The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 11, 1933, Page 2

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PAGE TWO DAILY WORKER, ‘EW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1938 Milk Strike Spreads to New Jersey | Agreeing with the need of build-| ing the Daily Worker into a mass workers’ naper, I wish to become | | Baeetion Committee “KHAKI SHIRT” CHIEF mol EXECUTIVEBOARD | a member of the Daily Worker OF “VOI UNTEERS” =! | | Volunteers. vi Volunteers are needed by the and Pennsylvania Communist Election Campaign Name 4. .--- essere eee BRINGS 25 SUBS - Conimnitien to work every evening | UAL K rom 5 p. m. until 9 to give out Soe Ll Boa a ta ak Lend CAS Hie Mis aes babeatien Nixes el, Bekele Troopers Guard Borden, Sheffield Milk hamabegs orice. S aramt este as NEW New subscriptions to representatives who call for to the Worker continued to them. ‘aose who can give some Hf Sepeaprecguite restecya gh ale cats roll in, as, the Daily Worker Volun- Be time evenings are asked to get in eae teers got into action. See touch with Carl Brodsky at the}; 5°}. 4 ©) | MM =, | | Phone ...... ay sh 3 n, who was framed up office of the Committee at 799 Mail or bring this coupon to the | in the first Bonus Try to Frame Terzani for Slaying of Anthony | | ‘Bronaway, Room 539 or Thone | district Daily Worker office, 39 .| has recently returned ST 9-5557 Fierro at Fascist Meeting 12th St, Send your in regard to building organization to Lol Daily Worker, 35 E. 1 | Mork City. suggestions the. above | Welfare Island subs. He is a ‘utive committee Volunteers are also needed to give time Saturdays and for a few hours Sunday mornings, in en ni r of “the e lunteers, at NEW YORK.—“Art Smith also boasted that the Khaki Shirts mur- dered one Communist and sent 19 others te the hospital at a New York meeting recently”—from an account of @ public speech by Smith, in the | | lf P. Sagile, a pain Sieaeners ter. by trade, d Philadelphia Inquirer, July 24. in brought in five . Who was the “Communist” murdered by Art Smith’s gangsters? ORGANIZATIONS . » BERRY RES SIGNS new subs. . On August 2, Athos Terzani, anti-fascist worker, was indicted by a : Of the members special Grand ury in Queens County, | of the executive for the of Anthony Fierro. | New York with anti- fascist workers, SLOW ARRANGING | WITH $17 non A committee, who The w es before the Grand Jury | Spending much of his time at the) PEE DLL. LB met Wednesday were Smith’s Khaki | Italian Workers Center in the Bronx i night. Greenberg Shir d others he began to learn, he began to feel | ELECTION WORK YEAR PENSION: brought in five Smith adelp! that his position, the result of auto- | Ax Earners subs and two new r matic dri a d * mur ling in the Italian Fascist | schools, was wrong. Volunteers; Tzuko ) . NEW YORK. Aug. 10.—The sinking brought in five Subs of Haan On May 1, he joined the huge | Px epar ations for Dime | Ship of Mag Yarra Bnahenl emaics| subs and a Volun- : united front parade, marching with| Wi _ O pen Air \has forced the resignation cf Comp- teer; Weitzman Fierro’s Evolution the Italian group. And here he be-| is |troller Charles Berry, at a $12,000 2! t nd two new Volunteers, 1 an Italian schoolboy,| gan to feel the tremendous enthu- Meets Lag year pension. Inability to agree on! erman, of the Fur Fascist in Mussolini sm of the workers struggling | | the best way to tax the workers made | he Needle Trade y recently convinced] against fascism. He came home in| NEW YORK— Although 1,000 let- |him quit in the midst of one of the | ial Union, pledged e was on the side of the greatest excitement w ‘My Cr 2ed his family | it was after that that he wrote his} ters have been sent to mass organ- organizations have arranged to do their share in this work, None of the branches of the In- the area to break the strike ag: ainst big milk intcrests. « ——— had in him. For the first jelty's most severe financial crisis, | 1° Meee ieee fe Daily Worker had ever seen in him. For the firs pst “8 u 3 olunteers in her’ union. time he had marched through the as sang: them to take ges | He had only recently returned from pias ‘ és s, taking part in an action, with | : sored Se a jaunt through Europe with J. P. wenty-four of the 25 members of thousands upon thousands ef work- C * “the work of the é | Morgan, studying taxation methods the e aH gt pivanded the Seyeiuniak Miection Catipelen, | rer i i a i i applied in Eyrope on impoyerished| ®%ecutive meeting Wednesday night. pre ges fae ory more | sponse has heen tardy. Only a few ‘Troopers guarding milk cars on tracks Utica, N.Y. State troopers are being poured into pplied urope on y a clear e Tl dis to workers and how to get banker's loans on the basis of this accomplishment. Vouchers for $2,500 and $600 were esolved. in the interest of self- ipline, that any member who fails attend two meetings will be 9 i drawn by Berry to finance this trip, | 4vopped from the executive. reed” is a fumbling, soning | ternational Workers’ Order have | AGENCY FINED $95 200 Farmers Arrested; | , 290 STRIKE IKE IN and when it was pointed out the| ‘The executive organized itself into ie | é iswer la t s thought ran “clearly through it, He| thie work. Workers clube and other | S INDLING 200) Terrorism | SWEDISH N AVY “as ante ot ites ase fieaact ty cireniation and distribution, edi ° must fight on the side of the work-| organizations also lagged in this | bs + rker correspondence, In 1919, Michele Fierro came to| eT against fascism. ite E i _ He has been one of the outstand- | finanei Hal and sustaining fund, cul- the United stat inc 8 shind him A Great Change | ‘The Blection Committee sronarica| F 1,700 UTICA, Aug. i0—In response to OVER B AD FOOD ing ‘opzonents to corporation taxes] tural, and trade union and mass or his wife and Italian, , “A great change has bina) ard mee that these boxes must be on the the demand of Governor Lehman Fe AGE NG. Bal Serre. cub resent ani A . $ did, until in HAL haye| he wrote, “a change which a few) streets, circulating among workers| seria hat all milk strikers be immediately ~——— i » Ba vt} The Volunteers will invade all thi x v in nay A 4 STOCKHOLM, Aug. 10—A strike |term notes fall due on December 11,| workers’ si ' 4 earned enough n in the United EA Se ee ee een un:| and not collecting dust in the office) NEW YORK, Aug. 10. — After| prosecuted, a new wave of arrests| of gg calfors and 400 recruits in @ workers’ clubs in New York, and ceil States to s red the Royal _|vinced it has occurred, How differ- Art Smith, according to the reporter | or the Philadelphia Enquirer, boast- | ed. And Michele Fierro, father of An- thony, in an appeal to all workers, has demanded that they defend Athos of the committee. Red Rally All mass organizations should also arrange for special unofficial dele- gates to attend the picnie to take part in an open forum on the Elec- tion Campaign work. Election Pamphlets issues during the campaign. Topics | swindling job huntérs out of $1,711, |gustern broke the lay by keeping | two receipt books, sending more than | one man after a job, and refusing to return fees. Workers jammed the hearings, revealing they gave in many cases their last sayings on the charge of the hearings complimented lis sweeping through the s! e area, ers for a minimum o 2 of the store~price which the brutal terrorism of the State police has not been able to crush, was marked to- day by two new developments. The first is the definite indication that | | series of 200 arrests in the last 48 barracks at the Swedish naval base bad potatoes, and the officers prom- ised a stricter food inspection. Hundreds of sailors who were questioned singly in a two-day ex- amination gaye out no information. They had agreed in advance to give Two days after the outbreak of but.rather than place a tax on high i hem to organize Volunteers’ Col- incomes, Berry with the consent of yuatears: Eo ad of the closed aut 5 strikers read i at BE OF and to enter into socialist ent Tam, how changed T am! ... | Geganigations are eleo asked to tas | Leapees haat Mae $25, in|State troopers arrested 125 strikers | at Karlskrona, in protest against Tammany Hall preferred to draw| competition with each otter, ane Resear Greene | gin the sale of tickets for the Red| West Side Court yesterday, while|Near Catatenk late today. The |bad food, was followed a. more | 23:00 of city money for a Buropean | cifh in which four or more members It was in this confused document Rally Picnic to be held Aug. 27 at! , 0 penniless victims sereamed | otal number of jailed strikers today mediately yy id si pale pleasure jaunt. “ become Volunteers will receive a that the student Fierro revealed his] pleasant Bay Park. Special rates P | was 383 sailors in another bai 3 bette: His retirement becomes effective | charter as a collective member of oping toward a complete accepianc?| are available to organizations for|-/Yn¢h him.” : ‘ |, Alt refused to dri until better | september 16. the Volunteers. and| es | e The $25 fine comes after weeks | a ot food was guaranteed. The first re- of the working class position, against! these tickets available at the office| he fi youns | ¢, n, exploi SS) h dat the License} ALBANY, N. % sult wes that one contractor was a m, exploitation, and oppression.| of the eommittee, 799 Broadway,| 0! hearings conducted a ‘ es tload of S eessio| This is the man of whos2 murder | Room 526. 7 | Bureau. There it was revealed Au-| sirike of the WV ‘forced to take back a cartload ot AMUSEMENTS DEATH OR | A LIVING | (GnayEs= “THE STRANGE CASE OF TOM MOONEY” THE WORKERS ACME ere the strike is spreading to .the neigh- etly the same replies to the of- H 3 me ue ate iriend, seems ee The committee will publish special | promise of getting a good job, Dep- boring ped of New Jersey and ay P “Urge workers to see film without fell.”—D AILY WORKER pL. BAT aE Be cect eee pein ee 'y he) pamphlets and leaflets on campaign | uty Commissioner Mary Kennedy in Pennsylvania. And the second is} and Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor | y¢0'o sm toto, cs h: e i farm 2 9 am. ma. The defense of Tergani is being! for these pamphlets ‘ he ebtioks tn the GbeGaee GO in: ews that the siriking {arte | the strike, after a farcical trial, the in “SUNNY SIDE UP” Laat ae ee condueted by the united front Ter- cry eue us so fer an-|the worke’: pn the abe made contact with @ group Of | First of the “ringleaders” who had and Holidays ani Defense C tee, in which| MURCed include: housing, graft, the| orde She said, “this court would ng . workers in the City Of} ).o1 imprisoned was sentenced to the International Labor Defense, the| {usion ticket, teachers, public utili-| be fair and square.” Gloversville. < one month’s imprisonment. Tae : Ey | Italian Defense Committee, the Gen- ee fransportation and the 5-cenb| yesterday the sobbing and enraged ohne aevelonpaae e es ppen | mild sentence reflects the emicials MUSIC BKO Jefferson 1H 8. # | Now 3 rece . | far s ris iy i iti eelin; 3rd Ave, The only eral Defense Committee of the TWW,|. ‘he wero conferehees will be held | WOTKeTs Weren't so "sure ADDUE that. ee eee eee eee echt recogaitiin | Of 8 Maen eRINe 6 = = |" EDMUND LOWE and NANCY CARROLL e of the| the American Civil Liberties Union, ; |Court proceedings were constantly unrest among the sailors. N pRB of thi eer ’| Sept. 9 instead of the date previously tates a with workers jumping | tien has borne fruit in a sw eoping ‘The strike. wes led by the Com- TADIUM CONCERTS I. ap ted Sry | Ate Pasvieeee en announced, All Party sections are a Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra | 11) “T LOVE THAT MAN” XS) ae Re BOE requested to mobilize the trade|¥P» Shouting “gyp,” “cheat” and|) 07. mauniat cous an the Perracks,, Way bi i oe yl ag et ta a Tee coaseke Gone ERYEN Strikebreaker .and | unions, unemployed councils, block| ter epithets. At a meeting of 200 farmers of | eae ee ede ea in recent SED prot igi i, be of college in} committees, mass organizations and| When the crowning insult of the| Perth, New York, representatives 0: mantee PRICES: 25c, Se, $1.00, (CIrcle 7-2575) — nt for ‘him ‘end Clubber, Whalen and | workers’ clubs to elect. delegates. to | low fine ended the session, the work-|the striking Fur Workers, Union | i gee ~ o America, | these confereNees, to nominate can-| ers rushed down the circular stair-| pledged their ®lidarity with the ° learned h_ very quickly,| Woll Are NRA Heads | gis coneymes. to nom booko In pOhaie of Atinietenne Ate Mee ate ae ne ae studi: Coliege and in a os These nominations must be in the|liceman trying to stop them was |cupply the ctriking furviers and their 1 S N an Right het in| . NEW YORK.—Appointed by for-) office of the Election Committee be-|lmocked down and stepped upon| families with free milk. This news By William In the meantime, associating in| mer police commissioner Whalen,| fore Aug, 22 at the latest. | y PE Week-end B CIAL— Exeursion Mathew Woll, vice-president of the {mies of labor, associated with lead-| jing scab bosses in the National Civic | Federation, has a long strikebreak- jing reeord. He is an avowed enemy | | | \of the Soviet Union and a friend of | They will | be ratified at the city-wide confer-| ii izations who support the Commu- | nist candidates is to see to it that the collection bexes are distributed throughout the boros. as there arc only 10 days left before the start wale the workers swept by attempt- to snatch Augustern out of the MARCH AGAINST was sent to the “Daily Worker” a worker corresp: ent in the strike Strike would be broken by the im- porting of milk from other states was answered by the farmers with strike preparations in these States, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. In special suffering of the Negroes in Harlem and other segregated dis- tricts in which Negroes are hemmed in and compelled to live in Jim-Crow residential districts where they are JOBLESS RELIEF Montgomery Brown HISTORY |A. F. of L., will head the strikebreaft-| ence scheduled for a week or ten | taxi he jumped into, They were| tea. His letter is printed on page 6b |ing arbitration board in New York days later. too late; and job shark Augustern | 2: i ‘ “Rita 7 Camp Wooulaus | City, it was announced today. Tasks of Organizations was whisked weg to his ritzy West| Meanwhile, the threats of the (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) FOR GIRLS and BOYS PJ On WALTON LAKE | Woll, one of the most vicious ene- The immediate task of all organ- | nd apartment house. State and City oficials that the SIG Sa aap egieat™ I claim that this is the first book of its kind for the youth of the world and that it is the only book which meets their greatest eultural needs in this revolutionary century —W,M.B. . * * leaving Workers Center Cafeteris ; i vane Susquehanna County, Pa., the farm-|charged fifty per cent higher rent | iath st. 10 pam. Arriving New [ithe Czarist whiteguards. of the spine Saleetion Week; t VRA WAGE SLASH ers have already stopped sending|and showed that they are discri- A $1.50 book for 25 seis, S36 copies for he y, 8 AM. The combination of Whalen, club-| Secure tickets for the pienic; and E their milk to market. In the milk|minated against in the matter of stamps or coin; paper bound, 320 pp. iP. Fare bo One way $1.25 || ber of the unemployed, and strik: i eile Ms a paretlngy to ther | Counties Of New Jersey, mectings are | the payment of relief. ; a eer ae Seats Rte tak Lod; ~ 00 per night breaker Mathew Woll as “arbitrator, es > ae NEWPORT, R. I., Aug, 10.—Another | ;,.;, ak reparations for ity fails to set aside special oney* refunder rig re et oe Denson eae ee and to collect dimes for the support being held to make preparations for| |The city 3 Ten Bungolow on (2 2 beds) on (furnished) aig $45 jis proof that the NRA in New York | will be used to smash strikes for Walton Leke Vor farther information ean || COSI Resigns—Then MonvMENT 2-100 t 6PM. | Takes His Job Again : ‘With Another Title! NEW YORK, ie 10.—After re- | Carriers Wanted for |{\ signing yesterday as Immigration i - es 5 | Commissioner, Edward Corsi today \ the Bronx, West Side || prtame head’ of tne Department of | ; down town New York Immigration and Naturalization, fol- i lowing a merger of the two depart- | and other parts of the ments by presidential order and will remain in charge of Ellis Island. About 500 employees—most of them political appointees—techni- cally lost their jobs when the order city. Call all week City Office, Daily Worker, 35 E. 12th St. (store), retained under the new agreement. | eth Real al Stage and Sereen Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AYENUE 1sTH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C, Weissman | John Barrymore In “Reunion | In Vienna” The Jefferson Theatre, beginning Saturday, will present John Barry- more and Diane Wynyard in “Re- atre Guild play_and “The Silk Ex- press,” with Neil Hamilton and Sheila Terry. The screen program, beginning on Wednesday, -will include Robert Montgomery and Sally Eilers }in “Made On Broadway,” and “The Sphinx,” with Lionell Atwill in the leading role, | | “Pilgrimage,” with Henrietta Cros- man in the principal role, is the screen feature at Radio City Music Hall this week, The stage show in- cludes “Blue Prelude,” a modern bal- let, based on the musical number of that name, by Joseph Bishop; “Feline,” a Roxyette number; “Melo- dies of Yesterday,” with Viola Philo, soprano; Jan Peerce, tenor, and the choral ensemble. | Iturbi to Conduct At Stadium Sunday Jose Iturbi, noted Spanish pianist, will make his American debut as con- 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 PB, Mospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled At One-Half Price White G Filled Fs Bre Shell Fremes Lenses not ine COHEN’ 5. 117 Orehard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Aclephone: ORchard 4-450 °° panbitisiahoges 19°4 || $1.00 | J. MORE Inte. ductor at the Stadium on Sunday GENERAL FUNE, night. Iturbi will direct the Phil-| ‘DIRECTORS RAL hharmonic-Symphony Orchestra in § id ad Wagner's “Tannhauser” Overture, and ee T mn Ae ‘ FP ha gle the Prelude from “Lohengrin”; Bee- Night Phone For International thoyen's Third “Eroica” Symphony, sherri io! and will play the Concerto in C Minor Workers Order went into effect, but they have been | assured that most of them will be | union In Vienna,” based on the The- | of the work, |Unless You Vote for Tammany” SaysFarley ss starvation and misery is the Jantest method Tammany politicians r2 using to intimidate voters for the 11 eleetions. Former sheriff Thomas M., Farley, if. f fa! his ward - heelers among starying workers and their families in the 14th | Assembly District around E. 53rd St. end threatening to cut them off the relief rolls if they do not support his | political puppets. The local politicians are beginning to realize the strength of the work- ers sentiments. who are refusing to be |bull-dozed by these grafters any longer and intend to support and vote the Communist ticket in November, This militancy and determination of the workers to throw out the Tam- many machine has scared the politi- cians into using threats of starvation and terror. But the workers are determined. They will go to the primaries in Sep- tember and register their full sup-! port of the only working class party ~—the Communist Party, | “Will Cut Your Relief, of “tin-box” fame, is sending around ; group of workers in the Nayy Yards haye discovered that the NRA codes The application of the codes will result in a 16 per cent cut in wages, | on top of the reeent 15 per cent cut | ordered by Roosevelt as an “economy” meesure. The code will bring their | wages down to $9 a week. | Strikes and protest meetings against the codes have already oc- eurred at several shipyards and Navy Yards, notably the Bethlehem Ship- , buildings yards, the New York Ship- | building, and the Sun Shipbuilding Yards at New Jersey. The Newport pretest is the fourth of such meetings in the last week. ‘Facing Eviction and Loss of Food Check, | Worker Tries Suicide | 2018 Bergen St., a milk driver jobless NEW YORK.—Wiiliam Deyito, of for a year, wos taken to St. Mary's Hospital Yesterday afternoon sorious- | ly ill after he tried to commit suicide because he feared being cut off the Home Relief Bureau relief list. | The worker, who has a wife and | child of 3, had keen extremely worried and despondent because of irregular food checks from the Relief Bureau. The family was also threatened with | eviction, The Bureau had refused them a rent check, NEW YORK.—Striking workers of all trades, furriers, metal, shoe, fur- niture, plumbers, doll workers, ete., will gather at the Trade Union Un- ity pienie at Pleasant Bay Park thic Sunday. The picnic will be used to strength- en the ranks and solidarity of the strikers. Stachel, Hathaway and Hymaer will speak on the meaning of Roo- sevelt’s strike-breaking decree. Sta- chel, who has just returned from the strike swent mine fields, will of developments there. The Century of Progress of’ the World Fair will be one of the out- standing features. A svort tourna ment, in which the youth sections of the various unions and the Labor Sports Union will participate, wil be of Beethover asndsie held. The John Reed Club will sup- STRIKERS TO ATTEND TUUC PICNIC ply artists to draw crayon pictures, Musie, dancing, entertainment and reyolutionary songs, will make this nienic one of the outstanding gath- erings of the season, Workers and workers’ organiza- tions are urged to come with their banners. TRY STRIKER TODAY NEW YORK.—Hyman Boris, who is charged by Louis Scherr, a scab, to have used threatening and insult- ing behavior with “intent to pro- voke and disrupt the peace” on Au- gust 8 at 85 Fifth Avenue, where a strike was being conducted, is to be tried at the 57th Street Magistrates’ Court this morning. The Interna- tional Labor Defense will defen the case ‘ going on strike soon both against the robbery prices paid to the farm- day by the farmers who bh: a refrigerator car {full of imported milk and dumped jt on to the rail- road tracks. The State authorities of the out- jying States are making efforis to forestall the strike in their States by raising milk prices one cent per quart. This has been done in Pennsylvania. In Connecticut, the State Milk Board has agreed te some of the demands made by the farmeis there for better conditions. Lehman Denounces Strike Governor Lehman has made an at- tempt to wreck the strike hy decoy- ing the farmers into accepting an arbitration board. His plan was de- feated by the Republican majority in the House because they want to hamper Lehman's chances of re- election by forcing him to call out the National Guard against the strikers. Lehman, who has personal eennections with the big dairy come panies through the Wall Strect banking house of which he was a partner, is making eyery attempt to break the strike. He has just signed @ bill giving the county Sheriffs euthority to increase the number of their deputies to any amount. The umber had been limited up to now. In his statement to the legislature, he dencunced the strike as “short- sighted and unwise,” The militancy of the farmers is undiminished desnite the fact that the State deputies carry rifles, and tear gas bombs. The capitalist press reports that dumping has deersased, This is only because the attempts to get scab milk through have de- creased. The strikers are learning very, fast how to mect the tear gas attacks of the State police. Many of them are war veterans and they are teach- ing their fellow, strikers the strategy of fighting tear gas attacks by at- tacking scab trucks not in solid groups but in scattered formation Many trucks were dumped in this way. 350 Walk Out from Woonsccket Mills WOONSGCKET, R. I., Aug. 10.-— Demanding a 30 per cent wage in- crease, 350 workers of the Woon- socket Falls Plush Mills struck to- day. The walkout tied up two plants. Altogether about 1,350 work- ers are striking in this town. \ items in the budget for war veter- ans’ relief. It sends the veterans te mands, and the unemployed workers are supporting the veterans’ de- mands, The Governor coldly listened to the arguments and then declared that he was extremely interested and sym- pathetic with the demands that were made, that he has in fact done mueh himself for the unemployed, He got twenty million dollars for the un- employed himself. He said he be- lieves that the funds already paid out have gone a long way towards relieving the emergency, and that now he has made possible the ap- propriation of sixty million dollars more if only the people will yote for the bond issue. “However,” seid the Governor, “the things that you are proposing bring up some extremely controversial questions. As Goyernor I should not and cannot propose or hope for thos? matters to be considered at the special session of the Legislature. ‘The matters are of too controversial a nature. If your proposals had merit I nevertheless would not_pre- sent them to the Legislature. I will not discuss whether in your proposals er not. The sixty million dollar bond issue will be ad- equate when and if it is voted. As for the emergency of the present, we will take care cf it as we are taking care of it now. I hone the city will be able to raise some money.” The committee then pointed out to Governor Lehman that he had not met any of the . Carl Winter said that his claim that the home owners were hel; cae his Me called Moratorium Bill false; that the bill did not help the home owners, bué only the bankers and mortgage holders. Minor asked the Governor whether he was ready to visualize the reac- tion that would take place among the unemployed workers when the Governor's answer was taken hack to them, “Unemployed men already starving were told yesterday,” said Minor, “that relief will be eut 65 per cent. Now when they are told that the Goyernor refuses to put the question before the special session and that they will have to wait un- til January for problematic relief the yeaction of the workers will he one of rage and determination to com- pel a change of front. They will un- derstand that the State Gore like the City Government and the Federal Government, is ready to starve them to the extent they are swilling to bear it. there is merit |" book is not wanted and is returned in good condition. Room and kitchen for season (far~ | higher wages and improved condi-| All Party lenguage newspapers are are a device for cutting wages. This he big dairy companies. and|the Home Relief Bureaus and de- z : T atehed) ils Ms coved gh SPO t sana. is |urged to reprint material on the time it is the 1,000 civilian workers ged Dat aie ieee Be the prives them as well as other unem- The Bradford-Brown Educational Co., Galion, 0. Grocery and Restaurant om Premise: {| Woll will have on his arbitration | C¢™Peign published by the “Daily” in’ of the Naval Torpedo Station at New- New York farmers. ployed workers of the relief that is TE SWIMMING, ROWI board, 27 presidents of local A. F. of Pear ng 10 woalerial sent dite y by | port who paraded through the streets One attempt at Avulia Station to|due them. The yeene si page d OTHER SPORTS L. unions. ection Campaign | yocterday protesting against the ap- import milk was thwarted porting the unemployed workers’ de- ae x By train: Erie BR. to Monroe; Bus to eee Committee. | plication of the code to their yard. Organizations Are Urged to Send Delegates to the MASS CONFERENCE OF THE DAILY WORKER, MORNING FREIHEIT and YOUNG WORKER BAZAAR Thursday, August 17, at 7:30 p. m, At the WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13fH STREET, NEW YORK — SECOND FLOOR — ROOM 205 Svery mass organization should elect a Bazaar Committee at the next meeting which will represont the organization at the Conference, Send in immediately the names and addresses of your Committee to NATIONAL PRESS BAZAAR COMMITTEE—30 EAST 13TH STREET, NEW YORK Unemployed Councils’ Week Spend YOUR Vacation in Our Proletarian Camps NITGEDAIGET UNITY BEACON, New York WINGDALE City Phone EStabrook 8-1400 f Camp Phone Beacon 731 New York —_. Proletarian Atmosphere, Healthy Food, Warm and Cold Showers, Bathing, Rowing, Athletics, Sport Activities NEWLY BUILT TENNIS COURT IN NITGEDAIGET WEEK-END RATES: 1 Day... $2.45 2 Days . 4.65 (including tax) every day at 10 Lexington Avenue Vacation Rates: $13.00 per week (INCLUDING TAX) PEAvE FOR. CAME. treiy | S108 hey hui lay and Saturday am, 3p. Pp. m.—Tal Plains Boad Express. “usb at Allerton Avenue. ROUND TRIP: to Nitgedaiget .. . $2.00 to Unity .... « $3.00 .

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