK AZ 332 E. 14th Street, N. ¥. ©. DINE IN THE OPEN AIR Garden Restaurant 323 EAST 13th STREET Near Second Avenue REASONABLE PRICES COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE NO TIPPING MUSIC Hold Everything! 1!!! Saturday, May 27 IRVING PLAZA 15th Street and Irving Pl. The FRIENDS of the SOVIET UNION —Preseat— SHOCK BRIGADERS#’ BALL —LIGHT COLOR—RAYTHM Dancing from Dust till Dawn ENTERTAINMENT GALORE . ANTI-WAR NEWS REEL Come early—Bring your friends—Have » good time and help us in our Anti-War Campaign | See: SATURDAY, MAY 28 Continuous Showing on from 1 P.M. to 11 P.M, 35 East 12th Street Per Week . « $15.00 Org. Tax .. Press Tax .. Total $16.50 —“ROAD TO LIFE” (Famous Soviet Talkie in English Titles) and LATEST SOVIET NEWSREELS also AMERICAN WORKERS NEWSREELS Ry the Workers Film and Photo League of W.LR. For the Relief of Striking Shoe Workers Al the FIFTH AVENUE TREATRE—28th St. ROOMS WANTED— Rooms are needed for students of the Central Training School for six weeks beginning June 15th, Pgrty members and sympathizers who can accomodate without charge one or more students during that peried, please report immediately to:— Specify whether male or female THE WORKERS SCHOOL Hundreds of workers prepare for opening celebration of our three proletarian camps Decoration Day week-end We expect you to join us at. Nitgedaiget :: Kinderland :: Unity Celebration programs will be rendered by the eae Workers Lab- oratory Theatre, dancers, singers and classical concerts by the Minia- ture Orchestras of the Camps, who also will play dance music, these orchestras will be @ permanent feature of our Camps during the entire season ALL CAMPS HAVE UNIFORM RATES START THE SUMMER RIGHT!—GO TO YOUR OWN CAMP! For information on Nitgedaiget and Unity call City office: EStabrook 8-1400 and for Kinderland TOmpkins Square 6-8434— Broadway Auspices: ternational Relief New York, N. Y, 25 Cents Wrerkore 6 W. 2 si Adults: Telephone ALg. 4-1199 Rates for the Week End One Day . $93.25. Two Days y 6.09 Three Days ....5 » 8.59

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