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Read The Arizona Sun The State’s Only Negrt Newspaper Vol. s—sc Per Copy PAUL ROBESON WARNS NATION^ LABOR ENDORSES CITY BOND ISSUE The Phoenix Central Labor Council at its regular meeting un animously adopted a resolution to lend all-out support to enact the Initiative Gas Tax Measure No. 300 which will appear on the No vember sth ballot, and to support the three City of Phoenix Bond issues for increased water, sewage and airport facilities. A condition was added by the Council that the support would be given if the construction work in volved were given to contractors in the State of Arizona. The Gas-Tax Initiative Measure No. 300 to be voted on November sth will reapportion the gas tax collections so as to allow the cities of Arizona to use 10% of the col lections to help maintain roads and other improvements within the city boundaries. At the present time the gas tax collections are divided as follows: 70% for the State, 30% for the Counties; and nothing for the cities. Under Proposition No. 300 the following division would be made: 70% for the State, 20; for the Counties, and 10% for the Cities. The only change would be that 10% of the collections would be taken away from the Counties and given to the Cities. There would be no increase in the gas tax. The City Improvement Bond Elections will be held on Novem ber 19th. Only property owners of the City of Phoenix will be eligible to vote at this election. Voters not properly registered with the city to vote, should register at the city hall at once. State registra tion is not sufficient to qualify at ->the city elections. *The Phoenix Improvement Bonds will be used to make the water supply of the city adequate to meet the needs of a sharply in creased population. This is to be accomplished by constructing fa cilities to bring added water to the Phoenix area from the Verde River. The Sewage Bonds will be used to repair and construct sew age facilities in Phoenix in order to overcome the serious health i hazards now existent and to in crease sewage arrangements for the growing population. The Air port Bonds will be used to im prove the Phoenix airport ar rangements so that larger cargo and passenger planes may make Phoenix a regular stopping point. At the present time these air facili ties are wholly inadequate. Percentage of Women Working Drops In Year Washington (FTP) The per centage of women In the civilian labor force dropped in the year since V-J day from 36% to 29%, the Department of Labor women’s bureau said Sept. 30. In June, the bureau found the hiring rate for women was higher in bo*h the durable and nondur able goods industries. The layoff and discharge rate was lower for women than men in both industrial groups at that time. W •WWVWWWWW liliportant Labor Issues sen By Winter Lecturer At University of Arizona Tucson, Oct. 9—(Special)—Chas. IL Woods, retired general solicitor to r the Santa Fe Railway Com pany, this winter lecturer in labor issues of major importance in the approaching presidential election campaign. The labor question will receive particular emphasis especi ally if Harold Stassen figures in t;he campaign since, as governor of Minnesota, he was instrumental ip. passage of the state’s Labor Ifeace Act, an act that has proved fairly successful, he said before tlhe Pima county bar association. - The classroom of the college of law will be no place for propagan da, no place to be pro- or anti iabor or pro- or anti-capital, but a place to state the background of ltebor questions, set forth the eco ) ARIZOi^f^UN IRENE MOORE'S CASE HEARD BY SUPREME COURT The plea of Irene Moore, of Phoenix, to escape execution in the state’s lethal gas chamber for the murder of her husband, Willie, was argued Monday before the Arizona Supreme Court The third woman to be sentenced to death in Arizona’s history, Mrs. Moore has been in the state prison at Florence since her conviction by a Maricopa County Superior Court jury. She shot and killed her husband in front of their home, 1615 East Jefferson Street, on Aug. 24, 1945. George Locke and Terrance Car son, Phoenix attorneys, were pre senting Mrs. Moore’s appeal for reversal of the death judgment while Asst. Atty. Gen. John Rood Co. tty. Ed Beuchamp and Asst. Co. Atty. Fred Hyder were urging upon the high tribunal that the death decree be upheld. The high court consented to re view the case, verdict is pnding. BIG MEAT HOARD FOUND IN CHICAGO Chicago—(FP)—More than 45 million pounds of meat are being hoarded in Chicago cold storage plants, including those of the Big Four packers. The charges were leveled here Oct. 4 by the Chicago Sun on the basis of its own survey of storage plants. The figure was a sharp boost over its own previous esti mate of 18 million pounds and the paper declared it was "highly prob able’’ that the hoarded reserves might be even greater than the new estimate. Packers tried to explain away the hoards with assertions that much of it was held for the army. But the Sun declared it had pre viously established that no meat stored in Chicago belonged to army or other armed forces, nor to UNRRA, Federal Commodity Cred it Corp., or the Dept, of Agricul ture. Detroit AFL Indorses Mainly Democrats Detroit —(FP) —Except for eight legislative candidates and the Re publican for coroner, the Detroit and Wayne County Federation of Labor (AFL) has indorsed Demo crats only for office on the party ballots. In the main they are can didates also indorsed by the CIO political action committees for county, state and congressional jobs. The list is headed by Murray D. Van Wagoner for governor and James H. Lee for U. S. senator, both Democrats and both already blessed by the CIO. VOTE 107—NO! nomic facts and point out the law and review the two sides of every problem, he said. Woods outlined the university law course in labor relations to in clude early history of the English labor law from the middle of the fourteenth century to 1890 and early American labor law to same date, the year in which tae federal Sherman Aca was passed. The course also will entail a dis cussion of the House of Lords T:*i ology in England, development of common law in the United Stales a survey of important state and federal statutes affecting latxlr, picketing, free speech, anti-tnjst acts, modern labor legislation, me National Labor Relations trends in labor he said. Jm. Published in the Interest of the Social, Political and Eco. Welfare of 40,000 Negroes of Arizona. PHOENIX, ARIZONA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1946 Gl FAMILIES AT HOME AWAY FROM HOME EN HAWAII lilted Mrs. Johnetta Reid, Washington, D. C. and her son, Nickie, find ways of making a pleasant life for themselves on the far off island of Oahu, Hawaii. Arts and crafts programs at the USO club provide an interest for Mrs. Reid and help to keep junior busy while daddy is on service duty at nearby Schofield Barracks. Bligh Des Brisay, USO worker, supervises. USO is appealing this Fall for funds to maintain a “home away frc;n home” during the coming year for ever seas service families like the Raids. ii Truman Backs AFL Federal Workers r I Jln Opposing Indiscriminate Firing > j St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 7. In >! creased pay for employes of the . Federal Government is one of the i major goals of the legislative pro . gram drafted for the next Con s gress, James B. Burns, president of » the American Federation of Gov ernment Employes (AFL), told the r opening session of that organiza t tion’s annual convention here. At the same time the delegates * were cheered by a message from t; President Truman expressing firm r opposition to indiscriminate dis > missals of Federal workers in the ■ | current program to slash the pay ■ roll. Conceding that reductions in Federal personnel "are an abso , lute necessity,’ Mr. Truman * declared, “yet, at the same time we must make sure that we dis tribute those reductions in such away that none of the essential t services are crippled.” " | Though he made no specific men t tion of the Federal Pay Act of 1946, f i which requires Federal employ *' ment be reduced to 1,600,000, the f President added that “we must see ■ to it that we do not have any sur > plus personnel.” In conclusion, his i* message said: * "Your convention is being held at a very important time. Never . before in the peacetime history of 1 this Nation have Government em , ployes been called on to discharge 1 as difficult and complex duties and responsibilities. Failure to dis charge them effectively would ser iously undermine public confidence in our form of government. We . must therefore work together to strengthen our career of public service. Expressing gratification of the President’s message, Mr. Burns told the convention: “That’s exactly the same position we have taken for months. We know that sharp personnel cuts must be made and we don’t want 7 excess baggage on the Federal pay -7 roll. B t that the ar bi -i-gersonnbl ceiling system 7 worho hardships on many agencies ' that can’t operate efficiently with * less personnel. If we are to have : efficient government, we can’t */'.ash our payrolls indiscriminate!v.’> The legislative program carried i before the delegates by Mr. Bums * is aimed at the following objec ■ .fives: 1. An increase of pay commen f [ surate with the real cost of living s rise since 1941, including a boost 1 for those now retired. , 2. Extension of the Classifica t tion Act’s benefits to all white ; collar clerical workers including I those in the field service. 3. Prevention of so-called “down-grading” in order to cut sal- j aries. 4. Establishment of seniority asj a stronger factor in determining j who shall be separated from the i service and in determining promo-j tions. 5. Protection of the retirement system, with optional retirement j at full annuity after 30 years' ser vice. 6. Six months’ half-pay for those; dismissed from the service withj five or more year’s service, and! commensurate compensation for those with less tenure. Bums did not set a figure for: the payraise to be sought before Congress this winter, but pointed out living costs from 1941 through las month had risen 45 percent. “All this means but one thing,” he said, “that Government em ployes are again piling up an ac cumulated deficit which is repre sented by the gap between the pur chasing value of their salaries and, the nominal values of the dollars they receive. Your national office j will again be ready to wage an-! other unrelenting campaign for, ! salary legislation when Congress convenes. JOE LOUIS SUPPORTS COMMUNITY CHEST USO national headquarters has just released a statement from champion Joe Louis in which he gives his support to the current $19,000,000 appeal. The statement reads: “I’ve had many big fights in the ring and I’ve won. But there is a fight that cannot be won alone. That’s the fight that every Ameri can must make to preserve the peace and to build a better world. We must all get in the fight to gether to keep the USO going for our boys still in service. We must all fight to keep our Community j Chests filled, so that, our boys and girls and their families will have a | better way of life. Let’s keep slug ging to get the USO its money and to fill the Community Chests.” In most cities, Community Chests are including USO in their appeal for local health and welfare agen cies. In cities where USO is not included in the Chests, and thru out rural sections of the country, USO is conducting its own fund raising campaigns. • VOTE 107—NO! He Links Attacks On Negroes To Those Against Soviet Union By MASON ROBERSON SAN FRANCISCO.—“A year ago, I heard high Amer ican military leaders talking about dropping the atom bomb on the Soviet Union. That was in Bavaria. Then they whispered it. Now it is spread in the headlines from coast to coast. So far have they gone in one year. Where will they be next month?” This grim warning came from Paul Robeson, the great Notice! TO OUR MANY READERS: On account of the shortage of newsprint we are forced to re duce the size of our paper tem porarily, hoping our next issue will be back to its regular size. | McFarland Reviews Accomplishments of Democratic Parly Florence, Oct. 10. — (Special) Reviewing his own accomplish ments and the program of the Democratic party nationally, Unit ed States Senator Ernest W. Mc- Farland here today fired the open ing gun in his reelection on Nov. |5. The Senator leaves here today | accompanied by a group of Demo | cratit no.r. nees for a two weeks | tour of the state during which he | will visit 24 Arizona cities and ■ towns for addresses and confer : ences with the people of those | communities. This is the latest j of numerous visits to every part I of the state made by the Senator ; during the last six years in ful j fillment of his pledge when first ' | elected that he would constantly \ keep in touch with the problems ! ; of Arizona. In his home town, where he has i been successively a practicing at j torney, county prosecutor, judge 1 I and where he owns a successful farm, the Arizona senator de- j dared that nothing is so impor tant for the American people as an 1 era of peace in the world. As an early advocate of international cooperatijn among the nations of the world, Senator McFarland has fought for the United Nations con cept as the best guarantee of world peace. ;j “The democratic party under Franklin Roosevelt and Harry! j Truman has followed a policy of j ,! planning for peace”, McFarland ,! said. “But we never have and do not now believe that this country or any country must knuckle down to any great power. We know now that the world cannot exist half i slave and half free. For that rea son I always have advocated a pol icy of strong national defense. I do not want our people ever again to be caught unprepared. And if we are strong and well prepared, we are far less likely to be at tacked.” Farmers Urge Farm- Labor Unity To Combat Monopoly Forces Des Moines, la. —(FP) —Point- ing out that the same monopoly forces an) at work to wreck the peace anti to drive small farmers to ruin, the 30th convention of the lowa Farmers Union here urged j the promotion of farmer-labor unity and cooperation against the ! i common enemy. j Army Mores In For Big Cut Os Nation's Meat Washington. (FP) Unless! meat loose with some army meat I demands to put a big, dent in the national supply, it was learned here Sept. 25. Army spokesmen said they Want ed 15 million pounds of meat weekly to feed the troops, and; they intended to use the full au-; Negro artist and progressive lead er, currently in San Francisco to speak for the National Committee to Win the Peace as well as or ganizations specially aimed at halt ing the rising tide of lynchings and oppression in the South. “It’s really all of a piece,” he said. “Attempts to break the Sov iet Union and attempts to break the Negroes and the progressive movement in America are all part of the same pattern. And that pattern is fascism. “An organized minority here in the United States, using the screen of the threat of war against the Soviet Union, are cracking down on democracy everywhere. They did it in Greece, they are prepar ing to do it in Yugoslavia, and China and here at home. “That’s why the rise of lynch ings and terror in the South is more than a localized tragedy. It is a warning and a threat to the entire nation. Today they kill Ne groes. Tomorrow they’ll be killing CIO organizers. . . . This is a na tional emergency!” Part of Robeson’s trip is con cerned with work of the Emer gency Committee Against Lyucn ing, which recently met with President Truman to urge him to make a formal open statement against lynching. “So Far,” said Robeson, “Tru man has not made the statement.” Robeson strongly hinted that continued terror in the South would lead to an explosion of re sistance on the part of the Negro people. “The veterans and the new young Negroes are not going to take this sort of thing lying down,” he said. He labelled the program of U. S. Fascists as a sign of despera tion and weakness rather than strength. “They’re terrified themselves,” he said, “A little strength on the part of progressives can stop them. "Their program is a program of reaction. It is against the tide in the world. And they know it. This talk of halting Communism as if it were an evil thing and as if it were isolated in the Soviet Union is non sense. “The whole direction of the world is toward Socialism. In Eng land and France, Norway and Fin land, Poland, Czechoslovakia, China and in hundreds of other countries all over the world, the peopel are turning toward social ism. “Russia doesn’t have to expand. She attracts, just as America did in the 16th century, with her then new democracy. “How can we hope to live in a world without getting along with Communists? We aren’t that strong. Even with the atom bomb. Sales of Toys This Year May Reach $250,000,000 New York, N. Y. Despite ma terial shortages, toy production for 1946 will reach $250,000,000 in re tail sales, a 35 percent increase over last year, according to a fore cast by L. M. MacDonald, president of the Toy Manufacturers of the U. S. A. j thority of the Department of Ag riculture to get it. Total meat I production for the country was j only 60 million pounds the week ending Sept. 21, they said. Next move, they indicated, was up to the packers, because the army does not intend to continue {its present shipment of seafood to ; posts because of the high cost Non-Political Most Good For The Greatest Number No. 19