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Page Two DAILY WORKER NEW YORK, FRIDAY. 5 Mothers | & Express Thanks For Fight Waged By “Daily” » Credit ILD, Communist Party With Saving Lives of Boys YORK. Ma mothers. Bates Worker office today gratitude for to express heir he work done by the behalf of their sons. phine Powell was ill and go along. to but requested speak in her name in their praise for the International Labor Defense and the Communist Party. “Tf it wasn’t for the International aid Mother Patter- Ss would be dead now. ational Labor Defense 1p which no one else gives Labor Defen: son, “our be The Inter gives us he! us. We com Ment never goin he N.A.A.C.P. brought an exp to the mothers’ faces hard to describe. Mothér Patterson said + about them: I think is a rat.” Mother Norris said: “The boys is backin’ the Communist Party and the I.L.D. in their fight and there ain't no one can tell them otherwise. We are with the Com- munist Party and the LL.D, straight hrough "How did you like the May demonstration?” "That was thé grandest thing in the world,” said Mother Williams. “The comrades sure was marchin.’ ” Tonight the mothers and Ruby Bates are the guests of the Theatre Uni6n at a performance of “Steve- Tomorrow they will receive send-off at the St. Nicholas for their trip to Washington Thus far, Roosevelt has signified his intention of listen- ing to their plea for justice for their sons. But as the mothers said al- most in unison: “We is gonna stay there till he does.” Day Arena Saturday. NEW YORK.-—The mass meeting and send-off for the five Scottsboro mothers tonight at the St. Nicholas Arena, 69 W. 66th St., will also take the form of a protest against the refusal of the White House to reply to their request for an interview on behalf of their sons. The mothers of the innocent Scottsboro Boys will leave for Wash- ington on Mothers’ Day, to demand that President Roosevelt intercede on behalf of their sons. Friday’s meeting will be their final appear- ance before an audience in New York before they leave. At the meeting, which is organized by the International Labor Defense. theré will speak, bésidés the five Scottsboro mothers, Joseph Brodsky, Osmond K. Fraenkel, Samuél Léeibo- witz, the attorneys for the boy John Wexley and Grace Lumpkin, well-known authors, and Ruby Bates. The LL.D. ahhounted yesterday that Anna Schultz, militant Ger- man Commuhist, who was Torg- lér’s secretary in Berlin, will also address the tmecting. All workers were urged by the/ afternoon in the office of the LL,D,| but because of lack of leadersh LL.D. to mobilize for this meeting | Alexander Racolin, LL.D. attorney,|the workers gradually disbanded, as a demonstration for the defense of thé Scottsboro boys, and against Negro discrimination and oppres- sion. * * * SCOTTSBORO MEETING IN BROOKLYN NEW YORK.—A Scottsboro Pro- test Meeting will be held tonight,| in the attempt to enforce the low | the St. Augustine's | Wage scale announced by Roosevelt | 8:30 p.m., at Chiirch, Marey and Lafayette Aves., Brooklyn. under the auspices of the Brownsville section of the Interna- tional Labor Defense. Joséph Taubét, prominent LL.D. lawyer, will speak. A symposium, in which will participate the Acme Association, the Universal Negro Improvement Associatioh, and the Harlem Literaty and Debating So- ciety will follow. 1978 ST.NICHOLAS AVE® 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. 79 ST.RY. CHINA KITCHEN CHINESE-AMERICAN CAFETERIA-RESTAURANT 233 E. 14th St., Opp. Labor Temple SPECIAL LUNOM 2c. DINNER 5c. Comradely Atmosphere Russian and Oriental Kitchen Comradély Atmosphere VILLAGE BAR 221 SECOND AVENUE near 14th Street, New York City CAthedral 8-6160 Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th & 126th St., N.¥.C. 2 Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFFICE HOUR: SUNDAY: The Communist Party the same. | to forget the! Mrs, Ada Wright | f Scottsboro mother who will visit Roosevelt Sunday to demand the release of her son ard the other Scottsboro boys. Terror Reigns in Alabama as Two More Strikers Die To Demonstrate Against Terror in Needle Market (Continued on Page 2) | property on the L. and N, railroad. A group of us were standing on | the railroad. A car drove up with a bunch of T.C.I. gun thugs, They | tried to provoke us pickéters, but didn’t succeed. Then they moved off a little way.” “All of a sudden they opened fire on us. It was out and out murder. We didn’t have a chance. They just mowed us down, Two were killed and their bodies were picked up later ih the woods, Those who were wounded crawled away into the weeds to hide, but the thugs followed and threw them into a car. They cartied them into the mountains and left them there to suffer. Then the T.C.I. thugs went on to a high school and shot into the yard. They went to a church where they thought the LL.D. was holding a meeting and fired through the window and wounded one man in the arm.” Seventy-five per cent of the iton ore strikers are Negro miners. The terror is particularly vicious gainst the Negroes. Miners Defend Selves The miners are defending them- selves. The strike wave is growing, but the strikers badly neéd the sup- | port of the entire working class of the country. Laura Stark, organization sécré- fense, was rested on Wednesday was arrested at the same time. Racolin was later released. | The Birmingham police depart- ment is now engaged in a vicious drive to round up all militant work- ers. Chief Hollums declares, “I have ordered that Communism be wiped out.” He thus raises the “red scare” | and the N.R.A. for the ore miners and to outlaw all strikes and all | Organization of the workers against wage cuts. Hollums and the police depart- ment are blaming the mufders on “Communist agitators,” thus prép- aring the ground for further frame- | ups on the strikers and oh all mili- tant workers who dare to organize or to strike. A Grafid Jury inves- | tigation has been ordered into the | Shootings with the obvious aim of preparing frame-up material against all arrested workers. All organizations and individuals | are urged to telegraph afd write im- | mediate protests to Hugh Johnson | and President Roosevelt at Wash- | ington, to Governor Miller at Mont- gomery, Ala., and to City Commis-| | sioner Downs at Birmingham. I. J. MORRIS, Ine. GENERAL FUNERAL | DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5359 For International Workers Order Williamshore Comrades Welcome ASSEMBLY CAFETERIA 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. Comradely Atmosphere Marshall Foods 797 BROADWAY, N. Y. C. {near 11th St. J Pure Foods at Popular Prices UTW Leaders Break Strike At Amoskeag omise trike Next Month” To Force Men To Work MANCHESTER, N. H., May 10. Horace R re and other of the United Textile Work America today forced over 9,000 rs at the Amoskeag proposing nt of grievar postponed until June 4. A atteinpt to force thé men back to work was made Tues- day. The workers then refuséd to be stampeded The W. leaders prort that they lead a legal strike” next month if a settlement is not reached. The strikers are bitter ag st the leadership of the U.T.W. and aré determined to organize to preparé for a rank-and-file led strike in June. Militia Called To Smash Relief Strike In Wichita, Kansas (Continued ried by the police. After the police had failed to break the ranks of the Strikers, firemen were called atid played powerful strearns of water on the marching strikers. Police injused more than a score of workers in a séeriés of brutal at- tacks. Intent upon defending them- selves, the strikers battled for an hour against the Vicious onslaughts of the police. Four cops were in- jured. | County Attorney James Wood joined in the attack upon the strik- ers, stating that all leaders would | be arrested on charges of criminal syndicalism. ‘om. Page 1) * Protest Starvation Relief | TAMPA, Fla.—Unemployed work- | ers here refused to accept 50 cents| | as relief pay for one week, flinging the checks back at the relief ad- ministrator in a demonstration here.|, 4 tremendous ovation was given| | Immediately after, 200 workers held| } & meeting in one section to discuss | | steps to be taken at tonight's meet- | ing of the Brotherhood of Unem- ployed. Following the demonstra- tion of 1,500 school children who battled with the police after free| lunches were discontinued, the un- employed workers voted to keep | their children from school because | they have no food or clothing for them. Children in two schools went on| | strike yesterday despite police bru- | tality and the arrest of children and parents. A mass meeting of all unemploye: | was held here Thursday. The jobl | are demanding immediate adequate | cash re! | police | | terror. ea Fort Worth Jobless Mass | FORT WORTH, Tex—Four hun- | dred fired relief workers massed in Trinity Park here Monday, demand- | ing continuation of their jobs. Re-| lief expenditures here have been cut | | from $4,500 a day to $1,500 a day | for the county. | The worke {a march on the relief headquarte: | abandoning the march. | NY. Vets Slandered By Hearst Sheet (Continued from Page 1) Washington in chartered buses, | paid for by the contributions of sympathetic workers at open air meetings.” Protest Jim Crowing Seventy-five Negro and white) veterans of the New York contin- gent, which was led by Peter Cac- cione, veteran of the 1932 Bonus Army, protested firmly against at- | tempted Jim Crowing at the “Dee | Street Cafeteria” to which eating Place the Federal Transient Relief | Bureau had seit the men soon |after their arrival last night. Vets tore signs off the wall reading: |““White trade only.” Afterwards a committee visited Arthur Rosichan, head of the Transit Bureau, and protested against this Negro dis- crimination. The rank and file statement in part, follows: | “Major Ernest W. Brown, Super- |intendent of Police here, if quoted | correctly by the Herald, is in error | when he says that the majority of | war veterans are not in sympathy | with the rank and file movement. | This is a repetition of the press | propaganda started last year to | Split the ranks of véterans and to | discourage others from arriving. | Contrary to the Herald, there are more than 2,000 vets already in Washington and conservative re- ports place the numbér on the road at double this figure. Atlanta Vets Endorse March “Two instances which show how the rank and file vets are support- ing and actually taking part in this march may be cited here. The | American World War Veterans, a National Veterans Organization, with headquarters in Atlanta, Ga., have endorsed the march ahd the three-point program. ‘They are sending a group, headed by Capt. |T. A. Pulp, which will join the con- vention on arrival, The American | Legion rank and file at Ashland, Wisconsin, took up a collection to | Speed the Chicago group on its way. | The rank and file of the Veterans |of Foreign Wars, the Disabled Am- erican War Veterans and the Work-| | ers Ex-Servicemen'’s League, have} | in many cases opened their halls to! Speakers for the three-point pro- | gram and are participating directly {in the march,” had gathered spon-| tary of the International Labor De-| tateously at the park, shouted for | prisco >, and file strike committee. Gutters of New York “Controller McGoldrick’ sign over $5,000,000 to the 128 SHIPS TIED UP (Special to the Daily Worker) | SEATTLE, Wash, May 10.—j} Leaders of the International Long-! shoremen’s Association tried hard to avert 4 strike here, but the action of the men all along the coast won) over the Seattle local. | Taggart, Craft, Morton and Whimpley, I. L. A. leaders, argued with the men to support the ho-} strike decision of Roosevelt, J. P.| Ryan and Senator Wagner but the longshoremen turned it down. | The men, who have gone out | with very little strike preparations, are very militant. | |to Malone, President of the Unem- ployed Citizens League, which is affiliated to the Unemployment! Council, when he pledged the Sup-| port of the unemployed to the strike. Refuse Arbitration | The strike takes place, despite the District President of the I. L. A.| and a crew of fakers who were try-! ing to submit questions of hours! and wages and wotking conditions| to an arbitration board which will| take away the right to strike. All) | the coast locals violently protested | against such argument. | They are striking for the original) | work 48 hours, lief, and an end to the brutal | | President Lewis, District Organ-| |izer Bjorklund and International | Organizer Paddy Morris, former Lovestonite, who are heading the strike in order to behead it, are tak- ing no action to organize rank and jfile strike committees. Those who make motions for the election of} | broad rank and file committees to} jlead the struggle are called “reds” by these gentlemen. | In spite of these manetvers,| and Everett elected rank! Out 100 Per Cent Seattle dockers are now out 100/ per cent mass picketing the docks, | the police have tried to interfere | with the picketing, but their efforts have been of little avail. | Calling for solidarity of the em- | ployed and unemployed, the Unem- | | ployed Citizens League is distribut- | ing leafiets at the strikets relief stations. Build Action Committees Action committees are also or- ganized by the Marine Workers In- dustrial Union, while seamen aboard the ships have reflised to handle cargo. The Marine Workers Indus- trial Union is pressing for the code of the union, Joining with the strikers, students of the University of Washington have issued leaflets calling on the students not to repeat their 1919 strike-breaking activities. The Communist Party has issued a statement to the longshoremeh | urging solidarity and militant mass picketing. Despite the red scare conjured up by the Hearst newspapers, the strik- ers received the statement of the} Communist Party with enthusiasm. The Daily Worker is being sold on | the picket line. | Wagner Heads Scab Forces Heading the forces of strikebreak- jing is Senator Robert Wagner, author of the infamous Wagner | Bill, which was designed to outlaw | strikes. | In an atterhpt to halt the strike action, the following telegram was sent by Senator Wagner to Secre- tary Bjorklund of the L.L.A., prais- ing Bjorklund’s past strikebreaking activities: “In interest of industrial peace and the President’s recovery pro- gram, I earnestly urge that the Jongshoremen’s strike set for | | | Fifty Nursery Workers Win All Demands in 2- Hour Strike for Raise PATCHOGUE, N, Y¥.—Fifty agri- cultural workers at the Swan River Nursery here laid down their tools in defiance of the N. R. A. Agri- | cultural Act and won their demands. They had been receiving 22 cents an hour for the hardest kind of labor, The new rate won by the strike} is $3.60 for a nine-hour day. The strike was Won one hour and a half after the demands were presented s first official act was to to the heads of the nursery. bankers’ syndicate.” EWS ITEM. IN LONG- SHOREMEN'S STRIKE 1N WEST pars Wednesday morning be deferred until questions involved have again’ been considered by the Président’s special committee which is convening today in San Francisco. The cooperation which you have already displayed in support of our President’s great efforts to effect this economic re- covery has been magnificent. T trust that this splendid record will not be marred by any hasty action at this time. Please con- tact members President's special committee who will reach Frisco this afternoon.” Following the receipt of Wagner’s telegram, the wires began to burn with messages from officials of the LL.A. urging the calling off of the strike. J. P. Ryan, President of the IL.A., sent the. following message to Bjorklund: “Chairman Wagner's request must be complied with. Cancel strike orders. I believe President’s special committee will now adopt different attitude than in past and much more arhicable under- standing should be arrived at. Wire me immediately N. Y. office.” But it was impossible for the d|demants: $1 an hour and the 35 Ieaders of the TLL.A. to defer the and relief workers, Negro and white, hour week. The dockers were gét-! strike actidn. The men went out SS | ting 85 cents an hour and had to! over the heads of the ‘leaders, as shown by the following telegrain} sent to Bjorklund by W. J. Lewis, President of the Pacific Coast Dis trict: “Impossible to defer tomorrow's action. This is sentiment of en- tire coast.” Then came advice from M. H. Reily of the national office of the LL.A. in New York: “Bjorkluhd: President Ryan wishes me to advise he will be guided by] district officers’ advice on Pacific] coast difficiilties. Situation in Gal-| veston serious for him to leave at) this time. Inasmuch as he will visit| various Texas ports requests you keep office here advised and I will relay all messages.” ‘ees . 1,800 Out Ih Los Angeles LOS ANGELES, May 10.—Kight- een hundred longshoremen of this port have joined the general west coast strike. Very few strike-break- ers dare to go near the docks. Despite the maneuvers of the ILA. leaders to stop the rank and file from getting full control of the situation, members of the union have forced the leaders to erilarge the strike committee to include 24 Jongshoremen. While-the leaders of the union have stated that they are opposed to militant mass picketing, the rank | and file are militant and enthusi- astic. The rank and file opposition group within the LL.A. and the Marine Workers Industrial Union are giv- ing guidance to the strikers and (Continued on Page 3) Jerome Speaks on AWP Tonight at Sunnyside Comrade V. J. Jerome, of the Na- tional Agit-Prop Dept. of the Com- munist Party, will be the first speaker at the forurhs initiated to- night by Section 10 of the Party in this district, at. the Hamilton Court Community Room, 47th St. and Skillman Ave., Sunnyside, L, I. Comrade Jerome will speak on Social-Fascism-American style (the Program of the American Workers’ Party). Admission is 15 cents; un- employed workers free. 2 Workers Arrested at Garside Shoe Co, Strike in L. I. City LONG ISLAND CITY.—Two strikers of the Garside Shoe Co. in Long Island City were arrested yesterday on the picket line and charged with disorderly conduct. An Investigation — Committee, elected by the Fitters’ Local of the Boot & Shoe Union, was given a Picture, by the strikers, of the kind of force and intimidation used by the bosses and the Boot & Shoe. Memibers of the committee, who are known to be staunch support- ers of Danner ahd Silverman, strikebreaking officials of the B. & §., could not deny the fact that the majority of the workers do not want this scab agency, the Boot & Shoe, MAY 11, 1934 by del’ Mass Layoff Of| ‘Unions 25 PerCent At Dodge Plants Speed-up and Firings at All Plants as Pro- duction Drops | (Special to the Daily Worker) DETROIT, May 10.—Twetity five | per cent of the workers have been | laid off at the Dodge plant. Dodge | workers have been hit by mass lay- | offs that are spreading from plant |to plant in the entire indtistry as | the production séason is coming to an end. At the Ternstedt Mfg. Co, a General Motors Auto Parts subsi- off. The Chevrolét plant is drop- ping hundreds daily, while Jenks &| | Muir, a subsidiary of the Murray | Body Co., has laid off 200 out of|Againts Hitler.” But now perhaps,/A. U—the American Olympic Com- | Mr. Hitler being a good man at the | Mittee—changed its tune to fit its 2,000. the workers that remain. At Dodge's even before the lay-off, the, speed-up was increased in many dé-| partments, and how the workers are being driven harder to main- tain production. fact that while 25 per ceiit of the Dodge workers have been laid off, production has declined only per cetit. | At the Dodge and other plants | the workefs are being shifted from} one department to another, and} then given beginner's wages. In the lock department of Plant 5 at Ternstedt’s the workers have been cut 11 cents an hour, from 66 to 55/ cents. | While thousands are being laid| off, the Detroit Welfare Depart-| ment is continuing to cut the re-| lief list which is now already down| to about 29,000 families. The latest figures show that about 500,000 more cats were pro- duced in the first four months of this year than were sold. This is about the same number as were left unsold during the whole of last year. At the same time, retail buying of new cars has actually | shown a downward trend, instead | of the anticipated seasonal expan-| | sion. Thanks to the A. F. of L.| leaders, who have smashed strike) actions time after time, the manu-| facturers were able to stock up. | The Auto Workers Union is rally-| ing the workers for a fight for a two-weeks lay-off pay, Workers Un- employment Insurance Bill (H. R. 7598) a six hour day and a five day week with no reduction in pay, and adequate cash relief for all unemployed, and abolition of the| speed-up systems, Urged To Immediate Protest Action (Continued from Page 1) bodied in the N.R.A. code, despite the attempts of the officials of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Snieltermen to prevent the struggle. “Throughout the South a mighty strike wave is spreading. Coal, steel, ore, metal, relief, and other workers are on strike. These struggles are shaking the very foundations of the | rule of the Southern ruling class and give a terrific impetus to the struggle of the oppressed Negro} masses for liberation, which fact underlies the effort of the Southern capitalists to smash these struggles. “The Trade Union Unity League calls upon all unions and workers’ organizations to immediately mobi- lize to assist the Southern workers, by smashing the fascist terror. Every T.U.U.L., American Federation of Labor, and independent union should adopt resolutions and tele- grams of protest at once, to be sent to Sheriff Hawkins, Birmingham, and to Governor Miller, Montgom- ery. These protests should denounce the terror, demand the right to strike and picket, demand the with- drawal of the troops ahd hordes of company gunmen, demand indem- nity for the families of the mur- dered strikérs and cotiviction for murder of the police and députies responsible. Call mass méétings at once. Organize broad meetings of protest, in cooperation with T. U. U. L., A. F. of L. and independent. unions, International Labor Defense and others. Protest to W. O. Downs, City Commissioner, Birmingham, against the raids, beatings, arrest and terror against the militant workers and the Communist Party. “By an immediate mobilization of the workers, unions and mass or- ganizations and the development of a national protest campaign, the terror in Alabama can he defeated.” L. COMRADES WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway bet. 13: @ 14th 8, 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 WORKERS 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST COOPERATIVE COLONY has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Trains, Stop at Allerton Ave. station Direction; “exington Ave, White Plains Office open daily from 9 a.m, to 8 p.m. Priday and Saturday 9 am. to 5 p.m. Sunday 10 am. to 2 p.m. | Macabees, f | ~ WILLIA | tive on the Olympic Executiv letes are now being begged o' | the German Olympic teati a is spraying them with frank Congress has answered with a request of Avery Brundage, |president of the American | branch, that he get the Inter- |national Olympic Committee diary, 30 per celit have been laid| tO make a survey to vetify Herr | terfere in Germany |Lewald’s statement. Only two months ago this same Congress pre- Sented the “Case of Ci ation The companies are using mass| bottom, he has seen the light. One | colors. 4 lay-Offs to worsen the cotiditions of| has no right to believe without an|Withdréw its threats of a boycott. “impartial investigation,” which is What the capitalist leaders of the Amétican Jew ess ask, that Herr Lewald’s statement is not true. A Mr. Hitler's previous statements and | How this works | conduct—his proscription of evety; about the out in practice is evident from the} workers’ and Jewish sports’ organ-! worth was revealed even on thé day ization (15,000 members of the Jewish sport clubs and Jewish Front Soldiers have alone been barréd from training fields and gymnasiums)—are not enough. After all, did not Gustavus Kirby, | the ex-president of the A. A. Uy speaking as a witness against Hit-{ ler while the “trial” was in progress, ; express his confidence ih Herr! Lewald’s “honesty and_ sincerity when Herr Lewald declared last year that “ih principle German Jews will not be excluded from Gér- man teams playing in the Eleventh | Olympiad.” 657% HE whole brilliant hypocrisy of | the leaders of the American Olympic Committee is évident in their dealings with fascists. When | they staged their half-hearted atid | misleading trial they invited not! only Gustavus Kirby of the A.A.U,,| an organization which follows the) sathe ptiiciplé of racial exclusion as does Nazi Germany in the South} openly and in the North covertly, but they also produced that fascist luminary of Ralph Harley's Na- tional Civic Federation, Matthew Woll, the ally of the Socialists. The Labor Sports Union has constantly exposed the tactics of the A. A. U. and the American Olympic Committee. It is the | only organization at present which is waging a resolute strug- gle for the boycott of the Olympic Games. When General Sherrill | made his empty pronouncement, last year, about keeping the Olym- pies from Germany in 1936 it was | the Labor Sports Union which | proved its loud voice a false one. When the A. A. U. “protested” against the barring of Jgwish ath- letes from the German competition it made no reference to the terror instituted against Jewish and work- ers’ clubs and athletes, nor did it cast even a glance at the destruc- tion of these clubs by Hitler. The tides of the resentment of the Jews in the United States were rising | drawn from the Nazis. |tions of Germany are obvious in | Lewald’s |made a careful study of the other M FUCHS Boycott the Olympics! To the statement of Theodore Lewald, Nazi representa. e Committee, that Jewish ath- n bended knees to try out for iid that the Murderer himself incense, the American Jewish high against the Nazis at that time land the A. A. U. threw out a fore- Stalling sop. When its resolution Was published the capitalist news- | papers immédiately began their howling against any “attempt to in- affairs.” (“The | A. A. U. is meddling in matters that | do not coricern us, said the idealistic | Paul Gallico.) Accordingly, the A, It quickly and _ entirely (ae New York Times, being pleased, commended its second manifesto as | “phrased more températely, in a |More conciliatory tone.” | How much thé A. A. U.’s phrases boycott were actually | following their publication. Avery | Brundage, the president, and Fred- 15| 13,000 members of the League of | erick Rubien, the secretary-treas- urer, pooh-poohed it as just @ stunt, as anyohe could see. “I don’t think,” said Mr. Rubien, smiling at the newspaper boys who were somewhat excited, “that we will have to go to the full extreme of otir résolution and boycott the 1936 games.” ENERAL SHERRILL, when he was informed of Hetr Lewald’s statement, “expressed satisfaction.” The fact that Hitler has been mur- dering workers and intellectuals in Germany and making no bones about it has nothing to do with the Olympics. “In principle,” after all, Jews are being offered every in- ducement to join the competitions, Though, of course, as the Nazi de- cree goes, “acceptance of noh- Aryan members of athletic clubs is left to the decision of the various athletic leagues.” To think that Germany will freely allow any Jews or non-Nazi work- ers to take part in the Olympic trials is to be crazy. The Labor Sports Union must be given every support in the fight against those who have scheduled the games for Germany. In the letter to Brundage the American Jewish Congress makes no demand that the games be with- The inten- interview. Lewald has countries and has discovered that almost nore are Jews. If no Jews, therefore, participate under Nazi colors, it will not be the fault of the fascists, who are searching the whole country for candidates; it will simply be due to the law of averages. The slogan must be adopied and fought for: “Boycott the Olympics!” And one of the best means of positive struggle is for amateur athletes everywhere to back the International Athletic Meet Against War and Fascism this July in Paris. NY. Meets To Hit Alabama Murders (Continued on Page 2) | and upper Bronx on the same eye- ning, with Sam Nessin and Ben Gold as speakers, Monday’s issue of the Daily Worket will carry the exact locations of these meetings. Other protest meetings scheduled for Monday evening will be held at Tenth St. and Second Avé., with Carl Brodsky as speaker; Columbus Circle, Max Bedacht, of the I. W. Q. and Bill Albertson, of the Food | Workers Industrial Union; Crown | Heights, Brooklyn, William Patter- son, national secretary of the I. L. D., speaker; Brownsville, Herbert Benjamin; South Brooklyn, Charles | Krumbein, district. organizer of the | Communist Party; Corona, Long Island, 104th St. and Northern Blyd., George Siskind; Coney Island, place and speaker to be announced; Wil- liamsburgh, Grand Street Extension and Havemeyer St. Complete details of these mcet- ings will be carried in Monday's Daily Worker. In anntuncing these meetings, the N. Y. disttict of the Communist Party issued a call to all mass ot- Baseball NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn —______. 000 030 131-8 16 1 Chicago 200 450 Oix—12_14 0 Carroll, Munn, Lucas and Lopes, Berres; Warneke and Hartnett. Boston —.— 000 000 101-2 7 @ Cincinnati _—______ 200 002 10x—5 9 1 Zachary, Barrett and Spohrer, Hogan; Si Johnson, Manion and Lombardi. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh Postponed; Rain. . AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago ....___- 900 000 021-3 8 0 New York — 510 340 OOx—13 12 9 Earnshaw, and Ruel; Ruffing and Dickey. Detroit - 000 030 000-8 4 8 —— 004 001 90x86 7 0 Mahaffey, Benton Philadelphia Rowe and Cochrane; and Berry. Cleveland — 000 033 230--11 12 2 Boston . 600 021 901-10 12 4¢ Hudlin, Winegarher, Lee, ©, Brown and Spencer, Pytlak; Walberg, Welch, Weiland and Hinkle. St. Louis at Washington Postponed; rain, * ‘ INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Syracuse 090 300 000-3 5 4 Buffalo _ 100 501 O4x—11 9 0 Judd, Bloomet, Gilvary and Taylor; Wil- son and Outen. Albany — 001 001 000—2 1 Rochester 00 001 O5x—6 11 ¢ Milligan ai ; Harrel, Liska and Lewis. Baltimore _ — 010 101 200-5 8 1 Toronto — — 220 611 10x—13 15 4 Melton, Aube, Miner And Atwood; Hol- Sensational Uncensored Motion Pictures Smuggled Out of Germany! COLUMBIA Cnet Bal to all shops, to all uae and paoe Te 4 workers’ meetings and gatherings to | Newark — 1 010-4 7 1 hiish protest telegrams against the | MINT. ~chanaice Myrna elt? btital Alabarha terror drive, and Hehline. 4 AMUSEMENTS BROADWAY at 47th ST, Continuous He & 4O¢ from 10:30 a.m. E ] |