Editorial THE CHARLOTTE LABOR JOURNAL And dixie farm news Published at Charlotte, North Carolina 8. A. Stall*, Editor and Publisher W. M. Witter, Associate Editor Entered a* aecond-claa* mail matter September 11, 1931, at the Yost Office at Charlotte, N. C„ uadar the Act of Congress of March 3. 1879. _ Oldest Bona Fid* AFX, Newspaper in North Carolina, consistently nerving the American Federation of Labor and ite members since it was founded. May 12, 1931. Approved by the American Federation of Labor in 1931. Endorsed by Charlotte Typographical Union, Number 338, An At Bliate of Charlotte Central Labor Union and the North Carolina Fed eration of Labor. __ News Services: American Federation of Labor, U. 8. and North Carolina Departments of Labor, and Southern Labor Press Associa tion. _ The Labor Journal will not be responsible for the opinions of cor respondents, but any erroneous reflection upon the character, stand ing or reputation of any person firm or corporation which m»y ap in til# columns of The Libor Journal will be rorrpeteo when called to the attention of the publisher. Correspondenee snd Open Forum opinions solicited, but The Journal reserves the right to reject objectionable reading matter and advertising at all times.^ MEMBER SOUTHERN LABOR PRESS ASSOCIATION "LET TEE SUNLIGHT OF A FREE PRESS SHINE IN DARK PLACES'* SOUTHERN LABOR PRESS ASSOCIATION >2 WEEKLY BIBLE THOUGHT “Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such a one in the spirit of meekness; considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted.”—Galatians. 50,000 TELEPHONES IN CHARLOTTE (100,000 POPU LATION) WITH 7,700 ON WAITING LIST On Thursday, June 23, 1949, Charlotte saw the Bell Tel ephone Company install its fiftieth thousand phone, with 7,700 applicants pleading for service, which shows a tele phone in operation for a little over every two citizens in our city, and the average would run less than that could the service desired be immediately given.| This remark able average is not due to any heavy pressure work by the telephone company, but . to the almost absolute necessity in this day and time to have a speedy and continuous com munication service in both business and homelife. A phone is almost as much of a necessity as are other pubj lie utilites—water, lights, transportation, etc. The Journal has never carried a dollar’s worth of tele pTTone advertising in its nearly 20 years of existence, and in saying that Charlotte has a good service, both local and long distance, we are not paying any debt of patronage, nor are we advocating any price increase for telephone service, but merely giving credit where credit is due. WONDERFUL, QUIET JUNE Enveloped by a mood impassioned with the quietude of a slumbering woods and becalmed by the drowsi ness of the warmth of June, Samuel T. Coleridge was moved to write— “A noise like a hidden brook. In the leafy month of June That to the sleeping woods at night Kingeth a quiet tune.* * Coleridge’s thoughts of peaceful June are immersed in a 20th Century sea of cataclysmic speed and care lessness that would have challenged the imagination of any 18th Century pen. Yes, the woods may still sing of a brook in June— but today we speak of man-made brooks that flow through woods; concrete brooks—flowing not of water, but of millions of unnatural devices called automobiles. For this is the time that travel soothes the searching heart. The softness of a nation’s green pastures will be pierced; trees, rich with life, will quiver with fear and the highway will hum to the tune of roaring ve hicles on vacation-bound jaunts. This is the beginning of the glorious vacation period when families will pack limb and belongings to seek a few fleeting moments away from Life’s more tedious tasks. It will be a wonderful June and a quiet June. It will be a wonderful June for those who drive with care, and an unusually quiet for those *2420 unfor tunate beings who will die in unnecessary accidents. MATTHEW WOLL, President, Union Labor Life Insurance Co. •The cleath toll for June, 1948. tfut-W YOU HAVE AN ! INJURY ACCIDINT.THE AT A CONSTANT YOU CAN DRIVE CHANCE Of SOMEONE SPEED OF 400 MILES IN BEIN6 KILLED ARE 8hrs.54min. tin 16 7hrs.18min. 1 in 12 6 hrs. 10 min. 1 in 6 NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCIL 45 m.p.h. 55 m.p.h. 65 ntp.h. THE MARCH Off LABOR ! TjW BRITISH BABY'S CHANGES OF LIFE HAV'E ALMOST DOUBLED ■ UNDER LABORCULE. UNDER .ABOR'S NATIONAL HEALTH PMW, 1 THERE WERE ONLY 34 DEATHS . PER JOOO INFANTS DURING 1946, ! THE LOWEST E\/ER RSCDRI3EDTHC { DEATH RATE IN *041 60 RFR KXD 1 U& STATE =NT HAS FIVE T>MESAS/ ASittxi '•/GMUCM MM I93ft. 0%OUTOFEVfelV *i2o vMdrwng MtVHEI/ POt_ ^suPPoenvteHStivte a OR OTHERS. THE W other u> abb 1 Either * pin VOUC HAT MOHEY will do'YXE 6«r TM6fiE IS IF Yt>U BUy-U^lCW-MADe HATS A NO CAPS. UXXRDCTHlS UMOM LABEL! Financial insecurity make* yon • pawn. Bnt with money to back yon up, yon can make your own mom Yon can retire without worry when the time comet. Yon can open up that little bntinett you’ve always wanted. 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