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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1933 i oe 8,000 SILK STRIKERS CHEE AS BROWDER SCORES BOSSES in the fore- le for bread took up other 1) (Continued from Page Statement of Earl B: th § = the present Communist Party e = fer the right hhecessity of comple velt gov- the whole social s way out of the pres: only way to end workers and that the will have to p m ment in t e NRA is trying to rob 1 Secretary of le Workers Union monstration and | picket line will e bosses change their mind attempt to open the mills 1 so far to meet with | of the dye workers, Tetx’ kers Union ke committee. si truce has been. re- rid of this Begin doader of n Snell, a striker from the | Commur st candic e house, and chairman | and butter as well ike Committee of | in solving the bi t and with such a Paterson as one ex: rris Power representing the | Allentown Silk Workers Union, said | e silk strike is solid in Allen-| d Easton and the workers will | n out until victory is won.” He ted out that the U. T. W. must | a united front for an effective | al strike since in Allentown and Painters Begin General Strike : of NEW YORK.—. ee the U. T. W. does not control | ‘all alteration pain and decorators called fo: ‘ morning by the Alteration Pa Brown, chairman of the | Paperhang and Decorators’ Union ration and Paterson organizer N. T. W. U. revealed that Eli and S, Schweitzer of the U. had rejected the proposal of gements Committee for a} front and had refused to send | to demand Tt was voted unani meeting Friday night Hall. Here it improvements w! for the work united a speaker to take part in the demon- stration. was brought out that h the union ga r many s ug- ; ified’ by vonstant|,,rbe U. T. W. organizer, flouting B1eS, Were ted Oe tne conten. | the demand of the rank and file for So ges tiapted wane £ol"| unity, also rejected the proposal for a united front on the picket line Monday morning. | A meeting of the, National Strike mously: An 8-hour day, $1.65 an hour, rec- ognition of the union and shop com-| Committee was held Saturday, and mittees, all hi to be done|the following decisions made: 1) To through the union, and the est call the committee the United Na- lishment of an unemployment tional Strike Committee, representing 30,000 strikers. 2) Elected a re- ions committee, representing all tricts, elected strike committee of- | ficials. 3)Decided to send Ann Burlak cent levy on the employ- gation to visit Painters of Brook and two others to New England offering cooperation with the U. T. W. _“Jake|to spread strike; if they refuse to the Bum,” the of the | issue a strike call in New England in Brotherhood, refv mit them|the name of the United National | to the meeting. meeting | Strike Committee. Her tour starts in| Salem, Mass. 4) Decided to hold a demonstration at Sandy Mill Park, Paterson, Wednesday, with speakers | from all over the strike area. 5) To start relief activities. | The strike committee has issued a} call to action calling on the strikers | to remain solid. | condemned this action of the labor faker. | An organization and s commit tee of 150 workers v Thirty Negro w Har- Jem shop, now a into the union, had already been on a spon- Ke ad 06 A | taneous strike, reported to the union | °\rGay there will be a conference ae ee ee eases it $3.5 (of the Manufacturers, NRA Concilia- tor Moffitt, and representative of the A. F. of L. Dyers Union. Senator} Wagner engineered the meeting. day. The Alteration Painters, Paper- hangers’ and Decorators’ Union calls upon all workers to down tools this Morning regardless of their union af- fillations. Workers are asked to stop promptly at 10 o’clock and march to the strike halls, The Brownsville workers will gather at 1440 East New York Ave. At Coney Island and Brighton Beach Worker Arrested at Anti-Nazi Meet to Face Trial Monday | they will gather af 129 Brighton | Beach Ave. Flatbush workers will NEW YORK.—Fred Geyzer, a assemble at 629 Rogers Ave. The/ 93.year-old woodworker, comes up| Williamsburg strike hall is at 691 | for trial before Judge Novo andj Broadway. The lower Manhattan! jury in the Kings County Court, Workers will march to 90 East 10thj St.; 1472 Boston Road is the meet-| ing place for the Bror workers, On Wednesda at 8 pm. there will be a 2 ss meeting of all the pi Manhattan | Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St DOWNTOWN JADE MOUNTAIN | American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE | Smith and Schermerhorn Streets, this morning on a _ charge of| | “felonious assault” growing out of | his arrest with 13 other workers at the demonstration in Brooklyn on May 15 against Hans Weidemann, Nazi envoy to the Chicago fair. Geyzer will be defended by three International Labor De- fense lawyers and workers are asked to crowd the courtroom which is situated on the sixth floor of the courthouse. Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades Milwaukee | | | | | Film showing of “1905,” at Liberty | Hall, 8th and Walnut Streets, at 7:30 Phone; TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES P. m. Admission 15¢ In advance; 20c| | 1} | at the doo CLASSIFIED A place with atmosphere where all. radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York FURNISHED ROOM, nice airy, 2 windows, | good for one or two, with comrades. Kitchen | vilege. 382 E, 19th St., apartment 16. THE LAST WORD IN FOOD || AT POPULAR PRICES The Daily Worker Advertis- ing Department requests our egos Readers to send in names and SWEET LIFE addresses of druggists, ie. CAFETERIA | cers, ete., who are known sym- | pathizers. Kindly mail to 50 |E. 13th St. | 138 FIFTH AVENUE Bet. 18th and 19th Streets NEW YORK CITY All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA) ——— Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 59 &. 13TH S8T.. WORKERS’ CENTER. | liance with the underworld. They Two Mass Meetings _ to Greet Anti-War Congress on Friday NEW are anticipated at the meetin hich il YORK.—Overflow crowds two big mass pen the U, S. War this Friday tings will be held ple, 130 W. 46th St. | holas Arena, 69 W. Con; i 6éth St. | Speakers will include Henri Bar- | busse, noted French author; Earl | | | Browder, General Secretary of the Communist Party of the U. 8; Prof. Alfons Goldschmidt, Devere Allen, A. J. Muste, William Pick- ens, Harriet Stanton Blatch and William N. Jones of the Baltimore “Afro-American.” | Demand Re-Opening of Todar Antonoff ft Deportation Case! Antonoff to Speak at Send-Off Meet Here Tonight NEW YORK.—A demand that} the Department of Labor reopen the case of Todar Antonoff, mili- tant Detroit worker who has been ordered deported, was made to TODAR ANTONOFF Frances Perkins, Secretary of La- bor, by the International Labor De- | fense. | Affidavits charging illegality of} the proceedings against Antonoff, filed with the Department, have been ignored, it is charged. The I. L. D. called for mass sup- port of this move to prevent the deportation of Antonoff to Bul- garia, in wires, letters, and reso- lutions to Frances Perkins from all sympathetic individuals and organ- izations. Antonoff, active for many years in organizing the auto workers of Detroit, will speak at a mass meeting in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th Street, tonight, at 8 p. m., before leaving for the Soviet Union. NOTICE Beginning this week the Editorial office of the Daily Worker will be open on Saturdays from 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. and on Sundays from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. as well as on other days of the week as heretofore from 7 p. m. to 9 p. m. A com- petent member of the Volunteer Committee will be there to help| workers who have difficulty in formulating letters to the Daily Worker, Help improve the “Daily Worker.”) send in your suggestions and criticism! Let us know what the workers in your shop think about the “Daily.” Gutters of New York By del ‘Daily Worker Volunteers Hold Affair in Drive for “Daily” NEW YORK.—The Daily Worker Volunteers, organized but recently for the purpose of bringing the Daily Worker to large numbers of workers, held their first affair (a movie and dance) last Saturday night at the Workers Center. The affair was a huge success. About 400 people attended. It was reported there are now 150 mem- bers in the Daily Worker Volun- teers, and that their goal was to have one thousand members within a short time. The pictures that were shown— one a Workers’ Film and Photo news reel on the Bonus March, Win All Demands in Metal StrikeVictory Win More Pay Despite NRA Threats NEW YORK.—After a strike last- ing three and a half weeks the work- ers of the Majestic Specialties, Inc., 200 Varick St., won all their de- mands under the able leadership of the Metal Workers’ Industrial Union. The victory which has inspired the metal workers still on strike to con- tinue their struggle, will result in wage increases for all the workers ranging from $2 to $6, a reduction of hours from 48 to 40 a week, time and a half for overtime, recognition of the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union, and division of work during the slow period. In addition the agreement calls for no discrimination against the strikers; The strike victory comes after the NRA through its official, Sinninger, an A. F. of L. man, tried to convince the workers’ delegation to repudiate the Metal Workers’ Union and go back to work on the basis of a 48-hour | week, He threatened to mobilize po- lice and federal soldiers to help the owner break the strike. The strik- ers chose to stick by the union and their demands, |and the other a Charlie Chaplin} | film, were received with much en-| | thusiasm, | | During the intermission, Lahn Adomyan, leader of the Daily} | Worker Chorus, taught those pre- | |sent the new Daily Worker song. | | It is a catchy song to the tune of “One, two, left foot,” and it was| easily learned. Soon, all were} singing it: “Daily Worker, Daily Worker, Long live the Daily Worker, The workers’ fighting voice, Hated by employers, beloved Hey! Spanish Bakers’ | Strike Win Demands in Eight Baker Shops NEW YORK Eight of the largest shops baking Spanish bread | were organized last week as a re- sult of a strike in which nearly all} the demands of the workers were | won. The Spanish and_ Italian | bakers who struck followed the leadership of the Spanish-American | Bakers Industrial Union affiliated) to the Food Workers Industrial Union. Working hours prevailing | at the time of the strike in these bakeries ranged from 60 to 84 and| pay was as low as $12. | Soon after the strike was called the bosses agreed to settle granting wage increases from $4 to $10 for! the bakers; a 48 hour week; rec-| ognition of the union and time and a half for overtime. The drivers who joined the strike received raises amounting to $7 a week. The victory was due to careful preparation prior to the strike. The union is planning to spread its organization to other shops. Oct. Issue of “Metal | Worker” Is Now Out NEW YORK.—The ‘October is- sue of the “Steel and Metal Worker” is off the press and will be reviewed in the Daily Worker Medalie ‘Too Busy’ to See Mark: Shahian Asks Matthews Wit- ness to Appear Today NEW YORK.—U. S. District Attor- ney Harold Z, Medalie was Saturday “too busy with conferences” to see Mark Shahian, eye-witness to the murder on Welfare Island of James Matthews, young North Carolina Ne- gro, after Medalie’s office, through Jacob J. Rosenblum, had asked Sha- hian to appear. | Medalie said, however, that he would question Shahian tomorrow at 3 o'clock in the afternoon on what the latter knows regarding the ac- tivities of a dope ring’ on Welfare Island. Shahian in his affidavit exposing the Matthews _murder—published | originally in the Daily Worker three | weeks ago—told of this narcotic traffic and of its operation with the sanction of high officials on Wel- fare Island. After Clarence Hathaway, Editor| of the Daily Worker, had forwarded | these charges to Medalie’s office, the latter, through Rosenblum, . asked that Shahian appear on Saturday. Shahian was accompanied to Meda- lie’s office by Edward Kuntz, attor- ney for the International Labor De- fense. City Events NEEDLE TRADES FRACTION TONIGHT All party members in the Needle Trades are called to a special general fraction meeting on Monday night, September 25, at 7.30 p.m. at Manhattan Lyceum. Honor German Exile Professor Alfons Goldschmidt, exiled German professor who has recently arrived here to deliver a series of lectures, will be the guest of honor at a dinner given by the American Committee Against Fas- cist Oppression in Germany in the Hotel Lismore Tuesday. The chairman of the dinner will be Professor Robert Moses Lovett. Featured among the speakers for the evening are Oswald Garrison Villard, Heywood Broun, Professor John Dewey, Rabbi Jonah S, Wise, Bishop Francis J. McConnell, Pro- fessor Ira Wile, James Waterman Wise, and Theodore Dreiser. Robert Minor To Speak Robert Minor, Communist can- didate for Mayor, will address a meeting of the I. W. O. Center of 1373 43rd Street, Brooklyn, this evening at 8 p. m. Candidate Minor will discuss the issues of the present. campaign. Several other speakers also will be present to speak in behalf of the Communist candidates for local and city offices. Following the speeches there will be a general discussion in which all workers will participate. Harry Gannes to Speak. Harry Gannes, member of the “Daily Worker” editorial _ staff, will address the Upper Bronx Section of the United Councils of Working Class Women Mon- day evening, at the Workers Center, 2179 White Plains Road, near Pelham Parkway, on “NRA and American Imperialism in Cuba.” The proceeds of this lecture will be contributed to “Daily Worker” $40,000 Fund. | tion write to the business office of the Steel and Metal Worker, Room 238, 80 East 11th St, New within a few days. For informa- York City. | prise that the small colleges allow The Circus Comes to Town By JACK HARDY (Batting for Edward Newhouse) Many years.ago there was football. a sport in this country called Cloaked in its modern vestments as an appendage of those big business and financial institutions called Uni- versities, the annual show got under way last Saturday. Only the small fry, sharpshooting for an extra week’s gate receipts, ventured forth thus early. under wraps for another week. these stalwarts be uncovered* to strut their stuff against their annual array of opening day set-ups. ‘The uninitiated often express sur- their squads to become crippled for weeks, in order to be served up on platters as straw men for the open- ings of big shots. I used to play for one of those universities which took a polishing at the beginning of each year from one of the leaders of the East. During the off-season I once asked our three thousand dollar a year graduate manager why it was that we stepped out of our class, to be made mince-meat of, in what was obviously no contest even before the whistle blew. He smiled at me be- nignly and in an off-moment let the cat out of the bag. “Sonny, the guarantee which we get from these guys for that one, game covers us for the entire season.” And so, you see how intricate the question really is, The Guarantee! It’s that magic symbol which makes me proud of a knee that still bothers me on occasion, although ten years have passed since it went on the ki- bosh in an opening day “spectacle.” Before the big push gets up full steam the “amateur” hired’ hands need the smell of real blood—and heavy dough is laid on the line in order to provide it. Southern Cali- fornia, one of the few big guns to get an early start this year, 1ed two lambs to the altar in a single after- noon. Occidental and Whittier, if you ever heard of either, were the raw meat thrown to the lions in a brilliant double-header. The scores were 39-0 and 59-0, indicating how close the competition really was. It was little Centre College from somewhere in Kentucky which took Harvard over the jumps in a surprise early season upset some eight of nine years ago. Thenceforth, they prompt- ly disappeared from the schedule of the Cambridge sportsmen. * * * jU have to hang around some pre-| paratory school squad for a long} spell to get a real insight into how the Grade A circuits. line up the warriors ‘who attract the $100,000 gates. I don’t think that they throw in the Dean’s office, but that’s about all they omit. I know of a certain left tackle who’s only on the second team but who draws $25 a week for sweeping forty feet of sidewalk each morning. Another whom I know on the varsity of the same squad draws a sum which he won’t reveal for Tolling a tennis court on the campus each morning. And being a first- stringer, he usually very conveniently forgets his appointed task. In pro- fessional baseball the ivory hunters are called scouts. Among the col- legiates they're “loyal alumni.” One of the graduating stars of a) local high school eleven asked me} several years ago to brace a certain leading coach of the middle west, whom I happened to know, “to see Charles Solomon Got Share of Tammany, Republican Graft SP; Candidate for? Mayor Received 2 Refereeships By DAN DAVIS “The City Government is in the hands of a corrupt and incompe- tent political machine. The legis- lative investigation forced by So- cialists and others proved to the hilt the charges made by the So- cialist Party that the City Gov- ernment under Tammany rule reeked with graft, inefficiency and corruption. Public officials were shown to be faithless to their trust, obedient to big business and in al- and the district leaders have filled their tin boxes with millions of doliars while the city has been brought to the verge of bankruptcy. Government has been reduced to a racket.”"—From Socialist Party City Election Platform for 1933. ee ee NEW YORK.—Twelve days before | Charles H. Solomon, lawyer and So- | cialist Party candidate for Mayor of | |New York City, applied for an in- junction against the striking food | workers of Miller’s Market in the | Bronx, which resulted in the murder | of Steve Katovis, the Socialist can- 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. Spond Indian Summer, the Most Real Workers At Beautiful Season of the Year imming, ‘Rowing. Hardball, Amid the Berkehiro Hill Hiking—Warm and Cold Showers VACATION RATE: $13.00 Per Week (incl. Tax) WEEK-END RATES: 1 Day - - $2.45 2 Days - - $4.65 (incl. Tax) Cars leave for Camp from 2700 Bronx Park East every day at 10 A. M. and Saturday 10.4. M, 3 P.M. 7 P.M. Take Lexington Avenue White ard B Stop at ‘Allerton Aveniie Station, he iidaNR Itai Round Trip: To Nitgedaiget To Unity PRESE OOM. JAMES C. Sustion” A Pes 2) i» Fereny Wi eer 4 %o law ano the course and pr: t plaintiff er any other party $2.00 $3.00. | The order, issued by the | Cropsey appointing Charles Solomon as refere peter, NATIONAL TITLE GUARANTY COMPANY, didate received a refereeship from Republican Judge James C. Cropsey at the Brooklyn Supreme Court on January 3, 1930. Five months later, in May, Tam- many Judge John B. Johnson ap- pointed a referee in a similar case, a foreclosure action, in the same court. Again the man appointed was Charles H. Solomon, These two appointments to referee- ships should be of peculiar interest to the workers of New York. One of the most effective methods by which the Democratic and Republican par- ties build up and maintain their ma- chines is to reward their hangers- on, ward-heelers, supporters and al- lies, by giving them appointments as referees, receivers, trustees, etc. The appointments spell fat fees for very little work. The fees are usually shared with the judge who makes the appointment or go as “contribu- tions” to the party treasury, as was revealed in the recent Seabury in- vestigations. The corrupt practice is so slimy that it has even gained the condemnation of the lawyers’ asso- ciations whose own ethical standards are not any too high. The refereeship granted by Re- Publican Judge Cropsey, on Janu- ary 3, 1930, was given to Charles Solomon, the present Socialist candidate. That irsued by Tam- ry @ Speoiml Term of jeurt, held in and f, County Court Hi the Supremes or t of Kings, at the ft ‘SEY place of such » actioe of thie Ceart; $0 this action may become the Republican-injunction Judge t many Judge Johnson on May 28, of the same year also went to Sol- omon. For his “services,” Solomon re- ceived a fee of $125 merely for put- ting his-signature to a few papers. Subsequently, Solomon got several additicnal appointments as referee from Tammany and _ Republican judges. Though the friendship of Johnson and Cropsey with Solomon may at first seem strange to sincere Social- ist workers, an insvection of their injunction records shows they are not “strange bedfellows.” Judge James C. Cropsey has the reputation, and justly so, of being one of the most notorious anti-labor judges in the country. It was a de- cision by Cropsey granting an in- junction against the Shoe Workers Industrial Union in June, 1932, that was used as the very precedent, Sep- tember 6 last, for arresting Robert Minor, Communist candidate for Mayor. Minor had dared to picket against an injunction taken out by the N.R.A. firm, the Progressive Ta- ble Co. in Brooklyn inst the Fur- niture Workers Indusirial Union. The Communist candidate stands trial September 26 on a d:cision handed down by Solomon's friend, Judge Cropsey. The sweeping injuntion against the striking bakery workers in | | Breokjyn and the injunc’’ons is- | sued agairst the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union, were also granted with Cropsey’s deci- sions as the preecdent! The, Social- ist Party, through Norman Taomas, “bemoans” the in‘unctions launched ‘against the workers with the as- sistance of Whalen and the N.R.A, The value of Thomas's words against injunctions is vividly por- trayed by his indorsement of the graft-receiving injunction lawyer, Solomon. y On December 21, 1924, Cropsey is- sued an injunction against the Full | Fashioned Hosiery Workers of Amer- | ica, Local 30, restraining the mem- bers “from interfering with the bus- jiitess and empioyecs” of Julius Kay- ser and Co., of DeKalb Ave., Brook- lyn. Justice Cropsey maintained that the company conduec’ed an open shop and that the union called a sirike when one of its m2 ybers was dis- (charged, The court held that the strikers were seeking to terrorize the workers within the plant and thereby granted the motion of the company’s counsel. ~ On June 6, 1926, Justice Cropsey, sitting in the Appellate Court, wrote an opinion in favor of the City against Frederick Schaefer of Forest Hills, Queens. Schaefer, a caulker, had sued the city for $722.75, as back pay from July’ 1, 1932, to February 19, 1924. The caulker contended that the city had paid him at the rate of $7 a day while the prevailing wage in that trade was $9. Justice Cropsey, in ruling against the worker saved the Tammany administration a to- tal of $250,000 sought in back wages by other workers in the trade. This was the admission of Assistant Cor- poration Counsel George W. Bard. On December 29, 1926, Justice Crop:ey cited in contempt nine work- ers of Local 87, Bakery and Confec- tionery Union, for violatiny an in- | junction against picketing of Browns- | ville steres. On Merch 17,/1926, Su- preme Court Jus‘ice Levis had. en- Joined this ws'on from picl:cu'ng gro- ceries and bel:evics on the grounds | that there was no strike of the em- ployess. Early in. 190. 15 copyists of the Breoliiin Pigh © 5 offie® espochd to Justice Crom-- for an order to compel the city to inevezse their pay | 14036 xem - per Tammany Judge John B. } YiAs <** gyptoman 12712 ouananty couany, nat ‘hye ry be 7 ¥0 @ompute the and mortgage enti oned in the ond to report whether the mortgaged pre: 26 and Sbat the Referee ware bis re or from $3,000 to $3,300 per annum, The workers claimed that this increase was prdmised to them by former Commissioner of Records Frank J. Taylor (now head of the Department of Public Welfare). The Commission- er had made this promise in a let- ter to Register James A. McQuade. Justice Cropsey ruled against the workers, holding ‘thet the letter was not a legal certification of the in- crease, Judge Johnson is a McCooey tool The big time kept its gladiators Not until next Saturday will what the low-down is in the way of ‘athletic scholarships’ out that way.” I have that coach’s reply in front of me now. “Were prohibited by the rules of our conference from making offers to prospective students. But you can assure the young man that employment opportunities in our community are plentiful and he'll have no trouble getting along.” If you've been around and understand the jargon of this tribe you'll reid the above reply something as follows: “We're offering nothing to a bird whom we havyen’t given the once over. Anyway, we're not putting it in writing since that Carnegie expose. Send the baby out next fall and if he can ring the bell for us we'll see that there’s' meat and cake for him.” P, S—He got the job. And so it is that I say, give me the professional game any day. They go through their paces and take home their cash—frankly and above board and without the stench of col- legiate amateur hypocrisy. \ STANDING OF THE CLUBS AMERICAN LEAGUE Club W.L.P.C.) Club W. LL. P.C. Washing. 97 51 .657| Detroit 73 19 A719 New York 88 56 .612| Chicago 65 83.439 Philadel. 76 69 .531 | Boston 60 85 .413 Cleveland 75 74 .802' St. Louis 56 94.969 $e NATIONAL LEAGUE club W.LP.C. Club |W. PC. New York 89 58 .606| Boston 79 70 .880 Pittsburgh 84 66 .561\ Brooklyn 68 9 .487 Chicago 84 68 .552| Philadel. 57 80 .900 St.Louis 81 68 .544| Cincinnatl 58 Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 2nd game AMERICAN LEAGUE (First Game): RHE. Chicago -000 043 301—8 13 0 Cleveland . «.211 020 010—7 BR 1 Hutchinson, Wyatt, Lyons and Sullivan, Berry; Hildebrand, Oon- nally, Hudlin and Pytlak. (Second Game): Chicago -000 013 011-6 @ 1 Cleveland .....012 360 00x—12 16 0 Gregory, Miller, Wyatt and Berry; Lee and Spencer. J (Fitst Game): St. Louis 000 000 OOI—1 2 1 Detroit .. +-000 000 02x—2 11 1 Coffman and Hemsley; Bridges and Hayworth. (Second Game): St. Louis. 200 000 000-2 5 1 Detroit .. -.100 004 00x—5 5 2 Knott, Herbert and Shea; Fischer and Desautels. New York .001 100 501 8 8 5 Boston 301 000 24x—10 10 4 Devens, Ruffing and Rensa; Wei- land, Rhodes, Andrews and Ferrell. Philadelphia ...304 100 201—11 12 1 Washington ....010 200 100— 4 10 2 McKeithan, Grove and Cochrane; Crowder, Prim, Chapman and Bol- ton. NATIONAL LEAGUE (First Game) Boston .... 000 001 100 3—5 13 0 New York 000 000 101 4—6 143 Brandt and Hogan; Bell, Shores and Mancuso. (Second Game) Boston .. «+320 00—5 10 0 New York -601 01-2 6 0 Smith and Spohrer; Spencer and Richards, (Called end 5th, darkness,) (First Game) Philadelphia ....102 100 003— 7 16 4 Brooklyn +-100 460 10x—12 15 0 Rhem, Berly, Ragland, Liska and (Second Game) Philadelphia .........000 11-2 4 0 Brooklyn ............014 0-5 9 2 Outen, (Called end 5th; darkness). Davis; Todd; Benge, Thurston and Lopez. (First. Game) Cincinnati -000 000 100-1 51 Chicago 000 400 21x—7 18 1 Lucas and Lombardi; Root and Hartnett. who has in his few“years on the | (Second Game) bench issued many injunctions | Cincinnati +010 000 000-1 8 4 against workers, and labor unions, | Chicago --600 000 000-0 6 1 though his record does not corhpare with that of Cropsey. Solomon, the injunction-lawyer, offered by the Socialist Pzriy to the working class az their “cham- pion,” as the “fighter” against graft and corruption, the bitter enemy of the Tammany and Republican ma- chines, hes not bos‘tated himself to cshate in the feul graft that comes from the c2p't7Hct power of public plunder in the hands of both mejor parties of the bosses. Tammany ard the Repubjican | Parly rews:d their fonds and is- | sue Injunctions ard pe'ze clubs asain t thelr en-m‘es. warded Solorcn. They re- At & SpeciaY uerm, ver Trot the’ \ Supreme Court, relo in eid for the County of iin t Court House, Plaintiff ation b G7 richie Compleins | mm cen be weld in ‘F te this Court with 2 Johnston favored Salomon with the above refereeship on May 28, 1930. Frey and Manion; Warneke and Hartnett. (First Game) Pittsburgh ......030 000 1004 86 St. Louis .. -000 221 00x—5 14 2” French Swe ic, Hoyt and Grace; Carleton and O'Farrell. Anti-War Congress ‘Gets Endorsement (Continued from Page 1) Professor Alfons Goldschmidt, out- standing German economist, who ; Was exiled by the Nazis; A. J, Muste, of the C. P. L. A.; Emil Rieve, Presi- dent of the American Federation of Hos-ery Workers, an A. F. of L. union with a membership of 75,000; Harriet Stanton Blatch, pacifist; William Pickens, Field Secretary of the Na- tional “Association for the Advance- ment of the Colored People; William ;N. Jones, Baltimore Negro editor; Devere Allen, editor of the World Tomorrow. J. B. Matthews and Reinhold Niebuhr, both of the Fel- lowship of Reconciliation, will preside at the mass meetings in St. Nicholas Arena and in Mecca Temple, respec tively. R Identically the same and same list of speakers will feature. both meetings. EUROPEAN MUNITIONS KING SERIOUSLY TLL. PARIS, Sept. 2:.—Sir Basil Zaha- 1ofi, “the myciery man of Europe” who amassed a tremendous fortune in his many munitions deals and throuch the fomenting of wars, was reported ecriously ill at his summer residence near Paris, *