The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 23, 1931, Page 2

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ee Page Fro i WORKERS SCHOOL OPENS MONDAY Registration Extended to May 29th NEW YORK.—The Summer Term of the Workers. School, 50 E. 13th St., will open Monday, May 25th. Many have registered for | the vital courses given. Only asmail number of vacancies are open for registration which has been extend- ed for a few days due to the in- creasing requests from the workers workers who did not have the chance to register in time. Workers who haven't registered must do so not later than May 29th For the Summer Term, the policy of concentration has been adopted by the Workers School. Only the most vital courses are given and every class is assured to receive suf- ficient attention from the School Administration and the instructor. Self-study groups will be formed with the personal cooperation and supervision: of the instructors. Stu- dent activities will be carried on with new facilities. What's On— * SATURDAY Middle Bronx Workers Club At 1622 Rathgate Ave. Bronx, will have a concert and dance at 8.30 p.m, for the benefit of a sick com- rade. All are asked to come. Third Avenue and Claremont P’kway Sta. er aaa Downtown Youth Branch IWO Dance in preparation for National Youth Day at 134 E. Seventh St. Admission 25c, a, ae House Party Arranged by the Communist Party, Unit 3, Section 5 at 8 p. m. at 2700 Bronx Park, East, Apt. W-61. elie. Dance, At the 1x0 Brooks Bd. ILD panish Workers Center, 1666 Madison Ave. Proceeds to go to the International Labor Defense Scottsboro Fund. ry * « Concert and Dance Given by the East Side Workers Club, 196°. Bway. ry All invited. * National” Youth Day Dance At 136 15th St., Brooklyn, will be given under the joint auspices of the Young Communist League, Unit 3, Brooklyn, Youth branches, IWO, the KT. Club and thg Red Darts ‘at § m. Snappy band and lots of fun, Kamission 2c. eo # Concert and Dance $ Given by Women's Council No. 24 at 1645 Grand Concourse, entrance on Mt. Eden Ave. Proceeds, Morning Freiheit. ee MO Concert and Dance Given by the Hinsdale Workers Youth Club, 313 Hinsdale St. Bklyn, ‘8 Boro-Park Ella May Wiggins Br. ILD Will give a concert and dance at & p.m. at 1373 43rd St, Brooklyn. Good program followed by a vetcher- inka and dance. Admission 25c. * “Teor” Concert Annual Concert at Town Hall, 43rd St, and Broadway. Proceeds to Jew- ish colonists in Bifo-Bidjan, U.S.S.R. tore 8 Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League Hold en open air meeting at 7th St. and Avenue B. See National Youth Day Dance Given by the Young Communist League, Young Defenders and Youth Branches IWO will take place at 569 Prospect Ave: Tickets 35c. in ad- vance and 50c,.at-door. Proceeds to National outh ‘Day. ose © Young. Defenders ‘Weekly class on “Defense” will take place at Lawyer Taub’s office, ILD, 799 Broadway. All invited. ed, ES International Workers Order Roumanian Branch 522 will give an entertainment and dance at the Czechoslovak Workers Home, 347 E. Tind St. Admission 50c. Halls open at 8 p.m, erie oe Unemployed Council At 27 E. Four. St. is going to hold a mass gas 3 at 3 p. m. The Paerson, N. J., defenders will speak, All workers, employed and unem- ployed. are invited to com. Crapo 8 Lectare At Workers School At 35 EB. 12th St. at 3 p, m. “Soviet Writers.” Cie eae ‘Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League Branch 2 Will _hold.an open air meeting at 125th St. and Fifth Avenue, 8 p.m. & iho # Party and Dance Given by Unit 14, Section 2, C. P. at 2109 Arthur Ave, corner 1880th St. Adm. 25c. . . Down Town Youth Branch IWO Supported by the down town units of the Young Communist League has arranged a dance for National Youth Day at 184 E. Seventh St. Adm. 2ic. Spring Dance Given by the Young Communist League at Belmont Hall, 661 EB. 183rd St, corner Belmont Ave. at 8.30 p.m. Adm. 35c. CP seek a) Gala Dance for Nat'l Youth Day Given by the Young Liberators, Young Communist League and the Harlem Prog. Youth Club will take place at 1492 Madison Ave. Adm. 38c. in advan 4 0c, at door. Banquet of Scottsboro Nine will given by the Brownsville Branch, ILD at § p, m. at 118 Bristol St. Adm. bart ea. National Youth Day Dance Given by the United Front Youth Committee will be held at 136-16th St. at 8 p.m * SUNDAY Open Membership Meeting, FSU Brighton Beach Branch, interest- ing speaker, All welcome. 140 Nep- tune Ave, 8\p.m. ee ing Defenders win nol their membership at 5 Pp. m. at 1400 Boston Rd. This will -be followed by a dance at which new members of Branch 4 will be installed," All branches and sym- pathizers are invited. pete tear nquet Given by the Brownsville Branch ILD at 6p. m.at Jewish Workers Culture Club at 118 Bristol St.. N. Y. Adm, 25c. Proceeds to ILD Scotts- boro Defens: “ * East Side Workers Club All members and sympathizers are urged to come and go out from house, to house with Daily Workers and Morning Fretheit. * * * May Festival and Concert Given by Unit. 26, Section 5, munist Part, ate m. at Com- 173rd St, Admission 25c, ee “Crista aad War Dancer” A very. interesting lecture will te given at the Mepieton Workers’ Club, 1684-66th St. Brookly seit amet 9 The Thenten anid the Class Strngete” Will be the subject of # telk hv ¢ ember of the Workers Laboratory ‘Joint Conbeemnes of Womens Work Direc- tors On May 23-24 onference and Wor! of women’s ig Woman | Work director agents, from districts 1, 2, 3, 15 will be held in New York City, Saturday and Sunday, May 23 and 24. Al rn ctive in women’s work in New York District, Section, | and units will take part in this con- | ference. | The n of the cor jis the f wage cui |nigh cost of living, Scottsboro, and |The Working Woman drive | A theatre party will take place on Friday, May to which all com- rades are invited. The show is one of the best comedies on Broadway. The proceeds of the theatre’ party will go towards the support of The Working Woman. If you want a good time don’t miss goi For information about the theatre party get in touch with the Workers Bookshop, 50 East 13th Street The Conference will be held at the Workers Center, 50 East 13th St., and will open at 2 p. m. All dele- gates should come to the office of the Working Woman, 50 East 13 St., 9th floor, Room 905, for further in- formation. SUPPORT NATL. YOUTH DAY TUUL and ILD In Call to Young Workers sued last night by the Trade Union Unity League and the International Labor Defense in support of the plan for a National Youth Day on May 30 and 31. The statement by the T. U. U. L. declares: The call for the first Youth Day in this country should receive the support of all young workers. The young workers in in- dustry, hard hit by the crisis, are beginning to look more and more towards revolutionary leadership in the struggle against the bosses. Over 2 million young workers out of work, and millions more working under speed-up systems are the “op- portunities” offered to the American youth. But the young workers are beginning to resist the drive of the capitalist class on their standards of living. Proof’ of this lies in the leading part that they have and are Playing in many of the strikes that are breaking out in answer to the wage-cutting policy of the bosses. The Trade Union Unity League supports the call for a National Youth Day as a day of mobilization of the working youth for a struggle for unemployment relief and insur- ance, and against wage-cuts. The national office of the I. L. D. issued the following statement: The International Labor Defense heartily endorses the plan for a Na- tional Youth Day to be held on May 30 and 31, These days must be days of mobilization of young workers for struggle against the bosses’ terror. ‘The legal murder of the nine Ne- gro youths in Scottsboro, which is now being prepared by the ruling class, must arouse the indignation and protest of every young worker. National Youth Day must serve the purpose of making known to the youth of this country the meaning of the Scottsboro case, and organiz- ing them to save the nine boys. As a result of the National Youth Day, the Young Defender branches of the I. L. D. must be built among the young workers, to mobilize them for the defense of the many young class-war prisoners. Collect $23 for Scotts- boro Defense at Farewell Party for 2 Workers NEW YORK.—Despite the fact that many of those present were unemployed, a small group of work- ers, gathefed at a farewell party to two of their comrades who are leav- ing to help build socialism in Soviet Russia, contributed $23 for the de- fense of the Scottsboro boys. The party was given in honor of the two workers, Ziskind and Zag- rades, who are sailing shortly to work in the Soviet Union. The ap- peal for the Scottsboro defense wes made by Hilda Fox who told the story of the Scottsboro frame-up. The money was turned over to the New York District of the Interna- tional Labor Defense. National Theatre at the Brighton Beach Cen- ter, 149 Neptune Ave., at 8.30 p, m, reas, Dre, Together with “Storm Over Asia” will be shown at the Workers’ Co- operative Colony, 2700 Bronx Park East. Showings 4 p.m. Tickets 35c. and 8 p.m, Get off at Allerton Ave. station Lexington Ave. Line, IRT. O55 ws Hike to City Islan By the students of Wor We meet at Pelham Bay 10 a.m, Bring bathing suit and food. Good sports program arranged. Bring griends.s ‘8 School. ation at ee, Young Defenders No. 3 and Steve Katovis Br. ILD Hike to Pelham Bay Park. Meet at 257 BE. Tenth St. at 9 a. m, sharp. Boxing, baseball and discussion, Dance At Spanish Workers Center At 1666 Madison Ave. Benefit of Center. Adm. 40¢, free. Good music, refreshme In Defense of the Seotishore Nine And all class war prisoners the Russian Mutual Ald Society has call- ed wv mass meeting to take place Workers Center, r oh fot floor at Enalish, Polish, Ukrainian and sian, i NEW YORK.—Statements were is- 25 PER CENT CUT MENACES WAITERS “Forward” Supports Bosses’ Association NEW YORK. — The restaurant owners of greater New Y have formed an association to cut wages, and with the Yellow Soct ish Daily Forward” suppo association, have served notice of a 25 per cent slash. The association has broken the contract with Local 1, of the A, F. of L. waiters’ union and is preparing a lockout for 2,000 workers. At the Central Trades and Labor Council meeting y night, the delegate of Loc these facts. He pointed out ha when the Greater New York Restaurant Own- ers Association was formed at a meeting in Mecca Temple about a month ago, Mr. Schaeffer the “La- of the Forward wrote such a glowing and enthusiastic ac- count of the new association that only a protest from Local 1 got it a little modified, and the delegate bor Editor” stated that the Forward still s ports the bosses’ association even now Ww the wage cutting program is openly decreed The association broke off lengthy negotiations with the offi- cials of Local 1 a day and threatened a lockout. ‘The waiters’ delegate’s only pro- posal to the Central Trades was that all union men should see that the waiter who serves them has a union button on his coat. As soon as he said that, the Uni- ted Garment Workers delegate got up and declared that the union but- ton should be on a coat with a union label in it. (The U. G. W. ts a “union” without membership which makes a racket of selling the labels). Then the A. F. of L. Laundry Workers delegate rose, and declared in impassioned terms that the label | must be printed with laundry ink. And in this comedy of buttons and labels, the fact that some 2,000 vork- ers are going to get a 25 per cent wage cut was entirely overlooked. These workers should take things in their own hands, elect their rank and file strike committee, and get ready for a terrific struggle. PROTEST LEGAL LYNCHING TODAY Boro Hall U. C. Calls Demonstration or so ago BROOKLYN.—The Borough. Hall Unemployed Council will hold a big rally and demonstration today in de- fense of the nine innocent Scotts- boro Negro boys framed up on a fake charge of raping two notorious white prostitutes and sentenced to burn in the electric chair on July 10. All employed and unemployed workers are urged to participate in today’s demonstration which will begin at 10 a. m. The council will hold daily meet- ings in front of the strike-breaking State Labor Faking Agency at John- son and Jay Sts. Needle Industrial Union of Canada in Convention, Toronto The Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union of U. S. is sending a fraternal delegate to the convention of the Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union of Canada. This con- vention will be held in Toronto, May 22, It is to be opened with a mass meeting Friday, and will last two days. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX JEFFE: 4 7 JEFFERWOsi —-Now-— RKO AcTSsS Doors Open Daily at 9:45 A. M. Spec. Early Bird’ price ZC! Except Sun., Hol. | Lillian Roth Teck Murdock and Co. Harry Foster Welch ‘Tracey&Vanett hs ih TONITE AT 8 P. M. First Showing of New York May Day Demonstration and “Old and New” A SOVIET FILM |dress the 57 student |the National Training School in DAILY WORKER, IL SU TAG DAYS TODAY AND SUN. inds to Send Delega- tion to Spartakiade F NEW YORK. — The Eastern Dis- trict of the Labor Sports Union has Saturday and Sunday, 23 and 24 as Spartakiade Tag . On May 30 and 31, National Youth Days, the district elimination meets take place. On. May 30 the boxing elimination will be held in Passaic, N. J., at 8:00 p.m. On the 31st the Track and field meet will be held at Ulmer: Park, Brooklyn, | N. Y. Collection stations are situated at: Bronx, Spartacus A. C., 875 West- chester Ave., Prospect Workers, 830 Westchester Ave., Vanguard Com- munity Center, 2800 Bronx Park E., Harlem: Vesa A. C., 15 W. 126 St., Harlem Progressive, 1492 Madison Avenue. Lower Manhattan: L. S. U., 2 W. 15 Street, Room 309, Manhattan Ly- ceum, 66 E. 4 Street, Red Spark A. C., 380 Grand St., East Side Work- ers, 91 E, Broadway. Brooklyn: Kaytee A. C., 764—40 St., Williamsburg A. C., 61 Graham Ave., East New York, 313 Hinsdale St., Brownsville Y.C., 122 Osborn Street, Boro Park W. C., 1373—43rd St. Workers School Graduates 57 Wed. Foster to Address the Students NEW YORK.—Next Wednesday evening, May 27th, at 8 p. m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St., Wm. Z. Foster, secretary of the Trade Union Unjty League, will ad- graduates of na send-off mass meeting and concert arranged for the occasion. This is the largest student body to be graduated at one time. After an intensive course of preparation for the class struggle, the students leave equipped better than ever be- fore for the battle ahead with the enemy in every form, including the Musteites and Lovestone renegades. The program for May 27th in- cludes a splendid string concert, the WIR chorus as well as dancing at the close of the evening. The tickets have been on sale only a short time but already the reports indicate the hall will be packed to capacity. Units of the Communist Party sold $120 worth of tickets in one night and brought in the cash. Similarly the branches of the TWO have ordered. 250 tickets. All working class organ- izations are urged to purchase ad- mission in advance for their mem- bership as there are only a few days remaining before the event. Tickets are on sale at the Workers Book- shop and Workers School, 50 East 13th St. GIVE YOUR ANSWER TO HOO- VER'S PROGRAM OF HUNGER, tW YORK, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1931 eee Pioneer Field Day Saturday, May 23 City Park, B’klyn BROOKLYN, N. Y.—After some negotiations with the Park Commis- sioner of Brooklyn, the Young Pio- neers of Boro Hall and vicinity se- cured a permit to hold the first Pio- need Field Day, this year at the City Park, Borough Hall, Brooklyn, Sat- urday, May 23 at 1 p. m. There will be numerous competi- tions between the Pioneer groups of Boro Hall, Williamsburg, Greenpoint and Red Hook. The vents cover a number of races, potato, relay and wheel-barrow races, exhibits of cal- esthenics, a punch-ball tournament and all sorts of competitive sports. Here is a chance for the workers of Brooklyn to see the Pioneers in action. Every worker of Brooklyn should gather all his kinds and the neighbors’ kids and take the whole family down to City Park, Borough Hall for one big free show. There will be no admission charge. Middle Village Bread Strike Won Mass Picketing and Courage Does It NEW YORK.—The bread strike in Middle Village has been won. Wednesday night the bakeries still holding out came to terms. Gershberg of Morton Ave. agrees to sell rolls at 7 cents below the previous price per dozen, bread at 2 cents below, and white twists at 3 cents lower. The other two bakeries cut gro- ceries 5 cents, and reduce bread and white twists as above. In the fight for lower bread prices, the Council of Working Class Wom- en, victors in the recent meat strike, led. They were joined by Branch 46 of the International Workers Order. Both organizations sent pickets from 5 a. m, to 8 p. m. and there were mass picketing demon- strations amounting in several cases to 1,000 to 1,500, mostly housewives. Attacks on Women. ‘The boss bakers used violence, one worker, Sara Lefkowitz, being beaten by a bosses’ wife at the Whaynne and Griffith Ave. bakery. Two were arrested. A committee of 14 who brought the demands were trapped behind closed doors and beaten up. 4 The A. F. L. officials put out propaganda for the bakery owners, by claiming that lower prices would mean lower wages. The working class women were able, however, to prove to the satisfaction of the workers that this was not so, and that there was nothing but the strike kept the bakery owners from charg- ing high for bread already made at low wages. METAL MINE WAGE CUT BOISE, Idaho, May 21. — A 25 cent a day wage cut was put thru today by the Federal Mining, Mecla, and Bunker Hill & Sullivan mining WAGE CUTS AND PERSECUTION! companies. NEW SOVIET FILM! A SON THE A STIRRING DRAMA OF THE EAST—THE STRUGGLE BE- TWEEN MAN AND NATURE— THE OLD WAY AND THE NEW PRODUCED IN THE U. AMUSEMENTS REBUILDING THE EAST! AMKING PRESENTS OF f LAND DEPICTING THE AGE OLD STRUGGLE FOR WATER— A BARREN LAND TRA FORMED BY SOVIET ENGID EERS FOR BENEFIT OF ALL S.S.R. BY SOYUZKINO NOW Hobs D STREET BROADWAY (WIS, 1789) oth Ave. & 43a ot BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORE LEO CARRILLO IN ‘HELL BOUND’ RKO ACTS. 8 “Five Star Final ts tric and alive” —SUN A, H. WOODS Presents ARTHUR BYRON ” Five star FINAL 6TH MONTH CORT THEATRE, West of 48th Street Evenings 8:50 Mats. We ‘ed. and Sat, 2:30 LIVE IN A— . at “MANHATTAN LYCEUM . AUSPICES: WIR and TUUC... 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizationr A new play by @ENKY BERNSTEIN MEL With Basil | Edna | RATHBONE | BEST |LA\ ETREL BARRYMORE THEATRE ith Street West of Broadway We: mi 50, Matine Eves. ana Sat. GILBERT — SULLIVAN | COMIC OPER: SEASON ‘Cant “PINAFORE” ift” Prices Ers. #0 t 2. Wed. “Thrif' Mia."tbe taf. Evlanger’s (Whea.. W. 44 St. Penn, 6-7963 Livenings 8:30 OPENS SEATS ow soREXS GONDOLIERS Star WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have 2 limited number NO INVESTMENT NECESSAR’ 2800 BRONX of 3 and 4 room apartments Y— OPPOSITE BRONX PARK PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a library, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various agricultural activities Tel, Estabrook 8-14 Take Lexington Avenue trai Get off Allerton Avenue 00; Ollinville 2-6972 in to White Plains Road and Officn oven from: 9 a.m. te ® p.m, every day; 9 a.m. to 5 vm. Saturday; 10 am. to 5 pm, Sunday MINOR SPEAKS AT SUNDAY FORUM Scottsboro Pass Topic of Evening The Workers Forum conducted by the Workers School has secured Robert Minor to speak on the vital topic of “The Scottsboro Case” this Friday night, May 22nd, 8 p. m., at the Workers School Auditorium, 35 E. 12th St., second floor. Comrade Robert Minor has ‘studied the case thoroughly. In his lecture he will deal systematically and com- prehensively with the story and sig- nificances of the case. The role of the reactionary leaders of the N. A. A. C. P. (The National Association for the Advancement of the Colored People), an dother bourgeois and petty bourgeois tendencies, the role of the I. L. D. (The International Labor Defense), the tactics of united front from below, the organizational tasks arising from the case, etc., will be thoroughly discussed. In order to fight more vigorously and effectively for the lives of the nine Negro boys who were sentenced ito the electric chair on July 10th, all workers must attend this vital forum. Graduate National Students. On Wednesday evening, May 27th, the National Training School Stu- dents will be granted. A mass meet- ing, concert and dance will be held for the occasion at Manhattan Ly- ceum, 66 East 4th St., at which Wm. Z. Foster will be the main speaker. The admission is, fifty cents. Tickets can be bought at the Workers School and Bookshop, 50 East 13th St. The program includes a String Ensemble, the WIR Chorus and other features. Units of the Communist Party sold $120 in tickets in one night. The IWO reports it will dispose of 250 tonight. Workers’ organizations please take note. Alger New “Impartial Chairman” for Bosses NEW YORK. there is now a new “impartial chairman” in the cloak industry. It is George W. Alger, the lawyer, and he takes office when Ingersoli goes out on June 1. Alger promises to continue the same poli- cies, which means that whenever the grafting cliques in the International Ladies’ Garment Workers decide with ‘the employers for more work for less pay, Alger will give his O. K. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED IN THE “DAILY” TODAY One thousand Bulletins must be sent out today. The Daily Worker Circulation De- partment would appreciate the help of any comrade who has some time to spare today and who can assist us in get- ting out this important ma- terial in connection with the Drive for $25,000. Tale the elevator to the 8th floor, 35 E, 12th St. Fight lynching. Fight deporta- tion of foreign born. Elect dele- gates to your city conference for protection of foreign born. TO THE INHABITANTS OF THE ALLERTON SECTION Buy Your Bakeries In the well-known bakery which is now settled with the Food Workers Industrial Union. You will get the best cakes, rolls and all kinds of breads. Fresh every hour, straight from the oven. G. & G. BAKERY 691 Allerton Avenue onx, New York 4& NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EA1 Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street Kaveaz Restaurant (Formerly Poltava 257 KE. 10th St.) 334 EAST MTH STREET Between Ist and 2nd Aves, Phone: Tompkins Square 6-9132 FRIEND’S The name of quality & Service Delicatessen and Restaurant Lunch 40 cents—Dinner 65 cents 19 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 4th and 5th Sts. AU Comraaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S 658 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Phone: LEHIGB 6343 ‘nternational Barher Shor W. SALA. Prop ™. 2016 Second Avenue, New Yor (het. 108rd @ 104th Star Ladies Robe Onur Specialty Private Beauty Parlor JOBLESS SESSION NEWARK, SUNDAY Forming United Front for Insurance, Relief NEWARK, N. J, May 22.—A call to all workers, organizations to send two delegates each to a united front unemployment conference Sunday at 2p. m, at 90 Ferry St., Newark, has been sent out by the Trade Union Unity League here, “Immediate relief and unemploy- ment insurance can and must be fought for. Discrimination on ac- count of color, age, sex, and nation- ality must be fought. Wage cuts and speed-up must be fought.” Downtown UC Calls Scottsboro Defense Meet for This Sat. NEW YORK.—The Downtown Un- employed Council will hold a Scotts- boro protest mass meeting this Sat- urday afternoon, at 3 o'clock, at 27 East 4th St All unemployed and employed workers are urged to attend, and show their solidarity with the nine Negro youths who are facing the electric chair as the result of a murderous frame-up on a_ fake charge of raping two white prosti- tutes while traveling on a freight train in a desperate hunt for work. Soviet Film “The Old and the New” at the Manhattan Lyceum NEW YORK. — —How the Soviet Union wiped out unemployment’ is ttold in the new film “The Old and the New,” which is being shown this Saturday evening at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th Street. The showing is under the joint auspices of the Workers Interna- tional Relief and the Trade Union Unity Council and the proceeds will go to the children’s camps being or- ganized by the W. I. R. A film of the May Day Demon- stration in New York City will also be shown. TRY THE NEW KYMAK Fermented Milk Sold at Your Favorite Restaurant Made by— KYMAK MILK PRODUCTS CO. We Invite Daily Worker Readers to CHINA GARDEN A HIGH-CLASS CHOW MEIN RESTAURANT Special 35¢ Lunch; 11 a.m—3 p.m. 50¢ Dinner from 4 to 9 p. m CARTH AT ALL HOURS OPEN TILL 2 A, M. 75 SECOND AVE. (Between 4th and 5th Streets) For A Home-Cooked Meal PATRONIZE HELLEN’S RESTAURANT 116 University Place (CORNER TH STREET: We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAPRTERTA 300D WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY . Between 12th and 13th Sts Patronize the Concoops Food’Stores AND Restaurant +2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents SOLLIN’S Regular Dinner 65 Cents The DAILY WORKER | Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. for information Write to Advertising Department 50 Kast 13th St New York City nished. Dunne or Shaw, Stuyvesant 9-8637. YOUR FOOD wil! do you more good if you eat under conditions of QUIET | Protection in have the wit to know 4 are RELATED Restaurant CLEANLINESS \ iat CRUSADER M13 EAST FOURTEENTH ST. > There is Comfort and 4 Eat with people who ‘>| FOOD and HEALTH (SELB-SERVICE) (Near Irving Place) JADE MOUNTAIN American and Chinese Restaurant Open 11 a, m. to 2 a, m. 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Street VEGE-TARY INN BEST VEGETARIAN FOOD MODERN IMPROVEMENTS $3.00 PER DAY—$20.00 PER WEEK P.O. BOX 50 BERKELEY HEIGHTS, N.J. PHONE FANWOOD 2-7463 Rz Take ferries at 23rd_St., Christopher St., Barclay St., or Mudson Tubes to Hoboken, Lackawanna Railroad to Berkeley Heights, New Jersey MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx (near 174th St, Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE o—0149 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE * Phone University 5865 Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES 4 place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York Gotilieb’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUP Near 14tb St. Stuyvesant 6974 All Kinds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Intern’] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON Cooperators’ Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue tabrook 3215 BRONX, N. Pel. ORChard 378% DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Jor. Eldridge St. NEW YuRK 3y6nan Nleve6uuuya DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 BAST 14TH STREET (Corner Second Avenue) Tel. Algonquin 1248 FOR: RENT—Small sunny frontroom telephone, elevator, $5. 94 Hamilton Place. Apt. 6-D 137th St. Bway. Sub. FOR RENT — All or part of two Apartments, furnished or unfur- At 338 East 19th St. Phone: FOR RENT:— PEEKSKILL—Room for season Junet— Oct, ti Atconidating two persens bath, th Y. Central, tow walk 1 mile—-K, L. COHEN, RED No. U- WILL LEAVE THIS councry therefore wish to dispose of all my private aceu- mulated elassical music for violin and at very ‘7th St, hooks ete. VSM, 413 1, Y= Ail Improves at Ith St. gnd Moor, m Apart: VACATION : — Beautiful Mountain Views, quiet resting place, good food, $13.50 weekly—Avanta Farm, Ulster Park, New Yor! )

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