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Thursday, July 10, 1941 Women's Diseases Studied By Bureau Common Types of Occupa tional Diseases Affecting Women Hundreds of women are finding jobs in defense industries. They are learning new skills, earning le^ular wages, finding new personal satisfac tions. But they are being exposed to new health hazards. Practically all industries present some dangers to workers' health, ac cording to a bulletin of the Federal Women's Bureau released today. Some of these hazards are known, along with effective means of prevention. Others arising from new substances used are particularly treacherous be cause their effects on the human body are unknown in advance, and months may pass before identifiable and often fatal symptoms appear. If for any reason protective and preventive measures in a plant are neglected, consequent industrial diseases prove extremely costly to workers and em employers alike. While the report points out that effective action in the field of pre vention of industrial diseases has been on the increase, there is danger that the urgency of the defense pro gram for quantity production may mean a relaxation of attention to plant health problems. This is par ticularly serious for women workers, whose illness rate is already higher than that of men. The new Women's Bureau bulletin entitled "The Occurrence and Preven tion of Occupational Diseases Among Women," summarizes the records of State agencies in nine states and spe cial studies in the field, from 1935 to 3938. Among the most serious job hazards to women's health are expos ure to a great variety of harmful materials, repetitive motion, organic dusts and abnormalities of tempera ture and humidity. Greatly increased interest in prob lems connected with the diseases of industry are noted in the report for the years 1935 to 1939. While at the close of 1934 only 12 states, three ter ritories, the District of Columbia and the Federal Government compensated for occupational diseases, by the close of the legislative sessions of 1939 the number of such laws had doubled. Im portant also were the amendments to three state laws which added to the schedule of diseases to be compensat ed in the state "any and all other oc cupational diseases." The importance of this "blanket provision" covering any illness that is occupational in character is seen when workers in states without such provisions, seri ously injured by some new and un listed diseases, cannot receive com pensation. Progress has also been shown in the development of state industrial hygiene projects. The most common types of occu pational disease affecting women as shown by the reports from eight of the states are as follows: Dermatitis or skin infection caused by exposure to many substances in eluding cleaning agents, dyes, vege tables, fruits, plants, dusts, rubber oils and greases, other chemicals Synovitis and other diseases result ing from repetitive movement pres sure, or vibration, as operating a ma chine, packing or wrapping package. folding, typing or continuous use of hand tools Lead poisoning Volatile solvent poisoning resulting from use of such substances as ben zol, carbon tetrachloride, wood alco hoi, amido benzine and naphthalene Other systemic poisoning following exposure to substances, such as ra dium, hydrofluoric acid, dye and ga fumes Chrome ulcerations from exposure to chromic acid in the plating, dip ping, and scrubbing of metal stamp ing Respiratory diseases from work in dusty occupations and Contagious diseases such as tuber culosis, scarlet fever, measles, etc. The report shows clearly that where the danger of exposure to a specific hazard is known, adequate preventa tive steps can be taken. An example cited was the occurrence of an un usually large number of cases of lead poisoning reported in one year in Ohio. Practically all the women af fected were employed in glass fac tories, the men in automobile plants When proper precautionary measure were adopted in these plants the cases of lead poisoning the year flo lowing dropped from 195 to 55. The evidence is conclusive that there is a continual need for constant check on the use not only of sub stances known to be poisonous but on those whose dangerous or harmless potentialties have not as yet been determined. The extent to which women hav been exposed to industrial hazards shown through a report form a study (if industrial health problems con ducted in Pennsylvania in 1934. I 1G.000 manufacturing establishments covcred, 228,000 women were exposed to organic dusts, 19,000 to abnormal ties of temperature and humidity, 14 000 to repeated motion pressure and shock, 12,000 to metals, 7,300 to in organic nonmetallic dusts, 0,000 to paints etc., 4,500 to lead and its com pounds, and additional hundreds of women to other hazards. Though in the prevention of indu trial diseases, the importance of sep arate lunchrooms, adequate whole some drinking water, adequate wash ing and toilet facilities has been con tinuously emphasized by health au thorites and reflected in State legis 'ottery Newsreel Boosted By Eble Captain Says There Is 22% Gain In "Buy American" Consciousness Editors Note:—Captain F. X. A. Eble spoke to the delegates to the 49th annual convention last week. The first half of his address, in which he urged the nation to prepare for peace in time of war, appeared in last week's Herald. The remainder fol lows: Third, there is no other industry in the United States which is as vulner able to attack from foreign manufac turers as is the American Chinaware and Pottery Industry. The American market has always been an oasis for imported china and pottery. This is especially true of Japanese products, and when the war is over, you can est assured that the Pottery Indus try will be one of the first to feel the effects of the terrific onslaught that will be made on the American mar ket when the soldiers in the armies of the world lay down their arms and go back to work in the pottery mills of Euope and Asia. Just as Hitler and his armies are over running Eu ope today because of inadequate de fense, so will the home markets of America be over-run in this new eco nomic war unless we all prepare for that war and organize a defense that will be absolutely bomb proof. That defense is the BUY AMERICAN pro gram of the MADE IN AMERICA CLUB. Why? Simply because our whole campaign is directed toward consumer education. In the final analysis, who is it that purchases the products you manufac ture Who is it that goes into the 5 & 10's, department stores, and gen eral stores throughout the nation and picks up the cups and saucers and examines them with the idea of re plenishing the household stock? Why it is the housewife, of course! Yes the women of America, I'll wager buy ninety-five per cent of the prod ucts you men make. Therefore, your jobs are in their hands. Your wel fare and the security of your families rest with the women of America who spend seventy-five per cent of our na tional income. It is to the women of America that we must continue to make our appeal. Seven years ago, when the MADE IN AMERICA CLUB first started op erations, we made it a practice to go into 5 & 10's talking with managers buyers and the sales girls who told us that only two or three people out of every hundred pick up cups and saucers and plates and look for the mark of the country of origin. In other words, seven years ago 97 per cent of the American women were in terested in price and not in the label MADE IN U. S. A. They were not BUY AMERICAN conscious then Today it is somewhat different. Go into the 5 & 10's and check with the store managers and clerks and they will tell you that twenty-five out of every hundred persons going into the stores are BUY AMERICAN minded They will also tell you that they are really MADE IN AMERICA label conscious. You have helped to bring this about. We have all done our bit along this line. Mr. Ornburn and the Union Label Trades Department and the various locals of the American Federation of Labor throughout the nation have also been doing a good job on the BUY UNION LABEL pro gram which has helped the general BUY AMERICAN campaign. All of us can share in the credit for making twenty-five per cent of the consumers of America BUY AMERI CAN conscious but that twenty-five per cent is not enough. We want to make it fifty or seventy-five per cent Indeed, we should make it 100 per cent. We have only scratched the surface. When I realize that the MADE IN AMERICA CLUB, with its limited funds, radio programs and the sup port we receive from many fraternal societies and patriotic citizens throughout the nation, has been able to do its part to awaken in the con sciousness of the American people to the necessity of giving first prefer ence to American-made products. It shows what could be done if a little more encouragement is given to our work and the program we are spon' soring. Now, to give you a little idea of how our program operates—the daughter of one of our consumer members in Queens, New York, was married the other day to a young man who was just graduated from West Point. There were many gifts, in eluding a tea set, made in Japan. The marking was almost entirely oblit erated. This is one other thing we are constantly combatting in Wash ington with the Customs officials and with the Federal Trade Commission —the improper marking of foreign merchandise. The young lady was of course em barrassed when she saw this tea set was Made in Japan. Her mother was a member of the Made in America lation and safety regulation in gen eral, nevertheless, the same survey of Pennsylvania firms found over nine tenths of the establishments without a lunchroom and over half without cloakroom. A fourth of all the fac tories provided only common drinking cups and almost as many provided common towels. There were 600 plants furnishing no drinking facili ties whatsoever and 700 furnishing no toilet facilities. Unsatisfactory outdoor toilets were provided in 2,000 other industrial plants. Club and had signed our pledge. After conference between mother, bride and groom, they decided to return the gift, which was done in a Very diplo matic way. Now, I am quite posi tive if we did not indoctrinate the mother with the principles of our BUY AMERICAN philosophy, this Japanese tea set would never have been returned. I want to also state that our Buy American princples re ceived a lot of publicity at the wed ding because the return of the gift received the unanimous approval of all. I could cite to you hundreds of in stances of this nature—not alone in chinaware and pottery, but in glass ware, rugs, matches, gloves and all kinds of foreign merchandise but again I appeal to you that we have only scratched the surface in our campaign. Our BUY AMERICAN philosophy should be thoroughly in doctrinated in the hearts of all the people and I feel like a preacher standing before his flock, asking for funds to support the economic philos ophy we all so thoroughly believe in. I do hope you good people will see the wisdom of not alone renewing the support you gave us last year, but that you will expand it so that the en tire membership of the National Brotherhood of Operative Potters will be enrolled in the Made In America Club. I have many plans for an expansion of our work and one in particular which I have thought of for many years has been a fifteen-minute newsreel—one that will be education al and a real human interest story showing the standard of living in China, Japan and other foreign coun tries in the Pottery Industry but it must be done in a way that will give this picture an appeal so that schools colleges, churches and theaters throughout the nation will ask for it Such a newsreel could be prepared either in conjunction with the U. S Potters Association and National Brotherhood, or it could be a distinct ly Brotherhood program, one that could give the history of the National THE POTTERS HERALD Brotherhood, show what it has done for the pottery workers and for the prestige of labor urnons in stressing the harmonious relations that have existed between you and your em ployers for the past fifty years. Such a newsreel would run into money of course but we have a plan and program whereby we can produce a first-class newsre»-l at a saving of about sixty per cent. Please bear in rnind this picture would be in sound and color—yes, colored beautifully. Some day I hope we can all get to gether—the National Brotherhood of Operative Potters, the United States Potters Association and the Made In America Club—on a definitely worth while newsreel that will show the American public the class, style, qual ity and design of American-made pot tery, and dinnerware in a way that will be impressive and convince the American people that American-made pottery is as good as, in fact better than that made anywhere else in the world. The work of the MADE IN AMER ICA CLUB must continue so as to help in laying a good foundation for the post war period. We are not sat isfied with the several million women who have signed our pledge—we want every woman in America made BUY AMERICAN conscious. Let us en roll the women in every village, town hamlet and city throughout this na tion in the MADE IN AMERICA CLUB. I want to impress upon you in clos ing that we have the most wonderful opportunity to put forth a program that will be worth while. Right now the people are thinking in terms of our own, which is after all the funda mental principle of the successful BUY AMERICAN campaign. Our work must go hand in hand with the efforts of all true Americans to in still in our hearts a greater love for our country, a more profound respect for our flag, and a deeper sense of appreciation for our Constitution and democratic form of government and what these all mean to our citizens I wish to take this opportunity to •Source: National Industrial Conference Board K ..TT" thank the Potters Picnic Committee for the splendid donation of $200 which the Made In America Founda tion received following last month's great outing in Youngstown. The MADE IN AMERICA CLUB, although primarily a BUY AMERI CAN institution is also a patriotic organization. We are opposed to all "isms" that are in conflict with fun damental Americanism. All these "isms" look alike to us whether they be labeled Communism, Nazism or Fascism. We have only one "ism" in our program and that is AMERICAN ISM. Preaching Americanism goes hand in hand with our BUY AMERI CAN program. You never met a Communist who was a BUY AMERI CAN enthusiast. In closing on behalf of the officers and members of the MADE IN AMERICA CLUB throughout the na tion, I want to extend to you our sin cere thanks for the support arid co operation the members of the Nation al Brotherhood of Operative Potters have given us in the past, arid I am going to renew our pledge of faith in our American institutions as mani iii the A iiicrican's 1 i/1. 8 The Cost of Clean Clothes and Linens in U. S. $446,000,000 a Year Pand GP William Tyler Page: "I believe in the United States of America as a government of the peo ple, by the people, for the people whose just powers are derived from the consent of the governed a de mocracy in a Republic a sovereign Nation of many sovereign States a perfect Union, one and inseparable established upon those principles of freedom, equality, justice and human ity for which American pariots sacri ficed their lives and fortunes. "I therefore believe it is my duty to my Country to love it to support its Constitution to obey its laws to respect its flag.... and to defend it against all enemies." THE BIGGER MARVEL She had spent most of the morning telling her class of evacuees some thing of the wonders of Nature. At the finish, she thought she'd scored a point. "And isn't it wonderful how the lit tie chickens get out of their shells'." But one quick-witted little nine year-old went one better. "What gets me, miss, is how they gf ii.." RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT The Great and Supreme Ruler of the Universe has, in his infi nite wisdom, removed from our midst our friend and fellow worker, Carrie Dunlevv. We, the members of Local Union No. 20, Steu benville, Ohio, recognize the loss of this sister, who was respected and loved by all of her fellow workers therefore, be it resolved: That, we, the members of Local Union No. 20, shall cherish and respect the memory of her pleasant manner and loyalty to our organization. That, we extend our sincere sympathy to the bereaved family, our charter to be draped in mourning for a period of thirty days, a copy of these Resolutions to be published in our official journal, The Potters llerald, a copy spread upon the minutes of the Local, and a copy sent to the bereaved family. BERNIECE HESS, JOSEPH F. GUNKEL, HARRY ROGERS, Committee of Local No. 20. ERSONAL Appearance Durability even Health are dependent upon proper laundering cleaning of wearing apparel. The annual amount of $446,000,000, so well spent by this Nation with commercial laundries and dry cleaners to uphold our standards of living, is more than half the amount paid for all of the services that Electricity furnishes in the homes of this country for adequate light* ing for home laundry including fifteen million washing machines and twenty-three million electric irons and for other electric appliance helps throughout the home from kitchen to bedrooms, that guarantee the well nourished, the well kept family. ELECtricity Serves You Well—and Cheaply. The OHIO POWER Co, szy i I W PAGE THREE A SAVINGS ACCOUNT WITH THIS BANK Will assure those much needed doll ars when unexpected emergencies arise. Those Individuals who do not enjoy this favorable position will find our PERSONAL LOAN SERVICE A most convenient and economical way to meet financial reverses. When justified, we advance cash on personal notes at 6% interest a year plus a $2.00 investigation fee, which can be repaid in eighteen months or less. Inquiries treated with strictest confidence. The FIRST NATIONAL BANK "East Liverpool's Oldest Bank" Member Federal Reserve System Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation SHOE REPAIR VALUES Ladies' Invisible Soles....59c Men's Invisible Soles 75c If you have been unable to wear your shoes after being repaired in th^past then demand invisible soles and give your feet the comfort they deserve. Shoes Dyed All Colors JOHN D. DALLIS IN THE LITTLE BUILDING The Man Who Soled E. Liverpool" Don't Say Bread Say BETSY ROSS Goddard Bakers You Can See the Cream ALWAYS USE Cream Top MILK BOTTLES THEY ARE SANITARY Used Exclusively By Golden Star Dairy Phone 3200 WHERE A SERVICE MAY BE BEAUTIFUL WITHOUT BEING COSTLY MARTIN Funeral Home 145 West Fifth St PHONE 365 Ohio and W. Va. License Ferguson H. Kind Coal Company Pittsburgh and W. Va. Splint Coal PHONES Office 934 Home 693 Railroad and Belleck Streets THE PLIGHT OF FINLAND (From the New York Times) Bitterness against the Soviets and desire to recover the territory lost last year are strong in Finland. Bombed by the Russians, who in turn claim that Finland permitted its ter ritory to be used as a base of Ger man air attacks, the Finns have now joined the German war against Rus sia. The Finnish Government and the Finnish people have been in a most difficult position. Nobody could have expected them to fight on the Russian side. The most that was hoped for was that they might maintain a pre carious neutrality between their old enemy and the Nazi aggressors. Ob viously this is the attitude they want ed to take. The wounds of last year's struggle are not yet healed, and physical and economic exhaustion, plus a stubborn allegiance to demo cratic principles, made them pro foundly reluctant to participate in the present conflict. Like all small nations, all they wanted was to be let alone. They gave valiant proof last year of their determination to defend their inde pendence. Without outside help they fought as no little people except the Greeks have fought against an over powering invader.