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FREEDOM OF ANTI-FASCIST | WORKER WILL BE DEMANDED BY UNITED FRONT GROUP Memorial Meeting fo1 Author NEW YORK Aug. 15.—Six prom morrow to carry to District Attorney Matthew Sullivan of Queens County | Krumbei @ demand by 1,000 pr ment pending against Athos Terzani, and pi Anthony Fierro, charged that th thorities had fr were ld: rea two reput identified the dicted for t! ne. “Workers do not come to memorial Meetings to cry. over their dead”, de- elared Frank Specto: s tional secretary of th come to mobilize thi Dack against the capit: Which lie behind the f: ZH Art Smith thin Fierro’s death ¥ not be let him look at Cuba. Only over the dead | the American cap to bring in fascism Build United Front. “We are going to avenge Fierro by freeing Terzani, by freeing Mooney | and Billings, and by building a powerful united front to act in ever case of a fr We will coi alliance that t: dare u r the worke At Specti tion a resolu- tion was calling on the Governor of Alabama to bring to hers of the two s slain on Sunday, and the c is which, the ILD. char co! d with the lynchers, and to saf three Negro boys in violence, ard the other at case against ive Other Speakers. Ww uro Gio- | n labor t, who was T in 1912 in Salem, Baldwin, director of rican Civil Liberties Union; Norman Thomas, socialist leade ‘Vanni Montana of the Italian dai mewspaper, La Stampa Libera, Herbert Mahler, of the General De- fense Committee of the I. W. W. Behind the fight to free Terzani 4s the strongest united front defense . Since the Ettor-Giovannitti case in 1912. Terzani’s plight and the danger of fascism in this country, as exempli- fied by the maneuvers of the Khaki Shirts, are the themes of speakers nightly on many street corners in Manhattan, Bro nm, Queens, and the Bronx. 4 Get Year Probation | in Coney Islard for | Resisting Eviction| NEW YORK.—One year probation is the justice meted ‘out by Judge| eld in the Coney Island mag- cour f workers who | on | her r and probation daughter Pa anoth All o fighting 2 it. two weel | | | | h| the fur- | niture of the ‘own on | the street, Mrs, Horn and the oth-| ers who are active in the Unem-| ployed Council protested. Patrolman | A. Cohen rint in a call for the riot | squad and on the arrival of addi-| tional for ed to make whoie- | sale arres The police carefully planned to| tay them before Judge Hershfield who is k for his brutal sen- tences against workers. The judge now believes that with the threat of @ year in jail he can stop the ac- tivity of the Coney Island Unem- ployed Co ‘s 8,000 at Court House in County March At Roswell, N. M.! ROSWELL, N. M—Three thou-| Sand people were at Court House *Sque-c in the Chaves County Hun-| ‘ March. Their demands were: cash relief weekly for two and 75 @ents additional for each depen- ‘Gent, stopping evictions, milk andj Shoes for school children and keep- ing the relief stations open each| iy. The demands were presented to; ‘the County Welfare Board and sent | _ By them to the governor. The gov- €rnoz took no action on these needs | the jovless. “pes the mobilization of strong- | arm forces, a mass meeting was held | the same evening, Aug. 9. There -they had a display of 50 deputies ‘and machine guns. One of the speak- “gers at the meeting was arrested and “later released. *.~ Although the demands were not| ‘sptanted the effects are already felt by the increase in relief which was given following the march, NOTICE UNITS AND MASS ORGANIZATIONS: |, Please make arrangements to jhave the edition (which comes off press at 8:30 p. m.) of the Daily Worker sold at your open- air meetings. Call every night with money for your bundles at| 35 E. 12th (store) | zes Action Against Real Slayer | |ereased too b Slain Italian Youth inent spokesmen will be chosen to- |Bakeries Hang || NRA Signs and || Raise Prices|| SBURGH, Pa., Aug. 15—| | ce new NRA signs, | | in the xing | | of this city raised | i y 16 per cent. Thirty | | cent meals are now thirty-five | | | cent meals. \| | pie was also in- | the Master Bak- | \ers Association by 100 per cent as/| | Ja result of the Association going | u he codes, 1] Relief Conference | in Mesaba Range Relief Is Cut; Taxes Dodged h~ Steel Trust The price of VIRGIN farmers relief Mesaba Range wil 20 at the Vasa Hall, corner of Ma- honing and Second Ave., North Hib- bing. This conference will take up the problems of this territory and the campaign for the adoption of the -The workers and | ference. of the be held on Aug. Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill The farmers of Zim are organ- izing to get free food and clothing for their children when school starts. | The Steel Trust, by its refusal to taxes and by manipulating its c and township governments, has already reduced the valuation in sev- eral territories on ore and is get-/ ting a tax reduction through this} maneuver. The latest attack of the mining companies, through their Steel Trust run county boards of commissioners is to try to force a “slave contract” | on all who have gotten relief in past months, In Markham a farmer, crippled so he can hardly walk, was to have been forced to sign such an agreement. When told that he was crippled, the Poor Commissioners’ representative stated: “Have him sign it anyway, and then we'll see if he can work.” Every worker and farmer should support the relief conference and} urge their organization to elect dele- | gates. Further information can be gotten | from the United Front Relief Com- mittee, 111-84 St. So., Virginia, Minn. Map Campaign for Shorter Hours at Fur Mass Meet Thursday NEW YORK,’ — Furriers are called to a mass meeting at Cooper Union on Thursday immediately after work by the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union. The meeting is to ratify the unanimous decision made by the fur shop chairmen last week to start a cam- paign to establish the 35 hour week not later than September 1 in all fur shops. While the bosses are flying the Blue Eagle in their shops indicating that they have accepted the Blanket code which ealls for a 35 hour week, they are taking no steps to establish the shorter hour week. Fur workers are urged to attend this important meeting to map plans to enforce the 35 hour week in the industry. Unemployed Council Demands Removal of the School Director EAST PITTSBURGH, Pa.—The Unemployed Council of Chalfant Borough adopted a resolution de- manding the removal of School Di- | rector Milewski, who compels the} children to come for milk in the evening though it could very well be distributed in the morning. The resolution points out that “the chil- dren were waiting for the milk de- | livery to the school building during a heavy rain on Thursday, Aug. 3. j He was told that his action might | result in the children catching colds and developing dangerous illness, and he replied: ‘I can’t help it if the chil- dren die; they must die sometime.’” Banquet Saturday to Greet Ford, New C. P. Organizer in Harlem NEW YORK.—A ba me James W. For | P: candidate for vice-president at ational elections, as sec- of the Communist | lem will be held next 19, at 7:30 p.m., h Workers’ Center, 1413 ifth A a well to , who pre-| ceded Ford as organizer of Section 4. Earl Browder, general secretary the Communist Party, Charle ¢ he ba of s » organizer of the New ting workers that Sullivan drop a murder indict- | York district, Robert Minor, Jack young anti-fascist accused of killing | Stachel and other Party leaders will % i A G ‘ ;, | be among The Lib- roceed against “the actual killer, a| 00, SNCNe . ree Sse waa - |Girly Turner of the Duncan Dancers will entertain. BAIL REDUCED FOR 3 HELD ON | LEAFLET CHARGE) Labor Defense Frees Young Workers on Habeas Corpus NEW YORK,— Writs of habeas corpus have been obtained by the International Labor Defense in the cases of Ben Klein, Jack Goldberg and Charles Williams, young workers framed for passing out leaflets be- fore a shoe factory at Boerum Place and Bogart Street, Brooklyn, where a strike is in progress, denouncing the NRA slave code. Trial for the three, framed for “attempted felonious assault” based on “possession of a razor blade” will be held next Wednesday, August 15, at 9 am. at Bridge Plaza Magis- trate’s Court. The I.L.D. urges workers to pack the court and smash this attempted frame-up. Caves in from Hunger; Boss Says ‘He Is Intoxicated JAMAICA, L. I.—At the Morris Park, L. I., Railroad oil house a worker collapsed from hunger while working. The men picked him up and laid him on some cotton waste. His boss came over and, after going through the motions like a doctor, by feeling his pulse and so on, said to another boss that the man was drunk. The other boss said, “It’s indigestion.” But the worker told another worker that he hadn’t eat- en that whole day. Due to the starvation wages paid to labor under the New Deal and through the NRA on the railroads in this country, a man with a fam- ily cannot hold skin and bones to- gether. While in Cleveland the well-fed and overpaid Railroad Brotherhoods chiefs are whittling away time whether we need or don’t need a Code, the unity movement is pre- paring the workers for the stand which we will have to take. Workers Adopt De- mands for Pipe Trade NEW YORK.—Five hundred workers of the smoking pipe indus- try adopted a code which was for- warded to Frances Perkins, Secre- tary of Labor, and Hugh Johnson, NIRA administrator in Washington. The chief demands in the code are for a maximum work week of 30 hours; a maximum of 60 hours over- time per man per year and no more than five hours per week; a min- imum wage of $20 for the unskilled and $35 for the skilled; time and a half for overtime; time work in- stead of piece work; equal pay to women and youth; wages to be ad- justed to meet the rising cost of living; unemployment insurance to be paid out of a national fund cre- ated by the employers and the gov- ernment and recognition of the union and the right to strike, Philadelphia Sheet Metal Workers Meet PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Aug. 15.— A meeting of all the sheet metal workers and cornice makers and | roofers will be held on Thursday, | this August 17, 8 p. m. at 1627 S. 6th St. This meeting is being called by the Metal Cornice and Roofers Un- ion which was reorganized last Thursday, August 10th. Many work- ers have already joined the union and are prepared for the organiza- tion of the entire trade, including sheet metal workers in the trade. We call upon all workers in our trade, employed and unemployed, to come to the meeting. washed the camp authorities. The Unemployed Council yesterday re- ceived a letter from Robert Fechner, National Director of the camps, stat- ing that “no blame could be attached to anyone connecteu with the camps.” The official report of Molletto’s death gives the cause as “pneu- monia.” They didn’t say that the boy had been in the hospital with swollen ankles from July 8 to July 22. And certainly they puried deep the fact that right after his hos- pital experience, he was set to work in the kitchen from 6:30 in the morning to 7 at night. Eleven and a half hours work for a boy who could hardly stand on his feet. Made to peel potatoes, wash pots in sloppy water, in a hot smelly kit- chen of a camp outfit. As he said in a letter to his mother’ on July 20, “that just about killed me. I went to work right after I got out of the hospital,” he wrote. “They didn’t give me a day’s rest and that made my legs worse. They won't give you the right kind of medical treatment,” Neither will the official report say that there was a food riot in the Port Elizabeth camp. The boys souplained they were getting too much canned stuff to eat. Dr, Paul Luttinger, Medical Expert of the Daily Worker, pointed out that there was a definite connection between a constant diet of canned food and swollen ankles. During the war whole ships crews fed on a constant diet of canned food were interned on account of swollen ankles, Of- ficers on the ship, fed on fresh vegetables and fruits suffered no ailments. This is part of the offi- cial war record, Dr. Luttinger added. For the camp officials it is enough to say he died from pneumonia. But this peculiar case of swollen ankles lowers the natural resistance of the body to the point where an orainary cold can lead to death. And the direct cause of the death was the cheap grade of canned food served (Canned Food Kills Boy in Forced Labor Camp Report Leaves Officials Blameless in This Killing and the De Noia Death By PASCUAL. NEW YORK.—Dominick Molletto, 21, went to one of Roosevelt's Forced Labor camps a tall strong and healthy boy. mother at 133 First Place, Brooklyn, Sunday, dead. Official indifference and negligence was the cause in the case of Benjamin De Nois, the boy killed by a falling tree, both cages the official report white-¢————_— He was brought back to his of his death just as But in in the But camp. 1 s_ doesn’t coxzern the of- President Rooszvelt, who. ting one of the sh irginia and eating alc, es and gravy from the| d the camp life De Nois doesn’t think it so wonderiul, Her boy was walking to work in the for forester left the tree half ui W when a state | he had sawed as the tree fell on her him to death. Fechner’s letter answering a tele- gram from the National Committee of Unemployed Councils absolves everyone irom blame. “’S’no right,” said the mother in her broken En- glish when the letter was read to her. “I want see right do, by my boy. I can’t talk, I can’t talk,” shej repeated over and over again, “I can’ tell you what is in my heart. T lose my boy, that’s all.” The undertaken is hounding her with a bill for $800 and Mrs. DeNois hasn’t a nickel or a piece of bread; for her famiiy of 12, But the National Committee of Unemployed Councils can di thing. In a statement i terday, the Committee say demand and will fight vo force the adequate government to provide ion for the imr a Neither Molletto, widow think the camps are so \ ° derful. She sits in her chair in silence. She says nothing as the oldest boy of the family of six, an- swers questions concerning the death. She gently rocks her body, and her eves fill with teer- rt) every mention of Dominick's nam Her head moves toward the tron room where the body of the boy rests in the open coffin. “My boy... he leave me, he was health,’” she whis- wered with a sorrowful smile, “an’ now ” and once again she looks toward the body. Columbia, ‘The capitalist press can say what it pleases and screen itself by dis- claiming responsibility for material in letters from readers. But the Daily Worker does not aim to con- fuse its readers, Rather does it aim to lead the workers in their strug- gles, and it can best do so by giving them an accurate factual picture of conditions which the workers meet. Liable as the “Daily” is to attack by enemies of the working class, it must verify as far as possible any statements of fact in its pages. In- deed the “Daily” has often pointed this out. If the toilet correspondent had carefully studied the situation he would have found plenty to complain about at Columbia. The administra- tion exploits its workers, numbering about 1500, as ruthlessly as any other boss. Wage cuts, layoffs and speeding up have abounded. Elevator oper- ators work 78 hours a week. During the past year, when the workers have been building organi- zation to fight these conditions, the administration has done everything it could to smash the organization, resorting to stool pigeons, third de- gree, and firing of union workers, Most recently, John Donovan, mil- itant student worker and president of the Social Problems Club, was. dismissed from the position upon which he depended to pay his tu- ition. The authorities fired Dono- van in June, when there were no students at the university to fight action, While this dirty deal was being put over the. Columbia brain trust Moley and Tugwell, were busy in Washington ballyhooing the N.R.A. and promising the workers their right to organize, ‘The attitude of the administration to students and faculty members who fight for their interests is just as “liberal” as the treatment given the workers. The cases of Reed Har- ris, expelled Spectator editor, and Grievances at Columbia Go Much Deeper Than the Toilets Elevator Operators Work 78 Hours a Week, Student: Worker Arbitrarily Fired BY A STUDENT CORRESPONDENT NEW YORK CITY.—In the August 3 issue of the Daily Worker there appeared a letter from a student correspondent condemning the conditions of the toilets at Columbia University. The statements in this letter were completely false. I have studied at Columbia for several years, The toilets are the only satisfactory things at % Donald Henderson, dismissed in- structor, are known well enough. But more has happened since. The discrimination against the Negroes is a burning grievance on the campus. The Daily Worker has already adequately handled that in its Aug. 10 issue, in the report of the World Problems Club. These conditions smell much worse than the I. R. T. latrines which the previous correspondent mentioned. But more and more workers, student workers, and students, express their determination to fight the adminis- tration and its repressive policies. The workers and student workers are learning to organize in spite of the administration spies. The Campus Workers’ Group, affiliated with the Food Workers Industrial Union, at 4 W. 18th St., is continually gaining new members. ‘The workers and students are on the way toward throwing the Columbia brain trust’s hypocritical promises back in their teeth and building powerful organi- vation in spite of the N.R.A. and its codes, Get in touch with the group and act organizationally, the only effect~ ive way, to get concessions from any boss, including the “Liberal” Uni- versity. —A Member = 8 (Editor’s Note: We are always glad when readers point out mis- takes we may have made, but we ask this writer on what authority he contradict us when it is the women’s toilets that the corres- Pondent wrote about? The woman student who wrote the original item, lists three buildings in which the toilets exactly fit the descrip- tion she sent in. They are East Hall, the Central Library Build- ing, and the School of Business. Now if there are any other ex- ceptions to be taken on this sub- ject, we offer to send two investi- gators to the campus, a man and a woman, to get the low-down on the subject first-hand. of the Group. . Seamen and Dockers Mobilize Forces for Code Hearings NEW YORK.—Delegates elected at meetings of seamen and long- shoremen will present the demands of the workers in various branches of the marine industry to the NRA officials in Washington on Monday, August ,21. The demands were drawn up at the national conven- tion of the MWIU in July, and came directly from the hundred rank and file marine workers who attended the convention. Delegations will go to Washington from New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore. They will carry with them thousands of endorsements from marine workers in those ports and others, and from ships sailing from every port in the United States, The delegations will be elected | at special mass meetings to be held} during the rest of this week, after | the long preparations that. have filled the time since the conven- tion > Delegates from New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore to Go to Washington to Present Workers’ Own Demands The delegation will carry the “code” or demands of the marine workers directly to the NRA of- ficials and the Shipping Board, which will probably be handed authority over the marine indus- try by the NRA bosses. The demands of the marine workers are not being presented as a “code” but as the minimum wages and working conditions which the workers will accept, and for which they are prepared to fight against every opponent. Because of the wide differences between the various crafts in the marine industry, the “codes” have been drawn up separately for long- shoremen, seamen and harborcraft workers. The fundamental demands of the “codes” are all much the same however. All demand the 8 hour day, and 40 hour week, with a guaranteed living for the work- ers in the industry to be supplied out of government and eaployerk funds if the industry does not pro. vide the guaranteed forty weeks work a year. The demands of the longshore- men call for a return of the wage cut put across by the ILA last fall, and a guarantee of 40 weeks at a minimum of 80 hours a week, with $30 a weekly minimum. The de- mands also call for an increased scale for handling war munitions, dangerous and noxious cargo. They demand that a “reserve” tax of one cent on every hundred pounds of cargo be set aside to pay un- employment insurance. he Harborworkers’ code, gov- erning towboats, also calls for the 8 hour day which will be a’ big reduction of their hours. The tow- boatmen now are working a ten hour day, and seldom get paid for any overtime at all. The seamen’s code calls for three watches on all ships, for a strict eight hour day and 40 hour week :for day workers aboard the ships. This applies especially to the stewards who often work six- teen or eighteen hours a day, Larger crews are demanded to make the eight hour day possible without speed up, and the wage ; onstration ,j |Mass Meeting Hears DAILY WORSER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1933 Farmer Kills Himself: Has No Means of Feeding 10 Children} CHISHOLM, Minn.—John Tanka, | a farmer of Balkan township, com- mitted suicide, as he could not see his family starving any longer. Tanko leaves 10 children. The county board shas been cutting re- lief because the metal mining com- panies controlled by the U. S. Ste: corporation are not paying their | taxes. | Gonshak Sentence Reduced io Eight Months by Board Arrested for Leading) Relief Demonstration NEW YORK, Aug. tence of Sam Gonsh: =—The sen- | uneniployed ted for leading a dem- Re St before the Home 4 at Spring and Elizabeth vas changed from two years to eigh: menths in the work house. Gon-|} shak was originally sentenced by the labor-hating Judge Thomas Aurelio, who invoked for this pur- pose the long unused Section 4 of the Parole Law. Over 100,000 signatures have al- ready been collected by the In- ternational Labor Defense on a etition demanding that Governor Lehman pardon Gonshak at onc? and remove Judge Aurelio. 500 MORE JOIN SLIPPER STRIKE: Union Orgaaizer NEW YORK. — At an overflow meeting of slipper workets which was held yesterday afternoon at Manhattan Lyceum, a report that an additional 500 workers have join- ed the strikers’ ranks was received with joyous cheering. The strike is conducted under the leadership of the Shoe and Leather Workers In- dustrial Union. Speakers at the mass meeting were the organizer Rosen- berg, Fred Biedenkapp, organizer of the Shoe and Leather Workers In- dustrial Union, the Italian organizer, and workers representing the shops on strike. It was brought out that not alone the bosses, but even the workers are amazed at the rapid growth of the strikers’ ranks. The names of 36 shops that are on strike was read, at the conclusion the work- ers from the floor called attention to new shops having joined the slipper workers’ union yesterday. “The strike has captured the workers’ imagina- tion,” Rosenberg said, “and our pick- et line is a guarantee for victory.” Biedenkapp’s speech was also re- ceived with great enthusiasm, It was brought out that out of town shops were neglected by the old unions. The industrial union hopes to bring these unorganized workers into the organization of the slipper workers. N. Y. Party District Invites All Workers to Italian Picnic NEW YORK.—The New York Dis- trict of the Communist Party issued a call inviting the workers to come out en-masse to the picnic Sunday, August 20th at Brandt Farm, for the benefit of the onl; i which leads the st ian workers again The picnic committee has announced an unusual program. Among the features there will be fireworks, Venetian illumination, sport contest, dancing, ete. Spaghetti will be served at depression prices. Wednesday ATTENTION Delegates to the Bro ville Daily Work: Committers. Mert. 1613 Pitkin Ave. Very important. All legates be cn time at & p.m. Pdaagor ete LECTURE ON NRA by J. Schuder, French Workers Club, 40 W, 65th St., 8:30 p.m. Adm. free. * OPEN AIR MEETING at E. 14th Street, Kings Highway, by Flatbush Workers Club. . * * SECTION COUNCIL LEAGUE of Workers ‘Theaters, Gene, Joe and Helen Make the Head By EDWARD NEWHOUSE \ lines , Financial Item Genial Gene Sarazen, inheritor of the Jones Imperial Mantle has ths $1500 Professional Golfers’ Association cup all polished and tucked away. The tournament netted him an extra $1000 in cash and many intangible thousands in publicity. financial column, we re; exhibition meet int: fered with his balked, squawked, to be precise, He Gsorge Jacobus, president of the Professional Golfers Association, countered with an ultimatum of his own. “You compete,” he said, “or your expense allowance for the next Ryder Cup match will be cut to the bone.” The appeal was strong. Gene acquiesced. He acquiesced and breezed through the opposition like Dudley, Farrell and Goggin. His statement, “Pretty good for an old man supposed to be all washed up,” made the sports pages. And now you and you will be buy- ing popular brands of cigarettes, shoes and sweaters because Sarazen happened to sink a putt on the thir- ty-second green and qualified to en- dorse them, Voice from the Depths “What we lost in a week, we can win back in a week,” states Joe Mc- Carthy, the Yankee boss. “We were only a game behind a week ago to- night and the big part of the Wash- ington lead has been picked up sin Why can’t we win it back? Why? Because Gomez, Ruffing and Allen can’t finish games, Ruth, Coombs, Lazzeri and Gehrig are tired, and of the younger men only Chapman, Dickey and Van Atta are coming through with championship stuff. . ee Etiquette While golfing, baseball and box- ing run along their worn and -well- established grooves, tennis is the one major sport registering progressive tendencies, Two years ago Helen Wills Moody blazed the trail by ap- pearing without stockings at Forest Hills and last season Bunny Austin staked out his pioneer’s claim by wearing shorts on court. Although the Deliberating Body of the West Side Tennis Club deliber- ated mildly against the principle of shorts, mass pressure by lady players with presentable stems caused a re- versal of decision. Miss Helen Jacobs, the femininely amazonian defending champion blushed and smiled graciously as she made her statement: “I talked to mother over the long distance phone to the Coast and she said it would be all right, but of course, I'll be a bit nervous at first. I think shorts look so nice. Don’t you?” A LETTE (By a Labor Sports Correspondent) FREE ACRES, N. J., Aug. 15.— More than 500 men, women, and children met; Sunday at Camp El- sinore, near Elizabeth, to attend op- ening exercises for the new swim- ming pool of the Workers’ Gymnastic and Sport Alliance of America. The pool is situated in the midst of beautiful woodland and is splen- didly built complete of concrete, All labor put into it from the digging to the casting of concrete was done by the worker sportsmen themselves, 14,000 hours of voluntary labor was put into the building of the pool, which has 72x30 foot swimming space and all appliances for conducting swimming contests and water sports games. Opening ceremonies were conduct- ed by Comrade Fritz Schade, chair- man of the New York district. In his speech he strongly stressed the [|| need for working class solidarity and STATIONERY and MIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES At Special Prices for Organizations Stencils $1.90 — Ink 85c lb. Phone ALgonquin 4-3356 — 8843 LERMAN BROS, Inc. 29 East 14th St. N. ¥. C, Tel.: Fordham 17-4011 BRONX WORKERS! PATRONIZE Columbus Steam Laundry Service, Inc. 2157 PROSPECT AVENUE BRONX A Laundry Workers Industrial Union Shop DOWNTOWN Grand Opening Wednesday, August 16th APEX CAFETERIA—Bar and Grill 827 Broadway, Between 12th and 13th Streets Eat Quality Food in Comfort SOUVENIRS TO ALL A FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION SHOP NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA ——~——_ Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 59 K. 18TH —————— ———:_>——== JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 seale of 1929 is demanded ST., WORKERS' CENTER-——— Phone: TOmpkins are 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES In the light of our deplorable lack of a suitable ister this entry. Gene didn’t want to enter the tournament. He was scheduled for an i tour with Joe Kirkwood, the trick shooter, and the P. Gi A, ||) plans, Also, he had little prostige to gain—cormpe- | | tition was hot and the Inheritor of the Mentle off his game. He demu . issued an ultimatum. ~ a unity for the achievement of such results. He was followed by a re- presentative of the Anti-Fascist Ac-, tion Committee who expressed the | freternal spirit between worker ath- j letes here and those suffering under the fascist regime in Germany. He appealed to all workers present ta pledge anew their support of thr fight against the murderous Hitlei regime and was warmly received by the audience. A series of exercises followed | Swimming and diving contests in singles between clubs were held and water polo games. | The Workers 'Gymnastic and ports Alliance is affiliated with the ocialist (Luzerne) International, but heated discussions are taking Place which will probably result in the transfer of the organization so the Labor Sports Union. Standing of the Clubs NATIONAL LEAGUE W.L. P.c. Club 63 43 594) Boston 61 48 .500| Phiinde}. 61 49 .550| Brooklyn 59 52 .536/ Cincinnati Club New York Pittsburgh Chicago St. Louis W.L. 58 52 "a 45 61 491 43 62.410 44 6T eas AMERICAN LEAGUE W.L. P.C. | Detroit 70 38 651 Club New York 64 43 .598| Chicago Philadel, G4 M0 .500| Boston 47 60 .444 Cleveland 53 £@ .482| St. Louls 42 71 .812 New York-St, Louis result not in, Club Washing. 54 Ot! 482 W.L. B.C. 51 SY 468 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Club W.L. P.c. Club Newark 82 54 .603| Montreal Rochester 73 64 Buffalo Baltimore 71 64 Albany Jersey City Toronto 69 6 507 54 BO 403 Inning-by-inning Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE R. Chicago ________000 100 000~1 Boston —______010 000 001— 3 i Bush and Hartnett; Cantwell and Spoh- rer, St. Louis 100 002 002-5 11 1 Philadelphia _____000 000 100-1 6 2° Hallahan and Wilson; Hansen and Davis. pecieriteoaslban a ray AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington — 000 003 020-5 9 0 Chicago —______910 000 000-1 9 1 Crowder and Sewell; Jones and Berry. Philadelphia "203 100 020-8 14 4 Cleveland 002 120 002-7 9 0 Grove and Cochrane; Ferrell and Spen- cer. Boston ——001 000 031-5 9 1 Detroit “101 001 000-3 9 3 H. Johnson and Ferrell; Marberry and Hayworth, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Newark 000 020 000-2 6 0 Toronto _______140 300 00x—8 13 1 Jablonowski and Kies; Birkofer and Hev- ft ing. Jersey city — Rochester Cascarella ence. 200 300 000-5 9 1¢ ; Lindsay and Flor- Don’t forget the International Labor De- fense Excursion, “All day on the Hudson,” on September 3rd. Se there with all your friends: Carriers Wanted for the Bronx, West Side down town New York and other parts of the cits. Call all week City Office, Daily Worker, 35 E. 12th St. (store). Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 1STH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 6-3 P.M, Hospital and Oculist Prescripti: At One-Half Price White Gold Filled Framea_____51.50 2¥L Shell Frames Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORchard 4-4520 ’ CLASSIFIED Furnished Rooms or Apartments Those seeking furnished rooms oF apartments will find the classified eol- umn of the ly” of special interest, Classified Ads 5 cents = word, BROOKLYN _ “Paradise” Meals for Proletarians Gar: Feins Restaurant 1626 PITKIN AVE., BKLYN | ER RE REESE Williamsburgh Comrades Weleome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave. Cor. - RVERY BITE A patteae 2 a wo 5 3 000 107 Olx—9 10 1|) uM \