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7) rage Your ons VAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1928 en = Communist Workers Dragged Down by Police at Armour Plant, Correspondent Says HAnaOuTS CAMPAIGN TALK Shut in Phone Booth After LR. T. Crash sh LAUNDRY SLAVES Much Fancy Shooting and NEW BALL GAME Ornate Swearing at Morosco as tors seciary Ketose ex BRINGS FIERCE AREEXPLOITED ON mae QWCRT : one-sixth of the earth doesn’t ex- .. 7 a . @ ist. This is the U. S. S. R. But non- [7 may be as superfluous as carry- baller LOL oe cL ae w existent countries as well as those WAGONS IN SHOP ing coals to Wilkes-Barye to im- | JUGOSLAY COURT tt recognized by the heavy-headed sec- port a Ch cago gang war to New retary of state may be allowed to York City, but this is what Willard. 4 sign his phoney peace pact. This is ears aa tech We ade oe ‘Gang PAR indi ec! eee : Cael :. - ar” a 8 re i. Be of Acting Scone ct sueiorim Silence Reveals Girls Faint in Heat of Wer" ** the Moro ree Torture Exile by Many 1" Castle who says that adherence by Workers’ Anger 100 Degrees fects of prohibition on the peace of | Shipments he the U R. to the pact would - a mid-west American city, whicl | ere ™ not in any sense constitute recogni- KANSAS CITY, Kan. (By Mail). (By a Worker Correspondent) | plugged along prior to the enact- | BELGRADE. Yvgoslavia, Aug. 27. ¥ tion of the Moscow regime by the he Armour dnd other packing Having read the Worker Corre-| ment of the Volstead Act with an |—The case of the hotel-keeper Adam si United States. Kellogg expects the } 5 bosses, in order to stem the spondence of Comrade Suskin in the average homicide record of one a | Mueller of Osijek. which has been bod combined capi states will wipe tide of the rising spirit of revolt on! Daily Worker of Aug. 9 aout the day. The competition for the priv- | in the public eye for some weeks, is ti out the U. - R. before he will the part%of the packing house work- laundry industry and the working) jlege of quenching the public thirst | srowinsp into one of the greatest * be forced to admit there is such a , have begun a reign of police conditions, I would like to add some | with needled beer compelled the com- | extradition scandals of the last few 4 thing. Kellogg forgets only one ror. On Tuesday noon, August important data which he forgot to! petitors to organize standing armies | Years. Mueller, who was born in 4 thing—the revolutionary proletariat. Hugo Oehler, organizer of the mention. on the theory that eternal vigilance Huneary, has been living with his w iar abe orkers (Communist) Party in During the last ten years the was the measure of their beer prof- hay se ts last say cig he Reduced to This District 10, and Matthew Cushing, laundry industry has grown to be its. Their profits enabled the gangs SEES | facet teks dad “dected ailectanne sl packing house worker, were arrested one of the biggest and richest in- to purchase the government, state | Featured ' in’ the new comedy, (ey 1 ie ts g d by the police when they addressed dustries of this city. The follow- | and city administrations, though, as | «mya the Fifth,” which is scheduled | 2°. fae be hae ; li a meeting of Armour’s workers at ing fact illustrates how quick the|one gangster correctly said, the Suddenly it occurred to the police the gates of the plant. Mary Hall of Brooklyn, her Bae covered with bloou stains bosses get rich. bootleggers, did not do the right |to open at the Little Theatre to- | night. . chief of Osijek, the well-known ‘ ze as she appeared following the I.R. crash at Times Square is $20,000 a Week. thing by the Anti-Saloon League, working class persecutor Cvijetko _. y Early in the morning, before the shown above. For fear she would tell the true story of the horror Eight years ago, when I started| which was responsible for their i -ee | Horvat, to lodge a charge against 4 workers entered the plant, leaflets | of the wreck she was kept shut.in a telephone booth where she nearly | to work for one of the present very | prosperity. jof the rival mobs. But the sheriff | Mueller that he was using his hotel | « ue handed a is esting the fainted from the heat and injuries sustained in the smash-up. big laundries, it was a poor place,) “Gang War” keeps the audience does not get such a square deal. He|as a meeting place for the illegal “ : vorkers to walk out at noon and at- . Sn it ELE i ‘ ; ‘ . To be posted o lopes, letters, - ‘ 4 PSE worse could be said about it8 | 5. deportation, life sentences and | the Le Si Was contrary to the | grams, shop papers bulletite tte VOTE COMMUNIST stands out. , coupon stating where you buy your clothes, furnish. Vh ‘ ‘ come for a ; . id CE: thé republican advisory committee: Pany is preparing lay-offs of work- 5 Ks Book of eighty stamps, $1.00, Gan be resold PRICE: f a a” sonte ahi who re. ers under the alleged Communist Show Se the Date evel were at 10c per page of elght stamps. fe In lots up to 100, Name of business place E Ms fi wi . gaining too much ground among the c in lots up to . act to the auto-suggestions of ill-| leanings of the workers for the pur. +B ? Quantity lots: 55 books for $50; 90 for $75; 3c in lots up to 5000. aa4 68, seketpverehekeasees et a gestions of i pose of further intimidating the |™embership; the time had come to 125 for $100, 2c in lots of 5000 or overy, Aaee ss asieante kar Prosperous and don’t know it. workers. act, Mauseth and Simons should be saleable size tend the meeting While this distribution of litera- ture was performed, 100 workers stopped at the entrance enthusias- tieally discussing the development of the organization drive. The re- sponse of the workers of the big- gest company in the industry sent SLUG PROGRESSIVE MACHINIST MEN (By « Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Il, (By Mail).—On —————— | washing about 900 bundles. At the present time its size has increased to a two-story building covering four blocks. It washes as many as 7,000 bundles of clothes, amounting to some $20,000 worth of business per week. And it is estimated to |with denial of the right of mem- be worth $1,500,000 in value. The laundry employs 300 inside from going to sleep, what with shooting and bombs and a couple of seductions. The play starts off with a bang and ends with a bomb- ing. The leader of one beer mob is killed leaving a church. Not satis- fied with one corpse, the gang re- sponsible for the murder shot up the cafe in which tho dead leader alarm down the line of the packing bers to run their own organization. was wont to hold counsel with his |holds up the gang for dough and pre-war booze, which the gang \leader finally refuses to cough up because he believes he is sufficiently | powerful to ignore such a political | nonentity as a sheriff. There is a good deal of hokum in} the play, which falls short of being |husky melodrama and yet is too |serious for good burlesque. In so offices. Tho meeting at the Cudahy plant a few days previously added fire to the uneasiness of the hosses. “We have got to clean ’em out of town,” was the expression of one of the three bosses sitting in a rich ear, and it became clear that at the noon meeting the bosses would call the.police into action to intimidate Monday night, August 13th at the meeting of the District 8 lodge of the International Association of Machinists, two progressive mem- bers of the I. A. of M., William Mauseth of Lodge 113 and William Simons, of Lodge 199, both of Chi- cago were set upon by Charles Fry, business agent of Lodge 126 and the sluggers from his lodge. Ps They showed the need of organiz., Help and 52 outside drivers. This ing women, youth and Negroes if 8 Only one example of the many machinists standards were to be >i8 laundries of greater New York. maintained and improved. They de-, What is the reason that the: clared that Fry anti the grand lodge osses become so rich and enlarge jofficials were peas from the same| ‘heir plants to such an exterit in s0 | Pod, reactionary, following a policy ‘Port a time? Because of the in-| |that had undermined the organiza-| ‘man exploitation of the laundry tion, Mauseth’ and Simons defended °Tkers and the drivers. i acl the planks in the progressiy Comrade Suskin has already in-| , men, while the dead chief’s succes- | far as it falls, it drops between these sor was busily engaged seducing a|tWo stools. Nevertheless those citi- little flapper, who liked his money, | 228 who are forced to live under his champagne and his mustache. Comparatively peaceful and blood- A a t killed, which com- less conditions and wish to satisfy pelted the colics to acta few" doce, {their hidden homicidal cravings will tions. The mess was cleared up to ede regret Paying the tariff on the satisfaction of the police and the “Gang War. i tudienca, when the new leader was| It must be admitted that Robert mit himself to be bulldozed, flocked | rected the beating. Throws Out the Progressives. And she told me that they had) printed. Your pen can fight, too, % ° : to the speaker’s stand. The com- Desperate Over Defeat. ; Fry then made an harangue, after| fainted because of the heat. “What if you will let it. Give it a i ee , Pany’s official became nervous. He, Fry, the boss of District 8, has which he shouted: “Let’s throw] is the wonder with the humidity in- | chance. In an investigation of one ward in | ran over to the cops on the motor-|become desperate because of the|them out.”* He. walked over to| side the mangle room at 90 or above Jersey City it was found that of 4,091, votes, 14039 turned up ‘ing. These people who had just voted had moyed away or died. With both old parties paying out millions for votes the business is flourishing. It’s get- ting so a man yotes oftener after he’s dead than ever before. : | ‘ | less of their big profits, refuse to . and bosses were also organized and| Lodge 113, tool and die makers, pabead : 2 weeks 65c 1 month §1 20 cents Al Smith, who stays awake nights ‘ voted down Fry’s propositions. I make good in such cases. iiGag of ways to get hie picture|* few tried to shout hurrah, but ‘y’S propositions. In PITTSBURGH, Par Aug. 27—| Orniiie 2 months $1.50 | $ months §2 in the paper, did so above by stand- | it ve : ‘ caine 8 Be, r Enclosed find - ing beside the first bale of cotton) yy aye police forced Oehler| convention on a full progressive | sentatives of two individuals in-| time has come for us to think about | ee NEA: analyzes thé economic and political background for of the season, which was auctioned atid: (Custities: ixto Abe Katonictile.| Deseeaer ant oppuattion sto (igs volved gathered here today for the | our conditions. Our bosses become |$ for ..... months subscription ‘ off at “Show Boat.” Al claims he | Genter aah ate ae etic eockeck | AMEAaM GTS. opening of the senate sub-committee | millionaires out uf our sweat, but ‘weaks the presidential elections. ts far more liable to lead the farm- ers out of their misery than Herbert Hoover because Herbert never did auction off a bale of cotton in his | back and shouted: “You here, too?” cycles, shouting “Look, he is speak- | growth of the progressive forces in ing. Do something.” this district. In the Chicago dis- The cop stood for a while listen-| trict election in December, 1927, ing to Oehler, who explained that|the progressive forces increased the party’s nominees are William Z. | their yote for business agents and Foster and Ben Gitlow. Then Oehler | other district offices, running on a began to speak on the issues con-| program which was printed and fronting the workers. “Our purpose | distributed among the membership, |Mauseth, pushed him from his seat and toward the sluggers stationed on the opposite side toward the door, ry then went for Simons, pushed him out of his seat, then started punching him. The slugging con- |tinued as explained above. The brutal methods of Fry |caused, indignation among the pro- and the heat above 100?” There is no ice water for the girls to drink. The board of health ordered the besses to make windows, but for | known reasons the inspectors seem | to be lenient with the bosses and no} windows have been made yet. The | same is true for most of the in-| Take the DAILY WORKER With You on Your {Communist Youth organization. | Mueller was escorted to the Hun- |garian border by gendarmes, but the | Hungarian officials did not want to |have anything to do with him and | brought him back to Jugoslavia. Mueller now lived for fourteen |days in Osijek under the strict sur- veillance of the police only to be sent back again to Hungary. Again the Hungarian officials denied him refuge in Hungary and for the sec- ond time was he sent back to the Jugoslav border. Police Chief Hervat™ now was struck by a bright idea; he had Mueller brought to the Austrian border. Since this drawn out persecution iv r i e hear’ © Pre ai r killed by his discarded sweetheart, |Middlemass, as the police lieuten-|had nothing to do with Austria and and drive fear into the hearts of wauseth is a trustee of his lodge, |gram. V | dicated that the average wage of his rival had his throat slit by an|ant, and Charles T. Lewis, as the|since Mr. Schober, Austrian police the workers, in this way hoping to ) | : the girls in the mangle room ranges |his rival had his throa\ rv , ” » as the | sin Rae inert stop tha movement for organiza-| 274 4 delegate to the Chicago Fed-| They stated that if they had to from nine to ten dollars per week | xpert Italian and the gang head- | sheriff, acted their parts realisti-| chief, refused to give him asylum, it ries 4 n ~\eration of Labor. Simons is a/take a licking, they would, Maus- for 6t8R hour: da The average quarters bombed by an airplane. ; cally. _ The former was so dumb |seems as though Adam Mueller will ’ At i uneraale : ee trustee of Lodge 199 and recently | eth saying that he had taken beat- wage of the itaher Help is between The pojjce department is given|that he did no know enough to be | not be able to withstand very much 4 ae ea ee Deg Ree rae elected by Lodge 199 as the dele-|ings from scabs, and if necessary, $20 and $23 ner week, the hours be- credit wif being on the level, in-/crooked and the latter was so|longer this ball-game kapes ve 4 eee Sec ae wanes aot © gate to the Atlanta convention of|he could take a beating from Fry ing unlimited with no extra pay for terested only in the mutual slaughter | crooked that he could afford to look| different border states and the i Rika) Reeiuak developments,» the I. A, of M. on September 17th.|and his sluggers. Gri SURE draekes ik nae | iimb. Anne Ria as Mazie | Jugoslav state official. : : a! Simons got blows on the forehead| Their speeches received applause ‘ ae +a! ‘ ‘i | Dowley, looked agreeable and shot | t ' i i Getting married in bourgeois cir-|__* Policeman approached Oehler and jaw, which became swollen, be:|dor thelr “militach Kendo rete eae pit oe Wainy civelne | pati Neate ae a fon |her. faithless gang leader like a| USSR GETS SUGAR MILLS. BENE 5 sverjbody knows, ds a mat- a a him to clear out. “There | fore he succeeded in getting out of| Speeches were in marked contrast Temperature 100. 1 Aap ike The Daily Worker takes | regular little wife, and though Wil- MOSCOW, USSR (By al ¢ ter of salesmanship. If you've ever ikeseubas OME oe tobed ae te their hands, Mauseth, unable to get) to that of Fry. These progressives! Comrade Suskin is also right aver precaution to gtard the ee bar ear ve ae ae a Me ae Solera sete pes a (gold anything you know you must | pounds that he represented a polit. | Sea wae Renton lmbat 60/8 baby | eco aeleanely for a policy of| about the miserable sanitary condi-/ names of its Worker Corre- ihr ie doh ti Pn pe rth janiba 6 “the state su secret to i fave the product in marketable ica) party which is om the balint i, drenched in blood. In the meeting | struggle, ~vithout bringing in per-|tions in the laundries, In the after. spundatite, of whoin there are MMW: |coeres Wa Te hd ee eee ee eco (condition. Above is @ new form of ‘the state of Kansas. The workers Hall, he was battered, thrown to the| sonalities, showing an understand-| noon of a very hot day, I drove up| foment in mille, hops dnt woliag es Price ere conan sign rieiaciovtylde a | Teducer said to be effective. Re-| intently listened to the conversa-/St0und, and kicked all over his|/ng of the problems facing the I./in front of the laundry where I| thruout the United States, There | coneiiice’ the "hidet cknHous that whe i oeiibe a the Mass of lon ‘ fucing is one worry the poor haven't | tion. ‘The: policeman retreated to | body: His nose and eyes are swol- A. of M. and the required solution, | work, To my great astonishment) are many also on shipboard. Join | fo, ced KOCK m thi 1d 1 the rei a ee 4 much of, The rich ladies, to whom consult the Armour official. Oehler| em his body bruised all over. As| While Fry's speech showed his|five of the girls were lying on the| this group of Worker Writers | Asadipcthah atbomi", Sever |e £ would never occur to quit gorg-| mounted the platform and began to|Mauseth was being pushed down-| bankruptcy, his intolerance, his de-| trucks outside in a fainting condi-| ‘ ree pe i ; ng themselves and walk arowhd the speak. Workers, encouraged by the stairs, he was punched from all/ termination to rule or ruin, despite tion, I inquired of an eldetly irwh | Senge eer sd thea okee ie | Fifty-five per cent interesting. | Who wins when you rend your ng e he of ol senlond of fact that the organizer did not per- | Sides. Fry himself, a big bully, di-| ‘he will of the membership, working woman what had happened. to your fellow workers when it is T. J, O'F. bosses’ paper? sme THE LADDER IN ITS REVISED FORM? CORT = ‘Thea., W. 48 St. Ev: Mts. Wed. & Sat. Money Refunded if Not Satisfied With Play. 8:80 oHANIS46th St Fiashage ats Mats. Wed. & Sai i i ii i i 5 HIs 1 in entering this election campaign | making great headway. Threats of | rossive delegataned Soin tage dustry. : 4 ; with GEO. OLSEN and ware is not only to seek your vote as expulsion and beating up progres- lodges, who fecl that, they meee 250 Organized, | V ¢ tion WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.—Her-)Kelth- CAMEO “34% Now protest against capitalism, but also| sives were made by Fry in the dis- any longer come to district meet.| _ How about labor organizations in| a a bert Hoover formally handed over 4 to organize the workers against the |trict lodge meetings, but later de- bosses.” “That's enough,” shouted the cop and with a clenched fist ran up to Oehler and pulled him down from the platform. The crowd began to follow Oehler, but then) stopped when a Cudahy young pack- | ing house worker, Matthew Cushing, 4 oe GAL Ochler’s place and began fa | Proposing the abolition of the pres- ig .. jent referendum for lection of peak. > Poliosmiay velently rushes | grind lodge officers’: (aubatuting However, while | lection by the convention every . |four years); and also proposing man he continued shouting at the | compulsory insurance which means top of his voice. Workers applauded |™uch higher dues. Fry’s proposi- when he declared that the packing | tions were defeated in a large num- workers Will not stand for a three-| ber of locals, largely due to the ef- dollar-a-day wage. Stool-pigeons|forts of the progressive — forces. exhibition shows that his program is one of slugging, of gangsterism. to the I. A. and pulled him off. he was being escorted by the police- ings, when any member opposing nied by him. Last Monday night’s the ptopositions of Fry is in dam.|OUt of the 7,000 laundry drivers of of unbridled ferocity! ger of being beaten up by Fry's| this city, only between 250 and 300 | slugging crew. gates who have Even some dele-, supported Fry Czar Fry introduced amendments | against the progressives on former | tation of Labor. by Monday’s night’s exhibition. Fry's action is the result of des- |peration. The progressives will j rally their forces under the slogan of “Gangsterism Must Go. Elect Progressive Officials on a Progres- |sive Program.” | Vare Hearing Again; | Vare Is Absent |this industry? Practically none. | jare organized. In a laundry drivers | |local union of the American Fede- | Just think of it, of M. Constitution, occasions had their stomachs turned | 0U‘ of 7,000 drivers only 300 are or-| ganized! And their conditions ate! |just as bad as those of the other | workers. The driver is the back-| bone of every laundry, he uses his| | skill and ability to get the trade and to hold it. He works about %0 hours a week and makes from $30 | jto $35. The driver is often forced to*pay for lost articles out of his/| wages because the bosses, regard- Keep in touch with the strug- gles of the workers while you are away on your vaca- tion. This summer the Elec- tion Campaign will be in full swing. The DAILY WORK- ER will carry up-to-the-min- ute news concerning the campaign ef the Workers (Communist) Party in the various states. Daily cable news service from the World Congress of the Communist International which opens soon in Moscow. Vacation Rates his office today to William F. Whit- ing, Holyoke, Mass., open shop pa- per manufacturer who recently suc- ceeded him as secretary of com- merce. “DAWN” With SYBIL THORNDIK and on the same program “MEMORIES OF CONFLICT” -and The 1928 The Presidential Election By JAY LOVESTONE were soon silenced by the grim looks | of the\crowd. we'll see you later.” Then one cop, instigated by the company official, rushed to him and slugged him until | Léfge 199, Brother Simons was elected a delegate to the Atlanta A week ago at the Lodge 199 meeting, Simons, laying down an anti-Com- Fry made an attack on| Forces of the U. S, senate and rep-| Workers of the laundries, | hearing in the Wilson-Vare senator- ial election of 1926. William B. Wilson, democratic candidate for senator from Pennsyl- we still slave under the worst sani- | tary conditions for starvation wages \and with no labor organization to | protect our interests. Think about the bedha ie tline: eaeac ‘ The role of the major Name . Stre The secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party parties in the campaign. The tasks facing the workers and what the Workers Workers ‘&e. a : blood appeared. Meanwhile the | munist barrage, branding every pro-| vania i it pe te i | ; life. Due to the strength of the| eroets pelt lined By the masses of| gressive a Communist, making the ter fight pied Wig ae ufdaeaieig ‘a union in our industry. city (Communist) Party means to them. ; eo Cass in New York Al hos the Armour workers. There was no | usual stupid charges of Soviet con-| atrived in\Pittsburgh yesterday. Sa rae StAtO seeeeeeseeereeseeeerees ¥ sed as a friend of labor to boost | excitement, which is the usual thing| trol, trotting out the usual faker’s| Vare’s convenient iliness at» At- ia Pei ‘ his PO". | [He is the father of the’ when an arrest happens. but there |line. Simons made an effective re-|lantic City will prevent him from| _ EDITOR'S NOTE:—For obvious AILY WORKER WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS hoy af bill which never built any was a grim silence which definitely | ply, despite threats of physical/attending the hearings. Forty. reasons the name of this. Worker | D, Motises and now he is trying to put | expressed the disapproval, nay, even beating from some of Fry’s hench-| three witnesses, many of them lead. Correspondent and his laundry are 26-28 UNION SQUARE 39 East 125th St., New ork City Over a powerful bill which will be a| bitterness, of the workers against | men, ' ing politicians of Allegheny County, "ot published. Many workers are NEW YORK, N. ¥. . powerful aid to the power distribu- the police brutality. They were Fry;'a: Thug’ Himvell have been summoned to appear at afraid to write the Daily Worker | —— —_— ting corporations. Al Smith's plat- brought into the police station, rihatae tic heading “Good and. the opening of the investigation because they believe that their | form for the presidency is person-|jocked up and held incommunicado. | Welfare” Fry read the recehtiyalh. | een — a i ae rs Be es touid remember! Company officials were on the| sued program. for the L. A. of M. 5 sonality of cn engine ro Per| spot trying to get some names,| convention by the International TO ALL OUR READERS: make a locomotive fly. while representatives of the Amer-| Machinist Progressive Group, ATONE WANT Eee Gems of Learning | Armour plant. Wednesday. morn- | ganizing women he _ dismissed Designed By ag Bits Paris Temps: “When it is sid- |e “ne SwO workers were balled out, | lightly with the old fashioned. idea j ered desirable to publish the terms | {f¢, Police setting a $500 bond for| that “Woman's place is in the - ‘ ; publi rms | each on a. vabrancy chatge. Mean. |‘Ta¢, , Wo Sea tee THE VOTE COMMUNIST STAMP =‘ THE VOTE COMMUNIST BUTTON of the Franco-British compromise, while. the ‘stocl-pigeons and fore. | 20™* e opposed taking Negroes it will be seen to be an instrument of Peace actuated by the same spirit h inspired the anti-war pact.” Bernard M. Baruch: “The business man is not con- gned about Smith. His career has ‘een a remarkable one. I don’t \hink we have seen one like his. usiness has no need to be worried.” _ Nebody can lose but the worker. MC. H. | ican Legion and K. K. K. were an- vious to find out what was the strength of the Communists in the Armour plant. Wednesday morn- man circulated wild rumors in the packing house plant re the persecu- tion of the Communists, such stories The Workers (Communist) Party is, however, consolidating its forces to fight the assault of the Armour and other packing interests. The I. L. D. is cailing a protest meeting in Kansas. The Armor Nucleus also issued a special statement to the Armour workers offsetting the assault of the bo: branding the Amalgamated plank an I. W. W. program, of the One Big Union. The argument for or- into the organization because “these niggers scabbed during the packing house strike.” After declaring that given a chance to speak, and then be kicked out of the hall; if the district lodge couldn’t do it, then he, Fry, would do so, Progressives Stand Firm. Mauseth and Sithons hurled back at Fry his own accusations, charg- ing him with disrupting the organ- Cc. M. | ization. with terrorizing members, | TWO COMMUNIST CAMPAIGNERS A beautiful ari of Foster and shield. Printed over a background formed by the Red Hammer and Sickle with the photographs @ of Foster and Gitlow tastefully worked in, | National Election Campaign Committee | i WORKERS (COMMUNIST) PARTY 43 East 125th Street ' NEW YORK, N, Y.~ fi rangement of the photographs Gitlow within a solid red Address 43 FIRST STREET PATRONIZE OUR Do not forget at all times to mention that ‘you are a reader of The DAILY WORKER. Fill out this YOUF AMO .... ss. ssesbsecssesseeacesteeeecessecsasepecee @ Mail to DAILY WORKER NEW YORK CITY