The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 8, 1933, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1933 Atlanta Police Raid TO INDICT ALL WHITE ORGANIZERS TO SMASH LD. P ROTEST EFFORTS Seize All Documents In Sudden Raid; No Arrests Made; Wide Protest Planned ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. Defense at 14114 Auburn Ave. All literature and material Jury on Friday, when he would? seek an indictment against all white | I. L. D. organizers on a charge of circulating ectionary _litera- ture. | No one was in the office when it| was raided, and no arrests were made. | This raid is a part of the reign of terror against the Negro and white workers of Atlanta, which has been expressed recently in numerous wan- ton murders of Negroes by police,| and shooting and maiming of others. On Labor Day more than 5,000 Negro and white workers took part na mass protest funeral for Glover Davis, blind Negro worker shot in cold blood by Policeman O. W, Allen. Police sought to terrorize the work- ers at the funeral, searching and questioning all white workers and warning them to stay away from “Negro meetings.” The I. L. D. has led the struggie against this reign of terror, uniting | Negro and white workers in a mass movement of protest, and in the de- mand for removal, arrest and prose- | eution of the police murderers. | The Unity of Negro and white workers, which the white rulers of Georgia are trying to smash, has also been expressed in the militant struggle for relief, led by Angelo Herndon, and the struggle for the release of Herndon, sentenced to from 18 to 20 years on the chain-| gang for leading Negro and white workers together in struggles. The| police attack upon the I. L. D. is| also part of the attempt to smash! the defense of Herndon, whose case | is now before the state Supreme} Court on appeal. A mass meeting will be called to pro- test against the attack on the I.L.D. office, and the effort by police to| illegalize and behead the I. L. D.| movement here, it was announced. | Mass Funeral | for Detroit | Negro Planned —The Atlanta office of the International Labor | here was raided yesterday by seven found there was seized. Assistant Solicitor John Hudson, prosecutor of Angelo Herndon and the Atlanta Six, announced that this material would be presented to the Gra nd Urges US. Workers Fight Intervention (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | tempt of reactionary elements to suppress preparations to resist the landing of U. S. troops. No precise | details were available. | Thousands of young workers} massed in Fraternity Park to cele-| brate International Youth Day. The} Youth Section of the Confederacion | Nacional Obrera de Cuba distributed | thousands of handbills calling for the mass meeting and voicing the de- mands of the revolutionary workers | of Cuba. | This manifesto raised the slogan | of carrying forward the revolutionary | fight until a government of) workers, peasants, soldiers, and sail- | ors has been achieved. Other demands include the follow- | In tl Labor Defense Headquarters Organizations Urged| to Elect Delegates) to ‘Daily’ Meeting | NEW YORK.—Worker-delegates from hundreds of local organiza- tions will hear C. A. Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, and Charles Krumbein, district organ- izer of the Communist Party, at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Place, where the drive to keep the new improved Daily Worker will be in- augurated. Organizations, groups and clubs which meet tonight are urged to be sure to elect delegates to this important conference. Those or- ganizations which have no meet- ings scheduled before Sunday should be represented by their of- ficers at Irving Plaza Hall. City Events NOTICE! TO ALL MEMBERS. All Party members are instructed by the District Secretariat to repore at the respective section headquar- ters this Saturday (after 3 p.m.) FOR SPECIAL WORK IN CON- NECTION WITH THE BASIC CAMPAIGN OF THE PARTY TO- DAY. ALL COMRADES ARE URGED TO RESPOND TO THIS CALL, AND SHOW THEIR BOL- SHEVIK CALIBRE IN THE SPIR- IT OF THE OPEN LETTER. DISTRICT SECRETARIAT. Hathaway To Speak NEW YORK.—C. A. Hathaway, ed- itor of the Daily Worker, will speak on the National Recovery Act at the PARTY ing: | Workers Center, 50 E. 13th St., sec- Against Imperialism “Down with the new government, which intends to pay the debts to| the Yankee bankers; out with Am-| bassador Welles and Caffery, (his appointed successor) and Secretary Swanson; against the construction of | airports, against the militarization of yor against the menace of Yankee armed intervention, against payment of debts to Wall Street, against the Platt amendment; for defense of the ond floor, tonight at 8 p.m. Daily Worker Volunteers, under whose auspices this lecture is to be held, will be admitted free. The ad- | mission charge to other workers will | be 10 cents. Harlem Forum Harry Haywood, noted Negro revo- lutionary writer and lecturer, will speak on “The Future of the Negro in the Black Belt of the South” at eee people and the Soviet) ihe sunday, Sept. 10, meeting of era ‘i , the weekly Liberator- League o Raliway Workers Give Ultimatum | sirugcie for Negro Rights Forum. An army corporal was killed at Victoria de las Tunas, in a counter- | revolutionary attempt which the sol- diers and workers quickly suppressed. Former army officers meeting in a movie house at Campo Amor were dispersed by an armed detachment of soldiers. The striking railway workers pre- sented an ultimatum to the junta, demanding that their demands for wage increase and improved condi- tions be granted by midnight of Sept. il. Rodolfo Mendez Penate, who had DETROIT.—A mass funeral Sat-|been assistant secretary of the in- urday, Sept. 9, has been arranged/ terior under De Cespedes, and whom for Richard Johnson, Negro worker,|the junta sought to have remain in who was shot last Friday by a po-| his post, resigned. He is a brother liceman. The funeral will take place|0f the leader of the nationalists. | All forum meetings are held at the Urban League Building, 200 West 136th Street. * Youth Congress Dance. A dance and concert to raise funds for a delegate to the Paris Youth Congress Against War and’ Fascism, at the New Dance Group, 23 W. 17th St. The National Committee for this Congress will provide music and dance solos; Albert Herling, concert pianist; refreshments; prominent speakers and square dancing for the 20 cents admission price. Children’s Reunion will be held this Saturday, Sept. 9, | at 1 p .m. from the Workers Home| at 1343 E. Ferry Ave., where John-| son’s body has lain in state for sev-| eral days. The League of Struggle; for Negro Rights is arranging for | the. funeral. The shooting of Johnson is a cli-| max of several weeks of terroriza- tion of the Negroes on the East Side| of Detroit. It started when a Negro| woman was kicked brutally in the stomach by the proprietor of a shoe| store when the woman wished to| exchange a pair of shoes she had | purchased. | Last Friday Johnson was shot by | a-cop as he was picketing the store. | Six bullets were fired into his body. He died a short time later in the Sergeant Fulgencio Batista, made army chief of staff when the officers were thrown out by the rank and file, | announced that he was arranging to ring back all officers who were not directly identified with the Machado regime. (Brookiyn 5 FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE BENSONHURST WORKERS Patronize Children of the Wo-Chi-Ca are to have their re-union this evening at 8 p.m. at the Central Opera House. Over 400 children will perform and a movie of the activities will also be shown. Come and see the splen- did work done by proletarian chil- dren, Negro and white. There will also be a mass initiation of camp | children into the Pioneer organiza- | tion. This is a performance that | both adults and children should at- | tend. Terzani to Speak hospital, the second death of a Ne- gro murdered by cops in three weeks. VINEYARD LODGE ULSTER PARK, N. Y. “Garden Spot of Ulster County” Modern hotel amidst beautiful 200 acre fru and grape farm; solariums, horses, tennis, refinement, congeniality. ‘American-Jewish | cuisine. Rates reduced to $16. Phone 3430) Kingston. JOSEPH ROSENTHAL. | Hoffman’s CLASSIFIED ~ RESTAURANT WANTED—Room and board; three weeks; | mace le > €8 CAFETERIA very quiet country farm, hundred miles up| river; comrade with small dog. Write M G., care Daily Worker. WANTED_Red Bullder to veil Daiiy work. | Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. and Literature in a very good sp ral commission. See Comrade Steg Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenin; between 8 and 10 P.M., for details. GORGEOU’S CAFETERIA 2211 86th Street lear Bay Parkway Fresh Foos at Proletarian Prices for Brownsville Workers! Brooklyn Workers Patronize HOWARD STE A M—— LAUNDRY PER VICE 476-8-80 Howard Ave., Bklyn, N.Y. PResident 3-3000 NOTICE is hereby given that license Ne NYB 11054 has been issued to the under- signed to sell beer and wine at retail, un-| der=Section 7 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law, at 205 E. 14th St., New York, | N. Y., to be consumed upon the said prem-| ises. 'R. H. Dining Rooms, Inc., 205 B. 14th | St., New York, N. Y APEX CAFETERIA 827 Broadway, Between 12th and 13th Streets All Comrades Should Patronize This FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION SHOP COMMUNIST PARTY MONTH CAMP UNITY WINGDALE, N. Y. A Real Workers Atmosphere, Beautiful Season of the Year Swimming, Rowing, Handball, Amid the Berkshire Hills Hiking—Warm and Cold Showers VACATION RATE: $13.00 Per Week (incl. Tax) WEEK-END RATES: 2 Days - - $4.65 (incl. Tax Spend Indian Summer, the Most Cars leave fur C. and Saturday 10 ee Express. Stop at Allerton A Round Trip: To Nitgedaiget To Unity | at N. Y. Welcome QUEENS, N. Y.—A new “investiga- tion” in the case of Athos Terzani | was promised to a delegation headed | by Norman Thomas, chairman of the /Terzani Defense Committee, by the | District Attorney of Queens County. | Arthur Garfield Hays, who at present {is trying to participate in the defense of the Reichstag fire frame-up cases, | will act as chief counsel for Terzani | when his case comes up for trial. | Terzani, out on $10,000 bail, will be the main speaker at a meeting to be held tonight at the Irving Plaza Hall, | at 15th St. and Irving Pl. Others who will greet Terzani at tonight's meet- | ing will be William L. Patterson, Nor- man Thomas, Rober Baldwin, Arturo |Giovannitti, Carlo Tresca, Michele |Palumbo and Anthony Fierro’s father. |Fake Paper Presented In Soviet Union Warns Workers’ Relief Head NEW YORK.—The Daily Worker \has been informed by the Workers International Relief that Morris Grubin is presenting a document in the Soviet Union purporting to be a | credential signed by M. Scherer, for- | mer national secretary of the W.LR., |and is giving out lying statements concerning himself and his standing |in workers’ organizations. |. No credentials have ever been given to Grubin. Any paper so presented is |a forgery. Complaints have been made by | workers that Grubin has stolen funds and is an unhealthy element. | Unit Begins ‘Daily’ Work by Raising $7 for Financial Drive NEW YORK.—Unit 10, Section 8, |of the Communist Party, began its | work for the Daily Worker Financial | Drive by bringing into the city office of the Daily $7 as part of its work in the coming drive. The unit challenges all other units in socialist competi- tion. Unit 10 promises to raise more | | money in this coming drive than any |other unit in the section. | All units in Section 8 are urged to ‘take up this challenge and report this | to the section and to the city office of | the Daily Work Unit 10 has also} | mronuised to es*4%5 44 23 fom the Daily Worker in the near future, Gutters of New York News Item—Society girls to harm our little Fiorello.” the fusion interests at the polls. “Stop! In the name of the Junior League I forbid you are being recruited to guard NEW YORK.—Instead of putting a brake on the struggles of the workers, as he had intended by his anti-strike threat and his arrest of} the Elco shoe pickets, Grover Whalen | | is confronted with a wave of strikes | that are growing in number and in-| tensity. | Motion Picture Operators Local 306 | tied up 400 theatres yesterday, de-| claring that the theatres operating} under the NRA are hiring men at a) 20 to 30 per cent cut in wages, and that a company union has been formed. These theatres all fly the) Blue Eagle. Yesterday 2,000 embroidery workers went out on strike, 700 artificial Whalen Threats Do Not Curb N. Y. Strike Wav flower workers, several thousand neck- wear workers, children’s dressmakers and 1,500 custom tailors. That Whalen will set to work at once to arrange sell-out agreements between the bosses and the workers is evident from the statement yester- day issued by Dubinsky that he will! 9f their conditions and to belong to | attend a conference called by Whalen| any union of their own choosing, and | to settle the embroidery workers’ strike. The aim of the A. F. of L. olucials in these conferences is to gain recognition of the union in or- der to get the dues of the workers, in return for which they will assist the employers under the cover of the NRA to beat down the workers’ wages and conditions. Custom Tailors | Strike ath Ave. Shop 1500 Out at Call of the, Needle Union | at an enthusiastic meeting of the | | NEW YORK.—The strike call is- | sued by the custom tailors section of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union and voted last Tuesday night tailors has met with a big response. | Several high class tailoring shops on Fifth Avenue have been shut down as nearly 1,500 tailors have joined the strike. The following shops are on strike: Schanz, Andrea, Ingerman, Dunn & Levy and Bronstein. A call has been issued to all bushelmen in department stores working on ready made suits to join the strike. The striking tailors plan a picket- ing demonstration on Friday at 12 o'clock noon at the Fifth Avenue shops, preceded by a meeting at 11 | o'clock at Irving. Plaza Hall, the | strike headquarters. Embroidery Work- ‘ers Tie Up Industry ILGW Officials Con- fer With Whalen NEW YORK.—Leaving their shops yesterday morning, embroidery work- jers numbering nearly 2,000 tied up a |greater part of the industry. The | strike was called by the Interna- \tional Ladies’ Garment Workers’ | Local 66, which raised the demands on the basis of which the workers left their shops for: minimum wage scales paying from $21 to $50 a week for applique cutters, a 35-hour week and unemployment insurance. The strikers, enthusiastic for the struggle to better their conditions, gathered yesterday at Webster Hall, where a report was given by the I. L. G, W. officials. Although only a few hours old the strike settlement is already in the hands of Grover Whalen, and be- hind closed doors som2 deals are | being made between officials of the union and the bosses. Union offi- cials promised a settlement hot off the fire at the Webster Hall meet- ing today, to be ratified by the workers today. This hasty action has already aroused suspicions among the workers that the demands raised to bring the strikers out of the shops will be bartered away. The officials at the meeting yesterday cited the dress strike as an example and be- hind the most enthusiastic speeches covered up the real discussions which took place between the bosses and themselves, The left wing workers in the strike point out that the strikers must in- sist on their demands being won be- fore any settlement is ratified, Admitting that previous strikes have not been real strikes, but called with the help of the bosses, the offi- cials declare that this strike is in- tended as a real strike. The left wing calls upon the work- to hold the officials to their word ferss thom to wate a real strike for all the, demands raissd. 3,000 Neckwear Workers Strike Demand More Pay and End of Home Work NEW YORK.—After a summer of negotiations with the bosses, A. F. or L. officials of the Neckwear Work- ers Union, feeling the overwhelming sentiment of the workers for a strug- gle to win better conditions, were finally compelled to call a strike. Thousands of workers are out in New York, Bayonne, Boston and Phila- delphia, in answer to the strike call. In New York, strikers estimate about 3,000 workers have joined the walk- out. The démands of the strike are for a 35-hour week, the abolition of home work and sweatshops, a 25 per cent increase for week workers, a 35 per cent increase on piece rates, sanitary conditions, unemployment insurance, and the abolition of child labor. At present the workers are employed 44 hours a week on piece work for the most part. The practice of home work has steadily lowered the piece rates of the workers. Competition of outside and inside workers has resulted in driving wages down nearly 300 per cent since the crisis. Fuchs, the union manager, has permitted the manufacturers to break the terms of the agreement and no real struggle has been put up against the continued attacks on the workers’ conditions. The strikers are firm for winning all their demands and are warning against the proposals of Fuchs that if the demand for abolishing home work is not granted, that the union will ask for equal pay for equal work for home workers. Strikers are also warned against a compromise on prices which will be covered up under “second grace” ties. Eighteen neckwear pickets were ar- rested today while picketing at the tie firm of McKurach, 1810 Eastern Parkway. Strike meetings are held at Aris- tocratic Mansion, St. Marks Place. Rank and file workers are recogniz- ing that the strike committee which was appointed by Fuchs, who only recently was a manager for the bosses, must be broadened to include rank and filers, and that strikers must be on guard to prevent any settlements behind closed doors. Knitgoods Shop On Strike NEW YORK. — Knitgoods workers in one of the most important shops in the industry—the Elgin Knitting Mills, 1109 Ingrin St., Brooklyn — struck this week at the call of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, for wage increases and union recognition, The A. F. of L. union at- tempted to stop the strike but the workers are firm for their demands. 1. J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-8369 Fer International Workers Order Call to Denionsttate Against Attacks on Workers’ Rights Union Square Meet on Tuesday at 5 p. m. NEW YORK.—The Trade Union | Unity Council and all its affiliated unions and the International Labor | Defense issued a call to all workers’ at Union So. Tuesday against what | promises to be one of the most dras- | tie steps yet taken by the employers | aided by the NRA, the courts and the | police, to smash the workers’ right to organize and strike, and to cut off |Telief from the miliions of unem- | ployed. Urging all working class organiza- | tions to unite in protest against the |increasing number of attacks in the |form of injunctions, and whole: jarrests of pickets on Tuesday at 5 | pm. at Union Sq. the call to the demonstration says: The attempt of Mr. Whalen to | raise a Red scare is only a maneuver to hide the real issues of all the | strikes which are being carried on against the employers’ attempts to continue long hours, starvation wag- | es, to reduce wages of skilled workers, and even to refuse to pay the miser- able minimum wages set forth in the blanket codes of the NRA. “The daily increasing prices of the necessities of life which we are forced to buy makes it still more important for all workers to unite and demand the right to organize and strike to enforce better conditions to meet the high cost of living. “We call upon all workers affiliated | to our organizations, affilieted to the A. F. of L. and independent unions, |to join in the mass demonstrations in | Unien Sq. We call upon all strikers, |no matter whether they are led by | unions affiliated to the Trade Union | Council or to. the A. F. of L, we call on aJl unemployed workers, to (march to Union Sq. with their ban- |mers in a powerful united front in | order to smash the injunction men- jace and protect their civil rights to |organize and strike for improvement to demand | unemployet ‘10,000 Protest | Frame-Up Case Against Negro LYNSHBURG, Va.—Ten thousand People, one-quarter of the town’s population, attended a meeting Tues- day night and heard Prank Lewis, of the newly-formed Scottsboro Com- mittee of Action, and T. H. Stone, of the International Labor Defense, who spoke on the frame-up of Reg- inald Leftwitch and the growing op- pression of Negro and white toilers. The meeting adopted a Plan of Ac- tion to conduct a militant struggle against these conditions. The unusual size of this meeting can be attributed to the anger of the Negro workers and their white comrades over the frame-up of Left- witch, who was immediately arrested after he reported finding the dead body of A. B. Coates, a white farmer. The Negro and white workers were stirred to action by this event. Im- mediately the newly-formed Scotis- boro Action Committee took up the case. They invited a representative of the International Labor Defense, T. H. Stone, who investigated the case and reported that the whole thing was a palpable frame-up. The Defense Conference held Tues- day night was a big step in the campaign for the release of Left- witch. Thirty organizations, repre- senting practically the entire Negro population of Lynchburg, rallied around the ILD and its campaign to free Leftwitch, and in support of the Conference held in the local Presbyterian Church. The ILD plan of action, including comsrete steps for building the cam- paign organizationally and financial- ly, was adopted at this conference and committees elected to begin the work immediately. The first resolution adopted pro- claimed the belief of the conference in the absolute innocence of Left- witch, demanded a change of venue from lynch-spirit-riddled Rustburs to Richmond where the organize. workers can give more adequate pro- tection to Leftwitch, and demanded that Negroes serve on the trial jury in his case. _ Resolutions were also passed de- manding the release of the Scotts- boro boys and demand the punish- ment of the Tuscaloosa lynchers. immediate relief for the DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves. Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-301% Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-8, 6-8 P.M. Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 1TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman White Gold Filled Frames—__$1.59 ‘ZYL Shell Frames -__—___... . 31.00 Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORchard 4-4520 Pind tak hi tee ocx EARN Sod Champion or Human Being By EDWARD | 2 with Loughran. ' daffy pugs. and called me over. The big b | awed by the de luxe bindings a: | in an easy chair, fingering a s | He had probably been drag- |ged out there against his | wishes, kept asking for the | | time and wondering about someone he was supposed to have met. The host did everything to get him started but Ernie wouldn't talk beyond the | traditional commonplaces |felt in the pink of condition and |expected to beat Loughran in the jreturn bout. I had seen their recent | fight and Loughran had made a mon- | key out of him, | I started asking questions while | drinks were being scared up but he | wouldn’t bite and refused to com- |ment on inside materiel. | “Nah,” he answered each leading | question, “nah.” | “What do you think about Tom | Mooney?” IT said. “Who's that?” | Pause, | “What do you think about the | Scottsboro boys?” “Never heard of them.” Pause. | I pumped him on unemployment, | Russia, Roosevelt, the crisis, the Navy | |in which he’d served. He reminded |me of the blackface comedian who | went through an entire motion pic- jture by repeating, “I ain’t heard | nufi’n, I ain’t seen nuff’n and I don’t | know nuff’n.” | Russia? “They got this Bolshevik government there, ain't they?” The Navy? “Weil, it makes a man out of you in a lotta ways.” Sharkey? “Ain't got a against him.” T that, Schaaf was a comparative- ly intelligent and likeabje athlete, a rarity among outstanding profes- sional stars. I asked whether he ad- vised young men to become fighters | and he said no. Topnotchers are efficient morons. Literate ones like Tunney and Benny Leonard are objectionable fools. This jis mot carping. It’s true. Too; it stands to reason. No imag- | inative person could ever become 2 great boxer, no one with a variety of interests could climb to the top of the heap in diving, golf, anything. | You have to train teo much, your entire outlook is twisted into achiev- ing perfection. Nobody with normal impulses can score three cruel knock- outs in one night as Dempsey has done. Ruth’s stupidity is common knowl- edge. One of his teammates said in the locker room that the Great One doesn’t know the names of all the players on his own club. Rodger Pippen, sports editor of the Baltimore “News” tells how for years he was closely associated with Ruth, roomed with him on various occasions, play- ed in the game when Ruth hit his first home run, yct to this day Ruth looks blank when accosted by him. “Hello, buddy, how's Baltimore?” Only yesterday Winchell ran an- other item about America’s Idol. The Babe pitched a two-hit came one af- thing NEWHOUSE | J MET the late Ernie Schaaf some time after his losing fight He was visiting the house of a friend in organizations today to demonstrate! Long Island, a collector of first editions, dried butterflies and The man knew I'd be interested to meet Schaaf ond heavyweight was evidently nd the butterflies and sat deep tatuette. o ternoon and in the evening he met Stuffy McInnis, the great first sacker who starred in the field for the other team. “That was a good game,” compli- mented Stuffy. “Thanks, kid,” Ruth said, “where were you sitting?” Dempsey is a fool. He does about as much of the promoting attributed to him as Coolidge did of the writing under this name. Tennis players are a crowd of dumb kids and wrestlers. Just ask me about wrestlers. There is no doubt about it. Under the cireumstances, no normal human being can hope to achieve champion- ship calibre. Standing of the Clubs AMERICAN LEAGUE Club W.L.P.C.| Clud W. L. P.c. Wash’ton 8746 .654| Detroit 66 68 .493 New York 177 53 .502| Chicago 61 73.555 72 65 .526| Boston 56 78 .418 68 65 504! St. Louis 49 86 .363 De postponed on account of wet grounds. NATIONAL LEAGUE Club W.L.P.C.| Clud W. L. Pc, New York 75 51 .595/ St. Louis 73 63 .533 Pittsburgh 74 58 .561| Brooklyn 54 74 .422 Chicago 74 69 .552 | Philadel. 50 75 .400 Boston 70 61 .534/ Cincinnati 52 82 .388 Not including Philedelphia at St. Louis. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Club |W. P.C.} Club W. L. P.C. Newark 99 61 .619| Toronto 80 83 .490 Rochester 87 74 540 | Buffalo 79 84 485 Baltimore 83 76 .522 Albany 15 82 .478 Montreal 79 81 .494! Jersey City 57 100 371 Rechester at Buffalo, Jersey City at Al- | Dany, Baltimore at Newark—nicht games. inning-by-Inning Scores AMERICAN LEAGUE H. E. Chicago 000 000 O0I—1 3 0 Washington ..000 009 000—0 8 0 Jones and Grube; Weaver and | Sewell. St. Louis . .300 010 400-— 8 13 3 New York. .510 201 10x—12 15 3 Braxton, Stiles, Hebert, Knott and | Hemsley; Uhle, Allen and Dickey. Cleveland ......000 000 000—0 5 1 ‘Philadelphia ....004 200 00x—6 9 0 Pearson, Connally and Pytlak; Mareus and Cochrane. NATIONAL LEAGUE R. H. E. Boston 000 000 100-1 6 1 Chicago -.010 100 00x—2 7 0 Brandt and Hogan; Warneke and Hartnett. Brooklyn 900 000 020—2 11 1 Cincinnati .. 000 000 000—0 5 0 Beck and Lopez; Lucas and Lom- bardi. New York ......010 001 000—2 10 1 Pittsburgh .....504 202 Olx—14 14 1 Parmelee, Luque, Clark, Salveson and Mancuso, Richards; Meine and Grace, Finney. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE R. H. E. ontreal 002 007 000—9 14 0 onto .. 100 100 000-2 7 @ Phelps and Stack; Brame, Marrow, Cook anc Heving. nibh didedcbebebebetetoteteededdedeehebebdobebeteddde bebe tet et Meet Your Comrades at the New--Modern-- Up-To-Date ALE RAIL BAR AND GRILL 106 East 14th Street Between Fourth Avenue and Irving Place WHERE YOUR NICKELS AND DIMES BUY THE MOST PURE FOOD AT PROLETARIAN PRICES KING'S BEER ON DRAUGHT | OPEN DAY and NIGHT PELE LEL ED LEED TT PEREDEEEL ETT

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