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7 ' i Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THU JULY 5. 1934 Ex-NRA Aide Hits Food Prices Soar; Relief Per re Jailing of Hillsboro hamily May Rise 28 Cents 11, Mlinois Terror {Continued from Pege 1) Party. Eleven leaders of the or- fanized unemployed @rrested on the t charge of conspiracy throw the governme: These men had tive in demons ing dictatorial Mayors and town counc’ abrogat the constituti Tight of freedom of a submit, Mr. Governc at: proclamatio Men deserve the com from any person who honestly Opposes fasci The proclam tions cannot be considered a thing but fascist in their Two of Jailed Men Town Officers It is interesting te note that, despite the almost hysterical hatréd towards these men evi- denced by certain elements in the county, they are respected by hundreds of their fellow- citizens. Two of them were elected to the town board of Taylor Springs In spite of this, and in spite of the fact that all but two of the men are permanent resi- dents oi the county, an exorbi- tant bail of $3,000 has been set On each of the men, an obvi- ously impossible sum for an un- employed man to raise. This, and the fact that the Grand Jury does not meet till No- vember, condemns these uncon- victed men to six months in jail until a trial. Attempts by deputy sheriffs and vigilantes to terrorize fami- lies of the prisoners have been made. Lawyers of the men were driven out of Hillsboro by a mob led by the chief of police, when they attempted to see the mitti muses. The judge refused them this, and stalled them off till the mob arrived. Friends Barred A harsh prison regime has barred friends and defense com- mittee men from visiting the eleven prisoners. Western Union telegrams sent to known friends | of the defendants have been turnéd over to the sheriff before delivery. Dr. Hoyt, a leader of the vigil- ante gangs which have been ac- tive against these men, publicly Stated that friends of the pris- oners had “better make their peace with God” if they do not remain silent, The situation in Montgomery County exemplifies a wide- spread fascist development throughout the whole of Mli- nois, notably in Du Page, Chris- tian, Franklin and St. counties. I need only mention the arrest of Norman Thomas and the gassing of a crowd in Christian County by the sheriff and his men, the arrest of A. J. Muste, for having in his posses- | sion labor literature, and the or- ders of the American Legion of Du Page County forbidding So- cialist meetings. This growing wave of repres- sion, led by officials of state and county, constitutes a fascist at- tack on the economic and po- litical organizations of the work- ers. Free speech is dead'in the counties named, and the right of workers to organize and pe- tition have become empty phrases. The responsibility is squarely upon you, as Governor of the State of Illinois, to stop this terror. I urge you to issue a proclamation demanding the re- storation of the rights destroyed by peace officers and self-consti- tuted vigilante bands. I-urge you also to use your full power as chief executive to enforce this proclamation by removing from office any peace officers who persist in this law- less persecution of the working people. I further urge, and this most strongly, that you immediately demonstrate your opposition to the forces that are driving the | state towards fascism, by using Clair | Up 13 Per Cent figures releas ubin of the ics showed t 51 cities by the con- ners’ guide of the Farm Adminis- Frisco Strikers Stop Scab Cargoes (Continued from Page 1) was attended by about 200 men and Furuseth railroaded a decision to accept arbitration. A. F. L. Men Repudiate Arbitration Later, at a rank and file meet- ing of 700 International Seamen’s | Union members, the decision was repudiated. The rank and filers demanded an official full meeting representing all striking seamen to consider this |or any other proposal bearing on the disposition of the strike. General strike sentiment here is dl growing as a result of the violent! . efforts by police to open the port. Delegates to the Saturday confer- ence called to consider such action are increasing in number daily. | It is expected that efforts to move jcaree will be resumed tomorrow. Goan c= Ne SAN FRANCISCO, July 4. |—The U., S. S. Holland, a sub- | }marine tender, moved up to} |the docks with uncovered | guns early today to back up| | strikebreaking maneuvers of Roosevelt’s Longshoremen’s |Board and aid the police in their} | brutal reign of terror against strik- |ing stevedores. The city’s cobble-stonel Embar- eadero, waterfront traffic artery, took on the appearance of a front |line garrisoned city in time of war. Droning overhead was a police airplane, spying on the movements \of strikers and directing foot, | mounted and automobile police who |patrolled up and down armed to the | teeth. Two men were shot, one is re- | ported dead and scores were badly | injured, following a police attack on | the striking longshoremen yesterday. | Guns roared, tear and vomit gas | bombs exploded and police clubs | swung for over two hours yesterday jas truckloads of merchandise ran |the gauntlet of picket lines from | the piers to the warehouses. The longshoremen fought the cops | With their fists and threw the tear |gas bombs back at them. Striking |stevedores and seamen swarmed along the entire waterfront and| concentrated their forces in front of the Matson Line piers, where the | your power and influence to se- | cure the immediate release of the eleven Hillsboro prisoners on a reasonable bond. This is no time for indecision, or for attempting to dodge re- sponsibility. I can assure you that if you fail to act vigorously and promptly to check the terror in Illinois, you will incur the ac- tive and determined opposition of those people in Illinois who are determined that fascism | shall not raise its ugly head in | this state. Very truly yours, W. O. THOMPSON. tion, food prices in New York are | by t |the meeting would be held July 4. household 49.30. At the e family bud- e there 8,000 single men and Single women lief e city will save $300 weekly new azrangement police were expected to escort the | first trucks. “The port is techn open,” Frank Carmody, representative of the Industrial Association, an- nounced with sadistic glee. Many in Hospital The hospitals are reported to be filled with strikers wounded in the police attack of yesterday. The number of wounded. is unknown. ident Lewis of the Interna- Longshoremen’s Association leading a move to settle the strike on shipowners’ terms over the head of the strike committee. At a meeting called last Sunday night to determine who represents the strikers, the longshoremen de- cided almost unanimously that the rank and file strike committee rep- resented them. Lewis attacked Bridges, militant irman of the strike committee, ising him of being the chief ob- Je in the way of settlement of the strike and said that only district officers had the right to represent the men. Bridges replied to Lewis, exposing | how he was conniving with the em- ployers to get the docks without mands. The strike committee has issued a statement charging that the em- | Ployers do not want to settle the strike, but are attempting to smash the union. Reports from San Pedro state that the strikers held a mass meeting and made further progress in isolat- ing leaders of the union who are attempting to settle the strike on shipowners’ De man d Rehiring Of Workers Fired nen back to the | gaining their de- ‘By Furniture Co. | Picketing in Jersey City Friday Morning Will Raise Demand NEW YORK.—A mass meeting to protest against the jailing of pick- ets in the Jersey City Miller Pur- | niture Company strike will be held Wednesday, July 11,atIrving Plaza Hall. It was incorrectly announced in yesterday’s Daily Worker that The protest will be held ‘under | the joint auspices of the Furniture Workers Industrial Union, the | American Civil Liberties Union, In- | ternational Labor Defense and the Committee for the Defense of Po- litical Prisoners. To demand the rehiring of all workers fired by the Miller Com- pany for union activity, the Furni- ture Workers Industrial Union stated yesterday that a picket line | will be set up in front of the es- tiablishment Friday morning. Mass pressure of the members of the Furniture Union and other| labor organizations, the Interna- | tional Labor Defense and the Amer- ican Civil Liberties Union, has| forced the National Labor Board to | hand down an order stating that the Miller Company shall rehire all former employes. | |On Picketing | “It is a good thing for change of scene. TERS OF NEW YORK a . — by del everyone to get away for a "From Pres. Roosevelt’s Radio Address ‘Action Imperative---2nd Table Shows But Slight Gain in Drive ConferenceTonight during the carmen’s strike. Why low with substantial gains . . for the second week in succession. Buffalo, Pitisburgh, Dakota, California, Cleveland, Connecticut, not hold the new readers gained during the successful strike, Milwaukee? Denver, North Carolina, Minnesota, Fort Worth and Boston fol- . Denver, North Carolina and Minnesota Omaha, North Kentucky, Chicago, Birmingham, Louisiana, Florida and South Dakota have added nothing to their new reader quota, most of them showing a loss fer the past week. Follow these tables closely each Thursday. Redouble your efforts | | ported te have elected and ap- ‘pointed delegates and have des- b sin Ci tion by Districts Since June 25) Changes in Gireula y . J |contributed from their treasuries to make up for this slow start! Mother Bloor Wires. ‘Appeal for Funds To Bail Out Negro, Booth Threatened With =" WILLIAM FUCHS ~ Say It Ain’t True | ing; ces of Ne ee : | Lynching ; — vt 44 Y CUSTOMERS will pardon me, I hope, if sentiment colors | Farmers mhauste | INE the text today. On July 4th I always remember that I | By ELLA REEVE (Mother) BLOOR | 2m an American. f : (Special te the Belly Worker) It is because this is Independence Day, indeed, that I | GRAND ISLAND, Neb., July 4—) : Keage he i in th zs i Floyd Booth, colored organizer, and| im doubly touched by some of the items in the newspapers, | Carl Wicklund are still in Loup iy | I have just returned from the® jail, where conditions are very bad.) . 44:04; eas ons | have a chance with the colored. | It is imperative to seeure the im-| patriotic exercises of the Ss so Principle has always been fore- | mediate release of Booth, who is|of Tammany and discovered] most with the A. A. U. When its | threatened with nent ed that right under the nose of|teams went over the water a few sci; Ese Ss. e ave nally 7 y St en | fascist gang: Ww the New Deal, when every years ago it separated the Negro | forced the court to drop its demand} ‘ athletes from the white so that one for property bond. It will take $500 | man is again a king and every WO-) might see that there was no favor- cash to buy surety bond. | | Spread news everywhere today, | | organizations, individuals. Carl | Wicklund will not leave Booth alone | in dangerous surroundings. Release | bonds must be secured today if pos- sible. We cannot do more here as the farmers are poor indeed, but are holding firmly together—never such solidarity before, Wire funds here, as much as pos- | sible. Unions Mass to Aid Hatters’ Strike at TUUC Urges Delegates from Unions to Help; Shops Struck 100% | NEW YORK, — The hatters' | | strike committee reported yester- | [day that a large number of dele- | |gates are expected at the Trade |Union Conference to Support the Strike, which will be held tonight at Beethoven Hall, Many A. F. of L. locals are re- | ignated that sums of money be te swell the strike relief fund. The Trade Union Unity Coun- cil has issued a call to all unions affiliated with the couneil to send | delegates and funds to the confer- | ence tonight. Several independent unions have also announced that they will give their support to the strike and will be represented at the conference. Present Present Total Monday to _Inerease or Percentage DISTRICT Saturday Friday Decrease over of Circulation —_—_Circulztion June 25, Quota 1. BOStOn . oes. s ss nye 1940 1144 194 25.1 2. New York City 18749 14196 393 68 3. Philadelphia 3319 1946 —124 15.7 4. Buffalo 792 478 —i4 5. Pittsburgh 934 426 —227 6. Cleveland 3228 1465 —112 7. Detroit 2966 1596 —186 38 8. Chicago 4945 3411 128 9, Minnesota 1648 709 — 6 28.6 10. Omaha : 192 — 52 11. North Dakota . 226 =o 12, Brattle. ees ce ee 563 155 — 36 47 es Mees 1442 B13 — 62 14, Newark .. 1050 56 16.5 -’ 841 — 7 North Carolina 184 148 5 42.0 . Birmingham ....,.. 331 238 18 18. Milwaukee 558 139 82.5 19. Denver 523 18 55.0 20, Fort Worth 214 110 Le 30.6 21, Bt. Louis .... 303 244 — 30 14.0 22. West Virginia . 143 83 —1 40 23. Kentusky 56 24. Louisiana 12 — 6 25. Florida ... 91 = 1 26. South Dakota .... 160 30 — 3 Foreign (ose cosese 528 319 —12 TOPRALB sy inscerues 48501 31220 50 35% EDITOR'S NOTE: the Saturday edition. subseriptions, ‘The first column shows the total circulation by districts of This figure includes bundle orders, newsstand sales and The next column shows the average daily circulation of the Mon- day to Friday editions by districts. The discrepancy between the total cireula- tio tion. shown in these two columns and the total daily press run rv? on the front page is due to the fact that the press run included large one-day bundle orders, whereas the table The press run contains unsold and returned copi The following is the rule in regard to the shown in ntains only permanent orders. the tables only paid circula- mn “Increase or Decrease”: If the total permanent daily increase in a district is 200 and besides this the district boosted its Saturday circulation by 600 the figure in the column would be 300 being the increase per day added to the Saturday increase divided by 6, or averaged over the week. Court Upholds Ban ALBANY, N. Y., July 4.—The| Court of Appeals, by a 5 to 2 vote yesterday, upheld the writ pro- hibiting labor unions from picket-| ing distribution points of a manu- facturer whose workers are on strike. The court declared its decision | based on an action brought by | George F. Stuhmer & Co., Brook- lyn bakers, seeking to keep union workers from picketing grocery stores selling its bread and cakes. The court said that such picket- ing was “destroying the grocery business,” and that it was an “jllegal secondary boycott.” Every organized hat shop in the | city is struck 100 per cent, The | workers are fighting for wage in-| | ereases and hetter working econ-' | ditiens in the shops. Appeals made |to the National Office of the United Hatters of North America |for relief funds have heen met with a negative answer. Not one cent has been sent to Local 8, | which is leading the strike, by of- ficials of the National Office. The strike to a great extent de- | pends upon the support given it by the New York labor movement. All unions that have not yet taken up the question of sending delegates and funds to the confer- ence tonight should see to it they are represented. Cold Storage Strike Continues DULUTH, Minn. July 4—The strike of thirty Northern Cold Stor- age workers continues after unsuc- | eessful attempts of W. W. Hughes, labor mediator, to send the strik- ers back to work. MILL CRIPPLED BY HOSIERY STRIKE LOS ANGELES (F-.P.).—Strikers at the Mission Hosiery Mills in Los Angeles were heartened by reports thatSthe plant is able to produce only 400 dozens of good hosiery a week. Any of the union knitters normally produced that number of dozens before the strike. The out- -of-State strikebreakers are desert- ing the mill rapidly, union leaders say. Stop depending for news and in- formation on the capitalist press that favors the bosses and is against the workers, Read the Daily Worker, America’s only working class news- LongshoreBoardIs Used Against Men) By BILL DUNNE (Continued from Page 1) called upon the strikers te demo- bilize their forces, call off the strike and return to work under the guns of the employers, the police and the gangs of professional thugs. This ‘appeal” was really an ultimatum: If the strikers did not submit, the blame for the employer-or- ote violence would be put on This is the method by which Roosevelt's church-and-state Ja- bor relations appointees exercise their “impartiat” functions. More clearly than its activities in the auto strike, the steel strike and the the textile strikes, the Roose- velt tion has shown its strikebreaking character in the Pacific Coast struggle. Its acts and those of its agencies confirm with the greatest clarity the Communist Party estimate of the main function of the government—the guardian of the interests of monopoly capital against the working class. Tt is because of this that the most yieious attacks of a fascist charac- ter are directed by the employers and their press against the Com- munist Party organizations and leaders on the Pacific Coast. Other trades have announced their determination to call a sym- pathetic strike if attempts are made to open the ports by force in Seattle and San Francisco. The shipowners are willing to negotiate with Ryan. They have done so. They and Ryan reached fn agreement by which the com- \ panies would discharge men for “violation of union rules.” In other words, anyone opposed to the Ryan | policy of running the union for the benefit of the bosses would be dis- eharegd and blacklisted. These} terms were rejected by an over- whelming majority. The strikers from Seattle to San Diego rejected the proposed settle- |ment “negotiated” by Ryan for the | following reasons—any one of which is sufficient to condemn this at- tempted delivery of the workers to the employers: 1) The plan made no provision for grain handlers, seamen, en- gineers, masters, mates and pilots. 2) It contained contradictory provisions for collective bargain- ing which made the proposals on this point meaningless. 3) It called for separate nego- tiations on wages for each port when the strikers were insisting on a basic coastwise scale. 4) No provision was made for lJongshoremen blacklisted by the employers, 5) The proposal gave the relations” beard auth-~’’~ pend and expel workers for “viola- tions” cr tue LL, Ryan) union rules. 6) The proposals conisined nothing in regard to hours of labor and payment of overtime. Acceptance of these proposals, especially point 5, would have turned the union completely over to the employers and the government— would have made it a union oper- ating under fascist provisions, in other words. These are the “peace” proposals | for which the Communists and the | Rank and File Strike Committee are being denounced by the employ- | ue and their publicists for reject- | ing. ‘labor Roosevelt’s Board continues to try| | trades has been dissipated by the to “settle” the longshoremen’s strike —as if this was the only group of workers involved. It wants to tear out the militant core of the strike. Its disruptive efforts up to date hhaye been resisted successfully. The employers are determined to prevent the establishment and ex- istence of a united organization of marine workers and allied trades on the waterfront. They will not stop at precipitating a massacre to ac- complish this. | As West so neatly puts it, “It was | this complication plus a conviction | that power in the dominant long- shoremen’s union had fallen into the hands of a rank and file com- mittee under Communist influence, | that discouraged the shipowners) from further attempts to negotiate | and led them and the supporting Industrial Association ... to a de- termination to open the port by) force.” | If the strike could not be dis- rupted by division and official treachery, then it would be smashed by armed force. The employers and their pub- licists now profess to believe that the danger of a general strike of all recent anti-Red drive, in support of which Michael Casey, head of the Teamsters’ Union, and the employer controlled officialdom of the San Francisco Central Labor Council was mobilized. But the delegates refused to launch the Communist- | baiting and expulsion drive that the employers demanded. Appeal to Jingoism The Pacific Coast press, the em- | ployers and the state and local of-) ficials are utilizing the tense situa-| tion in the whole Pacific area, the} vast military and naval program of | the Roosevelt administration, and | the recent naval maneuvers, against |The private armies of professional | inal | caste of the American Legion that the strike. They are appealing to/ the specially vicious forms in which state and national pride manifest themselves on the Pacific Coast. They are organizing all union- baiting groups of the population against the strikers—and especially against the Communists. The strike cannot be smashed unless the Com- munist Party is attacked, crippled and its leaders jailed or killed. The attempt to smash the strike will proceed about as follows in the event a general strike does not force the employers to surrender: The National Guard and the po- lice will “maintain law and order,” thugs, the fascist bands of business- men, underworld elements, ete., will be turned loose against “the Reds,” There will be raids, beatings, per- haps killings. Then there will be mass arrests either under the crim- syndicalism law or other charges such as “inciting to riot,’ etc. The employers and the state gov- ernments will stop at nothing to preserve their ironclad control, The ruling class that organized the Everett massacre of members of the I. W. W., shooting at point blank range into a boatload of un- armed workers, killing and wound- ing many, and then arresting the survivors, will not shrink from bloodshed in the present situation, where its autocratic control of the key industry of the Pacific Coast is threatened. The ruling class and the officer perpetrated the Centralia massacre of lumber workers in 1919, tortur- ing and haging Wesley Everest and railroading his heroic comrades to ‘Walla Walla prison, is now organiz- ing for the same kind of murderous assault on the working class—but on @ wider scale. The ruling class that organized the Wheatland massacre of hungry ; hop pickers will not hesitate to turn its wolf packs loose on the marine transport workers and their leaders if they think this will smash the strike and the unions, The ruling class that has organ- ized the whole series of murderous forays upon agricultural workers in Imperial Valley and invoked the criminal syndicalism law against their leaders is preparing to do the same thing in the Pacifie Coast ports. The ruling class that keeps Mooney in prison, that still holds McNamara and Schmidt because it has never been able to shake their loyalty to their class, is on the lookout for new victims. The ruling class and its agents who planted the dynamite on Pre- paredness Day, 1916, and who then railroaded Tom Mooney for it, will not hesitate to prepare new and more deadly frame-ups of working- class leaders. Must Organize Mass Defense To organize mass defense corps for all working-class leaders and the headquarters of working-class Papers and organizations, is, under these circumstances, an elementary precaution. But the best answer to the em- ployers, who are in a frenzy over the loss of their profits and the pros; of having to face a pow- erful and militant labor movement from now on, is the general strike. In 1919 there was a general strike in Seattle. During the war the lumber workers, then organized in the I. W. W., engaged in one of the two mass strikes in this country in the war period. The traditions of the Pacific Coast marine work- ers and lumber workers are of the most militant character. They now hhave a capable and honest leader- ship developed from their own ranks. American workers in all sections of the country must be informed of the tremendous importance of the present strug on the Pagific Coast in relation to the general movement against the capitalist of- fensive, the N. R. A. and its com- same solidarity in support of the Pacific Coast strike by other sec- tions of the working class is needed now as that shown by the thou- sands of unemployed workers who have taken a decisive part in the This kind of mass support of the great marine transport gle, and a general strike of Pacifie Coast workers will smash the proposed terror drive of the employers and their government, win the demands of the workers pany union and hunger codes. The! f man a queen, politics has crept into the A. A. U. Our forefathers made this a free country and Franklin D. Roosevelt amended it with the N. R. A. but iight in the A. A. U. there has been an “inner clique” which has been running things to suit itself. Now, it appears, it has chosen the American athletes who are to make trips abroad this sum- mer in secret. This is certainly a thing one would hardly expect to find in an American organization. Para 'T is almost incredible. Invelyed in the charge is Mr. Avery Brundage himse!f, the president of the A. A. U., a man who has made a million speeches about patriotism.. I am glad to see that he denies the charge. “The by- laws of the A. A, U.,” he shows, make favoritism impossible. “The charges are entirely without foun- dation. . . Every individual se- lected was discussed at length and each one was approved unani- mously.” Me: CHARLES HUNTER, coach of the Olympic Club of San Fran- cisce, is the one whe has made the charges. Until further facts are re- vealed it is really hard to say which is telling the truth, although Mr. may both be honestly mistaken. The A. A, U., for instance, has always South it has never allowed Negroes on its teams, because the Negro rules with an iron hand down there, has the best opportunities for prac- tice, and the white men wouldn't Of Storm Troops (Continued from Page 1) ing worse, as the gold reserves have already dropped te a two per cent eaverage, and there is already evi- dent, the first signs of increased in- fiation. Wholesale inflation, which of the middle class and the workers, is certain in view of the plans of the big industrialists and finance- capitalists to attempt to increase Germany’s expert trade by whole- sale dumping in the style of Japan. Police stopped the funeral of the assassinated General Kurt yon Schleicher and his wife. Close friends had gathered in the suburb of Lichterfelde, where Schleicher was to be buried, when Hitler armed forces ordered the funeral be stopped, No reasons were given. Celis ag Von Papen May Be Tried For Treason, Is Rumor NEW YORK, July 4—Uncon- firmed rumor emanating from Ber- lin indicated today that Hitler's vice-chancellor, Franz von Papen, may be tried for high treason short- ly. At the same time it was re- ported that General von Bredlow, deposed Reichswehr minister, earlier listed as being under arrest, has been executed. In Essen stringent measures of repression have been taken against all critics of Hitler's recent killings. Several have been summarily sent off to concentration eamps while others are belieyed to be held un- der protective arrest. The prefect of police in Essen has issued a warning that the slightest word of public criticism will land its author in the unforgiving clutehes of Nazi All cafes in Berlin are being closely watched with a view to the arrest and punishment of critics. As a result they remain practically de- serted as do other public gathering places. es UPHOLSTERERS’ MEETING THURSDAY A meeting of the Upholstery Section of the Furniture Workers Industrial Union will be held on Thursday, July 5th at 8 p.m. at the union headquarters at 81? Broadway, near lith Street. ‘At this meeting the problems of the united front conference of the Eastern States Diswict in the upholstery trade will be discussed. Brundage and Mr. Hunter, of course, | stood for democracy. Even in the! Hitler Reduces Size will further worsen the condition) itism. To make things from scratch, ;S0 to speak, the A. A. U. even saw | to it that the white athletes did not |get the bad accomodations. The | world could see that the A. A. U. did not favor any discrimination | against an oppressed race like the | whites. | eect iF it is proven that there really | is an “inner clique” in the A. | A. U. it will undoubtedly cause | much sorrow among people who ; have come to look upon the asso- ciation as one of the bulwarks of Americanism. I do not, for an instant, pride myself on being the only person who has the good of | all our institutions at heart. | What will all those people think, for example, who have admired the brave, principled stand taken by the |A. A. U., Mr. Brundage, and the {American Olympic Committee on | the German situation with regard to the 1038 games? They might cer- | tainly consider it nat a coincidence, | but a pre-arranged plan, that the {same persons who thundered that | America would withdraw from the |competitions if Germany continued [her Jewish prosecutions, and the | games were not removed from Bere ‘lin, are the same persons who have now discovered that Adolph Hitler himself is spying around the country |for Jewish athletes and trying | seductively to get them into the Olympic competitions, Indeed, what would these people think of Gustavus Kirby, the former president of the A. A. U., who ane nounced at the “Case of Civilization Lewald, the Nazi representative on the International Olympic Com- mittee, was a man in whom the fullest confidence could be placed when he promised that Jewish athletes would be welcomed into the German team? They might think | amiss. eee NE hates to believe that the A. | VA. U. is anything but geod | American stuff. Its officials are | all wealthy men and so one should be able to trust to their honesty and democracy, because they have nothing to gain by being other- wise. Indeed, what better proof of their Americanism haye we than the fact that the New York Athletic Club, one of its staunch- est members, charges $1,000 for ar initiation fee, Nobody but a good honest, democratic American couls pay that much to get into th club. SOL’S SANDWICH LUNCH 101 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9781 We Seare the Fis Labor Sports Union . Swimming Instructor and Life.’ guard takes care of you, the! CAMP UNITY WINGDALE, NEW YORK Clever Programs. Lots of fun. Cars leave daily from 2700 Bronx Park Bast at 10:30 A.M.—Fridays and Sat- urdays 10:00, $:00 and 7:00. CAMP STORE CARRIES CAMP SUPPLIES Pre ‘Anti-Faseism and establish a united and pow- cific ports. erful labor movement in all Pa- | U. F, S. Hall. United Front Supporters AN INTERNATIONAL SURVEY SERIE EVERY THURSDAY EVENING Beginning July 12th at 8:30 P. M, First Speaker—MORRIS TAFT on , 11 W. 18th St. sent in Germany” Adm. 15c Cars leave daily 10:30 A.M. UNUSUAL INTERNATIONAL PROGRAM AT CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, NEW YORK @ Songs in Six Languages—English Spanish, German, Jewish, Russian, Greek © Premier of FREE ERNST THAELMANN by Theatre Brigade and Big Chorus © Opening of free Workers Seshool—Direction of Charles Alexander ® Big Masquerade Ball. Pierre Degeyter Trio, Many other attractions. Finest Food. Comfortable Accommodations in Bungalows, Hotel or Tents $14 A WEEK Fridays and Saturdays, 10 A.M., 3 and 7 P.M. from, 2700 Bronx Park East. Phone EStabrook 8-1400. Or — take the boat. Against Hitler” that Dr. Theodore” ma