The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 31, 1933, Page 3

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| “WHALEN’S ARREST OF PICKETS IS TRUE INTENTION OF N. R.A.” Cleveland Conference Resolution Calls for Delegation to Washington to Protest Jailing 0 f Pickets CLEVELAND, Ohic—Declaring that Whalen’s actions against strike Dickets in New York represents “the true intention of the capitalist rulers of the U. 8. to use the NRA to enslave the workers still further”, the United Action Congress which concluded its sessions on Sunday unanimously pas- sed a resolution calling on all workers to protest and fight against Whalen’s attack. The resolution adopted follows: “The Trade Union Conference for United Action, meeting in Cleveland August 26-27, takes note of the pub- lc declaration, of Grover Whalen, NRA Administrator for New York City, who says that the NRA forbids strikes and even ‘picketing in an or- derly manner’ of employers who have signed NRA codes; who declares that the NRA, at the same time that it removes all restrictions of the anti- trust law against trustification of capital, also puts new restrictions upon the organization and action of the workers, threatening to take away their established rights of strike and picketing. “The Conference declares that in the action of Grover Whalen there is exposed the true intention of the capitalist rulers of the U.S.A. to use the NRA to enslave the workers still further, to intensify their exploita- tion, and to withdraw from the work- ers all their democratic rights. While on the surface this attack is aimed merely against the so-called ‘red’ unions, experience both in the USA and elsewhere has clearly demon- strated that it wil swiftly develop into a fascist attack upon all the trade unions and all dissenting ex- pression. Hitler began with an at- tack upon Communists and left-wing organizations, but within a few months has smashed the whole Ger- man trade union movement and out- lawed all political parties except the Nazis. “The Conference instructs its Pre- siding Committees to organize a del- egation of workers and their friends to go to Washington to formally pro- test before the Roosevelt adminis- tration against this outrageous at- tack upon trade union rights under cover of the very act which sup- posedly guarantees the right to or- ganize and bargain collectively. “The Conference pledges all par- ticipating organizations to carry on an intensive: campaign of exposure of the NRA upon the basis of this and other examples of its true na- ture as an instrument of enslave- ment. “We urge that the delegates to the Conference from New York City take immediate steps to organize in that city a mighty. movement of protest against this attack upon trade union- ism and democratic rights. All the unions, whether A. F, of L. or in- dependent, all unemployed organiza- tions. the Communist Party, Socialist Party, Conference for Progressive Labor Action, American Civil Lib- erties Union, and all organizations and individuals concerned about the defense of the trade unions and dem- ocratic rights should be called upon to join in this movement. As the attack is spread to other sections of the country, similar steps should be taken there. “In view of the urgency of the sit- uation, we call upon all organiza- tions throughout the country, and especially upon the local unions of the A. F. of L. and branches of the Socialist Party, to send telegrams of |protest against the Whalen anti- union and anti-strike edict, to the Roosevelt administration in Wash- ington. “The Conference calls upon the American working class to openly re- sist this and all other attempts to outlaw the strike weapon, to deny the rights to strike and picket. The Conference calls upon the workers to take full advantage of the favor- able moment for strike action to win substantied increase in wages and better conditions and to boldly defy the edicts of Grover Whalen and all similar attempts to deny workers’ rights in the name of the National Recovery Act.” 2,000 Porto Rican Needle Workers on Strike, Stone Plant SAN JUAN, Porto Rico, Aug. 30. —-Two thousand striking needle workers in Mayaguez, capital of the western province, stoned a factory when police tried to drive them away. A furious fight followed and many of the cops were injured. The strikers are demanding an eight-hour day and increased wages. Police reinforcements have been Ei to Mayaguez in an effort to reak the strike. Porto Rico is an American col- ony and is governed by Herbert H. Gore who has been described as a dictator. Comrade MAC HARRIS who is touring for the Daily Worker will be in the follow- ing cities on the dates listed below. We would appreci- ate it if the Daily Worker readers in these cities would co-operate with Comrade Harris. Aug. 31 to Sept. 3-OMAHA, Neb. | Sept, 4 to 5—LINCOLN, Neb. | Sept. @—COUNCIL BLUFFS, Ia. | Sept. 7—DES MOINES, Ia, | Sept. 8-SIOUX CITY, Ia. | Sept, 10 to 16—DENVER, Colo. Sept. 17 to 23—SECTIONS IN COLORADO seh iat \ & yesterday | © Cleveland Meeting Adopts United Plan Against NRA Codes (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) aimed merely against the so-called “red” unions experience both in the USA and elsewhere has clearly dem- onstrated that it will swiftly develop into a fascist attack upon all the trade union and all dissenting ex- pression. Hitler began with an at- organization, but within a few tack upon Communists and left-wing months had smashed the whole Ger- man trade union movement and out- lawed all political parties except the Nazis. “Faced with such a dire crisis, the workers assembled in the Cleveland Conference have begun the task of rallying all their fightingorganization in solid unity around a workers’ pro- gram. We call upon all workers and working class organizations to develop united struggles around the follow- ing demands: 1. For the preservation and re- covery of workers’ rights, for the right to strike, to belong to any union of the workers’ own choos- ing; for free speech, assembly and press; for abolishing of all dis- crimination against the foreign- born and against women and youth labor; for the release of all political prisoners. 2. Immediate and substantial in- creases in wages in all industries and for all workers. 3. A stubborn fight against all at- tempts to put over any wage re- ductions under the guise of a mini- mum wage program, 4. For a federal system of social insurance to be paid by the govern- ment and employers in order to secure all workers against all in- voluntary unemployment at the level of their previously established standard of living. 5. Complete equality for the Ne- gtoes who are being subjected to special discrimination under the administration of the NRA. Com- plete solidarity of white and Negro workers, 6. Struggle against relief cuts, evictions, foreclosures, and all at- tempts to shut off water, gas and electricity from workers’ homes. 7. Against forced labor camps commissary relief plans, and for payment in cash at full trade union wage rates on all public work. ‘We propose the following as meth- ods for realizing the program: 1, Organize and support strikes and demonstrations of employed and unemployed workers. Rally all forces for struggle against the cam- paign to smash the trade unions and abolish democratic rights, 2. Initiate and support all efforts of the workers to organize in shops, mines, stores and offices, strengthen the existing class unions and to build fighting industrial unions to carry on the class struggle of the workers, against the bosses and boss controlled government agencies. Immediate conferences of all genu- inely militant elements in steel, mining, textile and other industries to.unite the masses for struggle. 3. Agitate and organize in all unions and other economic who follow the dangerous and de- ceitful policy of “co-opq-ating har- bi amersd be adbaia bosses”. itensify the struggle against autocratic, corrupt, and racketeer- = Hy i Against the Roosevelt “New Deal’ of hunger, wage cuts, starvation and enslavement. For the united front of working class struggle. Cropper, Beaten by JailGuard,Demands Governor’s Probe | LITTLE ROOK, Ark—Atter beaten by the prison farm koe while the superintendent looked on, Freddie French, ot share-crop- per working on adjoining the Cummins Prison farm, went, to Gov- seoompanted by ‘his physitam Dr. 'T. W. Woddell. aay Since the governor was not in, French left a prepared statement of charges. Later the governor said: “If that’s true, I will request the prison oc ea to make an investiga- Chairman W. N. Trulock of the state penal board, questioned some time later, said that he had received no official notice from the governor regarding the casa |_NEWS BRIEFS Film Stars Guarded. HOLLYWOOD.—Film stars here are adding body-guards to their pay-| rolls following the gangster shootings of Monday night. Police announced, as usual, that a “war on gangster- ism” would begin. Actors fear that gangsters are at-| tempting to “muscle-in” on the film! industry. ° . Elections “Queer”. PHILADELPHIA.—Charges of thug- gery and intimidation were made by local voters as registration showed a/| huge increase in Democratic enroll- ments, | Opposition voters threatened to ask | Governor Pinchot to call in State} Police to supervise the voting. Girl Dies in Blaze. NEW YORK. — Panic-stricken,| Mabel Weiner jumped to her death| yesterday in an attempt to escape! from a fire that swept a tenement at York and Barrow streets. Her father and four brothers were critic- ally injured in the blaze and a dozen | others suffered from burns and smoke | poisoning. | eae ae, . Wet Victory in Washington. SEATTLE, Wash.—Washington be-| came the 24th state to vote repeal | of the 18th amendment yesterday. | Reports from the majority of the} voting precincts indicated that. the wets would win by a 2 to 1 majority. * * | | More Guards at Sing Sing. Scene at the eviction of the Pitindorfer family, of 526 E. 136th St., Bronx. AILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1938 ‘We Do Our Part’ Eagle Placed on |40,000 Follow Lead Furniture of Evicted Bronx Family of TUUC in Strike The Sign of the Blue Eagle 2 AG + : | 4 ALBANY, N. ¥.—The State Com-| for rent as indicated by this sign near the entrance to the building. mission of Correction yesterday re-| commended that twenty more guards | be employed at Sing Sing prison. The penitentiary population is the largest in history and Warden Lewis E. Lawes | has asked for more men to handle the prisoners. . Close Two Universities. VIENNA.— The Austrian govern- ment closed the doors of two univer- sities yesterday in efforts to balance | the budget. It is reported that both schools are hot-beds of Nazi agita-! tion. The work of the schools will be taken over by other institutions. | Striking Farmers | Force New Hearing on NRA Milk Code PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 30—So great has the strike sentiment be- come among the milk farmers in this milk shed that the Secretary of the Treasury, Wallace, has been forced to call a public hearing on the milk code for the district. It will be held this Friday. | It is generally admitted that the strike vote taken by the Philadel- phia Regional Committee of Ac- tion on August 21 forced the au-| thorities to reconsider the original code. — The $8,000 a year official of the Interstate Milk Producers Associa- tion is doing his best to discourage the farmers from coming to the hearings in any large numbers. Only committees will be admitted, | he warned the farmers. The au- thorities followed the same tack by | giving the farmers barely two days notice of the hearings. The most conservative farmers are openly declaring their determi- nation to enter on a milk strike unless something is immediately done to relieve them of the extor- tions of the Milk Trust. A group of workers’ organiza- | tions in Philadelphia has pledged | active aid to the strikers. Write to the Daily Worker about every event of inter- est to workers in your fac- tory, neighborhood or city. | BECOME A WORKER COR- | RESPONDENT! |a minimum scale of $13 on the silk } calls on the workers to form united PatersonBossesAsk | NRA to Break Silk Strike Due Today: 7,000 Expected Out to, Fight NRA Code | PATTERSON, N. J., Aug. 30.—}| Fearing a general strike of silk work-| ers called for Thursday morning at 10 am, silk manufacturers have re-| quested the National Labor Advisory | Board of the NRA to intervene to) prevent the strike. The strike call} has been issued by the Associated: Silk Workers, The National Textile | Workers Uniow has also issued a call) for a strike at the same time against the low wages fixed in the bosses code. The Asociated estimates that 7,000 will respond to the call for the walk-out tomorrow morning. Demands of the Associated Silk Workers are for a minimum wage of $36 weekly for weavers, $44 for warpers, loomfixers and twisters $18 for winders and unskilled workers, | a 5-day week and a 2-loom system. The National Textile Workers Union declares that these demands are un- realistic and will only deceive and) mislead the workers. The union is calling on the silk workers to form- ulate demands which can be won.| These demands are to be adopted at & mass meeting tonight called by the Union. Silk manufacturers are expecting the government's aid in putting over | | workers. | Although the A‘gociated reports | that the recently formed silk dyers’ | union will alsocall its workers out on strike, no steps have been taken by the Associated to bring this about. The National, Textile Workers Union in last minute instructions front committees in the shops to per- | suade the workers in the buildings where they are working to join the strike and to demand the forma- tion of a united front general strike committee. | The executive committee of the Wiseman Dye Shop local calls the workers of the shop to a meeting on | Saturday at 10 a.m. at 612 River) St. to discuss strike preparations. The workers of the United Piece Dye Works shop are also urged t attend. the meeting. 250 Spinners Strike Against Code, Ask More Pay By CARL REEVE WOONSOCKET, R.I., Aug.30.—The 250 workers at the Onowa wool spin- ning mill here are striking for an increase in wages, and are trying to spread the strike to another mill in Woonsocket owned by the same com- pany (the Loughton Company) and to the Loughton mill at Franklin, ‘The strikers, mostly young boys and girls around the age of eighteen to twenty, are keeping a militant picket line. “We've been on strike two weeks,” the picket captain said when inter- viewed on the picket line, “We want to make at least the same pay at forty hours that we did at 54 hours before they put in the code. We've been out on strike two weeks. So far we have heen able to keep all scabs out ofthe mill, although the boss is trying to keep the mill running“” Ask for Daily Worker The pickets crowded around and enquired about the Daily Worker, They gave their names and addresses and asked that copies of the paper be sent to them. “When the code came in some departments got as! much for 40 hours as they did for 54 hours and some got a slight raise some departments didn’t get the raise, so the whole mill went on strike,” The highest the spinners, the most skilled craft, receive, in the mill was $17.20 and the highest other depart- ments received was $14, even though | prices of food and clothing in Rhode | Island have gone up 9.1 per cent in the last month, The United Textile Union has sent organizers in here | and will undoubtedly try to force the strikers back to work. At the present “We've Been on Strike Two Weeks,” Says Picket Captain in Woonsocket, R.1.,” and “We Want Same Pay for 40 Hrs. We Got for 54” ® Note that plenty of rooms are Half of Tenants in Section Have Been 800 Shops Tied Up Served Disposses in General Strike scien of Tobacco Werkers NEW YORK.—Exemplifying the destructive claws of the NIRA, grip- 5 Ae ping families of the unemployed, the ft Pitindorfe y placed near their “% furnitu: on the sidewall for More Pay a sign d Bless Our Home”? Above Eis this is the “we do our part” eagle Less Hours of the NIRA. Senaneens The family of five was evicted) NEW norganize1 to- Tuesday from 526 EB. 126th Si. Ten) poy wos! responded to the other families in this house and 524| - both owned by the same realty cor-|Seneral. strike call of the Tobacco | poration, have beén served with dis-| Workers’ Industrial Union in great possesses and are awaiting eviction. | and some 800 small to-| They all weren't evicted o nTuesday a ai because the sidewalk 1s too narrow, pa ee foe ‘ and the corporation is afraid of the an. Nearly ger of the great many families i the neighborhood who themselves | are soon to be evicted. Around the corner at 198 Brown Place, the Mattle Wingate family of 8 has also been out on the street since Tuesday. This is a Negro fam- ily and the Jim Crow segregation practiced in all the apartments on Brown Place compels the Negro ten- ants to live in the basement under the street level. The rent paid is the same as the first floor. ba At a mass meeting held Tuesday, The A. F. night 500 indignant workers elected | making similar attempts a delegation of nine to see the land-| strike, They are ureing the we lord who lives in the same building.| ers to go back to their jobs and His daughter tried to deny entrance | then bargain for demands on the to the delegation saying: “You can’t | basis of the NRA cole which is| |in the history of Cigar Makers’ Union affiliated with the A. F. of L. were the workers | so united in their struggle, for it! was the policy of the union offi- cials to vlay the skilled workers | jagainst the unskilled and to be tray strikes by 4g agreements} with the bosses in of TL. offi forcefully enter an apattment.” She|soon to be adopted. A recent) was shoved aside with the words, ike-meeting in which 2,000 par- “you can’t force/wly throw fam-| ticipa: led that question. | ied di The aiers voted to s ilies out on the stree! y out on This same ap: nt house and | s e for their dom and to the one alongside it were the ‘scene; spread the strike to all shops of a militant rent strike in 1923 when | still working. the landlord attempted to raise rents | ear Toate, $5-$8 a month, (according to Mrs. | _ The Workers’ Internationa’ e- Eisenberg, one of the leaders in that | lief pledged its support to the strike). About 20 families were put| Sttike and. will provide relief for into the street, every window in the | the strikers. the majority of whom house was broken, the tollers blooded | 8" Latin American workers. and the buildings-urned into swim- ming pools, Red flags were flying from, all parts of the building and afterseveral days battling, the land- lord withdrew his rent rise and was forced to contribute $25 for a block party. The Lower Bronx Unemployed Council is located at 90 E. 187th St., between beth these eviction scones, | ulation here, are fighting mad,” she Helen Lyneia, organizer cf the Coun-| said. “And they're in an explosive cil pointed out that of all femil'es| mood. A year ago they would have ving in the territory between 138th | fought us. Now they come to us to 132nd Sts., from the East to Har- domanding organizing aid.”. Jem Rivers, half of them have been served With dispossesses. It isa v elty she “Said, to find an uncmp” family within the territory that still | has gas and electricity. “These Irish American workers, who form the majority of the pop- lat the”Onbwa mill four weeks ago. I was immediately cut off the relief and was told I couldn't get any more | because there is a member of my family... working. My son went on ents of one of the pickets, who live | in a company house. Passing through the town, the extreme poverty of the workers and their families in this industrial town of 170,000 population was all too apparent in their ragged clothes, and undernourished appear- ance, We passed the large Shoshone — | strike two weeks ago after having not fenced off from each other. Win- | worked only two weeks. I tried to get dows were broken. There was a gen- | back on the relief but they wouldnt | eral musty atmosphere of disrepair.| give me anything so far. We are | starving and I am going up tomorrow The father and mother of the/| and demand something to eat again. | striker were on the back doorstep, The houses are very cold in the winter | with several young children around | 2nd we suffer. We use kerosene for Nearly 4,000 Strike|* eret confer- | ¢. y ‘ Says A. Overgaard Mass Demonstrations Against Whalen Attack: Being Prepared; Protests Sent to Mayor By ERVING GOLD. NEW YORK.—In the face of attacks from the NILA and the react, | policy of the reformist trade unions of the A. F. of L, and the. | Trade Union Unity Council, leader of the militant unions in New Xi the City, has been the leader of between 30,000 and 40,000 workers in strikes for higher Win ‘Strike, Praise TU.UL. for Its Fine Strike Leadershi Window ‘Cleaners in| Hartford Win Higher Wages HARTFORD, Conn., Aug. 30.—Af- ter winning a strike for higher wages, the ni: organized Window House | Clean Union here sent the fol- lowing telegram to the Trade Union Unity League in New York: “Window House Cleaners Union of Conn. fraternally adership of the from the cover default in the agreem National Events Providence Workers to Celebrate. PROVIDENCE, R. I—The 14th Anniversary of the Communisi Parity be celebrated by the workers of Providence by a Mass Recruiting din- ner, arranged for Sunday, Sept. 17, at 8 p.m. at the Swedish Wo: Hall zstnut St. Songs included in tl , District Orgen Milwaukee YCL Outing. MILWAUKEE.—An ting by the Milwaukee Young Coz unist Lea zue will take p) Sunday, Sept. 10th at the I Woeds, Thtre will be musi i sports. Lecture on the NRA. PHILADELPHIA—M. L. Olken, district secretary of the WIR, will speak on thetopic “What does the NRA mean to the workers,” next Friday evehing at 1331 N. Franklin St. All welcome. Admission free. * ry WIR Labor Day Outing. PHILADELPHIA. — There will be a Labor Day outing at the WLR. camp, Numbers by the WIR Mando- lin orchestra, a quartet from the Music League and skits by the John Reed Club will be features. There will also be sports and games. . Join United Front. CLEVELAND, O.—The Cleveland | Small Home Owners Federation cen- | tral committee, after listening to a 15 minute argument by Comrade Al | Barry, voted by an overwhelming | majority to participate in the Inter- | national Youth Day Demonstration | on Sept, Ist. appreci-| } | strivi said Andrew Overgard, energeti¢ see- retary of the TUUC in an inteview with the Daily Worker. In his office at 799 Btoadway, An- drew Overgaard, who has devote. many years to the trade union moves ment, worked closely with Comrade Fos! discussed the highlights of the recent strike movement that has stricken terror into the NIRA bosses and provoked a fascist attack from the red-balter, Grover Whalen, “We lead the workers in their fight for higher wages, for improved conditions, against the bosses’ offen- sive. For example, Whalen is at- tempting to make the issue Com- munism in our strike leadership. This is a maneuver to hide the real issue in all of the strikes we lead, against the employers’ attempt to continue 5 long hours, to refuse increases in pay, to reduce the wages of skilled workers, and in many instances, the refusal to pay even the miserablé of the codes.” The TUUC participates in every it leads opposition groups within the A. F. of L. Now, in this | | critical period when the combined forces of the state and bosses are ganizations, the TUUC is showing its » ighting leadership. ‘The TUUC strives to unite all workers into a fighting center, re- gardiess of union affiliations, on the basis of a determined and united struggle for improved conditions. In our unions there are democrats, so- cialists and republicans. At the mention of arrest of the 6 pickets of the Elco Shoe Co. in Brooklyn by the Wall Street tool Whalen, Overgaard’s face tightened. iy are meeting the attacks of Whalen with a general strengthen- ing of our organizations, increasing strike activity and with protest tele- grams to Washington, with delega- tions to Mayor O’Brien. “We are now preparing a mass de- monstration in one of the largest halis in the city, most likely a Madison Square Garden. i I strikes now in progress. We we: constantly interrupted by telephonge calls from various strike centers. Nifo one could doubt that Overgaard ha his hands full. “In the metal industry,” he conf- tinued, “we have added 1,000 new member: ; mi ip. All of this in the t | few weeks. Many of the shop: the silver and holloware trade have al: aiy settled with the union and 2 granted most of the major de- mands, The Fixture and Figure Workers Union won its demands in almost all of the shops.” “Our struggles are carried on along a wide front. Strikes on two ships, the $8, Diamond Cement and the Cornore, are being successfully led y the Marine Workers Industrial Unicn. In the Brooklyn Navy Yard cur leaflets have aroused the work- ers to a protest against wage cuts, and we have been able to add to our ranks over 250 seamen. “The arrest of the Elco Shoe pick- ets has, of course, centered atten- tion on the shoe strike, which we are leading. Eight thousand workers are members of the Shoe Workers Indus- trial Union, which has grown rapidly in wa very short period. Half the shops have already settled. The others will probably follow shortly. “But the big strikes are not our only concern. The TUUC is leading in struggle over 3,000 tobacco str. ers. It has won over completely 750 striking textile workers in Brooklyn, has directed the strike of 550 young celluloid workers, and has just or- ganized 750 young workers of the Aerovox Company in a@ strike for higher wages.” I asked about the furriers. Over- gaard smiled, “Here,” he replied, “our policy of macs struggle has successful. The union has 1,100 shops working under union contract, and 8,000 members in the union.” , by DETROIT, Mich. THREE DAY PICNIC TO CELEBRATE 14th Anniversary of Communist Party SEPTEMBER 2nd, 3rd and 4th WORKERS CAMP, Twelve Mile and Halsted Roads PROGRAM SATURDAY: Games and Dancing from 6 to 10 p. m. SUNDAY: Jewish Dram Studio in one act play in English. March for Election Campaign, John Schmies, Candidate for mayor, speaker, turned the discussion to the them. They were French, the largest | lighting. There is no inside water.” | ‘There are many such company | Dancing from 6 p. m. to midnight. mill, which is a pile of ruins, having been completely torn down by the company last year, We arrived at a long block of company houses. They were old houses, made of brick run- ning parallel on two blocks, the out-| side toilets standing in rows in the middle of the back yards, which were, nationality in Woonsocket. “I have been cut of work for four years,” this textile worker said, “I have twelv children, all of whom are supporied out of the relief I got. I have been getting six dollars a wesl: relisf to support twelve children, no light, heat or anything else. My son got a job time they have their minds set on spreading the strike and winning their raise. ‘We then visited a family, the par-/ & uses in Woonsocket and throughout Blackstone and Pawtuxset Valley, | here the mill villages are, some with | ineide Tunning water, but the mafor- | | ity with: to heating system, and with | | outside toilets, for which the com- pany chatges 3 and 4 dollars a week. Almost all are frames made of wood. | {Company houses are to be seen in |most, of the mill villages of Rhode Island, E | Cutting Off Relief | | ‘The cutting off of this worker from | | vie relief lists no doubt explains hy there has been a slight decrease | {in the number being carried on the jvoliet rolls of Rhode Island, the | decrease, however, being negligible. |More than one worker testified that jhe has-been cut off of the relief list on the flimsiest excuse. There are over | 11,000 on the relief rolls of Rhode Is- \land, about 800 having been taken off in the last few weeks. The workers interviewed here reported no jobs are to be had. The employment office of the Maaville Jenkes mill, the Woon- | socket Rayon Co,, normally egaploying | | 350, said there were no jobs open when we applied for a job there, and that they are beginning to lay off men. The United States Rubber Co. Dancing from 6 to 10 p. m. Transportation from 7 Mile to Camp MONDAY: Singing by National Choruses, Art Dancing by famous dane= ers, Speaker from Central Committee of Communist Party. Games, Setween 12 and 4 p.m. on all 3 days CHICAGO, ILL. AT BIRUTES GROVE, PEOPLE'S AUDITORIUM, 2457 Plants here are shut down. Sunday, September 3rd, 1933 GROVE OPEN FROM 10 AM. TO 12 P.M. GAMES — DANCING — EATS — REFRESHMENTS DIRECTION: Take any Street Car to 63rd Si, ‘Then 63rd West to Argo, Ill. — From Argo Tree truck transportation to she Picnic Grove. — ADMISSION 10c Auspices Central Committee Communist Party, U.S.A.) IN CASE OF RAIN AN INDOOR RALLY WILL BE HELD AT THE COMMUNIST PARTY ANNIVERSARY PICNIC Archer und 79th St. W. CHICAGO AVE., CHICAGO, ILL. y } \ ba 4

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