OCR Text |
Show UTAH LABOR NEWS, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SEPTEMBER 2, 1938 Section 2 Practical Peace Plan Page 3 A UTAH SASII AND DOOR FACTORY Manufacturers of DOORS SASII GENERAL MILL WORK D. W. Richards, Prop. Friend of Labor 2341 South State Phone Hy. 4496 ' J UTAH STAMP COMPANY 118 W. South Temple Salt Lake Citr, Utah Wasatch 2588 Rubber Stamps, Notary and Corporation Seals, Brass and Bronze Signs, Dog License Tags, Etc. BEST WISHES TO LABOR Labor Day Greetings . . . JOHN M. WALLACE Mayor of Salt Lake City To Utah Labor I Wish You a Happy Labor Day MARTIN M. LARSON i Justice of Supreme Court - - FISIIEK-- S KEEPS VITAMIN - D YOU ' BREAD FIT A Product of American Lady Baking Company Salt Lake City, Utah 1844 South State Street . There Is No Substitute for Quality LABOR DAY GREETINGS (Continued from preceding page) been possible if labor had been united ? Sniping at Labor Board The Labor Board is one of the most important and effective instruments that organized workers have been able to acquire through their political and legislative influence. The Board is under constant g fire from employers. Under normal conditions there is no question that every member of a union and every leader of a labor organization would rally to its support. Instead we see that the representatives of one-ha- lf our organized labor movement are just as bitterly inimical to the Board as the most violent labor baiter. The animosity, we know, has been created not by the genuine aims and purposes of the Board, but by the fact that if found occasion to decide adversely against this half of the labor movement in jurisdiction disputes between the C. I. 0. and the A. F. of L. I could cite innumerable instances of the loss of labors power and prestige in every field of activity. But I dont suppose I have to argue here the necessity for peace and unity in the labor movement. It seems everybody is agreed that we must have unity. Outstanding leaders both in the C. I. 0. and in the A. F. of L. have spoken for peace. I could give you quotations from the speeches and writings of such leaders a3 Philip Murray, David Dubinsky, Sidney Hillman, William Green and John L. Lewis, each of whom in his own way supported a peace of one sort or another. The president of my own organization, Max Zaritsky, was one of the first to propose peace, and as late as last May said: I stand for peace. I stand for it not as a neutral but as an extreme partisan. 1 want peace because it is to the best interests of both the C. I. 0. and A. F. of L. Peace, peace, and we have no HENRY C. JORGENSEN Commissioner State Liquor Control Commission labor-baitin- i GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES TO UTAH LABOIt' FOR A IIArPY CELEBRATION I R. K. BROWN SUPERINTENDENT OF CONSTRUCTION UTAH STATE BUILDING COMMISSION Best Wishes to Labor Specify in your Building Plans peace. I can understand the opposition of one side or another to a peace that will not solve the basic causes of friction between the two wings of our movement. A peace that would leave things, in the same Best Wishes 9 From A FRIEND Western Paper Products Go. Manufacturers of state of inanition and inactivity that existed before the C. I. O. took shape would be meaningless. There is no point in effecting a peace that would take away the initiative and impetus to organize the unorganized. A peace that merely establishes the status quo would be no more than a truce at best. It would probably serve only as the jumping off place for another and more violent war. The peace I have in mind is one that would go much further than a simple patching up of differences. It would touch the more fundamental issues and would take into account every practical consideration that divides the two parts of our labor movement' at the present time. The solution I have in mind is somewhat as follows: A Practical Plan There must be a definite and unquestionable recognition that there is room for both industrial and craft unionism within the labor to set, for as a matter of actual practice both craft and industrial unionism are recognized by, both the A. F. of L. and the C. I. O. Thus the' A. F. L. issues charters to Federal Unions which are industrial in form. The Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, an A. F. L. organization, issues charters to radio (Continued on next page) I Corrugated Shipping Cases PHONE WASATCH 3115 ft N. O. Nelson Co. Beautiful, Silent, Automatic. and trouble. Hydraulic Transmission entirely eliminates shear-pi- n Call us for dealers in your Locality Exclusive Distributors for Utah, Idaho, Wyoming and Nevada Sloltol 820 Wasatch 4121 South Main St. igp? nova ong From Utahs feVHEAT-ir- a fclfl&r Home Owned Big 100 Bakery Good Trade Utah Labor . . . flour made from Utah wheat . . . sugar from Utah beets . . . eggs from Utah poultry farms all are used in making Royal Bread and Cakes. FIXTURES I Royal Pipe, Valves and Fittings 460 West 5th South Street SALT LAKE CITY Salt Labe, Inc. When you buy Royal Bakery products, therefore, you not only get delicious, nourishing food, but you also help support the employment of Utah people. Its good trade that works to the benefit of us all. So look for the Royal label when buying bread and cakes at your grocers. PLUMBING I r Greatest Stoker movement. This is not a difficult condition Setup Display Boxes Folding Boxes The Worlds Ming 91 0 380 W. 2nd So. St. Was. 692. Salt Lake City ! Salt Lake City I and Ogden Company George Mueller President t |