The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 21, 1934, Page 3

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Unions to J oin were asked to assemble at points OATLY WORKEN, NW TURK, PXIDAY, sorreyipern 71, 1954 wage ‘Tires PLANS COMPLETED IN NEW YORK FOR MASS MARCH TOMORROW ea TUL. Urges City Hall Rally Organizations to Forin| Lines for Parade at Union Square NEW YORK.—Preparations were completed yesterday for the mass march to City Hall tomorrow morn- ing to demand immediate appro- ls for adequate Winter re-| ef. All participating organizations facing Union Square promptly at 10 o'clock in the morning. Each organizations has been asked to elect two delegates to present their demands to Mayor LaGuardia. The delegates will meet at the review- ing stand at the South side of Union Square. City and Central organizations have been asked to elect one speaker. to address the mass meet- ing which will be held when the marching column reaches City Hall. Urges Unions to Rally The Trade Union Unity Council yesterday called upon all its af- filiated unions to rally with their union banners and with slogans behind the United Action Commit- tee Saturday in the mass demon- stration and march to City Hall to demand immediate adequate ap- propriations for Winter relief. The T. U. U. C. called upon all unions to initiate final preparations for mobilization of the shops and the unemployed against the at- tempts of the LaGuardia adminis- tration to saddle relief costs upon the backs of the working popula- tion, and to slash relief to the un- employed. Local Action Arranged Bronx workers will mobilize at 603 East 136th Street at 10 a. m. today, march past the 139th Street relief bureau, through lower Bronx to the Prospect Avenue relief bu- reau and proceed to the office of Bronx Borough President Lyons, where a delegation will present the demands of the jobless. In addition to the general de- mands which will be presented to Mayor LaGuardia on Saturday, which the Bronx workers will de- mand that Lyons support, they de- mand that Lyons endorse the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill. During the past week, under the leadership of the Unemployment Councils. Bronx workers have es- tablished mass picket lines at all relief bureaus. As a result, the re- lief supervisors have been’ forced to grant concessions. In the case of an evicted Negro family, the re- lief bureau was forced to grant im- mediate rent of $23 and to pay $22 to retrieve the furniture from stor- age. Rally in Borough Park In order to mobilize Borough Park workers behind the mass march to City Hall tomorrow, the Unemployment Councils will rally workers at 4ist St. and 13th Ave. tonight at 7:30 o'clock, and a mass meeting will be held at 44th St. and 13th Ave. Borough Park workers are asked to meet at the Unemployment Council headquarters, 4109 13th Ave. Saturday at 9 a. m. from where they will proceed to Union Square in a body. East Side Workers to Meet East Side workers will assemble at Seventh St. and Avenue a at 8:30 a. m. tomorrow and march under their banners to Union Square. Children, members of the Young Pioneers and the I. W. O. schools will meet at Rutgers Square where they will be joined by the marching column as it approaches City Hall. s Communist Party’ S Estimate of Situation ; in Labor Movement, Unity Trend Noted as 54th A.F. of L. Convention Approaches P Jobless Resist Mass Evictions In Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH, Pa., Sept. 20.— Unemployed workers of Pittsburgh are massing for an intensified fight against evictions, 1,200 of which are pending as a result of the refusal of property owners in the slums to accept the partial rent payment plan adopted recently by relief au- thorities. Deputies on Monday evicted the Singleton family from their home in a condemned house at 1729 Fifth Avenue, ousting parents and their five children, one of them a baby only eight months old, into the street with their furniture. Mem- bers of the Unemployment Council immediately commandeered a truck and moved family and furniture down into the Van Braam relief station. In the relief office a sign was hung on the furniture bearing the slogan: “Evictions Must Stop! Join the Unemployment Councils!” The workers demanded that au- thorities find a house immediately for the family, and forced instan- taneous action on the part of of- ficials. An empty house was ob- tained on Hazel Street and before nightfall the Singletons were in- stalled, fulfilling the Council’s slo- gan that “No one shall sleep out- of-doors.” Launching a new maneuver on the part of the sheriff's office against the militancy of the work- ers, a constable yesterday arrested Mildred Walker for “trespassing” in a house on Tannehill Street, where she and her family had been in- stalled by the Unemployment Coun- cil, following their eviction from another dwelling. A campaign of mass protest is being carried out by Council members to obtain her release. Of Negro Workers in Strikes By Bill Dunne ¥ Last April, when the wave of union organization and strikes was involving additional tens of thou- sands of workers, the Communist Party published an analysis and es- timate of the situation and a pro- gram of action based on the de- velopments of the past year in the labor movement. The Trade Union Unity League, in connection with the atttempt to put over the Wagner Bill, sent its representative to the hearings on the bill before the Senate Commit- tee on Labor and Education, and there made public its estimate of the new developments together with | its program of action. These estimates of the trend in the ranks of the working class and the program, based upon detailed knowledge and actual experience in the mass struggles, are of primary importance now because of the still wider development of the labor movement and the tremendous sig- nificance of the class battles which have occurred since last April—and because of the 54th Annual Conyven- tion of the American Federation of Labor meeting in San Francisco for its initial session on Oct. 1. Summed up, the estimate referred to above included the following vital | points: Increasing Contradiction Shown 1. The i ncreasing - contradiction between the decreasing income of the working class, increased produc- tion with fewer workers, the grow- ing concentration and centralization of capital (growth of monopoly) the huge increases in profits, and rising prices—the economic basis for the present organization movements, wage demands and wave of strikes, 2. The growing contradiction be- tween the pretensions of Roosevelt and his N. R.A. as @ friend of and jand their organizations as in the | | velopment of a new corps of organ- jincreasing use of armed force and| jfascist terror to suppress strikes coupled with the encouragement | and protection given by N. R. A.| to company unionism. This leads |to political disillusionment of work- | ers in regard to the purpose and results of N. R. A. 3. There is a nationwide revolt against company unions and all} forms of “employee representation” even in their recently “liberalized” | form. 4. There are huge new contin- gents of workers in basic industries never before organized or involved | in strikes, who are now engaged, or | are about to engage, in wage, or- ganization and strike movements on @ scale never seen before in this country. 5. The stubborn character of these movements must be noted as a@ most significant sign of the tem- per of American workers and as an indication of their increased | consciousness and determination. This is shown by the length of the strikes in the face of mass arrests, gassings, clubbings, shootings and | actual murder of workers. There | must be noted also the new phen- omenon of strike, re-strike and} strike again by the same groups of workers, together with the fact that each new wave of struggle tends to include ever larger num- bers of workers, A. F. L, Leadership Weaker 6. The unstable character and lack of ability to control workers | earlier periods is an outstanding fact in connection with the official leadership of the A, F. of L. and its affiliated unions. They main- tain their connection with the membership now, for the most part, by making continual concessions to) rank and file sentiment and pres- | sure in questions of strikes, organ- izational structure, tactics, etc. and by continual promises that the government will see that workers get, “justice.” 7. There is to be seen the de- | affiliation. |precedented solidarity between un- ranks, leaders who have received their training during the years of the crisis, who are much closer to the working class and represent its |interests and wishes as the so-called recognized leaders do not, cannot and will not. j Growing Desire for Unity | 8. There are many important signs of the growing desire for unity among workers regardless of union | 9. There is to be seen an un- employed and striking workers. Strikbreaking by unemployed work- ers has almost disappeared as a decisive factor. The unemployed are found on the picket lines and in the relief work of the striking workers and their organizations. Strikebreaking now is confined mostly to professional scabs and ruined middle class elements. ~¢ | Writer Points to ses jaid to the working class, and the|izers and leaders directly from the Rank and File Program| Unifies All Forces In U. S. Labor with some 400 shoe workers. (It is of the greatest interest to note here that at the time this estimate was drafted, the Centralia strike was the only general strike that had occurred in this period. The Com- munist Party saw this struggle cor- rectly, although it involved com- mass sentiment for general strike the six months culminating in the} West Coast general strike, and that now brings the general strike issue to the forefront in every important | labor struggle). Take on Political Character Negro Workers in Strikes development the advent of large numbers of Ne- gro workers into active participa- tion in strikes in the South and in defiance of N. R. A. |various boards and against the deci- sions of its boards. They are based PSS Ee sae ae Rank and File In A. A. ‘Fixed Election paratively few workers and received | little attention, as the beginning of | action—the tendency that has de- | veloped to a remarkable extent in| 14. Many struggles have devel- | dent. 10. There is to be noted as aloped, or are developing, a definite;tank and file candidate, to whom | of basic importance | political character. They take place | Earl Forbeck, Committee of Ten and its | leader, (Special to the Daily Worker) PITTSBURGH, Pa., Sept. 19.— The Amalgamated Association of |Iron, Steel and Tin Workers held an election for union officers Satur- day. No one will know the result of the vote of more than 200 lodges until Oct. 20, when the sealed en- velopes containing the balloting of Jeach lodge will be opened, sup- | Posedly for the first time, by the “canvassing board” of the union. | Speculation is rife as to whether | Mike Tighe will be re-elected presi- George Williams, so-called was supposed o have | thrown his support when he with- drew from the race last month, op- new evidences of solidarity between |in many instances around demands| posed Tighe for the post. | white and Negro workers in these | struggles. This is especially true | where new leadership has developed recently from the ranks and is not poisoned by the Jim-Crow of the official leaders. ll. There is the extremely im- portant fact of the conjunction of these struggles with the fight of the unemployed against hunger relief, uniting with them and the Unem- ployment Councils many A. F. of L. T. U. U. L, and independent unions. 12, There is the great and grow- ployment and Social Insurance Bill, its endorsement by hundreds of A. F. of L. local unions, many central bodies, some state federations and international union conventions over | the heads of the official leadership. 13. There is an increase in sym- pathetic strikes—and such signifi- cant movements as that in Cen- tralia, Il., where a whole working class of a town struck in sympathy |for the removal of troops, against police and fascist terror, etc. 15. There is a tremendous jof anti-militarist and anti-war sen- |timent among workers, intellectuals | and professional workers. There is | Ja tremendous sentiment and a | growing movement against fascism and its various manifestations in this country. Program Based on Estimate sented to the A. F. of L. conven- upon this estimate, with some addi- tion made necessary by in the country, labor movement and in the ranks of the entire working class. The vital essence of the Rank and | File Program is unification of all forces of American labor against the capitalist offensive and N. R. A, its main instrument. (To Be Continued) Union Organizes Men In Shipyards of Big Warship Contractors GROTON, Conn., Sept. 20 (F. P.), —Right on the heels of the Senate munitions investigation, the Elec- tric Boat Co. of Groton experienced a second severe shosk when the In- dustrial Union of Marine and Ship- building Workers of America in- stalled Local No. 6 at their highly profitable shipyard. Organizers have been making rapid progress in Gro- ton since the middle of August, and the new local promises to displace Hlectric Boat’s company union in short order. Following the strike victory at Camden, N. J., last May, the union launched a vigorous campaign in the New England district which has brought quick results. Shipbuilding companies which have been grow- ing fat on huge naval contracts are now faced with the prospect of being forced to come to terms with the first powerful organization of supped workers since the World ‘ar. C.P. Candidate to Talk In Syracuse on Monday: SYRACUSE, nN. Ty, Sept. 20. — Fred Briehl, Communist candidate for State Attorney-General, will speak at the Yates Hotel here next Monday evening at 8 o'clock at one of the largest election rallies held by the Communist Party in the current campaign. ATTENTION Workers of Williamsburg, Flatbush and Crown Heights The Crown Heights Branch of the Workers School at 25 Chauncey Street, Brooklyn, is now registering for courses: Principles of Class Struggle Revolutionary Traditions of the Current Problems of Negro Liberation Movement Public Speaking Courses also History of Masxism-Leninism Political Economy Trade Unionism Youth Problems English-Elementary, Interme- diate and Advanced Voice and Speech Direction forming in American Workingclass Historical Materialism Location easily reached by all elevated trains and street cars —Tom Truesdale, Director. DAILY WORKER MORNING FREIHEIT YOUNG WORKER Baz Friday October 19, 20, 21 at the newly and completely rebuilt ST. NICHOLAS PALACE 69 West 66th Street @ Organizations and individuals are urged to collect articles @ of merchandise for the Saturday aaf Sunday (Near Broadway) bazaar. Greetings, honor roll @ names and ads for the bazaar journal. Bazaar headquarters, 50 E. 13th St., 6th floor—Algonquin 4-9481 2,000 Protest Police Attacks In McKeesport McKEESPORT, Pa., Sept. 20.— Since the brutal police attack upon International Youth Day demon- strators here, Mayor Lysle has been flooded with protest resolutions, tel- egrams and ‘phone calls. Several delegations visiting him with protests found him surround- ed with police armed with riot guns and gas bombs. On Sept. 14, 2,000 workers dem- onstrated here against the breaking up of the Youth Day Rally and other violent attacks on the rights of the working class, against devel- oping fascism and war. Speakers chained themselves to lamp posts to prevent their arrest and removal by the police. The meeting passed resolutions demanding the right of free speech for McKeesport workers, and that the police unconditionally release Phil Frankfield and Jimmy Egan. A local anti-war conference will take place here Sept. 30, to be fol- lowed by a section conference which will help prepare for the celebra- tion of the seventeenth anniversary of the Russian Revolution. Chinese and American Workers Hit Betrayal By Chiang Government NEW YORK.—Two hundred Chi- nese and American workers cheered | speakers of the Workers’ Ex-Ser- | vicemen’s League and the Chinese | League Against Japanese Invasion, who called for a united struggle against Japanese imperialism and its agent Chiang Kai Shek at a meeting Sunday afternoon at Mott and Bayard Streets. A telegram protesting the be- trayal of the Chinese people by the Nanking government was sent to Dr. Alfred Sze, Chinese Ambassa- dor in Washington. The workers adopted a resolution supporting the National Armed Defense Commit- tee headed by Madame Sun Yat Sen. The speaker of the veterans’ or- ganization emphasized the impor- tance of the Chinese liberation movement as a strong factor in re- tarding imperialist war in the Far East, especially attacks by Japan against the Soviet Union. Workers responded to the speech of Liu, of the Chinese League, by shouting anti-imperialist slogans. Curtain Workers’ Union, Wins Strike Demands NEW YORK.—The workers of the Manhattan Curtain Company, 40 W. 25th Street, have returned to work after winning a wage increase and union recognition, following a strike under the leadership of the Curtain and Drapery Workers Union. | This is the second successful strike the union has led in the last two weeks. The first strike was won by the workers of the Style Curtain Company, 28 W. 25th St. All workers in the curtain, drapes, | bedspreads and pillows industry hhave been asked to bring their compiaints to the union, 40 W. 18th &Xreet, any day, after working | week, for a living wage and for the Pennsylvania Miners Protest Discrimination By the Relief Officials WASHINGTON, Sept. 20—Charg- ing that relief administration in Greene County, Pa., is tied up with the coal operators and is being used to fight trade unions, the Pennsyl- vania..Security. League has asked the F.E.R.A, to investigate. The league charged that “the executive director of Westmoreland County and former director of re- lief in Greene County, Paul Kee- nan, is a former coal company offi- cial, and has used his relief office prestige to urge striking miners to go back to work.” The statement, which is signed W. A. unions, states that the ad- ministration of Federal and State relief is used to frustrate union or- ganization. Questioned on Sept. 17, Federal Relief Administrator Hopkins said that he had not ordered an inves- tigation, General Strike Voted by 1,500 N.Y. Workers In Custom Tailor Trade) NEW YORK.— =A1 recomendation | of the shop delegates meeting for) a general strike of custom tailor-| ing workers, was unanimously | adopted by 1,500 custom tailors as- | sembled in Irving Plaza Hall on} Monday, after they heard the re-| ports of Oswaldo, organizer, and Alexander Hoffman, national secre- tary of the Custom Tailoring Workers Industrial Union of New York, The meeting instructed the execu- tive committee of the union to im-| mediately make plans and begin preparations for the strike. The: main demands of immediate aboli- tion of home work, the 36-hour recognition of the union of the workers’ choice, were adopted. An open air mass meeting held Tuesday on the corner of Fifth Ave. and 44th St., at which 2,000 workers heard Oswald and Hoff- man, applauded the decision for the general strike and the demands, the union announced. This, according to the announcement, is one of a ries of meetings to be held on Fifth Ave. between 42nd and 59th Smelter Workers Win 50 Cent Pay Increase After 4-Month Strike BUTE, Mont. (F. P.)—On strike since May 8, Butte’s 6,000 copper miners and engineers have finally knocked the Anaconda Copper Min- ing Company off its high-horse. The company has oficred a 50c wage increase, recognition of ihe Butte Miners Unicn, affiliated with the International Union of Mine, Mill & Smelter Workers, and has agreed to abolish certain vicious clauses of the contract system. It has, however, refused to concede a 30-hour week or guarantee full-time work, Miners and engineers are to vote on acceptance of the agreement. During the four months of strike, about 500 strikebreakers and gun- men were employed to keep pumps working and to police the mine by seven presidents of local U. M.) Strike-Breaking Mellon| Aluminum Firm Begins | BuildingCompanyUnion| NEW KENSINGTON, Pa., 20.—Andrew Mellon's Company of America, Aluminum Aluminum Workers Union, with the cooperation of A. F. of L. mislead- ership under Boris Shishkin and | ers by organizing a company union. A meeting is being held in the at which the company union will company, which the A. F. of L. forced down the throats of the strikers. The new “company representation plan,” patterned substantially along the lines of the U. S. Steel Cor- poration’s company union, is being constructed around the nucleus of company stools who were behind the “back - to - work” movement, which attempted to split the recent strike, led by Don Hageman, Ken- neth Cope, George Bakeman and their group. | Youth Delegates Urged To Bazaar Conference; Tickets at YCL Office NEW YORK.—The Red Press Ba- zaar Committee yesterday issued p. m, at the Workers’ Center, 35 E. 12th St. National and district organiza- tions are requested to send two delegates each. Local units or branches are allotted one delegate. Organizations should begin soli- citing advertisements and greetings for the Bazaar Journal, the com- mittee announced. Tickets and material may be obtained at the Young Communist League district office, 35 E. 12th St. Haywood Will Speak At Boston Meeting BOSTON, Sept. 20.—Harry Hay- wood, general secretary of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and an authority on the Negro question, will speak on “The Road to Negro Liberation” tomorrow eve- ning at the old Dudley Street Opera House, 113 Dudley Street. This will be Haywood’s first ap- pearance in Boston and the widely advertised meeting is expected to} be well attended. | Other speakers on the program | will be Sidney Bloomfield, district | organizational secretary of the Communist Party; Mrs. M. Cravath | Simpson, a member of several or- ganizations of Negro women in New England, and Donald Burke, secre- tary of the International Labor De- fense in New England. Eugene Gordon, president of the George Borden Branch of the League of the Struggle for Negro Rights, under the auspices of which Harry Haywood is to be presented to the Boston workers, will be hours, yards. Sept. having| broken the strike of their employes’ Dave Williams, today is taking steps | to complete the defeat of the work- | Odd Fellows Hall, New Kensington, | be launched, its way already paved | | by the “agreement” dictated by the a call to all workers and students | youth organizations urging them to} elect delegates to a special youth) conference to be held Sept. 28 at 8) Abtiat jailea |For Assisting MILWAUKEE, Wis., Sept 20.—A | mass movement workers arrested in the strike against the Geuder and Paeschke Company, a large metal shop here, is getting under way rapidly. A focal point of the campaign is the | defense of Santos Zingale, a well- * | known artist and teacher and mem- ber of the John Reed Club of Mil- waukee, Police have gone to the extent of breaking without warrants and arresting four workers, taking them to jail | under penalty of a beating. The following day being Sunday a special session of Circutt Court was secured by their attorney and a writ of habeas corpus that had been and they were supposedly free. Twenty minutes before the favor- able ruling on the writ, however, Mosher, the assistant district attor- ney, drew up warrants sworn out carrying a three-year sentence. When the workers were still in court they were arrested on the warrants and thrown into jail. They are now out on bail. | ful in view of the fact that recently during a police attack on the Geuder, Paechke picket patrol wagon was tipped over. The International Labor De- fense and the John Reed Club of Milwaukee call upon all organiza- tions and individuals to send pro- tests to Mayor. Daniel W. Hoan, Hedding of District Court, against the Milwaukee police breaking into workers’ homes, against the obvious frame-up of Santos Zin- and demanding the immediate dropping of all charges against them. SEND-OFF en ke DANCE N. ¥. Rank ny File Delegates to the 54th A.F.L. Convention at San Francisco SATURDAY, SEPT. 22, 8 P. M. AT IRVING PLAZA HALL Irving Place, Cor. 15th Street Jazz Band : Good Entertainment Admission 35 cents GRAND OPEN of the UNITED WORKERS CENTER At 306-308 E. 149th St., Bronx, N, ¥. SATURDAY, SEPT. 22nd, 8 P.M. Entertainment, Refreshments, Dancing Sponsored by German and Italian Workers Clubs. Contribution 25er Get Your Tickets Now For The MASS SEND-OFF for the delegates to the 2nd CONGRESS AGAINST WAR AND FASCISM to be held at MECCA TEMPLE 133 W. 55th St. WEDNESDAY EVENING September 26, 1934 Tickets 25c. & 40c. on sale at Workers Bookshop, 50 E. 13th St., New Masses, $1 E. 27th St., Fretheit, 50 E. 13th St., chairman of the meeting. City Comm. Amer. League, 213 4th Ave. tion by the Rank and File A. F.| |of L. Committee is based largely| over the question of whether the ing support for the Workers Unem- | Iron Strikers to defend the} into homes. of workers | They were held without charges. | obtained was sustained by the judge | by the police on framed up charges | | "The police are particularly venge- | lines a} District Attorney Zabel and Judge | gale and the three ether workers | Some of the more skeptical A. A. |members are offering odds that growth | Tighe will recapture the presidency, | | pointing out that the 76-year-old | misleader is much nearer the sealed envelopes than Williams, a resident | of Cannonsburg. The Amalgamated, now conduct- | ing its struggles for the steel work- ers exclusively within the arena The program that will be. pre-| marked off by the National Steel | Labor Relations Board, faces a lengthy and expensive court battle “majority rule” handed down by Jate de- | the National Labor Relations Board velopments, of the present situation |in the Houde case shall be applied in the organized | to the steel industry. Attorney Earl Reed, for the | Wheeling Steel Corporation, in a |hearing before the steel board in Washington Saturday on the ques- | tion of an election at the Ports- mouth, Ohio, plant of that com- his client would oppose the “major- ity rule.” Reed added that Wheeling Steel's fight would also be supported by the U. S. Steel Corporation and other large steel companies. Three weeks from now the Steel board is scheduled to hear its first case, which involves U. 8. Steel, when a complaint of the Mac-/| Donald, Ohio, employes and the} demand of A. A. members there for an election, will be heard in Pitts- burgh. pany, announced to the press that | cP. Program Exposes Other arties’ Aims Only Communists Op- pose New Deal, Planks of C. P. Point Out News from Wisconsin of the prie mary elections in which, according to the United Press “a new progres- sive party was baptized at the polls : aS a trial balloon for a new national alignment of liberals” brings sharply to the fore the Com- munist Party’s exposure of the aims of the old-line parties in the elections. The Party’s Congressional plate form reveals Democratic, Republi< can and “progressive” capitalist groups as being essentially support- ers of capitalism despite minor dif ferences as to how the Roosevelt government should use the New Deal and other misleading schemes to shift the burden of the crisis to the workers. The Communis: Party, therefore, calls on all working class voters to break with the old-line parties be they Socialist, Farmer-Labor or La- Follette “progressives “The Republican Party, the Re- publicans tn Congress, have sup- ported all the measures of Roosevelt directed against the masses for the benefit of the capi‘alists,” the pro- gram declares. “With the approach of the elece tions, the Republican Party is trys ing to appear as an opposition to the New Deal. They even pretend to ‘criticise’ the growing bureaus cracy of the Roosevelt administra- tion. But these are only campaign tricks to utilize the growing dis- illusionmnet of the working people in the New Deal .. .” the Commu- nist program continues. It reveals the unity of all the old- line parties in defending ca) by saying: “The Farmer-Labor Governor | Olson, of Minnesota, like his Demo- | cratic colleague, Governor White, of | Ohio, and Republican Governor Merriam of California has sent troops to break strikes. The so- called “Progressives,” the Borahs, | LaFollettes, etc., carry out the same anti-working class policies.” “The Communist Party calls on | the workers to break decisively with these parties of hunger, fascism and war. It calls on the masses to defeat the Republican, Democratic, Farmer-Labor and Socialist can- didates in the Congressional elec- tions. Elect Communist candidates, | Send the fighters for your demands, | for your class interests, to Con- gress!” CAMP Wingdale, | Is Open All Through September! PHIL BARD DIRECTS PROGRAMS MORE ROOM @ MORE FUN $14 a week; Cars leave 10:30 A. M. daily from 2700 Bronx Park East (Allerton Ave. subway on White Plains line). UNITY New York @ CRISP WEATHER $2.65 a day ALgonqiin 4-1148 Cam] ) Nitgedaiget FOR AN INDIAN SUMMER VACATION! Weather Is Crisp. The Hillside Is Colorful Ideal Time for Sports $14 a week. Finest accommodations. heated rooms in our modern hotel. Hot and coid water in each room. Best food obtainable COME FOR REST AND FUN! Cars leave 10:30 a. m. daily from 2700 Bronx Park Bast Estabrook 8-1400 6 steam- | Admission with tickt 25 cents ——. Philadel phia, Pa. DAILY WORKER AND | 15th ANNIVERSARY of the Communist Party FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28th, 1934 | at TURNGEMEINDE HALL Broad and Columbia Speaker: PAT TOOHEY Earl Browder and Clarence Hathaway will apear on the screen Bella Dorfman of the Artef — Freiheit Gesangs Ferein Withcut ticket 30 cents | @ Soviet Movie FRIDAY, ® Dance ADMISSION 25 CENTS — Philadelphia, Pa. “SUPPORT THE DAILY WORKER” ncaa @ Russian Bazaar Speakers Just. Returned from the Seviet Union SEPT. | 1208 TASKER STREET 21, at 8 P. M. ®@ Buffet AUSPICES: C. P., SECTION 1

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