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Page Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK; SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1933 *Recovery” Swindle Exposed is Member, of Rochester A.C.W. Clothing Basan! Cut “Loan” Is i in Line With Roosevelt Plan (By a Needle Worker Correspondent.) ROCHESTER, N. Y.—Mr. Holtz, president of the Rochester Clothing Manufacturers Association, comes out in the press with the usual state- ment that the clothing workers of Rochester will have plenty of work— Head Boaste: ‘15 P. C. Wage| Shacks Smashed—Hooverville Becomes Roosevelt Roost that the manufacturers have on hand enough orders to operate the shops He further stated that they are withholding action in | Presidente—— on a full-time basis, order to cooperate with Roosevelt, and they were preparing, to reorganize the shops along the| line of the Roosevelt National Recov- ery Act. Boss Tried It Once Before I am a worker in Fashion Park} and a member of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers Union. I read a Similar statement a r ago in the Same papers. That statement also promised p ork within a few| weeks, and ould work full time. But it turned out to be that the| highest week was ™ to 22 hot Altogether I should say that the fir: four weeks after his statement Worked 18 hours a week. After those | | | Weeks ago. In the last six weeks I’ve only put in ten hours ne alto-} gether. This is the “ promised by Mr. Holtz last 3 Two Wage Cuts By the w wages were cut twice— first a general 10 per cent cut—and)} then the workers in the overcoat! shop got a 12 cent cut on top- coats and twe ight overcoats. There are {wo s Shop 11A is aj sackcoat shop and 11B is the over-| coat shop. The so-called defenders) of the workers’ interests, the Amal-| gamated Union officials, use the| Sackcoat shop inst the} The topcoa overcoat light-| re shop s of “the over- | ke a 12 percent ing that if coat sh i cut, the topco vould be made in| the sack Through this! scheme they lized the spirit! of the Boss Forecs Loan From Workers “Now in regard to the statement of | zi Hot itz said the bosses | h were W line proposed in the ct, Just | before in red ause the officials of are always ready to bosses, they easily accommodate th got it. Loan Returned to Union Officials If the bosses borrow from a bank they have to pay 6 per cent and| guarantee to pay back the loan. But the 15 per cent which we loaned toj S is not guaranteed by them If they should hap- any profit, then they give 25 per cent to the union officials. | Before they give to workers the en- tire sum that they had loaned to the bosses, the officials see to it that the| dues of §1.75 per month come out} first. The union officials are very in- | pen to ma terested in seeing that the dues are | paid. Due to the lack of work in the shops, the workers haye only aver- aged $5 to $6 a week, which is not enough to live on. Regardless of this, the officials only desire is to see to it that the workers y dues so that they can get their big sala: of | in Rochester (RECOVERY ACT ‘|sentative of the American Fedi jitimate” labor one lump sum the money which they have been getting short each week. That's why they favor the loan. This is one of the first steps taken to put into effect the policy of the National Recovery Act because, as Mr. Holtz's statement shows, the bosses and union officials planned this out on the basis of Roosevelt's proposals. | So you can see, fellow workers, | | while we starve the officials of the| union get their salaries and the| bosses make their profits, and they| this in the name of “pros- jon Movement Needed | Fellow-workers, it’s about time we| get wise to these maneuvers and | build a committee of action in each! | shop which will deal directly with the bosses composed of rank and file| workers. Side by side with this we must build a strong opposition within | the union against the officials and their policy of betrayal. USED TO BREAK STRIKE IN UTICA By a Special Daily Worker Reporter | ANNISTON, Ala. June 16.—The heroic strike of the Utica Mill work- here has been sold out to the| bosses by George L. Googe, repre- | tion of Labor, and Charles L. Rich- |ardson, federal conciliator. The in- strument used to break the strike was Roosevelt's Federal Industrial Control Act. Under the pretense that this strike breaking bill gives the workers the right to organize, Googe, Richard- son and the employers forced the strikers to accept a “settlement” which includes not one of the de- mands for which the workers have fought for weeks. Contingent on Roosevelt As a “favor” to the workers, the mill management agreed that the final settlement of the strike would be “contingent upon the passage of the Industrial Control Act.” The settlement provides that there is to be no discrimination against em- loyees who become members of “leg- organizations—i.e., of @ company union or a local under the treacherous misleadership of the A. F. of L. The militant unions of the Trade Union Unity League are, needless to say, not “legitimate” in the eyes of the mill bosses, with whom the decision rests as to wheth- er or not it is permissible for work- ers to join a certain union. Defied Militia The strike of the Utica mill work- ers was against a ten per cent cut 55 hours, and a particularly vicious stretch-out system. The workers have defied the national guard, load- ed machine guns, and carefully guarded scabs. The sell-out of these workers is the first fruit of the Roosevelt In- which the lowest is $43.75 a week. Officials Collect Dues in Spite of | Low Wages | The organizers have been receiving only about 45 per cent of their reg- ular salary of about $60 a week. This is because the workers can’t pay dues. But when the officials receive the 25 per cent of the profits which is supposed to pay back the workers’ | Joan, all of these officials will get in| dustrial Bill in the South. In proportion as the bourgeoisie, ie., capital, is developed, in the same proportion is the proletariat, the modern working class, devel- oped—a class of laborers, who live only so long as they find work, and who find work only so long as their labor increases capital—Communist Manifesto. TORGSIN orders enable your relatives in Soviet Russia to purchase all sorts of domestic or im- ported articles at low prices. For orders on Torgsin apply to ‘these banks, or companies, or their authorized agents: Amalgamated Bank, N. Y¥. Am-Derutra Transport Corp. American Express: Co. Gdynia-America Line Hias Manufacturers Trust Oo. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. Public Nat'l Bank & Trust Co. R.C.A. Communications, Inc. Union Tours Amalgamated Trust & Sav- ings Bank, Chicago in Soviet Russia there are Torgsin stores in over 600 localities. Torgsin orders may be sent to anyone, in any quantity. To cities that have no TORG- SIN stores, Torgsin mails your order by parcel post, GENERAL REPRESENTATIVE in U.S.A. 261 Fifth Ave. aot siowiNew YOrk.N.Y Why Popular Wall Tent its +++ $4.95 JARANTEED WATERPROOF in the city for Individuals and Groups Buy Second-Hand Tent When a New One Sells for Less @ AT é SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE 121 Third Avenue WORKERS’ CAMPS SUPPLIED WITH TENTS, COTS, BLANKETS, COOKS OUTFITS, ETC. at LOWEST PRICES | Brooklyn, in the wages of $1 to $3 a week for| THE REMAINS OF THE HOOV ployed now deal” government of Roosevelt, and JOBLESS ON TRIAL, Self-Defense in Con Legal | Weapon NEW YORK —Self-defense will will be used by Sadie Berg, who will be tried this Monday with Irving ‘tmen. and Bertha Friedman at the Penn- sylvania and Liberty Avenue Court, | for having taken part in a demonstration for relief at a Home Relief Bureau. The decision to use self-defense | follows upon the dismissal of charges | against Irving Dolb, secretary of the Brownsville Unemployed Council |and suspended sentences for th other workers when leaflets were issued and an announcement m: that the workers would demand jury trials and conduct their own defense. Rather than give the arrested worker the chances to defend themselves and expose their frame-up and capi- talist class justice before a crowded court room, the presiding judge freed them. The International Labor Defense, whose lawyers assisted the arrested workers, issued a statement on the | policy of self-defense, saying, in part: | Worlsers Accusers Workers must lose their awe of capitalist courts. They must face the court and judge not as accused but as accusers. They must demand the right to jury trial and show their workingclass courage by exposing the nature of the capitalist frame-up system through speeches made by them in self-defense. By so doing they rally workers to the courtroom to support them and become accusers against the entire capitalist class in- stead of facing the court as culprits. The I. L. D. policy of self defense has been proven a more effective weapon than legal defense for the release of | ‘DEMAND FOR NO DISCRIMINATION | IN RELIEF WON: ‘Kaplan, Spokesman | for Strikers, Is Held in Jail PROVIDENCE, R. ae June 16.— award P» Reidy, Director of Public | Aid, accepted yesterday the demands of the strikers on a relief job not to | discriminate against any worker oat IR | the return to the job, The wage cut | has been rescinded. After the strike committee left | Reidy’s office and were waiting for a) car, the police arrested Kaplan and | Ford, both members of the commit- | tee. Ford was released later, while | Kaplan is held incommunicado. With this act the officials expected | to stifle the militancy of the men | | who returned to work. | ‘The workers adopted resolutions jcondemning the unity of the relief officials, the police and capitalist newspapers against the strikers. They condemned the arrest of Kap- lian and demanded his immediate re- lease. | The men are determined to build their organization, the Right to Live 'Club. They are developing a move- |ment to fight for their demands of $10 weekly cash relief for married people plus an additional dollar a week for each dependent. workers had lived here under the shadow of Wall Streets skyscrapers, on the edge of the East River, in huts built of egg boxes and tin, until raided a month ago by New York polic live there again in worse COURT AS ACCUSERS, NOT ACCUSED, | wife and one small child lived on. | Union is leading the strike. the re ER regime, several hundred jobless The shacks smashed, unem- squalor—a tribute to the “new Morgan, MONDAY FACE | More Effective Than Saysd. L. D. cla as war prisoners, As in the Dolb trial, the I. Lo-D.-attorney’s task ava be that of-guarding the work- ers against the legal trickery of the bosses’ cour Demand Jobless Insur-| ance! STAFF CHOSEN FOR INDUSTRIAL [Military Experts for Program of So-Called Public Works WASHINGTON, June 16.—The or- ganization being perfected under the direction of Hugh S. Johnson, the administrator of the “industrial re- covery” act, reads like a cross-section of strike breakers and scab herders in all the industries of the country. Johnson, himself, is an army of- ficer, and connected with the Moline Plow Works, notorious for years as one of the worst open shop estab- lishments in the country. Military Man Chief Aide The administrator of the “public works” section is to be Colonel George R. Spalding, division engineer of the army on the upper Mississippi, with headquarters in St. Louis. Spalding will have his headquarters in the Navy department. Herded into forced labor camps the unemployed youth will be used to build military auxiliary forces, while at the same time slaving under conscript regula- tions at one dollar or less a day. Spalding will have as his aides Colonel H. M. Waite, who will be deputy public works director; Major C. H. Cunningham of the Army En- gineers’ Corps; and P. B. Fleming, former graduate manager of athletics at the West Point army officers’ academy. Prominent Strike-Breakers Nelson Slater, president of the Slater Mills and of S. Slater & Sons of Webster, Mass., with mills also in Slater, Greenville County, South Carolina, is also a member of the Johnson organization.- This man is one of the bitterest opponents of or- ganized labor and lives off the ex- ploitation of women and child mill slaves who toil for hunger wages. Another member is Arthur, D. Whiteside, president of the National (Daily Worker Photo) MOLDY BREAD, thrown on the Brooklyn dumping grounds being picked up by an unemployed long- shoreman. When questioned by the Daily Worker photographer he said it was almost all the food he, his! STRIKE SPREADS AT COMMODORE, NEW YORK.—In solidarity with the workers striking in the Laundry | and Help’s Hall at the Hotel Com- modore, workers of the Station Cafe Department ofthe hotel came out on strike yesterday, forming a pick- et line and various strike commit- tees. The Food Workers Industrial Other Workers Act Word has been received that other departments are organizing and planning to strike soon. This is the first major hotel strike since the seneral strike about ten years ago, and has caused a stir among the otel workers. The Commodore strikers demand tatement of all strikers, ; no discrimination, return of the last } wage cut, 8-hour day, straight shift, pay for overtime, recognition of de- partment committee and other de- mands, A dance in support of the strike as been arranged by the Strike Committee for this Saturday night, at 1413 Fifth Ave., near 116th St. Ritzy CommodoreHotel Called Slave Hall’ NEW YORK. (FP)— Sneaking in the back way, notables including Millionaire Harry F, Guggenheim and Governor Lehman of New York raised $250,000 for the Jews of Ger- many, at a dinner in the Hotel Com- modore, while workers whe received wages of $4 to $5 a week were picket- ing the hotel. The strikers term the hotel, one of New York's ritzlest, a “slave hall.” The pickets carried signs reading: “We Strikers Are Against Hitler’s Persecution in’ German and Slavery in the Hotel Commodore. The strik- ers, led by the Food Workers Indus- trial Union, are fighting against mis- erable food and wage slashse. The latest to join the strike are the work- | ers in the hotel's station cafe, bring- ing the strikers’ number to 100. to send delegates to its convention on comment among the workers. In, part the call is given here, stressing its main points, addressed to mem- bers of the International Longshore- men’s Association, unorganized long- shoremen, Negro and white: “Last October the LL.A. signed an agreement that brought you a ten cents an hour wage, a cut in the size of gangs, unheard of speed- up and increased unemployment affecting over 80 per cent of the men, more rackets, such as the House job-selling and a piece off to the gang boss and the Democratic Club, control by the boss, instead of the union, of the size of gangs and drafts.” “We do not propose to any organ- ized longshoreman to leave or destroy his organization. .. . We propose a united fight -of the full forces for the defense of the conditions of the Jongshoremen as well as those of the other workers in the marine indus- try. regardless of their union affilia- Call Longshoremen to Marine Convention NEW YORK.—“We Can Do It,” is the title of the call of the Marine Workers Industrial Union to the organized and unorganized longshoremen The call was distributed yesterday on many docks and aroused much Pea tions, race, color, religious or polit- July 16-18, ical beliefs.” “We propose that a special long- shore session be held at our con- vention, where longshoremen from all over the country and New York can talk over and adopt demands for the new agreement and make plans to fight for them.” The call concludes by asking I. L, A. members and others to elect fraternal delegates from the docks and locals, It is being distributed at all the major docks in New York and already longshoremen are in- quiring for more information at the headquarters of the union, 140 Broad St. Go to see every subscriber when his subscription expires to get his re- | poration, Credit Office, president of the Wool Institute. The latter organization is the leading trade association of the woolen and worsted manufacturers, members of which include the lead- ing wool manufacturing companies of of Lawrence, Passaic, Philadelphia and other low wage centers. Dudley Coats is also a member of the Johnson outfit. He is a vice- president of the March & McLennan concern of Chicago and a director of the Export Insurance Company of New York City, the Swiss Oil Cor- poration, the Ashland Refining Com- pany, the Chicago Investors’ Cor- the scabby Minneapolis- Moline Power Implement Company and the Lea Fabrics Corporation. Every one of these concerns is strong- ly anti-labor. Steel Trust Strike-Breaker Each of the above open-shop bosses will have charge of dictating wages, hours and conditions in different in- custries. W. L. Allen of New York, consulting engineer and steel manu- facturer is to be “coordinator” for the steel industry, which is the most ag- gressive anti-labor outfit in the United States. Also in the organization under the direction of Johnson are a score of university professors, alleged econo- mists, Among these are Dr. Alex Sachs, formerly associated with the Lehman concern in New York, and S M. Du Bruhl of the General Mo- tors Research Division. Edward F. McGrady, notorious strike-breaker, red-baiter and union- wrecker, who has for many years been legislative agent for the Amer- ican Federation of Labor, is also in the organization charged with the special job of acting as liaison officer labor betrayers at the head of the jvarious international and national unions. All industries are to draw up pro- posals for carrying through the pro- visions of the “industrial recovery” act which outlaws strikes, makes ar- bitration compulsory, enables the president to dictate wages, hours and conditions of labor, does away with all anti-trust legislation and throws the full power of the government be- hind the finance capitalists striving for bigger monopolies. The discard- ing of “unprofitable” units in all In- dustry will throw hundreds of thov- sands of workers into the army of unemployed. BIG VICTORY WON BY BUFFALO IRON STRIKERS BUFFALO, N. Y., June 16.—After North Buffalo Hardware and Stand- ard Foundries compelled the bosses to withdraw the 23 and a half to \31 per cent deduction from every dollar earned, to recognize the shop committee which is to represent every department in the two shops and to promise no discrimination against the strikers. The gains achieved were a tremendous victory for the strikers. The splendid spirit of unity among the workers was evidenced in the action taken to have the strike com- mittee of 12 act as the shop com. mittee until the next meeting of all the workers when the union will be set up. Recognition of the shop committee practically means recog- nition of the union as the men are now signing up rapidly with the Metal Workers Industria) Union. Unemployed Council Heads, The strike was carried through with mass picketing. From 300 to 400 workers were on the picket line from 4 a, m. to midnight. The mem- bers of the Unemployed Council were militant and active in the leadership of the strike. Many had been re- hired recéntly by the company. When the strike was called about 200 marched to the Unemployed Coun- cil headquarters and asked the or- ganizr to help their strike. The Council responded immediately showing the strikers how to organize committees and picketing. A victroy picnic to celebrate this significant achievement of the newal at Munchas Farm, PEONAGE BILL | which is organized by the Downtown. a two day strike, 450 workers of the | General Hugh S. pointed by Roosevelt to be chief administrator of the National Re- Johnson, ap- covery Act. He will wield dicta- torial power in regard to wage cuts, hours of work, mergers—always under the orders of the biggest corporation owners who dictate to the whole Roosevelt government. FREE GONSHAK PARADE MONDAY; EVE OF APPEAL NEW YORK.—On the eve of the hearing of an appeal from the con- viction of Sam Gonshak to two years on “disorderly conduct,” a “Free Sam Gonshak” parade and demonstration will be held this Monday, 7 p.m., starting at Seventh Street and Ave- nue A and culminating at Monroe and Jackson Street. The parade, Unemployed Council and the Down- town section of the International Labor Defense will be preceded by a street run. Hear Appeal Tuesday Hearing on Gonshak's appeal will be heard the next day, Tuesday, in Criminal Courts Building, Smith and Schermerhorn Street, Brooklyn. The hearing is open to the public. Gonshak was sentenced to two years by Judge Aurelio, although the maximum sentence for disorderly conduct is six months. A writ of habeus corpus sued by the Interna- tional Labor Defense on the grounds that the sentence was illegal was Genied last week by Supreme Court Judee Bernord Shientag. The I. ©. D. showed Gonshak was convicted because he is a leader of the jobless. Part of Drive On Thursday, two unemployed workers, Clarke and Barnet, were declared guilty of “assault” for de- manding relief at a Home Relief Bu- reau. Arrests and sentences in all parts of the city show that this is a concerted drive ordered by the city government to stifle the demands of militant workers for relief. I. L. D. branches, block commit- tees, mass organizations, are called to participate in the parade Monday with their banners, and by a strong show of mass support help effect the release of Gonshak and other jobless prisoners and further the struggle of the unemployed. They are also urged to send teleerams and resolutions ad- dressed to Chief Just Kernochan, Appellate Part of the Court of Spe- cial Sessions, Smith and Schermer- horn Str Brooklyn, demanding Gonshak’s immediate release. CLASSIFIED THREE ROOMS—All furnished, sublet for summer. All improvements. | Reasonable. ! Klimeck, 348 E. 19th St, Hours between) 5 and 8. BROOKLYN FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARZANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE for Brownsville Workers! Hoffman’s RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA | Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. Police Terror Against Coney. Peddlers Two Arrested as Mass Indignation Forces Court To Release Boy Peddler Arrested and Beaten Last Sunday NEW YORK.—A cop was badly beaten, and young worker whom he tried to arrest was torn from his hands at 7th Street and Brighton Avenue Thursday night when he tried to stop a meeting called by Brighton Beach Peddlers Defense Committee and the Young Commu- nist League to protest the clubbing and arrest of Sol Stuppler, 17, Coney Island Beach. Boy Freed Stuppler received a suspended sen- tence ‘yesterday when the same judge who threatened him a “good lesson” at the first trial backed down before a court room filled with in- dignant workers supported by vigor: ous defense by lawyers of the Inter- national Labor Defense. Many of the workers in court saw the boy slugged by the cop as he was last} Sunday for selling ice cream on the| =¥- xt selling ice cream t6 aid’ his: family. His father is unemployed and his brother is at a Roosevelt forced labor reforestation camp, , Ai emergency squad hed to be callé@to quell the angry workers beofre?Stuppler could be taken away last Sunday. Two Arrested After the meeting had dispersed Thursday night two innocent people Harry Tense and Hisener were are rested while walking in the neighe borhood to be “the goat” for the cops well deserved beating. Owing to the indignation running high among Coney? Eland workers against the repeated jattacks by po- lice, the court did not*dare to charge the two with felonious assault as originally intended, “but made the charges “disorderly .¢onduct and postponed the trial. until June 26, The I. L. D. will defend them, VETS MEET TODAY NEW YORK.—A report on the Washington veterans’ convention, and the discussion of plans to force the repeal of the entire economy re- lief bill and to secure adequate re- lief for all’ needy veterans of the nation, will be on the order of busi- ness this afternoon at 2 p. m. when Negro and white veterans meet at Washington Irving High School, 16th St. and Irving Place. George D, Brady, chairman of the Veterans National Liason Committee that led the recent vet mach to Washington will be among the speakers. (Bronx) 705 ALLERTON AVENUE AT WHITE PLAINS ROAD Every Bite a Delight Home Phone: Office Phone: Olinville 5-1109 Estabrook 8-2573 DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2074 WALLAVE AVE. corner Allerton Avenue Bronx, N. ¥. MOT THAVEN 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue) DAYTON 9-4000 D. BACKER INTERVALE Moving & Storage Co., Inc. BRONX, N. 962 WESTCHESTER AVE. ¥; | YONKERS RED--CARNIVAL Yan Cortlandt, Tibbetts Brook and Psli- sades Park Hikers, come,in for an evening's fun, Sat. & Sun., June 17-18 Westchester Workers Center for UNEMPLOYED COUNCIL 27 HUDSON STREET, YONKERS Program: WILLIAM SIEGEL’S: CHALK TALK RED DANCERS — SOCIAL DANCING ROB ROBBINS ‘SKIT Refreshments, Roast.Goose and Other sdayay, poor Modernistic COUCHES CHAIRS —FLOOR SAMPLES— Unbelievable Low Prices Metropolitan Furniture Co. 1332 So. Boulevard Bronx Russian Art Shop Peasants’ Handicrafts 100 East t4thSt., N. Y. ¢. Imports ‘from U.S.8R. (Russia) ‘Tea, Candy, Cigarettes, Smocks, Toys Shawls, (Novelties, Woodearving ‘Lacquered Work Phone: Laman 40004 GOTTLIEB’S HARDWARE 119 THIRD AVENUE Near 1ith St, TOmpkins Sq. 6-4547 ALL KINDS OF ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Manhattan Lyceum Hall For Mass Meetings,’ ¥zitertainments Balls, Weddings and. Banquets 66-68 E. 4th St. New York Comrades are buying their Shoes at GENZLER’S FAMILY SHOE STORE 1317 WILKINS AVENUE BEST SHOES For the Entire Family Lowest Prices Comradely Attention ARMY TENTS 16xi6 $8.00 up Cots—S1.00 Blarikets $1.25 up Fall Line of Camping’ Equipment MANHATTAN MILITARY 478 WATER STREET Absolutely Lowest Prices ‘ Are You Moving or Storing Your Furniture? CALL HARLEM 17-1053 COOKE’S STORAGE 209 East 125th St. Special Low Rates to‘ Comrades GARMENT DISTRICT Brighton Beach SHeepshead 3-10447 Nigberg’s Bakery and Lunch Room 314 Brighton Beach Avenue Orders Taken for All Occasions Brighton Beach Workers WELCOME AT Hoffman’s Cafeteria 282 BRIGHTON BEACH AVENUE OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Garment Section Workers Navarr Cafeteria 338 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. Phones: Chickering 4947—Longacre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION —Balalaika Orchestra “Paradise” Meals for Proletarians Gar - Feins Restaurant 1626 PITKIN AVE., B’]KLYN Williamsburgh Comrades WELCOME De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave, Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT DOWNTOWN Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES with atmosphere t A pla where all radicals 302 E. 12th St. JADE MOUNTAIN ~ American & Chinese Restaurant Club Valhalla Jazz Band —DANCING TILL 1:30 —Dining and Drinks Round Trip 75c in adv. At the Pier $1.00 — MOONLIGHT SAIL Saturday, June 17 BOAT LEAVES 6:30; "Pier 11 East River, Foot of Wall Street WALL ST. STATION—LE.T., B.M.T, Tickets" WORKERS BOOKSHOP, 50 East 18th 6t. FRIENDS of SOVIET UNION, 799 B'way Record of all tickets must be in at | FSU, office by Sat. noon, June 17 CARNIVA at ULMER PARK Program: 1, Chorus of: 600 L OF ALL WORKERS’ CLUBS 5 Sports and Games Bands 3. Two Brass. Saturday, June 24, at 2 P. M.|4. soviet Newsreet: 5. Political Satire West End Line to Bay 25th St., Brooklyn |® Side Shows. Tickets obtainable at all Clubs. 7. Continuous Dancing with Double Jazz, Band. FOR FINE CLOTHING AT SAM and 142 STANT PROLETARIAN PRICES SEE ABE FLAMM Now With ADOLPH ‘ON STREET aod ABE FLAMM IS GRATEFUL for the response from old. & ‘new friends 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 workers is being arranged for Sunday Welcome to Our Comrades All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA > Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 5° F. 13TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER———~- - =