The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 19, 1933, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 193. Alabama Conference Launches Vigorous Anti-Lynch Struggle JAILERS WHITE-WASHED OF BARLOW FORT WORTH GRAND JURY Threats of Third Degree Made by Capt, Dowell | *4 Workers; Victim Clubbed to Death Because He Was Leader of Unemployed Councils MURDER BY P FORT WORTH, Texas—On the very day the funeral of the crushed | yom tortured body of T. E. Barlow, leader of the Unemployed Council, took | lyface, the County Grand Jury exonerated the jail officials for his murder ihm put the whole blame on Barlow himself. | * The report of the Grand Jury consists of a most brazen attempt to Whitewash the murder by citing¢———— — Barlow as the aggressor in the prison fight, According to the re- port Barlow received a fractured fkull when he was knocked down| There appeared evidence that the| by Charley Morgan, one of the The next morning, cock and bull story in the re- Berlow complained of while playing poker (with @ fractured skull) Still able to walk around for 24 hours. The whole ridiculous yarn is called with the Coroner’s state- ment that Barlow’s skull was one- half the thickness of the average heed. ‘When one of the three workers @rrested at the August 31 relief @toppage demonstration refused to @nswer questions put to him by Police Captain Dowell, the latter said: “We have methods of making people talk here.” According to Macomb’s testi- a) but was | of bruised flesh and broken bones | because of a terrible, brutish beat- | ing and mutilation with clubs. limbs had been twisted. Both eyes were blackened .... There was also a bruise of an ugly and vi- +. . Excessive the head and face . bleeding had taken place..... What Barlow’s body looked like in the mortuary, overwhelmingly | invalidates the report of the Grand Jury. It is impossible that Bar-| low received the sort of fractured skull that permitted him to walk around for 24 hours and then to | present a body proving he had re- |ceived a terrific clubbing while in| | police custody. This points to the | third degree “method” Police Cap- |tain Dowell had reference to. | The International Labor Defense | protested the cynical police white- | wash by the County Grand Jury in cious nature on the left side of/| BROWEDER, MINOR, | HATHAWAY, IN ANNI- VERSARY ISSUE Earl Browder, Robert Minor, Clarence Hathaway, Bill Dunne and others are writing special ar- ticles on the history of the Amer- ican Communist Party for the spe- cial 14th Party Anniversary issue of the Daily Worker which will ap- pear on September 23. Among the questions treated in this special issue are, ‘The Party’s Struggle Against Opportunism,” “The Party and the Communist International,” and “The Develop- ment of Our Trade Union Policy.” The widest possible circulation of this special enlarged issue should be arranged. Bundle orders should be sent to the business of- fice of the “Daily” at 35 E. 12th St., New York City. City Events Mattress’ Makers Meeting. There will be a special meeting of the Mattress Makers Section of the Furniture Workers Industrial Union today, 8 p.m. sharp, at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E, 4th st. The mattress makers, who are striking, will hear reports on the activities of the strikes in Brooklyn and New Jersey. Section 15 Members Notice. The General Section membership meeting of Section 15 will be tonight at 8 o'clock. The place announced at the unit meetings has been changed. The meeting will instead be held at the Coop Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East. All comrades must come on time. S. M. W. I. U. Meeting. eRe an only five or six blows were |the murder of this militant working ane ee etween | class leader. Charley Morgan and Barlow. The hess only marks on Barlow’s face after | Ds 2 the fight were a slightly black Ki tt d W k mark in the corner of his left eye, | ni $00 Ss or ers ® bruise in the left jaw cheek bone | ° | and a scratch in the center of his | § t k T d forehead. Both men shook hands r ] e€ me 0 a y fm a friendly ‘fashion after the! yew yorK—A call for a gen- Sight. | eral strike of all knit goods workers, Testimony of a worker who had | to take place today, has been issued wiewed the body of, Barlow in the |py the Needle Trades Workers’ In- mortuary is that: “The head, face | dustrial Union. Knitgoods workers aNd body and limbs were one mass | are to leave their shops and march ———— es, | to several strike halls in various sec- tions of the city this morning. Bronx | workers are to come to the Bronx Intern’ Workers Order | Workers’ Club at 569 Prospect St., DENTAL DEPARTMENT |Manhattan workers to iar bene | Auditorium, 131 W. 28th St., - 60 FIFTH AVENUE = |) iccsmurg workers to the Ideal Ball- wilh ee room at 151 Knickerbocker St, MM Work Done Under Personal Care of || Ridgewood workers to Flushing Man- Dr. C. Weissman sion, 1088 Flushing Ave., and Browns- |yille workers to Lincoln Palace, 432 Lake Ave. WILLIAM BELL | “The strike is called for 35-hour Optometrist week, a 30-hour week for night work jon knitting machines, unemployment |insurance and minimum wage scales ; |ranging from $60 to $25. 3 ora |CAR LOADERS WIN ee || WAGE INCREASE | Epene Tompkins | NEW YORK.—A strike of part- __--—~_ | time refrigerator car loaders at the MPIRICO New York elena freight station EL E | at 18th and West Streets was won | with all demands of the men being a Weer isre oti gets | granted, a 50 per cent raise in pay "Sapa pimaat peared |on dry cars and 100 per cent raise anerees eoees ie Coy Jon wet ears. The strikers were Fobscce Workers Industrial Union Shop || oroanized by the Waterfront Un- employed Council, all of them being jobless seamen. & J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL |) DIRECTORS 906 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Might Phone: Dickens 6-5369 Yor International Workers Order A. ARMAND, JERSEY CITY, N. J. We answered your letter but it) came back marked “Not at Address Given.” If you will send us your cor- rect address, we will be glad to an- swer the question you raised—Work- ers’ Correspondence Dept. | Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) has now REDUCED THE RENT ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS CULTURAL ACTIVITIES Hiindesgarien; Classes for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasium; Clubs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE Take Advantage of the Opportunity. Avenue train to White Pieins Road. Stop at Allerton Avenue Station. Tel. Estabrook 8-1400—1401 9 a.m, to 8 p.m. 9am. to 5 10 2. Office open daily Friday & Saturday Sunday 10 DAYS Camp Nitgedaiget BEACON, N. Y. FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS » Starting Sept. 21 to Sept. 30 “ ROSH HA SHONAH YOM KIPPUR @BORT PLAYS EVERY DAY DANCES AND CONCERTS EVERY iG ALL PROFIT FOR THE STRUGGLES OF NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION Sipecially Reduced Prices for Needle Workers Make Your Reservations Immediately in the Office of the Union — 131 West 28th Street APEX CAFETERIA 827 Broadway, Between 12th and 13th Streets All Comrades Should Patronize This FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION SHOP | seabs | standards of the workers, but rather |real improvements in their condi- The Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union, Brooklyn Local, is calling an Open Union Meeting Tuesday at 8 p. m, at its head- quarters, 196 State St. Brooklyn. Andrew Overgaard, Secretary of the Trade Union Unity Council of New York, is scheduled to speak on the recent Trade Union Conference for United Action, held recently in Cleveland, O. Furrier Meeting. All shop chairmen in the fur in- dustry are called to a meeting to- night in union headquarters at 131 W. 28th St., immediately after work. The question of the 35-hour week will be taken up. Attendance of all) chairmen is imperative. Pai: Carpenters’ Meeting. The Independent Carpenters Union is calling a special member- ship meeting for tonight at 8 p.m., at the union headquarters, 820 Broadway. This meeting has been called to speed up the organizational drive and every member is urged to at- tend this meeting. * Mass Organizations, Attention! Members of the Daily Worker Vol- unteers are visiting the various lan- guage and cultural organizations within New York City and vicinity for the purpose of securing support for the Daily Worker drive. All or- ganizations are requested to give! these Volunteers the fioor and full cooperation. Tailors Condemn Strike Agreement Of A.CW. Officials | Call Tailors to Join the Fight for Real Gains NEW YORK.—The Amalgamated Clothing Workers officials settled the strike of the custom tailors which they called two weeks ago. | The settlement was engineered in| the usual manner, behind closed j doors and without taking a vote by the strikers to determine their satisfaction with the terms. The strike settlement as announced is supposed to provide a 36-hour week and a 85 per cent increase in wages. Since no minimum wage is set, this will involve only a slight increase for the majority of the workers. Strong-arm men threatened to beat up a worker who protested the settlement, demanding the es- tabiishment of week work, a $1 minimum wage, and then he de- clared that the strike had been! called only in the interests of the! officials and the bosses. Only) 250 workers were involved in the strike. The overwhelming majority of custom tailors now on strike unier the leadership of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union con- demned the settlement announced | by the Amalgamated Clothing | Workers as an act of open strike breaking and treachery to the in- terests of those who are out on strike, in a resolution adopted at) a mass meeting at rving Plaza j Friday. The strikers voted to continue the | strike for week work, minimum wages and abolition of homework and called upon the workers of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers not to permit themselves to be used as to force down the living * } o join the strikers in the fight for tions. The strikers declared their determination to fight for the right to belong to a union of their own Gutters of New York By del A Portrait of District Attorney Crain’s Office, hard at work, in an attempt to (dis) prove Mark Shahian’s authentic murder charges in the Welfare Island Scandal. Patterson, Amter, Ford C.P. Election Nominees Biedenkapp, Shoe Union Head, to Run for Brooklyn Borough President; Sam Gonshak for Judge NEW YORK.—I. Amter, National Secretary of the Unemployed Council, was nominated Communist candidate for President of the Borough of Man- hattan, and Fred Biedenkapp, Secretary of the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Industrial Union, for Borough President of Brooklyn at the Communist |for Aldermen in the 19th and 2ist | Districts, respectively, in Harlem. | Negro and white workers, in Manhat- | ath Ald. Dist. . Party ratification conferences in both national Labor Defense, and James W. Ford, Vice-Presidential candidate in the last election, were nominated James Gralton, recently deported from Ireland, will run for Alderman in the 13th district, Manhattan. The Manhattan conference, which was at- tended by 146 delegates, Negro and white, of 100 organizations and Com- munist Party units, was addressed by Robert Minor, Communist candidate for Mayor, and James Ford. As in the Bronx, where Leon Blum, laundry workers’ leader jailed by the » Was nominated to the Munici- pal Court judgeship, so in Manhattan, Sam Gonshak, who was sentenced to two years in jail by Tammany Judge Aurelio, was nominated for the mu- nicipal court bench in the 6th Dis- trict. Minor also spoke at the Brooklyn conference held at Central Hall, 196 State St., where delegates represented 89 organizations. Many delegates from A. F. of L. unions (three delegates from the Socialist Workers’ Unem- ployed Committee at the Manhattan conference) were present at both rallies. The New Harlem Casino, at 116th St. and Lenox Ave., where the Man- hattan conference was to be held, cancelled the arrangements at the order of Tammany, and the rally took place at Esthonian Hall, 27 West 115th St. The complete list of Communist Party candidatesy ‘which includes tan and Brooklyn is as follows: Manhattan Borough Candidates Borough President Israel Amter Associate Judge Court of Appeals David Amariglio (Leeds) City Court Judge .Steve Kingston Sheriff ..... -Henry Shepard County Clerk. Laura Carmon District Attorney .Pauline Rogers Assemblymen— st Assembly Dist. 2nd Assembly Dis' 8rd Assembly Dist. 4th Assembly Dist. 5th Assembly Dist. 6th Assembly Dis Harry Fieldberg P. V. Cacchione 9th Asesmbly Dist. ... Auerbach 10th Assembly Dist. 11th Assembly Dist. 14th Assembly Dist. 15th Assembly Dist. 16th Assembly Dist. 11th Assembly Dist. 18th Assembly Dist. 19th Assembly Dist. 20th Assembly Dist. 21st Asesmbly Dis' Charles Siegel . LeRoy -.Ocacio y Spencer ude White -Colin Reed Aldermen— Ist Aldermanic Dist. 2nd Ald, Dist. . 3rd Ald. Dist. 4th Ald. Dist. . 5th Ald. Dist. 6th Ald. Dis John Adams Salvatore Giurato ..John Collins Joseph Klein . Stanley Zimnoch Joseph Porper ..Sam Madell, . Joseph Brandt, (Sam Brustein) ,Olmstead 8th Ald Dist. . 9th Ald. Dist. . 10th Ald. Dist. mes Young | lth Ald. Dist. . 12th Ald. Dist. larvin Thomasen | 13th Ald. Dist. Jai Gralton | 14th Ald. Dist. -Carrie Katz) 15th Ald. Dist. -Glessford 16th Ald. Dist. -Sarah Rice 11th Ald. Dist. - Uffree | 18th Ald. Dist. .Sarni 19th Ald. Dist. atterson | 20th Ald. Dist. ...........000s ‘Wicks. 21st Ald. Dist. 2nd Ald. Dist. -Reggie Thomas 23rd Ald. Dist. Maurice Sand Breoklyn Bor: Orndidates Borough President. "rod Biendenkapp | Sheriff .... .John Michael Cook Registrar . »..-Mozy Walker ; Supreme Court . Anthony Bimba Special Sessions fe. Dominic Fliani Assembly— (Incomplete List) Ist Dist. .. .Jcseph Roberts | 5rd Dist. 4th Dist. 6th Dist. 7th Dist. . 8th Dist. 10th Dis 12th Dis! a Viadimir | choice, 13th Dist. . joseph Garraffe son, national secretary of the Inter- boroughs Saturday, William Patter- -Harry Eddy Cantor Joseph J, Kahn Merrill C. Work .-Morris Yanoff - Angelo Del Lewis 18th Dist. . 20th Dist. . - Joseph Field 22nd Dist. ..Dan Rubel 2rd Dist. . -Mollie Samuels * Unreported. . ene Aldermanic— (Incomplete List) 33rd Dist. ..Doretta Tarmen 34th Dist. 36th Dist. 37th Dist, 38th Dist. . 42nd Dist. 43rd Dist. . 45th Dist. 47th Dist. 50th Dist. . 54th Dist. 56th Dist. . Hernandez . Oidgard --Hannah Scherer i Nicholas Meyers .Jacob Krasmitz * Unreported. 2 Brooklyn Parades Tomorrow Against N. Y.Scottsboros NEW YORK—A huge protest against the murder of James Mat- thews, Negro worker, killed by a Wel- fare Island prison keeper, and against the growing New York lynch terror will be the high points of a mass rally and two parades in celebration of the 14th anniversary of the Com- munist Party, and Communist elec- tion rally in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn tomorrow. “No Scottsboro in New York,” reads a leaflet distributed by Section 8 of the Communist Party who arranged the protest, At seven o'clock in the evening the workers will assemble at Hinsdale and Sutter Avenues and at Fulton and Schenectady to march through the working class districts, Negro and white, to the Brooklyn Palace at Rockaway and Pulton where the rally will be held. Speakers will include: Robert Minor, } Communist candidate for Mayor; Wil- liana Burroughs, candidate for Comptroller; Merril C. Work, Com- munist candidate in the 17th As- sembly District, and many recently nominated local candidates. Open Hearings On Iniunction Against Shoe Workers Union (Continued from Page 1) to fly the Blue’ Eagle and the red flag together. Eisenberg leaned heavily on the Fish hearings and the affidavits sub- mitted by Charles G. Woods, U. S. | Department of Labor Conciliator in the 1929 strike, for his red-baiting ar- guments. He recounted Fred Beidenkapp’s career as a loyal fighter for the work- ers and stressed especially the fact that an agreement with the union would force the bosses to close their shops on May Day and would prevent them from hiring and firing anyone who did not belong to the union, He disclosed the real intentions of the bosses when he said they would be willing to sign up with any union but not the Industrial Union, Boudin, attorney for the Industrial TInion, traced the role of Charles G. Woods as scab agent for the manu- fecturers in 1929 and characterized his arguments as “old horse chest- nuts.” Under the NRA, said Boudin, the workers are supposed to have the right to organize and the employers to reeoznize their elected renresenta- fives, He r-nd a wire from iss Per- kins which corroborated this and 176 At Birmingham Plan All-Southern Anti-Lynch Meet ILD Demands Death for Organized Murder Gangs in South BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. 18—A state anti-lynch committee which will call an all-Southern anti-lynch con- ference within two months was elect- ed by 176 delegates, representing 65 organizations, at an anti-lynch con- ference here Sunday. At the same conference, a delega- tion was elected which will go to Governor B, M. Miller to protest the wave of lynchings by small gangs consisting for the most part of offi- cers of the Jaw and other officials, which has swept Alabama recently. The delegation will also demand the arrest, indictment, and prosecution for murder with application of the death penalty, for all lynchers, start- ing with the circuit judge, sheriff, and three deputies of Tuscaloosa. Mary Cooper, white Birmingham woman, was chairman of the confer- ence, which was opened by Robert Durr, editor of the Birmingham World, Negro newspaper, who gave a review of the reign of terror leading up to the conference, and called for organized struggle against lynching. The program of the International Labor Defense, which fills this need, was presented by Jane Speed, white Southern girl who recently served a jail term for speaking at a May 1 meeting to both Negroes and whites. The delegation to Governor Miller was instructed to demand also the immediate unconditional and safe re- lease of the Scottsboro boys, Willie Peterson, and all other frame-up vic- tims, and equal rights for Negroes as guaranteed in the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments to the U. S. consti- tution. Another committee was elected to see Chief of Police McDuff, of Bir- mingham, to demand that the police reign of terror against Negroes in that city be stopped, and that all offi- cers guilty of killing and terrorizing Negroes be removed, arrested, and prosecuted for murder. Dr. Taggart, N.A.A.C.P. representa- tive and a scheduled speaker for the meeting, failed to show up, [. Miller Strikers Beaten in Jersey; Held in $40,000 Bail JERSEY CITY, Sept. 18—Four leaders of the I, Miller shoe strike, which is now 100 per cent effective with the last department, the cut- ters, having struck this morning, were assaulted and severely beaten by a gang of gun-thugs here yester- day, with the result that John Ma- doxion, a striker, and Patsy Gar- meni, foreman of the plant, are in the hospital. Held on $40,000 bail, charged with assault and intent to kill, are Alex- ander Ivanoff, Joseph Maglicano, Madoxion and one other shoe worker. Isserman of the Interna- tional Labor Defense will defend them in court. The obvious frame-up character of the charges is evident from the fact that Ivanoff and the others were in- vited to discuss the situation with the representatives of I. Miller. At the meeting in the restaurant they were set upon by a gang of cut-throats with knives and bludgeons. It is ob- vious that this latest attack upon the strike leaders is the culmination of a series of attempts to break the strike of 1,000 workers, The bosses are using every possible maneuver to break the effectiveness of the workers’ picket line. On Fri- day and again this morning pickets were arrested, Also I. Miller has proposed that they join the Boot and Shoe Workers’ Association, which would like to take the leadership out of the hands of the rank and file committee in order to behead it. The men have contemptuously rejected this proposal. Metal Union Wins 2 More Shops; 200 Wire Workers Join Strike NEW YORK.—Two more settle- ments in the meial strike were an- nounced on Friday by the Metal Workers’ Industrial Union when the workers of the Cromwell and Colonial shops returned to work with substan- tial gains, At the same time 200 workers in 15 wire shops came out on strike for shorter hours and more pay. The wire workers demand a $14 minimum wage, a 20 percent in- crease in wages for those meking more than $14: abolition of piece work; the introduction of the 40-hour week, time and a he!f for overtime. and recognition of the Industrial Unicn. The workers of the Cromwell and Colonial shops increased their pay by as much as $12 a week as a re- sult of the setilement of the strike. They are pledging 5 to 10 percent of their wages for the of those workers who are still on strike, smashed, He faced the red issue squarely, stating that section 7a of the NRA does not inquire into the political affi- lations of those representatives whom the workers choose. He quoted a wire received from Senator Wagner declaring that neither the govern- ment nor the NRA has expressed ap- proval or disapproval of any union of shoe workers, Blasting Eisenberg’s argument point by point, Boudin showed that the branded the attempt to get a perma- nent injunction by using the “red seare” as the bosses maneuver to go back to the swoatshon conditions in- troduced after the strike in 1929 was industrial unions keep their contrac- tual relations with the employers as is evidenced in the case of the Fur Workers Industrial Union, Hearings are to continue on Friday. ¢ Underground in Germany By EDWARD NEWHOUSE UCH concentrated and “firm-handed” work has been ex» pended by the Nazis to win over at least sections of the workers who compose the German Athletic organization, the huge “Deutsche Turnerschaft.” To gain the confidence of the membership they went so far as to lend a hand in the organi- zation of the gymnast-festival in Stuttgart this summer. Part of this assistance consisted of arresting 206 members of the “Turnerschaft” alone and over 600 others all over Wuerttemberg. None of this information ever found its way into the American press and we received it in a single- spaced, typed eight-page letter from Copenhagen, which turned out to be a little treatise on how to conduct underground work after your party or organization has been pronounced | illegal, “Before the festival,” reads the quaintly phrased communication, “a leaflet was edited in a number of 50,000. The Stuttgart comrades dur- ing the end of the games were able to place a copy in every wardrobe in the tents in spite of the hermetic con- finement of this tents by the police.” Examplés of other activities follow. It would be a pity to re-word the narrative: “The red sportsmen of Wurttemberg had resolved a maneu- vre for their apprearance during the regatta which was even as simple as effectfull. At a certain point of the Neckar-river above the regatta-place which is not easy to reach, the stream was tried through the drift of a wooden block. Before the beginning of the regatta-game, the comrades put into the Neckar-river 100 pieces of quadratic wooden blocks on which were placed little red flags with ham- mer and sickle. “During the match, the little Sov- jet flags came sailing into regatta- territory, The Storm Troopers, great- est part of whom could not even control their boats, were fishing in the regatta-territory for the scandal during a long time. A great deal of the spectators were seen laughing heartyly at the involuntare comic of the Storm Troopers ana smiling at the successfull trick of the red sports- men, And many thousands of spec- tators were convinced that the red- sports movement is living and work- ing. ee “(QOEBBELS could not help but mention in his speech the activi- ty of the red sportsmen. On the main festive-day we let 1000 children-bal- loons ascend to which was fastened propaganda material and addresses where like-minded could apply. Most of the ballooons were driven by the wind over the whole territory of east, middle and South Schwartzwald. Such balloons came down in Horb, Schwenningen, Freudenstadt, etc. “In all these towns the police kind- ly and ingeniously summoned through advertising in the newspa- pers not to answer addresses, which were fastened to the balloons but to deliver them to the secret state-po- lice, and so they involuntarily made a splendid propaganda. “The dayly speeches of the Nazi Jeaders were very badly frequented. The Saar demonstration, partitipa- tion in which was a duty of honor, and which took place on the market place of Stuttgart, collected less than 20,000 spectators, main political demonstration of the festival, which every delegate was bound to visit and to which the dele- gates were driven by all-often dra- conic means, were 30,000 of the 100,- 000 delegates. “The speeches were greeted with very tepid applause. The famous ar- tificial poses of Goebbels exploded in an ice-cold silence and more than once cause the impression of embar- rasment. . “IN THE street parades it was ex- pressly forbidden to sing certain songs but this the delegates disre- garded. The red sportsmen simply whistled the revolutionary songs so theprohibition did not really accom- plish its aim for the sympathies of the proletarian population belonged to the red sportsmen and their ar- Trangment.” DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Set. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-201 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M, 1-2, 6-8 P.M. e « in Stuttgart® “At the national festive hour—the | Standing of the Clubs American League. Club W.L.P.C., Club W.L PC. ‘Wash'ton 95 4 Detroit 60.77 473 New York 84 55 .604| Chicago 63 79 .444 Philadel. 78 67 .521| Boston $8 8¢ -408 Cleveland 74 71 5101 St. Louis 5¢ 89 .378 FORNEY aa 5 National League. Club W. LP. New York 75 68 .524 Pittsburgh 58 83 411 Chicago Bt. Louls 78 67 838 Cincinnati 57 8! 80 ‘New York-St. Louis game not over at press time. * * International League playoffs only. Night games. Inning by Inning Scores AMERICAN LEAGUE (First Game) Chicago . New York .....+ Gregory and Sullivan; Allen and Dickey, (Second Game) Chicago 300 010 000-4 9 0 New York - 000 100 011-3 7 0 Tietje, Wyatt and Berry; Ruffing and Rensa. Cleveland . Boston +800 000 060-9 15 0 se --000 000 000-0 2 5 Hildebrand and Pytlek; Rhodes, Welch and R, Ferrell. Detroit .... +002 050 010-8 9 2 Philadelphia ...004 010 40x—9 12 1 Hamlin, Hogsett, Auker and Pasek, Hayworth. St. Louis ....... 100 100 020-4 7 0 Washington ....611 000 000-2 10 2 Gray, Hadley and Helmsley; Burke + and Berg. > NATIONAL ERAGE HE. (First Game) Philadelphia ....000 000 010-1 7 0 Pittsburgh ......001 001 Olx—2 6 0 Elliott, Ragland and Davis; Meine and Padden. (Second Game) Philadelphia ....003 000 030-6 9 2 Pitsburgh ........000 000 000-0 4 0 Holley and Davis; Hoyt, Chagnon and Grace, Finney. Brooklyn +-203 001 000-6 9 2 Chicago ... +000 201 100-4 11 2 Mungo and Lopez; Herrmann, Hen- shaw, Bush and Phelps. 112 012 010—8 14 1 000 001 100—2 12 1 id Hogan; Jchnson, Stout and Lombardi. Games Today. Natfonal League. New York at St. Louis. Brooklyn at Chicego, Boston at Cincinnati. Philedelphia at Pittsburgh. American League, Chicago at New York (2 games). Detroit at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Washington. Cleveland at Sovtrn. (Brooklyn) WORKERS—ZAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N.Y. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE BENSONHURST WORKERS Patronize GORGEOU’S CAFETERIA 2211 86th Street Near Bay Parkway Fresh Food at Proleterian Prices I Willlamsbargh Comrades Weleome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave, — Cor. Siegel St. RVERY BITE A DELIGHT Attractive educational PROCEEDS FOR THE SPEND THE JEWISH HOLIDAY WEEK-END in CAMP UNITY WINGDALE, N. Y. A Real Workers Atmosphere — Swimming — Rowing Handball — Hiking — Warm and Cold Showers direction of PHIL BARD. @ WORKERS’ LABORATORY THEATRE PLAYS @ Prominent Speakers of the Communist Party NEW YORK DISTRICT Holiday Rates: 1 day $2.45 2 days. .4.65 Vacation Rates: $13.00 per week (including tax) for camp t-om 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:00 A.M, Fridays and 0:00 A.M., 3 P.M. and 7 P.M, Take Lexington Avenue White Plains Road Express. Stop at Allerton Avenue Station, — ROUND TRIP FARE: $3.00 program, under the COMMUNIST PARTY 3 days. .$6.50 4 days. .8.00

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