The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 19, 1933, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 1938 Tuscaloosa Grand Jury Ready to White-Wash Lynch Leaders Sham Investigation Is “Unable to Discover Any Evidence” wo and a half Scottsboro k The Grand judge Hi © permit end the victims ng in court on ganized an attempt to lynch them. Chief witnesses are Sheriff R. L Shamblin, directly responsible for the ynehings, and Private Detective W. | '. Huff, «and deputies Murray Pate | nd H. W. Ho! 5 he Negro boys wh THE LYNCHERS DO THEIR DUTY He did-not want another Scotts- oro defense, which has saved the ives of nine boys four times. that he would not. It was fortunate that the train arrived almost im- mediately.” 3 His first announcement, Sunday,} Later, Major Jemison, having con- after the lynchings, was that he had | ferred with his boss, said the mob not ordered the three taken out of | was “very gentlemanly and coopera~ Tuscaloosa jail. Sheriff Shamblin}|tive.” , witness iSO. The foreman'of the Grand Jury is Seaborn E. Deal, wealthy lumber- nan of Tuscaloosa. The other mem- ers, all business and professional | white men, are from among the | ‘vhite rulers who engineered the tynching. | Sheriff Shamblin he will protect h imit in the investigation. “Of course ‘ve are and will be condemned for the regrettable occurrence,” he told newspapermen. Sclicitor Edw has announced deputies to the rd De Graffenreid, | vidence” to the id in regard to clues that indictment.” tective and two de- y “were unable to mbers of the band,” tell the plate num- ing the lynch- r he Hittle hope of TL nor could the; hers of the cars co: ers Sheriff Shamblin announced, al-j| thevgh the Grand Jury visited the Spot where the two were murdered, that “throngs of spectators obliter- ated foot; ts or other possible marks of identifica ig Judge Foster explained the lynch- | ing with the public statement that “Tuscaloosa County was willing to| s2e the Negroes tried and w will- i them a fair trial, but} ling to have us $0 through another Scottsboro case.” | He explained this unwillingness by | citing the raising by the Internation- | £1 Labor Defense of the question of | the civil rights of Negroes, at| Decatur. | For the purpose of giving them a “fair trial,” he organized lynch-s against the boy's defenders, nounced pe! ily in the courtroom he would il ‘ the a-bitch” who sent him a tele; protesting g of the LL.D. at- pointed the most lawyers to be found “defend” the munity to 8 y to the state.” 119 THIRD AVENUE Near 1ith St. TOmpkins Sq. 6-4547 | ALI KINDS OF ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty * Russia? Workers needing full outfits of horse- hide leather sheeplined Coats, Wind- | breakers, Breeches, High Shoes, etc., will receive special reduction on all their purchzses at the Square Deal ARMY and NAVY STORE, 121 THIRD AVE. | (2 doors South of 14th Street) Also Full Line of Camp Equipment HUDSON Army and Navy Store THIRD AVENUE Between 12th and 13th eet TENTS, COTS, BLANKETS, HIK- ING CLOTHES, CAMP ‘EQUIP- MENT, COOKS AND WAITERS’ SUPPLIES—LOWEST PRICES | GARMENT DISTRICT — OUMm aS Phones: Chickering 4917—Longacre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA (41156 W. 29th St. New York Garment Section Workers Patronize avarr Cafeteria 533 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. a a however, said the Judge had given | the order, the next day Foster ad-| mitted that he had. 4 On Sunday, after the murder of Pippen and Harden, Deputies Pate | and Holeman, apparently drunk with | blood, shot to death Jim Pruitt, a| Tuscaloosa Negro tenant-farmer who | had dared to resist an attack upon | him by his white landlord, H. R.| Bambarger. | No mention of this “incident which | stirred the quiet of Tuscaloosa fol- | lowing the lynchings” (quotation | tom the Birmingham Post, Aug. 14), | was made before the Grand Jury. | After Allan Taub, Irving Schwab, and Frank B. Irwin, LL.D. attorneys, had been driven out of Tuscaloosa August 1, by the Judge, a group of prominent white citizens, “best people” of this “center of Alabama culture,” and the szyational Guard, Major Torrey Jemison, in charge of the Guardsmen, said: “I have no doubt but that the mob would have attacked within a few minutes. They were crowding around us. I tried to. reason with them, but they would not listen.” He ordered his troops to fix bay- onets. Tear gas was thrown. “It was the first time I had cocked my pistol and made ready to fire since I left the Mexican border,” he told Chief of police McDuff of Bir- mingham. “I would have had to shoot the best friend I had in Tuscaloosa. He was the leader of the mob. I called to him and told him that it would mean trouble if the mob attacked. He wouldn't listen. prepared to fire at him, although we were raised together. I told him that the mob might get these men but | | | | | Has this “leader” of the small group of leading citizens of Tusca- yloosa, bent on lynching, been called ‘to the Grand Jury to testify? It is not recorded. According to the sheriff’s story, a decoy car was ‘sent déwn the main road to Birmingham, ahead of the car carrying the three prisoners. It came back and later, the car with, the three prisoners handcuffed in the back seat, and a private detective and two deputies sitting in front, trailed by another car loaded with deputies, was sent down another road, an unfrequented back road. Twenty miles out of Tuscaloosa, the convoy was sent back. Twenty miles further down, they said, their road was blocked by two cars. Twelve masked men jumpea out and de- manded the prisoners. They were turned over, the sheriff's deputies said, without resistance. Ten hours later, the bodies of two of them were found, riddled with bullets, by the roadside a few miles away. This “abduction,” if there was one, occurred in Jefferson county. But the local solicitor announced there would be no Grand Jury investiga- tion there. The murder occured in Bibb county. There is no Grand Jury investigation there. In Tuscaloosa county, it is easier to control the investigation, to prevent embarrassing testimony from crop- ping up. Now behind the barbed-wire en- tanglements, guarded by 100 Tusca- loosa national guardsmen, a lily- white Grand Jury is conducting a | farcical “investigation” into a lynch- ing, under the personal direction of the lynchers. Young Communist League Week BEACON, New York City Phone EStabrook 8-1400 Camp Phone Beacon 731 Spend YOUR Vacation in Our Proletarian Camps (GOTTLIE'S HARDWARE NITGEDAIGET | UNITY WINGDALE New York | | Proletarian Atmosphere, Healjhy Food, Warm and Cold Showers, Bathing, Rowing, NEWLY BUILT TENNIS COURT IN‘ NITGEDAIGET Athletics, Sport Activities Vacation Rates: $13.00 per a (INCLUDING TAX) WEEK-END RATES : 1 Day... . $2.45 2 Days . 4.65 (including tax) CARS LEAVE FOR CAMP from 2700 Bronte Park East every day at 10 a.m. m., Stop at Allerton Avenue. ROUND TRIP: to Nitgedaiget ... $2.00 to Unity ..... $3.00 Friday and Saturday 10 a. m., 3 p. Plains Road Express. p. m—Take Lexington Avenue White Tel.: Fordham 7-4011 2157 PROSPECT AVENUE BRONX WORKERS! Columbus Steam Laundry Service, Inc. A Laundry Workers Industrial Union Shop PATRONIZE BRONX, N DOWNTOWN All Comrades NEW HEALTH CE Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 52 Meet at the NTER CAFETERIA . 18TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER. | JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrade: Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radical: 302 E. 12th ‘St. Worker Center Comrades Welcome Jniversal Cafeteria NIVERSITY PLACE Corner 11th Strect E CLASSIFIED Furnished Rooms or Apartments Those seeking fur: apartments will find umn of the “Daily” of Classified Ads 5 cents » word, hed rooms oF classified col- FURNISHED ROOM WANTED, male worker, downtown. Write particulars, L, D., care Daily Worker, LEGANTLY FURNISHED ROOM, double- onth; West ind Bay View Place, Brooklyn, to Unionize Saloons | Yorkville Organizer |Killed inFakeParadise Club Strike NEW YORK. — The Bartenders’ | Benevolent and Protective Association jof the A. F. of L. whose organizer was shot and killed last week in | Yorkville is being characterized to the bosses dS a “racketeer gang” by | the police, it was learned yesterday. | The “union” operates by means of | delegates who force acceptance of} | the union Without calling a strike or | organizing the workers, | This same method was employed | at the Paradise Club, 1576 Third Ave. | out of which the shooting arose. The so-called union delegate tried to make a deal with Max Luria, the owner, to have him accept the union and to fire his present bartenders and rehire other union henchmen they would select. His bartenders were urged to accept the organizers’ proposition. But when Luria told them the union’s Proposition they made to him they re- fused to join. Pickets were immediately tioned in front of the club. evening the organizer Maher was talking to them. A policeman told them to keep moving. Maher heat- edly opposed the cop and was ar- rested. On the way to the police | station he tripped the cop and started wrestling with him. Maher was killed in the scuffle when he at- tempted to reach for the cop’s gun. U.S. Lawyer Barred from Seeing Torgler. | sta- One (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) of this Nazi hireling that he hadn’t even read the indictment against his “clients.” “Couldn't Speak Frankly.” | Neither permission to see Torgler | and the other defendants, nor the | opportunity to read the indictment was obtainable, Teichert told Hays, | “without authorization from the High Court at Leipzig.” | Realizing that Teichert’s role was | not that of an energetic defender, Hays nevertheless informed the lawyer that there were a number of Germans in Paris who were eager to > be witnesses for the defense. Hays said he desired to take their testi- mony in the form of a deposition, and asked Teichert if he could give him “any suggestions”, The attorney assigned to “defend” Torgler, Dimitrov and the others had “no suggestions”. Weary of Teichert’s hedging, Hays sought—through the American con- sul—to get in touch with President Buenger of the High Court in Leip- zig. The same evasive tactics were resorted to by Buenger. Through the U. S. consul, according to Hays, he stated that he wished first to “con- fer with his colleagues’, and again that he “would not state whether or not he would see me.” Writes to “High Court.” Hays thereupon addressed a formal communication to the “High Court” in Leipzig. After declaring that he is an American lawyer admitted to the bar of the State of New York and the Supreme Court of the United States, Hays told of his power of at- torney from Dimitroff, Popoff and Taneff. “As I am an American lawyer, not | admitted to practice in German courts,” Hays wrote, “I understand it will not be possible for me directly to handle the defense of the accused. There are ways nevertheless in which a foreign lawyer may be useful.” Hays thereupon made the follow- ing requests of the Leipzig court: 1. For a copy of the official charges against the defendants; 2. Permission to see and confer with the defendants. The lawyer further wrote that he is informed that “there is evidence to be obtained on behalf of the defense from German refugees in foreign countries. I request that your court permit and direct that I have the opportunity to obtain such evidence | and the assistance of the lawyers as- signed to the défense in connection with obtaining and properly present- ing the same.” To Attend Hague “Trial”, Although Hays sent this letter to the Leipzig court on August 8, im- Mediately after his visit with Teich- ert, the German lawyer, no reply has as yet been forthcoming from the fascist tribunal. Hays said that he would join the European lawyers at the international trial at The Hague, organized by Romain Rolland and other intel- lectuals which is scheduled to open simultaneously with the frame-up trial of Torgler and the other de- fendants.+ | Lynching Protests Increase; Governor Miller Is Swamped NEW YORK.—Cables for the rousing of world-wide protest against the lynching of Dati Pip- pen, Jr., and A, T. Harden have been sent to European centers by the International Labor Defense, it was announced by Frank Spector, assistant national secretary of the | organization, . . BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — “Judge Foster, Solicitor De Graffenreid, Atty. Gen. Knight, and Gov. Mil- ler,” the Birmingham News says today, “have been swamped with letters and telegrams since the slaying of the two Negroes Sun- day, many of which demand that the Clarke Negro be released im- mediately and that -Tuscaloosa County officials be indicted for the murder of Pippen and Harden.” ORGANIZATIONS MUST The Trade Union Unity Councli asks all organizations to settle for jienic tickets, Funds are needed for numerous strikes now conduct- ed under its leadership. Bring money to 799 Broadway, Room 238. | A. F. of L. Committee for Unemploy- ‘Student Club Shows | trial Union, discontinued their ne- Police Admit AFL Is 400 Workers Cheer ‘in Gangster Drive Weinstock’s Attack’ on NIRA. Evils | “Workers Must Take| Rights,” He Says in Debate NEW YORK, Aug. 18.—The first | Public debate on the N. R, A. in this city held in Irving Plaza last night }ended in a decisive defeat for Presi- | dent Roosevelt's so-called Industrial | Recovery Act. About 400 workers, most of them | |members of trade unions, applauded i} | |and cheered Louis Weinstock when | he attacked the N, R. A. as depriving | the workers of their basic rights, and called on all labor to organize under militant leadership for compelling the bosses to improve working conditions. | Isadore A. Blanche, attorney, who favored the N. R. A., caused much | laughter among the workers when he insisted that the N. R. A. puts the | American government and law on the side of the working class against the | employers. | Weinstock blasted this claim by | citing what happened in the coal | fields and other industrial areas where striking workers were forced to return to work under the old condi- | tions by the N. R. A. Board. Considerable commotion arose when Blanche declared, “As long as capi- talism exists the N. R. A. is a safe- guard for the workers. You can’t | abolish capitalism, can you?” The workers answered him in an | uproar, “Yes, we can, and we will?” Weinstock called upon the workers to demand Federal Unemployment | Insurance, shorter hours, increased | wages. “The only way the working | class can gain its rights,” he declared, “is by taking them through organized struggle.” The debate was sponsored by the | ment Insurance, of which Weinstock is the National Secretary. Max} Boardman presided. | ColumbiaUniversity | HasJim-CrowPolicy, NEW YORK, Aug. 18—A delega- tion selected at the symposium on the “Way Out for the Negro” held last Friday night at Columbia Uni- versity, visited Director Coss yester- day and presented him with evidence | that Jim Crow discrimination was | being practiced in the halls of the; University. | Despite the evidence presented by the delegation pointing out that six | University dormitories do not admit any Negro women students, although ; 200 Negro women students attend the summer sessions, Director Coss de- | nied that the University has a policy | of discrimination against Negro stu- | dents, | The delegation presented evidence of the 4,500 positions in the Univer- sity, none are filled by Negroes. They also showed that Negro women stu- dents are barred by prejudice from | using the campus swimming pool, as | well as from all University dances, | student organizations, and general social activity. Protests are being organized by the World Problems (Cosmopolitan) Club and the National Student League. Issue. Warning Against Overtime | The Fur Department of the/| Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union issued 2 warning to all fur} manufacturers against forcing | workers to work overtime, in a leaflet widely distributed in the | fur market today. | The union has taken this step to enforce its agreement with the manufacturers and to assure more| work for the numbers of fur work- | ers still unemployed. Manufacturers | violating this rule will have fines | imposed and their shops declared| on strike. Workers will also be called to the union’s grievance! board if found working overtime. Platemakers Plan | General Strike’ NEW YORK—A strike commit- tee of platemakers, elected at aj recent membership meeting will meet today at the headouar’ of the Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- trial Union to make all necessary preparations for a general strike. The pletemakers, affiliated with the Needle Trades Workers Indus- gotiations with the employers’ as. sociation when the association re- fused to grant their demands. The strike is being called to gain week work in the trade, to establish mini- mum scale of $35 a week, the 40 hour week and the right to the job. Gralton, Irish Red Leader, Lands Sunday NEW YORK—Jim Gralton, re- volutionary farmer deported from Ireland by the De Valera govern- ment of the Irish Free State, will be greeted by committees of the Garlton Defense Committee, Irish Workers’ Club and supporting bo- dies when he steps off the Brittanic at Pier 60, foot of W. 20th St. this Sunday. The veteran working class fight- er, who was ‘banished from his birthplace without trial or criminal charge against him because he or- ganized neighbors to resist evic- tions, will speak at a mass meéting at Lexington Hall, 109 E. 116th St., at 8 p.m. Thursday, August 24. The. committee is flooding the city with protest leaflets. It urges Trish workers especially to call for | School and the Workers Book Shop. | furnish music and a movie will be City Events J. Boatride Sunday to Hook Mountain NEW YORK.—The New York Dis- | |trict of the Friends of the Soviet Union will hold a boat ride to Hook | Mountain Sunday, August 20. At/| Hook Mountain there will be tennis, baseball and swimming matches, fol- lowed by a moonlight sail down the Hudson. The boat starts Sunday morning at 10 a. m. from pier 11, East River, at the foot of Wall Street. Tickets Sk Broun on Marx, Gehrig and Newhouse By EDWARD NEWHOUSE Mr. Heywood Broun of the New York World-Telegram | yesterday contributed a column of amusing and restrained if not excruciatingly astute, comment on this department. ScAthe tein ate: $1 dot adulia; SNe for | Karl Marx, avers the former Socialist candidate and children. . Tickets are on sale at the| musical comedy impresario, would not approve. An investi- FSU, 799 Broadway, the Workers | gation by the Communist Party’s Central Executive Commit- | tee is sanguinely predicted. | “Those of us who believe in the | inevitability and imminence of the | cooperative commonwealth,” notes | the inclusive columnist, “have gone | around assuring ourselves that the individual doesn’t matter. Economic | determinism governs the tides of | mankind and leaders come upon the | Stage not of their own volition but according to their cues. The mass makes the master spirit and not vice versa.” | In point of fact, those of us who | believe in the inevitability and immi- |nence of the cooperative common- > — opportunity to comment on a ten- dency certainly not peculiar to Mh. Broun, but eminently represented b: him, This is in reference to the in-' variable inaccuracy of the entertain- ingly fantastic tales he runs about Earl Browder, Bob Minor and Mike Gold. Coincidentally, I happen to have ben present at the scene of ac- | tion every time to witness the frag- | ments of raillery on which the chi- maeras are based. They were, I sub- mit, chimaeras of the first water. Not so hard to “class-angle,” either. No, comrade, There'll be no Cen- tral Committee investigations. And Carnival Tonight to Aid Hitler Victims NEW YORK.—The local Commit- tee to Aid the Victoms of German Fascism will hold a mid-summer Carnival Saturday at 8 p. m.at Gol- den City Park, Brooklyn. The Work- ers Laboratory Theater will present a program, the W. I. R. Band will presented by the Film and Photo League. Alfred Wagenknecht of the National Committee to Aid the Vic- tims of German Fascism will be the main speaker. Proceeds of the affair will go to the victims of the Hitler Terror. Hold Party for “Furniture Worker” wealth have not gone around or even sat around assuring ourselves of any such thing. The individual does matter. Some individuals don’t, but that category includes neither Babe Ruth nor Heywood Broun. The theory to which Mr. Broun | refers is the apparently none too! basing | as for the solicitude about “when a | Communist starts out on an enter- prise without the support of texts from book and chapter there is no | telling what may happen to him,” I reckon I'll take my chances. Mr. Broun makes a mistake in his judgments on the Furniture workers will celebrate | wide-spread one which points out! physiques of the cafeteria “Commu- the re-appearnce of their union) that the individual is a social product nists” he’s accustomed to associating paper, the Furniture Worker, on) and xeacts on his environment. “The, with. Hell, Marx and Liebknecht, so !ters and machinists club to discuss ‘aid and trade union organizations. SLIPPER STRIKE | calling for the reinstatement of the | | strike committee prevented a group | , terday. RESTAURANT Saturday, August 19, at 8 p. m., at| the home of Comrade Gilbman, 2131 Vyse Ave., Bronx, Apartment 7. All| workers are invited to attend. Attention, Carpenters mass Makes the master spirit” and py heard, used to just polich up their vice versa. Babe Ruth not only hasn’t “Knocked Karl Marx out of the box” but doesn’t even “have him bearing down.” Sports writers, we took occasion to observe, create mythical figures as a | control heaving bricks at policemen. Standing of the Clubs NATIONAL LEAGUE ‘ an] i club W.L.P.C.| Club W. L. PG. A mass meeting of carpenters will| Matter of daily bread and butter. New York 66 43 .606| Boston 60 52 sll be hsld on Sunday August 20,1; fading of Ruth, publlety men and| nes” 631 0| roan, 14 $8 ah at Brownsville Labor Lyceum, 219) 2008 © oe eg St.Louis 62 53 [339 | Cincinnett 44 70 1 Sackman St., Brooklyn, N. Y. The meeting is arranged by the carpen-| | | Gehrig’s sterling qualities. so Hungry Lou's biography runs in} work | ballyhooters come to a realization of The not “Liberty,” and statisticians St. Louis at Phila., AMERICAN LEAGUE Postponed, rain, the problems confronting the car- ; | Club W.L.P.C.{ Club W. L. P; overtime to establish new records for washing. 14 86 .661| Detroit 56 89 .4{f Lacaholy vale see cates alin Gs him, | New York 65 45 .591| Chicago 51 61 .4! | Philadel. 56 55 495 | Boston 49 62 atl In this Mr. Broun detects the sug-| Cleveland 58 59 .496| St. Louls 44 72 340 Italian Pienie Sunday for “L’Unita’ Operaia” gestion that “Mr. bg har has called! Mr. Rockefeller on the telephone to say, ‘John, we had better build up New York, St. Louis, result not in. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE i italist sy: Newark 82.56 .504{ Albany 65.72 474 NEW YORK.—Charles Krumbein, | Te AGeisEa eer ae ene Pal Rochester 76 64 .543 ies bas 5 a istrict Organi i 2 | Baltimoer 73 65 '529| Buffalo “471 District Organizer of the Communist! “yo. Doesn't work that way. Mak- |oronto 172 67 .519/ Jerseycity 54 83 394 Party will speak at the Italian work- ers picnic arranged by the Perman- ent Conference for the Building of “L’Unita Operia” into a daily weapon of struggle. The picnic will take place Sunday, August 20, from 10 a.m. to 10 p. m. at the Brandt Farm. This Sunday has been named Red Italian Sunday by the Permanent Conference, which is composed of re- presentatives of 14 cultural, mutal Take Jerome Ave. subway to end, Buses will go from there to picnic Due to an error, a notice for a Section 5 Y. C. L. functionaries meeting was inserted in yesterday’s “Daily” announcing a meeting for NEW YORK.—The strike of the New York slippers workers spread to New Jersey yesterday when 250 work- ers in one of the largest slipper shops | in the state, the Central Slipper Co.) of Bayonne joined the strike. The strikers walked out when the com-j pany fired several workers and are discharged workers and improve-| ments in their working conditions.) Two workers were arrested when the strikers massed on the picket line. Prompt action of members of the | | | of bosses’ gangsters from provoking trouble at strike meetings of the Astor and Champion shoe shops yes- STATIONERY and WHEOGRAPH SUPPLIES At Special Prices for Organizations Phone ALgonquin 4-3356 — 8843 Lerman Bres., Inc. 29 East 14th St. N. ¥. C, BROOKLYN for Brownsville Workers! Hoffman's &% CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner Saratega Aves. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE Orders Taken for All Occasions WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE supplies at 40 W, 65th St. Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. ing allowances for the fact that the implication-detector has until re- cently been a Socialist Party member and isolated from contact with Marxian theory, we insist, vitupera~ tively insist, that he ought to know| better. Sports writers are not necessarily aware of the manner in which they fit into the scheme. They need have} no trace of sinister intent. To keep their jobs they have to have some- thing to write about and they pick on things which they figure will most it wants. They're giving it some- thing it has been educated to want. Writers write, heroes are created, customers pay. The fact that base- ball magnates skim the cream off all As an aside, I'd like to seize the on Way to Get a Job, JEFFERSONVILLE, Vt.—Ray- mond Scott, 44, of this city was killed by a train of the New York Central. Scott, who was unemploy- ed, met with the same fate as so mahy other unemployed workers on the road seeking employment. He was on his way to Rochester, where he was supposed to have a job. Both his legs were severed, the left just below the knee, and the right above the ankle. He was con- scious when picked up and he stated that he had been hitch-hik- ing all over in search of a job. | WILLIAM BELL Optometrist SS 103 EAST. TH STREET Near Fourth Ave, N. Y. C. Phone: Tompkins Square 6-8237 Alg. 4-9519 Strictly by appointment Dr. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST #53 BROADWAY Suite 1007-1008 Cor. 1th St. New York Office Phone: Estabrook 8-2573 Home Phone: Olinville 5-1109 DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2571 WALLAVE ave! Albany, Toronto (2nd) result not in Newark at Montreal, night game. Baltimore at Rochester, night game. Jersey City at Buffalo, night game. Inning-by-Inning Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE R.H.E. Cincinnati .....000 000 001—1 10 0 New York ......101 010 0lx—4 13 1 Lucas and Lombardi; Fitzsimmons and Mancuso. Chicago -310 £30 0O— 410 1 grounds. By auto take Sawmill River! effectively strike an audience condi-| Boston . .201 (90 000— 3 9 3 Road to Odell Ave. tioned and prepared by a multitude] Root N and Hartnett; Betts STP RENE PT of factors. and Spohrer. CORRECTION They're not giving the public what Pe AMERICAN LEAGUE R. -004 000 000 2—6 Washington 002 010 100 O—4 1 H.E. 1 Chicago 0 9 0 Spencer. | +s _ Philadelphia ...100 202 oa rh } 3 ; Detroit ........ 001 104 10x—" SPRE ADS TO N J | Killed by Train; Was ‘Mahaffey and Cochrane; Sorrell 5 Berea and Hayworth, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE * R.ELE. Albany .000 030 002—5 6 0 Toronto 023 010 00x— 6 1 1 Prim, Porter and Phelps; Fraser, Marrow and Heving. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman MOT THAVEN 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis, Avenue) PATRONIZE Friedland’s Pharmacy 118th St. and Park Ave. SPECIALLY REDUCED PRICES to comrades who mention the “Dally Worker” corner Allerton Avenue ronx, N. ¥. This is the NEW Portable SPARTAN Rotary f Stencil Duplicator instruction bocklet. UNION SQUARE 108 East 14th Street EVERY ORGANIZATION CAN NOW HAVE A STENCIL DUPLICATOR!! All Mimeograph Supplies at Reduced Prices ALgonquin 4-4763 MIMEO SERVICE New York City Saturday. This notice was repested | his ferment is not the fault of either| Thomas and Sewell; Miller and from last week. There will be no| tne writers, the fans, or, for that| Berry. 6 meeting today. matter, the moguls themselves. It] Boston ....... 51 just works that way and it’s no/ Cleveland -000 002 00x—2 7 0 damn good. Rhodes and Ferrell; Harder and SHeepshead 3.40447 $ 5 ° Ny Nigberg’s Bakery $217.52 osx : " and Lunch Room Y Lider aes i ' FREE EQUIPMENT: 6 stencils, ¥%2 1b. black ink, cloth ink pad, ink | 314 Brighton Beach Avenue }}| brush, stylus, correction fluid, writing plate, rubberold cover and an | ~

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