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’ Fail in Attempt to Frame-Up Two Workers in Chicago for Being jPROSEGUTOR PROVES VIGIOUS “RED BAITER” Workers to Continue Open Air Meets CHICAGO, Aug. 11—Two young | workers were freed by jury after a two day trial on the issue of Com- munism. The Communist Party of Chicago has been holding open air meetings on Washburn Ave. in the Negro neighborhood. The police in collaboration with gunmen tried many a time to break these open air meetings up. They used vari- ous means, ranging from shooting, clubbing to arrests. Two young workers Mittelman and Hackman were arrested and brought before Judge Trude. The arrested demanded a jury trial which was granted. In this trial the prosecution and the police clearly made it an issue of Com- munism versus capitalism. The prosecutor, attacking the Commu- nists, attacked the foreign born workers, and defended the American Federation of Labor. The defense did not side step the issue, but| answered clearly as to what Com- munism stands for, the irevitability of the class struggle, the right of the workers to organize, the role of the capitalist police and the courts as the agents of the bosses. The red baiting prosecutor used the flag and told the jury that if they freed the young workers, they would be “undermining society.” In the closing remarks counsel of the defense Goldman and Bentall appealed to the workers on the jury not to give a verdict that would serve the bosses. They said that as workers they had experienced the brutality of the police and capitalist justice. Inspite of the prejudiced instructions to the jury by the judge, after two hours of debate in the jury room a verdict of “not guilty” was brought in. One of the workers on the jury remarked later when asked how ‘e arrived at this verdict, that “I am a worker and I know how they beat us during strikes and we will not give up the few rights that we have so easily.” The I, L. D, defended the workers. On Monday, August 12, the trial of 16 cases that grew out of the August 1 demonstration will take place. ANOTHER ‘LABOR GOV'T MANEUVER (Wireless to Inprecorr.) MOSCOW, Aug. 11.—Commenting on the draft of the Egyptian agree- ment with the MacDonald govern- ment, Pravda declares that here as elsewbere the labor government ful- fills the historical task of carrying out the intentions of British impe- rialism concealed under a mask of pacifism and “respect for people’s rights.” i MacDonald is making a back door agreement, Pravda points out, with the Egyptian bourgeoisie represent- ed by Mahmud Pasha who rules with cut parliament and represents a fic- titious “independence” of Egypt, wy oAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, AUGUST 12, 1929 Decision of Central Control Committee Decision in the case of W. A. Jackson, passed at the Central Control Committee meeting held on July 25, 1929: W. A. Jackson, a Negro member who came from California to New | York on or about March 1, this year, and wha failed to appear before the | Central Control Committee when called for a hearing, stands expelled from the Communist Party of the United States of America for actions of treachery and corruption which brand him an enemy of the Party, of the working class and of the oppressed Negro masses. The Central Control Committee has evidence showing that Jackson, | under the assumed name of William Tate, has written anti-Party articles, | apparently intended for some Negro paper, in which he uses the lowest | | the Party and its work among the Negro masses, | There is also evidence of his stooping to a piece of the most despic- able blackmailing scheme that could be imagined. the oppressed Negro masses are warned to have nothing to do with this | traitor and blackmailer, provisions for ‘sanitation and the needs of the workers, caring for the VICIOUS LIES 0 workers, built |sick, giving out clothes and supplies. | “We have never yet seen a hun- | gry or ragged striker’s child or fam- lily. In many of our families chil- dren were hungry when we worked |eleven long hours every night or day |in the mill. So little of our wages | were left after rent, insurance, in- Workers Hit Slander Against W.I.R. (Continued from Page One) ing childten in the W. I. R. tent col- ony as reported by the Gastonia Ga- zette.” | Paid for, we could not buy enough |food and never the proper food to keep us healthy. We never had ; money for clothes and our children | | lies about the union, the relief and® them to school. |the defense organizations, is the afford to buy books for them. opinion of those living in the tent | Lack of Food. colony. I. L. D. representatives here; ,, ; i consider this part of the campaign | ‘Pellegra, the starvation disease |of villification on the part of the| prosecution and the Manville-| Jenckes’ controlled city authorities | that because of the low wages the to prejudice public opinion and rail-| Workers received they could never road the defendants to electrocution *fford to buy the proper nourish- or the penitentiary. jeans Kis Every striker in the tent colony “The sanitary inspector and coun- that could be reached this morning | ‘TY doctor make daily visits to the signed the following: jeamp. They speak to the workers “We brand the reports in the Ga-|#%4 have ample opportunity to see zette, Observer and other papers | how they live. They have never coming from Craig as lies intended : to prejudice the public against our |#ave never found a family hungry. union and our arrested fellow-work- | Face Death, ers. These statements are without, “Many of the strikers have baked foundation. The W, I. R. has sup-|pies and cakes and brought them to plied us with food, clothing and shel-|the boys in jail. The strikers and ter since the Manville-Jenckes Com-|their children have plenty. Let pany threw us out on the street. | workers and friends all over the “We have not seen a hungry or|¢ountry send good things for our ragged striker’s child or family in|fellow-workers in jail to eat. They the tent colony. ‘the only cases of |@te suffering for us. They are all pellagra were started by the star- faced with the electric chair for de- vation wages we had to live on when|fending our lives, our children’s we werked for the Loray mill. lives. Their greatest crime is or- “The canitary inspector has made | ®4zing for wh living wage and de- daily inspections ana failed to fing |cent working conditions. any excuse for registering a vom-| “Communists plaint and making ‘trouble tor us. |! e We pledge our continued suppo-t to\tional Textile Workers Union, as |the National Textile Workers Union, | Well as in the Workers International |the Workers International Relief end | Relief and the International Labor | the International Lavor Defense.” | Defense. The Communists, through | Mr, and Mrs, Browder, wn> were|*he Daily Worker, have been our |the ones questioned by Craig, deny | Staunchest supporters. | making the complaints attributed to; them. Craig quoted Caroline Drew as saying that “the strikers must henceforth shift for themselves.” | What Drew actually said was that the National Textile, Workers Union is sending the strikers into mills throughout Gaston County to do or- ganizational work for the Charlotte conference and the coming struggle against low wages and the stretch- out system. 5 Strikers Reply. “At our meeting tonight the Work- ers International Relief, through its representative, Caroline pledges it continued support. “(Sgd.) DAISY McDONALD, “Sec'y Loray Branch W. I. R.” Harlem Tenants Hold Member Meet Tonight | Harlem Tenants’ League will be held the Gastonia branch of the Workers|The League is making another in- International relief, Thursday night, | tensive campaign to finish enrolling passed. It was further decided that|fore the first of September. A this resolution be presented to all|/house to house distribution of leaf- |the newspapers as an answer to the/lets will be started today in the slanderous attacks being made. | 19th assembly district, where former stallments on furniture and fuel was! That this is just one more of the} were so ragged we could not send! Neither could we| |of the South, was unknown to the! organizers of the North. They found| Aug. 23; Port Carbon, Aug. 24. |registered a complaint yet. They| as well as others! . “at are welcome in our union, the Na-| against wages and conditions of the Drew, ini, | the ranks of the miners. | Aug. 8, the following resolution was|at least a thousand members be-| | | Communists Page Five POLICE BREAK UP TAUEL. MEETING at TUEL Rally (Continued from Page One) WORKERS GREET PRE- CONVENTION BUSH, SCHECHTER AT MEET TONIGHT Jail Minerich, Gorman To Rally for Gastonia tricks and slanders caleulated to raise antagonism and distrust against | | Defense, Relief (Continued from Page One) | inally controlled by the disintegrat- | rally the workers of New York for | the tent colony,| have been arranged: r u erected the tents and made proper| 19, Italian Hall, Luzerne, Pa, Ani? @ demonstration against the Boy | | i | | | | will be held in Giobetti Hall. All Party organizations and all organizations of the workers and of | ing U.M.V.A., has been arranged for |@astonia defense and r-lief. the purpose of electing delegates to the Cleveland convention. Thus far, the following meetings Monday, Aug. epeh air meeting is scheduled for | Tuesday evening at 7 p. m. at the| corner of Giobetti and Church street; in case of rain the meeting On Wednesday, Aug. 14, the meeting is called for 8 p, m, on the corner of | Main street near Franklin School in |2 Simposn; in case of rain, it will be held in Frank’s Hall, 526 Main street. Speakers will address the Inter- jnational Labor Defense picnic in Inkerman, on Thursday, Aug. 15, meeting wil! be arranged in Exeter for Friday and details announced withi na few days, Other meetings thus far scheduled include: Colum- bia Hall, Old Forge, Pa, Aug. 17; Pittston, Aug. 18; Lattimer, Aug. 19; McAdoo, Aug, 20; Scranton, Aug 21; Tamacqua, Aug. 22; Minersville, * “8 Issue Convention Call WILKES BARRE, Pa,, Aug. 11.— The Miners’ Section of the Trade Union Educational League has is- sued a following call to the Cleve- land Convention in leaflet form, and it is being distributed by the thou- sands in every mine center. It says in part: “The T.U.E.L. convention in Cleve- |land is of tremendous importance to the coal miners in the Anthracite trict. “The coal operators are prepar- ing to cut the wages of the anthra- cite miners upon the expiration of the five-year agreement. The mine owners are pre~aring to still fur- ther speed-up the miners in order to inerease profits. Rationalization and the speed-up system means still greater unemployment. Prepare for Struggle “In view of the preparations for en attack by the. coal operators miners, it is necessary that the coal miners in the Anthracite prepare not only to resist a wage cut, but to strike for an increase in wages and shorter hours, Shorter hours will help to decrease unemployment, which is a very serious problem in the Anthracite. “Fight Boylan, Brennan, Cappel- agents of the coal operators in “Defend the Soviet Union. “In order to effectivély mobilize to resist wage cuts, the treachery of the A. F. of L., to defend the U.S.S.R. and organize the Negroes, it is necessary to establish a militant trade union center which is based on A membership ¢meeting of the| the class struggle. “Call for delegates! Raise the At the regular weekly meeting of tonight at the 135th St. Library. | (estion of sending delegates at your next local union meeting!” OPEN AIR MEETS The following open air meetings will be held today: The meeting will also serve as a protest jagainst the imprisonment of Harry Zisman, 14-year-old Pioneer, in a jreformatory, because he took part Scouts, In addition to the two defendants, {speakers long active in the strug- {gles of labor will address the meet- ling. These will include William Z, |Foster, natignal secretary of the |Trade Union Educational League; im Reid, ‘president of the National |Textile Workers Union; J. Louis |Engdahl, national secretary of the International Labor Defense; Alfred |Wagenknecht, national secretary of {the Workers International Relief; | Ludwig Landy, of the W.I.R.; Louis | Hyman, president of the Needle jTrades Workers Industrial Union; |Charles Alexander, Negro director jof the Young Communist League; |and a Young Pioneer, GERMAN POLICE SHOOT WORKERS Attack Headquarters of Communist Party (Continued from Page One) democrats, but also of democrats and centrists, called a national pa- rade here today, The Austrian so- \cialist defense league and the tiro- lers participated, demonstrating |for a “greater Germany,” but altho it had been announced that 150,000 |Reichsbannermen. were coming, that |number was not achieved, despite \the mobilization of the official and ‘unofficial apparatus of the state, |LaBunions cooperatives and the jbourgeois and socialist parties. A considerable number of the \demonstrators were, unfortunately, |proletarians suffering from demo- cratic illusions. However, the broad |masses of the workers cold-shoul- |dered the demonstration, while lothers expressed open hostility. Hoersing and Schcidemann took |part in the parade to Unter den |Linden where speeches against the “red terror” were made. Hoersing’s speech was one of furious incite- iment against the Communists, de- manding that the government put |Communist activities at an end. “If the Communists continue their | | will suppress them with violence.” The demonstration passed the Karl Liebknecht House, the head- |quarters of the Communist Party, jwhere a tremendous red flag was \flying and a huge streamer, let- tered “The republican constitution |means a bourgeois dictatorship; the Soviet constitution means social- ism, stretched across the facade. | An attempt was made to storm the |headquarters, but the attackers were beaten off by the proletarian | guard. present activities,” he declared, “we | | Comm je) 1. ship meetings. meetings is com be a CEC and D speak on the ne: campaigns. 2 All section and unit industrial organizers are to meet {August Sth, 5 p.m, sharp, Workers Center, Be tlon women worker organizers will he held Wednesday, August 7th, at Sp. m. sharp, at the Workers Center. 4, All speakers and unit agitprop sory. representative to tasks in the Party at conference Thursday, August 8. 8 p. m. sharp, at the Workers Center. 5. Trade union work: week of August 12, Party assistance to the dixtribution of special issue of Labor Unity, Distribution of clal leaflet of the TUE Party sup- port to this distribution. 6. All Party comrades are to give | special assistance and support to the | meeting to welcome the 3 Gastonia 1 i | Women Greet Frame-Up Victims. Members of all the local councils Jof the United Council of Work Women, will greet the 3 women le ers (V Buch, Sophie Melvin in Gastonia du On Monday night, he Central Opera House, and |8rd 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 banners and slogans. Be sure to geome on time. |United Council of Working Women KATE GITLOW, Ae eh) oe French Workers Center Op French Workers Cente: @'Ed: ion Sociale,” at 143 \103rd St., will hold opening exercises Aug. 15, 8.30 p.m. speaking—admission free, cian Tee | Note, Working Women’s Councils. All Working Women’s Councils are| instructed to send 2 delegates to the conference to be held on Tuesday | night, Aug. 13, at Irving Plaza, 15th MANHA N Wednesday, August 14, all sec-| Pioneer tions are to have section member- Attendance at thexe There will Thursday, the A meeting of all unit and sec- |direetors are to attend the speakers’ | A During the| Dancing, singing, | ugust This unist Activities [CMTC STUDENTS Serapeet manta at ATTACK MEETING be a protest mee against the | imprisonment of Harry Efsman, our comrade, o Kot six months’ imprisonmer W. W. WEINSTONE, District Organizer. will Work at the | Will ho |p.m, at 46 + * Bath Bench Unit, Monday, Aug. 12, 4 ves., Brookly: T at 19th and 4th Av 15, at Court and Carroll 1 ection 2. , n 2 will meet at Center this week All_uni the Work Fraternal Organizations | St. and Irvi 1 few da orld. fli il di otk ent the coun rking Wom- en, Kate Gitlow, | Oe ae * a at 8 nd School, sharp. 7 E. 16th St, p. m. Williamsburg L0,D. an open Franklin Taft and the Down- held Tue rs Centers DRED SOLDIERS No Any Kin Negotiations of d: Karakhan (Continued jrom Page One) the activities of the white guard | Russians, as evidenced by the Amur | River incident. “The situation remains very grave,” he said. “It is incidents \such as this, which are not isolated, | that represent great danger.” Karakhan categorically denied all {reports of invasion of Chinese soil by the Soviet troops. At one point near Manchuli, he said, there is a piece of territory the ownership of |which is disputed. Soviet soldiers | demanded the withdrawal of Chinese |troops from that region and the Chi- |mese complied. H * | * + | MANCHUOI, Manchuria, Aug. 11. |—The Nanking government has |again made obviously inacceptible | proposals to the Soviet government |to negotiate the Nanking seizure of |the Chinese Eastern Railroad. | Chu-yang, the Nanking envoy, jhas asked M. Melnikoff, to negoti- jate on the basis that China agrees jway, but refuses to restore the chief Soviet officials to their former po- sitions on the railroad. | Chu’s proposal demanded the re- |placing of Emshanoff, soviet direc- | tor general of the railway control SHOT BY WHITES, to restore the status quo of the rail-| is distinguished by hat it | has simplified class nixms. | More and more, society ix splitting | up into two great hostile camps, into two great and directly contra- posed classes: bourgeoisie and pro- letariat-—Marx. Keep the date of Sunday Aug. | 18th open, Come to the Press | Carnival, 7 East 42nd Street, New York pee tithe date peta Me | |} Hote) and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETINGS] 14 on the first Monday of the month at & p. m. Industry—One 0 and Fight the Commo: Enem Office Open from 9 a. m. to 6 p, m. | AMALGAMATED | Th) FOOD WORKERS Meets 1st Saturday in the month at 3861 Third Avenue, Bronx, N. ¥. Tel. Jerome 7096 Ask for Baker's Local 164 Union Label Bread! —<— | Advertise your Union Meetings || here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City - | were Our own ‘age, the bourgeois age, | Y IN’ MINNEAPOLIS ‘Kidnap Two Workers; | Police Then Arrest te l (Spec the Daily Worker.) MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Aug. 11, |— More than 100 students at the ort Snelling Military | Training Camp, acting under the or- jders of their captain cked a Citizens Bridge Square |here yester and kidnapped Tom | Foley, of the Comn Party, and |Lloyd Dwight, a Negro member of |the Young Workers League, who | were spea! Over 1,000 workers |who atte the meeting demon- strated n m and the war plots of th h who C. Met, In the , Foley and Dwight were k by a group of young jing he police ap- peared on the and helped the \C. M. T. C. to break up the meet- ing. The police overtook the kid- |nappers, and, instead of arresting them, held Foley and Dwight. International Labor Defe | the release of both on | Earlier in the The se secured two workers arrested w distributing leaflets at the Fort Snelling C. M. T. C. camp, calling on the students to attend the demonstration. Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUE Phone, Orchard In ease of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and can assure you of careful treatment r. 9th St. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat,..9.80 | a, m. to 2 to 6'P. ML Tues. Thurs., 9.30 a, m. tool& 2 to 8 p.m. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p, m’ Please telephone for appointment, Telephone: Lehigh 6022 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803~—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER | Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Ste, Next to Unity Co-operative House |] Cooperators! Patronize | SEROY CHEMIST | 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y¥. Comrade ii ii i Counter demonstrations occurred '. + * | 2 thus placing new hindrances in the |" jy) meeting was attended by|Alderman George W. Harris, Negro,| Fifth Street and Second Avenue in which workers were brutally |Pureau, and Eismond, the vice-direc- Frances Pilat path of the national revolutionary |. ; . dvedih f the New York Ni ees = Ser ‘ | tor general of the railway, with other a movement which is assuming in- | °Very striker in the Workers Inter-| 2nd editor o: le New York News, | at 8:15 p.m. Speakers: Wm. Frank, | beaten up by police, who resorted Soviet officials. | | MIDWIFE creasingly the form of a mass in-|P&tional Relief tent colony, many |has again been nominated for the Lewis, Sklar, I. Zimmerman, to the use of firearms on the Un-|""T)) Soviet povdenment refused to||| Comrades 1m ‘Brighton Bench,|||} 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. ¥. ie fant dehantall strikers and other members: board of aldermen by the corrupt re- : |ter den Linden neighborhood. eae | Patronize | surrection against imperialism. | * Rutgers Square at 815 p.m. conside® the proposals. | Tel. Rhinelander 3916 | “Eyer since the workers of the | Publican party. Abraham Grenthal, at i rei Se ieee | \||Laub Vegetari & Dairy||| —_——- | i ; white, was renominated for the as-| SPeskers: Garcia, Pollock, Weich, I ee ||) Lau egetarian Ay || | | |Maxille-Jenekes Loray mill eame| Nt, "to apeain bunk thousands of | °> Ziebel. ‘Send Out Call For MUSICIANS STRIKE | Restaurant MELROSE— * + i - SOVIET FLIERS |Gers have been weitien in the peeve, Negro and white tenants with fake| ‘Tenth Street and Second Avenue’ Women’s Conference| TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (By Mail).'|} 211 Brighton Beach Ave. ELNOSE especially the Gastonia Gazette, | Tem bills. at 8.00 p. m. Speakers: Eddis, | i eae a Fa eum peta ate at Brighton Beach B.M.T. Station ||| Dairy RESTAURANT fabout our’union, the National Tex. | | Moreau, Weissberg. | More than 500 copies o: e cal rike, charging y | | omrades “Will Always Find It IN KRASNOYARSK (Continued from Page One) send delegates, while rank and file workers are especially urged to have their shops and factories repre- sented. Beside trade unions, workers’ fra- ternal bodies and women’s counci!s, organizations representing the bor- der countries of the U.S.S.R., such as Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Fin- land, ete., are urged to send dele- gates to the conference in order that the emissaries from Soviet Russia, who are bringing greetings and ex- pressions of solidarity from the workers and peasants of the U. S. S. R. to the workers and farmers of the United States, may be fittingly received on their arrival in New York next month. Scouts Fail to Debate Bronx Young Pioneers At Wilkins Ave. Meet The debate scheduled to take place between the Young Pioneers and the Boy Scouts last Friday at 1330 Wilkins Ave. did not occur be- cause the boy scout debaters failed to show up. The excuse they gave qwas that they were afraid of the Pioneers. Nevertheless, their scout leader arrived to take away any boy scouts who might have come to the debate, When the Pioneer leader said that the boy scouts were afraid to de- fend their own organization the scout leader promised to send a few boy scouts to debate the Pioneers next Friday. jout relief, found houses for evicted ;tile Workers Union, our conditions| jand wages in the mill, our orgen-| lizers and organizations which have, | supported and helped us, such as the Workers International Relief and the International Labor Defense. “The editorial in the Gastonia Gazette of Aug. 8 and other news- paper reports are deliberate false- hoods of such a nature as to whip up sentiment against the strikers and organizers in jail. List the Facts. | “We, the members of the W. I. R. branch of Gastonia, who know the facts, want to make them clear to everyone, “The average wage in the Loray mill is $11 a week, the work day 11 hours, The conditions in the mill and houses are very bad. The stretch-out system is in effect. That is why the workers struck on April 1, under the leadership of the Na- tional Textile Workers Union. “Wages are so low the workers could barely keep from starving. When the strike was called they were without food. The union, and especially the W. I. R., has taken care of them since. W. I. R. Supplies Food. “The W. I. R. has supplied the following items of food: flour, meal, sugar, coffee ,milk, buttermilk, mo- lasses, potatoes, lard, fat back, cab- bage, tomatoes, onions, salt, canned goods, beans, rice and greens, “The W. I. R. found houses and tents for the strikers when the M: ville-Jenckes Co, threw hundreds into the roads in all kinds of wea- ther, regardless of whether children and women were sick. 7 “Committees of strikers, with the help of the organizers, have given |e Middle-clans described t ing proposi- 1) {hat ,the existence of a material y proletariat; 3) th: in but the tra tion of THE W. I. R. IN ITS STRIKE RELIEF ACTIVITIES! Send vv Your Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing and Repairing to the W.LR. STORE 418 Brook Ave., Bronx (Near 144th Street) Tel.: Mott Haven 5654. Goods Called for & Delivered saan Y By Patronizing the W. I. R. Store you will enable us to clean and repair the clothing we send to striking and destitute workers, “Not Charity—But Solidarity!” \, > Whitchall and S. Ferry at 7.00 p. m. Speakers: N. Garcia, G. Powers, Valla. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! ;to the Working Women’s Confer- jence which will be held at 26 Union |Sq., Aug. 27 for the purpose of en- dorsing the municipal ticket of the Communist Party and mobilizing the women workers of New York for the election campaign were sent out last night. 7 th rm Mi A i bosses of their contract. a mass reyolu- Make demonstration for tionar: press. this Carnival te Tickets for the Press Carnival only 25 | cents. Morning Freiheit postponed pl Saturday ( at ULMER PAR NOON and NIGHT mic ) August 31 postponed West End B.M.T. Line to 25th Avenue Station 2 Soccer Games at 1.30 and 3.30 p.m. Music, Dancing, Entertainment, Sports > Tickets 40 cents—at the Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Sq., New York eee ea Ae h | Ac Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 108rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (2 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- No ber of rooms to rent, security necessary, Call at our office for further information. 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 Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149, MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., 7 onx, N.Y. Right oft 174th St. Subway Station RATIONAL: * Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE1.UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetariun Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s» Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN UISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York |