The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 9, 1930, Page 2

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This compares with only _ France, one for England and one _ for Germany in every 5,000, far below Western European coun- British Ask Delay in Enforcing New Tariff _ LONDON, July 7—Great Britain _ fase Te Two _DAIL Y WORKER NEW YORK, Ww EDNES DAY, JULY 9. AVERAGE W AGE IS $705, TRAINING SCHOOL T0 FLECTION COMM, CHICAGO PAPERS new TRIAL FOR SAUL A YR. STUDY ON WAGES SHOWS; WAGE CUTS BIG Workers’ Share of “ Is ational Income” Getting Less Each Year 99 P. C. Get Less Than $5 One P. C. Get 13 P. C. 000 a Year; Other of Annual “Income” The lying hokum of the bos: and their lackeys about the increas ing wages and the high standard of living of the American workers has been exposed by the facts collecte in a recent study published by the Natioral Bureau of Economic Re- | search, “The National Income and Its Purchasing Power” by W. L King. These figures show that not | only is the smail financial oligarchy | th growing richer, but that the work- | ers are growing poorer and po receiving less and less of what produce eacn year. | Im 1928, the workers received 36.06 per cent of the “ income.” But this is same percentage tha in 1910. Since 192 “share” has even taken drop from 38.11 per cer they receive] in 1928, acco: Monopoly pro hand, have been high. Analyzing i in terms 1913 dollars, that 98.92 per cent of all earning incomes in the U States get under $5,000 a y n other one per cent, who own the industries ani the means of produc- tiow of the country, get 13 per cen: of the meome. If we look at the absolute figures, s show that the average was $594, but had only risen to $705 in 1928 figured in 1913 dotlars. In other words, while the worker in 1928 was nominal: earning an average of $i for| ing’s figures $s) the ar, in reality, the increase in the actual buying power of his in- come was 18 per cent, dollar in eould bu; han two-thirds of the 1913 dollar It is to be noted that while King gives all these facts, he tries to logical conelu- thermore, he y about ing unem- er cut into income of the the is only o ble to tabulate. ued to record well a increases. cuts in April. ord of the e ret of wage cuts that ha all over the count grown by leaps in the last month or two. ition, the Wall Street mon- | ucceeded in passi: increase the cost of American working by at least 20 per cent, ac- ng to con the industr supposed to owest wages are paid. Thus, in| have the aver paid in| manufacturing or around ay quarries and oil w hs construction $1,644, ete. Marty Gets 5 Years PARIS, July 7—The Supreme Court of France has confirmed the five year prison sentence against Andre Marty, vice president of the International Red Aid, and Com- munist member of the French Par- liament, now in prison at Clairvaux. This sentence came as the result | of Marty's reply to a provocative | ary interview with Marshall Foch in which Marty declared that the French proletariat would duplicate the mutiny of the French Black Sea Fleet during the Russian Revo- | lution. This mutiny, led by Marty,) played an important role in defeat-| ing the plans for hostile interven- tion by the Allied powers at that time. i for Criticizing Foch For his part in the mutiny, Andre | Marty was sentenced to death. Bui the pressure of the revolutionary mass movement foreed a commuta- tion of the death sentence to on?) of 20 years in prison. So effective | was the campaign carried on by the} proletarian organizations in France} that not only were other revolution- lors who received prison sen- released, but Marty was} chosen a member of Parliament by mandates from about 40 depart- ments, After amnesty was granted him, Marty continued his revolutionary activity, and received several prison sentences, the last one, just con- firmed, for his courageous chal- lenge to Foch. Lloyd George on Tariff Reprisals In an article on the Americanbecause both Canada and Australia tariff, printed by the Hearst pa-| pers, Lloyd George referred to the | fact that Canada and Australia have already taken effective tariff action against the United States and laid much stress on the possi bility of Italy in carrying a deci- sive and strong tariff policy against America while discounting the likelihood of France doing the same thing. This view is rather significant are members of the British Empire and Italian Fascism is more or less jan ally of Great Britain. . Despite | her clamors against the American \tariff, the French government} | wants a closer rapprochment with) |the United States to offset British| and Italian pressure in Europe. The imperialist world is gradually lin- ing up for another war, with the United States and Great Britain forming the center of the two rival capitalist camps. Lloyd George Admits War Danger LONDON, July 7—The growing danger of war is so obvious that even Lloyd George, the “Liberal” leader of the British bosses, was forced to admit the truth. Speak- ing at a banquet held by the Inter- | national Congregational Church | Council delegates at Bournemouth, England, Friday night, he said: “Peace is by no means secure. In spite of treaties, man has not yet given up the idea of war. Preparations for war are going on in every country of the world. There are more men + ‘ned for war in Europe, Asia and America |than before the great catastrophe of 1914.” Boss Greed Gets Heav: y Toll of Child Toilers The rotten lie about the capital-| of age in which six or more working ists “risk” in industry was given another black eye by figures on the toll taken by capitalist industry of} child workers. According to the Illinois Department of Labor, more working children were injured in Illinois’ mills and factories last year than in any previous year. This shows the tremendous speed-up which is eating up the very lives of the American working class. The following 1929 figures, which only includes reported accidents, is very indicative. Accidents in in- dustry to children under 18 years days were lost are reported as 1,113, an increase of 159 over 1928. The bloody greed of the bosses who don’t care how many children | are injured or used up as long as they turn out big profits, is shown in the following admission of the Illinois Labor Department report: “Power driven machinery, on or |near which children under 16 years of age are forbidden by law to work, caused 30.4 per cent of all accidents in that age group.” Of the children under 16 who were in- jured in 1929, 69.3 per cent were | illegally employed. Show Big Illiteracy in United States While American imperialism ex- ploits and oppresses millions of colonial peoples in the name of bringing them the “blessings of civilization,” there are 6 illiterates in every 100 persons over 10 years of age right here in the United States, according to figures of the American Federation of Teachers. 3 for Thus the United States ranks tries in the per cent of people who can’t read or write. The facts further show that this situation is not due to the entrance to illiter- ate immigrants. Native whites of native parents show three times as much illiteracy as those of mixed or full foreign parents. The “civilization” of American imperialism indicated in these fig- ures is still further exposed when compared with the gigantic educa- tional program of the Soviet Union, where the workers and farmers own and run the country. ing of the new tariff law so as to sent & communication to Wash instructing the British Am: | lot to ask the United Sint Govérnment to deluy Lhe enfore-}to the old rate, | allow British ships alresdy en route towunlond their cargoes according | and | OPEN AUGUST FIRST) NEW YORK.—The Agitprop De-| partment of District 2 of the Com-| munist ‘Party announces that alll plans are ready for the organiza-| tion of the full time, 4-weeks train- | ing school beginning August First. | |'The District Agitprop Department| urges all Party units and revolu-| tionary unions to speed up the selection of their candidates for the school. All names of candidates must be in the District A |Department not later than July 15 in order to open the school on tinie: | The communication and registration | blank sent to the units should be| acted on at once. This full time training school will mswer the grave need of the Party | for new cadres of functionaries in the present period. The school curriculum will limited to two major courses. 1.—Program of the Comintern. 2—Party Org tion and Prob- lems and Tasks of the Revolution- ary Unions. The instructors in the rse will be Comraie R er, ict organizer of the Party, and Jack Johnstone, di secretary of the Trade Union UL League, who will be the instrm in the t 1de enion course. The in- ern Progi | will be announced soon. | A fund of $300 will be required to finance the | the students. | and que: out delay. quired to se! trade unio! be | structor in the Comi All Party units are re ct three students each “ENATOR BLEASE » LAUDS LYNCHING “Constitution to Hell, Never Protect Negro” | UNION, S. CG, July 8.—Senator| | Cole L. Blease of this state, cam- |paigning for re-election, is also de- liberately whooping up the ousiness | men and plantation owners to lynch Negroes. He refers to them as} “rapists,” although it is well known |that very few of the cases of lynch- ling take place around a genuine! ease of rape. Wherever the rape jexcuse is made, it is usually merely }an outright fiction, a camouflage | |for white terror intended to crush |Negro workers who object to a con- dition of virtual slavery. Most of {the recent and increasingly numer- ‘ous lynchirg cases do not even pre- {tend to be punishment for rape. | They arise directly out of attempts | |to swindle Negroes by white store- | | keepers, or refusal of white planta- tion owner to pay wages due. Blease in his speech here yester- day declared: “Whenever the con- stitution comes between me and the virtue of the white women of South | tel 130} o» constitution.’ “When I was governor of South Carolina,” said Blease, “you did not +hear me calling out the state militia to protect colored rapists. In my |South Carolina campaigns you | | heard me say: ‘When you catch the | | brute that assaults a white woman, wait until the next morning to no- tify me.” In this same Union City, on June |26, Dab Jenkins, a young Negro road worker, was lynched, so Blease | was verbally patting the murderers | on the back for their act. Jenkins was lynched by a gang of 500 wealthy farmers and white business men because he had been attacked by two of their number and had de- fended himself. RUSH WAR PLANS; GET 402 MORE BOMB PLANES WASHINGTON, July 8.—As part of the rapid war preparations of the American bosses, the U. S. War Department today ordered 402 bombing planes and 1,004 airplane engines for war purposes. This is just part of the big plan of war armament, the main feature of | which is the billion dollar naval building program which Hoover is | rushing through the Senate in special session. Landlord Keeps Money of Unemployed Woman NEW YORK.—Mrs. John G. Med- lock, aged 21, with an unemployed husband and a child to support, paid $20 deposit on an apariment to the agent of a landlord rening the building at 350 W. 85th St. That was before her husband los’ his last job. Starvation starea the family in the face and she asked for the now useless deposit back. | It was refused. She appeale+! to the West Side Court. Magistra*e Goud- man postponed the case. Mrs. Medlock fainted courtroom. One of the demands of the Coun- | cil of the Unemployed is “no evic- tion for the unemployed.” Rubber Mills Close— ‘And Perhaps Forever’, WOONSOCKET, R. I, July 8— The Woonsocket Rubber Co., a sub- sidiary of the United States Rubber Co., has closed mills here on which the lives of 20,000 in this one-indus- jay town depend. The mills are \“closed for several weeks,” offi- jeially. but one of the officials has been heard to say “they may never in the) | ing: | Yor fimous jing is to be held in this city eo Carolina, I say ‘To hell with the |, | trial Wednesday in Mt. DEMAND STREETS TIED WITH THUGS! cxsssona-sc. sy 2 11 Mt. Matas ernon Young Workers Tried Today NEW YORK.—AlIl attempts to s h the signature drive to put Communist candidates on the bal- lot in New York state have led so far. In New Jersey, across the river from New York City, such attempts are also being made, and | are also failing. Today, at 9 a, m. iti the city hall in Mt. Vernon, 11 members of the Young Communist League, arrested | ‘or holding election campaign meet- go on trial, nother ready been convicted for fense of bringing a worl program ar into a ca workers’ t election. of occasions meet n up by the ty with the co-oper of the hire¢ thugs of the local en. The response of tic id white workers to the the program of the caused the become panic authorities n. to he use o duct of activities 1s being ¢ cal authorities and fascists us sections of the state of 4 nd New because th realized the growing inf the Communist Party wh are attempting to if! | the New York election (Cone ittee. “Many place {Only y nilenged by the the ersey, campaig have last few ting of in New broken up by a netion with the this was done in order to prevent activities among | the workers in the large factories of that company town. “In Long Island and in Harlem we have had similar 2 this sort of verrorism, one of those | ending up in the death of Alfred | Levy—a Negro worker. In the city {of Schenectady a blanket order h jbeen given that no Communist meet- such instances the within Srunswick was ist gang in co: local authorities. s oi trolled by the open shop Gen Electrie Company. Defense Corps. “In Elmira, New York, the local authorities have refused to permit! the Communist Party to solicit sig- natures which even the capitalist statutes permit. The workers must | organize a movement against this | attempt to destroy our Party and organize a Workers Defense Corps | to protest the meeting against the onslaught of the bosses thugs. “The workers of the state of New| York and New Jersey will not be terrorized by these acts of the| bosses but will instead carry on! their election campaign activities with renewed energy. “The signature drive is now go- ing ahead with full steam. All |; workers’ organizations must help! the Communist Party to throw back into the face of the police and their hired thugs their attempts to liqui- date the Communist Party by aid- signatures in order to place our Party on the ballot and build up a tremendous mov2ment in support of | the election program of the Com-| munist Party.” Canadian Workers to Fight Terror in India The National Secretariat of the Canadian Labor Defense League | have decided to launch a campaign | against the white terror in India. The plan of the campaign includes | a demonstration against the terror | in India in combination with the | Sacco and Vanzetti demonstration on August 22nd. GREEK I. L. D. MEETING. | NEW YORK.—The Nick. Spano- vakis Greek branch of the Interna- tional Labor Defense will have a meeting Thursday evening at 301) W. 29th St. at 8 p. m. Communist Activities | Passate Daily Worker picnic will be held Sunday, July 13 at Deer Park, Cald well, N. J. Buses, leave 25 Dayton | Ave. at 9 a. m. tol p.m, Dany. Worker Prenie Will be held Sunday, August 17 in Pleasant Bay Park. All organizations are to keep this date open. | ; Paluters ‘Bruetieti | Will be held Wednesday at 8 p. m. at 26 Union Square, Attention Y.C.L.2 | All league members who go on Vernon are} to wear uniforms. | * ee * jon Campaign. Directors of all units are to meet tonight at 8 p, m, at 308 Lenox Ave. | | Nabor and Fraterna! Organizations Council 17, U.C.W.W. Will have a lecture tomght at $30 Dp. m, at 208 Otis St, Brookly reau will lecture on the "Role ie England in India.” j Section 4 Elec: Phone: LEHIGH 6382, ‘stermtional Barher Shop W SALA. Prop. 2016 Serond Avenue. New York (bet 103rd & 104th Sts) Ladies fobs Our Specialty be opened again” = in the streets of the city will |* 16 have al- the of- jput in charge by the offi , 193 ' Aecuse Each Other of} « Activities in Gangland CHICAGO.—The has printed a copyright special ticle which ended with the words: “Who killed Jake Lingle? This in- vestigator ventures the forecast that the world at large will never know.” But the mitted in print Lingle, exposed teersand extortion Tribune payroll Tribfme has already ad- the charge that ng fixer, racke- though on the hardly wrot ever It has also admitted that ed lots of mc at one time believed to have been inher- records have the estate he 2 entered into though public ited, in the Tri the Daily r and cor. Barker, most of nolice been suspended around the In the tators raiders, hi gan cing fired upon. fusillade of were hit, acle or else t aped i but firing in all direc- ight one. The “red” in heavy bombs, © knuckles and guns, to ¢eal | with the nal Unemployment fe the Trade Union e, held July 4 and 5. pe, but men ating for jobs and better conditions will be tuc if hey escape the worst of : | violence. RAILWAY CLERKS GANG SELLS BANK WRECKAGE | CINCTNNA’ therhood Id their it was closed dc widespread gra cials. The bur stated that “pos: contingent further ors,” the wreckage to the Central Trust | Co. The bank when it wa cy of the clerks e litigation over ms likely to eause uneasiness samong denosit- was closed June 26. found that the officia als ae the union had taken from the noto- rious Amos Shaefer, of the Doherty utilities group, forged securities for a $200,000 loan. They also worked the same game themselves, ‘oaning to companies of their own some $200,000 of the wor deposits on a deposit of forged stock. COMPLETE BIG STEEL MERGER CHICAGO, Il—A great steel | merger has been completed here. | The Hubbard Steel Foundry Co. of determined them to quietly sell | | “Docks Ot Hamburg” And 0 For Alt Kinds of Insurance” (A BRODSKY Yelepbone: Murray Hill o55: i Kast 42nd Street, New York MACDONALD coPS KILL 2 EGYPTIANS. |Mass Radicalization Is| IN Nor CAROLINA | p George Saul, indicted, tried, and | convicted in the Superior Court of aston County, in North Carolina, Patronize on a charge of carrying a concealed || Cooperators! weapon, and facing six months on| Growing in Egypt | a new trial today. CAIRO, Egypt, July 8.—Twelve | 7 rounds of bullets were discharged CHEMIST The date set for the new trial is |. into a crowd of angry v peasants by the Egyptian urmed force of the social-fascist and im- perialist MacDonald on Tuesday. | |air meeting of the National Textile} Four were killed. Two of them | Workers Union on private property | Were workers. The fight lasted a at Mount Holley, during the fam- long time. ous Gastonia strikes, when a meet-| The clash started when govern- ing was viciously broken up by the| ment troops and police appeared, He was originally charged with bayonets, to prevent the motor inciting to riot, resisting an|car of Nasha Pasha, the national- and carryi concealed |ist bourgeois Wafdist leader, from rkers and 657 Allerton Avenve | Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. August 18, when Saul must appear before the criminal term sitting of the Court of Gaston, Saul was arrested at an open Al (omraaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cluremont Parkway, Bronx c weapons. | driving in Mansura, whic al ae Wafd stronghold. The Egyptian | / Ch Y \coretimens ies prohibited che ial RATIO N AL ANGE ELES cca 'CE TO _ the Delta for the Wafdist dele- | egetarian ates, who are peogoe to hold a * “Ter nf If sectne be oe ‘2. RESTAURANT Bet 12th and i3th Sts, Strictly Vegetarvin Food | sura, ‘despite government o: | to use the railway, and wer¢ ; government troops and police, LOS Cal., July 8 e International Labor Defense ot California held a district conference | en qo | at G04 B. tuckin Suter aaa | ee ativ struggle against the Crimina! The Egyptian workers and pea see eae hes cemtte [sants, whose suffering under the been revived in California, in. the |@ouble oppression of native rea nee jand British imperialism is + ee eee tetsces Teor | World-wide’ economic erisis, are rad- |} — zed. Revolutiona seatiment tions, and rep ea the masses is growing, but | — from the employ : there is not yet a strong, organized | { eee 00D } HEALTH FOOD ° A NGELFS, | Ss, A = cP sy Jo) DM ies) A Wit Siways Find it Dine at Gar Place THERN BE aes Bronx (near 174th ation) INE INTERVAL e149 rkers in the shops. as well as the unemployed workers. The enthu Cee SRpachon siasm of the delegates reached a] ‘ithough the Wafdists still ex- | Jee i ercise considerable influence amon Vegetarian nd expressed itself in on for the immediate and unconditional release of the six of Imperial Val h pitch, a determi the Egyptians, militant cl. scious workers of Egypt have a |lusion in the Wafdists, who have re- RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 now doing time in San Quentin | Peatedly betrayed the F <nermemerreeiemeneniegnennitbesitnnssineat | people and capitulated to the Brit- —— § rialists. Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 | John’s Restaurant Conference to| Butte ‘Clerks } Wi 7 Go 27 SPECIALTY: ITALIAN HES be held in san Francisco, July 2' . a demic i Out If Scabs Deliver where ail” redione amen fextilers, Settle for BUTTE, Mont, July &—Twelve |! — es S HS neal, Nee kel ‘Wook Mountain Tickets | hundred members of the Butte | clerks’ union threatened to s | NEW YORK—The National Tex- | today if seab teamsters d tile Worke Union is calling upon where they work. The te all its members to settle for their |#94 truck drivers are on str tideatas fon Wha a mn that will} Butte. Yesterd: take place on Sunday at the mem-: Street fight when _| bex ship meeting to be held in the | clashed with pick union headquarters on Thursday | hurt. scabs s and four were Vegetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round. SANTA FE CARLOADING FAL'S OFF. CHICAGO.—Atchison Topeka & mds are invited to come along next Sunday for a day’s vaca- | tion on the boat “Doris” to Hook Mountain. It will leave at 8:30 a.| Santa Fe’s carloading of revenue 4 WESI 287) 3 2 > ° pe ehte IST 28" ET m. from west of 79th St. on the| freight fell off by 3,303 cars for 37 WESI ae heen Hudson The Broadway sub-| the week ending July 4 as compared 221 WESI 36TH STREET way will bring you to the boat. to the similar period of a year ago. Boulevard Cafeteria 541 SOUTHERN BLVD, Cor. 149th Street “Evo! ution” a Sth Street Where you eat and feel at home. Great photography, but a enbey |Alger sort of story is given us in GRACE GEORGE ; || Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF |“Docks of Hamburg,” the Ufa pic- SURGEON UBNTIST ture at the Eighth St. Playhouse. 249 BAST USth STREET Cor. Second ave New York This German film concerns itself : DAILY EXCKPT PRIDAY aus the conversion of a “good man, | || lease telephone for aypototmen. }a second mate on a German ship, | | etensenes Ceeiee ee \into a “bad” man, through the vile | influence of a cabaret girl on the} |. ORChard 3783 ing us in the work of collecting the | |Co. of Chicago. Fast Chicago, the Duquesne Steel |amburg docks, and the conversion |Foundry Co. of Pittsburgh and the} |Wheeling Mold and Foundry Co. of | Wheeling have been merged ‘nto the Continental Roll and Steel Foundry | This means more speed-up and wage-cuts for the | workers. SEEK NEW OIL FIELDS. BELEM, Brazil.—The American Exploration Co. is seeking conces- sions here for the exploration of land in the state of Amazona. This is one of the many “feelers” ‘or oil which is being made by bayonet- bristling Yankee imperialism. The | steel tentacle will follow next. Gold ‘and power for the fat boys of Wall Street. Starvation and brutality for South American proletarians. Biggest and Best Work- ers’ Outing of Season | ily 32: Worker PICNIC ana CARNIVAL VvVvVvVvY Our Build the | i Held in Co-operation with —All Revolutionary and Sym- pathetic Workers’ Organiza- tions; —All Party Communist Pap- ers; —All Daily Worker Readers; —All Workers from the Shops That We Can Reach; REMEMBER THE DATE Sun., Aug.17 Pleasant Bay Park Priclte Beauty Parlor hed lof the cabaret girl into a “good”.| girl through the second mate's in- ret | | DR. L. KESSLER | SURGEON DENTIST anh | fluence, ending in the arrest of a |gang of smugglers. Hollywood |never could beat this one. Tawdry as anything, copied from the cheapest of American films, a cheap story which even fine acting and daring photography of the Ham- burg docks can’t make you forget. Jenny Lupo portrays the cabaret girl, good acting by a beautiful girl. A short scientific film, “Evolu- \tion,” is instruetive and entertain- ling, though very elementary. Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET bldridge st NEW YORK (DR. J. MINDEL| i SUKULON DEWTIST | | vor. I UNION SQUARE Hoom 6U3~ Phone. Algonquin 618% Not connected with any other _aifice In “The First Mrs. Fraser,” St. John Ervine’s comedy now in its eighth month at the Playhouse. jr. Wolfson “AMUSEMENTS :) . | ARTISTS AND MODELS “Phone Orehara’ 25 P Paris-diviera Edition of 1930 AMERICAN PREMIERE MAJESTIC amen, 44th St. W of) ee ” nt Eves, at Sxl | vw ams OST GODS! | nunaist eansas OH “Inside the Line” A Radio Pieture with Hetty Compson and Ralph Forbes | 3y6uaa Jleyedunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist Bast 14th st. at 220 | TO 70° | A Theatre Guild Production THE NEW | GARRICK GAIETIES GUILD W. 524. vs. 8:30 Mts. Th.&Sat.2:30 BOT Cor. Second Ave. Tel. Algonquin 7248 TING SATURDAY Pp AMIR he Root of the World” Soviet Adventure Film Lenin Demand the release of Ios- Climbing Mt. ter, Minor, Amter and Kay- 8n ST. PLAYHOUSE | mond, in prison for fighting > UTCHERS’ UNION Loca) 174. A.M.C. &.W of MA. Office and Besaenenceiae Laber Temple 243 & 12" 52. W. STH STREET | for _Unemployment insurance. \| newerhs mestee th itd Sunday, {fi Employment Bureau o; day a We Meet at the— COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE UNION OF NEW YORK 2st Chelsea 2274 || Booo WORKERS "INDUSTRIAL ‘pw ow. | FRESH FRUIT SODAS AND ICE CREAM Rienue, “Heiress Wile Breckige Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue, Pulasky 0634 he Shop Delegates Council? meets the first ‘Tuesday of every month at 8 P. M, at 16 West 21st St Whe Shop Is the Basie Unit. | U. S. S. R. CANDIES CIGARETTES Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty | of \$1 25 DINNER FOR 50c BEVERY DAY 11 A.M. TOO P.M Fresh Vegetables Used Come where you are welcomed! Banquets and Parties Arranged. ROYALTON RESTAURANT A) 118 MIPTH AVENUE, COR, 177TH ST. NEW YORK CIry COMRADES, WE ARE SERVING | Advertise y.ur Union Meetings | here, For information write to | | E The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sa, New York City

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