K«ul The Arizona Sun TIM State’s Only Negro Newspaper Vol. 5—5 c Per Copy Union Labor In Arizona Will Support Community Chest Drive; Opens Today The 1947 Community Chest cam-1 paign kicks off Thursday night j aiming at a goal of $302,400 and assured of the firm and generous support of the American Federa tion of Labor in Phoenix, accord ing to Ross Goodwin, president of the Phoenix Central Labor Coun cil. Roe Bartle, famed orator and lawyer from Kansas City, Mo., will be the featured speaker at the Chest banquet, which will be held for campaign workers in the Shrine Auditorium at 6:30 p. m. Bartle is National Director of American War Dads and served as Rotary International convention speaker in France in 1937. Mas ter of Ceremonies at the affair, at which 1,000 are expected to attend, will be Bob Bale, known to Phoe nicians as Lieutenant Bale of WAC Recruiting during the war. “Members of organized labor an enviable record of willing and generous giving to Community Chest appeals,” Goodwin stated in a letter to Edgar H. Meyer, chair man of this year’s drive. Noting that every worker is urged to give at least 8 hours’ pay to support the 18 local agencies served by the chest, Goodwin observed, “This do nation is an investment in the kind of future for which the war was fought. Give not less than one day’s pay; more if you can.” Referring to the many welfare services supported by local Com munity Chests, President William Green of the A. F. of L. in accept ing membership on the National Citizens Committee of the Com munity Chests of America, said, “I fully approve the Community Chests of America in seeking bet ter hospitals, day nurseries, clinics, settlement houses, havens for the aged, and similar institutions. I call upon A. F. of L. members in every locality to gave local Com munity Chests support in their fund raising campaign.” This year’s drive for funds to support 18 vitally needed welfare agencies will have as its slogan, “Phoenix rises to care for its own.” The drive will be led by Meyer and James Murphy, with Jack Bijahm, chairman of the Executive Committee of the Community Chest I assisting. Division chairmen and I the divisions they will lead are asj follows: Government, A1 Rosenberg! and Dick Walsh; Central, Milt I Smith and A1 Norell; Women’s, j Mrs. John McCall and Mrs. Leslie! Kober; Commerce and Industry, I Joe Love and J. Otis Sullivan; Ad vance Gifts, Hal Payne and Henry Sargent. Acting as vice-chairmen of the campaign will be Mrs. John Boeti ger, R. C. Simis and Edwin L. Grose. The publicity will be direct ed by Williams and the Speak ers’ Bureau, which will give talks before clubs and organizations of Phoenix during the campaign, by Cavett Robert who will be assisted by Howard Pyle and Mrs. Eliza beth Haas. Urging that givers remember that they are approached only once a year for 18 agencies, Meyer em phasized that the goal is actually i 12 per cent less than the agencies requested for minimum neds. This is significant in view of the fact that the population of Phoenix has increased more than 10 per cent during the past year, and that the number of Phoenix' youth served by chest-supported agencies in the past year has increased by 240 per cent. Funds raised by the drive are not for purposes of charity and relief. They are spent for work with Phoenix youth in such character building agencies as the Boy Scouts of America, Camp Fire Girls, Girl Scouts of America, Young Men’s Christian Association, and Young Women’s Christian Association; they go for family and child wel fare and care of the underprivi leged through such channels as (Continued on page 8) AAA/VWV^VWWW\A/SAAAAA/VSAA/VNAAA/WWWWWWWWWWSAAAAAAA/WW\ FLIGHT OFFICER, URL JOHNSON, JR. RECEIVES WINGS AT OKLAHOMA FIELD ENID, Okla. Flight Officer ;« Carl Johnson, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johnson, Sr., of Bellaire, Ohio, received his silver wings and became a rated pilot at a recent graduation, ceremony held here at the Enid Army Air Field. Flight Officer Johnson arrived at the filed on May Bth of this year and after completing the pre scribed course in advanced twin engine pilot training was com missioned as flight officer, and as signed to active duty here. Prior to Filght Officer Johnson’s assignment to this field he served at Camp Atterbury, Indiana and Shepard Field, Texas. Before entering the services he attended the Ohio State University at Columbus, Ohio, following his graduation from the Bellaire High School. ARIiONirSWN Osborn Is Re-Elected Governor Sidney P. 09born was elected governor of Arizona in Tuesday’s election for his fourth straight term. Organized labor sincerely congratulates the governor, and wishes for him another success ful administration. His famous saying that “When I am in the house of labor I am in the house of friends,” is echo ed by us, “When he is in the house of labor, labor has a friend.” LEARNERS WAGE RATES NOW ABOVE PRE-WAR LEVELS Apprentice wage rages in the building trades are higher today than they were before the war. This is the assertion of William F. Patterson, Director of the Appren tice-Training Service, U. S. De partment of Labor, who told the annual meeting of the Structural Clay Products Institute in New Or leans recently that the amount of money paid aprpentices has in creased even more because of the rise in the journeyman rate. “This increase in the percent age of journeymen’s rates paid to apprentices has special signi ficance,” Mr. Patterson pointed out, “because of the fear that the government subsistence allow ance payable to veteran appren tices would tend to lower wage rates.” More than 85 percent of apprentices in the construe itoi* trades are veterans. The facts on the increase in ap prentice-wage rates were disclosed jby a study made by ATS on 60 ! aprenticeship programs in all of j the major building trades selected ;at random and covering almost i 2,000 employees. It was found that J the average apprentice rate for 1945-1946 represented 5 percent ! more of the journeyman rate than in 1939-42. “In all but 10 of the 60 buildings trades programs,” Mr. Patterson declared, “the higher wages paid in 1945-46 were due to raising the average apprentice rate as a per centage of the journeyman’s rate.” APPRENTICESHIP INCREASES 1(4% Warning that inustry, veterans and the country will suffer if the present high standards of the i skilled trades are not maintained, William F. Patterson, Director of the Apprentice-Training Service, U. S. Department of Labor declared that the number of establishments with registered apprenticeship programs in the skilled trades in the United States had increased by more than 164 percent in the year ending with September of this year. Addressing the conference of the American Society of Training Di rectors in Pennsylvania, Mr. Pat terson reported that the number of establishments with such pro grams increased from 25,800 at the end of September 1945 to 68,200 at the end of September, 1946. The Palmer Manufacturing Cor poration of Phoenix is now being picketed by veteran trainees, who were unable to survive on wages paid at that plant. Sugar Stamps Good Another Thirty Days Spare Stamps 9 and 10, good for five pounds each of home canning sugar, will continue to be valid through November 80, 1946, the district Office of Price Administration has announced. Both stamns were to expire Oc tober 31, 1946. Following the recently an nounced decision on a joint United States Department of Ag riculture OPA program to move western beet sugar into eastern deficit areas, this action is the second 80-day extension granted by OPA to permit housewives to receive theLr fair share of sugar. Published in the Interest of the Social, Political and Economic Welfare of 40,000 Negroes of Arizona. PHOENIX, ARIZONA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1946 I yH Jpv One of the IBV2 by 26 inch color posters issued and distributed by Apprentice-Training Service, U. S. Department of Labor, in behalf of American industry, State apprenticeship agencies, joint apprenticeship committees, and other organizations in furthering the National Apprenticeship Program. The Columbia Riot Trial f (As The Christian Advocate See It) The acauital of 23 of the 25 Ne groe defendants in the Columbia (Tenn.) riot trial at Lawrenceburg is a rather striking circumstance. Memory is a treacherous thing, but we do not recall any similar mass trials for race riots in previous years. Likewise we do not recall any group of Negroes tried in the South for any offense in which such a proportion were acquitted. This has occurred in individual cases, but not before in group cases. It must be admitted frankly that most of our people had become pessimistic about the trials, expect ing them to come out in the same way as most trials of Negroes ac cused of crimes against white peo ple, so much os that many had ceased to follow the accounts in the newspapers, merely wanting to know the final verdict. They Accepts New Post ill!!! jeeV. M.Bufi&zSS New York. —The Rev. John M. Burgess, for eight years recor of the Episcopal Church of St. Simon of Cyrene, Woodlawn, Cincinnati, Ohio, has taken up his new post of Chaplain of Howard University, ac cording to an announcement by Episcopal Church National head quarters here today. Mr. Burgess is a member of the Episcopal Church’s biracial com mittee which serves in a consulta tive capacity to the National Coun cil’s Secretary for Negro Work, the Rev. Tollie L. Caution. Deeply interested, and with wide experi ence in, practical social work, Mr. Burgess was for the past five years head of the Department of Chris tian Social Relations of the diocese of Southern Ohio. He was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan, in 1909, and attended school there. He graduated from the University of Michigan, and from the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was ordained in 1934, and be came priest in charge of St. Philip’s Church, Grand Rapids, remaining there from 1934 to 1938 when he went to the Cincinnati parish. Mr. Burgess is widely known as an outstanding leader of his race, and is consulted frequently by va rious officials on racial problems. should now revive their hopes for better things as they view the ver dict, for it is clear that the mem bers of the jury displayed a will to be just in making their deci sions. There has been a steadily grow ing disposition of southern courts in recent years to improve in jus tice toward Negroes. Not yet is it universal, but examples of a new sense of justice can be cited from cases all over the South. The dramatic case at Lawrenceburg, Tenn., ought to aid greatly in this movement, inspiring other courts to do likewise. The case is not entirely closed. Two of the defendants drew sen tences and a few of those acquit ted are yet to be tried on other counts. There are many compli cations still to be worked out. However, one big double ques tion remains unanswered, namely, Who is responsible for the riot and can the state of Tennessee do any thing about it? All the wh|te men involved were released by the fed eral grand jury and the state has no charges against any of them. Twenty-three Negroes were ac quitted after trial. Two Negroes drew sentences. Were these two Ngroes responsibl for the race riot or was the riot something for which nobody can be held legally responsible ? This is the tragic i problem in all race troubles. The, few sentences meted out are near- | ly always drawn by members of the victim group. The others are never handled. It is this immunity from the legal responsibility for rioting and lynchings that keeps the practice alive. All law en forcement officers know clearly the tactics for breaking up a mob and preventing a riot. But until they are willing to use the tactics they know and have enough sup port from local sentiment to mea sure out the law to the ring-lead- j ers, there will be little hope of l preventing riots and mobs by the; local authorities. Negro Attorney On Crimes Commission MANILA, Philippines Islands. Joseph L. McLemore of St. Louis, Missouri, former OPA attorney, has been serving with the War Crimes Commission as counsel since September of this year when he arrived here from the United States. \ A graduate of the New York University School of Law, Mr. Mc- Lemore engaged in private prac tice in St. Louis for over ten years. In 1945 he was given the position with OPA which he subsequently left to accept the overseas assign ment with the War Crimes Com mission. AFL Blames CIO For Rising Living Costs Chicago—(FP)—Blame for rising living costs was placed on unions which followed a “shortsighted' policy” of breaking price ceilings to get 18ic hourly wage increases in the executive council report to the 65th AFL convention here. Big Employers Succeed In First Attempt To Starve The Workers of Arizona Woman Exonerated For Killing Husband Maggie Scott, 42, 1314 East Adams Street, killed her husband, George Scott, 54, while acting in self defense, a coroner’s jury had decided Thursday. The jury, called by Justice Harry E. Westfall, ex-officio coroner, was told by Mrs. Scott that she fired bullets into her husband’s chest early Monday after he knocked her down twice and while he was reaching for a pistol. Police said they found a gun in his pocket. Mrs. Scott said her husband came home drunk about midnight Sunday and began to beat her. As she fell back against a dresser in tehir bedroom, she stated, she saw him reaching into his pocket. Knowing that he always carried a gun, she said, she believed he was going to shoot her. She then got a .38 caliber revolver out of the dresser and soht him once in the abdomen. Then, she told police, as he tried again to get into his pocket, she shot him a second time in the chest. When police arrived, Scott lay dead on the floor of the bedroom. A search of his person revealed that he had a small caliber auto matic pistol in his pants pocket, officers stated. Mrs. Scott’s daughter, Dorris Moore, who said she tred to separ ate her mother and Scott as they fought, suffered bruises and cuts. CHILD LABOR LAW BENEFITS ALL WORKERS Strongly urging extension of the child-labor provisions of the Fed eral Wage and Hour Law to types of interstate business not now cov ered, Beatrice McConnell declared recently on the eighth anniversary of that law that its enforcement has provided convincing proof that not only young workers but work ers of all ages, and employers as well, benefit from the elimination of oppressive child labor. Miss McConnell, who directed the Industrial Division of the Chil dren’s Bureau from 1935 until that Bureau’s reorganization in July, and who is now with the Depart ment of Labor’s Division of Labor Standards as Assistant Director in charge of the Child Labor and Youth Employment Branch, de clared that although youth em ployment has decreased somewhat since the pressure of war produc tion has ended, it is still high. Ac cording to latest estimates, about 40 percent of civilian youth 14 through 17 years of age were at work in the summer of 1946. Federal regulation of child la bor in industries producing goods for shipment in interstate com merce, Miss McConnell said, has been reflected in improved stand ards of State legislations and en forcement. “The protection of the law stood children in good stead dur ing the war,” she asserted, "and it is especially important now to guard against any letdown. The record of most employers is good in regard to compliance with the Child labor provisions of the Act. Nevertheless, there is still a fringe of employers who will ‘take a chance’ on employing children il legally, just as they will on violat ing the wage and hour provisions of the Federal law.” LOCKBOURNE TO SEPARATE MORE OFFICERS IN RECENT ECONOMY MOVE Fairground Racing Starts On Friday The Governor’s Handicap will inaugurate the 10 day meet at the Phoenix Fairgrounds Friday. This will be a 51 furlong event with the best sprinters at the track competing for honors. There are six hundred horses from California, Oklahoma, Ari zona, New Mexico and Texas, all primed to go. John Morrissey and Associates are the track operators with Harvey Foster as Racing Secre tary. Associates include G. E. (Blondy) Hall, owner of the DoubleO ranch in Northern Arizona, Ralph Lowe, oil opera tor of Midland, Texas, and John Casselman, case and grocery business man also of Midland. NoB-PotttkMU Afoot Good For The Chreateot Numbor From the votes that have been counted in Tuesday’s state-wide election, it is apparent that the so called “right-to-work” starvation wage bill has been adopted by the people, many of whom voted under misapprehension, many because they were unemployed, and many because they were simply “mad” at some union or union leader. The Labor Journal has contend ed all along that this vicious law would do exactly opposite from what its sponsors claimed it would do. We are still of that opinion. Time—and not too much time— will prove that to be true. But many workers will suffer before the law can be changed or elimi nated. Labor has not ceased to fight, nor will it ever cease to fight for the right to protect ALL workers, whether or not they think vt'hey need protection. Self-protection is the first law of nature, and we cannot be sacrificed by our big money-mad bosses, with the mis guided assistance of some of the workers. Undoubtedly some of those who voted for the bill are members of organized labor, but there have been scabs in the unions as well as out. Selfish, conceited workers, who care only for them selves. The only satisfaction we can find in them is that they, too, will suffer along with the real union men and women, who bitter ly fought this corporation-spon sored law. Many business men who through fear or otherwise, supported the law, will go down with the work ers—and most of them will stay down! They have played squarely into the hands of their masters, who will sacrifice them one by one. Manila USO Club Sets Example For World MANILA, Philippine Islands. The Intramuros USO, the first and the largest USO club in Manila, provides a variety of recreation facilities for all American Gls sta tioned here. From the very opening of the club, there has been integration of white, Negro and Filipine service men in every activity except swim ming and dancing. But even in those activities integration was eventually achieved. On his tour of Pacific bases General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower, Chief of Staff, U. S. Army, was pleased to see these servicemen in the same pool to gether. To Mr. J. G. Alviar, Filipino pro fessional USO worker, who has served 33 years as a YMCA secre tary, and to Mr. William “Bill” Child?, Chicago, 111., Negro staff member and assistant director of the club, the credit for much of the fellowship now exhibited in the swimming pool and in the other forms of recreation spon sored by the club. Centrally located in an area ac cesible to all troops, the club is equipped with swimming pool, gymnasium, pool and billiard rooms, bowling alleys, barber shops, snack bar, PX store, writing room library, information desk, ping-pong tables, small table games and dark room for those interested in photography. VETS’ INCOMES LOW \ Washington, D. C. (AFL) Most former Gl’s are not receiving incomes sufficient “to properly care for their families,” it was in dicated by a poll conducted by the American Veterans of World War n. COLUMBUS, Ohio.—As part of the War Department economy move, orders to separate 196 of the presently assigned 357 officers from active duty with the Air Forces were received last week at Lockbourne Army Air Field by Colonel Benjamin O. Davis, Jr., commanding officer. Approximately 121 percent of the number to be separated will be relieved from duty and assigned to Squadron “X” for separation from the service soon. The re mainder will be released upon or ders from higher headquarters. Officers being separated will be tndered the opportunity to accept commissions in the Air Reserve, equal to the grade which they held at the time of separation. Officers who were originally commissioned in other branches of the service also will be given the opportunity to take commissions in the Air Re serve. No. 23