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SNUBBED by CIO President Phillip Murray (R.), Rep. Clare Hoff man (R., Mich.) holds session with himself. Labor leader defies subpoena to appear before the congressman, who constituted himself a one-man investigating committee to probe a steel worker's strike at the Shakespeare Products Co. plant in Kala mazoo, Mich. Progressives to map 49 county program A major campaign to repeal the Illinois sales tax is expected to emerge from the Cook County convention of the Progressive Party, Sunday, Jan. 9. A weekend of planning, to include a meeting of down state party leaders on Saturday, also will map drives for a state FEPC, on rent and hous ing, and for repeal of the Taft Hartley law. These are antici pated as the major activities to be directed by the convention when it adopts a legislative pro gram on Sunday. Sessions will take place in Temple Hall, 330 S. Marshfield Ave. In addition to a legislative blueprint, the convention \yiH draw up a plan for streamlin ing the party’s county structure, according to William H. Miller, slate director. Miller expressed the hope that party workers who gained experience in ward activity during the election cam paign will be elevated to top positions of leadership. TO HEAR VARIED REPORTS The convention will hear re ports from labor, Young Pro gressives and the nationalities council. Miller said this week that a key function of party work will be to keep the public abreast of delivery on campaign pledges by elected candidates. “It is our intention,” Miller asserted, "to make Truman and Stevenson deliver on their promises. We will be exceed ingly happy if they do. If they don’t, we must see that the peo ple know about it.” Miller pointed a warning at Mayor Kennelly in addition to those elected last November, as he declared: “We have taken a very be nevolent attitude toward Ken nelly. We will make him a sub ject of attack if he fails now to produce on major issues.’’ Decatur shop owner fined DECATUR, 111. — Four Ne groes, who were refused service in an ice cream shop last Feb ruary, have finally won their civil rights suit against the own ers in Circuit court. The plain tiffs originally asked $2,500 damages, but each of the four will receive $25, the minimum provided by statute. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Block, owners of the shop at 150 Mer chant st., were accused of order ing their waitress not to serve Negroes. Those denied service were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Slaw, James Smith and Marshal Brad dix. After the jury had remained deadlocked for 22 hours, Circuit J‘udge Martin E. Morthland act ed on a motion asking for a directed verdict in favor of the plaintiffs. The amount of dam ages had not been set and there was no indication whether the defendants would appeal the verdict. The 1948 story: profits, profits and more profits The biggest hidden news story of 1948 was the con tinued sensational rise of corporation profits. After payment of taxes, 1948 profits stand at the all-time peak of $21.7 billion. -Old hands at concealing the real news, the press as tne year arew 10 a close played up testimony before a Senate investigating commit tee by big business’ hired eco nomists who tried to make a mole hill out of mountainous corporate profits. Favorite word used by the slick economists to describe profits as “illusory.” If it was just a dream, it was big; beautiful and large as life. What big business cannot ex plain away is that corporate profits have shown a spectacu lar increase since the war. with millions of consumers footing the bill. Estimated profits for 1948 be fore taxes are $35 billion, com pared to $20.1 billion in 1945, an increase of 74.1% The pic ture after taxes is even more striking. Estimated profits for all of 1948 are $21.7 billion, compared to $17.4 billion in 1947, and $8 5 billion in 1945, the year the excess profits tax was repealed. ENORMOUS THREE YEAR JUMP The jump from 1945 to 1948 post-tax profits was l>o5.3%. Despite industry’s tear-jerk ing advertising campaign in 1348, peddling the line that it makes penny profits per sales i dollar, the truth is that out of every dollar of goods sold by the corporations, about 30c goes into profits, bonuses and salaries for the upper-crust company officials. For every dollar the corporations paid out ia wages in 1945, they ma..e 33.7c in profits. By i948 the take had increased to 42.2c. A breakdown of the over all profit picture shows the nation's key industries leading the big parade. The November 1948 'newsletter issued by the Natl. City Bank of New York re ported the following profit in creases for the first nine months of 1948 compared to the similar 1947 period: Sixteen petroleum companies, a 74.9% profit increase; 12 auto and truck firms, 49.6%; 30 iron and steel companies. 19.8%; 14 electrical equipment and ma chine companies, 18.8%; 27 tex tile firms, 17.9%; and 38 chemi cal and drug companies, 15.6%. These profits were piled on top of steady increases amassed since the beginning of the war, with each year setting up a new U. S. turns clock back In Japan TOKYO — Japanese labor is catching the brunt of the heavy strikebreaking club being wield ed by Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur's occupation headquarters here. Latest anti-union blow was the Dec. 20 decree halting the three strikes involving some 812,000 coal, textile, maritime and elec trical workers. Reason given was that the work stoppages “interfered with production.” But Japanese work ers have long been aware of the close link between the occupa tion and big business. The occupation, which banned strikes of Japanese government workers some months ago, has now assumed the power to out law strikes in private industry. Such interference with union rights is a direct violation of both United Nations and State department policies on Japan an nounced directly after V-J Day. In France PARIS (ALN) — The French government has returned the great coal mines at Le Creuzot. nationalized after V-E day, to the Schneider trust which owned them before the war. The, Schneider interests were deeply involved in collaboration with the Nazis during the wartime oc cupation. U. S. pressure has been in strumental i n reversing the French trend toward full nation alization of basic industries, which was at its peak in 1945. Nationalization already decreed was administered in a very half hearted manner after Marshall plan aid began. In the mining industry, for in stance, former owners remained in top management posts and wert paid a bonus on each ton of coal extracted. The process of returning them to their previous power has now begun openly. In Germany FRANKFURT — Giant indus tries that backed Hitler’s rise to power with marks and muni tions have been given the green light by U. S. occupation autho rities in their bid for cartel agreements yto control world markets. The full story of the resur gence of German trusts is being unfolded before a special U. S. Army commission here. Witness es testified that the mammoth Robert Bosch Combine, makers of electrical machines, was given an OK on one such agreement, by Richardson Bronson, head of the military government decar telization group. American and British legal opinion holds the pact is illegal. The commission is also prob ing action of Gen. Lucius D. Clay and some of his staff, who decided not to break up the big German VKF ball-bearing trust ANTI-LABOR FUND ol $1 million is admitted by General Electric Co. President Charles E. Wilson, who told joint profits subcom mittee in Washington his firm spends that amount yearly fighting the United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers (CIO). Profits of GE this year will top $111 million, Wilson testified. record. WORKERS GET DRY CRESTS While industry was swimming in gravy, more and more work ers were getting tossed dry crusts. Despite three rounds of wage increases since V-J day, price increases of 35% brought an actual cut of 15% in the real wages of workers. Again the press sought to cover this up by exaggerating the import ance of slight drops in the gov ernment's cost-of-living index, which every housewife knows has little resemblance to what she pays out to the grocer and 45% more needed According to the Heller Committee, ... healthful and decent standard of living for a worker, his wife and two children requires an income of $78.50 a week. But in this year of high profits and high prices, the average worker was earning $54.06 a week—before taxes. He'd need about a 45% wage increase to meet the none too-high standards of the Hel ler budget. butcher. In an attempt to head off ris ing demands for restoration of price control, business papers at the year's end jubilantly re ported that prices were leveling off. They didn’t report that the level was still way over the heads of working families. Sixty percent of American families are earning under $3,000 a year, in contrast to the $4,100 the Heller Commit tee says a family needs to get along. By the end of 1948, great sections of the American people were facing real hardship. Roughly 50% of the nation's families had less than $200 in savings and, as reports of lay offs and production cutbacks gained in prominence, the ab sence of savings was bringing many families close to a crisis point. FOURTH ROUND READIED The bells ringing in th.' new year of 1949 wTere also ringing in demands for a fourth round in • /age increases. One fact could not be engulfed by the torrent of excuses for exorbit ant profits. Industry can afford to pay a wage increase of 25% to all wage and salaried em ployes without raising prices and still have $14.2 billion in profits before taxes. After taxes, its profit take would be $8.8 billion, or 120%more than the prewar average. Big business didn't have to wait for handouts from Santa Claus this year. It played Santa Claus to itself all year 'round. VICTIM OF CHICAGO HOTEL FIRE SEASON OF FIRES finds Chicago slum flats and hotels main targets. Four major fires have occurred since Dec. 1, latest in an apartment building at 4600 S. Paulina St., this week. After fires at Hotels Hubbard and Lorraine, flames swept the Victoria last week, where fireman, above, vainly applies oxygen mask to victim of fifth-floor blaze.