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Ty, ‘age o DAILY WORKER NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1933 RALLY TO SUPPORT OF RED PRESS AT CARNIVAL IN STARLIGHT PARK TODAY! Today’s the Big Day Out to Red Press Carnival! Workers Thruought City to Rally to Support of ‘Daily’ at Starlight Park Rain or Shine! months of both the “Da: YORK.—Tod: summe ery borou and the Freiheit. You do your s every suburban Round up your far our friend: ‘Ss live, mas: of to: and children and -trienc antic 1 brir ‘em ng in the morning th you, first to Starlight of Star engaged for ates Park, ¢ day t tl the Volunteers Needed | for Big Red Press Carnival Today! am late at the workers have ¢ i Bronx Coliseum, ntee ed to , to dance unti t the gates of Starlight any splenditi features co th Street, the Bronx, not already annc 1. ir later than 9 o'clock this morning! a wor! that many workers os and for tk ing, chalk talks by the in order to e ierotesee “Proleta: Red Press Carnival. too ch Starlight k, take P yton Avenue express, I. R. T., ie success of thi: air de- the publication during the WoryeIs “IS UILLT 9B JJO 488 pus | DEAD COMMUNIST HONORED TODAY Funeral from Workers ees eral eAusstions! program the | ’ < | Week-end starting July 1-in all work- | Center at 2 O’clock ers camps, namely, Unity, Niteedai. | get and Kinderland, will be under | the auspices of the New York Dis- | trict of the Communist Party. Ela- | borate preparations are being made, including such attractions as Work- jers Laboratory Theatre, Movie show- | fay at the age of 60. His body will|ing, tennis tournaments, sports, | lie in state at the Workers Center, 50 | ames and water sports. East 13th Street, from 11 am. until! A special committee in charge of 2 pm., when the funeral will be held | these preparations is working strenu- anc the body removed for cremation. | ously to provide the attractive pro- Dr. Mislig became a charter mem- ;srams for the hundreds of workers | or of the Communist Party after | who will spend their July 4 week-end te left-wing split from the Socialist | at these workers’ resorts. arty in 1919. He remained an active | os | ad loyal member of the Communist | Oe SEE ity until his death. ‘Jobless Youth in Suicide Leap; Urges | Children Out of Way July 1-4 Programs in All Workers’ Camps by Communist Party NEW YORK.—Workers will pay tribute today to the memory of the fruitful revolutionary activities of Dr. Mivnael Mislig, noted surgeon and eteran Communist, who died Thurs- HILDRE: CAMP REGISTRA-)} TION CLOSES SATURDAY NEW YORK.—Registration for the ildren in the first two week group | Sole cra: wincase New val despondent because he could find no clos#§ thie Saturday. The office of the| WOrE told children playing beneath yp is at 870 Broadway. The first | the window of 614 East 11th Street cup leave this Wednesday at 9 a.m.| to move away and then leaped from | can the Workers Center Building at|*he third floor of the building last | 50 E. 13th St. lone | He was taken to the Bellevue Hos- | HISTORY OF COMMUNIST -| pital in a critical condition. | ‘ INTERNATIONAL COURSE | RENTER APL | fbi IN WORKERS’ SCHOOL, G° to see every subscriber when his | EW YORK.—Sidney lone als | eebecrntion expires to get his re-| conduct a six weeks’ course in HiStory of the Communist In-} - NEW YORK.—Andy Gruchak, 19, Boys in Camps Depend _ on Fish to Get Enough to Eat By a Labor Camp Correspondent ELY, Minn.—Camp 704-CCC is at Birch Lake, about 12 miles from here It is made up of 212 men. Everybody is complaining about the food. Usual- ly the case is that they don't get enough; and some have gone even so far as to go shing in the eve- nings so that they would have enough to eat They work in the woods planting trees, and this work goes on rain or shine. For lunch in the woods they get two lousy sandwiches (usually cheese or potato) and a canteen of doctored water They sleep in tents on straw filled mattresses, which are usually damp. NEW YORK.—The entire cultural | They have inspection once a week.| Who questioned me for hours Mosquito netting was not issued to them till a few days ago, and probably would not have done it yet, but one of the boys was so badly stung by in- sects during the night, that the next morning he was unable to open one of his eyes. They have a doctor here, but all he has is first aid, bandages, iodine, etc. They all advise everybody not to join, and some are going to take French leave after pay day. ingle Jobless Relief Action to Be Planned at Meeting Monday NEW YORK.—All members of the Unemployed Councils and other workingclass organizations are asked to be present at a meeting on Mon- day, July 3, at 2 p.m., at 10 East 17th Street, called by the City Council of Greater New York to discuss plans for the struggle for unemployment ; relief. Workers Go Unpaid NEW YORK.—Workers on Bronx relief jobs went in vain for their sal- aries to the central paying station at 131st St. and Park Ave. yesterday. After waiting all morning and until 2 p.m. they were told to come back “tomorrow at 9 a.m.” LATRINES CAUSEREPULSIVE EPIDEMIC OF ONE-FOURTH OF CAMP RECRUITS By a Labor Camp Correspondent FT. ARTHUR, SAN PEDRO, Cal.—| line up and listen to the usual lec-| Well all I have to say is that I Being a late member of the Civilian | Conservation Corps, and having had| a month’s experience in camp, I can’t | reconcile my experiences in the C.C.C. with the stories they are printing daily in the capitalist press When I enlisted they assured me and my friends that there was noth- ing military connected with the C.C.C.} Yet we were not in the camp more than 10 minutes when the hardboiled army officers in charge gave us to understand that we were in the army now, and that we were not to forget it. There was considerable discussion | about this among the boys. I tried to | point out the great necessity of their| groans when the fellows first saw the | keeping together and forming some| | kind of rank and file control. The} | officers soon began to notice the ag-| em board with holes drilled out andj Uscrimination here. I ask you what jitation, and they spotted me as aj|nothing but flies and stench, refuse | jan dearth beneath. No running water! “red.” Court-Martialed for Agitation As soon as their suspicions became strengthened, I was arrested and im- | prisoned in the guardhouse a then | tried before the commanding officers, | For | | evidence they produced papers and} correspondence stolen from my bar-| rack bags. They found me guilty and | I was immediately discharged on the} grounds of “unsatisfactory work.” Hard Camp Routine I am still in contact with quite a| | few of the boys. One writes... “get- ‘Desertions from Labor, Camps Not Ballyhooed in Capitalist Press By a Worker Correspondent LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Out of 28 reforestation camps in Arkansas, 5 are | located in private projects of South- |ern lumber magnates, while the re-| | mainder are on national forests and | state parks, , Companies are being conditioned at Camp Pike, with boys sent in from Mississippi and other states, while from Arkansas detachments were sent to California. While the press ballyhoo about the Civilian Conservation Corps, no men- tion is made of the many boys who have deserted or were discharged for protesting the general conditions im- posed by the militarized burocracy. Army officers have been arriving daily in airplanes from various parts of the U. S. A. to take up some com- ‘mission of the army to handle the 28 different companies of 200 men in each, ting back to work after breakfast we ture and orders, etc. and at ten to seven pass through the mess hall and check out by number for “con- enience sake” receive our dry lunch ‘ll our canteen with water, and walk bout two miles up the mountain trail, axe over shoulder, and work un- til 11:30. Eat our sandwiches and drink our water and at twelve work again till 2:30, a total of seven hours of hard laber. Then homeward check in onte more, take a shower, and by that time it is almost 4:30. At five we have supper. Latrines Cause Epidemic After supper we visit the day room the “Latrine,” and were there or toilets. They are twenty-five years out of style. Merely a shack, a wood- or plumbing. As a result a severe epidemic of “crabelites” developed. Almost one-fourth of the men are prey to this desease. Strike Threatens for Better Food Another boy writes how spontane- ously sixty boys threatened to strike if the food did not get better. An- other writes that he would trade places with me anytime. He.is so disgusted. . All in all, the C.C.C boys have been given a dirty deal from a cold deck. —R. S. Feels He’s Re-entering the Army on Arriving at Mitchel Field Camp By a Labor Camp Correspondent MITCHELL FIELD, N. Y.—I used to be in the United States Army and it was like old times joining up with the Citizens Conservations Camps. There were 4,000 lined up at Mitchell Field where we were assigned, when the lieutenant brought up the pledge to fight and die for the U. S. flag. Out of the 4,000 about 300 quit right then and there. The lieutenant told them they were a fine bunch of quit- ters, but I couldn’t blame them. All the guys who were in the Army before couldn’t quit then, because an ex- soldier is always liable if he says he won't fight any more. Most of the C. C. C. are doing for- estry, but there are 6,000 of us push- ing planes and doing odd jobs around Mitchell Field. It is the same as the army, with officers and all. But the guys who were in the army ner session. Registration for the se, which costs $1.50, is now go- n at the Workers’ School, 35 E. newal. (tional in the Workers’ School} 0 S St © third floor. “WHAT’S ON By HARRY GANNES Sy ARTICLE VI | rday Before discussing the public works| | section of the industrial recovery bill, (Manhattan ) Title III, it will be necessary at this} £D /PRESS: THE WEINSTEIN DE- «NSE COMMITTEE CANCELLING JULY RST PARTY STOP REQUESTING OUR point first to take up some tactical | questions in the struggle against the} VEN HUNDRED COMRADES To atT-| labor sections of the bill. | ND YOUR CARNIVAL AT STARLIGHT| General Hugh §S. Johnson, “ad-| RG INGTEAD STOP WILL HOLD PARTY | ministrator” of the act, is already re-! 4Y EIGHTH. R ¢ MEMBERS OF coMMUNIST parTy,| quired to do some tall explaining to) @. L. and Workers’ Organizations who| keep the workers quiet. He instructed e_unemployed and wish to start work | the employers that they should take| fe Sites of Deny worker’ 98m. 12th g| the initiative in the wage codes. They| Isa those comrades who e and| are to go on as they always have in ish to do some volunteer work for Daily| the past in their policy towards the a: during day. Ask for Com-/ workers and in their struggle for pro- DANCE AND ENTERTAINMENT National | fits. y ny attention to the collective bargaining Good jazz squib or other labor tomfoolery in 5 E. He told them they need pay no! tudent League, 583 Sixth Ave. | and! Dance till dawn! Beer me 1th and ath at the recovery act. They have a Labor | dttee. Lucky number will be Advisory Board to take care of that.| elect a child for mp. Downtown Une: > B, near 6th St. (Brooklyn) ONCERT AND DANCE, Conflicts Insreasing. General Johnson admitted class antagonisms were sharpening. He put it in this roundabout way: “In the first place there has recently ‘jth St. and Mermaid Ave. Coney Island.) been unfortunate and ill-informed BLOCK PARTY, 42nd and 43rd Sts.| conjecture that there is some mutual lock Committee, at 4109—13th Ave. 8 p.m.} F idm, 10c. Refreshments. | fear between labor and industry COME TO CONEY ISLAND'S sPacious| Which has slowed up the preparation JALLROOM, City Club Youth Center. | of industrial agreements for submis- Qance to music of Buddy Riser and Band.| sion to the president.” Ramee 2863 West Sth St, Coney/ tHe told the workers not to ask to participate in discussion and strug- | gles over the setting of their wage Workers’ unft Club, Coney Island Workers’ Center, Zu- INTERNATIONAL ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCE, Porto Rican Anti-Imperialist Assn., eee 2h 8:30 Dm. | rates, over hours and conditions. He (Yonkers ) | wants them to remain silent, obe- ge aga Workers’ Center. 27 Hudson | dient, hogtied while the bosses de- AS NS ir ttainment,| termine how they shall live, eat. Help build the Work- , A ,.... oo slave, if they get a job; and how they Sunday shall starve when new millions are added to the ranks of the 17,000,000 without work. The greatest danger for the work- ers is to allow themselves uncon- ciously and insidiously, to be filled with the doctored news reports that now accompany the putting of the bill into action. Experience should warn every worker, every member of COME TO CONEY BALLROOM, City Segge to music. “Buddy Riser and Band. tainment 2863 West Fifth St., Cor ISLAND'S SPACIOUS Club Youth Center. 8665—2ist ‘ogram, re- ipate. Pro- SNCIL 10, Gerden Party, Sckopps home. Good ® nents. All urged to pai to C. P ILE BRONX WORKERS' COUNCIL 1.8 banquet and dance. Proceeds to C.P. @ Third Ave. 6 p.m. the a. F. of L. that the whole- RN CLOR TO HUNTERS ISLAND, | hearted support given to the bill by b ot 1598 Madison Ave. at 9:30 sharp.| the chief labor leutenants of the) Lopenteietr eas Cale ene wen el cepitalist class (Green, Woll, Hill- jouncil No. of Brighton Beach, ifs Hi Third St. Adm. 45e, Proceeds for|™2M Lewis é& Co.) immediately digestion ack brands it as a continuation, in a @ HOUSEWARMING OF F.S.U. Harlem In- new guise, of the policy that these (deenational Br. new headquarters, 87 W.|leaders have followed all along. Mth St, 8 p.m. Surprise program, Dan- Li (Sand refreshments. ‘Adm.| General Propaganda Not Enough But merely to repeat the general All welcome. All Our Choruses & Mandolin orchestra will entertain the crowd the whole day in different parts of the Park. Best Soviet Movie never shown before in U. &., will be shown, Labor Sports Union will have various sport exhibi- tions that will be a real treat John Reed Club Art- ists. will draw cartoons from every day life. 30 CENTS with ADMISSION FOR THE WHOLE DAY ! All Stories of Epidemics, Bad Food, Exposure, Filth, Told by Workers in Roosevelt’s Forced Labor Camps “WeWash, Cook, Drink and Swim in the Same Water,” Writes Recruit By a Labor Camp Correspondent C. ©. C., CHILLICOTHE, Ohio. am ition or allowance for the last time, |the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League | tacks of the bosses and the govern: | will lead a march of Negro and white | ment is of vital importance to thr VETERANS MARCH TODAY; PROTEST J ati N |Demonstration Caller to Defend Fur Unio NEW YORK.—A mass demonstr |gles, has been called for Wednesda} — ‘July 5, at 10 am., at Union Square dreds of thousands of war veterans |nist Party. The defense of the fur will receive their disability compensa- | section of the Needle Trades Work- a . ie Communist Part tion, in support of the furriers’ strug NEW YORK.—Today, when hun-|by Sections 1 and 2 of the Commu- ers’ Industrial Union against the at. jvets from the Veterans Bureau where | defense of all trade unions and work they will present a petition protest- | } p |ing conditions against the Recov | going to ie 5ee the truth. ing the $450,000,000 slash of benefits | (Slavery) Act rosters ee a bie oe pun Say ye |provided for under the Economy Act. All Section 2 functionaries are eg ee ek aa ay GGE Tena _ They will demand’ (i) The imme. | asked to come to the section head nothing big enough to ‘supply the | ite cash payment ot the balafce |quarters today at 2 to obtain leaf pites (Weleda ania ane was | ue on the Adjusted Service Certti- |lets calling workers to the demonstra. Pp. to 8 ‘ cates, the so-calleo Bonus. /2) The. tion. 90 in the shade under the tree) limmediate restorction of. disabilit Our eats are seldom right. When, | 9m, pinnae : neta Sp Bee er seca ur am rig 2|compensations allowances, pensions,, METAL BED WORKERS MEET ete a4 soen i Seen eD) 4 i. 7 | Bespital and domiciliary care. ana} NEW YORK.—Worke : in | the not seasoned, so your stomack is full: 'ather Veteran benefits affected by | metal be Ser ane 5 It will even ache, but you are still] metal bed industry are called to a hungry (not enough salt) the so-called Economy Act, (3) tm- | mass meeting today at 5 p.m. at the mediate adequate 4 for the Un- rters When there is not enough to eat|employed ano Farmers and (4) Ap- tet! of the Ura Le Aas we rave plenty and the next day the|pointment of a Lis Officer at tne,” DUNS! Union, S18 Broadway, meal is better. On Sunday and holi-| Veterans’ Admin: tion repro: | A salen Vhaauacorm aanlaien aie e S) days or when visitors are present we|ing the Worker Ex-Servicemer the EI 5 cht lke Linen: Tenge he Eternal Light on Madison i Cae Aap pei re Among the s»vakers will be gore Oe memes UP vera : The line of march wili be from the | Peter Cacchiones, evin, Haroid swspaper, : | Veterans’ Bureau east slong 34th St.!fickerson and P. Alerander of the |do you call the following: | groes live in the rear tents, work |separate from the whites. There are! no Negroes who are truckdrivers—in | | spite of the boys asking, which was answered with promises of “when the/ 'new ones come in, they will put} ‘some’ on.” We all sleep on cots and they are on the ground. When it rains, we! play the part of the fish, and when | it is dry we are supposed to play the | part of the camel. We wash, cook, drink, and swim in the same water ‘cook and drinking water is supposed | to be sterilized), which only gives it ,@ worse taste than natural. | For a toilet we have a hole in the} ground with a box and they put lime} on it, but it is so hot here and still! The Ne- it does not help much. The fiies crawl all over you while you are | there. These same flies come. and| }enjoy lunch with you. | before get the breaks. They made | me a non-com. and I get $45 a month instead of $30. And if any of us vet- | jerans are A.W.O.L. we get jailed for a few days, but the others are dis- | {charged. They try to make us feel | that a buck private in the army is |beuter than us, as if being in the real } my makes them higher, but that | doesn’t fool us. | LL WE FIGHT AGAINST INDUSTRIAL SLAVERY ACT? | propaganda against the bill, to an-j} swer it with the usual (and quite true) exposure of the general program | of capitalism in the present crisis, would not aid in smashing the illu- sions which the bill has already created and which it still will create. | The act requires a specific, con- crete answer to show up its whole basis, and its meaning, how it will work for the toiling masses as a whole, how the capitalists propose to profit by it. How much the capital- ists will gain by it in the way of profits, in the way of establishing a lower level of living for the American working class will be decided by the nature and extent of the struggle against it, led by the Communist Party and the Trade Union Unity League. Methods of Struggle It is necessary, by every means and every opportunity, to stimulate a discussion on the act in every shop,| factory, mine, mill, store, on the railroads, in which the revolutionary workers give the lead to exposing the bill. Do not let the workers rest con- tent with waiting and hoping that maybe something will come out of it. This discussion which we must ini- tiate and direct and give tone to, as well as our leaflets around the bill, should avoid just general propaganda phrases, It should take up concrete sections of the bill applicable to the workers we are addressing or leading. Particularly our discussion should take up the action of the Roosevelt administration, the bosses and the A. F. of L. under the bill as it affects a particular section of the workers. Every class conscious worker should not content himself with a superficial knowledge of the bill (such as the capitalist press want the workers to have) but he should dissect the bill in connection with the whole crisis program of Wall Street under the Roosevelt regime. Every Communist and member of the revolutionary trade unions should be the best in- terpreter of the bill and be able to answer the concrete questions of the daily struggle that the workers will put to them. The action of the Roosevelt ad- ministration, culminating at this time in the industry act, recognizes that there is a vast ferment among the DAILY WORKER MORNING FREIHEIT a pass 20 Cents toiling population. Particularly, this ferment has struck the basic indus- tries, such as steel, coal, automobiles, | textites, building, etc. As the result} of inflation, which itself has given the workers a wage slash of from 10} to 20 percent, struggles were arising. | Further inflation means further cuts} and the perspective of greater strug- | gles. The act puts these struggles in a new light and brings in many new! factors, The law, by promising a vast move-| ment of re-employment, tries to stem the struggle for unemployment in- surance, and thereby tries to save the bosses the huge profit and ex- pense this would entail, Around the bill, we must develop and increase the demand for unemployment in- | surance showing that unemployment | remains permanent for at least 15,- | 000,000 workers and probably 17,000,- 000 or more. We have such ad- missions from Green himself: “Some figures, which I believe to be accurate, have been shown to the effect, that even if we could by some mysterious power over night restore conditions of 1929, when we | were at the peak of consumption, when a balance between production and consumption had perhaps reached its highest point, that only 55 per cent of those entitled to work could be given work,” (Hear- ings on the Black Bill). Struggle Around Codes In the drawing up of the codes and the widespread discussion of wages and hours that the capitalist cannot avoid, every worker will be aroused to the point of though and action around his living standard. The ac- tion of General Jhonson and his Advisory Board is to keep this dis- cussion from penetrating the ranks of the workers, and _ prevent- ing them from taking any action whatever. We must stimulate this discussion, not waiting for the codes, but must tell the workers they should take the initiative in demanding a real i:crease in wages, organizing to carry through this discussion. In every factory, every shop, we must take the initiative in drawing ~up wage demands, demands for lower hours, better conditions. The Trade Union Unity League and the revolu- tionary trade unions, taking the lead, showia draw up demands for the va- rious industries, bring these demands to the workers for the widest dis- cussion and action in the shops. Around these discussions, meetings should be organized, leaflets drawn up, shop papers set up. As the action of the bosses around the bill proceeds further, every effort will be made to suppress the revolu- tionary trade unions, to isolate the revolutionary leaders of the workers, as a first step to stimulating the ad- vance of company unionism and to- ward helping the A. F, of L. in those industries in which the bosses find it best able to carry out the company union program. Efforts will be made to isolate the revolutionary trade unions by concen- trating the attack on them for viola- tion of the labor clauses. This, the bosses reason, will make it easier to put over their wage plans. With Roosevelt as titular head of the in- dustry act, the attack will then be directed against the Party, unless broad masses can be set in struggle against the slave- driving codes. To stave this off, we must take the initiative in the fight for improved conditions organizing workers’ com- mittees in all factories, strengthen- ing the mass base of the revolution- ary trade unions, preparing the work- ers to fight for the right to organize and strike. Some of the demands we should put forward in the shops are (1) Free and open discussion of all demands by the workers them- selves, (2) Right of the workers to organize in unions of their own choosing, which particularly means the right to join the fighting unions outside of the A. F. L., and the company unions which are now being recognized as ‘state’ favored unions. (3) Right of the workers through action in the shops to elect their own negotiation and shop committees. (4) Right of the workers to hold meetings of all workers in the shops to take up wage scales, hours and conditions, and to present such demands. (5) Protection of workers who take the lead from being fired and discrimi- Communist | | nated against by the bosses. (6) | Demand for recognition of shop | committees elected by the workers | | and of the unions which they set | Up. 5 In the steel mills, auto factories) and coal mines, where the big trusts are trying to set up new and more) stringent company unions, we must increase agitation for the workers to set up their own union organizations, jusing these fake rights which the | and of the unions which they set | {bin is supposed to give the work-| jers, and exposing every effort of the | bosses to keep the workers from| jorganizing, showing up the real in-| tent of the bill. | No general program of struggle can jupply in every industry. A special | | program of struggle should be drawn i {up around and against the bill in ‘every industry. Every shop must have its special program around wage dis- jcussions. The bosses very cleverly split up the wage schedules, dividing more and more skilled and unskilled, young and adult, Negro and white.In some instances the spread of wages is increased in order to further this | division and to keep the workers in one shop or industry from common | action. The A. F. of L. with its; | skilled core, in some industries, tries to intensify this division. In the A. F. of L. we must take up a struggle tor an immediate revision of all wage scales, demanding in- creased scale of wages, putting for- ward the idea that the workers not the bosses, should take the initia-| tive in drawing up wage scales, and jexposing the willingness of the yellow \leaders to allow the bosses the initia- | tive in this respect. We should de- ;mand special local meetings, in- |view ot the emergency, to discuss (new wage scales, exposing the danger of company unions and the role of the yellow leaders. We should put forward the demand for broad, elected rank and file negotiation committees. Above all, in the*basic industries, wey must call on all workers to set up their own organizations, to build the National Miners Union, the Stee! and Metal Workers Industrial union the Auto Workers Union the needlc union, the Food Workers Industrio’ Union. RED PRESS * CARNIVAL SATURDAY, JULY 1 5% rlight Park EAST 177th STREET, |to Madison Ave., 0: | organization to challenge another | sroup in raising subs for the Daily then ajong the ave- WES.L. AMUSEMENTS || American Premiere of Soviet Russia’s Great Masterpiece! | AMKINO Presents "26 COMMISSARS THE STRUBBLE OF THE BAKU WORKERS IN THE CIVIL WAR “Here is class history on parade. I am proud of it.” —PUDOVKIN (Director of “End of St. Petersburg.”) — Complete English Titles — ACME THEATRE THE WORKERS MMTH ST. AND UNION SQUARE 38 | Now | GEORGE ARLISS S in “THE WORKING MAN” and unfon local, or mass | MUSIC TADIUM CONCERTS™="™ Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Ay. & 13% Bt. Willem van Hoogstraten, Conductor EVERY NIGHT at 8:36 - 50c, $1.00, (Circle 7-751) “DANGEROUS CROSSROADS” with CHIC SALE and JACKIE SEARLE Get your uni PRICES: Communist Party SPEND JULY 4th WEEK END, ~Camp NITGEDAIGET UNITY WINGDALE New York BEACON, New York City Phone EStabrook 8-140 Camp Phone Beacon’ 731 | Proletarian Cultural and Sport Activities Every Day A Special Program Is Ar- | | ranged for July 4 week-end A Mass Pageant; Workers’ Laboratory Theatre Night; | Masquerade Ball; Musical | Recitals by the Nitgedaiget Trio; Cartoons by John Reed Club Artists & more Tennis, Swimming | Baseball | | | Rates: $13.00 p. week | Including all taxes WEEK ENDS j 1 Day .. $2.45 2 Days . 4.65 3 Days . . 6.85 (including tax) Cars leave for camp from 2700 Bronx Park East Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday at 10 a.m., 3 p.m., 7 p.m. Round Trip . $2.00 Comrade BEN GOLD will speak during the week-end on “The Situation in the Fur Trade” in Camp Nitgedaiget Week-End Program for UNITY: SATURDAY: Concert and Dance SUNDAY MORNING: Lecture by Comrade Alexander: “The Present Situation in Germany”. SUNDAY EVE.: Soviet Movie. MONDAY MORNING: Discus- sion: “The Role of the Work- ers’ Camps in the Revolution~ ary Movement.” MONDAY EVE.: Camp Banquet; Play by the Workers Labora- tory Theatre. TUESDAY: Lecture by Comrade Sklar on Roosevelt's Recovery Bill. Week-End Program for NITGEDAIGET: SATURDAY: Concert and Dance SUNDAY MORNING: Lecture by Com. Markoff: “The Pres- ent Situation in Germany.” SUNDAY EVE.: Revol. Play by Workers’ Laboratory Theatre. MONDAY MORNING: Discus- sion; “The Role of the Work- ers’ Camps in the Revolution- ary Movement.” MONDAY EVE.: Camp Banquet; Soviet Movie. TUESDAY MORNING: Lecture by Com. Stachel about Roose- velt’s Recovery Bill. TUESDAY EVE.: Moonlight Hike 5. Red Dance Groups will have several new numbers. An Open Air Restaurant where members of the Food we trial Union will st foods at erate pric Also beer and soft drinks will be served. Dance Orchestra the whole day for want to dance and ning the big ball at 6. _N 8, % 10, ete. To enumerate all the numbers on the program will take up too much space. Come yourself and be convinced. & Coliseum BRONX, N. Y.