The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 11, 1931, Page 2

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DATLY WORK Mis NEW YORK, THU! RSDAY, J +1; 1931 ay ee Many Organizations Greet Cultural Federation Conference Four more, great proletarian cul- ural organizations in foreign co tries have sent greetings to the con ference that will organize a tion of the proletarian c groups in the New York distri conference, which has been the initiative of the John Reed of American reyo- and artists, will be June 14, at Irving Sunday 5 Street and Irving Place, 10:30 a.m. that sent ational Union, the All- of Proletarian m of Proletar- the Association of Pro- y Writers of of Revo- of Germany, and roletarian THURSDAY Steve Katovis Branch 1.f Movie and € nnish We Committee Workers’ Ex- nen’s Lea: Pxecutive Servi Housewreekers’ Greater New Brotherhood of York I m. arth St for Scottshoro Defenne 30 p.m. 106th tsboro Unite Rookhinders’ Group of T.U.U.1 THURSDAY Open Forum Chelxen Workers Club (Greek Club) the Soviet Ur Workers Ex-Ser Ave, betwee z Brenayille Branch 1:1:D, I ular open & r at Hinsdale and t. ‘The 1400 Bos FRIDAY Workers’ Youth Club at 1492 Madison Harlem Prog. Admission free. Afiair for Defense of Scottsboro Boys in Jamaica fall, 109-26 Union Hall | Dniperstroy, x film sand picture n New York will be shown. follows screen showings. | 4 nly 25 cents, children 10 Seine PSS Alfred Levy Branch LL.D. r Il at 8 p, for boxes. * 8 Banquet es ca m. at s Soto, winner of Workers’ 2336 at 8 p.m music “dancing till late. * FRIDAY Very Interesting Lecture mle Yorkers Club. et, jokiyn. Come your friends Metal Workers Industrial League Important that all members attend membership meeting at 8 p.m. at 16 West 21st St. (top floor) Party To observe the departure of Com- vs. Capitalist Avenue: Press” at 140 eptune SATURDAY _ Huge take Spartakiad Send-oft plac ‘innish ssive Society West 126th St. William Z. Foster will speak. Many athletes who are to depart for Berlin will take part in a fine program. Get tickets in West 15th Street, oe oe Pr “What I Saw im the Soviet Union” Talk by KR. Gonzalez Soto (in Spanish), first Latin-American dele- gate to the May First celebrations in the USSR. Spanish Workers Cen- ter, 1666 Madison Ave., at 8 p.m. * * "¢ Youth Membership Meeting . Sharp at Irving Plaga. back from the Soviet will speak. Union, Vetcherinka, Concert and Ball Arranged by the Ukranian Labor Club Educational Women's Society and Communist Party, unit 11, sec- tion 1, at 8 p.m. at 66-68 East .... Street. Benefit of the Daily Worker. Admission 25e. <2 w Concert and Fentival At 136—15th Street, Brooklyn. Aus- pices 3 and 7 Communist Party, South Brooklyn Section, Benefit Daily Worker. : tas ead Anniversary Banquet and Concert is Saturday evening at the Croton Avenue Camp, on the Hill, Peekskill. All workers invited. Pro- ceeds for the support of the Daily Worker. Be ei tt Banquet by Council No. 14 Working- class Women of Middle Village 1 Fulton St. Middle Village, at Admission 50 cen Daily Worker Concert and Festival SATURDAY, JUNE 13, at 7.30 P. M. at 136 15th STREET, BROOKLYN, N. Y., Auspices: Units: 3 and 7, Sect. 7, Communist Party. Admission 25c, — All Proceeds to the Daily Worker. 524 Plenty of food, ad- | Racine “Socialist” Mayor, Fascist Legion Fight Jobless | McKenna; | the building of socialism in the Five rs, wa. Greetings were previously ceived from the International Un- on of Revolutionary Writers and ists and from the IFA (Federa- on for Workers Culture) of Ger- The federation will include such diverse cultural forms as literature, music, education, dancing, sports, a, cinema, nature-study, Espe- organization New York and vicinity that is doing work in the cultural field should elect two delegates in their names to the John Reed, 102 West “45S New York City. | TO WELCOME MAY Every ranto, etc. in and send treet, | to 5 cents a pound. jburden of the DAY DELEGATES, *repare Strike Paterson Against BRONX BRE AD : STRIKE TODA: Hihg Bread Cost| a PATERSON, N. J. June 10.—A| meeting will be held at the Begin Picketing Shop: | aion Haul, 205 Paterson st,, Pater- | for 5 Cent Bread on Friday, June 12. | es meeting is called for the| BRONX, N. Y.—Under the 1 ation of a widespreed food | ship of the Joint Strike Committee so, emphasizing the higna cost of | ; ad and the fight to be carried on | elected at last night's meetingSa mil- the lowering of the bread price. | itant picketing begins this mornin meeting is called by a committee | against the following bakeries in th 25 elected at the last mass mect- | Bronx: Yoske’s Market, 180th St. anc | ‘NS which was arranged under the Dlinton: Ave: acloinberg’s/ cma ative of the Women’s Councils of | Kruler’s Store, 721 E, 180th St.; | >aterson | Flapon’s Bakery, 738 E. 180th S aS aa | Standard Dairy, 180th St. and Clin- | ton Ave; I. & N, Lunch Room and Bakery, 180th St. and Prospect Ave.; in order to force the bakers to lower the price of bread from 7 and 8 cents WIN STRIKE AT QUILTEX SHOP’ The workers and their wives in the | _ % : gee neighborhood, who are feeling the | Sentence Lewis Stark fern of Wage cits (part time-wark| ©) LO UWOLDRVecday and unemployment are determined to fight against the pro: wh | NEW YORK.—The Quilt Depart- |ment of the Needle Trades Workers TO SOVIET UNION Big Mass Mectine at Irving Plaza on | June 19 NEW YORK.—A rousing welcome | will be given to the May Day Dele- | gation to the Soviet Union by the| workers of New York who are wait- | ing eagerly for the arrival of the de- | gation and their report on their} experiences in the Soviet Union. The | delegates are now on their way back | from the Soviet Union and will ap- | pear for the first time at the mass | meeting of welcome being arranged | for them by the F. S. U. at Irving} Plaza on the 19 of June. All meetings of welcome arranged by separate organizations are being | postponed until after this first greet- | ing when the delegates will report} on what they saw in the Soviet Un- | ion and will bring the greetings of | the Russian workers from the fac- | tories and collective farms of the Soviet Union The delegates will give their im- pressions of the success of the Five Year Plan and the progress of the building of socialism in the Soviet | Union. Their tour took them from | the May First demonstrations in| Leningrad and Moscow to the tim- ber regions of the north, down the | Volga, to great industrial centers in Nijni-Novgorod, Stalingrad, Charkov, Rostov and the Urals. to the collective and Soviet farms, Gigant and others, and te many social institutions for the welfare of the workers in the Oaucasus, the Crimea, etc. The American Workers Delegation is a living link between the American workers and the workers of the Sov- iet Union, and attests the enormous interest and solidarity of the Amer- ican workers in the Soviet Union and | Year Plan. Lodgings for Jersey Delegates Are Need The New Jersey Convention of the | Ratification || Communist | Party will be held at 57 Spring- field Ave., Newark, June 14, of town delegates will Out be here June 13th, All comrades who can put up delegates for one night should get in touch with Harry Silverman, 121 Springfield Ave., Newark, N. J. RUTH BOLAND A® FIPPODROME. n ‘Up F>- Murder” at the Hip- pod:cmethis wiek Lew Ayres, Gene- vieve Tobin, and Prune] Pratt play the chief role THE Ruih Roland of the screen appears in person on the vaudeville bill that | includes the Briants, Walter and Paul; Frank Libuse; Joe and Jane “Stetson; the Christensen Brothers with Wiora Stoney and Mignon Lee; the Forum Boys, and John Monroe with Tom Grant. jare determined to carry on the fight | | until the owners of the bakeries give | Brooklyn, Comrade Julia Poyntz will | ing is arranged by are selling the bread at the same |? ‘das : jel price as years ago, in spite of the |2Mdustrial Union today settled the | facEMeNatithe ‘pHoslotsm $ low. | Sttike of the Quiltex Company, 455 | er at the prese! me than ever be- | Broadway. This settlement is the} | first break In the ranks of the bosses | |from the upper district of the qnilt shops. The bosses are beginning to lize that the strikers are deter- mined to establish a union in the | trade. Settlement of the Quiltex will | no doubt be followed by other set-| |tlements. The announcement of the settlement of this shop at the meet- | |ing of the strikers was received with | | great enthusiasm, Poyntz Back From the! Lewis Stark, one of the ers af the shop of Needleman & ISoviet. Union to Speaks) a anser was entaccato tan eave |Monday on U.S. S. R. | in prison on a framed-up charge of < it the company union and the boss. Af- | NEW YORK.—On Monday, June| ter being sentenced, he sent a mes- 15, at 8 pm. at 1844 Pitkin Avenue, |sage to the other workers to go on} with the picketing, where he will join them as soon as he is out of jail Knitgoods shops are electing dele- | gates for the conference which meets | on June 14 at Irving Plaza. The con- | fore in the last 20 years. The militant worker’: housewives in to their demands. A strike h iquarter was estab- lished at 2109 Arthur Ave., where in- formation and instruction is given out to all concerned. active | speak on life in the Soviet Union. | Comrade Poyntz has just returned from Soviet Russia where she spent two years. An admi charged, with t ceipts go- Terence will hear a report on the ac- ing to the Daily Worker. The meet- | tivities and the planned drive to or- | ganize the trade. In “Women's Wear” on Wednes- | day, June 10 issue, there appeared a statement giving the decision of Judge Gordon Battle, the “impartial | chairman of the dress industry,” in| which he ruled that the workers Councils 7, 16, 20 and 21 New Bronx Jobless Branch Meets Tonite BRONX, N. ¥.—The installation of | 24Ve no right to strike. : a newly organized branch of the Un-| This decision is applied against the employed Council will be held at| Workers of the Senate Dress Com- | 1400 Boston Road, Thursday, June 3 , 264 W. 40th St.; these workers | 11, at 8:30 p. m, with Sam Nesin, 24 gone out on strike because the city secretary, as the chief speaker sa tepaet ey i nena ERG | workers of this shop ha nm on Peatie lg nd tymenniinene Wit: ‘be |strike for the past three weeks de- | spite the orders of the company All unemployed workers are urged / union to return to work without the to be present and aid in the formu-|roinstatement of the chairman. lation of a program of action for im-| when the workers refused to carry mediate relief and against evictions | out the orders of the companh union in the Bronx. lto betray their chairman, other | workers were sent up to replace them. This decision is only another Shoe . and f Leather | chain to bind the dressmakers to the Workers Mc Meet Tonite slavery in the shops. The only way |that the workers can fight against NEW YORK—A 1 meeting of ac-/ such an arbitrary decision is by or- tive members of the Independent | eanizing to fight for union condi- Shoe Workers Union, now the Shoe | tions. The Industrial Unton will sup- and Leather Workers Industrial Un- | port the workers of the Senate Dress | ion, will be held this evening at 16 | Company in continuing the strike for West 21 Street, at 7:30 o'clock. | their just demands. This meeting is of great impor-| Last Monday night. at the meeting tance. The R.LL.U. Resolution on| of the cutters of Local 10, one of the the work of the T-U.U.L. and on po- | workers who had veen thrown off his licies and tactics of the union will| job where he had been employed, | be discussed. All active shoe work- | while the officials permitted the re- ers are urged to attend | maining workers to work on Satur- day, wanted the floor to discuss this . . matter. Immediately the bunch of Trade Union Unity gangsters organized by the machine Council Meets Thurs. |) pounced upon him and he was badly beaten and hurt. ‘The Trade Union Unity Coun- cil will meet today to continue the discussion on the R.LL.U. resolution among other impor- “Nomadie” Travel Film of Northern Europe at Cameo “Nomadie,” depicting Dr. Alexan- der Singelow’s wanderings and ad- ventures of almost a year’s duration through the countries of Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Germany, 1s being shown on the Cameo Theatre screen Friday. With the tant matters. All delegates to the Council should not fail to be present. The Trade Union Unity Coun- cil starts Saturday, June 15, 1931, at 3 p.m., at 16 W. 2ist St. All elected students are to be there on time. camera Dr Siigelow (Special to the Daily Worker.) RACINE, Wisconsin, June 8—In Racine the majority of the workers are unemployed. The J, I, Case Co., since it stopped getting orders from the U. S. 8. R., is almost completely shut down; so is the Nash Motors. For fear of the workers organiz- ing into a strong unemployed move- ment, the Racine bosses have been paying out cash relief and have also been opening flop houses. But this costs too much money. It was neces- sary to work out some other cheaper and more effective method of keep- ing the unemployed from organizing and fighting. Therefore the bosses of Racine put in a “Socialist” mayor. Swoboda, in order to work out these methods. His first action on taking office was to issue cards to all tr leads one from one country to ati- other and trom one adventure to | second cut was too much for | settlement.” | cenefits and in order to better HAT TRIMMERS GIVEN HEAVY CUT Rank and File Calling For Strike NEW YORK CITY.—Hat trimm>-: of Local 7 received a 20 per cen cut which in reality amounted to ¢ 30 per cent cut including extras, The basses Of the factory are trying tc enforce another 10 per cent. ‘The first cut was made possible through the misleadership of thi union. Miss Tietelbaum talked the hot trimmers into believing that if they didn't accept the cut, the man- ufacturers would leave town. The the workers. Miss Tietelbaum saw this and pretended to be with the work- ers by calling a “stoppage pending Thus preventing the workers from getting together in the shop and fighting the cut. The girls were all sent home. The men in the shop are still working. In order to avoid paying strike sell out the workers the Union ignored a motion of rank and file workers to call the strike a strike. The work: ers of Local 7 were sent home until the next meeting and the motion to adopt strike tactics was railroaded off the floor. The rank and file Local 7 are fighting to call the strike a strike | against the wage cuts, and for the | adoption of strike tactcis, and against the misleadership of Miss Tietelbaum. | COLLECT THIS SAT. SUN. FOR DEFENSE) Fight Scottsboro, Pat- erson Frame-Ups NEW YORK.—The councils of the United Council of Working Class Women and the Icor are showing in nine Negro boys in Scottsboro, Ala.., and the five Paterson silk strikers by | participating in the house-to-house collections to raise defense funds that are being held this Saturday | and Sunday, June 13 and 14, by the |New York District of the Interna- tional Labor Defense. The Bronx Unemployed Council and various workers’ clubs will also take part in the collections, With the date set for the execution of the Scottsboro boys, July 10, less than a month away, all defense activities have to be intensified if they are to be saved. Workers who wani to go out col- lecting should report at 9 a.m. Satur- day and Sunday at one of the fel- lowing stations: 257 E. 10th St.; 353 Lenox Ave.; 347 E. Ind St.; 2700 Bronx Park Eas! 1400 Boston Rd.; 131 W. 28th Si 343 E. 84th St.; 799 Broadway, room 410; 1666 Madison Ave; 350 E. 81st St.; 64 W. 22d St.; 569 Prospect Ave.; 185 Forest Ave., Queens; 61 Graham | Ayve., Brooklyn; 135 15th St., Brook- | lyn; 118 Bristol St,, Brooklyn; 524 Vermont St., Brooklyn; 1373 43d St., Brooklyn; 140 Neptune Ave,, Coney Island; 252 Warburton Ave., Yonkers. Soviet Drama Subject Next Lecture at the Workers School, Fri. A lecture on theaters and plays in the Soviet Union will be given at the Workers’ School, 50 E. 13th St., this Friday night, June 12, at 8 p.m., by E. Jacobson. The lecture will include the Moscow Art Theater and its plays, as “Armored Train” and “Squaring the Circle”; the Revolu- tionary Theater and its “Shakhata,” “Man with the Portfolio”; The Trade Union Theater and its “Revolt”; The Myerhold Theater and its “Tech-. nique and Methods.” The “Blue Blouse Movement” will be also dis- cussed. The lecture will contrast the new proletarian culture that is being built up in the Soviet Union with the par- asitic and dying capitalist civiliza- tion. All workers are urged to attend this important and interesting lec- ture. sient workers which would entitle them to @ couple of free meals and a flop, Then the transient was Kicked out of the town. The cards were handed out through the police and anyone who refused to go was jailed for vagrancy. Now this “socialist” is going to put into effect new means of starving the unemployed Racine workers, He follows Hoover's plan of 1929 and calls a conference in order to put jis plans into effect. These are the organizations he invited to be mem- bers of the “socialist” advisory com- mittee (from Racine ‘Times-Call, dune 1): Racine Rotary Club, Ki- wanis Club; Business and Profes- sional Women’s Club; Racine, Co. Medical Association; Ministerial As- sociation; Racine Co. Bar Associa- tion; Independent Business Men's Association; 16th St. Business Men's Association; American Legion; So- cialist Party (1); Association of Com- merce; N. Side Business Men's Asso- ciation; Veterans of Foreign Wars; Trades and Labor Council; Manufac- turers’ Association, and Racine Engi- neers. Every capitalist outfit in town—and not a single representa- tive from those most concerned—the unemployed workers and their Lent CAMP UNITY, CAMP KIN Prepare for the outing to Camp For information about any of these four camps iliesi GO ON YOUR VACATION TO ONE OF OU! Proletarian Camps Information for all four camps can be obtained at 32 Union Square. Room No. 505. — Telephone STuyvesant 9-6332. CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. Boats leave for the camp every day from 42nd Street Ferry Good entertainment—DANCES at the Camp WINGDALE, N. Y. Autos leave every day 11 a. m,, Fridays at 10 a. m, and 6:30 p. m. and Saturday, 9 a, m., and 4 p. m, for the camp. These cars brings you directly t o the camp. CAMP WOCOLONA A return ticket to Camp Wocolona is only $2.60 Take the Erie Railroad. Branches of the I. W. O. The 20th of June (week- All registrations must be in the office a week in advance—Children 2 years of age and over will be accepted. Call Stuyvesant 9-6332 | | | deeds their determination to smash | the promise that the workers would the outrageous frameups against the | |Helps Boss Put Over a | the workers. Bosses to Use Pu site Schools to Spread Religious Poison | NEW YORK.—The reactionary | Board of Education, under Tammany ly control. is now fighting to introduce | eiigious instruction in the schools | by a united front of Jews, Catholics | and Protestants. An “Interfaith ~ LABOR DEFENSE T0 NEW YORK—‘Strikes in the co fields of Western Pennsylvania am tern Kentucky, also in West Vir- | ginia, are rapidly developing into thc most important struggle of labo: ; during the present economic depres- Committee” has | bsen able to “persuade” the District Superintendent of Schools Dr. Wil- liam J. O'Shea that this is a “demo- cratic” right and that Bible instruc- tion in a capitalist democracy is not only right but neces: The same | Sion,” declared J. Louis Engdahl, arguments are used by the bosses who | Seneral secretary of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, who returned control the schools to put over com- pulsory military training. The working class, through the Pioneers, Women’s Councils, Tenants’ Leagues and all other workers’ or- ganizations, must begin a widesprea NEW YORK LL. D. seen fo ae enn =< TNA MONTHS PLAN tent to which the plan has made| | headway may be judged by the fact | Rey | that the State Department of Edu- ‘Challenges Chi cago | to New York City yesterday from cation is willing to give credits to} 7 ; students who take the religious dope | District j course. | NEW YORK.—A challenge to the | | Chicago District to secure 1,000 new APL SEES OUT ese Seas NECKTIE UNION four months’ plan of work adopted 3 the district plenum of the New | York District of the International | Labor Defense, held in Irving Plaza, | 15th St. and Irving Pl. last Sunday. About 50 functionaries of district I. L. D. branches attended the plenum. Included in the membership cam- | paign will be the building of three | | mew English-speaking branches in| Arthur Seigman. Inc., necktie manu- | New York City. | facturer, cut wages and was! The campaign for the Scottsboro double-crossed by the bosses, is now| and Paterson cases was thoroughly suing the firm for $50,000. | discussed and plans made for inten- | sifying the drive. Fearing a strike of the workers! Another campaign that the plenum when the wage-cut was announced | decided to conduct with increased the bosses and their manager, Ru-| energy is the drive for signatures for | amnesty for all political prisoners. dolph Desacarras, hit on a plan to} ‘Furie: 16-98 SMBS GeenGat hue ae capture leadership. Desacarras ar- Imperial Valley and Mooney-Billings ranged for a walkout of the shop, | Week, and this will mark the be- which went into effect on Feb. 6 on’ j ginning of the final amnesty drive. The New York District has a quota be given back their jobs in a body: | o¢ 153.000 signatures in this drive. This so-called temporary lay-off wes Gertrude Ackerman addressed the to serve as the excuse for putting) yienum in the name of the national over the wage-cut. enn of the I, L. D. and Carl Hacker, When the notice of the wage-cut | district secretary, spoke for the dis- was posted in the shop 300 workers | trict. walked out on strike, despite the) The plans of work were further | bosses and the union deal. | elaborated at a meeting of the bur Now the union is sueing the bosses | reau of the New York I. L. D. Mon- because it has been compelled to| day night. The following depart- pay strike benefit of $10 a week to| ments were established: Organiza- The strike is still on| tion Department, Educational Com- and the amount of strike benefit is | mittee, Negro Committee, Labor De- mounting steadily, therefore the move | fender Committee, Ways and Means on the part of the company union to | Committee and Youth Committee. try and collect $50,000 damages from | Sections of the New York District the employers. | will also be established. AMUSEMENTS, SEE SOVIET RUSSIA SMASHING ITS WAY TO SOCIALISTIC SUCCESS AMKINO PRESENTS The 9-Y EAR PLAN RUSSIA'S REMAKING—A Talking Film (In English) “If you want to see a vivid film-talkie exhibition of what is going on Wage Cut NEW YORK.—The United Neck- wear Workers’ New York, which entered into a deal with the Union of to in the Soviet Union, see the Five-Year Plan.” — DAILY WORKER. THEA., 47th) Daily at 2:45 yy at 8:45 CENTRAL (eg teway MATS. Soe to 81.00|/EV ES. soe to $1.50 Incl. Sunday TRUTH IS STRANGER THAN FICTION! The Sound Camera Makes the Dark Continent give up its most amazing and closely guarded secrets. UBANGI A rare and thrilling record of hitherto undiscovered monsters, customs of odd humans and queer beasts. R 42ND STREET «K and BROADWAY (WIS, 1789) ° POPULAR PRICES ee GTERT #n@ SULLIVAN Stor ba ‘GoNDoLIERS” 6th Ave. HIPPODROME «...:: BIGGEST SHOW LN NEW YORK 500 te ‘ete “136 DI “ ey? sets | “Good Bad Girl scioastiane (ol gupp with MAB CLARKE Peintee Street 2 Week « Bes’ Mensay PATIENCE Au" Sat., June 13 2 O'CLOCK P. M. RALLY TO SUPPORT OF STRIKING MINERS Engdahl Reports of Conditions in Strike Area As He Returns to New York hese centers of iarvation Engdahl predicted that the wave ot ‘orism that the coal barons were janning to launch against this working-class uprising against hun- ger would be without precedent in American labor history. Plans will be perfected immediately by the Na- tional Office of the International Labor Defense for giving every pos- sible aid to the coal miners against the threatened persecutions, which are already a reality in Harlan and Beli Counties, in Kentucky, where nearly 100 strikers, including the lo~ cal union officials, are in jail. “Already on Saturday tear gas, which was unknown im the anti- Jabor wars of Homestead, Car- negie, Westmoreland and McKees Rocks, was being used in desperate efforts to break up strikers’ picket lines and demonstrations. “The infamous coal and iron po- lice that the so-called ‘progressive’ governor, Gifford Pinchot, prom- ised to abolish, are on the job evict- ing strikers from company houses, while the noterious Flynn sedition act will surely be brought into ac- tion immediately in the mine ewn- ers’ efforts to crush all strike ac- tivities, especially the holding of meetings and distribution of litera- ture,” said Engdahl. It is significant that the mine struggle agaivs’ | workers are spreading the strike to the Vesta Coal Co., subsidiary of the labor-crushing Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp., that secured through its courts the imprisonment for five years under the Flynn Sedition Act of Peter Muselin, Tom Zima and Sam Resetar. These three labor organ- izers are now serving the second year of these savage sentences in the dun- geons of the Blawnox Workhouse on the outskirts of Pittsburgh. Their release and the demand for the re- peal of the Flynn Sedition Law are in the foreground of the amnesty campaign of the I. L. D. in Pennsyl- vania, especially in the strike zone. MELROSE ETABIAN DAIRY yess BESTAUEANT Comrades Will Always Find = Pleasant to Dine at Ocr Place. 1181 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx (near 174th St, Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—~9149 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bot, 12th and 13th Sta. Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phese University 6865 Phone Stuyvesant 3816 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302°. 12th s¢. New York VEGE-TARY INN BEST VEGETARIAN FOOD MODERN IMPROVEMENTS $3.00 PER DAY—$20,00 PER WEEK P. 0. BOX 50 BERKELEY HEIGHTS, N.J. PHONE FANWOOD 2-7463 Bt Take ferries at 28rd_Mt., Obi sitet sf Sich orate Hoboken, Lackawanna Rallread to Berkeley Heights, New Jersey SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinos Ad Cents WORKERS—. EAT AND DRINI BI AT THE Lowest Pi PRICES ‘hl PURE FOOD LUNCH NORTHEAST Ci 13th ST. & UNIVERSITY Ft Cooperators’ | | | N.Y. DERLAND ‘ Kinderland of all schools and end) ~~ $2.50 per Day 9th YEARLY MORNING - FREIHEIT EXCURSION ON THE LARGE BOAT “City of Kingbury”’ FROM PIER “A” BATTERY to KINCSBURY BEACH Program: REVOLUTIONARY SONGS — DANCING TICKETS at the Pier $1.50; in Advance $1,25.—Tickets sold at the Morning Freiheit Office, 35 East 12th Street, 6th Floor. SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Ratabrook 3215 BRONE, N. B. Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE sth FLOOR All Work Done Under Perse at DR, sonteason’! on Gottlieh’s Hardware 419 THIRD AVENOw Near 14th St. Stuyveeans O0T4 AN winds uf ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty

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