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DAILY WORKER, EW YORK, THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1929 HOE STRIKERS — HFEYINJUNCTION. entiment for Spread of Fight Grows (Special to the Daily Worker.) BOSTON, May 15,—With the rike of the 12,000 shoe workers Boston, Chelsea and Stoneham tering its seventh week, sentiment growing for the spread of the ruggle to other shoe centers. Since the strike first began the ; sikers have courageously resisted attempts to crush the struggle. Violate Injunctions. Indicative of the spirit of the -ikers is their consistent mass vio- ion of the injunctions against ] keting which the capitalist courts ve so accommodatingly served at 1c requests of the bosses. An aspect of the struggle here is > capitalist press conspiracy of ence to smother the existence of e strike, hopirg in this way to ing it to a speedy termination. at they will be disappointed in evident from the in New York harbor. Seamen Slave to Get Ship Off Shore Photo shows the steamer Gypsum Prince, which went aground Seamen are slaving hard to get her off the Gastonia Bosses Start! Evictions Again (Continued from Page One) | evicting deputies, refusing to carry cut her crippled mother, aged 6 an invalid suffering from pellagra. uties and scabs aiding in the evic- | tions used the utmost care toward ker mother. The Loray mills sent | a truck to take the furniture to the | company’s warehouse, but Mrs. Mc- Donald refused to fall into this trap. j “Hell, no,” she said, “my things | ain’t geing to no warehouse. | ain't no better than the rest of the | union people, and can set it any- | where besides the warehouse.” Throughout the eviction of their | furniture, the strikers sang “Soli- darity Forever” so loud it could be heard by workers living in the val- \ley below, Mrs. McDonald’s mother | was cared for last night in the house |cf another striker. is respect is - fusing and enthusiastic strike shore. ings held every day, in which) 7 ms — | J nk and file workers express their Fraternal O : termination to continue the strug- | J > until all the demands are won. Der. :3: Conrt [ie BROORENN Sl . Bvhe spirit of the workers toward Council 17, U. C. W. W. | > injunctions granted the bosses is} “From the Cradle to the College’ n | will be discussed by J. Medem in a Krantz, an active|iecture at 227 Brighton Beach Ave. 8:30 p,m. eas oe e Roxbury District Court defiantly . quently reflected in the statement ade by Jacob iker, who when brought before | tomorrow, ‘SHOP DELEGATES . . Hushand a Mill Cripple. 8 anizatio McDonald, crippled in an accident g ns in the Arlington mill several year: ago, stcod guard over the furniture -'outside of his former home all night. McDonald has been refused vork in 11 mills in this vicinity, due to one of his legs being amputated by the accident. He is the father of five little boys. Others evicted include M. Marr, who has four children, and Ruth PLAN FOR STRIKE 1,000 OUT FOR LEATHER LABOR 2m RELIEF WORKERS. WARNS TRAITORS Progressives Tell of Shiplacoff Tactics (Continued from Page One) tee,” a clique which aims to defeat ; (with the help of the bosses) the rising militancy of the workers in She laid a gun on the table and |their struggles for better conditions | threatened to shoot unless the dep-jand against capitalist rationaliza- | tion, is enough to prove this. Furthermore, Shiplacoff enormous sums of money, extracted from our meager earnings, to the | Sigman-Schlesinger-McGrady clique, | \the leaders in the pogrom on the| furriers and cloakmakers. In our own union he obtained the full- hearted support of the bosses in ter- rorizing the workers in every pos- sible way. He works hand in glove with the bosses in his so-called or- ganization work. In order to defeat any possible resistance on the part of the workers to his treacherous schemes he suspended and removed from union activities the best fight- ers in our union. Last, but not least, he is a member of the social- ist party, the arch betrayer of the working class. Can we expect any- thing but betrayal from a leadership |keaded by such an individual? Without a fight the bosses will not grant us the 40-hour, five-day week, week work, one minimum seale for all mechanics, a minimum gave | | | | Four more years democratic ticket’s beating the fu m ion election democratic “czar” of New Jersey man. Photo shows balloting in the of graft for Both slates were Frank Hague, as a res late in the Jersey City com- Hague is the ed this bosses sion ticke back the bosses’ election. | Communist Activities TO AID SOUTHERN iy NHA’ rty Pi 3, the date nt Bay | Kee pienie of the Party Park, open. Jun to Ple Unit ducatior period, and the rest of the demands | d the judge: “Jail wil not stop Brownaville I. L. D. from disregarding the injunc- m.” Hailed to court with Kran women, The reactionary and corrupt bu- | A membership meeting will be held 8 p. m, tonight at 154 Watkins St alae ee Toussaint L’Ouverture. | | | A Toussaint L'Ouverture memorial |will be held at the dance and c cert at the Workers Center, 154 Wat- | RepresentativesChosen for T.U.E.L. Meet Woodward, a widow with three chil- \dren. Many additional evictions are scheduled for today and tomorrow. The ecnstruction of a union head- quarters, which will also be used as kins under the auspices of the Brooklyn Branch of the American N bor Congress, Saturday. Mu- dern Colony cab organization own as the “Bi and Shoe Work- Union” is still virulently at- king the strike which is now ng conducted by the United Shoe ’ Union. r Strike Demands. s on strike are de a closed union shop; high- the eight-hour day instead the present ten-hour day, and shop conditions, which means saucracy of the ’ 2 2 2 1 sre 35 other strikers, 21 men and 1 1 n 1 Proletbuhne, Kings, Queens. Arbeiterbund meets at & p. m day, Labor Lyceum, 785 Forest The Berlin May First will be cussed, | MANHATYA: | [—WaANRATIAN J) Millinery Handworkers’ Union. The social and educational club sl the Union will mect Friday, May 24, 8 p. mat New Webster Manor, 11th St. and'Third Ave. Soiree ? York Drug Clerks Association. The workers , The association meets at 8:30 p,m ; today, at Stuyvesant Casino, 1 ke until they get @ second Ave. cement for all workers in Re eiteal i i - nd A F as National Textile Workers’ Union. without separation pf A"membership meeting of locals of no yellov-dog contracts. the union in District 4 will be held today, 7:30 p, mat W. 21st ‘The Cleveland ‘Trade Union Unity invention will be discussed. | SION | to- Ave. dis- ve ee es ww by the bosses. to 5 t sy Harlem Progressive Club. A hike to City Island will be held > Sunday. Meet at clubrooms, 1492 t. Madison Ave., 8:30 a. d kg English Section, Die Naturefreunde. A hike to the Hudson River will be *: held Sunday. Meet at Dyckman St. Terry, 8* a. m. “$ * oe 8 ve nm Page Onc) Peay Section, N. T. W. I. U. ‘ <a. ..4. membership meeting will be held, of no allowed for de-! ai 131 W. 28th St. at 6 p, m. | WY: Frethelt’ Geannas ¢ ; eo reihelt Gesangs Verein. 1- The Hamburg and Stuttgart) tne sixth jubilee concert will be = thorities have prohibited the Het at the Carnegie Hall Saturday, tings of the Communists sche- \f1 Ps ane Epoeisy Se - | ied for the week of May 19, and » Red Front Fighters Convention BRONX | redul: : the s iod, eduled for the same perio Prolab Theatre at NJT.W.U. Benefit. | ‘The theatre will present “Mr. God | is Not In,” by Harbor Allen, for the benefit of the Southern’ Textile | Strikers at the benefit arranged by Council 8, United Council of Working Women, at 8 p, m, Saturday, May 25 Win Shop Councils. The Communist pamphlet entitled loody May Day” was confiscated | the police in Berlin today. The | ition of 50,000 was almost ex-j#t 1830 Wilkins Ave, | usted so the police found very! Cooperative International Labor v left. | Defense. Res i 5 counci ».| Carl Hacker, organization secretary | Results in the shop council elec Pini: esas ler hin eeape he ted ns are partially available today, | Southern textile strike at 2700 Bronx 1 show that in the railwaymen’s Park East, Tuesday. militant opposition to the —— —_ ion the uerats has had considerable Mexican Reactionaries In Koenigsberg the opposi- | arte |Want to Be ‘White’ in n has 1,670 votes against the re- mists’ 600. Everywhere in Fast (Cogd-Will’ JimCrowism (Continued from Page One) | the W. I. R. relief store, was started left wing union goes out on strike, yesterday amid great enthusiasm. the entire left wing may be said to|The building will be done by mem- be striking.” bers of the union. A large meeting A resolution on Negro work was | Was held to celebrate the beginning enthusiastically adopted after it was |°f the construction work. adopted on behalf of the American| The stability of the union is ‘elt | Negro Labor Congress by Harold |by all the strikers, The militant Williams, in charge of the Negro Spirit of the workers continues to Gepartment of the New York Dis-|¢*Press itself in spite of the evic- trict, |tions and the terrorism of the depu- ties. Fred E. Beal, National Textile A large number of delegates took|Workers Union organizer, was the floor to point out the vital neces-|cheered when he spoke on the seven- sity for immediate mobilization for hour day in the Soviet Union to a the furriers’ strike and to expose |large meeting of strikers. the fake maneuvers of the I. L. G.! The need for food and medicine W. grafters, continues urgent, according to rep- “Come to the food kitchen of the |resentatives of the W. I. R. here. fur union on 2ist St. any day and | They ask that funds be sent at once see workers who one time carned to the national office of the Work- £80 to $90 a week wait for a bowl ers International Relief, Room 604, of soup! And these traitors dare |1 Union Square, New York City. announce that at least 90 per cent | eae tals of the furriers are “working and | MOBILE, Ala, May 15.—The satisfied.” |State Convention of the Alabama Delegates Speak. Burochowitz, who rendered a re-|Federation of Labor today heard | George L. Goode, a special repre- port of the present situation among | P sentative of the American Federa- the fur workers, declared that final | preparations were being made for | the fur strike, He attacked the |d0 all they could to starve back to strikebreaking statements of the |the speed-up system the Gastonia Woll-McGrady gang, and said that and other textile Strikers following the durriers will make a determined |the National Textile Workers Union. fight to re-establish the union con- |He argued that breaking this strike ditions of 1926. would be a friendly act to “Ameri- aie pe leaders are Communists.” For gocd measure he added the lie that the strike “is financed by funds from Bosses Nervous. The acute nervousness of the fur manufacturers in the face of the pussia.” forthcoming strike is illustrated by | ~ ‘ the interview with Frank Hersko- vitz, president of the Associated Fur Manufacturers, Inc., in yester- day’s issue of “Women’s Wear.” Herskovitz tries to conceal his | nervousness by blustering secia- PROTEST TONIGHT tions to, the fur manufacturers, urg- | ing them to fire from the shops “all propagandists, agitators and peace disturbers.” At the same time the officials of the I, L. G. W. are being prepared | \22 Jailed Yesterday; Total Now 1,201 (Continued from Page Onc) »,| Charles Mollis, 33 years of age, of |66 East 119th St., was sentenced to | chose rather than pay a fine of $50.) tion of Labor, plead with them to} can institutions” because “the strike | 80 ussia the opposition has major- t L. G. lit 1s, There were opposition gains | 3 in anticipation of the fake stop- | Dresden, Leipzig, Opladen and) MEXICO CITY, May 15.—The|page. Dubinsky, ecting president of ) risruhe and other cities where "°Wspaper Excelsior, recently sus- the right wing international, in the | e opposition is a strong minority. pended for sympathy with the cler- same issue of “Women’s Wear ical insurgents, carries a front page | blandly admits that the union ex- | re chauvinistie letter to Wall Street pects to cash in, in the form of a Ambassador Dwight H. Morrow to- lankessnienta and gifts, $60,000 from | F day, protesting against a proposal |the Chicago and Cleveland centers, 1D) . tor schools at San Bernardino, $40,000 from the’ Workmen's Circle, egal on a strike for some time, fought back with stones against the police and a military escort protecting the imported scabs. bullets but most of the injuries re- sulted from the brutal manner in ¥hich police swung their clubs, Refused Wages. The strikers broke the gates of of a Mexico City primary school (were induced to sign the letter. BOMBAY POLICE \ ion shops, $36 for helpers ‘and | Violation of the “spirit of good will | hss 3 as fos- | + finishers. The Mexican bourgeoisie, gradu- | here was a great response to Sly surrendering to’ Yankee imper- | — ‘ious strike headquarters in great children in the “good will” talked |jice fired twice and used their batons mbers. Over 1,000 unorganized |! by Morrow, which, among other ikers i i be 5 4 | freely on strikers in the mill area. came out in the first day | things, demands a strict system of | ? ‘ (crimination against Latin Americans Police Jail Strikers, jand Mexicans in this country and he Tammany police swung their;are ready to foster prejudice, ir orkers, and arrested three strikers | militant Mexican workers and pea- \the Fessler Iron Works, 10th St.|sants do not think that way. “ir the East River. The arrested | Calif., to compel Mexican parents to|and the proceeds from a two-day NORKERS STRIKE classify their children there with |tax of the members of the organiza- Crientals or Negroes. Some pupils tion. (Continued from Page One) | le is $46 a week for finishers in| The letter said the move was in 3 by iwith a neighboring nation,” ‘unorganized shops $25 to $80 8 | tered by Morsow: ’ | | strike call from unorganized iron |ialism through its Portes Gil gov-| BOMBAY, India, May 15—Man Mons workers, who went to the ernment, is evidently training its | persone were injured today when po. the strike. Over 300 of these |Jim-Crowism and lynching. They imediately joined the union, evidently forget entirely of the dis- bs into action against the iron | their turn, against Negroes. The likera were bringing out the work-! :. i ; ‘Norway Miners Ratify | in the Fessler shop, One of the The workers, who have been out| Two persons were wounded by) Two others, Harry Connelius and) | Steve Stevenson, who are charged! with felonious assault, appeared be- fore Judge Bonellan in general ses-| sions, part two, Their cases were | adjourned to Tuesday. The attorney ‘for the union charges a deliberate and obvious frame-up of these two | strikers. John Taylor at the Sun Cafeteria | was thrown into the cellar by the boss and his gangsters, and locked {up there for an hour. He was res- cued from a beating by the workers in the cafeteria and escaped by the |coal chute. Most of the workers | walked out on strike. Hyman Bloom- | berg was slugged by a policeman) jat the Haynes Cafeteria at 411) Broadway, which was also taken out) on strike yesterday. saasie.| There will be the most important | mass meeting yet held by the union| at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East, Fourth St., at 8 p. m. tonight. The) purpose of this meeting is to spread | the strike, to protest against the in-| junction, plan for the struggle| thing to suppress the workers. It has refused to carry out the decision PITTSBURGH, Pa., May 15, lof the last members’ meeting to| Energetic steps are being taken by | women's tutablich a shop chairman commit. |the Workers International Relief| tomorrow, ltee of one hundred for strike emer-|here to rush sid to the textile Unit 5, Section leency strikers of North Carolina. A relief; ‘The first class on th eraniet rears wei eictete conference is being held dn May 24 Internati: rogram will be held | Hy arin of alse Vactory. lat 807 McGeagh Building, F Center, 28 Union ia _ By its policy of silence and) burgh, and steps are being taken to Ape * “watchful waiting,” with the aim of | establish relief machinery in all im-| n,. yeguine sno Oat demoralizing the workers, the ad- ministration is actually preparing tory” when it will come to us with ment. |ver on the part of the officials and the bosses. We must emphatically mentioned demands. | fae! 3 . | The answer of all the fancy | leather goods workers to the | bosses and the _ treacherous the ground for a brazen cry of “vic- | portant centers of Western Pennsyl- vania. j An urgent call was issued from the W. I. R. Pittsburgh office thru nothing better than the old agree-|F Plotkin, secretary, at Room <11,| We must defeat this maneu-| 119 Federal St, NS., to all organiza- at tions, sympathizers, asking them to jrush funds without delay. The demonstrate that we will not accept | Pittsburgh district, especially, where| |any agreement without the above-| 1 miners have fought police, brutality relief means to the success of a strike in time of struggle. burgh workers are urged in the cal to get behind the drive to establi | schemes of the officials must be |the’ Workers International Relief. | a call for an immediate strike / Donations, communications, etc. mobilization. The following steps | should be sent to F. Plotkin at 119 must be taken immediately: The decision of the last mem- bers’ meeting to establish a shop chairman committee of a hundred must be carried into life immedi- ately. Individual shop meetings must | be called immediately after for the purpose of electing shop commit- | tees to a union conference. This conference should establish the complete strike machinery, which should include the shop chairman committee of a hundred. Our watchword must be “Strike | for our just demands.” NEW DAWES PLAN UP TO POINCARE Morgan Gives French a Last Minute Command PARIS, May 15.—Emile Moreau | | with violation of the injunction, and|and M. Quesnay, French representa- tives on the Dawes board of experts, and representatives of French big 10 days in the workhouse which he|industry and finance had a two- hours’ conversation with the unof- ficial American delegation, Morgan and Young, and got their orders from American imperialism today. When they came out, looking so- ber, a tentative draft of the proceed- lings of the conference was distri- buted to all the delegates and a statement was issued to the press that “the revarations conference has reached a point where there is no- thing which should really prevent an agreement on figures for annual payments and on the principle of the plan of payment.” The German reservations to ac- ceptance of the Young compromise were included in the draft report of Germany. Notations on the margin of the report also were made by Dr. Schacht to indicate his ideas as to the terms on which the com- promise would be accepted by Ger- many. Moreau is seeing Poincare tonight to see whether the orders of Wall Street will be carried out by French imperialism, Federal St., Room 411. NEGROES DROWN IN NEW FLOOD Five Bodies Recovered; More Missing LIVINGSTON, Te May 15.— | Five bodies had been recovered late \today from the flooded Polk county |area where torrential rains sent the Trinity River and tributary streams out of their banks last night. The victims, all Negroes, were | found alongythe edge of the swirling Trinity River by searchers. Three were identified as a mother and two | daughters. | Searching parties continued ef- | rooned in trees and housetops. Three other Negro families and two white families still were missing along the Trinity River bottoms. Communist Literature Agents Discuss Plans throughout long strikes, know what} Pitts-| 7 forts to reach families reported ma- j German Party v Center, 26 ts site Workers? ir meeting will n today at 33rd St Union held and “ * * Upper Harlem Unit, Unit meet ut Cake t new ad- 5 W. 129th St. ~ * . Unit 1, Section 4, ades 4 1 to participate in the mass dis ons at 4:30 and 7p. m. today at 143.B. 103rd St. BROOKLYN | nd Section. mbership meeting will be held at the Turn Hall, 14th Ave. and Broadway, 8 p. m. Monday. * * | Bast New York Unit, ©. ¥. 1 Long Isl ul and An edueatior will be held at 313 Hinsdale p. m, Saturday Open Air Meetings Planned This Week Today. 137th and 7th Ave, 8 p. m. Speakers: Moore, M. Adams, R. Grecht. 180th St., near ¢ d Ave. (I. R. T.), al_ evening | 5:30 p. m.—Speaker: Wright. riday. 132nd St. and 5th Ave., 8 p. m— Speakers: Alexander, H. Zam, Mo- reau. } Wilkins and Intervale, 8 p. m.— Speakers: Saturday. 133rd and Lenox, 8 p. m.—Speak- Auerbach and Williams. Topic: egro Question Cooperators! PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. ¥. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 at Center Tomorrow -; : The organization of titerature | DR. J. MINDEL \sales will be discussed at the meet- x ef District 2 of the Communist Par- ty, at room 603, Workers Center, bined torre Sei ha ue 26 Union Square, 8 p. m., tomorrow. | Ne aTHOGR Sam Myron will lead the discussion. Unit organizers are urged to at- ;tend in place of literature agents where necessary. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 a.m. to 12; 2 to 6 P, M. Tues, Thurs., 9.30 a, m. to 12; to 8p. m. 10 a,_m: to 1 p. m. ne for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 ‘ East 42nd Street, New York Sund: = | Cooperators! Patronize Advertise your Union Meetings S E R O Y here. For information write to CHEMIST The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 Avenue Bronx, N. Y. against it, and to protest against to police brutality and interference in/ #} ssier busses attacked and beat up triker, Carl Ratzoff, who was ested and arraigned for “disor- ly conduct” in the Third District hrt. The evidence against all the sted strikers was so weak that | Joint USSR,Norwegian (Finn Union Commission OSLO, Norway, May 15.—The | Norwegian miners union has decided |4 mills and invaded the compounds. They demanded their April wages but the owners refused to pay their last wages unless they ended their | strike. K that yan overwhelming majority to ra-|__ At Lelisle road the police and Redes bine ar My dismiss |? the acrouaene tor rads om.| English soldiers made a bayonet xges against them. __ mission of the U.S.8.R., Finnish and| charge which’ injured several strik- Among. the huge iron shops tied Norwegian unions for solidarity and|€rs who were mass picketing. The in the first day of the strike were | joint action in emergencies. They! military are trying to enforce a wy | |General Bronze Corporation, in|did this against the expressed will| strikebreaking municipal order pro- g Island City, with 400 on strike, /of the bureaucrats in the Norwegian hibiting more than five pickets gath- the large iron works of the union. ‘ering at one place, Hison and Grossman companies. | | _ mass meeting for women will| Every member an active mem- |, The working class oi eld today at 7 E. 15th St., union | ber. Get a new member. Celebrate Hey ie. Pica i 4 E quarters, to arrange for relief| the Red month cf May by building ete ch 1) sures during the strike, |. the Communist Party. , hibit, eemerspars. the strike. WELCOME THE Manhattan Lyceum, 66 Admission Adults 35¢, PIONEER CONVENTION, Dist. 2 Friday Evening, May 17, at 8 P. M. Speakers—Tableaux—Dramatics EXCELLENT PROGRAM Tickets on Sale at Young Pioneers of America, 26-28 Union Square. THIRD YOUNG E. 4th Street, N. Y. C. Chile. a 15e. Patronize Branch of the Amalgamated] No Tip Barber Shops pel Food Workers 133 W. Slat St,, Phone Circle 7336 26-28 UNION SQUARE BUSINESS MEETING=]) Taya oo tee Tiree mas y of the CG SHSDE up) month at & p. Enaustry—one 2700 BRONX PAK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Tel; DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST 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 NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS | OF THE DAILY WORKER Chernenko, Solon DeLeon. | the stan worke announcement H. H. Broa of the E suff fact that yielded to the called off the in three big fi iation concess ards of the builc in t h, is Despite the completely not Broach has emp mployers that to: he lock- nounced Il have made before the; out threat. Want demand: b Conditions. of the employers nature, the for an ar- The hing cian tures that ar In_ this are com scabs Building Trades ociatic hru its demanded e off of the 14 wee! i gainst fixture manufact r a strike was called y this reason. Into the yesterday |stepped Samuel Untermyer, corpora- Jtion lawyer and millionaire, who an- nounced that he is prepared to con- duct another “investigation” inte the building trad The obvious purpose of this step is a campaign Fee ee a eee ints Pl against trade unionism in the build- piesa: demands mandy be yon: at Pittsburgh WIR Holds _»« Geclehtehat’ cee at Ce "aa the administration, on the other : E th ‘ih re-|sane” class collaboration Broach Wed ies coacenaly dots; eveee-| (conference. May 24 Ay tt eaeety ee A hint that Untermyer may even come out openly a hired lawyer for the builders is found in the statement of Norman, of the Build- ing Trades Em id iation, who denied that Unterm: a legal advisor to the Association, but hastened to add: “I am not say- ing he will not be in the future.” ono! Workers Lab. Theatre Meets Tomorrow Night A general membership meeting of the Werkers Laboratory Theatre will be held at 334 E. 15th St. (base- ment) tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. All t interested in proletarian dramatics are invited to attend. Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. ¥. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 COMRADES MEET AT Giusti’s Spaghetti House 5-course Luncheon 50c—11 to 3 6-course Dinner 75c—5 to 9 A LA CARTE ALL DAY 49 West 16th Street Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery © Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT. 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx : VEGETARIA) Dair RESTAURANT omrades ‘Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blyd., P-onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open trom 1° a» m te 12 p.m HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet || 302 E. 12th St. | New York ITALIAN DISHES Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVEL.UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sta, Strictly Vegetarian Food