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Page Two CALL ON DRES MAKERS TO To Demand Wage Increa es Above Present Low Rates; Expose Sham Move of | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) pressers, finishe: lrape) cleaners, examiners. clerks—will lay dow day in a gigantic str conditions in the dress trade The struggle of the dr a fight against the sweat tens, Jong hours, hunger employment, exploitation, Tor, gangsterism and inju Workers from all sho down their tools at 10 a.m march in a mass to the stri quarters indicated below. Li wheel t let no one ing until the following demands « won shipping 1) 25 per cent increase in wages of the lower paid workers and en- forcement of the wage scales. 2) Strict enforcement of the 40- hour, 5-day week, 3) No overtime, in order to pro- hlesinger | in the shops. | 11) Abolition of injunctions, | gangsterism and police terror. | 12) No interference by the gov- ernment, police and courts and the unrestricted right to strike and picket. The dress industry from which the bosses are making millions in profits must provide decent living conditions for the workers, International members, Industrial Union members and unorganized makers: Join in the United Front Strike! The rank and file mass | trike will smash the fake strike lock- out and the International fake union through. which the bosses and the leaders of the International aim to| enslave the dressmakers. Carry out strictly the instructions of this strike call. See that every | worker in every shop goes down with | you! Call down on strike the workers of the other shops in the building | DURABLE METAL (Socialists C DEFEND LIVING STANDARDS, STRIKE ENTERS of U.S. in Fake 2nd WEEK TODAY, Increase Spirited | Picketing | NEW YORK, — The strike of over 90 metal workers of the Durable Tool and Die Co. against a lockout is now in its second week. The workers, the majority of whom are young workers between the ages of 16 to 22, have car- | tied on such effective picketing that for the last four days the boss has not dared to bring in a single scab. The strike is being strengthened each | day as some workers who hitherto did not show up for picketing or at| strike hall, came down after letters | were sent to them by the strike com- | mittee. | Plans were laid out to meet any eqort the boss may make to bring in pickets on Monday with bigger and better picket lines. The fighting spirit the workers have shown from the first day of the strike is increasing each day, and they are showing the | most stubborn determination to con- tinue the fight until the boss is forced | )AILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY ‘8, 1932 NEW YORK.—Once again the- “Socialist” showed their true role as nts of the imperialist war makers in the ranks of the work- ing class. ‘The “peace rally” held Satusday at Madison Square Park under the auspices of the “Socialist” party was given over entirely to a repe- tition of the action of the Socialist before the last World War. The parade and meeting at which Nor- man Thomas was cheif speaker was a clear indication of the betrayal of the working class which the Social- ist party is even now preparing. over Up War Plans PROTEST WAR ON ‘Peace Rally’ Instead of aclling upon the work- ers to fight against the Wall St. gov- ernment which is directly responsible for the slaughter of the Chinese mas- ses in Shanghai, the government with | whose consent and active aid the Japanese capitalists seized Manchuria jas an Eastern base for war against | the Soviet Union, with whose support | the attacks are being carried against |the Chinese Soviets, Thomas reas- | serted its “faith” in the United States government and asked the workers | who happened to be present to “work (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) TUUC BACKS ANTI-WAR MEET THIS . THURSDAY AT ST. NICHOLAS ARENA (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | in back of the Friends of the Soviet | killed and crippled, is the mass pro- | Union in the demand that the United | test of the workers throughout the | States withdrew the warships from | entire world. The workers must stand | China; the workers must stand ready | to defend the only Workers’ Father- | CHINESE MASSES AT LYCEUM MEET | Pledge Defense of Soviet Union NEW YORK.—Over 800 workers | attended the Anti-Imperialist League mass meeting on Friday, Feb. 5, at | Manhattan Lyceum, where they en- thusiastically declared their support | to the Chinese masses of workers and | peasants fighting against the im- perialist powers and for the defense of the Soviet Union. This meeting was the first step in the campaign began by the Anti- Imperialist League, in answer to the appeal of the Chinese Soviet Con- gress, to the American working class. Telegrams were sent to the Goy- rnor of Alabama, demanding the immediate release of the nine Scotts- boro boys, to the Governor of Ken- tucky, demanding the immediate re- lease of the Kentucky prisoners, to the Mayor of Tampa, Florida, de- manding the immediate release of the 14 Tampa workers, and demanding the right of the Tobacco Workers’ Thugs Rob WIR Warehouse; Need Reliet Volunteers to Rush Food to Ky. Strikers PINEVILLE, Ky., Feb. 7.—In an attempt to discredit the | Workers International Relief, the operators hired a woman and gun thugs to appear at the Pineville Central Strike Relief Station and demand clothes. Four miners on the relief committee who took food and clothing from agents of the operators who had stolen it from the warehouse, have been arrested for robbery because they forced the real thieves to return the stolen goods. The National Miners Union has »— issued a statement on this slimy frame-up, the campaign to provide food and clothes te the hungry and ragged miners and their families. “The slowness with which relief Commenting upon this most recent attack upon the relief activities the | National Office of the Workers In- ternational Relief said today: “This is a deliberate strike- | breaking move of the operators to shut off relief from the central re- Mef distributing headquarters and | we bring sharply before the work- ers of this country that it must be answered with increased support of | forces are being mobilized is en- dangering the entire campagin. Redouble your support! Expose the treachery of the operators before the broadest masses! Bring new volunteers into the ranks of the Kentucky-Tennessee Striking Min- ets Relief Volunteers of the W.LR. “Every volunteer recruited for (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) Famous Writers to Take Truck where you are working. March to- | gether in a disciplined manner to the indicated strike headquarters. March strike vide more jobs for the unem- ployed. 4) 3 per cent of the bosses’ pay- to once more recognize the shop com- mittee and the Metal Workers Indus- trial League established in the shop 2"-will not me day, Feb. 15. the Vi ter 35 EB. 12th St. This n "ery import bs TUESDAY The newly orga’ Hast bush Branch of the “U. will ha roll for an unemployment insur- ance fand to be paid by the bosses and administered by the workers until such time as we have won the demand for unemployment insur- ance for all workers, to be pald by the government and the bosses. 5) No discrimination against Ne- gro dressmakers, and the right of Negro workers to work in every shop on the basis of equal pay and the equal right to work in every craft. 6) Equal pay for equal work irre- spective of age, sex, nationality or color. 7) Strict enforcement of the equal division of work for every worker, young or old, Negro or white, by the shop committee. 8) Equal pay for equal work for young workers and pay for continu- ation school. 9) The right to the job after one week's trial period 10) Shop committees to settle prices and to see that all other conditions won are carried through to the following headquarters: All uptown dress shops to 33d St., including Seventh Ave., Eighth Ave. | and Broadway, shall go to the United | Front Auditorium, 559 Sixth Ave. All dress shops from 33d St., in- Sixth, Seventh and Eighth | s., Shall go to Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. All Bronx dress shops shall go to the Bronx Workers Center, 3882 Third | Ave., near Claremont Pkway. All Harlem dress shops shall go to| 2011 Third Ave., corner 110th St. ‘The Williamsburg shops shall go to | the Union Hall, 985 Flushing Ave. | All from Bath Beach shall go to| the Workers Center, 48 Bay 28th St. | All Boro Park dress shops shall go | to the Workers Center, 1373 43d St. | ll unemployed dress makers shall | to the Greek Center, 301 W. 29th | from Brownsville go to 1844] Pitkin Ave. Long live the United Front Strike | of the dressmakers! Forward to vic- | tory! Big Meets in South and West Demand Jobless Insurance CHARLOTTE, N. C 500 white and Negro unemployed, half of them ., Feb. 7.—More than young workers, demonstrated today for relief. | In spite of a heavy cord rounded the City Hall the workers away as fe marched on the (¢ on of police, which sur- and attempted to drive| ast as they arrived, the unemployed | tions of money and food for the re- | Hall three time sin an effort to force |} 2 months ago after a successful strike, | and to take back each and every worker locked out. At Saturday's strike meeting com- mittees for entertainment, publicity, | etc. were elected to carry on the work | in connection with the strike more | systematically, Entertainments and | educational meetings are being ar- ranged every day for the strikers. On Monday and Wednesday at 2 p. m. artists of the John Reed Club will entertain the strikers with drawings and sketches. HIT CONDITIONS The conditions in the plasterers’ | trade is unbearable t othe extent that the Rank and File Local Union | 30 finally revolted against these con- ditions and the attitude of the offi- cials, who do nothing to relieve these conditions as long as they receive | their fat weekly salaries. | The rank and file of Local 30, at | their last local union meeting a week ago, proposed a system of rotation | of work, whereby the henchmen of | the officials will have to get no more | work than any other rank and filer. | The Officials didn’t seem to like it very much as the result that they wouldn’t pass on the motion for the | rotation system. The case of Joseph George, the young striker who was framed up by the boss*on a trumped charge of as- sault, came up in Tombs Court on Friday and was dismissed. The “tes. timony” given by the boss and one| ‘The propositions of the division | of his scabs, Jeannette Buchler, was | of work and control of the job was | so clumsy and conflicted so much | passed in the local union by an over- that even a Tammany judge could | whelming majority over the heads of | not use it to justify the railroading | the officials. At the same time a to jail of the militant young striker.) motion was made and carried that | The Metal Workers Industrial Lea- | the officials be suspended from their |gue, through its organizer Hugh Pynn, | offices. points out that this strike has prime significance for the Metal Workers’ | League and the Trade Union Unity | League, since it can be clearly seen that the bosses through the Metal Trades Association are working hard | to make the iockout a success in or- | der to stem the tide of organizational activity among the metal workers in- spired by the successful struggle put | up two months ago by these same | Durable workers. The MWIL there- | fore calls upon all workers and mass | organizations: to support this strike | to the fullest extent, with contribu- | ief of the strikers, and on the picket the mayor to receive their committee and give an naswer to| lime by being in front of the shop the demands for relief. The committee to ente: the City Hz A held on a lot® near which four workers ct ‘we will come back, stronger next time. The workers again m i on the City Hall, and once e unem- ployed and their com: mposed of local workers, were prevented from approaching the City Hall to present their demands. Ma of the unem- Ployed then w to the Workers’ Center, 12012 College St., and held another mass meet The police attempted to intimidate the unemployed workers arresting leaders at the demonstration, releas- fng them later, One worker. Paul Crouch, was arrested in the line of march to the City Hall and taken to the police station where he was held (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO} What’s On— | | MONDAY The Work Dramatic Council on aumeeting at 331 E. 93rd St, Broo Yim, at 8 p.m. rs are in vited. | ° + Bivotuntsers are urgently needed 1 the F.8.U. to distribute tate: for Anti-War Meeting. to held on Thursday, Feb. 1 comrades | to dis- | time police refused to permit the all, { SCRAPERS STRIKE. HOLDING STRONG. | NEW YORK.—The strikers of the | Self Mechanics Flooring Co, are mobilized every morning following up the few scabs that are still working on two of the jobs | Building trades workers are urged to come Monday morning at 7 o'clock | to 15 W. 126th St., Finnish Hall, to | help the strikers with their picketing. | The strikers are arranging a strike affair for the needy in their ranks on Tuesday, Feb. 9, at 8 p.m., at 15 | W. 126th St. Every class-consciou: worker is invited to come with their friends to this affair and help the striking floor scrapers. Admission 25 | cents ANNUAL BAZAAR International Labor Defense (N.Y. District) | February 25, 26, 27, 28) at STAR CASINO 107TH ST. & PARK AVE. ‘700 SINGERS at the National Concert of all the | Freiheit Singi SATURDAY EVENI Mecca Temple, — 55th St. and 7th Ave. Choruses from New York, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Philadelphia, Tickets 50c., 75c., bé&ton, Newark, Patterson, Providence, Fall River, ete., in revolutionary songs $1.00 and $1.25— 35 East 12th Street, 6th floor | ing Societies (fl NG, FEBRUARY 20 On sale in the Freiheit Office. this morning at 7 a. m. at 254 Canal Street. “CAIN” IN LAST DAYS AT ACME | THEATRE, The management of the Acme The- atre, 14th St. and Union Square, an- | nounce the final two days at the| Playhouse of “Cain”, the romantic | story of the South Seas. The pic- | ture will continue until Tuesday in. clusive. Original in story, settings | and direction, “Cain” has drawn an| exceptional following at the Acme, “Cain” is the tale of a stoker who| rebels against present-day society | and lands on an island off the coast | of Madagascar. Theaction is bound | up with his struggle for existence on | this primitive island. “Jewel Robbery,” with Mary Ellis and Basil Sydney, will move this eve- ning from the Booth to the Vander- | bilt Theatre. r resaee neaa Joan Carter Waddell has replaced | Martha Mason in Vincent Youmans’ | LAST TWO DAY Is Modern Civilization a |) Failure? | » A sensational drama of a man’s | seathing indictment of modern |) civilization! | ACME THEATRE || 14th Street and Union Square }| Popular prices—Midnite show Sat. | prices of the Cameo were much high- During the week a mass meeting | was held mobilizing the rank and | file for action. At Wednesday's meeting, Feb. 3, of the local union a| committee of nine was elected called “Action Committee.” This commit- tee is going to, conduct a fight against the bosses and the officials. Five of the bosses have taken out injunctions against the union when | attempts were made on the part of the union to enforce the rotation system of work on the job. musical play, “Through the Years”, at the Manhattan Theatre. ‘The Hippodrome screen is showing this week “Charlie Chan’s Chance”, with Warner Oland, H. B. Warner, Marian Nixon, Linda Watkins. On the stage: Neil Golden and his Dia- mond entertainers, Collins and Peter- son, masters of ceremonies; Cardini; Bill Telaak; Upham and Sidare; La Belle Pola; Jones and Wilson; St. | John Brothers. | Due to the demand for seats to| “Counsellor-at-Law”, the Elmer Rice drama, featuring Paul Muni, at the Plymouth Theatre, will give two ex- tra holiday matinees Lincoln's birth- day, Friday, and Washington's birth- day, Monday, February 22. “Road to Life”, the first Russian talkie, now in second week at the Cameo Theatre, has broken every at- tendance record of the theatre. Only “Down to the Sea in Ships” holds a higher gross record and this was established when the admission er than the present scale. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES SAST SIDF—BEONX RKO 309 2504 fil] —RKO Acts— Lubin, Larry and Andre Hutchins and Smith Archie Glenn The Barstows Sandy Derson Haas Brothers Today to Tuesday —On the Sereen— JAMES CAGNEY Jean Schwartz | and Co. “PAX With Prospects mist, —RKO Acts— Harry Savoy Joe Termini Carl Nt “in Wroae” Loretta Young he Hi napus | George E, Stone Three LIVE IN A— WORKERS COOPERATIVE .COLONY We have a limited number o: NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY 2800 BRONX PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you wil) find a ; land against all the attacks of the PL ASTERERS | bosses to destroy this country. Show your solidarity! Stop war on the Soviet Union! All out” to St. Nicholas Arena this thursday, Feb- Tuary 6! The Trade Union Unity Council issued a statement calling up its unions and the workers to attend the anti-war meeting: “The Tralde Union Unity Council, realizing the significance of the pres- ent situation, strongly urges that ey- ery one of its unions and every one of its members show their solidarity with the workers and peasants of Soviet China and the Soviet Union by attending the monster mass Anti- War Meeting, conducted under the auspices of th e New York District of the Friends of Soviet Union, Thursday, February 11, 8 p.m., at St. Nicholas Arena, 69 W. 66th St.” | Industrial Union to exist without in- terference, to the Federal Court in San Francisco, demanding the re- lease of Dea Chang, Chinese worker, | held for deportation, and to the Im- | migration Office of Los Angeles, de- | manding the ‘release of H. W. Wei, | similarly also held for deportation. | The speakers were Hau Su Chan, from the Chinese Anti-Imperial Alli- | ance; William Simons, secretary of | the Anti-Imperialist League of the United States; Israel Amter, district | organizer of the Communist Party; Kaye Mathews, Heald of the Anti- War Youth Conference; Stember, | Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League; B. |'Tamaka, Japanese Workers’ Club; S. J, Baum, member of the National Miners’ Union, Western Pennsylva- | nia miner who was a delegate of the Friends of the Soviet Union delega- tion to the Soviet Union; (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONED with instructions to take a leading part in the struggle for Negro rights, especially for the rights of the Ne- gro workers in the industry. He must militantly fight for the special Negro demands of the unions during the coming dress strike and must distribute leaflets with these special demands and sell the Liberator, or- gan of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. He must also take up @ course at the Workers’ School in order to get a working-class educa- defense corps for the defense of Ne- gro strikers in the coming strike. ‘Unless he carries out thes etasks and shows emphatically that he abandoned his chauvinistic ideas, the union is to expel him. ‘The jury gave the union itself cer- tain tasks to carry out in recognition that the union had not carried on energetically enough the struggle against white chauvinism and for the rights of the Negro workers in the industry, The union must carry has | Mass Trial Finds White Worker Guilty of White Chauvinism; Hit Race Hatred jon an educational campaign among | its members to destroy all chauvin- istic tendencies and must push the fight in the shops for the rights of the Negro workers. It must recruit | 500 members by the time of its May | convention. The jury decided that within four | months another mass meeting must be held at the New Harlem Casino to hear the report of the union as to whether Birns has carried out his tasks and on what the union itself |has done to push the fight for the tion. He must be ready to join a| rights of the Negro workers in the | industry. The mass meeting applauded the decisions of the jury and unani- mously adopted a telegram to be sent to Governor Miller of Alabama demanding the release of the Scotts- boro Negro boys and informing him | of the mass trial and the decision of the jury and the determination of the workers to fight against lynch- ing and race prejudice, both of which | the telegram denounces as weapons of the same boss class. AMUSEMENTS DRAMA OF THE sCAMEO 2ND BIG WEEK! ‘Soviet Russia’s First Talkie "ROAD TO LIFE” (TITLES IN ENGLISH) 42nd Street and Bway HOMELESS WAIFS 25¢ All Seats to1 P.M. EEEEIETHE THEATRE 6 HOMECOMING GUILD THEATRE, 52n tnd PERFORMANCE (THE HU PRICES For ROTH PARTS performance at one-h EUGENE O’NEILL’S TRILOG MOURNING BECOMES ELECTRA. COMPOSED OF THREE PLAYS PRESENTED ON ONE-DAY THE HUNTED Ist PERFORMANCE (HOMECOMINGS 5:80 to 7:00 (Tiekets may be purchased sepa’ uD PRESE Y: THE HAUNTED id St., West of Broadway TED & HAUNTED) 8:10 to 11:20 Balcony $1.00, $1.50, 82.00, $3.00; Orchestra and front baleony $4.00 itely for either above prices) alt the The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT 6. SHERWOOD. Martin Beck TOM". Ave ve. 8:40 Mats. Thurg.Sat 2:40 f 3 and 4 room apartments — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK library, 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 Office open from: ? a. m. (9 8 p.m. every days ® 10 9, wm. to 6 p.m, Sunday Satorc.: COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW By With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth Ther, Wi: 43 St Dye S20 Mat. Thurs. & Sat. 2:20 TRA HOLIDAY MAT, FRIDAY FIFTH AVE, (Bway & 28th St.) THEATRE TODAY AND TOMORROW Clarence Darrow in “THE MYSTERY OF LIFE” Continaous Performances QUEENIE SMITH * ‘A’ LITTLE RACKETEER The New Musical Comedy Hit! .BEST DANCING SHOW IN TOWN! | 44th St. THEATRE, West of Bway, ivgs. $:30. Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:36 EVERYBODY'S WELCOME ‘The new mustenl FRANCES WIL OSCAR SHAY ANN PEYNINGTO: SHUBERT Ther Bye. 8:30, Mat Hi PP ODROME'..75. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK 8: O | WARNER oOLAND acTs tn tel. | “Charlie Chan’s Chance” [Nef Golden and Co, (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Oak, representative for the National | Committee; .Charles .and eaaae | Walker, who were both indicted for | criminal syndicalism when they in- | vaded the Harlah terror zone with | Theodore Dreiser -last fall; Waldo | Frank, well-known critic; Quincy Howe, editor of the Living Age; Mal- | colm Cowley, editor of the New Re- | public; Harold Holmes Owen, archi- | | Load of Food to Ky. Strike Area Engdahl, the International Labor De- fense endorsed the activity of this group to break down the barricade of machine guns and wholesale ar- rests throw up against the strike by Harlan and Bell county officials. “Every effort of the miners to or- ganize, to strike against intolerable living conditions has been met by ter- ror and more terror. “A lawyer sent by the International \tect from New Hampshire; John Hen..| Labor Defense to provide bail and de- ry Hammond, Jr., journalist; Mary |fense for relief workers and other Heaton Vorse, labor journalist and | workers arrested as ‘criminal syndi- | novelist; Dr. Elsie Reid Mitchell, New | calists’ after a brutal raid on the Na- ‘york physician, and Edmund Wilson, | tional Miners Union headquarters. critic, was himself held in jail for a long per- Corliss Lamont, son of the banker | fod. Then he was released without Tomas Lamont, and philosophy in- | charges being filed against him. Later structor at Columbia, may join the | he was not allowed to enter the coun- | delegation by airplane, accompanied | ty. Gunmen armed with rifles, shot- | by cameramen from the Workers’ |uns, and submachine guns patrolled Film and Photo League, a depart- | Pineville for miles in every direction, ment of the Workers International | stopping all cars and grilling all pas- Relief. | Backing these delegates are Jo- sephine Herbst, novelist; Sherwood Anderson; Niles Spencer, artist; Dr. | Hans Zinssen, Harvard physician, | former president of the American | Medical Association; Lewis Mumford, ‘critic; Stuart Chase, economist; Eve- lyn Dewey, daughter of the philo- sopher John Dewey and co-author with him on educational works; Floyd Dell, novelist; Sidney Howard, celebrated playwright, and Robert Lit- tell, dramatic critic. In a statement issued by J. Louis sengers to prevent miners from hold- ing their peaceful union meetings. “Meanwhile the long list of raids. arrests, frame-ups on everything from murder to liquor possession, kidnap- pings, clubbings, threats, and indi- vidual assaults continues on the part of the hired thugs of the coal com- pany. It will depend uon the mobili- zation of workers in active rotest to | break down this tyranny, but we wel- come and endorse the relief and anti- terror expedition of. these liberals, and their effort to expose Kentucky despotism.” See Who A — Au Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx Mimeograph Supplies Mimeographs, typewriters $15 up; repaired, cleaned, New stenc’ $2.25, quire, ink $1 Ib. Mimeo bond, white nnd colored paper, Write for price "* PROLET MIMO 108 E, 14th St,, N. ¥. C., Near Union Sq. Phone ALgonquin 4.4763 Room 203 Patronize the Concoops Food Stores 4ND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAS1 “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” When the Winter Winds Begin to Blow You will find it warm and cozy Camp Nitgedaiget You cnn rest in the proletarian comradely atmosphere provided in the Hotel—you will also find it well heated with steam heat, hot water and many other provements. ‘The food is clean and fresh and especially well prepared, SPECIAL RATES Fates WEEK- D 7 For further information cal} the— RATIVE OFFICE at HEALTH FOOD | Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 4-081 — very shop, mine and factory a fertile field for Daily Worker sub- seriptions, Your Own Daily dvertises in Intl Workers Order OPTICIANS '| Harry Stolper, Inc. 13-15 CHRYSTIE STREET (Third Ave. Car to Hester St.) 9 am. to 6 pm. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4523 Dr. M. B. FELSEN SURGEON DENTIST * Extraction Specialist 851 East 162nd Street Corner Prospect Ave. One block from Prospect Avenue Subway Station KUlpatrick 5-5028 MELROSE RESTAUEANT Comrad wi SOIT oad al at 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 114th St, Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE Phone: Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 13th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian food FIVE COURSES 50 Cents Siberia-Rugsian RESTAURANT ' $15 East 10th St. Bet. Ave. A and Ave. B Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-0554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 a, m. to 1:20 a. om ! Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10...55¢ | 191 SECOND AVENUE f Between 12th and 13th Ste.