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-ammunitien plant in the world. pearance in only one department so . department takes in three large department. It links up the various _ Page Five 200 Young Workers Te ponstvate ‘Against Precrialish War in n Rally o on Union Sq. sil BRUTALLY | ATTACK GROUP; 1 YOUTH ARRESTED 10,000 Anti-War Bills Distributed / With banners and placards held aloft, 200 members of the Young Workers (Comntunist) League paraded up to Union Square Satur- day afternoon in an Armistice Day demonstration against imperialist war and in a counter-demonstration against a socialist-pacifist. demon- stration, They continued their demonstration for several hours shouting slogans, singing and bear- ing their placards and banners aloft in the face of continued perse- eution by police, until Joseph Bru- stein, 19-year-old member of the Young Workers (Communist) League was arrested at the instiga- tion of the socialist group. Earlier on the afternoon, a miser- able contingent of 27 pacifists, so- cialists and “Yipsels” had marched up Broadway, lost in the mid-day traffic and lunch-hour crowds. When they reached Union Square, they set up their platform and be- gan to harangue a few casual and disinterested passers-by with their pacifist exhortations. Young Communists Arrive. It was then that the young Com- munists came along. Carrying in their hands banners inscribed with “Fight Wall Street Imperialism”; “Only the Overthrow of Capitalism Will Do Away with War!”; “Join the Young Workers (Communist) League!”; Join the Workers (Com- { munist) Party!” “Pacifism is a Smoke Screen — Fight Imperial- ism!”; “Defend the Soviet Union and “Fight Capitalist Militarism!”; they swooped down on Union Square in a body. | Five times. the young workers tried to start an open-air anti-war raly on the square, but each time the police, tipped off in advance by the yellow socialist crowd, attacked the meeting and dragged down the speakers. Each time that the Com- munist group was broken up by the police, the 200 young workers formed themselves into a mass again, and continued to cheer and sing revolu- tionary songs. Youth Demand Stand. When members of the Young , Pb Slaying of Rothstein, Gambler and Friend Of Politicians Photo on the left shows curious passersby peering thru the window of the district attorney’s office while Assemblyman Maurice Cantor, lawyer of Arnold Rothstein, was telling what he knew of the mysterious slaying of the notorious gambler. On the right is Rothstein. Among his friends were many leading Tammany politicians. RUDBER STR ailing # mass meeting for tints meanie at 8 o'clock sharp at 56 Manhattan Ave. Brooklyn, Prom- {nent eneakers will report on Shif rin's case and on the cases of the other martyrs in our class struggle After a discussion on the reports a good concert program will amuse those present. Admission free. Workers of | Michelin | Denounce Hilfers | Italian Chamber of Labor. The Italian Chamber of Labor will celebrate the tenth anniversary of |its foundation on Saturday evening January 26th next. A concert and ball has been arranged for the occa- sion at the New Webster Manor, 125 Bast 11th St, New York City. A special invitation has been sent Continued from Page One Hilfer’s attempt to betray their | strike are all the more remarkable | in face of the fact that police, plain | 04 (Mtn avesition innal onions of clothes thugs, the church—all the | this city to set aside any other affair that may conflict with the date of {machinery of the bosses—has been | this celebration, t the disposal of the erican . n bd Dalek the di penal of ¢ Ame | Course in Spantah, Federation of Labor faker, Hilfers.| phe spanish Workers’ Center 1s | Superintendent Meyers, of the grening a gas in Spanish for the . A English speaking comrades. All those | Michelin Co., himself has endorsed | interested in joining this class should Hilfer’s efforts to get the strikers | write to the club at 55 W. 118th St.,/ back to the job to slave again for|¥; .Y.,C The clase will start on Workers (Communist) League de-) manded that they be given the right | to speak from the platform of the| pacifists who were protected by the| Workers Party Activitie | i Thursday, November 16th and will| $15 per week. “Go ahead,” Meyers | continue ‘once a week on the same |told Hilfers, “and get them into the | nights. American Federation of Labor.” But) | on, soanish Fraction of the-Work- the strikers have recognized by the | ers (Communist) Party’ will hold its very fact that Meyers endorses this | first dance Saturday evening, Dec. 22, | Ce |plan to get the strikers back into|Tenox ave. Proceeds will go for the ee | . | Proceeds will go for the police, they were refused. N. J, Attention. * oe ae |the factory that Hilfer’s purpose is | organization of Spanish workers and ed Subsection 3C Meet. Finds 3 The pacifist speakers pointed out | mitzabeih, N. J. is organising a Mas: | _ All units of subsection 30 will meet to betray the strike. Obrera’ As this will Bee teal Ine Communists in the audience, which |querade Hull ‘and Bazaar for Satur-/ (today, 6.30 p.m. at | present at this| While Samuel Brody, labor or-, ternational affair, please, dot not by this time had been swelled to) She evening, Dec. ist. All units and arrange any other affair on that important meeting. section 3) workers’ organizations of nearby cities are requested not to arrang¢ many hundreds after the arrival of | any conflicting affairs for that day. the young workers, and demanded | SL wan ee The Subsi that they be ejected from the crowd. Office Workers, Attention. eee ye meet Toney at 65 a The young people's socialist league, which was taking part in the paci- fist meeting, took great pains to co- All office workers in the Young Workers League are asked to send In| their names and addresses to the Dis- | trict Office immediately. | 3E International Branch. An important meeting will be hel on Executive Commit-|of the Michelin factory today, in| ganizer, was urging the workers to| date. strengthen their picket lines in front | . * * Brownsville I. L. D. Meet. A special membership meeting of the Brownsville branch of the Inter- national Labor Defense will be held | today at 8 p. m., at 154 Watkins| St. Important matters will be taken up and Rose Baron, secretary of the order that Michelin may see that the strikers are a power to be feared, Hilfers was spreading his d}treacherous scheme from group to AS F raternal Organizations RUHR LOCKOUT IS ‘COMMUNISTS GET BECOMING ACUTE SUPPORT IN WEST ATTACK WORKERS Thaelma nn Speaks to . Workers BERLIN, Noy. 11.—The situation in the Ruhr lockout of 213,000 metal workers which is involving greatey numbers daily in closing of mines, >. is growing most acute. The authorities are attacking the locked out workers osenly, stopping their meetings and surrounding them with police. At Red Ticket Shows Gain in Election Continued from Page One election watchers permitted 15 Com- munist votes to be reported. The socialists received treatment at the hands of the boss election counters. In the 4th Ward some active social ist voters cast their ballots but the total of their efforts was a report of no socialist votes. At least a dozen Communist members have reported that they cast their ballot for Foster and Git- low in this ward but the result of their voting was also not recorded in the total. On a conservative estimate four similar Essen a meeting was held at which Thaelmann spoke for the Communist Party. One hundred heavily armed police attended in an attempt to overawe the workers. Thaelmann outlined a fighting pro- ;gram for the locked out workers, and a strike committee composed of both organized and unorganized or five pended sear ee (rots | workers was: elected. fig ke Sok yee habe ole socialist trade union | The yellow | Te ie officials are working feverishly to Miners For Red Candidates. smother the struggle, but the fight- Partial returns from Yukon,| ing spirit is growing. Westmoreland County, Pennsy!l- Berlin papers report that further vania, indicate that hte Communists attempts are being made by the gov- secured 26 votes here as against 17/ ernment to mediate, and suggest |for the socialists. Partial returns | that the working hours and not the from Mercer County show 42 votes | wage scales be the basis of nego- |for the Communists and 81 for the tiations. Further operate with the police. 2 4 | by International Branch 1 on Monday | group of the strikers. For this pur-|New York section of the 1 fo > socialists, reports from am Se ee es | by, International Branch 1 alana eat ? hee of | Nill, speak. Refreshments wili bg) Westmoreland County show that in Doligh Revolutionists Arrest Young Worker. ies at 9yp.m. at 101 W. 27th St. PRP. NO. TORGS: TAS OL Rare served after the meeting. Oresident the C i conn Ons: evolutionis' er The Spanish Fraction will hold its i | Swiss workers who speak French. : resident’ ie Communist vote was : es Joseph Brustein, a member of the| first ball on Saturday evening, Dec. Unit UF, Section 1 3 127, Incomplete returns from Vir-- Separated in Prisons i liéth St. and eting ‘of Unit 6F, S ul. ite of the threats of Mayor Deane 5 eran a Pp Youn; Workers (Communist) 22, at Harlem Carino, | A me ng 01 nit n spi 2 0! ie reats 0! yo ¥ inia show Portsmo: th, C Ml Lenox Ave. Proceeds will go for the|wiil be held tomorrow evening at 60 rlatzbach that the “presence of | ,,.vomen's Council $ has arranged a|& tsmou ommu- seats League, was arrested by the police at the request of the “pacifists” | when he demanded the right to present to the crowd the position of the Workers (Communist) Party on the war danger. After the demonstration, during | organization of Spanish jorgan of the Spanish Bureau |Obrera.” Please, keep this date open and give this affair your greatest support, 5 Notice To All Units, | tickets is necessary | 6:15 p, m., Prompt settlement for all Madison, speaking | St. workers and for the support of the| will be taken “Vida | must attend. Marks Place. Important matters every member brody and other real organizers on | the picket line will be sufficient | {grounds for action,” these organiz- up. Unit 3E, 1F Meet. Unit 3E, 1F, will meet tomorrow at/ers are still leading the workers in| Unit 3E, 2F, will meet Wednesday, | at 101 W. 27th St |their struggle against the Michelin | vate. 3H, 2F Meet. | bosses. lecture for reat 8:30 p. m, at | nists 22, socialists 8; Virginia Beach Sh boupacn fy eee ‘speaker Thy | Communists 12, socialists 0; Nor-|to break the struggle of the prole- topic will be “Women in the Class| folk, Communists 8, socialists 6. | tarian political prisoners in Warsaw Admbaion is aygryone {8 weleome.! Among the reasons why the Com-|who had gone on hunger strike for ‘ munist election returns are so slow better prison conditions, and in or- |in coming in may be quoted the fol- der to isolate them from the work- Bey jlowing excerpts from letters of var-|ing masses in Warsaw who have WARSAW (By Mail).—In order Labor Temple Lectures. 12 Monday, Nov. 8:30 p. m. Square Garden ; , or, G 4 which the police had repeatedly at-|inorder to avoid ‘serious financial | 15 p.m, at 101 W. 27th St is An navetaly pene ions sts | a Improvereut tack igh 2, lious boss-party officials who have \demonstrated recently in front of the tacked the young workers and chil-/ @ifficulties, All comrades, wns ere DNibae eu keeck aki tise. are ANS ad ee aenias Becker. |charge of reporting election re- prison on a number of occasions, Ydren belonging to the Young|{crsis and all in, charse, of Ueki) | Ameeting of walt. SY, subsection | e man and women worker, is) ‘Tuesday, Nov. 13: 3:20 p. m., “Rus-|tUrns: the authorities are transferring the Pioneers, confiscating and destroy-|tickets or money for same by spe-| 24 will b Ear at 6 p, m.|being planned by the Michelin strik- aL iBines the Revolution, F. Cal-| The secretary of state of Mon- political prisoners from Warsaw to ing their banners, the Communist |i! mosrenger, to the district otfice,| yee we muands, [ere for Monday morning. They are | vs dnesday, Nov. 14: 8:20 p. m.,(t@na:‘“'I am unable to give you the|the horrible prison of Vronke- which group marched en masse to the| Committee. gtk ae sols Br, 1 getion 8 pes Pago aie sipwareteata' oe iEhilosophy-—Abelard,”” Dr. G. F election returns for the Workers/has a terrible reputation. - ec i Workers Center. Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra. pean MLR AE educational meet- |the power and solidarity of the} Thursday, Nov, 15: 8:15 sas oe ary, nat $be cen]. Up os. theaireeen ee. a % * % z [ing Wednesday on the question of| | ep, y i 3 |vassing Board meets in my office| have been transferred to Vronke. 10,000 leaflets issued by the Work-| ont a call tor new members, All i BL col ine aleounsion. ae Tees eens i el meme ved, - by. the) tounge, Ghantearte™ eee Bas Ster by the police agents on the way. C ‘ Party d attack. | those who play banjo, mandolin ana ine take 15 4Watkine st Be “p ~|threats of the Michelin Co. Friday, Nov. 16: 8.80 f ame ry. y = s A ers (Communist) Party and sttack-| concertina ‘and wish’ to join the| gyarisrs, 15 «Watkins St. Brooklyn, Study ‘ot India,” Dr. Harendranath| A letter from the secretary of FASCISTS CELEBRAT ing imperialist war and presenting | orchestra should apply at the head-| 14 tonly to Workers P. be Mattra “ erst se P) S|) quarters, 106.1. 14th St, on any! po, only Interested workers as well Irish Republicans | Saturday, Nov. 17: 8:30 p, m,,|State of Florida says in part: “A| ROME, Nov. 11—Military parades the demands of the Workers Party | Thursday evening at & p.'m. ris, ‘p {Psychology,” Dr. Samuel Schmal* tabulation of the votes cast at the ind reviews were held throughout - * | hausen, : : were distributed among the workers Sates ites * a polgnin Memortel Meet. ae Resent Celebration ee . |general election showing the infor- Italy today in honor of King Victor on the Square. A membership meeting of the unit|held in Madison Square Garden Sat- Office Workers’ Union. |mation you desire will be forwarded Emanuel’s PUTTING THE ‘BELT’ INTO WINCHESTER By CHARLES MITCHELL, The “Belt System,” which is quite in vogue in many of the Ford plants, has already been introduced in one department of the Winchester Re- peating Arms Ammunition factory in New Haven, Connecticut. The Winchester is the biggest It covers 25 city blocks. In “normal” times it employs from 12,000 to 15,000 workers but has capacity for the employment of from 28,000 to 20,000 in time of war. The feverish preparation for the coming imperialist war and an at- tack on the Soviet Union on the part of the United States imperial- ists is undoubtedly one of the main causes for a more thorough ration- alization process in the production ef war material; hence the introduc- tion of the belt or “conveyor” sys- tem, which is the most deadly speed-up system of production in the world. In One Department. The belt system has made its ap- far, the battery department. This rooms and includes seven processen of production, The introduction of the belt in this department is an attempt to further raise the level of productivity and, if successful in that department, which will most certainly prove very profitable for the war mongers, it will be put into operation wherever else possible, By this, the Winchester bosses are preparing to meet the huge orders of shells and ammunition which will come with the declaration of the next war, which is not very far off. The open-shoppers of the entire state are watching very closely the results of the belt system in the Winchester. If it succeeds, which it undoubtedly will, an attempt will be made to install it by all other employers in the huge factories and shops in the entire state. You can rest assured that if this new sys- tem of speed-up shows the slightest superiority over the already most perfect slave-driving system of ra- tionalization, its general use will spring up like mushrooms every- where! How It Works. Tt is an enormous belt, two feet from the ground, flat, running through several rooms in a given processes of production from start to finish. The belt moves slowly on, The workers are lined up along- aide of it, each working on a smi part of the product, h passes by them on the moving belt. At the initial end of the belt only Product, ready for the shipping de- partment, The -belt in the Winchester will eventually be installed in every de- partment possible, At the present time, however, it covers only seven processes which include the loading up of shells and making them ready for use. It begins with the inspec-, tion of empty shells; next comes the placing of the capsuls; third, put- ting in the powder; fourth, putting on the seals; fifth, finishing seal- ing; sixth, labeling, and, seventh, packing. All of these seven processes have been linked up in one belt, with four or five grinding machines, which, facing the top endof the conveyor, must run so fast as to be able to supply every “carrier” with the necessary products to keep all the workers on the belt busy all the time. On the other hand, the belt must run fast enough to be able to absorb every empty shell turned out by these machines. No Time to Breathe. Under the “old” system of speed- up, which was bad enough, the workers were timed every minute of the day. When a worker, for in- stance, had to leave the job for a moment, to go to the toilet or get a drink of water, he or she had first to report to the “timer,” tell him where he or she was going and for how long, for which time they were “docked” in their pay. In order to force this exhausting speed-up system, and suck the maximum profit out of the work- | ers, the Winchester maintained a big number of pace-setters and stools, called “timers,” With the introduction of the conveyor, and its eventual spreading through the en. tire plant as an automatic “driver,” and its displacement of the many “drivers” and “watchers,” a great number of the snoopers and slave- drivers will lose their “jobs.” Workers Dread It. The belt system is well known to the workers in the Ford plants, as it is known to many other workers all over the country. They dread it more than a nightmare. It is the most vicious speed-up system ever introduced anywhere. It grinds the workers to death; it holds them to the job like chained chattel slaves. It leaves a murderous effect upon the bodies of the workers and squeezes the very life-blood out of them in the shortest time possible. The introduction of the* belt sys- tem in the shops of the Winchester plants will have two immediate ef- fects upon production: (1) It will simplify the process ef production more and more. It will do away with the skilled worker entirely, cheapening the cost of la- id |bor, replace the adult workers by) rene the en be women, Men "8 who used ee, ote Hinsdale St. . Section 5 W. I. R. Prbanivre: An important meeting g Section 5 W.LR. organizers will be Workers Cents 0 Wikins Ave., today at 7.30 p.'m. Skee ne Unit F3, Subsection 2C, Unit F3, Subsection 2C will meet today, 6.30 p. at 108 EB. 14th St./ It will be the monthly meeting, which was postponed on ac-| count of election eve. activities will be discussed. a tag Sag Branch 4, Section 5 Meet. Branch 4, Section 5 of the Workers (Communist) Party will meet at its new headquarters, 1330 Wilkins Ave., lthe Bronx, today at 8.30 p, m. women and young workers, to whom the company pays only 24 cents an hour for the same amount of pro-| duction, (2) It will tremendously increase production as a whole. It will de- one of the most processes ever known. Must Organize. Unless the workers begin to think | of organizing themselves into such | erganizations as will fight to im- prove their conditions of life and work, and follow the advice given them in the columns of the “Win- chester Worker,” issued monthly by the Workers nucleus, their lot will become daily will sink so deep into misery that it will be completely impossible to ex- ist, as it is getting near that point already. The Winchester workers must follow the policy of the Com- munists, expressed in the “Winches- ter Worker,” and fight for their rights. Eron School 185-187 BAST BROADWAY. i} NEW YORK | 2 JOSEPH E. ERON, Principal | THE LARGEST AND BEST AS WELL AS OLDEST SCHOOL. to learn the English language. to prepare oneself for admission to college BRON SCHOOL is registered by the REGENTS of the State of Now York. It has all the rights of 4 Government High School, Call, Phone or write for talogue. REGISTER NOW! Our 26,000 alumni are our best witnesses, TELEPHONE on CENTRAL BUSINESS SCHOOL —Bookkeeping _ —Stenography —Typewriting ividual Instruction CLASS LIMITED I industrial | | Future shop| | leader will | members of the unit must be pre: velop the division of labor to the nth | degree, at the same time becoming | time-saving | (Communist) Party harder, and their conditions of life | will be held today at § p. m., at 318|Urday evening, January 19. All Party and sympathetic organizations please take note, i You are requested not to arrange any (conflicting dates. | Memorial Meeting this year will eld at the Powerfst . 2 the fense of the Soviet Union. District Executive Committee, | A discussion on the lems and our Party” | tie ent. ers. vited “American wi Serve as a basis for the discussion, of British Victory | DUBLIN, Tepid, Nov. 11—The} fe"! Trish who like demonstrations annoy- demonstration against|ing to the Free State government imperialist war and truckling to the British, stirred up| | some attenticn here today when four! | bombs exploded at dawn at the bases | Nesro Problems Discussion, |0f e Satwes of King William III “Negro Prob-|and King George II. 6:80 p. m,, at 268 Atlant, While little damage resulted, it) Brooklyn. ‘The discussion Was widely believed that those who be Otto Huiswood. All want real Irish independence placed the bombs as a protest against the celebrations of Armistice Day be- 411, cause such celebrations inferred a | kinship with England. The for the de-| New York District. | nesday, Ave., Party members and sympathi: interested in Negro work are | to attend. “John Peppe Negro Problems" pte werewwwevewrrewrrrrewevevewwveveewve% EE Scott Nearing will lecture on DOLLAR DIPLOMACY AND THE ROLE OF AMERICAN § IMPERIALISM THURSDAY EVE., NOVEMBER 22 at IRVING PLAZA, 15th St. & Irving Pl. First Soviet Cceiscie : BALL Saturday Eve. Dec. 15th AT MADISON SQUARE rnp GARDEN it iat AUSPICES: Daily Worker G86 66 6 8 6 Gs @ Freiheit © 59th birthday. wrytesular meeting of the Oftice| \to you after the election returns are = Workers’ Union will take place to- ‘anvas: ye [night at 8 o'clock at the labor |© F aon ely Nisa Pe Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave. On|, From Colorado - it will » “For An ni t Pt | the order of business is a discussion impossible to give you a complet eA on workers are invited. “Unemplyoment.” All office |tabulation of the votes cast at the i Sea general election for presidential ARL BRODSK We demand the immediate about- |lectors for the Worl Meat: tlom of all vagrancy laws; protec- |nist) Party until afte: Sy Bd Pelepbone Murray Hill S550 tion of unemployed workers from arrest on charges of vagrancy, | 7 East 42nd St., New York [DRT MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone, Algonquin 183 Not connected with any other office (CO-OPERATIVE Dental Clinic 2700 Bronx Park East Apt CL TEL. ESTABROOK 056% DR. I. STAMLER Surgeon-Dentist DIRECTOR OPEN: Mon., Tu: Wed., Thurs, from 10 to 8 P.M. Saturday and Sunday from 10 to 7 P. M. COMRADES EAT SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave. & 108th Sta, PYCCKHA SYBHOM BPAY Or. JOSEPH B. WEXLER Surgeon Dentist 26 yrs. in practice. Moderate prices. 223 SECOND AV. NEW YORK Temple Courts Bidg. = Or. ABRAHAM MARKOFE Between 107th For Good Wholesome EAT AT RATNER’S, Datry and Vegetarian Restavvant 103 SECOND AVE, Poud Workers Cooperative SURGEON Tist t "7 < Office Hours: Tues, Thurs & Sat Hi RRMA TS oe Clothiers, Inc. $0N s mae te Self-Service Cafeteria“ Sunday, 10:00 « m 15 8 ‘OND AVE. Near 7th St. BAKING DONE ON PREMISES Visit Our Place While on 2nd Ave, Vel: Dry Dock 1263; Urekurd (480 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant SECOND AVE, 12th and 13th Sts. Vegetarian Food, AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS |} Baker's Local 104 Meets IstSeturday in the month at 3468 ‘Third ave aw Bet iractly SUITS MADE TO ORDER READY MADE SUITS. Quality—Full Value 572 BROADWAY, N.Y Cor 18th St—Tel Algonquin 2223 { Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where al) radicals meet, 302 E. 12th ST. NEW YORK Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 13% W. Sint St. J47°BUSINESS MEETING] ]) MONDAY, NOV. 12, at 3 p.m One Indusxtry—One Union—Join and t the Common MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS 2440 rons Park East Near Co-cperative Colony. apt, 6H Telephone EASTARROOK 1469 opectal rates to students from the Co-operative House. All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGLIAKIAN HEALTH RaslAUKANT 658 Claremont P’kway Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to Phe DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City MEET YOUR FRI NDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian | and Dairy Res a i763 Southers Biyd., Bru: Hight Off IMth St Sub: LOOPEKATORS PATRONIZE J. SHERMAN Your Nearest Tailor Faacy Cleaners and Dyers 465 ALLERTON AVE. BRUNX ne aE SD ) COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE | E. KARO Nenrext Stattonery Store | Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy | 649 ALLORTON AVE,, Cor. Barker, BRONX, N, Y, Tel, OLinville 9681-2 — v7ya-z2 itera Werkers Patronise "L SCOLNICK Pelham TAILOR | Fancy Cleaner and Dyers 907 Allertom Ave., Bromz, N. 1%. at the NEW WAY C. 101 WEST 27th STRE: NEW YORK eT WE ALL ee i Patronize No. Tip Barber Shops’ 26-28 UNION poten. flight up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Individual sanitary service by Ewperts—Ladtes Hatr Bobbing Specialists, Unity Co-operators Pat! SAM LESSER Beeith Sa Vegetarian Resta’ Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Next to Unity Co-operative ee $e