The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 30, 1928, Page 5

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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1928 rage Five | Women Workers to Demonstrate Their Support of Red Ticket at Meeting Friday - RED CANDIDATES Workers Party Activities HORRIBLE EXILE WILL SPEAK AT BIG MASS MEET Will Present Working Class Issues The first Communist election rally for working women will be held| this Thursday, beginning at 8 p. m. at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and! Irving Place, ‘Women workers in the home and in the shop will there | demonstrate their solidarity with the only party which carries on an energetic struggle for their inter- ests—the Workers (Communist) | Party. Leading women militants, active) fighters in the class struggle, will| speak on the Communist program! for working women and will expose | the fight being waged by the capi-| talist parties against the women workers in the democratic “solid! south,” in republican Massachusetts | and Pennsylvania, in Tammany-con- | trolled New York, Among the speak- ers will be Juliet Stuart Poyntz,| Communist candidate for attorney- general in New York Rebecca Grecht candidate in the th Assembly Dis- trict, Bronx; Rachel Ragozin, can- didate in the 23rd Assembly Dis- trict, Brooklyn; Kate Gitlow, Ger- trude Welsh, and other prominent Communists. Scott Nearing, candi- date for governor of New Jersey, will also address the meeting. Answer “Socialist” Lies. The capitalist parties are empha- sizing the tremendous importance of the women workers in the elections this year, and have been using every means to get their votes. Figures of registration this year indicate definitely that women are partici- pating in the election campaign on NG much greater scale than at any ime since they began to vote. The demonstration this Thursday at Irv- ing Plaza will be an answer of the militant women workers in the shops, the working class housewives and mothers, to the maneuvers and attacks of the capitalist parties, the betrayals of the socialist party. In a statement issued by the New York Campaign Commitee, women workers in organized and unorgan- ized shops are called upon to rally to the platform and candidates of the Workers (Communist) Party, which fights for organization of the unorganized, equal pay for equal work, and other demands for the protection of working women. Olgin Will Speak at Red Rally in Bronx Tomorrow Evening | At a Red rally to be held in the Bronx tomorrow night, at 1347 Boston Road, N. & Olgin, Commu- mist writer and lecturer, will speak on the issues of the 1928 election campaign. Other speakers will be the local candidates running on the Workers (Communist) Party ticket in the Bronx. Among these are Rebecca Grecht, State Campaign Manager for the Workers (Communist) Party and running in the 5th Bronx As- sembly District; Sam Nesin, Com- munist candidate in the 6th As-! sembly District; Ben Gold, mil’ ant leader of the left wing furriers and zandidate in the 23rd Congressional District; Charles Zimmerman, run- aing in thé 4th Assembly District and Joseph Boruchowitz, candidate in the 22nd Senatorial District. CORRECTION, Due to an error in yesterday's Daily Worker the address was omitted in the article asking work- ers to send their Russian Anni- yersary greetings to the Soviet Union and describe the conditions of their work. Send your letters to J. Louis Engdahl, The Lux, Moscow, U. S. S, R., and he will | see that they get into the proper \ hands. Workers ene Notice, All units are instructed to meet} | eel, ua and promptly every week | until the election campaign is over and take up as the main order | business the immediate tasks of the election campaign. | See . i Ny J, Attention: The City Central Committes of | Elizabeth, » is organizing a Mas- querade ‘Bali ‘und’ Besant tee ‘aeturs day evening, Dec. Ist. All units and workers’ organizations of nearby |cities are requested not to arrange any conflleting affairs for that day. | cage aaa | | Bronx Y. W. L. The Bronx section of the Y. W. L. | will hold _a youth election campaign rally on Friday, Noy. 2, at 8:30 p, m. lat 1400 Boston Road, Phil Frank- feld, candidate in 3rd Assembly Dis- | trict for the Workers Party, will| | speak. | | ee | Subsection 3E Membership Meeting. | PpoeeaneS 8E will hold an impor- hog membership meetin today ee 15 p.m. at 101 est 27th \ Street For the importance of this meeting it is requested that every, | member be present and on time. The |names of all comrades who are not present at this meeting will be given |to the District Discipline Committee. pet ae Lower Bronx Young Workers League. An open air meeting will be held! today at 138th Street and Brook Ave. | Speakers: Smith, Geffin, Shiffman, | Mallkin, and Passikoft, Pioneer, Thursday: Open air | 138th St. ana wil Katz, Adler, Stein sinowitz, Pioneer, Friday: All comrades of Y. W. L. Lower Bronx unit be sure to eome to the election rally on Friday, Nov. 2, 1400 Boston Road, 8 p. m. sharp, This cancels DEeyipEe announcements, . Déwaiown Unie, Noa ¥. Ww. L. The following open air meetings in connection with the election cam- | Paign will be held: Today at 26th Street and Lexington Ave. Speakers, Geltman, Fox, Coop- er, Duke, Richman, Helfand, Jensky. ‘All speakers and members of the unit are to report at 26 Union Square at 7:30 p, , today and Wednesday. ae sabeccdion sE. air meeting today at 8 m. 39th St. and 9th Ave, P. Downtown Y. W. L. Unit 2. All members of Downtown Unit No. 2 of the Y. W. L. must participate in the Red night which is to be held by the Party sections of the dis- trict, Please report at 101 West 27th St. tomorrow at 730 p. m. The following comrades are sche-| duled to speak at the various meet- ings, Brustien, Geltman, Fox, Mil- ton, Jensky, Duke, Rothman, Cooper, Helfand, Richman, Harris, ‘Rosen. aetles ea SD 1, Subsection 2¢, A meeting of the unit will be held tomorrow, 6:30 p. m., at 30 Union Square. Industrial problems will be discussed. All members must attend. All Red Guards for Poll Duty Register at District Office Continued from Page Gne portant boroughs for watchers: 2075 Clinton Ave.; 755 E. 188th St.. and 2700 Bronx Park East. In Williams-| burg the headquarters is at 56 Man- hattan Aye.; in Brownsville at 154 Watkins St.; in Boro Park at 1373 43rd St.; downtown Manhattan headquarters are at 60 St. Marks | PL, and in Harlem the headquarters are at 143 E. 103rd St. Constant watch will have to be kept by the Red Guards on poll duty | to see that no Communist ballots are | destroyed or in any way tampered actual voting and during the tally-| ing after the polls are closed. | A large army of volunteers is es- sential. All members of the Work- }ers (Communist) Party and sym- pathizers who have automobiles at | their disposal are asked to donate, their services and ears to the red_ election campairr during the day, as many flying visits from poll to poll will have to be made. Boro Park Workers Will Hear Nearing Seott Nearing, Communist candi-| date for governor of New Jersey, will address a meeting at the Boro Park Workers’ Club, 1373 48rd St., Brooklyn, this Thursday evening. | A part of the proceeds of “the | meeting will be donated to the Daily Worker. | schools in working elass aeighborhoods, The abolition of reti- | gloux, Jingoti anti-union propa- ‘ganda in the xchools, OVER 1,000 NOW STUDY AT WORKERS SCHOOL In spite of the election campaign shat has occupied the energies and \ttention of the militant workers of this city for the past several weeks ind the tremendous work involved »f the building up of new unions in the needle trades, as well as in some vf the other industries, the Workers School is witnessing the most suc- ‘essful year in its brief but import-| int history, with a registration al- ready over 1,000 individual workers taking one or more courses in the ‘cores of subjects that are offered \t the school. The new headquarters that have deen occupied by the Workers School | ‘o mect the increased needs of the nilitant workers of this city for a working class training is already taxed to its capacity and is com- pelling the school administration to a r steps concerning the en- ee ent of classroom space and . ang the number of classrooms. Li apeans four classes have been started in the Fundamentals of Communism with two courses sched- utd to begin with the next two weeks. Two classes with over 40 workers each have begun in Marx- an w...icmies I, with another large Jass in Marxian i.conomies II. An extra elaes in Principles of Mevxism is to be formed in addition he one originally scheduled, while at the same time a class in Prin. | ciples of s.arx/s;u II is going on. Many English Classes, Fourteen English classes have al- uled to begin next week, The two | courses in U,. S, History and Amer- | ican Economic and Political History. re practically closed to further reg- | ation because of the size of the | classes, Expect 1,000 More. The Workers School expects to have a total registration of 2,000 individual workers before the fal! of 700 over its best previous year, the registration of 1,800 that took place in the fall of 1927, Such courses as “Anarchism, Socialism, Communi Comparative Study,” with M. J. Olgin as the instructor; “Social Forces in Current American Drama,” with Michael Gold as the instructor; “Elements of Leninist Tactics,” by D. Benjamin, find) students standing alongside the wall! because of the large enrollments. In School calls upon all workers to register without delay so tht they will not find themselves excluded from tk» various classes. Registra- tion is now going on at the office of the Workers School, 26-28 Union lal ~ | Union Subsection 3E will hold an open] at} with, This will go on during the | ready c‘arted with two more sched- term is over, resulting in an ineroase | | view of this fact the Workers) 3 Tabet. and Fraternal, Organizations Jewelers and Ball, The first concert and ball of the Jewelry Workers’ Welfare Club will| |be held Saturday, Noy. 3, at the New | Webster Manor, 11th St. between 34/ and 4th Aves. : Relief Society For the Tubercular | Children in U.S. The abcve society {s anging a Vetcherinka at the Carlton Hall on Saturday, Nov, 3 and asks all frater- organizations and sympathizers {not to arrange any of their enter-| | tainments on that day. Paces To Hold Balt. A ball will be held by the Knit| Goods Welfare and Culture Cinb|/ Thanksgiving Kye, Nov, 28, in Web- ster Hall, 119 B, 11th St. Cast agen Willlamsburgh 1. L. Mass meeting Monday, 56 Manhattan Ave, | Billings, Shifrin and oth prisoners will be discus: League Foi The annual din D. vy, 12, at} r class war , Mutual Aia, r of the League | Nov. E, at 6:30 p.m. Among those gram will be Roger Bald- | |and’ others. Ma ye Dental Workers’ Union. The Dental oratory Workers’ | announces a mass meeting} today at the Labor Temple, lith Street and 2nd Avenue. At this| meeting the first issue of the month- ly ‘magazine, the official organ of the union, will be distributed to all members present. 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- chanies in New York and are invited. | vicinity . 8 Williamsburg LL. D. | The Williamsburg Branch of the | LL, D. is calling a mass meeting for | Monday, November 12, at 8 p. m., at 56 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn. Prom- inent speakers will report on Shif-| rin’s case and on the s of the other martyrs in our class struggle. After a discussion on the reports a |good concert program will amuse those present. Admission free, Greek Literature Lecture, lecture on Gr | Spanish Workers |Obrero de Habla 118th St., Tuesda literature at the! (Centro 55 |Dutch bourgeois W.|is equally melancholy. Working Women’s Concert, United Counci will hold a lit ternoon, Sunda nd musical af- 11, 2 to 6 p. ve aA hoi Important membership meeting of the Unity Cooperative will be held | tomorrow |Garden, 75 3 All members are urged to be present. Rivtiniian orkers, |a meeting tomorrow at 8 |101 W. 27th { Nearing to Speak on Red Campaign in Harlem Tonight At a Red election campaign rally | to be held at the Hungarian Work- ers Home, 350 E. 81st St., tonight, the principal speaker will be Scott! | Nearing, Communist candidate for governor of New Jersey. Bert Miller, organizational secre- tary of District 2 of the Workers (Communist) Party and candidate in the 14th Senatorial District, and! L. Kovees, editor of the “Uj Elore,” Hungarian Communist daily, will be the other speakers. George Lloyd, of the Harlem section of the Workers (Communist) Party, will preside. tions and their bearing on the inter- national situation, stressing the role played by the capitalist parties in the imperialist war danger. Miller and Kovecs will speak on the na- tional and local issues of the cam- paign. \NEW YORK-BERMUDA FLYER MISSING. WASHINGTON, Oct. 2° (U,R).— Naval communications reported at 9:30 p. m., tonight it had not been able to establish communication with the amphibian plane being flown trom New York to Bermuda by Har- ie catia ty W. Lyons and Capt. William N. | Lancaster, | ae: men | | | 7 East 42nd St., New York Mimeographing Multigraphing; Typewriting : CELIA TRAURIG PUBLIC SYHNOGRAPHER 799 Broad’ Cor, 11th Street, Room 623—Tel: Stuyvesant 2052, COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE E. KARO Your Nenrest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy : 649 ALLERTON AVE., Cor. Barker, BRONX, N, Y. ) Tel. OLInville 9681-2 — 9791-2 ; ele ileg ie No-Tip Barber Shops' 26-28 UNION ee (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Individual sanitary service by Experts—Ladies Hair Bobbing Sa. . at the Laurel | f Working Women| “Tanah Merah (red earth). 15th St. M. gin, Ben Gold and | Juliet Poyntz will speak. Girls, piano and cello; Miss Menkel, | ality |soprano, proletarian orchestra will feature.’ Admission 50 cents. FOR INDONESIAN REVOLUTIGNISTS \Live in Marshes; 14 Communist Leaders (By Red Aid Press Service) Since the suppression of the in- |surrection in 1927, political events have played in the upper strata of Indonesian society, The Communist Party, the revolutionary mass or- ganization “Sarekat Rajat,” the rev- olutionary trade unions, etc., have all been disbanded and forced into illegality. Any attempt to build Cases of Mooney, |them up again is punished by ban- ishment to the “Digul camp” in the wilderness of New Guinea. This colony of exiles has become ve foc Mutual Aid will be heid Friday,| large, and the political prisoners 2, at the roth 8 ic Club Lounge, 18 | from Java and Sumatra are brought here. There are already over 2,000 win, Margaret Larkin, Lewis Brow: ne | human beings here, of which 966 are women and children who have followed their husbands and fathers into exile of their own free will. |Further, three hundred prisoners are expected. Ail these revolutionists have been exiled on administrative methods, |and have had no proper trial. Their life here is so wretched that even a newspaper, the “Neue Rotterdamsche Courant,” publishes a report by its correspon- dent, Dr. Van Blankensteyn, de- seribing the horrors of the camp. | This journalist had the opportunity of visiting the spot. He writes: Live in Marshes. “Tt is a desolate journey, from the mouth of the Digu! river, hundreds of miles up the river in the govern- ment steamer. Nothing but marshes Prof. Paula Osorio will deliver a/and inpenetrable primeval forest on either shore, The arrival in Digul | The part of the wilderness in which the camp has been esiablished is known as the This scunds as if this name originated Irving Place and |from the idea that it was to become Konin |@ Communist settlement, but in re- the name has been given by the color of the soil. . . . The authori- ties, the exiles and the soldiery all declare unanimously that the soil is useless for purposes of cultivation. ‘There are but few peasants among the exiles, but more will arrive presently from West Java. At the The Rumanian workers will hola| Present time the industry of the p. m. at exiles leaves nothing to be desired. | Men, women and children are doing their best to please even the au- thorities. The intellectuals among them are divided into two groups, a “right” and a “left.” The small \left consists of only 14 persons. These are cut off by the soldiery from the others. These 14 Communists have to live under truly frightful conditions and must build their primitive lodging in the marsh and bog. Here is < . and nobody can deny it... nerfect hell. Food, too, is very pi ufficient. Fourteen Communist Leaders. “The Indonesian revolutionary rec rd shows that these 14 doubly ex- iled men are Communist leaders, Sunario, Dahlan, Aliarcham and others, whose steadfastness has gained them the reputation—from Nearing will devote his talk to the standpoint of the authorities— |the significance of the 1928 elec- of “exercising moral terror over the other exiles. “In spite of the chicane of the authorities and the terror of the spot itself, most of the exiles have vetained their courage. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Oftice Hours: Tues., 9:30-12 a. m., Thurs. & Sat 2-8 p.m. Sunday, 10:00 a, m. to 1:00 p. PLEASE TELEPHONE FOR OINTMENT r 138th STREET lew York eb ebigh "ore m Telephones IDR. J. INDE SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone, Algonquin 818% Not connected with uny other office | PYCCKMA SYBHCA BPAY Or JOSEPH B, WEXLER Surgeon Dentist 25 yrs. in practice, Moderate prices 223 SECOND AV. NEW YOR: Temple Courts Bidg, COUPERATORS PATRONIZE J. SHERMAN Your Nearest Tailor Funey Cleaners and Dyers 40D ALLERTON AVE, mito oo SPER NTI Co-operative Workers Patrontze SCOLNICK Pelham TAILOR } Fancy Cleaner and Dyers itor Allerton Ave. Bronx, N. ¥. SMP 9-9 an mR AMMA Unity Co-operators Patronixe SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor Tait. th Aye vew York | Between 110th and 1ith Ste, Specialists, Next to Unity Co-operative fiouae {I As proof of ; imperialism. as she left her ere house. ernment receives his reward for se The photo above shows the bride wearing the WORKERS PARTY OPEN Alk MEETS Wind Up Campaign The following open-air meeti will be held this week in the election drive of the Workers (Communist) Party: Cohen, Bydarian, Peer. i Today. Steinway and Jamaica, L. I. Blake, Crouch, Powers, Rock. Sutter and Williams, Brooklyn—| Wall Street. (Noon.) R. Minor,| Liptzin, Julius Cohen, Macklin, Pri- | Rose Rubin. moff, Magliacano, A. Mershon FRIDAY. Prospect and 163rd St.—Stachel, fate ae ve Grecht, Spiro, Taft, Lillienstein. Withee pig meone a Fifth Ave. and 125th St—Mer-| “Yaret™ and Graham, Brooklyn. \kott, “Harry Blake, Gil Green, V-| pinta, Primoff, Midola, Weich, A. (Smith, y ,_ | Abramovich, Bacin, Pencil Co, (Noon)—Bal- soth Bt wand 6th Aye, 1. Zim lam, Y. W. L. Speaker. merman, G. Spiro, Chalupski. FORROW. Market Plaza (Newark). Padgug, 2nd Ave. and 10th St. Hendin, N. Sparer, Frieman, L. Blumenthal. Ph. Gocdman, R. Wortis. 1. Cohen Singer (Elizabeth). B. Lifshitz, |Milgrom, Suskin, Sam Saroff, S.| Pearlman, Pollack, Bliss Factory, 53rd St. and 2nd Union Square. Bert Miller,| Ave., Brooklyn. McDonald, Chalup- | Wright, Frank, S. Pollack. ski, Wilkins and Intervala Sulkow-| Water Front, foot of W. 14th St. sky, Goretzky, Fraides, Codkind, (Noon.) ‘Sherman, Gussakof, LeRoy, Jacobson, R. Lukelson. : | 99th’ St. and Lexington, SATURDAY: R. Grecht, Fishman. Myrtle and |Bimba, Julius Cohen, Williams, | Welsh, McDonald. Passaic, N. J. Sparer, Duke. W. 38rd St. (Noon.) Sazar, Gussakof. 144th St. and 7th Ave. Lamb, Edw. Welsh, Gil Green. THURSDAY. Jefferson and E. Broadway. | Rosenthal, S. Zimmerman, G. Spiro, Blum, E. Koppel. 18th St. and St. Annes. Baum, Frankfeld, Nathan Kaplan, Weich. Zukowsky, they welcome every fresh group of | jexiles with a revolutionary recep- tion. A red flag with hammer and sickle is fixed on a hill near the landing stage, and the band organ- ized by the exiles strikes up an en- thusiastically oo aes UST as the capitalist class uses accounting records to formulate their business poli- eles so that their profit ac- | counts will continually swell, so must labor and fraternal or- zanizations use accounting rec- ords to assist them in measur- ing {ts ability to increase tts proletarian activity. Your organization ean do it by consulting Louis P. Weiner, BCS. Public Accountant and Auditor 149 SPRING STREET, New York City. WALKER Phone or 7537 Intensive “Efforts to | tration” (Noon.) | Capmakers’ Market, Green St. and | line Ave.). their spirit it may be stated iat | played revolutionary | | '|St. Louis Officials in Registration Gra ST. LOUIS, Mo, ( Oct. 29 (U,P).— | The St. Louis county grand jury re-| turned three indictments here today charging “false certificate of regis- against one or more elec m officials in three precincts. | Highteen officials were reported to be involved in the indictments. ie 40th St. and 8th Ave. Nessin, Joe 1st Ave. and 79th St, | 1st Ave. and 116th St. | bach, Napoli, Magliacano, | W..N. Y. (14th St. and Bergen- Sparer. Elizabeth, N. J., Markoff, Perth Amboy, N. J. (308 Elm St.) Sol Auer- Moore, G.| Lloyd, Padgug. Poughkeepsie, N. Y., Bert Miller. |_ Paterson, N. J. (3 Governor St.) L,|Ballam, Martin, Yonkers, N. Y. Baum, Nat Kap- lan, 132nd St. and 5th Ave. Huiswood, | Edw. Welsh, Jack Stachel. MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THR DAMROBCH CONSERVATOR PIA NO LESSONS loved to 2440 Bronx Park East Near Co-operative Colony. Apt. 6£ Telephone BASTABROOK 2469. special rates to students from the Co-operative House. will be members are urged to attend. Action Commi Gil Green, | Hudson, Brooklyn. | Lustig, S. Garlin, W. Chambers. | Huge es rendered to Japon wu lWOLFE TO SPEAK IN CLEVELAND. Hall | Setsu Matsudaira, daughter of the former Japanese ambassador to the United States, was mar- ried recently to Prince Chichibu, brother of the Japanese emperor, at the imperial palace. ex-ambassador to the Wall Street go Thus the for Meeting |side and FE. | meeting here, dressed by tional agitprop Workers candidate for York, on Sunday, Ohio, largest ha the Public Auditorium, 6th Sts., cured for the huge Par which Bertram D. director (Communist) Congress Oct. 2 in this + ] y will Wolfe, of Party in which the Freiheit Singing Society. the German Leadertafel Singing Society, the South Slovak Singing Society and the Mandolin Orchestra will perform, will be one of the features of the evening. In ad- dition to this, the audience will hear several violin solos by members of | the Cleveland Symphony Orch All class-conscious workers are ex pected to attend this meeting, wh is expected to be one of the biggest {and most important ever held here. OPTIMISTIC HORSEMEN, BUENOS AIRES, Oct. 28 (U.P) —The Argentine horsemen, Jose M Brown and Antonio Porraso, start a ride to Canada on November The government has furnished trip. | 15. |horses for the | Complete freedom strike for the ag wil . © organize and ural classes. ee i'CENTRAL | BUSINESS SCHOOL | Bookkeeping —Stenography —Typewriting \3. Individual Instruction | CLASS LIMITED 108 E 14th Unity Cooperative Membership Meeting A General Membership Meeting of the Unity Cooperative held on Wednesday, October 31st, 8 p.m. at LAUREL GARDEN, 75 E. 116th Street This is a special meeting called by the Action Committee. ttee, Un. Ar. Cooperative, Inc. STREET All You Must Answer |=! the Fascist Terror of the Ku the Ku Klux Klan and American Legion w» READING anil AWorker The Only Fighting English Daily In the United States | See That Your Newsstand ita A Supply a Dally Workers _ BUY AN EXTRA C COPY EVERY DAY A AND GIVE IT TO YOUR | 8 HOPMATE ! ne | | GET YOUR FRIEND AND SHOPMATE TO READ THEDAILY WORKE | Procured , at Lake- has been pro- Press be ad- na- and | New Nov. 4, at © p. m. An excellent musical program, in| ¢ Socialist : $ ; WORKERS JAM RED RALLIES IN BROWNSVILLE Others Nearin Spe Hear walked over Workers Center tune of oy \Occupants Saved in | Rooming House Fire (By U en carried M the second f! lapse, and an was carried do’ top floor. co) woma’ ra. Needle Work \ list at the hy die Tradex Can Union Square, Room and funds for the election cam. the Workers (Communist) Party. nooner mem ee 068: CHEZ NOUS 154 SECOND AVENUE (Between 9th and 16th Streets) on Second Fioor Excellent Italian Cuisine MODERA Phone, 1 | Eat in a comradely environment, where you will always meet your comrades and friends. 4 i t Special parties and suppe can be arranged for. rs Special Dishes Prepared, For RATNER’ S Darry and Vegetarian Restaurant 103 SECOND AVE. H. L. HARMATZ, Prop, Self-Service Cafeteria Good | 115 SECOND AVE., Near 7th St. |] BAKING DO! REMISES Visit Our Place While on 2nd Ave. fel.: Dry Dock rc e430 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant if, SECOND AVE, Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Vegetarian food, rictly Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals me 302 E. 12th ST. NEW YORK ~ All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S | VEGETARIAN HEALTH | RESTAURANT 558 Claremont P’kway can meer eee neces! MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Yegetarian and Dairy Restaurant Southern Bivd., Bronx, N, ¥ ight Off 174th St, Subway Staifon WE ALL MEET at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK canal Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 5865 d wo tvs OO eee

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