Mel- Bill place, aylor, (y, of com- neet- y ev 2 eva sates, Beck, cted. Mrs. The- A GENERAL NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF ORGANIZED LABOR IN CENTRAL Recognized and Endors- ed by More Than Fifty Local Uniens and Cen- PENNSYLVANIA. SS \ “ x TEN Wels aN >; TS nk Ht Hw \ i ~ 2 He Ry WLR [] 1 AN ATTAINMENT OF THE LARGEST GENERAL WEEKLY NEWSPAPER CIRCULATION IN CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. Our Shop Is Equipped to Do Job Printing of All Kinds. Nothing Too tral Bodies Over Cam- Large or Too Small bria County and Ad- We Cater Especially to jacent Mining Areas. Local Union, Printing. U i P 'eSS E Ud is 5 Nog Sey + ew nion Press, Established May, 1935. RL Id bas " Patton Courier, Established Oct., 1893. VOL. 45. NO. 36. “HE Q CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA AREA. 123 South Fifth Ave. THURSDAY, JUNE 15. 1939 PATTON. PA. SUBSCRIPTION, $2.00 PER YEA R ANTILABOR SPY BILL IS HAILED BY CIO LEADER John L. Lewis Says That It Is Important That This Bill Be Passed Without Delay. Washington.—Laws to curb anti-la- bor violence, industrial spying, mur- der by company guards, and the build- ing up of huge private arsenals by | labor hating corporations, were urged here by John L. Lewis in his testi- | ROSS AT NANTY-GLO | | | | State Treasurer Principal Speak- er There Thursday Night. | State Treasurer F. Clair Ross of [ Harrisburg, will be the principal spea- | ker at a dinne rto be held at 6:30 on | Thursday evening of this week in the social hall of St. Mary's church at | Nanty-Glo. | The dinner is being arranged for the | benefit of St. Mary's Parochial school and will be followed by a dance and entertainment. {Judge A. A. Nelson of Ebensburg | will be toastmaster. Among the other speakers at the affair will be State LABOR ACT GETS CREDIT FOR GAIN IN UNION FIELD But Survey Discloses Other Fac- tors Likewise Had Something to Do With “New Spirit.” tions Board, declared this week on the ner Labor Relations Act went into ef- fect there had been an extraordinary Washington.—David J. Saposs, chief | economist of the National Labor Rela- | basis of a survey that since the Wag- | PRINCE GALLITZIN * CENTENARY-WILL BE OBSERVED | Loretto Will Commemorate 100 | Priest of Alleghenies. One hundredth anniversary of the served next May in Loretto with a program that will stamp the celebra- tion as one of the outstanding Catho- lic activities ever held in the Unitea Years Since Death of Pioneer | death of Prince Gallitzin will be ob- HIGH SPEED PRESS And Other New Equipment Will Be Installed By Our Shop. i It is with no little pride on the part of the staff of the Union Press-Courier | that we will within the next ten days enter the high class modren job print- ing field, with the installation by that time of a number of costly improve- ments, for the better and more ser- viceable requirements of our patrons. Heading this list of improvements will be a new and complete unit of | llon campaign, the largest type of Kluge Automatic Job Printing press, capable of printing everything .in the line of fine job CONGRESS AND INDUSTRY GIVEN BLAME FOR ILLS CIO Rallies Forces At Washing- ton This Week for New Organ. ization Campaign. Washington—John L. Lewis, rally- ing his CIO forces for a new organiza- Tuesday, denounced industry, congress and the government in general on the ground that they had talied to cure economic ills which mony before the Senate Labor Com-|genator John J. Haluska of Patton, As- mittee on the LaFollette-Thomas OP-| semblymen M. C. Chervenak, Jr., Por- pressive Labor Practices bill. ! “It is vitally important to labor and the nation that this bill be passed with- cut delay,” Lewis said. “The principles it embodies have been recognized by every worker and | every fair minded citizen as necessary to the continued existence of our dem- ocracy. Such a law should have been on the statute books years ago.” The proposed bill, Lewis declared, would restore basic rights to Ameri- can workers that autocratic employers | have consistently violated in their at- tempts to crush unions. “It will outlaw the labor spy, the professional strikebreaker, the irre- sponsible private army, the private ar- | senals that American industry has re- lied upon to deny collective bargaining to its workers. It will remove a bur- den of violence and a fear of repris- als that hang over thousands of Am- ericans in their attempts to organize for the improvement of their working and living conditions.” Lewis pledged the support of the CIO and pointed out that he spoke for all labor and progr ives in praising the bill and the work of the Senate Civil Liberties Committee whose ex- posures laid the groundwork for it. “The forces this bill will deal with are not only the enemies of labor or- ganiztion. They are enemies of Dem- | ocracy and of all government that is not dedicated to their profit alone.. “I know that I am not speaking only for the CIO when I urge the immedi- ate passage of this bill. I know that I am expressing the desires of every man and woman in America who must get a living by working for it, and who must have the right to organize freely and without fear in order to make that living one fit for the Amer- | ican people.” CHILD LABOR ACTION RENEWED BY GROUP The decisions of the United States Supreme Court in the cases involving the validity of ratification of the Child Labor Amendment by the States of Kansas and Kentucky in 1937 clear the way for renewed efforts to secure the eight additional ratifications needed in 1938 and 1940, according to Courtney Dinwiddie, general secretary of the National Child Labor Committee. The court upheld the validity of ratification by Kansas and dismissed a similar appeal from Kentucky upon the ground that “after the Governor of Kentucky had forwarded the certi- fication of ratification of the amend-, ment to the Secretary of State of the, United States, it was no longer a con- troversy susceptible of judicial deter- mination.” COLUMBUS KNIGHTS ATTEND COMMUNION SERVICE AT LORETTO! More than 150 Knights of Columbus affiliated with the Cambria county councils, attended mass on Sunday morning at the St. Francis College Chapel at Loretto. Most Rev. Bishop Richard T. Guilfoyle attended the mass and was honor guest at the breakfast held after the services. Knights received Holy Communion | tage; Dennis L. Westrick, Hastings; Al- { bert L. O'Connor, Loreto, and H. G. | Andrews, Johnstown. A musical program also has been | | arranged for the dinner. RED CROSS WORK 'In Cambria County Lauded at A! lecent Meeting. | “The past year has been one of mar- ked service to Cambria County by the American Red Cross.” This statement was made by Miss Anne L. Gallagher, executive secre- tary of the Cambria County chapter of the organization, at the annual dinner { held last Thursday night at the New i Ebensburg Inn. More than 100 attend- ed. Charles W. Davidson, chairman of the chapter, acted as toastmaster. Miss Elizabeth Brunner, assistant director, volunteer service of the national of- ganization, spoke of the different ty- pes of services rendered and with the aid of models showed the uniforms worn in various phases of work. Rev. Father William Griffin, director of Catholic charities, diocese of Altoona, offered the invocation. Miss Gallagher pointed out that the disaster relief committee has been re- organized under the leadership of Per- { cy Blough and that it will in the fu- , ture hold semi-annual meetings so as i to be prepared for any emergency. Owing to new legislation affecting | veterans, the chapter, Miss Galagher said, has found new opportunities to | serve disabled men and widows, chil- | dren and elderly persons in filing | their claims with the Veterans’ admin- | istration. The chapter has also assisted | veterans in obtaining hospitalization. | It has also given aid to men discharged during the past year from the Nation's | military and naval services. | Dr. Arthur M. Stull, county superin- tendent of schools, and many high sch- ool principals became interested in the home hygiene and care of the sich “through efforts man.” Standard course was given to girls in the junior and senior classes in the Cresson, Barnesboro, Carroll- town, and Beaverdale high schools, while junior courses were given to | girls in the eighth grades at St. Bene- dict and Bakerton. PLAN FOR FIRST AID MEET AT PHILIPSBURG vania are preparing for the _central Pennsylvania First Aid Meet will be held on Saturday, July 29th, | increase in the number and scope of agreements made between employers and employees. States. First announcement that the centen- printing, at a speed ranging from 3,000 | breed “black reaction” and “Fascism.” pieces an dup per hour. This press is| Declaring the “11,600,000 able bodied completely automatic and will give us| workers” are unemployed, he said the of Mrs. John Fore- | While the extension of collective bargaining might be ascribed to many | factors and not wholly to the Wagner spirit engendered by its operation.” The survey, in which Sarah Gamm, associate NLRB economist, assisted, showed, according to the report that the “most spectacular gains” were in the mass production industries “where there was little or no collective bar- gaining.” These industries were listed as steel, rubber, flat glass, automobile, and el- ectrical manufacturing, but equally significant gains were made in other industries, the report asserted. The survey showed also according to the report many industries in which | written agreements had been introduc- | ed almost for the first time, these in- dustries including aluminum, cement, | | 3 ;: | canning, petroleum and metal mining. | | | Eramples of large scale production units covered only recently and for the first time by collective bargaining agreements were given as the Alumin- um Company of America, Sinclair Oil Companies, Anaconda Copper Mining Company and American Smelting and Refining Company. For the first time in the history of the men’s garment industry a national agreement was signed in 1937. Sub- stantial union progress was made in the textile industry and in the shoe and leather industries. And so all along ihe line, TWO TRAFFIC DEATHS IN MAY INCREASE COUNTY TOTAL TOLL TO TWELVE May increased to 12 the highway fa- tality toll in Cambria county for the first five months of 1833, according to the monthly report of Coroner Patrick McDermott. The two deaths in May marked a reduction of one fatality from the pre- ceding month when three occurred, | but represented the same number of fatalities as was recorded for the cor- | responding month in 1938. ! The 1939 highway fatality toll at | present stands the same as the 1938 re- i cord, 1 2deaths having also occurred in the first five months of last year. According to the coroner's figures, { the 12 traffic deaths this year were | fairly well divided over the 5 month | period, whereas last year seven deaths | were recorded in one menth. Mine Workers in Central Pennsyl-| In addition to the two highway fa- talities, eight other violent deaths oc- 2 | . : . which | curred in Cambria county during the month of May, the coroner's report act, the report stated ,it indicated the | effectiveness of the act and “the new | Two traffic fatalities recorded in| | at Philipsburg. Winning teams will be | disclosed. This was four fewer than in | eligible to compete in the annual first | April, when 14 violent deaths were re- aid meet of the state which will be corded. | held this year in connection with the| Violent deaths last month include | Cambria County Fair at Ebensburg. | two mine fatalities, one railroad fatal- i Each member of the team winning | ity, two suicides and two fatalities re- | first place in Philipsburg will receive | $25, members of the second place team will get $20 each and more than $500 in other prizes will be distributed. Am- ong the mine inspectors who will be in charge of the Philipsburg meet are { Roy D. Joseph, Johnstown; W. H. Fil- er, Ebensburg; M, W. Thomas, Wind- | ber, and Dennis J. Kenan, Barnerboro. sulting from injuries suffered in falls at homes. There were 32 sudden deaths from natural causes investigated by the coroner. ary of Father Demetrius Augustine Gallitzjn, revered prince-priest of the Alleghenies, would be observed in a manner to attract national attention, was made on Sunday at Loretto by 1 Most Rev. Richard T. Guilfoyle, Bish- ! op of the Altoona diocese. | While the celebration will not ap- proximate in importance or attendance such Catholic events as the annual Eu charistic Congress, it was revealed that preliminary plans call for the presence of many Catholic dignataries and pro- ! minent laymen from all parts of the country. Prince Gallitzin, born of noble an- cestry in Russia, spurned the purple | and the marble halls of Russia for the rigorous work of arnissionary in Am- erica. He arrived in Cambria 7 in 1799, and established St. Miche 5 Church at Loretto, first Catholic chur- ch in the vast domain between the Susquehanna and Mississippi Ri St. Michael's Church Catholic houses of worship Harrisburg. There were ches in the wide expanse of the Mississippi river was where F ich missionaries had work- ed their way north from the Gulf of Mexico. Father Gallitzin, revered as the “Apostle of the Alleghenies”, died at Loretto on the evening of May 6th, 1840. Activities planned for the one no ot hundredth anniversary next year will | ! pivot around this date, Bishop Guil- | foyle announced. | | MINE SAFETY GROUP | ANNOUNCES AWARDS | AT EBENSBURG MEET | Awards for safe mining practices for the month of May went to Sonman Slope of Koppers Company and C. A. Hughes Coal Company, Cresson, at the regular meeting of the Holmes Safety Council of the Tenth B#uminous Dis- trict on Friday evening at Ebensburg. President Ira Bradley announced that the Class A banner for May had been won by the Sonman Slope where 30,027 tons of coal were produced w one lost time accident. Class B ban went to C. A. Hughes company which finished its fifty month thout an accident with an accumulated produc- tion of 15,675 tons. Holmes Safety Council Certificates of Merit were awarded J. Hugh, Por- tage; Michael Seabolt and W. Aberna- thy, Lilly; Louis Cornell, Douglass Me- | Clelland and Clarence Butterworth, of Cassandra. Speaker Friday evening was C. Owings of Pittsburgh office of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, who re- ! viewed recent mine accidents in the United States. Members of the council will motor to Pittsburgh on June 24th, for an ex- S. Bureau of Mines Experimental Sta- tion. Reservations for the trip may be made with District Mine Inspector W. H. Filer, Ebensburg. INDUSTRIAL UNION COUNCIL HOLDS IT’S REGULAR MEETING |i Giapuscs nis cori con hibit of the use of explosives at el ; of explosives at the i The bills, opposed by organized la- | the advantage of greater production and the very finest of completed work. The press is not to be confused with the feeder type on a platen printing pieces and up per hcur. This press is new unit conceived for better printing. In addition to this a number of oth- er improvements in our job depart- ment are contemplated at once, in- cluding new and modern type faces, and the Union Press-Courier will ap- preciate a continuation of the print- | ing of its present patrons, and solicits | that of all others. DRUNKEN DRIVERS [Would Get Stiffer Penalties If Rose and Mayer Get Bill. Action to have ed so that leaving the scene of an ac- cident where a death is involved would become Vv tary instead of involun- tary manslaughter, was promised the other day by Assemblyman Walter E. Rose of Johnstown. Mr. Rose will act on a request made him by District Attorney Stephens Mayer. In event Mr. Rose's proposai would become law the statute of limit- ations would be for five years in an' automobile hit and run case instead of two years as at the present. i District Attorney Mayer cited to Mr. Rose the case of Cal Reindfleish, 24, of New Florence, who, following | | his arrest recently on the charge of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of liquor, admitted that on December 24, 1934, he had struck and fatally injured Stuart W. Johns- | ton, 50, in Johnstown. | Although Reindfleish confessed to Johnstown officials that his car was | the one that struck Stuart, prosecution on a charge of involuntary manslau- ghter was precluded because the sat- tute of limitations in that type of case | runs for only 2 years. Mr. Mayer poin- ted out, however, that if the crime is made voluntary manslaughter under the law that the statute would run for five years and that anyone com- mitting such an act ed at any time within five years fol- lowing the date of the accident. Assemblyman Rose declared that he believes the proposal “a most sensible one” and that it would be one of which the public would approve. GOVERNOR PUTS HIS | SIGNATURE ON 3 BILLS THAT LABOR OPPOSED Harrisburg.—Three labor bills pass- ‘ed by the 1939 legislature, affecting thousands of Pennsylvania men and ture to them. | bor leaders, revised the state’s “Little Wagner” Labor Relations Act by ; sharply defining the rights of employ- | ers and workers, extending from 10 p. | m. to midnight the permissible work- | ing hours of women in industry and re- | laxed the anti-injunction law to per- | ite law amend- | could be arrest- | women workers, became effective last | Friday with Governor James’ signa- | congress had done “worse than noth- | ing” to solve this problem. He asserted that agencies of congress had been busying themselves “tearing the vitals” | out of measures for the unemployed.” In a keynote speech to a session of the CIO Executive Board, he declarad: | “I do not think the people will much | longer have patience with the nostalgia | and the powers of corporate business. | “Nor will they be content with the timid solutions offered by government, solutions fearfully withdrawn before they can be really tested. | Lewis told his leaders that the na- ! tion needed courageous leadership to | ward off the “danger of being engulf- [ed by a wave of despair and “black reaction.” | In taiking of the unemployment of | eleven million workers, Lewis said: “The slow undermining of the faith | of these people in the ability of our nation to provide them with a job constitutes an ever growing menace to the stability of our form of govern- ment.” Prefacing the discussion of a new campaign tor CIO membership, Lewis | told the board that “progressive. labor 1s not retreating.” “There are still in tais land 20,000,000 unorganized wage earners,” he said. “In many important measures, such as the rapidly expanding aircraft and | shipbuilding operations, we have only | begun the job of organization.” | The executive board, summoned to | Washington to prepare for a new or- ganizing drive, in the nation’s big in- dustries, was asked to authorize the use of injunction and damage suits in the war against the rival American Federation of Labor. Lee Pressman, CIO general counsel, sala such legal actions would be aim- ed at AFL boycotts against products manufactured by CIO workers and ! “collusive contracts” signed by em- { ployers and AFL unions to freeze out the CIO. The proposal to carry on the labor war througn the courts was made in one of a series of reports to the board. Another report urged that congress amend the Social Security Act to pay a maximum of $60 a month pensions tc persons 60 years of age and older, witn supplementary allowances for wives which would ilicrease the max- imum to $90. NEW YORK YOUTH DROWNS Lure of a swimming pool in the mountains of Pennsylvania ended fa- tally on Sunday for a New York City young man who was spending the summer on a Cambria county farm. | William Chort, 21, of New York, was drowned in Clearfield Creek, near the Flinton bridge between two and three o'clock on Sunday afternoon. He had arrived a few weeks ago to work on | the Joseph Monahan farm in White | Township, three miles out of | Timber on the St. Augustine road. He went to Coalport on Sunday to visit Harry Monahan, son of Joseph Mona- | han, and husband of a sister of Chort’s | mother. In company with the young | Monahan Chort went swimming. Harry Monahan told Coroner Pat- rick McDermott that Chort had been disporting in the tien foot deep hole Fallen at the mass celebrated by Rev. Father BARNESBORO LEGION WILL John E. O'Connor of Altoona, state SPONSOR ENTERTAINMENT chaplain. | FOR ASPINWALL VETERANS | The Barneshoro American Legion Ww 5 { Post is sponsoring an entertainment | for veterans at the Aspinwall Veterans | Hospital on Thursday, June 29th. Fred | L. Soisson,” well known Hastings | marksman, will entertain with an ex- i hibition of rifle, pistol and shotgun | shooting. The following members of | Barnesboro post are now patients at America’s Foremost Entertainer | j,, Aspinwall hospital: Dick Scollon, The regular Semi-Monthly meeting] The discussion of the American held in the Vintondale Dance Hall on | floor and each local was asked to June 7th. Mr. R. G. Davis presided in place at least two pickets on in Bar- the chair. The roll call was read and | nesboro on Saturday. It was also deci- answered by the following local unions | ded that each local union should write of Cambria county, Revloc, U. M. W.| a letter to the Management of the of A, Emeigh U. M. W of A, Moss- | American Stores Co. in this area and creek U. M. W. of A. Benedict U. M. | ask him to bargain collectively and W. of A. Vintondale U. M. W. of A, | sign a contract with the Wholesale and Colver Clerks, Barnesboro Clerks and | Retail Clerks Union. the Truckers, U. M. W. of A. Mr. John Maholtz spoke of the ac- A letter from the Barnesboro Clerks | tion of the Legislature and the Truck- of the Trades and Labor Council was | Stores Co. in Barnesboro was on the | Yons, : | and was able to swim. He dove from a James McDevitt, head of the AFL | 55rd and came to the surface only to Pennsylvania Federation of Labor, and | gjsapnear. Other swimmers at the pool | John A. Phillips, president of the CIO | 413 the coroner that not much time | Pennsylvania Industrial Union Council, | e1ansed before Chort was brought out opposed the measures as “vicious anti- | 4 the water. Coalport doctors report- labor legislotion. to a: | ed that in all probability Chort was They carried their fight to Governor seized with cramps ” James in asking him to veto the bills. fi The Governor refused. bio . McDevitt said, after the Governor | Reiffton, Berks county, as Fagan'’s suc- announced his intention of approving | cessor. Gifford has been general or- | the legislation, that Jabor leaders were | 8anizer for the American Federation discussing with their attorneys pos-|0f Labor in Eastern Pennsylvania. sibility of testing the new laws in The amendments to the present an- Brings Orchestra and Many | Entertainers to Ball Room. | —. | | Armed with saxaphones, clarinets, | violins, trumpets, trombones, blondes, brunettes and redheads, Ted Lewis, America’s premier showman, together with his celebrated high hat and his world famous dance orchestra and | stage revue, wil appear in person at| SUNSET on Wednesday, June 21st. Lewis is the mood-man of contem- porary American music; a sleight of hand artist, who with his little bag of tricks, can evoke sobbing syncopation or crazy cacaphony at will, The Tea Lewis revue, entitled a “Rhythm Rhapsody”, is an entertainment fan- tasy from giart to finish. | Jack Ellis, John Beck, and Jack Welch. The public is invited to attend the entertainment. GALLITZIN MINER HURT. ing for the assistance of the Trades and Labor Council. A motion was re- corded in the minutes of the meeting Caught under a fall of rock Mon- day morning while at work in No. 10 mine of the Pennsylvania Coal Coke Company at Gallitzin, John | Greene, 50, Gallitzin, suffered a com- pound fracture of the right knee and lacerations of the head. He was taken to the Memorial hos- pital, Johnstown, and his condition is listed fairly good. Greene is president of Gallitzin Local 1056, United Mine Workers of America. The fall of rock occurred after a mine car jumped the track and crash- ed into several props, dislodging them that the Council lend their moral sup- port to the clerks’ organization and that Union was read and discussed for a lengthy period: the clerks were appeal- | ers of letting bids for dump trucks, which would only mean favoritism for | the unorganized truckers getting the | Jobs with their low bids against or- ganized truckers. It was recorded that | a telegram be sent to the governor | asking him not to sign this bill until and all delegates present would go back to | a public hearing had been held by the their respective local unions and notify | truckers. The bill is House Bill 673. their membership to refrain from buy- | The store clerks of the Industrial ing any products that were made oh Stores said that the contract between the Home Baking Co. of Ebensburg until the management recognizes the clause set forth in his contract for Collective Bargaining for Arbitration. The discussion on H. R. Bill 6471, dealing with wages and hours for re- lief workers. It was recorded that the Council wire our congressman not to vote for the bill, them and the Industrial Stores would expire on June 29th and asked for all locals to cooperate and help them to regain another contract. The next meeting of the Trades and Labor Coun- cil will be held in the St. Benedict Local Union Hall on June 28th, 1939. the courts. Changes in the Labor Relations Act include those giving employers as well as employees the right to petition for a collecvtive bargaining election; de- claring as unfair labor practices sit- down strikes and intimidation either by employer or labor organization and permitting a “check off” of union dues only after a secret vote of the em- ployees. Another provision prohibited a mem- ber of the board from engaging in oth- er activity. It was aimed at one of the members of the present board, Patrick T. Fagan of Pittsburgh, who is presi- dent of District No. § of the United Mine Workers of America. All local unions are invited to attend. Joe Jones, Treas, Shortly after signing the bill, Gov. James appointed Harry Gifford of ti-injunction law relaxed the statute to permit courts to issue restraining or- ders in labor disputes in case of a sit- down strike; violation of a “valid labor agreement;” where the court finds a 1 union sought to compel an employer to | have his employees favor a particular | labor organization and in cases of en- forced violation by an employer of the Labor Relations Act. Governor James advocated enact- ment of the new Womens’ work law, which permitted two shifts a day in a plant from 6 a. m. until midnight. The Governor and other Republican lead- ers claimed it would attract new indus- try to the state. Democratic opponents and labor leaders contended it would permit men drawing higher wages to be replaced by women workers.