The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 9, 1931, Page 2

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Page Two J aambie and B osses Organize New Fake Union of Riggers NEW YORK.—A rigger writes this est of them it is no longer boys, Lambie. recketeer “organize out expert 5 organized the bosses and Safe Deak Machinery ciation He boasted once: “Your bosses are OPEN CAMPAIGN: POR KENTUCKY STRIKE RELIEF 18,000 Harlan Miners Need Food and Clothes to Carry On Struggle NEW YORK.—Thirty-five hundred blacklisted min Harlan, Ky., are starving and freezing to death. Those who are working work for $1.25 a day, one, two, three days a week. Un- der the c ions they have in the mines only a few pennies with which to buy foo o we find starvation all through Harlan and Bell County Coal fields, whether the miners are unemployed or working. ‘There are 18,000 miners in Harlan, | Ky., who say they can't live any longer without food and clothes, that hey will have to quit work and fight | against the conditions at once. In preparation for the strike a district convention of the onal Min Shirai has been called for Decem avention will set the s from @ letter coal miner ts rowing strike | all over the | Kentucky coal f “Bud, we have been having a 5} it was too late! ‘company-union “exactly,” oh no! offering me # lousy $1,700 to break up {this union.” That probably was only chicken feed. Even the Riggers funds alone netted him over $3,000. The the job! All of us found him out when | So did the workers Paper Box Union, before us. Thursday & “mass meeting | of Riggers” waé called. It was worth paying admission to see! Our bosses called the metting-—they edmitted it! Of course, Lambie and his bunch were there, ing to look innocent w saints. 52 was the lawyer Kli- in _. |banoff, the one who tried to rail- read Johnnie Kudia ‘Yeah, we ured to pay this shvster $2,000 a year, but the bosses boughs him over. We dicn’t know thit right away, neither did Johnnie Ku ila, but the Intera~ | tional Labor Defense and the Trans- portation Workers League did. “But to continue—the bosses got up and spoke — “Times are bad — Kraislovsky is making it worse by underbidding or contract work.” They want us riggers to help them out~ no, they did not say it just that way —but they actuslly said they want us riggers to have a union and they | are even anxious to finance it. About 30 of us head them repeat it and their heart-breaking tales. They even admitted breaking us up (through Lambie) last year and confessed how sorry they were for doing it. Also the traitorous part Kraislovsky play- ed against them shortly after. Hence this “new” union in the hopes of us- ing it against Kraislovsky. Not a “The following is the Mst of the bosses presént who pledged support: Academy Trucking Co., Jacob Good- man, Lederman Trucking, Sigman ‘ucking, New York Rigging, A. Katz, {. & M. Trucking, Benny Brown Trucking, Jerry O’Connel, Dave Gut- tenberg & Bros. and several others. “About $15 in cash was collected which was hastily pocketed by the al swindler Klibanoff, much to the disgust of Bill Masek. You know this | robber Masek. He is now the treas- urer of this bosses’ “union,” the same Nhs he was in the last one. This poor | fellow didn’t profit so much before pretty touzh time. We haven't been getting any thi hardly at Wal- | but they say they are ‘ng to do better, Bud. 1 think th need pretty lins Creek, 1 Il be a strike | Of 0 We sure had | 4 fine meeting Wednesday at Wal- | Comrade Rorfch was Things Is looking pretty lina Croek. with us. zood here about, The men are cominy out when they are called. | They tell me they will come. 1 m trying te get all J can lined e 3.00 bl raost matlitant the best fighters ng That is why the Goel oncrators are trying to starve them to death, starve them out of bavlan County. We must keep these alive so that they can help| noloyed” workers win their 2 against o that they can win their fight ainst diserimination by the coal operators agains. the leaders of the in Kentucky Workers International Relief s conducting Kentucky miners relief campaign for funds, food and clothing for Harlan, Kentucky min- ers, particularly throughout the southern and southwestern states. Judge Jones of Harlan County says he can't give any funds for union miners, that they don’t want them in Harlan, Ky., that he will get rid of all militant miners if he has to kill all of them and starve their families to death. The miners say they Enow the government and the coal operstors in Kentucky are doing all they can to starve them to death, but with the aid of relief donated by ‘workers and sympathizers they will organize to fight for their very lives the lives of their wives and and the miners. i¢ The Kentucky paicn appeals to all workers, Sy mpetiize: zations miners Relief Cam- to all working class or- to help keep the Har- live and in the struggle, tr clothes for the women and cxildren who are forced to remain feuoors huddled around the fires to keep warm because they have no clothes to face the cold outside and to go to school in A’ donations, food or clothing @ -xld be sent ty Box 191, Covington, eniueky ‘hat’s On— What's On ‘ r Bevvaptille Beanel, Vy Workove rt) corne’ 1 1.3 Christopacr a Brooklyn, at 4 pan, Pork Branch, F.8.U. A 1 Tosco Rus n St Ride. Maintenance Workers Uniow wi hold a rtaul nieeting at Treutger Hall, 238 séth Si, third floor, Workers ed to aitend, Vane at to sac: wilt ton Rd. speaker address Woments ¢ Conneits—t, 13 and 6 Manchuria Bolyn, 8:20 p,m Women's ¢ WI have ef Woman in tae Co. 607-508 Christopher Av Rebecea Kapl«n to speak " Caner Weald ne Role ‘it * Brooklyn. cklisted miners are the | starvation and ter-| food for the relief | from us—he only bought @ Long Is- d home and # brand new car! ris time he is out to buy the rest Long Island. “The 30 present and the collection were only possible because of the fear of many of them that they would |be fired if they did not attend and chip in. “We riggers should know enough about Lambie to keep away from anything he handles. The bosses want a fake union to help them fight | Kraislovsky and possible Centre. The bosses and Lambie will control tt. We will be suckers if we fall for this. ‘The only sensible thing to do is to organize a real Riggers Union controlled by the riggers themselves. The Transportation Workers Indus- trial League was ready to help us llast year to have a clean and mil- itant union—we were ready to affil- fate with them but Lambie did his dirty work and broke us up alto- bosses faised the ante and he did| | vaILY WORKER, NEW YORK, | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1931 = ———S eens | Negro Mine Strike |Prisoners Ask| iWorkers Help| WINCHESTER, K gto miners, who fac trial for their lives this month on trumped-up charges of murder betause they fought against terror and starva- tion in the Harlan County coal | fields, have written to the Inter- | national Labor Defense from Win- | —¥our Ne- | SHEET METAL WORKERS REBEL Members Call Own Meeting NEW YO j Chester County jail,, asking for| ; money to “look clean and nice” | when they appear in court. ‘The | | LL.D. is providing defense, to baceto and food to strike prisoners, both Negro and white, throughout | | the Eastern Kentucky strike zone and is sending food, clothes and milk to their wives and children ‘The four Negro miners are Gan- i} zie Banks, E. Philips, Andrew]! Hineh and Henry Oli all in} Winchester County jail. They| | write the ILD.: “We received | your kind and welcome letter and | it found us all well. We are glad | | to get the money you sent us; but we want you to send us $3 apiece so we can have our clothes | cleaned next week for the trials. We want to look nice and clean | on that day. Yours truly “(Sed.) GANZIE BANKS. “E, PHILIPS, “ANDREW HINCH, “HENRY OLIVER,” Every 25-cent coupon means food and hope for a starving strike | prisoner's family. Books contain- | ing these coupons, to be sold to} Negro and white workers’ organ- | izations, may beseucred from the | International Labor Defense, | Room 430, 80 E. ith St., New | York City, or contributions may | be sent direct. DEPOSITORS MASS: MEETING THURS. First Year Of Crash of Bank Of U. S. Depositors of the defunct Bank of the United States will hold a mags meeting on the occasion of the first anniversary of the crash of the in- stitution, Thursday, December 10, 8} DB. m.. Bt. Public School .65, Canal and } Hldredge ‘Sts., under the auspites of the Bank of United States Depositors Committee, Joseph Broderick, state superin- tendent of banking, has been invited to-be present and to tell the deposi- tors what has become of the numer- ous promises he and other officials have made in aiding the depositors. ‘The meeting will elect a delegation te go to Albany and make demands on the state legislature for speedy action in effecting a full return on their lost deposits, Maryland Lynch Governor Coming Here Saturday gether. Now let us join up with the ‘Transportation League and build a fight union to regain our old union conditions and wages. Their address is 5 East 19th St. Go up and see them. ~—A Sensible Rigger. Vets Who Were In Hunger March To Put On Drama Of Bonus NEW YORK.—Hunger marchers have invaded the stage to tell their story. Members of the Workers’ Ex- Servicemen’s League, who took part ih the National Hunger March that caused so much commotion in Wash- ington, are now ready with a three- act play to show their angle of the march, which has to do with the bonus payment. This three-act play will be staged by world war veterans NEW YORK.—Governor Albert C. Ritchie of Maryland, whose support to the lynch gangs on the Eastern Shore of Maryland bore fruit last Friday night in the lynching of Mat- thew Williams, 35-year-old Negro worker, will be in New York City this coming Saturday. He comes to ad- dress the National. Republican Club. His subject is announced as “Forces Menacing the Constitution.” The workers .of this city, Negro and white, will demonstrate against this lynch governor who refused to in- terfere to stop the brazen denial of the simplest constitutional rights to Orphan (Lee) Jones, and whose sup- port of the plans of the Eastern Shore boss courts to legally lynch Jones encouraged the rich farmers and merchants to carry their lynch- ing activities further and to hang and burn Matthew Williams last Friday night. at @ bonus dance given under the auspices of the Workers Ex-Sérvice- men’s Leagué, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St., Friday night at 8 p.m. The subject of the play {s the defeat of the bonus payment at the American Legion convention tn De- troit. =———————————— CELEBRATION OF THE 22nd ANNIVERSARY | of the SPARTACUS Grock Workers Educational Club At PARK PALACE 5 WEST 110th STREET Thursday, Dec. 10th, 8:30 P. M. —EXCELLENT PROGRAM— Dance Until Morning Hours Admission 50 Cente Free admission of unemployed work- ers with Unemployed Cards THURSDAY Painters’ Gr, T.U.U.L. Willmeet at the new headquarters, 1328 Southern Blvd, at & p.m, 8 cusston. ae Medical Workers’ Industrial League Will held an impor meéting of all drug store workers at 108 B, 14th St. at § pm. * NEW JERSEY it A Grand Concert will he given by the International Labor Defense on Friday, Dees 11, at Carpenters Hall, 6 Van Houten’ St. Prominent per- formers. Proceeds to go to defense of the five textile strikers. All work: are invited. ¥ ( WORKERS’ HEADQUARTERS— LABOR TEMPLE 15 WEST 126th STREET Telephone HArlem 7-5750 out Worke: has (ALF. GO. The tion be elected. The last of these, | Dec. 3, resulted in the president ¢all- the | | members having refused to take his | word for it thet ing in police to clear the (hall, the meeting adjourned. The socialist party clique, the point of physically rank and filers, themselves called a meeting whith took place Dec. 5, no discrimination: Jew and Gentile, any rank and filer, could get the floor and speak. The meeting decided to “exhaust all legal means before going to court,” and sent a committee to Washington to interview Interna- tional President Hynes and demand some redress of grievances against the officials. Another meeting is to take place Dec. 12 at Webster Hall at 1 p. m. sharp, to hear the report back of this committee. 6 eee EDITOR'S NOTE.—This is an- other of the many recent revolts against their by rank and file members of the var- ious A. F. L. unions. But these sheet each other. struggles of the rank and file. ‘Laundry Workers To Meet Thursday To Report On Active Shop Strike hold a mass meeting Thursday, Dee. the Active Laundry will be given. Wales Ave. The bosses of Sterling and Pretty laundries are still the leaders in the scab work, they themselves acting as gangsters and forcing workers from other laundries in the Association to work with the Active scabs. All laun- the fight successfully. call says. 12-MONTH SUBSCRIPTIONS BY JANUARY &th! ‘The Eighth Anniversary of The Daily Worker Will be held at The COLISUEM January 3rd, 1932 Working class organizations please keep this date clear! RESTAURANT, POOL ROOM, STEAM BATH, SWIMMING POOL, HALLS FOR RENT FOR ALL OCCASIONS BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 114, 4. MO, & RW. Office and Labor Temple, 29 EAST 4TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 Regular meetings overy first ana third Bunday, 10 4 M. Employment Bureao open every Gay atepPp. M LIVE IN A— WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2800 BRONX We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony yeu will ting » Mbrary, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities Tel. Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue AGAINST CLIQUE) scce’srruetons con hip vena Of Local 28 RK.—A revolt has broken in Local 28 of the Sheet Metal president closed two meetings prematurely | to silente the membership whi¢h was |demanding that 6 new administra- was | led by B, Cohen and J. Turvin, sup- Ported the corrupt administration to assaulting Following this, the rank and file continuation with 800 present, and was the first meet- jing in a long time where there was swindling bureaucracy metal workers will find, as other workers have found, that court action does not work, because the capitalist ; courts and the capitalist agents who have been acting as union officials always have an understanding with Build @ real rank and file leadership, refuse to let your- selves be swindled by any promises from Hynes, look out for tricks. Get in touch with the Metal Workers’ In- dustrial League of the T. U. U. L., & | Bast 19th St, which will help in all The Laundry Workers’ Union will 10, at 8 p. m, at Ambassador Hall, Third Ave. and Claremont Parkway, where a full report of the strike in At one o'clock Thursday the union will stage a mass demonstration near the Active Laundry, 51st St. and ‘Liberator’ Sunday in Harlem on Sun- day, December 13th Employed workers and sympa- te the share croppers of Camp Hill, Als, bundles of The Liberator, | Weekly organ of the League of | Straggle for Negro Rights, now in |a campaign for 10,000 new eircu- | lation, Make mall bat regular do- ‘tng Fund to cover expenses of | sending hundreds of free copies to | the South. Only a powerfol mass | organ will defeat the bosses’ lynch |law and persecution of Negro workers, Help spread the Liberator among | the share croppers in the Black Belt, and among Negro and white workers everywhere! Send contri- butions to The Liberator Sustain- ing Fund, Room £01, 50 BE. 13th St., New York, N. ¥. \NEEDLE STRIKES WELL PICKETED London Dress Fails To Get Seabs In NEW YORK.—The Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union is now conducting a number of very im- portant strikes in the various branches of the trade. A splendid demonstration was carried through yesterday in front of the London Dress Co., 245 Seventh Ave., a shop employing about 75 workers, on strike since last week. The attempt of the bosses to fill up the shop with scabs by advertising in the news- papers failed in face of the strong Picket line. ‘The workers of the Fox & Weiss- man shop, 30 W. 36th St., and I. J. Fox, 391 Fifth Ave. are continuing their strike despite the injunction. ‘The strike against the Robinhood Hat Oo. 68 W. 38th Bt., is in prog- ress. ‘The Spear Underwear Co, 136 Spring St., where the strike has been on for the past two weeks, shows the girls on the picket line fighting for union conditions. ‘The Industrial Unions calls on the needle trades workers from the vari- ous branches to assist these workers on the picket line, A special dem- onstration will be held this morning at 7:30 at the London Dress Co. A special meeting of the executive council will take place on Thursday ait 8 o'clock at the office of the union. Illustrate Lecture ! On Family Life In . The Soveit Union ‘The facts of the practical achieve- ments of the Five-Year Plan, rais- ing the cultural and the economical level of the life of the working class in the Soviet Union, is vividly por- trayed in the illustrated story “24 Hours With the Soviet Family Philli- poy,” to be presented by Marcel nations to the Liberator Sustain. |. LATHERS DEFEAT INJUNCTION MOVE Picketing “Goes On At Four Operations Bo flimsy wes the basis of the at- tempt of the contractor, employer and former officials of thé Lathers’ Union, Local 244, in getting an in- junetion against the union now strik- {fig four building operations in Brook- lyn, that the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, Madison Ave. and 26th St, yesterday was forced to throw out the plea for the injune- tion. The application for injunction as made out by the contractor was ad+ dressed to Willie Cohen and other ousted officials of the union. The trick was to force, through court action, recognition of thegkicked-out officials as still leading the union. But from the first the lathers and the arrested pickets showed how they had nothing to do with the ex- pelled Officials who they had caught in the act of betraying them to the employers. Picketing is now going on at the four operations still employing non- union lathers. Because of the pressure of Local 244, International Vice President Murphy has come down to “straight- en things out,” It is expected that he will be com~ pelled to recognize the new adminis- tration as duly elected by the over- whelming majority of the lathers. Murphy is also expected to find out why the Building Trades District Council of Greater New York will not recognize the elected delegates of the Lathers’ Union. Trials Of Harlem Workers Today Framed-up By Police and Garvey Leaders NEW YORK.—The cases of the four Herlem Nero workers framed up by the Garvey misleaders in al- liance with the police, will come up. for trial in General Sessions Court, Part 7, at 10 o'clock this morning. The trial was scheduled for yester- day but was postponed to today. The frame-up of these four workers grows directly out of the fight for the free- dom of the 9 innocent Scottsboro boys and the attempt of the Garvey national reformists and the N. A. A. C. P; misleaders to smash this fight. White and Negro workers are urged to pack the court this morning in solidarity with the,four framed up workers and the fimht for uncondi- tional equality for hte Negro masses. As the doors of the court are closed promptly at ten o'clock it is necessary that the workers should get there by 9:30 to insure getting in. [Hoover Aid Fires Foremen Who Fail to Drive Jobless WASHINGTON , DO C—“Drive the men like hell so they. won't come back again.” ‘That's what George WF. Adams Sry executive Secretary of Hoover’s Washington uhemployment committee, told the foremen of the woodyard whith was opened here over a week ago as part of: the Hoover-Gifford starvation plan. But the foremen were workers themselves: and refused to drive the hungry men, who came to cut wood in the yard for 25 cents an hour. They also falled, atcording to Mr. Adams, to gaard the gate against“Communists and other hangers afound.” 86 they were fired, “Some of the men told me they hadn’t had anything te eat,” said Mr. Moss, one of the discharged foremen. “Do you think I had the heart to drive men like that?” Now the yard has ceased to op- erate on the cash basis altogether: the men no longer get the measly 25 eents an hour. They nwst work hard.on the wood pile, while the Salvation Army colle¢ts the eash wages, a few pennies of which is ote to the workers in stale food, second hand clothes and yer- mine infested beds, TO GREET 3 YEARS OF NEEDLE UNION Celebration . January 1 Central Opera House The third anniversary of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union will be celebrated Friday, Jan- uary 1, 1932, at the Central Opera House, During the three years of its existence, the Industrial Union has been in the forefront, leading the struggle of the needle trades work- ers for better conditions, meeting the attacks of the powerful combination of enemies; the hesses, the company union agents, the police and the un- derworld, organizing the needle trades workers for struggle to secure decent living conditions, fighting against in- Junctions, police brutality, frame-ups and imprisonment. The Plenum of the G, E. B. will be held prior to the celebration, where the work of the union will. be re- viewed and plans for future activi- ties adopted. The celebration will take place on Friday night, January Ist, at a mass meeting and concert. Among the speakers will be Foster, Gold, Olgin, editor of the FPreiheit, who is expected to return to the United States shortly. The program will include Wm. Gropper, the Prolet- pen, Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra, the Artef, Gendel, and Edith Seigel. The admission will be 50 cents. Tickets can be secured at the office of the union, 131 W. 2&th St., and at DAILY WORKER SUBSCRIPTIONS HELP TO BUILD SHOP NUCLEI! the Cooperative Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park E, ‘800 SWARM DOWN MERMAID AVENUE IN BREAD STRIKE 17 Corner Meetings In Defiance Of Cops NEW YORK —Over 800 bread strike pickets started out at 2:30 yes~ terday afternoon and deménstrated the full length of Mermaid: Ave. Thereweré men, women and children, mostly women and children, ‘They held 17 street corner meetings onths way, in open defiarice of police warne ings that they were not to do any speaking at all. They demanded re- duction in the prices of bread and mobilized the whdle neighborhood behind the strike, After the demonstration the ctowd marched to headduarters at 2921 W. 32nd St.. Coney Island, and held a meeting in which arrangements for more Mass picketing went on. Some bakers are coming to dis- cuss settlement. The capitalist press jas before this falsely announced the strike was over, at various times. Workers are warned not to believe stories in the capitalist press about this strike unless they see them con- firmed in the Daily Worker and other workers’ press. Wherever 4 shop agrees to the lower bread prices, that fact will be announced in the Daily Worker. All out to continue cake vietory is won. 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO BAT Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near ith Street JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open V1 a. m. to 1:30 a. m. Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10...55¢ 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Ste. Patronize the Concoops Food Stores aND Restaurant Scherer, national secretary of the Friends of the Soviet Union, Thurs- day, Dec, 10, at 8 pm. at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Pl. and 15th St. ‘The illustrated lecture will show dry workers are urged to be present at the demonstration and mass meet~ ings and help the union carry thru “We start at 12 from the union headquarters, 260 B, 138th St. Thurs- day for the demonstration,” the union FIVE THOUSAND DAILY WORKER the life of Phillipov, a shock-trooper working in the Red Proletarian fac- tory, and his wife, two daughters and three sons during the 24 hours of the average worker's day. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RAST SIDE—BRONR \ ) tia Wednesday to Friday —Om the Sereen— RKO Acte— Eadie Conrad George & Marion Eddy Chester Fred- ericks & Co.. Arliss ‘Alexander Hamilton’ wth Doris Kenyon Dudley Digges 1931 AMUSEMENTS. THE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGEND O'NBILL’S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra’ Composed of 3 plays presented on 1[day HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED ‘TRE HAUNTED Commencing, at 5:20 sharp, Dinner tn- termission of one hour at 7. No Mats. GUILD THPA.,, 524 St. W. of Brny ‘The Theatre Gufld Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT E, SHERWOOD. Martin Beck fee's Ave. Ave. Beg’ Thurs. Eve. Dec, The GROUP THRA, Pre: 1931-—- Hy CLAIRE & PAUL SIFTON Under » Auspices of hes. Ould = I h 8t. MANSFIELD 35°%),003,5" Eves 8:30 Mate. Thurs.& Sgt.2:30 10th i. One way to help the Soviet Montague Love | Saturday, Dec. 12th Union 1s to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor,” hy Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. TENTH ANNUAL COLOR LIGHT PHILIP MERIVALE Agiene Nn wee. STEPHENSON MOROSCO TaeA < ‘a Even, Wed. COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW By With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI . W. 45 St. By, 8:20 Plymouth frat: thare, 2 Bat. 3120 ;CAMEONOW “Battle of Gallipoli” Thrilling story of ill-fated offensive in the World War Cth Ave. HIPPODROME 2':7::. bing renew IN NEW YORK acts “OVER the HILL” Inet. With JAMES DUNN SINGER STREET MERRIEST EVENT OF THE SEASON Biggest Gathering of New York’s Working Youth RNING FREIHEIT COSTUME BALL New York Coliseum Rast 177th Street, Bro Bronx especially prepared Dances Jaxx Band of 90 Musicians—ARTEF Players in extraordinary program _ Edith Segal with the Red Dancers will lead the crowd in Tickets in Advance, 65e—At the Door, 85 2100 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” ° [au Comrades Meet et BRONSTEIN'S. Vegetarian Health Restaurant : 558 Clorement Parkway, Bre OT HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phoue University 4-901 Intern) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE erm FLOOR AD Werk Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHBON Phone @ttyvessst asi6 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISEKD cadre a veaionts foxbet 362 B. 1%th St. New York MELROSE DAIRY seersvsaxe Siratant’ to th Dine at “Out ‘Place 1387 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronx (ned? tT4th Stationy FELEPHONE 1 VALE Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Ret, 12th and 18th Ot, Strictly Vegetarian feed fox fos ore aa Advertsing Departament The DAILY beige

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