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ORS Page Twe SWEEPING INJUNCTION AGAINST N. Y. SHOE STRIKE GRANTED GPORT Court Outlaws All Shoe Union Strike Activity of Industrial Union Béecision Industrial Union Leads Denounced by TUUC as Second Danbury Case Against Betrayal By CHARLOTTE TODES YSTON, Mass., Dec. 12.— 5 to amalgamation ‘om smooth e four shoe unions partic- the Boston Convention. f the convention ri BC ad to be f \The 1 | pror and File re looming controversies Workers Industrial by means of which certain lements in the convention hope to and | weaken the i ence of the union. At, me tin icials are trying to the ir own delega-, of ions out of fear of the strength of, e rank and file in the convention. No date Se |tective Union were declared ineligib 1 hundred members of the Pro- | ipate in the convention on technicality. The rank and file in the convention nion and its|are for amalgamation on the basis of ites one of | militant industrial unionism. Several oe | jocals of the National and Protective nt|shoe unions have gone on record for Union, | this. Local No. 13 of the Protective 2 last few} Union in Haverhill, with 500 mem- iecessful | bers, voted unanimously for establish- yers |ment of a class struggle union with and | r condi- | Each | 000 or | x7 ‘ | Workers’ Paper in the Norwegian Language NEW YORK.—Through the help of the Swed: guage paper, Ny Tid, 1eW paper in the Nor- a. jan-Danish language is being pub- © |lished here. The new paper, the | Norsk-Dansk Ny Tid, will be pub- hed weekly as an eight-page paper devoted to working-class news and phed to the | articles. jon Con-| In the past, Norwegian-Danish spealing to the| language news have been published New England and|0n @ separate page of the Swedish) paper. The new paper gives the Nor. wegian-Danish workers in America a ; revolutionary paper in their own lan- ___| guage for the first time. It is being published by the Sepco | York; Brooklyn address, 4012 Eighth | | Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Subscription} | rates will be $1.50 a year, 75 cents} for six months. Powers to Be Tried Today at the Tombs NEW YORK.— George Powers | | District Organizer of the Steel and | Metal Workers Industrial Union ;and vice-chairman of the ‘Trade | | Union Unity Council, who was ar-| rested as a result of his leading a) demonstration on the Home Relief | Bureau on April 27, 1932, will be| | tried today at General pees | O-+* EF. Tombs Cort at 10:00 a. m. He is charged with rioting, inciting | to riot and assault under penal law | 2019, an old Blue Law, and has| , been out on $3,500 bail. As a result of the demonstration | COHENS’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Ne. Delancey Street, New York City Wholesale Opticians | #YES By Dr. A.We EXAMINED stein Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises Allerton Avenue Comrades! The Modern Bakery was first to settle Bread Strike aud fi to sign with the FOOD WORKERS’ INDUSTRIAL UNION 691 ALLTRTON AVE. |led by Powers, the B All Kinds Of | ditional five milion dollars to apply \on home retie?, | Powers is being defended by Joe | Zauber, International Labor De- fense attorney. Workers are urged | to be present at this trial and to | pack the court | CHAIRS & TABLES || TO HIRE | Dayt. 9-5504 Minnesota 9-7520 || American Chair Renting Co. |! INSURANCE 799 Broadway N.Y. ©; 8Tu 7 vesant Scott Nearing Norman Thomas “Resolved That the NRA Is a Step Toward ene ate ean Socialism” For Honest Insurance Advice ||| Wedsesday, Deo. 13, 8:30 P. M. CONSULT IRVING PLAZA Irving Pi. & 1th St, N.Y. ©. Auspices Willow Brook Coop, Assn. ADMISSION 35¢ B. WARANTZ General Insurance Broker 1905 FH. Uth STREET, BROOKLYN TEL: ESP. 5-0938 To ALL MASS ORGANIZATIONS Please Note That the ROTOGRAPH co. 15 EAST 13th STREET WHERE IT WILL OFFER BETTER AND PROMPTER SERVICE DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Satter Avee., Brocktyn PHONE: DICKENS -9618 Offies Hours: 6-18 A.M, 1-9, 6-8 Fim, STATIONERY and MIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES At Special Prices for Organivations Lerman Bros., Inc. Phone Algonquin 4-3356 — 8843 29 East 14th 8t. N. ¥.C. INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE BAZAAR FRIDAY §SATURDAYJSUNDAY DEC. 15 DEC. 16 DEC, 17 PEOPLE’S AUDITORIUM 2457 WEST CHICAGO AVENUE PROGRAM: Singing, Dancing, Choruses, Ballets, South Slav and Buigartan “Kolo” nd many more attractions, PROCEEDS: Defense of Class War Prisoners. Admission 1(}¢ A, Rank and File Fight |: | vanguard of t tion, but are mob: gamation forced to fight it. {| bub to go. And “no person who will- DAILY WORKER, Misleaders nik and filiation to the y forms of tion. The In- n delegation is in the ‘oup with a clear program for a ing unity of the rank and file on the basis of class struggle ¢ strial Uni _| Nolan and Mahan Against Rank and File At the Convention are also suporter: of Nolan and Mahan, leadership of the Protective and National shoe unions, respectively, brothers of A. F. of L, burocracy, Whose only hope of their fast waning power 1s he will of the overwhelm- of workers and support and to try to steer the s into the A. F. ntually. ittle conver ing all anti-amal- Then there is a group of Love- stonite renegades, led by Zim.nerman and Bixby the prelim of the convention, have played th elements who throughout ary period of preparation h offiicals, wk f the rank and are leaders in the in-| e of alliance witl rt |ance with the A. F. of L, officialdom. Their aim is an independent union to hand over to the A. F. of L. The outcome of the convention rest on the action of the militant ra {and file. As one rank and filer put it, “We should be here not only to form) one union, but to make the conven- tion a means of preparing for the coming battles of the shoe workers.” Blanskard, Recent Socialist Leader, to Get City Job LaGuardia Proposes Him as Reward for Election Support NEW YORK, Dec. The name} Paul Blanshard, former leading} member of the Socialist Party in New) York City. appeared tod on the} provisional list of Mayor-elect La-| Guardia’s new “Cabinet.” | Bianshard’s name appears as the Commissioner of Accounts. Blanshard was @ leader in the So- so-called left-wing section of the So- {GUTTERS OF NEW YORK | | Hinder Amalgamation ’ DECEMBER 13, 1933 —by del “No subway should be permitted to run at a deficit.” Arthur C, Cunningham, Comptroller-elect on his recent return from a European vacation. Heiping the Daily Worker through Del: $0.25 4 00 Charles Groff . 00 3. Marks .... TOTAL TO DATE 00 | Sara Licht and Rose! 00 | | Paul Schwartz Unit 16, Section 11 A. J. B. . Previous Total ... Clears Terzani; Names Real Killer (Continued from Page 1) crop. A free-for-all fight started, he related, and while Fierro and Smith were grappling, Moffet stood on a bench and shot Fierro in the back with an automatic pistol. A little later, Wein declared, he heard Gen. Dominick Siana of the Khaki Shirt organization say to Mof- fer, “Why did you kill him?” On several occasions, the witness Publishing Co, 35 F. 12th St., New| propcsed candidate for the post of |S@id, Smith told him, “you must help back me up in this,” referring to Smith’s accusations against Terzani. The Khaki Shirt chief also made re- | cialist Party of the “militant,” the | peated threats, Wein asserted, and at jone time said that if Wein didn’t clalist Party. In the last Mayoralty |testity as Smith demanded, that he mpaign, Blanshard resigned from| would “kill me and all the other Socialist Party to take up the t for the election of LaGuardia, ing that he believed that he could better accomplish the same aims un- der the wing of LaGuardia. Labor for Peonage Camus Recruited by C.W.A. in the South (Continued from Page 1) Roosevelt government not only to force the unemployed to work at coolie wages, but also to use this con- dition as a bludgeon to best down the wages of the employed. The ©.W.A, established a minimum wage of 40 cents an hour and a maxi- mum of 30 hours’ work. The lumber N.R.A. code provides 24 cents an hour, or, at best, $11.52 for a 48-hour week. Hundreds, however, are allowed only two days’ work a week, or $3.48 cents for 16 hours, 24 Cents An Hour Enforced Early's letter was printed and dis- tributed by the Southern Pine Asso- ciation along with a memorandum to all manufacturers saying “the same conditions and remedial measures doubtless obtain in other states.” Within the past few weeks, the Southern Pine memo said, several lumber operators have been “faced with the question of their labor seek- ing to register with the National Re- Employment Service for work on ©. W.A. projects.” In other words, the slaves of the lumber camps harbored the illusion that they might escape the peonage of 48-hours and $11.52 a week or $3.84 for 16 hours @ week, by applying to the O.W.A. for $12 for a 30-hour week. Give Contractors Cheap Labor ‘The lumber operators therefore ob- tained a statement of C.W.A. policy, which lays down the law that if the operators requisition for laborers on C.W.A. projects, they have no choice fully resigns a position with a con- cern operating under a code, in or- der to gain the benefit of a higher wage, will be considered for employ- ment on relief projects.” In the District of Columbia the ©. W.A. has become a feeder for pri- vate contractors paying wages under the C.W.A. minimum of 40 cents. The contractor simply requisitions so many from the ©.W.A. roll. The worker, again, has no choice but to go, And once he is off the roll of the C.W.A., he is replaced immediate- ly; and if his private construction job runs out in @ day or a week, he has to wait his turn to get back on the C.W.A. job. ke xe e CHINA KITCHEN CHINESE-AMERICAN CAFETERIA-RESTAURANT 238 E. 14th St., Opp. Labor Temple SPECIAL LUNCH te. DINNER 35e. Jews.” Fear of death at the hands of | Smith and his crowd caused him to jlie in his testimony before the grand jury, he said in court yesterday. | “Did you deliberately tell an \untruth before the grand jury?” Judge Downs asked the witness bel- erently. 0, replied Wein, “IT answered that way because I had been threat- ed. I was afraid I would be kil f you lied then, are you telling the truth now,” pursued the judge. | “Yes, T am not afraid now.” When the judge turned in his chair, faced the witness, and asked him it he was “fully aware” of Nis position before the grand jury and whether he knew the “significance of an oath,” | Defense Attorney Hays vigorously ob- jected. “You are practically threatening the witness,” Hays protested, “that if he insists that his testimony now is | the truth, he is liable to prosecution for perjury before the grand jury. Moreover, you are serving notice that | if any of the other Khaki Shirts tell | the truth about the murder of Fierro, they will get into trouble.” “I have no such purpose,” the judge declared, gazing angrily at the lawyer. “I am simply trying to get at the truth.” Immediately upon the conclusion of Wein’s dramatic testimony, the district attorney asked the judge to excuse the jury. When the jury had Jeft the courtroom, the prosecutor walked toward the judge’s bench with the defense attorneys close on his heels. “The witness has admitted,” said the prosecutor, “that he did not tell the grand jury the truth. I request that you hold ‘him on a charge of perjury.” Characterizing the requést as “out- rageous,” Defense Attorney Hays charged that the district attorney's office was more concerned with rail- roading Wein than in prosécuting the real slayers of Fierro, “Why doesn't the -district_attor- ney ask for the arrest of Moffer, charged here with being the mur- derer of Fierro?” Hays demanded. A heated clash between the judge and Hays ensued when the former sought to discredit Wein’s testimony saying that “just because some cow- ardly whelps were aftaid of Art J. Smith, that doesn’t mean that I or anyone other man would be afraid.” “You might be, if you were & mem- ber of the Khaki Shirts,” Hays countered, When the lawyer charged that Wein was justified in fearing Smith as a result of previous murders which had been committed, the fudge said that he was not “interested in unsupported accusations.” “That's what some people say of the murders by the Nasis in Ger- many,” Hays retorted. Hays was among the foreign at- torneys who sat as observers at the frame-up trial of Torgler, Dimitroff, Taneff and Popoff. Art Smith's story that he accused ‘Terzani before anyone else did was contradicted by a prosecution witness at the morning session yesterday, The witness, Nolan said that 98 soon aa he en- } i F ormer Khaki Shirt | kerchief. tered Columbus Hall, where the meet- ing had been held, Terzani told him he knew who killed Fierro, and “pointed out a Khaki Shirt member, about 5 feet tall.” ‘The policeman testified that Ter- zani then showed him that the mur- der gun was hidden in the piano on the keyboard. Smith did not accuse Terzani un- til five or ten minutes after Termani had accused Frank Moffer, the police- man’s testimony revealed. Another state witness, Detective John Steinhauser, testified that Nolan had handed him the gun in a hand- Stenhauser had examined it for fingerprints with the naked eye and then turned it over to Detective Harry Butts, head of the police bal- listic bureau. Steinhauser admitted that no fingerprints were taken of Moffer, who was released the night of the Fierro slaying. Judge Downs, who throughout the course of the trial has acted as a helpful mentor for the prosecution, blew up when Hays sought to show that the district attorney's office had been negligent. “I am not concerned with whether you think the district attorney’s of- fice was efficient,” he snapped. “In these days you are lucky if anyone things well of anybody else. To show that you have no respect for the dis- trict attorney’s office does not con- cern me. If the defendant is inno- cent he Should walk out of here. But the mere fact that the district attor- ney’s office may have made a mistake and held the wrong man is not an issue in this case.” ‘Terzani, the defendant, had not yet |taken the svand when the Daily Worker went to press last night. C.W.A. Hires Only 12,000 New Men in City of New York (Continued from Page 1) and only 12,000 are at work. New those transferred from Work Relief, Projects are being held up. Whitney seid he would “withhold” projects until January. ° ae NEW YORK, N. Y—A strike of 200 workers from the Arden section of the Bear Mountain Civil Works Administration took place at the Erie Ferry, Jersey City, Monday. In New York City ©. W. A. workers revealed that they had not been paid for over two weeks. ‘Yesterday morning several hun- dred jobless at work on Civil Works Administration jobs went to the Hall of Records office, demanding back pay which is due them for weeks. They got no satisfaction here and then went to the 0. W. A. office at 15th St. and Eighth Ave. Here office to register for jobs and were told “we can’t take care of you here, go to the 14th St. Armory tomorrow.” Several hundred jobless who went to Dyker Beach Park yesterday morning on C, W. A. work were told at nine o'clock in the morning that there was no more work. These men have two weeks’ back pay coming to them, They held a meeting and de- manded to be put back to work, and finally were taken back, This work is near the ocean and many have no overcoats and afe suffering in the open air. They asked for their pay checks and were told to “wait until next Friday.” At the Jersey City ferry workers from the Arden section of Bear Mountain ©. W. A. works refused to go to work Monday, when they found $90 them would Tees. Arden have been getting up at four in the morning and getting home late at night. They have to put in. cight hours at jobs more than 50 miles from New York City, They work in the open, with no water, no toilets and no fires, building a roadway, Delegates to Cuba Will Report Sunday NEW YORK.—The Anti-Im- perialist League delegation, sisting of Harry Gannes, Hen Shepard of the Trade Union Unity Council, J. B. Matthews of the American League Against War and Fascism, Alfred Runge of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League and Walter Relis of the National Student League report on théir tour of in gation in Cuba at a mass meet ing Sunday, 8 p. at the New Star Casino, 107th and Park Avenue. The delegates, who spent three weeks investigating conditions in Cuban plantations, prisons, sugar mills, factories, trade un- jons, and peasant and student or- will give a first unt of the Cuban revolutionai situation. Joseph Freeman will be chairman. Rep. Dickstein Nazi Quiz Peters Out As MembersStay Away By SEYMOUR WALDEMAN (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec, 12— Boycotted by eight of the nine mem- bers of his own House Sub-Commit- tee on Nat ization and Immigra- tion, Representative Samuel Dick- stein (Democrat) of New York Cit today concluded his preliminary hearings on Nazi propaganda in the, United States. ‘The chairman of the sub-commit- fee sat alone and disconsolate at the huge mahogany hearing table, while the few newspaper men _ present, openly jested at the svectacle. Of the hundreds of the correspon- | dents in Washington, only four were | there, revresenting the United Press, t the Buffalo Evening News, Hearst's) International News Service and the Daily Worker. Before the beginning of today’s 8eS= | sions Dickstein announced that he) had filed the charges with the Post-/} master Generel against “Liberation,”| an orgen of the anti-Sem' Fascist Silver Shirts, published at Asheville, North Carolina, by William Dudley) Pelley, the guiding genius of the new) liberation. Dickstein claimed that | “Liberation” had nothing in it im- portant bearing on the arts or sciences and demanded that the post office withdraw its second class mail- ing privileges. The session closed with the placing in the record of a seven-page docu- ment entitled “Historical Sketch on Orisin and Extent of Nazi Activities in United States,” printed by the government. “for the use of the Com- mittee on Immigration and Natur- alization.” Dickstein, obviously mortified by the snubbing of himself by the rest of the subcommittee, hunched his body under the bronze bust of @ smiling George Washington. He tried to ignore the empty by talking to the reporters off at side of the committee table. “The German Consul in Colon,” Dickstein declared, while Rossbottom was in the witness’ chair, “visited your shins and instructed the crew to bring in Nazi literature through his office. This Mterature, which was kept in the lockers of the seamen and the stewards, was also used to propa- gandize the passengers, furthermore, a number of Germans have been brought into Colon without the proper certificates entitling them to work on American ships.” “That's imbossible on our ships. We do not have anybody in Colon.” Dickstein informed the press after the close of the session that testi- | mony had been ited secretly to the committee that forty-four Germans, working as stewards, cooks and seamen on the Panama Lines, opetate as Nasi couriers and propagandists. Amelgamated Leaders Sell-Out Teiloring Strike of 500 Men NEW YORK—The strike of 500 workers of the International Tail- oring Co. at 12 St. and Fourth Ave. iwas sold out yesterday by the offl- cials of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers Unton. Th the agreement which unton offi- cials forced through without taking @ vote upon it, the union agreed to outlaw strikes. As a result of this sell-out, the grip on the workers by this boss-controlled union was tight- ened up. Dressmakers to Hear Juliet Poyntz Juliet Stuart Poynts will lecture for dressmakers today, 1 p. m, on the situations in Germany and the! Soviet Union at Memorial Hall, 344 ‘W. 36th St, ‘Unemployed Needle Workers’ Meeting Needle trades unemployed com- mittee will hold a meeting of all unemployed needle trades workers today, 11 a, m, at 131 W. 28 Bt. Lecture on Reichstag Trial at N.T.W.LU. Alfred Wagenknecht, chatrman of the National Karri ar to will speak on at the forum of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, today, 2p. m, at 131 W 26th St. Ad- mission free, seats the Building Maintenance Workers’ Meeting A meeting of the Bronx Locai, Building Maintenance Workers Un- ion will be held tonight, 8:30, at TWO headquarters, 818 2 160th | the nausea one experiences while the Workers-Center and a couple of | stantly operating. Then he remem- The Fathers MHERE was a priest in the y a eatholie priest and I ne and there were alws chins in the back of his neck too. of oriental potentate who infes ments. Once I took a copy of the Queen Pedauque” off the shelves and read it carefully and it altered all my about the priest and from a s menace he changed into a treacher. ous and despicable and ludicrou: figure. This Brother Ange in th book was all that. A lowly capuchin | and filled with scurvy tricks. He would abscond with a donkey and| go about the count on the strength of e hibited. He bore a feather of th Angel Gabriel, a ray from the wise men’s star and in a little phial a trifle of the sound of the bells tha rang in the belfry of Solomon’ temple. Manifes' a faker. IE exercised a hold not only on the imagination, but also on more tangible and delectable por- tions of the heroine Catherine. | Every time Jacques Tournebroche thought he had hér all to himself, and this was not often, Brother | Ange would appear in the back- | ground. At the age of eleven I | | | cou'd searesty imagine what she saw | in him, but I have the impression | whieh may or may not have been | conveyed by the author that the | capuchin lent himself to amorous | practices disdained by the hero, who was considerably elevated in soul and simple ond direct in ‘his metheds, \ I pictured Brother Ange as a small man with many chins in his reversed collar and for a time that odious neckwear was to me like red cloth to a hamilton fish. It was listening to Father Coughlin’s speeches or watching Salvation Army officers spread gospel inches thick, The sensation recurred in the early part of this week when the resignation of Hunk Anderson and the appointment of Elmer Lay- den was announced by Father O'Hara of Notre Dame. I was preparing for one of the semi-annual trips of the elevator at pioneers were discussing what they will do after the revolution. One of them said he was going to have Hitler shot. The other was going to have eight new elevators installed in Workers Center, each of them con- bered the Young Pioneers were go- ing to move into the Empire State anyhow, I was looking over the paper with the Layden announcement. It car- ried a shot of Acting President Father O'Hara signing the school’s former backfield star for a two-year term. The caption failed to mention Hunk Anderson. Hunk Anderson had a poor season. He was fired and Layden who had been doing wel Led Duquesne signed. AM not sorry for Hunk Andetson who will not have to worry about getting a job. I may be an old meanie, for all I know, who goes around tying cans to dog's tails or forcing quarterbacks to learn how to count up to ten. And I don’t begrudge Elmer Layden his chance to recruit a few miners’ and steel workers’ sons and give them four years of financial irresponsibility, It’s the smug mug on the lug with the reverse collar that gets me. It’s the idea of these ecclesi- astical horse’s necks having the to dispose of people’s liveli- hoods and that on the basis of a few fumbled pigskins which are not rs beads of sweat on his chins. | ladies and gentlemen. | looks down at his unconscious playei® Fire Hunk childhood but he was He looked mean He had J thought of him as the kind ts Arabian Nights Entertain- to him. s “At the Sign of jut cowhides. What Conduct in the morning minar to split non- about the Ascension and in the afternoon fire your foot- ball coach for haying lost a few well played games. It makes me wish I were a young pioneer making decisions about post- 4 revolutionary . I would hire FY m to weld that Notre | © facui of reverse-collared fathers an ers into a football team to play ew York Giants or Joel Sa Canarsie Collegians. | I would give him free hand and you could sit in on the workouts. Tear SHA INK of it, man: “That was an incompleted lateral. Acting Presi- dent Father O'Hara is coming out | of that reverse play with his reverse collar and a beautiful run across the forty yard line, no, he’s down, he’s down, he’s smeared, ladies and gen- tlemen. What's this, they’re carry- ing Acting President Father O’Hara of Notre Dame off the field on a stretcher and the stands are hushed. the doctor is unable to ascertain the nature of the injury. “Father Wimpus is sprinkling holy water on the fullback’s pale brows, but the Father stirs not. The boy's | parents are in the ball park and his | little, dried up old mother comes run- ning out of one of the boxes, but the attendants hold her back. 'The cheer leaders are asking for the old Al- lagaroo-garoo-garax for Father | O'Hara who refuses to come out of his, ) > coma. They're taking the stretche| { past the Notre Dame bench and Hun?) His eyes glisten, they fill; two, no, three tears come cascading down the old man’s swarthy features. For the first time in a decade Hunk Ander- son cries. i I can see his mouth forming words, | ladies and gentlemen, he’s talking through his sobs .. . and here, ladies | and gentlemen, I turn you over to my good friend Graham McNamee who will tell you what Hunk Ander- | son said. Tell em, Graham... Mr. McNamee is too overcome with emio~ tion to talk, but I'll tell you. This is the Columbia Broadcasting System on a nation-wide hookup and Hunk Anderson said, “Cripes, Butch, who we | gonna use on that spinner play now?” Through Ed Newhouse Contributions received to the eredi\’ of Edward Newhouse in the Socialist | competition with Michael Gold, Dr. || Luttinger, Helen Luke and Jacob | Burck to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 || Daily Worker Drive: | Helping the Daily Worker | | Yorkville Athletic Club. W. Berenbaum .. Previous total ... ‘Total to date.. “All Comrades meet at the A] , } Vegetarian Workers’ Club | —DINING ROOM— | Natural Food for Your Health 220 E. 14th Street JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinése Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUB Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades | ———— at Comrades Beet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA ——— Fresh Food—Proletatinn Prices 59 iu, 18TH 81, WORKERS’ TERIA| Beacon, N. Y. Wholesome Food, 8, Best Price: $14.00 Per Week Private cars leave daily Cooperative Restaurant, 326 SEVE BET. 28™ © 2 Good Food at nS CAMP NITGEDAIGET The Only Workers’ Camp Open All Year HOTEL WITH 60 ROOMS Steam Heat, Hot and Cold hunning Water in Each Room. rts, Cultural Activities lace to Rest Estabrook 8-514 Grand Opening Today SILVER FO MEET YOUR FELLOW WORKER Phone: Beacon 731 (ineluding press tax) at 10:30 a.m. from the 2700 Bronx Park East BAR& GRILL NTH AVE 9™ STREETS Lowest Prices AT OUR i B