The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 5, 1933, Page 2

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‘ ERIE EEO Page Tyo DAILY duu, No\/ Vous, T Shoe Union to Fight{c Elco Co. Injunction Si ity Events WHITE GOODS WORKERS SPECIAL MEETING The Board of Trade of the White Goods Departments of the Needle 5th, in the office of the Union ° ¢ e *. ~ Trade Workers Industrial Union will leo Co. Gets Temporary Injunction in Next Step to Smash Strike Which Continues Strong; 47 Shops Settle ° NEW YORK.—Having failed in their attempt to smash the shoe strike through the NRA, the shoe manufacturers are now supporting the Elco Shoe Co, in obtaining a temporary injunction against the Shoe and Leather Work- | i ers’ Industrial Union, The Executive Committee of the Industrial Union, | | at its meeting yesterday, decided to institute action agains the temporary 1 W. 28th St. All members of the Trade Board and active union men are urged to attend U. S. Depositors Meeting A meeting of U. S. Bank deposit- is called for today at 8 p.m. at Intervale and Willkins Aves. A meeting of the Bronx delegates s called by the Committee of 28 to be held Sunday next at 1447 Char- lotte St., to prepare arrangements injunction and f to prevent from becomin: s 2rs on doll fo tied up the en these goous the un af Boot and Shoe Work- ve Union (A. F. of L.) y in Brookl; organ- nbers 30 po- ned at the door of the vent any but Boot and the chairman. Ques- the work vere directly on t the present strike. Does ect to enter the field Shoe and Union f ee r by prescing th the meeting adjourned when the of. ficials could not account for their fellure to take any steps in behalf of the shoe workers up to date. 300 Negro Workers Strike for MorePay in Charleston, N..: CHARLESTON, N. C., Sept. 4. ‘The plant of the Charleston Bagging end Menufacturing Co. was shut down tight this week when 200 Negro women workers led the 800 workers | in the plant on c*yke for the mini- mum wage under the NRA blanket code. “We want $12 a week,” was the slogan which called the workers out on strike soon after the plant opened Jast Saturday morning. The Charles- ton bagging mill is described as a “hell-hole” by Charleston workers. Slaving under a streich-out system, with 55 to 60 hours a week and pay averaging less than $8 a week, the} workers of the weaving department | d to strike for the $12 wage) provided under the textile code| which the company has ignored. | When these demands were rejected | by Samuel Stauffer, the goneral man- ager, as well as the domand to be paid immediately, the workers called on the rest of the workers to join them. They removed all the bob- bins, chopping knives and other ma-| chine parts to protect themselves in the event of police attack. Their past experiences stood them in good stead. The police, 40 strong, had already been called. Seeing the militant spir- it of the strikers the police advised Stauffer to grant the demands of | the workers for their pay. The po- lice then drove the workers away | from the plant and surrounded it to! prevent picketing. Worker Exposes Gov’t | Deportation Terror ‘Against Foreign-Born| NORWOOD, Mass.—At a meeting held here Barney Creegan‘ a worker held for deportation for his mili- tancy in behalf of the unemployed workers of Worcester, exposed the role of the Immigration Department. Calling for a sharper struggle against Miss Perkins’ deportation tactics, he told of his case and that of Sam Paul, a Greek worker who now starts his fourth month of pris- on: for refusing to give evidence in the “one man” deportation court. Action in this case, by sendin, telegrams to Frances Perkins, Sec: retary of Labor, Washington, D. C., is requested of all organizations, by *the Boston International Labor De- fense District. EL EMPIRICO 117 WEST 116TH STREET } GUARANTEED CLEAR HAVANA CIGARS ss Lowest Prices in City ‘Tobacco Workers Industrial Union Shop for the October 14 demonstration, JESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1933 s a '| Gutters of New York WOW — SQUEEZE BLOOD OUT OF-A wi: ~|\ for the commissionerships; William of C. P. Named in Glen Cove, L. I. Chas. McLoughlin to Run for Mayoralty; 5 Planks in Platform N COVE, L. I—Charles Mc- in has been nominated by the amunist Party for the Mayoralty | j and Supervisor position in the city here. Three commissioners and two assemblymen have also been nOmi- nated. Robe and Mor {1 Sollins, Gunner Bjionson, s Feldman were selected Meyer and Maurice La Forgia were named assemblymen for Nassau ¢ small boat was hired for fear of fi- nancial losses. When it was known | munist Party Bronx Janitors Meet 8 cuss evictions and wage cuts is called for tomorrow, 8:30 p.m. at the I.W.O. lub rooms 813 E, 180th St. Boat Ride Money Refunded Workers who were unable to get on the boat at the I.L.D. Excursion | Sunday and had tickets’ will get! their district office. money refunded from the Not expecting a large turnout be- cause of the Labor Day week end, a in the I.L.D. district office that the | boat would be too small unsuccess- | |ful attempts were made to get a arger one. Failure of many branch- es to report their sales caused added difficulties. Steps will be taken in the future to avoid such a situation. pane JIM GRALTON TO SPEAK To aid the Conolly House, Com- headquarters in Ire- Party in the coming election cam-| and, the Irish Workers Club invited | | paign contains 5 planks: unemploy- all workers to a picnic next Sunday, ment insurance, no foreclosures and covering new sources of revenu “Samuel Untermyer has bee. assigned the task of dis- | Demonstration to | Enforce Right to | Picket NRA Plant | Robert Minor to Head By del | | Strikers | NEW YORK.—Furniture workers | on strike for five weeks at the Pro- | gressive Table Co., 95th St. and Dit- | mas Ave., Brooklyn, will hold a pro- test demonstration on Wednesday morning at 7 a.m. against the denial of their right to picket this NRA firm. Picketing has been prohibited ti | | issued to the company recently. || Robert Minor, Communist can- | | rector of the American Civil Liberties | | Union and A. J. Muste of the Con- | ference of Progressive Labor Action | have been asked to head the demon- | stration. The workers are on strike for bet- ter conditions under the leadership of the Furniture Workers Industrial Union. j Call Strike of | Dye Workers In Paterson Today Weidmann Shop Ex- e for Tammany. —News Item. pected Out; Prepare Shoe Repair Workers Vote for General Strike in Lodi PATERSON, N. J., Sept. 4.—Work- ers of the Weidmann Dye Shop num- bering nearly 1,500 will strike tomor~- row morning at 10 o'clock if the de- mands which their committee will present to the bosses are not granted. Bond Launcry | _ Besses Try to Cheat | Workers | | didate for mayor, Roger Baldwin, di- | questions were | NEW YORK—In an effort to| ions, equal rights for Negroes, against bosses wareand all war funds for the unemployed, The Glen Cove City Council rec- ently refused to declare a mora- |torium on foreclosures and impose a heavy tax on the rich. This was) the decision at a conference they d held with the Unemployed Council. The Council presented demands for removal of all welfare officials, in crease of the wage scale of relief | workers, no foreclosures creased taxation on the wealthy. ‘Negro Woman Toiler ‘Fights Jim-Crow in) Employment Office By a Negro Worker Correspondent BROOKLYN, N. Y.—I was in the | employment office recently and Ij |saw for myself the Jim-Crowism there. They have a small room for | the Negro women to wait and a big | room for the white workers. Well, | I went to that office two days and I talked to the workers and they told me that they would rather be by themselves and would not say| anything, for it was the owner’s place and he could do as he wanted do. Well, friends, I am a Negro worker | and I could not stand it any longer. | I had to tell the agent, “What is this, a Jim Crow office!” and she said, “I am running this office to suit myself.” I told her I was going to/ show her how to run it and I told} all the workers in the little room| to come out and sit in the big room, | where I was sitting, but they were afraid and said they did not want| any trouble. I asked for my money and she| said I would have to wait five days. | I told her to give me my money for | I was going to put this office on} my list and stop their Jim Crow) in this city. There was too much of | that in the South. She told me,| “Don’t do that, I will give you your) money today.” And she did, but I} told her, “Don’t do me any favor,| I am going to watch on this office. And I left. Some of the workers came outside and asked me to get} their money fo! ei Lovestone Group Withholds Money | from Scottsboro ;win publicity from the Interna- tional Labor Defense for their own| political advantage, the Scottsboro Defense Club, organized by the renegade Lovestonite group, is withholding funds which it collected from workers for the Scottsboro defense. Jenkins, oranizer of the Scotts. boro Defense Club, was expelled | from the I. L. D. for disruptive ac- |tivity. He now refuses to turn| | over to the I. L. D. $20 which he ollected unless his outfit is adver- tised in the press. | William Lawrence, secretary of | the New York District of the I. L. D., calls upon workers to be on their guard against unscrupulous groups such as this which misappropriate funds for their own ends. Workers who contributed funds to the de- fense through the club should de- mand that the money be imme- diately turned over to the Scotts- boro Fund of the I. L. D. 2700-2800 BRO. CULTURAL SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS | agreement at Van Cortland Park, near the golf | links. | Jim Gralton will talk. There will | | be songs, dances and other amuse- | ments. SLIPPER WORKERS MASS MEETING A mass meeting of slipper workers is called for 1 p. m. at Manhattan Lyceum today at which Ben Gold, secretary of the Needle Trades Work- }ers Industrial Union is scheduled to speak. Shop chairmen and shop committees of all settled shoe shops are scheduled to meet at Irving Plaza Hall today at 6 p. m. AFL Dockers Union to Discuss Wages ILA Conference Meets in New York Today NEW YORK.—With the wage of the International Longshoremen’s Asstciation, the A. F. of L. organization on the water- front, expiring on October 1, J. Ryan, president, has calleda wage scale conference which meets this morning at 165 11th Ave. to discuss “a new agreement.” The longshoremen, knowing Ry-| an’s connections with the bosses, ex- | pect that he will propose a wage cut, or maneuvre to obtain one tor the shipping companies. A strong rank and file opposition | is expected, as there will be a bitter fight against any proposed wage cuts, Chain Grocery Swipes Sundays from Workers By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—One of the big chain grocery store systems has enforced a new ruling that compells all of their store workers to attend high pressure, sales-forcing meetings on Sundays. Thus, the company is not using their time, but the workers, in “pepping up” their organization. At a recent meeting, over 300 em- ployes were forced to give up their one day a week of rest—Sunday—to attend this gathering, which was strictly company business. Besides, the employes were not paid for giving up this day of rest, but were told that if they did not attend that they could look for another job. —F. P. To keep up a six-page “Daily Work- er,” the circulation must be doubled. Do your share by getting new sub-| scribers. Registration for Strike Sign Settlement Then on Thursday Fire Workers |. NEW YORK.—A vote to call a NEW YORK.—The Bond Laun- | general strike of shoe repair work-| dry bosses’ attempt to evade the /ers was taken last Sunday at a|terms of their recent agreement packed mass mecting of more than| with the Laundry Workers Indus- 700 shoe repair workers gathered at | trial Union was exposed when they Irving Plaza at the call of the newly | refused to take back three of the formed Shoe Repair Workers’ Union, ; striking drivers. The strike in that a section of the Shoe and Leather| shop was won largely through the Workers’ Industrial Union. The vote| sympathetic attitude of the laun- was unanimous with every worker | dry customers who refused to give rising from his seat, and was the| their wash to striking laundries. signal for a big demonstration of| The strike of the Bond Laundry cheering and applause as the work-| which lasted four weeks, severely ers expressed their enthusiasm and | crippled the business. If the bosses ‘willingness to carry on a struggle decline to take the settlement seri- to improve their conditions. ously, mass pressure will surely be While no definite date for the| exercised to enforce union condi- strike has been announced, registra- | tions. : \tion for the strike is to be held on i Thursday evening at Irving Plaza, Irving Pl. and 15th St. The hall will be open from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. and workers are urged to register at the hall immediately after work. ‘US Young Ukrainian | The meeting of the shoe repair workers was addressed by Lippa, the Philadelphia organizer who re- | ported the recent victory of the shoe’ |repair workers there, George Mar- tin, the union’s organizer, H. Mag- licano, who spoke in Italia, and Fred Biedenkapp, general secretary of the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Industrial Union. A collection of $90.65 was made towards the strike fund and the workers pledged them- selves to raise $3 each to augment the fund. One hundred thirty-four workers present joined the union, | Pied . Meeting Protesting | Negro Discrimination | Broken Up by Police | | ALBANY N. Y.—Police broke up ja demonstration held to protest the exclusion of two Negro workers from the local Salvation Army head- quarters on Liberty St. Rupert Carlton and Reuben Plas- ket’ two Harlem delegates to the State Continental Congress of Farmers and Workers, were told by Lieutenant Olsen of the “Army”: |“We can’t admit colored people. We |never did and we never will.” As a result the workers took out a warrant for the arrest of Lieut. Disen,; an official involved. CORRECTION Through an error of omission in Amter’s Aug. 30 article, “Appeal to “bosses” was left out of a sentence. The corrected sentence should read: “The Daily Worker is our main or- gan in liquidating the lies of the bosses and the illusions of the work- ers”, Party Members in Ohio” the words | Congress Endorses NEW YORK.—The World Youth Congress Against War and Fascism and the United States Congress Against War were enthusiastically endorsed at the first Convention of the Youth Section of the Ukrainian | Toilers, which opened yesterday at | Manhattan Lyceum. | The delegates who pledged sup- port represented a membership of | working and student youth in many cities as far West as Chicago, and including Pittsburgh, Dearborn, |Mich., Detroit, Cleveland, Phila- |delphia and Buffalo. The delegates on their return to their respective branches will affiliate their locals to the city committees now actively working for the September 22 Paris Congress and the September 29 to | October 1 United States Congress. ee NEW YORK.—The Youth Clubs of the Finnish Workers Federation will send a delegate to the Paris World Youth Congress Against War fand Fascism, the executive commit- jtee of the Federation announced yesterday. It called on all Youth Clubs affiliated with it to elect dele- gates, from among whom one will be selected by the executive committee, which will finance his trip. Quick action was asked, as the delegate must sail Sept 15. On his return’ a tour will be arranged so that the delegate can visit all the federated clubs. The names of the candidates should be sent as soon as possible to the Finnish Workers Anti-War Meetings, Federation, 35 E. 12th Street, New York City. This was the decision of the work- ers at their local meeting last Sat- urday. The committee will present demands for an hourly rate of 75 cents for the men, 50 cents for the women, an 8-hour day and a 40-hour week, for one man to a machine and the recognition of the National Tex- tile Workers’ Union shop local. A committee of the Associated Silk Workers are to meet with rep- resentatives of the National Labor Advisory Board in Washington to- morrow to arbitrate the strike of the 6,500 silk workers. Anticipating a deal with the bosses through the NRA, the Associated officials have deliberately failed to call meetings of the strikers for the past two days in order to dampen the ardor of the strikers. The National Textile | Union calls the broadsilk workers to a mass meeting next Wednesday night at Carpenters’ Hall, 56th and Van Houten Sts,, to discuss the ques- tion of mediation of the strike and the demands to be raised by the strikers. On Tuesday night a mass meeting of all dye workers in Paterson is called by the National Textile Work- ers’ Union to discuss spreading of the strike of the dye workers and to obtain the support of the workers, for the demands raised by the Weid- man wo:kers. The meeting will be held at 612 River St. at 8 pm. The workers of the United Piece Dye Works will meet on the same night at 416 Main St., Lodi, and the night \workers will gather at 36 Wall St., ‘Passaic, to make preparations for the | strike in the Lodi plant. \Jerry White’s Trial NEW YORK.—The trial of Jerry White, framed on charges of having a “concealed dangerous weapon” when a lawless raid was made re- cently on the Furniture Workers Union meeting, will take piace this morning at 9:30 a.m. in the Magis- trate’s Court at Second Ave. and Second St. Through an error, the Daily Work- er announced it as scheduled for yes- terday. Workers are asked to be present at the trial to demand the release of White. REGISTER WITH BOARD OF ELECTIONS CLEVELAND, O.—The Communist Party here wishes to instruct workers who have signed the petition to put the Party on the ballot that this sig- nature does not mean they have reg- istered for the coming elections, They must register before Sept. 12 in order to vote. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) is not credible. “The officers stated that the car in which they transported Pippen, Har- den, and Clarke, was accompanied for the first fifteen miles from Tuscaloosa and that these deputies were sent by an escort car loaded with deputies, back to Tuscaloosa after these first fifteen miles and had been travelled. In the light of further developments this is a clear indication of a plot to murder the three Negroes. “The officers stated that they were met, 23 miles from af- ¢ Workers Cooperative Colony (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) has now REDUCED THE RENT ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS Kindergarden; Classes for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasium; Clabs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED ter following @ circuitous route, by two cars filled with armed men who NX PARK EAST Gs E¥ of murder, “The officers stated that they rounded a curve in the road and ACTIVITIES were confronted with two cars eee fore F g i i z were the case, the car driven by the officers, if travelling at a normal rate of speed would at best have had dif- | ficulty in_stopping in time to avoid a crash. There is no account given of such difficulty ... The story which the officers forced & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE ff the Opportunity. train to White Stop at Allerton Avenue Estabrook #-1400—1401 Lexington Avenue Plains Rona. Station. Tel. Take Advantage o} Elmore Clarke, accidental survivor of the lynching, it is pointed out, is not only an obvious invention but does Oftice open daily Friday & Satorday Sunday tos jnot jibe with the story told by the deputies themselves, Pippen is made took their prisoners from them. ‘They | and LLD. Files Murder Charges Against 5 Tuscaloosa Officials to say, for example, that the head- lights of the “kidnappers” car were dimmed, “We charge,” the information states, “that they chose a circuitous road, out of the way, in order to find @ quiet spot in which to murder their prisoners. We charge that the decoy car said to had been sent out along the main road to Birmingham at nine o'clock on a Saturday night could have brought back no other report that at such a time the road was too thickly travelled to permit of carrying out the plot, of which we and Sheriff three prisoners out of hand. “The story told by the deputies about the ‘armed and masked gang’ to make up...” A conversation between Judge Fos- ter and Frank B. Irwin, I. L. D, torney, before the first hearing of Pippen, in which Foster refused to permit the attorney to see the de- fendants whose relatives had retained him, because he “did not want another Scottsboro case,” is quoted in the information alongside of a statement by Judge Foster, made after the lynchings, that “a determined feel- ing to keep this from being another Scottsboro case” prompted the lynch- ing, as directly incriminating him, The information filed with the Grand Jury continues: “It is recorded in an affidavit made by I, L. D. attorneys present at the time that Judge Foster in court on which they claim stopped them in-qAug. 2 threatened to kill with his cludes the statement that they could not tell the numbers on the license Plates of the cars in which the mob Tode because these were turned up- side down. This statement put the final cynical touch to a story obvi- ously false from beginning to end. “The fact that the two deputy sheriffs involved, on the very day of this lynching, cold-bloodedly shot and murdered Jim Pruitt, Negro tenant farmer, as he lay across his bed in his own shack, indicates clearly that their blood-lust had been aroused, that they were surprised and disap- pointed on learning that one of their victims had escaped death, and that they were determined to round out the job by murdering a third Negro own hand the sender of a telegram denouncing his action in barring the attorneys from the case after they had been retained by relatives of the defendants. The same affidavit, pier prises filed with United ey-General Cummings, states that deputy sheriffs in the courtroom answered Judge Foster to the effect that they themselves would ‘do it for him’ ,.. “We accuse Sheriff Shamblin of being a party to this plot, and of ordering the prisoners taken out of Tuscaloosa jail in full knowledge that they would be murdered by the depu- ties in whose charge he put them, and with the intention that they should be murdered. , “His complicity is proved by his failure to charge his deputies with & murder which they clearly com- mitted; by his announcement that he would ‘back them to the limit’ in the Grand Jury investigation; per- mitting the immediate burial of Pip- pin and Harden, the day following their murder, without an autopsy; permitting and abetting the destruc- tion and obliteration of all clues to the murder at the scene of the crime, including trampling down of the ground and taking away of the slugs which killed Pippen and Har- den, by ‘sightseers.’ ... “The International Labor Defense in these demands represents hundreds of thousands of workers, intellectu- als, students, both Negro and white, in the United States, who have pledged themselves to fight under its leadership lynching, “Already hundreds of thousands of these people have given expression to their protest against the lynching in Tuscaloosa, and to their demand for the arrest, prosecution and applica- tion of the death penalty to Foster, and Huff, in hundreds of meetings and mass ia those’ demands have been passed.” Workers’ | and the national oppression of the Negro people’ and millions more in foreign countries who support this struggle. Protest of Furniture | As to Perverted Standards of Fame | By EDWARD NEWHOUSE ERNON S. PRENTICE, the chairman of the American Davis Cup Committee issued yesterday the text of his official | report to the membership of that body. He resents elaborately | ankle had been sprained. His emphasis of that admiration |implies a great deal, Prentice made | perfunctory efforts to prevent Vines from continuing “‘as the final match {with Perry had no bearing on the | result,” but he does not deny that he | considers it to have been the only sporting procedure under the cir- | cumstances. An exceptionally per- tinent letter came into the office a |few days back and I reprint it in | full. Dear Newhouse: | In your column on the decline of | Ellsworth Vines, you did not men- | tion the fact that Vines is only one | of a dozen potentially brilliant play- ers whose possibilities have been de- stroyed by an imbecilic policy of overwork, To achieve ranking in the Inter- national First Ten, one must consider tennis skill as the most important achievement in life. Of course, this caa only occur in bourgeois countries where perverted standards of fame sacrifice the mental and physical health of thousands of youths. But, assuming that the consum- mate artistry of Tilden’s game is can tennis officialdom hes been so siderations that it has consistently blinded by immediate financial con- ruined every promising player of the last eight years. It is no coincidence that the great- est tennis experts of all time gained the heights years after they reached their maturity. Tilden was twenty-seven when he assumed leadership. Lacoste, Cochet and Borotra were no striplings when they routed Tilden, Richards and Johnston. Jack Crawford for years, has been improving his game slowly and now at twenty-five he is at the top. Ever since the Davis Cup went to France, officials have scoured the country for Tilden’s successor. Prom- ising candidates, all youngsters, have been rushed from tournament to tournament until a pseudo-perfec- tion was attained. As a result, these kid stars, after twinkling for a short | while, have become mediocre players with their vitality burned up. | Wood, when nineteen, was supreme |at Wimbledon. He failed in France and has since retrogressed. Lott, | Doeg, Van Ryn, Allison, Coen were |mever given an opportunity to ma- ture. The fire and spark of their | youthful play has disappeared. | Vines is the latest example. At twenty-one he is an old-timer, his tennis brilliance dimmed before it had a chance of revealing itself fully. And now, Frankie Parker, seventeen, is being rushed along the same path to extinction. That a few players are able to sur- vive this destructive policy only in- dicates to what extent this “rushing” |is criminal. Vinnie Richards, hailed as the “Boy Wonder,” flopped for a | few years. But he came back. Frank | Shields, with tremendous stamina physique is climbing and unusual ae after a sad experience in pre- ULSTER PARK, N. Y. j “Garden Spot of Ulster County”? Modern hotel emidst beautiful 200 acre fruit and grape farm; solariums, horses, tennis, ; refinement, congeniality. American-Jewish cuisine, Rates reduced to $16. Phone 3430 Kingston. JOSEPH ROSENTHAL. (Brooklyn) FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE BENSONHURST WORKERS Patronize GORGEOU’S CAFETERIA 2211 86th Street Near Bay Parkway Fresh Food at Proletarisn Prices WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1648 PITKIN AVENUE Near/ Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave., _ Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT sian a worth achieving, we find that Ameri- | | the charges that the Cup team had been overworked. At the | same time he expresses the “highest admiration” for Vines’ at this plant by an injunction order! gameness in struggling until an ultimate collapse after his & mature Davis Cup play.,Vines may do the same. 'To confuse the youth of the coun- try by emphasizing the “star” gvort system is good capitalist da. But the destruction of these Very stars by shortsightedness is just an- other example of the traditiona stupidity for which sports official: are noted. BEN KEAN, Standing of the Clubs AMERICAN LEAGUE Club W. L. P.C. Club W. L. P.6. Wash’ton 84 45 .651| Detroit 64 68 486 New York 17 48 .616| Chicago ‘Tl 60 .476 Cleveland 11 63 .530 | Boston 36 75 427 Philadel. 51 73 411! St, Louls 70 62.376 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club W.L.P.C.y Club WL. Po. New York 77 48 .616| St. Louis 71 60 538 Pittsburgh 71 57 .565| Brooklyn 52 73 .416 Boston 70 59 .543 | Philadel 5173 411 Chicago 70 60 538! Cincinnat! 70 61 .381 * * * INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Club W.L.P.Cy Club) WL PC. Newark 96 60 .615 | Montreal 75 80 .486 Rochester 85 71 .548| Buffelo 76 34 .476 Baltimore 83 75 .523/ Albany 74 82 .474 Toronto 80 78.507] Jersey City 58 97 .374 NATIONAL LEAGUE R. and Lewis; Bush and Hartnett. (First Game) Cincinnati ......000 000 000-0 8 1 Pittsburgh ......000 000 001-1 9 0 Johnson and Manion; Smith and Grace Cincinnati at Pittsburgh — second game postponed—rain, Others not playing. AMERICAN LEAGUE (First Game) B.H.E. Chicago - 000 000 000-0 4 2 Detroit . -440 000 000x—8 13 0 Jones, Kimsey and Grube; Sorrell and Hayworth, (First Game) St, Louis . 000 100 0010-2 8 Cleveland .....000 002 0001-3 9 | Wells, Knott, Gray and Hemsley Hildebrand and Pytlak, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) R. H. E. Rochester .......010 000 100-2 6 6 Montreal 010 031 OOx—5 10 2 Henry and Florence; Ogden and Stack. Second game not played. Baltimore at Albany, 2 games; Newark at Jersey City, 2 games— Postponed, rain. (First Game) Buffalo ........003 102 30—914 3 Toronto «103 101 60x12 14 7 Lucas, Wilson, Elliott, Perkins and Crouse; Frazier, Collier, Cook, Ham~- lin and Heving. Second game not played. Other games postponed, account o. rain, Intern’] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3018 Oftice Hours: $-10 A.M, 1-2, 6-8 P.M. WILLIAM BELL’ Optometrist GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 206 SUTTER AVE. one: Dickens 2- Phone: .. Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order DELEGATE and MASS MEETING TO START THE DRIVE TO SAVE THE DAILY WORKER Sunday, Sept. 10, at 7:30 p. m. Irving Plaza, 15th St. & Irving Pl. C. HATHAWAY AND C. KRUMBEIN WILL SPEAK All organizations send 2 delegates, All workers are invited to listen in. CAMP UNITY Will remain open during the whole month of SEPTEMBER : For the benefit of the ‘Dh COMMUNIST PARTY, NEW YORK DISTRICT ; Workers are requested to spend their vacation in Unity a

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