Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY WORKER, ‘EW YORK, MO AY, MAY 23, 1927 FARMERS Foresee Merger in’ Large Scale Farming: Develops in the West | customed to follow the harvest. Get Bigger Profit Page Five i ~ CO-OPERATIVES The Question of Collaboration: Between adeens and : Consumers’ Co-operatives WOMEN WOMEN’S WORK By KATE GITLOW (Sec. United Council of Workingclass Housewives). In the United States, the married wome mendous change—tfrom being do i nes | working women. It dees not matter The U, S. department of agriculture | Cooperati Tobaceo Growers Prosper ers. The fact is that the ho Baca Sihonpig Te ee har- Due chiefly to their cooperative |tomorrow. Others are hous ve “thresher machines known as| selling the producers of burley to- | The hi 8 ivi | " e ‘ ° S y t igh cost of living and es ally the high re: rivi e (oes ae ieee vine east of | baco have increased their return since | well Paid union workers’ wives to earn some Today to baiy eee hs : | ky Mountains. e advan-|1920 by $111,477,433. This repre-| American st: r ’ it i h nag ay ; — ‘ mg ‘ “ | y 477,433. é standard of living, as it is called here. i i The American Wool and Cotton \tages of this machine are given as the 'sents an average gain of Se a pound | the poorly paid un-unionized workers’ wives mt iis pyre vial vac DOEtRE! leading Sti p RVG GES REE Or cating y Zi vives must: work in order to make n are quickly undergoing a tre- c, i. @., how: ives, they are becoming t hether they are office or factory work- ewives of today can be the working women of ight and working women by day. The world economie conference of | culties. (By Federated Press). the League of Nations, (May 1927,| 3. Possibilities at Geneva) will also deal with the | measures of help: question of international collabora-| (a) Development and international | tion between producers and consu- | collaboration between producers and | mers co-operative societies. (Point |consumers’ co-operatives, INCLUD-| 3) “Agriculture” contains the follow-|ING THE VARIOUS FORMS OF | ing proposals: CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATIONS. | po of international 1, The present position of agri-| (b) ,Continuous exchange of all| ; re rs and threshing | over the price paid for burley tobacco | both ends meet. | : culture compared with the pre-war ALD ed Aaah a aeneral position [Per an, kad oes hopes to see the ee ee Jean labor and a shortening of in 1920 before the Burley Tobacco, When the world war broke out the | ‘4 for their militant participation in period with respect to production, lot agriéuitiiie wctontitte ‘and techni- | itive cotton manufactiring gh 4 arvesting and threshing periods. | Growers’ Cooperative Assn., was ox-| worker in America was promised a the different strikes. consumption, stocks of goods, prices|cal investigations, agrarian credit, |jevgine ea into one great trust. Its} These machines will tindoubtedly | sanized. better life. After the world war, the) The workers’ wives are moving and free exchange of agricultural | ete. es ried editorial in the May 19 con- | hasten large scale farming. The de-| These are the striking statements workers expected a more comfor- to the shops and factories. produce, (c) Raising the purchasing cepa: | nati aie! igo bo is an argument for a | partment points out that the combines of President J. C. Stone of the co-| table, easier life, but on the contrary, the cloak makers strike, a 2, Causes of the present diffi-!city of farmers. Pee en dieaten Seeds monopoly. .|to be profitable must cover more aere-| operative in a report accompanying |they have been confronted with more ttee for work among women spicata ay ie s mys hails the joint con-/age than the ordinary binder. It says: | Payment to the. growers in full for hardships. This does not exclude the formed consisting of women ntion of cotton employers associa-| “There must be 150 or more acres | their 1926 crop. Emphasizing the ad-| better paid unionized worke the industries and workers’ The Financial Position of Co-operatives in the Soviet Union i According to a report of the Trade|shares for a special inter-co-opera- Commissariat on the result of an in-| tive loan. of ecovperaiives, a change for the| tke PRODUCERS AND WORK- ‘ er htend : ERS’ CO-OPERATIVES have also has been registered in the |, Fs = UMERS’ CO-OPERATIVES | increased their own working capital. | which have been able to consolidate | Whilst by 110.08 the latter Snounted their position. The eo-opeyatives’ own to only 21% of the total balance, it funds amounted on 1.7.26 already io | #mounted already to 12.9% on 1.4.26, 5% of the total trade fund. Ac-| Less. favorable’ is the position of ng to the plan of the Centro- the AGRICULTURAL PRODUCERS’ ruz about 34 million roubles out! CO-OPERATIVES most of which are var profits are to be spent on still working with funds which are re-imbursements, _ whilst 3,800,000 ; not their own. roubles is to be granted for cultural | Commissariat contemplates and educational purposes. The trade | support for the agricultural co-oper- Commissariat recommends smaller /atives by means of long-term state re-imbursements and the formation! credits amounting to 14,750,000 of reserve funds to be invested in| roubles, The Position of Consumers’ Co-operatives in the Ukraine According to the statistics of the State Planning Commission (Ges- plan) of the Ukraine, consumers’ co- operatives had on January 1st, 1927, 2,400,000 members, which represents a growth of 20% in one year. Mem- Therefore, the Trade | further bership increased particularly in the rural districts, viz., 40%. The num- ber of shops and other enterprises of the consumers’ co-operatives has in- creased from 10,800 to 13,600. Last year’s turnover, exceeded 1,300,000 rubles, Workers’ Co-operatives and Unemployment general trend, I believe, in the cot- ton industry, is toward consolidation, | either through the selling houses or by the amalgamation of manufactur- ing units cbnverting and selling their | own products.” tions at Atlantic Otty as possibly the | available for cutting before costs with first steps towards such a combine. |the combine fall below costs with a This convention brought together for header and stationary thresher This the first time in ten years the N treckoning takes into ‘account only the tional Cotton Manufacturers Associa- | dirept cash expenses ordinarily paid tion, representing New England mills, |by the farmer, and the necessary re- and the American Cotton Manufac- placement charges for the machines. turers Association, the southern| Ertnp. : Cuts Labor. The argument for monopoly is “Eight-foot combines harvested 275 profits. The Cotton Reporter points | @¢res of grain on the average and to the 14% ,average profit on sales |16-foot machines averaged 682 acres | vantage of cooperation Stone sa; Better Prices. wives. Aid The Union. Cloak makers wives have been or- ganized into cloak makers wives’ councils, These cloak makers wives’ councils are not only helping in the struggles of the cloak, makers but are participating in the struggles of other workers, With the reactionary j ar, began a campaigr “Reports of sales throughout the for breaking up the peabal fe al burley tobacco district show that! of the open shops. The ‘cost of liv while the independent market aver-|ing has risen and the wages have ages $12.55 a hundred pounds, our | either gone down or are the same as tobacco sold for $13.25, or 70¢ a hun-| before the war thingy were dred pounds more than was paid ‘the | much cheaper. outsider, gross, for his tobacco.” when Women Learn. last season. The minimum crew op- }erating a 15-foot or 16-foot combine is 2 men, not including grain haulers. |Similar machines having a power| 4\drive from the tractor are sometimes | | Operated by 1 man. It is estimated | | that the combine reduces the amount | |of labor necessary for harvesting and ; the U. S. Steel Corporation shows | threshing in the great plains from | more efficient warfare on labor about 8.6 man-hours per acre for cut- ; unidns and stiffer prices—steel rails | ting with the binder and threshing | alone jumping from $17 to $28 a ton| With a stationary machine to about | almost immediately, 0.75 man-hours per acre.” The significance of the American; This means a reduction of nearly 80! Wool and Cotton Reporter’s editorial per cent in the man-hours required but reflects Jeading employer opin-/|for harvesting an acre of grain, It ion. At the convention referred to means a serious cut in the jobs avail- President William B. MacColl of the | New England association said: “The | netted by the U S. Steel Corporation and says the textile industry cannot hope tor such earnings till it com- bines, Effect on Labor. Nothing is said of the effect of such a monopoly on labor and prices. But the history of the formation of WASHINGTON (FP)—In a state-) ment disclosing that small cotton far- | South are sunk to the lowest depths of poverty, Secretary of Agriculture Blames Cotton Farmers’ Poverty on “Conservatism” mers in the old cotton belt of the|¥ The sociation handled and sold of bureaucras’ attack upon the left 118,35 pounds of tobacco in 1926. These changes are fecting the |.wing, e committee is engaged in The total cost of handling this crop |™inds of the workers’ w It is| organizing especially the cloak was $1,659,795 or aboutt $1.40 per | "OW much easier to orga them! makers and furriers’ wives fini. Sha: 100 pounds. This $1.40 per 100 pounds | than it was hefore the w: It..is| defense of the. imprisoned cloak is itemized as follows: executive of-|'tue that there ficers, directors and warehouse man- | housewives ag gers, 4 receiving house expense, living befo 28e; prizing tobacco, 19.6¢; grading died down th the coming of the) These organized cloak makers’ and department, 14.7¢; sales house vice Sa Due to the activities of the furriers’ wives councils are affilia- penses, 16.4c; freight, 1 ware-|Dourgeoisie which was engaged in! ted to the United Council of Work- house expense, 15.9; genera of: , | time of war in organizing the great ingclass Housewives, 10.7¢; community organization, 1.9c; | Masses of workingclass women for Working women and men are he- legal, 2.4c; field service, 2.4c and of-|}the war, the women ~ have been | ginning to realize the great neces: ficial publication, 2.3c. | brought to social consciousness, Now for organi ing and piven the Stone tells the growers they have | When they are not _ 80 un-informed great masses of workingclass women been overproducing and says that if *bout organization, it is much sim- in ‘the shops and the homes. They they continue to grow more burley | Pler to talk organization to them. beginning to see now that the than is consumed “it simply means Workers’ Wives Organize. Workingclass women and men must lower prices for burley tobacco.” The worker’s wife, the housewife, | te in a common struggle to pro- knows that she has to fight for bet- | ‘ct their interests. ter conditions for her family at home,| , The Joint Women's Committee is for better honsing, for better school- | determined to organize greater ing and for other things that vitally |S¢§ of trade unionists’ wives, to unite stricted standard of living.” concern the workingclass housewives. | With working women from other This record obtained from 288 /|1n the meantime she is also learning |'@des. This committee has organ- nite farm families in Gwinett coun- | that the most important struggle goes 12° @ larger committee of 2 from a typical Piedmont district, showed |" on the industrial field, on the job | ‘*¢¢ union and workingclass women's ¢ were up es of makers and furriers ainst the high cost of reactionary labor » the world war. They d against the ucrats, Join United Council. }an average net cash income in 1924 | Where she or her husband works. jorganizations to spread this move- of only $424 per family. These famil-| In the last thre oe ment nationally. ies averaged 5 persons each. working women’s Trt fare The committee had their first con- Their cash income was supplemen-|been organized with distinctly work- | {°Te?c® With women from shops, trade | ted by food, fuel and shelter from the | ingclass character such as the United | UMO"S and homes to arrange a mass to the economic advancement of these | farm, estimated to be wort $396 Council of Workingclass Housewives, | meeting for the women to enroll them People.” |per family. Their actual outlay for|#n organization of trade unionists’ | fF the ‘defense of the jmusiasr= White small farmers in Georgia. | living averaged only $291. | wi and other workers’ wiv = cloak makexa.e~dhénies jammed the |Jardine discloses, are meeting the|Most of them are tenants, and of the activities of this orear-- os. Thee to protest against the reac- | competition of the newer cotton re-|cropper families 34 per cent lived in|tha-ae--«n0" Turners’ strikes have | tionary labor bureaucrats and for the The Central Committee of the work- | its on very favorable conditions. But ers’ co-operative (Tsarabsektsia) has | these credits are to be granted only crawn up a plan how the affiliated|to members, who during their em- co-operatives are to help the unem-! ployment spent at least 50% of their ployed. The proposed relief action|/income in the co-operatives, have is af the same time a new form) paid up their share and have done of recruiting members. A special active work in the co-operatives. The unemployed fund is to be estab-/ Central Committee also recommends lished out of deductions from clear to the consumers’ co-operatives that profit and at the expense of re-im-! when appointing workers preference Jardine makes the statement that | “Traditional conservatism and lack of contact with other communities are considered the principal obstacles 1 CHILD IN 4 ~ HERE. SUFFERS POOR EYESIGHT bursements. This fund is to provide! should be given—conditions prevail- gions of western Texas and western | houses with paler conn beit east of sme ener with the | illusion that defense of the imprisoned cloaks for the unemployed long-term cred-! ing--to. members of the co-operatives. | Oklahoma, where, large-gealpuitig tin- fhe Mississippi River live at or be-| women’s place is only in the home. | |.abers and furriers. This was the Aided Textile Strikers. \first meeting of its kind where work- | It was the United Council of Work- | ing women from the shops and homes jingelass Housewives that came in| responded in such great numbers. |time to the textile strike and it has | In Industrial Field. | not only carried on tremendous telief| fost of the activities of the United work, but it has also carried on or- Council of Workingelass Housewives ganizational work by organizing the | are on the industrial field. The barri- ; A ; veg | Sttiking women, the strikers’ wives cades against the women, especially peel. cg eee haha beatae th ie paraiso PE other working women and work- | geainst the housewives, that they can- PS A ig ten 1899 to 1928. The department shows from census Doifiol pal Tene ene are NOW OF- | not be organized pee oat the work- i i r wor ved i ing | 22nized into working women's coun-| ing class, have been broken. [figures that the quantity produced per voter area growth of nearly (cls affiliated to the United Counetl | “The task of this committes of 25 y e ra - é y 7 wy +eR . o 3 } % othe. ol ical volume of production and of less than 90% ‘in total per- | of Workingclass Housewives where jis now to organize trade unionists 180% in the physical vo! P they are learning quickly the lesson| wives and to unite them with the sually low incomes and a notably re- ‘low this standard. Horsepower Gobbles the Workei’s Job By LELAND OLDS (Federated Press). is Percent Half gé~ . . . 1 Nebet-+= vuil Co-operative Pioneer Work = the Rurs One school child out of ‘every four IOHOSLAVL (Tver Guber-,try. Thanks to this coribine, 30 vil- jon the east side of New York City sia a gaastoci ee pumalgamated|is6e have already been provided with lis suffering from detection ayestet| in 1928 into the first AGRICULTUR- | clectric light. This year 4,000 peas accor ing. to. a. report presented yel- \1. COMBINE in order to carry out | ant farms are to be electrifie se I \terday to the executive committee of| agricultural measures with respect | vew seed, cattle-breeding and — er |the Bellevue-Yorkville Health Dem- to flax growing and to new forms of agricultural enterprises are ae : Pon lonstration by Godias J. Drolet, the flax dressing. The new factory has | tablished. It is also contempla' oy | consulting ‘statistician of that organi- a model farm of 40 dessiatins which build this year work-shop for the a leaden. rows high-quality flax seed for the | mg up of machinery and also an oil Dr. Shirley W. Wynne, Deputy benefit of the surrounding peasan-' factory. Boston Labor Body | Probing Sweetser In Donovan Case BOSTON, May 22.—Labor’s fight, on the state labor department and, {ts violent labor-hating chief, “Gen- eral” 5. Leroy Sweetser is focussed now on the demand that Sweetser reveal the names of the trade union officials who, he says, gave him their approval of the discharge of Mary Donovan. 3 Miss Donovan, labor department inspector, was fired recently because Sweetser did not like her activity in the Sacco-Vanzetti defense com- mittee, of which she is a member. Later he declared prominent. labor men had told him privately that he had done just right. Soy "Se ‘ial, committee ¢ Boston Content 1 Labor Union has pust visit- “kl the “general”, who won his spurs Lawrence textile strike by try- in ing to arevent textile workers from sending {their starving children out of the y, but was not given the names of the “labor men.” James ¥. Burke of the moving pic- ture operators, Rose Sullivan of the telephone operators, Harry P. Grages . L, U. and Roderick McKin- tion of Sweetser. iss Donovan has brought grave charges’ against the state wn de- artment for failing to prosecute em- Tesi violating the labor code, A separate committee of the Boston Central Labor Union is initiating the probe. Our Spring Fish nage MONTREAL, May” 22.— Fishing with a light rod and worm bait in the St, Lawrence off La Prairie, Jules Brossard of St. Lambert was surpris- ed when he felt a tremendous tug on his line, He had made a strike but the fish towed his boat agai rent for a half mile before he finally ~ Innded it. The fish was a 75 pound inst the cur-| Cops Little Laundry Owners Raise $10,000 Fund to Influence. Health Board The Board of Health will have a chance soon to look at nearly $10,000. That sum is being raised by the ’New York Hand Laundry Associa- ation through a $10 assessment on all its members in order to con- vince the board that it should re- lax measures of sanitary control. Sanitary conditions in many of the little-hole-in-the-wall laundries are far from ideal, but the as- sociation feels that something can be dove to make the board of health take a “reasonable” atti- tude, it is felt. through the rais- ing of a $10,000 fund. How the money will be spent has not been disclosed by officials. Chicago Grocers Form. Co-op. Bakeries; Hit at Non-Union Bread Trust CHICAGO—(FP)—May 22.—The nonunion baking trust will receive a severe check in Chicago when 300 grocery stores execute their plan for 1 cooperatively-owned bakery, to sup- ply them with bread and cake. Other grocers are ready to imitate the first group if the plan succeeds, The anti- union Ward Baking Co., will try to meet the loss by opening its own retail stations, the bakery workers’ union is informed. Efforts to switch labor bakery patvonage from the nonunion At- lantic & Pacific chain ‘stores to the union made bread of the National Tea Co,, are seriously cutting A. & P. bvead sales, the union asserts. Cops Attack Pickets In Building Trades. Strike at | Worcester WORCESTER, Mass., May 22.— | themselves into the bui laborérs’ strike here yester- day, w! they attacked a group of | | | sturgeon, measuring 5 feet 6 inches jong. pickets near a big building job on meeting of the demonstration, when sons engaged. ‘the results of a six months’ investi-| a gation of the physical defects of|of about 256% in pi school children in the third grades of used 24 elementary schools, public and pa-| shows that while the horsepower per \rochial, located between East 14th/ unit of output has increased 100% the jand 64th Streets, were presented. The | manpower per unit has decreased medical records of the children during | 33%. Twice 3s much mechanical pow- ‘the school year 1925-26 were studied er is now used for the same amount. \for the findings recorded by the phy-! of product but only % as much human \children had defective teeth; 26 per and in production per worker, The figures also show an increase rimary horsepower in manufacturing. Analysis sicians of the Bureau of Child Hy- labor power. That is the story of the! giene of the Department of Health. last generation in industry. Through the co-operation of the Labor Saving. “al Board of Education and the Superin-! “Growth in output per persons, | tendent of Catholic Schools, these rec-, says the report, “may be attributed to ords were made accessible. \2 sets of factors. The first set of Defective Teeth ‘ ‘changes includes the Sixty-four percent. of these school cent. were under-nourished; 25 per tyies, were: cent, had diseased or enlarged toi | Increases in productivity Total sils; 15 per cent. had nasal defects of industry, 1899-1925 output interfering with normal breathing. | Food products ....... 119.6% More school girls were found to be Textiles, clothing . 96.5 suffering from heart disease and pul-| Iron and steel .. 204.4 monary defects than boys. | Lumber... csene 68 The large number of school chil-| Leather products 33.8 ‘dren in the Bellevue-Yorkville section Paper, printing . 319.5 having impaired vision, defectye nasal | Chemicals, off .i.60s- 365.6 eigen omy rw AM ey nes el eal oe lence 0: - -ferreus metal S21/ counted for by the daily strain caused ha algal 168.7 by congested conditions in that part Vehicles, autos 4666.0 of the city, with insufficient sunlight, | Ship building . 22.2 both in the tenements and in some of | re RU os the older schools. These conditions| ai Atndbateles,:. <5; 178.4% place a greater burden upon their phy- si¢al resistance than among children) in other parts of the city. The physi-| cal defects found averaged 35 per cent, higher than those recorded by Dr. S. Josephine Baker, in 1921, ppm hee we Peccveapitng wo, 30 asa capita productivity 229%, | rubber industry the fi 13 Years of Tammany extend back to 1899. £ The extraordinary figures for the| ment of the auto since 1899. Since 1914 its) Among those present at the mpelie| output has increased 3920, its work-| eae Se Ee etens aay Oe force 92% and its output per) e Bureau ' 4 pointed out that the Department 6 Nahata 106 } Health has, for its rec work, the} same number of medical inspectors a8) quces the jobs available per unit of | it had in 1914, although the ee output. In the food industries dere| of children has increased about rh has been an increase of 7.3% in horse- pl ye Te Ceaser glen ake ago ‘S° | manpower per - “ ee ere chil-| ites. Roeevawet per unit has in ren, 8 sce saidibaia cal ois HCacess : Yaewrk The report on. the physical condi- $50,000 For U-Boat Design. ; tion of east side school children was} WASHINGTON, May 22,-—Twenty | referred to the Child Hygiene Com- designs were submitted today for the | mittee of the Demonstration for the|navy's new $5,000,000 super-dirigible. recommendation of remedial mea-| A special board of naval experts | sures, | will select the design and award a) prize of $50,000 to the winner, which} ce Fewer Jobs. which scabs were wo) a WORKERS! STOP THE MURDER) wil! be announced bout the last of | _ OF SACCO AND VANZETTI , \ A ) ization of machinery and power, the) ' introductién of various sorts of labor- saving growth of mass production of stand- | ardized articles, the elimination of) waste and other economics resulting from improvements in methods and management. large groups of industries, however, | \a part of the increase in output per | person is due to the shifting of pro- duction from industries dependent in a large degree upon labor to indus- \ tries more susceptible of mechaniza- increasing utili-'tion and of mass production.” i in ve of production, in number of workers employed Te cee Se By i by the department figures by indus-| tor of the wireless, has obtained the vehicle industry mark the develop-| creased 49.6% and manpower has de-| | Rr ere 16.9%. | thi back only to 1 we | the igures are | ea ost output increased 549%, | 33.8%, manpower minus 19.3%; chem- the number of workers 97.3% and per|icals, horsepower plus 44.3%, man- In the! power minus 53.4%; and in nonferrous ures «do not | metals an increase of 36.5% in horse- The increased mechanical power re-| output coupled with slight inereases | ‘dustry, due to the cigaret, the horse- of the class struggle. This proves! working women from the shops nat- that even housewives who were never | jonally for the defense of the im+ |thought much of, can understand the | prisoned cloak makers and furriers |great advantage of organizing and | for the left wing. The task of the combining the working men and/ committer is even greater. It has women at home and in the shop. to establish permanent delegated con- The United Council of Working- ferences on a national scale where class Housewives is fighting on many | the women from the shops and homes | fronts with the workers, men and and trade unions, can come together | women, carrying on relief, picketing | and discuss problems of the working- and holding mass meetings, organiz-| class as a whole and will act unitedly |ing the workers’ wives in the differ-) with the men workers and will be a lent struggles that are going on for|standing army to rally at a moments’ better conditions for the workers.| notice to defend their common im» Many of the women are being arres- | terests. devices and methods, the For industry as a whole and for Menaced By Fire. Twenty families were hurried from their homes at the height of the rain storm yesterday when fire Test Radio Typewriter. Senator Guglielmo Marconi, inven- | rights: to an automatic radio type- No. of Per capita | writer from a young Italian inventor, | ° dhs : workers output |which) it is stated will be able to in the four story loft building at 42 65.2% 33.0% |operate over great distances. Test Walter St., Brooklyn, threatened to 63.3 20.3 ‘of the machine will be made soon be- spread to nearby residential build- 145.8 j tween here and Rome. ings. 7.7 —1.6 (decréase) te, 38.5 —8.4 (decrease) 156.6 62.7 117.7 114.2 68.3 58.2 87.5 124.8 17 149.4 ink ume AT PPECIAL PRICE? 13.4 77 ‘ . 86.9% 49.0% Learn About Class-Collaboration These booklets present, in. simple language, the problem of a great danger facing Amer- ican Labor. Whether in the trade union or out of it, every worker should read these in- teresting and important booklets—and then pass them on to another worker in the shop: CLASS STRUGGLE YS. CLASS COLLABORA- TION—By Earl R. Browder —10 CLASS COLLABORATION—How to Fight It—By For iron and steel horsepower plus| power and a decrease of 55.5% in manpower per unit of output, In the lumber and leather products | industries we find very considerable, i increases in horsepower per unit of | Bertram D. Wolfe ' —10 LABOR LIEUTENANTS OF A ERICAN IMPE- in the number of workers per unit. RIALISM—By Jay Lovestone —10 On the other hand in the tobacco in-| THE THREAT TO THE LABOR MOVEMENT—By William F. Dunne power and manpower Legions % ml COMPANY UNIONS—By Robert W. Dunn = —.2: ed hi t ‘allen oy nity } A total of 70 cents worth of books for Thackerys’ Granddaughter Weds. | x +1 LONDON, May 22.-—The Arch: | 50 CENTS i bishop of Canterbury today issued | license for the marriage of Samuel | Richard Fuller, of Washington, D. C.,| and Miss Hester Makepeace Thackery | Ritehie, granddaughter Books offered in this column on hand © In limited quantities. All orders cash . NOTE and filled in turn as received. of William | Mekepeace Thackery, the famous | novelist,