The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 28, 1932, Page 2

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IN ELECTRICIANS Refuses to Account to Members for Spend- ing of $7,000,000 NEW YORK.—The clique in Local No. 3 of the Interna- tional Brotherhood of Electrical Workers “re-elected” itself Saturday. It stole the election and kept unwel- come “watchers” away from the vot- ing machine in the Central Opera House. Wilson, running for re-elec- Broach-Wilson tion as president, appointed all the near the machine esident of the In- al watchers allowed H. H. Broach, ternational Brotherhood of Electr Workers, entereq New York in 1 for the purpose of outing the O'Hara regime, then in control of the New| York local. Since 1926 Broach has succeeded in organizing a dictatorial! apparatus within Local 3. Members who dare to oppose the administra- beaten and ex- Since have tion are terrorized, pelled from the organization. 1926, eight hundred members been either expelied, barred attending union meetings or sus- pended, Members have been forced to pay fines ranging from $50 to $1,000. The money accumulated from this source has never been accounted for. The present officers and executive | committee of Local 3 continue to hold office by the sheer use of physical} force and all forms of trickery cluding the stealing of elections. For one “reason” or another, they de- clined for a long time to hold new} elections. The dissatisfaction of the members, resulting from the dicta- torial methods employed by the Broach administration, has forced new “elections.” The election held on| Saturday, June 25, due to the use} of floaters and hundreds of repeat- ers, has resulted in the “re-election” | in- ES | NEW AUSTRIAN W. I. R. SUPPRESED By Inpreccor Cable) VIENNA, June 27—Following a dd of persecution and chi- the Austrian Section of the International Relief was ed. A protest movement is s ee (By Inpreccor Cable) MOSCOW.—The. Clara Zetkin will be celebrated the Fifth of July in Moscow. Clara Zetkin is a veteran of the n Communist movement. GREET SHEPARD ATER JAIL TERM “Not Guilty,” Powers Other Nominee Says c NEW YORK —Henry Shepard, Governor of New York State, sen- | tenced to five days in jail for ac- tivities in obtaining relief for the destitute Negro workers of Harlem, is to be released today. Open-air meet- ings, at which he will expose the ,|tole of the New York police and courts in attempts to intimidate workers by terroristic activities against Communist candidates for of- fice, have been arranged for Thurs- day evening at 134th St. and Lenox Ave. and 142nd St. and Seventh Ave. On the same evening, Israel Am- ter, candidate for Governor of Néw York State, will speak at Workers’ Center, 27 Hudson St., Yonkers. Thig meeting will mark the opening of the state election campaign outside of New York City. Plans for the Red Ratification Rally on Coney Island Stadium, July 9, went forward apace, as the pro- gram committee of the United Front Election Campaign Committee rallied mass cultural organizations to pro- vide entertainment of a revolution- ary character at the meet, which 75th birthday of} of the old Broach-Hogan adiministra- | 20,000 workers are expected to attend. tion—with the exception of Finan-| Shop windows, club rooms and places cial Secretary W. A. Hogan, who is| Where workers gather began to be replaced by David G, O'Hara. |spotted with Red posters announcing Dispose of $7,000,000 Since 1926. | the rally, as workers launched into The Broach-Hogan administration| thetask of making this rally the big- of Local 3 has up to date not ac-|Sest ever held in this state in con- \STEAL ELECTION — FROM BOARDMAN PAINTERS UNION Shapiro Put in As Day Sec’y by Repeaters | and Underworld | NW YORK.—The membership of the Brotherhood of Painters Decora- tors and Paper Hangers of America jis seething with indignation at the | ruthless, brutal stealing of the elec- |tion by the machine. In every local | where there was any fairness about | the election, the candidate of the In- | terlocal Rank and File Committee | for the Election of Boardman as Day |Secretary got a majority. In locals | 490, 499 and 905, Broadman, the left | wing candidate, got yotes of three | to one. In locals 230, 261, 442 and |874 the Shapiro machine, by very | Communist candidate for Lieutenant- | methods, by use of repeaters paid | for by the International and in many cases not even members of the union, and by a great concentration of the |forces of the wnderworld, simply stole the election. Shapiro was of- ficielly given 1887 votes, and Broad- man 1518. Underworld Rallies, In local 442 there was'a regular mobilization of the underworld char- jacters, Broadman’s first watcher | was simply chased out. One watcher of another “independent” candidate was beaten up and thrown out. Fin- ally all watchers but Shapiro's left in disgust, unable to do a thing to stop the continued repeating. ‘The chairman and local officials were even going into the machine and voting, under pretense of showing members how to operate the voting machine. In local 874, the Italian local, votes were being cast by use of membership books of men long dead or dropped out of the union. Fifty repeaters were actually counted here. Local 230, the “autonomous local” formerly used by the machine thru the local officialdom for all sorts of sell out schemes the opponents of Boardman had booze served all day long. The Shapiro vote was marked right on the machine. Members were compelied to vote acvording to ballots counted for an expenditure of the| local's funds to a total of $7,000,000 | since 1926. In Nov, 1928, H. H.} Broach, then international president | of the ILB.E.W., transferred $50,000 | from the general fund of the union to the organizing committee. The crganizing committee is directly con- trolled by the International office. The $50,000 have been disposed of and no accounting has been given the members. Since 1926 the orgénizing| committee of Local No. 3 has dis- posed of $2,000,000 and no accounting has been given the members. In 1929, the eight thousand members of Lo- cal Union 3 were assessed $50 for journeymen electricians and $25 for helpers, According to Broach and the other officer of Local 3, this as-j Scssment was to serve as a strike| fund in a contemplated strike or lock-out. The strike or lock-out did| not take place, Them oney raised as| @ result of the assessment was Gia | posed of and no accounting has been given to the members. * Ex-Convict Financial Secretary William A. Hogan, International treasurer and former financial secre- tary of Local 3, includes in his collec- tion methods, death benefits. Hogan Bot many members to go to his law- yer and name him as beneficiary in case ¢f death. He was shown to have received the money after several Membe?s had died. His death benefit | graft bad other angles, to: To raise the mxjpey for these benefits each of the tirin 4,000 members in the local was alyays assessed 50 cents in case Of death, of a total of $2,000. Hogan Waa wmible to explain to the Lock- wood Committee what became of the other $1,000 every time a $1,000 death claim was paid. Hogan served at Ging Sing. Hogan's “integrity” and “honesty” is typical of the Broach- Hogan administration as a whole. The Insurance Racket. In 1929 Broach and his administra- fon established in New York a group insurance policy for the members of Local 3. To this insurance fund all contractors, big and small, had to pay 17 cents~(formerly 20 cents) per hour per man employed. Under this scheme the favored contractors had control of the money. Through this method they were able to gain in- formation as to how much work each contractor was doing and how much thelabor cost on each job. Using this information as a basis for fu- ture estimating and bidding for jobs, the favored contractors obtained the | services of the union agents and the union administration generally, to Squeeze out and prevent the smaller contractors from obtaining any large mount of new construction work. In return for this, the favored con- | tractors bought their group insurance | policy from the Union Co-operative Life Insurance Co—which is con- trolled by H. H. Broach. At a re- cent meeting of Local 3, the officers of that local bullied the members into allowing the administration to transfer the remaining insurance funds to the unemployment fund or any other fund legally possible. Thus the administration will soon dispose of the remaining insurance funds— the members will lose the policies paid for—and this will result in fat profits amounting to millions of dol- lars, for the Union Co-operative Life Insurance Co.—controlled by H. H. Broach. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 4. Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination for the Black paly | “assault” |nection with a Communist Election Campaign. * “Not Guilty,” Says Powers. George E. Powers, Communist can- | didate for the office of Chief Justice of teh Court of Appeals, New York State, appeared in General Sessions Court yesterday and pleaded not guilty to charges of rioting as handed down in an indictment by the Grand Jury, following his par- | ticipating in the City Hall demon- stration of April 21. for the trial. The indictment against Powers charges him both with rioting and, specifically, with assault on Deputy- Inspector David McAuliffe, and De- tective William Nammack. Powers pointed out today that after the was over, he was blaek and blue with bruises, whereas neither of the police thugs carried a@ mark, Powers, who is Secretary of the Building and Construction Workers Industrial League, was one of the leaders in the demonstration, whose delegation to Mayor Walker was re- fused admission to City Hall to ask for relief to the unemployed. Campaign Committee, Vote. All election campaign committees of mass organizations, and trade union groups and the United Front Election Campaign Committee will meet tomorrow evening 7:30, Room 205, on the second floor of the Work- ers Center, 50 E, 13th St. the election campaign will be map- ped, Militant Members of Irish Workers’ Club | on Trial Wednesday | NEW YORK—The four members | of the Irish Workers’ Club—Mallaly, | Moriarity, McKiernan and Cooney, |who were arrested and viciously | slugged last Wednesday night follow- ing a protest meeting against an eviction on E, 147th St. were re- leased under $1,000 bail each, through theInternational Labor Defense. Charged with felonious assault, the workers will ciwie up for trial Wed- nesday morning. They were all beaten while in jail, the worker get- ting the worst treatment being Mal- laly, who is crippled. A friend who |managed to get into the Bronx | County jail found him in a bruised, | bleeding condition. No date was set LABOR UNION | MEETINGS Painters General membership meeting, June 29, at | 8 p.m., at Irving Plaza Hall, to organize an Alteration Painters Union. 7 Italian Needle Worke: | ‘Tuesday, at 1 | W. 36th St, Me | ber of the Ama! tion to the Soviet Union, will speak in Ttal who was a member of the May 1 delega- | {an on conditions of needle workers in the Soviet Union. All needle workers invited. makers Boruchowite 6 at the Cloakmakers’ | open forum ednesday at 1 p.m. at | Memorial Hall, 244 W. 36th St, on “What Is Happening at the Secret Conferences of the Officials of the International and the Bosses and How the Cloakmekers Can Or- ganize for a Real Strike for Union Con- The Left Wing Group ot 19, LL.G.W., ‘calls all cloak finishers to a local meeting, tonight, at Bryant Hall to fight for the meeting to go on record against the reac- Plans for | marked for Shapiro in red ink. In |spite of this, Boardman got votes | here. Catch Repeaters. In local 261, Boardman watchers pulléd repeaters out of the voting booth, but the local officials came to their reses, Shapiro was the candi- date of (iis local, the Socialists in it voted for Barnes, but Boardman nevertheless got 187 votes, against Shapiro’s 400. Broadman got 193 votes in Local 1011, although the local had officially endorsed Shapiro. In this local there was @ local election Friday, in which Rosenthal, the left wing candidate for recording secretary ran so far ahead, that the officials stopped the count when there were only 80 bal- lots left to count, and tore up the tally sheets. The officials will now try by a surprise meetink to railroad their slate through, and the member_ ship should be on guard. Fight For Program. The Interlocal Rank and File Com- mittee calls upon the membership to carry on its work on the basis of the program on which Broadman ran; enforcement of union scale and conditions, all men to be hired thru an employment bureau controlled by |the rank and file, unemployment in- surarcc ‘nds paid for by the bos- ser and contrc'led by the rank and file of the unfoi: nodiscrimination, no overtime, no sub-contracting or | piece work, reduction of oificials’ sal_ aries and a general strike to enforce these and similar provisions. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: | 3. Emergéncy relief for the poor farmers without restrictions by the government and banks; ex- emption of poor farmers from tion of rents or debts, What’s On— TUESDAY ‘The dancing class of the Harlem Progres- sive Youth Club will be held at 1538 Mad- ison Ave. at 8:30 p.m. Comrade John Lawrence, F.8.U. delegate to the Soviet Union, will report at the Harlem Progressive Youth Club, 1536 Mad- ison Ave., second floor, at p.m. The Dram group vf the Proleteult will rehearse at 131 W. 21st St. at 8 p.m, WEDNESDAY Post 35, W.E.S.L. meeting at McKinley Bronx, at 8 p.m. L., will hold an open-air Square and 169th St., ‘The Center Branch of the W. I. R. will have a talk and discussion on the Bonus Mafeh to Washington at 16 W. 2ist St. at 8 pm, For information “Cannons the Workers’ Dept., 16 W. 2st Bt. egard to the film, communicate with ional Relief, Film All worker correspondents are asked to send negatives and pictures of working- class Mfe and struggle to the New York Pilm and Photo League, 15 W. 21st St. A meeting of Bronx carpenters wil be held at 1130 Southern Boulevard, at 8 p.m. JUNE 28, 1932 Workers Industrial Union. Some of the militant placards carried by workers in a demonstration against arms shipments to Japan, organized last Friday by the Marine (Film-Photo League) MICHIGAN PICKS STATE NOMINEES 365 Delegates Meet in Detroit Convention DETROIT, June 26. — With un- employment and mass misery in- creasing, and with’ the memory of the Ford massacre fresh in their mem:-ries, 365 delegates, represent- ing 106 organizations and 16 shops met at a united front state nominat- ing convention here yesterday and today and adopted a platform of struggle around twenty immediate demands of the Communist Party. Workers on Ticket. William Reynolds, leader of the Auto Wozkers’ Union was nominated for governor of Michigan; John Maki, coal miner, for lieutenant gov- |ernor; Leonard Woods, @ Negro ex- serviceman now with the Bonus March in Washington, for secretary of state; Neilie Belunas, for state treasurer; Benjamin Faulkner, a |Grand Rapids farmer for auditor- general; James Ashford, young Ne- gro worker, for attorney-general. Vet A Candidate. John T. Pace, ex-serviceman of De- nus March, was one of the nominees for Congress. In additoin to the twenty imme- | diate demands adopted for the cam- paign in Michigan, the convention unanimously endorsed the six chief planks adopted by the national nomi- nating convention of the Communist Party held recently in Chicago, BanquetTomorrow for Delegates from USSR NEW YORK.—Altho the returning workers’ delegation to the Soviet Union has already addressed more than 20 meetings in New York City alone, requests for dates continue to come in from workers’ clubs and other organizations, the Friends of the Soviet Union announces. A bankuet for the delegation has been arranged for tomorrow at the Garden Restaurant, 323 E. 13th St. at 6 p. m. A special musical and movie program are announced as features. MOVIES Stadium Concerts Start This Evening Under Van Hoogstraten The fifteenth season of the Stadi- jum Concerts, given at City College junder the direction of Willem Van Hoogstraten. Program for the week follow: Symphony No. 5 in © minor, Op. 67, Beethoven; Prelude to “Die Meis- tersinger,” Wagner; Excerpts from Music for “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” Mendelshon; Waltz, “Voices of Spring,” Johann Strauss; Hun- garian Rhapsody No. 1, in F, Liszt. Wednesday; Brahms Symphony No. 4, in minor; “Freischutz” Overture; Bizet’s Suite No. 1 from “L’Arle- sienne”; “Prince Igor,” Dames of Borodin. Thursday; Beethoven's “Pastoral” Symphony; Wagner’s Overture to “Rienzi”; excerpts from “Gotterdam- merung”; Forest Murmurs from “Siegfried,' and Wotan’s Farewell from “Walkure.” Friday; “Jupiter? Symphony of Mozart; Second Symphony of Rach- maninoff; Overture to “The Bartered Bride,” of Smetana. Saturday; Tchaikoysky’s Fourth Symphony; Nicolai's Overture to “The Merry Wives of Windsor”; bal- let music from Delibes’ “Sylvia”; Dvorak’s Three Slavonic Dances; Strauss’ Waltz, ‘Tales from the Vien- na Woods.” OW PLAYING! Intervention in Archangel—B Art Theatre Train” F =|] “Nor TO BE MisseD . ‘ ditions.” All Gloskmakere invited. Dis fasah Wit ier tee ¥ rea, films as ‘Poterkin’ and ‘The End of Cloak Fini St. Petersburg.” —Hérald-Tribune. i wACME THEATRE tionary decisions of the convention and ait steps for @ real strike, STREET & UNION Latest Working Class News - English ‘Titles 9 A. M. tot 1SCh sc: Bat. SQUARE Midnite Show Sai troit, one of the leaders of the Bo- | SOVIET SCWING NEAR COMPLETION Reach 90 Per Cent of Program The sowing campaign in the Soviet Union is nearing completion, accord- ing to cable reports received by the Amtorg Trading Corporation. On June 15 an area of 91,900,000 hec- tares (227,000,000 acres) had been sown, or 90 per cent of the program. The area sown last year was 1 per cent larger. However the area sown | this year is 9 million hectares larger than the one sown in 1930, when a record crop was obtained. Tractor Stations Play Important Part In the current campaign, 2,115 sta- tions employing 71,526 tractors sowed an area of 35,000,000 hectares or over 38 per cent of the entire area sown. The collective farms account for over 70 per cent of the area sown this year and together with the state farms make about fivesixths of the total cultivated area. Large Scale State Industry. Production of large scale state in- dustry in the first four months of the year was 26 per cent above the out put in the corresponding period of last year. In April the output of state industries amounted to 2,385,- 000,000 rubles ($1,230,000,000) which was somewhat less than the average maintained in the first quarter of the year, but 19.9 per cent greater than in April, 1931. The output of pig iron in May totalled 554,000 metric tons, as com- pared with 516,000 tons the preceding month, and was 35 per cent higher than in the same month last year. Steel production in May totalled 498,200 tons as compared with 491,- 700 tons in April and showed a gain of 9 per cent over the corresponding month of 1931, On account of a shortage of iron and steel, produc- tion in steel industries is being slowed down. It was decided to have all the workers in these industries take their annual vacation with pay beginning June 15. , Heat Results in Fatal Accidents for Lack of Recreation Facilities NEW YORK, June 27—The ab- Solute lack of recreation facilities for the workers and their children exasted a heavy toll here yesterday. Two workers died from drawning as they tried to escape the terrific heat of yesterday and find some recreation in Coney Island and Mohegan res- pectively. they are Howard Ep- psteiner and Jerry Grossman. Four children suffered severe in- juries which may prove to be fatal. a fractured skull and both arms broken when he fell from a windsill of Gates Avenue Magistrate Court while playing hide-and-seek. James Lathe, also ten years old, got a fracture of the spine when he fell from the roof of a one story church; Selwyin Horowitz, 11 years old, fell at foot of 23rd Street, Brook- lyn, while playing and fractured his back. Abraham Smith, 13 years old, got a skull fracture when overturning chairs benches in street where house. holders were seeking cooling breezes, Vincent Marone, ten years old, got! OUST OFFICIALS OF SHEET METAL WORKERS UNION Rank and File Throw Out MenWhoWanted _ to Expel Jobless NEW YORK. — A general revolt of the rank and file swept the re- actionary administration of Local 28 of the Sheet Metal Workers Inter- national Association right out of of- fice, Saturday. John Reul, who has for 18 years been president of the local and had built himself a nice little machine, got 298 votes against Charles A, Maddock, the candidate of the “Local Autonomy Group”, which was the form the opposition organized under. By similar large majorities, all the 24 officers of the local were put out, business agents and members of the executive com- mittee included. ‘The Reul machine got the help of Socretary of Labor Doak, the great deporter, during the campaign with an argument that the opposition was made up of “foreigners and Commu- nists”. Doak’s agents could find no proof of this, and withdrew from the case. Would Kick Out Jobless. The revolt was stimulated by a statement in the Sheet Metal Work- ers Journal, published by the In- ternational, that: “All those who are unemployed are dead wood, they can not adapt themselves to the circum- stances, and must be dropped from the union.” The International office and the Reul gang in Local 28 acted on the theory shown in the journal. There are 3,030 members in the local, and 2,000 voted. ‘The program of the “Local Auto- nomy Group” points out that the old officials blacklist men who com- plain of conditions on the job, got a recent wage cut of 25 percent for the mémbers, The group advocated in its pre-election propaganda yearly elections instead of every three years, lower salaries for officials, maintain- ing union conditions on the jobs, re- moving all officials who take bribes from the employers, a relief program, fair distribution of jobs, and finan- cial reports. The group heads a revolt of the rank and file; the group itself has progressive tendencies, but it is not a victory of a “left wing”. The rank and file should now see clearly that only by a real fight for unem- ployment insurance can they relieve to a great extent the jobless mem- bers, and that while it is good to get rid of the old reactionaries, this is only the first step along the path to real union militancy. Frame-up on Painters Collapses; Another Shop Goes On Strike NEW YORK. — The frame up started by Skaler Construction Co. against four pickets, collapsed whén the judge, in the presence of a court room full of painters, had to throw out the case, There are four pickets to be tried. The painters of Samuel Samolin shop, seeing the help given the Ska- ler painters by the Alteration Paint- ers Organization Committee, have gone on strike themselves for pay- ment of all back wages. Amusements edt VIENNA AFTER DARK “OFFICE GIRL” “Sure Cure for the Blues” —London Times SWAY & 47th ST. ‘oMAY FAIR ey: Tiger and Python in Fight for Life FRANK BUCK’S “BRING'EM BACK ALIVE” LAST WEEK The Thentre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy .By ROBERT 6. SHERWOOD Ey 8.40. Mts Th., Sat, Tel. Co 5-8229 —muUsic— TADIUM CONCERTS PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY OnCH. Lewisohn Stadium, A: Av. & 138th 5 Willem Van Hoo; Conducter 1 EVERY NIG: PRICES: 25¢, 500, 380 0) (Cirele 7-7575)— Y.C.L. MEET ON*THURSDAY | Ail Y.C.L. unit organizers, unit YOUNG WORKER agents, sec- tion organizers and youth frac- tion secretaries of trade unions, | LS.U, clubs, I.W.O, youth branches, youth clubs, ete. are instructed to be present at the | | district office of the Y.C.L. on || Thursday, June 30, at 7 p.m. | | sharp, for a short meeting to | take up the question of a weekly YOUNG WORKER for our dis- trict, Please be present and on time. DISTRICT SECRETARIAT, ¥, GC. L, No. 2 Ban Placed on ‘Negro Worker’ Is Lifted by NEW YORK—“The International Labor Defense has forced the admis- sion into the U. S. of the magazine, The Negro Worker, which had been banned by the customs officers”, Carl Hacker, acting secretary of the In- ternational Labpr Defense, said to- day. notified us last night that the maga- zine, Would be admtited, though orig- inally they called it ‘seditious litera- ture’. This is another victory to the credit of workers’ soldarity, a forc- ing through of the workers’ right of a freé press.” Customs After Fight] “The Treasury Department } ‘LEFT WING WINS ~~ IN CARPENTERS iWin All Offices Important Locals | NEW YORK. — The left wing j ticket in three locals of the United | Brotherhood of Carpenters and Join= ers of America was victorious in last | week’s elections. Particularly in | Locals 2090 and 2717 did the mem=- ‘bership support the left wing pro= gram, electing the whole ticket, all local officials, including the business agents. In Local 1164, two left wing can- didates were elected. Weinstone Will Speak at I. L. D.Meet Wed. Against the Dies Bill NEW YORK. — Announcing W. |W. Weinstone, editor of the Daily Worker cnd member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party as the principal speaker at the mem- bership meeting of the International Labor Defense tomorrow evening at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St., the I, L. D. yesterday announced the beginning of “an intensive campaign against deportations.” in Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” REGULAR ADVERTISERS Red Star Press (‘The Road’) Lucke-Kiffe Co. (Tents) Chester Cafeteria Garden Restaurant Manha’ IN THE DAILY WORKER Cohen's (Opticians) Coco and Spinicelli (Barbers) Dental Dept., I.W.0. Health Center Cafeteria Jade Mt. Chop Suey Wm. Bell, Optometrist Cafeteria Butchers Union, Local 174 Linel Cafeteria Workers Coop Colony Optical Co. Concoops Food Stores Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nitgedaiget Lerman Bros. (Stationery) Melrose Cafeterix Kavkaz Restaurant Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund Bronstein’s Vegetarian Restaurant Kale Cafetetia Dr. Kessler Czechos ik Workers House Avanta Farm Union Square Mimeo Supply Camp Wocolona Russian Art Shop Dr. Schwarts Rollin Pharmacy Gottlieb’s Hardware Messinger’s Cafeteria (So. Blvd.) World Tourists, Inc. Golden Bridge Colony Cameo Theatre Acme Theat Intern’] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Persons! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON COHEN’S CUT RATE OPTICIANS Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Rims $1.50 Shell Frames $1.00 117 ORCHARD ST,, Near Delancey CUT THIS AD AND SAVE Our $1 Job Half Soles and Heels A Complete Store . for the 6ec J Workers CAPITOL SHOE REPAIR 109 E. 14th St. 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 [poo ee nn eter torn renenntreeenenienarni Chester Cafeteria «| j 876 E. Tremont Ave. ! (Corner Southern Blvd.) ! Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.LU. DINE IN THE OPEN AIR Garden Restaurant 323 EAST 13th STREET Near Second Avenue REASONABLE PRICES COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE NO TIPPING * MUSIC Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season Several very nice rooms and bunralows for rent for the summer sea: fal farm in Eastern Pennsylvs ning water. Electricity, Swimming, ing, ete. Reasonable rates. Communi- eate with A. Benson, c.o. Daily Worker, COCO and SPINICELLI INVITE YOU TO ——PATRONIZE-—— A Comradely BARBER SHOP 1500 BOSTON ROAD Corner of Wilkins Avenue BRONX, N. ¥. Our work will please the men, the womeh and the children NO TIPS } CAMPERS ATTENTION! Army Tents 16x16 and Others Also Camp Equipment —Reasonable Prices MANHATTAN WIPING CLOTH INC. 49% Water St, corner Pike St. Phone Dry Dock 4-376 FURNISH Private entran conveniences, Wofker, 8th floor. Uth St, shower, $5 per week. All | BEAUTIFUL ROOM—All improvements. Ine uire Business Office Daily quire all week, Chernoff, 71 E, 7th St, asap i jantity of these, so if s you re hone CAnal 6-2985 CAMPERS ATTENTION Genuine U. S, Army Ventilated 9x9 Wall Tents $12.59 are used tents but in excellent condition. intending to comp this year, pick jut, while we have a good assortment cf them. f other tents. cots, si GOES A Logs way LUCKE-KIFFE CO. 523 BROADWAY (Corner Spring St.) Mail Orders Filled Promptly We have a small ves, blankets eed supplies, We have been es- New York City $12 A WEEK IN ALL THREE PROLETARIAN CAMPS: GO TO YOUR THREE PROLETARIAN CAMPS Nitgedaigot :: Kinderland :: Unity ALL CAMPS HAVE NEW UNIFORM RATES $13.00 Per Week, Including Organization and Press Tax WEEK END RATES: FIRST DAY $2.50, SECOND AND THIRD $2.00 NO COLLECTIONS ; The camps have enforced this drastic cut to enable more workers to. come out for rest and recreation - Automobiles leave daily for ail camps at 10 A.M, and 6 P.M, from 143 E, 103rd St. and the Ca You can also travel by train or boat. For information on Nitgedaiget and Unity call City office: EStabrook and for Kinderlahd TOmpkins Square 6-8434 ao : City Office of Camp Kinderland 108 E, 14th St. Auto Station Phone ‘Tonigh d-900n | ) wh

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