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THE DAILY boiasket ela NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1928 Page Five Weinstone Statement Urges Workers to ORIZES WILL BE. GIVEN FOR OLD, SHABBY CLOTHES Writers, “Artists Will Be Judges | ‘An appeal to all class-conscious workers to aid the work of the New} York section of the International | Labor Defense by attending en| masse the I. L. D, Autumn Revel to- morrow night was issued last night} by William W. Weinstone, district organizer of the Workers (Com- munist) Party. The revel is being held in Webster Hall, 119 E. 11th St. | Weinstone’s statement follows: “Class-conscious workers need no endorsement of the Internationa]| Labor Defense. This organization| has become part and parcel of the} revolutionary movement, a mighty | bulwark in the workers’ struggles | against their oppressors. The I. L.) D. is the peat right arm fighting| to free workers who have been| caught in the legalistic machinery by which capitalist ‘justice’ seeks to erush the working class into sub- mission, I. L. D. Work Important. “Now as paver before is the work of the — .. i. of the utmost import- ance. The vigorous election cam- paign that the Workers (Communist) arty has been conducting and the mil activity of left: wing ,work-| ers in various unions have caused an} intensification of the police drive| against the workers. Here in New] York the Tammany police have at- tacked Communist meetings, arrest- ed worke:: for distributing anti-war| leaflets and carried on other terror-| istic activities in an effort to stem the rising tide of working class re< volt. 1t has been the New York sec- tion of the International Labor De- + “4 2 fense that has fought this police| terror and defended militant work- t every attack of the boss| Must Have Funds. . 4. D, must have funds to carry on this defense work. Its au- tumn revel tomorrow night will aan vide a large part of these funds. is the duty of every member of ite Workers Party and every other class-conscious worker to attend this affair and give the I. L. D. their utmoct support.” * Tickets for the Autumn Revel are on sale at the I. L. D. office, 799 Broadway, Room 422. Attractive prizes’ will be given to thosse wear- ing the oldest and shabbiest clothes, Naval Limitation Is Doubtful Until 1931, Coolidge Discovers WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.—Chances } for successful discussion of disar- mament are slight before 1931, when the Washington Conference will automatically reconvene, Presi- dent Coolidge made it known yester- day. The publication of the terms of the Anglo-French naval pact have not brought general limitation of armaments any nearer, in the opin- ion of the president. His announcement left an ifnpres- sion in official circles that nothing | further is to be said or done on the | subject of limitation before 1931. The note of the American state department to the French and Brit- ish governments last month flatly rejected the Franco-British agree- ment to limit 10,000-ton cruisers and *) leave unlimited smaller cruisers and {| submarines under 600 tons. Neither France nor Great Britain has replied to the American note. Soviet Construction During Next Year to Increase 26 Per Cent MOSCOW, U. S. S. R., Oct. 25.— Construction during the next year will present an increase of 26 per cent over last year, according to| figures. announced by the State | Planning Commission. | The total expenditure in all! | branches of the economic life of the Soviet Union is fixed et 3,126,000,- 000 rubles, the biggest amount being devoted to housing construction, which. will take 800,000,000 rublei The remainder is fixed as follows! | Industry, 680,000,000 rubles; trans- port (besides tl withott rails), 485,000,000 rubles} agriculture, 220,- 000,000 rubles; schools, laborato etc., 203,000,000. rubles; communal ‘works, 175,000,000 rubles; roads, electrification, Get Your Money’s Worth! ‘Try the Park Clothing Store For Men, Fung me and Boys 93 Avenue Avi Corner 6th St. COOPERATORS PATRONIZB and Toy Shop 136 ALLERTON AVE, | members ‘present. "| cha “Watch and Handshake— Rew: Reward for 33 ‘Years of Slavery f b For 33 years Frank Riester, a letter carrier, toiled long hours in all kinds of weather for the miser- able wages which the U. S. Post Office gives its workers. swallowed all the capitatis puny government pension. t dope and never murmured at the k serfdom his straw-boss, R. J. Welch, superintendent of Station A, P. gold watch and a handshake as shown above. And ‘Ricster is also being allowed to retire and starve on a Riester was one of the 100 percenters who | he got. | rince St., In gratitude for his faithful presented Riester with a Fraternal Organizations ‘YANKEE DOODLE’ 1, L. D, Autumn Revel, A Proletarian Autumn Revel will | i be held at Webster Hall tomorrow evening at 8:30 p. m. under the auspices of the New York section of the International Defense. Prizes will be awarded to partl pants wearing the oldest and chi Siest clothes. . Fewalnra) Concert: doa tall The first concert and ball of the| | Jewelry Workers’ Welfare Club will! be held Saturday, Nov, 3, at the New| Webster Manor, 1ith St, between 3d and 4th Aves. Pew 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, 1th St, and 1st Ave. All members of the Typo- graphical Union who are in sympathy with the progressive principles are invited to attend, 4 Relief Society For t Children in The above society is pee 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. Sones: ie To Hold Ball. A ball will be held by the Knit Goods Welfare and Culture Ciub| Thanksgiving Eve, Nov. 28, in Web- ster Hall, 119 B, ith St, © hae ae Downtown Workers Club. The Downtown Workers Club has arranged a ratification meeting at| their club rooms, 35 E. 2nd St. on| 'd_floor, on Sunday at 8 p. m. The following will address the meeting. Wattenberg, Endin, Work- ers (Communist) Party assemblyman for 8th district, Bert Miller, Milgrom, M. Berlov, Silverstein from the club. and Henry Blum, . Boro Park Workers Club. A ratification meeting for the can- didates and platform of the Workers Tabereular | S.R | Party will be held this evening, | Oct. 26, at 137%’ 48rd St., Brooklyn, | under the ‘auspices of the Jewish Workers Club and Branch 671 W. C. Scere Downtown Workers Club. Open air. meeting today 8 DP. m. at 2nd Ave. and 7th St. Speak- ers: Adolph Wolf, Horowitz, Perlow, Klingoffer, at oe Young Workers Social Club. Special membership meeting today at 8 p. m. at 118 Bristol St. eee Williamsburgh 1. L. D. Mass meeting Monda. v. 12, at 56 Manhattan Ave. Cases of Mooney, Billings, Shifrin and other class war prisoners will be discussed. . oe Dr. Liber at Co-operative Colony, At the Co-operative Colony, Bronx Park East and Allerton ‘Ave., New York, every Sunday morning a talk on health from the workers’ New. point will be delivered by Dr, Liber, alternately for children aga adults, in English and Yiddish. On Sunday, Oct. 28th, 11 a. m., he will speak ‘for adults in Yiddish on “Whooping-Cough” and other health | matters. Outdoors if weather per- | mits; ptherrtise ie the auditorium, League “For Mutual Atd. The annual dinner of the League for Mutual Aid will be held Friday, Nov. 2, at the Civic Club Lounge, 18 E. 1oth St. at 6:30 p. m. Among those on the program will be Roger Bald- win, Margaret Larkin, Lewis Browne and’ others. eo. Dental Workers’ Union. The Dental Laboratory Workers’ Union announces a mass. meeting this Tuesday, Oct. 30, at Labor Tem- ple, 14th St. and 2nd Ave. At this meeting the first issue of the month. ly magazine, the official organ of the union, will be distributed to all This is the first magazine ever printed by the dental mechanics union and as the officials of the union assure, it promises to be a huge success. All dental me- chanics in New York and vicinity are inyited, Esperanto. 8. A, T—Grupo Esperantista Prole- taro has beginners’ class in the Internatio: Language Esperanto | } every Friday, 8 p.m, at 108 E. 14th | St, two flights up. . Harlem Raucational Forum, Political Symposium at 170 W. 130th Cooperators Patronize M. SUROFF Boys’ Shop Pants, Knickers for Men, Women, Boys Lumber Jackets, Wind Breakers, Sweaters and other Sports to Wear French Cleaning and Repairing Pants to Order to Match Coats 735 ALLERTON AVE. BRONX Unity Co-operators Patronize ' SAM LESSER sit ~- Tth Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House Pernt COOPERATORS PATRONIZE J. SHERMAN Your Nearest Tailor Fancy Cleaners and Dyers 065 ALLERTON AVE. BRONX eres Co-operative Workers Patronize I. SCOLNICK Pelham TAILOR Fancy Cleaner and Dyers Allerton BISGER PROFITS Enormous Dividend (By United Press) General Motors Corporation in the | first nine months of 1928 surpassed company’s history, its earnings |statement for the period revealed today. Earnings for the third’ quarter were equivalent to $4.42 a share on the 17,400,000 shares of stock out- stending, bringing the earnings for the nine months t» $13.42 per share. | ings amounted to $3.75 a share and} in the fire nine inonths to $10.75 a| share: Earnings for the full year of 1927 amounted to $12.99 a share | and until the present time consti- | tuted a new record for the company. Pupils Barely Escape Death When Fire Razes Baltimore Boys School | BALTIMORE, Md., Oct. 25.—The were placed in jeopardy when fire, breaking out at the McDonough School for the second time within two days, razed the wooden build- ings, almost completely destroying the school. The entire main building, consist- ing of the administration building proper, and three adjoining wings, housing over 200 students, was wrecked. The flames reached such propor- | tions that nine hours after the fire) was discovered firemen still were pumping water into the structure to prevent the blaze from spreading to the gymnasium and cottages sur- |xounding the building. The pupils attending the school save them from the flames. The school has been razed by in the last few years, but no attempt was made to build new brick build- ings. The old with yesterday’s result. COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE | E. KARO " Your Nearext Stationery, Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy. , 649 ALLERTON AVE., i Cor. Barker, BRONX, N, Y. } Tel. OLInville 9681-2 — 9791-2, No-Tip meee Shops’ 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Individual sanitary service by Experts—Ladies Hair Bobbing § Specialists, nnn St. Sunday at 3:30 p. m. Robert | Minor will speak for the Workers| Party, FOR RASKOB FIRM . |General Motors Issues, all previous calendar years in the| |the trans-continental flight record, |established in the “Yankee Doodle,” In*the third quarter of 1927 earn-| lives of hundreds of school children | | were taken out barely in time to | other less serious fires many times | wooden buildings | were negligently allowed to remain, | IN LOS ANGELES 3,000 Mile Flight Ends, Fail to Lower Mark MINES FIELD, Los Angeles, Oct. 25 (UP).—The monoplane “Yankee | Doodle,” piloted by Captain C, B. C. Collyer, completed its non-stop flight from New York to Los An- geles at 2:15 p. m. today, setting a new mark from east to west across | the continent. The plane left New York Wednes- | day at 4:15 p.m. Collyer, however, failed to lower in a flight from Los Angeles to New | York, The time reported in the flight today was unofficially announced as 22 hours. The mark made in the | west-to-east flight was 18 hours and 58 minutes. The old New York-Los Angeles | |record of 26 hours and 50 minutes | | was made by Lieuts. MacReady and | Kelly. New Metal Discovered | by Soviet Scientists LENINGRAD, Oct. 25.—New mineral of a high technical value has been discovered in the Chemical | Institute of the U. S. S. R. Academy of Sciences in the laboratory of Academician Kurnakoy. The mineral consists of osmical iridium containing up to 20 per cent of a rare and precious metal— rutemium. The mineral was found in pro- | duction supplied by the Trust “Soiuz Gold.” | | |GERMAN STEAMER GROUNDS. REGGIO CALABRIA, Italy, Oct.| 25 (U,P).—The German steamer, | Adolph Widermann, plying between Hamburg and South Africa, ground- | ed three miles off Cape Spartivento | today. Mimeographing Multigraphing; Typewriting; CELIA TRAURIG PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER 799 Broadway, Cor. 11th Street, Stuyvesant 2052. Room 623—Tel.: | Ga Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: Tues. Thurs. & Sat ] | [DR J-MINDE ne 9:30-12 a, m., 2-8 p. m. Sunday, 10:00 a.m, to 1:00 p. m. PLEASE, TELEPHONE FOR PPOINTMENT 249 BAST 116th STREET Second Ave. * New York Telephone: Lehigh 6022. Cor. DR. J. MINDE ‘I SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone, Algonquin 8183 Not connected wit! y ot PYCCKHM 3YBHOM BPAY Dr. JOSEPH B. WEXLER Surgeon Dentist 25 yrs, in practice. Moderate prices. 223 SECOND AV. NEW YORK Temple Courts Bldg. f | | ViCKETS IN ADT. Valuable Prizes to Tomorrow Night _ | Proletarian Autumn Reve] To Aid Class War Prisoners ‘SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27th at 8 p.m. 119 Webster Hall, East 11th St. ANCE 50e — — — AT LCOR 766 Shabbiest Dressed Auspices: INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE, NEW YORK SECTION, SOCIALIST PARTY In preparation for the jLResBibon | Square Garden meeting Sunday, Nov. 4, tickets and posters are on’ hand t the district office. DEGENERATION OF | pictures of Foster and Gitlow free distribution, for | Williamsburg Red Meet. The Young Workers League | than eam will hold a Youth Elec- | tion Campaign mass meeting on Sun- day, Oct. 28 at 56 Manhattan Ave., | Bklyn, ,at 2 p.m, Herbert Zam, can- |didate in the 14th assembly district of the Workers (Communist) Party will speak. A minstrel show will fol- low the meeting. of Red Candidate Hailed | in Columbus Continued from Page One official campaign book, there is no mention of the miners’ strike of . Workers Party Notice. All units are instructed to meet Also Vote Communist posters and|s 1927-28; there is no mention of the New Bedford strike (outside of one photograph); there is no mention of the collapse of the miners’ union under John L. Lewis; there is no |mention of the fact that the over-| whelming majority of the American workers are unorganized and there- fore incapable of waging successful | ¢ struggles against capitalism; there |ment of the Negroes and of other any mention of the word “capital-| ism” or of the capitalist system (for jwhich “the owning classes” are Harri no mention of the class strug- talist state. Seek to Deceive Workers. “The entire socialist campaign is| conducted under the slogan Peace, | Freedom and Plenty. (This slogan, | |which is a modification of McKin-| |ley’s full dinner-paid slogan, is con- tained twice in the letter of accept- ance, once in a leaflet addressed to is no mention of the disfranchise-| race discrimination; there is hardly | modestly substituted); there is cer-| | meetings today. | Blizabeth, N. J., regularly and promptly every week until the election campaign is over and take up as the main order of business the immediate tasks of the élection campaign, egy Er District Literature Conference. A district Hterature conference will be held today at 6:30 p. m.,| at the Workers Center, 26-28 Union| Miller ‘and Rebecca echt will address the conference, 1 Uterature agents and members of the literature squads of the Workers (Communist) Party and Young Work- ers (Communist) League must at- tend promptly. : . Today, open air meet at Simp- son and 161st St, Speakers: Namis, Weiss, Stein, N. Smith, pioneer. Boas Section 2 and 3 Notice. A special membership meeting that gle; there is no mention of the capi-| Was originally called for Thursday, | 25, will be held toda by decision of the district executive committee, on account of conflicting Do not fail to at- tend: 26 Union Square, 4th floor. N. J. Attention, The City Central is organizing a Mas- querade Ball and Bazaar for Satur- day evening, Dec. Ist. All units and workers’ organizations of nearby | | to the District Discipline Committee. | meeting and bri | . | will _be held Monday, 6 Committee of cities are requested not to arrange any conflicting affairs for that day. Soe | Bronx Y. W. L. | The Bronx section of the Y. W. 1. | will hold_a youth election campaign | the farmers, and many times in Thomas’ speeches, among them the} speech of August 4th in Ulmer Park with which he started his cam-| paign. The socialists wish to make] | district office as the Industrial Reg- | rally on Friday, Nov. 2, at 8:30 p, m.| Jat 1400 Boston’ Road.’ Phil Frank: feld, candidate in 3rd Assembly Dis- | trict for the Workers Party, will speak, their audience believe that actual! peace, actual freedom and plenty for all can be attained under the capitalist system. In this as in all other respects they follow the ex- ample of the capitalist parties, add-| |ing to the lie of capitalist promises | the falsehood of an insignificant) group acting as if it had a chance |of becoming a leading power in the | state.” Section 3, Women’s Work Directors. A conference will be held today at 6:80 p. m. at 101 W. 27th st. New Bulletins. Attention candidates on the Work- ets Party ticket, open air speakers, and all agitprop directors: New bul- | letins have been Issued by the dis- trict agitprop department on: (1) Smith, New Tammany and Wall RF % Street. (Dealing with the stand of | Foster to Speak in Scranton. the democratic party on all the im 5 pied portant issues in the present cam (Special to the Daily Worker) paigns.) Attend I. L. D. Autumn Revel Lomorrow FOSTER EXPOSES Workers Party Activities ae HARGE POLES (2) Needle Trades ruggle and the g e present election ca n. (Dealing i a with the political lessons that can "4 be earned from the needle trades in the past few years.) A speakers’ |be used for uni er and the re present electio that outli SOVIET UKRAINE be, Feady ‘xoon. ‘Those desiring "copies should call at the district agitprop is department ‘office, at. 26-28 Union| War Danger Looms in Square, 5th fic Pil d ki Ss h 3E International B usudski scheme The International B: Ge CNES ; hold an educational m 2 PARIS, Oct. A plan to aid ey, Set Ze at.2 pm. at. 101 W:|Poland in its attempts to form a will lead the discussion on the “sub- greater Polish nation out of terri- Ject: HASTEN EN, Every com-|tory seized from the Soviet Union, Pate, HSE RA Dredent: lis reported from German news Wakbertine am Membership Meeting. Subsection 3E will hold an impor- tant membership meeting on Tues- sources today. Announcement of the plan, which day, Oct. 30, at 6:18 p.m, at 101 W,|is Scheduled to become effective 27th St, For the importance of this| within the next few , follows meeting it is requested that every es afi member be present and on time. Phe the visit of bent hal sudsk names of all comrades who are not|take the cure at Rumanian wat present at this meeting will be giv places where he conversed number of Europear Branch 3, Section 4 Meet. The scheme, as reported in ‘Ger- A business and educational meet- ; ie ing of Branch 3, Sec’ 4, will be|™any, envisages the creation of @ held Monday, 8 p. m t 764 40th greater Poland out of a large sec- Et. Brooklyn, All members must |tion of the present Uk n Soviet attend, ; ae rie vee Republic and the White Russia A PiXQun Ploneers, Notes, Soviet Republic between the Dnieper oneer group has just been or-|__ nies' | ganized in Yorkville. and the Dniester This A meeting was ie held last week with 10 Pioneers pres- | seizure would include the cities of ent. The next meeting will be held | Aa t the Hungarian Workers Home, 30 Anak aod) Bley: od: the Ietee Sist St., Sunday at 11 a. All Yorkville Bioneers should attend this g friends dee The balance of the Uk keaine, | Kharkov as the capital, wou'd then |be organized as an bdopeaae re- public under French control. The French government is re- | garded as a’ prime instigator of the plan, tho it is understood that the British also. back it. Unit 3F, Subsec An educational meet n 3D, of the unit Op. m, at All’ members must 101 Ww. attend. 27th St, . L. Office workers of the Young Work- ers (Communist) League please send in your name and address to_the . Office Workers. Y. Ww. GULF STREAM UNCHANGED. PARIS.—Bottles found by fisher- men bear out the contention of the All intmbers ef the branch aust |wenons), Geographical Society, |i appear tonight at 8 p. m. at corner | Washington, that the Gulf Stream Fox and Prospect Ave., for an open| has not changed its rou air meeting, and Sunday at 10:30 a istrations have not been completed. You must do this immediately. pated eater Branch 4, Section 5. m. at 2075 Clinton and CIstri hy - CSREES <a tion of the special anniversary num- | « in sa ber of the Dally Work For Any <ind of Insurance Queens Rally. A Red election rally will be hela | tonight Ge 8 p. m. at rneens Peper Lyceum, 785 Forest Ave. jpeakers, jin English, A. Markoff; in <penuant Telephone Murray HIM 5550 Carl Jansen, J J. Berg, chairman. 7 East 42nd St., New York Needle worker Tact get collection lists from the Needle Tradex Committee, 26 Union Sq 202, and collect funds for the election eS campaign of the Workers (Commu- | nist) Party. Proletarianize! SCRANTON, Pa., Oct. at enna) liam Z, Foster, presidential candi- date of the Workers (Communist) Party will speak here at a nist paign rally Wednesday, Oct. 31, 7) p. m., at Labor Temple, 125 Frank-| lin Ave. His meeting, the only one| | UST as the capitalist class formulate their business poli- cles so that their prof! ounts will continual! £0 must labor and f1 ganizations use ords to assist t held in the anthracite, it is expected, | will be attended by hundreds of miners who are not in agreement | with John L. Lewis who advised them | to vote for Hoover. CENTRAL BUSINESS SCHOOL —Bookkeeping —Stenography —Typewriting Individual Instruction CLASS LIMITED 108 E. 14th STREET of will be 182nd St. and ‘United Workers Co-Operative ts | Friday, October 26th at 8: 30. | at | NEW TERRACE GARDEN Every member is requested to attend this meeting. ing its ability the Louis P, Weiner, BC Public Accountant and ahr tor, 149 SPRING Phone: WAL held on MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY ONS ists Wiehe} Moved to 2420 Bronx Park East Near Co-cperative Colony. Apt, SH Telephone EASTABROOK 2459 Special rates to students from the Co-operative House. Fordham Road BOARD OF DIRECTORS, For Good Wholesome Foud EAT aT “ERON SCHOOL! 185-187 pS BEQADWAT | JOSEPH E ERROR, Principal }}) THE LARGEST AND BEST AS ||| WELL AS OLDEST SCHOOL. |/| to learn the English language, to prepare oneself for admiasion ||| to College. | ERON SCTIOOL the REGENTS of New York. of a Government High School. Call, Phone or write for Catalogue: Fifth Anniversary United Council of MR. OLGIN will interpret THE Register Now. School Opens tn i} 25,000 Renter, baat Iii at IRVING PLAZA HALL, ok witnesses. Wi8) Admission 50 cents. TELEPHONED ORCHARD 4473 LITERARY & MUSICAL AFTERNOON BEN GOLD of the Joint Board of the Furriers and JULIET STUART POYNTZ will greet the councils. Talent—MISS MENKEL, soprano, will sing. —_ KONIN GIRLS will play at the piano and cello. — PROLETARIAN ORCHESTRA will play. On Sunday Afternoon from 2 to 6, Nov. 11 Part of proceeds to Shifrin Defense. RATNER’S Dairy and Vegetarian Restaurant 103 SECOND AVE. H. L. HARMATZ, Prop. Self-Service Cafeteria 115 SECOND AVE., Near 7th St. BAKIN DONE ON PREMISES Visit Our Place While on 2nd Ave. Tel.; Dry Dock 1263; Orchard 0430 Celebration of the Working Women TWELVTH by Alexander Block. Rational Vegetarian Restaurant ig, SECOND AVE, Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian }ood. Irving Place & 15th Street. Phone Stuyvesant 3816 You Must A | John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 302 E. 12th ST. NEW YORK the Fascist Terror All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT of the Ku Klux Klan and American Legion Lc Claremont P’kway Bes MEET YOUR FRIENDS at \ a » READING « Daily S05 Worker The Only Fighting English Daily In the United States BUY AN EXTRA COPY EVERY DAY AND GIVE IT TO YOURSHOPMATE! GET YOUR FRIEND AND SHOPMATE TO READ THEDAILY WORKER! See That Your Newsstand Has A Supply of Daily Workers Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant Southern Divd., Bronx, N. ¥. Off 174th St. Subway Station ‘WE ALL MEET at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE. |