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THE PRESS
0VTIC1AL OKGAN Of OKGANIZBD
THE NONPAREIL PRINTING CO.
PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS
Subscription Price $1.00 per Year
Payable in Advance
W*
do not hold •bimItm naponaible for
ISM
SAFETY MOVEMENT GETS
RESULTS
The lives of 310,000 Americans have
been saved since the national safety
movement began in 1913, it is reveal
ed in the 1944 edition of "Accident
Facts", the statistical yearbook of the
National Safety Council.
A box score of accidents contained
•tsjhs
Hamilton. Ohio
Baderged by the" Trades and Labor
Council of Hamilton, Ohio
Endorsed by the Middletewn Trades
and Labor Council of Middletown, O.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10,1944
EMBLEM OF PROGRESS
What has been described as perhaps
one of the most effective presenta
tions of the reasons for demanding
union products and union services ever
to be broadcast was aired recently
over Station WTOP of the Columbia
Broadcasting System by Albert N
Dennis. Mr. Dennis, president of the
Washington Union Label League, is
the founder of the well known "Labor
News Review" radio program. On his
634th weekly broadcast, he said:
"The one emblem that most truly
represents the fruits of ceaseless toil
and effort for the betterment of man
kind, from Alpha to Omega, from the
days of serfdom to the present ad
vanced state of wage earners, is the
union label—whether a label on a
product, a union shop card or a union
service button.
"The union label affords the ONLY
positive assurance that the goods you
purchase were (1) made by capable
workers, fairly compensated for their
work (2) not made in a foreign na
tion by exploited labor (3) not made
in a prison (4) not made by child la
bor, and (5) not produced by 'sweat
shop' methods. The same principles
applies to union services of all kinds.
"When you demand union-made
goods and union services, you (1) as
suredly help yourself (2) you help
your fellow-men, and (3) you aid in
the advancement of civilization to
higher standards and greater accom
plishments.
"These simple truths must be plain
to all who toil, their origin a part of
the age-long struggle of ALL wage
earners—and certainly their worth
should be appreciated by all. Truly,
the union label is an emblem of pro
gress."
•*^V
L4BOB
any
«h«i or opinions «xpr—d in th« articles or
eoMmunicationa of correspondent*.
Communications solicited from secretaries
of all societies and organizations, and should
be addressed to The Butler County Press, U6
Market 8treet, Hamilton, Ohio.
Ths publishers reserve the right to reject
any advertisements at anj time.
Advertising rates Made known en application.
Whatever is intended for insertion must be
authenticated by the name and address of the
writer, not necessarily for publication, but
a guarantee of good faith.
Subscribers changing their address will
please notify this office, giving eld and new
address to insure regular delivery of paper.
Entered at the Postoffice at Hamilton,
Ohio, as Second-Class Mail Matter
Issued Weekly at l» Market Street
Telephone
Last week this column discussed the
question of, a "hard" or "soft" peace
for Germany, reaching the conclusion
that the whole "issue" is a phony and
that the only question is a peace that
will stick, in which Germany will be
given an opportunity to take her place
in the family of nations and help
the rehabilitation and betterment
the world.
In connection with the division over
a "hard" or "soft" peace, Americans
will be interested in seeing the latest
March of Time film, "What To Do
With Germany". In it they will discov
er that statesmen, too, differ on the
best method of dealing with the Ger
mans after the war.
Sumner Wells, former Under-Sec
retary of State, whose book, "The
Time for Decision", has been publish
ed recently, would divide Germany
into 3 states, but insists that a peace
while realistic, should not be barbar
ously severe or vengeful. Britain'
Lord Vansittart, for 8 years Perma
nent Under-Secretary at the Foreign
Office, says that the disease is nat
ional and the cure must be national
Others who speak in the film, like
foreign relations expert John Foster
Dulles and columnist Walter Winchell
round out a picture of what is being
proposed today as a permanent cure
for German militarism and aggres
sion.
Dramatic and significant aspects of
the American labor struggle in some
of its greatest years are portrayed
from the human side in Bi'ead Upon
The Waters a book by Rose Pesotta
which Dodd, Mead & Co., will publish
in late November.
From 1933 to 1944, Miss Pesotta was
the only woman vice-president of the
International Ladies' German Work
ers' Union, now 305,000 strong. As a
in the book shows that the death rate
has been lower than for 1913 each
year in the 30-year period from 1914
to 1944, except for 1917 and 1936. In
1913 the rate was 85.5 per 100,000
population. Last year it was 72.3.
During the triple decade there were
2,808,000 accidental deaths. If the
death rate had been as high each
year as it was in 1913, this death toll
would have been 3,119,000.
WINNING THE PEACE
If we're to win the peace as well as
the war, the cost of living must be
kept down and the purchasing power
of money preserved. A reckless infla
tion that would necessarily be followed
by the catastrophe of deflation—with
its unemployment, bankruptcies, mis
ery and heartache—must be prevented
at all cost. Let's make no mistake—
dangerous period lies ahead. The
American people have nothing to fear,
however, if they show in the future
the same common sense they have
shown in the past, and continue to
put every penny over rock-bottom ex
penses into the purchase of more and
more war bonds.
WHAT NEXT?
The Buffalo, N. Y., plant of the
General Engineering Co. has develop
ed a reveting machine which will save
000 to 3,000 man-hours in building
an airplane, company officials an
nounce. The machine, they say, puts a
rivet through metal up to three-eights
of an inch thick and performs 4 op
erations which formerly were done
separately, drilling, counter-sinking,
placing the riviet and heading the
rivet.
MONEY
to bid at the
Farm Sales
ARE YOU READY with plenty of cash to attend
the public sales in your community? No need to
pass up something you need for the lack of ready
money. Hold onto your bonds. Don't sacrifice
a
thing. Simply get extra cash anytime you wish
at The City Loan.
$1,000,000 has been set aside for rural residents this fall.
$1,000 or less for anyone who can use it. Special terms.
Reasonable cost. See us for cash anytime. And when you
go to buy implements or whatever you need, ask your
for The City Loan plan. It's made to order for yon.
118 High St. Phone 3663
or
THE CITY LOAN
ana Guaranty Company
Hamilton, Ohio
E S A O V E O I O
W. I*
^Ti^| 'jV"
COMMENT ON WORLD EVENTS
tJki
THE BUTLER COUNTY PRESS
general organizer she led campaigns
and strikes in various cities across
the land and in Canada and Puerto
Rico.
Notable phases of her story deal
with police lawlessness thousands of
Puerto Rican needle-workers starving
under bureaucratic rule Seattle em
ployers as vigilantes sadly exploit
ed Mexican and Dust Bowl women in
Los Angeles women breaking factory
windows to save Flint sit-downers
from tear gas opposition to "disrup
tive foreigners" (organizers from the
U. S.) in Montreal failure of the
Mohawk Valley back-to-work formula
in Cleveland appalling conditions in
San Francisco Chinese underground
garment shops mountain men with
hair-trigger tempers on the 11-mile
picket line in Akron, and "outside agi
tators" striving to maintain peace
years when the ILGWU was torn by
internal war.
v
There are memories, too, of the au
thor's childhood in Tsarist Russia of
the Black Hundreds of peasants burn
ing landlords' estates of an immi
grant girl joining Waistmakers' Lo
cal 25 soon after arrival in America
of marching on May Day past the
scene of the Triangle Waist Co., fire,
in which 146 girls died behind locked
doors or jumping from high windows
of pioneering for workers' education.
After Pearl Harbor, Miss Pesotta
gave up organizing and returned to
work at a sewing machine, and now
makes WAC uniforms in a New York
dress factory. She has long believed
that labor union officials should go
back into industry at intervals to
keep in touch with rank-and-file
problems. At the 1944 ILGWU con
vention, she declined a nomination for
a fourth term on the general execu
tive board.
WISDOM
It is the common fate of the indolent
to see their rights become a prey to
the active. The condition upon which
God hath given liberty to man is
eternal vigilance.—John Philpot Cur
ran.
Labor Takes Veterans
To Parties, Gives Them
Weekend Of Fun
Houston, Tex.—American Federa
tion of Labor workers here believe
that wounded war veterans recuperat
ing at nearby hospitals should be
shown a good time and they have con
tributed $10,000 of their hard-earned
wages to see that the war heroes get
it.
The entertainment program, under
direction of Pat Moore, Secretary
Treasurer of Local No. 326 of the In
ternational Brotherhood of Teams
ters, is a weekly affair and it in
cludes all the trimmings.
Groups of six to sixteen wounded
veterans stationed at McCloskey Hos
pital are invited through the com
manding officer of the hospital to par
ticipate in a weekend of fun. Their
fare, including pullman, is provided
by the fund. Girls working at nearby
shipyards and war plants meet the
soldiers at the station and the vet
erans take their choice. They then
proceed to Galveston for a day at the
beach, including deep sea fishing if
they so desire. Dancing and a night
club tour occupy the evening hours.
Trips to football games and a picnic
to the historic San Jacinto battlefield
are also on the schedule.
When the veterans are ready to go
back, they receive a photographed
record of their two-day trip as a sou
venir of the good times they have en
joyed.
All expenses of the entertainment
program are pai3 for from the fund
voluntarily contributed by AFL work
ers.
See "Sufficient"
Holiday Liquor Supply
Columbus.—There will be an am
ple supply of liquor for this state's
Thanksgiving and Christmas buyers,
Director Don A. Fisher declared this
week. However, there may be a scar
city of bondeds and scotch.
Fisher added that there are still a
few thousand cases of unrationed
liquor in state stores. These comprise
three brands, blends with cane neu
tral spirits. In many cities the brands
have been sold out, but in some small
er communities they are still avail
able.
Rosenbalm Public Sale
Charles Rosenbalm has engaged
Harry J. Honerlaw, auctioneer to con
duct his public sale of horses, cattle
and farm implements on the Harry
Hughes farm located on the corner of
the Millikin and Mauds-Hughes roads,
8 miles east of Hamilton and 1 mile
west of Yankee road. The sale will
start promptly at 12:30 p. m. on Mon
day, November 20tfa. Q. Wjfle will
be the clerk.
TRAILBR
vacation
Teachers Oppose "Hasty"
Plans For Compulsory
Military Training
Washington, D. C.—Opposition to
any "hasty or ill-considered action to
set up compulsory military training
for youth in the post-war world" was
expressed by the Commission on Edu
cation Reconstruction of the Ameri
can Federation of Teachers at a spe
cial meeting here.
The views of the teachers' group
on this subject, which has not yet
been passed upon by the American
Federation of Labor as a whole, were
conveyed by letter to President Roose
velt.
The commission pointed out in its
letter to the President that while it
strongly favors whatever measures
may be necessary to the national de
fense, "it is convinced that the na
ture of these measures cannot be de
termined at this time."
The requirements of national de
dense after the war, the teachers said,
will depend upon the character of in
ternational as well as national de
velopments after victory is attained.
The teachers urged that a commis
sion of outstanding persons represent
ing the Army, Navy, veterans organi
zations, educational groups, labor,
management, agriculture and the pub
lic at large be appointed to inquire
into the question of a national com
pulsory military training program for
American youth. The commission
should be empowered to make recom
mendations to the Government, the
teachers said.
ON iUNDAY MORN. IF HEADACHES COME,
-OR ANY OTHER OAY.
HOP OUT Of BCD AND EASE YOUR HEAD
THE ALKA-SELTZER WAY.
1 headache
ANALGESIC (painreliever)
in Alka-Selteer acts quickly
because it is fully dissolved
and ready to go to work as soon
as you swallow it. Its painreliev
ing action is mad* more positive
by alkaline buffers which protect
It and speed up its action.
Because Alka-Seltzer contains an
analgtsic and alkaline buffer sails,
It Is usad by millions for the relief
not telly of Headache, but of Cold
Symptoms, Add Indigestion, Mus
cular Fatigue, "Morning After"
aad Muscular Pains.
At your drug store in handy
and by the glass.
BQ ~ZUis5& Try
Alka -Seltzer
The Proposed Hueston's Woods State Forest Park
PLAY
GENERAL INFORMATION
APPROXIMATE P!OUR »3
S/ZF OF FORBST AtOOO ACfiFS
S/ZF OF LAKE SOO ACG£S
OF S//0&F L/A/F e Af/LBS
Gfi£AT£Sr DFPTH OF IA/CF 35 FFFT
DBA/NAGF AGFA OF LAKF /O/ SQ. Af/IES
VACAT/OAf CAB/MS #0 o/t/rs
Express your interest in this public
project by contacting your member*?
of the Ohio State Legislature. It is
equally important for you to enlist
BATHIN6
PICNIC
PLAY
Suggestions
the support of all organizations of
which you are member. This improve
ment will benefit the people for gen
erations to come. It is a postwar pro-
RATION TABLE
SUGAR
Stamps 30, 31, 32 and 33 (Book 4)
valad for five pounds indefinitely
stamp 40 (Book 4) valid for five
pounds for home canning through
next February.
SHOES
"Anrplane" stamps 1, 2, and 3,
(Book 3) are good indefinitely.
3) are good indefinitely.
CANNED GOODS
Blue stamps A-8 through Z-8, and
A-5 through W-5 (Book 4) are valid
indefinitely. Worth 10 points each.
MEATS
Red stamps A-8 through Z-8 (Book
4) and A-5 through P-5 are valid in
definitely. Worth 10 points.
TIRES
Tires of commercial vehicles must
be inspected every six months or
every 5,000 miles, whichever is first.
Passenger tire inspections are re
quired only when applying for tire re
placements. Inspection records must
be retained for use when tire or sup
plemental gasoline applications are
made.
GASOLINE
A Coupon 13—Valid for 4 gallons
through December 21. B-4, B-6, C-4
and C-5 stamps are good for 5 gal
lons each until used.
VILLAGE GARDENS
100% Union House
Central At South Avenue
JOE TUTAS, Prop.
829 South Second Street
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CABINS
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ject and will put people to work after
the war. It will mean no additional
taxes since it will be built out of funds
accumulated in the State Treasury.
Mileage rationing records must be
retained and forwarded to the board
with supplemental gasoline applica
tions.
R-l and R-2 non-highway-use cou
pons are good for 5 gallons each and
E-l and E-2 non-highway-use coupons
for 1 gallon each until invalidated.
FUEL OIL
Periods 4 and 5 coupons are valid
through August 31,1945. Period 1 cou
pon of 1944-45 heating season is valid
indefinitely. All coupons have 10-gal
lon unit value, with most coupons
worth several units each.
All change-making and reserve cou
pons are now good.
LIQUOR
Current period expires Nov. 18,
with whisky and domestic gins as the
only spirits rationed
USED FATS
Each pound of waste fat is good
for two meat-ratio® points.
A man rushed into the newepaper
office and demanded to see the editor.
"Sir," he cried as he walked around
the room, "your paper has libeled me.
You have called me the "lightweight
champion."
"But that is true," returned the
editor. "You are Mr. Fightwell, aren't
you
"Yes, yes," cried the other, "but it's
my brother who is the boxer. I'm a
coal merchant."
Edgar K. Wagner
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
BIG SOCIAL EVERY FRIDAY AND SUNDAY
COME AND SPEND AN ENJOYABLE EVENING
PLENTY OF GAMES
AND EXTRA FEATURES
MOOSE HOME
At 8:30 P. M.
O E O S E I N
at
I E Y O E
Seventh and Walnut Sta.
•s%
Hamilton, Ohio
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