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PAGE TWO ‘Daily’ to Publish Famous Novel on German Struggles “Barricades In Berlin” to Be Printed Serially, Starting March 29 “Barricades in Berlin,” the famous | cialist lice chief, Zoergiebel. novel of the revolutionary struggles| Written in vivid story form, “Bar- of the German workers, will be pub- | ricades in Berlin” is based on fact lished serially in the Daily Worker.| the author making use of sworn affi- Publication of this book, which has/davits and the accounts of éye-wit- been hailed as one of the greatest| nesses. proletarian novels in the world, will; The publication of the book in se- begin next Wednesday, March 20. tial form is particularly timely now | Barricades in Berlin” is the work| when the fascist dictatorship in Ger- of a noted German proletarian writer,| many is reaping the harvest sown by Klaus Neukrantz. The English trans-| the socialist treacheries described so lation has been issued by Interna-| unforgettably in “Barricades in Ber- tional Publishers. It deals with the|lin.” The book shows the magnifi- | May Day struggles in Berlin in 1929,| cent discipline and will to struggle| when the workers heroically defend-| of the German masses who are today ed themselves against the armed at-| rallying their forces for the overthrow [VETS MARCH TO tacks of the police sent by the “so- Amalgamation Party Points of the bloody Hitier regime. | to the Real “Enemy Within” NEW YORK.—The Amalgamation Party, the militant rank and file opposition in Typographical Union Local No, 6 has answered the scurrilous circular of a clique called the “Minute Men” supporting the re-election of the Hewson administration. The clique’s cireulars, entitled “The Enemy From Within,” is answered by a reply similarly entitled. The reply says | in part: “What are the acts of sabotage they charge us with having commit- ted? By their own words in the cir- cular they convict themselves as the real enemies within—not the Amal- gamation Party “Act of sabotage Number 1 ‘They (the Amalgamation Party) strenuously oppose the settlement of s¢ale controversies through the me- dium of conciliation and arbitration afpd insist on strikes on all and every asion regardless of existing con- litions. “Messt's. Cassidy and Dahm may not be able to express themselves well in English when they say “on all and every occasion,” but they ad- mit to the membership by this state- ment, as they and Hewson have done by their actions in the newspaper and book and job scales, their willingness to surrend: » the emplpyers every- thing they ask for. No? Then get the sneering contempt these veterans show for the militant members of No. 6: “In the recent book and job con- troversy y (the A. P.) vociferously advocated the union demanding the | — = “In their blind loyalty to the em- | ployers they argue that were the em- | ployers to accedé to such a demand | they would have to be alfritists and | philanthropists! How, then, can | these gentlemen call themselves | | friends, let alone “leaders,” of labor? | They can't, so they call therttselves Minute Men—at the beck and call of | the employers every minute of the | day! | “Hewson's hour has come! No | Minute Men can help him now! In continuing these scurrilous attacks to | |top on the disgraceful record of the | past two years in office, he merely | | Pelterates through the Enemy Within circular his allegiance to the em-j| | ployers. A clear declaration of faith | |in the employers—in black and white | —and twenty sergeants-at-arms to intimidate the membership of No. 6! “To clean out Sixteenth Street from cellar to attic we'll sweep aside | these Minute Men who are attempt- | ling to tutn back the ¢lock of pro- | gress. These gentlemen representing | a dying order of trades unionism must be sacrificed to the rank and | retenti the old $60 seale and the | file of a new day! ee | ae nour. gs strike. .(Emphasis)| “Amalgamation Party Campaign theirs.) NO ARBITRATION UNDER | Committee, (Signed) A. J. McGregor, ANY CIRCUMSTANCES. (Caps| chairman; Al Rosenberg, secretary; | ours.) | "Theodore ©. Jennings, treasurer. Workers More Aware of the Role of the ‘Daily’, Says Lewis, Back from Mid -Western Tour! k from a tour of the middle western states in the interests of the ker drive for $35,000, L. Lewis stated yesterday that the drive al 1 far from sufficient funds have been raised, has been ging the Daily Worker to the attention of workers in areas which had never before been penetrated. cts were covered by Lewis in his tour: Pittsburgh, Cleveland, , Minnesota and Milwaukee. In these distticts he stop- nces with local workers’ organizations in West Browns- , Johnstown, Ambridge, Duquesne and Turtle Creek Valley nestown, Kenton, Akron, Toledo and Cleveland (Ohio); Mus- lamiazoo and Grand Rapids (Mich.); Gary and Hammond | Louis, Mo.; Chicago; Madison, Racine, Kenosha, Milwatikee rior (Wis.); and Minneapolis, St. Paul and Duluth, Minnesota. ‘or one who travels through the country,” Lewis said, “it is pos- sible to a more critical, more objective reaction to the material which appe than in New York. Hinsdale Workers Clu Received Tuesday eaten! fecetved ea Challenges Prospect| seis sae — sams a= | DISTRICT 1 1 Tae se NEW YORK—Challenging the | Genceal be og ar Prospect Workers Club in the race | “peoyiaence fo | Whitcomb Unit 19, See. 1 Coll. by group Whkrs, Bind & Mer- maid Ave., ©. L 5.00 Red Sparks Athieti¢ 9.00) Ping Pong Tourna- to win the bann which will be | Concert by Natl ws. awarded to the club which fulfills the | tile Wirs Unien, ¢ highest per centage of its Daily Work- | 3r e er as 99 er drive quota, the Hinsdale Workers | rinnisk Womens Club has begun an intensive cam-| Ctibs mee rv} psa to boost its own fund-raising | pora, 30.50 Hunter Chapter NSL activities. | Total to date $882.16; Tag Day 80 DISTRICT 2 Shule 8, IWO 4.00 “While the Prospect Workers Club | Ne Boro Park Workers is still in the lead,” a statement is-| anne wee, theu| Cos soe sued by the challengers reads, “we | the Marine Wkrs Ind) prownsvitle WC 3.45 are tight behind them, but do not|, Valen 100.00) 1, Marks 1.00 intend to remain in second place for | K Ker fa, Conner Workers Se - | ia. Stady Greap B18 re iH Miter nit 28, See 15 5. RAISE $10.50 FOR ‘DAILY W stalgaitie themeinder of Ban- NEW YORK—At a house party | T Gardian quet Proceeds given by Unit 15, Section of the © tavdce 30.89 Communist Party, $10.50 was raised | 5 panstg 258.87 for the Daily Worker, largely through | De Lane ee the cooperation of the Bronx Workers | PF a a,.< Club Chorus under the direction of | wottman 2. | Was credited to Dist. artet | | 2 by mistake. ‘Alterman. Collected at Corrected total to | Bath Bench Workers Club, 1818 séth St. z Jubilee affair 40.14 6.91 | » se eae ; NEW ples A) but Sa | Workers Taboratety | on Workers Health.” ¥ e oe eA pe renhgee + theatre Eg . who died last ek, the| vu . Section 1 | LECTURE Prof. H. Longfellow Dana, Sachnoff, who d age sola ip bi gts ig 1.10) 60 | Friday night, at 8:30 p.m. at Royal Palace, ee oe SEARCn TE Of the TAtere | 6 ty aeake's, | | 46 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn. Subject: Re- | national Workers Order, of which he!" tap pay ot cont Tendeneles in Drama and Films of Was a member, have donated $3 to/| Amer. Youth Ctub, | Picture, Girards- Soviet Union. Lecture will be iilustrated ‘ ‘Tag Day 401| - vitle oo] with lantern sitdes. Auspices FSU, Wil- , rrun dG bey Fda ped | amen, Youth Clab | Namebureh. Admission 25 cente, wionary english daily that Comrade L70| vores ry oy ee Sachnoff always supported.” | meownavitte shate 1,1 Total to date $894.08) ANNOUNCEMENT PLAYWRIGHTING ciass for beginners — ya ESS Ee SRR starts Priday evening, Merch Stet at the "AMUSEMENTS BANNED BY HITLER! “ ” THE REVOLUTIONIST with FRITZ KORTNER ENGLISH TITLES ACME THEATRE/|15S¢..5 & UNION SQUARE \eeseie ftom 9 a.m.—Last Show 10:30 p. e CIS LEDERER & DOROTRY GISM in rko CAMEO tins. Now! bregrand “VOODOO” AUTUMN CROCUS Produced by FAUSTIN WIRKUS ‘The New York and London Buccess Pxtra Attraction: “SONG OF LIFE” The Worker's Bway & MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of Eves, 8:40. Mats. Wed., Thurs. & #1 CLASSIFIED WANTED TO BUY—Cnsh paid for olf gold, feoth, 945 F. 163r4 Kt., Davis, Dept. Btore. nko JEFFERSON "sth st. * NOW JIMMIE DURANTE ané BUSTER KEATON in “WHAT! NO BEER?” Added Feature:—"OBET THE LAW,” LEO CARRILLO and LOIS WILSON with FURNISHED ROOM TO LET—AI improve- ments, for two—#5 x week; housekeeping. 57 West 4ar4 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 193° The Unemployed “See” Roosevelt Interview of Delegation With President’s Secretary Shows Jobless Only Mass Action Will Block Increasing Hunger BOARD FRIDAY! To Demand Relief and| Anti-Cuts Resolution | NEW YORK.—Veterans of this city tens and thousands of whom have] been driven to the verge of starvation by the detiial of relief, will march to the Board of Estimate tomorrow and demand immediate action to provide adequate relief for all un vets, married and single, Negro an white. The vets will demand that the city live up to Section 117-119 of the State Welfare Laws, which pro- vides for rélief for unemployed ex- servicemen, The veterans will rally in Union| Square at 10 a.m. and march in a/ body to City Hall. They will also de- mand that the city send a resolution to President Roosevelt and Congress asking for thé withdrawal of the cuts in veterans’ benefits. The Workers Ex-Servicemen’'s League has organized the march. Members of all other veterans’ or- ganizations, as well as workers, are asked to join in this united front movement for relief and against the cuts. “BOTH YOUR HOUSES” PLAY OF POLITICAL CROOKS AND GRAFTERS The log-rolling that goes on in the powerful appropriations committee of the house of representatives in Wash- ington is the subject of the current play at the Royale Theatre. “Both Your Houses,” written by Maxwell Anderson and acted by a competent cast, again exposes the po- litical marionettes, the crooks and grafters who are sent to Washington as congressmen and senators. The appropriations committee is charged with scaling down expenses. and the chairman reads the bill, striking out a post office here, a pub- lic memorial there, until it is ap- parently scaled down to the bone. However, there has been some pre- litiinary trading for votes to get through appropriations promised by various congressmen. There is also pteésent a young con- gressman from the west who discovers the gang that sent him to congress were interested in certain graft of their own. He decides to expose his own supporters arid also to fight against all appropriations that seen a bit shady. Meanwhile the old shyster who is chairman of the appropriations com- mittee and who has been practicing economy by cutting down the other | fellow's pet demands for government money, is revealed as the chief stock- holder in a defunct bank that only keeps its doors open in the expecta- tion that 4 federal prison will be built in his town and the graft therefrom will rescue his bank for the time being. When that is discovered all the members of the committee pile on their demands as a form of polite blackmail. The youngster from the sticks tties to prevent it, but is finally outmanouvered and comes to the conclusion that it is stupid to try to be honest—play the game is hence- forth his motto. As a play of exposure it registers. The author has contrived to maintain rapid action throughout. Many of the lines are excellent satire and they | inspire a healthy contempt for the capitalist lackeys at Washington. There is a bit too much raillery at the expense of the voters and anti- democratic propaganda that fits in with fascist agitation —H. W. "WHAT'S ON Thursday MEETING and Ciass in Editing tonight at Workers Piim and Photo League, 13 West 17th St., 8:30 p.m. All interested invited. “Soil and Turksib,” two of the best Soviet films will be shown at Labor Temple, Sat. urday night at 5:30 and 7:30. should see these films. ENTERTAINMENT-DANCE beniefit Workers Home, 27 West 115th St. in advance 2c; at door 356. Industrial Union. P.m. at 492 E. 169th St., corner Third Ave. ‘on Seottsboro and Weinstein Cases inent speakers. Auspices, Nat Turner Br., i. Le eee ie Friday CONCERT-DANCE given by Broux Branch Workers International Relief Friday night, Pros 8 p.m, st Union Workers Center, 801 pect Ave., Bronx. All workers in neighbor- hood invited to attend. WORKERS SCHOOL THEATRE LuAGUE (Branch 621 TWO) will perform some new plays Friday night at 8 p.m. at Paradise Manor, 11 Mt. Eden Ave., neat Jerome Ave. Subway. Interesting time assured, All in- vited. LECTURE by S. Sklaroff on “Should So- viet Union be Recognized,” Friday night at Workers Laboratory Theatre, of WIR, 42 East 12th St. Register now. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Ret Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours’ 8-10 A.M., 1-2. 6- P.M. hye intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE isth FLOOR AD Work Done Under Versonn! Carr DR. JOREPRSON Dr. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST ij | 106 B. 14th St., near HUZAY. | All Workers Daily Worker tonight at 8:30 p. m. at Esthonian ‘Tickets Auspices, Domesti¢ Workers Section of Food Workers MASS PROTEST MEETING tonight at | Dail Prom- | Central Party USA country, Winthrop W. Aldrich, Thomas Lamont, et¢. He Was work+ ing out measures to strengthen the position of the Wall Street banks at tion. Therefore Mr. Roosevelt refmed to see the Uneniployed delegation, just as he refused to meet with the dele- gation of the farmers and of the Negroes. He was “deeply interested,” we were assured; he always “likes to confer with the people,” but the banking situation was such that he could not see the representatives of the people. The Unemployed Dele- gation had to present the demands to the President through his secre- tary, Mr. Howe, who Calls himself the “ears of the president.” Kept Waiting In Rain, Kept waiting out in the rain for 40 minutes, because we were work- ers, while representatives of the bankers and manufacturers passed in and out without restraint, the Un-| employed Delegation finally got to the President's secretary. The delegation showed that Roose- yelt’s inaugural address means infla- | tion; a so-called work program, to the land” movement for the un- employed, while the farmers are struggling against hunger; further attacks on the Negroes; militariza- tion of the homeless youth; and more starvation for the children, The delegation emphasized that in requesting “power that would be | sive: to me if we were in fact in- vaded by a foreign foe,” Roosevelt in his inaugural address was asking for dictatorial power, in order to crush the rising struggles of the workers against hunger. False Insurance Exposed. In demanding Unemployment and Social Insurance, at the expense of the government and the bosses, the president’s “ears” interjected: “How can workers who have no work de- mand insurance?” This bears out completely what the delegation declared was embodied in the fake insurance schemes of Rovse- velt, supported by the A. F. of L. and Socialist leaders... It is not unem- ployment insurance, but, unemploy- ment reserves, It is clear that the Roosevelt Gov- ernment has no intention of keeping its promise to the workers to pro- vide them with unemployment in- surance. The various so-called “un- employment insurance” schemes that have been introduced in various states are nothing but unemployment reserves, Which will give nothing to the 17,000,000 unemployed at the present time. And even these bills have been scotched, “in order not to place more burdens upon the em- ployers.” Bosses Plan More Hanger. The govettiments program is one for the benefit of the bankers, and means more hunger for the whole working Class. The central demand of the working class is Unemploy- Organizations Partici- pating in Raising Funds for the Dance and Entertainment Domestic Workers Section Food Workers Industrial Unton Tonight, at 8:30 P. M. Estonian Workers’ Home 21-29 West 115th Street ADM. IN ADVANCE 2i¢, AT DOOR die, SPLENDID LARGE 1% | Hall and | Meeting Rooms TO HIRE Perfect for BALLS, DANCES, LECTURES, MEETINGS, Ete IN Tae Representatives of Workers Kept Waiting in Rain While Roosevelt Confers With Bankers on How to Add to Workers’ Burden By I. AMTER (National Secretary of the Unemployed Councils) The Conference calied by the National Committee Unemployed Councils, which met in Washington on March 4 and 5, elected a delegation of 15 to see Mr. Roosevelt and to present the demands of the masses of workers of this country, including the central demand, Un- employment and Social Insurance at the expense of the government and the bosees. Mr. Roosevelt was “too busy” to see conferences with the bankers of tits 6—— the unemployed delegation. He was busy in | A NEW POISON GAS Opens Pores So Mustard Gas Can Pour In { By a Worker Correspondent | DAYTON, Obio—The U. 8. Chemical Division of the War Department | claitns to have invented a gas which is to be entitted in front line trenches | against opposition troops. This is to be used in conjunction with mustard gas in making @ gas attack. H This new gas ig shot across the front line trenches of the enemy, and | when it Comes into contact with the human skin it causes the muscular | membrane of the pores to relax, 90 that the poves will remain open for the coming charge of mustard gus. | They say this method is far stiperior to the old method of shooting | Mustard, and the troops are not awate of the vanguard gas until the mustard has attacked then. Where the mask was formerly & protection, | this gas causes a sense of detection rolaxetion, so that the helmet comes into positi-n too late to guard against it. Landltords Start Terror which means forced labor; a “back| ment and Social Insurance at the ex. Calls for Fight On Forced Labor ce : 1. Am#er, national secretary of the Unemployed Councils, who calls for mass action of the unemployed te fight the Roosevelt-Wall Street foreed labor military camp scheme, and to demand unemployment in- surance at the expense of the bosses and the government. Street bankers’ congress, but only Women and not to men. pensé of the bosses and the govern- ‘This can be obtained not by the expense of the working popula- trusting Mr. Roosevelt and the Wall Camps IN. Y. BILL WOULD EXTEND WOMENS’ LOW WAGE TO MEN Try to Put Thru Law, Other Laws Attacking , Women and Children |! ALBANY, N. Y., March 22—Sup- porting the Brownell bill which would extend the proposed minimum wage plan to men and would tend to fasten the lowest wage levels upon men Workers as well as women and child workers, leistire class women mar- shalled their foress here today to urge passage of the bill by the N. Y. Legislature, Other minimum wage proposals before the Legislature include the Wald bill, which would set up man- datory minimum wage levels for wo- men and children, and the Bunnigan bill based on the Massachusetts plan of an advisory minimum wage affect- ing women and children in industry. The Massachusetts plan is for a vague and flexible “minimum” which is not enforced. Representing professional women and bourgeois feminists, the National Woman's Party voiced their opposi- tion to any law that would apply to Senator through mass pressure and mass ac- Dunnigan proposed a compromise bill | New ESTONIAN WORKERS HOME 27-29 W.115th St., N.Y.C. Phone UNiversity 4-0165 DOWNTOWN Workers Welcome at Ratner’s Cafeteria 115 Second Avenue Food Workers Industrial Union, NF ’S SANDWICH SOL'S LUNCH 101 University Place (Just Around the Corner) | Telephone Tompkins Square 6-0160-07H1 | COMRADYS MEET aT ROYAL CAFETERIA set BROADWAY, NEAR 1STR ST. Rest Food—Proletarian Prices. | Watch Our Daily Spectets to |__ 100% Fooq Workers’ Union 5: ton. as an emergency measure that would In every working class organization! @PPly only for the duration of the union, fraternal organization, club, depression, but Senator Wald would shop, flop-hotse—adopt resolutions NOt agree to any “compromise” on demanding unemployment insurance his bill. NOW. In the neighborhoods, fiop-|_ Governor Lehman has urged the houses, shops and unions, prepare for mediate adoption of the Wald bill militant struggle to compel the gov- 2nd is “supported by infiuential em- ernment to grant unemployment in-!Ployers” in this move. A number of surance NOW. Local, county and Manufacturers have been quoted as state struggles for immediate relief Saying that “instead of being a hard- and unemployment insurance must *hip, the minimum wage system be organized on the broadest united Would be a help to industry.” In front base possible, drawing in work- Other words, it would mean more ets of the A. F. of L., Socialist Party) Profits in their pockets. It would and all working class organizations.|tend to make general the present outrageously low wage scales. SOCTALIST LAWYER LETS WORKER DOWN (By 2 Worker Correspondent) SHEBOYGAN, Wis.—The police re arresting workers for being in the city Hall-where the employment agency and relief department are lo- cated. One worker was sentenced to 6 days in jail for being in the City Hall. A, “left” social-fascist lawyer named Humke, promised to defend this worker, and then let him get sentenced without turning a finger. HARLEM WORKERS SCHOOL OPENED NEW YORK— Harlem Branch of the Workers School has been estab- lished at 27 West 115th St. Courses open to all workers. Workers’ Rational Living Library Written and conceived from the modern and progressive worker's point of view and in his interest. Health Cotiservation, Disease Pre- vention, How to Live Rationally To- day in every Respect. Once learned, always known. Simplified teaching, plain guage. Employed and unemployed workers need the knowledge of how to live, how to avoid sickness and how to be cured, so that they spend nothing or the least possible on doctors, surgical operations and medicines, And also in order to avoid on the one hand, as much as they can, the humiliating and time-wasting dispensary “treat- ment” and on the other hand the parasitic and exploiting quacks, swin- dlers and drug advertisers! Away with misinformation, rubbish, poison and fake! At last a scientific, true and revo- lutionary rational living literature! No commercialism! No doctors to recommend; no institutions or drugs to advertise. Even the author, a well- known and old medical doctor, health teacher and revolutionary fighter for the workers’ cause, suppresses his name and address. Here are a few of the many sub- CONCERT & THEATRE Sunday, March 26, 8 P. M. at Spartacus Workers Club 269 West 25th Street —PROGRAM— SKIT—‘BROADWAY, 1033” by Theatre Collective JACK SHAFFRON—BASEO JOSEPH HABEROMITZ—VIOLINIST JULIA HABERGRITZ AT THE PIANO CHALK TALK—BILL SIEGEL OF THE JOHN REED CLUB Admission 26¢.—For the Benefit of Section % Communist Party lan- BROOKLYN For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1699 PITKIN AVENUE PURITY QUALITY SUTTER Vegeterian and Dairy Restaur: 589 SUTTER AVE. (Cor, George) BY our work: s Food and Constipation—Sex and BRONX Health—Moental Health—The Child's Health — Marriage — Overweight Mott Raven 9-8169 || ana underweight -— Work and Health — fndustrial Diseases DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 BAST 140th STWukT (Cor. Willir Ave.) Women's Intimate Life — Ven Diseases—Birth Control for Workers Children and Parents—Cancer and Other Growths— Disease and the Class Struggie ~ Abortion —~ Stomach Troub'es—-Muct We Eat Meat? ~- Sexual Impotence—Heart, Circula- tion, Blood Presssure—What Is In- sanity?—-What Is Psychoanalysis? When Is A Doctor Needed?—When Are Surgical Operations Necessary?— by a\'sm—Ccrshumption, Flu, Rheumatism — Pains and Achzs—Causes and Cure of Headache Irregular Healers—Pregnancy and Childbirth—Youth and Old Ags—Ths Common Co!d—Unemployment and Health—Teeth—The Effects of Fear Wheat About the Hair?~—And so on MPET TOUR COMMADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Brona Park East Foods Proletarian Prices Pare GARMENT DISTRICT PATRONIZE and so forth, S E VERN’? just appearep: CAPETERIA No. 1. 7th Avenue at 30th St. Best F'ood at Workers Prices HOW IS YOUR STOMACH? Each book of about 60 to 80 pages contains a complete subject. Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 ith AVENUE Price: 20 “cents a copy (Send no Stamps) Address: TONAL LIVING Station M, New York, N. Y, RAT Box 4, jects that will appear as we continuc} NEW YORK--400 workers clashed with police yesterday when three families were evicted from their apartinents at 219 Harzl St., Brook- lyn, by the city marshal. Twenty. three Were afrested. They were bundled into patrol wagons and booked on disorderly conduct charges in the Liberty Avenué precinct. koe ARREST PICKETS, TERKORIZE TENANTS NEW YORK.—Attempting to break up the powerful struggle by workers against high rents, large squads of police swooped down Wednesday on the picket line in frons of 1595 and 1519 Charlotte St. scene of a prto- longed rent-strike, and arrested tto pickets and two members of the Un+ employed Council. The four workers, held for hearing fended by the New York District In- te:national Labor Defense. The nolice tore rent-strike off the fire escapes, stopped all ings and tried to terrorisa the ten- ants by forbidding gatherings in front of the apartment buildings, 4 EVICTED, FIGHT GOES ON, MASS PICKET SATURDAY NEW YORK.—Four tensnts were evicted Tuesday in the driazling rain irom two East New York houses, 440 and 444 Williams St, where ¢ rent strike is in progress. At a mesting that same evening everyone of the tenants in the two houses demanded the four tenants be moved back, with the owner, a member of the Land- lords Protective Association, paying Costs, and also that the strike be con- in the 54th St. court, will be de-| Drive Against Tenants Rent Strikes Spread Again Despite Attacks of Landlord “Protective” Groups care with even greater determina tion. All the landlords 6n the block have organized, fearing that tenants in their houses will follow the example of the strikers. The owner of 440 and 444 is now trying to terrorize his tenants by posting detectives and Gangsters sll around the houses. But the tenants refuse to be intimidated and call for @ mass picket line of all workers in the neighborhood Sat- ufday 2 o’6lock. Alteration Painters Meeting Success in Organization Drive NEW YORK. — The Downtown Lecal of the Alteration Painters Union begen a general drive on March 16 in ordér to organize more shops and to bring more painters into the Union. The Organisation Committee of the Local, toxether wit the actives of the Local, have shown quite a bit of results for the fitst two Gays of the drite. Fifty new mem- bers joited the union and paid thei {initiation fees, and iso several em- ployers signed up with the Tnion. MEET IN CONEY ISLAND The Ooney Island Local of the Alieration Painters Union is new preparing for a general drive to Ranize the painters in thls territo: For this ptirpose a Mass Meeting is atfanged for Monday, March 2, at 1213 50th Streéi, Brookiyn. N. ¥., a5 8 p.th., in order to acquaint the losal Painters with the progvam and aims of our Union. New York MECCA AUDITORIUM 55th Street, Between 6th and 7th Avenues Tickets 35¢, 55¢ and 83e (tax Incinded) lath St., 6th floor, and Workers Book Shop, 50 E. 13th st. | th JUBILEE I CELEBRATION of the MORNING FREIHEIT (The Only Jewish Revolutionary Working Class Peper in America) Saturday Eve., April 1 — TWO RALLS — Brooklyn ACADEMY OF MUSIC Lafayette Avenue and Ashland Place For sale at Fretheit office, 35 8. THIRD ANNUAL CELEBRATION of the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 E. 4th St. FRIDAY, MARCH 24 ENTERTAINMENT Prominent Veteran Speakers — LEVIN — TRUMBULL — FORD Tickets 10c, at door %e, without ticket 36c¢ at door TICKETS ON SALE AT ALL W. E. 8. L. POSTS, | OUR MOTTO: 00D TO SAVE Address City . MY PAPER! Comrades: Here’s my share toward putting the Daily Worker drive for $35,000 over the top! TL contribute, o.cccreieevivedasarnevatsaainetens NONE 655 5 hie enna Geld cate an ewe da ao OEE SOMO Cee ed ee eee oeneerneceucveeeeeed Bian 1 ents Rush this back, with your contribution en- closed, to the Daily Worker, 50 Fast 18th Street, New York City, N. ¥. OPEN AGAIN TO SERVE OUR PATRONIZING COMRADES «New Health Center Cafeteria ‘|IN WORKERS CENTER RESH 50 EAST 18TH STREET ROLETARIAN ig Piicus