The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 25, 1932, Page 3

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= seers ee | ; | | | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY 25, 1932 Page Three MARINE WORKERS! MOBILIZE AGAINST HUNGER AND WAR AUG. Ist! Concession to Vets Is Signal for Bigger March (Surge Forward of Hundreds of Thousands Will Win More Demands By SOL HARPER ‘The refusal of the Bonus Marchers to leave Washington has compelled (Wongress to pass a bill, now signed by Hoover, abolishing the two-year ma- urity clause in the Bonus Certificate which prevented starving veterans from securing even a loan of half of tertificates for two years. The veterans must understand that hey are being permitted to secure ans now without waiting two years, hot because of any goodness from Ihe sky or from the Hoover govern- ent, but because of the Bonus arch to Washington, because the ponus Marchers refuse to leave Freaingion, and because the worker feterans throughout the United tates are becoming radicalized. The militancy of the veterans has ‘so won more concessions in the ‘Il just signed by Hoover. The num- sr of veterans who can borrow on Meir back pay has been extended, ad the interest rate om such loans as been reduced from 41% to 314 er cent, The Workers’ Ex - servicemen’s eague raised the demand for the dolition of the two-year clause last etober 30, 1931, when a delegation | veterans demonstrated in front of e Veterans Bureau in Washington ad moved a delegation of three into ‘e White House itself, from which e delegation announced “The veter- 2s will return here again on De- smber 7,” and they did return in National Hunger’ March, 400 rong. re must point, however, that the Yoover governme.t is attempting to lit the veterans who can now for fhe first time even secure a loan of re half cf their own money, and at a real move is in order now by 15,009 veterans to make greater {ke to Washington to get their | | f : alf-loans and show their solidarity the veterans now in Washington. peerens. go to Washington, and de- bes) your money now. VETS DIG IN FOR LONG SIEGE ‘CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ms; and the election of committeés ts officers subject to recall by the lembership and who must make reg- War reports to the rank and file. Yentral Rank and File Committee Chosen, A Central Rank and File Commit- was chosen, representing the .. and fil in all the camps that nt delegates to the conference. Pace as unanimously re-elected chair- an. ES following decisions were pass- : To continue picketing the White fous the next picketing demonstra- ion to take place Monday at noon with the demands for a special ses- ‘ of Congress to pass the bonus ill; and ‘for Hoover to revoke the tvacuation notice. To inform all billets to notify their puddies back home to organize dem- gnstrations before the homes of sen- yfors and congressmen; to hold open {ir meetings supporting the bonus rarchers; to, raise food and funds; jad to shower Washington with tele- rams demanding a special session of oneress to pass the bonus, and un- 4mployment relief and insurance. ‘To hold a temporary conference Wednesday at 10 am. of two dele- ites from each billet to discuss the femktion of a Central Food and Fi- fance Committee, which will be the Poy to Fascist Waters’ threat to top the food to all veterans in dis- (er es with him, Call Throughiut Land. To notify the sympathizers of the ee Marchers throughout the land ge all donations of food and money specifically for “the bonus marchers” and that the name B.EF. $e omitted to prevent confiscation by Waters. To visit Glassford and in- form him of the above mentioned jommittee in order to prevent him vom dividing the veterans on the ‘asis of food and money donations Fereus his central clearing com- ittee, To organize defense work—both le- ally and by mags pressure against growing terrorism against the veterans: a committee was chosen to ‘nvestigate the deaths of several vet- ‘rans rumored to have been heaten to death LD Waters’ M. Ps, Buffalo Workers Demand Berkman’s Immediate Release BUFFALO, N. Y,, July 24.—Edith Berkman’s immediate release was de- manded by 300 Negro and white workers who demonstrated at the Broadway Auditorium Grounds here against deportation and police. terror. The immediate release of Joseph jo and eight other Utica workers ig held for Grand Juy, was also Vigorously demanded. Solidarity with workers throughout world was pledged by the Buffalo ‘kers, especially with the workers Germany struggling against fascist lictatorship . The hadd rang with ‘heers as the workers present unani- nously pledged their support of the tommunist Party election platform, their own money until they had the ——S LITVINOFF HITS POWERS REFUSAL TO DISARM Answer War Mongers on Augus tFirst (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) by the British, who defended their “right” to bomb the revolutionary masses of the enslaved colonies of India, South Africa, East Africa, etc. The workers throughout the world are answering the war mongers with mighty demonstrations on August Ist. LITVINOFF’S SPEECH (Cable by Inprecorr) MOSCOW, July 24—Maxim Litvi- noff, head of the Soviet delegation to the “disarmament” conference, spoke on Friday before the General Com- mission of the “Disermament” con- ference at Geneva in connection with the Benesh draft Resolution, with which the conference adjourned. Litvinoff began his speech with the | statement that the delegates confer- ence had had to wait long for the resolution. If +> Vienna Congress is now usually -alled the “Gay Con- gress,” the present conference will probably enter history under the name of the “waiting conference.” Pointing out further thet the pa- tience of the delegates had not been rewarded by the results of. waiting, Litvinoff turned to analyzing the sev- arate points of*the Resolution. He said, “We cannot help admitting that |the resolution brings bitter disap- pointment to all peoples and organi- zations which placed .their hopes in the conference regarding peace, and justify the dark phophecies and mis- givings of those who from the very beginning didn’t share these hopes and illusions. Though the resolution begins with the assertion that the time is ripe for adoption by all nations of the world of essential and exten- sive measures on disarmament for the consolidation of universal peace, the rest of the Resolution completely negates this assertion, It recognizes, on the contrary, that the powers rep- resented at this conference didn’t find the time ripe for final adoption of at least one resolute measure on disarmament.” Resolution of Generalities Pointing out that the Resolution is full of general phraseology and dec- larations and has only one concrete point, namely on chemical, bacterio- logical and fire warfare, Litvinoff states that this point doesn’t give anything new because even back in 1925 it was under discussion, and negation of these methods of warfare fixed in the so-called “Geneva proto- col,” which was drafter by 34 powers. Now, this point of the Resolution, drafted in general terms, in case of adoption would only leave the hands of those powers free which ratified the “Geneva Protocol.” Litvinoff further stated that both this question and that on the pro- hibition on bombardment of civilian populations is rather in the com- petence of the Red Cross Union than the disarmament conference. Apart from this point no one recognizes in theory the right to bombard civil Populations ang when effected it is always done under the pretsxt of bombarding certain military objects. The only guarantee against the bom- barding of civilian Populations is by absolute prohibition of military avia- tion or at least of bombing planes. Didn't Raise Quantitative Dis- armament Pointing out that the majority of the points in the Resolution refer to the question of so-called qualitative disarmament, Litvinoff expressed the view that the fundamental questions must be quantitative disarmament. The Preparatory Commission, he said, generally didn’t raise the question of quantitative disarmament. Litvinoff stressed that “though the conference was called and gathered for reduction of armaments, however, we delegates, to the natural question which will be put as to what per centage of disarmament it hag been decided to reduce will be unable to answer on the basis of the proposed resolution because not only was there no decision but the question itself had almost not been raised by the conference. Litvinoff further pointed out that the Soviet delegation had proposed alternatively to its proposal for com- plete universal disarmament, an ab- solutely concrete project for the re- duction of all types of armaments by 50 per cent. Pointing out that had the Soviet proposal been taken up for discussion, other delegations could have advanced their proposals, he declared one could then haye Spoken of a certain step forward, Scoret Private Negotiations Litvinoff declared the “delegations had been doomed to complete inac- : Priest Cox’s “Paradise” for Pittsburgh’s Starving Unemployed Typical shack in Shantytown, Pittsburgh, organized by Father Cox, the “Little Mussolini” of Pittsburgh who has been carrying on a campaign to swerve the jobless from real struggle. fluenced by Cox’s propaganda, have brought their wives and children to a vacant lot behind the priest’s church, where they have “settled” them in miserable shacks, CALLS FOR FIGHT ON NANKING GOVT Mme. Sun Issues New Statement on Rueggs (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) removal to the Nanking Hospital. The statement further says that the Nanking Supreme Court decision rejecting the appeal for transfer of the trial to Shanghai demonstrates the intention of the Nanking Govern- ment to carry out the prearranged plan of persecution. The coming trial will be a comedy with the defendants denied deferise and the right to call witnesses and experts, and with the judges acting as prosecutors and al- ready having received extraordinary authority for findings and sentences. The trial will be “a preposterous dis- play representing the desires of the Nanking Government to conform to wishes of its imperialist masters.” The statement further accuses the Nanking government of complete ac- cord with the imperialists who intend to “howl the Rueggs case skyward as @ new-argument for the perpetra- tion of extra-territoriality’ and re- tention of their special robber ‘rights’ in China. The statement asserts that this also is part of the prearranged plan of the Nanking Government in collusion with the imperialists. Madame Sun Chin Ling express- es complete solidarity with the Rueggs and yesterday hurled a challenge at the Nanking Govern- ment concluding with the demand not only for the liberation of the Rueggs but .“for the lifting of the terrific burdens weighing upon the Chinese People. She called upon the Chinese People to smash the white terror that has filled mil- lions of graves and buried in the prisons thousands of the best men, women, boys and girls whose only crime is their attempt to shatter the chains binding the Chinese masses to the footstools of the im- perialist powers.” War Funds for the Jobless— through mass circulation of the Daily Worker, {tion while awaiting the results of |certain private negotiations. We now agree that these results are seen in this resolution which I am now an- alyzing, and which has no important value, being just a repetition of a similar resolution adopted three months ago to the effect that it had been decided to realize a decisive stage in the reduction of armaments. It was suggested than that the con- ference immediately engage in con- cretely realizing that resolution, but it didn’t happen and the entire sense of the resolution now moved consists in that we have been offered « plan to suspend the coneretization for a further six months, “What Is Guarantee?” “Where is the guarantee that we will succeed in this task far better than during the past three months? What changés will occur in that time? What obstacles will be re- moved which have hampered con- cretization until now? The resolution | doesn’t say so, but it is quite prob- able that new private negotiations have been resumed, “In addition there is reference to @ special conference for agreement by groups of states, Can one chain L. Bebritz, Facing Deportation, Tours Against Dies Bill CLEVELAND, July 24.—Louis Beb- \ritz, editor of the Uj lore, Hun- garian Communist daily published here, has just begun a speaking tour of 70 eastern and mid-western cities, exposing the Dies exclusion and de- portation bill. IMPERIAL VICTIMS STILL IMPRISONED Parole Board Refuses to Free Workers SAN FRANCISCO, July 24—One week after they were due to be released on parole from San Quentin Roxas, Imperial Valley defendants, Still in their cells. Uusing as a pretext that they did |not approve of the jobs which they |had secured—a condition for their release—the Parole Board of Califor- |nia is refusing to free them. Carl Sklar, another imperial Val- ley prisoner, is still waiting for a new hearing before the Parole Board. The receptions being arranged for Roxas and Erickson on their release are thus being turned into a tremen- dous protest mass meeting. ‘The newly formed branch of the | National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners is sending a delegation to the open hearing of the Parole Board in Sacramento, at which Governor Rolph will be present. This committee will make definite charges against the parole board for holding the Imperial Valley prisone:s in jail. Folsom Prison still holds Horiuchi, secretary of the Trade Union Unity League in Imperial Valley, whose de- portation has been ordered by the Department of Labor. The Int2rna- tional Labor Defense demands that he be allowed voluntary departure from this country to the land of his choice, They scheme to deport Hori- uchi to fascist Japan, where almost |certain death awaits him, These workers were arrested in 1930 for trying to organiz> the starving toilers in Imperial Valley, California. ‘They were attempting to make more bearable the conditions of the ex- ploited agricultural workers. zations are urged to send protests at once to Governor James A. Rolph, Jr., Sacramento, California, demanding the unconditional release of the Im- perial Valley prisoners, and to the Commissioner of Immigration, San Francisco, California, demanding yol- untary departure for Horiuchi, MARINES REFUSED TO FIGHT VETS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) day chose a committee to call on the Commandant to demand a thor- ough investigation. Utmost solidar- ity with the marines in question was voted by the rank and file, in a reso- lution unanimously adopted, to fer- ret out the real facts at the basis of this occurrence, and to organize dem- onstrations throughout the land, of employed and unemployed workers, any hopes to it? The entire history/as well as veterans, demanding the of the disarmament problem is an uninterrupted series of these suspen- sions and references to private nego- tiations and private conferences. If we look up the history of the Prep- aratory Commission we see that it usually suspended its sessions, and interrupted its work always by refer- ring to private negotiations, private meetings and conferences taking place somewhere, which allegedly had prepared decisions on the question dividing the commission. The com- mission met over and over again to state the failure of these private meetings. These ‘fruitful results’ of the private negotiations and confer- ences always turned out to be a mirage of delusive hopes as were the results of the private conferences em- bodied in the resolution now proposed to us. The Daily Worker will carry more details on Litvinoff{'s speech in to- morrow's issue, Bert abe eenetne Ite release of the arrested marines, \ Story of Solidarity. ‘The original story—which is run- ning the length and breadth of Washington—is as follows: A com- pany of marines were ordered out by Vice-President Curtis, July 14, when the veterans paraded. Twenty- five of the marines refused to go into action, throwing their guns down. These marines were instantly thrown into prison, The remainder, sent out, were immediately withdrawn, when the officials thought better of it—fearing the “reliability” of the rest of the company. RELIEF FOR DOGS (By a Worker Corerspondent) CLIFTONDALE, Mass.—Unemploy. ment is rapidly growing in this sec- tion, Big boring-mills are shut down. Schools may not open in September. Workers are losing their homes, The Welfare Board is feeding police dogs. prison, Oscar Erickson and Danny | Workers and working-class organi- | Unemployed workers in- + GOVT THREATENS N. C. STRIKERS | Strikers Vote Against} Pay Cut Plan (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE} | ing the strikers decisively rejected | to pay to the Institute. Seamen Sleep in Park; Institute | Beds Are Empty. Marine Workers Industrial Union Exposes Huge “Relief” Graft om South, St. Institute Collects Thousands; Sailors | Get Little Of It By GRACE HUTCHINS. ! A husky cop in plain clothes, show- | ing the visitor over the expensive | building of the’Seamen’s Church In-| stitute, admits at once that less than | 1,000 of the 1,614 beds in the Insti- | tute “given” for seamen are now be-| ing used. The rest stand empty, he explained, because jobless seamen can’t afford 35¢ a night to pay for the lodging. “They're sleeping out in Battery | Park and Jeanette Park here now,” | he stated, as he displayed dorm # ory | after dormitory with double decker jiron beds, all empty because no sea- man is allowed in the bedrooms be- tween 8 am. and 8 p.m. But more| than a third of the beds are empty | all night, too, because no seaman who ‘has been long on the beach) can possibly have 35¢ in his pocket | terms urged by Bradley and the/ bosses. During the afternoon the | Shipowners, Morgan, Rockefeller, SELL him a pair, so they made him pay for trousers that had been do- nated to the seamen as part of the Telief Campaign. The Marine Work- ers Industrial Union organized a committee to go with this seaman and demand his bag for him. Cuts Off Relief “Yes, 500 were on our relief lists this winter,” the smug cop continued. “But we have cut it down to only 100 and will probably cut off even that much very shortly. We can't afford to continue this relief.” Can’t afford? What about those empty beds? What about the food in the store rooms? What about the remaining $80,000 of the $100,000 fund | raised by the Joint Emergency Com- | mittee of the Seaman's Welfare) Agencies? | As the Marine Workers Industrial Union stated in its leaflet headed “GUILTY,” the Seamen’s Church In- “Gave” the Institute Who is back of this Institute that} stitute is guilty of raising funds for. relief in our name and then with-| general strike committee formulated | boasts of “serving” from 8,000-to 12,-/ |holding that relief. Food is there in| new compromise cents per hundred dozen for submis sion to a general meeting of the strik- | ers Saturday night. were decisively rejected at the meet- ing after three hours of heated dis- | cussion. Oust Compromizing Committee | The Adams mill committee, which | alone favored the compromise was, | fired by the workers and a new | terms of $2.12%| committee standing for continued | struggles was elected. Highland Cotton Mill workers, numbering 100, joined the strike. — | The workers have curtailed the power of Bradley, instructing him} to issue no more statements to the | press without the approval of the | strikers, but refusing to accept his resignation. The Chamber of Commerce, Min- isters’ Alliance, city officials and po- | lice are meeting to review the: situa- | tion and. determine upon action to smash the stubborn resistance of the | workers, The wide distribution of the Daily Worker Friday was a great factor in stiffening the resistance of the strikers. D. V. Bradley, strike chairman, took steps toward the betrayal of the strike Friday by urging “com- plete law observance” as justification for the police efforts to prevent all gatherings of strikers, In calling a meeting of the strik- ers Friday to consider the bosses’ terms, which were the July 11 scale ($2 per hundred dozen, as against | the workers’ demand for $2.25 per hundred dozen), Bradley said: “The time has come for a complete state- ment of the progress made in nego- | tiations for better wages and condi- | tions for workers now off their jobs and for some action of a positive | sort.” : This made clear Bradley’s efforts to force the strikers to accept the | July 11 scale. The papers speak openly of collaboration between Bradley and “local interests” to set- tle the strike because of fear of the | entrance of’ “Communist elements.’ Guard Adams Mills Workers. Strikers at the Adams mill at-} tempted to prevent the unloading of | machinery at the Adams hosier mill, but were scattered by the police and the machinery was unloaded. At the High Point Overall Factory the workers were prevented from joining the strike by police after a strike vote was taken. Police scattered the pickets and Police Sergeant Samuels, former silk mill owner, addressed the strikers and ordered them to stay on the job. One hundred struck; three hundred remained “under the pro- tection of a police shotgun squad. -Lawrence Hogan, United Textile Workers’ Union organizer, and sey- eral of his allies, described as “con- tributors to radical publications,” ar- rived here Saturday unmolested by the cops. Calls were distributed by the strik- ers urging the sending of delegates to the State Nominating Convention of the Communist Party to be held in Charlotte July 31 where steps will be taken to file candidates for all state offices and begin a stick cam~- paign for Foster and Ford who were denied a place on the North Caro- lina ballot, Bradley's role as a betrayer of the strike was furthey shown Saturday in a statement which he sent to all lo- cal papers advising the strikers to accept the bosses terms and return to work, The local press states, “As Brad- ley's proposals were presented police were organized following the reports that a large minority (read majority) would refuse to return to their posts declining to accept the will of the majority should it agree on resump- tion of work.” This shows clearly the collaboration of the bosses, police and Bradley to break the strike. jin this Seamen’s Church Institute. |ley’s statement: |000 “worthy” sailormen every day | |with its 260 employees? The magni- ficent building was given by some! owners in the United States, among them John D. Rockefeller, through | his Standard Oil Co., J. P. Morgan, through the United States Steel| Corp, the Berwinds, owners of coal| mines and shipping lines, such as the | Agwi (Atlantic-Golf-We st Indies | Line), and the owners of the Barber | Steamship Lines, Inc. | Standard Oil owns the Standard Shipping Co. and a fleet of oil tank-| ers; U. S. Steel Corp. owns the Is-} thmian Steamship Line, 29 steamers in overseas trade, 78 on the Great Lakes and 15 in river trade. of| |course, the shipowners are interested | Doesn't it aim to take the fight out of the sailors, convert them to| Christianity, baptize them and make them nice, docile, submissive servants of the capitalists? Doesn't it reward them when they are “worthy” good boys and throw them out or arrest them when they object to the pious atmosphere of the place and its dis- crimination against foreign-born non- Christian sailors? Didn't it help De- portation Doak and the U. S. Depart- ment of Labor to arrest a score of foreign-born seamen to be deported? “Yes, 80 per cent of our seamen are American-born,” boasts the pub- | licity director, “and only 20 per cent of them are foreign-born. That is because America is encouraging her shipping interests and of course we want to encourage the American sail- ors first.” This is the way they “encouraged” one seaman this week. He had I:ft his bag in the Institute's checking | room when he shipped out some week’s ago. On returning to New) York he wanted to get at his things, but the Institute told him he could not. He had no trousers to change to. The Institute told hint they would “I want to see us end the strike as an orderly group... There is danger also of the breaking down of our own spirit in this loose organization of ours so that radical and dangerous advisors can get in their work,” Bradley's advice to return to work was made in face of the bosses’ re- fusal to grant the workers’ demands for the April 1 scale. The bosses, fur- thermore, Bradley admits, will in- vestigate the wage scale in other cities in Tennessee and North Caro- lina and he agrees to notify the workers a week in advance if cuts |men’s Church Institute, the Ins the Institute, but they will only sell lit, not give it. Beds are vacant. They are not occupied because the Institute hese terms| of the wealthiest exploiters and bea ley to make a profit out of its jotel and restaurant. over $230,000 was taken in by the \hotel and laundr ry, according to the financial report, and over $110,000 by the restaurant. The Institute ad- | mits that it makes profits out of certain departments when it states | that it does not expect to make prof- it out of the serving of the 10 cent meals, After the Marine Workers Indus- trial Union held its trial of the Se: tute suddenly served ice-cream with the next 10-cent meal! ‘It is on the defensive now and is trying to quiet the anger of the jobless seamen, ly- | ing on uncomfortable park benches jand thinking of the 600 more un- jused beds up at the “Prostitute.” \Institute Guarded by Stool-Pigeons and Cops—Religion Flourishes This charity racket run by the mip| owners is like a joint company union, | the “welfare” work conducted by sev- eral shipping lines together, Like all such “welfare,” it con only be carried on with the help of company guards | and special policemen. About 50 of these cops guard the building, while | additional stool pigeons report to the managers any “discontent” expressed hy the seamen. On the doors of the fire-escap2 stairways a sign states that anyone | found on the stairway will be subject icion | 5 so “suspicion and arrest.” Sus] and arrest are words that well des- cribe the attitude and actions of the ship owners’ represen toward any organized efforts of the seamen vhemselves. While relief is denied, the chapel, | however, is flour with three well-paid clergymen in charge. While workers starve, the Institute is rais- | ing money to pay for stained-glass memorial windows in the chapel at $5,000, for a sanctuary and chancel at another $5,000 and for chapel! chairs at $50 each. | For the price of one chapel chair, $50, a jobless seaman could spend 143 | nights in-one of those empty beds. M.W.LU. Organizing Against Charity | Racket The only organization fighting} against the ship owners and their agents—organizing t! united front o fthe employed and unemployed for joint struggle against the ship owners is the Marine Workers Industrial | Union, It urges the seamen to or-| ganize and put an end to these con- ditions, to force relief from the In- are necessary to maintain “competi- tive average” wages. TICKETS NOW READY! Reasons shown further in Brad- stitute and the bosses, to unite and tight. 14,000 IN SWEDEN SCOTTSBORO MEET Norrkopping Workers Hail Mrs. Wright NORRKOPING, Sweden, July 24 (By Radio) —Four thousand textile rs met in a militant Scottsboro | pr ‘otest demonstration. The size of the meeting and the | vigor of the masses was even greater. |than the great May Day demonstra- {tion held here nearly three months ago. The police made several arrests, but, notwithstanding their attack, the; | workers paraded through the streets! en masse after the meeting, demand- ing freedom for the Scottsboro boys. This is the latest stop in the grand Scottsboro European tour of Mrs. Ada Wright, mother of two of the Scotts- boro boys, and J. Louis Engdahl, secretary of the I. L.D. At Ljustero, | Vaesteros and Stockholm, and in| scores of cities in Norway and in the| other European countries which the tour has covered, test resolutions were adopted and} sent to the American consulates and embassies and to the Alabama and United States officials. WORKERS PRAISE DAILY'S DRIVE! |“Finest Newspaper” Says One NEW YORK, July 24—As the Daily Worker mass circulation drive; enters its second week, scores of let-{ ters are pouring in from workers all over the country, bearing testimony to the Daily's importance in their struggles. Hundreds of workers who have never read the Daily Worker before are writing in to say that their con- tact with this paper has opened new worlds of thought and action to them. Below we print a few typical letters which should spur on every class conscious worker in putting over the |Daily Worker campaign for 30,000 new readers by November 1. From Pillage, Minn., C. M. Mason writes “Enclosed you will find a dollar to renew our subscription. We have taken the DAILY since the first issue was published and we could not get along without it even though we are w in paying. Not a copy is | wane as they are all passed on to others as soon as read.” | Northwest Miners to Hold Annual Rally MESABA RANGE—On July 30th | and 31st the National Miners Union Mesaba' Range Subdistrict is holding its annual festival or picinic, called Miners Day, at Mesaba Park, There will be a good dance on Sat- night at the Park Payilion, ion, ladies 15 cents and men s. On Sunday there will be speeches, prgoram, good food rved all w Everybody is welcome to come and have a good time. Baogalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season Several very nice rooms and bungalows for rent for the summer season. Beauti- ful farm in Eastern Pennsylvania, 50 miles from Philadelphia. Running water, clectricity, swimming, fishing, ete. Rea- sonable rates, Communicate with Tom Jessor, April Farm, Coopersburg, Pa. WHEN GOING ON YOUR VACATION VISIT —— THE RELIABLE FIRM — DOREVA, Inc. 152-154 BOWERY (Near Broome St.) UNDERSELLS ALL ‘This firm sells everything In the men’s Ine, Also Raincoats, Windbreakers, Shoes, Boots, Bags and Trunks at the lowest prices in the city. Drop in and convince yourself, Comrades and —Sympathixers! PATRONIZE A FIRM THAT PATRONIZES OUR RED PRESS MASS ORGANIZATIONS Have Your Own Picnic With Us! DISCOUNTS TO ORGANIZATIONS! 250 Tickets . +ee+-20 — Cents Each 500 Tickets ... ++++-15 Cents Each 750 Tickets .... +....12% Cents Each 1000 Tickets ............... 10 Cents Each Tickets at Gate Will Be 35 Cents Deily,cilorker PICN AUGUST 21st, 1932 Pleasant Bay Park IC iWIVS NO MON SLAMOLL

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