V
HAMILTON CONVEN
TION DELEGATES
The Hamilton delegates to the an
nual convention of the Ohio Federa
tion of Labor in Dayton, this week,
will support Arnold Bill, Cleveland,
candidate for vice president of the
federation, to succeed George W. Sav
age, recently deposed as vice presi
dent due to his affiliation with the
committee on industrial organization,
it was announced Tuesday.
Stanley Ogg, seci'etary of the Ham
ilton Trades and Labor Council, heads
the Hamilton delegation which in
cludes the following: Joseph Spauld
ing and Joseph Gallagher, carpenters
and joiners James Solomon, plum
bers and steam fitters Mark Pierson,
cement finishers V. M. Lackey, brick
layers Ed. Motzer and Gunnard Scho
blom, plasterers Sherman Clair, la
thers Joseph Hill, hod carriers and
common labor David Little, roofers
Lester Long, painters, paper hangers
and decorators John Fuchs, sheet
metal workers, and Frank Vidourek,
electrical workers.
OVERPECK IMP.
ASSOCIATION PICNIC
The twenty-third annual dance
and picnic will be given by the Over
peck Improvement Association, Satur
day, August 14. A good orchestra has
been secured for the dancing and
other amusements have been ar
ranged. The committee expects a rec
ord-breaking crowd at this year's
picnic.
Prices
Reduced
10%
This
Week
AWNINGS!
Call For Our Representative,
lie Will Give You Free Esti
mate on Hanging, Recovering
or on a Complete New Set.
Phone 1611
WITTMAN
Dr. Miles
NERVINE
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say«
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If you lie awake nightt,
start at sudden noises, tire
easily, are cranky, blue and
fidgety, your nerves cr«
probably out of order.
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Whether your "Nerv*a" hav#
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years, you'll find this lime
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•l fOUJO
Labor Department
Chief Is Injured
Columbus (OLNS)--Edgar W.
Brill, aged 49, of Parma, chief of the
division of factory and building in
spection of the industrial relations
department, was reported in "fairly
good" condition in White Cross Hos
pital here Friday, where he is suffer
ing serious back injuries, cuts and
bruises, sustained in an automobile
crash Wednesday.
Also injured were James McBride,
aged 40, of Akron, and Anthony T.
Corrigan, Cleveland, who is an ele
vator inspector in the division headed
by Brill. Corrigan» was only slightly
injured, according to reports.
The accident occurred when the
automobile driven by Brill collided
head-on with another car ton the
Three-C's highway north of Wester
ville.
Brill and Corrigan are well known
to Ohio trade unionists. The former
has been chief of the division of fac
tory and building inspection since
1931, when he was appointed by Gov
ernor George White. He is a mem
ber of a Cleveland Painters' Union.
Corrigan attended the convention
of the Ohio State Federation of Labor
gate from Elevator Constructors'
at Springfield last year as a dele
Local Union No. 17, Cleveland.
Columbus Labor Paper
Control Board Named
Columbus (OLNS) In keeping
with the reorganization of the Colum
bus Federation of Labor, delegates
last week elected a new three-member
Board of Control to direct the policies
and publication of the federation's
official newspaper, the Labor Tribune.
New members are George Lyons,
Painters' Local Union No. 727, and
Fred Plimell, Typographical Union
No. 5, Carroll McGhee, Musicians'
Union No. 103, was re-elected as
representative of the miscellaneous
crafts.
Plimell defeated T. R. Ellis, presi
dent of Typographical Union No. 5,
as representative of the Printing
Trades on the Control Board. Ellis
was a leader in the fight early this
year to restrain revocation of the
charter by the A. F. of L. as a part
of the CIO purge and reorganization
of the local federation.
In supervising the re-installation of
the old charter and election of offi
cers, Alfred T. Murphy, general or
ganizer for the A. F. of L., cautioned
the delegates to select Control Board
members who would conform the edi
torial policies of the Labor Tribune
to the policies advocated by the
American Federation of Labor and for
the benefit of workers organized under
the banner of the A. F. of L.
LABOR ELECTIONS
ORDERED
On 50 Ocean and Gulf
Steamship Lines
Washington, D. C. (ILNS)—The
National Labor Relations Board has
ordered that elections be held as
promptly as practicable among the
unlicensed personnel—with certain
exceptions—employed in the deck,
engine and steward's departments of
50 steamship lines operating out of
Atlantic and Gulf ports. The seamen
will choose between the International
Seamen's Union of America and the
National Maritime Union of America
as their representative for the pur
poses of collective bargaining.
In another concurrently held elec
tion, the unlicensed personnel of the
International Sun Oil Company will
select a bargaining agency from
among three labor organizations, the
two named and the Sun Marine Em
ployes' Association.
Board Asked to Act
David Webb & Sons
FUNERAL HOME
PHONES 48-78. ROSS AT "D"
EAT and DRINK
At
Bill Finn's Cafe
FRONT AND COURT STREETS
OPPOSITE POST OFFICE
The board's direction of the 51 elec
tions follows the filing on June 11
THE BUTLER COUNTY PRESS
of petitions by the International Sea
men's Union, affiliated with the Am
erican Federation of Labor. A hear
ing in the case was held in New York
city on June 21 before Trial Exam
iner Robert M. Gates. At that time
testimony was presented both by
I.S.U. and by the National Maritime
Union, an independent labor organi
zation formed on May 8, 1937, and
unaffiliated with any other labor or
ganizations.
Both unions entered claims to a
majority of the unlicensed personnel
employed by the companies. Most of
the companies, through their repre
sentatives at the hearing, admitted
the existence of a controversy be
tween these two unions, and expressed
a desire that the board resolve it by
holding elections.
I.S.U. and N.M.U. each have con
tracts with various companies includ
ed in this case. By filing petitions
the board believes I.S.U. has waived
its rights to assert the existence of
these contracts as a bar to elections.
Similarly the filing of petitions by
N. M. U. in the cases of International
Mercantile Marine, Luckenbach
Steamship Company, Inc., and Black
Diamond Steamship Corporation, pre
cludes any assertion of rights under
contracts which it has made with any
of these companies.
CIO Flays Davey
In Federal Court
Columbus (OLNS)—Federal Judge
Mell G. Underwood last week reserved
until August 4 his decision on a plan
by CIO attorneys for an immediate
decision on the requested injunction
restraining the Ohio National Guard
and local law enforcement agencies
in the Mahoning valley from alleged
interference with the constitutional
rights of CIO steel strikers.
Judge Underwood announced that
he would rule at the later date on
a number of motions made during the
offering of testimony on the CIO's
plea for the injunction. His decision
on that point came at the close of
testimony by witnesses placed on the
stand by the CIO.
In his closing arguments before the
court, Edward Lamb, co-counsel with
Carrington T. Marshall for the CIO,
bitterly denounced the action of Gov
ernor Martin L. Davey in using state
militia to protect workers desiring
to return to their jobs instead of
maintaining the "status quo," for
which purpose the state troops were
originally called out.
Plan Labor Institute
Columbus (OLNS)—Plans for a
series of labor institutes for the pur
pose of explaining the benefits of the
social security program to the worker
are being made by the Columbus Fed
eration of Labor in co-operation with
DeWitt Huffman, educational director
of the Ohio State Federation of
Labor.
Improvements made in the Ohio
workmen's compensation law by
amendments and the creation of re
gional boards to hold first hearings
on claims, all obtained at the hands
of the 92nd general assembly through
the efforts of the Ohio State Feder
ation of Labor will be explained as a
feature of one of the institutes.
President John C. Getreu, of the
Columbus Federation of Labor, has
appointed a committee composed of
C. H. Frank, Machinists' Union. Rob
ert Farley, Pressmen's Union, and Au
gust Bauer, Brewery Workers' Union,
to assist him in completing the ar
rangements with Director Huffman.
Complaint Names
Republic Steel
Washington, D. C. (ILNS)—The
National Labor Relations Board has
issued a complaint against the Repub
lic Steel Corporation, charging spe
cifically the company and its agents
with:
1. Locking out employes in Canton
and Missillon, Ohio.
2. Discharging 75 for union activ
ity.
3. Threatening employes with dis
charge or lay-off for union activity,
4. Refusing to rehire certain em
ployes because of their participation
in the strike.
5. Dominating and contributing fi
nancial support to company unions
at five of its plants.
6. Trailing and beating up union
organizers before the strike started.
7. Increasing the company police
force and using this force to interfere
with peaceful picketing.
8. Maintenance of arsenals "for the
purpose of interfering with, restrain
ing and coercing its employes at said
plants in the exercise of their right to
self-organization."
9. Promoting "back-to-work" move
ments during the strike.
10. Interfering with peaceful pick
eting and intimidation of employes
by shooting at them.
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DRIVER'S RULES
The Time to Prevent An
Accident is Before It Occurs
Never pass a car or any vehicle
going in the same direction at a street
or highway intersection nor when
near the brow of a hill nor on any
curve or at any other point where
view of the road ahead is obstructed.
Dim your lights at night when ap
proaching a vehicle coming in oppo
site direction.
Apply brakes gradually. Do not
come to a sudden stop, except in
emergency.
Use extreme caution when there
are children playing in the street or
on the sidewalk.
When stopping on a grade be sure
that brakes are set and that the
front wheels are turned to the right.
In descending steep grades always
change to second or low gear. Do
not disengage your clutch.
PITTANCES PAID
To Workers and Dividends
Soar
Ottwa ("ILNS)—New organiza
tions, demands and strike waves re
eal the existence of wage rates in
heretofore unorganized occupations
as scandalous as those exposed by a
parliamentary commission during the
trough of the depression.
When members of the United Tex
tile Workers Union struck at the
Peterboro plant of the Dominon
Woolens and Worsted Company, they
showed their payslips for the past
fortnight to reporters. Here are typi
cal amounts:
A female weaver, employed three
years, $7.41 for 98 hours' work male
weaver, employed 12 years, $12.07
for 90 hours' work male carder, em
ployed 20 years, $32.67 for 99 hours'
work.
Organization in many Ontario and
Quebec textile mills has reached a
stage where demands for higher
wages and shorter hours are being
made. Companies stall and complain
of poverty, though a royal commis
sion showed the bigger concerns made
net profits of from 60 to 150 per cent
during the depression years.
The Golden Rule of labor unionism
is to buy the goods of others as you
would have them buy yours.
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ORDINANCE No. 3606
Determining (o proceed with the improvement
of South K Street, from Franklin Street
Alley to 1'uthoff Street, and Puthoff Street,
from South Street to the foot of viaduct
at Street, in the First Ward of the City
of Hamilton, Ohio, by constructing- sani
tary sewers, manholes and inlet basins,
etc., where necessary.
WHKRKAS, The Board of Revision of As
sessments as reported to this Council the nec
essity for this improvement and recommended
the estimated assessment report filed with
Council by the Director of Finance after due
consideration and public hearing and
WHEREAS, The Director of Public Works,
beinj? directed by the City Manager, has fixed
ten years as the estimated life of this im
provement.
NOW THEREFORE. BE IT ORDAINED
by the Council of the City of Hamilton, Ohio
SECTION I: That it is hereby determined
to proceed with the improvement of South
Street, from Franklin Street Alley to Put
hoff Street, and Puthoff Street from South
Street to the foot of viaduct at Street, in
the First Ward of the City of Hamilton, Ohio,
by constructing sanitary sewers, manholes
and inlet basins where necessary, pursuant
to Resolution No. 7452 adopted by the Council
n the 19th day of May, 1937 and that for
the purpose of paying the cost and expense
thereof there is hereby levied a special tax
upon the several lots and parcels of land
designated in and in accordance with the esti
mated assessment prepared by the Director
of Finance, as made for that purpose and
recommended to Council by the Board of
Revision of Assessments on the 21st day of
.July, 1937, and which was made on the basis
of the foot frontage upon the following de
scribed lots and lands, to-wit: Lots 3760,
:i7til, 3762, 3763. 3770, 3771 and 3772 as the
same are known and designated on the re
vised list of lots in the First Ward of the City
of Hamilton. Ohio, which lots and lands are
hereby determined to be specially benefited by
said improvement.
Section II: That the owners of the several
lots and parcels of land included in said as
sessment shall pay the amounts from them
severally due, as shown by said estimated as
sessment, to the City Treasurer within thirty
days from and after the passage of this ordi
nance, and in default thereof said tax with
interest at not to exceed six per cent per an
num, payable annually in advance on deferred
payments, shall be made to the County Treas
urer in ten annual installments with the reg
ular tax of 1938, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943,
1944. 1945, 1946 and 1947, and the Director
of Finance is hereby authorized to certify
all unpaid assessments to the County Auditor
to be returned on the tax duplicate.
SECTION III: That bonds or notes of the
City of Hamilton, Ohio, shall lie issued in
anticipation of.the collection of assessments by
installments.
SECTION IV: That the City Manager be
and he is hereby authorized and directed to
cause the improvement to be made through
Works Progress Administration participation
and to purchase the necessary materials.
SECTION V: That all claims for damages
by reason of said improvement shall be ad
justed after the completion of the same.
SECTION VI: This ordinance shall take
effect and be in full force and effect from
and after the earliest period allowed by the
charter of the City of Hamilton. Ohio.
Passed: July 21. 1937.
R. H. BURKE, Mayor.
Attest: ADELE EDMONDS.
.Iv 30-it
Here is a Real
You are sure of Quick Service at the Nonpareil
ORDINANCE No. 3607
To borrow money by issuing note or notes in
anticipation of the collection of special as
sessments to pay the cost and expense of the
construction of Sanitary Sewers, manholes
and inlet basins, etc., where necessary, on
Legal Advertisements
Clerk of Council.
South Street, from Franklin Street Alley
to PulholT Street, and Puthoff Street from
Social Security Record
and Pay Envelope
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SAVE
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necessary under the
SOCIAL SECURITY ACT
^PHIS combination record and payroll
J- envelope eliminates the necessity of a
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Simple and inexpensive, it embodies all
the records necessary under the Social Secur
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Why put yourself to needless expense and
waste of time when this simple, inexpensive,
combination record and payroll envelope, does
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For additional information and samples call
NONPAREIL PRINTING CO.
326 Market St. Phone 1296
Hamilton, Ohio
South Street to the foot of viaduct at
Street, in the First Ward of the City o
Hamilton, Ohio.
BE IT ORDAINED by the Council of the
City of Hamilton, Ohio:
SECTION I: That it is deemed necessary
to borrow money in anticipation of the col
lection of special assessments to pay the cost
and expense of the construction of sanitary
sewers, manholes, and inlet basins where nec
essary, on South Street, from Franklin
Street Alley to Puthoff Street, and Puthoff
Street from South Street to the foot of via
duct at Street, in the First Ward of the
City of Hamilton, Ohio, as provided in Section
2293-24 of the General Code of Ohio, in the
sum of $672.75, the estimated amount of said
assessment.
SECTION II: That the City Manager and
the Director of Finance of the City of Hamil
ton, Ohio, shall issue note or notes for the
above amount. Said note or notes shall bear
interest at the rate not to exceed six per cent
per -annum, and shall be dated as of date of
the issuance, and said note or notes shall be
due and payable on or liefore two years from
the date thereof. Said note or notes shall ex
press upon their face the purpose for which
they were issued, that they were issued in
pursuance to this ordinance and in accordance
with Section 2293-24 of the General Code of
Ohio, and shall be signed by the City Manager
and the Director of Finance of Hamilton,
Ohio, and sealed with the corporate seal of
said city.
SECTION III: That the faith, revenue, and
credit of the City of Hamilton, Ohio, are
pledged to the prompt payment of said notes
hereinabove described in accordance with the
laws and Constitution of the State of Ohio,
and that there shall be and is hereby levied
upon all of the taxable property in the City
of Hamilton, Ohio, in addition to all other
taxes, a direct annual tax sufficient to pay the
interest and to create a sinking fund to re
deem at maturity the above provided for notes,
which tax shall not be less than the interest
and sinking fund tax
required
by Section 2
of Article 12 of the Constitution. Provided,
however, that in each year that the assess
ments anticipated by said notes are payable
and are applicable to the payment of such
interest, and principal and are appropriated
for such purposes, the amount of such tax
shall be reduced by the amount of the assess
ment so appropriated. The amount of said
tax to be computed by the taxing authorities
and to lie certified to the proper officers, and
the same shall be levied and collected as other
taxes are levied and collected. Said tax shall
be placed before and in preference to all other
items for the full amount thereof and all
funds derived from said levies hereby required,
shall be placed in a separate and distinct
fund, which, together with all interest collected
on the same shall be irrevocably pledged for
the payment of the interest and principal of
said notes when and as the same fall due.
SECTION IV: That the proceeds arising
from the sale of said notes shall be placed to
the credit of the fund for the payment of
said improvement and all unexpended balances
remaining in said fund after the cost and ex
pense of the improvement have been paid and
the proceeds of all bonds sold in anticipation
of the collection of deferred installments of
assessments and all cash payments of assess
ments shall be applied to the payment of said
note or notes and interest thereon until both
are fully provided for.
SECTION V: That the Director of Finance
be and he is hereby authorized to issue his
warrant to the Treasurer in payment for the
cost of said improvement.
SECTION VI: This ordinance shall take
effect and be in force from and after the
earliest period allowed by the charter of the
City of Hamilton, Ohio.
Passed: July 21, 1937.
R. H. BURKE, Mayor.
Attest: ADELE EDMONDS,
Clerk of Council.
Jy 30-lt
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