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Page 6 HOM K SLAVA DUNN telis us today how some of the forms of croup activity im the Soviet Union can he adopted. 4 matter how radical the ideas of the parents, an individual ne inevitably encourages dualistic tendencies in a child @ group life can prepare and train children effectively for collee- tive 1 s begins. the im- f training, the So- viet Union has developed an educa- tional include children of pre from three to seven ‘en before children reach the pre-school age, working moth- ers have an opportunity to put them urseries or creches as they call them, which care for ba years. free the es from one month up to three These types of organizations the mothers to take part building of socialism side with men ‘In 1913 Czarist Russia had only fourteen nurseries for babies and about 200 kindergartens for chil- dren of pre-school age. Now under Soviet rule, millions of children are rganized groups. n by side in some sort of o1 “(RECHES are now 4 the factories, ind organized at etc. All the new dwellings must in The collective farms have mostly seasonal creches open about six months a year. There is of traveling nursery care of nursing babies, taking in special trucks to the fields wi groups of their mothers may be working. Trains, especially those going long distances, now also have chil- dren's quarters or at least accom- modations where the mothers can get the right kind of food for the children and when they can bathe them and wash their clothes. All railroad stations in Moscow have mothers’ and children’s rooms for that purpose. “The kindergartens (for children from three to seven) are also of types to suit the different needs. The most common types of kinder- gartens keep the children through the day, but there are also some 24-hour ones. The clubs and schools for adults have children’s evening rooms attached to them for the mother students’ children. Chil- drens’ playgrounds are organized in city parks and in places out of town where parents go for recrea- tion, Wherever there are mothers in a large enough group, there is some kind of organized care for the children. MWOW, what can we do here to free the mothers, and to give this group training to our children t we must work and fight for # change of our conditions. Second, wherever it is feasible, make de- mands for nursery schools and kin dergartens as part of the pu school system. Third, we must use our own initiative to organize our own groups+get interested mothers together in groups which can work out practical schemes. They should plan together how they can share their time in care for their group of children, thus getting more free- dom for themselves, and group training for the children. Anyone interested in this plan, please write me. Together we can find a prac- tieal way of doing it.” (Next Saturday SLAVA DUNN will write on the emotional prob- lems of children.) Can You Make ’Em Yourself? Pattern 2184 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46, 36 takes 3% yards 39 inch fabric and % yard contrasting. Tllustrated step-by-step sewing instructions in- cluded. 2184 Send FIFTEEN CENTS in coins * or stamps (coins preferred) for each Anne Adams pattern (New York | City residents should add one cent tax for each pattern order). Write “plainly, your name, address and vailable in sizes | Size ‘Contractor ystem Robs Hard Coal Miners of Pay By a Mine Worker Correspondent PITTSTON, Pa.—The conditions the hard ooal region, especially in Pittston, are pretty bad. in In Pittston people work with con- tractors in the mines. When pay day comes and you get your miser- able pay from the Pittston Coal Company, you have to give half of it to the contractor. At a little dis- tance from the office stands the contractor with his hand out- stretched, for the envelope, he takes what he wants and then he gives it back to you almost empty. If you don't give it to him, the next day he will say, "No more job.’ When I didn't want to give him Block Unity With Steel Workers By a Worker Correspondent MATHER, Pa.—At Mather on Feb. 4, the Joint Committee of the Rank and File was disappointefi. The Committee had sent its Executive Board to Hynes, the District Presi- dent of the U. M. W. of A. to ask for his approval of the rank and file. Hynes, at first agreed with the move that the rank and file made in establishing the movement against Lewis and the Coal Operators. Later, when Hynes saw that the rank and file was not playing around but meant action he dis- approved of the Joint Committee branding it as a radical movement After Hynes refused to meet the Executive Board, the rank and file threatened to clean out the district | officials. Then Hynes agreed after the threat that he approved of the rank and file and also promised to be at the Feb. 4, meeting but failed to appear because of “some business of importance” Kremerich. called Al Capone, one of the District No. 4 organizers stated to one of the members that a Convention will be called by Hynes, on Feb. 9. The miners know well that the last minute Conven- tions of Hynes, have proven in the past not of benefit to the rank and file. The Joint Committee at its last meeting elected J. Finan for Fayette County and E. Alby for the Greene County miners in representing them on the Seale Committee of District No. 4. | At the meeting of Feb. 4, the rank and file heard the report on the Steel conference by Finan, and unanimously accepted it. ‘The miners of district No. 4 are deter- mined to cement the unity with the | steel |slanders made against the rank jand file, and of the expulsion threats against them the miners have looked to such a move as the one made at the Feb. 4, Con- ference | Because of the growing mass movement of the rank and file |members of the U. M. W. A | struggling for better conditions and preparing for the coming events, the A. C. Frick controlled newspa- pers are carrying a series of articles of mines after mines opening up, |that a boom in the coal industry | has finally arrived ‘Threats to Block Relief Fight By a Worker Correspondent WASHINGTON, N. H.—tIn this workers. Regardless of the | more than half, he said, “No more job.” It is eighteen months since I am unemployed. I have five children including my wife and myself there are seven in the family. I live on the miserable relief. You have to wait from one to six months to get clott B es, three weeks ago we formed an unemployment council. Now the relief has changed a bit. You get things more quickly and you get more clothes. In this town there are thousands of people on relief. Before they did not believe what I said to them about the Unemployment Council Now, after suffering a they came to it themselves. Splicing Forced On Miners (By a Mine Worker Correspondent) GILLESPIE, Ti. — In_ the Superior Coal Company mines here. the men are being terrorized by the union officials as well four pany into a position whereby they | plan to force another slave con- | tract on April first. These mines are owned by the Northwestern Railroad, and recently drew from the Independent Coal Operators Association of Ill. has contracts with Progre: Miners of America. Rumor has been started that Peabody took over the mines and that another contract will not be signed with P. M. of A. but with the U. M. W. of A. | In the meantime, while this talk is going around, the bosses in the mines are speeding up everywhere. For example they used to have men to splice cables. Now they took them off and are trying to slide this job on the rest of the men, that is, for each man to splice his own cable. At the last meeting we passed a res- olution against this attack of the company, but as yet it wasn’t set- tled. The bosses are like driving maniacs, if you don’t load the re- quired number of cars, you are called on the carpet and no excuses are good enough. In the last couple of months the mines have been working steady, but the men feel it is because we are preparing for strike April Ist. to get the six dollar scale and the six hour day, Cork Magnate Calls for Fascist Organization By a Worker Correspondent | LANCASTER, Pa—In delivering the closing address to the conven- tion of the Armstrong Cork Com- pany'’s wholesalers, Mr. H. W. |Prentis, Jr., president of the com- pany, company union advocate and |member of the reactionary and fas- cist Committee for the Nation, called on all members to join or- ganizations to protect our “demo- cratic fundamentals of government which are being endangered by re- | cent developments.” ONE PIONEER’S STORY | One day not long ago, I received | | i} | | | | | long time, | as the com- | they with-| | “Pm against tunemployment ineurance—it'a make people lazy.” 'Union Officials in Hard Coal A Battle Over Right to Collect Dues Sentiment for Unity Grows | In Illinois Coal Regions By a Mine Worker Correspondent of the delegates of this subdistrict, held Feb. 6 to prepare demands for the coming Scale Convention of the Progressive Miners of America, it was disclosed that a large number of local unions favor the 6-hour day and $6 scale, five-day week as a de- mand for a new contract with the coal operators. Local No. 1 with 2,600 members endorsed a resolu- resolution demanding that May Day be incorporated into the con- tract as a legal holiday. Among the resolutions adopted by the local unions are those calling |for a joint strike with U.M.W.A. ment. The sentiment for unity of | Illinois miners is growing, because | the men are realizing that the divi | sion of ranks allows the coal opera- | tors to pitch one union against the hady Characters | Hit Fishermen By a Fisherman Correspondent RAY, Minn.—It looks like they shady characters against us poor lshermen,” These are so-called respectable citizens. I, at least, do not have any |I will just give you an example of | two of them so that you will know rea homes, | By a Mine Worker Correspondent WILKES - BARRE, Pa, — Down | here in the heart of the hard coal | region where the capitalist papers and the radio boom about prosperity and better times ahead, the condi- tions of the Anthracite miners are | Very poor and are getting worse | daily. | Wage cuts and speed-up is the lot | of the miners due to the poor lead- | ership of the United Anthracite Miners of Pennsylvania whose | leader is none other than Thomas | | Maloney, who has sold the miners | out time and again with the aid of Father Curran and some of his associates. { The Maloneyites claim that they | have ninety per cent of the member- | ship which means that the new| | union holds the majority while the | old Lewis-Boylan’ Union has a minority composed of a few misled | Workers and some officials who still | support Lewis, | It is evident that the old union \ officials betrayed the miners openly | many times, which made most of the | workers join the new union think- | ing that Maloney would be their | | saviour. Now it is a different story | | because facts have proven .that | there isn’t much difference between | the two unions that exist in the An- | thracite today. | WITH OUR YOUNG READERS | guys comes around. You know this | Tien, one day, one of the Sn | | Sufy calls himself the Black Hitler, | fown most of the people live on|® Message that a Negro Pioneer| He's got some people believing in| |farms and work out to get enough | from Harlem had come down to the | him. He tells them that the white | money to pay taxes and support | ffice to see me. He roller-skated all| man is the black man’s enemy and | their families. There has been prac- |the way downtown, which is a dis- | the Negroes should stay by them- | tically no work here all winter and | tance of several miles. But the next selves, So this guy that believes in| many people are very much in need | time he came I was in the office! sufy comes around to the school jyard and starts talking to us kids) === of relief. A group of these farmer-workers | were going to see the Overseer of | the Poor te demand relief or work. The Overseer was told that this |committee was going to see him | The next day, the Constable called | Papers to sell when I heard the fire | and very glad to see him. He started | right off telling me all about the | way things are among the Negroes |in Harlem, This is what Robert T. | told me: } st week I was going to get my and trying to separate us by telling | |us we colored kids must stick to-| |Rether and we mustn't bother with the whites and that colored people | | will always be good to their own people. And that's a big lie too. | jobs, putting more people on the |ton League here. The other is his | business partner who owns a lumber yard and is a real estate man. ‘ | These are two enemies of the fish- the miners’ conditions but to see ermen here. They have been de- which set of officials will collect the | manding that the State Legislature dues. After the strike is settled close the lakes to commercial fish- either through arbitration or by |i8. Their past and present activ < A ities are of a very shady nature. It some promise, the miners go back to | is said that they were in the liquor work with their conditions worse | trade from Canada for many years. than what they were before. The | Settlers here have heard about ag . t 5 iy | and reports were sent to the Fed- TEE ane ene ieee ese eral government but it seemed that jt 2 no interest in the matter. unemployed list. Most of the peo- | Sia evn ple in our locality are unemployed | and living off relief, or working on relief jobs, even more shady. When this work relief was intro-} These two rascals have a great duced, the relief officials claimed | deal of influence in the local courts. that this would be sufficient for the | Some time ago a man was arrested workers. But in spite of that, evic- | for killing a deer. The game warden tions and foreclosures and sheriff |did not know that he was friend sales are taking place. Many dif-|of the lumber man, and was get- ferent complaints are brought be-|ting meat for him whenever he fore the relief officials, but they | wanted it. This fellow was taken to don’t seem to care because they say | court and the judge did not know that the state has set your budget | who he was. He pleaded guilty and and you will have to live on thatthe fine had already been set, when the best way you can. | the owner of the lumber yard came Whenever a strike is called, it is not called for the improvement of | j that they have found other fields poor, He needed meat,” was all he | said, and the judge suspended sen- tence and told the man to go home. Last fall the game wardens ar- rested two poor fishermen, Although these two fellows could prove that their conditions and efforts te or- | they were innocent, this same judge ganize. Please get these letters to | fined them heavily. They had to us by Wednesday of each week. | borrow money to pay the fine. NOTE Every Saturday we publish let- fers from mine, oil and smelter | workers, We urge workers in these tndustries te write us of By Mary Morrow, Children’s editor, The Daily Worker, 50 East 13th St. New York City. GILLESPIE, Il.—At a conference ; tion demanding this scale, also aj} At the present time, the liquor trade | |is not very profitable and it is said | | i; ident of the | ©msine coming along. I followed it | lee ei Uae engine aa | a ways and it stopped tn front of a | Cause right in my block there was | your family goes to see the over- | seer, there will be trouble.” In order to evade giving out any relief, they are trying to make it appear that the Communists are starting trouble. ~ An old man in the town was re- ceiving three dollars a week Federal relief till Jan. 1. Since then he has received nothing and is just left to starve. A poor worker's child was dying of pneumonia. The worker had no money, and in order to get a doctor, he had to get the Overseer of the | Poor to tell him to come. The over- | seer wouldn’t do anything about, it. |'The only way the worker saved the | child’s life was by borrowing money |to pay the doctor. A RESOLUTION The following resolution should be sent to: Dist. Attorney N. McAllister, Att. General U. S. Webb, Governor Frank E. Merriam, Superior Judge Dal Lemmon. All at Sacramento, Calif. I (we), the undersigned, pro- test against the frame-up of 18 workers in Sacramento, Califor- nia, under the vicious anti-labor Criminal Syndicalist Law. I (we), demand their immedi- ate, unconditional release; and further demand that the Crim- inal Syndicalism Law be wiped off the statute books of the State of California. This law denies workers their fundamental rights to organize, strike, and picket, and the right of free speech, press, and as- style number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE WANTED. Ww. 5 Address orders to Daily Worker Pa Department, 243 West 17th a Ne woman who couldn’ t | tenement house, blazing away like | seit pis ual mad. They got all the people out except one woman. She was on the |top floor. Her little girl was saved just before, but the house was blaz- | |in’ too. much to get back in it, so the firemen spread a net. The woman was scared and excited. So | when she jumped, she missed the ‘net and was killed. There’s fires al- most every day in Harlem during this cold weather. Nobody cares if | these old dumps burn down except- jing the people that have to live in |them, Landlord don't care, he gets his insurancé, but we've got to live |in these old houses that can burn |down in a minute. You never hear of such fires in the rich neighbor- | hoods. | Then in the school round my way | they give out food tickets to those | who need them. But they're always | thinking up excuses to take them | away again. They say they want to | “renew” the cards. And then it takes |them a month to “renew” a little | bit of paste board card. So we had |quite a fuss up there in school. |The kids were complaining and get- ting together and it looked like | trouble for the principal, | Adyentures of Margie, BOLD- ITS TIM WE CRACK & THE UNEMPLOYED ARE GETTING Tao [, SS |home relief. They always gave her | |excuses at the Home Relief Bureau. | So she was excited. She went down again to the Relief Bureau and cried | and begged the NEGRO woman who | was in charge to do something. But |the Negro Home Relief woman re-| |. Another time there was a fight | in the street and a rich Negro! woman, nicely dressed and all, came | up. She yelled at one ragged little | kid (his shoes were all torn and his clothes worn out), “You dirty little ragamuffin!” and the kid cried. That shéws that the colored peo- ple that's got more money don’t care about poor Negroes any more than rich whites care about poor whites. I’ve been talking to my teacher. She's a Negro, and I showed her the | New Pioneer and she thinks it’s very | | interesting. So now I sell it to her | every month. Once I asked her to (come to a meeting of grown-ups. | When she got there she saw me and asked: PUZZLE DIRECTIONS New members are: George Krpan, Raymond Golaizzi, Mir- jam Pylkki, Adrian Wilen, Lillie Smith, Alex Mojeson, Harry ‘Roistacher, Charles Each picture represents an animal. It you can find at least four of them write the answer on the back of a penny post- Libove, Israel Davidman, Miriam Mendel- fused to help her at ‘all. And it} Sta’ and mall it in, Then you ean te sohn, A. Chondler, John ‘aus, Ivan Keme- | Wasn’t until the Unemployment} come a member of the Dally Worker | novich and Joyce, John, Audrey and Matt! Council with a white man leading | Puzzle Club, Nikkari, |them, came down that the woman| , i ” | got any. relief, ‘What are you doing here? ) She asked. “T'm going to speak.” “What!” she says surprised. “In front of all these white people?” “Sure, Why not?” I said. “We're | i all the same here, Nobody'll eat me,” | too young to be with the Reds who Then I told her how Negro and | Show us the way to get better con- white workers are equal among the | ditions, But are we too young to Communists. “In summer at the| Starve? And are we too young to go Pioneer camp,” I said, “we sleep in e school hungry and to have no the same tents, white and black space) ie Ea we one Mab bet) boys together, and one time when |? !neer, and we're all going to make it rained so hard during the night |* Soviet America, where life will be my bed got all wet, and I bunked | better. with a white boy.” Of course, those of you who live “Do you mean you slept in the out of New York cannot come down very same bed with a white boy?” | like Robert and tell me things in she asked me. person. But you can all write let- “Sure!” ters and tell me what is going on “And didn’t you feel strange, and in your city and town. I will be glad the white boy too? Didn't he mind?” | to print your letters in this column. “No, of course not, that’s just: it. We're all the same in the Pioneers,” I told her, Some of our mothers say we are Tim and Jerry PA AND ME'S GOIN’ Te THE HOME RELIEF~" ( ae ash at All except the Indians ; other. Some of the men in both unions are of the opinion that the proposal of the Rank and File Com- mittee for joint strike committees, should be further supplemented by a call for joint P.M.A. and U.M.W.A. convention towards carrying out joint strike action and thus lay a base for unity. While the ‘Progressive Miners are preparing for the Scale convention, |in the U.M.W.A. territory there is also a growing sentiment demand- ing a scale convention, which up to now had not been announced. The only statement made by U.M.W.A. | officialdom has been thru the newly | appointed President of District 12, | Ray Edmondson, who stated that miners, electing of joint strike com- | U.M.W.A. scale committees will soon | mittees and for one district agree- | begin negotiations for a new con- | | tract and that they will call uw | “officers of law to guard their mem- bers against the criminally in- | Clined.” By this Edmondson means | the Progressive Miners. | 25 Miners Hurt iF rom Dam | P | By a Mine Worker Correspondent | SPRINGFIELD, Ili.—Last week pon will close the lakes here to commer- | twenty-five of our fellows have been | cial fishing. There are too many | taken to the hospital because of | black damp. These men were work- jing in the outer section and for ; Quite a while there was complaint | against bad air, but the company | Tefused to put more men on to take | erly. | In our mine they never shut the further out can't stand it. Seven- One is the notorious forester and| teen of these twenty-five fellows | a leading member of the Isaac Wal-| Were badly affected by the damp/| and at our last local meeting we put the demand to the company to | put on another fan, but so far there | has been no results. This is just one of the many | grievances in the mine. We have |350 men working on tonnage basis. Recently, about two months ago, we had a strike against discrimination, | when the company tried to put in | another cutting machine and give all the cars to machine men, who were put on day work and this left. us always short of cars. Even now most of us can’t make the scale, be- cause with the rate of 78 cents per ton and bad conditions, we are lucky if we make $3.50 per day on average. The men here feel that a new contract ought to be at least raised to 95 cents per ton. Sangamon No. 2 Miner. ‘Red Builder Arrested By a Worker Correspondent | FARELL, Pa.—Monday, Feb. 4 at rushing in. “Mr. Judge, this man is | 11:45 a. m. T was making my con-| | tacts with my readers of the Daily | Worker when T was stopped by the | dumbest flat footed policeman, Joe | Volinsky. Just because I had some Daily | Workers with Lenin’s picture on them, he picked me up in his three- wheel dog cart and I was taken to the police station. While waiting I was standing by the window thinking how I could get in contact with some of the leading Comrades. At that moment, one of the workers passed the win- dow. I called to him to come in- side. At that moment the Desk Seargent said to me “get the hell away from that window.” He also said “get in the cell, God Damn you.” He grabbed me by the arm | and locked me in a cell. “I was taken out of the cell and was told by the Seargent that I would have to wait until Major Frinck returned. I was detained for five hours and fifty-five minutes. | When Major Frinck came in and asked what I was here for, I re- plied that T was here just for having some Daily Workers with Lenin's picture on them, He asked me if T was selling these papers. I said, no, and he asked me if the organi- zation paid me for selling these papers. The answer was no and I was not asking for anything. Stage Demonstration At Ohrbach’s By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—Something of great importance took place several nights ago near Ohrbach’s store. About 5:30 p.m. a group of young workers gathered across the street from Ohrbach's and began to shout, “Ohrbach workers are on strike. Don’t buy at Ohrbach’s.” Many passersby, attracted by these courageous young people, also lent their protest and solidar- ity, which swelled the number tre- mendously. In a very short while very few if any people were going into the store. Everyone passing by across the street stopped to listen, includ- ing people in automobiles. It was very dramatic, to say the least. The bosses looking out from the windows became nervous and sent, for the police to break it up. And here's where the fun began! When the cops broke up the little demon- stration, the demonstrators, undis- mayed, went across the street near Ohrbach’s and continued shouting in loud, clear voices. The cops continued chasing them, but they would continue walking from cor- ner, mingling with the crowd. The cops were beginning to have apoplexy. These young workers were too much for their sluggish dull brains, and they gave up the job of chas- ing them. Tam sure that no leaflet or picket could do as much as that im- promptu demonstration. More of this sort of thing should be en- couraged, a HEALTH Be Medieal Advisory Beard | | | Is the “Safe Period” Safe? “IS the ‘Safe Period’ Safe” will be the title of an article appeari: in the first issue of HEALTH AND | HYGIENE, the Medical Advisory Board’s new magazine. This will | be one of a series of articles on birth control. In this first. article, }an analysis will be made of the | birth control methods advorated by the Catholic Church. The “rhythm” or “safe period” theory will be ex- amined from the medical point of view. The writer of the article is one of the leading specialists in the field of birth control. Take ad- vantage of the special advance sub- scription offer of one dollar a year, aa eR Uleer of Stomach 'OMRADE M. R. of New~ York writes: — “Two weeks ago my brother was taken to the hospital |for the second time. The first, time his case was diagnosed as peptic uleer of the stomach. Now the doc~ |tor says the ulcers have healed, bus | the dict of several X-rays shows jthat he has priduadinal adhesions |and muscular contraction of the pyloric region | “What my brother would like to know is will an operation really cure him, or is medicine and diet jenough to promote a thorough ; cure. | HEN an ulcer is situated at the end of the stomach where it |joins the duedenum (beginning of |the small intestine) vomiting may |be due to one of two causes. First, |Tespect for them. I know many Of | care of rooms and the cross cuts,|it may be due to the healed scar |them, one as bad as the other. but! so that the air could circulate prop-|f the ulcer closing the outlet of |the stomach so as to make the | Proper passage of food impossible; | what kind of men want to send us| rooms and then if the cross cuts are |Second, it may be due to irritation jto the breadline and destroy our| not taken care of properly the men|from the ulcer causing muscular contraction, with the same result, In the first case operation is nec- essary; in the second case, it may not be necessary, depending on whether the ulcer can be healed }and the irritation and muscular |contraction made to disappear. If jon the proper diet, with mental and physical rest, the vomiting disap- |pears and X-ray shows that food is not held up too long in the stomach, operation will not be nec- essary. A man with an ulcer should not { engage in work which prevents him from staying on his diet and keeps jhim under constant mental and | physical tension. Probably, as soon as your brother is better, he will have to.go back to such work, be- |cause in a bourgeois society the | type of work a man does is not based on his physical ability. No consideration is given to the prob- lems of individuals; here individual care is essentially for the wealthy, In the Soviet Union, however, the aim is always to fit the character of work with the mental and physi- cal ability of the individual to do the work. . Contraception and Thwarting Nature G, Los Angeles, Calif.:— \*% “Thwarting nature’ is a very | loose term and usually has no sig- | nificance. Of course, as is possible |in your case, intense mental con- flict, with inability to adjust to sit- uations, may cause the loss of weight and energy of which you complain. If that is thwarting na- ture, perhaps the term applies. But, if your doctor means that the pre- vention of conception is a thwart- ing of nature—that is sheer non- sense. If, as you say, nothing has been found organically wrong with you, we would not advise a dilatation and curettage (scraping) of the womb as Was suggested to you. It is of doubtful value, although occa- sionally used when the womb is of the small, infantile type, to stimu- late the lining membrane. That you have been trying for five months to cenceive—and vumsuccessfuliy— should not discourage you. Very often women will remain relatively sterile over a long period for no obvious reason and then become pregnant. We cannot even venture @ guess as to the cause of your sterility, since our information about you is not complete. More frequent sexual union dur- ing the fertile period (the middle two weeks of the menstrual month), will increase the chances of con< ception occurring. ieee te Advance Notice R. Frankwood E. Williams will lecture under the auspices of the Daily Worker Medical Advisory wenn Board on March 6th on “Sex Prob= lems and the Unmarried Adults,” at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th Street and Irving Place, at 8:30. More will be said on it later, will be 25 cents. Admission SUBSCRIPTION BLANK HEALTH AND HYGIENE Medical Adisory Board Magazine I wish to subscribe to Health and Hygiene. Enclosed please find $1 for a year's subscription Name Address City. . State. Scottsboro-Herndon Fund International Labor Defense Room 610, 80 East 11th Street, New York City I enclose Sch as my/ immediate contribution to the [Relermrapebi dere Defense}