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Page Twe DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MAY 25, 19 33 Against Forced Labor C BARRI THE STORY THUS FAR: The Wedding, in Berlin, demonstrate May the Socialist Police Chief, Zoergiebel. tacked by the police. A carricade is erected, which is al Shortly after 4 o'clock the decisive | attack was made. Eight closed taxis drove at great speed one behind the} other straight up to the barricades. | The s near the Nettelbeckplaz | had allowed the taxis to pass in good| faith Before the workers on the barri-| cades could take cover policemen in plain clothes jumped out of the cars} and opened a furious fire on the al-| ley. They drove forward at the point| of the revolver the thirteen workers| who had fallen into their hands, and compelled them to tear down the bar- ricades. The prisoners were used as/ cover against the shots of the work-| e During the first attack Kurt had @ small revolver—a mere toy in his| large hands. Nevertheless he had| felt he s not left completely help- less. Now, when he put his hands/ in his pocket he discovered to his de- | spair that he had lost it when carry- ing rafters for the barricades. There | was no possibility of replacing it. All the swearing in the world would not help. But at any rate he could put) up a bluff—‘And that gang,” he/ thought “is terrified even of blanks.” | So he knelt down in the middle of} the empty street and taking a pile of imeendiary caps from his Licey | placed one after the other carefully | tone. | . it made quite a nice bang! | The next one—peng . He was soon an expert in detoning the cap by hitting a small stone. Now e or four of the small t pfffee ... ff bonc! The ts of the police whistled around | They took the: flashes of ts and fired furiously Lead squirted on to} IN BERLIN BY KLAUS MEWERANTZ WLUSTRATED BY WALTER @UIRT Scottsboro Meet in | Harlem Tonight to Aid Trial Defense CADES Printed by Special Pormis | NEW YORK.—A mass meeting will sion of INTERNATIONAL be held ton Phillip: PUBLISHERS, 381 Fourth Church, 134th St., between Seventh and Eighth Aves., in connection with the coming hearings of Roy ight and Eugene Williams, youngest of s, in Decatur, Ala., on June 1. The ing is organized by Negro and white school teacher: under the auspices of the National Scottsboro Action Committee. Speakers will be William L. Patter- son, national secret: of the LL.D. and Bernhard Stern of the New School for Social Research. The So- viet movie, “Fragment of an Empire,” will be shown as a special feature. Avenee, New York City. All Workers are urged to reed this book and spread it among their friends. workers of the proletarian district, Day, 1929, despite the ban issued by The workers’ demonstration is at- iso attacked by the police. . the barricade. The most important position of the workers had thus been lost without resistance through this cunning man- oeuvre. Following the exposure of the at- tempt of William Davis of the Am- sterdam News to cripple the Scotts- boro March to Washington, the Na- * tional Scottsboro Action Committtee today made public the names of Kurt felt his way through the dark) those members of the Committee ex- passage to the stairs. Suddenly his) netted for attempting io disrupt the hand came in contact with the warm | jyo>on. soft face of a girl shrinking from his| "These are J. Dalmus Steele and touch. ‘The unexpected contact af-| seward L. Virgil. Steele is ‘mayor of fected them both with a curious hos-| Harlem,” a title without office given tile sensation. In the midst of this! him by Tammany Hall henchmen cold solitude there was suddenly the) virgil is a member of the Afro-Pro- warm closeness of a human bo tective League of Brooklyn, and sub- body, generalized, without individual-| stituted for Rev. Harten of the ‘Trin. ity—it did not matter whose it was—/ ity Church on the Scottsboro Action but for the fraction of a second this) Committee. Large sums are due to sensation begot a fleeting sadness.) the IL.D. from the Afro-Protective which at the same time wakened the senses. money was collected by the League At this moment, Kurt saw the} from Negro workers presumably for coming events of tomorrow for the|the International Labor Defense. first time calmly and relentlessly. He = Sy a ee aM had been too much in the middle of| N.Y.U. Students’ Hopes Slim the fighting to have any other desire . } ii than that of a machine-gun and an for Jobs After Graduation unending bullet belt. He had entirely forgotten the significance of the po-| R he immed 1 litical starting point of these events.| @!y hopes of the New York Univer- But now everything returned—and| sity seniors have dwindied to the with inescapable clavity, | point where they expect to be earn- | For a quarter of an hour everything | !& no salary by gts ae had been at a standstill. The alley|St@duating of this year, a poll o outside was silent and deserted and| the uptown graduating class revealed. in darkness. Not a footstep was to| This class includes the College of be heard, not a door creaked. Silent|Atts and Pure Sciences, attended and invisible faces gazed everywhere| mainly by sons of middle-class par- | into the darkness: on landings and| €Xts who before the crisis had plenty stairs the people stood—and waited.| of connections to place their sons af- It was as if a human being suddenly | ter graduation. Previously these sen- | holds his breath for fear of not hear-| tors had said they would be earning ing something. But all was quiet, un-| 4M average of $30 weekly immediately bearably ffuiet. If only they would | @fter graduation. begin shooting again. NEW YORK.—The immediate sal- League headed by Rev. Harten. This | break,” the girl said calmly as she | leaned back against the wall. | “Of course they will.” | Kurt was still standing in front of | her without either being able to see the other. It was soothing to hear this calm somewhat deep voice. For a moment he had almost believed that it was Anna he had touched. Who could tell where she was at this | moment? It was extraordinary how | little he was concerned about it now. Perhaps he would have been more anxious if she had stayed in the al- ley. For those outside everything was | finished—one way or the other. The girl's yofce was vaguely familiar. He was too tired to think more about it. It was of no importance. On the landing above them a door opened and subdued voices were heard. Then slow, careful steps moved down the stairs as if they were carrying someone. “That will be Otto,” the girl said. “His mother does not know anything yet. She was told he had been sent out as a courier.” A torchlight flashed through the passage and shortly afterwards a The prisoners were used as cover st the shots of the workers. e nts right and left, but t sat by himself in the middle of and let off caps. It was r more they shot, the like a wilder he became. The alley was such! stretcher was carried round the cor-| a pitch black hole that he could only! ner, As they crossed the yard to- be hit by sheer accident. wards the back door leading to the He did not notice that) Panke, a window was opened. Some- he hed bleck wounds of burns/one leaned out and then closed it on both of his hands. He noticed| again, since it was too dark to see but that it banged) anything. The bearers of the wound- | never he hit. The main thing was| ed’ disappeared noiselessly ng, us long as he went on bang-/the back-yards. ine wouldn't dare to enter |had gone on all night. If the police should suc-| By ed in getting a firm stand at the] “See that you get away yourself entrance of the alley now, all would|S0mewhere through the back-yards be lost, not a soul would escape from | there,” Kurt said to the girl. He got the mouse tra |mo answer—she had gone. Curious. use trap. | Hi “egg .| He did not even know whom he had After a quarter of an hour the po: spoken to. lice withdrew with their prisoners| from the half-destroyed barricade, DAWN... but only so far that they could still! “Bergen, why haven't those reports ki the alley under fire from the| arrived yet?” 3 of the Wiesen-| to six, sit.” As he answered the po- pistols hammered | lice president, the official was trying through Stretcher-bearing | chair. | standing in front of him. They were | directly connected with the police Get the Daily, ciorker DELIVERED To Your Home | The larve comfortably furnished |room, in which the president con- tinued his uneasy pacing up and | strange atmosphere of a sleepless night, intensified to an unbearable isolated uncertainty. He had paused to subdued voices of the guards who had been ‘stationed for the last few days in his villa in Zehlendorf. He would have loved to put on the wire- less or play the gramophone if only to have some noise to break the unbearable silence and to shorten the night. ‘The official in the armchair was asleep again. (TO BE CONTINUED) Every Mornine! | Marine Union to Stage Huge Anti-War Festival in workers, fishermen, sailors, longshore- men and other harbor workers will attend the second annual conven- tion of the Marine Workers Indus- trial Union here in July, In preparation for the convention, the union chas arranged to stage a | MAIL THIS AD TODAY! DAILY WORKER fo East 15th 8t., New York, N. Y. Please livered | Park Stadium on June 21, A gala program of sports, theatre groups, dencing, etc. to be climaxed have the DAILY WORKER ‘t my home (before 7 a. every I will pay the route- carrier 18 cents st the end of the week. has been arranged. Workers and workers’ organizations are asked to eall for tickets to sell among theix members at the lead- quarters of the festival committee at 8 East 18th Street. Phone: TO 645181. Demonstrate against imperialist war! All out National Youth Day; May 30! } | | “It is only ten minutes | shadow that moved behind] with difficulty to sit straight in his | A number of telephones were | | beadauarters on the Alexanderplatz. | | down the carpet, was filled with the | jextent by the tension of a helpless, | Tepeatedly at the door and listened | June) NEW YORK.—Hundreds of marine | | huge Anti-War Festival in Starlight | | by an unusual type of mass pageant | “They won't return before “se Camp Nitgeda‘get | - Opens for Summer This Friday night a huge campfire with mass singing, dramatic skits, and folk and revolutionary dancing: |led by members of the New Dance Group, will mark the official open-| ing of Camp Nitgedaiget’s summer | season. | Since its very beginning Camp Nit- | gedaiget has been a workers’ co-op- | erative camp, a place where workers | could come at very low rates for their vacation and rebuild their health after strenuous revolutionary activi- ties, | Every year more and more workers | have been attracted to the camp. It has been only through the active role |played by the worl campers in raising the camp activities to a high- | er level that this has been possible | This year the management of Camp Nitgedaiget plans a more elab- orate program than ever before. Mu- | sical recitals and dance music by |the Nitgedaiget Trio, an extensive | ‘rogram of swimming, baseball, vol- {ley ball, wrestling, self-defense and sport pageants will be organized by the L.6.U. sport director. Phil Bard, | artist member of the John Reed Club, will direct social and educational pro- grams, Together with the campfire the | Decoration Day week-end program will consist of a concert on Saturday | with the New Dance Group, chalk talk by Phil Bard, musical recital, mass singing an ss dancing. Donald Henderson, secretary of the American Committee Against War, lecture on war. This will be followed | by a huge proletarian costume ball in the evening (bring your overalls and tools), The program for Monday will con- sist of sport activities all day and in the evening a banquet given by the Food Workers Industrial Union. Tuesday there will be a National | Youth Day celebration in camp. spend a memorable Decoration Day veek-end in Camp Nitgedaiget, WHAT’S ON Thursday— DANCE—Domestic Workers Section of | FWIU for benetit of the Foltis-Pischer strike at Estonian Hall, 29 West 115th St. Admission 25¢. Support us by coming! INFLATION—Milton Howard, Education | meeting Office Workers Union — Labor | Temple, 242 E. 14th St. 8 p. m CLASS IN MOVIE, 7:30 p.m., Film & Photo League, 220 EF. invited. Expert instructor free. OUTLOOK FOR THE COLLEGE GRADU- ATE, Pen & Hammer, 114 W. 2ist St., 8:31 p.m. Open forum follows, Lecturer, Martha | Andrews. “SOVIET RUSSIA THRU THE CAMERA'S | Workers | 14th St, All| EYE,” illustrated lecture, Community Church, 560 W. 110th St. (near Broadway.) Adm. free. Latest scenes from U.S.8.R. Auspices West Side Br., F.8.U, 8:30 p.m. LE —‘Tabot and the Theatre,” by Strassbourg. Nature Friends Center, 12 E. 17th Bt., 8:30 p.m. (Bronx) MASS MBETING—Speakers, J. Cohen, Liston M. Oak, Dr. 8. Le Roy, Paradise Manor, 11 W. Mt, Eden Ave. 8 p.m. Adm. free. Auspices, Mt. Eden Br. PSU. (Brooklyn) | MASS PROTEST MF AGAINST + against the s tence of Gonshak to two years in jail, 4109 18th Ave. Auspices, Elle | D. Adm. free. YRALTON DEFENSE COMMIT- | TEE, fighting the deportation of militant | worker, Jim Gralton, Irish Pree State, Star | ANTI-WAR of Monster, 138th St. and Willis Ave. Two} ben Trish and Americak dancing. Friday RED DANCERS STUDIO PARTY, 77 Fifth] Ave. Entertainmont. refreshments and dancing. Adm. 25 cents. DANCE and ENTERTAINMENT, 87 Henry St., Brooklyn. Opposite Hotel Bt. George. Adm. 60 cents; 9:30 p.m. MASS MEETING, 249 Clove Rd., West Brighton. All Veterans attend! Concrete Facts! Auspices WESL, Come and learn something new! Announcement TREMONT WORKERS CLUB announces will start the Sunday program with a| | Black) has been exposed by the Salt “The Kid Wa By JOHN ARTICLE V She was twelve s old when she The doctor said she got rheu- ¢ fever from sleeping in a rain- ed bed. TAK. Street and the Harlem River while her parents and her little brothers and sisters looked on apathetically. For twelve years the girl and two little brothers and a baby sister had Lived on a barge. Some slept in the makeshift bed room furnished with things picked up at the city dumps. The others slept in the kitchen. Dur- ing her whole life her father had been towed about New York harbor, earning his two dollars a day when loaded with coal and a dollar a day when “light.” That was in the well- took the child to a hospital) s | from the coal barge moored off 123rd a it is pretty hard to feed a large family on that especially in warm weather when | the food on bi swarms with ants some of it has to be throw Don't Go To School Not one of the children had ever gone to school. Barge captains’| children do not go to school. The| boats are always moving about the | harbor and this girl grew ate. Most of the chi barges have never « th een the of a school room. “You got to live ashore if the kids are to go to school,” the father ex- plained. “And I can't pay rent and feed them and myself on a dollar a day.” Theirs was a typical barge cabin ; captain Scenes on the Barges of the N. Y. Waterfront Photo (right) shows 4-year-old boy at work on a barge. Thousands of children like him hold down jobs and displace grown men who walk the streets idle and hungry. “Jesus sereamers,” as the barge cap- tains call the Preachers, “come aboard and try to take the children from the mothers to be put in homes.” SMALL HOME OWNERS MOTHER BLOOR IN STATEN IS. Brings Farmers’ Message of Solidarity in Fight Against land, Friday night, over a thousand NEW YORK.—Backing the program of the Home and Small Property Owners’ Defense League at Curtis High School, St. George, Staten Is- “She got rheu- matism,” the mother explained. “You see it’s hard to keep this cabin dry when it rains. (Photo left). The water leaks in from the roof.” This is what a barge captain’s wife told John L, Spivak, the au- | thor of the aec- | companying ar - ticle which tells of how a twelve- year-old girl died as a result of | rheumatic fever from sleeping in a rain-seaked bed. CHEER sis | | Foreclosures | caHed for no fore-closures; no evic- tions of the jobless homeowners—? }against foreclosures; no deficiency judgments, and relief for destitute homeowners from all relief agencies. The militant spirit of the meet- ing and the fighting program adopt- ed was given its most clearest ex- pression by Mother Bloor, regional secretary of the Farmers’ National Committee for Action, representing five farm groups. The veteran labor fighter made a flying trip from Sioux City, Iowa, to bring a message of | Solidarity and greeting from the | farmers. | “You must join hands with the | 16,000,000 unemployed of America,” |the silver-haired veteran urged. | Gripping the audience the moment | she jumped to her feet, she told them: “Don't think the farmers fight be- longs just to them. Eighty-five per cent of the farm population is in the eastern states. They too are fight- |ing evictions. The fight against the system which made these conditions possible is your fight. Everywhere Workers’ Enemies Exposed All workers and all workers’ organ- | izations are warned against the fol-| lowing enemies of and perpetrators of | crimes against the working class. ROSS BLACK (also known as Aleck | Lake City (Utah) organization of the Communist Party as a totally un- reliable and dangerous individual (an unscrupulous adventurer and swin- dler, or a spy). While in Salt Lake City, he repre- sented himself at various times as being a member of the Australian Party, as a representative of the “Third International,” as organizer of the Workers Ex-Servicemens League, “te, He made efforts to get informa- tion on inner Party matters, demand- ed to see the minutes of the WESL, presented fantastic organizational proposals, cldiming them to be direc- tives from the “National Office.” As am eloquent speaker, he even suce | ceeded in gaining the confidence of some Cormrades, although, of course, he had no credentials to support his «various claims, Even in leaving Salt Lake City (in the last days of April, he claimed to be going to Denver to consult with the Party District Organizer there, | and obtained clothing and various sums of money from individuals and from the WESL, under false pre- tenses, Description: he is about 40 years of age, about 5 ft. 6 in. tall, has sandy opening of {ts new headquarters at ‘Tre- mont and Prospect Aves. Lester Carter will speak. Friday, May 26, 8:30 p.m. hair, blue es and is of stocky build; he is a “quent: speaker, witha slight British accent. men and women are learning the | Jesson of organization and the power of disciplined numbers and strength.” Hollis E. Taylor, president of the Fort Richmond unit of the League, couldn’t share Napears enthusiam— and neither could the audience, judg- ing from the ovation Taylor enjoyed. “I asked Wagner to urge a direct loan for home owners, ‘Taylor | related, reporting on a home- owners delegation to Washington. “No, no, no,” Wagner replied. “It can’t be done.” Ex-Congressman La Guardia, after praising himself for his “radicalism” and attacking vague “bankers and politicians,” urged the homeowners to make their demands known be- | fore the president. “I know he’s in sympathy with you,” he said. , only that it | white and the beds were clean. I | would rather wander the streets with | put in homes. But even barge mothers amps! Demonstrate Nat’l Youth Day, May 30 Stress Negro Rights more cluttered. The} NEW YORK y children ran around barefooted, their | Youth Day, will be made the occasion thin legs streaked with coal dust. for a mighty struggle for the Scotts- The mother had so much to do pre-| boro bo: ng meals and mending clothes| gro peop! 1 up from the dumps or gotten | issued yesterday by the Young Com- | y organization that she) munist League. The day, observed | much time to think of how} by working class youth and adults she was bri ging up her children. | {hroughout the whole world, will be five but looked fifty. sey Shea, parades and mass se ne “She Got. Rheumatism” ; In New York City the main demon- | “She got rheumatism” the mother! tration will take place in Harlem, explained. “You see its hard to keep| With preliminary meetings in the | this cabin dry when it rains. The| downtown and Bronx sections to rally water leaks in from the roof.” large groups of white workers. The list of a barge changes with the tides and the towing and the loosely joined planks of the cabin roof frequently come apart. The never knows when a roof leak. Only when the rain dripping in does he know. But it rained at night when everybody | was asleep, rained directly on the mattress in the kitchen where the girl Stage and Screen in cen eel Oe National Down with Hitler fascism! De-| | mand the release of Thaelmann and| | Torgler! Demonstrate National Youth | Day, May 30! ! might sta: slept. When they awoke in the morn- ing her bed was very damp. She had not been feeling well any- way. She never had been a healthy child. None of their children were very healthy and the parents could| not understand why. It was shortly after her bed was soaked that she de-| veloped rheumatic fever. - kept her in a hospital two the mother added. “It was a Everything was Metropolitan Opera Chorus and Hall Johnson Choir at Stadium This Season! Th? Metropolitan Opera Chorus will ap- | Pear with the Philharmonic Symphony Or- chestra this coming summer at the Sta- |dium Concerts. The full mixed chorus of 75 voices will be heard in two programs, the | first in July, and the second in August. One | the programs will be devoted to Wagner, the other to mixed excerpts from the Ital. ian and French operatic’ repertoire. The chorus is being trained for these appear- ances by Albert Sciaretti; the performances will be conducted by Hans Lange, | In addition to these unusual choral| events, two popular choral features | are again planned. The Ninth Symphony of | his children or sleep in the doorways | Beethoven with the assistance of the Schols | around the docks rather than con-|Cantorum Chorus and the Hall Johnson tinue to live in the filthy cabins,|Nesro Choir with Hall Johnson directing. There was the case of one tied up in| Tht Stadium public will tind Mishel Piastro, - , fPyeita concert master of the Philharmonic-Sym- the East River who took his wife and| phony orchestra, seated in his necustomed weeks, awful clean place. asked her when I went to visit he: and she said there was no bed bugs. “Gee,” she sighed, “it must be nice | to be in a hospital with nothing to do but lay in a bed.” | But sometimes a barge captain| and the rights of the Ne- | according to a statement | | w 12 When She Died” N2! Youtn Day to "CHICAGO §, P. gene SPLIT YOUTH DAY UNITED FRONT Order Socialist Youth to Leave Conference After Agreement CHICAGO, Ill, May 24.—The Na- tional Youth Day conference held on May 13 endorsed by 34 organizations, The conference which was called on the initiative of the Young Commu- nist League also included representa- tives of the Young Peoples Socialist League. Three representatives of the Na- tional Committee of the ¥.P.S.L. were present. One of them, Fish, declared “as representative of the National Executive Committee I pledge to do everything possible to build and ree main in this united front. Hope this example of Chicago is followed thru- cut the country.” Ordered to Split On May 22 a meeting of the Social- ist Party county executive committee ‘as held. This meeting decided that the Y.PS.L. withdraw from this united front which had already been agreed upon. No reasons were given for this action. Fish, McDowell and Jaffee, members of the National com+ mittee then withdrew from the con- ference. The ieadership of the Socialist Party and its youth organization are acting as strike breakers in tlieir af- forts to destroy workers’ unity. The Young Communist League is- sued an appeal to the members of the Young Peoples Socialist League to violate the decision of its national bod: Many membets expressad de- termination to participate in Me pa- two children and deserted the barge place, as well as Remo Bolognini, the as- because his little girl was “being sistant concert master tade and demonstration on Jitational Youth Day. me the story. “He just took them| children and his woman right off the} eaten alive by the bed bugs.” easels MENTS barge and went to some charity place. | | “Yes, sir,” said the captain who told | He just couldn’t get rid of the buss | RENE CLAIR * gPAMoUs and one night he woke up because his | THEATRICAL SATIRE ON PRESENT DAY SOCIETY little girl was crying and when he| - TE”? (For us looked at her there must have been|] atso ¢¢ A NOUS LA LIBER baer eo ae a million bed bugs all over that poor EVERY ONE MAY LOVE” sae aie as i | NEW POLISH MUSICAL COMEDY a mine fe ggietem aver. TMEV oe A OME. THEA TRE 3502282 fi05 So children die on barges and the ith STREET & UNION hospital records say “rheumatism” or |™ Continuous from 9 a.m.—Last Show 10:30 p.m. SQUARE Midnight Show Saturday “infection” and only the barge cap- tains know where the rheumatism and the infections come from. paces e i So some die but the most of them] | romoRow, “THURSDAY, MAY “ier live on in theefilth and squalor. ” “YE AR PL. AN” Se RSENS | | Russia's Remaking!—A Soviet Production Sometimes “Jesus screamers,” as Bee y ool eri a he barge captaii ll the ‘each- Associate Feature ‘SLIGHTLY MAI 2 ba or Stoeee one try e take with Evelyn Knapp, Walter Byron and iy! Mari t the children from the mothers to be st With St. & IGITY THEATRE [i 55 < have not lost the instinct for their brood and they fight despérately to keep their children. That is why children are hidden in the “cutaways” below the cabin when strangers ap- proach. Mothers are always afraid PEGGY WOOD AND ERNEST TRUEX in| EST SELLERS A NEW COMEDY MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th, W. of B'way Eves. 8:50; Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2:40 The Theatre Guild Presents = The MASK AND THE FACE By LUIGI CHIARELLI Adapted by W. Somerset Maugham BIOGRAPHY A Comedy by 8. N, BEHRMAN AVON oy 45th St., W. of B'way Mat. Thur., Sat. 2:30 Pulitzer Prize Winner “BOTH YOUR HOUSES” By MAXWELL ANDERSON (1 week only) ETHEL TREA., W. 47 St. BARRYMORE [3 8:40: Mats. Wed., & Sat., 2:40 that their children will be taken from them ‘and put in homes. CHINA EXPRESS MOVIE SHOWING Fri, May 26th, 8 p. m. Bronx Section I. L. D. and DAILY WORKER 801 PROSPECT AVE., BRONX I$ T Something new will take place. Some- thing that New York has never seen before, SS “Present Task of a Workers’ Press” By a Staff Representative of the SAT., JULY ist THE WHOLE DAY AKEN All workers’ organi- zations are asked not to arrange any affairs for this day. DAILY WORKER Fri., May 26, 8:30 p. m. BRONX MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor, Bronx Park East Foods Proletarian Prices Comrades are buying their Shoes at GENZLER’S FAMILY SHOE STORE 1317 WILKINS AVENUE BEST SHOES For the Entire Family Lowest Prices Comradely Attention TREMONT WORKERS CLUB 2075 CLINTON AVENUE, BRONX We find that a few of the BROOKLYN JOSEPH S. LAX, O.D. OPTOMETRIST 48 Flatbush Ay. —or— Livingston Street Laie doings and activities of th BROOKLYN, N. Y. (Near Fox Thea.) ‘ Main 4-3927 To have good vision have yotit eyes tested yearly town, TO ALL READERS OF THE “DAILY WORKER” TO ALL MASS ORGANIZATIONS HAVING WEEKLY ORDERS organizations are cutting out their orders because of the approaching summer months and because many of the workers are leaving the city for that period. We urge every one of these | workers to get a three-months’, two-months’, or one- month subscription for the Daily Worker | absence, so as to keep in constant touch with the in their e working class. Do not. forget to send in your subscriptions when you leave For SOKAL CAFETERIA Brownsville Proletarians Decoration Day in 1689 PITKIN AVENUE WILLIAMSBURG WORKERS EAT AT KALE CAFETERIA 286 BROADWAY, BROOKLYN 3 days $6.00 (incl. tax) Kathra’s Famous Home Cooking — BY TRAIN—West Short R.R,, W. 42nd St. (Ask for Bu: AVANTA FARM Ubster park... ¥. Intimate, Comradely Atmosphere LOW RATES — New Dining Room Now Ready SPECIAL DECORATION DAY WEEK-END RATES $11.00 per week $1.85 per day BY BOAT—Hudson Day Line, W. 42nd St. Pler, Excursion $2.50; one-way $1.50. (To Kingston—Bus at Kingston to R.R. Station, 100; train to Ulster Park 210) BY BUS—Eastern Greyhound Lines, Penn Terminal—Exoursion $3.00 > Route 9W to Ulster Park) BY CAR—Ronte 9W—Avanta Farm near R.R. Station: <M, sty Friday: Camp Fire (Phil Bard, Cultural Director) Saturday: Concert Sunday: Costume Ball Sunday Morning: ; Lecture on War by DONALD HENDERSON Monday: Sport Activities ‘ "on the sport ‘field Beautiful High Country — Bathing Week-end exoursion (round trip) $8.75 BEACON, N.Y. THE ONLY WORKERS’ CAMP OPEN ON DECORATION DAY WEEK-END PRICE: I day $2.25 (no tax) 2 days $4.25 (no tax) Every additional day $2.00 Special Program for Decoration Day Week-End Camp Nitgedaiget Cars leave for Camp daily from 2700 Bronx Park East. Also: By Train from Grand Central Station and by Hudson Day Line Boats. SPECIAL CARS leave for Camp from 2700 Bronx Park East; Friday: 10 a, m., 3 p. m., 7 p.m. Saturday: 10 a. m., 3 p.m, 7 p.m. 10 Sunday . mm. Monday: 10 a. m. Round Trip $2.00 + nie nic ea aig 0 eR aie