WASHINGTON WEEKLY COLUMN All la Same Boat Rep. Robert Ramsay (D., W. Va.) points out the peopla are behind the demands of trad* un ionists for • democratic defense program. "Labor ... is not asking too much,” Ramsay told the House March 20. "I find its program not very much different than the demands of aU the people, judg ing from the letters I receive from sny constituents. • '‘Labor, in the field of waffS control, wants a formula which will assure economic justice. That is pretty much what my contin ents want. Labor wants a more realistic price control program ' rather than one full of loopholes. p . . That is just about what my constituents want. "Labor wants a tax program that is more equitable than the monstrosity we passed in Decem ber which falsely carries the label of excess profits tax. Labor wants loopholes plugged in our tax bills. That is just about what my con stituents demanded. . . . “I have referred to the things labor asks and the thing my con stituents ask. I doubt if my Con stituency is much different from any other.” Stopping Speculators Housing Expediter Tighe Woods mats Congress to damp down on hooting speculators. Woods said March 20 the Gov ernment must be able to eontrd rents in new defense or mUftaiy areas just as soon as a new camp or plant is announced. Here’s what’s happening now: As soon as the Government says it is going to build a camp or plant, rent gougers and housing gamblers get set for a killing. Servicemen and defense workers are stabbed in the back. Rents shoot op and house prices increase before a single service man or defense worker is on the scene. Byrd “Economy” The machine controlled by Sen. Harry Byrd (D.) runs state and local government in Virginia Byrd is a loud shouter for “econ omy." Last year the number of state and local government employes in Virginia increased by 3,800—or 5 per cent. The government pay rolls rose by $13.6 million—or more than 8 per cent. What’s that about “economy," Senator? Ireland Adopts Government Boosing Program \ Socialism has come to Ireland. “Impossible!” you say? Read on— The Irish Government is now sponsoring -~M housing program similar to the middle-income plan in the United States. And everybody knows middle income housing is Socialistic. The National Association of Real Es tate Boards (NAREB), the Na tional Association of Home Build ers (NAHB), Sen. Kenneth Wher ry <R., Nebr). and other stand patters say so. Whoever thought the Irish would turn Socialistic? SMALL BUSINES8 GETS RUNAROUND FROM WILSON “White small firms have been left out in the cold, the giant corporations have been sapping up all the gravy in defense sub sidies. Already the big com panies, such as U. S. Steel, have been granted more than $2 bil lion in tax subsidies for defense expansion. “Yet at the same time applica tions from small firms and new comers ar» gathering dust in -gov ernment offices . . . The truth is that small business is getting a worse deal than labor from Mo bilisation Boas Charlie WUsoa ” It. Organized Labor’s Program for Action Sixteen million trade unionists ere united behind e six-point pro gram to brine democracy to the defense program. The six-point plan of action ires adopted unanimously by 704 representatives of the AFL, CIO and Railroad Brotherhoods at I meeting March 1 in Washington called by the United Labor Pol* icy Committee. The program stresses the im portant fact that unorganised, as well as organised workers, house wives, fanners, small business men and pensioned old folks must work together to get a fair de fense program. The most important objective is Congressional passage of a workable Defense Production Act. The present law—cornerstone of the defense program—ends June The plan of action calls for the formation of local consumer com mittees, wide distribution of vot in* records of Congressmen on de fense bids, visits to Senators end Representatives, meetings through out the country. end wide use of ell methods of publicity. Here Is the six-point program: 1. Mist co-operation in sap pert ef this anti-inflation pro gram from all community organi sations which support oar demo cratic Institutions and are devoted to the anti-totalitarian objectives ef Asasrlca’s defense program. 2. Promote public meetings, ra I dio and television programs, speeches before community groups and other appropriate means of alerting every citizen to the need for improved defense mobilisation and anti-inflation policios. 3. Forward letters, telegrams, petitions and memorials to Pres ident Truman and Members of Congress in support of the prin ciple of equal sacrifice and fair play in the mobilisation program. Our first objective is the improve meat of the Defense Production Act. 4. Help establish loeal consum er committee* through which the people amp he fully adriaed of the developments in Washington, violations of price regulations may be publicised, and to co operate with public-spirited mer chants for local anti-inflation pro grams. 6. Encourage authorised dele gations from labor and other group# to seek appointments with Senators and Congressmen during the forthcoming Easter recess to sat forth the problems of the con sumer. 6: Secure the widest publicity through the labor press and, if necessary, through the purchase of local radio time and newspaper space, for the voting record of Senators and Congressmen on major bills affecting tbe fight against inflation and for a better defense mobilization program. BI6 PACKERS, FOOD, KIVESTMSIT, STEEL CZARS RUN DEFENSE Wherever you look in the de fense program you find Big Busi nessmen seated behind the im portant desks. Take the Office of Priee Stabilization (OPS). It runs the phony price control pro gram. ;.^On March 18 the OPS an nounced appointment of tS men to top positions in the agency. Who are they? Their names aren’t important, 'but their background is. Almost 1 all of them are from, the ranks jof big business. Here are some | of the companies these men : worked for: Mosinee Paper Hills, Head Sales Co. Inc., North Pacific Hill I packers), Premier Foods, H. J. ! Heinz Co., Green Giant Co. (food | processors), Youngstown Steel A ' Alloy Co., Manhattan Shirt Co., j International Shoe Co., Hearn’s ! Department Stores Inc., Ameri | can Telephone A Telegraph Co., 1 Commercial Investment Trust i Corp, and Pittsburgh Consolidated Coal Co. The list shows Big Business is well represented in the OPS. But what about the people? They have quite a stake in price con Itrol. FACTORY WORKERS REAL PROGRESS 1. In 1939: The average wage ! was $24.88 per straight time 40*; j hour week. * 2. Living coat rises have added [$19.78 weekly to worker’s living j costs. 3. Taxes have increased by $8.42 weekly for unmarried work* er. 4. At end of 1950: Worker needed $53.08 weekly to live as well as in 1939. 5. Productivity: Normal rise adds $6.89 per week at 2 1-4 per cent yer year (11 years). 6. To keep pace with progress requires $59.97 weekly purchasing power. 7. Workers actual wage, end of I960, $58.80 per straight time, 40-hour week. 8. DEFICIT: $1.17 per week, $60.84 per year. DEFENSE LOSES “With the rejection by the House of Representatives of con ' sideration of the Administration’s defense housing bill the national defense program is set back .in its effort to assure decent housing I and community facilities in areas affected by the developments of defense production facilities and military installations . . .-—The Now York times, March 18. Wilson Draws Huge Pension WASHINGTON. — Record* of the Securities and Exchange Com mission show that Charles A. Wilson, the nations’ defense mo bilization czar, is drawing a pen sion of $66,000 a year from Gen eral Electric Company, which he headed as president until he re tired to take his present post. As Defense Mobilisation Ad ililfstrator' with full and final terials sad manpower, ha draws 1M,IWI annual salary. Mr. Wilson told a news confer ence on March 27 (the first time he had met the press in more than three months since he be came the top U. S. official) that: *T am from big business re signed. When I came into gov ernment I became a bureaucrat. I ceased to be big business." CIO Secretary-Treasurer James B. Carey, who is also president of the CIO International Union of Electrical Workers, said in a letter to The Washington Eve ■ ning Star that: “You mention Mr. Wilson's personal financial sacrifice in com ing to Washington. It should be made known to your readers that in leaving GE, Mr. Wilson takes' with him a life pension amount ing to *«e.000 a year. He will also get his government salary of $22,500 a year. In addition he will receive $$$,000 • year in dividends, from hft GS holdings. Hi will have V*capital gain of more than $1$0,000 as a result of a 37 per cent increase in the value of his GE stock in the last year. The actual truth, therefore, is that Mr. Wilson will certainty not have to engage in any per sonal austerity in his govern ment post.” Mr. Wilson originally insisted that any labor union leader ap pointed to be his adviser must resign his presidency. These facts are published so that Mr.. Wilson’s claims may be seen in their true light and the people can determine who is serv ing who. WILSON BRINGS IN MININCf LOBBYIST AS HIRED ADVISER A lobbyist for foreign mining interests is one of Defense Czar Charles E. Wilson’s trusted ad visers. Drew Pearson’s Washing ton Merry-Go-Round column, March 20 reports: “It is almost unbelievable, but Mobiliasr Charles Wilson is get tin r his advice on minerals from a lobbyist for foreign mining in terests, “Wilson's top mining consult-1 ant is Fred Searls, Jr., who used to lobby on Capitol Hill against domestic mining programs but now does his lobbying from the inside. ... He had been hired to advise what the government’s policy should be on securing min erals for defense. “Yet, at the same time, he is president of Newmont Mining Co., which has a rich stake in South African mines. This is another shocking example of how private interests have infiltrated into the defense agencies to grind their own axes.’’ FIGHT FOR ALL “This is not the fight for labor altae—this is the struggle of all the American people. . . . "We invite every civic and con sumer group to unite with or ganized labor in every community to make the protest of free men heard in Washington. . . . “United, the plain people of America are mightier than any :RPP ef profiteers or polticians.” From the Declaration of Prnici pies issued March 21 by repre ■ilstim of Id r^r* trade un» Farmers Worse Off Now Than In 1945 A report by the Senate Agricul ture Committee shows that farm ers aren’t getting rich. “As a result of rapid increases in production costs since 1945. farm operator’s net farm income in 1950 was no higher than in 1945 before the general post-war increase in living costs and price levels”, says the report issued March SI. “In terms of dollars with a 1945 purchasing power equivalent, farmers in 1950 had a net income -of only $8.5 billion as compared with $12.8 billion live years earli er. The net income of farm ope rators in 1950 would buy only two-thirds as much goods used by farm families for living pur poses as in 1945.” In other words, farmers are much worse off today than in 1945. ' Since 1947, the income of the average person living on a farm has gone down 12 per cent, and the income of the average non farm person has gone up 12 per cent. Th e Bureau of Agricultural Economies reported March 23 farmers’ average income dropped from $922 to $804 between 1947 and 1950. But average income for non-farmer* increased from $1,383 to $1,548. Which proves again the high cost of food is due to bigger profits of packers wholesalers processors. Declare y buying hj ▼ All Wage Earners Have Bis Stake In Stabilization Mrs. Chut Gaia# Woodhoue. Forster Member of Congrats. Cites Need For Understanding And Bsppsrt Of Ondrols. WASHINGTON—“The wives sad other members of the families ot America’s wage cantors, at all levels, have a very real stoke in price controls and their * success ful operation,” Mrs. Chase Going Woodhouse, former Congress wo man from Connecticut, declared here in an interview secured for use of labor publications. MIt would,” she continued, “be of mu tual help if all of them would try sincerely better to understand and actively to support the price, regulations so necessary for our mutual well being.” Mrs. Woodhouse has an im pressive record of service in edu cation and in the Held of econom ics, along with two terms as a Member of Congress, and is now a consultant in the Office of Price Stabilisation, ESA. Mrs. Wood louse explained further: “Research reveals that wives spend an average of 55 per cent of the family income, children are sent out for about 11 per cent of the family purchases, while the husband and wife together make about 14 per cent of tho family expenditures. “The need for commodity pnee stabilisation must he better un derstood by women. They should know that run-away prises have Just the same effect as 'a cut in the family Income and they re sult in a lowering of living stand ards. They should aise remember that high prices mega fewer bombs, fewer planes, for the de fense dollar. “Hera is where each woman can help lick inflation. Every time she refuses to purchase out of-line items, refuses to pay more than fair ceiling prices, every time she encourages and co-ope rates with her local merchants in helping to keep prices within hounds, she is, forwarding tb* de fense program, she is support ing the national effort to control inflation and to stabilize our econ omy, and at the same time she is helping to make tier own fam ily dollar buy more. “In short, by paying only legiti mate prices, she is serving her own best interests snd, even more important, she is rendering ef fective sid to our nation in our great task of making ourselves strong enough to maintain peace.” 60ING DOWII | BUYING POWER "The buying power of the av erage worker has fallen tremen dously while business has made record profits. “Wages have not increased tnj proportion to runaway prices . . . I For the average housewife, feed-; ing her family today is ji heart breaking and discouraging under taking." In those words, Rep. Isidore Dollinger (D., N. Y.) told the House February 28 what’s wrong with the defense program. “Within a few days after the Korean war began, food prices were increased. Yhey continued to spiral upward," Dollinger said. "There was no justification for pueh increases. Shelves and stor age places were piled high with every commodity. The price in creases did not stem from a sud den shortage of consumer goods but from speculation and an op portunity to profiteer. "Instead of rolling back prices to at least the beginning of hos tilities, which would have been the only fair and equitable ruling, prices were froseu at top levels." Local 42, Bakery and Confec tionery Workers, Atlanta, Ga., has obtained a pay increase for 800 employes of Gordon Foods. FREE ENTERPRISE? WELL, SOMETIMES The Readers’ Digest and H» Saturday Evening Port wart the government to help them. Honest! These fearless cham pions of free enterprise are on their knees crying for more Gov ernment subsidies. These oppo nents of Government aid for the people are yelling because their own subsdies are in danger. The business manager of The Readers’ Digest and the board chairman of the board of The Saturday Evening Post testified on March 16 before the House Post Office and Civil Service Committee, wliich is considering raising postal rates. In the past 10 years, btg maga zines like the Digest and the Post have received $2 billion in Gov u’nment subsidies. That’s because they get such iow .postal rates. Now the Government wants to end subsidies to the rich maga zines that can pay, their own way easily. So the Digest and the Post are squealing: We want our subsidy! We want our subsidy! PRESS StLElifABOUt FASCIST MOVEMENT “The public press has dons a magnificent job expooing^aa<| against communism in this coun try. “However, the press has been strangely silent on tne recent rise of the Fascist movement and the efforts made by strong influ ential people to make fascism the only alternative for communism as occurred in both Germany and Italy. “It is important that we not only crush communism but that we also ke«P an eye on and crush the other devastating enemy ap proaching us from the other di rection in the form of fascism.” —Rep. Wright batman (D., Tex.) in a House speech on March 7. PORK TO COME UNDER SPECIFIC DOLLARS AND CENTS CONTROLS WASHINGTON. — The Office of Price Stabilization, ESA, has let it be known that specific dol lars and cents ceiling prices are to be established soon on dressed hogs, pork and pork products. , Although prices of live hogs and other live animals were not covered ip the genera] price freeze, ceiling prices on live hogs are also expected. Prices of dressed hogs, pork and pork prod ucts have been frozen at the high est level between December IB, j T960, and January 25, 1951. OPS officials have already dis- j cussed terms of a tentative pric-1 ing regulation with forty repre- j resentatives of all branches of( the industry. Written opinions1 and proposals submitted up to March 15 are also being consid ered. It is stated the new price reg ulation covering hogs, pork and pork products is designed to per mit the industry to return as nearly as possible to its tradi tion pricing practices and still maintain rigid price controls. MANUFACTURERS’ PRICE REGULATION COMING WASHINGTON—A representa tive group of industrialists re sponded to an invitation of Mi chael V. DiSalle, Director of Price Stabilization, to meet in Wash ington with OPS officials to dis cuss a proposed manufacturers’ price regulation. Mr. DiSalle said that, through the new regulation, OPS hopes to aid industries which avoided price increases in the national interest and to re quire reductions by those who have advanced prices unnecessar ily. Headlines la Daily Newspaper* Back Up United Labor’s Charges Tkat Defense Setup Brings Na tionwide Chaos. WASHINGTON. — Headlines in the daily newspapers back op in foil the United Labor Policy Committee charges that the De fense Mobilization program at presently run has brought nation wide chaos. An a change from statements of the United Labor Committee, the story is unfolded by quota tions from newspapers ' which generally are minimizing or blank ing ont .^organised labor's fight for workable mobilisation setup. “President Truman was warned [by a top adviser that it will bo impossible to control wages ef | fectively until the government takes strong steps to curb rising prices end profits.” — James Y. Newton, Washington, D. C., Star, March 28. “In some sources it was said that the Entire stabilisation pro ! gram was in peril of collapse; the situation calls for drastic | measures, they said.”—Joseph A. i Loftus, New York Times, March 28. “Cost of Living Rises 1.3 Pet, to Record High."—Headline The Chicago Tribune, March 24. “The government announced that the cost of living jumped U P*r cant between January IS and February 15 to another all time high. The increase brought retail price levels to S per cent above those immediately before the Korean war started fat Juno of last year and to 9:S per cent #• » m* M°- Ths gsvern £ent impose^ its S>-pries fmte January M. The rise moans that under a contract ne gotiated March 1 at ths Whits House, and praised by President Truman himself, 1,000,000 rail road shop and terminal workers are to get a 6-cents-an-hour pay raise which would pierce ths government’s own 10 per cent ceiling on pay increases.” Ray mond J. Blair, New York Herald Tribune, March 24. “. ... But Johnson Is Oppos ed.”—Wall Street JouraaL “Enforcement of government controls during the present emergency has been much more gentle than tha policy followed during World War II, a survey by the Journal of Commerce indi eates- Tbs policy of leniency has been carried to the point where some businessmen believe that non-compliance is increasing rap idly, particularly in the materials .controls issued by the National Production Authority and in tha price controls issued by the Of fice of Price Stabilization. Thus far, 6 months after the controls begin to be issued in Washington, prosecution is virtually nil.” Sidney Fish, New York Journal of Commerce, March 26. REIT BILL HELPFUL OILY UNTIL JUNE 30 The House passed a weak rent control extension hill March If which will protect tenants in con* trolled areas only until. June 30. The Senate approved the measure March 18. But the extension isn't strong enough and the real estate lobby already is Aghting every effort to defeat a strong rent bill after June 30. Congressional action will keep controls on where they already exist. But towns and cities cap take them off between now and June 30. There will not be con trols where they do not now ex ist. So if controls are lifted in any city, they cannot be put back on—no matter how high rents climb. Speeding The Parting Gaeat • You’ve got a pretty place, Frank,” said the departing guest. “But it looks a bit bare yet." “Oh.” explained Frank, “it's because the trees are rather | young. I hope they’ll I to a good sise before again.

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