The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 17, 1934, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1934 Page Three ——— Dayton Workers Force Special Hearing on Workers’ Bill; ', Musteite Leaders Call Off Pennsylvania Hunger March ¢ Unemployed Council Prepares for United March to Harrisburg Sabotage of Convention Decision by the League Heads Was Predicted by Communist Party— Independents Join With Councils DAYTON, Ohio, Aug. 16.—More than 1,500 workers jammed the county court house here in the biggest dem- onstration called by Unemployment Councils to demand a 40 per cent increase in relief to be paid in cash and the en- dorsement of the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill. County commissione:s and relief administration officials would not give a definite answer to the de- mands, while expressing verbal “sympathy” with the lot of the un- employed. A second hearing specifically on the workers’ bill was set for Thurs- day, Aug. 23 in the County Court Housé, All workers have been re- quested to attend this hearing. Musteites Call Off March ALLENTOWN, Pa., Aug. 16. — While calling off the march to Har- risburg which the Pennsylvania Unemployed Leagues decided on, the Musteite leaders who control the Pennsylvania Unemployed Leagues, refuse to join with the Unemployment Councils and the Independent Unemployed Leagues for a united hunger march to Har- risburg. Bureaucratic and mechanical control of the organization, com- plete disregard for the opinion and interests of the members and re- fusal to carry on militant struggle against evictions stand out in the record of Musteite leadership in the Pennsylvania Unemployed Leagues. The march to Harrisburg was decided on by the leagues more than two months ago at their State convention, the highest authority of the organization. This same con- vention elected a March to Har burg Committee of 22, instructing them to plan and organize the march to Harrisburg. Almost two months passed and no preparations were made for the march, The Unemployment Councils which are planning a hunger march to Harrisburg were able to draw into this march the Independent Unemployed Leagues of Pennsyl- vania. A delegation of the U. C. ap-! proached the Pennsylvania U. 1. also but the Musteite leaders would not even hear about united action. Communists Predicted Step Long ago the Communist Party} of Allentown warned the members that the leadership of the Pennsyl- vania’ Unemployed Leagues will do everything in their power in order not to carry through the march. The original proposal of these Mus- teite leaders for a march to Har- tisburg was made only in order to quiet the demands of the members for action. Without even taking the first steps to prepare for the march, these leaders still boasted as late as Aug. 1, at their national convention in Columbus, Ohio, that a great march is being prepared by the Leagues in Pennsylvania. The Aug. 1 issue of Muste’s paper car- ries the headline, “Pennsylvania U. L. Prepare Gigantic March to Har- risburg,” and the story goes on to say that a call for the march has been sent out, and that a prelimi- nary conference will be held on Aug. 12 in Harrisburg, Just as the Musteite leaders never reported to the members of the League about the plans and activity of the March to Harrisburg Com- mittee, so they decided without the knowledge and approval of the members that the march to Harris- burg is to be dropped. H. Mozer,’ A. W. P. leader, chairman of the March to Harrisburg Committee sent the information to the last meeting of the Lehigh County Ex- ecutive Committee of the Unem- ployed Leagues that the march will not be carried through; these lead-! ers did not even dare to report this to the branches of the Leagues and did not even mention about it in the minutes of the Lehigh County Executive Committee, All workers must now rally be- hind the hunger march being pre- pared by the Unemployment Coun- cils of Pennsylvania. PARLEY IN YOUNGSTOWN YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Aug. 16.— The section bureau of the Commu- nist Party has called a conference for Sunday to check up on the re- cent decisions of the section con- ference. Unit organizers and frac- tion secretaries, as well as members of the committee, have been asked to attend without fail. RED BUILDERS DANCE AND ENTERTAINMENT Saturday, August 18 — 8:30 P.M. — United Front Sup- porters’ Hall 11 Wy 18th St., 3ré floor ‘Sniper,” Soviet. Movie; “america Today,’» work- ers’ newsreel; Chalk Talk by “Del.” Daily Worker cartoonist Admission: 20 cents in advance; 25c at the door Obtainable at Workers Bookshop, 50 E. 13th St.; Daily Worker Dis- trict Office, 35 E. 12th St., and from Red Builders. Proceeds for Red " uniforms. Tighe Asks Secret Session Of Steel Board (Special to the Daily Worker) PITTSBURGH, Pa. Aug. 16— Still true to form, Mike Tighe and his A. A. machine are doing their best to keep the hearings of the Na- tional Steel Labor Board in Pitts- burgh this week as far from the rank and file as possible. Yesterday the board decided, after an open hearing, to order an elec- tion among employes of the Apollo Steel Co., but today Tighe asked that the hearing with Standard Tin Plate Co., of Cannonsburg, be kept “closed.” No one but attorneys and officials of the company were admitted to this morning’s session, The after- noon session began at 1 o’colck, but no A. A. representatives were al- lowed in until 2:40, when Tighe, Miller and several rank and file members, among them a stool- pigeon named Summers, were ad- mitted. Summers was once exposed and expelled from the National Miners’ Union and the Unemployed Councils. When Tighe and his outfit have presented their side of the case a conference between both sides and the board will be held, after which the board will make its august de- cision—probably for another “elec- tion.” Committee Asks Right Of Anti-Nazi Refugees To Remain in U. S. NEW YORK—The right of Fried- + rich Beyerbach, German political , refugee, to remain in the United | States, was asked in a letter sent yesterday by the Committee for Protection of Foreign Born to Colonel Daniel W. MacCormack, { Commissioner General of Immigra- tion. Beyerbach came to the United ; States as a stowaway on the Levi- athan on Aug. 7. Discovered en route, he was turned over to fed- eral immigration authorities to be returned to Germany. The com- mittee’s letter, signed by D. C. Mor- gan, secretary, points out that Beyerbach faces imprisonment or | Militant Subs Climb In District | Competition Buffalo Leads Victory March With Gains Mounting IOCIALIST competition among Districts is stimulating wide-! spread circulation activity among Party members and readers. Tables for the past week show subscrip- tions mounting in the 20,000 new; reader drive, as several Districts near their sub quotas and others make sizeable gains. Buffalo leads all district in the quota. New York, Boston and St. honors in the home stretch, with the possibility of a spurt putting anyone in the lead. Twenty-three Districts during the week, only three re- mained stationary and none regis- tered losses, Total net gain for the quota, or 239 new readers, Subscription activity must be In- tensified during the last two weeks of the 20,000 new reader drive. Readers, see that your District goes over the quota top! Aid your Dis- trict in Socialist competition! Subscriptions August 7-13 sub drive, with 98.6 per cent of its Louis are fighting out second place j gained: week was 6 per cent of the 4,000 sub | Gutters of New York “Departmental trials will be instituted against police guilty of brutality to workers picketing the Commodore Knitting Mills, Brooklyn.” é —MAYOR LA GUARDIA. a 4 . ! Increase New Percent or Quota Subs of Decrease of Rec'd Total Since New for Sub DISTRICT June 19 Subs Week Quota 1 Boston 6 250 20 68.4 2 New York 44275 TS 87.6 3 Philadelphia 4 400 21 41.7 4 Buffalo 33 % 68 98.6 5 Pittsburgh -—8 100 8 37.0 6 Cleveland —7 350 28 38.2 7 Detroit 32-300 838.0 8 Chicago —n 864500 a7 42.0 9 Minnesota 10 200 10 48.0 10 Omaha —5 7 8 47.1 11.N. Dakota —15 a 1 25.0 12 Seattle 8 10 2 286 13 California 1 250 «1130.4 14 Newark 4 200 12 43.0 16 Connecticut 22 100 4 58.0 16 N. Carolina 8 so — 20.0 17 Birmingham — 7% — 10.6 18 Milwaukee -—4 150 $8 26.0 19 Denver —12 1% 5 40.0 20 Ft. Worth 1220 50 4) 46.0 21 Bt. Louis 5 50 23 62.0 22 W. Virginia 8.80 4 380 23 Kentucky 1 be dadeete Wate (C; 24 Louisiana 2 50 — 40 25 Florida — 50 3 160 268, Dakota —12 50 3 (20,0 Totals 184 4,000 239 48.6 Gallup FERA Men Win Pay Cut Restoration By Strike Action GALLUP, N. M,, Aug. 16.— A complete victory was won by striking FERA workers here after their mass pressure had forced re- lief officials to accede to every de- mand including the return of a ten-cent an hour wage cut from forty to fifty cents. For fiye days 300 men conducted mass picketing and held demonstra- tions protesting the wage cut.. The workers forced officials to release seventy-five relief men whom they had maneuvered to keep working, after the strikers had threatened to pull the men off the fobs them- selves, posed of relief officials, held- an emergency meeting to consider the death in Germany. The hearing in the writ of habeas corpus in Beyerbach’s case will be held next Tuesday at 10:30 am., at the United States District Court, Old Post Office building, near City Hall. Workers are urged to pack the court and organizations to send telegrams to the Labor Department requesting that Beyerbach be per- mitted to remain in this country as @ political refugee. , Wilkes-Barre Police Attack 200 Workers At Eviction Protest WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Aug. 16.-— Swinging their riot clubs, police here broke up a demonstration of 200 workers who gathered Tuesday to protest the eviction and con- ;Stable’s sale of an unemployed worker. The workers, mobilized by the Unemployment Council, had called for unity against evictions to three {Negro workers sent to remove the furniture. The Negroes answered the call and refused to cazry through the eviction. ‘The police then charged, arrest- ing four and beating many. John ! Muldowney and Bruno Zelinskas, unemployed leaders, were held for hearing. Two women who were ar- rested and clubbed were released , after workers had marched in pro- test to the police station after the Police attack. . Workers sent delegations yester- day to the mayor demanding that ; he keep his promise that no evic- tions will take place in the city. Plan Entertainment At New Youth School ' NEW HAVEN. —The Connecticut Youth School, which opened here on July 23 at the local Lithuanian Hall, will hold on open entertain- ‘ment on Sunday, August 19, at the , School, 243 Front St. The school, the organization of which was mainly effected by Lith- suanian workers’ organizations, has Negro students as well as those of other national extractions. Hart- ford, Waterbury, New Haven, | Bridsenet Ansonia, Milford and Stamford are represented. _ The school hopes to turn out - about 23 organizers for the working "class vouth movement 4 demands of the workers. Since such men as Paul Henderson, mine owner, and Dr. Shepard of the American. Legion were on the committee, workers demanded rep- resentation and got it. They elected one of their number to be on the committee and all the strikers at- tended the meeting in a body. Steel Company Judge Fines Eleven Workers In Ambridge Frame-up AMBRIDGE, Pa., Aug. 16—Eleyen workers who were arres‘ed in a po- lice reid on the Ambridge Interna- tional Labor Defense branch on Aug. 2 were fined $5 and costs by Burgess P. J. Caul, puppet of the steel companies, at a hearing Tues- day night. ~ When the trial was postponed last Wednesday evening Caul told Sylvia Schlessinger, I. L. D. attor- ney, that the men were charged with “unlawful assembly,” but last night Patrolman Verona testified that those attending the I. L. D. meeting had been guilty of disor- derly conduct and Caul fined them on this count. When Miss Schles- singer cited the change Caul lied that he had not said anything about “unlawful assembly” last week. Verona, who has done yeoman work as a stool-pigeon for the police in the past, claimed that he saw a man thrown out of the I. L. D. meeting, this lie constituting the “disorderly conduct” on which the arrests were made. All fines have been appealed. Wealthy Bankers Head A welfare wage committee, com- | 76 on Communist Party, Ticket in Pennsylvania HARRISBURG, Pa, Aug. 16.— The convention called by the Com- munist Party to ratify its platform and candidates for the coming elec- tions was held here on August 12 with 102 delegates present from } various parts of the state. The main political report was made by Harry M. Wicks, followed by a report on organizational measures by D. Davis. The dele- gates, among whom were workers from the mines and steel industries from the western part of the state, from the anthracite region, from the waterfront in Philadelphia, Negro and white, in discussion jbrought out the possibilities of bringing the platform to more and more workers in their respective sections. Stress was put, not only on the need of rolling up enough yotes to remain on the ballot as a legal party in Pennsylvania next election without collecting signa- tures, but also of the possibility of actually electing Communists to some of the offices to be filled at the coming election, The national election platform of the Communist Party was endorsed, with additional planks for the re- peal of the Flynn Sedition Law, abolition of the private police in the pay of large corporations, for immediate relief of the unemployed. The proposed march of the unem- ployed to Harrisburg in October was endorsed, and resolutions on Thaelmann, Herndon, Scottsboro, Egan and Frankfeld adopted, 716 Are Nominated A total of 76 candidates for the various offices to be filled in Novem- ber received the endorsement of the convention. The principal candi- dates, Harry M. Wicks for United States Senator, Emmet Patrick Cush for Governor, and William R. Powell for Lieutenant Governor, responded to the applause of the delegates with acceptance speeches. Following is the list of state can- didates: State Candidates U. S. Senator, Harry M. Wicks, Philadelphia; Governor, Emmet Patrick Cush, Pittsburgh; Licuten- ant Governor, Wm. R. Powell of Philadelphia; Secretary of Internal Affairs, Dan H. Slinger of Philadel- phia, Corruption Sternly Hit By Soviets MOSCOW, Aug. 16.—Newspapers here publish the decision of the Central Committee of the Commu- nist Party on the strggle against graft and cheating through the use of false weights and measures in the stozes. The chairmen of the appropriate departments responsible for run- ning the stores are chazged with the direct responsibility of rooting out all traces of any dishonest prac- Coast Fascist Group PORTLAND, Ore.—The Citizens’ tices in retail trade. They ave warn- ed by the Central Committee that there has been an_ insufficient Emergency League, formed during} struggle against this cheating of the waterfront strike and headed] workers, and that the Communist by Colonel William Aird, officer in] Party does not propose to tolezate bee Reserve etn Epon fi aan such conditions. carries the following questions on membership application blanks: “Do Soviet trade, the tact Com you own any firearms? What kind? | Mittee states, having abolished capi- List your military experience. Have talist traders and speculators who you had any experience with the| Used to get rich on the pcople, use of gas bombs.” should be able better to supply the E. Sammonds, vice-president of | WO-Kers and their families with the the United States National Bank| things they need for home and cu!- and big corporation head; and| tural uses. These things must ge Henry Cabell, heir to the wealth-| into the workers hands without any iest estate in Oregon and several] troubie or cheating by the remnants reserve officers and wealthy Cham-| of parasitic elements who still are ber of Commerce figures, are on thc| to be found in some of the govern- executive board ment stores. | Platform of Struggle for Rights of Workers and Negro People Ratified at Convention—Wicks, | Corigressional Candidates ‘| First District, Morris H. Wick- man, Philadelphia; 2nd, Russel In Pittsburgh All Public Works Closed in Allegheny County Until Sept. 15 (Special to the Daily Worker) PITTSBURGH, Pa. Aug. 16.— The last of 14,000 workers in Alle- gheny County who have been em- ployed on public works projects since April were fired yesterday, to be “replaced on relief rolls” and further swell the ranks of the mil- lion and three-quarters of Pennsyl- vania workers and their families who face starvation in the present relief crisis. The firing of R. W. D. workers has been going on for a week now. but with today’s 5,000 James L. | Stuart, R. W. D. Administrator, an- nounced the lay-off complete. No other R. W. D. projects are scheduled to begin until Sept. 15, according to Stuart, who claims the workers will be re-employed at this time, When the April lay-off was made a similar announcement was made, but only 14,000 out of more than 20,000 were given work again, Joint Chicago ‘Meeting Will Plan Activities for Herndon, Nine Boys (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Ill, Aug. 16. — To unite the Negro and white workers into a great mass movement for the freedom of Angelo Herndon and the Scottsboro boys, the Interna- tional Labor Defense and the League of Struggle for Negro Rights have joined in calling a united front conference to take up these cases. | The conference will open at 10 am., Sunday, at People’s Audi- torium, 2457 West Chicago Avenue. All organizations are requested to have delegates present, By Deli Last of Relief Chicago Caneassing | Workers Fired) Returns Take Spurt To 600 Names a Day Rate of Signature Drive Tripled This | “eek— Lawson Urges Intensified Drive to Assure All Candidates Their Place On Ballot (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Aug. 16.—Twelve hundred signatures on election petitions for Communist candidates were received here Monday and Tuesday at the office of the Communist Party campaign committee. This about triples the rate at which signatures have been WorkersEager To Sign Ohio Election Lists TOLEDO, Ohio—James Miller, Negro candidate for the Ohio State Legislature on the local Communist ticket, has collected 47 signatures in the petition drive of the Commu- nist Party, it was announced yes- terday by District 6. Miller states: “The reason that our section has only fulfilled its quota of signatures by half is that many of the comrades are afraid to mention Communism to the workers. “When I pointed out to the work- ers that all of our local candidates were active in the Auto-Lite strike and that many had been arrested and that Yetta Land, candidate for Attorney General, was the lawyer that defended the Auto-Lite cases most of them signed gladly. “Workers will sign our petitions if we are not afraid to ask them.” coming in. ® A. Guss, state campaign man- jager, was highly optimistic of the chances of placing a full slate of ‘workers on the ballot in November. ; The previous weeks, signatures |have been received at a rate of about 200 daily, and widespread alarm was felt as to the danger of failure to get Communist candf- dates on the ballot. John Lawson, Organizational Sec- retary of District 8 of the Commus nist Party, told the Daily Worker today that “The Chicago working class must keep up the good work, We must not only maintain the im- provement made in our work, but further intensify it. We must not be satisfied with a few good days, {but continue energetically until every one of our candidates is as- sured a place on the ballot.” Frank Prickett, member of the town board of Taylor Springs, will be one of the main speakers at the Red Election Rally Sept. 1 at Peo- ples Auditorium, 2457 West Chicago Avenue, This meeting is planned to celebrate the successful conclu- {sion of the signature drive which ends that night. Prickett was in- dicted last week in the Hillsboro case. All election petition and collec- tion lists should be rushed to local Watson, Philadelphia; 3rd, Leo P. Lemley, Philadelphia; 4th, Sterling; Besides planning a more deter- Rochester, Philadelphia; 5th, Arthur mined fight for the release of the Braun, Philadelphia; 6th, Ben'frame-up victims of Alabama and Gardner, Philadelphia; 9th, Steven Georgia, the conference will discuss Pukanecz, Allentown; 14th, Nettie the problem of winning the free- Wessner, Reading; 12th, John Mul- dom of local workers now in jail. downey, Wilkes-Barre; 24th, Victor Outstanding among these cases is Dellarose, Wilkes-Barre; 25th, Fred the Poindexter frame-up. Six Negro Siders, Finleyville; 30th, William ‘and white workers are now in Joliet Schmidt, Pittsburg; 31st, Laura Jane Grubbs, Pittsburg; 32nd, Ben Careathers, Pittsburg. State Senatorial Candidates | Second District, Samuel Lee, of | demonstration at a relief station. The appeal for Pointdexter, mili- tant leader of the Negro workers, jand his five comrades, is being Philadelphia; 4th, Dewey Wilson, ',,. 7. Philadelphia: @th, Lawrence A’ Pree ae present by the LL.D, Guest, Philadelphia; 8th, Harry Monck, Philadelphia; 16th, Victor Qne of Hillsboro 11 Brotzman, Emaus; 44th, John F. Fee McGuire, Pittsburgh. | To Speak At Chicago State Representative Candidates - First District of Philadelphia, C. Lippa and J. Stepansky; 2nd, B.} = 3 Coultri; 3rd, W. Hutchins and J.|_ CHICAGO, Ill, Aug. 16.—Frank Kelly; 8th, W. Jefferson and J. M. | Prickett, one of the eleven Hillsboro Doyle; 9th, Wm. Shafter; John J. Williams; Cohen; 12th, J. Starr and R. Hel- Communist election campaign on mes; 13th, T, McFadden and W.' Sept. 1 at People’s Auditorium, 2457 Leach; 14th, John Lyman; 16th,' West Chicago Avenue. The Hills- Sarah Epstein; 17th, John Weir; boro prisoners are charged with 18th, Frank Wilson, A. Civelli, D. “treason” and have been released Demarko; 19th, F. Novak, A. Gas- under $10,000 bail. ton; 20th, Geo, Kintech; ist, H.| pisns have been made for an Woods, Geo. Johnson; 2and, Carl! saporat, reception to Prickett at Henly, Beatrice Mast; 23rd, L, Tol- firme, wee son; 24th, A. Kalinofski; 25th, John ‘his meeting. Weaver; 26th, Geo, Wicher; 27th, | = Grace Cirelli. First Legislative district of Del- aware County, Julius Malachi of Chester; Ist L. D. Lehigh County, C. Huster and J. Hanzlick of Allen- town; 2nd L. D. Lehigh County, John Washek of Emaus; Ist L. D., Berks County, Harold John and Herman Weyman Jr. of Reading; 1st L, D., Cambria County, Stephen Gavare and Elmer Kish of Johns- town; 2nd L. D., Washington County, John Smoody; 2nd L. D., Fayette County, Agnes Sneer; 1st L, D., Allegheny County, Max Jen- RED ELECTION CARNIVAL and PICNIC North Beach Picnic Park Astoria, . I. LABOR DAY MONDAY, SEPT. 13, 1934 Communist Party, New York kins and Wm, Thornton of Pitts- burgh; 9th, Wm. Mikades, of Pitts- burgh; 10th, Morris Schindler, Wal- | ter Marcus, and James Barnes, of Pittsburg; Luzerne County, Lewis! Salones; Bernard Zelinkas; Paul, Nelson; Dominick Pachuck, | ADVERTISEME, NITGEDAIGET PRO- GRAMS ATTAIN HIGH LEVEL ‘The weekend program at Camp Nitgedaiget, which inaugurated a new development in the theatrical experimentation of the Theatre Brigade, and a new man to do the direction, won enthusiastic ap- plause. Jack Shapiro of the Thea- tre Gollective is the new director. The actors come from various companies and groups, including the Artef Players, Theatre Collec- tive, Workers Laboratory Theatre, ete, New plays are being intro- duced. Nathaniel Buchwald, promi- nent writer and critic, has alreedy written two plays which will see their premiere here. “Little Eva and the Commissar,” an uproarously funny comedy, was the first play produced here by Shapiro. It will be followed this week by the premiere of “A War Souvenir,” by Buchwald. The skit performed by Bella Dorfman of the Artef, and Lucy Morris of the Workers Laboratory Theatre, which dealt with interesting dramatic events incident to the Dally Worker cireulation campaign, was received with equal enthusiasm and de- mands for more skits. Aaron Holtz of the Artef, and the guest ap- Parlor Frame, Workers Call Strike in N.Y.| NEW YORK.—Several hundred parlor frame workers went on strike | yesterday under the leadership of the Cabinet Section of the Na- tional Furniture Workers’ Indus- trial Union, Local No. 2. The strike was officially declared at a large mass meeting of parlor frame work- ! ers Wednesday night at the Man- hattan Lyceum, All the shops are being picketed, in the effort of the workers to} establish real union conditions in the trade. During the last few. years the conditions have been un- bearable. Workers received miser- ably low wages and hours went un- Penitentiary for participating in a] C. P. Election Rally | 10th, prisoners and alderman of Taylor | llth, Anna Springs, will speak for the Illinois | counted. A year and a half ago, the workers established union con- trol in the trade and the bosses — were forced to sign union contracts j with the Furniture Workers’ Indus- trial Union. There is still widespread unem- ployment in the trade, and the em- parlor framé workers have decided that they will not return to work unless their demands are granted. 20.000 New Readers by Sent. Ist.! Unemployed? Sell the “Daily” pearance of the Kinderland Chorus rounded out the evening. ‘The camp fire program sparkled with wit. In addition to the camp paper, which was read both in English and Yiddish, there followed singing, recitations’ and musical numbers. This Friday, the exciting serial about the “Adventures of Moishe Reznick” will be continued by Dan Davis. Classes in dancing, swimming and tennis continue. Sports events, con- certs, dances, hikes, treasure hunts, Workers’ School Classes, are all regular features at Camp .Nitge- daiget. Because of the large scteage and adequate facilities, there will be comfortable accomodations available for the remainder of the season, Many of the signatures collected} campaign headquarters at once, or by Miller were collected in white| pe sent direct to the central cam- working-class neighborhoods, paign’ office at 101 South Wells Wiking Street, R. 702. Thousands of these lists have not yet been turned in, Get Daily Worker Subscribers | | NEW ENGLANDERS! District 1.L.D. and Daily Worker | PICNIC Sunday, Aug. 19 Olympia Park Shrewsbury, Mass. 5 Miles East of Worcester, Mass. Beer Bar — Orchestra Music — Excellent Foot — Rowing Swimming — Games — Speaker Voluntary Contribution at Gate Buses and cars Ieave from all Workers. Centers at 10 A.M, sharp Bostonians pes Philadelphia, Pa. — SUNDAY, AUGUST 19th, 1934 at Old Berkies Farm Hear! ANGELO HERNDON Heroic young Negro worker just released on bail from Atlanta prison CLARENCE HATHAWAY Editor Daily Worker, main speaker Labor Sports Union Freiheit Gesangs Farein Music Baseball Prize Campfire and Dancing in the Evening DIRECTIONS: Take car No. 65 or Broad St. Sub. to end of line; pags to No. 6, soca tide to Washington Lane and Ogontz Ave.; walk two squares west oo — CHICAGO, ILL. — RED PRESS jPICNIC of the NAGNAATA HOUVI Daily Worker Morning Freiheit Sunday, August 19th WHITE HOUSE GROVE Irving Park Boulevard and River Drive Program: Games, Dancing, Kefreshments Gates Open 10 A. M. Admission 15¢ DIRECTIONS: Take Irving Park Blvd. car to end of line where our buses will take you direct to grove.

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