The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 31, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1934 Town Board, A.F.L. Locals Demand Thaelmann’s Release 9 Detroit Unions Go To Consul Taylor Springs, Il., | Forwards Protest to | Nazi Ambassador | | TAYLOR SPRING, Ill Minneapolis Streets Under Martial Law Saneneeaaan oe ee The Village Board of 7 composed wholly of workers elected in the last election here, unani- mously adopted a resolution de- nouncing Nazi terror in Germany and demandin the freedom of Ernst Thaelmar leader of the German working c and all other anti-fascist prisoners The resolution, signed by the Mayor and bearing the village seal, has been forwarded to the German Embassy at Washington, D. C ‘The Council called upon all other City Councils to vote similar reso- A. F. of L. Groups Make Protest a Worker Correspondent DETROIT, July 30.—An A, F. of &, delegation visited the German Consulate here last Saturday morn- ing with a resolution demanding the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann and all trade unionists and anti- | fascists imprisoned in Germany. The delegation was composed of delegates from Painters Local 42, Bakers Locals 20, 77 and 78, Plum- bers Local 98~ Painters Local 552, Bakery Drivers Local 96, Laundry Drivers and the A. F. of L. Commit- tee for Unemployment Insurance and Relief. The 25 delegates were shown into the Consulate office and proceeded to read the resolution that de- manded the safety and immediate release of Thaelmann, outstanding Jeader of the German trade union movement, leader of the great Ham- | burg strike and the foremost fighter against fascism, also the release of all anti-fascist fighters in the Nazi concentration camps and dun- geons. After hearing the resolution, the secretary stated that the Consul was “absent” on vacation, but the By lief workers. Philadelphia | Marine Men | Hear Hudson He Calls for Election of resolution “would be forwarded through the usual channels” to : A Salty Delegates to Big The delegation told the secretary they would return on August 6th with a bigger delegation. he Red Squad was present in hurried arrival just \ ion shows clearly | the ‘ascist representa- | usc in the face of the steady | march of protest delegations tothe | Consulate. Baltimore Conference PHILADELPHIA, July 29 (By Mail).—In spite of the terrific | heat, 150 seamen and longshoremen | filled Boslpver Hall Friday night to | hear Roy Hudson, National Secre- | tary of the Marine Workers Indus- trial Union, Coast strike. “The important lesson of the strike,” said Hudson, “is that it taught us that a united frent can be established, and that only a united front under rank and file } control is effective in carrying on | struggles for improved conditions. | “The old policy of the fakers of maneuvering one craft into scab- bing on another has been ex- » ploded, and the workers on the coast, and throughout the country realize now that only united mili- tant action on an industrial basis can be of any value.” Hudson announced that various locals throughout the country have stated that they will send delegates to the National Unity Conference of seamen and longshoremen to be | held in Baltimore on September 1 2. He urged all marine workers to | raise the question of the conference | |in their unions and see to it that the rank and file are represented | by elected delegates. report on the West | Rosenfeld and Bevan Tour NEW YORK. — Anti-fascists throughout the country continue to give a rousing welcome to Dr. Kurt Rosenfeld and Aneurin Bevan, who are on tour in the Free Thaelmann campaign, the National Committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism announced yesterday. Dr. Rosenfeld, former Social- Democratic Minister of Justice in the Prussian Cabinet, and Bevan, Welsh coal miner and Labor Party member of the British Parliament, will speak in Los Angeles, Calif., on the night of Aug. 3 at a Thaelmann rally at the Mason Opera House, 127 South Broadway. Other meetings have been ar- ranged for them in San Fran- cisco, Aug. 4; Portland, Ore., Aug. 7; Seattle, Washington, Aug. 8; Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, Aug. 10; Calgary, Can- ada, Aug. 12; Winnipeg, Canada, Aug. 14. Returning to the United States, they will speak Aug. 16 and 17 in St. Paul and Minneap- olis, and at meetings in other cities on their way back to New York. | A group of Detroit attorneys, | headed by Morris Sugar, defense attorney in the famous James Vic tory case, after listening to Dr. Ro. senfeld, sent resolutions to the Ger- man Consul in Detroit and the} German Ambassador at Washing- ton. The National Committee an- nounced an intensification of the nation-wide campaign for the free- dom of Thaelmann and all anti- fascist prisoners in Germany, and @ growing demand for Free Thael- mann signature lists as a result of the Rosenfeld-Bevan tour. The following cities have en- 20 Carpenters Strike in War Dept. Project PHILADELPHIA, Pa., July 30.—| Twenty carpenters employed on a War Department project putting up | | four ammunition store houses at Fort Mifflin across the river from the Philadelphia Navy Yard, struck | yesterday protesting “kickbacks” to | the sub-contractor. The contract has the usual hypo- critical provision that skilled car- penters are to be paid union rates | of $1.20 an hour. But the sub-con- | tractor, Friedrich Messiah, rates | most of his carpenters as “helpers” and legally pays them 60 cents an hour. The others.are forced to re- turn the difference to the boss. He | doesn’t trust the men, however, but | forces them to pay him before the | pay envelopes are distributed. he jpaign: 5 | apes i ona labag ee The Brotherhood of Carpenters, | N. Y.; Williston, N. D.; Wau- j 3 is : i A F. of L. union, ordered the men kegan, Iil.; Brush Prairie, Wash.; rik 4 | GA, Wioh.: © Columbus, ohio: out on strike yesterday, but no de- Pete us : ’ |mands have been ma | Atlantic City, N. J.; Bismark, N. ae te the strike has nc) even been an- | ounced in the press. The leaders | told the carpenters that they’d| have the thing settled by Monday, | or they'd “pull” the rest of the one | hundred workers on the job out on | | strike. D.; Portland, Ore.; Quincy, Mass.; Brule, Wisc. Other cities, includ- ing Hariford, New Haven, Buf- fale, Providence and Seattle, show an increasing response to the campaign to collect a thou- sand signatures and a thousand pennies for the Thaelmann de- fense. The Communist Party Unit in| Fairbanks, Alaska, has sent a strong pretest. resolution to the German | Embassy at Washington. CAMDEN, N. J., July 30—One thousand members of the Marine I Workers Industrial Union, at a IN MEMORIAM: 1. I, being a cred- ulous person, had always believed “4 1 ha. Minnesota state militiamen are shown on scab duty in the business section of the city following the declaration of martial law by Governor Olson in an effort to break the strike of truck drivers and re- Nyota and Navoo Miners Walk Out After Being Docked BIRMINGHAM, Ala., July 30. — Exploited and doubly oppressed coal miners in Alabama are again strik- ing against bad conditions and for back pay. The Nyota and Navoo mines are on time this year for their demands and enforcement of the agreement with the Mo: icCormick interests. signed at the settlement of the last | strike.. Bill Mitch, president of District 20, United Mine Workers of Amer- | ica, engineered the sell-out of these miners along with 22,000 others be- | trayed, but was forced because of the militancy of these miners to secure for them an agreement with | coal operators that was better than | the average throughout the Ala- bama coal fields. For a long period these miners were out of work and the coal oper. ators continued to charge the un- employed coal miners house rent and hospital fees, and when the miners started to work again they were docked for these “back debt: The miners struck. At the settle- ment the coal operators were forced to cancel these debts. But when the miners went back into the mines the coal operators began to dock them again, despite the agree- ment. Now these miners are on strike solidly against the lying, betraying | tactics of Bill Mitch and the coal operators. Steps are being taken to organize | the rank and file movement among the miners by the Rank and File | A. F. of L. Committee here. Here are the miners’ demands put forward by the Rank and File Com- mittee: (1) For recognition of the boni fide unions. Against company unions. Against compulsory arbitra- tion. (2) For rank and file con- trol of the labor unions through democratically conducted elections. (3) For lower dues and initiations. Exemption for the unemployed members. (4) Against high salaries for union officials. Officers to re- ceive average wages of union men in the industry. (5) Equal pay and right to any job for Negro work- s. No discrimination against Ne- gro members. (6) Against the dif- ferential established by the N.R.A. for Southern labor. Equal wages ith Northern labor. (7) For the sage of the Workers’ Unem- ployment Insurance Bill, H. R. 7598. (8) For the right to organize strike and picket without police or Na- tional Guard interference. PERTH AMBOY, N. J., July 30.— Ordering the hall closed, police here turned out in full force to prevent a meeting of cigar makers of the Royalist cigar plant here who planned solidarity action with the | men on strike in the Philadelphia plant of the same firm. “Oh,” he said, “I would have | knockea him out in six rounds.” strike for the third | mass meeting, have made demands | that the New York Shipbuilding | Company take immediate action on} complaints that men are being fired without notice and being re- placed with others despite an agree- ment with the union. “If these conditions, won through our strike, are not lived up to, another strike will be called, Charles Purkis, or- ganizer, declared. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., July 30.— Ths Marine Workers’ Industrial Union here has pledged active sup- port to the strikers at the Royalist Cigar plant here on strike under the leadership of the Tobacco | Workers’ Industrial Union, ‘ the stories in the newspapers about Tommy Leughran’s modesty. About five years ago I covered his camp in Pennsylvania, when he was training for his bout with Sharkey. One day I interviewed Loughran— | exclusive and copyrighted. “How do you think you would have made out against Dempsey,” I asked in the course of the inter- view, “if you had fought him when Sharkey did?” “Oh,” he said, “Dempsey was through then. I would have knocked him out in three rounds.” “How do you think yo= would have made out against Tunney, if you had fought him when +e fought Heeney?” JZ asked, | “How do you think you're going | asked. | “Oh,” he said, “I'll knock him out inside of four rounds.” | Mr. Loughran, thereupon, went jinto the ring ageimst Sharkey a week or so later, and quit in the | second round. He was scared stiff. | A horde of priests (Loughran al- | ways traveled with a holy entourage) |had got into the Yankee Stadium the fight, and when the while Si arke; of the ring gesticulating wildly and itood in the center cursing the ctowd and they hated ‘descended on the ring, the hated them him), the priests I have to make out against Sharkey?” I} ran to his corner, | Two Alabama Coal Mines Again on Strike; UMWA Men Forming Rank and File Group N ew Date Set For Aluminum Plant Strike A. F. L. Leaders Take All Control From Rank and File | By TOM KEENAN | (Special to the Daily Worker) NEW KENSINGTON, Pa., July 30.—Depriving the rank and file of even a second hand opportunity to | look out for their interests, A. F. of L. leaders are moving forward toward a sellout of the aluminum workers’ decision to strike and the splitting up of the industrial union ; into craft groups. Bill reen’s henchmen, Boris} | Shishkin and Dave Williams have | | assumed the reins in negotiations | | completely following their first suc- | cessful maneuver in postponing the | walkout set for July 25 until Aug. 3. | The delay in action was en-| | gineered so as to allow the company | (Andrew Mellon’s Aluminum Com- pany of America) plenty of time to| | complete shipments on all seasonal | orders. | The lack of any preparations for a walkout, picketing, the establish- |ment of strike committees, etc., is also attributable to the A. F. of L. ers, who will point to this as | eason for not striking when the} time for action arrives. Union members state that no re- port has as yet been made by the National Council to the rank and | file concerning progress of negotia- | tions. Though a wage increase is the| central demand of the workers, this has been kept secret in all public statements by the A. F. of L. men, and only the demands for recogni- tion pushed forward each time. Present indications point to a complete betrayal unless the rank va file acts quickly to take con- rol. | Canadian Meeting Calls |For Release of Mooney MONTREAL, Canada, July 30— | The following telegram, demanding the release of Tom Mooney, was adopted by a mass mecting of 1,000 | Canadian workers gathered to greet Sam Carr, Communist leader re- cently released from Kingston Peni- | tentiary: “Governor Merriam. “San Francisco, Calif., “Mass meeting 1,000 workers | greeting Sam Carr released from | Kingston Penitentiary demands im- mediate freedom of Tom Mooney. “(Signed) Workers’ Rally for Tom | Carr, Canadian Working Class | Brotherhood of Railway Carmen, is On the Chicago Starts Drive \Bank Group \Strike Front] With Good Plans; Will Against All Win With More Action Social Bills L. I. City and Other Scions tliow How “Daily” Publishers Ales Oppose Can Be Used As Organizer; Campaign | Spreads to New Territory | WIN WAGE INCREASE CHICAGO, Ill, July 30—Wait- | |resses at the Hungarian concession | |at the World’s Fair won a wage in- | |crease and improved working con=| ditions by a@ 15-minute strike this | week. They sent a delegation to the Hungarian Consulate to press | their demands which were: Rein- statement of six dismissed waitress- |es; half an hour for lunch instead | of 10 minutes; a wage increase of $2 a week and no discrimination against any waitress for participa- | tion in the strike. é OMAHA, Neb., July 30.—Striking | car men of Omaha and Council | Bluffs, addressed by a leaflet issued by the Communist Party here, are told that “the strike must be based on complete control of the rank and | file and committees elected by them | and answerable to them. The | Parkers, McMahons, Greens and | other highly-paid officials and mis- | leaders must be kept where they | have put themselves, outside the | strike.” | NEW YORK.—Five hundred tug- boat workers, members of the Asso- | |ciated Marine Workers voted on | Sunday night to strike for an eight | | hour day. At present they work 10/| |hours. August 19 has been set ten-| tatively as the strike date. | | YORK, Pa., July 30.—Govenor | Gifford Pinchot of Pennsylvania has |} announced his readiness to feel | manufacturers in their announced efforts to move scab-made cigars from their plants here despite the mass picket lines of the 5,000 cigar |makers on strike here. Efforts to | move cigars from the plants here | | have failed thus far despite. brutal | | assaults by local and state police | on the massed pickets. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., July 30.— |The strikers at the Girard Refinery lof the Gulf Oil Company have re-| sumed picketing of Gulf Service Stations, while the Petroleum Policy | Board and the Compliance Board are trying to chide the company into rehiring the strikers, and sub- | |mit their demands for wage in-| creases, and for seniority 1ghts in | hiring new workers to “arbitration.” | ST. LOUIS. — John Harrison, | Young Communist, was slugged last | night by A. F. of L. Machinist Union | thugs while distributing leaflets to jthe strike meeting of the Century Electric Co. The leaflet, issued by the local Trade Union Unity Coun- cil, called upon the workers to he- ware of the seil-out beins prepared for them by the Regional Board in cahoots with Fitzmaurice of the Machinists Unioa and the Cential Trades Council. The workers had been on strike for three weeks, NEW KENSINGTON, Pa.—Strike action by workers of the aluminum industry has been postponed to Aug. 3 by the National Aluminum Work- ers Council negotiators, a committee of four, additional time having been reques‘ed by the Aluminum Co. of America in which to ccnsider the demands of the union. Postponement of the strike date, Which had been set by the meniber- ship, was made w:thout the decision being submittel to a vote of the yank and file, PITTSBURGH.—The strike of 538 | Logan’s Ferry miners, which has been quiet since it started May 25, may break into active struggle if the company carries out its threat to resume production with strike- breakers, CHICAGO.—Wolverine Lodge 227, proposing a conference of all shop- craft unions on the Chicago & Northwestern to take steps for a 30-hour week at the present pay, relief from the company or other sources for laid-off employes, a halt to the company’s speed-up system in the shops and for unemployment insurance. LOS ANGELES, Cal. July 30— Militant waiters in Local 17 of the American Federation of Labor waiters union have won a four-day strike at Sardi’s exclusive restau- rant patronized by Hollywood “big- shots.” The successful strike gives the waiters a weekly wage of $13.50, no deductions for meals, the eight- hour day and full recognition of their union. Cooks won a $10 a month increase. LOS ANGELES, Cal. July 30.— Petitions are being circulated here for the recall of Judge Frank C. Collier, who has issued injunctions against workers in several recent strikes and has earned a reputation as a labor hater. The petition, orig- inally sponsored by the Central Trades and Labor Council is being backed by the American Federation | Leader, Montreal.” COMMENTS ON. SPORTS » impression of jcarried away one | their rush. It was exactly like the rush of a horde of gangsters I had seen in the Coney Island Stadium, a few months previously, when the referee tried to award a fight to Phil McGraw instead of to Sid Terris, the east side idol, on whom many dollars had been bet. But what brought these reflec- tions to mind is that Mr. Loughran is scheduled to fight tomorrow against Johnny Risko. nee cit | JN MEMORIAM: 2. Mickey Walker is known to the joy-boys of the press as an immortal of the ring. He held two chamnionships in his time. | Both were secured under less than of Labor Rank and File Committee. William Fuchs the welterweight title from Jack Britton and the middleweight title was given to him in as bold and u.- mistakable a thievery as was ever perpetrated in the prize-ring. Tiger Flowers won, and everybody ad- mitted it—but Flowers was a Negro, and Negroes receive little redress in American athletics. Walker later deserted the middle- weight division to seek sustenance among the heavyweights. He proved a failure, Some time ago he was knocked out by a gigolo in Hollywood and by a garage-keeper in New Jersey. What brings these reflections to mind is that he has just claimed the middleweight title—and has been summarily dismissed by the Box- OME activity around District 8, Chicago, indicates promise of real Legislation for Job Insurance NEW YORK.—Industrial Rela. ‘ i ‘i | tions Counselors, Inc., a committed circulation. In Chicago itself, some work has started to recruit full- of industrialists and bankers, today time Daily Worker sellers. Individual Chicago Red Builders whose photos | geclared that it was opposed to ail appear are doing their share to uphold the proletarian honor of their | forms of unemployment insurance} | Fair City. But: All’s not well that begins well. Chicago started the circulation cam- paign with a comprehensive plan, called the section Daily Worker agents, discussed the program thor- oughly, and decided to “double the readers gained in the last drive, —— i stating that the country “would face the most costly social experiment yet undertaken should it launch a system of unemploys ment insurance.” The Industrial Relations Coun- selors has among its trustees Owen D. Young, head of the Gentral Elec- tric Company; John D. Rockefeller, 3rd, Cyrus McCormick of the Mc which would be about 3,000 new readers for our district.” Net re- Sults: with the official goal set at 2,000 new readers, only 28 per cent Cormick Harvester Company, and the “liberal” Rev. Raymond B. Fos- dick. | Alligned with the bankers and in, To his constit | of the quota has been reached. In John Wills, Com- Sane Wrest’s| dustrialists in opposition to any subs, the figure shrinks even lower m™unist Candidate in record, and you'll |form of unemployment insurance, we ee pace cam Macon | the National Publishers Association, st. Chicago sells pushing tbe Dai ini the Daily Worker, among Negro work-| 12 @ bulletin issued on July 16 de« most effective horn- ers Becaste a | clared: Blower to arouse “That's the best! «Unemployment Insurance. Thig women to vote for thom against wegre: | Bill for a tax of five per cent on the Party apparatus, and put their a fighting political gation and diserim- | all payrolls. Its seriousness speaks plan into life. An intensive effort Par: ination.” |for itself, and your representatives to recruit more Red Builders for sales before packing-houses, factories, | #ded in preventing its passage. at the Fair, from house-to-house and on the streets will do the trick. ss Cc New York did it, and so did Boston. We have our eye on you, Chicago, Montana Copper County so put those words uP deeds! : | Lists 37,000 on Relief . . | FROM the Windy City comes a stiff challenge from Alice J., addressing| BUTTE, Mont., July 29—Out of 4 herself specifically to hotel and resiaurant workers because “we have | Population of 51,000 in Silver Bow a big fight ahead of us,” she dares 99 more to join the Red Builders, | County, 37,000 persons are on relief) |order two or more daily for sale among hotel and restaurant workers | #0 investigation wget @ aa (we protest! 20 or more is more like it!); increase the bundle 100 Bethe omer ee oe iia nike: |cent by September 1; and gets subs totalling a year. She backs this up| ape OPE er one eri Veer i 6 A 35.200 are residents of Butte. This with $1 for her two-a-day, and sounds like she’s going at it like a north |*. : = ites Yokes an. itt pee |rich mine area where three out of | wind around the Great Lakes in the dead o’ winter. four persons are on government re+ |lief has produced about $2,600,000, 000 in mineral wealth since it first began operation. In Anaconda, 23 miles from Butte, where the largest smelter in the | world is located, about the sam@ | relief conditions exist. —1.6 per cent. We suggest another session with Daily Worker agents, this time to review the weak spots, strengthen . . . . | POCKFORD, Ill., is holding its own in the campaign for circulation. | “We have been having in one unit Red Sundays every Sunday so far,” writes Peter Peterson, D. W. agent. “Street sales are also increasing; shop gate sales twice a wee They ordered 400 of the special anti-war issue—this ought to stimulate further sales—and expect to hold a con- ference of Daily Worker readers and sympathizers in the near future. WHEAT CROP LESS IOHN THOMPSON, of Jackson, Mich., knows what he wants when he | ROME, July 30.— The Europeam wants it. Appointed by his section committee as Daily Worker and|Wheat crop will be less than . 400 literature agent, Thompson immediately stocks up on the best ammuni- million quintals (1,335,000,000 bu.) this year, the International Insti+ tion for Communist work in Jackson tute of Agriculture estimated today, —mental dynamite set off by the ; This represents a decline of 250,+ Daily Worker. Specifically, 25 a day,| 000,000 bushels over last year’s yield, 60 on Saturday, and a special order of 100 for a picnic early in August. | ele ie JN NEW ORLEANS, J. W. Elnas confesses that “as fast as I gain a customer or so, I seem to lose as many or more, due to unemploy- ment.” Has it occurred to Comrade From the bottom up. R, Nelson knows all EInas to suggest that these unem- ue Simpson, star, the horror of Jim ployed (and part-time) workers his sales between Crowism and unem- start selling the Daily Worker regu- He's determined to fea. He deen nis J@rly, and thus manage to retain double his aules Me feet ee the paper by earning expenses? South Side Obleago (2 90 papers on the Hundreds of Red Builders are workers, help him South Side of Chi- needed in New Orleans and other eo cage: aaiy: large cities to bring the message of | organization to workers. (For new Red Builders, 25 free copies the first | two weeks; at % cents the next two weeks; regular price of 134 cents following this period.) Elnas further reports one more newsstand gained, | and a trial bundle of five daily for a new seller. But recruiting Red Builders is an important job at present, comrade! JONG ISLAND CITY boasts a few more enterprising Red Builders. Tiba Garlin, Ruth White and Rose Leibner succeeded in recruiting | 25 Negro and white workers from an important plant into the Commu- | nist Party. You guessed it. The Daily Worker was the open sesame. These Red Builders sell an average of 60 each a day, and sell at I. Miller and Garside Shoe Co. as well as the railroad yards. In one house alone, six Negroes, now Party members, were contacted. That’s putting theory and practice in the spotlight! Shoe Union Meets Today On Demands NEW YORK.—To open the fight for new agreements with the shoe | manufacturers with whom the United Shoe and Leather Workers Union haye been in contractual re- Jation for nearly a year, a mass meeting of all members of the union has been called for today at 6 pm. at Irving Plaza Hall. Fred Biedenkapp, a leader of the. union, announced yesterday that agreements won from the manu- facturers last year expire on Au- gust 1. A number of conferences have been held between union rep- resentatives and the employers where the proposals of both the union and the employers were laid on the table. Both the proposals of the manu- facturers and the union will be brought before the membership in a report by I. Rosenberg, district secretary-treasurer of the union. Demands put forward by the union are: 1—Minimum wage of 90 cents an hour for all skilled workers. 2.—Minimum wage of 65 cents an hour for ail semi-skilled work- ers. 3.—Minimum wage of 40 cents an hour for all unskilled workers. 4.—Recognition of the union. 5.—No arbitration. A special call for full mobiliza- tion of all members of the Shoe and Leather Workers Union for this meeting has been issued to all locals. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: PHO. 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M : DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon || 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. GC | After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR, 71-0135 —WILLIAM BELL——_ OFFICIAL Optometrist ead 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. ¥. C, DR. EMIL EICHEL } DENTIST ; 150 E. 93rd St.. New York City }, Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 §, Hours: 9 a. m. to 8 p,m. Sun. 9 to 1 Member Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Fund Comrades Patronize EDELMAN’S|-: I. J, MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-53 For International Workers 0} EL LRT SS TTR, PATRONIZE Southern and West Indian Markets 291 Dumont Ave, — 325 Livonia Aye. BROOKLYN, N.. Y, Dickens 6-9792 DAIRY 966 E. 174th St., Bronx THE HOUSE OF QUALITY SERVICE Day-old and Jersey Eggs Our Specialty Your Patronage Will Be Appreciated — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Chinese Dishes 200 American Dishes 250 848 Broadway bet, 13th & 14th st. WHERE Our Comrades EAT RAPOPORT'’S DAIRY and VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 93 Second Ave. N. Y. City HARLEM WORKERS PATRONIZE INTERNATIONAL RESTAURANT and BAR 322 Lenox Avenue - New York Bet. 126th and 127th Streets CAMP GALA WATER ‘SPORTS MEET! (Directed by Yale, of the Labor Sports Union) P. S. The illustration above is not an example of this! Open Air Theatre Red Vodvil Team, Unity Players, Hans Eisler Trio, Ete. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS . DANCE! SING! ALL THE SPORTS! Sokal Cafeteria $14.00 a week. Cars leave 10:30 A.M. daily from 2700 Bronx Park E. for Wingdale, N.Y. id 7 P.M. Phone ALgonquin 4-1148. Fridays & Saturdays CAMP STORE ©: at 10 AM., 3 an 1689 PITKIN AVENUE ARRIES CAMP TOGS AT CITY PRICES | heroic circumstances, He bought ing commission,

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