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PAGE TWO ‘477 7" EKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, * FIGHT FOR RELIEF; CONFERENC “Police Gentle”, Says Mayor NEW YORK.—1 Mechanics, Bakers Endorse Conference ov Josiess next’ Council to Jobless he Union Mechani 136th St., an organization of several hundred Negro building | ,, Plowing ie aboverneny SsUbH DY trades workers, endorsed the June 3 Conference Against Evic-; ———~ tions and Relief Cuts to take| the Unemployed Council and the ‘NEED UNITY SAYS C. P. STATEMENT Special Call to Jobless in Neighborhoods to Calls for Support of Meet and Elect Delegates Conference, Demonstration s Association, 204 W. ie New York District of the Com- munist Party endorsing the call of JUNE 2, 1933 Call of U JUNE 3, DEMONSTRATION JUNE 6 FORCE DAWES TO BAN WEIDEMANN FAIR SPEECH nemployed Council and United Front Committee Says “We ChicagoWorkers Make Must Fight for Our Lives” NEW YORK.—Following is the statement and call of the} | Unemployed Councils of Greater New York and the United | Front Provisional Committee A to the unemployed of New City Refuse to Recognize Nazi 5 a pa f CHICAGO, June 1. (Special to the gainst Evictions and Relief Cuts Daily worker)—A delegation of 15 ~ elected by the Anti-Fascist Confer- ‘JOBLESS DEFY |place in Irving Plaza, Trving | iited Front Provisional Committee Vor cna wll orleks organi-| SD IKE, SCHEME OF ee Sige the beneaid Couneil = gains ti iS a fi uis. | a“ 1 3] a e) y Le |Place and 15th Street, at 10) Al workers must answer these| zations to rally to the Unem- i nd the management of the World's | RIOT SQUADS AT RELIEF BUREAU \Gas Bombs Flourished at Coney Island Demonstration Secne at 149th Street Home Relief Bureau demonstration Wednesday as Mayor O'Brien was telling a delegation elected at similar demonstra- | tions throughout the city that the “police are gentle.” The arrested work- ers were demanding rent and food. “We'll be back with thousands June irewioGne aR mete faci , —Five hundred unem- Sates cones. ton pean | ployed and their families, men, women ae and children, defied two riot squads | flourishing tear gas bombs, a squad of fifty police and thugs at the Coney | Island Home Relief Bureau demon-| Six Badly Hurt by BASES Police at the Perth ao standing in front of the bureau, the workers refused to disperse, and kept up a continuous shout of “We demand | rent!” “If you keep quiet,” said an officer in charge, “we will let you stay| m O ou ee here.” | “We demand rent!” the workers | answered in chorus. Before the captain could make a move, Bessie Horn, leader of the Coney Island Unemployed Council,| | said to him, “You are personally re- sponsible for any harm that will come to any worker.” Hear Delegation The workers remained until their) delegation returned from City Hall. Workers Kept Out of Court While Copper Trust Head Helps Judge to Prosecute National Youth Day Demonstrators PERTH AMBOY, N. J., June 1—The full force of the Rockefeller con- trolled city government was used against the demonstration on National Youth Day which took place last Tuesday. and, upon hearing that O’Brien would Fifteen hundred workers had come to the meeting at Copper Field. not do anything, pledged to return to 7 ice we: ing provocations and sought th etense to start the | their block and organize house and tk Scale Wei ee od block committees to combat evictions. slugging. Fina nforeed by a@— | om fo ne"hne tits |19 ORGANIZATIONS PROTEST ATTACK TONIGHT A protest meeting will be held to- night, 8 p.m., at 20th Street and Mer- lum: ing attack on} the slugging and| bea y y cot: reach | maid Avenue, against the attack of a Rober . young militant Nearo| | C0 E | thug paid by a landlord, Rosenkrantz, worker w e leg. upon Bessie Horn. The same thug) (The first sent to the Daily threw rocks and glass at an open-air incorrectly reported that blank cart- YOUTH DAY MERT | meeting held after workers put back ised.) r bi > first shot was fired All eye witnesses his as a deliberate lie children were p. An eye-witness p hit a worker over n he fell, unconscious, the cop got down on his knees and n over the head the ground.” sted and are up charges. The police tried 1 attack with the | NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 1—300 ridges were the furniture of an evicted family. to cover th The protest meeting is supported by house and block committees, the In-! from all parts of Connecticut partici- | ternational Labor Defense, Unem- pated in the National Yoenth Day | ployed Councils and the Communist events on May 29 and 30. The parade | Party. on May 30, held in the pouring rain, | was marked by a splendid spirit of i the demonstrators. To Begin Labor Camps for Women The program was arranged under the leadership of the Young Com- munist League. Nineteen youth or- ganizations co-operating. | Among them the Y. M. C. A, Y. M. H. A, tie hoa They | National Students League, Interna- 5 See enn sniae. | Honal WORkANS Grader atid \ecverdl In NN. y, State Amboy: | Negro youth otganizations. . New-| The march passed the Whalley| wasHINGTON, June 1.—Forced up again in| Avenue jail where several class war labor camps dae -Wonien similar to hat Berg and| Prisoners are held in solitary con-| tose now established for men will finement. As & direct result of thé | ho started soon according to a joint| the hearing on | demonstration before the jail and the| snnouncement by Frances Perkins, who were | Pressure brought to bear by the In-| secretary of Labor and Mrs. Roose- ld not appear. Workers| ternational Labor Defense the pris- | velt, ‘The first two camps will be| onets were released from solitary confinement and their privileges re- ved before the court were While inside established in New York state. ed to go in Under the guise of an experiment | A. | get together with neighbors on their | ative of the copper trust | Stored to give “occupational training inclu- near the ji e ready to presen app gee ding dress-making, embroidering. nst the workers. At the WHAT'S ON weaving and other handicraft,” forced I laced againe> | friday labor is started. It is a step to man- he charges ufacture clothing under forced labor ed. When the at- (Manhattan) conditions officially approved by the) u. D., Saul A. Wittes OWING (White Hell, Pitz-Pabat) government. In this way the present y morning he found 4:30 pm. Workers Film Photo sweat shop conditions and low wages | fon 25 220 E h Str his ee ke in the clothing industry will be car- SYMPOSIUM ON COLONIES, in connec-| ried out by the government. tion with Anti-Imperialist Exhibition now Ad s added. They ing $30,000. The n postponed un- Siowing, 8:30 pis. Joni Meed Oltib, B68 | SS een aerate mee Sixth Avenue. Speakers: Wallace Phelps, James Ford, Robert Dunn, William Simons. “NEW YORK—METROPOLIS OF R” Admission 25 cents, GERTRUDE HAESSLER on Workers’ Cor- ondence, German Werkers Club, 1536 Avenue (86th), 8 p.m. Questions, dis- Admission free, IP MEETING, Harlem Pro- gressive Club, 1538 Madison Avenue. All members must attend. CONCERT —- BENEFIT COMRADE HAR- PET. Freiheit Gesang Farein, J. Schaefer, Conducting. Pierre Degeyter Trio. ( Nitgedaiget Trio) in new Sovict T: MAN MASSES HUNGE A message of soli- is been sent to the central committees of all German ons by the Workers’ nee, represent- New, York is known from one end of the globe to the other as the richest city in the world. Its other side is hushed—the home of a@ million unemployed, a metropolis of hunger. What is happening to the army of 1,000,000 unemployed thrown to darity h Degeyter Club orchestra. Dancing Get the Adm. 35c—with this notice, the merey of the rulers of the 19th St. 8 p.m world’s richest city? ATRE FORUM ON “'1931"" play recent- d Theatre Collective speakers. New Masses; A. Markoff, What is happening in the Home Relief Bureaus? What do they tell unemployed applying for relief? What happens to evicted farbilics? Daily, ailorker DELIVERED eS CBr “ead the. shows (Bronx) Read the answer to these and : OPEN-AIR MEETING, Cruger arid tyvéig/ other questions in the Daily Work- To Your Home Pout tnd War tua eater Rome, Block. | er's new ser'es of articles, Workers Club, 2128 Cruger Avenue, “y (Brooklyn) LECTURE—The Truth About and Scottsboro Case. very Morning! YORK—METROPOLIS OF Oem 8,” STARTING WEDN! DAY, JUNE 7TH. Tom Moo! Speakers Fred Bied | was circulated for their reinstatement. |son’s unprovoked attack and threw _the Robinson administration. | stated that Bob Minor was “howled | | and to make sure to clect delegates | approved of his position. 1] | | | Were arrested at a Victoria Park meet- | | the City Hall Unemployed Demon- | ing of the unemployed relief strikers. | | Sttation next Tuesday, 11 a.m. | of the Communist Party, New York, M. The conference will mobilize the | members of all the organizations for the city-wide demonstration to held before the City Hall Tuesday, June 6, while the Board of Estimate is in session. Bakers Endorse Bakers local 505 of the A. F. of L. endorsed the conference the day be- fore. Workers’ organizations of every category and political affiliation have been invited to the conference to involve the entire working class of New York in the life and death issues of immediate relief for the unemploy- ed and part time workers denied by Home Relief Bureaus, Several hund- red branches of trade unions and labor organizations and groups of un- employed are expected at the con- brutal attacks on the very lives of the | | unemployed with united forces, in | militant struggle. Hunger knows no | distinctions of views or affiliations. | Against evictions and hunger all Workers’ organizations, all unemployed |and employed workers, should stand j united. ‘The Communist Party en- | dorses the urgent unity appeal of the | Unemployed Council, and calls upon all workers, regardless of affiliations or political differences, to unite around the life and death demands of the unemployed masses against evictions, for rent payments by the | relief bureaus, against reduction in | relief, for increased relief to meet the | rising cost of living. | Elect delegates to the Uneniployed | Conference at Irving Plaza, Irving | Place and 15th Street, Saturday, June | 8rd, 10 a.m. Turn out by the tens of ployed Conference June 3 and the city-wide demonstration at City Hall Tuesday June 6: . “Mayor O’Brien has refused to put a stop to the wholesale evictions and relief cuts which are being carried of unemployed and destitute fami- lies of New York. He has told our delegation (delegation of 30 who saw Mayor O’Brien Thursday, They were jelected by unemployed demonstrating | at Home Relief Bureaus all over the city—Editor.) that he can do noth- ing for the workers who together with their families face loss of homes and death from slow starvation. The profession of sympathy with which the Mayor sought to disarm the unemployed, were glaringly ex- posed for what they are worth by out against the tens of thousands | |SALVATION ARMY | TO STOP RELIEF Collected M on ey in, Fair to protest against recognition of Hans Weidemann, Nazi agent. Dawes of the World’s Fair Execu- tive, as well as Chicago City officials, stated that Weidemann was not a recognized representative and would not be allowed to speak. Workers gathered in front of the | German Consulate, 500 North Michi- |gan Avenue, Wednesday morning, | protesting against Weidemann’s pres- | ence in the city, Signs and placards Name of Jobless; ference. the fact that at the very moment Stopped Meals scheme | NEW YORK.—The pretty | | of the Salvation Army to collect funds | lin the name of the unemployed and | | then cut down on bread lines has met | with a setback in Brooklyn due to! some fast, militant action on the part | jof unemployed led by the Boro Hall | Unemployed Council, 73 Myrtle Ave. held up by the workers demanded the ousting of Weidemann and the re- lease of Thaelmann and other ar- rested working class leaders. Leaflets. were also distributed. Several hundred workers were gathered in front of the Consulate, | while many others witnessed the de- ‘A special call has been made to | thousands at City Hall, Tuesday, unemployed all through the city to) 7ue 6, 11 a.m. |TUUC, Unions, Pledge resentatives. |Support of Conference The conference is called by the @ M d Demonstration Provisional United Front Committee — Against Evictions and Relief Cuts) NEW YORK—The Trade Union composed of various labor and trade| Unity Council fully endorsed the union organizations including the United Front Conference on Unem- Unemployed Council of Greater New| Ployment called by the Provisional York, Trade Union Unity League, | United Front Committee Against Conference for Progressive Labor Ac-| Evictions and Relief Cuts for Satur- tion, Workmen's Sick and Death Be-|@ay, June 3, and the city-wide un- nefit Fund, International Workers| ¢mployed demonstration at City Hall, Order, Communist Party, Amalga-|June 6. It called upon all unions, | mated Food Workers Union, A. F. of | !@agues and groups, as well as upon L, Committee for Unemployment Re-| other workers, to send delegates to lief and Insurance, City Committee | the conference and to begin now to of Emergency Work: Bureau Em- | Prepare to take active part in the Bloyés. (oo niiber ot ions h Iread =| r of unions have already ae ery pig erties ral responded, with the following state- Mayor O'Brien against the continted | ments, quoted in part: attacks upon the unemployed at a MARINE WORKERS block and elect delegates to the con- ference. Single workers in flop houses and breadlines are asked to send rep- Home Relief Bureaus The Marine Workers Industrial ‘QUST ROBINSON? Union, which has al issued a call Unemployment Relief for June 4 for seamen, hailed the United Front 7 > |for a United Front Conference on| when these were being made, police | were brutally assaulting men, wo- |men and children who had gathered |at the relief stations, Aci on Bankers Orders | His own admission that “the bank- |ers hold a sword of Damocles over | the city’s head,” prove that City | Hall is acting on the orders of the big bankers of Wall Street. Mayor O’Brien intends to continue to pay usurious interest rates to the bank- ers. He intends to continue to squander more millions on salaries to the political henchmen who deliver the votes and collect the graft on which Tammany Hall thrives. Cannot Accept Mayor's Answer Workers of New York! and unemployed! We or O’Brien. We must force the gov- ernment of the richest city in the United States to provide for the ex- istence of those of us who have been deprived of the right to earn a live- lihood! Demonstrate June 6th We call upon all workers, employ- ed as well as unemployed, men, wo- Employed | cannot, we | must not accept the answer of May- | ~}imen and children, Negro and white, ference for June 3-and- piedgedsits utmost support to mobilize their| STUDENTS SHOUT 2,000 Hear Minor and) Others at Meeting mem workers for the June 6th Unemploy- ment Demonstration at the City Hall. NEEDLE, TRADES. . The Needle Trades Workers Indus- | trial Union whole-heartedly supports | the United Front Conference against NEW YORK.—Two thousand stud-| évictions and relief cuts to be held ents gathered at a mass meeting on| Saturday, June 3. We call upon our Convent Avenue, near City College| membership as well as all needle yesterday afternoon to hear Robert} trades workers to take an active part Minor and student speakers denounce the jingoistic attack on students of the college last Monday and the sub- sequent expulsion of eight. Norman | Thomas also spoke. “Oust Robinson” was the slogan heard most throughout the speeches and during the march through the campus which took place when the} support. We call upon the member- meeting terminated. | ship of our union as weil as all food Robert Minor urged the students! workers to mobilize for the demon- to continue to organize for the fight) stration on June 6th at City Hall, against militarism and the He T. S| SHOE UNION He pointed out the close alliance of} ik stri i the college administration with the | exyrmser tte ones industrial Union jingoistic military machine and call- ed for continued exposure and strug- gle against it. Student speakers stressed the con- tinuance of the fight to reinstate the suspended students. A petition City Hall, June 6th. « FOOD WORKERS The Food Workers Industrial Union endorsec the call by the Provisional | United Front Committee for a United | Front Conference against evictions and relief cuts and pledges its utmost |and relief ctits called for Saturday, June 3rd. We call upon our member- ship and on all shoe workers to mo- bilize for the City Hall unemployed demonstration June 6th, Another petition condemned Robin- | AN APPEAL his own words back at him by de- TO MASS ORGANIZATIONS manding his removal from office| | The City Secretaries of mass or- “for conduct unbecorhing a college| | ganizations in the city have ad- president.” | | dressed an appeal to the branches | Sentiment among the students, it| jand membership of all mass organ- is reported, is overwhelmingly against | | izations “to consider the united | | front unemployed conference on The boss papers of last night lyingly | | thé agenda of this week’s meeting | to the conference, June 3, 10 a.m., at Irving Plaza Hall.” All mags organizations are urged RELIEF STRIKERS ARRESTED | by the City Secretaries “to set up KITCHENER.—Charged with ob-| | Committees to be in charge of mo- structing peace officers, Jack Hudson, | | bilizing the entire membership and Alec Nieznany and Gordon Scheef | | the largest number of workers for down” when in reality the majority They are out on $500 bail each, New| | CITY COMMITTEE CALL TO charges may be added against them. | | THE I. W. 0. |__All branches of the International Workers Order arc instructed by | H. Schiller, City Committee Jewish Bureau, and 8. Duroskin, City Central Committee of the I. W. O., |to take up without fail at the'r | next meeting the election of dele- | gates to the United Front Unem- SECTION 15 ANNUAL BANQUET The annual banquet of Section 15 will be held Saturday night at the REGULAR MEETING OF W. E. 8, L. Post | 52, 1213 50th Street. Election of officers; refreshments. All invited. ILLUSTRATED LECTURE on Soviet Rus- sla, Benjamin Riskin, Also collection of . 297 South Sth Street, » Auspices F. 8. U, Willlamsburg, oe Saturday HARLEM F. 8, U, SOCIAL, 410. West 154th | Street. Dancing, refreshments; Anita Lewis and gang. MOONLIGHT ROOF GARDEN PARTY, | 1044 Avenue St. John, Bronx. Auspices Mid. | town Section of 1.'%. D. Refreshments, dancing. Admission 10 cents. In case of | rain, indoors, | RED AND WHITE and Charlie Chaplin comedy, American Youth Club, 407 Roek- | way Avenue near Pitkin. Auspices Young | | Pioneers, Section 8 Admission, children §| cents, parents 15 cents, RST DANCE NEW MAIL THIS AD TODAY! DAILY WORKER 50 East 1th St, HEADQUARTERS: Tremont Workers Club, Tremont and Pros. New York, N. Y. pect Avenue. Admission 15 cents. 1 © have the DAILY WORKER de- || ANNUAL BANQUET and CONCERT, c. a, CAN be reached in the short period of time. ts eth | Hathaway main speaker, Bronx vered ot my home (before 7 a. m.) || ; ok ing. I will pay the route- || Club, 1610 Boston Rond, Bronz. Ausplees Section 15, C. P. Good food, excellent con-| CONference will organize a fight | cert. INTERNATIONAL CONCERT, Mandolin Orchestra, 8 p.m., 106 | Street. Proceeds to’ Section cents at the end of the week, Freineit | st 14th | Hall. ADDRESS Ui Ree | APARTMENT BOROUGH ~ nn) Laictitenieeianeeomamioraart| 56 $0 work, — FLOOR .W Always take a copy (or ‘more) ot plates to the city enkapp and J. Milo, Savoy Mansion, 6322— Bronx Workers Club, 1610 Boston 20th Ave. Brooklyn. Auspices: West End | Road. Section ILD. Adm. 106. ENGLISH BRANCH OF IWO starting at Comrade Ollstein’s house, 3301 Mermaid Ave., Brooklyn. All interested invited to attend. | Copper Trust Pays No Tax; Jobless Relief Is Slashed Hold Conference of Organizations in Messaba Range on June 6; Will Demand Relief HIBBING, Minn., June 1—The Hibbing Unemployed Council is cal- ling a conference of all workers’ organizations in the Mesaba Range that Workers against the refusal of the steel trust to pay the last half of its taxes. The for more relief from the state and federal governments. It will take place on June 6, 2 p. m. at the Hibbing Village | The conference will also take up such questions as the forced labor programs that are being introduced in almost every locality, For instance the Daily Worker with you when you| °WNers of automobiles will not get relief unless they turn in thelr license ployed Conference, June 3, 10 a.m., at Irving Plaza Hall. All branches are also urged to elect committees for the purpose of mobilizing the entire member- ship and workers for the mass demonstration at City Hall Tues- day, June 6, 11 a.m., against evic- tions, for the payment of rents and increased relief by the city. Workers, Farmers to Unite in Nassau Co. Hunger March June 5 NEW YORK--Unemployed workers and small home owners of Nassau County will unite for a Hunger March to Mineola, the county seat, June 5, They will converge at the court house at 2 p. m. to demand “adequate relief or work to the un- employed and farmers; no shutting off of water, gas and electricity, no evictions, no foreclosures.” The Long Island Unemployed Action Committ organizing the march states that over 10,000 unemployed were laid off last week from the Nas- sau County Relief work making the laid off 26,000 This 1s to prepare action bership and thousands of marine} |in the unemployed demonstration at |expresses its support of the United | Front Conference against evictions | to demonstrate at the City Hall on June Sixth that the workers of New | York will not meekly submit to slow starvation and homelessness. More than two-hundred-thousand ) apartments stand vacant. Scores of | large buildings, many of them fully | equipped, are likewise unused. The | bankers, bosses and landlords con- tinue to make huge profits. The city jis squandering millions of dollars in | the interest of the politicians and | bosses. We must declare that our right to live is as important as the profits | Which the city-government defends. We must make clear that we will | fight to protect the lives of our chil- \'dren. If the city government will | we can and will do so ourselves. Rally in great masses to demand: 1, Payment of Rent for AN Unem- ployed. An End to Evictions. 2. Immediate Relief for Those De- | nied the Opportunity to Register at | the Home Relief Buros. ing Cost of Living. | the Unemployed. We call upon all workérs organi- | zations to mobilize their membership for the demonstration at City Hall on June 6th at 11 a.m. ‘We call upon all unorganized work- ers, regardless of affiliation to join in this mass demonstration. Elect delegates to the United Front | Conference Against Evictions and Relief Cuts—Saturday, June 3, at 10 a.m, in Irving Plaza Hall, 15th Street and Irving Place, New York City. defeat the new attack upon our homes and our lives. Forward Front! Unemployed Council of Greater N. ¥. Provisional United Front Committee Against Evictions and Relief Cuts. | not stop evictions, we must show that | Increased Relief to Meet Ris- | | 4 Cash Relief for Single Workers. | A Stop to Police Terror Against | Through our united struggle we can | in a United Fighting | Although the Salvation Army has | Monstration. One worker was arrested collected $420,000 in their drive for | * funds so far, 400 to 500 unemployed | Organize anti-fascist united front receiving meals on the Salvation! committees of all working class or- Army breadline Bay Ridge were noti- ganizations in every city of the Unit- | fied Wednesday that the breadline| ed States to carry on the fight against | would be discontinued. Unemployed | Fascism and to help in the relief of at the Court Street breadline were|our heroic German fellow-workers | notified yesterday that thereafter | battling against the Hitler dictator- | meals would only be served to work- | ship. ers over 50. Workers at 114 W. 17th | Street were told that only 1 Ite He. Would be served instead of two. | Italian F.S.U. Calls Conference Sun. for Soviet Recognition @ march of 35 workers from the Court | Street breadline to the Army head- | quarters at Ashland Place, they pick- | eted the office. An official said, “We| The Italian Section of the Friends | axe ot responsible for feeding the! of the Soviet Union issued a call unemployed. | today to more than 157 Italian organ- Win Demands | roars egy Stine a eae i onference for cognition ne | A, committee of 16 workers then! soviet Government. The Conference. Went to the main office of the Salva-| snich is to Be held at 299 doth | tion Army, 14 St., N. ¥. The two ac-! Street on Sunday, June 4th, is part of tions forced the continuation of the| the nation-wide campaign being car- Court Street breadline, to serve One| ried on by the ‘Prana of th avis meal a day to a thousand workers. 4 i “ A fight will now be made for the re-| Union. | Sumption of two meals. | Coming at a time when the danger The Army officials claimed that the | °f war is acute and the Far Eastern | Bay Ridge line was discontinued be-' Situation constitutes a threat against cause they had no money to pay rent | the Soviet Union, this conference is but they agreed to feed the workers|0f sreat importance. The delegates from Bay Ridge on the Court Street| Present at the conference will outline line. A Committee was sent from che | a plan of work and set themselves a | Unemployed Council to Bay Ridge to| qWota of signatures to collect to a pe- make contact there for a joint fight) tition for recognition. to re-open the breadlines with two| 1, Spinicelli, prominent Italian meals a day. speaker of the Friends of the Soviet | Union, will address the conference. | If there is a story, editorial or car-| All Italian organizations who have re- | toon you think your fellow-workers| ceived the Conference call are urged | would be interested in, cut it out and | to send delegates for participation in | paste it up Where they can see it, | this important campaign, The Unemployed Council organized | The WORKERS’ PRESS FEDERATION —is arranging the— FIRST INTERNATIONAL PICNIC SUNDAY, JUNE 4th, 10 a.m. Till 10 p.m. At the BRANDT FARM—YONKERS, N. Y. Hungarien Real Gypsy Music — Gypsy Kitchen—Gulyas Working Class Plays — Sports COVERED DANCE HALL — FOREST TICKETS 25 CENTS IN ADVANCE — 30 CENTS AT GATE Take Jerome Ave. Line Uptown, at the last station busses will wait for you BENEFIT:— UJ ELORE, HUNGARIAN COMMUNIST DAILY CAMP UNITY Wingdale, N. Y. is getting ready to open for the Summer Season —For Information Calt:— N. ¥. Office ESTABROOK 38-1100 WATCH OUR PRESS FOR MORE DETAILS Camp Phone WINGDALE 51 Chorus Saturday, July 1st—Morn to Midnight STARLIGHT International First Class Restaurant Under the § Taduetend Guperrision of the Pood Workers DANCING IN THE GREAT COLISEUM “RED PRESS” “DAILY WORKER” “MORNING FREIHEIT” P! we Ht Stan 5s, COLISEUM Program: Sport Exhibition Soviet Movie First Showing From &§ P.M. Till 8 A.M, —— SaaS i