Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 July 1947 — Page 11
| THURSDAY, JULY 24, 197 .
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is engaging in a public debate,
circles.
board of U., 8. Steel, denies that the agreement was produced by a combination between “big busi ness” and a “big union” - with {probable harm to smaller concerns in the coal busi- §
Meanwhile, la- ! bor papers are printing sugges{tions that the action of U. 8. Steel may mean that Mr. Perkins business should by-pass the new Taft-Hartley labor law in making | Steel's policy means that all big {contracts with unions. These papers are asking if U. 8. Steel's policy ments that all big employers, like many of the big unions, want to stay as far as possible from becoming involved with the new law. | If. that should be the result, it would please one of the ‘law's main | advocates, Senator. Ropert A. Taft]
industrial relations should be conducted so far as possible between employers and workers—with the government coming in only when they disagree beyond hope of reconciliation, : A statement by Mr. Olds says that benefits to the Lewis followers have been exaggerated, and he adds: “The increase in actual wages received by miners under the new contract is 15 cents an hour, or $1.20 for an eight-nour underground day (portal to porta ,,.. Wage Hike No Pattern “Coal mining differs in so many important respects from almost all other industrial occupations that the new contract does not set a standard for future labor contracts in. other industries. , . . “It is not more inflationary to
to grant a substantially similar}
{industries. . . . “In view of the special and haz-
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES.
PAG
Labor— : ; U.S. Steel Corp. Denies New Coal Pact Is Bad
Board Chairman Explains That Benefits
To Lewis Followers Have Been Exaggerated By FRED W. PERKINS, Scripp-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, July 24.—For the first time in many years the Industrial giant, U. 8. Steel Corp, as an operator of “captive” coal mines,
It is issuing statements to explain its part in promoting the recent agreement with John L. Lewis. The pact gave coal miners some wage and other advantages that may have repercussions in other industrial
Hearing Society
Plans Picnic Saturday The 8. I club of Indianapolis grant a wage increase of 15 cents | Hearing society will hold a picnic an hour to coal miners than it was Saturday at Longacre park. Members are asked to bring a wage increase a few months ago covered dish and meet at 2 p. m, {to workers in many other|at Bus terminal en route to the
ardous character of coal mining, it sponsor. does not follow that a welfare fund president.
i . Olds, chairm the [Of the kind provided for in the new Irving 8 chairman of, the contract is necessarily pertinent or need be set up in labor contracts in other industries.”
Mr. Olds points out that the contract does not cover mine foremen who perform managerial functions, in conformance to the Taft-Hartley law; that “all of the demands of the union were not granted;” and that the new contract purposely designed to avoid the real intent and obligations of the law and does not circumvent
“was not
Mr. Olds answers “Yes” to the question, “Was it more In the interests of the country as a.whole to pay whatever might prove to be the price for a new labor contract, mutually arrived at through col lective bargaining without government interference, general strike in the bituminous {coal mines?”
Flying Curtailed (R. 0), so long as there are no | . " strikes affecting the public interest. | At Ohio Fields ty He has taken the position that |
DAYTON, O, July 24 (U.P).— Army air forces officers. here announced yesterday that all nons essential flying at Wright and Patterson fields had been ordered “severely restricted” |threatened shortage of gasoline and |- ijet propulsion fuel. Washington officials have ordered all air force installations to clamp down on fuel consumption because right. the air forces are short 66 per cent of the fuel ordered for the first halt| 3 { 00 per WEEK! of 1947, it was learned, A Patterson field spokesman said there was no fuel shortage now, but that there was no assurance of a normal supply in the future.
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