The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 9, 1933, Page 2

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Vage iwo WO New YORK AiLY » bRiD JUN Y, L988 NEW YORK-- Metropolis of HUNGER BY A HOME RELIEF BUREAU possesses in batches with consid- INVESTIGATOR eration than is given to those ap- ARTICLE 3 pearing before the courts for far less Féar of losing their h important reasons factor in driving Serving dispose: money to ask the Home Relief Bu-| and as a result 1 ate > than is hunger. Yet of) tempt to frighten their tenants into res of the Home Relief! moving “without due process of law to provide the jobless with z of life, the failure to Use New Tricks. at least to stop evic-| Many ladlords simply bu t glaring forms from stationery sto G., a living in Lower Man- me to the Home Relief for help because the reatened to dispossess waiting three weeks for from a Home Relief Bureau ive, he received a dispos- Again he went to the he was told to her week of wait- his wife decided that the d not intend to help them. Break Up Homes. distributed their ‘ake the case of young Mr laborer He furniture They among their friends and the woman went to live with a friend who could shelter her temporarily. The man in the hallway relief office the lowing morning to recite his plight He was informed that since his wife was not living with him and was temporarily provided didn's need any help. As for him, he ought to go to the Municipal Lodg-| ing House, he was told, because the Home Relief Bureau doesn't single men. ‘Then there is the case of the Gross- man family of 961 Faile St. the Bronx, who reported to the Home Re- lief Bureau on May 2% that they were being evicted. Mr. Grossman that the Bureau could not rent because it was possible for his family to move in with his wife’s paren He objected to this scheme because his wife suffers from a mental ailment and one of his chil- dren has heart trouble. The crowd- ing would have a bad effect on every- body, he said. That, replied the of- ficial, is no concern of the Home Re- lief Bureau. These instances are not isolated They are representative of the policy of-the Home Relief Bureau in the matter of paying rents. The policy is simple enough, too. It consists of rmination to pay as little and s rom 31, 1982, the Home Relief Bureau paid out for rents a total of about 100,000 ft period. This would mean an average of about $17.50 per family for the entize period from November, 19381, to gust, 1982. Refuse to Pay Rents. refusal to pay rents on. the ds that there is no money, or other grounds, is a direct tion even of their own laws un- which the Home Relief Bureaus Section 1 of the Emergency Laws which created the bureaus de- clares éxpressly that: ‘The apecial or local laws . . . which limit or forbid the furnishing of shelter, fuel. clothing, light and medical at- tendence shall not apply to re- lisf authorized under this act.” The half-hearted and brutal man- in which the bureaus have led the struggle of thousands of to keep roofs over their is confessed in the report of the Temporary Emergency Relief Ad- ministration under which the Home Relief Bureaus function: | viol t for she| help | the 92,000 families which | aid during that} provisions of any general,| them out themselves, relying on the ignorance of their tenants to get away with it. Such fake dispo: ses are widely used in Harlem and in sections of the city inhabited by for- eign-born workers. Marshals have been doing 4 office business since 1930. keep up with the orde at such high speed ¢ matter as their fai’ tice of eviction to the y work t so small a to send a no- 24 hi One Fifth Avenue __ | Anti-Fascist in advance doesn’t bother them. Any jobless worker who demands to see a warrant of eviction before his be- longings are hurled into the gutter will find himself rudely shoved aside and possibly beaten or arrested if he insists on his legal prerogatives. Evicting a Thriving Business. In 1929 and 1930 marshals usually received $10 per room for moving the furniture of a family into the street. Today, because of the large volume Apartments here rent at $250 a | month and up. Half of the apart- ments are va¢ant. But below job- less workers herd together to get some sleep. ‘) | Philadelp \Chicago Fair Parade to Precede Protest Greets Nazi | Weidemann Chicago Workers to March in Protest on Anti-Fascist Day CHICAGO, June Althe officials of the Chicago World's told delegation of A cist Committee mor ago that Hans Weidemann, envoy, was not officially rec- nd would not be welcomed the Fair officials now deference to and re- spect for the president (they) should receive any and all official repre- sentatives from nations invited.” Protesting against this decision to extend an official welcome to Weide- mann, the Anti-Fascist Committee | | declares that “the Germany to which] that (Hoover) invitation was ad-| dressed no longer exists. It has been | replaced by a sabre-rattling terror- ism bent on restoring and even wor- sening “the Junker-capitalist mon- archy of 1914-18.” The sham refusal to welcome Weidemann has given way to the Fair officials’ real class intentions— Weidemann is to be dined and wined by capitalist Chicago as the repre- the sentative of the Fascist regime of Germany Under auspices of the Chicago} Committee a parade} | and demonstration converging on | the Loop from three parts of the city will be held on June 24, National Anti-Fascist Day to protest the pre- sence of Weidemann in Chicago as| invited guest of the World Fair. The nation-wide anti- Fascist movement, of which the Chicago) | anti-Weidemann demonstration is a} Against | talian I ascism | NEWS BRIEFS DAVIS SEEKS NEW STAY PITTSBURGH, June 8. — Senator Members of the Local Eagerly Snap Up Article| sames 3. Davis whose trial for using in the Daily Worker Last Week NEW YORK.—The Italian Unit tee, which has called the demonstration against Italian fascism before the | New York Monday is asking for Italian Fascist Consulate at 70th Stre In Italian. Prison : ANTONIO GRAMSCI, founder of the Italian Communist Patty, who, sentenced to 20 years in jail by Mus- solini for his revolutionary activities, is deathly ill in the dangeons of Turi, where he has been since 1926. Communist Party Anti-Fascists Call New York District, Communist Party, U.S.A., supports the Anti-Fas- cist demonstration called by the It- | demonstration, will assemble on East | éd Front Anti-Fascist Action Commit- et and Lexington Avenue for this Sat- y at 11 a.m, has invited the rk section of the Socialist tO participate in the protest and is awaiting an answer. To date the following organiza- tions have announced their ‘intention | |to join the united front anti-fascist | demonstration, demanding the free- dom of Antonio Gramsci, Italian Communist leader, Sandro Pertini | Socialist, Velia Matteotti and her two |children who are being held as host- | ages by Mussolini, and other poli- | tical prisoners. The Communist Party, the Young Communist League, the International Labor Defense, the Joint Board of the Dress and Waistmakers’ Union of Greater New York, the I.W.W., the Conference for Progressive bor Action, the Trade Union Unity | League, Local 162 of the Amalgama- ted Clothing Workers of America, the | Amalgamated Food Workers Union, |the Balkan Anti-Fascist Colamittee | the Jewish Workers’ and People Com- mittee Against Fascism. | Wait for Socialist Answer | Julius Gerber, City Secretary of |the Socialist Party, informed the | United Front Committee that he was _|calling a meeting of the city exec- | utive to consider participation. ; The Committee appeals to all Am erican working class organizations in | the name of the Italian working class to stage a real struggle in behalf of [se victims of Italian fascism. A parade, which will precede the | mails to defraud in operating a Jot- | tery in connection with his Moose | | Lodge racket is scheduled to start in | a |further stay. He claims he is still | | too fil to go on trial. Davis was first | | Recused last y and got the trial | | D0 | postponed until after the elections in | | Penrisylvania, He was Secretary of | |Labor in Harding’s Teapot Dome cabinet and later in Coolidge’s and | | Hoover's administration. As secre- | tary of labor he was notorious for his | | attacks against foreign-born workers | and carried out deportations of | workers active in the class struggle. PRINTERS BAN CONVENTION | | INDIANAPOLIS, June 8—In a | teferendum members of the Interna- | |tional Typographical Union voted | not to hold their annual convention | Support Huge Red Press Carnival Saturday, July j Starlight Park and the Bronx Coliseum have been engéged for the entire day of Saturday, July 1, 1933, for a Red Press Carnival, which is to be a mass holiday of the workers and at the same time a demonstration of powerful support to the revolutionary press, the Daily Worker and Morning Freiheit. A program that is unsurpassed by any ever held has been arrangéd for the occasion, including amusements and entertainments of all kinds. There is to be a mass pageant, arranged under the collective guidance and effort of ail of our cultural groups and organizations. ‘There will be sport exhibits by the Labor Sports Union and young workers’ clubs. Famous Soviet movies, not yet released in the United States, will be shown at this great affair for the very first time. All workers’ choruses and mandolin orchestras will gather in full number to take part. These are but a few of the attractions. Other games, entertainments and amusements are in preparation. They will all be publicly announced shortly in the pages of both the Daily Worker and the Freiheit, In the evening, all the workers gathered will dance in the Coliséum, to the tunes of severa! excellent dance bands, until the morning star appears! There is also being prepared a huge restaurant, supervised by mem- bers of the Food Workers Industrial Union, where the best food avail- able will be served at very moderate prices all day long. |this vear on a plea of the officers Admission to this huge carnival and workers’ holiday will be only 30 |that they should save money. None| cents. This will entitle any worker to remain and take part in the of the officers in the strike-breaking | festivities from beginning to end! Charles P. Howard machine haye In order to enable every single organization to take full part, the | 88recd to reduce their own fat sal-| management of this Red Press Picnic has decid i 1 | aries. The vote, at union headquar- ae Cj 7ee cecwwen #0. 0 HOkete 48 bcs vance to all organizations at the special rates of $1 per 100, or $5 per | ters, was 30,832, to 15,993. ADVANCE TIRE PRICES AKRON, June 8.—Higher prices on automobile tire prices ranging from | 7 to 14 per cent on casings with an | average of 8 1-2 per cent were put into effect yesterday. Tube prices were boosted 15 per cent. This is| | the second increase recently, the first | {being an advance of 10 per cent on May Ist | MOLLINSONS CRASH ON TAKE- | | OFF | CROYDON AIRFIELD, England, part, is building up a giant united) 5. united Front Anti-Fascist Ac-| 79th Street between First and York | June 8—Captain James A. Mollinson | tion against the fascist terror of the | Avenues, then march onthe consu- | and his wife, the former Amy John- | front of all workers for effective ac-| tion against Fascism in all its forms. | ||1n Detroit, a special united front | | conference gill be held Sunday, | | June 11, at 10 a. m, in the Arbeiter- | Ring Center, Holbrook and Brush. | An inclusive united front commit-| |tee has been established in Cleve-| | land, and a united front conference | has been called for Saturday, July) | 8th. Other anti-Fascist committees are already actively at work in| ia and Boston. The work| | of anti-Fascist action and relief for) | the victims of German Fascism is| | taking on a truly national character | at. last. bloody the Party membership and the work- ers of New York to rally in full force to the anti-fascist demonstration “This demonstration, called to de- mand the release of Antonio Gram. sci, leader of the Italian Communist Party, and Sandro Pertini, Socialist lawyer both dying in the Fascist dungeon of Tuni, as well as to pro- test the bloody reign of terror con- ducted against the Italian masses by the Mussolini Fascist Government, must witness thousands of workers in determined struggle against Fascist ian United Front Committee, the In- ternational Labor Defense and the | American Civil Liberties Union. [i held with speakers from the Iial- | reaction. Mass resistance against Fascism becomes an urgent task fac- |itg the workers today. Only by the | most persistent every day struggle, the most conscious and resolute, figh can the masses defeat the fascist ter- ror in Italy and Germany, as well !as in other sections of the world.” Fraenkel | NEW YORK—The nature of the hearing on June 22 before Judge, Malone in Morgan County juvenile: court in connection with the fight to | free Roy Wright and Eugene Will- jams, two of the youngest Scottsboro boys, were outlined yesterday to a | Daily Worker representative by Os- | mond K. Fraenkel, New York attor- | ney who recently returned from De- | catur, Ala. | Fraenkel and Gen. George W. | Chamlee, chief Scottsboro defense counsel, had conducted the court fight before Judge James W. Horton which resulted in the two boys being | transferred to the jurisdiction of the juvenile court—an admission that they had been illegally held during | the past two years. The two year mass campaign of |the International Labor Defense compelled Horton to send the cases to the juvenile court. | ‘Will Also Argue Patterson Case | Outlines Moves in Fight | _ for the 2 Youngest Scottsboro Boys OsMOND K. FRAENKEL Mts. Mamie Williams, mother of Eu- gene, who testified that her boy was | born Deceniber 9, 1917. | If Judge Malone decided adversely in the case, the defense has the “right” to appeat to Judge Horton. Just what that implies can be gathered from Horton's actions-in refusing to order a mistrial in the Haywood Patterson trial in spite of the -most flagrant appeals to the prejudices of the jury. If the case goes back to the or- dinary criminal court, none of the Proceedings of the Juvenile Court are admissable, Fraenkel said. “None of the testimony that was obtained is admissable, not even the fact that there had been hear- ing in the Juvenile Court, although everybody in the community will mony was.” It is thus clear that unless the ~ | construct it ~ | organization know that fact and what the testi- | Mussolini regime, and urges | late where an open air meeting will|son, noted woman flyer, crashed in | |trying to take off on a non-stop | | flight to New York early this morn- | ing. The plane struck a bump in the | ground and was so badly wrecked it | | will take more than a week to re-| | . . URGE CHAIN STORE PROBE | NEW YORK, June 8.—A campaign | | to haye the “business ethics” of the | chain stores investigated by the fed- | eral government was urged last night | at a meeting of 400 members of the | | Business Independence League. The is composed of small business men—grocers, druggists, etc., —who are being driven to the wall by the chains. The meeting also urged Mayor O’Brien, the Tammany clown, to tax chain stores. Nothing will come of the proposals. DUMP GUNS IN OCEAN NEW YORK, June 8.—Police today dumped into the sea, 3,816 alleged | deadly weapons, ranging from shot- guns to brass knuckles. The muni- | cipal steamboat Macon carried the cargo to Scotland lightship to dump it, The weapons were confiscated from petty hoodlums not protected | by Tammany. | Have the DAILY WORKER at ev- |ery meeting of your unit, branch, | union, or club, Telephone STuyvesant 9-9254 || UNIVERSITY GRILL, Inc.| | BAR RESTAURANT 22 UNIVERSITY PL, N. Y. Between 10th and 1ith St. c.| | | RUSSIAN MUSIC Ths only place where Russian Music and The Williams-Wright hearing will) of business, the price has dropped to) begin before Judge Malone, imme-| as low as $15 for an apartment.| diately after Chamlee and Fraenkel Many of these officials have fourid it) appear before Judge Horton to argue workers by increasing their protests | compel the release of Eugene Wil- | liams and Roy Wright the whole | elaborate legal proceeding will sim- | about it. The first thing he has to| decide is whether the boy is subject to Instruments can be obtained LATEST SONGS FROM U.S.5.R. RUSSIAN MUSIC CO. “Public welfare officials have been| necessary to buy new trucks and hire lined to limit their relief giving to families could solve their rent prob- lems through part-time earning or the patience and good nature of their landlords. In this extended period of unemployment, with families com- ing to the attention of relief agen- cies only after they have exhausted all their resources and usually with large accumulations of unpaid rent, Shelter is becoming an increasingly difficult problem. . The present haphazard methods of dealing with the payment of rents cannot be con- tinued indefinitely without serious consequences... .” Dispossegs Triple. Yet the “haphazard methods” are Being continued. In April of this year 34,544 dispossess petitions were filed in the courts of New York— more than three times as many as were filed for in the previous month, Match. The exact number of evic- tions carried out as a result of these dispossess is hard to estimate. Thou- sands of families who receive dispos- esses move “voluntarily.” tion, where do tt go, can be an- swered only by the generally accepted e families are living in less rooms than at any time in New York's history. This is at a time when the Tene- ment Houfe Department reports that | there are 201,406 vacant apartments | in the city, or more apartments than each family now receiving work relicf or home relief. No. 1—Sth Ave. No. 1, Fifth Ave., paragon of ex- clusive housing in Lower Manhattan, stands with half of its 225 apart- ments empty, while in the alleyways behind the buildings scores of home- less men quarrel nightly with em- ployes of the building for the right to bask in the heat issuing from the furnace rooms. Nor is it only the exclusive skyscraper mansions of Fifth, Park, Madison and Riverside Drive that go untenanted while workers sleep in subways or huddle together in fire-trap tenements. Mod- | ern apartment houses in the Bronx, Brooklyn d Queens, once within reach of at least part of New York's working ¢lass, have yielded their in- habitants to the slums. With the increase of dis} e from 194,046 in 1928 to, 308,516 in 1932 the slight chance which workers onee had of winning a hearing from The ques-| | more men. It is one of the few busi- i and fuel orders assuming that) nesses that flourishes and expands! death, | under “the new deal.” | Struggle Against Evictions. | In its daily efforts to organize em~- | ployed and jobless alike for adequate jrelief and unemployment insurance, |the Unemployed Councils have bat- | tled mercilessly against evictions. | If workers are to be deprived of | their homes because they are jobless, | let the responsibility for finding them ;new homes rest on those who have caused unemployment. | When the Unemployed Councils | put furniture back into the apart- | ment from which it has been moved ; by the marshal’s men, they are not | merely engaging in a reversal of the legal process. They are placing the | responsibility for these dispossessed | families where it belongs—squarely| je the shoulders of those who are| responsible for unemployment, on thé owners of industry and their hench- men in the city government. Instead of catering to the false feeling of| shame which many a worker suffers| when he sees his belongings on the street, the Unemployed Councils make every eviction an occasion of work- ing-class indignation and organiza-| tion. From Spuyten Duyvil to Canar- sie the Unemployed Councils have |for a new trial for Haywood Pat- | terson, who has been sentenced to At least 20 grounds for setting aside | the verdict will be cited by the I. L.) |D. attorneys, including charges of| prejudice, danger of mob violence to; |the defendants and their counsel, | jury tampering, etc. | “Interviewed in his office, Fraenkel | said: “At the hearing before Judge Ma- | lone the prosecution will, it is to be | presumed, present witnesses in an | effort to prove the guilt of the boys, and to testify that they are not amenable to correction for under the Alabamta law, if the Judge finds that the defendant is delinquent and that | he is incorrigible and not amenable | to correction, either by being put | under probation, or sent to an in- | stitution, then he can send the boy back to the ordinary criminal court for a trial. “The defense, of course, will pre- sent its incontrovertible proof that the boys are innocent and demand that they be freed outright.” | Describes Hearing | Deseribing the nature of the forth- | coming hearing, Attorney Fraenkel “corrective influence.” In determining that the judge will consider his past environment, his home surroundings, etc., are taken into consideration, and we will have Some witnesses from Chattanooga on that subject. Fraenkel said that while Attorney- General Knight found it impossible in the face of the facts to oppose the transfer of Roy Wright and Eugene Williams to the Juvenile Court, he nevertheless indicated that he would demand that they be sent back to the criminal court “because of the grav- ity of the offense.” Relatives Testified ‘Two witnesses had appeared at the recent hearing, the attorney said, Mrs. Beatrice Maddox, sister of Wright, who testified that her broth- er was born October 22, 1917 and ply result in the boys being thrown right back into the Morgan county criminal court. Fraenkel, a prominent New York of “The Sacco-Vanzetti Case,” pub- Mshed in 1931, Hospital and Ocolist Prescriptions Filled At One-Half Price White Gold Filled Frames—___.s1.59 ZYL Shell Frames ———. Tapes net iaclaaa | COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. | First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORebard 4-4520 constitutional lawyer, is the author 155 SECOND AVENUE Mfrs, of Balalaikas, Domras and Guitars DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. ntern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE ISTH FLOOR i All Werk Done Umer Personal Care of | | Dr. C. Weissman } i The Greatest Affair This Summer “RED PRESS” “DAILY WORKER’ ! | 9 1,000. Each of these tickets will be worth 10 cents at the door, which means that the holder will nave to pay only 20 cents additional to enter. Or- ganizations can sell these tickets at whatever price they want, thereby aiding themselves financially We expect you to take this question up at your next meeting, and to order as many tickets as you feel you can dispose of. Comrades, this is a huge undertaking! We expect tens of thousands of workers to fill Starlight Park on July 1 in a mighty demonstration of support and power for the revolutionary press. We urge you to take this matter up seriously, and to throw all efforts into the job of secur- ing as many tickets as you can, and to stimulate the greatest groups of workers to turn out in full force on Saturday, July 1st! : Tickets can be gotten at 35 E. 12th St., District Daily Worker Office, ground floor—also at Morning Freiheit office, 50 E. 13th Street, 6th floor. Signed, Red Press Carnival Committee Daily Worker-Morning Freiheit AMUSEMENTS First 100% Jewish Talkie from U. S. §. R. THE RETURN OF NATHAN BECKER | The Theatre Guild Presents ——, “BIOGRAPHY” A Comedy by S. N. BEHRMAN AVON? | 8§O JEFFERSON ¥t st. INOW A Siac . 2, FEATURES — GLORIA SWANSON Jemish-Russian Cast | in “Perfect Understanding” & i a s in A “ j 99 th RALPH 3AN English Humanity” yi? soorrmcrsae workers Acme Theatre ia) 14TH ST. AND UNION SQUARE To All Organizations That Took Advance Tickets For the Daily Worker Picnic The Daily Worker in order to buy the ticket for the trip to the Soviet Union, and to make arrangements for the six weeks in camps and the various other prizes which will be given away at the picnic, asks that all organizations turn in what- ever money has been collected so far on the advance sale of the picnic tickets. Those organizations that have run short of tickets should call for some more, and those that have not as yet taken them, please call at the City Office of the Daily Worker, 35 East 12th St. Completing 10 Years Activity of The WORKERS’ SCHOOL CONCERT and DANCE SATURDAY, JUNE 10, at 8:30 P.M. Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. Program: DEGEYTER TRIO THEATRE OF THE WORKERS SCHOOL NORMA GERTWIN WORKERS’ DANCE LEAGUE GROUP E, LESS and L, K, LUGANOV of MOSCOW—“Theatre of the Revolution” ‘Tickets: 35¢ in Advance At the door: 45¢ ON SALE NOW AT THE WORKERS’ SCHOOL, 35 EAST 12th STREET forced the payment of rents, swift) said that “the word ‘hearing’ is de- “MORNING FREIHEIT” A Tent Colony Is Being Erected at the Lake Front at WOCOLONA Charge 320 per Person Yor Entire Summer COMRADES INVITED TO JOIN Come to a Mesting Friday, June 9th at § p.m. ab WORKERS CENTER 30 East 13th Street Bus leaving front of Workers Center, | For further information phon & magistrate have completely disap- |, neared. The courts now handle dis- ‘Evins 8-8931 —. Day and Night COrtland 7-7239 — Day only care for evicted families and the cut-| liberating used in law instead of the ting of Tammany red tape. But to| word ‘trial.’ the Councils these victories are mere| examined with more informality than skirmishes in the battle to compel the adoption of a rent and relief policy which will not only keep roofs over | the heads of the jobless, but give | them some degree of security as well. There will be witnesses at a trial. The judge can cut short the cross-examination if he so de- sires. There is no jury, of course. The judge will then determine whether the boy is delinquent or not. Of course, if he determines that he ts | not, he goes out of the door, If he | determines that he is delinquent, he | has to decide what he is going to do |Rowboats, Round, Tender, | Runabout and Sailboats CHARLES FRANK 100 EAST 9th STREET NEW YORK CITY Special Prices to Proletarian| Camps NEEDLEWORBKERS APPRECIATE THE LITTLE WATCH REPAIR SHOP | [M7 SIXTH AVENUE, AT STH STREET , Tiekots at $1 per 100 or 35 Daily Worker Distric t Office, tice, 33 E, ADMISSION AT CARNIVAL SATURDAY JULY 1st, from 10 am. till after midnite STARLIGHT PARK & N. Y. COLISEUM East 177th Street, Bronx 4 WORLD OF ENTERTAINMENT ALL DAY Soviet Movie — First Showi: International Choruses, Sport Exhibition Daneing in the Great Coliseum fF 1000 can lee, 50 E. 1ath 8 call for them — 29 CEN With an advanced ticket to be ence ab every workers organization— Conte 6th 19th St. (store), or at ng HUGE ARBEITER AFFAIR FRIDAY, JUNE 9th, at 8 P. M. At the Queens County Labor Lyceum FOREST & PUTNAM AVES., BROOKLYN, N. Y. Music — Workers Choruses — Theatre — Dance Theater of the Gottscheer Maenner Chor WORKERS SCHOOL — Brooklyn Saenger Chor ADMISSION 25 CENTS UNEMPLOYED 10 CENTS Take 14th St. Line Subway (B.M.T.) to Myrthle Ave., change to Elevator to Forest Avenue.. CAMP UNITY Wingdale, N. Y. is getting ready to open for the Summer Season —Fer Information C2ll:— N.Y. Office ESTABROOK §-1400 WATC FOR M PR H 0 ETA iar R ESS WINGDALE. st D ILS During the Whole Month of June Camp Nitgedaiget 2scon.x.v. for the Benefit of the Communist Party, N. Y. Dist, Clty Phone: EStabrook 48-1400 ‘ Camp Phone: Beacon 781 Proletarian Cultural and Sport Activities Every Day Camp Cars Leave Daily 10 a.m. from 2700 Bronx Park (Toke the Lezington and White Pleins road exprecs and get off at Allerton Ave. station) FRIDAY and SATURDAY 10 a.m—3 p.m—7 p.m, Gpectal rates during the month ef June for TW.0, mombers $10 ($1 tex) Por sooperstive members and those whe stay 3 whole summe rin camp $10 ($1 tax) . Round Trip — $2.00 NO COLLECTIONS One Wer $1.25 [SPECIAL WEEK-END EXCURSION RATES for Workers’ Organ! zations (25-50 members): $1.65 (incl- tax); 50-100 $1.40 (incl, tax) Rates $13.00 per week ‘Week-Ends—2 Days $4.65 Including all taxes —1 Day $2.45 Special Activities This Week-End: Friday: CAMP FIRE Saturday: GRAND CONCERT AND BALL Sunday: LECTURE; SWIMMING RACES, BASEBALL GAME ee . EE NN

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