The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 26, 1929, Page 5

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CONTINUE FIGHT are asked to notice that outlines on May Day for unit discussion can be Communist Activities secured from the District Asit-Frop/ ly Worker, ” before Section 8) the Brownsville Workers Center, Watkins St. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1929 Five Talks on Soviet FROM PORTO RICA Drama WEBRO WORKERS|Fraterna | KON Club Hikes. aT » will row from City | Organizations OIL C0, MURDERS 2 Wants Volun- AST y ; y to Hunters Island Sunday, Meet News orror Is 1 BROOKLYN i ATTA | Wiens Cuma sk seat ee News of Horror Dae Cer ae ap heayae Suppressed 7 Party Members, Notice! | A dance ill be given by l Los py Pais ar Coney: Island Catt, id ‘ | EA,» Council Working Women, Coun — re CN . A mandolin orchestra and a Rus-| Tickets for the May First demon- n. we 2 " at 8 p. m. tomorrow, 1330 Wi $ ‘ont 1 from Page One) Frazier, Hoover Man, |: Inger will entertain at) stration at the Bronx Coliseum may | Traders Incite Harlem |si.<° "nt SoMauMades" worke Te rnd NIA lk? Snel 6 . y and oncert, to-|08 na 4 sais . dustr nio will benefit * lowed, blowing the ir ve S , ove m Mermaid Ave. cial secretaries should secure their ‘ Industrial Union wil ne ¥; : Scores His Treachery je Mermiala Ay Gueta. through the section machinery Race Riots Shae vai k ith the pumproom completely off, and eue,/#t once, Sections and units should ath Cooperative Branch, I. L. D. St r Johnsor : ch Young Workers League, | O°. 0nce, ee B00 x . - a n (Continued from Page One) A May dance and revel will be held |°"fanize, machinery accordingly, The following letter is addressed) A representative from the South rom te > ( er terrible Senator Copeland, democrat, N. Y./2stn St) Brockiyn en” 1% St 48 Bay pageant rehearsal every Sunday. & p. to workers by Harold Williams, /textie strike at the meeting at 8 nih of Johnson’s clothes party conference, {sane weonan Senta e Meet. -49|Di Santo at the District Office. the Communist Party of District 2,|?8"* Past: spade hey the pain, the worker attempted to Senator Frazier, N. D., is fighting |p. m., April 2 The | Unit SF, SD. urging them to support the Negro ] MANHATIAN ie phe ane eting. i i jump overboar¢ for debentures. ever a ns Baniza-| ‘Arrangements for’ May 1 will be ¥ ee) =| Champion. | 350 E, oth St, "|" Member crew who 2 an= Senator Frazier Leaves Hoover. ry discussed at the meeting of the unit, 4 Dear Comrade: May Day Demonstration Tickets. ; Per, : teered to rescue Johnson and two sPacieing ly shin) xetent) (dente, | SPOOET EA a greener UN (Min Bt ne en | eae Bie Hate PAHO nAG | irom g long ‘time the Neges work. | nae ae eo Mee Nny | WVORUCAERIR REAL? WRILE by helibctomnor. | Ore eee the crew. burned fy thd sad a Branch 4, Sect 2 " . * ry from the Soviet Union, will give the|. § a I eae he: District. Office, . Comrades are | Satu. Bt fares Sy we bl. were prevented from ments,” Frazier said, “I have been| Branch meets Mon April 29, at| y Week x x a. {last of as Ptlactuie’o the |S the most exploited section of, the istric ice ‘omrades are! 84th St, by the blast we prever r foreed to conclude that Mr. Hoover|§ P- m., 48 Bay 28th Si; Brookiya. | %PUR#, Workers Lengue Jane Band. new Sontee diame aa the Werkutg|the working class, had no paper to ; doing so because the company had did not mean what he said in his|7 BROWNSVILLE -|2 p.m. Sunday, at 143 B, 103rd St. deeds sod Nes Ua Mi “er8| speak for them. But today the 5 | previded no masks for such an emer- ; i ig | eee vi8 School tonight. Pe eerie vee ) | ‘ campaign talks about agriculture,” /+—___—-——-— wateeantilicnl : “4 Negro Champion” is the militant gency : Frazier support Hoover in the Engdahl Talks On U.S.S.R. | The branch mee April . . voice of the Negro workers, mob- Oil Worth More Than Lives. campaign as did Brookhart who yes- |_“Soviet_ Russia _in_1929"" wi be 29, at 7:3-p0, m, 93 Ave. B Dana to Give Final Miata Vohbs blasle wbbiers Of Amar. — terday made a similar statement. Meantime the house steamroller moved aiong with its job of flat- *tening the weak opposition to the administration bill, which it passed today, minus the debenture plan. There was today the same aversion to record yotes which give the farm electorate accurate proof of the treason of the men farmers have elected. Three committee amend- ments were adopted by Shouts of | “aye” from the majority when they were offered at the outset of the ion by Chairman Haugen. One specified that money should not be loaned to cooperatives to build ware- house and marketing facilities in localities where there are already sufficient warehouses and mark: ing facilities. ean ee FRENCH WORKER Had Been Active Cafeteria Strike (Continued jrom Page One) tional Labor Defense in Its attorney, Jacques Buitenkant, | succeeded in having the bail reduced leased for trial at a later date. | Is Active Militant. GUN PLANTED ON SAY COMMUNIST Lecture on Current USSR Drama Tonite jica for the class struggle, shoulder |to shoulder with their white fellow- | workers. To maintain and build the “Cham- AIDTOWARPLANS) STRIKE PIGKETS immediately took up the defense of the worker. | | to $500 and Perier has just been re- “The World Revolution Drama-| | tized” will be the subject of a lecture by Harry Dana at 8: tonight at the Workers School, 26. Union 1S “CRIMINAL” 'Square, New York City. This lec- So Tammany Police tute is the last of the series which Take His Fingerprints Dana has been giving on “Revolu- tionary Russian Drama.” During| the last two years he has been col-| lecting material on the new drama| of the Soviet Union in preparation | for a book on that subject. Dana will discuss the many new Russian plays dealing with the spread of revolution from the So-| viet Union to other countries | throughout the world. They deal| A Communist is evidently a crim- inal in the eyes of the Tammany police. Norman Sholem, a worker, has been fingerprinted merely be-| cause he told police that he is a member of the Communist Party. Fingerprinting is a procedure to which, as a rule, only persons held on criminal charges are subjected. pion,” support must be secured im-' “Rally at Coliseum to|Defy Injunction; Plan mediately from all class conscious sf ” Q oa PE Be Reply to Spread Strike workers, white as well as black. The “Champion” Dinner, given for the special purpose of mobilizing sup- (Continued from’ Page One) port, will be held Friday evening,|/the left wing and the Communist May 10, 1929, at 6:30 o'clock, at 26 Party are the hope of the American Union Square. working class.” ‘+ * & You are asked to do your utmost Many large left wing unions are to help make this a great success. continuing to announce their en- You are invited to send a repre-|thusiastic support of the May Day sentative and to support the “Cham-) demonstration at the Coliseum, it is pion” Sustaining Fund announced. Surely we can count upon ycu to! : Win Workers. : do your utmost to give us your sup-| ibe | Mass Picketing Monday. | port as a comrade who realizes the| Win the workers for the Commu- ; : Monday noon, April 29, there will ; aula natal eg rty, is the keynote of the! ree 2 H importance of eeeistea as Negi Meg Baer lesuied to the New|be a mass picketing demonstration (Continued from Page One) sentenced to jail if they went back to the picket line, | be The mass meeting of all cafeteria and restaurant workers is called at 8 p. m., at Irv- St. and Irving PI., to forces to spread the strike. Perier is at a loss as to the exact The “Hoover Wheat Prices.” motives of the frame-up, or the per- | with the revolutionary movement in| Workers and Sholem, who is an active member Germany and with the conflict of |their white fellow-workers for the of the Party, went to the 18th pre-| communism with capitalism in West-|P7oletarian Revolution, York working class by the New against the cafeteria employers in of the Communist the needle trades market. York district A has been the membe have escaped had t open, but the cor closed to pre oi} from evaporating When the phia_ the paid off the crew, a taking a stater making an in blast This proved that ping Commissioners hiv re shipping with the Sun Oil Co. in glove to whitewas TheeSun Oil C on its tanker slavery on e d On May Day—lo poor farmers! Show y national ach league hand h the oil bosses. ng live the al- liance of the working class and the with Inter- ke May CHICAGO, April. 26, | (UP).— : ind. ; | 4 PE NCHEG Mik call issued by the! Dayne ole levels since 1924 shortly after noon | and has done much propaganda work Ave., to ask for a permit to hold aj the conflict of revolutioary ideas | Césderetar the wtitade et the York district of the Communist y when heaviness at Winni-| among the French workers in this ™¢eting. At the police station he| with American imperialism, or wh STARVING WIDOW fosiense ee the attitude of ne) Party, appealing to working women, | Comrade . pee caused commission houses and| city. ‘This, together with the fact W@8 asked who was arranging the| British imperialism. Finally there| growing unemployment, ealle ate) Women’s councils and other groups! Evan ces Pilat pe raders to put large | that he has actively aided the cafe-| meeting. “The Communist Party,” | will be discussed the interesting S Par cietihe heeutis f spring, the °f, Working women to participate in quantities of the May deliveries on teria strike, may have led to this Sholem replied. “And who are you?” |series of plays dealing with the ques- tall declares, es SPéng: Whe this demonstration in favor of the MIDWIFE effort to railroad him to jail on a/ he was asked. “I am a member of | fake charge. the Communist Party,” he said. | The New York District of the He was immediately fingerprint- International Labor Defense also ¢d without being given any explana- |has secured the release on $500 bail | tion. }of Stephen Mesarosh, who was ar- May wheat was| rested while distributing leaflets of July $1.163-8 and) the Trade Union Educational| W®* May Firat at the Collseum. market. After falling nearly : cents, prices steadied materially on buying by profit-taking shorts. Weakness in all. North American I as induced by the sudden ng of export inquiries. At 12:45 p. m., » selling at $1.12, he Demonstrate Against Umperialist tion of Soviet Ru s turning east | and the spreading of revolution to| Asia. WOMEN WORKERS | KILLS SELF, SON No Food or Money in Tenement Home Defeated in a losing fight against The socialist party calls upon || the workers to celebrate May Day in recognition of the beauties of Spring. We, the Communists, call upon the workers to celebrate May Day by taking their places in the red army of the class gle. We call upon the w the conditions. The statement calling the demon- stration says: Women Will Demonstrate. “Women workers, show your soli- darity with the cafeteria strikers] strikers who are fighting 12-hour day and bad Tel. Rhinelan 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. nder 3916 COMRADES MERT AT Giusti’s Spaghetti House 5-course Luncheon | | : . g 50c—11 to 3 September |League near a nickel and copper | LD ET hunger, Mrs. Florence Carlson, 44-| celebrate May Day, the interna- | against the bosses combination w abacus TNs Fee Ae ; 3 factory in Long Island. Mesearosh YOUth Come from | Li | year-old widow, turned on the gas tional revolutionary holiday, not as | the injunction judges, the socialist a ae phe crs May Day at the Coliseum, "| Was severely beaten over the head M Tndustwen| n her top floor tenement home at| something passive and static, but and A. F. of L. misleaders! Help|| A LA CARTE ALL DAY gidbbiista bes 58 with a blackjack by the police be- any industries —— 4 |221 E, 17th St. Tuesday. Unwilling) rather as a spur and a challenge | the cafeteria workers win livable 49 West 16th Street + . fore being taken to the Long Island x r Yr r Trade |to leave her 19-year-old son Harry) to take up the struggle with re- |conditions and shorter working cat Nearing Lectures OM potice station. He will come up for| (Continued from Page One) To Prepare for |to battle with the problems which| newed and The energy vigor. hours. Union Conference Meet your Friends at trial in the Long Island Magistrate’s | typical of those from other Euro- Life in Soviet Union in Bronx at 8 Tonight Court next Monday. The I.L.D. will defend him. Fights Deportation. “What Is Happening in the So-| viet Union?” will be the subject of a lecture by Scott Nearing at Hunts | Point-Palace,-163d St. and Southern | boulevard, Bronx, at 8 o'clock to-| night. | f Fi i In his talk Nearing will speak on| iramed charge in the state prison ho rapid growth of industrialization faa : tos ccolleritvs agricultural | Teleased at the end of this month fanaa and the immigration authorities eSyements ot the peMsentiye-7 shaver informiet hitdsthat tg will be All class conscious workers at the Coliseum May First. Fifth Annual Concert of Freiheit Mandolin and possible death await him. Isaac Shorr, attorney for the I.L.D., is now in Washington, fighting the ef- forts to deliver Giletti over to the fascist hangmen. The New York International La- bor Defense is appealing for im- pean countries reads as follows: “The French youth greets the | Communist Youth of the United | she herself could not solve, she wait- jed till after he went to bed before | Representatives of shops from) disconnecting the gas stove tube.| the needle trades, textile, and other| When police forced the door yester- beauties of spring which the so- | cialist party calls upon the work- | 11 a. m. at union headquarters, 133 ers to appreciate are the ghastly |W. 51st St. Those working should Those not working will meet at GREENBERG’S Bakery & Restaurant | The New York I.L.D. has also | started an active fight to prevent the deportation of Mario: Giletti, anti-fascist worker, who is now fin- ishing a two-year sentence on e| Giletti will be deported back to Italy where torture | industries, as well as stores will gather at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Place on May 4, at 2p. m, at a special shop delegates| conference. This conference has ‘been called by the Women’s De- partment of the Trade Union Educa-} States. Intensify your struggle against capitalist rationalization, against repressions, against intes- | sive imperialist war preparations. Let us unite in the Commanist Youth International for the de- fense of the Soviet Union and the | World Revolution which will tional League for the purpose of | achieve the Socialist re-organiza- | mobilizing the masses of unorgan- | tion of youth labor.” jized as well as organized working Greetings from the representa- | Women of New York, to take an ac- tives of the various sections of the | tive part in the building of a mili working class, as wel! as those con- | *@nt trade union center at the Unity tained in the cables will be heard at | Conference in Cleveland on June Ist. the mass demonstration tonight at Central Opera House, 67th Street end Third Avenue. An elaborate program will also be rendered by Women Most Exploited. | “Women workers, because of their! lack of organization,” a statement jissued by the T.U.E.L. reads, “are beauties of the vicious speed-up | go directly to the market, 36th St. system, accidents, unemployment, | and Seventh Ave. wage cuts, police brutality, injunce- | “Comrades of the United Council, tions, discrimination against Ne- } you belong to the Women’s Bat- groes, foreign born, women and |ialion, whose slogan is “Always youth workers, and the growing | Ready for the Working Class Strug- danger of imperialist war. gles,” the United Council of Work- fie ment “Walee stiches oer “Win Workers For Party.” ing women ices in its Appeal | by the couple, Neighbors explained | sone Be ee i the ried hea) | ee yesterday that Mrs. Carlson, wid- Bt AS EN corte La Nat ‘i 4 IBS wed eight weeks after the birth of| Your leadership you have gained ale Ep mieten es her son, had worn herself out in) the confidence and the respect of | |, formation of the Radio-Victor the hard struggle to support them| Your fellow workers. In the food | aes ean of America, 8: /ub- both till Harry was old enough to workers’ strike, in the shoe work- ae nary, 0: i e Radio Corporation of wait = AerepniaPereonitoyimens, tad) coe csme,, ste needle trades |) eek ae aed Sen tercay little to enable them to live even| Struggle, in the field of organiz- |-¥ erent vames "N ESP POH UES on the meager standards forced upon| *"& the: tnorgenized.you have tak- || ORY or “he 0. ‘heh: ‘en the lead. You have shown your day they found Harry pitched for- ward before the window. Desperate from Hunger. Two months in arrears in rent, the widow was desperate. Her son, a chauffeur, hd been unemployed Orchestra Saturday mediate funds to fight these as well the Labor Sports Union and the he fifth annual concert of the as many other cases now in its Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra will be) hands. The I.L.D. has just con- given at the Town Hall, 113-23 East’ tributed $300 to help defend ar- 43d St. at 8.30 p.m., Saturday. | rested cafeteria strikers, thus A program of selections from further depleting the defense funds Hayden. Beethoven, Rimsky Kgrsa- of ‘the organization. Contributions koff and Stravinsky will be con-| Should be sent to 799 Broadway, ted by Jacob Schaefer. Solos| room 422. ill be rendered by Leon E. Mala- and Thomas Sokoloff. vat Slogan for May Day—fight ee against the speed-up and for the BIG GENERAL MOTORS PROFIT.) winning of the eight-hour day. General Motors Corporation yes-| Long live the seven-hour day, and terday reported net profit of $61,-| the six-hour day for young work- 910,087 for the first quarter, includ-| ers! ing equities in the undivided profit) ef subsidiary companies not con- solidated. This compared with $69,- 486,576 in the first quarter of 1928, On May Day—we hail the Chi- nese revolution! Long live the indian revolution! | Young Pioneers. Leading figures jin the revolutionary youth move-i ment will speak. | AIR EXPLORER FAILS. WICHITA, Kas., April 25 (U.R).— After a secret flight from here, | Parker Cramer, airplane pilot once |forced down in Greenland in an at-| tempted flight from Rockford, IIl.,) t» Sweden, and Willard S. Gamble, Tulsa, have arrived at Nome, Alas- |ka, it was learned here today. The} \trip was to survey a possible air | Long Live the First of May— the day of solidarity of the revo- | lutionary workers of all countries! Down tools on May Day! PROTEST AGAINST Police Brutality Injunctions Mass Arrests of Workers Fight Imperialist War Organize the Unorganized Defend the Soviet Union WEDNESDAY, MAY FIRST Doors Open at 4 P. M. (EAST EXCELLENT PROGRAM—Dixie Negro Choir will sing Dancers in a special May Day Ballet-—James Phillips, ist Party, District No. 2. the special victims of the bosses, and the most exploited section of the working class. Women have been; working very long hours, for starva- tion wages, under speed-up and con- ditions injurious to their health and that of their children, with no pro- tection; and the reactionary A. F. of L, officials have done nothing to organize women to fight these con- ditions. To Unite Forces. “The Women’s Department of the Trade Union Educational League calls upon militant women workers | “to unite their forces in the strug-! gle against the bosses, the speed-up| systems, open shops, low wages, a new imperialist war, and fight for | the immediate improvement of the! economic conditions of the workers, | forty hours. Weakened by hunger, the woman had died quickly after she stuffed windows, doors and key- hols. Police believe that Harry, tripped by bed clothing, died before he could reach the window which he evidently attempted to smash with the flat-iron found in his hand be- fore he could reach it. Pictures of the widow’s son were found on the top tray of the trunk which she is believed to have opened before disconnecting the gas. Neigh- bors said she \had idolized Harry since birth, and had kept some of the clothes he had worn as a child. eae ae Hat Worker Suicide. Constant discouragement was the and for the building of a strong and| explanation offered by the land- | ‘1 k ab ‘ The two had been dead a out | must now use your influence to | at the Coliseum with the entry of |, East 42nd Street, New York PetizininadicbechcedB an! Mich had tht) hundreds of new members into the | < courage on the picket line. You bring new proletarian elements into the Party. Don’t hide the Party under a bushel. Make an open appeal to the best elements in the ranks of the worke Win them for our Party on May Day, the day of the rising world prole- tariat. Let us celebrate May Day Communist Party to take part in the coming struggles. Organization Department, New York District, Communist Party, U. S. A. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE In the Soviet Union—the seven- hour day. On May Day we inten- sity our struggle for the S-hour day, 40-hour week! 939 E. 174th St., Station, Right off 174th Street Subway Cor. Hoe Ave. Bronx RESTAU. All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx RANT -——MELROSE— Dairy omrades Will A Pleasant to Din 1787 SOUTHERN (near 174th § PHONE jon) NE:— INTERVALB 9149, ETARIAN RESTAURANT lways Find It e at Our Place, BLVD., Bronx “For Any Kind of Insurance” ARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Bill 5550 COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE M. FORMAN Allerton Carriage, Bicycle and Toy Shop 736 ALLERTON AVENUE (Near Allerton Theatre, Bronx) Phone, Olinville MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blyd., ™ onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. For a Real Orient Subway Station ial Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET ) (Corner 61 RESTAURANT, 1 Open trom 1° a h Av, CAFETERIA CREATION ROOM m to 12 pm, powerful labor movement in this|la¢y when Charles Faine, a hat de- | country. signer who. had worked irregularly, Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 & atroniz Not connected with any cereers Celebrate May The International Labor Holiday BRONX COLISEUM known Speakers. Admission 50c; through your organization 25c. Auspices of the May Day Conference of Unions and Fraternal Organizations, Commun- “Women workers must elect dele- gates from shops all over the city| of New York; not only are the unions to be represented, but also’ the unorganized shops. The organ-| ization of the masses of enslaved! women workers into new, fighting, | industrial unions, is the first step toward theit emancipation. “Take up the call in your shop! “Elect delegates. Forward to the conference May 4, at 2 p. m., at! |Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving | Place. Make the May Day Demonstra- tion a demonstration against the z ot the injunctions of the | osses: Nearing Lectures on Dollar Diplomacy at} School Forum Sunday Scott Nearing, author of “Dollar Diplomacy,” “Oil and the Germs of War,” and “The American Empire,” | will speak at the Workers School |Forum, 26 Union Square, Sunday, at 8 p. m. on “Dollar Diplomacy.” In his lecture, Nearing will em- phasize the recent expressions of U. S. imperialism’s “Dollar Diplo- | macy” throughout the world, ex- | emplified by the Dawes Mission in San Domingo; Morgan, Lamont, and Young at the International Bankers’ | Conference in Paris; Kemerer in’ China; the marines in Nicaragua ‘and Haiti; Hover in Washington, D.| CG. and Dwight Morrow in Mexico; | jand the “disarmament” conference | in Geneva, | Day 177th STREET STATION) Negro Labor Songs—Guild noted Basso — Nationally | was found killed by gas at his room ther offi at 152 W. 49th St. yesterday. chine head No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/ °K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) tas? FROM FACTORY TO YoU! HIGH-GRADE MEN'S and Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 HAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat. a.m, to 12; 2 Tues., Thurs,, 4 to 8 p,m. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p, m. YOUNG MEN'S SUITS From $12.50 to $25.00 Tel: DRYdock 8880 HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNlversity 5865 PARK CLOTHING STORE ] J pease ano tee at | | ERED SPITZ, Inc. || Prone: stuyvesant asi6 93 Ave. A, Cor. Oth St, N. ¥, C. ‘Telephone: Lehigh 6022 FLORIST John’s Restaurant NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES (Bet, 1st & 2nd Sts.) fe A_ place with atmosphere Flowers for All Occasions where all radicals meet MASS-DEMONSTRATION on TRE DAILY WoukuR | | 802 E. 12th St, New York OPENING of the FIFTH NATIONAL CONVENTION YOUNG WORKERS (COMMUNIST) LEAGUE National Speakers. Reunion of the Hawaiian Communist League Paul Crouch, Walter Trumbull, George Pershing, Harvey Steele Mass Recitation by YOUNG PIONEERS “STRIKE,” by Mike Gold Sports’ Exhibition—Labor Sports’ Union | TONIGHT AT 8 P.M. ADMISSION 25c Centra! Opera House, 67th St. & 3rd Ave. Tickets on Sale at: Daily Worker office, 26-28 Union Square, ' ] a ° 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 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 Work 183 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 7336 TH-BUSINESS MEETINGS] ei 1d on the first M. month at 3 ion sues Young Workers League, Young Workers League, 43 E. 125th St. Pees p.m. Co Office Open from 8 a. Between 107th COMRADES EaT at the SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave, & 108th Sts, | Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVEl UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Veget Cooperators! Estabrook 3215 SEROY. CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue ‘arin Food Patronize Bronx, N. ¥

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