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= , fidence man.” PAGE Two Dusty ( ella DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARSH 1 6, 1933 Cellar Is ‘Home’ of Harlem Unemployed Negro Worker’s | I Stark Misery, Crowdin $22 A MONTH FOR CELLAR ROOM: HOME RELIEF REFUSES 10 PAY RENT; ONE IN FIVE HAVE JOBS, Ninety Per Cent of Harlem Children Live in Horribly Overcrowded Homes; 5 in Room Long Lines of Child Bootblacks, No Play Ground; Run Over in Crowded Streets NEW YORK.—A tenement cellar at 257 West 148d Street. Cobwebs on the ceiling, a thick layer of dust on the broken cement floor. Coal bins. It is dark, cold and damp. It is the “home” of a new-born workers’ baby, its young mother, Mrs. Miner, and the latter’s husband, James, an unemployed Negro ex-serviceman! | It the home of thousands of Negro workers of | hildren. City In Harlem there are 336 Negro housing areas are criminally neglected by the landlords and the city authorities. | Doubling Up The congestion is increased by the necessity of taking in lodgers to meet the rent. The death warrants of the bosses claim three times more children in homes with three or more Dt ms per room (and in Harlem |there are very often five or more) fase those living in homes with less han one person per room. At least 90 per cent of the Harlem children ve horribly overcrowded tene- Most of the flats are un- typical workers ions of nd white s forced to pay | a cellar. That | 1 to live in meni was forced to move from | heated, toilets in the hall. and are room into the cellar be- | lighted with oil lamps. Is it any wonder easier prey to the bosses’ onslaught than white children? Another Case Not far away from Leela’s home, at 50 St. Nicholas Avenue, her uncle, Mr. Miner, lives with his wife and 19. Miner brought up from Raleit North five years ago, b s’ Home Relief Bureau he rent. refused to pay Crushing Rentals Th e exorbitar the in-| family who n that of | pay $3] The * cent other | ch children’s c of Carolina, thought life in the north for a Negro worker. ne t lower th: t his children would be able to to decent schools. He thought that in the North his chil- dren would be able to build their lit- | tle bodies up with play and recrea- | tion. But he found the bosses attack on | Negro children in the North not very | mus He thought month. ometimes more Harlem | in one room. There are in ae. York HEA RTS “CHICAGO AMERICAN” LINKS ZANGARA TO UNDERWORLD Capitalist Papers Deliberately Suppressed Facts to Lay Basis for Terror Drive and that Negro children fall an | ause he | s better | BY BILL GEBERT ng of May Cermak in| proclaimed by the cap-| s throughout the country as “re narchist,” “Com- | e capitalist press | > make out that G. Zan-| radical,” and printed his | confession that he hates presidents, etc. this can pain was carried| it Party, the) a number of ely expressed the the shooting of Mayor of a fight be- | gangsters for con- heir “business”, something like} | truggles between different | gangsters connected with 1 machines of the Republican | cratic Parties and with} f of the Chicago Fed-| on of Labor sharpened especially | rt sent of Al Capone. | reaction of the of Chi cago to the Miami af- fair finds its proof in the article| wr in the “Chicago American” | February 28th. The Chicago Amer- | ican” which is a Hearst publication, on the basis of police records, in- dicates that Zangara is a tool of Gangsters and that the Chicago police are now investigating Zangara’s con- nections in the city of Chicago, from where he received a large number of letters while he was staying in a Miami hotel. First of all it is necessary t lish the fact that Z been played up as “unemployed” when he was errested, had in his Pockets $800 and admitted that he “dropped” 200 at the Florida dog , of course. no unem- r would have for bets on| dog tracks. Neither are there unem- ployed who ca $800 in their pockets Facts Were Congsaled It is very interesting that this fa known to the authorities from the very first day of the arrest of Zan- gara, was concealed from the masses. Louis Pushkin, secretary of the Buro of Identification of the Chicago police department made, according to the “Chicago American,” the follow- ing statement: “Zangara gives his occupation as that of a bricklayer and contractor. Now, bricklaying is hard manual Jabor, I have yet to see a bricklayer | whose hands were not scarred—the ridges on his fingers worn. ~, “Zangara’s fingerprints, on the » other hand, are perfect. There are no scars, no signs of hard labor. The | ridzes are clean and even. They are| not a bricklayer’s fingerprints, nor | the fingerprints of a man who ever| did any amount of work with his hands, They compare, rather, to the fingerprints of a pickpocket or con- * This statement of the fingerprint- ing expert is interesting and shows very clearly that although Zangara | may be a member of the bricklayers’ union in New York, there is a ques-| tion as to whether he actually was & bricklayer. Zangara furthermore is a registered voter of the Republican Party, both in New Jersey and California, Aimed at Cermak, “Chicago American,” further The ‘Indicated that Zangara actually at- tempted not to shoot Roosevelt, but Cermak, in the following prereccions | “Another matter of mystification 40 ¥ Chicago police authorities is Zan- ara’s ‘poor marksmanship, it was | said. Zangara served in the Italian Army during the war and was an expert marksman, according to Miami advices. Yet he missed President Roosevelt at distance of only 20 feet.’ As to the further indication of | Zangara’s connection with the gang- sters, the “Chicago American” de- clares: “The police bodyguard that accom- | | panied Mayor Cermak to Miami, it was intimated, has been checking up ever since the shooting upon the movements of Chicago and New York | gang chieftains known to have been in Miami. These statements of the American,” on the basis of police rec- | ords and information show definitely that although the bourgeoisie at- tempted to create a lynch spirit against the revolutionary workers, the facts were known from the very be- ginning that he was not a “red” and “unemployed,” but was connected with gangsters, and was probably their tool. Also, in connection with this, the authorities in Florida were very persistent in giving him outstanding lawyers for his defense. Lay Basis for Terror. These and many other indica- tions, are throwing a new light on the whole Miami affair. And then we wish to compare the above mentioned facts, taken from the “Chicago Am-/ erican,” with the following dispatch printed in the “Chicago Daily News” immediately a the shooting: “Legislation by the Illinois legis- 4 lature aimed at curbing participation in communistic parades and the holding of radical meetings may be one of the outcomes of the shooting of Mayor Cermak of Chicago by Italian cnarchist.” pbout ye “Chicago | 8 Above: The Miner family, at 351 | They get $15 every two weeks from t! 80 cents a week for food for each The electricity is shut off. The con the circumstances the bosses force on segregated into. h different from that in Carolina. Few Playgrounds Mr. Miner found that there ¢ practically no recreational facilities jin Harlem for children. The devel- opment of playgrounds lag far be- | hind the development of night clubs, cabarets and speakeasies, which the | white bosses patronize. Miner's own son was seriously hurt three months ago on the traffic infested streets of | Harlem, that are the Negro children’s | only playgrounds. Lines of Bootblacks Negro children are forced to work whole d: |certainly hindering their studies, blacking shoes. Long lines of Negro | child bootblacks can be seen in Har- ies and all over the city, where they Child labor in “democratic” acericil | Negro children, like any other chil- | dren, do not like to go to school WHAT ON IMPORTANT NOTE: In view of the critical financial situation in the Daily Worker, | organizations are urgently} asked to enclose money, at the rate of one cent a word per in- sertion, with announcements. Thursday MEMBERSHIP MEETING of Workers Film nd Photo League tonight at 8 | West 17th St. All interested iny LIBRARY CENTER CLUB, 101 Sixth Ave., invite: midtown cen evening for in- debates. No ad- tonight at | er trom TU the TUUL, and what ight t new headquarters, 492 E, 169th St. Com rade Birch of Lower Bronx Section will | report on problems of ILD work. sym-| | pathizers welcome. REGULAR membership meeting tonight at 8 p.m. at 4215 Third Ave., Bronx. | Ex-Servicemen’s League. LECTURE at Paradise Manor, 11 W. Mt |Eden Ave. Bronx at 8 p.m, tonight. Sub- | Ject: “Health and Education in Soviet Rus- | sta | | | Worker Speaker: Dr. Elsie Mitchell who lived and worked in Soviet Russia for six years and taught in Red Army—recently returned Admission free. Auspices Mt, Eden Branch, FSU. MASS RALLY being arranged by Section | 15, CP. tonight at 8 p.m. at Ambassador | Hall, Third Ave. and Claremont Par Spe Carl Brodsky and others. tonight at 8:30 p.m. | ford Ave., at BY.C,, 105 That- benefit Daily Worker, Auspice: BYO Sport Section and Red Sparks A.C. | Entry fee 10 cents. Prizes, ATTENTION—Brownsville Shoe Worker: A mobilization for our affair followed b & lecture by Biedenkepp on "Marxism o Hitlerism,” Thu: March 16th, @ p.m. at 149 Sutter Ave. | invited, admission free. Ciao Friday DEBATE Friday at 8 p.m. at Tre- | mont Workers 2075 Clinton Ave., Bronx. Subject: ic id Methods of American Working Class. . A, Hathaway Illinois ?tate Senator Graham, son- ’, pares Beth i in-law of Mayor Cermak, according to | pn, . eworkers Genter, 1108 | the same cispatch in the “Chicago Sub- Daily News” declared: nas 1 Its Perspec. “There is no question In my mind foro Park Schoo} 2, IWO that something should be done to} i Jacobson, Friday at 8:30 discourage the gathering of radicals | niter, 801 Prospect in Illinois. Although I am not yet t Union.” kin on her book sure what action the legislature can take to meet the problem, I expect to confer with Gov. Horner upon arrival tomorrow. Here we see clearly how correct th editorials of the “Daily Worker” were, showing that the bourgeoisie at- tempted to use the shooting of Mayor Cermak to sharpen their ter- roristic attack against the working class. The exposure of this case does not mean that the bourgeoisie will not continue, It will attempt to carry thru its aims and the workers must be aware of it, as the Zangara case can easily be repeated and there is no question that it will be repeated in one form or another. The working class must be sensi- | tive to all attempts of linking the revolutionary working class move- ment with terroristic acts on the part of gangsters of agent provo- cateurs to put the responsibility on the working class and its Jeader, the | Communist Party. History shows cases where agent provocateurs were | utilized to commit acts of terror, plant | bombs, etc., for the purpose of fram- | ing well known revolutionists for) use against the revolutionary move- ment. Now the Miami affair {s exposed. | It does not mean that with this it is settled. The working class must be | on the look-out for any attempt to carry on the terroristic acts by the | bourgeoisie against the working class, | and mobilize masses of workers to} defeat such attempts. his | .” Friday night 8:45 ¢ Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Adi. "ts cents . Saturday | CONCERT-DANCE Saturday night 8 p.m. at Manhatten Lyceum, 66 Fourth |mine-piece Negro jazz band Dancing till dawn, Auspices Council of Workers Clubs, Admission 40 cents, With this ticket 25¢, sae Maa Sunday OUTSTANDING CONCERT OF SEASON. Cello recital by Percy Such, eminent British cellist at Pierre Degeyter Club (revolu- tionary musicians) 55 W. 19th St., Sunday, March 19, Admission 36c, With this no- tice 25¢, Comrade Mac Harris is making a tour now for the Daily Worker. He will take up the organ- | ization of the financial drive as well as problems of circulation, The com- rades are requested to make all arrangements to make the tour of | Comrade Harris a success. Comrade Harris will visit the following cities: belle tL March 16 | Schenectady—March 18 & 19 | Albany—Mareh 20 | Gloversville—Mareh 21 ¥onkers—March 22. often missing school and | n. at 13} SECTIONAL PINGPONG TOURNAMENT | g, Dirty Mews 0 St. Nicholas Avenue, photographed just as the Daily Worker reporter found them, huddled around the only source of heat in the house. The rest of the seven children were at school. he Relief Bureau, which means about of the nine members of the family. ions they live under are typical of Negro workers and children through- out Harlem. The picture on the right shows the slums Negro tenants are poorly clothed and undernourished. It is a normal thing now for Negro children to go to school without breakfast. The psychological effect s that they develop a lack of self- confidence, are cowed, and the bosses put through their “inferiority” le right from the start. Compare the Two! At the same time that Mr. Miner, unemployed since 1931, his wife and their seven children, are worrying about where their next meal is com- ing from— Lucy Cotton, age 7, the daughter of a rich man who has lived off the acks of workers, is said to require the following to keep her “budget balanced” (the boss’s child's mother gave the following itemized monthly expense list of her daughter to Surro- gate Delehanty in @ claim that her daughter needs more money from her grandfather's trust fund, as reported Wall St. Terror in | Here, 3 p.m. Sunday NEW YORK.—A mass meeting of protest against a new wave of terror trolled government of Mexico against workers and farmers, and against the military occupation of Vera Cruz, will be held on ‘funday afternoon, 3 p.m. lat the Spanish Workers Center, 1413 | Fifth Ave. New York. This meeting, | American workers, has been called by | eight organizations which are sup- [SETING of Branch 500 1wo | 0 E. 13th St., Room 204. Speak 1 be at meeting to ai A independent unions | the policy of the members of | these groups should be. | | MECTURE at Pen and Hamme: ight. Anti-Imperialist League of the U. S. against the new attack on Mexican workers and peasants. “Mexican Federal troops have in- vaded the State of Vera Cruz,” states the call for the meeting, “disarming peasants and killing ruthlessly those who resist; they are attacking work- ers’ organjzations, destroying unions, as in San Bruno and La Probidad, Jalapa, murdering and deporting the strike leaders. | Millions for War “Millions of hungry .workers and peasants swarm through the streets of Mexican towns while the govern- ment, servant of Wall Street, has voted 56,000,000 pesos for new battle- ships. “War preparations of the same kind are being carried out by those Latin American governments which are under U. 8. domination, to in- crease the military strength of the United States in its struggle against | British imperialism for world suprem- | acy, | Yree the Unions “Demand the freedom of unions to function! Demand the immediate re- lease of political prisoners! Stop the plan of Yankee imperialism to draw Mexico into the South American wars!” | The meeting has been called by the Anti-Imperialist League of the United States, the Mexican Workers Mutual- ist Club, the Julio A. Mella Club, the Tobacco Workers Industrial Union, the Food Workers Industrial Union, | the Spanish Workers Center, Unit 1, Section 4, Young Communis‘ League, the Porto-Rican Anti-Imperialist As» soriation, and the Hispanie Naturist Club, a Organizations Partici- pating in Raising Funds for the Daily, Worker Paity, Morten |'PING PONG TOURNAMENT Brownsville Youth Center Red Sparks TONIGHT 105 Thatford Avenue, Brooklyn ENTRANCE FEE 10¢ | PRIZE TO WINNER AND RUNNER-UP LECTURE “Political Situation in Germany” SAM SKLAROFF Hinsdale Workers Club 313 Hinsdale Street, Brooklyn RIDAY, MARCH 17, 8 P. M. s in Harl em Where Negro Workers Are Forced to Live Vera Cruz, Mexico Mass Protest Meeting on the part of the Wall Street con-: inyolving both American and Latin! porting the drive initiated by the| in the New York World-Telegram of February 7): Rent at 995 Fifth Avenue........$800 Furnishings, upkeep of apartment 700 (In addition to this, Lucy's mother spends on herself $10,000 for clothes annually, $5,000 for gifts, $2,000 for entertaining, $3,000 for miscellaneous, out of an income of $28,360 a year.) “Enough of this misery the bosses are forcing on us and our children!” the Negro workers of Harlem are beginning to say. Every family and | child reached by the: Daily Worker | investigation of chiid misery in Harlem has readily joined with their white fellow workers in organizations | to fight back the bosses’ terror drive. :| Demonstrate Today At Williamsburgh Home Relief Bureau, are 7000 Workers Vote for NEW YORK.—Williamsburg Un- employed Council ¢alls for a demons- am. today. It asks all organizations participating. to bring banners. The demands of the demonstrators are: 1. Immediate payment of gas, elec- tricity and rent bills of unemployed workers by the Home Relief Bureau, 2. Relief in cash at the rate of $10 & week for each unemployed couple and $3 additional for each dependant. 3. No discrimination against Negroes or foreign-born. 4. $1 cash relief for single persons. Many workers’ organizations have notified they will take part in the demonstration, DOWNTOWN Workers Welcome at Ratner’s Cafeteria 115 Second Avenue Food Workers Industrial Union. COMRADES MEET AT ROYAL CAFETERIA 827 BROADWAY, NEAR 13TH ST, tarian Prices. Spectals tor 20¢ 100% Food Workers’ Union Shop | UNIVERSITY CAFETERIA | 122 University Place SERVING WORKERS CENTER SOL’S SANDWICH ‘LUNCH 101 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 0-9780-0781 GARMENT DISTRICT PATRONIZE SEVERN’S CAFETEBIA 7th Avenue at 30th St. Best Food at Workers Prices Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 833 7th AVENUB Corner 28th St, MASS FUNERAL TODAY PROTESTS — DEATH OF CUMMINGS AND BABY: NEW YORK.—The mass ass funeral today for Mrs. Cummings and he) newborn baby, will also be a protest parade against the Harlem Hospita) officials who sent the then pregnant mother to her death a week ago when : they refused her immediate attention and kept her waiting on a hospital bench, | The funeral will start from St. Luke's Hall, 125 West 130th Street, at i pm., and with Negro and white workers in line will go down Lenox Avenue. At St. Luke’s Hall, William Fitzgerald, Harlem organizer of the Inter- national Labor Defense; Otto Hall, of the People's Committee Against Dis: crimination in Harlem Hospital, and other workers will speak. Among the slogans to be carried on placards by the marchers are: | “Stop Criminal Butchery of the Negro People,” “Negro Workers Are Human | Beings—Not Guinea Pigs!”, “Control of Harlem Hospital by » Committee | Elected by the People of “Harlem,” “Unity of the Negro and White Workers Chauffeur, maid, etc. ..... . 350 Governess .. + 135 Food for child, mother and ser- vants ........ + 600} School (tuition, etc.) + 50 Clothing ......... 300 Storage of auto and charges at garage ..... 150 Laundry and cleaning for house., 50 Electricity and telephone . 5 Gifts and “gratuities” 25 Traveling expenses . 100 French, flowers, dancing lessons, books, drugs, stationery, medi- CINE wn ceveeeee se neeeeeee - 400 Monthly total - $3,800 tration at the Home Relief Bureau, | 95 Boerum St., Williamsburg, at 11) | | Harlem Conference of Youth, Friday to Make “Y’s” Lodge Jobless NEW YORK.—A conference of va- | rious workers’ organizations in Har- lem has been called for Friday at 8 |p. m. at the Lafayette Hall, 131st St. ; and 7th Ave., to demand the opening up of the YWCA and YMCA for free ; Shelter of the homeless, This Conference is sponsored by a Provisional Committee consisting of such organizations as: Students Lit- | erary League, Souffi movement, group of the Emergency Club, the 8th Ave. Block Committee, groups from the Mission House and Salvation Army, Finnish Workers Club, Young Communist League, etc, The Conference will work out a definite program of struggle to gain free shelter for the homeless Negro and white workers of Harlem. All workers’ organizations are urged to elect two delegates to represent their organization at the Conference and to | rally behind the fight for the needs | of the homeless, For further in- | formation, write to: Provisional Com- | mittee for Opening Of YMCA and | YWCA, 650 Lenox Ave., New yhat SHOE. STRIKE FACES BOSTON) Walkout BOSTON, Mass., March 15.—Seven | thousand workers voted to strike to- day under the leadership of the Shoe Workers’ Protective Union. They are demanding a wage increase of 15%, | abolition of the yellow dog contract and recognition of the union. It is reported that the Havervill Board of Trade is making a deal with the Shoe Workers’ Protective offering recog- nition of the union in return for selling out the strikers’ demands in Havervill, DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyp “ PHONE: DICKENS 2-8012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M. 1-2, 6-8 PM, {ntern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE bth FLOOR AU Work Voue Under Persona) Care R, JOSEPASON eae: ee r. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST 106 K, 14th St., near 4th Av. j the T.U.U.C. To Win These Demands.” By J. LANDY, Counc NEW YORK.—The Council of Workers Clubs is having its first cinb’ conference in Irving Plaza Hall, Sunday, 10 a.m. This establishes on a firm_ footing a new mass organization of English speaking young workers. The following are the outstanding facts to be considered in attempting to judge the political significance of this mass organizations: Conference Sunday Marks Year of Success for English Speaking Clubs il of Workers Clubs. The 4 clubs of last year have in- creased to 21 clubs with a total mem- bership of close to 1,500. At least 60 per cent of the total is in a work- ers’ organization for the first time. Barely 10 per cent are members of These are some of the questions that arise in the dally activities of the clubs: Shall the club support the Daily Worker financially? Shall the term ‘Comrade’ be used in the club? Do not pictures of Marx and Lenin give the club a “bad” name in the neighborhood? Should a club have bridge parties? | Why should literature be sold at a club dance when it might drive away some cash customers? Also, the fear that Negroes at a} dance will keep some cash customers | away from the club. Our major difficulty is the lack of developed club leaders. A primer on club work is being issued, and a class in organizational problems is being formed to overcome some of these problems. Some of the activities of the tn- dividual clubs are: study and discus- sion groups, forums, lectures, public speaking classes, dramatics, music, sport, ete. Other problems to cope with are that only a small percentage of our members are Negroes. Our two clubs situated in a mixed neighborhood, have to combat the trend towards be- both intensive and extensive depends on the rapidity with which we will train new leaders. We already have contacts in Ne~ gro and social clubs, and it needs but a slight stimulus on our part to change them into workers’ clubs. We therefore set for ourselves the goal of 50 English speaking clubs by next year. Stage and Screen “SHAME” CONTINUES FOR SEC- OND WEEK AT CAMEO THEATRE “Shame,” the new Soviet sound film, now in its American premiere at the Cameo Theatre, will remain a second week at the Forty-Second St. playhouse. The picture was selected in Moscow as the prize film of the year. The Moscow critics voted it the most mature movie turned out | by the Soviet studios and added that this was one of the best new films and that it showed Russians as they are. Frederick Ermler and Sergei Yut- kevitch, two of the foremost Soviet direojors, produced this film. The music was written by Dmitri Shos- takovitch. The cast includes many famous stage and screen artists, in- cluding Vladimir Gardin, who has been hailed as “the Emil Jannings of the Soviet screen.” “Ich Will Nicht Wissen Wer Du Bist” (Don’t Tell Me Who You Are), the latest Viennese screen operetta A | our clubs have partially succeeded in by Geza von Bolvary, Robert Stolz and Walter Reisch, will open this Saturday at the Europa Theatre, Gustav Froehlich and Liane Haid play the leading roles, “Hertha’s Erwachen” (Hertha’s Awakening), a new Ufa film, which had a little battle with the censors, has been finally passed and is no’ piazine, at the Little Carnegie Plays | louse. coming seggregated clubs. We have as yet, because of the rapidity of our growth been unable to involve the bulk of our members in either local, or city-wide class issues. Two of establishing unemployed _ sections. One of them has even been able to obtain relief for two of its single members, For the second year our growth AMUSEMENTS “SHAME is a gripping account of Iife in the Soviet Union, with its new security for the tolling masses, whose enthusiasm, consciousness of power, collective initiative and sense of own- ership and responsibility pervade the story.” —DAILY WORKER. area ‘SHAME is one of the finest of the Russian talkies, the finest, indeed, since ‘The Road to Life” —WORLD-TELEGRAM, FIRST FILM OF THE SECOND 5-YEAR PLAN PAM ENGLISH TITLES STARTING TODAY Gripping, Fantastic Film Drama “BY ROCKET TO THE MOON” Tense and exelting—as fantistic a story as Jules Verne could have imagit It will jolt you out of your everyday rut with a bang! Directed by FRITZ LANG (Producer of “Metropolis”) ENGLISH TITLES wonxers Acme Theatre ‘TH ST, AND UNION SQUARE FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH in AUTUMN CROCUS The New York and London Success, MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W, of Bwa’ Eves, 8:40. Mats, Wed., Thurs. & BKO JEFFERSON ae Se 2|NOW “Employees Entrance” with Warren Willis: and Loretta Young Added “NAGONA” Feature with LOLA Classics of the Screen! WORKERS’ FILMS-0..353 strucore Mott Haven 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 101 EAST 140th STE. (Cor, Willir Ave.) For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE STRUGGLE FOR BREAD—The dramatic story of the making of the workers’ paper the DAILY WORKER, can be shown at a very small charge, We are also booking SOVIET FILMS Every organization should take advantage of this opportunity to use the film for stimulating activities, drives, etc. CAN BE SHOWN ANYWHERE AT A NOMINAL COST. Information—Bookings at DAILY WORKER DISTRICT OFFICE, 35 East 12th Tel: AL 4-1754 DAILY WORKER BANQUET SPLENDID LARGE Hall and Meeting Rooms TO AIRE Perfect for BALLS, DANCES, LECTURES, MEETINGS, Ete, IN THE New ESTONIAN WORKERS HOME 27-29 W.115th St., N.Y.C. Phone UNiversity 4-0168 at MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 E. 4th St. MARCH 19 at 7:30 P. M. ‘ ALL ORGANIZATIONS ARE INVITED TO SEND DELEGATES MICHAEL GOLD will act as chairman, Speakers: MOISSAYE J. OLGIN, Famous Author and Editor Morning Freiheit. CLARENCE A, HATHAWAY RICHARD B. MOORE CARL BRODSKY 1, AMTER. Entertainment—Chalk Talk, John Reed Club