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Calls for Fascist Measures) cnet WASHINGTON power he capitalists Oct. 5.—Greater ds of the leading order to beat back the growing uggles of the workers hunge of the main points asked by a spe- cial committee of the United States Chamber of Commerce, which published its report here on the economic crisis s for the setting up of a “Supreme Economic Council,” to be run by three or five of the lead- ing bankers or other prominent ex- Ploiters Again and again this committee of the United States Chamber of Com- ce declares against unemploy- ment insurance. They propose a e of urance” to be under control of the individual corpora- tions, which would come out of wages, and be a blacklist and a TAMMANY USES “RELIEF” FUNDS FOR GRAFTERS Build Up Machine and Make Jobless Starve NEW YORK— in New York City which is supposed to go for “relief” of the unemployed, is being used to build up the Tam- many grafting political machine, some ght out in a lettter showed. While the letter was. written by James Marshall, chairman of the re- ions of dollars U. S. Chamber of Commerce TE APVENTU means of speeding up the workers. The main concrete proposal of this | organization of the leading bosses is | that the’ big trusts be strengthened nd wage cuts, is one | in order to keep up capitajism whose | is “the | To do this it is} has | proposed that the so-called anti-trust | laws be amended, and that the gov- | |basic principle they admit | desire of profit.” }ernment work more openly with. the | | trusts, aiding their wider formation, | | merging the state power with the big | corporations. This idea, which contains the | germs of fascism, is not a new one. |It was proposed several weeks ago by Gerard Swope, president of the General Electric Co. a Morgan & Co. subsidiary. The U. S. Chamber jof Commerce report endorses the |Swope scheme, and adopts most of | its points. The fact that the scheme | of Swope, who speaks in the name of j ene leading U. S. bankers, is now | j adopted by the U, 8. Chamber ot | | Commerce, which in turn speaks for the most decisive section of the capt- | talists, shows that definite steps are being taken by the bosses in an ef- fort to get out of the crisis. These | steps are for a strong front against unemployment insurance; for more | | wage cuts; for a strengthening of.the fascistization of the government, and the handing over of more disect po- litical power to the leading bankers | who will form an extra-legal group of | three or five to carry through the | capitalist attack. One proposal is that all unem-j} | ployed be registered to see what they | are “fit” for, to see if they are “worthy”, so that the capitalists can | haye greater control on the action | lof the unemployed. | timidating the active members. \| DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER, 6, 1931 - -—— | RES OF BILL WORKER OW WE WILL HELP THE BY CUTTING ‘THe Done | “SOCIALIST” LORD Ramer CureTHe-DoLe —Workers Will Follow Leaders That WILL M ake Him Wort {2 Done iyo WHAT, "WAGE CUTS ARE INENITABLE THe on SAYS TAke C— <= A HES RUANING AGAIN Now if We CAN SALE Bout. |Socialist Spokesmen LAUNDRY BOSSES’ [Soils Sokgemen, THUGS SLUG MEN, Picfuce Valen Racket YORK.—A moving picture rf i | operator writes to the Daily Worker Organization Goes On} |to point out that while McCooey, the ” |Tammany chief who created a scan- Conference Nears dal by putting his son up for judge recently, is attorney for the Sam .. | kaplan racketeers in the Moving Pic- Lantaey: | ture Operators, big socialist party spokesmen have been principal prop- ‘agandists for Kaplan’s crowd. Among | those who have spoken at their meet- NEW YORK.—The laundry bosses are trying to break the Workers’ Union by slugging and in- The chairman of the Organization Com- mittee of the union, L. A. Schrib- The views of the U. 8. Chamber of | |ings are: Norman Thomas, August |Classens, Samuel Seidman, Sam | Beardsley, Jean Coronel and Henry man, from the Active Laundry, has been slugged and afterwards was FUR WORKERS FORGE UNITY Not Through Stetsky, But in Struggle NEW YORK.—Thousands of fur workers gathered in the market yes- terday to discuss the latest develop- ments in the fake unity maneuvers of the Joint Counqil of the Interna- tional Fur Workers, where Stetsky together with his henchman left the “unity conference” refusing to agree to immediate steps for uniting the Ballam to Speak at Newark Shop Gate Meetinsx Wednesday NEWARK, VW. J( Oct. 5.—John J. Ballam, Communist Party can- didate for governor of New Jersey, will speak Wednesday at a shop gate meeting of A. Hollander and | Son, at 143 East Kinney Street. More |than a thousand workers are em- ployed at this plant which is the largest fur shop in the world. This meeting is one of those in Ballam’s election campaign tour in which he is exposing the capitalist candidates | and their fake relief plans. All mil- itant workers should contribute to WORLD CONGRESS OF WIR OCT. 9-15 8 U S. Delegates on Way to Berlin The eight American delegates to | the World Congress of the Workers International Relief, to be held in Berlin on Oct. 9-15, have embarked for Germany. . “ The World Congress is the cele- bration of ten years of existence 6f the International W. I. R. During this ten year period the W. I. R., Romanoft GRaAwD Duke Back IN RUSSIA He DEPRESSION "Wiue Ent By RYAN WALKER |Dress Shop Chairmen, |Actives Meet Thursday NEW YORK—A meeting of dress shop chairmen and delegates and active members will be held at the | office of the union Thursday, right after work to hear a report on the organizational activities of the union, the role of the united front move- ment among the dressmakers, and ; Many other problems confronting | the workers in the shop, All shop chairmen, delegates and active mem- bers are called on to attend. AMUSEMENTS Commerce regarding federal unem-| fired. Many others members of the the election eomn-' fund of the |ployment insurance, follow nearly|union were threatened with like Communist Party to carry on th publican advisory committee of New fur workers in struggle for union York County, who supports Hoover's Jaeger. which was founded on the initiative | policy of starvation for the unem- ployed and graft for-the republican leaders, the fact remains that in the squabble for control of the local spoils the workers get a faint in- sight into what is going on. Marshall's letter was written to Jesse Isidor Straus, chairman of the So-called State Relief Administra- tion. This outfit was appointed by Governor Roosevelt and are supposed to handle a $20,000,000 fund, though this far not one unemployed worker has seen a cent of it Marshal tells of jobs handed .out y to those who could prove they in democratic machine, hungry jobless workers whose es were on the verge of death, were turned away. It is not because Marshall is so worried about the un- employed that he acts. He fears that Roosevelt will use the $20,000,000 in building up his position as presi- dential candidate. Though Marshall's boss outfit does not mind the unem- ployed being robbed, they do not like the Tammany outfit getting a head start in the presidential election under the fakery of handing out un- employment relief. FOSTER SPEAKS the word for word, the opinion recently | expressed by the officials of the/ officials of the American Federation | |of Labor when they met in Vancou- | |ver, B, G. | | ‘WIR CALLS NEW _ MEMBERS’ RALLY Prepare for Hunger | The Workers International Relief, |799 Broadway, which is making 2 | drive to. establish branches in New York City, calls upon all the work- ers who joined the W.LR. on Soli- darity Day and who live in Manhat- tan between 14th and 60th Street, \'to come to a mass meeting which is being held on Wednesday, Oct. 7 at 8:30 in room 202, 108 E, 14th | Street. Workers who live between 14th St. and the Battery are urged to attend | the meeting that will be held on ‘Thursday, Oct. 8 at Manhattan Ly- ceum, 66 E. 4th Street. | More than 800 workers joined the W. I. R. on Solidarity Day. These workers are urged to come to the | meetings that are being called by the treatment. | Just. another hook-up between | Marches This Winter | In the strike against the Active Laundry last week the bosses framed up Some of the strikers and had them | e arrested on fake charges of larceny, | embers of Kaplan's union. and threatened to arrest all the other | LECTURE THURS. | Tammany and the socialists. Many big Tammany men are honorary force longer hours on the drivers. In some laundries the bosses announce that drivers must not quit before 5 | P. m., although drivers usually begin | to work at 6 a. m. and in the be- | ginning of the week they work as late as 9 p. m. ° | In many shops the workers are al- Five Year Plan jready electing delegates to the shop | - |delegates’ conference which the| NEW YORK—Sender Garlin, co- | Laundry Workers’ Union is calling editor of the Labor Defender, who | for October 18, to work out the policy |recently returned from a four and program of the union. The | months’ tour of the Soviet Union and | Laundry Workers’ Union meets every | Germany, will make a vivid contrast | Thursday in Ambassador Hall, which | petween boss terror in the U.S.A. and |is located at 3rd Ave. and Claremont | proletarian triumphs in the Soviet | Parkway. Union in @ lecture. Thursday, Octo- | ber 8, at 8 p.m, at Ambasta aa . 3875 Third Ave. His lecture, w1 Carpenters Aid Fight for Mooney, being given under the auspices of the Bronx Section of the International ‘Elect Delegates to the | | Oct. 11 Conference | Labor Defense, will be illustrated with new pictures, showing the most recent developments of the Five-Year Plan, and with unpublished photos of the capitalist terror in the United States. Garlin is now on a nation-wide Will Show Pictures of| IN NEWARK N.J Must Organize to Fight Wage Cuts William Z. Foster, well known lead- sr of strikes and national Trade Union Unity League secretary, will speak on October 10, Saturday, at 8 p.m. at 90 Ferry St., Newark, N. J. Industrial leaflets for the metal, building trades, textile and unem- ployed workers have been distributed | : for this meeting. Every worker is in- | Cut; ThenLaid Off vited to come and hear Foster, who | za — will speak on T.U.U.M strike strategy,| DULUTH, Minn, Oct. 5—North- on organization and ‘strikes against | West coal dock and the Pittsburgh wage-cuts, on the fight for Unem- | Coal Co. have cut the workers’ wages ployment Insurance and immediate |10 per cent. The workers used to relief for the unemployed workers | 8¢t/50.cents an bour and now they and on the lessons of miners strike. |¢t 45 cents per hour. The condi- Strikes are breaking out against | tions on the docks ate very poor. | w. I. R. for the, purpose of taking |part in the gigantic marches that will soon take place all over the | country, and in the impending strike in the steel industry. The aid and | cooperation of every tember of the W. I. R. is needed. If you are @ mem- ber of the W.LR. do your share. If you are not a member, join up! |Coal Dock Workers in Duluth Get Pay \ihe wave of wage-cuts and speed up | The workers only work from three to Ql over New Jersey. Hosiery workers are striking against a 45 per cent cut, in Paterson, Dover, Irvington and Bloomfield, N. J. The Musteites forced the T.U.U.L, members out of the strike meetings in several places so that Muste policy of “orderly strike and no picketing” can go through smoothly. For the fourth time the building trades workers struck on the Pru- dential Corp. job in Newark against reduction of wages, The T.U.U.L. dis- tributed two leaflets exposing the treacherous role of the A. F. of f, leadership and called upon the 250 workers to take the lead of the strike {nto their own hands. Come early. Admission free.” Aus- pices Trade Union Unity Council of Newark, N. J., 90 Ferry St. WEDNESDAY Workers Dramatic Council, in the Work will meet at 8 p. m irs Center, 35 H. 12th St. All work- irs’ theatre groups should send del- ae ae taates, VRURSDAY Painters Group, T. U. U. 1. will. meet at 1610 Boston Road, Bronx, at 8 p. m. Oct, Sth instead it as had been scheduled, last Wed light | CRA TRA ‘Tremont Workers Club, Will hold its regular membership neeting at 736 ‘Tremont Ave. 8 p. » , All workers are invited ‘to at: tnd. * e * Needle Tradex Athletic Club. will have its first organizational feeting October 8th at tha Indus- six hours a day and some days they don’t work at all. At one time the Northwest Coal Co. employed 15 men on the docks but the bosses lay off the. workers one by one and now there are no men working on the dock. This wage cut also cut the truck drivers 10-per cent. And now the coal car= riers and truck drivers have to load their own truck that the 15 men used to do. the issue?* Health Department says that the “saf” milk. you be robbed. Neither one of them reducing the price, ‘To you workers of New York, and all, are now robbing you. by banning loose milk. does it cost the milk trust which trust as follows: * 1931 Farmer tee Union office, Workers are in- ted to attend, = ee ey ee , ‘ Theré is a great noise about milk. The World-Telegram and the crooked Tammany The milg companies, both the bottled milk trust, led by Borden's and Sreffield, and the loose milk com- panies, ate fighting over which should rob you—that. is the issue between them. But they are agreed that PRICE. Let us se how these milk companies, one And remember the city hall grafters are planning to increase the robbery ‘What does the farmer get for milk? cents a quart for it? Well, don’t take our word for it, but read what a dairy farmer wrote to the N. Y. Times on Sept. 22. He gives the cost per quart to the R.R. Express Cost Delivered NEW YORK.—Local 2090, of the | Brotherhood of Carpenters and Join- ers, affiliated to the American Fed- eration of Labor, has elected two delegates to the mass Mooney-Har- lan-Scottsboro Conference that has been called by the New York District of the International Labor Defense for Sunday, Oct. 11, at 10 a. m. at Irving Plaza, 16th St. and Irving Pl. In electing its delegates, Local 2090 Tepudiated the fake conference of Sept. 24 called by “socialists,” phoney Progressives of the, A. J, Muste camp and renegades from the reyo- lutionary movement. Local 2090 was represented at this conference, at which all I. L. D. delegates were barred Anothr A F. of L. local that has sent in credentials for its delegates is Bakery and Confectionery Workers | Local 22, Yesterday Carl Hacker, secretary of the New York District of the I, L. D, addressed a meeting of hosiery strikers, members of the American Federation of Full Fash- joned Hosiery Workers, in Queens Labor Lyceum, Brooklyn, and ap- pealed to them to elect delegates to the conference. The strikers will yote later on the election of delegates.~ Many shop groups are also send- ing representatives to the confer- ence.. As wide a representation from the shops as possible is desired and Now, workers, N. Y. City, co8ts the trust charge But what is issue is one of Sept. 27. It says says a word about | in New York thi the issue is the | nearly every big are robbed! How much charges you 16 | a quart in bottl . inN.Y. City June ...2.70 cents 0.05 cents 3.2 cents 16 cents in New August .3.50 cents 0.05 cents 4.0 cents | tour and has already spoken in Phila- |delphia, Baltimore, Washington, Bos- ton, Lawrence, Mass., and other cities. Saturday night, October 10, he will speak in Brooklyn at 46 Ten Eyck St., and Sunday night, October 11, at Ir- ving Plaza, 15th St, and Irving Pl. Admission to the lectures is 15 cents. ton Wallace play the leading roles. VOTERS’ CLASS Firsb Voters’ Class meets this | Wednesday and Thursday at 7 p.m., Workers School, second floor, 35 E. 12th St. All who will vote for the first time should come for instruc- tions. The class will be over after Thursday. Workers Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it every group of five workers can send one delegate. The conference will make concrete plans for developing a real mass united front movement that will demand the immediate, un- conditional release of Mooney, the Harlan miners, the nine Negro Scottsboro boys, the five Paterson silk workers framed up on a murder charge, and all other Class, war pri- soners. if milk delivered to the trust in it four cents a quart; why does you sixteen cents for a quart bottle? Again, take the .N. Y. Times story of the cost of milk in other cities, printed in that paper of Sunday, that in Detroit: “The actual cost of bottling the milk is less than © AN EIGHTH OF A CENT.” The New York milk trust uses the same bottling machinery, and undoubtedly it costs the trust no more an it costs in Detroit. In fact, the Borden company has its clutches on the milk of city. And there is a lot of graft in every city on.milk. But see how New York workers In Detroit bottled milk retails for 12 cents a quart! Why is it 16 cents in New York? d In Los Angeles Grade “A” milk retails at 12 cents les. Why is Grade “A” 19 cents in New York and Grade “B” 16 cents? In Boston, only a few hours out of New York, bottled milk is delivered to your doro for 13% cents a quart. Why more in New York? In Philadelphia, just a couple of hours away from New York, bottled milk retails for 11 cents! Why York? In Chicago milk is 13 cents a quart in bottles. But conditions. The Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- trial Union yesterday pointed out that the company union agents re- jected all the proposals for real unity of the workers proposed by the dele- gates elected at the Cooper Union mass meeting. The Industrial Union statement points out that Stetsky ahd his supporters refuse to agree to the proposals to defend the job of every furrier, to elect a committee of 50 for the purpose of organizing a broad unity conference, to carry through the program of struggle adopted by the mass of the workers. To carry this program into effect, @ number of fur shops were declared on strike today for higher. wages and better conditions. This organization campaign of the union will continue throughout ‘the season. aire A Cooper Union mass. meeting of furriers will be held in the near future. 3 WAGE CUTS IN N.J. METAL PLANT Pay Down to $10 and $12 a ‘Week Newark, N. J. Daily Worker: We of the Art Metal Works of Newark have received our third wage cut September 23, We had an aver- age of ten cents per hour slashed of our pay. Many of us work for ten and twelve dollars a week, al- though the highly skilled workers are receiving an average of fifteen dollars a week. This is all that we have to support our families. About five months ago nearly half of us were laid off and a few were taken on again at a very reduced Scale of wages. The speed up is ter- rific, We now have to make five when we used to make four and the head foreman lays a pile of work on us and every few minutes piles a little more on top of it and comes out raving when we can’t finish it. They are demanding more from each worker than the fastest worker in the shop can produce, They are lay- ing off the slower ones one at the time and taking on faster ones as they go along. A few of us workers read the “Daily Worker” but of course it's hard to check up on who reads it since they don’t adyertize the fact: Comradely yours, —A WORKER. price, but that in all of them it 4s Remember that twenty years ago the farmers got just about what they get now from the dealers, but milk delivered in bottles then cost only FIVE or SIX Why the high cost of milk in New CENTS a quart! York today? The reason is GRAFT! ITS! TRUST PRICES! In the last twenty years the Borden Trust has got fat, got the farmers by the throat, gotten its fingers into the Health Department, barred milk out, of New York that might compete a lot of phoney institutions like the tion to connect with Tammany Hall crooks, and pro ceeded to rob both farmers and city workers that buy milk! Why do you pay so much for milk? Because the past Health Commissioner, Harris, for pure milk,” but retired to take den’s at $50,000 a year! Workers, you pay for that! Every time the Milbank Foundation “gives” a few thousand dollars to “charity” or to Department"—you pay for that! Now the present Health Commissioner, Dr. Wynne, | no more for ANY milk than eight cents! ROBBERY! struggle of the umy party of the working class. UNION LEADERS Socialist Lines Up Against Workers At a special membership meeting which was called for Thursday, Octo- ber 1, at Cooper Union, where be- tween 2,500 and 2,800 were present, the. membership of the Sheet Metal Workers Union, Local 28, adopted the unemployed relief plan which was Proposed by the “ways and means committee” for $9 relief per week, for every. unemployed worker. The proposal suggested a 10 per cent assessment on all employed workers Of the union whose scale is $66 a week. Also a 30 per cent as- sessment on the wages of the offi- cials of the union shall be made, whose wages are from $110 to $125, and whose expenses are paid. The Officials of the union opposed this assessment strenuously, but the membership voted over the heads of the officials. The officials judgment was that only 649 voted in favor of the unemployed proposal, and only |139°voted against it. In reality there were over 2,000 who voted for the proposal and less than 100 against for there were no absentions. Tubin, a member of the socialist party and formerly a manager of a bosses’ association of tinmiths and roofers, spoke for 45 minutes against the relief plan. All of the officials and Tubin, who is not an official, voted against unemployment insur- ance. . In the last relief committee which was headed by Tubin the workers got an average relief of $1.50 a week and the members of the committee got $9.05 a week. The officials are now trying to declare the whole meeting at Cooper Union as illegal. The rank and file union members must see to it that the full control of the funds is in the hands of a rank and file committee. Otherwise the leaders who opposed the cuts in the salaries for the fund will use it as a graft fund and not to help the un- employed sheet metal workers. | One way to help the Soviet Union is to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor,” by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. The Price of Milk Must Be Reduced! in Cleveland it is only 10 cents! Why the difference there? And why 16 cents in New York? Remember that in all these other cities, the price is a robber’s under New York. | way or another HOG PROF- to divide up the with it, built up Milbank Founda- started a “fight @ job with Bor- “help the Health OPPOSE RELIEF who plays the game of anybody with the biggest roll, is “investigating” ‘loose milk, with a lot of hand- Picked “scientists” who are also on the payroll in one ban loose milk which retails usually from eight to ten cents a quart, and makes you pay the trust’s price of 16 cents for for bottled milk Grade “B." Workers of New York! Daily Woker has already exposed he lie that the issue is one of “pure” against “impure” milk, Both are bad, But the trust and the city hall crooks want ‘cost New York workers to pay the trust price! Don't stand for it! Join the PARENTS’ LEAKUES that are taking up the fight to reduce the price of best milk, to NO MORE than eight cents a quart! Join the Parents’ Leagues, and if there is none in your neighborhood, forma League in your own neighborhood and write to the Daily Worker which will put you in connection with other Parents’ Leagues for ‘- a city-wide fight to reduce the price of milk! Pay |[ 50 East 18th St. New York Clty of Lenin, has collected and dis- tributed more than $20,000,000 in re- lief activities, and now has more than 10,000,000 members. The different activities of the W. I. R., such as the relief campaigns for the famine-stricken Volga area in 1921, for China, for Japan, for the British miners, for the Gastonia, North Carolina textile strikers, for the German working class during the famine-winter of 1923, have been the biggest international solidarity cam- paigns in the history of the revolu- tionary working class movement. Due to the heroic help of millions of workers, the W. I. R. has carried | through a series of international re- lief campaigns which have assisted thousands of strikes in all countries. At this moment the International W. I. 'R. is mobilizing its forces to send relief to the millions of workers and peasants who are starving in China as a result of the flood and famine. The eight American delegates to the Congress are: Joseph Fisher, representing the National Office of the W. I. R., who will head the dele~ gation and deliver the report, Bella Saltzburg, representing the textile workers, John Vukas and J. Robin- son, elected by the coal miners, M. Krepa, elected by the steel workers, Ed Royce, treasurer.of the W. I. R., and I. Katzowitz, a worker elected by W. I. R. members in Up-state New York. Wm. Parks, Canadian dele- gate to the Congress, accompanied the American delegation. At the conclusion of the World Congress, the delegates will leave for a month’s tour of the Soviet Union. “The Streets of New York” Opens Tonight At 48th Street Lawrence Langner’s New York Repertory Company will open their season this evening at the 48th.Street Theatre with a revival of Dion Boucicault’s old melodrama, “The Streets Of New York.” The chief players are: Dorothy Gish, Rollo Peters, Moffat Johnston, Armina Marshall, Fania Marinoff and Jessi Busley. “The Guest Room,” a comedy. by Arthur Wilmurt, will have its .pre- miere at the Biltmroe Theatre to- night. Helen Lowell, Beverly Sit- greaves, Joan Kenyon and Otto Hulett are the leading players. 53 At the Avon Theatre this evening, Katherine Roberts’ new comedy will have its first Broadway showing. Heming, Reginald Mason, G. P. Huntley, Jr., Richie Ling and Robert Vivian head the cast. of the milk trust. The game is to Don't stand for it! ‘The $45,000,000 a year more that it will oop A Theatre Guild Production y “HE” By" ALFRED SAVOIR Adapted by Chester Erskin W. 52nd. Eves, 8:40 GUILD ys Th. a Rat 2:40 Col. 56-8223 Group Theatre Presents {The House of Connelly By PAUL GREEN Under the Auspices of the Theatre Guild Martin Beck MAE WEST ‘The Constant Sinner’ “As sound and respectable as Belas- co's ‘Luu Belle’”—The Nation. Thoa. 45th W. ROYALE Bie wea eee wid sCAMEONQW 2nd Week on Broadway “EAST of BORNEO” With ROSE HOBART and CHARLES BICKFORL JULIAN WXLIE’S PRODUCTION GOOD COMPANIONS By J. B. Priestley & Edward Kno- block From Priestley’s Famous Novel Company of 120—16 Scenes 44TH ST. THEATRE, W. of Bradway . Matinees Wed. & Sat. 2:30 | Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents Phone Stuyvesant 3816 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES there “all” radicals moet 302 E 12th St. New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant | 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian food MELROSE | D. AIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Al Find It Pleasant to Dine at Oor Place. 1781 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near. 174th St, Station) . PHONE INTERVALE 9—01, Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to Advertising Department The DAILY WORKER