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Page Four S B 6 | me aoe OR YES, WE HA (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILA., Pa. (By Mail).—Who Says there is'a scarcity of work? Not the loca! slaves of the Oil Trust. They have con dence of republican “prosperity” in the form of the 24 hour day Ordinarily VE Penrose Ferry refinery have bank ers hours, putting rd e evi every two or three weeks. wor at the, that the saintly philanthropist, “PROSPERI N) a mere 12-hour t. To make a soft snap softer, actually get a whole day off And if any poor devil of a serf finds even ecure too much for him ‘> for a day, Rockefeller, | addition very -| humanely “p for lost time. Unless he takes ad vantage of this generosity, the ail ing worker is fired. Thus the in that feeds him. night gangs. But the men who com. grate is taught not to bite the hand There is a large rotation crew, in to the straight day and _THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1928 its” him to make up| pose it, mostly skilled hands, can hardly be said to work at all, as |-/ they only give 64 hours weekly to -|their job. They are divided into three shifts: —8 a.m. to 4 p. m; 4 p. m. to 12 p. m.; 12 midnight to 8 a. m. At the end of the first week, the 8 to 4 -'men take over the 4 to 12 watch; then they get the 12 to 8 turn the| pressed, the serfs are expected to | following week; the other gangs forsake their heavenly mode of exist-| faithful servant of the Rockefeller moving up accordingly. For them! ence for a while. the seven day week is a “Standard” standard. shifts is so arranged that every Also, the change No slave, however, is considered a In this they can interests before he has d@rudged from be likened to firemen who sit around | one sunrise to the next, rolling up the fire-house playing checkers un- shiny new dimes for St. John D. (til an alarm comes in. During) “Loyalty” of this sort may sound in worker does his 16 hour turn once} “emergencies,” which, it must be| incredible, yet the 24 hour day is-no a week, But when the oil barons are hard-!16 hour day goes into effect. |eonfessed, are rather frequent, the| novelty here. ‘are always hanging around the Unemployed workers | TY”; STANDARD OIL STANDARD IS 24 HOUR DAY, PENROSE SERF SAYS gates, but it would take time to break them into the Standard Oil system’ and invest them with the proper sense of “loyalty.” Besides the regular slaves can handle the rush jobs, particularly if their “loyalty” is aroused by waving 2 pink ticket in their faces. Cheney Brothers, Huge Conn "Father : WILL NOT MOVE MILLS TO SCUTH BUT PLOT CUTS ‘Equalization’ Is Name Given Wage Slashing (By a Worker Corr By CHARLES MITCHELL NEW HAVEN, Conn., (By Mail) —The open-hoppers of the state of Connecticut, who are popularly known ndent) as the Manufacturers Association, __ John D. Rockefeller and his met at their annual conference the, he conditions of slavery ewisti other day, in South nehester., 8¢Tibed by the Worker Correspo etter appears at the top of this There were present é mendous fo representing al important industr in the state, i eluding metal, rubber, textile, water power, tobacco, transporta etc. The meeting was headed by two of the biggest open shoppers in the state, the Cheney Brothers, owners of the huge silk m i chester, Conn. It took place in the beautiful building, the Cheney mem orial building in that city. One of the most important jects under consideration at vathering of exploiters of Labor, the offer made by the southern nfecturers and plantation owners, to the Cheney Prothers to move their mill to the south. une which they hav ive out in charity “t ly to create. Joh a “poor but hor est” boy slaves, they help 80 generous sub: (By @ Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Ill. (By Mail).—The demonstration in memory of the Haymarket martyrs, called by the nen’ |Y oun g Work (Communist) t, i sov eaey e ommunis Sere ty Gite ae ec | Lane pressive. Gath- ae sab labor power ered in Union Park to demonstrate °) The complete absence of Labor}, eal alge” Sond F " A st the capitalist frame. organizations, 3) Exemption from|; , crowding around the statue erected by the state in memory of the vicious police who were killed in the riot, were a large group of The Cheney Brothers hasten t¢ young v and workers’ chil- nounce to their anxious fellow para-|dren, Many older workers also ftes, that they will not move their|turned out to witness the demon- nlant down south in spite of all ation or to participate in it. tractive and very tempting off Overhead an airplane came whiz- made by the south,” and, amjdst zing by and the buzzing of the plane slause and ovations by a ver 4) *axation for several years, and Free sites on a railroad, e You Can’t Tempt Cheney aoe s Fy ene @@|mingled with the revolutionary | Chenee Broth peetee tenet ane| trains of the International. Bap- Sheney Brothers essured their listen-| rors atatine: | “Werkuos Prewet ers that they will fight for the cre-|‘y, ation of as favorable conditions in| > this part of the country as exist in| — the south. Re-echoing this stat Hubbard. of the Roge: Co. of Middleton, pre ense Corps!” “Organize the Unor- ganized,” “Defend the Soviet _.,| Union,” “Fight Against Capitalist ement, E. Kent) wars,” etc, were unfurled by the nd Hubbard itants present. The speak- dent: of the 1 out that it was the rev- ou! association, declared that everything | j1ytic movement today, the necessary to “equalize productive | y,, (Communist) Party and conditions’ between the soubh anid tiie oung Workers (Communist) | the New England states have been|Teague who inherited the militant undertaken, and ‘ te will be| traditions of the Haym The arket mar- details of the outrage- us “legal” murder of some of the aunchest fighters of the working arting with the Haymarket s on through the years ouching the Ludlow massacre, the no difference of the count One of the to this “equa | conditions,” that the bosses have as-| art sured themselves of the drive to], - reduce the wages of the northern} workers to the level of that of the southern workers, which ‘one-half | @f the wages paid to th zed workers in this state, which the New England states.” It was|means to mobilize the entire strength so suggested that part of the equal-|of the workers and challenge the ization scheme is the introduction of | open shoppers and beat’ back their fore efficient methods of produc-| attempt to lower the standard of fion, speed-up, lengthening the hours | the workers, But not to ignore such of work, etc. The bosses at this meet-| vital problems and to mobilize the img expressed a very aggressive and| entire power of the, labor movement almost supreme attitude, in their re-|and militantly and determinedly Iation with their employees. etruggle against the capitalist, means } This program of the bosses which|to break with the master class, ig intended to be put into practice| which the present leadership will f soon as it is advisable” is the| never do. jarpest challenge yet made to the! tire labor movement in this state,| and it is directed against the whole working class, both organized and unorganized. t Misleaders “What will be the answer of the jtalism. ee labor leaders in this state,) Among those elected on the execu- le Egans, the Murphys, the Cooks, | tive committee of the bosses federa- @te., to this challenge of the employ-/ tion are E, Kent Hubbard, a big open ing class? Will they even take note shopper of Middletown, for presi- 9f it and make a statement, which is dent; John H. Goss, of the Scovill about the only thing they are capable| metal factory of Waterbury, a huge 6f? No. Not on your life. They have concern, dominating the very life of Tong since become a part of the em-|the entire city; Frank H. Lee, of ploying class, “agents of the employ-|the hat factory at Danbury. Who ers in the r class.” The worke any action by th labor.” The State F etween the on of the 99 per cent unorgan- Communists Only Leaders This job belongs to the new lead- ership, the Communist and the left wing in the trade union movement, who haye an entirely different per- s of the working | doesn’t remember the Danbury hat expect $s can not ters case, which resulted in the los savings and house strikers to pay 292 and Son Who Live son, John D., 8 a common photograph in the | spective on the whole system of cap- bor, too, had a “convention” only a few months ago. But what a con- trast! The employers at their meet- ing adopted a rea! militant fighting program, by which they boldly chal- lenge the whole labor movement. On the other hand. the labor fakers, while making a claim to represent the workers’ interest, really spoke for the employing class. Their first action was to betray the workers politically. by leading them, like the ram leads the sheep, to the slaughter house, to vote for and sunport the parties of their enemies, in the re- cent presidential election. At the Federation convention there were resolutions presented by the small groun of left wingers, ‘which expressed the real situation existing in this state and outlined policies to be followed, if the workers were to get anywhere. To these resolutions, | the labor fakers paid lip service, by Senator R. Leland Keneeney, treas- urer of the Somerville factory, at Thompsonville, Conn., where a model employee and bosses association ex- ists,*which serves to speed up the workers to the very limit of endur- ance! E. G. Buckland, vice-president of the N. Y. N. H. & Hartford R. R., which recently bought over the Con- necticut Street Railway Co. which, ir. turn, has a monopoly of trolley and bus transportation in the entire state. And finally the Cheney Broth- ers, who own South Manchester, from \the newsboy to the mayor of the city. The Cheney Brothers also own | the city high school, which they rent |to the city for one dollar a year! These “beneficiaries” employ in | their mill at the present time over 5000 workers, who live in company owned houses and pay exorbitant having them read on the cénvention| rents. Whenever a worker quits the floor, but as soon as the convention ‘was over, they were entirely forgot- ten. je of the most important prob- ie outlined ja one of the reso- presented then, 1s the orgen- mill of the Cheney Brothers, he is also obliged to move from the city. The Cheney Brothers also own all the and for miles around the city of anchester. (To be continued) called damage done to the| company, as a result of the strike?| on Oil Slaves ”, are shown above, ng in one of their plants is de- mdent from Penrose Ferry whose page. A tiny fraction of the tre- e crushed from the lives of their ‘0 better” the conditions which they hn D. Rockefeller giving a dime to capitalist CHICAGO YOUTH HONOR HAYMARKET MARTYRS 1Pa eI ssaie strike, the dozens of work- who have paid the toll to cap- italist injustice and summing up with the Sacco and Vanzetti frame- ap, the necessity of taking up a fight against capitalist wars—of building workers defe corps—of continuing the fight to better the everyday conditions of the workers and thus training them’ to fight and preparing them for the biggest bat- tle—the final overthrow of the cap- it system, were chairman and speal ary jers lined up and went on to Wald- |heim Cemetery, where the martyrs |are buried. Many wreaths, sent by workers’ organizations, were found on the by the Revolution- |pieturesque statue erected ourselves—Organize Workers’ De- | militant workers. The demonstration | |was continued with the singing of the International and the workers’ memorial song. “In Memory,” a recitation, was given by a young pioneer and fol- lowed a short talk by the district organizer of the Young Workers (Communist) League, stressing the importance of devotion and loyalty to the working cla: the need for doubling our .energy in continuing the work that the Haymarket mar- tyrs died for. The Young Communists and Pio- |. neers present closed the demonstra |tion with their pledge: “We pledge allegiance to the Workers’ Red ig and to the cause for which it —one aim throughout our i freedom for the working class!” Singing the Red Flag, with the big red and black banners drap- ing ‘he statue, the demonstration was ended. The widow of August Spies and |many old fighters present were |greatly impressed and Mrs. Spies promised to speak before the League when called upon, Comrades Glotzer and Plott were the speakers, with Comrade Min | Lurye as chairman. TOTAL DEAD IN PARIS BLAST 7 \‘Speed-un in’ Munition Plant Is Cause PARIS, Nov. 21.—Seven workers Jare dead, five workers yet unac- {counted for and scores of workers |seriously injured as a result of whe explosion yesterday in the govern- ment munition plant in the suburbs ef Vincennes, Those listed as miss- ing are believed to be dead. The plant is under the direct | supervision of the department of | war, and was devoted exclusively to |the manufacture of cartridges for |French army rifles. The plant is |the most important of its kind in the country, and, due to the increase in the French army, had been work- ing at great speed. | With the appearance on the scene of Raymond Poincare, prime minis- ter; Paul Painleve, minister of war, |and Andre Tardieu, minister of pub. lic works, all reports relative to the explosion and its possible causes have been withheld, and workers in the plant charge that more have ‘been killed than is reported. After the explosion workers were |seen running from the burning jLuilding, leaving trails of blood be- hind them. Those who could not ron crawled away with broken legs lor ribs. Many of the injured work- ers, including women, are in a seri- ous condition. Workers, Caht all elass-collabo- ration achemes of the bosses and the in burenucracy. Fight back militantly ngninst the vifensives af the bosses. \ | wren wens } P amnt ecticut Silk CONDITIONS OF | SEATTLE CITY WORKERS VILE But Higher-ups Find | | Graft Plentiful | (By a Worker Correspondent) | SEATTLE, Wash., (By Mail).—1| |hired out to the City of* Seattle] Municipal Light Department, as a| |faller. The crew was hired out from |a free employment agency. The head faller was hired through the 4L, and, the high climber through a private employment agency. ‘Though the city has a free employment agency | it goes to the reactionary organiza- tion called the 4 L, to hire the boss for its crew! After arriving at the camp, I de- cided to take an inventory of the wages paid to the different classifi-| cations of workers. I, myself, got] $6 a day. The laborers that be- longed to the civil service depart- ment of Seattle got $4.50 a day.| | They are unorganized. The line men| (By Wireless to The Daily BERLIN, Nov. And the powerhouse men are|ations between the 1 and mechanics are organized in the| 4L. altogether unorganized. the food was rotten. after the army and navy d, doub mulligan-mixing stew bum. cook. But the cook was a civil ser- vice man and had a certain amount! of political pull with some of the! |city executives, and for that reason | the superintendent did not fire him. But, about four days before I left the super and the cook had an ar- |gument and the super decided to dis- | pense with the services of the cook. Laborers in passing the examina- tion of the civil service department {of Seattle are taken into a by one of the city “wallflowers,” |who never shoveled a shovel-full of dirt in his life. The first test of the examination is: wall six feet with a watch.” The next test that must be passed is that the worker cement wheel this down up again. Many workers who pass| | the ‘shovel test’ cannot pass this test | jin the time given.” The city civil} |serviee department forces workers | |to pass an examination that no pri-/| vate employer even forces workers to! go thru before hiring them. | | When I went to work I distributed | Daily Workers and some Communist Party State Platforms. Some work-| jers read them, but many would not! leven look at them. But there are| |many that could be drawn into the; |Party without much trouble. After | working 22 days, the bull-bucker or- |dered my partner and me to take our tools into camp. That meant that | We were fired. And as yet, I have not been able to find out why we} were fired. But I can guess that, since I was carrying on some amount of correspondence, the civil service department board of censorship had |been examining the mail, and that | was the reason. | After getting the statements for |the wages I had coming to me, I | was instructed to apply at the City | Light Department in the city hall of | Seattle for my money. |from one of the clerks there, as to} | where I should present my state- |ment. She referred me to the city |comptroller. He referred me to the |bond and warrant collector. He said, “Oh Hell, I haven’t anything |to do with that.” He referred me back to the collection department of | Seattle light, where I had first gone. | There I was pointed out an old bald- \headed man to see, and he told me |to go across the street to another \building, another department of Seattle Light. As I stepped into this building I took notice of the so-called “efficiency” that Seattle lays claim to. There were 25 clerks employed on that floor, some were reading papers with their feet cocked up on their desks, and others were talking. The manager of the office seemed to be having a sweet conversation with a |young woman clerk. This “effi- |ciency” is taking place under the |guardianship of our “honorable” ; Mayor Edwards who is supposed to |be a good business man. I com- |menced to smell a rat. Perhaps as Mayor Edwards is one of the bour- igevisie, fe Se putting sume vt the power trust propaganda into action in Seattle’s municipally-cwned util-! jities. I decided that under a capi- talist system of production and gov- ern it, there can be no such thing as sc ial ownership of public util- I inquired | Bosses e Star of “The Jealous Moon,” a’ | Briefly, it relates the adventures of new play by Theodore Charles and Jane Cowl, at the Majestice The- atre. n ities, whereby the worker may de- Plan Drive on Workers’ Wages JANE COWL. German Trade Union Reactionaries Sell Out Iron Workers 20. rive any benefits. Finally a lady in this department made out my time checks and told me to go to the Civil Service Com- in the Lyon Bldg., three After getting there, a yqung lady, who showed extreme signs of dissipation, took my time E checks and had them signed for me basement and then told me to present them to the city comptroller (again). glanced at them and directed me to collector as given city war- ie checks and told in height while the to present them to the teller and wallflower’ stands by and times him) cashier. mission blocks away. the “the worker (again) where I w: has to shovel a yard of dirt over aiyants for the tim bond and warrant money.” After stepping out, I glanced at atch and found that I had put in a wheelbarrow and in three hours of my time before I. paper. an incline and then finally got my money. —WOR-COR. s compelled to place three sacks my wi a- | of ‘The socialist party endorses the robber League of Nations, the fake Kellozg peace pact and creates the iMusion that war under capitalism, Down with these traitors to the working class! -—| opening safes, Worker) | dramatic climax is brought about he negoti- by a hard-boiled detective following yole of Heinrich Heine in the Chop- ocked-out work-| Valentine all the way from New in jers of the Ruhr and the employers, York. The big scene, you will As to the conditions in the camp,/have been postponed until after the call, the sanitary facilities were fair, but | decision of the national labor court! safe to save the life of a baby who The menu was of appeal, which meets on Saturday. is locked in the vault. The real reason for the stoppage The cook was a big pot-|of the negotiations, however, is that e-chinned, over-bearing,|the employers are sufficiently en- There couraged by the yielding of the re- |was a great amount of discontent formist trade union leaders to con-| an absorbing job of the picture. among the workers especially on ac-| tinue on the offensive. These reform- ressed by the | Count of the cook and the food. They ists will try to use this time to| - had appealed to the superintendent; maneuver for complete capitulation songs were sung and the work. | Rumber of times to remove the |to the bosses, He There I finally got my n be abolished “Alias Jimmy Valentine” | Transplanted to the Talkies ene ey ‘David Pinski’s “Three” {pe stage success of yesteryear, “Alias Jimmy Valentine,” by the ‘ : late Paul Armstrong, which was Here in Fortnight first produced in New York at the old Wallack’s Theatre as long ago| Celia Avramo, who produced and jas 1910, has been successfuly trans-| directed Andreyev’s “The Waltz of planted to the talkie screen. Metro-| the Dogs” last season is preparing Goldwin-Mayer is sponsoring the! a play by David Pinski called current film production which is be-|‘Three.” It will open the last week ing shown at the Astor Theatre. in November. The cast includes: | It appears that this crook story| Dorothy Allen, Wiliam Challee, and should linger at its present abode| Eduard Franz. The play will prob- for soime time to come, as it pro-|ably open at the Totten Theatre. | vides good entertainment and is) | still more or less of a master opus |among the multitude of underworld | comedy-dramas that have been pro- | duced in the last two decades. ! | The story is too well-known in |general to need much comment. eal comedy, at present called “Fol-| low Thru,” starts rehearsals today | under the direction of Edgar Mac-| Gregor, who is supervising the| book, and Bobby Connolly, who will stage the musical numbers. Prom-' |two crooks who serve their ring- inent in the cast will be Jack Haley, | jleader, Jimmy Valentine, he of the| John Sheehan, Irene Delroy, Made- sensitive fingers that, specializes in| line Cameron, Zelma O’Neal and Eventually Jimmy Jack Barker. | plans one robbery too many in that Se ARN he falls in love with the bank presi-| Leonard Ide’s comedy, “These Few dent’s daughter, whose father’s; Ashes,” moved from the Booth to bank he is planning to rob. Of the Mansfield Theatre Tuesday course, our hero then decides to go night. straight. A really thrilling and Charles Angelo is now playing the operetta, “White Lilacs,” at Jol- re-|son’s Theatre. occurs when Jimmy opens the Bert Wilcox has replaced Manuel | Alexander in “Tin Pan Alley” at Although the story has become) the Biltmore Theatre. trite from frequent use since the| original play, nevertheless, the good direction by Jack Conway makes DEFEAT PROHIBITION. | . SYDNEY (By Mail).—A referen- J " . |dum defeated a writ endorsing pro- William Haines is especially good, hibition by a vote of 900,000 to 350,- as also Lionel Barrymore, Tully 000, | Marshall and Karl Dane. Leila Hy- ‘ams plays the heroine acceptably. The picture has séveral talking sequences Orennize the unorganized! Or- ganize new unions in the unorgan- | ved industries! FLORIDA FARM WORKERS SLAVE IN MUD, FILTH |Hovels for Homes: $14 | for Weekly Wages (By a Worker Correspondent) Fifty miles south of Tampa, Fla., you will find the town of Bradenton, |which is in the center of a rich . ‘s . | truck growing district, celery being Schwab and Mandel’s new musi-| probably the most iigiontale crop. The large farmers, as a rule, live in the town and have their crops, which are tended by both Negro and white workers, Men and women and ichildren work on the farms. Some of these workers live in the town and are hauled to and from their work. Some live in ugly shacks on the farms. Wading in Mud. Truck farming is hard work. Much stooping is necessary. Plant setters usually work barefoot, as they must walk in mud. The ground must be soaked with water so that the plants will live. Men do the plant setting usually. ‘* Those workers who board them- selves put in atleast nine hours a day. They seldom receive over two dollars a day. Some farmers pay only $1.50 per day. The work is not steady, owing to the weather and other causes. And these workers never think of organizing, They only sigh for the good old days of the Florida boom. R. L. GREER. + * * (Written for the Worker Corre- | spondence class in the N. Y. Work- crs School.) : which are particularly | — | well done, ‘Boycotted Mexican Ra Newspaper Sold = MEXICO CITY, Nov. 21 (UP).—| The” newspaper Excelsior has been! purchased for $500,000 by Jose T. j Castellot and four associates from Mrs. Consuelo T. Alducin. The Excelsior has been under a government boycott since the Tural trial because of official displeasure ‘at its pictures and accounts of che trial. Its advertising revenue was seriously reduced. It was understood the new owners were assured the boycott wetld be lifted as soon as they took over the American Premiere 2nd Production of 8. THE THEATRE GUILD Presents | ——_—___—— | MOVIE OPERATORS STRIKE. | SHREVEPORT, La. (By Mail) — Major Barbara JUILD Thea. w szna st GUI Eves, 8:30, Mats. Thursday «nd Saturday, 2.30 The Saenger Ehrlich Enterprises have obtained an injunction against striking union motion picture opera- tors of Shreveport. “AMERICAN VARIETIES OF TROTSKYISM” | By BERTRAM D. WOLFE, Editor of the Communist | WORKERS SCHOOL FORUM, 26-28 Union Sq., 5th floor SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 235, 8 P. M. Questions and Discussion. Strange Interlude Jobn (} ON Thea. 58ch GOLDEN of B'way VENINGS ONLY AT 6:30 (TVIC REPERTORY 15t.seay 0 50c; $1.00; $1.50. Mats. Wed.&Sat. _ EVA LE GALLIENNE, Directo | Tonight, “Phe Would-Be Gentleman.” \Fri Eve, “he Cherry Orchard.” | dmission 25 Cents. |, ° ARTHUR HOPKINS announces the Daily Worker VERY Workers (Communist) Party Unit and Sympathetic Organization Should Dis - LAST WEEK OF “MACHINAL” by Sophie Treadwell. PLYMOUTH Thea.,W.45thst.Eves.s.20 Mats. Thurs, & Sat. i SON Chea. ith Ave. & oth St JOL IN Evs.8.30, Mats. Wed &Sat. ouy ODETTE DB WOLF ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER ‘Ha musica) romance of Chapin. CHANINS 46th St. W of bows W ot Bway Eves at 8 25 Matinees, Wed. & Sat. SCHWAR and MANDEL'S Little Carnegie Playhouse 146 West 57th Street — — — CiRcle 7551 TEN DAYS THAT | SHOOK the WORLD’ A SOVKINO PRODUCTION M. EISENSTEIN, CONTINUOUS NOON TO MIDNIGHT- AMKINO Presents the Director Mats. of Potemkin 50c3; Eves. $1.00, = — 2 2ND STARTLING WEEK! “MATA HARI: ‘The RED DANCER” KEITH: 42" ST. ALBEE CAME eWay fag CHAPLIN jn." BEHIND. THE SCENES* NITE HOSTESS: 46th St 8th Ave. Eves. 8.30, Mats., Wednesday and Saturda: pean aciiltislsantini oneal chanel ERLANGER THEA. W. «tn st, eee — «Evenings 8.30 — Mats., Wednesday & Saturday, 2.30, George M. Cohan’ Comedians with POLLY WALKER in Mr Cohan’s Neweet + Comedy “BI Musteal LLIE” CITY MECHANICS WIN. LOS ANGELES (By Mail).—City employed workers in the mechanical trades have won wage increases ir N° union meetiug, affair or labor event should pass without the distribution of a bundle of Daily Workers. E DAILY WORKER, the col- lective organizer of the labor movement is the best fighter for the organization of the unorganized workers, for militant trade union- ism, against race discrimination and against imperialist wars. QROER your bundle a few days in advance of your meeting at the special rate of $6.00 per thousand. Daily Worker 26 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK CITY, Please send me.. at the rate of $6.00 pi NAME ADDER: To arrive not later than ..... « CITY, STATE. .copies of The DAILY WORKER Gods NEW MUSICAL SMASH | musi. with GEORGE OLSEN the water and power departments, The 44-hour week'and overtime for Saturday afternoon were also won. eal i alla ae allie ale a aa WILL BE FIVE YEARS OF THE COMING OUT OF THE DAILY WORKER CITIES ARE URGED TO BEGIN MAKING ARRANGE. MENTS FOR CELE RATIONS NOW. OS RIES REY rt JANUARY 5, 1929 !