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bi ze Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1933 {etal Boss Signed Code on Same Day Conditions in Shop By M ARGARET COWL NEW YORK.—On the very day th: Majestic metal shop, the boss displayed signed the industria at the workers walked out of the the Blue Eagle, strikers report, and metal code which is supposed to guarantee metal workers a minimum wage of $12. for women and $14. for men. When the seit Beasley, young member committee, forced him to admit t under his plan and code the $14 minimum would be paid only to the fastest workers, “T know work working in the three years’ bu as some others?” asked him. “They U. w ave been sho are 2 Alice said fast wor! put in their place, the boss replie w worke atterward , is a fake. It not te after another, ] experiences in the shop. Speed-Up Schemes to a hi w “This is a sch worker the work of woman striker said. “What about those workers who have lost their fingers working for five,” one w the Majestic?” said another. “They | can’t work fast. " What about the worker who lost |* is leg in the service of the Ma- jest for eleven yea ter ” another wor “A woman who was the mother of two children was burned to death in the » four months ago because sho) ss forced her to work on a ne ee The strikers voted unanimously to continue t strike to ash the fake “mi m wage” of abolishment of the Highest Wage $8.81 Even the fake minimum does not apply to the workers in the enamel departmen*, the committee reported. A Negro woman worker told how in her two years in the enamel de- partment of the Majestic, the high- est wage she ever received for 48 hours was a ai 0: Young girls told how in the en- amel department they are slowly poisoned by acid fumes. Washing | stencils. they get soaked with in-| .. flammable fluids. Their smocks are 1 burned through by the acid’ and b they are in constant danger of being burned to death. e No special work-ciot loves are provided. Even ottest weather they are not per- mitted to open windows. “In the summer months we just | faint aw care,” a girl said. Unsanitary Conditions Exposed hes or rubber in the . \h \t the vill have to be fired, and| compromise on the wage~ sented to the boss. Under this scale, the biggest rai paid worke: he | boss is fighting mos' ne to make one |this out, told he was not there. know what happened to him. lement committee went to see the Majestic boss, Alice = 4 Metal Worker Industrial nion’” to “recognition of the orkers to return to work in a dy,”, the strikers spontaneously a unanimous “No.” on of an older Ameri- the strikers unani- for no discrimination, no hiring ; firing without union ¢ g0es to the lowest- , a condition which the strenuously. Durable Workers Strike There are no strike-breakers in © |the Majestie Metal shop, the com- ittee reported. The boss has sent s work to the Durable Metal shop, hose workers, when they found walked out in solidarity ith the Majestic workers. Contributions for the support of the strike are being sOlicited by the Metal i Workers Industrial hich has appealed to worke’ ll industries to help the Majestic and Durable strikers to hold their ranks solid. Ala. Boy Tortured and Spirited Away (By_a Negro Worker Correspondent) BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -— This is | repr what happened to a 15-year old/association to discuss mediation. N egro boy who they charged stole bieyele. f him. They went to the jail bout getting him out, but were We don’t On Aug. 13, about 8:30 p.m. the law” went to Wesley Harris home 804 Omega and arrested the oy. They came in rough, took him ut of bed and hand-cuffed him— wouldn’t allow mother or father, ither one to talk. The policemen’s ames is Moser and the other one we don’t know his name. They carried him all up and and the boss doesn’t! down the avenue and streets, tore is clothes from his body, parading he streets with his naked body. There are no towels provided, no| After whipping him on the streets drinking cups. The filthiest working | and avenues, they carried Davis conditions were described. There is| Harris, 15 years old, to West End a tiny dressing-room which will hold} Woods, tied him to a tree, and only a few women at a time, Others| b: must wait more than ten minutes of their get in. The men have no dr sing c 40-minute lunch-hour to to four days. eat him unmerciful. The boy vas in a serious condition for three And still in a bad room at all, but must change in the | twice as large as usual. His mouth presence of the women. “1 work in the foot-press depart- ment,” a girl said. ““The work there is very hard. For a 48-hour week I w hi Ww bi earn only $8. Some days I don’t make more than 85 cents. We work Piece-work, and if we get $8 too often, Blumenfeld, cuts the piece-rate.” Boss Tries to Split Unity In addition to spreading all sorts of rumors through his agents, the Majestic boss is trying to split the the price-fixer, ondition. His head was swelled vas twisted around. They beat im all over his head. His spinal vas swollen. Don’t expect him to e any more account Tobacco Strikers Reject Arbitration —To test the spirit fighting unity of the strikers by|of the tobacco strike which is under offering rates of pay which would|the leadership of the Tobacco Work- divide the workers into various |e categories, in the hope that they | manufacturers strike committee to send the workers | will fight among themselves. A Spanish woman striker was | bi rs Industrial Union, a group of proposed to the ack into the shops pending arbi- applauded when she exposed this|tration on the basis of the NRA maneuver and appeale to the strikers to hold their ranks solid. The workers unanimously rejected this proposal at a meeting of the When the committee reported the | general strike committee, boss’s proposal to change the strik-| t the same time a_ settlement ers’ demand from “recognition of' with the Brono Cigar Company at His father and mother| senting the National Textile Work- re today unable to find any trace| City Events | Need Election Volunteers | | The Communist Party Election Campaign Committee is in urgent need of volunteer office workers who can help in research work for the campaign. Workers can call all day the at the campaign headquarters, 799 Broadway, Room 526. Send Off Meeting for Perkins Delegation to Protest Deportations A mass meeting to New York’s quota of the Na- tional delegation to Frances Perkins at Washington, D. C., to protest against deportations, will be held this Wednesday, 8 p, m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St. New York. Immediately after the meeting, the delegates | will leave for Washington, so as to be ready to meet the “liberal” Secretary of Labor at 10 a, m. on Thursday, Sept. 7th. This isit to Perkins launch a national campaign against the terror, persecution and deportation campaign of the government against foreign born workers for labor and political activity and will have as the out- Standing issue, the Borich-N.M.U.- Pittsburgh cases. The outstand- ing New York issue is the Jack send off will Schneider and other Needle Trades workers’ cases. Prominent speakers will ad- dress the meeting. T. J. McHen- ry, Secretary of the Committee | for Protection of Foreign-Born, will preside. AFL Heads Fear to. Stop Silk Strike at Wagner Request PATERSON, N. J., Sept. 3. Senator Wagner, for the NRA,| sent a wire to A. F, of L. officials | here to call off the strike of the | 6,000 silk mill workers, and to hold | a conference to “mediate” | Fearing the resentment of the/ workers, the A, F. of L. officials | did not ‘call off the strike but de-| cided on sending a representative | to Washington to meet with the| ntatives of the employer’s | On Friday, a committee repre- ers Union, the United Warpers’ League, and the Twister’s Club, went to the strike committee of the A. F. of L. to propose a united | strike of these organizations. The | A. of L. leaders rejected the proposal, and accepted representa- | tives only from the United. Warp- | ers’ League and the Twister’s Club. | Tuesday night at 8 p, m. there | will be a mass meeting called by the National Textile Workers Union against government medi- ation and to raise the question of |demands for the strike. The meet- ing will be held at Carpenters Hall, 56 Van Houten St. A mass meeting was held Satur- | day of 300 workers of the Wied-; man Dye Shop where a decision was made to strike if the demands presented by a committee of 50 are refused by the boss on Tuesday morning. Other dye shop workers took similar action. At the same | time the A. F. of L. held a meet- ing of dye house workers. A com- mittee of the NTWU was sent to the A. F, of L. meeting to propose a united front strike, and to dis- cuss demands. They were refused the floor. The A. F. of L. leaders told them to come to a conference on Monday night. Instead of call- ing a strike of daye workers, the A. F. of L. is going to Washing- ton to “discuss” the question, 58 Grand St. is announced by the union. The workers won from 10 per cent to 30 per cent wage in- creases, and recognition of the To- bacco Workers Industrial Union, In connection with the Tobacco strike the Home Relief Bureau has been acting as a scab agency taking unwary tobacco workers on its un- unemployed list and sending them on seab jobs in striking cigar shops. Most of these workers when they | bench, reigns supreme since Tammany Whites Reap Fat Harvest in Harlem Columbia Metal Negro Democratic Voters Find Whites “Win” Leadership in Primaries Each Year By DAN DAVIS NEW YORK.—An inkling of the corruption with which Tammany keeps white district leaders in con- trol of the 21st and 19th Assembly Districts covering almost the whole of Negro Harlem was uncovered yes- terday by the Daily Worker, The 1930 census showed that though the Negro people make up one-eighth of the city’s population, they constitute one-sixth of the city’s voting strength. This is so because there are more native born Negroes than white people in New York City. Tammany understands this and therefore uses all its powers of cor- ruption, of miscounting, sending its ward heelers into the booths with voters, etc. In the 19th District, running from 118th St. north to 137th St. and East and West from Eighth Ave. to leader who pocketed $10,000 in 1927 for putting Judge Ewald on the 1924. Healy, like other Tammany leaders throughout the city, appoints the local candidates for whom the Negro masses of Harlem are to be misled into voting. He can elect a white man against a Negro in Harlem any time he chooses, except when things are too raw. Then a Negro politician who is willing to do the white bosses’ bidding is elected as a blind. How is Healy as a white man able to maintain his power in Harlem? Very simple. Members to the county committee who elect on the primary ticket the district Democratic leader, are themselves elected through peti- tions in proportion to the number of voters in each election district. Strange as it may seem, though all but five of the thirty-four election districts in the 19th Assembly Dis- trict have no white people living in them, the county committee con- tains no Negroes, Less than one per cent of the people in the entire as- sembly district are white. But Healy js elected district leader each time. He is elected by padding the ballots in the five “white” election districts so that they have a two-third vote against the remaining twenty-nine Negro election districts! Louis A, Lavalle, Negro attorney and executive member of the Tawawa Democratic Association, a Negro po- litical club in “Healy's district,” at- discovered that they were to scab tempted to wrest the Tammany lead- Madison, Martin J. Healy, Tammany | ers’ spoils Irom him, Lavyalle collect- | Jed the signatur ft h regis- | | tered Dem the Negro election d ve himself named as Healy. Lavall2, a “good” could then giv appoint the n replacing Democrat out judgeships and es to the local tickets. Six hundred thousand dol- lars in political patronage, which should have gone into the coffers cf the Harlem politicianc, was being distributed to other Tammanyites August 22, Lavalle took his peti- tions to the Municipal Building where the Board of Elections is lo- cated, He had just fifteen minutes to make the “deadline,” which was 12 o'clock midnight, for turning in the petitions. He found only one elevator running in the building. The operator said he had instructions not to let the Negro lawyer up. Lavalle ;and the delegation of Negroes with him were threatened with violence when they attempted to walk up to the election offices on the eighteenth floor. So they left, and Wednesday in the New York Supreme Court Building at Pearl and Center Sts,, Tammany Judge and ex-borough president Julius Miller “reserved” de- cision on the validity of Lavalle’s petitions to make himself the district leader. Thursday Miller definitely denied the validity of the petitions and re- fused Lavalle the right to register them, In the 2ist trict, Thomas Mur- ray, a white man, in like manner also reigns supreme over the Negro | masses. Two white district captains, a brother and a sister, are each holding $10,000 jobs, Charles -Horowitz, resid- ing at 35 Hamilton Place, is assistant corporation counsel at $10,800; Pat O'Connell, a custodian in the Board of Education at $15,638; William C. Fullen, 360 Convent Avenue, is at- tached to the Board of Transporta- tion at $13,390, Hundreds of other whites occupy posts as city marshals, deputy com- missioners, tenement house inspectors, while even the small jobs, like clerks, men of Tammany Hall, Meanwhile the Negro workers of Harlem, even some in the Tawawa Club itself, are looking towards the only Party which stands heels, head and shoulders for the Negro people, the Communist Party. are monopolized by the white hench-| Furriers Union | To Establish | | NEW YORK.—The campaign to | put the fur industry on the 35-hour | basis‘ took a new aspect when the shop chairmen’s meeting of i! Department of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union approved | zation to bring about the shorter | week in all the shops Of the in- | dustry, The attempt of the Fur Trimmers | Association to drag on the nego- | tiations indefinitely will be brought |to a head. A letter will be sent to the association pointing out that the | conditions in the industry requ |the immediate establishment ci the 35-hour week, Meanwhile the union will begin to enforce the 35-hour week in the Associated Fur | Manufacturers’ hops and in the independent plants, The Industri Union intends to take firm steps to establish the |short week for all workers by the jmiddle of September. 1] Custom Tailors in Mass Mobilization NEW YORK.—The Fifth Avenue Custom Tailors’ final strike mobil- ization will take place at a mass meeting, Tuesday, 7 p. m, at Irving | Plaza Hall, 15th Street and Irving |Place. The question of a strike will |be placed before the workers for | approval. | | | | Shop Recognizes Shop Committee NEW YORK.— Another metal | strikers’ victory, this time at the Columbia Meta] Shop, was won’ on the sixteenth day of a tenacious | strike which proved to the bosses tiations with the shop committee. The demands conceded by the bosses may be summed up in part: }a 40 hour ,5-day week! 10 per cent \inerease in wages over the original pay on the old 50 hour week basis, recognition of shop committee and !no discrimination against strikers. The victory at the Columbia shop is threatening the Other strikers to \further efforts. Other bosses are \now applying for negotiations with | the union and shop committees. |Farniture Worker’s | Trial Postponed to | Collect “Evidence” NEW YORK.—Again the trial of Jerry White, who was framed on the charge of “concealing a dangerous weapon” et the recent illegal raid of he Furniture Workers Union meet- ing, was postponed by the prosecut- ing police, who are having a difficult time proving their charge, for this morning at 9:30 in the Magistrate's Court, 2nd Ave. and 2nd St. The New York District Interna- tional Labor Defense is making every attempt to have the defendant tried as soon as possible in order to expose the NRA police, who are working as strikebreakers under Whalen’s orders. Workers are called upon by the In- ternational Labor Defense to be present at the trial in order to de- mand the release of Jerry White, young militant worker, and to pro- test. police terror. Star Knitting Mill Workers Win Conditions NEW YORK.—After a brief strike, the workers of the Star Knitting Mills, 134 North i1th St., Brooklyn, returned to work, haying wrested the following union conditions from the bosses: Recognition of shop chairman and shop committee, return of last wage cuts, no discharges, and other demands, | | | ACCIDENTS AND DISEASE TAKE TOLL OF YOUNG LIVES IN LABOR CAMPS Accidents Bring Many Deaths in Arkansas Camps (By a Worker Correspondent) LITTLE ROCK, Ark.—Accidental deaths have killed several C. ©, C.| young men recently. One worker was found dead in the Missouri Pa- cific Railroad yards at Newport, run over by a train. Papers in his pock- ets identified him as Joe Webster, of Camp Slatington, in Montgomery County, near Mena. He was be- lieved to be from St. Louis, as all boys in this camp are from there. And four more from this camp were Real Meaning of | “Reforestration” The following is my conception of this so-called Reforestration: REFORESTATION R epresenting a scheme to E ntice our youth into F orced labor camps O nly as a means to R etain an army and E ngage them when workers S trike for better wages and To Resist and Attack them when T hey show real strength In any part the of N ation. L, J injured as a truck carrying 22 en route back to St. Louis collided with @ farmer’s wagon near Corning, Last week a C.C.C. worker from @ camp near Russellville had his left ankle crushed as part of the train| jerked ahead, telescoping the cars, | when a coupling broke. Near Mena, | at Shady, a boy died from injuries received in a baseball game. Another worker in the Eagleton C. C. C. camp died from injuries in a truck acci- dent in the forest. Desertions are frequent. A ‘Young men can be seen on the highway order men off the trains, freights every day. They speak Ca miserable conditions. Officers | However, many are ae" | w honorably discharged for leading pro- and disregarding military dis-| Seventeen were discharged | near Mena recently for activity.” eae Strike in Ellsworth Wins Improved Food (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) CO. 1104, ELLSWORTH, Me.—On ug, 17 the boys at the camp went on strike because of the rotten food furnished by the goyernment. After |militantly refusing to work for two days, we won our demands and we were furnished the proper food. Most of aie merely do so as a formality. ers are cruelly brutal, scouting cars to bring back | dicks savagely Railroad “sap” up on transient orkers, especially Negroes, There have been found dead six young men in the last two weeks, as reported in the press, from various parts of Ar- |kansas. While the newspapers report | various a ‘getting harder to| that are Ned to! ejected from excuses, most the fact remains of them were forcibly speeding trains, f (By a Worker LOS ANGELES, Cal.—The men years’ service, tells the men that if When the men get sick or ge' poison oak they are forced to work just the same. | The men are given $2 credit out of $5 they receive. This credit is good in the camp exchange only. In this camp exchange the prices of soap, tobacco and cigarettes are double the price they are in civilian stores, There have been two strikes on bad food, but the captain fooled the workers by giving them good food for one day and a big line of bull, but the next day the food was the same as always. , . rotten! I believe that if small grievance and action committees were organ- ized in the camps we workers would be able to help ourselves. In the morning the men must get up at 5:30 am. and stand roll call, and also stand in line 15 to 20 min- utes before they get their breakfast. Their dinner they eat on the job and they also have to stand in line 15 to 20 minutes for supper. The men are loaded on trucks to go to work because it is a long way from camp. They load about 50 men on a truck at one time, which is not safe for the men on the mountain roads. There have been quite a few men hurt on account of speed-up and hard work, Men have had their feet and hands smashed from the heavy Prices in Labor Camp Stores Are Twice as High as Outside Correspondent) work on the road at hard labor and are not given much food to eat. The captain, who is an army man of 17 they do not work they will be sent home with a dishonorable discharge and their families will be cut off from relief, and when they reach home they will not be able to get a job. rocks, and one man had his collar {bone broken. q When the men came to ‘town’ in Fresno the navy recruiting officers come to ask the CO members to join the navy. Officers Stay “Away from the Camp Food (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) PROFIT GAP, Idaho—We work five days a week and are supposed to have Wednesday and Sunday of every week off. On Wednesday, we have inspection, which means you must make your bunk and stay around for inspection. If you are not there you are subject to K.P. duty, or they hold a trial and you are fined $3 out of your $5, You are subject to work seven days a week if the officer feels like it, Sometimes the cooks burn the food. They do not try to replace it, but serve it, and, if you can’t eat it, you do without. Some of the food !being served at this camp is not fit to be eaten by pigs. Mostly all the forestry men who used to pay $15 a month to the mess of 250 are now eating in an eating place just out side of the camp. They could not eat the food they give us, 180 in Quarantine for Typhoid Fever (By a Worker Correspondent) SAN ANTONIO, Texas.—One hundred and eighty young men, comprising Company 882 of the Civilian Conservation Corps, are under quarantine for typhoid fever at Camp Bullis, located near here. | Seventeen of the boys are actually infected, three are in a serious condition and one is not expected to live. The young workers had been employed on a state park} | project near Hamilton, some 300 miles from here. Authorities have failed to give any reasons for the development of the epidemic, but it is generally believed that the lack of sanitary Year aa at the camp is respon- sible. Ptomaine Poisoning in Montana Labor Camp (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) CAMP , Montana.—In our camp one fellow died from poison food ,and a lot got ptomaine poison- ing. The first couple of weeks everything was fine and then it got worse and worse. They are filling the hospitals with our fellows, ‘The chow is terrible and the boys hhave to walk around the camp for weeks in bare feet before they get a pair of shoes. We had a few minor riots about the food, and they sent the mess of- ficer away, and now it is getting better, T lost all the weight I gained, and a couple of more pounds besides. ‘Camps Used to Take Jobs from Forest Workers (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, Mont.—For the past month we had been eating corn willy and hard tack and only this week has there been an improvement. We are start- ing to get meat now and bread. The bad weather: and this consistently poor food had a lot to do with the young fellows leaving last week. And now again there’s a few more who want to go back. As far as I’m con- cerned, I'll just do as much work as I think I should for $1 a day, just when I feel like it, The captain is very unpopular with the men here. My opinion of him is that he tries to economize so that he will make a gocd name for him- self with the army officials. I raised heil this morning because they didn't fill my coffee cup, and there was more for everybody at dinner, The more you holler the more food you'll get, ‘We have been very busy fighting a forest fire which started Wednesday morning. There are about 1,500 men at work, most of them CCC boys from the camps in the vicinity. The government saves lots of money by using us, to fight fires, as other- wise they would have to hire men at 35 cents an hour, They have some of these men here, as this is a very big fire, the biggest in 10 years in this section. Every day some of the men are getting hurt Jone way or another. the concrete proposals of ihe organi-! | the futility of evading direct nego- | | 35 Hour Week Fur } | i | touch him now because he had lost| Kid Clendon or Clinton at Age of 27 By EDWARD NEWHOUSE CROWD of us were coming out of the dressing room at Asbury Park last Friday. Young Terry, who had just scored a knockout in the fifth, was there, and Sherman Brown, who had fought a draw in one look more the part of a fighter of the prelims. Both of them than I do so it’s problematical just why the tall guy pi¢ked on me. I may have struck him as sucker for a touch. He certainly looked like a chump for a jab. His nose was battered into a®———————— level plane with the lumps where his eyebrows shou'd have been, and his} ears protruded like minor pumpkins. | “You got a few minutes to spare,/ buddy?” he said. i We went into a hamburger place and he ordered coffee, putting a! nickel on the counter. “I'm not trying to hit you up,” he} said. “I just seen you talking to ono} of them big shots and maybe you can get them to me. I want a bout. Im a middleweight.” He was too tall for a middleweight. You could just see squat Brouillerds | and Walkers cutting him up. I told) him I couldn’t get a bout to save my} life, for him or Gene Tunney. I was. telling the truth. He didn’t think so, | He said his name was Kid Clendon! or Clinton and he’@ had over two} hundred fights but no manager would the last fourteen and because his; pan was,such a mess. “I ain’t walking | on my heels yet and one of them’ ought to give me a chance. I went eight rounds with Dave Shade on the coast. A guy who can do that} ain’t through. I can give them their money’s worth. All I want is three | meals a day.” | “Have you tried anything else?” “What else is there?” “Maybe around the gyms or sec-/ onding ...” | es, a 66{JE looked blank. I couldn't. see; im doing seconding or any- thing else. Maybe he couldn’t either. “There ain't nothing else,” he said. “When’d you fight Shade?” “Couple of years back.” I tried to pump him who his man- agers had been but he wouldn't say.| He got to talking disjointedly about how his purse had been held up in some one-mule Jersey town because he couldn’t come out for the third round. “I hadn't been hit much but my eyes went back on me. I looked up into the lamps but even that way I couldn’t see a thing. I get that way sometimes. But I give them their money's worth.” “What was your end that night?” “Twenty dollars. First time I smelled. money this year. Maybe I get it next month. Give you half of it if you can get me in to see one of them guys. I see where Sharkey is pulling $25,000 for taking Loughran. Say, ask one of them fat guys to give me a bout. They won't listen to me. Tell them abcut Shade. You can bs my manager. Half of anything I get.” “No,” I said, “I don’t know them at all.” aah Sat 3 WATCHED him finish his coffee, “TI ought to see a dentist,” he said, “I ought to see an eye doctor, Ain't a thing you can do without money. I got folks in Butte. Maybe they got| money.” . “Why don’t you get in touch with them?” “Maybe I will. They wouldn't rec- ognize me, I dont think. My father used to run a diner when I heard of him last. I could go for some ham and eggs. Up to the time I worked on the coast I sent them pictures of me most every month. You think they stopped writing because my mug was getting scrambled? There’s some doctors can fix you up. My mother must have kicked the bucket, she woulda wrote.” He flicked a paper ball cashier. “What's the idea?” the girl said. “I didn’t mean to hit you,” said Kid Clendon or Clinton, “Let’s get out of here.” Outside I started toward the board- walk and he accompanied me in si- lence. At a crossing he stopped short and nudged my arm, : “Say, I didn’t really think you could get me a bout,” he said. “I just had to talk to somebody, See you around,” at the CLASSIFIED WANTED—Large, light, airy room, with entrance, in midtown section, Write Daily Worker, CHILD TO BOARD—Motherly care, com- radely atmosphere. Near park-school. Call until 1 P. M, and after 6, Call FOrdham 7-0038R. VINEYARD LODGE ULSTER PARK, N. Y. “Garden Spot of Ulster County” Modern hotel amidst beautiful 200 acre fruit and grape farm; solariums, horses, tennis, refinement, congeniality. rican-Jewish cuisine. Rates reduced to Phone 3430 JOSEPH ROSENTHAL. Kingston. WORKERS—ZAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. Au -omreges Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 358 Chremort Parkway, Bron All Comrades W HEALTH CENTER ——~— Fresh Food—Proletarian Priees 62 L. 13TH ST., ee | New York--Rain. Standing of the Clubs AMERICAN LEAGUE + Club OW. LPC. Club W. L. P.C. Wash'gton A4 45 607) Detroit 68 68 .471 New York 74 62 .587| Chicago 60 70 .461 Cleveland 70 62 .526| Boston 56 75 .427 Philadel. 63 64 496! St. Louis 50 82 .384 Game postponed between Philadelphia at NATIONAL LEAGUE Club W.L. PC.) Club W. L. P.c. New York 17 48 .619| St.Louis 70 61 .534 Pittsburgh 70 57 .551| Brooklyn 52 73 .416 Boston 70 80 .561| Philadel. 51 73 411 Chicago 70 60 538! Cincinnati 50 77 .39: Rekoseat ia a INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Club W.L.P.C.; Club W. L. PAC. Newark 87 57 .622) Montreal 74 70 483 Rochester 86 71 .548| Buffalo 71 82.480 Baltimore 81 78 .517| Albany 73 82 471 Toronto 79 78 .508| Jersey City 55 97 .374 AMERICAN LEAGUE R. HE. (First game) Detroit .. -000 001 000— 1 8 1 St. Louis. 001 100 0Ox— 2 6 1 Bridges and Hayworth, Pasek; Blac- holder and Shea. Second game was not finished at the time paper went to press’ Boston . 1 O01 000O— 2 7 0 Washingt -002 000 OOI— 3 6 1 Andrews and Ferrell; Weaver and Sewell. : Cleveland 400 004 510-14 17 0 Chicago ........500 000 000— 312 3 Ferrell and Pytlak; Heving, Wyatt, Faber, Miller and Berry, Spencer. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) R. H. E. Newark ........000 031 110-6 11 1 Baltimore .......010 200 28x—8 14 0 ‘Weaver ‘and Hargreaves; Smythe and Linton. (Second Game) Newark ... -010 100 000—2 7 0 Baltimore -001 000 000—1 7 1 Duke and Hargreaves; Cantwell and Sprinz. (First Game) Buffalo ..........010 000 000-1 8 0 Montreal +..020 020 00x—4 7 1 Guld. Milstead and Crouse; Diet- rich, Fisher and Stark. (Second Game) +200 001 0-3 7 2 .005 110 x—7 9 1 Buffalo ......+6 Montreal ..... Gould. Milstead and Croude; Diet- rich, Fisher, A. Smith and Stack. Toronto 002 220 201—9 15 1 003 002 101—7 11 0 Heving; Kaufmann, Mooney and Hinkle. Inning-by-Inning Score NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) R, i. E. New York 000 000 300 000 01—4 10 1 Boston ..010 010 100 000 00—3 13 0 Shores, Luque and Mancuso, Rich- ards; Betts and Hogan, Spohrer. New York 000-200-20 4---4--0 Boston 000-310-01 4--11--3 Parmelee, Spencer, Luque and Man- cuso, Richards; Cantwell and Hogan. (Game called end 8th; Sunday law) Pittsburgh 001-010-100 3---12--2 Cincinnati 010-044-00g 9---12--0 Birkofer, Hoyt, Chagnon and Grace; Lucas and Lombardt St. Louis 000-210-000 3---7--0 Chicago 001-000-000 1---8--0 Vance and Lewis; Warneke, Herr- mann and Hartnett. Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 10TH FLOOR Alt Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Oftice Hours: 8-10 A.M,, 1-2, 6-8 P.M. White Gold Filled Frames_—____81.20 | ZYL Ghell Frames —_—_____ 91.00 | Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-955¢ John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A sper ra cians 302 E, 12th St. JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE A Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrad EES CARETERIA| Meet at the