Union press-courier. (Patton, Pa.) 1936-current, March 16, 1939, Image 3

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Thursday, March 16, 1939.
THE UNION
PRESS-COURIER,
ww —
e
ONLY
CAR
near ils price with these quality features
FORD V8
ONLY CAR with eight cylinders sell-
ing for less than $956.*
ONLY CAR with full
drive selling for less than $956.%
ONLY CAR selling for less than
$889* in which both front and rear
springs are relieved of
braking strains.
ONLY CAR with semi
clutch selling for less than $956.%
ONLY CAR with front
selling for less than $898.*
LARGEST hydraulic brake-lining
area per pound of car weight in any
car selling for less than $840.* Largest
emergency brake-lining
car selling for less than $840.*
LARGER diameter brake drums than
in any car selling for less than $956.*
MORE floor-to-roof height than in
any other low-price car. WIDEST rear
. seat of any low
torque-tube
driving and per gallon of a
with more than
s by the Ford “85’
-centrifugal
February Motor
radius rods
area of any
*Four-door Sedan, delivered
-price car. «
HIGHEST horsepower-to-weight ratio
of any car selling for less than $806.*
GREATEST fuel economy in miles
ny standard-drive car
four cylinders, proved
’ in the recent Gilmore-
Yosemite Economy Run, as reported in
Age.
in Detroit or at factory
FORD V-8
Easy to Buy ° Easy Terms ¢ Generous Trade-in Allowance
STOLTZ
Motor Co.
Ford
Sales and Service
Patton, Penna.
AF.L INTO THE G.O.P.
(Continued from Page 1) |
proposals would assuredly wreck the,
C. I. O. For the moment they might]
help the A. F. of L, which industry |
now regards as a satisfactory substi- |
tute for the outlawed company union, |
But in good time they could and would |
be used by reactionary employers to,
smash the A. F. of L. too.
That the Walsh amendments are ac- |
tually industry’s amendments is ob-
vious. Senator Burke of Nebraska has |
submitted some even more drastic pro- |
posals, but no one in or out of Con- |
gress is paying much attention to |
them. They served their purpose when
they gave Green a chance to denounce |
something obviously worse than his
own proposed changes. His went so
much farther than the Houston con-
vention had authorized that he was |
secretly called to order by some of the
more liberal council members at
Miami for betraying the convention’
mandate. The upshot was an agreement
to get behind a new bill.
This new plan calls for repeal of the
present Wagner Act and Its reenact-
ment with three major changes:
(1) substitution of a five-man board
for the present three-man board; (2)
a requirement that crafts must be cer-
tified as the proper bargaining units;
and (3) a provision that the board
may. not nullify labor contracts. These
three amendments are enough to des-
troy the Wagner law, if the Supreme
Court, following the election returns
in its latest decisions, has not already
done so. In the Fansteel case the court
accomodatingly pointed the way for
labor-baiting employers to avoid their
obligations under the Wagner Act by
goading strikers into unlawful acts. In
the Columbian case it invited federal
courts to ignore the board’s findings
of fact, the same legal device by which
the Federal Trade Commission was de-
vitalized years ago. Thus the objec-
tives of some, but not all, of the Walsh
amendments already have been achei-;
ved by judicial fiat.
The drive for abolition and reenact-
ment of the law has one purpose—to
get rid of the present board, whose
members have incurred the enmity of
the federation by insisting upon enfor-
cement without corner-cutting of fav-
oritism. This device would relieve the
federation of the embarrasing necess-
ity of going through with its fight a-
gainst Donald Wakefield Smith, the
member who has been most friendly to
the crafts. A five-man board might
have the additional viriue of provi-
ding green pastures for a pair of A.
F. of L. wheelhorses
The craft-union amendm
freeze industrial unionism. Bu
the formation of the NLRE the f
eration has askad for recognitic
more industrial units than )
craft units—173 against 84. Frequently
it has demanded broader group
On August 18, 1937, William Green
and Lewis G. Hines. now Pennsylvan-
ia’s Secretary of Labor and Industry,
“working agreement’ with F. D. Cos-
ter, late swindling president of McKes-
son and Robbins, and Frederick Win-
gersky, for the company. It stipulated
that all McKesson and Robbins bran-
ches would be placed under local A.
F. of L. contracts providing for a work
week of not less than forty-five hours
(one hour above the maximum now
permitted by law), that there would
workers than has the C. I. O. itself. | be no strikes or lockouts, and that the
The record clearly shows that verti-
cal unionism versus horizontal union-
ism is a fake issue so far as the fed-
eration is concerned; the sheer necess-
ities of belt-line production have dri-
ven it into acceptance of industrial
unionism. It has no objection to indus-
trial unionism, per se, only t o
control of the new unionism by some-
one else.
power to prevent imposition upon or
interference witn business of the em-
ployer by any other labor body no
affiliated with the federation.” A board
examiner in Seattle subsequently
found that this agreement had been
represented to McKesson and Robbins
employees as a closed-shop contract.
If that wasn't a yellow-dog contract,
As for the charge so often repeated
by the A. F. of L. and its allies that
the board has favored the C.I. O., the
record shows it is a spurious one.
Early in the game the board adopted
the so-called “Globe” doctrine: that
crafts must be certified as the proper |
collective-bargaining units in all cases
where they have any historical: claim
to recognition, any substantial meme
bership, and any inclination to be cla-
ssified separately. As result, in the six.
ty cases in which there has been a sub-
stantial disagreement between the C.
I O. and the A. F. of L. over the pro-
per unit, the board has found for the
federation in twenty-nine cases and
for the C. I. O. in twenty-three. In
only eleven cases has the board turned
down applications for craft-unit classi-
fication. In all these cases it had a good
reason for deciding as it did, the most
common being that a majority of the
craftsmen involved wanted to join an
industrial union.
The amendmnet against the invali-
dation of contracts is the most vicious
of the three. Its purpose is to prevent
the board from upsetting A. F. of L.
contracts where employers have hel-
ped the federation to organize their
workers in order to head off the C.
I. O. Federation leaders want to wan-
gle closed-shop contracts and thus to
forestall C. I. O. expansion. Already
this has been done in scores of cases,
and the board has nullified thirteen
contracts which obviously were the
products of collusion between the fed-
eration and employers. One such C. I
O. contract also has been canceled.
it was out of the same litter. Yet it
would have been inviolate under the
proposed amendment,
In the first case of contract nullifi-
cation by the board, the A. F. of L.
was the complainant against the Clin-
ton Cotton Mills. The federation quite
properly demanded cancelation of a
contract between the mills and their
company union. Since then the federa-
tion has gone in for a kind of company
unionism on its own hook. But if the
amendment it now sponsors is adop-
ted, nothing will prevent employers
from rushing into contracts with “in-
dependent unions” and again freezing
out the A. F. of L.
Trade unionists are growing increas-
ingly restive under the shortsighted
leadership that has tried to make them
behave like scabs. Already units of
thirteen internationals of the A. F. of
L., seven state federations, and central
bodies of twelve cities—including
Omaha, Senator Burke's home town—
have gone on record against tinkering
with the Wagner Act. This kind of in-
dependence at the grass roots holds out
some hope for an eventual union with
honor between the A. F. of L. and the
C. L O. But unless Roosevelt can reach
over the heads of federation leaders to
rally this sentiment behind a recon-
ciliation that preserves both militant
industrial unionism and the funda-
mentals of the Wagner Act, the price |
of his peace gesture to business will be
high.
“HUCKLEBERRY FINN” |
WITH MICKEY ROONEY
SUNDAY-MUNDAY BILL
The greatest thrill for an actor is
to play a character who does all the
things the actor himself has dreamed
of doing. Which is Mickey Rooney's
way of explaining exactly how his
character of “Huckleberry Finn” has
brought something into his life. The
Mark Twain Story, “The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn’ comes on Sunday
and Monday next to the Grand Thea- |
tre, Patton.
“He could go barefooted and fish,
didn’t bother about school, and in gen-
eral do as he pleased, which means he
did the things all boys want to,” says
Mickey. “And that doesn't mean he
was spoiled, or shiftless, or vicious. He
just was allowed his own self express-
ion. He expressed a great loyalty am-
ong other things in his attempt to
smuggle a runaway slave to freedom
He expressed a great love when he
saved the heiresses from the swindlers
—With ‘Hucklberry Finn’ Mark Twain
proved somewhat the same thing Fa-
ther Flanagan proved in practice in his
Boys Town; that there's reaily no such
thing as a bad boy.”
Mickey's role as the Mark Twain
hero is his first starring role in his
own right since his Mickey McGuire
comedy series. He has been a featured
player or co-star ever since.
“Not that this business of being star-
red means anything,” he says. “Iv’e
always said that {’'m really a character
actor. But right now I'm a character
actor playing a real character. Every
day I und new things about Huck
Finn, his thoughts, his motives, and
what kind of a fellow he really was.”
The picture, filmed largely on loca-
tion on the Sacrameno River, which
was called on to do duty for the Miss- |
issippi, follows the original story,
which Mark Twain wrote as a sequel
to “Tom Sawyer,” to the letter. Rich-
ard Thorpe directed. The period just
prior to the Civil War in Missouri and
Ohio was reproduced from research.
COUNTY FORENSIC
LEAGUE CONTESTS
PLANNED APRIL 1ST
Forensic league music and speech
contest for high schools in Cambria
County will take place on April 1 at
Ebensburg, according to an announce-
ment made by Daniel L. Auchenbach,
assistant superintendent of county
schools who is serving as director of
the contests this year.
Winners of the contests at Ebens-
burg wiil represent the county at .the !
Central District meet in State College
on April 15, and district winners will
compete for state honors at Norristown
April 28 and 29th.
Schools desiring to enter represen-
tatives in the county contests must |
turn their list of entries into Mr. Auc- |
enbach by March 10.
Each year, approximately 1z schools
from Cambria County compete in the
contest, which are sponsored by the
acting for the A. F. of L., signed a|
federation would do “all within its |
Pennsylvania Forensic and Music Lea-
| gue, with headquarters at the Univer-
| sity of Pittsburgh.
Students from Cambria County
i schools have captured many major
honors in forensic competition outside
the county in past years. Dale High
school entrants alone have won a to-
| tal of 21 first places, a record un-
| equalled by any school in the state. |
Included on the program at this |
| year’s state meeting will be 47 contests
for bands, orchestras, choruses, en-
| sembles, soloists, debating teams,
[ spaekers, orators and readers. En-
{ trants from each school may compete
in any one or all of the events.
Srrooo | hy a) Is |
STORES CO | me
31 RAAI\RNA 0} BV BEETS
Schools will be divided into three
divisions as follows: Class A, over 750 !
students; Class B, 250-270 students: |
Class C, less than 250 students.
In the reading event this year, stu- |
dents will be required to read selec- |
| tions from the bard's plays for the
| Shakespeare contest, and from Robert
| Frost, Robert Browning or Christina
Rosetti in the poetry contest. In ad-
dition, the poetry contestants must re-
citq a test poem. “When I Was One-
and-Twenty” by A. E. Housman.
Declaimers will read selections by |
Booker T. Washington, Theodore Roo-
sevelt, Woodrow Wilson, George Wash-
ington, or Prof. John H. Frizzell of
Pennsylvania State College.
In the contest for instrumental en-
sembles, competition will be between
string quartets, piano trios, woodwind
quintets, brass sextets and miscellan-
eous combinations of 3-5 and 6-12 in-
struments. As required numbers this
year, the ensembles will play compo-
sitions by Bach, Haydn, Beethoven and
Carl Busch, and in addition, will play
other compositions as selected num-
bers.
HIGHER STANDARDS FOR
TEACHERS APPROVED
Harrisburg — The State Council of
Education has approved higher qual-
ification requirements for teachers in
special fields.
The present requirements consist of
eighteen semester hours, the new re-
quirment prescribes twenty-four se- |
mester hours by September 1, 1939, and |
thirty semester hours by September
1, 1940.
The State Council of Education also
approved P ressively advancing |
standards for administrative and su- |
pervisory off Is The present re-
quirement coi ts of twelve semester
hours of ap; :d graduate courses; |
the new req rent prescribes eigh- |
leen semeste urs of approved gra- |
duate course April 1939, twenty- |
four semeste: irs by April, 1940, and
thirty semes ours, or the master’s
degree, by A 1941.
FOR SALE — Furniture — Inquire
at Hotel Patton, Patton, Pa. i
f Mammoth Cave re- |
; said to be the most
vet discovered.
A new sec
cently explo
Greater Saviugs
ON FOODS AT ROCK-
BOTTOM PRICES!
25¢
Calif. PEARS ....
or APRICOTS “=
FINE QUAL. OLEO, 17c
FANCY WHITE SOUP BEANS, glbs. 19¢
CALIFORNIA BABY LIMA BE ANS, 21lbs, Qc
FANCY BLUE ROSE RICE, 2 Ibs. 19c
QUALITY MACARONI OR SPAGHETTI, 2 lbs 15¢
WISCONSIN BRICK CHEESE, Ib. 15¢
19c¢
LOOOC I0000O0OHOONOOONNOONNACOCOOON(
Golden Krust Bread, i5¢
FINE GRANULATED SUGAR, 25-lb. paper bag $1.15
FRESH BANNER DAY COFFEE, 3-lb. bag for 39¢
FANCY TOMATO CATSUP, 3 14-oz bottles for 25¢
HURFF'S COOKED SPAGHETTI, 15% oz. can for he
FINE EARLY JUNE PEAS, 4 No. 2 cans 23c¢
DOVOVVVVOVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVOVVBVVOVVVVOVVVVVVVVIVVITOO
g i rani, S
[WE CORN, 572 10c |
KERNEL
a
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2 FOR
One Ib.
Prints
| PINK SALMON 27.
' STRIKE Big
ANYWHERE Matches, 6 Boxes 17c
GIBBS PORK AND BEANS, 6 16-0z cans 23c
SOLID PACK MEATY TOMATOES, 4 No. 2 cans for 23¢
QUALITY EVAPORATED MILK, 10 tall eans for H5¢
CALIFORNIA SEEDLESS RAISINS, 3 Ibs. for 25¢
FANCY EVAPORATED PEACHES, pound 1]5e¢
CALIFORNIA SWEET PRUNES, pound 5He
ORONO 2EA00ORAEANAAAANHANANNNNE
EGGS, oara2™ de
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Prim Pastry Flour, ii 47¢
Sack
OCTAGON LAUNDRY SOAP, 10 giant bars 36c
RINSO or OXYDOL Granulated Soap, Ige. pkgs. 2 for 37¢
IVORY TOILET SOAP, Medium cake he
Happy Baker Flour ii" 52¢
Sack
Fancy Meats!
Fresh PORK ROAST 150
BUTT ENDS, 1b. 19c¢ SLICES, 1b. 23c
DOV IOV
g Young, Tender Quality Beef
: CHUCK ROAST 22. 16¢ cS: 22¢
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CESTENT HAMS, 5 25
whole or shank half, 1b.
li) Pork Loins 52:5 ™ 69¢
Boneless, Always ready to slice cold or heat as desired
SMOKED PICNIC SHOULDERS, Ib. 16¢
LAKEVIEW SLICED BACON, 2 one-half Ib. pkgs. 25¢
MARKET SLICED DRIED BEEF, one-fourth pound 12¢
FRESH JUMBO BOLOGNA, 2 Ibs. for 29c
GOOOOONO
LARGE, MEALY WHITE
POTATOES, ug
COOKERS 25¢
Grapefruit, sv me. 6" 25¢
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. Fancy Bright, Firm LBS. g
APPLES, Best, Rome Beautys 6 25¢
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ORANGES, :..2""25¢ :.. 29¢
FANCY TEXAS CARROTS, Ige bunch He
CRISP FRESH ICEBERG LETTUCE, 2 solid heads 13¢
ONION SETS, Fancy Yellow or Bottle Necks, 2 Ibs. for Qc
F eautiful po