The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 24, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two a onsen ®” LY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1934 PLANS ARE COMPLETED FOR ‘DAILY’ PICNIC IN QUEENS SUNDAY YCL Calls NYU, S. Workers Urged Youth Rally In Madison Sq. £0 Emulate Germans In Thaelmann Drive Call Stresses Political Value OfBig Turnout Districts Depend On 14,000 at Sacco-Vanzetti Memorial Pledge to Free Herndon and 9 Boys Stormy Ovation Given Dp Demonstration on Dock| THOUSANDS GREET HERNDON AT BRONX COLISEUM RALLY | Hero—Haihaway Is Outings for Funds oc Principal Speaker in Press Drive By CYRIL BRIGC — NEW YORK —In guaranteed oration of the 1 0 the and Daily Wo: Angelo He boys sh 14,000 pe stration at .|nesday night gave a t come to Angelo H the lanta, Ga., s ed to 18 to chain gang for o1 and Negro workers together. ” | princir ve years on the anizing white tlarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker. Adult and young workers and in- tellectuals, Negro and white, they dged themselves to an ui of statement, needed to keep | ting der the leader: er in publication. | the I rnational Labor Defense, to x District, the rg tue Herndon and the Scottst country hip, is faced 1 in f lives of Sacco zetti, fighters for the working-cl: i it| and for the past three years have not enough—for the district | used every device and legal chican- its quota ahead of the|¢tY in a monstrous attempt to rush Se eee eon oe aq iy | the innocent Scottsboro boys to the . It must take the lead | electric. chair increasing its quota. is picnic] goa ether it can do this.”| Stormy Welcome to Herndon organizations have| A stormy scene ensued as Hern- of tickets|don was brought into the hall on the shoulders of several white and Negro workers, with the whole audience climbing onto the seats, roaring the International and lust- jily cheering and applauding the | American Dimitroff, who gourage- ously defied the lynch courts of the | South. | Herndon’s arrival was preceded | by enthusiastic demonstrations as | 1,000 Negro and white workers who | earlier in the evening paraded | through the streets of the Bronx, | marched into the hall with a sea of banners and slogans greeting Hern- |don, demanding his complete free- | dom and the release of the Scott: boro boys, Tom Mooney, Ernst |Thaelman and all victims of the decaying capitalist system and its |fascist terror. Members of the | Prospect Workers Club carried a this Tickets are only 25 to cents. In addition Hathaway speaking, a sports, dancing and m been arra: i Clarence rogram of has also Green ‘Backs’ Textile Strike; Plans Betraya Will Try to Avoid Strike Called By the Textile code trial, | The| pal speaker on the occasion} Convention WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 23, liam Green issued a state- men “endorsing” the proposed cotton téxtile strike, only a few hours after he issued another statement declaring that he would €o all possible to prevent the strike. The recent convention of the United Textile Union ordered its executive board to call the strike on or before Sept. 1. The compostion of the commit- tees set up by Green, to “aid” the strike shows that Green, in con- Suitation with officers of the union, is laying the basis for betrayal of the strike if he is unable to pre- vent it. Green set up a whole series of committees, headed by the reactionary A. F. of L. lead- ¢s. John L. Lewis is on the Or- ganization Committee, and the red baiter, Matthew Woll, is head of the Public Relations Committee. Earlier in the day Green de-| ¢clared, “One thing is certain. We will seek to settle this controversy | without resorting to a strike.’ A CORRECTION | The Tuesday, Aug. 21 edition of | the Daily Worker stated erroneous- Jy that locals of the Workers Un- employed Union would join with} the Downtown Unemployment Councils in a demonstration at the Spring and Elizabeth Relief Bureau. ‘The story should have stated that members of the Unemployed Union werg’ preparing to join in the action as individuals. Members of the Un- employed Union joined in the dem- onstration and took an active part in the picketing. READERS TO MEET NEW YORK.—All Young Worker Teaders were urged yesterday to at- tend the Young Worker Readers Conference tomorrow at 2 p.m. in the Workers Center, 35 East 12th Street. Mac Weiss, editor of the paper, will speak. Classified The heroic young Negro is seen on the shoulders of Harry Haywood, Negro Communist leader, and | Robert Minor, being carried to the speakers’ platform amid the cheers of the vast throng in the auditorium. Spread the fight, to bring new re- serves of workers and intellectuals can save Angelo Herndon.” Support of Campaign He made a stirring appeal to inténsify the fight for the release of the Scottsboro boys, Tom Mooney, Ernst Thaelmann, leader of the German working class, and all class war prisoners. He called on the workers, Negro and white, to sup- Communist Party, “the only party that dares to go into the South, that dares boldly to take up the struggle for the liberation of the Negro people, for the emancipation of the whole working class. Hathaway Greets Negro Hero declared that Herndon Hathaway port the election campeign of the | giant banner, reading “Revolution- | | ary Greetings. We Welcome You | Angelo Herndon.” Another banner, | and the victory we have won typify the whole struggle conducted by the Communist Party in the South which also received tremendous ap- piause, read, “Against Imperialist War. For the Defense of the Soviet Union and the Chinese Soviets.” Presented by Bob Minor Herndon, presented by Robert Minor, a representative of the Cen- tral Committee of the Communist Party, told of the bestial torture to which he was subjected in jail in an attempt to break his spirit and to drive him insane, of the digging up of an old slave law, passed against the uprisings of the slaves, to indict him in the move to crush the revolutionary movement in Georgia. The growing unity of Southern Negro and white workers had thrown fear into the ruling class, he said. The demonstration he led of unemployed white and Negro workers had forced the city of At- lanta to appropriate $6,000 for re- lief. In revenge, the lynch rulers in- dicted him and demanded his Geath. During his trial, the pros- ecution openly admitted that not only Angelo Herndon was on trial, but the revolutionary working class. “In South to Stay” A frail, slim figure, Herndon quietly hurled anew his defiance at. the Georgia ruling class. “The Com- | munists are in the South to stay,” he said. “They will organize and unite the Negro and white workers in joint struggle against their com- mon oppressors, for the overthrow of the brutal rule of the capitalists and rich landlords, for class and national liberation, for the creation of a Soviet America. The Southern lynchers are finding that the Negro masses are no longer isolated. Angelo Herndon is not alone, but with millions of workers, white and black, against fascist reaction.” He described the Georgia chain gang as a death trap for militant Negro and white workers, and de- clared only the mass fight had rescued him from torture and death. “But even tonight, speaking to you here, I am not yet free,” he for the unity of the workers, and in the first place for the unity of the white and Negro workers. Tremendous applause greeted his announcement that the Central Committee of the Communist Party plans a drive for $500 weekly with the objective of sending fifty An- gelo Herndons—fifty Communist organizers—into the South. “We greet Herndon,” he said. “We pledge ourselves to continue the fight for his final release, to continue with him the fight for the freedom of the Scottsboro boys.” Workers Hear Haywood “Herndon represents the new leadership of the Negro working class,” declared Harry Haywood, general secretary of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, who con- trasted Herndon’s courageous de- fiance of the lynch rulers with the bellycrawling of the reformist lead- ers of the N.A.A.C.P. “Only the working class can produce such a leader as Herndon. Herndon is a product of the rising liberation and class struggle taking place in the South.” Robert Minor, representing the Central Committee of the Commu- nist Party, declared that the Scotts- boro case had opened a new chap- ter in American history, “We wel- come Angelo Herndon as a product of the movement begun around Scottsboro,” he said. “Herndon is not an individual. He is the move- ment embodied in one of its leaders and fighters.” Minor called for a proletarian united front in the fight to save Herndon and the Scottsboro boys and to beat back developing fascism in this country. He urged all Socialist workers to jon with the Communists and front against fascism and impe- rialist war. Davis Pays ‘Lribute Ben Davis, Jr. editor of the Negro Liberator and one of Hern- don’s defense attorneys, paid a glowing tribute to the I. L. D. and said. “Only your determination toto William Patterson, its general other workers in building the united | [secretary, “who, he said, “is now jin the. Soviet Union, recovering the health that he lost waging the fight for the Scottsboro boys and Angelo | Herndon.” | Greetings to Herndon and the workers present at the meeting were extended by A. L. Wirin of the American Civil Liberties Union. | | Nat Stevens, district secretary of | |the I, L. D., presided. The demon- stration was concluded with a dance |number by the New Dance Group, | typifying the mass fight for Hern- | don, the Scottsboro boys, Mooney | and Thaelmann, and the singing of | the “International.” ‘Militant Painters Local Is Ousted (Continued from Page 1) |Federation to put an end to this skullduggery. The attack on our local is the beginning of a con- certed drive of the reactionary and corrupt officials of the American Federation of Labor against the en- tire labor movement. All labor should support the fight of our lecal for reinstatement.” Corruption and gangsterism in the Painters Brotherhood, which the rank and file are fighting against and for which fight Local 499 was expelled, is sinking to new depths in various sections of the country. Tactics such as Zausner is using in New York has led to a gun war between gangster elements in the Chicago Brotherhood for division of the union treasury, and the slaying of two of the gangster officials by rival gangs. Last Sunday Roy Thompson, a racketecr business agent. who was Lindeloff, general president of the rotherhood, among those who is responsible for the revocation of the Local 499 charter, was shot to death by rival racketeers. A few weeks prior to the killing of Thompson, Michael “Bubs” Quinlan, a south- side racketeer, was killed by Roy “Muckel” Shields, of the Painters District Council. Thompson was said to have been killed in revenge as was the case in an attempi on the life of James Dugan, business agent of Local 191 of Chicago on August 21. NEGKO HISTORY TAUGHT NEW YORK.—A class in public speaking, Negro history and the program of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights is being conducted by Grace Lamb every Monday night at the headquarters of the L. S. N.R., 119 West 135th St. The class is free, Negro Fights Chain Gang In N.Y. Court Georgia Warden Seeks to Drag Him Back to Death Camp NEW YORK.—The Georgia lynch rulers who are trying to murder | heroic Angelo Herndon on the chain gang, reached out yesterday for | Paul Smith, 21-year old Negro youth who fled the Whitefield Prison Camp, near Dalton, Georgia, @ year ago, and has been working in this city as a bootblack for sey- eral months. Smith vehemently protested the attempt to extradite him in Magis- (rate Jonah J. Goldstein’s court. “I don't want to go back to that prison camp, because they'll kill me,” he told the magistrate. Warden Harvey Smith of the prison camp, who has extradition papers to take Smith back to tor- ture and certain death, stepped for- ward at this point to “resent the aspersions on the fair name of the State of Georgia,” of whose chain gang brutalities Jack Spivak: in “Georgia Nigger” gave irrefutable proof, “They'll kill me, because they think more of a dog than they do of a Negro,” Smith insisted, point- ing to a deap scar on his forehead, outward evidence of his treatment at the camp. Magistrate Goldstein post) ie rking with Arthur Wallace, pres- deci: kes isa Set to pias ident of the Chicago DistrictsCoun- | attomey, he said. § PR tbate cil, and former bodyguard of Dh. P. attorney, he said. Smith was serv ing a 10-year sentence on the chain gang. Herndon Will Speak In Brooklyn Tonight BROOKLYN.—Revy, James Hor- ton, pastor of one of Brooklyn's largest Negro churches, is expected to make the welcoming address to Angelo Herndon, heroic Negro lead- er of the working class, on his ap- pearance at the Elks Auditorium, 1068 Fulton Street, this evening. Negro and white workers and in- tellectuals will join in a tremen— dous mass welcome to the young Negro leader who courageously de- fled the Georgia rulers, was sen- tenced to 18 to 20 years on the chain gang for organizing white and Negro workers together, and is now out on bail, pending appeal. WANTED Board and care for 3% year old boy and room for parents. Write Box 14 ¢/o Daily Worker. SHARE six-room apartment. Private house. One large front room, two small ad- Joining rooms, $10 per month. F. Cohen, 96 Ave. C, 2rd flo ee LICENSE NOTICE NOTICE is hereby given that license Number A-9730 has been issued to the un- dersigned to sell beer at retail, under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law, at 373 Amsterdam Ave., New York, N. ¥., for off Premises consumption. Daniel Bilenkis Purity Dairies 373 Amsterdam Ave., New York, N. Y. 250 FOLDING CHAIRS “ 60c 35 W.26th St.,.NYC John Kalmus Co. MUP'y Hil 44-5447 WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apariments availabie. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Direction: “Lexington 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 8-1400—8-1401 | riday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.| Chicago Names Shock Brigaders in Drive For Signatures | CLEVELAND, Ohio, Twelve hundred nominating pe’ tions containing 34,192 certified Signatures of voters in 33 Ohio counties, have been filed with the Secretary of State at Columbus, as- suring Communist candidates of their places on the ballot in the fall elections. Only 26,445 were required under the State election regulations and the signatures filed plus others col- lected in Cincinnati and Columbus will provide a margin of 10,000 names. The State candidates named in the petition are: I. O. Ford, for Governor; Janie Langston for Lieutenant Governor; William Patterson, for Treasurer; |W. ©. Sandberg for United States ; Senator; John Marshall for United States Congress Youngstown, Cleveland and Cin- cinnati took fi ‘ond and third place as the citi Pennsylva Aug. 23.—) Yetta Land for Attorney-Generai; | which produced the greatest num-!has been named a Red Week ber of petition signatures. Indivi- duals who led in the drive were Miller, of Toledo; Vinia, of Youngs- owe. and Esther Sweitzer of Cleve- | Jand, Chicago Shock Brigaders Named CHICAGO, Aug. 23—Fine work of individual workers in collecting signatures in the drive to place the Illinois State Communist tick?t on the ballot was reported here Wed- nesday. However, the campaign as a whole is still lagging and the danger still exists that the neces- | Sary number may not be collected | by Sept. 1, the deadline. Among the comrades whose work has been a great factor both in strengthening the Party’s chances of getting our candidates on the ballot and in giving inspiration to other workers are Frank Hamilton, 2, Negro comrade in Section 7, who turned in 300 signatures; Brown Squires of Section 11, who secured | | | 200; Frank Burda of Section 3, | who got 150 signatures. | Section 2, which is primarily fer the campaign for Yewton for Congress turned beginning Aug. 26, for collection of signatures. members and sympathizers are asked to rally daily during this last week of the drive. Pennsylvania Candidates to Tour PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Aug. 23.—- The election campaign in this State will gather momentum on Monday as three leading Communisi. can- didates start on statewide speaking tours through the major industrial centers, Harry M. Wicks, candidate for United States Senator, will begin a tour of the anthracite coal region with speaking dates at Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, Hazelton, Shenan- doah, Pottsville and Shamokin. From there Wicks will travel west to the Pittsburgh ccal region and through the steel towns, thence to the nowthern part of the state. Emmet Patrick Cush, candidate | for Governor and veteran rank and file leadoz in the steel industry, will | |stari; East on the same day for aj} ‘ies of speaking dates in Phila- hia and vicinity. Dan Slinger, miner and candidate for Secretary of Internal Affairs, will open a simi- lar tour tonight with a mecting at| > All Party C. P. Gets on Ohio Ballot with 10,000 Names to Spare; nia Candidates Start on State-Wide Tours Steel Towns Lead Ohio Cities in Successful Canvassing 730. On Sunday he will speak at @ picnic at Golfs Hill near South Bethlehem and then he will pro- ceed to Reading, Lancaster and Chester where he will spend a total of nine days. Baltimore Election Picnic BALTIMORE, Md, Aug. 23.—All workers who have signed the Com- munist Party nominating petitions in this city are among those in- vited to attend the election picnic which will be held here on Sunday in Greenwood Electric Park. Bernard Ades, candidate for Governor, and Joseph Gaal, section organizer of the Communist Party here, will be the principal speakers at the event. Ades is the courage- ous lawyer who led the defense cf Euel Lee, Negro farmhand, against framed charges of murder. The park may b2 reached by tak- ing car number fourteen or car number nit of the Elicott City Line and stopping at Edmondson the Center Square in Allentown at Avenue and Winters Lane, Tomorrow to Prepare for Youth Day Meet Y. C, L. CALLS NEW YORK.—The Young Com- munist League yes‘erday issued a call to all young workers and students to demonstrate against | | war and fascism on International Youth Day, Sept. 1, the day when the world’s youth rallies against im. | perialist war and fascism. | The demonstration in New will begin at 1 o'clock in the after- noon in Madison Square Pa: Twenty-third Street and Madison Avenue, from where the young workers and students, massed be- hind the banners of their various organizations, will march to Tomp- kins Square, Seventh Street and Avenue A. a With the call to the demonstra- tion, the Y. C. L. issued a statement emphasizing the necessity of having a huge mass meeting and parade. “We workers, and especially the youth, can, by our united efforts, halt the bloody hands of the fascists and war makers. We take our in- spiration from the fighting youth of the last war who, in the midst of the bloody slaughter in 1915, fought to unite the workers in opposing trenches to turn the guns on their real enemy—the bosses of their own countries, “Take up the fighting standard— International Youth Day—the day when the working youth of the world raise their arms in mighty mass protest against imperialist war and fascism.” A preliminary demonstration to prepare the rally on September 1 will be held tomorrow along the waterfront. Workers are being urged to mass at Twenty-first Street and Eleventh Avenue at 12 noon, N. J. Labor Board Aids} Move to Break Strike NEWARK, N. J., Aug. 23,—The Regional Labor Board took steps today to break the strike of work- ers of the N. and J. Shoe Co., 56 Earl St., by maneuvering with the bosses of the plant to carry on balloting tomorrow in the plant to see if the workers would rather be- long to the Boot and Shoe Union than the United Shoe and Leather Workers Union, which is leading the strike. The bosses for some time have been intimidating the workers in an attempt to get them to sign up with the Boot and Shoe. Or- ganizers of the United protested to the Regional Labor Board this afternoon and demanded to know where the board got the authority to hold the elections, Veterans Will Protest Relief Denial Today NEW YORK.—A delegation of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League will call today on Harry Levine, act- ing director of the Home Relief Bureau in Manhattan, to press their protest against the refusal of help by officials of the East 102nd St. Precint office which resulted in the suicide of Carmelo Fazzena, a job- less veteran. All veterans with grievances con- cerning their treatment by the Home Relief Bureau were urged yesterday to report this morning at the Harlem office of the Ex-Service- men’s League at 119 West 135th St. Y.C.L. Calls Meeting Of All Union Members NEW YORK.—A special meet- ing of all Young Communist League members in revolutionary, American Federation of Labor, and independent unions will be held tomorrow at 1 p.m. at the district office, 35 E. 12th St. The meeting of trade union fraction secretaries scheduled for today has been called off, and fraction secretaries have been in- structed to attend the Saturday meeting instead. AVANTA FARM Ulster Park, N. Y. Workers resting place. Good food. Quiet. Bathing; $12 per week; $2 per day; 10 A. M. Boat to Poughkcepsie. Ferry to Highland; 3:20 P. M. Train to Ulster Park. Round Trip $2.71. Help Us Greet Angelo Herndon and his couragcous attorney BEN DAVIS With a Unity Celebration! Pageantry! Color! Music! In Open Air Theatre, On Leke Ellis We Have Room for You $14 a week. Cars leave 10:30 A.M. daily from 2700 Bronx Park Fast. rideys, Saturdays, 10 A.M., 3 and 7PM, Abgonquin 4-1143, Unity Many Signatures Already Campaign for Mil Collected in Committee's lion Names in the Demand for Leader’s Release NEW YORK.—Lauding the cour- ageous action of tens of thousands ~ German workers who braved eath in the Nazi plebiscite last Sunday by affixing the name of Errss Thaelmann, imprisoned Ger- man Communist leader, to the bal- ict, as their candidate for president of the Reich, the National Commit- tee to Aid Victims of German Fas- cism yesterday pointed out that tunity to do likewise in the current campaign of the organization to ing the release of Thaelmann, Already, the committee out, miners from West Virginia, stell workers of Lackawanna, N. Y., and workers from many points have | cast their ballots for Thaelmann. Bownton, W. Va., sent in 100 sig- | natures of Negro and white miners, demanding that the longshoreman and trade union leader, Thael- mann, be liberated, demanding his safety, demanding to know his Present whereabouts. Lakawanna, N. Y., gathering signatures. Nor- wich, Conn., has sent in 63 votes for Thaelmann’s freedom; Law- rence, Mass., 87; Gary Steel work- ers, 100; Fall River textile work- ers, 87; Flint, Mich., auto workers, 101; Kansas City, 160; Spival, Colo- rado, 61; Monessen, Pa., steel workers, 105; Yonkers, N. Y., 120; Lynn, Mass., 80; Hicksville, N. Y., 80; Morgantown, W. Va., 113; Cru- tisville coal miners, 180; Holden, W. Va., 120, Cities, villages and farming com- munities busy securing signatures and which have already made par- tial reports of their local drives showing that the campaign for a “Million Names to Free Thael- mann” is going forward are: Sarah Ann., W. Va., Bismark, N. D., Hoquiam, Wash., West Paris, Me., Shenandoah, Pa., Tampa, Fia., Tulsa, Orleans, Banksville, Conn., Russelton, Pa., Red Banks, N. J., Killinly, Conn., Eben Junc- tion, Mich.,. Paynesville, Mich., Red Grantire, Wisc, New Castle Pa., Paterson, N. J., Duluth, Columbus, Atlantic City, Mt. Vernon, N. Y., Dwyer, Pa. Duarte, Cal., Foster center, R. I, Ambridge, Pa. Thaelmann is scheduled to be tried in the month of September by the Nazi “People’s Court,” which is actually nothing more than a drum-head court martial. He has been in jail for more than 18 months. The campaign, officers of the National Committee point out, will aid not only in the struggle for New Japanese Imperialist Invasion to Be Scored NEW YORK.—An open-air mass meeting to support Madam Sun Yat Sen’s declaration for a united struggle against Japanese impe- rialist invasion of China will be held Sunday at Mott and Bayard Sts., at 2 p.m. Représentatives of the following organizations will speak: American Committee Against War and Fas- cism, the Friends of the Chinese People and from various Chinese organizations RABBIT FUR MEN TO MEET NEW YORK—Hhe rabbit fur strikers will hold a mass demon- stration today at 11 am. at 27th St. and 7th Ave., under the joint auspices of the strikers of the In- dustrial Union and the Interna- tional Union. American workers have an oppor- | raise a million signatures demand- | points | the freedom of Thaelmann but will also be a help in the fight for the liberation of the writers, Ludwig, Renn and Carl von Ossietzky, an* the many other anti-fascist pri oners now held in concentratic camps throughout Germany. Signature Campaign Grows in N. NEW YORK. — The Anti-Na Federation of New York reports in creased activity on the part of somc organizations in New York in con- nection with the campaign for One Million Signatures and Pennies for |the release of Ernst Thaelmann, imprisoned German Communist leader, and all political prisoners in |Germany. The Communist Party, New York District leads in the col- lection of money and signatures by having turned in up to the present about 3,000 names and $180,04. Other organizations which have shown results in the campaign are the Women’s Councils, Nature Friends, Icor, Italian Federation, Millinery Opposition, Young Com- munist League, Cli-Grand Youth Club, branches of the International Workers Order and others. The Anti-Nazi Federation urges all organizations which have as yet not obtained these petition lists to get them immediately at the office of the Federation, 168 W. 23rd St. Organizations should turn in the lists as soon as they are filled out, days before the grand Daily Worker Picnic takes place. The first big affair to launch the 360,000 Daily Worker Drive and for the New York Dally Worker. Come and bring your friends. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY s: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M NE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Get. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. G Atter 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR. 17-0135 Office Hour: PRE Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFFICE HOURS: 1 SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M. Tompkins Square 6-7697 P.M. I. J. MORRIS, Ine. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order We Sell or Rent ® OUTDOOR AMPLIPIERS, H We also repair and convert Special to comrades! A $5 Mike that w MILES REPRODUCERS CO.. — Spend Your Vacation HOPEWELL JUNCTION Vacation Rates for Adults $1: 10:30 A. M., 3 P. M. and 7 P. CAMP KINDERLAND 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 Cuitural sand Sport Activities Every Day Cars Leave for Camp Daily at 10:30 A. M.; Friday and Saturday The Camp Will Be Open Until September 11 [ORNS AND MICROPHONES radios at reasonable prices orks from your own radio for $1 and up Five-Day Money Back Guarantee If Not Satisfied 114 W. 14th St., New York City » Inc. CHelsea 2-9838 in a Proletarian Camp — NEW YORK 4.00 per Week (Tax Included) M., from 2700 Bronx Park East. Bring Your Shopmate New Plays @ Gay Campfire @ $14 a week. Cars lpave nt 10:20 A.M. On Fridays and Saturdays, 10 A.M., 3 TRADE UNION WEEK AT Camp Nitgedaiget Beacon-on-the-Hudson, New York Meet ANGELO HERNDON Six Piece Jazz Band! s! Special Programs! Hear Louis Weinstock—Special . from 2700 Bronx Park Fast daily. P.M, and 7 P.M. brook 8-1! hy

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