LABOR DAY GREETINGS DERITA CLEANERS Derita, N. C. Tel. 4-3831 ' LA»OR DAY GREETINGS from Domestic Laundry, Inc. Complete Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service Tel. 3-7113 811 S. McDowell St. Charlotte, N. C. GREETINGS FROM KEMP DEAtON USED CARS Um Silurtw I* Cl>—— from •fid Many B«rf«in> on Our La*. SKK THEM Rhone 3-0986 1108 S. Tryon St. ' Charlotte, N. C. LABOR DAY GREETINGS from Dixie Bog Co., Inc. Manufacturers R. O. Bos 1888 Rhone 4 9765 Charlotte, N. C. GREETINGS DO WT IN'S FOOD STORE Fancy Groceries and Meats Rhone 3-5428 1404 E. Morehead St. Charlotte, N. C. GREETINGS NEIL A. DOUGLAS Notional Weldor* Supply Co. Incorporated Phono 5-5751 1230 S. Try on St. Charlotte, N. C. , LABOR DAY GREETINGS Per your friend in file He.pital Tale vision Receiver Set A. F. Dancy Co. 21S W. 2nd Charlotte, N. C. 4-2706 4-2335 LABOR DAY GREETINGS Dtnton Furniture Company Quality Furniture Easy Fey leant Flee* • Specialty W« STRIVE TO SATISFY IMS. Cottage St. Tel. 2-S925 CHARLOTTE. N. C. LABOR DAY GREETINGS from DOUGLAS fir SING FUNERAL DIRECTORS 1335 Elisabeth Avenue Phone 2-4131 Charlotte, N. C. GREETINGS F fir E Chockwritor Company 138 Brevard Court Phone 4-6704 Charlotte, N. C. MORE and BETTER HOSPITALS FOR ALL TAR HEELS! lotwuen dii yeort of 1948 ond 1952, do I LL _-J_h 1 --J M-tiiL ^ 1? Jicoiin ana meaicoi car© ncia or norvn varonnci mod* remarkable propfiii A ncord of 77 mw cmd improved hospitals, with 4,406 bods, hi 73 of 100 counties, is some thing to bo proud of—ond tributes greotly in making North Carolino a bettor place in which to work# ploy and lire. 1 Another contributing foclor to for North Coroliniant h the browing industry's regulation progrom where brews See f f \ 1 intiei W^eeSeel w^rw*TWl^r# rllees™ permitted under State control *• Cooperate to wholeiome conditions for the legal sole of .K . ■ • \Sb* ;■;' • North Carolina Division umiiD states niwm foundation. BtVIHAi PHILIP MURRAY Late President of CIO Late CIO President Learned Unionism At Father’s Side PITTSBURGH (LPA)—The year was 1892 and a six year-old boy listened intently as striking coal miners in his native Blantyre, Scotland, made their plans. The local president in charge of the meeting was a man named William Murray. The boy was his son, Philip. The strike-strategy session was the first union experience of the future CIO president, whose life was devoted unspar ingly to the cause of labor until death came November 9, 1952, the 17th anniversary of the CIO’s founding. The boy Philip was only 12 when he entered the mines as a helper to his father for a wage of about 30 cents a day. He was 16 when the family—there .were 10 children in all—arrived in the United States on Christmas Day of 1902 and settled in Irwin, % coal mining town . near here. Father and son went into the mines together again and young Murray studied correspondence school courses ' at night. A fist fight in 1904 with a check weigh man accused of short changing the miners on tonnage set the course of Philip’s future life. He was fired because of the incident and 600 miners walked off the job in protest. They formed a local of the United Mine Workers and elected young Mur ray president, but hunger broke the strike after four weeks -and GREETINGS Elder's Food Storo Groceries, Meats, Fruits and Vegetables We Invite Year Pet renege Phone 5-9330 4618 Monroe Road Charlotte, N. C. LABOR DAY GREETINGS from Eastway Cash Grocery MR. F. r. STIFF. Owner Groceries - Meats and Vegetables All Kinds Soft Drinks 1500 Eastway Drive Phone 9482 Charlotte, N. C. LABOR DAY GREETINGS FROM Electrical Contracting fir Engineering Company 1800 Hutchinson Ave. TeL 5-3345 Charlotte, N. C. Labor Day Greetings Pabtf Blue Ribbon Bear • t/isrriDuvea uy Carolina Distributing Co. 505 South Cedar CHARLOTTE, N. C. Murray was run out of town by ^eputy sheriffs who told him never to come back. He decided in that moment that the only future for Him was with the working man. He became president of UMW District 5 and in 1912 was elected to the UMW international execu tive board. In 1920. when John L. Lewis became UMW president, Murray was elected vice presi dent, a post he held until 1942. Lewis once said that there was no coal business executive who could compare with Murray in his knowledge of the industry. ty’hen the UMW joined with seven other AFL unions in late 1936 to form the Committee for Industrial Organization for the purpose of organizing mass pro duction industries on an industrial union basis, Murray became head | °f the CIO Steelworkers Organ \ izing Committee. The unions which had formed the CIO were expelled from the AFL in 1936 on a charge of pro moting dual' unionism. In 1938, the CIO, after three higly sue resaful years of organizing, held its first constitutional convention and changed its name to Con gress of Industrial Organizations. Murray was elected a vice pres ident and became president in 1940 when John L. Lewis stepped down from the top post after supposing the unsuccessful Wen dell W i.kie in hi^ bid for che presidency against Franklin D. Roosevelt. The campaign to organize steel I went on.e Big US Steel had ere- j ated a furore in the financial j world hy capitulating to the un- j ion without a struggle in 1937, j hut it was some time before “Lit- j tie Steel” grave up its violent op position and came into the union fold. It was not until 1942 that I the United Steelworkers of Arrer- ! ica held its first constitutional ' convention, electing Murray pres ident. A rift had started developing between Murray and Lewis short ly after Murray stepped into the top CIO spot and in 1942, Lewis took the UMW out of the CIO, ousting Murray as vice president | of the union. Along with other labor leaders Murray served on government > boards set up by Roosevelt to Ideal with labor problems just j prior to and during World War ill. Immediately after the war, | he headed the CIO delegation [which participated in a joint La bor-Management Conference called by President Truman, but the meeting failed to agree on a con structive national wage policy. As head of the Steelworkers, Nun ay led the 194« strike which 1 rou*.ht an 18 1-2 cent wage boost to hundreds of thousands of workers in the steel industry and paved the way for wage hikes in other industries throughout the nation. In 1949 he headM the steel strike which brought the Steel ■ worker* company-financed pen sions and a new welfare program. , also pace-setters for other indus- i tries. The problem of Communist in fluenee in the CIO was tackled by ' Murray at the 1949 convention. The unions whose leaders were i following the Soviet line were placed on trial and ousted from the CIO for refusing to follow CIO policy. Much of the demo cratic membership of these un ions has been taken into other CIQ affiliates, some of them new unions created for that purpose. Firmly believing that labor must protect its gains and make advances through the political ‘ ! process, Murray helped create the CIO Political Action Committee during the 1944 campaign to re elect Roosevelt. He assumed 1 chairmanship of the committee > after PAC’s first head, Sidney Hillman, died in 1946. Murray personally worked hard for the election of Truman in 1948 and I Stevenson in 1952. Only two ; weeks before his death he had made a nationwide radio and tele vision appeal for Stevenson. When the Korean War broke ] out in 1950, Murray again Joined < in active labor support of the mobilization program. A pro posal he made to other labor or ganizations resulted in the forma tion in December, 1950, of the United Labor Policy Committee, dissovled in 1951 when the AFL withdrew. r In 1952, Murray led the Steel workers in a successful fight for a new contract, signed only after an eight-week strike that followed a court ruling that President Tru man’s seizure of the mills to pre vent the walkout was unconstitu tional. The seizure took place after the industry, playing for a big price boost, forced strike ac tion by refusing to accept Wage Stabilization Board recommenda I tions for settlement of the con itract dispute. Murray received honorary de grees from three universities, held numerous positions with public service organisations working in the fields of-social welfare, health and civil rights and was for many years a member of the school board here. He also was a mem ber of the executive board of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions. His sudden and unexpected GREETINGS EIGHTH STREET MARKET 421 West Eighth Street Phone 4-5117 Charlotte, N. C. —Leber'* Business Apprecieted GREETINGS Edwards-Roland Auto Solos USED CARS 2740 Wilkinson Bird. Phene Z-2361 Charlotte, N. C. We Pay Top Prices far CLEAN USED CARS GREETINGS ELECTRICAL SPECIALTIES COMPANY 529 West Trade Street Tel. 2-2460 Charlotte, N. C. i®ath, a week before the 1952 310 convention was scheduled in L*e Angeles, came just a few tours after he had addressed a mion meeting in San Francisco. His own words can best express ■he convictions which led him to :nrn down many lucrative offers iom private industry and cast his et with the working man. “The work of organising,” he laid shortly before' his death, ‘rises so far above men and so 'ar above triviality that men who ire interested in kids, men whose iouIs and hearts and minds beat n unison with the aspirations of ittle children and toiling men and somen, will loan their bodies and heir souls and their brains and :heir minds and everything that Sod has given them in this work >f organising.” WORKERS COVERED BY UC JP 13,000,000 SINCE 1940 MOW TOTAL 36.009.090 WASHINGTON (LPA) — The lumber of workers covered by State unemployment insurance aws has increased by about 13. >00,000 since 1940. the Labor De GREETINGS ELDER'S SUPER-MARKET 832 West Boulevard Phone 3-8970 Complete Line of Groceries - Moots - Produce Every thing for Hm Piscrhniogtiog —VISIT OUR MOOIRN STORI— partment’s Bureau of Employ ment Security announced. In tha 1940 calendar year, workers in covered jobs averaged 23,100,000. Thus far this calendar year, cov ered employment has averaged 36,000.000. Covered employment reached a peak of 37,400,000 in December, 1952, an increase of about 2,000, 000 over the 1951 December total. The average for the 1952 calen dar year was 35,700,uw. The Bureau said that about two-thirds of the nonagricultural labor force in now covered by State Unemployment insurance programs. GREETINGS Gus Frangochis' Wine Shop 322 South Church St. Rhone 2-4080 Charlotte, N. C. LABOR DAY GREETINGS FIDELITY VAN & STORAGE, Inc. Morins - Status# - Reckinf 200 Wart 29th St. Rhone 4-S316 LABOR DAY GREETINGS BELL ASH ESS no EAST TRADE STREET Charlotte, N. C. GREETINGS BEN B. PROPST BOX 526 CONCORD, N. C. LABOR DAY GREETINGS KEESLER COMPANY PLUMBERS SUPPLIES Concord, North Carolina v GREETINGS Member Federal Deposit Insurance Carp. AND Member Federal Reserve System TELEPHONE 214S CONCORD, NORTH CAROLINA