Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
eta, PULL, Suing ad, Looe A L Miller Racketeers Exposed As Professional Strikebreakers and Swindlers “CONSTITUTIONAL LE LEAGUE” STOOL PIGEONS PRIVATE’ PROPERTY Its Address Is Fake, ( Mussolini‘s Agent; NEW YORK—The Constitutional | Edueational League. to Break the strike in Shoe Co. factory, which is the 1 Miller | is a pure fake or- ganization, a one-man p) us racketeer, who does, associate with two ot labor spies and s of whom is a Mussolini agent in this country and the other an expert in assing bad checks. | The Constitutional Educational League was exposed yesterday by the Federated Press as th I erty, for sale to a certain Joseph ernment spy, tv ing worthless ch who helped last unemployed worke: No wonder the Consti al Ed- ucational League dared not puf up the $1,000 and submit to a public; as it Trade x notorious | ke breakers, one ear in the investigation of its statements, th was challenged to do by Union Unity Council! The the strikers challenged Ka to appear and prove his statements and 500 strikers gathered at the ap- pointed date, June 6, but Kamp not show up. Instead he issued a | ing statement that the Da admitted his stateme’ (1) but that he woul ergument. The Constitu tional League appeared s 700 workers of the I. Mi pany went on sirike. It issue a r phiet with a sensational title, You Against the Gqvernment?” a big announcement on the ‘$1,000 Reward if any info this bulletin is proven unt Then followed, in: statements, every one of ¥ fal ‘The League deci Union Unity League the Shoe and Leather Wi In- dustrial Union conducting the strike, is one, “have never won a strike”! They have just won five strikes in the | last few weeks. The TUUL unions were declared “not unions but politi- cal organizations”, in spite of the fact that no TUUL union makes any inquiry even as to the political party of a worker joining it—and there were plenty of other lies. The Trade Union Unity Council chalienged this fake “League” to “Put up or shut up”, The racketeers did not put up. Fail In Lynch Plot. But the Constitutional League be- | What’s On— | | rs ‘The Imperis! Valley Branch, J. L. D. will Bold an open-air meeting at Walton Ave. @nd 170th St., Bronx, at 8:30 p.m. ce 8 | An open-air meeting under the auspices | of the Workers Zukunft Club will be held at Seventh St., corner of Second Ave., at § pm, The LS.N.R, group of Harlem has ar- ged a farewell concert ang dance to a| up of Negro artists sailing for the Soviet inion, at the Bronze Studio, 227 Lenox fe, at 9:30 p.m. Comrsde Hatry Raymond will speak on , fie, Blestion Program of the Communist |truth is militant workers in Michigan, | | swindler and xet’s Its Mail Through Works With Passaic Spy denouncing in- of the strike, and gangs to assemble gan to issue leaflets leader calling for 1 n front of . The first meeting large number of ‘the the addressed them and racketeer gang- ked out. Kamp hes been trying feelings be-| workers of strike leader pore hi |The union drive for houses. They did not | from | and the} lies about the relief. | the owner of ‘The Constitu- ducational League,” the man who tries to reise gangs against the Miller , the purveyor of lies | union, the fellow who i the strike area in a car of hired suggers? government spy r of propaganda Americanization”) for he John P. Dwyer post of the Vet- erans of Foreign Wars. bos Kamp tiack open air meetings of ers anywhere in Long Island. He mms to a resident of Long Island. does not say much about his ng the last year. The that he has been hunting he name of J. M. Patterson. been arrested twice, the last n March of this year, for pass- s checks. The first time in Benton Harbor, Mich., last nd time was in Flint, held in jail in default of $250 bail. In July, 1931, he addressed Niagara ¢ | Falls Rotarians on “Communist Ac- tivities” and was praised by the sec- retary as a “second Floyd Gibbons.” He helped to engineer the flogging of unemploygd workers last fall in Oak- land County, Mich. Strike-Breaker Partner Kamp has been working recently with one “Jack” O’Brien, who likes to call himself “Captain” O’Brien when | lecturing business men’s clubs on the |red peril, | known as J. W. and in private lite is also Bryant. The “cap- has a record extending back at 10 years, as_ strike-breaker, racketeer, When the Passaic,.N. J., textile workers struck in 1926, O’Brien helped secure an in- | junction against them. The coppers had copped some letters from strike headquarters in a raid, and O’Brien copped them from the coppers but was caught and had to turn them back. In 1930 he was promoting min- jature golf courses and cashing worthless checks in the great state of Ohio. Gets Mail Through Fascists. The address of the Constitutional Educational League is given as 113 W. 42d St., but it has no office there. Kamp receives his mail through the Italian Historical Society. The secre- tary of this society is Harry Loyd (sometimes called “Lord”) Varney, tain” ledst tufty_at the Mapleton Workers’ Club, 2006 th St., Brooklyn, at 8:30 p.m. | Comrade Leon ‘Dennen will speak on Soviet | ature at the Bath Beach Workers’; ib, 7274 Bath Ave., Brooklyn, st 8:30 p.m. | Euglish-spephing Brauch 615, L.W.0., will| have a regular meeting at 3159 Coney Island Ave, Brooklyn, at 8:30 p.m. All| members are urged to come and participate | in the election campaign discussion. oP a Branch of, LW.0, will have a regular meeting at 11 W. Mt. Eden Ave., af 8:39 p.m. j ‘The Heriem Progressive Youth Club will mee an important membership meeting at 1888 Madison Ave. at 3:30 p.m, ies 8. Horwatt, lecturer on ocono: Pt nits Workers’ University, will ate H. Saitzm: socialist the | men or unists,"" at fall, 266 F. » Bronx, Fhe Comp Will Branch of the LL.D. wi an open-air m Ke, corne iellgnd Aves. GB de Pévline Rogers will speak on “Weieen In the Soviet Union” at the Tre Werkers’ Club, 75 Clinton Ave iw (18¢th Bt.), at’ 8 p.m iis fp the National Nominating jon_of the Communist Party wil at St, Luke's Hell, 128 West 130th | jt 8 pm. All workers are asked to this moeting. ww workers are ne need at the W je. Apply at 16 W. ist at. al v o will be given a banquet by the ELD. at 216 F. idth St, at 8 p.m ’ Marlem Progressive Youth Club will 8 ~ u& pace ab 1698 Medison Ave, and dunce will gecond be given former I.W.W. membmer, who is paid | by Mussolini to conduct Fascist propaganda among Italian-Ameri- cans. Varney gives the address of this “resident of Long Island City” as Yonkers. Scottsboro Big” Issue on World Solidarity Day: Struggle Against War A Fight on Terror BULLETIN PARIS, June 9 (By Cable).— Four thousand French workers par- ticipated in a Scottsboro demon- stration in the Communist ‘munici- pality of St. Denis. They elected a delegation to demand from the British embassy in Paris that Mrs. Ada Wright, Scottsboro mother, and J. Louis Engdahl, general sec- retary of the International Labor Defense, be allowed to enter Eng- land, Alsd an elected delegation visited the American embassy in Paris and demanded the uncondi- tional liberation of the Scottsboro Negro boys. A bs | Perk Elia May Branch, LD, 437d Bt. Brookiyn, at 8:30 p.m ‘| is 28 cents. | . * * ! have a con- al at 2921 W. Admis- will have it ark. All com- | jomen's outa hn, have its - ee i Se Say D come to. the Pientc | Pi % Park, Brooklya. 4 aie of Struggle fer Meare Rights S strawberry festival Snd dance | gt #18'W. dard Bt. at 2 9) 3 ‘the New mittee of the oes fe ian eed meeting of st: Convention at 7 werk, at 1 p.m. coy compete ‘annave's val and ce at 3189 Coney Island Rens the pe A sport thy as Sport ptetee pica oata 4 ih, Bey Park. si will_be held at 569 Pros- ai ch tions are asked not for Aug. 28, when jo will be held at NEW YORK.—Scottsboro and the national oppression and persecution jof the Negro masses will be a major | lissue at the world-wide demonstra- | tions on World Solidarity Against War, Sunday, June 12. The |demonstrations are being organized by the Workers International Relief with the active support of many other working class organizations. Throughout the world the demon- strations will militantly raise the demands for the unconditional re- lease of the nine innocent Scottsboro Negro boys, for full equal rights for the Negro masses and the right of self-determination for the Negro ma~ jorities of the “Black Belt.” In New York, the main demonstra- tion will be held at Starlight Park, 177th Street. Negro and white work- ers’ delegates to the Soviet Union é will celebrate the “Not for Leib and Gershonowit Fatal Ot, Pater- will arrive from Europe on Sunday and will be among the speakers at the demonstration. They will tell of || Day | | | | | | shoe Workers Tag Days Begin Today; Call_for Help Today begins the Tag Days fo trike funds, which will end Bundi, All shoe work all workers of other org tions, are alled upon to report to the follow- June 12, ing stations for boxes and material. | reef must be | carried on with full speed: Manhattan [DRESS STRIKE IN BRONX WON as well as} More Shops Walk Out; Picket Shops : NEW YORK. — Thirty workers, |cloak and dress makers of the M. & |C. Cloak Co. of 724 Astor Ave. went lout on strike to force the bosses to Union headquarters, 5 E. 19th St. 142 E, Third St- 301 W. 29th St. 108 E. 14th St. Bronx 6. W. 135th St 569 Prospect, Ave. 1 1323 Southern Blvd. 2800 Bronx Park, East. Brooklyn 61 Graham Ave. 1109 45th Ave. | 1813 Pitkin Ave: All. members of the Women’s Councils and Workers’ Clubs are to report to their regular meeting places. All Party members and sympathizers are to report to the above stations. All shoe workers are to come to the union headqiarters, | JAPANESE a man who has led gang- | FASCISTS IN TERROR DRIVE Workers “Appeal for World Proletarian Solidarity (Continued from Page 1) .- armed struggles with the police and tax collectors. The Japanese ruling class are trying to crush these Tev- | olutionary struggles by a savage in- erease in the terror against the toil- ing masses, with attempts to illegal- ize and disrupt working class organ- izations. lutionary workers is signed by 16 organizations. The appeal says, in part: | has! The Japanese bourgeoisie started since the end of March new preparations for the imperialist war. The latest mass-arresting of the re- volutionary workers and peasants and the destroying of the proletarian revolutionary organizations are @ menace to the Japanese working class. “During the Parliament Elections in February, 1932, the only legal workers’ candidate in the Tokio Dis- trict was arrested. At the same time not only were 5 members of the Jap- anese Young Communist League ar- rested, but also the revolutionary workers who yoted for the workers’ candidates were persecuted. “The same thing is happening now in Japan that happened in Europe before the outbreak of and during the World War. In Japan, where the most important prole- tarian organizations (Commumist Party of Japan, Red Trade unions, | Japanese sections of the League Against Imperialism and the In- ternational Red Aid) are illegal, the only legal proletarian revolu- tionary mass organization, namely “KOPFJ” (Federation of Cultural Organizations plays an immensely important role in the class strug- gle. Since the beginning of the present robber war on China and | the drive for armed intervention | “Kopfj” has carried on tremendous struggles against the war and for | the defense of the Chinese People and the Soviet Union, the social- | ist fatherland. | | | | | |The Japanese Government has lately | |forbidden nearly all periodicals of the | |Kopfj” | against. “The more important the role played by the “Kopfj,” in the strug- gle against war, the more brutal and | The appeal of the Japanese revo- | | reinstate a presser, who was fired and to recognize the Shop Commit- tee. After two weeks of bitter struggle, during which Charles Mizel, one of | the bosses, did everything in his/ power to break the strike with the help of the police and gangsters, the workers won their demands. The strike was led by a United Front Rank and File Strike Commit- tee, that had the confidence of all the workers. The Needle Trades Workers Indus- trial Union supported the strike from the very beginning and as a result of this, after the strike all the work- ers joined the union. Two More Shops Strike Yesterday two more dress shops, the Lorraine Dsess Co., 842 6th Ave., and the Sam Abramowitz, 127 West 25th St. came down on strike for better conditions. When the committee of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union |came to call the workers on strike the boss threatened them and when he found he could not intimidate them, offered them $100 to leave his shop an open shop. The committee in the presence of the workers ex- posed these tricks and all the work~ jers, like one man, cade down to the Industrial Union, had a meeting, el- ected their committee, worked out thei? strike demands, and are de- termined to make their shop a union shop, The Organization Department of the Industrial Union calls on the ac. tive dressmakers to report on the Ppicketline in front of the following shops: B. P. Dress, 127*W. 24th St.; Cohen Dress, 37 W. 28th St.; K. & T. Dress, 118 W. 27th St.; Har Fan Dress, 158 W. 27th St.; Lorraine Dress, 842 6th Ave.; Sam Abramovitz, 127 W. 25th St. Cops Attack Workers At Columbus Circle NEW YORK, June 9. — Workers were attacked yesterday by the Pol- ice for singing revolutionary songs at an open air religious meeting held in Columbus Circle, When the meeting was opened, the workers started to sing revolutionary songs and booed the sky pilots as they began to speak. The police was called to disperse the workers and protect the speak- ers. DISTRICT DELEGATES, NOTICE All delegates to the District Con- yention of the Communist Party must report at the District Office Saturday morning between 10 and 12 o'clock in order to get their de- legates’ pass and place of conven- tion. ROSE BARON FAREWELL NEW YORK.—Rose Baron, active in militant defense work for many years, will be the guest of honor at a banquet arranged by the Interna- tional Labor Defense of the New York District in Sollin’s Restaurant, 216 E. 14th St. at 8 o'clock. She is leay- ing for the Soviet Union to take up work in the MOPR, internatipnal la- bor defense UF atenek st MEXICAN SINGER HONORED NEW YORK.—As an expression of the unity of the workers of Latin- America and. the U. 8, the Musi- cians Club, 63 W. 15th St., elected Concha Michel, revolutionary Méx- systematic is the persecution on the |ican singer, as an honorary member. part of the ruling class of Japan. and has broken up all its meetings. “Tt is absolutely necessary that & protest be organized through prole- tarian solidarity. We call upon the workers of all countries to unite against the imperialist war-inciters, against the robber war on China, the monstrous plot for armed intervention against the So- viet Union and its victorious social- ist construction.” their experiences in the Soviet Un- ion, of their observation of the tre- mendous achievements in Socialist construction made by the Soviet mas- ses in the victorious accomplishment of the Five Year Plan. The hideous Scottsboro frame- ups and death sentences are part of the growing terror and perse- cution against the American work- ing class, directed with especial brutality and vehemence against the Negro and foreign born toilers, This frightful terror is part of the bosses’ preparations for a new world war. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 5. Against capitalist terror; against all forms of suppression of the Politica! rights of workers, LABOR UNION MEETINGS Meta! Wor Regular meeting of Metal. Worke jal League on Friday, June 1 ns for the district shop in preparation for the National Convention. Ca Be Clothing Workers Rank and File Committee urges all cloth- ing rorkers to participate in the reception at the pier, Sunday, for Sante Mirabile, juen's clothing worker ‘rien to thé Soviet will i Union. He ie the Bus bri sh, © dare jould re rit Pile mentee, Fee use ds limited, the number of Alteration Painters Williamsburg Section of the Al Painters meets: every Wednesday at at 89 Cook St. Food Workers All members of the Cafeteria and *Hotel & aurant trade sections of the Food Workers’ Industrial Union meet Monday, June 13, at 8 p.m. at 5 E. 19th St. to hear the report of the committee of 15 elected at the previous meeting. LATEST SOVIET NEWS LOTTERY FOR 2ND 5-YEAR PLAN— MECHANIZED SALT wale eats Any ACH oA ee: TURKEY REATYCETC, fre. COMMUNIST CONVENTION) IN CHICAGO THE SOVIET PICTURE, THRILLED THE WORLD ‘THE END OF ST. PETERSBUR® Also: Ex-Servieeme PRESENTED wok Ky The dth STREET & UNION WoneeA CME THEATRE tdateronce | Continue to Picket at 1520 Seabury; More Join Tenants’ League NEW YORK. — The Unemployed |Coyncil and the Tenants League at 1520 Seabury Place calls on all work- ers to help picket the place, where the landlord is trying to evict more families of unemployed workers. Tuesday, taking advantage of a mo- ment around 5 p.m, when the hun- dreds who had been picketing had gone, he evicted Isadore Suckerman, 8 months’ unemployed and owing only two weeks’ rent. Two thousand people gathered quickly, and prevent- ed his ousting another tenant, Salz- man, who had lived in that same house 17 years, and owed only two weeks’ rent. The number of families in the League has grown now from 14 to 16. Severiteen families have received dis- Possess notices, Unemployed Teachers Meet Today at City Hall to Hear Report NEW YORK.—Following a mass meeting Wednesday night in the auditorium of the College of the City of New York, attended by more than 1,000 students, ‘parents, employed and unemployed teachers, final prep- arations were made to send a com- mittee before the Board of Estimate this morning at 11 o'clock. The fight of the teachers and stu- dents is being led by the Unemployed Teachers’ Association and the Stu- dents’ Committee-on Fees, ‘The committee, speaking on behalf of 10,000 unemployed teachers, will demand (1) the appointment of the 310 teachers on the 1928 list in dan- ger of losing their jobs upon the ex- piration of the list; (2) no cut in the appropriation for education at the expense of teachers and students; (4) no fees for students at the city colleges. ‘The committee will report the re- sults of the interview with the esti- mate board at an open-air mass meeting outside the City Hall at 4 o’elock. Placards containing the de- mands of the teachers and students Will be held aloft at the meeting. A large atetndance of teachers, as well as sympathetic workers—employed and unemployed—are expected at the City Hall meéting. Printers Group Aids Remington Strikers NEW YORK.—The Relief Commit- tee of the Remington-Rand strikers, young printing workers, went to a meeting of the Amalgamation Party in the International Typographical Union and received a donation from them totalling $16.50. ‘There will be mass picketing Friday at 4:30 pm., Tuesday at 4:30 p.m, and Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. Strikers meet at 73 Myrtle Ave., Brooklyn. Relief is handled through the Print- ing Workers’ Industrial League at 126 University Place, N. ¥. W.LR. BONUS DEMONSTRATION PICTURES AT ACME THEATRE Scenes of the Worker's Ex-Service- men’s Parade and demonstration, are now being shown at the Acme The- atre. The pictures which are being presented by W.LR. show the larger number of marchers at City Hall and at Union Square. Other scenes show Bonus Army in Cleveland, Chi- ¢2go, Washington and other centers. The pictures of the Communist Convention in Chicago will continue until Sunday inelusive. This is one of the best films the Acme has pre- sented in some time, and shows the important events that took place at the convention, “The End of St. Petersburg,” Sov- kino’s thrilling picture of the cap- ture of the capitol by the workers, and the downfall of the Kerensky regime will continue until Tuesday inelusive. As an added feature the Acme is presenting the Latest Soviet News, showing many events in the USSR. The Acme management states that news of the Bonus Army and Soviet News items wil be shown at the theatre as soon interesting | SOCIALISTS Blackjacks and Knives Answer to Question NEW YORK.—A Socialist Pafty speaker at a meeting Tuesday at 7th St. and Second Ave.; run by the “Yp- sels” and the district headquarters of the “S.P.” at 327 9th St., called on his gang of blackjack, knife and iron knuckle armed thugs and had five young workers slugged, An attempt to ask a question by one of the young workers, mémbers of the sports sec- tion of the Workers ‘Zukunft Club, 31 Second Ave., was the excuse. A message to the Zukunft Club that Socialist Party gangsters were attacking workers at the 7th St. open air meeting caused a few of its mefh- bers to go down. When they got there they found a Sovialist Party speaker addressing about 60 people. One worker asked a question, and the speaker shouted, “Start a fight with them!” workers not anybody else except the Socialist speakers’ guard of six thugs was armed, Isadore Korenzweick was slugged between the eyes with an iron glove. The same thug, with the same wea- pon, did the same thing then to Mor- ris Gebelman. Jack Blank was cut on the lip and across the temple with a knife by several of th thugs. When he went to Beth Israel hospital, the doctors worked two hours on him—and»called the police, who finally let him go. Sam Kurzwell was blackjacked across the back, and Sam Bitter was hit on the face with a blackjack. The Zukunft Club will point out that this is how the Socialist Party treats workers, and call for workers to rally against these vicious ene- mies, not only in the unions, where Socialist Party officials always hire gangsters against the members, but by voting Communist in the elections. Dist. 2 Calls Upon Sections to Place “Liberator” Orders NEW YORK.—The Secretariat of District 2, Communist Party, has is- sued a call to all sections urging them to place their orders at once for “The Liberator,” official organ of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. The issue, just off the press, fea- tures the recent Nominating Conven- jtion. It also contains an article on Toussant L’Ouverture as well as drawings, photos and other features. FAREWELL FOR NEGRO ARTISTS NEW YORK.—A farewell concert and dance for the Negro revolution- ary artists leaving for the Soviet Union to take part in the production of the film, “Black and White,” will be held at the Bronze Studio, 227 Lenox Ave. near 122nd St., tonight at 9:30. Amusements LAST WEEKS ‘The Theatre Guild Pres REUNION IN VIENNA A Comear. -By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD. , bend St. GUILD “Wes or nway By 8.40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Co 5-8229 EVOLUTION OF A NATION! Diary, of a Revolutionist Soviet Russia in Its Formation—and Today New Amkino Action Talkie With English Titles [PaRCLUSIVE SOVIET NEWOREEL—, tt lan""—Mechanized Sait Mining. (ris Newsreel will not be ‘any other New York Theater.) 10th Morning Freiheit Excursion on the ° Hudson to Hook Mountains on the S.S. ‘Claremont’ SATURDAY, JUNE 11th Leaving Pier A, Battery Park, at 2 p. m. (Near South Ferry) OANCING—-ENTERTAINMENT—GO0D- FOOD TICKETS 85 CENTS JN ADVANCE « $1.10 AY THY PIER —Tickets sold at— RBroroRt AND CUTLAR — CENTER ee tet Show Gat. | 15¢;,\: Midaite ia RESTAURANT BI 3 as eave one MS EAST 18th STREET 0 HRONX PARK FAW 1 ROAI amen svmmme 216 BAST 14th nner 105 ay ‘TFORD hi oaD 2 sen EEE SLUG WORKERS) None of the Zukunft; ‘On to Schenectady’ for| N.Y. State Communist | Nominating Convent’n NEW YORK.—The Secretariat of the Communist Party, District 2 (New; York), has put out the slogan, “ON TO SCHENECTADY!” On toSchen- ectady, to the United Front Conven- tion in support of the Communist Party Platform and candidates, which will be held there June 19! The district committee calls upon all workers in the shops without fail during the next few days to elect their delegates to the state nominat- ing convention in Schenectady. This refers particularly to the workers who have been out on strike and who rec- ognize that under the correct Jead-|the Board of Superintendents thru ership ‘of the revolutionary unions|their representative, David. This pet- they have been enabled to carry on|ition pointed out that the two schools the struggle against the bosses, to which the children of P. S. 53 were to be sent were already crowded; and might endanger the health of ithe pupils; that the pupils would get less individyal attention in the crowded classes; that the longer dis- tances to be walked would put them in danger of accidents. To all these pleas, the Tammany education officials were deaf, de- claring that the closing of the school would involve a “saving” to the city of $30,000, Determined to push the fight, the parents are electing a delegation to go direct to the school authorities to press their demands, FIGHT TO KEEP * ® P.S.53 OPEN Children Endangered, Parents Charge NEW YORK.—Following a meet- ing of teachers and parents of chil- dren attending Public School, 53, in Yorkville, it was decided to demand from the Board of Education that it withdraw its order to close the school. Previously a petition containing the names of 1,000 parents had been sent to the Board of Education and | | Weinstone, Alexander, at Harlem 1 Meet Tonite NEW YORK.—A capacity crowd of Negro and white workers are ex- pected at St. Luke’s Hall, 125 W. 130th St., tonight to hear a report of the National Npminating Convention. W. W- Weinstone, Charles Alexander and others will speak. | Prior to the indoor meeting two street meetings will be held, one at 130th St. and Lenox Ave. and the other at 130th St. and Seventh Ave. Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” Arranged by the New York ON AUGUST 28 : yivg Avg juvsvad Ut “TT intern Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE Ith FLOOR ~ AD Work Done Under Persons) Care A of DR, JOSEPHSON PICNIC ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 18th STREET WORKERS! REST AT The AVANTA FARM in a comradely atmosphere—plain but good fresh food at $12 a week AVANTA FARM, Ulster Park, N-¥, a ‘Will reopen as COOPERATIVE BUNGALOW AND TENT COLONY Free Accomodations This Week-End for Wocolonians and Their Friends Bring Your Own Food Round trip fare $2.—Erie R.R. Further details will appear in the Daily Worker Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices OUT TO:— KINDERLAND FOR THE WEEK END CAMP WOCOLONA , MONROE, N. r RUSSIAN MEALS For Poor Pocketbooks KAVKAZ 332 E. 14th Street, N, ¥. ©. CAMPERS ATTENTION Army Tents 16x16 and Others Also Camp Equipment —Reasonable Prices— MANHATTAN WIPING CLOTH INC. 478 Water St, corner Pike St. Phone Dry Deck 4-3476 OUT TO:— NITGEDAIGET FOR THE WEEK END INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY DAY FOR BREAD AND FREEDOM! FOR THE DEFENSE OF THE SOVIET UNION—AGAINST IMPERIALIST WAR! Rain or Shine! All Workers Demonstrate! WITH THE WORKERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF SUNDAY, JUNE 12th ALL DAY at STARLIGHT PARK—177th St. and West Farms Rd. Hear the Report of the Workers Delegation of the F.S.U, Just Back from the U.S.S.R. —PROGRAM :— TAR So Rk, Seed PHOTO LEAGU! DANCING! SINGING! SPEAKING! DIRECTIONS: Take Lexington Ave. 180th St. Subway to 177 St. Station, JOINT AUSPICES: —T.U.U.L. and W.LR. BAND—LABOR SPORTS UNION SP, E—-PIANO AND VIOLIN kin "Heer “Cannons or Tractors” and “Children of the New Day” 8,0. Refreshments and Open Air Restaurant—Endorsed by all ‘Workers ‘Orgs. YOUR VACATION SHOULD BE SPENT IN A ~ PROLETARIAN CAMP ONLY The Month of June is ideal for vacation in the Proletarian Camps Every dollar spent by a worker on rest and vacation must go to the institutions of our movement GO TO YOUR THREE PROLETARIAN CAMPS Nitgedaiget :: Kinderland :: Unity ALL CAMPS HAVE UNIFORM RATES $16.50 Per Week, Including Organization and Preas Tax NO COLLECTIONS Antomobites leave dally for alt comps ot 10 AM. Feigers snd, Heturdere ® A.M. a6 E, 1084 St. and the Coop Cafeteria, 2809 Bronx Perk F. yeas alee aperel by train or boat. All at low rates, For information on Nitgeda‘get and Unity call City office: EStabrook 8-1400 and for Kinderland TOmpkins Square 6-8434 Auto Station Phone Lehigh 42008 City Office of Camp Kinderland 108 &. 14th St.