The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 26, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSD x Haywood N ew Sec’y League of Struggle For Negro Rights Veteran Working Class Leader Outlines Plans; Emphasizing Necessity of Building a Mass L. By CYRIL NEW YORK.— gro li unanin gle for Board of that org: Richard B. Moore tendered his resignation general secretary on account of ill health. He will, however, con- tim the League as a member of the National Ex- ecutive Boerd Ben Davis Named Liberator The Board voted to release Maude White as editor of the Liberator to permit her to take up other work. It decided to invite Ben Davis, Jr., of Atlanta, Ga., to a shin of the paper. is also nationally known for his activities in the closely related struggles for Negro liberation and the social | emancipation of the workingclass. | As one of the defense attorneys for | Angelo Herndon, Davis, together | with his client, fe: ssly used the | lynch courts as a forum to expose the national oppression and plun- | Gering of the Negro masses, and | the policies of the white ruling class of keeping the Negro and white toilers apart ion and the cause of ously elected as Editor of Building of L. S. N. R. Imperative, Haywood Declares y Haywood, who was inter- the H viewed by writer after the Board meeti declared that the conditions confronting the Negro and white toilers, and their grow- ing resistance to the Roosevelt “New Deal” slavery not only provide the basis for building the L.S.N.R. into a nation-wide mass organization, but madé it impérative. “The Board took note,” he de- clared, “not only of the increas- ing fascist attacks on the toilers, directed with special fury against the Negro masses, but of the tre- | mendous response throughout the country to the militant program of the L.S.N.R. The Negro masses are in motion today to a greater extent than ever before in théir history in this country. The unity of the white and Negro toilers is being welded in increasing num- | bers of joint struggles for their demands. The Board decided that one of the urgent questions fac- ing the organisation is the erys- talization of the growing mass sympathy with the program of the LS.N.R. into definite organiza- tional channels.” Ths led us into a discussion of cropping up. like mushroom growths of new reformist programs and grouplets sponsored by middle-/| class Negro misleaders. dislodged by the crisis from their usual avoca- tions. | Warns of Reformist Activities “On the basis of the awakening of the Negro masses, their growing discontent with their worsening conditions, there is a feverish in- crease in the activities of reformist elements,” Haywood stated. “There is a wide-spread growth of jim- crow nationalist movements spon- sored by Negro middle-class vision- aries, who are advancing all sorts of programs directed toward holding the masses back from struggle and | to confuse them in their search for a real “way out” of their intolerable | conditions. The “Back to Africa” slogan of Garvey is being revived | in new and more subtle forms. These new editions of Garveyism} Haywood called neo-Garvevism. A} movement of a_ jim-crow “49th| State” has been launched in Chi-| cago. These reformist programs are | all designed to prevent the approach | of the Negro masses to a real rev-j olutionary program, and to hold them under the leadership of the} middle-class misleadérs, which means, objectively to keep them) hound to the chariot of the white) rnlifg class mastérs and to defeat | their struggle for liberation. Most Boldly Put Forward L.S.N. Program Haywood, veteran f general secretary of the League of Str Negro Rights at a meeting of the National E3 nization Monday night at 119 W. 1 S.No R: BRIGGS or Ne- the entire working class, was ug- cutive 35th St. 35t > : ak HARRY HAYWwoon | thie Picket Line of C. W. A. Workers Demand Back Pay White Collar Workers Demonstrate at City | Hall Today | NEW YORK. — Sixteen workers! from the Railroad Co-Ordination | Project 177 were jailed Tuesday as | the workers attempted to set up a| mass picket line around Col. DeLa- mater’s office at 111 Righth Ave, | The workers discovered a week ago that on February 16, the 250/ clerical assistants on this job wete | listed for a wage rise from $18 to} $21 a wéek. The pay rise was néver given them A petition signed by all the cleri- cal assistants on the project was given to C.W.A, Administrator W. A. DeLamater on Friday, demand- ing the back pay due the workers. DeLamater promised that he would “investigate,” and if the wage rise order went through, it would be incumbent upon him to grant the workers’ demands. He promised to give his answer on Monday. When a delegation of the griev- ance committee and fifty of the workers called at DeLamater’s of- fice, instead of giving his answer, he called the police to forcibly eject | the delegation. The committee re-| ported back to all the workers on the project. | Resenting the treatment which | their elected representatives had! received at the hands of the C.W.A. | administration, the workers decided | to picket the C.W.A. office en masse. | Meanwhile it is reported that the| project will be discontinued after May ist. Carrying signs “Col. DeLamater, | is the lay-off a cover for the cor-| Tuption in your office?" “We de-| mand our pay,” the workers massed at the C.W.A. building. | Yesterday all sixteen of the ar-| rested workers were released, and "| again returned to picket the office | | of Col. DeLamater, where picketing | “AS against these reformist pro- grams, it becomes urgently necés- sary to more boldly and determined- ly put forward the program of the | LSNR. for a real revolutionary | way out through the most relentless struggle by the Negro people, in alliance with the white toilers, against the rising fascist reaction in the country. This can be done only on the basis of mobilizing the masses for their immediate de- mands against unemployment, dis- crimination, wage cuts, lynching, against the increasing robbery of the share croppers and poor farm-| ers of the South, against Hunger,| Fascism and War. | Haywood will make a 3-month/ organizational tour of the most, im- | portant industrial centers of the North, spending 2 weeks in the chief centers. The tour will take in De-| troit, Chicago, St. Louis, Cleveland, | Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Baltimore | and Washington. | Food Workers To Rally, with Dressmakers Today | NEW YORK—The Colby Cafe- teria strikers will join the dress- makers demonstration when General Johnson arrives to “investigate” the lockout in the dress trade. The workers will meet at 36th St. and 8th Ave. and march from there at will be resumed until all demands | are granted. oe era * White Collar Workers Demonstrate Today NEW YORK. — White collar workers, under the leadership of the Associated Office and Profes- sional Emergency Employes will demonstrate at City Hall today at 4:30 p.m. An elected delegation will demand that Mayor LaGuardia give definite answers on the ques- tion of wages, continuance of “work relief” jobs, and discrimination on relief and jobs. | The A.O.P.E.E, of 232 Seventh | Ave., wired LaGuardia, demanding | that. he meet with thé delegation | and be prepared to give specific | answers to the workers demands, "CAR WANTED NEW YORK—The New York Dis- | trict of the Communist Party is) seeking the loan of a car all day May ist, for very spécial work. ‘The car must leave New York City to go upstate. The work is very im- portant. Comrades or sympathizers owning cars are asked to get in touch with the N. Y. district im- mediately. PIPE MAKERS’ STRIKE WEEK NEW YORK—The workers of the IN 8th | absolutely no unemployment in- N. Y. Orders for May | GUTTERS OF NEW YORK Will Be Taken Following Places | Issue At ‘ind offense Yer honor / be placed at ng section headqu {ANHATTAN: 96 Ave C and 58 115th Ww. h St.; HARLEM: 27 W. St.; LOWER BRONX Ave.; UPPER BRON Ave., and Room 3, 685 Mort Ave; BROOKLYN: 132 Myrtle Ave.; 1280 56th St.; 61 Graham Ave.; 1813 Pitkin Ave.; JAMAICA 148-29 Liberty Ave.; MINEOLA, L I.: 80 Main St.; LONG ISLAND CITY: 4206-27th St Last minute orders can also be placed at the District Daily Worker Office, 35 E, 12th St Move to Enact Fake Wagner Insurance Bill “Will Make My Career Worth While,” Says Senator Wagner WASHINGTON, D. C., April 25.— In an attempt to stifle the growing mass demand for the immediate | enactment of the Workers’ Unem- ployment Insurance Bill, President Roosevelt added his personal en- dorsement to the fake Wagner- TRENCH DIGGING NOT ILLEGAL “A child was haled small hole in a park.’—N THE FEDERAL TREASURY LEGAL into court for digging a EWS ITEM Lewis “Reserves” Bill. Several weeks ago Roosevelt: backed the fake Wag- | The Wagner-Lewis Bill offers Revealed as Enemy of Auto Men’s Unity tinued from Page 1) surance to the 16,000,000 workers now unemployed, setting them apart as potential strikebreakers, and provides no insurance to agricultural workers, teachers, do- mestic workers, transportation workers, government employes, | shown its strikebreaking role in a doctors, nurses and interneés in | number of cases, notably that of hospitals, and workers in shops (the Bower Roller Bearing Workers, employing less than ten persons. | Smith was echoéd by his faithful | In other words, more than half of | lieutenant, Harry Harrison. | the working class would receive J. J, Griffin, leader of the openly | absolutely no insurance under the | Teactionary clique which has been | Wagner-Lewis bill, jfighting the Smith group for con- | The Wagner-Lewis bill would pro- | ttol of the M. E. 8. A. is now back | vide only $7 a week for ten weeks | 4fter sevéral weeks in the East, and as unemployment, insuranée, and in | 2PPéared at last night's meeting.| the case of those who had worked | This individual, who, from the be- for more than five years, for 15 Ge ee meee ae pee i 7 5 a! e M. B.S. A, Me @ MAsiniumt Of $70 to F108" |e A Pes decided to steal) A bill if enacted goes into effect on | SMe of Smith's thunder and to} July, 1935 and into operation on| outdo even him in spouting radical ss hrases. July, 1936! At the same time, not be- » v ing obligatory, it would not go into ep bn es npr , Putting on a red rose for the oc- | effect in some states for many years: | id: “I e ° ie: fund “would ‘bar eraual by he said: “I’m an American, | but I want to say there's one coun- | & 3 or 5 per cent tax on payrolls, | try where such a thing (blacklisting | but this would cost the employers of workers) couldn't ha: a | nothing since it would be deducted lekais Russia.” But Pt Laas bas | from the wages of the workers, The | Staden “enittasiaame’ for tee sos | employer might pay into separate Union Griffin also made asi S| pools, setting up more company posal for United Action pan ocaed oe Sauce ie bid are q- | Victimization. In other words, on) f sy if She |all_ fundamental questions Smith! mitted, is to set up separate state ; “insurance” schemes, thus dividing |" Griffen agree. That is, both the struggle of the workers for real | #T@ equally opposed to militant a¢- unemployment insurance into 48 / tion that alone can win the work- separate fights. | ers’ demands. Of this bill Senator Wagner has |, Your correspondent has learned said: “This thing will make my | that Harrison at the meeting of the career worthwhile.” ey ies et a e A. ire made a vicious, slanderous attac! Only the Workers Unemploy- : ment Insurance Bill (HR. 7598) [07 tie 4 WV. 0. echoing the prop now in the House Committee on | ®88nda of the Ford Motor Co. Ford Labor, provides adéquaté upani- has let it be known that he is out Hep oa to get the A. W. U,, declaring the ployment insurance to all work- e 7 A. W. U, members are putting em- ers. It provides for unemploy- uct. 4 tots, th i ment insurance to all workers | TY bec hala Bt Sos) Oieab stad without discrimination of race, | Mes to break down. Harrison, like creed or color, to be paid by the | SPartow eagerly picking up drop- } bosses and administered by the |P!"8s of the Ford Co., repeated this aay ca’: Workeis | Cevecywhere | Slander at Sunday’s meeting in an should greatly intensify the cam- | effort to discredit the A. W. U. paign for the enactment of the | which has considerable influence |among M. E. S. A, members. Workers Unemployment Insur- | r ance Bill (H. R. 7598), demanding | The A. W. U. has issued a state- Congressmen sign the round ment repudiating this charge. “We! don’t know whether it’s true that/| workers have put emery dust in| | motors,” the statement says. “If} | any workers have done this it has | been on their own initiative. But |one thing is true, and both Harri- son and Ford know it, and that is | that the A, W. U. has never advo— cated such tactics, but constantly | points out to workers that the only | effective way to fight the speed-up lis by electing united committees in| |departments to compel slowing! | dewn of the line. Harrison is merely echoing his master’s voice and is) | Showing that the top leadership of the M. E. 8. A. will stop at noth- |ing to discredit the only union | which urges militant united action of the members of all unions, as well aS of unorganized workers, to win their just demands. Such tac- tics play into the hands of the Ford Motor Co. and are designed to divert the anger of the M. E. S. A. members, who are demanding ac- tion against victimization of active union men.” Snuffing Out Strike The Smith machine, by its tac- ties, is slowly snuffing out the strike of about 3,000 tool and die makers, who since April 12 have been waging a struggle for a 20 per cent | | wage increase and the 36-hour, five- |day week. Interviews with a num- ber of rank and file strikers reveal that in a number of shops the com- panies are taking back men on the condition they give up their union books. The Smith léadership is showing no alarm at this and not taking any steps to combat it. In this situation it is also likely that agreements will be réached with individual shops and sanc- tioned by the officialdom, which are no agreements at all and mean no improvement in conditions of the workers. Despite this situation, the tool and die makers’ strike can still be won, but only by rejecting the ruinous policies of the Smith leadership. It is possible to carry through proposals made time and again by robin petition to take the bill out of the House Committee, and vote favorably on the Workers Bill, Santo and Sulliyan To Report on 8th C.P. Conyention Tonight NEW YORK.—The Eighth Na- tional Convention of the Communist. Party, U. S. A., will be the subject, of discussion at a special open mem- bership meeting called by Section 15 of the Communist Party tonight at 8 o'clock at 2075 Clinton Ave., Bronx. The section urges all Party mem- bers and members of mass organi- zations to be present at this meeting. John Santo will be the reporter. ste e NEW YORK.—Section 5 of the Communist Party will hol@ an open membership meeting tonight at 8 p. m,, to hear a report by Com- rade Sullivan on the Eighth Na- tional Convention, at 722 Prospect Ave. Painters Call Meet To Defeat Injunction NEW YORK.—The Alteration Painters Union has been leading a militant strike against the notorious landlord of the Bronx, Mr. Ossinoff, a Socialist. for the aes tivé months, An application for an injunction has been issued against the Altera- tion Painters Union, The union is going to fight this injunction in court and on the picket line, A conference of all workers’ or- ganizations is called for Friday, April 27, 8 p. m. at the Allerton Workers Club, 2715 White Plains Road. At this meeting the ques- tion of fighting the injunction will be taken up. KILLED ON TRAIN’S FIRST RUN ALLENTOWN, Pa. April 24.— | Knickerbocker Pipe Company, 29 12 noon. | Washington St., Brooklyn, are in The Colby strikers will demon-| great spirits now in their é¢ighth | week of strike. Last week they| | raised theit demands from 10 per) | cent incréase to 20 per cent increase | in wages. strate against the framing of Michael Okona. and against the in- junction, Monday 12 noon, at 36th &t. and 8th Ave. is 4 ‘ SAS UE Aa 8 IN "aE Charles Remalley, engineer on the maiden trip of a Lehigh Valley Express freight, was killed today when the train plunged off an em- bankment near here today. Harold Brown, he fireman, was seriously injured, the militants in the M. E. S. A., to spread the strike to tool and die makers in the large auto factories and jointly with the A. W. U. and the rank and file of the A. F. of L., call on the production workers to join the struggle. Cleveland and Seamen Plan for New March to Washington, D. C... in Red Russia was one of; (Continued from Page 1) |at South and Whitehall Streets,! “It was in 1921, just_after the | Thursday, 3 pm. | The seamén’s and longshoremen’s | delegation will arrive in the capital | at the same time the shipowne! come to meet with the N.R.A. offi- | igus ea Aa} A May Day Victory NEW YORK—On May Day the} bargemen of the Bouker Contract- | ing Company will get a wage in- | crease. | ‘This is not because the bosses have gotten generous or anything like that. The bargemen are getting théir } pay raised because they organized under the leadership of the Marine Workers Industrial Union and thru} mass action forced the company to} agree to the demands of the men. A month ago there was no form of organization among the barge-| men in the Bouker Company. The | M.W.LU. started a campaign to or- | ganize the men and after lining| up a few in the union, circulated a list of demands that the bargemen | themselves endorsed at a meeting that was held on a pier at Staten Island. Backed by all the bargemen, a| rank and file committee presented | demands for increased wages, to the | company. The company officials tried to stall the men, but when told | that the bargemen would back up their demands with strike action, the bosses consented to the wage in- crease, Men who were getting $100 a month will receive after May Day $115 and $120 a month. 1,500 at Anti-Fascist Meeting in Los Angeles | —ponionss | LOS ANGELES, April 25—Fifteen | | hundred persons packed Abramson | Slutzky Hall, and hundreds were turned away at an anti-fascist meet- ing last Priday night, arranged by the Workers and People’s Committee Against Fascism. The workers unanimously adoptde a resolution calling for united action against the growing menace of fascism, : piege Bier NEW YORK—“The role of women in the struggle against war and fascism,” will be discussed by Clar- ence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, at a meeting called by the Women’s Councils for Friday eve- ning, April 27, 8 p. m., at Webster Manor, 125 East 11th St., New York, Coney Island Strikers NEW YORK.—Supporting the militant strike of the Nathan Res- taurant, who are striking for bet- ter working conditions and the rec- ognition of their union, the Indus- trial Food Workers’ Union calls upon all Coney Isiand workers to demonstrate on the strikers’ be- half tonight at 15th St. and Surf Ave. Shoe Workers Meet To Prepare for May Day The United Shoe and Leather | Workers’ Union will hold a general membership meeting on Thursday, April 26, at 5:30 pm. at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Place and 15th St., New York. A report will be given on the national .elections. There will be mobilization for May First. St. Loujs strikes and continuing de- partment stoppages in the Detroit area (the latest were a half-hour stoppage in the Drop Forge De- partment of the Chevrolet plant on Monday, which defeated an attempt to introduce piece work, and the stoppage yesterday in a department at Jenks and Muir, subsidiary of the Murray Body Corp.) show that the strike movement in the auto indus- try is by no means over and mili- tant policies in the tool and die strike can be a means of rousing tens of thousands of workers in a determined fight for wage increases, against speed-up and company unions and for their other demands. | singing there, that some of the local Anti-Fascist Meet in Yorkville for Tonight NEW YORK. workers by the hundreds mass tonight in an op meeting in the heart of Y vilie, claimed by the New York Nozis as their bailiwick, Four ad gathered at a similar i last week. anti-Nazi will begin at 7 p.m. St., betw Third and Lexing- ton Aves. (By a printer ror, the Daily Werker y: ‘day announced the meeting to be at 76th St.) The meeting is called j| by the German Anti-Fascist Ac- tion, a nstional group with 100,- 000 members. Mother Bloor Will Speak on May Day at Union Squar (Continued frem Page 1) — Anti-fascist will domonpirstion in East 86th | spirit at that anniversary meeting |that he had seen in the Commune. When one speaker cried ‘Vive La it went through the | | whole 1 And 50, too, it roused | that, Day demonstration. “And then as the years went by jand I became organizer of many | of the needle trade strikes, I saw the massés increase in Union) Square. They became more politi- |eal. It was no longer merely aj ‘union holiday.” Telis of Her First May Day In the U. S. 8. R. | Mother Bloor, told of her first | demonstration in the Soviet Union. | She was a delegate to the first in- |ternational trade union conference, | which organized the Red Interna- tional of Trade Unions. There were | delegates in Moscow from all over jthe world. And “Mother” was the Amercan workers’ representative. “That first May Day I experi-/ | the happiest May Days of my life,” | fair at Manhattan Lyceum, April | declared Mother Bloor. demobilization of the Red Army, | and we had assembled a good many | Trade Union delegates from all/| over the world, Early in morning | of that first May Day in the land of the Workers’ and Farmers’ Gov- | ernment we were roused by mass) singing, and much to our surprise, it was in English. We rushed to} the windows of the Hotel Lux and | looking out we found about 80 Russian-American workers, who! had come from Detroit and Cleve- land to help build up the factories, | and they were singing for us to come out. “We went onto the balcony and joined in the singing. We marched with them to the big house of the| Moscow Service. We made a noise commissars came out and thanked us for helping to build up their machinery. Then we all assembled | in Pulaski Square,.ahd they had all the trolley cars available in town! masses in front of Pulaski Square, ; with circus trains, and speakers. They rode all over town and we with them. We spoke to workers’ groups everywhere. That was my first May Day in Moscow. Many of Her May Days Spent in Strike Struggles | Mother Bloor spent another May Day in Moscow. This time it was entirely different. It was in 1930. The Soviet Union was near to complet- ing the first part of the Five-Year Plan, They had successfully passed their first struggles, and had achieved victories. It was a great pageant of rejoicing. One million and a half people marched. “We stood in front of Lenin’s tomb,” solemnly stated Mother Bloor, “and reviewed the gigantic march. The workers passed by singing, dancing, and shouting, as well as parading The parade was the greatest one I've ever seen. It was thrilling.” Many of the American May Days which Mother Bloor has lived through were spent in the midst of | strike struggle, when threats of all kinds were made against her. | Will Ride With Scottsboro Mothers | She spent May Day in the midst | of strikes with the Colorado miners, and with the workers of Southern California. She demonstrated on May Day with the copper miners of Calumet, Michigan, and with the | farmers of the great Dakotas and Montana. And every May Day that Mother saw, became a greater May Day, 8 more significant one. This May First she will ride at the head of the parade with the five Scottsboro mothers, who are coming to Néw York especially for this monster May Day parade. She will speak in Union Square, and let her voice be heard, as an expression of the hundred thousand massed into the Square, against fascism, hunger and war. * NEW YORK—A meeting of cap- tains, marshals and grand mar- shals of the United Front May Day parade will be held Saturday, 1 pm. at 35 E. 12th St., second floor, Attendance is urgent. ball Hoopla, aH ike! ‘HE sport committee of the Associated Workers’ Clubs writes in a letter, descr a hang-up sports season. Dear Comrade Ross: Why has the Associated tion of clubs of English-sveak ibing their attitude and plans for Workers’ Clubs, an organiza- ing workers and students, not yet formed a single well-functioning sport group? Because the organization energy, and “no one would waste time on such frivolities where there was! |real work to be done.” But a club’s nob a club without base- or wrestling or boxing or me kind of sport activity. The “Y's” and the settlement hous understand this and draw thi masses of youth in on that basis, | if no o‘her. However, individual workers’ clubs, on their own initiative, re- alizing the significance of drawing | the youth closer to the revolution- | ary movement through sports, have to some extent done some organiza- tional work to this extent. The American Youth Club has | a bexing team. The West Side Youth Club has a baseball team. Various other groups reported similar sport activity, till finally the executive council of the As- | sociated Workers’ Clubs realized that the basis of a club movement | among the mass of the American | youth must be to engage in | worker sport activity, Thereupon, we proceeded to ac- tivity. Boxing and wrestling tour-/| naments were initiated between various clubs under us. The win-| ners of these tournaments will exhibit at the A. W. C. annual af-| and 28, The Cli-Grand Youth Club and the Harlem Progressive Youth Club | will put on a tumbling exhibition. | An open-air tra@k meet, called the | “Anti-War Track and Field Meet,” | will be held June 2 at Ulmer Park. Affiliations with Labor Sports Union have heen arranged. | Our task now, after this be- ginning, is to build baseball leagues, | gymnasiums must be equipped, | hikes must be arranged, and the/ whole fiéld of sports must be en-| countered by us and made useful} for our youth. We call upon all} members of clubs to join and build | up sports groups. We call upon | all workers to join their neighbor- | hood club and sport group. For) information, communicate with the Associated Workers’ Clubs, 11 W. | 18th St. | Sports greetings, SPORT COMMITTEE, ASSOCIATED WORKERS’ CLUBS. | RR oe ORE and more workers’ groups are coming into the fold of sport activity and drawing work~- ers into their organizations who, | altheugh they might know noth- | ing about polities, enjoy sports | work, And it is the drawing of | these workers into the elmbs, ex- posing them to the significance of Jaber sports, which will strengthen the , revolutionary movement, * . LONG with this movement, the Nature Friends, in order to get all class-conscious workers ac- quainted with this phase of work- ing-class activity, has sent me this release: “The Red Spotts International has set aside Sunday, April 29, as/ the International Hiking Day, on which all sports and cultural clubs | are invited to join in one big hike | which is being called in every city | throughout the world where work- | ers are engaged in sports. “This outing should be looked upon not as an opportunity to “get: away” from the task of organizing workers in shop and factory, but rather as a means for this purpose. Here is the opportunity for every comrade to invite his fellow work- ers, to have a talk with him in congenial surroundings, and to show him the necessity for workers’ or- ganizations. Whole groups from shops can be organized in this way, because often workers cannot be in- RUSSIAN NITE Entertainment & Dance Friday Hyening April 27th Flatbush Workers Center 1576 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn Arranged by Professional Com. to Support the Struggle of the Waterfront Workers Subscription 50 Cents ATTENTION-BRONXITES ‘The English Branch of the 1.W.0. 519, has just been organized and welcomes ell visitors interested to its regular meeting tonight at 2700 Bronx Park Bast, 8:30 p.m. in the Engdahi Room. Thrilling Motion Picture and Lecture RUSSIA AS IT Is! by and with JULIEN BRYAN in person County Center, April 27, 8:30 P.M. White Plains 550-$1.10-$1.65 ANDWICH SOLS “Suse 101 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Tompkins Square 8.0780-9781 Teleph BERMAE’S Cafeteria and Bar 809 BROADWAY Between 11th and 12th Streets 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 —WILLIAM BELL_——. OFFICIAL Optometrist OF TRE of sports groups requires tima to form shop groups, etc., but will always welcome the opportunity to spend the Sunday in the open in a comradely atmosphere. 'HE Nature Friends, the hiking ore ganization affiliated with the Labor Sports Union, will lead the hike. There will be three different meeting places. Everybody, however, will mset at the end of the Palisades trail. A varied program has been arranged. The meeting points will be: First column, Dyckman St. Ferry, 8 a.m., fare 20 cents. Second column, West Side, Seventh Ave. subway station, Van Cortland Park, 9 a.m., fare 30 cents, Third column. Van Cortland Park station, Seventh Ave. subway, 10 a.m., fare 30 cents. Tramp, tramp, tramp. Swing your arms and legs, for Sunday is International Hiking Day, Burry Entries in For East District L, 8. U. Swim Championships NEW YORK — Entries for the Eastern district Labor Sports Union swimming championships are pour- ing in. What promises to be a cork- ing meet will be held at the Church of All Nations, Second Ave. and Second St., Saturday night at 7:30 o’clock.. Swimming on the part of the spectators will follow the meet as the feature of the évening. Th LS.U. urges all those swim- mers in this district to hurry their entries into the office at 114 W. 14th St. Events in the men, women and junior (under 16 years) divisions will be held, including breaststroke, backstroke and freestyle events. Baseball Standing of the Clubs (Includ. Tuesday’s Games, Apr. 24) NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet W. L. Pet Chicago 601.000 Boston 3% .500 New York 61 .037 St. Louis 15 .167 Brooklyn 42 .667 Cincinnati 15 .167 Pittsburgh 42 .667 Philadel. 07 .000 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet. Detroit 41 .800 Phila. 34 429 New ork 42. .687 St. Louis 23 .400 | Cleveland 32 .600 Washingt. 35 .378 | Boston 43 S571 Chicako 14 .200 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet. Oe Toronto 22 .800 ster 42. Albany 2.3400 Syracuse 21 .667 Buffalo 24 .388 Montreal 3 .399 Baltimore 25 .288 GAMES TODAY New York at Philadelphia. Brocklyn at Boston, St, Louis at Pittsburgh. Cincinnati at Chicago. AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia at New York, 8:15. Chicago at Detroit. Cleveland at St. Louis. Boston at Washington. AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia, 001 000 001 2—8—¥ New York 000 200 01x 36-1 Benton, Kline and Hayes; Macfayden and Dicker. Chicago 000 000 021 3+8—0 Detroit oo 900 200 2—6—1 Jones, Wyatt and Shea, Ruel; Auker, Frasier, Marberry and Cochrane. Boston at Washington, postponed, cold, NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn 301 000 090 4— 8-2 Boston 900 401 Bix B—12—1 Mungo, Herring, Page and Lopez; Pick- rel; Mangum, Cantwell and Hogan, Spoh- rer. New York at Philadelphia, postponed, cold. St. Louis at Pittsburgh, postponed, cold, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Hileher, Cook, Abberbock, Pattison and Duke, Tamulis and Glenn. al at Albany, postponed, cold. Buffalo at Baltimore, postponed, cold. Rochester at Syracuse, postponed, cold, OPTOMETRISTS OF (OPTICIANS 1378 ST.MICHOLAS AVE* 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. at-179" ST.NY at 1061 ST.NY , Wisconsin 17-0288 Dr. N. 8. Hanoka Dental Surgeon 261 West 41st Street New York City DR. EMIL EIKCHEL DENTIST 150 E, 93rd St. New York City Cor, Lexington Ave, ATwater 9-8338 Hours: 94, m. to 8p. m. Sun. 9 to1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Prices Gh # xX CHINA KITCHEN CHINESE-AMERICAN CAFETERIA-RESTAURANT 233 E, 14th St., Opp. Labor Tempk SPECIAL LUNCH 2c. DINNER a4 Comradely Atmosphere 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave, N. ¥. C, Phone: TOmpling Sanare 6-827 %

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