The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 7, 1934, Page 2

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_ AUGUST 26 Page Two ‘= DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, / Steel and Met GUST 7, 193% al Workers Plan Strike Preparations; Rivet Rank and File Control Rule Into Constitution SHAPES FOR MILITANT FIGHT Raises Women and Youth—Pl Increase, 30-Hour Spec and kers in ies, the con- gates covered of union experi- ts by di range ence in and out A cl problem of the red cor:=2t means of combat some length by d Jack Stack ting the T. U. U. diy one of the prin- e meeting. Rank and file control of all action he central organizational theme Ml dec of the convention. ution is one of the of the application of le rule of the union on dealing with ior y local may call a strike of its shop... or any department therein, when it is deemed expe- dient and necessary that the strike be called for the good and welfare of the membership, and that of the unorganized workers, if such workers are employed on the same job, Unless a momentary strike is abselutely necessary during working hours on the job, a general mem- bership meeting of the local shall be called first where a strike vote shall be registered by a show of hands. It shall be obligatory for all members of the local to strike and take active part therein, once the strike is decided upon.” (Even as the steel workers were approving doct mt, the A. F. of L. pol over to some faking leader for a Sell-out could be viewed in opera- tion in the aluminum which has been wrested from the hands of the rank and file alum- inum workers, and laid in Bill Green’s lap in Washington. From here it will certainly be handed back to Andrew Mellon and his Aluminum Company). Fight Unemployment Increasing unemployment lower wages, the disgust of steel Workers with the betrayal of the June strike movement by A. A. and A. F. of L. leaders, the baring of N. R. A.’s fascist character in all re- cent struggles of the working class— all these and numerous other pres- ent conditions furnish the basis for great organizational gains by the S and Los Angeles Aircraft \Bosses Try to Shackle Men to Company Union LOS ANGELES, Aug. 6—Further foncerted efforts on the part of owners of the Douglas Aircraft Cor- poration to force their 3,300 ern- ployes into a company union called the Douglas Employes’ Association are meeting constantly growing on- r a worker is hired at the plant, he is given a membership card in the company union, and 4s told that he “doesn’t have to sign it, but he'll get along better if he does.” The attempt to force $1 percent of the employes into the union so that under the vicious NRA ruling, this company union can “speak” for the workers points} out more strongly than ever before| the imperative necessity of estab- lishing among the workers a mili- tant rank and file union. A, F. of L. fakers have been for Some time flirting with the em- Ployes at the plant, warning them to avoid “alien” influences. The Tole of the A. F. of L. unions in air- craft strikes this year at Buffalo and Hartford, however, is being ex- Posed by the Communist Party shop nucleus in the plant through ‘ts shop bulletin and daily contact with workers, Meanwhile Douglas Aircraft expanding is its present production capacity so that it can fulfill a con- tract for seventy-five multi-motored transports which are readily con- vertible for military service. Keep this date open! } DAILY WORKER DAY a 4 on of| of handing a strike | “strike,” | 1 Demands for Negro Workers, ans Struggle for Wage Week, Recognition W. 1. U. Methods for achieving se were the primary concern of | the convention. A review of the work of the cor the adop' of its cons resolutions on all aspec zational work in the future, that these methods are now ready at hand js of the departing dele- d their full realization and that the struggles ture will determine the growth of the union. And with the swearing in of new officers and ng of “Solidarity,” each metal delegate went back hop pledged to “carry the ions of the convention in! {National Secretary Jim Egan ad- | journed the convention. Minneapolis Strike | (Continued from Page 1) |by confusing them and antagoniz- jing them against the Communist |Party. Instead of warning workers against the military forces |that would be useed in the strike, they helped to create the illusions in the minds of the workers that Olson would send the Guardsmen to stop the scab trucks. On Wednesday, the second day jof the strike, when Olson had al- jready placed troops in the city, the Communist Party again issued a |statement which was distributed to |the strikers in which the Com- |munist Party took up the following |points: (1) The strike must be |broadened immediately. The union |m call out the petroleum work- jers, who are under jurisdiction. The union must wo:k for spreading the strike to all commercial trans- |portation, (2) The union must im- |mediately appeal to the other local unions to take up the question of |sympathy strike with the drivers, concluding in the following man- ner: “The drivers are fighting the | battle of every working man in Minneapolis. Every working man | must be called upon now to join | the battle.” | Against the Troops. | (3) Compel Olson to withdraw the troops from Minneapolis. We quote from this statement: “The troops are here to intimi- date the strikers and all Minne- | apolis workers, Bullets, bayonets and poison gas are held in store for the drivers and the other workers” and “The Organizer, Daily Strike | Bulletin of local 574, finally ad- mits this fact, but mere talk will not prevent events such as hap- pened in Toledo and San Fran- cisco. Do we want to see our pickets drowned in blood from builet and bayonet wounds de- livered to them by Olson’s troops? If we say no, we must act now. We propose united action of the organized labor unions and unem- ployed organizations, workers’ fra- ternal and poliical organizations, to stage the biggest demonstration of labor in Minneapolis, and, if necessary to march to the Capitol in St. Paul, to present a mighty demand for the withdrawal of the troops.” The Communist Party sent out a letter. to local 574, to the Central Labor Union and the Socialist Party, asking for a joint committee to undertake such action, Again local 574, together with the Central Labor Union and the Socialist Party, ignored this call and again the leadership of 574 instructed the drivers to chase away the Commu- nists who distributed literature from the strike headquarters, Strikers Shot Down On Friday, July 20th, the warn- ings of the Communist Party and the need for such action as proposed in the bulletin, proved itself in prac- tice. More than fifty workers were shot in Market Place on Third | Street and Sixth Avenue North. Due to the narrowness of the strike, only about 300 to 400 pickets could be rallied to this place where the em- ployers made a concentrated move to run scab trucks. Police Chief Johannes instructed his police to shoot to kill, and armed them with shotguns. The shooting of strikers by the police was certainly encouraged by the fact that the picket line was small and the fact that Olson’s troops were ready at a minute’s notice to come to the assistance of Johannes’ police, After this shoot- | ing, that has already taken the lives of two pickets and crippled a num- ber of them for life, the Communist Party again issued a statement which was distributed to the work- ers in Minneapolis, in which the Party called upon the workers and all unions to organize a General Strike as an answer to this bloody attack of the Citizens’ Alliance. The Dunnes Oppose General Strike Again the Trotskyist leadership of local 574 answered in the negative to this call. On Friday night at the big protest’ mecting agains: the shooting, under the auspices of the union, Myles and Vincent Dunne proclaimed that they were not for 4 the appeal on which re-elected | the | Reports Show Government Surveys Cite 21 Per Cent Increase Following a continuous rise for the previous fifteen months, food | prices for the country as a whole rese 0.9 per cent in July, according to an announcement yesterday by the National Industrial Confer- ence Board. This second govern- ment report on food prices in the past week substantiates the an- nouncement by the Bureau of La- bor Statistics on July 31, that food | prices had advanced 21.5 per cent |in the fifteen month period from April 15, 1933, to July 15, 1934. As a reflection of the devasting ef- fects of the A. A. A. cop reduction | program coupled with the drought, | further advances are in the offing. | “Food prices advanced 0.9 per }cent in July,” the report by the | National Industrial Conference | Board stated, “or more than is usually observed during this period jof the year. Since April, 1933, food | prices have risen 21.5 per cent.” In addition to a rise in the cost of food, living costs as a whole, continued an upward trend, the | report showed. | While speculative buying on the food exchanges send the prices of| |the most elementary necessities skyward, while speculative future | buying of wheat has sent the price }of bread up in every city in the country, millions of poor farmers face ruination, That the rise in the cost of liv- ing for the working masses is part | of the Roosevelt New Deal of hunger is fully born out by Roose- velt’s radio speech of October 2,/ | 1933, in which he said: “I do not hesitate to say ... that it is defi- nitely a part of our policy to in-| crease the rise, and to extend it to those products which have as yet felt no benefit. If we cannot do this one way, we will do it] another. Do it we will.” general strike. They called for a one-day transportation stoppage Saturday as a protest. Emery Nel- son, secretary of the Central Labor; Union, and Roy Weir, editor of the Labor Review, the official organ of the Central Labor Union and the Farmer Labor sheet, were spokes- }men at the meeting. These people, | however, consciously ignored the question of either transportation or general strike in Minneapolis. The Dunne leadership of 574 did not fall out with the Cramers and Nelsons, and the very fact that no transpor- tation strike took place on Saturday proves that, while the Trotskyite jeadership of local 574 was speaking for a transportation strike, they | joined with the Cramers and Nel- sons to ignore it in action. The most characteristic of all was the fact that at this meeting the Farmer- Laborite Shoemaker and _ other | speakers were allowed, without a ; Word to the contrary by the Trot- skyite leadership, to praise Olson and approve of his actions. Not a word was mentioned about the fact that the troops came to the scene of murder to assist the police and to help move the scab trucks that | were covered with the blood of the workers. In spite of numerous calls for a speaker from the Communist Party and the Unemployment Coun- cil at this meeting, this was refused by the Trotskyite leaders of 574. The next day there was a con- tinuation of the praise of Olson, and the loud speaker in the strike headquarters kept on thundering that Olson is the friend of labor and that on Friday Olson was the man to protect order when there was chaos. The call for unity of all workers to fight the terror of Mayor Bainbridge, Johannes and Olson was answered by the strike leader- ship not only by preventing of Com- munists from speaking to the driv- ers, but also in attempting to pre- vent the members of the Unemploy- }ed Council from joining on the | picket line and from entering the strike headquarters. Splitting tactics amongst the un- employed were put in operation through the M.C.C.W. (a Trotsky- ite-controlled nominal organization for the unemployed). The Unem- ployment Council of Minneapolis had gone out to mobilize the sup- port of the unemployed for the strike. Several E.R.A. jobs were ap- proached by the Unemployment Council and the United Relief Workers’ Association and organiza- tion was started to get the E.R.A. workers to strike in sympathy with the drivers and for their own de- mands of union wages on the job and increased time to make up a minimum of $16.50 per week. The Trotskyite leadership, instead of urging the drivers to assist the Unemployment Council and the United Relief Workers’ Association to organize the E.R.A. workcrs and bring them out in support of the drivers strike and into the struggle for their own demands, proceeded to pull the E.R.A. jobs out and to bring the workers into the M.C.C.W., barring the Unemployment Council and raising the “red scare” on their own hook amongst the E.R.A. work- ers, urging them to eliminate the Communists from the organization of the E.R.A. workers. Such splitting tactics only weakened the organiza- tion of the E.R.A. workers and the organization for an effective strike of those workers, sending them bac! to the E.RsA. jobs without a stzuggic for their own demands. , the government, GUTTERS OF NEW YORK INDUSTRIAL UNION Food Prices PROGRAM 22 Federal ~ FURTHERMORE I'M R PocToR oF PHILOSOPHY # A GRAOURTE,CUM LAUDE, FROM YALE, HARVARD, _/ PRINCETON, ALSO ~ Ho “COLLEGE MEN with executive ability and pleasing personalities to teach at Arthur Murray’s; must be excep- tionally good dancers.” Help Wanted Advertisement in N. Y. Times Relief Strike In $15,000 Bail Three in Des Moines Face Conviction On Syndicalism Charge By HENRY CLARK DES MOINES, Iowa, Aug. 6.—Ex- cessive bail of $5,000 each has been set for James Porter, Ira Meade and John Nordquist, relief strike leaders, indicted for criminal syndicalism, in an unsuccessful attempt to crush the strike of relief workers here. The three leaders have been im- prisoned for two weeks now, follow- ing their indictment on false tes- timony of city, court and relief offi- cials that they had threatened and advocated force and violence in the demonstration of relief workers be- fore the city council and on the re- lief work picket line. The obvious aim of the city gov- ernment is to subject these working class leaders to the discomforts and torture of imprisonment during the hot months, with bed food, dirty cells and other bad conditions. All workers and organizations are urged to send protests to County Attorney Carl Burkman, Des Moines, Iowa, AFL. Chiefs Move — 8UT_CAN You DO SNAKE HIPS, LINDY HoP, OR “he carioca? (Sea a % ae To Launch Negro Rights Drive At Scottsboro-Herndon Rally Tomorrow’s City-Wide National Campaign for Passage of Anti-Lynch Bill NEW YORK-—A bold bid for full equality for the Negro people will be made when delegates to the Scottsboro-Herndon Emergency Conference, to be held in this city tomorrow, lay plans for the launching of a nation-wide cam- paign for the adoption of the Bill for Negro Rights and the Suppres- sion of Lynching. The bill will be one of the central points of the conference, which will be held at St. Paul's Church, 249 West 132nd Street. The Bill for Negro Rights was born in struggles. Five thousand Scottsboro marchers presented a bill of rights so the President and to Congress in May 1933. Roosevelt, busy with the envoys of fascist Ger- many, refused to see the Scottsboro delegation. Senators and Congress- men in whose hands the bill was placed refused to introduce it. The bill, however, started a great hurrying and scurrying among the Washington officials. Oscar De- Priest, Negro Congressman, intro- duced a feeble and ineffectual ad- dition to the Fourteenth Amend- ment to the Constitution. The na- tional officials of the N.A.A.C.P. lobbied for the Costigan-Wagner anti-lynching bill, which was intro- duced with the frankly-avowed hope that it would dam the rising militancy of the Negro masses. Costigan Bill Aids Lynchers raised by the N.A.A.C.P. leader- ship as an anti-lynching measure, the Costigan-Wagner bill is in real- ity a slyly-conceived and cleverly- designed weapon of the lynchers, It contains no provision for death penalty for lynching—thus tacitly agreeing to the classic argument of the Southern lynchers that a lynch- ing is not a murder. It treats lynch- Against Local 499 (Continued from Page 1) committee of Local 499 be dis- solved. 2.—That no meetings of the local shall be held without ap- proval of the District Council. 3.—That the local must accept the “supervision” of the District Council. Upon the statement of the local officers that these requests would have to be referred to a member— ship meeting of the local Ackerly immediately replied: “I hereby de- clare your charter revoked. All money, records and property must be delivered to me by Thursday at 10 a. m. at the Hotel Victoria.” Scabbing Going On Despite the brave statements of Mr. Zausner that he would have 5,000 pickets at the jobs today, a carefull check-up by Local 499 lead- ers revealed that that gentleman had only succeeded in rounding up about 100 pickets. The Master Paint- ers have succeeded in some scab- bing. Scabs are being procured through the Association as well as the Edwards Employment Agency, 777 Sixth Avenue. A mass meeting at the Labor Temple, held a few hours after Mr. Ackley’s ultimatum to Local 499, condemned the action of the Gen- eral Executive Board and supported the action of the local officers. A regular local membership meeting Conference to Open ing as something divorced from the whole system of discrimination and national oppression. But perhaps most dangerous of all is the defini- tion of a “mob,” as three or more persons acting in concert for the destruction of life or property, with- out authority of law. Thus a picket line of striking workers, a meeting held without approval of officials, or even a meeting of workers for self-defense—these would be a mob, to be crushed by authority of the Costigan-Wagner bill! And like- wise, those many lynching-bees led by sheriffs and sheriff's deputies would not be lynchings at all, since their leaders bear an official badge and have the authority of the law. “Death to Lynchers” Contrast with this the bold and courageous words of the Bill for Negro Rights and the Suppression of Lynching—a bill based on the draft presented by the Scottsboro marchers: “Every person participating in a lynching iS declared to be guilty of murder in the first degree and upon conviction shall be punished by death.” At a time when the white ruling class is doing its utmost to prevent the united action of white slave and black slave, when new Jim-Crow laws and practices are being con- ceived on every hand, when the misleaders of the Negro masses be- gin a campaign for “voluntary seg- regation”—the Bill for Negro Rights declares boldly that whoever “shall adopt or enforce any measure aimed at or resulting in the denial of full equality of Negroes, is guilty of a felony,” and that “any person who shall discriminate against Negroes, is guilty of felony.” USSR Peace Policy Is Re-Affir med (Continued from Page 1) people as a whole were imbued with a united will to defend the fron- tiers of their country, offer the se- verest rebuff to the enemy and in the shortest period again return to the peaceful possibility of using all forces of the state towards Socialist construction. The Speci al Far Eastern Army in the course of five years has been at its post, standing fully confident, guarding the Soviet frontiers, guarding peace, “It stands fully confident because it is surrounded by the great love and comradely care of all toilers, Party and our Stalin. For all toilers of our coun- try the Far Eastern Army is a sym- bol of the great will of the prole- tarian state to defend its frontiers, @ symbol of confidence of our vic- tory over any enemy who would dare cross the border of the great land of Socialism, a symbol of our country striking towards the peace cause of peace, Precisely because of this all toilers, not only those of our fatherland, so ardently love the Red Army. And precisely because of this the Special Far Eastern Army is so dear to us. “Regretfully we state that the maintenance of peace depends not upon us alone. There are many who would wish to profit by Soviet territory. They would hamper our construction and im- pose upon us war in order to im- prove their bad business by means of bloody slaughter by seizure of someone else’s land and property.” Addressing the Red Armyists, Red Navy men, the commanders and political workers of the Red Army, Voroshiloy urges them in- defatigably to strengthen their fighting ranks, master the use of arms to perfection and always be ready to defend the frontiers of the te Soviet Far East from whatever source danger might menace. Bakery Bosses Start Injunction Proceedings Against Bread Strikers of the whole world. “The proletarian state proved by deed in 1929 that its army exists for defence and not for resey The Special Far Eastern rmy, which with lightning speed annihilated the forces of its enemy, did not make use of the fruits of its victories as the army of an imperialist state would do, clearing immediately and yolun- tarily the territory of the state with attacked the U. S, S. R.” The order of Voroshiloy further states: “Our country is making gigantic strides towards a new happy So- cialist life. In order to attain this life we need peace with all peoples. Precisely because of this our gov- ernment is strengthening the Red Army. We are strengthening our Red Army precisely because it con- (The next article will deal with martial law in Minneapolis.) stitutes a stubborn, consistent, Steadfast bulwark for the cause of peace, because it is a fighter in the NEW YORK—The bakery bosses of the Bronx haye applied for an injunction to break the bread strike now being conducted by the 174th Street Neighborhood Organization. The injunction proceedings, seeking to restrain all picketing, will be started today at the Bronx County Supreme Court, Scores of workers have been az- rested while picketing the 174th Street bakeries in this strike against a raise in the price of bread and rolls. The Neighborhood Organiza- tion appeals to workers to send contribution for carrying on the struggle against the rising cost of living. All contributions should be sent to the organization headquaz- ters, 1841 Bryant Avenue, Bronx, New York. Twenty thousand new readers by Sept. Ist means 20,000 addi- tional recruits for orgahized class struggle, : militant leadership, before any an- latter's charter had been made, A, F. of L. Union blocked an im- will be held tomorrow night at the Labor Temple. In the meantime legal steps have been taken to pro- tect the moneys and property of the local from the Zausner and General Executive Board cliques. That the plan to revoke Local 499’s charter was well-thought-out and was the property of Zausner men throughout the city was evid- enced, rank and file painters point out, by the fact that in Local 905, a Bronx unit of the Brotherhood, a meeting was called yesterday morn- ing at which motions were intro- duced to condemn Local 499 and its nouncement of revocation of the BLOCK ALUMINUM STRIKE PITTSBURGH, Pa., Aug. 6—Of- ficials of the Aluminum Workers’ mediate strike when they referred wage and recognition questions to the A. F. of L. officials in Wash- ington. Classified SUBLET for two months, large light room, suitable for 2, all improvements, vici- nity Union Square. Reasonable. In- quire: Ann, Editorial Dept. D. W. HARLEM WORKERS PATRONIZE INTERNATIONAL RESTAURANT and BAR 322 Lenox Avenue - New York Bet. 126th and 127th Streets SKEETE DETROIT, Much., Aug. Nominating Convention Sund and adopted a militant platform of struggle for the rights of all toilers. The list of candidates is led by John Anderson, leader of the Pro- gressives in the Mechanics Educa- tional Society, who is the Commu- nist candidate for Governor. Delegates included workers from the Ford, Chevrolet, Hudson, Briggs, Chrysler, Murray Body and other large automobile plants. There were rank and file members of the American Federation of Labor, as well as of the Auto Workers Union and other militant unions affiliated to the Trade Union Unity League. There were farm delegates, and delegates from the copper mining region in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, delegates from Flint, Grand Rapids, Ann Arbor, Jackson, Saginaw and other industrial cities. Negro workers, women workers, young workers were all represented at this convention. Two Socialist Delegates Two delegates from the Socialist Party of Pontiac were present, demonstrating the desire of the working class rank and file of the 8. P. for a united front struggle for the common needs of all workers. They were given a loud ovation. Among the delegates was also Bill Young, Communist Mayor of Platt, Mich., who told how the Communists in his village had achieved their successes. As chairman of the first session, the convention elected John North, one of the leaders of the Auto Workers Union in Grand Rapids, who had just finished a four months’ term in jail for his part in a demonstration against relief cuts. Frank Sykes, leader of the struggles of the Negro masses, was chosen vice-chairman. Weinstone Reports William Weinstone, Secretary of the Michigan District of the Com- munist Party, presented a masterly analysis of the present situation facing the toiling masses and the tasks in the election campaign. He stressed the acuteness of the war danger and the onward march of fascism. He exposed the new deal nationally and as it operates through the corrupt Comstock gov- ernment in Michigan, which, equal- ly with the Republican administra- tion of Detroit, is the tool of the automobile manufacturers. Weinstone dealt concretely with the Socialist and Farmer-Labor Parties, exposing the reactionary character of the leadership of these two parties, as well as of the A. F. of L. leaders. Addressing himself to the two Socialist delegates, he made a stirring appeal for united action of Socialist, Communist and non-Party workers as the only way PATRONIZE Southern and West Indian Markets 291 Dumont Ave. — 325 Livonia Ave. BROOKLYN, N. ¥. Dickens 6-9792 Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT On Fridays, Shoe Repair Where Brownsville Comrades Fix Their Shoes 279 Livonia Avenue Brooklyn New York WHERE Our Comrades EAT RAPOPORT'S DAIRY and VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 93 Second Ave. N. Y. City IRKERS WELCOME — ‘W CHINA CAFETERIA Chinese Dishes 200 American Dishes Be 848 Broadway bet. 19th & 14th st. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS Sokal Cafeteria 1689 PITKIN AVENUE GET THAT UNITY TAN! Ca: He Thizks There Are Too Many Workers Around! Camp Nitgedaiget Beacon-on-the-Hudson, New York Cars leave 10:30 from 2700 Bronx Park East daily, jaturdays, 10 A. M., 3 P. M. and 7 P, M, EStabrook 8-1400 Tenve 10:30 A. M, daily from 27 Bronx Park East, Fridays, Saturdays, 10 A. M., 3 and 7 MICH. C. P. PRESSES Leaders Held RIGHTS OF WORKERS IN ELECTION DRIVE Platform Demands Better Wages and Conditions, Social Insurance and Adequate Relief, Fights For Negroes and All CivilRights 6.—The Communist Party’s Michigan State Election Campaign was launched at the ay, which put forward a slate of candidates led by auto workers, heard the report of Wil- liam Weinstone, district organizer of the Communist Party, oe to defeat the forces of fascism. He called for conducting the election campaign as a mass struggle, aim« ing to enlist the broadest massed of toilers in the fight to win im- proved conditions, pointinz toward the revolutionary way #ut of the crisis and the establishment of So= viet power. Adopt State Platform Weinstone’s speech was followed by a broad discussion in which the delegates told of the experiences in their localities and made proposals. for conducting a successful cam- paign. The State election platform adopted by the conyention en- dorses the National Congressional platform of the Communist Party, points out the increasing attacks on the living standards of the working class of this State. The platform raises demands for higher wages, shorter working hours without re< duction in pay, abolition of the speed up, adequate cash relief to the unemployed, and full social in- surance, It demands repeal of the State Criminal Syndicalism law, declares against attacks on the civil rights of the workers, against the use of injunctions, and police and troops in strikes. The program calls for adequate direct relief of needy farmers, no foreclosures of. farms, equal rights for Negroes and foreign-born, repeal of the State sales and head taxes and other de- mands. A resolution was also adopted on concrete ways and means of con- ducting the election campaign. Among the proposals are a state relief march on the capitol at Lansing in October and the build- ing up of a strong Michigan League Against War and Fascism in prep= aration for the second U. §. Con- gress Against War and Fascism Sept. 28 to 30. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves,, Brooklyn 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, 7-0135 DR. EMIL EICHEL DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St., New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Bours: 9 x. m. to 8 p.m. Sun. 9 to 1 Member Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Fund a I, J. MORRIS, Ine. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order BUT YOU'LL LIKE OUR CAMP Because of the— Proletarian Atmosphere Workers’ Rates — $14.00 Workers School in open air. < SPORTS ENTERTAINMENT DANCES + —to satisfy any worker! CAMP UNITY Wingdale, New York PRESENTS New Plays in Open Air Theatre New Sport Spectacles Water Sports on Lake Ellis Clever Camp Fire Programs Coming Here For Your Vacation? Arrive on SUNDAY instead of Saturday to assure a bunk. P.M. ALgonquin 4-1148

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