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Ro Page Tws DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1933 SPEAKERS LA DEMAND DEATH T0 LYNCH GANGS, AT HARLEM MEET Robert Minor, James Ford, Others, Show the} Necessity for Continuous Struggle NEW YORK, August A spo} for another march to Washington to demand the safe release of the Scotts-|jaet from boro boys was voiced last night at a protest meeting against the Tuscaloosa a zs, held at the Community House of the A. M. E. Zion Church at 151 W. 136th Street. s rs was collected for boro Defense them William F e Harlem I. L. D. Mrs. Mary C. Spted of Montgomery, Alabama; Samuel Leibowitz, Scot boro counsel; Irving D. attorney #iven from James W. rd, Negro labor lead and Robe mmur didate for f New York, all praised the International Lab fense for its work and stirr audience into pledging t 1 ¢¢tant support in the fig! o free the Negro prisoners in the South held on trumped-up charges. Leibowitz declared his solidarity with the ILD. in the fihgt to save he Scottsboro boys and decla that he vy i go back to their fense even if it meant lynching. In his talk, however, he praised the ‘impartiality’ of Judge Horton, lauding him for his opinion grant- ing a new trial to Heywood Patter- son. Robert Minor, who followed Leibowitz, pointed out that Horton was as guilty as any in carrying through the frame-up of the nine innocent b “Anyone who will praise the ‘impartiality’ of Judge Horton,” he declarea, “says in real- ity, ‘Let the lynchings continue!’ ” Robert Minor. speaking as a rep-| resentative of the Communist Party, told of the vicious conditions of peonaee in the South. He told how at the time of the Civil War, the slaves had been “freed” and how, after the Reconstruction days, the Democratic Party had entered into a “gentlemen’s agreement” with the Republican Party. “And that ‘gen- tlemen’s agreement’,” he said, ‘‘was an agreement which said ‘You may » Going loved Scottsboro Russia? UD LL D, | City Events | Election Parade Sunday. NEW YORK.—The Red Front Band has mobilized its entire mem- | | bership for participation in the | Election Parade that will be held jat Pleasant Bay Park, Unionport | N. Yu. where the Communist- Party, N. Y. District, is having the first ratification rally on Sunday, Aug- ust 27th. Varous mass organizations have | promised to attend in full force; with their banners for this eleetion parade, Besides the various games arranged and dancing that will 2:30 until midnight, | the District Committee of the Com- munhist Pary has arranged a pro- —___—_} gram for the evening, starting at | hang, burn and lynch the Negroes|6 o'clock. Comrade Bob Minor, | as much as you please!” jcandidate for Mayor on the Com- Minor spoke of conditions in the|nist Party, 50 E. 43th St. 5th fl. South at present. He showed how/ Admission will be 25 cents. Tick- the present wave of lynchings andjets in advance can be obtained at murder was an indication of the|the District Office of the Commu- growing social unrest throughout|nst Party, 50 E. 13th Et., 5h fl. the South. “The Tuscaloosa lynch-| Pleasant Bay Park can be reached ngs are a direct threat to our be-/by I. R. T. subway, Pelham Bay boys. Th ough|Line to Zerega Avenue. Buses them the white rulers of the Sonth/will run from the subway. station | ntaneous demand from the audience | “|are saying that they will murder the| to the Park. boro bo: Scott Student Conference. A conference to rally workers, | students and youth generally to Two Negr O€s Meet |smash the terror against students Death at Hands of} sivst, isaac the "comme White Land-Owners =: Church, 110th St. and 5th The conference has been called by the Committee of ex- pelled and suspended students. ——- | — Alabama Lynching Is) Collection Continued. $ S - NEW YORK.—The collection of 24th Recorded This {20,000 dimes has been extended Year in U. S. ‘2 September 5th. All comrades | are urged to retain their boxes and to get as many workers to con- NEW YORK, Aug. 25—Selma, Ala-| tribute as possible. Those organ- jbama, was the scene of another | izations that have not called for lynching, the International Labor| boxes are urgcc to do so at once Defense learned yesterday, while @/ at the office of the Election Cam- Negro tenant farmer was murdered] paign Committee—Room 526, 799 in Pennsylvania yesterday in a quar-| Broadway. rel with the white owner of the farm -—— he worked. | Concert for Metal Workers. | Joe Solde, of Selma, was lynched| A Metal Workers W.LR. Com- Aug. 10. In spite of efforts of local| mittee which was organized to ob- | authorities to conceal this crime, the|tain relief for the 3,000 strikers | | information has come to the atten-| in the metal industry has arranged | tion of the International Labor De-|in cooperation with the Workers | fense office. International Relief, a gala con- Solde was framed on a charge of|cert in which will participate stealing a cow, the real reason being | Prominent Negro and white artists, |a determination’ by his white land-|for September 9th at the Coney lord to drive him off a piece of land | Island Workers’ Center. {he held under lease. Four white men, Archie Bryant, Walker Bryant, | Edward Meallin and Ace May, took him into the woods and beat him to death. The Eviction Protest. A protest meeting against the frame up used against an evicted family at 28th Street where tue| landlady refused to accept a rent| lynching of Solde is the ns voucher, will take place on Mon- twenty-fourth reported this year. Workers needing full outfits of horse- | whide leather sheeplined Coats, Wind- | breakers, Breeches, High Shoes, etc.,| “will receive special reduction on all their purchases at the Russian Art Shop Peasants’ Handicrafts 100 East 14th St., N. Y. C. day, August 28th, 8 p. m. sharp,| at 27th Street and Mermaid Ave.,| Coney Island. Fred Biedenkapp | will be the principal speaker. Ad- mission free. Unemployed Cloakmakers. | Imports from U.S.8.R. (Russia) || NW YORK—Local 2 and 3 uare Deal Ten, Candy, Cigarettes, Smocks) Tors I! of the Workers Committee on Un- | Se quered Work rep de be “al one a special | me: ALGONQUIN 4-0004 meeting of al ast Side unem- -ARMY and NAVY STORE ployed cloakmakers and dress- 121 THIRD AVE. | (2 doors South of 14th Street) . Also Full Line of Camp Equipment | AIRY, LARGE MIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES | STENCILS $1.90 INK 8c New Rotary Duplicators $18.50 up || All Other Items as Reasonable Union Sq. Mimeo Supply 108 EAST 14TH ST. ALg. 4-47 Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Ine. 347 E.72nd St. New York Telephone: RHinelander 5097 makers, Monday, Aug. 28, at 298 Henry Street. Protest Monday. The West Indian Protest meet- ing which was scheduled for Wed- nesday, Aug. 28, was postponed on account of the rain for Monday, August 28th, 8 p. m. at Renais- sance Casino, 150 West 138th St., | Corner of 138th St. and 7th Ave. (HE DAILY WORKER calls upon th all Daily Worker Volunteérs to come into the City Office of the “Daily”, 35 E, 12th St. (store) to STATIONERY and WIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES At Special Prices for Organizations New York address envelopes, etc. Please call all day Monday till Friday from 9 a.m to7 p. m Phone ALgonquin 4-3356 — 8843 Lerman Bros., Inc. 48 East 14th St. N.Y. C. | GOTTLIEB’S HARDWARE 119 THIRD AVENUE | Near 1th st. ‘TOmpkins Sq. 6-4547 ALL KINDS OF ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman Tel.: Fordham 7-4011 BRONX WORKERS! PATRONIZE Columbus Steam Laundry Service, Inc. 2157 PROSPECT AVENUE BRONX, N. Y. A Laundry Workers Industrial Union Shop 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. WILLIAM BELL Optometrist Election Campaign Week Spend YOUR Vacation in Our Proletarian Camps NITGEDAIGET UNITY BEACON, New York WINGDALE City Phone EStabrook 8-1400 New York | | | Proletarian Atmosphere, Healthy Food, Warm and Cold Showers, Bathing, Rowing, Athletics, Sport Activities NEWLY BUILT TENNIS COURT IN NITGEDAIGET WEEK-END RATES : Vacation Rates: $13.00 per week! 1 Day . . $2.45 (INCLUDING TAX) 2 Days. 4.65 1 (including tax) ‘VE FOR CAMP from 2700 Bronte Park East every day at 10 n.m, and Saturday 10 a. 3p. m., 7 p. m—Take Lexington Av whit Plains Road Express, Stop at Allerton Avenue. 05 mae x: ROUND TRIP: to Nitgedaiget .. . $2.00 to Unity ..... $3.00 Week End Program in Nitgedaiget Election campaign, sport contests. Continued in the afternoon. Bvening—Concert program—Plerre Degeyter Trio, A new revolutionary feature An Agit-Chorus of fifty voices in song and recitation and the New Dance Group in the “Politician Dance.” Reading of the results of the straw vote é &nd also the winning candidate for mayor of Nitgedaiget, SUN. Morn: ing—Sam Nessin "Why Workers Should Vote for the Communist Can- didates,”’ Afternoon--Baseball games. Evening—Election Ratific: CARS LEA Frit Dane Ko 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth A Phone: Tompkins Squa: Office Phone: Estabrook 8-2573 DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2574 WALLAVE AVE. corner Allerton Avenue Bronx, N. ¥. MOT THAVEN 9-8749 ~ DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue) Visitors toRussia! Full Outfits of LEATHER COATS, BREECHES, SHOES, PANTS and everything needed at guaranteed Lowest Prices in New York City. HUDSON ARMY and NAVY STORE 97 Third Avenue Between 12th and 13th Street | | Tammany Leader: Gutters of New York ! ry element for its su S trength * . Testimony in Senator eland's RACKET COMM. pportand “Say That’s Insultin’” Adopt Resolutions of Pr to one of the biggest mass meetings big shoe strike and the results of the | | 4 Metal Shops Grant Strikers’ Demands| New Shops Join Strike; Big Strike Meet Today NEW YORK.—More metal shops were reported as having settled to- day with the Metal Workers’ In- dustrial Union. Since the settlement of the La Belle shop, the workers in the Job shov, the Columbia Metal and Spinning, and the Keystone Plat- ing Co. have returned to work hav- ing won decided improvements in their working conditions. About 4,000 workers are still out on strike, among whom are the 450 strikers of the Mutual Sunset Lamp Co., and the 350 workers of the Majestic shop. The morale of the strikers is ex- cellent, The metal strikes were greatly strengthened by the walk out of the workers of the Durable Co. which has come out 100 per cent and by the Empire State Novelty workers who also joined the strike, Ben Gold, national secretary of the Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- trial Union is scheduled to speak at 8 mass meeting today at 12 noon, at Manhattan Lyceum, 64 E. 4th Street. Organizational activity is ravidly developing in other sections of the metal industry. Mass organizations are called upon to support the metal workers’ strike on the picket line, and to send their contributions to the Metal Workers Industrial Union, 35 E. 19th Street. Don’t forget the International Labor De- fense Excursion, “All day on the Hudson,” ember 3rd. Be there with all your Huge Shoe Meet Condemns Whalen — Strike -Breaking rotest to Grover Whalen } and N.R.A. in Washington NEW YORK.—Striking shoe workers jammed the sidewalks for blocks around Arcadia Hall, Brooklyn, Thursday night, unable to gain admission of shoe workers ever held in the city, The meeting was called for the purpose of reporting the condition of the | code hearings held recently in Wash- —ington but it was turned into a huge protest of 7,000 shoe workers against the threat of Grover Whalen to |break their strike. Early in the afternoon crowds of shoe workers | started streaming into the hall, hold- ing their shop signs aloft until not an inch of space was available. The scene resembled a great national | political convention. In a stirring speech, Fred Bie- |denkapp exposed the real motives | back of Whalen’s threat. He told of | Whalen's record as a clubber of the unemployed and instigator of for- | geries against the Soviet Union. Tae thousands of workers inside and out- |side the hall answered with hisses and boos when Whalen’s name was| |mentioned. Denying Whalen’s charge | that the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Union wat made up only of Com-} munists, he said “If all you workers | gathered here were Communists, Grover Whalen would not be here today.” e a Other speakers at the meeting were I, Rosenberg, organizer of th slipper workg*s and Kramer, organi- | zer of the stitchdown workers. Frank | Costello, veteran fighter of the 1929 shoe workers’ struggles, emphasized the necessity for keeping the ranks \solid. F. Papa was chairman of the | meeting. A resolution was adopted protest- | ing Whalen’s strikebreaking activi- ties and was sent to Whalen and to Washington. The National Shoe Workers’ As- sociation headed by Zimmerman and Hutchinson are assisting the shoe bosses to recruit scabs to break the slipper workers’ strike. Along with the New York State Employment agency which is furnishing scabs, for the Novelty Slipper Co. The Association inserted an ad in the New York American for the same purpose. Shoe workers are warned not to be misled by these seab agencies, Irish Ready Conditions to Follow C.P. Lead, Says Gralton Deported Revolutionary Leader Describes in Ireland By PASCUAL. | NEW YORK.—Reading about Jim Gralton’s revolutionary activity in Ireland and his final deportation, one might expect to find a dynamically Powerful worker who has a complete mastery of public speaking. But Jim effective in another way. Jim is a slim, quiet sort of fellow of about 35, with clear, shrewd eyes behind horn rimmed glasses. He speaks quietly on the platform, just as though he were talking to one or two workers. The meeting last ‘Thursday night at Lexington Hall was called in his honor, but he had no prepared speech. He would rather the 120 workers (majority of them Irish) asked questions and they would have a little discussion. Somebody asked him a question about tobacco, “Yes,” he answered, “they're growing tobacco back in Ireland, but it's no use; you can't sell it. They give a dole, amourits to about 10 shillings ($2.50) a week. Well, it’s better to take the dole than a farm with 50 acres of land.” He was asked if there was any group with whom the workers can co-operate to better themsélves. He responded very simply: “There’s no- body else to work with but the Com- munist Party.” Touching on his deportation he dryly quoted somebody who had said: “It's a bad policy to deport anybody now, because when the Communist Party comes into power they'll de- port their enemies, the capitalists.” “What about Owen O'Duffy's Blue Shirts, the Fascists?” somebody shouted from the back of the hall. Gralton answered in the same quiet, matter of fact tone: “The Fascists are the greatest bunch of bums I ever mety they have callouscs on Gralton with his matter of fact way of speaking, and witty dry humor is fA De EOS AO irs CaN OTe their hands from tippin’ pints.” He went on further to tell about |the way he, together with a group of starving workers and farmers, | seized the grazing land of a wealthy landowner and settled one of their number on the land. The landowner came to them and protested, saying he had’ no place to graze his cattle. They told him he could graze his cattle on the land providing he paid the new owner for the privilege. But he didn% want to glorify his | activities of organising eviction fights. “It's just like they do up in the Bronx. You get a bunch to- gether and give physical argument to the sheriff.” When the questions took on a re-| |Ugieus turn, with workers asking whether this or that priest is help- |ing the workers, whether Communism is against religion or whether Com- munism is the highest form of re- ligion, Gralton answered quite prac- tically: “I’m sorry, but I’m not an authority on religion. All I know is that if Protestants, Jews and Cath- olics go out on sirike, you don't stop to figure out their religion.” He related a story of protesting coal miners in a small town who were given 6 pence more per ton of coal by shouting “Up Communism,” and went on to add: “The Irish peasant is shrewd and cunning, and if he thinks he can gain anything from a movement he'll fight like hell /egcinst anything that stands in his way. 1,000 Strike in Radio Plant Metal Union Guides Strike for More Pay NEW YORK.—A thousand young workers in several departments of the Aerovox Corporation, one of the biggest radio plants in Brooklyn em- loving 1,200 workers, are out on strike. Eighteen young girls of the winding department of the Shop started the walk-out last Wednesday which now threatens, to involve the entire plant. Many came out on Thursday and ers’ ranks daily as they see the peppy fight these young workeis are | putting up for more pay. { With the help of the Metal Work- ers’ Industrial Union, the young strikers have gone right to the busi- ness of getting their strike organ- ized, They have elected a strike committee and have drawn up de- mands for a minimum wage scale of $18 a week, $15 for the unskilled, | $22 for the solderers $20 for the new | solderers, a 36 hour week, recogni- tion of their shop committee and no} discrimination against any strikers, The company’s gangsters are working hard to terrorize the strik- ers and keep the-other workers in the plant from coming out. Police are also on the job helping the boss to break the sirike. McCarthy, a young girl striker was arrested but the union’s attorney later obtained | her release, The picket line continues daily, however. Suggestions by the company that the workers join the A. F. of L. were | seorned by the strikers. “We don’t) want a union that the bosses sug- gest for us,” they declared at strike meetings. Settle Two Shops | in Furniture Strike Rank, File Struggle Develops in Local 76 | NEW YORK —The first fruits of the militant strike of parlor frame workers were reported today with the successful settlement of two| Brooklyn Shops, the Berman Parlor Frame Co. and the Star Parlor Frame Co. The settlement will mean wage increases of from $7 to $12 a week for the 55 workers in- volved, unemployment insurance paid for by the bosses and recogni- tion of the Furniture Workers’ In- dustrial Union, which led the strike, At the same time reports are com- | ing in of upholsterer bosses nego- tiating with the union, and several settlements arc expected shortly in | the upholsterers strike. Meanwhile the strikers are solidifying their ranks, just as the struggle in local 76 of the A. F. of L. is developing | between the officials and the rank and file. When workers dare to express their opinion which is not | agreement with that of the official- dom they are often threatened with violence at the open meetings of the union. Sees Court Action Killing Light Rate’ Reduction in N, Y. NEW YORK, Aug. 25.—The action of the big electric companies in tak- ing to court the decision of the Pub- lic Service Commission reducing rates 6 per cent will doom this de- cision, the Chairman of the Com- mission, Maltbie, announced today. He said that the reduction can be indefinitely postponed by court ac- tion. more workers are joining the strik- | | | Life and the World’s pean tour to the-family home at Manual Training High ha the two cars. George is a lanky, open-faced. pleasant boy who is just turning 21. This is only the second day that he’s off the Europa which brought home half of the invading team,' but he seems rested. He speaks with the ease of one accustomed to in-/ terviews; freely, fluently and with | gusto. | They didn’t run into much com- petition, Metcalfe, Cunningham, Fuqua, Morriss and himself, going undefeated. But everywhere they performed to record crowds and everywhere they had a fine time ex- cept... Except where? Germany. “We hed traveled hours by rail- road, ferry and airplane when we arrived in Dusseldorf, but nobody met us. We walked about twenty minutes with our luggage before we got to the hotel. Everything is so tense in that country, nobody dares open his mouth, This Hitler is just a pale photostat Mussolini. Guess you heard about the American doctor Mulvihill who got mobbed because he didn’t give the fascist salute. Well we didn’t either. Not a one of us. “That's one European country where conditions may improve. They} couldn’t get any worse. “In France too, their attitude has changed a great deal since the U.S went off the gold standard. We had a funny time with one conductor who wanted to give us fourteen francs on the dollar. Eighteen was the rate of exchange that day,-but he wouldn’t give it. Say, he was a howl. Hid his face in his hands and worked his body from side to side, kept screaming, “Non, non, non, non...” He was going to call gendarmes and Laborde the discuss thrower pulled him back by the shoulder and this guy reached for his back pecket so we all jumped back but it turned out to be just a ticket pad. “Roosevelt said he wasn’t going off the gold standard, why doesn’t; he keep his promise? I like people to keep their promises.” “They don’t like Americans in France but the air there isn’t loaded with gunpowder like in Germany, Austria and Hungary. Maybe I just didn’t notice it.” About high-jumping. None of the home stars did over the equivalent of 6 ft. 2 in. and George's. world record is 6 ft. 8% in. In practice he has actually done 6 ft. 10 in. So of course he wasn’t pressed which was lucky, all in all, because take- offs were poor. In Budapest con- ditions were rather favorabie, they had a brickdust take-off which was wetted, and there he did.two meters which is about 6 ft. 6% in. Spitz is convinced Cunningham could take both Lovelock and Bonth- ron. “The man is a wonder. You remember his running within a second of the world’s record for the mile, then doing 1 min. 50 sec, for the half. Well, in Europe he ran within a fifth of a second of the | 1,500 mark and the same afternoon | stepped out for a 49 quarter and when he pulls up he says, ‘These European shoes hurt” Not even winded.” McCluskey had some difficulty be- ‘cause they wouldn't give him the | steeplechase, his specialty. At that, he did well. Anderson and Laborde placed one, two in the discus throw most everywhere. Sometimes Ander- DOWNTOWN WORKERS WIL LL APPRECIATE APEX CAFETERIA BAR and GRILL 827 BROADWAY (bet. 12th and 13th Sts.) Excellent Food — Reasonable Prices OLEAN AND COMFORTABLE ENVIRONMENT SERVICED BY FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION N Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 69 All Comrades Meet at the W HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA | -. 18TH ST.. WORKERS’ CENTET Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades GARMENT DISTRICT Garment Seétion Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUB Corner 28th St. Phones: Chickering 4947—Longacre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York Worker Centcr Comrades Welcome Universal Cafeteria 80 UNIVERSITY PLACE Corner 11th Strest me CLASSIFIED é PURNISHED cingle or double rocm facing beach. Renccnable. Wert Tnd-Bay 2223 Bay View Place, Broolly. way. Furnished Rooms or Apartments Classified Ads 5 cents WANTED—Purhished or Unfurnished Room. Location Utica Ave. Station, Private Balance: State Rental. P. M. 6-0 Daily rorkex, BXORPTIONAL largo light room for couple in Brooklyn. Care child if des! L, Dicatur 2-2522, except Sunda: COUPLE Wishes to share ‘apartment in Greenwich village. Write Lendy, -o | Daily Worke:. To keep up a six-page “Daily Work- er,” the citea-""oi must be doubled. Do vorr share by getting mew sith- By EDWARD George Spitz has just returned from a triumphant Euro- Greatest High Jumper NEWHOUSE in the green suburb of White- stone, Long Island. He sits rocking on the breezy, spacious | porch while his mother reproves the elder George for lolling about in paint-stained clothes, Dad Spitz who is a teacher ith one pf d been tinkering son won, sometimes Laborde. Did Metcalfe run up against anly of the discrimination he has had to face in his own country? No. In Sweden he was a sensation, of course. None of those people ever saw a Negro. He ran them bowlegged too. What about professionalism in col- leges? “That's mostly bunk,” Spitz said, “There’s a lot of that in football but track doesn’t draw enough here. If it did, there'd be no telling. As it is, the contacts you make are the only tangible benefits derived.” He is dissatisfied with present criteria in rating competitors. “Be- cause Johnny Morriss beat out Beard by a foot he got this trip, although Beard holds the world’s record and is much the more consistent per- former. That sort of stuff’s no good.” High jumping doesn’t require a great deal of practice and George finds it interferes little with his other interests. He has perfected a com- plicated style of his own and now he finds he jumps best after a three weeks’ rest. He has just finished a three year pre-med course at N.Y.U. and starts studying dentistry in the fall. If he hadn't gone on the tour he would have worked as life guard at the nearby beach. The crisis doesn’t seem to have hit the Spitz family. Their tran- quillity is a strange anachronism for one who has observed other Amer- ican homes go to pieces. The father is a powerfully built man, strikingly native to his suburban surroundings. He used to do 5 ft. 11 in. himself and was also a member of a world’s championship team—the Whitestone Fire Company which won the prize for efficiency at the Exposition of 1908. George appears to be his sort. Standing of the Clubs Philadelphia at St. Louis resuit not in. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 70 43 .619 Pittsburgh 62 55 .530 Boston 66 58 .555| Phil'phia 49 66 .¢21 Chicago 65 54 .547| Brooklyn 48 66 .421. St. Louis 64 56 .533/ Cincinnati 45 75 .375 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Newark 85 57 599 {Buffalo 72 73.497 Rochester 78 65 .545 | Albany —-69: 78 486 Baltimore ° 7 68 521 | Montreal 68 75 .468 Toronto 78 73 .500 | Jersey City 55 88.305, All games to be played at night. AMERICAN LEAGUE ‘Boston -100 510 010-8 11 1 Chicago . -000 000 100-1 7 0 Rhodes and Ferrell; Gaston, Haid and Berry, Sullivan. Washington ....010 310 000—5 10 0 Detroit .........110 000 110-4 8 4 Burke and Berg; Marberry and Hayworth, Pasek. 000 010 120-4 8 2 New York . Cleveland +010 000 05x—6 10 1 Devens, Pennock, Moore and Dicl- ey; Pearson, Hard, Spencer, Myett and Pytlak. NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) R. H. E. Pitteburgh ...202 010 000 00—5 7 1 New York ...200 030 000 03—8 14 2 French, Swetonic and Grace; Fitz- simmons, Luque and Mancuso, (Second) Pittsburgh ......000 000 020-2 6 1 New York ......023 010 00x—6 7 1 Meine, Swift and Picinich; Parma- lee and Mancuso. (First Game) -000 030 000-8 7 1 sseeee-100 100 101-4 9 0 and Lombardi; Beck and Cincinnati Brooklyn ‘Lucas ‘Second) -000 030 000-3 7 1 Brooklyn ... -300 001 OOx—4 2 4 Johnson and Manion, Lombardi, Carroll and Lopez. (First Game) Chicago . 020 020 012—7 13 1 Philadelphia ...301 030 10x-8 8 0 Malone, Herrmann and Campbell; Rhem, Collins and Davis, St. Louis at Boston played pre vious date. (Second) Chicago .........313 060 000—7 16 2 Philadelphia ....000 010 030-4 7 1 Warneke and Hartnett; Liska, Berley and Todd. BROOKLYN Hansen, Brooklyn Workers Patronise HOWAR —STEAM LAUNDRY —SERVIC E— 476-8-80 Howard Ave., Bklyn, N.Y. PResident 3-3009 FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE Hoffman's RESTAURANT) | @ CAFETERIA | Pitkin Correr Saratoga Aves. ) iY WORXERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN A’?/ENUE seribers, Noes Hopkinson Ave, Brooklyn, N. Y. AMERICAN LEAGUE if Club W. L. P.C. Club W.L.P.C. Wash'ton 80 40 667; Phil’phia 58 60 .492 New York 70 48 .593 | Chicago 57 65 467 Cleveland 64 61 .512 | Boston 51 71 .418 | Detroit 61 63 492 | St. Louis 45 78 .366