Indorsed By Every Craft In Charlotte and In The State The Charlotte Herald me « V v L , Indorsed As Official Organ of North Carolina ^ Farmers’ Union -.- - - — __*_ 5c COPY—$2 YEAR VOL. VI. NO. 3 CHARLOTTE, N. C., AUGUST 17, 1923 MOST SUCCESSFUL GATHERING IN HISTORY OF ORGANIZATION Legislation Looking to Work Advancement. era SUPREME COURT Child Labor Laws, Convict Leasing and Other Inter esting Questions Acted Upon by Labor. Greensboro, Aug. 15.—The North Carolina State Federation, which has been in session here from Mon day morning to Wednesday after noon, adjourned, to be pronounced the finest meeting ever held by labor in this state. Although the basis of representation had been changed at the previous convention, cutting down considerably the number of delegates to the membership of the various locals and Central bodies, there were many more delegates in attendance than at the last conven tion. Two outstanding events of the convention was the election of C. P. Barringer as president, which killed the aBrrett-Moody factionalism, and the provisions made for the em ployment of a full-time organizer for the state. Action on many questions for the welfare and advancement of the workers was taken, ^ chief among which was that of giving unqualified endorsement to the organization of the textile workers. Endorsement of the proposed amendment to the national constitution which will per mit of the enactment of a national child labor law that cannot be de clared unconstitutional was another important step taken, while the Unit jed States Supreme Court, the con vict leasing system, promiscuous calling of troops to towns where in dustrial disputes arise between em ployers and employees, and other questions of vital interest were act ed upon. rne convention was opened mon day morning by C. J. Lochridge, president of the Greensboro Central Labor Union, and called upon the Federation’s chaplain; J. O. Belton, Y griflite cotter, -of -Mt. Airy, to open the meeting with prayer. The big man from the mountains who is known throughout the state as the best granite cutter in the south and the best Baptist preacher in the world, petitioned God for guidance in the convention just opening. He prayed for wisdom for the officers and delegates, and asked that every thing the convention might do, be of such nature that v God would be glorified and this earth of His made better for His family of his children. B. L. Fentress, city attorney of Greensboro, was introduced as the personal representative of the Mayor of the Gate City. He spoke eloquent words of welcome to the delegates and visitors, and expressed regrets that the mayor could not be present, yet he was glad, he said, for the mayor’s absence gave to him a pleas ure and a privilege that ne would not have had if the mayor could have been in the convention. Mr. Fen tress said he hoped the visitors would derive as much pleasure from their visit to Greensboro as the city de rived through their coming. Vice President Caldwell responded to the welcome given the workers, and in a few well chosen words told something of the objects the work ers hoped to obtain in the meeting here. Acting' President Caldwell t also paid a glowing tribute to the Greensboro merchants and business and professional men for their co operation with the Greensboro work ers, and thanked them for the Fed eration for the beautiful decora tions that greeted the visitors. Then it was that ftflr. Lochridge turned the convention over to Vice President Caldwell, who immediate ly asked for the report of the cre dentials committee. This report was made, and there being no contests or challenges the report was accept ed, and the delegates ordered seated in the convntion. R. W. H. Stone, president of the Farmers’ Union, wag then introduced to the delegates, and midst loud and prolonged applause the veteran fighter for the farmers and wage workers took the speaker’s stand. “I always feel at home in your con ventions,” President Stone began. “In fact, next to my own union, I love this union more than any other organization. I look upon you, and I see the faces of men who take the products of the farm and convert the raw material into finished prod ucts, and others of you then trans port this commerce to the peoples of the world. We are closely linked together, the worker of the field and the worker of the factory, that neith er of us can advance wihtout help ing the other. Nor, can one of us suffer without suffering coming to the other. , “Then, too, you boys in the fac tories were babes on the farms. You left us, out there in the fields, and as your old dads watched you wend your way toward the cities and the industries, you were fol lowed with prayers that you might be successful in your endeavors. We are still praying for our boys in the industries, because you are ctili ours. v (Continued on Page Two.) Legislation That Labor Will Endeavor to Obtain Greensboro, Aug. 15.—Following is an outline of the legislation that the State Federation of Labor in North Carolina will seek to have embraced at the next session of the \ general assembly. These recommen dations came from the legislative committee and were adopted by the convention: Child Labor Law. There is to be presented to the people of America the opportunity of voting for an amendment to the Constitution of the United States that will allow this nation to protect its little children, by law, and by a law that cannot be declared uncon stitutional by a North Carolina fed eral judge, or by any other judge in the United States. Your committee recommends that this federation in struct its officials to give all pub licity possible to this proposed amendment to the constitution, and write strong letters to all members of Congress in this state, and to 'the two United States senators, and urge their support of this amendment that will provide for a federal child labor law. We also recommend that the press be appealed to in an effort to secure the support of every news paper in the state, and that ether or ganizations, especially the 1 women’s organizations and ministers asso ciations, be urged by this federation to lend their support to the success of the proposed amendment. Your committee feels that the North Carolina State Federation of Labor should take the lead in secur ing this law, because of the iacl that, it has been North Carolina manufac turers and North Carolina judges who have brought the defeat of the two national child labor laws this country has had in the past. Your committee feels that the state of Noz’th Carolina should be the first in the fight for the release of the ‘thous ands of children who wrere thrown into bondage through the suits brought by North Carolina manulac turers, heard by a North Carolina judge, and through his pronounce ment had their protection taken away from all the children of toil throughout the nation. Your committee feels that it is eminently proper that the world should be notified that the State Fed eration of Labor, meeting in Greens boro, the home of the federal judge who declared the national child la bor law unconstitutional, is here and now beginning a campaign to prove to the world that the good citizens of North Carolina are opposed to working little children in the indus tries, and wage that campaign with out a stop, brooking no interference and stopping at no obstacle, until the coming of the day of election on the proposed amendment, and on that day have the citizenship so thoroughly aroused to a sense of their dujty that old North Carolina will vote almost unanimously for the adoption of the amendment. This state owes that to the childhood of America, because the labor of the little children in past years has been one of the main causes of this state’s pre-eminence in the industrial field today. Your committee begs this federa tion to work and preach and talk and pray for the success of this move ment, and vote for no candidate for any office who refuses or fails to em phatically and publicly declare him self whole-heartedly in favor of the proposed child labor amendment to the constitution of the United States. Higher Educational Institutions and Common Schools. Your committee feels sure that this State Federation of Labor is deeply interested in education, and your committee would suggest to you that the present tendency of the State seems to be to devote more and more money to the institutions of higher learning, thereby crippling the state’s ability to properly care for those children who should have every opportunity in the public schools. It seems that your proper officers should take such steps as would assure the proper care of the children in the state before so much money is expended op higher edu cation. Children are attending schools in relays and divided classes because of lack of facilities and teachers, while hundreds of thous ands of dollars are going to the higher institutions. This should not be. It isf better by far to have all the children with common or high school education then'to have a com paratively few of the state’s citizen ship graduating in the higher insti tutions. The Militia, In view of the fact that many em ployers of labor seem to have the idea that the state military forces are maintained for their sole pro tection, and that troops can be used as strikebreakers, coupled with the further fact that many civil officers desire, as evidenced by past per formances, to dodge all responsibil ity when imported strike breakers are brought into a community for the purpose of lowering the w’age and living conditions of the North Carolina workers, there should be a law in this state forcing cities and counties calling for troops to pay all expenses incident thereto. It is a notorious practice, that of calling troops when there is no need for troops, and the readiness with which troops have been used in the past forces labor to the belief that their presence is more desired for pur poses of intimidation than for pro tection. Your committee suggests the enactment of a law with these provisions. Convict Lease System. ! i our committee is at loss for words to express its earnest desire that the State Federation of Labor take the lead in putting an end to the state’s barter and sale of human beings. We’re speaking now of the state’s convict leasing system. It is a blot upon the fair name of North Carolina. It is hellish in principle and brutal in practice. Private con tractors or business firms who hire such convicts are actuated solely by selfish motives and hire the convicts in the same manner they buy mules or steers. Common decency alone should cause men to blush with shame who thus purchase the con victs, and the state of North Caro lina should feel more shame in its part of the crime than even the man who hires the convicts. We urge this Federation of Labor tp= call upon the ministers, the women’s organiza tions, the press of the state, and all right thinking people .throughout the state to join in a firm deipand for an immediate and final end of this dis graceful chapter in the common wealth’s history. So long as the state of North Carolina continues this inhuman practice the churches are1 but hollow mockeries of Chris tianity, and our boasted progress is nothing more than thin veneer. “The eyes of the nation are upon North Carolina” is a statement we love to make, when expressing our pride in our state’s material ad vancement. We forget for the mom ent that when the eyes of the nation are upon North Carolina, those eyes are looking at a state that still deals ii\. human souls and human bodies, even as it did when slavery was a legalized business. Your committee wants this shame removed from North Carolina’s good name, and it can be done only through the ac tivities of this, or some other organ ization of men and women who love human beings and are willing to work and fight for justice and right. Incorporation of Towns. i our committee would have you seriously consider the dangers to de mocracy and to popular government in what is commonly termed “one man” towns. There are in this state miniature principalities and king doms,5 where one man, or one com pany. of men, own and control the town and all that lies or exists there in. There is no law in such Diaces, except the law of the industrial ba ron. Officers of the law are hired by him and paid by him and do the things they are ordered to do by the ruler in these smlall, but. strong, em pires. The existence of such places in a democratic republic is danger ous to the citizens having to ’ive and labor in such places, and is detrimen tal to the advancement of these same citizens. You are urged to seek leg islation! that will incorporate, or cause to be incorporated, all com munities in North Carolina where there is a population of 500 people living within a radius of one square mile. By this method and this alone can people < have representative gov ernment and escape the penalties al ways paid by thos whose destinies are absolutely in the hands of one man, or a small group of men. (Continued on Page 3.) BARRINGER FEDERATION PRESIDENT i_ Moody - Barrett Factionalism Dead as a Door Nail. BOTH ARE GLAD Convention Expected Bitter F i g h t—Harmony Reigned Supreme — Federation , Greensboro, Aug. 15.—C. P. Bar-| ringer, state chairman of the execu tive committee of the Brotherhood of Railway Carmen, living in Salis bury, was chosen president of the North Carolina State Federation of Labor, in the closing hours of that convention, Wednesday.5 Mr. aBr ringer is one of the most popular men in labor circles, and is a high ly educated man, a great reader and student, and the delegates in the convention were highly elated when the Salisbury man was selected. Barringer’s election means the death of the Barrett-Moody fac tionalism i nstate labor circles, and it is safe to say that there are no men in the state prouder of this fact than Messrs. Moody and Barrett. Both expressed themselves as being entirely satisfied and extremely hap py over the outcome of the election. This factionalism is peculiar, in that Moody and Barrett are far from be ing personal enemies, the factional spirit arising because of differences of opinion the two men held con cerning the policies of the labor movement. Both men are intensely interested in the workers of the state, and friends of both feel confi dent that they twill both be on hand to assist President Barringer in his every undertaking for the workers of the state. | Both Moody', and Barrett were placed before tie convention for the presidency. Before their names were presented, however, Barrett hid placed thd name of Mr. Bar ringer in nomination. Mr. Moody arose and spoke highly of the man whose name had been presented, aftd immediately afterward, and ** at the urgent request;,,of Moody and Bar-*, rett, both their names were with-^j (Continued on Page Two.) THE TEXTILE WORKER WILL RECEIVE AID State Federation Pledges Full Support to Craft. FACTS GIVEN In Motion — Industry Should Have Due Recognition— Fear Rules the Workers. Following is the motion made and carried to aid the textile workers by the State Federation of Labor in the Greensboro Convention: “The textile workers1 of North Carolina constitute the largest sin gle body of workers in the state. Yet they receive less pay, work longer hours per week and have the poorest working conditions of any other group of workers. Practically all of them live in company-owned houses, giving to the employer ab solute control over not only the time the workers are in the industry, but while they are in their homes as well. When a textile worker is dis charged from his job,’ it does not only mean the loss of a job for that particular worker, but in nearly ev ery instance it means also that the entire family is discharged and or dered to move out of the house they have been living in. “The spy system is in vogue in many mills of North Carolina to such an extent that many workers are afraid to join the organization or to accpt office in the union. Many mfcn and women have been dis charged and moved out of their homes and the mill officials refused to give any reason whatsoever for such discharges. This is an admis sion that the workers were fired be cause of exercising their constitu tional right of joining a labor or ganization. “No man can be the good, active citizen he would like to be so long as his life is controlled by fear. The worst fear of all is that fear of los ing a job, which, in turn, means the loss of food and clothing and shelter for the workman and his loyed ones. “There are many good employers who would be most glad to raise the standard of wages and give to the textile workers a reasonable work week, like other crafts enjoy, but their hands are tied by that inner (Continued on Page Two.) HIGHLAND PARK BOSS IS FIRING MORE WORKERS FROM MILLS Young Takes Appeal |In Ejectment Proceeding Will Young, discharged employe of the Highland Park mill, who had been cited in ejectment proceedings by the company, gave notice of ap peal from the decision rendered last Tuesday in Squire Alexander’s court. Col. T. L. Kirkpatrick appeared for M!r. Young and C. W. Tillett, Jr., appeared for the Highland Park cotftpanyf The case was tried before a jury composed of J. H. Overcash, S. P. MlcGinn, B. E. Smith, J. C. Springs, W. C. Hinson and E. L. Durham. On account of the absence from the city of the editor of The Herald, who has been attending the State Federation of Labor convention in Greensboro, details of the trial will not be published in The Herald until til the next issue of the paper. SUPREME COURT MOST POWERFUL BODY IN WORLD Yet It Is Headed by Man Who Was Repudiated By 46 of the 48 States of the Nation. Greensboro, Aug. 15.—“There is no place in the Constitution of the United States, nor in any statute of the United States, that gives to the Supreme Court the power to nullify laws made by Congress, and signed by the President,” was one of the high spots in the address delivered to the State Federation of Labor by Edward F. McGrady, personal rep reentative of Samuel Gompers and legislative representative for the American Federation of Labor. Mr. McGrady was given a great ovation at the conclusion of his address and often through his speech he was in terrupted with applause. Mr. McGrady, who was presented J^y Chairman Caldwell as re'present ■4i|g President Gompers said, in part, as’iollows: “I bring to you the greetings and good wishes of the president and the executive council of the American Federation of Labor. It is the hope that your deliberations in this con vention will do a great deal to ad vance the cause of labor, not only in this state, but that it will add to the strength of labor throughout the na tion. “Mr. Gompers was unable to be present today; Be. is at present in Chicago, representing his organiza tion, the cigar makers, as a delegate to that convention. “The American Federation of La bor believes this is one of the states where lots can be accomplished for organized labor. We, of the north, have looked askance at the Carolinas for the reason that they have been lagging behind in industrial legisla tion. I come from a state where we have a 48-hour law in the mills of Massachusetts; and we hope some day you can put over similar legis lation,” Mr. Me. McGrady stated. “We have a hard time holding the 48-hour law, and you workers of the Carolinas act as a drag, so to speak, so you see it is in the interest of the entire country that you should get together and work for legislation similar to that we now enjoy. “We were told after the war that labor could expect more, that labor could get justice; but after we helped win the warTWe were con fronted with the toughest wave of reaction in the history of the coun try. We have held our own by re fusing to take a step backward, and we have accepted reduction in wages onlyjtfter a hard fight to pre vent it, for there never was any ex cuse for reduction in wages, because in some cases dividends increased from 300 to 16,000 per cent. And yet, in the face of these great earn ings, they put on a campaign of reaction, backed by the United States chamber of commerce and the kept-press of America,” Mr. Mc Grady asserted. “The program of big business was to whip you by legislation,” he charg ed, and he said that “they got the governors and national leaders to agree that they would put on the boards men who favored big business and they did this, yea, even to the Supreme Court, in curbing your lib erties. “We are supposed to be a demo cracy, but we are drifting fast right to oligarcy. Two successive con gresses passed a child labor law, which was signed by the President; that is the will of the people, and yet the Supreme Court of the United States renders a decision saying the child labor law was unconstitutional. There is nothing in the constitution that gives the Supreme Court the right to nullify the will of the peo ple,” Mr. McGrady asserted (mmch applause), adding that “when the Supreme Court exercise^ that power they seized it illegally. After the Supreme Court declared the law un constitutional, a new Congress passed another child labor law; and (Continued on Page Two.) GAVE DELEGATES DOWN THE ROAD FOR THEIR SINS Says Union Men Who Buy Non-Union Clothing Are Themselves Scab Em,pldyers. Greensboro, Aug. 15.—President Manning, of the Union Label Trades Department of the American Feder ation ,?f Labor gave the delegates attending the North Carolina State Federation of Labor convention “down the country,” with a swift kick at every step. The delegates, recognizing their guilt, took the tongue-lashing in the proper man ner. % “You boycotte merchants for era* ploying scab carpenters and. other non-union builders, yet you . yoUr selves employ scab workers every day in the year,” was one of the straight - from - the-shoulder charges jnad* a> -fhe big Washington man. "'You defeat candidates for office who patronize non-union barber shops, and at the same j moment you are wearing scab made clothing, or shoes, or hats. Every time you make a purchase, and spend your money for an article, any article, that does not bear the Union label, you are em ploying scab labor, and in many in stances, penitentiary labor. Boys, get yourselves right with God and with your fellow men, and then you can succeed with the ‘other fellow.’ “The Union Label is one of the •most precious things in the world. It is one of the greatest emblems on earth. Let’s see what it is. It is not just a rag, with a design worked upon it. It-is not just a piece of metal, with lettering or an insignia. No, No! It is the one thing in America that has brought the work-week down from 72 hours a week to 48 and 44 hours a week. It represents the one thing that changed the hours of the gooa nousewiie, wno used to get up before daylight and cook her hus band’s breakfast, watch him depart for his labors before the rising of the sun, and wait for his return after the sinking of the sun, and who now has that husband and father with her and her children all the time ex cept the eight hours that he now la bors. “The Union Label represents the one big force that brought the pub lic school into existence. It repre sents the one spirit that surged on ward until the toiler rose from the place of the serf to that of respect ed citizenship. It is the greatest in fluence for good in this country, with the sole exception of the church. “That shirt you have on. Does it bear the union label? If it does, then it was made by a happy worker under good conditions. If not, it is a nine-to-one shot that it was made either in a prison or in the home of some piece-worker. “I do not see how any right-think ing person can purchase an article of wearing apparel that has no union label upon it. Then how much more surprisig is it that you men, you leaders in' your various towns and cities, are here today wearing some articles of clothing that do not have the union label on them at all. “ ‘Well, I can’t find a suit, or a shirt, or a pair of shoes with the label on or in them,’ some of you say. Now that is pure bunk of the bunkest sort. If you tell your mer chant that you want the union label on your clothing, he’ll get it for you. He’s in business to supply the wants of his customers. If he hasn’t got what you want with the label, then refuse to take anything else. He’ll soon get it for you, and you needn’t worry about that part of it. You create the demand and the merchant will be sure to supply your wants.” It was a great lesson to the dele gates, and it is safe to say that many men in North Carolina will go many, many months without clothing be fore buying another non-union piece of ^ goods. “Feed and Weed and Breed,” are the three guiding stars in dairying, said one speaker at the recent farm convention in Raleigh. Of the three, he declared that, feeding is the most important. Secretary and His Wife Have Received Their Notice. MYERS AND KIRBY Both Fired on Wednesday—« Workers To Gather Fri day Night at Union Hall. G. C. Myers and H. C. Kirby, for years employed in ^he Highland Park chain of mills, were discharged Wednesday. On the previous Mon day Mr. and Mrs. Clyde McGann were fired out of the mill. On Thursday afternoon the report came to d'.be Herald that the mill company was firing workers by the wholesale. While the number as re ported to The Herald was twenty five, it is not known just how many there were discharged, a]l told. ..These discharges follow the fir ing of Will Young, Misses Carrie Parker and Annie Langley, and Mrs. Langley, last week. The fact that a jury rendered a verdict in favor of the company in the ejectment pro ceedings instituted again Will Young is thought to have had an in fluence in the reported wholesale discharge yesterday.: It had been voted on last Mon day night to meet on*this Friday night for the purpose of taking a strike vote to force the reinstate ment of Young and the three women. _ I Myers was fired, so he says he was informed, because he attended the ejectment trial of Will Young. Kirby was fired, he says, on the ground that “there had been too much going on around here.” It was brought out at the trial Tuesday that Myers was a delegate to the Central Labor Union. His discharge foHwed Wednesday, al though 3uperintendedt Anderson had sworn, in the Young trial, that he did not. discharge any worker for union affiliation. A meeting this Friday night in the North Charlotte Union hall will be held. Officials of the Union will be present, and it is expected that a crowd will gather tonight for the me: . which lime definite action will be ,taken on the whole matter. WANT POWERS OF SUPREME COURT CURBED BY LAW Nation-Wide Movement Joined By North Carolina Labor Great Campaign Being Waged. Greensboro, Aug. 16.—North Car olina labor has officially joined the nation-wide movement to curtail the autocratic power of the United States Supreme Court. TJie following res olution tells the way North Caro linians feel toward the matter: Whereas, The United States Su preme Court hjis assumed powers never delegated to that body either by constitution in its original form, or by constitutional amendment, or by .legislative enactment, and, Whereas, Nine members of the Supreme Court are now .more pow [ erful, through this self-assumed au thority, than the Congress of the United States and the President combined, and Whereas, This condition, if al lowed to continue, and grow as it has grown in the past few years, will eventually undermine this demo cratic republic, and nullify popular government, therefore, Be Is Resolved, That the North Carolina congressmen and senators be urged to vote for the bill which is to be presented in fee next Con gress of the United States providing for the perpetuation of our repre sentative form of government in the following or similar language: That when a law is declared unconstitu tional b ythe United States Supreme Court, and the same bill is again presented and passed by both branches of Congress and signed by the president, it shall become the law of the land. WISCONSIN MAYOR LAUDS ACHIEVEMENT OF UNIONS By International Labor Newt Service. Superior, WJis., Aug. 8.—Wel coming the delegates of the State Federation of Labor at its opening session here, Mayor Fred A. Baxter said: “I believe that 90 per cent of the population of our city have faith in organized la bor. Had it not been for or ganized labor the citizens of this great country of ours would have been divided into two classes, the very rich and the extremely poor. “I am heartily in favor of a high standard of living for the workers and a correspond ing living wage.”