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N. Y. TRADE UNION NEWS DELEGATES NAMED 10 | ANTI-SLAVERY MEETING Many Respond to Call for July 15 Conference To Defend Unions and Working Conditions NEW YORK.—Considerable progress is reported in the response to the call issued by the American Federation of Labor locals, Trade Union Unity League and independent trade union and labor groups for a July 15 Con- ference at Webster Hall in Defense of Trade Unions to unite the forces of Isbor against the attack which the employers are planni labor movement under the guise of@——. the National Industrial Recovery Act. | » Organizations that have already [elected delegates to the conference (include Local 52 of the Association of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental | Iron Workers Union; “the Alteration | Plumbers, Steamfitters and Helpers ! Union; the Amalgamated Food | Workers Union, A. F. of L, locals and | ing against the ing of codes as in the textile indus- try, the attacks on striking laundry workers in New York City and re~ fusal of the owners to recognize the Laundry Workers Industrial Union, and last but not least, the arrests, frame-ups and attacks against the leaders of the fur workers’ section of the Needle Trades Workers Indus- Theodore Dreiser | Backs Struggles | Of Fur | Workers Sends Letter to Union Voicing Sympathy | NEW YORK.—The Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union received the following letter yesterday from} Theodore Dreiser, noted novelist,! supporting the struggles of the fur| workers under the union’s leader- ship: Tuly 5, 1933. I have read with the greatest in- terest the memoranda on the strug- gles of the fur workers. It is really | a very vivid and intelligent picture, | and corresponds closely with other struggles of labor with the capital- istic crowd. I have seen the same thing in four different places, and in every 7 Colleagues in School V YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 7 —————. _+o, . .., LD. DEMANDS nal Uy WITHDRAW JIM-CROW ACT , 1933 Photo shows New York high school studenis who wete recently awarded prizes for marksmanship. Militarisation of the youth is increasing thruout the U. 8, as part of the preparations for the next im- wage Lhiee Sends Letters to Bolan and O’Brien Saying Workers Will Defy Ruling Directed Against Negro and White Unity YORK NEW to gro and together on treets demanded of Police Commissioner Bolan a letter dressed to him te y by the Nev York District International Labor Defense. A similar letter was sent to Mayor O'Brien, The I. L. D. charges in its letters that the order, which was carried into action by the atrest Sunday of Cyril Briegs, Negro editor of the Harlem Liberator, is an attempt to prevent the growing unity of Negro and w workers in their struggle against race oppression and for the right to live. To Mobilize Workers Against Order police the Negro woman, because he had been mistaken for a white man. “The 1. L. D. of New York wishes to express its indignation against uch an outrageous and unscrupu- lons order, in which you attempt to copy the tactics of the slave owners and southern lynchers. “Robberies” Pretext “The fiimsy pretext of preventing robbers under which this order was iscued will not fool the workers. The real cause behind this act is to prevent the growth of unity be- tween the Negro and white toilers in their struggles against the in- human condition posed upon them by the American boss-class, Because of the deepening of the i rther oth workers’ groups: needle | trial Union. The committee fur rede ec tantone tmatnding 1o,| places the full blame for their filu- cals of the International Ladies Gar-/Sions upon the shoulders of the ment Workers Union: locals of paint. | American Federation of Labor offi- |cialdom who have acted as nothing ers,,metal workers and numerous fra- | ©! more than a Recovery Act propa- s the order is publicly with- . L. D. declared in its at it “will not only defend all Negro and white workers who may be molested by your agents economic crisis and the inability of the Roosevelt administration to re- Neve the miseries of the masses, realization of the necessity of a nited struggle of both Negro and instance I have seen the American Federation of Labor fighting un- derhandedly with the agents of the | Industrialists, whoever they may be, for the suppression of ae | perialist war. To counter-act these and similar ac tivities, workers will join the August First anti-war demonstrations to be held in scores of cities thruout the country. | | | | | ternal labor organizations. eae, 2 1 interests f ! oe oo ee ee a ———) |mobilize the masses of hite workers is growing daily. ; |ganda machine for the capitalists rights and the real ER WORK RS ‘Se ttsboi P | ; Rare pubile ‘opinion t eat eee Pees nee ont cmere 2 Ee eeees orem, fmg land their government, the real bene-' workers SCO ro raraGe ||Labor’sDividends 225, Pe ht il fall'and fall oulserebty ficiaries of the act. I wish TI could personally do some- ° into the city Yo of New “The I. L. D., been stimulated by the Provisional Committee. Representatives are being sent to the various unions explaining the’ character of the new Roosevelt law, the need of labor unity in de- fense of trade unions, and the virtual ; denial of the right of workers to| Strike against the starvation wages to be approved by the government. | Tilusions about the Recovery Act | created among workers by the em-j ployei's and the government, the | Provisional Committee, points out, | are“crumbling daily with the draft- | 100 COMMODORE STRIKERS PICKET NEW YORK.—A mass picket line of 100 Hotel Commodore workers, on strike against intolerable conditions, gained the sympathy and enthusiasm | of many workers who passed by and who applauded the strikers. The ef- fect of the picket line was so wide- spread among the bystanders that, in about half an hour, squads of Police | launched an attack that’ broke up! the demonstration. The _ strikers, ghowever, were greatly encouraged by Bene solidarity shown the mass picket line, | Banners carried by the picketers | demanded reinstatement, the “right to be treated like human beings,” de- | cent food, an end to discrimination, the 8-hour day, and no wage cuts. Workers are called to report in the | morning on the picket line in front! of the hotel at 140 W. 36th St. PIPE MAKERS UNION FORMED NEW YORK—At a meeting re- cently in the Brownsville section the | Independent Smoking-Pipe Makers’ | Union of America, the first union in this field since 1918, was voted into existence by a group of about 50 pipe- makers. The Provisional Committee in De- fense of Trade Unions again calls upon those organizations and shops which have not as yet elected dele- gates to do so at once, if the confer- ence is to represent the militant voice of the organized workers in and around New York City. * Credentials of the elected dele- gates should be forwarded to the headquarters of the Provisional Com- mittee at Room 637, 799 Broadway, New York City. From this office can lalso be obtained the special leaflet dealing with the many phases of ite Recovery Act and how it effects the | workers. Communicate with the | | Committee AT ONCE. Hearing on NEW YORK.—Nine needle work- ers, arrested on framed charges yesterday in connection with the pre- pared attack by the police on the} workers’ demonstration in the fur market against the Recovery (Sla-| very) Act, were released on bail yes- terday. Among the arrested workets | released were Irving Potash and Jack Schneider, union leaders who} were taken from union headquarters | yesterday by police. The amount of| bail set for the nine wi 's amounts | to $23,500. The tactics of the police in ar- resting those.workers. who have been | active in strike struggles was for the purpose of being able to place a high bail and force the union to bear heavy financial expenses. Strike Forces Favorable Court Decision Bail 9 N eedle Workers in Anti-Slavery Law Protest | thing to make such a struggle ef- | fective, but in the last analysis, | that is the labor of the workers | themselves and their intimate and | constituted leaders. Nevertheless, I have been notified by the National Committee for the Defense of Po- litical Prisoners that there is to be a meeting on this matter, and they have invited me to attend. The Committee is doubtful about the | date, but if it is held on Friday of this week, I shall be able to attend | for a little while, and shall be glad | -9 do so. My :ympathies are with the strikers and their leaders in this struggle, of course. Very truly, THEODORE DREISER. Injunction which enjoins the Associated. Fur Manufacturers from employing any but A. F. of L. workers and only! those members in good standing. The injunction which the A. F. of L. secured a few weeks ago was ob- tained in collusion with the -manu- facturers to force the workers to join the A. F. of L. It was secured by default since the manufacturers ex-} pressed no opposition to the move. Since. the injunction was directed against the Industrial Union, the Union, through its attorney, de- manded the right to be heard, to prove that the A. F. of L. is in con- spiracy with the fur bosses and the injunction must be set aside. At the hearings, the A. F. of L. attorney, Markowits, and the Associated attor- ney, Fillmore, both pleaded that the injunction would not be detrimental WIN PAY RAISE IN BRIEF STRIKE 609 Mich. Men,Women get 10% Increase for Entire Plant MONROE, Mich., July 6—As a result of a short strike in one de- the River Raisin Paper Co. received an immediate wage increase of 10 per cent with a promise of 10 per cent more both on August 1 and on September Ist. The wage in- crease affects the entire plant. increase was forced upon the com- pany when 75 young workers in the cotrugated department struck on Saturday, July ist. The strike had beén in progress only 3 hours when the company decided to yield. The strike occurred in the same Needle Trades Industrial Union Forces Open |tsgn where 1200 steel workers have just gained an increase of 32 and a half per cent in their wages after | a two day strike against the New- town Steel Co. th strikes pro- vide an inspiring example to the workers to struggle for more pay and better conditions. The workers of the River Raisin Paper Co. must now take steps to build a permanent organization or the company’s promises will remain scraps of paper. As an immediate step, workers department committees to represent them in all grieyances to be taken up with the company. The organ- ization of ‘a strong industrial union of all workers in the plant will Guarantee that the demands won by the workers are protected. Employees in Jersey City to Get Pay Cut; The | in every department | should get together and elect their’ Judge rendered a decision Bernard Shientag today upholding the Skilled workers in this trade! tnqustrial Union's claim to be heard receive as low as $10 for week's in connection with the recent in- |to the Associated Fur Manufacturers. |The favorable decision for the In- dustrial Union will make it possible tor the Industrial Union to obtain an open hearing and produce wit- Will Effect County JERSEY CITY, N. J, July 6—| jtra and Choruses have artanged un- Tonight in Bronx | | NEW YORK.—Carrying banners and placards with slogans demanding the immediate and safe release of the nine Scottsboro boys, hundreds of Negro and white workers, under the auspices of the Bronx Section Inter- jnational Labor Defense, will march in two torchlight parades through the Bronx tonight at 7 p.m. | The parade in the lower Bronx | will start at Wilkins and Intervale, jpartment, six hundred workers of | proceeding to Claremont Parkway and | Washington Ave., at which point it \will merge with the parade from the | Upper Bronx for the march to South- jern Boulevard and Tremont Avenue, where a final mass rally will be held. The marchers will also demand the irelease of all class war prisoners, in- cluding Sam Weinstein, Sam Gon- shak, Leon Blum, Leon Taback and | will protest the discrimination against | Negroes at the Bronxdale Swimming | Pool, and the terror by the police, at ;the behest of the laundry bosses, against the laundry workers now on |strike in the Bronx. Speakers will consist of Samuel | Patterson, National Scottsboro Action Committee, “and representatives of mass organizations, including the In- ternational Labor Defense. July 16 to Raise Funds for Defense NEW YORK.—To help raise funds for the defense of the Scottsboro boys, Tom Mooney, Angelo Herndon, | Sam Gonshak, Sam Weinstein, Leon Blum, as well as other class war prisoners arrested here daily for| fighting for unemployment relief, for) the right of workers to live, the N. ¥.) | District International Labor Defense | will stage a Carnival-Picnic at Pleas- | ant Bay Park on Sunday, July 16. | The Workers’ Dance League, Labor | Sports Union, the Downtown I. L. D. dramatic group, a Mandolin Orches- usual entertainment programs for the event. Hungry Boys HOBOKEN, N manuel Costiletto, boy two years hi: ed this morning with a bag of rolls and four loaves of bread in their pos- session. After they said they stole the food from a store because they were hungry, Costilleto was booked on a charge of petty larceny and his companion was held as a juvenile de- linquent, July 6—Em- and another . Veteran Dies By Own Hand SEATTLE, July 6.—Kenneth C. Sharpe, a participant in the first Bonus March, shot and killed him- self last night in a hotel room. He | was unemployed and destitute. The card on which he wrote his farewell note was one granting him admis- sion to the gallery of the House of Representatives in Washington. He asked that his parents in Alberta not be notified until after the fu- neral because he feared “they would not have enough money to come home.” “a era | Tries Suicide Four Times FAIRVIEW we J., July 6.—Dis- heartened beca he was unable to find work and because the emergency relief he received failed to provide more than a starvation existence for his family or himself, Dessel Lupinski for the fourth time unsuccessfully tried to commit suicide. He was rescued from the mill pond and taken to a hospital. Starving Child Found NEW YORK.—A three-year-old child was found starving on Broad Street yesterday, having had no food for three days. The baby was taken to the Broad Street Hospital. Women Strikers inN.J. Win 12%% Rise ELIZABETH, July 6.— Women} strikers of the Atlantic Romper Co, | | to Police Crow laws owners.” ‘The complete text of the letter sent Commissioner Bolan is as of the southe follows: “Through the evening press of * Wednesday, July 5, we are informed that the Harlem police have re- ceived instructions to stop white men from accompanying Negro women. As the first act of this out- rageous order, Cyril Briggs, editor of the Harlem Liberator, was ar- rested while in the company of a 300 Housewives Pr at Bronx Gas NEW YORK—When over 300 housewives crowded the hearings of the Bronx Gas and Electric Co., demanding lower rates, Milo R. Maltbie, chairman of the utilities oj that from gas of the higher p: as 43 per cent. a workingclass defense organization, demands that vou immediately withdraw your in- tructions to the Harlem police. We declare that unless you will publicly announce the withdrawal of these instructions, we will not only defend all the Negro and white workers who may be molested by your agents, but mobilize the masses of workers and public opin- ion throughout the city to defy your endeavors of introducing into the city of New York the Jim Crow laws of the Southern landowners.” otest : Rate Hearing 1927 companies to 1932 all of the raised the salaries als as high York Edison salaries from creased officers’ commission suggested that the hear- | $193,500 in 1927, to $230,800 in 1932, ings be closed. have been shelling out fits throughout the crisis, heavy pro- charg- afford to pay their bills. Tt was brought out that the Bronx Gas and Electtic Co. was charging lows in other companies: ing steep rates, cutting off the gas|& Electric Co, 17 per cent when unemployed workers could not | York & Queens Light & Power |43 per cent; Brooklyn Edison, 29 per cent; United Electric Light & Power Co. 77 per cent. | when workers were getting wage | *The gas companies in New York |Cuts from 10 to 20 per cent. Officials salaries $1.45 per thousand cubic feet for| These payments to high officials gas, when other companies charged | ate just a means of concealing pro- only $1.15. fits. In order not to hear the oe ———— plaints of the housewives, the com- | REVOLUTIONARY JOURNALISM mission adjourned its hearings un-| COURSE IN WORKERS’ SCHOOL til July 14 “to study the matter.” NEW YORK.—A six ks’ summer While the gas companies cut }course in Revolutionary Journalism wages of their workers, they shoved | will be given at the Workers’ School up salaries to the officials in order | beginning July 24 by Sender Garlin, to hide the increased profits. In| of the Daily Worker staff. Regis- the hearings on the Consolidated! tration for the course is now going Gas System, it was brought outon at 35 E. 12th St., third floor. “Liberator” Week ‘There will be dancing, games and the showing of Soviet movies. A {returned to work today after being work. | i is t Tnternati junction issued to the International Jout a week having gained a 12 and | : ‘Though no official vote was taken at’ The union has announced a mass|Fur Workers of the A. F. of | Messes to prove the conspiracy. SPEND Your VACATION membership meeting, to be held next | Thursday evening, 8 pm., at the| Brownsville Labor Lyceum, 229 Sack- man St., near Liberty Ave., Brook- lyn. All pipe-makers are urged to be | present. | { BUILDING TRADES WORKERS’ | CENTER i NEW YORK.—The Building Trades | !84guage sections, are called to dem-| strike meeting contributed $100 to- Workers have established a day room| at the Building Workers’ Center, 37| E. 13th St. It is asplace where build-| ing workers are welcome, whether affiliated with the A. F. of L., unor- ganized, or of the independent unions. POCKETBOOK STRIKE LEADERS TRY — TO BLOCK MOVE FOR MASS SUPPORT NEW YORK.—An effort of striking pocketbook workers to gain the general united support of all working class groups, in the strike against the lockout declared by the pocketbook bosses, was blocked yesterday by the strike committee, which voted to prevent the pocketbook workers from | hearing any speaker but speakers from the Socialist Party. This action followed the strike > committee’s proposal that the pocket- book strikers attend a conference July 15 to be conducted by the So- cialist Party with the aid of the union leadership. When some of the union members suggested that speak- ers of both the left and right wing be invited, and so in this way build up a wide mass support for the strike, | the strike committee refused to en- tertain this suggestion. © Report 1,009 Out At yesterday's meeting the strike committee reported that between 40 snd shops are now on strike, and | # hat the strikers number 1,000. It is reported that a settlement is in the air, but workers should be on their guard that their demands are considered in the terms of the settlement. A general membership meeting has been called for today at 1 p.m. at the Rand School, 7 E. 15th St. I, W. O. PICNIC SUNDAY An all-day picnic will be held this Sunday July 9th, at Pleasant Bay Park, Bronx, by the International Workers Order Schools and Children’s 3ranches. The picnic is arranged for he support of the summer work of 1e children’s movement, One of the vatures of the program will be the Gunes a Liew beer Finnish Hall, Miass Installation of 20 Children’s | Ancelo Herndon Br Ti.D. JamaicenP*® Branches into the International | Saturday Workers Order, BEACH PARTY, Shop Nucleus. 3074 W, le food! program of sports, /games, Fits St. Coney Island. Lockera aaa he plays, music and dancing has been |!" cvening, MOBway te Once arranged, Max Bedacht will be the | Pareusy, Suenten Subway to Ocean ee Lge Tickets are 20 cents, cent advance ticket, and children free, poets 8 IW. 0. To Picket With: L.,| The judge’s decision is a distinct |victory for the strikers, who have forced it through their militant | struggle. The militant strikers are ‘compelling the bosses to settle de- New Utrecht Ave. Unit 33, Bol party, Open Air Garden, 37 W. 118th Food Workers’ Union NEW YORK.—All members of the International Workers Order, all onsirate their solidarity with the Food Workers Industrial Union by Unity of All Marine Workers Is of Coming Industrial UnionConvention ins Cafeteria, 30th St. and Seventh Ave., today at 12 noon to demon-/ strate against the 1929 injunction be- ing used against the food workers, | WHAT’S ON Friday / (Manhattan) | A_ COMMITTEE OF ONE HUNDRED FRIENDS OF DAILY WORKER NEEDED to help in preparation of July 30th picnic at Pleasant Bay Park. Make pienic mighty demonstration in support of your Daily by helping to rally workers for this gigantic} affair. Please report at city office of Daily 35 E. 12th St. (ground floor store) MUSIC AND BEER—PIERRE DEGYETER CLUB, 55 W. 19th St. 8:15 p.m. Aunt Molly Jackson, Red Dancers, Luba Rymer, of Artef, string soloists, new Scottsboro song, vote red Musical round, other fea- tures, refreshments. Adm. 35c, with this notice 25c. FILM SHOWING, Six Chaplin—Langdon, Laurel and Hardy comedies at Workers’ Film and Photo League, 220 E, 14th 8t. Dancing. Adm. 25¢, 9 p.m. COMRADES WHO WISH TO REGISTER POR OUTING to Camp Unity July 23 regis- ter at Harlem Progressive Youth Club, cry eget Ave. Meet in Club, Round rip $1. ‘EGISTER NOW! at Workers’ School, 35 E. 12th St., Room 301, before it's too late! (Brooklyn) BORO PARK WORKERS’ CLUB, LEC- TURE ON NATIONAL RECOVERY-—4314 Hear about this! by a Prominent speaker. EUGENE BLONDELL, American Imperial- ism—The Philippines Struggle for Inde- Pe nee—Unit Youth, 2663 West Fifth St., Coney Island. (Jamaica) ALLAN TAUB returns from Decatur— COMRADE SANDVANITZ SECTION 15, leaving for Soviet Union, fare. (ions to form a “nity council” with spite the injunction, In answer to the heavy bail im- posed upon active union members, the strikers themselves today at a the meeting of city commissioners on a wage cut for all city employees, it is ascertained that a 20 to 35 per cent cut will go into effect before August 1./ Hudson County officials present at the conference of city commissioners looked favorably towards this cut, which will later be extended to the whole county. wards the union’s defense fund. More than 4,000 city employees, in- ,cluding school teachers, firemen and fering. special playground will be set aside for children. others will be drastically affected by ;the cut. This will reduce the pay of | jall Jersey City workers to one-half of |what it was @ year ago, and with | |prices rising on all foodstuffs due to! inflation, will make for increased suf. By HAYS JONES Much to the distress of Andrew Furuseth, the shipowners have an- nounced that they are not going to present any “recovery” plan. They are quite satisfied with the $30,000,- 000 subsidies the government gives them and the “conferences” under which trade has been restrained for years, with government supervision and approval. The shipowners do not need a “recovery” act to keep the seamen in subjection, so they think, because Andy Furuseth and a few others have succeeded in making the name “union” equivalent to “sellout” in the marine industry and the ma- rine workers haven't fully recovered yet. In a recent speech in New York, Furuseth told his local members of the International_ Seamen’s Union that the government was going to force the workers into the union and the LS8.U. would have to show signs of life to “keep our finger in the pie.” In other words, Furuseth be- gins to realize that he is not very valuable to the shipowners and their government,. and fears he will be shelved. More indicative of the kind of or- ganization Roosevelt would shove the marine workers into as the “labor or- ganization of their own choice” is shown by recent developments in Seattle. -Seattle has long been an open shop port, with the longshore- men bound by a Fink Hall, or com- pany union system. The A. F. of L. has a hundred or so longshoremen organized there, as the result of a recent campaign in which they used the most shameless demagogy, and then sold out the longshoremen for 76 cents an hour with a wage cut. ‘The Seattle plan, if it proves suc- cessful, will undoubtedly be tried in Eastern ports it the shipowners find they need it. The Seattle Plan The plan is being arranged by a licensed officer named Fox. Fox's plan is for the “bona fide” labor un- which the shipowners would make a “collective bargain.” The “bona fide” labor uhions are the reactionary A. F.of L. unions. Joe Ryan, the rack- eteer head of the International Long- shoremen’s Association, is one of them. Andrew Furuseth, whose 1.8.U. is known among seamen as the “Pen- ochle Club” is another. William Ma- her, one man boss of the New York towboatmen is another. The Marine Workers Industrial Union is not con- sidered a “bona fide” labor organiza- tion among these gentlemen. Its leaders do not draw high salaries. It is run by the rank and file. It has a militant program of struggle against the shipowners, for better wages and working conditions—recovery act or NO recovery act. the “Unity Council” The has been calling for unity among the marine workers, re- gardless of affiliation, until unity has become the uppermost idea in the minds of the marine workers of Puget Sound. Now Fox comes along and exploits that idea, by proposing a “unity council” of the heads of the “bona fide” reactionary unions, with an “impartial chairman” to cast the deciding’ vote. This “impartial chair- man” is to be a lawyer—a shyster in the employ of the shipowners. This “unity council” is to make the collective bargains with the shipown- ers, It would be a bargain. for the shipowners, certainly. For Unity of Marine Workers There is a way to beat that racket. That way is to give the shipowners a real unity council, or united front of the rank and file workers in the marine industry to bargain with, Such a unity of all marine workers is the organizational base of the M. W. I. U. It calls for the election of Ship and dock committees, to make the ship and the dock basic units of the union, bound together through the shore organization, and actually func- tioning, instead of leaving all union activity to the shore officials. The Marine Workers Industrial Union 1s holding its Second National | Base | Convention on July 16 to 18 to work jout ways and means of fighting for better conditions and wages for al marine workers, organized or unor- ganized, white or Negro, American or foreign born, Roosevelt's Recovery (of the prof- its) Act calls for collective bargain-| ing. The merine workers must see that there is no collective bargain made for them to slave and starve | under by Furuseth, Ryan and Maher, or by Mr. Fox and his shyster allies, | in a “bona fide” unity council. | There is nothing but a raw deal due the workers from Roosevelt's fas- cist organization of industry. We leave pipedreams of Roosevelt's ‘“‘fair- ness” to the non-political” LW.W. which is whining outside the doors | to be admitted to the conclave of) Green, Woll, Ryan and Roosevelt.) The MWIU knows that the only way to stop the inroads of the bosses, ganize the workers, The next big step in organizing the workers, to see that the workers are not sold out by such “unity councils” or by any other ally of the shipown- ers and boss stevedores, is the Second | National Convention of the MWIU,/) where rank and file delegates from ships and docks, will gather to plan the battles of the near future, where all marine workers, regardless of af- filiation, can fight against the speed- | up and wage-cuts, the short gangs | and long hours that the owners of| the marine industry are driving down | our throats. ! Forward to the MWIU Convention | The Marine Workers Union Convention will be the conven- tion for three watches, for full crews, for full dockers gangs, for lighter drafts, for the eight-hour day, | and against the slave labor of work- aways. Elect delegates to the MWIU con- vention from évery dock, from every ship in every port of the coasts of North America and the Cartibean islands. LICENSE NOTICES | | wy. | Cots—$1.00 backed by their government, is to or-; Industrial | a half per cent increase in pay, al 44 hour week and the right to join & union. | Ee EE NOTICE is hereby given that license num- | ber B4616 has en issued to the undersigned | jo sell beer and light wine at retail, under | Section 76 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control , at 262 Fifth Ave,, New York, N. Y. to be consumed upon the said premises. Delicatessen, Ine., 262 Fifth Ave., New -Lide | York, ARMY TENTS 16x16 $8.00 up Blankets $1.25 up| Full Line of Camping Equipment MANHATTAN MILITARY | « WATER STRECT. | jutely Lowest Prices MEET YOUR COMRADES AT TRE | | Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Prices ! RRIS, Inc. FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order NEEDLEWORRERS APPRECIATE. THE LITTLE WATCH REPAIR SHOP 817 SIXTH AVENUE, AT 281H STREET ~ BROOKLYN. TOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE * BENSONHURST WORKERS Patronize GORGEOUS CAFETERIA 2211 86th Street for Brownsville Workers! Hoffman's — RESTAURANT | & CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. | i tn sn nia ti i BES 1a cc SNM Ae Ne ouNse a aNINNL mimi NITGEDAIGET BEACON, New York City Phone EStabrook 8-1400 Camp Phone Beacon 731 Vacation Rates: $13.00 per (INCLUDING TAX) For those who stay oll summer in camp | $10.00 per week CARS LEAVE FOR CAMP from 2300 Bronx Friday and Saturday 10 Pp. m. Plains Road Expr lerton at Al ROUND TRIP: to Nitgedaiget .. . $2.00 .to Unity «1... $3.00 FRIDAY FVEN(NG—Liberator Camp Fire. SATURDAY MORNE Track and Field | SATURDAY AF SATURDAY FYENING—Concert eture on the role Movement. BUNDAY AFTERNOON—Sport events. SUNDAY EVENING—Dancing | SUNDAY MORNING—Le IN OUR PROLETARIAN CAMPS (ONE DOLLAR TAX) | oot Be | Week-end Program for Nitgedaiget NOON—Tenris tournament and swimming races. Nitgedaiget Trio. Liberator Pageant and Nitgedaiget Dance Orchestra. UNITY | WINGDALE | New York Proletarian Atmosphere | ° Healthy Food “ | Warm and Cold Showers Bathing Rowing Athletics Sport Activities ° | Newly Built Tennis | | Courts in Both Camps | Let es WEEK-END RATES: 1 Day . . $2.45 2 Days . 4.65 (including tax) week Park East every day between 9-11 9, mj —Take Lexington Avense White Avenue. Meet, Singing Chords, ehaik tatk, | of the Liberator in the Nogte Lineration |