The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 4, 1929, Page 5

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Strike Leaflets ns 662 NEW BEDFORD _. STRIKERS STAND DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MARCH 4, 1929 rkers Arrested in Garment District While Distributing “HOOVER, CABINET 8 OF MILLIONAIRES, Wo Two Office ee Two Workers Killed in British Wreck ELDINPRISON "2 SEVERAL HOURS; | Labor and Fraternal Organizatio Play Volunteers Wanted. wanted for the International Labor Defense Bazaar.| International Labor Defense will meet |help us with the Ra «|tomorrow night at 8 o’eloek in the Volunt ‘s if ‘ A. bi “ : ake eppual baseer of the Interns; |Labor. Temple, 14th St, and Second |scene in the one-act play "Marching | 46 Tho hee ae ote TT kT ot che Ree woth Stat Piao’ o'clock tonight. At | 7 |the Labor 4 -|least 5 ; | Bie j Pssialite \fice, 799 Broadway, Room 422, and hursday, 8:18 p.m. ive needed. a eaflet in Call for Union Membership Fay Kroll and Miriam Helfer, two | office workers, were arrested Sat- urday afternoon on 80th St. in the| nt distriet while distributing | lars calling upon all office | kers employed in the district to | support the dress strike now going on under the militant leadership of | the Need Trades Workers Industrial | Union and to join the Office Work- | crs Unien. Both arrested workers | e members of the Office Workers | Uy Taken to the Jefferson Market | Court immediately after the avrests, were held in jail without being owed to communicate with any- one for several hours. Brought be- fore the court, they were fined $5 each, The growing power and militancy of the Office Workers Union, dem- astrated in these arrests, as well as nnection with the dress strike, the cause of the jailings and tin Iu spite of this attempt on the part of the Tammany and Schlesin- ser police force to intimidate mem- bers of the union, the distribution of these circulars will be continued, the Office Workers Union an- nounces. Participation in the picket cemonstrations of the strike will also continue to be part of the union's jnilitant work. WAR, PHILA, TAG DAY FOR STRIKE To Help N. Y. Needle} Trades Workers | PHILADELPHIA, March 3—A| paign for the relief of the needle trades strikers of New York has been started here by the Work- evs International Relief. The Phila- celphia Committee is taking its first step in the drive by arranging a Collection Day on Saturday, March | 9. | The W.1. R. calls-upon-all-organ-| izations and individual those already affiliated with the W. I. R. and those who are not yet af-| filiated, to give their full, coopera- tion. The following centers will be used as stations for the eollection where all workers are asked to re- port at the nearest place: 39 N. 10th Street, 817 8. 5th St.,| 1208 Tasker St., N. W. corner 8th! d Ritner Sts., 1881 N, Franklin| 214 Spring Garden S8t., 4035) rd Ave., and 2926 W. Gordon St. | Those organizations who wish to! work from their own headquarters should appoint a responsible com- mittee to be in charge and to apply | to the W. I. R. office, 89 N, 10th) St. for supplies. Liberals Vainly Seek Mediation Between Sandino and Moncada SAN SALVADOR, Feb. 28,—The “Indeperdence Association of El Salvador and Nicaragua” is annoy- ing the Yankee lackey “president” of Niegragua, Moncada, by its rather futile efforts to get the presi- Gi | | 1 sense dents of other Central American |the building. Everyone present was|men at lower rates has aroused / petitive power in their fight with governments to “offer their friendly mediation in the internal conflict of Nicaragua, in order that it might soon end in an honorable and peace- | ful form.” The presidents of Honduras and of Hl Salvador have answered in the | affirmative, promising their €0-op- | eration to such an end, The presi- cent of Costa Rica, Gonzalez Viquez, | however, answered by expressing 2 | pious wish thas Nicaragua might have pet but adding that he could | not intervene to that most desirable | end as Augusto Sandino was not) considered as a belligerent govern- | ment, and remarking that the pres: | ent situation is not one of differ- | cnces hetween two governments. ‘The president of Guatemala has not as yet replied at all. As Mon-| cada himself was also addressed by the association, Anastasio Somoza, his secretary, yesterday replied as follows: | “Referring to your telegram, President Moncada you to have the xood will to address yourself first to the presidents of Central Amer- ica, in such manner that it may he thought in common accord in our situation, not against the United States, but in order to arrive at an underatanging of our duties on the continent.” Nicaraguan dispatches add that Moncada and his gang do not consider the matter of any im- | portance, | NEW DAIRIES IN CAUCASUS. BAKU, (By Mail).—In the North- ern Caucasus 43 butter and cheese factories are boing constructed by the local daily cooperatives union, . MINNEAPOLIS, (By Mail).— ‘The cleaners and dyers of the Kro- nicks Co. have been locked out be- cause they were union members. workers, | * Two stolers were killed when the London-Glasgow night express collided head on into a freight train at Tibshelf, near Alfreton. The wreck: was due to negligence on shows piled-up cars. the part of the company. Photo Many Letters trom Miners’ Families Tell of Suffering Letters are daily being received at the National Office of the Work- ers’ International Relief, 1 Union §q., from starving miners who ap- peal for a crust of bread for their suffering wiyes and children. Be- eause they ave supporting the mili- tant National Miners’ Union, the coal diggers are discriminated against by the mine owners and the United Mine Workers’ Union officialdom who have formed an alliance against the great mass of coal diggers of this country. The Workers’ International Relief is cooperating with the National Miners’ Union in a national cam- | paign to raise funds to buy food for | |the'starving miners and their fam-| ilies. One of the letters received yes- terday, signed by, Joe Anthony, Eri ton, Pa., reads as follows: “Just a line to let you know I am in hard shepe. I have been out of work for 18 months and can get no |work, I belong to N. M. U. and 1) can’t get work no place so I am | | writing to you to see if you can help| me and my family. I have no shoes on my feet and my shoes no good, and my children need clothes and shoes. I have been in debt and can- not get credit any more. If the N. M. U. could help me I would be glad for all my faith is in them. I am doing all in my power to help build the N. M. U. for we need it. So please answer me quick for I am in bad need.” The. appeal of _Anthony,..1s_.weil ho s of other destitute min- Food ers must not go unheeded! &hu Cy coal regions! Send contributions at |ence to the Workers’ International | Relief, 1 Union Sq., Room 604, New York City. Australian Miners Reject Wage Cut SYDNEY, Australia, (By Mail). —New South Wales coal miners | have overwhelmingly rejected the scheme put forward by the reac- tionary state premier, Bayin, that they accept a wage cut of a iN]- ing a ten in order to ‘eho! Titate the coal industry.” A strike looms should the & ne be put thru. Union Headquarters (Red Aid Press Service) SOFIA, (By Mail).—A few days) ago the police raided the headquar- ters of the workers’ unions in Ka- valla, broke open the doors and mis- handled all the workers present in then taken to the station. ing must be rushed to the | | HOUSE PASSES DRY SPY ACT ‘Postpones Origins Law | One Year; Dies | WASHINGTON, March 3 (U,R),— |The seventieth congress met on Sun- day to draw its dying breath today. |It expires at noon tomorrow with |the inauguration of a new president jand vice-president. The senate convened and adjourned | without transaction of any business |but the house gave final approval to the last of the appropriation jbills and acted on several other measures, Perfunctory last meetings of both branehes will be held tomor- |vow, the house convening at 10 a, m, jand the senate at 11 a, m. Both bodies were attacked today for holding Sunday meetings by members who want support from backward church organizations. Senator Robinson, (Dem., Ark.) scolded the senate immediately after the roll eall and made the motion for adjournment which was adopted 1 Sp to-BG.. Rep. Lanktord (Dain, Ga.) | The latest appointee, Lamont, is ja blue law advocate, was not al- lowed to speak but extended to the record some hell-threatening re- marks. Without a dissenting. vote, the \house adopted the conference re- |port on the first deficiency appro- priation bill, which had been jlayed in conference almost a month beeause of a disagreement over the senate amendment providing $24,- |000,000 for hiring spies for the pro- |hibition service. | As finally passed, the bill pro- |vides approximately $3,000,000 for this purpose, The house also passed a resolu- tion to postpone for another year the adoption of the National Origins’ plan fer computing immigration quotas. The measure is approved by President-elect Hoover and is an attaek on the foreign-born workers. The object of the senate’s Sunday meeting was to allow time for action on the same resolution, The next congress will have ¢ larger administration majority. It is exneeted to start work within a month on farm relief and tariff |legislation, the two major items of ‘business left undone at this session, FIRE “YOUNG” WORKERS. DUBLIN, (By Mail)—The de- cision of the Great Southern Ry. to lay off 121 drivers and firemen and fill their places with younger strong strike sentiment among all FOR RUTHENBERG MEMORIAL (July 9, 1882—Mareb 2, 1927) Anti-War MEETINGS To Be Arranged by All Districts and Many Party Units All Over the Country, the National Office Can Supply RUTHENBERG MEMORIAL BUTTONS With Comrade Ruthenberg’s Picture on a Red Background and with the Slogans:— FIGHT AGAINST IMPERIALIST WAR BUILD THE PARTY The Price of These Buttons will be: 7e per Button on Orders up to 100; 5¢ on Orders of 100-500, and 4¢ on Orders Over 500. All Party Units Are Urged to Send in at Once Their Orders and Together With Remittances Direct to WORKERS (Communist) PARTY, | National Office 43 E. 125th St., N. Y. C. No Appointees Able to| | Defy Mellon Orders | (Continued from Page One) is a partner of Elihu Root and very close to Morgan. Charles Adame, secretary of the navy, is a million- aire banker, part of the Morgan) network, John James Davis, secretary ‘of | Habor, who also holds over from! \Coolidge days, is president of the Bond and Mortgage Co., Pittsburgh, |a millionaire and politically import- ant on account of being a kind of | Imperial Wizard for the Moose, a fraternal order with half a million | | members, | Polite Face. | | Ray Lyman Wilbur, new secre-| tary of the mterior, will bring to} the position somewhat publicly | soiled by Fall and Roy West andj | Work, all diseredited by graft in| their department, the oily face of a |college president, used to begging | millions from big business men in| return for the right kind of edu-| cation in Leland Stanford Junior | | University. | | Walter F. Brown, who will dis- | \tribute patronage to “deserving re-| | publieans” through the post office | |department, of which he is post-| |master general, is a professional politician and ehairman of all kinds \of republican party committees, and |so is James W, Good, the new sec- | |yetary of war, | Sop to Raskob. William D. Mitchell, attorney general is a democrat and seems to have been put on for his subser- yieney to Hoover and to honor and perhaps keep in line the organiza- jtion so recently led through a na- jtional campaign by Raskob of the | |General Motors Co. Arthur M. Hyde, one of the la-| |test appointees, secretary of agri- | leulture, was governor of Missouri | jin 1921-45, otherwise little known | lexeept as a smal local politician, |He will do what Hoover says, and, |whatever he does, the farmers will leurse him. No big man would dare jto take the place, relatively unknown, but sufficiently connected with big business to make ‘him perfectly safe for Hoover's | masters. He is chairman of the |board of directors of the Griffin | Wheel Co, and director the First National Bank, Morris Plan Bank, |Montgomery Ward & Co., Armour |& Co. and the Globe Steel Tubes Co. |He is president of the American Foundry Co, Daring the war he| held the safe and strategic position, profitable to his friends, to whom lhe gave contracts, of “chief of the |procurement division of the army.” The whole eabinet is, with the exception of Boss Mellon, made up safe in their intentions and not po- | litieally prominent enough but what | lihey will jump when Hoover and| | Mellon crack their whips. | | ‘Steel Cartel to Meet | in Belgium in March | BERLIN, (By Mail).—Represen-| \tatives of the English steel works | |and the Polish foundries will be in- | vited to the quarterly meeting of the | |International Raw Steel Cartel, to} |be theld in Brusels, Belgium, on} | March 14. The question of the car-| \tel’s prolongation will be discussed. | The cartel is an imperialistic scheme | to give English interests more com- | the U. S. Steel Trust. struggle, jorganigation at any affair Ave, J., Brooklyn. given by the Bronk Workers Club Saturday, March 28, Rose ae eer Young Workers Social Culture Club) |Couneit of Working |Hungarian Workers Home, paring for the annual bazaar of the/torium, 160-4 W, 129th. Bt, Priday +i BD, evening, March 22. Music by f 4 orchestra. lgiven by the | North Americs {66 BE. Four jning, March 23, at 8: ler is urged jeollect article jzaar and _to t joffice, 247 Sixth Ave, | te. 6 ory Thea-|W. L. Sunday, March 17, 8p. mat |tre Sunday evening, ch 10, 715 BH, 138th’ St. “Marat,” a play | Lowe, Negro actor, appear. \based on the Paris Commune, will hy * pie’ | janine nL enn of men rich enough to be perfectly |) ap. tertainment, | ish Branch of the Internationa) Labor Defense will be held tomerrow at |4:30 p.m. 1400 Boston Road, 26 UNION SQUARE preparatory work, | ond Ave, on ae * | Fretheit Singing Society. | inthe gronx, section, Prethelt Sing: ny hall Saturday, March 9, den, 1847 Boston Road, ' The chorus) will partielpate in the concert pro-| gram, i F | York Drug Rose Gar-| Section | Entertainment and dance for the funds of the Daily Worker and Span- | * * Patertainment, New bi lish and Negro papers will be given | lerks. The New York Drug Clerks Asso-|by Section 4, Friday night, March ejation will hold an entertainment /22, Imperial Auditoripm, 160-4 W. and dance at Leslie Gardens, 88rd|129th St. St. and Broadway, Sunday evening, a San Mareh $1, 8 p,m. All organizations “Young Worker” Dance and Enter- please keep this date open. | tainment, A dance and entertainment for the benefit of the “Young Worker” will lbe given by Upper Bronx Units 1! 4-2, Saturday, March 9, Bronx 8 8 Inter-Racial Dance, ti An JPtgreragiay gangs, Ld the pane an it of the jegro ampion, Daily| at *; villi ve. Worker and the Obrano hay, Yeen ai Workers Center, i330 Wilkins Ave ranged for Friday evening, March 22,| 1, at Imperial Auditorlum, 160 W. 120th] 4 upSRanimm Fraction Patt vi. a given by the Spanish fraction of the |Party, Saturday night, Mareh 16, Lex- ington Hall, 109-111 116th St. Pro- pos Millinery ‘Theatre Party. The Millinery Workers Union, ~v4,|cceds to "Vida Obrera,” organ of the has arranged a theatre party’ for| Spanish Bureau. Mareh 20, Fraternal organigations are asked not to arrange conflicting Gates for that evening, * Maay pe International Women's Day, International Women's Day will be leprated at. the Central Ope Progressive Group, Local 8, LU.G.W. | foeee ea he hg “Ghird Ave The Progressive Group, Local $8,|p, m., Mareh 17.’ Mase pageant, show 1. GW. will have @ booth at the | ing women's position in the aitferent Li.» D. A BAAY, I. pathizers are urged to collect arti-|the event. eles, Send to Ida Katz, Bazaar Com-} mittee, Unity Cooperative, 1800 7th Aye, City. * Daily Worker Spring Benek. | Unit 4, Section 7, Bath Beach, will give a ‘Daily Worker dance at 48/ ay 28th &t, Saturday evening, | March 16, 4 | uns,” an episode of the miners’) without charge for any| Young Workers League Dance, Party unit, trade union or fraternal| An entertainment and dance under | they ars|the auspices of the five Manhattan Write Sylvan Pollack, 1409 | units of the Young Workers League will be held at Harlem Casino, 116th St. and Lenox Ave., March 80, ceeds to the Young Worker, * * Dance, Bath ne ee} Workers Laboratory Theatre, The Workers Laboratory ‘Theatre wilt precipe its one act play, “Mare! ng G range, Pro- | CO ORS Want Books For Basnar, | ‘The Downtown J. L. D, will have : » a bese born Ae tlie 't, ESB ataxe Broan “Mayatuaia” Bail | on March 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, Books on|, For a good time all workers are| all subjects and in all lan uages are|invited to come to the "Kapstunim” | foo “road: | Ball for the benefit. of the Daily |Worker on Saturday, Maren 28, at 700 Bronx Park Bast at 8:80 p, m.| fo will be imported aouventra, an opera in 12 scenes and many other | Mnopt| features, ‘The affair ig under the Gaks| auspices of Branch 6, Section 6, of |the Workers (Communist) Party, ee Williamsburgh ¥. W, L. Units. The Williamsburgh Units 1 and 2) f the Young Workers (Communist) | arranged an anti-war wanted. Bring them to way, Room 423, BkeR ae Bronx Workers Sport Club. | A sport carnival and ball will be} den, 1347 Boston Road, Breoklyn, | The fourth annual dance of the| 9 Young Workers Social Culture Club| League have will be given Saturday evening, | mass, meetin March 28, at the Hebrew Ladies Day | 8 P- mM. at 5 Ni , : Yilyn, George Nureory, 641 Hopkinson Ave., Brooks | er st sea Ker * | ment, Cougetl_28, he The for Friday, Mareh 8, at Manhattan Aye., Brook- Pershing will be the Good entertain- * ierman, * 8 German Counejl CG ve me EEE Oe Ws We | Seetion 4 Dance, orth United A dance for the benefit 4 the i , meets |x, c ion, the Dai orker the third Monday of the month, at the |and. the Ramglens ele wit’ be elves 1 350 WD. iby Section 4 of the Workers (Com The council is pre-|munist) Party at the Imperial Audi- Bist St. City. * ; Anti-Faseist Hall. jane An entertainment and ball will be Anti-Fascist Alliance: r pion, 4 33rd ay WS r3 of| Bookshop, 26 Union Square, or the District Negro Committee, 38 Union Square. at Manhattan Lyceum, h St. on Saturday ev p.m. | * * International Branch ‘Talk. Comrade Oshinsky — will ‘Why New Unions? at the meeting | na, |of International Branch %, Section 6, ‘on 56 Manhattan Ave. Brooklyn, to- day, Mareh 4, 8 p. my | * . . Lower Bronx Unit, Y, W. L. r will present! A social and dance will be given a yearly re-| by the Lower Bronx Unit ef the ¥, * | ee 2 Section 6} Textile Booth at I. L, N. Bagpar. Every knitgoods and textile work- | by the district office for the I. L. D. b hem to the uni discuss | tage a lew, at Brooklyn Workers Entertainment, nent y Automobile— | | INSTRUCTION TAUGHT, Complete | Course $10, until license granted; also private and special Fnscruction 10 Ladies su» AUTQ 845 Longwood Empire scuoor avenue, Brom INTervale 10019 (Cor. Prospect Sta,) , Brooklyn, March 16, m. Dance Will wouuw os ” ¢ | Bronx Jewish Branch, I. L. PD. | A mass meeting of the Bronx Jew- | ts 623 Downtown English Br, I. L. D. The downton English branch of the Patronize No-Tip Barber Shop 26-28 UNION SQUARE (i filght up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) | CO-OPERATIVE Dental Clinic | 2700 Bronx Park Hast = | Apt ©, L. HI TEL BSTABROOK 0668. DR. I. STAMLER |, | 3S’ Phone; DiCkens 1096, ° e Surgeon-Dentiat Bh B d St di OPEN: Mon, Tues. We . “Photos of ‘the better kind.” BROOKLYN, N, ¥. Special Women’s Day Edition of the DAILY WORKER to appear on MARCH 8TH Special articles, features on International Womens’ Day will appear SEND YOUR BUNDLE ORDERS NOW © by telegraph, air mail and special delivery RATE:— $6 per thousand—$1 Per hundred DAILY WORKER | NEW YORK CITY | 4 Daily Dance, |r fat 60 St Members and sym-/ historic periods, will be a feature of | iain fees Workers Party Activities nted by the Bronx Section Dra-| matic Group. Proceeds to the Young Worker. * A, Section 1. Interna- will meet The _ rei tional Bra: today, § 1 ned on J, * *, Section 1 1, will M 2, Section & will be held tonight at lyn. Every member must attend, will _be he w at 6:15 p.m M Comrades who can 1 , pre wan nd, saxapho! ne, Work on Improving Baku Port Started | BAKU, U, 8. 8. R., (By Mail | Work has begun on extensive provements on the port of Baku involving the expenditure of 6,000,- | 000 rubles. At present three stone | piers of 30 meters in length and 225 | meters in width are being construct- | ed. A special oil loading pier with a-protecting wave breaker erected later as well as a pier docking lumber boats. Crew of 8 on Dutch | Lifeboat Drowned | C| AMSTERDAM, (By Mail).—The | whole erew of 8 of the Dutch steam lifeboat Prinz der Nederlanden were drowned while going to the assis- | tance of the Danish steamer Valka, whieh was strended near the Hook | of Helland. > lifeboat collapsed | in the heavy seas. ‘Ta | sniesiealall ; ‘or Any Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New York’ A TS be for 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 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 Conspiracy Trial of 25 on Thursday Continued from Page One is sore at Governor Roosevelt, rep- resentative of the big open-sheppers of New York. The reason for this sudden dis- affection betwe the two faithful that Governor fused the request of the st chusetts to ex- tradite denkapp, national secretary of the Workers Interna- al Relief, and Paul Crouch, na- secretary of the All-America Anti-Imperialist League, to stand with 23 others on charges of vonspiracy in connection with the New Bedford textile strike, In a letter sent to Governor “| Roorevelt, Governor Allen adminis- s uw petulant rebuke to Roosevelt or thus thwarting the vengeance of the mill owners’ courts, Behind the Allen-Roosevelt con- troversy is thought to lie an older political antagonism. Governor Roosevelt, democrat, refused to ex- tradite Jiedenkapp and Crouch, not out of “friendship for labor,” but in order tu give a jolt to Allen, the re- publican who defeated the man for whom Roosevelt took the trouble to stump in Massachusetts during the elections. Allen comes back at Roosevelt as best he can by writing a “nasty” letter, charging Tam- many’s silk-hat governor with doing violence to the sacred constitution of the United States. ‘The proletarian movement fs the self-conselouns, independent movement of the immense major- | ity—-Karl Marx (Communist Mant- testo). Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner Gth Ave.) RHSTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open tron, tha om te 19 pom, All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx MELROSE—. . VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT emrades Will Always Find it Pleasant to Dine at Our Piaee, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 188 W. Sist St., Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING] eld on the first Monday of the menth at 8 p. m, try—One Union—Join AMALGAMA’ FOOD WORK E: s || Baker's Loea} 104!) {Saturday in the month at 4468 Third Ave. |) Bronx, N. ¥, Union Label Bread | atv U Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Dr. M. Wolfson Surge Dentist 141 SECOND ENUR, Cor. 9th St. Phone, Orchard’ 2333, In ense of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and ansure you of careful trentment. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST ition Foust T Thurs, & Sat. Sunday: 10:00 ain. (J Tod" p. m. Please Telephone for Appointment 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor, Second Ave, New York Telephone: Lehigh 6022 J. MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 808—-Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected wit any other office PHONE: INTBRVALE 9149. Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals Fmeet 302 BE. 12th St. New York Comrades, Patronize The Triangle Dairy Restaurant 1379 Intervale Avenue BRONX MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., Bronx, N. ¥. Right off 174th St. Subway Station We All Meet at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave. Between 107th & 108th Bte,

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