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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 1934 Page Three On the Strike Front 4,000 Out in York Cigar Company Plants YORK, Pa. (FP.).—Almost 50| cigar manufacturers—practically all in York County—were forced to close their plants when 4,000 mem- bers of the Cigarmakers Interna- tional Union of America went on strike. The strikers formed a moy- able picket line to enforce their ac- tion by keeping all the cigar fac- tories in their county closed. The strike was the workers’ an- | swer to the announcement by the York County Manufacturers’ Assn. that the open shop would prevail | in their 127 industries. Try to Break 5-Week Strike in Vermont | BURLINGTON, Vt. (F. P.).—In| an éffort to end the five-week strike at the Queen City Cotton Co. mill, Mayor Burke of Burlington has ap- pealed for aid to Robert Bruere, member of the Cotton Textile Na- tional Industrial Board. Los Angeles Plant Closed After 14-Week Strike LOS ANGELES (F.P.).—After a 1é-week strike, A. H. Wittenberg, president of the Mission Hosiery Millis of Los Angeles, closed his plants to await settlement of the strike through a meeting between union officials and the manage- ment before the Regional Labor | Board. The chief demand of more than 250 workers involved is for a closed shop. Constant picketing has been maintained despite police ter- ror, nation of the workers. Strikers re- taliated by placing railroad ties, rail plates and even rails in front of a@ locomotive trying to enter the yards of the company. One worker was beaten up by a vilage deputy, and another burned when he picked up a tear gas bomb to hurl it back at six special deputies. Union men are approaching the workers in the pottery kilns to walk out, If that group leaves the plant, the firm will lose thousands of doi- lars a day. Also a tent city was to go up today where pickets will sleep while picketing will continue 24 hours a day. In one tent it was planned to open a first aid station. | |Custum Tailors Out In New York Strike NEW YORK.—Two hundred workers formed a mass ‘picket line yesterday in front of the striking custom tailoring shop, Schanz, Inc., 745 Fifth Ave. ° Eight Jailed in Philadelphia Gulf Oil Co. Strike PHILADELPHIA (F.P.).—Eight of the 700 striking Gulf Oil Co. work- ers of Philadelphia have been ar- rested in the two weeks of the strike, five of them for trying to talk to a strikebreaking truck driver. The strikers are demanding wage increases, reinstatement of fired workers and continuation system of hiring workers from the list of former employes. Almost 150 drivers and Gulf service station attendants have joined the strike with similar demands. Twenty Fur Shops Strike of the} see ag Sa Se AN EDI If a United Front in France, Why Not Here? TORIAL | FRENCH WORKERS IN UNITED FRONT AGAINST WAR AND FASCISM Are de Triuhphe, in Paris, a few | M\HERE is not a Socialist worker or a Communist who will | | not be thrilled at the n | France telling of the final |agreement ‘ Communists and Socialists of Paris united in a demonstration days ago. against war and fascism at the tom! ews that has just come from realization of a United Front ‘in defence of labor and democratic liberties” against the menace of Fascism. | Why, in the name of eve American working class, can rything that is precious to the mot such United Front agree- | ments be realized here mn this country? Are we not menaced here by Fascist reaction? Do we not see re- b of the Unknown Soldier under the | Ways and means of cementing unity for immediate, specific actions | against reaction and imperialist war. Comrade Browder, General Secretary of the Communist Party, has | written an open letter, clear, simple, and earnest, to the leaders and | members of the Socialist Party proposing common action against the class enemy which daily takes strength and encouragement from the disunity in the ranks of the worki But still no answer, These are momentous times. T! in Minneapolis, etc., is making glorious history in its struggles against | ng class. Still silence, while the brutality of the em- ployers, the offensive of the Wall Street’ war-makers advances. he American working class, in ’Frisco, | Steel Bosses Ti ohten Attempt to Railroad Kean, SMWIU Head Penn. Superior Court Reaffirms Decision to Railroad Egan PITTSBURGH, Superior cour reaffirmed t courts to railroad James Egan, Sec- retary of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union to one year imprisonment on the framed- up charge of inciting to riot Egan has been out on bail since last November, following the arrest at a crucial point during the Am- bridge strike when the steel barons. seeking to rob the strike of its leadership, arrested Egan. Now again the decision to jail Egan comes at a time well calculated by the steel corporations to hinder the developments of the rising struggles in the steel industry. The National Convention of the 8. M. W. I. U. to convene August 3rd is now in preparation. The decision to jail Egan is aimed at sabotaging the preparations for this convention. The steel trust realizes the impor- tance of this convention, coming at Nat'l Executive Board of Union Discusses Steel Situation PITTSBURGH, 7.—Pians ta st the steel bosses’ offensive, ag re: shown in increasing mass lay-offa in the mills, violation of agree ments by Republic Steel, and tn@ attempt to railroad Jim Egan, Gen- eral Secretary of the Steel and Metal Workers’ Union, to jail, were discussed at a meeting of the Na«+ tional Executive Board of the union held in this city. The board meeting made final preparations for the second national convention of the union, which will | be held in thiscity Aug. 3. Reporte | were given by representatives of the | different districts on the progress of | the convention preparations. Many | locals have already elected theif | delegates; still others are develop= ing activities in ‘connection with the mass lay-offs in steel and zing for the conven< thereby mobil tion. Special convention calls have been addressed to all independent unions and locals in the industry, inviting them to send ‘fraternal delegates, Convention Will Rally Steel Workers The convention will focus the ate 600 Out for 6 Weeks |. NEW YORK.—The fight for July the yoke of wage slavery and oppression, In Greenville, S. C. GREENVILLE, 8. C. | actionary violence, strike-break: |inereases in the fur industry con-| (F, P.).—| tinued yesterday with 20 shops on , chauvinism, jingoism and enormous | é preparations for war going on right before out eyes? | Is there not the most crying need for working class unity? | the obstacles that stand in the way of this unity be overcome? tention of all steel workers on the increasing fierce attacks on theig |rights and living standards, and Cannot Can any person honestly say that the American working class can- More than 600 out of 900 workers voted to continue their six-week strike against the Piedmont Mfg. Co. at Piedmont. Picketing is being maintained day and night, The vote was taken on the report that the management. was planning to reopen the plant. 1,000 Picket 24 Hours | A Day at Kohler City | KOHLER CITY, Wis.—To the ac- | companiment of jeers and swinging | tists, 1,000 workers picketed at the Kohler Company in the village of Kohler yesterday. Picketing began before dawn. Throwing of tear gas bombs at a group of pickets aroused the indig- WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. | Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children, Direction: “exington Ave., White Plains Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave. station Mice open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m, | Sunday 10 am. to 2 p.m. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Priday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. fe KRAUS & SONS, Inc. Manufacturers of Badges-Banners-Buttons Fer Workers Clubs and Organtyations 157 DELANCEY STREET Lelephone: DRydock 4-8275-8276 MIMEOGRAPHS bought, sold, exchanged, repaired Stencils, Ink, Supplies Very Reasonable Empire Mimeo Service 199 Broadway, Room 542 Stuyvesant 9-1862 | First District Magistrates |strike under the leadership of the Fur Workers Industrial Union. Five shops have already settled with the union. The settlement agreements have given the workers $5 to $10 increases in pay. The drive for the increases was workers in the market yesterday which was addressed by Ben Gold, leader of the Needle Trades Work- ers Industrial Union. Urge Packed Court as Relief Union Leaders Face Trial at 10 Today NEW YORK.—Paul Block, organ- izer, Michael Davidow, secretary of the Relief Workers League, and Jack Rand, arrested last week for distributing leaflets at the ferry entrance to the Governors Island- Fort Jay project, where over 200 lay-cff, will be tried today at the Court, Franklin and Center Sts. Workers are urged to pack the court at 10 am., when these wockers come up for trial. Upholsters’ Union to Meet Tomorrow Night NEW YORK.—An open meeting of all upholsterers is called by the Upholstery Department of the Fur- niture Workers’ Industrial Union for Thursday, July 19, at 8 p.m., at the union hall, 812 Broadway, N.Y.C. At this meeting the following will be discussed: 1. The Jersey City. situation in connection with the Brooklyn Lounge Strike. 2 A report of the Conference which was held last Sunday in Philadelphia between the Furni- ture Workers’ Industrial Union and the locals of the Interna- tional Upholsterers’ Union where definite decisions in favor of the united front were reached. 3. A report on the present sit- uation in the trade in New York. | | Watch Them Perform MOONLIGHT New Masses and F. S. U. Ashley Pettis Valhalla Club Orchestra SAIL-DANCE on the The National Negro relief workers struck against a mass | | not understand the need of fighting reaction, to release Ernst Thael- mann and all those working class Nazi prisons? Tn say that would be to slande: fighters now being tortured in the x the American working class! What has been accomplished ii | The Communist Party has made repeated offers to meet with the So- nm France can be accomplished here! | cialist Party. It still stands ready and eager for unity. Members of the Socialist Par strength of the working class w ty! All who truly desire to see the nited and strong, not divided and And yet the Socialist Party, with its newly elected National Executive | weakened, let there be action for a United Front, let there be steps to see that the sincere proposals of the Communist Party be answered. spurred on by a mass meeting of| Committee, continues to ignore the repeated i the Communist Party Central Commit vitations sent to it by € proposing a meeting to discuss If in France, then why not here? Illinois Jobless|Cleveland Caiinitidile hae Cancale Speed Election Plans Hold Southern Meet July 21 Unemployed j Councils, | Workers’ Alliance, PMA Issue Call | SPRINGFIELD, I!l.—Representa- | tives of employed and unemployed workers will meet here on July 21 and 22 to plan a campaign for the enactment of the Workers Unem- |ployment Insurance Bill, for the raising of relief throughout the state to at least Cook County levels, land for the recognition of workers’ |committees at all relief stations. | The call was issued jointly by a number of organizations, including ;the Unemployment Councils, | Illinois Workers Alliance locals of gressive Miners of America Local: | Hod Carriers and Unemployed of Harrisburg. The conference will be held at Odd Fellows Hall, 21344 So, Fourth | St., Springfield, Ill. Jobless Halt Forced Laber | Project in East St. Louis | | EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill—Fully 500 | Workers, members of the Unem- |ployment Council of Madison, the {Illinois Workers Alliance of Venice jand Granite City and the Federal | State Aid Association, stopped the |forced labor work on the Venice High School here Friday. The attempts of the Illinois |Emezgency Relief Commission to carry through their “work for | beans” program have been met with {the militant resistance of the un- |employed in St. Clair and Madison Counties. The workers in the E. | St. Louis and Tri-City districts are putting up a struggle in the face the | | West Frankfort and Buckner, Pro- | 1, 15 and 56, and the Progressive | of the sabotage of such leaders as} Must Collect 50,000 Signatures Immediately To CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 17.— John Williamson,. district or- ganizer of the Communist Party Ohio, today issued the follow- | ing appeal to the membership of the Party in Cleveland for re- doubled efforts to collect 50,000 nominating petition signatures needed to place Communist can- didates on the state election bal- lot. “The District Bureau calls upon every Party member in Cleveland | to attend his unit meeting tonight | without fail despite the tiresome work in which we have been en- gaged this week and despite the miles of marching today follow- ing the upsurge of mass indigna- tion over the relief murders. “The unit meetings tonight will receive special instructions con- cerning the alarming election sig- nature situation, the August First demonstration and the building of a mass unemployment council.” . 8 # Issues Call for Support Of Party’s 6-Point Program CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 17.— |The Election Campaign Committee |of the Communist Party of this | state has issued a call to all work- | |ing class organizations for a con- ference in Youngstown, Ohio, on July 29 to ratify its six-point elec- tion platform. The conference will be held at the Central Auditorium, 225 Boardman St., at 10 a.m. The six points of the Communist Party state program are: For the right of all workers to organize, strike and “picket. For Unemployment Insurance as provided in the Workers Unemploy- Put Party on State Ballot Illinois State Election Committee Moves to Its New Headquarters CHICAGO, July 17.—New headquarters for the Illinois State Campaign Committee of the Communist Party have been opened in Room 702, 101 S. Wells St. The phone number is Dear- born 7394, Increased activity in connec- tion with the campaign, particu- larly with the Cook County Nominating Conference of July 28 placing additional responsibil- ity on the committee, have made larger quarters necessary. All inquiries on campaign prob- lems: should be addressed to this office or to neighborhood head- quarters. | All taxes to come from the wealthy classes. Full equality and rights for Ne- | grees. For a _ workers’ Soviet Gov- ernment in alliance with impover ished farmers. While these are six main points |to be put forward in the program, conference for the formulation of a more detailed program. The Communist candidates on the state ticket of the Communist Party are, I. O. Ford of Cleveland, for Governor; Janie Langston of Columbus, for Lieutenant-Gov- ernor; Wm. Patterson of Toledo, for Treasurer; Wm. McDermott of Hamilton, for Secretary of State; these will serve at the ratification | PledgeSupport to Gen’! Strike Call for Unity In the Fight Against Hunger and Terror NEW YORK. — The National Board of the Unemployment Coun- | Industrial Union for leadership in | »| the developing struggles. | cils, in a statement issued toda: | pledged the full support of the | hundreds of thousands of members of the Unemployment Councils | throughout the country in support | of the striking West Coast workers. | The statement calls upon the | membership of the Councils in the | East and around the Gulf ports | to join in all solidarity actions with | the San Francisco strikers, and re- | news its pledge to actively support | Workers everywhere in their strug- | Bles against a common enemy for predaag conditions and the right to ive. The statement in full follows: “The National Unemployment | Council hails and greets the inspir- |ing general strike struggle in sup- port of the West Coast Maritime | Workers. This struggle marks the | beginning of the necessary united | counter-offensive against the hun- ger and terror program of the | bosses and government. The suc- ess of this struggle will serve to strengthen the fighting forces of the United States, “The National Unemployment | | Council calls upon all of its afi-| liated organizations everywhére to | Tally in support of the longshore- | men and seamen in their fight for improved conditions and the right to | especially call upon all affiliated | crganizations on the East as well | as the West Coast and on the Gulf | | JIM EGAN a time when the strike sentiment is again rising among the steel workers and the convention becom- ing a focal point of attention of the steel workers now that the A. A. following its betrayal, is becoming | more and more discredited in the eyes of the steel workers, who are now looking toward tion of the Steel & Metal W ork: | The National Labor Defense is | planning to appeal the case to Su- | preme Court. All workers organiza- | tions should send protests to Dist. | Atty. Andrew Pat\, Pittsburgh, Pa. | rae: ae | Ambridge Workers Prepare |For Steel Convention | AMBRIDGE, Pa.—Workers here |have taken the call for the Second National Convention of the Steel land Metal Workers Industrial Union }and pasted it up on the telegraph |poles throughout the town. Because of the extreme terror against all | militant workers and their organ- | izations, the workers cannot meet to elect their delegates, only in sec- |ret groups, illegally. All halls are |closed to the workers. Open air meetings are banned. Warrants are | still out for the National Secretary of the union, James Egan, in Am- bridge. Aliquippa and the whole of Beaver County. The eyes of the workers in this | workers everywhere throughout the [County are on the Second National | | Convention of the Steel and Metal | Workers Industrial Union are thoroughly disgusted with the Officials of the Amalgamated Asso- | |ciation, after the glaring sellout |carried through by Mike Tighe and | Company. Officials of the A. A. organized control of their jobs. We| (Affiliated to the AFF.L.) have been | in Ambridge for the past three months, with the consent of the steel corporations and the local gov- to rally for active suvport of the | ernment. In all this time, they have | They | | will have as its main program the | task of mobilizing the workers for | mill and local struggles around par« | tial demands, and for the preparae | tion of a mass strike in the indus« | try. The steel barons, realizing the | significance of the coming conven= tion, have chosen exactly this time to railroad the General Secretary | of the union, Jim Egan, on framed~ up charges of “inciting to riot” durs | ing the Ambridge strike in 1933. The | sentence of one year in jail imposed | by the lower court has been upheld by the Pittsburgh higher court. An appeal must be filed within the next | eight days with the Supreme Court }if Egan is to be kept out of jail to continue his leadership of the steel | workers’ struggles and participate in the convention, | Calls for Joint Action Against Lock-Out In addition to the necessary ex< | penses of the convention, the steel | barons have confronted the union |with the necessity of raising hun- | dreds of dollars for Egan’s defense, The National Executive Board de- cided to appeal to all unions and mass organizations to come to the | union’s assistance with contribu« | tions to enable the holding of the convention and secure the reloase of Egan. Answering the action of the Res | public Steel in refusing to renew | the agreement with the Amalga- | mated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers and in locking out its workers, the board meeting called for joint actions with the A. A, | membership, and preparation of a joint strike to force Republic Steel to renew its agreement, and at the |same time to demand from thecity | governments that unemployed relief be given these workers during the whole period they are outside of | the shops. Preparations are also to |be made for a strike when the com~ pany announces the re-opening of the mills. || Foster’s Article on Steel Strike Appears in Saturday’s ‘Daily’ | ena “A Lesson from Steel History,” an article reviewing the struggles || of the steel workers, by William Z, Foster, leader of the great steel strike of 1919, will appear in Saturday’s Daily Worker. Every worker should read this lucid account of the steel strike . ment Insurance Bill (H. R. Dy i July 21, 7:30 p.m,| Theatre Presents: |// ciaude Broshears and Earl Clause. ad Saco HON ce Ree Yetta Land of Cleveland, for At-| Strike. We pledge and will under- | not been able to organize ten work- ae aes et tai we a Dee On SS. Ambassador | Cecil Mack’s Choir To insure a victozy in this fight, | taxes and other liens of small-home | torney General; W. C. Sandberg of | take to mobilize the unemployed |ers necessary for them to issue an | st vig paths pbs» vps From South Ferry|Laura Bowman—||/it is necessary to form a united | owners and farmers. Cleveland, for U. 8. Senator; John /in all parts to prevent the load-|A. A. local charter. sped eae Tickets 75c in advance on sale James soxwill—||| front of all workers and to catry| Repeal of all present tax laws |Marshall of Leetonia, and Ben At-|ing and unloading of ships from|’ The workers of Ambridge appeal | at Workers Book Shop. $1.00 at boat Thelma Minor—||| through the election of delegates to | which workers, poor farmers and|kins of Akron, for U. S. Congress- and to ports that have been struck |to the workers throughout the | Mass at Relief Office and to support the movement to spread the strike to all ports. We call upon our affiliated organiza |the Conference for Unemployment | Insurance to be held in Springfield |on July 21 and 22 at the Odd Fel- Teen anes small business men have to pay.|men-at-large. |country to support the Second Na- | tional Bi-Annual Convention of the ~ | Steel and Metal Workers Industrial | Orallia Banskina Arranged Through World Tourist, Inc. _ |Demanding Pay JOPLIN, Mo.—Relief workers here, fort to all campers. of the remaining accom are on the same level as CAMP UNITY Overcrowded The Management of Camp Unity regrets that it cannot accommodate any more campers until further notice. The camp is filled to capacity and any further additions would cause discom- It suggests that Unity patrons take advantage two proletarian camps, Nitgedaiget and Kinder- land, where cuitural, social and sports activities modations in the other Unity’s. ta a P. S. the down you'll enjo: Rates? to come? By boat, if you like, or 3 and 7 P. M. The Joys of Mountain Climbing! Camp Nitgedaiget Beason-on-the-Hudson, N. Y. | ‘You pass the swimming pool on | owners. The lowest: $14 a week. How Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 A. M. Fridays, Saturdays, 10, Estabrock 8-1400 trip from Mt. Beacon. Then yy the tasty, plentiful meals. by our cars that Leave 2700 Win Relief Concessions CINCINNATI, Ohio.—A delega- tion of 100 workers forced J. E. Stuart, Hamilton County Relief Di- rector, to promise that the quality of food would be improved and fresh fruits would be included in all re- lief orders. Immediate relief was granted for the needy cases pre- sented. Petitions for cash relief are being circulated in the neighborhoods by the Unemployment Councils and will be presented to the County Com- missioners at a demonstration on the Hospital Lot, 12th and Central Ave., Friday, July 27, at 8.30 a. ay Luzerne County, Penna. Jobless to March Today WILKES BARRE, Pa.—Workers in Lugerne County, under the lead- ership of the Unemployment ae cils, will march on the variou: = lief offices throughout the county Wednesday, July 18. The demands of the unemployed include: (1) doubling of present relief; (2) $3 weekly cash relief to single workers; (3) no evictions, cash rent for small home owners; (4) supplementary relief to all unemployed; and (5) a tax moratorium for small- home Mass meetings are being held by the Councils of Ashley, Plymouth, Larksville, Miners’ Mills, Swoyers- ville, West Wyoming and Wilkes- Barre, to rally worxers for the march. Workers in Wilkes-Barre will mass at Fulton and Coal Sts. in the | “Without the Communist Party and the Daily Worker the masses of the United States are leaderless and victim on every side to the direst oppression, to the eruelest betrayals. That the larger part of the| masses of this country— | unemployed and employed workers, including strikers from coast to coast—still fail to gauge the role of | the Communist Party in| their struggles is due in principal measure to the present limited circulation of the Daily Worker. It must double, triple and gain circulation in the hundreds of thousands. If | every Party member and | sympathizer gets one new | D: reader, we will have more than 20,000 new readers by is absolutely intellectual thizer in the obvious. We but 50,000! brood. It is every day, tential Heights Section, Wednesday, July 16, at 10.30 a.m September First!” BILL DUNNE now!"? SEYMOUR Dunne, Waldman, Young Urge Drive Action! “That the Daily Worker for every worker, farmer, war and fascism and for a Soviet America, is quite not 70,000 more readers question is not whether, but when, we shall get the | 20,000 to 50,000 new read- ers, for we are literally in a race against the fascist | and the tempo increases | | Each new reader is a po- fighter 5. All readers of the ly Worker must consi- der themselves subscription | shock troopers — right) i __} “The police in many cities indispensable | £¢t their assignments from the Daily Worker. For many a sergeant and sympa-| pores over the columns of this paper to determine where his trusty clubmen are ‘needed most in the battle against the working class, Carefully, very carefully indeed, the capi- talist government of the United States scans this paper every day. Why? Simply because they know full well that the Dally Worker leads the fight of the workers—against every move by the capitalist hour. | government and its indus- | tral top dogs. Workers our |and farmers throughout the country and all their friends must also appre- ciate this signifleance, and we shall gain our 20,000 | new readers.” WALDMAN. | MARGUERITE YOUNG. fight against must have, The crucial ‘a real fight | every | tions to organize and join mass protest demonstrations in every city. against the use of federal) | troops, militia and police violence | . | against the strikers. We call upon | our members to establish picket | lines at every employment office | that attempts to recruit scabs. We | especially direct ourselves to assum- | ing prompt, adequate relief from the responsible agencies, for all} strikers. | “The splendid suport thus far | given by the unemployed in this | great struggle, and in all other | strikes of which this one is a part. | must and will be duplicated and | multiplied. The National Unem- | ployment Council is proud of the | role that the organized unenfployed | have played in preventing the use of unemployed as strike-breakers. We pledge the multiplied efforts of | the hundreds of thousands of Un- employed Council members through- out the country in the active fight against the common enemies of all | workers. | “Forward in the fight for the right to live! “On with the fight for security | | through énactment of the workers | Unemployment and Social Insur- | | ance Bill!” Anti-War Meet In Rockaway ROCKAWAY PARK, L. I.—The} | Rockaway Branch of the American | League Against War and Fascism | has called a unity meeting to plan | action for a demonstration against | War for Wednesday, 8 p.m., at the | Men’s Club, Beach 68th St. and | Rockaway Blvd., Arverne. Fraternal | organizations and clubs are urged | to send delegates Union. These workers in such shops |@7eered when their relief checks as the A. M. Byers Pipe campeny, | had been delayed, massed before the Spang Chalfant Pipe Company, the | if Aehy office mid 13. Just a6-the National Electric Company, the |™eeting was about to begin, an Central Tube Company, the Amer- A Rae we ee oa ican Bridge Company have shown | sf highs their determination to send dele- ES geet rhe Bos gates to this convention, in spite | pay ini i y | Day, Communist candidate for Con< of the brutal police terror. They | gress, was held in the same place; = er part 0} ie day, a to the National Office of the Stecl | men hese paid. walch and Metal Workers Industrial! There are about 2.200 relief Union, 929 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh./ workers on all the projects here | Single men and women get nothings All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Foed—Proletarian Prices—50 KE. 18th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER — Spend Your Vacation in a Proletarian Camp — CAMP KINDERLAND HOPEWELL JUNCTION NEW For Adults and Children Vacation Rates for Adults $14.00 per Week (Tax Included) YORK For Children of I.W.O. Schools and Members of the I.W.O. $16.00 for 2 Wks.—5 Wks. $52.50—10 Wks. $105.00 : For Others Additional $2.00 per Week For children over 12 years an additional dollar per week Cars Leave for Camp Daily at 10:30 A. M.; Friday and Saturday 10:30 A. M., 3 P. M. and 7 P. M., from 2700 Bronx Park East. Register Your Child and Spend Your Own Vacation in| CAMP KINDERLAND