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TEXTILE MILLS Number ‘of | Looms is Doubled (By « Worker Correspondent) EASTHAMPTON, Mass. (By hard and unbearable working condi- tions we all know only too well, to bear. The bosses constantly flaunt in our faces the so-called phrases of “life, liberty and pursuit of happiness,” to enjoy. “Good” Conditions. ere? The West Boylston Manu-! acturing Co. doubles looms in No. & with practically no increase in wages, adding 4 to 6 combers in carding rooms (no noticeable wage increases), increasing sides for more frames for drawing in girls. Doffers got theirs, also sposlers, evidences of speed-up. Those of you workers who escaped rational- ization so far need not fear for the “kind” hearted bosses will not for- get you unless in the meantime you organize into a strong union. More Wage Cuts. The United Elastic Corporation weavers are getting cuts, style get own filling and oil, carry web to web-room, docked for had work, ete. Many weavers with many years’ $20 for a 55-hour week (with a few exceptions). Learners work free until they get their own looms. Fin- ishing department girls get $12 and piece-work rate on hanking and other work is such that many earn much below $12. The Hampton Company cuts vages, laying off workers and com- the same amount of work, speeding ete. Much of the work is danger- in dyes, bleaching, etc. MILL WORKER. AIM TO DEPORT JAILED PICKETS Settled Shop Workers Meet Tonight (Continued from Page One) police, members of the Industrial | Squad, private detectives and un- derworld characters in the hire of | te fur manufacturers and their Mass Mecting Tonight. The General Strike Committee has settled shops for a mass meeting tonight, immediately after work, in Stuyvesant Casino, 140 Second Ave. At this meeting leaders of the strike will report regarding scttle- ments that have already been made. They will also give a birds-eye view of the gencral strike situation and of prospects in the near future. A meeting was held Saturday of representatives of labor organiza- tions which were represented at the recent labor conference to help the | furriers’ strike. This meeting de- | cided upon a series of steps to aid | the struggle. They also accepted a_ recomumendation of the Executive ning, July 9, in Webster Hall, 11th St. and ‘Third Ave. All working class organizations ave urged to send representatives to this conference Out to Frame Furriers. a vew frame-up against a striking farrier has just become known. On Saturday ivorning this worker, Al- A hert Young, was arrested on the th: cket line, together with five other ‘vorkers. Arraigned in Jefferson spine Court, they were all freed, use there was no straw upon whieh io grab in order to hold them. "This the strikebreaking “council” strongly resented. So detectives were sent slong. and as soon as Yerng and the five other workers Jeft the court room the dicks ar- rested him and three of the group and dragged them to a police sta- tion in Brooklyn. There the work- ors discovered that they were ar- on instigation of Stet- sky’s “boys che charge that they were guilty of beating up David Meltger last Tuesday. These “boys” solemnly declared that they have somewhere or other an eye-witness who will be willing to testify to this. This witness was brought and categorically declared thai he did not see these arrested workers at the scene of the beat- ab ine S5 they brought them to Melt- “x, and the latter declared that rey of them he was absolutely cer- Was an Tresent at the beat- a he three workers wi freed, iat Young was held as anew victim ty this strikebreaking crew. DENVER 'TYPOS GAIN. DENVER, Colo. (By Mail).— _Newsprnes printers have won an in- ws in waxes of 75 cents a week, “int 41a week next September. They That the seab council is hatcl ing | IN EASTHAMPTON Mail).—No need to talk much of the | what low wages and knocks we have | also Coolidge-Hoover | prosperity which we are supposed | What are the “good” conditions | spinners, belt system for spinners, | speeders and slubbers speeded up | and rates cut and many other smali | changes with less pay, bad lights, | experience get only $15 to} selling those remaining to produce | up machines, work during noon hour, | ous because of the use of chemicals | ympany union, the “Joint Council.” issued a call to all workers in the | Committee to call a second labor | conference, to be held Tuesday eve- | ‘©! Fourth st. at 6:30 p. m, tomorrow. i vied up ‘ahi a three-year contract, DAIL Y WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESD: AY, JU LY 2, 1929 _ WAGE. CUTS IN WITH THE , SHOP PAPERS END THOSE SHOP PAPERS IN. Don't you want to let all the workers know about your shop paper? The Daily Worker Shop Paper Department will gladly devote part of this column to your bulletin. Every one in charge of shop paper work must see that the Daily Worker gets a copy of the bulletin issued in bis plant. SAVE THE GASTONIA FRAME-UP VICTIMS S THE SHOP PAPERS serve as the voice of the exploited workers in the shops in which they are issued, one thing, of greatest im- | portance to all the American workers, must receive first attention in all shop papers—the frame-up and attempt to murder the 14 Gastonia textile strikers by the mill bosses, through the bosses’s court. Unless the workers of the United States show their power, unless they raise mighty protests, and hold great mass meetings—meetings to demand that these workers be freed, then the mill bosses will have their way, and the brave Gastonia fighters will be gone. For this is another Sacco- Vanzetti case, only on a larger scale. Every shop paper must take the lead in calling for mass demonstra- tions on behalf of these framed up strikers. Workers in the shops, knowing through past experiences that their shop papers are for and by the workers, will respond to the calls for mass meetings and shop gate meetings for the Gastonia prisoners. Anyone knowing the fight- ing records of the shop papers in the past, cannot but be certain that the shop papers will be in the vanguard of the fight to save the framed- up Gastonia strikers. * THEY’RE ALIVE IN CLEVELAND H2 THE BUNDLE WHICH WE RECEIVED the other day from Cleveland been in the mails a little longer, the wrappers would have heen scorched through. er that bundle contained a bunch of the liveliest, reddest hot shop bulletins you ever saw. Some of them were new—these were the first numbers gotten out. First, there,is the Red Motor, published by the Communist Party nucleus in the White Motor Company plant. The White Company ha a scheme to trick its workers. It issues a book called the “White Book,” which the company says is “for the workers’ benefit.” This “White Book” has the brazen nerve to tell the workers at the White plant—the speeded-up, underpaid slaves—that they have a real “heaven on earth’ rae Ara is hotsy-totsy. Well, the Red Motors as a true shop paper should—lams into the lies of the “White Book”— and makes the pages of that book look like so much toilet paper. * * * TWO MORE FIGHTERS THER NEW SHOP PAPERS IN CLEVELAND are the, Valve Builder, issued by the Communist shop nucleus of the Thompson Products Company, and the Hydraulic Workers Press, issued by the Communist nucleus in the Hydraulic Press Company plant. The Thompson plant is one of those plants that Wall Street im- perialism will turn into an ammunition plant in the coming imperialist war. And the Thompson Company is preparing for that war now. Thus it can be seen that the Valve Builder is destined to be of great im- portance in aiding to turn the coming imperialist war into a war against the capitalists of all nations. And it shows right off the bat, in its first number, that it won’t be asleep. Live articles tell how the Thompson plant will be used in the coming war; expose the company baseball team for what it is—a scheme to keep the workers satisfied with their slavery, and there are several letters from Thompson workers. The Hydraulic Workers’ Press reported a strike in the Hydraulic Press Company plant in its very first issue. Fifteen men from the assembly gang on the checker cab frames struck when their wages were cut. They were finally talked into returning by the foreman’s “soft words.” But they'll be wiser next time. They'll have a live shop paper to guide them in their next strike. * MORE TRUTH THAN POETRY Oh, we all get dirty and funny For a check of a little bit money Slaving away, everyday at Thompson Steel. * * * * Plenty of trouble and sorrow, Maybe get fired tomorrow, But we pile up the millions that turn Into billions for Thompson Steel: From long hours of speed-up, Our backs get bent and sore, But we get so many wage-cuts, We got to hurry up more and more. Do you want to know what the cause is? No one’s to blame but the bosses, So workers, get wise, ORGANIZE At Tompson’s Steel. —By a Thompson steel worker in the Valve Builder. ‘ BORN IN THE MIDST OF BATTLE ORN IN THE MIDST OF A HOT FIGHT—that’s the Auto Worker of Oakland, Califopnia, published by the Communist Party shop | nucleus of the Fisher Body and Chevrolet plants in Oakland. Right from the very start this shop paper received its baptism of fire. The workers of Fisher Body, solid in their strike, demand an eight-hour day, 40-hour week, abolition of piece work, a $6 a day minimum, recognition of the shop committee and the union, now have a shop paper which will serve as their voice in their present strike, and in all future struggles. * * * SOLIDARITY IN OAKLAND ERE’S A BIT FROM THE OAKLAND AUTO WORKER, in con- nection with the Fisher Body strike, which speaks for itself: “In our present fight, which is the most important in Oakland since the last war, we see people of different races and colors fight side by side on the picket line. We have many Chinese workers helping picketing. A Negro worker spoke at our meeting; a Filipino boy was arrested the other day for picketing. What does this mean? The workers are realizing that they must stick together— irrespective of color, race or nationality—and put up a militant fight against the bosses.” Communist Activities nN Prince St.; Tompkins Ave., cor Hart St.; Graham Ave., cor Varet St, and Grand St. Extension, cor Haverneyer Unit 3, Section 4. ish Meetings are held every Tuesday night at 235 W. 129th St. Open air mectings are held every Wednesday night at 1328 Lenox Ave, or Fifth Ave, and 133rd_ 8. , + es & Units TF, 9F, Section 1. Industrial activities of the Com- munist Party and lessons from recent left-wing lead strikes will be dis- cussed at the meeting at 27 E. Fourth St. at 6:30 p. m. today, 23 Se Unit R2. A meeting will be held at 27 Fourth St. at 7:30 tomorrow. th ial pe Unit 1F, Section 6. The Communist International Ad- Gress will be discussed at a mecting jof the unit at 66 Manhattan Avo, at 50 p,m. today, [BRONX MeKinley Square Unit, C. Y. L. An open air meeting—the first of the League to be held in a Negro section—will be held today at 8 p. m., at 165th St. and Brook Ave, [——_BROORTYN Branch 1, Section 7. Bloomfield will lead discussion on “New Developments in the Muste Movement and the S. P." at 715 KB. 138th St., at 8:30 p. m. today. E. * * «# Brownsville International Branch. A meeting will be held at 8:30 p. m, tomorrow fe! 264 yas king St. ‘Morning Internhtionat Branch, Vern Smith will lead discussion on the Program of the Sixth World Con- gress of the Communist International at the branch meeting at 26 Union Square, sixth floor, at 10 a, m. to- morrow, _ * © Unit SF, Section 1. “The Open Letter and the Latest Developments in the Party” will be discussed at, the meeting at 27 E. cnet August 9 Downtown GY. Le pen air meeting will be held at aon se ane Aco Ave, at T p.m, to- lay, Stanley, (chairman) Duke, Pioneer, ‘Anitey Milton, and a speaker yom the I, Bay D. wt ppgeky tion 6. Open air meetings will be held 7 » m, Thursday at Myrtle Ave, cor, Stee “y SCOTT RUN COAL MINERS JOINING NATIONAL UNION achine Out for Lewis M e sponent) N, W. Va. (By Mail) i attended meeting of the Nutional, Mii Union here, which resulted in a large nur f new members for the local N. M. U. The local union president, O. S. Roby, acted as chair- man and the miners listened with aveat interest and attention to the cons gz of three Ne- {gro and two white miners, all work- here in the mines. @ to help build the N ers’ Union, Scotts Run ers? is is the where place about a month ago a truckload of jhired gangsters of the Lewis’ ma- chine prevented a meeting of the N. M. U. local and besieged Pai Too- |hey, national _ secretary-treasurer, jand other N. M. U. men for many {hours in a miner’s home, helped by {the coal and iron police. | The Lewis machine swore that the | National Miners’ Union would not _ Page Three _ ‘FRONT AGAINS BOL SHEVISH? AVOWED PURPO France is Se Seen as the Initiator of Bloc (C tinued from Page On Hunge now part of purpose of the alliance is to attack the Soviet Union is cay from th bland admi n for we scheme that present a common front Bolshevi 4 iS SE oe it wor against A Poland and Ruma ~ and to str thé present engthen i Ru- ations with been has mutual gning of the Moscow Pro- with the be allowed to hold any mectings in/s. | Scotts Run or other West Vi mining towns. The mass meeting on Sunday was the answer of the jiminers and the National Miners’ | Union. Another mass mecting will | be held in Liberty, W. Va., this com- | ing Sunday. | The United Mine Wor! | are still maintaining. organi: fak rs in |the field, who talk to the miners | | ubout organizing the United Mine | Workers of America as it was be- fore, bat they must first break up the National Miners’ Union. All hey are interested in is to collect 1 each from as many miners as they can fool, which is very few. But when it comes to fighting inst a wage-cut they are not sround, &nd only the National Min- Jers’ Union fights. against jeuts. W. VA. MINER. STINSON CALLS | FOR CRUISERS. Means to Have Biggest Navy at All Costs (Continued from Page On:) ernment official, always means ‘“‘su- periority.” Each country will al- \lege that the other has some advan- |tage, and will build another ship | to overcome it, | The Washington administration is making this announcement to coun- ; teract a smoke screen move of the British press and statesmen, who | have begun to declare that “hearts jcount as well as yardsticks” and that not so much attention should) tions, and ‘ {be paid to the number of cruisers) dent Hoover built, which will be all right if both | countries “except to keep the peace.” 'a resolution | of the League of Nations, stating! | able opportunity created by the re- | cently de | | | ILLINOIS MISL Viscount Cecil today made public adopted by the council that members of parliament should “use their influence to insure that the fullest use be made of the favor- red policy of the Ame ican administration, in order to pe fect the machinery for the preven- tion of war, for the defense of in- ternational order ,and for the organ- ization of peace.” There is much talk in England about “mere limitation of arma- ments being a negative precaution against war,” and other such ex- jcuses for building more cruisers. EADERS MEET ROCK ISLAND, Ill. (By Mail). The misleaders of the Illinois State Federation of Labor will mect here Sept. 9. These labor fakers, who have expelled militants from their organization, have no program on behalf of the thousands of unem- ployed in this state, particularly the coal miners, over 60 per cent of whom are idle. FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Cor. 110th Street Tel. Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number of tenants were compelled to leave the city, we have a num- ber of rooms to rent. No security necessary. Call at our office for further information. Big Event WATCH FURTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS wage- | they wish to } ox to the Sov have r nea a nothing m n objective plebiscite, without the slightest pr one side or the other, in ascertain the wishes of the abian people, ly proposed to e@ nor Be: Against the U.S. As reg Poland, al Union has repeatedly proposed methods for maintaining peace at the time when Poland, as a catspaw for the imperialist powers has bi joining in conspiracie an attack on the U.S. S. R. |_ The Soviet Union has proposed to ea the conclusion of a~non-ag- ion pact and that effectual anaines to be taken for ensuring oe with regard to the f conspiracy against ae which the la’ jbut a part, continues existence of the Moscow Proto ol, which arose out of the Kellogg Pact, which the Soviet Union signed indication of its desire for This Protocol has been signed by the borde: untries except ae and was initiated by the U. R. in an attempt to stave ey an at- tack upon it and to show the peace- |ful intentions of the Soviet Union. Conspiracy o, the Soviet for Hoover Putting “Dry” (Forces on War Basis By Changing Officials WASHIY process of f TON, Tully 1—By a iring, enforced resigna- arranging to concen- trate in the hands of himself all of the prohibition enforcement power. He will put his own puppets in the place of Assistant Prohibitioner Oftedal, who will be sent to collect jcustoms on the Pacific ast Mable Walker Willebrandt has ady been forced out, and the pr lent is said to already have in mind the successors of Secretary of the Treasury Lowman and Prohibition Commis- sioner J. M. Doran. rf Black Haiti | By JACQES DICHARSON, Jacques Dicharson, born in America, but brought up in France, g seaman who ha ost of his adult years fighting for orkeing class. He avre of his experiences a ufferings of agents of American imperialism in one of Wall St After being beaten uncor he f mate of his ship, the author goes into the city of P vince, Haiti, where he makes the acquaintance of an English orge Hey Thru the latter's a month, Dixon, a straw be Dicharson has taken into his confidence, betray. da vaylaying him to the Ter- minus Bar, knocks him unconsei th the butt of a gun, Dicharson mak way to the home of a friend, ye Hey, where George and his native girl, Pauline, nurse him o'clock when I xt morning. head was only throbbing o venture if it had not been for my ¢ of how fortunate I had been to esc n th a grim reminder of ble od, Pauline a cup of coffee with bread and butter. George had been gone e early morning. H rk at six. The ¢ 2 restored me. I sat down and starte I figured that if I went out in the streets in bre light Dixon or any of his gang of cutthro: ysuld not « t do me anything. Hell! I tho there must be ance of law here. I resolved that if y attacked me they nd me prepared. That if I had to die here, I wouldn’t die alone. A dirty hireling would go to heli h me. Chasing these thoughts from my mind, I took my hat, bade Pauline 1 went out. I went to » hospital. The Haitian doctor tl mined me told me that it was only a little scratch and the f the week it would b: I told him how it had happened. Idom treated one of th all rig He said that own color that way. Usually Te ians that took most their wrath. He gladly gave te when I asked him for one. ee) 8 H VT to the Nouvelliste. I had heard that the Nouvellisie was 4 only radical newspaper in town. It believed in only fooling the people part of the time, telling the uth only when it could not do otherwise, or when the same truth ould not be sold out! This is of course a few months before Petit and Roumain started their Petit Imp: al. Their fight is only a one-man show. They want all the white men to get out of Haiti, and if they do not, well a little p war would put them on the map. They are not interested in the c struggle Their intere ies in Haiti and the color que on. I entered the Nouvelliste and waited for the Emile Chauvet. He came in about an hour afterw He was stout, not too bad looking, but he had a premature agedness and languidness. T sat down at his invitation and showed h my credentials from the vate as a whole, “militant” rd. editor, Tiyan UE lated exaatly what had oc 1 to me the night before. “Heewas drunk, wasn’t he?” ¢ vet asked me when I had fin- ished. I told him that ha had not been so, not unless a glass of beer could have gotten him dunk. That was a practical impossibility. -hounds in Haiti. He had boasted Dixon was one of the grpatest booz one time of having’ dr a under drinking beer police. the table five Danish tramp, sailors, Chauvett took the telephone and called the chief of * * ites a. tectives, a Bee HAT worthy came a few sub-chief and the chief of Bonte, accompanied by the chman by the name of of Dostoie us novel, “Crime .” which is playing 's engagement at the Film Guild Cinema, was recently shown) On the same program the Film to Theodore Dreiser, who was so | Guild Cinema is presenting Anatole impressed with its astounding quali- | France's “Crainquebille,” his fa- ties that he immediately issued the mous satire on law and justice, in- following statement: | troducing Maurice de Feraudy in “Of all things difficult to, achieve | the leading role. in art the more so are t Starting Saturday, July 6, the to man’s deeper and d Film Guild Cinema will present the cholokie moods—his first American showing of the Sov- reactions—approaches kino film, “Spartakiada,” which is a sions. His subtlest arkable film-record of the Red + Olympiad recently held in Moscow, cinema-version world- fa Pavloff, Toma, Ivan Bersennieff. Robert Weine, who directed “Cab- inet of Dr. Caligari.” Vera Orlova and The director is amental rece and respor whether pleasurable or the reve to the various stimuli of life—his to deepest fea hatreds— some , elations, suspicions, most abstruse and in s completely if not per- of the world, able s and phas ever form of athletic y conceiv con manently, veiled motivations.” ture. In the seven-reel picture we “Crime and Punishment? behold the amazing physical ‘renais- | enacted by the Moscow Art Players, | sance cf the Soviet Republic and its *AMUSEMENTS- r|the cast including Gregor citizens performing with splendid | Michael Tashanoff, Maria Germa- sj;ill and sportsmanship feats of | vova, Maria Kryshanovskaia, Pavel speed, strength and agility in every kind of er event. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIS' 1 UNION SQUARE Theodore Dreiser 5°: “I recommend ° Crimeand Punishment as the most brilliant and artistic psychologic study the Cinema has ever achieved.” " - LU ; : 115th ba eee a ena pasow. rinwavealnceted ‘or. Second Ave. ew Yor! y Oe ROMEICE WIENES trector vor eCaligarle? Cee NeuFsE BoD. rete, Bat 9.30 FILM GUILD CINEMA fontinuaus, nai 52 West 8th Street Tues, Thurs. 9.80 2. m. to 123 p.m. to midnite NOW PLAYING! Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF Cuore DENTIST o § p,m CAMEO ®: ® CONSTANT NYMPH aie PAULINO-SCHMELING FIGHT FILMS IN SOUND Wi Street” Sunday, 1 a.m. to 1 p,m, Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 “For Any Kind of Insurance” _ (CARL BRODSKY | Telephone: Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Murray Hil. 5550 (4 East 42nd Street, New York All Its Readers Gala Picnic and Sunday, July 7th AT Pleasant Bay Park Benefit ‘IL LAVORATORE’ Italian Communist Paper THE DAILY WORKER RECOMMENDS Admission 35 Cenis. Strikers Admitted Free Take Kast Side: Bronx Siibway to 177th St. Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER to Come to the Outdoor Festival WM. W. WEINSTONE District Organizer Communist Party Will Speak Cooperators! PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N.Y. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/ “K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) vvww- Torchlight Parade, Games, Dancing, Contest, Concert, Special Features, Refreshments and Spectacular Amusements 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 then Untonport car. which were invited the workers | who participated in | of physical cul- | |TRIAL OF ANTL / SOVIET FORGERS OPENS IN. BERLIN ‘Documents’ for Bo too Crude Press (Ci nued fro Ine) to Pavionovsky for what he thought were bona fide G. P. U. (Soviet State Political Administrati uments, discovered that th crude that the find it hard s genuine. He ies were so Post them of! would fused to pay the rest of ked for the “docur tead had the two forgers arrested The “documents” 1 f three letters which were a tion of some e r missed fire. 1 had ators Borah and Norris } 000 apicce from the nment These forgeries were they, were quickly exp later forgeries, which got the thors into such hot water, « to be statements from the G. I declaring that the G. P. U had committed the’ earlier fors making it purposely crude in c that Borsh’s name might be clear thus “disinfecting” him and ma it possible for the Sc to st Soviet re |bribe Borah in the future without | anybody believing it In the testimony today the de fense repeatedly contradicted itself, also making the claim that the Ev ning Post reporter was an agé nt provocateur who had _plante forgeries on Orloff. That ning Post man might hi something more than an innocent connection with the forgeries would not be surprising in view of the well-known methods of the capital- ist press in devising anti-Soviet | propaganda. | The court will take a recess to- morrow and resume Wednesday. | | PLUMBERS HELPERS GAIN. | ST, LOUIS, Mo. (By Mail)— Over 200 plumbers helpers here struck and won a wage increase to | $7.75 a day, and $8 a day beginning August 1. Cooperators! Patronize or O Y. CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. | Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 13% W. 5Sist St, Phone Circle 7336 LS Plat at rae MEETING] ] eld on the first Monday of the month at 8 p. m, One Industry—One Union—Join and Fight the Common Enemy? | [ Office Open from 9 a. m. to 6 p, m. Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery & Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx VEGETARIAN v RESTAURANT omrades ‘Will Always Find It Ple to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx ios 114th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149. Dair. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian aml Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., P-onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1690 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE1.UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A, place with atmosphere where all radicals moet 302 E.12th St. New Yo¥k