The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 11, 1933, Page 2

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UNIONS, WORKERS GROUPS [City Events | ‘xs Yon 4 Page iwo . DAILY Was, NeW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1933 Protest N.R.A. Strikebreaking at Union Te Tomorrow TO MARCH WITH BANNERS | NRA Parade to Mus ter Show of Force Against} Militant Siri kes in All Industries NEW YORK.—One day ikebreaking parade goes up Fifth Avenue, New York will witness a huge demonstration on Union and the NRA to break the numerous conditions. Coming as organized unemployed and fraternal | cttor better their Square against th strikes for h groups under es and of ners unions, \Shoe Meeting to Expose Scab Union attacks on in ot mand the Grover W v NEW YORK.—In order to expose keep his hands off 1\the Independent Shoe Workers progress Union, a bosses’ nization operat- the ing Shoe among the shoe workers, and Leather Workers Indus has called a meeting of sl: workers for this afternoon at per Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. The workers Intimidat goaded on by ti ab union parading under the name independent” ter the shoe and slipper trades here in ordi shoe strikers who have already won ® number of splendid victories in the re slipper shops re at with the union |: are Baltic Shoe Co., r women as many an well Republican o: Novelty and another shop Threaten Teachers ne is withheld for the pres- Dr. Williar crews will return to work hieitont of 5 even shops have signed to} oi her eee The workers won wage in- aa ranging from 35 to 60 per} public and hig cent and a 40-hour week. Negotia-| NEA drive. 7 tions are on with a number of shops 3,600 school teache give favorable ned and settlements are expected by the end (ot Uy hidpege and enthusiastic he } lose the m repair workers he i “th fe in sur|Wiuch took place Friday afternoon schools ‘for those at Irving Plaza Hall, a general | who 1 indulge Am! an Tam-|strike was declared under the chief of ’s schools| Shoe and Leather Workers In- meetir of teachers for dustrial Union. in Washin pss eb eS ore dol, Irving Place and Mass Picket Today at Shop Where Bob | Minor Was Arrested. f the aeicean ve taken no of injun’ NEW YORK—Mass__ picketing jat the Progressive Table Co. at 95th Street and Ditmas Avenue, ‘ooklyn, where Robert Minor was arrested last week Yor urging the s to come out of the shop, be held today. Workers and rs are to report at the strike 771 Sackman St., net counsel the to use mass Picketing before the shops the only effective weapon to smash the st headquarters at injunction. at 3:30 p. m. Louis Waldman, New York State Another striker, M. Sokolar, was Secretary of the Socjalist Party in| arrested last Friday for talking to a letter to Governor Lehman also a scab two blocks away from the eee injunctions} shop, The scab ignored Sokolar, “t the ef eness of the ied sido the a apes am. Waldman counsels the | W@:xe@ into the shop and e out with the boss and a cop. The Governor “Section 7a of the NRA” be safe-| Sergeant stationed at the furniture hat the prov’ ms of ition, how-| factory refused to arrest Sokolar but the boss insisted and he was locked up on a charge of disor- derly conduct. The case comes} on tomorrow after-| up on September 15th and the In- oon © Square will be @n|tornational Labor Defense will de- effective answer to the strikebreak-|terq the worker ing program of the NRA and for its organization of the workers to gain their demands. program has beeo to organize c The demonst: noon on Union omraaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, au WORKERS—E. AT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. | Bren tbbhbbttthhhhhbbbbbhbbhhbhhhhbbhbbbb bbb bbb bbb | 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 | Workers’ is attempting to en- | to break the unity of the | Terzani Defense Meeting the de- of Athos a tonight, Mon- A mass me e forces will be h day ot. 11 at 7:30 p. m. at 10th Street and Second Ave. Members of the Terzani Defense Committee and the International Labor ‘De- fense will address this meeting called by the Downtown section of the ILD. Paris Congress Meeting Another in the series of mass |meetings to popularize the coming |Youth Congress Aagainst War will |be held tonight at the Tremont Club, 161 Prospect Ave. | Prominent speakers will answer questions at the end of the meeting its final send- York Dele- The Bror 1 hold off meeti gate to t day night at “the Prospect Workers | Club, 1157 Southern Boulevard. There | will be a lantern slide lecture shown on the “ of War.” | Schlauch, essor from N.Y.U | who just returned from Europe, will |be the main speeker. Meeting of Nurses The problem of nurses and its re- lation to the N. R. A. will be dis- cussed at a mass meeting to be held | Wednesday at 8 pm. at Franklin Manor, 836 Franklin Ave., Brooklyn, | | Furriers Shop Chairman | | Meetings | | The furrier shop chairmen of the | independent shops from 28th Street | | to 31st Street inclusive will have a meeting today right after work, at| the union auditorium, 131 West 28th eet, | Meeting of White Goods | | Workers A special meeting of all active |members of the White Goods De | partment of the Needle Trades Work- 1s Industrial Union will be held to- day right after work at the office of |the Union, 131 West 28th Street, for | nat preparations for the general | strike, Red Players All former Red Players, wanting to participate in the Election Campaign work of the Communist Party are asked to come to 569 Prospect Ave.,| Bronx, Section 5 headquarters, today, | Sept. 11, at 8 pm Red Press Bazaar Committee Calls for Second Conference | NEW YORK.—The second Red \Press Bazaar Conference will be held this Thursday evening at the | Workers Center at 7:30 p. m., in Room 205, according to the Ba- zaar Committee. All delegates | who participated in the first con- ference must not fail to be pce-| sent. All other organizations who were not represented at that con- ference are urged to send their |elected bazaar committee or be | represented through the officials of |their organizations. | Concrete reports will be submit- |ted by all delegates as to how far their respective organizations have |gone into the work of helping to| |make this year’s Bazaar the big-| | gest success in its history. The! | zevolutionary: press calls upon all! mass organizations to do their | Guty in this huge undertaking. No Jorganizations should fail to be |represented at this conference. Cleaners at Meeting | Hit Starvation Code | NEW YORK.—On —One thousand | | cleaners, pressers and dyers meet- | jing in Irving Plaza yesterday | voted to call a strike in the trade. | The meeting was called by the| Cleaners, Pressers and Dyers Un- ion to hear a report from its deh |egation to the code hearings which | were held in Washington. The code presented by the bos- ses asks for a starvation wage ranging from 30 to 45 cents an hour and a 50 hour week. | The workers repudiated this starvation program and enthusi- astically supported the call for a strike in the near future, which ‘Name C. P. Candidates | ough of the Bronx and the three Communist candidates for the city offices | | tively, Paterson Dyers —— cine) - chien wooren / 4 Pe ene (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) TAMMANY 1S i WMCH MEnNES SOY NAVE. | | worker out... . Jom with the strik- | thay he ie | wii tAveE— BEAR HEN LEGITIMATE BUROCEN — ip ty FORGOTTEN COMRADE, “THAT THE PROPOSALS: ALSO INCLUDE — PROPOSING FF “TRX ON BROKERAGE HOUSESAND UTILIMIES — ers for these demands: “1) 75 cents and 80 cents an hour for men. “2) 50 cents an hour for women | (women work in different crafts in the dye industry.—Ed.) “3 Minimum 30 hours and maxi- mum 40 here a wees “4) No all work to be done in pe ht shifts. “5) ‘ition of th National | | — Textile Workers Union and a Workers’ Committee in every de- partment. “G) Other demands for departments | and shops to be adopted by the | workers, “All dye workers stand united un- Textile Workers Union. divide your picket line, The dye workers pledge a united | Peg e S wierers He “TAXES FOR SHE RICH” ARE NEITHER LEGAL NoR PRACTICABLE - ranks. One strike. 6 INCREASE IN WATER /| “ RATES WHICH 15 SOMETHING “THAT IS INTENDED FoR WORKERS AND EASILY | mills for a joint victory. ENFORCE ABLE — union affiliation.” | A.F.L, Prepares Sell-Out | Eli Keller, | organizers of the United Textile | Union, took a further step in pre-| week-end meetings that they favor | arbitration through the code nego- tiations and oppose the dyers’ strike. (Associated Silk) meetings boasted of their close relation to U. 8. sold out the strike of South River | ON. J.) needle trades workers last | year. Several thousand workers will be at the Lodi plant at 5:30 Monday |morning to prevent the starting of |the mill. The Lodi plant, four blocks |Jong, has never been on strike and is the fortress of the dye industry. More than a thouusand of the Sat- urday issue of the “Daily Worker” was distributed throughout the strike | | area. The “Daily Worker” representa- | ; | tive spoke at the main strike meet- | ing on Saturdays at (sate ta sth Hall. ‘San Martin Named ‘President of Cuba at Bronx Conference NEW YORK.—The Communist Party election candidates for the Bor- Were unanimously ratified by delegates of ninety-five Bronx organizations at | an election rally and conference Saturday in Ambassador Hall. Louis Hyman, president of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, was nominated for Borough Presi-e dent. A great ovation greeted the Ald announcement that Dr. Paul Iut-|_ & mesa! | tinger, Daily Worker health writer, | Dist. / PA ‘was See for the Supreme} 25—Helen Lynch | Cte ee isis Court Justice in the first district. 26—Goodziete festo called on the Cuban masses to Two workers in the toils of the ‘i—Sam Nesin “demonstrate their repudiation of im- polige for militant working class ac-| 28—Glenn | perialism, and to show solidarity and tivities were nominated for Muni-} 29—Levy militancy in the face of the insolent cipal Court Judges. Leon Blum, now) 30—Sam Berland military and naval display of the serving a years sentence in Comstock| 31—Rich | | Washington Government.” Junta Tries to Disarm Workers The junta countered by keeping machine guns mounted at all stra- tegic points where workers assemble. and by continuing its efforts to dis- | arm the workers and peasants. All resident American capitalists, and the big Cuban capitalists, are ex- erting every pressure they can on President Roosevelt and Ambassador Welles to have marines land and dis- arm the workers and peasants, Such a step would inevitably result in drenching the island with blood. Roosevelt Visits Quantico Marines President Roosevelt spent half an 32—J. H. Cohen The conference was opened by Mrs. W. Burroughs, Communist candidate for Comptroller. In the evening in the same hall a banquet was ten- dered the Communist nominee for | Mayor, Robert Minor, Minor was also an unexpected visitor at the after- noon conferem2e. Both he and Mrs, Burroughs were cheered. After outlining the platform of the Communist Party, Mrs. Borroughs pointed out that there was not a single Negro delegate in the hail despite the fact that the very neigh- borhood in which the conference was being held several hundred Negroes| nour with Colonel R. P. Williams, lived. | commander, at the Quantico, Va. “This failure to reach the Negro} workers must be overcome imme-|rines is concentrated, ready to be diately, right now, at the beginning} rushed to Cuba as a Cuban expedi- of the campaign.” Her criticism was/ tionary force. accepted by the gathering who pled-| A plank in the program which ged to draw the Negro workers of the | President San Martin swore to carry Bronx into the struggle. | out, at his inauguration at noon to- Santo, organizer of Section 5 of} day, calls for nullification of the Platt the Communist Party, made the no-| amendment to the United States con- minating speech in which, he said: | stitution, which declares that the “Our candidates have all one} United States claims control of Cuba’s background—the working class. They | foreign indebtedness, the “right” to have all proven in the past that the | intervene, and the “right” to employ are willing and capable to lead the] the island as a strategic base for struggles of the workers in the Bronx | nayal and military operations. Spok- today. ; esmen of the regime immediately ad- Peter Starr outlined the plan of ded that “they had many more im- prison for leading the struggles of the Laundry Workers Industrial Union was nominated for the judge- ship in the second district while Leon Taback, arrested for leading the unemployed, will run in the first district. Taback was found not guilty by the Court of Special Sessions and freed the day he was nominated. M. J. Olgin, editor of the Jewish Daily Frejheit, and Carl Brodsky, manager of the N. Y. Communist! Election Campaign Committee, were nominated to run for state assembly in the 3rd and 6th districts respec- The complete list of nominations, which includes militant workers, Ne- gro and white, is: Mayor—Robert Minor. President of Board of Aldermen, | Ben Gold. Comptroller, W. Burroughs. Bronx Borough President — L. Hyman, Distrist Attorney—Severino (Presi- dent of the Bricklayers Union, A. F. of L.) Supreme Court Justice, 1st Dist— Dr. Luttinger. Associate Judge of Appeals—A. | Lotker. City Court—Dr. Stammler, Municipal Court 1st Dist.—L. Ta- back, Fa Wzational work for the cam-| portant things to attend to now than ign. ti 4 ” Beas Court 2nd Dist.—L. ‘An open discussion was then held the question of the Platt amendment,’ followed by a report of the creden- tials committee. The candidates and | the Communist platform were then unanimously endorsed. WASHINGTON, Sept. 10. — Word was received from Buenos Aires that the Argentine government, which is influenced by British imperialism, had sent a message to Washington Sheriff—A. Bydarian. Registrar—J, Tomashaw Oounty Clerk—A. Hoffman, County Judge—M. Taft. Assemblymen was made by Louis Davidson, busi- |ness agent of the union. NOTICE: expressing opposition to U. 8. inter- Dist. aes | Vention. A resolution opposing inter- 1—Baker ‘The editorial office of the Daily|yention was also introduced in the 2—A Mofshovitz Worker is open from 7 to 9 pm.|Peruyian congress, but there was not 3—Carl Brodsky every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,| quorum to vote on it. Brazil and 4—Steele Thursday and Friday. A competent| Chile were reported ready to join 5—Lola Fine comrade, member of the Volunteer | with Mexico in greeting the new re- 6—M. J. Olgin Committee, will be there to help|gime and calling on the Cuban mass- T—Eddy Smith workers who have difficulty in for-|es to submit to it and “speedily re- 8—Max Schulman ar! mulating letters to the Daily Worker, store order.” By JOE KIss The general strike of the tobacco workers, called by the Tobacco Workers’ Industrial Union in Greater New York, began Aug. 21. Four thousand workers, a large num- ber of them Latin Americans as well as other nationalities, Hungarians, Checoslovak, Italians, etc., responded to the strike call, At the first general mass meet- ing, a large rank and file strike com- mittee was elected, representing both large and small shops. We must point out the weaknesses of the strike committee in the first two weeks in not being able to come forward with clear-cut demands and lead the workers, The general demands, which came out in the form of a very compli- cated equalization price lst which | the equalization price list of 1929. For this reason there were very few set- tlements, and none with the large shops which employ 100 workers or over, where this equalization list was impossible to present and therefore no settlements could be reached. We must point out the main weak- ness. This was in the leading com- on Tobacco ners Build Militant Union in General Strike the last general strike of 1919, called and led by the chairman’s committee. At that time also, in spite of the de- plorable living conditions and low wages of the workers in the indus- try, the American Federation of La- bor officials refused to enter the strike at the beginning. They en- tered the strike only when the ranks of the workers were weakened and when they saw the time ripe to come into the situation for the purpose of settling the shops in the name of the A. F, of L. under the very same con- ditions that they had before, But the situation today is differ- ent than it was in 1919. Now many A. F. of L. members have joined the ranks of the Tobacco Workers’ In- dustrial Union and shops formerly controlled by the A, F. of L. have responded to the call of the General Strike, Thus the tobacco workers in Greater New York are on the road to establish a powerful Industrial Union under the leadership of the Trade Union Unity League. They will go further in the organization of the large masses of unorganized tobacco workers and mobilizing and prepar- 35 Shops Settle, RaiseWages, Belauimunion: Establish Party Nuclei in Large Shops mittees of the general strike. Al- though they were members of the union, they did not understand clearly the Trade Union Unity Council line on the question of de- mands as well as the necessity of building the tobacco Workers’ Union. In the midst of the strike, by con- stant discussion with the workers on the picket line, at committee meet- ings, at mass meetings, the wrong approach was fully overcome and workers as a whole unanimously adopted demands for a general 25 per cent increase in the large shops and a uniform price settlement for the small ones. ‘The question of organization and the role of the union as the initiator, organizer and leader of the strike was brought out very sharply. This was achieved in spite of the opposi- tions of the conciliators, who main- tained that the strike is being led by @ United Front Committee (which is true), but that the Tobacco Workers’ Industrial Union has nothing to do such a way that they fully under- stood the vital necessity of establish- ing a strong militant union in the trade. Settled Shops So far 400 new members have been recruited for the union, Thirty-five small and large shops were settled, with the majority recognizing the T. W. I. U. and signed agreements; no hiring and firing without the con- sent of the union, no discrimination and recognition of the shop commit- tees plus increase in wages ranging from 10 to 30 per cent. We also recruited about 15 mili- tant strikers into the Party, among them a few Negro workers, and established a Party nucleus in one of the big shops which settled. It is interesting to note the role of the Cigar Makers’ International Union of the American Federation of Labor, which resisted and sabo- taged the strike, although they were invited to unite for the purpose of carrying through the strike for de-|ing for new battles out of which the with the strike, The sentiment of | cent: living conditions. This is the| workers will come out 100 per cent the strikers was hammered out in| same as the treacherous policy in| victorious ll, By del |General Strike of | front with the strikers in the silk | self Ex-Pug, writes: No settie- | know ment of the strike without an open|them are high school graduates and | | vote of all strikers, regardless of | went in for boxing to support fam- |paring the sell-out of the thousands | | of strikers when they boasted at| The speakers at the United Textile | openly | Labor Conciliator John Moffitt, who | “Swell Kids’’--Before and After By EDWARD NEWHOUSE n . hand is a letter anent last Friday’s column on Ernie Schaaf and the intelligence of various professional stars. I re- print the controversial paragraph. “No imaginative person could ever become a 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 too much, | your entire outlook is twisted into achieving perfection. Nobody der the leadership of the National with normal impulses can score®- | Let no One three cruel knockouts in one | twenty-five he’s ex-feather and ex- me | a One Strike Committee, night as Dempsey has done.” The correspondent, who signs him- “Many boxers I are swell kids. Several of jilies. They got as much brains as | the next fellow, but fighting is their The A. F. of L. leaders, including | business, so they have to put their together with national | feelings aside same as men who work jin slaughterhouses. If you ever met |them outside the ring, as you seem to have, you know they’re as human }as you and me. “Take this Ross who is fighting Canzoneri next Tuesday. His father owned a delicatessen store and he was murdered, so Barney went ahead land he has been “supporting his mother and his brothers ever since. From all you hear Canzoneri is also a peach of a little fellow.” I do not say that the boxer, start- ing from scratch, in inferior as a rule to the average youngster. But all-consuming training grinds and the rigors of merciless competition soon transform him into a vicious automaton devoid of reactions we are accustomed to considering as normal. Possibly that’s going too far. I, too, jhave known fighters who were| “peaches of little fellows.” But either they quit the ring or drank | themselves into oblivion, or died of “occupational diseases” like syphilis or concussion of the brain (Schaaf) or signed off to become bouncers at night clubs and company thugs at coal mines. The period of awful let- down after fights usually has to be filled by powerful and ruinous stim- ulants. Harry Greb, who was proba- bly the most perfect fighting mechan- ism I’ve seen, is a classic example. He needed less training for bouts than any topnotcher in recent years. He took it easy up till the very moment of the initial gong, then he became a snarling beast, bent on destruction. The stream of abuse he poured into opponents’ ears would alone be sufficient to stun “Ex-Pug’s” ordinary “high school graduate,” oS te le (Oo wonder after the fights Greb plunged into an almost equally intense round of street brawls, booze and women. Immediate transition into a quiet suburban existence is possible only for freaks like Sharkey. Greb packed a hundred arenas with oppressed truckdrivers and file clerks howling~for blood, Greb enriched a hundred promoters, Greb died around the age of thirty, burned out, the f 4 ideal of capitalist “sport.” naval base, where a regiment of ma-| Canzoneri and Ross may be “swell kids.” The fact that Barney is good to his mother indicates nothing, of course. Every big shot gangster I know is a grand family man after hours. Hitler is probably a perfect darling to his boy friends. Jimmy Walker spends over a hundred dol- lars for one of Betty's nighties. Still, Tuesday's headliners may be two swell kids. But I have before me two close- ups of the boys from Sunday's Her- ald-Tribune. Look at Ross, He's been fighting only a few years and there are still glints of intelligence in his brown eyes. He’s at his peak, his body is clean and slender, his face comparatively unmarked. To be sure, the accompanying interview carries a number of statements which make you dubious about the boy’s sharpness. For one, he remarks that, fighting as an amateur for sev- eral years, “I only brought home ten, twenty, maybe fifty dollars at a time.” “Apparently,” comments the reporter, “he considered himself an amateur until he was paid off in three figures.” CLASSIFIED WANTED rom with other comrades. Vicin- ity 10th and 14th Streets. Inquire Book- shop, 35 E. 12th St. WANTED airy, quiet room. Vicinity 14th St. Inquire B. 8, c/o Daily Worker. DOWNTOWN Phone; TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant ’\, SPECIALTY—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 & 18 Welcome to Our Comrades NEW HEALTH CENTER Fresh Foo?—Proletarian Prices 58 KE. 18TH ST., APEX CAFETERIA. 827 Broadway, Between 12th and 18th Streets All Comrades Should Patronize This FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION SHOP All Comrades Meet at the Look at Tony Ganzoneri. At lightweight champion. He has been fighting ten years, falsifying his age |bofore he was eighteen. Tony’s gim- jlet eyes peer out of a bruised, flat- ;tened moonface which has been pounded into insensitivity by Routis, Singer, Chocolate, Berg and scores jof others, He retains his punch probably, but he has lost much of his speed and verve. He may or |may not know it, but Canzoneri is inexorably on the skids. He will fight until he can no longer draw enough customers to make it worth the pro- | moters’ while. He won't know enough to quit in time. When he’s through, he'll be through not only as a fighter but as @ man. Standing of the Clubs AMERICAN LEAGUE Club W.L.P.0.; Club W. L. PC, Wash’ton 90 46 .662 | Detroit 68 71 .496 New York 80 53 .602/ Ohicago 61 75 .448 Cleveland 172 68 .514/ Boston 87 82 .409 Philadel. 68 65 .511' St. Louis 51 87 .368 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club W.L.P.C,, Club W. L. P.c. New York 80 51 .611| Boston ‘TL 62 534 Pittsburgh 76 61 .559 | Brooklyn 56 77 .424 Chicago 77 61 .559 | Philadel. 52 79 .396 St. Louis 74 64 .436/ Cincinnat! 52 84 .382 Inning by Inning Scores AMERICAN LEAGUE First Game Fischer and Hayworth; Gomez and Dickey. 000 100 000-1 3 3 Detroit (2nd) New York .. -100 130 18x—-9 10 0 ‘Lawson, ler and Pasek; Allen and Rensa, First Game Louis . -000 001 002—3 Boston -000 000 002—2 Hadley and Shea; Welland, and Ferrell. Second Game, St. Louis .....000 000 000 04-4 8 2 Boston ......000 000 000 0-0 7 3 Blaeholder | and Hemsley; Welch, Brown, Andrews and Ferrell. Only games scheduled. Cleveland ..,.....002 000 010-3 7 1 Washington ....300 000 40x—7 11 1 Hildebrand, Hudlin and Spencer, Stewart, Russell and Sewell. NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) St. 60 5 0 Kline R. HE, -000 000 000-0 4 1 000 412 00x—7 11 1 Frankhouse, Zachary, Mangum and Hogan; Hallahan and Wilson. Second game not finished at press time. (First Game) New York . -000 003 021-6 13 0 Cincinnati . .010 000 000-1 9 1 Fitzsimmons, Hubbell and Mancu- so; Benton, Frey and Lombardi. Second game not finished at press time. (First Game) Pittsburgh . 008 002 000-2 6 4 Brooklyn .......010 000 000—1 5 2 Swift and Grace; Beck, Leonard and Outen. (Second Game) Pittsburgh . Brooklyn .. Birkofer, Harris and Finney; Mun- go and Lopr~ (First Game) Philadelphia ....000 000 000—0 6 0 Chicago ... «100 300 00x—4 7 0 Rhem, Liska and Davis; Tinning and Hartnett. Philadelphia . Chicago ... “0 Pearce, Berly, Ragland and Davis; Nelson and Hartnett. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 peat | AVENUE AN Work ange ‘Under ey “ Dr. C. ‘Weissman Hospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled At One-Half Price COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. sani Te cae ©

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