The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 23, 1933, Page 2

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i i i Page Two w#AILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1933 COPS ATTACK CROWD AFTER! J. Sik Owners Threaten To Open REV. POWELL BARS CHURCH jis on Monday “FOR WELFARE ISLAND MEET False Friends of Scottsboro Boys Work With Tammany; Young Wor ker Beaten and Jailed NEW YORK.—Police Thursday night attacked a crowd of nearly 500 at a meeting in front of the Abyssinian Church, 132 West 138th St, after Rev. A. Clayton Powell, Jr., pastor of the ™ the church for a protest against the Negro, on Welfare Island. The me: members dignant at thi Didding the 1 sent nm, a small othesrr ampled | ad been Men and and clubbed even aft women were they knocked dow ies, however, were report e police, too. and two co) treated for | minor inju Harlem hos- | pital. Young Worker Beaten. Isadore Dorfm @ 19-year old needle tr: was severely beaten. He was c and even he in a sei police ¢ stamped When he was fi injuries. Although bi ered, Dorf- man was y en from the hospital b lodged in the } “West 135th St. stati chi d with | “simple assault and resisting arrest He will come up f Morning in Wa ton Heights Magistrates Court, st St. between Convent and Amsterdam Aves. Robert Minor, Comm candi- date for mayor of New Yi James ‘W. Ford, Harlem orga: of the Communist Party and car e for Vice-president in the last “tial election, spoke to the in ,4itont of the church. Minor, who| himself had served a term on Wel- fare Island for leading an unem- ployed demonstration on March 6, 1930, said that the Daily Worker ex- (Brooklyn) ater FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE for Brownsville Workers Hoffiman’s RESTAURANT 8 CAFETERIA » Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria = 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Nar Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. | | | | Brooklyn Workers Patronize HOWARD ——__STEAY LAUNDRY —S ERVIC E— 476-8-80 Howard Ave., Bklyn, N.¥. PResident 3-3000 ~~ GARMENT DISTRICT Phones: Chickering 4947—Longacre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. Buse. Soe aan | DOWNTOWN JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE | in Alabama, church, refused to permit the use of | murder of James Matthews, young } had been arranged by the League | murder of Matthews had nto the officials respon- killing. T Powell, who is a member of the NRA Committee, is more con- cerned with whitewashing Tammany than he is in preventing a repetition of prison murders of Negroes, is re Island protest meeting. Pre- had agreed to a meeting oosa sharecroppers case When the plans were changed and it was decided to hold the Welfare Island protest meeting, Rey. Powell backed down, thus show- on | ing himself to be a servile agent of Tammany Hall. During the past few months he pretended a solicitude for the Scottsboro boys and spoke at various meetings. Series of Articles on NRA by Earl Browder To Begin on Monday | | The first’ of series of articles by | arl_ Browder, Secretary of the | Communist Party, called “What | Every Worker Should Know About | | The NRA?” will be printed Mon- | day. The series will then continue for the rest of the week. They | are a simple, clear, fundamental analysis of the purpose and re-| sults of the NRA as it affects the daily life of the working class. | Do not miss the first installment SA LE 20 Percent Discount on all BOOKS — PAMPHLETS PERIODICALS dealing wita Economics, Unemployment, N.R.A., War, Marxism- Leninism TEN DAYS ONLY! September 23—October 3 WORKERS’ BOOK SHOP 50 East 13th St. Alg. 4-0233 Russian Art Shop Peasants’ Handicrafts 100 East 14th St., N. Y. C. Imports from U.S.S.R. (Russia) Tea, Candy, Cigarettes, Smocks, Toys Shawls, Novelties, Woodcarving acquered Work | ALGONQUIN 4-0094 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 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personai Care of | Dr. C. Weissman | | MOT THAVEN 09-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue) Home Phone: Olinville 5-1109 Office Phone: Estabrook 8-2573 DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2574 WALLAVE AVE. corner Allerton Avenue Bronx, N, Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades ee 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 A Wonderful Spot-for Organizations’ Affairs STUYVESANT GRILL AND OPEN AIR BEER TAVERN 137 Third Avenue Between Ith and 15th Streets | tion to sell. si WILLIAM BELL=— Optometrist Ko 106 FAST. 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave, N. ¥. ©. Phone: Tompkins Square 6-8237 CLASSIFIED earn some money please call at Daily Worker City Office, 55 E. 12th St. (store) Monday to Friday.’ See M. Blyne. INDIAN CHIEF with Sidecar in good condi- Meyers, 1544 3nd Ave. (80th New York, MARGARET STAFF please call Veronica, President 3-0874. All Comrades _|NEW HEALT H CENTER CAFETERIA |___. Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 59 i, Meet at the 18TH 8T., WORKERS’ CENT! APEX CA 827 Broadway, Between All Comrades Should Patronize This FOOD WORKERS INDU: FETERIA 12th and 13th Streets STRIAL UNION SHOP n by his action in barting the | , Sept. 22. — e committee, in statement to all silk and dye strik- ers urging one united strike front, calls the strikers to turn out to a mass demonstration Saturday at Sandy Hill Park. The statement says in part: | “Members of the Associated | (U.T.W.): Now is the time to pre- | sent one united front against the bosses’ attempt to open up the mills on Monday, Assemble at your own strike headquarters on Satur- day morning and march with your own slegans and banners to the main demonstration at Sandy Hill Park. The Associated Silk Workers | Union is invited to select their | own speakers for the demonstra- | tion.” | Earl Browder, general secretary | of the Communist Party, will ad- dress the strike demonstration. eT BAe PATERSON, N. J., Sept, 22—Al- though local papers announce that |the manufacturers intend to reopen the mills on Monday and feature in their headlines that the silk mill owners are organizing to break the strike, afternoon papers indicate an impending change of policy among the employers of the Institute of Dyers and Painters. Announcements said to come from | the Institute declare that the em- | ployers have a new plan of action that will meet the demands of the strikers. The report which is un- official declares that: “If the plan is acceptable to the workers of both the NTW and UTW and there is little doubt that they will accept there is little need for the new conciliator designated by the Labor Board. How- | ever the Labor Board and the Board | of Trustees of the Institute have yet | to agree.” | The Union has received no infor- | mation from any source in regard to | the proposals of the manufacturers | and is continuing its preparations for | mass demonstration on Saturday | at Sandy Hill Park and will mebilize | the strikers on the picket lines to | keep the mills shut Monday. 'The National Labor Board appoint- ed Richard Newstadt as conciliator today to take charge of the strike situation. This comes after a letter of protest had been sent by the Gen- eral Strike committee of the Nation- al Textile Union to Senator Wagner of the National Labor Board demand- ing the removal of Moffit, the present US. Labor conciliator, on the ground | that he has deliberately excluded offi- cial representatives of the dye! strik- ers, the NIWU from negotiations. The letter declared that formal ap- plication for a hearing has been filed but the application remains unan- swered. The NRA makes it compul- ,; sory for the employers to deal with representatives chosen by the work- ers, yet Moffit and the Institute have flagrantly violated these provisions, ‘The strikers will remain out on strike and keep the mills closed until the | demands of the strikers are won, the | letter stated. Moffit declared today in a defensive statement that his actions were due to the refusal of the Institute and the employes to deal with the NTWU. | Jacquard manufacurers are report- ed as facing a terrific loss and have} | asked Mayor Hinchcliffe to interfere in the strike and reopen negotiations. A gigantic turnout is expected at Sandy Hill Park Saturday when the strikers will give their determined answer to any attempt to break the strike Monday. Open Air Meeting. An open air auspices of Units 1 and 8 of section 11 will be held tonight at 8 p. m. at 8th Ave. and 45th St., Brooklyn. The speakers will be H. Johnson, Pinkson and Sherman J. Wirkula. ras meeting under the | Gutters of New York By del Racket No. 1: The push-cart peddler racket—— The above cartoon is the first of a series exposing New York rackets. They will appear from time to time. All comrades who know of or have been victimized by any of the | thousand and one rackets which infest the city, are invited to write us about. their experiences so they can be picturized in this series, Address: Del, clo Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St. Frame-Up Seen in Threat to Arrest Shoe Union Heads |Plan Demonstration at City Hall Monday as} Arrests Grow; N. R. A: Calls Union | to Meet With Bosses | Ak Ei Te pe aT | NEW YORK.—That the shoe manufacturers are preparing another | frame-up similar to that of the four union organizers in Jersey City but! | this time involving the heads of the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Industria} Union was indicated when two detectives and police called at union head- quarters Thursday night with warrants seeking to arrest Fred Biedenkapp, the union’s general secretary. They: failed to find him, however, “the affidavits sub- jafter a study : ‘ j mitted. The Union is mobilizing its forces | “c) Gate more than 80 shoe strikers |for a demonstration against police ~ - | have been arrested as a result of the eats She Semeeurs ab Oley Hall drive to terrorize and intimidate the Monaay’ Morning at 10 s,m. | strikers and smash the strike by in- Moving to bring about a mediation | junction. On Thursday morning, 40 of the shoe strike, Henry F. Wolff of | strikers of the Delman Shoe Co. ‘ire | the Mediation Board of the NRA) arrestéd in their headquarters at 845| today wired to the Shoe and Leather ong Ave. They were piled into three Workers’ Industrial Union informing patrol wagons and brought to court. them of a preliminary conference ar-| ‘The owners of the Comfort Slipper | ranged with the shoe and slipper | co. and other slipper manufacturers | jemployers’ associations and “unions !nave notified the workers to repurn | jconcerned” for Monday September) to work and promise to help’ the | 2% at 11 a, m. and inviting the | Boot and Shoe Workers’ Union to Union to send its representatives. organize them. Although the shops The Union committee attending {are announced as opening for the re- the conference on Monday includes: |turn of the workers, the strikers’ Fred Biedenkapp, Frank Costello, a|ranks remained intect. Not a sin- representative of the I. Miller strike/¢le striker has accepted the ‘offer of committee, I. Rosenberg, represent-| working under a scab union. ing the slipper strikers, Bernstein,! Red “scare” propaganda which has organizer of the stitchdown strikers | figured in many previous strikes of and George Martin of the shoe re-|the union has started again. Leaf- pair section. Attorney Boudin will|lets issued by an organization calling also be present for the Industrial|itself the Independent American Union. On Monday night a mass| League Against the Communist Prop- meeting will be held at Arcadia Hall,| aganda in the USA carry a slander- Brooklyn, to report the result of the|ous attack on the Communist Party. conference to the strikers. j The leaflets seek to break the strike No further hearings on the perma-|@nd urge the workers to join the |nent injunction against the Union| scab A. F. of L. union of whose sell-| applied for by the shoe manufactur- | out policies, the shoe workers are} ers will be held, according to reports. | well aware. | The judge's decision will be rendered —_ SAMBER Gs] Var Vets Sending At the Prospect Avenue Delegates to Meet (CONTIN' Station, Bronx BAR and GRILL rD FROM PAGE ONE) French author, and Earl Browder, | | | | | MEN’S FINE CLOTHING FOR WORKERS], SALTZMAN BROS. | READY MADE AND TO ORDER 181 STANTON STREE General Secretary, Communist Party, US.A., will also address the Con-| gress, Other speakers at this anti-war, meeting will include Professor Alfons | Goldshmidt, exiled by the Nazis from Germany, Devere Allen, editor of the World Tomorfow, A. J. Muste, C. P. |. A. William Pickens, Field Secre- tary of the National Association for the Advancement of the Colored People, Harriet Stanton Blatch, out- SUITS (NEAR CLINTON STREET) NEW YORK Come to Our Store or Send 129 EAST 34th STREET WORKINGMEN OF ALL COUNTRIES! You Need Natural, Undoped and Unprocessed Health Foods to Give You Health and Strength in Your Struggle for Power. “HEALTH FOOD DISTRIBUTORS New York City. — Phone: LExington 2-6926 standing woman-pacifist, William N. Jones, and cers. | Workmen’s Ci The Are Young Branch, Workmen's | Circle, Branch No. 1050, announced yesterday election of delegates to the Congress. The Friends of the Chi- nese People, pledged to fight for the protection of the Chinese masses against imperialism, also elected del- egates. University sraduates, some of whom were drilled as reserve offi- cers for the U. S. army, are rallying to the support of the anti-war Con-| gress with the Associction of Un-! employed College Alumni electing a| delegation to the Congress, for Our Health Guide Free— (Near Lexington Avenue) CAMP Attractive educational PROCEEDS FOR THE 2 days Saturdays 10:00 AM., 3 P.M. and 7 P.M. Rond Express. Stop at Allerton Avenue Station, ‘ ROUND TRIP SPEND THE JEWISH HOLIDAY WEEK-END in || 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 i} | 1.65 Vacation Rates: $13.00 per week (including tax) Cars leave for camp from 2700 Bronx Park East dally at 10:00 AM. Pridays and Reinhold Niebuhr, of the Fellow- | ship of Reconciliation, will act as chairman at the Congress public mass reception at Mecca Tervle, while \ J. B, Matthews, elso of the Fellow- City Events Open “Daily” Fund Drive. Launching their extensive pro- gram to gain their voluntarily established quota of $5,000 to be donated to the $40,000 Daily Worker Fund, the Daily Worker Volunteers of New York will conduct an Indian Summer Fes- tival Dance this evening, at the Workers Center, 35. E. 12th St. Announce Open Forum. With Mrs, Williana Burroughs scheduled to speak on “How the NRA Affects the Negro Worker,” the first Open Forum and general discussion sponsored by the Har-| lem Workers School will be held | Sunday evening, September 24, at the Harlem Workers School, 200 | West 135th Street. J. Tauber to Speak. Under the auspices of the Fili- pino Anti-Imperialist League and the International Labor Defense, Joseph Tauber, I. L. D. defense attorney, will address a mass meet- ing at 186 15th Street, Brooklyn, tonight, calling for the release of the Filipino political prisoners, Crisanto’ Evangelista, S. Capa- ducia, Dominador Ambrosio and others. * * Retail Tailors’ and Cleaners’ Mass Meeting. An organizational mass meeting of the retail tailors and cleaners will be held tomorrow at 3 pm., at 144 E.! 16th St. There will be a report on) the scab tactics of the A. F. of L. 6f-| ficialdom, ee ed Painters’ Fraction Meet. Members of the Alteration Paint- ers’ Union are called to attend a general fraction meeting at the Workers’ Center tonight at 7 p.m. Ree} Shoe Repairers’ Membership Meeting. All shoe repairers, hat cleaners and bootblacks are called to 4 member- ship meeting of their union Sunday, 10 a.m., at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Place and 15th St. ae Speakers’ Conference. The Harlem Agitprop Committee has established a Speakers’ Confer- ence for all Party and Young Com- munist League speakers in the sec-| tion, for both itdoor and outdoor) meetings, The first meeting was held last Sunday, with about 25 present, and an organization was formed and a program drawn up.| The Conference, together with the/ Agitprop and the Speakers’ Bureau, | will be a mechanism for rotating speakers around the section. It was unanimously decided to hold the con- ference weekly until after the elec- tion. The next conference will be held Sunday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. +. ae Guiterres to Speak. Isabello Guitteres, young brother of one of the Filipino leaders of the Communist Party in the Philippines, who is now serving an eight year prison term, and Joseph Tauber, at- torney for the International Labor Defense, will be the outstanding speakers at a mass meeting, concert and dance, Saturday, Sept. 23, at 136 15th St., Brooklyn, at 7 p. m. Comrade’ Truesdale, wel'-known Negro speaker, will also speak, * . Moonlight Sail. Tonight Student Review Moonlight Sail and Dance on the Hudson aboard the steamer “Scagate.” | Music, entertainment. Boat leaves | Pier 6 E. R., Battery at 8:15 p. m. Subscription $1.00, yao. 1545 Venezuelian Workers. Venezuelan workers in New York will today celebrate the opening of the Venezuelan Workers’ Center, 1664 | Madison Ave., near 110th St, by a program of entainment, beginning at 8pm Nazi Tool Plays Role in Fire Trial (Continued from Page 1) 1 —___--——_ alienist brought in by the prosecu- tion, testified that when he saw Van der Lubbe last March he found him practically normal. Ofierng a “set- | entific” explanation for the imbe- | cilic Hollander’s ations in the trial,” | the alienist said that “it is not im-| pessible that Van der Lubbe’s recent refusal to take nourishment brougnt about a state of emotional weakening which -can well vent itself either in crying or lavgiing.” “Is it possible that Van der Lubbe is under hypnotic influence?” asked the prosecutor with tremendous se- riousness. To this the Nazi professor replied, “I regard this as impossible.” In the course of cross-examination Frofcssor Bonhos!fer admitied that when he spoke to Van der Lubbe lasi | Marth, the letter denied vigorously that he knew Ernst Torgier, former Communis: ficor leader In the stag, and cne of the de“endants. vies to C" Nazi ve court tecay eagerly | ship of Reconciliation, will preside ; at the reception on the satre nishi, | | September 29. in St. Nicholas Arena. j rome hear UNITY Phila. Anti-War Mcet Tonight PHILADELPHIA, Scpt. 22.—Robert. Minor, member of the Central Com- mittee of the Communist Party, J.B.’ Matthews, of the Fellowship of Re-| concilietion, and John Green will) gpeck at a mass mesttig arranged} by the Phi'adelphia Committee for | the Congress Ago’nst Wer to be held tomoxsow night (Saturday) at eight o'clock. program, under the art Turkish Workers Bold Meet NEW YO? K+-The Turkish Work- ers C'ub will hold an anti-war meet- ing Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at 269 W. 23th St. Speakers will in- clude Margeret Schiauth of New York University, who wes a delegate to the Amsterdam Anti-War Con- gress and a representative of the Turkish Consulate in New York, Woo ery @ NOTICE _ON GREETINGS! All greetines from ergantzations (mininrum $2) and individuals (25 cents) for the official program of COMMUNIST PARTY 3 days. .$6.50 4 days, .8.00 . Take Lexington Avenue White Plains FARE: $3.00 5 the Nazi government, eccuced of brig the real instigetor of the Reichstag fire. S2 fuie the wideiy-suppo.’ Idraiund Heines, a Nezi leader and now the police ciilef in the Sitssia Province, direded a squad cf storm troopers to the Reichstag building, and aided in placing the tinder and finally setting the fire, the States Attorney read a telegram from Heines saying he was at Gleiwitz from Feb- ruary 20 to March 1. The fire 02- curred on February 27,,and by this facile, uncgrroborated alibi the Nazis naively hope to convince the world of their innocence in this arson plot. The presiding judge, ‘ilhelm. Buenger, mildly ‘reproved” some newspapers which Assistant Parisius charged with ha’ construed testi- mony given about an al- leged visit to Saxony as being con- flicting. “This kind of reporting,” said Judge Buenger benignly, “hurts the cause of complete objectivity.” : the United States Congress Against War must be turned in to the office, Room 1610, 104 Fifth Ave., by Mon- day morning. came in for a bit of unkind, Dear Mr. Newhouse: course of the article, you state that “The fact that he has been concentrating solely on the Garden and neglecting a hun- minor doubts on his sincerity.” I don’t think you would have made this statement if you knew me and had followed my column over a pe- riod of years. The very fact that I go after the big guys and don’t who couldn’t come back at me must prove something. However, I don't concentrate on the Garden, as you'll Jearn by following my column. Only last week, I was firing at the Coney Island Stadium for putting Ruby Goldstein in, week after week, with helpless setups. (The Boxing Com- mission acted on this matter only yesterday.) If most of my guns are trained on the Garden at this time, it’s for the very good reason that the Garden has driven most competing clubs to opoly on running the so-called boxing game. Call me anything you want but in- sincere. Meantime, best of luck to you in conducting your new sports column, Fraternally yours, —DAN PARKER. an ery WAS indicated that the doubts on Mr. Parker's sincerity were of a minor nature. These minor, innocu- ous doubtings I reserve for practically everybody and everything. Bitter, bit- ter life has brought me to this pass. But I did say that Mr. Parker's ex- poses of Madison Square Garden and the ratty individual he has denomi- nated Sinister J. Influence have been informative and amusing. I did say that one should presumably be grate- ful for such exposes as one gets. What I failed to state explicitly-in the course of the bantering was that. ex- poses and muckraking are not enough. Let us assume the Daily Mirror succeeds in breaking the corrupt Gar- den’s “virtual monopoly.” Assume Honest Joe Whosis is put in charge. How will that change the situation? “The so-called boxing game” is not being ruined by individual clubs with or without virtual monopolies. There wasn’t any less faking, crookedness or profiteering in the industry five, ten or 20 year's ago. Fumigating one nest of rats will. only drive them’ to cover in another part of the cellar. er ag) JOXING is crooked by the. very na- ture of the scheme into which it fits. How can one expect people brought up to admire ideals of suc- cess and achievement which can only be attained through crookedness to keep from striving for them? Fight- ers, promoters, managers, all want to make money and the few formulae which are available for this attain- ment happen to be crockea. Eliminate Johnston and you'll get another clique. Smash the monopoly until another enterprising set will take the trouble to reorganize it. It's not the actors you have to shift, the play has to be rewritten. In cracking open the sore that is Madison Square Garden, Dan Parker helps to diagnose a diseased organism that needs the scalpel and not adhe- sive tape. By this time you may have gath- ered I'm advocating drastic changes. the given circumstances? Obviously | not. What's there to keep matchmakers from cutting into the purse of som? preliminary boy? What's there to | (o)} What’s Muckraking Worth? The New York Daily Mirror’s Mr. Dan Parker, who dred other fake outfits casts some} concentrate on inconsequential heels | the wall and now has a virtual mon-| and you'll have disorganized fakery | Can they be carried through under | perhaps injudicially acid com- mentary in these columns responds with a gracious note: I received in today’s mail a copy of your column of re- cent date (there was no way of telling from the clipping the exact date of publication of the article in question). In the be changed from that of a profit- ecring industry and a means of libelihood to a medium of recrea- tion, | Utopian? Not at all. It’s being done in the Soviet Union. Jimmy Johnston, Ruby Goldstein and Madison Square | Garden will only go when profession- | alism goes, they will only go when an | entire system whose values they rep- | resent goes, values implicit in the ex- istence of Mr. Dan Parker's Daily Mirror. STANDING OF THE CLUBS | AMERICAN LEAGUE | club W.L.P.C,, Olu wW.L.P.c. | Wash'ton 97 49 .664| Detroit 70 79 .470 | New York 87 55 .619| Chicago 68 82 .434 Phila. 75 68 .524| Boston 59 84 413 Cleveland 74 72 .507' St. Louis 55 91 .377 No-Teams scheduled for today. NATIONAL LEAGUE Club WL P.O. | club W.L. Pc. New York 88 55 .615 | Boston ‘T7 68 .531 Pittsburgh 83 65 561) Brooklyn 59 84 .413 | Chicago 82 67 .650 | Phila, 56 85 .394 | St. Louis 80 67 .S44 ' Cincinnati 87 90 .388 * | Pittsburgh at St. Louis postpotied on ac- count of rain. Only Boston at Philadelphia played. reer See 2 | INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE PLAYOFF | Rochester at Buffalo, 8:45 P.M. EDT, Night Game. AMERICAN LEAGUE Inning-by-Inning Scores R. H. E. | Boston ... + -000 100 002—3 6 0 Philadelphia ....000 000 000—0 11 1 Betts and Hogan; A. Moore and Davis. GAMES TODAY National League | Brooklyn at New York (two games). Cincinnati at Chicago. Boston at Philadelphia (two games). Pittsburgh at St. Louis. | American League New York at Boston. Philadelphia at Washington. Chicago at Cleveland. St. Louis at Detroit. ’ STATIONERY and WIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES At Special Prices for Organizations Lerman Bros., Inc. Phone ALgonquin 4-3356 — 8843 29 East 14th St. N.Y.C. AIRY, LARGE Meeting Rooms and Hall To Hire Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Ine. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: RHinelander 5097 | ens ARRANGE YOUR DANCES, LECTURES, UNION MEETINGS at the NEW ESTONIAN WORKERS’ HOME ich- | the tesk of allempting ~ keep fighters with families to sup-/ port from taking Givies? What can) prevent a promceter from. building | | third-raters into headline cards? Cer- jtainly not the Boxing Commission. Certainly not sporadic expoz2s. The status of the sport has to Camb Kinderland if HP SWELL ICT, N. Y. REOPENS FOR THIS WEEK-END “MORNING FREIHZIT” and CHILDREN SCHOOLS Beginning THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 | until SUNDAY AFTERNOON 27-29 West 115th Street New York City RESTAURANT ard BEER GARDEN ie) For tie Rensonai’s Piicce; Mood and Entertainment of the Best Machines Leave 2700 Frcnx Park East Daily 10 a. m., 3 p. m., 7 p. = FOR INFOR?“ATION CALL: ALGONQUIN 4-9481 ' ¢ 10 DAYS ay Camp Nitgedaiget THE NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS - Starting Sent. 21 to Sept. 30. ROSH HA SHONAH - - - - YOM KIPPUR. SPORT PLAYS EVERY DAY :: DANCES AND CONCERTS EVERY EVENING :: ALL PROFIT FOR THE STRUGGLES OF ~ ‘THE NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION . Specially Reduced Prices for Needle Workers Micke Your Reservations Imunediately in the Office of tie Union — 121 West 28th Strest xf

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