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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1930, wees: . 2 276 we > = S =—-_ Fe cy rs = Ea E_ *NO JOBS” SAY Not Bosses’ Chi arity But Relief! Seattle Wires for 150 More Each Day in 60,000 Drive; Reduce Price for Far West ‘The Daily Worker campaign for show distinct signs of life. York circulation by the Red Builders Yesterday 1200 papers were added to New INTERNATIO NEWS. AL METAL, WAGE CUT 60,000 circulation is beginning to News Club. Mussolini Tries to Get Rid of Growing (RUBIO OK’S LAND- Today we get an urgent wire from *——— _ | INGD 1 NOMDp = . 7 “PQ P J OAKLAND BOSSES; wt in IS CONFIRMED, Army of Unemployed (WNERS ROPER 9 warms the heart. He says: | | ROME.—In order to escape from paw Seven Seen Cera senor ee: 2 eae the necessity of taking care of the Acl-< fop Bj yeas WI ” | alists ae : Asks for Big- Change ) ISS GRO NG 500 Dailies.’ Socialists Bie Cray sey ee ee eres |S 31g ; hi } © 9 S — Boots 2 premcins 20) repent, hint: Strikers | Mussolini ordered that workers can In Landlaw . =. He wee Ge seme Shing test —— leave the country in search of work.) © 2 . A ! ae Hpeonemibe apd. , bitration court, which was agreed to ports, as many workers tried to es-|has alr handed to Wall Street Winter, Fight! Renee gen ver ens Touts |by the Socialist leaders of the metal cape from the terrible prison condi Bayes Taal ors oe ie ee KLAN. i s br i e ly. Whole armies were |@ her ic step against the OA , Calif—Seeking a job strike, has brought in its decision tions in Ita is ech 2 in California is harder now, than it Seattle and New York are ahead providing for a general wage cut of | migrating to France and Switzerland | Mexican peasants and t wen! for pioneers to seek a gold ore of all other parts of the country 3 per cent for all metal workers be- | in search of work. France closed its| “To gain the confidence of the ones during the gold “rush in the toward raising their quotas. Seattle's ginning November 17, and an addi-| frontiers against the Italian workers landowner nou ced that eighties. total is a 480 increase by December tional 5 per cent cut beginning Jan-|and is sending back whole contin- the agrarian 1 be ar nes ‘ i sae Ss 1 and twice that by the first of the “ uary 19, 1931, for all workers 18 or gents of Italian workers. On the rail-|to permit the large downers to At the Glass Mfg. Co. several hun- : : x 1 ; pase an wo Dn | S| ABEL am REC ONTIE ag dred workers gather mornings look- After the smoke of the countless fake promises made by the boss | year. Ger & KWow THE DAILY WORKER! | over, and 3 per cent for those below way station at ee ase daily i PF their land. as a as to. ea args ing for @ Job. Factory far from main parties before election lifts we find bigger breadlines, more evictions, Other sections of the country must | that age. | one hing sc pues of Rs et i ie poctuctl : entrance gate-fenced in with a high| more suffering among the families of the unemployed, more arrests of (follow the Seattle example. Thi | This is the outoonie‘cf the betrayal ine the frontier. ; But eee | Tk aft F ; Gy 36 wire fence, barbed wire atop. It re-| jobless as “vagrants.” |campaign will show the bright spots , e = of the strike by the reformist lead- e slap tae id aoa seed ernni n_to block the : and, semblas some fortress. | Fight these miseries forced upon the jobless by the bosses and their | and the dark spots of the Communist movement. gral she = revollicuarya UNlOnORE ear ne cen g etiy ond Gunn eee ee Workers stand huddled tozether| political parties! More and larger unemployed demonstrations. Join GET ACTION! IMMEDIATE! ON TO 60,000! JUMP INTO THE position in advance warned the work- te ea ones ae Bane cae cogtehes utior e Wes ie around a bonfire, which some one| the Unemployed Councils and prepare to march on the bosses’ Congress | CAMPAIGN YOURSELF, ers that this would be the result of | eke Pee fe se s a mn ste the pane dra ; preps c ra built of dried weeds and leaves. Cali- with a million signatures to demand that immediate, tangible relief |the arbitration court, which the So- | 7¢Ry 2°00) ees ate cathe wipes out or See 5 fornia is no exception to cold. damp| be given. What we want to know is why the Communist vote in Minne- cialists so gladly accepted to end the "2 Sepraigred meee at Onn | serena eto 5. completa mornings, Half starved the workers | ‘Photo shows jobless workers clustered about a stove in an impro- sota is 12,847 and the circulation of the Daily Worker is 822. strike. ieee Fe one atiailey cision jdomine ae la ee ip ne it apitalis s land increases the system of peonage push closer to fire. Some one,hands| vised flophouse. * | s . bee | = ace co weneege rte Ween out the Communist Party Sodial In- - ae vee "I sell 20 Dailies every day on the ‘L’ without very much time or ee alba Rabari aaa pe = anaes jof the Mexican peasants. t t is trouble and I wouldn’t get mad if some comrade gave me a little com- : & : i - i. A | The amendments proposed by erision Zellavaar wrerviane Alert) Jobless in Florida Are Menaced | petition.” M. Alexander. | wage. cut put over with the aid or/Extend Engineering — | rubio specifically provide that the hear more about it. Suddenly gate | | News extra for the Pacific Coast: “All papers for units and ees ora ime a bestenine| Projects in U.S.S.R. 22 !ndtomers have the right to guard comes over, kicks fire out and ues . " individuals in bundles of 5 or more will be 1 cent a copy in future les Berar ease Git tae rall ean | E 00EXe|employ a large number of peons . ~ r sa 5 _ = eA em without the ot tion of giving them tells to move away before he will call B Ji il d Ch 6 Th t instead of 1 cents. Newsstand prices on a returnable basis will paper 5 the eat BOG a ELAGIES inst temion the eae police, anings an ain wan reat} remain at 2 cents, Pacific Coast, we've done our part now let's see eee eee ac leeemien Me ie Bnane acorns lank. ttehaa (been sthe <aractice fol At Heintz “57” Vaviety you boost the circulation.” ad Council deal wai the cane Heine the peasants to form a village on 0 1 | 2 as tor the haciendas (large farms) and to Normally employing about 500.) : : read ao Se xtens f the Soviet rineering “Nothing doing. Our rush season is| Fight This Boss Terror By Organizing and Que worker, Anderson writes: induntry. A nlmber of great engines “e™mend, communal lands. AIL thi over. We laid off 120 girls from to- : : : “Many comrades are making sincere efforts to push the circulation of ” | i 2 Balen ed. Not | Sune out at or roke. Some mato job this week,” growled the| Fighting for Jobless Relief the central organ to the 60,000 mark. ‘Too much value cannot be placed AUSTRIAN GOV'T JAILS aa ee deca Peers eens’ pene of he larees are Amer= employment clerk. Sic ae ee upon street sales, house to house sales, sales at meetings, etc. All of the eae ee Sibert pee Ne F ee Calevintiig Widehiue Co; (By _a Worker Correspondent) __,| aforementioned sales methods are of the utmost importance and we must} COMMUNIST CANDIDATE. Rees Ge AETAGE Cael c the: beadlean! penmsuitsn Willd et Normally employing about 400. FORT PIERCE, Fla.—This is a small town and they print continue and intensify our efforts along these lines. 2 liard roubles in the economic year |meekly stand by an permit Rublo to Large sign greets eyes upon enter-| a small capitalist paper and this is what they say about the “But in subways and street cars let every comrade digest the | yIENNA—The head of the Com- | j934-95, By 1932 the engineering in- |Teduce them to worse slavery than ing grounds—‘No help wanted.” Dis- | jobless that are coming down here from the North. comes ot the Lois rie Mee tne bid Slrort front page. There | munist election list in Carinthia, /qustry will supply all the machinery | liey already suffer under. There will i i 7 “ *t yt . eg es ei *s . Is no sane reason why the agitprops, Dai yor! ents, etc., - 0 - he 1 an 4. |b ajor battles against v Eee te here ea yal Six in a jobless family came to Fort Pierce in an old auto thi Dee nte gioco cre paces cece CBM comrade Katzianka, has been a-|for the Soviet oil industry. By 1934- |be major battles against Rubio, the see the sign? Want no one. We are | 2 not push this 60,000 up to 100,000 in a very short time if they will rested in connection with a Com-|a2 the production of Diesel motors laree landowners, and the imperial and they were broke when they got here. When they asked = oe z make a sincere effort at unit meetings to impress upon all comrades the importance of giving our paper publicity at every possible opportunity.” working part time,” was “polite” an- swer to my inquire about employ- ment. munist leaflet being distributed in \i1) raise the total horse power from | ‘st robbers. Carinthia in the Slovenian language. | 250,0000 to 1.4 million annually. A| |The leaflet exposes the swindle of | —_ for something to eat at a clubhouse here the man at the club- house told them he could no help them but would take them Westinghouse Electric Company Normally employing 300. “We are working only 5 days. Many are laid off. First chance will be given to those we laid off. Nothing in sight | for you girls.” Suddenly one girl cried | ‘out. “I have a baby to support, it is | starving. Tl end it all by jumping in the bay.” “Oh! don’t do that,” an- swered the clerk. “Have your friends | that are working all this while and making good money help you out.” “Such friends who make good! money don’t exist, others are unem- | ployed like myself and are starving.” *Then go to the Community Chest.” *It’s all bunk, this Community chest, I tell you,” she screamed. “Before any help comes my way from that source, I'll starve, so I might as well do something quick.” With this she went out mumbling something under ber breath, Some departments not working full time. In the other layoffs are taking piece. Every morning time keeners gate is rushed by hundreds of girls, who have been laid off from the can- neries, They are vainly seeking a job American Rubber Manufacturing Co. “We are working only three days. | Don’t bother us. Next time read the sign, before you enter. We want no one This all encouraging list of fac- | Told to He took them to the polic to a place where they would get something. Beat It. e station and put them in a car} and took them to the county line and told them to keep moving. They will say the same to them in the next county to keep moving. They take their names and tell them next time it will be six months on the chain gang. Lots of jobless beat their way here on trains. They take them to the) county line and the next county does the same. Jobless Are Starving. There are lots of jobless right here in Fort Pierce but they are not to- gether and each starves for himself. Some catch fish every day and that is all they have. There are millions of acres of land lying idle that has never been touched, at two hundred fifty dol- lars an acre and people in town starving. I think it is time for the workers to {ake this land and make their living on it instead of letting it lay for a high price. There are just big farmers here and some small ones. I make $2 a day in a big orange grove about five months in a year. The rest of the year I have to starve and starve while T am working too. Indians Mistreated. T have my shack in the woods on tories, I went thru in one day’s time, |SOme of this high price land. They while looking for work. Will Hoover's | WOuld make me move to town and division of work apply to these and Pay oes price rent if they knew I similar factories? Majority of fac- |W@S here. satis ak aoe oe only part 3.5 |. Will write you something about the days. Dividing up with the unem- (Indians that live here in the woods ployed the three days, will leave one |" Some of this high price land. and a half days of work. It PRs to me like they will have to Entire Families Starve in New Britain, Conn. (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW BRITAIN, Conn.—We work- ing women in a neighborhood of this jelty came together to see if some- | thing could be done to help the fain- | ilies in this neighborhood who are j actually starving. Some one said we should see Mayor Quigley, so a committee was sent to! see the Mayor. The mayor said he would make an appeal in the drive | of the Community Chest for the | Xmas Fund. | We did not like this treatment | from our mayor, just imagine waiting | until Xmas to help some one who is starving today, so we went to the |mewspaper and told them about the |meibrbors and what the mayor said. | We were disappointed when the pa- | pers didn’t print anything about the | |bad conditions in New Bedford for working people, that’s why I am | writing to your paper. We also went to some rich women | in New Britain but they said that conditions were bad on the stock market and they couldn’t give any- | thing now, and they told us to get out of here. So each one of us pitched in $1 apiece. —Woman Worker. worse than starving outright. Work- | ers will certainly not stand for this very long. This more than anything | else should bring the employed and | unemployed workers close together to fight for the common cause — For unemployment insurance, for work or wages etc. under the leadership of the Communist Party and the re- volutionary Trade Union Unity League.—A. A. USE SPY AGAINST PORTLAND MEN Terror Against Jobless Growing SEATTLE, Wash.—R. Bonham, dis- trict immigration officer of the U.S. who presided at the hearings of the 12 workers of Portland, regon, being held by the immigration officials for deportation, is quite an expert stool-pigeon himself, in fact, can) share honors with the “darling” of | the Portland police, stool-pigeon, N. R. Bacon. Bacon got his informa- tion about the “reds” by joining the Communist Party anu the Interna- tional Labor Defense, at the orders chief of police, Jenkins, of Port- land, Oregon, This stool-pigeon Bacon, is testifying against the work- ers and Bonham is presiding at the hearings, a good combinations. He used to attend meetings and see what workers were there, and used this information against them. ‘This man was both judge and pro- secutor in the hearing of 12 honest. workers. He, Bonham, is a rabid labor-hater and is determined to send these 12 workers to their death in fascist countries and it is he who is asking for more stringent national Jaws against Communists and laws to outlaw the Communist Party. Mat eas SEATTLE, Wash.—On Saturday, starve. The only way they can make | a dollar is keeping hogs in the woods | and they kill some and take them to MOVE HEARING the referendum carried out ten years BILL NUSSBAUM, 318 HASTINGS STREET, DETROIT, M ICH., IS THE FIRST MEMBER OF THE DAILY WORKER PAID-IN-ADVANCE CLUB. HIS SUBSCRIPTION IS PAID UP UNTIL APRIL 28, 1932, ago and calls upon the Slovenian workers and peasants in Carinthia to | | stand shoulder to shoulder with their | Austrian fellow-workers, ARMISTICE DAY, NOT FOR WORKERS Lies Hide Approach of New World War (Continued from Page One) war! Remember that there are now 30,000,000 men under arms — more than were ready at the outbreak of war in 1914! Remember that “de- mocracy” is a lie and “patriotism” | a word to trap you into the trenches for the profits of your bosses. Remember that the workers of | only one nation came out of the World War with a real victory—| for the working class—the workers | of old Russia, That today, in Soviet , Russia, wages are rising, hours be- ing shortened, unemployment is | wiped out, socialism is being built, | because, and only because, the Rus- sian workers used the arms given them to shoot down the workers of other countries, to overthrow their capitalists and take power for the workers and farmers! To fight against war, fight against capitalism! To organize against war, organize in the revolutionary trade | unions of the Trade Union Unity League! In the Communist Party, | which leads all struggles of the workers! To defend yourself against the war danger, defend your wage scale, fight the speed up, join the {yesterday tells of Communists cap- jturing additional towns along the | Sionaries are leaving Honan, Kiangsi Comrade Katzianka has identified himself with the contents of the} leaflet. He is persecuted by both the Vaugoin-Starhemberg-Seipel gov- ernment of Austria and the fascist military government of Yugoslavia. Only a few months ago he returned from serving a prison sentence in| Laibach over the border where he/ was arrested by the Yugoslavian au- | thorities whilst visiting his relatives there. CHINA RED ARMY IN NEW GAINS Chiange’s Mercenaries Fail to Stop Them NEW YORK.—Capitalist press re- | ports from China admit that the Chiang Kai-shek armies sent sainst, the Red Armies in Central China| have been so far unsuccesful. With | new rumors of war in the North, | and big troop movements there by FIGHT ON SOVIET UNION, Chiang in Shansi, the chance of Roees | flooding central China with his mer- PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Nov. 10.— cenaries is less than it seemed to be Delegates of Andy Furuseth’s “Inter- several weeks ago. national Seamen’s Union led the Meanwhile a United Press FURUSETH GANG LEADS | Story Central Labor Council in the war on Yangtze river and says that all mis- | council compliment Senators Odie and Reed on their attempt to place an embargo on Soviet goods. and Hupeh provinces. Chiang has | 20,000 men spread out over Kiangsi, a hi ff . Bie Miey onto euecinaL The International Seamen’s Union the Soviet Union at their last meet-| ing. Furuseth’s men moved that the | when the workers would slave from || Cooperators! A special correspondent for the Chicago Daily News states in a copy- wrighted feature story dated Oct. 1, that every other day news is received of fresh victories by the Red Army. He mentions as captured by the Reds the important towns of Liling, Chal- ing, Chuchow, Pingsiang. He says that Communist armies move at night with amazing swiftness, and show ex- cellent grasp of military strategy, | has no membership to speak of, but maintains a treasury accumulated | during the period after 1921 when it | had oyer 100,000 members, and has | offices and property and a flock of | | pie card artists who are actually | first class servants to the big ship owners and the U. S. government. The vote was 27 to 18, for the reso- lution, many of the delegates asking Fort Pierce and peddle them among the people. Two Indians ve rested and also the people that bought the meat. They s against the law to sell meat people even if it is your own meri They want people to buy, m- the butcher shop at 50 cents a pound. I don’t know what price the Indies sold the meat but it was cheaper. The Indians sell deer meat too, Lives With Old Father. My father is 71 years old and just me and him live in the woods, no nothing, nothing else. I give the old Daily Workers to the Negroes to read. I think I can get some to take it, some told me they would like to take the paper but had no money. I think it is high time for the workers and jobless to make an end to this capitalist system. We will be with you when the time comes, 0 November 1, the police of Seattle ar- rested Albert Mayereck as he was distributing Vote Communist leaflets. He was taken to the police station and kept in jail for five days with- out being allowed to call the Inter- national Labor Defense office. It was only Wednesday morning, that the police allowed him to call. He was tried Wednesday afternoon, but the defense attorney successfully prevented the attempt of the police to railroad him to jail; he was ac- quitted. Charles Blaine, member of the Un- employed Council of Seattle, was ar- rested October 30 as he was walking on the street in the early evening; he was kept in jail till Monday, when a charge of “disorderly per- son” was placed against him and trial was set Wednesday afternoon; he was freed. Jobless workers! Make a living selling the Daily Worker. Write 50 East 13th St., N. ¥. C., for details. FOR MOONEY . Witness Against Him) ' Up On Dope Charge SAN FRANCISCO.—The California | | supreme court is still delaying action | on Warren K. Billings but ‘Tom| Mooney, through his attorneys, Frank | P. Walsh and Cyrus King, has asked for a hearing before the advisory pardon board. He claims that al- though the supreme court hearings in August and September were sup- posed to deal only with Billings’ case, as a matter of fact much tes- timony for and against Mooney him- self was introduced and he has a right to a personal hearing such as Billings received at Folsom peniten- tiary. The eight points brought up against Mooney in the Billings hear- ing can be disproved, Tom says. He | will waive all technical objections re- \lating to his radical activities and opinions, he adds, even though these points have no direct bearing on the question of his innocence of the Pre- paredness Day bombing in 1916, Estelle On Morals Charge. Estelle Smith, the notoriously un- reliable witness who testified against Billings both at his trial and at the | Supreme court hearings last summer, has been arrested on vagrancy |charges-in a Chinatown hotel. She | was registered with a man as his wife and is also suspected of opium smok- ing. In her repudiation of testimony given at the trial she confessed to using dope. Estelle is indignant at “being ar- rested like a common person,” claims to have heen framed up and has ob- tained the protection of her old standby, Police Capt. Charles Goff, who also calls the arrest a. frame- up, although he denied the Mooney- Billings case is a frame-up. He suc- fight for Unemployment Insurance! | ‘The way to stop imperialist war is not to wait till it comes, and then think to stop it by one single action, but to prepare, to organize now, to- day, here in America, to fight for your own daily, simple interests, the interests of the whole working class! This is the first step. Take that | step today, American workers, before | your bosses and their government | throw you into the hell of blood and | slaughter of the oncoming war! DETROIT LL.D. TAG DAYS ON NOV. 15-16, DETROIT. — Th e International Labor Defense of Detroit is arranging | throughout the city today, Tag Day, Saturday and Sunday, November 15 and 16. And calling upon every mem- ber and sympathizer of the LL.D. and the members of the Communist Party to support our Tag Day. The LL.D. needs the help of everybody, just as much as the persecuted workers need the LL.D. to defend them. Report to the following halls: Workers Home, 1343 E. Ferry; Polish Workers Club, 5770 Grandy; Jewish Workers Club, 9148 Oakland; Finnish Hall, 5969 14th St.; Interna- tional Workers Home, 3014 Yemans St, Hamtra; Ukrainian Workers Home, 4959 Martin St.; Polish Work- ers Hall, 28th and Magnolia; Russian Hall, 8890 Copland; Greek head- quarters, 1208 Brush; Lithuanian headquarters, 4637 W. Vernor High- way; Hungarian headquarters, 6982 W. Jefferson. ceeded in releasing Estelle from the ordeal of “quarantine’—the physical examination given women arrested in raids on disorderly houses—but she is still in jail without bond, sometimes feigning an attack in one | indignantly ho wthe Furuseth gang direction, and suddenly seizing a city dared to talk about “convict labor” in another. Red Army activities|in Russia, when there are a million stretch from Sgechnan in the far Child laborers and any number of west clear to the coast. convict made products from Amer- This correspondent scouts the |/¢an penitentiaries passing unchal- theory of many experts that there is|/enged in U. S. But the machine no possibility of Communism in| jammed the resolution through, China. He tells of the misery of the} The matter will have to come to a| people, misruled by the militarists,| vote again, next meeting, under the | and cites cases of ffarmers rising | council's rules. There will be an-| spontaneously and driving out troops, | other fight, |considerably larger amount of the | machinety for the chemical industry, the sugar industry and the cold stor- age industry is to supply as far as possible the machinery necessary for mining, chemicals, petroleum, foun- dries, etc, “STAGGER” IS Only Got $6-$10 When Working Full Time ATLANTA, Ga.—Nearly 3,000 work- ers, including men and women, col- ored and white, some of them having worked in this mill for many years and who have big families to sup- port, all of these are erected by the “stagger” system. Many of them one day every 9 days. Even when in the “good times”) 7 a.m. till 6 pm., puting in full week, they would only get from $6 and at most $10 a week. With this they had to pay rent, get the food for the family, clothing, and pay doctor bills (due to lack of decent food, many of the workers here are sick with pellagra, and other deseases). Ane Now Starving. And now they work one day a week, or one day every 9 days. How do they expect the workers to live? Several times the workers in this | mill made attempts to organize them- selves into unions. But due to the fact that the leadership they had | was the AFL. (U.T.W.) naturally it could not be expected that the U.T. W. would stick it out till the strike was won. The Daily Worker melts a million steel wills into one battering ram to smash the boss system. On to | 60,000. Be a Daily Worker worker daily. though the farmers had only spears. | THE TH wr OFFICER ADMITS THATWARISNEAR, | JUBILEE Sees Storm Brewing Everywhere NEW YORK.—Another admission that war is near was made by Col. | Alexander Powell, war correspondent, author and traveler who arrived from Europe Sunday, “The Franco-Italian situation,” said the Colonel, “is as full of potential dangér as a tin of nitro-glycerine.” He told of growing fascism and war preparations leading to war. “The ‘steel helmet’ demonstrations in Germany, the strained relations between Italy and France, the revo- lutionary rumblings in Spain, the gravity of the economic situation in England, the acute agrarian distress in Rumania, the sullen discontent among the peoples of the Danube Basin—these are but a few indica- tions of a gathering storm,” said Col. Powell. (The Pioneer of Jewish Reserved Seats on Sale at the Don’t miss full cireula- tion tables each Wednes- day in the Daily Worker. of Comrade MORRIS VINCHEVSKY Revolutionary Literature) will be celebrated by all revolutionary workers Saturday Evening, November 22 at, MADISON SQUARE GARDEN Four of the Most Famous Poets from the Soviet Union are coming to extend their greetings. They are: I. CHARIK, I. FEFER, Y. BROWNSTEIN and SH. GODINER Freiheit Gesangs Farein — Red Dancers Artef and Others Office of the Morning Freihoit 35 East 12th Street, New York City Prices: 50c¢; 75c; $1.00 and $1.50 MORE PEASANTS GO | INTO COLLECTIVES |the main branches of industry; coal | | MOSCOW. — Recently there has jbeen a new stream of peasants into the collective agricultural undertak= jings. In Saratov 44,000 new peasants j have joined the #Jlectives. In Sam- jara from the 25th of September to the |16th of October 22.900 peasants |'joined the collectives, or 2 per cent of all the still remaining private farms, In the Spask area of Samara 1,500 new peasant farms have joined the jcollectives so that the total cOllecti- | visation in the district is 16 per cent. “For Al Kinds of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY. Velephone: Murray Hil 555¢ |fight to line up the Philadelphia | get one day a week work, others get 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York | Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥ i DEWEY 9914 —_ Office Hours: A. M-9 P.M. Sunday: 10 A. M.-1 PM. DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave. U Sta., . At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, WN. ¥. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE | | Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not eonnected with any other office _—MELROSE— D. s. VEGETARIAN ah a RESTAURANT | omrades Will Alwayy Bind St Pleasant ¢o at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Brons ing (near 174th St, Statton) ONE: INTERVALE 9146. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE. UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetariun Food ee HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 |] Phone: Stuyvesant 2916 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atrnoephere where al) radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York | Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to | The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 50 East 13th St. New York Clty