The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 6, 1933, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDA , SEPTEMBER 6, 1933 5,000 Attend Mass | City Events || Gutters of New York Funeral of Negro. | Harlem C. P. Meeting. NEW YORK.—There will be a | | membership meeting of the Har- | lem Section of the Communist Party to discuss the Open Letter, tonight, Wednesday, at 8 p. m., at | | the Finnish Hall, 15 W. 126th St. | Atlanta Cops, Ministers Try to Cow White, | Taback Defense Demonstration Negro Workers Present ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. 5. More than five thousand white | afd Negro workers crowded Mt. Zion church and the street | Outside here, Labor Day, in a mass protest funeral for Glover | Davis, blind Negro worker who W. Allen, August 3. Chief of Police O. T. Sturdivant, who is himself under indictment for graft, and dozens of plain-clothes men, circulated through the crowd, searching all white workers, bull- dozing and terrorizing the Negroes, and warning all whites to stay away from “Negro meetings.” One white worker, named Okello, was arrested when police found in his possession a leaflet calling on white and Negro people to organize top the killing of Negroes by! Police intimidated the undertaker, and Davis’ family, to keep them from carrying banners with the} srotest slogan of “End Police Mur- ders.” Two Negro preachers, J. T. Dar- ‘ey and the Rev. Dorsey, joined the nolice in their intimidation efforts | and tried to keep protest speakers | vut of the church. The Rev. A. J. Martin, also a Negro, however, in a speech denounced their cowardice, and in a funeral prayer asked “God o have mercy on Dorsey and the church that did not have the cour- age to protest the murder of a blind man by police, and police brutality.” Benjamin J. Davis, Jr., I.L.D, at- torney, who with John H. Geer is conducting the defense of Angelo| Herndon, spoke at the funeral, an- nouncing that another mass protest demonstration would be arranged | very soon, and urging organization | of white and Negro workers to end} the reign of terror and murder by| police which has gripped Atlanta the past few weeks. The tremendous demonstration at this funeral, and tne unity of white and Negro workers shown there, has | shaken the officials and white rul- ng class of Atlanta. A United Front Committee is oreparing a delegation supported by 1 mass demonstration, to go to the| mayor with a demand for prosecu-| tion and application of the death} penalty for Policeman Allen, who} murdered Davis, and removal of all policemen implicated in recent shootings of Negroes. Custom Tailors Call Gen’ Strike Today Strike for Week Work! Led by Needle Union NEW YORK.—At the call of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union custom tailors will go on strike today at 10 am. A general strike call has been issued by the union for the following demands: Week work system in the entire trade. Thirty-five hour week, five working days of seven hours each, Minimum wage scales for coat mak- ers and try-on makers, $40; for bu- shelmen, $40; for vest makers, $40; for pants makers, $40; helpers and finishers, $30. Abolition of sweat shops and homework. All production must be carried on on the premises of the manufacturer. The strike headquarters are at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Pl. and 15th St. Soviet ILD Pioneers Write Scottsboro 9 NEW YORK.—Among the many letters received for the Scottsboro boys in Birmingham Jail, by the In- ternational Labor Defense, are those written by members of the MOPR, the ILD of Soviet Russia, and espe- cially by the children in Pioneer or- ganizations attached to MOPR. The children write that they have read about the Scottsboro boys, the frame-up against them, and the in- ternational fight for their release, in their local Red Aid newspapers. Among the tasks set themselves by ‘these children, says the latest letter received from the “Young Friends of MOPR,” Pioneers’ School No. 6, Anapa, in the North Caucasian Re- gion, is the collection of dues ein other funds for the MOPR. Arrested in Brighton, to Stand Trial Today BROOKLYN.—The trial of the nine pickets of the Food Workers Industrial Union arrested at Hoff- man’s Cafeteria in Brighton Beach a few weeks ago, comes up in court this morning. All workers are called to pack the Coney Lsland Court House on W. 8th St. to protest the Qrrest of these workers. At the same time the boss, Mr. Hoffman, seeking a permanent injunction wgainst the industrial union. WORKERS PATRONIZE CENTURY CAFETERIA 154 West 28th Street Pure Food —_Proletarian Prices STATIONERY and - MIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES | At Special Prices for Organizations ' Lerman Bros., Inc. Phone ALgonquin 4-3356 — 8843 29 East 14th St. N. ¥.C. Food Worker Pickets, | was murdered by Policeman 0. | Briggs, Liberator Editor, Attacked’ Worker “Who Stole) Funds Guilty of Attack NEW YORK.—Cyril Briggs, editor | of the Harlem “Liberator,” was at- tacked Sunday noon by Alexander Mooney, whose petty thievery of money contributed to the Liberator | was exposed in last week’s issue. Briggs narrowly escaped serious in-| jury. Because of the militant policy| of the paper, Briggs has twice before been the object of attack by Tam- many thugs. | As Briggs entered the doorway of the Liberator office at 2162 Seventh Avenue, a loaded beer botile was thrown at his head. He dodged and avoided the missile. Had it struck | him, it would have inflicted a danger- ous wound, Mooney then attacked Briggs, breaking his glasses and biting and kicking him. Negro workers imme- diately rushed to Briggs’ rescue and drove Mooney and his wife, who ac-/| companied him, out of the neighbor- hood. Harlem workers are planning a bodyguard for the office of the Lib- erator and its editor. Two weeks ago Mooney walked out of the Liberator office, where he was employed, with money entrusted to him to buy stamps for the mailing of the paper. The Liberator, in com- menting on this, said, “It is against the policy of the Harlem Liberator to use the bosses’ courts and police against any worker. We are confi- dent that the workers whose pennies contribute to the publishing of the | Liberator will deal in their own way | with Mr. Mooney. ‘Steel Trust Says | NRA Cuts Wages (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ting a 33 per cent slash in pay un- der the steel code signed by President | Roosevelt and approved by the offi- | clals of the American Federation of Labor, including William Green and John L. Lewis. Many Will Lose Jobs In an editorial in the same paper justifying the wage cut, the state- ment is made that many workers will lose their jobs because of slackening of operations. The title of the edi- torial is: “Recovery Act’s Chief Purpose Is to Spread Employment.” It then goes on to say: “Owing to | the probability operations will taper | off during the next few weeks it is | hardly likely all of this reduced num- | ber (now working) will be needed in | the near future.” | The editorial then strives to erase | Some of the promises made by Roose- velt, Gen. Johnson and Green.” “It appears the intent of the act \38 misunderstood by many persons who think of it as a wage raising | Jaw,” says the Morgan sheet. | On the contrary, they point out, it is a wage-cutting law, “Steel workers, whose time is cut from 60 to 40 hours a week, will suf- fer a loss in wages temporarily at least.” They then try to explain the widely spread propaganda that was made at the time the steel code was pro- posed that a 15 per cent rise in wages would go into effect. “Inasmuch as steel wages were raised only last month to 40 cents an hour the reduction in hours for those who have been working 60 hours brings a corresponding cut in wages, that is one-third.” The editorial tells the workers it | is Roosevelt's wish that wages be cut in order to carry out the NRA. “The thing for steel workers to remember, however,” they say, “is that the administration is engaged in a tremendous effort to put men to | Work and that later it will be just as coneerned to provide wages which will give everyone an improving scale of living. This is a great war and the installation of the codes (that is the wage cuts) is simply the first battle.” The very éditorial which reports that more workers will be fired, tells the steel workers that the NRA, which slashes wages, is intended to increase employment and raise the workers’ standard of living. To ac- complish this every worker in the biggest steel mills in the country got a 33 per cent wage cut. Spokane County Jail | Also Discriminates Against the Negroes By a Negro Worker Correspondent | SPOKANE, Wash.—Here in the | Spokane County Jail there is just | One Negro trusty, but there is the difference between color here too, The white trusties have a place by themselves with better beds, but this | Ngro has to go back to his little cell at night, and sleep on the iron bunks. The head jailer told this worker that they were not allowed two Negro trusties. Help improve the “Daily Worker.” send in your suggestions and criticism: Let us know what the workers in your shop think abont the “Daily.” | workers is galled for tonight at 8 The Bronx Section of the LL.D., together with the Unemployed Councils, fraternal and mass organ- izations, has arranged for a demon- stration, protesting the frame-up of Leon Taback, Thursday. The demonstrators will gather at Frisby Ave. and St. Peters St., two blocks onth of Westchester Square, at 2:30. Leon Taback will conduct his own defense this Friday in the Court | of Srecial Sessions, Bergen Build- ing, Tremont and Arthur Aves. at 10 AM. Protests should be sent to Judges Herbert, McInerny, and Flood. White Goods Mass Meeting. A. mass meeting of white goods o'clock at 66 E, 4th Street to make preparations for the Washington hearing. Knitgoods Membership Meeting. The general strike peparations of the knit goods workers will be discussed at a membership meet- ing which will be held Thursday, 6 p. m., at the headquarters of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. Workers are urgently re- quested to attend. | Puerto Rican Workers Entertainment. The Puerto Rican Anti-Imperial- ist Association (Asociacion Anti-Im- perialista Puertorriquena) will hold a dance and entertainment at its conter, 112 West 116th St., this Sat- urday, for the benefit of its organ, Liberacion. A jazz and Spanish rhumba orchestra will provide music. Admission 25 cents. | Carpenters Meet. ‘The Independent Carpenters Union will hold its regular membership meeting tonight at 7:30 at headquar-}| ters, 820 Broadway. A speaker from the International Labor Defense will address the meeting. All carpenters are invited. Open Air Meeting. There will be an open air Com- munist Party election meeting at Far Rockaway Plaza (L. I. Station) to- night, at 8:30 P.M. Rockaway LL.D. Meeting. The International Labor Defense will hold an open air meeting at the corner of 84th St. and Rockaway Beach Boulevard (Hammels Station), Thursday, at 8:30 P.M. Election Campaign Lecture. A lecture on the election campaign will be held by Working Women’s Council 35 at 148-29 Liberty Ave., Workers’ Center, tonight at 8 P.M. Anti-War Talk at Youth Club. “Your Uniform and Your Gun Are Being Prepared for You” will be the topic of a discussion to be led by Carl Brodsky this Friday, at the Youth Club headquarters, 114 Ludlow St. Fifty per cent of thé small ad- mission price to be charged will go to the election campaign of the Com- munist Party. C. P. Election Slate Drawn Up In Birmingham Negro Worker to Run for President of City BIRMINGHAM, Ala, — Raising as their chief demands, cash relief to the unemployed, the unqualified right to organize, and equal rights for Negroes, the militant workers of Birmingham have nominated, on the ticket of the Communist Party, M. C. Ellis, a T. C. I. worker, as their candidate for President of the City Commission. The elections take place October 9. W. D. James, a Negro worker, will run on the ticket with Ellis for the office of associate commis- sioner. A third candidate will be named by the Oommunist Party In their campaign, Hllis’ 40-year old machinist who has been active since the world war in the struggles of the working class, and James will bring forward the burning issues that face “the Birmingham masses today. In théir campaign, Ellis, 40-year Seven dollar weekly cash relief for every unemployed worker with $1.50 for each child, is the central demand of the Communist program for the Birmingham elections. Other de- mands include cutting down of the police force which is used to ter= rorize workers, especially Negroes, the money saved to be used for the unemployed. Cancellation of all debts to the T. C, I. and other com- panies, incurred by the workers while they were unemployed. For the right of the workers to join any trade upion, to strike dod to picket for better conditions and in- creased wages. The candidates of the employers— Jones, Robinson and others—are giving their main attention in the campaign to the question of city ownership of power plants. The C. P. has raised the demand‘ 50 per cent reduction in all utility rates, whether, these utilities are owned by private companies or by the city government; free gas, light, water and rent for all unemployed areee and 5 cent carfare on all ines, To keep up a six-page “Daily Work- er,” the circulation must be doubled. Do your share by getting new suab- seribers, | | By del Arrested Worker _ Chosen Communist Candidate forJudge | Delegates. ‘Prepa ring) for Bronx Ratifica- tion Rally | | \| | | NEW YORK.—Leon Tabac, unem- | ployed worker arrested several months ago at a demonstration for relief and now released under $1,000 bail on a felonious assault charge, has been chosen as Communist Party candidate for Municipal Court Judge in the Ist District of the Bronx, it was announced yesterday. The entire Communist Party ticket of candidates nominated for the | Bronx will be ratified at the mass United Front Election Rally and Rati- fication Conference this Saturday, Sept. 9, at Ambassador Hall, 3861 Third Ave., in the Bronx. Mrs, Mary Burroughs, Communist Party candi- | date for Comptroller, will be the main speaker at the conference, which be- gins at 1 p.m. In the evening a banquet will be tendered to Robert Minor, Communist candidate for Mayor of New York City, in the same hall, Minor was en- thusiastically received by six hundred workers when he spoke at Ambassador Hall under the auspices of the Middle Bronx Unemployed Council last Fri- | | day night. “Tf your organization does not meet before Saturday, the day of the rally and banquet, call on your or- Untermeyer Tax Program | Is Clever Campaign Ruse Camouflaged As Tax on Rich Corporations, It Is Calculated to Fall Heaviest on the Workers and Small Home Owners NEW YORK, Sept. 5—That the Tammany tax program | presented yesterday by Samuel Untermeyer has been deliber- ately cast in the mold of an “anti-rich man” form for the purposes of the coming election, was widely admitted here to- day by leading Tammany lawyers. ganization’s office to send two dele- gates to the cenference,” reads part of acall sent cut by the Bronx Elec- tion Committee to all workers, urging their support of the Com- munist Party candidates. Bronx Communist Headquarters for the campaign are at 569 Prospect Ave. and 2075 Clinton Ave. * # Workers who have Communist election campaign collection boxes are urged to turn them in to the |committee office—792 \ Broadway, Room 526—as soon as possible. Brady Bans Sale of “Daily Worker” Leading capitalist political ob-© servers commented openly on the fact that the Tammany lawyers have al- ready admitted that the proposed taxes on brokerage firms and utility incomes are only a temporary blind behind which the city can go for- ward with its increased taxes on water and the application of the sales tax. ‘The gestures of taxing the rich, ‘will also be used to cover up the plans for further wage cuts in the payrolls of the civil service employees, it was said, Consumers Will Pay Utility Tax Lawyers pointed out that the pro- posed tax on brokerage firms be fought for a long time in the courts, and can be easily evaded, even if | passed. They also showed that the taxes on utility incomes, either will be killed in the courts, or else ultim- ately passed on to the consumers. In addition, many of the largest city utilities are exempt from all further taxes by the terms of their franchises. In contrast to all the obstacles Mrs, Wright Is. Forced to Drop Returns to Chattanoo-| ga Because of Death of Her Brother CHICAGO, Ill. — Mrs. Wright, mother of Scottsboro boys, has been obliged, because of the death of her brother in Chattanooga, to leave her Scotts- boro tour with Ruby Bates uncom- pleted, it was announced today by the International Labor Defense. Mrs. Wright has returned to Chat- tanooga, The tour will continue with Ruby Bates, it was announced, and Alice Burke, white girl who has just been released on bond from Birmingham jail where she was serving a sen- tence for organizing white and Ne- gro workers together for relief. Ada Flatbush Alteration Painters Combine In Strike Drive Three Locals Join in General Mobiliza- tion NEW YORK. — Three alteration painters’ local unions have combned in a joint general drive against the degrading shop conditions in the Flatbush sector. Strike headquarters have been se- cured at 629 Rogers Ave. near Park- side, Brooklyn. All alteration paint- ers of the A. F. of L. and unorganized workers in the industry are called upon to come there Tuesday morning and aid in the work of organizing the hundreds of Flatbush workers who toil under miserable conditions. At a joint meeting of the three Jocals held Saturday, plans were worked out for the general drive and strike committees were elected. Heading these committees are the following workers: J. Bressenger in charge of the general drive; J. Kras- nitz heading the organizational com-., mittee; J. Block on the provisions committée; U. Spillman, on the legal defense committee; A. Freedland pub- Ueity committee; and C. Berliner- man at the head of the picketing committee, enforceable commission to that lie in the way of the supposed taxes on the rich corporations, the taxes that fall on the poor, are easily can be quickly passed. The increased water rates and taxi levies will fall heaviest on the poorest tenants and the small, independent taxi owners. and More Wage Cuts What can be expected in the very near. future, was hinted at today by Untermeyer and Peter Grimm, both working together on the “economy” cut city expenses, Scottsboro Tour Untermeyer stated that the city will fulfill its promise to the bankers to cut payrolls, while Grimm warned that further cuts must be made in payrolls. These are undisguised hints at further cuts in the wages of teachers, engineers, etc. ‘That the City’s “economies” will come from the lower paid employees was made clear today by the action of the Budget officials. While the city dropped over 103 day laborers from the payrolls, the salaries of judges were listed at the old figures of $17,500 a year, and $15,000 a year. | Anti-Deportation Delegation to Go to Capitel Today attorney. has a plant in Jersey City, and is un- der the control of the same stock company as the plant in Harrison. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) metal, radio and General Motors plants, who fire their higher paid workers and hire the starving work- ers who come for relief to work at lower wages. Harrison is controlled by the fa- mous Hague crowd of Jersey City, where workers are arrested at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, and at 2:15 are convicted and railroaded to six months in jail, without even the legal formalities of trial or defense by The Crucible Steel also The Harrison Crucible Steel Plant before the crash used to em- ploy as many as 2,500 workers, and now, with the NRA, employs barely 500. The workers work in two shifts, from 7 to 3 and from 3 to 11. The workers work very irregularly. Two weeks ago fifty workers in the foundry department were laid off. These same workers wére hired one week before NRA, The employers have fed the work- ers with rumors that work will speed up after Labor Day, when they expect a contract from the government for 16-inch shells, The Crucible Steel has a company union and railroad their plans through without even pretending to consult with the werkers. Certain fellows fvom each depart- Group Will Leave two of the) After Lyceum Meeting NEW YORK.—The delegation to protest against deportations of for- | |eign born workers will be given a sendoff at a meeting to be held at the Manhatian Lvceepm, 66 E. 4th St., tonight at 8 o’clock, The delegation will leave immedi- ately after the meeting and will meet in Washington with other dele- igates' from Newark, Philadelphia; | Pittsburgh, Cleveland and Detroit, and then proceed to the Labor De- partment, to lay before Frances Perkins the protests and demands of American workers that deportation cease, victims now held be released and all deportation actions be dropped. The meeting will start promptly at 8 p.m. and will be addressed by prominent speakers, Come early. Bring your friends. T. J. McHenry, secretary of the ; Committee for Protection of For- }eign Born, will preside. | Upholsterers of A. F. L. Mareh With Industrial Union NEW YORK—A ample of solidazity was shown by the upholsterers of the A. F. of L. local 76, this Friday, when a large body of furniture workers of the Industrial Union came in a body to the headquarters of the local with a view to effect united action in the present strike situation. The members of Local 76 received the. upholsterers of the Industrial Union with loud cheers and joined them in a large mass picket demon- concrete ex- | decisions of any kind, sulted and avused Merion Laugilin, and tried to find out from her who in Harrison took the Daily Worker, who liked it, what her connections wete, Phila. Textile the heart of the A. F. of L. hosiery center in Kensington 400 workers of the Hellwig textile mill, recognizing the betrayal policies of the A. F. of} L. oficials in the recent hosiery and textile strikes here, have on strike under the leader: militant National Textile ment, friends of the employers, are appointed by the managers to the shop committee, and the workers never know anything of meetings, or Here is an instance which will show the high-handed manner of Chief of Polict Brady of this com- peny town. When the Interna- tional Labor Defense deposited the bail for Marion Lcughlin, and ccked for a receipt, he replied: “The prisone is your receipt,” and flatly refused the formatity of a written receipt. At the same time the police in- ‘ The only answer to the high- handed acticns of the authorities ef Harrison is to have mere wark- efs selling more “Daily Workers,” not only 2t the Crucible Steel, but at the RCA radio tube p‘aat, at the General Motors, at the Worthing- | ton Machinery Corporation, at the Driver Harris Ware Comphay and through the streets of the Hague- controlled factory town. No bans on the Daily Worker! Workers’ Strike Led by National Tex-) tile Union PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Sent. 5—In e out of the forkers’ of the stration over the heads of the A.F.L. leaders. The demonstration took place in front of the Trade Shop in Long Island. It is the ke; present strike. The stationed at the factory were sur- prised to see the sudden appearance big body of workers. Over shop in the letail of police three hundred upholsterers took part in the demonstration. The earlier hint that the neighborhood was unsympathetic to union demon- stration was not hrought ont Union. Although the workers have been intimidated by the “red scare,” when Nationel Textile Union organ- izers answered the issue squarely the workers were thoroughly convinced that the N. T. W. leadership would fight in their interests. The workers are demanding more pay and other improvements in their conditions, pgs ‘On Saturday the Daily Worker has By EDWARD T for the year 1930. No wonder ten. They have to be. Take any recent major sports event. Take the Giants-Braves series. You'll not be making a mistake. The Giants took it and look where they! are. Remember the write-ups, the pompous, cocksure analyse; of the Braves’ pennart bid. Not an “exvert” gut conceded them a chance. T wish I had the stuff at hand so I could quote. The Braves were a duplicate of the wonder team of ‘14. Berger was a second Ruth; Maranville, a tower of strength; Brandt, Cantwell, Frank- house, pitching marvels. Remember the six-column, half-page-deep car- toons in the Hearst papers, showing the rampant Warriors, the cringing What differential equations and earned run averages, what innuendoes of the Giant Big Fours imccnding cvilapse. All a bit ridiculous to the outsider but spiritual manna to the 135.000 Boston faus who attended and mors substantial manna to Owner Fuchs. Ca Orca 'HE Giants, in due course of events, virtually swept the series. Remem- ber again the experts. How, exclaimed they, could a team be possibly con- sidered to be of pennant calibre with a batting average around .250? How can the Giants lose with the Four Cylinders clicking? Pittsburgh is the team to watch now. What a laugh. These are the stu- denis cf the game, the scientists on whose word hang millions of readers. These are the boys who predicted and would have given you 3 to t odds that the Giants would finish in the Segond division, the boys who interred Ruth three years ago and quoted Moody at 10 to 1 against Jacobs. Wal, as Will Rogers would write, people make mistakes. He wouldn’t be doing columns if they didn’t and, my father has confided on occasions, neither would I. Undoubtedly fans are expected to admire the dispensers of their source material for discus- sions because of their skill in getting away with it. Undoubtedly, too, they are charming and gracious enough in their apologies. Sports Editor Paul Gallico of the New York Daily News has formed the 98 Per Cent Wrong Club of which he is president. But at the same time he and his men wax scientific about Travis Jackson's knee, Carnera’s “secret punch,” Moody’s spinal column and baseline. I wish I could triumph over my notoriously hu~ morous flair and sense of the whim- sical long enough to sit down and tabulate the silly. predictions ,and 100 per cent wrong comments of just cne set of these specialists. The more intelligent of them no longer venture ’ predictions. When they do, they qualify them left and right until they get to sounding like a “Nation” editorial, a Ph.D. thesis on the Shakespeare-Bacon contro- versy or a National City Bank bul- letin on the crisis. Old-timers have perfected a patter which enables them to sound author- itative and appear to be uitering the last word on the subject without committing themselves. On rainy days when copy is scarce they ram- ble on, reminiscing, weaving auras and halos of romance about bits of very ordinary action, begging for controversies by offering opinions de- liberately to provoke the fan mail on whose extent their jobs Jargely depend. Se ‘ORE intelligent commentators of the Westbrcok Pegler type scorn this form of log-rolling and branch off into other fields. Pull and the ob- vious excellence of their material are the most important factors which secure them their niche on pages of jah and pfuy. At that they lay off the touchy stuff and kick sacred cows all around the pasture- only when they're pretty well preparcd for the slaughter -house. Of course, by disperaging sports pages of contemporaries I may be DOWNTOWN ‘Phone: TOmpitns Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPOCIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades _————————————————— <= ——— All Comrades meet at the Vegetarian Workers’ Club ~DINING ROOM— Natural Food for Your Health 220 E. 14th Street Biting the Hand That Feeds Me o- Bet, Seceond and Third Avenuer Tel: Fordham 7-4011 2157 PROSPECT AVENUE 8 pages: Increase your bundle order for Saturday All Comrades Meet at the ‘NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA| Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 52 L, 18TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER. BRONX WORKERS! Columbus Steam Laundry Service, Inc. A Laundry Workers Industrial Union Shop \\ Wy = NEWHOUSE HERE is more hokum in the four or five sports pages of a newspaper than in the financial, editorial and news sections combined. That’s going it strong but I’ll go further. There is more hooey in a year’s files of the average sports expert’s out- put than in a volume of the Congressional Record; more bum predictions than in the collected speeches of Herbert Hoover sports stories are better writ- doing the same to the readers there~ of, biting the hands that feed \me, figuratively. \ Aint nothing I got against spo writing as such, mates, ‘cept the; aint no way I can slide out of read- ivg a mess of it on this job, by gum,, and it hurts, comrades, it hurts. Standing of the Clubs AMERICAN LEAGUE cub WLP Club = W.LPO Wash'ion 65 45 .6°4 { Detroit 65 68 489 New York 75 83 .587 | Chicago 60 72 455 Cleveland 12 68 .5?: Boston 5676 426 Philadel. 64 65 4961 St. Louis 49 84 .368 Faria, NATIONAL LEAGUE Club WLP.) Club W.L PO. New York 17 49 .611 | 3t. Louis 70 63 .526 >Dittsburgh 72 57 .888 | Brooklyn 52 73 416 Shicago 72 60 .545 | Philadel. 51 73 .411 Boston 70 57 543 Dincinnat!, 50 80 .368 * * INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Club «=W.LP.C., Club W.LP.o. Newark 97 61 .615| Montreal 76 80 .487 Rochester 85 72 .541| Buffalo 79 8¢ .486 Baltimore 83 77 .521| Albany —_76 82 .480 Toronto 80 81 .496 | Jersey City 59 98 .374 Inning-by-Inning Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE R. H. E. -000 100 000-1 8 3 Pittsburgh . -003 110 10x—6 13 1 Hubbell, ores and Mancuso; French, Salverson and Grace. No other games played. New York . AMERICAN LEAGUE (Pirst Game) R.H.B New York ..,...000 000 OO1—1 3 2 Philadelphia ...000 013 02x—6 8 6 Gomez, MacFayden and Dickey; Mahaffey and Cochrane. (Second Game) New York . ....100 310 0319 12 f Philadelphia ....202 000 002-6 9 3 Devens and Dickey; Cain, Wal- berg, Combs and Cochrane. Washington .802 000 000 21-5 10 2 Boston ......000 100 010 2—4 11 2 Stewart, Russell and Sewell; Rhodes, Weiland, Kline and Fer~- rell. +101 100 331-9 10 0 Boston . +011 000 310-6 18 3 Whitehill, Russell, Crowder and Sewell; Welch, Fullerton, Kline, Weiland and Gooch, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) RE Baltimore -000 001 000-1 9 1 Albany .. «110 000 00x—2 7 1 Claset and Sprinz; Fussell and Padden. i Albany .. ‘ Ogden and Linton; Campbell and Phelps. (First Game) € - 000 015 001—7 11 2. ++++200 000 010-3 11 0 Buffalo .. Toronto Wilson and Crouse; Marrow, Cook, and R. Smith. (Second Game) Buffalo . Toronto . Wilson and Crouse; Marrow, Cook and R. Smith. (First Game) Newark .. -000 620 010-9 14 3 Jersey City .....000 000 402-6 12 3 Deshong and Eisemann; Pipgras and Savino. (Second Game) Newark ..........000 001 00-1 4 1 Jersey City . -000 010 01-2 8 1 Broaca and Hargreaves; Cascarella and Emerson. Rochester at Montreal, twilight and night games. VINEYARD LODGE ULSTER PARK, N. Y. “Garden Spot of Ulster Coun! Modern hotel amidst beautiful 200 acre fruit and grape farm; solariums, horses, tennis, refinement, congeniality. ‘American-Jewish cuisine, Rates reduced to $16. Phone 3430 Kingston. JOSEPH ROSENTHAL, Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-8012 0 A.M, 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Hespital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled At One-Halt Price SPD. White Gold Filled Frames___61.50 ZYL Shell Frames -__—__., , $1.00 Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORchard 4-4520 PATRONIZE BRONX, N. Y. wees

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