The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 8, 1932, Page 2

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scittinteaaaE Page Two AMTER EXPO IN UTI! se U Workers Shield Be ronson, Strike Him In Vain Police S2el SES CONDITIONS IN FIERY SPEECH UTICA, N. .beut turned out to hear ¥. Amter, Com state-wide tour. The meeting was hel Sharp contrast to the mecting of the EXPECT 20.900 AT. RED RAL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE revolutionary music and been prepared by the United Committee, A mass chorus of several hundred voices, made up of all mass | chorvs organizations, will sing. Music will be provided by the W.LR. Ped. Front bands. The Ag theatres, Proletbuhne, and Wort: Leboratory Theatre will present’ re+ volutionary plays and mass r: tions, The Red Dar sent several numbers. son jon to the m will b cents per person, tic'zets d et the door, subject to a five-cont discount on presetta- tion 6f the throwaway cards which this being given out to workers week. All organizations are urged by Yait ed Front and Stadium Rally, body to their sect to mar y to- vicious 2publicen and nd the the a Negro | y of New York nile they refuse to fight for Negr ef or for Neégro rights. This gesture is a di-"| veet-asiack upon th eworkers, de- &gned to comfus the issues put for- ward by the Communist Party, with comagegic thunder Ford will expose this demagogy in contrat, to the Commu Platform of deimands, an txé background of misery and tion of the Negroes of Har! Jem, | vnpom whom the heaviest burden of | the crisis of capitalism is laid. | Pienie Sunday. | At Ford’s meeting in Brownsville, | Thursday night, the hall, with a ca- ai st of them unemployed ist candidate for Governor, now on 2 id on Ch ‘or Square, and was in alists held two nights previously | ied largely by small Exposes Conditiens ed the conditions in ges as low as 12}4c 1. AMTER en hour are paid, and where the! average in the textile mills is 23¢ an the workers being employed 2 cr 3 days a week, so that the wave is #4 a week. The re- given to the starvation relief. Only 750 families are getting $3 a week, and they are now weeks. Young workers get nothing reign-born and Negro workers are openly discriminated against. The attack on the Socialist Party, with a full exposure of the Repub- lican, Democratic and Socialist plat- forms, and of the Utica convention of the Socialist Party, where there were put up 5 shyster lawyers as can. the stand of the Socialist didates. met with tremendous ovations from the crowd. When Amter showed that iXarlin and Solomon procure injunc- tions for the bosses there were boos. Workers Shield Bronson The sensation of the meeting was the secret return of Charles Bronson, |who was arrested recently and sen- tenced to 30 days in jail. Bronsom; 15,000 workers is! drawing it out to $3 every 2| n war and the Soviet Union | facity of six hundred, was over- |for whom the police were searching, {flowed by an enthusiastic crowd of jlast night returned to the work- y Pan i Papen, by which Germany would pen, vee'rers, more than 60 per cent Ne- | groes. | Apienic to raise funds for the | flection campaign, arranged by Unit | 5 (Boro Hall) of the Communist Party, will be held Sunday in Pro- foeet Park, Brooklyn, beginning at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. No en- | Ywance charge will be made. Rehearsal Sat. | A general rehearsal of all choruses | t> take part in the Red Election Daily will be held at 6 pm. Satur- | cy, 1 Coney Island Stadium. All| 1 embers of choruses are asked to re- omptly, so that the mass ch bs will be prepared for the rally lat- to in'the evening Music League Program. The Workers’ Music League calls tron all its affiliated organizations | ‘nd all those holding tickets for the ticnic, who are not affiliated, to} filly at the Stadium meeting Satur- | fay. The Workers Music League is | leansferring the program of enter- | tainment as originally pisnned for | the Udmer Park picnic to the Coney | ‘land. Stadium. All workers holding | M.L. picnic tickets are. advised thas. their tickets will be honored at | lhe Coney Isiand Stadium, | | Candidates, Note! | All Communist Party candidates in New York will meet in Room No. 205, Workers Center, 50 E. 13th St., at 8 p.m., Wednesday, July 13. Reparations Meet Fails Solve’Problem | ; of German Payments | ‘The Lausanne reparations and war 2bt conference prepared to adjourn lerday with the conferees no; péarer a solution on the question of | tow to sweat further reperations iayments out of the impoverished Verman masses. Following a secret PHhference last night between British | time “Minister MacDonald and the ‘erman Junker Chancellor ovn Pa- , the latter admitted that the Heulties” had not yet been ightened out. (The French premier, Herriot, con- ‘nued his resistance to the German omands for arms equality with “ance and the dropping of the “war vit” clause in the Versailles Treaty. tentative agreement is said to have reached between Herriot and “the sum of $750,000,000. Von) however, was not able to say| s taen and how. And the French, on held out that the reduc- the reparations must be con- int upon action by the United in wiping out the Prench war to America. © “ppecial session, which was sup~ E to last all night, broke up n minutes, with the French eh deloxates expressing will have a beach party. Directions: Bright’ Paxiway. Se aR ada ers of Utica and made a speech, The workers shouted and cheered, and when he left the meting the poilce and detectives who were at the meet- ing in full force, tried to get him, but the workers protected him, and he |disappeared. During the night the search for him continued. FRIDAY The Irish Workers’ Club will have a busi ness meeting at 2072 Fifth Ave. (128th Bt.) | at 8 pm. Comrade A. Markoff will speak under the auspices of the Bill Haywood Branch, LL.D., 3159 Coney Island Ave. 8:30 p.m. The Harlem Progressive Youth Club will have a special meeting at 1538 Madison Ave. at 8 p.m. All members are asked to attend. The Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League, Post No. 85, will have a bonus rally in the Bronx. Assemble at Tremont Ave, and Southern Boulevard at 6 p.m. The Newark Unemployed Couneil will hold a protest meeting against police terror at 8 p.m. on the corner of Waverly and Chariton Sts. Per The Brighton Beach Workers’ Club will hold an open-air meeting on the election campaign on East Beventh St. and Brighton Beach Ave, at & p.m. Comrade Louis A. Baum will speak on the Dies Anti-Alien Bill at the Workers’ | Zukunst Club, 31 Second Aye,, at's p.m. The Concourse Workers’ Club will hold an | Open-air meeting at 170th St. and Walton Ave. at 8 p.m. Comrade Pauline Rogers will speak on “The Present Situation in Chile” Bath Beach Workers’ lub, at 8:30 p.m. at the 2273 Bath Ave., vrights Group of the Workers’ Theatre of the W.IR. will meet 2ist St. at 8 p.m. Comrades in- terested in playwrighting are invited, Members of the W. I. R. Band are to report for rehearsal at 7:45 p.m. at 6 W. 196th St. Bring instruments, The Irish Workers’ Club will meet at 350 E, Bist St., instead of the address pre- viously announced. Comrade Carl Brodsky will speak on “Two Worlds” under the auspices of the Down- town Branch of F.S.U. at 216 B. 14th Bt, top floor, at 6:30 pm. Admission is ree. . of the Branch 521 English-Speakit Branch, 1.W.O.,, will have a regular met ing at 11 W. Mt. Eden Ave. at 8:30 p. All members are urged to come and pring their friends. Michael Gold will speak on “Soviet Cul- ture” at 134 E. Seventh St. at 8 p.m., w der the suspices of the Youth Branch Ne. 405, 1. W. 0. A meeting of the depositors of the U. 8. Bank will be held at 116th St. and Mad- ison Ave. at 8 o'clock. Bob Dunn will speak at the Proleteult of Williamsburg, 16 Manhattan Aye. Brook- lyn, at 8:30 p.m. Registration for the summer term of the Workers’ School is now on at 35 EB. 12th telephone Al. 4-1199, SATURDAY Council No. & of the United Couneil of Working Class Women will have an outing to Claremont Park at 4 p.m. The Workers’ | Ex-Servicemen’s League, Post No. 1, will have a house warming at their new headquarters, 131 W. Qist St., at 8pm. o 28 ‘The Vote Foster Club of Carnegie Shop Take Beach train and get off at Ocean A committer will ba there tn | Newark Meet ' Tonight | to Protest Terror Used Against the Negroes | (By a Worker Correspondent.) NEWARK, July 17.—The Unem- ton St. Block, while holding its regu- |lar meeting in the home of one of |the workers in the block, was sud- denly invaded by two uniformed po- licemen, a captain and a cop, and were told by these uniformed thugs that next time they found Negro and | white workers meeting together they | would be arrested. They also threat- | } ened to beat up the workers who gave | the hous: for a meeting place for} | the block committee. | Later, one of the Negro workers | explained to the committee that Ne- | gro workers are allowed to gather | only fdr the purpose of gambling, | drinking and praying. ‘The Unemployed Council is prepar- ing to hold an open-air protest meet- jing on the cormer of Waverly and Chariton Sts. (half a block away) on Priday at 8 p.m. ‘TRY 10 PREVENT PARADE OF KIDS: \HungerMarch Planned for July 12 Under the flimsy excuse that it would interfere with traffic, the Po- | lice have refused the United New | York Children’s Committee a permit to parade to City Hall to present the |demands of the thousands of starv- jing children to the meeting of the Board of Aldermen July 12. H Conditions Worse “All children welfare societies de- clare that the conditions of the New York children in the crisis is appall- ing, but is continually getting worse,” the Committee states. “The Negro children, who need relief most, get jleast. Health conditions are abomin- |able in Harlem and other Negro Sec- tions. The death rate there is twice as high as in other sections. Mal- nutrition rates are continually rising. The last examinations of the chil- dren in the schools showed that ap- proximately 25 per cent of the chil- dren examined were starving.” All workers organizations are urged to send, in protest resolutions to the Mayor, the Board of Alderman, and the Police Department. WORKING WOMAN The August issue of the Working Woman will be off the press by July 23, 1932, This is to alow for a wide distribution of this special anti-war August 1, edition. Beginning with this edition the Working Woman will cost 3 cents per copy. Special orders for this edition of the paper should be placed now with the districts or by writing to The Working Woman, Pp. 0. Box 87, Sta. D., New York City. | | ' STAGE-SCREEN “IN OLD SIBERIA” ACME THEATRE TODAY The Acme Theatre, 14th St. and Union 8q,, has booked the Soviet | film, “In Old Siberia”, and will show | Sunday. This is a tense drama of OPENS AT |the picture today, tomorrow and | Tzarist days and the struggle of the | political prisoners. J. Reisman, noted Soviet producer, directed the produc- tion, which was produced in the | U.S.S.R. with a brilliant cast headed by A. Zhilinsky and V, Taskin. The same bill will have a Soviet news reel and latest bonus news. Beginning Monday and continuing Tuesday and Wednesday, the Acme will present “Demon of the Steppes”, a story of the Civil War in the USSR. “BRING ’EM BACK ALIVE” IN | FOURTH WEEK. Frank Buck's “Bring ‘Em Back Alive” enters on its fourth and last week today at the Mayfair Theatre. The picture has established a new record at the Mayfair, Based on the experiences in Frank Buck's book, “Bring 'Em Back Alive”, the picture records the camera record of eight months in the Malayan Jungle, di- rected by Clyde B. Elliott. The pic- ture has received the endorsement of explorers and authorities on zoology and natural history. Amusements nC ot “The Cry of the World” With GEORGE BERNARD SHAW AND OTHER WORLD-WIDE FIGURES “th BIG WERK —MuUSBIC— TADIUM CONCERTS" PHILHARMONIC-SYMPRONY ORCR. Lewisohn Sta: AV, & 138th Willem Van Hoog: yn, Conductor i] EVERY NIGHT at 8:36 —PRICES: 25¢, 50¢, $1.00 (Circle 7-757) — A Gripping Soviet Film "IN OLD SIBERIA” Drama of Political Prisoners im Tearist worners Acme Theatre 14th Street and Union Square IRY ROOMS—Kitchen priv- o Uleks fom beach, Friedman, DALIY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1932 ‘VETS MARCH IN BRONX TODAY Leader, as | ployed Block Committee of the char-|To Hear Ford Sat. at Coney Island NEW YORK. — All posts of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League is- sued a call yesterday for a mass de- monstration and parade in the Bronx today in support of the fight for the | bonus. The demonstration, which will be held at Tremont Ave. and Soutiern Blvd., will commence at 6 p. m. The vets will then conduct a parade to another section of the Bronx, where the marchers will be joined by members of the Irish Workers Club, Unemployed workers throughout the city are invited to join the de- monstration which will put forward, along with demands for the bonus, demands for unemployment insur- ance, Saturday night all Posts of the | Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League will Beier the Communist election rally at the Coney Island Stadium where J. W. Ford, Communist candidate for Vice-President and World War vet- eran, will speak, Soviet Officials Aid In Search for Missing Round-World Aviators MOSCOW, July 7.—Soviet aero- nautic officials were today cooperat- ing in the search for James Mattern and Bennett Griffin, missing between Berlin and Moscow on their round- the-world flight. There is a slight possibility that the flyers passed Moscow in the night without being seen and kept on to- ward Omsk, 1,600 miles to the East, j but this probability is not being con- sidered seriously, Furniture Workers Continue Strike NEW YORK.—The strike of twenty furniture workers at the Muskin Shop at 232 Throop Ave. continued strong today. Sam Weinstein, chair- man of the shop committee, who was arrested and held on a disorderly conduet charge, was released today on $200 bail. The boss called for a conference with the strikers, but re- fused to come to terms with the strike committee. The neighborhood is very sympa- thetic with the strikers. The Pur- niture Workers’ Industrial Union is calling @ mass meeting tonight at 8 o'clock at the Workers’ Center. SHOCK WORKERS’ STORIES A collection of stories by shock workers in the Soviet Union, showing great creative ability, is the highlight of No, 5 of Literature of the World Revolution, which has just been re- ceived from Moseow by International Publishers, distributors of the maga~- zine in this country. ‘The magazine may be obtained at all Workers’ Book Shops or in quan- tity orders direct from International Publishers, 381 Fourth Avenue. ITALIAN LECTURE, A lecture on the Second Five Year Plan will be given tonight at 8:30 p.m, by Comrade Tito Nunzio in the Italian Worker Center of the Bronx, 595 E. 184th St. Landlord Tries to Bar Negro Children from W. I. R. Kitchen In an attempt to break the solid- arity of Negro and white workers, the landlord of 450 West 53rd Street is trying to evict the kitchen of the Workers International Relief at that address, giving as his reason the fact, that Negro and white children are fed without discrimination at that kit- chen. A mass meeting of workers to pro- test against this vicious move has been called by the West Side Unem- Ployed Council for tomorrow night at 8 p.m, at its headquarters at 418 W. }53rd Street. Urgent Call for Funds To Help N. Y. Shoe Workers Win Strike NEW YORK.—The National Ex- ecutive Board of the Trade Union Unity League issued an urgent call today to all workers and working- class organizations to rush funds to help the I. Miller and Andrew Geller shoe strikers, who are carrying on a heroie struggle against wage-cuts, po- lice terror and court injunctions against picketing. The statement, signed by William Z. Foster, says, in part: “Workers: On you depends the out- come of the heroic fight of the shoe workers. Through their own forces the shoe workers have smashed the company union, beaten back the thugs and the police terror. The most dangerous enemy now is HUN- GER. The shoe workers who re- ceived, like all workers, miserable starvation wages, are now compelled when going out to battle for their interests to leave at home starving children, The shoe workers are fighting the battle of all workers. Answer at once. No time is to be lost. The next day may be too late. “Individual workers, workers’ or- ganizations, all friends of the strik- ers, come to the assistance of the shoe strikers, “SEND ALL FUNDS TO THE SHOE WORKERS’ STRIKE RELIEF COMMITTEE, 5 E. 19th St, New York City. Send by mail or bring in person.” 14 Fur Shops Strike For Wage Increases NEW YORK.—A total of fourteen fur shops are throughout the city were striking today for increases in Pay. Now that work in the fur trade is beginning, it is expected that in the coming week this campaign will Spread on a mass scale. The Indus~ trial Unien calls on all fur workers not to work excessive hours and to report to the office of the union on Saturday and Sunday morning at 7 ®, m, W.LR. Children’s Camp Opens July 9 NEW YORK.—The Workers Inter- national Relief Children’s Camp at Wingdale, N. Y., will be officially opened tomorrow (July 9) with a gala concert and outing for parents and sympathizers when the first contingent of 100 children initiate their summer vacation. ‘The children will leave for camp tomorrow at 9 a.m. from 16 W, 2ist St., and the parents and other vis- itors will leave for the week-end out- ing 2 pm, from the same place, HIT DUBINSKY’S FAKE DEMAND Talks Week Work, But Favors Piece Work of Dubinsky, head of the Interna- tional Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union, who announced today that he was “oiling machinery for a mass laid bare today, Dubinsky says the coming strike will be called to abolish piece-work and to establish the trade on a week work basis, Indeed, week work is what the cloakmakers demand. And that is what the Needle Trades Work- ers’ Industrial Union is calling the workers to fight for. But that is not what Dubinsky is interested in. Mr. Uviller, head of the bosses’ association, spilled the beans. Uviller |admits he is for piece-work. But Mr. Dubinsky’s union, according to Uviller, wants a week work agree- ment, but is not against winking at bootleg piece-work, ‘The Needle Trades Workers’ Union stands for a real united front struggle of the rank and file for week work. No bootleg piece-work must be toler- ated, Set up committees in the shops for this fight. Fake Economy Cuts Summer Session Students by 20,000 NEW YORK.—Twenty thousand fewer pupils are registered in sum- mer sessions in New York schools this year as against last year as a result of the fake economy program, put through by the Tammany Board of Education, Only 40,000 have registered for the summer sessions, and these are being crowded into large classes, with hun- dreds of teachers fired as a result and those remaining burdened. The politicians who control the educational policies of the city ad- ministration claim that they are “saving” $60,000 by this method. HOLD HUNGRY DOCTOR FOR VAGRANCY NEW YORK, July 7—A former ear, nose and throat specialist, Dr. Otto Goldie, 76 years old, who lost all his savings in the Clarke Brothers’ private bank, was held without bail for vagrancy by Magistrate Green- span of the Night Court. TOM MOONEY RUN NEW YORK.—A Tom Mooney Mile Relay will be a big feature of the Eastern District Elimination Meet that will be held July 16 at Ulmer Park, Brooklyn, foot of 25th ve., in preparation for the Inter- national Workers Athletic Meet at Chicago July 28, 2 and 30, LL.D. MASS MEET. PATERSON, N. J., July 7—An In- ternational Labor Defense mass meeting will be held tomorrow, July 8, in the German Hall, 156 Broadway, at 8 p.m. sharp. SPECIAL CAMP PROGRAMS Unemployed Council Week starts today and continues until July 17 at Camp Unity and Camp Nitgedaiget. Working class entertainment is being arranged. a ARR LRT GREATEST OPPORTUNITY FOR WORKERS’ VACATION 18 NOW BEING OFFERED BY OU: environment, ond ‘for $1.25. A great number of them se- cured Tents, Bungalows and Hotel Rooms for the entire season. Our camps excell in spirit and beauty. You can have a Sum- mer Home for your entire family for a minimum of $15 and a maximum of $35. You will be able to stay a week alone for only $3.00 or a full family for a maximum of $6.00. You can spent a day for 75 cents or a 2-day week- This is a Proletarian Plan Store at ——— For any information R TWO COOPERATIVE CAMPS NEW YORK.—The hocus-pocus | permeating the latest “strike” plans} ,| trial Union, exposed the treacherous strike in the garment trade,” was/| Needle Werlters Rally| To the Support of; Communist Platform NEW YORK.—Hundreds of work- ers crowded Memorial Hall Thurs- day afternoon to hear a discussion lot the platforms of the various po- | itical parties in the coming election | campaign. Ben Gold, secretary of the Indus- activities of the three capitalist par- ties, particularly on the struggles of the needle trades workers and the support given by the Communist Party to the struggles of the needle trades workers as well as all other struggles of the working class of this country. He pointed out the fact that the Communist Party initiated the move- ment for unemployment insurance and is the only poitical party that is carrying on a real struggle against imperialist war and for the defense | of the Soviet Union, He called on the needle trades workers to throw themselves actively into the election campaign, to form election campaign committees in their shops and to sup. |port and yote for the platform and |for the candidates of the Commun- ist Party who are staunch fighters and leaders of the working class. Sound Radio City Workers on Stagger Wage Cut Proposal NEW YORK —In line with the HooverWoll stagger method of wage cutting, cards have been passed around to the workers engaged on | building construction at Radio City asking them whether they would like to work 36 hours a week instead of 40 hours a week as at present, with corresponding wage cuts, of course. Most of the men have refused to agree to the plan, but that does pot mean the company will abolish it unless the workers shown an organ- ized resistance. 39th St. Tenants Plan Strike For Lower Rent NEW YORK.—Tenants living in the rear flats at 436 W. 39th St. have planned to call a rent strike today if the landlord refuses to concede to the demands of the ‘newly organ- ized house committee and reduce the rent from $20 to $18 a month, Yesterday morning members of the Unemployed Council spoke to the te- nants. All the workers agreed to strike today if the demands for lower rent are not met. { 'L. LEWIS ON DAILY ‘TOUR TO PREPARE FOR SUB DRIVE Campaign for Daily Starts July 15th In connection with the drive for mass circulation which the Daily Worker will start on July 15, a spe- cial representative of the Daily will make a tour of all the districts to make sure that district apparatuses are set up and kept going full force for the duration of the drive, and to assist in the carrying out of all di- rectives sent out to the districts from the National office. L. Lewis is the comrade who has been selected by the secretariat of the Party for this important work, He is now in Chicago on the first lap of his tour, which will take him through most of the’ districts west of Chicago. Comrade Lewis’ itinerary during his stay in the Chicago district will include the following towns: West Allis, Cudahy, Kenosha, Racine, Mile waukee, St. Louis, Springfield, Terre Haute, Evansville, Princeton, Indian apolis, South Bend. Comrades in these towns are asked to give the Daily representative every co-opera- tion. In addition to taking up problems of the drive, Comrade Lewis will also assist in arranging affairs and pic- nies for the benefit of the Daily, The drive for mass circulation which opens officially on July 15 is jthe biggest ever attempted by the Daily Worker. In the meantime place your or- der for the August 1 Anti-War is- sue without delay, No orders will be received after July 15. Special rate of $7 per 1,000 for this issue only, Write to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St., New York City, WORKERS CORRESPONDENTS MEET NEW YORK, — A meeting of all worker correspondents has been c¢all- ed for this Monday night at 8:30 p, m. in Room 308 at the Workers Cen- ter, 35 East 12th Street. LABOR UNION MEETINGS Unemployed Council Meets Sunday A meeting of the City Council of the Un- employed Couneil of Greater New York will take place July ® at 1 p.m, sharp at 5 Ey 19th St. }, Nitgedaiget Melrose Cafeteria 's Sick and Death Benefit Fund in’s Vegetarian Restaurant Kale Cafeteria Dr. Kessler Czechoslovak Workers House Avanta Farm Unlon Square Mimeo Supply Cohen’ is (Opticians) ‘WATCH THE ADS! REGULAR ADVERTISERS IN THE DAILY WORKER Dental Dept., 1. Linel Cafeteria Workers Coop Colony Sol’s Lunch Santel Midy Manhattan Lyceum Sollin’s Restaurant Rollin Pharmacy Gottlieb's Hardware Messinger’s Cafeteria (So, Blvd.) World Tourists, Inc. Golden Bridge Colony Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre Stadium Concerts Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR Spend this week-end in Nitgedaiget or Unity and see how well the plan works, because you can live and eat as you wish, A PLAN FOR EVERY WORKER! A PLAN FOR EVERY WORKERS’ FAMILY WORKERS Take advantage of the new plan in Nitgedaiget 2x2 Unity to serve you. You can live according to your pocket Two thousand workers spent July 4th week-end in NITGEDAIGET and UNITY —Cooking facilities in your own’ tent or bunk— A Cafeteria will serve you at city prices, also a Food Jow rates. USUAL CULTURAL AND SPORTS ACTIVITY Come out for this week-end and choose your place. call EStabrook 8-1400 Antes for both camps cs a E. 108rd St. and the he Cafeteria, 2700 Bronx k East, Phone; LEhigh AD Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOREPHSON ———————————— CAMPERS ATTENTION! Army Tents 16x16 and Others Also Camp Equipment Reasonable Prices— MANHATTAN WIPING CLOTH INC. 478 Water St., corner Pike St. Phone Dry Dock 4-3476 FURNISHED ROOM—For one on E. 11th St., tig Tg : Daily Worker, ain floor. Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season Ll miles from Philadelphia, weatinr gah, electricity, swimming, fishing, etc. Rea~ sonable rates. Communicate with Tem Jessor, April Farm, Coopersburg, Pa, ATLENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAS’ Patrening the Af calnteri REASONABLE PRICES CONEY ISLAND CE 10% of all proceeds —NOW OPEN— The New NTER CAFETERIA 2709 MERMAID AVENUE * to go to the Daily Worker and the Morning Freiheit All comrades invited to come—Best Food—Low Prices—Comradely Atmosphere MORNING PICNIC and 500 Tickets for $6,00-—O Raise Funds for Your Organization Through the FREIHEIT CARNIVAL SATURDAY, AUGUST 6th 1932 At Ulmer Park, Brooklyn SPORTS—DANCING—ENTERTAINMENT rder Your Tickets Now! MORNING FREIHEIT OFFICE,35 E. 12th St., 6th fl. |

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