The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 25, 1933, Page 2

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Page T Shoe Work ers’ Union Answers Whalen Attack Demands Hands Off Strike, Right of Worker: to Organize, Ask s Hearings on Shoe Workers’ Conditions NEW YORK.—The Shoe 1d | Biedenkapp, secretary of the Shoe Leather Workers Industrial Union| and Lea Workers’ Industrial ghatacterized Grover Whalen’s| Union requests a hearing and de- hreat to break the strike of|mands that Grover Whalen be in- early 8,000 shoe workers as a|structed to refrain from attaching wuthless attempt to aid the bosses|the union and the workers of the to beat down the shoe workers’ liv- | industry ing standards and prevent them| —_—_—— from organizing into a union, in a] Tetter sent to Whalen yesterday. “The thousands of workers who areé# members of our organization @xpect that they will have the right under Section 7 of the Na-| tional Recovery Act to select and ehco their own union and their union pesentatives without in terference from anyone” the lette declares. Demanding that Whalen withdraw is statements, the un-| ions calls for a conference to pre- sent the facts about the conditions | workers | ‘Reinstate 24 - Painters Ousted By Union Officials |Rank, File Support | Forces Action NEW YORK, Aug agai which the shoe 24.—Fearing are king. “We particularly | the indignation of the rank and file eall your attention to the fact that members, officials of the it is absolutely untrue that the Boot and Shoe Manufacturers who have signed the Blue Eagle are living up to the requirements of the code, We are ready and willing to present c incing evidence to the contrary,” the letter continues. In a letter to Donald Richberg of the NRA in Washington, Fred More Dressmakers Leave Shops to Continue Strike Bosses Advance Dues to ILGW—to Deduct from Pay Envelope NEW YORK.—The dress strike is by no means ended. Hundreds of workers were reported returning to the strike halls today to continue their strike against sweatshop con- ditions after being told by the con- tractors that their wages will not differ much from the amount prior to the strike. International officials are now having the active co-operation of the National Dress Manufacturers in obtaining dues from the workers. Dressmakers report that the work- ers’ dues are being advanced by the contractors, who pay the union and then expect to deduct the exorbitant dues from the workers’ pay. Settlements continue to be made by the Industrial Union, with many real increases won for the workers. Police arrested 37 needle trades workers, mostly in the garment cen- ter, today as the workers continued picketing the shops. Code Hearings Delegates of the Needle Trades In- dustrial Union in Washington, after waiting for a day and a half, had still not been called to speak at the hearings on the dress code, as we go to press. All Wednesday the floor was given to the employers’ representatives and administrators, im whose ranks Dubinsky is sitting in place of Hillman. Hearings started with a boastful speech by Grover Whalen declaring that he has settled everything in the New ‘York situation, and he received the unanimous approval of the employ- efs and I.L.G.W. officials present. ‘The first day of the code hear- ings was devoted to settling differ- ences between contractors and job- bers. The code submitted by the jobbers was denounced by the con- tractors and insiders who are resist- ing the efforts of the jobbers’ asso- elation to swallow all other associa- Hons. Out-of-town contractors are arguing for a still lower wage scale. It is apparent already that agree- ment on wage scales will be a mere formality, with none of the groups taking responsibility. The hearings are expected to last for several days. | union | Brotherhood of Painters of America, District Council No. 9, refrained from opposing a motion made today by Harry Sacher, labor attorney, in the Supreme Court here for the rein- statement of 24 union members who were cxpelled by the Council last March for their militant activities | within the union. The motion was granted by the presiding judge on the failure of the Council's attorney to appear. | Council to reinstate William Gersch |and Irving Redler. Among those ordered reinstated is Louis Weinstock, National Secretary of the A. F. of L. Committee for Un- employment Insurance, and prom- inent for his activity against the A. F. of L. bureaucrats, Three of those expelled, Sam Bogorod, Harry Rothstein, Louis Weinstock, were union representa- tives in the District Council, which cancelled their membership before any charges were placed against them. A wave of intimidation within the unions then forced the expulsion of these three and 23 additional workers from practically all unions of District Council No. 9, of New York City. All of the reinstated members are determined to carry on an even more | Vigorous struggle within their unions against the corrupt officials, Alteration Painters Form Volunteer Group to Spread New ‘Daily’ NEW YORK.— On the initiative of Jay Weitzman and Samuel Sagik, regular members of the Daily Worker Volunteers, the Alteration Painters Union, local gne, has or- ganized a Volunteer group ot five members. The three new Volun. teers are J. Schere, W. Yokin and C. Nick. . Every Monday evening one of the union Volunteers gets 25 copies of the ‘Daily’ when it comes off the press at 8.15, and rushes with them to the union headquarters at 1472 Boston Road, where the regular meeting is in progress. Many new readers have thus been gained. The Alteration Painters Union has already elected delegates to the mass conference for a six- and eight-page ‘Daily,’ to be held Sept. 10, 11 a. m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St.. All other workers’ organizations are urged to follow the example of this alert union without delay. ‘Daily’ Carrier Route Planned for Jamaica NEW YORK.—Dora Rappaport, a member of the United Council of Working Class Women and of the Daily Worker Volunteers, has ordered 50 copies of the Daily Worker every day and pledged to establish a car- rier-route in Jamaica, L. I. Jamaica workers who are willing to help her in building this route are urged to communicate with her at 9110 138th St., Jamaica. A previous court ruling ordered the | | | | | Knight, Jr., notorious for his stub- Urge Aid for “Daily on Western Tour ' Warkers ef Deayer, Colo’ Sait! | Lake City, Utah, San Francisco | | and Los Angeles are urged to| | give full cooperation to Mac- Harris, representative of the| | Daily Worker, now on tour of | | these cities to boost ‘Daily’ cir-| | culation. | Grand Jury Again Recesses “Probe” Of Two Lynchings: Knight, Foe of 9 Boys, | /Wants Postponement, | To Let Protest Die TUSCALOOSA, Aug. 24—The Grand Jury, supposed to be “investi- gating” the lynching on Aug. 13 of | Dan Pippen, Jr., and A. T. Harden, | has been recessed again until Sept. | 5, in the hope that the general in- dignation over the lynchings will have cooled off, and a whitewash of | Judge Henry B. Foster, Sheriff R. L, | Shamblin, the two deputies and pri- vate detective in charge of the Ne~- | groes when they were murdered, can be passed off smoothly, No attempt has been made to rec- oncile or even cover up the obvious discrepancies in the stories told dy | officials. Although a Birmingham | Negro paper has pointed out that a/ boy on a bicycle could have reached Birmingham from Tuscaloosa in less | than the four and a half hours that | went by between the time the sher- iff’s car “speeded” out of Tusca- loosa and the time the deputies re- ported the lynching, no effort has been made to even explain this dis- crepancy. It was a Negro doctor, B. B. Mit- chell, who turned Elmore Clark, acci- dental survivor of the lynching, over to Sheriff Shamblin a second time, it was learned here. Attorney - General E. ‘Thomas born fight to legally lynch the Scottsboro boys, asked for the recess. He is in charge of the “investiga- tion.” In justification for the lynching, and the violent ejection of Interna- tional Labor Defense lawyers, the Tuscaloosa News, local daily, says editorially: “Social equality never hes been, is not now, and never will be recog- nized in the South. Those who came to preach a different order always have been, are now, and always will be repulsed.” Phila. Fur Strikers Win All Demands PHILADELPHIA, Pa., August 24— The Fur Bosses Association formed for the purpose of breaking the strike of the fur workers led by the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, were compelled to yield to the de- mands of the Union yesterday and conclude a settlement. The settlement represents a real victory to the workers. By its terms, the Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- trial Union is recognized, and the workers win increased and guaran- teed minimum wage scales, equal division of work, and ten legal holi- days a year with pay.| The hours of work are set at 35 hours if similar conditions are established for the furriers in the department stores, otherwise the hours will be 40. The union feels confident that it will be able to successfully conduct a drive to establish union conditions in the stores and all other places where furriers are employed. An unemploy- ment insurance fund has been estab- lished by the employers, to be ad- ministered by the workers. The settlement was effected with the assistance of Joseph Winograd- ski, sent by the National Office ‘of the union to participate in the nego- tiations. Great enthusiasm was ex- pressed by the strikers for the results gained. OTE | Will the worker from Chicago who sent in a letter some months al about the activities of Art Smith please send this information again, with all possible details in addition? Gutters of New York * 2. Becomes AN "ACTIVE * MEMBER 3. SHE LET COWN ft STRAP OF HER Baran! Surr, x You'Re A MENACE “Yo “THE MORALS OF “Hie corny et HONOR, WAXES FRT AND WEALTH BUYS HIMSELF A TAMMANY JUDGESHIP, Struggle Pp ledged at Sacco-Vanzetti 1,500 on Boston Common Pledge to Fight for, Ideals of Two Legally Murdered - BOSTON, Mass. Aug. 22.—With bared heads and clenched fists, 1,500 | | City Events | Midsummer ‘Carnival | A special feature of the Midsum- {mer Carnival under the auspices of | the Workers International Relief, | which will be held tonight at 8 p. m. | {at Golden City Park, Brooklyn, will | jbe a talk by a journalist who has | just returned from Germany and | thas been an eyewitness of the Reichstag fire. .3ie has seen Tors- ler and some of the. other German | class war prisoners. | The carnival includes a program of revolutionary music and songs | by thé International Reiief Band, | Fair, by the Workers Laboratory | Theatre, and a reSular Soviet film show: en. \Iron and Bronze Workers | A meeting of the Inside Iroa and ze Workers will held t To chisol down Bronze Workers will be belgie: | lead I think McCarthy would have to night at 8 p. mi. at the Labor) undertake more drastic alterations: rr akconed ie at eae Eu | Exchange Sewell for Traynor, Cros- ers in the unorganized shops are | (tt! Latah oH Lapa cio fer called upon to join the union RATS ease Whe Se AM he oN ; Otherwiso, longer than those on the well-known Lynch Protests Today | snowball. Too, it’s always handy to A street demonstration will be | Start pitchers who'll pitch nine in- |held today at 8 p. m. at 125th St.|nings without making third base look land 5th Avenue by Post 2 of the/|like Times Square during theatre Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League | hour. These ore novel considerations who are leading protests against the | | 5 four lynchings that occurred last | involving week. same ad An open forum will be held on | No point the cases Sunday at 2 p. m. at 187 | imperfect West 128th Street. | Serio! tit no punch in Farrell, Lary and Byrd. i In Cleveland, of course, they had a ee Hesnel Mer uns | flashy Brown and the high winds of The regular ae hata : the Municipal Stadium to contend | peared set Suet i > | with but we have got a pretty good | t is 4t Averne, L. I. at 8.30 p. m. perfect ing it to a ver, in one. “| line on those boys in the last few | | seasons. Lary may fool us by pulling | Blondy Ryan but Byrd doesn’t. em to be able to develop beyond a ertain point. Dusty Cooke has done | Zatuliak to ‘Speak William Zaguliak, militant leade’ of the automobile workers of De-| far potter. | troit, who was arrested on the picket| Walker is the goods. He handles line in the recent strike there and himself with less of the apparent held in prison five months as host- | cnitti and form of either Byrd odds on the Yenks are | workers stood on Boston Common today and, on the sixth anniversary of the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti, pledged that as long as life lasts they will carry on the struggle of the workers against oppression, the cause in which Sacco and Vanzetti met death. Frank Spector, of the International Labor Defense, jail mate of Tom Mooney in San¢— Quentin, sentenced to 42 years as the leader of the Imperial Valley strikers, and finally released through the mass protest of workers led by the International Labor Defense, called on those present to enlist in the fight for the freeing of the pres- ent day class war prisoners, Comrade Spector told of the frame-up of Tom Mooney, in San Quentin for 17 years because, like Sacco and Vanzetti, he led in the struggle of the workers, of the Scotts- boro boys, framed up in Alabama and sentenced to die because they are Negro toilers, just as Sacco and Van- zetti were persecuted because they were active in behalf of the foreign born workers; of the deportation cases against Edith Berkman, Massa- chusetts textile worker; Sam Paul, unemployed leader, still held in jail in Providence, R. I., and facing de- portation because he refused to tes- tify against himself; and of the lynching of the Tuscaloosa Negroes. There was loud applause when Comrade Spector said, “Let us pledge ourselves to carry on the fight not only to free these class war prison- ers, but to destroy this rotten frame- up system of capitalism and set up instead a working class society.” Jack McCarthy, district secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, completely exposed the National Re- covery Act. “They give us more blue eagles,” he said, “but the conditions of the workers keep getting bluer and bluer.” McCarthy spoke of con- ditions of the workers in the shoe and textile industry of Massachusetts and the necessity for the workers building their own unions. Jessica Henderson, chairman of the N.E. committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners was chairman. She went into the lives of Saeco and Vanzetti, and of the role played by the Boston “society” Lowell, Fuller, Strotton, Grant, Thayer, etc., in car- trying through the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti. Prof, Harry Dana, like Jessica Hen- derson, connected with the Sacco Vanzetti defense through seven long years of the fight, read the letters of Vanzetti to him which appeared in the Daily Worker. “From Cam- bridge where I live,” said Harry who had been a Dana, “At sunset you can look across at the skyline beyond the Charles River, and see the Bunker Hill monu- ment, monument to “liberty.” On that same sky-line, can be seen standing the Charleston jail, where Sacco and Vanzetti were put to death.” Dana, who was delegate to the World Congress against war spoke of the activities of Sacco and Vanzetti against the bosses world war, and of the necessity, in carrying forward the Struggle for which Sacco and Van- zetti died, of fighting against the danger of a new bosses war at the present time, The fight of Sacco Vanzetti will not end until capitalism is overthrown, Dena said. Resolutions were sent to the Gov. Miller of Alabama demanding the re- lease of the Scottsboro Boys, to Gov. Rolfe demanding the release of Mooney. The release of Sam Paul of Providence was also demanded. The speech of Hector Thomas, of the Scottsboro Committee, a Negro worker showing the Scottsboro fight as the same fight as Sacco-Vanzetti, was one of the most enthusiastic re- ceived. When the resolution was in- troduced demanding the death pen- alty for the shefif. the judge and the lynchers who hed a hand in the lynching of the Tuscaloosa Negro workers, there was great applause. * * * LYNN, Mass., Aug. 22—After po- lice had succeeded in preventing a scheduled Sacco-Vanzetti-Scottsboro Demonstration today in front of Lynn City Hall, 200 workers gath- ered on the Common. Police made attempts to demoralize the workers here also, but militant protest by the Lynn I. L. D. forced the open- ing of the bandstand. The meeting was addressed by Manuel Blanc, Dist. Org. Sec'y of the I. L. D., who pointed out the in- creasing terror under the N. R. A. \giving as an example the recent sell-out of the Lynn shoe strike, and Howard Carter of the Boston Scotts- boro Action Committee, who drew the lessons of the Sacco-Vanzetti case and called for real solidarity of Negro and white workers. I. L. D. Answers S. P. Attempt | Socialist Leaders Move to Exclude Communist Party The following statement on the ittempt of the Socialist Party to exclude the Communist Party from the united front committee which is defending Terzani, was made | yesterday by William Lawrence and Lawrence Emory, LL.D. repre- | sentatives on the Terzani Defense Committee. frame-up of Athos Terzani anti-fascist worker, for the mur- der of Anthony Fierro, anti-fascist Student, is the latest, in the long | chain of frame-ups which mark the | history of the American working | class. Fierro was killed at a meeting of the “Khaki Shirts of America, Inc.,” held on July 14, 1933, in Astoria, Long Island. Art Smith, leader of this terrorist gang, whose program calls for the establishment of a fas- cist dictatorship in the United States, provoked a fight against several Ital- jan anti-fascist workers present in the hall. Fierro, a young student, only a few years from Italy where he had felt the effects of Mussolini's murderous regime, rushed to the aid of his com- rades who were being beaten. One of the Khaki Shirts, later identified to the police, jumped on a bench, puiled @ gun and fired. Anthony Fierro fell dead, the first victim of an armed band of Fascist terrorists of Ameri- van origin. When the police reached the hall. | Art Smith pointed out Terzani and | another anti-fascist worker, Michael | Palumbo, as the guilty ones. Both Terzani and Palumbo had seen the f, to Weaken Terzani Defense |real murderer, and showed him to the police. This man was held and questioned by the Assistant District Attorney and later released. Terzani was then held for homicide and Pa- lumbo was charged with felonious | assault. The International Labor Defense, | through quick and effective action, | succeeded in exposing the frame-up | against Palumbo, secured his release on bail, and finally forced the- dis- missal of the charges against him. | Compelled to release one of its in- tended victims, the prosecution re- | doubled its efforts to frame the jother, At @ special hearing of the Grand Jury, at which no defense | witnesses appeared, Terzani was in- dicted for second degree murder. The motive here is clear. Not sat- isfied with the death of one anti- fascist, the ruling class is attempt- ing to railroad another to a long prison term in an effort to check the growing struggles of the workers against fascism. The ruling class 1s thereby giving direct\support to the Khaki Shirts in their campaign of terror against the workers, and is stimulating the growth of the or- ganization itself, just as it is now trying to revive the Ku Klux Klan in the South. The Terzani case is the outgrowth of the development of fascist tenden- cies in the United States, crystallizing into such bands as the Khaki Shirts, which are fostered by the war-time methods and war-time psychology accompaying the National Recovery Act, and which receive direct, if not open, support from the government. ii fae sy EALIZING the seriousness of this case, and the need for an ener-| getic struggle against fascist mur- der gangs as the only adequate de- fense for Terzani, the New York District of the International Labor Defense has made every effort to bring about a brodd united front de« fense campaign involving all working class, fraternal and liberal organiza- tions. The International Labor De- fense declares that the fight to free Terzani must be based upon a mili- tant campaign against fascism in general, against the menace of fas- cism in America in particular, and that such a campaign is of vital im- portance to every worker. Starting from this premise, the N. Y. District of the I. L. D. approached the Italian Anti-Pascist Unity Com- mittee, composed of various Italian organizations, with the proposal that, a provisional committee be forméd to call a unjted front conference and lay the base for a real united mass campaign of struggle. This offer, after some discussion, was accepted, and a committee formed consisting of representatives from the Italian Unity Committee, the American Civil Liberties Union, the General Defense, Committee and the International Labor Defense, Hb ILD made its position clear at the start, declaring that it would not bargain its principles nor its program for the sake of unity; neither would it attempt to force its pro- gram and principles upon any other organization. The ILD is ready and willing to enter into a united front for mass struggle on the specific issue of defense for Terzani. As long as the other organizations are willing to unite and mobilize their members and followers for the realization of the demands which bring us together, the ILD stands ready to co-operate and to do its utmost for the success- ful carrying out of the decisions of the United Front Committee. The International Labor Defense insists only that the minimum pro- gram agreed upon be a militant one “designed to rally the largest number of workers for united struggle. At the last meeting of the United Front ‘Committee, certain decisions were made which lead the ILD to posed publicly its position as regards em, By a unanimous vote, the com- | Mittee decided to extend an invita- tion to the Socialist Party to join in the united front. The Socialist Party accepted the invitation, and desig- nated Norman Thomas and Attorney Weinfeld as its delegates. Norman ‘Thomas has subsequently been elected Chairman of the Committee. The In- ternational Labor Defense heartily agrees with this decision and wel- comes the inclusion of the Socialist Party. At the same meeting, however, a motion to invite the Communist Party to send its representatives to the United Front Committee was re- jected on the grounds that the Com- munist Party was represented in the persons of the delegates from the International Labor Defense. While we, the ILD representatives, readily acknowledge membership in the Communist Party, it must be categorically stated that the Inter- national Labor Defense is a non- Partisan organization embracing workers of different political views and stands ready to defend any worker who falls victim to capitalist justice regardless of his political af- filiation or creed. The International Labor Defense is an indepéndent or- ganization having no organizational air with the Communist LL.D. Representatives Show Non-Partisan Character of Body In addition, the representatives of the ILD, while members of the Com- munist Party, are not authorized to act on behalf of that Party and have no power to mobilize the member- ship of the Communist Party for ac- tion against the frame-up of Ter- zani, In view of these facts, we, selected as the representatives of the Inter- national Labor Defense, wish to de- clare that the decision of the United Front Committee to exclude the Communist Party for the above rea- sons endangers the creation of a real united front embracing all sincere anti-fascist organizations of the working class. The importance of the Communist Party in such a campaign, and its record of militant struggle against fascism and for the interests of the working class, cannot be de- nied. To attempt to exclude it from such a campaign is to weaken that campaign and does not lead to unity of the working class. Our organiza- tion, the ILD, has expressed its agree- ment with our position, The International Labor Defense will continue to work for complete unity in the fight for Terzant’s free- dom and against fascism, and pledges to do everything in its power to rally the greatest number of workers to this struggle. WILIAM LAWRENCE LAWRENCE EMERY, Representatives of ILD on Terzani Defense Com. age for the surrender of his wife, later ordered deported, will speak at the New York Conference for the be held at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St., Saturday afternoon. Organizations are urged, in a | statement issued today by T. J, Mc- Henry, national secretary of the Na- tional Committee for the Protection of the Foreign Born, to send dsie- gates to the conference, Food Workers A lecture on the NIRA will be giv- jen tonight at 8:30 p.m. at the Food Workers Industrial Union, 4 W. 18th St. Shoe Workers’ Meeting ‘The Shoe Repairers’ Labor Lyceuni meeting, which had been erroneously announced for yesterday, is definitely arranged for tonight at 8:30 p.m,, at 949 Willoughby Ave. near Myrtle Ave., Brooklyn. ‘ The workers of greater New York, will assemble Sunday morning, Au- gust 27, 10 a.m., at Irving Plaza Hall, corner 15th St. and Irving Pl. Bank of U. S. Depositors The committee of 28 of the U. 8. Bank depositors has called a meet- ing of the delegates for Saturday, August 26, at 2 pm. at the Down Town Workers Club, 165 East Broad- way. Bronxdale Action Committee The Bronxdale Action Committee has organized a concrete program of activity for the coming week, such as protest meetings against the Tus- caloosa, lynching, and race discrimi- nation at the Bronxdale Pool. Today, Friday, will be held many open air meetings throughout the Bronx. In addition there will be a mass meeting at 8 p.m. at the Co- operative Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East, ‘Bronx. N. Y., where Jim Allen, author of “Negro Liberation,” is announced as the speaker. All workers are urged to attend. Communist Month in Unity has decided to turn over the profits of the Camp for the month of Sep- tember to the Communist Party to aid the Party in carrying out its ‘many campaigns, This coincides with the 14th anniversary of the Communist Party in America and the 10th anniversary of Camp Unity. Programs for the month will be under the control of the District of the Communist Party. Rates will be the same. Call\EStabrook 8-1400 for further information. Knitgoods Workers in Union Drive NEW YORK.—The organization drive among the knitgoods workers is spreading to more open shops. On Tuesday the workers of the Re- public, 204 Wallace Street, Brooklyn, went out on strike for wage in- creases. The strikes of the Starr Knitting Mills, Brooklyn, and Bela- cier Knitting Mills, in the Bronx, are still on. All knitgoods workers are called upon to support these strikes, Jobless Locals to Give Nance NEW YORK —A Roof Garden Dance will be given by Locals 2 and 3 of the Workers’ Committee on Un- employment Saturday night at 8 p.m. at the Grand Street Playhouse, 466 Grand St. The purpose of the dance is to .raise funds for a united struggle against evictions and star- vation on the lower East Side. Discuss Plays Against NRA A discussion on how to fight the NRA codes by means of musical comedy skits and short plays will take place tonight at the W. L. T., 42 E. 12th Street. Alexarder & Doishon of Post 191, WESL, Attention—Return Where are you? Has anything happened? If you are safe and left on your own, be men and return. If you are safe and do’not return you place yourselves in the ranks of the enemies. The rank and file of Post 191, must go ahead and will go ahead whether you return or not. Mistakes can be made. If anyone sees these comrades, please bring this notice to their attention. } Protection of the Foreign Born, to) The management of Camp Unity | or Lary but he puts the old college try into every play and he hits. Hit- \ting, columnisis periodically inform us, helps a baseball team. Lary himself will never be a mon- |Keywrench in the machinery. He's the sort of player who fits into a well-oiled mechanism but doesn’t animate it. Yet he’s a remarkabie |ficlder, and, to further plagiarize, | | fielding too is important. | And now, children, we come to pitching. We must never neglect pitehing. Ruffing. MacFayden, Go- |mez and Allen did and looka what happened to them. Washington peo- ple pass them on the street without so much as nodding. Worse still, Washington teams pass them in the statistical tables appended to these words, Do you think Mr. McCarthy likes that? He doesn’t. Once he even went \'so far as to try resting Vernon, over- familiarly entitled Goofy, Gomez for three days to see what would happen. Sure enough, the Castilian soupboner went out and won a four-hit game. You will readily see this if hardly a suitable policy. A real master mind assumes his pitcher's arms aré com- posed of Mr. Goodyear’s product in- stead of the ordinary muscular tis- sue and blood cells. We must do our share by kidding Mr. McCarthy and doing much tech- nical second-guessing. This way we will keep up the interest and deflect it from channels like unemployment and the Chinese Revolution about which we may have been bothering our pretty heads. ’ * « Straight from the Shoulder Colonel John Reed Kilpatrick, the new president of Madison Square | Garden, has surveyed the boxing sit- uation and decided to adopt a brand new policy, to be known hereafter as Straight-irom-the-Shoulder-Deal- ings-with-the-Public. In our private catalogue it’s filed as Line Number | 1oax. i “The first thing I learned about | boxing,” reminisces the Colonel, “was the rule of a fight manager—never to agree to his man fighting any one who has the slightest chance of lick- ing him. If we don’t change that, then boxing is lost.” The Garden lays its cards on the table and “wants the public to know the deterring fac- tors in promoting good matches.” ' For instance, “Jimmy “McLarnin ‘could defend his welterweight title against either Billy Petrolle or Andy Callahan, but is not anxious to meet Intern’] Workers Order ( DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH 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 2-9012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M.,/1-2, 6-8 P.M. ‘Hospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled At One-Half Price IFRX- White Gold Filled Frames_..__.__ 1.50 ZX Shel + $1.00 COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORchard 4-4520 CLASSIFIED Furnished Rooms or Apartments Those seeking irnished rooms er apartments will find the classified col- the “Daily” of special interest, sified Ads & cents » word. ONE-TWO, bright clean rooms, private bath, refrigeration, kitchen privileges, rea- 235 West 110th Street, Apt. 9. WANTED—Purnished or Unfurnished Room. Location Utica Ave. Station. Private Msraniee. State Rental. P, M. 6-0 Daily rorkor, sonable, ee X Weighty Matters By EDWARD NEWHOUSE Despite the spectacle of his Yanks’ helpless floundering before Clint Brown’s deceptive. shoots, Joe McCarthy insists that chances of catching the Senators have by no means faded. several skits including the World’s; The benching of Combs, Sewell, Ruth and some of the rest and insertion of fresh strength in the persons of Walker, Dev- , Farrell and Byrd, have dissipated the lethargic zt titude which has been gumming up the Western invasion.§” least so the Yankee boss whistles in the dark. that eight-game *—~ ——-~—-— the former becaus' feels the 1 would not draw, and is disincliat to meet Callahan because the lattc® is 2 lefi-hander.” By uncovering some of these run: 8 the military gentleman us believe we're on the nating them. After rak- would road to elimi ing in on @ series of trumped wa matches, the Garden is coming to the realization that they stand to lose at least as much as the dis- sruntled fans. The Man-to-Man line is a last resort, an extra dose of poppycock, as Tunney would have it Setups will be done away with only with the discarding of the entire . very seriously, there is | Managerial, promotorial and profes- sional arrangement. Standing of the Clubs AMERICA!) LEAGUE olud W.L.P.C.) Club WL. P.O Washing. 79 40 .664| Philadel. 57 60 .48" New York 70 47.598! Chicago 56 4 .467 Cleveland 68 61 .508 | Boston 50 70 416 Detroit 61 62 498 | Bt. Louis 48-77 .36¢ Secon wames of doubleheaders not in. NATIONA!, LEAGUE club W.1. B.C.) Club W. &, P.c. New York 68 43 613 | Bt. Louis 64 56 .533 Boston 66 5% .555 | Philedel. 48 66 .421 Chicago 64-53 .647 | Brooklyn 46 66 .411 Pittsburgh 62 83 .539 | Cincinnati 45 73 381 Pittsburgh at New York postponed, rain INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Cub = WT. PO} Club W. L. P.c. Newark 85 57 .599 | Buffalo 72 73.497 Rochester 7265 .545| Albany 69 73.486, Baltimore 74 68 .521| Montreal 66 75 .463 Toronto 73 13 .500! JerseyCity 55 88 .38/ All games postponed, rain. Inning-by-Inning Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE (First. Game) Cincinnati +000 000 000— 0 7 6 Brooklyn .....110 000 00x— 2 8 6 Derringer, Kolp and Lombardi; Mungo and Lopez. (Second Game) Cincinnati 200 000 010— 3 Brooklyn 100 000 010-— 2 First Game) Chicago ........000 010 0183— 5 Philadelphia ..000 000 000—~ 0 Bush and Hartnett; Holley and Davis. (Second Game) , Chicago ..... +032 001 021— $ 16 6 Philadeiphia ..002 000 040— 613 2 Tinning, Hermann and Campbell: Moore, Pearce, Elliott, Collins and Davis. 200 010 000— 3 7 2 210 010 00x— 4 6 0 ind Wilson; Brandt and AMERICAN ea Boston .. -012 020 100-6 10 2 Chicago .. -000 000 001—1 8 2 Welch and Ferrell; Wyatt, Kimsey, Haid and Grube. Philadelphia ..010 032 000 00—6 10 0 St. Louis ...000 006 000 01—7 11 0 Grove, Walberg and Cochrane; Stiles, Hebert and Hemsley. . HE. Washington ...200 120 503—13 17 ' Detroit os. e ss 201 000 030— 6 14 « Whitehill, Russell and Sewell; Fischer, Frasier, Auker and Hay- worth. New York 014 400 100—10 10 0 Cleveland --001 000 000— 1 7 3 Allen and Dickey; Bean. Hudlin, Connally and Spencer, Myatt. — The Daily Woker COMES OFF THE PRESS 8:15 P. M. WORKERS ARRANGING OPEN-AIB MEETING SHOULD SEND DOWN TO 35 EAST 12th ST. (Store) FOR A BUNDLE OF PAPERS, WHICH CAN BE SOLD AT THE MEETING, NOT LATER THAN 9 P, M. Unemployed Workers WHO WISH TO SELL THE ‘DAILY’ AS SOON AS IT COMES OFF THE PRESS PLEASE OALL AT THE Tea ADDRESS ALL DAY TILL P.M. | 1, J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 206 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone; Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order BROOKLYN for Brownsville Workers! | Hoffman’s RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA : Pitkin Corner Saratoga A BENSONHURST WORKERS Patronize | GORGEOU’S CAFETERIA , 2211 86th Street

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