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a urged the workers to support it. Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDN Terror Still Rages on Coast in Wake of Broken Strike Betrayal Guilt Southern White Woman Pleads ExSocialists Give Reasons) For Resigning| | Wicks and Péesh Assert Rests on A FL Top Leaders Workers Ready to Fight While Chiefs Planned Betrayal C.P. GAVE WARNING Socialist Party Partner Through Endorsement of A.F.L. Policies SAN FRANCISCO, J While the longshore by Harry Bridges and o tant left- continue to resist. effc N. R. A. and reaction: ads to arbi- trate their st their de- mands out of exister mediators and A. F. of were tightening the ring which led to the calling off of the general strike and by which they are try- ing to force the longshoremen to return to work defeated More than 500 Communists and other militant workers who played | a leading role in the general strike Police, are in jail, and the local thug and troop terror has not yet abated. The press continues to call for the blood of the workers’ leaders. Why Was Strike Called Off? The question almost every worker is asking himself today is: “Why w the San» Francisco general strike called off so quickly?” Was it because the workers had not responded to the general strike call? Of course not. The mass re- sponse to the general strike was the greatest and most enthusiastic ever seen in any strike. This is ad- mitted by friend and foe alike. Was the general strike called off because the workers refused to fight? This, too, is untrue. The glory of the San Francisco general strike lies precisely in the unsur- passed self-sacrifice and deter- mination of the workers to carry on the struggle in the face of the civil war declared upon them by the bosses and the gove-nment, and in spite of the murder, shooting and gassing of workers by the armed forces of the capitalists. The workers were well aware of what they would be faced with in the general strike. They decided the same sacrifice was necessary to gain victory in the marine strike. A. F. of L. Top Leaders Guilty Then who called off the general strike, and w y? Not the workers, but the strike-breaking American Federation of Labor top leaders. The calling off of the strike was a deliberate betrayal. This treach- ery was pre-arranged and planned | by the Vandeleurs and the other| misleaders. It was as much as ad- mitted the other day by Joseph P. Ryan, president of the Interna- tional Longshoremen’s Association, in his report to the Central Trades and Labor Council of Greater New York. What the bosses and government could not do with bullets, gas/| bombs and jails, they accomplished through the so-called labor lead- ers. C. P. Exposes Treachery This is why the Communist Party ‘wages so uncompromising a strug- | gle against these treacherous lead- | ers. Not to do this, as experience has shown, actually means to per- | mit the capitalist enemy to de-| moralize the workers from within | and to render them helpless be-| of their power by placing the lead- | ership in the hands of militant and | honest fighters of the workers them- | selves, means predetermined defeat | no matter how militantly the work- | ers fight and how much they sacri- | fice in the struggle. | The leaders of the Socialist Party and the A. F. of L. say that by do- ing this the Communist Party is! sowing discord and creating divi- | sions in the workers’ ranks. To fight | the betrayers of labor is not divid- ing the workers. It is only dividing the workers from the capitalist agents in their own ranks, and unit- ing them to defeat the bosses and | assure their victory. Role of the Socialist Party However, the imperative necessity of uncompromising struggle against the labor lieutenants of the capi- | talist class is not only confined to| the leaders of the A. F. of L. When the Socialist Party at its recent De- For Loans to Herndon Bail Fund $15,000 Drive Is Fight For His Life, S Grace Lumpkin ays EDITOR’S NOTE: Grace Lump- kin is a white Southern woman who has had first hand know!- edge of th ious oppression of Negroes b; he Southern white ruling class. She knows what it means for a militant Negro worker to be in the hands of the South- ern jailers. She appeals to YOU to rescue Angelo Herndon. Only eight days are left in which to raise the bail for Herndon. Un- less $15,000 in loans of cash and Liberty bonds is raised by Au- gust 3, this heroie young Negro erganizer will be sent to certain death on the Georgia chain gang. Rush loans of cash and Liberty bonds to the International Labor Defence, 80 East llth Street. Re- turn of these loans is guaranteed by a committee of Corliss Lamont, Robert W. Dunne and Anna Damon. By GRACE LUMPKIN Author of “To Make My Bread” At some time during my education in public schools I was taught a poem with| these lines in it: “Stone walls do not a prison make, nor iron bars a cage.” I suppose this poem indi- cated that if a person had a soul which was big enough it could re- main free and happy while the body was persistently subjected to all the deteriorating effects of close con- finement, monotonous or bad food. insects and vermin, and the “spirit” to loneliness, indignity and misery. This is a beautiful sentiment, but I have never heard of a man or| woman who has asked to be put into jail in order to prove it. However, I know many who have consciously risked a jail sentence, | even death, for a principle, a be- lief. Recently Ighave been corre- sponding with one of these. He is Angelo Herndon, a young Negro who risked his life to obtain unem- ployment relief for the poor Ne- groes and whites of Atlanta, Georgia. He is in Fulton Tower Prison, with a sentence of 20 years hanging over him. He has been there 22 months, suffering indigni- ties, privation and loneliness. The | iron bars and the stones are there, and they make a prison. It is hard in a few brief words to tell what a Southern prison is like, especially for a Negro. It is| not only the confinement. The Scottsboro boys are in a more modern building than Angelo Hern- don ,but, like him, they have been subjected to the grossest brutalities. John Howard Lawson, recently re- turned from a visit to both Her: don and the Scottsboro boys, has | reported the cruelties practiced on | these prisoners. Angelo Herndon, confined in the jail at Atlanta, writes of this treat- ment. But he also writes with pleasure about the release of other | workers, and with concern about those who are still in prison. this sense, he goes beyond the bounds of his prison—that he is not concerned wholly with himself, but is continually thinking of others, | fore its onslaught. Not to drive out|in this country, in Germany, in| these fake leaders, not to strip them | other places, who have risked their | lives or their freedom just as he! did. ay oie Herndon Affair Tonight NEW YORK.—An affair to help | raise funds for the Herndon bail will be held tonight, July 25, at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th | St., under the auspices of the Tom Mooney Branch of the International Labor Defense. Milton Herndon, brother of An- gelo Herndon, Joseph Tauber, I. L. D. attorney, and Joe Gilbert will speak briefly on the fight for the freedom of Herndon, Ernst Thael- mann and the Scottsboro boys. An excellent program will be fur- nished by the Workers Laboratory Theatre, the cast of Stevedore, and members of the National Negro Theatre. troit convention unanimously en- dorsed the policies of the A. F. of | L,, they became partners to this | great betrayal. | When A. J. Muste and the Ameri- | can Workers Party advise the work- | ers to “let the leaders expose them- | selves” it actually means that the workers must not resist the be- trayals of their strikebreaking’ lead- ers. The misleaders of labor of the A. F. of L. and the Socialist Party are precisely the instruments upon whom capitalism leans for mass support and the establishment of its mass base, without which its rule would be impossible. It would have been impossible for the Roosevelt government to carry through the N.R.A. without the sup- port of the A. F. of L. It was the A. F. of L, leaders who tried to con - vince the American workers that the NRA. gives them the legal right to organize, that the govern- ment is now “on the side of the people” and that they should, there- fore, support it. It was the Social- ist Party which told the workers that the N.R.A. is a “step to cialism” and that it 'T HAS even become the custom of the capitalist press to remark, albeit grudgingly, upon the assi- duous activity of the German Com=+ munist Party. In the face of a government of murderers, morons and maniacs, whose like has rarely been visited on history, speeches are made in public places, leaflets and pam- phlets are circulated, Hitler’s deeds exposed one after the other. Hit- ler himself was forced to admit in his latest castings to the Reich- Stag that despite all his terror Com- munist activity in Germany has not been stifled. 3 he Spasms and labors of the po- lice have not been able to sup- press illegal sports literature. Daily the police add to their spies, but daily the papers continue to be pub- lished—and go into numerous edi- tions. Hardly a district which does e capitalism.” this, it | The uncompromising _ struggle ee. the misleaders of labor is | * of first importance. With out eliminating th leaders the _ workers will be betrayed in.all their struggles. not have its own newspaper. When the editors are caught—others im- mediately take their places! In Berlin, Middle Germany and South Germany, papers have been issued for a long and sustained period. The last issue of the “Red Sport,” published in Berlin, contains | ten pages. The latest publication In| Chicago Police Ordered J CHICAGO, Ul, ism on feeling is being stirred up,” parade on July 29 smashed. The parad attacks against bathers. Jim-Crow rules. he Dail, report reads as follows “July 20. Report that tense rai Twenty-ninth. Parade to beach to issued.” Worker is in possession of a report of captains of police in the office of the chief of uniform Districts Number 6, 7, 10, 35, 38, 40 and 41. to hold a few men in reserve on Sundays. to Attack | Yegro and White Parade Sunday All South Side police captains have ed to mobilize their uniformed men in defense of Jim- the beaches next Sunday. ” police officials have ordered the Using the stale alibi that , called by the Youth Section of the League of Strug- gle for Negro Rights and the Young Communist League is part of a city-wide campaign against segregation of Negroes on the beach. The only feeling that has been stirred up by beach parties of Negro and white in the last few weeks was that created by police At no time has any serious trouble between white and Negro workers been threatened because of violation of a meeting of police, The cial feeling is being stirred up in Captains are ordered Men to be ready on the |} be broken up. No permit to be Gov. Olson Acts to Declare | Martial Law in Minneapolis (Continued from Page 1) employment Council, which have always been in the forefront in all struggles of the unemployed and relief workers. Yesterday's strike | resulted from these activities and| from, the call of Local 574 for al ke of all drivers supplying relief | isregarding the long record of| the Unemployment Councils and the | United Relief Workers Association | as the most effective fighters for the needs of the jobless and also as| loyal energetic supporters of the} striking truckmen both in the May | strike and at the present time, the Trotskyite leadership is attempting | to split the ranks of the relief work- | ers by creating a new organization. The fighting prestige of the truck- men is being used to conceal the| splitting tactics of the Trotskyite leadership. | Representatives of the United | Relief Workers Association were | yesterday ejected from a small meeting of N. R. A. workers that was packed with Trotskyites, and was held in the headquarters of Local 574. The Unemployment Councils and | the Relief Workers Association ar striving by all means to prevent the carrying through of such disastrous splitting tactics. The meetings called last night decided to send a dele- gation from the councils and the Association to all meetings called by the Trotskyite Minneapolis Cen- tral Council of Workers demand-} ing a halt to all efforts to split the E. R. A. workers, insisting on united action, one set of demands and a common series of actions to win these demands. Such action, the} E. R. A. workers present declared, | | was necessary both in their own | fight and in their solidarity with the striking truckmen. + eae | (Special to the Daily Worker) Mayor and Police in Provocation | MINNEAPOLIS, July 24.—Mayor | Bainbridge and Police Chief Jo- | hannes are pursuing the most pro- | vocative tactics as the strike of the | Minneapolis truck drivers enters its second week. Despite the state- ments of Local 754 that deliveries to hospitals and other such urgent deliveries would not be interfered with, Police Chief Johannes is pro- viding huge convoys of police, ac- companied by a fanfare -of publicity on all such trucks, | Yesterday some 30-odd trucks were moved under police convoy. Today the same tactics are followed. One truck-load supplied to General Hospital was accompanied by some sixty police, armed with shot guns and rifles. Clearly at the behest of the| union - busting Citizens Alliance, | Bainbridge and Johannes are try- ; ing to provoke a repetition of last Fridays murderous assault. While | these tactics are followed by city | officials, Federal mediators are try- ing with the help of Governor! is “The West German Worker,” the first issue of which contains six multigraphed pages. In Berlin, every three weeks, material for functionaries is pub- lished, giving instructions for work, Nine such papers appeared in the first four months of 1934, Regularly, long political directives are published for organizing edu- cational courses for all members. Such themes as the following are treated in the latest one: “Capi- talism, War and Crisis” —“fas- cism, Democracy”—“The Revolu- tionary Way Out”—“What Must Be Done At Present?” In addition to all this, units and clubs publish their own little sheets, though not regularly, To counter this, to keep the athletes of the working class from joining the secret organizations, the Nazis are making desperate at- tempts to popularize their own mili- tarized sports clubs. Their latest act, furthermore, has been to put Herbert Hocher, one of the stars of the capitalist track, into the lead- ership of the Gestapo—the Secret Police. * . . 'HAELMANN, however, still re- mains in prison—a victim at | Johannes and Mayor Bainbridge, Dern Urges As War Plan Olson to force arbitration. New set-in air preparedness, COMMENTS ON SPORTS » tlement proposals are in the hands of the union and the bosses, with no statement yet as to contents or as to action of parties concerned. | Olson, however, threatens that if the proposals are rejected, martial | law will be declared. ea, Laundry Workers Strike (Special to the Daily Worker) MINNEAPOLIS, July 24.—After several weeks of fruitless negotia-| tions with the laundry owners in} an effort to settle their own griev- ances, Local 18005 of the Laundry | Workers and Dry Cleaners Union| struck this morning. Together with | their own demands, the workers in| the local declared their solidarity | with the striking truckmen and de- manded the removal of Police Chief | The strike resolution declared: | “Not a wheel shall be turned, not | a shirt ironed, not a garment | cleaned” until these demands are achieved. | The strike action was voted in| direct defiance of William Green, president of the A. F. of L,, who! wired that the charter would be revoked if a sympathetic action was voted. After the wire was read, the workers voted to strike. There are about 3,400 laundry workers and cleaners in the city with about 2,000 in the union. The Business Agent of the Laun- dry Workers local, declaring that all plants had been closed, today solicited the aid of the Unemploy- ment Councils in maintaining | picket lines at all establishments. | The action of the laundry workers, | however, does not represent a gen- eral policy of the local A. F. of L. leadership, which is trying to pre-| vent the growing solidarity. strike actions of other unions with the striking truckmen, More Planes. WASHINGTON, July 23. — Pres- ident Roosevelt will take early ac- tion on the recommendations for a greater air force made by the New- ton D. Baker special army aviation board, it was announced at the White House today after publica- tion of the report by the board, Secretary of War George H. Dern, who is now in Panama, expressed his approval of the board’s recom- mendations in a letter to Baker. While at the same time admitting that an “air invasion of the United States is a visonary conception,” the board recommended an expansion of the army air corps to 2,320 air- planes, which would put the United States far above any other nation | the state convention held in New any moment to the fascist hang- man, The International Sports Congress Against War and Fas- cism, to be held in Paris, Aug. 11 to 15, will raise a resounding voice for his release. In Saare- bruck, 6,000 workers, the other day assembled to watch the swimming preliminaries of that district for the International meet, demon- strated on this demand. The swimmers sang it in a choir. It is a demand that has been raised GAINST War and Fascism is also the slogan of the track and field meet, under the auspices of the Labor Sports Union, which will be staged by the International Work- ers Order on Sunday, Aug. 5, at 1 Be at Rice Stadium, Pelham Bay ark. This meet takes place during the week when world-wide demonstra- tions will be held against the twin devils, The I. W. O, asks all work- ers’ organizations to participate in this meet to voice their feelings against imperialist butchery, There will be ten events for men, seven for women and six for juniors. En- tries should be in before July 28th at the I, W. O. office, 80 Fifth Ave. Reactoinary Policy Forced Them Out NEW YORK.—In a statement to} the Daily Worker denouncing So- | cialist leadership for its refusal to} jfight the “New Deal,” for its sup- pression of revolutionary rank and | file activity, and for its sabotage | of Communist united front propo- sals, | explained today why they left the | | Massachusetts Socialist Party | join the Communist Party. Wicks, | who like Bush was a leading So-| cialist until recently, is now run-| ning for Senator on the Communist | | ticket. Paul Wicks and Carroll Bush to Wicks and Bush left the Social- ist Party after fighting within its ranks for more than a year to bring | about united front activity Communists on various issues. | with Leaders Completely Exposed | Their statement declared: “Our recent resignation from the Socialist Party was the result of the party’s leadership com- pletely exposing themselves at Bedford, Mass. We came to the | realization that no honest and | sincere worker who was aware of this demagogy could remain within the ranks of the Socialist Party. This action came on top of the recent national convention where the so-called ‘left-wing,’ led by Norman Thomas and Dan Hoan, secured the adoption of a resolution calling upon the So- cialist Party to take power if the capitalist system should break down, and also several other ‘ifs’ were placed in this resolution. Imagine a party having to prom- ise that if the capitalists should give up the ship of state that they (Socialist Party) would then take it over and establish Socialism. This was supposed to be a very militant stand, but Rev. Norman Thomas and Dan Hoan are per- fectly safe in being in accord with this stand. It does not cost them anything because such a state of affairs which presupposes this action is beyond the realm of possibility. “With the coming of the new deal our eyes were opened to the misleadership of the Socialist Party, Thomas, hailing the new dealas‘a step toward Socialism,’ and the favorable attitude taken by our state leaders brought forc- ibly to our attention that these leaders were following the foot- steps of Ramsay MacDonald and Otto Wels. In a letter to Com- rade Wicks concerning the N. RB. A, Alfred Baker Lewis, State Secretary of the Massachusetts Socialist Party, made the follow- ing statement: SOCIALIST HEAD BACKS N.R.A “‘T would also like to get clearly from you just what you mean by being opposed to the N. I. R. A. . «« It has resulted in reducing the hours of labor and increased wages for some people. It seems to me that our attitude toward that should be the same as our attitude toward other reforms; namely, we should welcome them as a step and criticize them as being only a step in the right di- rection. . . . But in all this I see no special attack on nor any special necessity for attacking the N, I. R, A. any more than in the sense in which we attack any other capitalist reform, namely, that it does not go far enough.’ “What putrid facts to give to workers suffering from cuts in wages under the N. R. A, ‘A step in the right direction,’ says Lewis, showing himself as follow- ing the footsteps of Noske, Scheideman and other prominent Social-Fascists, “The Socialist Party leaders ab- solutely sabotaged the united front proposals of the Communist Party, afraid that the rank and file of the party would become in- fected with the revolutionary fer- vor of the Communists, Revolu- tionary fervor is not encouraged in the Socialist Party; if it were, the misleaders would be thrown out. “We appeal to our friends in the Socialist Party, and among William Fuchs The entry blank says nothing about freeing Thaelmann, and that slogan surely must be raised at every anti-war and anti-fas- cist demonstration. It must be raised at this gne! Pee wi HE American delegation to the International meet is sched- uled to leave on the midnight of Aug. 1. “But,” appeals Comrade Rich- ard Heikkinen, National Secretary of the Labor Sports Union, “money is needed to complete the delegation.” Comrade Heikkinen himself will be unable to lead the athletes un- less a fund is immediately raised for his expenses, Through this space, therefore, the L, S. U. appeals for funds. All workers and members of youth and sports clubs are urged to con- tribute. Send whatever you can to the Labor Sports Union, 114 W. 14th St., New York City, Or send the money to this col- umn and it will be turned over to the L. 8. U. The first doliar has already been contributed by Comrade Si Ger- ESDAY, JULY 25, 1934 | “But we're doing all we can!” LL.D. Seores Terror Raids In California Demands End of Civil Rights Violation By State NEW YORK.—Branding the ac- tions of San Francisco courts as open fascist terror, the Interna- tional Labor Defense yesterday wired the following sharp protests to Judge Steiger of San Francisco and Governor Merriam of Cali- fornia: “International Labor Defense protests your summary trials, sentences hundreds, application one thousand dollar yagrancy bail against members our organization, leaders Marine Workers Indus- trial Union and Communist Party. Two hundred thousand members and affiliates International La- bor defense brand your actions Fascist terror with main crushing legal Communist Party and, demand immediate release all imprisoned on own recogni- zance, Open jury trials all ar- rested.” The International Labor Defense | also sent the following wire to Gov- ernor Merriam: “International Labor Defense | protests continued Fascist terror your state. Demand end of vigi- | lante raids on Communist Party. | Protest use of relief records for persecuting unemployed. Protest attempt to further red scare by invention ridiculous former police records. Two hundred thousand | workers and affiliates our organi- | zation, demand end to violation | elementary civil rights. Demand open jury trials for all held. De- mand stop deportation drive es- pecially directed against Commu- nist Party.” the workers, to consider the fol- lowing; that while the Thomases and Lewises were hailing the N. R| A. ‘as a step in the right direc- tion,’ the Communist Party cor- rectly pointed out the class char- acter of these proposals and with the determination that only a Bolshevik Party can have, was organizing the workers and lead- ing them in their struggles for better conditions, Leading the struggles of the share croppers of the South, the miners of New Mexico and the workers of the East, struggles in which the workers were faced with open fascist terror—but a Party en- riched by the teachings of Marx, Lenin and Stalin, and, guided by them, can follow only one line, ‘On with the struggle!’ We ap- peal to you to be honest with yourselves and join the Commu- nist Party, enter the struggle for Soviet America!” | ‘ain York City delegation at 186 South Jobless Rush ‘Plan for Visit To Legislature | Working Class Groups Are Urged to Elect Delegates Now | NEW YORK.—In an appeal ad- dressed to all working class organi- |zations, the United Action Confer- | }ence on Work, Relief and Unem- ployment -asked for the election of delegates to a mass delegation of | 1,000 which will present the de- |mands of the unemployed workers, |the poor farmers and veterans to Gov. Lehman, demanding their im- mediate adoption by the present special session of the state legisla- ture, | | Al dolegates’ names and addresses | should be sent to the Committee Offices at 29 E. 20th St., New York City. Delegates for upstate cities and towns will meet with the New Pearl St., Albany, July 31, at 8:30 am. after their arrival. Upstate delegates should send names and addresses of delegates to the Al- bany County Relief Workers Union. | The United Action Committee is setting its objective for the mobi- lizing of 1,000 delegates from the state representing employed and | unemployed workers, workers in the trade unions, veterans, farmers and |small home owners organizations. The committee, citing the refusal of Gov. Lehman to include any work- ing class legislation in the special session of the state legislature, has | put forward the following demands: 1—Enactment of the Workers | Unemployment Insurance Bill by | the state. | 2—Enactment of the Workers | and Farmers Bill Against Evic- tions and Foreclosures. (This bill provides for the suspension of all evictions and for a moratorium | on mortgages, interest, taxes and assessments for the duration of the crisis). 3.—Cancelling of the New York City Bankers Agreement and sus- pension of all payments on the city debt service. 4.—Taxes on the corporations and utility trusts, on inheritances | and large fortunes, and an up- | ward graduated tax on all in- comes in excess of $5,000 a year for the raising of relief money. In no case shall any taxes be im- posed on the workers and farmers. All working class organizations are asked to elect delegates on the basis of one from each local and two from each city or central body. (Negro Worker Not a Suicide, | Group Claims | Investigation Made By LL.D. and L.S.N.R. in | Buffalo Case BUFFALO, N. Y., July 24—Evi- | dence that Earl Wilson, 27-year old | Negro dock worker whom police say they found hanging in his cell dead on July 12, did not commit suicide | but was murdered by police, has been uncovered by an investigation | made by the International Labor Defense and the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. Wilson had been arrested without a warrant on a charge of second dszree assault. The medical exam- iner had pronounced his death as suicide. The workers’ committee, however, found that Wilson had been severely beaten by police after | his arrest, and that though Wilson wes found with a leather belt around his neck, he was known to have always worn suspenders. No marks of any kind were found on his neck. ‘The committee forced the District Attorney to agree to an autopsy by a doctor chosen by it, which re- vealed that Wilson had died of a broken neck. No proof of suicide was given. The I. L. D. and the L. 8. N. R, are trying to find three prisoners who were near Wilson's sell when he died, and who had been forced to sign statements whitewashing the acts of the police. Food Prices ToRise In Drought Crisis (Continued from Page 1) 000 head, according to Secretary Wallace’s report, at an average price to the government of $3 a head. To most impoverished farm- ers these funds have been of no assistance, since the Government turns them over to whatever creditors have mortgages or liens on the farmers property. Communist Party Bill With grain speculators, rich farm- ers with stored supplies, and food and milk monopolies in the cities preparing to rake in tremendous profits on rising prices, the Govern- ment stubbornly refuses to grant any of the basic demands of the impoverished, drought-stricken farmers embodied in the Farmers Emergency Relief Bill proposed by the Communist Party. These demands are for cagh relief, distribution of fodder at government expense, cancellation of lien debts, moving and protec- tion of herds of all farmers at government expense, and im- mediate organization of food and water distribution for all stricken families. The spread of the “Daily” to the mass of workers is a pre- requisite to their successful struggles. Classified TRUCKS FOR HIRE for Pienles, Out- ings. Reasonable. Brownies Delivery Ser= vice, 34 West 2Ist St. NEEDLE WORKERS PATRONIZE SILVER FOX CAFETERIA and BAR 326-7th Avente Between 26th and 29th Streets Food Workers Industrial Union N. ¥. U, Comrades Patronize VIOLET CAFETERIA 28-30 WAVERLY PLACE New York City QUALITY BAKING CO. 44-19 Broadway, Astoria, L. I. J. and Z, DEMIRSIAN, Props, Oriental Famous Shashlik Bread delivered at all Picnies within a day's notice All Comrades Meet at the Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA FE. 13th St.—WORKERS' CENTER: SUNDAY, JULY 29th From 10 A. M. to Midnight Sports Program Extended son, Save Angelo Herndon -- Raise Money -- Attend PICNIC International Labor Defense — New York District — Camp NITGEDAIGET BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, NEW YORK IS PLANNING A GRAND VACATION FOR YOU! Theatre THURSDAY: Special Midweek-Concert by Pierre Degeyeter Trio. Return Performance (by special request) of SCOXTSBORO by Theatre Brigade. — Excursion to other Music: workers’ camps. FRIDAY: Gala Campfire—You'll like the camp paper, the play, chorus, etc, SATURDAY: See the RED DANCERS in an interesting repertoire. ————and WE ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE A SUNDAY LECTURE BY EARL BROWDER General Secretary of the Communist Party Rates: $14 a week. Cars leave from 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 A.M. On Fridays and Saturdays at 10, 3 and 7 P. M.—Estabrook 8-1400. Dancing — Games Concert — Refreshments Admisnion 25c Workers School (Dir.: Edith Segal.)