The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 28, 1930, Page 2

Page views left: 0

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

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

Text content (automatically generated)

\ Eage ‘Iwo Vladeck S Calls for Appeals for Votes of Jews in Tammany Mouthpiece NEW YORK.—AlIl for Vlade Congress, “every Jew who co his vote a serious matter, m for Vladek.” That’s how an advertisement run- ning in the Jewish Tammany organ today reads. As on a previous oc- easion, Vladek in appealing for votes through advertising in that Tammany paper again hiding ‘his identity. There is no mention of the words socialist,” or “socialist party,” in their advertisement. There’s hardly any candidate or any of the other capitalist p: showing such rottenness as V1. Broun, Thomas and others are d playing in the present election paign. Broun began by advertising’ BRAZIL REDS LEAD PROTEST to Call no Workers Fight Boss Cliques (Continued from Page Onc) who fought under the leadership of the Communist Party of Brazil. Latest reports state that the “revolt has been quelled.” Over 100 casual- ties are reported, but details are not given. By a policy of showing the workers that the new bourgeois clique is no better than the old, and by fighting for the real demands of the workers, the Communists are en- deavoring to arouse the workers to | take leadership in the uprising. The cable from Rio de Janeiro says:: “Communistic elements took advantage to protest against the food situation.” Barricades were thrown up around the Ministry of War, the eentral police station and the foreign office against the revolutionary work- ers, showing the widespread nature of the uprising. The reports that the revolt has been “quelled” can be faken with a grain of salt. A Washington dispatch to the Journal of Commerce on Monday | states that Stimson has announced nother quick change and is taking | steps to recognize the Getulio Vargas | outfit when it takes power in Rio de | Janeiro. In fact, Stimson now ex- | plains, Wall Street never was “op-| posed” to the uprising, but it put the | embargo into effect because it was “the requirements of international | Jaw.” | The British are quick in their at- | tempts to take advantage of the | situation and are frantically trying to make an alliance with the new government before Stimson can rem- edy the effects of the “new turn” of American imperialism in Brazil. Up to the present time, the various gonflicting bourgeois groups leading | the three divisions of the “revolu- | ffon” have not settled the division of the swag. Various counter-revolts | have taken place in Rio de Janeiro, nd no agreement whatever has been | reached between Vargas, represent- | 4mg the Southern army, the Northern imsurgents, and the gang of bour- | geoisie who still hold Sao Paulo, the | most important state. | The fight of the workers, under the ocial "MASS VIOLATION | the four or five hundred demon- DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1930_ sss Race Prejudice in the organ of Wall St and Park| Ave., Herald Tribune, that he} not a Communist. On his posters | as well as on the posters for Nor- y the name of their y is ommitted. Now Vladek | ain is advertising for votes in the’| Tammany paper and appealing in the me of his Jewishness to “every Jew.” Jacob Panken, another “socialist” now arguing with the Tammany candidate, Sirovich, as to whether Mrs. Panken buys kosher meat or not, has made a speech at Stuyves- ant High School Sunday afternoon, identifying himself with the Zionist and other Jewish nationalists in their present outery against the MacDonald government which has stopped immigrants to Plesatine and has concluded a political deal) with the representatives of the Arabian bourgeoisie in the interests of British imperialism. | es | oF ascist, | TEE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER STARVE QUIETLY OR 7HE Police DEPRINENT| STAD VE AND NICELY. Tk GIVE Si AIMIT OF Te LAW, VIETL YOu THE | Bougur MUDGEE P -: i Z t WILL GIVi OW? al DON'T DEMUNSTIATE | QR THe BULLET Ay) |\\WE'L BAYONET FOR You you Up Where Are They? — APIE nL STARVE GYETLY = \WQUIETLY OR ¢f L STRI usd ts aS Has } By RYAN WALKER. WHERE ARE 7HE CZARS OF YESIER YEAR - YICHOLAS AND ALL THE REST; OF INJUNCTIONS Picket Zelgreen Again Today; 21 Arrested (Continued from Page 1) continually worsening conditions— that the question before the workers of New York! There will be mass picket dem- onstrations—mass violation of the| injunction—every day at noon at} Zelgreen’s cafeteria! All out to help the Food Workers picket! All| out today! | is Foster Speaks. The Communist Party election rally Thursday, Oct. 30, in Cooper Union, at which William Z. Foster, candidate for governor on the Com- munist ticket, will be a speaker, will | be also mainly an anti-injunction | mobilization. Foster will leave his| upstate tour, and rush back to New York in order to take part in this} most important struggle. | munist vote is a protest against in- junctions. Serve Injunction. | The demonstration yesterday was | led by “Slim” Welsh, carrying strike placards. Eight or ten police were already on the ground, and their leader rushed up and served a lengthy copy of the subpoena on the picket. Welsh walked up and down reading it, still wearing the placards, and then tore it into rib- bons. The police pounced on him, strators who had been clustering around jeered the cops, and began to march back and forth, singing “Solidarity.” The police attacks several times | cleared a space in front of the cafe- teria, but the pickets always swarmed back, in spite of every- thing the cops could do—and cops kept getting thicker and thicker. The patrol wagon arrived some time after the green “emergency wagon” and carried the arrested workers away during a chorus of “Boo’s” given the police by the crowd. Jeer Police Sluggers. The sidewalk across the street was jammed for half a long block with spectators, many of whom jeered the police when they saw | | election district. A Com-| | RAIDS, ARRESTS leadership of the ommunist Party of | cops slugging women workers, or Brazil shows the deep-going radical- sazation of the masses, and the fact | that the workers and poor peasants are beginning to put forward their | independent demands against their own bourgeoisie as well as against all imperialist forces. Party Activities, | An Election Campaign Rally and Ball, | for the benefit of the “Vida Obrera”, Spanish Weekly Organ of the Com- | munist Party, will be held Sat., Nov. 1, at the Harlem Casino, 116th St. and Lenox Ave. Admission 60c in advance, 75c at the door. American Jazz and Latin American Dances to- gether with other features will mark & pleasant evening. Please keep this open date. 8 te Work—Old Enuf to Vote tit be ‘the keynote of the Section 1 Blection Rally of the Young Com- unist League. Tues., Oct. 28, § p.m. at the lanhattan Lyceum. All young work are invited. Unit 3, Section 2. meets 132 B. 20th Bt, Boom 6. Blection Campaign Meeting Seam Nessin, Communist Candidate State Senator, 22nd District will eak tonight at § p. m., at Arlington i, St. Marks Place, on election igsues. Polish speakers also, Labor and Fraternal Clothing Badly Neede For union orzanizers and funetion- ries. Particularly large coats, and shoes. W.IR, local, 10 E, 17th . _ * es % Ui loyed Comrades Needetras volunteers in office help, Report WLR, local. 10. 1ith 8t. Rehearsal “Turn the Guns” (Nov..t Pageant)—-will_ take place at 38 Bast 12th 2nd floor to- night at § p. m. no erience neces- wary. a ea United Council of Working Clans Ww. ‘omen Lecture in Bensonhurst, on “Workers lucation” on Oct. 29, at 8 D. 2006 77th St. Brooklyn, ing Section T.U.U.L. step in the drive to or- employed and unemployed orkers in our industry will mappd out at the mass meeting to be held the Workers Home, 350 Rast ¥ t., Thurs. eve at $ p. m. members are urged to bring a fellow worker when they come. Bronx Cooperntive LL.D. I meet of, the Eronx Co- ware TLD. will be held Wedn a ot 29th in the Cooperative A and . m. m2 = jum. Election of Executive Co! will ie cement ake place. | of laughter and a demonstration for engaged in some other brutality against the pickets. Mounted po- lice finally rode their horses on the sidewalk among the spectators across the street to drive them away. Workers followed those arrested to Jefferson Market court where they were given a hearing yester- day afternoon, and 15 dismissed, the judge saying that he “did not! want to advertise the Reds.” Storms the defendants answered him: from the workers in the audience. Six were held, charged with vio- lating “Paragraph 600.” Among them were “Slim” Welsh, Ialapof and Rose Rosen. (Names of the other three were not obtained yes- terday.—Ed.) A. F. L. Prosecutes. At this hearing, the bosses did not even appear. The task of rail- roading to jail workers who dared to demand the right to picket against the 12-hour day fell on the faker, Irving Epstein, business agent of Local 302, of the “Deli- catessen, Restaurant Countermen and Cafeteria Employees’ Union” of the A. F. L. Epstein told how he got the injunction for the boss, and asked the judge to punish workers violating it. I. L. D. In Fight. A statement issued yesterday by the District Office of the Interna-| tional Labor Defense reads as fol- lows: “The International Labor Defense is behind these workers in their struggle against the courts in their right to picket and protect their class interests against the employ- ers of labor. The courts in issuing these injunctions are attempting to cripple the unions in their daily battle for the right to live and their fight for shorter hours and higher wages. The I. L. D. will give their support to the workers in this mili- tant fight and battle with these unions against any sort of suppres- sion hindering them in their organ- ization.” The Red Campaign : r | in New York City) Today. Open air meetings in needle market at 12 noon. | Open air meetings in every | Tomorrow. | | First Red Automobile March| all over Greater New York. All comrades and sympathizers hav- | ing trucks or automobiles are re- quested to get in touch with the campaign headquarters imme- | diately. (Algonquin 5707.) | Red Night all over Greater |New York with scores of meet- | ings in every district. | Thursday. | Big Foster-Trachtenberg Rally |at Cooper Union. Doors open at | 7 p.m. Open air meetings | election district. Friday. | _ Foster-Browder-Olgin Rally at | Grand Manor Hall, Williamsburg. | Foster-Amter-Nessin meeting | at Ambassador Hall, Bronx. | Open air meetings in every |election district. in every| BY BUFFALO COPS | BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 27.—Po- lice admitted during and after the brutal attack on masses of workers | in Lafayette Square here Saturday | night and while smashing all the furniture and destroying the records | in Communist Party headquarters a | few minutes later, that they were | trying to prevent advertisement of the mass meeting to be addressed by William Z. Foster last night. Foster, Communist candidate for Governor of New York, arrived at midnight to speak yesterday in this city. One of the workers arrested at Lafayette Square was Josephine Baldwin, and the charge against her | was that she was carrying a sign advertising Foster’s meting. Ches- ter F. Murphy was arested there for distributing handbills advertis- | ing the Communist election meeting. Joseph Harris, Trade Union Unity League organizer, was jailed for VIKUKEL EXILE Mass Meet Sunday at Central Opera House | NEW YORK.—The deportation of | Serio, Vikukel and the wholesale |arrests of foreign born at the Com- munist ratification convention in | Oregon will be protested at a mass | meeting at the Central Opera House, |2, under the auspices of the Dis- |trict Council for the Protection of | Foreign-Born. Arrests and deportations on a large scale is going on throughout the United States without any or- ganized attempt on part of work- ers to stop it. A mass movement is now fast gahering force to halt deportations and protect the rights of foreign-born workers to organize into unions and militant organiza- tions without persecutions on part of the department of immigration. At the Central Opera House meet- ing, the speakers will be, J. Louis Communist Party ticket, N. J. Olgin, editor of the Freiheit, R. Saltzman, National Secretary of the Council for Protection of Foreign-Born and Samuel L. Darcy, Assistant Secre- tary of the International Labor De- Sunday afternoon, 2 p. m. on Nov. | Engdahl, lieutenant governor on the | t That Which Failed Last Nov. Mor | Against Demand for Jobless Insur- | ance Lead by Communists Hoover’s “hunger committee’} went into action yesterday “to’ re- eee Co Wee. ee police thing |swWer to the concerted drive of the |blabbering for a few minutes over | the radio. The big splash which | Hoover made in his announcement sper tha pavaciten’ forvunes |that he was going “to end human |'°v'¢s On tie parasites ii | misery” has now disappeared to less| _ It this that the c | than a ripple. Not a single worker |feared when they realized ou Fes aided by the new outfit. {out of war funds, boss profits and is the leadership of the Communist It is now becoming clear that the| party ‘The “I present “hunger committee” has no | ¢:¢ boss committee of action against different plan than the Hoover Bus-| any yelief which requires money iness Council of last November, | out oz the bosses’ pockets. That is which failed miserably in stopping | why the stagger system was pro- the economic crisis to the slightest | nosed to make the workers stagger degree. under the load of the crisis, through The only thing that Wood had to|a mass wage cut. see, after a long conference in New| On more than one occasion Wood York with leading exploiters and/ ang Hoover have stated that the bankers, is that he urged everybody | jocal authorities would have to do © “clean up” and in that way pro- | the bulk of “relieving.” As the local vide a few cents to severay dozen | grafters have been yelping that they unemployed. jare doing all they can, it is plain Nor is this new. Hoover, Lamont/ that nothing will come from this and Klein proposed the same thing | source either, without fight by the several months ago, and the unem-| workers. An examination of the ployed army has mounted by the | deeds of such outstanding fakers as fense. S. Horwatt Secretary Dis- trict Council will act as chairman. hundreds of thousands since that| Walker of New York and Murphy time. of Detroit amply proves this. Rex Beach’s “Silver Horde’ Obens at the A new picture is current at the Globe Theatre. Rex Beach's best-| seller of yesterday, “The Silver | Horde,” turned into an Radio Pic- ture, with Evelyn Brent, Louis Wol- heim, Jean Arthur and Joel McCrea. prominent in the cast. When this novel of Beach’s was the mode some years ago, we read | it with relish and retained a recol- lection of the dramatic surge of the theme. Unfortunately in bringing the book to the screen—and here is trying to anounce the meeting in a speech at Lafayette Square. Feared Com-nunist Program. | The police show themselves abso- | lutely ruthless in their eforts to | keep the Communist program from | the masses of unemployed who fill | Buffalo. The rulers here want no speech from Foster, fresh from | jail in New York for leading the jobless. They do not want the star- ving unemployed to hear the Com- | munist program for organization of | jobless and workers in the shops for a united fight on evictions, to put the furniture back when it is thrown out, to force the city to give immediate relief to the starving, to | cuts, and to force the passage of teh national Unemployment Insur- | once Bill. This bill provides that the war funds and income of the | wealthy be taken to make a fund that will pay each jobless worker $25 a week. The motrocycle squad at Lafay- ette Square went directly from its attack on the workers there to Communist headquarters at 200 El- licott St., and wrecked the place. They beat up a woman worker Ruth White. Her condition is unknown for all are held incommunicado. The police arrested 20 other work- ers there, who are now charged with disorderly conduct. Patrolman Arthur Kroeber, who beat up White is still following her vindictively. “I want to know where that girl works,” he declared loudly in the police station, “I’ll have her fired if I can.” In addition to Ruth White, the arrests at Communist Party head- quarters were: Gearge Barron, Asher Winzowicz, Warren Moore, Carlo Ilminski, Lawrence Johnson, Anton Alkucz James Williams, Ralph Carpenter, John Hoffman, James Lustig, A. Cappelo, Charles Fralich, Louis Kushman, Henry Drozen, Otto Hall, Edward Schultz, Irving Heinman, Anthony Calda- rello, and Homer Simmers. 1800 Seventh Avenue, Corner 110th Street Nicely Furnished Rooms Facing Central Park Don’t miss full circula- tion tables each Wednes- day, in the Daily, Worker. Singles from $6.00 ap Doubles from 88.00 up |much of the real melodrama has a talkie plot if ever there was one— been lost by the stock-in-trade meth- | ods of the director, which makes | auspicious events of the new season, | | Andy’s first sound picture as the | Workers! Give your answer! Fight for the Unemployment Insur- ance Bill! Vote Communist capitalists that | t of a job has been fed in any| millions of workers’ facing starva- | tion this winter would fight under The “hunger committee” is FIGHT ON SERIO, “Hunger Crew” Plan Same as|URGE LEATHER WORKERS FIGHT e Evident Every Day Is Boss Move to Fight! py, Voices Demands of Rank and File NEW YORK.*The Fancy Leather It is becoming more evident that |Goods Workers group of the Trade the “hunger committee” with Wood | Union Unity League was issued to in the leadership, is the bosses’ an-|the members of the International | Pocket. Book Workers’ Union which Communist Party demanding real jabaris its convention Oct. 31, a call | | unemployment insurance, to be paid | 0 action against the treacherous | policies of the socialist and A.F.L. 'group in control of the union and of the convention. | ‘The statement of the T.U.U.L. de- scribes the speed up, constantly growing more severe among pocket- |book makers and cutters, more ma- |chinery displacing workers, without any provision to take care of those |ferced out, terror, blacklisting and | espionage. Real Demands. The T.U.U.L. group outlines the | demands which class conscious work- ers must fight for, which an honest fight for: seven-hour, five-day week | without overtime; week work, no sec- tion work; abolition of the helper |system (which is a wage cutting |scheme); minimum wages for |mechanics and helpers; unemploy- |bosses and the state, and adminis- tered by the workers. The T.U.U.L. calls for a union based on shop committees, shop dele- j gate system of representation, rank jand file organization committees. ‘The group points out that none of Globe Theatre picture, “Check and Double Check” as the initial attraction, according | to an announcement made yesterday | by Joseph Plukett. | | This comprises one of the most} Last 3 Days! this inaugral presentation, | eith-Orpheum swings into! Broadway with a medern, well equipped theatre comparable with | those of other major producers of | sound pictures as a “show window” | for the first run here of Radio pic-| tures. The selection of Amos ’n’ opening offering makes the event | AMLISEMENTS A PICTURE POEM FROM THE EARTH OF RUSSIA "SOIL Dovzhenko's Cinematic Triumph!—Banned—and Cheered in Berlin! » TH ST. PLAYHOUSE American Preniere: uy wD Amkino Release ment insurance to be paid by the! 52 WEST 8TH ST., Between Fifth and Sixth Ave —Spring 5095 | particularly noteworthy as it pre- CONTINUOUS NOON the actual scenes of the salmon fish- | ing—the silver horde, and the sal- mon canning factory seem ultra real by comparison. In fact, one! gathers the impression that the plot | has been fitted in to an educational picture of this industry. We have the girl of the Alaskan town, Cherry Malotte, played by Evelyn Brent, with the scarlet past and the heart of gold, eventually tracking down her man in the per- son of Boyd Emerson, played by Joel McCrea, after the misunder- standings and machinations of Mil- dred Wayland, the daughter of the Seattle man of power who tries to daughter in more than. one way. The suave ‘villian, Fred Marsh, is | enacted by Gavin Gordon. Char-| acter parts are provided by Louis Wolheim, who overacts even more than usual, Raymond Blanche Sweet, who formerly star- | red in her own right, and several others. Besides the actual scenes | of the salmon fishing and canning | this talkie has a false staginess | about it which does not ring true| with the others. “The Silver Horde,” | however, will provide an average | evening’s entertainment for the audible movie fan. To many who do not remember the Beach novel or know the wide open spaces of the) great Northwest it will possibly give more. AMOS ‘N ANDY TO OPEN RKO has set Friday night, for the dedication of its new Metropol- itan playhouse, the Mayfair Theatre Broadway at 47th Street,—with Amos ‘n’ Andy in the first Radio Vexetarion RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round 4 WEST 28TH STREET 37 WEST 32ND STREET 225 WEST 36TH STREET © | continuous performances after the keep the boy from marrying his } Hatton, | 5 | principals in “The Law of The Si- sents for the first time on the screen | Workday Prices: | 9. | Sat. Sun. Mollday Prices: ities, “ on M, 250 am 12 to 2 P.M. 25e and 50c the comedy personalities, “Amos ’n' M." 35e and 50e 2 to 6 PM. 50c and 750 Andy. - 50c and %5e Evenings 750 and $1.00 The Mayfair will have a capacity | of 2,300 sats. The policy will be TO MIDNIGHT A Theatre Guild Production’ Roar China MARTIN ®5CK THEA. 45th W. of 8 Ay. Rvs. 8:40 Mts, Th. & Sat. 2:40 premiere, starting Saturday, No- vember Ist, at popular prices. IN SOVIET FILM. IVIC REPERTORY *% 8. 6 as. J 50e, Evenings $:30 h. & Sat, 2:30 :, Director “SIGFRIED" “ROMEO AND SULLET” catBoxOft.@T'nHall,113W.43 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 46th St. GLOBE say ltovs0 An, Rex Beach's Great Drama The SILVER HORDE with EVELYN BRENT Joel McCrea, Louis Wolheim, Jean Arthur, Raymond Hatton 420 St. CAMEO 23,%:,, [NOW ALL TALK AND SOUND “AFRICA SPEAKS” Strangest Picture Ever }iimed $1, $150. Mts. T LE GALLIENN Daily trom A native of Siberia, one of the berian Taiga,” at the Acme Theatre. N OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA THEATRE 44TH STREE Tyrese, Eves, 8:40. — Mats. Wed, & Sat., 2:40 | 300 Balcony Seats, $1, All Performances “UP POPS THE DEVIL” A Genuine Comedy Hit with ROGER PRYOR MASQUE 45th St.7hea,,°7, of B'nay Evenings at 8:50 Mats, Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 INA ROSA New Musical Romance, with GUY ROBERTSON, ETHELIND TERI ARMIDA, LEONARD CEELEY, Others MAJESTIC THEA., 44th, W. of Broadway Evs. Mats. Wed.&Sat. 2:30, Chi 2600 THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR IT A COMEDY BY ZOB AKINS SAM H. HARRIS Thea., 42d St. W. of B'y Evening 8:50, Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 HIPPODROME BIGG 43rd St. and 6th Avenue ST SHOW IN NEW YORK Wheeler & Woolsey in Half Shot at Sunrise RKO ACTS NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RKO—ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW! NOW PLAYING! LoStAve, RKO ACTS Bobby Jarvis and Co, Bobe Hope Dance Parade Billy Green and Co. Marsh & Archer Bellecli Bros, The Mightiest Picture OVER PRODUCED BY MEJRA Prospects 161st, Directed by one of Soviet Russia's Foremost RKO ACTS Directors Jane & Katherine Wm. Sully & Co. SCENIO eoseietg UNION SQUARE , popular bl Wheeler & Mortor ACME THE 9 (Between 42m Ave) | Prices UNION SQUARE THEATRES Dynamic, Dramatic Thunderbolt! STORM Director End PUDOVKIN ""iefuer St —ADDED ATTRACTION— LAUREL AND HARDY COMEDY apvesture to Come. Out of Russia! ASIA BrOMFILM OF MOSCOW of “The of | Red Election Parade on Wed. Need Autos NEW YORK.—Wednesday night, \the first red parade of trucks and Jautomobiles wil take place. The Communist Campaign Committee calls upon all Party members and sympathizers having trucks or auto- mobiles to enlist in the parade, with \“Vote Communist” signs promi- nently displayed. Every member or sympathizer having a truck or auto- mobile is called upon to get in touch with the headquarters imme- diately (Algonquin 5707). |these things can be expected from |the administration of the union, which, during the year it has been in office shows itself as rotten as the old clique, pursuing a policy of compromise and class collaboration at the expense of the workers. They refuse to keep their promise to rein- |state the suspended members of the | union, Organized struggle by the members must be conducted, for a militant policy, to organize shop committees, | to unite with the unorganized and leadership would mobilize them to) Stop the onslaught on the standard | of living. The T.U.U.L. is the leader, “For Alt Kinds of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray HI) 555¢ 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥ DEWEY 9914 Office Hours: 9 A. M-9 P.M, Sunday: 10 A, M.-1 P.M. DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave, U Sta., B.M.T. At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, N. ¥. |DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office EAT THE BEST AT THE HONEY DEW CAFETERIA Incorporated Fourth Ave. Cor. 12th Street You can select the best foods, as we have a great variety. HOME-MADE MEALS sure you will like our cooking HONEY DEW CAFETERIA Incorporated We a 4th Ave. Cor. 12th St., New York City —MELROSE—, Dai VEGETARIAN airy RESTAURANT jen 1) Always Find It jnce. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Si P@RONBs- vation) INTERVALE 9146. | RATION AL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND -AVE1.UB Bet. 12th and 13th Ste, Strietly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVR. Phone: UNI versity 6868 hone: Btuyvesant 8816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A, piace with where al) radicals, weet 302 12th St, New York Advertise your Union Mi here. For information one The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. st 13th St. New York City,

Other pages from this issue: