The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 3, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two AILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1934 N. Y. Youth Demonstration Pledges Aid to Textile Strike Red Election Carnival Opens N; Y, Campaign Today THOUSANDS G ASSED IN BIG McKEESPORT [° RALLY; 17 ARE HELD Seven ‘Thonntiad March in New York—Negro and White Defy Police Terror in Philadelphia— Four Hundred Rally NEW ers me 2 in Temokins ternational Youth Day the Y fut pport to the st cicm called by we are in the midst of a close alk out strial strike. We ful: est. support to these | workers. We pledge to do all in our power to their strike.” The mass rally at Square followed a parade through midtown and downtown Manhattan. Shouting slogans against imperial- | ist war and fascism revelutionary songs the demonstra- tion wound its way from Madison Square Park to Eighth Avenue then South and East through the streets of the lower East Side. At Tompkins Square the meeting Was addressed by I. Amter, Com- munist Party candidate for Gov- erno>, Lou Cooper, youth organizer of the T. U. U. C., Tillie Littinsky of the American League Against War and Fascism, Sid Spencer, Ne- gro youth leader, and a member and singing TORE —Seven thousand Square Park Saturday in the In-|® new trial Friday by help these workers win | Tompkins | of the Youth Pioneers, workers’ children organization. John Little, et organi of the Young Communist Leegue, was chairman The cen‘ral slogans of the dem- ons en were: Support the Tex- tile Strike, and Defend the Seviet| Union placards demanded the freedom c* the Tom Mconey, Ernst Thaelmann and other class war prisoners, and speakers protested against the ris- ing wave of fascism spreading throughout the country. The fight againts imperialist and especially against the war pro- vocations against the Soviet Union by Japan on the East and by Ger- many and Poland on the West was vigo- ously -s:ressed. “We, young werkers and students, Scottsboro boys, pledge to lay down our lives if nec- essary to defend the Soviet the workers’ Union, fatherland,” olution acopted als demanded unemployment insurance and more relief to the unemployed, the cessation of oppression of Ne- gtoes and terror against all work- ers, and the turning over of all war funds for jobless workers, McKeesport Demonstration Gassed (Special oe the Daily Work: made a vic k, tear-gassed thousands, rested seventeen and beat youths and one girl speaker. ar- three “* "Mayor George Lysle had refused ® permit and organized the fascist attack. A big protest meeting has been called by the Young Commu- nist League for Wednesday night. Four hundred demonstrated on International Youth Day in Pitts- burgh. Negro and White Rally in Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 2.—More than 200 Negro and white youth participated in two meetings and @ march yesterday during the In- ternational Youth Day demonstza- tion here, organized by the Young Communist League. The Negro workers who turned oui defied the savage police terror drive concentrated in the neigh- borhood of 22nd and Master Streets since the mass outpouring of Negro workers a month ago in protest against the b-utal attack on a young Negro woman by a witite store- keeper. Others showed cir sym- pathy with the demonstration by packing windows and roofs along the line of march and cheering the Reduced Prices on AVANTA FARM Ulster Park, N. Y. Workers resting place. The same good food and care. $9.50 per week—$18.00 for two. 10 A.M. boat to Poughkeepsie. Ferry to Highland; 3:20 p.m. train to Ulster Park, Round trip $2.71. the main | | first, in Pittsburgh young and adult work- demonstration against war and fas- oung Communist League pledged felis rike of the? = vie» reontion SQVIets Lodge Sharp Protest With Japan Woman Clerk Barbar- ously Tortured By Japanese Officials (Special to the Dally Worker) MOSCOW, Sept. 2 (by wireless) —Barbaric tortures of a woman clerk, Golovina, one of the Soviet ens arrested by Japanese-Man- churian authorites, were sharply brought to the attention of the Jap- anese Ambassador Otas when he visited the Soviet Foreign Commis- sariat. The Soviet government de- manded that the Japanese govern- ment take steps to stop the provo- cative arrests and inhuman tortures by Japanese-Manchurian officials. Tass, Soviet news agency, report- ing the nature of the vigorous pro- test, states that Assistant Foreign Commissar Stomoniakov brought to Ambassador Otas’ attention the following facts: Japanese gendarmerie at Harbin sted the woman clerk, Golovina, employed on the Chinese Eastern Railway, on August 22. After a certain lapse of time she was called an up for examination. Her “exam- ination” consisted of the most brutal, medieval tortures. Metal bars were placed between her fin- gers. The bars were tied with rope and then drawn tight causing Golo- vina to lose consciousness. Her ; head and face were punched. All these tortures were carried out by Japanese officials. On August 27, Golovina was conducted to the street in an extremely serious con- dition and sent to her home in the cab unassisted, and warned she would be arrested again “when her health improves.” At the present moment, in view of the serious condition of Golovina, she is in a hospital. Assistant Foreign Commissar Stomonakov stated that this is the actual information given by Golo- vina herself to a tupac of of forcing them to “confe: onslaughts on the Eastern line of the C. E. R. Jobless Councils Aid Textile Strike (Continued from Page 1) apart from any controversy in which the wage-earner may be in- volved,” now brazenly declares that the textile strikers will ‘find out soon that we are not going to underwrite the strike. If there’s any indication of this illusion we'll clamp the lid down.’ “This means that textile workers who are starving even when they are employed and who will there- fore become entirely destitute the moment they go on strike, are to be allowed to starve. “The National Unemployment Council of the United States, in accordance with its fixed policy of supporting every struggle of work- ers against the hunger policy of the employers and government, eclls upon all affiliated organiza- tions everywhere to protest and fight against the attempt of the government to deny relief to work- ers who are in need. We urge our organizations in all textile centers to establish joint committees of unemployed and strikers who will organize and conduct militant ac- tion to force relief authorities to provide adequate relief to the tex- tile strikers and théir families.” CAMP NITGEDAIGET Beaco2-on-the-Hudzor, New York Becomes Camp Needle Trades for 12 Days! (Profits go to the Industrial Union) From SEPT. 7th to 19th SPECIAL LOW RATES! Full Week — $13.00 4 days 8.00 3 days 6.50 2 days 4.50 1 day 2.50 (tax included) ee Fine Programs Artef Players Cutler's Puppets New Dance Group Pierre Degeyter Trio All the Sports! Donee! Sins! Vacation With Your Comrades! “o=» Barly at Union Office, 131 West 28th Street ~sssial Busses Will Take You to Camp ¢ is Loveliest in the Fell! Appeal Denied Six Pickets ‘Of Consulate LLD. in Philedelphia Will Press Fight for Anti-Fascists | PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 2—Six anti-fascists sentenced to long |terms in prison for picketing the German consulate here, were denied Judge Otto Heiligmann, ‘who upheld his pro- Hitler verdict against the defend- ants. | Errol White, International Labor Defense attorney, announced that | the fight for their freedom will b | carried to the State Supreme Court, and, if necessary, to the U. S, Su- preme Cow The I. L, D. called upon all workers, intellectuals and | anti-fascists and their organiza-| tions to flocd the office of Judge Heiligman at City Hall with tele- | grams, resolutions and phone calls. | It also appealed for funds to fight the case, asking that contributions be sent to the International Labor Defense, 49 North Eighth Street, Room 207, this city. The six defendants are Ben Gard- ner, section organizer of the Com- munist Party, James Wilson, Bea- trice Mash, Mary Smith, Sophie Braverman and Mary Kahn. Ar- rested July 14 when police broke up a demonstration before the Nazi Consulate, they were held in $1,000 bail each. On Aug. 14, the men were sentenced to one year and the women to six months in prison. More Destitution Due, Says Richberg: (Continued from Page 1) retail food prices are during the coming Richberg says. However, when it comes to per- tinent statistics concerning the worker, Richberg considers a few percentage units not worth mention- ing. In-his first report Richberg tossed aside the June 1933 to June 1934 decline of 1.1 per cent in the average manufacturing worker's real wage as a real wage which “re- mained practically unchanged.” He was more interested in boosting about the approximate 600 per cent increase, under N.R.A., in corpora- tion profits and the large increase of company unions legalized under the protecting beak of the Bluc Eagle. Incorrect Report on Food Prices Thus in the third report he de- clares that “retail food prices have increased more than 20 per cent since the low point in April 1933 ” But according to the Aug. 28 announcement of the Bureau. of Labor Statistics of the Labor De- partment, “current retail food prices are up by more than 23'4 per cent.” This statistical report announces that “retail food prices advanced the past two ks to the level reached since Dece , 1931... As compared w. he index of 90.4 for April 15, 1933, | me the low point reached since pre- | war days, current retail food prices are up by more than 23!% per cent. They are 4.7 per cent higher than for the corresponding period of a year ago and approximately 11 per cent above the level of two years ago when the indexes were 106.7 and 100.8 respectively.” Richberg indicates that the “Rural Rehabilitation Program” or subsis- tence plan will be continued. “The Administrator of F.E.R.A, reports that this experiment indicates that standard urban families may be made permanently self-supporting in rural communities at less finan- cial outlay by the Government than the cost of direct relief in the cities. This money will be eventually paid back to the State through non-profit corporations and will provide a ro- tating fund to be used in the build- ing of many rural communities. The Rural Rehabilitation Division believes that promoting the organ- ied rural communities for part-time work in farming and industry is the cheapest form of emergency re- lief for thousands of permanently stranded families in the cities.” Where the employment in “indus- try” is to com? from, or what pro- visicn is to be made for the small farmers who would otherwise sell their produce to the city, Richberg dcesn’t indicate. In detailing the “important serv- ices” which the War Department “has rendered ... to the Emergency Conservation Work and Civil Works Administration,” Richberg, brings out “the organization and centro) of the C.C.C.” by the military arm of the government. “It was the function of the War Department to accept the men chosen by local re- lief agencies cooperating with the Department of Labor, to administer and supply them and control them in every phase of activity, excep: generally the performance of tech- nical work...” “The fourth section of his report covering ‘Relief of Financial Press- ures’ will be completed prior to Septemier 5,” Richberg notified Roosevelt. creases” “expected months, in Classified WANT TO SHARE ROOM in comr: family. Bex 15, caze ef Daily Worke ENSD NOTICES Cafeteria, 50 E. 13th St., New York, N. ¥ (Continued from Page 1) cisco Marine Workers. Saturday xoston American carries huge eight- column headline, double line, “U. S. in move to deport alien agitators. Employers rush to get anti-riot in- surance.” The paper says, “Fed- eral officials today moved quietly but swifty to curb red agitation on the textile strike fronts in New England and elsewhere. Secret agents of the Immigration Service were dispatched to every mifi cen- ter with orders to ferret out alien agitators. These agents were given orders to make arrests and start deportation proceedings at the first sign of trouble, Thus the Roosevelt government, through Perkins and Hearst, mobi- lize to break the strike through the ‘red scare.” Yet Gorman and his machine encourage this strikebreak- {ing by making daily attacks on the Communists. No Relief Further attempts of the govern- ment to break the strike and starve the workers out include the state- ment of Bernard F. McElligot, Mas- sachusetts relief head, that no strik- ers will be given relief in Massa- chusetts. “The budget is already made out,” he said, and “there are no extra funds for strikers.” The meeting of the United Tex- tile Workers today voted to picket all mills Tuesday morning where strike has been declared, including those mills shut down by employers, The Boston Traveler today quotes extensively from the Daily Worker editorial “Textile Workers Defeat Strikebreaking Red Scare of Bosses and A. F. of L, Leaders” without editorial comment. (Special to the Daily Worker) PROVIDENCE, R. I., Sept. 2— More than 200,000 New England textile workers were preparing their strike today at union and mass meetings. Tomorrow, Labor Day, parades and meetings will concen- trate on strike preparations. These preparat are initiated mostly from below. In key sections like New Bedford the mass picketing has not been prepared by top U.T.W. leaders, but is being prepared on the initiative of the rank and file. Ann Burlak answered today the ridiculous accusations of the capi- talist press regarding “tomato throwing.” She said: “This red scare is raised in |Textile Strikers Are Ready Throughout Areas to Picket order to break the ranks of the textile werkers. The U. T. W. leaders, as I stated in the New Bedford meeting attended by 1,500, are asking the U. T. W. lo- cals to act as detective agencies for the employers and ‘report the reds.’ The best guarantee of winning the strike is the invioving in the strike ef the most active and militant textile workers who are now attacked by the employ- ers and the U. T. W. top leaders. There is no feeling against the Communists in the U. T. W. rank and file New Bedford.” Calls for Unit Burlak called for unity and soli- darity to win the strike, with im- mediate organization of mass pick- e*ng before all mills. “While the U. T. W. leaders shouting ‘throw out the reds.’” s said. “and disuniting the rank: N. T. W. U. is proposing unity in the strike front with the U. T. W. and the rank and file. The N. T. W. U, members will help organize mass picketing and take active part in it and in all strike preparations. Burlak pointed out that the two independent unions, which have conservative leadership, the Fall River Federation of Textile Opera- tives and the Independent Textile Union of Woonsocket, are making a grave mistake by deciding nst t> join the strike. She called on the rank and file of these organiza- tions to strike and work to win side by side with the members of all other unions. Police Mobilize Rhode. Island State and muni- cipal police are mobilizing all their strength against the strikers today. In the face of this mobilization for terror, the U. T. W. leaders sent a telegram to Governor Eli at Massa- chusetts attacking not the police mobilization but the “reds,” and asked him not to call out the Na- tional Guard “needlessly” and to “protect union strikers against Communists.” These strike-break- ing leaders thus welcome the police terror and lay the basis for attempts to smash the strike through terror. In New Bedford and other tex- tile centers all police days off and vacations have been revoked, police armed, and guards mobilized. Most New England mill owners announced today they will try to keep mills open with strike-break- ers. Text of Textile Strike Demands (Continued from Page 1) dle girls; Semi-skilled — Spoolers, slashers helpers, warp boys, wind- ers; Skilled—Warper tenders, third hands; Highly skilled—Drawing-in girls, men quillers, long chain seam- ers, slasher tenders. tment: Unskilled— cleaners, men, “chain pegge ci helpers clerk; Skilled — Weavers, knotting machine helpers, inspect- ors, smash piecer, card cutters; Highly skilled—Loom fixers, chan- gers-over, warp twisters, third hands, knotting machine operators. Colth Room: Unskilled—Inspect- ors; Semi-Skilled — Presser men, folders, clerk; Skilled—Shearers. Maintenance Department: Un- skilled—Yard men; Semi-Skilled — Stock men; Highly Skilled—Pipers, carpenters, steam fitters, electri- cians, blacksmiths, welde:s, coal Gremen, oil fireme: Machine load carding and spin- ning; Picker men—Four machines; Card Tenders—Medium to fine 20 cards and strip their own without carrying laps; Card Tenders — 25 cards without stripping or without carrying laps. (This means to keep cards clean, doff and put in laps and take out the fly); Assistant Card Grinder—Grind two or three cards a day and responsible for a section of about 50 cards; Double Tenders — Four machines; Ribbon Tenders—Four machines; Comber Tenders — Eight machines; Draw Frame Tenders—24 delive-ies; Slub- ber Tenders — 2 frames; Interme- diate Tenders—2 frames; Second Tenders—2 frames; Fine or Jack Tenders — 2‘frames (Fly); Aux- iliary help of doffers for speeder tenders in relation to job. Spinning Room: 6's Yarn—480 spindles; 8's Yarn—600 spindles; 10's Yarn—720 spindles; 15's Yarn— 720 spindles; s'l5 Yarn 840 spin- Gies; 20's Yarn—960 spindles; 30's Yarn— 1,200 spindles; 40’s Yarn— and over—1,440 spindles. Spinning room doffers rates: Rates per 100 bo2bins only no extra work, Production: Warp: 40,000 to 44,000 sobbins per week; Filling: 37,000 to *2,000 bobbins per week. Warp— Max.— Min. Filling — Max. — Min. Mule spinners: 1,800 spindles or less per operative. Machine load—Yarn finishers de- vartment: Foster winders—Up to 30’s yarn—40 spindles; Over. 50's yarn—60 spindles; Universal wind- ors—30 spindles; Quillers winders— yarn—l0 spindles; 24’s yarn—20 dies; 40's yarn—30_ spindles; 29 spindles; eset Warpers—5 werper ARYe. cechine load—Slashing Depart- One mochine to each slasher cnder; One helper to every two nachiner. ee ton Textile Industry: Weaving tment—Loom Fixers load: oo find number of looms per sec- vion divide maximum inches below by the widtl of loom. (Example: 4,800 in. maximum inches divided by 40 in. width of loom equals 120 plain non-automatic cam looms 40 inches wide per section.) Note: Loom widths under 40 in. run the same size sections as 40 in. looms. Plain sections: Maximum inches Tiree Seized With Brother Of Herndon| Negro & White Worker | Held on 3 Charges After Picketing NEW YORK.—Milton Herndon, brothe: of heroic Angelo Herndon, was arrested Saturday night to- gether with three other Negro and Empire Cafeteria, and 125th Street. Bail, which was furnished by the International Labor Defense, was set at $300 for Herndon, and $900 for Selgman, a white worker, charged with riot, mischief and as- sault. Trial has been set for Sept. 6 for Herndon and Seligman. Two other pickets, Moore and Holmes, were arrested on minor charges. Picketing of the Empire Cafeteria was initiated several days ago by the Young Liberators Club of Har- lem in protest against the man- agement’'s refusal to hire Negroes in any capacity other than porters. During Saturday’s night’s picketing, Someone not on the picket line threw a rock at the window, smash- ing the plate glass. Although the action was clearly that of a pro- vocateur, police eagerly utilized it to attack the pickets and arrest the four defendants. Lenox Avenue Maritime Workers Vote for Program (Continued from Page 1) the seamen and longshoremen on a nation-wide scale. Delegates representing the radio operators wrote into the program a demand for $160 to $165 2 month for operators. This is the wage seale for second officers. The Baitimore conference dis- played clearly the demand for united action on the ships and docks in face of William Green's attempt to smash all united rank and file actions in the ports and everywhere. A move on the part of the leaders of the International Seamen's Union in Baltimore to sabotage the con- vention was an utter .failure. A leaflet issued by them, which at- tempted to ridicule the conference, was not taken seriously by the rank and file. One delegate came from that union, despite official orders that no member of the I. S, U. should attend. The broad aspect of the confer- ence was shown by the large num- per section—4800 in. equals one sec- tion of plain non-automatic cam looms; 3840 in. equals one section of plain draper looms; 3360 in. equals one section of plain Stafford automatic cam looms; 2280 in. equals one section of plain C. & K. 2 x 1 magazine box looms on cams. f Jacquerds and fan locms; 1920 in. equ fancy drapers or 2 x 1 box lcoms; 1680 in. equals one sec- tion of fancy Stafford automatic looms; 1440 in. equals one section of fancy C, & K, 2 x 1 magazine box looms, Deductions for variations: Deduct 5 per cent from section for each shuttle after second on box looms; 33 1-3 per cent from fancy section for ordinary lenos; 50-60 per cent from fancy section for Jacquard lenos running on dobby; 10 per cent for multiplier and double cylinder motions; 35 per cent for rayon warp—deduct 15 per cent for rayon filling—50 per cent for both; pop- lins, heavy broadeloths and balicon cloths call for moderate deductions. Changing over and big jobs: All changing over to be done by spare men. All big jobs such as knock- ing off cams, removing and replacing top and bottom shafts, loomsides and dobby sides, loom sleys, solid round swing rails, leno warps, other warps for bad harness, reed, hitch back or other defect not the fault of the loom fixer, broken heddle bards, done by spare men. Samples to be taken care of by spare men. Mechine load—Weaving Depart- ment. Coarse fabrics (Definition of coarse fabrics:—not fine in material or close texture; low priced goods. Non-Automatic™ plain looms: — Width of loom 40 inches or less. Maximum number of looms to a weaver :—8. Filling 36’s or higher:— Sley 42 or less. For every 5 counts of filling below 36’s one loom to be deducted. For every 10 inches in- crease in the width of the loom, one loom less to a weaver. Non-Automatic plain box looms: (Width of loom 40 inches or less.) Maximum number of looms to a weaver: —8. Same proportionate allowance and deductons for filling and width of loom as for plain non- automatic looms. Non-Automatic Dobby and Jac- quard looms: (Width of loom 40 inches or less.) Maximum number of looms to a weaver:—6. Same Proportion allowances and deduc- tions for filling and width of looms as for plain non-automatic looms. Non-Automatic Dobby and Jac- quard box looms: (Width of loom 40 inches or less.) Maximum num- ber of looms to a weaver—G, Same proportionate allowance and decuctions for filling and width of looms as for plain non-automatic looms. Our Readers Must Spread the Daily Worker Among the Members of All Mass and Fraternal Orzgan- izations As a Political Task of First Importance! ber of telegrams that came from unions and ships’ crews in all parts of the world. One radiogram came from the crew of the S. S. Makau in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Maritime workers on the West Coast, who are fighting fas- ist terror for the righ’ to organize, gemon from New York, groups of longshoremen sent messages pledging to support the program adopted by the conference. Tonight the seamen, longshore- men and radio operators leave Bal- timore for their respective ports with one aim in view—to unite all maritime workers for strike action on the Bast Coast of the United States as a step toward a strike on a national scale. . Unemployed? Sell the “Daily”! DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M.. 6-3 P.M PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Ayes., Brooklyn S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFTICE HOURS: 11 - 7:30 P.M. SUNDAY: 12-38 P.M. Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. GC After 6 P.M, Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR, 17-0135 Dr. Harry Musikant Dentist 7195 EASTERN PARKWAY Corner Kingston Ave. DEcatur 23-0605 Brooklyn, N. Y. Dr. Simon Trieff Dentist 2300 - 86th Street Brooklyn, N.Y. } MAyflower 9-7035 Brownsville and Ei Comrades We! | J. BRESALIER | New Yerk | EYES EXAMINED—GLA: FITTED 525 Sutter Ave. at Hinsdale St. Brooklyn, N. ¥. i white workers while picketing the | y ed }on the Communist Party ticket, officially opens his cathe Amter, Heading Ticket, NEW YORK. aes A paign today and will make 5 Fur Workers Are Injured By Gangsters Industrial Gains Men Attacked With Guns, Knives and Pipes NEW YORK. — Five fur workers were seriously injured yesterday when they were attacked by bosses and gangsters of the Schick Brothers fur shop, 145 W. Twenty- ninth Street, after a committee of strikers of the Fur Workers Indus- trial Union had entered the shop to demand that work be stop Sunday work is a violation of the union and N.R.A. agreements.. Two workers, Morris Angel and Abe Kramer, were arrested. The latter was badly wounded by fur kmives wielded by the. gangsters in the Schick shop. Angel had not been near the scene of the fight but was arrested later while talking to Kramer on Sixth Avenue. One of the gangster-bosses was hurt when the workers defended them- selves from attack Delegations of fur workers yes- terday picketed 200 fur shops de- clared on strike and those shops which worked Sunday against the agreements, AFL Textile Chiefs For Compromise (Continued from Page 1) pointed by General Johnson, Sec- retary of Labor Frances Perkins, Secretary of Commerce Roper (Sugar Corporation spokesman) and the National Labor Board, recalls a similar strike committee proposal made by Gorman last week to Chairman Lloyd Garrison of the MANY ATTRACTIONS WILL FEATURE C. P. PICNIC IN ASTORIA to Make Opening Speech —Workers’ Organizations Called to Atten in a Body With Their Banners t mter, candidate for Governor his first campaign speech at the Red Election Carnival and Picnic, at North Beach Picnic Park, Astoria, L. I., arranged by the New York District of the Communist Party for Labor Day. The Election Campaign Commits tee of the Communist Party has called on all working class organi- zations, clubs, trade unions, etc., to attend this affair en masse, bring- ing the banners of the organizations, in order to turn this picnic into a demonstration of the support of the mass organizations of New York for the election campaign of the Com- munist Party. The John Reed Club, Labor Sports Union, New Dance Group, W.LR. band and many other organ- izations are cooperating in making of this picnic the outstanding event of the season. A political obstacle race has been prepared, as well as a public funeral for Hitler, and mock elections, This is only a small part of the extensive program ar- ranged for the day. Dancing from 2 p.m. to midnight will be one of the attractions, while ped. | plays and dances will be presented by the Workers Laboratory Theatres and a group of girls from the 1934 Follies, under the direction of the New Dance Group., Admission will be 25 cents. The park can be reached from Grand Central or Times Square on the Astoria subway to Ditmars Ave., Astoria, L. I, thence buses to the park. B.M.T. and Second Avenue L can be taken to get to Ditmars Ave. Staten Island C. P. Festival NEW YORK.—A three-day vaca- tion and festival was arranged by the Communist Party of Staten Island for the Labor Day week-end and Monday at the Scandinavian Summer Home Camp at Annadale Beach. The proceeds will go to support the election campaign. In the musical program various attractions will be featured, such as the. IW.0. Symphony Orchestra, Workers Theatre, and the speakers will include Robert Minor and Michael Gold. Tickets can be ob- tained at the Workers Bookshop and the Brooklyn Scandinavian Hall. National Labor Relations ‘Board. No arbitration proposal of any kind, was voted by the U. T. W. Conven- tion. 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE PAUL LUTTINGER, M. D. eae ANTI Os DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. Are Now Located at NORTH, NEW YORK CITY Hours: 1- 2 and 6-8 P.M, Tel. GRamercy 7-2090-2001 All mrades Meet at NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—s@ E, 13th St—WORKERS’ CENTER ____| CAMP Vacation During Bea reading and study. programs. Plays in Camp Unity Will Remain Plains subway line) 10:30 A.M. daily. Fri WINGDALE, 'HE countryside is colorful, the weather crisp. Fall is ideal time for sports. The camp is less crowded. You will like the comradely, congenial atmosphere. To is a splendid time to rest, catch up with your FOX? Our staff prepares stimulating, highly entertaining fires. We have splendid sports facilities—tennis, boating, every kind of ball games, Rates: $14 a week — $2.65 a day Cars leave from 2700 Bronx Park East (Allerton Ave, Station on the White UNITY NEW YORK utiful Indian Summer Leading speakers come to lecture. our theatre, skits, vodvil, camp- Open All During September idays and Saturdays, 10 A.M., 3 & 7 P.M. Rates: 1 doy 2 days 3 days 4 days Adults 0 Round trip tra (Transportation is arranged through Swiming and Rrowing in e Register now for the I.W.O. Outing to Camp Kinderland Four Days — Sept. 7th to 11th Make your reservation in advance for 1, 2, 3, or 4 days Register at I. W. O., 80 Fifth Ave., 15th Floor Delegates of Branches must also register at the office. For more details call ALgonquin 4-7733 or TOmpkins Sq. 6-8434 CAMP KINDERLAND HOPEWELL JUNCTION Bungalows, Tents, Warm and Cold Showers, Healthy Foods Cultural and Sport Activities Every Day Children up to 6 $1. 5.00 nsportation $2.25 the “World Tourists,” 175 Fifth Ave.) NEW YORK the Beautiful Sylvan Lake

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