The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 25, 1934, Page 2

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‘ i ‘TENTS Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 1934 JAPAN’S WAR PROVOCATIONS SCORED BY ANTI-WAR LEAGUE | An Organized Furriers Cast Record Vote In General Election to Show Backing of Industrial Union Answer Called Urgent Need Strong Representation at Chicago Congress Urged as Reply id Fascism. 1 Japanese ts and jingoi: to provoke the Sovi I ondemned by se Nation leaders os neoln Stef- Robert Mor rin, Rev. Wi ofessor Geor; on Hughes, 1 rT. Rabbi Reeve Bloor, R. Lester ra ft Dorothy Mondal: The statement also points out r that Germany will take advantage of the situation to attack Soviet Ukraine. It further adds that “such a move by Hitler un- questionably w: set Europe in flames and involve the United Btat danger is the tragic, immediate need in America.” the statement goes on to say. “To answer it, a s is called by the American League Against War and Fascism to take place in Chicago, end 30. This Con- nese Provocations “Alarming news from the Far East indicates the existence of a Situation fraught world peace. The Japanese nation, under the domination of the mili- tarist group now in power, is to strike agains Since Japan in 1931, it has consolidated ver in Mi huria, has built Strategic railways, military reeds, neyal ports and airdromes. In recent months it hes succeeded in. assembling a huge war machine for the coming conflict Only one explanation can be given for the long list of atrocities committed by Japan against Soviet employees of the Chinese Eastern Railway and that is that they were perpetrated with the purpose of trying to provoke ‘the Soviet Union into war. Powerful Jananese re- actionaries, fascists and are urging the militzry of Japan to proceed ‘from words to deeds. The ‘ominous warn Served on Soviet Russia by the Japanese Foreign Office, alleging unfriendly acts, indicates that the prevailing opinion of the Japanese ruling class is that the sooner they attack the U. S. S. R. the better. General Araki recently stated that any agreement between Japan and the Soviet Union is quite impos- sible; and that Japan is ready for war when it comes. “That the world is watching the fuse burn close to the powder keg has heen clearly shown in the last jingoists dictators few days. Late reports from Man- @hukuo are to the effect that 1 diplomatic relations with So’ Russia have ceased. and that the Chinese Eastern Railroad, belonging jeintly to the Sovist Union and to China, may be taken over by force. Japan has consistently refused to enter into a non-aggression agree- ment with the Soviet Union. War Will Involve U. S. “As soon as the inevitable war breaks out in the Far East, Nazi Germany will surely take advantage of the situation and attack on the ‘Western border. Hitler aims at a ‘Greater Germany’ at the expense of Soviet Ukraine. Such a move by Hitler unquestionably will set Europe in flames and involve the United States. “The present moment is as grave. as full of dangerous possibilities as was the Spring of 1914. The Ameri- ean people do not half realize that @ war in the Far East and in Europe will inevitably draw the U. S. into the slaughter. The time to act against war is now. Peaceful intentions of individual citizens are of no avail. Organized action against the war danger is the tragic, immediate need in America. To answer it, a National @ongress is called by the American League Against Wer and Fascism to take Place in Chicago, September 28, 29 30. This congress is sponsored by trade unions, church groups, peace organizations, student socie- tips and numerous groups and Prominent individuals.” LERMAN BROS. | STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City Abgonquin 4-2356—4-8943—4-7823 CAMP EQUIPMENT Lowest Prices in New York City _ SQUARE DEAL “ARMY and NAVY STORE 121 Third Avenns (near 14th Street) WORKINGMEN’S STORE THE anized action against the war | Berkowitz, Kessel Miller, Monia | Schwartz, Fannie Glotzer, Archie ¢|Maskin, Chaim Goldberg, Anna Winogradsky Re-Elected Manager With 2,093 | Votes Cast K ighest vote the Fur m was re- ie general elec- id and unpaid officers held on Wednesday, the union announced NEW YOR | Wor 2,093 votes were cast to elect a manager, ten organizers r function s The response in the elections is taken as an indication of the solid support of the union by its member- ship and a demonstration of defi- against the bosses who at- tempted to force workers into the Joint Council through coercive reg- r threats of violence and | framed arrests | J, Winogradsky was re-elected | manager by a vote of 1,673. The) ten organizers elected to office were J. Schneider, P. Paul, Gus Hopman, | Sol Wollin, J. Fleiss, M. Angel, M. | Boerum, L. Schwartz, Harry Green- | berg and C. Meltzer. The thirty-one elected to the Trade Board are: j William Kaiser, Leviche Cohen, I. | Opochinsky, Philip Brown, Sam/| Resnick, Philip Glantzman, Hyman Greenberg, Al Melnikoff, Abe Kap- Jan, Mary Fleishman, H. Becker, H. | Bogdansky, Max Foreman, A. Ozer- \off, B. Clarfield, C. Orenstein, E. | Goldberg, H. Lamazoff, Lucas Prem- ice, Sarah Suroff, Abe Shafran, Oscar Ward, Ida Thal, O. Archie | Schneiderman and Philip Millstein. | ‘Demand ‘Where Is Thaelmann’ (Continued from Page 1) ecident about the ferocious sirang- | | ulation to death of the well-known writer Erich Muehsam in the Son- nen concentration camp and |the quick execution of Lieutenant Scheringer in the prison of Dresden. | It is also by mere accident that the corpses of the Bavarian national- ists, Dr. Fritz Gerlich, Dr. Willi Schmidt, Isenburg, Aretin, Frau | Gutenber; Pastor Muhler have |; been discovered near to the con- centretion camp of Dachau, Bavaria. “Let us unite for decisive action! Let us sound the alarm! Where is Thaelmann? Is he safe? We de- mand to know! How are ail anti- fascist prisoners faring! “Let there go forward to the Minister of Justice and to Chancel- lor Hitler, Berlin, Germany, thou- sands of cablegrams and registered letters with return receipt de-| manded with decisive requests to} hear from Thaelmann. “Let us immediately elect a dele- ga‘icn to go to Berlin to inquire | |into Theelmann’s safety, into the! jsafety of all our brother anti-| fascists. | Let us spread the campaign for | |a million signatures to free Thael- mann and his fellow prisoners in every city, shop, organization. Let a million voices demand safety for Thaelmann, demand to know his where-abouts, demand his libera-| tion. “NATIONAL COMMITTEE TO AID VICTIMS OF GERMAN FASCISM, 870 Broadway, New York, Noy.” | Frame-Up of Negro Hit At Protest Meeting |Held in Niagara Falls NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y,, Aug. 24. —A ‘protest meeting against the |frame-up of Alfonso Davis, Negro | youth, on a trumped-up charge of “raping” a local white woman, was held at ihe city market grounds here August 14, with over 350 white and Negro workers in attendance. George Hart, district secretary of the International Labor Defense, | exposed the frame-up, bringing out the glaring contradictions in the statements of the alleged victim and her escort. He called upon all work- ers and honest intellectuals to sup- | port the I. L. D. in smashing this | attempt to drive a wedge between the Negro and white workers, and to organize a broad united defense committee for Davis. Henry Shepard. district organizer of the Communist Party, showed the attempt to use the Davis frame- up to whip up a lynch spirit is part of the drive on the living standards of the working class, and upon the Negro masses especially. Honor Sacco, Vanzetti at Wisconsin Meeting KENOSHA, Wis., Aug. 24—About 400 workers attended a mass meet- ing Wednesday in Columbus Park to commemorate the death of Sacco and Vanze‘ti, maztyred working- | class heroes, and to protest the | threatened murder of the Scotts- boro Boys, Ernst Thaelmann and | Angelo Herndon. The meeting was addressed by Richard Kaufman of Milwaukee, anti-fascist loader, and Peter Ham- kins of Kenosha, Communis’ can- didate for State treasurer in ihe} Wisconsin election camp2 Peter Sable, local secrstary of Inter- HERNDON DEFENSE FUND TIME LIMIT EXTENDED 30 DAYS NEW YORK. breathing space for the collection of the $15,000 needed to appeal the ttsboro and Herndon cases to the U. S. Supreme court has been won by the International Labor Defense in forcing the supreme courts of Alabama and Georgia to grant rehearings in both cas as announced by the I, L. D. This period, it was pointed out, does not relieve the day-to-day pressure for cash needed to prepare the motions for the re-hearings, the printed briefs which will have to be filed in both these cases, travelling and other expenses for the attorneys, These expenses have so far almost daily exceeded the contributions. On the contrary, ex- penses are added to the appeal by these new moves. At the same time, the I. L. D. warned that the full sum must be collected by September 1, in order to be prepared to take the cases to the U. S. Supreme Court in October. At that time, thousands of dollars will have to be paid down in cash to the government printer who, according to U. S. Supreme Court rules, must do the printing for the fs to the “court of last illusions.” Funds should be rushed daily to the national office of the I. L. D. Room 430, 80 E, 11th St., New York City. Jobless Parley Tomorrow Will Plan City NEW YORK.—The fourth session of the United Action Conference on Work, Relief and Unemployment, to be held at Stuyvesand Casino, 142 Second Avenue, tomorrow at 1 p. m., will outline the final plans for a mass march on City Hall on Sept. 22, and take the preliminary steps in the organization of a state-wide | hunger march on Albany. One of the central problems to be dealt with at the conference, James Gaynor, chairman, announced yes- terday, will be the fight against the new relief tax program of the La- Guardia regime. “The relief tax program,” Gaynor said, “does. not provide any more than the present starvation relief budgets, while at the same time thrusting the entire burden upon the small business men and @he work- ing population.” To LaGuardia’s claims that “not one man, woman or child has been permitted to go hungry or go with- Hunger March out shelter during the winter or sum- mer months,” Gaynor cited among others the names of two workers. Delorita Thomas, of 856 Dawson St., died of starvation last week after long delayed relief had come too late. Another, Carmelo Gazzena, of 317 E. 108th St. a jobless World War veteran, hanged himself last | Saturday after four months of futile effort to get help from the Home Relief Bureau. Fazzena personally brought his plea for relief to Mayor mis who sent him ioner Hodson, where he was again denied relief. The United Action Conference, representing employed and unem- ployed, relief workers and trade union members, opposes the plan of making the poor feed the poor, and will mobilize thousands for a mass |march on City Hall on Sept, 22 to demand adequate cash relief, and decent jobs at trade union wages on the relief projects. 4 United Prov Conferences Endorse Detroit C. P. Ticket DETROIT, Aug. 24—The election drive of the Communist Party is moving forward rapidly here. <A total of 100,000 copies of the national and State election platform have been printed and are being widely distributed in working class neigh- borhoods and in the auto plants. During the past week four united front election conferences were held here at which the State candidates and their platform was endorsed and additional local candidates nom- inated. Frank Sykes, Negro working class leader, will run for Congress in the first district against the Negro mis- Jeader and Republican politician Roxborough as well as against Con- gressman Sandowski who is up for reelection. Earl Reno, former auto worker and now organizational secretary of the Communist Party, will run for Congress in the 14th district against Congressman Weideman, exposed several months ago as a member of the board of an industrial spy agency. Cass Baily, Negro worker, and Clyde Morrow, employed in an auto plant, will run for State Sen- ator and George Kristalsky will run for State Representative in Ham- tramck. The State candidates of the Com- munist Party are: John Anderson, leader of the Progressives in the Mechanics Educational Society, for Governor; Phil Raymond, national secretary of the Auto Workers Union, for United States Senator; John Maki, iron miner of| Ironwood, Mich, for Lieutenant+Governor; John Rose, farmer, facing jail for criminal syndicalism, for Secretary |} of State; Lonnie Williams, young | Negro worker, for Attorney-General; |May Himoff, leader of young work- ers struggles, for State-Treasurer; John North of Grand Rapids, unem- ployed leader, for Auditor-General. | Textile Workers Hear C, P. Platform JEWETT CITY, Conn., Aug. 24.— For the first time in the history. of this city a Communist Party out- door meeting was held here by the election campaign committee at which the program of the Party was explained to 200 striking textile workers, The workers, employees of the As- pinook plant and members of the United Textile Workers Union, listened attentively and enthusiaé tically to the Communist election demands as explained by Bob King, Connectitut District President of the Marine Workers Industrial Union and candidate for Congressman-at- Large. Kling outlined the Commu- nist position on trade unionism and in particular the Party's attitude to- ward the impending general strike of textile workers, Reporters on Picket Line in Fight Against Union Discrimination NEW YORK.—Fifty newspaper- men, members of the Newspaper Guild of New York picketed the Cunard Line docks here yesterday, when 8, I, Newhouse, publisher of the Staten Island Times landed on the Aquitania. The newspapermen carried banners demanding the re- instatement of Alexander Crosby, editorial writer of the Staten Is- land Advance, who was fired for organizational activity. Other ban- ners carried by the nswpapermen declared that the paper was “un- fair to union labor.” The ship was met at quarantine by a delegation headed by Heywood Broun, national president of the Guild and including James Kirnin of the Times and Alexander Crosby, who was fired from the Advance, The committee presented demands for the re-instatement of Crosby. Meanwhile, an airplane, piloted by Ben Leider, staff writer of the Post, flow everhead. On the wings of the plane were blazoned the words “Back the Guild.” Newhous2? made no comment on the demands, but after he hed met with his managing editor Hockstein, the pickets movtd to the Staten Islend Ferry. national Labor Defense, was chair- man, ( As the Daily Worker went to press, arrangements were being made for a series of mass meetings throughout Staten Island, w C.P. of Queens Urges Sending of Delegates to Election Parley NEW YORK. — The Queens Sec- tion of the Communist Party has issued @ call to all workers, Negro and white, and to all workers’ organizations, to send delegates to a United Front election campaign conference to be held Aug. 30, at 8 p.m.. at the Masonic Temple, 41-26 58th St., Woodside, Long Island, Irving Schwab, election campaign manager, will present the platform. The local candidates will also ad- dress the conference. Paul P. Cros- bie, now under charges in the Amer- ican Legion for expulsion because of membership in the Communist Party, is the candidate for Congress in the Second Congressional Dis- trict. Booker T. Morgen, Negro needle trades worker of Corona, is the candidate for State Senator. Celia Balogh, housewife and lead- er of the Queens League for the Protection of Children, is the can- didate for the Assembly for the Sec- end Assembly District. George Will- ner, furniture worker and organizc- iional secretary of Section 9, is the candidate for Assembly for the First bly District. Oreste Menesan, ig trades worker, is the can- ¢ fer Assembly in the Third District. | Subs fer the “Daily” Join the Red Builders! LaGuardia, who sent him to Com- | back to the Home Relief Bureau | | l 7 AFL Lieula ‘Bring Release ‘Of 3 Workers |Bail for Three Towans Had Been Set at $5,000 Apiece DES MOINES, Iow Aug. 24.— Three militant workers, held on Iowa criminal syndicalism charges, are free without bail until their trial in the Fall, following demands | by 17 locals of the Des Moines Trades and Labor Assembly of the American Federation of Labor for their release on reduced bail. The bail originally had been $5,000/ apiece. The men, James Porter, Ira Meade and John Nordquist, were arrested during a strike for better wages of 2,000 relief workers early in June. The strike lasted a month. The defendants, two of whom be- long to the Communist Party, are {charged on prejured evidence with advocating violence. President J. C. Lewis of the Iowa State Federation of Labor de- manded the release of the workers and declared his opposition to the criminal syndicalism law. The Communist Party, the Socialist Party and the Farmer-Labor Party have demanded the repeal of the anti-labor law, The American Legion is fighting against the repeal. California Writ to Ban C. P. Fought (Continued from Page 1) Police Department of San Francisco to Mr. Albert Boynton of the In- dustzial Association which prove definitely that the police were the leaders of the raids on workers’ headquarters and homes. The docu- ments list the police violence and depredations against workers and their homes and headquarters. A partial list of casualties caused by the police and vigilante raids on workers’ organizations compiled by the Nation, which covers a pe- | riod from July 2 to 22 in twenty California cities, is one of the most. | gory records of fascist brutality to be found outside of fascist Ger- many. There are innumerable cases of workers being beaten by mobs, sev- eral cases of kidnaping, robbery, house wrecking, stabbing, shootinc. Almost every crime on the calendar was committed by police and pri- vate armies of vigilantes against. Communists and labor union mem- bers, Boston C. P. Office Raided BOSTON, Aug. 24—Police today} raided the Communist Party office, arresting Sidney Bloomfield, Alice Ward, OBrien and two others on the pretext that they were running a lottery. The lottery charge is based on a Daily Worker contest. The raid was led by chief of the Red Squad Goldstine and is obvi- ously in line with the reign of terror being spread by police on the West Coast. The Communist Party here has been making very active prepa- rations for supporting the workers in the impending textile strike. Judge Hayden, notorious Jabor hater who freed the murderer of | George Borden, Negro worker, to-| | day fined Irwin Miller $209 because a book of contest tickets was found in his possession after he had been arrested for distributing leaflets. The International Labor Defense is protesting the raid and calling for protest wires from all over the country to protest the arrests and demand the freedom of the ar- rested workers. Wires should be addressed to Mayor Mansfield, City Hall. The I, L. D. is urging that funds for defense purposes be sent to 12 Hay- ward Place, Boston. Chicago Plans Picnic on Sept. 3 for ‘Daily’ $60,000 Fund Drive (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Aug. 24—For the benefit of the Daily Worker drive for $60,000, a picnic will be held in the forest preserve at Glenwood, IL, on Sept. 3. Karl Locker, Com- | munist Candidate for Congressman- at-Large, will speak. The picnic, under the auspices of Section 6 of the Communist Party, is expected to draw workers from the smail towns just south of Chicago. Trucks will run to the grove from 115th Street and Cottage Grove Avenue and from 119th Street and Michigan Avenue. There will also be trucks from Chicago, Harvey, Chicago Heights and Kankakee. | Autos reach the grove on Route 1, Indiana Avenue. Classified COMFORTABLE ROOM, single man, rea- sonable. Call all week, 315 West 79th St. Apartment TF. ROOM FOR GIRL or couple, Kitchen privileges. Reasonable, Boro Perk, Write Box 23 c-o Daily Worker. SHARE SIX ROOM-epartment. Private house. One large front room, two small adjoining rooms $10 month. ¥F. Cohen, 96 Avenue C. Third floor. WANTED furnished room or share apart- ment, Gir. Lower West Side. Box 9 c-o Daily Worker. WANTED BOARD and care for 3¥-year- old boy and room for parents. Write Box 14 c-0 Daily Worker. EXCELLENT 1-2-3 studios. Furnished or unfurnished. Reasonable. Modern (cle- vetor). 145 Second Ave., Apartment 29. SINGLE ROOM, comfortable, shower, reasoneble. 270 W. Fourth St. near 11th oS. Apartment 15. RUSSIAN LESSONS. Very reasonable, 8 to 10 8. m. PERSONAL Individuel, groups. Phone SChuyler 4-0174. Outing Tomorrow by Youth Will Aid Anti-War Congress NEW YORK.—A drive by the American League Against War and Fascism, Youth Section, to raise funds for the Second U, 8. Congress Against War will be launched tomorrow with a boat ride to Bear Mountain. The boat “Bear Mountain” leaves the Battery at 8 a. m. tomorrow. There will be dancing and entertainment on the boat and sport events at Bear Moun- tain. Tickets at the League office, 213 Fourth Avenue, or at boat, are one dollar. The excursion is being run jointly by the Youth Section of the League and the T. U. U. C. Youth Section. 2 More Jailed In Anti-Labor Florida Raids ORLANDA, Fila., Aug. 24—Two militant workers were arrested and railroaded to the City Stockade this week, as the lynch rulers and their fascist. groups continued the terror drive against the Communist Party. The arrested workers are L. E. Bland and his wife, Lillian Bland. Bland was evidently arrested under the impression that he is Paul Bland, The police have openly stated that had he been Paul Bland he would have been turned over to the fascist Ku Klux Klan. Local workers believe that the two prisoners are being tortured and have obtained the aid of At- torney Theodore Woodward to get them released on a writ of habeas corpus. Funds are urgently needed for the fight, and the workers here are sending an appeal through the Daily Worker to their class brothers in other parts of the country to help them by financial contribu- tions and protests. Contributions can be sent through the Interna- tional Labor Defense. Travel Full Hiking and Camping Outfits Breeches, Shorts, Slacks, Sweaters, Shirts, Work Shoes, ete. TENTS, COTS, BLANKETS TENTS—i x 7—6 ft, High 3 ft. sidewall eeprentsns S108 We carry all sizes in stock at lowest prices in city. Army Folding Cots —... - $1:69 Hudson Army & Navy 105 THIRD AVE. Corner 13th Street Mention Daily Worker for Special Discount 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.) N, Y. U. Comrades Patronize VIOLET CAFETERIA 28-30 WAVERLY PLACE New York City Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York Cam Help Us Greet Angelo Herndon and his courageous 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 East. 8, Satirdays, 10 AM., 3 and 7 P. ALgonquin 4-1118. DAVE ALLMAN, please come home, t Unity ‘Bronx Bread Strikers Win fone e 8 Lower Prices ' EES | q Bakers Agree to 1 Cent! E A > ‘ | 8 Reduction in Prices || a vetere the grand Dally || Worker Picnic takes place. The} ~ of Bread and Rolls |] Bret big affair to launch the | % || 360,000 Daily Worker Drive and ,NEW YORK. — Consumers of|} tor the New York Daily Worker, y 174th St. and 180th St. of the Bronx, || Come and bring your friends. 4 who have been carrying on a strike s fe against the high cost of bread for! » several weeks under the leadership | +f of Neighborhood Committees, have | oncluded a settlement with the DR JULIUS LIT TINSKY. bakery owners, winning a reduction J in bread prices, | 0 A.M., 1-2. 6-8 P.M| ‘ The strikers won a one-cent re- DICKENS 2-3013 duction on both bread and rolls and 107 BRISTOL STREET recognition of the Neighborhood | Committees. Settlements were rati- | Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn, fied by the consumers at mass meet- | ings held in the neighborhoods ieee 7 Aiding the fight was the rank and |! Dr, Maximilian Cohen | °° file group of local 507 of the Bakers | Union. The prices foliowing the| settlement are seven cents a pound | for bread and nineteen cents a dozen for rolls. Before the strike bread and rolls sold for eight and twenty cents respectively. In the West Bronx, where no struggle has yet been carried on, prices are nine and twenty-four ents. RUSSIAN ART SHOP |! Inc. 109 F. 14th St, and 9 W. 42d St. Imports from the SOVIET UNION Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W.. N.Y.G} i * After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703-GR. 17-0135 Dr, S. A. Chernoff |: GENITO-URINARY t Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C, OFFICE HOURS: 11- 7:30 P.M. SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M. Tompkins Square 6-7697 GIFTS - TOYS - NOVELTIES } DR. EMIL EICHEL To Hire H DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St.. New York City Cor. Lexington Ave, ATwater AIRY, LARGE MEETING ROOMS and HALL Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Benefit Fund (pee ne nna ee y Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E.72nd St. New York Telephone: RHinelander 5097 COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr, Delancey Street, New York Oity EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchar Factory on Pre: WHERE Our Comrades EAT RAPOPORT'S DAIRY and VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 93 Second Ave. N. Y. City PANTS TO MATCH Your Coat and Vest Paramount Pants Co., Inc. 693 Broadway SP 7-2659 WE MATCH ALL SHADES AND PATTERNS — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Chinese Dishes American Dishes WEST SIDE WORKERS PATRONIZE BROWNS HAND LAUNDRY 239 West 72nd Street Between Broadway é& West End Ave, WE CALL AND DELIVER WE_DO POUND WORK TRafalgar 17-0496 bites 25e 848 Broadway vet. 13th & 14th st. Phones: Chickering 4947-Longacre 16039 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE 250 FOLDING CHAIRS Fan Ray Cafeteria at 156 W. 29th St. New York 60 c John Kalmus Co. hues muita PUBLIC ADDRESS — “AMPLIFIERS OF SYSTEMS ALL KINDS to Mire for All.0O¢ cas t-0n-8 Bellaire Sound System Telephone: DECATUR 2-9730 1612 FULYON STREET BROOKLYN, N. Y. All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 &. 13th St—WORKERS’ CENTER -TRADE UNION WEEK AT Camp Nitgedaiget Beacon-on-the-Hudson, New York Bring Your Shopmates! Special Programs! Meet ANGELO HERNDON @ Gay Campfire @ Hear Louis Weinstock—Special Six Piece Jazz Band! $14 & week. Oars 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 New Plays — Spend Your Vacation in a Proletarian Camp— CAMP KINDERLAND HOPEWELL JUNCTION NEW YORK Vacation Rates for Adults $14.00 per Week (Tax Included) NGELO HERNDON Greet Comrade 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 Cars Leave for Camp Daily at 10:30 A. M.; Friday and Saturday 10:30 A. M., 3 P. M. and 7 P. M., from 2700 Bronx Park East. Register | now for the I.W.0. Outing to Camp Kinderland ‘ Four Days — Sept. 7th to 11th Make your reservation in advence for 1, 2, 3, or 4 days Adults $2.45 . 4.28 6.00 3.85 7.50 5.00 Round trip trenaportation $2.25 (Transportation is arranged through the “World Tourist,” 175 Fifth Ave.) sister at I. W. O., 80 Fifth Ave,, 15th Floor Dolewates ef Branches must also recister at ihe Children up to 6 6 to 12 $1.40 2.65

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