PAGE FOUR I HOW HIGH, MR. SMITH? | 5 - : ' Wr- T • . I 5 In a full- page political advertisement published in The Charlotte Observer April 4, 1950, f Willis Smith said: | S “I believe in high wage scales for the American working man.” I 2 ■> ( ~ s 5 > k £ This is the same wealthy Mr. Smith who, only three years ago—when living costs were at their peak—vig- 3 3 s orously opposed a 40-cents per hour minimum wage for those same North Carolina workers for whom his heart now bleeds and in whom he is showing such a sudden interest —for purely political reasons, of course. |J 5 • 'V - fi a i His ad further states: “UPON THIS RECORD THE PEOPLE OF NORTH CAROLINA MAY JUDGE £ 5 him ” 3 ' ' - ' | 1 HOW RIGHT YOU ARE, MR. SMITH 1 s ' 'I $ I k Now, let’s look at the record. The following is taken from a news report in the Raleigh News and Observer % w k 2 of March 6,1947, and deals with the appearance of several lobbyists before a General Assembly Committee: ' - k 3 “A well-fed battery of some of the highest-priced lawyers in North Carolina pumped broadsides yesterday 3 i k into a measure which would raise the pay of an estimated 35,000 Tar Heel workers to 40 cents an hour—sl6 a fl SI ~ _o- ■ p 5 ■ .. m i € . % 2 N “One of the lawyers, representing some of the very industries in which State Labor Commissioner Forrest \ S- ■ 4 Shuford said the majority of the low-paid Tar Heels are employed, was ... Willis Smith of Raleigh. & 5 s § “SMITH CLAIMED THAT THE BILL IS ‘HARSH, UNREASONABLE AND § 5 I! UNNECESSARY’.” | ■' . K " L ~ lr " 3 So it’s HARSH, according to Mr. Smith, to pay a minimum wage of 40 cents an hour! !jj UNREASONABELE for a person working 40 hours a week to make sl6 for his lab- \ V or! Unnecessary to pay workers a wage sufficient for even the barest subsistence! \ \ Now, Mr. Smith claims to believe in high wages for the American working man. \ w \ \ HOW HIGH, JOR. SMITH? j ~ 1 k J •. si j FRANK GRAHAM HAS SPENT HIS LIFE BATTLING UNSELFISHLY 5 FOR THE GREATER WELL-BEING OF ALL THE PEOPLE! 3 9 !(This advertisement contributed by Yancey County supporters of Frank P. Graham) 2 am YANCEY RECORD THURSDAY, APRIL 27,1950