The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 14, 1931, Page 2

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acinar eens ieeraesss 3 > ef Goo: Ritchie A Anti-I wynching Cancels Speech in NewY Spoutings: Wor DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1931 frais to F ace|! Deinbristration|| ork, Wires Demagogic | kers Denounce Lynch Terror YORK.—Fearing NEW to Negro and face the angry protests of vhite workers demonstrating in this city against the lynch terror in Maryland, Gov. Ritchie of Maryland eat elled an engagement to speak in this city on Saturday, engaged in demagogy by wire, sending to the National ee D- c Ciub a telegram on “Forces® Menace the Constitution,” the n he was to have ad-| b, iis telegram was being read} cheon of the club, the work- | ched past the club with ban- and shouting slogans he bosses’ lyneh terror, and for the] + on wi t on wh ional equality es Proceeding by way of Fifty Ave. orkers held a demonstration at at wh ch speakers denounced a of Matthew Wil- the Eastern Shore J. Louis Engda Cecil Hope and rade Kingston pointed out that ngs of rich farmers and 1s had been roaming the Shore for weeks, searching | for two framed up Negro farm) nds, Orphan (Lee) Jones George Davis. | The activities of the lynch gangs were openly encouraged by Gov. Ritchie and other state officials, and | } against them. | reporter To a question by a the Baltimore Afro- American as to what he intended | doing about this brutal lynching, Ritchie replied: “What can I do? more about pushing this case after it leaves the hands of the Wicomico grand jury than you could.” This was Ritchie’s attitude when Worcester County officials were for | brazenly denying the simplest con- stitutional rights to Orphan (Lee) | Jones, denying him the right to see| @ counsel and finally trying to de-| prive him of the militant defense of the International Labor Defense, an| | organization of white and Negro} | workers. It is with this bloody record of| brutal suppression of Negro rights, and with the smug hypocrisy of the slave-driver, that Ritchie, afraid to} and|come to New York in person, wires | his demagogic spoutings to the Na-| tional Republican Club. In that wire he warns his fellow slave drivers of the menace to American (boss) prin- I can do no | New w Offices of ‘Nat'l Comm. Unemployed | Councils Are Opened The National Committee of the Unemployed Councils of the| United States has set up offices in| Room "402, 16 West 2ist St. the | committee reported yesterday. All communications should be | | | addressed to Herbert Benjamin, | National Secretary. | Other papers please copy. - Alteration Sania Start Campaign to ‘Build Strong Union Three Groups in City; | Plan Activities and | Open Up An Office | With the group in the Bronx grow- ing and new groups organized in Williamsburgh and Brownsville, al- teration painters have Unions affiliated to A the | tion Painters’ eset Trade Union Unity League. |permanent headquarters for Bronx section has been established at. | 1325 Southern Boulevard, near Free- |man St. station, and will be open |every day from 8 a.m. until late at | night. An enthusiastic meeting of the | Bronx section was held last Thurs- day, when a number of alteration |painters joined and a fund was by the bosses’ courts of the Eastern) ciples (such as Jim Crowism, race j Shore, The demand of Bernard Ades,| hatred, starvation of the unem-|St@rted for the campaign. FF ; Open forums will be held every attorney of the International Labor} ployed) in “the revolutionary ideas Tuesday st 10 am: with leading Defense, for a change of venue to| prevalent in some countries abroad y ; Baltimore for the trial of Orphan (Lee) Jones, had been denied by the) and advocated to an extent here.” With the blood of Negro workers courts with the brazen declaration} on his hands, and speaking as a rep- | that there was no danger of gang yiolence on the Eastern Shore. on trial on the Eastern Shore, Mat- thew Williams was lynched. With} the eyes of the working class on Maryland, the boss courts were forced to postpone the trial of Jones. The. mob leaders are known, but Goy. Ritchie has taken no action lynch | resentative of the capitalist class | which carries on a brutal suppression | Two days before Jones was to go|of the rights of the Negro masses, | this demagog declares in his wire that the rength” of the boss gov- ernment “lies in the fact that it gives expression to the traditions, ideals and free spirit that animated our forefathers in their century-old ef- forts for self-government.” Stop Legal Lynching This Week! Workers! Act at Once! HOUSTON, Texas, Dec. 13.—Unless the workers, Negro and white, launch at once a mighty protest against the legal murder of Barney Lee Ross, this innocent young Negro worker be electrocuted by the Texas boss government on Friday of this week. The Texas boss courts rushed through the railroading of young Ross to the-electric chair in a two- hour trial in Dangerfield. He was framed-up on a charge of raping a white wemtan drug addict. Eigheen investigators for the International Labor Defense have dug up new evi- dence which smashes to pieces the frame-up case of the state. The ILD attorney has asked for a stay of exe- cution in order to present this new evidence. The State parole board has been forced to admit the importance of this evidence and has declared that it favors a stay in execution. But Governor Ross D. Sterling has re- fused to grant a stay of execution. Arthur Mandell and other attor- neys engaged by the ILD have gone to Dangerfield to secure affidavits and testimonials to place before the governor in a renewed demand that he halt the legal lynching of this young worker. The International La~ bor Defense calls upon all workers’ organizations to rush protest tele- (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) Plan Armed Intervention Against German Masses Armed intervention against the pro~ letarian revolution in Germany as a step towards crushing the world pro- letarian revolution and preparing the attack on the Soviet Union, is openly called for by Newton D. Baker, former secretary of War and a present can- didate for nomination for president on the democratic ticket. Expressing the fear of capitalism of the prole- tarian revolution in Germany, Baker warned the Intercollegiate Conference on world peace, on Saturday, that: “What happens in Germany in the next few months will determine what kind of a world our children shall live in.” In a report to Congress on Friday, Hoover called for “continued steady purchase of military airplanes by the Government.” The report declares: “It is a matter of Governmental concern that there should be main- tained an adequate nucleus of an aircraft industry capable of expa~- what kind of « world shall live in.” sion rapidly to meet needs in an emergency.” Hoover's “emergency” means war on the working-class at home and abroad. Brazenly admitting French impe- Tialism’s plan for armed intervention against the proletarian revolution in Germany, and against the Soviet Union, French manufacturers of gas masks are advertising gas masks “as the ideal Christmas presents” throughout the eastern province of. France. A sign in a pharmacy window at Charleville in Ardennes, says: “Protection of the civil oppula- tion against chemical warfare. Re- duce your superfluous, expenditures a little and buy a gasmask, It will prove the-best investment you ever made Oo not wait until it is too late.” : members of the Building Trades Sec- tion of the Trade Unfon Unity League discussing trade and organ- | ization problems. | Regular meetings of the Bronx Section of the Alteration Painters’ | Union are held at the union office every Thursday at 8 p.m. A banquet will be held at the office Dec. 26, where leading members of the Build- ing Trades Section and delegates from groups in A. FP. of L. building trades locals will be present. “Conditions in the trades are get- ting worse every day. The employ- ers know no limit to the wage-cuts, lengthening of hours and speed-up they are enforcing. Men are offered as low as $4 a day and the eight-hour day is actually abolished. The masses of painters aer ready for organiza- tion and for struggle against these rotten conditions.” To Expose Renegades at Dressmakers Open Forum, Today at 1:30 NEW YORK.—The administration of Local 22 with their Lovestone al- lies will be exposed as enemies of the united front strike at the open forum of dressmakers, called by the United Front Committee, Monday at 1:30 at Memorial Hall, 344 W. 36th St. Leaders of the united front com- mittee will speak on the following topic: “What was the answer of the .administration of Local 22 to the call for united strike and what must be the answer of the dressmakers?” Unemployed Cloakmakers Meet Monday. A meeting of unemployed cloak- makers, members of the Industrial Union, will be held at the union of- fice, 131 W. 28th St., Monday, at 1:30, to discuss the question of unemploy- ment work among the cloakmakers, and to lay down the program for work. MONDAY N ext Clasi ‘Will be held in St. at 7:30 p.m. lems and Tasks. ym_2' “Colonial Prob- Simon of Anti-Im- perialist League to speak. on ee Needle Trades Workers’ Ind, Union The Youth Branch will hold an af- fair for the benefit of the London Dress Co, strikers, tonight, at the Union Hall, 131 W, 28th St. Admis- sion 25 cents. * NEW JERSEY Perth Amboy Jim Grace and Aunt son from the Kentucky will speak at Columbia Hall, State St. Dec, 14, at 7:30 p.m, workers invited, Molly Jack- 685 swung into} the campaign to build strong Altera- | coal fields All '|DRESSMAKERS WANT ONE UNION; PREPARE STRIKE IN INDUSTRY | (CONTINUED FROM FAGE ONE) | still harbor illusions thet there: ts | much possibility for unity between | the workers and their representatives and the company union agents who [are directly serving the interests of the bosses as there is for unity be- | tween the workers and the bosses whose interests are diametrically op- posed to each other, will the workers really be able to unite their ranks for struggle to defend their interests against the bosses and their agents and through their united struggle build one powerful union controlled by the workers. The Industrial Union. | The Industrial Union did not come | into existence as a result of a whim jor as the company union agents would say, ‘by instructions from Mos- | cow,” but as a result of the most de- termined struggle of the workers against class collaboration policies of the A. F. of L., as a result of the ruthless expulsion policy and union | smashing activities of the Sigmans, Schlesingers, Kaufmans, Hillmans and Zaritzkys. The needle trades workers, espe- cially those who have been in the union for the past few years, know that the left wing opposition in the International Ladies Garment Work- | ers Union and the Furriers Union has for years exerted every possible ef- fortrto keep the ranks of the work- ers united. We need but recall the years during which the expelled lo- cals carried on the fight for rein- statement; how the delegates elected by the mass of workers under left- wing leadership were driven away from the hall with the aid of the po- lice at the formation of the national organization committee. They know that finally all efforts for unity and a union based on class struggle poli- cies were rejected by the leaders of the International, who in order to maintain their control have com- pletely converted the union into an agency of the bosses. After this, the Industrial Union was built as the only instrument of the workers in their struggle for better conditions. This struggle of the left wing go- ing on for a period of more than 2 years must convince every worker that the leaders of the International and the A. F. of L. are fighting tooth and nail against unity of the workers, are opposed to one union because such a union controlled by the rank and file would reject their leadership and repudiate their policies which are based on collaboration with the bosses. Smashed Conditions. Miserably low wages, long hours, merciless wage cuts, unemployment, misery and starvation, the complete destruction of the union standards in practically all the branches of the needle trades show to what extent these leaders have sold out the in- terests of the workers, converted the unions built by the workers as in- struments of struggle into agencies that serve the interests of the bosses. wanting to exploit the urgent desire for unity to smash the united front struggle of the workers. Their fake unity manouever burst like a bubble when it came to a show- down. When it came to the ques- tion of pledging themselves to work for unity and struggle for better con- ditions, Stetsky and with him the entire right wing leadership, left the conference. ‘They have not changed! They are the same agents of the bosses! And what about the recent exper- jences in the dress locals? A group of rank and file workers who are suffering as a result of the break- down of union conditions in the dress industry, organized themselves into a united front committee for the pur- pose of uniting the dressmakers to fight for better conditions. It was denounced as a “Communist manouever” and met with a barrage of attacks on the part of the com- pany union. ‘The Industrial Union endorsed and gave its fullest support to the united front movement. When at the last membership meeting of the dress de- partment of the Industrial Union a committee of 25 was elected to go to the members of Local 22 with pro- posals for unity, for a united strike to include all workers, right wingers, left wingers and unorganized workers, the company union agents, despite the mass protest of the members of Local 22, refused to admit this com- mittee to speak to the workers, and with the aid of the police drove the committee away from the hall. In- stead, they elected a so-called “rank and file’ committee, whose main purpose it will be to cover up the treacherous deeds of the Interna- tional officials and who are already conspiring with the bosses to put through a fake strike along the same lines as the fake strike in 1930 which has brought about the present mis- erable conditions in the dress trade. Lovestone-Anarchist Combine. The latest manouever of the anar- chist-Lovestone combination in Lo- cal 22 in admitting the committee of the United Front to the membership meeting was but another effort to defraud the workers. In a news item which appeared in the ‘Women’s Wear” on Monday, Dec. 7th, which speaks of the last meeting of Local 22 on the dispute between Zimmerman, Blustein ad- ministration and the International, the following statement appears: “The next day the leaders of Local 22 sought to assure Dubinsky,” it was stated, “that the Communist were admitted to the Bryan Hall meeting, only to minimize them as a nuisance.” Recognizing the resentment of the workers against their action at the previous meeting, they now sought to outmanouever the workers by ad- mitting the committee, while at the same time relegating the purpose for which the committee came to their hand-picked committee of 25 which ‘was organized for the sole purpose of The conditions in the fur trade, like the conditions in the other | branches of the needle trades, have been reduced to a low level. There are also wage cuts, speed-up ,and slavery in the fur shops. In the beginning of July the fur workers, disatisfied with their mis- erable conditions and stimulated by the Industrial Union, united their ranks to fight for July increases which are a tradition in the fur in- dustry. Kaufman had agreed with the bosses not to demand these in- creases. The workers took up the struggle. In one shop after another the bosses, under the pressure of the workers, were compelled to give the increase. The individual shop strikes were followed by the strike in the dogskin trade which paralyzed the entire branch of the industry. A. F. of L. Atacks Strikers. ‘What was the attitude of Kaufman, Stetsky, and the other leaders of the company union? True to their tra- ditions of agents of the bosses, Kauf- man with the aid of Dubinsky, Schlesinger and Zaritzky resorted to the same old methods of fighting the workers. The police, the gang ter- ror, frame-up and persecution, was the answer of these company union agents to the successful struggle of the furriers for better conditions. When these methods failed, they resorted to a fake unity manouever, KENTUCKY MINERS IN NEED OF FOOD AND CLOTHES TO CARRY ON FIGHT Editorial Note —The following four® letters give a bird’s eye view of the appalling misery and starvation that exists in the Kentucky mine fields where the miners are organizing into the National Miners Union to strike for better pay and living conditions. These miners are militant and deter- mined to smash the coal company rule despite the terror and brutality of the thug agents of the coal oper- ators. These brave fighters must be fed and clothed. The Workers In- ternational Relief is rushing relief into the mine fields as fast as it comes in. Workers everywhere are urged to send money and clothes at once to the WIR, 16 W. 21st St., New Send Relief To to go to school, It is awful in Wallins. How the poor little children must go to school. They haven’t shoes to wear on their little feet. They look so cold. Some go without food. Some only get one meal a day—and this meal consists of corn bread, beans and potatoes with not enough seasoning in it. It is sure @ horrible sight to see the comrades as they come to the Workers International Relief kitchen for their one meal per day, And, dear comrades, the terror down here York, N. Y. CHILDREN HAVE NO SHOES Wallins Creek, Ky. Dear Comrades: I,am writing you these few lines is regard to me and my family and is terrible. It is hard to explain the pitiful condition of the miners and their families, they are so destitute. Do rush food, clothing and shoes here before the cold weather sets in. If we don’t get help here there will other comrades. Times are hard here. We can’t get clothes for our children Miners Prepare To Strike; Call On Workers To Help Them Win are still throwing miners out of their homes into the cold because they can’t pay their rent. A Wallins Creek Miner. BLACKLISTED Twila, Ky. Dear Sir: T have a family of nine and they are all naked and barefooted and I can’t send my children to school. I am out of a job and haven't worked a lick since May 10th. I am black- listed and can’t get a job. Sometimes we have bread and water to eat and sometimes we have water without the bread. The kitchen is about five miles away and it is hard for my family to get to it. GP. be more children dying with the hor- rible disease called flux. The bosses NEEDS FOOD AND CLOTHES ‘Wallins Creek, Ky. To the Public: Iam a blacklisted miner of Harlan County and have been blacklisted seven months. My condition is very bad. We all need clothes and shoes myself, my wife and my daughter. We will appreciate whatever you can send. We are very low on food. Some- times we have something to eat and sometimes we don't. A Miner. * NEEDS CLOTHES Twila, Ky. Dear Comrades: I am still out of work and can’t get any work to do. I still live in the Creek and am trying to send my chil- dren to school, but it is getting so cold that I doubt whether they can go much longer. I can’t take my family to Wallins; it makes it awful- ly hard on me. We need shoes No. 612, 3%, 13, 11 and 5. We need overalls size 33, 36, 12 and 7, 4 Miner. misleading the workers, giving the impression that they too stand for rank and file control, with the intent of using this committee as a cover for the treacherous deeds of their allies, the leaders of the International. The seeming conflict between the leaders of Local 22 and the Interna~- tional was just another gesture, for already there are indications that they are working at high speed in order to patch up their so-called “differences” and joining up their NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONE your fellow workers to the Daily Worker, don’t for; Worker Eighth Anniversary afternoon, January 3, at the its anniversary celebration attend, numbers by Tickets are Coupons are now being distri Get Your Fellow Worker Down to the Coliseum, Jan. 3 for Daily Worker 8th Anniversary Daily Worker readers and agents, when you approach or workers’ mass organizations for sub- scriptions in the campaign for 5,000 12- month subscriptions ‘get to tell them about the Daily celebration to be held Sunday Bronx Coliseum. Show your support of the workers’ paper by attending and A fine revolutionary program has been prepared, including a pageant, “The Trial of the Yellow. Pres getting other workers to ” and the International Chorus and the Red Dancers. cents at the door, and 25 cents with a coupon. buted. Get your coupons now. forces in the struggle against united front of the workers. United Front Committees. ‘The sooner the mass of dressmak- ers put aside any false hopes and their ranks, the sooner they get down to the task of. building united front right wingers, left wingers, Negro, unorganized, the sooner the workers get down to the task of preparing a real rank and file strike committee elected by and responsible to the mass of the workers to lead and set- tle the strike on the basis of the de- tion be wiped out the dressmak- ers once more build a union to fight for their interests. GBnited Strucgle Will Bring One Union in the Dress Trade The dressmakers must understand that not by conferences with mis- leaders, but by organizing their ranks on a common procram for common demands against the bosses, by fight- ing with united ranks on the picket- Jine for their just demands, can they develop a real effective struggle which will bring about the desired unity and one union ruled by the workers, a union where the union shall dictate the policies, the character of the lead- ership, a union controlled and ad- ministered by the workers in the in- terests of the workers. The dressmakers in the course of the struggles of the needle trades have often led the way. In 1909 they sounded the signal for the organiza- tion of the needle trades workers. In the struggle against the betrayers, the dressmakers have béen in the forefront, and now is the time when, once more,-the dressmakers on the basis of their own strength and unity | ¢ must take up the struggle and once more lead the way for the other needle trades workers to wipe out the sweat shop conditions and build a strong powerful united union, led, ad- the gets down to the tasks of uniting committees to include all elements, | white, Spanish, Italian, organized and | ministered and controlled by the SEE BIG FOREIGN |To Be Held Dec. 20 for New York Area The Committee for. the Protection of Foreign Born reported receipt of credentials of a number of Work- men’s Circle branches and shops to the New York Conference for “the Protection of the Foreign Born, which will be held Sunday, Dec. 20, at 10 mands worked out by the dress-!am ate the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 makers the sooner will the present! § Fourth St. low wages, long hours, unemploy-} “The committee expects this con- ment. sneei-up, mi and starv: merence to be the largest held on the protection of foreign born and that it will lay the basis for struggle against the plans of Hoover to launch fur- ther attacks on the foreign-born workers, LAUNDRY BOSSES ASK INJUNCTION NEW YORK.—The bosses of the Active Laundry which is on strike are sending out circulars to their cus- tomers denying that there is a strike or a union, but that a few irrespons- ible people are just walking up and down with picket signs, and, further- more, that all the workers on strike are thieves. ‘Iie workers were fired for union activity. And the fact that tLe bosses are asking for an injunc- tion against the union and not in- dividuals proves that it is the Taun- dry Workers Univn, 260 E. 138th St., that is conduct‘ng the strike and that ‘he bosses feel it strongly. The hear- ing for the injunction will be held Monday. ADs rank and file and their chosen rep- resentatives, a union based on a pro- gram af class struggle. AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 pla presented on 1{day HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED Commencing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner in- termission of one hour at 7. No Mats. GUILD THEA., 524 St., W. of B’way The Theatre Gaild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy Lory ood () .By ROBERT E, SHERWOOD. Ow s if \ Martin Beck aoe rcs Wednesday to Friday ive. $:40 Mats. Thurs.&Sat.2:40 —On the Screen— —RKO Acts— “AIS The Group Thea. Presents Street 1931— + By CLAIRE & PAUL SLE'TON Singer WOM Ghder “Auspices of Thea, Guid in Person Sst. Chamberlain MANSFIELD 372,470 5¢ a geroey FROM THE NOVEL Eves 8:30 Mats, Thurs.& Sat.2:30 Jimmy Burel-} py DALE COLLINS Ih & Blorde a Wally Sharpes —WITH— Roma & White Knight Troupe Gary 2P. M., Pageant :—“Tri: COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW - By With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Eves,, 8:45, Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:80 EVERYBODY'S WELCOME ‘he new musical comedy hit, with RBANCE) WILLIAMS, os: ANN PENNINGTON HARRIETT LAKE SHUBERT Thea., 44th St. W. of Bow'y Eve, 8:30, Mats. Wed, & Sat. 2:30 | Now Playing!— A SENSATIONAL INNOVATION! Anew type of nature film from U.S. S. R. ‘KILLING TO LIVE’ A drama of animals as they struggle for food and existence. F3 CAME 42nd STREET & BROADWAY Special 10. A. M. wornine | torr m 20C Plymouth mee eee St. bh 8220 e Ben PHILIP kl ah ye naires IN NEW YORK _ Richard Dix ae Claudette CYN ‘AR A 8 acts é obb FE arry with en et le F creme | Colbert [sretivicoy rosith Auris” | ciave Anere Secret Service i. kis MOROSCO THEA., 45th W. of B’way, DEMONSTRATE BORN CONFERENCE 8th Anniversary Dail Sunday, January 3rd of the lorker Dery USA Bronx Coliseum 1932 East 177th Street ——PROGRAM—— jal of the Yellow Press,” International Chorus Red Dancers—and many other features ADMISSION 35c WITH THROW AWAY 25c BREAD STRIKEIN CONEY IS SOLID | | That the workers ¢ of Coney Telahd | are standing solidly behind the strike for the reduced prices on bread was seen on Friday morning when gang- sters and police tried to provoke fights with the pickets. One woman was chased through the streets by gangsters. When they couldn’t get her they went into a cleaning store on West 32nd and with the aid of the police beat up and arertsed the store keeper, Louis Fergelman when he stated that no one was hiding in his store. His trial was postponed until the following Monday. A mass meeting was held on Fri- day night with more than 2,000 work= ers, and house wives present. All the workers pledged to continue the fight until the prices will come down. Louis Engdahl was cheered when “he rose to speak in the name of the Communist Party. ‘Fhe International Bakers Union (A. F. of L.) called @ meeting also for Friday night, but when they saw that no one came ta their meeting they called it off with the excuse that it was raining. DEMONSTRATE AT PUBLIC SERV- ICE COMMISSION TODAY. All workers and workers’ wives are urged to assemble on Monday, De= cember 14, at 1 p. m. at 7th Street and Avenue A, from there march to the Public Service Commission at 80 Center Street. The Central Executive of the Wom- en’s Council calls on all members, and housewives of the neighborhoods to come to 7th St. and Ave. A at I JADE MOUNTAIN | AMERICAN aud CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 n,m, to 1:70 2, m, Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10...55¢ 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 1°th Sts, Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR Al) Work Done Under Persona! Care~ of DR. JOSEPHSON Dr. M. B. FELSEN SURGEON DENTIST Extraction Specialist 851 East 162nd Street Corner Prospect Ave. One block from Prospect Avenue Subway Station Phone: Kllpatrick 5-5028 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. MELROSE BESTAURANT Comrades Will Alwayn Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Brenx (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE Rational Vegetarian Restaurant — 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 18th Ste, Strictly Vegetarian food Phone Stuyvesant 3816 oo John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. th St. New York HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant. 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 4-9061 _ Z = AU Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Brea» Patronize the a Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2100 BRONX PARE EAST: “Buy in the Co-operative | Store and help the ee Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to | Advertising Department The DAILY WORKER |

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