WIRE er WRITE to Year Ceagressaea ia Pretest Ajiissl Mil ARTI-LABOR Bills! CHARLOTTE LABOR JOURNAL VOL. XVII; NO. 26 CHARLOTTE. N. C.. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 6. 1947 Subscription $2.00 Per Year Prices Of Food Products Expected To Soar M 1948 Agricultural Economics. The huroou’s forecast Indi cated higher prices wore on the way for several commodities, •owe of which appeared headed toward peak levels reached dar ing aad after World War 1L On livestock and meats, the bureau said prices probably will continue high and meat production was expected to drop about 10 pounds per person from the 1947 average per cap ita rate of 135 pounds. Egg and poultry prices also art pxpected to average higher than this year, and dairy prod ucts may be higher the Rrst six drouths of next year than ia the first half of U47. There may he a drop in tiro- last half the- bureau said. Prices of wheat, which in Chicago soared to the highest arork for the December future delivery since 1917, were fore cast by the boreau to be gov erned largely by the site of next year's crop. Export de mand was expected to continue large until the middle of 1949. December wheat at one time this week was quoted at S.1.1B \ bushel while in the rash mar ket No. 2 red, wheat was sold for SS.lt H, the highest price since 1929. The bureau's outlook on corn and other livestock feeds was that prices were expected to average higher than this year and because of this j*ar’s poor corn crop the total feed sup* plies would be smaller. Prices for potatoes early in 1948 probably will be higher Than last winter, the bureau said, while continued high prices were predicted for wool during the first half of next year. Fruit prices were expected to be about the same as this year. Moderately lower prices were foreseen in a larger rye crop, while somewhat lower prices also were predicted for com mercial truck crops. As wheat at Chicago and other big markets continued its upward trend, there was an other increase in bakery flour prices at Minneapolis, moving 1# cents higher per hundred pounds to S7.85. Also on the upgrade in markets were rub ber, scrap steel, cocoa, butter, lamb. corn, rye and cotton. In the livestock markets prices of bogs, cattle and oats declined WOLL ASKS RELIEF FOR LOW INCOME GROUPS Congress Urged To Revise Minimum Wage Act CONGRESS STRONGLY URGED TO RAISE MINIMUM WAGE TO 75 CENTS AN HOUR. Washington, D. C.—The AFL strongly urged Congress to immediately raise the minimum wage to 75 cents an hour and to amend the Fair Labor Standards Act to extend its coverage to workers new excluded by the wording of the original law. Walter Mason, national legislative representative for the AFL, in testimony before the House Committee on Educa tion and Labor, presented the AFL's policy on minimum wage legislation as adopted at the recent convention and attacked those who are opposed to the upward revision of fka minimum Wfktff* IaVpI Referring to the national wage' policy adopted by Congress with passage of the Fair Labor Stand* aids Acts, a policy which recog nised a legal obligation to main tain the minimum standard of living necessary for the health, efficiency, and general well-being of the nation’s workers, MrJ Ma son declared: “I am calling upon the mem bers of this committee to face reality—to acknowledge that the present 40-sant-an-hour minimum rate no loiter carries out our national wage policy and to take the corrective action necessary to make this policy effective. The American Federation of Labor ii proposing an immediate in crease in the minimum wage to 75 cents an hour. We do not feel that this proposed minimum will provide the standard of liv ing contemplated by the original act. It is, however, what is needed immediately to correct the gross inequities which now exist.” In answer to critics who have forecast dire effects for the na tion’s economy if the minimum wage is increased, Mason declared that such an increase would have two beneficial results: “First, the productivity of the individual worker who had been receiving substandard wages will increase. You may ask why this should happen. The answer is very simple. Workers receiving a substandard wage cannot be ex pected to contribute to' their full est extent to the_ welfare of the enterprise. Because of the lovr waves, they canno provide thera | selves or their families with ade quate food, housing or clothing. I The individual worker in such von-fitiens is easily fatigued, has a' very low morale and because of his other worries cannot con tribute the full measure of his capabilities. With a minimum wage which will provide a decent standard of living his productivity naturally rises. “Secondly, the imposition of the minimum wage will mean greater managerial efficiency. Since in most cases, substandard wages have been a subsidy to the less efficient producers at the ex pense of the workers, the effect of the minimum wage will fall heaviest on those less efficient producers. It will thus force j these operators to re-examine their methods of doing business so that they can maintain the same level of costs as their com petitors. In other words, the minimum wage will force pro ducers to improve the efficiency of their operations.” In addition to increasing the wage level to 75 cents an hour, Mason urged extension of the law’s coverage to include seamen, employes of retail and service establishments with an annual volume of business amounting to (Continued On Page 4) Doherty Urges Raises For Letter Carriers Washington, D. C.-—'William C. Doherty, president of the National Association of Letter Carriers and an AFL Execu tive Council member, called upon Congress for the prompt revision of the Civil Service Re tirement Law to provide high er annuity payments for re tired employes. In an editorial in the No vember issue of the associ ation’s journal. The Postal Rec ord, Doherty protested the “sto ical indifference” shown by Con gress in return for the volun tary relinquish asent by *be let ter carriers of their right to strike or to engage in collec tive bargaining procedures. Mr. Doherty stated that the retirement law, aa amended from tiase to time, is a good law “basically” but “the annu ities under the law today simply will not permit retired letter carriers to do much more than exist.” “The Langer-lAaves hills, in troduced in the flrst session of the 80th Congress, would have gone a long way toward cor recting this inequity. Simple justice demanded that a liber alised retirement Mil be enact ed. It is needless to point out at this time that letter carriers are still waiting for the passage of such a MIL “It is not a question of striking against oar Govern ment; we have never enter tained the idea. Moreover, W never will. So far. so good. But why in the name of social justice and fair play, must oar retired men bo compelled to struggle on through the sun set of their lives on a totally inadequate annuity? The ‘quid pro quo' we receive for our for (Continued on Pago 4) U. S. Labor Praised By Win. Green » ' I New York City. — AFL .President William Green, in a prepared broadcast for use on the State Department’s; “Voice of America” program beamed to Russia, emphasized the freedom enjoyed by Amer ican workers in political matters, in the selection of their upions, and in the de termination of their nation’s poliofe*^ The program consisted of a se ries of questions put to Mr. Green which brought out the‘ba sic differences between the labor’ movement under a democratic government and under a totali tarian regime. For purposes of the broadcast, the Nazi system was chosen as an example of the totalitarian form of government. On the general question of the basic difference between a demo cratic labor organization and the Nazi totalitarian labor movement, Mr. Green said: “Basically the difference was i between freedom and slavery. A democratic labor organization like thfe American Federation of Labor is free and self-governing. Its policies are determined by the members themselves and its ac tivities are carried on by union Officials elected by the members. Certainly the AFL is completely free of government domination and control. Frequently we are opposed to government labor policies and we do not hesitate to express our opposition. “Now contrast this free system with the slave conditions which Hitler imposed upon German la bor. First, he destroyed the free labor unions of the Reich, con fiscating their property and im prisoning* their leaders. Then he organized a labor front, which the government compelled workers to join. These workers had no voice in the selection of the directors of labor nor did they have any say over such fundamental policies as wages and working conditions.” In reply to a question on polit ical matters and the freedom of workers to express themselves and exercise their right to vote, Mr. Green reiterated the AFL’s* non partisan political policy. He said; “In our country the unions are free to support whatever party they favor and of course all un ion members enjoy the same free dom. “The American Federation of Labor itself has consistently fol lowed a nonpartisan political pol icy and has refrained from giv ing a blanket endorsement to any political parties whose records convince us that they are friendly to the cause of organised labor. Nor do our unions attempt to in fluence their members to support any particular political party. “We have confidence in the (Coetianed on Page 4) FOOD PRICES\A T NEW PEAK AND CLIMBING New York City.—The diffi culty of making end* meet be cause of the soaring coot of living has added a further complicating factor in Ameri can family relationships, al ready dislocated because of wartime conditions, the Family Service association reported. In a survey of lit family service agencies in American cities, all affiliated with the FSAA. H have noted that mounting living costs had in creased the number of prob lems families have brought to the agencies in recent months. In discussing the report, Frank 1. Hertel, general direc tor of the FSAA, said that the current abnormal economic sit uation is causing not only short-term family problems but is sowing seeds for the future, since “children growing up in an atmosphere of frustration and uncertainty in one genera tion tend to carry over the same instability of home life in the next." Marginal income families are the most affected, but the re port noted that many higher income families for the flrst time are seeking agency assist ance. Among the difficulties noted are inability to pay for needed medical care, improper diet, increase in the number^uf mothers going to work and in ability to pay for proper day care for children of working mothers, inadequate housing, children leering school to help support families, exhaustion of savings and mounting debts. Board Decides On Bargaining Unit ___ i Washington, D. C.—The first decision under the Taft-Hartley 'aw on the question of what con stitutes a proper bargaining unit was rendered by the National La bor Relations Board. The board followed policy es tablished under the old Wagner act and carried forward in the new law. It dismissed the peti tion of the AFL's Brotherhood of Electrical Workers for an elec tion among twenty employes of the French Broad Electric Mem bership Corporation at Marshall, tf. C. Board members held that the unit was too small because it failed to include the company’s twenty-one other employes at Burnsville and Bakersville, N C. The N. L. R. B. assumed jur isdiction of the case on the ground that the co-operative util ity, owned wholly by its costo mers, sold $2,980 worth of power across the state line in Tennes see and brought 40 per cent of $131,000 in supplies from sources outside North Carolina. AFL CONVENTION URGES ACTION TO BRING ABOUT WORK HOLIDAY ON ELECTION DAY The AFL convention at its session in San Francisco voted unanimously to use all practical means possible to bring about the observance of election day as a legal holiday in order that all workers may have the necessary time to vote. In place of several resolutions introduced on the subject, the delegates voted for a substitute report submitted by the Committee on Resolutions which supported the policy “of mobilizing labor’s strength so that it can be made most effective on election day.” The committee report is as follows: “In connection with election day, your committee recog nizes the fact that the primaries are of equal importance to election day, for it is then that he candidates for public office are chosen. In many Southern States the selection of candidates in the primaries assures their election. “To secure legislation making either primaries, or elec tion day, or both, legal holidays presents difficulties which may not be immediately overcome. Your committee recom mends that the American Federation of Labor and State Federations of Labor apply all practical means possible to establish election day as a legal holiday, and in states where the primaries are the determining factor that primary day be made a legal holiday. — “In the meantime your committee suggests that as a first step it is advisable that affiliated organizations and their local unions in negotiating agreements with em ployers, include provisions which would assure the worker^ a holiday or an adequate opportunity to perform their es sential obligations as citizens, and to demonstrate the ef fective part they can, and which they should play in the election of public officials.” URGES HIGHER PERSONAL EXEMPTIONS AND THE REPEAL OF EXCISE TAXES Washington. D. C.—Matthew Woll. AFL Executive Coun cil Vnember, charged that the majority report of the Special Tax Study committee appointed by Chairman Knutson of the House Ways and Means committee, would, if enacted, “shift the tax load from those more able to those less able to bear the burden.” Mr. Woll’s charge was made in a minority report which he submitted to the House Committee in the belief that the majority report is contrary to the “best interests of the nation and the welfare of our people.’* Mr. won pointed out tnat me majority of the special committee refrained from submitting; recom mendations on income tax rates and exemptions on the theory that such matters are the prerog ative of the House Committee on Way and Means. He said, how ever. that the com mitt ee pee* ceeded to make 38 recommenda tions for specific changes in in come tax provisions of the Inter nal Revenue code. The net result of these recom mendations, he said, “would wreck the effectiveness of the surtax on individuals, almost as devastat ingly as any surtax scale revis ion that might have been con templated.” He added: “Their purpose seems tot be to attain by indirect and complex means the result of income tax cutting for the favored few grhich they do not dare recommend by an outright reduction in surtax rates.” Mr. Woll criticised the major ity report for its failure to take cognizance of the revenue re quirements of the Marshall plan | for aid to Europe and for other \ essential expenditures of the I Government. He declared: “There is no indication in the majority report of what the net tax loss would be. It is certainly reckless tax planning to make recommendations without knowing the cost.” Mr. Woll found in a majority recommendation “that the excise tax structure be retained and strengthened,” a step in the di rection of a Federal sales tax which would constitute an unfair and capricious burden on consum ers and businessmen alike. He concluded that the 46 major proposals of the majority would oe oi sugnt application to per sona with incomes of less than $5,000 a year which comprise 96 1-2 per cent of the taxpayers. In this respe't he said: “The program of the majority is consistent with the across-tho board percentage program for re pwtMNiils now being made by _ certain groups for some form of a * Federal sales tax.” On the proposal to allow all married couples to divide their in oomes for tax purposes, Mr. Woll pointed out that this would be of particular benefit only to couples with incomes above $5,000 and urged that such action be taken only after reduction of taxes on low incomes and the elimination of certain excise taxes. Mr. Woll presented a positive program for tax revision which called for the increasing of per sonal exemptions for low income taxpayers, elimination of excise taxes on 10 commodities, and the plugging of existing loopholes in the tax laws. He recommended that “the highest priority be given in any program for reduction of individ ual income taxes to increasing personal exemptions, and that $2.5 billions of revenue reduction be utilised immediately to grant such relief to the lowest income groups.” On the subject of excise taxes, he urged the immediate repeal of the tax now levied oh oleomar garine, transportation of persons and property, electric light bulbs, matches, women’s purses, toilet preparations, and lubricating oil. In addition Mr. Woll recommend ed cutting the tax on admissions and on telephone and telegraph service by 60 per cent. N. Y. Firms Face Serious Charges Washington, D. C.—In an other action designed to stamp oat tho trend toward monop oly control hr .big bnainoaa in ternets, tho Jsstke Depart ment charged that 17 New York investment bankers hare a stranglehold an the nation’s security hnsinaas. Attorney General Tom C. Clark annannead that a salt had been instituted in the New York Federal Coart charging the bankers with riotstions of the anti-tnut laws in handling •t per cent of tho stock and bands issaad daring the last nine years, and valued at $14 billion. The Gamnaent asked for injunctions against the banking houses and their partners, and asked siso thst the Investment Bankers Association of Amer ica be broken sp by court or 4or. The Government suit accused the bankers of conspiring to dominate the stock and bond business by txiag the prices and terms of new issues, and by strangling competitive bid The with wore charged not to On hm 4) J