The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 17, 1934, Page 2

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aan Page Two Fur Workers Battle AFL Gangsters, Police; Tear Up Leaflets of Scab Union Thousands Mobilized, Demonstrate Loyalty to Industrial Union Urge Return of Tag , Day Convention Boxes NEW YOR K—Workers who volunteered for tag day collections the raising of funds for the 1 Convention Against Un- urged to return oxes immediately to Special Fund Committee, 29 E. 20th St. NEW YORK ing workers gat t yesterday for volunteer preparations for the asked to report td nyention office at National C E. 20th St the officia nt € with their so-callec anifeste to manifesto” called come back to your © admit ther Enraged by move to smash workers tore the lea to Pass Roosevelt Inflation Message m Page 1) This was the signal for the thugs in which the fur Showed their mi spired Roosevelt's new pro- Bee rs, the cro about $1 200,000,000. a : lib pacifist i Seettating workers from House what about the sharpening of another, the economic war for markets and workers vigorously t whether it were not inevitable that selves against the gangsters. Scores of|inis should lead closer into substi-| Police were stationed at each block | tuting guns for currency in the strug- driving away the crowds of workers | cle, and he evaded. “Well, there’s but they were unable to disperse the masses of fur workers. For an hour afterwards, nothing harmful in trade among na- tions. We're trying to get trade.” despite | Coughlin touched the vital also sonstant efforts to disperse them, the | point of markets. So bluntly that fur workers marched up and down | Senator Gore of Oklahoma, sitting through the fur market determined | in on the hearing, remarked to defend their right to join a union of their own choice and demonstrat- ing their loyalty to the In ial Union. Five fur workers were Epstein, Clara Meltze: Maurice Weissm tk r it will help the people “You e of sil China, but I’m worried about in something. We're trying to put the price of gold up so as to increase rrested: Ray J. Weisblatt id Isidor Row. prices, Now if we increase the price of silver, aren't we putting up prices and hurting the Chinese who haven't got silver, helping only the banks who have it, in China? ... you know, I asked someone about this the other day and he answered, ‘I don’t give a damn about China. I’m thinking about the United States.’” Coughlin had asserted that the United States would help the 800,- 000,000 people of China and India} by doubling the price of silver for) coinage. It is this part of the pro-| Miners Fight Injunction In Anthracite Strike ‘om Page 1) (Continued f ugt support Cappelini and Maloney amy more than they will support Boylan and Lewis. gram Gore questions—the workabil-} ity of the silver phase, not the prin-| ciple of price raising. Finally, when jhe kept asking whether it wouldn't CongressMoves Fast < t if we put up the; GUTTERS 10,000 Workers in Needle Trades Demand CWA Jobs Workers’ Delegation I Denied a Hearing at State C.W.A. Office After some 1 with Sullivan, Publicity Director of e C. W. A. the delegation was a statement, supposedly sent 7 by Mr. Daniels, but without sig- “Ernest P. nature, declaring that director of the C.W.A. of New York City, will work out with the State Employment Service the procedure for registration of unemployed per- sons eligible for employment when the needle trades projects are devel- It is planned to start some of projects on Thursday or Friday. ‘The State Administration cannot deal directly with the Needle Works Trades Association, as the responsi- bility for developing these projects rests with the New York Civil Works Administration.” Almost coincidental with the re- lease of this report, a riot squad of the police department rounded up a group of the workers who were on | the outside. “Miss Grace, the following program on which their bers to vote for them: ‘European Gov'ts union conditions, shop chairmen to bosses. OF NEW YORK DEMAGOGUES = By DEL Goodrich, Commissioner of Sanitation, offers prize for a snappy slogan to coax trash into can.’’ —wNews Item. Program of Rank and File Waiters in Election Today NEW YORK.—The rank and file opposition group of Waiters and Waitresses Union Local No. 1 has a list of candidates for officials of the union in the election which takes place today. The rank and file, fighting against ths racketeering officials, propose | candidates appeal to the union mem- Exemption of dues for unemployed members, re- instatement of all dropped for failure to pay dues due to unemployment, distribution of jobs by committee elected by the workers; enforcement of be elected directly in each place of work; drive to organize the unorganized; unemployment insurance at the expense of the government; unity of all workers, in all unions to fight the | Prepare Reprisals on Cheap Dollar (Continued from Page 1) | will be answered by reprisal measures | throughout the world. The “Petit Journal” declares: “It is most likely | Roosevelt policy will provoke at once protective measures of an economic and financial nature from the big powers.” that the new! NEW YORK.—A strong Commu- |nist Party is the best monumeut to; “The rank and file opposition wishes to state that the strike demands should not be narrowed down to the recognition of U.. .P. but for the right of the min to belong to the union of their own choosing; for the colliery rate sheet rates, to be paid for ail mining, mechanical mining the same as hand mining, restriction of output per man to two cars per shift, six-hour day and five-day week without reduction in pay, payment for all dead work, against the check- off, against arbitration and commis- sions. What Is the N.R.A.? “John L. Lewis and William Green of the A. F. of L, say that they sup- port the N.R.A. 100 per cent, and they, together with the N.R.A,, have| through the National Labor Board broken the strikes of the bituminous miners, the Weirton Steel workers, | the Budd Auto workers, and the Ford workers. And now the N.R.A.| sends in Boylan, Btennon and Gold-| en, of the U.M.W.A., and three coal/ operators, to act as strike-breakers | to break the strike of the anthracite miners. | homa, “hurt the man who has only tea and TOKIO, Jan. 16.—President Roose- | rice,” in China, Coughlin gave him-/ yelt’s drive for a cheaper dollar, self away completely, saying, “Yes, it! coupled with expected British re- would—but we've hurt him for 500! prisals, caused great fluctuation on! years.” the Japanese stock exchange today, | Coughlin is working with the Com-| with the Japenese government and | mittee for the Nation, an industrial-| traders considering a further de ists’ group, including leaders of the/ preciation of the yen in an effort to Sears-Roebuck, Remington-Rand and hold recent Japanese trade gains in other big businesses. They have| Asiatic and South American markets | been flooding the country with infla-|@t the expense of their U. S, and| tion propaganda for months. With| British rivals. them also, Senator Thomas of Okla-| leader of the inflation bloc} in Congress, is working. The House Committee greeted Coughlin with unctuous deference, Chairman Somers, Tammany Demo- crat, calling the witness “one of the best authorities on money in Amer- ica.” Coughlin took occasion to declare his primary interest in finding mar- kets for the manufacturers and in- dustrialists—and to declare war on| “Stalinism” and Communism. A very smooth demagogue, he played upon the misery of the masses BERLIN, Jan. 16—President Roose- | | velt’s drive for a cheaper dollar has | caused consternation in Nazi circles | | and is likely to accelerate Nazi plans | for inflation of the currency. | ROME, Jan. 16.—Financial experts | | praised Roosevelt’s move as “ending” | international uncertainty, while the | | fascist government considered plans | for devaluation of the lira as an an- swer to the cheaper dollar. PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, Jan, 16. |—Prague newspapers reported today | that the government devalued its cur- | W. 66th St., and at the Arcadia Hall, | V. I. Lenin, world’s working class, and the New | York District of the Communist | |Party is strengthening that monu-| ment by initiating in its ranks at the | meeti norating the tenth | | annivers: of Lenin’s death 1,000) |mew recruits who have joined the Party during the recruiting drive} started three months ago. | The initiation will take place at/ the three memorial meetings ar-| ranged in Manhattan, Bronx and Brooklyn. In addition to the initia- tion of new recruits, a banner will be presented to the section of the Party most active in the recruiting drive, From all indications it ap- pears that the Harlem Section will get this banner, as they have re- cruited and assigned to units 184 members during the past three} months, | Three Meetings | The memorial meetings, which will | be held at the Bronx Coliseum, E.} 17th St., the St. Nicholas Arena, 69 918 Halsey St, Brooklyn (near in America, toyed with the thought} “Maloney and Cappelini also sup-|of revolution, and then bluntly de- | port the N.R.A. 100 per cent andj|clared that the way out is “reform| State that they would be willing to|of the abuses” of capitalism. He allow the conditions of the miners|called on god and Roosevelt to eradi- to remain in the hands of a com-jcate these “abuses,” and solemnly| mission for months, that the officers|proclaimed that all could be cured} of the U.AM-P. are against strikes,|by changing banking and currency) the rank and file opposttion states/practices. It was just because of the} that this is the same policy of Boy-! failure of the Federal Reserve Bank- | lan and Lewis, who are against|ing law, Coughlin said, that “men | Strikes, the N.R.A., which is against|began to question not exactly the/ strikes, the coal operators are against | soundness of capitalism—I think the} Strikes, Maloney and Cappelini agree sane people of this country will al-| with all of these, and stand for arbi-| ways give allegiance to that economic | tration, against strikes, for the | Philosophy—but the abuses,” and that N.R.A. and concilliation boards. But “the Socialist was on the soapbox, the miners know that the only wea-|the Communist agitating in his pon they have is to strike, that is darkened hall” during recent years the only way they have ever won| (apparently Coughlin thinks all this anything.” has ceased!) | Unemployed Miners and Equalization; Setting himself up as an authority} Thirty-five thousand miners in |rency by 15 to 20 per cent to meet | | Broadway), will be real demonstra- | tions of the determination of the | workers of New York to follow the VIENNA, Jan. 16—The Austrian | way of Lenin. It will be the answer government indicated that the Au- | of the New York working class to the strian schilling would be further de-| provocations of William Green of the preciated as a result of President|A. F. of-L, A great number of mass Roosevelt's move. | organizations have called on their |entire membership to attend en | masse, | Speakers at the New York Coli- | | Seum will include Charles Krumbien, | District Organizer, Communist Party; NEW YORK —Mary Van Kleeck,| James W. Ford, Ben Gold, Juliet | who recently resigned from the Fed-| Stuart Poyntz. Earl Browder, Gen- eral Department of Labor in pro-|eral Secretary of the Communist test against the employer control of | Party, will be the main speaker at the National Labor Board, will speak | the St. Nicholas Arena, together with on “New Deals In Industry?” at the|Rose Wortis, Steve Kingston and annual dinner of the League for|John Little, New York District Or- Mutual Aid, this evening, January |ganizer of the Young Communist 17. As head of the Department of| League. Robert Minor, Communist Industrial Studies of the Russell| candidate for Mayor in the recent the threat of the cheap dollar against Czechoslovakia’s trade. Mary Van Kleeck Will Discuss the “New Deal” on capitalism, Coughlin forgot that District No. 1 are totally unemployed the primary contradiction—the ever and can only find work again in the! mines by reducing the working time to six hours per day and five days x )% Week, by placing a limit on the production per man to two cars per shift, therefore we call upon the miners in both unions to unite in the strike, and fight for demands, which will give thousands of us unemployed miners jobs. ‘Elect joint strike committees from both unions to fight for conditions. For mass picketing. | deepening jand fected, in fact increased, by inflation, which leaves the masses of the pro- ducing workers with \power than they had before, Wise~ jcracking and posing at length for | the crowd of news photographers, the |priest made the most of the occa-| sion. rift between production consumption— cannot be af- less buying Well-fed, well-dressed, referring | jauntily to visits to him by the Lord Mayor of Bombay, he never failed to Sage Foundation, she has been study- ing the steel and coal industries un- der the N. R, A. The dinner will be held at the London Terrace Grill, 405 West 23rd St. not living up to” its ability to issue a currency total of two and one-half times the base of its currency, Hence, presto, Coughlin declared that Roosevelt’s message yesterday “dou-/| bled” America’s supply of 42 billlion of gold to 814—and we “could” now have 19 billions in currency. elections, will speak in the name of the Central Committee of the Com- munist Party at the Arcadia Hall, Richard B. Moore, Sadie Van Veen, Fred Biedenkapp and Nell Carroll will also speak in Brooklyn. All meetings will start at 8 pm.| sharp. Admission will be 35 cents, including one cent for the Unem- ployed Councils, * HATHAWAY SPEAKS IN BOSTON MEMORIAL | emphasize his alliance with the dom-/} Against discrimination of the Ne-j|inant powers—and never did he fail fro and foreign-born workers. |to refer with equal fervor to his in- Smash injunctions by mass viola-|tense interest in the masses who are ‘tions. exploited by these powers. He} ~ Spread the strike to all of the an-|pleaded for vast new circulation of ite. Rank and file Committee|money—to give more to “the aver- ction. age laborer, who earns only $14 a week.” But he didn’t mention that wage increases are the only way Paar A ROXBURY, Mass. Jan. 16. —| Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, will be the chief speaker at the 10th Anniversary Cele- bration of the “Daily”, Saturday, Feb. 10th, 8 P. M., in Dudley St. Opera House, 113 Dudley St. The affair will Bronx Food Workers The thread of fascist ideas ran) clear through Coughlin’s speech to the committee. He put forward the doctrine of intense nationalism, com~ Plaining that Europe has taken “our Money and our machines, our blue- prints and our brains.” The currency inflation by the printing press method and the doubling of the price Benefit Tonight for Framed Shoe Workers | _ NEW YORK.—-A benefit perform- of “Peace on Earth” playing at 9 Civic Repertory Theatre will be held tonight to raise funds for the -defense of the shoe workers who have ‘been framed in the shooting of Wil- liam Strauss, a fellow shoe worker. Phereet 54 Pickets in Blechman Strike to intimidate the picketers and | h the strike at S. Blechman and Inc., 502 Broadway, police ar- | 6 UP a mass picket line. 4 |Christian gospel of bro s workers can get more of the circu- lating money. Instead, he markets for the owners, hammered on new him it was difficult Indians and Chinese Americans whose country them our bathtubs.” He reported, too, \that it was a churchman and not a '“boy friend of Queen Elizabeth,” who NEW YORK. — Continuing their originated the economic law of Gres- of mass arrests in their at- ham, that “bad money drives out bad.” Because of this law, Coughlin pro- posed bimetallism—a coinage He got in |some words for mother church, too, telling the Congressmen that the |“‘real reason” he became interested in |these matters was that “Catholic and Protestant missionaries” reported to| () to get the to accept the therhood from “denies : in| that god has given us.” 28 more workers Monday while | which gold would be mixed with sil-/| |of silver were, Coughlin said, but the natural “follow through” of the | |Roosevelt program. Congress must | “follow through,” he declared. Talks of Revolution “If you refuse,” he added, “I pre- dict a revolution in this country that will make the French revolu™~ p look silly . .. we're not going . have Communism or any of those silly things, but we're liable to have an overthrow of other things, .. . Roost- velt is not going to make a mistake because god is guiding him. God knows we've prayed enough during the last few years for an end of the depression; Roosevelt is the answer |to our prayer ... we're going to pro- ‘duce and we're going to get markets. We're going to keep the blessings Strike for More Pay NEW YORK.—A strike of the work- ers of the California Cheese Special- ties Co. at 62 Truxton Ave., Bronx was called on Monday morning when the 30 workers of the firm walked out in protest against miserable wages and long hours. The strikers elected a strike committee and joined the Food | Workers’ Industrial Union. The strikers are demanding a weekly and $3 for unskilled, a 40 hour week, time and a half for overtime, double time on holidays and equal division of work. In addition, the workers de- mand the reinstatement of all work- ers fired for union activity and recog- | nition of the union. The capitalist system’s time-hon- ver, He declared that “capitalism is! ored way of doing that is war, Strike headquarters have been es- wage increase of $5 for skilled workers! tablished at 699 Prospect Ave,, Bronx, pes of 1,000 Recruits Feature of N.Y. Lenin Meets Hathaway to Speak in Boston, Mass.; Torgler’s Secretary in Detroit, Mich. be held under the auspices of the Daily Worker Committee, District the great leader of the|One. The varied program includes the | Russian Workers Chorus, which will sing new Soviet songs. Powers, Frmed in 1932, on Trial Thursday; 11) Calls for Witnesses NEW YORK.—The International Labor Defense, in an urgent appeal, calls upon all workers who were present at the City Hall demonstra- tion of April 21, 1982 against the threatened closing of all Home Re- lief Buros to report to the office of attorney Joseph Tauber, Room 403, | 401 Broadway, Room 403 between 2 | and 7 P. M. today. Fight for unemployment insur- ance. Support the National Con- vention Against Unemployment on Feb. 3 in Washington, D. C, CARL BRODSKY All Kinds Of INSURANCE 799 Broadway NYC; STuyvesant 9-5557 Allerton Avenue Comrades! The Modern Bakery was first to settle Bread Strike and first to sign with the FOOD WORKERS’ INDUSTRIAL UNION 691 ALLERTON AVE. Trade Unien Directory ++. BUILDING MAINTENANCE WORKERS UNION 790 Broadway, New York City Gramerey 5-0857 FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION ‘4 West 18th Street, New York City Chelsea 3-0505 FURNITURE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 312 Broadway, New York City Gramercy, 5-8956 METAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION ‘85 East 19th Street, New York City Gramercy 7-7843 NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL ut ‘UNION 1st Wost 28th Street, New York City Unekawanna 4-4010 STATIONERY and MIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES At Special Prices for Organisations Lerman Bros., Inc. Phone ALgonquin 4-3356 — 3843 29 East 14th St. N.Y.C, Brownsville Pharmacist Directory B. ESECOVER, 447 Stone Avenve. WM, GARDEN, Ph.G., 386 FRANK SUSSMAN, Ph.G., 501 Powell St, J. NOVICK, Ph.G., 408 Howard Ave. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1934 Four Murdered in | Cuba When Troops Fire on Big Crowd (Continued from Page 1) |Tevolt, The whole | emphasizes that no ing the social bas! | workers and pea | self. | Communist P tuation again rnment lack- of the aroused | can stabilize ‘arty Calis For Armed | Struggle in| rty |calls for the formation of joint ac- | tion committees for the struggle fo: municipal power, preparation for po- litical mass strike against the terror of the bloody reaction and U. S.j | armed intervention. The Party called upon members and workers to inten-} \sify the struggle on all fronts, to seize arms, build joint defense de-| tachments to further undermine the basis of the present government and to lead to the revolutionary way out of increasing mass misery, exploita- tion and fascist terror. Today the “Ala Izquierda,” student organization, organized a onstration against the new gove! jment and Batista, demanding Batis- | ta’s arrest and trial for the murder | on Dec. 29 of Jaranu Senadi, student, Cadenas and others. A mass demon- | stration will be held tomorrow by the Trade Union Confederation. Trade Union Congress Endorses Party Call ‘The Congress of the National Labor | Confederation in session here issued ;@m appeal today for mass actions | against the reaction. The Congress | endorsed whole-heartedly the appeal of the Cuban Communist Party for | armed defense against the attacks of | the reaction. Representatives of sugar workers at the Congress held a conference yes- terday, with 100 representatives of sugar mills out of 147 present, ac- counting for no less than three- fourth of the total sugar production {in the island. Workers in a dozen sugar mills struck over the week end in a forty- eight hour general strike ih Guanta- namo province against the terror of the reaction. “ARL Jewelry Local, to Voteon Rank File Slate in Elections NEW YORK.—Rank and file mem- bers of Local 1 of the International Jewelry Yorkers (A. F. of L.), are |putting forward their own slate of | officers at the elecitons to take place today at the Washington Irving High School, 16th St. and Irving Place. Candidates running for office on the rank and file slate are G. Rosen }for vice-president; D. Fratkin for business agent; K. Arkin for financial | Secretary; N. Lappine for recording | secretary; M. Rubin and N. Avrutsky for trustees; A. Sabella, J. Press, M. Hoffernberg, H. Berner, G. Tavel, Abramovitz and J. Cohen for Execu- tive Committee. left JAN. 27 Eight P. M. COSTUME BALL and CONCERT CELEBRATING th ANNIVERSARY L. W.O. @ In Defense of Ping Pong reader, and neither the fourth floor blondes nor the extra strength of Benny’s coffee has anything to do with it. Iam about to undertake a cause and like all good cause undertakers I expect a goodly measure of punishment, and, perhaps, who knows, A Fate Worse Than Death Itself. But when they bring celluloid ball. T expect gn: cago, Detroit, Cleveland and New England. I anticipate the letters of Outraged protest that will flood our harrassed editor. I am even prepared for the bricks, vegetables and sundry other missiles that will find their we; through the Daily Worker windows in Depariment, titude tself. * Yea, verly, we are for- * UT there will be rejoicing over on Second Avenue, where the Red Sparks hold sway and the ping of the serve and the pong of the return are sweet sonatas to tennis table ad- dicts, Ping pong piayers will scurry cut of their holes, sandpaper rackets aloft, and fall in behind the banner of the Daily Worker Sport Column in serried ranks. Well, in ones and twos anyway. Meyer Milquetoast, distant relative of the famed Casper, will no longer siink up the dark side of the street, but will stride confidently up Houston, a new light shining in his eyes, bound for a table tennis tourna- ment and glory. And this will be my reward, even though the baseball wolves tear me limb from limb. eles ese , too, once sneered at the game. A sport? Competition? Exer- cise? Fie, fie! A man who would play ping-pong would put on cheese cloth and dance. And any guy that would do a thing like that simply can't be discussed. He's beyond the pale, beyond redemption. He’d he thrown out of any respectable pool- room. But the time came—ah, it always comes— when we learned to rue the day that we had scorned ping-pong, It happened, like a lot of other things, at a summer camp. Some Amazon challenged your columnist to a game. I accepted, contemptuously, of course, Ud defeat the vixen 21-0 and then go down to the athletic field where there ain't no ten commandments and @ man can perspire freely. We volleyed back and forth a while, your correspondent missing more than he hit. But, what the hell, wait until the game started. I'd get serious then and beat that dame so bad she'd never again look at a ping-pong table. First serve. Something white whizzed over the net and past me. Who was throwing things? “One— love,” she lisped sweetly. Hell, that was an accident. She served again, and again I felt # cool breeze as the celluloid winged past me. I thought I detected a snicker in the ever-growing gallery. A slight flush, I was later informed, began to creep slowly upward from the region of my neck, I gripped the racket more tightly. The young comrade, whose mater- nal ancestors undoubtedly were witches in old Salem, served again, a slow, twisting teaser. I swung with reckless abandon at the place where I fondly imagined the ball would be, but, woe is me, my friends, the spheroid had gently cured away from my racket, Three—love! . Cols was flung to the winds, as the literary people have it. I forgot that I had ever read Marx, that I must be cool and _ self-pos- sessed, that I had a mother and home. . .. But why should I bore you, my friends. The fourth, fifth and sixth points were the same, The inaudible snicker became a lusty guffaw as the crafty jade humiliated me before my comrades. The malicious, grin- ning face of the she-devil opposite me became hazy to my _ sweat- ing of teeth in Chi- | \ | my limp body on a shield into Hathaway, let them tell him that I conducted myself like a true*- a =si warrior. a belted knight of the! dimmed e! Thirteen, fourteen— love ‘hrist, when would this agony end? Death, O death, come to papa! Well, m’sieu, it was finally over and I dragged away my bruised soul . | YOUR columnist’s heart goes pit-a-pat this morning, gentle jegk’ Is - Red pa. berg, 3s of was tem- alist i the held | with what was left of my bedy, 1 Yood- | play ping-pong no more. | that is, except in the dead of night,” 'in a muffled chamber, where I bang the general direction of the Sports| a celluloid sphere against a blank wall and dream of the day that ‘I will meet that imp of Satan who inflicted those terrible scars on my spirit and defeat her, even as she did me, 21—0. Ah, ‘m’sieu, then I will laugh loud and long. You think me a bit queer, m’sieu? I don’t blame you, You don't know what ping pong can do, to a@ guy. Ror despite the terrible treatment at the hands of the lady who beat me in my first and last table tennis match, I hope she’s in good health and attends the big New York workers’ ping-pong tournament this month. So many entries are expected that the affair will take three days to run off, Jan. 25, 26 and 27. The finals will be held at the Red Sparks dance at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St., Saturday night, Jan. 27. Literally the best players in the coun- are expected to battle it out at the finale. A new feaure of the competition will be a men’s single consolation tournament for those eliminated in the first and second rounds of the tourney. A women’s single tourney is also scheduled. Entries are pour- ing in. If you're what we expect you to be, a secret ping-pong player, obey that impulse immediately and send in your entry to the N. ¥. District partakiade Committee, 799 Broad- way, Room 539, New York City. The fee is 25 cents for men and 15 cents for women. The meet is open to all amateurs. Most important of all, it’s part of the many-sided preparations for the World Spartakiade and is part of a campaign to acquaint New York ath- letes with the great international workers’ athletic meet, the World Spartakiade, at Moscow, Aug. 5 to 18, 1934. Batter up! Yorkville Gym Meet Won by Home Club NEW YORK. —With seven clubs sharing in the scoring honors, the Yorkville Workers’ A. C. meet here last week showed an upward curve of interest in gvmnastics among labor sportsmen. The affair was held at the Yorkville Gym, 347 E. 72nd St., and was sanctioned by the Labor Sports Union, Eastern District. ‘The results follow: APPARATUS (first Yorkville, 98; Fink, Cavalier, Yorkville, 84; Vesele, 18; Ackercit, Y.W.AC, 6345 T.W.AC., 66%. ‘APPARATUS (second class): Nietham- mer. Fichte, 64%; Fr. Jokn, Yorkville, 59%; Gorz, Yorkville, 68; G. Bares, Work~ ville, 56%. ROP® CLIMBING: Pechar, Yorkville, 8.6 sees.; Sauchy, Y.W.A.C, 7.8 secs; Fr John, Yorkville, 9.2 secs, STANDING BROAD JUMP: Carison. Harlem Prolets, 8 ft. 7 in; Prasek, Yorie- ville, 8 ft. 1 in. APPARATUS (women): Lenz, York- ville, 65%; Voelkel, Yorkville, 54; Cinat, Y.W.A.C., 64. ROPE CLIMBING: Kolchos, Y.W.A.C.. sec.; Mickes, 12.2 sec. RUNNING HIGH I. Yorkville, 4 ft. 2% in.; E, Lenz, Yorkville, 4 ft. % in.; Cinat Young W. 3 ft. 11% in. STANDING BROAD JUMP: Danko, Yorkville, & ft. 8% in.; Cinat, Y.W.A.C., 5 ft. 8 in.; Mickes, Yorkville, 5 ft. 7% in. GROUP CALIS' CS: Yorkville girls, 88 pt.; Yorkville nm, 18 pt; Y.W.A.C, girls, 78 pts. BASKETBALL: — Yorkville-Lithuantan, 24-14 in favor of Yorkville, class): Marlow, Spartacus, 414; Yorkville, Hlamos, 13 JUMP: Miller, "way Coffee Shoppe 866 Broadway. Quality Foods DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin ond Suiter Aves., Breekhyn PHONE: DICKENS %-9018 Office Honrs: 8-18 AM, 1-2, 68 P.M. af COHENS’S 111/ ORCHARD STREET Ne, Delancey Street, New York City GALA PROGRAM Prizes! Prizes! Prizes! FOR BEST COSTUME ® Ether - Wave Instrument Musie Out of the Air! ° Sol Braverman’s 2 Negro and White Orchestras e IWO Symphony Orchestra I. Koreman, Director e Mass Pageant by I.W.0. Youth & Childrens Section e 69th REGIMENT ARMORY 25th St. & Lexington Ave. Admission 35¢ Wholesale Opticians 44520 Public Notice —— 1X. Gorren, formerly with the Union Square Mimeo Service, is now with Empire Mimeo- graph, 799 Broadway, Room 441, DOWNTOWN Patronize MARSHALL FOODS 791 BROADWAY Bet. 10th and lith Streets Best Food—Proletarian Prices JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurané 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades _ All Comrades meet at the Vegetarian Workers’ Club —DINING ROOM— Natural Food for Your Health 220 E. 14th Street ‘Bet. Srecond and Third Avenues $$ ___—. All Comrades Meet at the Fresh Food—Proletarian Priece—S@ E. 13th St.—WORKERS’ NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Come Away From the Noise and Rush of the City FOR REST, QUIET - - AND A LITTLE FUN AT CAMP NITGEDAIGET ‘BEAOON, N. ¥. Hot sad cold running water in 60 steam heated t0od-—-Gee the wewly. decorated social” and ‘dang Of tasty, nuteitions ‘ising “halls.” ™ ALL THE SUMMER FUN WITH WINTER COMFORTS Come for the Raton 66 por weak ¢ press tax); ipecist week-end fare from Cars Leave Daily at 10:30 A. M. res, etc. -end—You Will Want to Siay the Week! j.£13 for T. W. 0. and Co-Operative Members jay to Sunday (32.50 round trip) from Co-operative | Ave. daily aker Son, also lela ‘on- and age, ‘sil- ille, gs- ttle, fin- ind as de o- fe id le n wee ete No more,4, and? J

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