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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDN DAY, MARCH 28, 1982 CONFERENCE TO FIGHT “BLOCK- AID” FAKE SCHEME Mobilize for War NEW YORK. — To expose Block-Aid” system of the bosses, an dto organize workers’ block com- mittees, the Unemployed Counc organizing a unietd front conference for Sunday, April 3, 2 pm., Workers Center, 1813 Pitkin Avenue. An appeal sent out to workers’ or- izations reads, in part: The Tmergency Relief Committee is threatening to close the Home Re- ief Buroughs in April and to dump e entire responsibility for the un- starving workers The Block Com- ization, which is receiv- ity in every boss nev the ihe the misery of the un- it i 1is organization as s of registering the militant cution and ip on the workers, Red Book, i by the Albany for the nder the chapter “New War,” an explana- Defense Committee e gover of 1917 Mobilized for ent in sme this organization is an exact dupli- of the Home Defense Committee Combine this organization | he recent order of 33,000,000 | t blank by the U. S. governmen sy to see what kind bosses have in mind in their leaflet, refore become a leaders to whom w York would turn in any crisis. Our answer must be: A whole net- work of real block committees of the Besinpiovad Council in every work- ing class block in this section, which will force relief from the bosses and the government, and which the bosses will find impossible to suppress. is the they ay Block-Aiders t zroup of when ected TENANTS SU PPORT BRONX PAINTERS Bosses Fail to Hire Seab Labor NEW YORK he second day of the strike of the Alteration Painters | which is going on at the Hunts Point | ig Co., 882 Hunts Point Ave., , and at the Art. Craft Decor- Co., of 79 Pondfield Road, Brownsville has tied up all the jobs comp'etely. The bosses have tried | to bring scabs to finish the jobs. This | time also the bosses were fooled be- cause when the workers saw the men picketing they refused to take hte job. Tenants Support Strike On one job at 143rd St. and 7th Ave., four men were put on by the boss to scab, but they were taken down by our pickets. This particular place is populated with Negro work- ers. The tenants of this house are sympathetic towards the strikers. The tenants were aroused when the strik- ers explained to them about the con- ditions that they were working under. They all promised not to let, anybody in to work in their apartments unless he shows a card from the strike com- mittee that the strike has been set- tide. The strikers show a wonderful spir- | it. They are all out 100 per cent on picketing duty. Tonight there will be a general membershir ing of the Alteration Painters at ee Plaza, Irving Pl.| and 15th St., N. ¥.C. At this meet- ing we will lees the report of the strike. All members must attend this meeting. Non-members can come to this meeting and join the organiza- tion What’s On— WEDNESDAY— Comrade James W. Ford will speak on the deportation bills now before Congress at the Brownsville Workers Club, 118 Bristol Street, Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. All workers are we The ¥oung Hunger Fighters of Middle Bronx meet every Wednesday afternoon at . at 1400 Boston Road are invited. Irving Schwab, one of the I neys defending ‘the Bronx will speak to the L, 8. N. R., 418 West TRURSDAY— Richard B, Moore will speak at st the Nat Turner Group, L. 8 a St. Luke Hall, 127 West 130th Street, ai 8 p.m. The Ed meet at Speaker The plumbers and helpers »- voting sched ulod for ‘Thursday has 1 led off Instead an organization mec Mm be held on Friday, at 8 p.m., at 1985 Southern Boulevard, Bronx. Ail members should be present The West Bronx Branch, F, §. U., will hold a debate at Burnside Manor, "71-85 ‘West Burnside Avenue, Bronx, at 8 p.m All workers are invited. The New York City clothing workers will nominate a worker from their ranks to go to the foviet Union on May 1, under the auspices of the N. Y. District, F. A nomination meeting will be held at Irving Isth Street and Irving eal Oi Max Bedacht will speak on “World Capi- talism and the Soviet Unton,” at Irving Plaza Hall, 16th Street and icving Place et 8 p.m., under the @uspices of the N. ¥. District, F 8.4. at the | workers on | who are | ided to be a means of | s burden on the workers every bloc This “block aid’| t only a farce as }Outs cter of the Block | »| and their ability to discuss the most at | L. D. attor- | | - {Protest Anti-Alien Bills In Brooklyn at Brownsville Club NEW YORK. — The workers of sville will gather tonight at the le Workers Club, 118 Bristol Brooklyn, to protest against s, which aim to de- | 's that parti s of the working ps W. Ford, member of the Pro- tion of Foreign-Born NEGRO WORKER ‘DROPS OF HUNGER, IS SENT TO JAIL ment in Hospital By J. LAPITOS. Delegation | NeW YORK—Frank Johns, a ill be the speaker. Negro worker, unemployed, facing On Friday, March 25, a report of | starvation, with no place to sleep, the second delegation will be given | went to the Municipal lodging house in Manhattan Lyceum 66 East 4th St. | The speakers will Jand J. Nickolays, |second delegation, sented the organization On Sunday, March 27, a report of | |the Delegation will be given at 2921 | | West 32nd Street, Coney Island. Saul tt will speak. The meeting is | ed by Branch 122, Interna- | | tional Workers Order. The residents of the various sec- ns, where protest meetings will be held are called to attend these meet- | ngs and protest against the bills be: D, Bartkin | members of the who have repre- Ukrainian and Russian | SOVIET CHILDREN BRILLIANT, ‘SAYS ARISTOCRAT rip “Children In Capitalist Countries NEW YORK.—Declaring that Am- erican and British children “become little more than imbeciles when com- pared with children of the same age n Soviet Russia,” the Baroness Rav- ensdale, eldest daughter of Lord Cur- |zon, in a lecture to the members of the Women's City Club at 22 Park here. Outlined the mighty | achievements of the Soviet Union Gell | educating the children of the work- | jers there Expressing her complete bewilder- ment at the remarkable advances of the Soviet Union in the sphere of child education and care, the baro- ness admitted that “she had no idea | what this tremendous training of the young brain would bring to Soviet children in after year “The children of the Soviet,” continnvedh” “are | Gstinlle entitinn, They are citizens and somehow you do not feel the precociousness about them that would characterize the advanced British or American child. They seem to possess and to ex- press the articulate convictions of their souls. They have the most extraordinary developed brains I have ever known.” Citing various instances of the mental maturity of Soviet children | Avenue, advanced political and social prob- lems, the baroness admitted that her | impression of the Soviet child led irresistably to the conclusion that they would carry through the Soviet | program. Although she went into raptures | over what was being accomplished in the Soviet Union, the baroness purposely omitted any mention of the horrible starvation, misery, illiteracy and disease of children under cap- italism, With equal forethought, this aris- tocratic lecturer failed to point out that the huge forward strides made by the children of the Soviet Union over their former standing under the Tzars and over the position of the workers’ child under capitalism was |due entirely to the fact that the workers and poor farmers of the Soviet Union had kicked out the bosses and landlords and set up a | Proletarian dictatorship. The Soviét | workers live under a government run | by the workers and for the workers and not for the profits and interests | of the capitalists, landlords and their pampered children. | Continue Strike | In N.Y. Laundry, | Militaney G Grows Despite Jailing NEW YORK.—The strike of New Style Laundry workers at 16th | St. and d Ave., where the boss said | that he would lock up shop before | he would hire union workers, is still | going strong. The militancy of the strikers con- | tinues to grow, despite the fact that siv of the most active union organiz- ers are held in jail on a $32,000 bail bond. | The Negro and white workers, who walked out 100 per cent in support of a fired Negro work are not dis- couraged on ac { of the frame-up nd have pledged to fight on till bey win. the | All workers are asked to come to 5 East 19th St. | meetings ever at 2lst St. and Ist Ave., New York. He stayed there for several days and then he was chased out. This worker went to look for some other place and went to the Salvation Army. He was chased from there also, and collapsed of hunger, An ambulance was called from the St. Catherine Hospital to give him first aid. When the ambulance ar- rived, they refused to take him to the hospital, but instead they took him to the police station to lock him up for vagrancy. The workers of the Williamsburg | Unemployed Council protested against the action of the hospital authorities land, police and told them that he needed medical treatment and food | instead of jail. Then another ambu- lance came from Kings County Hos- | pital and took him away to the } hospital, COUNCIL WINS ACTION FOR 5) —— Expose Fake Block Aid Plan to Workers NEW YORK. ‘The Downtown Un- |employed Council continues with its record of winning relief for ployed workers every day. Yesterday 5 families who as indi- viduals had been refused relief by the Home Relief Bureau, though in desperate circumstances, received im~ mediate attention when accompanied by committees from the Unemployed Council. One of the cases, Mrs. P. Rothber- ger, 726 E. 9th Street, had been reg- istered at the bureau for some time, was about to be evicted and had no food in the house for her three chil- dren. The council also held an open air meeting in front of the block aid of- fice at First Street and Avenue A to expose their fake purpose to the workers, “The block aid scheme”, said a speaker to the workers crouding around to hear him, “is a plan set up by the bosses to bleed the work- ers of their last penny and to lead them away from organizing and fighting for immediate, adequate re- lief and unemployment insurance,” Many workers who had been wait- ing to get in the Home Relief Bu- reau across the street listened to the speaker call on them to organize as the only method to win relief, point- ing to the many victories of the un- employed council as proof of the power of organization against indi- vidual action. The Downtown Council has made an important change in its work by its decision to have new and inex- perienced workers form the commit- tees going to the charities. This will give valuable experience to fresh workers and develop more leaders. 1,800 IN MINN. SUPPORT MINERS Huge Mass Meet for Strike Relief MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., March 22,—-At a mass meeting of the Workers’ International Relief for the Kentucky miners, the Wesley Auditorium was packed with 1,800 workers in one of the biggest mass held of militant unem- workers. Tremendous enthusiasm greeted the speech of John J. Ballam and the Soviet film was met with re- peated outbursts of applause. A collection for the Kentucky miners of $100 was taken. Ballam will speak at 26 more meetings in Min- nesota, Northern Wisconsin and Upper Michigan. “THE RED OFICER’S FRIEND” IN LAST DAY AT ACME, “The Red Officer's riend” a roman- tic drama, is now in its last day»at the Acme Theatre. Not only does the picture present a vivid tale of the back wash of the war in the Crimea, but the film has some notable actors, who give a realistic performance of those eventful days. The leading artists are: ritz Rasp, Brigitte Helm —both well known for their work in “Metropolis"—and Vladimir Sokoloff, formerly wih the Moscow Art Thea- tre Players, Beginning Thursday, te Acme will today to help the s i a militant laundry workers iu their Moe Meetcve Chitinees Peel Hips from “The 5th Year.” This is the i The Laundry Workers Industrial t time the picture will be shown. Union at 260 E. 138th St. is giving The film shows the progress and its first annual ball Saturday, March , at the Ambassador Hall, 3d Ave. and Claremont Parkway. Ten per’ cent of the proceeds goes to the Ken- tucky miners | ANY $1.50 OR $1 INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS BOOK WITH ONE 12-MONTH SUBSCRIPTION TO THE DAILY WORKER achievements of the U. S. S. R., The program at the Trans-Lux Theatre on Broadway, devoted to short subjects is presenting the fol- lowing this week: “The Spider and The Fly,” a cartoon comedy; “Dai- mond Experts,” a Sportlight short; “Song of the Voodoo,” a Vagabond travel film to Haiti; “Musical Jus- tice,” with Rudy Vallee, and ‘The Unemployed Ghost,” with ‘Tom Howard Demand He Get Treat-} ! | | Strife-Song By MORRIS WINCHEYSKY. (Translated by (This poem, vV. J. Jerome) by the first Jewish revolutionary writer who died a few days ago in New York, first appeared in “Der Wecker,” London, December 23, 1932 and has been sung by Jewish revolutionary workers ever since). Set aflutter the banners the scarlet, Strike up a march and set columns astir! Rouse all the toilers, the starvelings half-living Say to them: Brothers, see, here we stand— There—the blood-handed Here is Freedom, foe. is Light, and is Justice. ‘Fherxe—Oppression and Evil and Darkness. Brothers, march with us this day! Let not with weeping the Say to them: Now is no Let: not the voice of this workers’ eyes moisten. moment for tears. hour sound sorrow, Now when we go forth to battle the foe, Battle the blood-handed f ‘oe, We—with a will all men to embrother. He—with a will to rend us with hate. Brothers, march with us this day! Set aflutter the banners the scarlet, Rouse all the slumbering, One by one, gather chem, All for the cause Ring out the summons: Against the blood-handed All you oppressed, you ins! those who are weak all who are scattered. foe! ulted, come rally. Take back the plunder from robbers, enslavers. Brothers, march with us tl his day! Set aflutter the banners the scarlet. Strike up a march and set columns aswing. Hold in remembrance our heroes the fallen. Think of the victims of Pillage and Greed— Now when we march on the foe! Fuse the red strength in the pale and the bloodless. Straighten with couragé the bowed and the drooping. Tell them; March with us this day! Mother of Scottsboro | Boy Urges Workers| to Continue Fight) N ew York, N. Y.| | Daily Worker:— Just a line to let you all know | how thankful I am to see how in- | terested you all in getting our boys | |free. I have been in the north for | |some time and everywhere I go| the workers show a great spirit | |in the fight to free our boys. I think it is wonderful the way |the workers are supporting our |fight. It would be better if all the Negroes could see it as I do, | I will soon be leaving the north |to go back home in Atlanta, Ga.) |I ask all the workers to continue | |the fight. I will do what I can| in the south, , —Violet Montgomery. || Landlord Ready to Be Stool-Pigeon to Br ea k Strike NEW YORK.—William Grassi, the landlord of 733 Arnow Ave., failing in numerous tricks to break the strike for lower rents in the house, has now threatened to resort to a despicable act against three of the tenants. He has informed three widows in the rent strike that unless they aban- don the strike he will have their sons, their only support, fired from their jobs by informing their employers that the workers are “blosheviks.” The rich landlord is now about to plpay the role of a cheap stool pigeon. These threats have aroused the rest of the house, and three tenants who previously were not in the strike have now joined. A protest demonstration has been planned by the tenants. THOMAS BEECHAM RETURNS TO PHILHARMONIC, Thomas Beecham returns to the Philharmonic-Symphony this week for the remainder of the season. On Wednesday afternoon and on Thurs- day evening, at Carnegie Hall, the program i sas follows‘ Overture to “Prince Igor,” Borodin; “Brigg Fair,” Delius; Symphony in E flat, Breit- kopf, and Haertel No. 3 and 99, Haydn; and Symphony No. 4 in G major, Dvorak. The Saturday night Student’s pro- gram will have Handel's ballet, “The Gods Go a’Begging,” the Dvorak Symphony, Delius’ “On Hearing the First Cuckoé in Spring” and “Sum- mer Night on the River,” and Tchai- kovsky’s “Francesca da Rimini” Fan- tasia, Sunday afternoon at Carnegie Beecham will direct the following program: Overture to “Prince Igor,” Borodin; “Brigg Fair,” Delius; Sym- phony No. 4 in B flat major, Beetho- ven; Ballet, “The Gods Go a’Beg- ging,” Handel; Francesca da Rimi Fantasia, Tchaikovsky. “The labor movement will gain the apper hand and show the way to peace and socialism.” LENIN. EAST SIDE LAST DAY! “The Red Officer’s Friend” A TENSE DRAMA OF THE CRIMEA A UFA Production—Directed by G. W. PABST, of “Secrets of a So! ‘and. Paris—With Brilliant European Cast. BEGINNING THURSDAY “Soviet’s Challenge” A PROLETARIAN PRODUCTION— BASED ON TH YEAR” ACME THEATRE 14TH 8ST. & UNION SQUARE Man Comrade | ‘voreter ow Peutsch, 222 K. 33rd 8 DURABLE STRIKE RE-UNION SAT. To Aid Metal League Recruiting Dtive NEW YORK.—The Metal Workers of the Durable Tool and Die Com- pany who have recently gone through a@ militant strike lasting six weeks, are holding a reunion affair this Sat- urday, March 26, at 8 p. m. at the W.LR. Center, 16 West 21st St. ‘These workers have put up a heroic struggle and have learned a valuable lesson in this strike. They now un- derstand and realize the need of building their Metal Workers Indus- trial League to a strong mass union of metal workers—ropted in all the shops in the industry—as their only weapon and guarantee of victory in their future strike struggles against the intolerable conditions that prevail in the metal sweat shops. Many of the Durable Strikers are now actively participating in the day to day work of the union in order to help successfully carry through its present membership drive, which will put it on the road to becoming a powerful Metal Workers Union. This affair in addition to being a reunion of hte Durable strikers will also be a rallying affair of all metal workers of New York in support of the MWIL's Recruiting Drive. The Durable workers call upon all militant workers and their organiza~ tions particularly those who have shown solidarity with them on the picket line, and assisted them in their spirited resistance to police terror and their routing of scabs to come to this affair. 4 ‘There will be good music and danc- ing—also a program of entertain- ment, which will include a wrestling match by members of the Labor Sports Union, a revolutionary play, and other good features. There will be no admission charged. THREATEN RENT STRIKE WITH INJUNCTION Landlords Desperate; Tenants to Fight Even If Granted NEW YORK—The landlord of the five houses on Longfellow Ave., Bronx, where the tenants are striking for lower rents, has resorted to a last desperate measure to break the strike. He has applied for an injunction with clauses so sweepin gas to take away from the tenants and workers the most elementary rights in their fight for better conditions. He asks that the tenants be stopped not only from picketing but even from talking to other tenants about organizing against the exorbitant rents. He wanst the court to stop the tenants from distributing leaflets, holding meeting or eyen publishing statements concerning their activities. In short he asks for a complete abridgement of the »constitutional laws that the bosses ask the workers to hold so sacred, but which the bosses violate without compunction when their profits are threatened. The injunction denies all the right of free speech, free assemblage, etc:; guaranteed in the constitution. Furthermore, in his application the landlord resorts to falsehoods con- crening the activities of the tenants. He says, for instance, that the work- ers rioted in front of the house, as if it were the workers and not the squads of Tammany police called by the landlord who carried through assaults, Let the workers and others note that there are no injunctions issued against wage cuts, unemployment, starvation, high rents, and all the burdens imposed on the workers and toiling masses by the bosses, but the moment the toiling masses rise to fight these burdens, the bisses imme~ diately resort to this most vicious weapon against them, ‘The contents of this application for an injunction should arouse every tenant and worker at what is a direct blow at his right to organize and fight against the bosses, bankers and landlords. The granting of this in- junction by the Tammany court wili be another record for the workers to remember of the twin identity of the court and the bosses. ‘The tenants state that, injunction or no injunction, they are determine to continue and carry on their ren- strike for lower rents. They call o1 all tenants who have won thei: strikes and sympathetic tenants to rally with them in a fight in which they have a common interest, A blow at the tenants in one house is a blow at the struggle for lower rents in another, and a blow at the entire working class. Youth Metal Fraction Meets Thursday, 7 p.m. NEW YORK.—All members of the Young Communist League who are metal workers—employed or unem- ployed, are instructed to attend a very important fraction meeting to be held on Thursday, March 24th, 7:30 p. m., at the Workers Center, 35 E. 12th St. All Y.C.L.-metal workers must be at this meeting whether or not they are jas yet members of the Metal Workers Industrial League. Attend- ance to this meeting is strictly com- pulsory regardless of any other as- signment, District Secretariat, Y.CL, District 2. AMUSEMENTS The First Real eeuare COSSACKS si = Directed by OLGA PREOBRASHENSKAYA— Only woman di- rector in Russia, who produced “THE VILLAGE OF SIN” A SOUND FILM—TITLES IN ENGLISH The Romance That Thrilled All Russia! 2nd WEEK! THE LATEST MOTION PICTURE FROM SOVIET RUSSIA Amkino Prsents—American Premiere of Cossack Life DOW GUILD Presents 7p HE ‘MOON IN THE YELLOW RIVER By DENIS JOHNSTON GUILD THEA., 52d St., W. of Eve. 8:40, Mats. Thurs. The Vheatre Presents Liha EU 9) IN VIENNA Comedy .By ROBERT E. Pana vend L th Martin Beck 5. a"s Ave. Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurgs.Sat 2:40 COUNSELLOR- AT-LAW With PAUL MUNI W. 45 St, Ev. 8:20 ‘Thors. & Sat. 2:20 ELMER RICE Plymouth jr HIPPODROMES::,:.:; & 43rd St. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK BKO Bill Boyd Acts: in pave '™*! | “Carnival Boat’ arotton with Ginger Rogers TO in English) 2 ROOMS COMPLETE, #18 E. 11th St. Gall 628 Apt. AT EE First Russian Talkie! DIRECT FROM 5 ‘VEEKS AT CAMEO ROAD LIFE Drama of Russia’s‘ Wild Children’ NEW LOW PRICES—AT ALL THEATRES ~ WED. to FRI. AT THESE THEATRES JEFFERSO 58th Street Street ir, Ath St. & To Present Play On Scottsboro Case This Thursday in Harlem NEW YORK. — “Scottsboro Lim- ited”, a short play by Langston Hughes, well-known Negro writer, will be presented this Thursday nite at St. Luke’s Hall, 127 West 130th Street, under the auspices of the Harlem Group of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. An additional feature of the eve~ ning will be a short address by Rich. B. Moore on the significance of the Scottsboro frame-up and mass de- fense of the 9 innocent Negro lads by millions of white and Negro workers throughout the world, FORCE LANDLORD TO STOP EVICTION NEW YORK.—A committee of the Williamsburg Unemployed Council which fought against the eviction of Jacobson, an unemployed worker of 108 McKibben St., was able through threat of a rent strike and a resis- tance to the eviction to prevent this worker from being thrown on the street. The committee went to see the landlord and told him that if the worker was evicted the tenants would stop paying rent, and that the eviction would be resisted. The Williamsburg Unemployed Council will hold a mass meeting at 61 Graham Ave., Thursday, March 24, at 8 p.m. TAILORS WILL SEND DELEGATE TO SOVIET UNION Nomination ” Meeting Will Be Held Thurs- day, March 24 NEW YORK CITY. — Thursday, March 24th, at 6 p.m, (right after work), a Mass Nomination Meeting of the Amalgamated members of all branches of the industry has been called, to be held at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Pl., where a dele- gate to go to the Soviet Union to represent the Amalgamated Rank and File workers will be made. It is for the first time in the his- tory of the mén’s clothing workers’ that they have had the chance to send one of their fellow workers to a Workers’ and Farmer’ country to view the tremendous achievements under a Workers’ Government. Every member of the Amalgamated, whether a coat maker or vest maker, pants maker or children’s jacket maker, is eligible for nomination and election. The Amalgamated Rank and File Committee and the Friends of the Soviet Union, in a joint appeal, call upon every tailor to participate in the nomination and election of a del~ egate, who will attend the May First demonstration in Moscow and remain. one month to investigate the condi- tions of the workers there. Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Persons! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON Intl Workers Order OPTICIANS G2 Harry Stolper, Inc. 73-75 CHRYSTIE STREET Third Ave. Car to Hester St.) 9 am. to 6 pm. Daily Phone; Dry Dock 4-4523 ‘THOROUGH EYE EXAMINATION EXPERT FITTING OF GLASSES Special Rates to Workers and Families WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN 106 East 14th St. (Room 21) Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8237 29 EAST M4TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Fall Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations Patronize the Concoops Food Stores Restaurant 2100 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN BESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find 3¢ Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx (near 174tb St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—9149 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 13th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian food JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 a. m. to 1:30 a. m, Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10...55¢ 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13tb Sts. Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave. (Corner Southern Blvd.) Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.1.U. Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E, 12th St. New York Schildkraut’s Vegetarian Restaurant 4 West 28th St. Wishes to announce a radical change in the prices of our food— to fit any purse—yet retaining the same quality food. Those new prices shall prevail only at the 4 West 28th Street Store We hope to greet you as before. AU Comraaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 658 Claremont Parkway, Bronx BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, A. M ©, & BW. ot N. AL Office and Headquarter Labor Temple, 243 Kast ith Street ‘Room 12 meetinxs every ‘iret and ird Sunday, 10 A. M. . Employment Bureau open every asy at 6 bo Regular thi LIVE IN A— | 2800 BRONX WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK Comradely atmosphcre—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a Ubrary, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities Tel. Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train te White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue PARK EAST a id i