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DAYLY WORKER NEW YORK TAMMANY WOULD (ILL BANK PROBE; 1S DEEP IN STEAL Lawyer for City Trust Creditors Lets Cat Out of Bag No Action Expected | Eye tO Shield More Grafters Sunk deep into the mess of sordid corruption which precipitated the City Trust Company $7,000,000 crash, Tammany Hall is so deeply involved in the systematic looting of the funds of thousands of poor depositors in the Ferr: concern that it is doing everything in its power to kill the Moreland Commis- | sion investigation. This was the in- timation in more polite language made yesterday by Leon Leighton, attorney for a group of the bank’s | yicher creditors, who asked Gov. Roosevelt to appoint the attorney general as special prosecutor in place of District Attorney John H. Banton. Leighton expressed his dissatis- faction with the selection of Su- preme Court Justice James C. Crop- sey as committing magistrate, evi- dently knowing enough of the re- publican judge’s activities to sus- pect that he would be discreetly quiet on more incriminating aspects | of the collapse. Expect No Action. However, those close to the in- quiry say it is unlikely that Roose- velt, as loyal to Tammany Hall as any of the grafters already dragged into the dirt, would press for any Workers’ Children Endangsorcd WZOre Whgle asleep in the tenement at 69 Havemeyer Street, Brooklyn, 7 months 4 old Dominick Napol- itano, a workers’ child was bitten by a@ kage rat. The workers in this dis- trict dwell in rat in- " fested, disease, breed- ing, firetrap tene- ments, and are robbed by greedy landlords. The grow- ing revolt against robbery by landlords has led to the for- mation of the Har- , lem Tenants League, 4 and these workers’ : tenant leagues will arise thruout the country to fight the poor housing condi- | tions of the workers. RANK AND FILE HATERS REJECT ANTI-UNION DEMANDS OF BOSSES Rousing Meeting Shows Membership Will Fight Demand for Non-Union Work i’ (Continued from Page One) must be put up against the anti- Officials Follow Old Game. union demands of the bosses. | While the union officials stated Workers New Out. jat the meeting that they were op- The agreement with the monufac- | posed to the demands of the bosses, turers expired yesterday, following they showed no indication, as was a ten-day period of grace, for con-|to be expected, that they would urge tinued negotiations, and yesterday | mobilization of the membership for in Tenemen “ts PROTEST POLICE BRUTALITY 10 | SHOE STRIKERS Philadelphia Workers Get Only Promises | PHILADELPHIA, June the face of a mass protest brought | before Major L. B, Schoffield, Direc- {tor of Public Safety, against the | brutality of the police against strik- ers, the director was forced to | promise in the presence of the | | workers and reporters, that he would “see to it that workers would | be permitted to picket.” Schoffield displayed feined sur- prise when Jennie Cooper, local In- |ternational Labor Defense secretary | and members of various unions and jother working class organizatior told of police attacks on workers peacefully. picketing before the Laird-Schober shoe factory, of the |forceful breaking up of peaceful | meetings by the police and their in- terference with the distribution of leaflets and literature, Arrest 600 Workers. “Within the six months since Jan. 1, close to 600 workers, mem- arrested, men, women, and children alike have been subjected to brutal violence, insult and imprisonment by \the police of this city le peace- |fully engaged in meetings, distribu- | tion of circulars, picketing and other legitimate activities, which involve a statement presented to the direc- tor and signed by representatives of jthe I. L. D., the shoe workers, food | workers, textile workers, needle jtrades workers and window-cleaners a) said, | “Although obviously hostile to the change in the legal proceedings | all the workers in the local were out | organized resistance to the maneu-|@ims of workers organizations, the ‘against the bank swindlers which would besmirch the name of the “new Tammany” more than is ab- solutely necessary to insure con- tinued election support. Democratic representatives at the probe are in-| stead conducting careful caucuses| with the object of limiting the 1ames of exposed grafters to those! uready published. They include Sdward Glynn, nephe? of former | Governor Smith, Judgo Francis X. Maneusco and his father, Pasquale| Mancuseo, and Waren C. Hubbardy Tarlem district leader. The graft, of which they got) arge shares, went. to the support of New York fascist organizations, it 1as already been revealed at the robe, | x Di Paola Still Mum. The Moreland Commission is still iampered by the blunt refusal of} \nthony Di Paola, director and reasurer of the defunct bank, to} ell more of the crash and the ac-| ivities of those who brought it! bout. Contempt proceedings face im because of his refusal on the rounds that certain awkward ques-| ions were “outside the scope of the iestigation.” The question will e decided when he faces Judge ropsey. ‘fice Workers Dance ‘ommorow Night Will: \id Cafeteria Strikers | Tn addition to a ten dollar collec- on made for the cafeteria strik- 3, the Office Workers’ Union at) 1 enthusiastic membership meet-| g last night in Labor Temple,| edged ten per cent of the proceeds | its Roof Garden Dance to be held | morrow night on the roof of the eckscher Foundation, 5th Ave. and ‘4th St., at 8 p.m. An invitation] as also voted to all cafeteria} rikers. | At the meeting nominations for| ficers were also held, as follows: 20tge Primoff, president; Ray aim, vice president; Helen Allison, eretary, and Harry Rubin, treas- er. ngements committee showed that| e dance will be as successful as| 2 previous ones held by the union, \e dance is part of the organiza- n campaign the union is now con- cting. In this connection, an open * meeting will be held today at} :30 p. m. at 26th St. and Madison| re. Speakers include I. Zimmer- mand Ray Heim. Jen Schwartz | ll be chairman. | | the working class cannat simply | hold of the ready-made = state chinery, and wield it for tin own «This new Commune (Paris june) breaks the mofern state t—Marx. |tival of the Last minute reports from the ar-| pices of the Communist Party, of the shops, At the meeting it|vers of the employers. was decided that the workers should| In this connection, the officials of eturn to their individual shops this the local are making no mention of orning and present the union de-| preparations for a struggle against mds to the bosses. Should the|the bosses if the latter push their osses refuse to agree to these de- anti-union demands, but are instead mands, it was decided that the | merely advising the hatters to re- workers would continue staying out. | main out. Anot mass meeting to consider future action will be held next Mon- | day at 1 o'clock at Manhattan Ly- coum. At the same time, speak the flocr again raised the demand for week work, a victory which, they declared, would be the best guar- antee against the offensive of the bosses, A progressive worker at the meeting made a motion that a com- mittee be elected at the meeting to participate in the conference with the bosses. This motion, evidently imed to guard against a possible submission to the demands of the bosses by the union officials, was hy the chairman, who did not put it to a vote. Distribute “Daily.” One of the most heartening things m Warn Workers, The Progressive Group is there- fore continuing to point out to the inembers that passive announce- maneuvers of the bosses will be in- effective. They point out that the present “bill of prices” proposed by \the union, even if accepted by all the bosses, will not improve the con- \ditions of the workers. They de- nounce the policy of “peaceful co- cperation” with the bosses, at the expense of the workers, and call for |the end of the piece-work system |and demand the week work system |instead,” Trimmers Meet Today. An important meeting of Trim- jmers Local 7 of the United Hatters of America will be held this morn- ling at 10 o’clock at Stuyvesant Ca- sbout the meeting was the enthusi- jsino, 149 Second Ave. The “bill of astie reception given to the Daily | prices” of the bosses, which demands Worker, 500 copies of which were|2 reduction amounting to between distributed to the members as they |15 and 20 per cent of the present entered the hall, Lill, will be discussed. ~ Communist Activities (TANT f Shop Nucleus 4, The C. I. Address will be discussed at the ineeting at 6 p. m. ‘Thursday at the Workers Center, 26 Union house-warming | 5duare. er cle a Soy We. Af | Workville Communist Youth League. An executive committee meeting |will be held at 6 p,m. Thursday at the Workers Center, 26 Union Square, A unit meeting will be held at § Din. Friday at 350 1B, sist St. [BROOKLYN J Section 6, Unit 4F. A speaker from the Women's De- partment will address the educational ch 5. r a s meeting Will be held to- | meting at 263 Atlantic Ave. at 6:30 pom. t Adten. Salle. Unit 4F, Section 6 Open Air Meet. Conditions in the American Safety tion One Celebration. ation and wi ne shov che: and oa food program. ae TF St. 7 ment will be dis- m. today at 27 ae eee A busi day at 8 COs, Ae | M1 Lavatore Pienic. ‘The annual piente and outdoor fes- “Tl Lavatore,” Italian meeting outside the plant at La munist newspaper, will be held rence St, and Myrtle Ave. w- at 5:16 7, Pleasant Bay’ Park. Musie,|p, m, today, neing, games, contest and special So) Ree N be on the program, Section @. an dishes will be avail-| The ©. T. Address, lead by a dis- able throughout the day, trict representative, will be discussed Bey ee at the functionaries meeting at 66 Postpone Freihett Manhattan Ave., at 7 p.m, tomorrow, The Frethelt excur sett Me raed Bench, xeursion. n, to Atlantic J., postponed Saturday due Meeting of Sections 2 and 3, to inclement weather, will be held| A. very important meeting of all Saturday, June i Party members of Sections 2 and 3 se will be held today at 6:30 p, m, at Section Unit 1 2, Inving Plaza Hall, Irving Place ‘and The C. I. Addre will be discussed | 15th St. at the meeting at Room 608, Work- ers Center, 26 Union Square, at 6:30 p. m, tomorrow. Negro Working Women Meet. A mass meeting dealing with the problems of Negro women worlters and housewives will be held at the Harlem Labor Center, 235 W. St. Friday, Comrade Welnstone will fe- port on a very important problem, 129th $:30 p. m., under the aus- Jarlem Section of the t i their an fractions of the middle cinss. They are therefore not revolutionary, but conservative-—Karl Marx (Commu- fae Making Officers for Im perialist War tan er While the leading imperialist powers are enthusiastically plotting for the neat imperialist war, th- greatest care is taken to insure au efficient supply ot naval officers who will supervise 1" claughter of mi. ions of workers and peasants. Secreta: of the Navy Charl:s i. Adams is secn here presenting « naval sextant to a ‘udent in the Ar- rapolis Naval Co'- 19% , ments that are opposed to the new | Razor Plant will be the subject of the |m | report. magistrates before whom these | workers appeared have been unable |in most of the cases to find any | justification for the arrests as is | evidenced by the fact that 98 per cent of those arrested have been di missed when they appeared for hear- ing.” Charging the police with a flagrant abuse of power in the in- terest of the bosses the statement Says that this conclusion is further supported by the “attitude of the higher officers on the police force who often refuse to issue copies of charges of those arrested, holding them incommunicado, subjecting them to fingerprinting, photograph- ing, violence and insults in the | course of severe grilling.” The statement closed by demand- ing the end of police persecution, the right to assemble and to organize in support of their demands, and to picket, In the presence of newspaper re- Porters Schoffield received the delo- gation “with open arms,” but those well acquainted with the tactics of the police force know that ctubs will continue to swing on the picket lines and that cells will continue to be filled with strikers, union leaders and members of the Communist |Party, despite the deceptive sweet smiles of the director, The nine Pioneers arrested Wednesday on the picket line in front of Laird-Schober, and held in the House of Detention for a whole day, will appear bef-:e the Juvenile Court early next week, In the meantime the shoe strikers are continuing solid despite the Police brutality and the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union is continuing on its series of success- ful strikers. Labor and Fraternal Organizations Caran —— Harlem International Labor Defense. The branch meets tomorrow, 8 pe ., at the Unity Cooperative House. 1860 Seventh Ave, i as + * «& New York Drug Clerks. A mass membership mecting, called by the central headquarters of the Bronx section, will be held at Hunts Point Palace, 163rd St. und So. Toule- vard, at 8 p. m. tomorrow. | Promi- nent speakers will introduce plz for immediate execution of organiza tional demands, [BROOKLYN 5 Section 6, Unit 4s, An open air meeting will be held at Myrtle Ave, and Lawrence St., this evening. > * #* Shoe Workers Mass Meet. The Independent Shoe Workers’ Union is calling a mass mecting noxt Thursday evening, at Arcadia } 1, 918 Halsey St., Brooklyn. Speake Will include Ben Gold, Fred Biedon- kapp, Juliet 8 Poyntz, and J. Magilacano, pare Members and friends of the club will ledve hoadquartors, 118 Bristol St, near Pitkin Ave., to participate in the Freiheit excursion to Atlantic jBeach, N. J., Saturday, | Workers! Volunteer ‘Help in W.LR. Office | ‘or Gastonia Strike | Due to the police attack on the | “oray mill strikers’ tent colony 1 Gastonia, the savage destruc- ‘on of tents and food during the aid, with arrest of 60 strikers sainst some of whom frame-up aurder charges will be placed he Workers International Relief, One Union Square, Room 606, is in need of volunteers to help ad- | dress and mail a special appea! Come any time duriny the day. It is of the utmost im- portance that workers give help to the W, I, R. during this cri- tical period, | 10.—In | bers of our organizations, have been | the purposes of our organizations,” | rage rive TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 1929 * Eve sleep a tempt i HARLEM TENANTS DEMAND CUT RENT Big Meeting Scores the Landlord’s Rapacity The regular mecting of the Har lom Tenants League last night, ct the Public Library, 103 W. 167th St., was attended by many angry tenants from all sections of Harlem. ome of the tenants say they arc thru with the old parties and Abra- ham Grenthal, present assemblyman was scored as a fraud by Mrs, Irene Peters who stated that Grenthal even robbed his club and that mem- bers had circulated a hand-bill show- n marble shooting contests 1 keep them from thinking of the mise nade to obscure the fact t Even Marble-Shooting Contests Have a Purpose for he progam of the capita of the workingclass. children have few pi are part of t the work “1 Striker Tells eputies Choked Her Before Shooting ye girl striker, living in the colony at Gastonia writes following account of the zking up of the strike demon-| stration Friday, and the shoot- ing up of the strikers families in | the tents later that night. Her letter shows the speed with which the strikers reorganized their} | Workers Guard, after the first | attacks. It was written before a} series of attacks Saturday which | wrecked tents in the camp, and| left it in the hands of brutal! | deputies. The letter is as follows: i} * * * W. Gastonia, N. C., ' PLEDGE AID TO | the Soviet Union, | ing that campaign funds collected last fall had not been accounted for in his report of political contribu- tions to the secretary of state. The main speakers were Richard | | Moore, president of the league, and yrace Campbell, vice-president who roposed that rents be reduced in- stead of increased. A resolution was adopted calling for the organization of all working | class tenants, into strong fighting leagues, such as the Harlem Tenants League throughout the city. It also demands that rents for kers be fixed on the basis of | their wage scale, forbidding of evic- | tion of unemployed workers, no dis- | crimination, municipally built houses for work at cost, housing and sanitary la The rent law comes | up today before the board of alder- men, June 8, 1929. “Dear Friends:—We had an | uproar last night. Four police- men got shot and also Joe Harrison. They got Miller, Bush and I don’t know who else. They got almost all of | | the guards and put them in jail. We have got new guards back | guarding the ground so nobody can get down there. Aderholt, Tom Gilbert and Arthur Roach all are wounded. Joe is not hurt so bad, I think. Some one hit Miller in the eye broke | | his glasses and hurt his eye bad. They tried to get Beal and | lynch him. ‘The were after me and a boy striker last night and I was | | told they were going to lynch | us for'taken Joe to the hos tal. “We formed a line to go to | the mill to pull another strike. They grabbed me and Sophie and Edith and Bush and choked | us almost black. They threw | ; one old woman, 65 years old, | | away out in the street and one | | boy. way out in the road about 25 feet. “Well, I had better close for | | Seaiasai malay | |Tourists to the USSR to See Great Five-Year | ‘Plan in Operation! The group of American tourists | who will visit the Soviet Union this | summer under the guidance of Dr. Joshua Kunitz, lecturer on Russian; | this time, so answer soon and | | literature and culture at the Col-|/| exeuse bad writing because I lege of the City of New York, will|} am so nervous I can hardly | | be given special opportunities to stand it. I want to go to the | | see how the new five-year indus- hospital and city “hell.” So trialization plan (Gosplan) is being | goodbye. | put into operation, | “Your friend, ., | J The party will make a trip down —YOUNG GIRL STRIKER. the Volga through the heart of the| Russian grain belt and will see how} the enormous crop is being har-| o “SHUSHES” NICARAGUANS, | MANAGUA, Nicaragua, June 10.) vested. On the way down from|—Brigadier General Williams in| Nizhni-Novgorod to Astrakan, the|command of the U. S. marines here section of Russia where Maxim|2@ttempted to soothe the feelings of Gorky spent his boyhood and youth, the aristocratic families who, have the party will stop off at peasants’| Sold themselves to Wall Street and villages which line the shore of the|now express some regrets. picturesque river. | A short time ago a squad of A series of lectures and intimate| drunken marines broke into a ceme- talks on present-day and past Rus-|taty and defaced the monuments. sian literature and culture will be| Williams said he didn’t believe a mn by Dr. Kunitz en route. In-| marine would do such a thing. ws and meetings with nota-| areas ee bles in the various fields of Rus-| |sian education and art will also be} Barney Forman, of the Hotel, Res- | arranged. taurant and Cafeteria Workers The party will sail under auspices! Union, is asked to report at union of the World Tourists, 175 5th Ave.,! headquarters at 133 W. 5ist St, at |from New York orf the S. 8. Car-|9 2, m. Thursday. |mania on July 38rd. Mr. Goodman} announced that but a few vacancies! machinery, and wield it for its own still exist in the party. purpose. This new Commune (Paris Sate Bier brenks the modern | ‘Reich Will Finance | Huge Works Building | Apparatus for War) BERLIN (By Mail).—The Reich- stag has decided to subsidize the |Schichau works in Elbing. This de- cision means new millions for the employers who have already. received | |88 million marks and now receive another 21 million and an annual subsidy of 2,500,000 marks. The Communist members declared with- out contradiction that these workers |built torpedo boats and other war |material for foreign use in violation jof the Versailles Treaty. The motion of the Communists that the works should be expropriated and leonducted by the municipality was ‘rejected. The Communists declared that German imperialism was aim- ing at making this eastern works into a place for the production of illegal armaments for use against | ASKED TO REPORT i arx. ‘For Any Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY ‘elephone; Murray Hil 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New York Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tuilor 1818 + 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 11ith Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative Hou Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 138 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 7330 BUSINESS MEETING€>] eld on the first Monday of the month at 3 p. m. One pL Att ge Union—Join Office Open from ht the Common Enemy! m, to 6 p. m. | | THE ARCHITECTURAL _IROD | iane GN & STRUCTURAL WORK | Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. ||| 26-28 Union Sq., New York City UNION meets every second and fourth Tuesday of the month, at Rand School, 7 East 15th §t., Headquarters: 7 East 15th City, Telephone: Stuyvesant 4 and 2194, nfeld, Secretary, Phone; LEHIGH 6382 Tnternational Barber Shop ‘M. W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) caitaite CONVICT 11 WHO game DEFY INIUNCTION | IN FOOD STRIKE cod Another Boss Bows to Cafeteria Union (Continued from Page One) The D. & H. Cafeteria, 216 W. 35th St., has agreed to accept the terms of the union and the workers have |gone back under the improved con- ditions for which they have fought bitterly for ten weeks. This: makes 29 cafeterias that now have signed agreements with the Hotel, Restau- rant and Cafeteria Workers Union. This involves about 600 workers whe are working under union conditions, A number of additional settlements are expected in the n future, as negotiations are proceeding. list system to lull the worker For with these contests, an at- laygrounds. Michael Obermeier, organizer of the union, spoke to an enthusiastic meeting of the strikers sterday afternoon. He declared that he feels certain of more settlements soon. He urged the strikers to keep on fighting with the same militant de- termination as they have shown for |the past ten weeks against great ob- cass stacles. Obermeier referred to the (Continued from Page One) dirty work being done by the A, F. many police are recruited against |cf L. bureaucrats, who are trying to us.” steal the fruits of the struggle, in Gold said the furriers, having suf-|crder to sell out the workers to the fered for two and a half years be-|bosses. According to reports, Loh- cause of the strikebreaking tactics|man and Flore, officials of the A. of the right wing and the bosses,|F. of L. International Alliance are are determined to fight all obstacles | approaching cafeteria owners pro- in their path to victory, posing to give them union cards in Mobilizing Forces. |veturn for certain considerations, Mobilizing all their forces for the | Former Local 719 to Meet. ke, groups of women, youth, T,| Harry Annis, organizer of the U. E. 1, locals and others are hold-|former Local 719, which has Amal- ing meetings throughout the week, |gamated with the Hotel, Restaurant An open forum will be held to-|and Cafeteria Workers Union, also morrow at Bryant Hall at1 o'clock. |spoke and denounced the treachery Ben Gold will speak on the effects |of the A, F. of L. “But the rank of the fur strike on the cloak situa- | and file are growing more and more |disgusted and many will soon break tion, | A shop delegates meeting will be |away from these traitors as the FURRIER STRIKE Meets Mobilizing for Big Struggle held Thursday night at 7:30, it is|members of Local 719 have done,” |Annis announced at a meeting of all announced by the Joint Board. —___—- members of the former Local 719 at the union headquarters. The members of the former Unity Waiters Association, which has also affiliated with the Amalgamated od Workers, will also hold 2 meet- ing today at the headquarters of the VIENNA (By Mail),—According | union to a report from Bucharest, the well- | — known leader of the working class | . movement in Roumania, Marcel | MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Pauker was arrested there on the} - , y Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 8rd of May. Pauker was one of the} accused together with Dobrogheanu- | 1763 Southern Blvyd., P-onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station Pauker, Communist in Rumanian Fascist Jail, Goes on Hunger Strike Gherea in the great process against the Communist Party in Bucharest | in 1929. He was also amongst the! 16 accused who made good their! escape during the trial. He was sen-| tenced in his absence to 10 years| at hard labor. Marcel Pauker has now gone on hunger-strike in ordes'| to secure his release and has an-| nounced his intention of continuing | the hunger-strike under all circum- stances. The case is thus exactly similar to ihe case of Dobrogheanu- Gherea, Cooperators! PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery $toi Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. Y. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—0791-2 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A. place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. = New York BLAST KILLS WORKER OSLO, Norway (By Mail).—A} workman was killed and several se- | verely injured when three buildings | of the Norwegian Mines, Ltd., ex- | plosives factory were destroyed by | a detonation. The surrounding woods | caught fire. | 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 colleges and universities. All Commercial and Secretarial Subjects. (3) Comptometry, Electric Book: keeping and Blectric Billing. (4) All grades of English for intel- gent foreigners, Registration for Our Summer Term Is Now Open. Telephone: STUYVESANT 2387, J. E. Eron, Principal. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE1 UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food for a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner Gth Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open trun, 1@ a m to 12 p m. u Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery © Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx Comrade 2 All Comrades Meet at Frances Pilat BRONSTEIN’S MIDWIFE VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 8916 Patronize Cooperators! S E R O i Dair Malet Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station PHONE: INTERVALB 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y.]) DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office ) 9149. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST ST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 &. m, to 12; 9 to 6PM.” Tues. Thurs, 9.30 a, m. to 12; Dm t i Lohr 10 a, Oo 1 p.m, Plense telephone for appointment. Telephon Lenigh 6022 Tel: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER