Women’s Voice: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m (1 revision imported) |
m (Text replacement - "<references/>" to "{{Reflist|2}}") |
||
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
<small> | <small>{{Reflist|2}}</small> | ||
==External link== | ==External link== |
Revision as of 14:11, 13 February 2024
Women's Voice (ca. 1942-1964) was a publication of We, the Mothers Mobilize for America edited by Lyrl Clark Van Hyning. It first began as a newsletter established in Chicago in 1941. Later it became a 16 page newspaper with circulation of 20,000. By 1952 the circulation fell to around 10,000.
The paper's slogan was "For Christ and the Constitution."
Contributors
- Leslie Fry, author of Waters Flowing Eastward.
- Henry H. Klein, lawyer and Jewish convert to Christianity.
- Eustace Mullins, noted expert on the Federal Reserve System.
- Richard Kisling "Income Tax - a Crime Against Humanity" (February and March 1959)
- T. W. Hughes author of Forty Years of Roosevelt (1944)
Articles
- "At The Root of It All…Anti-Gentilism"
- "Is Masonry World Jewry?" (1945)
- "King Barney and his Satellites" (article on Bernard Baruch by Henry Klein, January 29, 1953)[1]
- "Abominable Yet True" (1957)
- "16th Amendment is Unconstitutional" (1957)
Notes
- ↑ Cross-Currents by Arnold Forster and Benjamin R. Epstein, page 63