The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 14, 1924, Page 2

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AN Page Two SCAB PLANT'S EMPLOYMENT SYSTEM BARED Daily Worker ManHired After Hours of Quizzing (Continued from page 1.) old torn cloth cap, a torn and muddy blue coat, and a pair of shoes with the toes kicked out and the soles worn thru. I pleaded with the employment men one after another, asking for any sort of a job. I told them I had no money and was hungry. Twice I got as far as the line inside the office where an interview is granted. How They Buy the Slaves. A sharp faced man with a long pointed chin projecting out under a pair of thin rimmed glasses stood at one end of this line. At the desk by which he was standing was a pile of applications for jobs, and a large pad of paper. In the employment man’s hand was another large pad. The interview with the ragged army of unomployed consisted of a sharp and hurried look at the applicant's face. Nine men out of ten who filed past this desk were promptly turned down by a persistent negative shak- ing of the head. Jews were turned away without explanation or argu- ment. Ragged Worker Has no Chance. Twice I passed this line. The first time I asked for a job at anything that was open, telling the man that I was broke and hungry, and offering to do anything that was wanted. He ‘was not at all impressed, simply shak- ing his head and saying, “nothing open today.” The second time I asked for a job in the cable forming depart- ment, and got the same reply, “noth- ing doing today.” Then thinking that perhaps the Western Electric subscribed to the theory that clothes make the man, I borrowed a good overcoat, shined up my best shoes, dug a felt hat out of the closet, pressed up my suit, and again went out to sell myself to the Western Electric company. I recalled the advise of another vyember- of.the, army of the unem- ~loyed, “if you can’t do anything else, you can always get a job as inspector or straw boss. They don’t have to do anything but look wise anyway.” So I applied to the sharp faced, long jawed individual for a job as inspec- tor. Best Liar Gets Job. He looked me over a minute, made a little mark in on the pad he held in his hand, gaye me an application to fill out, and let me go tnru the gate to a table. It is not probable that the Western Electric, which is so shrewd in other matters relating to its inter- ,est, has the slightest suspicion that the questions in these applications are conscientiously answered. The long tables where the applica- tions were filled out were occupied by groups of two, three and four job hunters who were making out their applications together, slowly building up a series of lies which they thot most probable that the Western Elec- tric would accept. Want Hitsory of Your Life. After we filled the applications we took them to a clerk and then sat down in one of the chairs that fillea the large employment room to wait until the employment manager could Anterview us. In the application we -had to give two references, our last five places of employment with rea- sons for quitting and date of employ- ment, our nationality, education, date of birth, whether married or single and similar questions. After giving in my application, at 1:30 on the afternoon of June 9, I had to wait two hours until my name was called by Mr. Noble, at office No. 2, where I was to be interviewed about & job. 4 Sharp Face Looks 'Em Over, } During these two hours over 300 _ men and boys filed passed the sharp faced man at the railing, and two- _ thirds of them were turned away. Of _ thoge who were admitted to sign ap- | plications, and interview Mr. Noble, less than 25 per cent were given jobs. very careful check was made by foble and his sharp faced assistant to how many were admitted, and Footed more were admitted than there ‘were jobs. They were forced to wait ‘two hours, and then turned away. | The labor market is at present drugged, unemployment being sharply on the increase, and therefore the employers can afford to choose their help from among a large number— Anconveniencing the unemployed with- - out any come-bick and to pay less Karl Marx Understood it. As I waited, watching the unem- 0} workers stream by, I thot of ‘passage in Karl Marx's pamphlet, rag bor and Capital.” Marx ways: “The free laborer sells himself that by fractions. From day to he sells by auction eight, 10, 16 hours of his iife to the ING SLAVES I$ SUSPENSION AND EXPULSION OF PROGRESSIVES IS ISSUE IN BIG CARPENTERS’ ELECTION TODAY By JOHN W. JOHNSTONE. Shall Chicago carpenters have the right to advocate pro- gressive measures within their union without danger of*suspen- sions or expulsions? This is one of the biggest issues at stake in the district elec- tion contest today between Frank Stahl and Harry Jensen. Harry Jensen has used his office as district president to sus- pend nine carpenters’ which opposed his reactionary rule. Would Expel Progressives. Jensen is further known to support the recent expulsion of thirteen mili- tant carpenters’ union members in Los Angeles for membership in the Trade Union Educational league, an organization which advocates amalga- mation and the Labor party. Frank Stahl, who seeks election to- day, declares himself flatly opposed to expulsion and suspensions for advo- cacy of progressive principles and pledges himself toward the protection of progressive members. Let us look at what has happened in Los Angeles and be warned by it: Los Angeles Expulsions | General Organizer Muir, for the car- penters’ union in the Los Angeles dis- trict, uses the police in his fight against the progressives in order to remove them as possible delegates to the coming international convention. About 13 of the most active members of the carpenters’ union have been ex- pelled without trial by the aid of the police because they dared to advocate amalgamation and independent work- ing class political action. All of the expelled carpenters have been from five to 35 years in the or- ganization, many of whom held office, among them the two business agents of Local 158, the largest local in the Los Angeles district. Members of or- ganized labor in general and the car- penters in particular will do well to investigate why the officials of organ- ized labor work in conjunction with |the police department against mem- bers of the union. T. U. E. L. Office Raided. March 1 an educational meeting called by the Trade Union Educational league was raided by the police, head- ed, by the notorious professional stool pigeon, Jack Diamond, whos@. ad- mittedly perjured evidence has sent so many I. W. W.’s to the penitentiary in California for mere membership in that organization. Stool Pigeon Dia- mond did not recognize his regular I, W. W. crowd, and called up the po- lice station to see if he was raiding the proper place, and was told that Room 291 was the place and to be sure that no one got away. Thirty- nine were taken to the police station, where the cat was let out of the bag. Union Officials, Stoolpigeons. The police captain did not concern himself as to what they were doing at the meeting. All he wanted was the name, address, the union and union card number of each worker. He then called up Secretary Horn of the cen- tral labor body, who came down to the police station with Parker, president of the Metal Trades council to give the prisoners the once over. This hap- pened on Saturday. On Monday the police called Secre- tary Horn, Business Agent Frazier of the carpenters, and Buzell, a leader in the Metal Trades council, a govern- ment appointee on vocational training, into a conference to look over all the material taken in the raid and inci- dentally to give them the names and card numbers of the men arrested. Expelled on Police Evidence. That same night General Organizer locals *- Muir of the carpenters’ union came to the meeting of Local 158 and demand- ed the immediate expulsion of some nine members of that local. At this meeting some of the material taken in the raid by the police was distrib- uted. These men were expelled with- out the semblance of a trial. The same has been déne in the Jewish lo- cal and in Local 426, until now there are about 13 old and active progres- sive members who have been expelled from the carpenters’ union on evi- dence submitted by the police, Machinists, Molders Stand Firm, On the same evidence, from the same source, the Central Labor coun- cil and Metal Trades council of Los Angeles have notified the machinists and the molders that they will not recognize those delegates who were arrested in the raid, on the grounds that they are adherents of the Trade Union Educational league. Both of these organizations have refused to recall their delegates, and are right- fully demanding that they and they THE DAILY WORKER Coolidge and Dawes to Carry Wall Street Banners in Campaign (Continued from page 1.) mission as major of engineers in June, 1917, was made lieutenant colonel one month later, and the next January became a colonel. Thus in a few short months, at a time when ev- erybody thought military reputations would surely carry elections, Dawes became a swivel chair brigadier gen- eral. I don’t believe all this was acci- dental. It is no small thing for the powers that be to have an old three- card man from the oil gang of 96 all furbished up and made new, with an international reputation and all set for national election, The machine headed by Boss Butler early showed its determination not to temporize with the Lodge type of outworn “Old Guard.” There was a cleaning out of the Old Guard, the old- er ones being sluffed off and the ranks of the younger “Old Guards,” hard boiled and up to the minute, were closed. Discipline was complete un- der the new “Mark Hanna” Butler. Crowe Labor Expert Calls _Union Illegal (Continued from page 1.) been illegally conducted by two detectives. The plain-clothes men walked into alone will decide who shall be their|the union headquarters at 214 N. delegates. This means that progres- State Street and produced two grand sive machinists and molders have been expelled from these two councils because they are progressive enough to advocate amalgamation and a labor party. Acted as Prisoner Guard. This is class collaboration with a vengeance and shows the utter bank- ruptcy of labor officialdom. But what can be expected from such a combina- tion of officials as Muir, Horn, Frazier, and Parker. Horn some time ago was caught red handed. working for the sheriff of that county, escorting con- victed I. W. W. members to San Quen- tin penitentiary, his only excuse being that for doing it he got a free ride to San Francisco and back. His accuser at that time was Frazier, now busi- ness agent of the carpenters, who was also one of the men behind the pres- ent raid. Frazier’s brother is in the police department. Cops and Labor Officials. It is surely a rotten mess, when we see a united front formed between the police and union officials against the progressives; when we see a secre- tary of a central labor body putting his O. K. on the brutal persecution of | put behind the bars. the I. W. W. by volunteering as an escort to take them to the peniten- tiary. The difference between this type and Diamond, the stool pigeon, is only one of degree. Just Like Jensen. The motive behind the activities of General Organizer Muir and Business Agent Frazier of the carpenters’ union is the same as that of Harry Jensen, president of the Chicago Carpenters” District council, when he suspended all the locals who had candidates run- ning against him for president. It is a struggle to retain power. The Chicago carpenters are taking care of Jensen, and it looks as tho he will be retired to the workshop after the coming election. In Los Angeles the situation is a little different. Some 19 members have been expelled. Most, if not all, of them would have been delegates to the coming interna- tional convention. Now they are ap- pealing to that convention for rein- statement. What are the Chicago car- penters going to do about it? highest biuder—to the owner of the raw material, the instruments of work and the means of life; that is, to the employer. Eight, 10, 12 and 15 hours of his daily life belongs to the man who buys them. The labor- er leaves the employer to whom he has hired himself whenever he pleases; and the employer dis- charges him whenever he thinks fit; either as soon as he o to make a profit out of him or fails to get as high a profit as he requires. “But the labor whose only source of earning is le of his labor power cannot leave the whole class of its purchasers, that is the capitalist class, without renouncing his own existence. He does not be- long to this or that particular em- ployer, but he does belong to the CAPITALIST CLASS; that is, it is his business to find an employer; among this capitalist c! it is his business to discover his own partic- ular purchaser.” Bleeding there Workers. I also recalled that the Western Electric bled from these unsuspecting employes many million dollars in 1928 that rightfully should have gone to them in wages. The Western Electric company, because it owns the raw ma- terial and the capital, extracted from the labor of other workers, makes these-men come begging almost on their knees for the chance to produce ten dollars for the company, and in return receive back less than five. These men and men like them pro- duce all of America’s wealth, for which they receive back trom the capitalists just enough to reproduce other slaves, and they stand for the insulting talk thrown at them about “ability,” “success,” “always room at the top,” “pep” and “good-will,” “fel- lowship,” “harmony”—with which the Western Electric is much more free than it is with a fat pay envelope or with decent working hours and condi- tions. Watch for Next Article. In the next article I will tell of my experience inside the plant, and will tell about how Mr. G. Knudson, head of the entire inspection department, hired me “to work hard for advance- ment which will come after you dem- onstrate your ability.” Whiskers Grow in Paterson as Razor Wielders Strike PATERSON, N. J., June 13.—Barber shops in Paterson are closed follow- ing the walkout of union workers. Employers will try to opera’ with non-union’ Men. The strikers are demanding $28 a week and 50 per cent of receipts over $40, and that the closing hour be changed to 7 o'clock and 9 o'clock on Saturdays. Every new subscriber Increases the influence of the DAILY WORKER, jury subpoenas calling for the appear- ance of the two officials before the grand jury—not the state’s Attorney’s office. Crowe’s Labor “Expert.” But as in the case ot the upholster- ers’ officials the grand jury subpoena was just a ruse to get them into Crowe’s star chamber. There Mac- Millen, one of Crowe’s two labor “ex- perts” who knows nothing about la- bor, began threatening them. “You belong to an illegal organiza- tion,” be blustered. The men demanded to be shown. “Well, you don’t belong to the cen- tral body of the Federation of Labor. You have no Federation charter,” an- swered MacMillen, “Neither does the Amalgamated Clothing Workers,” said Stewart. “What's that got, te do with it? We have a charter from our own organ- ization.” MacMillen evaded and began to re- peat that the Food Workers’ union had no jurisdiction in the food industry. Crowe’s man then began threaten- ing that the strike leaders would be He charged that bad smelling chemicals had been dropped in struck restaurants. Scab Places Smell Bad. “Don’t you know that no one is going to eat in those places when they smell so bad?” he said. The unionists said they were not responsible for the bad odor of scab restaurants, that their organization had committed no breach of the peace by dropping chemicals or in any other way. MacMillen came back with a vague statement that he “had the goods on them,” but would let them go with a warning. Amalgamated Food Workers’ mem- bers are indignant at this illegal brow- beating of their representatives. They point to the fact that not a single arrest has been made under the in- junctions obtained by 170 Greek res- taurant owners as showing that Crowe's men have not even faint pre- text for making charges. The strike will not be halted by Crowe's threats. The labor “expert's” blustering merely shows the strike’s effectiveness. SAN FRANCISCO, June 13.—Lieu- tenant Howell Smith, commander of the American round-the-world flight, was forced by engine trouble to land at the little coast town of Hue in French Indo-China, according to wire- less advices received here today. Subscribe or Buy it on Newsstands Many workers in Chicago, and elsewhere, are today reading the DAILY WORKER for the first time. Carpenters, in Chicago, are reading the DAILY WORK- ER, to get the news of their election today. Western Electric workers are reading it to get the truth about the corporation that ensiaves them. Workers and farmers everywhere are reading it for news about the June 17th convention at St. Paul, Better get on the subscription list, by sending in your “sub” at the epecial rate of TWO MONTHS FOR $1, using the blank on this page. If you live in Chicago you can also get the DAILY WORK- ER at all newsstands, in the city and its industrial suburbs. Send all “subs” to the DAILY WORK- ER, 1113 West Washington Bivd., Chicago, Ill. SCIENCE CROWD COMES OUT FOR LYNCHING By ROBERT MINOR. (Special te The Daily Worker) CLEVELAND, June 18.—For the first time the republican national convention drew a crowd, a crowd big enough to fill the auditorium and the visitors’ balcony. They had come to see the lynching of the Wisconsin delegation —the first real entertainment of this poor, cold-nosed convention. So nearly every seat was taken. Everybody threw the rules aside, got right with the door-keeper of his particular section, and brought in his ticketless friends to fill the vacant seats of those who hadn’t come. The evening session was set aside solely for the delectable treat of thet baiting,, ragging and defeat of the reformers. The only busi- ness for the evening was the report of the platform commit- tee. Wall Street Nutty. Charles B. Warren, ambassador to Mexico, as chairman of the platform committee, looked soft, like a puffy small town business man, whén he ad- vanced out the runway to deliver the majority report. Before reading the report he indulged in a few remarks intended as jeers at the Wisconsin delegation. The report he was going to deliver, he said, had received the vote of every member of the commit- tee with the exception of the repre- sentative of one state; and he looked with an insulting grin toward the lit- tle group of Wisconsin delegates. The words of the report, which have now become the text of the platform of the Grand Old Party for the 1924 election, fell from his lips as a cold, hard, brutal outlay of the plans of a board of directors. I suppose a read- ing of the platform will show a lot of camouflage, but in that atmosphere it seemed to be without even that. All eyes were on the Wisconsin del- egation. Warren came to the point which was set for the carefully prepared pandemonium. A long sentence of eulogy reached the words “Calvin Coo—” Bung Is Pulled. And this was the time. Like the starter’s pistol-shot for the racers, it was the signal that released the dem- onstration. It was not a demonstra- tion for Coolidge; it was a demonstra- tion against the farm revolt of the northwest, which these men so child- ishly think is embodied by LaFollette. Men jumped on tables. Women shrieked, chairs rattled. They’re off! After five minutes all eyes are turned on the little Wisconsin delegation. Necks were craning over the balcony to jeer Wisconsin instead of cheering Coolidge. The whole of the throng was facing the little hole in the stand- ing crowd where the Wisconsin dele- gation remained seated. Soon all the shouts became jeers, all hurled at the little hole in the crowd where Wisconsin sat. Fists were shaken. A score of men of the bouncer type, jumping from table to table to surround the Wisconsin dele- gation, stood over them to shake fists into their faces. The Wisconsin dele- gation sat silent. LaFollette Boys Razzed. Hundreds of small town politicians began milling around the hall, headed by their state delgation signs, singing an imbecile song that has circulated here, entitled “Keep Cool and Keep Coolidge.” The processions all con- verged and congested in the aisle where sat the Wisconsin delegation. “Get up! Get up, you rats!” “Stand up, Wisconsin!” “What’s the matter with you?” were the yells. After this had continued 20 minutes the signal was given by a functionary to Mr. John Philip Sousa, the shiny, slick and famous bandmaster, and the strains of “The Star-Spangled Ban- ner” floated over the hall. “Now they'll have to get up!” shouted a gleeful voice, tho I heard some one mutter, “That's a dirty trick.” But the Wisconsin delegation con- tinued to sit. A big fellow leaning dangerously over the balcony’s edge shouted, “They won't even get up for “The Star-Spangled Banner!’” and a roar of boos, catcalls and hi: shook the roof. Yellers Dry Up. But the crowd got tired of yelling. “The Star-Spangled Banner” gave way to “Hail, Hail, the Gang’s All Here!” and gradually the illusion of a threat- ening mob about to do violence faded into a picture of a thousand tired busi- ness men puffing from overexertion, wiping their faces, blowing their noses and taking their seats. Babbits Grow Weary. Mr. Warren came forward again and continued to read the soon-to-be program of the Republican party for 1924, which gradually became tedious. At its end, very few having heara more than a few words of it, came an- other, but fatigued, demonstration. Chafrman Mondell announces that the minority report, “which was sup- ported by only one member of the committee representing one state, will now be delivered by the Honorable Henry Cooper, delegate from Wiscon- sin, who asks for fifteen minutes to speak on this motion.” He paused and repeated with sarcastic emphasis, “the Honorable Mr. Cooper.” Amidst a few catcalls and boos, counter- balanced by the desperate applause of the Wisconsin delegates and some sympathetic visitors, the tall, white- bearded Henry Allen Cooper, many years @ congressman, advanced to speak, The venerable age and steady coolness of the old man seemed for a moment to awe the crowd. Too Much Fish. Mr. Cooper is a good speaker. For a minute or two one could almost have a vision of another “crown of thorns and cross of gold” episode like that of Mr. Bryan’s in 1896. But no. Not on this fish-blooded crowd. In a few minutes the jeers began again. “Sit down!” “We don’t want to hear that stuff!” “He’s a Democrat-Socialist!” But the old man’s voice swelled above the din. The aged body straightened and grew tense with emotion. Mouths gaped with wonder at his fervor. It was the first spontaneous moment that this convention has had. It was a voice out of the past—of an old bib- lieal prophet, as tho come to life out of the preachers twaddle of the invo- cation. One began to have a sense of shame and sorrow, as at exposing a human heart to a butcher's knife, but it was only a voice out of the past, speaking the outgrown philosophy of the western prairies of 1896—a protest against Time, a protest that was soft and doomed to failure. Galleries With Cooper. The crowd seemed to like the show —the first kick of two tedious days. The timekeeper advanced to touch the old man on the shoulder; his time was up. Somebody shouted, “Time’s up; sit down!” But a considerable roar of “No, keep on!” made the timekeeper stop with his arm extended. The old man continued. At the end of his speech he began reading the “LaFollette platform” as a minority report. When Cooper came to the passage denouncing the oil thieves, I looked at Harry Daugherty, sitting among the Ohio delegation. Daugherty, in the most strained ostentation, was self- consciously talking with his neighbor. Another reformist passage was met with yells of “No!” And then the jeering and heckling began again. When Cooper read with fervent into- nation the recommendation that fed- eral judges be elected by popular vote, a fat man in an aisle seat shouted “Socialist!” The speaker turned a white-haired and solemn, naive face toward the interrupter. “A gentle- man says ‘Socialist,’” he said. “Well, when I introduced for the first time the proposal for the election of United States senators by the people, that, too, was called ‘Socialist,’” he said. Fat Boy Is Noisy. “I agree; it is!” yelled the fat man. And as the speaker continued, the fat man again interrupted to shout: “Tell us about Lee-nine!” (Lenin). A low murmur, in which the word “Bolshevik” could be heard, swept over the hall. Mr. Cooper ended, and Chairman Mondell rapped the gavel. “All in fa- vor of the minority report—” LaFollette’s cherished plan went down under a roar of “Noes!” that had the flavor of thunder. The major- ity recommendation was put and car- ried with an equal roar of “Ay Harry Daugherty raised his hands above his head to applaud wildly. He leaned back, with open mouth, and yelled with joy, like a child. Boom Follows Boom. And so the real business of the con- vention ended last night. LaFollette is flattened and only served as a pleas- ant diversiqn, anyway, This morning the delegates are strolling in, with a mien of want-to- go-home, Nothing to do but vote for a vice presidential nominee—as soon as they are told whom to vote for. Tired of endless drilling in “booms” that are never confirmed by the bosses, the automatons have dropp: the booms one after another. The name of Hoover is floating today, more than before. But don’t take any- thing too seriously, until William M. Butler, the sleek looking business man-boss, who sits there silently with C. Bascomb Slemp and Nicholas Long- worth behind him, sends some one out the runway to place in nomination the name of—? And yes, by the way—Mr. Samuel Gompers is in town. I can't find him. Nobody can. I found Matty Woll's signature on a hotel register—but that’s all in sight. Mr. Gompers is here to voice the demand of “Labor” for light wines and beer. But from the Republican convention—circuses, tnd no bread—and no light wines and rs, ENGLEWOOD TRUNK WORKS 842 W. cago + 63rd Street, Chi Manufacturers and Jobbors in High Grade TRUNKS, BAGS, SUIT CASES TORaa eLceee, wee ; Opposite Weste: .- By, pet a 819 ata <a" Saturday, June 14, 1924 ESTERN ELECTRIC + Stahl Pledges Fight Against Landis Award (Continued from page 1.) The first need of members of the carpenters’ union in Chleago, is unity against the open shop employ- er. That is my position. Jensen Bitterly Opposed. Jensen is bitterly opposed by pro- gressives for his recent suspension of nine local unions that opposed him, for his action last January In ordering carpenters to work with scab painters and for his failure to organize ‘the thousands of carpen- ters who are working on open shop jobs under the direction of the in- famous Landis Award Citizens’ Com- mittee. Stahl’s Record. Stahl’s strength is based on his record of opposition to the corrupt machine, for his support of progres- sive measures as at the Decatur convention of the Illinois Federation of Labor last year and for the belief of the rank and file that he will lead the fight against the open shop em- ployers and not against union men who hold progressive principles. Those Contracts, Jensen’s eleventh-hour effort to save himself by capitalist press stories regarding contracts signed with several contractors is riddled by Stahl. “Those contracts were signed with the international president, William Hutcheson, not with Jensen,” said Stahl yesterday. “Hutcheson was called in by the contractors after Jen- sen had failed to get them to sign.” Why the Concealment? Stahl points out the suspicious fact that the contracts were signed at the last minute without showing the text to the rank and file. He wants to know what is the reason for conceal- ment. Other unionists bring out the fact that the contractors whose names Jen- sen is flaunting were hiring union carpenters right along. The question is whether the new contracts are along real carpenters’ union. lines or along Landis Award lines. * That Jensen has been using Landis Award methods himself at times is shown by the fact that he has or- dered carpenters back to the job after they had refused to work with scab painters and other craftsmen. This was particularly true of the church building job at Palmer Square last January. Building Trades Divided. Stahl scores Jensen for his un- friendliness towards members of other building trades’ crafts. Stahl points out that neither the carpenters nor any other building trades’ group can fight the boss successfully alone. Open shops, like Western Electric, where there are many non-union car- penters working, cannot be organized except by the united action of coun- cils of the allied crafts’ unions, he shows. ene) ‘Twentieth Century Delayed. NEW YORK, June 13.—Derailment of a freight train at New Carlisle, Ind., blocked traffic on the New York Cen- tral lines today, and held up their crack train, the Twentieth Century Limited, three hours, officials of the line said. MITCHALL’S INTERNATIONAL ORCHESTRA Union Music Furnished For All Occassions Write for appointments to M. MITCHALL, (Teacher of Saxophone) 1640 W. Congress St. Chicago, Ill. A COOL PLACE ——FOoR. GOOD EATS Mohawk Restaurant & Lunch Room . MADISON STREET | (near Green St.) where you will get quality and prompt service. FRED. SCHWAMB, Prop. TTT TTT JAY STETLER’S RESTAURANT Established 1901 1053 W. Madison St. Chicago Tel. Monroe 2241 George E. Pashas COZY LUNCH 2426 Lincoln Avenue One-half ae? 2 yo Imperial CHICAGO mln i

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