Che Charlotte labor Journal Endorsed by the N. C. State Federation of Labor AND DIXIE FARM NEWS Official Organ of Central Labor Union; Standing _ for the A. F. L. 12 YEARS OF CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE TO NORTH CAROLINA READERS Journal advertisers deserve Consideration < __ tnb reaoers VOL. XII—NO. 28 YOUR ADVERTISEMENT IN THE JOURNAL IS A GOOD INVESTMENT CHARLOTTE, N. C., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1942 $2.00 Per Year - “United We Stand for Victory” - Th« ONLY REALLY INDEPENDENT WEEKLY in Mecklenburg Comity ImC"»TgLp??5MrrFor » Weekly Its Readers Represent the LARGEST BUYING POWER in Charlotte A. F. OF L. AND C. L 0. SIGN ARMISTICE; NO MORE “RAIDINGS” - IMPORTANT STEP TOWARDS AMALGAMATION (?) WASHINGTON, D. C.—The American Federation of Labor and the CIO signed an armistice on Dec. 2. The agreement, en tered into by the Peace Committees representing both organiza tions, calls for an immdiate end to union raiding and jurisdictional warfare. The conferees described 4heir action as a most im portant first step toward actual amalgamation of the A. F. of L. and CIO. They also emphasized that it will be of tremendous benefit to the war production program, since the agreement will prevent delays due to union rivalry. Having accomplished this initial and significant truce, the peace con ferences recessed until later this month when negotiations to bring about a permanent merger of the AFL and CIO into a united labor movement will be resumed. The truce, which will have to be ratified by the Executive Councils of the A.F.L. and C.I.O. provides for the appointment of a joint committee of A.F.L. and C.I.O. representatives to hear and decide any jurisdictional dif ferences arising between an A.F.L and a C.I.O. union in the same field. If this committee fails to agree on its decision, it shall select an impartial arbiter to resolve the dispute. If the committee cannot agree on an arbiter within five days, the President of the United States shall be requested to name one. “We recommend that this understanding shall remain in force until labor unity is effected,” the announcement by the A.F.L. and C.I.O. Peace Com mittees stated. The truce was proposed by the A.F.L. Committee, composed of Vice Presidents Harry C. Bates, Daniel J. Tobin and William Hutcheson. Their recommendation was made pursuant to the unanimous action of the recent A.F.L. convention in Toronto which urged an immediate armistice with the C.I.O. to end raiding. The convention declaration said: “We are convinced if these (peace) negotiations are to be successful, bitterness of feeling must be eliminated and hostilities come to an end. Your committee believes that it would be difficult indeed for the unity committee to make satisfactory progress if in the meantime hostile raiding tactics continue. We, therefore, urgently recommend that this convention approve of an immediate armistice as an essential evidence of good faith and sin cerity.” In very similar language, the agreement entered into between the A.F.L. and C.I.O. Peace Committees declared: “We are convinced that if peace negotiations are to be successful and unity achieved, cooperation among our respective members and organizations must be encouraged and promoted. It is our belief that it would be extremely difficult to make satisfactory progress toward unity through these negotia tions if, in the meantime, there is absence of practical cooperation between the two organizations. We agree to the establishment of a joint A.F.L. C.I.O. Committee to hear and decide any disputed jurisdictional differences that may arise between the two above-named organizations.” At a press conference following announcement of the truce, A.F.L. Chairman Bates said complaints could be filed with the new Jurisdiction Committee only by national and international unions affected. The committee will not consider disputes between two A.F.L. unions or between two C.I.O. unions, he added. Members of the new Jurisdiction Committee will be named by the Execu tive Councils of the A.F.L. and C.I.O. when they meet to ratify the pact. BY TAYLOR CALDWELL Human revolutions are of slow growth. Modern democracy is the heir of the ages, of men dead for many centuries. It began in the thoughts oi Egyptian Hebraic, and Grecian philosophers, and burst into open fire in the Magna Carta, when, for the first time, the Rights of Man were boldly pro claimed. It progressed through hundreds of years of darkness, oppression, and misery, sometimes shining brightly, sometimes almost disappearing in the murk of tyranny and despair. It broke into a wider blaze in the Amer ican and French Revolutions. But democracy is still in the process of be coming. It may take many hundreds of years longer before it has per fected itself, rid itself of the old grossness and injustice which it inherited from the Dark Ages. But even in its present imperfections it is still the noblest concept which man has ever dreamed and for which multitudes have heroically died. In each century it must again engage in the ancient struggle against the primordial forces of destruction and reaction. And each time that the battle is won the march of ultimate democracy is hastened. It is worth fighting for, this ultimate democracy, though we ourselves may never see its perfection. However, by the Grace of God and our own THE MARCH OF LABOR i* -The aettPuACE op TKADE-Ua/ioMM.