The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 14, 1932, Page 2

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DAILY Ww OR NE Ww YORK, , THURSDAY. JULY 14 150,000 OUT AS STRIKE SPREADS OVER BELGIUM Government Turns | Coalfields Into Military | Camps in Effort to Crush Strike Struggles Soldiers Workers (c BRUSSELS, July in Many Plact Clashes with Police Increase | tured & munitions factory-at Ploustte; able by Inprecorr) 13.—The strike wave of the Belgian Refuse to Fire on| workers has spread to the Soignies coalfield. In Nivelle Prov- ince and Brabant all enterprise: Miners of Herve Plateau have joined the strike following a have been forced to shut down. meeting at which the miners drove out the reformists. FOR JOINT FIGHT | IN PAINT STRIKE Left vie Painters | ull for Unity ~suly NEW YORK 13—All_ mem- bers of Painters’ Locals affiliated with District Council were called out on strike today The Alteration Painters’ Union, 1130 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, in calling for joint action, issued the following call to the District Council and all members of the Painters, Decorators and Paperhangers of America “Our organization, whose members work in the alteration line, having been informed of your strike call, proposed toyou joint action to or- ganige the unorganized painters on) the following bas “1, That a united front commit- tee of equal numbers of both organ- izations be formed to ci y on the strike. “2. That the workers of struck shops have a right to Delong to what- ever organiza vided the: m they see fit, stick together in the shop in the def2nse of their conditions. “3. That shops thus settled shall ave a shop.committee elected by the to handle their own griev- S¢ proposals wer> approved at a membership meeting held at Irving Plaza on Ju mittee of 1 13, 1982, and a com- has been elected to con- This committee or at the appear upo next meeting of } istration for the Summer Term of the Workers’ School is now For informa- | tion apply at 35 E. 12th St. Telephone Al. 4-119, THURSDAY Council No. 86 of the United Council of Working Class Women will have a lecture on “The Importance of Organizing Working Glass Women” at 951 Leggett Ave., Bronx, at 8:30 p.m. Workers are urged to join the Workers’ Chorus of the International Branch of the ’ Id at Dewey Square “Hotel, , Room 321, | a 8:30 p.m. %\. Vernon Branch, I. L. D., will hold an| yki or mass meeting at 421 8. Eighth Ave., t non, at 8 p.m. Pomisin Rofland Youth Branch. ¥. wi, s N! Pik has been invited s. u., th Sts. at 12 noon. with bonds, property. me to the LL.D., 385 Spring- . Newark, N. J, field Ave. Volunteer District 1 workers are L. D. office, needed in 799 Broadway Headquar Section changed. headque at. 1200 Intervale Ave., Home St., Bror of 15 hi rters are Ist floor, corner of (Freeman St. Station) Comrade Marry Raymond will speak on the Bonus March at the Intwor Youth | Branch No. 491, L.W.O., at 1018 East Tre-| thont Ave., Bronx, at 8:30 p.m. The Mapleton Workers’ Club will have a Thass mecting at 2006 70th St., Brooklyn, at 8:30 p.m. Post No. 2, Harlem, Workers’ Ex-Service- men’s League, will have a meeting at their | Hew headquarters, 127 W. 125th St., at 8:30 p.m. A_membership meeting of the tional Workers’ Order will be held hattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. at 8 p.m Club meetings will be held every second @nd fourth Thursday at the same address until further notice. terna- Man- A membership meeting of the Workers’ Union will be held at Temple, 242 £. 14th St., at 7 p.m. Office Labor Gomrade Louis A. Baum will speak on the Scottsboro case and the Dies Deporta- tion’ Bill on the corner of Leonard and Boerum St: der_the auspices of the Rus: ‘gh Branch, I.L.D. FRIDAY ¢ The Bath Beach Workers’ Club will have @ special meeting at 2273 Bath Ave., Brook- lyn, at 8 p.m A open-air election campaign meeting will be held at Fourth St. and Second Ave. under the auspices of the Workers Zukunft Club. hip meeting of the Metal Workers’ Industrial League will be Held at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place, at 8 p.m. Election of delegates to district convention will take place. Every member is urged to be present. er he ‘A special ‘The Unemployed Council of 53rd St. will have '® concert and dance at 418 W. 53rd 8%, Admission is 25 cents. ‘The Red Sparks Athletic Club will have & general meeting at 380 Grand St. at 8 o'clock. A very urgent meeting of shoe workers, bers of the Workers’ International will be held W. 2ist Bt. at 8 p.m. “ open forum will be held at the Iris! Club, * bald vith Ave., at 8 p.m. a symposium on phe Tnternationsl Btu- G Movement'’ will be held at Community oars ‘eth St. and Fifth Ave, at 8 pm ploying soldiers pro-| will | Ma-; outsid> Industrial Union at White- | etc., | | the | been | ated | Over one hundred and fifty | |thousand workers are now on strike throughout Belgium, in- jcluding miners, and workers in | the iron, | water, steel, gas, electricity, textile and glass industries. The Belgian Government is em- and military air-} Planes in an attempt to break the strike. The coalfields have been can- | verted ‘into military camps. At Charleroi, many street demon-| strations have occurred, with fights | between the workers and the police | and military. | At Marchiennes Woldiers are frater- | nizing with the strikers in defiance of the government. At Montignies, the soldiers have refused to fire on strikers. In the central Belgian dis. trict soldiers have joined the worker: under the slogan of “Long Live the Strike.” The Social Democratic Party in its usual attacks on the struggles of the workers pretends that the strike movement is a Communist provoca- tion. The social-democrats are at- tempting to mislead the workers with the argument for a “peaceful” solu- tion of the strike by returning to work without their demands. The government continues its mass arrest of Communist Party function- | aries. A number were arrested last night at Charleroi, Herve and Liege. Public meetings have been prohibited at Brussels. The French Commun- ist paper “L'Humanite” has been banned from Beigium for supporting the Borinage strike. STATE ELECTIO NOTES NEED ELECTION LYRICS. The immediate need for lyrics for ine electi-> campair> was pointed out today in a call by the Workers Music League to all workers, writers and sympathizers who are capable of writing verse, to fill this need. Workers, especially, are urged to write these lyrics and send their manuscripts to the Workers Music League, John Reed Club, 63 15th St., music those chosen. ‘The lyrics, to be acceptable for election campaign purposes must embody the sixoints of the Com- munist election platform and the personalities of Foster and Ford. Som ae SIGNATURE DRIVE. An appeal to all sympathizers of the Communist Party to join in the campaign to collect signatures to place the Party on teh state elec- mn ballot was issued yesterday by the United Front Elect‘on Cam- paign Committee. The committee pointed out that, while in some sections of New York City, and throughout the counties of the city, teh signature campaign is progressing satisfac: torily, there are weak points in this cempaign in critical districts in the city itself, notably the lower East Side. Harlem, Williamsburgh and South brooklyn, the campaign has lagged dangerously. Sympathizers are urged to join this campaign, and to report to the nearest of the following headquar- ters for instructions and material: 301 W. 29th St.; 142 E. 3d St.; 350 E, 81st St.; 314 E. 104th St., Man- hattan; 1373 43d St. and 285 Rod- ney St., Brooklyn. Raymond Speaks Tonight, Harry Raymond, Congressional candidate in the 15th District, will speak tonight before the members of the Intwor Branch of the Inter- national Workers Order, at 1032 Tremont Ave., the Bronx. His sub- ject will be “The Significance of the Bonus March.” Bata, Speed-Up King, Dies in Plane Crash PRAGUE, July 13.—For the first time, the Bata Shoe Co. passed its dividend yesterday, and at the same time Thomas Bata, “speed-up king” of the European shoe industry, died in the crash of his private airplane. The Bata Co. operates forty factor- ies employing 30,000 workers, The greater part*of the factories have been lying idle for some time, Bata was known for the severe speed-up and starvation wages under which he forced his workers to op- erate. Speakers will be Motssaye Olgin, Donald Henderson, Sidney Hook, Marry Elmer Barnes and J. T. Yong, under the ausp! of the National. Students’ League. Admis- sion is 28 cents. ‘The Imperial Valley petra! of the LL.D. will hold an open-air meeting at 169th St, and Grant Ave, Bronx, at 30 p.m. 1538 Madigon Ave., second floor, at p.m. so ‘Unit 14, Section 5, will hold an open-air where the members will put to | |Military Revolt Spreads in Brazil Against U.S. Tool The military revolt in Barzil |azainst the de facto re gime of Pres- | |ident Vargas continued to spread yes- | terday. The anti-Vargas forces in the State of Sao Paulo claimed the adherence of army heads in several other states in the movement against the pro-Wall Street government of Vargas. The revolt appears to be | backed by British imperialism whose | tool Louis Prestes was driven out of | office last October by forces lead by | Vargas. ‘The anti-Vargas forces have cap- 120 miles northeatst of aSo Paulo and! half way to Rio de Janeiro, seat of the Federal government. Pedro de Toledo, who resigned as} Federal Governor of Sao Paulo State to join the revolt declared yesterday |that the movement was directed to- wards seizing control of the entire nation, rather than to set up a sep- larate government. FORD SCORES JERSEY JIM-CROW, | Blizabeth ‘Hall Jammed to Hear Candidate ELIZABETH, N. J., July 13—Turn Hall, largest political hall in Eliza- beth, was jammed yesterday by an enthusiastic crowd at a campaign nieeting addressed by James W. Ford, Communist candidate for Vice Pres- ident, although cops had threatened | he owner of the hall in an attempt to prevent the meeting. Attended by about a hundred Ne- groes, the meeting proved one of the} best yet held in New Jersey. Entire Negro families were present, empha- sizing the important part which Ne- !groes are beginning to take in the working class movement in Elizabeth. Ford explained the program of the Communist Party, dwelling on the socialist betrayal of the workers, He told of the Party's activities in the struggle for equal rights for Negro workers, Minnie Zuroff, candidate for mayor, and G. Edwards, Negro candidate for state senator, also spoke. 25,000 Jobless. Of a total population of 120,000, 25,000 Elizabeth workers are unem- ployed, according to the admission of city officials. The city relief agen- cies give scrip for food. The limit is$ 4 a week, no matter how large the family of the jobless worker. Six thousand Negroes are residents in the Port, the slums of the city, where police brutality is greatest. Discrimination is rampant. Protest Jim Crowism. A few days ago a white man was killed while parking at night near the city dump. He was with a 16-year old girl. Immediately sixteen Ne- groes were arrested at the dump, where they are forced to “live.” Al- though police admit there is not a bit of evidence against these sixteen, they are still held on suspicion. Wage Cuts Rife. | Metals, chemicals, railway shops and needle trades are the chief in- dustries of Elizabeth. In all of these workers have suffered wage cuts and unemployment. The Singer Sewing Machine Plant, producing for war purposes, now em- ploys only twenty per cent of capac- ity, and those it does hire are young workers at a weekly wage of $3. ‘LAUSANNE DEBT “Agreement” Is Not Binding Under a heavy attack in tne House of Commons, British Government spokesmen were forced yesterday to admit that the Lausanne “agreement” diq not relieve the German masses of the burden of further payments of the huge war tributes exacted by the victor powers in the last World War. Neville Chamberlain, Chancellor of the Exchequer, was trapped into ad- mitting: “If cancellation all around can be achieved, we cancel. If, on the other hand, cancellation all around is not possible, thea we must wait and see what America may propose to use be- fore we van decide what arfrange- ments we can make.” Prime Minister MacDonald tried in vain to erase the effects of this dam- aging admission. With typical hypo- crisy, the former shining light of the Second (Socialist) International, at- tempted to defend the sham “solu- tion” with which the Lausanne con- ference ended its labors. Lloyd George, leader of one section of the shattered British Liberal Party told the House that the “settlement brought home by Mr. MacDonald was no settlement at all, since there exists another document that may render this nugatory.” The statements by Chamberlain and Lloyd George support the persistent rumor that in addition to the "gen- tlemen’s agreement” there is still an- other secret agreement by which the Young Plan for sweating reparations out of the German masses would con- tinue operative if the United States refuses to cancel the American war debts. This secret agreement is gen- erally accepted as also aimed against the Soviet Union by forcing Germany in exchange for any concessions on to submit to French political guidance meeting at St. Paul's Place apd Third Ave. le, opm . ithe gcparations questions, of Elizabeth, but most of them live; PACT A SHAM! \ers, to take up plans to mobilize for shop | Strikes, against the wage-cuts and for bet- <== Left Cloak Group Urges Real Strike iCalls to Defeat City Hall Sellout NEW YORK. — Th Central Com- mittee of the left-wing groups of the LL.G.W.U. today issued the follow- | ing call: “On with the struggle. Cloakmak- ers—the struggle for a real strike is developing successfully, The officials of the International and Joint Board who have prepared another city hall strike are in mortal terror of the awakened cloakmakers. “Let us continue with the mobili- )Zation. The last two days were his- toric days in our struggle for a real strike. Monday we successfully beat back the attacks of the international gorillas. On Tuesday the cloakmak- ers within the armory and outside of the armory have shown that they will not permit themselves to be fool- ed, terrorized and sold out, “The hundreds of police, detectives and gorillas, the Lovestone agent | provocateurs who pointed out left- wing cloakmakers to be thrown out of the meeting and beaten up, “All this was of no avail to the International officials and their ef- forts to get the indorsement of the cloakmakers for their sell-out strike. The demonstration in the armory against their chief leader, the arch enemy of the working class, Matthew Woll, the mass open air meeting out- side of the armory of the cloakmak- ers who were thrown out, the fact that the cloakmakers en masse left the armory when the president Du- binsky began to speak, the closing of the meeting before 7 p, m.—all this shows conclusively that the cloak- makers have awanekend' and will not permit themselves to be fooled by the International officials and are ready for a real strike for union conditions. “Cloakmakers: Let us now with a faster tempo continue to organize our forces for a real strike. Organize shop committees and block commit- tees. Organize thousands of unem- ployed cloakmakers in a struggle for immediate relief. Close your ranks and our victory will be assured.” I.W.0. Opens Five Children’s Centers NEW YORK.—The International Workers Order has opened five sum- mer centers in the poorer sections of New York to care for children who are forced to spend the hot summer) months in the city. The Centers are in the following headquarters: Downtown, 8414 Lewis St.; Williamsburg, 266 Throop Ave.; Brownsville, 1844 Pitkin Ave.; Bronx, 951 Leggett Ave.; and 3882 Third Ave. COP THREATENS NEGRO NEW YORK.—W. Pargin, Negro comrade, was threatened with a beat- ing by a policeman for his activity in a recent rent strike at Mace St.} and Olinville Ave. the Bronx. The cop found Pargin in a car with a white comrade near the Allison Ave. subway station and, after question- ing him, drew a blackjack and at- tempted to strike him. “Towards Soviet America” by Wm. Z. Foster—$1.25—an elabora- tion of the platform of the Com- munist Party in its election cam- paign, LABOR UNION MEETINGS Knitgoods Membership Meeting Tonight Tonight, Thursday, right after work, the membership meeting of the Knitgoods work- ter conditions. The report of the trade committee will deal with the various shop strikes and the preparations for new struggles. | work of two. | tional taxes on the property of thou- | sands of miners.’ Many small farmers | Freeman, an 18-year-old miner, was |to the mine, Sheriff Hoard Duff and | Jim Crow Eviction Printers Win Victory | | lin Typographical No. 6| NEW YORK—The Amalgamated Party, the left-wing group of the American-Journal-Mirror Chapel of} Typographical Local 6, led a success-} ful fight against the leadership and| won. | The Chapel unanimously over-rode| the decision of the organizer, James department to another. This de- cision was designed to speed up the} printers, forcing one man to do the The rank and file also voted against | the decision to arbitrate for a new newspaper scale. MARTIAL LAW IN MINE FIELDS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) were Miles Popovich, Louis Valentine, Walter Spontano, John ‘Trucham, Donald Lippian, Frank Franek, Ignaz! Pozenwich and Raymond Burian. Five of those miners are under 21 years of age. Twenty-nine pickets were arrested at the Pine Fork Hanna Coal Mine, Jefferson County. They were charged with blocking a public highway. Farmers Effected. With Belmont County taxes in the arrears one million ang a half dol- lars, the authorities are putting addi- are affected, too. There haye been evictions in scores of mining camps. The United Mine Workers of America refuses responsibility, claiming it did not call the strike, Need Food. Preparations for the Jefferson County hunger march are increasing. The stricken Ohio miners are in urgent need of food, clothing, etc.) Funds and food should be sent at| once to Room 4, Freter Building, Bridgeport, Ohio. Youns Miner Killed, COLUMBUS, Ohio, July 13.—Ray Killed by the bullets of the National Guard at Chauncey, Athens County. His bullet-riddled body was thrown into a nearby cemetery by his mur- derers. While escorting a group of scabs @ corps of deputies attempted to dis- | Perse a crowd of pickets, only to find} themselves surrounded by several) hundred angry miners. Duff was pushed off the road. of Feeding Center Halted by Workers NEW YORK—Sixty workers jammed the magistrate’s court, 314 W. 54th St. to protest against the eviction notice served on the Work- ers’ International Relief feeding cen- ter for children at 450 W. 53rd St., and succeeded in forcing a jury trial, which will be held July 19. Although the landlord was offered rent, he insisted on trying to carry out the eviction because, he said, he wanted no Negroes in his building. Allan Taub, International Labor) Defense lawyer, who represented the W. I. R. feeding center at the hear-| ing, will give a report on the case/ at a dance to be given Friday eve-| ning by the Unemployed Council at| 418 W. 53rd St. to raise defense funds. | Admission is 25 cents, ULMER PARK MEET JULY 16. NEW YORK. — New York labor athletes are holding a sports elimi- nation meet at Ulmer Park, Brook- lyn, this Saturday, July 16th, The winners at this meet will comprise the team that goes to Chicago to re- present New York at ‘he Interna- tional Workers Athletic Meet. | WATCH THE ADS REGULAR ADVERTISERS IN THE DAILY WORKER 'y Stolper Optical Co, Kinderland, Nitgedaiget (Stationery) Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Fund Bronstein’s Vegetarian Restaurant Dr. Kessler Crechoslovak Workers House Avante Ferm Square Mimeo Supply oa ip Woeolona Russian Art Shop Dr. Schwartz Cohen’s (Opticians) Dental Dept., LW.O. Health Center Cafeteria Bell, Optometrist Raise Funds for Your Organization Through the MORNING FREIHEIT PICNIC and SATURDAY, AUGUST 6th 1932 At Ulmer Park, Brooklyn SPORTS—DANCING—ENTERTAINMENT Rollin Pharmacy Gottliob’s Hardware ‘age ‘colony Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre Stadium Concerts CARNIVAL 500 Tickets for $6.00—Order Your Tickets Now! MORNING FREIHEIT OFFICE,85 E, 12th St., 6th fl. SHOE STRIKERS HOLD MARCH Demonstrate Despite Vicious Injunctioin LONG ISLAND CITY, July 13— | Dan, to transfer the men from one/All the strikers of the Five Star, I. Miller, and Andrew Geller factories— some of seven hundred — staged a |mass demonstration in front of the factories late yesterday afternoon. The demonstration was held despite the injunction issued against the workers. The Fascist Federation was exposed ; at a meeting of the Andrew Geller strikers as a strikebreakers’ otgani- zation. The two-faced role that the Federation played in the last two weeks was clarified to the workers and they decided to have nothing to do with these fakcrs and betray- ers. A unanimous vote of confidence in the Shoe and Leather Workers In- |dustrial Union was taken after sev- eral of its representatives explained the necessity of a united struggle in order to defeat the injunction and to win the strike. The Five Star strike is getting stronger. No scabs have entered the doors of the factory. About a score of workers turned up in an answer to an ad for lasters in the New York American placed by the bosses, but all.turned away when they learned lof the strike. The union has obtained informa- tion from reliable sources that Charles Miller and Squire, the sup- erintendent of the factory, left for Boston to get strikebreakers. Preparations for the shop confer- ence which will be held July 23 are going ahead speedily. The union is- sued a call to the shoe workers in| Brooklyn and Manhattan to elect | delegates to the conference. Plans; for mass action against the miserable | conditions which are existing in the | trade will be discussed. STAGE-SCREEN “CONDEMNED TO DEATH” AT || CAMEO THEATRE “Condemned to Death,” a mystery film story, based on the adventures of the infamous killer, Jack O'Lat- ern, starts today at the Cameo The- atre. Arthur Wontner, who pro- trayed Sherlock Holmes in “The Fa- tal Hour” and “The Missing Rem- brandt,” playe the leading role in this new thriller. Others in the cast! include Gorden Harker, Norah How-| ard, Jane Welsh, Cyril Raymond and Gillian Lind. Walter Ford directed. As an extra added attraction, the, Cameo offers the latest Carveth Wells | adventure film, “Binghi.” This is Wells’ first film since “Hell Below Zero”. “Binghi” is a journey through Australia, | Constance Bennett, in “What Price Hollywood” opens at the Mayfair on Friday morning. Others in the cast include Lowell Sherman, Neil Ham- ilton and Gregory Ratoff. It was directed by George Cukor from the story by Gene Fowler and Rowland Brown, Gustav Froehlich, German star of} “Zwei Menschen,” has the leading role in “Brand in der Oper” (Fire in, | the Opera), the new German musical} film drama which will open today id |the Europa. “A JEW AT WAR” GPENS AT, ACME THEATRE TODAY “A Jew At War,” a Soviet film dealing with the World War andj Soviet Russia of today, will open a three days’ engagement today at the, Acme Theatre. As an added featur> the Acme will present Foster and Ford in the latest news of the day. On Sunday, Monday and Tuesday will be shown the Amkino production, ; “TheBlack Sea Mutiny,” a Soviet Cops Beat Up Picket Then Jail Him in the GERMANY TO Furniture Strike CONSCRIPT LABOR NEW YORK —The strike of the furniture workers at the Muskin Manufacturing Co. in Brooklyn is be- ing solidly continued, the workers pledging to stay out until they have won, Yesterday a picket, Joe Mika, a} Von Paver ih in Move to Ban Communists (By Inprecorr Cable.) BERLIN, July 13—Chancellor von marine worker who came to help the/ |Papen and Baron yon Gayl, German strike, was arrested and sentenced to|yfinister of the Interior, are visiting two days in jail. He was slugged| president yon Hindenberg today to and beaten viciously in a hallway| consult on final decision on following near the police station. Thugs hired by the boss to scab on | political questions, work conscription, |state commissary for Prussia, new the workers in the iron department | bans against the Communist Party, go around with clubs in full view of| | surance payment. the police. A strifer was struck across the face by a policeman (badge No. 17382) for standing in front of the factory. A meeting of the Furniture Work- ‘employment further retrenchments in social in- The compulsory work plan follows upon the huge retrenchments in un- insurance, The plan calls for the labor conscription of two ers’ Industrial Union will be held at| hundred thousand to two hundred 108 E. 14th St. tonight. A full report of the strike will be given eat this meeting. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 6, Against imperialist war; for the defense of the Chinese people and of the Soviet Union. |and fifty thousand young German workers. The government proposes by this means to cut its relief ex- penditures to two hundred million marks, half the sum to go for ma- terial and administration, with the result that the labor conscripts will be paid only six to eight marks weekly. AMUSEMENTS | NOW THE MYSTERY HORROR FILM SENSATION “CONDEMNED TO DEATH” Could An Executed Murderer Direct a Demon to Ayenge His Sentence? With ARTHUR WONTNER eaten Screen Attraction— LD"—A Unique Adventure with—Carveth Wells 9a.m tol pm. Mon. to Fri, 25c Lewisohn Stadivm, Amst. Av. & 138th Willem Van Hoogstraten, Conductor EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 50e, $1.00 (Circle 7- PRICES: 250, = TODAY, TOMORROW and SATURDAY Soul Stirring Soviet Film ‘A JEW AT WAR’ FOSTER and FORD IN ACTION THE WORKERS With Street and Union Square Acme Theatre NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX RKO (ory 2504 flof, JEFFERSON ||| FRANKCI WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY Ann Harding in “Westward Passage” with LAWRENCE OLIVIER & IRVING PICHEL AT JEFFERSON—Extra Feature “FAST COMPANIONS” with TOM BROWN, JAMES GLEASON and MAUREEN O’SULLIVAN MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat., Sun., and Holidays Intern'] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persona) 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 COCO INVITES YOU TO ——PATRONIZE—— A Comradely BARBER SHOP 1500 BOSTON ROAD Corner of Wilkins Avenue BRONX, N. ¥. Our work will please the men, women and the children NO TIPS the film, with the actor Minin in the leading role. Hundreds of © Workers Come Out Each Week- End to Nitgedaiget and Unity A great number of them se 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 $85. You will be able to stay ayweek alone for only $3.00 or a full family for a maximum of $6.00. You can spend a day environment, for 75 cents or a 2-day week. ond for $1.25. - UNITY HAS NO MORE BUNGALOWS WITH COOKING FACILITIES. NITGEDAIGET STILL HAS A FEW LEFT. RUSH IF YOU WANT ONE. ATIENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES Gny2a SANDWICH SOL 5 LUNCH 108 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9781 Camp Wocolona MONROE, N. Y. Lodging: $1.00 Per Day $4.00 Per Week FOOD STORE ON PREMISES Light Iunches at all hours Regalar Meals Served at $1.50 ‘Per Day ROUND TRIP FARE—S2 Erie B.R. Bungalows and Rooms To Rent In the special anti-war issue of “The Communist” (July), Earl Browder writes on the problems of placing the party on a war footing. Workers GREATEST OPPORTUNITY FORK WORKERS’ VACATION 1S NOW BEING OFFERED BY OUR TWO COOPERATIVE CAMPS A PLAN FOR EVERY WORKER! A PLAN FOR EVERY WORKERS’ FAMILY | The Plan Works Because It Serves the Workers! cured Tents, Bungalows and Take advantage of the new plan in Nitgedaiget ana Unity This is a Proletarian Plan to serve you. $12 A Wk. ($9 for Board and $3 for Room Two first-class Restaurants to serve you at $9.00 per week, $1.50 per day, or you can buy 2s many or as few single meals a day, as you wish. Profits of both Restaurants go to Communist Daily Worker and Morning Freiheit. USUAL CULTURAL AND SPORTS ACTIVITY * Come out for today or for this week-end and choose your place For any information call EStabrook 8-1400 + both camps at 148 F. 208ed Bt: Dally at 10 a.m; , Saturday, th comps at 143 5 208rd Kt: Dally at 10 am.; Friday, Saturday, PS

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