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#AGE LWO LY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY 24, 193 JURY DISAGREES 5 Bombs Rock Three Homes of Progressive CHICAGO JOBLESS Mother Found Starvi IN TRIAL OF 6 Miners’ Union Leaders/ HEAD IS CLUBBED! ARRESTED MAY LON ANG July After de- | iberating 30 ad ked jury failed to agr a vetdict in the case of t < workers on trial here} for one r because of May Day demons! : ry was dis- endants 14th be ordered ‘Those on Sam Davis, Fisher, Daniel The bail on| onerated and Beso case take ne calendar. The trial was political throughout, denced by the division of six to six, in the case of oss, former Communist mayor, who conducted fense and who spoke on significance of May ne Communist election charged ordered to aS WAS € his own the histc has re be are asked that mailed to contemplat- Mayor Shaw 1 of the red w M. Strong, mal Labor class along struggle | lines FORCE RELEASE OF TAMPA FOUR! duly TAMP. 17.—Final freedo won for all the Tampa is by the Interna- tional Labor e and the mass organized ot s victims of the pressure rique freed on again McDo: held twenty-four hours 1 while officials sought | to o1 mob to “take him for e” when he left the jail. For this purpose reports were circulated and published in the Tampa press that had thre@ened the lives of various promment citizens. On the contrary, however, he was | enthusiastically received everywhere | by the workers, who formed a vol-| untary. guard for him against any attempt at thuggery. KILL N.Y. YOUT IN FOREST CAMP : Government Tries to} Hush Up Murder NEW YORK. — When Abraham Yancovitch was killed in a forced labor camp on July 13 his body was returned to his relatives with a certificate that death was caused by a “cerebral hemorrhage, cause unknown.” Insistence of the family for further information brought the answer in the form of a telegram | to the dead boy’s brother, Harry | Yancovitch of 1382 Boston Rd. that “Yancovitch was struck in a fist fight by Gerole Santriana, another enrolled man and acting sergeant.” After the boy’s murder the other recruits were warned to keep aise about the whole matter. | WHAT’S ON | Monday ‘Workers’ School Summer Term opens this | week. Registration is accepted this week| for any course before its first session, at| the school office, Room 301, 35 E. 12th’ st.| Attention Musicians! The newly formedy formed jazz band of the W. IL R. needs! 1 saxophone and 1 cornet player. Our re-| hearsals on every Monday at 8 p.m. at 29 St. Marks Place, near 2nd Ave. | The newly organized I. W. 0. branch of Spanish Naturalists invites all workers to| a pienic and dance on July 30, at Camp| Annabelle in Staten Island. Trucks leave| at 8 @clock in the marning from the/I, Local No. 52 and an Organiza-/ Spanish Workers’ corner 116th St Center, 1413 Fifth Ave., Fare to the camp is 60¢ one way. Admission 0c, rent for a tent for the whole day 25c. ‘Taback Defense Conference today at 8 p.m. at Ambass: Way and Third Ave. Brownsville Organizations: ville Boro Daily Worker Conference has been called off for July 26th, but will be held August 2nd at 1813 Pitkin Ave. Notify your delegates of this change. Hinsdale Workers’ Center will have a lec- ture by Earl Browder July 25th at 8:30 Hall, Claremont Park- The Browns- p.m. at Premier Palace, 505 Sutter Ave. Topic: “Roosevelt's New Deal and the War Danger.” Proceeds for Communist Party. Rehearsal of Dram.-Chorus W. L. T., 42 SE. hizt St., Tuesday at 8 p.m. Male voices needed. Intern] hidiss Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves. Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M. 1-2, 6-8 P.M. White Gold Filled Frames_____§1.50 ZYL Shell Frames —_—____— Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORchard 4-4520 + $1.00 TAYLORVILLE, Ill, July 23— The homes of three leaders of the Progressive Miners’ Union were bombed here today. The first explosion rocked the home of Andrew wman, local board member of the Union, tearing away part of the foundation and shatter- ing windows. A few minutes later another bomb | Neal N. exploded at the home of Reese, attorney for the same union. The final explosion took place at the house of Jack Stanley, of Amalgamated Local 9 of union. Commemorate Hushka -Carlson Day on Thursday Anniversary, of Bonus! Marchers Killed by Troops July. 1932 NEW YORK.—New York veterans, Negro and white, will commemorate the first anniversary of the murder of son on Bloody Thursday, July 28,/ 1932, when armored tanks, bayonets} and tear gas were used to force the eviction of the Bonus Marchers from | Washington. The last Thursday of each July} has been designated by the Workers’ | | Ex-Servicemen's League as Hushka- Carlson Day, when veterans will rally to do honor to the memory of their} fallen comrades, who laid down their lives for not only the veterans’ tause, the | but for all oppressed masses who are being unmercifully ground down every day in the interests of the sys- tem of capitalist exploitation. Veterans of all wars, their fam-| ilies, all workers and sympathizers, are invited to participate in the memorial program on Hushka-Carl- son Day, next Thursday afternoon. There will be an assembly at Rutgers |. Square (East Broadway) at 3 p.m. From there, a parade will leave for| Madison Square (23rd St.) at the) | Eternal Light. After a brief stop, the | | procession will continue to the north end of Union Square for the tinal) rally. Prominent speakers in the vet- | erans’ movement, including leaders of | the Bonus March, will make ad-) dresses. CCC. REPLACES LOCAL WORKERS | Foreed Labor at 15c. Used to Hit Workers NEW YORK.—yYoung workers in | Camp Durn, near Bountiful, Utah, are working on the roads at a cost to the | government of less than 15c¢ an hour, doing work that local unemployed | could do at 50c an hour, reports a | recruit who quit the camp because | of dissatisfaction with the conditions. Great dissatisfaction has been aroused among the local workers by | this practice of the “New Deal” of | importing foreed labor at starvation wages to compete with local workers. This young worker told of meeting about 60 other youths from other for- est camps in four western states on the train that brought him east. They all had the same story of working at @ ruinous wage scale on projects that should haye employed home labor. Twenty workers have already left from this one camp because of com- plaints about the hard work and the rotten food. Most of the boys in this camp are from New York and vicin- ity. The boys work seven hours a day on a diet of sour milk, coffee with- | out sugar, half-cooked potatoes, corn- ed-beef hash and prunes. Grumbling and complaints over the | work and the food are growing among | the boys. Iron Workers Plan Organization Drive NEW YORK.—An intensive drive mong inside ironworkers under the leadership of the expelled A. F. of tional Committee of inside men, was organized at a meeting held in La- bor Temple, 243 E. 84th St., last Friday, where steps were taken to | build one union of inside and out- | side iron workers. Karlin, Socialist leader, and Kara- sik, under the guidance of the off- cials of the International are doing their utmost to split the ranks of the workers. They called a meeting of inside iron workers on Thursday at the Rand School where about 50 were present, and attackéd th> rank and file workers who are organizing under militant leadership. Another mass meeting is called by the Executive Board of Local No. 52 in conjunction with the Rank and File Committee. This meeting will be held on Friday, July 28, at 8 p.m. at Labor Temple, 243 E. 84th St. All iron and bronze workers are urged }to be present at this meeting. Terror Fails to Halt Harlem Rent Strike NEW YORK.—The Lower Harlem rent strike at 128 E. 111th St., con- tinues with the tenants solidly to- gether despite the terroristic actions of the landlord, Jacob Cohen. A street meeting of 500 workers in front of the house sent a protest delega- tion to Mayor O’Brien who refused to see them because he was busy with the Fascist aviator Balbo. Cohen is employing a squad of gangsters and a policeman to in- timidate the workers. The cop beat up two kids who live in the house. Two thugs broke into the vacant apartment into which the sympa- thetic janitor had his furniture car- tied by the workers after he was evicted, ripped the wires out and at- tempted to flood the rooms. president | William Hushka and Eric Carl-| AT SCHOOL MEET) Lockner Held by Cops! in Psychopathie Ward;| | 8 Others Jailed = | CHICAGO, July 23.—After being | brutally clubbed in the lobby of the| | Chicago Stadium, where of the “Save Our School” was in progress, Karl Lockner, local| |leader of the Unemployed Councils,| | was arrested on Friday and taken to| a psychopathic hospital. Eight other | workers were also jailed. | When Lockner demanded that he | e heard at the meeting, called by| the Committee to foree the School) Board to rescind its economy pro- gram, he was forcibly carried from the platform by police, and taken to the lobby where the beating took! place. Workers who witnessed the | attack were indignant. Many others, | however, were unaware of what was | happening, | Superintendent of Schools Bogan,| given permission to speak offered a substitute plan proposing that “pub- lic volunteers stand on street Contets| with tin boxes to collect money for) | school supplies. The Save Our School | | Committee was forced by the as-| semblage to reject this plan. | The topic of cuts in teachers’ pay| was sidetracked under the plea of| “Save American Civilization.” | John Fitzpatrick, of the local A. F.| | of L., was roundly booed when he | praised the police handling of, the] teachers’ demonstration. | Lockner and other workers came to| | this meeting after the Unemployed | Councils had been especially invited |by the Save Our School Committee to take part. The Committee, com- posed of teachers who opposed the | program of the School Board in abolishing junior high school, athletic and art courses, etc. has been in- | fested with politicians and others who see in this movement a chance to destroy all possibilities of effective action and an opportunity to garner | votes, BARRICADE | BUILT TO STOP EVICTION 1,000 Battle Police Riot) Squad; 5 Hurt NEW YORK—Five were slugged and beaten up Friday night when a 4 cepemeed Bronxville workers tried to | put back the furniture at 1473 East | New York Ave. of William Bryan, | Negro worker with four children who was evicted the same morning. The riot squad smashed their way into the apartment through the rear entrance and evicted the family. The workers were unable to carry the furniture back due to the heavy cor- don of police immediately thrown around the building. The day pre- vious, 500 workers had successfully beaten off the marshall and his thugs when he attempted to evict the fam- ily. Those injured were: Al Dasch, 24, 2117 Pacific St., pulled off platform and slugged in heart; Sam Andel- son, 46, 162 Chestnut St., laceration of scalp; Bernard Blum, 15, 586 Georgia Ave., laceration of scalp; H. Gladstone, 17, 116 W. 16th St., con- cussion of spina] column; Bess Brow, knocked unconscious. No arrests were made. ‘DELEGATES PLAN KNIT GOODS DRIVE Call Mass Meeting for Thursday a | NEW YORK.—Plans for an im- mediate trade-wide campaign for wage increases averaging 25 per cent, shorter hours, defense of week work, and other improved conditions were launched last Saturday at the con- | ference of 312 delegates of knit goods workers representing 63 shops. Of these shops 50 are unorganized. Delegates from Newark, 6 delegates of Ridgewood Links & Links knit- ters, and 25 delegates of unemployed knit goods workers participated. Plan Immediate Drive | The conference elected a commit- tee of 10 to draw up the final draft of a code to present to Washington, | but it was voted not to wait for the Biles dei hearing but to plan an immediate qampaign for improve- |ment of conditions, for an increase | in membership, and for a strike fund. A mass meeting of all knit goods | workers will be held this Thursday at 6 pm. at 108 Flushing Avenue, | Brooklyn, where a report of the con- | ference will be given. All unemployed and active union members are urged to report at the union offices, 131 West 28th St., N. Y. ©, and 103 Knickerbocker Ave., Brooklyn, to help in the campaign, Workers School Opens Summer Term Today! The Summer term of the Workers | School opens today, with eight spe- cial courses and five classes in Prin- ciples of Communism. Three of the new courses are, Science and Dia- lectic Materialism, with Stephen Graves and D. Ramsey as lecturers, the Development of Trade Unionism in the U.S., and History of the Com- munist International, both by Sid- ney Bloomfield. There will also be two courses teaching the Russian language. CARPENTERS STRIKE NEW YORK.—The carpenters of the Greenbaum Woodworking Co. went out on strike Friday against the manouvers of the’ boss in refus- ing to sign the agreement with the union. All carpenters are urged to come to the picket line every morning at 138 East 25th St., near Lexington Ave Gave Last Food to Baby Mrs. Beulah Kinkaid, her husband Washington, ‘POLICE SHOOT 3 IN EVICTION FIGHT Workers “Throw Gas | Bombs Back at Police PITTSBURGH, Pa., July 23.—Po- lice firing into a crowd of 800 work- ers, led by the Unemployed Coun- cil demonstrating against an evic- tion in East Liberty, resulted in three wounded. Tear gas bombs, thrown by the police, were hurled back by the enraged workers. At Teast four have ben arrested on a charge of rioting. The Unemployed Citizens League participated in the demonstration. Two of the wounded were imme- diately rushed to the hospital in a critical condition. The Interna- tional Labor Defense is organizing a widespread campaign to fight the police brutality. VOTE STRIKE IN SLIPPER TRADE Mass Meeting Called for Tomorrow NEW YORK—Over 170 delegates representing 20 slipper factoriés vot- ed to call a strike in the slipper trade of all organized and unorganized shops, at a conference held Saturday at Irving Plaza Hall, by the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union. The date for the strike has not been set. The strike will be called to demand recognition of the union and for a minimum wage scale ranging from 40 cents an hour for learners up to $1 an hour for experienced workers. A committee was elected to draw up the minimum wage scales on the basis of piece work rates, and to present the demands to the bosses. It was decided to call a meeting of all slipper workers belonging to the union tomorrow (Tuesday) at 7 pm., at Irving Plaza Hall. TABACK DEFENSE CONFERENCE TONIGHT NEW YORK.—A conference to map plans for mass defense of Leon Taback, an unemployed worker framed by the police for his ac- tivities in leading the struggles of the jobless, will be held tonight, 8:30, at Ambassador Hall, Parkway and Third Ave. Organizations are urged to send delegtes. Claremont D. C. City Hospital Admits Patient Is Starving but Discharges Her in Two Days WASHINGTON, D. C., July 23.—Emaciated and ill, Beulah Kinkaid lies in the Georgetown University Hospital, her husbanc and baby by her bed- side—all are victims of a ghastly two-month battle against hunger. The baby, Billy, gurgies happily, He doesn’t know that his parents used | their last money to buy him milk while they lived on a daily loaf of bread | ———¢donated by a neighbor. | | | | and (inset) their baby, Billy. The trio came here ago from Harrisonburg, Va. Almost penniless, Kinkaid thought that surely he’d find a butcher shop in town that would have a job for him. They brought their home along with them—a low wooden room, built on the body of a light motor truck. Ar- riving, they obtained permission to | park on the side lawn at the home | of Ed Thompson, near Rosslyn, Va. Daily, Kinkaid, tramped into town. Some days he walked 20 miles, look- ing for work. But he couldn’t find it. And daily the couple’s small store of | money dwindled. | The baby got his milk but last week, Mrs. Kinkaid, wasting away under the strain, collapsed and had to be taken to the Gallinger Mu- nicipal Hospital where they said “most of her trouble was matnutri- tion”. Still, they discharged her after a couple of days and, with a small donation from a social worker, the pair again took up the fight. But Saturday night, she became ill again. Moaning, she was taken to the hospital where the social | worker secured a bed for her thru a connection. Hoodlums in Attack on 16th Street Block Committee Center NEW YORK. — Organized hood- lums staged an attack on the head- quarters of the 15th and 16th St. block committee headquarters, at 432 E. 16th St. Friday night, severely beating a young worker, Ann Stew- art, and causing injuries, perhaps serious, to another worker. The threat was voiced by the leader of the gang to come back and wreck the place tonight unless they had moved the headquarters, “We'll blow out the brains of some of you, too”, he was reported as saying. The block committee has answered | the threat of the thugs by calling for @ mass meeting of protest at the headquarters, tonight. All work- ers of the neighborhood are urged to be present to smash this attempt to outst the block committee. This block committee has done ex- cellent work among the unemployed. Over a hundred families have re- ceived relief through the efforts of the committee which organized a picket line at the Home Relief Bur- eau at 78th St. and York Ave. and forced the payment of relief to needy families. two months LABOR UNION MEETS DRESSMAKERS:—Special meeting of ac- | tive dressmakers right after work at Greek Center, 265 W. 25th St., to discuss new drive now under way. | strike is being | Machinists’ | families of the strikers. ng, BOX WORKERS STRIKE FOR LIVING WAGE TUUL Leads 450 Chi-| leago Workers Against Speed-up CHICAGO, Ill., July 23.—Four hun-/} dred and fifty paper box workers of the Container Corporation struck last ! Thursday against a ten to twelve hour; day, rate, a 15 to 25 per cent hourly wage and terrific speed-up. The| led by the Paper-} | Wood Box Workers Industrial Union | affiliated with the Trade Union Unity | | League. | many Negroes. Among the strikers are | \ In order to forestall strike action the company, prior to the walk-out,) | offered to raise the minmum hourly wage to 40 cents for men and 30 cents for women. But the workers deter- mined to win a real living wage, marched from department to depart- ment, shut off the power and tied up the plant completely. The company is now negotiating! with the committee elected by the} workers. A. F. of L, agents of the| Union, the Electrical Union and Steam Fitters Union were on hand to split up the strikers into craft unions. The workers rejected these splitting tactics and joined the Industrial Union. Even member of | the A. F. of L. in the maintenance | departemnt joined the strike and the Industrial Union. Relief is urgent to maintain the The strike committee, of which Edward Hau- mann has been elected chairman, ap- peals to all workers’ organizations to send’ relief to the strike headquar- ters, 357 West Chisago Ave. Relief work is being organized by the strike committee jointly with the Workers’ International Relief, Workers Needing Aid Increase to Nearly 1,000aDay NEW YORK.—Although newspap-| ers are busy shouting Roosevelt's praises of a ‘t‘urn to prosperity,” the Welfare Council of New York City in its latest release states: “on the contrary, both the numbers of fami- lies assisted and the amount spent for relief were greater ‘in June than in May, according to an analysis of the exponditures for relief made by | the Research Bureau of the Welfare Council.” Pointing to the fact “that requests for aid are increasing rather than decreasing,” the report indicates “that the daily average number of new ap- Plications received by the City Home | Relief Bureau has increased from 881 in June to 943 in July.” William Hodson, executive director of the Welfare Council finds the usual stock in trade excuse, “that we may witness in the months imme- diately ahead the apparent paradox of definitely improving business con- ditions and at the same time little if any decrease in the total number of families requiring outside assistance for food, shelter, and other necessi- ties.” Garment Section Workers | Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 26th St, Au “omraaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Brom Are You Moving or Storing Your Furniture? CALL HARLEM 17-1053 COOKE’S STORAGE ‘ 209 East 125th St. Special Low Rates to Comrades DOWNTOWN JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades O{7,.—eo————::== STAGE AND SCREEN NEW FILM AT RIVOLI 1 1s BANAL ATTEMPT TO GLORIFY NEW DEAL| By H. M. WICKS “This Is America,” the current picture at the Rivoli, is a repro- duction of a few news-reels depict- jing isolated events during the pe- riod from 1917 down to the present. The purpose of the picture is to give a panoramic view of the, leading events as they occurred in the Unit- ed States—the United States enter- ing the war in 1917, the strike wave of 1919, the “boom” years of Cool- idge’s regime, the 1928 presidential campaign, the Wall Street crash of October, 1929, and the election of 1932 followed by the inauguration of Roosevelt with his “new deal.” Fror, the first flash to the last the’ “plot” is transparent—to build up a background for eulogy of Roosevelt and his attempts to find a capitalist way out of the crisis, The lines spoken by the an- nouncer were edited by Gilbert Sel- des and for downright banality and drivel they surpass anything ever emitted from behind the silver screen. The selections of news-reel pic- tures were also very poor, revealing the total inability of those responsi , world they attempted to describe during the past 15 years or more. | ble for the picture to understand the Flag-pole sitters, English channel swimmers, pie-eaters, a few air flights and frenzied scenes in the stocl» market were elaborated, but the great underiying social move: ment, the accumulation of the ele-, ments of catastrophe, the y of capitalism and the decadence of its. ruling class and its imitators en- tirely escaped the editor. Of course, if the authors dealt with such facts they would not be able to draw the conclusion of a peaceful capitalist way out of the crisis. In the light of the stock crash at the close of last week, the conclu- sion drawn by the picture that Roosevelt had led the nation for- ward on the path of “economic tre- covery” seemed almost grotesque. The picture is utterly worthless and exceedingly boring except for the fact that it reveals the shabby material available for those whose pltry jobs it is to help forward the Roosevelt “ballyhoo’ to cover up the Phoné: TOmpkins John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York CHINA KITCHEN para rdenoe and CAFETERIA merican and Chinese Dishes 233 em 14th St., Bet. 2nd & 3rd Ave. nice quiet to eat our i 25e LUNCHEON 35¢ DINNER BROOKLYN FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1680 PITKIN AVENUE Spade Meals for Projetarians Gar - Feins Restaurant 1626 PITKIN AVE., B’KLYN —— eas Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria vicious attacks being made upon the masses 94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT Hyperinsulinism--A Fancy Name for Slow Starvation NEW YORK. — Hyperinsulinism is too much insulin for the body's nor: the fancy name Doctor Seale Harris} mal needs. Consequently, Dr. Harri | attached to a disease caused by ex-| (als the new disease hyperinsu linism.” cessive hunger in a report before the American Medical Association. Science service writes, “nesices| Karl Browder to Speak hunger, the patient may suffer from! Ty Brooklyn Tomorrow weakness, nervousness, tremors,} sweating and mental lapses, Dr. Har- ris reported.” NEW YORK.—Earl Browder, Gen- It then Continues, “The disease. ac-; eral Secretary ,of the Communis| cording to Dr. Harris, is the exact, Party, will speak on “Roosevelt's ‘New opposite of diabetes. While in dia-| Deal’ and the War Danger,” tomor- | betes the pancreas supplies too little, row, Tuesday night, at 8:30, at thy insulin for the body’s needs, in the) Priemier Palace, 505 Sutter Ave., in new disease, the pancreas produces! Brooklyn. SEE the New Life of the Worker in Daghestan! == First American Showing of AMKINO'S biy-o CME. ‘RB. A 9 revolution A orn Anew "vale | THEATRE Acted by a cultural shock brigade of the Ci Work Wee es are Club in Daghesten — all native cast (Bugiish Titles)” eae ee Adtea 4 + “A Spl Ww GNT i Featur “A Day in Moscow” “yah WORKES MmmLyORDAT \ MUSIC TADIUM CONCERTS Phitharmonic-Symphony Orehestra Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 138 St, HANS LANGE, Co EVERY NIGHT at 8:38 PRICES: 25c, 50, $1.00, (Clrele 1-875) “THE STRANGE CASE EO oF (TOM MOONEY” Tedey | also “Shriek in the Night” ith St. & Fes Jefferson 1th st. | Now JAMES CAGNEY and ALICE WHITE in “The Picture Snatcher” Also “TRICK FOR TRICK” with RALPH MORGAN and SALLY BLANE Remember this date: July 30! That’s when workers will rally to. the Daily Worker's support at a huge plenic in Pleasant Bay Park. DEMONSTRATE IN THOUSANDS JULY 30th DAILY WORKER PICNIC @ Pleasant Bay Park - | @€6 3 Lc] tional|]Q ot is Mapas Dishes | Ae tee 2 tana 2. The N 1. Two weeks eee s 5 ie ke Group alge 3. The John | « 5 8. Two weeks Reed Club | % in. Unity Artists em reste e = 9. Red Front poorites Band Sports Un- ion Events FI N 10, Marx's, (e) Lenin’s, 5. Workers’ B Stalin’s Laboratory w Books Theatre ical > 3 t a bs @ Admission at door with draw- ing ticket 15e — Tickets 25¢ from your organization I. R. T. Pelham Bay Line to Zerega Avenue. Buses from Subway to Park THE WORKERS SCHOOL OPENS TONIGHT A 6-WEEKS SUMMER TERM “Training for the Class Struggle” COURSES IN Principles of Communism | History of the Communist Be International : Political Roonome Science ard Dialectic Marxism-Leninism Materialism Trade Unionism in the U.S.! Russian REGISTRATION IS ACCEPTED FOR ANY COURSE BEFORE ITS FIRST SESSION At the Workers School Office, Room 302 East 12th Street New York—Telephone AL-gonquin 4-1199 “Daily Worker” Week Spend YOUR Vacation in Our Proletarian Camps NITGEDAIGET | UNITY BEACON, New York WINGDALE Clty Phone EStal ik 8! Camp iPhone naphligg arge New York Proletarian Atmosphere, Healthy Food, Warm and Cold Showers, Bathing, Rowing, Athletics, Sport Activities NEWLY BUILT TENNIS COURT IN NITGEDAIGET one WEEK-END RATES: 1 Day . . $2.45 2 Days. 4.65 (including tax) every he ght Ral 10 nm, ue White Vacation Rates: $13.00 per week (INCLUDING TAX) rane Tvegahdelt Ped resty from 2700 Bi is Park &i ‘riday and Saturday 10 a, m., 3 p. m— Lexington A\ Plains Road Express. Stop at Allerton '‘ pada ROUND TRIP: to Nitgedaiget . . . $2.00 to Unity ..... $3.00 Learn to Drive ‘An Automobile! Under the Supervision of a former New York Inspector Unlimited number of individual lessons on new cars given by our expert instructors License guaranteed — driving in traffic — classes for ladies. * se Cened n ey YORKVILLE AUTO SCHOOL 204 BAST PHONE: nen AR OOmenge Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER. CAFETERIA (933 = R wer mere P ¢