The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 8, 1934, Page 2

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A Page Two ‘DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1934 orkers From Spain to Louisiana Redouble Protests As Nazis Secretly Prepare Death Trial for Thaelmann te In Madrid| Angelo Herndon’s Brother Hails Mass Fight Jailed Relief. “German Bank) For Release of Heroic Young Negro Leader Strike Heads n Demand "Sig Consulates s Bombarded | Ds Dail ~ With ‘Free Thaelmann’ Messages NEW YORK.—As weeks pass | with no news from Fascist Ger-| many giving any clue to the present fate of Thaelmann, impris- oned Cor anti-fas es are increas- ions, three worke: rday after f v= ato the windows Consulate carrying “Free Thaelmann. Spain, the consulate an buildings were also rkers ca Death for Hitle: Thaelmann.” for In the same city, the German bank were petitioned to a demand for the release of nn. More than 100 signed, the severe warnings of the Zurich, Switzerland, hundreds of posters and leaflets were dis-! buted despite all the precautions aken by the police and detectives to prevent it Guard Nazis As a result of these militant ac- tions in Switzerland, the Basle building of the German Consulate which contains a bust of Hitler in the window has been closely guarded by police for several days. The opening of the “Peoples Trib- unal,” the terror court which has been especially created to try Thaelmann and other anti-Nazis, signals the plan of the Nazis to attempt a swift, secret trial for ‘Thaelmann and a swift execution. Secret Murder It is the plan of the Nazis to present the world suddenly with the corpse of Thaelmann as an irre- vocable fact. At the same time, the secret execution of Thaelmann is being prepared by deliberately spread stories that he is no danger of a death sentence. The wild raids of the last few weks, the failure of all inquiries to ng banners | p r the employes of NEW brother of the Young Negro leader, | yesterday addressed through the ily Worker the masses who, led the Communist Party and the ational Labor Defense, made e the release of his brother bail. His letter follows: ‘To the Editor of the Inter: Daily Worker: “Comrades, through the columns of your paper, I extend to the mem- bers and supporters of the Interna- nal Labor and the deepest grati- Con tude to those who have shown such unrestrained interest in behalf of my brother, Angelo. “In their endeavor to fight for a just cause, the devotion shown by the American workers in the libera- tion struggles to free all class war , forces me to express sin- cere gratitude to my fellow com- ‘ades, “They have without doubt ren- dered a great service, not only in forcing the release of my brother, but are carrying on courageously in the defense of al class-victims. “IT am desirous of personally ap- pealing to the entire working class to give the staunchest and most heartfelt co-operation to the heroic activities of the revolutionary | workers, in bringing about the com- plete emancipation of the workers Cain Chief Leads. Attack on Painters (Continued from Page 1) sition candidate for secretary. Not only did Zausner count Weinstock | out of office, but, it is charged, he did not seat a number of locals which had elected delegates to the council on a rank and file pro- gram. Many of the locals insisted that no dues would be paid Tie District Council until Zausner was ousted. The membership has maintained this attitude firmly in the present strike, begun a week ago last Monday. when a city-wide YORK.—Milton Herndon, and farmers of the United States. “We realize the kind of system under which we live, and at the same instant, we realize the utter impossibility of any member of working class to receive justice in the courts of declining capitalism. Thus, the time is ripe for all work- ers, intellectuals and professionals, to rid themselves of the poisonous ideology of the master-class, and take the only path that can lead to emancipation and to absolute security of the future, in short, the revolutionary way out, “In closing, permit me again, to express my heartfelt gratitude to the Communist Party, the Iater- national Labor Defense, and all of friends and supporters of those fighting arms of the American working class in their expressions of dauntless courage, with the pledge to add my small share in carrying forward the fight for the absolute liberation of the Negro people, and the ultimate aim, free- dom of the whole working class, “Comradely and sincerely, “MILTON HERNDON.” Protection Demanded NEW YORK — How protection against a pianned attack on Angelo |Herndon by the Georgia Ku Klux| Klan, upon his release—protection which the unwilling officials of the |state and railroads were forced to! grant—was demanded ied ti scores of} Refuse Food organizations and prominent indi-| viduals, was told yesterday by the |International Labor Defense. Among the organizations which joined in this drive, Friday and Saturday, were the Federal Council | of Churches of Christ, branches of the ILD. for Industrial Democracy, scores of| the League | the | American Civil Liberties Union, and | the National Committee for Defense | of Political Prisoners. Waldo Frank, Theodore Dreiser, | and Corliss Lamont, one of the| trustees of the I.L.D. bail fund, were} among the individuals who joined in the demand, The demands were addressed to Governor Eugene Talmadge of Georgia, the police officials of At-| lanta and of cities along the rail- way line between Atlanta and Washington. At the same time, offi- cials of the head office of the Sea- board Airline Railway at Norfolk were called upon to provide special protection for the train on which Herndon was to ride. In a wire to the ILLD., surance that special precautions) would be taken, after a barrage of| demands had descended upon | them, The spread of the “Daily” to the mays of workers is a pre- requisite to their successful struggles, The New AN EDI (Continued Pogroms TORIAL from Page 1) these officials gave as-/ meet with any response on Thael-| walk-out for a 6-hour, $9 day was mann’s condition, as well as the| begun. ominous insistence of the German| Zausner began the strike, Embassy at Washington that Thael-; and file jeaders charge, for the| mann faces a Nazi court on charges purpose of collecting a tax of| of “treason” and that these charges) $1.99 per member. Sensing the are “decisive,” all indicate that the) attitude of the members, he re- Fascists are approaching close to) duced the tax to 50 cents, but still | the day when they expect to mur-/ % no ayail, Local after local has der Thaelmann. elected its own strike committee | The organization of protest ac- | and has refused to recognize the | rank possible that the story is completely fabricated, a8 often occurs in such situations, but even if this is true, it is clear that this could serve only as a signal for the blood-letting. The basis for the clashes between sections of the Arabian and Jewish population had long before been prepared. This basis is the crmnal colonial politics which supports itself by inciting one section of the oppressed population against the other. This basis is a permanent anti-Semitic incitement which for many years has been conducted in Algiers by French politicians. The basis is a nationalistic and religious propaganda of the Arabian bourgeoisie which sees in pogroms the possibility of eliminating the Jewish business competitor. The fire was spread because the fascist conduct of the Zionists gave credence to the propaganda that ail Jews are enemies of the Arabian workers and want to exterminate them. | In order to eliminate the anti-Semitism, | the pogroms and the incitements of one nationality against the other, it is necessary to wipe |. out that force which supports this anti-Semitism. This force is the |Held on | Syiillickliam Charge, Trio Go on Hunger Strike By HENRY CLARK DES MOINES, Ia., Aug. workers who have been active in | the leadership of the strike of 2,000 relief workers here, and have been held on bail of $5,000 each on charges of “criminal syndicalism,” have started a hunger strike. The three, James Porter, local or- ganization secretary of the Com- munist Party, John Nordquist, mem- ber of the strike committee, and Ira Meade, former workers’ candi- date for mayor, were indicted three weeks ago on testimony of city and relief officials and the police. County Attorney Carl Burkman | has refused to allow a reduction in the bail. | The three were jailed because of their activities in organizing the relief strike around the demands for a 24-hour week and endorse- }ment of the Workers’ Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill by the city. Call Special Defense Parley In Brooklyn BROOKLYN—An | urgent appeal jfor the sharpening of the fight} |against fascism and for the freedom |of Angelo Herndon, Ernst Thael- mann and the nine Scottsboro Boys |is continued in the call for an em- jergency conference to be held to- | morrow evening at 4109 Thirteenth | Avenue, Brooklyn, | Richard B. Moore, National Field | Organizer of the International Labor Defense, will outline the tasks of | the fight for the rights of the per-| | secuted Negro people and against 7.—Three | ILD Praises: Daily Worker For Herndon Defense Drive Call Upon IL. L. D. Members and Sympathizers To Aid Circulation Drive NEW YORK.—The National Ex- | ecutive Committee of the Interna- tional Labor Defense yesterday ad- dressed a letter to the Daily Worker, thanking and praising the paper for the assistance given in the drive to raise bail for Angelo Herndon. “With the assistance of the Daily Worker,” the letter states, “we are confident that we will raise the additional $15,000 needed to de-j fend Herndon and the Scottsboro boys.” The full text of the letter follows: | “It was primarily the excellent assistance of the Daily Worker that | made it possible to raise more than | $15,000 bail for Angelo Herndon in a@ period of 25 days. Without the Daily Worker, it would have been impossible to raise the bail for Herndon in the short time we had, }and our young leader would still | be sitting in Fulton Tower jail. “The Daily Worker was foremost among that small group of news- papers which broadcast the appeals for funds. The capitalist press has been silent — ominously silent —on the Angelo Herndon case. It has set up a barrier which it has so far been impossible to break through. The richer newspapers among the Negro press have also been silent while Herndon con- tinued to drag out his days in Fulton Tower. “But the appeals of the Daily Worker and a few other militant | Part in making possible this great newspapers of the working class and the Negro people have made Herndon’s release possible. Of the thousands who streamed into the office of the International Labor | Defense in the 25 days of the Hern- | don bail campaign, the majority mentioned the name of the Daily Worker. Of the bills that poured | in by mail, the majority were at- tached to the appeal printad in the | Daily Worker, “The ‘Daily’ has once more given an inspiring example of how a working class paper leads and or- ganizes the mass struggles. The In- ternational Labor Defense, in the name of its staff and its entire | membership, wishes to convey its | heartiest thanks to the Daily| Worker, which played such a great | victory. With the solidarity and assistance | of the Daily Worker we are con- fident that we will be able to raise the $15,000 we need to defend Hern- don and the Scottsboro boys and to free them finally from the clutches of the lynchers. “We ask all members and sym- pathizers with the International La- bor Defense and with the Scotts- boro boys and Angelo Herndon, to support the drive of the Daily Worker for more readers, for a mass circulation. In this way the good that the ‘Daily’ is doing will be increased many-fold.” ‘Protest Tide Rises Against Coast Terror SAN FRANCISCO. — Reactions’s | anti-Communist, anti-labor drive is} | beginning to crack up. Sentiment | against the attacks on the rights of | | workers begins to grow as the pro- tests mount up. Many sections of | | growing fascist reaction in this} country. All Boro Park, Bath Beach and} the population are condemning the fascist, anti-working-class terror tions before all German Con- | District Council strike “leadership” | sulates is an immediate need. Thaelmann’s life is in danger. Meetings in the streets, before shops, and especially at Nazi of- fices alone can stop the hands of the Nazi executioners. For the liberation of Thaelmann and all anti-fascist prisoners! DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M.. 1 PHONE: DIC! 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. C After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 92 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR. 17-0135 Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFFICE HOURS: 11 0 P.M. SUNDAY: 12-3 3 Sheela Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th & 126th St., N.¥.C, + fi COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises KRAUS & SONS, Inc. Manufacturers of Badges-Banners-Buttons for Workers Clubs and Organizations 157 DELANCEY STREET Telephone: DRydock 4-8275-8276 LERMAN BROS, STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City ALgonguin 4-3356—4-8843—4-7823 | Zausner, frantic, is already ef- fecting settlements with the inde- pendent bosses, thus weakening | the strike ranks. | The attack on Local 892 was preceded by a visit of McNamara | and Edward Ackerley, international | board representative, to the head-| quarters of Local 499, the most | active element in the strike. There Ackerley announced the zevocaton of the charter of Local 499. revoking of the charter and tHe terrorist tactics against the mem- | bership in Local 892, as well as a| number of other locals is seen by members as an organized pogrom policy of Zausner. An. interesting sidelight on the lengths to which Zausner is going is indicated by the fact that Local 499 is the oldest unit of the paint- | ters union, having been organized | in 1878, before the American Ied- | eration of Labor, as such, was organized. The withdrawal of the | charter, against which there is a | storm of protest in other locals, will mean the loss of death bene- fits by the members of the local, The men of the local are bitter at international headquarters, since they have been paying 60 cents monthly per capita to the inter- | national office for the death bene- | fits. Painters all over the city, aroused at the pogrom policy of Zausner, j will march in a demonstration | Association and the District Coun- cil headquarters on Thursday. | Tonight Local 499 will hold a regular membership meeting to | discuss in detail plans to strengthen the strike and fight the revocation | of its charter by international union | officials. against both the Master Painters | 6 the hirelings of tne capitalist Press, one of the most offensive | to the taste is the lackey who pro- strates himself with bubbling en- thusiasm at the feet of every wealthy slob into whose presence he is admitted, He is even worse to the sight and smell tinan the | mountebank of his profession who | Parades as an intellect. An example of what I have in mind is presented to us in a story jin the New York American. The | author is a worthy named Bur- =| ton. The story is on T. O. M. Sopwith, the millionaire owner of the Endeavour, which is being |handled mainly by a crew of scabs, fifteen men having siruck a few weeks ago when Sopwith refused them a raise in wages. The head is “Sopwith ‘Goes Over Big’ With U/ S. Sportdom.” With what U. S. Sportdem has Mr. Sopwith gone over big? You can read the from top to bottom ten times you'll find | no mention of any U, S. Sport- colonial policy of imperialism. Against this must be marshalled the united energies of all oppressed nations, No other solution is possible, Picketing Fads! In Minneapolis : Leaders’ Truce Are Exposed MINNEAPOLIS, M Minn., Aug. 7.—| Martial law continues here, and | picketing of the striking truck drivers has ceased by agreement be- tween Governor Floyd B. Olson and} the leadership of the drivers’ local | union 574. Close to 200 pickets are held in the military stockade. Some strikers have already been sentenced |to 90 days at hard labor. The Na- | tional Guardsmen have been in- structed to arrest all those selling | Communist literature. Individual employers who agree to accept the settlement proposed by | the Federal conciliators. Fyror-': Hass and E, Dunnigan, have been given military permits to cp... trucks. The 100 major employers | combined in the Citizens’ Alliance ;or under its leadership have refused | to accept and have sought an in- | junction from the Federal Court to force Olson to withdraw the Na- | tional Guard. The Haas-Dunnigan agreement in | itself means a defeat of the original demands of the truck drivers. At last night’s mass meeting 25,000 Minneapolis workers attended, show- ing their readiness to support the strikers, Join the Red Builders! dom with whom Mr. Sopwith has gone over big. The only kind of Sportdom he goes over big with in the story is the Sportdom represented by the boot-lickers ; Present to interview him. Cray aa A HIGH type of boot-licker, Bur- ton’s story is as gross a story as one can hope to encounter, The author begins by painting Sopwith as a “very human, likeable sports- man.” This of the man who refused to raise the wages of his men from $13.50 and some odd dollars extra ;@ week, though he has otherwise spent millions to win the cup away from America. Burton then tells us of Sop- with’s precedecessor as challenger, Sir Thomas Lipton, the man who always lost with a smile and starved his employees with a smie. Him, Burton calis, “an amiable, wiity, lovable old fellow.” Mr. Burton does not know that Sir Thomas exprossed the wish that his employees be kept away ren Red Lies Of Ohio Paper WELLSVILLE, ¢ Ohio, Aug. 7.— The local unit of the Communist Party has issued a leaflet exposing as a “stupid lie” the charge printed in the Wellsville News that Com- munists have a_ secret list of \churches scheduled for destruction |by dynamite and fire. In clumsy, rustic imitation of its |metropolitan betters, the News at- |tempted to create local anti-com- munist incitement by publishing in lits July 28 issue a dispatch from | Washington, Ohio, reporting an ad- | dress on “The Menace of Com- munism” by a Dr. Oscar Autritt at a@ prayer meeting of the “ultra- |fashionable First — Congregational Church, where Calvin Coolidge, arch foe of Communist principles, used to worship.” Dr. Autritt declared that “in a dark cellar in St. Louis I saw a blueprint at least 20 feet long list- ing the Wellsville church as one of jthe churches to be blasted as a |lesson to Capitalistic America.” The Communist Party leaflet re- plying to Dr, Autritt’s cheap effort at sensationalist anti-working class | incitement points out that “the Communists don’t believe in such jacts of individual violence or ter- | rorism.” COMMENTS ON SPORTS » from his grave, lest they defile it, because he was so amiable, witty and lovable. Ce ESS BERTON is writing: “A hard- boiled yachting expert raised a glass of shandygaff in the middle of a group and drank ‘to the blue- eyed guy up there’,” That's just the kind of person Mr. Sopwith is. Even hard-boiled yachting experts get filled with en- thusiasm over him, Mr, Burton does not mention, however, whose shan- dygaff it was. One can be sure that Burton did not inquire whether it was Mr. Sopwith's custom to drink shandygaff with those of his employees who struck. Mr. Bur- ton was tco overwhelmed by the fact that he was drinking shandy- gaff with Mr. Sopwith. It is not noo . though, to buy a creature like Burton with shandygaff. He lies down na- turally. He continues: “Immediately an- other yachting writer, who is so un- Bensonhurst organizations opposed |to lynching and fascism are asked | by the I. L. D. branches of Boro Park, West End Section to send del- egates to the conference. Where or- | ganizations do not meet in time to jelect delegates, the executive com- mittees are urged to appoint dele- gates, Cuba Ruling Groups Face Mass Unrest HAVANA, Aug. 17. — Fighting among the factions of the Cuban | Government, showing rising discon- tent in the political sections, is causing active concern of revolt |here among the ruling cliques. Three Americans have been ar- rested on the charge of smuggling in arms and ammunition to aid the foes of the Mendieta government. Huge shipments of arms are being brought into Cuba almost daily. The arrested men are Frederick Wilcox, son of William R. Wilcox, chairman of the Republican National Com- mittee on the presidential campaign of 1916, Arthur B. Needham, repre- senting American sugar interests, and Colonel Arthur B. Hoffman, who was recognized as having been revolt against the Machado rule. The Communist Party is calling on the masses to show their solida- rity against the Mendieta puppet government on August 12, the anni- versary of “Massacre Day” of the Machado government. AUTO MEN WALK OUT DETROIT.—The wood and metal patternmakers, the first batch of workers to go into the shops for the 1924-35 season, have struck for a 16 per cent wage increase. Every job shop in Detroit is closed un- der the leadership of the Pattern- eerie Association of America, A. F. of Get Daily Worker Subscribers William Fuchs sentimental that he is often ac- cused of kicking his mother and biting his father for breakfast, voiced the hope that Sopwith’s en- deavour will the America’s Cup.” How is this for personality? Mr. Sopwith melts the toughest guys. You will observe how Mr. Burton brings in contrast to prove Mr. Sop- With’s worth, Beats his mother and bites his father — utterly over- whelmed with sentiment for Mr. Sopwith! UT this is only one illustration of the type of newspaperman * 8 I refer to. There are plenty of | other examples. Worthies like Burton fill every newspaper office | in this country. A bascball writer of my acquaintance, once refused to write a story attacking MeGraw to which he had been assigned, because he was afraid McGraw would not let him into the ball park again, involved in the unsuccessful Gibara | 35 unloosed by the open-shop employ- ers. A group headed by Bishop Par- sons, Rabbi Reichert, Will J. French (Administrator Creel’s right-hand man in the N. R. A.) and Louis Bartlett (ex-Mayor of Berkeley) has signed a statement protesting “cur- tailment of free speech, unlawful interference with the rights of the individual, and every manifestation of mob violence and lawlessness, no matter by whom or against whom.” The Building Trades Council of Santa Clara County has condemned the anti-labor raids and deporta- tions in San Jose, and has asked that vigilantes be arrested and tried. Over the protests of labor men and liberal clergymen, the San Jose ordinance forbidding meetings in St. James Park has passed its sec- ond and final reading. Rev. Hubert Doran of the Centella Methodist Church denounced it before the city council as “un-American and} violating the provisions of the con- | stitution.” In Sacramento, the Workers’ School was denounced before the Grand Jury, which is considering criminal syndicalism indictments against the 28 Communists ar- Classified SUBLET for two months, large light room, Suitable for 2, all improvements, vici- nity Union Squa: Reasonab) in- quire: Ann, Editorial Dept. D. |AUTIFUL furnished room, levator, single; 2766 Barnes Ave. Apt. D-3. Week- days, Allerton Station. RADIO for sale. Sacrifice. Majestic 9 tube. Bolter, Sd E. 88th St., 2 flights rear. After 6 P. TRUCKS FOR HIRE for Picnics, Outings, all occasions, Very reason- able to workers clubs. BROWNIES DELIVERY SERVICE, 34 West 2ist Street. Restaurant and Garden “KAVKAZ” Russiam and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 382 East 14th Street New York City Tompkins Square 6-9132 Brighton Comrades Patronize Parkway Food Center |Fish Market 3051 Ocean Parkway Corner Brighton Beach Ave. QUALITY BAKING CO, 44-19 Broadway, Astoria, L. I. J. and Z. DEMIRJIAN, Props. Oriental Famous Shashlik Bread delivered at all Picnies within a day’s notice WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children, Direction: ‘exington Ave., White Plains Trains, Stop at Allerton Aye. station Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m, Sunday 10 a.m, to 2 p.m, rested there. Detectives planted in the school as students testified se- cretly against its “revolutionary in- struction.” All defendants are still in jail, in default of $1,000 bail each. The hunger strike of the 29 work- ers in the San Francisco jail is} meeting with much sympathy. The workers are demanding a lowering of the exorbitant bail. Among the | recent statements of support re- | ceived here is that of the National Committee for Political Prisoners | in New York. The wire follows: | Flaine Black, City Jail, i San Francisco, Cal. Accept our expression of soli- darity for stand you have taken on excessive bail. We want to express solidarity to you and others in prison result activities General Strike, and tell you that we support your action in calling hunger strike for reduction ex- cessive bail your cases. Have seat wire urging release and pending which immediate reduc- tion of bail to reach judge tomor- row. National Committee for the De- fense of Political Prisoners. A. H, HIRSCH, Sec. | mediate Build a Daily Worker Route Funds Urged To Aid Cuban UnionLeader | Ordoqui, CNOC Leader, Is Held in Dungeor by Mendieta NEW YORK.—A call to all work ers and working-class organizations | to intensify the campaign to raise funds to aid the fight for the free. dom of Joaquin Ordoqui, genera] | secretary of the Confederation Na- cional Obrera de Cuba, the militant trade union federation of Cuba with more than 300,000 members, was issued yesterday by the Trade Union Unity League and the In- ternational Labor Defense. Two hundred dollars are needed imme- diately. Ordoqui is in a Cuban dungeon, charged with “inciting an attack,” for his leadership of a counter- demonstration of workers when the fascist ABC party staged a parada on June 17. The ABC marchers were attacked by followers of ex« President Grau San Martin, an other capitalist group, and several were killed. The Wall Street controlled Cuban government is attempting to destroy the ©. N. O, C. by framing up and getting rid of its leaders. Sailors and marines of the ship Cuba are also being held in dungeons. The marines had participated in adem- onstration against the fascist ABC. Workers are urged to send pro- tests to President Mendieta and Fulgencio Batista, chief of the Army and Navy, at Havana, Cuba. Send funds to the Daily Worker office, 35 E. 12th St., N. Y. City, for im- transmission to Cuban workers, N. ¥. U. Comrades Patronize VIOLET CAFETERIA 28-30 WAVERLY PLACE New York City Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 191 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) NEEDLE WORKERS PATRONIZE SILVER FOX CAFETERIA and BAR 326-7th Avenue Between 28th and 29th Streets Food Workers Industrial Union All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA ———— Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 KE. 13th St—WORKERS’ CENTER |__| He Thinks There Are Too Many Workers Around! BUT YOU'LL LIKE OUR CAMP Because of the— Proletarian Atmosphere Workers’ Rates $14.00 Workers School in open atr. SPORTS ENTERTAINMENT DANCES —to satisfy any worker! Camp Nitgedaiget Beacon-on-the-Hudson, New York Cars leave 10:30 from 2700 Bronx Park East daily. ‘On Fridays, Saturdays, 10 A. M., 3 P. M. and 7 P. M. EStabrook 8-1400 CAMP UNITY Presents HANS EISLER TRIO Violin ......- Cello ALEXANDER SOLOMON . AVRON TWERDOWSKY seseeceees, ALBERT ROZIN Wednesday Night Concert Beethoven, Dvorak, Rubenstein and Cassedo Program in duet combinations and trio TO BE FOLLOWED BY DANCING Oars legos for camp from 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 A. M. (0 A. M., 3 and 7 P. M. Fridays, PINE A igen 4-148, RATE: $14 A WEEK; $2.65 A — Spend Your Vacation in a Proletarian Camp — CAMP KINDERLAND HOPEWELL JUNCTION NEW YORK For Adults and Children Vacation Rates for Adults $14.00 per Week (Tax Included) For Children of I.W.O. Schools and Members of the I.W.O. $16.00 for 2 Wks.—5 Wks. $52.50—10 Wks. $105.00 For Others Additional $2.00 For children over 12 years an additional per Week lollar per week Cars Leave for Camp Daily at 10:30 A. M.; Friday and Saturday 10:30.A, M., 3 P. M. and 7 P. M., from 2700 Bronx Park East, Register Your Child and Spend Your Own Vacation in CAMP KINDERLAND

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