The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 8, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, FRIDAY. JUNE 8, 1934 Remember Tomorrow at 1. P.M ---Daily Worker Day and Moonlight Exeursion! Gutters of New York Louis Weinstock Is Picked By Painters Foster Urges All | | Trade Unionists to. | Aid Thaelmann ave price fo) Weirton Steel Fires 116 Union Men as | Nest Strike Date Nears (oO Pe er WILLIAM FUCHS ~ . | : | Defeat Zausner ei» (Continued from Page 2) | Passing the Hat ! lo Defeat Zausner =A _ teenies Pe -assir : found only 300 of 3,900 workers ists, all those who oppose fascism, | ag ‘i | ready to strike | must rally to the support of the| MVHE statement of the Board of Directors of Mr. Max Baer | a A “ Committee of Ten Remai | anti-fescist fighters in Germany. . District Council Rules by Terrorism; Rank and) the A.A cpkaagerge | Seas Gistaralle th toe support te | that a postponement of the latest Battle of the Century delegation decided to tomorro’ would have to be sought today, for the good of one and all, is an unexpected and distressing one. Mr. Baer, the killer, and Mr. Carnega, the killer, as they have become designated nV Moore the fight for the freedom of Ernst} Thaelmann. | German Workers Opposed to Hitier | Why is the Hitler government at- | File Revolt Against Corrupt Regime and 2 WEEKS negotiations By SENDER GARLIN HEN the elections for day Secretary-Treasurer of Paint-| , “We came here to see the Presi- tempting to murder Ernst Thacl-| Since they signed for ; ND eer —— \ Hage : = ie rans ; dent,” said Moore. “If we can't mann? Because the Hitler regime| fight, have been the subjects || MITT. MASK, CHEST PROTEC- | District Council 9 takes place in New York on Sat-| wet go on home and get busy. We |has not been able to subject the/of numerous alluring tales| 505 eae urday, June 30, the members of the union will have the oases - reveltinien on the con- | workers efi leeniangte irre de-|4 3 i ee “a BS | WANTED alternative of voting either for Louis Weinstock, a rank|\eu'en, coor, Now they (Perkins | spite terror and murder, despite the|@uring the past few weeks-— | | ; : ; tone, (led Pl a © : \ and file leader who recently had a gun placde against his|something else, and supppression of the trade .uni tales conceived with the ut-! Any comrade owning a catch- : . ae | looked like eg byes Segoe The recent elections in the SHOP | most ingenuity and designed to|: er’s mitt, mask and chest protec- ribs at a union meeting, 00 on resolution, We can’t do that | councils in Germany have shown| heighten the popular excitement; || tor, one or all, is asked to loan for Philip Zausner, chief of || ed why he walked out, En- the whole world that the German/ but this announcement, sed to Say, || same to Clarence Hathaway for the corrupt administration : |tinger said, “Well, when I get] workers remain true to their class,| reveals that popular excitement has || the big game tomorrow. Please that they are opposed to Hitler. The | extent to which the mass struggles of the workers are rising is evidenced | in the courage displayed by the workers in voting against the Hitler lists in the shop council elections. The attempt to murder Ernst Thaclmann is an attempt to crush | the rising anti-fascist struggles of the workers which are being or- ganized and led by the Party of which Ernst Thaelmann is the not been heightened. |] call at the Daily Worker office, It is not an ordinary thing for 4 || 35 E, 12th St., 8th floor, with the manager to ask for a postponement || material, or call the office at on the ground that his fighter is not fit to go on with the fight as| scheduled, even though, as one reads the an- nouncement, i t is discovered that Baer is “physically all jenough of something, I get out and | | that’s all.” | | Perkins said the whole question | came up over what William Long lor Weirton said to the Plant Super- | |intendent when they presented their jdemands on May 21. The em- | ployers, according to Perkins, had informed her something about a conversation showing a union de-| mand for a closed shop. The union that was not the | machine which has sought to 1 k and file opposition by gangsterism erush a terror and ALgonquin 4-7954. Ask for Wil- tock was nominated Wed- liam Fuchs. y night to run against by Local 499 of the Painters’ Union of the A. F. of L. At the same time minated another rank r, Frank Wedl, to make r Business Agent. Foree Tax on Members worth of tickets, it is reported, have already been sold. But $200,000 is gold! Nor need one take too seri- ously the fact that Mr. Kilpatrick, the Garden’s president, is swearing |spokesmen said Whiie the entire membership of issue, the issue was the convention | Se os | leader—the Commmunist Party, ie Be tie bead romance oe ee i Ti Jew Yor! e is | | : atter aoa i copies of eas deat eon |oetSo T iust said to them, ‘Will you | Why have the Hitlerites selected | used only in the has a lot of honor and opposition workers, there are more than 20,000! |deny it?’” Perkins explained. |Thaelmann for their class ven-|1 4 s¢ extreme, to the postponement adds to the flavor of the bout. i. ake Youngstown Steel Piece Work, N.R. A. Men Don’t Want Hailed by LLG. W. Steel Labor Board Heads in Chicago cc iter seo (Continued from Page 1) | for | Social democracy. | CHICAGO, June 7.—-Praise 5 | the strikebreaking N.R.A. permeated| Thaelmann, Leader of Fight on | geance, as their victim? Because) Ernst Thaelmann, a worker, a long- | shoreman, is the beloved and recog- | | nized leader not of the Communists | | alone but of the mass of German revolutionary workers and of in- “Also I asked them to put into con- jcrete form a few statements they {made rather loosely regarding dis- |crimination . . . to give us some- | thing specific . . . also to clear up the question of their power to | negotiate.” Enroute to protest at the White House and to see Secretary of Labor | Frances Perkins, the delegation of pat uremployed in the city. Under the guise of organizing the unorganized, a 50 cent tax was re- cently foreed upon the painters by the Zausner machine. This resulted in the collection of more than $160,- 000. Rank and file leaders charge that hardly a cent was used for or- ganization purposes; moreover, dur- s campaign nothing was paid ters when the in- genuity of press agents ead £ is doubtful whether even a post- een nement of a week drained and one © Max Baer At of tickets. The bbetorecten must fall back on material things.| have been the victims of wish-ful- Usually, when postponements have | fillment when they put the ringside been necessary, the law or some-| seats at $25. To make money on & thing equally majestic has been | heavyweight fight one needs men called in to do its duty; but now capable of winning by knockouts, LOUIS WEINSTOCK Suspend Sentence only three or four voted “aye,” no cesar strike benefits. The tax collec- ten held a secret conference with | negative vote was taken but the| the Tuesday session of the Interna- | Fascism all such ropes to hang on are evi- quickly and neatly, and neither Mr. tion was halted only after the rank President Green of the A, F. of L.| president, Medlick, voted the mo-|tional Ladies Garment Workers) Thaelmann, the Communist, like| dently deemed ineffective. The| Baer nor Mr. Carnera appear a and file in various local unions put | It was learned that there was a@/tion carried. Convention. Governor Horner, who! Communist Party, is today the lead-| isk has to be taken. “Baer’s timing | capable of winning by knockouts, up @ stiff fight against the tax which they charged was unconstitutional, as well as the reckless expenditure of funds collected from the mem- bers. A Veteran Fighter For more than eight years Wein- stock, the rank and file candidate, has been active in the fight against the corrupt machine which ruled over the union, and in leading the demand for union democracy. On several occasions open threats to! murder him were made by union henchmen, But during this entire time increasing support has devel- oped behind the campaign against the administration forces. “The district council as well as the majority of the locals are fi- nancially bankrupt,” Weinstock said yesterday. “There is growing demoralization in the ranks and no confidence in the present ma- »hine. There is open revolt against the Zausner gang, especially in | view of the cynical violations of the union agreements.” The agreement, Weinstock ex-| plained, calls for a seven-hour day,| On Three Jailed At Relief Meet Cops To Keep Out | All Workers | BULLETIN j Police twice attacked workers | who attempted to send a delega- tion with their relief demands to | the Home Relief Bureau at Chris- | topher and Belmont Sts., Browns- ville, yesterday, arresting and bru- | tally clubbing one worker. In taking steps to force the re- lease of this worker and bring an end to police brutality, all work- ers are urged to meet at the Un- employment Council, 234 Powell.) St.. Brownsville, today at 9:30 a. m. where a defense committee | will be set up. NEW YORK.—In a small Mul- But this, he said, exists only on|cops and plain-clothesmen — who paper. “In reality the men are com-| filled all the seats in order to keep pelled to work more than eight! workers from witnessing the crass | hours a day, a vicious speed-up sys-| court-terror proceedings, Jzmes and | tem exists, and the wages received| Rose Lechay, brutally beaten and| by the men are from $5 down.” arrested at the trial of Relief dem-| Sensing the growing revolt of the) onstrators May 27, received sus-| tank and file, the Zausner machine | pended sentences fo 30 days from | recently attempted to prevent the| Judge August Dreyer. | nomination of Weinstock by filing) Joseph Elwell, editor of “The| charges against him. Zausner got| Hunger Fighter,” official newspaper | one of his “organizers,” Harry Ros-| of the Unemployment Councils, | en, to prefer charges against Wein-| who was arrested and slugged by stock on the ground that the latter) police at 50 Lafayette St. on May | a five-day week and $9-a-day wage.) berry St. Court room, crowded with| | sharp division on this move, several leaders protesting vehemently and finally attending merely in order to see what happened. Upon word of the mass firing at Weirton reaching the A. A. leaders ‘Courtroom Filled With | cight A. A. district leaders imme-| the same as in the 1919 strike, and diately telegraphed President Roose- velt: “While we have been here trying to arrange for collective bargain- ing conference word has come to us from families of our Weirton delegates that Weirton Steel Com- pany today discharged 116 men. ‘These include two members of our | delegation. For several days Weir- ton Steel Company's bosses have been asking each man if he would strike or stay in mill. Discharged men said they would strike. They are union men, The company ordered the men out tomorrow to he paid. Pay day is usually on the twelfth of the month. The men who belong to the union will not be taken back. This is only one of many provocative tactics by the Steel Corporation which have continually refused to bar- gain collectively with their em- ployes, The two discharged men are members of the same delega- tion that saw you in January. We asked for collective bargaining then and are still asking for it. Are we to understand that dis- charge is the penalty for any steel worker who joins the union or who commits the crime of coming to see you to obtain enforcement of Section 7a of the N.R.A.?” Roosevelt Government Promises | | Medlick introduced a letter from | the company officials, written in | Polish, asking the workers not to |strike, to stand by the company oad It warned that blacklist would be kept of all active strikers, |that thousands of workers would lose their jobs forever. A raise was | promised if the strike is averted. | Officers of the Lodge made no |comment on the communication. Republic Steel Strike | Wins Minor Victory (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, June 7—Workers in the ten-inch mill of the Republic | Steel Plant in South Chicago won a minor victory by their strike yes- |terday and were rushed back to |work today by officials of the| Amalgamated Association, who pre- | vented the workers from enlarg- | ing the demands presented. | |The strike began at three o'clock | Wednesday morning when two com- | pany policemen attempted to beat up a worker for handing out a leaflet of the Amalgamated Asso- ciation in the shop. Workers sur- rounded the stool pigeons and kicked them out of the shop. A walk out followed almost at once involving all but five or six work- ers in the mill. ‘The seven o'clock morning shift was informed of the strike and the majority of the workers refused to enter until the company promised to fire the dicks involved and not to discriminate against strikers. Amalgamated officials today min- imized the whole affair and failed “deliberately accused me in the pub-| 96, was also given a 30-day sus- | pended sentence by Dreyer. In sus-/ lic press (the Morning Freiheit) of | being responsible for the attack! pending sentence, Dreyer declared: | Hallas, President of Revival Lodge upon him Sept 26, the night of the mass meeting in Mecca Temple. He also defamed my character by ac- cusing me of being a gangster as yer article published in the same newspaper, which I will exhibit at “I commend the police depart- ment on their action.” | This was said just before the Lechays were to be tried, and | Joseph Tauber, their attorney, im- | Nothing |to utilize the situation to raise Among today’s arrivals was Roy| other demands. Republic Steel is known as a 169 at Clairton, Pa., a leader in the | “fort” by the steel workers, because Unemployed Council and one of the | of the large number of company delegation who recently fought mili-| guards in the place. These thugs tantly for relief at Harrisburg. |even invade the wash rooms and The two leaders fired were Mel| keep a careful check on workers was trotted in as one of the chief speakers, declared that the N.R.A.| “is with the I. L. G. W. U. because the I. L. G. W. U.4s with the N.R.A.”| following which Mr. Bialis, an I. L.| G. W. U. leader, stated that he was| “proud the Chicago workers had) such a governor.” Although the convention went on record against the red-baiting Civic Federation, Matthew Woll, one of the leading lights of the organiza-| tion, spoke at the Wednesday ses- sion and his speeeh was included in the minutes. | When the question of week work | came on the floor, David Dubinsky, the International president, opposed | it for all he was worth and black-} jacked the rank and file delegates | with the threat that the union) would be smashed under the week work system. The convention went on record for the vicious piece work | system by a vote of 254 to 65. Dele- gate Gross of Local 22 and a chair- lady of a New Haven shop of 400 workers fought on the floor against | Dubinsky’s piece work plan. Butchers Discuss General Strike Move To Elect Central Strike Committee NEW YORK.—-Butchers of the Fort Green, Westchester, Fulton St. and Fort Lee markets continued | their strike for wage increases yes- | terday and late in the evening were preparing for a mass strike meet- | ing at the 84th St. Labor Temple | to discuss the question of a general | | strike to effect all New York pack- ling and slaughter houses. | Workers of the Fort Green, Ful- | Report Tonight on mediately challenged the judge on | Moore, president of District 2, and going in there for fear of the|ton and Washington markets have the: trial.” ; his statement, declaring Members: Slugged proved his prejudice and “revealed | At two mass meetings held inj a state of mind unfit to try fairly Mecca Temple, rank and file mem-|the cases of Rose and James) bers were terrorized, members were! Lechay.” Tauber agreed to the trial | beaten and clubbed and many of) only after he had read a motion to| them had to be taken to hospitals.’ this effect into the court records. This campaign of terror, according| “what followed was a repetition of to Weinstock, was carried into the what had occurred during Elwell’s | local unions, for the defense described the brutal! Those who are supporting the) trial, One after the other, witnesses candidacy of Weinstock and Wedl | attack by police on the Lechay’s. | charge that Zausner’s ballyhoo for) he two arresting officers, Dobler | the N.R.A. and for the Painters’) and Bellin, bull-headedly repeated | Code has resulted in the most’ their ridiculous lies, on which th shameful and degrading code for| naq evidently been coached, declar. the New York painters. Weinstock, ing that James Lechay had attac! for example, charces that “Zausner) 64° ang dragged his wife to the willfully neglected to get C.W.A. ground, and that they had merely! Jobs for our members and blocked been “trying to keep the prisoners fyery attempt of the rank and file! in eascee? | In their efforts to secure these jobs.” als | Tauber introduced newspaper reover, charges the rank and file a Jatener, this year, as in| Photographs of the attack into the | previ cars, failed to make any! Yecords. But Dreyer’s mind was serious effort to secure public school made up in advance, and only the work for our painters and deliber- | mass indignation and protests of ately misied our membership by New York workers kept him from making them believe that written sending them to jail for thirty days. communications will secure their jobs.” Expose Frame-Ups | By Bosses’ Courts in Mass Trial Tonight Fighting Program The program of Weinstock and Wed) in the coming election calls | for: 1—Thé 6-hour day and 5-day! week; 2—The $9-a-day wage scale; ——-- 8—The right and security of the| NEW YORK.—Testimony in the job; 4—Job and Shop Committee; | frame-up of workers involved in the §—Strict union conditions; 7—Every| struggle against hunger and war will painter in New York a union paint-| presented,in the dramatic form er and for a minimum initiation| of a mass trial, Friday evening, 8:30 fee; 8—Full democracy in our union;| o'clock, at Irving Plaza, 15th Street 9—Rank and file leadership; 10—| and Irving Place. ; Unemployment insurance and for| The trial is arranged by the Mid- the Workers Unemployment Insur-| town Section of the Hagopa De- ance Bill, H.R. 7598; 11—Rights of| fense Committee and the Interna- Negroes to join the union end equal] tional Labor Defense. rights for Negroes on the job. The rank and file candidates are fighting against: 1— Gangsterism and racketeering in the union; 2— Speedup and piece-work; 3—Com- pulsory arbitration and injunctions; | 4—Expulsions or dropping of mem- hers because of unemployment; 5— Dunne to Discuxs the Minneapolis Strike NEW YORK.--Two important re- ports on the developments on the strike front will be given at al Overtime; 6--Favoritism; 7—Illegal} cpecial open meeting of the Trade | taxation, | Union Unity Council tonight at Irv-} “Down with Zausner Rule! Down| ing Plaza Heli, Bill Dunne will; wih Gengsterism Racketeer-| discuss the Minneapolis strike and| inc! Ter a Renk and Pile Leader-!a report on tne Stee) and Meta £ These are tht ccntral slo- Workers Industrial Union ar geN> of the rank and file opposition| preparations for the coming in the union strike will be given by J. Mattles. | st . 4 ra of rank and file members as that it|Jake Entinger, President of the| Spreading of strike sentiment. Transportation Lodge at Weirton. Those A. A, leaders who could be reached early today received in- formation that the rollers have| walked out in the Republic plant at | |South Chicago with interest but|*he Roosevelt government. without comments beyond, “We will | check that up right away, We don't) know anything about that union.” | The A. A, delegation includes ten leaders, but only four of thém are members of the Commmittee of Ten. surance that Frick miners are “waiting the word” to go out with) the steel strike. 1 Special to the Daily Worker YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, June 7.— The steel workers here do not want. the Steel Labor Board proposed by The sentiment for united action of .the steel workers, regardless of union, Th Youngstown Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union delegates to Washington will report on théir conference with Senator Wagner and the Labor Board at a mass meeting in the Central Auditorium, Boardman Street, Youngstown, on set. up rank and file strike commit- | tees to take control of the situa- tion and halt attempts of the lead- ers of the Amalgamated Meat Cut- | ters Union to betray the struggle. Leaders of the Amalgamated have been meeting with the Regional La- bor Board officials, but the results| of the negotiations are not known! to the strikers, as not one striker | was present at the meetings. The strike committee set up at the Fulton Market elected four strikers to accompany the union leaders to the Labor Board confer- ences and report back to the work- Sunday night, June 10 at 7 o'clock. ers. SIGNED R.P.C, MANIFESTO; SEESOLD POLICIES UNCHANGED 46 NEW YORK, ‘A radical smat~- tering of phrases which leaves the| essentials of the old policies un- changed,”—this is how an honest revolutionary, a member and offi- cer of the Young Peoples Socialist | League and a signer of the mani-/ festo of the so-called Revolutionary Policy Committee, reacts to the cisions of tine recent Detroit Social- ist_ Convention. This comrade, whose name can-| not be made public without jeopar- dizing his job, in a signed state-| ment delivered to the Daily Worker, | yesterdey declared: “I can no longer | work within the 5. P. for Socialism,” | and announced his intention of joining the Young Communist League. His statement in full follows: “Comrades: “The announced intentions of the Revolutionary Policy Com- | mittee which were, namely, to | make a stand for proletarian dic- | tatorship and for united front, | | and unen which basis this left ‘ing movement in the Socialist Pariy had attracted a large num- véll as labor organizers, have “Can No Longer Work Within the For Socialism,” YPSL Leader Declares Sf: been so grossly betrayed at the recent Party convention in Detroit that it is high time fer all conscientious members of the S. P, to take stock of the latest situation. “By maneuvering about with the militants, who are politically unconscious, as well as reaction- aries, and by allowing such a pseudo-Marxist as Norman Thomas to take control of the Party on a “left” platform, the Revolutionary Program Commit- tee has demonstrated only too clearly that it will not make any serious struggle against the poli- cies of the intrenched leadership. “The new declaration of prin- ciples is merely a radical smat- tering of phrases which leaves the essentials of the old policies un- changed. For instance, a ‘gov- ernment under the workers’ rule’ | will be instituted in case of a ‘complete collapse’ of the capi- talist system. Now, we all know that the capitalist system will never die without some refical parties to essist in killing it, and even if it were fo perform such a politically and economically un- exampled act, the wording of the declaration could mean anything from a bourgeois republic to a ‘Kerensky Provisional’ govern- ment. “As for the ‘United Front,’ an extremely vital question, the convention killed all attempts to bring such a motion on the floor, leaving the future policy on this point exactly the same as it has been before. However, all honest clements in the Par- ty should continue their efforts toward a united front on spe- cific issues, and fer a reyolu- tionary struggle against fas- cism and for the revolutionary overthrow of capitalism. “Personally, the almost com- plete capitulation of the R.P.C, and the mistaken idea that Com- rade Thomas is fit to lead a left- wing movement are such convinc- ing proofs of the utter bankrupt- cy of the world-wide Socialist parties that I feel that I can no longer work within the S. P. for socialism. “A Member of the Y.P.S.L. er of the fight of all those who are against fascism, all those who are against reaction, misery and the cul-| ture of the Middle Ages. For Thaelmann and his Party symbolize the fight for freedom, the fight for a new world, the workers’ world. The Fight for Thaelmann, Is Fight against Fascism i The freedom of Thaelmann, which can be forced from the Hitler beasts just as it was forced in the case of Dimitroff and his colleagues, will not only hearten the anti-fascist fighters in Germany, but will be a blow to the growing reaction and fascism in this country, as already | shown in the murder of the workers in Toledo, California, New Orleans | and Birmingham, in the wave of lynching of Negro toilers that is sweeping the country. | Fellow trade unionists! Take up| the fight for the freedom of Thael- mann! The fight for Thaelmann is the fight for all anti-fascist fighters in the Hitler concentration camps! The fight for Thaelmann is the fight for all those who opposes fascism! The fight for Thaelmann is the fight against reaction and fascism in the United States! Pass protest resolutions; send telegrams and delegations to the German consulates! Let us rise with one mighty voice backed by demonstrations, actions, and strikes! We demand the freedom of our class brothers, Ernst Thaelmann! National Executive Board, Trade Union Unity League. WILLIAM Z. FOSTER, General Secretary. Deportation Fight. Delegation to Tell of Visit to MeCormick NEW YORK.—A report on the results of its Hearing béfore Com- missioner General of Immigration | McCormick and Assistant Attorney General Keenan will be given by the anti-deportation delegation at @ mass reception this Friday eve- ning, 8:30 o'clock, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. The delegation has just returned | from Washington where it presented | the protests of New York workers against the deportation terror by which the government seeks to crush the militancy of foreign born workers and prevent united strug- gles of foreign born and native workers against unemployment, starvation, fascist terror, and prep- arations for a new imperialist war. The delegation, which was elected at a mass conference on May 28, of representatives of 196 organiza- tions, including A. F. of L. locals, took up with the Department of Labor the cases of Edith Berkman, Jack Schneider, William Zazuliak, Sam Paul, and others held for de- portation, and the cancellation of the citizenship papers of Emil Gar- dos. A, F: i Delegate Brings In Strikebreakers NEW YORK. — Patrick Drew, delegate of the United Association of Plumbers’ Local 463, affiliated to the A. F.-ef L., is helping Samuels and Dickstein, Plumbing and Heat- ing Contractor, by bringing mem- bers of Local 463 to act as strike- breakers on a job at 146 E. 44th St. where the Workers are striking under the leadership of the Alteration Plumbers Steamfitters’ and Helpers’ Union. All workers, especially from the building trades, are urged to come to the union headquarters, located at 864 Broadway for mass picketing. | Was threatened with kidnaping, al- | | Baltimore 110 000 000-2 8 0 | Syracuse 010 030 00x—4 ® 1) Appleton and Asby; Fussell and Cronin. St. Louis 001 001 003-5 13 0 Chicago 110 001 = 000—1 1 is off” and we have “to give the public a fair deal.” It would be an onery thing if we did not give the public a fair deal. ek oa IN a way, a state of affairs like this might have been predicted. | Although Mr. Carnera, the killer, though spies from the Baer camp| were watching his every move al- | though he made a number of heroic | rescues, although the nation’s lead- ers were clamoring for tickets to the fight—although these things | used to be the case with Mr. Demp- | sey every time he was scheduled to | fight—the fish have not bitten. Mr. Baer, the other killer, has worked | equally hard—he has made speeches, | posed with chorus girls, and has} been the swain of a movie actress | and a society flower—but the tick-| | ets have been remaining forlornly in the box-office. Two hundred thousand dollars quickly and neatly, or any other honest way, in this encounter. Both are fighters without color, the color of a Dempsey or even a Tunney. Carnera has a record un- paralleled for worthlessness by any champion who ever held the title. His career is replete with fraud- ulent bouts. He won the title by a phoney, or worse; whether any cash was handed over in the alley or not it can be said that Sharkey quit to him. Baer is a tabloid battler. He is a proper subject for serials in the Daily Mirror, but I'll be hanged if he deserves two eight-column streamers in the Times, as Demp- sey used to get. In Dempsey’s time he would have been hardly consid- ered. It is likely that he will beat Carnera; his record, at least, may be relied on for this prognostica- tion; but as an example of a heavy- weight champion—God help Co- lumbia, the Gem of the Ocean! BASEBALL GAMES YESTERDAY NATIONAL LEAGUE 001 022 000-5 13 1 New York 000 100 67x—14 14 2 Prankhouse, Brandt and Hogan; Fitz- simmons, Luque and Mancuso, Richards. Pittsburgh 000 100 100-2 7 0 Cincinnati 000 100 000-1 4 0 Lucas and Padden; Kleingans, Kolp and O'Farrell. Brooklyn 100 000 000—1 4 1 Philadelphia 900 000 000-0 7 0 Leonard and Lopez; Darrow and J. Wil- gon. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Boston i) Newsom, Knott and Hemsley; Gaston, | Wyatt and Madijeski. New York at Boston, postponed. Newark 530 000 510—14 33 1 Albany 100 049 090-5 9 4 Brown and Kies, Glenn; Milligan, Fil- | ley, Edwards, Jones and Finney | Toronto at Buffalo. Rochester at Montreal. AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland 121 000 002— 68 12 2 Detroit 012 000 26x—11 10 0 Hildebrand, L. Brown, Winegarner and LUCKY PALACE RESTAURANT Real Chinese and American Dishes Marvelous Dinner 30c a 50¢ at all hours Special Arrangements for Organization Parties 30% Pell St., Chinatown. WO 2-8201 — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway bet. 13th # 14th st. Russian and Oriental Kitchen Comradely Atmosphere VILLAGE BAR 221 SECOND AVENUE near 14th Street, New York City 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. NEEDLE WORKERS PATRONIZE SILVER FOX CAFETERIA and BAR 326-7th Avenue Between 23th and 29th Streets Food Workers Industrie! Union The proletarian revelution can not take place without the forcible destruction of the bourgeois State Who Signed the Reyolution- ary Manifesto,” machine and its replacement by Tel. Dickens 2-5189 Lee Tennis Racket Co. Rackets restrung & repaired at reduced prices to D. W. readers a new machine.—Lenin 1994 Pitkin Avenue, Brooklyn, N. ¥. Myatt; Bridges and Cochrane. Philadelphia 000 002 O10—3 6 1 Washington 010 003 10x—7 9 1 Cain, Kline and Hayes; Whitehill and Phillips, Berg. (Classified) AIRY room, separate entrance, all con- veniences, 145 2nd Ave., Sth St. Apt. 23, 39 E. 10th St. Apt. 4-W. Well furnished cool room, also 2 unfurnished connect- ing rooms. Share kitchen, FURNISHED room, nice, airy, with kitchen privileges with comrades, 332 F. 19th St, Apt. 15. PANTS TO MATCH Your Coat and Vest Paramount Pants Co., Inc, 693 Broadway SP 7-2659 WE MATCH ALL SHADES AND PATTERNS, Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFFICE HOURS: 11 - 7:30 P.M. SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M. Dr.D.G. POLLOCK DENTIST Brooklyn Paramount Theatre Building at De Kalb or Nevins St. Subway Sta’s. BROOKLYN, N. Y. Daily 9-9, Sundays 10-2. TRiangle 5-8620 Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THE REMOVAL OF HIS OFFICE TO 41 Union Square, N. Y. C. GR. 7-0135 CAthedral 8-5160 Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th & 126th 8t., N.¥.C. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 AM,, 1-2, 6-3 P.M I, J, MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-12" Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order 4 ; ]

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