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VHE DAILY WOR. KER, NEW YORK, TU ESD. Y, NOVEMBER 27, 1928 fF EW SHUT-DOWN THREATENED BY HANOVER BOSSES _ ae» Term Agreement (Wireless to the Daily Worker) BERLIN, Nov. 26,--Tke Duis- burg ar the appeal of Union against the revious invalida- granting the unions a slight wage increase. The employers are now ap- pealing to the National Arbitration Court. i The iocked-out metal workers are } continuing their struggle for wage increases and the eight-hour day. Large demonstrations have taken place in many towns under the lead- nership of Communist Committees of } Action, y have already given notice to the workers that they will end the pres- i 1 cnt wage agreement by December t é They demand a_ long-term ) veement, iene low wages. > EEE AE | ADMIT SOME BIG j SLUSH FUND SUM. + Albany Record Shows | Socialists Splurged . Continued from Page One ceipts of $5,028,706.02, according to the statement of James W. Gerard, tee, filed with the secretary of state today. The receipts include three of $500,000 each from the County ; Trust Company of New York, which are as yet unpaid. John J. Raskob, chairman of the} National Committee, until recently | head of General Motors, was the! largest individual contributor with $110,000. Closely following him were William F. Kenny, close per- sonal Herbert H. Lehman, lieutenant-governor elect of New) York, with $100,000 each. The late Thomas F. Kyan, who gave his home as Waynesboro, Va., con- tributed $60,000. In the $50,000 class were Pierre S. Du Pont of Delaware, who bolted the republican ticket to support Smith; M. J. Meehan, Harry Payne Whitney and Charles W. Clark of New York. William H. Todd, millionaire ship- builder, and also a friend of the) governor, gave $35,000, while Ber- nard M. Baruch, contributed $33,- 000: William H. Woodin, tanother re- publican bolter, donated $25,000, as| did Nicholas M. Schenck, B. E./ Smith, Arthur Curtis James, Oliver Cabana, Jr., George MacDonald, Samuel Untermeyer, George W. Loft, Edith A, Lehman, Peter G.| Gerry, defeated for U. S. senator from Rhode Island, Francis P. Gar- ven, Nicholas F. Brady and John D. Ryan. Mrs. James C. Farrell contribut- | ed $20,000 while Robert S. Clarke, | Fdward -S. Harkness and Henry} Morgenthau each contributed $15,- | 000. Freeman to Give Class on American Literature at the Workers School Joseph Freeman, noted Com- munist writer and lecturer on litera- ture, will give a course in “Social | p Aspects of American Literature” at’ the Workers School, 26-28 Union p. m. This course, which will have | six sessions, wil be a continuation of the course given by Joseph Free- man last year in which the import- ant tendencies in recent American Literattwe were related to their economic and social backgrounds. The course this term, however, tho a continuation of last year’s can be; taken by all vorkers and students that did not attend the other course. The new course will attempt to poems. Attention will be focused upon current literature and empha- sis will be not so much on the books Among the authors that will be di cussed. are: Ernest Hemingway, Glenway Westcott, Countee Cullen, Michae! Gold, John Dos Passos and others. Quakes Cause Panics » in Bulgarian Towns SOFTA, Bulgaria, Nov. 26 (UP). .--The population of Shirpan was thrown into panie today by severe earthquake shocks. Quakes also were reported from other towns in northeastern and southern Bulgaria. Shirpan suffered heavily from earthquakes inwApril. \ MORE WAR DOCUMENTS. BERLIN, Nov. 26.—Bavaria has decided to publish next month a number of secret, documents, includ- ing Crown Prince Rupprecht’s war diavies. It is believed the diaries and aichives will reveal many im- portant clues to events of the World War. Workers to Fight Long’ tion court today granted | the Metal Workers | tion of the labor minister's decision |. ne Hannover metal industrialisis | treasurer of the Nattonal Commit- | loans | friend of Gov, Smith, and/ democratic | Sq.. beginning this Friday, at 8:30) trace the social roots of the newer; literature and the new novels andj Photy shows Margaret Moore, ward is usually “the gate.” 133 N. Portland Ave., Their who is recovering from injuries received when two trolley cars collided at DeKalb and Flatbush Aves., Brooklyn. Now she will probably be able to collect damages, something which traction workers are unable to do when hurt in similar accidents. nM FONSECA BAY | |German PapersRidicule “Good Will” Talk Continued from. Page One from American imperialism, | will receive most attention from Mr. tries Hoover, Where the guns have not {been used yet, diplomacy is 1 |ghired, say Mr. Hoover's advisors. | ae Germans See Imperialism. BERLIN, Nov. 26—The German capitalist papers laugh at the “peace nd good will” camouflage thrown jover the tour of inspection which el Leniu Memortai Meet. |. A Lenin Memorial Meeting will be held in Madison are Carden Sat- urday evening, January 19. and sympathetic organizations please | take note. | You are requested not to arrange Lenin All Party | Workers | Party Activities THOMAS WOULD (ro and Fraternal Organizations nish Workers Dance. The Spanish Fraction of the Work- DISSOLVE S. any ccontlicting dates. ‘The ‘Dy, : , morlal Meeting this year will be|ers (Communist) Party will hold its of. ‘Py ogressives | remenerfel’ demonstration against | first dance Saturday evening, Dec. 22, ‘ihe imperialist war and for the de- fense of the Soviet Union. | Dingetet, Executive Committers, New) ‘k District. at Harlem Casino. . 116th St. ana | Lenox Ave. Proceeds will go for the organization of Spanish workers and the support of their organ “Vida Obrera.” “As this will be a real in- |Would Form “mi New Party | At the bi-weekly luncheon Satur- day of the League for Industrial Democracy, the reverend Norman |President-elect Hoover is making through American colonies and |Epepective colonies in Latin Amer- The Deutsche Allgemeine Zietung says: “The relations of the United States to most Latin-American coun- tries were and are not of the best. The North American diplomats suc- ceeded preventing the Latin- American States from building a colid, unified front ¥gainst Wash- gton and revived the binding power of the Monroe Doctrine. But Unit 3E, 1F Meeting. fernational affair, please, dot met| Thomas, recently the candidate of the latest antagonism between the An important meeting will be held) Gates) “n° : lthe socialist party for president of torth and the south was not settled. pes EH EA aaa aletacdhaa 8 Seep ee Seat (the United States, spoke for the dis- “That Mr. Hoover wishes to ap- SS | A free course in Spanish will be |S0lution of the’ socialist party,|pear as the representative, in a ‘x atin ference. i: unit, /iven to all English speaking com- | Proved what Communists have long sense well known, of the power of ubsection and. section functionaries Tades who wish to learn the-langu- known, that the socialist party was cxpansion of the United States, is ot Section, 2 of the Workers (Com. | ii avers Club, 53 West 113th st, and is no more a party of the work-| shown by the fact that he is mak Pe be oday f , 55 St, : ces : ee et) Party WW. sith st, Voryjevery Thursday at 8:30 p. m ing class than the republican ang jing the trip on the warship Mary- |important matters will be discussed . t * democratic parties, and urged the Jand, Mr. Hoover is traveling not jan functionaries must be present « Epa are ase ef “liberals and progressives” in those | only as 2 business man but also as | subsection 3E. the International fete Defense will! parties to “get together with the the representative of a powerful cial meeti a wvceum, 6 Street. Nor- | 5¢ ; eee y ¢ [101 W. 27th St. “All comrades must| man H. Tallentire will be the chief tion to the republican party,” which | countries are not able to compete. eee sac Bienes ar reas ya, |e Pectin a creWe MBatS) DAY: “It is reported that his trip is to Lower Bronx Y. W. I ‘ . ¢ “We must start the work of or-|cerye as a means of studying the The Lower Bronx Y, W. 1 hold Knitgoods Ball. ariidation Mowe = Walcanacreanedt Sears z | social at 715 B. 138th St, on Satur-| ‘The first annual ball of the Knit- i TRBsceariotenanth ta tite Leak prospects for a second Panama Canal day, Dec. 1. The one-act play, “Oc-|g00ds Workers will be held on|the labor mc through Nicaragua. However, it is |tobér” will® feature. Thanksgiving Bve., Nov, 28, at Web-| lead, considering the present leader- not to be expected that that fact Nich witeuuee *tthe Newlycorganized. Knitgoods| Ship it has,” Thomas added that| wii) lead to the withdrawal cf the |_ The City Central Committee of | Welfare and Culture Club has ar-|he would soon have a more specific |)arines from Nicaragua, where they Elizabeth, N. J., is organizing a Mas-|ranged this affair for the purpose | program on which his “progres- | querade, Ball and Bazaar for Satur- day evening, Dec. Ist, All units and work organizations of cities are requested not to arrange Party Units Attention! The Spanish Fraction will hold its first ball on Saturday evening, Dec. |22, at Harlem Carino, 116th St. and| |Lénox Ave. Proceeds will go for the organization of Spanish speaking workers and for the support of the lorgan ot the Spanish Bureau “Vida | Obrera.” Please, keep this date open and give this affair your greatest support. i Pioneers T |_ All Pioneer to the | party on That houtving Day, Thurs- |day, Nov. at the Workers Cen- ter ‘at 2 p. ae wiitala’ rola te be a working class childrens’ Thanksgiv- ing Party. Bring all your school | friends. . F Upper Bronx Unit 2, Y. W. L. | qth Upper Bronx Unit 2 of the Y. KoA Hs me dance on Saturday, Dee. 1, 8:30, at their new headquarters, 1330 Wilkins Ave. Bronx, Many surpris- ing novelties are in store for those has never before beei, shown in New York City. Jonly 25 cents. |your friends, The admission will be Come and bring all | Unit 35, 2F Meeting. | adhe unit will hold an. ‘Important meeting tomorrow at 6:15 p. m. at 101 W, 27th St. All members must | jattend. Unit 5F, Subsection 3D. The unit will have an educational meeting tomorrow, 6 p. m., at 101 W. 37th St. Rebecca Grecht will lead a discussion on the results of |the recent election campaign. \ GF, Section 1. | 6F, Section 1, will hold an impor. tant’ special meeting today at p. m. at 60 St. Marks Place, to dis- cuss the C. E. C. statement og/Trot- skyism. 7F St. ; A meeting to discuss the statement of the C. B. C. against Trotskyism in * our Party will be discussed in Unit |7F SL today at 6:30 p. m. at 60 St. Marks Place. | Night Workers To Di ‘Trotskyism. A special meeting of the Night | Werkers Branch to discuss the ques- tion of Trotskyism will take plac | tomorrow at 2:30 p. m, at the Work- ers Center, 26 Union Square, top floor. Members absent from this meeting will be reported te the dis- cipling committee. | Women's Tebacseie Notice. ‘The Women's Department of the Workers (Communist) Party is or- ganizing a speakers’ bureau, Women| speakers get in touch with Comrade Ragozin at 26 Union Square. Com fade Ragozin will be in Party Of fice ‘Pnesday, Wednesday, Friday from 6:30 to 8; Saturday from 10 a m. to 2? p,m. District Women's Committee, Meeting of District Women's Com- mittee, Section Women Work ¢ Banizers, and traction women se taries’ meeting will be held on Sat. urday, Dec at 26 Union Square. Sei ction 1 ‘Attention, The monthiy organization confer-| ence will be held ‘Yhursday at 6:30 p.m, at 60 § t Marks Place. All wu M3 a organizers must International Branch 1. An tniportant business meeting of | the Iternationa! Branch 1, Section i, will be held tomorrow et 7:30 p. jms at 60 St. Marks: Place, ' ¥.W.L. wh eateiny Festival, A Thanksgiving Festival will given by the Harlem unit of the | Young Workers (Communist) bi at 143 BK. 103rd_ St., tomorrows erat ning, & Dance music will be p.m, furnished by the Harlem League Or- chestra, All League members are invited to come. * . Section 5 Notice. to attend without fail their respec- tive unit meetings during the week of Nov, 26 as a _regolution accepted by the Section Bxecutive Comm. fete on measures to suceassfully combat and er e¢ Trotskyism within the Party ran will be distributed and voted upon. S. S. Executive 30, A meeting of the subsection executive will be held tomorrow night at 6:30 at 101 W. 27th St. All (must attend, nearby | eny conflicting affairs for that day. | will hold a housewarming | at! | who attend, including a novelty that | All members of Section 5 are urged | of fostering closer contacts and re- lations between the knitgoods work-| Sives” The Icor Society for Jewish Coloni- zation in the Soviet Union will hold its fourth annual bazaar on Novem- ber 30th, December 1st and 2nd, at the big armory, 68 Lexington Ave., | New York City. Prizes to ticket buy- ers will be two trips to Soviet Rus- sia. A big entertainment and a big time is promised to all. eiiee . German Proletarian Theatre. resentative Chandler, also spoke. “Tf America rejected the mild a republi “what chance is there for \ ism.” and sécialists could unite. ers, each All workers are invited to attena|, The lecture was given under | this gala affair. title of “What Next; a Political * S Symposium,” and Dr. Henry Mos- kowitz, a democrat, and former rep- eralism of Smith,” Moskowitz added, social- | Chandler declared that the recent ‘The German Proletarian Theatre is €lection showed that the country are the cause of so much scandal in |Latin America.” the The purpose of Hoover's trip, ac- cording to the Vossiche Zeitung, is the “consolidation of the Monroe |Dectrine to the ultimate degree, for new investments of North American capital and for closer economic hege- mony between the United States and the south.” “There are two observers of the president-elect’: journey and they are following with anguish the prog- ress of the Stars and Stripes on the ican, lib- praanens a Rayglutionary aN ey no need of either democrats ot Maryland, namely, England and on Saturday night, Dec. Ist, at 8 ” “ Mary ae, 8 ve o'clock, at the Labor Temple, '243 4 | Socialists” and said that the “pro- spain, To pnt the matter bluntly, | 84th St. A cast of more than one|gressives’” chance lay in “occasion- |hundred people from the various | al change of leadership of the [Workers organizations is partlcipat-| \oiican party. \ ing. All class-conscious workers jshould, aivenn., megane ‘Workers School of New Haven Opens on December 11 NEW HAVEN, Conn., e # Labor Temple Lectures. Wednesday, Nov. 6:15 p. m., “The Dance: As a Medium of Cre- ative Expression.” »Miss Daisy Blau. ere Class War Prisoners Concert. Concert and dance for the benefit of class war prisoners, Sat., Dec. 8th | 8 p. m., at Bronx Workers Centre, |The New Hav 1330 Wilkens Ave. (near Freeman | ayen Workers School St. subway station}. Admission 35¢, been organized.as a branch of Auspices: Sacco-Vanzetti Branch I. Workers School of New York, ‘national Communist educational cen- Nov. 26.— |there will be a struggle in the near re- | future between the pound and the dollar for supremacy in Latin-Amer- | ican economics.” Swedish Misleaders of Labor and Bosses Will Get Together STOCKHOLM, (By Mail).—The Swedish conservative government has called an “industrial parlia- ment,” to be composed of representa- th has. the the ter, It will immediately establish |tiyes of the bosses’ associations, and three sub-branches—in Hartford, the right wing labor misleaders. The | |Rendand and Bridgeport. he courses to be given at munism,” with George Siskind as AID FASCISTS: § Gain Control of Meet structor; “Organization Principles,” with Charles Mitchell as instructor; “Youth Problems and the Children’s |New Haven school will begin on Dee. 1. and include “Elements of Com- purpose of the parliament, as stated by both bosses and labor misleaders, is to “reach a common ground so as to avoid future strikes and boy- cotts.” The proposal follows the ad- |mission by the conservative govern- ment that its compulsory arbitration law failed to work because of re- sistence by the yore: PORTLAND, Ore- Most stores the in- by Force Movement,” with Don Grey; and y Ez, two Engtish courses, with Emma (Red Aid Press Service) Schlossberg. i Plans are also being made to SOFIA, Bulgaria, (By Mail).— | The organization of war victims, in-| ‘valids and cripples, is a large mass organization in Bulgaria, having a| | few hundred thousand members. The fascists have tried for a long time! bitious yet attempted i Connecti jand will result in raising to gain control of this organization, | |but until recently without any suc. | ‘Geological level of the members ‘cess. | sympathizers greatly. | During the last meeting, they suc- | ‘ceeded in carrying thru a forceful the party of the class straggle. ‘seizure with the help of the police. | where there are Party units. ‘establish a circuit school which will take in all the towns in the state This educational program is the most am- here have been compelled by union retail clerks to recognize the union. “For ([ARL BRODSKY Any Kind of Insurance” cut, the and | ‘Telephone Murray Hill The Workers (Communtat) Party Is \7 East 42nd Street, New York |During the Jast mass arrests the |general secretary of the organiza-/ ‘tion, Lalju Schirkoff, had already een arrested. On the eve of the congress of this organization the} whole centrai committee, with Ilja} |Seboff at its head, was arrested. Spied the congress the elected bur- | eau was forced out by the police and | a fascist bureau put in its place. The | new bureau began its activity with] telegrams of greeting to the king,| Liaptscheff and Zankoff. | What was not possible until now | in a legal way, has been made pos sible with the help of police and ie) ‘terror. Protest Expulsion, ~ | BELFAST, Ireland, Nov. 26 (UP) | |—Seven nationalists left the Ulster | « |parliament today in protest against | \the suspension of seven members of | the opposition on Nov. 22, A spokesman for the dissident | nationalists said they would not re- turn until the suspended members | were reinstated. JINGO FLYER LANDS. MEMPHIS, Tenn., Nov. 26 (UP). | —Col. Charles A. Lindbergh landed here at: 3:40 p. m., today from Kelly | Field, Texas, enroute to New York. | Lindbergh said he expected to leave | early tomorrow. | i} | Organize the unorganized! Ore genize new an in the anorga hued industries! Daily Worker Agents Attention ! There will be a meeting of Unit, Sub- Section, Section Daily Worker Agents on Tuesday, November 27, at 6:30 p. m. at 26-28 Union Sq. (Workers Center) All Agents must come without fail! DETROIT, Nov. real understanding of motor 6, (FP). plants is possible until one is familiar with the pace the assembly lines which bring to- gether the different parts of the employed car. The Hudson goes through in #re ; ee about an hour and a half, the belt °ds of speeding up. They tell tt moving about 18 feet a minute, worker that by working hard ar which is 10 feet a minute faster St, on a piece recites than it moved 10 years ago. The tendency is to run the just as fast as the human machines beside it can be made to keep up with it and complete, their opera- tions. And young workers are bet- ter able to stand the pace. It has been estimated by a Chrysler em- ployment manager that not more than two per cent of the men on this production work are over 30 to 35 years of age. The machine sets does the driving. No man can aha lazy even if he wants to be. Work- ers in certain Dodge departments complaint that the line moves fast they can’t leave it for a ake even to get a drink of water. so a worker does interrupt the as He rr oic in any way he is committing the cardinal sin in the world of mass production—“holding up the line.’ That’s when a foreman needed to supplement the may mo’ apparatus and to give the worker a warning, a scolding or a “bawling out” telling him how many men there are outside who would like {his job. Straw posses, the workers call |these inspectors and work leaders. Against them, and the foremen, the workers grumble often and vigor- ist upon shouting “Speed ’em up,” “Rush along ther “Better keep busy, the big boss’s liable to be along any minute,” or “You're hold- ing up production, get a move on” hese and a hundred other varia- tions of the incessant speed-up theme. And sometimes, as workers in the Briggs plant have testified, there may even be a physical Kick | Ree to accompany the verbal lashing. One careful student of the Ford plant shows that “in 1919 in the motor assembly room on certain moved by a given point at the rate of 40 an hour; by 1925 they were moving at the rate of 60 an hour. On other lines in 1919 the rate of speed was 120 an hour; in 1925 it had been increased to 180 an hour.” As a result of this speeding the out 31,200 cars a week with the‘ same machinery with manufactured only 25,000 cars week in 1920. Since the report was made the speed has been still fur- ther increased both at Ford’s and | at all other plants. But increased production does not usually result in an increase even of nominal wages. Workers on the motor block line in a Hudson-Essex department were reported recently No have street clean up good w ine 80": ine ne | worker u runners time employme (Note.—Rober author of Labor soon to be publ ional Publishers mw ne BOSTON SHIFR BOSTON, aE 26.—Scenic Audi torium has been hired by the Shifrin Defense Committee for a large mass meeting called as a demon- stration against the frame-up of the left winger Shifrin} on a charge of murder. ing will be held Tues Progressive and left wing ers in this city are organiz € ithout a in wages. seen other men put out on the because they couldn’t ma rid a regime said { 1 expe in increase in so r The well I t special mote “pal meth a ganize e that np and the of RIN qiby he e ad an usy sea RALLY TONIGHT Militant Speak at Meet Will attempted ) world by a powerful movement which not only will ously, especially when the bosses in-| tense of the victim, who fi prison sentence, a protest F raise funds for the le ci a li but are de of movement proportions, fe eloping impressive Locked Out German Metal Workers Continue F ight for Wage Increase, 8-Hour Day HOOVER SIGHTS HUMAN MACHINES 7S RACE LABOR DEFENSE ono STRUGGLES Yat’l Mine Union Aids Free Speech Fight CLEVELAND, 0., 26. — The Miners which has ated out of the bitter strug» gles of the miners of America, could nor could the ranks of the miners have been together solidly as they had it not been for the actiy- Nov. Nationai Union, een cre ‘never have been formed, held we as jes of the International Labor De- fense in the coal fields during the r eX 1 months, when the shield of the working class was for ever nm th b, defending persecuted ; helping them to or- Miners Local Helps I. L. D. No. 1, ational Min- ers Pov Point, Ohio, has recognized eat aid of the International r Defense in the miners struggle sending in a cont butic n of 00 toward the pr free speech in Eastern Ohio. Powhattan Point has hown its solidarity with the work- ers of the country and of the entire working for and support- work of the international de- the working class, the I. ing the ‘ = ENSLAVES. GROUP INSURAD MILWAUKEE Workers of the American Household Furniture Co. were further enslaved when the com- pany forced them to accept the group insurance plan. WILL BURY D Prominent speakers, both local D JINGO. and from New York, will address) \pwpoRT, R. 1, Nov. 26 (UP) the demonstration. Shifrin will p.\ bat ane Hed nak at the meeting, ‘The other| Funeral services will be held hens cl apeatien' = oe 4 tomorrow for Rear Admiral Joseph New York speakers will be Irving| 10° Jayne, U. SN. Retired, who degree defended conveyor lines the unfinished motors | tyion against six thugs sent by cialist officialdom of the wing Dust explosions in the U. § 500 Ford plants were in 1925 turning jivcc, hifrin Defense C Shifrin aw murder charge because himself attack him ommittee. to for his the le activities. TON, (By WASHING M il). toll of 900 wor took a Over ured in these accidents, Ghich othey: otlad |e eam nets tenis Ae eS ABRAHAM MARKOE SURGEON DENTIST Office Hour! es. Thurs. & Sat 9:30-12 a, m., 2-8 p.m. 10:00 a. m. to 1:00 p SE TELEPHONE FOR APPOINTMENT Vibth § Dr. m. RERT New Vork Lenigh 602 2s ve Telephone to be turnin gout 800 pieces for the | p+----+-++-++-------------- {DR. J. MINDEL/ | same wages they received when do- ing 500 to 600 piece: A student who worked a summer in a Detroit plant writes, “I have seen men who made more than the required 340 pieces per hour have their schedule per pieces increased to 400 hour Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops’ 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Individual sanitary service by Lxperts—Ladies Harr Bobbing Specialists. MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS Moved to 2440 Bronx Park as Near Co-operative Colony. apt. Telephone BASTABROOK S483, Speetal rates to students from the Co-operative House. Eron School 185-187 ADWAY JOSE} PH Bs ERON, Principal AND BEST AS P SCHOOL, to learn the E to prepare ad: RE Our 25,000 alumni are our best witnesses, PELEPHONE ORCHARD 4473, CENTRAL BUSINESS SCHOOL} —Bookkeeping —Stenography —Typewriting Individual Instruction CLASS LIMITED 108 E. 14th STREET ff ARBEITER BUND, & ==| ALLERTON es | SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone, Butcher: s trial on a second he single-handed ft so- last workers’ were in- ' Algonquin 81834 je connected with any other office enna & Bronx; German Me Nd Club. Manhattan IRS second and fourth Tuesday of the month, at Rand Sch o1ds ‘and A. Rosenfeld, Secretary, Meets every 4th T month. at I Sith St. Nev at regular meet English library lectures Social entertainments, AN Ger- man speaking workers are wel- come. cS TRON, ) Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers AX W. SIxt St. Phone Cire! *°BUSINESS MEETINGS held on the first Monday of the month at 3 p. One tndustry—| and F Office O Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City eet! | c Neopia TORS J. SHERMAN Your Nearest Tailor PATRONIZE Fancy Cleaners and Dyers AVE. BRONX Unity © onity Co-operstors. Patroniae operators Patronine SAM LESSER Ladies’ and ae Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave New York Between 110th and 111th Sta, Next to Unity Co-operative House 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. 66th Eat on Sunday and Monday Health Food Restaurant 1600 Madison Avenue | twenty-five of the two days “FRELHEIT" per ce: for those to the Phone, ALGonquin 0682. —G, ALTIERE CHEZ NOUS (OUR HOME) 154 SECOND AVENUE (Between 9th and 10th Streets) on Second Floor Excellent Italian Cuisine MODERATH PRIC Eat in a comradely environment, where you will always meet your comrades and friends. Special parties and suppers can be arranged for. Special Dishes Prepared, Wholesome Foud ae RATNER’S Dairy and Vegetarian Restaurant 103 SECOND AVE. i. L, HARMATZ, Prop. Self-Service Cafeteria 115 SECOND AVE, Near 7th St, BAKING DONE ON PREMISES Visit Our Place While on 2nd Ave, fel. Ury Dock 1203; Orehard v43@ Food MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messiager’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Bivd., Bronx, N. ¥, Right Off 174th St. Subway Station WE ALL MEET NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 14 SECOND AVE, Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Sirwtlv Vegetarian food. All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 658 Claremont P’kway Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES Ao with atmosphe: where all radicals meet, 802 E. 12th ST. , NEW YORK Y