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wee f t Page Two “ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1933 PATERSON AF.L. DYE UNION PROPOSES 10 SURRENDER DEMANDS FOR RECOGNITION Asks Check-Off; Easton, Pa., Silk Pickets March On Largest Silk Mill to Pull Workers Out On Strike EASTON, Pa., Sept. —Pickets from Easton and Allentown are today marching on Shamokin on the Eagle Mill, the largest silk mill in the world, | essor Ira B. Wile, James Water- | The U.T.W. organizers are trying to keep|man Wise, Theodore Dreiser, and | the mill at work and the United Strike Committee is trying to close it down | employing nearly 1,500 workers. today by sending pickets. PATERSON, N. J.—The mass picket line of the N.T.W.U. and A. F. of L, rank and file stopped the attempt of both the dye and silk manufac- m: s this morn-@— Sat Shoe Strikers Voice turers to open the ing. In Passa: the picket line: Strikers of both the picket line. of solidarity evidenced. The A. F. of L. Dyers’ Local issued a statement this afternoon indicat- ing their 1 u dye strike closed. | Bosses Fail to Appear At “Mediation” Meet NEW YORK.—A delegation of 20 shoe strikers of the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Industrial Union met at the N.R.A. headquarters yesterday at the’ call of Henry W. Wolff, chairman of the Labor Mediation Committee, who had arranged: the meeting for the purpose of “mediating” the strike. The shoe manufacturers openly hi off for the leaders of the U. T. W. The A. F. of L. Dyers’ Local demands are: De- duction of union dues from the em- ployee’s pay envelopes, employment A. F. of new men only through th of L. Union, Shop Labor Com to adjust shops in dispute. John J. Ballam, in behalf of the National Textile Workers’ Union, an- swered this sell-out proposal of the U. T. W. officials as follows: “That the U. T. W. officials have abandoned the demand for wages and better con- ditions and are proposing the check- off for the U, T. W. national offi- | cials in order to send the men back} to work at the same and even lower | wages and worse working conditions,| old time worn threat that they would is evident. Its purpose is also to| move out of town rather than con- eliminate the N. T. W. U. The/ cede to the demands of the Shoe picket lines this morning and the} and Leather Workers’ Industrial mass demonstration Saturday showed | Union. conclusively that the dye strikers follow the general dye strike com- mittee and the National Textile Workers’ Union.” The check-off going through the National U. T. W. office will enable McMahon and ot U. T. W. leaders to sell out the strike, line with the five weeks’ truce engineered by McMahon, which all union members repudiated, and in line with the gen- eral sell-out policy of the U. T. W., declared Ballam. ‘The United National Strike Com- mittee of the silk workers received a wire yesterday from the silk bosses which said that they would deal only with individual ps and individual workers. Ballam plied that the policy of the National Textile Work- ers Union is that all negotiations | munist but that the bosses are mak- with the manufacturers are to be rt | ing him one. “In all the years of carried on through committees elected experience in the trade ions,” he by jhe General Dye Strike Committee | aectared, “I have never known any has already been elected. He also de- | union so sincere and devoted to the clared that’ the proposal of the dye | Working class as this union.” manufacturers to deal only with in- dividual strikers, violates the de- cisions of the N.R.A. Labor Advisory Board and Section 7a. A call to action issued by the Uni- ted .National Strike Committee calls on all strikers to hold their ranks solid, spread the strike and build Tank and file committees in every silk centery and concludes, “One strike committee, one picket line, one united strike.” This call is signed by or- ganizations not present at the first meeting of the strike committee. The United Warpers League of Paterson has now decided to especially take part and elect 2 official delegates to| the strike committees. The Unions of Allentown and Easton, etc. are also taking part. The next meeting of the United National Strike Com- mittee takes place Thursday afte: moon in Easton at 2 p.m. at Bakers Hall. mediator and refused to send their representatives. strikers accept an agreement in which all demands are granted except rec- ognition of the union, the latter de- mand to be left to the N.R.A. in | Washington to determine. Fred Bie- denkapp, secretary of the union, left the reply to the members of the de- | legation. One by one they emphatic- ally declared their support and loyal- | ty of the Shoe and Leather Workers’ | Industrial Union. | “When we struck, we made our | choice from among the shoe unions in the city and we chose the In- dustrial Union and its leadership un- said the chairman of the general strike committee of the I. Miller Co. Frank Costello, another and Shoe Union. Louis Boudin, at- torney for the Industrial Union, de- clared that Whalen’s statement in the press has been detrimental to the workers and that he encouraged the |shoe manufacturers to take out in- junctions when he publicly declared that recognition of the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union would be treason to the government. The delegates of the Boot and Shoe Union and the National Shoe Union, whom Biedenkapp exposed as repre- ing altogether no more than 250 shoe workers, left the conference de- claring they had nothing to say. Wolff declared that he would call on the shoe manufacturers to meet in conference again. He admitted that the sentiment of the strikers was for the industrial union, | Lutins Hall, Front and South Park * . * streets. Several strikers and John A general dye ‘strike relief com-| Ballam will speak. mittee has been set up at 222 Pater-| Striker John Lejeun is at the St. son Street and calls all o1 ations} Joseph Hospital in a serious condi- to speed funds for relief. Sandwiches} tion following the beating up which and coffee were served to the strik-| he received Friday night when the ers by this committee today at all| police carried out a brutal attack on halls after the picket lines. The} the picket line. His hip is in bad W.LR. is cooperating with this com-| shape, his chest is badly beaten and mittee. |he is spitting blood. The strikers On Wednesday, September 27, at| voted at the mass meeting last night Blizabeth, New Jersey, there will be| to send him flowers, and the LL.D. is ™ Mass meeting for strikers relief at taking up this case. APEX CAFETERIA 827 Broadway, Between 12th and 13th Streets All Comrades Should Patronize This FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION SHOP Take Advantage of the Last Week in CAMP UNITY WINGDALE, N. Y. COMMUNIST PARTY MONTH Spend Indian Summer, the Most A Real Workers Atmosphere, Beautiful Season of the Year Swimming, Rowing, Handball, Amid the Berkshire Hills Hiking—Warm and Cold Showers VACATION RATE: $13.00 Per Week (incl. Tax) WEEK-END RATES: 1 Day - - $2.45 2 Days - - $4.65 (incl. Tax) Oars leave for Camp from 2700 Bronx Park East every day at 10 A. M. and Saturday 10. A.M, 3 P.M, 7 P.M. Take Lexington Avenue White Plat Stop at Allerton Avenue Station. rear ade sad on $2.00 Round Trip: To Nitgedaiget - To Unity $3.00 ————— 200 West 135th Street HARLEM WORKERS’ SCHOOL New York Classes in— LAST WEEK OF REGISTRATION Principles of the Class Struggle—Williana J. Burroughs, and A. Markoff. Cerrent Problems of the Negro Liberation Movement— James W. Ford. oer mnggi Traditions of the Negro People—James en, Organization Principles—Sidney Bloomfield, English—Grace Lamb. All the delegates attacked the Boot | | Dinner Tonight for | Prof. Goldschmidt, | E: By Nazis NEW YORK, N. Y.—Professor Robert Morse Lovett will act as |chariman of a dinner in honor of | Professor Alfons Goldschmidt, ex- iled German professor who recently arrived to deliver a series of lec- tures. The dinner will be held tonight at the Hotel Lismore, at 253 W. 73rd St. Speakers will be Oswald |Garrison Villard, Frank P. Walsh, | Heywood Broun, Professor John Dewey, Rabbi Jonah B. Wise, Bishop Francis J. McConnell, Prof- others. The dinner is held under the lauspices of the American Com- | mittee Against Fascist Oppression |in German ‘A. BL. Shoe Union Loyalty to Union At Heads Seek to Break : the NRA Conference The Brockton Strike | Brotherhood Leaders Discourage Real Strike BROCKTON, Mass., Sept. 25.—The |strike of the Brockton shoe workers involving nearly 8,000 continues strong after the unanimous decision of the strikers to reject the proposals of the N.R.A. National Labor Advis- ory Board. | The board's decision would have flouted the invitation of the N.R.A.! forced the strikers back to their jobs | | with the check-off of the 35 cents ‘They declared that| weekly dues continued and held in} they would have nothing to do with| escrow until a final decision is made | a Communist Union, and made the|@s to which union the workers shall | belong. A decision of the National | Labor Advisory Board is expected | within a few days. Meanwhile the local boss press is preparing the sentiment of the strik- Shoe Union. A local paper devotes a | whole page of a recent issue to the | offer submitted by the Boot and Shoe | Union to the N.R.A. A. F. of L. offi- cials of the Boot and Shoe Union are assisting the shoe manufacturers to recruit scabs and break the strike in | several shops which are trying to op- |erate. But the strikers are determined to rid themselves of the corrupt offi- cials and the Boot and Shoe Union. |They support the Brotherhood, a |mewly formed organization controlled | by a local politician, Goodwin, who is chiefly interested in gaining recog- nition of the union. | Great militancy prevails among the strikers, who want to develop a real struggle but are being held back delegate, declared he was not a Com-/by the Brotherhood officials. Thus | |far no demands have been raised in | the strike dealing with the improve- ment of the workers’ conditions, and mass picketing is discouraged. What- jever picketing is carried on is called | “observing,” since the word “picket- ing” is taboo. In a letter to the manufacturers, Brotherhood officials declare that they have organized their own union and will not accept dictation or in- terference from the manufacturers regarding the union they wish to | join. The letter appeals to the manu- |facturers for recognition, ;them that the workers will be “faith- ful, loyal employees.” “You are the only ones who can settle it,” the offi- |cials of the Brotherhood declare. The | strikers recognize, however, that their |Solidarity and continued struggle will |settle the strike and are determined jto continue the strike to rid them- | selves of the A. F. of L. Pressure of the rank and file forced the Brotherhood to establish a union |relief committee of 100 members last | week, and the entire city is to be can- | vassed by committees of workers for relief supplies. | A Brooklyn shoe manufacturer is |said to have approached Edward Mc- Grady, A. F. of L. official at the N.R.A., offering to take the Brockton work in his plant and for the work- ers in Brooklyn to scab on the Brock- ton shoe strikers. Brooklyn shoe workers are urged to be on guard against this. Postpone Terzani | Trial to Nov. 27th | NEW YORK.—The trial of Athos Terzani, accused of killing his anti- Fascist comrade, Anthony Fierro, in |a fight which broke up a meeting of the Fascist Khaki Shirts of America in Astoria, was set for Nov. 27 yes- terday by Judge Thomas Kadien of Queens County. Originally the trial was scheduled to start today, but postponement was asked by the de- \fense to gather all the legal proof of its contention that a Khaki Shirts member was the actual Slayer. The new date had been agreed upon by Assistant District Attorney Joseph Loscalzo and Harry Sacher, one of the seven attorneys for the united front Terzani Defense Com- mittee, and Judge Kadien approved |the choice without hearing argu- ; ment. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn ICKENS 2-3012 10 A.M., 1-8, 6-8 P.M. Intern’] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 18TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of WILLIAM BELL Optometrist REGISTER NOW! For Information Call Algonquin 4-1199 | = 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave. N. Y. ©. Phone: Tompkins Square 6-8237, assuring | Gutters of New York 202352 | NATURE of CRIME State Magistrate’s convention. “Jobless thousands are a growing menace and should be recorded and fingerprinted.”—Justice Neal Yehle at N. Y. By del 20002 Strike Committe to do away with the secrecy sur- | ;Tounding the negotiations between the A. F, of L. officials and the em- ployers and with the one-man leader- ship of the strike. | The demands raised by the com-| mittee include the abolition of the | speed-up, job control, the elimination of poisonous materials, the establish- |ment of an unemployment insurance fund financed by the employers, and | the abolition of shop stewards to be | replaced by elected shop and job | committees. | The rank and file committee will mobilize the painters to broaden the strike committee, develop real mass | picketing and conduct an organiza- | tion campaign among the painters. | ‘They will demand referendum vote on | the strike settlement. 1,000 Painters Answer Strike Call | NEW YORK.—The general strike | call issued by the Alteration Painters Union met with consider- able response today when 1,000 | | painters in 250 shops registered at | |the strike halls, Hundreds of non-! union workers were among those | who registered, | On the first day of the strike | |16 pickets were arrested but were |released as a result of efforts by jthe International Labor Defense. | More scitlements were handled | today by the settlement committee which meets at 80 E. 11th St., room 230. Downtown strike head- quarters are at Manhattan Lyceum, | Torgler, in Court, Proclaims Innocence | (Continued from Page One) protested that the official court in- terpreter was garbling her testimony. An inkling into the mood of the Nazi judge is found in the fact that when an affectionate smile passed between the witness and her brother, whom she had not seen for a long time, the judge admonished her to “take the trial more seriously.” Arthur Garfield Hays, New York { attorney who is a spectator at the trial on behalf of the International Commission of Jurists which just ad- journed its sessions in London, to-/ day denied a report that he would take the stand to testify in the trial. | Hays said that he had declined the offer of Dr. Sack, lawyer appointed |by the Nazis to “defend” Torgler, to | take the stand, inasmuch as his evi- dence would “only be hearsay.” As @ matter of fact, “hearsay evidence” | 4s admissable according to German law, and should Hays take the stand he might have, attempted to present. the findings of the International Commission which completely ab- solved the Communists of respon- sibility for the Reichstag fire, and charged the Nazis with the crime. Nazi Newspapers Yell for Blood Van der Lubbe was recalled to the stand today by the prosecution in an effort to establish his where- abouts in Berlin just prior to the fire, His demeanor was the same as on previous occasions when he mumbled his answers in a confused, contradictory way. The Nazi tool first affirmed and then denied his reply when the judge asked him whether he had said that “the masses in Germany must be stirred up by fires in public build- ings.” Nazi newspapers continued to yell for the blood of the Commu- nist defendants, the “Leipziger Neueste Nachrichten” yesterday declaring—regarding George Dimi- troff—that “It is immaterial what role he played in the Reichstag a AFL Painters Urge Rank Wolff made the proposal that the/ers for the return of the Boot “= and F ile Control of Strik Demand an End to Secrecy in Negotiations | Between Bosses and A.F.L., a Broad ‘Underwear | was adjourned with no vote taken. ‘adjourned with the strikers united to 'In Hearing of Worker ' Tuesday, City Events Laundry Code. A series of open air forums is being held by the Laundry Workers Industrial Union on the proposed laundry workers’ code. These meet- ings will be held at 140th St. and Lenox Ave. on Tuesday nights, at 114th St. and Fifth Ave. on Wed- nesday nights and at 188rd St. and Lenox Ave. on Friday nights. Fiche Sainte English Workers’ Club. A general membership meeting of all members of the English workers clubs will be held tomor- row at 7:30 p.m. at 126 University Place. pA Cipk sae Pocket Makers’ Meeting. A mass meeting of the pocket makers will be held at 5 p.m. at | Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St, and| Irving Pl., today. ae) he Open Forum. NEW YORK, N. Y¥.—All proceeds of the Open Forum of the East Side Workers’ Club, at 165 East Broadway, will go to the Daily Worker, on Wed- nesday, Sept. 27. The speakers will be John Adams, who will speak on the Struggle | Against the N. R. A. Questions and | Discussion will be encouraged. Ad- mission only 10c, * * * Mass Organizations. Members of the Daily Worker Volunteers are visiting various lan- | guage and cultural organizations | within New York City and vicinity | for the purpose of securing sup- port for the Daily Worker drive. | All organizations are requested to} give these volunteers the floor and full cooperation necessary. eer par T. U. U. C. Meets A meeting of the Trade Union Unity Council will be held on ‘Thursday night, Sept. 28, at 37 E. 13th St. at 7: p.m. All Council e and Picketing | | statement calling on the A. F. of L. painters on strike to bend all energies to win the strike with resulting real gains for the mcr was called by the District Council without consulting the workers, The rank and file committee urges the painters to fight for ( e demand $1.65 an hour raised by the officials, © = | NEW YORK.—The painters’ rank and file committee today issued | chip. The strike Dubinsky Railroads Another Sell-Out of Workers : NEW YORK.—The deal negotiated | by Mr. Dubinsky of the International | Ladies’ Garment Workers Union and | the whitegoods manufacturers | through the N.R.A., was read to the; strikers yesterday at strike meetings at Beethoven, Arlington and Webster halls. TThe terms of the settlement grant far less to the workers than the de- mands for which they struck, Not only are the wage scales agreed to lower than the demands raised, but the work is classified into cheaper and higher grades allowing a 15 per cent reduction to those workers em- ployed on cheaper grades of work. For example, the minimum wage of $26 for operators, for which the strik- ers fought, was reduced to $21 by the agreement. The working week is to be 374% hours instead of the 35 hours demanded. The workers showed bitter resent- ment when they heard the terms of the settlement. One worker was se- verely beaten when she rose from the floor to question the decision. Af- ter raising the “red scare” and in- timidating the workers with the threat of a long strike, the meeting At a meeting held by the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, many workers of Local 62 came to discuss the strike settlement. More than 1,000 strikers present rejected the settlement and voted to continue the strike. Members of Local 62 de- | clared they would fight to have the | agreement withdrawn. The meeting continue struggle. Postponement Ordered Beaten by Harlem Cop A postponement until Thursday morning was ordered yesterday in the trial of, Isidore Dorfman, young worker who was beaten and arrested on a charge of assault by. Patrol- man William Robinson in front of the Abyssinia Baptist Church, 'W. 128th St,, last week during a pi test meeting against the murder of James Matthews on Welfare Island. The trial» will take place in Wash- ington Heights Magistrate's Court, 151st St. and Convent Ave. Meanwhile, both the League of| Struggle for Negro Rights and the} Young Communist League in Upper Harlem have announced mass meet- ings protesting against the attack| on Dorfman and others, and de-| manding his immediate release. The L. 8. N. R. meeting will take place tomorrow evening at Lafayette Hall, 165 W. 1311st St. and the Young Communist League meeting will be at St. Luke's Hell, 125 W. 130th St., on Thursday evening, Storm Destroys Tampico. MEXICO CITY, Sept. 25.—Proba- bly the worst hurricane ever to strike Tampico today destroyed the greater part of the town. Many wore reported dead. Martial law was declared in the city. fire. This much has been proved, that Dimiiroff is a moral incen- diary of gizantic proportions.” The court adjourned until 1 am. delegates must Be present. Sa pos Anti-Injunction Demonstration The Trade Union Unity Council! urges all its affiliated unions to mobilize for a special picketing dem-| onstration at 5 p. m. today against injunctions and for the right to be- long to a union of their own choice. | The workers will gather at 10th St.) and Broadway. More Workers Join Ranks of Striking Custom Tailors Philadelphia Tailors Expected Out Today NEW YORK.— Despite false ru- mors circulated by the National Mer- chant Tailors’ Association that the strike has. been settled, the 2,700 cus- | tom tailors who went out on strike last week under the leadership of the Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- trial Union are holding their ranks intact. Today 650 tailors in Philadelphia | are expected to join the strike and tailors in other cities are planning to | walk out in the struggle for better conditions, After arranging an appointment with the NRA last Friday to take up the question of settling the strike, the striking tailors arrived at NRA headquarters and were met by a@ squad of police who ushered them out quickly. This attempt to intimi- date the tailors did not have the de-| | sired effect. They are insisting on) their right to be heard and will de- mand another appointment. Despite all attempts to recruit scabs the strike has practically tied up the high grade shops in the in- | dustry in New York City. Untermyer Wants 10 Per Cent Wage Cut, More Taxes NEW YORK, Sept. 25.—In a radio address which was a subtle defense of Tammany Hall in the coming elec- tions, Samuel Untermyer openly hinted that another 10 per cent wage cut is in store for all city civil service employees. This step was defended by Unter- myer on th that the neces- sity of paving the Rockefeller-Mor- gan banks their huge loans de- manded it. Untermyer is a member of the Tammany Board of Strategy. Untermyer declared that the cut would apply only to salaries above $3,000 a year. Similar promises were made before the last wage cuts handed down by the city, In his radio speech, Untermyer was forced to admit the complete failure of his proposed tax on Wall Street exchenge transactions. He predicted that in a@dition to the in- creased water toxes, (°° otty will soon levy taxes on signs, fire incpee~ tion, ete. He made an indirect election plea for Tammany by warning egainst in mid-stream.” Minor and Brrroughs Fight for Expelled ‘ity College Boys NEW YORK, Sept, 25,—To help in the fight for the reinstatement of the 21 expelled City College stu- dents, Robert Minor and Williana Burroughs, candidates respectively for Mayor and Comptroller of New York, will lead a demonstration of 17 organizations in a march from Washington Square to City Hall on Saturday, Oct. 7. The students, who are determined to get back, have been holding meetings on and around the college campus despite warnings of Dean Gottschall, published in the Faculty Bulletin, An entire new set of rules has been adopted to suppress the ac- tivities of the three suspended clubs —the Social Problems, Liberal and Student Forum clubs, i ‘ i} | | looking New York’s East River. | does it in an hour. His offices nine holes, so Harry has to be on hand. That means a six- o'clock train. Mr. Galvin puffs, wheezes and dubs but keeps miraculously on the fair- way, He’s taciturn, and efficient in his methods if not his golf. He has never broken 100. Harry Wickens has done 74 and conststently hovers about 80. Harry eats his breakfast in the servants’ hall and helps the gardener with chores until Mrs. Theodore Gal- vin tees off. For her Harry has to carry a bag with enough equipment to go around a National Open field. “Jones used this putter in the Brit- ish Amateur three years ago,” she in- forms her guest about the fourth hole, “He presented me with it at Inverness.” Harry has been with the family a year, but Mrs, Galvin still doesn’t know his name. She calls him “boy” and “I say, there.” Mrs. Galvin ‘doesn’t shoot out of sand traps. You have to bring out the ball. Also, she skips the fifth and seventh holes be- cause of the woods. At that, can’t crack 100. Neither, for that matter, can Miss Evelyn Galvin, who comes on after Mr. Kenneth’s ball landed in “Sara-} zen Pond” she bet a five-spot he could find it. Harry stripped to the; waist and dove in but he couldn't locate the ball, so under water he| fished one out of his pocket and came up with it. At the lockers Miss Eve- lyn gave him the five-spot, but Mrs. Galvin found out and forbade fur-| ther tipping on the principle that the boy will expect it and his service will) suffer. Some of the men still slip| him dollar bills though. PS and all, Harry Wickens aver- ages about fourteen dollars week- ly, but five of this goes for carfare and only nine is left for the family. Harry has four younger brothers still in elementary school, a father and mother. The old man, who is older than he should be for five youngsters like that, hesn’t worked for a year and a half. He used to help out in a vegetable store that went under. Harry's salary disqualifies the fam- ily from relief. Together with about three hundred other families in the area which is to be razed for the Fred F. French company’s Knicker- bocker Village development, they were served with a dispossess notice last spring, but the eviction didn’t go through because of the organized protest. It is tragic for Harry to return to this verminous apartment after aj day at the Galvins’. He thought of running away, but you can’t pull out | just like that. As it is, some of the boys got into trouble for stealing pears off a push cart. Mrs. Wickens has beer! frantic for months, and the Settlement people may send her up for an examination. Harry himself doesn’t think there is anything wrong with his mother. All she needs is three squares a day, he says. They only have two beds and a cot in the place. Harry sleeps on a bed with the two youngest. There is no way you can exterminate the bedbugs. Harry’s caddy clothes, laid on a chair, are the only presentable fea- Harlem Election Rally, Expected to Attract Many Outside Workers | NEW YORK.—An unusual election rally, through which many new work- ers are expected to be drawn into the revolutionary movement, has been arranged by the Harlem Section of the Communist Party for this Sat- urday evening, Sept. 30, at Rockland Palace, 15th St. and Eighth Ave. Speakers at the rally will be: Rob- ert Minor, the Communist Party’s fighting candidate for Mayor; James W. Ford, member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party and candidate for Alderman in the 2ist District, Harlem; William L. Patterson, National Secretary of the International Labor Defense and can- didate for Alderman in the 19th Dis- trict of Harlem, and Williana Bur- roughs, Communist candidate for Co=ntroler. * A splendid program arranged for the evening incluc'es © ono-act com- edy .called “The New Deai” by the Workers’ Labovatory Theatre, the “Liberator” Chorus, and Haricm String Ensemble, both directed by Samuel Heyward. Primitive African folk dances will be presented by Assadata Dafora Horton, West Afri- can composer, and his group. Jua- nita Carter Lewis, distinguished ar- tist, and the Workers International Relief Band will entertain at the rally and the famous Liberator Dance Orchestra will play until four in the morning, according to the arrange- ments committee. ————— The Daily Worker Advertis- | Readers to send in names and addresses of druggists, gro- cers, elc., who are known sym- E, 13th St. A she} pathizers, Kindly .mail to 50) Caddy ARRY WICKENS caddies on the private golf course ‘t Mr. Theodore Galvin at Forest Hills, Long Island. He lives on Henry Street in the slum sector of Knickerbocker Village over- It’s a two-hour ride. Mr. Galvin himself commutes each day, but the Cadillac are on lower Broadway, not far from Harry’s home. He’s a lawyer and very systematic. Each day before breakfast he shoots® ture of the dismal, bare rooms. | Pan aaa | ALL the time Harry had been work ing for the Galvins he never had a chance to play an uninterrupted round of 18 holes. He Has never yét got around to playing in a caddy tournament although that’s one of his ambitions. Cyril Tolley has | watched him putting and said he | had a remarkable touch and could certainly be developed. Harry Wickens knows the stories of Billy Burke, Johnny Goodman and Johnny Revolta, the Menominee boy who rode the rods to the Florida Open and became an overnight sen- sation. He has tried to get a job at a club but there was nothing doing. “IT wish I had an afternoon off to go around that course by myself and really keep score,” he says. “I’m sure I could equal that 74.” STANDING OF THE CLUBS AMERICAN LEAGUE Club WLLL. PC.) Club W. L. P.c Washington 97 51 655 | Detroit 73 79 480 New York 88 56 611| Chicago 65 83 439 Phillies ‘TT 68 531 | Boston 60 85 414 Cleveland 75 74 602! St. Louis 55 94 369 No games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE é Club W.L.P.C., Club W.L.P.C. lunch as a rule. But she doesn’t keep! new York 89 58 605 | Boston 79 70 530 score. When there are men in her'| Pittsburgh Re bed eg ¢ “ PH i i =| Chicago 84 68 es 8 foursome she frolics, tries hand-| o' Touis 82 69543 |3incinnatt 58 92 387 springs and trick shots. She ap-| ‘Brooklyn at Philadelphia, proves highly of Harry, whose repu-| Other clubs not scheduled. tation as a retriever she helped to eerie make proverbial. NATIONAL LEAGUE She’s all for Harry. Once when R. H. E. Pittsburgh . -000 010 200—3 10 0 St. Louis ........010 111 20x—6 14 0 Smith, French, Swift and Grace, Finney; Walker and O'Farrell. Brooklyn -+-020 020 201—7 16 2 Philadelphia ....000 100 100-2 7 2 Beck and Lopez; Hansen, A. Moore and Davis. eee INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE R, H. E. Buffalo ... -200 001 010-4 8 2 Columbus -001 500 02x—8 10 1 | Wilson, Gould and Crouse; Dean, Winford and Delancey, Games Today. National League. Boston at New York. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. (Only games scheduled.) Srey ae | American League. (No games scheduled.) U. SIs Foced Reverse Decision (Continued from Page 1) Hosiery Workers, an A. F. of L. union with a membership of 175,000; J. B. Matthews and Reinhold Niebuhr, both of the Fellowship of Reconcilia- tion; Devere Alien, editor of the World Tomorrow; William Pickens, field secretary of the N.A.A.C.P., and others, Additional Delegates Among the organizations electing delegates to the anti-war Congress today are included: Bakers and Con- fectionery Workers International Union, Local No. 167, A. F. of L., of Newark, N. J.; Workmen's Circle, Branch No. 546, Ridgewood, N.¥.; Women’s Unemployed Council, Brooklyn, N. ¥.; Anti-Fascist Action Committee, of Philadelphia, Pa.; Lo- cal No. 10, Workers’ Committee on Unemployment, New York City, hae aia Chicago, Detroit Rallies CHICAGO, Sept. 25—A monster rally Wednesday evening, to send off the delegates by Chicago workers to the United States Congress Against War, will take the form of a demon- stration against United States inter- vention in Cuba, and in support of |the revolutionary Cuban workers. ‘Thousands of workers are expected to fill Temple Hall, Van Buren and Marshfield Ave, Ce We DETROIT.—A mass meeting to’ send off Detroit delegates to the Anti-War Conference, and as a pro- test meeting against United States in- tervention in Cuba, is called for Wednesday, September 27, at 7 p.m,, in Grand Circus Park. vit I. J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 206 SUTTER AVE. Phone: Dickens Night Phone: 6-53 For International Workers Order (Brooklyn) WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Ngee Hopkinson Ave. kiyn, N, ¥. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE BENSONHURST WORKERS Patronize GORGEOU'S CAFETERIA 2211 86th Street ing Department requests our Near Bay Parkway Fresh Food at Proletari sburgh Comr: ‘Welcome De Luxe ' Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave. —_ Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIORT i