NOTHING TO PAWN BUT HER BODY; POLICE TAKE THAT (Call)
New York Call Tuesday, February 27, 1917, page 1
New York Call Tuesday, February 27, 1917, page 1
New York Call Sunday, February 25, 1917, page 3
New York Call Wednesday, February 21, 1917, page 2
New York Call Tuesday, February 20, 1917, page 1
New York Call Saturday, February 17, 1917, page 1
Summary: Describes the caring hospitality of a home for women released from jail. , (New York Call, February 15, 1917, p. 1. DDLW #90)
New York Call Monday, February 12, 1917, page 6
New York Call Thursday, February 8, 1917, page 3
New York Call Tuesday, February 6, 1917, page 1
Article in the New York Call (Sunday, February 4, 1917, page 7) in which Day interviews the executive of the child welfare board.
New York Call Sunday, February 4, 1917, page 2
New York Call Saturday, February 3, 1917, page 1 [Above the fold.]
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