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yEW YORK, MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1930. BOSSES DEAL WITH) Pewee of Poti 28 FAKER ROOSEVELT SAYS Works Out Plan for Longer Breadlines for Workers Plans Scab-Herding Employment Agencies | to Help Wage-Cuts Fritz Leiber i NEWS BRIEFS | Pereer erence: GERMAN REACTION AT WORK.! = : BERLIN, March 30. — e“Gener-| FRITZ LEIBLER and his company j ously” withdrawing his own erder}* are presenting a repertoire of| | prohibiting public demonstrations,| Shakespeare plays at the Shubert| | which was aimed at the Communist Theatre. The first offering, “Ham-/| |Party, the Prussian Minister of the let,” is unusually well acted, espe-| | Interior has announced that the law) cially the part of the mad Dane,| jfor the “protection of the republic,” which is portrayed by Leibler. | jwhich was approved by the Reich- As usual during the last few, |stag, will prove a better weapon i | ; vy, iy . nN! years, when any of the classics are) jagainst “public disturbances.” This’ shown, their producers tamper with law is a legal weapon of the bour- the plays and direction. Leibler is} Fine Pertorma ALBANY, March 30.—“With re-;shall starve in the unemployed | | genis aimed particularly at the Com-| no exception, and gives an entirely gard to efforts to prevent or at) Tanks. | | BORG. Se [new istersriation of ine famous . a ,. Roosevelt outlined a “plan” for | SOVIET BUYS CHILEAN | play. en all is said and done, least te minimize futare unemploy handling the present unemployment NITRATES. we must admit that he has been| ment crises,” said the Tamme@ny -ityation whieh exactly suits the VALPARAISO, Chile, March 30.— ‘ite suecessful with his experiment. | Gevernor Roosevelt today, much) posses. It provides for breadlines, |Soviet commercial representative Firstly, he has cut out several short | of the planning must necessarily be done by the industrialists of the state.” In other words, let the bosses who exploit the workers when on the job regulate when the workers regulated by private charity organ- izations, small jobs at cut wages, | wherever possible, and scab-herding employment agencies, to be used for the bosses in the event of strikes | against the workers on the job. “Cotsofanesti’” Queen Marie Again Grover Whalen, chief cossack who ordered the vicious attack on the 110,000 workers who started to march to City Hall on March 6th to présent their unemployment de- mands, bragged about allowing reyal parasites and foreign exploit- ers to hog the streets on their sf to New York. He spoke be- Over-Production PRINCETON, N. J., March 30.—| Dr. Eugene Lyman Fiske, medical director of the Life Extension In- stitute, states that there are 200,- 000,000 pounds of excess fat being carried around on the carcasses of 120,000,000 Americans, an over-pro- duetion so to speak ef 106,000 tons even of unnecessary lard. This, he says, means that “as a nation we are overfed,” and accounts for America’s continued rate, fore the National Democratic Club Saturday. He particularly praised Queen Marie, the royal orgiest who dur- ing the World War at Cotsofanesti pulled off the lewdest pajama par- ty together with her lascivious yoyal companions while at a Red Cress Hospital wounded soldiérs were bleeding to death. { of Human Lard | However, the doctor generalizes | too much. It is obvious that the fat is not equally distributed. “In. junetion Bill” Taft, for example, packed around about 400 pounds and yet he lasted 70 years. Yet | every day your newspapers will | give you accounts of some jobless | | worker committing suicide. Go! {down to the morgue and look at) death! him and you'll not see any excess|non in the Plumb | fat. | Cosgrave Says He Will Rule Again DUBLIN, March 30.—William T. Cosgrave, president of the Irish Free State, and outright tool of British imperialism, who was defeated in the Dail Eireann by two votes over hig refusal to accept an old-age pen- sion bill, declares he is confident that his party will be returned to power. Originally it had been reported that Thomas Praises Walker for Jobless Fakery Jazzy Mayor Walker received con- gratulations on his ability to fool the jobless by his aping friend, Rev. Norman Thomas. Sky pilot Thomas sent Walker a telegram praising|the struggle against the militant | trades, and are not interested in him for his proposal to establish} unemployed workers being organ-| organizing the plumbers’ helpers, municipal employment agencies in- stead ef providing the workers with Eamon de Valera, now in the United States, and head of the Fianna Fail, | party of the pettybourgeois, which | puts up a weak opposition to British) |imperialism, would be asked to form} a government. | Cosgrave took the occasion of his; | defeat to try to lead the magses to, believe that the Irish Free State is | not @ tool of British imperialism. | | | 1“Work or Wages.” | The “socialist” party is trying its hardest to work with Walker whom they regard very close to them in ized by the Communist Party and the Trade Union Unity League. ‘tion say, however, that the Berchmann has announced a total of 110,000 tons of Chilean nitrates be- ing purehased by the Soviet Govern- ment, under arrangements whereby Argentine banking institutions are financing purchases of considerably more nitrates for Soviet import. * * j GOLD STANDARD FOR CHINA. | SHANGHAI, March 30—The pro- | | posal of the Kemmerer Commission, | | financial agents for American im-| | perialists, to put China on a gold | standard, means an immediate rise | in the living costs of the Chinese masses who are siready starving, | and a prospect of bankruptey for considerable sections of the petty- bourgeoisie, since in effect the dif- ference between silyer and gold hitherto borne by the foreign traders |is to be passed on to the whole Picture of the Unemployed Couneil in Oakland, California, afte: they had been beaten up by the police for preparing the March 6 dem- onstvation. The picture was taken immediately after their release on bail, and still weaving bandages put on them at the emergency hospital. Reading from left to right: Carl Tripple, alse held for deportation; Ed. Wang, Anna Robbi: ick Sopoff and Archie Brown. | population and all domestic prices CANNONITES BAR PROTEST OUSTING --s."2r%,<-t A YOUNG WORKER OF JOBLESS NEGRO <= au DEPRESSION IN ARGENTINA. BUENOS AIRES, March 30. Try to Swing Plumbers Police Club Workers in no'sitt in the cloud of depression {appears in Argentine economy. Helpers to ALF. L. | Protest March Pediat ad: | | Henchmen of the Trotakyite Can-/ NEWARK, N. J., March g0.—|than double any previous February, Helpers’ As-, 4 demonstration organized by. the| ale slearinga are the smallest singe) : jens vc bers ~'*"| Unemployed Council of the T, U., 1926 grain exports are 81 per cent sociation are waging a fight against U, L. in cooperation with the Com ‘off, wool 41 per cent, beef 14 per) the m , and recently succeed-| nist Party in front of 19 Liying-/ cht, mutton 9 per cent, and butter] ed in barring Ben Intrator for the ston St. in order to protest against 19 per cent. time from the union. Intrator is @/ tne eviction of L. Grant, an unem-| lessening of credit appear te help young plumbers’ helper, but he i8| ployed Negro worker with his @0y- The money unit, the peso, is Nor does the present/ sequences whicih have helped to} speed up the play and secondly, he| plays his role in a natural manner, | making ne attempt to be bombastic. | As he correctly states in the pro- gram: “Just be natural and you cannot go wrong on what Shakespeare! meant, He wrote his plays for act- ing, not for study. In some fashion, probably by taking Shakespeare too seriously, we have put him on a pedestal where he would never have wished to be. All this talk of ‘re- yiving’ Shakespeare is absurd. I) as he wrote, not to inflict him.” This is what I call debunking Shakespeare with a vengence! Leib- ler has a clear, loud voice and his diction is pleasing. they are all satisfactory. Marie Car- roll gives a well balanced exhibition as Ophelia, and puts the part in its is more than adequate as Claudius, | while Virginia Bronson gives life and vigor to her portrayal of the Queen of Denmark. .Others worthy of special mention are Thayer Ro- berts as Rosencrantz and Grant Gordon as Guildenstern. They make their parts full of vigor and life. — Today in History of the Workers | ie also a member of the Young Com-) sniy trom their home at that ad-| below par on foreign exchange. munist League and .of the Trade gress was brutally broken u: f y ip by the Long Hours, Speed-Up Union Unity League — reason ty é vats 7 poliee, The workers resented the enough for the Trotskyites to fight vicious attack of the cops. against his admission, They are afraid he will expose them before Four workers were arrested. These) the membership. Their excuse is 2%: Jay Rubin, Frank Fisher, Al- the fake one that Intrator is not, Pert Granelli and Jack Vallet, iat a ee working at the trade now. | Asserting their determination to) Thousands of unorganized work- i 3 continue the struggle against the TS Work long hours for miserably | Line Up With Fakers. evietion of unemployed workers, the | low wages. Shirt ironers, family | The Cannon renegades are trying Communist Party in a statement, de- dine, meKet and sssorters, and) to mobilize the membership, which ¢lared in part; jGcuvesy. bose wer from 9 to 10} fg amsall, fer affiliation to the A.| «4We wank furthir to, somind City | CUc,2, 87, Pere, weners, betta F. L, instead of the T. U. U. Li . | skill fi 7 - | Commissioner John F. Murray, atelee ae oeae get bed 8 day, Uneed: | | They refise to admit that there is “ junemployment in the — building Organize for Fight is that his answer to the unemployed) 4 meeting of the hand laundry! delegation that no workers are be-) workers will be held Monday, 1] ing evieted for non-payment of/o'clock, at 143 E, 103d St, Hand ‘vent was plainly exposed by the|laundry workers do not work on |evietion of the Grant family from/ Mondays. All laundry workers, who the Livingston street house, lare employed, are invited to attend — this meeting. | |Give Gastonia Defense! Laundry workers ean get informa-| just in using the organization for an attack on the T. U, U. L, Militant members of the Associa- mem- Hurley Says 7,000,000 Jobless Are Happy | bers and all other young plumbei's’ At the same time, Hurley admits helpers will be rallied to fight un- but says it | der the leadership of the T. U. U. L. against the bosses, against the A. F, L, and against the renegades. “The fundamental aim of our gov- | ernment,” said bunk-shooter, seere- |that the crisis is growing, tary of war, Patrick J. Hurley, atlis a temporary affair. Referring to, the Vanderbilt Hotel yesterda: Mea the 1,250,000 workers who demon: | to bring people happiness.” Yess) tad on March 6, under Commu: | Me Hurley, euch NarPimcroved. are nist leadership, Hurley biithly said,|Red Prisoners Night “There is no Communist menace.” | at Rockland Palace, experiencing on the breadlines. Gov. Roosevelt Protects Tammany Grafters Saturday, April 12th tion aboyt the Cleaners and Laun-| Banquet on April 1st dry Workers Ind, League at the of- \fice, 18 W. 17th St. Three hundred workers and sym- pathizers are expected to gather at) Smash Whalen’s Ef- i i} the Gastonia Anniversary Banquet to be held by the National Textile forts to Make Them partment of the Trade Union Unity | Part of His Cossacks) League on April 1st at the Manhat- quet is being given as an expression | his attempt to make a semti-police| Workers Union and the Negro De- tan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. The ban-| _ Chief Cossack Whalen has dropped of solidarity with the oppressed Ne-| organization out of the taxi drivers.) ALBANY, March 30,—True to) York.” While the bill was a re-| On Saturday, April 12, at 8 P. M., gro and white workers of the South,| He announced several days ago that | March 31, 1833—Chattel slavery | ordered abolished throughout British empire. 1854—Workers of Barce- against high eost of living. 1925— Strike called in West Virginia coal |mines for organization of workers. | i | LAURA D. WILCK merely wish to present Shakespeare true perspective, William Cortleigh | nee ot ‘Hamlet’ EVELYN BRENT | In the principal role of “Framed,” a new mystery film at the Globe Theatre. VAUDEVILLE THEATRES PALACE Helen Morgan, Bob Ripa, Jules Bledsoe, Jimmy Carr, with his Sil ver Slipper night club orchestra and May Questelle, Edith Eyans and Ray Mayer, Naughton and Gold; La Belle Pola; Flowers of Seville!” and Christ Charlton. HIPPODROME On the -stage—Cireus features | headed by May Wirth and Wirth Family, and Joe Young and Com- pany; Bert Spence and Edith True, |“The Big Parade,” and the Five While the rest of the cast are not Lelands. Talking screen—“The Co- | on the same high level, as the star,; hens and Kellys in Scotland,” with | | Charlie Murray, George Sidney, Vera Gordon and Kate Price. 81ST STREET. Alma Rubens; Florence Richard- | son and Her Musical Boy Friends; |Sim Moore and Hal; and Brems, | Fitz and Murphy Brothers. Feature photoplay—“The Case of Sergeant Grischa,” starring Chester Morris jand Betty Compson. Wednesday, | Thursday and Friday—Joe Wilton jand Rex Weber; Ben Blue; Johnny | Downs; and Malenoff and Octette. | Feature photoplay—‘“Second Wife,” | with Conrad Nagel, Lila Lee and | Mary Carr. CIRCUS ACROBAT KILLED Hans Jahn, 35-years-old, a circus ‘for Laundry Workers; |tona, Spain, held demonstration! acrobat for Barnum & Bailey’s show, was killed Saturday night when he fell headfirst from the top of a 40-foot pole. { | A, H. WOODS presents | ALICE BRADY ™ ‘LOVE, | A Satirical Comedy | Eltinge 0, Mat. Wea. & | | | HONOR and BETRAY + 42nd St. W. of Bway EBOUND Players Give |GRISIS WORSENS; WHEAT WAY DOWN Lowest Since 1913, Figures Show Decline continues in the steel in- dustry. This is one of the chief facts which blast the Hoover “pros- perity propaganda” which he wants the unemployed to eat instead of food. There is a “declining moyement |in operations” in the steel industry | says the Journal of Commerce (March 27, 1980). Awards for | fabricated steel, to feed the “big | building boom” that Hoover has | been lying about, were “the smallest so far this month,” says the Journal of Commerce, Whereas there is a | usual average of 50,000 tons a week, |last week there were only 20,000 tons ordered as compared to 37,000 two weeks ago. Wheat prices this year reached the lowest March 15 level since 1913, according to the Bureau of Agri- _ \cultural Economies of the Depgrt- ment of Agriculture in a report just published. Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker, Correspondent. jt Sy6naa Jleyedrnuya DR, A, BROWN Dentist 801 East 14th St., Cor, Second Ave. Tel. Algonquin 7248 Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENU: in case of t come to « long experi “For All Kinds of Insurance” 7 East 42nd Street, New York | Dr. ABRAHAM RKOFF SURGEON DENTIST BAST 115th STREET jecand Ave. New York DAILY EXOEPT FRIDAY Please tele; for appotatment Tejephone; Lehigh (022 (DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST Cor, 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone; Algonquin 6183 Not conne Ih any other office 1 R 1 | Arthur Hopkins presents a new| comedy by Donald Ogden Stewart | | wit HOPE WILLIAMS | PLYMOUTH ‘Th. 45th St. W. of Bway) Evs, 5150, Mats. Thurs, id Sat, 2:40 cima Seemeeee 7 | S" Say {VIC REPERTORY eat i C EVA Le GALLIEN Tonight—“THE CORPSE” Tom. Night—TH PEN pOoOoR “WOMEN HAVE THEIR WAY”) —~. —MELROSE— Eves; 8:30. Mats, Thur. Sat. 2:80} Dairy RESTAURANT SOc, $1, $1.50 Gonrades 1) Always Find 11 Director Pleasant te Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE INTERVALD $149. his fellow Tammany fakers, Gov- ernor Roosevelt today vetoed a bill requiring an investigation of “the administration and certain loeal authorities in the city of New| publican maneuver, an investiga- tion, Roosevelt knows, would reveal too many Vitales and graft and rettenness without end. Hence his vetoing of the bill, jall the revolutionary and militant j workers of New York will be at Rockland Palace, 155th St. and 9th Av., for the Red Prisoners’ Night. | This will be the second day of the j trial of the Unemployed Delegation | which attempted to take the demands|Z. Foster and W. J, Ford, head of ‘of the New York Unemployed Dem-| the department of the Textile Union as well as an opportunity to plan further aid for these workers. Speakers at the banquet will in- clude a worker from the Southern mills, Fred Beal, National Textile Workers Union organizer, *William | taxi drivers would not have to wear ;@ uniform in order to get a license. | «4 Whalen’s attempts to fascistize the| eab drivers was smashed by the masa protest among the eab drivers who did not want to be considered | a part ef Whalen's seabby eossacks | jwho attack workers and unem-| A THUNDERBOLT of DEFIANT DRAMA presents TROYKA’ By LULA VOLLMER from the Hungarian of IMRE. FAZEKAS RATIONAL Vegetarian | RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE: UE Bet 12th and 18th Ste. Maste' Producti o Arnold Zweig's Nevel Chauvinists Attack Philipinos jonstyation on March 6 to City Hall Unity League. Strictly Vegetarian Food LOS ANGELES, March 30.—More faselst white chauvinist violence started by the American Legion in California, came to a head in a dance here when white hooligans attacked | with a knife wound and landed in'a| reports of the trial. Filipinos at a dance hall under the Polish Parliament Shuts Down WARSAW, March 30,—The Sejm, or Polish parliament, was ended by & decree published tonight by Presi- dent Moseicki, This occurred after | szeuse that the Filipinos were danc- ‘ing with white girls, A lieutenant of detectives, G. P. Moore, who | mixed in to help the whites, emerged | hospital. the president, earlier in the evening had put his signature to the new ministry formed today by the leader of the government party, Col. Wal- ery Slawek. Mass Troops JERUSALEM, Palestine, March 50.—British troops and police are be- ing eoneentrated here in fear of an- other uprising of the Arabs. Th in Palestine excuse offered is that “riots are feared” during the Moslem festivi- ties in April. parday, April 1%, 0 W. 155th St ked to leave this Casino, Jaz band, intermational danees and songs, Tick: |1 at ‘orkers Bookshop, 26 Union and adage ‘Workers Center, 26 115th ia * Unit Meetings Tonight. Unit. A, Bection 4, 8 p. m., 336 Lenox Ave Umit aE, Boction 6630 Pam RS ipple St.; Unit 8, Section 7, & m.. 128) 15) Brooklyn; Borour’ Hall Unit, 6,20 p. m., 73 Myrtle Ave. . . * Four. 4U_ Units have Discussion on Las son of March ¢ this week. Labor and Fraternal Organizations jastonia Ranquet. April 1, 7p. m., Manhattan » Fourth St. speakers: ler, eBal, Martin, Black- Tuesday” u 49 eo * folk ‘extile UL, White Solidarity Dance. Negr songs. Aurpices, National Workers Unton, Negro Dept... T.U. Tickets, 75 cents per pl: . . ° Harlem Movie Dance and Coneert. Saturday, April 5, 1800 Aueplees WLR. Culture and ‘yb. Club room open every e' RE See National Textile Workers Unten. All unemployed members of New York District report today between 0 a. m. 4 ppm at distriet meng: quarters, . 16th St. room 309, for special work, ° ue LL.D, South Sinv Secretariat. Moved from Chicago to New York, £0 E. 11th dy bij 430, German Branch 43, Demonstration against " tere m., Labo mple, p.m. English and . Tuesday, ¥ tei sarea) f f . ™., rehearsal @ murle” ascunn, Sowniown Workers Club, 194 H, 1th St. All that can play an inetrament fawited. ‘Womens Council No, 12, Tonight, "£30 pom, 143 Croton: Park, Bronz. hel Holtman on G Paris Commune. + 8 & Womens Council No. 16, Tonight, 247 B, 94th St., Brooklyn., @% Gorelik on Paris Commune. | Expect Big May leyed. |and were arrested. {ploy The delegation will be at the Red! Prisoners’ Night and all the com- rades will want to see and hear their UNTO N SQUARE Now Playing! URL s THE DOCKS OF HAMBURG Sensational !—Thrilling! with JENNY JUGO and WILLY FRITSOH A vividly dramatic portrayal of the underworld of the famous German senport Hambura, 4 Added Attraction— THE CULT OF NAKEDNESS “The Way to Strength and Beauty” The new way to health and longevity through wakedneass which is now sweeping Europe c Day Conference (Continued from Page One) 6. Unemployment remains one of the | most pressing problems befote the entire working class, and with more) than 600,000 unemployed still in New York City, the fight for Work or) Wages, and for Social Insurance| must be continued. | This struggle is coupled up with} the struggle of the workers in the) shops for shorter hours—7 hour day, 5 day week—against the wage-slash- ing offensive of the bosses, This is Enst 14th Broadway “ai iN me Theatre !30:, erformances Datly 9 A. M. tu Mida! 25c After 5 P. M. 35c “Special for Organizations” FURNISHED ROOMS CM. FOX i h a ST. Apt, 10. Single, 33 UNION : atruggle of all sections of the 22%yK'°" cattateneeh!™ se-80et | Stationary and’ Printing ‘working class, men and women, white| Board optional. Stinsild, iatiasoaven and Negro, young and old, and there- Office enpeite vere fore the entire working class of the | w. 1 R, CLOTHING STORE 10%Redaucti F ually Worker eity looks forward to the conference. ye danger of war against the, Soviet Union becomes more acute every day, and therefore the May Day demonstration will not fail to) yaise the slogan most militantly of Defense of the Soviet Union. The provocations against the work- ers of this city by the arrangement of the fascist counter-demonstration by the American Legion and Veter-| ans of Foreign Wars, with ths full as-| sistance and approval of Wall Strect | and the city administration, demands | the full mobilization of all working | class organizations on May Day. | All unions and workers’ organiza- | tions must not fail to send two dele-| gates. In all shops, form shop com-| mittees and elect your delegates di- rectly from the shops and factories, Let the answer of the workers of |New York to the provocation of the bosses, to the sneering and ignoring! of the workers’ demands, to the ar-| rest of the Unemployed Delegation be a mighty conference on April 4. 542 BROOK ANEN TX, Telephone Ludlow i Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called’ for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their families, SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! 25% REDUCTION TO CITY AND UNION WORKERS Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by . WORKERS MUTUAL : OPTICAL CO. Under personal supervision of 4 ISON Optometrist 215 SROOND, AVENUE orner 3 ‘Street NEW YORK CITY Oppontt WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Untom Square FREIHEIT BLDG.——Main Floor Phone: LEHIGH 6383 International Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop, 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 108rd & 104th Ladies Bobs Our Specialty feu Beauty Parlor ARE A story ef the Russian Revolution with a cast which includes | ZiTA ZOHANN, LEIGH and ALBERT VAN DEKKER Opens Tuesday Night HUDSON THEATRE West 44th Street * Evenings 8:40 Good Seats from $1.00 a Theatre Guild Produetions 4 MONTH IN THE COUNTRY By IVAN TURGENEV GUILD W. 524. Evs, 8:30 Mts.Th.&Sat.2:30 amend “THE APPLE CART” By Bernard Shaw MARTIN BECK 4, fg72¢ Eves, 8:30, Mats. Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 8215 Bronx, N. ¥. _— Circle 1699 Saxophone Taught Suite ais RED HOT MUSIC DAN BAKER “THE CHEF OF HOT TUNES” and his ORCHESTRA pati Ww jal Rates t ‘orker Re JACK ROSE- | |Matinees Wednesday-Saturday 2:30 | HERBERT Radio Oi Picture FRANELIN ‘Wettcucster_Aves, REGENT 116th Street and Seventh Avenue “FRAMED” with EVELYN BRENT and Regis Toomey, More thrills than "Under- world” and “Alibi* Combined. Popular Prices—10;30-1 p.m, 350 Bookkeeper Wanted! THE JEWISH MORNING FREIJHEIT wants an earnest comrade and good bookkeeper for its office. Must read Yid- dish. Report immediately to 30 Union Square, New York. Fight the Ri wwe ad lgadel rv ve WAV ight Danger, A Hundred Proletarians for Every Petty Bourgeois Rene- SSS se HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 Phone: Stuyvesant 8816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISBES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 402 BE. 12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at ; BRONSTEIN’S: Vegetarian Health Restaurant $58 Cloremont Parkway, fusineae rages londay of ¢ Hdueationat “meetings Monday of the ‘month, ecu: joard = meetings-—ev ve rnoon at T seioc ree, t Union: J 7! One Unto etn nnd m ings hele the first Advertise your Union Meetinge here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City | | Con ee) tt