The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 8, 1931, Page 2

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. help crush the revolutionary union. Page Two NL - « DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1931 IN RESISTING AN EVICTION, BKLYN Vicious Landlady Tries to Evict NegroWoman Behind in Her Rent BROOKLYN, N leadership of t and asked in whic! the other tenants d not te house, y house blood-bi ta the throwing and at whateve she pleases. D Negro man and his t 2 o'clock evie 1e rent strike he 2 few da € house, toget League. against any evictions night the Tenants’ League was in- formed that Lulu Bon was to be evieted. By the time the tenants hag gotten together, the furniture, under the supervision of the police had already been carried out. Within € minutes all of the furniture was with the " calling borhood to come to and protect th Ne sooner in frent of the the m house lice arrived—in patrol wagons, vate cars, etc Police Slug Workers. The speaker, Ann Rollins. pulled down and the police began beating her. A young worker in- terfered and was severely beaten by two cops The workers living in the house where the eviction took place tore a chimney apart and threw the bricks Anti-War Confer- ence in the Bronx on July 17th CONVENTIO VCL High Cost of Bread BRONX, N. ¥.—In order to take up the fight against imperialist war preparations, for the demand that the war appropriation shall be turn- ed over to feed the over ten mil unemployed and for the defense of the only workers fatherland, the Union, a United Front Anti- conference will take place in Bronx on Friday, July 17, at 8 at 569 Prospect ‘Ave. conference not organizations will but delegates of many of the shops from the Bronx will be present as well, Definite steps will be taken at this conference to organize anti- committees s many shovs S possible to line work- against the utting and drive of the bosses, which of their war Soviet War the Pp. m. this only the repre- mass be war ers, terrorizing S a pa parcel preparations. START ZINC, LEAD PLANTS. The construction of nts, for the p: two new °! un rece at Vladikavkaz in the Region, U. S. S. R What’s On— Miners’ Relief Affair ass meeting will be held at th Workers’ Club, 16 W. 26th n Motion picture. Volga ja will be shown Two from the Pit urgh on of the workers t Every worker should try to come along and bring his shopmate Workers’ Building Maintenance Union Will between Sec- Membership neetings will be held every second Wednesday in the month at Kruetger Hall for the next three months. Mectings start at & p.m. The next m will be held Aug. 12 and est follow. Come along and ng your shopmate. a ey 4th watown Unemployed ir meeting 7 t. and University Pl oS Steve Katovis Braneb 1.L,D. Will hold an open-air meeting at University Place and i4th St. at 8 p.m. Council 0 p.m. Council | Williamsburg Will have a lecture on the Miners’ Strike at 61 Graham Ave. at 8:30 p.m. at Brooklyn * down upon the policemen. For 15 ee Sat me riends of the Soviet Union t 8 minutes the workers were at Turner, returned delegate from struggling with the police. Ann Soviet Union, will talk at 1844 ol “ ‘i | Pitkin Ave. at 8 p.m. on his Experi- Rollins and Major. the young! ences in the Soviet Union, | worker, were thrown into a store and kept there until more police arrived. ‘Then they were taken away. No sooner were those two workers taken away when all the pent up resentment of the wor broke ‘The workers fought the po- ce, with the result that many were + te the hospital. One more} er was severely beaten and ar- | sied. The police fired six shots 2 an effort to frighten the over| 2,000 workers away. Tae arrested workers se: W are being Feld on the usual frame-up charge cf felonious assault. The workers of | EB ‘ownsville must rally to the sup- % of the four arrested, for Lulu Bonner is also held, and must dem- onstrate to the landlords and city stration the Tenants’ gue and Unemployed Council will on the struggle against evic- and starvation. FOOD WORKERS TO MEET FRIDAY Fight Terror of A.F.L. and Police Allies NEW YORK. — Increased activity ef the Food Workers Industrial Union sffiliated with the TUUL, among the ™ailserably underpaid and overworked food workers in New York has re- suited in an intensification of the Grive of the A. F. of L. local 338 to Three raids on the headquarters ef the F. W. I. U. at 16 W. 2ist St. have been made in the past two days by Tammany detectives, each time} accompanied by Heller, organizer for | the corrupt A. F. of L. local. The excuse offered by the detectives was | that they were searching for the! thugs who last week attacked two or- | ganizers of the A. F. of L. local. The | raids, however, are obviously a ma- neuver intended to intimidate and/| demoralize the members of the revo- lutionary union. | Finding it impossible to crush the F. W. I. U. by obtaining anti-picket- ing injunctions for the bosses, the officials of loca) 338 are causing mem- bers of the F. W. I U, to be ar-| rested on “suspicion”. The revolu- tionary food workers are picked up a@ random, held in jail for a few) days without hail and then placed | under $1,000 or $2,900 bail. The A.| F. of L. fakers hope thus to bring | about the discharge of the arrested | workers for not reporting at their) jobs, and to prevent them from pick- eting. | "The police and courts are willing- ly cooperating with the A. F. of L. tacketeers in this vicious but entire- | ly umsuccessfully attempt to crush | the revolutionary food workers ‘union. ‘The latest example of this con- warfare against the F. W. I . is the arrest of the food worker | day charged with participating in| even though {t ae ae THURSDAY Mass Meeting Unorganised Painters Will be held at 8:30 p.m. at 1400 Boston Road. All painjers invited * * ‘Two Striking Miners From the Pittsburgh Mine area will give an account of life under the rule of bar families at_the Hungarian Workers’ | Club, 350 E. Sist St. at 8 pm. In addition a Soviet film, “From Volge | to Gastonia” will be shown. All workers are urged meeting. to attend this | aye: aor 3 | Scottsboro Case | Will be the topic of a talk by Jo- | seph Brodsky, attorney for the In-! ternational Labor Defense at the meeting of Branch 500 of the L.W.O. at Workers’ Center EB. 12th St, | at 8:30 p.m. Admission free. Steve Katovis Branch 3.L.D. id an open-air meeting at . Seventh St. and Ave. B at 8 p.m. Young Defenders No. 1 } Open-air meeting at i61st St. and Prospect Ave. at 8:30 p.m, oo ep Friends of the Soviet Union All Brighton members must be present at the meeting at 140 Nep. tune Ave. at & p.m. t oestablish a | branch of the F.S.U. Lecture on ‘Hoover's Debt Moratorium and the War.” Ray Ragozin will speak. Membership Meeting Joe Hill Branek I.L.D. At 6:30 p.m, sharp at 132 E. 26th hock ie Workers’ Esperanto Groap Open-air meeting at 8:30 p.m. at the Egyptian Obelisk, Central Park (behind the Metropolitan Art Mu- seum). Discussion on propositions of Manchester Group and Corre- spondence Course. Downtown Youth Branch 405 1.W.0. Meets at 134 E. Seventh St. at 8:30 p.m. Discussion on Miners’ Relief. All welcome. Special Meeting ‘outh Com. 1L.W.0. At 6:30 p.m 32 Union Square, | Room 605 Bronx Workers’ Club Will_meet in their new headquar- ters, 1610 Boston Rd, at 8 p.m, Very important, Bie Bronx Youth Branches 401 and 408 1.W.0. Go to New York University Cam- pus for Goldman Concert. Meet at §:45 p.m. on campus, Downtown Daily Worker Readers’ Clb Will meet at 9 p.m. at Manhattan Lyceu E. Fourth St. Lecture b mond on “Working pitalist Press.” ad- Bi miion free, eh te FRIDAY All Youth Branches 1.W.0. Meet at headquarters at 8 p.m. and proceed to Young Communist League | Convention opening at Central Opera House, 67th §t. and Third Ave, | a, ee Friends of the Soviet Unton — | Ray Ragozin will lead an_open| forum discussion on Hoover's Derby | Plan and War Against the Soviet | Union e, 187th St., near Grand | Coneo Oe “Daily Worker Readers of Harlem” | A meting of all readers at 8 p.m at Finnish Workers’ Hail. 15 W 126th St, Prominent speakers. Daily Worker Readers of the Bronx A conference of all Daily Worker | readers at p.m. at 2700 Bronx Park East, Auditorium; movie, “Volga to Gastonia.” | red. The arrest of Smithline is the | fifth in the past few days by the | AF of L, organizers who parade | throughout the city with the police | arresting any militant food worker they happen to recognize | A general meeting of the member- Smithline, who was arrested yester- ship of the Food Workers Industrial | Uniou has heen called for next Fr- attack on the two A. F. of L. of-|day night to combet the constantly, was proved | increasing | Scottsboro, Ala., Paterson St. | execution of SIXTH NATIONAL OPENS FRIDAY Weinstone, Minerich Speak at Opening A monster greeting for the dele- gates to the Sixth National Conven- tion of the Young Communist League has been arranged for this Friday evening at 8:00 p. m. in Qentral Opera House at 67 Styeet and Third Avenue. This convention. the first in two years, is particulerly important be~- cause it takes place in a year of un- precedented unemployment tion and working class misery gether with all this it falls at a time when the anti-Soviet war prepara- tions are assuming an ever sharper With hundreds of thousands starva- To- form. of young workers thrown out of jobs, lured into the army, na Na- tional Guard to be used as cannon fodder in the coming boss attack pon the Soviet Union, the ta ~ | organizing youth into the Young Communist League and the revolu- tionary trade unions is one of the most important on the order of the day. The convention delegates have al- ready begun to pour in from all sec- tions of the country. Hitch-hiking, riding baggage cars, in battered cards and trucks, they are streaming in to the city for the opening of the con vention that will hammer out the ways and means of organizing the working youth, Negro and white, o! this country. An elaborate program has been ar- ranged to welcome the young work- ers who have travelled hundreds of miles from the north, south and Pa- cific Coast. The Workers’ Labor- atory Theatre will present a play: a pioneer graduation will also be held from the stage. | William Weinstone, who has just returned from the Soviet Union, will address the convention for the Cen- tral Committee of the Communist |Party. Tony Minerich, Nationa] Sec- lretary of the Y. C. L, recently re- leased from jail as a result of his activities in the Ohio mine strike, will sound the keynote ef the con- vention in the speech that will pre- cede the actual business of the meet-) ing. Among the other speakers will |be a representative of the Youth Section of the International Workers | Order. A special delegation of young miners fresh from the picket line | will also be present at the conven- | tion, DEFENSE CONF. IN PATERSON JULY19 PATERSON, July 2—A _ broad united front defense conference, to intensify the campaign to save the victims of two of the most dastardly the Pennsylvania coal | ns.at @ mass meeting arranged | for relief for the miners and their} frame-ups in the history of Ameri- | can labor, the five Paterson textile workers and the nine Negro boys in will be held here Friday, July 10, at 8 p.m, at 205 ‘The conference is be- ing called by the Jersey Sub-District of the New York District of the In- | ternational Labor Defense. All workers’ and sympathetic or- ganizations in Paterson, Negro and white, are urged to send delegates to this conference which is being held on the date originally set for the the Scottsboro boys. This execution has now been stayed as a result of the appeal filed by the Internationa] Labor Defense to the Supreme Court of Alabama. The conference will broaden the move- ment to free these innocent Negro | boys: as well as the five workers whom the Paterson textile bosses are | trying to send to the electric chair | Carl Hacker, district, secretary of |the I. L. D., will be the chief speaker. The steel barens shoot children im the July Labor Defender. 3y6naa Sleve6unua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 801 EAST 4TH STREET (Corner Second Avenue) Tel. Algonquin 7248 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria Pare Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain §80 BROADWAY Near 12th Street 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Lime of STATIONERY av L Re Seomtigine |Demonstration Today lin the Bronx Against NEW YORK. The workers of the Bronx will hold a mass demon- stration today at 180th St. and Pros- Ave. of the aldermanic room, made their pe to foree the bakery own- | s of thet neighborhood to lower WY back to the demonstration and the aplue cet bread’ upon an improvised stand, Thomas Doherty and June Croll told of the contemptuous trickery of the Tam- many aldermen in killing their de- mands, Cries and shouts of indigna- tion and angry arose from the crow Police at this point tried to inter- fere with the speakers, but seeing |the temper of the workers, thought discretion the better part of valor ;and retreated. To March On Aldermen In reply to the insolent refusal of the Tammany administration to even permit the delegation of the more than 800,000 jobless families to present their demands, the Unem- ployed Councils declare it would or-/ ganize picketing and marches on in- dividual aldermen in all boroughs to foree action from them. For this purpose a city wide con- ference will be called the latter part Aitno the strike has been going on or 3 weeks the workers are determ- ned that the price of bread will come down a The winning of the strike in the | Bronx will be enother step forward in the fight to lower the cost of liv- ing. All workers of the Bronx are asked to come and participate in the demonstration at 7:30 p,'m. Pocketbook Rank and File Committee Reports Tonight rs Help Morris White Co. Cut Pay NEW YORK.—A mass meeting of RAISE FUNDS FOR STRIKING MINERS AT WORKERS PARTY. | Two workers in the Bronx raised | pocketbook workers is being called | $20 last week for the miners relief / for today at Irving Plaza Hafl, 15th|*! ® small party which they ar- Street and Irving Place, at 5 o'clock ranged in one of their homes. ‘These | p.m, by the Pocket Book Workers ‘WO Workers, Rose Lefkowitz and | Rank and File Committee. To this |=™ma Alper, realizing that the relief | meeting the Rank and File Commit-|°@mpaign is of the utmost import- | tee elected at the previous Irving |#90¢ for the strike, asked some) Plaza meeting, heki on June 12, will|{tiends to come to their home and submit a report of its activities anq | Wilized this social affair te nee | present plans of action. It will re- dara EERO OF SER ECRSLET Ip: port on how to regist the enforcé- lief. From the sixteen workers pres- ment of the sell-out agreement and °* Fad Agemtgre anode Mee how to organize in the shops for | °S Should use this method for help- Hichiaaian ing the age gy their strike seis 7 . ‘ starvation. It is important not as a ane pegs Hts © hee ag | means for raising relief but for ex- firm of Morris White, which employ- ed over 500 workers, was shut for ae ener ee about six months. Now it has re- pee opened with but 200 workers, fore-| CHICAGO, Ul—The will of John| ing the workers to submit to such |: Lawler, live stock broker, dispos- wage scales as the firm wants. The|!N8 Of an estate of $4,500,000 was union administration has agreed to| Sled yesterday with Clerk Leathe all the wholesale wage cuts. The | © Robin of the Probate Court an workers, however, raised such @ storm |*PProved by Judge Oscar Caplan. \ {CONTINUED FRUM PAGE ONE) of August. ‘Board of Aldermen Motion to Kill Demands of the Jobless s:ooxvw, x va « councils especially will be organized for such marches. 8 DEFENSE MEETS IN CITY JULY 9th Frame-Upi NEW YORK.—Several mass pro- test meetings will be held in New York this Thursday evening as part of the nation-wide demonstrations against the legal lynching of the nine innocent Scottsboro Negro boys. In Harlem, white and Negro work- ers will rally at a mass meeting in St. Luke’s Hall, 125 W. 130th Et. In the Bronx there will be an in- door mass meeting at the Ambassa~ On the same night there will be sev- eral open-air meetings to mobilize the workers of tthe Bronx for the Ambassador Hall meeting. In Brooklyn there will be three meetings. One at 1662 Bergen St. corner Rochester Ave.; one at 61 Graham Ave., and the third at 382 Cumberland St. At all these meetings speakers will give a history of the Scottsboro frame-up and the class significance behind it, and will tell of the efforts to free the boys, initiated by the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and the International Labor Defense and supported by hundreds of or- ganizations and several] million work- ers throughout the country, as well as the workers of the Soviet Union and many workers in Germany and other countries. All workers are urged to turn out in masses on Thursday evening to show their support of the mass fight to save the boys. Stop the legal lynching of the nine Negro children! Smash the bosses’ lynch terror! |, $163 for Miners Jobless, destitute fam-! Brooklyn | ilies, block committees, unemployed night, a collection for relief 'F ig ht Scottsboro! | dor Hall, 172nd.St. and Third Ave. | | | | | | Relief of Carpenters Local 2717 Labor Lyceum, at Monday for the striking miners was taken up on the floor from among the members, and resulted in a donation of $63.05. See- ing this act of working class solid- arity, the union officialdom was forced to contribute $100 from the treasury in an effort to appear as being in the interests of the strikers. BUSINESS SCHOOL DAY AND EVENING Commercial—Secretarial Courses Individual Instruction Open the entire year 14th St., at 2nd Ave. N.Y.C. TOmpkins Square 6-6584 READERS MEETING OF LINDEN, NEW JERSEY Thursday, July 9, 1931 8 P.M, At WORKERS CENTER ST. GEORGE and FIRM 8ST. Roselle, Linden, New Jersey Readers Meeting of Newark ‘Saturday, July 11, 1931. 8 P.M. 5 BELMONT AVE, Newark, New Jersey MOVIE—PROMINENT SPEAKERS Come and *bring your shopmates Cd that the office was forced to call) a shop meeting. As we go to press \the workers are still meeting. The | Rank and File Committee has issued | a circular to the Morris White work- | ers to reject the bosses’ and union | AMUSEMENTS administration proposals and tight | that all workers go back without wage cuts. i At today’s mass meeting the Rank! and File Committee will also re- | |port in detail about this new sell-/ The Picture That Took a A DRAMA OF EVOLUTION CLARENCE THE MYSTERY OF LIFE Million Years to Make! with Explanatory Lecture by BARROW Plaza this Thursday has been post-| poned to July 28, The postponement | ‘has had to be made because of dev- ‘elopments toward a strike in the fur RKO trade in which Gold is active. The Maltese Falcon 8 acts tickets for Thursday will be good for | With Bebe Daniels the meeting on July 23, | ont Bisrede Consen GIVE YOUR ANSWER TO HOO- VER'S PROGRAM OF HUNGER, WAGE CUTS AND PERSECUTION! BEATRICE—CALL OR WRITE AT ONCE. MOTHER IS DYING FOR You, | | The war drums beat, by Joseph | North in the July Labor Defender. “PIRATES OF PENZANCE” “ aft? Eves, 500 to $2. + Thritt” Prices Be. e082, Wet. Mats, 500 to $1.50 ERLANGER THEA. W. 44th Street PEN. 6-7963. Evenings 8:20 (New Modern Air Cooling System) + Wks Bee's ‘IQLANTHE’ SBA75 MUSIC Beginning Tomorrow Night "Patna CONCERTS Phitharmontc-Symphony Orch. Lewisohn Stadinm, Amat. Ave. & Dr. LEO KESSLER Surgeon Dentist the Removal of His Office to 853 BROADWAY Corner 14th St. Rooms 1007-1008 New York City EFFECTIVE JULY tat (B. M. ‘T. Station tm Butiding) Announces Proletaria HOPEWELL JUNCTION, N. Y. — be in office one week in advance of 7 years or over are accepte: 32 Union Square.—Rates Sewers tes Store B. ESECOVER PHARMACIST 459 Stone Ave., Cor. Sutter BROOKLYN, NEW YORK od ? Gottlieh’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUE Near 14th St Stuyvesant 6914 All Kinds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Autos leave from 143 EB. 108rd St. 10 a. m. and 6:30 p. m. and S: for the ™ Au Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant $58 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx For informatien about LIVE IN A— _— We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME , FOOD Fair Prices | A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY Between 12th and 13th Sts VACATION : — Beastiful Mountain Wises GO ON YOUR VACATION TO ONE OF OUR Information for all four camps can be obtained at $2 Union Square. Boom No. 505. — Telephone STuyvesant 9-6332. CAMP KINDERLAND x CAMP UNITY, WINGDALE, The comrades are requested to come on time, in order not to remain behind. CAMP WOCOLONA MONROE, N. Y.—On beautiful Lake Walton--Swimming—Boating, etc. Revolutionary Entertainment. A return ticket to Camp Wocolona is only $2.60 Take the Erie Railroad. CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. Beats leave for the camp every day from 42nd Street Ferry Good entertainment—DANCES at the Camp Call Stuyvesant 9-6832 WORKERS (COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK 2800 BRONX PARK EAST Comradely astmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a brary, athletic director, workroom for ehildren, workers’ clubs and varions cultural activities Tel. Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get. off Allerton Avenue ce ee ee a. m. to Bop. m. n Camps All registrations for children must at 143 East 103rd St.—Children d.—Registration for adults at for adults $17 per week. N. Y. every day at 10 a m., Fridays at jaturday, 9 a. m., and 4 p. m. camp Conductor. | |Movie—From the Volga to Gastonia | out scheme of the officials in the/ SEE! The Birth ef the Harth....a human being with 2 tail | case of the Morris White Shop. Every The nag, the pent ker should come to the meeting. |j/B STRE! ee = CAMEO “eS” |=| Now BEN GOLD LECTURE POSTPONED | 2 WIS, 1789 | The lecture of Ben Gold which| = |was to have been held at Irving GILBERT and SULLIVAN Se" | | | | | } } Es READERS CONFERENCE Friday, July 10, 8 P. M. 569 PROSPECT AVE. Bronx, New York Readers Club—Seetion 5 Units Come and bring your friends JOSEPH R. BRODSKY Attorney for Scottsboro Priyoners peaks on “THE SCOTTSBORO CASE” Thursday, July 9, 8:30 P. M. WORKERS CENTER 35 East 12th St. Reom 301 Admission Free {WO English Speaking Branch Na. 300 Any applicant wishing to join wil! find a doctor ready for examination DOWN TOWN Daily Worker Readers Club ‘Will meet on Thursday, July 9, 1931 | | i} | Lecture will be given by H. Reymond | | | | | 9 P.M. At Manhattan Lyceum 66 EAST FOURTH ST. Working Class Press vs. Capitalist Press HARLEM DAILY WORKER READERS A Meeting of All Readers ‘Friday, July 10,8 P. M. At Finnish Worker's Hall 15 W, 126th St. Prominent speakers and social entertainment ———————————————_— THE BRONX DAILY WORKER READERS A Conference of all D. W. Readers Friday, July 10, 8 P. M. 2700 Bronx Park East Auditorium Movie—“Voiga to Gastonia” Prominent Speakers STATIONERY—CIGARS SODA FOUNTAIN—FAMOUS MALTEDS 103 UNIVERSITY PLACE NEAR 12TH STREET ‘Wardrobe trunk, violin, mando! ie, clarinet, | trumpet, tenuis racket, | radio, $5. S. C., 2011 Morrin Ave, Bronx, Leaving for 8. U. COUPLE—Interested im sharing .om apartment. Call after 7 p. m. Blum, 223 Cypress Ave, 187th St. Broax. es See PSU BOATRIDE ON sain THIS SATURDAY the | Protest Against War | Committee of Woll Matthew Woll and his committee of 100 that are leading the war eru- | Sade against the Soviet Tice wort | be there--pui hundreds ‘wOrKers other friends ef the Sovict j Union wit! be sure to nor am the ‘boat this Saturday, July 1%, fer the |boat-nide, picnic and genera! fubsieo | that is being arranged by Loca) New | York, Friends of the Soviet Union. The boat, City of Keansburg, leaves Saturday at % p.m. from Pier | A at the Battery for Keansburg N. |J. From there all tho tucky boat- | tiders will go to Helvidere Beach, | | at and | which contains, emony other attrac- tions, picnic grounds and bathing | facilities. On the pienic grounds a demonstration against Woil’s com laaies and the whole anti-Soviet | crusade will be held, with recently | Teturned delegates from the Soviet | Union as speakers. An entertain- | ment program will also be presented, ; With drawings and recitations by members of the John Reed Club, Tickets are $1.25 in advance and $1.50 at the boat. Get them at the FS.U,, 799 Broadway, Room 221, or | the Workers’ Bookshop, 50 E. 13th | St. Read the Labor Defender on the Scottsboro ease, | | | Unusual Wholesome Dishes Made of || FRESH VEGETABLES & FRUITS | AFTER THEATRE SPECIAL LUNCH 56e | DINNER 65¢ ARTISTIC SURROUNDINGS QUALITY FOODS | Grufood | WiectauranrsN | 153 West 44th Street | 110 West 40th Street | (East of Broadway) ‘True Food In the Key to Health | Patronize the || Concoops Food Stores} | AND Restaurant 9700 BRONX PARK EAST | | “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” Cooperators’ Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 8215 BRONX, N. ¥. | | | | | i| Intern’l Workers Order || DENTAL DEPARTMENT 5 i 1 UNION SQUARE 8TB FLOOK |] AH Werk Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON Phone Stuyvesant $816 Jobn’s Restaurant | | | |] SPECIALTY: VRALIAN DISHES A place with atm here all” radicals, meet |] 502 EB. 12th St, New York MELROSE DAIRY Yeracnas Comrades Wii Always Find It Pleasant te Dine at Oxr Place. 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 17éth St Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 90149 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bot. 12th and 18th Ste, Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 886s SPEND ‘YOUR VACATION aT w * » ‘The Farm in the Pines” Electric Light, A! Improvements Near M. Lake, R.F.D. Ne, 1. Box 7h. M. OBERKIRCH, Kingetom, N.Y. Advertise Your Union Meetings Bere. For Information Write to | Advertising Department ~ The DAILY WORKER. 50 East 13th St. New York City | || BUTCHERS’ UNION fou SS Labor Tem: 48 East *ith Street PIO geome i : ove

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