Greetings L S. KELBMJGH & SON Welders Miscellaneous Iron Work 415 East Seventh Street Phone 2-020# CHARLOTTE, N. C. Best Wishes R, P. STEFFEY COMPANY General Electric Horae Appliances 116 West Fourth St. Dial 2-5104 CHARLOTTE, N. C. Greetings SHIP-AHOY RESTAURANT “Charlotte's Leading Restaurant’ 117 West Trade St. Phooe 4-2671 CHARLOTTE, N. C. Greetings W. 0. Jarrell Michiee Co. Expert Acetylene and Electric Welding 1200 South Mint SL Dial S-7189 CHARLOTTE, N. C. i SAFE AT HOME? Ir SECURE RASE or I.AIIIIMt firmly KEEP 8TAIKWAYS CLEAN AND WELL LIGHTED More deaths occur annually from accidents > in the home than are caused by traffic ac cidents. the National Safety Council reveals. Over 75% of the accidents Incurred by elderly people in the home result from falls . . . usually on stairways. Falls from lad ders account for many of the accidents to children. These accidents can be greatly lessened by simple precautions in the home, such as securing the end of ladders and effectively lighting stairways. Our Wiring Specialists are at your sendee to make light more useful than ever in your home ... for pleasure, health, and SAFETY. i DJIK POWER COMPANY _ th. /2u/mont Cata&wU. ' Wage Increase Ruled Illegal; Ruling By The Supreme Court WASHINGTON—A wage increase bigger than a labor union demanded was declared illegal by the Supreme Court recently because the employer failed to notify the udion of the raise. The court ruled unanimously that when an em ployer is negotiating with a union on an increase, he can’t grant a general increase without consulting the union. To do so, the court held, is a violation of the national labor re lations act, which guarantees the right of collective bar gaining. The company involved wai Crompton-Highland Mills, Inc., oi Griffin, Ga. The CIO Textile Workers union had been certified as bargaining agent for worker! in the plant, and negotiation) were in progress for a contract. Talks reached a stalemate De cember 19, 1945. Twelve days later Crompton-Highland grantee a wage increase ranging frore two to six cents an hour—mow than the union had asked during negotiations. It did so without notifying the union in advance. Justice Burton, delivering the court's’ opinion, said the occasion ’was clearly “appropriate for col lective bargaining.” He said the circumstances would be different if a similar offer had been made by the em ployer during negotiations and had been rejected or left unac cepted by the union. A wage increase then, he said “might well carry no disparage ment of the collective bargaining proceedings.” Crompton-Highland argued that it granted the wage boost because the union had terminated negotia tions and because an increase was necessary to keep a working force in a highly competitive field. But„ the court accepted the findings of the National Labor Relations board that while the talks were at an impasse the un ion had not broken them off en tirely. “We do not* have here,” Burton ^aid, “a case where the bargain ing had come to a complete term ination cutting off the outstand ing invitation of the certified bar gaining representative (the un ion) to bargain as to any new issue on such a matter as rates of pay.” The high tribunal’s action re i versed a ruling by the U. S. circuit court at New Orleans, which had refused to issue a de cree enforcing the NLRB finding against the company. The Supreme Court sent the case back to the circuit court with instructions to issue a de cree. It said the lower court, may however modify the terms of the NLRB’s order. In another action today the court refused to extend the time in which Gerhart Eisler alien Communist may appeal his con viction on passport fraud charges. He has until June 6 to file an appeal but the matter is now aca demic because Eisler has fled the country. WILLIAM GREEN DISfjBQWS HERALD-AMERICAN “8TTOT" ' j President Green of the Ameri , can Federation of Labor, in a telegram to Chicago Typographi cal Union No. 16, has emphati cally repudiated the “stunt” by which the strike-bound Chicago Herald - American attempted to make capital of his name. The Hearst paper, which is the Chicago outlet for Westbrook Pegler and other anti-labor har lots. received “guest column” written as an accommodation to Victor Reisel, whose stuff is reg ularly supplied by the New York Post syndicate to newspapers in a number of other cities. Presi dent Green was among the “guest columnists” who had consented to write for Reisel (while the latter was on vacation) without being informed that the “fcuest column” would be sent across a picket line. The facts were set forth by President Green in his wire to our union, which closed with this pledge: “I can assure you that I did net and will not prepare any article for publication in Chi-X cago Herald-American while its empsyees who are members of ITU are on strike. The heavily promoted “guest column” scheme is the latest in a series of frantic attempts made by the Hearst organisation to counteract the boycott activities of the striking printers. In ex ploiting the names of the Amer ican Federation of Labor and its president, the Herald-American has brasenly ignored the clearly expressed warnings made by President Green. Last November he repudiated such Hearst tactics in a telegram which was printed in the Federation News, official paper of the Chicago Federation of Labor, and distributed to all AFL unions in the Chicago area. Still later Green sent an of ficial communication to every AFL state and local central body in America setting forth the Typ ographical Union’s position in the strike against the Chicago papers and asking for their co-operation. This latest Herald-American “stunt,” like earlier ones, has boomeranged. Every labor lead er who has been contacted by No. 16 after his name was misused by the union-busting Hearst pa per has expressed the bitterest kind of resentment toward the paper that resorted to this trick ery. Greetings LINCOLN THEATRE H. A. Plait, Mgr. 408 East Second St. Phone 3-5907 CHARLOTTE, N. C. Greetings Meckleiburg Packing Go., IncorpwalMl Custom Killing for the Public. Slaughterers and (tenderers. PineviUe Road Phone 4-6441 CHARLOTTE, N. C. Airport Park Bring the Kiddies and Enjoy Yourself WILKINSON BOULEVARD CHARLOTTE, N. C. Bette’s Men's Store. father* s Day ♦ . Favorites H1CKOK SUSPENDERS 1.50 to 3.50 ★ H1CKOK JEWELRY 1.00 to 3.50 ★ HICKOK BELTS 2.00 to 2J>0 ★ BILLFOLDS 2.00 to 10.00 ★ PARKER PENS 5.00 to 15.00 ★ PEN SETS 17.50 to 22.50 A RONSON UGHTERS 6.50 to 10.(0 ★ SPORT HANDKERCHIEFS 50c to 1.00 ★ < GIFT TIES 1.00 to 3.50 ★ MEN'S PANAMAS * 5.00 to 10.00 ★ INTERWOVEN SOX 55c and 75c Belk’s American Mutual liability Company AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE Liberty Life Bldg. Phone 3-4153 CHARLOTTE, N. C. ___ eml mm • REAL ESTATE 824 1-2 Eaat Trade SL Phone 4-6469 CHARLOTTE, 'N. C. , Greetings John QaslaRd Company REAL ESTATE i Industrial Bank Bldg. Dial 3-8849 CHARLOTTE, N. C. » E. 1 Feeley Company < Dyestuffs & Chemicals 121 East Boulevard Phone 3*8865 CHARLOTTE, N. C. Compliments of KEITH MOTOR COMHK 318 West Fifth Street Dial 3-6658 CHARLOTTE, N„ C. Rent A Car or Track. Drive It Yourself A fleet of new automobiles at all times. Trucks, aU capacities rented or leased. Charlotte Car Rental Semite, tec. 411 North Try on St. Phone 5-5969 CHARLOTTE, N. C. Johnnie Blackwelder’s BARBECUE (Air Conditioned) Open Daily 7:00 A. M. to 1:00 A. M. Barbecue, Steaks, Bruns wick Stew, Soup. Chicken and Sandwiches of aU kinds. Curb service. 2721 N. Tryon St. Dial 5-3567 CHARLOTTE, N. C. FINER FURNITURE »T BETTER PRICES Goines Furniture Co. OPEN NIGHTS EASY TErA FREE PARKING Eleventh & College Sts. Phone 5-3539 CHARLOTTE, N. C.