The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 9, 1931, Page 2

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FOREIGN BORN WORKERS FIGHTING WAGE CUTS AND STARVATION CON- SIDERED CRIMINAL BY THE GOVT ting a lump amount enough to carry through the remaining two winter months and for government unem- ployment insurance. That the round- up is aimed to realize another point in the proposals of the Fish Com- mittee, the attack on the Commu- nists, who lead all struggles in the id the Hoboken waterfront interest of the entire working class, is A raid on the » ont, | clearly shown. For example, the 275 unemployed seamen questioned'in | )-.ciine article of the police maga- | By LOUIS KOVESS, Two weeks ago Secretary of Labor Doak announced the decision of the Morgans, Mellons and Rockefellers to start the round-up of the “criminal aliens.” For two weeks the round-up of the “criminal aliens” is going on. ‘The results are: true Fish-Whalen fashion, 88 held or | 52" Spring $100,” sates: “The Alien | oF said aboard the Salvation Army | 262 Must Go.” eerie “Broadway,” Pier 15,| ‘The article greets wholeheartedly | the setting up of the “Criminal Alien | Bureau” of the N. Y. Police Dept. ‘This department is aimed against the ; Communist and left-wing workers, Stapleton, S. 1; 18 of 400 unem- ployed seamen, lured there by the re- lief promises of the Salvation Army were held for deportation. Raid Seamen’s Church Institute, A raid in the Seamen’s Church In: stitute in New York, where 5,000 un employed workers were surrounded by federal immigration officials, police- men and by a Church Institute gang doing the dirty work for the capital- ist government, and 102 held for de- | portation. The Ellis Island immigration offi- cials explain that these raids are made in conformity with the instruc- tion of Doak for a general, nation- wide round-up. So we see, that the round-up of “criminal elements” which will be continued vigorously all through the country, is a round-up of unemployed, foreign-born workers. The workers, who built up the great wealth of the bosses of this country and are thrown into unemployment | Ployed and employed foreign-born | and starvation by the same bosses | workers, together with the tremen- | and their government, are “criminal | dous growth in the number of lyneh- | aliens.” Captain Cabo (says the N.| ings (in the year of this economic | Y Times) is making daily tours along | crisis the number of lynchings in- the harbor front and any man seen | creased by two scores compared to} loafing about who appears to be a| the previous years) and the brutal foreigner is stopped and questioned as to how he came into this country. Carry Out Fish’s Proposals. Even before the proposal of the Fish Committee for registration and mass deportation of foreign-born workers is passed by the U. S. Con- gress representing the bosses, the proposals are being actually carried into life. The native and foreign- born workers alike are forced to iden- Pers : tify themselves. Mass deportation of | font of the native white, Negro oy the foreign-born workers follows, | freign-born workers, POeetben wi especially those who are thrown, into | the millions of poor farmers, for Im- | media elie’ r the Unemployed. - “ere sses and | ™ ediate Relief fot » “orth aati bien dag ps mig We must force through the passage | by congress of the Workers’ Unem- | ployment Insurance Bill, for immedi- ate relief for the starving poor farm- | ers, on the expense of war funds and jagainst all unemployed immigrant workers and against all foreign-born | truggling inst wage-cuts and | speed-up. It is aimed to help the preparat: of the bosses’ govern- ment to ler the workers into war against the only country ruled by the workers and peasants, against the | Soviet Union. | Round Up “Alien Criminals.” The round-up of “alien criminals” lis widely carried through. It is car- | ried on also against those workers | | who are still employed. For example, in Detroit, in two automobile fac- | tories where the dissatisfaction against wage-cuts grew higher, the immigration and police officials lined | up all workers and held in one fac- | tory 10 and in the other 20 foreign- | born workers for deportation. This | deportation drive against the unem- | white, Negro and foreign-born work- ers when they demand real relief for the unemployed, instead of the fake | promises and soup kitchens and flop houses of the Salvation Army, Hoover | and the police departments, necessi- tates quick actions on the part of the workers. Need a Solid Front. We need more than ever a solid those who lead.the struggle for get- Office Hours: 9 A.M.-9 P.M. Sunday: 10 A.M.-1 P.M the bosses. DR. Jj. LEVIN | Must Protect Foreign Born Workers. SUBGEDN DENTIST | A solid front of the working masses Ue AREY at SRbORTT | for the protection of the foreign born, | | against all forms of discrimination | aimed to break up the unity of the | working class, to weaken and crush | them separately. Fight for the de- fense of the workers’ press, banned by the U. S. government. Demand second-class mailing rights for the “Young Wo. “Young Pioneer,” “Vida Obrera,” barred from the mail |because they lead the struggie against starvation. HEALTH FOOD | Fight Under Leadership of T. U. U. L. Z For Insurance. Vegetarian Restaurant | Millions of persecuted, Jim-Crowed, 1600 MADISON AVENUE | segregated Negroes! Millions of for- Phone University 5865 DEWEY 9914 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Ret. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food |eign-born workers threatened with | deportation! Millions of native-born | white workers sentenced to slow death | | by starvation by the government of | the bosses! Millions of ex-servicemen | demanding immediate cash bonus in- | stead of the “Tombstone Bonus” pro- | posals of Mellon and the other mil- | | lionaires! Millions of small bank de- | New York || positors, robbed by the bankers who | rule this country! Millions of starving farmers cheated alike by the Repub- lican, Democrat, Progressive, Insur- gent and Farm-block capitalist fak- ers! Stand united behind-the unem- ployed delegation presenting your de- mends to the U. S. Congress on Feb. Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to The DAILY WORKER a Dees | 10! Get into the hunger marches! 50 East 13th St. New York City })/ Support the revolutionary unions and unemployed councils affiliated to the Trade Union Unity League! Support the Communist Party, leading all struggles in the interest of the working class! Comrades are welcome to BORDEN’S Dairy-Vegetarian Lunch Room 240 EAST 14TH STREET (Next to Labor Temple) Home cooked food at reduced prices MONDAY— Ne Brighton Beach Unemployed Council calls upon all workers to come to a mass meet at 8 p. m. at 140 Neptune Ave. Important preparations for the Feb, 10th Demonstration at Union Square will he made. AU Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S A Tag Day for Il Layorn takes place at 9 a, m. A alian Vegetarian Health comrades and sympathizers are urged Restaurant to report at 301 W. 29th St. (at the Greek Center). 588 Cisremont Parkway, Bronx 3y6naa Jleve6unua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 EAST 14TH STREET (Corner Second Avenue) Tel. Algonguin 7248 Comrades from Brownsville and East New York are Eating in the East New York Cafeteria 521- Sutter Ave:, cor. Hinsdale St. Presh, g008 mesis and reasonable prices MELROSE ALgonquin 4-7712 Office Hours: DAIRY [isracnant Fri and Bun), by Apuoisinent Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant te Dine at Our Place. 178? SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronx (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—9149 Dr. J. JOSEPHSON SURGEON DENTIST 226 SECOND AVENUB Near 14th Street, New York City Phone: LEHIGBR 6383 International Barber Shop "MW. BALA. Prop. 2016 Second Avenue. New York (het 108d @ 104th Ste _ Ladies Robe Our Specialty DR. J. MINDEL Surgeon Dentist 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone: Algorauin e167 Not connected with any other office | police attacks and jailings of native [ _ Private Beaoty Parton DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1931 a THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER HONOR OF O! MAKE THE Wi SAFE Fare DEMOCRAC HT FoR THE FLAG! LD LL Give You x Influenza Takes Biggest Toll of orkers, Survey Shows Jobless By B. BLOSSER The bourgeoisie have at last dis- covered what any worker could have told them 13 years ago—that the in- fluenza epidemic of 1918 bore more heavily on the “poor” and “very poor” than on the “well-to-do” and “mod- erately comfortable.” However, the study recently isued by the United States Public Health Service should be of interest to all workers as giving definite proof which even the bourge- oisie are forced to recognize. The report not only shows conclu- sively that there were more cases of influenza among the poorer workers in proportion to their number than among the “well-to-do.” It also proves that more of the workers who caught the disease died than did the bourgeoisie. This was especially true of young children under 5 years of age and of old people over 65. High Child Mortality Among Workers The causes. for the higher death rates among the “poor” are summar- ized as follows: “The effects upon resistance to the disease which a continued un- favorable environment may have; | the increase in the chance for in- fection brought about by the condi- tions under which members of the poorer households work and live; the differences in the medical and other care of patients in the poorer and richer households which may have (!) prevailed and the effect of such differences upon the fatal- ity of the disease,” Of course, the study merely asks the question if these are the causes. The workers know that they are. In accounting for the higher death rates among the young children of the poor, the author suggests: “Among the factors should be included that of medical and nurs- ing care, in which respect the poor were usually at a disadvantage. The strain upon parents who were themselves atacked at the same time as their children must have been more severe among the poor than among the well-to-do, particu- larly in view of the fact that the families of the poor more frequently were larger and composed of young- er children than those classed as economically better off.” The figures presented show that the | number of cases of influenza per 1,000 of the population was 60 per cent higher for the very poor than for the well-to-do. The number of deaths, moreover, was over two and one half times (2.6 times) as high for the very poor, while the per cent of those with flu who died was nearly | twice as high for the poor, We must fight for our very lives! Mass Picketing Today in Needle Market (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) held in the large hall at 1844 Pitkin Ave., Brooklyn. General problems in . connection with the strike will be dealt with, and plans for the gigantic demon- stration to be held on Wednesday at Lincoln Arena, Broadway and 66th Street, will be discussed. At this demonstration on Wednes- day, workers in every trade and in- dustry in New York will show their solidarity with the oppressed needle trades workers who are fighting for the elimination of sweat shop con- ditions and for guaranteed minimum wages, a 40-hour 5-day. week, and recognition of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. An over- flow meeting at the Lincoln Arena will serve to prove to the bosses and their allies, the IL.G.W. and the police, that the workers of New York are backing the needle trades work- ers to the limit! By CYRIL BRIGGS As the leading boss agency in the unemployment racket, the role of the Red Cross is to cover up as much as possible the terrible suffering and misery of the starving millions of ur- ban workers and of the share crop- pers, tenant farmers and poor farmers while handing out the absolute mini- mum of “relief” in those sections where the “danger of bloodshed” forces the panic-stricken local bosses to appeal to the Red Cross to come in with its skimpy hand-outs and slave-driving methods of exploiting the starving workers. This role has been sharply exposed in the cynical opposition of the Red Cross charity fakers to having Con- gress appropriate $25,000,000 for “re- lief” of starving populations in the South. This opposition, in face of ad- missions by bankers, capitalist news- papers and others that entire sections of starying populations are at present denied even the meager hunger- existence rations of the Red Cross, is in line with the long record of the Red Cross as one of the most vicious boss instruments against the working class, Starve Negro, White Share Croppers In the state of Arkansas, thousands of Negro and white share croppers, tenant farmers and poor farmers are starving while the Red Cross plays Hoover politics in opposing any ap- propriation by Congress for these, and other starving workers, In the mean- time, the boss press is forced to ad- mit that “with or without the seed loan, they starve unless the Red Cross or some other agency feeds them.” The same boss press also has to admit ‘hat even the comparatively few fam- ‘lies recsiviny Red Cross pittances are still starving; A special effort will be made this week to collect the $5 dress strike tax in all shops. The union requests that all members pay up their back |dues this week and turn in the dress | strike fund lists to the headquarters. All members and organizations which have not yet been given these lists jare urged to get them at the union headquarters, 131 W. 28 St. A meeting of the Executive Coun- cil of the union will be held tonight at 7:30 in the union headquarters. Final arrangements for the Lincoln Arena meeting will be discussed. At 2 p.m. today unemployed dress- makers will meet in the union head. quarters. Unemployed tailors will meet in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St., at noon. é Open air meetings will be held in the needle trades district today and tomorrow, and mass picketing will take place before the seven shops in which the N. T. W. I. U. has called strikes. There will also be a meeting to- night right after work, of dress shop OUR FLAG CALLS You; THISTS A WaAQ. To END chairmen in the union headquarters. Red Cross Tries to Hide Suffering of Town and Country Millions “Not that families are getting a ration which would be looked upon in normal times as_ sufficient.” (New York Times). Force Workers to Slave for “Meal” In the few sections where the Red Cross is peddling its “relief,” the starving workers are fed a hunger ration that costs the Red Cross the sum of 3 cents a meal—for the actual ingredients, not counting the graft and overhead which take up the bulk of the “relief” funds of all of these boss charity fakers’ organizations. The boss press boasts that the starving workers and agricultural laborers and their families are now getting accustomed to privation: “One little tot in the ‘soup line’ at the school remarked, ‘I’m getting so I don’t mind going without my supper now’.” (New Orleans Times Picayune). 2 Work in Wet Trenches Scantily Clad For the skrimpy hand-outs of the Red Cross, the workers are forced to slave for the Red Cross or the rich planters. Most of the. share croppers are put to work in wet trenches and cleaning up drainage districts for their “meals.” They are forced to work at least two days a week for the Red Cross, the county or the rich planta- — Kick ’em in Their Own Pants! — Lf GeT To THE FROWN’ goo 1$/] | LIWE AND FIGHT wire [1 | FoR YouR FLAG You J 1\ Tm Busy WRITING MY MEMOIRS Aow pitt il ey GENERAL Soun-50- MILES- FRom “THE- FRONT” MINE, MILL LABOR TO DEMONSTRATE Prepare in Over Sixty Industrial Towns; Fight for Life BULLETIN. ee NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Feb. 8.—There will be a big demonstra- tion here for the Workers’ Unem- ployment Insurance Bill Tuesday at 10 a. m,, in front of the city hall. The Jersey City demonstra- tion has been called off. ee SOVIET DEFENSE MEET FEB. 13TH ES.U. Warns Bosses Preparing War By D. AMIS. ‘That terrible scourge of the working lass, unemployment, is most keenly elt by the masses of Negro workers. ‘he percentage of unemployment in e large industrial centers, in pro- rtion to the population, averages tween 25 per cent and 331-3 per cent among the Negroes, according to jan official statement of the crusader Inews agency. In Cincinnati, the Negro popula- itidn is one tenth of the total popu- lation but according to the figures f the chamber of commerce the Negroes who are unemployed are one third of the total number of jobless. In Chicago, out of a half million of kiemployed workers, 25 per cent are INegroes. In the smaller industrial cities the rate of unemployment among Negroes averages 331-3 per ent. ‘The deepness of unemployment is best illustrated by the number of evic- tions which take place in the Negro territories. In Baltimore, fifteen evic- tions of Negro families took place in less than three weeks. However, all these families were returned to their homes due to the heroic work of the [Unemployed Councils which gathered ithe workers in the neighborhood to jreturn the furniture. During the month of January, over a thousand evictions took place in th city of New York, out of which number vere over three hundred Negro fam- ilies. Another evidence of hard times and misery suffered by the Negro workers is the breadlines. In the Negro centers of cities like New York, Chicago, etc., hundreds of Negro men land women clog the breadlines daily. Because of the inhuman treatment received, standing out in the cold for hours waiting for their measly ra- tions, shoved and bullied by pot- bellied lackeys of the police depart- iment, the Negro workers in the Har- lem readline smashed the head- kjuarters of the Salvation Army Re- lief station. This latter bosses’ insti- tution, aside from giving out food jthat was fit only for the garbage, teated the workers as if they were savage leopards. “If the problem of business de- pression is not solved now, the next depression may bring the downfall of capitalism and the es- tablishment of a Soviet system in Western Europe and the United States.” This was the warning given to mem- bers ofthe National Dry Goods As- sociation by Professor Malcolm P. McNair, managing director of the Bureau of Business Research of Har- vard University. The moral for the capitalists is clear:war against the Soviet Union. The moral for the workers is equal- ly ‘clear: defense of the workers’ fatherland against the military at- tack which the capitalists of the world are preparing. On Friday evening, Feb. 13th, the workers ot New York will demon- strate in defense of the Soviet Union | big mass meeting in Central Opera House, 67th St. near Third Ave. The meeting “will be under the auspices of ocal New York Friends of the Soviet Union. The speakers will be Robert Minor; Richard B. Moore, | Uational Negro Organizer of the In- ternational Labor Defense; and Lem Harris, an American newspaperman who has just returned from the Soviet Union where he worked’ in factories and on collective farms. An {Congress of the Workers Unemploy~ excellent program is also being ar- ment Insurance Bill. ranged. ° Nd CANTON, Ohio, Feb. 8—Workers and the vast number of jobless in this city of 110,000 population, work- ing at many industries but a large number of them, making their living on wages (when they have jobs) from the stecl mills, sneer at the capitalist press bunk about improv- ing conditions. They are preparing to demonstrate at 12:30 p.m. at the Court House on Public Square. Speakers and part of the demon- With demonstrations tomorrow in support of the Workers Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill already reported as arranged in 59 cities and, indus- trial towns, reports continue to ar- rive at the last moment of still new ones. Although no mail is received by the Daily Worker on Sunday, it was learned that in addition to those previously listed, demonstrations and hunger marches were being prepared in'two new Ohio cities, Canton and Massilon, and in eight more Penn- sylvania industrial and mining towns. Simultaneously, it was learned that in most of these cities, the masses are already talking of still bigger demonstrations on February 25, In- ternational Fighting Day, and are looking forward to the report on that day of the delegates they sent to Washington to present on February 10 their demand for the passage by Katherin Cornel in New, Play at Empire Tonite Katherine Cornell's new vehicle, | “The Barretts of Wimpole St.,” a! play by Rudolf Besier, will open/at the Empire Theatre thi sevening. In the cast are Katherine Cornell, Brian Aherne, Charles Waldron and Mar- garet Barker. Another play scheduled for this evening is “Dr. X,” a mystery drama by Howard W. Comstock and Allen C. Miller, opening at the Hudson The- atre. Howard Lang, May Vokes and Florence Shirley are in the cast. Schwab and Mandel’s musical com- | edy, a satire on Hollywood, “Ameri- ca's Sweetheart,” will be ushered in} at the Broadhurst Theatre on Tues- | day evening. Herbert Fields did the book, Lorenz Hart the lyrics and the (CONTINUED ON PAGE FIVE) music is by Richard Rogers, Jack Whiting, Jeanne Aubert and Gus Shy head the cast. “She Lived Next to the Firehouse,” a satirical play on the gay 90's by William A. Grew and Harry Delf, will open Tuesday at the Longacre The- atre. The leading players include Victor Moore, Fiske O'Hara, Ara Ger- ald and William Frawley. Frank Merlin’s new opus “Hobo,” is booked for the Morosco Theatre on Wednesday night. Paul Kelly has the leading role, During the early part of the year, he twins of a Negro family in Brook- lyn died from starvation. These chil- dren were killed by the bosses who breed unemployment and continually drive the living conditions of the workers to the lowest level, while they thmselves live in luxury. In England, Arkansas, 500 Negro ind white poor farmers marched into ie town and demanded bread for “BY ROCKET TO THE MOON” Human hearts will thrill to the dauntless spirit of adventure that carries the gleaming rocket to a planet heaped with gold! Here is a romance of two worlds that will hold one world breathless! DIRECTED BY VRITZ- LANG WHO MADE “METROPOLIS” UFA presents ~ and the wet trenches they are forced to work in and on the plantations. In some places, the Red Cross co- operates with the rich landowners in the enslavement of the share crop- pers. Instead of “meals” they make an allowance of $2 weekly per couple, plus 50 cents additional for each R 42ND STREET child, up to five children. Those fam- |] ¢ A oO proapway|) OPULAR Now ilies, and there are many, who have ° WIS, 1789 PRICES more than five children, are left to} feed the additional children as best they can. Meny share croppers, par- ticularly the Negroes, are forced to work for their landlords (big land- owners) for $1 a week, plus $1 from the Red Cross. For these there is not even the 50 cents additional for each child up to five. Under this cash allowance, a couple having no | children are allowed 14 cents:a day each. A family of seven (parents and five children) are allowed 64 cents a day, or 9 cents each day foreach member of the family. A family with Theatre Guild Pradactions Green Grow the Lilacs W 62nd. Eves, 8:60 GUILDS. Tn. Sat. 2:40 Elizabeth the Queen Lynn Fontanne Alfred Lunt Morris Carnovsky, Joanna Roos and others Y Martin Beck Thee.t5th st. tive 8:40, Mts, Th, & Sat, 2:40 ,& 434 St BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK ans os, \ ” 8 ‘Little Caesar RK O/EPWARD G. ROBINSON DOUG, FAIRBANKS Jr. —— NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX You Wourn Ruin our, AVE You A Bosius Noi You'd CLose THE BANKS. THIS 15 ALL You Met GET UTIL. WE more than five children must feed VIC REPERTORY 14th. st. 6th av. 2 8: borer sens Higa aphienp tt Sociane Neal | PRR MPRSIOME RVATEE enim yrs day. A family with ten children, for instance, would have to get along at EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director tion owners. The New Orleans Times Picayune, in a report on conditions in Arkansas, in which most of the ugli- est facts are covered up as usual in capitalistic press reporting on work- ing-class misery, admits that: “Some of these (share croppers) have been reporting for their Red Cross allotments with shoes worn through in the sole and clothed only in a shirt and overalls’ ‘Thus scantily-clad and without ade- quate progection against the weather 6 cents each a day. /ACAMIELE Negro and White Workers! Share | seate 4 weeks adv. at Box Office and . 'W. 43) Street pace ng Pe nger le cand ager omgererso evened SES | Farmers! Fight against this lousy = Ce. bitvece charity! Demand unemployment re- ON THE SPOT: lief as the right of the workers who with CRANE WILBUR end Prospects Wise, have created the wealth of the coun- ANN AMET OR RKO ACTS try. Refuse to be put on charity /BDGAM WALLACE’s FORREST THE. || EKO ACTS 49th Btreet, West of Broadway hunger-rations and the goup lines; | ryes, 9:80, Mats, Wed. & Bat. at 2:30/1 nich x Rood Support the struggle of \the Com- Everett's Monks Paul Decker munist Part and they revolutionary & Co, Others trade unions for the Unemployment Insurance Bill. Support the Hunger Marches to your State capitals and A B, WOODS Presents F ARTHUR BYRON IVE STAR FINAL Get a 1931 Datly Worker the national capital! Join the un- | "ive Star inal’ is ¢lectric and iive calendar free with a six employment demonstrations Feb, 19th + months’ subscription or re- By RYAN WALKER OND ISSUES: If WE (BLARAN x5 £00) 1101 iy Top FUHT Tal KCK. IN- Whe Paptr LAND. U.S Negro Workers Are Hard Hit By Unemployment; Must Organize their starving families. These poor farmers live in the Delta region which could not grow crops because of the drought. An attempt of a lawyer-plantation owner to quiet these starved farmers, who had become en- raged by their miserable conditions, was defeated. The poor farmers were determined to get food for their families or fight. The small store keepers called upon the Red Cross, who doled out $2.75 of provisions. In Oklahoma City, the Negro and white workers, tired of waiting upon relief that was not coming, smashed a merchant's store and took the food | that they needed. This severe unemployment crisis reaches out into every territory, Negro and white agricultural work- ers have left the farms in large num- bers. In one month a southern rail- road company sold, in two counties, over one hundred and seventy tickets. Many of these farm laborers do not have money to buy railroad tickets and are compelled to beat their way to the cities. Here they can not find work and ad to the already large numbers of unemployed. Large masses of Negro toilers in the cities and rural districts are facing starva- tion. But they refuse to starve. They are organizing and must continue to organize into fighting groups, de- manding unemployment insurance and food from the local and state governments. Scientific Examination of eye glasses—Cerefully adjusted by expert optometrists—Reason- able prices. * SOPTOMETRISTA-OPTICIANS 9.W. 1831 ST gies. Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOO! Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY Between 12th and 13th St: 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 Cooperators' . Patroniz: SERO CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Eatabrook Ae BRONX, NF Pee Ga nee sete aetna M F ae

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