The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 18, 1928, Page 5

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ll baer ee, town Manhattan to THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1928 NEW RED NIGHTS lee THIS WEEK-END Follows Big Drive of| Last Week The New York State Communist | Election Campaign Committee fol-| lowing the tremendous success of the Big Red Night Election Rallies held the last week-end in Harlem and in the Downtown East Side District, at which thousands of workers, paraded, demonstrated, cheered for the candidates and platform of the Workers (Communist) Party, is now organizing for huge Red Nights Fri-| day and Saturday, Oct. 19th and 20th in the Bronx, Brownsville and the Downtown East Side Sections and in the Negro Section in Harlem. | } Scores of speakers will be sent to each of these sections in each of which ten open-air meetings will be | held from 8 to 9:30 p. m. when all the meetings in the sections will be adjourned to wind up at the central meeting place and main corner of the section where final demonstra- tion will take place for the Workers’ (Communist) Party of America. perialist war. The Los Angeles, its headquarters here. Th here. I, L, D. Autamn Revel. A Proletarian Autumn Revel. will | i i 1d at Webster Hall, Saturday, Big Demonstration. Setober 27, at 80 p,m. under the i ; | auspices of the New York sectio1 | There will be red torch parades; | snePices OF ional” Labor Detense. | parades with placards and banners | vrizes will be awarded to particl- bearing aloft the slogans of the pants wearing the oldest and shab- party of the class struggle, trucks| st clothes, Photo shows huge airdrome at Lakehurst, N. Fraternal Organizations! JAPAN DEFIED BY bringing workers from the various corners to the central wind-up cor- ner, cheering and singing squads of ‘Young Pioneers and other features | {3 that will reflect the enthusiasm of | Fifth | of the militant workers of the various | ; sections on behalf of the ticket of the | full proceeds of these affairs will go party of the working class, Workers (Communist) Party. The pfollowing are the assignment of | #sked to keep these dates open. speakers for the Red Night in the Bronx, Friday, Oct. 19th. All speak- ers must report to the designated place at 7:80 p. m. : List of Meetings. BRONX—Longwood and _ Pros- pect—central speakers: Jay Lovestone, F T Weinstone, Ben Gold, Rebecca Grecht, Sasha Zimmerman, Rose Wortis, Otto Ruiswood, Jack Stachel, Sam _Nessin, Nat Kaplan, and Philip Frankfeld. the | towards wind-up corner—| Ww. W.} | | Co-operative Red Rally. i i The Election Campaign Committee | the Un-Ar-Co-operative has ¢r-| anged a ratification meeting for morrow at the Parkview Palace, Avenue and 110th Street, and concert and dance on Friday, Oc- tober 26th at the same place. The the Election Campaign of the Workers (Communist) Party. All labor organizations are kindly Bache ce Brownsville Color Light Dance. A Color Light Dance will be eld | Oct. 20 at the Brownsville Labor Ly- ceum, 219 Sackman St., “under the auspices of the Young Workers So- cial Culture Club. Jewelers Concert and Ball. The first concert and ball of the Jewelry Workers’ Welfare Club will be held Saturday, Nov. 3, at the New Webster Manor, 11th St. between 3d and 4th Aves. Millinery Workers. Millinery and Workers Social and | Educational Club of Local 43 will) 1638rd St. and Prospect Ave.—j|hold a grape and Hallowe'en festival Rose Wortis, Martin Abern, Williams, N. Wilks, Geo. Arthur Stein. Wilkins and Intervale:—Sam Nes- sin, Wm. Abrams, L. Cohen, Schiller, | Saturday, Oct. 20, at the Claridge Ho- | Costrell, | tel. Spiro, | be obtained at the union offices, 640 Admission 75 cents. Tickets may Broadway, and 4 West 37th St. he . Brownsville Banquet. A banquet to open the Workers Cen- | Hertz, Gladys Schechter, G. Acker-|ter in Brownsville will be held Sat- | man, and Zweibon. 174th and Vyse Ave.:—Rebecca Grecht, Sazar, J. Codkin, S.LeRoy, Grace Lamb, and Ed. Epstein. 180th St. and Daly Ave.—Vern Smith, B. Friedman, Winters, Eli) Oct. 20, at 8:30 p. m. tlJacobson, Rose Rubin, and I. Cohen. t] Aldus and So. Blvd: — Jack nStachel, Sylvia Bleecker, Philip | } urday evening, Oct. 20 at 154 Watkins St. All workers of Brownsville are invited to attend. CHR * Dr. Liber Lecture. | Dr. Liber will lecture in the Boro) Park Workers Club, 1313 43rd St., } | ale DAL | Yugoslav I. L. D. Dance. Comrade Isabel Waldner, winner/| of the 1928 beauty contest held last) Frankfeld, Joe Cohen, Sy Gerson and | May, will dance at the Grand Annual | Vosk. jc ‘oncert and Ball given by the Yugo- | slav section of the International Ka- Washington and Claremont:—W./bor Defense to be held Sunday, Oct. W. Weinstone, S. Zimmerman, Kaplan, Weisberg, Shafran, Podol- sky, Potash, S. Solomon and J. Blie- man. (All speakers will report to the above corners to which they are as- signed. In the case of those .as- Nat | 21, at Sokol Hall, 525 East 72nd St. “Arragnetti's” Union Jazz Program begins at 2:30, dance Music by Band, 7 p.m. . Bis) Bath Beach 1. L. D. The Bath Beach branch of the L| L. D. will have a musical evening, Saturday, Oct. 20, at 8 p. m., at 1965) Bath Ave. A rich musical program 7 | signed to Longwood and Prospect, |is in store for all who attend. Every- as well as to other corners, speakers | body is invited. | should first report to the second corner). Meetings in Brownsville. Brownsville, Friday, Oct. 19th., All speakers for Brownsville are to report at 7:30 p. m. to 154 Watkins Ave.—Robert Minor, J. J. Ballam, D. Benjamin, Ray. Ragozin, S. Lip- zin, A. Bimba, Alexander Trachten- berg, Paul Crouch, Geo. Herbert Zam, Geo. Primoff, Kate Gitlow, Mary Adams, Edw. Welsh, Will Herberg, Gil Green, M. Pas- ternak, H. Koretz, P. Midola, I. Zimmerman, Edw. Wright, Gertrude Welsh, P. Shapiro, J. Sumner, tFrank, Lawrence Ross, Max Kagan, H. Davis, Winogradsky, Victor Ci-| bulsky, Phil Goodman, H. Lerner, A, Harfield, Julius Cohen, Hy Gordon, Miriam Silvis, Colow, and Popkin. Red Nights, in the Downtown East Side District and Negro Harlem to be held on Saturday, Oct. 20th, speakérs to be announced in to- morrow’s issue of the Daily Worker. Women Work Directors to Meet in Conference at Center on Saturday | Next Saturday at 2 p. m. a con- ference will be held at the Workers Center, 26-28 Union Square, of all women’s work organizers, fraction secretaries and language organizers for women’s work. The conference will discuss prob- lems relative to women’s work in a this district, and will prepare for Ht the huge mass meeting for women _) workers being called by the Work- ' ers (Communist) Party for Nov. 1 at the Irving Plaza Hall. Due to the importance of this women’s mass meeting of Nov. 1, all other conflicting meetings have been called off. Preparations are being made for a women’s meeting of unprecedented size, to present to the working women and working class housewives the platform of class struggle of the Workers (Communist) Party, stressing those points which affect women labor. your shop con- Needle worker! Has tributed to the election fund of the Workers (Communist) Partyt Col- Get a collection list nt O38 Powers, | ae . Williamsburgh Workers Center. Williamsburgh workers will cele~ brate the opening of their new Work- | ers Center Saturday, Oct. 20, with a concert and dance in the evening. All Williamsburgh workers should at- tend this grand opening. Oriental Night. A dance and entertainment, “Orien- tal Night,” will be held at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. tomorrow under the co-auspices of Japan- ese Workers Association, New York Branch and Japanese Branch, I, L. D. Ito Michio, famous Japanese dan er, will entertain. Jujitsu exhibition, | native chorus are some other fea- tures, | All the proceeds will go to aid the| Chinese trade unions and to aid the! white terror victims in Japan, Tick- | ets 50 cents in advance and 75 cents at the door. * 8 . N.Y. Progressive Club Meet. A regular semi-annual meeting of | the New York Progressive Club will) be held Sunday, Oct. 28, 2 p. m. at the! Stuyvesant High School, 15th St. and Ist Ave. All members of the Typo- graphical Union who are in sympathy | with the progressive principles are | invited to attend, | Reliet 8. Cees | ty For the Tubercular | dren in U.S.S.R. | The above society is arranging a| Vetcherinka at the Carlton. Hall on Saturday, Nov. 3 and asks all frater- al organizations and sympathizers not to arrange any of their enter- tainments on that day, Fahey Dr. Liber Lecture, | Dr. B. Liber will lecture on “Health | and the Social Problem” at the Boro Park | Jewish Workers’ Club, 1373 43rd St. on Saturday, ae | To Hold Ball. | A ball will be held by the Knit Goods Welfare and Culture Club Thanksgiving Eve, Nov. 28, in Web- ster Hall, 119 B, 11th St. ‘ . . Y. W. L. Downtown, | There will be a club rally to en-| dorse the Communist Platform and | Communist candidates, followed by a} social, at the headquarters of the Downtown Unit at 60 St, Marks Pl. tomorrow evening at 8 p.m. ‘This | rally is being held under the aus- pices of the Young Workers (Com- munist) League, Downtown Units 1 and 2, Everybody welcome. nie Youth Chorus, | The Youth Chorus will hold an or- ganizational meeting and rehearsal on Saturday, Oct. 20, at 1.30 p.m. at the Workers Center. | Everybody welcome. { ae | i To AN Units. All units ‘are instructed to secure posters and tickets for the Madison! Square Garden meeting of November 4th at the district office. | eee ae Downtown Y. W. L. Red Night. Downtown units Nos, | and 2, of | the Y. W. L. will hold a Red Night! | by the I. R. T. lines, was run over \“For Any Xind of Insurance” DiRECT. R.& G. || ARL BRODSK {7-53 Delancey St.| | Between Forsyth and } Telephone Murray Hill 5550 Eldridge. J., the center of Wall Street’s preparations for im- Street's air weapon of destruction from the air, militarists’ dirigible, is at present moored largest of Wall e Graf Zeppelin, German ear Red Nominees at WORKERS HOLD | Where Wall Street Ate Preparations for War yas Being Made 500 WORKERS IN Workers Party Activ BIG PROTEST OF . Fractions of the Workers (Commu- nist) Party at 2 p,m, Sunday, Oct.|to Be Really Clean?” will HIGH MEAT PRIGE 21, in the Russian Labor Lyceum, 150] Outdoors if weather 1 Fae Court St. Newark, N. J. oe Indoor Rally ities SPEAK ERS TO BE CANDIDATES OF N. J. Campaign Meet. saa Dr, Liber’s one At Co- Sunda t at 1 An election campaign mass meet-| Sunday, Oct. 21, at 11 ai. aly; ng will be held under the auspices | oleratly eColony, us Dr, Lib- of the Russian, Polish and Ukrainian to Be Really Clean?’ er's talk to children on “What Means will be given WORKERS PARTY Prominent speakers’ will discuss! To Women's Work Organiners! | —— the platform of the Workers (Com-) | The en in Politics” leaflets +; munist) Party. All those under-| should be distributed at all camps os : 5 Cleveland Women. Hit sanding theve ianguages are invited. meetings and Red raites ty -unit| Will Outline Platform Admission free. women’s work 0} Get ther “a ~ iv i ws ie jat 80 E. 11th st $3. per ass Strugel Excessive Prices dectinstia: nadie Radiee Ao caine ante alte of Class Struggle —_——_ All members of Section 2 must thea)? Sina | - ie i ttle their accounts for the Datly r ti Meet. | Wor! of downtown Manhattan Continued from Page One Worker-Preihelt Bazaar during this he veane Workers ee of | ee rate st a jidates and ter and point out that they are union| Week. __It is imperative that every | winiiamsburg will hold a Youth Elec- |W! hear Communist candidates a t comrade do this. | tion Campaign mass meeting on Sun- | other Communist speakers at a Red eee rt, rent futon tee ermarec ate |day, Oct. 28 at 56 Manhattan Ave. | Plectior, Rally of the Workers (Com- workers. The A. F. of L. union Workers Party Notice. |Bklyn. at 2 p.m. Herbert Zam, can’ | OC ts DAY Lae ress, ti lly bet: d th k All units are instructed to meet/didate in the 14th assembly district |munist) Party, to be held tomorrow has continually betrayed the work-| ,guiarly and promptly every week | of the Workers (Communist) Party |at 8 p. m. at Hennington Hall, 214 ers has now degenerated to the point where it organizes petty business men instead of workers. With this charter as a weapon to protect |themselves the butchers have ac-| cepted the increase of the meat trust assuming that again they can fool the workers and make them pay as they have done in the past. Swift and Company controls the meat packing houses in Cleveland. Ever since its inception in 1886 | on October 24, in the lower down-| town section of the city. The fol-| lowing open air meetings have been NANKING REGIME arranged Clinton an adway. Speakers: A — Cheskis, B. Rosenberg, M. Cullen, . . Rutgers Square Speake: L. | ME Kleidman, B. W kshull, J. $ Manchuria Included in Columbia and Rivington ak - R. Block, J. 'Klinghotter, “Meo oie Government man. Sis Suffolk and Grant. Speakers. G ANKING. Thi hs Abramowitz, B. Intrator, R. Pollak. NANKING, China, Oct. 17—In Eldridge and Rivington. Speakers:|¢pite of 0) sitior M. Cohen, Lurye, S. aniels, sas = eu BpOn one e Senbies 7th St. and Ave. By Speaker H.\|Feng Yu-hsiang, minister of war Milton, M. Helf d, F. Roth ar- | : 7, : u Pioneers fP™&” Par-) and vice-president of the Nanking | St. and Ave. C. Speakers palt:|regime under the new constitution, | : General Chang Hsueh-liang, dicta- | -ar-|tor of Manchuria, was placed on the | B and 2 J. Roberts, Pioneer. Rubin, J. Rosen, peakers: nsky, # “Irving Place and 14th St. 1. Rich-|Nanking state council, thus putting | man, J. Harris, J. Fox, Party and ithe northern province under Nan- 10th St. and 2nd Ave., M. Duke,|king ju iction despite Japanese | M. Exter, Brustien, B. Rosenberg, M. a3 Helfand, Paul Crouch, Herbert Zam, | 9pposition, | Pa and_ Pioneer. | Notice: All members of b: Feng expressed his disapproval at 60 St. Mar first, stating that he thought the| arp. Instruc will | | y acomrade in charge. |move premature, but after other | Downtowh Wotxets clus, Koumintang leaders had assured | The Downtown Workers Club has|aim that Chang would be loyal to arranged ification meeti at | yy, hates elub: & eh and st on| Nanking, although at present =| 2d floor, on Sunday at 8 p. m. | ist i i - The following will address the |C°Uld not hoist its flag in Manchu- | meeting. Wattenberg, Endin, Work- ers (Communist) Party assemblyman for 8th district, Bert Miller, Milgrom, M. Berlo: rstein from the club. . . | Downtown Mass Meet. The Downtown Workers Club has arranged an open air meeting for to- ria, due to Japanese opposition, Gen- | eral Feng withdrew his opposition. a | antedi Morrow at 7th St. and Second Ave. af 8.30 p, m. ¥ i i The following, will speake Horo- eae Light oo tan witz from Jewish Workers _Univer- mprovements. sity; Adolf Wolfe, from Work : 3 hae (Communist) Party; B. Intrator Young Workers (Communist) League; ax Berlov from the Workers Club. | Daily Worker Box No. 1. Nussbaum will be chairman of the i meeting. | a ineelanten o Je | Freiheit Gesangs Ratification Meet, Freiheit Gesang Farein and Fr JRGEON DENTIST heit Mandolin Orchestra will hi ratification meeting for the W 1 UNION SQUARE Party candidates on Saturday, Oct. 20th, at Astorla Hall, 62 ©. 4th St,|fRoom 802—Phone, Algonguin 8183} | at 8 o'clock. or oth ‘M. Olgin, M. Epstein will speak in fees Somanet ea wile Ouy Sanex Serine Yiddish on the important_campaign issues, also a spealser in English. A musical program is arranged for the evening. Workers Party Calls for Volunteers to Act as Election Watchers Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours, 9:30-12 a.m., 2-8 p.m. Daily Except Friday and Sunday 249 EAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York Telephone: Lehigh 6022, Cor. A call for Red election watchers, was issued last night by District 2 of the Workers (Communist) Party. | A conference in which detailed and full instructions will be given to all Communist watchers will be held at 8 p. m. on Thursday evening, October 18th, at the Workers Cen- ter, 26-28 Union Square. This con- — ference is of the utmost importance to the Red election campaign and should be attended by all party mem- bers and sympathizers. PYCCKHMA 3YBHOM BPAY Dr. JOSEPH B. WEXLER Surgeon Dentist 26 yrs. In practice, Moderate prices. 223 SECOND AV. NEW YORK Temple Courts Bldg. nd) ————— ———— ——) t “It is not enough to have placed an S | the candidates of the Workers (Com- Selection of munist) Party on the ballot,” the Sah SEW YORE ClEe | tuniat) bs 1000 pair of pants of the best| | wools and worsted to match any coat and vest, $4.95 and Up We are making the best pants to order. We have 50,000 dit- ferent. designs, im- ported and domestic fabrics, at very rea- sonable prices. A good opportunity| | to save money and] | time when you come to the well-known pants spectalist LEG CRUSHED BY TRAIN | NEW YORK, Oct. 17—Marshall | Tucker, a Negro worker employed by a northbound Lenox Ave. sub- | way train today, ten feet south of the station platform at 135th St. and Lenox Ave. He was taken to the Harlem Hospital, where his left leg was amputated. It feared that he may die. OPEN SATURDAYS & SUNDAYS, 7 East 42nd St., New York na camcant Co-operative Workers Patro: I. SCOLNICK Pelham TAILOR Fancy Cleaner and Dyers | 707 Allerton A Bronx, N. Y.2) eon rere | | | | | | | E. KARO Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE., |. Cor. Barker, BRONX, N. Y. OLInville 9681-2 — 9791 as: PATRONIZE } | Tel. Unity Co-operators Patronise SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 -- Tth Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up)| 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Individual sanitary service by Experts—Ladies Hair Bobbing Specialists, COOPERATORS PATRONIZE SHERMAN Your Nearest Tailor Fancy Cleaners and Dyers ALLERTON AVE. BRONX Swift has made millions of dollars from the sweat and toil of the work- ers. It is a known fact that the workers in the packing houses are until the election campaign ts over and take up as the main order of usiness the immediate tasks of the election campaign. low the meeting. Section 2 Industrial Conference. The October I |of Section 2 will 6 p. m. at 101 important matters Club Hlection Rally. An election rally and sociable for the purpose of getting the endorse- ment of young workers clubs for the Communist Election Campaign, will be held under the auspices of the Young Workers (Communist) League, Downtown Units 1 and 2, tomorrow to be aken sentatives must attend will speak. A minstrel show will fol- dustrial Conference up All Industrial Organizers and Work-| by the Workers (Communist) Party. ers Correspondence directors as well as leading and local fraction repre- East Second St Throughout the election campaign, workers in that section of the city have evinced a great interest in the platform of class struggle offered their re- drive, by the platforms and This has been proven by sponse to the signa large sale of party evening, at 60 St. Marks Place. A Section 8. : very good program with talented en- Section & special membership meet-| other Communist literature and by tertainers has been arranged. Music|ing on Monday, Oct. 22 at 8.30 D. m.|{he mass attendance at Red will be furnished by a jazz band.|at 154 Watkins St am 7 " Everyone is welcome. All_ comrades must show up for| Rally held last week at Clinton Hall. at ae Red Sunday, Sunday morning at 9.3 RS Sree Morning International Branch. |p. m. at the headquarters at 154 W The speakers at tomorrow's rally A meeting will be hel@ at 26 Union Square today at 10 a. m. sharp. | kins St meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 23. \ |at Hennington Hall will be Mo: Special enlarged section executive | y Unit |9* Olgin, noted Communist é Lower Bronx League. organizers must also be present. |and lecturer; Boris Lifs candi- the most exploited and oppressed; tmportant activities of the Lower EEE se Gia | date for assembly in the Sixth Dis- workers in Cleveland. Long hours, Lae, EaNe Workers (Commuiniat) The following comrades of the Y.|trict of Manhattan; Bert Miller, can- low wages, miserable conditions are Friday: Red Night. All members| W. L. Are assigned nt the Red Rigas didate for senate from the Four- the lot of the workers, Yet, not| must attend. vn lbiuwikgcesmees: a ee teenth Senatorial District; S, Almas satisfied with its huge profits ex- Section 1 Meet. 180 and Da Binde zoff, of the editorial staff of the ‘ Aldus and So. B s Bra 5 a 3 tracted from the workers Swift and) A special membership meeting of (yds and So. 7 armont Parkway | tine Doran, secretary of Company is now intensifying its| S¢ction 1 1s called for tomorrow at /__rilitan Gannes, the Uk: section of the Work- robbery of the workers. important matters will be taken up.| Prospect and 18ird—Hd. Epse ers (Communist) Party, who will ED. 1 aken Up-| 174 and Vys—Nat Adler. riedgt* Meat has reached such exorbitant|“!! Members are urged to be present.) Central Meeting: Longwood and speak in Ukrainian; I. Candela, sec- ty * . Prospect— Prankfeld, prices that the workers of Cleve- Prospect—Phil Frankfel no longer afford to eat dgnas can . to report to headquarters, 101 W. 27th ‘ pa meat. Contrary to their previous! st, every night this week to go out! meeting today at 630 p acceptance of these high prices, the canvassing. W. 27th St. Attention Section 2. All members of Section 2 are asked Unit 2F, 2c. m. at Unit 2F 2C will hold an industria 10 retary of the Italian section of the Workers (Communist) Party, who 1 will speak in Italian, and Ben In- | trator. workers of Cleveland are now ready to organize against this continual increase of food products. To crys- tallize this sentiment for organiza- tion, District 3 of the Workers (Communist) Party called this meeting. And the women and men of Kinsman section responded as never before to protest against this ruthless robbery of the hard earned money of the workers. HUGE COLORFUL MASS Pageant | Sunday, Nov. 4,2p.m. Doors Open 1:00 P. M. at MADISON SQ. GARDEN Final Rally of Communist Campaign Mimeographing Multigraphing; Typewriting; CELIA TRAURIG PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER 799 Broad Cor. 11th Street, Room 523—Tel.: Stuyvesant 2052. east) COOPERATIVE DWELLERS Patronize a comradely stationary store Hochberg & Canor - 1th Anniversary of Russian 669 ALLERTON AVE. Revolution —BRASS BAND OF 100 PICKED ARTISTS —FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY, 300 Voices and Proletarianize! UST as the capitalist class uses accounting records to formulate their business poli- cles so that their profit ac- counts will continually swell, so must labor and fraternal or- ganizations use accounting ree- ords to assist them in measur- ing its ability to increase its proletarian activity. Your organization can do it by consulting Louis P. Weiner, BCS. Public Accountant and Auditor, 149 SPRING STREET, New York City, Phone: WALKER 5793 or 7537, $$$ CARPENTERS’ UNION LOCAL 2090 | Meets every Thursday, 8 P. M., at | Labor Temple, 243 East 84th St. Office and headquarters are in the Labor Temple. Speakers :— WM. Z. FOSTER, Communist Presidential Candidate BEN GITLOW, Candidate for Vice President AND OTHERS. RED MUSIC RED PAGEANT — RED SPEECHES 20 RED FLOATS Artistically painted and decorated, will portray the Soviet Revolution, the International Labor Movement, the Communist Press, the Cooperative Camps, the New Unions, etc., etc. ee, ‘Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Tickets:—Arena $1.00; Balcony 50c; on sale at Workers (Communist) Party, 26-28 Union Square, New York. ERON SCHOOL 185-187 EAST BROADWAY NEW YORK JOSEPH E. THE LARGE RON, Principal ND BEST AS WELL AS OLDEST SCHOOL, to learn the English language, to, prepare oneself for admission to’ College. ERON SCHOOL ix regiatered by GENTS of the State of . Ht has all the rights | ernment High School. . Phone or write for Catalogue Now. School Opens in | September. Our 25,000 alumni are our best witnesses. TELEPHON | | | | ||] Remister ORCHARD 4473 MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS Moved to 2440 Bronx Park East Near Co-cperative Colony. Apt. 6H Telephone EASTABROOK 2459 Special rates to students from the Co-operative House. COMRADES at the SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave. Between 107th & 108th Sts. EAT For Good Wholesome Foud EAT AT RATNER’S Dairy and Vegetarian Restaurant 103 SECOND AVE. H. L. HARMATZ, Prop. Self-Service Cafeteria 115 SECOND AVE., BAKING DONE ON F Visit Our Place While on : Dry Dock 12 MISES 2nd Ave. Orchard 0430 esant 3816 | Phone Stuy tet John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 302 E. 12th ST. NEW YORK You Must Answer the Fascist Terror of the Ku Klux Klan and American Legion wy READING te aily S05 Worker The Only Fighting English Daily In the United States BUY AN EXTRA COPY EVERY DAY AND GIVE IT TO YOUR SHOPMATE! GET YOUR FRIEND AND SHOPMATE TO READ THEDAILY WORKER! | See That Your Newsstand Has A Supply of Daily Workers All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 763 Southern Bivd., Bronx, N.Y. Right Off 174th St, Subway Statton WE ALL MEET NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Rational Vegetarian Restaurant it, SECOND AVE. Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Striclly Vegetarian Food, Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE,

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