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© Page Two “a eee sagan sumpansmersn ts DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1931 Huge Extent of Graft Revenue In ACW Revealed Unwitingly Orlofsky, Notorious Squeals On His Fellow Grafter, Hillman YORK.—A startling expose expenditure of |more than the Hillman clique was adopted by Lo- cal 4, Ss, headed by Orlofsky and Beckerman, notorious racketeers in out of town work, canvas and lin- | ing supplies, now engaged in an in- | tra-clique struggle for the spoils of Amalgamated offices. The re-| solution in part reads | “The right of the G. E, B. of | the A. C. W. to squander $500,000 | of Amalgamated money is now challenged by us. So far, nothing | can be found in the constitution or | the by-laws of the Amalgamated | that gives them the authority to spend this enormous sum of money. These expentlitures were never de- ¢ided upon by the national con- vention. They were never approved by the members of the organiza- | tion at large and it is now a mat- | ter to be seriously considered whe- ther or not the general officers or the members of the finance com- mittee of the G. E. B. cannot be held personally responsible for the expenditure of this enormous sum @f money. The expenditures were im the form of loans made to man- ufacturers. The fact that such loans were invariably accompanied by reduction in wages to the mem- | bers working for the clothing ma- | nufacturers receiving the loans makes the action of the organiza- tion subject to additional criticism.” While trying to utilize Hillman's big scale grafting activities to hide thelr racketeering, Orlofsky and Beckerman fear to tell how and} where this money was gotten, and the part they played in these trans- actions, ‘The vast sum of money that flowed | into the treasury of the company union from dues, special graft for services to the employers, assess- ments, and other revenue was used by Hillman and his machine to not only enrich themselves and aid the bosses financially but to corrupt sec- tions of the workers so that the yoke | of the company union would be ri- | veted tighter about the necks of all men’s clo¢hing workers. Similar graft revenue flowed into | NEW of the $500,000 Made in esolution 4 he | | | the coffers of the Orlofsky-Becker- | man coterie to such an extent that | they threatened to out-racketeer | Hillman. It was the question of the | division of the spoils that the two groups of the company union fell out and are now in a mad scramble to | keep their offices. Meetings called by both groups yesterday indicated that many cut- | ters are yet not fully aware of the role of both misleaders, Hillman and Orlofsky. The big employers in the Manu- facturers Exchange have definitely aligned themselves with Hillman, confident that he would serve them P. F. B. Hold Meeting and Plan An Outing to Hook Mountain ‘The New York City Committee for | the Protection of Foreign Born will | meet tomorrow and Wednesday 8:30 P. M. at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 Fast Fourth Street. The meeting will hear reports on the anti-deportation week drive which ended Saturday. Final plans will also be discussed for the excursion to Hook Mountain which will be held this coming Sun- day, September 5. The excursion will | be held on the steamer Miramara | which will leave from pier A, North River, at 9 A. M. and will return late in the evening. A program of dan- cing, music, games and competitive | such worsening thé conditions of the | tailors and the cutters in the entire PARADE TONIGHT DAY, SEPTEMBER 8 | Open Street Run and in the slogans | precinct, j fused “A permit t6 the International | the | streets. Workers will come en masse | all worker sportsmen to come to the | International Youth Day demonstra- Racketteer, Cornered, better and had the control of the company union. Hillman threatened to discharge those cutters following his rival Orlofsky in a clean-up move to oust Orlofsky within a short, time. At the meeting of the Orlofsky forces Beckerman hinted but did not dare speak openly of the state of af- fairs of the Amalgamated. “Of course there is no one to take care of the caretaker but an examination by an impartial labor committee, with a certified public accountant, would uncover in the general office finances a condition that would shock the country.” Orlofsky, forced to retreat some- what by the superior forces of tre Hillman clique told that only a few weeks Hillman had offered to take him into his group if he (Orlofsky) would submit. “I can produce 20 affidavits that Hyman Blumberg, manager of the New York Joint Board, has within recent weeks offered me the co- managership of the New York Joint Board. I ask Mr. Hillman and Mr. Blumberg whether they offered the post to a crook,” Or- lofsky said. Rank and file members of the cut- ters local have issued a statement branding both cliques as mere rack- eteering groups interested in the booty of the company ution and as industry. The Rank and File Committee of the A. ©. W. has called a mass meet- ing today at Stuyvesant Casino, Sec- ond Avenue and Sth St. to discuss the latest developments and struggle against both A.C.W. cliques. FOR INTL YOUTH (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON Sprints that will take place along the route to arouse the interest in the that the runners will beat on theif backs 6n bands exposing bosses’ sports and rallying worker athletes for the Demonstration of September 8th, International Youth Day. Refuse Permit For Parade ‘The police inspector of the 73rd Brownsville, yesterGay re- THE. ADV ENTURES OF BILL WORKER OALITIONABLE is MADonaLD « You Mesesty Your ates YeorR Hand ne Wf gosy KISSES We te a Cause € Rom, ou) Taste IS Very TRE Same sont of 20kY ABOUT YES We Have Wo WAGE CUTS To-Da: Hovey Hoover Kade A RUSS THE Hand MAT SIGNS, ORDERS for WORKERS Tay Flavor Suits THEA. OF a MATTIC Wo by EPR TATions OF DIKAL Aller Debserwg Doatc q OUN HiLLe@uITT I Kgs Your ay PY Bmenve iB T Hag 5 VCH px RSE OLY Taste nD uh Oy \} ey By RYAN WALKER Se y Wathen Wie SMASH Cartan Bye ITS Kigees our Williamsburgh Jobless Mass Meeting Friday The Williamsburgh Unemployed Council, 61 Graham Ave., Brooklyn, will hold a mass meeting, Friday September 4, at 7:30 p. m. The problems of fighting for im- mediate relief and extending aid to emergency cases and evicted families will be among the questions that will be taken up. SPECTOR SPEAKS IN CITY FRIDAY Will Tell o of Valley Case Frame Up OHIO METAL MEET MAPS OUT FIGHT Steel Workers Gather to Pledge Struggle On Pay Cuts BRIDGEPORT, Ohio, Sept. 2—The second Ohio Valley Conference of the Metal Workers’ Industrial League was held Aug. 30, with 22 delegates representing most of the mills in the valley arriving unanimously at a plan of orfganiztion and struggle against the wage-cuts. The night before the conference about 200 steel workers and miners attended a mass meeting of the M. W. I. L. in Benwood, despite the threat of the Wheeling Steel Co. bosses to fire any worker found at the meeting, and a smaller meeting was held in Wheeling the day be- fore. In Steubenville over 1,500 steel workers, several of them bringing the course of his prison duties. their entire families, braved both| Tt has been the persistent fight cold, drizale and threats of discharge | that the workers of this country, par- in attending a spirited mass meet- | ticularly on the west coast have made ing at the River Front Park ‘hich is responsible for the action Stmday night a smaller crowd at- jof the California bosses in freeing New York workers will greet Com- rade Frank Spector the first of the Imperial Valley prisoners to be re- leased from San Quentin after hav- ing served 13 months of a 42 year sentencs. The greeting will be in the form of a banquet at the Webster Hall, 119 Hast 11th Street, Manhattan. Comrade Spector was in the same prison with Tom Mooney and had oc- casion to ste him there éach day in Youth Day Committee fot a parade scheduléd to be held Friday, Septem- ber 4, in préparation for the main International Youth Day demonstra- tion, September 8 at Rutgers Square. The International Youth Day com- mittee immediate decided upon four open air mass meetings to potest against this refusal and to demand right of the workers to the to the ope nair meetings Friday, September 4, at Rockaway and Du- mont, Bristol and Pitkin, Herzel and Pitkin and Saratoga and Pitkin ‘The Labor Sports Union calls upon tions in masses, to come in uniform to come’ with their organizations and club banners. Bronx Youth Prepare Friday, September 4, all youth or- ganizations in the Bronx, including the Youth Branches of the Interna- tional Workers’ Order, the Young Defenders, the Checkerboard Solid- arity Club, the Spartacus Athletic Club under the leadership of the Young Communist League, will hold ‘ Spector. er See Si ee, But there are seven more workers The steel workers’ conference reg-| in prison there. Seven more workers istered a big step forward since the | who were not freed, but whose sen- last conference about seven weeks | tences, through the pressuré of the before. The time was spent almost | masses of workers, have been low- exclusively discussing organizational | ereq from 42 years to 14 years. methods, organizational plans atid| The fight for the release of these the perspective of struggle. | seven workers must go on. The fight A statement calling for ~ strikes | to free them must be intensified. The against wage-cuts is to be printed | Campaign for their release must be and the steel mills of the valley | Made in every section of the country. flooded with it. Mass meetings will| Help Start the fight in New York be held in those towns where the | bY attending the banquet which will workers demand them. Both the | be held at Webster Hall on Friday printed statement and the mass | night, September 4, begining 8 P. M. metings will popularize the Tri District Conference to be held in tot Davie ORDER ACTIVE IN ELECTION DRIVE) burgh Districts. The most important decisions dealt Mobilize For Special Instructions a demonstration against war at 138th Street and Brook Avenue at 7 p.m. There we will hold a short meeting and then march to Longwood and Prospect Avenues for a huge open air meeting. All workers, young and adult, must come to the demonstration at 138th treet and Brook Ave., and show the sports, ete. will be provided both aboard the ship and at Hook Moun- tain. The cost of a round trip ticket is $1.25. THURSDAY BATHROBE BOSS FIRES ON PICKET Strikers Hold Firm in Their Struggle bosses that we are going to fight Workers B-servicemen’s Leagne Branch No. 1. against the next war. will hold an open-air meeting on Séth Street between Leington and 3rd Ave, at 8 p. m. Members should | leave the hall at 7:30 p.m “DIRIGIBLE” AT HIPPODROME THIS SATURDAY “Dirigible,” which ran for some time on Broadway, will have its first popular price showing at the. Hip- podrome begnining this Saturday. Jack Holt, Ralph Gravés and Fay Wray play the leading roles. The stage acts include: Lander Brothers Wotlgri Raperanto Group. will hate an important member- ship. meeting at the Hungarian Workers Home, 350 East Sist Street if Room 3.. All workers interested in learning Esperanto should attend. Branch 405 Youth Section TWO. has its regular meetings this Thursday, September 3rd at 124 EB. 7th Street, at 8:30 p. m. eure ‘ Printing Workers Industrial Léague. will hold a special membership meeting September 3rd at 7:30 p. m. ih the TUUL building, & Hast 19th St Printing wotgers of all crafts are with Helene Ambrose in a comedy skit; Eddie Deas and his Boston Brownies colored band; George Broadhurst; Charley Tobias and Co.; Bertolino, magician; James Russéll and Harry Armstrong; The Four urged to attend FRIDAY Freinds of the Soviet Union Brownsville Branch will hold an opefi-air meeting at 7:30 p. m. at Pitkin and Bristol Sts hee - Harlem Progressive Youth Club will have 4 meeting at 1492 Mad- fson Avenue, 7:30 p. m, Come and bring your freinds. * ° Robeys. This is the final week of the Gil- beft and Sullivan contingent of the Civic Light Opera Company at the Btlangér Theatre, Next Monday the company will open ifs road tour at Atlantic City. Director Milton Aborn ha sassernbled attother bratich of the organization which will |ifaugufate the Fall and Winter seasoti of light | opera, using Franz Lehat’s operetta, “The Metry Widow" as thé offering ‘The Workers of South Brooklyn Join the South Brooklyn rally for 4th Cl International Youth Day Sept. A parade will start at 10th St. Bth Ave, 7 p. m. and will end Court and Carroll St#, Come on Monday night at Brianger’s with Meer eos Donald Brian in his well-known NEW JPRSHY character of Prince Danilo. Miss Newark Alice MéKensie will sing th part of A as! 1 vill be held by the Miners” Relief Committe at the | “Sonia,” ‘The Lehar work will run Tabor Lyceim, 190 Belmont Ave. at which a report will be given by the committee that went to the W.LR. Convention in Pitteburah. All mem- bers are urged to attend, fot a fortnight, and be sucteeded by the Oscar Strauss opera, “The Onoo- olate Soldier.” ACTIVE MILLINERY WORKERS MEETING TONIGHT A meeting of active milinery work- ers will be held tonight right after Unionville The State Pienic held by the min- ers’ Relief Committee will take place on Sept. 6th, at sinosya Grove, 3! Burnett Avé., instead of August 28rd, as previously stated to, the Workers Calender. Admission cents. Tick- | work, at the ted ot the Unoln, 131 ets which were to be usad 0 cet Ma pen Lop this date, p Re While the administration of New York City is supposedly carrying on @ campaign against gangsterism and racketeering, real rackéteers are go- ing scot free. This dent yes- terday morning when the boss of the Dinoattia Shop of 429 So. 5th Street, Brooklyh, fired two tevolver shots at bathrobe pickets in froné of his shop, ‘The workers called on the police to artest thé boss, but the police, who ate always ready to club and arrest pickets, refissed to arrest the bess, However, the workers of this shop joinéd the ranks of the strikers. The addition of these strikers was greet- ed with great enthusiasm by the bathrobe Workers. The campaign is Spreading out today. A number of shops taken down today have many young workers employed. The de- termination of the strikers has com- pelled a number of new shops to apply for séttlement. The |strikers aré enthusiastic about the results of their campaign and are confident that their campaign will result in the improvement of their conditions and in the organization of the bath- robe trade. KNITGOODS MEMBERSHIP MEETING TONIGHT A membership meeting of knit- goods workers will take place tonight at the office of the Union, 131 Wes 20th Street. A report will be given on the sttike struggles conducted by the Knitgoods Department and also plans for spreading the campagin. All knitgoods workers aré called Bie arene this meeting, with organization, for, with the per- | spective of strike struggle clearly | established, the immediate need is preparation of all forces. NEW YORK—~—The International Workers Order membership has been mobilized to collect signatures thru- out the city this week end. Addi- tional stations will be opened for this purpose. Workers in revolutionary unions, needle, shoe, food, marine, textile and all trades ate urged to tespond to the call and to participate in this week end drive. On Sunday, September 6 — Red Sunday, all workers are called on by the Communist Party, District 2 to report at the following campaign headquarters for special instructions: 143 E. 103 St.; 142 E. 3 St.; 132 E. 26 St.; 301 W. 29 St.; 19 W. 129 St.; 134 E. 7 St.; 151 Clinton St.; 2700 Bronx Park Hast, Bronx; 569 Pros- pect Ave., Bronx; 2061 Bryant Ave., Bronx; 1622 Bathgate Ave., Bronx; 61 Graham Ave., Brooklyn; 1373 43 St. Beklyn; 118 Bristol St. B’klyn; 105 Thatford Ave., B’klyn; 313 Hins- dale St. B'klyn; 412 Sutter Avé., Biklyn; 261 Utica Ave. Brklyn; 48 Bay 28 St., B’klyn; 799 Flushing Ave. B’klyn; 46 Ten Byck St. Bkilyn; 118 Cook St., Biklyn; 1373 43 St., B’klyn; 2006 70 St. Bilyn; 2931 W. 26 St; Bilyn. Queens: 3187 32 St., Astoria, L. I, clo Rosenberg. Yonkers: 252 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, Working class organizations are also Called on to act immediately in the election of delegates to the Ra- tification Mass Congress which takes place on September 18. The enclosed call was issued to all mass organi- zations. Workers organizations are also requested to turn in immediately to the District their lists of commit- tees who wilh be held responsible for ‘Tag Days on September 19 and 20. ‘The meeting of Tag Day Commit- tees will be held on Thursday, Sep- tember 10, at the headquarters of the Party, 35 Bast 12 St. The names of tag day committees ‘should be a? in advance, , ‘ wW ae °F €xpténce HOLD PATERSON MOBILIZATION FOR UNITY DESPITE TERROR (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Communist Party for governor of New Jersey declared that he, in the name of the Communist Party, would participate in the test of the tight of the workers of Paterson to hold open air meeting in the city. Sam Appel, one of the most mili- tant strikers who has been beaten up many times by the police for his militancy, told the workers at the meetings how the NTWU was check- ing up on every shop settled by it to see that the terms of the settle- ment were being maintained. This ig doné by carefully questioning the workers and the bosses. The UTW had started rumors that the settle- ment which the NTWU had made in the Perfect Silk Co. was a fake set- tlement. The NTWU in the course of its régular check up examined every pay check on pay day. Every check and pay-slip was strictly ex- amined and the prices were found to be according to the settlement terms. It was found that a weaver who had worked 38 hours during the week had a pay check of $35. In the Newtex, which was a hard shop to settle because of the stubborn resist- ance of the boss, the winder who be- fore the strike was making only $12 a week is now receiving the full un- fon scale of $20. This winder was present at the meeting and veriffied the statement, Expose UTW Fake Settlement. At thé mass meeting this morning, two workers from the Mayer Shop, of 14 Corland St., told of the fake settlement the AFL had negotiated with the boss. There are 16 weav- ers in the shop in two shifts. These workers who were both members of the NTWU went into the shop on the bosses promise that the AFL would séttle on full prices. After working one and a half days they found they were getting only 2% cents for 38 picks on artificial, which represen- téd a half cent increase whereas the union price is 4 3-4 cents. They went on strike again and came to the NTWU to get the cooperation of the only union which would get a set- tlement and have it kept. A spécial membership meeting of the NTWU is being held Thursday night for the purpose of mobilizing for the Friday unity conference. The new executive will be elected at this meeting which will be held at the Turn Hall at 8 p. m. Committees to Collect Relief. In order to broaden the collection for relief the Workers International Relief is sending a number of com- mitteés of strikers to workers’ organ- igations in Passaic, Plainfield, Sum- mit, and Newark. The WIR asks that all organizations which receive these committees should give them the fullest cooperation so that the funds which are so vital to the con- tinuation of the strike are obtained. Two branches of the International Workers Order have pledged sub- stantial sums from their treasuries and will mobilize their membership for the collection of relief.,The Lod- zer Benevolent Young. Men’s Asso- ciation has pledged to contribfite $25 and to mobilize for the textile relief campaign of the WIR. The Workers International Relief urges all workers’ organizations throughout the country to speed immediat aid to thé Paterson strikers who are now in the seventh week of their strike. The necessity of the relief can be seen from th fact that the city au- thorities are cutting off relief from militant workers. An unemployed worker had been receiving a miser- able three dollars & week from the municipal authorities for maintaining his family of nine. His daughter Was arrested on the picket line and the authorities stopped the three dollars for this family of nine. On the opening of school on Sept. 8 a demonstration will be held before the Board of Education to demand free food and clothing for children of strikers and unemployed workers. In preparation for this demonstration the Young Textile Pioneers are ar- Intern’] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 6TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care ot DR. JOSEPHSON fanring alt @ mass meeting this Satur- day afternoon at the Turn Hall. The strike leaders will speak and there will be a good program of enter- tainment which will be given by the Pioneers. A series of open air meet- ings is also being held to rally the workers and their children for this demonstration. JAIL 4 WORKERS INHOBOKEN ILA Fakera } Fear Sell- Out Exposure Four members of “the Marine Workers Industrial Union were ar- rested this afternoon {n Hoboken at the orders of the misleaders of the International Longshorenten’s Union while distributing leaflets exposing their treachery, Kelly had the four workers from the Marine Workers Industrial Un- ion seized by gangsters. Kelly then whistled for the cops and while they waited for the cops they beat up the workers. The complaint against the worker .was signed by Nolan, the other faker who participated in the Strike breaking last week. The mis- leaders of the ILA are preparing for the sellout of the workers when the agreement runs out at the end of September. The leaflets exposed the role that Kelly and Dolan played in the strike of eight hundred longshoremen at the Holland American docks last week. During this strike Kelly and Nolan had strike breakers brought in to break the strike. .. Jewelry Workers to Discuss Tactics of Unit ed Front shop, 64 West 48th St., are on strike against starvation conditions since Monday and are getting the aid and guidance of the Jewelry Workers In- dustrial Union. The organizer was arrested on the picket line Monday. The Union will have a meeting to- night, Thursday, at 6:30 p. m. at the Labor Temple, 14th St. and 2nd Ave. John Steuben, acting secretary of the ‘Trade Union Unity League will speak on the Paterson Silk Strike and our United Front Tactics. Pocketbook Makers Will Meet Today Prepare for Elections of Union Officers NEW YORK.—A meeting to nomi- nate new officers of the Pocketbook Workers Union will be held today at 5:30 p.m. at Stuyvesant High School, ‘15th St. and First Avenue. The workers under the leadership of their Rank and File Committee have called for these special elctions whn two weeks ago they voted by an overwhelming majority to oust the incumbent right wing-socialist ad- ministration. Warning the workers against the maneuvers of the revived Shiplacoff clique, the Rank and File Committee urged all pocketmakers to support the following demands in putting through elections for a rank and file administration: 1) That all members of the union without exception be allowed to vote and run for office. This includes all unemployed, suspended members, etc. 2) That @ rank and file committee of 25 be elected to supervise the elec- tions. AMUSEMENTS The “A JEW AT WAR” FOLKS THEATRE SECOND AVE. and 12th ST. A Masterpiece of Soviet Cinema Art EVERY DAY—CONTINUOUS FROM 1 P. M. TO MIDNIGHT Jew Helps Russia Build A Stirring Epic of War and Revolution in which the declassed are reborn— Prices: Matinee 25¢ Evening 35¢ and 50c Build a workers correspondence group in your factory, shop or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. EPPODROME °*.,.:: & 434 Bt Lai ae SHOW LN NEW YORE 8% acis | WILL ROGERS Ho’ | “YOUNG AS You FEEL” LOCREORD GREET COMRADE WORKERS! Just Released from San Quentin Prison at the Welcome Banquet FRANK SPECTOR The jewelry workers of Anderson |* 4,000 MASS FOR RELIEF IN RACINE “Socialist” Mayor Is Hard Put to Fool the Jobless RACINE, Wis., Sept. 2.—Four thou-~ sand workers enthusiastically backed thedemands of the Racine Unem- ployed Council to the Common Coun- cil on Tuesday night. Over 1,000 paraded from Lake Front Park, where 3,000 had gathered. The crowd jammed the Council Chambers to support the demands put forward by the Unemployed Council. Among the demands were: A lump sum of cash for immediate relief to all unem- ployed workers and their families; no evictions and free speech and tight of assemblage of all workers. The “Socialist” Mayor, Swoboda, and the council referred the demands to a committee. ‘The workers protested this eva- sion and will continue to organize. The police failed to overawe the speakers, Clark, Nelson, Miller, Raw- lins and Brown. TONIGHT! TONIGHT! J. LOUIS ENGDAHL Will speak on “Role of LL.D. in Defending Class War Prisoners” At 35 East 12th Street At 9 P.M. ADMISSION FREE Auspices—English Speaking Brane': 500, T.W.O. Cooperators’ Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue FRIDAY NIGHT, SEPT. 4th, 8 P. M. WEBSTER HALL, 199 E. 11th Street Comrade Spector brings greetings from the remaining seven Imperial Valley prisoners and from Tom Mooney and many of San Quentin. PROLETRIAN CAMPS MAKI COME TO WOCOLONA COME TO NITGEDAIGET THEY ARE ALL WITHIN T SATURDAY—9 a. m. to 10 a. m STNDAY—9 a. m. to 10 a m. for information call at other class war prisoners rotting away behind the gray walls Auspices: New York District LL.D. RED FRONT OUR BATTLE IS GREAT, OUR FIGHTING IS VITAL PROLETARIAN CULTURE, SPORT AND RECITAL TEACH US TO FIGHT WITH A one COME TO UNITY AND KINDERLAND— Automobiles leave for Camp Unity every day 9 to 10 a.m. and 2:30 pm. from 143 E. 103rd St, FRIDAY—9 to 10 a. m, and 6 p. m. We also take passengers to Kinderland Headquarters for Children—143 E. 103rd St. 32 UNION SQUARE, ROOM 505, TEL. STuy. 9-6332 ADMISSION 35c E US READY AND STRONG HE REACH OF YOUR HAND ~ and 5 p.m the office of all 4 camps Estabrook $215 BRONX, N. 4. MELROSE DAIRY Y&GrraRian RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th st. Station) PELEPHONE INTERVALE 9~0149 Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. - New York SOLLIN RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET © Rational Vegetarian - Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, itth and 18th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian food sUNITED RESTAURANT OPEN ALL NIGHT 110 Avenue A Near 7th New York City Imperial Barber Shop J. DIAZ, Prop. 1800 SEVENTH AV: Bet. 114th and 115th Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For tmformation Write to Advertising Department The DAILY WORKER 50 Bast 13th St. New York City