The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 4, 1933, Page 2

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_Mother Bl Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1938 Toilers Cheer Mann; British Leader Here for Anti-War Fight Protests Defeat At- tempt of Labor Dep’t to Bar Him (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Party, ar Communis and now the far Manr Americ congres in the 2 tional of Labor Mann la Daily Worker As the wo at the pier, hands in an latter was p to the office inst W: Mayor O (Continued from Page 1) met by a squad of they were jor part of the delegation d to he delegation of Negro workers waiting on the steps attracted so much attention that on second thought, or perhaps third or fourth, Mayor O’Brien instructed the cops to bring the entire delegation into his office where he interviewed th committee of three spoke on [. L. D. Asks New Trial for Negro Boy in Charlotte : New Evidence Shows ’Brien Gets Protest on Lynch Frenzy Against Negroes the entire delegation representing} twenty-five fraternal organizations, | church organizations, unions, and clubs in Harlem. They demanded immediate action against lynch incitement stories | which, inspired by police, have been rampant in the press. They also de- manded that the M: r, as the i administrative officer of issue a statement against, and halt these provocations, and that he make public the records in the Matthews case; that the Mayor give immediate freedom to Isadore Dorfman, arrested and clubbed for defending a Negro worker, and re- Icase all other framed prisoners; that there be no Tammany white- wash of Welfare Island, but a pub- lic investigation of the Matthews murder and conditions in Welfare | Island; and that the right to free speech assemblage, and petition be enforced. The Mayor said that he could do nothing about these demands, but that he would arrange a meeting with | Police Comm: oner Bolan who was | in charge today at 10 o’clock. Mayor O’Brien further stated that it hasn't been proven that there is a lynch ter-| r. (In i of the many facts ‘ought to light by the committee.) | He also “promised to investigate” the case of Dorfman and the lynch- | publicity in the capitalist press. “In| regard to the Matthews case, I'll have | Gutters of New York ce “HE NAA WE'RE WORKIN’ HARDER NO M&KIN' Less understanding on the part of Director, H. J. Kenner. By del FltHneast / AT LAST NOu'RE BEGINNING To CET THE IDEA | “Most of the 10,468 complaints charging failure to live up to N..A. agreements by employers, are due, to mis- jing been placed in the hands of a | upon to come across, so much so thet | complainants.”—N. Y. N.R.A. Abandon 30 Hour Demand in Ladies’ Tailors’ Strike ILGW Manager in a Secret Session With N.R.A. NEW YORK.—About 1,500 workers are involved in the general strike of ladies’ tailors, dressmakers and alter- ation workers called by Local 38 of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union. The strike enters its | second week with many shops lost | in the 1930 strike participating in the | walk-out, | Early in the strike the officials of | |the LL.G.W. showed their readiness |to abandon the demand for a 30-| hour week for which the strike was | |called, and now call for a 35-hour | |week, The demand for a 30-hour) week along with demands for in-| creases of 20 per cent in wages and | |an unemployment insurance fund had | been voted and approved by the) | members. . | During the last week the strike has |been without any ranly and file lead- | ership, the conduct of the strike hav- | | | |small committee appointed by Green- | burg, the local’s manager, A gen-| eral strike committee, which is non- | Hubbel Pitches 4-2 Victory (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ' who were afterward reported hurt, & stampeding multitude of 52,000 base- ball-drunk, statistics-intoxicated fans crashed into the grandstands and the sunny bleachers to watch their fa- vorite mow down the American Leag- uers, inning after inning, operating | flawlessly, backed by Terry's brilliant defense work and Mel Ott’s spectac- ular hitting. | Hubbell's sterling performance was climaxed by a genuine, copyrighted World Series ninth inning, when Washinton filled the bases with none cut and gave the Giant ace the big moment, when he rallied under fire, allowing Manush to score cn an ‘out, fanning Bluege and forcing Seweli to | ground out. The “team that would be lucky to finish sixth” gave an inspired ex- hibition against the supposedly in- vincible Washington sluggers. Hub- bell was almost universally counted | | Cronin started Wally Stewart. in- stead of the more consistent Crowder | or Whitehill. But it was the business- second and participated in the squelched ninth-inning rally, Mel’s homer was the only extra- base hit of the game, which saw only two bases on balls, which were given by Hubbell successively in the eighth, Un to the jittery ninth, the play was a bit anti-climatic to the pre-game ement, The. 15,000 who stood in line for the 4,100 bleacher seats evolted and, sweeping with them the as cf attendants, mounted po- tice and reserves, staged a melee in which scores were knocked uncon- scious and kicked around, and hun- it r shreds. One girl reported a broken wrist she sustained when a cop swung her out of his way. * INSIDE, the crowd never got settled, It seethed in a mad, cheering ex- citement while Hubbell struck out the first three batters to face him and worked itself into fever pitch when Ott got off his homer. There wes a strange atmospheric ten~’ after that, but little noise. The Sen- ator flurry in the eighth aroused them and prepared for the climax eee |dreds had their clothing torn into { Frame-Up Character like, unobtrusive farmer Boy Wonder, | which turned out to be all Hubbell. a in celebrating the Pafis Commune of employed la: mass protest months in the after Brixton Jail De mic, Of medium | with ‘ay joviality and anim pression of yea: ties among the about eagerly as he s to ques- about 20 year: weren't on 2 speakin7 ‘Mann was asked. “Yes, in 1913, I came here f years ago—in 1883. old at the time and worked in - lyn for six months as a machinist for Havemeyer and Elder, sugar re- fore that, too. first time 50 lyn Bridge w part in the celebration T 1913 Mann to the United States again e at the invi- tation of “Ju a labor published in Pittsburgh. William Z. Foster, now a leader of the Com- munist Party, and Bill Haywood helped arrange nearly 70 meetings in various parts of the country for him, Mann said. Born in Warwickshire, England, in 1856, Mann went to work in the coal Pits at the age of nine, after two and one-half years of schooling. Later he ‘was apprenticed to a firm in Birming- ham, and learned the trade of ma- chinist, or engineer, as it is called in Britain. Tells of Many Struggles Mann came to the forefront as a leader of unusual organizational ability in the British dSckworkers’ strike in 1889, and from that time on he took an active and leading part in scores of labor struggles not only in England but in other countries as well. | This strike, Mann said, involved not | only the ports of Great Britain, but | affected the ports of the entire world. | , Twice the British veteran leader | Went to South Africa at the call of | the gold miners who asked his aid} in their struggles. The first time was | in 1910, and ihe second time in 1922. | On each occasion Mann remained six | months, ig the gold miners the is years of experience as! ® fighting labor organizer. | Since 1927, Mann has visited the | Soviet Union six times, once—in 1927 | when he was on his way to China. | “The British working class has time} and again shown the greatest soli-| darity with the Soviet Union,” Mann said, “This is seen whenever'the Eng- lish imperialists try to terminate re-| lations with the U.S.SR.” eet “The Example of the U.S.S.R.” | Asked about the influence upon him ef the Bolshevik Revolution, Mann | said that “from the very first days I could see that they were furnish- img 2n example for the workers of Britain as weill’as the rest of the world.” Describing his political develop- ment, Mann asserted that “as far back as 1886, I took an active part | 1371, and have continued to partici- pate in the anniversary celebrations | down to the present time. I gladly} accepted the name of Communist} from the date of my first reading of | the Communist Manifesto, written by Marx and Engels.” “In 1927,” Mann told the writer, “I ‘went through the Soviet Union on my way to China, before the Kuomin- tang had betrayed the Chinese work- | ers and peasants to the imperialists.” With. Browder in China Smilingly pointing to Earl Brow. der, who sat beside him, Mann said “I_spent a good deal of the six months in China with Earl, and many meetings we both addressed from the same platform. “During the six months I spent in China, I addressed 188 meetings. Many of them had audiences as large as 100,000 and in Hankow, on May Day, 1927, I spoke to at least 150,000 Workers and peasants.” With misery increasing among Bri- fain’s 3,000,000 unemployed, the Na- tional Unemployed Workers Move- ment was finding increasing support, Mann reported. *“With a working population of 14,- 000,000” the veteran leader stated, 3,000,000 unemployed creates quite a problem, and the government is find- 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 STH FLOOR AM Work Done Under Personal Dr. C. Weissman Care of die on »| burg Cour paper |. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY | of Trial CHARLOTTE, N. C.—A motion for trial for John Lewis Edwards, 18-year old Negro boy sentenced to a framed charge of murder was made by Attorneys Conrad O. Pearson and Cecil B. McCoy, repre- senting the International Labor De- fense. Judge W. F. Harding of the Mecklen- y Supreme Court and told of new evidence proving that the charges on which the boy was con- victed are untrue. Judge Harding a new has tha cords and affidavits before he can give an answer.” The judge has the aid of the Charlotte News, which is doing its best to minimize the import- ance of the and dampen the mass defense that has been built up. J, L. Edwards is one of a group of 70 Negro youths that were picked up by local police and by brutal third- degree methods were forced to “con- ; fessing” guilt of murder. The motion was made before; attempted to| “stall off” the appeal on the claim he must “examine the court re-| | that investigated, too,” he added. | | It is so near election time that the mayor has become cautious of his word Police Commissioner Bolan was more outspoken to reporters yester- | day. It was he that issued insruc- ticns to the metropolitan police to get “the gorilla man dead or alive.” When told that the workers who called on the Mayor were protest- ing the lynch incitement of the Po- lice Department, he said that there was no discrimination, and that the Police Department had 100 Negro cops up in Harlem, and if there are any protests of arrests and clubbings of Negro workers, that it was the Negro police who are doing the job there. Write to the Daily Worker about every event of inter- est to workers in your fac- tory, neighborhood or city. | BECOME A WORKER COR- RESPONDENT! “Sunny South” Casts Its Rays On Delaware dgeville, their way home, WARNING! ny Colored Person Found Loit- ering on the Streets of Bridgeville (after 12 O'clock midnight) East of railroad, Except residence of Bri- who are on business or on will bé Arrested .and Jailed U 1til 12 O’clock the following day. TOWN ORDINANCE. COMMISSIONERS: _ BRIDGEVILLE. Sample of notices posted by local authorities in Bridgeville, Del., warning Negroes that “any colored persons found loitering on the streets of Bridgeville after 12 o’clock midnight east of the railroad, except residence sidents”—Ed,) will be arrested and day.” (the superior Nordics of Bridgeville apparently mean “re- jailed until 12 o’clock the following This is only one of the ways in which state and local officials provide justification for vicious attacks—even lynchings—upon Negroes. ing increasing resistance to its pol- | icy of cutting down the pitiable dole.” Mann said there were “encourag- ing reports of growing solidarity of the workers and strong indications that millions of then will refuse to take part in the production and transportation of munitions in the event of war—and particularly if that war is directed against the Soviet Union.” Responding to a question about the recent action of the Independent Labor Party of Britain in support of unit front action with the Communist International, Mann said that, “the |rank and file of the I.L.P. is more |and more taking part in joint actions with the Communists—not gingerly, |}mind you, but heartily!” | Labor Leaders Go Into Business ‘The corruption and betrayal of the | socialist parliamentary leaders like Ramsay MacDonald is paralleled by |the corruption of the British trade union officialdom, Mann told. the | Daily Worker. Asked specifically about |the case of Frank Hodges, formerly general secretary of the British Mine Workers’ Union, Mann replied: “Oh, Hodges? He’s completely iden- jtified with the capitalists. He’s in- | terested in the development of mining and coal consumption, Why, the very title of his autobiography shows his essentially capitalistic outlook. He called that book, ‘My Adventures in the Labor Movement’.” Mann chuckled. Arrested, Deported Mann has not only been arrested scores of times in connection with his militant labor activities, but he has been deported from numerous coun- tries, including Germany, France and Ireland. He was expelled from the latter country only last year when he came to Belfast where textile workers were engaged in a bitter struggle against the mill owners. In 1896 he was deported from Ger- many by Kaiser Wilhelm after he had received official permission to come to Hamburg where seamen and dock- workers were on strike. The year be- fore Mann was expelled from Paris by the French officials, During the imperialist war of 1914- 18, unlike the majority of the official trade unon leaders of Britain, Tom Mann maintained a consistent anti- war position, to Sell at Red | NEW YORK.—All articles to be | sold at the Red Press Bazaar, which | opens this Friday in the Madison | Square Garden, are made by workers, | at a sacrifice, and for love of their | revolutionary press. ‘The rank and file members of the cloakmakers’ union have opened up @ special factory in which they are making clothes and suits to be sold in their booth in the Bazaar Hall for the Daily Worker, Morning Freiheit and Young Worker. The Dress and Fur Departments of the Needle Trades Workers Indus- trial Union are making articles in their shops for the Red Press Bazaar. They haye taken the materials and goods sight into the bosses factory to raise, funds for the press that ) Na Union Workers Make Clothes Press Bazaar | fights for them. j The display will be one of the, largest of ladies dresses, fur coats,; and other fur articles ever seen in the history of the Red Press Bazaars. The factory of the cloakmakers, where they are working to make some of the finest clothes to be sold cheap- ly to the workers, will have cloth coats of real quality, modern styles, and designs especially prepared for the bazaar. All prices will be reasonable and the National Press Bazaar Committee calls upon the workers of New York and outside to reserve their purchas- ing until the Bazaar opens on Fri- day, October 6th of this week, in the main hall of the huge Madison Square Garden. Bootblacks Aevcsiol |“Must Shine Shoes to Eat,” 15-Year Old Marty, for Working Sunday | Rinaldo Tells Judge; Group Formed SUL OD asa tales Uauie ix ece aS r By JEAN BOLAN. NEW YORK.—Police arrested every boot-black in sight in the Union Square area for shining shoes on Sunday. The bootblacks, many of whom were formely employed different trades | —as machinists, carpenters, shoemakers, bakers, steel workers—and are now forced to turn to shoe-shining to eke out a living, are terrorized by the police at every turn. | Marty Rinaldo, one of the boot- | blacks, asked the judge before whom they were brought, how he was going to eat. The judge answered smugly, “Food can be bought in stores. Of course, you have to pay for it. In order to pay for it, go to work.” The shoeblack, a youngster, 15 years old, pleaded his case. “My father and mother are out of a job. I’m the | only one who can support my brothers |and sisters. I don’t like to go out | shining shoes and be chased by the | cops. Nobody likes to go out shin- ing shoes. But they are forced to Shine shoes in order to eat and pay the rent for the house.” The arrested shoeblacks were re- leased. But they are determined to put an end to this terrorization by the police. George Maiogan, who is organizing the bootblacks under the guidance of the Trade Union Unity League, said there are about 45,000 bootblacks in New York on the streets and in the barber shops. The barber shop bosses demand long hours of work. They have to sweep the floors tens of times a day, also mop the floors, polish the chairs and’ mirrors, sweep the dust from the walls. The bosses insist that they -—— Bootblacks to Meet. Tonight at 8 p.m. at 37 E. 13th St., there will be a meeting | of bootblacks called by the Trade Union Unity League for |the purpose of forming an or- ganization of bootblacks to fight for improvement in their condi- | |tions. All bootblacks are urged to attend. Ea wear presentable clothes and clean collars. All this for no salary, ex- cept what they get from tips for shining shoes. “Yesterday I was distributing leaf- lets. When I gave them the leaf- lets, they thanked me. ‘They were very happy. ‘We don’t have anything to lose, only our shoe shine box. We are very glad that somebody is interested in organizing us. “We are going to have a demon- stration at City Hall,” Maiogan in- formed us. “We will march with our shoe-shine boxes on our backs and will demand relief, clothes and jobs.” The meeting called for tonight at 8 p. m. at 37 E. 13th St., will discuss fhe preparations for the demonstra- ion, |Workers’ Chorus of 1,000 Voices at Red Press Bazaar NEW YORK.—The International Chorus of 1,000 workers, under the direction of J. Schaeffer, will be one of the features on the opening | of the Red Press Bazaar this Fri- day, 4 p. m, in Madison Square Garden. A mass dance spectacle will be staged on the same evening by all Workers’ Dance Groups. Clarence Hathaway and Moissaye Olgin will deliver addresses of greet- ings to the workers attending the opening. The Bazaar, which will last Sat- urday and Sunday, will be featured by fur articles, jewelry, wearing ap- parel and many others donated to the Bazaar and which will sell at low prices. Funds raised at the Bazaar will go to the Daily Worker, Morning Freiheit, and Young Worker. City Events Carpenters’ Meeting. A membership meeting of the car- penters will be held tonight at 8 p. m., at union headquarters, 820 Broadway. Pipa eragt Brooklyn S. and M. Workers Meet. The Metal Box Workers Section meeting will be held tonight right after work at union headquarters, 196 State St. corner Court St., Brooklyn. The questions of wage scales and or- ganization work will be taken up. Roe: ya a Bank ef U. S. Depositors. The Committee of 25, Bank of U.S. Depositors, will hold a meeting to- night at 116th St. and Madison Ave., 8 P. M, and another meeting to- morrow night at Prospect and Long- wood Ave., at 8 p. m. * * Change of Meeting. The Daily Worker Volunteers will meet tomorrow night instead of to- night, at 35 E. 12th St., at 8 p. m. see Election Rallies Tonight. C. P, Units of Section 2 will hold three election meetings tonight, 21st St. and 8th Ave., 41st St. and 8th Ave., 53rd St. and 9th Ave. Section 5 has arranged four meet- ings in the Bronx: 181st St. and Prospect Ave., Prospect and Fox St., Intervale and Wilkins and at 169th Grant Ave. Local candidates will speak at all meetings. Keep Your Party on the Ballot. Reg- Aster Communist October 9 to 14. Trial Opens Today _ Of 14 Sioux City Workers ‘Arrests Are Prepara- | tions for Relief Cut SIOUX CITY, Iowa, Oct. 3.—Four- teen workers charged under the Iowa Criminal Syndicalism law with “be- ing Communists,” will come up for trial Wednesday morning here before Municipal Judge Berry J. Sisk. Mass and legal defense is being organized by the International Labor Defense. Bail for the workers was set at a total of $71,000. The arrests grew out of a militant demonstration last Monday,’ when an inerease in the amount of flour given to the unemployed was forced. The city is preparing to abolish the giving of grocery orders, and to establish soup kitchens instead, and the arrest of the 14, who led the organized op- position to increased starvation, is part of the preparations. Protests against these arrests should be sent to Judge Berry J. Sisk and County Attorney Duckworth, Sioux City, Iowa, On Saturday the Daily Worker has 8 pages. Increase your bundle order for Saturday! Importance of NEW YORK:—The importance of registering Communist during the registration days on Monday, October 9th to Saturday, October 14th, was emphasized again yes- terday by the Communist Election |Campaign Committee, 799 Broad- way, New York City through its manager Carl Brodsky. “In the 1982 elections the Com- munist Party won an important victory in New York State by gain- ing enough votes to give the Party official recognition. By reason of this new status, the Party has set up a State Committee and will set up various county and city com- mittees throughout the State as the permanent election apparatus of the Party,” he said. “Next year, 1934, these commit- tees will be elected by the enrolled voters of the Communist Party Registration Is Stressed functioning, was also. appointed by | the officials. There is no representa- | tion of the shops on the committee, | Just as in the Milgrim shops, the | Spectator, a Carnegie shop, is per- | mitted to have one union department | working while the other is on strike. | Negotiations for settlement are now | in progress, with not a single rank and | file member represented. The left wing group in the union is urging all strikers to prevent a repetition of, the sell-out of i930 and to organize to demand and fight for | rank and file representation on the | general strike and settlement com- | mittees. Key City CabDrivers | Strike Against Tax Taxi Union Leads the Fight Against Pay Cut NEW YORK.—Drivers of the Key Citp Taxicabs were called out on strike yesterday by the Taxi Work- }ers’ Union in protest against the city’s |5-cent tax on cab fares. . The cabmen of the Parmalee Taxi Co. are also reported to have joined the strike. Charging that several pickets had been beaten up by strong arm men of the taxi companies in the attempt to stop the strike, Harold Eddy, the union organizer, declared today that the strike would be spread to tie up the whole city. The strikers are demanding a minimum | wage of $18 a week for a 48-hour week instead of commissions, the| abolition of the blacklist, and recog- nition of the union. 3 Big) taxi companies failed to com- ply with the law, in effect Sunday, which provides for the registration of the 5-cent tax drop-on the meter, Instead, the companies are taking the tax out Of the drivers’ pay, forcing them to give up their tips and even their earnings to pay the tax. Efforts to spread the strike follow the two enthusiastic organization meetings held by the unior? Monday night at the union headquarters, 37 E, 13th St,, and at 344 W. 36th St. At the latter meeting 500 hackmen attended, including a large number of Negro drivers. ‘The 5-cent tax is only one of many grievances of the drivers. ‘Che low pay, the daily hounding by the traf~- fic cops, the frequent jail terms in- flicted on the drivers for trifling mis- takes, and the system of black-listing are awakening the hackmen to the need for organization. B and M Shop Joins | NEW YORK.—Striking cleaners and dyers held a big demonstration in front of the B and M Shop, at New Lots Ave. Brooklyn, and won the workers out on strike during the demonstration, The Band M Shop is controlled by the A. F. of L. Another demonstration occurred at the Colonial shop at 23rd St. and First Ave., where a picket was beaten up Picketing continues at the Spot- less chain stores. The union is ap- pealing to the tailors to cooperate in the struggle against the Spotless chain. JOBLESS, ENDS LIFE NEW YORK.—Despondent over his continued failure to find work, John Hylan, 55-year old electrician, hanged himself in his home at 2886 Briggs Ave., the Bronx. Communist who will also nominate the Party candidates in the next year’s elec- tion. This will be done by a pri- mary election. “Because of this, the matter of enrollment with the Party by all revolutionary and sympathetic workers, this year, at the time of registration, becomes of prime im- portance.” Brodsky also pointed out that the candidates of the Party and the Party’s election committees can be nominated only by primary election, so that if there is no enrollment, the Party will not be able to nominate candidates. “Every worker should take ad- Cleaners,’ Dyers’Strike| Mel Ott, who put the game on ice | with his homer. in the second, scor- | ing Joe Moore, Carlo rang up ten. strikeouts, but Stewart was in trouble right off the bat. After allowing three consecutive hits in the third he was removed in } favor of Jack Russell, who stayed on | the job until the insertion of Pinch- | hitter Harris in the eighth. Al Thom- | as finished out. UDDY MYER, Ben Chapman’s pal, who had Leen so dangerous with his spikes all_ season, proved to be a real buddy to the Terriers by weighing in with three errors. If Cronin hadn‘t gotten two for four this degenerate punning might have been even further indulged in. But Joe proved to be no Crony at all. He started with a single in'the 30,000 Miners on Picket Line Defy Breaking of Strike (Continued from Pae 1.) ganizer of the Steel and Metal Work- ers Industrial Union. The steel workers of Central Tube demand an eight-hour day and ten hours pay, and recognition of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, Other plants are meeting tonight to endorse and make their demands. The train crews of National Electric refuse to move loadéd cars in sym- pathy with the strikers, Picket lines on Spang Chalfant and Seamless Tube will strike 14,000 workers today. Beaver Valley is calling a mass steel conference by the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union this Sun- day, to spread the strike, at Jones and Loughlin and other mills. Protest to Pinchot Fifteen State police took up posi- tions at Walworth Foundry Gate, where over 1,000 strike under the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, and made way for score of scabs. Governor Pinchot, working night and day to break the coal strike, is now seeking to stem sup- porting movement in steel. John Mel- don, Secretary of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, sent a te- legram of protest to Pinchot. In Weirton, West Virginia, Clars- burg, Steubenville, efforts of A. A. delegation of 20, who negotiated with the President Weir, came back to the strikers’ ranks brimming with fight. Weir said, he'intended to run scabs to break the strike. Tension is high, and mass picketing involving 10,000 is planned for today. ~ At Clairton, miners continue to picket by thousands, half of their ranks women, as over two hundred armed thugs guard the Carnegie plant. Over a thousand steel work- ers are kept virtual prisoners in the mill, bunks and food being run in, and the armed guards holding them in as much as they seek to keep the picketing miners away. Their wives ask release of their husbands so that they may join the strike, Relief for the strikers should be sent to: Art Winber, chairman strike relief committee, Z.N.P. Hall, 8th St., Ambridge, Mb A |make for an ex-cricket-player from officials to end the strike failed. A! 500 lecal and out-of-town reporters did their roving in the stands, pre- paring their raving for today. 474 of these will claim they knew Ott would be the dark horse of the Series, 463 will compare the Giants to the Breves of 1910. 470 will state Hub- ball is greatsr then Matty ever was. One is swearing himself blue in the face because of a iaulty typewriter ribbon. President Roosevelt sent regrets that he could not be on hand to throw out the first ball. He spent the morning receiving the Abys- sinian ambassador Uja-Muki and in the afternoon motored South to award a blue ribbon to his son’s horse who won the prize for being well-bred. The horse. Cagaie Somer MONG those present was Miss Gwladys Vanderlust who is on the Cambridge, England. She had an idea he was athletically inclined and surprised him with box tickets. “What,” inquired the bleeding ex- cricketeer, late in the fourth inning, “4s a catcher’s mitt?” “I do not know,” replied Miss Van- derlust who sported a beige (Patou) ensemble with ciel bleu trimmings. “Perhaps when that man behind the plate shakes hands with the tall one on the hill,” Among those absent was Joe Sil- ver who played outfield for the Orioles thirty years ago and would have given a right eyelash to get a bleacher seat. Joe was listening in on the broadcast before a Madison Square cigar store. Nights he sleeps on the benches in that same square, Goes Joe who used to be a bosom pal of the late Miller Huggins. ILD Frees 2 Textile | Workers in. Carolina Framed for ‘Robbery’ Bill Johnson and John Alman, mil- itant textile workers framed by federal officers on a charge of “robbing a post-office,’ were freed in court today when W. R. Jones, | attorney retained for their defense | by the I. L. D., ewposed the frame- up character of the charge and smashed the prosecutor’s case. Hospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled At One-Half Price White Gold Filled Frames_____$1.50 ZXL Shell Frames ~__—____. $100 Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Oft Delancey 8t. Telephone: ORchard 4520 ARRANGE YOUR DANCES, LECTURES, UNION MEETINGS at the NEW ESTONIAN WORKERS’ HOME 27-29 West 115th Street New York City RESTAURANT and BEER GARDEN CLASSIFIED ——— COMEADE FREEBERG, come to, Brooklyn, OO DOWNTOWN THE LAST WORD IN FOOD AT POPULAR PRICES vat the SWEET LIFE CAFETERIA 138 FIFTH AVENUE Bet, 18th and 19th Streets NEW YORK CITY John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York —$————————————— | JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese 197 SECOND AVENUE |), Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades cactinaier mene All Comrades meet at the Vegetarian Workers’ Club —DINING ROOM— Natural Food for Your Health 220 E, 14th Street Bet. Seecond and Third Avenues —————————————— ——— __ Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 04 All Comrades Meet at the CAFETERIA] cE, 18TH ST., CENTER————-| vantage of the right to enroll with the Party so that he may have a voice in selecting the Party’s can- didates and election officials,” declared, APEX CAFETERIA 827 Broadway, Between 12th and 18th Streets All Comrades Should Patronize This FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION SHOP sath } ROCKINGHAM, N. C., Oct. 3. —( t

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