The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 14, 1934, Page 6

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Page Six Safety Songs Don’t Stop DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1934 Young Miners c | Westmoreland County Accidents at Nellis Mine Being Elected’ Officials in Eviction Five Big Accidents Occu rred in One Month and Small Ones Happen Every Day By a Mine Worker Correspondent NELLIS, W. Va M June 16 I and stru the Johnson dune 16. ner and the rest wanted every union in Di brate the NRA I had showed the N.R.A. is not class but for tt here is a s eign worke: native born w Since I wr Worker about the Nell ing safety, three w 7 two elec- and an- : has been cut bone brok' month, an uation. Twice in he month we have safety meet- th ings and sing safety songs. Fascist Germany is described in the women in under Hitler Teaflet “Women Under cism.” Women were driven out of industry and the professions and) told to “go back where ey be- longed”"—to the three K’s: Kirche, Kinder, Kuche (church, children, kitchen), to be obedient and passive breeders of cannon foddre for the war-like Aryan bent on conquering the world. Some wealthy women, such as Frau Goebbels, echoed the réactionary phrasse of their hus- | bands, telling women to stay out of “dirty politics.” Women still employed in indust: under this Fascist regime had their conditions worsened: anti-fasc: Women, Aryan or no, have been brutality mauled, beaten and. mur- dered. At the advent of the Hitler regime, Dr. Martha Muchow, a psychologist, committed suicide. In their effort to spread their lack reactionary beliefs in this country fascists are trying to whip up a sentiment for driving Amer- ican women out of their jobs. Under a title and box-number, the| following letter was sent to men for the collection of signetures One of these letters fell into the hands of a woman and a copy of it was sent to us by Betty M—— “THE WORLD STATESMAN “Box No, 529 “General Post Office “New York City “Friends and Fellow Country- men: “In spite of all President Roosevelt has been able to ac- co ish in his fight to restore prosperity it has become evident that unless something additional is done there is going to be a larger number of unemployed men for years to come. This is intolerable and all red-blooded men should unite to end such a probability. “The World Statesman believes that Chancellor Hitler of Ger- many has hit upon the right idea -to soive the problem of unemploy- ment. Women should not make it impossible for men to support them and continue te demand such support. them to co-operate with men, not compete with them. “If you agree won't you kindly | sign this petition, get your friends to add their signatures, and re- tum the same to the above pronto? “We, Citizens of the United States anxious to avoid misunder- standing and restore prosperity to our country, believing that wom- en’s place is in the home where she should be supreme and that She should have equality with man in inheriting property and in all other ways, except in in- dustry and commerce where, due to the fact that man is obligated to support the family, man should ‘be supreme. “Urge the Government of the Hitler Fas- | Y|36 takes 334 ya: Nature meant for | example and take women and children out of gainful occupa- tions so that every man will have a chance to earn enough to sup- port the family society expects him to support. “(Space followed for name and | address of desired signers,)” | ied Ea | Can You Make *Em | Yourself? Pattern 1853 is available in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 3 39-inch fabric and % yard contrasting. Illustrated step-by-step sewing instructions in- | cluded. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) |for this Anne Adams pattern. Write |plainly name, address and _ style |number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. | Address orders to Daily Worker| Pattern Department, 243 West 17th St., New York City. Imported 10% Discount to readers of Daily Worker Peasant Handicrafts, Toys, No’ Cigareti eopening Sale! A NEW BRANCH AGAIN AT 14th STREET RUSSIAN ART SHOP, inc. ——Now at. 109 East 14th Street, New York City SOVIET UNION from the Wholesale | and Retail velties, Shawls, Blouses, Candy, ites, etc. An Opportunity to See the CHICAGO WORLDS FAIR FREE Two round trip tickets will be given away at the Morning Freiheit Day and Moonlight EXCURSION TO BEAR MOUNTAIN On the Beautiful Steamer CLERMONT Saturday, July 14th, 2 P.M. Boat leaves from Pier A, Battery Park. King Davi for Dancing. city 's Jazz Orchestra Refreshments and Drinks to appease your appetites at prices Admission: in advance 85e — at Pier $1.10 to Leadership By a Mine Worker Correspondent ‘The month of June fields YUKON, P: the and checkweighmen in the loca the U.M.W./ The locals a in the hands of Lewis and his henchmen, bt many have now cleaned their te, electing an en- tire new set of officers, etc. Drive Against Jobless Unemployed Council Increasing Fight for Relief As Jobs in Mines Decline | By a Worker Corr:spondent LIBRARY, Pa. — Westmorland County officials jailed an unem- | | In the Hutchinson local, formerly | ployed worker for non-payment of | under control of a clique, they elected a new pit committee and / officers. Only two former officers were reelected, both of whom are militant fighters. Another new development is the | fact that youth are being elected | as officers of the locals. Yukon, | on, Biddle and Export lo- ve elected several youth all of whom pledged | themselves to get rid of the Lewis | henchmen. | We workers must teach the youth | | about Lewis and the whole corrupt labor haters, to overthrow the Lefis machine and set up con- trol by rank and file. UMWA Officials Think | Only of Dues, Miners In Helper Find Out By a Worker Correspondent HELPER, Utah.—The officials of the United Mine Workers of Amer- ica have proven that they are not for the workers, much to the sur- prise of some workers. The officials | have shown that they will not sup- port them in strike nor help in any way for the benefit of the workers. The union dues are high. For instance, in one mine where mirers | work only seven days in two months they must pay $3.50 for | | dues. The rest, which is very little, | | goes for rent and other expenses, | |leaving them nothing. | We have } = | Helper for the park to hold our | | Meetings under tne auspice 5 + | Workezs and Farmers | Union. He refused. We to hold meetings just the | anyone who attempted to | arrested. The speak | able to say, “Fellow wor and | they were charged with the using | | of loud and boisterous language. | ‘This goes to show you that fas- | cism is rapidly approaching and our | constitutional rights, for free speech and. assemblage are not upheld by | the officials. I can only say that the workers | must unite all the more solidly and | fight for a Soviet America as tt only way to solve our present mis- erable conditio: Protective attempted same. and speak was} ere only | | Lancaster Courthouse LANCASTER, Pa. July 13.— Harry M. Wicks, candidate for U. 8. Senate from Pennsylvania on the Communist Party Ticket, will speak on the court house steps here Sat- | urday, 8:30 p. m. | Wicks will deal with the relief | problems, jobs, and the conditions | of the workers. He will also an- | swer attacks of the local A. F. of L. leadership against the Communist | Party. | Jennie Cooper, section organizer, | and Fred Trubeani will also speak. | Start a Daily Worker route to- day! The growth of our “Daily” | today spells the results of tomor- | row's struggles. Build a Daily Worker Route Unemployed? Sell the “Daily” How Petka Saved the Train | Jeux is what happened near a small town in Russia about 15 years agow Civil war was raging over Russia. Bosses and nobles spared no effort to crush the workers’ revolution. One day towards autumn the news came that the Whites (those who wanted the czar’s government) jcame towards the town where Petka and his father lived. Petka was 13 years old then. His father was a locomotive engineer. Petka ;made up his mind to be one, too, when he grew up. Ever since he could walk Petka | spent mos: of his time in or around the round house, watching the leco- motives and the men who cleaned and repaired them. Sometimes his father would take him in his en- gineer's cabin for a short ride. In this way Petka learned a great deal about how a locomotive is run. | When it became known tha‘ the | Whites were approaching, the work- ers of the town armed themselves |and went out to meet the enemy. About a day after they were gone, a short train consisting of a couple of cars was to follow the workers’ detachment, in order to supply them. with food and amunition, and to pick up the wounded. Petka’s father was to run this train. As soon as Petka learned about it, he decided to go also. There was no use begging his father to take him along; that was out of the ques- tion. Petka knew his father’s en- gine well. An hour before the start Wicks Speaks Today at! |@ road tax. The total sum in ar- rears amounted to a little over $6. | Officials declared that he would be | kept in jail until he raised the money — although they admitted that even they were not clever enough to suggest means whereby an unemployed worker might earn money while in prison. The’ worker was arrested while engaged in R.W.D. work. His ar- rest, by statement of the officials, will begin a campaign of similar arrests amongst the great number of unemployed workers in the county who have been unable to pay their taxes. Another campaign is being launched to take away the nomes of the workers who are behind in a former yard worker, has received from the officials of W: ington | | County that his property will be sold at public auction on August 6 Shooting of Miners Follows President's Fine-Sounding Words | By a Mine Worker Correspondent BESSEMER, Ala. — The unfair play that is being dealt to the strik- ing ore miners is this—the Presi- dent said he would think of the forgotten men and give them the right to organize and demand their rights. Yet when we did so they sent the iyational Guard to fight us back. They came on our picket lines at Sloss and searched whe pickets for weapons, but yet they allow the company thugs to carry |weapons to fight us and allow |the scabs to work. The company thugs want to | shoot, us down, but as. soon as the | strike is over they will have to work !hand in hand with us and live on what they are trying to prevent us from geiting. We pay taxes to pay the National Guard, too, and they strive to cut off the hands that feed them. The government officials are also un- fair to the laboring man who sup- ports them, SPREADING THE “DAILY” (By a Worker Correspondent) ALPHA, Ill—We nave organized the I. W. A. in Henzy County. T am one of the delegates to the county center body, and I brought up a questign about workmen's news. I persuaded one delegate to take the Daily Worker. I told him not to be scared, but read it, and pass it to the other 200 workers in that town without jobs, and hid in back of the coal in the tender. The tender is the little car that is directly behind the loco- motive. It carries the coal. Pretty soon the cars were coupled together and they left the s‘ation. Everything went well for a while. The driver could not see Petka be- cause of the coal that was piled up between them and the boy had a great time. Suddenly his father brought the train to an abrupt halt. “Something is in our way,” he said to the stoker. They ran the train a little closer and discovered a pile of railroad ties dumped on the track, “This doesn’t look so good to me,” Petka’s father romarked, “But we must try to get through. Call the rest of the crew and try to pull the ties apart while I mind the engine.” No sooner did the stoker and a few car men come up when the sharp rat-a-tat-tat of machine guns was heard. One of the men was killed ou right, and the rest fell as ihey ran back towards the train. A detachment of soldiers | | managed to get in the rear of the workers’ forces. They hid with their | machine guns in the bushes, along- side the track. Petka’s father peered out of the cab window, trying to see if any of his comrades were unhurt. Suddenly he sank to the floor with a groan. The whites turned their guns at the engineer's cab. The engineer was hit in his legs. He squirmed on the floor of the cad, trying to reach the lever, but could not. he sneaked into the round house Wm, Stanton of Can- | lumber | notice | jers who are put on R.W.D. or C. WITH OUR YOUNG READERS The Whites thought that they less he pays back taxes of $9.42.) Stanton has been unemployed for three years and has received no re- | lief. « This campaign will affect thou-| sands of unemployed and poverty stricken workers in this coal region who live in little board shacks and tarpaper barracks and subsist upon the most meagre relief or upon in- frequent, starvation wages. Stan- ton has taken his case to the Un- employed Council which has already begun a campaign against the threatened eviction, Relief conditions in general in Washington County are of an ap- palling nature. A single man is given $1.50 to live on for a week; a married couple are given $2.9 and a couple with two children, $5.25. This amounts to six or seven cents a person per meal. No coal is provided, although in these dis- tricts homes are without g2s or elec: yo We s are told by ef officials to take coal from} company dumps, but when they do this they are arrested for stealing. | And no ice is provided, although | this is a summer essential. t The administration of relief is} similarly of the worst sort. Work, A. jobs find their relief cut off im- mediately despite the fact that they do not receive their first pay check for several weeks. Frequently | they find that although their job may last only a few days it never- | theless, takes them five weeks to| get put back on the relief rolls. The local investigators are de- liberately slipshod in their methods. Requests for relief are never turn- ed in or are denied. Garden plants sent to headquarters are held till rotten and are then thrown away. And, in addition, workers belonging to the Unemployed Council are threatened with stoppage of relief. Recently a delegation from the Unemployed Council headed by Fred Siders of Library conferred with the relief officials of Washing- ton. The officials at first refused to see more than one worker at a time but the delegation insisted that everyone be present and the officials were forced to yield. When the delegation left, after taking up all the cases on its list. the administrator suggested that no} more delegations were necessary. | She was told that the workers | themselves would decide that. | The Unemployed Council is grow- | ing rapidly in Washington County | because local workers are beginning to realize that as individuals they are powerless to secure relief. An old steel worker summed this up yesterday at relief headquarters when he said: “The U. S. Steel corporation fired me when I reach- ed the age limit and then I couldn't get any more work: And I'll tell you what opened my eyes. It was when I couldn’t get relief and was reduced to begging, and then I went to the Unemployed Council and they got relief for me.” There is a prospect of widespread | unemployment throughout the coal| district this summer. Commercial mines are already shut down or operating only two days a week. And the captive mines which here- tofore have been running five days | a week in order to store up coal| against - the threatened steel strike are beginning to fire men. A few days ago 200 men were fired at the Mountour 10 mine, one of the \Fight in Crosby | For Relief Job | Youth Members of Both Party. largest mines in this section. had killed the entire train crew. Cautiously they crept out from be- hind the bushes and slowly ad- vanced toward the train. Petka was si'ting on the coal, horrorestricken at what he saw. In. just a few minutes the Whites will board the train. They will blow up the amu- nition, tear up the tracks, and kill his father. The workers ahead will be caught in a trap, without food or cartridges, Carefully he crept over the coal, and slid into the cab. His father looked up at him from the floor but did not seem surprised to see the boy. With a weak gesture of his hand he poinied to a lever, but Petka needed no instruction. He pulled the lever, and with a hiss of seam, the train started back. The White soldiers were so surprised they stood stock still. The train picked up speed and disappeared. There was a great excitement in town when Petka jumped off the locomotive, and related what had happened. Petka’s fafher was re- moved at once to the hospital. Im- medistely a group of armed workers, boarded the same train and went, ehead to the front. The Whites knew better than to hang around waiting for them, and scattered in all directions. Con‘act was estab- lished with the first group of work- ers who had gone out earlier, and the Whites received a good beating. As for Petka, he was the idol of the town. And I’m sure his father did not mind his presence in the round house any more. W. 8. PARTY LIFE Pay Cash Won| YCL Help Build Closer Link a Worker Correspondent By Demands That YCL’ers Do Party Work Will CROSBY, Minn.—The ne of the Crow Wing County relief ad- |; ors together with the city || their relief without cash and no/0f the P: importance | insurance to protect the wo! of youth ed out that | while on the job. then the workers of Crosby or- ganized and put up a petition against forced labor, 579 signatures were gotten. A committve of five, led by Emil C. Nygard, was then elected to go to the Sta coniro! te board of vp the pi of control, who cl prised that the worker’ as well as in other towns were forced to worked for relief without cq Now | hardly anyone is working for relief orders in Crow Wing County, unless they are working for cash, The next point we found out un- der the Farmer Labor administra- tion wes that the State hed set a budget for families getting ré When we asked our relief invest: gator of Crow Wing County how much was each person’s budget per month, she said the budget for a family of eight for one month was for the man, $4.65; wife, $3.60; children over 14 years, $2.60; chil- dren over 7, $2.60; children 1 to 6, the ones who really need the most, get $1.5 And the clothing for the whele family of eight was not to be more than $3.80 per month. The yellow dogs and parasites who work in the relief offiezs criminating against the working class get as high as $175 per month and free car expenses. I wonder how that parasite from St. Paul can feed a child with $1.55 when one quart of m per de at 8 cents per quart tctals to $2.10 per month, I have been a miner for 20 years and with my partner produced $200 of wealth per day ut received $7 ' $8 a day for each of us, Now the relief parasites and other capi- hi a good time out employed and on relief. Let's organize under the leader- | 4) ship of the Communist Party, the only Party that fights for the in- terests of the working class, to es- tablish a Soviet America. CORRECTION In the miners’ correspondence page, last Saturday, July 7, a letter was published under the heading “Averages 5 cents a day in Colo- rado Tungsten Mine.” This was a Wants To Be Clarified mistake. The letter came from| The Party sub-section committee Randsburg, California, not from} would like to have clarification on Colorado. this problem. Specifically it should be explained: NOTE ()_ Why Y¥. C. L.ers should join the Party—veasons, etc. We publish letters from coal (2) What role they should play and ore from miners and from oil field workers, every Saiurdey. Wej| expected of them afier the: urge workers in the helds Wednesday of each week. Conducted by Mary Morrow. Chil- dren’s editor, The Daily Worker. 50 Eest 13th St.. New York City. JUMBLES All the letters in the words are mixed up, and so are the words themselves, Juggle them around and you will find one of the workers’. major demends. OT RAW MOPEDELUNY LAL DUNSF HET. a | * PUZZLE CORNER Magic Change wy [a O;|> SE ie L K fae 4 I We tS Chanze one letter each time and make a new word, until you change Milk into Wine, as Boss, bAs:, baRs, Wars. ANSWER TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE Join the Detiy Worker Puzzle Club by sending in one of the solved puzzles. while we are un- | se to|the Party and are still doing youth ‘write us of the conditions of wor's| Work (Y. C. L.). |and of thei: struggles to organize. | |Please get your letters to us by| one of the weaknesses in this work at the present time is that only about two per cent of the Y. C. L. |membership is in the Party and |that this must be raised. It like- | wise stated that Y. C. L. comrades | must not be used for other activity |than youth work. ‘We have had experiences in York- ville in this respect. Here almost jail the leading co: des from the |territory who ars in the League have joined the Party. In one case, |the Party Unit 403 ted to make the Y. C. L.’er agitprop director and |make him a buro member, end later they wanted him for fina: re= tary. He of course refused these tasks, explaining that his only ac- tivity was as a Y. C. L. organizer, which takes up a _ considerable int of time. Now the unit in- that the comrade carry out n unit assignments, canyas- etc, In Unit 404, of the Party, the |¥. C. L. comrades were also asked |to take Party assignments, having | similar experiences as above. Wrong Conception of Party and League Relations | At the meeting of the sub-section | committee of the Party, all this was | brought out by the Y. C. L. repre- sentative. The Party members of the sub-section committee could see no reason why it was necessary to have Y. C. L.’ers join the Party when they still wanted to do League work. When this was explained as: (1) @ closer organizational connec- tion between the C. P. and Y. C. L.; (2) a good means of bringing the campaigns, the line and the activity of the Party in general and of a specific Party unit in particular to the Y. C. L., and also; (3) to draw the attention of the Party to the Y. C, L. campaigns and to the youth question, then, the Party comrades laughed at the idea, which they characterized as a “Party fraction in the Y. C. L.” It is ci to anyone in touch with the Cc. L. that when lead- amcui jc jing Y. C. L.ers join the Party (and |no doubt they are the ones who ould) they have no time for Party | assignments outside of youth work, except at the expense of the Y. C. |L. These comrades may be, for ex- ample, unit organizers, and they not only have the Y. C. L, unit meet; 'ing, buro meeting, unit orga lor sub-section committee meeting, 'C. P. unit meetii but the actual | basic work of the Y. C. L. untt. In the Party unit, Y. C. L.’ers are |ne+ looked -upon as actual Party ;members carrying out very import- The units do y as a whole for their. work, urging them to do it better, to give more time to it, assign more forces, check up on it and get reports, but rather take advantage of their being C. P. members by trying to burden them with other work, and draw them cut of the Y. C. L. This reflects the poor understanding of the youth question in Party ranks. jin their Party unit, and what is join (3) How the C. P. unit as a whole and not just the Y, C. L.’ers can help in the carrying out of this work, (4) How much dues does a Y. C. |L.'er have to pay in the Party | Cempleyed and unemployed) ? | JR. ¥. C, 1, Unit 405, Cc. P. Unit 403. E.'S., ¥. C. L. Unit 419, Cc. P. Unit 401. Reply By Editor Based on the facts presented by the Y. C. L.'ers in the above letter, itis evident that unclarity exists on the question of what Party leader- | tionary kindergarten. Result In Negiecting Youth ship means to the c.L. Tr Y¥. C._L. program explains: Although the ¥. C. I nally independent, ° ganizational connections xist between it and the Cemmu- nist Party, This connection is effected through mutual represe: tation on all rungs of the organi- zaticnal ladder. “To secure Party leadership in L, it is necessary to have mate number ef Party is ore the ade: members in the ¥Y. C. L. This is an ved by the overwhelming ity of the functionaries cadres) being simultaneously members of the Communist Party.” The Party comrades of the Yorke ville sub section, as well as Y.-C. L. comrades, see the need of. creating of a Party core in the Y. C.L. But the comrades of the Party incor- rectly view the act of joining the Party as full graduation into the Party. Thus at the moment when a istrict is assigning young Party members to devote their entire time to the building of the youth movement — the Yorkville comrades by their wrong attitude are not only doing the opposite, but. they are discouraging young cadres of the Y. C. L. from joining the Party for fear of being overbur- dened with work. Two things are thus bound to happen: Either the work of the Y. C. L. will be entirely neglected to satisfy the Party’s need for forces, or the yourg comrades who try to develop closer understanding of the Party, will leaye the ranks of the Y. C. L. entirely. Comrade Browder, in his report to the Eighth Convention of the Party, declared against the current practice of depleting the Y. C. L. of its best forces when they are most needed on the youth front. “In the past ... there has been allowed to develop a sort of organi- zational rivalry between the youth and adult organizations — a rival net in the nature of socialist com- petition, but of the adult organiza- tions trying to grab away as quickly as possible from the youth organi- zations every rising young leader who shows special organizational or political capacity. The idea has been thet as soon as the youth movement produces a leader who is ‘good enough for Party work’ that this means he is wasting his time if he remains any lenger in what is looked upon a3 a sort of proba- This frivolous ude toward youth minated from cur m Every Y. C. L. ac encouraged to join Party. in order to become better acquainted with its functioning, to raise his level of understanding, to better transform Party politics into the work of the youth movement and to prepare the Y. C. L. activist for future Party work. While a mem- ber of the Party, he must not be made to feel like a slacker if he does not assume responsibilities as the adult next to The Y. C, LJers Party duty and main task is buildins the youth movement. If that requires his full time (and it should), there must be no atiempt to overburden the Y. C. L. com- rade. On the contrary, the Party unit, if it has the means, is obligated to assign additlonal young Party comrades to work in the Y. C. L. The Party comrades thus as- sgned to Y. C. L. work are not a fraction in the Y. C. L., in the sense that fractions exist. Commu- nist fractions function not in Com- munist organizations, but among the non-Party masses. The Y, C. L, is a Communist youth organization. Until a different system of dues payments is. worked out, the Party comrades in youth work (the present Y. C. L’ers who are also Party members) shall pay their dues in the Y. C. L. In the Party they shall pay only the two cents a week dues, In cases of unempioyed com- rades, the Party units shall assist in making it possible for these com- radcs to pay dues in the Party, in addition to their regular Y. C. Ly dues, ORG. DEPT. ¥. Cc, L. ORG. COMM. C. P. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Enamel of Teeth Marlyn V., Springficid: — The enamel of the tceth is a protective covering and consists chiefly of calcium (lime) and phos>horus. This is why one must provide for \these two elements in the diet be- fore stronz, hard enamel may be ex- | pected. Milk and green vegetabies are excellent enamel builders. Spestie Paralysis Worried Mother:—Try ihe Man- hatten Spastic Clinic which is part of the neurolozical Institute, Medi- cal Center, 163th Street and Broad- way. . Cures for Concer Bertha, Montrcal, Canada: You are wasting your money on fake cures. Your father’s case seems to be a hopeless one and it would be moze humane ‘o leave nim clono,! instead of dragging him from one} city to another and from one quack | to the next faker. If anything could have been doe for him, Monireal is as good as New York in this respect. At the present time, there is no specific cure for | cancer. If a surgical operation docs not help, ‘he only thing left is deep X-ray or radium vreatmenis, Sometimes the three are combined, Montreel surgeons and physicians, especially at the institution >ou mention, are perfectiy competen. to handle the case you describe. Under Doctor acl a tos: By PAUL LUTTINGER, MD. — ————__— the circumstances it would be a@ waste of time and money to bring him to Now York. LOS ANGELES Mass Protest M: ng and Dem- on-tration for the L’beration of Ernst Thaclmann Wednesday, July 25 Trinity Auditorin 847 S. Grand Ayo. Speakers: SAM DARCY, Dict. Orsan- irer, C. P.; LEO GALLAGHER, §. ROSENFELD. DR. J. C. COLEMAN, M. LUTOTOVSKY Admicsion 15 cents Auspices: Jow:sh Werkers’ ples’ Committee As: and Peo- st Fascism and Camp Lumberville PHILADELP ATA Is Now Oncn for Workers of, Philadelphia and Vicinity In order to strengthen the Camp Com- ¢ has been called July 16, 8 o'clock, Bt, jonaries of orsenizations, mem- of the Camp Committee end thore interested in the Camp are requested to attend. For Information, Registering, Call MARKET. 8230

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