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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1933 DELEGATION MAKES BOLAN Police Pact With ISSUE STATEMENT TO PRESS *s ; Negro Workers Demand Halt | Daily Worker Writer) “sland prison. \ This ‘the campaign to open;the books on Committee of : of Lync Incited in by P ssioner Terror NEW YORK.— ‘workers, representing Harlem working League of Struggle for Negro Rights, the press and police, called on Bolan quarters, and, unlike the cial denial throu Comm “gorilla tral Park the verbal he had r to. bring or alive.” was insistent The delega- ade Commis- hrough with the manded. rs were called in after the delegation left the office, and ‘Bolan spoke to them as follows | statements in the press in with the Central Park ng me a: ing that I ice into Central Park after n and that I issued} dead or alive, and were issued to the effect that co d men and white women walk together should be ar- , is not true. I made no such ements, and am not responsible for them. “The would take ttee sioner Bo! statem Press repor' that orde’ d me if I tion against the hat I would not, a denial to 2 to publish it.” tested that hat “‘the impartially Jaw agains Gentile ination resenting. a political When the committe that Cyril Briggs had ty or not.” pointed out been arrested for accompanying a Negro woman, because they ht that he was white, stated that was a viola- tion e¢ law, and t should hav been I would not have arrested them.” When the committee stated that they would hold mass meetings and demonstrations, protesting strongly against the lynch wave that is sweeping over New York, in spite of| the police and suave denials of the police department, Commissioner Bolan stated that he would advise them strongly against. just such “re-| sistance.” i Bolan found himself facing Negro workers, who, instead of allowing themselves to be interrogated and) intimidated, demanded immediate withdrawal of the lynch order of the | departinent which was published in the New York Journal of Sept. 5, and picked up by the other papers. | The committee, headed by Her-| ™man* MacKawain, chairman of the League of Struggl stated that whi the words of Com-| missioner Bolan were grandiose and/auspices of the New Lots, N.S.L.! fine, still they were just words.| “We've already seen the action of the police department in Harlem.} Mass meetings and demonstrations, | which Commissioner Bolan so sttongly advises us against, will con- | tinue to take place in Harlem until | it is perfectly safe and possible for Negro and white workers to walk) through the streets together, and} until Negro workers will not be in- Sulted and beaten and ‘gorilla man’ | hurled at them through the lynch in- centives of the local press.” The committee, protesting the Jynch spirit whipped into being by |C@mnaign. the police and press, reported to! workers assembled in Lafayette Hall. Besides seeing Mayor O’Brien and | Police Commissioner Bolan the com- mittee also called on Alderman J.| Baldwin, Republican representative, | on Tuesday. This scared O’Brien! into seeing the committee, since he} was afraid that the Democratic votes | ‘of. Harlem would go Republican in .the coming elections. Baldwin re- fused to issue a stetement to the| ; on the grounds that he had ainsufficient evidence. ‘The committee of 25 Negro work-| ers will today see candidate for! Mayor, McKee. i Preparations of the League Struggle for Negro. Rights are go- ing ahead for the mass public trial | on the Matthews murder in Welfare! campaign to open the books on the Matthews case is one of the key demands of this committee, and the demands against lynch incitement are part of Welfare Island case, and prose- ernment. New York Area olice and Press Bolan is suave. A committee of 25 class organizations and led by the protesting the lynch incitement by | yesterday at 10 o'clock in Police De- Mayor, he saw them promptlly, | Shoe Workers Defy Terror, Join Strike 15 Arrested at the| I. Miller Shop NEW YORK.—The shoe strike con- Schwartz Production acob and Son Shoe Shop was” crippled today when the en- crew of the fifth floor joined other strikers of the same plant. De-/| spite police intimidation of pickets for blocks around the shop, and the, display of NRA signs, the strike is spreading inside this plant and it is ected to be closed down complete- ly soon, Fifteen pickets were arrested at the I. Miller shoe shop. when a picket line was thrown around the plant yester- day. Five more were arfested at the Bellecraft Slipper Co. The owners of the Dewéy Shoe Re-| pair) chain fired their union help Monday but quickly retreated wh workers in four of their shops out on strike. After a half di strike the bosses conceded all de- mands and signed up with the union. | ing of striking shoe-re- workers is scheduled for Sun- day at Irving Plaza‘at 10 a.m. The Shoe and er Workers In- dustrial ppealed for funds to I four union me d in Je F 5 c: btain the release of Iva: Maglicano, Ma- doxin, and Duch: All workers are ed to obtain colle2tion lists from | fen office to aid in freeing City Events Tuscaloose-Scottsboro Meet. A Tuscaloosa-Scottsboro protest mass meeting will be held tonight (Thursday) with Robert Minor, Wil- liam Patterson and Louise Thomp- son as speakers at Ambassador Hall, Third Avenue and Claremont Park- way, under the auspices of the Nat Turner Branch of the I. L. D, . 4 Burroughs. in Rockaway. Williana Burroughs, Communist candidate for Comptroiler, will speak at a large open-air meeting on the Central Square of Far Rockaway, L.., tonight. i aie oe Symposium on Cuba. A symposium on the revolt in Cuba will be held at Premier Pal- for Negro Rights, ace, 505 Sutter Ave., Brooklyn, to- | morrow night at 8 p. m., under the Earl Browder, Donald Henderson, J. Bruno, and two Cuban students, | will speak. . Hitler Protest Meeting. Yorkville units, C. P. and mass organizations of Yorkville will hold a monster protest meeting against Hitler and the Reichstag Fire Frame-Up in the Labor Temple, 84th Street, between 2nd and 3rd Avenues, tonight. This is also a mobilization meeting for the election Earl Browder, James Ford, und local candidates will speak. Admission 10 cents. Unem- ployed free. Furriers’ Meeting. A meeting of the Executive Com- mittee, NTWIU, together with ac- tive floor workers and shipping clerks employed in the fur trade, will be held tonight in the office of the Union, 131 West 28th St., Rocm 403, at 6:30 p. m. sharp. €i, 28 ® Meet to Protest Deportations. A mass protest meeting will be of ;held tonight at 66 East 4th St. 8 p. m., to protest against the depor- tation policy of the Roosevelt gov- William Zazuliak and others wil speak. . Y.C.L. Meeting in Brooklyn. A section membership meeting of Brooklyn, 1, Section of Y. C. L, 132 Myrtle Ave., will be held to- Gute the murderers. = {night, Gil Green will speak on =|the NR. A. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY | ___o0WwNroWN , 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR AM Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman - WILLIAM BELL Optometrist 106 EAST 47H STREET Near Fow Phone: Tompkins A Wonderful Spot for Organizations’ fairs Aft STUYVESANT GRILL AND OPEN AIR BEER TAVERN 137 Third Avenue «SANDWICH 101 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Sqcare 6-0780-9781 (screens danhnlatiotiabece slaty Telephone STuyvesant 9-9254 UNIVERSITY GRILL, Inc. BAR RESTAURANT 7% UNIVERSITY PL, N. ¥, C. Between 10th and 11th St. — | tlemanly” F Is Held at Request of | Aide of Reilly | By CARL REEVE WATER, N, J., Oct. 4—Hugh state organizer of the A. F. of L. of New Jersey, who is having a hard time trying to dampen the militancy of the Ford strikers here, refused to see the Daily Worker rep-| resentative today, and his lieute-| nants, sporting large white badges on which “A.F.L. organizer” is promi- nently displayed, caused the arrest of the writer in front of the Ferd} gates today, as a “Communist agi-| tator.” y across the street from the| on the Hudson River front, holding a meeting” in a| a few other A. F. of L. or-| His lieutenants biccked the} dogr. When the name Daily Worker) was mentioned, the aide of Reilly,| with the A. F. of L. organizers cage, D . “Reilly don't w to talk to any Communists,” he said, “We have aa agreement with jhe! police to keep cut all Communist agitators.” ganizers. of L. Leaders | hown at Ford’s This A. F. of L. committeeman re-} fused to give any news and refused to call out Reilly. One minute later the writer was stopped by the chief of police and three policemen. “You're a Communist agitator,” he said, “and the A. F. of L. organizers just told me you're talking to the strikers. The A. F. of L. don’t want you around here.” After being held for some minutes, the chief of detectives as- signed policeman No. 26 to escort the Daily Worker representative away from the Ford gates, and an auto load of plainclothes detectives fol- lowed the writer for two miles be- fore finally deciding to turn back. Why is Reilly, the A. F. of L. and the police so nervous, and afraid of a Communist talking to the strikers? Because Reilly is trying to tire out the strikers with marking time, and because the strikers are conducting a militant s e in spite of these ele- ments. Reilly tried to limit picket lines to two hundred, and two thou- sand are out on the morning picket lines. Reilly tried to delay the spread of the strike, the march on Detroit, but the strikers are preparing to) march. Reilly tried to follow a “gen-| policy toward scabs, of} which there are several hundred. But the strikers are swarming over the cliffs and are watchéully picketing | in force, and are preparing to take | care of the scabs in the proper mili- | tant way. | Reilly and the other A. F. of L. or-| ganizers are trying to completely con- trol the strike in their small com- mittee, urging the workers to leave everything in their hands. Mass pick-| eting, militant action to clean out the scabs, rank and file control of | the strike and a broader strike com-| mittee, to spread the strike quickly. These are the needs of the strfkers and the program of the left wing, and Reilly and the A. F. of L., who want to break the strike, are there- fore agitating against “reds.” Minor, Ford Testify This Afternoon at 2 in Trial of Dorfman NEW YORK.—Robert Minor, can- didate for Mayor on the Communist Party ticket, and James W. Ford, re- cent candidate for the Vice-Presi- dency on the Communist Party ticket, will both testify this afternoon as eye-witnesses in the brutal attack upon Isadore Dorfman, young worker who was beaten and arrested in Harlem on Sept. 22 while demon- jstrating against the murder of James | Matthews on Welfare Island. The trial takes place this after- noon at 170 E. 121st St, at 2 p.m. ; Workers are urged to crowd the courtroom. TUUL Urges Unity to A-F.L. Convention (Continued from Page 1.) ing full support to the fight of the miners. We make no distinction in this case as to what union the miners are fighting for. ‘ Since the miners are fighting for the UMWA recognition, we are giv- ing them one hundred per cent sup- port in this fight. The National Miners Union, which is organizing the fight of the miners for better conditions and leading big strikes in New Mexico and Utah, is fully supporting the fight of the miners for UMWA recognition and for other demands raised by the miners. We call upon the AFL convention to immediately endorse the strike of the miners for their just demands, to call upon all AFL organizations to support the strike of the miners, to pledge full moral and financial sup- port for the striking miners, to re- pudiate the strikebreaking actions of Lewis, Muray and company, to de- mand from the NRA, President Roose- velt, Governor Pinchot, and all other government agencies to stop the strikebreaking actions against the miners; to withdraw all armed forces from the strike field so that the mineys can carry on to victory. We feel that such a united support to the miners on the part of all AFL organizations, Trade Union Unity League organizations, independent unions and unorganized workers will compel the stubborn employers to yield to the workers’ demands and prevent the use of the armed forces that are mobilized to drown the miners’ struggle in blood. All those who withhold such support will be responsible not only for weakening the strike but for all events that may transpire as a result of the bosses’ provocations. A, F. of L, delegates! ‘The A. F. of L, leaders claim four million members; now is the time to mobilize these millions together with other workers in support of the miners. Act and act immediately! National Executive Board, Trade { Leon Blum, a “framed” Laundry Workers’ Industrial Union is away six months, yet no judge has agreed to free him on a writ of habeas corpus. Gangsters like ‘Owney’ Madden are taken before judges 24 hours after arrest and release: Gutters of New York worker and organizer of the | cd. Special Cafeteria to Serve Meals at Red Press Bazaar NEW YORK—A cafeteria of the, most modern type is being installed | in Madison Square Garden to pro- vide delicious food at low prices to the thousands of workers expected to} attend the Red Press Bazaar, which opens in the main hall of the Gar-| den this Friday, 4 p.m. The opening of the bazaar, which will continue Saturday and Sunday, | will mark the first mass appearance | of Tom Mann, 77-year old British labor leader, on his present visit to this country. Mann will speak at 8 p.m. sharp. Additional speakers will include} Clarence Hathaway, editor of the) Daily Worker, and Moissaye Olgin, noted Jewish writer? Thousands of valuable articles, among them jewelry, furs, dresses, musical instruments to mention only a few, which have been donated to the bazaar, will be on sale at low prices, The International Chorus of 1,000 workers, under the direction of J. Schaeffer, and all the Workers Dance Groups will stage ak unusual pro- gram of entertainment. Arranged for the benefit of the} Red Press, including the Daily Worker, Morning Freiheit, and the Young Worker, the bazaar will afford ; the thousands of workers of New York City the chance to help their) press, to have a good time and to} obtain many valuable bargains. Delegate Challenges A.F.L. Bureaucracy (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ers who not only listen to but invite into their midst such people as’ Red Cross officials and Chamber of Com- merce officers. “I have only one vote in the con- vention. I am one of the 318 dele- gates who have only one vote a piece, and who represent State Federations of Labor, Federal Unions and Central Labor Councils, having a total, un- questionably of more than 1,000,000 dues paying members of the A. F. of L. against these 318 votes, John 1 Lewis alone casts 3,000 v Lew claims to represent only ¢ id 250,- 000 members. Think of it 000 votes for 250,000 and 318 votes for 1,000,000. Supposed Representatives. “This system of apportionin is one method by which cont b in t ‘acy under of ‘democracy’ The heads of ternational Unions, such as supposedly speak for the entire mem- bership of the unions, but as a matter of fact and record, they are much further away from the rank and file than are officials of Central Labor Councils, State Federations and Fed- eral Unions. In fact, it is well known that revolts in the A. F. of L, gen~ erally start in Central Labor Bodies, ‘Supposed’ is right for the Interna- tional Union Officials ‘speaking for the rank and file.’ “Those 318 delegates from Central Labor bodies know these facts, They know that the delegation excluded today brought a program vital to the interests of the A. F, of L. member- ship. Although these delegatés are intimidated by the bureaucracy, I feel certain many of them will fight. “Of course, the usual ‘red scare’ was raised against the rank and file delegation. Well, I have no idea how many of them are Communists—I'd guess two or three. But this much I know: They represented 1,200 unions which are not Communist unions, but unions of workers who feel that the present leadership of the A. F. of L. does not represent its own dues-pay- ing membership, Furthermore, whether or not these brothers are Communists or what not, has nothing to do with the case, since the very A. F. of L. constitution specifically guarantees against any discrimination on the grounds of political views.” All resolutions adopted by the A. F. of L. Committee for Unemployment Insurance have been introduced and are printed in Tuesday’s and Wed- nesday's convention proceedings. This assures that they will be the subject of some debate on the floor, although Woll, Chairman of the Resolution Committee and Victor A. Olander, Secretary of Resolutions’ Committee, expert stranglers of membership pro- test, will do their best to bury them. employed from dues, sponsored by the Kenossa Central Labor Couneil, shows that this is considered a vital issue in many parts of the country. Resolutions before convention now include withdrawal of A. F. of L. of- fictals from N.R.A., no discrimination against Negroes, exemption of unems ployed from dues, abolition of racket- eering gangsterism, for compulsory Federal Unemployment Insurance, for mass violation of the injunction, and lowering initiation fees of Federal Labor Unions, and against Hitlerism. No resolution for or against recog- Union Unity League. ‘WM. Z. FOSTER, General Sec’y, nition of the Soviet Union appears in the printed proceedings. It seems A resolution for exemption of un- |. Deputy Sheriffs. Fire on Pickets (Continued from Page 1) | shop delegates are being elected for Mills Stay Shut in Paterson as Picket Lines Stand Guard Strikers’ Delegates Do Not See Wagner PATERSON, N. J., Oct. 4.— The United National Strike Committee delegation tried to present the strik- ers’ demands to Senator Wagner yes- terday in New York and were told by his secretary that he was out of town. The Senator had me’ with a number of manufacturers on the silk s‘rike situation, tut wes apparently unable to accomplish anything. He is reported to have scheduled mest- ings with New Jersey Congressmen for further efforts to break the strike. Mass picket linés around the Pater- completely stopped several small shops from opening. All mills and dye plants in the strike area remain tightly shut. Thousands of dye strikers jammed the hall at 612 River St., Paterson, to hear Martin Russak yesterday. Seven, hundred Lodi strikers crowded Passaic Hall and were addressed by Moe Brown. Rank and file strikers, both men and women, spoke at both meetings. The organizational work of the Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union is de- veloping rapidly, Large numbers of workers of the huge Textile Dye Plant, which the A. F. of L. claims to control, held a meeting under N.T.W.U. auspices this morning, joined the union and are calling a larger meeting at the plant for Thursday at 2 p.m. at 612 River St. Departmental and shop meetings of dye houses are being held daily and the formation of an N.T,W.U. mill delegates’ council, Rank and file of the A. F. of L. are strongly influenced by the pro- gram and struggle for unity of the N.T.W.U. They are carefully watch- ing every move of the officials. With- in the shop delegates’ body of the A. F. of L. Dyers Local they are fight- ing daily for unity, The United Warpers League of Paterson, an inde- pendent craft union, was able to get two of its members seated as dele- gates on the Associated Strike Com- | mittee and instructed them by unant- mous decision to fight in the commit- tee for unity with the N.T.W. A large united front group of Ital- ian silk and dye strikers has been formed under the leadership of Di Bartolo, N.T,W.U. Italian organizer, with many A. F, of L. Italian mem- bers in it. It meets daily at 22 Pater- son St. The Workers International Relief is co-operating with the N.T.W.U. silk and dye strikers’ relief committee, .of which Caroline Drew is secretary and Tony Antieri treasurer. Breakfasts are provided daily on the picket lines to all pickets regardless of union af- filiation at three stations, 222 Pater- erson St., 612 River St., Paterson, and 22 Clark St. Garfield, for the Lodi strikers. An average of 1,500 pickets are being fed daily. Ninety-six fam- ilies were supplied from the relief store just established at 61 Hamilton County strikers today stood solid,| preventing any return to work move-| ment in face of threats that their, | strike was a rebellion against the gov-: ernment and that all strikers would | be outlawed by U.M.W.A. officials. Over 125,000 workers in the Steel and | Coal are on strike now in Pennsyl- vania, Ohio, West Virginia, with steel reading and the coal min- to pull the Carnegie Clearton, Pa., as well as until unqualified victory. nteen thousand miners in county, southern West Virgi- a, came out on strike today, against coal code Agreement. Effor Murray to split the strik- miserably when and 5 workers took > by scores of other mine i voted to stay out on strike 1 two days after Frick men win union recognition. The strategy Lewis, Murray,! Feeny was.to isolate Frick miners by sending others back to work, then | opening a reign of terror by Pinchot! | and Roosevelt. All miners rebuked | | this attempt’ and are out solid with} not the slightest break in their ranks | even among those who already have! union recognition, The Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, ad- mitting its previous stories about re~ turn to work lies, now says the mine strikers stand pat. Soft coal region's holiday strikers stood pat today for recognition of their union as un- moved by their union chief’s com- mand to return to work as they were by their plans, . Murray and U.M.W.A. district pres- idents have sent runners to miners, officially outlawing the strike that was an outlaw strike from its incep- tion, ers deter Steel Mill a t ick ow failed No. 4 4 § al of of that officialdom this year is trying to dodge this issue, although convention rumor is that Woll will insist on making his usual National Civic Fed- eration speech against recognition, Senator King, in his address to the convention, also managed to work in a reference to “the enslavement of workers” in the Soviet Union. ‘This convention has the largest rep- resentation from the lower organiza- tions in years, There are some 320 delegates from Federal labor unions, State Federations and Central Labor Councils—the nearest thing to rank and file representation possible with the present form of organization. From remarks and discussions among groups of these delegates it is evident that a big insurgent move- ment is forming, not in this conven- tion, but among the membership throughout the country. The presence of officials like Han- sen, president of the New York Car- penters District Council and a power in the building trades council, at the rank and file meeting last night, ac- this wide, but scattered, opposition developing. This is Banquo’s ghost Ave., providing food for the neediest families. Funds are urgently needed and an appeal is being broadcast by the re- lief committee to all workers and their organizations for relief. Send funds immediatelye to Tony Autieri, 222 Paterson St., Paterson, N. treasurer of the relief committee. J, ‘Tress Bosses Aid ILGW Officials to “Celebrate” Thomas to Speak on Same Platform With Grover Whalen NEW YORK. — Madison Square Garden was the scene of a “celebra- tion” yesterday when the dress manu- facturers closed their shops at noon and aided the officials of the ILGWU to call their meeting of union mem- bers in celebration of the settlement’ of the dress strike. The stage was) filled with manufacturers who min- gled with officials of the ILGWU, Norman Thomas and members of the) NRA, including Grover Whalen. Only at one end of the stage could be seen a few rank and filers. These were Negro workers who had been jim- crowed in a separate section apart from all the others. Most of the meeting was devoted to a musical program. Union officials and NRA representatives were the only speakers, Applause was short and artificial when the strikebreaking ex-police Commissioner Whalen spoke. This bitter “enemy of the working class, who would have smashed the shoe workere’ strike, solemnly repeated sec- tion 7 of the NRA and hypocritically stressed that the workers must be | permitted to bargain collectively “free from coercion, interference and re- straint.” The hundreds of pickets who have been beaten and arrested in the New York strikes at the instigation of Whalen give the le to this brazen de lemagogy. “Capitalists having nothing to fear from such men as David Dubinsky, Julius Hochman and other ILGW officials,” Grover Whalen admitted. Knowing the discontent existing among thousands of dress makers be- cause conditions remain the same in many shops, with the contractors bettering ery crt le ot iitae is oh ipl ag tion of Dubinsky in his speech attempted to the sibility on the fact that the code had instead at the N.R.A, victory feast that this convention is supposed to be. Keep Your Party onthe Ballot, Weg- ister Communist October 9 to 14. son Dye Houses early this morning} Giants 6, | York Giants equalled and s Series here. Cronin’s ace right-hander five innings, was knocked loos- er than one of Mae West’s gestures with a six-run attack that drove, him to the showers in the sixth. The well-known “depression” which another equally effective General, Hugh Johnson, is supposed to have rendered virtually a thing of the past, was still very much in evidence. The bleachers were packed as early as 10 o’clock but an unprecedented number, of reserved seats gaped va- }cantly at the down-trodden American Leaguers. Attendance was given as 46,000. Washington’s one run came when the veteran Goslin homered off the upstate Bachelor of Arts in the third. It was a healthy blow and would have been a home run in any man’s park. Had it not been for this upper tier smack, Schumacher’s world se- ries debut would have been a shut~- out. It was by no means a watertight performance, the young collegian having to pitch his way out of diffi- culties on a number of occasions, But the Nats’ five clean hits were scat- tered over as many innings. + 8 8 wild-scoring sixth inning was the game’s pivotal point. Joe Moore led off with a single to left. Critz forced him av second. Manager Terry rapped a long double to left which boosted Critz to third. Mel Ott, to date the batting hero of the se- ries was purposely passed, filling the bases, Then the cast-off O’Doul came to bat for Davis and drove in two runs with a clean single. Another supposed has-been, Travis Jackson, caught the spirit of the big offensive and singled to right center. Ott raced home from second, O’Doul going to third. Terry signalled for a Squeeze play and Gus Mancuso came through, dumping a bunt half way between home and third. O’Doul Scored and Jackson reached second. “We-can’t-lose” Blondy Ryan whiffed vigorously, Schumacher .sin- gled, scoring Jackson and putting Mancuso on second. The Giants had batted around. Just to keep things moving, Moore singled point Al Thomas came in to relieve Crowder and the heavy baseline traf- fic. Still in the swing, Critz weighed in with a hit but Terry forced him at second, ending the congestion, es # exception of tins outburst, the Giants had nothing to write the home folks about. They were three up and three down in the first, fourth, fifth and eighth. This correspondent had no chance to interview Wally Stewart, Tues- day's losing pitcher, who commented thus on the initial game: “That was the cheapest ball game I ever saw. The Giants have a worse defense than the Red Sox, if that is possible, advertised.” But Manager Cronin, der and raised two fingers to indi- cate that this is only the second. The teams are moving on to Grif- fith Stadium on two special trains. Joe Silver, an unemployed ex-Oriole of our acquaintance, is planning to ride the rods under one of them. We will have his special story in three, four days if things break right and he can scare up the postage. The consensus of opinion among the 500 baseball experts who infested the premises was somewhat as fol- lows: The Giants won the game. The Senators lost the game. If the next game is not called on account of darkness or rain, either the Giants or the Senators will win it. Fitzsimmons may pitch the next one. On the other hand, he may not. Bebe Rath is ¢ colorful figure. Tinker to Evers to Chance was a fine double-play combination. Ruby Bates Continues Scottsboro Tour Spite of Ili Health NEW YORK, Oct. 4.—In spite. of rapidly failing health, a condi- tion induced by the strain of her tour of mote than 50 cities on be- half of the Scottsboro boys, Ruby Bates, white girl who first testi- fied under compulsion that the nine Negro boys had attacked her, and repudiated this testimony at the spring, will continue with a series of twelve meetings in Connecticut and Massachusetts, si With Ruby Bates on the platform at these meetings will be Alice Burke, white organizer of white and Negro workers from Birming- ham, facing a long prison sentence for her working class activities there, Meeting will be held in both Waterbury and Ansonia on Oct. 7, and in Bridgeport, South Norwalk, Stamford, and Westport on the 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th. A FOOD WORKERS IND’ |Goslin’s Homer Spoils Shutout for Schumacher in Second Game of Series; Experts Still Experting OLO GROUNDS, Oct. 4.—Prince Hal Schumacher of the New { to center, Mancuso scoring. At this; T seemed to be that. With the} and their hitting is even weaker than who went hitless shrugged his shoul- | in’ second trial in Decatur, ‘Ala., “last | APEX CAFETERIA | 827 Broadway, Between 12th and 13th Streets — All Comrades Should Patronize This ——— v: Senators 1 urpassed the performance of his teammate Hubbell by letting down the Washington Senators with 5 hits and 1 run in the second game of the 1933 World General Alvin Crowder, after fy holding the rampant “Team of Destiny” runless in the first — The experts are g ington, 5 RECENT feature of the World Series is the by no means negligi- ble development of Convictions on |the part of several Giant luminaries, The general run of these Convictions was on the subjects of gasoline, lub- jYicatory oils and hats. As a rule, advertised convictions of baseball players have been restricted to equipment, but some occult influ- ence is broadening out their interests |and authority to cover these fields of mechanics and fashion. Bill Terry is featured in full page ads—‘I use nothing but Essolene and Essolube Motor Oil in my car. You'll get quick starting, smooth pick-up, mileage and economy’ with Essolene |that you never could with the old \fashioned gasolines. Take my word for it.” This is straight from the shoulder goods and Terry is what my high ‘school teacher used to term emi- nently qualified to hand it out, Wasn't he batting champion of the National loop. Didn’t he nab that sizzler of Goslin’s inthe eighth Tues- day? Hubbell developed a somewhat more frivolous, but none the less, decisive conviction. Our sole, satur- |nine and scintillating south-paw screwballer is being exhibited for scrutiny in full-page ads which pre- sent him wearing Adam hats in taci~ ‘turn approval. His is a minor Con- viction and extremely painless to develop. es 8 * LABOR SPORTS’ NEWS. Filling a long-felt need, the La- bor Sports Union is forming a club in downtown New York. Its probable’ headquarters will be at the Manhat-, tan Lyceum. The organization com-| mittee has called its first meeting for Friday, Oct.:6, at the Labor Sports Union Center, 813 Broadway, between llth and 12th Sts. The meeting will be held at 8:30 pm, All interested are invited. joing on to Wash-' § Feed at) -- AO were SR A SENATORS AB.R.H, PO. A.E. 2 30.01 3.0 412000 011000 400340 400100 Kuhel, 3001510 Bluege, 3b . 200030 Sewell, c . + 300300 Crowder, p 2:0 }t.44 Thomas, p . 000000 , McColl, p ... 00001 of Rice ... 101000! Harris . 1000 0 0: Bolton . 100000 Totals .....5.. 31 1 52413 0 GIANTS A.B.R.H.PO.A.E. Moore, lf 402400 i f° $51 411103 0 2.1 0 4.0/0 oe BA dk Oe ele OC Oe ee | Jackson, 3b . ok Pee ee Mancuso, c PIR, Sige fae Sg, ee Se) jRyan, 88 ......... 40102 0 Schumacher, p.... 4 0102 0 O'Doul . wee A eee oe Totals ......., 32 6102713 0 | Score by Innings i +++-001 000 000—1 5 0 New York ....,.000 006 00x—6 10 0 O'Doul batted for Davis in sixth, Rice batted for Thomas in seventh, Harris batted for Bluege in ninth, Bolton batted for Sewell in ninth. Runs batted in—Goslin, O'Doul (2), Jackson, , Mancuso, Schumacher, Moore, Shcrifice hit—Jackson. Double plays—Cronin to» Myer to Kuhel; Jackson to Critz to Terry. Struck out —By Schumacher, 2; by Crowder, 3, Bases on balls—By Schumacher, 4; by Crowder, 3. Wild pitch—Schumacher, Umpires—Moriarty (AL.) at the plate; Pfirman (N.L.) at first; Ormsby (A.L.) at second; Moran (N.L.) at third. MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE ~ \Cor, Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Prices Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 1th AVENUE Corner 28th Bt. 1 (Brooklyn) FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1688 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave, Brooklyn, M. ¥. UNION SHOP USTRIAL