Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| 5 epee Yage Five DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY. JUNE 1, 1929 BOSSES, FRANTIC, PUSH FRAME-UP OF IRON STRIKER Wimpel Held for Grand | Jury Trial The attempt by the iron and Bronze bosses to frame up A. Wim- pel, one of the striking iron workers of the Lasser and Kaplan Iron Works, was yesterday given sup- port by the capitalist courts, when Wimpel came up for hearing at the Second District Court, on 161st St. The attempt to railroad Wimpel is being made on the unsubstanti- ated charge made by a strikebreaker at the Lasser Works, who alleges that he was assaulted by the striker. No Summer Resorts for ‘Workers’ Chil Despite the fact that Wimpel denied | any connection with the alleged as- sault, and the strikebreaker could furnish no evidence of Wimpel hav- ing assaulted him, the striker was) held for Grand Jury trial and faces a prison term. | Picketing continued yesterday at) all shops tied up by the 4,000 iron| and bronze strikers. At the Lasser and Kaplan Works on 143rd St. and} Southern Blvd., a picket demonstra- | tion was held to show the workers’) solidarity with Wimpel, the striker | against whom the frame-up attempt | is being made by the Lasser bosses. A mass meeting of the strikers will be held today at 1.30 p. m. at Webster Hall. J. Louis Engdahl of the Daily Worker will be one of the | speakers. | A mass meeting of strikers’ wives will be held Monday at’ the union! headquarters at 7 E. 15th St. to discuss relief and picket plans. | TO ASSEMBLE FOR FIGHT ON EMPIRE Anti-Imperialists Hold Meet Tomorrow corrupting the petty bourgeois na-| ist League, yesterday. A Latin American conference has been called by the ‘Ail-American | Federation of Transport and Com- | Anti-Imperialist League to be held munications Workers, The arbitra- tomorrow, at Lexington Hall, 109 E,|tion board held their strike illegal 116 St. at 2 p.m, to strengthen|2nd prevented them from returning the resistance to Yankee imperial-| ism, to expose the fake “peace” be-|Ported them in their strike. \ tween Bolivia and Paraguay made by | | railway workers ended today when age ‘tote iz While the best of the beaches are reserved for the wealthy, poverty forces the workers’ dren—Crowd Fountains for Aid| a children to remain in the sweltering city. Scattered fountains like the above in City Hall Park all has fresh, cool water to which the workers’ children can turn to for relief, and even from these the Tammany police chase them. In the Soviet Union, a workers’ and farmers’ government, workers and their families are sent to summer resorts, which belong to the workers’ and farmers’ and are not for the use of a few wealthy parasite 200 WORKERS IN HUNGER STRIKE [Protest Arbitration in| Mexico City | BULLETIN. MEXICO CITY, May 31.—The hunger strike of 200 discharged President Portes Gil promised | that they would get their jobs back “as vacancies occur” and | promised the government would | enforce this decision. | * * * | MEXICO CITY, May 31—Rail-| way workers, 200 strong, went on a| |hunger strike today in the supreme|im@ the workers behind its cam- court building as a protest against | the court decision that their 1926 | strike was illegal. | N. Y. Labor “Defense Organizes First Three Shop Branches in U. S. | In accordance with its policy of entering more actively than ever) into the struggles of the workers, | the New York district of the Inter-/ NN. Y. Workers Cram} national Labor Defense is now or-| ganizing shop branches. Three such | branches have already been organ-| ized, one in a printing shop, one in| REPORT 20 DE AD IN STIFLING HEAT Congested Beaches With more than 20 deaths from a millinery shop and the third in|the stifling heat reported to date, | |@ paper products factory. They are | thousands |the first shop branches of the I. L.| crowded the only places fo “‘amuse- | D. to be organized in this country, | all other branches being residential. | The New York I. L. D. is now starting a drive to organize more shop branches in this district. As| part of this drive thousands of leaf- | lets are being distributed to work- ers in shops and factories, telling of the aims of the I. L. D. and rally- paigns. These leaflets are attrac-| tively printed and may be obtained | at the office of the I. L. D., 799 ment” available for them, grabbing a precious few inches of space at ;congested city beaches. fort. of New York workers | In New York City the tempera- | ture rose to 83 degrees, with a hu- midity of 92 adding to the discom- At Glens Falls, N. Y., the tem- perature was recorded at 110, the highest mark in the East. Three deaths from drowning occurred in| New York state. In New York City the subways The strikers took possession of | Broadway, room 422, { “U. S. financial capitalists are busy |the court last night, This morning tionalists, many of whom have al-|they were still holding their posts, ready sold out to the imperialists,” listening to speakers who urged said the All America Anti-Imperial-|them to remain until the decision | their hunger strike. was reconsidered. The strikers are me! to their jobs. Other The university stu | | announcing | mbers of the | unions sup- dents’ strike | FURRIERS MEET AT RUTGERS SO, Demonstrate Today for | Fur Struggle (Continued from Page Onc) American imperialists and the “set-| also continued in support of lawjof the strikebreaking plans of the tlement” of the Tacna-Arica dis-|Students who protested changes in |bosses and the company “Joint were jammed at an early hour with |those anxious to escape from the |Sweltering heat of the city tene- |ments. Some 800,000 are estimated | to have played at “vacationing” | round the hot dog and ice cream | Stands of the island. | The bright weather was conveni- | jently seized by Police Commissioner Whalen as an excuse to keep his} army of press agents busy by of- ficiating at the formal opening of | the Rockaway beaches. He was ac- jcompanied by Arthur Smith, son | of the former governor. | In Stirring Statement It (Continued from Page One) | union, the Amalgamated Section of the T. U. E. L, has issued a stirring call to all workers in the industr: tailors of men’s clothing, cutters. jend operators. The call urging them to come to the Cooper Union dem- jonstration in thousands follows: | “Sisters and Brothe: | “Once more the thousands of clothing workers are revolting against the terrible exploitation in the shops and against the cor- rupt Hillman machine. “In the last few years the Hill- man-Beckerman machine has sup- pressed every revolt of the tailors with the aid of the gangsters and the police. Through brutal force this clique has expelled many militant left wing workers from the Amalgamated, many of them being forced to leave the indus- try. “The Amalgamated “leaders,” with the help of the bosses, has made the thousands of tailors to work like slaves in the shops, and with terror methods forced the will cf the bosses on the tailors. “The continuous wage reductions and reorganizations, the standards ef production, the inhuman speed- up system, the contracting sweat- shops, has forced the tailors to become humble slaves of the bosses. “The tremendous unemployment and miserably low wages has brought the clothing workers to | the point of beggery. Graft and Corruption. “The open graft and corruption, the gangster and boss terror and the open, shameless co-operation between the bureaucrats oi the A. C. W. and the bosses hzs de- stroyed the union and broken the morale and spirit of the clothing | workers. | “Helplessness and desperation exist among the tens of thousands of tailors throughout the country. “The majority of the clothing workers are forced to work in open shops. The corrupt “Amal- gamated leadership” is not inter- ested in organizing the thousands of unorganized. These union bu- reaucrats are not interested in improving the conditions of the workers. “The Hillman machine has made a company union of the Amalgamated. The Hilimans and | their cliques are the open agents of the bosses and the avowed ene- mies of the workers. They are | openly connected with the ‘For- the AMALGAMATED T.UEL SUPPORTS BIG COOPER UNIGH MEET TODAY | trial Union. | Calls for a Vigorous Fight on Hillman’s Union-Wrecking Union of all needle wor Bosses Reward Her POLICE PROTECT HORTHY FASCISTS MEET IN BUFFALO Anti-Fascists Hold Big that . will defend the interests of the Demonstration workers. ig Hillman’s Agents at Work. | BUFFALO, “We call the attention of the | garian Horthy : held) i tailors that even in the present | Hotel continues with no,Wisi- struggle the Hillman machine has | |tors allowed to enter the hall, A its agents, who are mobilized to disrupt the success of the move- ment. Just as in the past, the Hillman agents are organized and waiting for the opportunity to be- tray the worker: “The 1 VU, L. calls on the Willembrandt, strong police force is still surround- ing the building. The Anti-Fascist Federation held a big mass meeting in front of the hotel in att ing the fascists. The secret of the Anti-Fascist coke at the Mabel for many Federation, A. Markoff, clothing work to be on their’ |, arg Wall Strect’s assistant at-|demonstration denouncing the par- guard and not allow any individu- torney general, has received her re-|liament, Mayor Frank X. Schwab, als to use the movemen ewn and Hillman’s p ambitions. The only guarantee for the success and victory of the of the clothing rendered ward for s es in the country. tion magnates of the ia- the |and the Washington go~ernment of rieq| bankers for giving hospitality and encouragement to the murderers or the Hungarian workers and farmers. present revolt = He said that “the bankers of Wall workers against Hillman’s com- = St. are responsible for the overthrow pany union is the full ¢ 1 in SHIP ORGANIZER of the workers government of Hun- the hands of the rank and file Qoeegl q 1 acyl and (puting jink poy eemee over the movement. murderer "Torthy, who has butchered “The T, U. E. L. calls on the and tortured tens of thousands of tailors to come to the Cooper é workers and farme: Union meeting. The Hillman ma- ientcaniapauaee chine is decayed and degenerated. “The T. U. E L. is convinced that the clothing workers have Frame Morgan, of the Marine League He called va the ers to join the Anti. ist Federa- |tion in order to stop t > spreading \of fascism in America. | Louis Kovesh, of Uj Elore, Hun- the strength to achieve for them- | selves 2 40-hour, 5-day week, ( : » Rreaiawerl acmendnbionwarens to || 5 ae Ae |garian Daily, spoke and pointed out ized and |¢.q (Continued from Page One) | that the delegates to the convention organize the unorganized and | tribute copies cf the Marine Work-| sre agents of Horthy. wipe out the reductions, reorgan- | ers Voice and the Labor Defender Soe: , ization, standard of productions |t the men on the ship, ‘The | ,, 1 of the speakers demanded the and speed-up systems. Marine Workers Voice is the offi disbanding of the Hungarian fascisti. “It is the duty of every clothing | (regan of the Marine Workers | Many Workers carried signs brand- worker to come to the Cooper | 769, which is now carrying on| 7 the Hungarian fascists as Union meeting and help defeat |.) exter Z “murderers, cut-throats, torturers, the Hillman machine, and build the Needle Trades Workers Indus- “The Pressers’ Club has pledged an extensive national organizational | i orked gn among the loited seamen. ov an had been attacked by a {hired guard on the boat after the | criminals, and conspirators against the workers of Hungary.” A demonstration took place yes- terday afternoon before the statue nd for the building of an Indus- |(efended himself from the attack, | POC, trial Needle. Trades Worke ee We The sabes Sa oe | Pehe Rev. John Ormai, pastor of a Union, For this reason | CWeC. “he organizer was tied toly utheran church of Buffalo has the T. U. E. L. will work in co- operation for the success and vic- tory of the workers. The unity of as hours anchion of the boat for several while the officers sought a policeman in order to make a formal asked mayor F, X. Schwab for more |“protection from the Communists who have come here to demonstrate.” | open enemies. Semich in UMWA, Not National Miners Union |J. Watt, president of the National |tion will only strengthen our drive | Miners Union, and others, appear: ing in the Daily Worker recently, it |was stated that Ignac Sem arre As poet The minister is vice-chairman of the George Mink, secretary of the | The min : : Marine Workers League, last night |C*Vention promoting fascism. |told the Daily Worker: | “This savage sentence imposed | upon Morgan for organizational ac- |tivities reveals strikingly the fear | jof the ship owners of the organiza- | tional campaign which our League | is now carrying on. Morgan’s cour- egeous stand in the face of this |frame-up is an example of the fight- In.a report of the arrest of John |ing spirit of our men. His convic- | all workers means a victory of | the workers over all the enemies of the workers, masked as well as Not only has the bourgeoli forged the weapons that bri denth to itself; it has also called into existence the men who are to wield those weapons—the modern working class—the proletarians— Karl Marx (Communist Manifesto). “On to the struggle! “On to victory! “A.C.W. SECTION, T.U.E.L.” Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. ¥. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 mong the exploited seamen.” h was ‘or Any Kind of Insurance” | wards,’ with the Sigmans, un organizer of the National Miners cs | Today, landlords will try to collect) pute, in both of which the American their examination regulations. Mon- | Council.” imperialists have maneuvered to, strengthened their position, The ter-| rorism of Machado in Cuba; the im- poverishment of the masses in Haiti Porto Rico and other Caribbea: colonies of Wall Street; the new wave of revolt throughout Latin) America will also be subjects thoroughly discussed at this confer-| ence. All Latin-American organiza-| tions are urged to send delegates. | The following anti-imperialist con- | ferences, in addition to the Lexing-| ton Hall meeting, are scheduled for the near future: Eastern Anti-Imperialist Confer- ence, June 15, 2 p. m. and 7 p. m,| Irving Plaza Hall, New York City. | Middle Western Anti-Imperialist | Conference, June 16, 2 p. m., Cap-) itol Building, Randolph and State | Sts., Chicago, Ill. Western Anti-Imperialist Confer- ence, June 23, San Francisco, Cal. Tenants to Parade Today as Protest Against Rent Hogs. (Continued from Page One) open air meeting will be held. Ex- cellent speakers will outline the nec- essary program and action to stop robbery. Last ni; ht the Emergency Rent Laws expired, and the city board of aldermen have definitely refused to extend the laws for another year. | higher rents, assured that now they | will not even have to dicker with a| magistrate before they force the} tenants to pay the raises. Tenants are urged to come in masses to the parade, as a forciful indication of the force that the land- lords and legislature will have to deal with. The Communist Party has already announced that it will make the housing situation one of the main issues in its municipal elections campaign. Pioneers to Hold ' Hike Sunday; Urge Children to Attend The Pioneers of District 2 will, hold their first district hike this Sunday to the Palisades. All Pio- neers will meet at their section head- quarters and then go to the Dykman St. ferry. There will be an interesting pro- gram of games and soprts, All Pioneers who have any baseball or ether sporting equipment should Lring it along, so that ell comrades ‘vill be able to participate in the games. Our own age, the bourgeois age, ix distinguished by this—that it | has simplified class antag: More and more, society ix ting up into two great hostile camps, 1 t und directly contra + bourgeoisie and pro- letariat—Marx. av jing taken, day congress is scheduled to take up a proposal to establish autonomy at the university. FOOD LEADERS WON'T PAY FINE Kramberg, Obermeier Denounce Injunction (Continued from Page One) stration, in which thousands of| workers of all trades are expected | to participate, will be held in the| garment center on Monday, it is announced. These demonstrations have continued in the face of dras- tic injunctions and the most vicious police brutality. “We Will Not Pay” “We will not pay the fines im-| |posed upon us for alleged violation |fur workers to join this mass meet- of the injunction, Like the hun-| dreds of strikers who have gone to jail for sentences ranging from 2) days to 6 months, we will likewise go | to jail as a protest against the vic-| ious injunction which robs the strik- ers of all their rights to organize and strike for shorter hours and higher wages. It prohibits peaceful picketing, carrying placards or dis- tributing leaflets advertising the! fact that there is a strike, from| boycotting in any way the cafeterias struck, from persuading the custom- ers not to patronize the open-shop| cafeterias, from every activity what- soever that is necessary to carry on a strike. The picketing and all other) strike activities have continued in| spite of the injunction, because the} strikers refuse to be driven back to the 12-hour open-shop slavery and to miserable wages, bu either whole- sale arrests and police brutality or by the injunction,” Michael Ober-| meir, organizer in charge of the strike committee, stated today. Defended the Strike. “Each of the defendants con- temptously and wilfully advised and counseled disobedience to the in-| junction order of this court and aid- ed and abetted in its violation,” de- clared Justice Crain in imposing) sentence. “Each is found guilty of contempt of court.” The decision was the result of action taken by Nathaniel Phillips, counsel for the Wil-low Cafeterias, a $3,000,000 con- cern with 22 cafeterias in New| York. An application for a temporary stay of execution in the above case was denied by the Appellate Divis- ion. Further legislation for an ap- peal from the order fining the strike leaders for contempt of court is be- | \ Reap the benefits of the May Day demonstrations by getting into the Communist Party wWork- jately after work at Cooper Union. Active Members Meet Monday. The workers are called to demon- strate before the nest of the union-| wreckers and socialist scabs and show their determination to join vig-| orously in the coming struggle | against the slavery in the shops, ana} against those who daily sell out the interests of the workers, On Monday, immediately after work, there will be held an unusually important meeting of active mem- bers of the Industrial Union in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St.) Important. reports will be made at| this meeting by leading spokesmen | of the Joint Board. Important or- ganizational activities will be plan- ned in connection with the coming struggle of the furriers. Cooper Union Tuesday. The greatest mass meeting prior to the issuance of the furriers’ strike call will be held Tuesday immedi- The Industrial Union calls upon all ing, and thereby demonstrate that they are determined to destroy the sweat-shop system brought back inte the existence by the company union. Call Communists for Picket Duty in Food Demonstration Mon. Communist Party members working in the needle trades ter- ritory and those unemployed are instructed by the New York Dis- trict of the Communist Party, through William W. Weinstone, district organizer, to appear for picket line duty in connection with the cafeteria strike hetween 11:30 and 12, Monday, June 3. “The coming weeks are the most critical in the entire strike,” says the call. “The bosses are concentrating their attacks on the workers in a desperate effort to stem the onward march of the union. The courts and police are seeking by the most ruthless methods of fines and violence to |! break the resistance of the work- ers. We must rally the workers in the biggest mass demonstra- tion yet seen to meet the cam- paign of terror and show that the workers cannot and will not be subdued by such methcds.” HATT. | Party Picnic. the date of the Party mt Bay Park, open. + 8 Pioneers, District 2. Meet at section headquarters and proceed to Dyckman St. Ferry for the Keep June picnie to Ple; |hike to the Palisades tomorrow. B ICL Section 6, Unit 6F. Speakers from the Industrial De- Workers International Relief. Volunteers to address, fold and en- close envelopes for children’s camp campaign are asked to report at 1 Union Sa., Room 606. * * 8 Harlem Labor Center. The second inter-racial dance and social of the season will be given at headquarters today at 8:30 p, m., at 235 W. 129th St. Feet Spanish Workers’ Center. A dance to celebrate moving into new headquarters at 26 W. 115th St. will be held at 8 p. m. today, eee Die Naturfreunde. The English section will attend the Midvale Spring festival. Meet at 2:30 p. m. today at the Chamber Street | ferry of the Erle R. R. Fare, $1.75. | - * * | East New York Culture Cub. | ers who participated. A concert will be given at 313 Hins- | dale St. at 8:30 p, m, today, w Communist Activities Aves., at 12 noon today. partment of the Communist Party will address the open air meeting in front of the American Safety Razor Company at Lawrence and Myrtle Caen Aun,” ‘e Section 9, The C. I. Address will be discussed | at the section membership meeting at Turn Hall, Broadway and 14th/ Ave, Monday, June 4, A District Of- fice speaker Fraternal Organizations Anti-Imperialist Meet. Delegates to the Second Anti-Im Perialist World Congress at Paris, July 20 to 31 will be elected at the Eastern Conference of the League at Irving Plaza, 15th Street and Irving Place, tomorrow, 2 p. m. and 7 p.m. A Latin American conference will be held Sunday, at Lexington Hall, 109 E. 116th St. at 2 p. m. Com- municate with the’ offices of the League at Room 433, 799 Broadway ROSE |. RR United Council Working Women—In- | ternational Labor Defense. A musical program will be offered by soloists of the Conductorless Sym- phony Orchestra at the joint concert eee Allerton Theatre, 11:30 p. m. today, [~~ BROOKLYN Parquet Floor Workers. A mass meeting will be held to- day at 3 p.m. at Scandia Hall, 51st St. and Fourth Ave, ey ese * ‘ouneil 1, U. C. W. We The first anniversary of the Coun- t cell will be celebrated with a banquet at $820 Church Avo, tonight, | ous struggle against the betrayal | of the Hillman machine and has vill lead the discussion. | Schlesingers and the A. F. of L. company unions, and joins in the fight of these traitors against the cloak and dressmakers, the fur- riers, the cap and millinery work- ers who are organized in the mili- tant and aggressive Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. Revolt of the Clothing Workers. “The Amalgamated Section of the T. U. EF. L. has consistenly carried on a fearless and courage- aroused the workers to struggle against the intense exploitation that the Hillman cliques and the bosses have forced on the* work- ers. | “The Cooper Union meeting, | which is called by the Pressers’ Club and the T. U. E. L., is the beginning of organizing the tail- ors, in laying the foundation for a strong Needle Trades Industrial Phone: LEHIGH 6382 lnternational Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor FEE Airy, Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO HIRE Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak | Union, jvect. I | United Mine Workers of America and has no connection whatsoever | We regret the error. This statement was incor- Semich is a member of the telephone: Murray Hili 5550 |with the National Miners Union. / 7 Past 42nd Street, New York ([ARL BRODSKY cas? FROM FACTORY TO YOU! HIGH-GRADE MEN'S and YOUNG MEN'S SUITS From $12.50 to $25.00 PARK CLOTHING STORE 93 Ave. A, Cor. 6th St. N. ¥. C. COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE M. FORMAN Allerton Carriage, Bicycle and Toy Shop 736 ALLERTON AVENUE (Near Allerton Theatre, Bronx) Phone, Olinville 2583 | Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER Cooperators! PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. ¥. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 Workers House, Inc. 347 EB, 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 Why Patronize 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 Exploiters? | BUY ONLY FROM YOUR ||, Cooperative || ZX Food | (FENCO\ i yy cervice |i UNION SHOP Bakeries, Meats, Groceries, Restaurant Brooklyn: 4301-3 8th Ave. * + 806 48rd St. 4005 5th Ave. Pere 6824 8th Ave. Manhattan: 2085 Lexington Ave. / Co-operative Trading Ass’n, Inc. Office: 4301 8th Ave, B’klyn, N.Y Tel. Windsor 9052-9092, AMALGAMATED ¥OOD WORKERS Meets Ist Saturday in the month at 3861 ird Avenue. Yel. Jerome 7096 Baker's Local 164 Bronx, N. Y. Ask for Union Label Bread! Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 733 CS Mt MEETING&}} eld on the first Monday of the h at % p. m, o —One Union—Join and Fig! ¢ Common Enemy! Office Open from 9 . to 6 p.m, Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City se: ERON SCHOOL Moved! The Eron Preparatory School, which holds a Regents Charter as ‘a private high school and which was located for a period of thirty years.at 187 East Broadway, has now moved and is now located in larger and more commodious quarters at 853 Broadway, Corner 14th Street, facing Union Square. The Eron Preparatory School runs courses in: (1) Regents and College Entrance preparatory for all und universities. Il Commercial and Secretarial colleges (2) etrie Book- ric Billing. ‘ish for intel- etry eeping and (4) All grades of ligent foreigner: Registration for Our Summer Term Is Now Open. Telephone: STUYVESANT 2387. J. E. Eron, Principal. Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Dairy sienvenn Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. ||} Gomraden ean Always Find It |] \ Pleasant to Dine at Our Place, Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor, 9th St. Phone, Orchard 2333, In case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and can assure you of careful treatment. COMRADES EAT ‘ | SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT | 1604-6 Madison Ave. | Between 107th & 108th Sts, For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open tron, 1¢ a m te 12 p m. 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 MELROSE 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blyd., T-onx, N. ¥. Right off 174th St. Subway Station HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. ‘cond Ave, New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 a.m, tol to 6 P, Tues, Thurs., 9.30 a, m. to 12; 4 to 8 p,m Sunday, 10 a. m, to 1 p. m. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PAK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) 302 E.12th St. New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVEI.UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food