The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 28, 1932, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1932 © Page Three Workers! What Is Your Reply to the Socialist Swindle? Socialist “American Freeman” Stole William Z. Foster’s Acceptance Speech; Distorted It, Substituted “Socialist” tor Communist in Vote-Catching Move for S. P. “American Freeman” Revealed As Recognized Socialist Organ The Milwaukee Leader, which boasts that it is “the only socialist daily in the United States,” and is one of the chief organs of the Socialist Party, recognizes | lished it in its June 11 issue. @ co-worker, “The Amer- ican Free. man.” ‘Thad ms 0/8 Publication, ran by the THE MILWAUKEE LEADER, notorious ‘es2 BIGINGREASE journalism, E. Halder- worn out: IN SOCIALIST us, is placed by the Mil- waukee P Leader at the head of Rapid th in Socialist sentl-) ei ie et mist'is erideneed in the recent 30- “socialist crease in Soctalist publications, ac- publica. cording to the national party office tions.” report, just made public. 5 Thirty-seven daily, weekly and| | Tt was monthly publications, in response to] | this Social- ® questionnaire sent out from par-| | ist Party ty offices, classed themselves as) » ; Socialist newspapers, an increase of| P ublication, in| 3 “The Am- erican Free- ‘ man,” pub. Hy lished at Fy ae, oe Rsnees |! Mite son, ounce af] paragraphs ‘American Boclallst_ Quarterly, .Now from Com- rade Fos- aA Speech at the Chicago nominating convention jand substituted “socialist” for Communist and pub- It is such plagiarists, who steal parts of our cam= paign material, in an effort to make their policy LOOK as much like the Communist program, in order to try to keep workers from following our revolutionary standard, that the Socialist Party puts forward as leading candidates. The publisher of the “American Freeman” is socialist candidate for United States senator in Kansas, Spread the Exposure! The exposure published in the DAILY WORKER yesterday is being published as a leaflet in hun- dreds of thousands of copies. We want our readers GERMAN RED FRONT IS READY Answer Communist Call for Mass De- fense Corps (By Inprecorr Cable) BERLIN, July 27—A motor lorry with 25 uniformed Nazis was stopped by the police at Coepenick on the outskirts of Berlin, Four army pis- tols, 75 rounds of ammunition, re- volvers and 25 other weapons were found in the lorry. All the Nazis were taken by the political police to Berlin. Eleven anti-fascists were summar- ily sentenced to one week’s impris- onment for distributing general strike leaflets. One anti-fascist worker was sentenced to two months to help circulate this leaflet. We want our readers to help bring this evidence of Socialist Party decep- tion and treachery to millions of workers and poor farmers. We want this leaflet distributed at every Socialist Party meeting from now until November. The price of this leaflet will be Twenty-five Cents per Hundred and Two Dollars per Thousand; in lots of five thousand or more one dollar and seventy-five cents per thousand. Order from the National Campaign Committee, P. 0. Box 148, Sta- tion D, New York City. Send in your order TODAY! FORGERY USED TO CONCEAL CRASHES Police Cry ‘Reds Did It’ (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Bankers, Lewiston, Auburn Workers Ground in Capitalist Mill of Wage-Cuts, Forced Labor $6 to $8 a Week for 10-Hour Day Received in Shoe and Textile Plants newspapermen that “a nationwide plot to destroy public confidence in banks had been in operation for many weeks, Traylor did not say whether similar “plots” caused nearly 600 banks to go on the rocks from Jan. 1 to April, 1932. The “plot” is rounded out by cer- tain details given by the police which fit the picture to perfection. Warned by his “confederate,” the mythical “agent” disappeared, conveniently leaving for the perusal of the police a number of unmailed letters which purport to give the authorities the inside details of the fiendish plot against the banks—scores of which have been failing with increasing tempo during the past months as the capitalistic economic structure shook under the heavy blows of the crisis. Any doubt that the story cooked up by the police isa concoction from staré to finish is dispelled by an ex- aminntion of the letters which au- thor‘iles claim to have found in the room vacated by the vague “Row- Jang.” Obvious Forgery. Addiressed to “Comrade H. G.,” the letter reads: “F¢l ‘owing your instructions to me, 3 am writing to give you as clear a picture as possible of our campaign against the banks in this district. You know it is a slow proposition to get people steamed up over a run. However, your telephone program seems to be working out fine. “We note here with great satisfac- tion that you are making consider- able progress in Pontiac and that you are taking a good crack at the one jug which is there, the First National.” It\is interesting to note that the word \ “jug” is an underworld term for bank and would be a normal part ef the police vocabulary—another in- dication that the letter in a rank forgery. * A Dick Tries His Hand. Another bit of internal evidence to prove the letters a pure concoction is the second paragraph of the letter: “I did not have much trouble in convincing the Agitation Propaganda Bureau that this was important work and that the sooner we strip the petty-bourgeois and the white collar stiffs of his faith in banks the sooner we will bring about the un- rest that will lead to the revolution.” The reference to the “Agitation Propaganda Bureau” is a police yer- ‘sion of the Agitprop Department of the Communist Party and a provo- cateur attempt to link the mysteri- ous “Rowland” with the Party. Seek to Cover Steals, This campaign “against the Reds” cignificantly follows the wave of in- dignation which spread throughout the country following the “loan” of 000,000 by Charles G, Dawes from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in order to bolster up hs sagging Chicago bank, The pub- } UU icity given the present forgery in he entire capitalist press is in direct ntrast to the almost complete lence which followed this “deal.” The fact that the bankers and Ineir police find it necessary to re- rt to the traditional methods of) ; endless wage-cuts and forced labor shoe and textile workers in Lewiston US. ARMY ORDERS RECRUITING DRIVE Workers to Answer War-Makers Aug. 1 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the two-week annual active duty period. Thie new war polity was initiated secretly Jast week. Load Japan Munitions on Delaware. Philadelphia workers report _in- creasingly frequent calls by Japanese freighters at Delaware River ports for munitions and other war supplies for Japan for use in its present robber war against China and its growing |war drive against the Soviet Union. These freighters often anchor near the Franklin ‘Sugar Refinery, so as to deceive the workers of Philadelphia as to their real mission. They later take on their death dealing loads at other piers and at docks near the many chemical plants along the Delaware River, While helping to arm the Japan- ese militarists, the Wall Street Gov- ernment is also rushing repairs of |submarines, torpedo boats, cruisers, armored battleships at the Philadel- phia Navy Yard. ‘Throughout the country on August First, American workers will answer these criminal war preparations with tremendous, militant anti-war dem- onstrations, > # «@ LAWRENCE, Mass., July 27.—Tex- tile and other workers of Lawrence, suffering intense poverty and starva- tion, will demonstrate on the South Lawrence Common (O'Connell Field) on August First. Many mills in Lawrence are al- ready working on war orders. Mayor White has shamelessly declared “We Ought to Have Another War.” The bosses and their prostitute press are Spreading the lying propaganda that war, with its wholesale slaughter and mass misery, “will bring back pros- perity.” The workers of Lawrence will answer the bosses’ war‘and hun- ger program with a militant fight for unemployment relief, social insur- ance, cash payment of the veterans’ bonus, defense of the Chinese people and the Soviet Union and the stop- Ping of the production and shipment of munitions to Japan, ASKS 3-YEAR MORATORIUM ON DEBTS BUENOS AIRES, July 27—A mo- ratorium of three years on all for- eign debts was asked by the gov- ernor of the Santa Fe Province from the Legislature, which is expected to comply with the request. tet nie AIEEE ALOR eee SON forgery shows the desperateness with which they are operating in order to Cover up Hoover's discredited Recon- struction Finance Corporation, By LOUIS HINDUS. Protracted unemployment, chronic part-time work, fearful speed-up, Welfare Board—these are the conditions that are facing the eight thousand information gathered in my two-day stay in the twin cities of the Pine ‘Tree Se A ae Do ee ee an Te of une mployed workers by the City and Auburn, Maine, according to the “Six, seven, eight dollars a week— this is all we get for a 10-hour day of work,” said a young shoe worker to me whom I met in the City Com- mon. “What can you do?” he asked in answer to my question why the work- ers stand for these conditions. “We are helpless, we have no organization, no union and never had any.” A middle-aged weaver, sitting on another bench in the park, related a| story of fearful speed up and endless wage-cuts in the Lewiston cotton mills. He said that besides the three wage cuts in the last 18 months which amounted to 40 per cent, every weaver is made to run 35 and some~ times 40 looms for $12.50 a week, working 10 hours a day. | And strangely enough these brutally exploited textile workers declared that he is “lucky to get that,” as al- most half of the textile workers are unemployed and the rest are work- ing part time, and few only work full time, and they are absolutely helpless, because they have never had any union, Forced Labor. An unemployed worker told the writer of another gruesome story of forced labor of the unemployed by the City Welfare Béard. He said that unemployed workers with large fam- ilies get five dollars a week in gro- cery checks which entitles them to buy only bread, potatoes, beans, lard, canned milks and eggs when they are only 10 cents a dozen—and nothing else. And for this slop “relief” they are forced to work for the city five days a week, thereby replacing the regular employed city workers who used to get between $3.50 and $4.00 @ day. When these exasperated dis- charged workers went to the City Hall in Lewiston to protest against this arbitrary rule of the politicians, the entire police force, which was mobil- ized from both cities, broke up this Spontaneous demonstration, A few young energetic TUUL or- ganizers of French Canadian descent (90% of the workers of Lewiston and Auburn are French speaking Canad- ians) should be sent there to organ- ize the employed and unemployed workers for a struggle against the miserable conditions imposed upon them by the bosses and their hench- men, the politicians, who lyingly deny that there is misery in the twin city and in the entire state of aMine, BUFFALO AUGUST 1st ACTIONS BUFALO, July 27.—Angi-war dem- onstrations here on August First will be held in the following locations: Black Rock Market, Broadway and Market, heart of the Polish workers’ section at 6:30 p. m,, at Broadway Auditorium, in the center of the Negro section at 6:30 p.m. At 12 o'clock noon there will be a demon. stration in front of the Crosby plant, Williams Street, which is producing war munitions, There will also be and another to three months’ im- prisonment for spreading general strike propaganda, The Communist Party issued a telegram to all Communists and anti-fascists, calling them to be ready for alarm at any moment. The so- cial-democrats are trying to destroy the united front. The Communist Party pointed out the necessity of mobilizing all toilers in factories and labor exchanges in the anti-fascist front against fascist surprise at- tacks. The appeal of the Communist Party further stated the election must show that millions are against fascism. Mass defense corps must be organized, the appeal declared, pointing out that mass action is the best weapon and that no individual terror must be resorted to, The greater the masses evidencing allegi- ance to Communism, the more dif- ficult it will be for the fascist rulers to execute their reactionary program of banning the Communist Party. 7 8 6 Call for Reorganized Army. BERLIN, July 27—The Federal decree ending the military rule estab- lished in Prussia was followed by an appeal of the Deputy Commissioner of Prussia to the police not to hesi- tate to use guns against workers fighting back the terroristic drive of the fascist storm detachments, In a radio address, General Von Schleicher, Minister of National De- fense, stated that the reorganization of the army is essential to increase its efficiency without consideration for the limitation imposed upon Ger- many by the treaty of Versailles. SOUTH CHI. STEEL DEMANDS RELIEF To March to Ill. Steel Corp. Friday SOUTH CHICAGO.—On July 29 the steel workers, unemployed and part-time employed, will march to the Illinois Steel Corporation to pre- sent their demands for relief. Hun- ger marchers, with their families, will assemble at 93rd and Burley at 1 p.m. The hunger marchers will march through the following streets: North on Burley to 90th St.; West on 80th St. to Escanaba Ave.; north on Es- canaba Ave. to 83rd St.; East on 83rd St. to Houston Ave. (1 block from Burley); south on Houston Ave. to Baker Ave.; south on Baker to 85th; east on 85th to Burley Ave.; south on Burley Ave. to 91st; east on 91st St. to Greenbay Ave.; north on Greenbay Ave. to 90th. At 90th and Gren Bay a committee will be elected to present the fol- lowing demands to the officials of the Illinois Steel Corporation: 1. $10 for each married man and $2 additional for each dependent. 2. $7 for each single man. 3. Minimum 4 days’ work per week or cash relief equal to 4 days’ pay. 4. Return of 25 per cent wage- cut. MANY JERSEY TOWNS JOIN. NEWARK, N, J., July 27—New Jersey workers will answer the war preparations of the bosses with giant anti-war demonstrations on August First in the following towns: Newark, at the Military Park at 6 p. m. Elizabeth, at Union Square at 7 p.m. Hillside, at Gurd and Silver at 7 p.m. Perth Amboy, at Eliza- beth St and Hall Avenue at 7 p. m. Carteret, at the Workers Home, 307 Romanovsky Street, at 7:30 p. m. Paterson, at Grand and Mills Sts., at 6. p. m, Passaic, at First Ward Park, near Essex St., at 6 p. m. Hoboken, at 6th and Washington, at 7 p. m. Other demonstrations are bryg Prepared in New Brunswick, Triton, dersey City and Bayonne. BANK SAYS “NO SOCIALISM” IN CHILE ‘The Central Sank of Chile admit- ted that the much celebrated “so- cialist” coupe d'etat did no alter the @ demonstration at Lackawana, Rohe jlehem steel town, at 7. p.m, ‘| id Political or economical situation of the country, a dispatch from Santi- ago stated yesterday, y U. S. FACES HUGE LOSS IN TRADE Dominions Try Ban Soviet Products The Imperial Economic Conference | at Ottawa, Canada, yesterday devel-| oped a sharp attack all along the line against American export trade with the British Empire, Under pro- posals offered by the Canadian Gov- ernment, the United States stands to lose most of its more than $250,000,- 900 export trade with Canada as a result of the sharpening trade war between England and America. Similer proposals, favoring British products, are expected from the other British dominions, and from the British ruling clique in India and other British colonies. J The governments of Canada, Aus- tralia and New Zeland made a de- mand for an embargo on the products of the Soviet Union, principally wheat and timber. The British delegation is opposing this demand in view of the revenues derived by England from her increasing export trade to the Soviet Union, which is the only crisis and affords a large market be- cause of its successful, gigantic so- cialist construction. The British del- egation met the demands of the do- minions with concessions to buy their meat at the expense of Argentina. country not suffering from the world | Worker exposed the brazen political deception prac- ticed by the Socialist Party paper “The American Free- man.” In an effort to mislead the workers into voting for Thomas, this paper edited by the socialist candi- date for the U. S, Senate from the State of Kansas, | E. Haldemann-Julius, resorted to straight~out political | swindling. e The socialists published as their own, large sece | tions of the Acceptance Speech of William Z. Foster, | the Communist Presidential candidate, with “Socialist | Party” substituted thruout for Communist Party. They attempted to use this revolutionary speech to win votes in support of the anti-workingclass campaign of Nor- man Thomas and Maurer. Workers! WHAT DO YOU SAY OF THIS PO- LITICAL SWINDLE? Will Mr. Norman Thomas, with the characteristic method of the Socialist Party leaders, try to explain this away “as the usual Communist slander’? This, | he feebly tried to do in his own avticle in the “New | Leader” of July 23rd, with the Communist Vice-Pres- | ident candidate Ford’s recent exposure of his position | on the Negro Question, This they do more and more as they find themselves increasingly unable to answer | effectively the Communist unmasking of their pro- capitalist policies. Only two weeks ago, in the “New Leader” of July 16, in reply to what the editor admitted were “many requests from all over the nation...for answers to communist falsehoods (!), Wm. M. Feighenbaum de- clared: “When they (the Communists) slander (!) the Socialists assume that we are doing the right thing (!) and that their statements are false (!)— assume that the Socialists are right (!) until the ANTLUSSR AIM AT GORGULOV TRIAL White Guardists In Lying Testimony (Cable by Inprecorr) PARIS, July 27. — The Gorgulov trial today involved the police. Pietri, retired government minister, stated that the police guard for the assas- sinated French president Doumer was weak on the day of his murder. Po- lice Director Guichard defended the police. Guichard also denies that Mrs. Farrire, wife of a reactionary author, drew police attention to the suspici- ous behavior of Gorgulov before the shot was fired which killed Dou- mer. Dr. Logre, chief physician of the Prison Hospital, presented Gorgulov as actuated by exaltation arising out of his obsession of a mission, while several insanity experts pronounced Gorgulov fully responsible for his ac- tions on the day of the murder. Anti-Soviet war provocation feat- ured the second day of the trial in |Paris of Dr. Paul Gorgulov, white guardist assassin of the French pres- ident Doumer, as the French imper- jalists mobilized several witnesses in a vain attempt to establish a connec- tion between Gorgulov and the Soviet Government, The chief of these witnesses was | Ivan Lazaraff, himself a white guard and a former soldier of the forces of the Tsarist butcher, General Wrangel. Lazaraff “without hesita- tion” identified Gorgulov at the trial as “a Soviet agent” after previously failing to identify Gorgulov’s photo- graph among a number of others. Another white guardist named Rosnovsky inadvently queered Laza- Toft’s testimony by identifying Gor- gulov as a member of the “Green Russians” organization, an anti-So- viet organization. The white guard- ists and their French allies then at- tempted a magic conversion of the “Green Russians” organizations into a pro-Soviet body. But it did not work, ‘The government provided a num- ber of alienists most of whom were willing to swear to anything, includ- ing the insanity of Gorgulov, in line with the government's attempt to prevent the trial from involving the French official circles, and especially the head of the police whose action in leaving Doumer unguarded at pre- cisely the moment of Gorgulov’s at- tempt on his life has never been explained. The French Communist ‘paper “L’Humanite” is carrying on an energetic exposure of the trial. Arrest Mich. Negroes In New Terror Drive PONTIAC, Mich,, July 27.—Police in order to break the unity of Negro and white workers; arrested a Negro woman for going in to the house after the Unemployed Council had set her furniture back. Millise Williams, living at 7 Grant Btreet was evicted Tuesday, July 12, while she was out looking for a house workers mobilized in the neighbor- hood and set the furniture back in the house. Police latter arrested Williams on a charge of “entering without breaking.” { City wide mass meetings are being conducted protesting this terror, Can the Socialist Leaders Explain? Yesterday under the title “CAUGHT,” the Daily] contrary is proven.” In the same issue of the “New Leader,” the editor | himself has the following to say: “Never has there been such a barrage of sadist | falsehoods (!) from the Communist camp as in this campaign.” Alright, chieftains of the Social; the rank and file members of your to the American workers that t + Party, prove to tion, proye n deception br: Practiced by your colleagues of “The American Free- man” as exposed by the “Daily Worker” yesterday. is the “usual communist slander,” prove that our expose is a “sadist falsehood.” men! Prove your charges, geritle- Explain your deception to the workers! * * * The Daily Worker has exposed the “Am- erican Freeman” steal not merely as an ‘ex- ample of the particular rascality of E. Hal- demann-Julius, but because this typifies the demagogic methods employed in various forms by the Socialist Party in attempting class. |to present itself as a party of the working The Socialist Party is attempting to mas- querade as a “friend of Russia,” as favoring the class struggle, as seeking unemployment insurance, as favoring the abolition of eap- italism, ete., whereas in their day-to-day prac- tices and policies they are opposed to the Soviet Union, the class struggle, etc. Their demagogic song is a cover for their acts; the swindle by E. Haldemann-Julius is the same melody, sung in another ahd cruder key. | | Bankrupt Nanking May Suspend Payment on China’s Foreign Debts Collapse of Government Economy Hampers Butcher Gang’s Drive on Chinese Soviets eign debt payments, thereby deepen- ing the devastating world crisis of capitalism, The collapse of the Nanking gov- ernment economy is already creating’ great difficulties for the Nanking butchers in the financing of their fifth “Communist Suppression” cam- paign against the emancipated work- ers and peasants of the powerful Chinese Soviet Districts. “The financial condition of the Nan- king government, already severely shaken by the world crisis and the revolutionary upsurge of the Chinese masses, has been worsened by the Japanese seizure of the Manchurian customs revenues, thus diverting to Japanese imperialism the sum of $500,000 a month which formerly went, to the Nanking grafters. The Manchurian seizures repre- sent only one of the contributing fac- tors, however, as the July custom col- lections are estimated to total only 9,400,000 taels, (one tael about 40 cents) as against more than 19,000,000 in July last year. Foreign and do- mestic bond issues and amortization payments are dependent on the cus- toms receipts. So, in large measure are the Nanking subsidy bribes to the various regional war lords to main- tain their mercenary allegiance to the Nanking Government. In addition, Nanking difficulties are increasing by reason of the growing refusal of the peasants to pay the ta extortions, re- sulting in agrarian revolts and the spread of the Chinese Soviets, BANKS GETTING HOOVER RELIEF Jobless Would Get $20 [f Fund Were Divided WASHINGTON, D. ©, July 27.— Another episode was added yester- day to the Hoover sham of “unem- ployment relief,” with the announce- ment that the Great Stationary En- gineer had appointed former Senator Atlee Fomerene of Ohio as one of the directors of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration has handed over hundreds of millions of dollars to banks, rail- roads and insurance companies. The Finance Corporation now has “available” $300,000,000 to be loaned to states for purposes of so-called “relief. work.” Even if the various States apply for the full $30,000,000 and even if all the $300,000,000 finds its way to the unemployed workers, which it certainly won't, every un- employed worker will get exactly $20 and the part-time workers will get nothing to tide them over the worst crisis in the history of capitalism. “Towards Soviet America” by Wm. Z, Foster—$1.25—an elgzora- } tion of the platform of the Com- The workers must continue to fight for unemployment insurance at the expense of the employers and the ste" Servers nan: orremroe The bankruptcy of Nanking government economy will most likely force Kuomintang China to default on its foreign debt payments, it was admitted yesterday by T. V. Soong, Nanking Minister of Finance and brother-in-law of the Wall Street butcher, Chiang Kai-shek. In this, China, will join an increasingly large procession of bankrupt capitalist governments who al- ready have defaulted on their for-@ Hosiery Workers Refuse Pay-Cut Strikers Solid for Original Demands (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) to accept the mill bosses’ proposal that the workers be put on the July Seale of $2 per hundred dozen. The strikers are holding out for the April scale, $2.25 per hundred dozen. Committees of strikers met with! the mill owners yesterday to discuss the settlement of the strike. The ar-| rangement for the meeting-was made | by Bradley, head of the strike com- mittee who has been doing all he can to settle the strike before “radi-| cal influences gain a footing among the ranks of the strikers.” The early papers here announced | that the meeting would result in a! compromise settlement, but the later | Papers were forced to admit that the rank and file of the workers remained | solid for their original demands. | Will Continue Strike The workers declared that they will | continue the strike until all the de-| mands are granted. | Strikers told the mill owners that they can starve easier on their back | porches than while wouking in the, mills at starvation wages. A large number of leaflets were dis- tributed among the strikers by the National Textile Workers Union call- ing on the workers to continue the | good fight and spread the strike to other mills. Mt. Airy Strike Stormy | Over 400 furniture workers striking | at Mt. Airy continue their successful picketing of the mill. These workers have refused all compromise offers of | the mill owners. | Intensify the mass struggle | against the production of war | materials, and against the trans- port of arms and ammunition! VETERANS FORCE OUSTER RECALL | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) |men in the billets, decided to val! off | the attack. | The police court trial of Pace and the eight veterans arrested in Mon- day’s picket demonstration at the ;Sates of the White House was post- poned at the request of the govern- jment yesterday. Pace and two vets |in a hearing on another charge of parading without a permit, was sen- tenced to pay a $40 fine. The later case is being appealed by attorneys! of the International Labor Defense. } Attorneys for the International La- |bor Defense demanded that bail be | Set for all the men arrested in Mon- |day’s demonstration. Pace to Speak in New York Pace, who is chairman of the Rank and File Committee of the bonus army, is to speak at a mass meeting | of veterans and workers on Union Sq. |in New York on Saturday evening |at 5 o'clock. Stember, another leader jof the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s Lea- | gue will also speak at this meeting, More Vets Arrive | More groups are reported to be on the way to the capital from various sections of the ountry. The Workers Ex-servicemen’s Leae gue and the Rank and File Commit- tee are preparing for further demons strations to demand an extra session of Congress to pass the bonus bill. Plans are being made also to rally the bonus army men to a big anti- war demonstration to be held’ in Washington. Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season ‘al very nice rooms and bungalows t for the summer season. Beauti- ful farm in Eastern Pennsylvania, 50 miles from Philadelphia, Running water, slectricity, swimming, fishing, ete. Rea- sonable rates. Communicate with Tom Jessor, April Farm, Coopersburg, Pa, Avanta Farm ULSTER PARK, NEW YORK WORKERS KECREATION PLACE RATES: $12.00 and $10.00 Located one-half mile from station Fresh milk, improved chickens f ing for guests, DIRECTIONS:—West Shore train, For week-ends $3.75 round trip. By moter: Albany 9W Route. By bus: Capito) rminal. By steamboat to Kingston to Ulster Park 220 by train, RAISE FUNDS! BUILD 52 Issues $2 NAMIE oocccccccrccces. OHI .reccvresccceserererevens THE WESTERN WORKER A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West’ 26 Issues $1 Western Worker Campaign Committee | 1164 MARKET STREET, San Francisco, Calif. : IT! SUBSCRIBE NOWL 13 Issues 50c vee Street ., ve State visseesere

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