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PAGE TWO PAIL Y WORKER, PROTEST JAPANESE IMPERIALISM! NEW YORK.—In an attempt to stifle the mass response to the demonstration to be held this morning at 10 a.m. at | Pier 59, foot of West 18th Street, against Japanese imperial- | ism, Police Commissioner Mulrooney, acting under orders of | the State Department in Washington, has announced a | “heavy police guard” for the Japanese imperialist bandit | Yosuke Matsuoka, whom the workers will ‘greet’ when he | arrives at the above time on the Leviathan. butchering of the Chinese People and the world slaughter of workers Matsuoka is here to prepare. Matsuoka is to be dined and wined by leading American imperialists, despite | their mutual enmity. | The American Committee for Struggle Against War calls on all workers and other opponents of war to answer, Mr. Matsuoka, the State Department and Mr. Mulrooney, | with a demonstration this morning that will echo in the ears | | of the imperialist brigands in Washington and Tokio. PARIS COMMUNE AN D) ANTI-HITLER MEET | Clarence Hathaway — N. Y. Dist.} Organizer, and James W. Ford will| speak. A huge memorial on the 50th anniversary of Marx, and in celebra-| tion of the 62nd anniversary of the! Paris Commune to be held in the A fine program has been arranged with the Freheit Singing Chorus, Prospect Mandolin Orch. Workers Theatre, Red Dancers, Acrobats, and Hunts Point Palace, Bronx, this Sun-| { the celebrated I.W.O. string quartet, | with concert musicians. | Admission at the door, 25 eet Richmond Jobless, Veterans in Rochester, Testify to the “Daily’s” | Role in Struggles Aid Paper in $35,000 Fund Drive: Unemployed in Richmond Also Raise Circulation The neighborhood committees of the Richmond (Va.) Unemployed Council have co-operated with the local Daily Worker Committee in a combination financial and sub-getting drive, according to a letter received from T. H. Stone, Daily Worker representative in Richmond. “In spite of the fact that Rithmond workers have been subjected to quite a financial strain in repelling the attacks of Mayor Bright and his thugs,” writes Stone, “they responded to the appeal of the ‘Daily’, knowing its inestimable value in the fierce struggle for unemployment relief that is going on here. Further proof that workers throughout the country, in all fields of struggle, recognize the importance of the Daily Worker, is shown in the following letter, from J. Peterson, secretary of Post 187, Rochester, of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League: “At our last meeting we passed a resolution of solidarity with the Daily Worker, the vanguard of the workers’ press. The veterans realize that the ‘Daily’ must live not only for the news that it brings, but because it is the only yress in the country that dares to come out so openly for the veterans. Especially at this critical time, when the veterans are being robbed more than ever, and with only the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League and your paper protesting against this wholesale robbery. . . Received Wednesday 8 678.85) Williams! Shule No. & Previously received . 22,807.94) Williams! Totel to date 28,486.59 WEDNESDAY’S CONTRIBUTIONS (DISTRICT 2 (New York) 2. 2. 2 6 3. a mated Rank & File Tag Day $141.11 a soian 1.00 Ff 1 8 Tag Day 184 ie. Alvert Glassford Tag Day 3.63 1. W. O. Shnie it 5. Unit 3, Section 1 4.00, Bronx Shule 19 2 Untt 412, Section 4, Tag Day $4| Sec. 1 Unit 1-0 5.00 See. 15, Unit 18 1 Bath Beach Schule 2 Tag Day 1.62 | See. 1, Unit 2 00 4 Mid Town Unemployed Council Tag Day .54| Sec, 1, Unit 4 oo § 1. Wkrs. Club Arrangement Com, 20.17| See. 1, Unit 5 10.00 2, . Br. 130 3.00 See. 1, Units 6-7 25,00 | 2 Br. 620 1.2 50 2 m Teplitsks 1.00 00 Distriet Party Meeting 1.00 00 3144) 8 20 m Prog. Youth Club 3.16| ¢ “00 Y. House Gathering 35 | oO Finnish Workers Club 14.00 50 East Piatiush School 1 1. W. 0. 180 00 Lesh Stern Os 2.00 G. ¥. G. 00 . 2, Unit & 30 Sympathizers 54 See. 2, Unit 9 2.00 Louis Monza 30 Sec. %, Unit 10 2.00 Mike Reich 09 See. init 12 = 1.00 See. 2, Units 14-8 3.00 Sec. 4, Unit 412 1.00 Seo. 4, Unit 418 2.00 Sec. 4, Unit 422 56 Total Total to date Donations Daily Worker banquet, 19, accounted for, but not Hated: Prospect Workers’ Club Bronx Workers’ Club Zukuntt Workers’ Club Cli-Grand Workers’ Clup Fretheit Gesangs Verein Flatbush Workers’ Club Brownsville Youth Center Italian Proletarian Club Fast Side Workers’ Club Chinese Vanguard I. L. D. Coney Island Workers’ Club Witamsburgh Workers’ Club Rumanian Unemployed Committee Mapleton Workers’ Club Middle Bronx Workers’ Yorkville Workers’ Club, Jerome Workers’ Club Hinsdale Workers’ Club City Committee Jewish W. Clubs Down Town Workers’ Club Brighton Workers’ Club Vegetarian Workers’ Club Pelham Parkway Workers’ Olwb Bridge Plaza Workers’ Clubs ‘Tremont Workers’ Club Union Workers’ Club P Workers’ League E. N, ¥. Workers’ Club Greek Workers’ Club Council of Workers’ Clams J. Siewal and L. Albert ALL. D, L. D. Bill Haywood ¥. L. D Crechoslovak 1. L. D. No. 9 Saceo Yanzetti Branch, I. h. Joe Hill Braneb, I. L. D. Club Athlette West Side Unem- | _ ployed Connett R.N.M.A, Seelety Br. 43 Sec. pnit Columbia Shop Nuclens ‘ Sec. 15, 00 | Bec. 15, U1 00 | See. | United Council for Study & Action 7.00 353323333222 2333222232222223322233333332 Ee 3 BANNED BY HITLER! THE REVOLUTIONIST DANTON = svat with FRITZ KORTNER ENGLISH TITLES ACME THEATRE |se 14h STRERT & UNION SQUARE ‘Continueus trem 9 a.ma—Lart Show 10: Bway & The New York and London Bucesss Produved by FAUSTIN WIRKUS MOROSCO THEATRE, W. of B Extra Attraction: “SONG OF LiFR” rhe Worker's Rres. 8:10. Mats, Wi CLASSIFIED KO JEFFERSON 114 §. NOW WANTED TO BUY—Cash paid for old gold, teeth, 945 B. 188d Dept, Stor in “WHAT! NO BEER?” Added Festura—"01 LPO CARRILLO and LOIS WILSON FURNIAHED ROOM TO LET—AN fmprove- ments, for two—$S % week; also Nght M07 West arf Mt, MT But the workers of New York will not be intimidated, | | | and are determined to thunder their protest against the! | 233323233 3253% 3 325233333323332333 *\ “SOIL” —*TURKSIB” | 180) THE INDEPENDENT BARB- JIMMIE DURANTE and BUSTER KRATOW THE LAW,” with NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1938 Bosses, Government Coin Millions Out of Tennessee Coal, Iron & Editor's Note—This is the first of the installments appearing in the | Daily Worker from the new t FORCED LABOR IN THE UNIT TATES by Walter Wilson. Pre- pared under the direction of the La- bor Research Association. Intro- duction by Theodore Dreiser. In- By WALTER WILSON. F all the many kinds of formed la- bor in the United States, one of |the most important is the use of con- | | viets. Its extent can be partially | grasped. by looking at some official | jand unofficial estimates of the total jannual value of merchandise made jin the prison factories, mills, shops, | and farms of the United States. | The figures fssued by the U; States Bureau of Labor Statisti 1923 are still the most comprehe: ever brought together. According to these estimates, the total value of | commodities produced in 104 state and | federal civilian prisons for adults in 1923 was $75,622,983. This estimate | |does not include juvenile reformator- ies, city or county prisons, federal | military prisons, or the maintenance | work—prison upkeep, cleaning, laun- dry, repairs, cooking and so on—done | in every prison. The latest estimates conservatively |give the population of state and fed- eral prisons as 140,000 on January 1 1932. It is estimated that at least 70,000 of these are productively em- ployed, as against slightly over 51,000 | in 1923. Almost 35,000 of the 1931 prisoners were employed at mainten- ance and the remainder were either not reported or were reported incap- | acitated or idle. The estimate made | by the Associated General Contractors of America at their San Francisco| convention in 1931, gave 75,000 as the | number of employed convicis in 1930, | producing goods with a market value of $100,000,000. CONVICT SLAVERY IN | | STATE PRISONS Alabama has one completely integ- rated prison textile industry. Cotton which is grown on the prison farm is ginned, dyed, woven into cloth and made into shirts in Prison, | where the Scottsboro boys have been held Warden Lawes of Sing Sing Prison | in New York recently admitted that | the fiscal year 1931-32 has been the Most prosperous the Sing Sing fac-| tories have ever known. For the first | nine months, beginning with July, ternational Publichers, $1. | ¢ | CONSTRUCTIO Rn iv 19: sales totaled $860,000, as against S of $800,000 the previous Auburn Pr n annually about $1,000,000 worth of is consumed by state depart- San Quentin Prison in California, Tom Mooney and other politi- isoners are held, made 3,996,947 bags during the fiscal year end- ed June 30, . The return to the tate was $399,644, Mconey himself the its in a small om and peels po- tatoes for 700 meals a day, FARM, ROAD AND WORK farm states, Texas, » and Mississippi, The big pr Arkansas, Louisiar ave Driver Superintendent of the Wichita prison farms where workers are tortured to make them work fester sa more profits can be coined by the also produces | work their convicts largely in agricul- | ture. Nearly 250,000 acres of land in| the United States are under culiva- | tion by convicts. Texas alone has 83,407 acres farmed by prisoners, rais- | ing products which were valued in| [1927 at $1,362,968. Louisiana in 1926 |had an incothe from her prison sys- tem of $1,557,715. This Income from \the forced labor of prisoners obvi- ously helps to keep down the tax rates on the big plantations in these tes and is hence heartily approved yy the capitalists and big landown- ors, | There is also a great deal of con- struction work done convicis for ; government institutions. Out of 98} linstitutions listed in the Handbook of | |American Prisons and Reformatories for 1929, 38 were using convicts on construction work. Florida, Georgia, North Carolina ;South Carolina, and Tennessee have a |large number of prisoners convicted | jof miedemeanore—usually Jaw viola-| |tlons carrying @ sentence of less than | lone year’s imprisonment—doing road | work under cdtinty management. Out- | |side the South we find such cities! as Toledo, Columbus, and Dayton, | Ohio, working their prisoners on| farms. In Massachusetts eight of the local jails and houses of correction | work their convicts in chair, and shirt making. The Alleg! ‘County workhouse, which it | burgh and where a number of poli- | tical prisoners are now incarcerated, | has a broom factory, @ carpet factory, | a chair factory, laundry, unholstering | shop, and farm. | STEEL FIRM BUILT | ON CONVICT LABOR | THE great volume fo convict-inade | goods, is produced under several} \different systems. The rhosi import- {ant systems are the “contraci,” the | |“state account,” “state use.” “public | works,” and “lease.” There are a few | | others, either combinations of the| above or schemes devised to get! around state laws regulating the mar- | | keting of convict-made goods. | ‘The Tennessee Coal, Iron and Rail- | | toad Company, now a subsidiary of | the United States Steel Corporation, | Was one of the biggest companies to be founded on convict labor. This| | company, as well as others, dealt in | convict labor “futures” in the came | Way that gamblers deal in wheat and | |corn “futures,” | The wide range of prison-made goods includes almost everything im- | |aginable from baby buggies to coffins, | from lumber to flags, and from farm | | |to take up the Unpaid Prison Labor ailroad Co., Powerful U. S. Steel Subsidiary, Founded on Convict Toil; Prisoners Often Used as Strikebreakers machinery to cotton. Work clothing is the most important. The National Federation of Womens Clubs estim- ated that 41 per cent of all work shirts and 35 per cent of all work pants were convict made. A single prison contracting firm in 1923 pro- duced in its 17 prison factories about 16,000,000 shirts. Not only are prison-iade goods sold in the home markets. They are also dumped abroad in huge quantities. It has been unofficially estimated that ten per cent of all convict-made merchandise is exported. Members of the House of Representatives from the big prison-farim states declare that of the hundreds of thousands of bales of cotton produced by prisoners, about 65 per cent is exported. The cotton is not labelled and is sold in the gen- eral market SE OF PRISONERS AS STRIKE BREAKERS Convicts have been used a numbor| of times as strike-breakers. One of the first examples was in the Coal Cveek strike in Tennessee in 1891-92. When the forces of state had defeated the miners, after an intense, bitter war, an official of the Ten- nessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Co.,| in an interview with the New York Times, said: “One of the chief rea- sons which firet induced the compar tem (convict-lease) was the great chance it offered for overcoming strikes. For some years after we began the lease systern we found that we were right in calewlat- | $ ing that the free miners would b? loath to enter upon strikes, when ‘they saw the company was amply provided with convicts ... I don't mind saying that for many years the company found it to be an effective club over the heads of the free miners.” During 1928, in a molders’ sirike at Nashville, Tennescee, convicts were put to make stoves and doing foundry work. Finding that they were. not getting enough production in that way, the stove companies arranged to have the convicts paroled into the outcide plants. Several men were act- ually so paroled as strike-breakers. There have been many other such cases; but such incidents are often kept out ef the press. ere ® Watch tomorrow's Daily Worker tor the second installment from “Forced Labor in the United States.” It will contain sensational new exposures of the chain gang system of oppression and slavery. ‘Barricades in Berlin’ | Reviewed on Monday; | Starts in ‘Daily’ Wed. | Monday's Daily Worker will contain a review by Robert Ham- ilton of the remarkable proletari- || an novel, “Barricades in Berlin,” which the “Daily” will begin pub- lishing serially next Wednesday, March 29. | This book, written by the noted || German proletarian writer, Klaus |) Neukrantz, and published in Eng- Ush translation by International Publishers, tells the story of the struggle of the workers in a single street in Berlin during the bloody May Day events in 1929. The story of those stormy days is directly connected with the coming to power of the fascist dictatorship and the present struggles of the A masces. Don't miss the first instalment next Wednesday. Tell your shop- mates and fxiends about it. recent ee, Workers Film & Photo League Presents FINAL PROGRAM—HISTORY OF RUSSIAN FILM SERIES SAT., MARCH 25—5:30 and 7:30 P.M. | Labor Temple, 14th & 2nd Av. Speaker: JOSEPH FREEMAN. ANNUAL BALL AND WALTZ CONTEST Sunday, March 26, 8 P. M. | ERS’ UNION—LOCAL 101] Westminster Hall 75 Lenox Avenue, Cor. 114th Street Admission — Ladies Free ANNOUNCEMENT a, Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST Afinounces: of his office to larger | quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 08 ‘Tel. ALgoriquin 4-9805 The remov Ben Gold Speaks to Foltis Strikers; NEW YORK-—Tonight Ben Gold, ral Seer the Needle es Industrial Union, will address |a huge mass mobilization and rally in support of the Foltis-Fischer strike at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th Street, at 8 p.m. The question of 8D) jing the strike to the remaining ca*eterias of the Foltis-Fischer chain will be discussed as well as action to defeat the bosses’ attempt to get an injunction, With the Foltis Fischer cafeteria at 44th Street and Madison Avenue on strike teday, a tetal of 14 out 1 shops are now involyed in the rike. Build a workers correspondence group im your factory, shup oF neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. COMRADES WHO HAVE BOUGHT Suits and Overcoais—know Abe Flamm NOW ASSOCIATED WITH 142 Stanton St., Near Norfotk Manufacturing Their Own Clothing He wants to greet both old and new ériei DOWNTOW N Telephone uyvesant 9-9254 “UNIVERSITY GRILL, Inc.| BAR RESTAURANT |} | UNIVERSITY PL, N. Y. c.| | \{ Between 10th and 1lith St. [WU Mlertstoh sea hentia SQUARE CAFETERIA GRILL 848 BROADWAY Welcomes Worker Center Comrades {ntern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE th FLOOR AL Werk Done Unier Personal Care @ PR JOSMPRSON Hospital and Ocutist Preseriptions Filled it One-Malt Price | Waite Gold Fitted Frames. j 2YL Shell Frames Lenses not ineluded COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. 1.50 51.00 D. Heilen Restaurant 116 UNIVERSITY PLACE, N.Y.C. Cerner 13th Street STARTLING REDUCTIONS a AEE BROOKLYN For Brownsville Proletarians | SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE } ‘Hoffman’s RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA Tetephone: ORchard 4-4520 Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. ¥ 1th Shop Out; Sam & Adolph WHILE WORKERS’ CHIL- DREN STARVE NEW YORK.—The dear little Park Avenue dogs who suffer so much were brought up for consideration by Miss R. A. Grosvenor at the League for Animals meeting, who proposed that every fifth Park Avenue block be set aside for x dog airing space. EEE Ten Days That Shook the World! China Express! Struggle for Bread! Ete, Ete. Ete. CLASSICS Fonnaae bea MOVTEs— Any orgsnisation can now at nominal cost. Taformation and Arrengements at District Daily Worker Office 25 8. 12TH STREET a MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor, Broms Park East Pure Foote Prol¢iarian Prices show them CONCERT & THEATRE Sunday, March 26, 8 P. M. it Spartacus Workers Club 29 West 26th Sirest PROGRAM — SKIT—“BROADWAY, 1933" By Thestre Collective JsCK SHAFFROK—BABSO JOSEPH WABERGRIT?—VIOLINIST FOLIA WABERGRITY AT TRE PIANO CHALK TALK—BILL SIEGEL OF THE JORN REED CLUB Admission Wo.—For the Benefit of Section Organizations Partici- pating in Raising Funds for the Contes) Darts USA AEE, canGaA House Party ARRANGED BY UNIT 20, SEC. 15 SAT., MARCH 25, at 8 P. M. ENSEESAICMENT Ser gRGEMAN TS Marx, 2309 Holland Ave., Bronx, Apt, 4-B Concert and Dance TONIGHT at 8 P. M. AT TRE ESTONIAN WORKERS’ 27-29 West 115th Street Daneing—Refreshments—Admission 5c. Arranged by Unit 410, C. P.—50 Per Cent for the Daily Worker HALL Movie and Dance T., MARCH 25, at 8 P. M. HE STRUGGLE FOR BREAD” Washington Heights Workers’ Club 501 WEST 1618T ST., N. Y. “Fragments of An Empire” will be shown WILLIAMSBURG WORKERS’ CLUB fanbattan Ay 43 Mi @. SUNDAY, MARCH 26, 8 P. M. Costume Party and Entertainment SATURDAY, March 25 FLATBUSH WORKERS’ CLUB 1207 Kings Highway, Brooklyn Spaghetti! Entertainment! ancing ! SAT., MARCH 25, at 8 P.M, 2, Communist Party ITALIAN WORKERS’ REANQUARTERS 288K. 10th $i, Ne T. ranged by Unit ion 1 THIRD ANNUAL CELEBRATION of the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s Lea gue MANHATTAN LY! TON CEUM, 66 E. 4th St. IGHT TICKETS ON BALE AT ALL W. ©. 8. New Sovlet Play, Produced “THE GODLESS” ENTERTAINMENT Prominént Veteran Speakers — LEVIN — TRUMBULL — FORD Tickets 10e, at door 200, without ticket 5c at door . L. POSTS, a for the First Time in America by IVAN LEBEDOV in 4 Acts from the Life of the Soviét Village Saturday, March 25th at 8 P. M. Coop Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East Dancing After the Performance ADMISSION 26¢ Arranged by Dramatic Section of Novy Mir Club. — Entire Proceeds for the Revolutionary Press. SS ———— WHAT'S O Friday (Manhattan) LECTURE: Prof. Stephen Graves on “Karl Merz and Future of American Working Class” at American Youth Pederation, 122 SYMPOSIUM O! CHILD MISERY ¥} NEW YORK—A symposium on child misery has been arranged hy Bronx workers otganizations, W. I. R branehes and the Bronx medical aid units. to take place at the Ambassa- Second Ave., 8:30 p.m. Admission 15 cents.) dor Hal), 3rd Avenue and Cleremont MEMBERSHIP | MEETING Tom Mooney | parkway, Irid m. | Br. LL.D. at 818 Brocdwe p.m. Dis+ 9 2 cussion on Negro preglems in South by| Dr. S. A. Tannenbaum, bt Paul Comrade Morton. Luttinger, Dr. H. EB. Slatkin, Cer! TGs hes Winters and Alfred Wagenknecht. ing Tobaces Wor W, 12éth St. 8 p.m, SOCIAL-checkor and representa t -|and Teachers Association wil partici- ives trom the Parents nite 9:30 p.m. at 21 West 189th at, Room 12, pate. (Bronx) CONCERT-DANOE iver by Bronx Br.| , " we ; 2A, 3 im. at WAIN Workers Center, | ee ne ee OM Ty 901 Prospect Ave. All workers In nel Herth bags Sgt Nase, ened borhood invited. at $0 K. 13th Si, 2nd for.’ Import SPECIAL MEETING Branch 531 Interaa- tional Order, = Workers School Please E your organtzetion «3 possible, Theatr will perform, & p.m. Ad-| DANOZ at ‘Tremont Workers Club, 015 dress: Manor, 11 Mt, Eden Ave., | Clinton Sat. nite, #lso entertainment near Jerome Ave, Subway. Interesting tims | and ing program, Admission 39 easured. All invited. cents, Good bend. 4 LECTURE by Dt. B. Lieber at Tremont| CONCERT-DANGZ given by Clty College { Workers Club, 2078 Clinton Ave. Subject: | uvening Ghapler of Mationel” Student \q “Effect of Capitalism on Workers Health, MAS6 MEETING on Banking Situation, 8 p.m. at Elsmere Mall, 170th and Morris Are, Party Pree admission. POSTUM-EXPOSE of Misery and among working class children to- pm. at Am dor Hall, Sed Ave. jareraont Per! Chairman Dy. #. | Auspices Ald Unit of Auspices Communict ba Subway. Auspices Bast Bronx Subject: “Soviet Systen vs. Pass MASS MEFTING on Banking Situation and report on Albany Conference, 8 p.m, at | * 813 B. 180:h St. Good speaers. Auspices LW.0. Shulo Mo. 5 and No. 98. La Pred Biedenkapp tonite on Situation at ct Workers 1187 South Pros; Boulevard. man Gituation, 0:90 p.m. ‘orkers Club, 1849 Jarome} rooklyn) LECTURE 8. Stlsrof on “Should Sovies Union be Recognized” at Bata Besch Workers Club, ma 16 Manhattan mdeacies in Soviet Beach a ne Cou LECTURE by Comrads Diy ‘om tos to: German situation at 2006—T0tn st. pan, Saturday PARTY A 450 Sixth SPEAK aT ‘ORKERS FILM GUE on “Hissory of R sat Labor Temple, 14th Quartet, West 20th et, CONCERT-PARTY at Bronx Bhi t. nite, RED aa’ on Sunday MARIONBTTE PRESENTATION—By Louis Buain ef John Resd Olnd at New School Social pm, at Pyti o ited Front ageinst rade Gr tuyer in program of original compositions for piano. < mission 39 ce Addrear: ANNOUNCEMENT Music by Degeyter { Tickets 18 cents, on sale at 13 1534 Southern Bouler: Refreshne 7 invited. SPARK A. 0. THIRD ANNUAL BALL NITR at atten Lyceum, 66 F. Jazs band. Admicsion 40 cents. ‘TERTAINMENT given by Ste TLD. st 15 East Third gt e—progrem—reireshments, A. cents, Set. nite. Research, Sunday evening, & a of “The Ball of the Bruno Jastensky, “Tnternational vies and Drama in Boriet " by Prof. H. L. Dana, Sunday, 3 jon ‘Terple, 185 W. 70th ile Br. FSU. D CLUB-—Sundar, 2:80 pam.— Erents ¢f the ny.” Benjemin end will speak on Politieal and auion. Diséuasion on policy German Fase PARTY given by Br. 615 I. . alte for benefit Daily Worker at ans Home, 3036 W. gad Monday UNUEUAL CONCERT. ‘Tite Plerre Degey- alejans) presents pianist and lec- ecrape: Program starts 8:15». 25 and Secor nite. Two films will] PLAYWRIGHTING class for beginners be chown— nko) end “TUNK- | starts Priday evening, March Sist at the SI3" (Turia) and 7:30 p.m. | Workers Laberatory Theatre, of WIR, 42 Admission 25 eante. Fart 12th St. Register now. JUBILEE LV ceuspranio of the MORNING FRETHEIT (The Only Jewish Revolutionary Working Class Paper in America) Saturday Eve., April 1 New York . MECCA AUDITORIUM 55th Street, Between 6th and ith Avenues TWO HALLS Brooklyn ACADEMY OF MUSIC. Lafayette Avenue amd Ashiand Place PROGRAM: ‘ Fretheit Singing Society and Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra’ Conductor: J. SHAFFER ARTEF “SHULEM GETS A MEDA One-Aét Play, by Cherner & Paior from Pilsudsky Government’ SAME PROGRAM IN BOTH HALLS Tickets 35c, 55¢ and 83e (tax included). For sale at Freiheit office, 35 E. 12th St., 6th floor, and Workers Book Shop, 50 E. 13th St. ———lyyyyxyx————>>——>x_xE oe OPEN AGAIN TO SERVE OUR PATRONIZING COMRADES New Health Center Cafeteria IN WORKERS CENTER RESH ooD OUR MOTTO: 50 BAST 13TH STREET ROLETARIAN t Prices the Daily Worker dri I contribute .... Name .... Address New York City, N. Y. with a letter from your organization City Phone—EStabroek $-146) ———— TO SAVE MY PAPER! Comrades: Here’s my share toward putting for $35,000 over the top! State... Rush this back, with your contribution en- closed, to the Daily Worker, 50 Kast 13th Street, Do You Know of thé Reduction tn Rates at CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. ¥. Special Program Every Week-End $12.50 Includes Tax to members of I. W. O. and Co-operative OPEN ALL YEAR—HEALTHFUL FOOD, REST, RECREATION SPORT AND CULTURE All Winter Comforts—Stsam Héat—Hot and Cold Ruwning Water ff Every Room Workers organizations write fer Spécial Excurdi¢ds and Rates AUTOMOBILES LEAVE DAILY FROM CO-OPERATIVE REQTAURANT, 2700 BRONX PARK EAST, BRONX, N. Y. beet eeeeeee $10.50 per week Camp Phéde—Boacon 91