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ACTIVE NEEDLE ii | | Sesue of Year's Biggest Time i | j WORKERS HOLD MEET TONIGHT Rule on Agenda (Continued from Page One) Market court this morning. yers for the I. L. G. W. will appear to defend them, and it is| inderstood that they will make | strenuous efforts to get them re- leased on bnil. Judging by their previous -efforts in similar situa- | tions, there is no doubt that the) company union attorneys will be successful, So expensive have been the gange | ters in the hire of the I, L..G. W, nd the “expense accounts” of their mn i Above is the Peter Stuyvesant, the Hudson River Day Line steamer which the Daily Worker has chartered for its Moonlite Cruise and costume ball on the Hudson tomorrow night.. It is the largest, newest and most beautiful steamer plying the Hudson, with a magnificent ball room and eight spacious staterooms, MOONLITE CRUISE HACKMEN CALLED pecs eet ts TOMORROW NIGHT TO REAL FIGHT ech lave decided to float a bond eid metime next fall. Reports of this; en ra } P — ‘ campaign are, appearing | in the Affair to Swell the! Taxj Chauffeurs Union friendly capitalist press, whose re-| ad | x : povtess FRI geatetilly.” fect] the | $50,000 Fund | Warns of Boss Outfit banquet given them a short time) “ontinued from Page One) ‘ * ago for their services in giving pub-| jo¢ (eens Vee nine threaten- | (Continued from Page One) licity to the vecent fake stoppage ing it with bankruptcy. Yankee Garage, at 157th St. and in the cloak trade. Schlesinger; ‘The moonlite cruise tomorrow and | River Ave; and the Parbell Garage, Matthew Woll and others of the gho picnic at Pleasant Bay Park Au-|&t 487 W. 129th St., and others at same anti-labor stripe spoke at the/pust 18 are our last resorts this | (28 Southern Blvd. and 624 Whit- banquet, at the conclusion of which | side of suspension, They must be | lock Ave., in addition to a number each “gentleman of the press” re- financially successful. Puttting | of others, ceived a wrist watch. laside for the moment the fact that, The nature of the strike leader- How popular this bond issue will! the cruise will be the outstanding| ship was :zen in a meeting held be among the workers can be SebN | proletarian shenanigan of,tho year, | Yesterday afternoon in Harlem Ca- from the fact that high-priced!i; j. the duty of every revolution- sino, 116th St. and Lenox Ave, gangsters are still sweeping thru ay New York worker to buy all Where the only demand stressed was the cloak shops in an effort to force | the tickets he can afford and thus an increase of the commission rate the workers to pay up back dues/ holy maintain the Daily in the ever from 40 to 45 per cent of the fare. and taxes forced upon them during sharpening class struggle, But what| ~The Taxi Chauffeurs Union has the recent stoppage. a pleasant duty! \since its foundation carried on a Jacobs’ Local Denounces Clique. The Peter Stuyvesant, known as campaign for the eat ey and cape 5 ; the Queen of the Hudson, is the!a minimum wage of $1 an hour in- fe ri eS atige RLM leaned largest and most beautiful steamer stead of the 40 per cent commission was adopted at the last meeting of in the Hudson Piver Day line fleet.' rate which prevails at the present Local 6, Cutters, N.T.W.L, of which| It is barely two years old and the | time. Taxi drivers at present work he is a’ member. The resolution °Mly boat plying the river that 60-70 hours a week, and many of follows: joasts a ball room, in addition to them longer. “The murderous attack on one ot vee it oa eight Sateen .| Staterooms where groups of work- our spembers, Brother, Uneohs, near ers can. fore athenets hold private! Other demands of the Taxi Chauf- the firm of Schwartz and Salzberg, can: foreg' k fours Una a: Crater’ New Yore 131 W. 85th St. where he is at|Parties, if they desire, od [eet a are eatin [cst employed, is but one of the This floating palace, well covered include the following: s Give Demands. epeated gangster attacks organized|8"4 affording — ample protection| 1, Elimination of the present vi- by Dubinsky and the clic:> of Local|®sainst inclement weather, has a ca-|cious speed up system, and against 10. i jpacity of 3,500, but in order to give | the fleet owners’ practice of setting ¥ the Red Revelers all the space neces-|yp minimum booking requirements. Ignored Threats. are fi He | : sary for whooping it up, the Daily) 5 ‘ i esol of dhe “All the previous threats had no/has printed only 2,500 tickets. Hack tome "Blimifation of police Stietaan sobtpaee of this shop, ‘The spacious ballroom, in combi- discrimination and individual perse- and they paysistently refused to reg-|nation with Vernon Andrade’s fa- | ution, indefinite suspensions, revo- ister with the company union. Fail-) ing in their efforts to force the workers into submission, the Dubin- sky clique sent a band of gangsters to the shop last Friday, who at- tacked Jacobs with knives and black- jacks, cracking his skull and cutting open his ear drum. The Executive Committee of Cut- ters’ Local 6 condemns most vigor- ously this murderous assault upon Erother Jacobs, who is one of our best members, The Executive Com- mittee throws full responsibility for this act upon the Dubinskys, Schles- ingers and Greenbergs. The cutters will rot remain passive in the face of such terroristic acts, but will or- | properly to meet this terror. Build Union! We call upon the cutters of the cloak and dress trade not to fear this gangster rule, and rally around Local 6, Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union in order to fight with greater determination the ageuts vf the company union and their gangster methods. We express deep sympathy with wife and children and other kin of Brother Jacobs, and hope that he) will soon recover and again be in| our ranks.” Executive Committee, Local 6, N. T. Wit. Us HARLEM HOUSING mous Negro Renaissance orchestra, i i |which has been booked to furnish sation of thie ate icles \the music for the occasion, promise | 3: Equal rights x “sh al weMccg? ja night of such dancing as happens to use the Public stree' ee but once in a blue moon, and yet| 4. Elimination of the jthe dancing is the smallest part of | blacklist. the pantagruelian entertainment be-, 5. Against all discrimination of ing prepared. Negro drivers, and a constant fight At the dock, providing there are| against all fleet owners who prac- any left, tickets will be $2. Pur-| tise discrimination against Negro \chased today they will cost you only and other drivers. * | $1.50 apicce. We sail, rain or moon- ¢, Enforcement of compensation shine, promptly at 8 p. m. from the |jaws and eliminntion of the many West 42nd St, pier. Get your paste- tricks and subterfuges bz which jboards from the Daily Worker, 26/ fleet owners cheat hackmen of their |Union Square; the Workers Book | protection rights. 9 | Shop or New Masses, 30 and 22 | vicious Unien Square, respectively; Sollin’s, 216 East 14th St.; Needle Tradgs J dustrial Union, 181 West 28th St.; Unity: House, 1800 Seventh Avenue; Bronx Workers Colony, 2800 Bronx | station, 6 Co |Brownsville Workers Imperilled in Fires; | Form Tenant League | The lives of many Negro and | white workers were imperilled last | night in fires which broke out in the | Brownsville section of Brooklyn. | The tenants were driven into the streets and the entire neighbérhood was threatened with destruction. Twelve workers were carried to the streets &fter they had been over- come, by gas and smoke. This section had already deter- Millinery Workers, 4 West 37th St.; | Park East, or any Communist Party | 7, Compensation insurance of all motor vehicles as a protection to hackmen. 8. Remission of bond premium {when cab is laid up for a day. | 9. Abolition of the criminal iden- | tification card. 10. Fleet owners to supply proper | protection of equipment of cabs, in- cluding locks for spare tires, tools, ete. 11. Full four-door cabs such as are |in operation in other cities. 12. Toilet and washrooms in ail | garages. | 18. No compulsory uniforming of drivers. MORE CHAINS ON LATIN AMERICA. GUATEMALA CITY, Aug. 7.— The first airplane mail service be- tween Guatemala City and Cali- fornia will be inaugurated tomorrow when a Ryan monoplane operated by BERGER DIES OF SOVIET FLIERS | Communist ACCIDENTINJURY TAKE OFF TODAY Famous Right Winger in Socialist Party (Continued from Page One) cialist party in America had begun to swing to the right, he joined it, and remained a’ right wing leader until the day o2 his death. Fought Do!shevism. | Berger was ‘nstrumental in secur- \ivg a cangressicnal investigation at a “ the time of the Lawrence strike, He led to his indictment and conviction under the espionage act, and a sen- tence of 20 years which he never served. He was twice denied his seat in Congress because oi this conviction, but after the war the |U. S, supreme court revorsed all de- him to take his seat, As editor of the Milwaukee leader, anc in publis speeches he was a bit- ter enemy of the Bolshevik revolu- tion, and was a staunch upholder of the Sigman and Hillman gangster. jism in the needle trades unions. | GRAVEDIGGERS TO PICKET CHURCHES (Continued from Paye One) der the supervision of St. Patrick’s cathedral. At the same time the superin- tendents of the principal cemeteries in the city formed an association, Their first step in an effort to wheedle the workers out of thei Murray Butler, president of Co- lumbia university, asking him to suggest “a qualified authority to arbitrate the difficulties.” Those in charge of the Calvary cemetery are still making a feeble effort to bury their neglected dead Tuesday four pf them were injured when a large trench they were dig- ging with the aid of a steam shovel caved in, burying them, U. S. Naval Officers and Money Back It (Continued from Page One) special mooring mast sent down by the navy from Seattle. On its flight, three American naval experts will assist in the navigation: Lieut. Commander Ro- sendahl, Lieut. J. C. Richardson, and Engineer C. P. Burgess. These are the U. S. aces in dirigible technique. Blow at Britain. A load of American miliionaires will be carried, prospective backers of the Zeppelin trans-Atlantic freight and passenger service to be started in 1931. The Zep will fly over England, without stopping, and merely flaunt her German-American prestige in the face of Wall Street’s bitterest rival, Britain. As though to prove the combina- tion of German and American in- terests against. British rivalry, President Hoover and Secretary of War Good yesterday telegraphed their best wishes to the Zeppelin commander, Eckner. WILL BUILD NAT'L espoused the cause of the central| powers when the war broke out, This} cisions against him and permitted | demands was to appeal to Nicholas | with the help of strike breakers. | ZEP FLIGHT IS DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1929. Fascists Slander Crew; Lies Nailed (Continuea from Page One) 400 miles. The first leg of the flight across Siberia. Stops probably will be made at Novosi- birsk, Khabrovsk and Petropay- losvk, in the Soviet Union. The fliers plan to cross the Pa- cifie ta Alaska, landing at Dutch Harbor and at Sitka. * (Wireless by Imprecorr.) BERLIN, Aug. 7—The ‘ascist paper Corriere della Sierra reports that the crew of the aeroplane “Wings of the Soviet” fascist greetings with Mussolini at a reception in Rome, praised fas- cism and the fascist leade: and |compared Mussolini with Lenin This report has been re ted by the social democratic press, in spite of an ivfimediate denial ‘by the pilots. The International Pr Corre- spondence (“Inprecorr”) is empow- ered to declare that no member of | the Soviet airplane crew used the fascist salute or praised fascism or praised the fascist leaders or com- ‘pared Mussolini to Lenin. : The Italian reception and attitude | of the Soviet ai n bore a strictly | formal and official character. All socialist statements to the centrary | are slanders | Labor and Fraternal Organizations \ aes BROOKLYN. __! Brighton Beach Concert. The Brighton Beach Workers Cen- ter has arranged a midnight movie and concert for the benefit of the Gastonia strikers and frame-up vic- 0 cents and are on sale at the R, office, 799 Broadway. * + 8 N. ¥. Drug Clerks. A general membership meeting will be held Thursday 8.30 p.m, at 142 Second Ave. een Women Greet Frame-Up Victims. Members of all the local councils 6f the United Couneil*of Working Women, will greet the 3 women lead~ lers (Vera Buch, Amy Schechter and |Sophie Melvin), who were framed-up in Gastonia duting the textile strike. On Monday night, Aug. 12, at the Central Opera House, 67th ‘St. and $rd Ave., Council members will gather in the dressing room of the hall and jenter the meeting room in a body. All local councils should bring their tims on Si Aug. 10, 11:30 p. m., |at the Lakeland Theatre, Brighton Beach and Lakeland Ayes. Tickets | «| Mittee in Detroit states that of ap-| Page Five STIMSON STAYS IN HIDING OVER = BIG PLOT-EXPOSE Underlings Admit Note Given Ambassadors (Continued ‘rom Page One) y hatched by Stimson, the United Activities nths? imprisonment, W. W. WELNSTONE, District Organizer. Section All units of § e Worke C , until further eee > represen speak on the next tasks in the Party | cam igns, I section and unit industrial jzers are to meet Thursda m, sharp, at the |; y headquarter are obtained, eting of nil unit and see- orker organizers will esday, August » at Unit 48, Section 3. Will meet Thur Workers Center. S p.m, sharp, at the Workers Center | Open Air etar ! 1 ith § es rialist inves J the speakers’ ely: a ialist im * August 8. 8 De! Schech sion of of the t the Workers Center, || °°7'j¢h''s Chinese and ae ie selon crovki Dustde ths | Boer investigation which could be used as k of August 12, Party assista Bilveri ga : 7 to the distribu an excuse armed assault, fet again R., both Pravda lenflet port to this stia denounce th and Jamaica | @ Al Party L, at 8.00 pm. Speakers: | i: special assist M. Rock, A. Markoff Soviet Union will combat it. meeting y t. and Lenox Ave. at 8.00 eee One af t s | August 1 and 6th Ave. at 8.00 p.m t » Rk, [be a protest meeting ed O. Eusepi, G r r his imprisonment of Harry man, our 46th St. a AV 0 pam a ‘ Pioneer comrade, who got — six | Speaker: I. Zimmerman | playing t minology while wo s fer a world wa Isve: ernme! NEW NAT'L AUTO MEXICAN SENATE UNION TO FORM HITS AT‘LABOR Workers Are Resisting | Pass Gil’s Amendment Boss Offensive To Centralize Power (Continued from Page One) ent reserves the right of legi tion to the states in labor matters. Under the constitution, the states, when controlled by liberal elements, \have forced employers in isolated cases, to pay wages of workers on | strike, ete. ing Union a 1924 status, emph that the Chinese fate can Soviet Union cluding any third par { (Continued from Page One) ! of the highest developed and ration- alized industries. “The inhuman speed-up system makes it necessary to eliminate workers from the shops | at the carly age of forty-five.” Simplified machinery and the in- troduction of the “belt,” the call ‘Bronx Workers to Hold Demonstration Against Brutal Tammany Police 3ronx workers will hold an out- door mass meeting at Intervale and |says, makes it possible to employ | i | Wil ins s, tomor night to increasing rumbers of women and | Part of Sell Out. protest against the feroc: of the |young w who can be made to| portes Gil is known to have agreed | Tammany’ police in attacking the International Red y demonstra- tion at that corner a week ago, ar- resting the chairm Bloomfield, ‘after pulling him off the speakers? jplatform several times, and later staging a raid on the headquarters of the Bronx Section of the Young Communist League in which many {do the same work as men at much | as part of his sell out to American lower wages. Especially in the ac- | imperialism and the Catholic church cessory parts of the industry youth | feudal land owner reaction to and women workers are primarily |jaunch a campaign to make labor employed, at wages that do not) nore “deperidable.” laverage more than thirty-five cents an hour. | | Many Negro Workers. The bill goes now to the state legislatures, which have been called |into executive session to vote it “Large numbers of Negro work- me, -agaalon to t young workers were slugged and 18 jers are employed in the auto indus-| frou. With Gil in. control oF | dragged off to jail. |try. A report of the Mayor’s Com- erates se y Cooperators! SEROY |a lower wage. This is done by the auto workers, not only in a fight CHEMIST | bosses in order to keep the work- lagainst the rotten conditions and ‘ ers divided and make it difficult to | Wage-cuts, that we must toil under, S57 “Allerton Avenue Patrénize | proximately 24,000 foundry workers La | over 16,000 are Negroes. They are | a (5 ata | usually given menial tasks and paid | ®2Mizing the tens of thousands of ongsuiua diem. into unione:” |but organize to get better condi- || Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. Pointing out that the auto indus-| tions and more wages and also to | BLOW AT BRITAIN banners and slogans. come on time. United Council of Working Women, Be sure to try hours, either for an attack on the|A:, F: of L. and other reactionary ialists themselves, the call says that the workers must organize to fight | this bosses’ war. Workers Resist. “The. wage-cutting and speed-up system of the bosses has compelled | A meeting of all speakers and unit | agitprop directors and chairmen of | lopen air meetings will be held on |Aug. 8 at 7.30 p.m. at the Workers Center, All comrades are obliged to |be present, The call concludes by urging all workers in the auto industry to send delegates to the preliminary confer- ence. The basis of representation is as follows: All local unions are entiiled to + Speaker Class, eaking, with A class in public aha Ge eea Tene eck Cai a Rebecca Grecht as instructor, will| the workers to fight back, In the : as be given on the fifth floor of the| past few years many of our fellow three delegates; all shop committees or groups of ten workers are en- titled to one delegate. | Workers School, beginning at 7 p.m., Aug. 8. Candidates for this course should be assigned by all units and | workers have resisted in a series of | departmental strikes, as shown by | must report before Thursday to the lthe strikes in Oshawa, Canada De- | _ {Workers School. Only one day is|the strike s , 1a, De- | — |left 'to register for the Speakers | tgoit, Flint, Oakland, Cal., and in| “For Any Kind of Insurance” |Class, Registration for entire course | many other auto centers. The re- | is $1.00. ed: eRe 2 * * * cent strike of over 2,000 workefs in | Sanday Boat Excursion. = Detroit, led in a militant struggle | |Hook Mountain via the Hudson River/a 20 per cent wage cut at Murray | on the steamer Ossining for Sunday. |Boay is the best expression of the | lresistance of the workers against | the bosses’ attacks. “The American Federation of La-| | bor has thoroughly exposed itself as |vhe open enemy of the working} |class. At its convention in Detroit | |, Harlem Youth Club Hike, | in 1926 it stated that a campaign | eee ters Oe go tar a |Would be launched to organize the month at 8 Dp. mm hike this Sunday, Aug. 31, to Coney | auto workers, Instead its only par- | bei Pale pas Union—Join Island, meeting at 1492 Madison Ave., | 43,3, < FS s ani ight the Common Enemy! 9 oclock. Bring along your bathing | ticipation was in helping to break |] o¢tice Open from 9 n. mm. to 6p. ra. all efforts to carry on effective or- |suit, ganization and to betray every | strike of the auto workers, This | West) was demonstrated by the recent | strike in Detroit at the Wood Hy- draulic and in the Flint and Oshawa (CARL BRODSK Telephone: Murray Hils 6550 Aug. 11, There will be dancing on the boat and games at Hook Moun- |tain, The steamer Jeaves the foot o' West 35th St. at 8.58 a.m. and puts off from Hook Mountain at 6 p.m. |Tickets in| advance, $1.50; children junder 12, $1.00; can obtained at the club’ headquarters, 301 W. 29th Street. Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W, Sist St, Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING] eld on the first Monday of the * * * Sigs nes ‘ French Workers Center Opening. The French Workers Center, “Club d'Education Sociale,’ at 143 108rd St,, will hold opening exercises Aug. 15, '8.30 p.m. Dancing, singing, | speaking—admission free. ae ee Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. Die Naturfreunde. “Within the A .F. of L., the so- cialists, headed by Muste under the 7 East 42nd Street,"New York | can be put on a war basis in 24 fight the betrayers of labor in the | e Office hours: Mon., Wed. a.m. to 12; 2 to Tues., Thurs., 9.90 a. % to 8 p,m KATE GITLOW, Secretary Soviet Union or for a world con- | @nions.” 20 BAT fe Fhe Speakers, Apitprop. flict for markets among the imper- Representation. Cor. Second New York , Sat., 9,30 6 P.M. m, to 123 Sunday, 10 a, m. fo 1 p.m. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 SURGECN DE DR. J. MINDEL NTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. Between 110th and New York 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St. New Tel. York, N. Y. Rhinelander 3916 MELROSE— strikes. 3 . Dai VEGETARIAN 26- aitV neaeaonan Fake “Progressiveness.” i 28 Union Sq., New York City om a it Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx |The English Section will meet at East 180th St. subway station, Sun- day, 8 a.m. to go swimming at the Quarries. Fare 80 cent | Comrades in ear 174th St. Station) | mined to form a local tenants’ Jeague as a part of a city-wide move- iment of workers to establish and control their own leagues. Tenants from all parts of Brooklyn will be invited to attend the first meeting of the Brownsville League. the Pickwick Airways and the Latin-American Aerial Transport Corporation starts northward. The airplane arrived here last night, bringing a message from President Portes Gil of Mexico to the Guatemalan press. SONFERENCE ON Many Delegates Speak at Tenant League Meet (Continucd from Page Qne) tenements, last night found expres- ston in the conference. v Opening the concrence Richard B, (pfoore, president of the League, Aiated the grievances of the tenants and their detery jon to rectify the miserable conditions under which their landlords force them to live, Moore’s speech was followed by the olection of committees frem the floor, credentials, ways and means, program, vesolutions and other cem- mittees being chosen in this way. Spenkers from a number of other cvganitations, including the Commv- | nist Party, the United Council of | Working Class Women, the Trade Union Educational League, the In- ternational Labor Defenge and the American Negro Labor Congress, were thea introduced to the confer- ence. ‘Richard B. Moore was elected permanent chairman of the confer- enee, with I, Fishman as vice chair- man. Flizabeth Henigson was elect- ed secretary; Francis Field was lected assistant secretary. Howard Williams was chosen as ead of the credentials committee, race Campbell of the Ways and Means Committee and Charles Alex- ander of the Resolutions Committee. ERA A AA Lox't sail to attend the Daily Wor Press Carn Entertainment, Games, Sports, Az i SUPPORT THE DAILY WORKER | COME TO THE MOONLITE CRUISE Sunday, August 18th, AT PLEASANT BAY PARK Buses at East 177th Street Subway Station Tickets for sale in Daily Worker Office, 28 Union Sq. and all Communist Party headquarters (Continued from Page One) based on the principle of the shop delegate system. Ten delegates will come from Bos- ton, 12 from Philadelphia and three from Binghamton. The latter will NR ker val 1929 Refreshments a |he workers from the Endicott-John- | son plants, where 7,000 workers are | employed. Striker Delegates. Strikers direct from the picket line will attend the forthcoming con- |ference as delegates. These will come from the Burns Shoe Co., Ar- thur Bender Co., Jefferson Co. and | Jackson Co., where strikes are now in progress. The strike in the Burns Co. be- gan after the workers there had smashed the company union and joined the Independent Shoe Work- ers Union. Hear the Story of AMY SCHECHTER SOPHIE Monday, August 25e Local New York, GASTONIA MURDER FRAMEUP charged second degree murder and released on $5,000 bail each Mass Protest Meeting CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE, 67th St. and Third Avenue Auspices: Admission International Labor Defense, New York District guise of a ‘new progressive move- | ment’ in the trade unions, are help- | jing to betray the workers and do- | ing all in their power to hinder the | campaign of organizing the unor- ganized. Often using progressive | slogans in order to deceive the work- ers, these fakers have already suc- | ceeded in betraying the rayon strik- | ers in Elizabethton, Tenn. the | | hosiery strikers in Kenosha, Wis.,| jand the silk workers’ strike in Pat- | erson, N, J. “We must build a National In- dustrial Auto Workers’ Union that will take upon itself the task of or- the Brighton Beach, (ni PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149. Patronize | }Laub Vegetarian & Dairy MEET YOUR ERIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., 7 onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station Restaurant 211 Brighton Beach Ave. at Brighton Beach B.M.T. Station Patronize | No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) | 2700 BRONX P/"K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) 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, RATIONAL + Vegetarian | RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEI UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx VERA BUSH MELVIN HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 12th, at 8 P. M. Tel: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: IPALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicala meet 302 E.12th St. New York NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet, Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER Workers International Relief