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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURD. AY, FEBRUARY 2 28, 1929 DITOR ADMITS Fraternal Organizations SILK WORKERS | BANK PRESIDENT LOANED BIG SUM : Xing Honored Ferarri, Good to Blackshirts Big loans to fascist newspapers in | ‘ew York, to enable them to carry n Mussolini's work here whether hey have legitimate sources. of in- me or not, helped to wreck the ity Trust Company, which has veen closed by the state banking | ommission with deficits of about 8,000,000. Many Italian workers iad placed their wages in this bank, nore or less under compulsion from heir employers. Italo Falbo, editor of the I! Pro- :resso Italo-Americano, the largest f the pro-fascist papers here in the talian language, admitted yester- ay that his friend, Frank M. Fer- ari, recently deceased president of he bank, lent him $12,000 without | gf ther security than his deposit of art of the amount in the bank. Ferrari Decorated. Other fascist papers got like ums, and so did friends of Ferrari vho re not in the newspaper busi- Ferrari ated by the King of Italy—on Mus- olini’s orders. Frederick Powell, chairman of a ommittee of depositors who have tbout $1,000,000 sunk in the now lefunct bank, has written to the state banking commission, asking hem what right they have to say hat the depositors will get 80 cents | vn the dollar or more, if when the lirectors of the bank are allowed to lispose of their stock at $5 a share x less, in order to avoid the assess- aent that is coming. Powell also practically accused he city chamberlain of New York f having inside information about he bad condition of the bank, when | 1e withdrew the city deposit there, | ust before its crash. The depositors breaten to bring the case before | he grand inry. CHESWIGK TRIAL PUT OFF AGAIN Argument on Charges Next Thursday PITTSBURGH, Pa. Feb. 22.—/ The Cheswick .cases, the trial of ten ~iners arrested when a troop of Pennsylvania state police ran wild ind rode down, bombed, shot and ubbed a Sacco-Vanzetti meeting to | 00: tponed again. But the prosecu- is actively carrying out the or- lers of the coal companies of this} tate, and every effort will yet be nade to frame up and imprison the jefendants. The last trial date set was Feb. 25, Attorney Henry Ellenbogen, | representing the International La-| or Defense, on Feb. 19 moved to uash the indictment charging that| miners were rioting and con- jot, unlawfully assem- ting an officer, ete. indictment had been} because during the riding The raurder, jown of the workers end miscellane- ous shooting by the state troopers, | soper was shot and killed, by persons unknown, The murder indictment was drop-| ped some'time ago, and the argu- ment on the rioting indictment and yther charges will come up in court Thursday, Feb. 28. The International Labor Defense has notified the defendants and wit-| nesses that they should not appear in court until further notice from ithe I. L. D. It also calls on all) workers who saw the brutal assault by the state police on the miners at Cheswick, Aug. 22, 1927, to get in touch at once with the local office ot the I. L. D., thru Attorney Henry Ellenbogen, Room 609, Plaza Build- ing, Pittsburgh. The miners under indictment are: Dominick Mangini, Dominick Lore- fice, Joe Bracco, Mike Maratovich, Tony De Bernardini, Joe Lorrie, Frank Maskalunas, Raymond Siena and Peter Moretti. Bernardini has not yet recovered from the effects of the clubbing he received and is at present in a hos- pital. Many of the victims of the police charge, some of them women ond children of miners’ families, are crippled for life from the infunies they received. WGN IN- CR! LONDON, (By Mail).—The In- dustrial Court has decided that the demand for an increase in wages of 4 shillings a week, made by the dockyard machinists, should not be | granted. The present wage is 44 shillings a week, Strike sentiment is growing. TROYES WORKERS STRIKE. TROYES, France, (By Mail).— Textile workers in this center al- nost unanimously took part in a 24-hour demonstration strike in fa- vor of a wage increase. Chrixt Ae herd it ee iter wi vaten,the owen et ar the arine erat Ki x (Communist Man: tore BX himself has been deco-| International Labor Defense Bazaar. The annual bazaar of the Interna-|8!ven_ tonight, tional Labor Defens trict, will take plac 10 in New Star and Park Ave. M New York dis-| March 6, 7, 8, | ‘asino, 107th t. | tribute articles, fice, 799 Broadway, Room 422, and help us with the preparatory work. | Metro Workers Soccer League. The Metropolitan Workers League will hold a ball tonight|the work of Bee forsin. at the Laurel Garden, E. 116th |St, basement, Frate: organiza- Jewish Workers ( Repudiate Betrayers tions are asked not to arrange any conflicting dates. - . Fretheit Singing Soctety. The Bronx section, |ing Society will hold a concert and ball Saturday, March 9, |den, 1847 Boston Road. | ranged for Friday evening, March 22, at Imperial Auditorium, 160 W. 129th ee Lat Millinery Thentre Party. ‘The Millinery Workers Union, 43,| 4 184 | bas. ‘arranged theatre party” for |’, Boh udey eae emer ae Italian workers to go back to| | Mare raternal organizations | Young Workers Social Culture Clu 2 ial Jare asked’ not to arrange conflicting lyn jWork in the Morris Broad Silk Com- | |dates for that evening, The toners annual dance of the pany at a very low price. The re: ore Young Workers Social Culture Club/ sult of this was complete demoral- y|will be given Saturday evenin 2. see ee ya at | March 23, at the Hebrew. Ladies Day |ization of the workers, The Progressive Group, {I L. G W., will have a bo |. L. D. Bazaar. |pathizers are urged to collect arti- jcles, Send to Ida Katz, Bazaar Com- | mittee, Unity Cooperative, 1800 7th jAve., City. * le 8 Workers Laboratory Theatre. The Workers Laboratory Theatre will produce its one act play, “March- ing Guns,” an episode of the miners’ struggle, without charge Party unit, trade union or fraternal organization at any affair they ar- range. Write Sylvan Pollack, 1409 Ave. J., Brooklyn. a ie Needle Trades Workers Dance. Left wing needle trades workers [will attend a concert and ball given jby the T. U. B. |%, Workers Center, Mareh 2. band. Jazz + *# Council 5 Concert, A concert will Washington Ave., Yugoslav Workers Club. The Yugoslav Workers Ei and Dramatic Club concert, play the Bohemian |78rd. St. |p. m. |7 in the evening. | National Hall, 321 E.| * Garlin, Magi “rane Sunday. Worker, will speak at ke duties come into the of- Soccer | Freiheit Sing- * * « Rose Gar-| The chorus; eke Het Wanker eaiaion pene | I. L. D. Tuesday, 8:30 p. m., 143 B,|the Associated did absolutely noth- | Worker and the Obrano has been ar-|29rd St | ing for them, except send a few dol- | oth at the|} Members and sym- * * for any|/ branch of Local | be given at 1387 Bronx, by Council} ational has arranged a and ball tomorrow at The program begins at 3 and dancing, which follows, at Sender Garlin and A. B. Magil, both | of the editorial staff of the Daily | the Open | {Workers Progressive Club will be! 8:30 p. m., Coopera- tive Hall, 612 Hudson Ave., West ner | York, N. | Harlem Eduentional se Concert,| Dance. A concert and dance will hae perun| by the Harlem Educational this “evening, at Hal | 400 Manhattan Ave., one block of Highth Ave., at 117th St. Pros Summit, N.J. J., Workers ceeds will go to the enlargement of} ab. The Jewish Workers Club of Boro! Park has organized a class in the| A, B. C. of Communism meeting 8:30 p. m. Tuesday evenings, 1373 43rd St., Brooklyn, Valentine is instructor. SUMMIT, N. J., Feb. 22.—At an enthusiastic meeting, the workers of | Summit, N. J., who were called out Downtown Workers Club Ball, ‘A ball will be given by the Down-|sociated Silk Workers, repudiated town Workers Club tonight at 8:30| ; i joi , | will participate in the concert pro-/|p. m., 35 E. Second St. | that ene ‘and in a body joined the gram, «8. ational Textile Workers Union. Sete # : . ae (ae e palit tecreattd amon |For five months these workers havi E jament, New York Drag The Downtown L. D. will have ; | Clerks. a book booth at the I. L. D, Bazaar | been on strike, entirely neglected by | The New York Drug Clerks Asso-|0n March 6, 7, 8, 9 10. Books on the Asscciated. Although the work- jeiation will hold an entertainment) ll subjects ‘and in all languages areley: ure relatively few in number, and dance at Leslie Gardens, 83rd| Wanted. Bring them to 799 Broad- th ly kept | St. and Broad , Sunday evening,| Way, Room 422. | et they courageously kept up a} March ge 8 pe 7 All organizations my sik 7: és S | militant picket line for many ease kee ate open. farlem I. L. Ds 12 eR eue wi ebeee Karl Reeve will speak on “Labor | months. Inter-Racial Dance. | Struggles and the L 1 ” at the During this time the officials of | meeting of the Harle neh of the| * ‘ Bronx Workers Sport Club. lars eack week for relief. More re- A sport carnival and ball will be|cently an Italian organizer of the given by the Bronx Workers Sport| Associated, it is claimed by the| Club Saturday, March 23, Rose Gar- Boston Road. ers, went to Paterson and told Two of the other shops, which had séttled at higher prices, now. cut prices to the lower level and insisted A membership meeting of the|0M & non-union shop. This resulted |Brooklyn Young Workers’ Social|/in the workers of the two other | Club will pe, held Friday, 8:80 Pp. ™./shops going out on strike. In des- | |peration with the officialdom of the | |A. S. W., and hearing of the Na- |tional Textile Workers Union, the workers came to the Paterson local | office, and from there to the na- tional oftica of the N. T. W. U. ‘HUGE MORGAN | lof the eels | Nursery, 521 Hopkinson Ave., ciel yn. Young Workers Social” Culture Club Meet. In a body the |joined the N. T. W. U. The National Textile Workers | Union now pledges to support the} | Largest in U.S. jhas not yet been stated, made to rally, the maximum sup- Only three other banks in the port for these courageous strikers. | | United States, the National City) —_—— | Bank, of N York, the Ch Na- 2 i 5 tional Bank, of New: York, and the BoSnian Village Is | Continental-Tlinois Bank and Trust| Attacked by Fascist | Jugoslay Gendarmes on strike by the officials of the As- |§ The meeting was the result of} | | this appeal for aid. New Mammoth to Be strikers tore up their old cards and |W ieces over a year ago, has been| years the Jargest in U.S. but will now have second place. Only two banks in England, the Midland Bank, Ltd., and the Lloyds | Banks, Ltd., run ‘above a million) dollars in resources, and of these | the largest is the Midlands, with $1,- 860,379,094. Morgan’s man, Myron Taylor, chairman of the finance committee | of the United States Steel Corpora-| tion (the steel trust), is credited with the actual negotiations consummated the merger. Forum of the Workers School, 26-28 | | Union Squaye, tomorrow evening, 8 p.| jm. Garlin will speak on “Some Bour- |geois Literary Critics” and Magil will jdiscuss “Modern Revolutionary Po- * * © Progressive Butchers Banquet. Celebrating the opening of, union |headquarters at 314 E, 9th St. the/ |Progressive Butchers and Poultry |Workers' Union will hold a banquet | lat the Downtown Workers Club, 35 EB. Second St., tomorrow. aa Bronx Open Forum. A. Landy will discuss “American| | Theories of the Class the Bronx Open Forw | Aye, tomorrow, . Pp. * Struggle” at , 1330 Wilkins m. * Biellese Workers Carnival Dance. | A first carnival dance of the Bielles/territorially as well as in control. The Guarantee Trust is at 140} ‘Pershing to Speak Broadway, and the National Bank! lof Commerce is at 9f Nassau St., | at Anti- War Meet i m | the rear of the buildings abutting. Hartford - Tomorrow | Taylor has been the active head of tl the Steel Trust for some time, HARTFORD, Conn., Feb. 22—/a8 part of a triumvirate,.with Mor- |George Pershing, national field or-|%an himself as chairman of the ganizer of the All-America Anti- board, and James A. Farrell as the | Imperialist League, will speak at an| “chief executive officer.” J anti-war meeting here Sunday at) 3 p. m, in the Labor Temple, 97) worked closely with Morgan’s part-| Fark St. The meeting is being held net. Baker, under the auspices of the Anti-Im- perialist Conference of Hartford. | Pershing will speak on the new | cffensive of American imperialism | in Latin-American countries and the |imminent danger of an imperialist war, The Hartford Anti-Imperialist | Conference urges all workers and |} farmers of Hartford and vicinity to | | \attend this meeting and learn the facts. The proletarian movement is the nelf-conacious, independent movement plated merger, stock in the two mately $70 a share. FOOD WORKERS | Meets istSaturi [eicetnnae eter en ene Airy, Large | Meeting Rooms and Hall Automobile Ee ares INSTRUCTION TAUGHT, Complete Course $10, until Yicense granted; also private and special Imscruction to Ladies. ive AUTO 845 Longwood Empire Scoot avenue, Bront INTervale 10019 (Cor. Prospect Sta.) Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the | Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E. 72nd St. New York: , Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 Go ae es | Why Patronize} Exploiters? “BUY ONLY FROM YOUR Cooperative Food Sevrice aces” Phone: DiCkens 1096. Blue Bird Studio “Photos of the better kind.” 1598 PITKIN AVE., Cor, Amboy St BROOKLYN, N.Y. Bakeries, Meats, ||ron School Groceries, : 185-187 EAST BROADWAY JOSEPH 4 "RON, Principal ye LARGEST AND BEST, AS BLL AS bree ied SCHOOL rn the Hnglish Language to prepare oneself for admission to colleg BRON SCHOOL 1s registered by the REGENTS of the State of New York. It has all the rights of a Government High School Restaurant Brooklyn: 4301-3 8th Ave. 806 43rd St. 5401 7th Ave. 6824 8th Ave. Manhattan: 2085 Lexington Ave. Call, ie ye or Write for Catalogue! Tradi REGISTER Now! Ottteer ri 8th reed NY Our 25,000 Slumat are our best Tel. Windsor 9052-9092. rutmenone: OlCHARD 4473. The two banks adjoin each stil | On announcement of the contem-| banks rose on the market approxi- AMALAJAMATED | Baker's Local 164. | Co., of Chicago, are in the billion) dollar class. The National City! |Bank of New York has been for| BELGRADE, Jugoslavia, (By! | Mail).—The whole population of the | | Musselman village of Sandzak in southern Bosnia has been brutally attacked and beaten by an expedi-| tion of fascist gendarmes. The cap- | | tain of the expedition was Spasoye |Racitch, a relative of Punica Ra- ‘citch, who murdered Raditch, Croa-| |tian leader. | | ‘House Rejects Motion tat to Probe Reserve Board WASHINGTON, Feb. 22 (UP).— The house banking and currency | | committee made an adverse report, | today on the Black resolution which requested the secretary of treasury! to furnish congress with informa- tion on whether the Federal Reserve Board had conferred with the Bank |of England before issuing its recent warning against excessive . stock Taylor | speculative loans. handled steel trust finances, and|\ Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) | 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) | Cooperators! Patronize E. KARO Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE. Cor. Barker, BRONX, N. Y. Tel.: OLInville 9681-2—9791-2 COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE and Toy Shop 736 ALLERTON AVENUE (Near Allerton Theatre, Bronx) Phone, Olinville 2363 91GS° FROM FACTORY TO You! HIGH-GRADE MEN'S and YOUNG MEN'S SUITS From $12.50 to $25.00 PARK CLOTHING STORE 03 Ave. A, Cor. Oth St. N. ¥. C. Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 + 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House The Red Army, besides serving as the army of the international working class and as defenders of the Soviet Union, is also an educa- tional organization. Its soldiers receive a working class education and help to educate the workers and peasants of the Soviet Union. Workers Party Activities”: Garlin, Magil, Sender Garlin and A, B. Talk Sunda Magil, both [International Branch | Subsection E Section of the editorial staff of the Daily Branch Worker, will speak at the Open d its meet- rum of the! Workers School, 8 night from to Friday, « nion Square tomorrow evening, 8 p.|9:30 p. m., 101 W. m, Garlin will speak on "Some Bour- * geols Literary Critics” and Magil will] Spanish Fr discuss “Modern Revolutionary Po- ‘Ball of the etry.” y ; * # # East N.Y. ¥- 109-111 The East N. Y. Unit of the Yew.L. id: bre: organ of t |will hold a “Build the Young Work- nish Bure: er” camaradefie, tonight, at 8 p. m. * 313 Hinsdale St., Brooklyn International Women's Day. YES SE East New York ¥. W, Le The ¥ Ww. L. Worker” 8:30 p. m., rade Stephens, will \problems of buil Subs section 3 Execut old an important st New York unit of the will hold a ‘Build the Dally | camaraderie tonight 313 Hinsdale St. eee | Section 4 Daily Dance. Entertainment and dance for | 8, United Council Workin; Women, | i 4 day. 7 8 : Wier a tentahe Ray Ragozin| . (Continued from Page One) strike as much as possible. Relief | jfanae'oe Netto" papers. willbe Dea ey nme ye tebe Aten pit tale 4 comedy by Tonekov, will GF Commerce, resources $934,302,-| drives will be opened up at once, |by Section 4, Friday night, Unit Section 4, Attention Mades Workers® Industrial Union. | 599. This will make # two billion! both in New York City and in Pat-|23,,,Jmperial Auditorium, 160 Unit 3 ion 4, has been t » * * dollar concern, thé name of which eyson ond other efforts will be] ferred by ection Executive ae Lower Bronx’ Open Forum. Unit “Youth and the P will be dis-| work cuared at the forum, Lower Bronx) 8:30 p. Unit, ¥. W. L, 8 p. m. tomorrow. Dance follow on Negro e Committee | Pacifists and European patriots. eeting Mon-| Hereafter SENATE ‘VOTES’ TO WITHDRAW. PROM NICARAGUA Will Pass Navy Bill; Reverse Action (Continued from Page One) mmany democrat from New York. The 71-ship program would call for » appropriation of $700,000,000 as starter. In a letter to Secretary of the avy Curtis D. Wilbur, Black de- red that “if the general board of he navy thought seventy-one new hips necessary then (in 1928), when armament might occur, they are requisite in view of the attitude of the British Foreign Office.” | “Socialist” for War. | is significant that Chairman Britten of the House naval affair: committee and Representative Vic- tor Berger, the socialist, both fix on the reaction of the British ad- miralty, that of competing with U. S. imperialism in a naval race, as a reason for still more ships, in preparedness” for war with Eng- land. “Although England can neither outbuild or outbluff the United States in any cruiser-building race,” Berger today said, “the relations be- tween the two countries are reach- ing a point similar to the one which SPRING CARNIVAL NEXT FRIDAY March First at Webster Hall, 119 E. 11 St. — . . . International Women's vill be existed for a decade betwe - =| A = Subsection 31 Social gslebrated,, at, the Contéal “Overa|tand and Germany before the out. | Sensational Attraction! Subsection 8B will hold a_socia fh EAA SER Arcee aoa NE aD | Vorld War.” THE SAVOY WILD CATS ee theD tit of the D ‘Worker! ? ch 17. Mass pageant, sho sreak of the World War. 2 21D ana eh Ses Rae pet Rae n’s position in the different 5 ; vale THE PRIDE OF LENOX AV. at Amalgamated Food Workers Hall,| yistoric periods, will he a feature ot| Representative Britten said in his GEORGE GANOWAY and the event. Section Women's Work fi v. , “ * * organi id secretaries of women's pee po he ee | BERTHA VANDERBILT ine ne Li Ie eg ni: can get tickets at 28 ‘It would appear that Great in a dance selection j League, will hold an entertaining nt eaptaiat agaes 45 38, aioe sa ae las Boesr oe aden) aad and dance tonight. Units are aske ingland and another code for con- 7 . " + to cooperate. Un ¢ Mon- | sumption in the United States, each GEORGE” SNOWDEN and aay, PAULINE MORSE in their of them, however, having Bri \trol of the seas as their goal. One s for home politics and the other is fodder for American professional con- | interpretation of the HARLEM STOMP VERNON ANDRADE Ren ance Orchestra Dancing till 3 a. m. T YOUR BEETS EARLY |Argentina Plans to Aim | & :- Tariff Law AgainstU. S. epted—Alg. ; 5 ae i Booksho: Union Sq.1 Rand BUENOS AIRES, Feb. 22—The|| HBeckxhe , ne ee Argentine Industrial Union, an as- Negro Champion, 169 W. 133 St. sociation of manufacturers, has sent Pe eee [cae ae tage ee on-/% memorial to President Trigoyen Qi i” atieay x, W. Ce arab ed day, 8:30 0 Wilkins ,|fecommending general tariff in-| . W. Ly jamsbu; ec- | at Bs er ; é tion, will hold a_ social Saturday, ae peenena itt a\creases against those countries, Yi March 2, Workers c enter, 56 Manhat- ae }meaning especially the United an Ave. Play, songs and poems will * a « ” jbe presented. ' Dance follows. Shop Nucleus 4, paneer whose “tariff is hostile” to) Upper Bronx ¥. W. 1. Forum.” |, 6:30 pom. : ‘The Upper Bronx Y, W, L. forum ay will discuss “Youth and the Indus- | trial Union” tomorrow, 8 p. m., 1400 Boston Road. | rs will be elected at the * meeting of Unit Subsection 2 “Young Worker” Danek and Enter- 6:30 p. m, Mond 108 E, 14th St tainment. * ° ba * A dance and gntertainment for the ‘wectionn i, Attention! enefit of the “Young Wo will Weseit Ghcilan 1 eretnniece be given by Upper Bronx Units 1|,,Momberssf Sec PeeehtaghR and 2, Saturday, March 9, Bronx | / Pendenay: Maibe lee Workers Center, x. w. A dance and entertainment for the benefit of young dress str! be given by Downtown Un E Jem Unit 1 of the Young W (Communist) League, tonight, 2 10th St. | 1330 Wilkins Ave. Teh * * 27th 1 report at 101 W. L. ce Strikers’ Dance. : Branch 2, Section 8 A membership meeting of Branch 2, Section 8 1 be held Monday, P. ™., ale St, New member- ship books will be distributed. |B, * * Long Island Open Forum. Vera Bush will discuss “The Kel-| 66 ” on Be th ue New cra.| “ENTERTAINMENT Tala I eity Open, Roms Mt the Lone | susie Furnished for all ocenstons. | an én Forum, : 1th and Broadway, Astoria. Take| BY Expert Talents. GEO. DUPREE Astoria trai nto Broadway station. | 1547 Broad — ring 4086. 9OOOOOOO9O909O5OO1OO WATCH THE OPENING! To All My Patrons— H. eee WELL-KNOW! x E WHO Is NEW eee at 939 East 174th Street COR, HOE AVENUE, BRONX RIGHT OFF 174TH ST. SUBWAY STATION se eh te dd Concert and Dance given by SUB-SECTION 3-B will be held TONIGHT AT 8 P. M. at AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS HALL 133 WEST 51ST STREET Refreshments, entertainments and dancing until morning. , ADMISSION 50 CENTS, PROCEEDS GO TO DAILY WORKER. Spend Your Winter Vacation at the Cooperative Workers’ Camp Nitgedaiget PHYSICAL AND MENTAL RECREATION Hi BEACON, N. Y. — Phone, Beacon 862 RATES: $17.00 PER WEEK | OPEN ALL YEAR CITY PHONE:—ESTABROOK 1400. maid "or Any Kind of Insurance” i ble BRODSK Comrade Frances Pilat ‘Telephone: Murray HIN 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New Yor! MIDWIFE 4351 E. 77th St. New York, N y nn Tel, Rhinelander 3916 | Coe EAT ‘ SS ae ee ee | _ SCIENTIFIC —MELKOS . ETARIAN VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave. Between 107th & 108th Sts y R STAURANT omrades ‘Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149, All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S ETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, For a Real Oriental Cooked Meni VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION Open from 10 a. m. VEGE Bronx Cooperators! Patronize S E R O Y Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 CHEMIST John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A_ place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 Avenue Bronx, N. Y. Dr. M. Wolfson Surge, SECOND AVE Phone, 01 In case of trouble with your teeth Comrades, Patronize The Triangle Dairy Ries comeraaer Ciena eaatnae Restaurant you of careful treatment. 1379 Intervale Avenue BRONX Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: Tues., Thurs, & Sat, 9:30-12 a. m., 2-8 p.m. Sunday: 10:00'a, m. to 1:00 p. m. Please Telephone for Appointment 249 EAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York Telephone: Lehigh 6022 DR. J. MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., Fronx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station We All Meet at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVE! UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food — Hotel and Restaurant Workers * Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 188 W. Sist St. Phone Cirete 73: BUSINESS MEETING*@7}) eld on the first Monday of the month at # p.m, ry—One Union—Join and Fight the Common Enemy! Open from Oa. mm, to 0 p.m. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. ® Phone: UNlversity 5865