The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 20, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two . Detroit Meeting Sunday to Fight Ban on May Day (Continued from Page 1) the May Day demonstration, club- bing many Negro and white workers. on the basis there was no “physical barrier” between black and white in the e Negro and white t Ned Goodwin. o worker, and Jane Speed ng Southern white girl, were arrested The City Council this year has answered the demand of the May Day committee for a per with a request for ‘o think it over But the Bi orkers will meet at 20th St. and 7th Ave., North at 5 p.m, May 1 working-class power, and they are determined to go through h it permit or no permit Capitol Park, on whose steps the May 1 demonstration will be held. is bounded on one side by the tall White structure of the Jefferson County ja On the top floor of this jail are imprisoned seven of the Scottsboro boys. Six of these have been suffering the tortures of soli- tary confinement for weeks—part of the never-ending effort of the jailers to break their spirit and even to try to kill them off by abuse and mistreatment before they can be tried again. If the demand of the workers that these boys be taken out of solitary, can be speedily gained, the Scotts boro boys will be able to look down on the greatest mass demonstration of working class power that Ala- bama has yet seen. They will be able to hear clearly the shouts of the assembled workers, white and black, in a mass violation of the Jim Crow park regulations: “Set the Scottsboro boys free!” The International Labor Defense has called on all Scottsboro dem- onstrations and meetings through- out the country, and especially the special demonstrations scheduled for April 25, Scottsboro Day, to sup- port this demonstration in Birming- ham with resolutions and wires de- manding “hands off!” the May Day in Birmingham, addressed to Gov- ernor B. M. Miller, and the City Council of Birmingham. (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, April 19—The Work- ers of Chicago are determined to march through the Loop May First despite the second flat refusal of the police to issue a permit. When @ delegation of 35 representing the May Day united front conference called on Commissioner of Police Allman Wednesday, the excuse given by Allman was that would “block traffic.” “This denial of the right of the workers to demonstrate on their international day of struggle,” stated the May Day Committee yesterday, “is an attempt on the part of the city government to stifle the growing militancy of the working class, in line with the growing Fascist attack on work- ers’ rights. Starting from Union Park at p.m.. the line of march is to go East on Madison Street to Michigan Boulevard, then South to Congress and East to Grant Park. for a show of DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M 137B ST.NICHOLAS AVE® 1690 LEXINGTON AVE, at i179” Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFFICE HOURS COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr, Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel, ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises Special Russian Program will be given by Panlina Dagmarova Sama Votliar osha Roodarin Tinsha Berman Beacon, N.Y. Tel. Beacon 721 Cars leave daily at 10:20 a. m. from Co- operative Restzuzant, 2700 Bronx P% st. Ph.: Estabrook &-1499, Private Quarters Again Available the march ‘| business men had promised. Ne- RARE Me Oe ee eee ee ats DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1934 Juggle Shoe Vote to Spike Biedenkapp Victory Lovestoneites Aid Mackesy Clique to Violate the Union Constitution and NEW YORK—Deliberate viola- tion of the constitution and juz- gling of votes by the Inspectors Committee of the United Shoe and Leather Workers Union resulted in declaring William J. Mackesy elect- ed as general organizer of the union in the place of Pred G. Biedenkapp, who was originally elected and re- ceived the highest vote. A report has j been issued by "|the Coordinating Committee of the union, after a local of the | means of wt of the in order re-election in Bos is distorted lace Biedenkapp. Originally Biedenkapp received 4,301 votes as against Mackesy’s 4,213. The statement of the Coordinating Committee declares that Mackesy received 4,813 and Biedenkapp 4,090. A. Silver, representative of the New York local of the union, rep- resentative on the Inspectors Com- mittee in a letter to the Coordinat- ing Committee prot against the juggling of the votes and the viola- tion of the union constitution “Several acts of the election in- spection committee have been clear- \y in violation of the very spirit and of the rules and regulations of the constitution,” says Silver in his letter. Engineer Re-vote The violations refer to the fact that according to Article 7 fection 7 of the constitution, the duties of the election inspectors committee is only to count the ballots. Instead, | the election inspectors committee ordered a new election in the last- ers’ local. They thereby switched the whole results of the vote. Not | only that, in counting the ballots in other locals, they deliberately switched votes cast for Biedencapp to Mackesy in order to swing the| election to Mackesy. | Silver declined to sign the ma- jority report of the committee, and in the name of the New York local registered his protest against the | overt acts, and held that the entire | election inspection is unconstitu- | tional. { uattinnts Seamen ‘PresentDemands in ‘Washington March (Continued from Page 1) | istration we have known or heard of.” As dawn broke, we handed them | bandages we brought aiong for blis- | tered feet. They passed them first | to Elbert Lahue, @ slight young sea-| man, He had walked the last five miles barefoot | They swung into the open road} singing. They were too buoyant to | | wait for the breakfast coffee the | gro and white, they marched two! by two. And they flung out to the) quiet wayside a sturdy yell—“Stand| \’em on their head—Stand ‘em on| | their feet. Seamen, seamen, can't) | be beat.” | | They would reach Washington | sometime late today. They would go to the Federal Emergency Relicf Administration and to President Roosevelt to protect against three | | weeks’ futile efforts by Federal, |State and City relief officials in | Baltimore to break up the Seamen's | | Control and give absolute power to) |Harry Greenstein, State Relief Ad- | | ministrator in Maryiand. | | “We've been fighting to get con- | trol of our own relief for more than | two years,” Leonard Patterson, young Negro seaman told me. “We| got it last January, and we're go- jing to keep it. A few weeks ago, | the relief officials brought down a fellow and said he was in charge. | But he was a king without power.) |The seamen just told him, “We only | recognize our own suv-committee.” Patterson, of the Seamen's Sub- | committee elected by tne rank and} file to run the relief project, was one of the three leaders of the march—a slow-spoken young man/ who could bring every seaman to at- | tention by calling, “Hey, guys.” The | | other leaders were James Kennedy, who checked the accuracy of ever; figure he uttered, out of experienc: as director of the clothing depart | ment of the Seamen's project; and| | Walter Tack, the clean-cut young | leader from the M. W. I. U. | The marchers stood around sev-| eral dying campfires on the wet) green field. Here they had stopped | at midnight, about a mile this side of Laurel. They had marched this distance, resting 10 minutes at 50- minute intervals, since 3 p.m. Sev-| |eral times they were overtaken by | | automobiles bringing coffee in milk | | cans—coffee from cars sent to over- | |take them by the business men. | Most of their shoes were broken by | the march, but they didn’t seem to! notice, standing on the wet ground. “Are you tired?” I asked one, — | | “Don't you know?” he = grinned.) |“Seamen are used to walking, on} j the decks, or on the beach?” To} | be “on the beach” is to be unem- | | ployed. | | LECTURE LECTURE DR. HOFFER | “MAY FIRST” | | Friday, April 20th, 8 P. M.} COMRADE RINGS HOUSE 2164 - 16th Street Auspices: Tom Mooney Branch 817 | i WO. = | \the question of jelection was raised. The report was | wonderland Count Out Biedenkapp the New York local and a demand recommended. n the re-election ordered uncon- itutionally by the election inspec- committee, voting instead of by presentation of union books, as is | provided for in the constitution slips were handed out to the mem- bers granting them a vote. Lovestoneites Heip Out all of this maneuvering to set | Biedenkapp’s election, the mites, under the leadership el Zimmerman, mobilized all forces to keep union members of their who know of constitutional viola- tions, from bringing them to the attention of the memb Zimmer- man himself is secretary of the co- ordinating committee and knew the were having a re-vote, in violation of the constitution, but did not interfere, aiding in the dis- | tortion of the voting. In fact, he is in charge of the blank baliots and let them go out in the maneuver to} oust Biedenkapp after he was elect- ed by the rank and file. Rush into Print j The statement of the election re- | sults declaring Mackesy elected sent to the pr as not taken up by the coordinating committee where illegality of the| sent out to the capitalist and labor | press in order to create the impres- | |sion that the election is an accom- plished fact and everything is over, | when the whole matter is being contested vehemently. At a meeting of the coordinating committee last Saturd: Zieble, a member of the coordinating com- mittee, demanded an explanation and a discussion on the methods \used by the election inspectors com- mittee. But under the leadership of Zimmerman a vote against these demands was recorded. This was done to enable the election inspec- tors committee to carry through the unconstitutional acts in miscount- ing the votes. | “What have you been doing while resting in field?” “Talking, smiled a husky sea-| men, older than some. “We've been telling stories — love stories, sea | stories, politics stories.” Try To Ease Out Workers’ Control The Young Men's Christian Asso- | ciation dominated Seamen's relief | | until the M.W.L.U. and the Unem-| ployed Council started organizing the Baltimore Seamen. By sheer) solidarity, through demonstrations, | through strikes, and through con- tinual struggle, they gained control. | As Patterson put it, “we came to| Washington December and saw the National Director of Transient Re- lief, and won from him Federal aid to the Seamen's project. | “Last month, the local relief offi- | cials and the police started getting | busy. Harry Grenstein, State Relief Administrator; Frank M. Little State Transient Director, and w.| | Bolton Kelly, Director of the Tran- sient Bureau of Baltimore, got busy. | “They brought their own staff | down to replace our elected staff. | We exposed them so completely, | particularly the graft that had gone on before the seamen took charge, that they left. Then they threatened | to take our clothes away from us—| the clothes we issue to the seamen. “They drove down with a truck on Monday, and they had a heavy) police force out. But the truck went | away empty. While the officials. were talking with our commi‘tee, the seamen in’ charge were issuing out | all the clothes we had.” Tuesday Kelly again brought down an “official” staff—but again they were forced to walk away. The seamen invited the officials, then, to send a representative to an open meeting. Little came. He pro- posed a new transient project. with new registrations and federal offi-| cials in charge. He told the sea- men, “You're through.” -Then the seamen met and organized the march. “Hey, guys!” Patterson called out. | The men gathered around him. “We| are 21 miles out of Washington. I hear there are some petty grievances here-—well, you know the seamen’s| administration is always ready to hear them. But I warn you, there might be a disrupter here, and I} think I got my eye on him. Now we'll have a little organization meet- ing and find out about this, because you know we're 100 per cent united in Baltimore, and that’s the way we're going into Washington.” Several stepped out and explained. They wanted to move on, instead of waiting for coffee as they had de- cided before midnight. Stack asked | for the floor and got it. | “Fellow workers,” he said, “we'll move on whenever you say. We| knew before we started, this would not be any romantic journey through It’s class struggle of the sharpest kind. We've got a good! chance to win this time. But we've gotta go into Washington, not | like broken-down old seamen, like | a Father Cox's army, but like an army singing our battle song.” “Let's go!” the spirit of these marchers rose above their blisters and their sore bodies, “Atta boy—| let's get going!” In tvo minutes they had picked up the banners they hed flung on the sed, end were marching toward Washington, with another yell: “One, two, three, four; what do sea- men fight for? Seamen’s Control, Seamen's Control! Five, six, seven, eight; who do we seamen hate? Grenstein, Grenstein! Boo, boo!” GUTTERS OF NEW YORK The voice with the smile Former Navy Man Criticizes Lack of Action in Sub Drivel By del \ & \ Y | NEW YORK—A former Navy) man, now living in Kenosha, Wis., who has secured nine subs for the Daily Worker in a month and a half, levels sharp criticism of the W. H. S. failure of the comrades in that town to take the “Daily” sub drive! Every day the sales of the “Daily”|day for an immediate and definite seriously. This criticism is especially per- tinent in view of the fact that in Kenosha there is a Nash motor plant, with the workers there talk- ing strike, yet little or no effort has been made to reach these workers with the “Da: The comrade writes: “Iam not a member of the Com- munist Party, but wholeheartedly support the program and work of} {the Party. I am convinced that if | our movement is to grow, and it | | must and can with conditions as} they are today, then we have to secure many more readers for the | | Daily Worker.” | It was partly through reading the | | Daily Worker that this worker, a/| picture of whom is shown while he | was in the service, became class- | conscious. He realizes the power of the “Daily” to revolutionize | workers, | | “Most of the workers I approach | are only too glad to subscribe when | I show them a copy of the paper,” | \he writes. “Many more subs could | be gotten, but the Section Orga- | nizer of the Party tells me that| |hardly ony of the Party members | | have gotten any subs for the Daily | | Worker.—W.HS,” | “Daily” In Kenosha | Although Kenosha has a popula- | tion of over 50,000, including auto- mobile workers, the circulation of the Daily Worker there does not| | exceed 100, including subscriptions | | and bundle sales. i | Kenosha plans a sale of 1,000 of | | the special May Day edition, show- ing that if an effort is made the sales of the “Daily” can be in-| | creased ten-fold. | | But it is not enough to plan a} large sale of # special edition.) |in Kenosha should reach at least | 1,000, | What is true of Kenosha is also | true of other industrial centers in the country. This situation must and can be remedied by every class-conscious worker, by every working-class organization orga- nizing bundle sales of the “Daily,” and getting new subscribers, Smith habitation Moves Endagner ‘Tool and Die Strike {Continued from Page 1) blows to the jobbers. All the time he moved to weaken the strike by steering it into the hands of the N.R.A. Labor Boards. The membership of the MESA is one which is militant and hates the no-strike leadership of the A. F. of L. Smith did and continues to de- ceive the membership with his left phrases and militant speeches. Knowing that the strikers are op- posed to arbitration, Smith at last Monday's meeting of the striking tool and die makers thru outright trickery and deceit, put over a res- olution to deal with the Automobile Labor Board “only to take up cases of discrimination.” His Cunning Tactics In his own cunning way, know- ing the sentiments of the strikers, he declared that he will not have the automobile Labor Board “med- dle in our strikes and give us arbi- tration.” Now, of course, as anti- cipated by the Daily Worker, he openly “confers” with the N.R.A. Labor Boards, asking their good strike-breaking offices to “settle” the strike. The Michigan stove workers strike was put by Smith into the hands of the Detroit Regional Labor Board. The strikers were not even asked to vote whether they want arbitra- tion by the Detroit Regional Labor Board. The sentiments of the strik- ing tool and die makers, as Smith very well knows, are against the | Automobile Labor Board. And now Smith, stripped by his actions from his left-coating, is openly moving, with the aid of the N.R.A. strike- breaking boards toa weaken, disor- ganize and break the strikes of the militant members of the M.E.S.A, Working to Expel Militants In order to carry out his anti-la- bor purpose, Smith, while ever more openly showing his friendship to the N.R.A. Labor Boards, is build- ing up his machine with the sole purpose to attack and if possible to expel the militant elements in the strike who are the backbone of the there are also open A. F. of L. strike- breaking elements who are raising chauvinist issues to divide the native and foreign-born workers, Today's Detroit News features a long story by Arnold Scott, who it is rumored is a spy. This tool of the | manufacturers ostensibly attacks Smith, but the purpose of the in- terview with this stool pigeon is | to attack the rank and file and. the militant leaders in the M.E.S.A, The stools and reactionary elements are directing their efforts against the popularly elected militant leader of the production workers, John An- derson, Smith, as it is natural for a leader of his type, who covers up his stirke- breaking deeds with pious gestures and left militant phrases, is tacitly supporting the attacks made by the reactionary A. F. of L. elements against the militants in the organi- zation. He raises his fists against the militants in the M.E.S.A. but smiles humbly and acts like a perfect gen- tleman when confronted with the reactionary chauvinist strike-break- ing A. F. of L. elements. Smith keeps silent on the decisions of the top officials of the A. F. of L. against strikes made at their last Sunday's conference in Pontiac. The cunning deceitful Smith is very dangerous. If the strike of the militant tool and die makers is to end in victory, an open struggle against Smith’s compulsory arbitra- tion policy must be taken up. Only these will keep the strike well-organ- ized, develop the splendid militancy of the striking tool and die makers and insure their victory against the tool and die manufacturers, reece See | organization. Within the M.ES.A., | Brassmen Win Strike (Special to the Daily Worker) DETROIT, Mich., April 19—The strike of nearly 100 workers of the Roberts Brass Manufacturing Co., auto and aircraft parts, was settled yesterday with real gains for the workers. The workers were granted a 10 per cent increase, and more next week; recognition of shop commit- tee, readjustment of piece work rates, The company also agreed to fire Barth, hated time-study man. The strike was led by the Brass} Workers Industrial Union, militant independent union. The workers went back organized 100 per cent, and agreed to help finance organiza- tion work in other brass plants. N.Y. Furriers | | Drive Scabs | From Market Lovestoneites With the Cops Attempt to Break Strikes NEW YORK, April 19.— Thou- sands of furriers stormed the mar- ket yesterday in two demonstrations against the bosses and their agents | of the Joint Council and the Love-| stonites. | The first demonstration was on the picket line in the morning, when | detectives, gunmen and a few misled Yipsels were bringing strike-break- ers to the Bader & Kaufman shop, | 350 Seventh Ave., against whom the Industrial Union has been conduct- | ing a strike for the last few months ‘The mass of furriers met the scabs | and their protectors with such de-| termined resistance that they had to flee. From there the mass picket line moved over to the Zimmerman & Sher shop, 150 West 30th St.,) where the notorious Lovestonite, Weiss (Turk), at the head of aj strong police force, brought in daily a few scabs. | The Lovestonite, Weiss, having | such a strong police force behind | him, was very provocative. A clash broke out and, despite the riot cali for more police and detec- tives, the thousands of furriers succeeded in driving away the | scabs and the Loyestonites from the Market. Five workers and three of the Council gunmen were arrested. At 2 o'clock today the Union is calling an Open Forum to organize big committees to stop overtime and | work on Saturdays. 2,000N.Y. Telegraph Messengers Strike Against Slave Pay Vote for’ Strike After | Demands Are Refused by Company Officials NEW YORK.—Two thousand tele- | graph messengers, employed here by | the two major companies, Western | Union and Postal Telegraph, and/ led by the militant Telegraph Mes- sengers’ Union, walked out on! strike this morning in protest | against the miserable slave wages and conditions under which they have been working. The strike ac- tion was unanimously voted for at @ mass meeting held last night after demands for a $15 a week minimum | wage and better working conditions, which were presented to the officials of the telegraph companies yester- answer, were refused. ‘The messengers, most of them young boys, have been earning as | little as $7 a week, working in all | kinds of weather. They are strik- ing for union recognition, minimum weekly wages of $15 for messengers on foot and $30 for messengers, who have to provide their own gas and oil, in automobiles, free insurance for bicycles, free uniforms and other equipment, carfare for ten blocks and over, preference to be given messengers when positions as clerks, operators, etc., are open, and recog- nition of all office committees. Last week the telegraph mes- sengers of Cleveland, Ohio, went out on strike and won wage increases which ranged from 15 to 20 per cent. Rank and File Make Gains at AA | Nat’l Convention (Continued from Page 1) this point showed the strength of the opposition. Seventy-nine dele- gates voted for the amendment, and 48 opposed it, ‘This is a very important victory, as the constitution provides that) the convention will consider no reso- | lution unless presented before the convention, in time to be incorpor- ated in the printed program. This victory opens the way for a rank and file program. The four- point program of new lodges, which was presented in the regular man- ner, in time for incorporation in the program of the convention, did not appear in the program. Tighe is quoted as having told the lodges presenting these resolu- tions that: “It would be a waste of paper to print this.” ‘The four-point program cen- tains the proposal for the imme- diate presentation of demands for union recognitjon, and a 25 per cent basic wage increase. It pro- vides for a ten-day ultimatum to the bosses, and a general strike of the demands are not granted. It further provides for the in- dustrial form of unionism; the six-hour day, five-day week. Tighe maneuvered to get the floor for Senator Davis by declar- ing the sessions open and imme- diately introducing “Puddler” Jim, Delegates from Gary forced Tighe to read a letter from the Gary local, charging Davis with aiding the company unions. Davis spoke against strikes and for industrial peace. He said: “My own experi- ence in strikes and being on the sidelines in 1890 in two Homestead strikes has been that I can say with all my heart that I abhor strikes.” Many delegates left the hall while he spoke, and he received but scanty applause. \ (Reacanariaanerenrsns ‘ ™ —— All Subways to Atlantic Avenue Station —— omm= WORKERS’ DANCE LEAGUE enor FE ALF, GUEST SOLOIST BROOKLYN Tickets 35¢ - 55e - 85 - 99¢ — On Sale FRIDAY, ACADEMY at Box Office Workers Bookshop, fr. L. D. APRIL 20 OF MUSIC Sponsored by United Front Supporters 8:30 P.M. LABOR EFENDER Baseball’s in the Air! ing day with something li traditional tossing of the first men of each team’s respective city. | PIG LEAGUE baseball burst forth in aH its glory on open- ke 180,000 fans cheering the ball by the mayors, or alder- And with it came the color of brass bands, marching players, flags strewn across the stands, yells and thrills. And the following day, opening day spenders took a vacation. Attendance took a* terrific drop. The Giants, who, the day before, packed | 40,000 spectators into the} stands, played before 5,000 fans. The | same thing occurred (like a fade- away ball) in other cities. But the | baseball season goes on despite the | fact that maybe the scribes of the press who stream headlines across | the sport pages that this is going to be a bigger and more prosperous years, might be a little wrong. Opening day was impressive, but it’s the days in between that count for the purses of the big leaguers. } ] remember when opening day was as grand a thing to look forward to as watching the world series championship. Forty thousand | isn’t much of a crowd, considering | that the stadium could hold much | more, and that many workers | would have wanted to see the game, | within « | LONG with the big leagues, soft | ball teams will begin functioning on the sandlots throughout the hot months. Kids will be playing on the streets between towering buildings | and will be intermittently stopped | by the passing of automobiles. They | will be darting out to the open lots | every time someone gets hold of a hall and bat. The parks will be hold- ing thousands of spectators every Saturday and Sunday, watching baseball of another caliber. | The Labor Sports Union will soon | begin organizing soft ball baseball tournaments. It will build teams in the cities and farm lands. oe aucin | | NOTICE, wherever I go, that the} fans don’t only want to see a sporting event; but also, they would | like to get into it. You can’t really | wholeheartedly enjoy a game unless you play it. The only reason I can| sg? for a healthy person going to) @ me contest which he is interested | in is for him to watch better tech- nicians in the game. In turn, he develops his own craft. In playing | the game himself, he tries to learn | from what he has seen. In learn-| ing and getting better, the joy of | mastery and fun is developed. There's one thing better than watching some big league pitcher | put some dope on the ball. That is to go out yourself and throw that ball until you get the right hook or drop or curve. You get the idea of the thrill in participa- | tion after watching a finished | | | sportsman when you listen to some kids. One boy who had seen Johny Weismuller swim, ran be- fore me im a swimming pool, swinging his arms and telling an- | other, “That's the way Weismuller swims, Watch me. I know how. | now.” He cleaved the water and swam—just like Johny Weismul- | ler, the kid said. Another time I watched another boy standing in a peculiar position Article on Trotzky in “Daily? Tomorrow “The bankruptcy of Trotaky- ism,” an historical and analytical |) study by L. Magyar, will appear || in tomorrow’s issue of the Daily Worker. This article is of spe- cial value because it traces the 30 years’ development of Trotzky- | ism from a species of opportun- |} ism to a counter-revolutionary current. | Philadelphia | Brooklyn with his bat circling behind his shoulder. “Here's the way Bill Terry does it.” And they keep practicing. In time, they become the “stars” of their contemporaries. Any sport, any day of the year, if you want to get the idea of how Red Grange gallops like a ghost, or if you want to learn the technique of Benny Friedman's forward pass throwing. or if you wish to see the inside dope of Bill Tilden whacking a tennis ball, just sidle up next to a gang of kids and get them to talk about their favorite athletes whom they've seen in ac- tion. They'll show you how. Rate ies ‘HB Jack London Club of Perth Amboy has the right idea when they write: “Comrade Ross: “The Jack London Club of Perth Amboy, New Jersey, has recently or- ganized a gymnasium group and a | baseball team. “We are anxious to play baseball with all Jack London Club baseball teams in New Jersey, and with all other workers’ teams in the state. In fact, we are very much inter- ested in forming a Jack London Club Baseball League of N. J. This, we feel, would help organize work- ers’ sports in N. J. “We challenge all workers’ teams to a baseball game or a series of games, Address all challenges to M. Kovacs, 443 Grove St., Perth Amboy, N. J. “With Sports Greetings. ‘M. KOVACS” Well, here are a bunch of chal- lengers who don’t have to lay down any guarantee on_ their ability as the professional boxers must do, Baseball's in the air! Baseball Inning-by-Inning Score AMERICAN LEAGUE R. HE. New York 030 010 213— 10 18 1 Philadelphia 000 101 OllL— 4 3 MacFayden and Dickey; Mahaffey, Mat- usak, Kline and Hayes. St. Louis 100 010 900 2 8 1 Cleveland 000 100 O2x— 3 6 1 Wells and Grube; Harder, Winegarner, Connolly and Pytiak. Wash. (1st) 100 910 200- 4 7 2 | Boston 100 102 O01— 5 10 0 Btewart, Crowder and Berg; Walbere, Rhodes and Rinker |Wash. (2nd) 008 900 OOO 3 5 0 Boston 002 140 00x— 7 13 1 Prim, Filey, Linke and Berg, Klumpp. Welch and Ferrell. NATIONAL LEAGUE R. # 00 900 000- 0 5 1 New York 100 010 oOx— 2 4 0 Collins and Wilson; Parmelee, Luque and Richards. Chicago 900 111 oOf- 4 90 Cincinnatt 100 000 000~- 1 5 2 Malone and Hartnett; Derringer, Bren- nan and O'Farrell. Boston E. 001 000 0 1 009 O10 0 1 (Game called end 7th fog) Zachary and Spohrer; Beck and Lopez, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Buffalo 020 000 003 0 «= 5 «10 2 Newark 000 410 000 1 Lisenbee, White, Chandler, ‘Tamulis and Glen. Toronto at Albany, postponed by rain. Montreal at Syracuse, postponed by rain. Rochester at Baltimore, postponed by rain, 30 80 GAMES TODAY NATIONAL LEAGUE New York at Boston. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Chicago. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh. AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia at Washington. Boston at New York. Chicago at St. Louis. Cleveland at Detroit. AMUSEMENTS SA, T.U RD. ALY: April 2ist 3 SOVIET FILMS 1, Pavlov’s Mechanics of the Brain (Complete Version); 2. Problem of Fatigue; 3. Itch for a Higher Life (Satirical Sound Film). Two Showings: 7:30 & 9:30 P.M. New School Auditorium 66 West 12th Street Tickets: 50c in advance, at Medical Bureau, F.8.U., 80 E. lith St., and Workers’ Bookshop, 50 E. 13th Street. At door 60c. TENTH ANNUAL CONCERT of the FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA Assisted by a Group of the Freiheit Gezang Farein JACOB SCHAEFER, Conductor Saturday, April 21st — 8:30 P. M. — Town Hall 43rd Street, East of Broadway Part of Program: Fifth Symphony, Beethoven, Suite of Soviet Melodies, Schaefer Tickets 50c, 75¢, $1 at 106 E. 14th Street and Box Office pi Caine ohaists sociated ars ADEN TE ATR SR TTI I. J, MORRIS, Inc, GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order 7 ANCE 2) for the benefit of Workers Ex-Servicemens League PROCFEDS TO CARRY ON FIGHT FOR THE BONUS i Sat., April 21, 8:30 p.m. | LW.O. HALI—415 Lenox Ave. Subscription 25e—Hot Jazz Band | Comradely Atmosphere Marshall Foods 797 BROADWAY, N. Y. €. {near 11th St. ] Pure Foods at Popular Prices Al'orton Avenue Comrades! The Modern Bakery was first to settle Bread Strike | and first to sign with the | Food Workers’ Industrial Union 691 ALLERTON AVE. GARMENT WORKERS WELCOME SHERIDAN ~ VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT { (Formerly Shildkrauts) 225 WEST 36th STREET Between 7th and 8th Avenues Williamsburg Comrades Welcome ASSEMBLY CAFETERIA 166 Broadway, Brooklyn, N. Y. __ (Classified) PERSONAL WANTED by a friend Samuel Premac’ formerly at 736 W. 181st St. Care + Daily Worker. 6 122 f ‘Wilson and Crouse; }

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