The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 20, 1931, Page 2

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Vage Lwo BLEYER WORKERS| Congressman Says TO HONOR COM. PINKUS GORDO Memorial Meeting to Be Held Tuesday nemory of a devoted Party who data ben ar- ) Nucleus ROOKLYN. 2 work) and ers’ Cen- 61 « m Ave., Brooklyn T nd especially the Bleyer Shop, with Gordon has for nd fighter in upon to pay of our de- he activities of Comrade nd with the co- of the en- to 1 the shop and o cut wa: t . our dead e Bleyer wo: valiantly icipated in the defense of hun- a of worker ghout the who fell vi ims of capitalist ies of Pinkus of the I, L. e shop yer Shop Nucleus of the ist Party in arranging this meeting calls upon all of the Bleyer shop to come in honor rkers to this memorial meeting and memory of Comrade Pinkus Gor- | is activities in the revolu- | don for ‘ing-class movement wo! FILIPINO LEAGUE | ELECTS OFFICERS Press Fight on U.S. | Imperialism YORK—The Philippine | nti-Imperialist League of the United nization which is | for Filipino freedom, held its | NEW for the election of the ex- officers at 67 Sand St. last Vednesday. ‘The following was elected: Sajona, president; Miriam , secretar Reid, treasurer; | Lopez, publicity, activity and propa- zanda chairman; Gomez, publicity director. This organization, while its name | S Filipinos only, is open also | any other nationality who may desire to join, provided that he who 0 desires support and subscribe to | its ‘aims and objects. The Anti- | Imperialist League is fighting against | race discrimination, is fighting for | immediate and unconditional jnde- | pendence of all colonial peoples from | foreign imperialist domination and | particularly of the Philippines. It is | also in sympathy with any movement | for the liberation of oppressed Peo- | ples. | Today, as never before, we need an | organization of this kind when we are conscious of the exploiting ma- | chinery of imperialism around us, | All workers and fighters against im- | perialism are called upon to join the | Philippine Anti-Imperialist League. The addr of the league office is | Room 535-799 Broadway, New York City. WIR Parent Branch Is Organized; Make Plans to Get Funds A branch of the Workers Interna- tional Relief, composed of mothers and fathers of WIR scouts was or- ganized Monday night, April 13, at the Czechoslovakian Home, 347 East 72nd St. Dorothy Ross, secretary of the New York district of the Workers Inter- national Relief, explained the pur- pose of the WIR and the necessity of workers organizing to support the strike and unemployment relief strug- gle of the working class. The members of the branch elect- ed an executive, and made plans for visiting organizations to make ap- peals for funds, in order to send chil- dren of unemployed, to WIR camps free. ‘The branch will meet every Mon- day night, at 347 East 72nd Street. What’s On— MONDAY— Workers Px-Servicemen’s League Will hold an opén air meeting at & p.m. ta Pitkin and Hopkinson Aves. Brooklyn, after which a branch of the legaue will be organized, Al worker exservicemen of Brooklyn ure urged to attend this meeting and then march to headquarters o! new branch, 4 W.LR. Band Rehearsal Will be held at 31 W. 28th St. at 8 p.m. in Preparation for May Day, May First Pageant Rehearsals will be held at $50 EB, 81 Street today and ‘Thursday, WEDNESDAY “May First” Lecture Will be given by Mary Adams, ree cently returned from the Soviet Un- jon, at 8:30 p.m. at 1622 Bathgate Ave, under the auspices of, Councils 3 and.24, Kuilding “Mainte Union Meets at 8 p.m, s% 12th St. ee Workers Ind, etton Be on time. Place, “Force is the midwife of every old society pregnant with a new one. It s itself an economic Powen,’—Marx; Living Standard Is Coming Down Here NEW YORK. — A downward sweep of the standard of living of the American workers was pre- dicted by Congressman Bertrand H. Snell, in a speech Thursday night before the St. Lawrence County Society at Hotel McAlpin. Snell said that the crisis was ley- ig out the standard of living of all workers (he meant in cap~ alist lands). His remedy was to pull down the tariff walls. Besides, he saw “a gradual weakening today of the economic social structure of this govern- UNEMPLOYMENT CONFERENCE SOON Councils Holding Good Street Meetings NEW YORK.—All workegs’ organ- izations, union locals and fraternal orders, tenants’ leagues in Manhat- tan south of 59 St., and the Madison Square, Downtown’ and Waterfront Unemployed Councils, are called to send two delegates each to a United Front Conference on Unemployment | to meet May 10 at 10:30 a.m. at Manhattan Lyceum. The purpose is to unite and co-ordinate the work of struggle against starvation in this territory. The details will be worked out of the daily struggle to stop evic- tions, get back fees from fake agen- cies, form house committees and te- nants’ leagues, conduct a struggle for per cent reduction in rents, and icularly to conduct a house to house canvass to gather information of the neediest cases of unemployed workers for which relief will be de-| manded from the city. The conference is called in the name of the Lower Manhattan Un- employed Council, and organizations not yet receiving letters of invitation to it, should communicate with the secretary of the council at 16 West 2ist Street. Big Street Meetings The Downtown Council of the Un- | employed held a meeting of some 800 workers at University and 14th Street, Saturday night, and simul- taneously another at the council's concentration area center, Aye. and Fourth St: Both meetings were very successful, and 150 Labor Uni- ties and 50 Daily Workers were sold at the University meeting. A meet- ing will be held at 11:30 a.m. today at Leonard and Church. To get out the necessary leaflets, hire the necessary halls, etc. the Downtown Council is putting on a May Day Eve Rally and Ball, April 30, at 131 West 28th St. There will be prominent speakers, refreshments will be served, and the Workers Lab- oratory, Theatre is furnishing a jazz band, and staging a show and other entertainment. Banquet to Greet Il Lavoratere Italian Commun ist Paper Reappears NEW YORK.—“Il Lavoratore,” the fighting Italian organ of the Com- munist Party, will resume its publi- cation after a temporary suspension. This will be an event of great poli- tical importance for the masses, deprived during the suspen- sion, of their only collective organ- izer, of their indomitable champion in the struggle against misery and starvation, and left at the mercy of “Il Nuovo Mondo,” the yellow daily that concluded its treacherous and adventuristic career by becoming, quite recently, the official organ of a dissenting fascist group héaded by Fama, leader of the Ku Klux Klan. But the fact that “Il Lavovratore” will resume its leading post in the class struggle is a nevent of great importance not only for the Italian masses of this country but also for the toiling masses of Italy, engaged in a@ fierce struggle against fascist reaction and oppression, and for all the masses of all nationalities in- volved in the country-wide offensive against the fast advancing fasciza- tion of American capitalist reaction. To celebrate such a significant event more than two hundred organ- izations will send their delegates to a big banquet on the 26th of April at 5 p.m. in the Workers Center, 35 East 12th Street. All organizations which did not elect their delegates to this banquet are urged to do so and send their donations. They are also urged to notify not later than the 26th of April how many copies of Il Lavoratore’s first issue—which will come out on May Day—they intend to buy. Copies must be paid in advance at the price of 3 cents each. The first issue of the Italian week- ly will contain greetings from tens of mass organizations. These greet- ings must be sent in not later than the 26th and paid in advance, too, at the rate of $1.25 per inch, Tickets for the Banquet are on sale at 50 cents in the office of 11 Lay- oratore, 35 East 12th St. They must be bought not later than the 22nd of April, Fight lynching, Fight deporta- ton of foreign born. Elect dele- gates to your city Protection of foreign born, | DAILY WORGR, NEW YORK,MONDAY, APRIL THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER 7 IN THE URRAINE 58 | |NORTH Causcasia Bo PERCENT, — [/ ANY CONTRASTS BETWEEN | In Tye VOLGA BEGISA "90 Dep cern THe FARMS OF OUR BLESSED USA j; Ue vow ee het, No 2 | Depry, a4 | Bes JO ET UNION Wet | LORDS, Ao Mol » MORT | De ' | CE MIDDLEMEN- NO AOBE fs Sj AND Sisepones relay) as — | LS DEBTS, Best TRACTORS h| ia pos =| MEAL 5 ONCE ADAY ra = SI (AND HELP FRom Te Soe | eA Ge | AE ures Genry, Dee oat ME For THe Cousscrives : oan AND AS > + = aby, Za WINGY Say Tuay (Aina G je Cn F \¥ou ARE THE Back- FoR A Bay ee & . EXCUSE Me a ee, cy ee) ae Rl wai 1 ioe K Sti, Atk T Gor Yo | Bas aS SS AT ee: ey IS THE CountRys Ih 87000 4 ox tne us) | Attusring WO) QR45.2 Pe 3 a of ENT OE RRM | ij am Soviey OLLECT IV; i! s nt dh Oy) | | ie | | \ bat ~%“ y PERCENT IN |] |_ SUAno [hee CHIROPRACTOR is SS “PISA Try a : ; i By RYAN WALKER , and Stop Him! ‘ Don You Dake Deaw | F L Bureaucrats Scrap Over Booty: Accuse of Scabt NEW YORK. — Thursda} meeting of the New York Cent Trades and Labor Council witn the spectacle of Joseph Ryan, presi dent of the council presiding over the meeting in a full dress suit. Ryar was in a hurry to get to a banquet given him by some of his exploiter friends. During a jurisdictional fight be- tween the stationary firemen and the stationary engineers unions, the del- egate for the machinists got up and mentioned that “This jurisdictional | fight is causing strike-breaking. Be- cause the machinists want to avoid the $160 assessment, they are joining the engineers.” The whole matter was finally re- | ferred to “Brother Green and Brother Morrison” to be hushed up in secret COMPETITION ON | HARLEM PARADE, “IEETS THIS WEEK Smash Scottsboro Court Lynching | NEW YORK.—Harlem workers will hold a series of protest meetings this week against the frame-up and court room colored | lynching of nine youngsters in Alabama. | Street and factory gate meetings ill be held every day between now Friday night when there will | a big indoor mass protest meeting | at St. Luke's Hall, 125 West 130th Street. The principal speaker at this meeting will be William Patterson, | who has just returned from the Sov- | iet Union. | oth s will be ©. A. Ha-| thaway, who acted as prosecutor at the mass trial against white chau- vinism, and Richard B. Moore, na- tional Negro director of the Inter- (LD) MEET PLANS * DEFENSE OF 19 10 Negroes Among Those Facing Chair NEW YORK.—Plans for the fight to save 19 workers from the electric chair in which the ruling class is trying to burn them were made at a conference of branch organizers of | the New York District of the Inter- national Labor Defense, held Friday night in the district offices, 799 Broadway. The 19 workers comprise the eight Negro boys at Scottsboro, Ala., the five Paterson, N. J., silk strikers and the six Atlanta, Ga., workers accused of “inciting to in- surrection.” Of the 19, ten are Ne- groes. The plans include the rallying of | thousads of workers through street,| jumped up and a sugar bow! fe! | Meetings, preparing for the great! the floor. | mass demonstration on May Day in| out his gun, held up all three work- Union Square. From on until May Crusader Restaurant Manager Calls Police to Beat Up Workers, ae tii | NEW YORK.—T manager of the Crusader Restaurant, 14th St. ne Fourth Ave., went on a ramp against the workers last Thw | During the afternoon hi drive away from the sidewalk in |front two Red Builders selling the Daily Worker. They refused to go. | and the crowd which collected sup- ported them. They did not leave. | Then, about midnight, three work- ers entered and asked to be served. | The manager accused one of them | of being drunk and ordered him out. The man, though perfectly orderly, insisted on his right to eat anywhere he wanted to. The manager then | called a policeman, who, after very | few words, simply pulled his club and | beat the worker unmercifully, so that the blood spurted from his head on the floor. A man at a nearby table ll on The cop, alarmed, jerked ers, called the wagon, and, after fur- | to hear Guido s 7S EXILING Mm, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet 103rd & 104th Ste.) For Freedom of 5 Ala.! Negro Boys Private Beauty Parlor MELROSE Ladies Robs Our Specialty April 17. ~— ROCHESTER, N. Y., Ht of workers ity fille VEGETARIAN Hundreds of workers of this city fil DAIRY trees ed the Labor Lyceum Tuesday night Comrades Will Alwaye Find 48 Ple to Dine at Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St, Station) LELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—9149 io, militant Italian worker, under threat of deportation | to f Italy, and certain death. Serio, who spoke in Italian and Eng- | lish, was given a big ovation by the | workers. Comrade Serio pointed out | Patronize the | that it is not the case merely of | Comrade Serio, but one which in- volves the inte: and workinge sts of every worker lass organization, Resolutions condemning the per- secution of foreign-born workers and the frame-up of the nine Negro youths in Scottsboro, Alabama, were unanimously adopted. The w rs pledged themselves to carry on an Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST ‘Buy in the Co-operative national Labor Defense, the organt-| Struggle for Negro Rights, is lead-| ing the campaign against the legal Day at least 50 street meetings will| ther beating, handcuffed the three | be held by the LL.D. in New York} and took them to jail, where they are City. The Santiago Brooks Branch| still held. ‘The manager stood by, alone, a Spanish-language branch, is| enjoying the spectacle of the workers Ttalian | Organizations to Build, Subscription List | NEW YORK.—The Trade Union Unity Council of New York has another immense campaign to increase the circulatoin of its official organ, the “Labor Unity” so that it will be possible to issue a weekly New York edition of the Labor Unity, re- porting all New York struggles. It is a six month’s campaign. April first up to October first of which the main tasks are to reach between seven and eight thousand New York | readers of the Labor Unity. | The Council has set quotas to all | | of its affiliated organizations. | | The Council has also decided to | | send a Labor Unity delegation to the | | Soviet Union for Nov. 7. It is the | 14th celebration of the Russian Rev- | olution. The Council will pay all the | expenses necessary and is assuring the delegation that they will get a big reception in the Soviet Union. One | thousand yearly subscribers is set for/ | one delegate and the one that gets | the majority will be the winner. | Organizations should cal! on other | | organizations of equal size to compete | to reach the quota set by them. Many | large organizations can have a dele- |gate of their own by getting one | thousand yearly subscriptions by October Ist. | Get in touch with the District Of- jfice at 16 W. 2ist St., for a speaker | at your next meeting. JOBLESS MEETS, TOLEDO TOLEDO, Ohio, April 15.—Polish | Branch, No. 5, of the Unemployed Councils of Toledo held their regu- lar weekly open-air mectings every ThursdaY at La Grange and Striker | Sts., North End, at 6 p. m. JEFFERSON Bert Wheeler and Bob Woolsey will be seen on the screen in their latest comedy, “Cracked Nuts,” at the Jefferson Theatre until Tuesday of this week, On the stage Jack McLallen and Sarah are the headline attractions, Other acts are Captain Willie Mauss; Crane and Earle; the | “Varieties” revue, with a large cast | of dancers and singers; Ted and Al Waldman and Frank Shields, From Wednesday until Friday, | “Woman Hungry,” with Lila Lee in | the leading role, is the screen fare. | The stage acts include the Keller | Sisters and Lynch; Montrose and | Reynolds; Mona and the Radio Mon- archs; May Usher; Harry Stanley; the Lassiters; Mulroy, McNeece and Ridge, HIPPODROME On the screen—Richard Barthel- mess in “The Finger Points,” with Fay Wray, Regis Toomey and Rob- | ert Elliott. The vaudeville include Milt and Frank Britton and Gang; Joseph E. Howard, Madie and Ray, Chris Carlton, Fortunello and Ciril- lino, Lydia Barry, Easton and Howell and Aussie and Czech. Need Vehicles for May Day All Party members and sympa- thizers who have trucks, cars or motorcycles which can be used for May Day should register at the headquarters of the United Front Committee, 16 W. 2ist St. ‘Telephone Chelsea 3-0962, | power and with a wide range. lynching of the nine Negro youths. This meetin will serve to mobilize | for a parade on Saturday afternoon | in Harlem against the Scottsboro court lynching. The parade will start at 3:30 o'clock from 140th St. | and Lenox Avenue and will march down Lenox Avenue to 116th Street, then east to 110th Street. and Fifth Avenue where a demonstration will be held. Both parade an dmeetings will be | used to mobilize the masses for a/| gigantic protest demonstration in| Union Square on May First, | Concert Includes Song | of Rising of the Masses) The high point in the concert) n recently by Belarsky, basso, at | gie Hall was the singing of | songs by modern Russian com- | posers, Denbsky’s “The Alarm Bell,” Before the Attack,” a fold nge dby Ananiev, and Da- videnko’s “The Blacksmith.” The loudest applause gre6ted an encore, a sung of the rising of the mass:s. | Belarsky has a fin'evoice, full of He evoked considerable appreciation by his rendering of classical Italian, French and German selections, but real enthusiasm in the Russian song | series mentioned avove. —vV. Ss. “Company’s Coming” Opens at Lyceum Tonight Of the six productions scheduled for this week, one “Young Sinners,” | is a revival and another, “School for Virtue,” was seen in Greenwich Vil- | lage a short time ago and is now | being moved uptown. The openings | are as follows: “Company's Coming,” a farce by Alma Wilson, will open at the Ly- ceum Theatre this evening with a cast headed by Lynne Overman, Frieda Inescourt, James Spottwood and Leila Bennett. i The New Yorker Theatre will house the popular-priced revival of Elmer Harris’ comedy, “Young Sinners,” opening this evening with Dorothy Appleby heading the cast. “Two's Company,” by John Patten Russell, comes to the Hudson The- atre tomorrow night. Rollo Peters and Ann Davis are the only players in this comedy. . At the LongacreTheatre, also on Tuesday, will be ushered in “School for Virtue,’ a comedy by Arthur Eben | hack. Shirley, Booth, Robert wW. | Craig, Buford Armitage and Evelyn Wade are the leading players. “The Bellamy ‘Trial,’ a mystery play dramatized from the novey by Frances Noyes Hart, will have its premiere showing at the Forty- Eighth Street Theatre on Wednes- day night. E. E. Clive, Philip Tonge, Fred Eric and Ellen Southbrook are in the cast. On Thursday evening, at the The- atre Masque, the new Alice Brady show, “Brass Ankle,” will have its first showing. Du Bose Heyward is the author, “Miracle At Verdun,” the Theatre Guild production of the late Hans Chlumberg’s play: dealing with the resurrection of World War dead, is now in its final week and will close this Saturday night at the Martin Beck Theatre, { | } arranging 22 street meetings. On Priday noon a successful meet- | ing was held by the Hattie Carnegie Shop Branch of the I.L.D. at 54th St. and Madison Ave. The meeting was addressed by Carl Hacker, district secretary of the LL.D. On Friday evening at an enthusiastic meeting at 86th St. and Lexington Ave., attend- ed by more than 600 workers, Albert Lee, a Negro worker, spoke on the three cases for the I.L.D. An ap- peal for defense funds netted $10. On Friday night, April 24, at 8 o'clock the New York LL.D. is hold-| ing a big ‘indoor mass meeting at St. Luke's Hall, 185 W. 130th st. William L. Patterson, Negro militant who recently returned from Soviet Russia, and other noted speakers will address the meeting. IL D Branch Holds WeeklyOpen Air Meet NEW YORK.—The Steve Katovis Branch of the International Labor Defense will hold mass open-air meetings every Monday evening at Seventh St. and Ave. A. The meet- ing last Monday was very successful, with néw members gained for the branch and a sale of Labor Defend- ers. Speakers are from the ranks of the branch, Other I. L. D.} branches should do as well. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX Doors Open Daly at 9:45 AM Spec. Barly Bird. price 25 Except Sun., Ho Prospect i6ist Ben Blue Swan and Lewl Revue Leon Navarra ‘Tommy Van 1ST TIME IN BROOKLYN FIVE COMPLETA OF LUXE SHOWS DAILY EDNA FERBER’S GREAT NOVEL COMES TO LIFE Hippo with RICHARD DIX, IRENE DUNNE Richard Dix, Irene Dunne Estelle Taylor, Edna May Oliver RKO-RADIO’S SUPER PRODUCTION and RKO Vaudeville ANN SUTER CHARLES AHEARN and his millionaires ROBINSON DEWITT REVUE | | being clubbed. The restaurant was in an uproar and many patrons walked out indignantly, Marine Workers Voice ‘Scores Deportation | ‘Scheme of Sec’'y Doak | NEW YORK.—The April issue of jthe Marine Workers Voice, organ of |the Marine Workers Industrial Union, |140 Broad Street, takes up seriously jthe wave of deportations which threaten the seamen. The leading ar- ticle in the paper describes how Scc- | Tetary of Labor Doak, an old time re- |actionary union official, orders the | deportation during the crisis of 100,- 000 seamen who didn’t happen to be born in the U.S. A. Other articles tell of victories by {seamen organized in the ship com | mittees of the M. W. I. U., and tears | | the covering off the betrayal of the| |Jongshoremen now striking in New |Orleans. Quick action by the defense corps of the workers in New Orleans |spoiled a kidnapping plot directed | against members of the M. W. I. U., | and another story tells how a threat- jened mutiny of seamen on the Brit | ish freighter Middleton saved the liv | of two Cuban seamen who had stowed |away on the ship, ing Store and help the Left uncompro fight for the libera-| tion of all wictims of the class justice of the bosses. | The meeting was held under the Wing Movement.” joint auspices of the International Labor Defense and the Council for ae. of Foreign-Born workers. ike Gold to Speak at SU Membership eeting Thurs. Night NEW YORK Michael Gold, noted proletarian writer, will be the prin- cipal speaker at n Open member- ship meeting of the New York Local of the Friends of the Soviet Union next Thu y, April 23, at 8 pm. in Webster Hall, 119 E. 11th St. Gold recently - returned from the Soviet Union and he will speak on his ex- periences there. | The meeting will help to reorgan- ize the local F.S.U. and lay plans for building it into a mass organiza- tion. R Ragozin, the new local secretary, has issued an appeal to all members, as well as other friends of | the Soviet Union, to attend this all- important meeting. _New York is one | of the centers of the anti-Soviet | campaign and a strong organization | of the Friends of the Soviet Union| is essential to combat it and to sup- port the great work of socialist con- | struction over one-sixth of the earth's surface. Admission to Thursday night meeting is free. AMUSEMENTS CAMEO '0 42nd STREETS SWAY A. A, MILNE’S Sensational Success “The PERFEGT ALIBI” Two hearts against death. -giving all to smash the mysterious crime that mocked the law—and almost defeated justice, RKO-Radio Picture "Theatre Guild Production Miracle at Verdun By BERNARD SLAW ‘ \. GUILD}, Last Week Getting Married By HANS CHLUMBERG Martin Beck Bs ee st Th eae CIVIC REPERTORY +" 5 ings 8:30 boo, $1, $1.50. Mats. Th, & Sat, 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight ... Tom. Night Seats 4 weeks advance at Box Office and Town Hall, 113 W. 43rd Street LIONELL ATWILL T HE SILENT WITNESS wo KAY STROZZI-FORTUNIO BONANOVA MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th, W. of B'way Kvgs. 8:50 Matinees Wed. and Sat., 2:30 A. H. WOODS Presents ARTHUR BYRON ™ Five star FINAL 4 Star Final is electric and alive” Tive Star aie ORT THEATRE, West of 48th Street Srealags 8:50 Mats, Wed. and Sat, 2:30 DN SQ. GARDEN, 49th § daily Ine Last Week CIRCUS ing for the Virst Time in N.Y, IKON } Ye) BEATTY | bX In Steel Arena with | INGLING . and RNUM & ILEY Alon 40 Ferocious perior'g Lions and Tigers Orland-Mara Sensatlon—1000 New Foreign Features—800 Clreus Stars—100 Clowns— 1000 Menagerie Animals, Congress of Freaks. | Admission to all—inel, seats, $1 to $3.50, tax—Children under Half Pri Aft, exe. Sat. Tickets now selling arden, 49th & 50th Sts, Box Offices, S PIRANDELLO'S GREATEST PLAY SL X CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR! + with | Walter CONNOLLY & Eugene POWERS | BIJOU THEA. W. 45th SC, Pvenings 8:40 | tinoes Wed, and 5 30 We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA 300D WHOLESOME, FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY etween 12th and 13th Sts. “SE RO a 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 BRONX, N. ¥. 3y6naa Nlevebunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 501 BAST 147A STREET (Corner Second Avenue) Tel. Algonquin 7248 HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 6865 Phone Stuyvesant $816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Ket, 12th and ith Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food orb Ave. & 434 Bt. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORR trciotings | “THE FINGER ERS | POINTS” A comrade who,is leaving will sell furniture of his two room apart- ment very cheap. 2070 W. 8th St. Apartment 2, Brooklyn, New York Advertise Your Union Meetings’ Here. For Information Write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Department 50 East 13th St, New York City — Vegetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round 4 WEST 28TH STREET 37 WEST 32ND STREET 225 WEST 86TH STREET Au (omroaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronz

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