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‘The Fight for United Front _ far into the past. Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1933 The Paterson By J. ST Silk Strike ---| ACHEL MHE growing pressure of the silk workers for a fight against, | the $13 cotton code whicl tndustry forced some of the officials of the United Textile Workers to announce a strike for Thursday (yesterday). True, n was imposed upon the silk | many workers in Paterson, where the strike sentiment is | strongest, doubt whether the® officials will not once more call “ff the strike as was the case m. three occasions in the past few aonths. But the National Textile Workers Union is calling upon the rorkers to strike and there is every ossibility that a mass strike of the ilk workers of Paterson, Allentown nd New England will be developed. the key question in the development | f this fight is the development of | ae united front of the silk workers 1 this unorganized industry in which there are almost a dozen dif-| 2rent unions. | ae \T the Cleveland Trade Union Con-| Vterence for United Action there | as adopted a unanimous manifesto | > the workers of the U. 8. This 1anifesto called for the development | { the united front of struggle} gainst the capitalist attack against | re living standards of the workers irough the operation of the. Na- onal Recovery Act. Voting for this 1anifesto were elements of diverse olitical opinions including the ele-| ents around the Conference for} rogressive Labor Action of which . J. Muste is the head. | True, there were some questions | pon which not ‘all the delegates | yuld agree. The outstanding dif-| srence of opinion was on the question f giving support to the building of he Steel and Metal Workers Indus- rial Union, which alone is now lead- | ag the struggle of the workers in} he steel and metal industry, It nould be remembered that the AFL inion in this industry even now, fter some recruitment has a mem- ership not larger than the member- hip of the Steel and Metal Workers ndustrial Union. Certain delegates dhering to the CPLA refused to ake a position in favor of support- ag the building of this union. i A. J. Muste in his summary re- ‘aarks just before the close of the ‘onference while not taking a posi-| ion on this important question made | uite a sharp attack on some of the/ wlicies of the Trade Union Unity | yeague. He especially singled out or attack the National Textile| Workers Union in Paterson. He ex-| sused the desertion of one of the| Conference for Progressive Labor) Action adherents and signers of the Sleveland Call by the name of} 3rooks on the ground that the Na-| ional Textile Workers Union in Pa-| erson was not really fighting for the united front in the past. This he| 2ted suspicions that can not sily rémoved. Muste while talking about Paterson. also stated that he had) been invited by the NTWU to speak in Paterson on Wednesday evening the night before the calling of the strike and that he would without doubt be there. Muste gave this as proof of his genuine fight for the united front. On the strength of this Statement he was advertised thru the press and thru leaflets as one of the speakers at the meeting! A few hours before the meeting the offic of Muste was cailed remind- ine him of the meeting. One of his assistants answered that he will be r: vas not at the meet- understand what this failure to| appear at the meeting means ‘we must give some facts about the situa- tion in Paterson. We need not go We consider only the developments of the last few months. The conditions of the silk workers in Paterson have become in- tolerable. Experienced workers make gn average of $16.00 a week for a full weeks work. In 1929 these same Workers received $30 and more per week. The cotton code with its min- imum wage of $13 has been imposed upon the silk workers. The workers gre solidly against this code. The AFL textile union of Paterson Amown as the Associated Silk Work- @s has‘in the past few months called ‘md announced a general strike in Paterson on three different occasions and each time called it off the last minute. The National Textile Work- ers Union has made numerous ap- peals for the united front of the workers of both organizations. It sent a letter to the local organiza- tion on numerous occasions. Dele- gations appeared before the execu- tive board. In each case the united front proposal of the National Tex- tile Workers Union was rejected. Among those who rejected this pro- | tional silk strike. posal were the adherents and sym- pathizers of the Conference for Pro- | gressive Labor Action, the leading | element of whom is the same afore-| mentioned Brooks, | In this strike again the National Textile Workers Union is calling} upon the workers to unite their ranks. To organize one strike com- mittee, to unite on one set of de- mands, to establish one united picket line—in a word to united for the win- ning of the demands of the workers. There exist great possibilities for actually making this strike a na-| This of course will | not be done by Mr. McMahon of the | United Textile Workers. As the workers wiil recall he accepted the bosses’ codes and only recently he/| acted as strikebreaker in Salem} where after a successful strike con-| ducted over the heads of the UTW Offiicals the 1800 workers withdrew from the AFL and organized an in- dependent union. This can only be done by the workers themselves- In establishing this united front and a national strike the NTWU is an important factor not alone be- cause of the policy of united front for which it is fighting but also be- cause of its influence and organiza- tional strength. Aside from its mem- bership) in Paterson which is not much less than that of the AFL union (the bulk of the workers are unorganized) the NTWU has thou- sands of members in Rhode Island, Philadelphia, and influence in Al- Jentown among the silk workers. The NTWU therefore in this fight for the united front is fighting for a real strike. Only in this way can a real silk strike be developed. . . ‘THERMORE there are many other unions in the field-inde- pendent unions. It is clear that the AFL organization here can have no claim to monopoly of the field. The unions outside the AL number many more workers than those in the AFL. It would seem that in such a situation even those who are not in agreement with the policies of the Trade Union Unity League but who profess to be for the united front could have but one road—to fight for the united front of the workers in the various organizations for the struggle. And especially important is the establishment of this united front in Paterson. »Paterson is look- ed upon by the silk workers through- out the country as the one to give the lead. What then should one say when A. J. Muste voted for the | united front manifesto in Cleveland and fails to come forward and fight for the united front in this first struggle after the conference. What explanation can there be for this? When the struggle of perhaps 75,000 | silk workers throughout the country is involved one must give a political explanation for the failure to come forward in Paterson and state -his position. This becomes especially important because those who claim to be adherents of the CPLA refuse to fight for the unity of the silk workers in Paterson. The meeting did take place with- out Muste. True, we heard no com- plaints from any of the workers why he did not appear. And the attend- ance was very large. Some 1200 workers were present. The majority were non-members of the National Textile Workers Union. Among the speakers were, Moe Brown, local or- ganizer of the NIWU., Ann Burlak, National Secretary of the NIWU, and the writer. The speakers were well received. The workers voted for the united front policy proposed and elected a strike committee of 60 workers. This committee is to go to the Associated and ask for unity for one strike committee, for one set of demands | to be decided by the workers on the basis of the various proposals made by the different unions. The work- ers are ready for a real militant struggle. One of the features of the Situation is the feeling among the workers that was expressed that the UTW officials may again call off the strike the last minute thus dividing the ranks of the workers. There. are weaknesses in the work of the NTWU in Paterson about which we will deal in another article. But one thing is clear. The TUUL unions who voted for the Cleveland Manifesto are organizing the united front of the workers, organizing the fight to defend the interests of the workers. Spend Labor Day Week-End in our Proletarian Camp KINDERLAND Hopewell Junction, New York Cultural and Sport Activities Every Day Week-End Rates: One Day—$2.45; Two Days—$4,65 Special Program for Labor Day Week-End Friday night— Banquet to celebrate the Fourteenth Anniversar y of the Com- munist Party. Saturday night— Revolutionary Songs, Recitations, Red Dancers. Camp Fire. A special edition of the Cam i ip Paper by L, Miller, Mass singing conducted by J, Shafer. Recitations by members of the “Artef.” Sunday night— Masquerade Bail. Special prizes for best costume, First prize— a set of Lenin’s works. Monday morning— A revolutionary play “Nira and the Working Class.” Cars leave for Camp daily at 10 AM. from 2700 Bronx Part East Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 10 AM; 3 P.M. and 7 P.M. For information call TOmpkins Square 6-8434 | |Stachel t6 Discuss el | “Daily” With, Local] Trade Unions Tonite NEW YORK.—Jack Stachel, act- ing secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, will address dele- gates from local industrial unions |on the problems of the * Daily | Worker, at the Workers Center, 50| | | E, 13th St, second floor, tonight | at 7 o'clock. If any of the unions invited have not yet had a chance to select | their delegates, officers are urged | to come to the conference tonight. | Thousands Answer General Silk Strike Call in Paterson A. F. of L. to Arbitrate Under N. R. A. | | | PATERSON, N. J., Aug. 31.—| “It’s the greatest weik-out yet.” | This was the comment of the/ workers as they left their shops| this morning at 10 am. and an- swered the call for a general silk strike. Nearly 38,000 massed in Roseland Hall this morning at the first strike meeting. Figures of the actual number of workers on strike were not available today at strike headquarters of the two unions calling the strike, the National Textile Workers’ Union and the As- sociated Silk Workers affiliated j with the A. F. of L., but hardly a loom could be heard working as one walked through this big center of the silk industry. Estimates that from 6,000 to 7,000 were out were verified by many strikers who de- clared that only a few shops are still working. “Tt had to be a big strike,” said | a woman weaver, at the strike hall. |“We couldn’t get anything out of |that NRA. It’s true some of us got a cent or two more on the yard, but when the hours were shortened to 40 we all got a pay-cut. Now we make less than $15 a week and the unskilled workers who are sup- posed to get $13 a week are work- ing only a few days. They get any- where from $9 down. This strike is going to mean more wages for us.” This was typical of the deter- mination of the women workers. Last night on the eve of the strike a telegram received by the Associated Silk Workers from the National Labor Advisory Board signed by Leiserson, urged that the strike be called off and that “both parties maintain status quo and| submit their differences to the Na- tional Labor Board,” But the sentiment for a strike among the workers was too great and Schweitzer and Keller were compelled to go through with it. However, they answered that they were willing to arbitrate the strike. “We shall be glad to sit in with the| loyal NRA board and settle the, strike,” he told the local press. At the same time the Associated officials at the strike meeting this morning did not raise the demands of the strike with the workers. Both the A. F. of L. officials who spoke stressed the importance of signing up with the union. This together with Schweitzer’s statement to the local press would indicate that the | strike will be quickly smothered by the Associated officials unless the rank and file are watchful by insisting -on broad rank and ‘file trike committees. Today’s meeting | while concerned chiefly with regis- |tering the strikers, also elected a | strike committee on which only shop chairmen of union shops were jelected. The unorganized shops} | were not represented on the strike committee. The strikers were heartened at the report that 2,000 silk workers came out in Shamokin, Pa., all the silk plants were tied up in Strouds- berg. Other silk centers are report- |ed as considering strike action. That the strike would be a real |mass movement of the silk workers | was forecast last night at the mass |meeting called by the National | Textile Workers’ Union when more than 1,000 packed Roseland Hall and heard speakers of the Union discuss the issues of the strike. Ann Burlak who has recently guided the strike of the Salem textile workers to a successful conclusion, Jack Stachel of the Trade Union Unity League, Moe Brown, organizer of the locall NTW, were enthusiastic- ally greeted by the workers who ex- pressed their desire for unity in | the strike. The National Textile Workers’ Union will make a plea for unity in the strike at the strike meeting to- morrow morning. ‘Martial Law Rules” In New Mexico (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) menb of troops, the governors of the various states involved are try- ing to smash the strike. Utah particularly is an armed camp, with the operators threaten- ing a massacre in their efforts to smash the strike and keep it from tying up the entire coal fields. The picket lines hold firm, nevertheless. The miners are in no mood to be driven back into the pits without winning their demands. Paul Crouch, and his wife, Sylvia ee are ‘still being held in jail. adoption of the coal code by John L. Lewis and the operators as a means of driving the men back to work. Local papers under bold headlines print a story headed: “Operators and UMWA in Accord.” In Gallup the Gallup American | Coal Company printed a large ad. yertisement in the local newspa-! per, “The Gallup Independent,” calling the miners to a mass meet- ing, with the statement: “Those standing by the National Miners Union are not wanted and will not be tolerated” The local papers are using the got to pay the banks. Gutters of New York i Tammany Office-Holder ($15,000 a year) You'll have to take another cut. By del Well, we’ve Providence, R. [. ° Attempts to Smas Communist Meets Police Arrest 4, Club Others in Attacks of | Last 3 Weeks PROVIDENCE, R. I—Four work- | ers were arrested, one clubbed into} unconsciousness, and many more beaten in the continued attack of the Providence police to stop the) Communist Party from speaking to| the Italian workers of Federal Hill Section of this city. Under the pretext of blocking traffic the meetings of the Com- munist Party for the past three weeks have been interfered with. The Sacco-Vanzetti meeting ar- ranged for Aug. 22 was awaited by 5,000 workers who came to hear the Communist Party speakers. Two pa- trol wagons of police drove into the peacefully assembled crowd and dis- persed them with clubs and black- jacks. Anna Block was again dragged off the platform and D, Glass was beaten unconscious. The trial of the three workers, | Anna Block, Lennie Carbone and S.} Turchette, which took place last Wed- nesday in the police court; was a farce. In spite of the overwhelming evidence that meetings had been) conducted in that vicinity for over| a dozen years without the pretext) of blocking traffic, the workers were fined $10 each and costs. The workers are determined not to) allow tH® police to disrupt workers’ | meetings in the vicinity and_a peti- tion is being circulated for the right of -free speech, Meetings will con- tinue in that vicinity. Striking Cleaners - in Philadelphia, Pa., Join ILD En Masse 286 Workers in AFL. Locals Join Shop Branches | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Aug. 31. —As a result of activities of the International Labor Defense in keeping the jails clear of striking cleaners, dyers and laundry drivers here in defiance of a reign of ter- ror by police, 286 of them joined the organization en masse at a strike meeting here Thursday. The laundry workers, organized in Drivers Local No, 501, A. F. of L, are carrying on a. militant strike, Arrests have been so numer- ous, the I.L-D. has been obliged to arrange approximately $100,000 in bail for arrested workers. The striking workers joined the LL.D. at a strike meeting in Bos- lover Hall, where 1,000 strikers rose to cheer when M. Stern, dis- trict organizer, appeared to pledge further support to them, and to ex-. plain the role of mass defense or- ganized by the LL.D. Only those who:were able to actually sign ap- plication cards and pay initiation fees were counted among the 286. Many others expressed their inten- tion of joining. i _ The strikers will be organized into shop branches. Worker Greets “Daily” _ NEW YORK.—John Kellen, who is ‘leaving for the Soviet Union, has ,sent a greeting to the new six-page Daily Worker and a con- | |be held at Ambassador Hall, 3861 tribution of $5 to th i Seniesa oO the sustaining Bronx Takes’ Lead in 5-Borough C. P. Election Conference Sept. 9 Set for City- Wide United Front Ratification Meets Minor to Speak Robert Minor, ‘Communist candidate for Mayor, will speak tonight at Ambassador Hall, Claremont Parkway and Third Avenue, 8:30 p. m. at a meet- ing arranged’ by the Middle Bronx Unemployed Council. Sivas NEW YORK.—The first section to announce the arrangements for United Front Communist Party Ekction Campaign Ratification Conferences to be held in all five of the city boroughs simultaneously on Saturday September 9, is that of the Bronx. The Conference will Third Ave., at 1 o'clock in the af- ternoon. One of the three main candidates on the Communist Party city elec- tion ticket,, Robert Minor, for mayor; Willhemina Burroughs, for Comptroller; Ben Gold, for Presi- den. of the Board of Aldermen, will speak. Calls to the conference haye been sent out to all working class organizations in the Bronx. An- swers of acceptance are already be- ing received, sections five and fif-| teen of the Communist Party who are arranging the rally report. In the evening a banquet will be tendered to the Communist Mayor- alty candidate, Robert Minor, in the same hall. The letter urging delegates to be sent to the conference in the after- noon was sent to trade anions, clubs, fraternal and mutual aid or- ganizations, unemployed councils and block committees, shop com- mittees, etc. The headquarters for the Bronx} section are at 568 Prospect Ave. and 2075 Clinton Ave. Oi) Re Wear “Vote Communist” Buttons NEW YORK—*Vote Commu- nist” buttons with a white hammer and sickle on a red background, are ready for distribution, the Commu- nist Election Campaign Committee, 799 Broadway, announces. The first organization. to respond to a letter announcing the sale of the buttons at 2 cents apiece to organizations, was the Hungarian Workers’ Home Society of 350 E. 81st St., who sent in $10. NRA Cafeteria Does Its Part by Firing .|Girl Who Ate Bacon NEW YORK. — Before NRA, Nellie Kapowitz worked 2s bus ‘girl at Silver's Cafeteria. She earned $1 a day for 5 hours work, and was not charged for the food she ate while on the job. After NRA, Nellie was given a raise of 20 cents a day and she worked only 4 hours daily. Now she had to pay for her meals Which by order of the manage- “nent could consist of only coffee and rolls. During NRA she was fired, fo eating a piece of bacon, Write to the Daily Worker about every eve-i of inter- est to workers in your fac- tory, neighborhood or city. BECOME A WORKER COR- CAMP UNITY Will remain open during the whole month of SEPTE For the benefit of the COMMUNIST PARTY, NEW YORK’ DISTRICT Workers are requested to spend their vacation in Unity during September RESPONDENT! MBER | consider City Events Special T.U.U.C. Meeting There will be a special Trade Union Unity Council meeting tonight at 37 E. 13th Street to Whalen’s attacks on workers’ rights to strike and picket; a report on the Cleve- land Conference. All TUUC delegates are re- quested to be present at this meeting at 7:30 p. m, sharp. Bath Beach Meeting appearance of the of “The Voice of the The first Number West End” will be hade the oc-' among the hundreds of mags. They sold steadily, easion for a mass celebration tomorrow at 8 p. m., at the In- ternational Workers Order Center, Bay 25th Street at Benson Ave. Comade De Santis will speak on the importance of the Red Press in the class struggle. Workers’ School Dance Tonight The Summer Term students of the Workers School are having an entertainment and dance tonight at 8 p. m. for the Expansion Fund of the School, at 35 East 12th Street, 3rd floor. A plaque of Gorki will be awarded to the class that was most. active during the term in selling stamps for the Expansion Fund. There will be e@ good program and dancing. Admission is 15 cepts. Building Workers Meeting The Building Maintenance Work- ers Union will have a meeting to- night, 8:30 p. m., at Lafayette Hall, 165 W. 13ist Street, Room 9. The meeting was postponed from Wednesday because of rain. | Several questions of importance | to the union will be discussed. Tobacco Workers’ Entertainment A group of Spanish and Hungarian artists’ Will share in the entertainment tonight at the Julio A. Mella Club, 1413 Fifth Ave. near 116th St., for the benefit of the Tobacco Strikers. Ad- mission is 25c. SLIPPER WORKERS MEET A mass meeting of the slipper workers is called for this after- noon at 1 p. m. at Manhattan Ly- ceum, 66 E, 4th Street. Camp Unity Program Camp Unity * will open the month of September with a full program of activities for the La- bor Day week end. There will be a campfire tonight. The Soviet sound film, “Shame” and dancing is arranged for Saturday. On Sunday morning, Harry M. Wicks will speak on the subject, “14 Years of the Communist Par- ty of the U. S. A.” A dinner will be prepared for Sunday night with Comrade Krumbein, District Or- ganizer of the Party as speaker. There will also be music and dancing. Sidney Leroy of the Friends of the Soviet Union will speak on the morning of Labor Day. All profits will go to the Communist Party. Tobacco. Workers’ Picket Line ~ Ts Suecessful More Than Forty Shops Start Nego- tiationsWithUnion NEW YORK.—A militant picket- line of tobacco strikers under the leadersliip of the Tobacco Workers Industrial Union, in the third week of the strike, has purged several hun- dred shops of all strike breaking ele- ments, and prevented the sellout tac- tics of the International Cigar Makers Union of the A. F. of L, from creeping into the tobacco strike movement. The workers’ determin- ation has already compelled more than 40 manufacturers to approach | the Industrial Union through the strike committee to negotiate for a settlement. At the same time two of the few Standpatier shops which have for some time declined to join the gen- eral strike, have now come out and placed themselves in the ranks of their fellow workers. One of these shops is the Alliance, with 21 work- ers out. The strikers’ relief committee is calling upon all workers organiza- tions to support the struggle of the tobacco workers and send their con- tributions to the seeretary of the To- bacco Workers Relief Committce at strike headquarters, 350 E. 8lst St. Neglect: Kills Aged Negro; Young Toiler Appeals for Unity From a Negro Worker Correspondent ALBANY, N. Y¥.—George Logwood, | born in slavery in Alabama, died at: the age of 75 on Aug. 7. The aged worker most worried himself to death because he wanted work. While the New Deal was around the corner they | vefused to take him in a hospital, bul pul him in an old home to die like” the capitalist class will do to the rest of us workers unless we unite more for the stiruggie. | If one worker ever heeds another | worker's help it is now that they should join hands and build a strong unity and fight for our rights and’ for aged workers. | Young workers, let's not break the strikes, but to carry them on, for if | one worker starves on a job it means | the same thing to the rest, Don’t let. the bosses make slaves out of us like they are trying to do, Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR All Work Done Unies Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman “Straight By EDWARD stories and novelettes for pu out at a monthly rate of seven variably. I imagine he pulled sold himself stories under any His market virtually disap- lications going and Yates were cut to about a cent a word. My friend | married a girl with a job, so it didn’t | became a matter of bread and but- ter, but the last time I saw him he hadn’t sold a thing for a year. He | didn’t know what hit him, couldn't | make head or tail out of it. We/ walked down Lexington Avenue and/ had our last argument about| “straight writing” and “propaganda.” | My friend stuck by his guns. A/ “straight sports” story was meant to {| amuse readers and that’s all there | was to it. No larger implications. | It was rot about the pulps being shot | through end through with ruling class psycholegy in its subtlest, most | effective and opiate form. Every onse in a while, he said, you get pulp | stuff that stands up with Kipling and Wells. He shrugged his shoulder and kept inviting me downtown for a shot of rye while I talked. Possibly the dam- age to my wind may have been com- pensated for by the breath I might have saved. * oe REMEMBER, expressing contempt | for both Kipling and Wells. I} talked from 57th St. to 34th. The Boy Who Makes Good Illusion, on which every pulp story based itself, was sapping the spirit and taking the rebellion out of ten million young factory hands, students, farmers. | Older people who knew better escaped into the fictitious atmosphere of the ring and the baseball diamond. to recapture shteds of their youth, plunge into fleeting pipe-dreams of qhat might have been, snatch a moment of triumph in a life of fail- ure by identifying themselves with the sickly boy who built himself up, and the old pitcher who sidled un- assumingly to the mound and slow- | balled his way to a World Series victory. F In those days, the manner in which pulp sports stories affected the development .of a revolutionary moyement assumed a more or less negative aspect. Little open animos- ity toward revolutionary struggles manifested itself and the class char- acter of their approach was almost totally obscured. Only recently could you put your fingers on bla- tantly obvious illustrations of the theory. Disregard, for the moment. Ama- zing stories dealing with the future when psuedo-scientifically equipped Red Army hordes will invade the US. Look at the current issue of Street and Smith’s “Sport Story Magazine.” Read the leadoff piece by prolific Burt L. Standish, the originator of the Frank Merriwell | series. > * ARRY DARNELL is an amiable but ambitious youth working for a tire factory. He wants to make good. Hard-fisted Foreman Lachlin is the menace. An ex-heavyweight boxer, he goads Larry into a fight and whales the living hell out of him. The boy is made to quit the factory. Larry determines to become a “scrapping tornado.” He signs up with Bradley, another ex-fighter,| who shows him the ropes. Of course the boy’s got the stuff, He gets his first bout and scatters dental work all over the arena. He's ready for Lachlin. ‘ Report comes—“The men at Plant ' 2 have gone on strike and Lachlin’s | got them fighting mad. They're picketing the other plants and there's talk of militia... . “Larry tensed. This strike was going to cost the company plenty of money if it wasn’t stopped soon. It might even wreck business for along time. And all because that crowd was swayed by a man who could dish it out faster and harder than he took it.” ‘There's a sure-fire battle scene be- tween strikers and scabs. Larry ar- tives on the spot. The superin- tendent who fired him is in trouble. Larry fights his way through. “Me, said Larry, ‘I’m a tire man, not a rioter. You seem to be in a spot, Mr. Mainville....’” Arrangements are made to have Larry and Lachlin fight it out for the fate of the strike. Four full pages of ring stuff. Lachlin, a vicious, snarling animal. Justice prevails. “You're through, Lachlin,” exclaims “she boy in @ clinch, “Through! Here’s one to bite on and take your strike with you.” | “He shook loose, timed his shot! perfectly, and bounced one off Spend Laber-Day Weekend (Friday night to Tues. morning) Camn Wocolona LODGING IN BUNGALOWS $3.00 for Week-End $4.00 for Week Rus Ieaving Workers Center, 50 E. 13" Street Aatgrny ‘at 1:31 sharp, Return- ing ‘Tnesday, Arrive New York & a.m. Fare: ronnd trip, $1.59. One way, $1, Camp eapneity limited, Make reservation by mailing deposit to Rox 805, Mon- No rotuotion for less than fell nd. For informstion phone Monument 2-7609 ws MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS - 296 SUTTER AVE. Phono: Dick Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For Internationa! Workers Order three hundred dollars each week. Twice he became editor In the crisis years, his racket wore >— | thin, | peared, Only a few large firms with |capital wore able to keep their pub- Sports” NEWHOUSE | ¥ ONCE knew a writer who used to make a living doing sports Ip magazines. He turned them or eight and circulated them almost in- d d down between a hundred number of. names, Lachlin’s chin that knocked hir clear through the ropes. “The referee went through the count just for the exercise... . “‘You certainly pulled us through,’ Mainville said fervently, ‘And it’s a poor return for me just to put you in our sales-training organization “when I’d like to hand you the whole plant.” That's all. Standing of the Clubs AMERICAN LEAGUE Club W.L. PC} Club W.L. P.c New York 73 48 .603/ St. Louis 69 59 .538 Boston 70 55 .5€0| Brooklyn 52 72 .419 Pittsburgh 68 56 .548| Philadel. 50 73 .407 Chicago 69 58 .543' Cincinnat! 48 78 .381 Chicago and Cincinnati, not scheduled. * . * NATIONAL LEAGUE Club OW...) Club. W, L. Pc. Washing. 82 43 .656| Detroit 63 60 .488 New York 173 51 .589| Chicago 60 68 .469 Cleveland 68 63 .519| Boston 55 73 .430 Philadel. 61 63 .492! St. Louis 47 82 .364 Detroit at St. Louis, played later date. Washington and Philadel. not scheduled. * oe NAL LEAGUE Club W. L. P.C. Buffalo 73 79 .480 Montreal 70 77 .476 INTERNATIO: Clubs W. L. P.c. Newark 93 57 .620 Rochester 84 67 .556 Baltimore 8172 .530j Albany 70 81 .464 Toronto 76 77 .497| JerseyCity 58 95 .379 Toronto at Montreal, played former date. Albany at Newark, two night games. Inning-by-Inning Score AMERICAN LEAGUE R. H. E. Boston -206.700 000—15 18 2 New York .....209 000 000—2 6 2 Rhodes and Ferrell; Pennock, Uhie, MacFayden and Dickey. Cleveland --000 002 200—4 12 0 Chicago -.001 000 000—1 9 0 Harder and Pytlak; Lyons and Berry. NATIONAL LEAGUE R. HE. New York - 000 010 002—3 11 2 Bosion ... 200 000 05x—7 8 0 Parmelee. Bell and Mancuso; Cant- well and Spohrer. (First. Game) St. Louis -600 000 400—10 12 2 Brooklyn -000 010 011-3 8 5 Carleton and Lewis; Mungo, Leon- ard, Shaute end Lopez, Outen. (Second Game) -301 201 301-10 13 1 Brooklyn -000 010 021-410 1 Haines an O'Farrell; Benge, Shaute, Ryan and Outen. Pittsburg ....1.310 005 004-13 19 4 Philadelphia ...060 010 301-11 16 1 Smith, Swetonic, Hoyt and Grace; Moore, Pearce, Collins, Them, Berly and Davis. St. Louis INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) A R.H. FE Jersey City ..000 020 203 1-8 14 1 Baltimore 120 130 000 0—7 14 2 . Hanlon and Rensa; Claset and Lin- on, (Second Game) Jersey City . -.000 000 1-1 6 0 Baltimore 000 000 0-0 1 0 _ Meola and Emerson; Mattingly /and Sprinz. Buffalo --000 100 000-1 1 8 Rochester --010 002 3ix—7 14 1 Milstead, Elliott and Crouse, Bros- ki; Henry and Florence. 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. Hospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled At One-Half Price SFR White Gold Filled Frames_____ $1.50 ZYL Shell Frames -__—. + $1.00 Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St Telephone: ORehard 4-4520 (Brooklyn) for Brownsville Workers! 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