PAGE FOUR x a Patton Courier, Established Oct. 1893 Union Press, Established May, 1935 THE UNION PRESS Combined with PATTON COURIER Published Every Thursday by Thos. A. Owens, 723 Fifth Avenue, Pat- ton, Pa., and Entered as second class mail matter May 7, 1936, at the post- office at Patton, Pa., under the Act of March 3, 1879. F. P. CAMMARATA, Business Mgr. THOS. A. OWENS rernsrssnree JEAIOR Subscription, $2 Yearly in Advance. || Advertising Rates on Application. |i The endeavor of the Union Press- Courier is to sincerely and honestly represent Trade Union Workers in eftorts to obtain econemic freedom through organizations as advocated vy the CIO and AFL, and we solicit the support of trade uniens. Mater- jal for publication must be author- ized by the organization it repre- sents and signed by the President «lu secretary, and bear the seal. Union Fress-Courier gives its advertisers the advantage of the combined circulation of the two { | The | | st circulated weeklies in Cam- | ria County and has a reader cove rage that blankets Patton and the x mining towns. RANDOM THOUGHT Some things are so glaring that | even the untutored are made to | laugh. The best we have seen for weeks was contained on the first page of the Barnesboro Star last week, and likely in a lot of other and read: Republican newspapers, ad “Republican Governors In Six States Effect Substantial Savings,” or some such wording. For sheer dis- toriton of facts by politicians the statement has the year’s prize. It made a boast that Republican Gov- ernors and legislators in various of the states were saving more than one hundred million dollars in the next two years by restoring “sanity” to unbalanced budgets. ° But the biggest laugh of all arises in Pennsylvania being advanced as an example par excellence of this G. O. P. budget pruning, the statement claiming | that Gov. James had submitted a bud- | get which was about one hundred mil- | lion dollars less than his Democratic | predecessor. The statement broke the ! figure down to say that the state's re-! lief allocation had been reduced 177 millions plus, and the rest of the bud- | get was 13 millions less than for the | previous biennium. It was interpreted by National GOP Chairman Hamilton, ! ving a third term? Washington started dent's rests on tradition—not upon any law that prohibits it. ° We remember when Governor | who explained that all this big reduc- tion was made possible “at a time when President Roosevelt and the New Deal are encouraging reckles sand extrava- gant spending” because “there are mei, with the courage to wrestle with thi problem.” ° Shades of Annias! Who gave Mr. Hamilton Pennsylvania's figures, and why would any newspapers publish- ed in Pennsylvania, where all citi- zens should know better, publish such bosh? The one hundred million dollar budget reduction credited to Governor James results directly and solely, from the fact that the state’s assistance appropriation—for relief, mother’s assistance, blind pensions, old age assistance—was calculated by simply using the figure left over after adding up all other state ap- propriations and substracting the to- tal from estimated total revenue. Nobody at Harrisburg, Republican or Democrat, made any pretense that the figure thus arrived at, 127 mil- lions, would be enough to last the ful biennium. A special session is to meet next year when the money runs out. It will be interesting to note what the saving will be for the entire bennium. Likely it won't be anything. Maybe more will be spent than the last administration spent in the same period. But the “courage of Republicans to wrestle with this problem” isn’t much when Mr. Ham- ilton’s press release doesn’t even amount to shadow boxing insofar as facts are concerned. ° What's wrong with a president ser- this tradition, not because he was real- ly opposed to a third term, but be- cause he didn't want the job any long- er. It may have a tendency to perpet- uate a man in office, but the argument is foolish. Sometimes that may not work out so well. If a man is the head of a going business for eight years, he should be in a better position to make the business even more prosperous by reason of his experience. The whole squabble about third terms for Presi- James was campaigning last fall, he swung through Cambria county, and at least appeared in Patton, with a “body-guard” of a couple of miners in working regalia, caps and all, the interpretation of which, we presume was to indicate that the candidate was a friend of labor. But the re- cent session of the Republican legis- lature didn’t show any of this trend. The legislation actually passed op- posing labor laws passed during the Earle administration, in the judg- ment of some of the state's leading Don’t Forget . . . FATHER’S DAY SUNDAY, JUNE 18th pre FORGET DAD! He’ Something to Wear! Appreciate A Gift from Our Store. Help You in Your Selection of Worth-While Gift! Sure He Will ARROW FRUIT OF SHIRTS 1.19 SOCKS 3 pairs for Also 2 pairs for . Other Makes $1 $1 GIVE HIM— A New Pioneer Breather Belt. A Pair of Garters, or penders. 1 THE LOOM and Other Makes of BOTANY TIES OTHER TIES 5 B.V.B. PAJAMAS, SPORT SHIRTS, SHORTS andi BRIEFS | INTERWOVEN NU-TOU -00 00 20c¢ pr. A pair of Pioneer Custom Fit Sus- The Tog Shop B. C. WINSLOW CO. Patton , , s A Great Guy! Give Him A We're Let Us NECKTIES C Oo © T Complete Line of up Penna, | s ¥ | a larger fund into the highway pool. | dear, why do you try to do anything? , Why don’t you run?” { ers did not choose to run. | shoppers frowned and bullied all they | action was in the saddle and i L. Lewis, { to Republicans themselves, went too far, to do the party any good—and it may have a flare back that will be destructive to candidates all over the state this year. ® However, the legislature, having passed this anti-labor legislation, and having sent it to the Governor, can see it become law only if and when Governor Arthur H. James, the can- didate who last fall was accompanied by “laboring men in uniform” signs the bills. What the Governor will do, will be to sign the bills, according to newspaper stories. However, in the drastic “curb” on labor as drawn by the recent legislative session, the CIO and AFL in Pennsylvania, and the Bro- therhoods of the railroads, too, are all united in urging the Governor to use his veto power. Governor Arthur H. James is on the “spot” with labor. He has two things to do—veto or sign. To him rests the opportunity of real- ly making himself a friend of labor— or a friend of the interests who are op posed to the common people—and he has apparantly chosen the latter course of action. ° According to news stories the Re- publican faithful will begin receiv- ing the job patronage at once, now that the legislature has adjourned— and there are a lot of Democrats who will get the skids this week and in the weeks to follow. Biggest trou- ble is that there are not nearly suf- fient jobs to go around. George E. Prindible of Patton, a member of the Unemployment Compensation Board, will have served his term during this month. It isn’t likely he will be reappointed by Governor James. And there are about a hun- dred other jobs above the $5,000 a year mark, now held by Democrats, that will be changed at once. ° | In the light of Gov. James campaign promise of last fall of “jobs for all who want them; relief for al who need it,” the 1939 regular session of the leg- islature, just adjourned, must be re- garded as a failure. Although the Re- publicans were in full control of both branches of the legislature they did nothing to carry out either promise. All the taxes of the Earle administra- tion which Gov. James raved about, we re-enacted, the promise of ade- quate relief was carried out by appro- priating $127,000,000 for the current biennium instead of the 205,000,000 the state will actually need. And on top of this Governor James has slashed this appropriation by another $7,000,000. From all indications the “bite” will hit Republicans and Democrats alike on WPA right here in our home territory. The state will allow only $8,000,00 for projects. That means the federal gov- ernment can only furnish $32,000,000. The federal government gives four times the amount of the state in road construction on WPA. And what the administration is giving won't be suf- ficient—or nearly sufficient to take up the load. And the state won't save by it, but the business men, the relief folk, the merchant-—stand to lose plen- ty. Cambria county will have only 568 men on WPA doing road work after July 1st, as compared to 1,346 now at such employment. There will hundreds laid off. They will have but one re- course and that is to go directly onto the rolls of the Department of Public Assistance. The state will be paying em just the same as if they had put They'll sit at home and do nothing, and have less cash to spend instead of earning a bit more and building roads. ° There are too many Casper Milque- toasts who seek to inject into labor their own timidity. Every time any- thing goes wrong, or some tories get tough, they say to labor: ‘Oh dear, oh, The cecal min- The open- said re- that la- a good could. Casper and his friends like preferred like men. bor had better run alon little doggie. But the to stand up for the Under the fighting lec who has ded the abolition of 1 complex, the United Min I America has won such a viet may change the whole course ion shop agree bor movement. The 1 an ment won in the est s % the general fens ) doing it le a co and I the way to all of labor to advance and not retreat when chalenged by its foes. ° Let the Casper Milquetaosts of lib- eral politics also take note. Progress- ive labor, as represented by the CIO is solidly organized and militantly led. It believes that the workers have barely begun to get the consideration to which they are entitled and which they have the power to win. Those who fight boldly and bravely for liberal measures and democrat- ic progress will find they have the loyal support of an advancing and determined army of labor. But the politicians who shrink and pussey- foot when reaction says, “Boo!” will fall by the wayside, “ We glanced through the pictorial section of the New York Times last Sunday and came upon the group pic- tures of the graduating class of the West Point Militay Academy. With its hundreds of faces, we searched out for one we knew—a Patton boy—-Cadet Paul J. Long, son of Mr. and Mrs. Isi- dor Long, and somehow or other, we felt the elation that his parents, his neighbors, too, must have. For Paul Long is a graduate at the United Sta- tes Military Academy today, because he so willed it. He did it himself. He THE UNION PRESS-COURIER. did it without the aid of Congressmen, or senators, or political pull of any kind, He, as a member of the United States army, won his right by compe- titive examination, to enter West Point. Too, we glaced over all those pictures in the New York Times, and consider- ed what a very small percentage of them all, won the right to their grad- uation through only their own efforts. And we honor and congratulate Paul J. Long, and the satisfaction he must feel, for doing it. ° Not only Cadet Long's family, but all his home town folks, do feel justly proud of his accomplishment and the defense forces of the United States will have gained a worthy of- ficer as a result. May his career be a glorious one. May his life-span be marked with the same charactersis- tics of his youth. And if such it is, Paul Long will go far in his chosen field, because he has shown that he has the determination of accomplish- ment, though obstacles be many. Thursday, June 8, 1939. The First Stop on Your Trip! Service Station Fill up the tank with Gulf Gas and you'll have = perfect week- end trip! Gulf will get you thru traffic faster and give you that “extra” power on the hichway! 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