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Page Two George Crawford East Side Confectioner Gets Nazi Death Threat The Nazi Death Threat a pi faa (ee ty bury. to Face Murder Frame-Up Charge Second Time In Week “Impartial Tribunal Aids Lynchers WASHINGTO: i S. Supreme Cot George Cra must be t setts aut its de-| el Lee, aged d ar Defe! Give Billion to | Bankers In Guise of Denositors’ Aid Stocks and nse Bolster Bonds for Bankers; Gyp Depositors r the uidating bank depos- | of closed banks, | $4,000,000,000 in de] 1s’ is tied up in the collapsed » and even if the full govern- to pay off de 's will get only| sets are wort 25 cents on th The si announcing the bil ment to the ban prevent dumping far above lar to be paid ade by on dollar pay- s Ch the} out. Roose from being forced to sell them and pay the depositors cents on the dollar, the government | provides the billion. ‘his permits| the bankers to keep their stocks and| bonds and make higher profits on| them at the expense of the dep ors. At the same time it keeps prices on the Wall Street stock market higher, benefiting all the stock gam- | blers at the expense of the bank de- Positors, Secret Passage to | foering’s House Stirs Fire Trial (Continued from Page 1) hangings in the main session cham- ber and lobbies were easily inflam- mable. This testimony flatly contradicted Police Commissioner Heisig’s state- ment, reported in the “Voelkische| Beobachter,” Hitler's organ, on Sep- tember 28, that “it was especially disagreeable to van der Lubbe that, he tried to set the door hanging on the western side of the session chamber on fire with a fire-lighter, but found that the curtain simply wouldn’t burn.” Torgler Identification Fails The next witness, Schmal, a civil service employee, refused to state definitely that he ever saw Torgler! and van der Lubbe together, | the prosecuting attorney and Judge Buenger vainly tried to refresh his memory. He admitted that he might have confused Torgler with other persons. Dimitroff: “Did you receive the reward offered for finding the in- cendiaries?” Schmal denied this, answeting Dimitroff's other questions by stat- ing that the minutes of his examina- tion before trial “quote his state- ments falsely.” Dimitroff: “Weren't the minutes read to you before you signed them?” This aroused the indigna- tion of Judge Buenger and Attor- ney-General Werner, Schmal ad- ast 50 years | of war, k SOT APC MOLL “Sell German Candy or Die,” H Nazis Had Smashed Window of Store NEW YORK.—A Nazi threat that his store would be burned and that | he would be killed unless he handled German candies was received yester- | day by Morris Richman, a confectioner of 145 E. Hous: The threat was contained Nazi sources, and was appare German Exit From League Shows Clash of Imperialisms (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) an couldn’t ma Blow to League. iy’s exit inflicts an over- y to the League of Na- trument for the op- r nations. lists and have duped ers wil the alleged}; va tribunal. failure as sereen for the becomes ‘es of mil S gas a imperiali lots now cent to scores upon si of toilers in all coun’ ons Germany Stakes All on War. “Germany’s withdrawal is not an act for the ‘preservation of peace,’ nor does it by any means lessen the ‘war menace, as the Nazis try to represent it. This act indicates that Fascist Germany is staking all on the growth of its armaments | and that Europe is Balkanized and that th italist world has entered the path of open preparation for the new imperialist war. “Germany's foreign political isola- more than 25/| tion was never before so complete as | now. Its den a domestic polit a wa istrative exit is also ‘al maneuver to find y out of the toiling masses’ grow- discontent with the salvation promised by the Fascist dictatorship, ‘ith the suffering they have to un- dergo, and with the Nazi fiasco, Stimulating Patriotic Fervor. “Its exit from the League of Na- tions and the organization of new elections both have one object in mind—raising a new chauvinist, patri- otic wave within the country, and producing something like a ‘expres- ion of the national will,’ both of hich are indispensable to German ascism right now, at the threshold of the fifth starvation winter, and after its scandalous failures in the ichstag fire trial in Leipzig and “The Fascists are striving for a new re-division of Europe, with the aim of establishing a new, predatory Versailles Treaty. For this purpose armaments are needed. They wish an equal share in the imperialistic plunder of smaller, weak peoples. Nazi Aims Against U.S.S.R. “Finally, who is ignorant of Alfred Rosenberg’s adventurist plans aimed at the Soviet Union? The German Capitalist class is seeking a way out of the foreign political blind alley it has landed in by means of a direct plot with the imperialist powers ‘face to face,’ “They calculate that their with- drawal from Geneva will bring pres- sure to bear upon their former allies and strengthen the domestic political | position of the Fascist regime, thus} with your immediate contribution. helping it to slip through hunger winter approaching, “Germany's exit means the frustra- tion of the Conference for ‘Disarma- ment’ and the beginning of open armament by all the the fifth After the withdrawal of Germany and Japan—the two most militant imperialist nations—what remains of the League of Nations and the ‘Dis- armament’ Conference? “The Japanese capitalists are al- ready waging war against China, German Fascism also seeks its own Not in vain do the Junkers mitted that “the mii Mica tecmec* nutes were not \ \ and landowners speak of the Baltic countries as the ‘Western Manchuria.’ Austria is another ‘Manchuria’ which Ne, aes ent by the same group which engineered | al n imperialist | powers, including Fascist Germany, | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1933 Latest Scab Action (Of the NRA. Today | Demonstration Called | Against ‘Settlement’ | of Strike by A. F. L. Bulletin. | WASHINGTON, D. C. — Senator Wegner notified the Shoe and Leather | Workers’ Industrial Union last night | that mediation of the shoe strike | would be directly by the |\National Labor Advisory Board and | j asked that a delegation be sent to a hearing in Washington on Friday | morning. eek ee NEW YORK.—N. R. A. maneu- jvers to break the shoe strike having |thus far failed, Grover Whalen moved to a sharper attack in his announcement that all striking shoe chops would open for work with | | the “settlement” of the strike by! |the Boot and Shoe Union (A. F. of | L.) effected through an agreement | signed by this scab agency and the Manufacturers’ Board of Trade on the basis of the shoe code recently approved in Washington. Simultaneously with this an- }nouncement an advertisement of |I. Miller and Son appeared in the New York American, declaring that |this notorious open shon. neve | willing to sign up with a real union, had signed up with the A. F. of L, offic’ and colling the workers |back to the shop. By Grover Wua.en’s latest “medi- ation” move, the N.R.A. exposes | its intention to give full protection |to scabbery and strikebreaking. To |the shoe workers the agreement just announced is nothing more than a sham and fraud since the Boot and Shoe Union has no con- Att e is Warned; All Out in Support of Shoe | Strike! | Demonstration at N.R.A, offices at 45 Broadway at 3 p. m.,, against | Grover Whalen’s move to smash shoe strike and drive shoe workers into A. F, of L., Boot and Shoe Union. St, near 2nd Ave. | anonymous letter, but obviously from | the smashing of his store windows| | several weeks ago, after Richman|nection with the strike, by its own had placed a sign in his window Open ad s | which read:—‘Gentiles and Jews,|hated by 5 don’t buy German ca »” A pic-|York City, where it has never been ture of Adolf s,/able to gain a foothold. Return to “Wanted for Murder” was above it,|the shops on this basis, the shoe | and “A product of German culture,” | W° declared today, is unthink- below it. jable, si is would not only de- | Previously Richman had been vis-|feat the strike but would drive ited by several'“customers” who made | *#em back to the seme sweatshops, large purchases and then asked for| The shoe ers’ answer to | German candy. When he told them| Wha’ announcen was the | that he did not it in stock, they}! Ket lines | hurled the purchases to the floor and|at the 15 shops of the Board demanded their money back. ade yesterday and a demonstra- The death threat letter which| {on at 1. 8 1 the police be si "hia ‘failed to u he strikers | ended with the wo! | of the Nazi” and ¢:; | the swastika, follows: | “You have been warned a few |f; times to buy and sell German | candy we broke your window to | show you we mean business shoul ned not to let this| cab action foist a new form hem, namely the dom. They | nfment against | s on their strike | “By the power |-7" the sign of NR out the latest a al to the rank and file of! Pe a an appe: Al Id T P . t the Boot and ane Union to sup-!| | rad port the shoe strike and to take] A Ol wo ain ers action a: the betrayal of the} strike by their officials, The Shoe Union 0 appéaled to all workers to aid in the fight to} |free Maglicano, Ivanoff, Madoxia and Duchin, whose cases are now awaiting a d on on whether an} appeal is to allowed. In the union organiz | In AFL. Frame-Up NEW YORK.—Two painters were held for the Grand Jury and 10 | others were dismissed at the trial of | the Negro and white strikers arrested last Wednesday on charges of felon- fous assault, after having been brut- jally attacked by gangsters of the | Brotherhood of Painters. The ten workers who were released could not even be identified by the scabs who ressed charges against them, Th two defendants eld wens wines |tribute to the defense of the four whose bail was placed at $5,000 and |comrades and to arrange to visit | Angelo, who was held without bail. |them frequently. This can be done | Although Attorney Kuntz asked that | through the union office, 77 Fifth | Miller be released on low bail as his |\“V° _ wife was expecting a baby, Judge| While the government attacks on Farro was indifferent, |the shoe strike are increasing, the strike continues solid and the slip- After the trial, E, Paeal, a Brother- | ner and stitchdown bosses are be- hood gangster, was arrested and held ing pelled to ask fod settle- for felonious assault when John | "AY number aie aie | 7 7 ments. A number of these settle- | Swire, one of the strikers, identified ents are now being negotiated | him as having attacked and wounded | a+ the same time plans are under | him on 151st St. Paeal admitted that way to spread the strike to the en- [he had been sent by the Brotherhood |tire stitchdown section of the in- | to work on the job where the Altera- justry, and many more shops are jtion Painters Union had declated lecpected out including the entire strike. He was held in $1,000 bail.) eno or Jacob and. Som, The trial is to come up in the Wash- |”"7 Ms sag A This week the trial is scheduled ig 3 ‘ | van veto gaan 11st and Con-|+,” determine Whether the tempo- junctions issued by Justice | nk to the 15 shoe manufac- tuders are to be made permanent, Zausner’s Gangsters Terrorize Workers at Local 261 Meeting NEW YORK.—Continuing his ter- roristic methods of stifling criticism, | Phillip Zausner brought gangsters into the membership meeting of Lo- ca! 261, of the Brotherhood of Paint- ers, who threatened the life of a rank and file worker Friday. The member was saved from an attack by the great number of friends he has among the workers, A police riot squad which called out found the doors lo and the gangsters waiting for the rank and file workers at some other part of the building. A member from Local 1011 was fol- lowed by gangsters on his. way home recently. Workers were compelled to be meantime the four ers are being subjected to brutal treatment in jail, according to re-| |ports of strikers who have visited | them. Ivanoff is being singled out | for sp pei ution for his mili- tant role in the past struggles of |the shoe workers. Shoe workers and| other workers are urged to con- | 2 2 Philip Zausner, secretary of Paint- | ers District Council 9, tried to bribe | |dohn Swires, active member of the | Alteration Painters Union, a few days | ago with rosy promises if he agreed to return to the A. F. of L. and help in strikebreaking activities, Swires | answered emphatically “no, The N.R.A. threatens to outlaw strikes. The Daily Worker fights | the N.R.A, Fight for the “Daily” i} an | the Fascists are splashing in the | center of the European map, | “The proletarians and toilers of Germany are beginning to under- sland where the National Socialist leaders are leading the country. Isolation in the sphere of foreign polities on one hand; unemploy- ment, poverty and starvation of the toilers on the other—these are the fruits of eight months of Fas- cist rule, “Only the German Communist Party, the sole lender of the German proletariat and toilers, smashing Fas- cism will bring that country out of this blind alley, victoriously breaking the chains of Versailles!” was The reinstatement of the 26 left wingers was celebrated at a banquet at which Clarenee Hathaway, the editor of the Daily Worker, was the principal speaker Leather Workers take him home to prevent an attack. | r, Shoe Union Protests GUTTERS OF NEW YORK CHAS. 1,373 oy SOLOMON MINOR RBOVE GRAPH INDICATES cae COMPARRTIVE PUBLICITY Fe “THE CANDIDATES IN. CAPITALIST PRESS vs RKO THEATRES STRAW VOTE POLL BoB MINOR 2,453 SOLOMON —by del! | THE acTuAL COMMUNIST VOTE OWARSS THE SocinList INJUNCTION -LaWYER. 500 Frisco Dockers Go On Strike for Union IN. R. A. for Company Union; Negro Workers Refvse To Scab on Their White Brothers; Strike Spreading SAN FRANCISCO, Calif.—Five hundred stevedores on the Matson Line ducks in San Francisco struck, demonding reinstatement of four men fired for belonging to the International Longshoremen’s Association, and recog- nition of the I. L, A. as their union, union, and had the support of the N. Reject NRA Plans to Return to Work, “ivike Is Solid Under Independent Union GLOVERSVILLE, N. ¥., Oct. 16— Teather tanneries in Gioversville and Johnstown have been tied up for the past ten days with a strike of over 2,000 leather workers orsanized into the Independent Leather Work- you siill refuse we will bun your |°t4 om their union ani greeted the| ers? Ynion, ‘The union was organ stofe and later kill you take this as ee tration at N.R.A,| 24 in the mills, as the workers a final warning to hell with the | headquarters at 3 p.m, today. Thou- realized that working under the Blue | police we can take care of that your |cands of sidi are € ed to| Zagle was not all it was said to be. appeals to the police not wipe n out to protest N! scabbery In these shops it meant nine hours of you off our death list your days are /and the attempt to force the strik-| WoT in 8, reductions in pay and ris- numbered sell German candy or jors into the A. F. of L. | ing living costs which shrunk their die, | ‘The Shoe and Leather Workers’) Vases even more. By the power of Nazi. | Indu 1 Union yesterday issued| As the bosses learned of the grow- ing strength of the union, they began a campaign of discrimination against active union members. In the Fulton County Leather Co., a mill employing about 110 workers, the workers in the brushing eept. were made to do work o ver again without pay when an experiment with a chemizal failed to bring the desired results and) spoiled the work. When the workers consulted an active union member in the shop as to their action and were told to demand pay for this work the union member was fired and the shop, rising to his support, declared a strike, ‘ ‘This spark started the flame which later developed into a big struggle against miserable working conditions in this company controlled region. The workers are demanding union | recognition, recognition of their shop committees and $4.20 a day for unskilled labor. Exorbitant prices here make the cost of living higher than in New York City. ‘The local NRA mediation board, on which Frank Patern, owner of one of the leather factories is a member, has stepped into the strike and has de- cided that the workers return to work and submit their grievances to | arbitration. But although this is the first time in the history of Fulton County that the workers have taken up the challenge of slavery condi- tions and have decided to strike, they see clearly that a return to the shops with no concessions won would be disastrous to them. ,They see that the arbitration proposal is just a maneouvre to drive them back to the same conditions, The workers in Gloversville are learning rapidly that they can de- pend only on their own strength and not on promises of the bosses, mayors and other officials. Just as in every other strike, in textile and in coal they must be prepared for attacks and other tricks of the bosses to break their ranks, The bosses will raise the cry of “reds,” “radicals” and “Communists” to divide the strikers front. The strikers must realize that this cry will be raised because they are fearless, incorrup- tible fighters, determined not to yield to the bosses and to continue the struggle for their demands to defeat this, they must keep ranks intact and their strike solid, regardless of any attempts of the bosses to divide them against each other and break their strike. Furriers’ Meet general membership 1°. : of ‘ers will be held today, right atisr work, in Webster Hall, 119 Bast 11th St. At this meeting the question of the thirty-hour -week for the slow period, which is now beginning, will A v union, The company refused to recognize the | R, A. in its claim that the Blue Book | organized by an ex-police chief after the 1919 strike was broken, was “not a company union.” The men claim that it is, and refuse to belong to it any longer. Most of the longshoremen have refused to pay dues to the “Blue Book” any longer, but the shipowners are try- ing to hang on io it. The strikers refused to allow a N. R, A. mediator to negctiate the) strike, claiming that it was for rec- ognition of their union, and was not} negotiable, ( The strike is in the hands of the longshoremen themselves, and the I. L. A. officials are taking very little part in it. The officials have made no effort to carry on a direct fight against the Blue Book, saying that it would go to pieces if the men joined the I. L. A. ard refused to pay dues into the Blue Book, A rank and file group precinitated the strike through the issue of a} leaflet calling for a strixe in sup- port of the four men who were fired. The stevedores were hesitant about going out, but when the leaflet ap- peared they struck, This same rank and file group has been responsible for the slogan, “Smash the Blue Book” and for the program of or- ganizing dock committees amonz the rank and file, to force a militant) program on the I. L. A. officials. About fifty white scabs have been recruited for the strike and are held in readiness at the Fink Hall of the Blue Book union. Negro longshore- men in Oakland, across the bay from San Francisco, refused to scab on their white fellow workers. So far the I. L. A. officials have done nothing to prevent the recruit- ing of scabs, or to spread the strike to. other docks. The strike will probably spread, after a meeting of the I. L. A, at which this question will be voted‘ on, Neero Worker In Court todey for Scottsboro Protest NEW YORK.—Horold Lyons, Ne- | Sro worker arrested for being pres- ent at a Scottsboro protest meeting two days after Tammany police had brutally broken up the meeting, will come up for trial today in the Crim- | inal Court Building, Part 4, at Frank- lin and Center Sts. Lyons is being defended by the International Labor Defense. White and Negro workers are urged to pack the court to pro- test this outrageous frame-up of a Negro worker. ’ ma 15 Workers Sirile :) at Salem Brothers NEW YORK.—Seyenty-five work- | crs, men and women, skilled and unskilled, walked out on strike to- day in the Salem Bros. metal lamp shop, 122 Center Street, New York. The workers are demanding 35 per cent wage increases for all those re-, ceiving less than $25; 30 per cent Wage increases for all those earning more than $25; time and one-half for overtime; recognition of the Steel & Metal Workers’ Industrial Union. The workers are determined to carry on their strike until thelr demands are met by the bosses; steps are also being taken to spread the strike to the other lamp shops and unionize the trade. Greet Nygard On Thursday evening, Oct. 19, at the Hunts Point Palace, 163d and Southern Blyd., Bronx workers will greet the first Communist mayor. All workers are invited. Get Supreme Court Turns Over Negro to Southern Lynch Court Ju 3 ° Mint Julep INISTER though the fascination of military uniforms may be for women of all ages, the freqency of visceral vibrations produced by the mention of military titles is found to diminish in aging men. This is adduced to a number of factors among which indiscriminate bestowals of these badges of appreciation on aviators and puns on the term Rear Admiral figure largely. The finsings are published by a joint research committee of # the Russell Sage Foundation®—~ F a ae q i ve i ine, we ee bench | Niles otis rived at snidependanetys | I was sitting in the press box at the by a personal canvass. _ | Polo Grounds, turning the pages of a Four of the six approached indi- | Sears-Roebuck catalog and all of a viduals did not know the difference Fearon alr Mie va | tuated by Bill Terry’s recent assump- | Memphis turned out for the parade to celebrate his homecoming, and the ; nessee hill-billy act. The uniform) sudden I thought Terry’s managerial between a Brigadier and a Major) duties would interfere with his cus- tomary spryness between Critz and I didn’t jump and I didnt’ say a word to anyone. Quietly I drew forth my notebook and jot- ted down the idea. Remarkable, how your best ideas come as flashes out of the clear blue, Unassumingly, I replaced the bad. Terry, as it turned out, had ideas of his own. He finished in a tie for second in the league batting, and fielded more than adequately throughout the season. There is no need to dwell on further details. The Overburdened One came through with a pennant, a World Series and a five-year contract. Stubbornly but niexorably my idea wore down, quailed, hung in shreds and disap- peared. The process was gradual and virtually painless. I stationed Mr, Terry on a small private pedestal and let it go at that. ‘ DS bodkins, though, that was a | Jetdown yesterday. I was sitting in bed watching Montmorency pour cream into my tea and Jenkins placed the papers in front of me and there mas Bill Terry, grasping his Colo- nel’s diploma, suh, smiling for all he was worth, as us Ozarks say. All right. So he’s a Colonel now. Let him burn the candle at both ends. Harpo Marx did it. But you can’t burn the candle at both ends and in the middle. You can’t be}, Manager, First Baseman and Colonel*. j at the same time, especially when the three are so interdependent. What if Terry starts batting 220, what if Hubbell falls down? Will they strip him off his epaulettes? Does the commission expire with the five- year contract? Who killed Cock Robin? I’ve got four votes in my family and I demand to know. There's nothing in a colonel’s title, It's a fake. I saw more than a dozen majors and three colonels at the Madison Square Garden Rodeo last Thursday and you think they were any good? Remember what I said about them? “In confidentially hushed tones the announcer let you know that one of the attractions would be a colt tagged Mountain King or Dynamite Dan =| General. Five did not know how Charles A, Lindbergs received his title. Three failed to remember Ja- cob Ruppert’s rank. All six mispro-| nounced Colonel. As you no doubt surmised, this burst of sober research has been ac- tion of the purpoe. The thirty-six- yearold Boy Manager of the cham- pion New York Giants has been commissioned Colonel by Governor Hill McAllister of Tennessee, All day was topped off with a real Ten- was still at the t ailor’s but the} commission was ready, lettering and all, Bill took it and uttered three strikingly appropriate sentiments in- to the microphone. He said he was glad the Giants won the World Series. He said he was grateful to the good people of Memphis for all they've done for him. | He also said he would do his best to live up to the conferred honor. McAlister expressed regrets that) Bill couldn't manage the Memphis nine. A Nawthener from up hyar arose and stated Bill was putting| New York on the map. ae aoe AC this point I’d like to confess I wes one of those who considered Terry’s promotion to manager a mis- step fraught (anybody who doesn’t like this kind of writing can leave now) with danger. The First Base- man of Coogan’s Bluff and the lunar visage never impressed me as a@& notoriously bright strategist, and} player-managers flop as a rule, A devotee of master-minding in all forms, I sniffed at the idea of Bill’s handling a team which Mc-) Graw failed to put across. I pre- sumed his managerial duties (I said you could leave now) would inter- fere with his customary spryness be- Cleaners, Dyers Union Settles Four Shops and Workers Gain In Pay: NEW YORK —Announcement of settlements of four shops on strike under the leadership of the Clean- ers’ and Dyers’ Union was made to- day with big increases in wages won by the workers. The shops which were settled are the Jamaica shop at 11610 Atlantic Ave. Richmond Hill; the American, 4004 New Utrecht Ave., Brooklyn; the Universal and the| Doris Cleaners and Dyers of Brook- lyn, the latter two being chain re- tailers. The wages of wo: '§ wore raised from $6, $8 and $10 to as much as $14 a week by the settle- | ments, Despite the many obstacles placed in their way, the drivers of A. F. of L, Local 185. who have been strong for a strike but have been held back by the officials, seem to be nearer | to it than ever before. The prom- | ised improvements in corditions res | main unfulfilled and the drivers are | recognizing that their only hope for better conditions is through struggle. | Brush Workers of Amer. Safety Pazeor Walk Out on Strike NEW YORK.—yYesterday morning, the entire brush department of the American Safety Razor Corporation at 1 Main Street, Brooklyn, came out on strike when their demands for union recognition and for higher wages were not granted. ‘ The shop committee presented the demands of the workers before the strike was called. The boss, dismayed by the action taken, tried to per- Suade the workers that he could not_ grant their demands because the cor- poration is operating at a loss and jobs were being given only to keep ‘them employed. The workers were not convinced by this speech and decided to strike, after a meeting at headquarters, 33 Myrtle Ave. Brooklyn. They sent their committee again for a final answer and again the boss refused their demands. Picketing will begin| this morning. The strike is led by the United Brush Workers’ Union. Ben Gold to Speak at Election Rally. Ben Gold, Communist Candidate for President for Board of Aldermen, will speak tonight at an election rally to be held by the Paper Bag Makers Union, Local 107, at Grand Mansion Hall, 73 Ludlow Street, 8.30. Admission free. Meeting of Fur Workers A general membership meeting of fur dyers, chauffeurs and helpers is being called by the Fur Workers In- dustrial Union for tonight, at Man- hattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St. at 7:30 p.m. A report will be given on the Washington code conference as be taken up, . your tickets at 699 Prospect Ave. in advance, ‘ | the foul line. City Events | RES PR Nery RR vere 1s Sa RTC SEMEN Smedley Butler, something ferocious, and he was a snarling, kicking, un-, tamed mustang from some Ar! range, never been successfully 6 before, pay close attention, ladies and gentlemen. “Smedley was busy being saddled in the chutes and he didn’t hear a word of all this. He issued with his rider, bucked and twisted pers funciorily but with a great deal less vigor and@ efficiency than his pred- ecessors. For a m ing he mustered a painfully anemic display of energy and adrojtness. He was coralled with dispatch.” ‘That horse was owned by a Colonel You know what they did to it? This teat came in today’s mail: ' Sieh AU j pe2 =. i I don’t recall seeing anything in ~ your “Last Stand of Romance” story about the method used to make @ very tame horse buck like a wild mustang. $ Guy Endore Well, the man said they were wild for two cowboys tocows, to start with cows, to start with. The contest called for two cowhoys to rove and hold. the animal while a third one milked her and rushed the bottle to an av- pointed place. Would you like to be | roped in that brightly lit arena and be milked in front of all those people, One of the cowboys was a captain and the other a Colonel like Bill Terry. Even so, DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Brooklyn > PHONE: DICKENS 2-801% 1 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P. WILLIAM BELL Optometrist 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ay N. ¥. Phone: Tompkins Squat 8237, (Brooklyn) FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria’. 1638 PITKIN AVENUE | Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria EVERY BITE A DELIGHT well as other union activities 94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St, ~