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ep ei iM | | Many Mass ; Actions to Precede August “Red Days is Are Set for Week-End Party Sections Seek to Win S. P. Members for United Struggle NEW YORK.—All sections of the New York district Communist Party are pushing ahead their final pre- parations for the giant demonstra- tion on August First, International day of struggle agai war and fascism. The preparatory activities are marked b: neighborhood parades and demonstrations, shop gate meet- ings and demonstrations, Red Days for which the entire membership is | ing mobilized for house to house canvassing with the special Anti- War edition of the Daily Worker. One of the most important fea- tures of the August First prepara- tions this year is the organization by the Party Sections of anti-war actions at the docks, etc., directed against the shipment of materials All sections of the Party in the New York district are also direct- ing their efforts at winning the so- cialist workers and adherents to the united front of struggle against the growing menace of fascism and danger of war. All sections are seriding delegations and developing a drive to convince the socialist workers of the extreme urgency of one united demonstration on this August First. The City Committee of the So- cialist Party has not yet replied to the second communication of the Communist Party proposing immediate discussion of the prob- lem of how to effect one united front of struggle against war and fascism, and for defense of the rights and living standards of the masses, Some of the preparatory actions for August First are the following: Downtown—Special demonstra- tion on the waterfront, Friday, July 27th. Begins at 10 a. m. at Whitehall and South Sts. march to 18th St. and llth Ave. There will be joined by the midtown waterfront section for a United Mass Anti-War Demonstration. Saturday July 28th: Anti-Fas- cist, Anti-War March beginning at Union Square, 7:30 p. m., to Rutgers Sq., through the East Side streets. Saturday and Sunday the 28th and 29th are Red Days for the Downtown Section. All members will gather at their headquarters for mass canvassing with the Special Anti-War Edition of the Daily Worker. Crewn Heights: July 26, 27 and 28, Open Air Meetings! July 30th: Torch Light Parade and Demonstration at 7 p. m. Beginning at Fulton and Lewis Sts. ¥. C. L, and Progressive Youth Club street run, Friday the 21th. Section-wide Red Sunday for mass distribution of the Daily ELECTROLYSIS SUPERFLUOUS HAIR ON FACE PERMANENTLY REMOVED Results Guaranteed — Personal Service MY METHOD ENDORSED BY PHYSICIANS PROMINENT Will give treatments to unemployed free every Friday from One to Four “ 1T1W.7ist St.at B'way C,H. Landis prone: Endicott 2-9150 TYPEWRITERS NEW and REBUILT. GUARANTEED, LOWEST PRICES, QUICKEST SERVICE, SOLD— RENTED Underwoods, Remingtons, Royals, L. C. Smiths and all other makes sold, rented, bought, repaired, exchanged. Rebuilt and refinished. Guaranteed for one year, the same as new machines. Also Russian and Yiddish machines. J. E. ALBRIGHT & CO. N.Y.C, Bet 12 & 13 Sts. ALgonquin 4-4828 825 Broadwa Established 1896 MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Prices SOL’S SANDWICH LUNCH 101 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9781 — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Chinese Dishes __ American Dishes 848 Broadway bet. 13th & 11th st. Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGAT WHERE Our Comrades EAT RAPOPORT'’S DAIRY and VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 93 Second Ave. N. Y. City war | _# DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1984 1 Anti-War Rally ie at Board Aids Company) Union Move By GEORGE GILL PITTSBURGH, Pa., July 25.— Although the workers in the Cru- cible Steel Company in Harrison, | N. J. voted down the company union plan, on June 22, by a vote of 750 to 335, the National Steel Labor Relations Board works hand in hand with the steel company to tie the workers to the company union. Today, the National Office of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, received an answer to their letter demanding that no new elec- tions be held, and that the vote of the workers against the company uinon stand. | James Egan, National Secretary of the Steel and Metal Workers In- dustrial Union, immediately sent | the following reply: “The only interpretation of the position of the National Steel Labor Relations Board, as put forward in your letter, can be that you are in agreement with the company in laying the basis for putting over another election upon the workers. “Our position is that in the Crucible Steel Company, in Har- rison, N. J., the question of com- pany unionism has been deci- stvely decided upon by the work- ers, and has been rejected, and the workers are now free to organize their own bona fide trade union of their own choice, without coercion or intimidation by the company. And any action of the National Steel Labor Rela- tions Board in aiding or abetting the company in carrying through its plan, for another election, is in direct violation of the rights and interests of the workers, Worker and Negro Liberator July 29h, 1@ a. m., from 134 Tompkins Ave. and 16 Utica Ave. On Thurs- day the 26th, Anti-War Parade of the I. W. O. branches in the ter- ritory. The Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League will demonstrate Saturday, on the anniversary of the murder by U. S. troops of Hushka and Carlson during the Bonus March. The Associated Workers Clubs have called on all their affiliated organizations to hold outdoor meet- ings in their neighborhoods, and to concentrate their efforts on the sale of the special Daily Worker edition as well as literature dealing with the war danger and struggle against war. All club members are requested to report to their respective club headquarters for Red Week End on the 28th and 29th. The New York City Central Com- mittee of the American League Against War and Fascism has ar- | ranged a mass march and demon- stration on August Fourth, the Twentieth Anniversary of the out- break of the World War. The dem- onstration will gather at Columbus Circle, 1 p. m., and march down | Eighth Ave. to Madison Square Park, |N.R.A. Code Will Draw Fire at Metal Confab In Chicago, Sunday | CHICAGO, July 24.—Workers in every important metal shop in Chicago will be represented at a united conference called fon July | 29 by the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, Chicago District, j to mobilize the forces of the work- lers to fight against the metal in- | dustry code. Besides the District Board, locals | of the S. M, W. I. U. in 12 plants, and organizational committees in 15 others signed the call to the conference. Among the plant locals sgning were those in Internation | Harvester, Pettibone Mulliken, Wil- son and Bennett, McClintic Mar- jshall, Crane, and Reflector Hard- ware. Local 23 of the Mechanics Bduca- tional Society of America, has en- dorsed the move for unity and has j elected delegates. “Mathew Smith, MESA lender, is attempting to keep the workers divided. He recently made a vicious attack on the Communist Party and the S. M. W.I. U. ina meeting here. Smith also made an attempt to shift responsibility for the present condition of the work- ers from the backs of the Roosevelt administration and the capitalist class onto the working class. IMPARISON—The decadent Ro- mans were lovers of sports. One of their sports was to throw Chris- tians to lions. Another was to throw gladiates into a ring and force them to fight, to the death. Our capitalists are lovers of tropics) is to throw coins into shark-infested waters for native boys to dive after. Another is cock- roach rating, Another is racing cross-eyed dogs. Be there tomorrow and pretend I’m two sets behind.”—Sidney Wood, American member of the Davis Cup team. |. gockeetaen was present in a press agent's ted one day, jhaps better than any sports. One of their sports (in the | ETERMINATION—“I'm going out | | Thousands Still Needed* For Bail to Save Him | From Chain Gang EHIND the gray walls of! Fulton Tower prison in Atlanta, sits a young Negro} worker who symbolizes, per-! other | one person, the new spirit, the | leadership among the Negro | People. | This new spirit says openly to the white ruling class: } “Every human right, every privilege that is granted to others, we intend to have for ourselves. We will be satisfied with nothing | less. We will not beg and we will not cringe. We will organize to take what is ours. We know | that the cost of the struggle will be great—but we will not turn | aside for that.” What a contrast between this | new leadership, this working-class, uncompromising leaderership of the Negro people, with the servile lead- | ershiu of such an organization as | the National Association for the | Advancement of Colored People! | What a contrast was the militant fearless, self-defense of Angelo Herndon in the Georgia courtroom with the cringing, crawling attitude of the representatives of the N. A. A. C. P. in the case of George Crawford in Virginia. There the keynote was: “Proyoke the min- imum amount of resistance . . . keep the cooperation and good-will of the dominant majority.” By “dominant majority” the N, A. A. C. P. leaders meant, of course, the working class. Against this shameful sell-out, the language of Angelo Herndon in the lynch-ridden courtroom rings out true and clear: ‘You may do what you will with Angelo Herndon. You may in- dict him. You may put him in jail. But in his place there will arise thousands of Angelo Hern- dons to carry on the struggle for unity ef Negro and white workers and for the emancipation of the Negro people and the working- class.” This is the new spirit, the new Jeadership among the Negroes. This is the spirit of unity between white and Negro workers. Tt is this leadership that the Georgia lynchers would murder by 18 to 20 years of torture on the chain-gang. It is this leadership that the militant white and Negro workers must preserve, must save for the struggles ahead. But the chain-gang stares Herndon in the face. Only $2,800 has so far been raised. Fifteen thousand doilars is needed to get Herndon out of Fulton Tower Prison. Funds must be rushed to the office of the International Labor Defense at 80 East lth Street, New York. Their return to the sender after the bail has been released is guaranteed by a com- mittee consisting of Corliss Lam- ont, Robert W. Dunn and Anna Damon. If this money is not forth- coming by August 3, Herndon will go to the chain gang and to al- most certain death, ee ag Volunteers Needed Volunteers are urgently needed at the National Office of the In- ternational Labor Defense, Room 430, 80 East Eleventh Street, to help in the Scottsboro-Herndon Campaign. All those who can spare the time are asked to re- Port at once. Sunshine Biscuit Co. Refuses to Reinstate Ten Union Members NEW YORK—At a conference of the owners of the Sunshine Biscuit Co, and Conrad Kaye and Pedro Hartinez, organizers of the food Workers Industrial Union, and 10 workers who were fired by the com- pany for union activities, the bosses refused to reinstate the fired work- ers as the union demanded. The conference was held in the offices of the Regional Labor Board before Mr. Ben Golden, who Promised the union a decision on the matter by July 26. HERNDON BAIL L cash or Liberty bonds toward the releases the bail bond. Damon are trustees of the fund. OAN CERTIFICATE ped tee °y rs 4 eka adm soe tent The numbered certificate as shown, wiil be given to all who advance $15,000 Angelo Herndon bail fund, as guarantee that the contribution will be returned when the court Corliss Lamont, Robert W. Dunn and Anna eae Bury Cattle (Continued from Page 1) tatorship of Wall Street. It strikes in the grain regions of the Soviet Union, governed by the proletarian dictatorship, the gov- ernment of the workers and farmers. The capitalist government acts only to protect the profits of the few, big property owners, the cap- italists. The Soviet Government flings its | tremendous resources into COL- LECTIVE ACTION of the whole population into the breach and saves the crops and preserves the welfare of the farmers and the entire people. | Listen to the note of triumph | of E, Yevdonikov, Boisievik sec- | retary of the North Caucasian Re- gional Committee of the Commu- nist Party of the Soviet Union, in| his report to Stalin on the drought: | “The meance of the drought | was a serious trial for our Re- gional Party Committee We had a chance to test the stamina of | our collective farms in the | struggle for crops. There was no panic or the sligniest shade of downheartetiness. The drought has failed to wrest from us any considerable section of the region.” Pitted against the collective work of the Soviet farmers, led by the indomitable Bolsheviks, eyen the drought must lose its terrors, Continuing his report, the Bol- shevik leader of the farmers writes: “When, in the critical days of May, the Communist Party Com- mittee issued the call for watering the crops, in literally two days the entire population, from the young- est pioneers to the oldest men, were roused to action.” “The most incredible things were done in these two days. from collective farms miles distant. Pumps dams dykes and irrigation lines were bulit bringing the water to the stricken area.” “The engineers called the re- sults “perfectly stupendous,’ as ir- | rigation lines were built in three and four days when the en- gineers had declared that it would take weeks and eyen months to do the work.” “We have passed our trial with honor . . . we have fulfilled the sowing plan by May 9, and have sown over and above the plan 54,248 hectares . . .As a result of our work the authority of our Party in the broadest masses of the pea- santry is practically unlimited!” rae | neeiad with a calamity which fs impoverishing millions of small farmers, the Roosevelt government acts with criminal inadequacy in protecting the stricken families. Acting solely to protect profits and the property of the wealthier farmers and landlords, the Roose- velt government is incapable of properly organizing the tremendous resources of the country in. the in- terests of the majority of the stricken farmers, Ruthlessly defending profits and capitalist investments, and working Not relying on the Labor Board, the union is continuing the work of organizing workers in the plant. about five years ago, when Jack Johnson came in. He had received a ticket for a fight that night, and he wanted another. The press agent refused him. When Johnson per- | sisted, the press agent chased him. When the old champion had gone, I remonstrated. “Aw!” the press agent said. “Don’t let it worry you. He don't mean nothin’, He’s been: through for twenty years.” Oe EFLECTION—In the countries when horse racing is considered the sport of kings it is also the sport of—touts! ee gee 'ONNECTIONS—"The only reason |\ Dillinger was not a tool of theirs (the capitalist government) was |that he lacked the proper connec- to protect the rich from the bur- dens of the drought, the Roosevelt People brought water in pails | several | As As Farmers Starve Sak thd oe food or fodder to the suffering families and herds, Roosevelt can be energetic and efficient only in building battle- ships and poison gas in a two and a half billion dollar program. His capitalist loyalty to profit, his cap- italist defense of big capital for- ever doom him to futility and in- adequacy in defending the welfare of the majority of the population. A Soviet government of workers and farmers could immediately mobilize the resources of the coun- try for the struggle against the drought. Under such a government there would be ne question of defending Wall Street investments, big land- lords hoarding fodder, or encroach- ing on the private ands of wealthy landowners. All this would be swept aside in the drive to protect the majority farm population, the workers, the small and middle farmers. Now the fight must be for the enactment of the mersures em- | bodied in the Farmers Emergency Relief Bill proposed by the Com- munist Party. It provides for cash Yelief, for distribution of fodder and food. The mass of farmers have two enemies, the drought and Roosevelt. They must be fought together. Need Bigger Effort To Put Daily’ Over (Continued from Poge 1) mands had been met by the bosses ».. our Daily Worker! At the same time, our Party was | endeavoring to plan, organize and carry out the most intense circu- lation campaign in the history of our paper. All Districts, Sections }and Units, all mass and language | organizations, and all trade unions and fraternal organizations were marshalled into the drive for 20,000 new Daily Worker readers by Sep- |tember Ist—and 175,000 readers by | January 1st. | Results, however, during the fifth week of the drive show conclusively that our forces have not been prop- erly mobilized, have not been suffi- ciently trained and supervised, have not accepted this task in the spirit of Bolshevik determination to win! Only 19.6 per cent of our new reader quota has been secured after five weeks have passed. Subscrip- tions have fallen off steadily during this entire period, so that today the “Daily” has fewer subscribers than {t had when the drive first started. This has been true not just of segregated districts, but of all dis- tricts. While there must be no let- up in the development of a Red Builder organization to assure com- plete representation of the “Daily” on the streets and before factories, the Party membership at large must maintain and increase sub- scribers—the very backbone of our paper. One month remains in which we must reach 16,000 new readers with the “Daily!” government gives no cash relief, no |; COMMENTS ON SPORTS » tions.”—Sender Garlin. “Of course, I am for it,’” Tunney said in response to questions as to what he thought of the New Deal.” —The United Press. - 8 EGIMENTATION—“Many active cases of tuberculosis in the 20-30 age group (in America) are directly traceable to participation in strenu- cus, competitive, interscholastic sports . . . in high school days.”— Dr. R. H. McCutcheon, Medical Di- rector of the State Preventorium, Pa. “One hundred and fifty thousand young Russias paraded before Joseph Stalin and other Bolshevik Jeaders to celebrate the “Day of Physical Culture... .” “Today’s parade under the hot | Moscow sun was a pageant of youth Management, DAILY WORKER. William Fuchs Herndon Is Symbol ot New Fearless/Free Lynchers Negro Leader, Says Harry Haywood! Of Negro Boy ‘In Mississippi BOLTON, Miss., July 25.—Four white men who lynched a young Negro laborer, John Sanders, on the afternoon of July 16, were quickly exonerated and freed by Justice of the Peace Mason Bird- song, after having been placed un- der “technical arrest” by District Attorney Hugh Gillespie. The dis- trict attorney made no attempt to prosecute the lynch-murderers. Sanders’ body was riddled with bullets fired by C. D. Lancaster and John Lancaster, according to their own statement made in the nature of a boast rather than a confession. ‘The two men claim that, together with their kinsmen, Walter Lancaster and his son, they “rescued” the murdered worker from an armed mob and took him into the woods to “question” him concerning a letter allegedly writ- ten by Sanders to a Hinds County white girl. Sanders, they say, at- tempted to escape, and they shot him down, In exonerating the murderers, the local authorities upheld the chau- vinist principle, prevalent among the Southern white ruling class, that the Negro masses have no age that a white boss is bound to respect, and that any of the “best white people” can at any time undertake “punitive measures” against members of this oppressed nation, Dollfuss Is Killed In Nazi Uprising (Continued from Page 1) were released when the Heimwehr forces massed machine gunners around the Chancellory building and threatened to open fire. Preceding the violent clash be- tween the two murderous fascist groups in Austria, the Nazis, backed by German capitalism, and the Heimwehr, supported by Mussolini, the Dollfuss government had launched a terrorist drive against Socialists and Communists, arrested 1,500. One Socialist worker was hanged, the Dollfuss regime claim- ing he was working with the Nazis, No Action Taken Despite the threat to hang Nazis caught with dynamite, no action was taken ageinst them. All communication with the out- side world was cut off at the time the Heimwehr surrounded the Chancellory to rescue the captured Cabinet members. However, before that time the following incidents were reported. Early in the afternoon, 400 armed Nazis seized the Seventh District Barracks, commandeered trucks and machine guns, and swooped down on the Chancellory, overpowering the guards and imprisoning the oc- cupants. Working on a prearranged plan, they at the same time seized a radio station 10 miles out of Vienna, de- claring that Dollfuss had been de- posed. The Heimwehr is reported to have re-captured the radio station, with 10 killed in the fighting. Vienna was put under army rule, all important buildings being sur- rounded and mounted with machine guns. Foreign correspondents were not permitted to leave their quar- ters and were thus barred from con- firming most of the reports. Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. G After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR. 17-0135 —WILLIAM BELL————. orrictal Optometrist OF RE 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Aye. N. ¥. ©. MP ai ttc ee esas Cheba! Classified LARGE ROOM for 1-2, all improvements. Goffen, 317 E. 13th St., near 2nd Ave. WANT Native French—native Spanish comrade each one evening week. Advanced conversation, Small compensation. Write Box 11, e/o Daily Worker. LOST AND FOUND LOST license with two dollars, money but please return li » 610 E. 5th Bt. isi Keep Zelman, Upward Sub Trend Encouraging, But Quota Drive Weak LESS every Party member and reader of the, “Daily” goes to work immediately, the drive for 20,000 new readers by September 1 will be seriously handicapped. For the first time since June 19, the weekly subscription tables show a slight gain in regular subscribers, but this is practically erased by the losses still occurring among the Saturday subscribers. Districts 1 and 8 show the great- est gain in regular subscribers, with @ gain of 33 each for the past week, Districts 6, 20, 21, and 25 continue to show losses, For the Saturday subscribers, District 1 shows a gain of one lone reader. Districts 11, 22, 23 and 24 remained stationary and the re- mainder of the Districts incurred losses. Chicago dropped 149 Satur- day subscribers in the period. Subscriptions July 17-23 Increase Quota or Per Cent of Decrease of Quota New Since for the District Subs July 16 Week 1 Boston 260 a 110 2 New York 275 29 108 3 Philadelphia 400 3 4 Buffalo 5 nso 5 Pittsburgh 100 4 40 6 Cleveland 30 7 — 7 Detroit 300 eae) 8 Chicago 500 ei 9 Minneapolis 200 a 748 10 Omaha 7 — 8 — 11 N. Dakota 80 Ts 8.0 12 Seattle 150 ech a8 13 California 250 16 O65 14 Newark 200 5 a6 15 Connecticut 100 10 10.0 16 N. Carolina 50 ° ° 17 Birmingham = 75 — 1 — 18 Milwaukee 180 Cee 19 Denver 1% ae 20 Fort Worth ® = 1 — 21 St. Louis © — 2 = 22 W. Virginia 50 o o 23 Kentucky 50 0 0 24 Louisiana 50 0 ° 25 Florida 5 — 1 = 26 8. Dakota 50 0 ° 4,000 13.3 KKK Hoodlums Make! Night Raid on Finnish| School in Van _ Etten! VAN ETTEN, N. Y., July 25—Ku Klux Klan hoodiums broke into the Finnish Hall here late Monday night, broke doors and windows and chased fifty-four boy and girl stu- dents from their beds as a fulfill- ment of their threats of terroriza- tion against militant working class | organizations, The Finnish Hall is being used as { a summer training school for youth members of the Finnish Workers Federation. The students from eleven states are attending courses in sociology, economics and working class organization principles. The F.WF. is urging every work- ing class organization to send wires of protest immediately to Governor Lehman, Albany, N. Y., and to Mayor Westbrook, Van Etten, de- manding the arrest and punishment of those who participated in the raid on the school, PAINTERS’ FRACTION CALLED NEW YORK.—All party members of the Alteration Painters Union must attend a Fraction meeting on Thursday July 26 8 pm. at the Workers Center, bringing their books. The question of the coming general strike will be taken up. The spread of the “Daily” to the mass of workers is a pre- 3 GroupsVie For Control InCar Union Rank and File Opposes Company Union Clique and A. F. L. Heads By NAT GANLEY DETROIT, Mich.—The last meet- ing of the Hudson local of the United Automobile Workers Union (American Federation of Labor) tefiected the three-cornered fight now going on in the organization, The three forces contending for power are: 1. The Green-Collins A, F. of L. burocracy. 2. The Arthur Greer-Richard Byrd group which tends towards company unionism, 3. The rank and filers who stand for jone fighting industrial union in tha auto industry controlled by the members, Dillon, the right hand man of Collins, was present at the meeting, ‘+ He brought with him the president of the St. Louis A. F. of L. local to put up a fight for the removal of Richard Byrd from the Roosevelt Auto Labor Board. Byrd is the so-~ called labor man on this board. He works hand in hand with Arthur Greer, the $50 a week president of the Hudson local of the A. F. of L. The Green-Collins machine wants recognition from the auto manu- facturers on the grounds that it can do just as good a job in preventing strikes as the company unions, Arthur Greer was one of the original representatives of the Hudson company union. All hid actions during and since the Jund A. F. of L, auto conference proves him to be a company union man | working inside the A. F, of L, td split its ranks. He works under thé |direction of Richard Byrd. At the local meeting Greer succeeded in“! railroading thru a motion to endorsé Richard Byrd's activity on the Autd Labor Board. The minutes of this board disclose the following facts; It helped the manufacturers td manipulate piece work rates down- ward, covered up the blacklisting of union workers, helped the manu- facturers rob the workers of pay for waiting time, and put over a plan for “orderly’ mass lay-offs on a so-called seniority rights basis, But the lay-off plan contains a joker clause giving the companied the right to fire or retain anyone they please. It is this activity of the Auto Labor Board which Arthur Greer endorses, The Rank and File The Rank and File members of the Hudson local exposed both Dillon and Greer. They presented their motion for one fighting in- dustrial union in the industry ond put up a militant struggle for the motion. Greer used the same tactics» as Collins in the national conference, in shutting off discussion and tabling the rank and file =] | tion. The rank and filers are de. termined to continue the fight. against the A. F. of L. burocracy and the company union movement; They call for the building of united front action committees in thd Shops and neighborhoods that can develop independent struggles for improved conditions over the heads 150 E, 93rd St.. New York ely Oor. Lexington Ave. ATwater How a, m. to 8 p, m, Sun. tot Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund requisite to their successful |Of the burocrats. That is the first DR. EMIL BICHEL { DR. EMIL EICHEL | pp yytjus LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M PHONE: DICKENS 2-301% 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn CAMP WINGDALE, Swimming, Fishing and HAS ROOM FOR YOU AGAIN! (Labor Sports Union Lifeguard) £2 Our Red Vodvil Team—Berenberg & Jacobson — Open Air Theatre — Hans Eisler Trio — Dances — Sports — Fun Cars leave daily at 10:30 a.m, from 2700 Bronx Park East, jurdays, 10 a.m., 8 and 7 p.m. ALgonquin 4-1148, Camp store charges city pri UNITY NEW YORK Boating on Lake Ellis Fridays and Sat and health. The participants ranged in age from 10 to 20 years... . “All the paraders were glowing with health.’—Walter Duranty in yesterday's New York Times, ats a iE Expert—‘Shaw ... would have found fame and fortune as an up-and-at-’em sports writ Gene Tunney. Shaw is the man who picked Georges Carpentier to knock out Jack Dempsey. so. (| Bbw Front—The Congress of Jewish World Sports Federation, meeting in Vienna, has passed a resolution asking the International Olympic Committee to acknowledge Palestine as an independent state and, therefore, also as a participant in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. Sports Program Extended A. M. Camp NITGEDAIGET BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, NEW YORK | IS PLANNING A GRAND VACATION FOR YOU! Music :: Theatre :: THURSDAY: Special Midweek-Concert by Pierre Degeyeter Trio. Return Performance (by special request) of SCOTTSBORO. — Excursicn to other workers’ camps, FRIDAY: Gala Campfire—You'll like the camp paper, the play, chorus, ete. SATURDAY: RED DANCERS in 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 On Fridays and Saturdays at 10, 3 and 7 P. M.—Estabrook 8-1: (Direction: Edith Segal.) Workers School Raise Money ANGELO HERNDON to Save inn te Le De PICNI Sunday, July 29th’ Astoria, L. I.