The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 26, 1935, Page 4

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Page 4 HOME LIFE po Ann Barton “1318S month-old baby was cold and hungry and had no place to sleep but a bureau drawer.” This is the first harrowing .sentence of a long news story in the San Fran- cisco News of Feb. 9. “That's why, James Stout, 27 former college man and ex-marine . ” continues the second sen- tence, “resorted to holdups.” found ief funds as to feed a famil Another child y Blamed in Relief Kill- another New York “Henry W. Arden, 27 an unemployed 1 . slew a relief case wo home yesterday. He and his ther then went to the Chicago ation and sprayed with pistol bullets, kill- and jing another en Arden killed his mother and a HE stories, from which the above are exce are known in new: Paper vernacular as “feature stu sob stories.” Thev are intend: to be read, with a kind of choke weepy feeling, and forgotten. It is not necessary to suppress them They will not carry, believes the newspaper owner, any propaganda for the unemployed to organize They will not teach the unorganized worker that organization together with millions, is necessary, not to rob, kill, or “solve” things by com- | uicide, but to fight for thi cing police, city, state, ar ral officials if necessary HEN a starving desperate man robs, in order to feed his baby, this is “human interest.” When a young girl, out of work for two years commits suicide, this merits Several inches of space feature stuff.” But when the hearings on the Unemployed, Old Age, and So- | cial Insurance Bill (H. R. 2827), | take place in Washington, this news remains outside the capitalist paper. | This Bill, representing the mass support of millions of Unemployed | determined that the government shall insure them against need, brought to its hearings the voice of the unemployed themselves. The Bill was brought into being by the organized unemployed. Such news the papers suppressed. HAT the newspapers do not real- ize, however, is that even these “human inter stories, when there are plentv of them, as there has been in newspapers throughout the country these past months— even these “human interest” stories have their effect. To the supposedly blind masses to whom the news- Papers address themselves, they bring sudden sharp realization that | there are too many of these hap-| penings to be accidental. They lead | the reader to think they must be part of the cruelty and blind dis- order of a hateful society. They | are vet another contradiction in an outworn society. Can You Make ’Em Yourself? Pattern 2169 is avdilable in sizes 6, 8, 10, 12, 14 and 16. Size 8 takes 21% yards 36 inch fabric. Illustrated step-by-step sewing instructions in- | eluded. | close at hand and they are cam- ‘Politicians DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 19 Speed-Up in Aluminum Plants “ ( A By an Aluminum Worker Correspondent KENS GTON, Pa of the New Kensington Alur NEW 56 Local plant has many shortcomings 1 the conditions that exist a great extent he local has failed to effectively combat an evil that is facing the workers here— situated here is I be- eve the first minum plant to erected, and much of the ma- rinery installed at that time is still n use, Yet, we workers here have to compete in output with some of the more recently constructed plants of the Aluminum Company that have the use of more modern machinery. This gap is bridged by the excessive burning of human energy. When the eight-hour day was in- augurated here, the workers were almost immediately forced to pro- duce as much as they had previ- ously produced in the twelve-hour de Demagogues Block Swing to Left By a Steel Worker Correspondent SPARROWS POINT, Md.—There are many new developments among the steel workers here. Many work- ers who were under the complete sway of Roosevelt and the N.R.A. are today beginning te turn defin- itely radical. Most of the workers here are in- fluenced by Father Coughlin. He is | not quite as popular this year as at the same time last year. y Long’s popularity is on the increase. Workers are writing to/ sking how he expects to carry s plans and also offering him advice, telling him that if the work- | ers can’t use ballots they'll use bullets, | The company union election is | paigning furiously. | A ladies’ auxilliary to the A. A. | has been organized here and it is growing. Even some of the kids | want to organize. On Sunday, March 3, we are hav- ing a mass meeting in Highland- | town at the Finnish Hall, 703 S. | Ponca Street, 2 p.m. H. M. Wicks | |of Philadelphia will be the main} speaker, By an Auto Worker Correspondent DETROIT, Mich.—King Henry and his hirelings go hand in hand with corrupt polities. At Ford’s the| workers all have to sign from one | to five petitions a day or find them- Selves out on Miller Road. This has been going on for the last four weeks. One petition was to keep the Mayor and the council in for a longer term, as if they are not rotten enough the two years that they are in office at present. One young fellow was taken off the job and told to take the peti- tions around. He did the first time, but the next time he was assigned to the task he told them he did not want to take it as most of the work ers did not want to sign and pas: | losely Rivals |ing from him, Wilson has been re- That of Ford They use the bonus system here as a means of getting the workers to put out more production. The worker, in striving to get this little bit of extra money, generally pro- duces more than is alloted to him The result is that the task immedi- oday are contrasted | ately goes up, and he has to put conditions that existed | out still more in order to get the the organization of the | bonus. 1 show that the This system and the ability of workers to the Mellon controlled Chamber of Commerce to keep other factories away from this district, has given the Aluminum Company here the most skillful and efficient workers. Word is out to the foremen that any work that cannot keep up kers the speed are to be replaced. When a man outlives his usefulness for Mellon he is eased out and others are gotten to replace him. So, there | is always a string going in and a | string of broken down workers go- ing out urely Ford has finally vorthy opponent in speeding up the workers. We have men working here that claim they are now working | as hard or harder than what they did for Ford Anyone that believes or advocates that “Life begins at forty” has never worked for Mellon. F ou r Workers Held In Eviction Fight | | By a Worker Correspondent | COLUMBUS, Ohio.—Remnants of | feudalism exist on Stambaugh Ave., in the State capital of Ohio. Negro | workers live in this neighborhood, and today find themselves enslaved to a sharecropper landlord by the name of Wilson. Wilson has as his | private attorney the present Attor- ney General of Ohio, John Bricker. | Wilson also has the services of the | “liberal” Justice of the Peace, Bach- | man, and his constable flunkey, Haines. | During the past ten years work- ers in the neighborhood bought land from Wilson. They built their own homes on the land, and today | they find that they owe Wilson more than the land originally cost. | Wilson wants to evict these work- ers, take possession of their homes which represent a lifetime of labor and savings. The workers have been kept in ignorance of the exact amount of their independence to Wilson, as he did not give them receipts regularly. On the pretext | that these people were tenants rent- found a ceiving approximately $100 a month | from the charities, These conditions were discovered | When Wilson started an eviction | Tampage, beginning with Mrs, Mor- gan, a widow. The workers are now fighting to save Mrs. Morgan’s | home. Four workers have been ar- rested in connection with this evic- tion: David Jackson, member of the L. S. N. R., and vice chairman of | the Marion Township O. U. L. unit; Mrs. Morgan, Sam Hendricks; and H. Pollack, section organizer of the Communist Party. The trial of the first three will take place on March 4th in the court of Justice of the | Peace Bachman; Pollack’s trial will be held March 6, in the township court of Justice of the Peace, Becker. | A joint fight to save the homes of the workers and for dismissal of | charges against the accused, is be- | ing conducted by the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, the Un- “Shail we mention the unemployed again, Sister, or was yesterday enough?” Paper Exposes Foreman By a Steel Worker Correspondent GARY, Ind—Who is this man Horan? You workers in the Mer- chant mill of the Illinois Steel Company know him well. He is nothing more than a petty racketeer and grafter, a turn fore- man in the inspection department. After his first shock and heart- break at seeing himself exposed in the January issue of the “Gary Steel Worker.” he has picked up the pieces, glued them together, and now he is strutting around, pretending that he is proud to find himself written up in the “Steel Worker.” He even complains, when | there are plenty to listen to him, that he was only on the second | Page and not the first, Remember Ed Wall, Horan? He too woke up and found himself on the first page. When the company could no longer pass over his graft- ing and had to give him the gate, the “Gary Steel Worker” spread the news all over the front page. We can do it again, only this time you, Horan, will be drinking the bitter | medicine. ‘Daily’ Sells Quickly In Steel Town By a Worker Correspondent McKEESPORT, Pa. — This is to let you know of our first day at selling the Daily Worker on the streets here. Another comrade and T were taken to the police station but they had | | to turn us loose They told us not remarks about them. The boss told| employment Council, rank and file | t© throw the papers on the street him he had to. Then he got sore| and told the boss he was not an errand boy for a lot of rotten poli- | ticlans. He was immediately fired. | members of the Marion Township | O.U.L. unit, the Communist Party units in the South Side, the I, L. D. and the Y. C. L. Frank Murphy, home town boy from Detroit who made good as Mayor of that city, busting union. | crippling strikes, and arresting reds | Helena |in the service of Henry Ford and thousands in smaller plants. the rest of the automobile kings, is now Frank Murphy of Manila, Philippine Islands, | down, Roosevelt rec-| In the La Alahambra fac- | tory alone 2,300 walked out, in La Flor de La Isabella 2,020, La At this point in his account Mur- |phy will perspire more freely, for | or give them away. In two and a half hours we sold forty-one papers and sent out four young boys with five papers each. press. He poured the whole mess the | through the radio. But the strike | | 1,650, La Insular 871, besides | COMtinued solid. In fact its strength | tended the funerals escorted by 300 | grew as farmers hundreds of miles |away sent funds to support the |and gas masks. struggle, Plan Deportation | Of Seamen | By a Marine Worker Correspondent | | PHILADELPHIA, Pa. The | | Roosevelt New Deal and its depor- | | tation terror machine under Fanny Perkins is plotting a drive against | the 1,000 seamen stranded in| | Philadelphia. Immigration authorities have completed plans to herd foreign- born seamen on relief here into ; the “alien” detention house at | | Gloucester, N. J. Though immigra- | | tion spies, aided by local relief of- | ficials, have failed to dig up evi- |} dence sufficient for deportation, | they are preparing to issue warrants wholesale, threatening seamen here over sixty days with deportation. Waiting only for a stamp of ap- | proval from Federal relief authori- | ties, local relief officials point out | that it would be cheaper to deport | these men to starvation or death | | than to continue giving them the | 60 cents a day relief they succeeded in forcing from the Transient Bur- } eau through militant struggles. In the meantime, the Philadel- |phia County Relief Board has | | started a slashing attack on sea- | men’s relief. Many rooming and | | cating houses eligible for seamen’s | relief have been stricken off the list and a large number of men | denied relief. In this way relief | Officials resume their drive towards concentrating seamen into a few places and keeping out the militant | elements. Immigration authorities are charging that local relief is so luxurious, that seamen make no at- tempt to get shins. “Alien” seamen should therefore be deported. This is all part of the shipowners’ drive to smash unions among the seamen by forcing the older and | more militant elements out of the industry and replacing them with young, inexperienced, docile boys provided by Seamen’s Church In- stitutes and such notorious, float- ing fink halls as the U.S. S. Mercy, Murphy Reports te Roosevelt on By Samuel Weinman {dered strikers, Nevertheless over 10,000 strikers and sympathizers at- | Police equipped with tear gas bombs | Communists Led Strike (330 Die-Makers Laid Off In Packard Motor Plant DETROIT.—A survey of the Pack- | ard Motor Car Company reveals the astonishing fact that die shop su- Perintendent Mr. Doyle on or about Nov. 1, 1934, began building new dies intended for the 1935 models with a comparatively small group of die makers. By Nov. 25, the original group had been increased quite rapidly till it reached a crew of somewhere around 400 die makers and affiliated machine hands, Mr. Doyle is an old timer at Packard’s. “Ask the man who owns one,” is the familiar trade phrase attached to its product, which of recent year had become but a faint echo of a once glorious past. Three eight-hour shifts had been maintained, including an allowance of fifteen minutes for lunch, Dur- ing this exceedingly short spurt, which the capitalist press heralded high and wide as a “great auto re- vival,” the company required that every man work at least 48 hours per week. A great many men had worked 56 hours per week, on and off. for straight time of course. Just three weeks prior to Jan. 31, a steady lay-off had been executed, with the result that at the end of January only about 70 die makers remained on the job, In other words, 330 die makers had been No Compensation On Relief Job | By an Auto Worker Correspondent thrown out upon the streets, in this particular case alone, having worked only about two months or less. Packard Motor manufactured a line of high-grade trucks, but owing to the small volume of business dis- | continued production of trucks. This year the company plans to in- vade the light car market in com- petition with Ford, General Motors and Chrysler. ciety of America is heavily repre- sented at the plant, having con- cluded a 35-hour week agreement lately. School Offers To Barefooted Boy The Mechanics Educational So- | Rags) Phen bated As perenne | By a Worker Correspondent , N. C.—On the re- | * v lief jobs we have no kind of insur-|. NEW YORK.—The following is a ance. Our lives are in danger all| letter sent by Frank Kryzak, Com- the time and if we get hurt it’s just | munist candidate for State Senator we that have to suffer. The other day, a man working on in the last election, to Mr. Dodge, the F. E. R. A. tried to twist two | Principal of Public School 30, Staten cables together with an iron crow-| Island. The text of the letter bar. The bar slipped and cut a| follows: deep gash in his head and knocked | him unconscious. Ten stitches had| “I want to call your attention to to be put in his head and all he|the fact that my son, Chester, got was his doctor bill paid. The boss mass told him that it was his fault and that he was lucky to get anything at all. Another example of mistreatment on rellef jobs was when the boss | man got mad at one of the work- ers who was standing on the edge of a ditch and because he was not man enough to control his temper, he kicked the worker backward into the ditch. It’s always been that way because we workers can’t get a job anywhere else. We have to work on the relief for little pay with no kind of in- surance in case of an accident. If we get killed, we get killed, that’s | all, and our families are left to beg for direct relief. Safety Measures Neglected By a Steel Worker Correspondent GARY, Ind.—We have here in the Illinois Steel Company mill a safety inspector called “Fat” Billy Davis. When times were better and the company was making profits hand over hand, “Fat” Billy was a mighty particular gentleman. At that time they had laborers clean up the tracks so that scrap wouldn't lie there and therefor the switchmen wouldn’t fall and hurt themselves. Davis used to make sure that the tracks were just so in order to prevent accidents. Now, in order to maintain their profits, the company does no clean- ing up. The place is a mess and workers are in constant danger of | accidents, Davis walks around but never sees to it that the tracks are clean. He learned very quickly not to interfere, butler to prepare a bromo-seltzer and proceed. Strikes and peasant uprisings are not Murphy's only headaches, There is the decline in trade and the drop in Wall Street’s colonial profits. The bankers are the Philippines | Stayed out of school about one week | because he had no shoes and the |Home Relief Bureau refused to | grant him any. “Being on work relief at twelve | dollars per week I can hardly buy | food at the prevailing prices, let | alone shoes and clothing. “I reported this to the teacher. | Thereupon, Miss Regan sent with |my son, Henry, a bundle of clothes, | just dirty rags. When I opened up | that bundle of rags I felt so insulted as if someone had slapped my face | in public. “No, Mr. Principal I shall not put on those dirty, disease breeding rags on the body of my beloved child. We shall not allow you to degenerate him to a state of pauperism. Is this what. you want to make out of proud Americans? Is this what I fought for in the war? Is this democracy? “I did not want any rags. I am sending them back. I demand shoes. | However, I do want to make clear | that I do not expect this to come | out of the cut salary of the teachers but out of the huge profits of the bankers who control the Board of | Education. “I shall not send my son to school | until he gets shoes.” Yours truly, JOHN KRYZAK, A veteran who volunteered to fight for democracy. NOTE Eery Tuesday we publish letters from steel, auto and metal work- ers. We urge workers in these in- dustries to write us of their condi- tions and efforts to organize. Please get these letters to us by Friday of each week, the valuable chromite deposits are the fountain of inspiration for Hon. | Pedro Guevara, Resident Commis- (sioner in the U. S. Congress. On | Jan. 21, Guevara spoke for the im- | Four Out of Five O four out of five have pyorrhea? | Is pink tooth brush the only | thing wrong with the world? Is film | the thing you have to fear most? | How much subway and street-car | advertising about care of the teeth | should workers believe? ‘These | questions and many others will be } answered in the various articles on | teeth, gums and oral hygiene which j will appear in the first successive | issues of “Health and Hygiene,” the magazine of the Medical Advisory Board. “How To Clean Your Teeth,” “What Is and What Is Not Pyor- rhea?” “The Cause and Prevention | of Inflamed Gums,” are some of the titles of articles which will appear. | Subscribe now; take advantage of | the special advance subscription of- fer of one dollar a year. Trench Mouth 1 Deiat P. P. writes: “My four year-old girl complains of dis- comfort in her mouth; the gum was bleeding and so swollen that you could hardly see her teeth; they were full with pus. Her lips started to swell and she had fever.” If we were to add another symp- tom, “offensive odor,” then the diag- | nosis would probably be acute Vin= |ecent’s infection (trench mouth), The odor is very characteristic, However, illnesses such as acute leu- kemia (a disease of the blood) and other diseases involving general malnutrition, should be ruled out. |The term “full with pus” un- doubtedly describes the yellowish- gray covering over the gum. This is | slough, or dead gum tissue which has been destroyed by the germs during the process of the disease. Pus does not lie loose about the mouth, If this slough were removed and this can readily be done, a red Sensitive bleeding surface would be exposed. Another coating would’ ac= cumulate in a few hours, Vincent’s infection does not al- ways take on this acute form. It is quite prevalent in a chronic stage when only slight pain and bleeding is present and very little, if any, | swelling. In more advanced con- ditions, the points of gum between the teeth are destroyed, leaving a blunt, flat surface with a space be- tween the teeth where the pointed gum was originally. As the more severe acute cases are approached then the body as a whole is affected, as well as the mouth, The patient has a fever of a low grade, loss of appetite, head- ache, difficult swallowing, because the throat is painful, nausea and | perhaps marked drooling. But we do know the disease is catching, A patient who has the disease can give it to another who may have kissed him or her or used his dishes. People with unclean mouths, ill-fitting crowns and fill- ings and who may be debilitated from any cause, are more sus- ceptible. Workers are generally more liable to the disease because | of their poor living conditions, lack | of nourishing food and the inability | to secure adequate health informa tion. The treatment for the milder cases of Vincent’s Infection is the use by the patient at. home, of one level (not heaping) teaspoon of sodium perborate in a glass of warm water. The mouth is rinsed every hour for a few days. The tooth brush is not used until most of the symptoms have subsided. The old toothbrush is to be discarded, other- wise the patient may be re-infected. Avoid spicy foods and smoking. The accumulation of tartar on the teeth should be removed the dentist only after the disease 1s well under control, If there is a marked im- provement after the first forty- eight hours with the use of the Sodium Perborate, then the patient may rinse every two or three hours for a week. Then continue three times a day for about six months (this is very important). In the more severe cases, the patient should rinse the mouth every half hour for two or three | Now Murphy will blurt out what kicking. Japanese imperialism is jhurts most. The Communist Party | stealing a part of the plunder. For example, American exports of cot- ton manufactures to the islands tumbled from 58.60 per cent of the total in 1933 to 48.22 per cent in 1934, Simultaneously Japanese ex- | he will relate how the general sym-| SO Murphy decided to play his | pathy strike spread to other indus-| ace of trump. Murphy armed the ahaa ; | tries. He will detail the sympatiy | Police wtih rifles, gave the command | of the Philippmes organized and_ |walkouts of the Oracco Candy | to maintain “order at all costs,” and|!ed the cigar strike. ‘That's why makers, Yellow Taxi drivers, De Hue |©n Monday, Sept. 18, the police | the whole set of Roosevelt-Murphy Long lumber men, Lauritzen em- | fired on a mass picket line in front|Maneuvers failed. The Commu-| broidery workers, Cristobal oil men,{ of the La Minerva cigar factory. | nists anticipated and exposed every seamen and longshoremen, | Three strikers were murdered and days and then diminish gradually. If there is fever, weakness and other symptoms, the patient should be placed in bed. Vincent's Infection in its acute form is a very serious and dangerous disease. The use of neoarsphenamin (sal- | perialists when he declared in Con- | gress that he would approve the establishment of a relationship such as existed between the United States and Cuba before the Platt Amend- |ment. Guevara will discover that |the Filipinos will fight a Platt ognized in Murphy a first-class op- pressor, for which he was promoted to the post of Governor-General of the Philippine. At this moment Murphy is racing to “confer” with Roosevelt, to sound a warning to Wall Street. This is no vacation trip. Then why the sudden journey half way round the | Workers’ Militancy Murphy is afraid to talk. He will keep plenty under his hat. Even | most of what he spills to Roosevelt | will never see the light of day in j the capitalist pres | For instance: Two local Soviets . up in the Philippines! | Is that one of the chief reasons | |for the Gbvernor-General’s flying | visit? | According to the imperialist Phil- | ippine Herald (January 22), “An| agent of the Bureau of Labor who returned yesterday from Tarlac re- | ported that two Communist colonies | > | F | have been established in two vil-| ‘ |lages of Tarla i | Will Murphy report that in Tarlac | a | Frovince thousands of farmers have | studded their fields with red flags? | That they have seized the land? | That payment of rent has stopped? | | militant. strike struggles have con- Medical Adisory Board Magazine | That the landlords do not dare to! : |vulsed “poor” Murphy's peace of , 4S . » Send FIFTEEN CENTS in coins | try to collect rent? rs é i ay : “se \mind. Seamen of the port of Cebu 28a it Pe rams She ‘ es ¢ I wish to subscribe to Health and. stamps (coins preferred) for each| ‘And what will the President think | wages. He resorted to the red scare. ; Start a mad man-hunt for strike | walked out. varalyzing shipping | dependence to the islands. Filipinos statement that “everything is|| Hygiene. Enclosed please find $1 Anne Adams a York | when he hears Murphy's story about |He had the police hea enene acre ee ee ae Akaka completely. ae the cottnda | are taking independence seriously. | hunky-dory in the Philippines,” || for @ year’s subscription 2 City residents shoul id one cent | the cigar makers’ strike? Last Au-/|in strike headquarters. He had the | arrested and thrown into jail. Mur-|of Moilo tied up that port. For/| " - ae ioe each pattern order). Write | gust, ayee 11,000 cigar workers in Department of Justice “discover” | phy assures Roosevelt that the Phil- |many weeks not a single vessel left | ‘They demand real independence. It/ which will be relayed to every news address and Plainly, your name, | Manila and nearby provinces struck Style number. BE SURE TO STATE | against their 20 cent daily wage. SIZE WANTED. Murphy is in a tough spot. It will Address orders to Daily Worker |>- hard to explain how he let the leaders to put over a sell-out a la| And following “Bloody Monday” | fu-niture store and shop in Manila.| and Roosevelt will resist Philippine | curate account to Roosevelt, the Pattern Department. 243 West. 17h | trike get oui of hand. William Green. He smeared his} Murphy gave orders forbidding | At this inncttire in his narrative | freedom. The $200,000,000 invest- President will be reaching for an Street, New York City. ye been set § Murphy, Strikebreaker strikers—but it didn't | work, First, he tried arbitration. Then he promised an increase in —<__—___. that the strike leaders were sub- sidized by Moscow gold. He em- ployed the reformist trade union | up charges of “sedition. At least thirty cigar factories shut | whole bag of tricks over the island) public mass funerals for Living in Squalor for Wall Street’s Profits 19 wounded. But neither did that stop the strike. companies of constabulary and three regiments of infantry, all armed with tear gas and machine guns, to ippine courts can be relied upon to railroad the strike leaders on frame- deception. The illegal, underground | |Communist Party of the islands is| resisting evictions, driving off the! landlords, seizing the land. The Communists are leading the strikes on the rice and sugar plantations and in the factories. The spectre | of Communism havnts the Philip- pine Islands as it haunts the rest (of the capitalist world. It is unlikely that Murphy will mention to Roosevelt that Earl Browder. General Secretary of the C.P.U.S.A., sent him a scorching telegram protesting against the murder of the cigar makers, and that immediately a flood of protest telegrams from workers’ organiza- tions all over the United States swamped the Governor-General. After six weeks on the picket line the cigar makers won wage in- creas However, the bosses soon rescinded the strikers’ gains, A new cigar strike is brewing. | In the meantime several other | |gither of these two harbors. Last |month over 309 Chinese carpenters and cabinet makers picketed every ports of the same commodity to the Philippines leaped from 24 per cent in 1933 to 39.86 per cent in 1934. Faked “Independence” Then again there is the Tydings- McDuffie law which “promised” in- Murphy's Police Murdered One thing is certain. Wall Street the mur-| Murphy will order the White House | ment, the trade, the war base and | Amendment as did the Cubans. In the face of the facts—the jin the Pacific, and the fight for |independence—the Murphy-Roose- | velt conference will issue an official Many of These Filipinos (is proving mighty embarrassing to | paper in the country and broadcast | | Murphy, Roosevelt and Wall Strect. | over the radio. | Yet if Murphy delivers an ac- aspirin instead of a sweet. varsan) by the dentist is extremely valuable, provided it is properly ap- eh : lied. This does not mean that growing in strength and influence. . | Soviets in Tarlac, the strike strug- Pp jWorld? Murphy is a shrewd poli-| surphy will try to make amends| Then Murphy, feeling extremely |The Party led the tenant farmers|The bankers are getting Jittery gies, the growth of the Commu- aoe ae has anything to do tictan, He knows that in Manila | by demonstrating that he used every | Mauseous by now, will go on to tell to set up Soviets in Tarlac, ‘The | about uoH $200.000,000 investment | nist’ party, the crisis in trade, Jap- CEN alien Wisties” should: he lari ee ee * Roosevelt-New Deal trick to stam-| how he mobilized 1,200 police, six|Communists are in the forefront, in the Philippines. anese competition, the war danger Ps "8 . pede the boiled and other careful hygienic Precautions maintained. The dis- ease hangs on a long time, but can be completely cleared up with pers sistent treatment. pee coos We Have a Date With You O MARCH 6, Dr. Frankwood FE. Williams will lecture under the auspices of the Medical Advisory Board on The Sex Life of the Un- married Adult. The lecture will be held in Irving Plaza Hall, 15th Street and Irving Place, at 8:30 Pp m. Admission is 25 cents, SUBSCRIPTION BLANK HEALTH AND HYGIENE NOME oi 0 6b cies ita dads

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