The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 24, 1930, Page 2

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ee i ones OO { DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, , FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1930 SOCIALIST PARTY WHITE GUARDISTS IN SECRET PLOT | AGAINST Russian Monarchist Paper, Chief Aid to Fish, Announces Collaboration With “S.P.” Chiefs Hillquit, Thomas, Brou Conference to Attack Workers’ Fatherland NEW YORK.—The white guard, ian paper Novoye Russkoye lovo, appearing in New York dis- sed yesterday a vicious plan of the New York Czarists and social- ist party, kept hidden from the workers because of the election campaign. The Novoye Russkoye Slovo works in conjunction with the in- famous Djamgaroff and other Czar- ists back of the Fish Committee. During the sessions of the Fish Committee in New York, particu- larly when the representatives of the Amtorg Trading Corporation were called to testify, the Novoye Russkoye Slovo acted as the official organ of that committee. Whatever questions were previously formu- lated on the pages of that sheet, the red-baiting Congressman on the committee used against the repre- sentatives of the Amtorg. A mem- ber of the staff of that paper, the white guardist and gambling club owner, Bernadsky, was the official translator of that committee. The publisher of that paper, Shimkin, was always there to give instruc- tions. “Socialists” Calling Conference. | Now this white guard paper has disclosed what the “socialists” are trying to hide until election d It appears that they plan a co nee for November 9, five days after election day, two days after the thirteenth anniversary of the Soviet Revolution, to inaugurate a cam- paign against the Soviet Union. The conference, according to the Novoye Russkoye Slovo, will take place at) the Pennsylvania Hotel, New York, with “Morris Hillquit, Norman Thomas, Heywood Broun and other, outstanding orators.” who will tell Labor and Fraterr: Office Workers Dance { Office Workers Union will take pone S Saturday, Oct. 25 in the New ‘arlem 16th St. cor Lenox Ave. Admission 50 cents. | Women’s Rally | Section Yorkville and Harlem United Council of Working Class Women Oct. 25, 1930. Hungarian Workers Home, $50 E. Sist st. N.Y. mission 85 cents. Good prole- {arian ‘program. Starts promptly at 30 p,m. i we Attention Workers of Brighton portssection is being teor- a our regular eercise will Sunday at 10.30 sharp at une Ave. under the auspices Labor Sports Union. All i <e Te Section 4, Attention Proletarian banauet arranged for | Oct. 26 alled off by the Section Buro. Instead a proletarian dance and a motion picture show has been afranged for Sa p.m. at the Ha ter, 308 Lenox Av . _Con- tribution Prom- ipent speakers. | i The Labor Defense Photo Group | Js having an affair_and _exhibi- | tion at the studio, 7 East 14th St on Saturday, Oct. 25 at 8.15 p. m. Ryan Walker will draw cartoons, Japanese Jiu-Jitsu artists, magicians, motion pictures and many other features are in the program. The admission is only 25 cents. All com- Fades and sympathizers are invited. Banquet nine patconame At 1400 Boston Rd., Saturda 25, 8 p. m. Something new. a Admission 15 cents, Unit 4, Y.C.L. ee ae. ‘The Alfred Levy E.N.¥.-LL.D. Br: Is having a package party @ance on Sat. evening, Oct. 25 a! Vermont mie acorn. * Auspices Bronx | Festival of ‘New Masses “Prolet-Buehme’ Prole- | faribo Theatre) Fridas Oct. 24, 8.20 | B. m., Yorkville Casino, 210 E. 86th St. Review, play, ppeee music, 35c. * Join the International Symphony rchestra Under the auspices of . the Workers International Relief. Re- hearsals every Sunday morning at 0 a. m. at the Hungarian Workers’ Home, 350 B. 8ist St. between First and Second Ave. Classes for begin- | ners. rth, Jee... Will the Comrade Who picked up a package of pamphlets | in the gallery of the Madison Sa. Garden, Section 28, Tues. Nite, please get in touch with A. Nordic, 1494 Croton Pk. East, Bronx, N. Y. we ae Yonkers! Attention! Anti-fascist| demonstration, Pen- onia Hall, 320 Ashburton anes Zonkers. Sunday. Oct. 26, 2.30 p. Speakers in English, Russian, Polish, rainian, e > LL.D. Sacco-Vanzettl Branch. Showing of Soviet film, “The Road te. Freedom.” Flying post and dance, urday, Oct. 25 at wire ‘Third Ave., ieee 1T4th-175th Sts, A Lecture te Harlem Sunday, et" 26, 7 2 m. sharp on the Election. Campaign. Harlem Prog. Youth Club 1433, Madison Ave. near ‘ere St. All workers are in- vited. % i s “Five Years in the Soviet Union” Sunday, Oct. 26, 8 p. m.. at the Civic F 10th St. ‘Dr. BE. Ree Mitchel who will lecture on the sub- ject, went to the Sovie Union with her intention of staying five weeks, She remained there five years. General Membership Meetings Will be held today at 8 p.m. Ex- Servicemen's aagene at Ukrainain Hall, 15 BE. 3rd Party Activities, Daily rere eee ‘onference This ursday A conference of all Unit and Sec- tion Daily Worker representatives will be held this Thursday at the es Seca Lyceum, 66 East Fourth sharp, Every Unit Dany Worker rep qnust, be present, An Election n Campaign Rally iu for the benefit ot the “Vida Obrera”, Spanish Weekly Organ of the Com. ye held Sat., Nov. ‘arlem ,Casino, Ave. grout Party, will 116th St. Admission 650c in American wn Dances to- rier will mark Please keep this id Latin with other . nut to Vote {ing the |swer to the treacherous “ j celebration of the Thirteenth Anni-| Robert Miner AND CZARIST | THE SOVIET UNION’ n to Take Part in Nov. 9 “about the terror and mass execu- tions without trial” in the Soviet | Union. A Hurry Call From Berli The announcement of the Novoye | Russkoye Slovo about the contem- plated “socialist” campaign against the Soviet Union comes with a “heart-rending” appeal printed as | an editorial and carried over to the next pege, signed by two infamous | leaders of the Menshevists in Ber- | Communist Candidate, 20th Con- gress onal District, New York. J, Louis Engdahl Wn. Z. Foster Communist Candidate for Lieu- Communist Candidate for Gov- | tenant- Governor of New York | ernor of _New York State. M. i. Olgin | I Communist Candidate, 10th Con- gressional District, New York. Communist Candidate, 23rd Con- | gressional District, New York. lin as well as leaders of the Second | (“Soci ’) International, Rafacl Abramovitch and F, Dan. The Menshevists, in winding up Negro RILU Delegate | | to Report Tonight on their appeal, call upon all ‘social USSR Chauv inist Trial | ist” parties to do their duty in “de- veloping the maximum activity” in| a fight against the “terror in Russia.” Coming as it does at a moment} when the League of Nations and the “little Entante” are openly| planning a war against the Soviet | Union and when the government of France and the United States -are| the Soviet Union for developing an economic Laveott and) Negro worker and otherwise at- a blockade against the Soviet Union| tempting to introduce the customs on a wide scale, the vicious attack| o¢ hourgcois America into the So- of the Berlin menshevists and the| via (aton, conference called by the American | “socialists” together with the ac-| tivity of Fish, Easley and their sIk| is part of a definite program to at- tempt to hinder the Five Year Plan) which nevertheless developing] 4 | Lieut.-Go t” Cowards Hide Plan. | LOWER 3 cowardly “socialists” who | Comrade Murphy, a Negro Beal | worker delegate to the R. I. L. U. | Congress, will report tonight at the! meeting of the Meéal Workers, 16| West 2ist St. Murphy will deal in his report with the Stalingrad trial of the two | American engineers expelled from Vote Communist! | Y. State—Wm. Z. Foster Louis Engdahl ANHATTA Dist—R. Shohan Dist.—David Gorman r The hide the name of their party when| appealing to the voters (as for in-| stance, as in the case of the election | posters for Norman Thomas and| Heywood Broun), are now hiding their plans of joint action with Czarists, the Fishes and the Mat- thew Wolls, against the Soviet] | | Union because of the approaching 01 T “sociali Ww 18th Cong’ Samuel Darcey | elections. ‘he ocialists” kno hee Sone Sete) ae that the workers all over the world | consider the Soviet Union their| Fatherland, which is the only coun-! BRON’ |try where the workers and farmers | ara rule. The workers know that there! is but one country where unemploy- | ment is abolished, and that is the| Soviet Union. The “socialists,” | therefore, have during the election campaign officially stopped their flood of slanders against the Soviet) Union while at the same time mak-| ing preparations for a conference} on a grand with Hillquit, | Thomas, Broun and others as speak- | ers in order “to develop the maxi-| mum activity” against the Soviet| 20th Co: Robert Minor Ford an Borochowitz —John Williamson am Ness: —A. Wakenknecht —I. Amter st. Tih Cone'l Dist. A. Hathaway 10th Cong'l Dist.—M. J. Olgin Uni QUEENS nion. a | ist Ass'y Dist—Emanuel Levin Defend the Soviet Union! 2nd Cong’! Di Markoff Workers! Smash _ this combina-| tion of the Czarii cialists” Fishes, and “so-! as you did last winter dur- “religious” attack on the! Soviet Union! | The defense of the Soviet Union| is one of the issues of the present | election campaign. NEED RED WATCHERS | FOR ELECTION DAY NEW YORK. — With the senti-/ Give your an-| ment among the workers for the | “socialist” Communist Ticket being more and party on election day, as well as to| more displayed every day by the| the party of Fish, Matthew Woll,! record attendance of the red cam-| Easley, William Green, Whalen and | paign meetings and demonstrations, | other bitter enemies of the work-| the capitalist parties are now pre-| ers and farmers. A big vote for the | paring to rob the Communist Party | Communist Ticket on November 4th’ o¢ its votes through the well-known will be a slap in the face of all’ methods employed at the police, It/| enemies of the Soviet Union and a}; | . is therefore very urgent that the} warning that the workers are ready £6d- watched ae eal ey every | to defend the land where the capi- | polling place, in every election dis- talist society of unemployment, sui-|{_. 9 P : has sng | trict. Without watchers the three Cee Sah ken EtOte ae being | capitalist parties will change the} abolished. Mobilize to demonstrate for the Soviet Union during hel oreo vote, will destroy votes cast | for Communism. \ versary of the November Revolu- | othe Communist Campaign Com- | tion. Agitate for and vote the Com- Mittee calls upon all Party members munist ticket on election day. |and members of revolutionary frat- ernal organizations to fill out the| | watchers’ blanks and send them in| \to the Party headquarters. All re-| volutionary workers can obtain such blanks either from the secretary of their unit or organization or di- rectly from the Communist Cam- New York ' paign Headquarters, 60 E. 18th St. PREMIERE TONIGHT AT 8 O’CLOCK “FEST DER NEUEN MASSEN” at the YORKVILLE CASINO, 210 E. 86th St., N. Y. C. Revue— Mass Play— “WHAT WE WANT” “WE ARE MARCHING” Music and Mass Recitals Music, Pictures, Mass Recitals Chorus MAX BEDACHT, Speaker CHILDREN OF THE NEW DAY “LENIN ADDRESS” MARVELOUS CAST OF CHILD-ACTORS, 3 TO 8 YEARS OLD The Life of the Children of New Russia, Organized in the Pioneer Movement STAR CASINO 107th Street and Park Avenue aday, October 26—Continuous 1-11 P. M. Admission 50ce—Children 15e. Benefit: Children’s Camp Campaign § WORKERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF Local New York—10 East 17th Street “For Alt Kinds of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Gill 5551 7 Kast 42nd Street, to Work—o1a. the Section othe hornets, of | o! Young Com- 6 ‘pe se ‘Oct. ae 8D. m. hattan i fare invited.” t evening. inti Be 5 FOR BETTER VALUES IN et Suits and Ovecesenr” vW arn ge ‘@ . — PARK CLOTHING CO. 93 Avenue A, Cor. Sixth St. Red Candidates Discuss Main Issues in Special Interview red banner. We must roll up a mighty Communist vote—a signal of growing struggles against the rotten capitalist system!” Engdahl Denounces Clubbings. | Call on the Workers to| Roll Up Huge Red Vote NEW YORK.—Out of jail, the) J, Louis Engdahl, red candidate leading Communist candidates on} so, Lieutenant-Governor of New| | the New York State ticket plunged) york said: | into two weeks left to the election| |, ; | campaign. Tremendous issues face This winter blackjacks _and/ the working-class in this election. | breadlines will be the capitalist’s | The Daily Worker has interviewed a ‘solution’ for unemployment. we] large number of the Communist | S@Ww at the Board of Estimate meet-| candidates on the burning questions | ing in New York the action of the | that the Communist Party is rally-| Socialists when our Unemployed ing the workers on. | Council delegation was murderously assaulted. Norman Thomas stood| there and smiled. He kept his} mouth shut, endorsing by his actions | the whole blackjacking campaign of | the Tammany grafters against the! candidate for governor, who was in | unemployed. The _ selection by| the grip of the Tammany grafters| Hoover of ex-police commissioner on Hart’s Island for six months for} Woods on his ‘hunger committee’ leading the unemployment demon-|/is a symbol of what the 8,000,000) stration on March 6th said the lead-, unemployed may expect this winter. ing issue which faces the workers} «phe Communist Party is the| throughout the world is the sharp-| only working-class party leading ening economic crisis, with its huge| the struggles of the workers on unemployment and wage cuts. every issue. We must inspire the “Hoover's ‘hunger committee’,| workers with the advance of the said Foster, is a sharpened offensive! Five-Year Plan in the Soviet Union of the bosses, not only against the|is contrast to the bankrupt, decay- growing demand for unemployment| ing system of capitalism with its| insurance, but directed against the| desperate misery for millions, entire working-class. The ‘stagger-|There are only a few days left in} system’ proposal is the largest this campaign. In those few days single mass wage cut ever proposed.| we must concentrate in the shops It will cut the wages of all work-| and factories. The ery ‘Vote Com- ers one-third, and is the intensifica- | munist!’ with all that it means in tion of the wage-cutting campaign) struggle must resound throughout supported and aided by the fascist} every industry.” leaders of the A. F. of L. A smash- % mee ing attack of millions of workers) Minor Sees Rising Revolt. must be mobilized against this hunger threat. The insidious factor in the whole affair is the united front of every boss political party, velt Hospital, where he was taken from the Tammany jail, candidate | including the regublican, democrat and socialist, behind the Hoover.| fT Congress in the 20th District, | Wall St. latest attack. is restive to be in the struggle. He “Th H one de z «,2.,| feels keenly his inability to be in ,. rhe Hoover ‘hunger committee’! the midst of the fight. “Through-| is a recognition that the crisis is reschitig frightful helehté. ‘The out the world we see the rising tide Z ake # a | of revolt,” said Minor. “The Amer-| aoe coe feed be the Amrietg| ican workers are feeling the brunt] 4 f the capitalist attack, sharpened | working-class. They know the by ha ce The war Tanper « intensifying. We see the Anglo-U. S. antagonisms heigéhtened in Latin America. The Red Army of China Foster Attacks “Hunger Committee.” William Z. Foster, Communist | Robert Minor, slowly recovering | from a serious operation in Roose- American workers will show fight, under the leadership of the Commu- nist Party. “We must mobilize this fight. We must rally the workers under the MUSIC AND CONCERTS ARTHUR iFriends of Music sopaxszxe JOINT WOMEN’S: RALLY Section Yorkville and Harlem . C. of W. C. W. Salutate, October 25th 8 P. M. SHARP Hungarian Workers Home 350 East 8ist Street, New York PROLETARIAN PERFORMANCE SINGING — ATHLETICS REFRESHMENTS ‘onductor METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE | SUNDAY AFT., OCT. 4 SHARP 2 = 2 hee iF c ts = 5: 8 Z ae 4 Ss ee z 3 |JANACEK FESTIVAL MASS (First Time in America) in English. | Richard Copley Mgt. (Steinway Plano) | TOWN HALL, First Subscription Concert TOMORROW (Sat. Aft.) at 3:00 GORDON wv Quartet Mgt. NBC ARTISTS SERVICE, 711 5 Av. Admission $50 T didn’t take long for the people in the Union Square to find out that something BETTER in eating places had come into their neighborhood. To these people we wish to make an appeal. The Crusader Self-Service Restaurant appeals to its patrons for their cooperation in main- taining a quiet, restful atmosphere in the dining recom. We cannot afford to have our tables occupied by some individuals who argue and discuss the topics of the day for long POFLAGS OE HUNG oe cil ie ads, os hiheaibe eg wea heals: In order that we may maintain our high qual- ity of food and service it is necessary that we have a quick turnover in our seating capacity. Each seat must be used many times during the rush hours, There are many more who would patronize our restaurant if we could provide them with seats at the rush hours. We need their busi- ness, and that is why we are appealing to our patrons to help us in the good work we are doing. We thank you! CRUSADER SELF-SERVICE R sTAURANIE is advancing, and the imperialists are preparing a bloody interven-| tion. The Fist Committee, the Hyde-Hoover attack on the U.S.S.R., the billion-dollar naval building pro- gram, and the rapid armament throughout the world show the ap-| proach of an imperialist war, and jespecially the danger of attack against the Soviet Union. We must rally the workers now to fight the imperialist war danger. In our elec- | tion campaign this point must be| | stressed. We demand the funds go to the unemployed.” war Must Learn From Germany, Says Amter. T. Amter, one of the March 6th delegation, the day after he was re- leased from Hart’s Island got into action in the election campaign. | Comrade Amter, candidate for con- gress is now on a tour throughout the country, rallying the workers| behind the Communist banner of | struggle. “We must take a leaf from our brother arty in Germany,” Amter stated. “There they rolled up near- ly 5,000,000 votes for a Soviet Re- public. unemployment insurance system. Here there are nothing but bread- lines. We have in Germany an ex- emple what the social-fascists do when in power. They lead in wage- cutting. They the unemployment insurance payments; they ‘protect’ the profits of the imperialists under the Young Plan. Thomas, Panken, | Broun are the blood brothers of) | Zoergiebel, Broun and °Co., cialist betrayers in Germany. “A huge Communist vote in the United States is a stone wall against the attacks of the bosses. A worker who votes Communist votes for an unrelenting struggle against wage cuts, for unemployment insurance, Conditions are worse in the! | United States. Germany has a fake | the So-| Newark Workers Are. Rallying for Bigger |Woster Meet, Nov. 2 NEWARK, Oct. —A Foster meeting three times the size of those of Morrow and Simpson will be the workers’ answer to the boss class which denied the Krueger | Auditorium for a Foster rae the Newark office of the New Jer- sey State Election Campaign Goins mittee, Communist Party, an- | nounces that Laurel Garden, a big-| ger, better and more centrally lo-| cated hall, has now been secured fo! Foster’s meeting in Newark on} Sunday, November 2nd. The same hall that the capitalist | candidates, Morrow and Simpson, | used was rented for Foster, but} after the widespread and expensive! advertising was done, the owners| of Kruegers Auditorium returned the deposit and declared the date cancelled. Now the large Laurel Garden Arena at. 457 Springfield | Ave., Newark, has been secured and | with its more than double capacity, Foster will address that many more workers. The Newark meeting will begin | at one o'clock sharp and at 7:30 p. and for the final overthrow of capi- talism.” “Communist Party Leads Fight on Lynching”—Moore. Richard B. Moore, Red candidate | for Attorney General, declared: “For the Negro masses, the pres-| jent crisis has brought a wave of | terror and lynchings. Thirty-eight lynchings to date is the record of the capitalist attack this year against the Negro workers and frarmers. The Communist aPrty is the only Party in this campaign that is fighting against lynching and mobilizing the entire working class to smash it. Vote Communist!” Max Bedacht, Communist con- gressional candidate in the 19th | District, said: “The Communist election campaign of struggle against the attacks of the capital- ists does not end with election day. We rally as many hundreds of thou- sands to Vote Communist as we can, [AMUSEMENTS | A Theatre Guild 1 NEW FALL EDITION GARRICK GAIETIES GUILD W. 524. rvs. 8:30 Mats, Th.&Sat, 2:30 THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR IT A COMEDY BY ZOE AKINS SAM H. HARRIS Thea., 42d St. W. of B'y Evening 8:50. Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:30 VIC REPERTORY Tritton an ings 8:30 J Ay & Bate $1,60. Mts, Th. oe Sat., 2:30 LE GALL, TENNE, Director Tonight—"SINGE cy as MEO. AND JULIET” (GYRIED” Benladvenely etbere Df. &T'nHall,113W.43 NINA ROSA sical Romance, with Guy Nfopprtso + BTHELIND TERRY, RP CEELEY, Others THEA., 44th, W. of Brondway 0. Mate, Wed.&Sat. 2:30. Chi 2600 >) > (©) id on tha. screen WHEELER he WOOLSEY Half Shot at Sunrise THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA 44TH STREE THmmatRe W. of Biway Eves. 8:40, —= Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:40 | $00 Balcony Seats, $1, All Performances ARTHUR HOPKINS Presents TORCH SONG New drama by Kenyon Nicholson THEA. 45th Street Plymouth West of Bway Eves, 8:40, — Mats, Thurs. & Sat. 2:30 “UP POPS THE DEVIL” A Genvine Comedy Hit with ROGER PRYOR Thea., W. of B'way MASQUE 45th St. Stcninea at 8:50 Mats, Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 SECOND BIG WEEK TH ST. PLAYHOUSE 52 WEST EIGHTH STREET SPR, 5095. Popular Prices Continuous Noon to Midnight A, H. WOODS presents 2ND_MONTH—OWEN DAVIS’ SENSATIONAL MYSTERY THRILLER ELTINGE THEA., 42nd St. W. of B'way ‘The jones Silent re Drama bet. Sth & 6th Aves, “THE 9TH GUEST” Eves. 8:50, — Mats, Wed. & Sat. at 2:30 Vote Communist! UNION “SQUARE THEATRES Two Big Features! REMARKABLE! THE LAW & A chronicle of the for life ACME THE AMAZING! SIBERIAN TAIGA frozen wastes of Siberia Fighting for, food ... ARMOURED VAULT ADDED ATTRACTION tee DRAMATI SAME with “cement Hele, ‘Mai "PROGHAM UFA Now Playing! REAL! OF iL Tungus Tribe in the « Battling AND EXCITING ADVENTURE. Nolan and Johannes Kioman DUCTION UNION SQUARE || popular ane Brondway”” | Prices ee TO ENDORSE RED PROGRAM OCT. 27 At Conf. of Shop Dele- gates and Mass Meet NEW YORK, Oct. 23.—A confer- ence of shep delegates and a mass meeting of workers is being called by Section 1 of the Communist Par- tv, District 2. for Oct. 27, 1980, at 6 p. m, at Cooner Union, Cooper Square, N. Y. C., to endorse the platform of the Communist Party in the election campaign. William Z. Foster, Communist andidate for governor of the state of New York and leader of the |March 6th unemployed delegation | who was at that time arrested for presenting the demand for work or wages to the unemployed workers of New York City and recently re- leased after seven months in jail, will address the shop delegates and other workers on the issues of the election campaign and their signifi- cance to the workers. Workers in the factories and on the docks and unemployed workers are urged to elect delegates to rep- resent them at this conference and are urged to attend it themselves, The conference, besides endorsing the platform of the Communist’ Party, will at the same time be a mass protest against the bosses and for improving the conditions of the workers, but we do not stop ‘there. The fight against capitalism, for unemploy- ment. insurance and for the final ictory must be redoubled now and after the election.” Brill Exposes Tammany Grafters. The Communits candidate for Comptroller in the state of New York, Comrade F. P. Brill exposed the fake “relief” of the Walker- Roosevelt grafters. “The $1,000,- 000 item—what there is left of it after the Tammany grafters get theirsfingers on it first—wont pro- vide one square meal apiece for the New York unemployed. Demand immediate, real relief for the unem- ployed. Fight for the passage of the Unemployment Insurance Bill. To do it, Vote Communist!” M. J. Olgin, editor of the Morn- ing Freiheit, Jewish language Com- munist newspaper, stated: “With the lynching of Negroes in this present wave of terror against the militant workers comes a sharper persecution of the foreign- born workers. Behind this is not only Hoover & Co. but the fascist leaders of the A, F. of L. such as Woll and Green. The leadership of the campaign for the protection of , the foreign-born workers is in the jhands of the Communist Party, Every worker must resist this at- tack. Vote Communist! Fight Communist !” Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N Y¥ DEWEY 9914 9 Office, Hours: M.-9 P.M. Benkigt 10 A, M1 PM. DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave, U Sta., B.M.T. At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, N. ¥. DR. J. MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Keom 803—-Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office —MELROSE— Dai VEGETARIAN a RESTACRANT omrades ‘Will Alwayy Find 1t Plensant (o Vine at Oar Plnce. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Brons (near 174th St. Station) ?BONB:— INTERVALE 9146 RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT . ! 199 SECOND AVE. JE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts, Strictly Vegetariin Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNIversity 6868 “hone: Stuyvesant 3316 John’s Restaurant bay orrey ITALIAN DISHES place with atmosphere Waite “all vadicsion eet 02 K, 12th St. New York ot eee ae Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 50 East 13th St. New York City 1800. Seventh Avenue, \Corner 110th Street Nicely Furnished Rooms Facing Central Park Singles from $6.00 Doubles from $8.00 OPEN EVENINGS ]

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