[the release of Mrs. Ethel Byrne] (untitled)
New York Call Friday, February 2, 1917, page 3 [First page 1 by-line above the fold.] Governor Whitman signed a…
New York Call Friday, February 2, 1917, page 3 [First page 1 by-line above the fold.] Governor Whitman signed a…
New York Call Thursday, February 1, 1917, page 3
New York Call Sunday, January 28, 1917, page 3
New York Call Tuesday, January 16, 1917 pp. 1,3
New York Call December 27, 1916 p. 2.
“Man cannot live by bread alone, not even one dollar and eighty-two cents worth. Neither can a woman.” Dorothy Day’s humorous article about trying to live on $5 a week, the typical wage of young working women. (New York Call Monday, December 18, 1916, page 2.)
New York Call Friday, December 15, 1916, page 3
New York Call Tuesday, December 12, 1916, page 2
New York Call Sunday, December 10, 1916, page 3
New York Call December 6, 1916 p. 3
New York Call Sunday, December 3, 1916, page 5
New York Call Friday, December 3, 1916, page 3
New York Call November 30, Thanksgiving Day, 1916 p. 2
New York Call November 30, Thanksgiving Day, 1916 p. 2
New York Call November 21, 1916 p. 3
New York Call November 13, 1916 [Her first page 1 by-line]
New York Call November 16, 1916 Page 1
New York Call November 15, 1916 p.2
Summary: Her first court assignment is confusing with no sure way of getting home. (New York Call 11 November 1916, p. 2 DDLW #61)
Three short stories and a poem Dorothy submitted to the Chicago Daily as a young girl.