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aR, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1928 THE DAILY WOR Page Five | Politicians Attempt RED COLLECTOR I. L. D. Defending All| Arrested Militants | Police yesterday and Sunday tl rested six workers in various parts of the city in what appears to be; an intensification of the drive! against workers who engage in| militant activities. A frame-up seems likely in the | Six Militants Arreste INVENT BRIBERY CHARGE AGAINST ; to Rope In Workers By Publicity ‘Stunts d Throughout City in New Photo shows Tammany Hall grafter Mayor Jimmy Walker, in one of the many publicity stunts by which he attempts to fool the voters by detracting their attention from the wholesale robbery of the public funds. Walker is shown at a rodeo. The United States Section of |the All-American Anti-Imperialist |League has just received a com- |munication from an envoy sent by |the organization to General August |Cosar Sandino, head of the army of |liberation in Nicaragua, against American imperialist invasion that country. The letter is dated El Chipoton, Nicaregua. Written in the head- TO FIGHT LEWIS Appeals a Militants for Funds Continued from Page One open shop coat and steel operators. | |Many rank and file miners have al-|‘uarters of Sandino’s army, it re- ready been railroaded to ptison be-|Veals the truth about the situation cause of their loyalty to the left|‘" Nicaragua and the horrors the 4 ; ‘ American marines are causing to wing cause during the recent strike. e in the innocent workers and peasants | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | ] workers in its election campaign. arrest of one of the workers, Sylvia| Sobel, who was arrested Sunday while collecting money for the cam- paign fund of the Workers (Com- munist) Party. In an effort to put a halt to the red collection cam- paign, a charge of trying to bribe an officer’ has been concocted jagainst this young worker. Defended by I. L. D. She was held under $2,000 bail, | which was furnished by the New York section of the International | Labor Defense. When she appeared before Magistrate McInerny in Eighth Magistrate’s Court yester- day morning, he postponed the case until Oct, 31. dacques Buitenkant, representing the I. L. D., is defend- ing the young militant. Two members of the Workers Party, Morris Taft and Meyer For- man, were arrested yesterday while addressing an election campaign meeting at 36th St, and Seventh Ave. They were brought before Magistrate Smith in Jefferson Mar- ket Court, Taft being charged with holding a meeting without a permit and Forman with interfering with an officer. Forman’s offence had been that he,had asked the police- man a question. The magistrate was, however, compelled to dismiss both cases when the I.,L. D. attor- ney showed that no permit is need- ed to hold a meeting and a citizen has the right to ask an officer a question. More “Democracy.” Two other workers were also ar- rested yesterday at Sixth Ave. and 27th St. for distributing leaflets an- nouncing a Shiffrin protest meet- ing. The ordinance under which they were arrested has been found unconstitutional so the case was ad- journed until Jacques Buitenkant, representing the I. L. D., submits a memorandum. The case will come up for hearing Thursday and mean- while the workers were released in the custody of the defending attor- ney. ‘The sixth worker arrested yester- day was Clara Rappoport. Her par- ticular “crime” was that she tried to persuade would-be customers of a store at 948 Freeman St. not to buy there as it is one of the stores where the Grocery, Fruit and Dairy Clerks’ Union is conducting a strike. She was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct and released on $500 bail furnished by the New York! Tobe. | | | STEEL WORKER DIES IN BLAST JOHNSTOWN, Pa., Oct. 22 (UP).— One man was killed, another per- haps fatally injured and two others burned seriously in an explosion in the open hearth department of the Cambria plant of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation today. The dead man is Andrew Mikolaka, 54; Park Custer, 41, is believed dying; Peter Daly, 26; Isadore Kunkola, 44, were hurt also. * The men were pouring ingots when a mold expleded and white hot metal enveloped Mikolka and Cus- ter, their clothing being consumed in a second. Distributing “Daily” | Is Crime; Philadelphia Worker Gets 10 Days PHILADELPHIA (By Mail). It is a crime to distribute the “Daily Worker” in the city of brotherly love. This is the decision of a local magistrate who sentenced Leon Baen, a worker, to ten days in jail for this offence against the capital- ist class, The official charge against Baen is “distributing seditious literature,” a charge under which other militant workers have recently been arrested in the effort of the Vare-controlled city police to keep the Workers (Communist) Party from reaching the thousands of miserably exploited PRE-ELECTION ACTIVITIES, CAMDEN, N. J., Oct. 22.—Most of the 790- seized in seven raids yesterday on Camden County road- houses were free today but badly d after the wholesale ‘clean- up” of “night life’ over the week- end. Fifty New Jersey state police con- ducted the raids after 12 o'clock Saturday night on roadhouses vio- lating the midnight closing law. The troopers took ten motor busses to t» carry revellers and proprietors of aa establishments to police | courts. | Wight the C, M. T, Cvs and the R._ 0. T, C's Fight the boy scouts. Fight Hint | Williamsburg will hold a Youth Elec- | |New frame-ups are in the making. | roll call will be taken. | Williamsburg Red Meet. |Bath Ave. A | must attend. The Young Workers League of |All members | tion Campai, 8 meeting on Sun- | Upper Harlem Y, C. W. L. day, Oct. 28 at 86 Manhattan Ave. |_ The Upper Harlem unit of the| Bklyn. ,at 2 p. m. Herbert Zam, can- | Young Workers (Communist) League didate in the 14th assembly district | Will hold an open air meeting this of the Workers (Communist) Party |evening at 137th St. and Lenox Ave. | will speak. A minstrel show will fol-|G. Rady, Si Rady, C, Alexander, Si low the meeting. |Gerson are the speakers. All com- . |Tades are to meet at 7:30 at campaign . Workers Party Notice. | headquarters. ae Leaded are instructed to Risst regularly and promptly every wee until the election campaign is over} Labor and Fraternal and take up as the main order of acertg | usiness the immediate tasks of the slectlon casapin Organizations To All Units. I, L. D. Autumn Revel. All units are instructed to secure| A Proletarian Autumn Revel will posters and tickets for the Madison|be held at Webster Hall, Saturday, Square Garden meeting of November | October 27, at 8:30 Pp. m, under the} 4th at the district office. auspices of the New York section of | e ° a |the International Labor Defense. Prizes will be awarded to partici- pants wearing the oldest and chab- Siest clothes. 5 a x | Section 8. Special enlarged section executive | meeting today. Unit organizers | must also be present. | . . . Jewelers Concert and Ball. Downtown Y. W. L. Red Night. The first concert and ball of the Downtown units Nos. 1 and 2, of|Jewelry Workers’ Welfare Club will the Y. W. L. will hold a Red Night| be held Saturday, Nov. 3, at the New tomorrow. in the lower down-| Webster Manor, 1ith St. between 3d town section of the city. The fol-|and 4th Aves. lowing open air meetings have been 2 arranged: | Clinton and Broadway. Speakers: A. | Cheskis, B. Rosenberg, M. Cullen. Rutgers Square. Speakers: Kleidman, B. Wakshull, J. Glass. Columbia and Rivington. Speakers R. Block, J. Klinghoffer, M. Blei- man. Suffolk and Grant. Speakers. G.| invited to attend. Abramowitz, B. Intrator, R. Pollak. | . | Eldridge and Rivington. Speakers:| Relief Society For the Tubercular! M. Cohen, T. Lurye. S, Daniels. | Children in U.S.S.R. 7th St. and Ave. 8, Speakers: H.| The above society is arranging a Milton, M. Helfand, F. Rothman, Par-| Vetcherinka at the Carlton Hall on | ty_and_ Pioneer. |Saturday, Nov. 3 and asks all frater- 5th St. and Ave. C. Speakers: M.|al organizations and sympathizers | Kooperman, B. Rubin, J. Rosen, Par-|not to arrange any of their enter-| ty_and Pioneer. | tainments on that day. 7th St. and 2nd Ave. Speakers: H. | aie @ yee Cooper, J. Roberts, M. Jensky, Par-| To Hold Ball. ty_and Pioneer. A ball will be held by the | Irving Place and 14th St. L. Rich-|Goods Welfare and Culture Club| N. Y. Progressive Club Meet. |. A regular semi-annual meeting of |the New York Progressive Club will L.| 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 man, J. Harris, J. Fox, Party and| Thanksgiving Eve, Nov. 28, in Web-| Pioneer. |ster Hall, 119 E, 11th St. 10th St. and 2nd Ave. M. Duke, | oS Si M. Exter, Brustien, B. Rosenberg, M. Helfand, Paul Crouch, Herbert Zam, Party and Pioneer. jarranged a ratification meeting at| Notice: All members of both units| their club rooms, 35 DB. 2nd St., on must report at 60 St. Marks Place|2d floor, on Sunday at 8 p. m. | at 7.30 p. m. sharp. Instructions will| The following will address the | be given by a comrade in charge. meeting. Wattenberg, Endin, Work- | ere Jers (Communist) Party assemblyman | . Unit 3B 1F. | for 8th district, Bert Miller, Milgrom, | Unit 3E 1F will hol da meeting to-| M. Berlov, Silverstein from the club. | day at 6:15 p. m. at 101 West 27th} pes st. Downtown Workers Club. The Downtown Workers Club has Finnish Workers. se The Finnish Workers Club_cooper- Unit 3E 2F. ating with Local New York Workers ‘A meeting will be held of Unit 3H | International Relief, has arranged a| 2F tomorrow, at 6:15 p. m., at| benefit performance of “The Crowd,” | 101 W. 27th St. proceeds go to the struggling textile RA RE workers. The motion picture perfor- | Nearing in Bronx. | mance will be combined with a mass Comrade Scott Nearing is going to| and Jay Lovestone are to speak. The | speak in the Bronx on November 9,|/ad Jay Lovestone are to speak. The Party units and sympathetic organ-| meeting will be held at the Finnish bor Temple, 15 West 126th St.,| hursday, October 25, at 8 p. m. All comrades are urged to attend. izations are requested to keep this| date open. oie 48 3h. | Shop Nucleus 4-3F meets today | at 5:45 p. m. All members must at-| Iron, Iron Bronze Workers, The and Bronze Workers’ | | tend. | Union is calling a special meeting to- ee ts te |day at 7 E. 15th St at & p, m. Unit 6F, Section 1. |for the purpose of discussing de- 6F1 meets today at +6 p. m.| mands to the bosses. at 60 St. Marks Place. aie SF 3D. BF 3D meets tomorrow at 6 p. m. at 101 W. 27th St. Women’s Council 22. | English Council 22 of the Coopera- |tive House, at 2700 Bronx Park b. | will hold an educational meeting to- i jday at 8:30 p.m. AM working | EASA ES as ore class women Invited. | Williamsburg Y. ‘W. L.. will hold| an open air meeting at Cooper and| «Harlem I. L. D. A meeting of the Harlem I. L. D. § Third St: today at 8 p.m. will be held tomorrow 4 y t 8 p.m. at Speakers: Berk, Geltman, Welss,)1%3' Hast “1vard St, Recent Dercnt in. z # we tions os ee. amongst them the, |case of William’ Schiffrin, will be | ‘ 1D, International. | discussed. The I. L. D. corner will jection 1D, International Branch, | aigo be. unvelled on’ that gigw meets tomorrow at 60 St. Marks | Rie leon oe |& representative from the local |fice will be present, of- Place, at § p.m. Educational meet. Gusakoff will speak on the “War Danger.” i | . | | wane wsek Y. W. L. | . . Proletarianize! Lower Bronx Y. W. L. will hold an opén air meeting today at 138th St. and Brook Ave. Speakers: Katz,| Gerson, Malkan and Schifman. On Thursday an open air meet will} be held at 138th St. and Wilkins Ave. | UST as the capitalist class uses accounting records to formulate their business poli- | , | | cles so that their profit ac- Zbeakers: B- Cohen, Adler, Monbisky.| |. counts will continually aweil, {| nth open alr meet at Simpson{ | #2 must labor and fraternal o Sanizations use accounting re ords to assist them in measu ing its ability to increase its proletarian activity, Your organization can do it | | and 161st St. Speakers: Namis, Weiss, Stein, N. Smith, pioneer: eee Brownsville ¥. W. L. Today an open air. meeting will -be held at Pacific and Utica Ave. at 8 p.m by consulting Louis P. Weiner, BCS. Public Accountant and Auditor, 149 SPRING STREET, New York City. Phone: WALKER 5793 or 7537. N. J. Attention, The City Central Committee of Elizabeth, N. J., is organizing a querade Bull and Bazaar for Satur-| day evening, Dec. ist. All units and | workers’ organizations of nearby cities are requested not to arrange any conflicting affairs for that day. Unit 6F, Subsection 2B. | A special meeting of the unit will be held today, 6p. m., at 101 W. 27th St. The meeting will take up special campaign work, oe ey COOPERATORS PATRONIZE J. SHERMAN | Your Nearest Tailor Fancy Cleaners and Dyers 465 ALLERTON AVE.,° BRONX Unit 4, Section 7 Meet. A meeting of Unit 4, Section 7 of | the Workers (Communist) Party will | be held tomorrow, 8:30 p. m., at 1965 | Mimeographing Multigraphing; Typewriting; CELIA TRAURIG PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Cor. 11th Street, oom 623—Tel,: Stuyvesant 2052, Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. . 26-28 Union Sq., New York City i Workers Party Activities WEISBORD TALKS IN ATLANTIC CITY Says Old Parties Work for War Continued from Page One Smith? If Smith is a liberal and a ‘friend of the people’ against Wall Street gouging, why are even reac- tionary republicans bolting their party for Smith? Because his lib- eralism is a fraud, his promises to the farmers, like his promises to the wets, are empty and meaningless political tricks, and he is as much of a lackey of the capitalists as Hoover. The only question among the capitalists is, which would do their dirty work best, which is the more efficient in protecting and fur- | We have a whole series of cases| arising from the recent strike to defend. “The capitalist court of Washing- | ton County legalizes the murder of | our people, by unconditionally free- | ing Carboni, who admittedly mur- dered George Moran, of Bentleyville, jan outstanding National Miners’) {Union leader, and wounding two/| jothers. At the “inquest” which was | jan “inquisition,” the district attor- | |ney made Carboni a hero while at- | | tacking the National Miners’ Union. Pp |The role of the police department |invaders are made in the most en-| jon September 9th in Pittsburgh is) €rsetic manner,” the report says. | | sufficient to convince everyone of |The loss suffered by the American | how union-smashing and strike-| a | Lewis bandits, slugged, beat and ar- rested 200 delegates. The many new | frame-ups and those of the past) y, | demonstrate the attitude of the capi-| y, talist state. Wholesale Evictions. operators undertake | P' evictions. \The “The coal | wholesale | breaking this police department is.| - of the way. the workers will respond to our ap- of Nicaragua. The envoy has been and is at resent with General Sandino since The army is aliantly the coward enemy on the ther side of the camp. “Military operations against the my of invasion is great, constantly | These police, in collusion with the the determination of our people to struggle. “The forces of reaction fear our nion. They are determined to wipe is out. We will fight every inch We have faith that is eal again. For our struggle Harmon |not only our own but is the strug- thering the interests of imperialism? |Crook Coal Company, with exten- gle of the whole of the working But whoever wins, the workers lose.” | sive holdings in West Virginia, leads |class.” “Smith is a regular Tammany this fight, supported by other com- Rush aid at once to National man, and never has criticized its| panies. It is only supporters of the| Headquarters, 119 Federal St., N.S. N, He got his start as a and clever _ politician corruption. dependable (evictions. M. U, that are threatened with | Pittsburgh, Pa. Lewis spies are treated| tributions, please fill out the fol- When sending con- whose loyalty to Murphy and the|well by this and other companies.|lowing blank. other grafting leaders was unswerv- ing. The new Tammany Hall has a veneer of respectability, as the agency of big business. From dirty! driving them from their jobs, hop-| Miners’ Union. city politics, graft by means of lu- crative contracts, protection of speakeasies and prostitutes, Tam- | many is looking for larger fields of] tance. operation. The republican gang Knit |have had a grand splurge of corrup-|in countless lawsuits, replevin cases, | tion, thru which Hoover sat silently,| suits of ejections, mass picketing | State whether or not he profited person- ‘ally. Tammany wants its share, in| return for which it would serve the |trust monopolies that have made|tacks of the unholy three generates | such enormous profits that Hoover calls prosperity, and is reaching out ‘or more profits in foreign markets and colonies to exploit. In'these for- eign markets American imperialists are coming into sharp conflict with British imperialism, and a military duel is inevitable. Whether Hoover or Smith is president makes no dif- ference. Either would lead the United States straight towards war.” BOSSES’ JUDGES RECESS. WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 (UP).— The United States Supreme Court today announcea it will recess from next Monday, October 29 until No- vember 19. ‘For Any of Insurance’ ARL BRODSKY Telephone Murray Hill 5550 7 East 42nd St., New York Lind Unity Co-operators Patronise SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 -- 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE } E. KARO Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE., Cor. Barker, BRONX, N. Y. Tel. OLInville 9681-2 — 9791-2, Co-operative Workers Patronize I. SCOLNICK Pelham TAILOR Fancy Cleaner and Dyers 707 Allertom Ave., Bronx, N. ¥. Sotillitcedicansieemanetiael Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1. filght up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Individual sanitary service by Experts—Ladies Hair Bobbing Specialists, THE ARCHITECTURAL IN, BRONZE & STRUCTURAL wore ERS UNION juarters: City. jephone: nd 2194, A. Rosenfeld, Secretary, Stuyvesant ARBEITER BUND, Manhattan | | | | ' t | Ticast 18th & Bronx; German Workers’ Club. accepted at regular meetings. German CT English Mbrary, Sunday lectu: Social entertainment: All one speaking workers are come. Scott Nearing * will speak in ‘the Bronx on November 9 Watch this space for further announcements. |The operators, in collusion with the | Lewis gang, are victimizing thou-| sands of supporters of the N. M. U.,/§ |ing to drive them from the industry. |Our union is called upon from many | . fields for relief, legal aid and assis- siderable litigation. We are involved | cases, etc. We are harrassed with con- Street City Please accept my contribution of to help build the National My name is “MINE UNION CALL ANTY-IMPERIALISTS GET GREEK WORKERS behind it an enormous of ammunition and food- stuffs. In retaliation for the loss that the Wall Street mercenaries snffer, the marines are ordered to destroy and assassinate entire fam- leaving amount ilies without any consideration for ge or sex. Old men, women, chil- dren, are cruelly butchered. This wholesale brutal murder is done either as they retreat or by drop- ping from airplanes incendiary bombs in the homes of the poor pea- sants who go about peacefully. After the retreat of the American marines before the firing line of Sandino’s army, what is left is de- vastated villages. | August Sandino, through the en- |June 22, 1928, and he has had op-|VoY, sends his greetings, together portunity to witness how the “army | With those of his army, to the hun- of outlaws and bandits,” as called|Steds of thousands of members of by the capitalist press, is function- ing. Sandino and his army, accord- ing to this letter, are consciously fighting the invaders. well equipped, disciplined and fights \¥ the All-American Anti-Imperialist League. The liberator realizes, as does every one of his disciplined sol- diers, that only by the action of the workers and peasants of the two jcontinents can Nicaragua be freed |from foreign invasion. The struggle will go on until the complete libera- tion for. Nicaragua is secured. Power Trust Paid Club Woman $600 a Month WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 22— Mrs. John D, Sherman, former pres- ident of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs, was paid $600 a month by the Power Trust during the last two years she was in office, or a total of $14,400, it was revealed in hearings conducted by the Federal Trade Commission. “Home Surveys.” Mrs. Sherman wrote articles at the instance of the National Elec- tric Light Association in a part of the trust’s propaganda called “home | surveys.” The League of Women Voters at the time were making in- quiries about the high cost of elec- tr Mrs. Sherman's successor, .|Mrs. John Sippel, wants to continue these friendly relations with the st which’ were so lucrative to Mrs. Sherman. It is thought by some that Mrs. Sippel would be willing to derive |raoney for signed articles extolling the virtues of the trust. “The National Miners’ Union is \fighting to the last man, The at- |more determination on our part to | struggle for the achievement of our |cbjective. Shooting and murder of jour people, eviction and victimiza- tion, hunger and suffering increase WANTED | Large, light airy Room | Preferably near Union Square. | A, CHOROVER, | Workers Book Shop, 26 Union Sq. |Call STUY 0489; 10 a. m—8 p. m./ Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST ‘Thurs. & Sat. Office Hours: Tue: | 9:30-12 a. m. |] Mon., Wed. and Fri. Sunday, 10:00 a. m. Please telephone for appointment. 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York Telephone: Lehigh 6022. Cor, DR. J. MINDEL RGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone, Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office PYCCKHM 3YBHOM BPAY Or. JOSEPH B. WEXLER | Surgeon Dentist ||] 25 yrs. in practice. Moderate pricen, ||] 228 SECOND AV. NEW YORK | Temple Courts Bldg. Support and defense of the Fight Against American Im Voting As You Strike—for the Capitalist Class Buttons Sell at: 100 or more 5c Order from NATIONAL OFFIC. 43 Kast 125th St., 43 East 125th St., New York, N, Enclosed find $ niversary Buttons to Address, The buttons for the 11th Anniversary of the Russian Revolution are now ready, the dexign of which ix reproduced above. hundred thousand workers should wear one of these buttons on November 7th. — Every Party Member! — Every Militant Worker! See That You Wear An Eleventh Anniversary Bution For to do this means Please send One Soviet Union! rperialism! Fight Against Imperialist War! Building the Workers (Communist) Party! the Working Class Against f For A Workers’ and Farmers Government! International Proletarian Solidarity! each — less than 100, 7¢ each. E, Workers (Communist) Party, New York, N. ¥. ne, Workers (Communist) Party of America, Fi You Must Answer = the Fascist Terror | of the Ku Klux Klan and American Legion » READING tie Daily The Only Fighting English Daily In the United States lorker 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 Police Drive Against Workers OF U.S, DOLLARS Wall Street Signs for $30,000,000 ATHE? Oct. 22.—The signing of a $30,000,000 contract for irrigation a land improve- ment betwen the Greek government and the American firm of Ulen & Co. and Monks, which was revealed today by the Ministry of communi- cations, marks another step forward in the penetration of American cap= ital in Greece. The irrigation works will be con- structed in the Struma Valley, which is north of Saloniki and west of Philippi, and the marshes of Philip- pi and Thessaly are to be drained. The Seligman interests of New York underta’ nce the ng. American capital has been playing an increasingly important role in the politics of Greece, where it is reported to be clashing with French interests, ai growth of American influence here will have an influence on Mediterranean poli- ties, it is believed. There are also indications that American investments will be pro- tected as long as Venezuelos holds the upper hand, as was evidenced by the part he played in breaking the strike of the workers in the American controlled tobacco indus- try recently. NOVELIST DI NEW YORK, Oct. (UP).— Frances Newman, nc t' and lit- erary critic, died at her home here today of a cerebral hemorrhage. s Newman, a native of At- ta, Ga., was winner in 1924 of the O. Henry memorial award for her short story, “Rachel and Her Children.” Best known among her novels were “The Hard Boiled Vir- gin” and “Dead Lovers Are Faith- ful Lovers.” EFRON SCHOOL 185-187 EAST BROADWAY NEW YORK JOSEPH E. ERON, THE LARGEST AND BEST AS WELL AS OLDEST SCHOOL, to learn the Englixh language, to prepare oneself for admission to College. ERON SCHOOL is registered by the REGENTS of the State of New York. It hay all the rights of a Government High School. Principal Call, Phone or write for Catalogue: Register Now. Sch mber. Sept Our 25,000 alumni are our best witnesses, TELEPHONE ORCHARD 4473 MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS 2440 Bins Park East | Near Co-operative Colony. Apt, Telephone EASTABROOK 2 Special rates to students from the Co-operative House, . 6 459 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., Near 7th St. BAKING DONE ON PREMISES Visit Our Place While on 2nd Ave. Yel.: Dry Dock 1263; Orchard 6430 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant SiusLOND AVE 12th and 13th Sts, Vegetarian Food. y Bet. Strictly | Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant | SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 302 E. 12th ST. NEW YORK All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Re 1763 Southern BL Might Off 174th 8 o~ Wi ALL MEET © at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET wae NEW YORK a 1600 MADISON AVE. PHONE: UNIVERSITY stu