The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 29, 1934, Page 2

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ftw Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1934 ANTI-WAR MASS MEETING FOR YOUTH CALLED IN NEW YORK Chicago Group Gets C ongress Headquarters To Raise $3,000 for a ILGW Costs of Parley Shows Intimidation of NEW YORK Militants Is Policy of the : EGRESS War and F of A. F. L. Chiefs meeting James Wechsler, Edi- Columbia Spectator, Joe ‘ational Student League ompson, National Y anizer of the T. U. U. L g Luchter of the Carlisle Y , chairman of th Youth Section of EW YORK.— National Com- Groups of the dies Garment ‘yesterday con- demned William Green, president of the American Federation of La- and the officials of their own ation for the concerted cam- of terror launched against rank and file expression in the American Federation of Labor. The stateme issued over the ignature of the National Commit- tee of Opposition Groups of the In- paign ternational Ladies Garment Work- ers Union, follows in full ‘William Green, in announcing an intensified campaign against all n League. Charles Cartell-| militant rank and filers in the A ices Tone, will ant ox | Ti of Ue shows-that the, A.W. of T ghairman as j lom works hand in hand Tickets can be obtained in ad-| With the bosses to suppress the dis- vance at the American League Of- fice, 213 Fourth Ave.; International Labor Defense, 870 Broadway; In- ternational Workers Order, 80 Fifth action among the workers and their desire for militant action against the bosses. The official ac- tion by the Executive Council def- initely aligns Green and his hench- Ave., and the Workers Book Shop,|men with the worse enemies of the 50 East Thirteenth St working class in this cow = as the Ku Klux Klan, American New Congress Committee Legion, etc. Green and his cohorts Headquarters | must be condemned by every honest Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) | worker. CHICAGO, Aug. 28—New head-) yr G@w.v. Officials Terrorise quarters for the hicago Arrange- Rank and File ments Committee for the Second a § ny : U. S. Congress Against War and| (Tne. L. G. W. eres be aie . | Dubinsky down, are prov: capone pee on ven worthy pupils of William Green, in Arts Building, Room 609. The new- ly organized Arrangements Commit- tee, headed by Professor Robert Morsse Lovett of the University of Chicago, estab ed the new office in order to provide better facilities for the Congress at a more central location. Other officers of the committee beside Lovett are the following: First Vice Chairman, George Koop, member of the Typographical | Union and Socialist candidate for Senate two years ago. Second Vice Chairman, Bill Geb- ert, District Organizer, Communist Party. * Third Vice Chairman, Mabel Byrd, Chicago delegate to the Paris Women’s Congress Against War and Fascism this year, prominent Negro authority on labor problems, who quit the N.R.A. in opposition to its anti-Negro poli The Congress will open with a mass meeting at the Coliseum, 16th | and Wabash, on Sept. 28, at which nationally known speakers, ing Harry Ward, President of the American League Against War and Fascism, will be introduced. The Chicago Arrangements Com- mittee, which has the task of mak- ing all preparations for the Con- 8ress, is engaged in a campaign to raise $3,000 for hall rent, printing, etc. All organizations and individu- als wishing to donate should send the money at once to 185 North Wabash. Los Angeles Anti-War Conference LOS ANGELES, Aug. 28.— With the objective of sending at least | five delegates to the Second United States Congress Against War and Fascism, a preliminary conference | of Los Angeles county organizations will be held tomorrow at 8 p.m, at the Cultural Center, 230 South Spring St. The call to the conference has | been mailed to some 250 organiza- tions by the Los Angeles Branch of the American League Against War and Fascism, sponsor of the | congress to be held in Chicago, Sept. = 29 and 30. CARNIVAL! and PICNIC North Beach Picnie Park Astoria, L. I. LABOR DAY MONDAY, SEPT. 13, 1934 Communist Pa New York | LERMAN BROS. | STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City ALgonquin 4-2356—4-83¢3—4-7823 250 FOLDING CHAIRS “ ©0c John Kalmus Co. “yes tunisas WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK FAST has reduced the rent, good apartments several available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Direction: “exington Ave. White Plains Trains. Stop at Allerton Aye, station OMice open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400-—8-1401 friday and Saturday 9 a.m, to 5 p.m. includ- | terrorizing the rank and file in the I. L, G. W. U. In every local union a brutal terror campaign is waged |against any one who has the cour- age to demand from the officials to stop acting as agents of the bosses by refusing to defend the workers’ interests. In this terror campaign the entire offiicaldom is united, the well-known old time reactionaries like Dubinsky, Hochman and An- tonini and those who use demagogic phrases like Zimmerman and his | type. The methods employed follow closely the advice of Green. It in- cludes fines, physical terror, expul- sions and police assistance. Work-| ers who have been members of the/ union for many years and well | known fighters against the bosses | are slugged and prevented from coming to union meetings, At the grievance boards they are refused | proper defense and denied every! other democratic right guaranteed | by the constitution of our union. Terror Helps Bosses Put Through Wage Cuts “The main reasons for the terror are clear. On the one hand, the | bosses are on a rampage to force down the conditions in the shops. |In this drive they have the support of the governmental code machinery and the union officialdom, who owe their jobs to the support they get from the bosses. On the other hand, the workers are fighting des- perately to defend their conditions. The officials turn to terror as a possible means through which they can hold on a while longer to the union apparatus and at the same time keep the workers from resist- ing the bosses’ program. Terror Must Be Defeated “The National Committee of the Rank and File Oppssitions calls upon the members of the I. L. G. |W. U. to defeat the terror in our {union and join with the rank and | filers of other A. F. of L. unions to defeat Green’s terror campaign. The rank and file movement in the I. L. G. W. U. has grown strong and has a following of thousands of workers in the union. The rank and file movement which stands for clean and militant unionism, against union racketeering, graft and peace policy with the bosses, | will continue fighting in defense of | the membership as a whole. No | terror will prevent the Rank and | File Oppositions from exposing the | betrayals of the officialdom. Union leaders who terrorize the best mem- bers, who play politics with the | bosses and stand for deportation of | militant workers, are misleaders and | must be ‘driven from our ranks as | our enemies, | “Members of the I. L. G.W.U.! Stand behind the rank and file movement! Defeat the bosses’ wage cutting program! “Defeat our enemies inside our union!” i} U Opposition Sell Urges Fight Against iba Comminee opens drive Green’s Terror Rule swe svick weak on Tag Days Called To Aid Scottsboro 9, Herndon, Thaelmann Aug. 28—Tag Days in this city from to raise funds for the defense of the Scottsboro boys, Angelo Herndon, whose cases are to be appealed to the U. S. Supreme Court; and Ernst Thaelmann, leading anti-fascist in Germany, who is being tor- tured in Nazi prisons. Lawyers will proceed to Germany to help defend Thaelmann. All workers’ organizations, sympathizers, intellectuals, and professionals are urged to par- ticipate in the tag days to aid DETROIT, will be held Sept. 13 to 17, 17th Day as Parley in Capital Nears | (Special to the Daily Worker) NEW KENSINGTON, Pa., Aug. 28. —The strike of 3,800 aluminum workers here entered. its 17th day 1| with Aluminum Oo, officials and been so earnestly sought by the A. | FP. of L, officials. Spirit on the picket lines has been declining noticeably during the past few days, strikers report, and} Boris Shishkin and those whom he | | controls on the National. Aluminum | Workers’ Council intend to order | @ signed agreement. | The New Kensington Chamber of ;Commerce has wired a plea to these victims and help smash fascism, Cannonsburg AFL ‘Victory’ | Wins No Gain) (Special to the Daily Worker) PITTSBURGH, Pa., Aug. Announcement has been made by George Williams, president of Local | 79 of the Amalgamated Association | of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers and candidate for president of the Amalgamated against Mike Tighe in the elections next month, that the Standard Tin Plate Co. of Can- | nonsburg has granted the A. F. of L. union full jurisdiction in the en- tire plant there. But no gains were | made by the workers, investigation reveals, The union has held a written con- tract with the company for workers in the “hot mill” for a number of | years, and had recentiy asked a} contract for the other production departments. | ‘When the company declined, the | controversy was referred to the Na- | onal Steel Labor Relations Board, which acted as “mediator” during its session in Pittsburgh. Closer examination of the new agreement, however, discloses the fact that the company still has | signed a scale which affects only the “hot mill” workers, and has | merely “agreed verbally” that the A. A. can “represent the rest of the plant in collective bargain- ing.” 28.— | “Collective bargaining” is an ex- | tremely loose phrase when used by the industrialists. Gathering around a conference table, a polite shaking of hands all around, the polite re- fusal of all or most of the workers’ | demands, and a quiet adjournment | of the meeting—this is the com- panies’ idea of collective bargaining. For example, Roy Hunt, president | of Mellon's Aluminum Company ot | fused to arbitrate, under the super- | vision of the National Labor Board or Federal conciliators, any of the} ready to meet representatives of the | employes at all times for the pur- | pose of collective bargaining.” | The Standard Tin Plate case has | been hailed as another victory for | the National Steel Board, but the workers in Cannonsburg have not gained a single inch over the ground they held before. Council Members Will Meet Tomorrow Night NEW YORK.—The Unemploy- ment Councils yesterday called upon all workers to report to their local headquarters tomorrow eve- ning in preparation for a mass demonstration before the City Hall a’ the time when the Board of Aldermen will next meet to vote taxation for relief funds. The date of the aldermanic meeting has been tentatively set for either Friday or next Tuesday and will be definitely announced | at the council meeting tomorrow. Roosevelt, Perkins, the Labor Board | and union officials to conclude the | strike hurriedly and put a halt to/ “the suffering of this community of | 35,000 people.” | Pittsburgh papers are hailing the return of Andrew Mellon from Scotland as an indication that the aluminum workers in his employ are | | about to receive a union agreement, | better wages and working condi-| tions, Relief authorities in New Ken- sington are preparing to do their best toward providing strikebreakers }in case the company decides to smash the picket lines. Amter Condemns Tax Relief Plans * (Continued from Page 1) item in the City budget and that this sum be ear-marked for relief. It also demands that the reserve fund of $24,000,000 shall be used for relief. “Banker Payments Must Cease” “The Communist Party declares that while millions of people in New York are starving, payments to the bankers must cease. “If thees sums are used, then relief for the unemployed of the city can be provided. We demand that a family receive a minimum of $20 per week and that the un- attached receive a minimum of $7 a week. On the basis of Mr. Hodson’s figures the following sum would be required: “Five hundred thousand families | at $20 per week equals $10,000,000 a | | week. “One hundred and fifty thou- sand homeless men and women, at $7 a week, equals $1,050,000 a week or a total of $11,050,000 a week. “Two hundred thousand families unaccounted for by Mr. Hodson, at $20 per week, equals $4,000,000 a week. This makes a grand total of $15,050,000 a week. “This would entail an outlay of America, who has to date flatly re- | $782,600,000 a year for relief of the| unemployed in New York. “As the state and federal gov- ernment supply 75 per cent of the proposals advanced by the al-|antount, there would devolve upon uminum workers’ union—declares|the city an outlay of $195,650,000 repeatedly that the “company is/ per year, or $16,304,166 per month. “The bonded debt service of 168,000,000 a year plus the $24,- 000,000 reserve makes a total of $192,000,000, which, if used for re- lief, would provide $16,000,000 per month, the amount required for proper relief of the millions of hungry unempoyed in New York. “Tt is only the mass pressure of the workers of New York and un- employed that will force the La Guardia administration to take the above steps against Wall Street and in the interests of the workers. Only in this way can the unem- ployed of New York be kept from starvation this coming winter. “Force the city government to annul the bankers agreement and provide immediate emergency win- ter relief for the unemployed. Fight against any increased fares, against wage taxes, against sales taxes of any kind. We stand opposed to shifting the burden of feeding the unemployed upon the small busi- ness man, himself hit by the de- struction of the buying power of the masses.” out Feared Aluminum) ds Confer union leaders gathering in Wash-| ington for the conference which has | |the general feeling seems to be that | the strikers back to work without | ) Marine Union Asks $100 To Open Hall in San Francisco NEW YORK —The Marine Workers’ Industrial Union issued an urgent appeal yesterday for assistance in raising $100 to finance the opening of a new hall for the San Francisco |] branch of the union. “The hall has been raided by |] police and vigilantes eight times,” said Roy Hudson, na- tional secretary of the union, “A new campaign of terror has been unleashed against militant unionists to block votes for work- ing-class candidates in the Cali- fornia elections. Our union, however, will continue to func- tion with the support of the workers throughout the country.” | Funds to aid the San Fran- |] cisco local should be sent to Roy Hudson, at the national head- || quarters of the M. W. I. U., 701 New Stone St., New York. United Front Is Union Plan In Bed Trades Industrial Union Asks Joint Action with Wisc. A. F. of L. Group NEW YORK.—The general execu- tive board of the National Furniture Workers Industrial Union, in a let- ter to George Treger, president of the Simmons Federal Local Union of the A. F. L. of Kenosha, Wisc., requests the establishing of unity between the two unions in the struggle against employers. Joe Kiss, national secretary of the | Industzial Union, at a picnic of the | Kenosha Federal Local on Aug. 25, registered the growing sentiment of the Simmons plant rank and file for a united front for the fall sea- sonal strike, already under way in Atlantic Seaboard states. Kiss will address the Federal Local on Sept. 7th. | Working conditions in the Sim-| | mons plants throughout the country are very bad. Union leadezs report wages are low despite fat govern- ment orders for army cots and mattresses. Demands of the furniture workers are: 1—The 30 hour week. 2—An increase in the wage scale. 3—No race discrimination in the wage scale. Fei tttte lag of the union, Petition Signers Are Terrorized (Continued from Page 1) limited to the Communists, but ex- tends to every field of liberal or working-class activity. Sheriff Kidnaps Militant Farmers SISSETON, S. D., Aug. 8—Ted Sharp, cripped war veteran, is in |the hospital in a serious condition and several other militant farmers and workers are badly injured to- day following the raid Saturday night on the Farm School, Clear Lake Park. The farmers were attacked by a group of drunken Legionnaires led by Sheriff Roehr of Marshall County, who kidnapped Julius Wal- sted and six others, took them to the cellar of Carter's Millinefy Shop in Britton, where they were beaten and tortured for the enter- tainment of hundreds of drunken Legionnaires who had gathered from various surrounding counties. The fascist demonstration was an attempt to crush the organiza- tional stréngth of the United Farmers League and the United Workers League of Marshall Coun- ty, which have, grown tremen- dously during the time the farm school was in session. Hours before the atiack on the farm school fascist hordes attacked a demonstration of workers and farmers in Britton. Despite being armed, at least eight attacking fascists are reported in tfié hos- pital besides others who were in- jured but not enough to require hospital treatment, Workers Greet Editor'| | of Old Fighting Daily Bulletin (Special to the Daily Worker) BUTTE, Mont., Aug. 28.—More than 1,200 workers, most of them members of the Butte local of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, jammed the High School auditorium here last night to hear Bill Dunne, former editor of the old Butte Daily Bul- letin, expose the red scare which is being used by the local authorities against the miners’ strike. Dunne took up the issue of the red scare as raised by William Green, president of the American | Federation of Labor, explaining the use to which is was being put, in- cluding the nature of the approach- | jing A. F. of L. convention. | In reply to a question put by the! | Miners’ Committee as to whether | any of the union members had raised this issue, Dunne replied: “No, but this is what the situa- tion is.” Warns of War, Fascism Addressing the miners again, Dunne, after paying a tribute to the memory of Frank Little, labor martyr, spoke for an hour and a half on the crisis, the present situa- tion in the American labor move- ment, and the next step for labor, emphasizing the triple danger of hunger, war and fascism. The audience, composed almost entirely of miners, engineers and members of various other American Federation of Labor unions, also included striking workers of the famous Butte Hill, scene of numer- ous stubborn workers’ battles. This is the hill overlooking the railway trestle from which Frank Little, I. W. W. leader, was hung by a gang of Anaconda Copper Mining company thugs in August, | 1917. The attendance of these | miners was proof that the militant | tradition of the Butte Daily Bulletin still lives and that the struggles | Which centered around the paper |and the miners’ fight for organiza- | tion and decent living conditions | during the war and post-war period | were not fought in yain. Copper Mines Organized | Butte, Anaconda and Great Falls, ;| last night's meeting. the strongholds of the Rane Copper Mining Co., are today com- pletely organized. The Butte local of the I. U. M. M. S. W. insisted on iaking charge of Its president, Bob Brown, acted as chairman and its leading committee occupied the stage of the auditorium. The Com- munist Party committee had planned different arrangements, but the Miners’ Committee stated that in view 6f the opposition in some quarters to granting the use of the hall, they considered the meeting their responsibility. Miners Talk Over “Old Times” Following Dunne’s speech, the miners’ spokesman declared that they “did not care a biank” about the red scare, but he reiterated that he felt very strongly on the ques- tion of responsibility for the meet- It took Dunne three-quarters of an hour to walk the three blocks from the High School to Main St. after the meeting. He was stopped every ten .feet by workers wifo 11, 200 Butte Min iners Hear Dunne Expose Red Scare Will S peak in Butte Again Today and in Billings Tomorrow wanted to shake hands and talk about old times. A strong group of the rank and file committee of the A. F. of L. has been formed since Dunne’s ar- rival here. He will speak again tomorrow night at the local union meeting of the miners. On Thursday night he ; will speak in Billings. Classified WANTED — Unfurnished studio between 14th and 23rd Streets West. Box 50-W, | care of Daily Worker. | COUPLE want furnished apartment; reli- able; below 23rd St. Box 19, care of Daily Worker. 2 ROOMS PARTLY FURNISHED in rear of club. Good for 2 comrades. $20, Box “‘C,” Daily Worker. CHICAGO, ILL.—Wanted—light used car, for use of Daily Worker office. Any party members or sympathizers who have a car for sale, call Armitage 4088 or get in touch with Daily Worker District Office, 2019 W. Division St, | anti-war film, plays, | short talks by John Little and Jen-| | nie Giacco, delegate to the Paris Amter & Talk| [At Youth Day Demonstration | | ie |Speakers for Rally | Announced —Evening Program Scheduled International Youth Day demon- stration against war and fascism, | | Saturday afternoon in ‘Tompkins | | Square Park, Seventh St. and Ave-| |mue A. | Other speakers will be John Little, | district organizer of the Young) Communist League; Charles White, | Negro youth leader of Harlem, and Tillie Littinsky of the Women’s Sec- tion of the American League Against War and Fascism. | The demonstration, called by the Y. ©. L., will begin in Madison Square Park on 23rd St., at 1 p.m.| From here young and adult workers | and students will march to Tomp-| kins Square Park where the main | mass meeting will be held. Saturday evening there will be @ program at the Workers Center, 50 East Thirteenth St., including an music, and Women’s Congress Against War and Fascism, Niagara Falls LL.D. (Continued from Page 1) urday night. The militancy of the workers at one of the meetings pre- vented arrests in spite of the pres- ence of eight police squads. The largest meeting, at St. Louis and Roosevelt Road, was attended by more than 1,000 workers, who de- fended the speakers, and no arrests took place. After being driven from one corner, the crowd reassembled across the street and a young Com- | munist spoke from the shoulders of his comrades. Several were badly beaten when the second meeting was broken up. At 55th and Ingleside, one worker was arrested when he dodged police lines, and addressed a crowd of about 500 from a house top. The | capture was only made when the fize department scaled the roof with ladders. United Front Formed On these two corners, workers have long held open air meetings weekly. On Roosevelt Road, the meeting was smashed two. weeks ago, but held successfully last week because of a large and militant turnout of workers. In Hyde Park, workers’ speakers have been badly beaten and jailed with regularity for the last three weeks. A united front movement involving Communist, Socialist and liberal elements has been formed to fight for the 55th St. meeting place. Three workers were arrested last night for pasting International Youth Day posters on telephone poles. Fourteen West Side workers’ or- ganizations have banded to fight for free speech rights, The united front committee is going ahead with plans for I, Y. D. rallies and an automobile torchlight parade on Roosevelt Rd. Restaurant and Garden “KAVKAZ" Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 982 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.) MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE 1 th STREET CAFETERIA 3 East 14th Street, N.Y.C. Near 5th Avenue Brighton Comrades Patronize Parkway Food Center Fish Market 3051 Ocean Parkway Corner Brighton Beach Ave. 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. | NEW YORK.—I. Amter, Com-| munist Party candidate for Gover- | | nor, will be the main speaker at the | Meeting Attacked In 3 Sta | Herndon Will Speak ak | on Struggles in South at Brooklyn Meeting NEW YORK .—Angelo Herndon, young Negro Communist leader, will speak at a mass meeting Fri- day at 7:30 p.m. at the Colonial Mansion, 1933 Bath Ave., Brook- lyn. The meeting has been arranged by the Coney Island and West End sections of the International Labor Defense. Herndon, out on $15,000 bail pending appeal of his sentence of 18 to 20 years on a chain gang for leading an unemployed dem- onstration, will tell of the strug- gle of Negro and white workers against white bosses in the South. Guild Extends Staten Island Fight Program \Campaign To Reinstate | Newspaperman To Go On Till Victory NEW YORK. — The New York Newspaper Guild announced yester- day that because S. I. Newhouse, publisher of the Staten Island Ad- vance, bars the formation of a Guild chapter among his editorial employ- ees the Guild is considering, in addition to regular picketing and mass activities, the circulation of a new pledge among the paper's readers. Signers of the pledge would re- | frain from purchasing products ad- vertised in the. Advance. Several thousand Staten Island residents have already signed cards pledging not to read the paper until it recog- nizes the Guild and reinstates Alex- ander L. Crosby, staff member dis- charged shortly after he joined the Guild. The Guild and Mr. Newhouse dis- agree as to the effects the Guild’s activities are having on his paper. While the Guild has reliable infor- mation many persons have stopped reading the paper, Newhouse stated the August circulation has shown a gain over July. Newsstands all over Staten Island report a fall in sales. Meanwhile the Guild Emergency Committee, leading the fight, pre- pared to continue picketing “until Christmas, if necessary.” Pickets are being assigned, through tempor- ary Guild headquarters at 34 Rich- mond Terrace, Staten Island, for daily duty. The Guild has called a general membership meeting for tonight to discuss further measures. Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY 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 Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. G After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Sulte 703—GR. 17-0135 |De Soto Building, | Party Committees tes Stress Need of Signatures —_ |Minnesota, Wisconsin and Connecticut Drives in Peril MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Aug. 2%.» | With September 8 the deadline f |filing nominating petitions in t State close at hand, the Commur election campaign committee hy has called on every Party memb and sympathizer to set himself t. task of collecting ten signatur immediately. The drive to put Communist can- didates on the ballot here is made more difficult by the requirement of a fifty-dollar filing fee for each candidate. A total of $450 is req quired for the nine candidates which the Party is placing in nomi~ nation, The State campaign committes urged today that all signatures and funds be rushed at once to the Con- gressional Campaign Committee headquarters or to the State Flec- tion Campaign Committee at 212 Minneapolis, Minn. Ee Connecticut Signatures Needed NEW HAVEN, Conn., Aug. 28— “An alarming situation faces the Communist Party of this district in the matter of collecting sufficient signatures to remain on the ballot in the coming elections,” I. Wofsy, candidate for Governor warned to- day. He pointed out that of the re- quired minimum of 6,000 deadline for submitting the nominating peti- tions is Sept. 1. “This means that the immediate and most serious efforts of every Party member and sympathizer must be directed toward the signature drive. This is our most important political task during the next seven days.” The State campaign headquarters also announced that 75,000 copies of the National and State election plat- forms haye been made available for distribution to concentration shops and working class neighborhoods. Wisconsin Drive Lags MILWAUKEE, Wis., Aug. 26—A Jag in the drive for nominating sig- nature petitions was reported here from various parts of this district today. The State Election Campaign Committee urged all members of the Communist Party and the Young Communist League to return at once all petitions with signatures and to circulate others at once. A special signature collection day has been set for Sept. 1. On that day Party members and other work- ers will report to their respective | headquarters and will canvass a ter- ritory assigned to them. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M.. 1-2, ag rM PHONE: DICKEN'! 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, New York Otty EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE Houi - 2 and 6-8 P.M. PAUL LUTTINGER, M. D. — AND — DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. Are Now Located at NORTH, NEW YORK CITY ‘Tel. GRamercy 1-2090-2091 |____ Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA KE. 13th St—WORKERS’ CENTER — From Far and Near Camp Nit Directed by Jack Shapiro Bungalows or Tents. and Saturdays, 10 A.M., 3 and 7 Workers Come to — gedaiget Beacon-on-the-Hudson, New York FOR THE YEAR’S BIG EVENT ... Labor Day Week Program! NITGEDAIGET FOLLIES — Theatre Brigade and Big Chorus of the Theatre Brigade See the prize-winning NEW DANCE GROUP in a New Program Pierre Degeyter Trio—Five-Piece Jazz Band Enlarged Quarters to insure your comfort. Modern Improvements, $14 a week. Cars leave 10:30 A.M, Daily from 2700 Bronx Park E.; Fridays Modern Hotel Finest Foods. P.M. Phone EStabrook 8-1400. In Open Air Phil Bard, Cream of the Season’ WINGDALE, NEW YORK s Fun Theatre Yale Stewart, Alex Solomon, Tel. ALgonquin 4-1148 CAMP UNITY FOR LABOR DAY WEEK! Sports’ Field on the Lake The Hans Eisler Trio and Theatre Group Red Vodvil Team (Berenberg & Jacobson) $14 _ week. Cars leave daily at 10:30 A.M. from 2700 Bronx Park East. Fridays and Saturdays, 10 A.M.,3 and 7P.M.

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