The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 6, 1934, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1934 Youth Mass Meeting Tonight Will Spur Anti-War Parley Herndon Urges Big Attendance at Brooklyn | Mass Trial SPEAKERS TO URGE Thousands Face Robert Minor Tells DELEGATES’ FOR U.S Letters Sent to Many You Them to Send Rep DRIVE. CONGRESS uth Graseninntiods, Urging resentatives to Mass | Rally in the § Star p Caine | YORK.—Prepar to be held in € cism, made tonight at a mass meeting of the Youth Section of the} U: T. W. ee League Against W: pen at 8 o’cloc no, 105 E, 107th St appeal will be made at t: mi eeting for all organizations repre- sented to elect delegates to the Chicago congress. Letters have been sent to:all organizations which include young workers and dents, urging them to send official delegates to tonight's ss meet- ing. Speakers tonight will be Angelo} Herndon, Mother Ella Reeve Bloor, | Norman Tallentire, New York Sec- retary of the American League; Irving Leuchter of the Young Circle Le James Wechs! editor of th Joseph Cohen, of the National Stu- dent League; Leo Thompson, Na- tional Youth Organizer of the Trade Union Unity League; Rev. Kenneth Kingston of Glen Cove, L. I., and Richard Heikkinen, American te to the Paris labor sports They will deal with differ- ses of the Chicago congress. s Cartell, executive secre- y of the youth section of the American Le: Fascism, will be chairman. Part of the proceeds of the meet- ing will be used to pay the expenses | for a youth delegate from Cuba to the Second U. S. Congress. Twenty- five per cent of the entire proceeds of the meeting will be contributed to the Scottsboro-Herndon Defense Fund Volunteer. ushers have been asked to appear at the Star Casino at 6 o'clock tonight. — 1 DR. EMIL RIGHEL a | ' { DENTIST {150 E. 93rd St., New York City j ' ' Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Fours: 9 a. m. to 8 p.m. Sun. 9 tol Member Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Fund Dr. Harry Musikant Dentist 195 EASTERN PARKWAY Corner Kingston Ave. DEcatur 2-0695 Brooklyn, N. ¥. ELECTROLYSIS SUPERFLUOUS HAIR ON FACE PERMANENTLY REMOVED Results Guaranteed — Personal MY METHOD ENDORSED PROMINENT PHYSICIANS Will give treatments to unemployed free every Friday from One to Four fq 171W.Tist St.at B’way C,H. Landis pone: endicott 2-9150 WEST END TIRE SHOP Battery Service ..:-: .Tires-All Makes 140 West End Avenue Cor. 66th St. Joe Litt Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Chinese Dishes —__ American Dishes - EAT WHERE Our Comrades RAPOPORT'S DAIRY and VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 93 Second Ave. N. Y. City SANDWICH SOLS *LuncH 101 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9781 MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Prices TYPEWRITERS NEW and REBUILT, GUARANTEED, LOWEST PRICES, QUICKEST SERVICE, SOLD. RENTED Underwoods, Remingtons, Royals, L. C. Smiths and all other makes sold, rented, bought, repaired, exchanged. Rebuilt one Also and refinished. Guaranteed for r, the same as new machines. ussian and Yiddish machines. J. E. ALBRIGHT & CO, | | 825 Broadway, N.Y.C, Bet 12 & 18 Sts. || Established 1896 ALgonquin 4-4828 i stu- | Columbia Spectator; | gue Against War and | [pies public opinion and mass ons for a la ge delegation to md United States Congress Against War and Fas- The meeting Shoe Union _ Bids Makesey | | To Explain Invited to Report On| His Reactionary Stand | At Meeting NEW YORK.—Members of Local 23 of the United Shoe and Leather Workers’ Union have invited William Makesey, general organizer of the union, who was recently brought to task by the local for having agreed with William Green’s anti-Communist union “purging” | | plan, to come to a general member- ship meeting of the local which will be held tonight at 6 o’clock at Ir- ving Plaza Hall. Makesey will be asked to report jon the general situation in the | union. It is a well-known fact that | Makesey is responsible for a six- | teen-month arbitration and no wage increase agreement in the New England States. Whether Makesey will accept the invitation is not known, but the workers in the local are anxious to hear him explain his position on arbitration and the red- baiting campaign as against the | militant and democratic policy of Local 23, which has just concluded agreements for wage increases with | forty manufacturers. | Among the points on the agenda | for tonight’s meeting is a report of | I, Rosenberg, local secretary-treas- urer, on the financial situation in | the union. the membership will be asked to act fon the question of raising funds for the union. At a conference of shop delegates held last week an assess- ment was recommended. An urgent call has been issued to | every member of the shoe, slipper, stitchdown and shoe repair depar‘- | ments to attend the meeting. Pickets Free 7 In Philadelphia (Continued from Page 1) after flying picket squads pulled | night shifts of several mills out| last night. In Conshohocken, police escorted scabs to work at the Jones woolen mill, and threatened to swear in a host of deputies “if necessary.” (Special to the Daily Worker) | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Sept. 5— More than 35,000 textile workers are | out on strike in this area, with nine | large mills completely shut down in | this city, and at least four more in | Norristown and Bridgeport nearby. | Police terror is being thoroughly | prepared with a supply of tear gas | bombs being laid in. Pursuing the policy carried on in| other centers, the United Textile | Union officials have not yet pre- sented any official series of de- mands to the employers. : Mass picketing began yesterday | despite a heavy downpour of rain. Edward Heany, local union organ- | izer and six others, were arrested at the head of the picket line, but | their release was forced by the! militancy of the workers. | A mass meeting of all Strikers | will be held Thursday night at Kensington Lyceum, Second and | Cambria Streets. All workers are urged to be present. LLD. Offers Aid To Textile Strike (Continued from Page 1) in the United States by just such | | militant tactics. | | “The International Labor De- | | fense, Eastern New England Dis- | trict, pledges its full support ‘| | the textile strike and offers its full | co-operation to aid in organizing defense committees which will take charge of providing bail for the ar- rested strikers, organize defense campaigns to put the pressure of j protest upon the courts and oe and state officials, “We urge all strikers to immedi- | | ately propose the organization of | large defense committees in every | local, and to call upon the strike | |committees to call in representa- | tives from the International Labor New Bedford Police (Cunteeusd from Page 1) operate with us. We | know that - a minority of the manufacturers | are bad. We ask them to close | down their mills until the end of | the strike and cooperate with us in achieving a national settlement.” U. T. W. Neglects Picket Lines In this speech Sylvia did not em- phasize mass picketing. The U.T.W. leaders have not organized the picket lines and the mass picketing is spontaneous and due to N. T. W. U. leaflets, and above all to the great militancy of the workers, The Chicago on Sept.’ 28, 29 and 30, will be| only picketing organized by the | leaders was “publicit Picketing with Batty, Sylvia, etc., riding from one mill to another, organizing a picket line of five or ten for a few minutes and then riding on to another mill. Mean- while the thousands of workers out | picketing stood and watched and} were not drawn in by Batty or | Sylvia. Last night and this morn- | ing however, Picket lines of thousands as well as standing crowds. These marching lines were organized by the workers themselves. Yesterday in New Bedford alone | more than 300 copies of the Daily of Midwest’s Need for the New ‘Daily’ | $60, 000 Fund W. Wi ll Help Build National Edition | to Play Bigger Role in Struggles of Farmers and Mine Workers y ROBERT MINOR great improvements made in the Daily Worker, and also | of the imperative need to strengthen it, to give it more space | and elasticity, to fight for the things we need—in short, the 'VERYWHERE I’ve i lately, I’ve seen evidence of the| there were marching | | Worker! | imperative need of raising the $60,000 it asks for. In Southern Illinois there are literally hundreds of events of importance to the whole life of the American working-class, that do not even get a single men- tion in the columns of the Daily We get very sore about this in the Illinois mine fields. We | don’t like it a damn bit, and many |are the just complaints. But when we try to figure out how to get even Worker were sold in addition to|the most important news in—it is those distributed free. The influence | impossible to see what could have of the Daily Worker in New Bed-| ford is growing and it is eagerly| read by the strikers. Police. Carry “Riot Act” Police last night had the riot act | in their pockets which ordered} Pickets to disperse, but have not yet | | used it. However, police threw tear | |gas in front of the Goodyear mill. The strikers today were concen-| trating on pulling out key mills not | yet out, such-as Goodyear in New| Bedford, Fruit of the Loom in Rhode Island, the Atlantic Woolen Mill in | Providence, etc. | Waldo Frank, noted author, was halted by police near picket lines and put through a rigorous ques- tioning. He was finally allowed to go, but is being closely watched by | detectives, So far the efforts to arouse the| workers to a “red scare” have col- japsed, and the strikers strongly |favor the N. T. W. U, policies | wherever they are broached. The Boston Herald, seeing the “red scare” so far futile declared this morning that “the Communist menace has collapsed.” Silk strikers in Pawtucket last night said they cannot understand why the Paterson silk workers have | not joined in their strike. They branded the refusal of Keller and | Following the report| Schweitzer to call out Paterson as| because Strikebreaking and scabbery and | animals going, been left out to make room for “our” stuff. Then again, in such a place “as | South Bend, Ind., where the Party has made rapid advances and is recruiting some splendid young pro- letarians who mean business in the class struggle—it becomes almost impossible to put the new situation on the map. You simply can’t pry open enough space to get elbow reom in the paper to let the Party | and the working-class know about | it. | Travelling all over the Middle | West, driving rickety Fords over} the drought-scorched plains of | North Dakota and Montana, I see the raw side more than the smooth. Farmers are driving their “life's | | work” in the form of raw-boned herds of cattle to the Roosevelt “shooting galleries’ to be killed. These sunken-eyed men then turn back to their empty farms without one nickel in cash for the slaugh- tered cattle, the first call on the “compensation” for slaughtered of course to the mortgage-holder. _ Hungry men who raised the cattle are not allowed even to cut off and take back to their homes a few pounds of meat from the carcases; “that would ruin the market.” The carcases are buried, sometimes with quick-lime, to keep men from eating them. The good beeves are practically given by the government to the big packing house monopoly. The farmers are “credited” with a few dollars on the books, and return to their farms empty-handed. They stop on the road to talk, saying, “Hell, we are through.” Meantime thousands of pages of Wall Street-paid poison is being poured upon them by the press, All of these men and women must have the Daily Worker to tell them what to do. Hardly a fraction of this struggle of the sweat-soaked and hunger- wracked American working people can be reflected in the Daily Worker as the paper’s material resources | now stand. And the possibilities are simply staggering. Many are the enthusiastic compli- ments to the newly-improved Daily Worker from workers and farmers everywhere I go. But with most of the compliments there goes also a sad regret that the deep sufferings, ghastly struggles and splendid suc- cesses of one or another group of workers and farmers and of the Communist Party should get into the columns of the paper! ‘There if no possible answer to the problem but to have the new, bigger, improved Daily Worker in three editions! It must be done, and every work- ers’ organization, especially every trade union, must treat this as their own business. That is—it is their business to raise the $60,000! | called on Paterson workers to come out_on the streets at once. Police Forbid Mass Picketing Chief of Police McLeod of New Bedford issued a provocative attack on strikers this morning. He said he ordered no arrests yeterday so | | he could observe strikers, then | threatened, “I saw enough yester- | day to convince me that the mass | picketing must end at once. Start- | ing this morning any crowds con- gregating who fail to disperse when ordered by the officers will have to| take the consequences.” lice have issued orders that ‘sien must be limited to ten at} each gate. Thus manufacturers and | police are setting the stage for aj determined effort to break the | Strike through strikebreakers and | | terror. Mass picketing of strikers and rank and file committee to organize strike better must be the answer to this strikebreaking threat. The N. T. W. U. in its statement appealed to the unemployed to re-| fuse to scab, to become active on the picket lines, to go on joint del- egations and demonstrations with the strikers to the welfare office to demand relief for strikers and | Unemployed alike. The U. T. W. leaders have said nothing so far regarding the unemployed. Holyoke Mills Shut Tight William Skinner and Sons at Holyoke, reported the largest Silk mill in the world, was complete- ly shut down by strikers. Hol- yoke mills are shut down by effec- tive strike there. Picketing in Salem and Low- jell began a movement there for a 100 per cent strike, and the | Strike is spreading and gaining in strength at all such points, includ- ing Salem, Pawtucket, etc. The strike is strong around Worcester, Mass., most of the mills | of this area being shut or crip- pled. The strike is decidedly stronger |in Maine. Such towns as Water- | ville area are entirely crippled. At the Amoskeag, in Manchester, N. H., where 9,000 struck, pickets are On guard at the mill, which strikers forced to close down even a few hours before the strike be- gan. In Vermont as well as Maine the strike is practically 100 per | cent effective. New Bedford Pickets Militant (Special to the Daily Worker) NEW BEDFORD, Mass., Sept. 15. —More than 10,000 strikers milled around three tire mills last night in such a militant manner that the Fisk Mill struck this morning and Goodyear and Firestone mills | announced they will close the rest of the week. More than 5,000 strikers gathered around the Fire- stone mill last night, following a |mass meeting in Brooklawn Park | addressed by Ann Burlak and | Walter Burke of the National Tex- | tile Workers Union. The strikers loudly cheered Ann |Burlak’s remarks regarding the | Reject ‘Arbitration! AN BEDITORIAL (Continued from Page 1) tion, against ending the strike without the granting of the demands. for which the workers braved the bosses’ gunmen, thugs and militia, to, go out in strike. | It was precisely this kind of workers back into the arms of the | ened their union, by the Communists to arouse the workers’ demands! Textile workers! Spread the strike! which you are fighting! Reject the arbitration that shoved the auto company unions, It was this type of arbitration that defeated the demands of the Pacific coast marine strikers, that brought worse conditions to the steel workers and weak- Gorman and the other U.T.W. officials should be flooded with telegrams and protests voicing the demands of the textile strikers against the acceptance of Roosevelt's Three-Men Arbitration Board. The Communist Party urges all workers to reject this strike-breaking maneuver of the Roosevelt New Deal hunger government. All Communists and all militant workers should immediately start | @ campaign among the masses of textile workers to acquaint them with the manner in which such arbitration boards appointed by Roose- velt have been used against the workers in the past. Everything should be done now, without the slightest loss of time, | workers against the great strike- breaking danger of arbitration. Arbitration, another name for strike- breaking, should be decisively defeated! There must be no return to work without the granting of the It is the very fear of the rapidly growing strike, because of its remarkable militancy, that Roosevelt steps in now to smash it. strike-breaking arbitration board. Carry it through to victory for the demands for the strikers marched to the Fire- stone mill singing “Solidarity.” De- spite a large mobilization of po- | lice the strikers showed a lot of | determination to close down the Firestone mill. When the manage- ment and police tried to slip the scabs out the back way, scores of windows in the plant were smashed. The strikers, who are largely U.T.W. members, welcomed Bur- lak and Burke to the picket line and took part in singing strike songs. Another mass meeting was held earlier in the evening in | Hazelwood Park where Burlak and Burke spoke. (Special to the Daily Worker) LAWRENCE, Mass., Sept. 5.—The main developments throughout the Lowell area late today was the spread of strikes in many large tex- tile mills by means of mass picket- ing demonstrations. Yesterday only | lin a minority of the workers in this district were affected by the strike. Today over 10,000 were on strike in the immediate vicinity of Lowell. Picketing was in progress today at the Loraine Mill in Pawtucket, R. I, and a mass picket line pa- | trolled the Lawrence Hosiery Mill. Over 1,000 workers picketed this mill, which is not yet. shut down but badly crippled. Attempts of manufacturers to ship |Defense to aid in organizing strik- | 8teat need for unity among all | cloth from struck mills to others ers defense committzes.” “District Exegutive Committee, INTERNATIONAL LABOR DE- FENSF, Eastern New England District.” | National strikers and the Textile Workers Union to merge with the U.T.W. to es- tablish th‘s unity. ( proposal of the | still working were foiled by strikers’ squads which patrolled the roads and stopped all cloth-laden trucks. The strike has not yet hit Law- problem is unemployment. Of a normal working population of 23,000, the papers state that only 9,000 are at present employed. Workers place the figure even lower, at 5,000. The general trend of the strike late today was toward a more com- plete shutdown in all mills, (Special to the Daily Worker) BOSTON, Mass., Sept. 5.—In- creasing in militancy and numbers, the textile strike in New England today contradicted the statements of bosses and their press that the strike was lagging. The Nashua Manufacturing Com- pany of Nashua, New Hampshire, Was reduced today to operating with a@ skeleton force. The Amoskeag Mills in Manchester, employing 9,000 workers, closed down on Friday, but U. T. W. organizers have done little tea ebgie the workers into picket Py ‘Salem the rank and file group of the Independent Sheeting Work- ers’ Union, despite police interfer- ence, issued a leaflet urging the union to reverse its previous de- cision and strike. The Skinner mill in Holyoke, largest silk concern in the world, is closed. All 2,900 work- ers in the Adams Mills of the Berk- shire Associates walked out, while over 6,000 strikers closed the mills or crippled production in Burling- ton and Winooski, Vermont, Water- ville, Maine, and Worcester and Uxbridge, Mass. Eighty per cent of Vermont's textile workers and 70 Upon adjourning the meeting rence proper, where the greatest . striking. ( per cent in New Hampshire es Roosevelt Acts By SEYMOUR WALDMAN | (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) (Continued from Page 1) | considering that quite favorably,” Gorman added. “It can be taken as a matter of | course that we shall go as far as | possible to meet the wishes of the President. We believe that he has an understanding of our problems }and that he would not take any step that would jeopardize the wel- | fare of the million men and women who toil in the textile industry,” Gorman declared in a formal state- | ment at noon today. He took this velt, with the help of President Wil- | jliam Green of the A. F. of L.| showed his “understanding of our| problems” by breaking the auto strike with the hated National Automobile Board. Also, despite his Tepeated admissions that the work- ers are “tired” of “boards.” Strike Move Grows “Meanwhile, the strike movement is growing stronger every hour and the strike will continue until there is a settlement that is acceptable to the workers. The numbers out this morning again exceed our ex- pectations by far,” Gorman de- | clared. However, he again avoided | reference to the unequivocal, spe- cific strike demands on _ hours, | Wages, loomage and other points considered “imperative” by the re-! cent U. T. W, convention, Gorman, at noon today, declared that “so far, we have only the press | association announcement of the in- tention of President Roosevelt to name a board of mediation in the textile strike situation. We can make no definite statement of po-/ sition until we have some more def- | inite word regarding the President's plans for the Board,” notwithstand- ing the fact that he had had three hours to get “definite word” from Hyde Park. The A. F. of L. strike leadership’s week-old plea to Roosevelt to pro- tect it from a strike-thundering rank and file was answered. Gor- man purred beneath the stroking “mediation” hand of the President. Gorman took occasion, in his for- mal declaration, to repeat the ridic- ulous request that the N, R. A. Tex- tile Code Authority “adjourn as code authorities and meet as man- agement, not to find ways of com- batting the strike, but to find ways of meeting the demands of the men and women who have suffered in the industry to the point of exhaus- tion.” In the meantime, Gorman, through his publicity machine, sent out word, “We are driving steadily toward victory and there will be no termination of the strike short of victory.” Whose “victory” he didn't say. Paterson Silk Strike Is Voted (Continued from Page 1) working against the interests of the textile workers. The president of the A. F. of L. local was present and was given the platform. He said nothing of strike preparations but insisted that the N. T. W. U. members could only join the A. F. of L. as indivi- duals, thus rejecting the N. T. W. U. unity offer. The workers present however unanimously rejected this stand. At another meeting on Labor Day, the A. F. of L. officials stated that “strikes are secondary.” DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M. 1-2, 6-3 P.M PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves,, Brooklyn Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. G After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR. 17-0135 Classified WANTED, single room, 50, Daily Worker. LARGE light room across Central Park. Kitchen privileges. ‘Telephone service; 1801 7th Ave. Apt. 2B. ROOM Wanted in neighborhood of Union Square, Unfurnished preferred. Write Box 95, Daily Worker. ATTRACTIVE studios renovated, furnished, unfurnished; 145 Second Ave. (9th 8t.). Apt. 20. NICELY furnished studio. piano (elevator). Call all day; 337 W. 14th St. Apt. 64. YOUNG comrade wanted care for girl 6. Light housekeeping. Good home, Box 15 Daily Worker. downtown. Box YOUNG man wants room. Private family. Bronx. Home like. Box 90 Daily Worker. ‘ Personal GOLDIE NEWTON, lost your address. Phone me today. Gramercy 5-1075. Fanny Legal Notice J. LOCATO has bought ‘the Shoe Repair Shop from C. Amato of 1044 45th St. Brooklyn, free and clear. I am _ not responsible for any debts incurred by c. Amato. To Stem Strike the terms are satisfactory?” “We're | | Negro Leader Facing Chain Gang, Ann Burlak, MASSES TO JUDGE GEORGIA LYNCHERS IN PUBLIC HEARING Joseph Brodsky to Indict Southern Rulin; Class at Rally Tomorrow NEW YORK.—Angelo Herndon, heroic young N. leader of the working-class, yesterday called upon all York workers, black and white, to attend the Public M Trial of the Georgia ruling class and their lynch courts to- morrow night at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, in Brook. "a —tlyn. | | position despite the fact that Roose- | ‘Amter To Cite Vital Election Issues Tonight Plans Keynote Speech At Mass Meeting— Scores LaGuardia NEW YORK.—Israel Amter, Communist candidate for Governor, | will deliver the keynote speech at| @ mass meeting tonight at Man-| hattan Lyceum, 66 E, Fourth St. He will discuss outstanding issues facing the city’s workers in the/| current election campaign. The mass meeting will be pre-| ceded by two parades starting from | Rutgers Square and Union Square, | led by the Workers Ex-Service- | men’s League. Carl Brodsky, Com- munist candidate for assemblyman, and other local candidates will also speak. The Communist gubernatorial candidate issued a statement yes- terday in which he attacked Mayor LaGuardia’s Labor Day speech in Chicago. The statement declares that “Mayor LaGuardia put him- self forward as representative of the so-called progressive element in the country. In this Labor Day speech he identified himself com- pletely with Roosevelt and the New Deal proposing nothing more than Roosevelt has to propose. This makes him a champion of the N. R. A. leading toward fas- cism.” Referring to LaGuardia’s com- ments on regimentation, Amter’s statement declared: “We ask Mr. LaGuardia further Dr. Simon Trieff Dentist 2300 - 86th Street MAyflower 9-7035 Brooklyn, N. ¥. | The trial should be attended by all Negro and white workers of New York,” Herndon declared, “be- cause at this trial they will be able to get a picture of what actually took place at the time I was con- victed in Atlanta, Ga. They will also be able to learn from this trial how better to fight for improve- ment of the conditions of the work ers, white and Negro, and against increasing fascist violence and frame-ups against the working- class and its militant leaders.” The young Negro leader, sentenced to 18 to 20 years on the Georgia | chain gang for organizing white ’|and Negro workers together, stressed | the importance of intensifying the |fight for the safety and freedom |of the Scottsboro boys and Ernst Thaelmann, leader of the German | working-class. Herndon himself is out on $15,000 cash bond, pending | appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court. | In addition to Herndon, speak- jers at the mass trial include Ann |Burlak and Joseph Brodsky, chief of the legal staff of the Interna- tional Labor Defense and Scotts- boro defense attorney. | The Brooklyn Academy of Music |can be reached from Manhattan, via I. R. T. subway, getting off at At- Jantic Ave., and walking two blocks to Lafayette St. | since when American workers have submitted to regimentation, and why he considers this a necessary derivative of the present system. In this fashion LaGuardia and other progressives are trying to make fascism acceptable to Amer- ican workers by insisting that regimentation is a necessary part of the American system. American workers will not accept regimenta- tion and certainly not regimenta- tion of hunger, ‘WILLIAM BEL Optometrist 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. ¥. C. Telephone ALgonquin 4-5752 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE 49-10 13th Avenue CAMP WINGDALE, ANTI-RELIGIOUS 15th Anniversary of Trio—Camp Unity REVOLUTIONARY DANCE NIGHT Daily Sports Events! Camp Unity Will Remain Pridays and Saturdays at 10 AM., 3 From SEPT. 7th to 19th SPECIAL LOW RATES! Full Week — $13.00 4 days — 8.00 3 days — 6.50 2 days — 4.50 lday — 250 (tax included) —. Hours: 1 - 2 and 6 - 8 P.M. RADIO SERVICE by Men Who Know How ®@ Special Dis- counts to Comrade. Readers of the “Daily” SQUARE RADIO CO. WINDSOR 8-0280 ‘WE GO ANYWHERE CAMP NITGEDAIGET Beacon-on-the-Hudson, New York Is Camp Needle T (Profits go to the Register Early at Union Office, 131 West 28th Street Special Busses Will Take You to Camp PAUL LUTTINGER, M. D. ea eas DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. Are Now Located at NORTH, NEW YORK CITY Tel. GRamercy 7-2090-2001 Brooklyn, New York UNITY NEW YORK Big Four Day Program CAMPFIRE WITH SKITS, Etc. Friday Night —— Pageant and Concert to Celebrate Communist Party—Hans Kisler Chorus—Vodvil—Historical Series of Workers’ Songs —— Saturday Night See Various Groups —— Sunday Night 15th ANNIVERSARY BANQUET —— Monday Night Interesting Lectures! Open Through Septembex. $1% ® week. Cars leave from 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 A.M. and 7 P.M. Phone ALgonquin 4-1148 rades for 12 Days! Industrial Union) Fine Programs Artef Players Cutler’s Puppets New Dance Group Pierre Degeyter Trio All the Sports! Dance! Sing!

Other pages from this issue: