The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 2, 1929, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

i ‘ \ : é eas ee N ORR Ly a. ‘ -eading Mine Company Dismisses Thousands; Wage Cut Deal with UMWA Seen W ELECTRIC. | =D Pishtimeriaion DRIVE T) FREE Fraternal Organizations'COURT INH. G. (NCHINERY 1S “HARRY EISMAN, | ..2"=."=-"2 «| TELLS DEFENSE Freiheit Singing So y Picnic. al Diggers Joining la National Union By ANN.. ROCHESTER. day, Sept. 8, at Pleasant Bay Bronx, reiheit chorus nthracite miners will never see llar of the $4,000,000 savings to CNG GREY PPE SEIS gaan alah ee ossessed Arabs, Stripped of Their Land, is ~ <A “af * : e | Sovie An leles Office Workers D: The Office Workers Ur rt ers Receptio HW on will give for which Ni lash, bass’ baritone; V ad Wolf Barzel uy, ©'Can’t Ask Prospective “| Jurors So Much a : ar ‘Plan Campaign to Re- | lease Jailed Youth . Will appear in a new d instr 1 (Continued from Page One) *~ sisted that a N The district office 6f the Young| Pioneers of America, District 2, an-| | nounces the opening of a joint cam- was more help, likely to kill p han a citizen secured for 3 h aign with the New York distri Worker. . : sae ( ful hiladlphia ad Reading [of the International Labor Defense Communist Activities (0 Norm ca chat and Iron Corp, as a result of |for the liberation of Harry Eisman, | A°"., {{9't Haver eG reason he was prejudiced against nical changes and electrification. the militant member of the Young} ‘ those of the defendants who came A Pioneers who was sentenced to six] Prowneville ; months in a Jewish reformatory at obtain boxes fc io Fellaheen, or Arab land workers, who, robbed of their their land by British imperialism, which | Morgan’s long arm reached . i ‘3 A handed it to the Zionists, imperialist tools, have revolted. to finance the coal company’s from outside the state. However, Ralph L, Potts, a cotton vie public utility companies to GALL FIGHT ON | Fascists to Send YOL GIRLS BEAT. sceins Ren certs fevadencne ce svete Bese a th | Youth Here to Learn | |sailing for their international jam-| neA. Sanne me eting. wil He was excus sags edie huildings ) ee ciae GAR SE L L 0 WT : Bank Grafting Game MILITARY POLICE ee hte Biumfiend hatte omrade Mass Meeting Held. an ais Sate writl dicpines| Pe ROME, Sept. 1.—Seven young ment issued veaer ‘a condemn Ate ee eae °c aoa saa held ne Italians employed by large banks | will be sent to the United States T.U.E.L. Exnose N. J. | to study American banking methods, | Fakers’ Plans jit was announced here today. The | action of Judge O'Keefe in sentenc- ing the Young Pioneers as part of Caldwel the general frame-un system that is Five ry Eisman. is in line with the at- rious speeches tempted railroading of the 23 Gas- lotte organizer; tonia strikers. In order to destroy} a0 f 4 . Over the militant working class craw’ | Defendants Also Go aa ae eae AAS. nx € iS) the New t numbers of colliery workers} considerably more than half the | : and older men now employed h , Belmont and North Charlotte eting was attend- vho though small determined in the vae Wells, Char- ‘oll, for- Attacked in Anti-War Meet, Defy Arrest (Continued from Page One} jare being trained by Wall Street to ° company’s breakers. The re- an old breaker by an- y immec threw cent of the v The | endan’ t that break- | s now only where formerly Much of Reading’s ex- ng of $4,000,000 will of ne out of the payroll. r scheme includes |idea, suggested by Count Volpi, | 2 MGM RY: | president of the Italo-American | (Continued from Page One) (Society, has met with the approval “Reds” and “hot heads” and stoop-| o¢ Premier Mussolini, : , ) : ing to every underhanded trick at| |kill other workers in the impending their command. Thcy are determin- imperialist war and to act as strike éd to defeat us. At the meeting of | |breakers at home. the State Conference Board last | | Over 500 guardsmen and civilian Wednesday, steps were already tak- visitors thronged around the speak- Ber Huber Car and Mike Har- kers, spoke for They pointed out that s more ne ary for the workers to ra together in zations, the bosses try to frame the| With Leaders leaders of the workers. Harry Eis- man was jailed because he was a| (Continued from Page One) | (Continued from Page One) en to turn our demands over to the]! ers ag the sinister character of the, ™8" f pese ‘ vests ae 1 luction and sale of electric|company-controlled arbitration |boss’army was laid bare. The uni-| Militant Pioneer, who was very ac-|$750 bond. They will be tried in as between themselves, which should nization for the sup- er by a new $6,000,000 genera-|hoard. This is being done in spite| a Ua Us Un formed workers especially were so tive in the fight against the bosses, | Gastonia on October 15. have the most submarines, but both ort ir fellow union members plant at Il-2ndon, Pa. This | of the overwhelming opposition of | struck by the message of the League and for this reason, the courts, the This makes a total of 16 delegates want more | than Bri ay with : its | paced sun tbe alesis cise and t will supply po : for the elec- | the rank and file. that they refused to disband despite | agents of the capitalists, sentenced | sent to the T. U. U. Convention|larger surface navy, will permit ke ol sepia Bad th Gna the ed 1 Hail Conference in ond the snarls and threats of their supe-| him to six months. |from this district. The others left | without a struggle. fe riors. Finally, in desperation, and! “But the Young Pioneers will not | Jast week in autos to stop on the} Week of Trial |fearing that the parade scheduled| be intimidated by such tacties on| Way at various textile centers for| miserable iditions they have suf- |fered under for long years. They |urged the workers to definitely re- ne operations and for the y subsidia now apply- s. It will utilize the Lost by Arbitration. Don’t let them fool you with their lying propaganda about the street | Hague Displeases French. The results so far of the Dawes- vpest grades of anthracite from Re Land | jfor three o’clock, in which Spanish | the part of the police and the courts, | '@anizational work, There were| MacDonald conferences were semi-| 1. diate ack sell-ou : k : : Nat OF ; part r et : pudiate the black sell-out policy of Reading company’s mines and | Cymer ew Crepe ead Uchee | (Continued from Page One) _| and world war veterans were to take| They will continue their work of | others elected to go but the pressure |officially announced at the British| th. ty. 7. W. and ite kindred or- 1 banks. It is part of a far-|fion The facte are: inthe 1d05| the U.P. W. and the A. F. of L. |Part, would be held up unless the/ organizing the workers’ children to | 0f union work, the beginning of the |foreign office ee of eS ory | ganizations under the leadership of and] eg: 7 ted | the corrupt officialdom of the A, F. of L., company union de luxe, to satisfy x dividends. which the hing slicy aimed kholders’ demands from the: divid young workers were got rid of, the | officers called out the military po- lice. participated in the struggles of their | trial, the tremendously increased ac- |declaring for y of parents despite the persecutions of | tivity of the N. T. W. U. in the | England, a term which is interpreted the authorities. | southern field, compels the union to | diferently in each country, and ad-| °° 2 Twenty armed M. P.’s charged the “The Young Pioneers call upon | keep some of the best trained or- | mitting that there no di ision on) nse Ny he 4 platform, dragged the speaker down/all workers’ children to protest| ganizers at work here. All will re-| the size of the ¢ , contained | Continue Mass Activity. and began to haul her off to the|@gainst the imprisonment of our| turn as soon as the convention {mainly the significant statement | In the meanw) guard house. The other eleven| courageous comrade, and to issue a| Over to continue the organization of |that both countries favored a limit) American worke League members rushed to her de-}| |fense, shoutin, “If you take one of Only the strong fighting power of the left wing can lead the work- ers of the South, black and white, in struggles against the bosses, | their police and courts and against the traitorous leadership of the A. F. of L. In all these struggles the I. L. D. must move forward with the N. T. W. U. as the shield of the workers against the bosses’ prosecution. Support the Gastonia defense, free our fellow-workers, movement for a wage increase of Division 194 of the New Orleans car- men, which resulted in a winning strike, the men were persuaded by their reactionary union officials to go back to work and (like Wepner, Jones, etce., are trying to do with us) submit their demands to arbi- tration. After months of arbitration proceedings and an enormous ex- pense to the union, the decision of the arbitration board was: “There is} pany confidently expects to pay n the reconstruction is com- terest paid on funded ady been doubled by saje through Morgan and Drex- of Phe new bond issue. reserves calculated to last 00 years, Reading Coal owns third of all unmined anthracite the m allied the by warning to the courts that there |More locals of the union in an ever-/0n the tonnage of submarines and/Gastonia Joint Defense and Relief five | destroyers. Campaign Committee, 80 E. 11th St., | There is much dissatisfaction|room 402, New York City, continu- |heard from officials of all countries|ing tag days, collections, house to jinvolved in the Young plan, except| house, shop and factory, to raise the had better not be any more such| extending field, throughout \us, you'll have to take all!” Infuri- cases, unless they would bring a/| states. ated, the military police attacked) storm of working class protest down \the girls, pulling hair, scratching,| upon their heads!” Organizers Also Go. Hugo Oehler, Southern distric -ennsylvania. It runs n: and|no justification for an increase in| uphold the right to organize, | 20d otherwise exhibiting their man-|_ The Pioneers, together with the|ganizer of the N. T. W. U., replac-| Britain. French publicists especially | very urgent funds for the defense. h Glen Alden Coal as lead-|the wage scale at this time.” The| strike and defend themselves |liness, but the young workers gave| International Labor Defense, are|ing Fred Beal who is on trial, and | ave bitter at what they consider the’ Word has been received at Char- producers. Claiming |New Orleans carmen have received! against the vicious attack of the |St¢h a good account of themselves| planning an intensive campaign to! William Dunne, representative of ction of the French delegates in| lotte of great activity in the unions, on capital tied up in!no increase since 1920. of /tticking them, insisting that the| youth organizations, workers’ fra- imum had been yielded and then| ternal |that in the end, the attempt to ar-| acquaint the workers of the city| the Central Executive Committee They were t 4 |rest any of them had to be given up.| with the case, and to line up all f bosses and their agents; rally the working for 45 cents to 51 cents ma associations, United Front —of course at resery , i i i : Sharlot masses of American workers to | ‘ | the Communist Party, left Charlotte | (™"*" shinee anodes ee a of mine workers,—|per hour. defeat. the murderous union- | “You ain’t no ladies,” one of the, Working class organizations in the, Friday by train, also to attend the |™aking further surrenders, | conferences to continue the mobiliza- Kkholders pay no atten-} Our New Orleans brothers are at| smashing plots of Southern textile [cowed M. P.’s snorted. The girls re-| drive for the freeing of Harry Kis-|Convention. They are expected back | tion to save the Gastonia strikers. 2 committees and fed-| present out on strike against star-| bosses.” torted, “We're. Communists and) man. ae ne, Byen the U- S:t vations waxesand thapsace “aeatul 5s |proud of it!” | Gommission stated that|being betrayed by the reactionary |g ee ne Pate, Week @ steady |” They were then herded together ompany should expect financial | policies of their union leaders with|srq out of the Meeklenbure County |@nd driven to the railroad station) WORKERS rn on capital invested in un-|the able assistance of the local cap- lesietchouae?teom whom ane prose- |at Roa Hook, below the camp, where | government. Likewise in| cution and the defense selected only |they were turned loose with bluster- loped reserves not to be mined | jtalist Chicago, in June 1927, the 20,000 seven jurors of the twelve who will m® threats of three-month jai BUR N E F F | 6 | E § a) “For Any Kind of Insurance” (/ARL BRODSKY Build Up the United Front of the Working Class. Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor, 9th St. Phone, Orchard 2333. In case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and can assure An average of fifteen meetings a week are now being held by the National Textile Workers Union, at various mills throughout the Caro- |linas, Tennessee, Alabama and Vi |ginia.’ At most of these meetings, | a representative of the International | Labor Defense appeals for the sup- | | port of the defense of the 23 Gas-| |tor.ia strikers whom the mill prose- Tuesday or Wednesday. | Telephone: Murray Hils 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New York | 40 yeal Reading claims a re- on coal lands probably not to|members of Div. 241 voted unani . terms if they dared to return. 9 4 Beet i der a verdict on the charge of e 4 geo ined for over 200 years. |mously to strike if necessary to en-|musder against sixteen members of /@% ¢ffort to start a riot, the offi- force their demands for a wage iN- | the National Textile Workers’ Union. jcers backed a truck onto the young nthacrite operators are nibbling | : ; : he edges of a contract with the|crese. Behind the back of the mem-|Qut of the 600 eeniremen drawn for| Workers as they were being shoved/Set Fire to Gastonia Patronize ted Mine Workers which expires|bership (as is being attempted eae a ».|along the tracks to the station. ’ cution is trying to convict of mur- N Ti B b Sk you of carefal treatment. in 1930, Still nominally recog-| here) the officials submitted seagate ga pag this)""“Leaflets calling on the guards- Bosses’ Images Phaeata eaett 0-LIp barber Snops ng the A, F. of L. union, they|matter to an arbitration board| es men to demonstrate against the! |coming imperialist war on Interna-| ¢,,. uf ‘ontinued from Page One) Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF probably be impossible to select five 26-28 UNION SQUARE w its present weakness and con-|which granted them a “raise” of| tore jurors from among these who| he Gastonia defense. The r | i i . ‘ st & ie se) fe 2 ras ia se. eS0- tors! Patronize (1 flight up) SURGEON DENTIST ny expect wages reductions and) e, Again the men were defeated. gre acceptable to both prosecution| ‘ional Youth Day, Sept: 6, and eX |tutions from Germany were trom | ae 2700 BRONX P/ ~K EAST 249 EASY 115th STREET a c i ve resen % € ainin; ie strik breaking Yr * | Cor. S id Ave. ke ¥ pd peers ue: = ae 5 ‘ a ae . ‘ and defense. Several hundred more | fe Rea guard, were widely dis the mass meeting of workers of S EK R O Y | (corner Allerton Ave.) Oftiee ipa rs wed. Set. ate listriCh ASTeeMment /CeP Een 2 Arbitration is A Trap. veniremen will have to be drawn in|tributed before the meeting was Stardgard, and from the function-| —————————————————— nay Ms to 123.2 to 6 P. Me than 5,000 antheagie mine{ In the terms of arbitration, the |this event. The trial will not start | broken Ripe iste daverneaee itl aries meeting of the International CHEMIST z Tues. ae ie ul sm to 12; s employed in 1926 are now |State Conference Board will agree |before Wednesday, according to all| which the guardsmen received them| Labor Defense of Germany, the! 657 Allerton Avenue | Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1p, m, | Advertise your Union Meetings Please telephone for appointment. of work. Pennsylvania anthra- Telephone: Lehigh 6022 employment has never regained pre: evel. Since the 1926 n work has been more and more Greater Hamburg district. The English resolution declared, “the workers have now before them beforehand to abide by the decision |indications. Defense, prosecution | contributed to the fury of the offi- of the arbitrators and attempt to/and newspaper reporters here all’ cers which culminated in the raid. bind us to it, no mater what the de-/ agree on only one point—that this] cision 1S, | Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. here. For information write to | The DAILY WORKER Sim gular, and many operations have : permanently closed. In 1928, 1 a small force employed, work- were idle 91 days on the aver- aced with this unemployment changes in the industry and such electrification and ration- ition plans of thes¢ of Reading , anthracite mine workers have | of greater solidarity and more rmined resistance to the opera- ’ offensive. Only the National vs’ Union can provide the mili- leadership for such resistance. iINA WAR LORDS! NEW ATTACKS ding Over Border Different Points (Continued from Page One) tarist leader, as a 24 hour bat- yt Jailnor, and a severe battle Manchuli, with the Red Army uring Kalun, near the border. ig is using these stories as an ise for more mobilization. An- ry big army of mercenaries, com- | ided by General Wang Chou- ig, has been sent suddenly from <den to Suifen-ho, where there ready a concentration of Chang's ps. iti Russian white guardists sed into Soviet Union territory lay and attaacked the village of bodne Luski, on the Amur river. Workers Form Battalions. ‘ther bands attacked villages in Nerchinsk region, the same day, Chinese troops fired on the So- steamer Karpenko, The near future will show xer we are dealing with actual _». of Nanking to liquidate the “act or a new provocational ma- ver,” said the newspaper Pravda. vatches published yesterday from ingrad, Odessa and elsewhere, of workers \-luntarily forming alions to go into action on the churian frontier, , Setanta Arbitration means sur- | trial, the most important -that has render to the Public Service. It|ever taken place in the South, will means the defeat of the 8 hour day| almost certainly last a month or and the 25% wages increase. It is! more. Pea age pone ee What First Week Proves. The first week’s events prove Boycott The Ballot! Prepare to | Strike! | Brothers: Under no circumstances can we accept this miserable at- clearly that: (1) The prosecution will try to have unionism outlawed and organizing, striking and self- ~ |defense made criminal offenses pun- tempt to sell us out by the mis-| ishable by death. (2) That the state sete fs Ss ee; has no definite specific facts upon must stand solidly for our demands! Shichi ko bake ite: indictnent we No compromise! We must insist on shown By the failuve of the Man: direct jnegotiations {with |the |com-|*? LA ms d dirceconotnie nower:t0! ville-Jenckes’ lawyers to write a sec- pein Aa Bavente ther Ballot! |O%4 bill of particulars in accordance ak Ca aul rd “|with the argument of the defense Enea eta ng, |counsel, which was upheld by th i ‘1 |court that the defendants are en. Th Rank aud en sites ene titled to know these alleged facts. eer is only one ry | rg = ion) (3) That although the Southern gone Pra e.Tunee tae ae Sitnatlor capitalist press continues its edi- we will be defeated, The rank and|toTial howling that this is an or- file must set up its own leadership. dinary murder trial even the prose- A part tion no longer can keep up this This can be done by organizing rank wit and file committees in all car houses |P™étense, as shown by the character and garages in every city and town lof the questions they ask the venire- in the state where our members are |™en, clearly proving that they re- alize very well the significance of employed. Such ‘committees have | already been organizd and others | i are pects stir of formation. A bearing upon the future of the labor i a ‘movement in the South, and by the Giese paces Aaigcn ate fact, that the selection of the jurors by electing representatives from |depends upon their answer to the each local committee. This will en- | TU°3\'™ A ‘; able us to keep in touch with each |Prejudiced against labor unions, or- | other all over the state and devel- | 8anizers, Communism and radical re- lop our full strength in this fight. |ligious beliefs. icy This is the only way we can win! (4) The pretense of impartiality | Get in touch with the Traction of the prosecution has broken down, Workers Section of the Trade Union |as shown, for instance, by the fact Educational League at the following |that the state is desperately trying halls: 205 Paterson Street, Pater-|to get on the jury business men who ison, N. J., 93 Mercer Street, New- | openly admit prejudice. ark, 25 Dayton Ave. Pass@lc and! (5) That the searchlight of na- 308 Elm Street, Perth Amboy. Thejtional publicity and the campaign Traction Workers Section of the|of the International Labor Defense Trade Union Educational League |to arouse workers to the support of will be the means of connecting up|the defense by mass protest has ‘our rank and file committees on a| forced a complete change of line of state wide scale. _,|the state and of capitalist news- No arbitration! No removal ‘of | papers, the attempt now being made the old contract! to electroecute the union organizers Fight the sell-out of the union of-|by due process of law with every ap- ficials! : pearance of impartiality preserving Organize Rank and File Commit-|the illusion of democratic even- tees! handed justice of the courts as an Prepare to Strike! For the 8 hour day! For the 25% wage increase! agency of “all the people.” (6) That the I. L, D. analyses of the state of inflamed prejudice a Ns tte! |the outcome of the trial and its) ‘questions as to whether they are} ae ~|a typical instance of the brutal! on the part of the capitalist and methods which the capitalist class | middle class is correct and tha with | of every country is using against very few exceptions only the tenant/ workers. In America, only two |farmers and unskilled workers are after the legal murder of sympathgtic to the defendants and | Sacco and Vanzetti a group of trade| |the union which is leading the re-| unionists in Gastonia have been ar- volt of the Southern mill workers] rested and all the forces of capi- against the stretch-out system and talist class justice are being mar- | starvation wages. |shaled in an attempt to bring these | 3 Out of 400. innocent working men and women It is remarkable that out of to the electric chair.” | [nearly four hundred veniremen ex-| | The British workers demanded | lamined last week only three “per-| ‘the government of America at once | fect jurors,” who have neither read | release the Gastonia prisoners, at) \nor heard about the Gastonia case, | the same time reminding them that) |and who are, therefore, entirely free the British workers have not for- rom prejudice, appeared. These gotten the legal murder of Sacco! three semi-illiterate farmers didn’t 2nd*Vanzetti two years ago, and the even know Aderholt was dead. The continued imprisonment of Tom defense eliminated them by peremp-| Mooney, Warren Billings and hun- tory chanllenges. dreds of other American working Thus far the defense has used 62) Class fighters serving long terms of jof its 168 peremptory challenges | imprisonment in American peniten- and the state has used 27 of its| tiaries.” | b8. | The workers also declared “in| Many Exceptions. | Britain and the colonies the same| | The defense was forced to use a| persecution goes on unabated. The \number of peremptory challenges to i labor government stands indicted as \eliminate veniremen who admitted to @ tool of British imperialism, It) strong prejudice but who said they |stands self-condemned before the |would try to be impartial. The de-| working class for its refusal to re- \fense has taken exception to the rul-| lease the Cramlington miners, Staf- jing of Judge Barnhill on these and ford railwaymen and the Nine Mile) \other veniremen. This, added to the Point miners. It continues to keep) lexceptions taken by the defense to| Irish political prisoners in British |the ruling of the judge on the bill| jails and sanctions the ruthless ter- ‘of particulars, lays the basis for an| ror now proceeding in Ireland, con-| ‘ppeal should the state succeed in| cerning which its official organ, the a conviction. | Daily Herald, keeps criminally Successful meetings were held’ last | silent. | night and Saturday at Kings Moun-| One of the German cablegrams de- | tain, where 300 workers heard Kirk-|clared “we still remain under the) land, Drew, Phifer and Gerson ap-| fearful impression which the exe- peal for support of the defense and|cution of the two American revolu- call for mobilization of southern) tionaries, Sacco and Vanzetti, by workers for general struggle against American justice left upon us. Now the bosses; at Bessemer City where | again, America, the land of “classic Paul Shepperd, Mike Harris, Wil-| democracy,” wants to murder revo- liams and Hubert Carol spoke; at|lutionary proletarians who fought! McAdenville where the second mass| for the prime necessities of life. We meeting thus far was held with! pledge all in our power to stop the Poyntz as the principal speaker; at|repetition of the Sacco-Vanzetti North Belmont and Mt. Holly where | case. The whole civilized world, and the first mass meeting took place; especially the revolutionary prole- at Homestead; at the W. I. R. tent tariat of all countries, raised their colony; at Dallas, and several other! united voice against the execution textile centers, |of Sacco and Vanzetti and now the At all meetings workers pledged | protest must be increased tenfold) to support the defense and many to save the sixteen Gastonia strik- joined the I. L. D, ko Wg years THE W. I. R. IN ITS Your Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing and Repairing W.LR. STORE HELP STRIKE RELIEF ACTIVITIES! Send OO to the 418 Brook Ave., Bronx (Near 144th Street) Tel.: Mott Haven 5654. Goods Called for & Delivered 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!” Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty P: ate Beauty Parlor 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 Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St. New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 —<— - ———————— | Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City DR. J. MINDEL Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office ‘ED FOOD WORKERS Meets Ist Saturday Third Avenue, bronx, N.Y. Ask for | Baker's Local 164 Ont Jerome 70v6 VEGETARIAN vu Label Bi 1 “ deihceNbcaealad Dairy RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Fin | ea | | | Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx Station) INTERVALB 9149. Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated | Food Workers | 183 W. Sist St, Phone Circte 7336 [2S BUSINESS MEETING lield on the firat Monday of the |) month at % p. m, | One industry—One —Union—Join || and Fight the Common Enemy?! Office Open from 9 a. m, to 6 (near 174th St. PHONE :— MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., P onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station Comrades in Brighton Patronize Laub Vegetarian & Dairy Restaurant 211 ‘Brighton Beach at Brighton Beach B.M.T. 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. Beach, Ave. Station RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT » 199 SECOND AVEl.UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. * Strictly Vegetarian Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet, 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A_place with atmosphere 15% REDUCTION TO READERS by gga a hy sige Mes. OF THE DAILY WORKER 302 E.12th St. New ¥ ‘on

Other pages from this issue: