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er" ase re | _ WEDNESDAY __Page Two FORD EXPOSES SOCIALISTS: SHOWS HOW THEY JUSTIFY THE LYNCHING OF NEGROES Communist Candidate Flays for Its Stand Against Self-Determination Says Thomas, Like Socialist MacDonald in In- dia, Would Justify Slaughter of Negro Majority July PROVIDENE, R. I 4.—| Thomas and the Socialist Party in ‘When confronted with the statement | justification of their campaign of Norman Thomas, Socialist candi-|a t the Communists. When tiv | date for president, that the Con ami | share croppers of Camp Hill, Ala.,/ Mist platform demand of “Si -|rebelled last summer against their termination for the Black Belt is very| miserable conditions, the capitalist dangerous, bad socialism, and an in-|press and Chambers of Commerce vitation to race rio James W. | justified their murder of the Negro Ford, Communist candidate r vice- | leaders in that strike by quoting the president, replied that “Mr. Thomas | Socialists.” is unable and unwilling to under-| Self-Determination.” stand the Negro question and the) Reporter: “Will: you tell us, Mr problems e Negro people. Thom-| Ford, what does the Communist Par- &s sees the! ty mean by ‘Self Determination for | white upper cl the Black Belt’?” ment is taken not from the point of Ferd: “There is a great stretch of view of the needs of the Negro mass- liana in the h known as the es, but from the point of view of; Biack Belt, where the majority of what might happen tq the white | the population is Negro. This stretch land owners of the South.” of land is the monopoly of a small Pare OOD he San smiled | ctique of white landlords and is ruled as he read aloud Mr, Thomas's edi-|1v those landlords and capitalists. I| torial in, the official organ of the s ‘as born in the heart of the Black cialist “Very bad Bocialism, and an invitation to race ricts.’ Thomas means that the south- ern white ruling class would rather | jditions down there are even worse than in the days of slavery. The Ne- |gro share cropper and tennant farm- instigate a war against the Negro | «, re held actual bondage. When masses in the Black Belt than per- |... tatk of ‘self-determination for the mit themselves to be ruled by the) piack Belt’ we mean the right of the majority of the population which | Ness people, the majority of the happens to be Negro Jation to govern themselves in “It is bette ording to MY.|that section. The Socialist Party, as Thomas,” continued the Comm nist | well as the Republican and Demo- fandidate for vice-president, “that| cratic parties, are uncompromisingly the Negro majority in the Black Belt be ruled. opp Ploited by the landlord minority jored to this. They are opposed to juality for the Negro masses. the Socialist convention in Mil- slaveholding at the social waukee, they rejected the plan for calamity of self-determination of the} <ocial equality for the Negro, the Negro majority overwhelm the white|same as the capitalist parties do, Yuling class of the South.” * |inserting in their platform the hypo- Bocialist Incites to Riot Negro Masses. “When Mr, Tho? condemns the ight of the Negro m hemselves in the B tinued Ford Yustifies riots Negro masses in the Against | critical phrase of ‘legal equality.’ And |they are even opposed to that. Hey-| wood Broun, one of the leaders of| the Socialist Party and a member of rm Committee, wrote in i-Telegram, ‘If I-were a for high, or judiciary of- vould say, even without being ered, that I weuld not now sane- South. If the. Socialist he masses, you will | ones to talk ‘ri the Si before the tion and 15th amendments to the Consti- .| tution of the United States’.” ruling | Rule lynchings’ y do it even ass commences to club Party Opposes of ce ee Vorkers and Farme In this way, the Socialists pave the| «The socialist Party is opposed. to| way for riots and mx«ssacros, the rule of the workers and. farmers. then, of course, blame the mil:tant | fight against the dictatorship masses. In the Scottsboro case, We| or the masses in the Soviet Union,” fad the capitalist press quoting jcontinued the Communist candidate -|for ‘Vice-President. “The Social'st |Party favors | of the ruling class, in practice a dic- | tatorship against the* masses. During {the World War, I was a soldier in the U. S. Army, and remember very well the Socialist talk in Europe of | self-determination being a violation | of 6 principle. In practice, the | headed by Ramsay worked out their ‘social- by slaughtering JOB AGENCY IS’ BLIND TO LURE WORKING GIRES «= Agency | lie lave and fully supporting Mr. Empire State Recruits for Traffickers ‘Thomas, ocialists” ialism. g out the s in their cpposition to for the Black Sta determination POLICE CANVASS por typical The ent to a Su. th ad in th feovery workers two yee arriving there she f h a few boitle lving arcund. The bors of the vl a@ to mcke fam: her and asked her job on 13th pap rs for Eviction Fight Stirs Inferest of Jobless Heat night at 7 o’cle: Soe NEW YORK.—Attempting to stem Lest week she applied for a job| ine growing interest of the workers ee tee Eaipe Bhat “lof the neighborhood in the Irish! ment Agency on Sixth Ave. They | Workers’ Club and the Unemployed | sent he to the “Jay Dee Network | og police are reported to be Company. hn St. Upon ar-|yaRing a house-to-house canvass of Five] there she “Mr. Gold” to} 147th St. Bronx, where four’ whom. the letter was addressed but! niitant members of the club were) _ not the It} was t! “Jay Dae Network Co.” me gentleman she hed m>t ed roncently after an eviction struggle several yoars Eeing a member : mee of the YCL, went back to the! Seoretly Indicted. agency and demanded her mon y| ae ¥ Ts were secretly indicted beok, and eccused them of being in by th County grand jury on cghorts to get girls into the ha densgee of felonious assault last of a “blind” for “prostitute traffick-|Thursdey and are now free on $1,000 es, They denied this but refunded | bail ecch. her money, saying that no other | Magistrate McKinnery, who on Fri- hed mad2 such a complaint. Several | dismissed the charges against the ether girls have reported that they’) Workers, just prior to. their re-arrest have not received a job from this “Mr. | 0” bench warrants, refused to permit ‘the workers to file charges against Kane, the policeman who arrested jand participated in the slugging against them. The judge said it was “outside his jurisdiction, and that the matter was in the hands of the district, attorney.” Will Bring Protests. Goid” and have been told by him to eon back many times over. “: Many Such Agenci | Working women have reported oth- | er agencies sending them to “tea} shops” which were nothing more than | blinds and open house in some cases, | The Unemployed Councils will heip eny workers fight if they are victim-| This morning a committee, atmed ized by these job sharks amd any] with protests from a number of New exeney that is found directly respon-| York work-rs’ organizations, will call s.ble for this particular offense will) upon Charles BwMcLaughlin, Bronx be demonstrated against and the Ui- | County district attorney, protesting conse buro visited to demand the can- | aga‘nst thcir indfetment and demand. cellation of their license. ing the right to enter a counter- claim against Kane. The effectiveness of the work of the Trish Workers’ Club and the Unem- ployed Council is seen in the fact that the Catholic charities, who had previously refused to help John Mc- Partiand, father of six childyen, to whose aid the club had come, have now offered to pay one month's rent, The action of the charities is un- ‘doubiedly based on a fear that Mc- Partland may leave the “fold.” for ee, What's On— Tr ranay Seotion 7 class {or eutling stencil held from to 8 p.m. Comrade De will pe in charge. Typing is not necesgary to participate in the class Workers’ Ex- emen’s League No. 2 will hold an ope mieeling wt 125ih Bt, (ond Fifth Ave. at 6 pan, Socialist Party) Belt—in Alabama—I know that con-j the efforts to enforce the 14th| so-called ‘democracy’, | the | e policy in the | IRISH WORKERS: \Seamnen Denounce Kennedy Arrest Spirited tion in Baltimore BALTIMORE, Ma., July 4 Aroused to action by the brutal at-! tack upon James Kennedy by the po- lice and by other seamen when they picketed jcut on | Sunday, the Munson S.S. Line | dustrial Union and the International |Labor Defense in a protest demon- stration last night at the foot of | Broadway | L. Berker of the International La- | bor Defense exposed the wave’ of ter- ror directed aaginst the workers, pointing out especially the vicious- ness of the Dies Deportation Bill |Roy Hudson, national organizer of |the Marine Workers Industrial Un- ion, was the main speaker. He de- jmounced the police terror and con- gratulated the Baltimore seamen for |their militancy. A motion was en- | thusiastically and unanimously ac- | cepted, calling for a city wide dem- |onstration to the City Hall to force |Kennedy’s release and to compel the opening of the Recreation Pier, prop- erly equipped for lodgings and meals for unemployed seamen, at the ex- pense of the ship owners and the | City Administration. A committee was immediately elected from among |the assembled workers to make the plans for this march on the City Hall. | Applause. broke.out when a telegram was read bringing a pledge of soli- darity from hundreds of NeW York seamen who demonstrated in New York City, protesting Kennedy's ar- rest, and demanding his immediate release. Speakers, representing a number of different working class organizations pledged in the name of their organ- izations, untiring support in the struggle for the release of Kennedy and the other jailed seamen. Ground for Workers Cultural Federation Laid in Detroit,Mich. | DETROIT, Mich.—At a meeting of |delgates from Worker's Cultural |Groups held Sunday, June 19, at | Worker's Camp, the groundwork was laid for a permanent Worker’s Cul- tural Fedration to include all cultural | organization of proletarian character in Detroit and vicinity. Th delegates represented 26 organi- | zations and 42 individual groups, such as singing, dancng, and dramatic societies, orchestral and educational groups, and artists and writers groups. The purpose of the Detroit Work- er’s Cultural Federation is to act as a clearing house for and to coor- indate the cultural activities of all workrs’ organizations, to encourage free interchange of talent, and to jextmd such activitis wherever pos- | sible. Dfinite plans for fall activities will b formulated during the summer. | Any organization or group desiring to | affiliate is invted to write to the Fed- | eration at the John Reed Club Rooms | 8420 Twelfth Street, Detroit, Mich. Such organizations may elect one mittee of the Federation, next meet~- ing being held Friday evening at 8 o'clock July 8th, 1932, at the above address, ‘Ku Klux Klan Leader | Clark Proved Insane | Kleagle of the Ku Klux Klan, and who recently organized a racket | called Esskaye, Ine. a back to pros- perity movem2nt .with $100 member- ship fees, was committed to the ; Psychopathic hospital for examina- tion as to his sanity. During the ; Place for the ex-kleagle was jail and ; not a hospital, VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: | Against Hoover’s wage-cutting policy. DAM) Y WORE ir N ~ Demonstra- | his arrest and that of| peacefully | in protest against a wage| last | over 1,300 workers answered | | the call of the Marine Workers In-| delegate to sit on the Executive Com- | examination one of the doctors ex-| pressed the opinion that the proper |°! ® flood through Southwest Texas. German Election Posters (F. P. Pictures) All the capitalist parties*in Ger- many concentrated on trying to crush the Communist Party in the recent election, Nothwithstanding that Communist election workers were jailed, Communist newspapers suppressed and Communist speakers prevented trom usmg the radio, more than 4,000,000 workers voted for a German Soviet Republic—for the revolutionary way out of the crisis, HIGHWAY SLASH HIT BY 2,000 Commissioner Says | He’s Not Concerned PORTLAND, Ore., July 4—The State Highway Commission headed by the millionaire department-store owner, Governor. Meijer, proposes to slash wages on all state relief jobs, from $3.00 to $1.50 per day. When the workers protested to Leslie Scott, Chairman of the State Highway Commission and heavy stockholder in the reactionary mouthpiece, “The Morning .Oregonian,” that the low- ering of wages would reduce the standard of living of the workers to that of a coolie, he replied “That is no concern of ours. Men will not receive less money than formerly but will work twice as long for it. They will keep in condition for heavy labor. Men would rather be employed at a low wage than loaf four weeks out of five,” Immediately after the proposal had been flashed throughout the state |that the State Highway Commission was to take definite action on June 20th, the Trade Union Unity League |and the Unemployed Council issued | thousands of leaflets calling upon the |workers for a mass demonstration in front of the Multnomah Hotel when {the commission was reported to be CHICAGO, Il.—Edward Young; convening! Over 2,000 workers, des- Clarke, founder and former imperial | Spite police terror rallied in protest, 9 Die in Texas Flood; ‘Farmers Lose Homes SAN ANTONIO, Tex. July 4— Nine lives were lost today as a result It is estimated that over $1,000,000 damage was done over the week-end. Small farmers suffered great losses |as a result of destruction of livestock | {and crops, and hundreds were said ‘to be homeless, Reports from Moscow daschibe: 6 one of the most important events of the current musical season; the concert tion of Albert Coates. The program presented several recent compogitions ;of outstanding Soviet composers and included the Twelfth Symphony of Nikolai Miaskovsky, a piano concerto of Samuel Feinberg, and a suite from the ballet, “The Golden Age,” by Dmitri Shostakovieh. In his Twelfth Symphony, which is said to be closely allied in spirit to his Sixth which was a reaction to the events of the October Revolution, ; Miaskovsky “delineates the struggle ment), and its achievements (third movement) as contrasted with the old, pre-Revolutionary Russia (first , movement)”, ! Speaking of the Shostakovich work the Moscow News writes: “The exceptional creative talent of Shostakovich, coupled with his youth (the forming of his creative person- ality took place in the years of the Revolution), would lead one to ex- pect to find in his suite from the ballet ‘The Golden Age’ the greatest degree of avvroach to the problem of Soviet composers at the Bolshoijhave been inherited from the old Theatre on June 1 under the direc- | for building socialism (second move-| ques and in the invention of jnstru- ‘Albert Coates Directs Soviet Composers Concert of utilizing in the service of the Re~ volution and Socialist Construction, all the mastery and technique which musical culture. In actuality, we have quite the reverse, Shostakovich — in his musie to the ballet ‘The Golden Age’, whose content deals with the trip of a Soviet sport team to tho gapitalist countries — does not only fail to affirm Soviet musical ideology but {s ensnared in the methods of contemporary western European art. All his rare technical mastery, the richness of his creative fantasy, which he uses with unusual dexterity and facility, he employs in the crea- tign of ideologically imperfect grotes- mental tricks.,, “The conductor was Albert Coates, S P. DRESSES UP STATE PLATFORM Use Left Phrases to Fool Workers | UTICA, N. Y., July 4.—Swift iron- | ing out of the opposition to the Hill- | quit machine and the nomination of | Louis Waldman, a New York lawyer, jas their candidate for Governor in plishments of” the state convention jof the Socialist Party held here yes- terday. An up-state minister, Rey. Herman J. Hahn, of Buffalo, who poses as a “militant socialist” in a section of the state where thousands of steel | workers are unemployed and hungry, machine. In a bitter speech, Hillquit declared it was necessary to “be on guard against so - called phrases which hide reactionary con- tent,” a characterization which aptly applies to Hillquit himself and the whole Socialist party, This is shown in such planks as the demand for the six-hour day, five-day week, a fake “public works” program which 1s indistinguishable from that of Tammany’s Governor Roosevelt, and unemployment insur- ance—to be administered by capital- ist state, city and county officials and reactionary trade union leaders. In order to cover up their reaction- ary program on the Negro question, and smarting under he charges of militant workers in the state, the convention nominated a Negro re- formist, Frank R. Crosswaith, for Lleutenant-Goyernor, The Milwaukee Socialists Sabotage Mooney Defense MILWAUKEE.—Mr. Frank Weber, Secretary of the Federated Trades Council and leading member of the Socialist Party, refused to give cre- dentials to speakers of the Mooney- Scottsboro Defense Committee for visiting and organizing trade union locals and membership for the Mother Mooney meeting—to be held in the) Milwaukee Auditorium Plankinton Hall, July 6. The refusal of the Socialist Labor Bureau practically means that no speakers or committees with leaflets for the Mooney meeting can be ad- mitted in the union halls, This action on the part of the So- cialists is at the same time an ex- pression of their fear of the growing interest shown by the rank and file workers in thé Mooney-Scottsboro defense and against the general be- trayal of the Socialists, which control most of the A. F. of L. locals in the city, Despite this the rank and file workers are in favor of the defense of Mooney and give their support. The workers of Milwaukee plan to meet Mother Mooney and Richard B. Moore at the Milwaukee St, Paul (Union) Depot at 6 p.m. HIT SOCIALISTS AT SHARON MEET Speaker for S.P. Says) Don’t Beerudge Rich SHARON, Pa.—\orkers in Shen- ango Valley made the Socialist doc- tor, Van Essen very uneasy here on June 30. The doctor had just com- pleted a lecture on unemployment and conditions of the working class in which he said the workers should ‘not begrudge Hoover, Mellon, Davis and the rest of the millionaires’ private fortunes.. When question upon ques- tion was shot at.him the doctor was forced to admit that the Social- ist Party, was not leading the masses in strugg) The socialist doctor admitted that Communists were leading the work- ers in strike struggles whereas the Socialist Party was doing nothing in this direction. In regard to the Negro question the lecturer was forced to admit that there was nothing in the socialist platform concerning the struggle against jim-crowism to his knowl- edge. Postal Rates Go Up Beginning Temorrow NEW YORK.—To cover its deficit, created by huge war appropriations, the government, beginning tomorrow at 12:01 a.m., puts through an in- crease in postal rates from 2 cents an ounce for first-class mail to three cents, At the same time air mail rates will jump from 5 to 8 cents for the first ounce, with a 13-cent bocst for each additional ounce, At the same time thousands of) postal workers are being ruthlessly fired to carry out Hoover's fake econ- omy program, \ OPENING W. I. R. CHILDREN’S | CAMP JULY 9 | NEW YORK.—The Workers Inter- national Relief children’s summer camp et Wingdale, N. Y., will be opened with a gala outing and con-| cert on July 9, when the first con- who did all in his power to reveal the essence of these compositions. This loader, without whose difficult end responsible work no musical composition could have artistic life, made execution worthy of the com- positions presented.” Coates is scheduled to conduct the Stadium Concerts the last four weeks following Van Hoogstraten, who di- rects the first part of the season, tingent of working-class children will initiate their summer vacation, — AMKINO'S NEW SOUND FILM “ALONE” Drama of Fight Against Ignorance the coming election were the accom- | led the fight against the New York | revolutionary | Davila, Chilean Fascist (F, P, Pictures) This agent of United States bankers uses “socfalist” phrases to hide his fascist-militarist actions, While continuing his efforts to rescue the bankrupt Amer‘can- controlled nitrates monopoly, Davila has launched a reign of terror against the militant Chilean work- ers and is sending many of their leaders to a living death in prison camps, SCORES KILLED DURING FOURTH Fireworks, Drownings, | Chief Cause Scores of persons lost their lives during the Fourth of July week-end by drownings and automobile acci- dents and deaths from fireworks. Millions throughout the on the crowded beaches and for ex- cursions, Nine Drowned, Nine persons were missing after an excursion launch capsized at Talla- mook, Ore. Five survivors reported that a huge wave struck the craft, rolling it cver. Nearly 20 persons were drowned while swimming on beaches on the Atlantic Coast alone. : One girl was killed and twenty-five other persons injured in automobile crashos. More than 40 persons, mostly chil- dren, were burned or maimed in fire-| cracker accidents. Three houses were set afire by fire- crackers, In Butte, Mont., six young work- ers were killed by dynamite, which they were using to set off in “cele-! bration” of the Fourth of pay “May I Say...’ The usual flood of patriotic bunk flooded the country, with politicians, | undeterred by the crisis and mass un- | employment, speeches on tion,” Bldg. Workers Plan Strike In Brooklyn repeating ancient “the glories of the na- Against Long Hours NEW YORK.—Following a success- ful two weeks’ strike of alteration painters, who succeeded in forcing a revocation of a wage2-cut at 1177 Anderson Ave., corner 167th St., the Alteration, Decoration and Paper- hangers’ Union, which led the strug- gle, is now proparing a strike against the 11-12-hour day for building trades j workers in Brooklyn, A meeting of the work2rs on this particular job will be held this morn- ing, it is announced. WORCESTER SCOTTSBORO- BEORKMAN CONFERENCE | As one of the series of Scattsboro- Berkman conferences to be held throughout the state of Massachu- sctts, the International Labor De- fense of Worcester has s2nt out calls for a conference to ke held on July 18, Wednesday, at 8 p.m,, at Knichte of Pythas ‘lal, 69 Mechanic Si., Worcester, Mass, P Amusements country ; had fled the cities for a short. respite baiter’”? |game are in the wooded portion of the estate. Trout and other fish can be found in the streams and brooks. Passing the estate one can see from jthe road a number of buildings built like a castle. In front of the build- ings is a huge artificial lake which cost $100,000 to build, according to Fish’s neighbors. Houses Rot Away On the outside edge of the estate are about a dozen houses. These houses are unoccupied and are slow- ly rotting away from exposure and |lack of attention. In Peekskill there |are fully 1,500.or more workers un- | employed who are unable to pay rent. Some of the workers, knowing of | the Fish estate and the empty houses, |have tried writing in to the Nocha- peem Corporation, Fish’s agents in New York, for permission to use one of the houses. In the letters they tell of their miserable plight, of long un- employment, of children to care for, jetc. But Fish prefers to have the houses rot. Fish is willing to rent the houses, But for no less than $25 a month. Some of the houses are so old that they were witnesses to the campaign of George Washington during the Revolutionary War. They have no electricity nor gas. Altogether there are about three of the houses rented, In one of them lives a worker with a Jarge family, who has been unemployed for a long time and only just recently got a job at $3 a day, During his unem- |ployment this worker tried to get a reduction in his rent, but failed, Outside of the few houses that are rented, really not on the estate proper, the only other people on the vast estate is the family of the care- taker. “Keep Off” | Posted on trees surrounding the es- tate are signs reading, “Warning! Private property, private park land. No hunting or fishing allowed. No trespassing for these or any other purpose permitted, under the penalty of the law.” Under the protection of these signs and the capitalist laws of private property, Fish is able to close the miles of land as if by an iron wall. The workers who rent houses |from Fish have but an acre of land |alloted to them, and as they work their tiny plots of ground, squeezed for space to grow vegetables or raise chickens, they view around them the stretch of acres of land, unoccupied, unused, closed in and barred by the sign of private property. Many workers in this section would like to enter the estate to shoot game for food. While workers in the city suffocate from heat, while many are wasting jaway for need of country air, while jhundreds of others dream of a vaca- tion in the country, the Fish estate |lies, a vast unoccupied expanse of |Jand, unused, untenanted, wasted. I used to pass there every day and} view the beautiful grounds, and think ing for in the “great world war.” Cousin of Hamilton Fish Is Lord of 2,700-Acre Estate Houses on Land Rot A wayWhile Unemployed Workers Pay Rent to Millionaire By J. R. About five miles from Peekskill, New York, on the old Albany Post Road is the 2,700 here estate of Stuyvesant Fish. Stuyvesart is the cousin of Hamilton Fish, notorious and active enemy of al] militant workers. The estate is at the foot of the Catskill mountains. rabbits, pheasants and other small “red Deer, of what a wonderful sanatorium or rest home it would make for workers, I gaze at the lake that cost $100,000 to build, with no one using it. I think of the Soviet Union, where it w as exactly such estates that were taken from the nobility and the rich class and turned over to the workers, Hamilton Fish also knows about the Soviet Union. He too has a large estate, near Garrison, New York, ; Herein lies one of the answers for Fish's campaign against the Commu- nist Party and all militant workers, |Fish is afraid that the Communist Party will lead the workers, as they did in Russia, against the American nobility and rich class and tear down the signs of private property such as those on his and his cousin’s estate. To tear down those iron walls around land, natural resources and instru- ments of production and instead to have signs stating “Property of the entire working class. All welcome who toil and produce. All parasites, like Fish, keep out, under the penalty of workers’ law,” Mass Pressure Frees Jobless Worker BERKELEY, “Mich,—The Interna- tional Labor Defense scored a victory in Justice Baldwin’s court here last Friday where an unemployed worker was tried for assault and battery, The court was packed with nearly a hun- dred militant workers. The welfare had refused the work er’s family a meagre starvation ra tion that Oakland County doles out to the children of the unemployed. This father did not intend to go hung'y so he attempted to help himself, Fle was then arrested and charged @ith assault and battery, The prosecutor seemed very @is- tressed over this worker taking the law in his own hands, He said that he thought such action would encovrage the setting up of a Soviet govern- ment here in America. The worker was defended by an I. L. D. Attorney Berg. The jury was out long enough to get hungry and came back with a verdict of not guilty, Y.M.C.A. Sues Seven‘ Jamestown Workers* in Bumnting Drive (By a Worker Correspondent) JAMESTOWN, N, Y.—Seven Jamesown, N. Y. workers who were forced to pledge contributions to the YMCA during its campaign here are being sued in court here, Thege workers a re out of jobs or have had such wage-cuts that they cannot pay these fakers and the “christian” as- sociation rushes to the capitalist court to collect, Don’t be surprised if you hear of the “ suing for any cigarettes that a soldier might ac- cidentally have gotten without pay- Red Star Press ("The Road”) Lucke-Kiffe Co. (Tents) Chester Cafeteria Garden Restaurant Manhattan Wiping Cloth Co. John's Restaurant Lasy Sever Go teal Co, Concoops Food Stores Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nitgedaiget Lerman Bros, (Stationery) Melrose Cafeteria Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund Bronsteja’s Vegetarian Restaurant Kare hci Dr. Ki Crechosiovek Workers: House Avanta Farm Union Squere Mimeo Supply Camp Wooolona Ruscien Art Shop Dr. Schwarts REGULAR ADVERTISERS IN THE DAILY WORKER Cohen's (Opticians) Coco and Spinicelli (Barbers) Dental Dept., L.W.O. Health Center Cafeteria Jade Mt, Chop Suey Wm. Bell, Optometrist Parkway Cafeteria Butehers Union, Local 174 Sental Midy Manhattan Lyceum Sellin’s Restaurant Rollin Pharmacy Gotilieb'’s Hardware Messinger’s Cait World Tourists, Ine. Golden Bridge Colony Camee Theatre Acme Theatre Stcdium Concerts (80. Bly.) lntern’| Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 1th FLOOR AU Werk Hone Under ATLENTION COMRADI Health Center Cafeteria: WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Ueslth Conter Cafeteria ard help t Revolutionary TMevs pRST FOOD JONABLE PRI RR A TT ist EARL ROSSMAN’S “Dangers of the Arctic” A RENDEZVOUS WITH ICY DEATH tr 3. FRANK euck’s "BRING HOLLYWOOD THE. A & 6th St, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, JULY dth, 6th ‘The Romance That Thritled All Russia AMKINO PRESENTS “CCOSSACKS OF THE DON” Starring EMMA OfSSARSKAYA —-MUSIC— DIUM SOR CERT S| workers Acme Theatre Adth Street and Union Square TA FATLRARMOMO-S¥MEHONY, one es Stadium, an bows ia Hoogst at 8:80. ut Ue fttces! hg amie ul ‘(Cirole 4-2575)— n Y H are) vy CUT RATE OPTICIANS Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Rims $1.50 Shell Frames’ $1.09 117 ORCHARD ST., Near bi COCO INVITES YoU TO —PATRONIZE—— A Comradely BARBER SHOP 1500 BOSTON ROAD Cor of Wilkins Avenue BRONX, N. Y. Our work will please the men, the women and the children NO TIPS Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave, (Corner Southern Blvd.) Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.1U. DINE IN TI OPEN AIR Garden Restaurant 323 bef 138th STREET Second Avenue REASONABLE, PRICES COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE * MUSIC CAMPERS ATTENTION! Army Tents 16x16 and Others Also Camp Equipment Reasonable Prices— MANHATTAN WIPING 478 Water St, corner ‘Phone Dry Dock 4-'