Newspapers / The Charlotte Labor Journal … / Aug. 16, 1951, edition 1 / Page 3
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STANDARD CINDER BLOCK CO. Manufacturers of CINDER CONCRETE PRODUCTS North McDowell St. Phone 2-2168 RALEIGH, N. C. Compliments / . BEESON HARDWARE CO. HIGH POINT, N. C. SYKES FOUNDRY & MACHINE COMPANY IRON, BRASS, BRONZE AND ALUMINUM CASTINGS GEAR WORK AND LICKERIN END WINDING Maple Avenue Extension Phone 170 BURLINGTON, N. C. Thomasville Coca Cola Bottling Co. THOMASVILLE, N. C. SNOW LUMBER COMPANY Phones 3396—3397 "Everything to Build Anything" HIGH POINT, N. C. HIGH POINT LAUNDRY, INC. •' FRENCH DRY CLEANERS AND DYERS Phone 3325 HIGH POINT, N. C. GREETINGS TO LABOR McEWEN LUMBER CO. WHOLESALE HIGH POINT, N. C. i' Hospitality Is An Art yt"/ Coke Makes It So Easy NORTH CAROLINA COCA-COU BOTTLERS ASSN. Receives Railway Union Gift For Heart Fund WASHINGTON, D. C. — The Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees has (riven $*1,138 to the 1951 Heart Fund. Thomas C. Carroll, president of the un ion, presented a check from the Brotherhood, July 18, in the of flee of Secretary of Labor Maur ice J. Tobin, Chairman of the National Labor Gommittee of the American Heart Association. In presenting the check to To bin, Carroll, who serves on the National Labor Committee, said1 “I am well aware that heart dis eases each year disable and kill countless tens of thousands of working people, particularly those who must work hard and often under great stress and under all kinds of unfavorable weather con ditions as in the case with the railway workers represented by our union. “We are therefore particularly anxious to do everything we pos sibly can toward the control and eventual conquest of heart dis ease, America’s number one health problem." Tobin said: Your most gener ous assistance will help make it possible for the American Heart Association and its affiliates to expend their program of heart research, to disseminate Informa tion to a broader strata of work ing men and women on how best to deal with heart and circulatory diseases and to broaden its vari ous community services, such as cardiac and work classification clinics, in the hope of bringing heart disease under control.” Tobin expressed his apprecia tion for the co-operation and sup port that American labor is ex tending to the Heart cause. Aid ing Tobin as Executive Vice Chairman of the National Labor Committee are Assistant Secre taries of Labor Ralph Wright and | Robert T. Creasey. MRS. CHASE GOING WOOO- i HOUSE, former Congresswoman from Connecticut, now an OPS executive, said: “The need for commodity price stabilisation must be better understood by women. They know that run • away prices have just the same effects as a cut in family income ■ and result in a lowering of living standards. They should also re-; member that higher prices mean i fewer tanks, fewer planes, for the defense dollar.” Uncle Sam Says There Is s pretty little house on the batiks of the Cumberland river —the House that Savings Bonds Bought. A regular Investment in V. S. Savings Bonds—now Defense Bonds—enabled the owners to first purchase the lot, then to buy a house, move It to the site, and re model It. Maybe yon can’t save as much as they—maybe yon can do better. Whatever the amount, your systematic saving can be the means of making year own dreams come true. Enroll now for the Payroll Sav ings Plan where yon work or the Bond-A-Month Plan at your bank. II. S. tmmm Otmwfmtmi GREECE — Vocational schools are essential to Greece's future industrial development and to a better standard of living for its workers. Economic Co-operation Administration experts are help ing in their development. Latest school opened in the Peloponnesi an town of Tripolis, to train 300 students a year in machinists, electrical, woodworking and build ing trades, is a co-operative enter prise, with $30,000 for the pur chase of equipment from abroad provided from American aid funds. s NORWAY — Norway’s stand against Soviet Russia’s world ag gression tactics was reaffirmed by a resolution passed by the National Council of the Norwegi an Federation of Trade Union* supporting the peace manifesto of the joint Nordic labor movement, "Peace With Freedom," and par ticularly emphaliing that “every act of aggression, by whatever arms it is undertaken, and wheth er it is committed openly, by sup porting a civil war, or in other ways, is a crime against the peace and security of the whole world." | MICHAEL V. IMSALLE. rector of Price Stabilization. “Controls are repugnant to people, and certainly they anr me. I hope they will not 6w m essary for an extended perieef time. But I do know periods of stress, the A people will sacrifice and they accept the controls we nee<f we have adjusted our li machinery to care for alt ments of this country."’ PARIS — Trade union ixpuMr on manpower will t>e calTeif nether by the Organization Hr European Economic Co-openrtSte* | (OEEC) some time in Hir fM|_ somewhere in Europe, ter worif «r the problem of how to prodaee as quickly as possible the goatta and services required for anr mejliate defense effort srdfiwafit seriously upsetting the riiiiipfcir relationships of normal empfay ment. GARRICK TURNIN6 WORKS QUALITY WOOD TURNINGS 812 Millis Street HIGH POINT. N. C. H' ere’s a money- earning opportunity for you Now—a new law lets your maturing Series E Bonds go on earning for you ten years longer! And you don't have to do a thing! I are you one of those patriotic citizens who began buying— and holding—Series E Bonds back in 1941? Now your govern ment is going to reward your faith with a chance for your bonds to earn extra money—over and above wnat you d expected! According to the bill passed by Congress last spring, it is now possible for your United States Series E Bonds to continue earning in terest ten years longer than was originally planned. Therefore, if yon started as automatic hood saving plan, and helped your conn try at the same time, yon can look forward to ten years more of effortless earning from the bonds yon bought! For example, a Series E Bond which cost you $18.75 in 1941 will pay you $25 in 1951. But if you hold that bond ten extra yean, until 1961, it will pay you $33.33, an average inter est of 2.9%. And there it nothing for yon, as ' a bond holder, to do. Yon need not exchange the heads yon have. Yon need not sign any paper, fill out any form. Yon simply beep your bonds at yon have been keeping them. You may still redeem any Series E Bond at any time after you’ve owned it for sixty days. (The tables on this page show what you can get for it.) But, unless you really need the cash you're much better off to hold your bonds; they are n paying method of saving. Bonds are eafer than cash! Cash is too easily spent on nonessential things. And if you lose or accidentally destroy it, you’re out that much money. But when you have cash in Defense Bonds, you’re more apt to hold on to it And if your bonds are Ioet or destroyed, the Treasury will replace them far( you at no cost or loss to you. 1 <3S The cash you bvt a bood ut- „ infs is safe and solid; sad U’a steadily growing toward a sons big enough to buy something really worth while whoa tho Inisiaess, a retirement fund, am education for yonr children. So if you have bond* coming due, take advan tage of this new offer of your government— just ait back and let them go on making money. Meanwhile keep adding to your flaw ing* by buying more United States Defer—, Bonds regularly—through the Payroll Savings. Plan where you work or the Bond-A-Montta Plan where you bank. to to The new law also allows you to exchange your Series E Bonds, in blocks of $500 or more, for Special Series G Bonds which pay interest semiannually at the rate of 2X % per year. Few full details, ask at any Federal Reserve Bank or Branch. # ^ Now OrlgM w oN>**y (or lacol 125 00 1445 $50.00 37 JO $100.00 71.00 120000 1$ $900.00 17500 $1,00000 79000 20 EaMaOaO awtarMy *a$M (TO Imm Ium $Or| • • • $29 JI 29.04 24.94 47.10 2701 20.44 20.04 9000 3IJ3 3207 3343 $9002 9107 93.12 94.37 9902 9407 94.12 4000 4207 49.33 4407 $10149 10341 104.29 10449 11149 11349 11449 12000 12941 13007 133.39 $20240 20740 21240 21740 22240 227JO 23240 24000 29007 24143 24407 $90449 91449 131.29 94349 99449 94449 14149 400.00 42407 '493.33 $101240 103740 1,04240 104740 1,11240 1,13740 1.I42JO 140000 149343 1,30407 1,133.33 i Buy U. S. Defense Bonds today • Now they earn interest 10 years longer! \ The V. S. Government dam not pay for thie advertising The Trtatmry Department thanks, for their patriotic donation, the Advertising Council and THE CHARLOTTE LABOR JOURNAL
The Charlotte Labor Journal and Dixie Farm News (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Aug. 16, 1951, edition 1
3
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