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oe $6 DOLE a > ee re Nee ee a or RON Page 6 LOCKED OUT MINERS TAKEN OFF RELIEF ONSHERIFF’SORDERS Attempt Bribery When Starvation Threat Fails} To Herd Miners into Company Union By a Mine Worker Correspondent BESSEMER, Ala.—The Tennes- see Coal, Iron and Railroad Com pany is trying every way possible to force the company union on us. In Bessemer, where the Readers Ore Mine, biggest ore mine of the T. C. I, is located, there is a local of the International, Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers Union, The local has a membership of about 1,000. policy of forcing over the company The mine has been closed down | Union has failed. close to seven months. When they Now they have a new policy. The go to the Super for anything, he tells them to go to see Jack Brown, | he has everything under control | now. When the union men go to Jack Brown, he will talk to them a while and then ask them, “Why don’t you all come to our meeting on Tuesday night?” He is talking | about the company union. The Jack Brown and Will Jones resume work the company wants |company is calling a few of the to open up under the company | bona fide union men back to work union, Now the company union is| when the mine isn’t opened up. These men are testing the timbers, water pipes, tracks, etc. The com- pany union men have been doing this work up until last week. The main reason the company is put- | ting these men to work, is to make | them think that the company is good to them and that way get them to join the company union. The bosses sent two or three com- | carrying on a campaign with ever, means possible. The main pol Was an attempt to starve and freeze the bona fide union men into the company union. The majority of the bona fide union men who have families tried to work a small piece of ground so that they could raise some sweet potatoes, corn, etc. for their fami- lies to have something to eat this| pany union men to work with the | winter. bona fide union men to agitate | At the present time, all of the them to join the company union. | bona fide union men are on the |The bona fide union men are wor- welfare lists with the exception of |ried by the company union agita~- a few who were called to work |tors the whole time they are on two weeks ago. The company has|the job. This is the policy of the | special stools to tell them what company—to get a crew of com- goes on in the camp. Will Jones pany union men so that they can | is a Negro stoll and the camp open up the mine. The general superintendent went | to the company union meeting one | night and there were only a few Negroes there. And he told the white workers, you carried the Ne- gro. into the ILM.M.S.W.U., and then you all come running back to the company, and you all must get the Negroes into the company | union. If you don’t you are just | wasting your time. You all ain't doing a damn thing but spendng our money. We have enough white men, now you must get the Negroes. The bona fide union men said | they will starve before they will | join the company union. | The workers here love the Com- | munist Party. The workers said | the reason why they love the Party is because at the time of the strike everything the Party told them| came true. Secondly, they said they know the Party is on the right | line because the bosses are fight- | ing against the Party. And I know | any time the bosses fight against | anything it must be good for the working man, watchdog who works with the com- pany sheriff, Jack Brown Will Jones goes around the camp trying to find out how many sweet potatoes, corn, chickens, etc. the unfon men have at home. If the union men have as much as two banks of sweet potatoes, a little corn and a few chickens, which they worked hard all summer to raise, Will Jones will report back to Jack Brown, and a few days later the worker will receive a card from the welfare telling him that he is cut off. The company gave Jack Brown tomplete control over the company property. Jack Brown is the com- pany high sheriff. His main drive is against the bona fide union men He stopped them from getting wood on the company’s property Jack Brown tells the bona fide union men that he will let the company union men get all the wood they want off company prop- erty. “We will help men who help the “company,” he tells them. Not only that, but when the union men Women Flay Badiret’s Attack | On Chicago Workers’ School CHICAGO, Ill—You have told us|;ers who understand the way in about the lies of the capitalist press | which we are being used by those | in the pages of your magazine.*/ who get rich on our labor. We William Randolph Hearst has re- are proud that our school is so im- cently published a series of arti- portant that Mr. Hearst is afraid cles insulting our Chicago Work- | of us and has to resort to lies and ers’ School and stirring up fascist attempts to stir up violence against attacks upon us. us because he realizes that the | His editors distorted quotations ae class is growing stronger ‘ every day and will not remain en- from Lenin, and made us out to slaved, We are also glad to say be a dasgerous, mad group of for-| that many workers who read his eigners. We are serious students articles have written to the school of the problems of the working- @nd come to the school, and en- class. As American workers, we rolled for courses. want to better our living conditions, We want to turn Mr. Hearst's at- and we meet to study how this can tack upon our school into a victory be done. for the working class by showing us is w n of forty that it a good lesson in the way cee Sn to Leone and was ‘he capitalist press is used as a so impressed with the life the Weapon against workers. workers lead there that she came to study Communism in the Work- ers’ School when she returned to Chicago. Another of us is a young girl who had never heard of Com- munism before she saw an adver- tisement of the Workers’ School and thought that perhaps this was a place where she might find renewed hope for a happy life. Another of us has had eleven years of experi- ence in the Communist movement, and comes to the school because it is the place where she can meet sincere people, one of the most in- spiring places in Chicago. Another of us says: “I first came to this school because my husband wanted me to prepare myself to join him in taking part in the class struggle. He felt I could learn more from studying the works of Lenin and Marx than from his ex- planations.” After the articles against us ap- peared in the Chicago American, the owner of our building, Mr. Flor- sheim, of the Florsheim Shoe Com- pany, served our school with an eviction notice. The rent was paid, but he said we were not desirable tenants. On the street where our school stands there are mostly burlesque shows and flop houses. These are allowed to remain unmolested. Our school, which tries to teach the workers to better their condition, is not allowed to stay at 505 South State Street. *Editor’s Note :The above letter was received by the Working Woman, a Communist magazine for women, They turned it over to the Daily Worker for publica- tion. Vet Calls for Renewed Activity in Bonus Fight By a Worker Correspondent TOLEDO, Ohio.—With the aid of the Daily Worker, let’s call upon the ex-Service Men, the majority of whom are amongst the masses of destitute workers, throughout the country to get the rest of their bonus in cash, by putting on massed demonstrations and making de- mands upon Congress to pass it at the coming session by sending them letters and telegrams. I am one of the occupants of the City Flophouse here called the Wel- fare Center, and over two-thirds of these destitute men are Veterans of the World War. There are millions of others in the ranks of these masses of hope- less workers, who would greatly benefit by the bonus. We could get better clothes, food and shelter. But we are going to resist evic-| Let's call on every Vet to get tion. We realize that this attack | out on the street and demonstrate upon us is only the beginning of | and raise the cry of “We want our a fascist attack upon sincere work- ‘bonus in cash.” Here Is My Dollar To Put Drive Over the Top NAME ADDRESS = Tear off and mail immediately to DAILY WORKER 50 FAST 13¢h St. New York, N. ¥. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1934 Can Well Afford to Smile 1 i ‘Operators Try to Starve Miners into Company Union) NRA Decides Against Back || Pay For Striking Miners By a Mine Worker Correspondent POWHATTAN PT., Ohio.—Seven- ty miners who were locked out as result of a strike in early Novem- ber have been reinstated as a re- sult of a decision handed down by the National Labor Relations Board, The Board, however,’ refused to. force the company to pay the men for all the time they were out, in Spite of the fact that the men were discharged for no legitimate reason. The strike had originally grown out of the fact that the company refused to drill the holes, furnish powder to shoot the coal, and lay the tracks, as it had been doing up until that time. The men took strike action. Im- mediately, the district officials of the U. M. W. of A. headed by Percy Tedlow made every effort to get the men back to work, and suc- ceeded to break the strike. When the men went back, seventy were locked out. The U. M. W. of A, Officials did nothing to get the men back on the job except go | through all the N, R. A. red tape. The result was that the men were out for more than a month, and when they finally got back to work they did not get a cent for all the time they had lost. | This is the way the U. M. W. of | A. officials defend the interests of | the miners. As far as the original | grievance goes, the company won jou there also. You sure can’t get | any justice from the N. R. A. or the Officials of the U. M. W. of A. Donald R. Richberg (left), N. R. A. chief, and President C. 1. Bardo | of the National Association of Manufacturers seem to be enj ying them- selves at a banquet during the Manufacturers’ Convention held recently | in New York. Perhaps Mr. Richberg is thinking of the fine decision | made by an umpire appointed by him in the case of the Powhattan | miners, Terror Drive Wareage Bill Intensified Gains Suppor In Northwest In Portland By a Worker Correspondent PORTLAND, Me.—We are send- ing you twelve votes for the Work-| ers Unemployment and Social In. surance Bill. Will send more later The Socialist Local of Portland | elected F. Maxfield as a delegate to the National Congress for Unem- ployment and Social Insurance in By a Worker Correspondent | SPOKANE, Wash.—The following will give you an idea as to how we are beng served by the public ser- vants in this outpost territory of capitalism, I, as representative of the F. S. U., and Dr. Munro, of the Liberal | Washington. One delegate is going Club, applied for the Lewis and | from the Cumberland County Power Cla School Auditorium for Scott | and Light Co, shop. The third del- Nearing. The whole school board egate is Mrs. Wallace representing turned us down, I timore n Baltimor | By a Marine Worker Correspondent | BALTIMORE, Md. — Continuing | its aggressive tactics in its deter- mination to bring about a revision | of tht “$57.50 sellout agreement” | harnessed onto the seamen by Vic- tor Olander, I, S, U. head, who} represented nobody but himself at) the arbitrations concluded in New York City two weks ago, the M. W. I, U. here printed petitions and at meetings urged that the seamen sign in protest of the slave code that that the agreement actuallly amounts to. That the seamen here resent the | now famous “Olander agreement” is evidenced by their eagerness to sign the petition and in the few days that the petition has been in cir- culation more than 400 seamen have signed. When the waterfront has been thoroughly covered in the opinion of the sponsors of the peti- tion, it will be sent to the American teamship Owners Association as visible evidence that the seamen re- gard it an injustice for any agree-| ment to be concluded without them- selves being taken into the reckon- ing. At a meeting held last Sunday the seamen signed and mailed in- dividual post-cards protesting the the sell-out engineered by him, and During the past four months we have been deprived of the use of every hall in the uptown section for showing the “Road to Life” and “The End of St. Petersburg.” The Finn Hall is the only one that would take us in. Two attempts were made by the American Legion a neighborhood club. The delegates will leave for Washington on Thurs- day, Jan, 2. The Armenian Aid Society en- dorsed the Workers’ Bill and the National Congress. The Scotch So- ciety heard our representatives and promised to take up the Workers’ Bill at its next meeting. to stop lectures, one given by Rob- | ert Lee Minor and the other by James Bradley, candidate for U. S. Senator, The American Legion and the Chamber of Commerce have openly stated that they will drive Communism out of Spokane. The head of the Electrical Work- | ers’ Union, Mr. Place, argued in the | following way when the Workers’} Bill was discussed at the union} meeting: | “We pay a man in Washington $5,000 a year to look after bills and We have sent an air mail letter other such business, We- shouldn't to the National F. S. U. for direc- | have to worry our heads off. He tion on Scott Nearing meeting. He | knows better.” is due to speak here Jan, 7. No| —_— other town in Washington has de- | = NOTE nied halls so far as we have heard.| _ We publish every Saturday let- | We are now forced to move from ters from coal and ore miners and | our bookstore headquarters by the| Smelter workers. We urge workers | first of the year. We surmise it is| in these industries to write us of | the same influences behind this| their conditions and efforts to | that were behind the other sup-| organize. Please get these letters | pressions, to us by Wednesday of each week. | | telling Olander himself that they | did not recognize that he acted in jtheir behalf. | The seamen feel that the agree- ment robs them of their inherent right to improve their lot on ship- | board by direct strike action. The Olander agreement provides for a “no-strike” period of one year. At this writing the local Project announces a system of forced labor for the seamen. Twelve hours are broken into three watches and the seamen residing at the “different- labelled” projects are required to work each watch of four hours. | The local Waterfront Unem- ployed Council called a special meeting to rally the seamen against this plan and we await with some expectation the results of the reso- lutions made at the meeting. The membership decided at that meet- ing to ignore the forced labor plan and go about their daily business as though the notice never ap-| peared, WITH OUR YOUNG READERS By The Daily Worker, 50 East 13th St., New York City. $57.50 Pact A.F.L. Chiefs ‘Hit by Seamen Fight Against Workers’ Bill By a Worker Correspondent GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.—Unem- ployment and social insurance as the rich men see it, such as the bills written up by Senator Wagner and Wm. Green, or the way the workers want it as presented by the Workers Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill H. R, 7598 is a burn- ing question among the top leader- ship of the A, F. of L. in Grand Rapids. When the writer's union, the American Federation of Teachers, Local 265, indorsed H. R. 7598 early in the year, the local priests of the Temple—the Labor Temple—imme- liately went into their dance and dragged out the Wagner Bill and indorsed that misleading orgasm. Since then, they have consistently fought the indorsement of H. R. 7598 as it is being taken up by the various locals. The resolution forms presented to the union for indorsing H. R. 7598 automatically bring it before the Central Trades and Labor Council, but those gentry have to date always been successful in having them “received and filed.” | This will soon change, however. The A. F. of L. Trade Union Com- mittee for Unemployment Insurance | and Relief formed the nucleus around which the local Sponsoring and Arrangements Committee was | built. A hall was rented in the Temple for the purpose of holding a conference to elect and prepare a| delegation of Grand Rapids work- ers for the National Congress for Unemployment and Social Insur-} ance. This meeting was called for 7:30, Dec. 19, and at that hour and date, we were informed by the cus- todian of the Temple that we could not hold the conference in that building. Slick! What? This ruse was only partly success- ful, however, for only two blocks away, the Auto Workers Union was holding a meeting, and'they rushed through their work and invited us to make ourselves at home in their hall. The conference was much better than we had any right to expect under the circunstances, al- though many A. F. of L. delegates became disgusted over the first episode and went home; but an en- thusiastic meeting was held. Mary Morrow, Children’s editor, WASHINGTON—JAN, 5 AND 6 | While their fathers and mothers have been gathering together in one big fight for the Workers’ Unem- ployment Insurance Bill, the chil- dren have not been caught napping. | It’s their job as well as their pa-| rents’, because this is something | that means just as much to them. It means enough food on the table, | @ warm house on cold days, and), clothes and shoes to keep out Win- ter winds and rain. | And this is what is happening. | All over the country, hearings and| meetings are being held about con-| ditions of child suffering. At these| hearings delegates will be elected to| besides puzzles, wouldn't it? of go to their Congressmen demanding | course, this would be open to all. that they support the Workers’ Bill., Anybody can send in a question, At the National Congress for Un-| and anyone can try to answer it. employment Insurance in Washing-| There must’ be some questions that ton on January 5 there will be} bother you, some things you don't delegations of children from Phila-| know well Now, who's going to! delphia, Baltimore, and Washing-| send in the first question? | ton. Then a group of these chil- dren will go to Miss Perkins and Mrs. Roosevelt to present the chil-| The January issue of the NEW} dren's demands. Delegates will be PIONEER is out today. You'd bet- sent to the Board of Education with| ter take some good advice and get| demands for clothes and food for your copy early, because I’m sure the ones who need these things. | this issue is going to go like hot| For more schools to do away with| cakes. The cover is just about the! overcrowdedness, They will present | best the NEW PIONEER has ever| a statement supporting the dele-| had, and that’s saying a lot. Pio- gates to the Washington Congress.| neers won't have any trouble Selling Beside this, every Pioneer Troop| this magazine at Lenin Memorial in the country will send a telegram | meetings, because no one could! or a Special Delivery letter to both refuse to buy it after seeing what's| Miss Perkins and Mrs, Roosevelt) on the cover. demanding that they accept the| The funny strip on the back is program of the chidren’s delegation. | unusually good this time. There We've got to get together and| are two exciting stories, one called fight for these things. The gov-| “Waterfront” and the other, “A ernment is trying to put over a| Night in Asturias,” is about the fake insurance bill which does not) revolution in Spain and how some help the unemployed at all, but in-| stead puts more money into the pockets of the rich owners. We must stop this and force the gov-| ernment to adopt the only Bill that| is good for the workers—The Workers’ Bill. | A GOOD SUGGESTION | Mae Schneider, Puzzle Club mem-| ber of New York, has a good sug-| gestion, She thinks it would be} nice if we had a regular Question Box, and if the Puzzle Club mem- bers would try to answer the ques-| tions sent in, That would give | members something to puzze over OUT TODAY! | | day long. And not only are we ask- boys and girls helped the revolu-{ tionists. There is also the second | and last instalment of the story of | Dimitrov, the brave fighter who} defied Hiter’s judges. Besides this, | | there are the usual interesting fea- | tures--stamps, puzzles, letters, jokes, science, If you are not a subscriber you may get a copy by sending ca nickel to Box 28, Station D, New! York City. WHERE'S THE MONEY? | The Pioneers all over the coun- try, from Maine to Florida and from Los Angeles to New York seem to be all pepped up these days. What about? The NEW PIONEER Drive for $2,000, of course! Judging from the letters that have been pouring into ‘the office of the NEW PIO- NEER, plenty of money has been raised and still is being raised. BUT —WHERE Is IT? That's what we ask ourselves all ing ourselves, but the people we owe the money to are asking us. We owe most of the money to the printer who prints our magazne every month. “Hey, what about the money you owe us?” he asked us yesterday. “Oh, you'll get it soon,” we answered. “The Pioneers are rais- ing lots of money in the Drive.” “Well, why not give us some of that money?” he asked. “Well, it’s this way. They haven't sent. it in yet.” “Huh!” said the printer, “I don’t believe they've raised all that money. Seeing is believing.” “If the Pioneers say they've raised it, they have,” we said. “We'll ACROSS Leader of the October revolution. 6—A place where a fox lives. 8—A pronoun. 10—Railroad (Abbreviation). 11—An intoxicating liquor. 12—A boy's name. 13—A pronoun, 15—Opposite of “off.” 16—Supposed climate of hell. 18—Loyal comrade and leader of the Soviet Union recently assassinated. DOWN 1—Abbreviation of boy's name. 3—Something used for catching fish. 4—A preposition. 5—Opposite of “wrong,” 7—Incorrect. 9—Man's neckwear. 10—An expensive make of car. 14—A word often used with the word “neither.” z 16—A short familiar greeting, 17—Towards. This puzzle is by Ruth Sandbank, age 12, of Aurora, Mich. Seeing’s believing,” said the printer again, Well, how about showing him? Send in the money! Los Angeles has sent in almost $50, but where are the other districts? If you've turned the money over to your lead- ers, get after them, and tell them give you some next week for sure.” Ay NICK "ROUND |[OK! WE GorTA Go Te THE ~ COME TOTH 6G | Adventures of Margie, Tim and Jerry—Who | Are the Young Pioneers? S'Lowe! GROCERY STORE For. 0uR MOM— we need the money! Send it in! WORKERS’ HEALTH Conducted by the t Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board (The Doctors or the Medical Advisory Board do not Advertise) “Pfunder’s” Plunders Pockets of Workers G. J, Kenosha, Wise.: * “Pfunder’s Stomach Tablets,” for ulcer of the stomach, proves to ; be a mixture of ordinary alkaline Powders: Bismuth Subnitrate, Mag- jnesium Oxide & Sodium Bicarbo- nate. Mr. Pfunder when asked for information concerning his prepara- | | tion, generously offered to give any information “except the formula,” which is “secret.” The analyses by | the Bureau of Investigation of the American Medical Association re- vealed the golden secret, Furthermore, Pfunders uses the whicn occasionally causes methe- moglobinemia, a serious blood dis- order, instead of the harmless Bis- muth subcarbonate, which is now generally prescribed by physicians. This serves to emphasize again what we have often stated in this column, i, e., that quack patent medicines are often potentially harmful, as in this case; that, when not harmful, they cost much more} than if bought under their proper | chemical names; and finally, that.in | most cases they are just as worth- less as sugar water, having no value |at all for the illness. | It should be a matter of pride among workers that, just as they j will not fall for the subtle pre- | fascist demagogy of bourgeois poli- | ticlans, and just as they will not, fall for the mystic opium of priests, ministers and rabbis, they will also! | not swallow the unscientific patent- | | medicines of the Lydia Pinkhams, | Father Johns, etc., etc. All these groups squeeze money from the! worker on false pretenses of one| kind or another. They are all) | worthless. They all appeal to ig- | norance and are based on magic, | mysticism and falsehood. | Asthma R. W., Allentown, Pa.:—Asthma is} | | symptoms, But there are many | | causes for asthma. Saying that you} have asthma does not mean that} you know the cause of the attacks. | The most common variety of asthma | is. called bronchial asthma, You apparently have bronchial asthma; | but several things have to be done| to make certain of it: | 1—An X-ray of the chest, | 2—Careful examination of the! nose and throat. | 3—Skin tests. These tests are done by a special- ist in asthma and hay fever, who stances which may be responsible) for your attacks. The substance | which causes a reaction in the skin may be the cause of your attacks | Some of the substances responsible IN THE HO By ANN | @LAVA DUNN contributes the fol- | lowing in her weekly series on the care of children:— | The “ideal schedule” for a young child, usually given in all books on child training, is seldom possible in a working class family where the mother does her own work. \ But this schedule can usually ne changed so as to fit the rest of the family and yet not neglect the most important needs of a growing child. The essential needs are: regular mealtimes, early bed hour, daytime nap (or rest if the child cannot sleep), regular visits to the toilet and outdoor play. The most practical hours for these activities usually are: 6:30*-7:30 A. M—getting up, dressing and washing. 7:00-8:00 A. M.—Breakfast and toilet for bowel movement. 9:00-12:00 A, M.—As much out- door play as possible to arrange. 12:00-1:00 P. M.—Dinner (heavy meal of the day). 1:00-3:00 P, M—Nap or rest. 3:00 P. M.—Milk or fruit if the child needs it. 3:00-5:00 P. M.—Outdoors as much as possible. 5:00-6:00 P. M.—Supper meal), 6:00-8:00 P. M.—Bath, brushing teeth, bed. Little children should sleep eleven to thirteen hours every night and take a nap or rest from one to two hours. If a regular hour for bed is fol- lowed, the child begins to feel sleepy at that time and makes little fuss about going to bed, especially if there is no excitement and rough play before bed time. Regular meal hours are equally important. The body itself gets used to the regular hours (if there is no nibbling between meals) and a healthy child is hungry and ready for his food. 5 So it is with the regular visits to the toilet. His bowels will gradu- ally begin to respond to the regu- larity and form a healthy habit that helps through life. Like all training, it needs lots of patience and persistence, but the results are worth it, as every mother who has tried it, knows. Limitation of space makes it im- possible to elaborate cn the above schedules. In future articles we hope to give helnfr! ints on meals, sleep and other points. The earlier hour is considered the best (ight ~ forthe ehild - i |old fashioned Bismuth subnitrate | for asthma are feathers, fur, dog hair, house dust and many others, If feathers are responsible, they will | have to be removed from your house and a substitute-like “kapok” used, However, specific details in the treatment of bronchial asthma can only be given after a careful hise tory of your symptoms is taken and after the three items noted} | above are carried out. | The best place to have all this |done is at a clinic in a hospital treated. You will have to make many visits so that you should chose | | the nearest available hospital clinic, Unless your doctor has done all that has been suggested, he is treat- ing you blindly. Going away to the ocean will not cure you if you are | a mattress on which you sleep. Th, diet you are on now is of no valu |in the treatment of bronchial asth- |ma. At your age, very rarely is | particular food responsible for ate | tacks. Bad teeth do not cause asthma, but they should be examined by = dentist to prevent them from cause ing other trouble. Wee wen: T. B. of the Hip . B.i—From the description in your letter, your coxdition was most likely one of tuberculosis of the right hip joint. This is a chronie, long-standing condition, which in the majority of cases completely fuses or stiffens the joint. The shortening of the limb, which nearly always occurs, is due to the disease eating away or destroying part of the hip bone, thus shortening that limb. The cause of this conditioh is the tubercle bacillus (the germ whicla produces tuberculosis), which is th same germ so destructive in th lungs. velops it and another does not. For the same reason that one child de- velops infantile paralysis. or any | a word used to describe certain other disease. while another does | Susceptibility to the disease © not. (whether or not one easily gets sick) is generally due to a lowered resis- | | tance or vitality in that particular child or adult. In children the tu- bercle germ may come from milk, varticwarly milk from unhealthy or tubercular cows. You ask whether if is permissible for you to have a child. In view of the fact that vou have had no symptoms of pain in the hip joint, and that you have been enjoying perfect health for many years, the answer is yes. However, if the hip have trouble in the delivery of the child. I would suggest, therefore, that you be thoroughly examined by an orthopedic physician. regarding your hip condition. ME j Routine and Habits Can You Make ’Em Yourself? Pattern 2099 is available in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 36 takes 3% yards 39-inch fabric, Tllustrated step-by-step sewing ine structions included. Send SIXTEEN CENTS (16c) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this Anne Adams pattern, Write Plainly name, address and_ style number, BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. Address order to Daily Worker, 243 West 17th Street, New York City. Send for your copy of the ANNE ADAMS WINTER FASHION BOOK! PRICE OF BOOK SIXTEEN CENTS BUT WHEN ORDERED WITH AN ANNE ADAMS PAT- TERN IT IS ONLY TEN CENTS. TWENTY-SIX CENTS FOR BOTH, where such cases like yours are| |) | sensitiye to feathers or the dust ii} | | i } wok Since Sami aes ie * 4 i y ie a Ft ‘| $e: You ask why one child de~ | 1 5 4 i u injects into your skin certain sub-/ is fixed in a bad position, you may | i i