The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 4, 1929, Page 1

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| ( t For a Labor pa ‘ THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized For the 40-Hour Week Party Baily Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York. N. Y., under the aet of March 3, 1879. FINAL CITY EDITION a | Nol. V., No. 364 Publis! Publishing Asnociation, inc., 26-28 Union Sq., New York, N. Y. ‘d daily except Sunday by The N: tional Dally Worker NEW YORK, MONDAY, MARCH 4, 1929 In New York, by mail, $8.00 per year. Price 3 Cents formation. imperialist war is imminent. The teachings and the spirit of the are still the guide of action of our for the struggle against the imp American workers for the defense of American capitalist rule. Live Live Leninism! WIN STRIKES IN 1» 3 SHOE SHOPS nion Struggle Ends) in Pay Increase | | | The Diana Shoe Company of rooklyn, long a firm known to e relentlessly opposed to the| injonization of its factory, has| ‘fallen before the “organization | trike” offensive of the Indepen-} lent Shoe Workers’ Union and has igned an agreement granting all nion conditions to the workers ind full union recognition. Two ther firms smaller than the above ut «still employing crews of sub- tantial size were also compelled to ettle up. As have all the other shoe fac- tories signed up in the last two eeks of the campaign, the Diana jompany was compelled to grant we raises of from 5 to 20 per In addition to this all con- tors employed by the bosses re to be dispensed with and only ion members ‘are given employ- in thesshop-.—- Lasted 3 Days. Over 150 workers are employed nthe Diana plant. Under the ilitant leadership of the union hey conducted a three day strike hat convinced the boss that he too, ike other bosses recently, must ome to terms. This was the con- Jusion the Refined Shoe Co. and more Shoe Company came to fter strikes lasting one week each. | This Thursday evening at 8 p’clock all shoe workers in Brook- yn are called to a mass meeting f the Independent Shoe Union in Voraine Hall, 790 Broadway, srooklyn. In addition to the union leaders, ho will report on the remarkable lation achieved by the organ- zi ation during this drive for better onditions, prominent speakers of the labor movement will address | he meeting. | The Franklin Shoe Co., Brook-| iyn, formerly a union shop, had its production halted when the em- loyer refused to renew his agree- ment with the organization because | he workers had demanded 4, raise | mn wages. The strike was declared ast Friday and will be prosecuted ill the pay increase is granted ted with all other conditions in- | ‘luding unreserved recognition of he union, | Southern California. soap Have Joint, rogram on Bond Vote. SAN BERNARDINO, Cal., March | 4.—The local Central Labor Council nd the Building Trades Council ave a “plan of action” to form a foint Board between the two. No an Bernardino worker should, from his, get the faintest idea that these | imid reformist bodies are going) fight the employers. Far be it from such, although the ocal A. F. of L. sheet in all serious- ess opened its account of the won- erful “plan” by saying that “a new pirit of co-operation and concerted ction burst into flames” when the ads of the two councils got to- ether. It turns out that all this “flam- ing” is about is “to better direct the force and power of the local la- bor movement” in such way as to bring the “greatest good to the frreatest number”, of labor fakers in ‘ivic matters “such as the recent igh school bond issue, the Sisters’ Yospital, the sewer inspection propo- ition, endorsing political candi- lates,” etc. In short to distribute e pie or at least the pie-crumbs orded by capitalist politics. MEXICAN PRIESTS’ BIG TIME MEXICO CITY, March 3 (UP).— ishop Antonio Guizar Valencia, of hihuahua, has petitioned President milio Portes Gil to extend the PARTY CONVENTION GREETS COMINTERN | The Sixth Convention of the Workers (Communist) Party greets | its international party and revolutionary world leadershtp, the Com- munist International, on the occasion of the Tenth Anniversary of its The Communist International was born out of revolutionary strug- gle against the last imperialist war and against social reformist treachery... Today, again, it is engaged in a similar struggle. A new s Socialist reformist treachery is again endeavoring to sell out the working class to this imperialist war. _Our Party and its Convention knows that the Communist Inter- national will lead the workers of the world to victory in this struggle. leader of the victorious revolutionary proletariat of Russia, V. I. Lenin, We greet our Communist International leadership and pledge our Convention and our Party to prepare itself, to strengthen itself, to clarify itself, for its share of this task. cleanse its ideology from the poison of opportunism, it will defeat Trotskyism, it will mobilize against and lead the American proletariat final defeat of American imperialism by the revolutionary overthrow Long Liye the Communist International! founder of our International, of the Comirttern. It will close its ranks, it will erialist war; it will mobilize the of our Soviet Union and for the MOB IN FLORIDA LYNCHES NEGRO Handed to Murderers by County Sheriff BROOKSVILLE, Fla., March 3. —The first lynching of the year took place here when 18-year-old Buster Allen was taken from the Tampa jail into which he had been thrown by a plantation and busi- nessmen’s sheriff because he was a |Negro accused by some hysterical idle white woman of “insulting” her. Allen was mutilated and hanged from a tree about 25 miles from town, during the night. The mobsters got hold of him thru presentation of a paper which the sheriff professed to believe was an order for his release signed by the sheriff of Hernando county. He was not actually released, how- ever, but simply handed over to the mob, which carried him away. No arrests were made. Ukrainian Air Service Shows Growth in 1928 ODESSA, U. S. S. R., (By Mail). —The company Ukrvozdukhput (Ukrainian Airways) carried 3,285 passengers during the summer sea- son of 1928, 619 more-than in the previous year, The company oper- ates over the Moscow-Kharkov-Baku route with a number of intermediate stops. A large increase in the amount of air mail carried was also recorded, the total of 16,320 kilograms being double that of last year. The com- |pany transported over 32,000 kilo- grams of baggage and freight. Police in Socialist Ruled City Beat Up Prisoner in Cell MILWAUKEE, (By Mail).—Ser- |iously injured in a police cell in this | socialist party ruled city, Douglas DRESS STRIKERS ‘BRAVE JAILING IN PICKETING TODAY Mass Demonstration of | All Needle Workers in Garment Area | RN | 1,400 Strike Arrests SaturdayVoluntaryTax Success, Survey Shows | All dressmakers, cloakmakers, |furriers and hemstitchers, who hold! membership in the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, and | other strike sympathizers, will | rally to the dress strike area early this morning to conduct a mass picket demonstration. | Defiant of the mass _jailings | | (hundreds having been - arrested | every Monday morning) the work- ers refuse to be intimidated by the police, and continue their already highly successful struggle against the sweat shop system in the dress trades. The dress strike district is in the area covered by 35th to 39th Sts and Seventh and Eighth Aves. Arrests Don’t Terrify. A total of those arrested since the strike started (about three and a half weeks ago) shockingly dem- onstrates how energetic the New York police force is in aiding the bosses’ attempt to break the strike. Over 1400 have been arrested since the strike call was issued. Instead of doing damage to the solidarity of the workers, thousands of hith- erto non-union workers have en- tered the union, hundreds of shops were compelled to concede full union standards and hundreds of sweat shops were permanently out of business. From a survey made by the Joint Board of the N.T.W.LU., the re- sponse of the dressmakers working in settled shops to the decision of the membership to give 8 hours work for the union, and for the strike fund, was highly gratifying. The eight hours for the strike tax were to have been worked on last Saturday. Ordinarily no work is permitted on Saturday since the strike has won for these workers the 40-hour five-day week, but spe- cial permission was granted, by de- cision of the members to use this day as “Tax Day.” Announcement was further made | that more detailed figures of the response to the “tax call” will be issued at some later date. March on City Hall. Over five hundred strike func- | ‘tionaries last Wednesday afternoon marched down to City Hall and presented to Mayor Walker’s of- fice a statement demanding free- dom from. the tyranny exercized by the police throughout the strike. They demanded the immediate stopping of a reign of terror, po- llice and judicial, that can result in 1,400 arrests in three weeks. De- spite this demonstration and pro- test meetings held thyoughout the strike by.several organizations be- | sides the union, the arrests con- Outside New York, by mail, $6.00 per year. Workers Mus t Safeguard HOOVER, CABINET FIRST BUSINESS SESSION OF Daily Worker for Future OF MILLIONAIRES, COMMUNIST CONVENTION COMRADES: : The campaign to save the Daily Worker, to put tion a firm financial basis, is entering its last lap. The response of thousands of workers and working- class organizations thruout the country during the past few weeks has shown that the Daily Worker is an absolute necessity to them in their many struggles. The more than $15,000 thus far contributed has enabled us to pay off the most pressing debts and to prevent the fighting organ of the American work- ers from suspending publication. For more-than five years the Daily Worker has appeared every day de- spite the untold sacrifices that it required. The crisis that we have just been passing thru brings us face to face with the necessity of SAFEGUARDING THE DAILY WORKER FOR THE FUTURE. We want to prevent a recurrence of the situation that nearly sounded the death-knell of the only working class paper in the English language in the world. We want to make unnecessary feverish appeals that place extra financial burdens on the workers. We want to give the American workers assurance of having their militant paper every publication day of the year, leading their struggles, fighting against all the enemies of the working class, fighting for the over- throw of capitalism and the establishment of a work- ers’ and farmers’ republic. Safeguarding the Daily Worker for the future means also defeating the efforts of Morris Hillquit, corporation lawyer ‘and socialist party leader, to cripple the paper. Robert Minor, editor, and William F. Dunne, assistant editor, have been indicted on criminal libel charges at the instigation of Hillquit. The Daily Worker faces a legal battle that will involve large expenses. It is a battle not so much against Hillquit as an individual, but against the entire scab socialist party clique that is trying to break the dress strike and is consistently playing the role of agents of the employers in every work- ing class struggle. Hillquit and Company must be defeated. The receipts over the week end fell off to a dangerously low point. Only $120.10 was received Saturday and yester- day. Should contributions continue at this pace, it will mean that the Daily Worker has no assurance that it will be able to function and to grow in the future free from the danger of closing down. Many districts have not yet fulfilled their quotas. These districts must immediately intensify their efforts. This is the final week and it will require final de- termined efforts on the part of all workers and working class organizations to put their militant organ well beyond | | jnent to his cabinet, that of the mil- | INSTALLED TODAY Militarist Carnival for the Wall Street Inauguration Lamont Is Trust Chief No Appointees Able to Defy Mellon Orders WASHINGTON, March 3—Blocks of pine lumber stand along Penn- sylvania Ave., window space selling at $50 per person and a general air jof satisfaction and complacency on the part of the biggest imperialist agents, senators, r¢ resentatives and other employes mark the pyelimin- ary stages of Hoover's inauguration. The ceremony tomorrow will be a militarist spree, with all branches of the army present on an unpre- cedented and imperialism’s latest war weapons, airships, par- ticularly prominent. | scale, Employer Cabinet. Hoover is already justifying the trust which a brazen financial oli- garchy is placing in him. With the announcement of the final appoint- lionaire manufacturer and corpora: tion director, Robert Paterson La- | mont, as secretary of commerce, | Hoover presents big business with a cabinet of its own kind. Over half of its members are millionaires in their own right, and the hand of Morgan and Mellon lies plainly ever the rest. Andrew Mellon himself, the third richest man in the world, holds the post as secretary of the treasury, as he did in Coolidge’s cabinet. Partner of Root. Secretary of State Henry L. Stim- son, former secretary of war and governor general of the Philippines, (Continued on Page Five) REPORT UPRISING danger’s door. The last week must be the best! Safeguard the Daily Worker. Prevent future crises! The total contributions are: | Previously listed .......... A $15,568.42 | Saturday and Sunday ..........- 120.10 Bh) DRE i Sn pae ak et oa eS +++ $15,688.52 | Reports of revolution, coming from | Send funds immediately to Daily Worker, 26-28 Union Square, New York. THE MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE. Fighting Bishop’s Book at Big I. L. D. Bazaar Here Soon EES Autographed copies of Bishop |McKibbins, 25, is in a hospital here | tinued. The same policy of whole- suffering with concussion of the| sale arrests is expected to mark brain. Police would give no ex-|this morning’s picketing. But noth- planation of how the prisoner was|ing can stop the strikers in mak- hurt. ing full use of their right to picket ec reeam ra arom the shops where slavery conditions Quit Union or Lose are being fought, is the sentiment Job, Says Stove Co. | \among the workers. USSR STEEL OUTPUT. OWEN SOUND, Ont., (By Mail). KHARKOV, U.S.S.R., (By Mail). |The Yugostal steel trust of the William Montgomery Brown’s new | book, “The Bankruptcy of Chris- 7,900 MINERS IN NEAR VERA CRUZ No Trains Run fr Mexico City MEXICO CITY, March 3 (UP).— ‘om | unofficial sources and thus far un- | confirmed at government sources, | trickled into the capital tonight, | especially from Vera Cruz and the! state of Sonora. | The repor' were meager and! without details. ‘They merely said | Mexico was in revolution and made no mention of who was directing the subversive movement, or to what extent, if any, it had gone. All day the reports have been cir- culated through the capital. Trains between Mexico City and Vera Cruz were curtailed, some communications OPENS HERE TODAY, 3 P. M. Workers (Communist) Party Receives Open Letter from Communist International Mass Workers’ Organizations Telegraph Their Greetings to Opening Meeting of Convention The Sixth National Convention of the Workers (Commun- ist) Party of America, the first business session of which is expected to begin this afternoon at 3 p. m. at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl., following the formal opening Friday at New |try the cases in the New Bedford |anti-labor and severe sentences can | ers throughout the country use their \the strike on charges of conspiracy \teo take charge of the defense. 'Clarence Darrow, who will head the | shortly, 662 STRIKERS ON TRIAL TOMORROW Conspiracy Trial of 25 on Thursday (Special to the Daily Worker) NEW BEDFORD, Mass., March —The great mass trial of 662 New Bedford strikers opens in the su- perior court here Tuesday morning. The first group of cases will include the so-called Sharp Mili riot cases of June 24, 19 The 662 militants are up on vari- ous charges, such as inciting to riot, disorderly conduct, parading with- out a permit, etc. Some of them have been convicted as many as 12 times. Judge Dillon of Springfield will court. He is known as viciously be expected, according to the Inter- national Labor Defense, which is defending the strikers, unless work- mass pressure to smash the designs of the mill barons’ courts. Conspiracy Trial Thursday. The trial of 25 leading figures in to disturb the peace and conspiracy to parade without a permit has been set for Thursday. Arthur Garfield Hays and Joseph Brodsky are expected here Tuesday defense forces, is also expected A vigorous defense cam- paign is being inaugurated by the district office of the I i. D., under the direction of Secretary Robert Zelms and Attorney Harry Hoffman. * ~ * Governor Allen is Sore. BOSTON, March 3.—Governor Allen, representative of the big open-shop bosses of Massachusetts, (Continued on Page Five) Belgian Police Cause| Louvain Librarian to! \Discredit Secret Pact BRUSSELS, March 3.—In a des-) perate effort to bring some evidence | to confirm the Belgian and French| government’s denial that they have entered into a secret military pact for war on Germany and Holland, tian Supernaturalism,” will be on sale at the big annual bazaar of | the New York District of the In- ternational Labor Defense, which | opens in New Star Casino, 107th) St. and Park Ave. Wednesday | night. The bazaar will continue | for five days, closing Sunday night. | Bishop Brown is the famous | heretic bishop who was excom-| municated from the LANSFORD STRIKE Much Unemployment in Coal Fields LANSFORD, Pa., March 3.—The —The Empire Stove Co. of Owen Sound is forcing 25 iron moulders to sign agreements with the com- pany to give up their membership in the International Moulders’ Union. The company has threat- ened the men with dismissal if they do not quit the union. Fake ‘Progressives Discuss the U. S. Labor Movement By SENDER GARLIN. Among those present are between 300 and 400. Among them are ele- gantly attired ladies, alert-looking young business men, a large group of rosy-cheeked boys and girls—stu- dents “majoring” in the “labor movement” in college, Ornate chandeliers hang from the high ceiling, casting a soft light on the cheerful faces of the company. The dessert, chocolate ice-cream and demi-tasse is delicious, and the din- ers chat with neighbors and wait expectantly for the speakers, It was at a modest luncheon of the “League for Industrial Dem- ocracy” at the Town Hall Club on 43d St. near Fifth Ave. on Satur- day afternoon. Look around a bit. At a long table, facing the well-groomed audi- eriod for registration of priests. total of 1,274 priests had regis- od up to yesterday, ence are a number of individuals, whose faces are fainiliar. There’s Morris Hillquit, of 214 Ukraine expects to increase its out- put of pig iron above the original estimates. Two blast furnaces are being completed and will start op- erations in the near future. Blast protestant United Mine Workers of America, episcopal church after he had ac-j maintained here thru a closed shop cepted the teachings of Darwin and | contract and by the support of the Marx. He has sent a letter of employers, has called 4 strike of greeting to the I. L. D. bazaar and | seven thousand men whoghave no donated copies of his other books, | choice but to belong, nominally, to furnace Number 6 of the Petrovosky steel mill at Dniepropetrovsk in the Ukraine started operations in No- vember. Riverside Drive. Big lawyer, has represented some of the most influ- ential corporations in the country. Has lots of pull in spite of the fact that he’s a socialist. Just pulled off a job on the needle trades workers —perfectly “legal,” y’understand, but the workers are out $150,000 in stocks, Trying to put the editors of the Communist press in the pen- itentiary, just now. And here’s Ben Stolberg. Yellow, bushey hair. Looks like a little fox. “Impartial” writer on labor ques- tions, but in soft with all the cor- rupt right wing trade union bureau- crats. Stolberg sneaks about get- ting “low downs” on union struggles and then sells them to the capitalist press (The Nation, Century maga- zine, etc.). Ingratiating, sly, mer- cenary. ..'. There’s Eddie Levinson—the boo- bey-looking guy with the tortoise- (Continued on Page Two) bo “Communism _ and Christianism,” and “My Heresy.” Mrs. Brown has also contributed embroidered ar- ticles made by herself, which will be on sale at the bazaar. The I. L. D. bazaar this year is expected to surpass all previous events of its kind. There will be more than 30 booths, selling ar- ticles of every kind, many of them hand-made and unobtainable else- | where. About 15 nationalities are cooperating in the bazaar in addi- tion to many other working class groups. Elaborate entertainment programs are being prepared for each of the five nights, with the program for each night in chargé of a different language group. All the proceeds of the bazaar will go for the defense of class war prisoners. Drivers Killed When Gas Truck Falls Over “PITTSBURGH, Pa., March 3 (UP) —James O’Brien, driver and. his helper, William McLaughlin, were burned to death today when a large gasoline truck on which they were |the U. M. W. A. The men are being made to strike \for a longer work day. The em- | ployer is the Lehigh Coal and Navi- |gation Co. It has been operating ‘its breaker six hours a day. Presi- ident John Kelly, of Sub-district 1 jof District 7 of the U. M. W. A. ; demands that the work day be ex- tended two hours. | There is much unemployment in the coal fields, but the U. M. W. A. officials do not ask for the use of /more men, only for the longer work |day for those at work. The strike |started Thursday, but the company \is still coyly refusing to act. GERMANY OFFERS HALF. PARIS, March 3 (UP).—Ger- many’s first concrete offer of how much she wants to pay on war debts | was made today. French sources reported that Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, German delegate to the reparations conference made the offer of a flat annuity of ap- proximately $230,000,000 to Sir Jo- siah Stamp, of the procedure com- | mittee of the reparations conference. The Dawes plan, this year, would provide for an annuity of $575,000,- were down and during the day the police here have produced a trucks loaded with soldiers could be |Belgian spy Albert Franck, who seen in the streets. This later phase |“confesses” to having forged the particularly was noticeable + about |document, which was published in| Chapultapec Castle, where many of | Dutch papers. the capilal troops are held. | Franck is a former librarian of The revolt is said to be a mili-|Louvaine, and editor of small mag- tary insurrection, at least in its|azines. He has admitted to friends first phases, under the leadership |that he would. soon “sacrifice him- of General Jesus Maria Aguirre at self for Belgium.” Vera Cruz, where the anti-govern- ment forces have seized the city and surrounding towns, and that Aguirre is acting under a compact | with General Francisco Mando and | “Belgium now is able to know ker enemies from her friends,” Franck said. Franck declared he enacted the} double role of being a member of Governor Fausto Topete of Son-|the German espionage service in ora. These two latter are said to | 1928, while he simultaneously was have taken control of all federal |reporting to the Belgian government troops in Sonora, and captured |the workings of the German espion- Nogales at, five o’clock last night. jage system. Farmer Offers $100 to ‘Daily’ If 999 Others Will Do Same The Daily Worker publishes to-|tributing $100 a year because he | day a letter that we consider of |knows the Daily Worker is an abso- the greatest importance to all work-/lute necessity in the struggles of ers. August Schlemmer, a 71-year-|the workers and poor farmers of old farmer of Chisago City, Minn., this country. offers to contribute $100 a year to| Are there 999 others who will fol- a Daily Worker Reserve Fund if|low his example? All those who are 999 other workers and sympathizers /willing to make a similar contri- will do the same. He suggests that |bution should write at once to the these $100 contributions be made in|Daily Worker, 26 Union Square. installments of $10 a month. Comrade Schlemmer’s letter fol- The suggestion of Comrade lows: Schlemmer is a challenge to every | Dear Comrades: reader of the “Daily.” One thousand | I feel so sorry that the Daily | 000. Experts were still hopeful that Schacht would increase his estimate to an amount more nearly approx- riding overturned and burst into flames. The men, were pinned be- contributions of $100 a year each would be a permanent safeguard against future financial crises. Comrade Schlemmer’s description of his circumstances shows that he is one of the great mass of American farmers who are forced to wage a constant bitter struggle for the bar-| est necessities of life. He is willing neath the wreckage. imating allied demands. ‘* to make the great sacrifice of con- Worker, that fighting sheet, should always be so hard pressed for shekels to.keep arunning. It would seem that those who are in the Star Casino, which was attend- ed by 5,000 workers, has re- ceived an open letter from the Communist International (to be found on page 3 of this issue). None of the routine business of the Convention was transacted at Friday’s meeting. This will probably begin at today’s session. The first point on the agenda is the report of the Central Executive Committee on the political and economic situ- ation, the activities of the Party, and the tasks facing it. me The convention received the fol- lowing telegrams, among others, from mass non-Party organizations: From the Trade Union Education- al League of Ladies Tailors Local 88: Greetings welcome delegates to the Sixth Convention of the Work- ers (Communist) Party of Amer- ica, no combined force of imperial- ism, labor traitors and reformists can, nor will stop the revolution of the wheel of history. The working class of America must and will under the banner of Communism, fulfill its historical mission and will triumphantly march forward towards its final goal, the eman- cipation of the workers. Down with imperialism! Down with la- bor traitors! Down with the S. P., the servant of the capitalist class! Long life the W. C. P. of America! Hail the Communist In- ternational!” From the Progressive Group of Bakers’ Union, Local 500, secretary Pinchewsky, came the following tele- gram: “We send our revolutionary greeting to the delegates of the 6th convention of the Workers (Communist) Party of America.” The Progressive Group of the Fancy Leather Goods Workers’ Union sent the following: “The progressive group of the Fancy Leather Goods’ Union greets the convention of the Work- ers (Communist) Party, the leader of many struggles of the Amer- * | ican working class. May your de- liberations bring more class-con- sciousness among the American working masses.” The Central City Committee of e Jewish Workers’ Clubs of New York sent the following telegram thru their secretary, S. Hurwitz. “Best wishes for success in your work of building a mass party to lead the American working class struggle and establishing a gov- ernment of workers and peasants in the United States of America. Long live the Workers (Commu- nist) Party of America! Long li the Communist International’ The Paterson Freiheit Gesang Verein greeted the convention with this telegram: “We greet the Sixth Annual Convention of the Workers (Com- munist) Party forward to a mass party and to future victory of the working class.” The Lenin Branch of the Inde- pendent Workmen’s Circle of Chi- cago telegraphed as follows: “We greet convention Commu- nist Party. We pledge support in fight against world imperialism and for defense of Soviet Republic. Long live Comintern! Long live coming Soviet Republic of Amer- From Cleveland came the follow- ing telegram: “Dear comrades we are with you in struggle against coming } imperialist war and for defense of the Soviet Union! Long live the | Communist International! J. SANDERS, sec’ty. Pol Fra.” “Daily” Will Publish Special Issue for the Intern’] Women Day In celebration of International Women’s Day, on March 8, the Daily Worker will publish a | |special Women’s Edition, con- taining news and feature articles of special interest to working class women. Because there is bound to be a big demand for the | | labor ranks would be able to cur- | tail expenses in some way and make that a first claim after their living expense is taken care of, by denying themselves of all Continued on Page Three | |ders immediately. special edition, organizations are urged to send in for bundle or- At the same time, working women are asked} ~ to send in material for use in the Wemen’s: Day Edition.

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