Newspaper Page Text
*4, fl 7 I 1 it* ^v,^r ,t •. ?.t'.. ®I1 »J(-. 1 J:. Washington, D. C. (ILNS). The Supreme Court at its last sitting granted two appeals for review much more important to labor than any of the cases decided at the same sitting. The Fansteel Metallurgical Corpora tion, North Chicago, 111., refused to bargain collectively with its workers. The result was a strike and mainly for a time a sit-down strike. The county court issued an order calling for eviction of the strikers, and the sheriff carried out the order. Before that, however, the company had fired the strikers. Board Blamed Company The N. L. R. B. ruled that while the sit-down strike was illegal, the com pany had led the way in illegality. It had persistently and for months re fused to bargain collectively with its employes, and interfered with their organization—both actions against the law. The company's action produced the strike, the board said. The N. L. R. B. ordered that certain of the dis charged men be reinstated or com pensated. The Seventh Circuit Court, holding that participation in the il legal sit-down strike gave ground for discharge of the men, by a two-to-one INDUSTRIAL DECLINE IS BIGGEST IN THE U.S. Geneva (ILNS). Index numbers compiled by the International Labor Office and published in the new edi tion of its Year Book of Labor Sta tistics, show that in March, 1938, the latest month for which complete fig ures are available, industrial produc tion in 12 countries was from 23.1 to 28.4 per cent higher than in 1929. In 8 other countries, however, it was from 4.0 to 33.6 per cent lower than in 1929. The greatest increase, 82.4 per cent, occurred in Latvia and the greatest decline, 33.6 per cent, in the United States. Countries, besides Latvia, in which production exceeded the 1929 figure, and the percentage of increase given by the Year book for each, are: Japan, 79.1 Finland, 58.3 Estonia, 50.0 Sweden, 46.0 Chile, 36.4 Denmark, 35.0 Hungary, 32.9 Roumania, 31.4 Great Britain and Northern Ireland, 23.6 Norway, 23.2 Germany, 23.1. Countries, besides the United States, in which production was lower than in 1929, and the percentage of decrease given by the Year Book for each, are: Austria, 4.0 Poland, 4.5 Canada, 13.5 Czechoslovakia, 18.2 the Netherlands, 18.5 France, 21.3 and Belgium, 32.1. RADIO STATION GOES UNION New,Orleans (ILNS) .—Broadcast ing station WDSU, New Orleans, joined the two other major stations of this city in agreeing to employ only union musicians when a contract was signed by the station, and Joachin Pipitone, president of Musicians' Union, Local No. 174. The contract runs until January, 1940. -.- i ,«*y v.v .- 1 •A*v.« To Appeals For Review Granted Of Great Importance To Labor—Judge Appoints Court Of Five Judges To Hear Case—Decision Is "Without Prejudice." vf' i fa .,, .t Supreme Court Agrees To Review Decision of Lower Court On Sit-Down Strike Miss Perkins said that 248,000 work ers were placed in positions in October, with automobiles, body and part plants alone absorbing 85,000 new employes. Retail trade establishments, she said, hired about 44,000 additional workers in October to handle the increase in fall business. Manufacturing as a whole, the sec retary said, added 156,000 employes to payrolls, exclusive of a decrease of 103,000 casual workers in canneries. CHICAGO MARKET CO. Phone 5000 Weekly payrolls rose about $5, 100,000 a week, a gain of 3.3 per cent, the secretary reported. The secretary said that general gains also were reported in wholesale and retail trade establishments, anth racite and bituminous coal mines and private building construction, result ing in a higher payroll index for Oc tober than any other month in 1938. CHICAGO BLEND COFFEE—2 lbs 29c FLOUR, HOME PRIDE—12 lbs 20c CATSUP—14-oz. bottle, 2 for 15c PEANUT BUTTER—2-lb. jar........ 22c GRAHAM CRACKERS—2-lb. box. .. 17c SEES GROWING SENTIMENT FOR LABOR PEACE Washington, D. C. (ILNS).—Secre tary of Labor Perkins told a press con ference here that she has found a real desire for reconciliation between the two opposed labor groups among both A. F. of L. and C. I. O. members and that this desire is growing. Asked about the naming of a peace committee, she answered that this was one of many "trial balloons" which ought to be tried. Parts for Tractors-Trucks & Autos INSIST ON GETTING THE BEST You always get the best at the Savage Auto Supply Co. 636 Maple Avenue HAMILTON. OHIO Phone 116 1 1 v THE BUT1JER COUN The vote squashed the board's order. Supreme Court will review. In the other matter, the Civil Liber ties Union got an injunction from Judge William Clark in New Jersey, restraining Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City from stopping free speech in his town and driving out union or ganizers. He appealed to the United States Third Circuit Court. This was his right. But Judge J. Warren Davis of that court took the unheard-of ac tion of fixing a court of five judges to hear the case—and calling back two retired judges to sit on it. Decision "Without Prejudice" These judges are Joseph Buffiington and J. Whittaker Thompson, two of the very old men who got the Third Circuit the name of the "Methusaleh court who took prominent part in 16 decisions which the Supreme Court re versed in one session. The Supreme Court refused the re quest of the Civil Liberties Union to disqualify this made-up court—but did so on matters of form, and expressly "without prejudice" to future motions in the matter. Morris Ernst, attor ney for the Civil Liberties Union, is jubilant. ILLION RETURNED TO JOBS SINCE JULY Washington, D. C. (ILNS).—About 500,000 non-agricultural workers have been returned to jobs in the four month interval since July, bringing the total number of persons at work to 34,000,000, compared with 38,000,000 in 1929 and 37,000,000 in September, 1937, Secretary of Labor Perkins re ports. .#•, Sw *Vr,*"*». .'• 1 i *"H*»'' "f r* V 1- i. Y&" -r ,,! 'A 1 Copyright, w. N. V.) President Green said in part: "Labor is not opposed to principles involved in profit-sharing but it is op posed to the way in which it has de veloped and operated. Profit-sharing as developed in the United States was imposed on all existing economic in justice and discouraging union activity to secure a fair basic wage. So-called profit-sharing plans were mainly de veloped by corporations that at tempted to substitute for real collect ive bargaining an arrangement termed employe representation which for the most part was the form without the substance. Collective Bargaining Vital "Labor believes all plans affecting labor must rest on collective bai-gain ing. Beginning with the basic fact of our social organization that people must have incomes to buy the neces saries and comforts for living, labor asserts the right of every person to opportunity to earn that income which includes the right to payment from work done. "The right of labor to the fruits of its toil has been obscured by the com plexities flowing from the corporative form of financing, and mass produc tion with its standardization of de signs and machines and sub-division of work for repetitive processes. Cor poration financing has altered and ob scured the responsibility of investors in a business enterprise. Mass pro duction or large scale production has obscured the relation between the worker and his productiveness. "What is needed in this situation is genuine organization of workers in unions. No Substitute For Justice "This union function is indispens able to justice to workers, to balanced progress of the industry within the business structure and to social jus tice and peace in the community. De nial of this fundamental justice to those who carry on the production processes of industry or maintain our service institutions, or attempts to frustrate collective bargaining are what cause labor disputes and social discontent. Substitutes for justice v --V :T£. '-. .A. v .* VOL. XXXVIII. No. 35. HAMILTON, OHIO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1938. ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR A. F. of L. Opposed To Taxing Power We're Sure Santa Will Take Care o' This Labor Is Not Opposed To Principles Involved In Profit Sharing—Collective Bargaining Is Vital Factor— Labor Has Right To The Fruits Of Its Toil. Washington, D. C. (ILNS).—Pro posals to use the taxing power of the government to promote profit-sharing plans are "unalterably opposed" by the American Federation of Labor, Presi dent William Green of the federation told a Senate finance sub-committee investigating profit-sharing systems. Senator Clyde L. Herring of Iowa is chairman of the sub-committee. may for a time prevent the outbreak of disputes but they increase and fos tera spirit of unrest which sooner or later takes its toll. "In recognition of these facts our nation has undertaken to assure to wage earners the right to organize in unions and to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing. This priceless foundation of economic liberty we intend to main tain against all invasions whether by employers or governmental adminis trators. "Labor cannot be asked to accept blindly management's decision on what constitutes profits. All of the facts must be available. "(1). Production and costs records must be equally available to union and management. "(2). Sales policies must be con sidered by both parties and be mutu ally acceptable. All records must be equally available to both sides. "(3). Salaries of executives and officers and returns to investors must be subject to the same conditions. "(4). Financial policies and pro posals must be subjected to the same review and decision. Standard Wage Comes First "(5). The standard wages of pro ducing workers, which are production charges should be fixed by collective bargaining at the highest level indus try could reasonably be expected to pay and should provide for customary standards of living proportionate to productivity as human labor power is increased by mechanical power and machine tools, and reflecting lower unit production costs. The standard wage is the cost item which is the first charge in industry and which is neces sary to the sustained consuming power upon which all business depends. "(6). Profit-sharing or a partner ship wage is the share which labor would have in the net income of the enterprise. In reality labor is a part ner in production, not from the in vestment of capital, but from the in vestment of experience and work ability. As a partner labor would have a voice in determining rates of profit-sharing. "The American Federation of Labor is unalterably opposed to using the tax power of the government to pro mote profit-sharing plans. We are squarely opposed to amending the So cial Security Act to provide tax credits for funds, allotted to profit-sharing or any similar purpose, however worthy they. may. be in themselves.'' \\T- mi win i* DO vo U s' IF" VA/E PATCH OP AMD PAINT IT OVER, VJE CAM GIVE IT TO HIM AGAIN THIS ^vYa'V/'// CM CI5TMAS To Enc r-"-4" ,v :'•.-" vaY/'/VVT-'i'v' '.'A'/A 'Xv.A/xi11 i A For Profit-Sharing, Green Says Building To Continue Active This Winter, F. II. A. Officials Say Washington, D. C. .iionths. I'LKS? Fed eral Housing Administration officials predict continuation of hes»v,v c- idon- tial consina tie:, durinv lm u rate' They bused t!u for a. (V:-!kt figures. In that «i:ih, applications for niortcag*.- insurar on ?rsa!: homes totaled $:i7,467,l)Oi and mort gages accepted for insurance $64, 627,000, increases of 117 and 82 per cent respectively for Odohor. Property improvi mom o?* which insurance was provided, num bered 53,A'4 with a value of $22, 367,000—the hitrk- volume since Housing Act amer.dn.i-:as be came effective last February, jlfec, -£-r iCrf* v—'• J?", 1 I r" mm •J .v. Vv THIRD ^•-ip 'J ,," *,"- i% IIP pif Iwaukee, Wis.—Delegates to the convention of the National As m: "f Real Estate Boards, rep iting 50,000 members from 455 ated bodies, which met recently !Iwaukee. condemned Congress- Wright Patman's "death sen chain store tax proposal as a are which would "bring economic to all American trade, commerce i di?«try.'' The association deci fo :demn the proposed measure voii-d after the board heard Pat plea.-.' for his own legislation, and II. \'ystrom, Professor of Mar at Columbia University, pre sd facts in opposition. ntt a*mi' The dream of every girl! A gorgeous new cedar chest all her own—to safe-guard her precious things from prying eyes. Three big trays that give 1. 3 more storage space. The two front trays swing out on hinges giving access to roomy interior. Choose from the most complete selec tion of cedar chests in town. Come in today! rat* Modern or period styles in all sizes all priccs. -.3. -A tn "Lowin ~Pr sa DRIVE ST DISEASE Back Nation-Wide Drive Against In fantile Paralysis—Pledge Whole hearted Co-operation. Washington, D. C. (ILNS).—Sev enty-three officers of national and in ternational unions have wired pledges of wholehearted co-operation of their unions in the Fight Infantile Paralysis Campaign of 1939. This was in re sponse to the invitation of President William Green of the American Fed eration of Labor that they join with him in the formation of the Labor Di vision of the Committee for the Cele bration of the President's Birthday. Wholehearted co-operation and a deep understanding of the necessity of this campaign made up the keynote of every message to President Green. Tni record support of the leaders of labor definitely proved that labor is fully aware that the dread infantile paralysis knows no boundaries and that it takes its highest toll within the families of labor. Daniel J. Tobin, president of the Teamsters' Union, clearly voiced this -enlinient in his acceptance, saying: •'Only those of us who have had sick ness of this kind, or a sickness of a similar nature, can fully appreciate the necessity of maintaining an in stitution by public subscription which will help wipe out the dreadful scourge of infantile paralysis which has per -e"ot"d our safety for years." To Send Greetings This year every member of -organ ized h-bor will have the opportunity of sendi.ir his personal greeting to the President on his fifty-seventh birti,lay. With this greeting to the IV -i 'ent will go the contribution of lab:-! to the National Foundation for In!'-..mile Paralysis. Labor's contribu te v ill be known as Labor's Silver te and should represent the gen y of every union member. PAT MAN CHAIN TAX FLAYED BY REALTORS ckut. 15 .95 L'y O N V E N I E N TERMS COURT