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b MILWAUKEE, Wis., Aug. 23.—A movement has developed to recall from | ‘ AAACN Domne « Page Two SOCIALIST MAYOR ASKS 25 PER CENT WAGE CUT 10 MEET BANK LOANS Recall of Mayor Hoan Pressed by Real Estate| Cliques Demanding More Wage Cuts and Rivals for Political Plums Mayor Hoan, Socialist Mayor for the last seventeen years. Hoan joined the Socialist Party under the guidance of the late Victor Berger, | Socialist Representative in Congress. | Hoan’s friends say that the movement has been initiated by real estate in their® ae dealers who are behind taxes. | Actually, the movement is being| led by two groups. One is the Real Estate crowd whose appetite for wage cuts in the City payroll has been whetted by Hoans’ apparent | willingness to guarantee the pay-| ments to the bankers. The other | group is the clique of city politi-| cians who are fighting with the Hoan machine for places on the| payroll. | Anti-Deportation | Meeting August 26) | NEW YORK-—A New York con- ference of representatives of organi- | zations to plan work for the pro- tection of foreign-born workers ¥ 7 against the terror drive which is| Cut ‘Wages Por intensifying under Roosevelt and Recently the Socialist administra-| Perkins’ N.R.A. will be held Satur- tion led by Hoan, instituted a “vol- | day, August 26, at one o’clock, in untary” ten per cent cut in the| Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St. wages of city employees. | The conference, to which all organi- According to the World-Telegram | zations of workers are urged to send Hoan then proposed that all city| representatives, is called by the New workers be put on a thirty hour|York District Committee for the week, with a per cent cut in|Protection of the Foreign Born. wages. In defense of this wage-| “Deportation for American born cutting measure, Hoan claimed that] and naturalized citizens is not a re- the city would be able to hire 2,500! mote idea,” T. J. McHenry, national | more work It was clear that|secretary of the committee said to- Hoan wes proposing the “stagger/day. “Only a firm resistance to plan” for the City employees. |the deportation terror against the| Protects Bankers foreign-born can prevent this de- Meanwhile, the city’s treasury was ning low, Hoan and his Social- administration were confronted rnatives, either to pay ru ist with two al the interest to the bankers on their loans, or to reduce the wages of employ Hoan chose the g the months June, the ci! hile the loa: bankers were paid. Hoan proposed to pay the work- ers in scrip. His plan was not ac- cepted. Hoan and his administration h rted to ave uance of bonds to} sifying crisis in the But this has placed the City even more firmly in the grip of the bankers. Many demonstrations unem- ployed workers demanding that all payments to the bankers be stopped | in order to pay adequate relief and to avoid wage cuts, have been club-| bed by the Milwaukee police at the| orders of Socialist Police Chiefs in| the Hoan administration. of On NRA to Protest High Dues of ILGW 10 Open Shops Strike Again to Enforce Agreement NEW YORK—A march of 200 pressers to N. R. A. headquarters at the Hotel Pennsylvania to protest against the exorbitant dues de- manded by the International officials before jobs are made available marked the high point in the devel- opments in the dress strike situation yesterday. The march was led by the Needle Trades Unemployed Council. Dressmakers in ten more open shops struck again when bosses refused to grant conditions on the basis of the terms of the strike set- tlement. The dressmakers came to the strike halls o f the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union for assis- tance in gaining the conditions promised in the agreement. therefore cannot raise wages. At the same time settlements in more than 20 shops were effected through the Industrial Unions resulting in real gains for the workers. Pressers, many of them jobless for @ long period and starving, joined the march to the N. R. A. headquar- yesterday after officials of the . G. W. U. demanded a sum of $76.50 for a union book and a job. @ first payment $26.50 is de- manded by the officials In addition workers are compelled to appear before a special board and if they are not found satisfactory to the Board they may lose their $26 and ra A. F. of L. bureaucracy in fieecing the workers. The finishers are also being held up for dues, and are being forced to pay $19.50 for a union book and a job. At N. R. A. headquarters at the -*Kener refused to believe the pressers and demanded affidavits in proof. two hours fifty affidavits were sworn out by pressers testifying to the racketeering activities of the I. L. G. W. officials, Kener promised some action. An outraged rank and file presser, when asked for his $26.50 «the I. L. G. W. headquarters yestera, ~+eplied by giving Breslau, the man. 7; of the union and one of the chief rack- eteers, a good panning. | Another demonstration of pressers ‘will take place tomorrow at the Hotel Pennsylvania to demand that Kener keep his promise. The United Association of Dress Manufacturers the contractors of the dress industry, are reported to} have ratified the dress strike settle- ment after having agreed provision- ally to 35 per cent for overhead and | profit to be paid by the jobber. This | agreement between the jobbers and contractors remains in effect for two ‘weeks, after which a permanent fig- ure will be set, i b | about a link between four or six city |velopment. American workers. and especially Negroes, should be vitally | interested in this question. The comment was made on the! basis of the Fish Committee to the jlast congress, and of more recent statements by Ex-Police-Commis- sioner Mulrooney, now head of the state beer commission. | Organizations are urged to send donations with their delegates, to |help the fight against the deporta- | tion of such militant working-class fighters as Jack Schneider, of the | Needle Trades Union, Frank Borich, |secretary of the National Miners’ Union, Antonoff and William Zazu- \liak of the Auto Workers Union, |and others, in the statement issued by McHenry. | PAINTERS REJECT, MOVE FOR TAX NEW YORK.—A revolt against |the high handed action of Painters’ District Council officials in putting jover a 50 cent daily tax on the membership among other decisions made at the recent Mecca Temple meeting is growing apace as local after local refuses to accept the de- cisions. The latest local to act is Paint- ers local 499, which unanimously adopted a protest against the Dis- trict Council’s action at its last membership meeting, and forwarded this protest to the General secre- tary of the Union with the demand | that the District Council be restrain- jed from all actions based on the decisions. The protest by Local No. 499 charges that the office of District Council No. 9, “intentionally chang- ed the order of propositions to be voted upon with the purpose of con- fusing the membership . that the vote on the propositions was taken following a disturbance caus- ed by Vice-President Ackerly at- tempting to speak, a disturbance which was used, under the pretext of creating order, to beat up some of the members and to intimidate the majority into voting for the propositions, without the member- ship knowing exactly what they |trict of the I. L. D. was chairman. How to Help Build the Daily Worker If you are already a reader of the Daily Worker, 1—Induce your fellow workers, in | the shop and your neighborhood to start reading the “Daily” and make arrangements with the newsstands for as many orders as you secure, and notify us about the address, so that we may deliver them. 2—Papers can also be delivered to | homes by carriers at the rate of 18 cents per week. 3—Secure steady donations even for the smallest amoynt of 10 cents per week, for the paper's sustaining fund of the Daily | Worker. 4—Write in suggestions to improve the “Daily” and how to distrib- | ute it, | S=Join the Dally Worker Votwn- | teers! | 2,000 Gather In Sacco-Vanzetti | Memorial Meeting Police Smash Meeting In Providence; 6,000 Gather There NEW YORK, Aug. 23.— Two thousand workers gathered in Union | Square Tuesday in a mass memorial meeting to the memory of Sacco and Vanzetti on the sixth anniver- sary of their legal murder in Boston. After standing in the Square for over two hours at the meeting con- ducted by the anarchist and I. W- W. groups, the workers joined the demonstration called by the Inter- national Labor Defense at 7.30 p.m. Protest against the frame-up of Terzani, anti-fascist worker charged with murder, was voiced by both demonstrations. The I. L. D. demonstration marched to 13th Street and Avenue A th the Italian section where a huge demonstration was held. Hun- dreds of workers accompanied the parade along the sidewalks as it marched to this district. Many Italian workers came out from the tenement houses to listen to the speakers in English and Italian. Among the speakers were DeBartelo, editor of ‘“L’ Unita Operia”, Valloni of the Terzani De- fense Committee, present when the Khaki Shirts killed Anthony Fierro in Queens, and Griffin, Negro work- er affiliated with the I. L. D. Sam Stein of the New York Dis- Many workers joined the I. L. and pledged their support in carry- ing on the struggle against the growing fascist offensive in Am- erica. * ‘ * PROVIDENCE, R. L., Aug. 28— Police broke up a Sacco-Vanzetti demonstration of 6,000 workers here Tuesday, arresting Anna’ Bloch, Dave Glass of the Young Commu- nist League, John Edmond, local unemployed leader and Leonard Carbone. Anna Bloch: and Leonard Car. bone were due to be tried Wednes- day for speaking without a permit last Thursday. A group of fifty police from every precinct of the city clubbed both women and children in smash- ing the meeting. Dave Glass was beaten unconscious with blackjacks in the hands of the police and Anna Bloch was badly bruised. Death Rate Lower. NEW YORK—Dr, Shirley W. Wynne, Health Commissioner, stated today that the death rate in New York City last week of 7.46 per 1,000 population was the lowest of any reno ONO Gutters of New York “The city is sick”, says Mr. Untermeyer. provides the basis for a correct diagnosis. DAILY WORKER, NRW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1933 The tongue Metal Shop Settles As Strike Continues Strong All Demands Won at La Belle Shop NEW YORK.—Just one week af- ter the General Strike in the silver and hollow-ware trade had been called, the bosses of the La Belle Silver Company, located at 89 Broome St., were forced to accede to all the most important demands of the workers and to sign an agreement with the Metal Spinners Union, and the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union. The men, who had been working 48 hours a week for about $23, are now re-employed on a five day, 40-hour week, with a wage increase of 25 per cent above the wage on the 48 hour scale. Four months from the date of settle- ment, the hours are to be reduced to 35 a week with no decrease in pay. Along with these wage increas- es, the workers were granted time and a half for overtime, full pay for all legal holidays. including May 1, division of work during slow season, and the elimination of piece work. Recognition of the union was also won, Yesterday a number of other shops came out. These included the Durable Metal Novelty Co. of 468 Broadway with 150 workers, and the Globe Silver Co. The bosses of the Excelsior Silver Co. have already applied for a set- tlement. Delegates from 97 Organizations Plan Red Press Bazaar NEW YORK.—Last Thursday night 125 delegates ‘repesenting 97 organizations met at a con- ference to work out plans for the annual “Daily Worker,” “Morning Freiheit” and “Young Worker” Ba- zaar. A committee of 25 was elected to start work immediately on the plans mapped out at the confer- ence. It was also decided that a sec- ond Bazaar Conference is to be held on Thursday, Sept. 14. At which delegates will report on were voting on at the time.” week this year. preparations. ‘Fixture Workers Win First Strike NEW YORK.—After a strike of only one week, 140 members of the Fixture and Figure Workers’ Union, affiliated with the Metal Workers’ Industrial Union, returned to work yesterday with most of their de- mands granted. A $17 minimum wage, an increase of 10 per cent on wages from $17 to $30, 5 per cent on wages above $31, time and one-third for overtime, and a five-day, forty-hour week, were the gains won from the bosses. Further demands were the elimination of sub-contractors within the shop, equalization of work during the slow season, definite pay day, and the recognition of the Union. This has been the first important victory of the Union since it was or- ganized six months ago. Yesterday morning all but three or four shops had already settled. Shop commit- tees were immediately organized and at ‘noon the workers returned tothe shops in a body. A general meeting is being called by the Union for this evening at 8 pm. at Union headquarters, 35 E. 19th st. Alteration Painters On Strike for More Wages NEW YORK.—A strike was called by Alteration Painters’ Union Local 1 against the Sam Minskoff Realty Corp., with offices at 521 5th Ave., last Monday. The 16 painters in- volved are demanding higher wages and are protesting against a speed- up system introduced recently by an \efficiency expert which has increased the amount of work and brought wages down to $3 a day. Painters are urged to support the strike. Headquarters of the local are at 1472 Boston Road. Note. Will the comrade who wrote the note to the Daily Worker on Fred Ruthe please come up to see the Daily Worker about it. Prosecutor Moves. to Bury Major Issues Affecting Workers By JAMES CASEY ALL STREET'S political experts are ready to bury in the Fall election campaign all the major issues affecting the immediate needs and demands of the working class, Hence. @ great cry has been raised | political leaders and the racketeers. But the capitalist newspapers, al- though zealously firing the interest of their readers in the crime ques- | tion (one entirely satisfactory to Finance Capital) nevertheless are not divulging the names of the cul- Prits involved. Therefore, the Daily Worker, with this story. offers to the workers and small business men of New York City the names of a dozen Tammany and Republican political leaders who have been associated with racketeers and thugs, and with crookedness in public office. However. before listing the names. a few more words must be said. When United States Attorney George Z, Medalie appeared bfore the New York County Grand Jury on Tuesday, he accused certain Tam- man politicians of whose guilt he had been aware for at least more than a year. Why had not Medalie spoken up to this time? As a Fedral official. it was his duty then as well as today to seek to ferret out crime and “bring the guilty to justice”| The reason for Medalie's belated action is very clear. Medalie, who is a Repub- lican a friend of Seabury and of the bankers, is also a supporter of the Fusion movement, The Fusionists want to make racketeering and graft the main issue in this campaign. And Tammany Hall is preparing to District Attorney Thomas C. T. Crain, who was invited to visit the Grand Jury room, greeted the jurors but refused to supply any informa- tion. Yet it is a fact that Crain, as a member of the Council of Sachems of Tammany and its own prosecutor, is thoroughly familiar with the graft and corruption of his organization’s leaders. Crain has also the names of Republican politicians, who are linked up with gangdom and thievery in office. He will be in a fine posi- tion to provide Tammany with am- munition in its fight against the Fusionists. Incidentally, Crain is also in possession of evidence showing how manufacturers paid millions of dollars to New York City racketeers to aid them in strikes and generally in activities against unions and the militant workers. The Socialist leaders will vigorous- Jy join in the fray to attack both the Democrats and Fusionists (who include Republicans) on the crime issue. n this way the three capitalist political parties will avoid discussion of the principal issues concerning the mass of the city’s population, viz: the issues of unemployment re- lief, social insurance, the five-cent fare, the high earnings of public utilities amidst increasing suffering of the workers, high rents, evictions and more taxation. But while the Communist Party will push forward the major issues, it will relentlessly fight and expose graft, bribery, corruption and all other criminal manipulations of cap- italist. office-holders and politicians. The Communist Party will continue to show that all the accumulated loot comes to the servants of Wall Street from the pockets of the . Workers. RON. meantime here are the names of crooked political leaders which the thai newspapers do not pub- Thomas M. Farley, former sheriff of New York County, is the leader of the Farley Association. This club has sheltered professional gamblers. Farley, while holding public office, made bank deposits of $396,502. Dur- ing this period, his total salary and all other known income amounted to only $90,000. The Tammany leader has admitted that, as a business agent for a reactionary labor union, he accumulated $100,000 in cash. Michael J. Cruise, who as City Clerk in the Walker administration figured prominently in the Seabury graft investigation. He is the head of the Tammany Central Associa- tion, which also is known to have harbored gamblers and other dis- reputable characters. A third Tammany group closely connected with racketeering is the Second Assembly District Democratic Club of Manhattan. This organiza- tion is controlled by Harry C. Perry, Chief Clerk of the City Court. Two hold-up men have made affidavit that their shares of the proceeds of @ $14,000 robbery were lost in the clubs controlled by Perry and Far- ley. THIS AFFIDAVIT DISAP- PEARED FROM THE FILES OF DISTRICT ATTORNEY CRAIN'S OFFICE. i Nobo raids have been made by po- lice on the Perry Club, following complaints, in one of which more than 100 persons, including several notorious gamblérs, were arrested, and in the other upward of 80 per- sons were seized. In both instances ALL THE DEFENDANTS WERE DISCHARGED. On one occasion a A’. A LATER date, the Daily Work- er will expose in detail the role of the Fusion movement, with La meet the Fusionists on this question. ; Guardia and his associates, In the killing occurred in the Perry Club, resulting from a fight which devel- oped in the course of gambling there. Although an eye-witness gave to the Police the name of the individual he blamed for the murder, the Police Department and District Attorney Crain have not pressed action. Perry made bank deposits of more than $135,000 during a time when his sal- ary totaled $50,000 and he had NO OTHER SOURCE OF LEGAL IN- COME. Criminals have found protection in the People’s Regular Democratic Organization of the Fifteenth As- sembly District, Brooklyn. This club is controlled by Peter J. McGuinness, czar of Greenpoint and Assistant Commissioner of Public Works of Kings County. Racketeers also have found haven in the Fifteenth’ Assembly District Democratic Club of Kings County. The leader of this club is none other than the county sheriff, James A. McQuade. McQuade, unable before an open inquiry to explain his jug- glirg of bank deposits, said he had Siven gifts to vathree relatives. Professional gatnbters have also received assistance from Jacob Ro- senberg, Republican district leader and an assistant deputy sheriff. Rosenberg is the head of the Lin- coln League Republican Club, Another Republican linked up with gamblers is John R. Crews, former Commissioner of Taxes and Assess- ments. He is the head of the Sixth Assembly District Republican Club of Kings County. John Theofel, Democratic leader of Queens County, is one of Tam- many Boss Curry’s close friends, who refuses to acount for his accumula- tion of wealth. From 1924 to 1930, ‘Theofel, as chairman or treasurer of campaign funds for his organisa- tion, received a salary not exceeding $11,000 a year. Nevertheless, his worth increased from $28,650 to $201,000. Tt is known that office- holders in Queens have bought ex- City Events Notice—Cleaners, Dyers. ‘The Executive Board of the Clean- ers, Dyers and Pressers Union of 223 Second Ave., N. Y., wishes to deny the rumors being circulated to the effect that the inside workers of the Cleaners, Dyers and Pressers’ Union are out on strike at the Oriental Cleaners and Dyers of 808 E. 139th Street, New York. I..L. D. Open Air Meeting. ‘There will be an open air meeting Thursday, August 24 at 9 p. m. on 84th Street and Rockaway Boulevard, Brooklyn. Coney Island Conference. NEW YORK.—Ways and means to fight the rising cost of living will be taken up at a comference of Coney |Island workers to be held August 25/ jat 8 p. m. at Pythian Temple, 21st | | Street and Mermaid Ave. Union Workers Club. All members of the Union Work- ers Club are called to a special meeting to be held Friday 8.30 p. m. at 804 Forest Avenue, Bronx. Sheet Metal Workers. A meeting has been called for tonight at 8 p. m. at the headquar- ters of the Independent Sheet Me- tal Workers Union, 820 Broadway. Comrade Nessin and other leading workers will be present. ‘ Shoe, Slipper Workers. Shoe, Slipper, stitchdown and shoe repair workers will have a mass meeting today at 5.30 p. m. at Arcadia Hall, 919 Halsey Street, Brooklyn. Very important ques- tions of wages and hours will be discussed. — Mattress Workers Meet. NEW YORK.—A membership meeting of the Mattress, Box and Bed Spring Workers section of the Furniture Workers Industrial Union, will take place tonight at 7.30 p. m- at 818 Broadway to take up the expiration of their union agree- ments and prepare for organization of the open shops. W.E.S.L. Post Moves. The Hushka-Carlson Post, No. 35, W. E. S. L. has moved its head- quarters to 1472 Boston Road, near Wilkins Ave., Bronx. All members and veterans are urged to come to ne meeting Thursday evening at p.m. SHOE REPAIRERS MEET The Organization Committee of the Shoe Repairing Department of the Shoe Workers Union has issued a call to all shoe repairers, boot- blacks and hat cleaners to attend the following meetings: All workers from Harlem and Bronx and Manhattan tonight 8.30 p- m. at Rand’s Harlem Terrace, 210 East 104th St. All workers from Brooklyn and vicinity tonight 8.30 p. m. at Brook- lyn Labor Lyceum, 949 Willoughby Ave. The purpose of these meetings are to discuss our preparations for a general strike. |Election Campaign at »Proletarian Summer Camps The Communist Election Cam- paign Committee has arranged a special week-end in Camps Unity, Kinderland and Nitgedaiget. The week-end of Friday, August 25, Saturday, August 26, and Sunday, August 27, will see a series of events with special emphasis on the election campaign. On Friday, August 25, all the camps have arranged that in con- nection with the cane fires that the Holy Trinity of the Republi- can, Socialist and Fusion Parties shall be fed to the flames of re- volt as symbolized in the camp fires, accompanied by significant ceremonies and appropriate mea- sures and speeches, etc. Sunday morning there will be lectures by a prominent speak- er on the Communist Party elec- tion platform at each camp. Role of Medalie and Names of Crooked: Leaders Exposed Crain Refuses to Give Data on Racketeering to Grand Jury pensive automobiles from an agency IN WHICH THE COUNTY LEADER Is THE LARGEST STOCK- HOLDER. Former Sheriff Charles W. Culkin, also a Tammany leader, has been associated with bootleggers while in public office. He has ben charged with misappropriation of public money during his tenure, but action against him has not been pressed. Clukin is president of the Monroe Lamp and Equipment Company at 314 West 14th St. Testimony has revealed that from 1924 to 1929 ‘liquor was shipped from these prem- isés every day in violation of law.” Betwen 1925 and 1931, Culkin made representations that he had a license, The othtr James J. has since ab- dicated, married Miss Compton and set up housekeeping on the Riveria. He is at lpast temporarily through as a dispenser for all-night billiard hall licenses. In recognition of this act, the Garden matchmaker re- turned $1,200, keeping, it is as- serted, the balance as recompense for his goad intentions. Arena Howling and Billiards, Inc. the firm occunying a basement of the Ridgewood Grove Club as one of Mr. Flatto’s tenants, ran behind on its rent and the attorney agreed to take the claim for $800 against Johnson on assignment. Now Mr. Flatto goes to court. Johnston’s lawyer tiled a general denial, ask- ing for a bill of particulars. This irked Mr. Flatto to the extent where he upped and stated: “Tl give a bill of particulars to the District Attorney. This fellow Johnston took money under false pretenses and is withholding $800 of it: I gave him a chance to settle the case in the civil courts. Now I'm going after him for grand lar- ceny.” Mirror” which reports the case ex- hibits undue concern over the im- plications of the unsuccessful trans- action. Neither party works itself into a lather over the fact that such a bargain was at all possible. The Billiard Club would have been justi- fied in taking advantage of John- ston’s pull, Johnston would have been entitled to his cut and cer- tainly there was nothing reprehen- sive about Walker’s role. Seven million people be damned. Indig- nation is in order when one of the boys offends against ethics of the profession. Unlike his namesake, the boxing industry’s James J., is a sensitive individual” who talks only on oc- casion. When interviewed on ques- tions relative to the merits of his fighters, he talks rather freely. During signing ceremonies for big fights he sheds his reticence and during training grinds he becomes virtually voluble. When asked for a statement on the above circumstances, the head of the Royal Family reverted to the characteristics of his inner self. He was never really cut out to be a public figure. “See my lawyer,” he said, shyly. Attorney Lauria said: “Mr. Johnston tells me he discharged the obligation, did everything that was asked of him and returned the money as it was Put in his hands. TITLES It started when Mille Gade Cor- son swam the Channel within a few James J. In a Legal Snarl By Edward Newhouse Mr. I. A. Flatto, attorney and owner of the Ridgewood Grove Sporting Club has filed a complaint in civil action against Jittery Jim Johnston, fight promoter for Madisor Square Garden. He invokes the community’s collective pow4¢ to recover $800 of the $2,000 given James J. upon the latten- Neither Mr. Flatto nor the “Daily [ drag with another well-know' James J, who could get the firm an all-night billiard hal © Mi weeks of Gertrude Ederle’s feat. “Second Woman to Swim the Eng- lish Channel” had no ring to it at | all.. She became the First Mother to Swim the Channel. c Lindbergh made the First Solo Flight Across the Atlantic. Lady Drummond Hay was the First Wo- man Dirigible Passenger Across the Atlantic. Ruth Elder, the First Woman Would-be Atlantic Flyer to. Crash Near the Azores. Wiley Post sports the title of the First Round-the-World Flyer wo Play Radio City while Ruth Litzig who died yesterday is the First Wo- man To Die While Stupidly At- temptng to Set a Swimming Endur- ance Record. Two years ago a cup now in the possession of Heywood Broun was awarded to the chorus girl who could drive a golf ball farthest. Figuring largely in today’s sports pages are Bea Gottlieb, the First Woman to Beat the Prince of Wales at Golf and Primo Carnera, World’s Heavyweight Champion. Standing of the Clubs AMERICAN LEAGUE Ciub W.1,P.C. Club w.L. P.c, Washing. 17 40 .658| Philadel. 57 59 .491 New York 69 47 .595| Chicago ( 56 63 .471 Cleveland 63 60 .512| Boston. 49°70 .412 Detroit 61 60 .504! St.Louis 44 77 .364 Phila. at St. Louis, result not in. NATIONAL LEAGUE Club W.L.P.C., Club W. L. P.C. New York 68 43 .613/ Chicago B 169 Boston 65 53 .551| Philadel. 48 64 .429 St. Louis 64 55 .538| Brooklyn 45 65 .469 Pittsburgh 62 53 .539/ Cincinnati 44 72 .379 Gincinnati at B'klyn, rain. Pittsburgh at New York, rain. Chicago at Philadelphia, rain INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE W.L.P.C. Club W.L.P.C. 85 57.599] Buffalo 70 73.490 Albany 6973 .488 Club Newark Rochester 78 65 .545 Baltimore 74 68 .521| Montreal 66 75 .468 Toronto 73 71 .501| JerseyCity 55 88 .385 ‘All games postponed, rain. Inning-by-Inning Scores AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston (ist) 000 000 100-1 3 1 ! Chicago ....011 000 0lx—3 7 0 Kline. Rhodes and Ferrell; Jones and Grube, Boston (2d) 000 000 00I—1 4 0 Chicago ...000 740 10x—12 15 2 Fullerton and Gooch; Durham and Berry. Washington 000 000 010-1 7 2 Detroit 010 000 001—2 10 0 Crowder and Sewell; Bridges and Hayworth. . New York ..010 000 000-1 6 0 Cleveland ..000 200 00x—2 9 0 Ruffing and Dickey; Brown and Spencer. NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis ...000 001 002-3 6 2 Boston --300 001 00x—4 4 1 Carleton. Johnson and O'Farrell; \ Betts and Hogan. Chain Refuses to Employ Negro Help NEW YORK.—A flat refusal to employ Negro help was the answer of Mr. Carey, manager of the Grant store on 125th St., Tues- day, to the committee of Negro and white workers who demanded that Negroes be hired. A meeting has been called for Thursday, September 7, at St. Lukes Hall, 125 W. 130th St., at 8 pm. to hear the report of this committee. The committee was elected last week by the Commit- tee Against Discrimination of Ne- gro Workers on Jobs. Representa- tives of organizations whose mem- bership totals over 10,000 are, on this committee. The demands presented by the committee on August 18 include: 1) The majority of employees in the 125th St. store must be Ne- groes; 2) the white workers who are replacing Negro workers must not be discharged but be trans- ferred to other stores in the chain; and 3) there must equal pay for ee The Daily Woker COMES OFF THE PRESS 8:15 P. M. 35 EAST 12th ST. BUNDLE OF PAPERS, WHICH CAN BE SOLD AT THE MEETING, NOT LATER THAN 9 P. M. Unemployed Workers WHO WISH TO SELL THE ‘DAILY’ A8_SOON AS IT COMES OFF THE CALL AT THE PRESS PLEASE ABOVE ADDRESS TP. OM. ALL DAY TILL counts of $1,929,759. His salary as sheriff amounted to only $54,261. Mi James J. McCormick, a Tammany istrict leader, deposited $384,785 in the banks from 1925 to 1931, a sum out of all proportion to his salary as Deputy City, Clerk. He failed to ac- count in any way for $150,000. William L, Kavanaugh, a Demo- cratic co-district leader, deposited $250,609 in his bank accounts since 1920. Kavanaugh is Deputy Com- missioner of Water Supply, Gas and Electricity. This leader’s graft con- sists in supplying by contract towels in buildings for which permits must be obtained from his office. Joseph T. Quinn, Democratic co- leader of the Second Assembly Dis- trict of Queens, received $32,000 in cash as “gifts” fi the late John M. Philips, sewer pipe king. While Sheriff of Queens County, he placed deposits in his personal bank ac-| Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE MTA FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of ir. C. Weissman 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. PATRONIZE Friedland’s Pharmacy - these gifts in a safe deposit vault rathér than in a bank, because, he ik they ‘bore the apvearance of ev 113th St. and Park Ave. ‘ SPECIALLY REDUCED PRICES ‘ton the “Daily N. Y. Delegation to Cleveland to Meet at 37 East 13th St. NEW YORK.—Delegates from New York to the Trade Union Conference in Cleveland will leave Thursday, Aug. 24th, 11 p. m. Delegates are asked to meet before that hour at the Office of the A. F. of L. Committee for Unemployment Insurance, 37 East 13th Street, from which address the specially chartered bus will leave. Negro and white workers. Mr. Carey, the manager, was instructed that he must answer Tuesday, August 22, when the committee would again call on him. The Committee Against D: crimination is planning a cam- paign to fight discrimination in larlem places of business. There are no Negro employees in the gas and electric or telephone com- panies or on the street cars in Harlem. %* SANDWICH SOLS LUNCH 101 University Place (Just Around the Jorner) Telephone Tompkins Sqcare 6-9780-9781 a em IIR Se ns Cet Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St, BROOKLYN Williamsburgh Comrades elcome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave., Cor. Siegel St, EVERY BITE A DELIGHT WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE | NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN. that license Aumber NYB 9520 has been issued to the undersigned to sell beer and wine at retail under Section 76 of the Alcoholic Beverane Gontrel Law. at 927 Broadway, Ne | LICENSE NOTICES | \