The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 5, 1931, Page 2

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Page Two ™~ ——___. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AY 5, 1931 a oT. U. U. C. Denounces Police Smashing of Harlem Parade in Defense of Negro Youths NEW YORK.—Denouncing the col- laboration of the New York police department with the southern boss lynchers and calling upon the white and Negro workers to mobilize their forces to smash the frame-up and planned legal thassacre of nine Col- ored children in Alabama, the Trade Union Unity Council of Greater New York yesterday sent a letter to Mayor Walker, declaring, in part: “The smashing of the Harlem dem- onstration by the police which re- flects the policy of the government, indicates very clearly that @ program. of suppression and terror is being organized similar to that followed in the Sacco-Vanzetti mutder, similar to that used to send Mooney and Billings to a living death in Folsom and San Quentin penitentiaries, an attempt to suppress by terror the workers defense in order to insure the legal lynching of these nine oung Negro workers, Try Smash United Front. It is quite natural that Tammany Hall should give @ lead in the at~ tempt to terrorize the white and Ne- gro workers, so as to try and keep them from forming a powerful unit- ed front that will stop this wholesale legal murder. New York City has the largest Negro population of any city in the world, and more and more the Negro and white workers are be- ginning to realize that the “white man” (Capitalist) laws of white su- periority, Jim-Crow laws in the South, and segregation in the North without written law, are the methods used (very successfully up to re-| cently) to divide the white and Ne-| gro workers so that your program of wage-cuts, speed-up, unemployment, | hunger and misery can more effec- tively be foreéd upon the working class a8 a whole. The frame-up of the nine young | workers to the eléctri¢c chair in Ala- bama, takes its place in American Jabor history in a long string of bru- tal murderous frame-ups, dating back to the beginning of trade unionism—the outstanding one of) which was the hanging of the five | workers in Chicago, if the year 1886, | whose only crime was that they were | Jeaders in the great strike for the | eight-hour day called on May First, 1886, in Chicago, afd which gave/ birth to May Day as an International young Negroes shall not die! The Trade Union Unity Council of Greater New York not only protests against the brutal smashing of thi Harlem demonstration by your po- lice, but pledges its full support in the defense of these framed-up Ne- gro workers, and calls upon ail af- ticipate in all of the defense work; the Harlem demonstration was only the first—it is not the last demon- stration. zetti, when every city whetier it was administration, had the sarne pro- gram, smish the workers defense, and it was only in those cities where the workers rallied in sufficient strength that demonstrations were held. Sacco and Vanzetti died, murdered by the ruling class, only because thé workérs did not organize strong enough to save them. “These nine young Negroes will die if they are left to the “tender mercy” of Capitalist “justice.” They can only be saved by the working class, by the Negro and white work- ers uniting their forces in the strug- gle, determined that this mass slaughter shall not be allowed. “We demand that your administra- tion shall not interfere in the build- ing of a defense for the nine young Negro workers, “we demand that you instruct your polieé not to interfere with any future demonstration that may be organized in this city. “We call upon the workers, Negro and white, to rally to thé support of these nine young Negroes by organiz- ing United Front Scottsboro Com- tional Labor Defense whose prompt action in sending to Scottsboro their lawyers, brought graphically and im- mediately to the workers, this crude, brutal, murderous frame-up. “We call upon the workers—Neégro | and white—to build the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, into a/ powerful organization, to send dele- gates to Seottsbaro Defense Confer- | ence on May 17th, called by the| League of Strugglé for Negro Rights | —to build a powerful defense strong | enough to put in practice the slogan —THEY SHALL NOT DIF!” Day of working class struggié. Gov- | ernor Algéld years later, in pardon- | ing Neebe, Swabb and Fielding, ad- mitted the frame-up, but Parsons, | Spies, Fischer, Engel and Ling, were | . Murdered just the same. | Brutal Suppression of Negro Masses. | “With the Scottsboro Negro boys | the situation differs, in only one) sense, but a very fundamental one, | —they afe Negro workers and in that lies the whole story of the struggle of the most exploited se¢tion of the working class with all the added} features of @ suppressed minority, against intensified exploitation, not only as workers and poor farmers, but whose expleitation is increased because they are Negroes. In thé) South, robbed as share croppers, en- slaved in chain-gangs, worked as peons on white farms—at starvation. wages in the industries, subject to the law of the mob, Jim-Crowed, dis- franchised; in fact, subject to all the brutal éxploitation of capitalism, there is added to it many of the most brutal suppressions suffered by co- lonial péoples. In the North the same general policy is purstéd, al- though not to thé same Marked dée- gréé as in the South. Segregated by program if not by law, the Negto is compelled to pay higher rents for unsanitary homes, they ate given the hardest work at thé lowest wages, they are the last to be hired and the first to be fired. “The nine. young Negroes of Scottsboro are not leaders—theit ar- rest for stealing a ride on @ freight | train while looking for @ j6b, was seized upon to further tertorise the Negroes who afé Ofganiting espée- cially In the South, yés, ofganizing with the white workefS in joint struggle egainst wage-ctits, spéed-up, unemployment, for immediate relief and for unemployment insurarice, and what is more, for social, politi- eal and economic equality for the Né- groes. This sends shivers down the spine of the whole capitalist lags, es- pecially the Southetn “gentletien.” So, your police. under your instrue- smash @ white and Negto wotk- "_ ¢ré’ dernonstration in Harlém organ- ized to help to stop the legal murder . of these niné young Négro workers. Convenient Lynching Exénse. “Of course, the charge Harry Orchard Haywood, or paid the lives of Sacco and Vansetti 86 it is Very eney to get & prostitute +» to give a mask of “righteousness” and | May ©“ “justice” to the burning in the eles (thie Chait of these fitie yottng Ne * “It Will Rot go down. ‘These nine Ay— "ita Vilage Youth Ara ts at 1 Fulton A$: at PROTEST WAR ON | NICARAGUA FRI. Anti-Imperialists Call fillated organizations to actively par- | “We remember Saceo and Van- | Democratic, Republicart or Socialist | Mittees to stréngthén the Intéerna- | THE ADVENTURES THESE ARE “He feeds | Re FATHE! | S S$ GG } THE L Riz %e Swe § AIP | aes OF BILL WORKER my || SOWED AND 1M || Them THis 15 } THE LAND CRANTED “To LanDLorD ay Biesy WHO NEVER te vi GEFORE OR AFTER IT Was STOLEN FROM THE INDIANS AT COURT THURS. To Defeat Paterson Legal Lynching PATERSON, N. J., May 4—When} Benjamin Lieb and Helen Gershon-| owitz, two of the five Paterson silk) strikers whom the silk bosses’ courts | are trying to railroad to the electric} chair on framed charges of murder,| are arraigned in court here Thurs-| day, May 7, at 10 a. m., the judges} j will find opposing them not only the | |two defendants, but hundreds of} other workers who are determined to leave no stone unturned to save their} couragéous comrades. Lieb and Ger-} shonowitz are being arraigned on an| additional charge that has been} | trumped up—assault with intent to/ kill—and the workers of Paterson are being called by the New York Dis-| trict of the International Labor De-| fense to demonstrate outside the courthouse on Thursday morning. The new charge is an obvious at- tempt to repeat the trick that worked | $0 successfully in the Sacco-Vanzetti! case: the prosecution is first trying, to secure a conviction of the two workers on a lesser charge in order to brand them with a criminal rec- ord when the trial for murder takes place. In the Sacco-Vanzetti case Vanzetti was first tried on the framed | up charge of having been responsible for the Bridgewater robbery; when he was later tried for the murder of the paymaster at Braintree, the; Bridgewater conviction (though it| was also thé result of a frame-up) Mass Meeting NEW YORK, N. Y—With warships | guarding the coast cities and air- planes actively bombing in the inter- | ior, Yankee Officers in the National | Guard of Nicaragua together with | the marines are leading a bloody campaign aaginst the Army of Lib-| eration. arid revolting working masses Was used against him and proved a trump card in thé hands of Judge Thayer, Gcevernor Fuller and the no-} torious “impartial” commirsion. The I. L. D. ealls on all workers to smash this shameless trickery by} which the bosses aré trying ta se-| cure & shortcut to the elertrie chair. | All five workers are charged with] | the union principles call for. At the | scabs to remain. Three wéeks later of Nicaragua. In 4 letter to his wife first degree murder and felonious as-| in New Orleans, Ralph Deadsley, | sault as the result of the death of) leader Of the National Guards, boast- | Max Urban, a silk mill owner against | ed how he crushed the revolts in| whom the National Textile Workers’ Logtown and Mosé Farm aé him-| Union was conductitly a strike. Ur- self shot General Blandon, Sandino’s ban died after an attack by under- ligutenant, taking. his sword) as a| World characiers with whom he had trophy, Aeéording to a dispateh of dealings; no attempt was made to thé Assointed Press of May 2. ‘There ar€ more than 200 Yankee officers it the Natio! Guard’ in Nisaragua, which Améfiédn imper- ialism “is training and déveléping to | police the country.” | With the revival of the héfoic | struggles of the Army of Liberation | sineé last month espeeially the armed | uprisifigs of workers in the Eastern Coast of Nicaragua, Yankee imper- ialist government increases its ma- rines and eénlarges the National Guards to carry its murdefeus war against the Nicaraguan peopie on an unknown scale and brutality. Against the Wall Street war on Niearagia, the N. Y. Branch of the Anti-Intperialist League will hold & tess protest mesting on the coming Friday evening, May 8, at Harlem Casind, 116th Sf. and Lenox Ave. Robert Dunn, chairfran of the Anti-Imperialism League, Clarence Hathaway, of the Communist Party, FP. L. Sanches, of the Association of thé New Revélutionary Emigrants of Cuba, and Wiilam Patterson, of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights will be thé priticipal spéakers. T. H. Li of thé Néw York Braneh of the Anti-Imperialist League @1ill pre- wide. May Day Greetings:— BN. J. Féder Lipton $1.00 | 8. preg’ Schwartz ‘ , A. $I in Cohen May Bay Greotings:— Finedere Fishman ALBERT MAIER Brown Litehite $1.00 simon Greetings: 1. Wassertaan Beattice Keeby Br. sh hatereaticnal Werkees Order |S Simon /\Kaith Gartine $1.00 L. Sherman Saul Lambert - Altechuler Max Epstein GREETINGS! S. Karnovsky E, Weinruth INTERNATIONAL WORKERS | J. Goldberg Jack Lerner ORDER Sohlossbers A. Glass Branch 64 910.00 | 1. comes I. Levitt = J. Winicow A. Yablinsky Revoletionary Samuel Wildham | J. Lanibert SECTION 3, UNIT 7 $425] 4. Lechowiteki | H. Musoff GRBETINGS Harry Soloff L. Chesis OTK . UNIT Henry Stmoti John Vuska , i pesidtotalhet alli RRO Sertha Bloomberg Victor Divak evidiite et oss evighl ond frances Davis BRANCH 112 Yous Zettint Cashman Davis INTERNATIONAL Max Hiltzik J. Weiss WORKERS ORDER J. Calem 1. L. Weiss 5 $10.00 5. Rosenberg M. Liandanski | apprehend thé criminals, but instead | the five strikers were framed up in| an effort to deal a death-blow to the N. T. W. U. ia Paterson. JOBLESS REPORT POSTER DEBATE Delegates from the unemployed | Councils have been selected to hear and Yeport on the debate between Comrade William Z. Foster and A. J. Muste on the policies of the Trade Union Unity League and the Confer- ence for Progressive Labor Action, to be held at the New Star Casino, 107th St. and Park Ave., on Suhday afternoon, May 10. This is the first time that such délegates have been sélectéd and the move is seen as & recognition of the importance to the Wholé Working Class, employed as ‘well as unemployed, of thé diséussion. ‘The debate is held tirider the aus- piees of the John Reed Club of revo- lutiénary writers and artists. Tt will begin promptly at 2 pm, Sunday, May 10. f RRR NPE Nenana oy renee ence Pwr MAY DAY GREETINGS TO THE DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK CITY DEMONSTRATION Discussion On Union Policy in Settling Cafeteria Strike’ Two statements from workers, tak- ing opposite points of View on the settlement of the strike in the Olym- pic Cafeteria are printed below, and comment on both by an official of the Food Workers’ Industrial Union, which signed up the shop. ‘The first statement is in opposition to the termis of settlement. “To the Editor of the Daily Work- er: I just want to emphasize how to main union shops in the union scale. “Comfades, in 11929 you all re-| member we had a big stfuggle in the | cafeteria (food) industry in order to | win better conditions, and we had a | victory, at that time we gain 38 shops ; in the union, but the shops were | never organized. First of all, we did | not get the scabs off the job; second, we did not get the union scale of | wages; third, and the main thing, is | that we did not get the 8-hour day as | time the blame was placed in, some | of the leaders, a few of them were right wingers, but today they are out, and were replaced by a revolutionary leadership. “But today we make more mis- takes than we did in. the pest. “A shop Was called out on strike and two workers were scabbing. Within two hours the shop was set- tled with the union and the official of the union (F.W.1.U.). permitted the the boss broke the agreement of the union and thréw the workers out of the shop. So we started a new strug- gle for the workers against the boss, and wé placed a picket liné. At the time when the workers were picket~ ing the shop, the same two scabs were laughing at our militant fight~ ers. After 10 days struggle in. the luosy rain, the boss could not exist any longer and came again to the union.and settled. “Let us look over the first settle ment that was made. The second settlement is entirely different than the previous. When 1 say entirely’ different, don’t think fer a minute that the conditions are better than before. “Instead of the workers getting better conditions, the boss got the benefit of the strike. “A worker is supposed to get $22 a week according to the union scfile. What does he really get~-$18 a week (busboys and dishwashers). This is just the same as in open shops. Com- rades, this is not the only thing wrong in the shop. After such @ compromise to the boss, in the méan time we compromised with thé lousy two scabs. “We can't fool the workers any Johger by promising them imion con- ditions. Comrades, busboys and dish- washers should get union wages which is $22 a week and not $18. A militant worker cannot work with! scabs. | “Comrades, in the past we always | have said to thé workets we make mistakes because we have some right wing leadership, but today we make TRY THE NEW KYMAK Fermented Milk Sold at Your Favorite Restaurant Made by— KYMAK MILK FORA TR BANDAGE es STOOKING go to P. WOLF & CO. INC. 1499 Third Ave.j 70 Avenue A Bet, A € 85 St.) ne 4 wg ina (let Floor) Open Eves 8 p. m,' Open Bred 8 9. th. NEW YORK CITY SPRCIAL LADE ATTENDANT Vhone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant AND ‘THIS 1S THE KIND O CROP T'vé BEEN Rais ONLY MoRE So EACH the same mistakes and maybe worse. Today wé cannot put the blame on right wingers because there are none. We speak to the workers to fight for better conditions, but so far we have not done much for the workers to gain better conditions. Only by giv- ing them leaflets and lip service will not get anywhere. We must show the workers deeds. This is the only way we will win over the working class in to the T.U.U.L. revolutionary unions, “Comradely yours,, “LL, DEMAS “H. BLUMBERG “Members of the F.W.LU. and C. P.” PSII ‘The other statement follows: “To the Editor of the Daily Work- er: Six weeks ago I was working in an open shop, the Olympic Cafeteria, | 235 Willis Ave. We worked 12 hours a! day and six and a half days a week. } ‘The boss was firing and hiring as he | pleased. Our wages were for dish- | washets and busboys as low as $16 @ week; we began to speak about it when @ customer told us to join the Food Workers Industtial Union, and will fight. not only against the wage cut, but for an increase of our pay | and shorter hours. We did join the | union, and the next day presented the union demands. The-boss refused and we put on the pieket line. He was forced to sign up with the union. after two hours of picketing. “In this section of the city our shop .is the sécond union. shop, and the boss tried to lock us out. Our union again took the challenge of the boss and we began to picket the shop. After tén days of picketing, we forced him again to sigh with the utiion. We stopped the lock-outhand the wage cut, at the same time. cut the hours fro 112 hours to 10 hoyrs a day; from six and 4 half days a week’ to six, days a wéek, also 4 $2 increase for evéry worker. Of coursé we did not wit all our demands be- | causé we did not, have any other) shops organized in this section. “The bess wanted to keep two scabs on the job. We did compromise and allowed these scabs to stayy on the: job for a week, Today we have all union workers in the shop: “Fellow food workers: Join the Food Workers’ Industrial Union and fight against wage cuts and the six and a half day. week! cS “JOHN OPALIN.” This is the commént on this situa- tion by Mike Obermeier, an. official of the F.WAU.: “Above we have two statements on the same strike situation with an en- tirely different approach. It is true that the union is by ft ofjeans satis- fied with the settlement. It must be admitted that $22 a week for the NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAGT SIDE—BRONK »| EDNA FERBER’S -~NOW= Great Novel 8 ie 8 ee Bape 2 UlMarTon: Aeert Bom HS. xe Radio Picture With FRG cuit px AU Week he Packer & Rail ~ THEATRE 562 BROAD ST. NEWARK, N. J. LITTLE NOW PLAYING! FIRST NEWARK SHOWING THE MARVELOUS SOVIET FILM ADOED ATTRACTION “LO8T GODS” A THRILIANG EXEEBITION OF EXPLORATION IN ANCIENT CARTRACE —Plant This!—_ KAT ITS You J DUMPING THAT SPOILED MY CROPS 4 Se A } Memorial Meeting | Today At 8 P. M. | For Pincus Gordon NEW YORK.—The Paper Plate and Bag Makers Union, Local 107, is call- ing a memorial meeting for Pincus Gordon. The meeting will be in the Grand Mansion Hall, 73 Ludlow St., today at 8 p. m. Gordon was not only a militant fighter in the ranks of the proletar- iat here, but also in Russia, where he was born. He was a member of the Communist Party, and founded the International Labor Defense Branch | in the Bleyer shop where he was) working. He was an active member of the union. All workers are in- vited. 2BRONX CHILDREN HELD FOR MAY Ist BRONX, N. Y.—Forcibly breaking | into the homes of two workers at} 2800 Bronx Partk Fast, police and the principal of a nearby sthool, arrested two children for their part in calling the children to demonstrate on May First, Sol Malinosky and Abe Rosenberg, both 13 years old, were hailed before | the Children’s Court in the Bronx! and sentenced to one week in a re- formatory. ‘The. boys had been among the group of children that had picketed the school and urged the children to join in the May Day. demonstration. They are now out on bail and ef- forts will be made through the I.L.D. to appeal the sentence upon them. { dishwashers would not be our final | aint. However, we must consider these facts: “The first settlement after two | hours’ strike could not be considered | @ settlement; the boss accepted the | demands to stall off and to try to} hire a scab crew. The boss did not | succeed, the workers stood solid. | There followed a lockout-strike of | ten days. “After ten days a settlement. was reached which was accepted by. all the strikers, as you see, the strikers gained 18 hours less work per week and an increase of $2 per week. The Executive Council of the union ac- cepted the compromise settlement after the strikers voted to accept it. ‘The executive had to consider wheth- er the sacrifice involved in keeping on the strike was necessary to the! best advantage of the members in- volved.” | tion as a basis of demanding imme- Sy RYAN WALKER nee Sa BROTHER SOW These feed 14 Youre = ms AND Waren 1. THE CROPS | cpeatesr Tear GRowW ON Youre. SOUL WIL [WHAT «iy CHANGE, D USED To ReworRse [if pace ( OFF THAN You Fee i] pee ae oy y { Try hos fi we 3 — sgner tT AD SAZ, EARTHS x OF THE Sipe Ace <AND SYATE AND (ELECT ile FARMEN. 4AND LORD 0B 2854565 mo DLber : a pe SF OMEN T Mernnrnagy & ACTORS Ardly “4 a VAcwneey # CALL JOBLESS CONFERENCE SUN. Call Issued By Lower! Manhattan Council NEW YORK—A United Front! conference has been called by the | Lower Manhattan Unemployed Council at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St., Sunday, May 10, 1931, at 10 a.m. This conference is to unite the employed and unemployed in the struggle for unemployment insut- ance and immediate <relief. Calls have been sent to over 150 workers’ organizations located between 59th St. and the Battery, which makes up the territory covered by the Lower Manhattan Unemployed Council. At present there are three branchés lo- cated in different neighborhoods of lower Manhattan and each one of these branches is carrying out an ex- tensive house to house canvassing campaign finding out the actual con- ditions of workers families living in their section, and using this informa- diate relief from the city authorities and the other relief agencies. From information gathered by this can- vassing work it is plain that unem- ployment is increasing, that. more families are starving in their homes and are in danger of being evicted and having their gas and electricity shut off. The unemployed branches are organizing the tenants of the neighborhoods into house commit tees, block committees, and tenants’ leagues. The function of these or- ganizations is té fight against the eviction of any unemployed family living on their block, calling rent strikes if necessary; also calling rent strikes if the landlords refuse reduc- tions in rent to the tenants. ‘Carnegie Workers Fight Lay- Of Faker Tries to Force Them; Revolt Starts NEW YORK--The workers at the Hattie Carnegie were warned by the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union when the reactionary union sent them back to work to injure the strike, that their turn would come. Business Agent Greenberg of the lo- cal, a self-appointed dictator, had a meeting with Carnegie, and was told that a few little changes had to be made. These were for; 25 per cent “reorganization” (that means firing a quarter of the workers); 20 per cent wage cut, separation of the sam- ple rooms, piece work; the men to work on wool, suits and ¢oats, and the girls only on silk and soft ma- terials; and everybody to join Local 22, Carnegie offered, out of generosity, to wait for some of the demands, but only to insist now on 25 per cent re- organization, the 20 per cent wage cut, and the separation of the sample rooms (a trick to abolish division of the work). ‘ Greenberg agreed to all this, and ‘asked only for a year’s contract, so he could collect plenty of dues. Greenberg and the employer agreed to begin with ofie shop at a time. Carnegie runs two, and em- ploys over 400, So to divide the workers, Green- berg called a méeting of only those in the 55th St. shop to try and drive them into the new agreement first. ‘The workers who carte to this meeting followed the lead of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industria] , and demanded that the twe shops meet together. The vote wa 100 to 6 to refuse to consider Green The branches also are taking the} berg’s fine scheme except at a joint starving families to the Board. of Estimate and if relief is refused there | the branches organize committees which go to the stores in the neigh- borhoods and get relief for these Starving families. In carrying out this important work it is of the ut- most importance that the employed sh@uld be united with the uném- plo: So all workers organiations get i touch with the Lower Manhat- tan Unemployed Couneil immediate- ly and elect your delegates for this conference and take your place in the struggle for unemployment in- surance and immediate relief. For full political and social rights and self-determination for Negroes! TODAY AND TOMORROW RUSSIAN REPERTOIRE WEEK! MAXIM. GORKY’S “CAIN AND ARTEM” . “Gorky’s Characters Live Again... . Tense, Dynamic, Over powering” —DAILY WORKER. Two Great Soviet ‘ WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY «“A SHANGHAI DOCUMENT” Engrossing/and Dramatic Film of Life in Shang- hai—An Intimate Close-Up of Native Life and _ the Conflicting Cross-Currents. SCAMEO 22 =: N0 42ND STREET and BROADWAY (WIS, 1788) NOW Theatre Gulld Pradnetion —— LAST WEEK ogo fp W. Sind, Tver, 8:40 Mts. Th. & Sat, 2:40 ‘GUILD 6th Av. CIVIC REPERTORY *** Bvénings $:30 506, $1, $160, Mats. Th. & Gat, 2:3 EV4 LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight ..... % CAMILLE Tom, Night . 6. CRADLE SONG Seats in Advance at Box Office and n Hall, 112 W. died Street ‘Vive Star Pinal is eleetric and me SUN A. A, WOOUS Prepedia A new lay by 47th Street West of Broad: T HE SILENT WITNESS **» KAY STROZZI-FORTUNIO BONANOVA MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th, W. of Biway Nivgs. 8:50 Matinees Wed. and Sat,, 2:30 arent eninenne a ee 4430 St SET YORK Bios \LEW AYRES MIGEST SHO: ' i ARTHUK BYRON * Five STAR FINAL CORT THEATRE, Werf of 48th Strect Evenings $359 Mats, Wi . and Gat, 2:30 Li 1 with | in “IRON MAN” With JEAN HARLOW, Don Azpidau and Havana Casino Orch } a) meeting. The first victory is with the rank and file. Rational Vegetarian Restaurant | 199 SECOND AVEN Bet. itth and 13th Strictly Vegetarian Wood | HEALTH FOOD | Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 686s | SOLLIN'S RESTAURANT . 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Cor Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE . APR FLOOR AU Work Wore 0: Mor Re JOREEREOR Gottlieb’s Hardware J THIRD AVENUB KY BuRNeTAN || Meme T4tH 6t— Stoyvesnnt 607. With | sasit | dua | Karle bi) Gidda ot RATHBONE | BEST [LARIMORE ETHEL BARKYMORE THEATRE ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES 8:60. Mutinses Wed. ani sat, ¢:o0|{ Cutlery Our Specialty 7 LIONELL ATWILL —— COCO & BASS INVITE YOU ——PATRONIZE— A Comradely t BARBER SHOP 1500 BOSTON ROAD cong He Nie er renner nee

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