The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 14, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two =~ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1934 Leaders of Militant Nebraska Farmers’ Group Named > on United Front Ticket Backed by Communist Party Gebert Asks Action in District to Place Party on the Ballot 400 Delegates Draft Slate and Program Are Communists Nominees LOUP CITY, Neb., Aug. 13—The president a the State organizer of the rmers’ Holiday id the Workers’ ited Front inde- late endorsed by amunist Party. John head of the group, will run for G veteran and State organizer, will run for United States Senator. Both Schefeik and Lux are mem- he Communist Party. mass basis and the working background of the election Robert Burleigh, worker organizer, for Lieutenant- Governor, and Burt Sell, militant farm leader in the recent pow pickers’ strike, for Congressman. A broad, popular response to the demands raised by the Communist election platform is indicated by the recent State ratification con- vention near Grand Island at which the candidates were nominated. The vital importance of the plank against the Agricultural Adjust- ment Act and the demand fo: mediate drought relief has particularly clear to a large num- ber of farmers in this State during the past two or three wee The experiences of the Omaha street car workers in their regent strike, and the ferment among the packing house workers, has made the city population of this State realize the yday significance of the Com- munist call for struggle against growing fascism and Roosevelt's at- tacks on the living standards of workers. The convention itself was an im- pressive display of the mass basis for the united front election strug- gle. More than 400 workers and farmers attended. Many more would have come had not the drought in- tensified their poverty to the point where gasoline and even shoe leather has become a luxury. The actual campaign work is al- ready under way. The People’s Standard, weekly newspaper pub- lished here, has been designated as the official campaign organ of the United Front ticket. Nominating petitions are in cireylation. So is campaign literature. A drive for funds is on. The complete State slate consists of: John J. Schefcik for Governor; Robert Burleigh for Lieutenant- Goyernor; Floyd Booth for Secre- tary of State; G. Shoppe for Attor- ney-General; Waldo Hankins, for Auditor of Public Accounts; Ellen Allen, for State Treasurer; H. E. Renquist for Commissioner of Lands and Buildings, and Josie Hallquist, for Superintendent of Public In- struction. The national slate consists of: Harry M. Lux, for United States Senator, and Al. Broberg, J, P- Burke and Burt Sell, for Congress- men in the Third, Fourth and Fifth Districts. Competition Stirs Daily Worker Drive (Continued from Page 1) candidacies of ® ig all I have to say now.” And that’s saying a mouthful, Mike! Though poets and novelists may come from Indiana, workers remain in the Hoosier state to fight for their class interests. Avery Karn has built sales up in Richmond to 50 copies daily and is certain that he'll make it 100 before snow flies. Sells to Munition Workers From campus to cannon factories might be the title of a story on how three New Haven comrades are building the “Daily,” selling it to the painters and carpenters work- ing on the university buildings, as well as on busy corners and before such plants as Winchester and Sar- geants. It may only be a bicycle built for one, but Harry Davis, Lancaster, Pa., Daily Worker Agent, bought it to show Champion Sub-getter Bill Murray what makes the circula- tion wheels go round. At that, he’s going to have to keep his feet off the break, because Comrade Mur- ray is the kind of worker who uses a three-day vacation to step out and sell 75 copies of the “Daily” in addition to picking up eight sub- scriptions. Harry, however, sleeps with his pants clips on and is re- ported to have a voice that can be heard three blocks in any direc- tion. Florence Wayne is from Missouri and she knows that even workers who are not fully class-conscious will buy the “Daily” because it carries news the other papers don’t dare print. She is concentrating on the packing plants in Kansas City and is asking the workers to write letters and articles about con- ditions. In this way, she expects to popularize specific issues and build this interest into a desire to read every issue. ed to Win Metal Workers ‘Workers in the McKeesport tin mill may not know about the “Daily,” but they're going to learn alot in the very near future, be- cause Gust Mikades and another comrade are ordering a bundle to sell before the gate and they ex- pect to show en inerease after the first four days. “It’s not that w ers don’t want to read our ‘Daily’,” writes Comrade Mikades, “but too many don’t know it exists.’ We're tn hearty agreement with this ob- J. y Nebraska | ernor, and Harry M, Lux, world war | ; urther strengthened by the | Workers in Buffalo Hold Demonstration Workers’ and Farmers’ | To Pro tes 4 A rres ts Fight Action Against | William MeQuiston and | Manning Johnson ALO, d police ii ass leaders, Buffalo work- ers engaged in a militant demon- ion before police headquarters | Seneca and Frank Sts. last Fri- day night following the arrest on “suspicion of being a Communist organizer” of William MeCuiston. The arrest is part of a joint drive by Federal and city authorities. on workers’ organizations here. Enraged by sts of militant McOuision was pul off a peaker’s stand and w! ed away in a police car while addressing an open-air meeting at the corner | of South Division St. and Michigan | Ave., one of numerous meetings held in this city last week to protest the | j arrest of Manning Johnson, Negro leader and former district organizer of the Communist Party, and Stan- | ley Schmiel, International Labor De- | fense attorney. Schmiel was ar- rested when he visited police head- quarters to protest the holding of ; Johnson without charges and to demand his release March On Headquarters | More than 500 workers at the} meeting at which McCuiston was) | speaking when he was arrested by | Federal and city detectives started @ march on police headquarters, their ranks swelled on the way by other indignant workers as news of the latest arrest spread. Warned by patrolmen on duty of the march of | the angry workers, police headquar- | ters summoned reinforcements from all nearby police stations. These, armed with riot guns and gas bombs, threatened the workers when they demanded the release of Mc- Cuiston and information on what charges he was being held. Up to the present, no charges have been placed against McCuis- ton, who police claimed to recog- nize as a Communist organizer from a police cireular with his photograph. The boss press, how- ever, indicate that the local and Federal authorities are cooking up a charge of “bombing and arson ac- tivities’ against him, despite uni- versal knowledge that Communists are relentlessly opposed to acts of individual terror. The Buffalo Even- ing News on Saturday reported he | was to be questioned in connec- tion with the fire which destroyed the Buffalo Freight Terminal and Warehouse Co. building on the Blackwell Canal on the previous Sunday. Held Without Charges Although Manning Johnson is still held without charges, police indicated today that the direct cause of his arrest was his resent- beer garden refused to serve him. Johnson and a white comrade are said to have entered the place for a glass of beer. The proprietor re- fused to serve Johnson. Police claim Johnson threw a glass of water at the chauvinist proprietor. They admit that Johnson was | badly beaten following his arrest jand had to be sent to a hospital for treatment- ment when a white proprietor of aj servation and suggest tHat other comrades in industrial and metro- politan areas give it some thought, backed up by a lot of energetic ac- tion. Party members! Readers! The Socialist competition between Dis- tricts will continue past the drive for 20,000 new Daily Worker read- ers by Sept. 1. This is but the first step in doubling the circula- tion of the “Daily” by Jan. 1. Speak to every friend, acquaint- anee and worker with whom you come in contact. Ask them to subscribe or buy the Daily Work- er. Join or get unemployed work- ers to join the Red Builders. Make circulation an important part of your work in the finance drive. Give the Daily Worker first place on your calendar of activity and responsibility! Get Daily Worker Subscribers Earn Expenses Selling the “Daily” Join the Red Builders! YY NO sensible estimate was the late Wilbert Robinson anything but an insignificant figure. The metaphysicians of the sports pages may write lyrical tear-jerkers about him, but the sum and substance of his contributions to humanity re- main nothing. He played on the Baltimore Orioles, he was eighteen years manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers—what an epitaph! Let us add to that—he once made seyen a in seven consecutive times at att The newspapers made him, as they have made every professional sporting character. He was eigh- teen years manager of the Brook- lyn Dodgers—and he won only two pennants. But the excuse given in the newspapers is that he was never allowed the money to buy players. the sport of professional baseball. He could not win any pennants because he did not have the money Smeltermen’s Union Endorses Workers’ Insurance Measure SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Aug. 13.—Representatives ‘of metal miners and smelter workers in thirty states, meeting today at the convention of the Interna- tional Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers Union of America, voted to endorse the Workers Unem- ployment Insurance Bill. The proposal for the endorsement of the bill was made by the Amer- ican Federation of Labor Rank and File Committee on Unem- ployment Insurance, The union led the recent strike of mill and smelter men in the Birmingham area and is now conducting a strike of smeltermen in Butte. Reports Gains in Flop Houses of Jobless NEW YORK.—Forty per cent more men used public and charity lodging houses during the month of June this year than during the same month a year ago, according to statistics issued yesterday by the Welfare Council of New York City, Despite warmer weather 9,336 job- less men braved the horrible con- ditions in the “flop” houses—a drop of only 10 per cent from May and only 19 per eent from the wintry month of March. At this time of the year most unemployed men pre- fer park benches, The huge increase of 40 per cent this year is due to the continued worsening of living conditions, rising prices of rent, and the firing of thousands of single workers from work relief rolls by the city, An increase of 322 daily in the number of homeless transients was reported by the Welfare Depart- ment as well as a rise in the num- ber of unattached persons receiving aid from the Home Relief Bureau. In spite of the seasonal change only 3 per cent less women were lodged during June than May—an unusu- ally small decrease, the department admits. Commissioner William Hodson’s comment on these statistics was his usually demagogic statement that “New York City is not shirking its responsibility,” coupled with a warn- ing to umemployed men and boys throughout America to “stay out of New York.” The filth-ridden “flop” houses are the last resort of the jobless, the final barrier to actual starvation. Hodson's boasting of the “respon- sibility” which the New York City government has accepted, is an in- sult to the unemployed workers and a step toward further demoralizing “velief” conditions. Three Furriers Seized by Police after Clash at Downtown Factory NEW YORK —Three militant furriers were arrested yesterday and held without bail on a framed-up charge of feloniously assaulting Bernard Kramer at his factory at 247 W. 30th St. The workers, Leonard Strong, Gus Rossios and Nat Novitz were seized by cops after a clash at the Kra- mer shop when the boss was at- tempting to prevent his workers from leaving to join the Fur Work- ers’ Industrial Union. The em- ployer, the police claim, was stabbed. No one has been identified, how- ever, as the stabber. Workers demonstrated around It is a commentary on|s to buy players! In their eager- ness to make him a figure, there- West 30th St., booing the police after the arrest- Tenants Push Rent Strike on Sugar Hill Delegates of 14 Build. ings Pledge Support at Mass Meeting NEW YORK.—The militant rent strke conducted by 235 tenants of four apartment buildings in the Harlem section known as Sugar Hill may soon affect other build- ings in the vicinity, it was indi- cated at a mass meeting of the striking families on Friday evening. Delegates from fourteen other houses attended the meeting, called by the United Tenants League to pledge their support and their ef- forts to bring occupants of neigh- boring buildings out on strike, The buildings thus far involved in the fight for reduced rents and physical improvements are 281 Edge- comb Avenue and 746, 772 and 805 St. Nicholas Avenue, Only three families have failed to join the strike. The strike executive com- mittee declared that it would con- tinue its activity despite the fact that all its members have been Served with dispossess notices, When a delegation of the tenants, interviewing representatives of the Sonn Leasing Corporation, man- agers of the buildings, pointed out that the corporation renjed better houses to white tenants for less money, the spokesmen for the cor- poration replied, “We get as much as we can.” Among the active leaders of the 1933 strike are Ben Davis, Jr., editor of the Negro Liberator. Textile Workers Demand Strike (Continued from Page 1) bor Assembly, did not so much as mention the problem of strike which is the burning issue facing the de- legates. In his report, presented in writ- ten form to the delegates, Mac- Mahon was foreed by pressure of the rank and file to take natice of the strike question, but here also he emphasized control by the inter- national officers of the union. The wage and hour demands are taken up in a different section of MacMahon's report under a report of a committee appointed by Mac- Mahon to make recommendations. The committee advocated to es- tablish the following scale: “revi- sions of the Cotton Textile Code,” “Hours, two shifts of 30 hours per week with no exemptions. Differen- tials: The establishing of four min- imum wages: Unskilled, $13; Semi- skilled, $18; Skilled, $22.50; Highly skilled, $30.” On speedup the recom- mendation is: “Machine load. The revision of all work loads on the basis of reason and ordinary com- mon sense.” Mrs. Gifford Pinchot, wife of Governor Pinchot of Pennsylvania, addressed the convention and said: “Mr. Pinchot is very proud of the fact that last year in Fayette County in the coal mine strike when miners were shot down by; deputy sheriffs, that he called out the National Guard twice to pro- tect the miners’ constitutional rights and privileges.” The National Guard helped break the strike, and the workers are now saddled’ with company unions. A letter from Mollie Dowd, local organizer of the United Textile Workers in Huntsville, Ala., where textile workers are out on strike, was read to the convention. The letter said, in part: “Today I hear that the business men on the Chamber of Commerce of Huntsville have threatened the job of the public welfare worker if she gives a loaf of bread to the strikers, much less anything elese. . . “They are still boldiy threatening our lives and send me word every day that they are coming after me that night to take me for a ride just like they did Dean, And you need not discount that they will do it. “They say as soon as they get rid of us they will put the workers back in the mill at the point of a gun if necessary.” The convention will reconvene this morning at 9:30 o'clock in Town Hall, Relief Workers Win Increase in Budgets in Wisconsin Strike ANTIGO, Wis., Aug. 13. — A strike of relief workers, led by the Unemployment Council, Loeal 1, has just ended with the workers winning a 20 to 30 per cent increase in relief budgets, representation on the grievance committee at the relief station, no discrimination against unem- ployed single men who cannot be supported by their families, and the return of all auto license plates to workers on re- lief or on F, E. R. A. jobs The agreement which the strike committee reached with the relief officials was accepted only on the condition that the demands be granted at once. George McArthur was elected at a meeting of the Unemploy- ment Council to represent the relief workers on the grievance committee, Plan Terror To Fight C.P. in Argentina BUENOS AIRES, Aug. 13.—Fear of the growth of the Communist Party and its influence is revealed in the latest report of the Ministry of the Interior which reports that the government arrested more than 1,600 people for militant activity in Deliberately lying and slandering, the report states that the Commu- nist press is constantly inciting at- tacks on public buildings, water- works and railroads. It does this in the attempt to conceal the terrible misery of the peasants and laborers here as the wealthy landlords grind profits out of them. There have been many strikes led by the growing Communist Party, which raises the slogan of the agrarian revolution and anti- imperialist revolution against the yoke of the imperialist bankers, who dominate the life of the coun- try: Following the example of the more powerful imperialist countries, Argentina has created a special ter- rorist police squad “to fight Com- munism.” The white slave traffic, in which all the government officials have an interest, continues, and the gov- ernment officials are seeking to as- sociate this vile traffic with the Communists. But the masses are increasingly following the Commu- nist leadership. Haas, Dunnigan Rewrite Plan To Suit Employers in Minneapolis Strike (Special to the Daily Worker) MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 13.— Hass and Dunnigan have rewritten their plan for the settlement of the truckdrivers’ strike to suit the em- ployers, according to latest reports. These reports stated that the em- ployers and mediators fully agree upon such a plan which also has the approval of the labor relations board in Washington. Over 9,000 trucks are in opera- tion now, which is 3 bigger num- ber than the one which prevailed before Olson’s so-called restrictions against employers refusing to ac- cept the Haas proposals. In nor- mal times about 13,000 trucks are run. About 2,500 of these permits have been issued largely to people who own their own trucks, and who agree to abide by the Haas- Dunnigan proposal, not necessarily signing with the union. The others are special permits for necessities, interstate commerce. Many of the large firms move their material by hiring small truck drivers who have permits. W. I. R. MEETING DEFERRED NEW YORK.—The general mem- bership meeting of the Workers’ In- ternational Relief called for tomor- row has been postponed. The meet- ing will be held the evening of Mon- day, Aug. 20, at the Anti-Nazi Fed- eration, 168 W. 23rd St. The change has been made on account of the Angelo Herndon meeting scheduled for tomorrow night. fore, we learn from the newspaper boys that he developed players. An- other reason for immortality — he developed Dazzy Vance! In their respect for the maxim of speaking nothing but good of the dead, how- ever, the newspaper boys forget that a number of years ago the departed Uncle Robbie unloosed one of the heaviest denunciations upon sports writers that has ever come out of the mouth of a pro- fessional impresario, i 4 OBINSON worked for money all his life, for his own profit and for the profit of his various bosses, He was a part of the skullduggery which is professional baseball. What did Robinson actually do for basedall? Examine the poems, es- and evaluetions by the joy- You will discover that they consider his greatest worth the fact that when he became manager of the Brooklyn club it was not mak- ing any money but that when he COMMENTS ON SPORTS » left it, the club was one of the richest in the big league circuit. 'T SHOULD be observed that most of the garlands that are set on his head have to do with his ami- ability. He was, one learns, an- other of those elevated souls who never lost without a smile. This personality toueh is always used when a denizen of the caves leaves this best of all possible worlds. Look back upon the eulogies of the late MeGraw, whose delicacy of de- meanor and expression earned him the nickname of Muggsy. Indeed, one can still smell the incense. Muggsy too was an old Oriole and so celebrated when he went to his grave. But how many of those who wrote about Muagsy’s future stay in Val- halla wrote about Muggsy’s con- necticns with varioys Florida real estate deals? Or about Muggsy’s connections with the gamblers who think the Polo Grounds is a Val- halla enough for them and are con- William Fuchs tent to leave the Valhalla above to others? Did it creep into their stories that Cozy Dolan is still col- lecting a salary from the Giants? Or about a certain occasion, a few years before the war, when Muggsy | tried to buy a game? her ae 'VEN a man who was a friend of Robinson’s, Hugh Bradley, of the Post, writes of the literature on his demise that “some of the gushing tributes perhaps would bring a scornful chuckle if the newspapers were sold elsewhere than at subway stations.” What he means is that the “gushing tributes” are primarily for the benefit of suckers. If not for the suckers professional base- ball and similar arts would have few heroes. I hesitate to point this out, lest I betray a secret, but it is a deep-rocted axiom among sports writers that no fan is as comically sentimental and weak- headed as the baseball fan. “Say it ain't so,” the question put to Joe Jackson, is the motto they have officially given him, Dentists Quit St. John Clinic over Dismissal Nun Gives No Reason for Mismissal of a Member of Staff NEW YORK.—The entire dental staff of St. John’s Hospital, Long Island City, has resigned in protest at the recent dismissal of one of the staff, who was discharged with no notification of the charges against him. The staff is protesting his discharge and the fact that the staff itself was not consulted in the matter or given any notification of the discharge. The group gives its services with- out charge to the workers who apply at the clinic, The members of the clinic pre- sented a petition protesting the dis- charge to Sister Hilda, in charge of the clinic. She refused to accept the petition or state the reasons for the arbitrary dismissal The dentists have called on dentists and physigians throughout the city to aid them in this fight. The medical staff at St. John's is looked to especially to take con- crete steps to aid them. The mem- bers of the group have urged that dentists of other sections suppor: them by refusing to join the staff of the clinic, To prevent any suffering because of the action of the dentists, ar- rangements have been made that all workers holding the yellow clinic ticket of the St, John’s Clinic may receive free attention at the offices of any of the dentists who resigned. Plans Set for Herndon Rally (Continued from Page 1) yesterday in an interview with a Daily Worker reporter. “The Negro masses, harassed by ‘unemployment, mass starvation, lynching, jim-crow, discrimination in jobs and relief, are desperately seeking a way out of their intol- erable conditions. “Servile Negro agents of the white ruling class are busy seeking to head off the struggles of these masses for land, freedom, equality. and bread and to divert them into reformist channels harmless to the oppressors. It is our task to con- vince these masses that the only way to free themselves is through the close unity of white and Negro toilers in joint revolutionary strug- gle against their common oppres- sors.” Herndon is out on bail of $15,000 pending appeal against a verdict of 18 to 20 years on the notorious Georgia chain gang for his activ- ities in organizing and leading white and Negro unemployed workers of Atlanta, Ga., in the fight against starvation and for adequate relief. Another gigantic mass welcome meeting will be held for Herndon at Bronx Coliseum, East 177th St., August 22, the anniversary of the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti, com- memorated by the International La- bor Defense as National Scottsboro Day in the mass fight for the free- dom of the nine Scottsboro boys. Both meetings are under the joint auspices of the I. L. D, League of Struggle for Negro Rights. Get Daily Worker Subscribers! 20,000 New Readers by Sept. Ist.! Unemployed? Sell the “Daily” PERSONAL EUGENE NIGOB—please get in touch with faci Doroshkin at I.W.O, office, 80 Fifth venue, HARLEM WORKERS PATRONIZE INTERNATIONAL RESTAURANT and BAR 322 Lenox Avenue - New York Bet. 126th gnd 127th Streets WHERE Our Comrades EAT RAPOPORT'’S DAIRY and VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 93 Second Ave. N. Y. City = WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Chinese Dishes __ 200 American Dishes 250 848 Broadway bet. 18th & 14th St, FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS Sokal Cafeteria 1689 PITKIN AVENUE PATRONIZE Southern and West Indian Markets 291 Dumont Ave. — 825 Livonia Ave. BROOKLYN, N. ¥. Dickens 6-979 Special Membership Meeting of Section 4 Called for Tonight NEW YORK.—A special mem- bership meeting of the Harlem Section of the Communist Party will be held tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the Finnish Workers’ Hall, 15 W. 126th St. Questions of the greatest im- portance will be discussed and all members of the section are instructed to be present, and to come on time. To allow full dis- cussion, the meeting will not start later than the stated hour. Unit organizers will check up on the attendance of the mem- bers of their units. and the |% Wiliiamsbursh Comrades Welecme De Luxe Cafeteria 4 Graham Aye. er fleet St. Bronx Jobless Cut Red Tape, Win Rent Pay NEW YORK—Rent vouchers without the usual red tape have been won by the mass pressure of workers from the lower Bronx Home Relief Bureau on 139th St. After a series of struggles organ- ized by the Unemployment Coun- cils, 603 E. 136th St- Under the leadership of the council, workers had conducied mags picketing and had refused to leave the relief station until rent vouchers were granted. Investiga- tors were sent out after regular hours by the bureau officials to find homes for the workers. About two weeks ago Helen Lynch, Unemployment Council leader, and two other militant workers were framed and given jail sentences for picketing by Magis- trate Margolesky. Helen Lynch was held for several days in solitary confinement until the International Labor Defense acted and she was transferred to regular status, Upholstery Workers Will Meet Tomorrow NEW YORK.—Plans for unity of all unions and individual workers in the furniture industry will be discussed tomorrow night at 8 o'clock, at a meeting of upholstery shop delegates called by the Fur- niture Workers’ Industrial Union in Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Ir- ving Place. The industrial union’s efforts at unity are the first step in preparation for the struggles with employers which are antici- pated when work is restored to its seasonal volume in the fall. SKEETE Shoe Repair Where Beayperiilc Gomrates Fix 279 Livonia Avenue Believe It or Not WE’RE ACTUALLY So Bring Your Racket, And Your Bathing Suit And Your Best Pals CAMP Wingdale, —And It’s No Rumor This Time. Has Room for You This Week. So Hurry Out! 6 ae | Organizer Urges Efforts Be Redoubled to Get Signatures CHICAGO, Tl, Aug. 13—‘Ouw Party will never be able to explain to the working class of Chicago and Mlinois why we were not able to get on the ballot if we do not collect the signatures necessary to do 50,” William Gebert, district organizer of the Communist Party, declared today in urging redoubled efforts for the collection of 90,000 nom- inating signatures. With the nominating petition drive entering its final stagt today, only 200 lists out of a 15,000 total have been returned, A- Guss, State campaign manager, reported. There are now 13 days left before the deadline for submitting the peti- tions to State election authorities. “We must place the collection of signatures on an emergency basis,” Gebert’s appeal said. “We have the masses of Chicago workers look- ing toward our Party, waiting to see what our actions will be, We can and we must place the Party candidates on the ballot, and it can be done if every Party and Young Communist League member feels himself personally responsible for collecting signatures.” Guss urged workers not to retain petitions in their homes or neigh- borhooed organization headquarters, but to rush them to State campaign headquarters at 101 S. Wells St. Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. G After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Bulte 103—GR. 17-0135 Dr. S. A, Chernoff GENITO-URINARY Men and Women 228 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFFICE HOURS: 11-7:30 P.M. SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M. Tompkins Square 6-7697 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. EMIL EICHEL DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St., New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. AT water 9-8838 Hours: Member Workmen's Benefit Fund I. J. MORRIS, Ine. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-568 For International Workers Order aimee eet om warmer ee PLAYING TENNIS | We Supply the Court And A Grand Lake And A Darn Good Time! UNITY New York and Saturdays, 10 A. M, 3 and 7 Cars leave 10:30 A. M. Daily from 2700 Bronx Park East. On Fridays P.M. —— Algonquin 4-1148 week or $2.65 for a day. c a beautiful Are You Planning A Summer Vacation? Only A Few Weeks Left! WE sts poleiaran camp, for rest, sports, cultural c= tivities, lots of fun and an opportunity to gain health and catch up on reading and study. 1d economical) trip up by boat. leaye from 2700 Bronx Park East, 10:30 a. m. daily. On Fridays and Saturdays, schedule is 10 a. m., 3 and 7 p. m Our city phone is EStabrook 8-1400. Camp Nitgedaiget Beacon-on-the-Hudson, New York Xi oa T= finest food available is tastefully prepared. Comfortable quarters in hotel, bungalows and tents await you, Swim- ming, tennis, dancing, ball games, theatricals concerts— everything you could want! Proletarian rates are $14 a ¢ Oars

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