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Page Two FIRST INT’ L NEGRO MEET TO UNITE NEGRO MASSES FOR FIGHT Congress To Be Held July 1930 in London to! Fight Imperia list Oppression. Will Unite Negro Workers’ Movement With| Revolutionary Working Class Movement The International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers an- nounces: “The st International Negro Workers’ Congress will be convened in July, 1930, at London, England. This congress will lay the founda- tion of the organization of all the Negro workers on an international seale and will unite the Negro work- movement with the international revolutionary working-class move- ments. It will open a new page in the history of the age-old struggle of the Negro masses for freedom and emancipation. It will form the veginning of the final decisive strug- gle against imperialism and capital- st expl i Fakers. “The congress will wage a merci ess attack on the treacherous lead ership to whom the majority of the | Negro masses are still giving their support, The tools of imperialism, the Garveys, the Champions, the Randolphs will be completely exposed and the heroic struggle of the Ne- gro toiling masses of the world will be co-ordinated and saved from the hitherto isolated position that has: handicapped its growth. The con- gress will establish the necessary contact with the international labor movement. Struggle Is On. “The International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers states that the London Congress will be composed of the delegates of the most militant sections of the Negro masses, and will include workers, both colored and white, who will unite all forces in a single struggle against imperialism and their lavk- e In Africa, America and the West Indies, whenever the Negro worker are being ground down by the im- perialist, the movement of protest is widening, in some localities tur ing into open rebellion and upris. ing against the exploiters. All labor organizations, all work- ers groups, Negro and white should immediately make preparations fu the election of delegates. “For information as to further details address the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers, 2 West 15th St. New Yo Bakers Oust Clique TU UL Warns of Another (Continued from Page One) and are proceeding with the prepa- rations for the election. Long Figh The left wing in Local 500 has been fighting for a long time ainst the arbitrary rule of the of- ial clique which has waged no real fight for union conditions, has an “arbitration agreement” that sells out the bakers, forces them to work under ruionous conditions, refuses permit membership meetings, and expulsion es a ruthless policy against all who better conditions. The ¢ favoritism in dividing the work, giv- ing jobs to its follow After most of the militants were expelled, a new group grew up, on| the basis of the intense dissatisfac- | tion of the workers, and this group is being utilized by persons like | Pollack and Yellin, who are in no manner better than the corrupt offi- cialdom. Panken Dodges Out. The meeting Friday was per- mitted by the officials who dared not risk an explosion any longer, and relied on the U.H.T. and the yellow Forward to control things: Since none of the clique could pre- ‘orward gang brought in , labor-hating Judge He ruled ou motion to allow the “expelled” mem- bers in the hall (since there has been no ratification by the member- ship of these expu the mem- bers are not really expelled). A motion was made by the Pol- ms, Jack-Yellen group that the question | mediate action to compel the bosses) be takn up after the first point on the agenda. Panken walked out and a nice chairman presided. But while discussion was going on the members themselves simply threw open the doors and let’ the pelled” or “suspended” members in, and that was that. Impeaches Officials. After Panken left the meeting de- cided to abolish sections. It im- peached the officials and elected the administration committee. The Trade Union Unity League calls the attention of the members of Local 500 to the fact that they must carry on the fight, not only against the old clique but against Pollack and Yellin, who are work- ing hand-in-hand with the United Hebrew Trades and the yellow For- ward against the interests of the workers. The bakers must imme- diately organize shop committees in every bakery in order to fight for union conditions in the shops. The workers must immediately organize the struggle for establishment of the eight-hour day and five-day week, for equal division of work, for social insurance paid for by the em- ployers or the state. Japanese Government Fears Leninist Ideas (Continued from Page One) Japanese workers are serving long jail sentences for their adherance to Marxian-Leninist principles and fighting for them. It is the avowed intention of the Japanese imperialists to attempt to stamp out Marxian-Leninist teach- ings because of the rapid spread of revolutionary ideas among the work- ers. Japanese imperialism is undergo- ing a severe crisis at the present time which is part of the whole crisis, The workers are expressing 2 more militant mood in the face of growing mass unemployment. While a number of college stu- dents have been dabbling in Marx: ism, the plan of the Ministry of Education is directed not so much #gainst the students, who come from the petty-bourgeois and bourgeois, and can be counted on to support capitalism, but is aimed mainly against the workers who are rapidly cing enrolled under the banner of Marxisny and Leninism, setae | dre T. | cs Seek Koutepoff In Berlin, Germany (Continued from Page One) |received information that some of Soutepoff's w tle grievance against the “gen- ” and whisked him away. here, with a wide circulation y cails for the expulsion of the et ambassador “Dvogalevsky-” e Communist daily, ““L’H j declares that Koutepoff was kidnaped by his own followers in jan attempt to redit the Soviet | Unio: noble newspaper car s “L’Humanite,” ermitted and aided by remier An- tiew for ter able deluge of lies, and anti-Soviet propa- papel an- ig aigns,” ganda.” Big 6 Members Rally to \Strike; Hiss President) (Continued from Page One) out a contract since June 30 of last year. The main demand of the men is for the five-day week. The com- |mittee reported an offer of the bosses which does not include the five-day week, but provides a three- year contract, with a promised raise | each year of $1 a week, not retroac- tiv The months since the middle of order a! of last year are paid for on the old| scale, Proposal Rejected. The committee recommended re jection of the contract, and ther was no dispute about that. But | whenever a militant moved for im- to come in line, that motion was al- ways some way, illegal and out of jorder. When one of the members, | known as a militant, got up, he was |ruled out of order. He appealed, x- | and the meeting voted him the floor. He moved that the union not onl reject the proposition of the bo | but that the chapels elect strike | committees to take the strike situa- jtion into their hands. legal by President Rouse. munists have the right idea.” Rouse Hissed. A motion by another member that the committee hold one more confer- ence with the employers, then take a strike vote, was ruled out of order. Rouse made his usual sob-story appeal to the members, who hissed and booed him for his refusal to al- low action. A motion that no proposition be accepted without the five-day week specification was carried unanimous- ly. Finally a motion carried that the committee negotiate again, and bring in another report, March 1. “Big 6” will meet Sunday in Stuy- vesant High School to elect officers. All members are urged to appear, and vote for the candidates of the Amalgamation Party, to put an end bosses by officials of the local. Mexican Terror Agent Will Visit Gov. Young LOS ANGELES, Cal. Feb. 9.— General Jose Tapia, who newly has been chosen governor of Baja (Low- er) California by the terroristic Mexican-Wall Street government, will be the guest of honor at numer- ous social and official functions when he arrives, February 22, on this “White Spot” of the open-shop- pers, for a meeting with the “lib- eral” Governor Young, who is “pro- gressive” enough to prevent the re- lease from California dungeons of om Mooney and Warren K. Billings. The visit is said to be part of Ta- pia’s program to build up Hoover- ized good will between the two coun- tries—both ruled by Wall Street im- perialists. Neither Tapia nor Young, however, have the patent on the good will of the workers of this city, state and nation, and they will ite-guardist pals had | { “[Intransigeant,” capitalist news- | to this stalling and yielding to the|* A Southern | | | Photo s | Wor 's Conference. owing the South Carolina school segres fight against these schools and the white capitalist policy that is re- sponsible for them will be on the tasks of the International Negro DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1930 Jim-Crow School gation policy. The to Defy Murder Gangs | CHARLOTTE, N. C., Feb 9.—In the face of an increased agitation by the bosses of this state for lynch- ings of Negroes and of union organ- \izers, and the beginning of a whis- pering campaign of ers and threats, active preparations are be- ing made to hold a mass meeting against lynching, here Tuesday: | Sol Harper, Negro worker and In- | ternational Labor Defense represen- tative, and George Saul, of the I. L. |L., will be speakers. There will probably be other speakers, repre- senting the National Textile Work- ers Union, which calls on Negro and | white textile workers to unite in |the same union for struggle to im- | prove conditions in the mills. U.S. Liberals Do Bit For Imperialism (Continued from Page One) }and collaboration with British im- perialism. sland its character. Villard, edi- Norman Thom- ment expose are: Oswald Gar tor of the “Nation” as, social-fascist sky pilot, who re- cently wrote in the “New Leader” | that the Indian capitalists should have the right to exploit their own | workers, and Roger Baldwin, direc- t f the American Civil Liberties Union, who in a letter to Chief Cos- sack Whalen, referred to the mur- der of Haitian workers as “our pol- icy in Haiti.” ‘Do Not. Accept Fake Peace,” Says NTWIU (Continued from Page One) sters of the I. L. G. W. are getting | desperate, and may try anything. |It calls on all dressmakers to dis. |regard the fake settlement. The | dressmakers have, by thousands, |disregarded the fake strike. But this is not enough. A p: ive at- titude will not win conditions for | the workers. | Defy the Company Union. | The Industrial Union calls on workers in locked out and open shops to strike now for settlements nder union conditions, and to nder the leadership of the N.T.W.LU. Dressmakers in each shop should elect their shop committees, and elect their members on the rank and file strike committee that will lead the workers’ struggle. They should not go back to work at the order of the company union. As soon as a shop committee is formed, its epresentatives should get in touch with the Industrial Union at once, and start the real fight for the 40- hour week and union conditions. Governor Rooseyelt, the I.L.G.W., banker, are steeped in hatred of the | just how the loot is &. be divided, | but they are all agamst the work- ers. The Industrial Union is the | workers’ hope. Milliners For Women’s (Continued from Page One) held daily at the offices of the union for the election of delegates,” |the statement continues. The work- jing conditions of the unorganized millinery workers are unbearable: The insecurity of the job, the low wages, the inhuman treatment by the bosses proves to the millinery workers th&t a union is their daily need, Lesson of Fake Strike. “The last decision of the General Executive Board of the Industrial Union to call such a conference and to lay the basis for a broad and |deep-going organization campaign ‘to organize the thousands of ex- ploited women needle workers marks a very important step forward of our industrial union. The fake stoppage of the Schlesinger machine led by the bosses and their agents, proves once more to the millinery workers that the industrial union is the only union truly representing the needle workers and always ready to fight to better their conditions. Local 43 urges every women: worker to carry the call of the conference into the shops, to elect delegates to the Eastern Women Workers’ Con- ference, thereby helping the ex- ploited women needle trade workers to build the industrial union which fights for equal pay for equel work for both men and women werkers.” probably be so proper time, informed by the Eastern Conference Anti-LynchingMeeting |Shoe Workers At Meet lin Charlotte Tuesday)|Today Plan to Combine! ‘Jobless, Strike Battle | Waging war on unemployment in the shoe industry, joining the fight of the unemployed with the struggle {of the workers still at their jobs, and the thousands locked out by more than a score of the New York shoe manufacturers at the order of the U- S. department of labor, the Independent Shoe Workers Union of 'Greater New York calls on all shoe rikers and unemployed shoe work- yers, to meet in one of the most im- |portant meetings held so far. The | meeting is today, at 2 p. m., at The |W Center, 26-28 Union Sq. s meeting was formerly adver- jtised to be held in Irving Plaza Hall, so all should take notice of the change. It will be in The Work- ers’ Center. | The shoe strikers, out for months lait, are as determined to win as jever, and at this meeting there will |be full reports of the latest events on all of the picket lines, and for all the struck or locked out shops. Plans for the greatest possible ac- ! tivity will be announced and dis- The other signers of the docu-| cussed, as this is the period when | They |the power of the strikers begins to | be most felt by the employers. |New Issue “Working | Woman” Out; Push Subscription Drive Mass unempléyment affecting 2,- 000,000 women workers and the of countless unemployed men vidly described in the current | ie of the Working Woman. I. Amter, writing of these condi- tions, tells Negro women fellow- | workers why they belong in the Com- |munist Party. Pictures, articles, | news items from centers all over the | United States and abroad make the ‘issue of great interest not only to women but to all workers—Negro |and white, farmers and industrial | workers. | Ina drive for 10,000 subscriptions | by May 1, the Working Woman asks all women workers to help build their own paper. The subscription lis 50 cents a year. Order your sub- scriptions or bundle orders from the Working Woman, 43 East 125th St., New York City. is v ‘Big Enrollment for N. Y. Workers School It is reported the registration at | the Workers School which is not yet |complete has gone far beyond ex-} | pectations, especially when com- pared to last year’s Spring Term | enrollment. Workers are still en-| rolling in the forty odd courses of-| fered, chiefly registering for the Fundamentals of Communism, Marx- jan Economics, Public Speaking, and This amendment was declared il-| the employers and Lehman, the| Principles of Marxism. | However, registration is still open But the talk all around among the| workers, they may have some dif-| for those who have not had an op- members was, “That's it. The Com-! ferences among themselves as to| portunity yet to enroll. Besides the above mentioned courses, one may | still ente: the History of the Amer- liean Labor Movement given on | Wednesdays at 8:30 with V. IL | Jerome as instructor, the class in | Public Speaking which is to have several divisions and is given on Mondays at 8:30, the Theory and Practice of Trade Unionism given on Fridays at 7 o'clock with J. Schmies as instructor. The School will definitely begin this Monday, Feb. 10. All students who have already registered and |have not received their class room passes are requested to call at the | school office to get same. |40 Longshoremen Form Unemployed Council Forty Unemployed longshoremen gathered in Howd Hall, Brooklyn, Thursday at the call of the Long- shoremen’s nuclei of the Communist Party. An unemployed council was organized, after a good meeting and many joined the organization. USSR Ex-Ambassador to Mexico Leaves MEXICO CITY, Feb, 9—Alexan- der Makar, ambassador from the So- viet Union to Mexico, until the Ru- bio government got its instructions from Wall Street to break relations, left for Vera Cruz last night. He will sail for the Soviet Union on Monday. Eat at— COOPERATIVE 26-28 UNIO) Service—S: New Term Ss tar t ES) | auguration of the Wall Street presi- | himself is in a hospital with a bul- ;caped. Undoubtedly they were al- FR"SH, VEGETABLES OUR SPECIALTY “MURDER”, W, .R, CALLS 20 KILLED IN UTAH MINE ‘Utah Mine Blast Should Make Miners’ Fight | The mine disaster in Standard- | ville, Utah, was characterized as wholesale murder by the Workers | | International Relief in a statement | | just issued which declares: | | “Only a month after the terrible | | mine disaster in McAlester, Okla., | | which took a toll of 59 lives, another | lexplosion in Standardville, Utah, | ‘has killed 20 men, with the fate of | | others still in doubt. | “The Workers International Re- | lief has consistently pointed out the | (Continued on Page Three) | NewYork Unity League, Moving to 13 W. 17 St.) ito Better Lead Fight) A significant step toward further |co-ordinating the struggles of the | |workers of the Metropolitan Area will be taken with the establishment | of the new headquarters of the Metropolitan Area Trade Union Unity League, at 18 West 17th St. The removal of the T.U.U.L, to new | quarters, which will take place | | within two or three days, far from | |being a mere change of address, | will mean the opening of a revolu- | tionary trade union center that will | be able to give direction to the ever- sharpening struggles of the work- ers in a way that was impossible in the old cramped quarters at 26 Union Square. | The removal to the new headquar- | | tion of the preparation for the con- | jvention of the Metropolitan Area | T.U.U.L., to be held Saturday and Sunday, March 1-2, Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl. This con- vention will have as its chief task the establishment of the T.U.U.L. in Greater New York and New Jersey as a powerful, representative revo- lutionary trade union center, parti- cipating and giving direction to every struggle in every industry. All revolutionary trade unions, T.U.U.L. groups and militant work- ers in the A. F. of L. unions, shop committees, unorganized and unem- | ployed workers—Negro and white, | men and women, adult and young | workers—are asked to elect dele- | gates at once to this all-important convention. As the establishment of the new headquarters will require an ex- | penditure of several hundred dollars, | all workers and workers’ organiza- tions are asked to contribute funds for the building of their new trade union center. Funds should be sent temporarily to 26 Union Square. | i Two Rubio Supporters Killed in Tampico} TAMPICO, Mexico, Feb. 9.— Mayor Ciro Rodriguez and former Mayor Martin Martinez, of Altea- | mira, state of Tamaulipas, were | killed at a ball celebrating the in- dent, Pascual Ortiz Rubio. Rubio let-hole in his jaw. Reports state that the killers of the mayors es- lied to the defeated petty-bourgeois presidential candidate, Jose Vascon- celos. Labor and Fraternal Organizations All income affairs, such as bazaars, dances, concerts, ete. for which or- ganizations desire publicity in this column, must be paid for at the rate of §1,00 for a singe inse: $2.00 for three 1 ‘The lowed at thi five lines with five words to each Hine, A total of 25 words. Exposition International Revolution- ary Posters, s Of Workers Esperanto Group, 28 Union Square. 5th floor, till Feb. 26. uJ Unit 2, Tuesday, 8 p. ‘m, Toom 6. jection 4, , 143 E, 103rd St., Cree, eee Unit 1F, Section 6, Tuesday, i bah halon nba Educational Meeting. ‘War and Leninism, tonight, 8 p. m. 27 EB. 4th St. i y . Unit 3, Section 4. Tuesday, 8 p, m. 336 Lenox Ave, Educational. est Unit 2R, Section 1, Meets now Tuesdays 8 p. m., 27 E, 4th St. Unemployment, discussion. Unit, 26 Tonight, 8.30 p. and Broadway, cussion. inmsburg. .m., 68 Whipple St. Five-Year Plan dis- cee nee Unit TF, Section 2. Meets now Mondays, tonight, 6,20 p. m., 1179 Biods way. Unit 12F, Section 3. Executive tonight 6.20 p. m. at Sec- jon headquarters, Unit meet Tues- 6.30 p. m., at Section headquar- | RR TE os Seetion One. Section Department heads meet Sec- tion Organizer for instructions, to- night at Section headquarters. Unit functionaries meet Section Or- anizers or correspondent Section ‘unctionary, for instructions, before unit meetings. FURN! HED ROOMS, 133 110th Lett pd and RESTAURANT N SQUARE © elf-Service | now completing the shipment to the ‘stitute the largest consignment of Ieee will also mean the intensifica- jthe worker employed in the store pay i Ethel Barrimore Theatre Eves. Soviet Union Buys aad Beene bi PoP FE FOR HOLY As a part of the preparations for| the 1930 Soviet spring sowing cam-! paign, the Amtorg Trading Corpora- tion has recently purchased and is} AIDS BOSSE Soviet Union of 20,125 tractors Ralliés Religion Back valued at $30,000,000. These con-| of Imperialist W ar tractors ever sent to the U. S. S. R.} and probably the largest purchases of tractors ever made by a single corporation, Reports from Rome Sunday give account of a letter of Pope Pius the Roman Catholic church calling upon “the whole Chri uni‘te against the et Union. While the Pope specifically calls for prayers against the Soviet Ur on March 19, he uses the mo: lent language against the freedom of religious disbeli owed in the Soviet Union, and covertly demands of the imperialist govern they urite against the “ Peter A, Bogdanov, chairman of the Board of Directors of the Am- torg Trading Corporation, stated that 14,000 tractors have already been shipped, 5,000 of them in Janu- ary, while the remainder are to be shipped within a month and will be put to work immediately. The con- signments include many heavy (and incidentally, though he ¢ tractors, the total power capacity! mention it, the socialist) society of of the units purchased aggregating | the Soviet Union. 357,000 horsepower. In addition,) Evidently, smelling the gathering the Amtorg purchased 17,000/ of imperialist forces for war on the ploughs, 2,000 grain drills for seed-|Soviet Union, the Pope wishes to be ing machines and 13,000 special| recognized as the sanctifying agent drills for cotton and corn. |of imperialist war, massacre and} plunder, The Pope’s letter states that in order to organize religion behind counter-revolution in the Soviet Union, he had established a few years ago a special commission on merly kept the cleaning store in the | Russian affairs” in the Vatican. Co-operative Houses, 2700 Bronx | Evidently alarmed at the way the Park t, has been forced to move {socialization of agriculture particu- out from the Co-operative. This larly is progressing in the Soviet fellow has now opened another store | Union, wiping out as it goes all the in the neighborhood and has started | '#norance, superstitution and coun- a fight against the Co-operative | tet-revolutionary bands his church Cleaning Store. He is trying the {has organized among the peasantry, old method of competition. | the Pope feels that such a letter He tries to kill the Co-operative ee enact the earpnas Gh mobi, store by doing the work cheaper, but "= Telia EL pees Bp Mane Way he does not intend to lose any money j DreDareLicna. Sens Me yeorey, by this. Instead he intends to make (Continued. on Page Three) Tailor Boss Cuts Wage Fighting Co-operative S. Silberberg, the tailor who for- for this. Formerly this worker used to get 15 cents for a suit and the} same for pressing a dress. Now he} decided to cut this worker's wages | down to 10 cents for a suit and dress. Onr own age, the dourseots age. | is distinguished by this—that It | has simplifiia class antagonismy, More and more. society t= xptitting up Into two great hostile camps, Into two grent and directty contra. posed classes: bourgeoisie and pro- | letariat-—Marx. *AMUSEMENTS>«| =|C AME Q|XOw “METEOR” wast.epwav [tt ss By 5 N. BEHRMAN American Premiere } W. 62, Eve 8:60 GUILD fice tnasee t0 “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky LAST WEEK! 45th Street MARTIN BECK 45th street Eves. 8:40. Ma and Saturday ¢ Guild Product Startling Drama of European Crookdom d “CAUGHT IN “if Tk rae BerLin UNDERWORLD” with Germany's Leading Dramatic Star FRITZ ‘Thursday KORTNER 2:40 * ‘The Chocolate Soldier’ +4] AR STRAUS’ OP ‘A h CHARLES PURC Alice MacKenzie and Roy NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES | | | Loew’s “Big 2” | PITKIN. || PARADISE | ELTINGE Thea. 42na_ st. w. Broadway. Eves. at 8: Wednesday and Saturday 2 A. H. WOODS Presents “RECAPTURE” | A Love Story by Preston Sturges Author of “Strictly Dishonorable” IVIC REPERTORY lth st 6th Ave. | Eves. §:30. Mats, Wed., Sat, 2:30 | 50e, $1, $1.50 fo} Mats. ‘opper | EVA Loe GALLIBNNE, Director |] Pitkin” Avenue Grand_ Concourse Tonight—“THE SEA GULL,” | Brea ‘Tom, isht—"THE LIVING CORPSE” | ON BOTH SCREENS THE GREATEST OUTDOOR ALL TALKING CLASSIC “VIRGINIAN” with GARY COOPER MARY BRIAN, RICHARD ARLEN, WALTER HUSTON Stage Shows—Both Thentres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY 47th’ Street, West of Broadway 8:50. Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30) Death Takes a Holiday A comedy about life. with PHILIP MERIVALE Write About Your Conditions | for The Daily Worker. Become a | Worker Correspondent. | EAST SIDE THEATRES | PLAY H © Us 183 SECOND AVENUE, CORNER EIGHTH STREET By Popular Demand 3 More Days—The New Soviet Photoplay “A Man from the Restaurant” —ON THE SAME PROGRAM— “EVOLUTION” | | Beginning Thursday, February 13—“THE NEW RABYLON” | | MIDWINTER CARNIVAL Arranged by Section 5, Communist Party ROCKLAND PALACE, 155th St.-8th Ave. SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 15, Program: FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA in new selections. ANNA SAVINA from the Moscow Opera SMITH’S NEGRO BAND Tickets 75 Cents 224442444248 CONCERT AND BALL: |World Meet of F.S. | to Mobilize fer 'Am _ U. Soviet Defense of Ru Soviet the FS: ma International Cont U. to be held at E , on February 2 nization secretar om nearly 50 coun- ction of the F.S.U. vill meet to p mobilization of the nd ionary ilectu- the world for defense of the and support of the ¢ plan of socialist under ¥ ild the United Front of the g Class From the Bottom Up—in the Industries! “For All Kind of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray HIN 5550 7 Hast 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE 42 BROOK AVENUR Telephone Ludlow 3098 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High. Class Work one Goods Called for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their families, SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! Phone; LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop M. W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square FREIHEIT BLDG.—Main Floor —MELROSE — Dai VEGETARIAN ory RESTAURANT mrades Will Alwayn Find 11 vlensant to Dine at Our Pince. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx eH ORR Mth gt. Station) ONE:— INTERVALD 9149 RATIO Vegetarian ! RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food NAL HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 re eee Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where al) radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURCECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Vlease telephone for sppoint Telephones Lehigh Wore Cor, —————— Advertise your Union Meetings here, For mformation write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City the Annigamate now, Dist St. : a ait Phone Chelsea 2274 usiness: meetings Monday of the font at s. ane isducational meeting: le third Monday of the month, Bxecutive| Board meetings—every ‘Tuesday afternoon at 5 o'clock, One Union! J. Fight e Common En aie Office cpen from 9 a. m. to 6 p.m See AMALOAMATED FOOD WORKERS Baker's Local 166 Tel. Jerome 7096 Union Label Bread! ee ct ee