The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 18, 1933, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKE Minor to Speak { Will Elect Deleg to Cleveland Meet NEW YORK —The Ex Committee of the Tr Council has invitec candidate of t for Mayor 18th St. at 8 p.m This meeti now being cond ated -wi and call together their m the purposy of that the Cle repres t of Ame Gecent Meanwhile Legislature Prepares to Lev3 Sales Tax on City WNEW YORK, Aug. 17.—Tam meny Hall made public its ful nicipal eloc i 1 named two men friend of ae of too ses ng with a’l the | well the ¥. C. L. Section, dinery Section Functiona ing on Saturday at 2 p.m. comrades from shops must Prospect Ave. ates TAMMANY NAMES : BOSS FAVORITES: FOR ELECTION = y New| « for Fer- opping of the Functionaries and. all der to Speak Harlem Wel me at TUUC Meet Tonight) 'e Jares_W. Ford | | Ps ‘| Hotel, Restaurant >| Workers Meet Tonight |to Consider Demands ‘e members of the Hotel f ihe Food the Hotel ffiliated with e Amalgamated Food International Cooks’ Assoc n Italian Spo. g Club and ed Citizens’ e committee has following code of ize and strike, a 1 the establish- ment of a ge scale to meet the ing cost of living, abolition of pri- loyment agencies, unemplov- ment insurance at the expense of the employer and the government. A hnge mass meeting to ratify the code of the United Front Committee ll be held Tuesday, August 22, at Garden, 306 West ween Eighth and b s. Preparations for this be discussed at tonight's hip meeting. meeting the strike at the Commodore Hotel will aiso be taken up, All are urged to aticnd. Protest Tuscaloosa Lynching In Harlem on Saturday NEW YO James Ford, Harlem organizer of the Communist Party, Allan Taub and Irving Schwab, the o I. L, D, attorneys who were en from Tuscaloosa by Judge er, William Fitzgerald, organizer the Harlem section of the I. L. D., and F. Sanches, of the All-American Imperialist League, will speak he protest demonstration tomor- at 131st Street and Lenox Ave- ee ue, This meeting is arranged to protest against the brutal lynching of the two Negro workers, Pippin and Hardin, who were murdered by a mob of Tuscaloosa County authorities. > @8| Clark, the third victim of the South- as Republican, determined that tock Exchange Tax Bill shall ern lynch masters, is in a Tuscaloosa jail in a very critical condition. Protest telegrams must be sent to Governor Miller, of Montgomery, Alabama, to answer this cold-blooded murder in the “Lynch Belt.” All workers must pour into the streets and demonstrate to smash the lynch inst Negro workers. To All DAILY WORKER VOLUNTEERS! Call im reference to the Daily Worker, 35 E. 12th St. (store) 9 a.m. or 5 p.m. for special work DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Brooklyn Building Maintenance Union Meets Harlem members of the Building Maintenance Workers’ Union will meet at Lafayette Hall at the north- east corner of Seventh Avenue and 131st Street, in Room 10, at 8:30 p.m. tonight to form a Harlem section of the Union. BROOKLYN Hoffman's : RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman Hospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled At One-Half Price $1.50 + $1.00 Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORchard 4-4520 fi I. J. MORRIS, Inc, GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone; Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Pyone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE BENSONHURST WORKERS Patronize GORGEOUS CAFETERIA 2211 86th Street Near Bay Parkway Fresh Food at Proletarian Prices CLASSIFIED Furnished Rooms or Apartments ‘Those seeking furnished rooms ot apartments will find the classified col- umn of the “Daily” of special interest. Classified Ads 5 cents a word. LARGE ROOM—Parily furnished, to let, near Bronx Park; all conveniences; private en- trance; reasonable rental; near subway. Write XYZ, c-o Dally Worker, Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2500 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE has now REDUCED THE RENT ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS CULTURAL | Kindergarden; Classes for Adults Clubs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE Take Advantage of the Opportunity. Lexington train to Plains Boad. Stop at Allerton Avenue Estabrook 8-1400—140) Station, Tel. White BRONX PARK) ACTIVITIES and Children; Library; Gymnasium; tos m. to 5 19 a.m. to 2 Office open daily Friday & Saturday 1] Sunday i he 4 A Workers at a rest farm near Moscow, U.S. 5S. R. L ordered deported from the U. S. to fascist Italy, won, through the I. L. D., the right of free departure to the Soviet Union recently. Workers Send Many Suggestions to N. Y. Election Committee Buttons, Pamphlets to| Be Issued Soon; Boro Conferences Called i NEW YORK, Aug. 17—As the pre- parations for the coming election campaign go forward, the Commu- nist Election Committee is receiving an increasing number of letters from workers with many excellent sugges- tions for the carrying through of the campaign. The Committee invites all workers and sympathizers to write in, or visit. The Committee is working on the preparations for Boro Conference to be held on September 9, in every borough. Each Conference is to be held on the basis of the broadest united front. The Committee has set the sched- ule of at least 50 open air meetings a week for every Boro, with debates, dances, affairs, etc. to be arranged in addition. The sale of election campaign but- tons will begin very,soon. Coupon books for the collection of small do- nations will also be ready soon, A special program for the workers’ Summer Camps has been arranged, with torchlight parades, mock elec- tions, etc. Each camp will elect its Mayor, every vote to cost 5 cents, and the proceeds to go to the Campaign Committee. Leading Communist candidates will speak at the various camps this Sat- urday morning. Hundreds of thowsands of copies of the Communist Election platform will be dvailable in @ few days for mass distribution, The Committee which has its of- fices at 799 Broadway, repeats its call for the “Twenty Thousand Dime Col- lection Week” which begins August 19-27, 500 Workers Strike In Infants’ Wear Industry NEW YORK.—Five hundred work- ers in the legging, snowsuit and in- fants’ wear industry were called out on strike for union conditions on Monday by local 91 of the Interna- tiorial Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Un- ion and the Amalgamated Clothing Workers jointly. Strikers are meet- ing at 7 E. 15th St. Individual shop settlements are be- ing concluded by the right wing lead- ership without any consultation with the workers, There is also consider- able talk of the intention of the of- ficials to raise dues and initiation fees, although the wages of the work- ers are miserably low. Rank and file workers are getting together to de- mand representation ‘on the strike committee and the right to decide on strike settlements, \ “Public Hearings” On School Budgets This W’k, Board Announces NEW YORK—Public hearings on the school budget have been an- nounced by the Board of Education for either this week or next. This sham “democratic” method of hear- ings is employed after the budget committee has presented its report, which is kept secret. The policy of spending thousands of dollars for Tammany school su- perintendents will be continued. And the demands of the workers for more schools, smaller classes and more teachers are being pushed aside. To prevent this, workers and delegates from organizations should jam the hearing at 500 Park Ave. Watch the Dally Worker for the exact date. ITALIAN PICNIC SUNDAY AT BRANDT FARM, N. Y¥. NEW YORK.—An Italian picnic to wind up the campaign launched for the purpose of transforming the weekly organ of the Italian workers into a daily weapon of struggle, will take place Sunday, from 10 a.m, to 10 p.m. at the Brandt Farm. The picnic has been arranged by the Permanent Conference for a daily Unita 'Operaia in which are represented the workers of 14 cul- tural, mutual aid and trade union organizations. To go to the Brandt Farm, take the Jerome Ave. Subway to the last stop. Buses waiting there will take you to the picnic grounds. By autos, take the Sawmill River Road to Odell Ave. | * » NEW YORK, FR iLED WORKER REGAINS HIS ~ H«ALTH IN THE Concetta Ferrara Praises Rest Homes for Moscow Workers NEW YORK.—Concetta Ferrara, Italian worker who was sentenced to | deportation to fascist Italy and for whom the I. L. D. won a free depar- ture to the Soviet Union, is now in a rest home near Moscow, recuperat- | ing from the treatment he received in Ellis Island while waiting for de- portation. The following letter was received ( by a friend in America. It is the first | letter received from him since his departure. “Dear Comrade: “I arrived July 6 at Leningrad. On the 10th I found myself in Moscow in the office of the MOPR (I. L. D.). I gave a report to the comrades of the MOPR on the good work you are carrying on, for which they express their admiration and thank- fulness for the sacrifices that the workers of the I. L. D. are making in behalf of all those who are perse- cuted by capitalism. On the 20th, IT was sent by the MOPR to a summer resort at a house of rest, at a beau- tiful place where the ,workers of the Moscow factories go for one month’s vacation with pay. “I must remain in this house of rest for two months, not because I was so tired out from the work I did in the U. S&., but because the time I was in jail weakened me very much. The Moscow MOPR says that it is their duty to take care of the health of the workers. I spoke in Italian at a meeting of factory workers, and I gave the greetings of the American workers and of the I. L. D. (which saved me from the hands of Musso- lini). The Moscow workers exchange the greetings and pledge themselves to do their utmost in solidarity with the world working class, Greetings to the comrades of the Borough Park I. L. D. branch and to all the comrades who helped me and the I. L. D. to win my departure to the land of the workers, Comradely, “CONCETTA FERRARA.” Woll, NRA Attempt to Break Strike of Furniture Workers NEW YORK.—Matthew Woll, vice- president of the A. P. of L. and lead- ing strike breaker, together with the National Recovery Act Board are trying to compromise the strike of furniture workers and send them back under the old miserable con- ditions, Members of Local No. 76 of the Upholsterers Union are called upon by the Furniture Workers Industrial Union to guard against such betrayal and to elect rank and file commit- tees to participate in negotiations with the bosses. These attempts to break the strike of upholsterers and parlor frame- makers led by the Furniture Workers Industrial Union have met with fail- ure. Strikers of the A. F. of L. Local in the same industry are joining ranks with the workers of the In- dustrial Union, They are determined to continue the strike to gain their demands and an agreement signed with the Industrial Union. The Progressive Table Co. of Brooklyn applied for an injunction against the Industrial Union on the charge that the union is critical of the NRA and is opposed to the Uni- ted States Government. Kitchens were established by the Industrial Union where hundreds of workers of the Industrial and A. F. of L. unions are fed daily. In many cases food is sent to the homes of strikers’ families. Workers are ur- gently requested to report to 818 Broadway, New York City, and bring what they can to contribute to: the upkeep of these kitchens, F.S.U. Boat Ride on Sunday, Aug. 20 NEW YORK.—The Friends of the Soviet Union will hold a boat-ride to Hook Mountain where a program of sports will take place, on Sunday, August 20. A moonlight sail down the Hudson will follow. Features in the program will be the FSU Balalaika Ensemble which will furnish the music. Good food will be sold at reasonable prices. Tickets at $1 for adults and 50 cents for children are on sale at the SOVIET UNION FSU, 799 Broadway, the Workers’ | School and the Workers’ Bookshop. Boats will leave at 10 a.m. Sunday morning, from Pier 11, East River, foot of Wall St Ferrara (indicated by arrow), Jury Drops Lynch | “ Investigation ” Till September 4' Complete Whitewash of Officials’ Guilt Seen by ILD TUSCALOOSA, Ala., Aug. 17.—The Grand Jury “investigating” the lynching of Dan Pippen, Jr., and al T. Harden last Sunday, recessed to- | day until September 4, without mak- ing any report. A complete white- washing of the lynchers was indi- cated as all officials implicated dis- counted the possibility of any in-; dictment. Attorney General Knight, prose- cutor of the nine innocent Scotts- | boro boys, is directing the sham in- vestigation. A whole battery of law- yers has been called in on the case, to cover the guilt of Judge Henry B. Foster and Sheriff R. L. Sham- blin and his deputies who are charged by the International Labor Defense with direct responsibility for the murders. The bodies of the two victims were exhumed today for examina- tion, but the evidence was undis- closed by Sheriff Shamblin who announced that the bullets that killed the two had been carried away as_ souvenirs. Elmore Clarke, survivor of Sun- day’s orgy, was called to tell the story of the lynching. Sheriff Sham- blin announced that the murder charge would be pressed against Clarke, although, preyiously to his being found alive, he had said that he did not believe him to be guilty of the charges against him. The foreman of the jury is Dr. S. E. Deal, wealthy Tuscaloosa lum- berman. PSM aa BIRMINGHAM, Ala,—White Southern working women ar taking a prominent part in the mass pro- test organized here against the lynching of Harden and Pippen. The Southern District of the LL.D. has raised demands for the prosecution of Foster and Shamblin; the right of Negroes to serve on the Grand Jury; and the immediate, safe and unconditional release of Clarke, Willie Jimison and Dan Pip- pen, Sr., still held on the framed]; murder charge. Philadelphia to Hold Meetings .to Protest Tuscaloosa Lynchings PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Aug. 17.— Every International Labor Defense | Ex-Servicemen’s League, the Marine 4,000 ‘Dailies’ in the Dress Strike Area) | NEW YORK —Twenty-seven Red Builders and carriers yester- day covered the dress strike area from 40th St. to 15th St. with) 4,000 Daily Workers, above the | normal distribution of the “Daily.” The Daily Worker wishes to continue the sale and distribution of the “Daily” in the strike halls | of dressmakers, metal-strikers, | shoe-strikers, and in other places where workers meet. .All Daily Worker Volunteers and all unem- ployed workers are urged to come to the City Office of the “Daily,” 35 East 12th St. (store), to help in this important work. “Join C. P.” Urges Wife at Stephen Graham Funeral Workers Turn Funeral of Party Member Into Demonstration NEW YOR Demonstrating with placards alongside the coffin of Stephen Graham, Communist Party member, 700 workers marched in the funeral procession from the Jugo- Slav Club at 24th St. past the Work- ers Center. Police attempted to interfere with the procession at Sixth Ave., demand- ing a permit for the demonstration, and an American flag. For 15 mi: utes the funeral was held up u the permit was secured. 4 At the hall before the procession Comrade Graham’s wife spoke, say- ing that Stephen was a victim of the terrific speed-up in the Vita Bran Company where he had been employ- ed, He was electrocuted when in an exhausted condition he touched a fauity electric piig. She urged the workers present to join the Commu- nist Party to continue the work Com- rade Graham carried on in the class struggle. Representatives of the Workers Workers Industrial League and Com- munist Party also spoke at the fun- eral. Comrade Graham was buried at the International Workers Order Cemetery at Staten Island. Communist Party Calis for Support of Metal Strike NEW YORK.—The Communist Party, District 2, issued a statement today hailing the splendid struggle of the metal workers for better con- ditions and calling upon all workers and their organizations, especially those workers located in the terri- tory where the strikes are taking place, to do their utmest to support the strike of the metal workers. The statement declares that it is a real achievement of the Metal Workers Industrial Union to have mobilized the thousands of metal workers participating in the strike for a struggle to win better conditions and the support of all workers is im- perative for a successful outcome of the strike, which will in turn have a tremendous effect on the metal work- ers in the heavy metal shops in New York and Brooklyn. Slipper Bosses Call Police When Strikers Stage Demonstration NEW YORK.—Twelve police cars were mobilized by the owners of the Knight Slipper Co., the Melrose Slip- per Co., and the Novélty Slipper Co., today when slipper strikers demon- strated in front of these shops and ed upon the workers to join the The police wer called when some of the workers in these shops responded and joined the demonstra- tion. The general strike committee ot the Shoe ani Leather Workers Union is determined to get these workers in this gangster controlled area to join the strike for better conditions. branch in Philadelphia will hold open-air meetings to protest the Tus- caloosa lynchings, and to demand the arrest of Judge Henry B. Foster and Sheriff R. L. Shamblin of Tusca- loosa, and the application of the death penalty to all lynchers, it was announced today. A campaign is being developed here to involve Negro churches, mass and other working-class organiza- tions, around the protest against this double lynching, and to demand the immediate, unconditional, and safe release of the nine innotent Scotts- boro boys. Pittsburgh Workers to Hit Tuscaloosa Lynchings,Aug.18, 19 PITTSBURGH, Pa.—Workers here will hold two large demonstrations to protest the Tuscaloosa lynchings, the International Labor Defense has an- nounced, The first, Friday, August 18, will TUUC Calls for Support of N. Y. Shoe, Metal Strikes NEW YORK—The Trade, Union By EDWARD even on finances, pro basketvall fol comes through. presentative soccer elev team by a surp: verdict of 2 to 1, eleven individual stars, most of whoi each other. ally, Dynamo Stadium holds 55,000 but enth astic crowds denuded most of Moscow’s green j boulevards of benches which they set up at the edge of the running track. The SRO sign had been hung out a week before. In actual fact the man- agement received 500,000 applica- tions from factories, trade unions, ete, Still, there was no mad scramble | nto the grounds. Volunteers of the benches days ahead. | The 75,000 came and went in fine! order. | Color? You bet. The thing would | have made old Rickard’s eyes pop. | Most of the spectators were dress- | ed in white, men as well as women, Red berets and shirts on the comso-| molkas, A magnificent display of aero-| nautics. ‘The entire force of the Moscow airport turned out. Mono- planes looped the loop, two dirigibles | dropped parachute jumpers, a gyro-| scope, sight hitherto-unseen, appear- ed as the piece de resistance. Track events were run off before the game, All foreign embassies sent | beribboned delegations. Maxim Ggr-! ki leaned over the railing with rapt | attention througheu!. A fortnight previously, a Moscow team had beaten the Turks 7-2 and a Leningrad eleven had also handed tkem a trouncing. But talented and flashy as the all-stars were, they could not combine. Two-thirds of the game was played in Moscow ter- ritory and it was only brilliané goal- keeping and sound work by the backs that kept the score down. Soviet soccer terminulogy has been borrowed from Britain. “Offside,” “corner,” “linesmmen” are employed with roore or less fantastic pro- nounciation, But the game has achieved a popularity which no other sport enjoys. Crowds as large as 40,- 009 and 50,000 will attend a game between two crack factory teams. There is no professionalism. Pos- sibly as a result, first class British pro teams could undoubtedly teach finer’ points to the best of Russian combinations but the general stand- afd of play is high. For an outsider, a feature of the entire scene is the spirit in which the games are pleyed and watched. There is almost never any suspicion of foul or even roaga play and any breach of fairness is met with the sort of embarrassment you feel when your kid brother bullies some smaller boy. The Moscow crowd expressed tremendous enthusiasm after the two Turkish goals. THOUGHT FOR THE DAY Expert baseball opinion is voiced for the benefit of those out of the know by Memphis Bill Terry, radio star and manager of the league- leading Giants: « “Well, to get up from fifth place Demand Release of Mooney in Superior SUPERIOR, Wisc.—A_ resolution condemning the frame-up and im- prisonment of Tom Mooney and de- manding the immediate release of him, the Scottsboro boys and all class war prisoners, was adopted at the August 1 Anti-War Demonstration here. The resolution was presented by the local Tom Mooney Committee of Action, e NEWHOUSE What with three-quarters of the major league teams struggling to break ding up altogether, Madison Square Garden running its house-fighter shows to attendances of three and four t's permissible for us to do a bit of gloating when an item like ven defeated the Soviet Union's picked The game was witnessed by a colorful gathering of 70,000 fans, who watched the inevitable breakdown of the mm had never previously played with ryou have to keep winning while the four clubs ahead of you are losing, That makes it tough because there will be days when they'll be playing ‘ one another and some of them will win if others lose.” Standing of the Clubs NATIONAL LEAGUE Club W.L P.C.| Club W. L. P.C. | New York 65 43 602] Boston 60 58 .536 | Pittsburgh 62 49 559) Philadel. 46 64 .418 Chicago 61 51 .545| Brooklyn 44 63 .411 St. Louis 62 53 .539| Cincinnati 44 69 .389 AMERICAN LEAGUE Club W.L.P.C.{ Club W.L. PC. Washing. 73 38 .658| Detroit 85 58 .482 New York 65 44 .596| Chicago 51 60 .459 Philadel, 55 55 500} Boston 49 61 .445 Cleveland 57 59 491! St. Louis 43 72.374 New York, St. Louis result not in. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Club W.L.P.C.y Club WAL. PC. Newark 8258 .594| Albany — 65 71 .478 Rochester 75 64 .529| Montreal 65 72 .47: Baltimore 73 65 .529| Buffalo 64 72 471 Toronto 71 67 .014' JerseyCity 54 82 .397 Inning-by-Inning Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE R. H. E. Cincinnati -000 010 010-2 13 4 New York -500 010 10x—7 11 1 Frey and Lombardi; Parmelee and Mancuso. St. Louis -000 160 001-8 14 2 Philadelphia ...010 000 031-5 8 2 Carleton and O'Farrell; Holley and Todd. Chice Pittsb wet gre at Boston postponed; rain. at Brooklyn postponed; AMERICAN LEAGUE R.H.E. 0 Washington ...501 034 100—14 16 Chicago 550 100 000— 1 4 3 Weaver and Sewell; Miller and Sullivan. Boston 201 003 000—6 10 0 Detroit . 00 010 000—2 5 1 Weiland and Ferrell; Auker and Pasek. Philadelphia ...000 030 010-413 3 Cleveland ......013 072 20x—15 19 2 Earnshaw and Cochrane; Pearson and Spencer. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE R.H.E. Jersey City.....000 011 020-4 8 1 Rochester .....101 030 00x— 510 2 Hanlon and Reusa; Kaufmann and Hinkle, Albany ........200 014 001— 811 0 Montreal . 102 000 00— 3 8 2 Tamulis and G. Phelps; Pomorski and Grabowski. Newark at Toronto, night game. Baltimore at Buffalo, night game. Camp Wocolona On WALTON LAKE —SPECIAL— Week-end Bus Excursion Bus leaving Workers Center Cafeteria 13th St, SAT., 1:30 p.m. Arriving New York MONDAY, 8 A.M, Fare both ways $1.50 One way $1.25 Lodging $1.00 par night per person $4.00 par week — $12.00 pgr season Tent for season (2 beds) $12 Bungalow for \season (furnish Room and kitchen for nished) Grocery and Restaurant on TENNIS, SWIMMING, ROWING and OTHER SPORTS By train: Erle R.R. to Monroe; Bus to Walton Lake For further information call MONUMENT 2-7699 to 6 P.M. VENETIAN ILLUMINATION FOLK SONGS SPAGHETTI e Unity Council of New York in a statement today called upon ail affiliated organizations and their membership to support the strikes of the metal and shoe workers both morally and financially. The victory of the metal and ‘shoe strikes will mean the development of real organization and will stim- ulate tens of thousands of work- ers to join the revolutionary trade unions in these industries, the statement declares. Sanitation Dep’t Aids Boss Against Bond Laundry Strikers NEW YORK.—Despite the entry of the Department of Sanitation to aid the Bond Laundry, 405 East 175th St. to break the strike by threatening be held at the corner of Arthur and Center Avenues, and the second, on Saturday, will be held at Kirkpatrick and Wylie Avenues. Delegations will be elected at these meetings to make up a committee to visit the Pittsburgh Ciy Council next Wednesday, at 2 p.m., to demand that SIOYIOM OLZIN 4SUTOSY UOTJeUTUTTLOSIP in Pittsburgh cease immediately. R. Bates, Mrs. Wright to Speak ‘in Michigan Mrs. Ada Wright, mother of Roy and Andy Wright, two of the Scotts- boro boys, and Ruby Bates, star de- fense witness in the Scottsboro trial at Decatur, Alabama, will speak in Michigan from August 22 to August 27, The schedule of their meetings is as follows: August 22, Detroit, at Mount Olive Baptist Church, corner of Willis and workers who distributed leaflets, the 65 strikers will continue to picket this morning. Joseph Stillman, militant union or- ganizer, was arrested while leaving the 161st court, where four Bond strikers were up for trial. The case of the strikers was adjourned until ‘Thursday. The shop delegates council at its meeting Saturday decided to start a broad campaign to gain support for the Bond strikers. Workers organi- zations in the neighborhood are urged to report to the strike headquarters, 1837 Washington Avenue, where they can help win the strike. A meeting to organize the down- town laundry workers is called by the Laundry Workers Industrial Union for Thursday evening at 95 Ave. B. gust 25, at Flint; August 26, at Pon- Brush, at 8 p.m.; August 23, at Mus- kegon; August 24, at Saginaw; Au- tpe: and Aug. 27 at Workers’ Camp, ‘welve Mile and Halsted Roads, 4 Ticket 20c 8 a Ss N S =) = | a is n DIRECTION: Jerome Ave. &.... AUTOS: Take the Sawmill River Road to Odell Ave. BRANDT FARM ———— Build UNITA’ OPERAIA Into a Daily! PIC-NIC (RAIN OR SHINE) FIREWORKS SPORT CONTESTS JAZZ BAND POT GAME vo last stop. Busses waiting ‘Wd OF 9% WV IT Wworg j Young Communist League Week Spend YOUR Vacation in Our Proletarian Camps’ NITGEDAIGET | UNITY BEACON, New York City Phone EStabrook 8-1400 Camp Phone Beacon 781 WINGDALE New York Proletarian Atmosphere, Healthy Food, Warm and Cold Showers, Bathing, Rowing, Athletics, Sport Activities NEWLY BUILT TENNIS COURT IN NITGEDAIGET Vacation Rates: $13.00 per (INCLUDING TAX) ‘WEEK-END RATES: 1 Day .. $2.45 2 Days. 4.65 (including tax) CARS LEAVE FOR CAMP from 2700 Bronx Park East every day at 1 a.m. Friday and Saturday 10 a. p. m,, 7 p. m.—Take Lexington Avenue White » 3 Plains Road Express. Stop at Allerton Avenue. ROUND TRIP: to Nitgedaiget . . . $2.00 to Unity ..... $3.00

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