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Page ‘aks DAILY WORKER NEW YORK, SATURDAY. OVEMBER | 22, 1980 MILLINERY WORKERS ARE TRICKED INTO. GIVING FAKERS FREE HAND: Must Rally to Rank and File e Committee Fast| and Fight Or Will Ge NEW YORK.—One the most burning questions before the millinery workers today is the collect ve agree- ment which the m turers and the off: Hat, Cap and Mill: ternation on the wor! Yet the meeting held a few days ago which was to have been a con- tinuation of a meeting two weeks ago primarily to the collective agreement was turned into a squabble between the several cliques for leader- ship. The workers known to be against the agreement which is being plotted by the bosses and the officials of the company unionized Interna- tional were not given the floor lest they expose the fact that the officials are working hand in glove with the| bosses to put over this wage-cuting, speed-up agreement. After the various cliques got through telling on each other and one | rank and filer who spoke against the agreement but attacked it as some- thing the bosses wanted without | showing the role of the company union officialdom in maneuvering into effect the exhausted member- ship was himself maneuvered into) voting for a proposition giving the or- ficials the right to negotiate with the | bosses on the collective agreement | although the membership is flatly | against it. Instead of a vote by a show of hands a “yes or no” vote was taken and the chairman arbitraril ruled for the proposition of negot: ating. he Cloth ‘s In- over of Wo put This Means a Sellout. This actually means the enforce- ment of one of the worst wage-cut- | cliques were permitter to take up the| |purpose of fighting the collective | agreement and the wage-cuts, speed- ! worsening of the already miserable t Sell Out Agreement | | ed collective agreements ever | le industry unles: atter into their own | by votes but through | n the shops. | Lederfarb, ex-chairman of the tive and leader of one of the} local cliques in his anxiety to gain a| following for himself told tales out | of school and corroborated what the | left-wingers in the local and the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union has pointed out to the mil- linery workers. Piece work, Leder- farb stated, is being worked in many shops with the full knowledge of the executive although the agreement calls for week work. Many of the club members, that is the organized machine work overtime and Sunday in spite of the decisions against over- | time in view of the widespread un- employment he admitted. | A Trick. | In order to prevent a real discus- | sion from the floor on the collective agreement and a proper vote the) | time attacking each other. The class conscious, fighting left wingers were deliberately refused the floor though they were on the list. Discontent among the membership is so great that the rank and file | committee recently organized by | members of locals 24 and 42 for the up, impartial machinery and general conditions of the millinery is gaining many sympathizers, as indicated by the attendance of 200 workers at an open forum held under its auspices. Icor Bazaar Opens Next Wednesday NEW YORK.—The Sixth Annual Icor Bazaar will open next Wednes- day, Nov. 26, in the huge armory at 68 Lexington Ave., near 25th St. All workers are urged to partici- pate in this bazaar and help the Icor in its work in Birobijan, where 2 | new life is being constructed by the Soviet Government on the basis of | the historic Five-Year Plan. Labor and Fraternal RED UNIONS Let workers know of your meeting nights and activities. This column is. for this purpose and should be taken advantage of. Write up your notices as short as possible and mail them in. a ae “CHINA AS NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL PROBLEM” Will be the subject of the lecture to be delivered by Dr. Gorwitt at the Workers’ Club of Bronsvills, 118 Brisol Ave., Friday, Nov, 21, at 8 p.m. DANCE TO RE HELD By_the Youth Progressive Club and the Y. Unit 1, Saturday _eve- ning, Nov. Ty, at 8:30 at 569 Pros- pect Ave. Admission 35 cents. ANTI-FASCIST ALLIANCE HARLEM SECTION. Will have a dance Saturday at $ m. at their headquarters, 2011 Third Ave. between 110th and. 111th Sts. Conttibutions 5 cents. OPEN FORUM IN ENGLISH AT THE BRONX WORKERS’ CLUB 1472 Boston Rd., Sunday, Nov. 23. at 8:30 p.m. Subject: “American Im- Perialism and Its Policy in Latin American Countries.” Admssion free. BRONX OPEN FORU: Mu : “The Economic Crisis tn 8. at 569 Prospect Ave.. ‘149th | St. Bronx. Admission All workers gare invited. near free. CZECHOSLOVAK YORKVILLE BR. At the Workers’ Hall, 347 EB. 72nd St. invites you to attend its meeting Saturday, Nov. 22, at 8 p. m. and hear a lecture on “Unemployment and Po- lice Terror.” Admission free. Bring your shopmotes. CUBAN WORKERS crv Will hold a mass meeting Sunday, Nov. 23, at 3 p. m. at 412 Sutter Ave. A dance will be held in the evening at the clubrooms, same address. OFFICE WORKERS, ATTENTION The’ Office Workers’ Union calls upon all its members to participate in the mass violation of the injunc- tion at Zeigler's Cafeteria on, 34th St. and 8th Ave. Monday, Nov. 24, at 5:30 p. m. ; ES BORO PARK YOUTH SECTION OF I. W. 0. Dance Saturday. Nov. 22, at the Boro Park Workers’ Center, 1375 43rd St. Admission 15 cents. DISTRICT SHOP PAPER CONFERENCE Y., ©. L m., on the 4th mit and” Section. ore ganizer, agit-prop and shop paper committee member must be present. SECTION 2 Comrades report Sunday to West Side Workers’ Club, 64 W. 22nd St., for Red Sunday at 10 3. m. The Cooperative Workers Colony Is building a children’s section of the library. Comrades who have any children's books they can spare are requested to send them to the Work- ers’ Cooperative, 2800 Bronx Park B. Building Maintenance Workers Union General fraction meeting will take Place Wednesdav, Nov. 26, 7.30 sharp, at 35 E. 12th St. Members are requested to moblize shopmates for the mass violation of the injunction at Zelereen’s Gafeteria, 34th Street hetween7th and 8h Axes. Be here Monday: at 0.3) 2m Thi ira dJanthor: ree Of the Red Builders News Clup, Sunday night, 830 p.m. at 27 Fourth St. * Cont. for Collection of Siznatures For the Unemployment Insurance Bill, Monday, 8 p. m. at 140 Neptune Ave., Brighton Beach, at the Brighton ‘Workers Club. All ‘workers’ organ- fant lons are requested to send dele- Bats, * AD Communist Activitien Brownsville Workers School | wt 105 Thatford, Ave. Brooklyn, Y.. 8 p.m. Tople of discus op Rising” the New Struggles”—T Needie Workers.’ S$. Koretz of ate N.T.W.LU. Questions, Wiscussion. AD LABODR yar FRATERNAL -— f Brighton Beach, Attention evening and concert given Haywood Branch, 1.L.D. rt Brae Brighton Beach Workers Club. Thanksgiving ae Nov. 26 at 140 Neptune Ave., at 8.30 p. m. LOCAL 24 MEETING ORGY FOR FAKERS But Mass Resentment Shows Against Clique NEW YORK.—A meeting of mil- linerTy workers of Spectors’ local 24 was held uesday at Bryant Hall. This meeting was a continuation of the meeting of Nov. 6. The order of business was the report for eight | months “activity” with the collective agreement as the main point of in- terest to the workers. The major portion of the time of the two meetings has not been uti- lized to expose the maneuvers of Za- ritsky and the rest of the officials of locals 24 and 42 who try to force the collective agreement against the will of the workers. The Communists and the representatives of the United | Front Rank and File Committee were not given the floor. This was done consciusly, in order not to have a real exposure of the methods of the sell- out and real proposals of what the milliners must do to defeat the bosses and their union agents. Lovestonites Atiack Communists But the floor was certainly granted to the Lovestonites, Zukowsky and Rosen, who speaking against the col- lective agreement, not only did not tell the workers how to defeat it, but utilized the opportunity to win favor with the administration by attacking the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union and the Communists, t".us de- claring themselves ready to be em- braced in the folds of local 24 and to become, with Mustee’s aid a part of the administration. Most of the time of the two meet- ings was spent in discoveries and “revelations” made by the new mes- siahs of the millinery workers, Mr. Lederfarb and Mr. Maliniac (former- ly chairman and secretary of the ex- ecutive board and ousted about a year ago), and the answers by the administration. These two "martyrs, who for years have been a notorious part of the administration now till about graft, corruption and swindle in the union. They pointed out the Fascist regime in the union. They proved that the executive hoard consists of scabs and persons who use their positions for their own purposes. They told how the officers permit their own clique to work piece-work, overtime for time and a quarter, on Sunday, etc.; how executive members would not go to work the following day after meetings ; and be paid by the union for first time; how in the struggle against the former local 43 of the trimmers, they had the police on the pay-roll. They made many more discoveries which are not now, having already been brought to light by the lefts at the time Lederfarbs and Maliniacs were still a part of the organized fascism, graft and corruption of this union. Yet they did make one new dis- covery. Dederfarb openly stated “that members of the “Vancsord organiza- tion committee of the local have keys to the union headquarters and do their things which are too vulgar to be mentioned.” “Ask Mr. Pressman,” he said, “the man who sweeps the floors and he will tell you the things he finds in the rooms.” The conclu- sion is reached that the union is turned into a brothel by this clique. Of course, the administration did not keep quiet. They put up I. H. Goldberg, a paid officers’ and their best speaker to make the job, But even he could not drown in the sea of his demogogy the accusations made, though he urged that the mil- linery workers should depend on the ‘devotion” of the officers to their in- terests. THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER { Russia DOES REPRESENT Tle CRUL 1RIXION WE SHoup FIGHT Dean YES We SHouLD Figat FoR OuR — Yes! Look! — 5, OLD DEAR. AMERICAN | +) WORKER, WALKER. Loox BAcK OF You.ComRan; AND SEE THE IDEA ts ov ave 19 oh ra ED To pi al y He =. wl iF LARGE FORCES FOR ZELGREEN PICKETS Critical Battle Monday} at 5:30 P. M. (Continued from Page One) mittee pointed out yesterday that the| mass demonstration Monday eve- ning must have the support of every | class-conscious worker. It is not the fight alone of the food workers who were locked out when the Zelgreen boss and Irving Epstein of the A. F. of L. Local 302 got out‘an injunction to defend the 12-hour day in the Zelgreen, and locked out the Food Workers’ Industrial Union members who had previously established union conditions there. It is not the fight alone of the needle workers, prominent so far in the mobilization campaign against injunctions, because they know that the coming giant strike of dressmak- ers will be met with the injunction weapon at every shop. It is not the fight alone of the shoe workers, who have suffered hundreds of arrests for violation of injunctions against icketing during the great union-smashing lockout or- dered over a year ago by the U. S. government. It is the fight of every worker, and every worker must fight now! Now is the opportunity, in New York. Large Forces Needed. Fred Biedenkap, chairman of the Smash the Injunction Committee, stated yesterday that there is no question in the minds of the com- mittee that the police will be at the Zelgreen in full force to prevent the workers asserting their right to strike Monday. The committee feels | too that the workers will rally to save that right and come also in full force. Thousands are needed. Zel- green Cafeteria is at 257 West 34th St., near Eighth Ave. Every shop must send. its quota, with its own chosen leader, registered with the |Smash the Injunction Committee. Delegates reported yesterday at the conference that all their organiza- tions had held large meetings and made plans. Everywhere there is enthusiasm for the struggle. The International Labor Defense, to which most of the revolutionary unions and many other workers’ or- ganizations last week affiliated in body pledges to take care of the ar- rest cases, and to see that the fam- ilies of arrested workers do not starve. The 36 prisoners arrested and rail- roaded through special sessions for taking part in the demonstration on Nov. 13 have organized and are send- ing delegations to every worker meeting they can locate to call all out to the struggle. Biedenkap, representing the Smash the Injunction Committee of the T. U. U. C., will speak at the great mass meeting in honor of Winchefsky at Madison Square Gardens tonight. The 36 arrested pickets will also be there. UNSPEAKABLE SIMONS START NEW WHITE GUARD NEW YORK. — Another fascist movement against the workers’ or- ganizations and the foreign born workers is the re-organized Ku Klux Klan, appearing under the approp- riate name of “The White Band,” sponsored by the same Colonel Wil- liam Joseph Simons who was “Im- perial Wizard’ of the K.K.K. The organization literature boasts of “Di- vine Providence as a prime principle of peerless patriotism,” and issues at- tacks on Communism, the revolution- ary unions, Negroes and foreign born. It refers to “the influx of aliens” as “polluting our population” and stands for drastic deportations. Copies of its leaflets sent to the Daily Worker by a “White Brother” are accom- panied by a threat from him, “When we finish with you birds those not in jail will be high tailing it to Russia.” Out of a job? Got spare time? You can earn a little money and take a crack at the system by sel- and to let} it go by would be very dangerous to} the whole militant union movement | Office Workers Ready Office workers are mobilizing all |forces in the fight to smash the in- junction. All employed and unem- ployed are called by the Office Work- ers’ Union to participate in the dem- onstration on Monday, 5:30 p. m., at 257 West 34th St., in front of Zel- green Cafeteria. On Wednesday, Nov. 26, at 6:30 |p. m. at the Labor Temple, 14th St. | and Second Ave., the union will have its regular semi-monthly educational meeting. A discussion on the Men- ace of Injunctions will take place. A prominent speaker will lead the dis- cussion. All members of the Office Workers’ Union and their friends are urged to be present. 1,000 NAMES IN FOR JOBLESS BILL Landlord Worries | About His Rent NEW YORK.—The Downtown Un- | employed Council is reported to have collected over 1,000 signatures to the demands for the Workers’ Unem- ployed Insurance Bill to give each | Jobless worker $25 a week. Over 100 | were collected yesterday. An interesting situation has come to light. An unemployed worker liv- ing at 1464 South Boulevard received a letter from his landlord to take to the Tammany so-called “City Free Employment Agency.” The letter says: “The bearer, Mr, Turner, has been a tenant in my house for over a year. For the past three months he has | been unemployed and unable to pay | his rent. His gas and electric light have ben shut off for the past two months and his financial condition is most appalling. Although I am in earnest need of my rent, I have been obliged to be lenient in demanding payment. I will certainly appreciate any assistance you are able to ren- der him in securing a job so that he may be able to meet his debts and exist.” With this letter the worker went to the agency, and they practically ignored it. He came again and again, and couldn’t get a job. The Daily Worker discloses the complete circulation situation in tables each Wednesday. Watch for them. Study them. AU Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx We Invite Workers tothe BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices ! A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY Between 12th and 13th Sts. Airy, Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO HIRE Suitable for ! tings. Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop | M. W. SALA. Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 108rd & 104th Sta.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor — Comrades, Patronize Clean Wholesome Food. CAFE EUROPA 317 EAST 13TH STREET, (Near 2nd Ave.) “F. W. I. U, Place.” for Zelgreen Picketing| JOBLESS REFUSE ORDER TO beled Brooklyn ee ops Face Determined Resistance| NEW YORK —The Borough all| Unemployed Council yesterday held | @ mass meeting at Jay and John-| ston Streets in Brooklyn, and a crowd of about 400 assembled to hear the speakers. While Chairman Abe Rubin of the Metal Workers’ Indus- trial League was speaking, police came up and tried to get him to stop. He refused and put up Sam Nesin, of the October 16 delegation to the city hall. Nesin began to speak to an en- thusiastic crowd and the police came up and pulled him off the box. They | wanted him to come with them to} the station but he refused to go vol- untarily. The crowd had already voted unanimously to stay right there. All this took place after the police had been regularly notified that the| meeting would take place. Even- tually, seeing the determined way the crowd closed in, and sure of resis- tance if they tried to break up the! meeting, the police went off, and re- ported back that headquarters said the meeting could go on. It was highly successful, the work- ers and jobless cheering and ap- plauding, and signing many names to the demands that Congress pass the Workers’ Unemployment Insur- ance Bill, and some joining the coun- cil. An indoor meeting was held at 72 “fyrtle Ave. afterwards. There will be meetings every day here at 9:30 a.m. Negro workers are espe- ci "~ invited. Yesterday another meeting was held in Brooklyn before Johnstone and Jay, and the police tried to force the workers to speak lower. The meeting went on, however, until it was sufficiently organized to go down to 73 Myrtle Ave., where many joined (NEEDLE WORKER JOBLESS RALLY Mass Meets, Forums, Fight Evictions NEW YORK.—Open air meetings at four places in the dress and fur |markets drew thousands of workers | |to hear the speeches of the Needle | Trades Workers’ Industrial Union speakers on the necessity of organ- | izing jobless councils and fighting the injunctions, The first regular meeting of the Dressmakers Unemployed Council which was organized last Tuesday will be held Monday at 2 p. m. at the Spartacus Hall, 301 West 29th St. The dress council will meet every Monday and Thursday at this hall and all dressmakers are urged to come and participate in the dis- cussion and report on eviction cases so that the council may take action to prevent evictions and to put the furniture back when the landlords try to have it thrown out. Dress Strike Forums. Sunday there will be two open forums in neighborhoods where nee- dle workers reside, on the question of unemployment and the dress strike as a means of fighting unemploy- ment. One will take place in Bath Beach at the Bath Beach Workers Club, 48 Bay St. The speaker will be the chairman of the N. T. W. I. U. shop delegate council, Com. Good- man. The other will take place in the Bronx Workers’ Club, 1472 Bos- ton Road, at 11 a. m. Tomorrow, all unemployed Needle Trades Workers are invited to at- tend the Winchefsky 75 year Jubilee being held in the Madison Square Garden. All unemployed workers will be admitted free of charge on presentation of their unemployed council membership book and will march into the hall in a body. All unemployed needle workers are asked to congregate in the outer central the Councils of the ITS ee lobby of me Garden at 7 p. m. AMUSEMENTS Theatre Guild Productions ELIZABETH, THE QUEEN W. 52d. Evs. 8:4 GUILD Mate "tn.asat, 2310 ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK THEA. 45th St. West of Broadway Evs. 8:50. Mts. Th. & Sat. 2:50 IVIC REPERTORY 141 St. } se, $1, $1.80, Mtn Th S'S EVA LE GALLIENNE, Direetor Today Mat. ........ “Peter Pan” Tonight reo Sisters”? Seats(wks.adv.atBoxOft.&T'nHall,112W.4 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 INGUS | fA —on the screen— “AMOS 'N’ ANDY in ‘Check & Double Check’ MUSIC AND CONCERTS NINA ROSA New Musical Romance, with GUY ROBERTSON, ETHELIND TERRY ARMIDA, LEONARD OFELEY. ‘Others MAJESTIC THEA., 44ti it Broadway Eva, §:30. Mats, Wed.&Sat. 2:30. Chi 2600 EDGAR WALLACE’S PLAY ON THE SPOT with CRANE WILBUR and ANNA MAY WONG EDGAR WALLACE’S FORREST THEA. 49 W. of By, Evs. 8:50. Mts, W. & S, 2:30 THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA THE HIT YOU HEAR ABOUT 44TH STREETS Eves. 840. — Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:40 300 Balcony Seats, $1, All Performances “UP POPS THE DEVIL” 4 Genuine Comedy Hit with ROGER PRYOR MASQUE 45th St. Tiza.,,", of Bway Evenings at 8:50 Mats. Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 46th St. Datly trom GLOBE Sway 10:00 a0 at. “BIG MONEY” with Eddie Quillan, Robert Armstrong, James Gleason and Miriam Seegar 424 St. CAMEO %%,%,, [NOW “Wild Men of Kallhari” Philharmonic-Symphony TOSCANINI, conductor BROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC THIS SUNDAY AFTERNOON at 3:15 CHERUBINI—MOZART—STRAUSS STOKOWSKI, Guest conductor Carnegie Hall,Thurs. Eve., Nov. 27, at 8:4" iday Afternoon, Nov. 28, at 2:30 BEAHMS—BACH METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE | Sundday Afternoon, Nov. 30, BACH—BRAHMS (Soloists: Selpiont ‘Gutat and Alfred Wallenstein) ARTHUR JUDSON Mgt. (Steinway Piano) CARNEGIE HALL, Fri. Eve. Nov. 28, 8:30 GINA SOPRANO PINNERA Mgt.HAENSEL & JONES (Steinway Piano) TOWN HALL, Sun, ate, ae 30, at 3 ONLY RECIT. RI JOHN CHARLES THOMAS Mgt. NBC Artists Service (Steinway) NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RKO—ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW! RKO ACTS Art Frank and) 509 \ his Yankee Vol- Sans, Yo") Laughs Three Switts | 1000 Bert Fitzgibbens| Angus & Seattle) Thrills Gracie Barry fe} Rhapsody in Silk] Gp Prospect 16ist, RKO ACTS May Wirth & Co, Dolly Kat and Okay Boys Bob Hope Bob Fisher Cunningham and Bennett Arrest Students Who Demand Free Lunch for Kids of Jobless BROOKLYN, N. Y.—When two former students of Utrecht High School issued a leaflet calling upon the student body to protest the ar- rest of two other students, they were | taken to the Coney Island Court and | held in $300 bail each. They are | Joseph Cohen and Esther Aks, mem- bers of the Young Communist} League. Their trial will come up Tuesday morning at the Coney Island Court. In the early part of this year Dr. Harry A. Potter, principal of the school, disbanded the History Club, a students’ organization, as being “unamerican.” It was “unamerican” because the students demanded free lunch for students whose parents | are jobless, real student representa- | FOREIGN-BORN SESSION DELEGATES TO REPORT All delegates to the National Conference for the protection of the foreign born, all representa- tives of mass orgaizations and all members of the district executive committee for the protection oof foreign born are called for a spe- cial meeting today, 3 p. m. at Irv- ing Plaza, Irving Pl. and 15th St. All delegates must immediately send in their credentials and $6 carfare to the council for the pro- tection of foreign born, 32 Union Square, room 603. The national conference for the protection of foreign born will open on Nov. 30, 11 a. m. at Press Club Convention Hall, Nationa] Press Building, Washington, D. C. tion, a paper that would be of and|~ for students and an open school lunch period. Recently a group of students, mem- bers of the Young Communist) League, decided to present their de- | mands in the form of a “Utrecht Bulletin.” The first issue called for | the re-establishment of the History Club and for students to sign a peti- tion demanding it. Three thousand | five hundred students, many of| whom work after school, responded, but nothing was done about it. The second issue again Brmentes | the demands of the former History | Club. Two former Utrecht students volunteered td distribute this bul- letin. They were arrested and sen- tenced to three days’ imprisonment | . in the Coney Island Court. It was their arrest that was protested. Vegetarian 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 Boulevard Cafeteria 641 SOUTHERN BLVD. 149th Street Cor. | Where you eat and feel at home. Tel. ORChara 8783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET vor. Eldridge st NEW YORK 3y6naa Jleve6uuua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 East 14tb St.. Tel. Algon 7. Second Ave —MELR OSE— “For All Kinds of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hil} S55t 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! SEROY. CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 8215 Bronx, N. ¥ DEWEY 9914 » Office, Hours: M9 P.M, mencae 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. SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 818? Not eonnected with any is A aes Dairy sssracnanr 1) Always Find ft ‘asant ¢o Dine at Our Place 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD. Broms near 174th 8t. Station) eHOND > INTERVALD 9146. RA T I ONA Lb Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE1.UB Bet. 13th and 18th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 hone: Stuyvesant 3316 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN ' DISHES A place with atmosphere where all 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 City ICOR BAZAAR | WEDNESDAY (Thanksgiving Eve) Thursday, Friday, Sat. Nov. 26, 27, 28 and 29 165th Infantry Armory 68 Lexington Avenue, New York (Between 25th and 26th Streets) Bor » Good Meal and Proletarian Pricey Fat at the UNIVERSAL CAFETERIA Cor, 11th St. and University Place (Special. Room for Conterences) 26% REDUCTION TO CITY Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL - OPTICAL CO. ‘ander personal supervision of AND UNION WORKERS DR. M. HARRISON ' Optometrist 215, SECOND AVENUB Corner 13th Street NEW YORK CITY Oprodre. a New York Eye and Gar Infirmary Telephone §