The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 6, 1933, Page 1

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agement “NEW YORK—METROPOLIS OF HUNGER” Dal l Arrange Door-to-Door Neigh- + — Read the connection between Morgan, “the borhood Distribution of the magnificent” tax dodger and owner of palaces in : I E New York, and the savage eviction of unemployed Daily Worker: workers from their miserable tenements. “New THE WEATHER—Today: Fair; slightly warmer) York—Metropolis of Hunger”, will begin in Wed- nesday’s issue of the Daily Worker. Central Or Mew York, N. 7., mméer the Gibson Racket Ends--Make The Morgans Pay! Today the workers of New York march to City Hall. Just at this time, the “Gibson Committee” which has been acting for three yéars as the chief buffer to prevent the New York workers get- ting any real unemployment relief, suddenly announces that it is go- ing out of business. The Gibson Committee survenders and admits that the staryation of hundreds of thousands of New York workers is a “per- manent” situation, and says it is “turning the taek over to the City and TO BRING THE MORGAN QUIZ 10 QUICK END ‘Committee Goes Into WE WOULDN'T BE SURPRISED! By Federated Press | WASHINGTON, June 5.—Re- | ports which persist in the financial, center ef Chicago, LaSalle Street, called “Chicago's Wall Street” are that two political observers in Washington who are described: as | being “usual reliable” as: that Roosevelt's name will be found on an uncensored preferred list of | | Kuhn, Loch and Company's list of | i stock customers. AZIS TERRORIZE ~NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1933 International ) MATTERN SAFE IN MOSCOW, HAILED BY SOVIET AIRMEN {Fed on ~ Arrival: To Fly On to Omsk MOSCOW, June 6. (Tuesday) — Jimmy Mattern, hopped off at 1:14 Ly, Worker Cominynist Party U.S.A. (Section of the Communist AFL Drivers Help Cleaners and Dyers |Win 3 Hour Strike NEW ROCHTLLE, N. ¥., June 5. | —A three hour strike in the Motz-| | kin Bros. cleaning & dyeing shep | was won by the Cleaners, Dyers, | and Pressers Union of New Yort | and vicinity. | The boss attempted to fire the shop chairman for the second time He was reinstated and all union help hired in place of non-union fresh westerly winds. CITY EDITION Price 3 Cents “JOBLESS WILL PRESENT DEMANDS FOR RELIEF AT CITY HALL TODAY, 11 A.M. Demard Enactment of Workers Ordinance; x a : to the permanent agencies after September,” and that “what lasts for Secret Session. to am. today (6:14 pm. New York Paka ee rhe ae en ee si he | Backed by 299 Organizations more than three years certainly isn’t an emergency.” time, Monday) for Omsk, Siberia. || \i5.q thé strikers with their ‘sol- paeee ol ite Gibson admits now that the “private financing” is a colossal farce. “Private financing” was from the beginning only a swindle put over on the workers to obstruct the movement to compel the United States gov- ernment, at the expense of the capitalist class, to provide unemployment relief. The Gibson racket started out three years ago. It was none other than J. P. Morgan, biggest king of Wall Street bankers, assisted by a galaxy of lesser lights, including Norman Thomas, head of the Socialist Party, who launched this contemptible swindle upon the working class with the famous ‘“Block-Aid” speeches in which they used the radio to call upon the masses: “Everybody must contribute a dime!” At the same time, J. P. Morgan, whose firm made more than a million dollars in a Single deal in connection with the financial collapse, and whose income remained many millions of dollars per year, altogether ceased paying any income tax and has not paid any during the whole period of time. We speak of J. P. Morgan, but Morgan is merely the most typical of taxes which most logically becomes the first source for unemployment Discuss Tax | —— | | WASHINGTON, June 5.—The at- torney for the Senate investigation committee, Pecora, announced today | that he hopes to end his inquiries into | ‘the affairs of the Morgans by to- morrow evening. | ‘This announcement was made soon | after the Morgan attorney Davis, b- | jected to further prying into the in- come tax payments of the Morgan partners. To Go Into Secret Session } The committee will go into secret | ssion to decide how much further | | they will go into the tax payments of | the Morgans. | | It was announced that the Morgan} | domination of the railroads would be | DEFENSE LAWYER FOR THAKLMANN German Communist’s Legal Aids Beaten and Arrested LONDON, (By Mail).—The sister of the Bulgarian working class leader Dimitroff, arrested by the Nazis in Berlin on the framed charge of hay- ing been implicated in the Reichstag burning, has applied to many Ger- man lawyers to undertake the defense of her brother, but everywhere has ment with refusal. der the extreme Fascist terror are on the fourth leg of his world cir- cling flight. Omsk is 1,450 miles east of Mos- cow. MOSCOW, USSR, June 5.—Soviet aviation officials, foreign correspond- ents, and Soviet newspapermen and photographers, after 16 hours of | sleepless vigil, cheerce ¢ames Mat- ‘tern, round-the-world flyer, when he ‘landed his plane at the Moscow ai port at 8:57 a. m. (Eastern Stand- ‘ard Time) today. With only three hours’ sleep since jhe left. Floyd Bennett airport in |New York Saturday morning, Mat- ‘tern climbed out of his plane look- ing tired. with eyes bloodshot, but safe in the Soviet capital after the | fog which had forced him to land his idarity. ‘CALL CAMP GRAFT “CLERICAL ERROR’ ‘TO HIDE SCANDAL |Lay. Blame on Clerks: Bought Thousands of Articles Now Useless | — | NEW YORK.—The reason for buy- Gibson Committee to Close September; to Care for Hungry Thousands Must be Forced The NEW YORK, announcement City yesterday by Harvey D. Gibson that all relief by the Gibson Committee would be discontinued on September 1 makes the unemployed demon- m. at City Hall, the only diree f the city can turn for their re stration called for today at 11 a. tion in which the unemployed o lief demands. Gibson, in making the nouncement at the exposed the fact that lars had been drai and other impoverished s the population an- ame time { dol- ions of pference to be pr example of a half a hundred other big heads of the institutions of the | through the Alleghany corporation rt ‘ world had thought him lost. ing 200,000 toilet kits for the labor Nite Sol : f ‘ | ne of the lawyers gave the fol-) . Y | City Sole Agency Now finance capitalist oligarchy that rules the United States. While these | and other holdings would ze eX0M- | owing reply: Bh fens the paved gate the! camps, was @ clerical mistake, ac-| We are turning One ion teak imillionaires and billionaires altogether ceased to pay that category | ined. But it is hard to see how much) 1 Oe eeeeouan rder, . after. 8) on, nfurmath 4 yi the city tibso This hinaviee(e 1% multi sd Loge be I dae be docortplshed ta this direction | That Wille German lawyers un- | crueliing flight through slorm and/ Coming to the information given bythe cit Gibson. Th Ordinance was day relief and social insurance. ‘The Gibson Commuttee—launched by Morgan and applauded by Nor~- man Thomas, started out on the most gigantic racket in which 600,000 people—most!y workers whose wages were being cut and clerks and pet- ty business proprietors on the verge of bankruptcy were practically held up and forced to contribute $13,543.344.10 in cash to the Gibson Com- mittee’s fund The whole sum extorted by the Gibson Committee from the classes most bitterly suffering from the economic crisis amounted to approxi- mately one cent per day for each unemployed worker in New York! Even at that not all of the one-cent-a-day went to the unemployed! It is admitted that $500,000 was turned over to the Salvation Army which itself is conducting a sordid game of “helping” the starving to continue starving. The facts exposed in the investigation at Washington show that billions of dollars are available for the unemployed in the Treasuries and in the resources of the big financial gangs who have stolen through tax swindles and othérwise the legitimate unemployed relief of 17 million job- less American workers. Mayor O'Brien and the Tammany ring of underworld grafters who in City Hall are the watchdogs of the tax-swindling bankers of New York, will use every device to scare off, to confuse and to defeat the demand of the workers for unemployment relief. But the cash is thore. The money can be had. It will be obtained quick enough and paid out if the workers go with sufficient courage and determination to demand and obtain it. eee 3 The workers go to City Hall today in massed ranks determined to obtain a showdown. “Make Morgan and the other millionaires pay”! is the legitimate demand of the unemployed. The government of the City of New York, the metropolitan center of the financial oligarchy that rules America, must be made immediately today to give an affirmative an- swer to the demands of the working class. The workers march today to City Hall to face the cowardly corrupt gang of Morgan’s watchdogs. Behind us is starvation, pushing us to action, Behind us we hear the cries of our starving children! Ahead of us are the bloated tax-dodging swindlers who must be compelled to pay. AN owt today! Om to City Hall! Wall Street Financial Power ‘The Senate investigation of the Morgans has just scratched the sur- face of capitalist society, And yet it has shown how completely this society is dominated py Wall Street monopoly capital. There is no section of our life where the domination of Wall Street financial money power does not penetrate. The whole political life of the State, from the president's office, through the Supreme Court, to the congressmen and generals and am- bassadors, is under the domination of Wall Street financiers. In the everyday lite of the masses, the Wall Street financiers and bankers headed by the Morgans play a dominating part. in the short time which the commit- | tee plans to give to the remainder of | the Morgan inquiry. | ‘The quesioning of the Committee! | have become of noticeably cautious) character in the last few days. The | votes in the Committee for further | inquiry have been weakened by the! selection by Roosevelt of Senator! Couzens as the delegate to the World| Economic Conference. Many of the) decisions of the Committee to make| the Committee disclosures public were | passed by one vote. The selection of Senator Couzens by. Roosevelt has the effect of strengthening the openly re- actiouary elements in the Committee who have been voting against making the Morgan disclosures -public. Another serious weakening of the! Committee has resulted by the reduc- tion of the original $75,000 appropria- tion to $20,000, a sum far too Small to permit further real progress in the investigation. : Evaded Income Taxes The Senate investigation Committee | was informed today that one of the | leading Morgan partners, Thomas S. Lamont, evaded income taxes in 1930 by “selling” stock to his wife and then} buying it back. The Committee did not see anything wrong in this pro- cedure, however. prepared to defend Communists, nearly all the lawyers who defend Communists now get into jail along with their clients. Several lawyers who declared their readiness to defend Torgler, Thael-|hours better than the time made by | mann and Dimitroff in court, have been terrorized by storm troopers in their private houses or offices. The well-known Hamburg lawyer, Dr. He-| by a group of Soviet airmen who! gewisch, who was asked by Thael- mann’s wife, Rosa, to visit her hus- band in prison on the question of nis defense, was immediately arrested and beaten up by the authorities when he went to apply for permis- sion for the interview. The imminent danger threatening Comrade Thaelmann makes all the more urgently necessary the organi- zation of anti-Fascist committees in every town and city throughout the United States. Funds are needed for defense—thousands of political refu- gees and victims of the Nazi terror are suffering. Organize relief cam- and rush funds to the Na-/ Paigns tional Committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism, 75 Fifth Avenue, New York City. There is no time to lose, Revolutionary fighters are in dire need all over Europe. Act) at once! Taxes If Cut ULLETIN. Roosevelt Threatens More in Veterans’ WASHINGTON, June 5.—House leaders definitely decided today to delay consideration of proposals to cut less than called for by the Roosevelt “Economy” Sill “In the hope that President Roosevelt's appeal te the nation might reverse congressional sentiment.” WASHINGTON, June 5.—Hundreds of millions of dollars In new taxes, and drastic reductions in veterans’ | today by President Roosevelt. | Roosevelt repeated his demands | . | | | restored, through the Connally Amendment, some of the cuts in the original Roosevelt Bill. The original | Roosevet cuts amounted to $500,- | 000,000. The Senate amendment re- | stores about $170,000,000 of these | cuts, leaving the rest just as Roose- | velt and his budget director provided | for. Will Discharge Hospital Cases. compensation were again demanded today in reply to the action of the Senate which, in response to the steadily growing actions of the veterai | island 70 miles plane on 4 small southwest of Oslo. When ihe arrived in Moscow, Mat tern was 51 hours and 37° minutes Jout of New York City, almost three Post and Gatty in their round-the- | world flight. | He was greeted at tne landing feild | tossed him in the air several times— | their expression of good-will. Then he was given hot food. In his twenty- four hour flight across the Atlantic he had eaten nothing but oranges. diate rest, but Mattern remained awake until his plane had been re- fueled before going to sleep, ex- hausted. Matiern hoped to continue his | flight to Novosibirsk, 1,700 miles east |im Siberia, but Soviet officials ad- | Vised that it would be better to stop at Omsk, 400 miles before Novosi- birsk. It was almost certain tot they would insist that he take inc | route, along the Trans- Siberian Railway, through Omsk, Novosibirsk, Irkutsk (on Lake Baik el) and Khabarovsk, near the Pa- | cific Coast. the Evening Post. The army is sup- posed to have issued an order to stop | buying these articles beginning May 5, but because of this little mistake the order was mislaid by a cle not found until May 25. It happened that just in these ik and brushes toilet articles, Now they have on hand brushes, tooth and other | {some 200,000 shaving brushes and 175,000 tooth brushes for which it has} no use. | The Evening Post, all the other) capitalist sheets and the government | tale of placing the blame on some clerk in an office to hide the respon- | sibility for tens of thousands of dol- | lars in graft. SE | |No Real Basis for | U.S. Business Rise Say. London Bankers’ | LONDON, June 5.—London finan-| cial circles ave reported as saying that the recent rise in the price level in the United States cgn be put down ‘to Rooseyelt’s inflationary activities The slight. improvement in business, re of mil- women and children cy responsible for the we liens of men. n the city who are in need Hail, Tammany in conjunction with the bank ven before the 1 of the much hailed pri r, had institu'ed a progr { curtailment payments by the Home Relief reau and reduction in other allow- ances. The demonstration today is ai ized by the United Front Provisions! Committee Against Evictions and Re- lief Cuts which was initiated by the ‘The airport physician urged imme-| publicity agents expect with this fairy, Unemployed Council of Greater New | 25,000 AUTO WORKERS — vance contains t 1. Relicf to be paid to all unem- plored without discrimination. 2, Nl evictions to cease. 3. Minimum relief to be based on 810 a week for couples, $3 for each dependent; $7 a week for sinzie per- rons. 4. Employers to pay 4 weeks’ wages before laying off workers. (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO) MARCH ON FORD PLANT; DEARBORN ARMED CAMP | SOVIET OFFICIAL URGES EVERY |secn in England and in the United i AID TO FLYER States is thought to be the result of NEW YORK, Sune 5.—Boris Skvir-| speeuletion sky, head of the Soviet Information | Jobless Ford Workers Demand Cash Relief or Jobs; Slaved Many Years to Enrich Ford | Bureau in the United States, cabled to Moscow today urging that Mat- tern's plans “be facilitated in every way.” according to Jack Clark Clark learned of the safe landing of Mattern near Oslo ‘early this | morning. and immediately tried to get bim by transatlantic teleohone. | But the flyer was already on his way to the Soviet capital. Clark remem- | bered to put through a eall to Skvir- sky at Washington. He apologized for having awakened him from sleep. Skvirsky’s answer, says Clark, was: “My only indignation would have | been if you had not called me. Ft | get the apologies. I am most happy that Mattern and his plane are safe, and I shall cable Moscow immediate- |ly that he is arriving today and to facilitate his plans in every way.” Tammany and Morgan Demand Cut in Relief ‘7 Die on City Beaches; Send Committees to Get Food; Camp at City Guards Are Withdrawn [jmitsUntil Permitted to Present Demands NEW YORK.—Seven people died Sunday,, six by. drowning and one| from sunstroke aggravated by lack! of immediate medical care, when only 44 of the 235 lifeguards assigned to | the N. Y. beaches, frequented by al- | most a million workers each week-| end, were on duty. 700,000 people were on the beaches of Coney Island and Rockaway. The retrenchment on the use of lifeguards is part of Mayor O'Brien’s “economy program.’ | ‘Ford Has Forced | ‘Labor Camps in | ‘Northern Michigan | | =i GLADSTONE, Mich., June 5.— | Unemployed Ford anto workers who have been shipped to the un- cleared lands of the Ford motor corporations in the upper penin-| | sula find that they now have to | work 10 hours a day pulling) — teuie WWureminsey: premmanD Borre May Slat, 1955. Braneh No.10, Auto Workers Union, Detroit, Mich. Attention: Ur. Be G. Dear Sir:- of Sefety & #elfar We have, therefor \4 have ordere aoe 6 saree wy that any defiance on your part ously as the attempt to reach any attespt. Ke tru will not result as di: Gilmore, Secretary. et regerding the denial of been presented to the Commission ¢, denied the request 4 Chief Brooks to break up NEW YORK.—With a Morgan group of bankers demanding paymont on | | A worker cannot buy milk without paying tribute to the Morgans. stumps, dislodging boulders, clear- | The Fora Motor officials on arch 7th, 1952, end suggest The fate of 249,000 vejerans’ .hes- | ‘They control the bulk of the dairy business of the country through their power over the Borden milk monopoly. A worker cannot light a gas stove or turn on the electric light, or make a telephone call, without paying tribute to the Wail Street bank- ers headed by their Morgans, who have in their monopoly grip, the major: | ity of the electri« light, power and telewhone companies of the country. The struggle against wage cuts, against rising prices, against forced labor camps is a fight against the Morgans. When the working class fights for Federal Unemployment Insurance at the expense of the state, it is the government loans due to the Mor- gan bankers which the government protects when it sets itself against the demands of the workers. The farmers who are fighting against the intolerable burdens of mortgage debts are fighting the Wall Street, bankers headed by the Morgans who through the banks and insurance companies hold the majority of these mortgages. Bi Sas When the government prepares to levy new enormous taxes on the consuming masses of tl:e population, when it cuts the compensation of the disabled veterans, in order to “balance the Budget”, it is the loans of the Morgans which the government is protecting. And at the same time, the Wall Street finance capitalists place the entire tax burden upon the toiling masses, evading even the trivial in- come taxes for which the law at present provides. ‘The Army and the Navy are for the protection of the investments of monopoly capital, of the Morgans and the Wall Street financiers. A worker cannot ride on the country’s railroads or a large part of the traction lines without handing over profits to the Morgans, who, together with one or two other Wall Street houses, drain off the lion’s share of the income from these industries, pital cases wikh be @otefmined by the | disposition of the Connally amend- | ment. Roosevelt's plan will force the | Veterans’ hospitals to discharge these | | cases. If the Senate amendment stands, | | Roosevelt has announced that he will demand additional taxes to make | good the amount restored to the vet- | erans. | Roosevelt's tax program has al- ready added enormous new taxes to the present tax burdens of the people. Roosevelt. has extended the Hoover excise taxes on electricity, theatres, etc., which cost the consumers $500,- | 000,000 every year. | His program provides for heavy increases in the taxes of small in- comes. Roosevelt has opposed any increases in the taxes of large in- comes or corporations. The Sales Tax, which Roosevelt declared that he would not veto, is again coming up more frequently in official discussions. ‘The Roosevelt program to balance the budget is completely concerned with guaranteeing that the interest payments due to the Wall Street bondholders will be met on time. Whatever the outcome of the pres- ent dispute between Roosevelt and the Senate on the exact amount of reduction to be decided upon in the @ $120,000,000 loan on June 10, Tammany Hall, the New York section of the | Democratic Party, and one of the most powerful supports behind the Roosevelt administration, is driving ahead for more cuts in’ the wages of city employees, drastic reductions in relief payments, increased taxes on water, tolls on bridges, heavy creases in auto fees and a rise in subway fare. Means Higher Rents. The Tammany Board of Estimate bas already decided to collect $30, 900,000 in increased building depart- ment fees. taken from the workers and small salaried classes in the form of higher rents. Tolls on the bridges and auto taxes are expected to cost the people at least, $25,000,000, Demand Increased Subway Fare. Tammany officials have also men- tioned a 2-cent increase in subway fare, George Harvey, the Repub- lican Borough President of Queens has publicly demanded such an in- crease, in addition to a sales tax. As usual, Tammany is prevaring to conceal its plunderings of the city treasury, and make a bid for re-elec- tion by appearing as the defender of the five-cent fare. Preparing Teachers Wage-Cut. The wage-cutting strategy of the Tammany machine is taking clearer form as the day approaches when the payments to the Morgan bankers fall due. The original Tammany proposals This will inevitably be | in- e—— | aries of school teachers, sity for more wage cuts in the sal- and other city employees. It has been admit- ted that Tammany has promised to make ‘retrenchments’ in the city pay roll. The reductions will not, o. course, come from the fat salaries of the Tammany Hall office - holders. They will come from the wages of | the small salaried employees. ‘The coming wage-cut in the sal- aries of the school teachers is fore- shadowed by the recent utterances of the Tammany officials in the Board of Education, who have been em- phasizing that the teachers must make “sacrifices” in order to con- tinue the schools. The coming wage cut is being prepared by expulsions }or suspensions of militant teachers from the A. F. of L. Teachers’ Union and the school system. Morgan Banks Demand Cut Relief. The delegation of bankers which holds the $120,000,000 of notes due on June 10 is headed by Frank Polk, former Under-Secretary of State, and one of the Morgan stock favorites. The Morgan financial group holds a majority of the city loans. Tammany Plunders. Treasury. ‘Tammany Hall and the Morgan | ing underbrush, etc, At first they! | worked 8 hours. They are paid | 75 cents a day cash and 75. cents | scrip. The scrip is good only at | certain tied stores. For some | reason Ford calls his forest labor || camp his cooperative farms. : News F lash! WASHINGTON, June 5.—With all _Tules suspended to speed passage, the | House passed today the McSwain Bill. establishing a National Guard of the United States. At the present not part of the army, being sworn into Federal service when a state of war exists. The McSwain Bill) | makes all State National Guards a | part of the United States Army. This | measure increases the Army to twice its present size, and is a fitting com- mentary on Roosevelt's peace speeches. 11 GIRLS INJURED IN FACTORY BLAST Eleven girl factory workers were slightly injured at 5:50 last evening, when an explosion started a fire in the Amelloit Manufacturing Co., 218 Belmont Ave., Brooklyn. The blast that you urge the so-called by our laws, Tours ‘ghunger marohers” to abide ‘ t ruly, Ke COMMISSION OF SAFETY % WELFARY, By. Above is the photo of a letier sent by the “Dearborn Commission of Safety and Welfare.” Dearborn is a city near Detroit and is controlled by Henry Ford. The River Rouge plant where the Ford car is made is located there. In this letter Ford th: reatens to use the same bloody meas- ures as in the previows hunger march, DETROIT, Mich., June 5.—We demand cash relief or the | return of our jobs, is the slogan of 25,000 Ford workers who have marched through the streets of Detroit and were stopped Dearborn have refused to grant a permit to enter the city. Auto workers who are starving together with their fami- lies after being out of a job for a long time are determined to camp at the city limits until they are per- mitted to present their demands to the Ford company. Reports state that a tense situation exists inside the plant. The employ- ed workers compelled to go through the inhuman speed and wage cuts are supporting the unemployed out- time the State National Guards are| at the city limits of Dearborn where the River Rouge plant of the Ford company is located. So far the city authorities of EEE (servicemen) and state troopers fill |the town. They guard the border of Dearborn against the Ford workers who have slaved in the mills there and are now starving as if it was a foreign enemy. Henry Ford hag again threatened to repeat the Bloody Monday of March 7, 1932 where the police un- der his orders murdered four work- ers and wounded many in the previ~ ous Ford Hunger March. A letter | sent by the Ford controlled city offi- cials to all opzanizations who de- manded the right to enter Dearborn - i ¥ for heavy taxes on automobiles is banks are co-operating in the levy- | occurred in the rear of the iwo- side. ‘The radio, the movies, the newspapers, the book publishing houses, | Veteran's compensation, they both ’ i} i f the h | states, “We trust th defi fA ¥ * | agr mi mee! flere position from ing of new heavy taxes and reduc-| story, brick st . caused when Committees from unge’ es, e trust that any defiance pits pint 2 canna ereoteh ld Earn epee a nh mn [aie % Se toa ceralain tie marchers have been sent out to col-|on your part will not result as disas- and the universities are dominated by the Wall Street bankers headed by the Morgans. ‘The working class in its everyday fight against hunger and exploi- tation comes to grips with the power of monopoly capitel headed by the Morgans, and it is only the fight of the working clase and toiling farmers that can smash the power of the Morgans. and small consumers must pay for the bond interest to the bankers. Have the DAILY WORKER at ev- ory meeting of your unit, branch, wnion, or club. \ realty and automobile interests who exercise great influence in Tammany city administration. They fear that the value of the realty near the bridges will fall. ‘The alternative proposals which tions in salaries and relief in order to protect as far as possible the graft of the Tammany government, A recent survey. estimates thai Tam- many Hall office holders plunder the city treasury of $200,000,000 every year-in useless city. jobs. | spontaneous combustion set off a pile | of celluloid. Get your unit, union local, or mass ‘organization to challenge another | in raising subs for the Daily, | Worker’ lect food as the workers are prepar- ing to remain at the city limits un- | til they gain permission to enter the city. Dearborn ig like an armed fort. ‘The potica, Rord's gun thugs. ithe EN |terously as the attempt to march on the Ford Motor Company on )March 7, 1932.” In these words Henry Ford prepares to repeat the | slaughter of the Ford workers who | refuse to. starve quietly.

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