OCR Text |
Show THE O SEARCHLIGHT James A Report To Labor (Continued from preceding The following Emil K. enacting clause of the gratitude and voted to strike the House Bill 168. They deserve good will of Utah workers. Alonzo F. Dexter Farr Stanley N. Child Mrs. E. E. Ericksen Ira Huggins Ashton A. Lynne J. Arthur Grant The Hopkin Bailey following Backman, collective Clyde Members ing the enacting Abel James S. Rich A. McMurrin George A. Christensen Lynn S. Richards House showed fight was in vain fidelity toward of they the men proved and wage women with Gus enemies against of strik- Amos B. Robinson P. Lund McKinley Morrill Claud Hirschi Mitchell Melich earners J. W. Reed S. W. Elswood William C. Jensen Thomas Mathew Adolph Sorenson John Harry R. M. Pederson Sterling Halladay L. B. L. Rasmussen Robert Ray Henry C. Roberts Fred J. Milliman P. Greenwood Hugh J. Hintze William Mrs. C. Frank The the Penrose following House Milk L. Della Elliott L. Loveridge Val H. Cowles E. Clyde Sabin Ingleby L. Jack W. Rees Walker J. M. Bell Alfred M. Durham White Carroll Members J. Meador went along with Edmonds-Backman combine— some enthusiastically and some with every show One House Member was forced of reluctance. into line by pressure from the Milk White clique. G. M. Kerr John Bushman Reuel E. Christensen James L. Nielsen D. Homer Jensen George S. Noble John H. Schenk L. Rulon Jenkins G. A. Mark Staples Paxton George C. Murdock Earl Whittaker Joseph E. Rees Ralph W. Duvall C. J. Jr. Royal J. Susan Mozley Alice The Brinkerhofi Ambrose Harold A. Stevens B. H. Stringham 168: Ray their Utah: Daniel Miller their nevertheless Frank M. President voted not friendship for labor and democracy by voting against House Bill 168 are as follows. While their Erastus Kendall the and Warner who W. John Holt Rendell N. Mabey and of HB the June Edmonds clause of Hale up Dawson on 168 Don lined They Vote L. C. Romney senators bargaining. Elisha Cannon, Senate A. absent Quayle George Macfarlane, were Nielsen J. Welton Ward Adrian W. Hatch Senate Vote on 168 senators William senators House Clifton following Kelly voting: page) of the corporation executives will go along with you to win the production battle and the United Nations war. But while they are doing that they will take time out to perfect their Farm Bureau alliance and nail your collective bargaining hide to their back-yard fence in the campaign of 1944. It 1s now known that they plan a noquarter tight. Either you prepare your defense now, or you will be beaten—beaten badly. You eannot neglect your vital legislative interests until September, 1944, and hope to compete with their strong machine. It will be easy to wipe out the legal basis of collective bargaining in this State if you delay your preparations for defense. ‘T’o postpone action now is to court ruin in 1944-5. You should improve your relations with the aciual farmers. They should be urged to return to their traditional friendship for labor and cast off the yoke of mercenary corporations who victimize them and menace both of you. The unholy allhance of Farm Bureau bosses with powerful absentee-owned corporations can be shattered if you get the facts to the farmers. Remember the old adage, ‘‘A stitch in time saves nine’’! ! The A. L. N. Myers Marsden 8S. Gardner S. Thomas A. Jones Rulon J. Larsen William Smith W. R. White, Speaker following were Frost recorded Grotegut as absent and net voting: Jean Z. Murdock Grant Clarence Midgley L. Merrill |