Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
oth ee 4 ! ( D- ve re ig n, Rltsa aan ed ————— ee ee ee DAILY WOR! WORKER, EW | ORK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1929 __ rage Five Negro Workers Join Communist Pa Party, League at Detroit Anti- Lynching Meeting BILL TO REGISTER FOREIGN-BORN IS PASSED BY HOUSE Is Part of the Hoover | Repression Drive Against Labor Churches Fall in Line Police Convention for’ Radio Spy System (Continued from Page One) against American workers. The reg- istration scheme will provide a per- fect blacklist for the employers and will make easier than ever the frameup of militant workers. It is pointed out that workers in strikes can be “provided’’? with a criminal record with little difficulty by utilizing the apparatus of the registration officials. It was x vealed some time ago that finger- prints can be forged; in this way frame-ups of militant workers can become a matter of routine. Churches Fall in Line. Efforts are being mobilized to mobilize the churches and all other agencies of “public opinion” behind the repression program being push- ed by President Hoover. At a con- ference of Congregationalists now being held in Detroit, a discussion on the “enforcement program” took place and resolutions were passed supporting it. At the same time, under the guist | of “fighting crime” new and ingen- ious methods of branding workers are being worked out, in conformity } with the Hoover drive. In Atlanta, Ga., a meeting of the International Association of Chiefs of Police adopted a system of “criminal sta- tistics” by which “the amount of crime in America will be accurately gauged in the future.” Radio Spy System. Under the system, to be operated by the federal department of justice, police forces thruout the country will make monthly and annual re- ports concerning ‘crime and crimin- Making way for the establishment | of a complete and elaborate spy sys- tem by radio, Commissioner William P. Rutledge, of Detroit, reeommend- ed that a committee be named to dis- cuss with the Federal Radio Com- mission the question of allocating to police departments a wave length or radio frequency “best adapted to police service.” Communist Activities MA TTA’ ! Womens’ Work Organizers. Urgent matters will be diseu the m J ed at Work Center, at 8 p. m. tonight. ee aS 26 Union Sa., ecutive Committee will meet tonight at 6:30 p. m., at 350 EB. 81st St. eae aa Italian Fraction. The C. I. letter will be discussed at the membership meeting to be held at the Workers Center, 26 Union Sq., Room 402, tonight. aE RA 2 C, Y. L. Tron Strike Benefit den party and dance for the om strike will be held t. at 8:30 p. m. Sat- ae Oe Unit B, Seetion 4, A class in the C. 1. program is conducted by the unit at Sist St, at 7:20 p, m., Wednesda eS ee Greek Fraction. Bring membership books to the meeting at 101 W. 27th St., at 8 p. m. tonight. ae Section Orzanization Conference Postpoffed. Comrades will be notified by mail of the new date of the Section Or- ganization Conference, which was to have been held today but was post- poned. Cae ee Communist Youth Leagw A speakers’ bureau will be held at |7 p.m. tomorrow at 26 Union Sa. * | Unit 128. A meeting will be held at 6 | tomorrow at Jol W. 27th St. Unit 48. {A meeting will be held tomorrow at 101 W. 27th St. p. m. 6 p. m. | Section 4 Housewives’ Members. A meeting will be hed at 8 p. m. tomorrow at 14% E. 103d St. | T BROOKLYN 1 Coney Island Unit. A meeting will be d at 8:30 . tonight at 2901 Mermaid Ave. Open Air Meetings ednesday, 1ssth St. and St. Annes , Gottlieb. Moore, M. Fifth St. and Seventh s, Begun ‘Aver andeii0th St, Shrlich, Baum, Wilkins and le, Primoff, Reiss. 62nd St. and Amsterdam, Glassford. rd Williams Trial of Two Dry Spies Who Killed “Suspects” ABINGDON, Va., June 4.—The three law enforcement _ officers charged with murder of J. W. Ken- drick, Emory and Henry College student, on May 6, will be tried eparately, Judge A. C. Buchanan ruled today. Phone: Stuyvesant 4816 | John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 802 E.12th St. New York le Communist Youth Lengue. | | | Fire i in Plant Threatens Workers Fire in the Department of Street Cleaning incineator plant in Brooklyn threatened the lives of many'workers there, and destroyed the plant. Over 50 workers are made jobless as a result. STIRRING CALL IS GAP AND MILLINERY WORKERS. ISSUED TO ALL (Continued on Page Five) the pogrom policies of Zaritsky and his henchmen, and devising new methods for maintaining in power the reactionary Zaritsky machine. The conditions of workers are being steadily undermined by the competition of the open shops, ir which tens of thousands of un. organized workers are working under miserable conditions. The demands of the workers for a cam paign to organize the open sho} centers, a campaign against the speed-up system, unemployment, ete., were completely ignored. Dur- ing the entire period of the two years since Zaritsky has taken over the reins of the administra- tion of the 1927 convention, our union has been steadily going downward. Zaritsky’s Administration — An Orgy of Destructiveness. They expelled Local 43 with a membership of close to 4000. They employed scabs, guerillas, and the police to break the strikes of Lo- cal 43 and united with the bosses to destroy the local. They pro- voked a lockout against the Chi- cago Cap Makers to force piece work in the trade, expelled the Chicago Strike Committee and gave up the general strike a few weeks before the season, thereby reducing Chicago to an open shop center. Later they expelled 200 members which reduced the local to the insignificant number of 85. They expelled the Millinery Local of Women Workers of Chicago, and made the field free for open shoppers of that city. They made all efforts to force piece work and the forty-hour week on the New York Cap Makers, which was frus- trated only thru the efforts of the left wing. They presented tens of thousands of dollars from the un- employment insurance fund to the bosses, and are now secretly plan- ning to do away with the un- employment insurance fund. They broke up the fighting Local 7 of Boston, organized a company lo- cal instead and took out an in- junction against the old local, and withdrew the charter of the Milli- nery Workers of Boston which had laid the basis for the organiza- tion of the unorganized Millinery Workers. They expelled Sals- berg, Miller, Weissman, Feingold and Anna David and many other loyal fighters for the workers. They fought against the Toronto workers because thev insisted on enforcing the terms of the agree- ment and made the grounds fertile for small contracting shops in New York and elsewhere to spring up like mushrooms over night. Zaritsky’s administration made it possible for unemployment to become rampant and has done nothing to alleviate the suffering of the unemployed. Reorganiza- tions in the shops had become daily occurrences. They established | a reign of terror and discrimina- tion especially in locals 24 and 1, took away from the membership the control of the union, which be- came the property of a small clique, and supported the Sigman- Schlesinger company union with thousands of dollars from the hard earned pennies of the workers. The convention by giving its official sanction to this destructive work has demonstrated clearly to the great mass of workers of our trade that they can expect nothing from this clique of union buregu- | erats who are dominating our union, The responsible »delegates chosen by the rank and file of the various locals, who were ejected from the convention by police, delegates from unorganized cap and millinery centers, and minority representatives of right wing lo- cals therefore met in conference with the determination that the Hat, Cap and Millinery workers must be organized and must have a union to defend their interests; that the workers of our trade must curb the greed of the bosses and thru militant struggle im- prove their conditions in the shops and organize tho tens of thousands of unorganized exploited workers in our trade, The conference adopted a plan i , for an immediate campaign to or- ganize the unorganized, under the leadership of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. It de- cided to call upon the expelled lo- cals to affiliate with the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, it decided on an intensive cam- paign to expose and repudiate the lecisions of the Zaritzky packed convention, and to enlighten the workers who are still in the locals hat have not yet been expelled rom the International, the urgent need for unity with the Needle trades Workers Industrial Union, che only organization in the needle wades today that is really cham- pioning the cause of and leading the needle trades workers in a militant struggle against the bosses and their agents, the re- actionary right wing cligue. Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers: Sisters and Brothers: What are the problems confronting the workers of our industry today? What can we do to solve these problems ? Our trade is practically unor- ganized today. ‘here are close to 40,000 workers employed in the trade and only about 7,500 of these are organized. More than two- thirds of the workers are women, who are the lowest paid in the industry. The speed-up system, standards of productions and low wages have been gradually intro- duced into the trade, The capmakers agreement in New York expires in July. And the administration is again con- spiring with the bosses to rob the cap makers of their basic gains, | 40 hour week and the week work system. It is evident that they are already scheming to camou- flage this betrayal of the workers interests in a manner similar to Hillman’s hire and fire supple- mentary agreement. In the millinery trade in New York, reorganizations have as- sumed such proportions, throwing out more workers into the army of the unemployed, which threaten the very basic conditions of the millinery workers. Zaritzky and his lieutenants in the millinery union are helping the bosses in their reorganization schemes so as to weaken the union and carry thru their plans to return to the piece work system thru the re- establishment of a collective agree- ment. reductions in individual shops. Call to Action! Sisters and Brothers! The Zarit- | zky convention has shattered all hopes for unity even among those workers who had entertained the illusion that, realizing the destruc- tion brought upon our union by Zaritzky’s ruinous policies, the convention would make an end to his pogrom policies, and would | unite the workers for struggle. The Conference of Represenia- | tives of organized, unorganized and minority groups of right wing locals offers the only hope, a con- | structive program of action for the Hat, Cap and Millinery Work- | ers. The National Committee calls | upon every worker in our trade to rally to the program adopted by | the Conference. It calls upon the 1 workers in the unorganized cen- | ters to form shop and factory com- mittees, and with the aid and co- operation of the National Com- | mittee elected at the conference, to immediately take steps and begin organization work in the various centers. The National Committee calls upon the workers to organize their ranks and carry on the strug- | gle in their respective locals for affiliation with the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. It calls upon the Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers to carry on a struggle for the following program, worked out and decided upon by the left wing conference: | 1. For organization of the un- | organized with particular at- tention to the specific prob- lems of the young workers, women workers and Negro | workers, | For shop and factory dele- gate form of organization. For a minimum wage for young and adult workers, They are granting wage | H. Thomas; domin- Clynes or Thomas ", Lord Sankey; min- , Lord Thomson; educa- Charles Trevelyan; pen- O. Robe board of trade president, W. G. Raham; labor, Tom health, Arthur Greenwood, , Noel Buxton. Count All But 6 election returns re re- from Orkney and Shetland, M'DONALDGALLED TO SAVE EMPIRE BY KING GEORGE Nobility ena: Traitors | for New Cabinet (Continued from Page One) MacDonald will do anything radical, or in any way interfere with the in- ference in the parliamentary line- |come of king, dukes, landlords and yp, which so far is as follows: Tey. big business men or other employ- 2x3; vativi ; liberal, ers of labor. nationalists, "independents, Hee The Communist Party of Great| pr¢ hibitionist, 1; constitutionalist t: Britain has warned the workers} in pa s 308 who voted “Labor” as a protest so that the labor party is 20 against the strikebreaking and star- short of having control. Lloyd vation and war-making policies of | George’s liberals thus hold the bal- Baldwin, that the labor party pro-| ance of power. By voting with the {gram, as outlined in its published vatives, they can defeat the |election leaflets and speeches shows | “labor” government almost at will; | that there will be little change in| by withholding their vote, or giving |England. In some respects it is more} part of it to labor, they can con- jreactionary than the conservative. | tinue the MacDonald government in | The debt claims will be pushed) p r | against France. The usual talk of | “reduction of armaments” will be Final ceived where the seat in parliament was won by Sir Robert Hamilton, libe- ral, It made the returns complete from 609 of the 615 seats in par-| liament. The result of the 6 out- nding seats will make little dif- votes Lloyd George's Attitude. , w The London Daily News, chief li- |; continued, the labor party officially | 1212) orean, issued an evidently in- demanding “a sufficient navy to pro-| ooirog stateme Re threatening the tect the empire.” eowrt “Freedom of Seas.” unles Now that the British no longer | ss |have a policy of building two ships | jfor every one that their strongest 1 of the MacDonald regime certain terms were met. It | | here will be a lamentable break- down unless Mr. MacDonald changes (competitor builds, and agree to nt particulars which naval parity with U. S., the labor terized his iast term of office. party is made the - instrument rst he must remember. he is through which to demand the free- dom of the seas. Freedom of the the cutive committee but of pa servant not of his party exe- iament |seas, hypocritically put forward, is! and the nation; and secondly, his a good slogan for any country that attitude toward liberal members does not have a clear control of the must undergo a complete spiritual | seas. transformation.” Closer co-operation with the) ‘The paper then declared the for- League of Nations is another tenet of the MacDonald empirialists. Brit- ain controls the League of Nations | enough to use it as an instrument of |war against the U. S. Sell Out Labor. MacDonald’s party came out dur- ing the elections for class collabora- tion, and arbitration of strike de- mands. The labor party chiefs on the British Trade Union Congress General ouncil went to the extent} of accepting the Mond plan, Britain’s anti-strike and union surrender scheme. | The labor party government may |venew relations with the Soviet) Union. A large body of business men who lost money when Baldwin broke them off are after their mar- kets again. On the other hand, Mac- Donald’s ministry is certain to con- tinue the suppression of the British colonies, and to enforce the strictest measures against any real workers’ |movement in industry. Probable Cabinet. | Political writers made the follow- ing forecast of the labor cabinet: |Premier, J. Ramsay MacDonald; the U.S.S.R. \foreign secretary, Arthur Hende During the present building sea- son; chancellor of the exchequer,|son it is intended to erect several | Philip Snowden; home secretary, J.| houses from sphagnum. mer condition led to the laber party leader’s downfall in 1924; of the lat- ter it The liberals will never again submit to the cheap mean- spirited indignities to which labor | in 1924 thought fit to subject them and unless the ordinary human de- cencies preserved practical co- operation will be impossible.” ‘ind Cheap Form of Houses in Moscow MOSCOW, U Professor V. } in Moscow a tw sphagnum ble upper layer 3.S.R. (By Mail).— rassov has built story house of (sphagnum is the peat retaining its of | fibrous qualities) with a slight ad- mixture of caustic soda and lime to make it fireproof. The cost of this house was equal to 40 per cent of, that of a wooden house. In view of the great supplies of} sphagnum in the U.S.S.R., which ip ses three-fourths of the world peat deposits, Professor Nekrassov’s| experiment opens up bright pros-| pects for the building industry of 4, Equal pay for women and men workers. 5. For the 40 hour week and the week work system. , with the shoe workers, with the | food work all 's and the miners and others who are fighting in struggle against the exploita- 6. For Social Insurance, such tion of t¥e capitalists and their as unemployment, old age rvants, the right wing bureau- | pension, etc. eracy and social reformists, by 7. Against the inhuman speed- uniting into a militant class trade | up systems (standards of | union center. | production, piece w etc.), Forward to new struggles! | which is undermining the Forward to the struggle for the health of the workers and abolition of wage slavery! | | increasing unemplc | Forward to victories! i] 8. For a struggle ag: Forward to unity with the contracting and corporatic Needle Trades Workers Industrial shops. Union! | 9. Against Zaritzky’s man- Long live the powerful united | euvers to reestablish a col- lective agreement in the mil- linery trade in New York. union of all Needle Trades Work- ers controlled by the rank and file! Long live the Militant Trade 10. For a struggle agains‘ child | Union Center which will unite the labor. 4 working class of America into il. For the formation ofa mil- | powerful weapon of the class tant trade union center to consolidate the ranks of the workers and to coordinate their struggles. . Against the impending im- perialist war, and for the defense and recognition of the Soviet Union, Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers: The time for action has come! Take up the work in your shops and in your locals! Take up the | tasks of building your union in the large as well as in the small cen- ters! Our industry must be placed under union control. We must see to it that every Hat, Cap and Millinery worker earns a decent livelihood in the trade. We = must unite with the workers in the Tel.: DRYdock 8880 other needle trades and build a FRED SPITZ, Inc. ighty Needle Trade Workers In- aperia FLORIST | dustrial Union that will stand up against the power of the bosses } NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) and lead the workers from victory . Flowers for All Occasions est 15% REDUCTION TO READERS We must go hand in hand with OF THE DAILY WORKER ' the heroic striking textile workers, struggle against capitalist exploi- tation! | | —National Organization and Propaganda Committee of | the Hat, Cap, and Millinery Workers for Unity with | the Needle Trades Workers | Industrial Union. | (ARL 7 East 42nd Street, New York an re) ACTIVE PRESS, Inc. 26-28 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK CITY sal aaeginnens OR A ahreipanersiimanineiain pe CALL NEW STRIK INELIZABETHTON: : FIGHT SELLOUT « Workers “Meet Today at Call of N.T.W.U. (Continued from Page One) back to slavery for $8 to $13 a week under the lash of the speed-up sys- tem and terrorized by an elaborate blacklist. Wilson, the company official who is declared the “impartial arbiter” ky the terms of the sell-out, to de- cide who shall and who shall | the leaflet, which not, is exposed i says: ng the black- list system together with these U. T. W. and American Federation of Labor officials, “Wilson is a sp of stool-pigeon known a rel director,’ who was em the Passaic, New Jersey s to blacklist hundre strikers. san |getting rid of ‘ and ‘agitator |red or an agitator is a wo , ing man or woman who fights for strong, junions controlled by the worl | ther es, for better wages, for less working hours, better working jconditions, and who will not sell out this fellow-workers to the bosses.)” The U. T. W. and A. F. of L, of- | ficii who called off the strike are also shown up, their black, anti- labor records being given in detail. What of Jailed Strikers? “We know that we struck fought under the rallying er ‘All go back or none go back!’” states the leaflet, and continue: “What has become of this basic prin- ciple of union solidarity? What of the 52 strikers who are under ar- rest? Why were they left to the |merey of the courts controlled by the Bemberg and Glanzstoff com- |panies? Why should not these 52 |workers have been freed befcre the ike was called off? | Why were they not withdrawn if ‘peace’ has been declared? are the soldiers paid by Bemberg and Glanzstoff? The U. T. W. of- ficials surrendered, but the Bem- jberg and Glanzstoff compa’ are | keeping up the fight workers, “How was the strike called off? By deceiving us as to the terms of | the ‘agreement,’ by concealing the sinister meaning of the terms of surrender, by carefully creating con- | fusion in our ranks! Only 25 Per Cent Register. “But—in spite of every effort of | the misleaders, the big majority of mill workers now’ feel that they have been played with as pawns in | {a profitable game between the mil! | owners and the U. T. W. officials. Not more than 25 per cent of former strikers have registered, On every hand there is discontent and anger. | Already hundreds of strikers have been refused work in the mills. “However, there is no need for discouragement. Victory can still be won. The workers are here, the mil are here. The mills cannot Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop M. W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Cooperators? PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. Y. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 — 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 = BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, A.M.C.& B.W. of N.A. Office and Headquarters: Labor ‘Tem fags E, 84th st, Room 12 Regular meetings every first and third Sunday, 10 Employment Bureau open ever day at 6 P, M. AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Meets Ist Saturday in the month at 3861 ‘Third Avenue. Yel. Jerome 7096 Baker's Local 164 Brons. N.Y. Union ‘Mabel Bread! Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 183 W. Sist St., Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING<}) eld on the firat Monday of the month at 8 p. indastry—One Cc Union—Join Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City “Why were the soldiers left here? | Why; on the mill | 657 Allerton Avenue Labor and Fraternal Organizations MANHATTAN | mperialist Leag' ee BREAK UP — MEETING, ARREST il dip median, Po?" | Distribute “Champion, eet r r “Young Worker” Mich. r jd at 8 p. Plaza Hall ind Irving to prepare for the Wastern Conference to be held June | DETROIT, (By Mail).— |Breaking up a ting called by }\the Communist h League here jin protest against the lynching of | Counell 5, Working | Joo B 19. ley, M. J, Olet the class |laborer of Ala n., police ar- el eae tga! Mer- ‘rested Philip ld, local or- : * rganizer of the Lee Orsag © ranalleaners and Dye ee Aeon | and rr from a he sympa- ee nion onference will | thetic crowd of Negro ton and white wor! Dis. | Alexandri Negro dis : by the flimsy evidence of police who run without workers, The mass of | brought charges of “l the common people are with the mill fic” even after workers. Only business men don ese inated by the Bemberg and Glanz-\the police s s—but whe live on forted to disch ‘Take us houted m and officials who hold us alll” jobs by grace of Bemberg and Negro workers who toc off, are against us resisted al attack of the is the time to fight! Let police and the arrest of the speak- the textile workers in Eagerly reading copies of the New Bedford fought last summer gro Champi organ of the as the textile workers in Passaic. | 4 n Negro Labor Congress, New Jersey, fought, as the textile the “Young Worker” and copies of workers in Gastonia, North Carolina. | over 3,000 leaflets denouncing lynch- are fighting now, ‘They are still on ing and race discrimination, they strike in Gastonia and organizing in prossed their interest in the Com- more than 60 other mills under the munist platform. Over 40 applica- banner of the Natic Textile | tions for membe and League were t p in the Party ed in in the rs Union of America. This is kind of union we want!” heat of the meeting. | Strike Demands. | The story of the lynching of Joe The strike demands outlined in the Boxley was recounted by Lee Orsag, leaflet are: chairman, who pointed out the na- | “Reject the blacklist settlement! ture of the class conflict which gave “Full reccognition of our own rise to vicious discrimination against union! Negroes. Murray followed with an “The right to organize shop, de- appeal to the workers to join the partment and mill committees in the American Negro Labor Congres: mille: Problems confronting Negro wo | “No registration! No blacklist! | ers as an oppressed ‘ace and as part All strikers to be put back to work | of the working class were outlined before new workers are hired. by Frankfeld, who directed his ap- “All workers to be hired through peal primarily to the Negro Youth. | the union committees. “Organize an effective self-defense “All charges to be dropped against corps and join the Communist Youth the 52 workers arrested under the| League, which fights and defends injunction! |the interests of the young Negro “Women and young workers to! workers!” he urged. get the same pay as men for the; Police arrived after Orsag read a same work! resolution which condemned the Box- “The 8-hour day for all workers! | ley lynching and exposed it as “part “Fifty per cent increase in/of the whole system of lynchings, wages! discrimination, and suppression of “No night work for women and | the Negro workers,” young workers under 18 years! While they forced the Negro “Twenty per cent increase over workers outside the speaking zone, jday wages for night work! League members shouted to the “No speeding up workers! workers to stand firm, telling them | “Make the union the strongest | that “legal’“permission to speak had j}power in the Valley. Smash the | been obtained and that it was only | sellout.” another attempt to smash the meet- ing. Taking advantage of the aroused interest in the Communist activities, local units will hold another meeting at the same place next week, Long Live the Revolutionary Struggle of the Oppressed Colo- nial Peoples! ERON SCHOOL Comrade Moved! Frances Pilat The Eron Preparatory School, |, MIDWIFE 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 moyed 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 for ull colleges ‘ersities. (2) All Commercial and Secretarial Subjects. (3) Comptometry, Electric Book- keeping and Electric Billing. (4) All grades of English for intel- ligent foreigners. Registration for Our Summer Term Is Now Open. 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER Telephone: STUYVESANT 2387. 101 WEST 8TH STREEE J. E. Eron, Principal. peraegheciggeR eon. RESTAURANT CAFETERIA ) ATION ROOM Open trum 1¢ a m te 12 poo. Cooperators! Patronize S E R QO Y Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S CHEMIST Bakery & Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx Estabrook 3215 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 of careful treatment. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Bronx, N. Y.]}) All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx MELROSE + VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURA omrad: 7) Always Pleasant to Dine at Our 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Beans enone: 114th Statlo ONE: IN’ ERVALE. 9149, PR Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 . m. to 12; 2 to 6 P, Tues, Thurs, 9.30 a. m. ey 125 % to 8 p, m Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p,m, Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., ™ onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/ °K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.)