The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 12, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two 66 Jailed, Many Hurt As Cops Attack Ant s ]- Fascist Rally In N.Y. Ca for Protests to La Guardia and O’Ryan NEW YORK.—Riding their horses brutally onto the side- walks where workers moving homeward after 4,000 demonstrated Thursday night, police jailed 41 and injured a score of others who took part in the anti-Nazi rally in Yorkville were large Yesterday morning, 25 additional arrests were made when a pro- test picket line was formed around the Night Court at 57th St. and Fighth Ave. to which the ar- rested workers had been taken. One of the workers. severely in- jured, was taken to Bellevue Hos- pital The workers assembled promptly at 7 p.m. on Thursday at Karl Schurz Park, 86th St. and Avenue A, from which they were directed to the block between York and First Avenues. The police and city ad- ministration, while refusing to re- voke their denial of a parade-per- mit, had at the last minute given the N. Y. Committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism, Thousands listened to the speeches throughout a heavy shower which | drenched both speakers and audi- ence. Then, at 8:30 p. m., with the evening made even darker by the heavy thunder clouds, the meeting was disbanded and speakers in- structed the demonstrators to return to their homes. But even before the crowd had had a chance to leave the block on which they had been given the right to meet, mounted police had already charged into them, driving them to the sidewalks. ‘Then, as the demonstrators walked in orderly manner in the middle of the street to First Ave. shouting slogans on their way to the sub- way and elevated stations, the po- lice charged into them again. They repeated this attack continually, proving that they were under in- structions to break up the anti- Nazi meet at any cost. Already on Wednesday evening the city administration had re- vealed its pro-Nazi attitude by prohibiting an anti-Nazi street corner meeting at 86th St. and Third Ave., which has been used as an open air forum in this sec- tion for many years. Thursday's brutal attack on the rally was but a continuation of this policy. Militantly shouting slogans “Fight Against Fascism,” Front,” and “Down With Hitler,” the massed workers swept slowly along 86fh St., booing occasionally as Nazi hangouts. were passed Many workers in Yorkville cheered them and joined in shouting their Slogans as they marched by. some points shopkeepers and others stood in doorways, sneering. At Second Avenue, the police, evi- dently alarmed lest this effective demonstration reach the sacred and holy bourgeois provinces around Madison and Fifth Aves., decided to smash it here. Mounted cops rode their horses onto the sidewalks, head on into the marchers, driving many up the steps leading to the L_ station; others were driven North and South into Second Ave. The unarmed workers defended themselves as best they against the vicious onslaught. of & “Red | Detroit Calls Open Air Meets To Fight Alabama Terror Rule (Special to the Daily Worker) DETROIT, Mich., May 11—A series of open-air meetings ¢ by the Communist held Saturday night in various sections of Detroit to protest the slaughter of Al: strikers. Resolution of will be adopted. NEW YORK. — Workers and workers’ organizations through- out the country are urged to pro- test against the murder of the st Alabama workers. Call meetings of protest! Send tele- grams, letters of protest immedi ately to President Roosevelt, Hugh Johnson, Governor Miller at Montgomery, Alabama, and to City Commissioner W. O. Downs at City Hall, Birmingham, Ala? Drastic Writ Is - Served Against Ala. Ore Strikers (Continued from Page 1) provocation or warning, and that the pickets were without firearms. Not a gun was found by the in- vestigators. The facts borne out by a large number of witnesses are} that these deputies, who drove the} death car, got out and began firing into the pickets with machine guns and pistols without warning. “We further find that they were later reinforced by company gun- men with machine guns, and pur- sued the pickets through the woods, searching for them, and continuing a rapid machine gun fire, and gas, } while the unarmed pickets were try- jing to escape. Several were shot down quite a distance from the scene of the trouble by the depu- ties.” The national guardsmen, warmly welcomed by these A. F. of | L. officials, in the Red Mountain strike area where the shooting o! the strikers occurred, have dis-/| persed groups of strikers who gath- |ered to picket and to defend them- selves against other attacks mo- mentarily expected. Deputy Sheriff |Arnett, who was in the group of | 414° iongshoremen. deputies firing on the Negro strik-) ers, admitted he fired his machine; |gun into the pickets, | The “special officers’ (T.C.1.| | gangsters), who are “patrolling” the | strike area, are using armored cars, Guardsmen,.are going around with these deputies making arrests, it was. reported. It.. was _na the Wenona mine. arrested were, Joe Evans, Ben Win- ston and William Holloway. 3 Terror reigns in Birmingham and in the iron ore fields against all militant strikers. | Protests Attack on | Negro Woman by Cop | | NEW YORK.—Four hundred Ne- | gro and white workers protested | could | against police brutality and Negro in militancy. | In |- discrimination in a mass meeting | meetings are held daily in front of | strike DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, } .Y. Dockers Walk Out On Mallory Line Scahs By Are Reernited O’Tool Detee- tive Service NEW YORK.—Longshoremen on 34 and 37 of the Mallory p Company struck yes r recognition of the ipport of the coast- the Southern gulf About 200 men came out and i ing along ie piers. e sentiment of piers gers from the horemen’s As- at the docks early yesterday and told the men that a strike was on and that they were there to lead it Nobody went into the piers and the men began to prepare to set up @ mass picket line. The TZ. L. A delegates at once joined with the gang foremen and herded the dockers away from the docks, tell- ing them that there should he no mass picketinc. Most of the long- shoremen left the waterfront dis- gusted. ional Bring in Seabs After the I.L.A. delegates got the men safely away from the docks Several truckloads of scabs were brought in. It is reported that the scabs were recruited by the notori- ous Val O’Toole Detective Service (operating under the name of the Pioneer Industrial Service). Throughout the day organizers of the Marine Workers Industrial Union were on the west side water- front. Leafiets were. distributed urging the men to spread the strike to other piers, to set up strong picket lines and to elect a rank and file committee to head the strike. There. was strike talk all along the waterfront. Many coastwise piers were not working yesterday, due to the fact that very few ships were in. All the longshoremen speak ill of the leaders of the Interna- tional Longshoremen's Association. - “If we come out down here we don’t want the LL.A. bunch,” said a docker from pier 51. “The men from the Marine Workers In- dustrial Union are O.K.” It is highly possible that within the next few days more longshore- so | men will walk out but this time un- | tervale and Wilkins Ave——Ben Gold, der the leadership of. the Marine Workers Industrial Union and rank nd file committees. Attempt Confusion Tt {s clear that the I.L.A. officials | are trying to create a state of con- fusion on the docks in order to de- feat any big strike movement of Their tactic in this situation is to try to head the movement on individual docks, betray it and leave the men | disgusted and helpless before the! shipowners. The Marine Workers Industrial Union is urging the men to elect tional | their own’ committees on all the! guard troops who arrested three | docks and come out in an organized | ‘At | Negro strikers several miles from| manner, spreading the strike from) bers, raise your voices in the de- Those strikers | pier to pier in solidarity with the| mand for the immediate arrest and gulf coast men. Longshoremen Are Backed in Strike By Frisco” Seamen (Continued from Page 1) Mass parades and a very dark doorway on Second | held Thursday night at Prospect Pl.| the docks Ave., near 86th St., cops threw down a worker whom they clubbed merci- lessly. A couple of the police were slightly and Howard Ave., Brooklyn. |. The protest grew out of the brutal| based on the code of*the Marine give the second lecture in a series beating and arrest of Mrs. Tims, | Negro woman who was attacked by Demands of the longshoremen are | Workers | Industrial Union, with | variations. The basic demand of hurt and were taken to Flower|a cop and charged with assault | the strikers is $1 an hour and the Hospital for treatment. The metro- politan papers howled that, “bricks and other missiles flew thick and fast,” but your reporter, who was on the scene, saw no missiles flung whatsoever. International Labor Defense lawyers ate preparing to defend the arrested workers, and the I. L. D: calls upon all mass organizations to protest immediately to Mayor La Guardia and Police Commis- sioner O’Ryan and to demand ‘the immediate release of all arrested workers. In a statement issued to the press yesterday, Alfred Wagenknecht, executive secretary of the National Committee to Aid Victims of Ger- man Fascism, declared: “The so-called anti-Nazi riot in Yorkville Thursday night was a police provocation from beginning to end. After the meeting was ad- journed at 85th St. and York Ave., the 4.000 audience walked down| 85th St. to First Ave. At this. point mounted .police, by riding into the people, forced them to the side- walks. “For a long time after, the police went from corner to corner on 86th St., and insulted pedestrians, stand- ing on the corners, forcing them to move on, although these pedestrians had not been at the meeting, had not seen the attack by the police upon the Anti-Nazi crowd, and were altogether unaware what this rough handling was about. “The belief prevails among the police and city officials that York- ville is part of Hitler’s Germany, a little Nazi colony over which Hitler and his agents rule. is proven by the presentations made to the anti-Nazi committee that tried to secure a parade permit, in that the police commissioner claimed frankly that Yorkville was ‘enemy terri- tory’ which citizens should not go to because they may be attacked by the Nazis. “This attitude must be fought and the anti-Nazi forces of New| York intend to take action toward the end that Yorkville again be- cemes safe for workers and others who are against Fascism and to- ward the end that it no longer is regarded as under the regime of Nazi storm troopers who terrorize the residents with guns for the car- aa | several weeks ago. Mrs. Tims’ case will come up in the Liberty Ave. court on May 17. | | WHAT’S ON | Saturday | | Manhattan | ENTERTAINMENT and DANCE for the | |beneft of the Waterfront Concentration | Group, 168 W. 23d St. Contribution 15 cents. Refreshments. | BALL of the BOOBOISIE given by the John Reed Club and J.R.C, School of Art Irving Plaza, Irving Pl. and 15th St. Otto Soglow sketch, Lou Bunin Marionettes, | Bobbie Lewis skit, hot jazz band. Admis- sion 49 cents. | DANCE and ENTERTAINMENT given by | Social Youth Club, 108 W, 24th St. Admis- | | sion free. Check room 25 cents. Music | | by John Cusano and his Harmony Kings. | | “DANCE with the dancers at Joint party | of the Workers Dance League, at 108 14th St. Subscription 25 cents. Folk dan ing, solo dancing, Jaxx band, Russian Bar. | SPRING CARNIVAL given by Clarte, French Workers Club, 304 W. 58th St. | Good program, Pierre DeGeyter Orchestr | Coat room 25 cents. Lower West Side Workers Center, 107 | | MeDougal St. Entertainment and dance. | Speaial Orchestra. Admission 15 cents. DAILY WORKER Volunteer Dance Group Entertainment. and Party. Carol Beals will dance. Subscription 25 cents. | Workers Center, 35 E. 12th &t., Sth floor. | SCOTTSBORO BENEFIT Dance and En- tertainment at La Maison Payde Studio, 762 St. Nicholas Ave., near 148th 8t., 8:30 p.m. Proceeds to the Scottsboro Defense Fund. Dr. E. Berkovitz speaker. Admis- ston 35 cents. SOCIAL GATHERING given by Eighth Ave. Unemployed Council, 2 E. 134th St., Apt. 9, near Fifth Ave, Good music and dancing. DANCE and ENTERTAINMENT spon- sored by Dept. Store Section of Office Workers Union, 114 W. 14th St, Subscrip- tion 35 cents. WRESTLING and ATHLETIC Exhibition of Young Workers Athletic Club at Hun- garian Workers Home, 350 E. 8st St. American and Hungarian Gypsy Dance ‘W. 724 St, 8:30 p.m, Dancing, entertainment, refreshment, Subscription 50 cents. Auspices: Allied Professional Committee to Aid Victims of German Fas- cism. CONCERT and BANQUET in celebration of Eighth Anniversary Harlem Progressive Youth Club, 1538 Madison Ave., 8:30 p.m. LW.O. Musical Quintet, Dramatic Section | Recitation, four-course meal. Admission | 40. cents. UNITY THEATRE, 24-26 E. 23d St., pre-| sents can Festival. Horton's Shologa | Oloba, 9 p.m. Admission 35 cents. | DANCR given by American Youth Fed- eration, 144 Second Ave., corner Sth St. Good time assured. 10a, | 36-hour week. Mass Picketing Singing “Hold the Fort” and “We'll Hang Scabby Peterson to a Sour Apple Tree,” two thousand striking longshoremen marched in @ mass picket parade along the Embarcadero yesterday. High was the enthusiasm of the pickets and great was their mili- tancy as they swung down to Main Street where the shipowners’ scab agency is located. The police had sealed the street with heavy cordons of uniformed men. But the stevedores broke through and demonstrated in front of the scab herder’s office where they held a tremendous demonstra- tion. “On- to the docks!” shouted the longshoremen. They proceeded to picket the individual piers, Conspicuous by their absence from the demonstration and picket line were W. J. Lewis, Presi- dent of the Pacific Coast District of the International Longshore- men’s Association. and. other paid officials. The picket line was led by the rank and file strike com- mittee, The question of bringing the teamsters out to support. the strike | was being discussed last night. The proposal to make the “West- ern Worker,” organ of the Califor- nia district of the Communist Party, the medium of official statements of the strike committee was cheered at the strike committee meeting. This proposal was referred to the Publi- city Committee. eae pate Out Solid in Everett EVERETT, Wash. May 11— Members of locals 38 and 76 of the International Longshoremen’s Asso- ciation struck along with the rest of the Pacific Coast stevedores. The men came out solid Wednesday morning at 8 o'clock, There are no at- tempts on the part of any workers here to scab, Seamen Support Strike the first day of the strike ere two ships in the harbor, . Lake Frances and the 5. 5S. The crew of both ships On th the Kansan, have declared their solidarity with the longshoremen. The crew of the Lake Frances, when asked by toad officers to the cargo Gutters of New York “A gangling, six foot Negro with criminal-maniac tendencies has attacked several white women with a hammer.”—N, Y. DAILY NEWS. AY 12, 1934 Open Air Meetings' in N. Y. Monday to: in | HitAlabamaTerror | (Continued from Page 1) 131st St. and Lenox Ave.—Clarence | A, Hathaway, editor of the Daily | Worker and James Ford, Harlem Section Organizer of the Commu- | nist Party. | Lower Bronx at 7:30 p.m. at 163rd| St. and Prospect Ave—Sam Nessin| of the Trade Union Unity Council} and Herman Macawain, Secretary | |of the League of the Struggle for| | Negro Rights. | Upper Bronx at 7:30 p.m. at In- | National Secretary of the Needle | Trades Workers Industrial Union. | Brownsville at 7:30 at; Hopkinson }and Pitkin Avse—Herbert Benja~ | min, organizer of the National Com- {cts ” of the Unemployment Coun- cils. | Corona, L. I. at 7:30 p.m. at 104th St. and Northern Blvd —George Sis- kind, of the District Committee of the Communist Party. “Turn out in large masses,” the statement urges. “Stop the murder of our brave fellow workers in Ala- bama, protest the N: R. A. starva- tion and wage cutting against: the | Southern workers, the strikebreak- ing and wage cutting that affects all workers, Rally in mighty num- |; conviction and death penalty for! |the murderers of the Alabama| |miners. Demand the withdrawal of | the troops of National Guards and} armed thugs of J. P. Morgan from| the strike area. Demand the un- limited right to organize and strike for free speech and free assembly. Fight the jim-crowing and discrim- ination against the Negro workers. “Turn out in mighty numbers. |The fight of the Alabama miners| | against the N. R. A. wage cutting,| ;murder, terror and strikebreaking| is the fight of all workers.” | _BEDACHT SPEAKS ON FASCISM | | NEW YORK.—Max Bedacht will) |of three on Fascism and Social | Fascism at the Workers’ School, Saturday, May 12 at 330 pm. The course of three lectures on this im- |Portant topic has been arraned by the Trade Union Unity Council es- pecially for members of the trade unions. The third and last lecture of the series will be held Saturday, May 19. blank. Officers of this ship are at- tempting to get the cargo aboard | the ship themselves. Also the crew | of the Kansan declared that they | Will stick with the men on the docks, A spokesman for the crews said | that Everett and Boston are the two | best organized ports. Crews Refuse to Scab SEATTLE, Wash, May 11. — Dozens of ships’ crews in Seattle,| | Everett. and Tacoma haye shown their solidarity with the striking longshoremer by refusing to handle cargo. | Many of the seamen have walked off the ships. i The Marine Workers Industrial issued a call to the crews of all | ships to stay ‘aboard and fight for | the 1929 wage scale, |* Meanwhile the seamen on the 8S. |S. Lemerske won the reinstatement. of a seaman who was fired because | he refused to handle cargo. ss2aidfH me ETAOIN AOIN AOI The 8S. S. Queen was towed to the Admiral dock to be used as a scab herding house. A fence was built around the dock and a patrol of armed thugs thrown around it. Shipowners are trying unsuccess- fully to transfer the seamen who are on the Admiral Line ships to the S. S. Queen for strike-breaking duty. Pete Gill, Sec’y. of the Interna- tional Seamen’s Union, has refused to mobilize the I. 8. U. members to support the strike. The only ship to unload during the first day of the strike was the 8. 8. Cordova, which had aboard it an I. 8. U. crew. Supporting the strike, the Unem- ployed Citizens’ League has issued a call to all unemployed to come out today in a solidarity picket demon- stration with the longshoremen. Teamsters have also given their support to the strike. They have refused to deliver any cargo to or from the struck vessels. In Everett N. Y. Party Holds Bazaar, Festival For Fighting Fund Features Prominent Entertainment May 23-27 NEW YORK.—The crisis Has seri- ously affected the financial situation of the Communist Party by reduc- ing workers’ incomes to the vanish- ing point, and consequently reduc- ing the income from dues and col- lections at political meetings. On the other hand, the crisis has brought about a set of problems which the Communist Party must tackle, ‘The May Day demonstration was a glorious show of working class solidarity, but the expenses of May | Day are still to be met. These are the reasons why the Party must rely on the coming Festival and Bazaar | for financial aid. This affair, which takes place at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th Street, from May 23rd through the 27th, will be an out- standing local event. | Prominent. Party leaders will | speak each evening, from Wednes- day through Sunday. Entertainment will be supplied by Andre Cibulski, dancers from the Workers’ Dance League and Theatre Union, the Daily Worker, Finnish, Ukrainian and Lithuanian choruses, the I.W.O. Symphony Orchestra, the Freiheit Gezangs Farein, Maxim Gorki union and others. On Sunday afternoon the Young Pioneers will give a free performance of “Strike Me Red.” The Festival and Bazaar Commit- tee, with headquarters at 35 East 12th Street, 5th floor, urges all com- rades to cooperate in order to as- sure the success of this vital under- taking. It is especially important that as many articles as possible be collected. Roy Hudson To Speak At MWIU Film Festival | Sunday, at Webster Hall NEW YORK. — Roy Hudson, National Chairman of the Marine Worker's Industrial Union will speak on the Longshoreman’s Strike at a four star talking film festival in Webster Hall Sunday, May 13. The festival which will include “Red Head” (Poil de Carotte) and “Killing to Live,” which according to Variety is Soviet Russia’s ten best pictures rolled into one, i Performances will be continuous | from 2 P. M. to 11 P. M. Dancing will follow the last show, WILLIAM FUCHS Soviet Athletics: 2 mW 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 | HE reports, published yesterday, of the intensified athletic | program drawn up by the Culture of the SovietgUnion must be painful indeed to the) | honest worthies of the capitalist press who write stories of | the barrenness of the Russian sports landscape. These | wonderful people need not be? expected, of course, to im- | molate themselves upon their falsehoods; they can be ex-| pected rather to keep on! | grinding out their deliberate stuff; | but it is fitting to the utmost, par- ticulerly in view of the editorial | guano of the Boston Post a week or two ago (commented upon in thiss pace the other day) to add | some more, if sketchy, information | about the development of sports in the land of the Soviets, The pieces printed in yesterday's newspapers provide only a minute idea of the subject, ogee | se a ee in these reports is the plan set up for the Red Army by Voroshilov. It is laid down as a “guarantee of success in the great task of building up the armed forces of the proletarian state.” Nowhere in the world is an army so excel- lently trained and arrived at so high a degree of physival culture as in the Soviet Union. The ex- amples of its capabilities are enor- mous. An outstanding instance is the feat of the five young soldiers who carried out a ski run for almost three months without a break. These comrades, Gantimurov, Golovichev, Vecherin, Bogomolov and Kichigan, started out Nov. 30, 1933 from Irkutsk for Moscow. They reached the capital on Feb. 21, in excellent condition. No sim- ilar performance is chronicied in the records of sport. And in the U. S. 8. R. ski sport did not de- velop til 1922. In February, too, in fact, another group of Red Army soldiers skied 2,000 km., from the Ural to Moscow, in 32 days, In 1929, the Red Com- -| mander, Kuropatkin, alone and | without aid, covered the distance between Omsk and Moscow, 2,800 km,, in 60 days, without changing skis or boots, - Ps 6: 'HUS the Red Army. Now to the civilians, As with the Army, the Workers’ and Peasants’ government | spares nothing in their behalf. Proof | of this is easily found in the plans for construction. Some of them are: Baku: In the course of this yeat| construction will be started on a gigantic palace for sport and physi- cal culture for workers in the oil works of the Stalin district. The construction will include a stadium for 2,000 spectators; a football field, tennis court, volley ball court and basketball court. There will also be room for light athletics and exer- cises. The huge sum. of 1,000,000 rubles. will be spent for the con- struction; 600,000 rubles have al- ready been appropriated. cee a “Palace for Children’s Physical ski-station and grounds for hockey, filled its task in passing ski-tests for the GTO badge—10,000 members of the first degree and 10,000 mem- the head of a well-organized sports army of 1,115,000 workers instead of 70,000, as in 1923. With the intro- | duction of the GTO badge over Union! | the United States? | their heads would fall if there were GTO, that medal of the stars, is in! by magnificent work. | New York Bt. and V. Davis. Brooklyn Chicago and Hartnett, Boston Cincinnat! and O'Farrell. Philadelphia Pittsburgh kofer, Hoyt and Padden, Veltman. "8 . ARCHANGEL: Forty-six thou- Palos +‘ ihe. bea ed oe O.-8 io : r |New. Yor = sand roubles for the construction Of | NT wyatt and Ruel: aeePayden, Smythe, Murphy and Dickey. Culture” have been appropriated.| st. Louis 100 010 001 14 u . The “Palace” will al | Washington 200.000 100 0—3 3 7 a plate ae tae ar Hadley, Knott, Newsom and Hemsley; Stewart, Russell and Phillips. tennis, volley-ball, football, ice- | Detroit 012 020 10410 14 0 skating and a large hall for physical | Philadelphia 000 050 000-5 9 2 exercises in the winter time. Auker, Frasier and Cochrane; Cain, WHITE RUSSIA: The organiza~ | Qievetana "poi O00’ 080 09-6 10 3 tion for physical culture has ful- | Roston 100 030 000 01-5 11 3 bers of the second degree. ee Waetee tt UKRAINE: Towards the 10th an- | Carithers, and Lambert; Kleinke and niversary of its existence the Council | Lewis. " Baltimore 300 000 500-8 11 1 of Physical Culture finds itself at inbeonte 202 001 000-5 12 1 Supreme Council of Physical have started to pass all necessary tests and 300,000 sportsmen have, passed them and received the adge. | MOSCOW: The Moscow organiza- tions for physical culture had 200,- | 000 members who passed the tests for the GTO badge. This amounts to 100 per cent of the plan fixed by the Supreme Council. In all, more than 50,000,000 | rubles have been assigned by the | government for construction and | equipment. Besides stadia in the | places I have mentioned sports | palaces will be erected. in -T' Minsk, Erivan, Kazan, Stalingra and Grozny, among other cities. Over 100 state farms and ma- chine-tractor stations will get spe- cial recreation grounds for sport. | Another sport that must not. be | overlooked, though only the most! enthusiastic would call it an ath- letic one, is chess. The Russian Chess Federation today boasts a membership of not less than 700,- 000 members. * + . i CAthedral 8-6160 Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th & 126th &t., N.Y.C. Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C, OFFICE HOUR W 0 SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M, Wisconsin 17-0288 Dr. N. S. Hanoka Dental Surgeon 261 West 41st Street New York City DR. EMIL EICHEL DENTIST 150 E, 93rd St. New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. AT water 9.5838 Fours: 9 a; m. to 8 p, m. Sun..9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund 'O THIS is how little the Russian comrade is treated with sport. In the United States one of the first | things slashed when the bankers have to be paid their due is the ap- | propriation for the meagre athletic fields. Nine times out of ten the| appropriation is completely cut out. | In the United States many of the fields and gymnasia, in fact, have been donated by individuals or so- cieties. In many of the school play- grounds even children are refused admittance after school hours. But look at the picture in the Soviet How many champions have we in The price on Algonquin 4-4432 AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.G. CHIROPODIST 223 SECOND AVENUE Cor. 14th St. Scientific Treatment of Foot Ailments 1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE * 1690 LEXINGY g at!79” ST KY too many. In the Soviet Union, the | the hands of hundreds of thousands, | earned not by fluke or publicity, but | Baseball NATIONAL LEAGUE 010 001 000 0-2 9 1 Louis 200 000 000 1-8 9 1 ‘Hubbell and Richard, Mancuso; P. Dean 030 000 172-13 20 0 000 100 000—1 9 2 Benge and Lopez; Joiner, Malone, Ward, Phelps. 202 000 040-8 17 0 200 000 O21—5_ 11 2 Betts and Hogan, Spohrer; Frey, Benton 000 001 210 0-4 11 2) 021 000 001 2-6 11 0 Hansen, Pearre, Collins and Todd; Bir- AMERICAN LEAGUE —WILLIAM BEL OFFICIAL Optometrist he ohh Workers needing full outfits of ho leather, shceplined Coats, Breeches, High Shoes, et: cial reduction on all their purchases at the ARMY and NAVY STORE 121 THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of 14th Street) aa 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. ¥. ©, Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-8287 Russia? hide Windbreakers, +» Will recelye spe- UARE DEAL Harder, Pearson and Pytlak; Ostermuel- ler, Rhodes and Hinkle. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Granger, Appleton and Atwood; Cole, Lucas, Pattison and Crouch. Syracuse at Buffelo— Postponed, cold weather. ‘Newark at Montreal —- Postponed, cold weather. Navarr Cafeteria American & Chinese Restaurant Garment Section Workers Patronize 333 7th AVENUE We Haye Reopened JADE MOUNTAIN 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) 1,000,000 sportsmen in the Ukraine DRY MATES coons West 15th St. and Mermaid Ave. Broo! The friendly workinmen’s store in CONEY ISLAND WORK CLOTHES OUR SPECIALTY KRAUS & SONS, Inc. Manufacturers of Badges-Banners-Buttons For Workers Clubs and Organizations 157 DELANCEY STREET. ‘Telephone: DRydock 4-8275-8276 « (Classified) ROOM or ‘share delightful 3-room apart- ment, Elevator, refrigerator, phone, reas- onable. 2199 Holland Ave. 5B. Pelham Parkway Station. COMRADE wants unfurnished room — Downtown, Manhattan. Reasonable. Box 21, Daily Worker. BRIGT, modern, beautiful furnished room facing park, reasonable, private, all sub- ways, 285 W. 110th St, Apt. 9. Un. 4-9822, 5-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT. Sub- Tet cheap till October. Airy. 2 Jans St. (mear 12th St. and 7th Ave.) Oh. 2-7289 or SH, 9-1042. BEAUTIFUL ROOM, suitable 1-2. Very reasonable, 319 W. 94th St. Apt. 43. NICE AIRY, SUNNY ROOM—near Station, 22 Bay 29th St., Brooklyn. Davis. FURNITURE for sale or take apartment. Leaving town. W. H. Harrison, 336 E. 13th St. COMRADE WANTED to take over business management of small printing plent in New York ity. Must have experience. Write OB. care of Daily Worker. WOMAN COMRADE desires to take care of a child. Special privileges to the parents. R. Green, 891 E. 172nd 8t., Bronx, first floor, GREGG SHORTHAND taught. Lesson 35 cents. Write or call Apt. D-11, 440 West Mth St, Sunday, until 8 P.M. FOR SALE—L. 0. Smith Standard Type- writer — $12. Underwood Standard — $16. Underwood Standard—l4-Inch carriage— $20. Call Sat. or Sunday (ali day). Apt. 5, 1500 Brook Ave. (17Ist St. & 3rd Ave.) WANTED—Russian Linguaphone Course. Daily Worker, Box 10. | RUSSIAN 4-174, Lesson, group. Schuyle: ‘Translations done. MANAGER AND COOK—or couple wanted, | WORKERS’ RADIO SERVICE Radios Installed and Repaired 4504-16th AVE. BROOKLYN Demand Our Service! WINDSOR 6-5228 © Folding Chairs © Desks, Files © Typewriters KALMUS 35: West 26th Street For Meetings, Dances, Banquets, Conventions, Ets. STUYVESANT CASINO 140-142 2nd Av. Near 9th St. Catering for All Occasions To Hire AIRY, LARGE MEETING ROOMS and HALL Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc, for the Nature Priends Camp of Phila- the towboatmen have refused te tow point | barges or transport cares. delphis. Write fufl information to ~~ LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City ALgonquin 4-3356—4-8843—4-7823 Full Hiking and Camping Outfits Breeches, Shorts, Siac Sweaters, Shirts, High Shoes, Sneakers, Work Shoes, Horschide Leather Clothes, ete, “KAVKAZ" 382 East 1ith Street 302 E. 12th St. 848 Broadway bet. 13th @ 14th st. Tompkins Sauare 6-9132 Caucasian Restaurant Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES New York City Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet New York — ALL COMRADES WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES TENTS, COTS, BLANKETS SPECTAL—Snede & Wool Windbreakers Hudson Army & Navy 105 THIRD AVE, Corner 13th Street Mention Dally Worker for Special Discount ers’ patronage—that they would on them, DAILY 50 East 13th Street, New Vork City 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: RHinelander 5097 Russian and Oriental Kitchen VILLAGE BAR 221 SECOND AVENUE near 14th Street, New York City | All Comrades Meet at the’ NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—80 E, 13th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER, ORGANIZATIONS TAKE NOTICE! Build the “Daily’s” Income Whe ORGANIZATIONS can influence neighborhood stores and professionals—dependent almost entirely on work- readers by placing their advertisements in the DAILY WORKER. | i ee of the “Daily,” after seeing these prospects can send In their names and addresses. — Our Representative will call WORKER ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT Comradely Atmosphere receive preference from our AL, 4-1954

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