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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1934 ‘5 - ————— eee ei PE gts tein A.F.L. GROUP BARES TREACHEROUS AIM OF GREEN'S ‘RED SCARE’ TRADE UNIO ARE CANVASSED ON WAR STAND: League Against Fascism and War Sends Out Questionnaires YORK.— Taking another o broaden the fight against of a new war and the t of fascist tendencies in a national. poll of n members on their at- titude towards a new world conflict eing conducted by the National Trade Union Section of the Amer- ican League Against War and Fascism “Would you join in a nation-wide protest to prevent the United States NEW step from taking part in another war? is the first question asked of the unionists. “Would you unite in re- fusing to transport munitions or other war supplies in the event of a war?” is the second query. Obviously recalling the fate of the trade unions under Mussolini, Hit- ler and Dollfuss, the last question | asks: “Would you join in a nation- wide protest to prevent the forma- tion of a fascist government in the United States similar to the pres-| ent governments of Germany, Aus- tria and Italy?” The present voting campaign of the American League against War) and Fascism, it is pointed out, is| similar to the recent questionnaire , sent out to a number of trade | union leaders and intellectuals in| Great Britain England by the Brit- ish Labor Monthly. The American League Against | War and Fascism is calling upon all | trade unions which have not as yet | obtained the questionnaires to com- municate with the national office of | the organization, 112 East 19th St.,/ New York. | Two-Day Strike Wins Wage Increases for Furniture Workers NEW YORK.— Workers of the Moskowitz Parlor Frame Company of 52nd St. and 11th Avenue went | back to work after a victorious | strike which lasted two days. The 35-hour-work-week and increases in wages were won by the workers. The workers also won a 2 per cent unemployment insurance fund, to be paid by the boss. This is the second shop that has settled with the National Furni- ture Workers Industrial Union since the general strike has been declared in the trade. DENVER, COLO. Enlarged conference to. discuss Daily Worker Financial Campaign FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 7:30 P. M race Church, 13th and Bannock Street Organizations are urged to send delegates LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City Algonquin 4-3356—4-8843—4-7823 , 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 Ave. station Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m, Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Telephone: Estabrook &-1400—8-1401 Priday and Saturday 9 am. to § p.m. AVANTA FARM Ulster. Park, N. Y. Workers resting place. Good food. Quiet. Bathing; $12 per week; $2 per day; 10 A. M. Boat to Poughkeepsie. Ferry to Highland; 3:20 P. M. Train to Ulster Park. Round Trip $2.71. Cam Help Us Greet Angelo Herndon and lis courageous attorney BEN DAVIS With a Unity Celebration! Pageantry! Color! Music! In Open Air Theatre, On Lake Ellis We Have Room for You $14 a week. Cars leave 10:30 A.M. daily from 2700 Bronx Park East. Fridays, Saturdays, 10 A.M., 3 and Algonquin 4-11 ‘Plans to Take! ‘Relief Taxes Out of {f Wages LaGuardia Proposes a Levy on Payrolls and Sales Tax | Judge at Hearing Reads Olgin’s Work in Terror Campaign NEW YORK he LaGuardia ad- ministration yesterday prepared new taxation in the form of a sales |tax or a tax on every pay envelope for the purpose of financing unem- ployment relief. Explaining that all available re- lief funds would be exhausted by the end of the month, LaGuardia prepared to deliver a radio talk tonight at which the tax plans, if SAN DIEGO, Calif., Aug. 21— At the hearing of Angus Dr: dale. charged with cri udge Daney, the courtroom in si he took fifteen minutes to read s of “Why Communism,” a ilet by Olgin, while A. E. The enebling legislation, the Ross the Jansen, head of the local “Red || Bill, by which city is em- Squad” twiddled his thumbs on || Powered to levy new tax imposts, the witness stand. {Was signed yesterday by Governor ned, declaring: “The allowance we have now is admittedly a minimum allowance. Any sharp increase in living costs would make it still less adequate. But what we have to worry about now is the constant increase in applications for relief.” LaGuardia’s relief conferences which were held during June with leading bankers and industrialists proposed a tax on incomes, a sales tax, or a tax on subway, elevated and street car rides. The United Action Conference on Work, Relief and Unemployment, which at that time demanded that the city stop the payments to the bankers and tax the corporations and public utilities for the financ- ing of relief, will meet at a mass conference at Stuyvesant Casino, 142 Second Avenue, on Sunday, Aug. 26, where plans for a gigantic march on City Hall on Sept. 22, will be made. Drysdale was defended by Wilmer Breeden International Labor De- fense attorney. The prosecutor refused to return the confiscated pamphlets saying he wished to read them. Hathaway Will Speak at Election Banquet NEW YORK.— Clarence Hatha- way, editor of the Daily Worker and Communist candidate for Congress | from the Seventh Congressional | District, will be the main speaker at an election rally and banquet to be held by Section Six, District Two of the Communist Party. The ban- | quet will be held at Royal Palace, 16-18 Manhattan Avenue, Brook- Friday, Sept. 14, at 8 p.m. ‘The Communist Party Answers the Provocations of William Green U.S.A. Statement of Central Committee, Communist Party, (Continued from Page 1) file. It indicates his determination to use the methods of Hitler in his service to the capitalists. . . * Y¥ THE attack on the Soviet Union contained in Mr. Green's state- ment, the Executive Council of the A. F. of L. takes place in the forefront of the war provocateurs against the Soviet Union. It is no accident that Mr. Green’s attack on the U.S.S.R. coincides with the extreme war provocations of Japanese imperialism in the Far East. Green, like Hitler, attempts to divert the attention of the masses away from their own hunger and starvation, by slanderous provocations against the U.S.S.R. At the very moment when the masses are entering the struggle against war and fascism, the A. F. of L. Executive Council comes out openly with fascist measures and with war-mongering attacks on the U.S.S.R. Mr. Green long ago took his stand as a defender of capitalism. Mr. Green has refused to learn from the Soviet Union the lessons of how to fight the capitalists, of how to drive out the Morgans, the Fords, the bankers. He is an apt pupil of Hitler. He has learned from Hitler how to improve his methods in the fight against the workers. He especially has learned to single out the most militant workers, who are the backbone of every real trade. union movement. But all this does not. solve the crisis. The army of unemployed is growing, Strike struggles and the fight for unemployment insur- ance are sweeping the entire country. The A. F. of L. workers are taking up the fight over the heads of their leaders. The attack of Mr. Green is proof of the fact that his policies are not meeting with success, that the workers are more and more taking the path of struggle against the capitalists, This, says Mr. Green, is Communism. The Communists are rousing the masses to fight for bread, to fight for their rights. This does not meet with the approval of the capitalists. It does not meet with the approval of Mr. Green. The capitalists wish to further drive down wages. They wish to cut down relief to the employed. They undertake to rob the workers of every right ‘@.ich they have won through years of struggle. They wish to strengthen their whofé fascist drive against the workers. Mr. Green serves as their agent in the labor movement. He tries to carry out across the entire country the strikebreaking policies which he applied in San Francisco. The vigilante and.fascist bands worked together with the police, and with the support of the A. F. of L. bureaucracy in outlawing Communists, in deportation drives, in curtailing the civil rights even of liberals and intellectuals—all with the aim of breaking the workers’ resistance. Mr. Green would apply such policies throughout the entire trade union movement. In his fight against the Communist Party, Mr. Green is compelled to resort to the vilest slanders and lies. He hopes in this way to win and maintain support from those who do not know the position of the Communist Party. . . * IR. GREEN claims that the Communists are not concerned with the immediate economic demands of the workers. We answer this lie with facts. Precisely in those cases where the Communists formu- lated the policies and led the workers in struggle, the employed and unemployed won concessions from the capitalists. Where Green and the bureaucracy were able to carry through their policies, the workers were defeated. The case of the auto and steel workers most clearly illustrates the results of Green's strikebreaking policies. We do not attack Green and the A. F. of L. because they are not Communists. We attack them precisely because they betray daily the most elementary economic interests of the workers in the factories and of the unemployed. Their policy of working hand and glove with the government, their insistence on arbitration, their reliance on class collaboration with the employers, leads invariably to the disarming of the workers in the face of the Bosses’ attacks. It leads to the victory of the bosses and to the defeat of the workers. Mr. Green declares that the Communists wish to destroy the trade union movement. This is a lie! Zhe policies of Green and Co, their strikebreaking tactics, the gangsters in the unions, their cooper- ation with the police, the bosses and the government; the destruction of workers’ democracy in the unions, the jim-crowing and discrimina- tion against Negroes, their splitting policies in the unions—these are the things that weaken cnd undermine the very foundations of the trade unions. These are the things that prevent the millions of workers from joining the A. F. of L. unions; these are the things that prevent the smashing of company unions; these are the things that prevent the unification of the A. F. of L. unions together with the independent unions and the unions affiliated with the Trade Union Unity League. If it were not for the present rotten and servile leadership, open tools of the capitalists, at the head of the A. F. of L., there is no doubt that during the last eighteen months it would have been pes- sible to have built a unified trade union movement with ten to fifteen Unity million workers in its ranks, The workers could then have had a finally adopted, will be announced. | Drysdale was in the Workers || Lehman. Book Shop when he was arrested. The rise in the cost of living, nsen took a covy of each pam- ||Mayor LaGuardia declared, was} phlet as “evidence.” About ten ||causing the Welfare Department) pamphlets were on the judge’s || “considérable anxiety,” Yet, despite | desk. the tremendous increase in the cost | Judge Daney, who is up for re- || Of living, LaGuardia stated that no election, dismissed the case. || increase in relief budgets was plan- Statement Calls for Mass Fight Against His War on Workers Opposition Group Shows Bureaucracy Is Seeking to Stifle Growing Revolt of Rank and Fiie Against Tis Sellout Policy | | NEW -YORK.—The A. F. of L. Trade Union Committee for Unem- ployment Insurance and Relief issued a statement yesterday call- ing upon the workers in the A. F. of L. to protest against the provoca- tive statement of the Executive Council of the A. F. of L. as fore- casting a campaign of violence and intimidation against the rank and file movement, The statement fol- low “The three-point program of the Executive Council of the A. F. of L, declaring a holy war on the Com- munists, and calling for the de- portation of the militant foreign- born workers in our ranks, must arouse every honest militant rank | and file member in the A. F, of L. “The program of these reaction- ary officials is the forerunner of a mass expulsion movement and a campaign of intimidation and ter- ror against the rank and file move- ment, which is the only force lead- ing the struggles of the A. F. of L. workers for the right to organize and to win better conditions. With government cooperation and with the aim of aiding the bosses in their policy of wage cutting, speed-up, and driving down the standards of living of the American workers, Mr. Green and his Executive Council intend to drive out of the A. F. of L. those militant rank and file members who are a serious chal- lenge to their sell-out policies. In every center of the country the rank and file are calling strikes over the heads of these officials, “The reactionary leaders of the A. F. of L. are aware that the rank and file are organizing to send dele- gates to the Fifty-fourth Cconven- tion in San Francisco, who wiil ex- pose their conniving with the N.R.A. against the workers and demand position to unemployment insurance, failure to stamp out racketeering, gangsterism, and other notorious practices in the A. F. of L. unions.| “Mr. Green and the Executive | Council hope to sidetrack the real in the A. F. of L. and whitewash their sell-outs by raising the Red Scare. They will have to answer to the rank and file for the notori- ous gangsterism and racketeering Workers Union, in the Chicago Milk Drivers and Electrical Workers Union, and the murders and maim- ing of union members which have been perpetrated with the open supported of Mr. Green. “The rank and file of the A. F. of L. must resist this Red Scare at- tack with all its energies. “Rank and file members in the A, F. of L,, take up this question in your local unions; adopt protest resolutions against this incitement to terror in your organizations and local unions; demand that the Ex- ecutive Council rescind its state- ment. “Elect rank and file delegates to the Fifty-fourth Annual Conven- tion to fight for the rank and file program to answer the attacks of the employers and the reactionary officials. Make this statement of the Executive Council-a means of rallying greater numbers of rank and file members into a powerful movement in the interests of the rank and file.” powerful consolidated working class weapon with which to wage the struggle for their daily bread. This is what the Communists fight for in every union in which we work—the A. F. of L., T.U.U.L., or independent unions. It is our aim to establish a powerful trade union movement, embracing all workers, a trade union movement with real workers’ democracy, freed from gangsterism and corruption, organized on an industrial basis, guaranteeing complete equality to the Negro toilers. . . * ye: we Communists have great confidence in the American workers. We see the possibility of developing a powerful trade union move- ment, a movement of twenty million or more workers. These would not be Communist trade unions. We Communists are opposed to unions composed only of Communists. We favor a broad trade union movement which contains all workers, of all political opinions, Social- ists, Communists, Democrats, Republicans, workers without party affili- ation. Workers of all religious beliefs and of no religion, of all colors and races should be joined together in one powerful trade union movement. All should be united on one aim: How to strengthen the power of labor in the fight for the interests of labor. The Communists know that the majority of the workers of the United States will only become supporters of Communism on the basis of their own experi- ences and on the basis of our ability in a comradely fashion to con- vince them of thé necessity for Communism, The leaders of this united trade union movement must be honest, militant workers, elected through the exercise of true workers’ demo- cracy in the unions. Every trade union post, from top to bottom, must be filled through democratic elections by the workers. ‘When the Communists fight against the Green leadership, it is with {he aim of securing a united trade union movement under work- ers’ control, capable of waging the struggles of the workers for their daily needs, If hundreds of thousands of workers in the recent period did join the A. F. of L. unions, it was precisely because of the militant activity of the rank and file workers and their chosen leaders who fought over the heads of the A. F. of L. bureaucracy. We ask you workers: Why is it that in the steel and auto industries the company unions have progressed during the last period and the A, F. of L. unions remain relatively weak? Precisely because here the policy of the A, F. of L. bureaucracy was victorious, because the Communists were not yet able to organize the opposition against their policies to the same degree as in other industries, We say to Green, in answer to his latest provocation, that Com- munists will not be driven from the unions. On the contrary, we will exert all our efforts, we wil! work ten times harder, to win the workers away from your policies, for a determined struggle against the bosses. In the A. F. of L. unions, as in all other unions, we will continue to wage the struggle against the bureaucrats and their class- collaboration policies. We will continue to work for the building of one powerful united trade union movement. As the last year has shown, the Communists have no differences with the hundreds of thousands of militant rank and file workers who have fought determinedly against the bosses’ attacks. These workers, with increasing clarity, show their hatred of the strikebreaking activity of the Greens, Wolls, Lewises, McMahons. To an increasing extent they are fighting shoulder to shoulder with the Communists for militant trade unions able to win concessicns from the bosses, The Communist Party calls upon the Party members to increase their efforts to win the A. F. of L. workers for class struggle trade union policies. The Communist Party calls upon the A. F. of L. workers to reject the slanders of the Executive Council against the Communists. We call upon the workers to unite together with the Communists in a fight against the policies of the bureaucracy for a united trade union movement, for militant policies capable of forcing increased wages, shorter hours, the end of the speed-up, the right of the workers to organize. District Quotas Set in Drive (Continued from Page 1) from such organizations will be handled through the District offices and credited accordingly. . . . Socialist competition must proceed at once .. . between Districts, Sections and Units! Three Districts have already challenged others— and been accepted. Other challenges must be forthcoming. All energy must be expanded to raise the required $60,000 in the shortest possible time, without forgetting that new reader growth must be maintained at a rate which will guarantee a doubled circulation for the “Daily” by January 1, District Quotas for $60,000 Drive Dist. Quota Dist Quota Dist Quota 1 Boston .... $2,000 10 Omaha -$ 250 19 Denver ... $ 400 2 New York. 30,000 11N. Dak. 250 20 Houston .. 300 3 Phila. 3,500 12 Seattle 1,000 21 St. Louis .. 500 4 Buffalo ... 750 13 Calif. .. 2,000 22 W. Va. ... 200 5 Pittsburgh . 1,290 14 Newark ., 750 23 Kentucky . 200 6 Cleveland . 3,000 15 Conn. .... 750 24 Louisiana , 200 7 Detroit ... 3.500 16N. Car... 150 25 Florida . 200 6500 17 Bhham .... 150 26 So. Dak. ., 200 800 18 Milwaukee. 1,000 i problems confronting the workers | existing in the International Fur} | Workers, has an answer from them for their op- | Strike Still On In Knitgoods Under KWIU Left-Wing Union Ends Walkout in 50 Shops with Pay Rise NEW YORK.—Despite the fact that David Dui ky, president of the International Ladies Garment been successful in herding members of the I. L. G. W. U. back to work under worse conditions than before the knitgoods strike began three weeks ago, the struggle of the knitgoods workers continues in many shops in New York under the leadership of the | Knitgoods Workers Industrial | Union. Dubinsky, aided by Mayor La- | Guardia, the Regional Labor Boerd | and Raymond B. Ingersoll, Brook- lyn Borough President, was success- ful in dividing the ranks of the workers and settling the strike for at least part of the workers on the basis of the 36-hour week with no increases in wages. Tlie workers had previously worked 37:2 hours a week and Dubinsky’s settlement was therefore an agreement for a direct cut in wages. The Knitgoods Workers Industrial Union, however, which put forward the demand for the 35 hour week and corresponding. increases in wares. has already settled 50 shops on this basis, all the shops settled winning pay increases from 5 to 10 dollars and getting two legal holi- days per year with pay. All sug- gestions made by the Industrial Union that the I. L. G. W. U. and the United Textile Workers Union establish a united front and fight for one set of demands were turned down by leaders of the A. F. of L. The united front proposals being turned down. the Knitgoods Work- ers Industrial Union launched into a campaign of organizing the open shops and settling individual shops on the basis of wage increases and shorter hours. Thirty-five open shops were organized by the Indus- trial Union during the course of the strike and eight have settled, win- ning increases, Picketing was continued yesterday by I. L. G. W. U. members at the Star Sportswear Corporation, 568 Broadway. This shop was closed by the owners after mass pressure of New York Labor had forced Mayor LaGuardia to’ retract, at least verbally. the anti-picket edict of the Police Department. Owners of the Sportswear shop had established a company union headed by Emil Kalaf, In fact, lead- ers of the I. L. G. W. U. blazed the way for the company union after they organized the shop a year ago. Workers became demoralized and disgusted with the I. L. G. W. U. leaders’ policy of collecting dues and doing nothing to better the con- ditions. In the midst of this de- moralization the company union sprung up. ‘The company has a temporary in- junction against picketing and the company union has been promised the support of the Police Depart- ment, Rally for Herndon In Coliseum Tonight (Continued from Page 1) the joint auspices of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and the Unemployment Councils. ' Detroit Speeds Defense Fight DETROIT, Aug. 21—Sixty dele- gates from 22 organizations attended an Emergency Scottsboro-Herndon- Thaelmann conference here Friday night at the Danish Brotherhood Hall, 1775 Forest Ave. The conference elected a Scotts- boro-Herndon-Thaelmann Commit- tee of Action, and decided to hold tag days Sept. 1 to 5, and a mass welcome for Angelo Herndon on Sept. 17. Trade Union Meeting in N. Y. Tomorrow To Plan United Action |'__ NEW YORK.—Delegates from a number of independent unions, and unions outside of the American Federation of Labor, will meet at Irving Place, at 8 p. m. tomorrow in Irving Place at 8.p. m. tomorrow to plan united action in defense of workers’ rights. This conference, if was an- nounced, is made necessary because of the concerted bosses’ attacks on the living standards of workers, as shown in the rapidly increasing cost of living, and because of the fascist terror against workers’ or- ganizations both in this city and on the West Coast. The conference will also discuss the recent attack by William Green, president of the A. F. of L., against the rank and file of the unions. SECTION 6 MEETS TONIGHT NEW YORK.—A campaign com- Classified LARGE sunny room facing park. sma room. Kitchen privileges, tele- phone; 1801 7th Ave. Apt. 2B. Cor. 110th Street. VICINITY Union Square. Excellent 1-2-3 studio. Reasonable. Modern (elevator); 145 Second Ave. Apt. 20. WANTED furnished room or share ee ment. Girl. Lower East Side. 9 ¢/o Daily Worker. DRIVING South for vacation, August 24, comrade wishes companion. Harold Lef- Kovitz, CHickering 4-2200, 239, Veterans Find City Bureau Responsible for Worker’s Death NEW YORK.— The Harlem Veterans Relief Committee of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League yesterday sent a tele- gram to Mayor LaGuardia hold- ing the City Relief Administra- tion responsible for the suicide of Carmelo Fazzena, jobless World War veteran who hanged himself after relief was denied to him. The telegram said: “The veterans tf Harlea pro- test against the buck-passing methods of Mr. Hodson of the Department of Public Welfare and of the head of the Emer- gency Home Relief Bureau of 102nd Street in forcing Carmelo Fazzenc, jobless World War vet- eran, to commit suiicde after complaining to you regarding their methods of denying him relief.” Fazzena, aid, after being refused complaified to the Mayor, who referred him back to the bureau. Red Nominee Routs Norfolk Thugs in Fight NORFOLK, Va., Aug. 21.— At- tacked by five thugs following a waterfront speech, Alex. Wright, Communist candidate for United States Senator, held his assailants at bay with an axe-handle until workers in the neighborhood came to his rescue. After his speech, Wright boarded a bus going from the waterfront to the center of the city. The bus was trailed by an automobile containing six men, five of whom followed him when he alighted. They cornered him in a narrow lane between two houses on @ side street and attacked him with clubs. Wright, looking about for a weapon of defense, seized an axe and disabled one of his assailants. The head of the axe snapped and Wright continued to wield the handle until workers, roused by the battle, rushed to his defense. Ig- noring his injuries, Wright made a ten-minute campaign speech at the scene of the battle and won pledges of support in the election campaign. The Daily Worker can Better Aid Your Struggles if You Build its Circulation, N. ¥. U. Comrades Patronize VIOLET CAFETERIA 28-30 WAVERLY PLACE New York City Restaurant and Garden “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 382 East 14th Street New York City Tompkins Square 6-9132 Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) GROUP ASKS FOR U. S. DELEGATION TO GO TO BERLIN { | Would Send Workers To Demand News of Thaelmann NEW YORK.—‘“What has hap« pened to Thaelmann?” This cry heads a call issued t | the National Committee to Aid Vir tims of German Fascism at i meeting Sunday. The call appea for unity of Socialists, Communis. and all anti-fascists in a fight fo. the release of Ernst Thaelmann, Communist leader, imprisoned in Nazi Germany, and all other anti- fascists. The call, urging the sending of thousands of protest telegrams td Hitler and the Minister of Justice in Germany, concludes by propos- ing that an American delegation be elected to go to Berlin and investi gate the state of Thaelmann’s health as well as that of the rest of the anti-fascist prisoners. Chicago Club Protests CHICAGO, Aug. 20.—A resolution demanding the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann and other anti-fascist fighters imprisoned by the Nazi regime in Germany was unanimous< ly adopted by members and friends of the Bulgarian-Macedonian Work~ ers Club at its picnic, Aug. 12. The resolution has been forwarded td the German Ambassador Hans | Luther, at Washington, D. C. Unless Every Section and Unit in the Party Throws Its Forces Vigor- ously into the Circulation Drive, the Daily Worker Remains Un- known to Thousands of Workers, 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. C After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 92 EAST 17th STREET Suite 708—GR. 17-0135 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 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 250 FOLDING CHAIRS 60c John Kalmus Co. “ruse nuns? tu at Brighton Comrades Patronize Parkway Food Center Fish Market 3051 Ocean Parkway Corner Brighton Beach Ave. All Comrad: | NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—s0 E. 13th St.—WORKERS' CENTER ____| Meet at the Cam Beacon-on-the-Hu Bring Your Shopmate: $14 a week. Cars Leave for Camp Daily at. 10:30 A. M., 3 P. M. and 7 P, TRADE UNION WEEK AT Nitgedaiget Meet ANGELO HERNDON New Plays @ Gay Campfire @ Hear Louis Weinstock—Special Six Piece Jazz Band! Cars leave st 10:30 A.M. from 2700 Bronx Park East daily. On Fridays and Saturdays, 10 A.M., 3 P.M. and 7 P.M. EStabrook 8-1400 — Spend Your Vacation in a Proletarian Camp — CAMP KINDERLAND HOPEWELL JUNCTION Vacation Rates for Adults $14.00 per Week (Tax Included) ‘ Greet Comrade ANGELO HERNDON in our Camp this Sunday Bungalows, Tents, Warm and Cold Showers, Healthy Foods Swimming and Rowing in the Beautiful Sylvan Lake Cultural and Sport Activities Every Day The Camp Will Be Open Until September 11 son, New York s! Special Programs! NEW YORK 10:30 A. M.; Friday and Saturday M., from 2700 Bronx Park East.