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OW AA Feed. * Page 4 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1 Farmers in Drought Areas Face Winter Without Feed Slow St One to Four Dallars| Allowed a Month Per Head By a Farmer Correspondent ARCADIA today, ments of the summi how much longer the farmers are going to te such conditions able part of Nebraska three weeks, and have carefull served the conditions of the mass of the people is no shipped wagon that wagon of hay or fod are getting something ginning The A.A.A. belly ica robbers are just the F.ER.A. belly wed from month per head for ir stock. This means me ‘pour corn per t prices is of $4 feed for less then of prese seven hout the corn day It means per day per horse without a tion. This is short for hogs on the average, four pounds of corn per day, for cows it hort 28 pounds of hey where erain ration is fed € hort 20 pou of hay where a grain ration fed. The grain ration for cows would be about six to eight pounds if cows were expected to give any flow of milk at all. Horses would require at least 15 pounds of grain per day {if expected shape for work next summer. This means t ach robbers are that their hors he A.A.A. stom- ing the farmers should be able to live on one-fourth of their regular Tations required. Bossie should 1 on almost one-fourth of her regu- lar requirements, and the pork must laugh and grow fat on less than one-fourth of its regular re- quirement d one of these da the Press will be telling the starv- ing millions that the A.A.A. admin- istrators did everything in their power to help the poor ignorant farmers save their stock but that the fool farmers all turned “red”! and instead of teaching their ani- mals that they should get fat on such rations, they deliberately re- fused to use a psychology and so most of the animlas died, or else it Was due to the drought not being severe enough. One farmer told me yesterday that he had been to see the relief | administrator out getting more feed for his animals and was told that he could use his corn and hog check to buy feed. When he told the administrator that he had a family of seven and that they had waited until now for shoes and un- @erwear and other necessary clothes, fs they had wore all the shoes and underwear o7 the administrator Teplied, “Well, if that is the way you are going to manage, your stock Will have to s But—there is going to be thou- Sands of babies suffering, to say Nothing of the millions of adults, all because grafters and politicians are not using any respect for the furtherance of this nation. History tells us that Nero fiddled while Rome burned. Hearst’s papers are yelling about the “reds” and Communi: taking this country while the grafters and politicians are allowing this nation to suffer the most severe losses of one of its most basic industries ever recorded in history Bushe! of Pctsinos Nets Eighteen Cents By a Farmer Correspondent GRAND JUNCTION, Mich I am living out here in the country Where we get nothing but capital- ist news. We are Communists at heart, but find it very hard to talk in a per- Suasive manner when we are so far behind the times. I believe there is a good chance to do some work here. The farm- ers and small town people, about one fifth of them, are living on charity which is pretty hard to get. Potatoes sold at an auction for| eighteen cents a bushel. After Standing the expenses of shipping, a farmer realized fifteen cents a bushel on apples. I would like to hear from farm- | ers in other parts of the country telling of conditions. The Social- ists tried but failed here. So did | the Farmers’ Union. HAIL THE DA America! Name ... {All greetings, which must be Ith Anniversary and Lenin Memorial Edition SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1935 I send revolutionary greetings to the Daily Worker, the organizer of the American working class, the leader in the fight for a Soviet order, will be published in the Datly Worker.) Allotmen arvation Bank Loans Come First Says Federal Agency By a Farmer Correspondent LOUP CITY, Nebr.—We are the biggest snow storm e feed I have on hand r-year-old straw stack I have applied for a feed loan on Aug. 6 and have not received a feed loan as yet A young man told me the other day that he was refused a feed loan because he did not have enough debts. He would have to take a bigger loan from the gov- ernment and pay off the local bank It shows Wall Street wants her money first and Uncle Sam will have to wait. It shows that the capitalist structure is breaking down fast and the workers and farmers are suffering. Even | and cattle are suffering under this undesirable system. norses ts Mean for Cattle Promised Feed Loans Obtained Through ‘Pull’ Only By a Farmer Correspondent STROOL, S. D.—Winter is sneak- ing in slowly in the stock country, but there is very little snow yet, and none at all in some places. There is very little grass on the the memory of the old timers. The areas that have any grass are very much overstocked. The bare areas {| are going to try to get through the winter on Russian thistle hay, dry Russian thistle pasture and a little grain or cotton seed cake. When the weather is cold this is a poor diet Tt is like feeding a man on spinach and epsom salis Old stockmen used to figure on a Relief Head Has NoRemedy Pr e ARE For Starvation By a Worker Correspondent TACOMA, Wash.—A feature of a recent demonstration of Tacoma’s unemployed, under leadership of the Unemployed Councils, was the the Internationale by about two hundred men and wo- men in the main hall inside the Pierce County Relief Headquarters. They sang it again a bit more lustily after hearing District Re- singing of lief Director A. B, Comfort admit | that he knows the present budget means slow starvation, and that he knows no remedy for starvation under capitalism. But when asked to study Communism’s remedy, he beat a hasty retreat, Small farmers joined the city’s unemployed in this demonstration, presenting their own demands; and it was evident that nothing can "| prevent them from organizing ef- fectively to gain something’ else than capitalist starvation for their families, Letters from Our Readers Because of the volume of letters re- | ceived by the Department, we can print only those that are of general interest to However, all let- by the Daily Worker rea ters received are editors. Suggestion: welcome and whenever possible are used for the improvement of the Daily Worker. A UNITED FRONT AGAINST WAR ND FASCISM EFFECTED Bronx, N. Y. Dear Comrade Editor: Four Socialist and two Communist women workers, ex-members of an antiquated organization, the Con- sumers League, have met on Decem- ber 12, 1934, to decide what to do with $57. which was left in the treasury when the organization liquidated. It occurred to Anna Tuchman, one of the old members, to propose a united front against war and fas- cism. This proposal was accepted unanimously and it was ordered to have the $57 sent to the American League Against War and Fascism immediately. The Fascists won't like this at all! L. N. OUR QUESTION AND ANSWER | COLUMN HELPS NEW READER New York, N. Y. Dear Comrade Editor: I hop2 you have an idea of how great a help the Daily Worker is to us who are first being awakened +o Communism. It is the greatest organ to show new believers the truth of facts that the readers of the capitalist press are blind to. Your Question and Answer Col- umn is excellent. I have heen send- ing excerpts in fact to a friend who thinks that the Socialist Party is the one way out. A. 8. I. W. 0. members should get their branches to send greetings to the Daily Worker on its Elev- enth Anniversary! A greeting from every branch should be the sogan! ILY WORKER! ». Street. ..... .. State. ..... accompanied by cash or money | ton of good hay to the head with plenty of grazing on the side and even then there was stock loss. I hate to think what will happen | | to the stock by May 1, especially since they look like they’re at the |end of the trail right no Cotton cake is fifty dollars a ton and roughage is from fourteen dol- lars for ripgut straw to thirty-one dollars for alfalfa. A cow will lick up a ton alfalfa in six weeks when there is nothing to splice out with. The stockman who has been able to keep some old hay over and so has a good supply on hand with | some pasture with plenty ald | grass is sitting pretty fair, but the rest, and this means 95 per cent of them, are a thousand miles from home with a played out horse. The “free money” that was talked | about this summer, that everyone | was supposed to get (feed loan) don’t seem to be coming any more except in cases of strong politics! or bank influence. Sp lit Shift Robs CCC Boys Of Hot Meal | By a Worker Correspondent PORT ANGELES, Wash—The worst grievance we have in Camp) Twin of the C.C.C. right now is the fact that we are allowed only one recreation truck to go to town for the week end. This truck will only of our own ride out also. | Somebody posted a copy of the! |Call to Action (local bulletin of the |here. If the workers’ organizations | @™inistration,” the pamphlet said, | ;Communist Party) with the article | about ancient eggs and other bum grub on the bulletin board. This made the mess sergeant, Vern Foot,| plenty mad. | ‘The men on rail work are still! without proper water repellent work | clothes. They issued a few oil- skin slicker suits, but these are too stiff to work in and soon develop | leaks at the knees and elbows. The men on regular day work | have to ride four or five miles to | work in an open truck over rough roads, and then walk one to two miles to the job. They leave camp at 7 a. m., and don’t get back till 4 or 5 at night. There is a gravel job here now CODE DELAY By an Agricultural Worker | Correspondent SAN ANTONIO, Tex—The misery |and starvation existing among 8,000 or more nut pickers in this city has again been sidetracked with the further postponement by the N.R.A. of the hearing scheduled for the| ship of the growing group, and] ojeys of their own. prairie, less than there ever was in | of | | FEEDING THE BLUE BUZZARD | {2 p.m. and get your money. Bow Delays | Four-Dollar | Weekly Pay By a Worker Correspondent CHICAGO, Il.—The Excellent | Nut Factory, 1051 West Grand | Avenue, is employing about 300 Ne- gro and white girls, working six days a week, picking nuts at seven cents a pound. The average girl makes only four or five dollars a week. Seven cents, the price they are paid per pound, is just fare one way to work. Com-| pare this with the price you have to pay for a pound of shelled nuts | at your confectionery store. | The boss got away with paying |the girls last week and this week. | | Some of the girls had so much con- | | fidence in him that they did not | | bring but one way carfare. He | Proved true to form and had a no- tice stuck up in the shop, reading | “Come back Wednesday, Dec. 26, at You will be off until after New Year.” My girl friend and some of the other girls cussed themselves blue in the face when thew saw that. I} told her she was wasting her breath. The only way to safeguard your in- terests on the job is by setting up a good shop committee under the guidance of the Food Workers’ In- dustrial Union. If you would have done it when the nut season began then you would have been able at | least to have something to eat to- morrow, Christmas, instead of biting your finger nails. She tells me that the girls chipped in $14 a couple of weeks ago and bought a radio for the factory. | Some of the girls that have chipped | in for it have since been fired.. The shop can close next week or go out The drought takes a hand in helping Roosevelt carry through his | Agricultural Adjustment Program, The upper photograph shows two heads of cattle, dead as a resuit of the feed shortage caused by the | drought, The lower photograph shows cattle being herded into a Kansas. City stockyard to be slaughtered as tailing cattle. New Deal advocates part of Roosevelt's program of cur- | will have us believe that the upper | Photograph represents a calamity, the lower a blessing although the re- | sults are the same in both instances, i working a number of men on two shifts. One shift is from 4 p, m. to 10 pm. and there is a Hoot Owl shift from 10 p.m. to 4 a. m. | The men on the Hoot Owl shift have to get up with the regular men at 6:30 a. m., make their beds and sweep for inspection. However, the four to ten shift is really the | worst, These men have to eat a cold| lunch instead of the regular supper. As supper is the only decent meal | we have here, these men protested. The Forest Service man, Mr. Erb,! who is in charge of the work, told haul twenty-four men. If we rustle | these men that if they didn’t like! scandalous conditions of relief for | our own ride in, we have to rustle it they could go down and get their; the unemployed. D.D. (dishonorable discharge.) I think that some resolutions from the outside would do a lot of good} from all over the country would send protest resolutions it will show the young workers here that they have some backing and will encour- age them to take militant action themselves. Address protests to Captain Mal- colm MacDonald, Camp Twin, Port | Angeles, Wash. NOTE We publish every Thursday let- ters from farmers, share croppers agricultural and We urge farm- and cannery, lumber workers. ers and workers in these indus- tries to write us of their condi- uons and efforts to organize. | Please get these letters to us by | Monday of each week. IS AIMED ‘ |suming a dictatorship over these workers. | A-group of about 14 members was | contacted by the two fired workers, and these were sent out to spread | propaganda about plant. conditions. Rodriguez continued in his dictator- jindictments grew out of protests | AT NU Civil Liberties Union | In Anti-Sedition Fight CHICAGO, Jan. 2.—Support of the movement, initiated by the In. ternational Labor Defense, for the repeal of the Illinois Sedition Act and of the defense of the 15 Hills- boro defendants was announced by the American Civil Liberties Union in a pamphlet sent out to today to one thousand of its members in Illinois and neighboring states. | The pamphlet “ ‘Sedition’ in Illi- | nois,” points out that the Hillsboro | late in May of this year against | The defendants | | will be tried at Hillsboro in the cir- | cuit court on Jan. 7, | “So corrupt was the local relief | “that names were copied from tomb-stones and put on the relief lists so that officials could pocket |the money . . . the Unemployed | |Councils exposed this corruption; | they demanded adequate relief; | they agitated for federal unemploy- | ment insurance. Picketing of relief | | stations was started and public | demonstrations were organized.” Ordinances were then passed un- |der pressure of business interests | in Hillsboro and Nakomis against | public meetings and parades, the} | Union said. Your greeting to the Daily sary should be in before Jan. 12! Worker on its Eleventh Anniver- Unions — the Daily Worker is of business and the boss whom you “cussed out” will own the radio, and he did not put in a nickel for it. The boss has his Christmas every day, that is why he is not con- cerned about the workers. Charity Heads Give Destitute. Run-Around By a Worker Correspondent PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—I am writ- ing you this letter so as to inform your readers what fakers and liars | and hypocrites the wealthy of our country are before Christmas. In a tenement located at 419 Spruce Street there are several des- titute families with small children who are receiving welfare orders of | $4.60 for three people. They pay $4 rent and have sixty cents left | for heat, food and clothes. This | applies particularly to two families. The women in these families are | both about to become mothers. These families applied at several charity organizations for a Christ- | mas basket, but on Christmas Eve I saw that they would have no food | for the great Christmas that they are told about. I called up the City Mission, located at 225 South Third Street, and received the answer that the welfare is taking care of these fam- ilies, Some time before Christmas, one | woman wrote a letter to Mrs. Biddle, living at 1829 Delancey Street, hav- ing read in the papers about all the baskets and charity this woman was | giving out. In reply she received | a card which said the following: | “I feel so sorry for you all—I | think the Emergency Aid will help | you, 20th Street and Sansom, Phila- | | delphia—I have great sympathy. | “A. BIDDLE.” see When she called the organization mentioned on the card she was in- | formed that they had nothing for your greatest ally! Greet It on its Eleventh Anniversary! T PICKERS’ CONDITIONS her or her children and hung up | the ’phone with a bang. jand 3 cents for shellers, and 35 cents for crackers. | New Union Organized Nine workers of this organization, | dissatisfied with the bureaucracy of | Rodriguez, who comprised the only | officer, withdrew and formed a nu- Out of this code recently inaugurated for this) husied himself about getting as | nucleus grew “El Nogal,” the present industry. After the second post-) many names as possible. Although | yank and file organization of nearly , demonstration, the workers having | assembled en masse at each hearing through a call made by “El Nogal” to pack the courtroom. The organi- zation is building up a united front, not only locally, but over the coun- try. The A. F. of L. refused to sup- | port the code, and would not permit several sympathetic locals to sup- | port it. About 140 plants here, filthy | ponement of the hearing on Decem- he claims that his union has 12,000 | 9999 members, which is fighting for | 89d dark, are still packed with men, | |ber 10th, a committee of ten mem-| members, these names represent no the enforcement of the code by | Women and children who are work- | their day many tons of coal “picked” bers elected by “El Nogal,” militant union of the pecan shellers, was ;turned away with instructions to | re-appear with their demand for a hearing on December 17th. The action of the N.R.A. in set- ting atide the hearing is no more than an attempt to discourage the workers and to hold up the enforce- ment of the code until the shelling | season is over in May or June. The ecde would allow the pecan sheliers $6 per week for 40 hours of work \instead of the present wage of 15 cents a day, Bosses Block Code | When the code went into effect on October 29, the Southern Pecan Shelling Association and thirty-four | reformist union (Pecan Shellers \cil in this city. When two pecan |shellers, last year, told a plant boss that they did not wish to be robbed that he had been connected with what is supposed to have been an Unemployed Council, felt that he would help them, So they contacted him. Rodriguez immediately took advantage of i ge by as- fi other complainants, including the, more than 5,000 actual nut-pickers. | Rodriguez Makes Promises He promised these workers, at the that he would secure for wage of $7 per week; $1.50 per day, with eight hours, for cleaners, and a minimum wage of $1 per hundred pounds for crackers. Within two or three weeks, he declared, he would | mands. The organization then took | have a conference with the plant | owners. But this was never done. No committees were elected, and the workers were always put off with promises. They continued to | work for 4 cents and 7 cents a pound, the same wage which they had been getting before Rodriguez appeared. | Rodriguez had a committee of 25 eted the funds. He further refused | their organization, Rodriguez pock- i have any minutes of meetings | to return them, stating that Rodri- |guez had declared the distribution _ of literature to be against the prin- (ciples of the Pecan Shellers Union. Company officials, trying to subdue building up a local and national | united front. | “El Nogal,” from the first, concen- | trated on the basic struggle of the In May, shortly after | organization, its elected representa- | tives went to the plant owners and | demanded better conditions. The | companies refused to meet these de- up the issue with the N. R. A., with the result that on May 12 there was | |a hearing to investigate the com- | | plaints. No agreement was reached. B. Oberman, vice-president of the American Shelling Cmpany, asserted | that “five cents a day is plenty for | a Mexican to live on.” The N. R. A. | merely promised that Washington | | would do its best in the matter of Union) led by Magdaleno Rodri-| men and 25 women to collect money | bettering the wretched conditions guez, a Mexican Nationalist, was! from these wretched workers. And, | Of the nut pickers. | first associated in 1931 with the! according to A. F. of L. officials, who | | Lovestoneite-led Unemployed Coun-| wished to see the money come into| N. R, A. officials here and at | N. R. A. Fears Militancy | Wyeshineiane realizing that the nut | pickers were getting too militant to | stand a low wage scale much longer, through the false weighing of their | kept, and would not permit working | determined to hold them down by |nuts, they were immediately fired. |class literature to be introduced. | the formulation of a code, which is These workers, not realizing the, Workers who had bought pamphlets | the one being fought so bitterly by | role of Rodriguez, and considering and papers from agents were forced | Rodriguez and the company officials. The N. R. A, is merely making a pretense of attempting to alleviate conditions; this is proven by the continuous postponement of the hearings. In addition, there is fear, , ing far into the night and again | | before dawn in order to earn as | much as $2 per week on which) to support large families. Mean-} | while, Rodriguez boasted, in an ad- | ‘dress which was broadcast over the radio, that the company officials | | would donate him an automobile | amounting to the value of a thou- sand dollars so that he could con- tinue his good work. But there is a fierce militancy | and a growing clarity among the nut pickers. They are rallying to the call of “El Nogal” to enforce | the code. | eat, ees | Editor’s Note.—This worker writes | in the letter that “El Nogal” is) building a national and local united | front. It seems to us that any activ- | ity for the building of the united | front should be first directed toward | building trade union unity among the nut pickers themselves. This means the fight for the united | front between “El Nogal” and the) Pecan Shellers Union. From the letter it does not seem as if this is placed in the forefront of our policy there. The Pecan Shellers Union, from the viewpoint of membership alone, is as large as “El Nogel.” The duty of all militant trade unionists there is to weld together the power of both thése WORKERS’ HEALTH | devoted to this | had to be omitted. |“Then if I get arrested,” she re- | more. Conducted by the Daily Worker Medical Advisory Board (The Doctors on the Me 1 Advisory Board do not Advertise) Why Articles on Sex? M. ©, Ohio—You say that you have noticed the many articles on sex in our column, that we have been accused of being un-Marxist, and you advise us to read Clara Zetkin’s Reminiscenses of Lenin (on Women, Marriage and Sex). W would be poor Communists in- deed if we wrote on sex without be- ing familiar with Lenin's important writing on this subject. In the pamphlet you mention Lenin se- verely criticizes the German women and youth, organizations for mak- | ing “questions of sex and marriage | their chief subject of political in- struction and education.” If our column had the same effect on our | women and youth organizations no censure would be great enough for us, As the editor stated when our| column was organized, we “exist solely for the purpose of furthering the solution of workers’ health | problems through our paper.” The material that appears in the column is not chosen in an arbitrary way, but is determined by the subjects | that the workers are interested in, and ask us about. Since many of our letters ask questions about sex, we write about it. Sexual questions | have been of a greater proportion in the letters we receive and prob- ably more space should have been} subject, but the hypocritical bourgeois system of} morality makes a frank discussion | of some of these questions a crim- inal offense and, therefore, they However, although our job is primarily to answer questions about health, we believe that the exami- nation of practically any important problem of modern life leads to the Communist way out as the only solution. This is particularly true of the problems of sex. It is a criminal indictment of our present system that it distorts the lives of sinful and ugly. This is no accie | dental occurrence. It is due to the | influence of the Church which dominates our morality. It does this |so that we will be filled with feele ings of guilt and shame, and theree |fore be timid slaves, not daring to |rise up against their system of | slavery, They want sexual experie ence to give us a sense of sin so that | we will feel the need to come to them for forgiveness. Thus they strengthen their hold on us, and the hold of their owners, the bosses. As Lenin said at the third Com- somol Congress in 1920: “We deny the morals preached by the boure geoisie, they who deduce their morality from God. We affirm they are put forward to corrupt the minds of the workers and peasants in the interests of the landlords and capitalis We do not claim that this ape proach to the problem of capitalism is the most important one. The greatest problem of today is the fight against hunger, war and fas- cism, and for the overthrow nf | the capitalist system which creates them. The rest of the Daily Worker treats of this more fully than we can, . * * Psoriasis M. E., Brooklyn, N. ¥.—Psoriasis has been discussed in our column on several occasions, There is no known cure for this disease. The eruption can be cleared in most cases, but it usually returns after several weeks, months or years and must again be treated. It is not contagious and does not affect the general health. It sometimes seems to run in families. There are many treatments for this condition and often more than one method must be tried. Have an ointment made up of 3 per cent of salicylic acid and 10 per cent of ammoniated mercury in petrolatum and rub it into all. the affected parts at night and wash it off with soap and water in the morning. Do not use this ointment on your face workers and makes sex something IN THE By ANN or your genitals. HOME BARTON How Stella Got Coal PROMISED once to tell the story about how my friend Stella got coal. Here it is. ee nas J TELLA fell limply into a chair. Little Stella, sweeping the floor in stockinged feet, stopped to look at her anxiously. Big Stella un- buttoned the thin coat, and took off the hat someone had given her. In the next room Alec and Franky were playing. They too were in stockinged feet, because there were no shoes. Irene, swing- ing her school books, came into the room. “It’s cold in here, Mom,” she said. Stella was dead tired. She was tired all over. Dully, she watched | the snow sift into the corner of the room, from the crack in the thin wall, There were only three bucketfuls of coal left. Then what would happen to them? At the first touch of the cold weather, that in the anthracite coal regions becomes very bitter, Stella had gone to the relief office. She, like the others, had waited her turn in the outer room, then in the inner room, and finally was | able to speak to the young man at the desk, She explained that she had a house full of kids, and no coal for the winter. She sald she was afraid of what might happen to them if there was no coal. “We'll investigate,” she had been told. And she went away. ae ee ‘WO weeks, three weeks passed by. No one came to the little house to investigate. Stella went to the relief again. But still there was no investigator. It was November and then December. Stella once dressed herself like a man—and went to the outskirts of the coal yards, and ers and their wives from the ground. with her fingers to fill the coal bucket. All through the anthracite coal section, the miners and their wives, and those who had mined in coal, from that dropped by the coal cars. The company used special po- lice to chase these unemployed min- ers and their wives from the ground. Many of them were arrested. Once the man at the relief had said to Stella: “You're strong and husky. Why don’t you go out and pick coal?” And Stella felt bitterly angry. torted, “will you look after my children?” Neighbors loaned her coal from their little store. And now there was no more to be had. And the relief had stalled her once eke ae) 'TELLA sat there limply. Then suddenly she had a flashing thought. Stella had been a mem- ber of the Unemployed Council. She herself had gone in delega- tions to the relief to get food, clothing, for other unemployed. But she herself, had never raised her own problem. Why not? How foolish of her? She needed the help of the Unemployed Council now, if anyone did. She would go to the Unemployed Council. Boer oe “fRENKA, mind the house,” she called sharply. She got up threw her coat on, put on her hat, and whirled out of the house. She trudged up the hill, slippery organizations around a single mili- the workers, cut wages to 2 cents/on the part of the officiais, of a! tant fighting program. with ice. The water slid into her came to the wooden door of the Unemployed Council, Flung it open. Inside were the organizer and a dozen or so members of the Council, “Barvage,” she said to the or- ganizer, “what do you say you and the Council members come to the relief with me, and try to get me some coal!: Three months I have been going to them fakers. My kids will get pneumonia, and there's no The men looked up at her from the leaflet they were composing. The organizer strode away from the table. “Go for coal, Stella? Why sure we'll go with you for coal. Why- in-the-hell didn’t you tell us be- fore?” He smiled. “How about it boys, do we g0?” (To be continued tomorrow) Can You Make ’Em Yourself? Pattern 2162 is available in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 36 takes 4% yards 39-inch fabric. Illustrated step-bye step sewing instructions included, Act 2162 Send SIXTEEN CENTS (16¢) which includes 1 cent to cover New York City Sales Tax, in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this Anne Adams pattern. Write name, address and style number, BE SURE TO STATE SIZE. Address orders to Daily Worker Pattern Department, 243 West 17th shoes. Rut she didn’t mind. She re tN Street, New York City, Po