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Sisal—‘Good Neighbor’ Product Sisal, the fiber made from the henequen plant of Yucatan, touches upon the life of every American. For most wrapping twine around the m „,l or express package we get is sisal-made. And the bread we eat was made from flour made from wheat bound up in the field with sisal tmne, for American farmers have never found an acceptable substitute. Har, with its increased demand for wire and steel products, has forced twine and rope into new roles of importance, thus creating for sisal the greatest demand in history. A big ship unloads 10,000 bales of Yucatan s "green gold,” as sisal is known, in the Port of New Orleans, to be converted into binder twine for the nation s “breadbasket Left: A bale of sisal has just been opened in a Notv Orleans rope factory, and the strand* arc being fed into a breaker machine. Right: Tfiete long, golden strands are about to become yarn. This machine is a preliminary processor, which cards out the fiber: and lays them parallel to each other. Now in yarn form, rolled on bob bins, the sisal is being spun into a small ball of rope by the girl at the machine. . I Coils of finished rope made from i sisal are about to begin their jour . ney to the far corners of the coun | try. Washington Digest Serious Labor Situation Hinders Defense Effort \ f Members of Congress Also Demanding Facts , On Charges That Big Business Plays Favorites in Defense Contracts. By BAUKHAGE National Farm and Home Hour Continental WNU Service, 1343 II Street, N-W, Washington, D. C. The explosion in the defense set- up in Washington foreshadowed in these columns two weeks ago is about to take place. At least, as this is written, the fuse is being laid if not lighted. Senator O’Mahoney of Wyoming and Representative Coffey of Washington are both de- manding facts connected with charges that big business is playing favorites in the defense contracts. But an equally amazing story lies behind the way labor has been dealt with in the defense program. Part of the facts have leaked out piece- meal, some are still very much un- der cover. Put together they make an amazing revelation of what was behind the President’s delay in taking action in the captive mine strike and also how bungling all along the line forced the adminis tration into the worst labor situa tion that has arisen since the de ( fense program started. The trouble began when it was decided to take the settlement of certain labor disputes out of the United States Conciliation Service and place it in the hands of the Defense Advisory commission with branches headed by William S. Knudsen and Sidney Hillman. Up to that time from 95 to 98 per cent of the labor disputes were settled by the Conciliation service. But the remaining 2 to 5 per cent were slow ing down defense and it was decided that Mr. Knudsen’s staff represent ing industry and Mr. Hillman’s staff representing labor could settle the recalcitrants. The theory was that Knudsen’s men would crack down on industry and Hillman’s on labor. But it didn’t work that way. Each favored his own kind. Mediation Board Founded So the National Defense Media tion board was founded. All went along smoothly for awhile, although more and more criticism was heard ; that the board was exceedingly pro labor and achieved settlements by the simple process of conceding to | labor’s demands. | Then the board made a mistake. It handed down one decision which opened the way for the United Mine Workers union shop demands which I smashed the board, threatened the i administration’s foreign policy and created the worst labor crisis that the country has faced in many a long day. The decision I refer to was in the ' case of the Bethlehem shipbuilding plant in San Francisco. The A. F. of L. union demanded a union shop, that is, that any man working for the company a certain period would have to join the union. The board granted this demand, thus forcing 20 per cent of the plant’s non-union workers to join the A. F. of L. One member of the board, Cyrus Ching. representing industry, held out against the decision. He foresaw that it would create a precedent. i When the decision was announced i it was stated that it should not be | taken as a precedent. This pious j statement was like giving the baby a piece of candy “if he won’t ask for another.” Once the A. F. of L. had received this concession the C. 1.0. stepped up and said: “I want one, too.” The result was the famous Federal Ship building and Dry Dock company case of Kearny, N. J., this time a shipyard on the East coast. Against the vote of the members of the Na tional Mediation board representing industry, the union was given “maintenance -of - membership” which is a diluted union shop. The company refused to accept the deci sion and the navy took over. Another Precedent Here was another precedent, whether the board meant it or not. i And it didn’t take long for John Lewis to take advantage of it and put in his demand for the union shop in the captive coal mines. If he i had planned it that way he could not have been provided a better opportunity to vent his ancient grievance against the President and I set himself right in the middle of a national issue. If the case of the Bethlehem Ship building workers was good, Lewis’ was far better. C. 1.0. has a 95 per cent membership in the captive coal mines. But not the kind of a95 per cent that most people think it. Not 5 per cent non-union workers scat- BRIEFS ... By Baukhage In BV4 years the Civilian Conser vation corps has brought 100,000 il literates to the Fourth Grade level of being able to rend and write. This is the only compulsory educational course in the CCC. The net income of farm operators during the first nine months of this year increased one-fourth as com pared with the corresponding period of last year, according to the de oartment of commerce. THE COS’ rir r A C °—^DEMOrpxm tered here and there in all the mines. But full per cent mem bership in ma J . nes and none perhaps in a w small ones The Nationa jnse Mediation board voted a °7" Mr - Lewis’ de mand for a u shop an d pan dora’s box flew open. One of the things that en \ e . • .. was , a highly paradoxical ana gniy painful situ ation. For the do r, by taking tnis rare anti-labor s ep, had virtually left the operators in the position that if they had yielded in the later negotiations they would be in the position of suppor mg Lewis against the government, bull the situation might have been saved if something had not happened when the Presi dent called the operators and Lewis and Secretary-Treasurer Kennedy of the United Mine Workers to the White House. When the men came in the Presi dent did what his labor advisors hoped he would. He made a briel appeal to both sides to get together and settle the question, since a strike must be avoided. If he had stopped there all might have been well. But he went on and said what Lewis felt was prejudicial to his case. This not only woke all the smouldering anger in the breast ol John Lewis but when the commit tee of 200 C. 1.0. advisors heard about it they were just as mad. His feeling was reflected when he turned down the President s later proposals. President on the Spot And the President was on the spot. Congress was insisting on strike legislation. Speaker Sam Rayburn had promised it. Others were demanding that the troops be sent into the captive mines at once. That, wiser heads who knew the temper of the miners believed, would mean a strike in all the mines | and the army would have to beat I its bayonets into pickaxes. So the President paused, wrote | a conciliatory letter to both parties. 1 Meanwhile, congress could stew but I , the President was pretty sure that \ its members would not take the \ initiative of alienating vote with primaries roming up in the ' spring and elections next fall. The prospective candidates for re election wanted the onus to be placed squarely on him. Whether the Conciliation service could have handled the captive mine strike as it is stili handling the other 98 per cent of the cases of labor disputes no one can say. But it is clear that it was mishandled by the Mediation board and it is likewise clear that if critical congressmen finally crack down on Mr. Knudsen’s iiiictiij' udih uu”-- **** . iwiuum a dollar-a-year men for showing fa vors to business they have plenty of grounds for cracking down on Mr. Hillman’s stalwarts who created the pattern of labor partisanship that came near severely injuring not only the defense program but the administration’s foreign policy as well. • * A Rip-Snortin' Texan Comes to Washington Another Texan lias come to Wash ington and the moment of his arri val was on historic one. We have had a lot of rip-snortin', ringtailed wildcats from all parts of the coun try, some human, and some not quite. Now we have something that will make even the Texas delegation in congress sit up and take notice, for this unwilling delegate from the Lone Star State is the wildest of them all. He is a Texas long-horn. A steer with an eight foot spread of horn He is 12 years old. He weighs 1,200 pounds and he is admittedly wilder than anything in the zoo where he has been given the place ol honor —right up near the entrance. Most people do not know that the Texas long-horn is rarer than the buffalo which he once displaced on the Texas plains. He is a direct descendant from the wild cattle which the Spaniard* brought to America when they came. Those cattle could walk endless miles to water. They ware bred and de veloped to meet conditions that existed a hundred years ago in the great Southwest. Then water was piped and ditched into the great ranches and the fatter, easier go ing Herefords were introduced The long-horn had the muscles and the endurance but he did have the meat, so he began to disappear. George Sumpson, a Washington | correspondent ,rom the Middle West who is also a correspondent for Texas papers and a keen devotee of America's flora and fauna, start ed out three year* ogo to get a long horn for the Washington “n’e had his troubles. He simply could not get hold of a real, simon pure long-horn. There were semi domesticated beasts but none of the real, wild-eyed np-roarmg variety that have made the long-horn as much a symbol of America as the eagle itself. | Bar num Had Plugged Holes And Was in the Money Whe/i P. T. Bamum, as a young man > left Danbury, Conn., to make his way in the world, he Jeft numerous unpaid bills behind him. To one creditor the imagi native showman said with great intensity: ‘Til pay you what I owe you as soon as I get rich.” The other laughed and eyed the youth disdainfully. “That will be when a sieve holds water,” he jeered. But in a few years the master showman was well on the road to success, and with great satisfac tion wrote the man the following note: “Dear Sir: I have fixed that sieve.” Ideals as Stars Ideals are like stars; you will not succeed in touching them with your hands, but like the seafaring man on the desert of waters, you choose them as your guides, and, following them, you reach your destiny.—Carl Schurz. Longer mileage and greater durability result : from the use of Vitamic rubber, produced by { HI adding a new rubber vitamin called Vitalin \ t Protection against skidding and side-siips because of the pafented Safti-Lock Gum-Dipped l||§|§|lj#^ Cord Body and Super-Speed Construction. ALLOWANCE Here’s the tire that will give you outstanding Home & Auto Supply Store today and equip your ear with a set of these amazing tires. ■«,»0T0.U,A«WT.ACT0.,.../(lsi*f olt \ ?•>«*«>"« fXTRA TRACTION BAR LENGTH ” TRUCK-BUS TIRE MR. EXTRA _ '".mUmi" ' "***• UP to 215 EXTRA INCHES OF TRACTION BAR fiij cost and has all the patented LENGTH PER TRACTOR jfl / I Firestone Construction I ...i kic* S features. It also is made in MEANS. to fit and Y± ton buktooe right'in the center of jk fjCtStOltt the tread provides extra traction HUgH ali-TIACTION and saves up to one gallon of W ALI 0 K 11 K ‘ traction for soft going with mmm 3 I li'X] fill I lone mileage on hard surface BC „ namt from th« an EitraTrjctionßir Length Firestone development. See OWOUND GRIP TIRE toUa >- IHI QUICK-STAATINO COMIINATION A WA»M CAI FOR nil MONIY PSn .u?/. ont firestone firestone Afes. INI ANTI-FRfIZI BUBBATTERIES and HEATERS I **3-1 Here is complete, SPARK PLUGS Larger cores, extra Mi ik j| ■■HI ,„„„ i,,,-,,, „ij Put these two to efficiency and low fcV /i 1 ' long.lasting, cold work and itar , co „ m .k e these fa^gHl weather protection for cara, « mr qu | c kly in any hcilcrs rcsl TUH trucks and tractors. ™ weather. bargains. Helen to the Voiee of Fir-ton* with Iliehard Crook,. Marparet Bj>takt mnd the Fbreetone S^mphonp l I Orchestra. under the direction of Alfred IValtAAßtAim Mondoy 9vtningt. over N. B. C. Rod Network I NEW IDEAS for Home-Makers By RUTH WYETH SPEARS THESE conversation chairs so much at home in a Victorian setting would be just as smart in a modern room. They are com fortable too, and any man who can nail together a box of one inch pine boards can make a frame for one. The lady with needle and thread then takes over. If ready made spring cushions are : used it is best to buy them first 1 and then plan the box base to fit. » The dimensions in the diagram r tilt the back and seat at comforta -1 ble angles. Domes of silence at the four corners of the base makß the chair easy to move ... NOTE—If you would like to make 0 hooked rug like the one in front of the fireplace, Mrs. Spears' Add-ASquare pat tern shows how to hook a rug in smaU sections to l>e sewn together. Ask for Pattern No. 201, and enclose 10 cent*, addressing: MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Drawer 10 Bedford Hills New York Enclose 10 cents for pattern No. 201. Name Address — — The Soul About what am I now employ ing my own soul? On every occa sion I must ask myself this ques tion, and inquire, what have I now in this part of me which they call the ruling principle? and whose . soul have I now? that of a child, . or a young man, or of a feeble i woman or of a tyrant, or of a - domestic animal, or of a wild t beast?