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DAILY WORKER, “W YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1929 4,000 Workers at Hartford, Conn. Underwood Typewriter Plant Called on to St ‘vike LINK, BAR MEN” ALREADY OUT; ——x= FIGHT SPEEDUP whe 1o3rd banjo pI noon. are needed. Section Two. An educational meeting will be held at 6 p. m. today, at Workers Trade TT oena League 1s| Genter, 26 Union Square, Unity re ‘operative Unit, A, membership meeting will be held Leading Struggle | at 8:30 p, m. tod at 1800 Seventh HARTFORD, Conn., May 9.—The AV¢ sar agtes 400 workers of the Underwood Ty: Downtown it writer Co, have been called on to join) init meets hee Lea be aeons in a general strike, in sympathy 27th st, with the workers in the “link and ie cieeweah bar” department who have been on im duolating Communist life in| Sunday at 143 “Piano, violin and > and will speak, Tas BROOKLYN h League Hike. Ik Si _ Meet 8 ee | Literature A Soviet film depicting the strike a week against the speedup, The 4000 workers at the factory received leaflets from the Trade Union Educational League on Hon: jday at 5 p. m. calling for a fighi| against the intolerable conditions in the Underwood plant. The workers are urged to strike in sympathy with the department strike which has been Seanad a week, This department, the first | adjustors, known as the “link and hee ee r ,” walked out on Monday yas inhuman’ speedup. About "350 men Wort 946 Sixth Ave., directly after Want oubsat thet times the union declared a strike against | the shop. As a result of the speed-up, the a Bi “link. and bar men” sre forced to| ,,_Bushel Serves Employers. | ' i Hymen Bushel, the magistrate turn out 10 machines more @ week| 144 resigned from the bench to help than formerly. Against this VISIONS Hibs Untbed (Resimurant sOwnera, in speedup, and the fact that they a /tueir effort to break the strike, vee Maa eRIBE anes ee again sought to prove that the strik- 4 ers were “professional gangsters.” machines), that department went ony John Rikos, 32, of 62 F. 103rd St., strike. against whom Bushel was particu- A department committee W4S jarly vitriolic in denunciation, was formed and after the company re-| sentenced to 30 days in the work- fused to grant their demands, the /pouse, Six others, John Duses, 35; strike was called. Department 4 in Santiago Parayso, 20; Charles Au- mittees have also been formed in gat, 39: Satiris Constantinitis, 40; | other departments. Joseph " Hervize, 28, and Agonomi Members of the Communist Party |Gouris, 27, were put on a $1,000 and Communist Youth League re-|“peace bond” to stay away from the | port that the sentiment is high for picket line, with the alternative of | a general walkout. 10 days in jail. They took the jail The strikers are holding daily |sentence. meetings at the Labor Educational WRIT DEFIED BY FOOD STRIKERS Alliance, 2003 Main St. At the Royal Typewriter Co., the | same general conditions prevail. | | | Workers in one department have | BY POLICEMAN workers demanded a 15 cent in- crease, and a new committee has been elected. The Trade Union " Educational League will soon call on Lay Basis for for Fr ameup | the Royal workers to join the strike) of Bronx Worker of the Underwood workers for a united battle. The workers will have; The possibility of either death by how the A. F, of L. sold “them out| 134th St. and Alexander Ave., the} in 1919. The Trade Union Educa-| Bronx, or a long prison term on a tional League has brought a pro-|framed-up charge of “felonious as- | gram of militant class struggle to/ sault” faces Garry Smith, 45 years} the typewriter slaves in Hartford. | \old, a striking worker of the George | It has established headquarters at /L. Storm Lumber Co., the Bronx. | Lyric Hall, 593 Park St. Smith had hailed one of the com-| the job, As he hopped on the run- ning board, the scab brandished a} jammer at Smith. When the strik-) jer attempted to defend himself, the policeman who was on duty nearby began to chase him. He trapped Smith in a hallway and shot him repudiated their committee which ac- nothing to do with the American a gun wound inflicted upon him yes- pany’s trucks in an effort to per- 2,000 AT SHOE ‘thru the right side. Doctors at the) cepted a 2% cent increase when the, Federation of Labor, remembering terday by a policeman stationed at suade a scab operating it to leave Enthusiastic Reports Lincon Hospital say that Smith’ on Strike Progress a het earasap machinery is al- . ready beginning to move, District (Continued from Page One) Attorney John BH. MeGechan having kapp congratulated the workers on! announced that he has taken over] their “wonderful, fighting spirit.” | the case personally. Fighting Campaign. | Efforts to force a “confession Steve Alexanderson, president, H.'fyom the striker while he was lying Levine, business agent, and J./at the point of death in the hos- Magliacano, organizer, all spoke on! pital yesterday failed. the militant organizational cam-| Palen orck Unity Conference. | Victor Chenkin Will It was announced at the meeting Sing at Teor Concert Sunday; Olgin Talks) that each individual shop would choose a delegate to the Metropoli- tan Area Conference of the T. U. i E. L. to be held May 18-19 prepara-| A new Soviet film depicting life tory to the Cleveland Conference.| of the Jewish colonists in the U. S. Already 10 shops have made their| S. R. will be featured at the concert! of Icor, (Jewish Colonization in Sov- iet Russia), at the Carnegie Hall, 7th St. and Seventh Ave., at 8:15 selections. Jeanette Pearl, field representa- p. m. Sunday. Victor Chenkin will give a song tive of the Workers International Relief and Raymond Clark, 19-year- recital, and speeches will be made, by Charles Recht, chairman, and M. old Gastonia mill striker, received J. Olgin, of the staff of the Freiheit. a hearty welcome when they ap- pealed for funds to aid both the striking textile workers of Carolina and the striking shoe workers of Boston. A total of $201.93 was col- lected at the meeting. Following the lead of the last co: - ivention of the socialist party, a re- ‘and Mr. U. S. Workers Prepare tor First Correspondents’ Meet With the rapid development of plans for the first National Con- ference of worker correspondents in the United States, to be held in Cleveland on May 31, immediately preceeding the Trade Union Unity Conference called by the Trade Union Educationa! League, comes the announcement by many editors of the Communist press that the | worker correspondents of their papers have pledged their fullest co-operation to make the conference @ success. Such foreign-language Communist newspapers as Uj Elore, Hungarian Communist Daily, and Der Arbeiter, German language Communist or- gan, Novy Mir, Russian language Communist organ, which have devel- oped large groups of worker corre- spondents, have joined the Daily Worker in the preparations for the Cleveland conference, “Conferences are to be planned by our worker correspondents in such tenters cf basic industries as Pitts- burgh, Detroit, Cleveland, Akron, | Chicago and Bridgeport, and also in| New York, in preparation for the. conference in Cleveland,” said L. | Bebrits, editor of Uj Elore. “We have many worker correspondents in these centers, anid they will choose delegates to the worker correspon- | dents’ conference at the iocal con- ferences. They have received with enthusiasm the announcement of the | conference, and have promised: their | support to it.” | | Theodore Burner, editor of the} |German language Communist organ, | “Der Arbeiter,” told of the prom- | inent role in industry played by the | workers of German birth in the | United States. He stated that most of the Germans worked in the basic industries, especially the auto and_ sireraft industries, as skilled work- ers. He declared that the Arbeiter’s worker correspondents would be rep- resented at the Cleveland Confer-_ ence. The call for this conference will appear shortly, t k Unit will hike | ZARITSKY TERROR Whitev Ww. ash Destr uction of Local 43 (Continued from Page One) of the Chicago capmakers, in order to force piece-work upon them, also came in for a complete whitewash- y at the W en- |ing by the reactionary hand-picked ter § Union Square, at 2 p. m. to- committee, morrow. Ges | The Chicago Crime. ae « unist Youth League. In the discussion on the Chicago | gunday. stoce at esses, Sul, MG |situation a bitter and venomous at- Watkins St. cael made by administration on I. Feingold, one of UNION EXPOSES FAKE ‘STOPPAGE’ Ignore Terror; Keep Show Threat as Bluff |rnion conditions. to Aid LL.G.W. Gang (Continued from Page One) company union cannot afford to be at odds with each other. The company union would have long been wiped off the face of the earth were it not for the support it receives from the organized bosses. The bosses would never have been able to oppress and ex- ploit the workers in such a shame- | ful manner and take back all the gains of the workers without the aid of the company union. It is therefore ridiculous to im- agine even for one moment that these partners, both of whom are in mortal fear of the organized power of the workers and whose interests are identical, will enter into a conflict with each other. It is common knowledge that the company union is not fighting the bosses and that the bosses are not fighting the company union. The pretense of both Mr. Grossman Nagler to a conflict be- tween them is only a method de- vised to feel the workers. Both of them know that the workers will not respond to the stoppage, which they had planned originally in order to strengthen the company union and continue the chaos in the industry, and they have therefore changed their tactics and are instead staging a farce of a strike, They appear to quarrel with each other, they make statements that there are serious differences between them, and soon they will publicly attack each other; all in order to give the impression to the workers that they are in actual fight. However, they are mistaken in their plans. No matter what the clique and the bosses may do, the workers of the cloak industry are convinced that it is nothing but take maneuvers carefully calcu- lated to drive the workers to the company union. The workers of the cloak industry will not per- mit themselves to be fooled by any such trickery and such fake state- ments. The workers of the cloak industry will destroy all the ne- farious plans and conspiracies of the bosses and the company union no matter what form they may take, and will prepare and mobili themselves for a real strike for better conditions, under the lead- ership of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. Important Meeting Called. A special meeting of the Board will be held o'clock Joint tonight at 7 at the national office of the union, 16 West 2Ist St., in order to ‘ consider the report of the Board of| Directors on the forthcoming et strike. Immediately after work tonight, also, the first meeting of the “Com- mittee of 100” elected at the Shop Conference of the Fur Trade on May 4, will be held. Plans will also be! discussed here for the coming strug-| gle. A meeting of Local 98, Italian Cloak and Dressmakers will be held| tonight after work at 131 West 28th St. At this meeting a report will) be rendered by Oswaldo Eusepi, gen- eral organizer. Delegates will also | be elected to the forthcoming Metro- | politan Area Conference of the New York T. U. E. L. in preparation for the Cleveland Unity Congress on| June 1, 2. Shop Delegates Wednesday. | Tomorrow morning at 11 o’clock,) the Propaganda Committee of the Cloakmakers will meet at 131 W. | 28th St. The monthly Shop Chair- men’s Conference will be held next Wednesday immediately after work at Webster Hall, Ave. Vitally important problems | of the trade will be taken up at this meeting. | Proletarian Banquet of Milliners Will Be | Held Tomorrow Nite, A highly attractive program of | entertainment and speeches has been arranged for the Proletarian Ban- quet by the Progressive Cap and Millinery Workers tomorrow night at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving | Pl., at 8:30. | Louis Hobergritz, well-known vio- | linist, accompanied on the piano by his teacher, Prof, Leo Portnoff, will | appear. Samuel Cibrulsky, tenor, will present ® program of modern | and classical songs, Dancing will | follow, . be aes oe dhe serie which mili- |tants called in order to defeat the piece-work scheme. Feingold was |oapecially maligned because of the consistency with which he exposed the secret conferences which ky gang held with the manu- tsk Faeki zrers in their plot to destroy As a result of Zaritsky’s saboiage jof the Chicago strike, the struggle | finally lost, with the result that the city is now an open-shop center for cap workers. Feingold, who was sitting in the i 3 not even permitted nt briefly his own side of |the story. | The Boston Crime. | The third major crime of the re- jactionary officialdom, completely | whitewashed by the “Committee on concerned Bos- broke up the Officers’ Reports, ton. Here the G. B. the local, vitrarily removed jleadership, which was elected by \eret ballot, and appointed instead i ewn clique, When the members’ lvesisted this attack, the interna-! tional officers even went to a cap- jitalist court for an injunction. | As this edition of the Daily | Worker goes to press, discussion on |the committee’s reports had not yet lcommenced. Judging from the com- sition of the machine-packed con- |Vention, it is beyond doubt that all the recommendations of the interna- |tional gang puppets will be “heart- \ily approved.” | Gangsterism. Yesterday’s session particularly |was marked by frequent exhibitions of gangster methods and cheap| |hooliganism. When left wing dele- gates took the floor, they were re- peatedly greeted by insulting re- marks, accessible dishes were thrown on the floor to create a clatter and disturbances created to drown out! | note of opposition to the ma- | |chine-wrecking tactics of the gang, [in control. In anticipation of the formal “ap- proval” by the machine-packed, con- vention of the arbitrary expulsions by the officialdom, representatives | of Local 48, delegations of other ex- pelled locals, and representatives of all important partly organized and unorganized cap and_ millinery | workers will meet at an important | conference at Webster Hall, 11th St. {and Third Ave, tonight. Problems {of the cap and millinery indus! will be discussed, and plans laid for saving the union standards of the workers in the trade, ‘Testify That Judge Hid Big Bank Fraud | | (Continued from Page One) |tempt was made by the directors of | the bank to sell the whole thing, tes- | tified to a trick to get him to sign a pur ct instead of an option, and told of finding the for- and refusing to buy the bank 4, whereas Warder, who had men examining the bank, and idence from Giannini’s claims he did not know of | the frauds until Feb. 10. Giannini further: flatly | when he told Gener !Francis X, Mancusco, who wa chairman of the board of the C Trust, of these enormous forger ated that yucee the judge begged him to conceal the {crime until he could sell the City | Trust. | iteaniilen the depositors’ and |stockholders’ chances grew dimmer. |The City Trust lent huge sums to \f vspapers in New York with no real security offered, Build shop committees and draw the | Mass Demonstration Has Negroes Behind It (Continued from Page One) in masses, are even now addressing ' Poli i a letter to Police Commissioner asked to call at Room 1707, Whalen of New York, in which they |} xtile Workers’ Union, 104! § Say: between 9 a. m. and 8 At the Paramount Cafeteria at International © Defense. MANHATTAN | of the Ne mass newspaper nd farmers, toda the Workers’ Cente Pe a National Textile Union Wants Volun- teers. Volunteers to prepare membership books for the Southern textile strik- a To D Communist t Activities FAKE MEET OK’S UNIONS CALLTO Fraternal il Organizations PREPARING FOR UNION SQUARE : BIG NEGRO WEEK uw Ne to Commun vo Labor t Party ge One) ons (Continue as the nt Americ are in The club hikes t ant ta 26 ancey . son Sund: Me St. and ae Bas 1 Delancey St., yesterday over British | Van Cortlandt Park 1 up rank and entiment 50 pickets were arrested while peace- ancipation among the Ni to fight fully picketin, t least 20 them | Through Self vernment Within the | 7 c 7 Pee aE - 2 fully picketing. A\ of them | Zhroug Empire?” will be debated by| | BROOKLYN | off and to such | were viciously attacked by police-| Richard B. Moore, contributing edi- 2 cheap capitalist trash ‘hat has been men, who pulled them into hallways |tor of the Negro’ Champion, and A, | United Council of Working Women, ead cis’ be weed to place anid: cal a oth ‘Soir vera |M.. Wendell Malliet, maica,! The dle des Workers’ In- | 2? sed aca and slugged them. . Some were |under the auspices of the West In-/gustrial Union will benefit. trom Negro wo to their present knocked unconscious. This was so|dian Cinb at St. Luke's Hall, 125 W. | banquet and conce status in r roc Sawai ek 120th St, at 4:15 p. m. Sunday. Food Workers Counc tatus in @ : atrocious that the crowd which had . ® * vesant Casino, 140-142 Drawing in Negro Worke: gathered protested and several were Die Naturfreunde. tonight NG er the: ¥ ref For |The English and German sections eos 7 € Meat Seas themselves unmercifully beaten. Por) iti hike from Ram: to Suffern Council 7, U. ©. W. We into the general the past several days it has been Sunday. Meet at 5 a. m. at the ‘The third Jubile e of the r a large scal Thi made difficult to establish a picket | Chambers St. Ferry of the Erie R. R. | be first, the condition line at these cafeterias, as the strik-| “A inass meeting of the English sec- of the incr indust ion @' re a 0 " on » e t A. W. Ha ounc Ww. e oe on sts eeee both by Baas pen ens Sey done eT econ on “Trot- | of certain of America where etectives and bosses, and by the y 5 ; skyism” at Road at} the Negroe 1 a majority of the police who work in close coovera- German, Fraction Peateee Breck, tte) today. population, "of © the tion with them to try to break the Mt aeeee elie, Negro in Ame f hisceece strike. |Temple, 243 EB. 84th St Tillie peon status may ider ov, ‘ | Tuesday, Room 11 role of a 12 red. “When these strikers appear inj . * * evelopme Our e: ong court, guilty of no crime except the} = oor alt a es ne L. tral Ave y {line of drawing - : nit meets tonight at headquarters, Fi 4 desire to force higher wages and | 101 W. 27th Se : East New York Unit, ets immediately into th shorter hours from the employers, i © : ie ae cpen aie mee oe the | scious militant wor |they are punished for disorderly! ho (ir Min nite y ace izations, so that wi conduct and felonious assault. at 143 EK, 103rd St. at 9 Dav misleading i “We demand that you cease at Gud capitalist attempting to once the wholesale arrests and police a spr and file Negro brutality, and interference with the Goldens Bridge Colony NEW_JERSEY wor Anything that can be done strike, which has continued through- | y4.,meetng will be held’ at | the 3. Workers Soccer League, | by militant labor unions will help out the strike. We demand that you | s p. m. An outing will be held he finish of the son will be| out in this p: m and should be suspend police guilty of brutality x fearing, from |soteerete Mie edi Bint GL Peak | heartily en 1 by all workers and that they be indicted for assault, who are class conscious, who will We dema ri strike. We . - oa 7 e vorkers of | Move forward to a new day, for sestereaa i “Lore |the German workers in their strug-| the world. Gea 1 ligtati aiid daniers’) codec rane police terrorism against the strikers. gle against the German capitalist} ‘The workers of New York must | eS me government in We call upon the entire labor move- America. ment to join us in one united pro- test against the reign of police ter- ror which is being employed to at- | class as well as foreign imperial: reply to these murders and _ these | “The First of May, the interna-/ new attacks at the big demonstra- tional working class holiday, was a/ tion in Union Square tomorrow. The | } use for the German capi-|New York I. L. D. calls upon all IN; Y. Communists Will jtempt, to throttle the labor move-| food excuse for the German capi | ot Mt “attend this demonstra-| Attend Anti-War Meet ment. ( talis \ a Can't Be Suppressed. Worllere. (The Red) ont, Pightars)| Wemiand make 22) 8 challenge to Me! embers of the New Yon dis- fe sea 4 : jy, the shield of the workers of Ger-| capitalist class and its ‘social Evite of thas Conumuntes Eanieenee 2 The eee strikers begin their fiwags mune be anemntained flunkies thruout the world. a . ie e i ae : ‘arty an letter by calling to Commissioner | eee SERRE Sm e Communis outh League are Whalen’s attention the fact that: “We ourselves have been accus- | instructed to attend an open air “In less than five weeks of the} duration of the strike of the cafe- teria workers for the abolition of | that the only group of workers that the 12-hour day and against starva ‘tion wages, slightly over 1,000 strik- | 870eS Of these,| tional and its sections. /ers have been arrested. tomed to police brutality and lynch-) | Equal Pay for Equal Work! ing for several decades and realize —————- |fight militantly along with the Ne- is the Communist Interna- URGE “LIBERAL” — jat 4 p. m. § meeting at 95th St. Saturd and Broadway Robert Minor, Paul Crouch and George Pershing will be among the speakers to dis- cuss “American Imperialism and the Navy.” nearly 150 have received jail sen-| “Negro workers of New York) | Eeerat tences ranging from three to 60/City, this demonstration is your) GGREAL ; the fines imposed total $6,000; | demonstration, You must show to ssive bail has been imposed.|the Tammany police that you wily facies} Frances Pilat Fully 100 strikers have been brutally | defend your lives along with the (Continued from Page Onc) j beaten by both the private detec-|rest of the working class. Better Government League, to an-\J 9 MIDWIFK employed by the cafeteria cwn-| “Come to the Union Square dem-! nounce that they would oppose any | 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. ers and by uniformed policemen, | onstration Saturday, 1:30 p.m.” | other candidate but him, Tel. Rhinelander 2916 “These workers are for the first time, for unionism, against the most intolerable condi- itions of exploitation. Their wages, ‘for a 12-hour day, 6% day week, average from $15 for bus boys and dishwashers to $25 for cooks and countermen, They are demanding $22 for the lowest paid and $35 for struggling, | I. L. D. Speaks for It. The question for the republican Among the organizations that the | bluffers seems to be which would social-democratic government of run a better chance of crystallizing Prussia is attempting to suppress! the dissatisfaction with the rule of in its general drive against the mili-| Tammany. Both candidates are as- tant working class following the | Suming liberal poses. By placing May Day demonstrations, is the In-| LaGuardia in the running they hope ternational Red Aid, the central de-| to get the liberals, and with Hylan fense organization of the German’ they hope to get some of the Tam- cooks and countermen, up to $50 working class, The Red Aid is now | Manyites. ‘ for the highest paid workers, the active in defending the many work-| TO class conscious workers the chefs, They are also demanding|ers arrested during the murderous “democrats, republicans and socialists sanitary conditions, as it is notorious that the Sanitary Code is not en- forced and kitchens, etc., are filthy. | “The strike, which began April 4 in the garment section, is rapidly spreading into other sections of the attack on the Berlin workers by the | al! belong to the other side and will “socialist” police. The New York be fought on the basis of the plat- district of the American section of form of the class struggle of the the International Red Aid, the In-| Communist Party. ternational Labor Defense, will dem- COMRADES ME Giusti’s Spaghetti House 50c—11 to 3 6-course Dinner —5 to 9 A LA CARTE ALL DAY 49 West 16th Street AT 5-course Luncheon Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery & Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. onstrate its solidarity by being one of the chief participants in the giant protest demonstration against the Berlin murders, to be held in Union city. Within a week, 25 cafeterias in the lower East side have been struck, Already, employers are see- tS FROM FACTORY TO YoU! HIGH-GRADE MEN’S and ing that we fre determined to fight until we win, and neither police bru- tality, jail sentences, nor injunctions can stop the courageous and militant strikers from rae on to a vic- torious conclusion. 25 of the cafe- teria owners have signed an agree- ment with the union, and many more would have signed if they were not terrorized by the United Restaurant Owners Association, who by threats force them to hold out.” Negroes Pledge Solidarity. Of all persecuted workers America, the Negro work lynched, peonized, lashed, Jim Crowed, and discriminated against in every way, are the most aware of the police terror. The class son- scious Negro sees how every police- man is a bulwark of this lynching employer-ruled society. will be at the Union Square meet- | ing. Congress has statement: ssued the following J1th St. and Third! the more militant members into , the Communist Party. “We, the American Negroes, the most oppressed Section of the work- Members of the United Workers Co-operative Association! ELECTION FOR THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS WILL BE HELD SATURDAY, MAY 11, from 5 to 9 P. M. in the Auditorium of the COLONY, 2700 BRONX PARK EAST. MEETING of the Golden’s Bridge Colony will be held at the WORKERS CENTER, 26 Union Square TONIGHT AT 8:30 P. M. New members are accepted. There will be an outing this and every Sunday to the colony from 125th St., N. Y. Central at 9:45 a. m. — For information write S. ihatsier Goldens Bridge, New York. in And they| , The American Negro Labor) ® YOUNG MEN'S SUITS Right eff 17 Stat 4th et Subway Square tomorrow (Saturday) at 1 ail Covara, uy, | ae 6 x é rades Meet at p.m, , : From $12.50 to $25.00 ee | The I L. D, last night thru its PARK CLOTHING STORE BRONSTEIN’S jmectetary, Hosa) Haron, isnued) the)# Dies. ascemlatl We Wie, C VEGETARIAN HEALTH following appeal to New York RESTAURANT? pao nl RESTAURANT WAnawen ‘THis. Cetin” 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx “The deliberate murder of work- . J. I EL ers demonstrating on labor’s inter- national holiday by the “socialist” government of Berlin is one of the greatest outrages ever committed against the working class. “This dastardly crime must not SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 11 Cor. Second Av “For An Any ; Kind of Insurance” of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone; Murray Hil. 5550 . East 42nd Street, New York | Ey Sunday, 10 a. m: to 1 p. m. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 “RERGM AN BROS... Cooperators! Patronize Your Nearest Stationery Store S E R O Y Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. Y. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE M. FORMAN Allerton Carriage, Bicycle and Toy Shop 736 ALLERTON AVENUE (Near Allerton Theatre, Bronx) Phone, Olinville 2583 Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops! 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/~K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Tel.: DRYdock 8380 FRED SPITZ, Ine. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. nt St. Phone ele TB30 BUSINESS MEETING] on the fir ria of the Always Dine at Onur Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx riz on) = 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blyd., " N.Y nx, Right off 174th St. Subway Station For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT TH INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner Gth Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open tron, 2 a m te 12 p om HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNlIversity 5865 —_— Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York 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 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetariin Food ae