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Page lwo Daly Y WORKER, Kew YURR, peur; MARCA 4 1932 Call Unity Conference in Boston Dyess Strike BOSTON, Mass., March 4. — While the officials of the Intermatic dies Garment W with cooperating day, recalling pickets fr of the striking shops, the Front Strike took on a mo and determined spirit and dated new gains. Kramer, tional official and agent of ib weat- hop bosses, spent entire de preparing to complete be dress and cloak maker the notorious “scientizic emen All during the day the United Front pickets patrolled up and down before their shops. More bosses, feeling the effect of the strike, have sent in their applications for settlement. Conference Tod: The United Front Strike Commit- tee, in order to unite the ranks of the dress and cloak makers for more e struggle against the bosses Internationa’ Conference of al through end th fakers, has called a Unity striking shops to be held this after- noon at 2 p.m, at the Association , 995 Washington Si In the call issued by the strike committee, the shops of the Inier- national are especially invited to all shop meetings and are urged to eleet delegates to the conference. The chief concrete task to be taken ‘TENANTS SAY ! REDUCTION THE GUATEMALA; ) iI WORKERS FACE EXECUTION IN MEET TO PROTEST | up at the conference will be to elect NO RENT IS PAI ce eae aE > 5 mah Va Rae one Ke coimi om all the AL b K.—The 3 workers} aad jie, saved aoive Bhone L f ond peasants are still kept in jail in es of eight of them. Action by ship of the Guatemala, They face long prison workers of the U. S. could help worr-| All Join Cc ymmittee terms and possible death. in fresing the work now held in ; E Tw ‘The Martinez government in Salva An Sees ot ee uxXce i * vi i he mas meeting " ak ‘2 aT nate tert wad nignt | NEW YORK.—No settlement, no ® = tthe revolutionery workers’ 3: the Spanish Workers Center, 4 E sod Aa Heats aalaiaiena oo the house committee,” the | 'anizations in stil 116th St., New York City. Among the Se suse a ee ade triking tenants of 733 Arnow Ave.! The Anti-Imperialist League i akers are William Simons, secre- t ree Aneel alas told the agent of the Hollgrass Realty | calling a mass meeting to protest| tary of the Anti-Imperialist League, a to win mark- neeting throughout A letter was sent by the Rank and File Strike Committee to all manu- | facturers whose workers are on strike under the leadership of the United Front Committee announcing that it considering individual applica- tions for settleinent | Great indignation was expressed on the part of the strikers by the action of the LL.G.W.U. officials in sending a letter to the Binder | Brothers Cloak Co. offcring te send im new workers to work for lower wages than the present scale. The present scale was concluded some time ago through an agreement forced on the bosses by the Needle Trade Workers Indusirinl Union. All during Sunday there will be a@ house to house collecyion to raise funds for strike f. as "NEEDLE TR ADES WORKERS, AE TDN, Paso N sharp at the second floor, there will be a very important meeting member On Saturday at 24 p. m. up the dress strike. Every fraction is instructed without Workers Ceater, to take of the needle trades fail to be present. DRESSMAKERS REPUDIATE SELLOUT; - MORE WORKERS JOIN UNITED FRONT, SCONTINUED FROM PAGE UNE> merely with their own sweeping vi tories, pledged to assist the worl | and recognition of the shop commit- the 40-hour we: ase in wag. tees and the union. The strike of the drecsmakers is |at the families as they were being | Mr. | ist” | them in Russia with the information | that the workers in Russia are worse | duction in rent, no evictions of the Co. when he came for rent today.) egainst the murder of 3,000 workers The entire house is solid except for | in El Salvador and the execution cf | two scabs. | Juan Pablo Wainright, the leader of One of them, Mrs. Kennel, jeered | the revolutionary movement in Gua-| temala. The timely demonstration in evicted last week. This anti-working | Mexico City for the freedom of the class attitude and support of the and in Spanish, Leonardo F. Sanchez. Admission is free. Show your soli- darity with the Colonial masses. Make this meeting a real help to the struggles of the workers in the colonies. landlords on the part of a worker is explainable when it is known that Kennel is under the influence of the socialist party, reads the “social- newspaper Forward and is an active member of the Workmen's Circle. The second scab is an ex- posed stool-pigeon of teh landlord. The workers have made it so hot for | them that they are looking for other | apartments. The Women’s Council is calling an | Workers Who By JOHN SCHMIES DETROIT, Mich.— The Auto| Workers Union and Unemployed | Council in Detroit and vicinity are | completing the final arrangement for | open-air meeting in support of the | a huge mass Hunger March of Ford strike Friday, at 8:30 p.m., at Oliin- | workers which will place on March ville and Allerton Aves. On Satur-|%7. This Hunger March to the| day, at 3 pm., there will be a mass| Rouge Plant is the answer of tens | demonstration in front of the house, | of thousands of Ford workers against | many working-class organizations, in-| the lying statements of Ford, the | cluding the Communist Party, will) capitalist mewspapers and Mayor | have speakers there. | Workers in other houses owned by the realty company headed by Grassy are seriously considering a sympathy rent strike after discussing the mat- N RE! (UT Ii ter with a delegation from Arnow ave | BROOKLYN APTS: Socialists Collect Money for War Against U. S. S. R./ ACOATINUED hum PAGE ONED NEW YORK—The Council of Williamsburg, which is | leading the hunger march to the Borough Hall on International Wo- men’s Day, March 8, thas just won concessions from a landlord at 48 Bartlett St. Brooklyn, The land-| lord granted the demands of the | House Committee, which are a $2 re- le to fight against Commu- ism... , Viesinik must supply |Bedacht To Speak Unemployed | Enriched Ford Will Demand Relief March 7 | Murphy's propaganda that the Ford) Co, will hire 30,000 of workers with in the next few weeks. The unemployed Ford workers not only have lost thier homes, furni- | tures or whatever little savings they have had. These workers and their families are actually facing misery and hunger. Ford made not less than $55,000,000 profit in 1930 and (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE? | Saturday At Ar- beiter Festival | NEW YORK.—Thousands of work- ers’ of New York will again flock to the 4ta big annual “Arbeiter” Fes- tival, arranged fur “Der Arbei‘cr,” |German organ of the Communist Party, at 8 p.m. on Saturday, March | 5, at the New York Labor Temple, 243 E. 84th St. The numbers of the program which |has been arranged this year, have | been selected with special care and | | pret | supplementray agreement which says | ber 1, 1932, | pressmen now working will find Put et 7P-C. Wage Cut On rinters in ial YORK, of helpi: | | N in the printing industry Major Berry, | aided by his allies, the presidents | Conway and Davis of Locals 51 and| 2 put throvgh one of the most| br sell-out in long strike- his ge cut of 7 per cent, the in-| troduction of a 4-day stagger week and the elimination of a senior pressman, which is another 25 per cent cut, is represented by him as a victory for the workers, especially the idle. To this is added a three-months that the 7 per cent reduction repre- sents a minimum relief (for the bosses—Ed. D. W.) “But the equi- ties involved do not justify a further reduction until there has been estab- lished a measure of uniformity in the distribution of the cost of necessary liquidation.” This is an open admis- sion that the wage cut put over on the pressmen is the opening wedge | for an all around wage cut in the printing trade, for further slashing | at the expiration of the “supplemen- tary agreement.” In order to facilitate this betrayal in the interest of the printing bosses, Berry maneuvered to get full power to negotiate this infamous agreement in spite of the fact that the original contract does not expire until Decem- On the basis of this latest sellout; the workers in the shops will find the | wage cut in their pay envelopes this week, and one-fourth of the senior themselves in the street. Militant rank and file opposition groups have already been formed in the local union and are organiz- ing shop committees to resist the sell-out. Printing workers! Refuse to ac- cept the reduced pay envelopes! Pro- tect the seniors of your shop against discharge! Fight against this cyni- cal betrayal of your interests and or- Workers’ C Advertise in the “Daily” | lubs Should Save the Daily Worker! What is your Unit or Branch doing? HERE ARE SOME WAY Concerts, dances, af- fairs to— SAVE THE DAILY WORKER Attend the one nearest you; spend an enjoyable evening! Help your fighting paper! PACKAGE PARTY given by Section 1, Unit 1-B Sat. March 5, 8 p. m. 215 Second Ave., Top Floor All proceeds to the Daily Worker HOUSE PARTY FOR THE - DAILY WORKER Sun. March 6, 7 p. m. 1675 Bryant Ave. Apt. 54, Bronx Given by Unit 18 and 19, Sec. 5 TEA PARTY — CONCERT for the benefit of the DAILY WORKER Sat. March 5, 8 p. m. 301 West 29th Street ADMISSION 25 CENTS Down Town Workers Club CONCERT AND DANCE Sat. March 5, 8 p. m. } First Anniversary Entertainment and Danee given by the PHOTOGRAPHIC WORKERS LEAGUE Saturday, March 5th At 8:30 P. M. FINNISH HALL 15 West 126th Street | Music by Famous Harlem Syncopators | | Admission 50c DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR 4U Work Done Under Versona) of DR. JOSEPHSON | Intern’) Workers Order Care Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and (3th Str Strictly Vegetarian food MELROSE DAIRY Y&eetanian RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find 3t Pleasant to Vine at Our Place. 1287 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) YELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—9149 still striking by rallying their for- ces to the picket line and to con- tribute a half day’s pay to the strike fund to help spread the struggle to new shops. To Rush Gold To Trial the struggle of all the y Williamsburg, ‘Therefore all are asked to parti onstration. The headguarters of the United It was made evident today that Front Committe in Williamsburg is @ conspiracy of the Behlessinger- | @¢ 795 Flushing Ave. All workers Kaufman clique is afoot to railroad | Should come to this headquarters on to jail the leaders of the Indus-| Monday for picket duty. trial Union. Without sufficient no- To Held Dance, tiee a frame-up case pending a- | Section 2 of the Communist Party gainst Ben Gold, secretary of the | has arranged a dance and entertain- Needle Trade Workers Industrial | ment for the striking dressmakers, to Union, was suddenly placed on the | be held at the hall of the United calendar. Gold was not informed | Front Strike, Saturday evening at 8 that his case was called and did not! o’colck. All strikers, all dressmakers, appear in court until 12 o'clock. The| regardiéss of wrion affiliation, are “Women's Wear,” organ of the/ invited to come. The admission is sweatshop bosses and International | free, officials, came out yesterday with an item to the effect that Gold fail- ed to appear in court. This all shows clearly that the bosses and the agents of the com- pany union are interested in taking | the leaders out of the active ranks of the workers, | kers in workers te in the dem- Anti- War ( Gonterence Called by Friends of Soviet Union M PAGE USED (CONTINUED Williamsburg Active. the Soviet Union, the cali of the The dress Front Strike Committee, have called | fet Union to yield to the provocative a protest demonstration which will| @ttacks upon it has so far prevented take place Saturday, March 5, at| War against it. To this firm peace noon ai Grand St. Extension, near | Policy of the Soviet Union must be §. Fourth St. and Havemeyer. | added now the full strength of work- The demonstration will be a pro-| img-class support to their socialist test against the terror and brutality | fatherland. that the bosses and their servants,| Every factory worker, every trade the police and gangsters, are using in| Ution, should answer these war an effort to break the strike of the | Plans of the bosses by electing dele- dress makers in this territory. | gates to and participating in the ‘The strike is spreading rapidly in| Anti-War Conference of the Friends | the Williamsburg section. Every day , °f the Soviet Union. more shops are joining the strike. Members of the socialist party and | Some shops have already settled with | the reactionary A. F. of L. trade| the Industrial Union, haying won an| Unions must learn by the activities | | Of their leaders that they are ene- 9, What’s On— jmies of the Soviet Union, They | hav ecarried on a campaign of lies | and slanders against the Soviet Union, ramay The yellow Forward printed a pic- Max Bed: will speak on “Religton | ture of th and the Class Struggie” at the Tremont ie perads/of the Red Atmy| Workers’ Club, 2075 Clinton Ave, Brona,|! Red Square on May 1 under the| at 8:30 p.m, Admiarion 18 cents, | caption: “Soviet Troops Mass on the The J: “youth Branch No. 412, of Manchurian Border.” This lie is oo LW. 26/ only a glaring example of the entire| nion Ha kere: ace uP series of lies which this yellow sheet z has served up in order to prepare the The Red Colony Youth Branch, No, 433, STOUnd for an attack on the Soviet W.O. will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 2700| Union, a y s : The call of the Friends of the Soy-| ade M. Altman will lecture on the | fet Union reads, in part, as follows: "Geneva Disarmament Conference and the | r Policies of the Goviet Union’ at the Pros-| 27 American working class can- peet Workers’ Center, 1187 Southern Blvd, "ot remain silent in this war situa-| Bronx, at 8:30 m. tion, Only the organized working gee will heve Class front of millions for the de- & lecture at 11 on St. at 8:30 p.m. | fense of the Soviet Union can hold Comrade Levine will speak on ‘The Com- munist Party in the Mass Organizations.” back the arm of the imperialist ° | bandits. ited Btrike will be discussed at s Athletic Club, 360 Grand | ah ae | helping organize this front of work- Alteration Painters, Downtown Section, | TS’ Solidarity against imperialist war will meet at 134 2, Seventh Bt, at 8 pm.| on the Soviet Union. The New York ‘The Downtown Youth Branch, No. 405, j District, Friends of the Soviet Union, | of the I.W.0. will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 17/ Calls upon all workers’ organizations, eee | all trade unions and workers in the ‘The Brownsville Yeuth Branch, No. 407, of the I.W.0. will meet at 8 p.m. at 287| Renenectady, Ave. sana 7 parts Youth” Branch, No. 403, the L.W.0, will meet at 8 p.m. at 1400 Bos- | ton Rd., Bronx, . ‘The Steve Katovis Branch of the LLD. will meet at 387 B ‘Tenth St. at 8 p.m. | Class, * . An important mem! Pood sig) . held at BE. ” Joseph Zack will speak on ‘The Imperial- | Workers on May 1. ist War and the Trade Unions.” member must attend. of the 1L.p. wii | ‘ernational solidarity, Room 410, at 8 p.m. king Brinch, ‘No. 521, of benefit of the Daily Worker at 11 W. Mt. Baden Ave, Bronx, at 8:30 pm. At tree. of the F.s.U. aan Corl Brodsky will speck on “Is War evitable?” st the Pelham Parkway Pal- Lydic Ave, Bronx, near Pelham 7B, ot 8 pm nos aals strikers of Williamsburg, | Friends of the Soviet Union points | under the leadership of the United | Out that only the refusal of the Sov- | The Friends of the Soviet Union is |, his particular school every stud- shops, to send delegates to this im- | Portant conference and to make the Soviet workers feel that the working | | class of America is Teady to defend | the constitution of socialism, which |is the future of the whole working ed The Friends of the Soviet Union is ip meeting of the | Organizing a delegation of 50 Amer- Union will ee | ican workers to meet with the Soviet This delegation Every | will help cement stronger ties of in- Every factory worker, every trade union, should answer these war plans | ¢ a vecherinka for the | by electing delegates and by partici- pating in the Anti-War Conference Turn the front towards the im- perialist war promoters, who threaten the Chinese workers and peasants, off than the workers of the capitalist | Unemployed and recognition of the | world. There is the cry that there is | House Committee. one place on earth where socialism} Other House Committees on the is being bufit and therefore, we must | block are being organized and are stop their work. Whoever cannot| Preparing for the March 8 Hunger read Russian is unaware of the lies! March to the Borough Hall in Brook- | that we see when we read Izvestia.| lyn to demand free food and cloth- We must therefore redouble our ac- ing for children, immediate relief and tivities, so that we can justify the Unemployment insurance. The march correctness of our past activity, We| Will begin at 12:30 p.m, at Broadway | must defend Abramowich in hisstand| 8d Myrtle Ave. and will proceed against Communism, We in Amer-| from there to the Borough Hall. A) | ica must fight Communism as an ex-| delegation of women and children | ample te the Second International.” | Will present the demands to the Bor- These open counter-revolutionary | | ough President. remarks, which were duplicated in, Nn the evening of March 8 Inter-| even more vigious form by the other National Women’s Day will be cele- | speakers, indicate that the counter-| brated by a large mass meeting at reyolutionary Socialist Party leaders | Grand Manor, 318 Grand St., Brook- | in the United States are on the j b, | yn. Comrade Amter, District Or- | doing their share in the war provi ‘oca- | | ganizer o fthe Communist Party, will tions against the Soviet Union. | be the main speaker. These take place at the moment; The Block Committees in Harlem | when war is being carried on in| #t@ holding open-air meetings and | China, against the Chinese masses, | house to house canvasses to mobilize | which are led by the Soviets and| the widest masses of women and when every form of provocation is/ Children for participation in the manifest in the attacks upon the So- | Hunger March to be held on March | viet Union. This occurs at the same|8 in Harlem. The march will begin time that Trotsky issues infamous | 4b 11 a.m. at 142nd St. and Seventh statements against the leadership of | Ave. and will proceed to 135th St. the Communist Party and the Soviet | 2nd Lenox Ave., to the Hoine Relief | Union and openly deciraes that not| Bureau, where there will be a large only industrial but political troubles | demonstration against the misery and will face the Soviet Union in the| Starvation of the Negro masses in event of war. | Harlem, for relief for single unem- This counter-revolutionary banquet | Ployed women, for free food and | did not continue very long. After the | clothing for children, | speeeh-making, when the dinner was| The March 8 evening mass meeting | being served, an odor from a stink will take place in Finnish Hall, at 15 fluid arose in the hall that drove| W. 126th St., with an interesting pro- everybody out. According to report,| gram and Comrades G. Siskind and there was attached to the bottle con- | Maud White as the speakers. taining the fluid a piece of paper with the words, “Our contribution to} “RUSSIA REBORN” AT ACME ‘Comrade Abramowich.” It is ap-| THEATRE parent that among the socialists present was somebody who would not| ‘This is the last two days of “Rus- | tolerate the anti-Soviet position of | Sia Reborn” at the Acme Theatre, 14th St. and Union Square. The pic- these enemies of the Soviet Union and was incensed by the speeches| ture is one of the most interesting made, and particularly would not al- | Proletarian films taken in the Soviet low the aims of the banquet to be| Union and in Germany after the achieved, namely, to collect funds for) World War. The film depicts the | Dan, Abramowich, to continue their | Struggle of the Russian masses — | disruptive work in the Soviet Union. | Workers, peasants and the Red Army | This is the Socialist Party, not in|-to build the Soviet Union. The its profession of, and “petition” for, | Pictures taken in Germany present a | | recognition of the Soviet Union, but | Vivid picture of the workers and their | the Socialist Party in action, in open | | anti-Soviet unity with the imperial- EAR Eeteace ist governments at a time of war) provocation against the Soviet Union. wm Today and Tomorrow! |“Russia Reborn” Sensational Film of Post- War Soviet Russia and Post- War Germany A 10,000 mile trip to Russia and Germany —Special Added Attraction— “LENIN AT WORK” ACME THEATRE 14TH ST. & UNION SQUARE | Youth Killed in N. Y. | School Gymnasium (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK—I am a student of | the George Washington High School | ent is required to take physical |training. Our physical training | |mostly consists of military marches | | and we are also taught to have very | strict discipline like in the army. | with the view of depicting in the| ganize shop committees to prepare most interesting and gripping way | for a strike against the bosses and the present-day class struggles. | their agents, Berry, Conway, Davis Comrade Max Bedacht of the Cen- | and company. tral Committee of the Communist Party will in his speech deal with a subject that is right now of the ut- | most interest and importance for every worker, “The war in China and | the tasks of the working class.” The “Proletbuehne,” German agit- | Prop troops, most popular workers’ | theatre in America will present their Williamsburg Hunger ‘March, International | Women’s Day, March 8 NEW YORK.—The Williamsburg section of the Communist Party has new big revue “Links Ran!” (‘Turn | issued a call to all workers, employed to the Left’!). The W.I.R. “Red| and unemployed, especially women | Dancers” will be there with an in- | and children, to participate in the terpretation of the famous fighting, Hunger March on the Boro Hall of song of the German workers: “Roter | Brooklyn, Tuesday, March 8th, In- Wedding,” and “Solidarity of Black | ternational Women’s Day. and White.” This hunger march, arranged by ¢ Other features are presentations of | the Williamsburg Unemployed Coun- workers’ sportsmen, a play of the| cil, will bring to the Borough presi- Yorkville group of Young Pioneers,| dent and the politicians in Brdok- concert, dancing and other entertain- | lyn the demands of the jobless and ments, part-time workers of Brooklyn. All Admission in advance is only 35¢| workers are asked to assemble at (at the door 50c). Tickets can he | | Myrtle and Broadway at 12:30, from obtained at: “Arbeiter” office, 35 E. | which spot the march will begin. 12th St., Hungarian Workers’ Home,| ‘The same evening, an Interna- 350 E. 81st St., Hungarian Bookshop, | tional Women’s Day celebration will be held at the Grand Manor, 318 1585 2nd Ave., near 83rd St., F. Han- sen, butcher store, 1645 York Ave.,| Grand St., at the corner of Havemyer St. Comrade I. Amter will speak. near 87th St. Members of the unemployed coun-| There will also be a good program of musical selections including the cils are admitted free upon showing | Lithuanian Chorus, a piano solo, and their membership card. @ presentation by the Workers Lab- oratory Theatre. struggle to better themselves. As an added feature, the Acme is present- ing “Lenin At Work.” Beginning Sunday the Acme will present “Taras Bulba,” the Ukrainian Cossack, screened from Nicoli V. Go- gol’s novel. “We are pronouncing in good faith the words ‘the dictatorship of the proletariat’ and we shall make them & reality.” LENIN. AMUSEMENTS TRE THEATRE GUILD Presents HE MOON IN THE YELLOW RIVER By DENIS JOHNSTON GUILD TREA., 524 St., W. of B Eve. 8:40, Mats. Thurs., Sat, First Time at Popular Prices! EXPLORERS of the WORLD TALE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGEND O'NEILL'S Trilogy | Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 plays presented on Iiday HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED Commencing at 5:30 eharp, Dinner in- termission of one hour at 7. No Mats. ALVIN THEA., 52nd St., W. of B'way The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy, All Seats to1 P.M. ‘Mon. to Fri. 25¢ 42nd St. & B'way .By ROBERT © SHERWOOD THEA, 45th Martin Beck se a’s Ave. Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurs.Sat2:40 COUNSELLOR-AT- LAW & 48rd St. ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK Plymouth Zhe™,W. 45 St By. so | aCe "Law and Order’ RUTH ROYCE BANQUET and CONCERT to be given by Fourth Group of Tractor Mechanics Leaving for the U. S. S. R. on March 9th There is a rope which every child is required to climb, On February 24 a boy aged 16 was forced to} climb this rope, He got up ok., but the rope sprang apart and broke. | Being that the boy had nothing to | catch on, he fell and was instantly killed. Now the authorities of the school te are trying to say that the boy fell M &C B ll on account of heart attack. Every- | asque IVIC a. body in the school knows that this, Joint Branches of Middle Village is a lie, because if any child has| Branch 46 and 403 Together with | heart trouble he is given a card and ‘WOMEN’S COUNCIL No. 14 does not have to take the physical | training, Saturday, March 5th eeriaietinenlanaiaainnnnciaasiaineianeniti tice At8 P.M. the Soviet Union, and thus the in- is ternational proletariat, IRVING PLAZA HALL Join the Friends of the Soviet 15th St. and Irving Pl. Union! soe Defend the Chinese Soviets and Admission 50c the Soviet Union! WORKERS CENTER—35 East 12th St., N. Y. C. SUNDAY, MARCH 6th at 8 P. M. All Proceeds for the Daily Worker and other Workers Press 11 Clinton Street All proceeds for the Daily Worker Sat. March 5, 8 p. m. —VECHERINKA— All proceeds for the Daily Worker Given by Unit 12, Section 5 595 East 170th Street Apartment 1-I, Bronx. ADMISSION 25 CENTS Spaghetti Party to be given by Unit 13, Section 15 Sunday, March 6th At 6:30 P. M. 1680 Anthony Ave. (Shul 6) ADMISSION 25¢ All Proceeds for the Daily Worker RUSSIAN MEALS For Poor Pocketbooks KAVKAZ 332 E. 14th Street, N. ¥. ©. ONLY ONE WEEK! | NEW ROYAL THEATRE | Southern Blvd. & Jennings St. Bronx BEGINNING Friday, March 4th to Thursday, March 10th “KILLING TO LIVE” A Sovykino Production Auspices: Br. 99 and Shul 15, of the International Workers Order DAILY WORKER — Vecherinka and Dance — Saturday, March 5th At 8:30 P. M. 2109 Arthur Ave., Bronx (Near 180th St.) Dancing, Food, Entertainment ar- ranged by Units 9 and 10, Sec. 15. PRPS EY OES AE CALTRANS Mid-Winter CONCERT and DANCE Saturday, March 5th for the benefit of the DAILY WORKER 2802 Olinville Ave. Excellent entertainment AUSPICES—Units 16, 19, 21 & 23. Section 15. TICKETS 25c ENTERTAINMENT CONCERT and DANCE Saturday, March 5th for the benefit of the DAILY WORKER 216 East 14th St., top floor AUSPICES—Unit 2C, Section 2 ADMISSION 25 Cents Report all Daily Worker “KABTZONIM” ‘WILL DANCE Sat., March ith At 8:30 P. M. Manhattan iyi 66 E. FOURTH 8ST. AUSPICES: Freiheit Gesang Farein A Lively Program Admission—47 Cents Workers’ Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day-to-day struggle. ffai 7 Affairs to this column Furnished Room: #4 per week White comb, 118 E. 17th St, or the Daily TE | Voce: ones. —————————— LIBERATOR |e AnniversaryConcert —J. SCHAFER. STATEN ISLAND NEGRO QUARTET Proletbuehne—Red Dancers John Reed Club—W.LR. Band Sunday, March 13th —PROMINENT SPEAKERS— At2 P.M. J. W. Ford Robert Minor B. D, Amis M. Olgin Ben Gold STAR CASINO 107th St. and Park Ave. Admission 50 Cents ETE PERSE AE ETRE 2 OT MARCH 5th—8:30 P. M. SHARP NEW YORK LABOR TEMPLE—243 E. 84th St., N. Y. C. 4th BIG “ARBEITER” FESTIVAL for the benefit of “Der Arbeiter,” official German organ of the Communist Party, U. S. A. : MAX BEDACHT SPEAKS Proletbuehne, Workers’ Sports “Red Dancers” Dance Admission 35 cents in advance—s0 cents at the door ALL FRIENDS INVITED GOOD DINNER Auspices—Tractor Auto Workers School, 282 N. 6th St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Tickets in the “Arbeiter” office—35 East 12th Street, New York