The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 20, 1929, Page 2

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Page Two varcy WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1929 HOOVER ON AIR: HINTS AT WAR IN RADIO TALK France Threatens Blow at Five Power Plan New J lowing is a copy of his letter PARTY Ulpn Deserts Lovestone Camp Harry Fox, who was a leading Party member locally in Newark, sey, and who became jhe leader of the Lc now announces his break with the Lovestone tenega still to be acted upon by the District Control Commiss tone faction there, les. His case is ion. The fol- Are You of Those Withholding Day’s Pay from the Party To very Party Member! Tho the DAY’S PAY assess- ment was decided upon three months ago there are still thous- ands of Party members who have not yet given their DAY’S PAY. ARE YOU ONE OF THOSE PROTESTMEET 2 Old Siberia There is no basic individual plot T0 PUSH FIGHT in this film, Amidst the Siberian |blizzards against the dreary winter fcr | The prison warden, Communist Candidates with his hangman-like overseers and the mire of the serville provincial “society”—these represent culmin- landscapes and the gray grim prison walls, with the mass of criminal con- jviets for a human background, we see conflict of two element forces. | | Ostrobeylo, (Continued from Page One) the political reliable concerns given a monopoly on the best radio wave lengths by Hoover's radio com- mission last year. Always Ready to Fight. Hoover expressed the usual plati tudes about hoping for peace, and that the present discussic wit “other countries” would lead to ¢ armament, and then said: Never has there been a president who did not pray that his adminis- tration might be one of peace, and that peace should be more assured for his successor. Yet th men have never hesitated when war be- came the duty of the nation. And always in these the thought of our presiden preparedness fo the assurances Which bodes MacDonald thinks, that U. S. is ready fc tary or trade peace empire. France May Block Parley. The semi-official Temps, follow- fmg the lead of the French delega- tion at Geneva, in leading articles intimates that France will negate the whole proposed Five-Power Confer- | ence on armaments by declaring its decisions null and void unless made | a part of the draft treaty now being | written at Geneva. Moreover, if the! position of France on army reserves | is tampered with, says this spokes- man of the French government, France will demand the same treat- ace.” for Britain, as he nav n Seven gned the world court optional clause, all with reservations, and with England specifically reserving the right to réfuse to hay. tried any disputes between herself and dominions. ATTENTION, WORKING WOMEN All women workers are urged to send in stories of their activities, workers correspondence and other items of interest to women workers for the Wome Seciion of the; Daily Worker. Stories must be, sent in immediately. i To the C. E. C. Party of U 43 East 125th Street, New York City, N. Y. Communi Ss. A Dear Comrades: It is now one month since my expulsion from the Party for my support of the activities of the Lovestone splitters in their attack’ on the Party and the C. I. During this period I have had no connections, either personal or by mail, with Lovestone or any of his adherents. At the same time I have tried to make a critical study of the ques- tions involved and of Loyestone’s position of fighting the Party and the C, I. I have come to the conclusion that Lovestone and his followers represent an anti-Pa: tendency, which is rendering objective aid to the enemies of the Party—to the enemies of the working class. In view of this I state that I completely disassociate myself from Lovestone and his adherents. I recognize my mistake and condemn my anti-Party action of carrying on the fight of these renegades within the Party. In particular I condemn the speech I made against the Party of which I have been a loyal member for five years, and in sup- port of Lovestone, at the time of my expulsion. The action of the Party in expelling me from its ranks for my unpardonable action was correct and I endorse it. At the same time I believe that the Party needs within its ranks every comrade who to- day is ready to work actively and to fight energetically against all enemies of the Party. _ For this reason I hereby appeal to the Central Committee for my reinstatement in the Party. I stand ready to carry out all instructions and decisions of the Party. Yours for Communism, HARRY FOX. Capmakers Union Will; Hail Triumph For Elect Saturday Night) Communist Party, All mili and progressi aa (Continued from Page One) makers are urged to attend the years of activity of the Communist] me Capmakers Union, |Party as the leader of the workers Saturday, at S p. m. at 133 Second in their battles, will be told by Com- : i Se HORA aE munist Party leaders, standard- Ave., when the executive board of bearers in the New York municipal the local will be elected. They are elections who have been outstand- urged to vote against the betrayers ing fighters in the class struggles in of the workers and support the mili- | ip¢ United States. The rally must be turned into al stirring demonstration by the work-| ers of New York for militantestrug- | jgle against the boss rationalization |program with the demands for the 7-hour day, for unemployment in- surance, for higher wages, against! the deadly capitalist speed-up, for| af ike JIM CROW IN HOUSE OF LORD. “I believe I have the right to maintain the integrity of my church 2s a white church,” Rev. William Blackshear said yesterday in defense of his Sunday order barring Negroes from his Brooklyn church. Fraternal Organizations Spartacus Film League. The Spartacus Film League, an} amateur, working class motion pic-| ture organization, has begun work on | = Negro documentary film which will | depict the life of the Negro worker | in the segregated Harlem section of New York. The League is open for membership to all interested in this work. For information write J. Grimm, 36 Park Ave., New York. “hae * } Bronx Park Lecture. | Dr. Lieber will open the kinder-| marten with a lecture on “Parents nd Children,” in the auditorium of the Bronx ‘Workers Colony, 2700 t, on Saturday, Sept. Bronx Park E 31, at 8:30 p. 2 ee 3 Brighton Beach Party Council 17 WeW. will) give a party ower for the benefit of the t-Daily Worker Bazaar on Sunday 22, 8 p, m.. at 227 Brighton Beach Ave. Admis- sien free. | Te he Harlem Progressive Youth Club. Members are to attend the Gas- tonia defense mecting in the Central Opera House Friday evening, Sept 20, en masse se Workers’ Pic The nese Workers tion w ve a pier Sept. Pelham B: ning at 10 a: m. Games, tertainment, refreshr mission, 25'cents. Dir ington Ave. subway then change to surface ham Bay Park Biull * Copies of A. B. ©. Wanted. | At least ten copies of the A.B.C of Communism are needed by the Workers School. Any comrade will- ing to contribute or sell a copy should bring it to the school, 28| Union Square, fifth floor, as soon as possible. Communist Activities Latin-American Electoral Ball. The Spanish Bureau is arranging An election campaign rally and ball far Saturday, Sept. 28, 8:30 p. m., at the Harlem’ Casino, ‘116th St, and Lenox Ave, Latin-American dances and songs, Negro jazz band. Lead- ing Communist Party candidates will speak. Admission 75 cents. Os 3 * All Sections and Units, Note. The District Agitprop instructs all sections and units to make sure that the five comrades chosen by each section and the three comrades chosen by each unit for special training in the courses for Party functionaries at the Workers School ire registered during the current week. All members admitted to the Party Since April ¥, 1929, are re- sired to register for the class in ‘Fundamentals of Communism.” All srospective students of the Workers School are urged to sign up without glay, as registration closes on Sept 85% 10th Anniversary. Section 7 will celebrate * Boro Park. the 10th onniversary of the C. P., U.S, 4. and ratify the Communist candidates of the section at a meeting on Satur- | Club will give a dance the right to organize, which are out- standing demands in the program of the Communist Party in the munici- pal election, the New York district |of the Party declares. | Attention, City Clubs, Inc. |Report on Cleveland A special conference of all City Clubs, Inc., executive committees wii 2 be held at 108 E. 14th St. on Mon- Ww day, Sept. 23, 7:30 p. m. Important! Conference ill Be | matters are to be taken up. Given Here Saturday (Continued from Page One) yesterday, will take the first steps \for the affiliation of unions, propa- \ganda groups and shop committees with the Unity Center. Definite or- ganization steps will be proposed in the direction of the organization of T.U.U.L. groups and shop com- mittees as well as plans for an in- Bronx Election Campaign Rally, | tensive campaign for the organiza- ‘An election campaign rally will be |tion of the unorganized workers of | held at Longwood and Prospect|New York and New Jersey. W. W. Prominent women | question of mobilizing support for| Gastonia situation, ete. All councils|even mean a strike in New York to! must have an active committee on |free the 16 workers who go on trial 5 * * in Charlotte, N. C. on Sept. 30. nia Defense Meet, | The question cf workers defense | TS ae mans gat’ {committees will also be taken up. Conference called by | They will ct strikers against fo |the fascist meaczres of the bosses e468 Harlem Youth Dance. Harlem Progressive Youth at the club- 1493 Madison Ave., | The this Sat- Good jazz rooms, : urday' evening, Sept band. ee ee Gezang Farein Rehearsal. In preparation for the Tenth An versary Celebration of the C. P.. U A., the Freheit Gezang Farein will have a general rehearsal at 106 E. 14th St. on Friday, Sept. 20, at 8 p.m. All members must attend. es eS | Defense Bronx D. and W. I. R. of Wednesday, Sent. 23,| Sh ode stern Road and the state which is used when- Workers Laboratory Theatre. ever workers go on strike. The regular Friday meeting has been called off in order to allow members. to attend the Gastonia _pro- test meeting at the Central. Opera, House tonight. lee Daily-Freiheit Bazaar To Be Workers’ Store. Bath Beach Collection Station, = The Bath Beach headquarters for Gastonia Defense boxes, 48 Bay 28th | (Continued from Page One) St., will be open Saturday and Sun-|handiwork, doing a real “labor of ai love.” As such, their products are above monetary value, yet beside being “bargains” in every sense of the word, they have the added value of serving to maintain the revolu- tionary press of the workers who buy them. Bearing this in mind, the sale of tickets must go on with increased tempo. Our motto must be 100,000 |workers at the bazaar this year. | We can do it. Get a bundle of ba- \zaar tickets and make sure to sell them all. Your fellow workers in violinist; | members to attend. opera singer, pianist and fine entertainment. All and sympathizers urged Admission 35 cents. eo ee Unit 1F, Section 2, A special meeting will be held to- day, 6 p. m., at 1179 Broadway. * * * 10th Anniversary Celebration. The 10th Anniversary of the Com- munist Party of the U. 8. A. will be| jcomplete the signature drive suc-|3rd St.; Ukrainian Workers’ Club, | Farein will have a general rehearsal Will Speak (Continued from Page One) will show the relation between the Gastonia struggle .and the fight of the New York Workers in his speech at the Central Opera House meeting. Other speakers will be Bill Dunne, Sophie Melvin and Ben Wells. “The Gastonia fight is not a local struggle,” Weinstone said when in- STILL WITHOLDING THE DAY’S PAY FROM THE PAR- TY? The present situation in the country, the rising tide of strug- gle of the masses, the success of the Trade Union Unity League Convention, the sharpening of the class strugzle in Gastonia—sure- ly in such a situation every Par- ty member must rally to the ||terviewed by the Daily Worker yes- support of the Party in every |! terday, | respect. “New York workers are very def- At a time when some of our || initely concerned with the fight, be- comrades are face to face daily with the open fascist terror of the capitalist class there should not be a single Communist who fails the Party at such a period. If you have not yet given your day’s pay act at once! If you have done your duty to the Party see that every mem- ber of your nucleus does the same. Demand of your nucleus offi- cials an account of all money col- lected and see that it is for- warded to the National Office of the Party. Let your unit insist that the district shall send all funds col- lected on the day’s pay to the National Office immediately. No Party member will be con- sidered in good standing who has not secured a day’s pay stamps either by giving a day’s pay or through unemployment per deci- sions of the nucleus. italist machinery, operating with the socialist bureaucrats, against | workers in the needle, food, shoe, and scores of other trades. “Unless the workers take this | struggle against the real enemy—! the Walker-Hoover strikebreaking | government—against the La Guar- dias, the Thomases—they cannot mobilize the greatest masses for |their fight,” he continued. | Increase Police Terror. “On all hands we see the increased {capitalist police terror. Peaceful |Commmunist meetings in Browns- | ville and throughout Manhatan have {been broken up. A special bureau |of the Whalen police has been es- |tablished to intimidate New York workers. “This capitalist terror in New York City is only part of the Gas- tonia terror. It is our common |fight, which demands a common Send all money collected to||front against our common enemy.” Communist Party, 43 E. 125th H Besides the Central Opera House St., New York City. |gathering demonstration, other |meetings will be held at Whitehall |St. and So. Ferry, 114th St, and jLenox Ave., 10th St, and Second }Ave., 110th St. and Fifth Ave., In- tervale and Wilkins Aves., 50th St. and First Ave., Brooklyn; Grand FASCISTS CAN'T peereert !79th St. and First Ave., Manhattan. ty Workers Mobilize | This meeting will also prepare for | th Pax m f e mass collection days tomorrow For Signature Drive and Sunday throughout New York. The following stations have been Despite fascist and reactionaries|named at which collection boxes attempts to prevent the Communist | will be distributed and returned: Party from obtainging signatures! Downtown: Workers Center, 27 necessary to place Communist|K, 4th St.; Workers Center, 26 standard bearers on the ballot in! Union Square; Shoe Workers’ the New York municipal elections,| Union, 51 East Tenth St.; Millinery workers are rallying to the appeal| Workers’ Local 43, 4 West 37th St.; of the Party in a final effort to| Window Cleaners’ Local 8, 15 East cessfully. | The danger, however, is not yet} over, warns the Communist Cam- paign Committze in a statement is- 66 East 4th St. Harlem: Workers Center, 143 E. 103rd°St.; Finnish Workers’ Club, 15 West 126th St.; Unity Coopera- sued yesterday. “Only two more | tive, 1800 Seventh Ave.; Hotel) weeks remain during which signa-| Workers Br. A. F. W., 133 West) tures may be obtained. These are|51st St.; Czecho-Slovak Workers’ the critical weeks The results ob-| Home, 347 East 72nd St.; Hungarian | tained within the next 14 days will| Workers Home, 350 East 81st St : . i determine whether the candidates! Esthonian Workers Club, 1787 First {J of the Commur.:.t Party will appear | Ave. en the ballots on November 5, thus | Bronx: Workers Center, 1330 Wil- giving the workers an opportunity | kins Ave.; United Cooperative, 2700 to demonstrate their support of the| Bronx Park East; Bakers’ Local 164; Party of the working class,” the|A. F. W., 3861 Third Ave. Committee declares Brooklyn: Scandinavian Workers’ “The next two weeks must see/Club, I. O. G. T. Hall, 65th St.; a thorough mobilization of all Com-| Lithuanian Workers’ Club, 46 Ten; munists and sympathizers for the | Eyck St.; Finnish Workers Club, 764 final days of the signature cam-/|Fortieth St. | paign A slackening of effort will| Williamsburg: Workers Center, 56} endanger the Communist ticket,”|Manhattan Ave. campaign workers urge Bath Beach: Workers Center, 48} Headquarters where petitions may |Bay 28th St. j be obtained will be open every night,|_ Brownsville: Workers Center, 154 Saturdays and Sundays, at the fol-| Watkins St. lowing places: THREE MORE DAYS! Down town Manhattan, 27 E. 4th{ St.; Harlem, 143 E. 103rd_ St., | Today, Tomorrow, Sunday | The Latest Sovkino Achievement and 235 W. 12th St.;\ Bronx,} In Old Siberi 1330 Wilkins Ave., 715 E. 138th St.; KATORGA Williamsburg, 56 Manhattan Ave.; Brownsville, 1554 Watkins St.; Boro Park, 48 Bay 28th St., Bath Beach. Striking Life and Dramatic Struggle of Political Pri- soners in Czarist Russia FAREIN HEHEARSALS TODAY St. Marks Theatre In preparing for the 10th anni- versary celebration of the Com- 133 SECOND AVENUE Corner Eighth Street munist Party, the Freiheit Gezang Prices 15 to 25 Cents | | | at 106 E. 14th St. today at 8 o’clock. All members are expected to come without fail. |the shop will help you. Remember | our enemies spare no efforts to crush our press—our united efforts must give them a solid setback. |FURNISHED ROOM FOR TWO; all Improvements. 183 Hooper St., Brook- lyn, Stage 8490, celebrated Friday, Sept. 20, 8 p. m.,| at Miller’s Assembly, Havermeyer | and Grand St,, Brooklyn. Prominent | speakers; entertainment; admission | free. Auspices of Section 6, C. P.,) and the Young Communist League of | Williamsburg. | * « * Unit 2, Section 4. The regular Tuesday meeting has | been called off because of the sec- tion membership meeting. The regu- lar Tuesday meeting having been | called off because of the section membership meet, Unit 2, Section 4,/ will meet Monda Sept. 23. * * Section 3 Attention! By order of the Section Buro, all members of Section 3 must appear at the section headquarters today ad Sept. 21, 8 p, m., at 48 Bay 28th ETROPOL “ASSETS EXCEEDING $29,000,000 Deposits made on or aay of t jonth will Last Quarterly Dividend paid on all amounts from $5.00 to $7,500.00, at the rate of tage Bank y Mail, C Ww Ist day of the mo 4% Mondays (al) day) until 7 P. M. Society Accounts Accepted. We Sell A. B. A, Travelers Certified Checks at 6 p. m. for very important Party business. DIRECTIONS: before the ard i di interest or 7 ST SPEND YOUR VACATION IN CAMP NITGEDAIGET THE FIRST WORKINGCLASS CAMP — ENTIRELY REBUILT 175 New Bungalows - - Electric Light Educational Activities Under the Direction of JACOB SHAEFFER THIS WILL BE THE BIGGEST OF ALL SEASONS CAMP NITGEDAIGET Telephone Beacon 731 Director of Sports, Athletics. and Dancing EDITH SEGAL Director of Dramatics JACOB MASTEL Take the Hudson River Day Line Boat—twice daily— 75 cents. Take car direct to Camp—20 cents, i} | atively and collectively the camp of | physical force. Against them stands. out the jmoral force as personified by the|sociate of Ferrari's who had turned | group of political prisoners. The parallel between the two is drawn in a firm, convincing manner. From the very beginning one senses the inevitable triumph of the moral force over the apparently victorious physical force. The director has very intelligently |and aptly made use of a number of | “agent of the poor people of New| i |methods evolved in Soviet cinema-| York,” and “the fri ad of the work- |cause in the past few years we have | tography by the brilliant group of |e seen growing violence of the cap-| experimenters, The film testifies to the director’s artistic fact, his sensitiveness to subtile values and his search of new means of eloquent sereen expression. “In Old Siberia” has placed Reiseman in a prominent position among the young film di- rectors in Soviet Russia. “In. Old Siberia” is first of all a sincere, true, interesting and useful film. “In Old Siberia” (Katorga) opens today for Sept. 19, 20, 21, 22 at the St. Marks Theatre, 133 Second Ave.,! comer 8th St., for the first time at popular prices, Trial of Communists Off Until Thursday; Others Start Today The trial of the 11 members of the Communist Party and the Young Communist League arrested last week at Stone and Pitkin Aves., Brooklyn, was postponed until next Thursday when they were arraigned before Magistrate Radick in the New Jersey Ave. Court yesterday morning. Jacques Buitenkant of the International Labor Defense appeared as attorney. Seven others arrested about one month ago when police broke up a FERRARI GAVE JUDGE $75,000 ‘Checks Show Mancuso | On Bank’s Pay (Continued from Page One) }man of the Ferrari City Trust Co., |and “never got a cent from it.” Judge Mancuso, confronted with the evidence, taken from a safety | deposit box by George Ziniti, an as-| | | | state’s evi" nce, confessed yester- d before the King’s County grand jury that he got the money, to the total of about $25,000, during 1927 and 1928. He alleges that it was to pay back a debt. Tammany Hall ap.cars in the | municipal election this Fall, as the But Tammany Judge Mancuso divided the -~oil. with Ferrari, who stole wage earners’ mor.cy and loan- | ed much of it to Itelian language | fascist newspapers in New York. i} United Hebrew Trades | ‘Scabs in Attempt to Break Butcher Strike, The United Hebrew Trades is con- | tinuing its policy of openly acting as an agent of the bosses. When a strike was called two weeks ago in the butcher shop at 308 Courtleau | Road, Brooklyn, which was an open | shop ,the right wing union sent in| scabs and declared it a “union shop.” |__ When the Food Clerks Industrial | | Union, Local 7, members started to! | picket the shop, they were arrested on charges of contempt of court. | When picketing yesterday, A.| Goldberg was arrested and held, in $200 bail in the Snyder Ave. court. | Other pickets arrested r->2ntly, are | out on $500 bail each and go on trial Sept. 27. All are charged with con- tempt of court. The union announced last night | that picketing will continue. Communist Party open air meeting }at 137th St. and 7th Ave. will go jon trial this morning in the 12th! | Magistrates Court. R—K—O AMEO 42nd St. and Broadway C Star of “Czar Ivan the Terrible” Fre Pro “THE stu cr Is G revealing, formances telling per- by Leonidoff, star of r Ivan the Terrible’ a. dual role.”"—Evening Sun. in a j|LEONIDOFF in a dual role, in the newest Soviet Russian extraordinary film. occurrence in Jewish Ghettoes of Old Russia. ecds ced in U.S.S.R. by BELGOSKINO EXTRA ATTRACTION! 2nd Big Week AMKINO Presents Newest Russian Triumph Based on actual historical a °F edom SEE AND HEAR NINA TARASOVA mroup of Russian songs Actual! LIVING a powerful presentation of progress and showing Ru: pain and Hilarious — which set FILM 52 W. 8 Street (fH: 7 F TON W. 46th St. LTON Mats. Wed. n in Eves. & Sat. his The Talk of the Town! 6th Ave Evgs, 8:3 50c, $1, $1.50 EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director Tonight—“THE SEA GULL” Tom. Mat—“THE SEA GULL.” BEACON, N. Y. New York Telephone Esterbrook 1400 Intimate Playouse, 180 St., Boston Rd. Sidney Stavro, Dir.66 ARTZIBASHEF'S Masterpiece Now Playing! Dynamic! The Remarkable Sovkino Film in the Land of the Soviets revealing the tremendous —and on the same program— The First Soviet Comedy WHEN MOSCOW LAUGHS Genuine Humor Europe laughing! GUILD CINEMA Y Continuous Daily Noon to Midnight Special Forenoon Prices—Weekdays 12 to 2—35 Cents Saturday and Sunday 12 to 2—50 Cents 8:50 2:30 new American play GAMBLING 0. Mats. Wed, Sat. 2:30 Ce res ee Tom, Eve-—“WOULD BE GENTLE- MAN.” BRONX THEATRE GUILD (Bx. Pk, Sub., last stop) Ford 9922 WAR’ Rives, 6:43. Mats 245 Mrwev Cast Thrilling! RUSSIA all phases of every-day life ssia at work—at play— in in pleasure Clever ‘s eA She all ots S Xvas] SPRing 5095-50G0 in rovincetown Playhouse Mh GARRICK Th., 65 W. 35th. Evs. 8:50. Phone Wis. 3430 73 By MICHAEL pe ESTA” iis MATINEES THURS, & SAT., 2:30 § Rates to Labor Groups. ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE 47th St W. of B'way. Chick, 9944 Eves. 8:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 paxwaren’® BIRD x HAND GENERAL MOTORS. ROCHESTER, N. Y., Sept. 19 (U.P) —Announcement of the sale of the Northeast Electric Company to the General Motors Corporation—a sale involving about $13,000,000—was announced today after a meeting of directors of the former corporation. Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. “For Any Kind of Insurance” ((ARL Murray His KY 7 East 42nd Street, New York Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE Q. flight up) 2700 BRONX P.’~K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 DR. J. MINDE SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MAREOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat. 9.80 a. m. to 12; 2 to 6 P.M. Tues. Thurs. 9.30 a. m. to 18; % to 8 p.m Sunday, 10 a, m. to 1 p. m. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 2, VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant,to Wine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Stati PHO INTERVALE. NB i— 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Sovthern Blvd., ' snx, N. Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEL.UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City 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 Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 7836 ee uaNESe MEETINGS} id on the firet Monday of the One indurtey—One "Unfon—Jot in Fight th Ofice Open from 0's. ms t0'8 pres. 4MALGAMATED we ERS +Meste 1 Ogu in the mont the, month at 3 6 166 Tel. Jerome 7090 Unton Label Bread! FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get @ 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.

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