xt70gb1xgn8v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70gb1xgn8v/data/mets.xml Kentucky Kentucky Press Association Kentucky Press Service University of Kentucky. School of Journalism 1943 Call Number: PN4700.K37 Issues not published 1935 Aug - 1937 Oct, 1937 Jul - 1937 Aug, 1939 Oct - Dec, 1940 Jan - Mar, 1951 Aug - 1956 Sep. Includes Supplementary Material:  2005/2006, Kentucky High School Journalism Association contest 2004-2005, Advertising excellence in Kentucky newspapers 2003-2005, Excellence in Kentucky newspapers newsletters  English Lexington, KY.: School of Journalism, University of Kentucky Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Press Press -- Kentucky -- Periodicals The Kentucky Press, August 1943 Vol.14 No.10 text The Kentucky Press, August 1943 Vol.14 No.10 1943 2019 true xt70gb1xgn8v section xt70gb1xgn8v . .3 :.‘::‘, 1‘ ‘ ' .‘i'iz'1'12‘3"'“.”“.§ "'3 ‘3 ‘ I. ‘ ' . 2 __ , ,_ _ .. __ , , , .. -.,A_.-—--'~-‘,3_3_;:;_:2..:.
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AFREE PRESS AND A FREE PEO- the edItor to chp and use as they are, devoted to the Freedom of the Press 433:, 55,335., ‘5 .
‘PLE — AN UNBEATABLE TEAM!” or adapt to his local needs. theme. Stories and features will be 1‘6- :3: 5323333513323
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Newspapers of the nation Will adopt Publishers WIll again thlS year be ask- leased by the rum serv1ces, statements 33,
this slogan during the fourth annual ed to float the American flag above their concerning the inter-relation of freedom 3 r5333 3
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National Newspaper “Teek, October I mastheads on page one, during the of reIIglon and press freedom Will be 3 3335533,. ,.
‘to 8, to express the Objectives of this ‘Week. In .1942, thousands of newspa- made by religious organizations. Adver- 3:33, .
3year’s observance — the creation of a pers, in every part of the country, hon- tising mat companies will devote spe- 5,3, 333‘ 3
Igreater apbreciat'ion of the C331 “idiom Of that serv- 3 ‘3 33
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3telling the story of Free— 5.5: , a & $3.123??? ,h / E757. { cerned with the affairs of 33 33,333 - .3 "'
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available, Newspapers wrll .-,- x“, 2.17:..- I? [,0 -3‘» ”NM‘” w __ unite lor the promotlon of ,« 335.1; . .3 -
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.of charge. Any publisher A“ U N BEAT-A. lS hoped that through Him 133 351332» 5 ‘*
3not receiving the releases 3 3 ' year‘s observance of Na- 3 53:33 ,
3’ may obtain them by writing to his press Ored the flag In thIs way. tlonal Newspaper Week, the newspapers 33 555333-13 -
latss0_c1ation or to Vernon T. Sanford, Groups and organizationS, both inside may not only bring about a better un- 3.5: 33533 '33:,

. ,chaIrman, National Newspaper Week and outside the Fourth Estate, have derstandlng 0f the Free Press as a rIght , 5 33: -
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western University, Evanston, IllInOIs, c1al messages are being planned by ad- Week commIttee are: Frank B. Hutch- 3 333 g 5,33 .
under the directi n its head Ken 01- vertisin aoencies, s ndicates and va— inson, New erse Press Association; 5' #13.“ .
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sen. It will contain four pages of sto- rious Washington officials. Radio WIll John. B. Long, California Newspaper 3 , 53333 3'; 5,5 - .
fl Iies, features and editorials, ready for honor the newspapers w1th broadcasts PublIshers Assoc1at10n; Cranston W11: 53 333333353
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 . w Page Two THE KENTUCKY PRESS August, 1943 i Au:
‘ ’ i Drive Started To |nc'rease in a more secure position to face the spread.over the northeast, southern, Vapi,
, .‘ Cutting of Pulpwood unknown available wood supply both palachian and great lakes areas. Nel.[
‘ in the United States and Canada to son’s plea went to Governors of Ala.
I “ The pulp and paper ihdUStrY in bOth care for the multiplicity of uses of wood. bama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illi.
' the United States and Canada face a Forty-three Kentucky newspapers are nois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louis”
, critical shortage 0t PhlPWOOd' The carrying the pulpwood advertising. Ac- ana, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Mina
' PltOdUCtS 0f the industry have a mild] cording to a statement by Chairman nesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Newi
‘ higher degree 0t essentiality than is Walter M. Dear, “The small weeklies Hampshire, New York, North Carolina,
' ‘ generally recognized especially 1“ some and dailies that are actively carrying on Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina,
, . ‘ government circles in hOth countries. this campaign in pulpwood areas are Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia,
' , i Any additional curtailment 0f the pres- doing a fine job for all of us.” We need West Virginia, and Wisconsin.
, ‘, Cht uses to meet this WOOd “who“ more pulpwood production to keep our Dear said initial returns from his first
‘ cannot be defended in the light Oi all present printpaper quotas. A clipsheet appeal to daily and weekly newspapers
Of the facts. ' . . and mats reached every cooperating pa- indicated an enthusiastic willingness to;
i , Analysis Of the pulpwood Situation m per this week. Give as much publicity match the record of the nationwide
i ‘ bOth the United States and Canada space as you can to this worthwhile scrap campaign. ”Newspapers, large
1 - g, clearly shows the great burdens being campaign." and small, are responding magnificently.
1 : placed on newsprint sources. This makes to our appeals both for money and 30,
j ,1 i it all the more important for maximum Newspapers in the pulpwood area of tive editorial support,” he said. :
efforts to be exerted in both the United Kentucky have been contacted by the As a start in the drive quarter-pagel
i ‘ States and Canada to cut a total 0f Newspaper Pulpwood committee on the advertisements were sent by the news-i
; ,‘ 3,500,000 cords of wood additional to proposed drive to increase pulpwood paper committee to about 1,600 week-
i : avert not only a calamity to the pulp cuttings on woodland lots this fall. A lies and dailies in the pulpwood areas.
_ y] , . and paper industry of both the United serious _ shortage of paper 15 contem- Funds for the campaign are being 0b-
} i 3 States and Canada but serious impalr— plated unless more pulpwood can be tained from newspapers and the pulp
j" ‘ ment of the war effort. shipped to the mills. Newspaper in— wood industry.
i A committee of the ANPA Board of terests in the pulpwood drive are not If the campaign is successful in the‘
1 Directors has conferred in Canada With confined to newsprint shortages because circumventing 2,500,000 _ cord shortage
, Canadian newspaper publishers, repre- only six per cent of all the pulp used of pulpwood, it would bring produc-
i : sentatives of Canadian newsprint man- goes into newsprint. Important are the tion up to the minimum of 13,000,000
‘ ' ufacturers and representatives of va— numerous other uses of paper and pulp cords needed by the industry this year.
I} . ‘ rious branches of the pulp and paper directly associated with the prosecution Normal peacetime output is 16,000,000(
1"? , industry in Canada, including those re- of the war. Advertisements have been cords a year. '
sponsible for their wood cutting and released. The newspaper committee pointedl
3 _ their manpower in the woods. A com- It is probable that a program similar out that United States pulpwood pm;
“ ‘ ‘ plete report has been made to the to that which was so successful in the duction was off 24 per cent in the 1943[
if, Canadians on the effort of the pulpwood scrap drive will be formulated. To date first half while inventories stood at 52
.1 ' cutting drive in the United States, 68- we do not have any information on the per cent below the level of the like 1942
is “ ‘l ‘ pecially the program of the newspaper drive save that which was gained from period, adding that some mills alreadyi
j publishers headed up through the com- a news story released August 5. Here 1s had shut down for lack of wood. I
I ‘ mittee of which “falter M. Dear is ' the story— Although states of Washington and.
‘ chairman. NEW YORK, AUG. 5 (AP) — The Oregon have large pulp mills, the cam-
,‘ ‘ , . Regardless of what may be the month newspaper pulpwood committee an- paign was not directed to the pacifiC‘
; to month analysis of the current situa- nounced today launching of a sectional- norlthwest because of the highly mecha-
tion and its bearing upon WPB orders ly-directed drive to produce more pulp- nized character of wood cutting in that]
on newsprint consumption in the wood and thus avert a threatened shor‘t— area. ,
3 . United States, it is important that ev— age of 2,500,000 cords. Pulpwood is “necessary for the suc-i
3' . ery daily newspaper publisher, especial— Simultaneously in Washington, War cessful prosecution of the war and the‘
1'1 ly the large users, exert more than or- Production Board chairman Donald M. maintenance of an adequate civiliflfl[
,1 dinary efforts-to reduce their consump- Nelson asked Governors in 27 pulpwood economy,” Nelson said in his plea to,
tion below what they are entitled to use producing states to call upon woodland governors. i
i‘ , by WPB Order L240. It is not sufficient owners, operators and farmers “to do _ __ i
,3 that consumption be brought into bal— everything within their power to in- _——_”___T_"___ . l
31$ , ance with production — consumption crease the production of logs to be used We are requested to repeat the notice,
a i should be brought below present pro- in the manufacture of wood pulp.” from the Office of Censorship fihtmifl
. duction and stocks on hand maintained Walter M. Dear, past president of editors to be alert to every mentioi1 0‘
unimpaired and increased so as to be the American Newspaper Publishers as—' ' radar and military electronic dei’ltes'i
, if ‘ __——-————— soeiation and publisher of the Jersey to establish beyond all question that
i" liams, American Newspaper PUbiiShETS Journal, is head of the newspaper com- there is appropriate authority for eveii’
‘3 ' Association; Walter Johnson, Southern mittee in the campaign while Frank statement made; and to submit an ma-
i.‘ Newspaper Publishers Association; Ed- Block directs the War Activities com- terial on the subject—other than thatre"
' win A. Bemis, Colorado Press Associa- mittee, a pulpwood industry group. leased by appropriate Government at
, . , tion; Paul Gorham, Illinois Newspaper Block was industry director for the thority—to the Office of CensorSillP for
‘ 1» Markets; and Charles L- Allen, National scrap and waste paper drive. review in advance of publication or
‘ 3, Editorial Association. The drive will be made in 27 states broadcast.
; if ‘i. '

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‘ . 1.1.111 . 111 -
. 11‘ 11 1111
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>43 August, 1943 THE KENTUCKY PRESS Page Three 1 1131111131
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lthern,1ap.1 E111 '1
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argia, 1111.1 1 1‘1 H11 ‘ 1
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lewspapers1 1,1 1‘1 1“
lingness to: ‘ _‘_‘I 111‘ 1
lationwide _ 1 1 1:1
>ers, large 5 ”g 1: 1‘ ,
.gnificent1y1 '1 111:
ey and M1 Th U S D . . . ‘1 111111111, 11 -
d. 1 e . . epartment of Agriculture estimates that It takes the . 1 :1 u
1arter-page1 food from 42,000 acres to feed the workers who build a 35,000 ton battle- J 111 1
the news . 1 ;_ “4,11;- 1 -
h . :1 r 1“ ‘11” 1
,600 week- 5 'P 1511; ,1
700d areas. 11.1111 ‘1
being oh 1 It takes the food from 155 acres to build a bomber. , 1111 1 .
the pulp1 11,111 1:11
‘ful in the‘ 1It takes 43 acres to build a medium tank. 11'? 1%
d shortage 1 1 1;:‘1 11 ‘
1g produc. These figures illustrate the immensity of the job of feeding a na- 11 1111 11
000 . . ; 11‘21111 “
,113111190111ear. tion at war. Tremendous quantities of food must be produced. They must 1 11111111 .
16,000,0001 be kept flowing steadily through the channels of distribution to the meal— 1 11111 1
. ' 1 tables of American workers. 11111 1
re pomtedi 1 1113‘ 11111 .
)wood pro-1 11 51:11:11,
n the 1943 The efficiency with which this food is distributed greatly determines 111 ‘
tood at 52 , k 111,11 1‘1"“ 1 -
16 like 1942 how well American war ers eat. 1-111 11 1
i115 alreadyl 1 1 11 1
700d- d1 Greater efficiency in food distribution means less loss of perish- 1 1’ 11
1 1 11 “1.1 111 ‘)
3%? 31111 ables, and therefore a larger quantity of actual food available at the store. :1 1:11 11 .
the pacifiC1 It means that foods reach consumers with a higher nutritional content. It 1 11111 111 1
211111;! 1111;511:211 means that prices are lower than would otherwise be possible. It means that 11111111 1
. 1 . . 11, '11-:1111-51‘
1 transportation facilities and manpower are released for other Vll’ul war jobs. 1 K1 1 f:
or the 51101 ’1 1 14 1-
1'“ and 11111 - Th ' h h d tA 8. P roud to be doin the 11 » 1111 T;
Lte civiliafl1 at :5 w y t e men an women 0 are p 9 1 1111!. 1 , 1 _
his plea 10‘ nation's most efficient job of food distribution. 11111111 1 L
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. 1321 11.11.11 1!. ,
tthenotlce, ' 11 1161 111 ‘1
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1131

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;' ‘3 ‘ Page Four THE KENTUCKY PRESS August, l943 l Aug
. , ‘1 /7 mum wage and overtime provisions ”any any employer is entitled under Sectitml the year.
. i 3 employee employed in connection with 14 of the Act to file an application for i should be
. t P a S the publication of any weekly orfisemi— employment of learners at subminimum the relatic
. en . - r ’ 8 weekly newspaper With a Circulation of rates in his plant, which application will and the t
_ - less than three thousand the major part be considered on its individual merits,‘ job should
w Official Publication or the Kentucky of which circulation is within the coun- Approval of the application dependsl be paid rr
j Press Association t where rinted and ublished.” Inso— u on the em 10 er’s showin that cent
. ____._ fy P P d h P . .P%.h.. g thePer
. _ . ar as newspapers are concerne , t e occupation in w ic it is proposed [Giover the ti
‘ , ‘ - l h r . - - . .
. , Victor B Portmann, Editor Pub's e wage order, issued upon the recommen- employ learners is a suffiCiently Skilled Until a}
3 Printed On The Kernel Press, Lexington dation of. an industry committee arid occupation .to warrant a. substantial been appr
; , after continued public hearings, applies learning period, that experienced work. thority or
I , Kentucky Press Association once" only to employees of newspapers who ers are not available for employmentl taken by
’ Vance Armentrout—m-Ea-gggrtier4°“mal: Louisville are covered by the Wage-Hour Law and in that occupation, and that curtail-i the learnc
1 . u u o —— . .
, Joe R1ch9.rdson_.”_._._,.._..._.._...__&.___..~...,Times, Glasgow not Within the sc0pe of this CXCmptlon., ment of opportunities for €mP10yment. tions, leari
‘ V. _P . t . . _ _ . . . . . _ .
Victor R. Portmann_:ff_.:?:.f:U. or K., Lexington Recently Administrator Walling said W111 T6511“ If the application is denied, prentices
Secretary-Manager . Wa C— A l a . covered h
f , District Executive Committee that tor enforcement purposes thctla 1g . e rner wage rate may be prov1ded f the
. . j ‘ Tyler Munro”, Union County Adirocate’ Ngrgan- Houi DiViSion would not COnSl er t at in a certificate in graduated steps up to Lom f
l . field, (State-at-large), Chairman; C auncey orgey, _ ‘ tereo m
1 . Independent, Ashland’ (stateflbmge), Vice-chair- any small newspaper loses the exemp the heme rate of .40 cents .an hour. :l‘l'iel . bl
i ‘ man; First, Joe LaGore. sun-De?°c§at’ Pgduvfilh; tion merely because of its Willingness to learning period in a certificate is llml[-‘ Pllca e rr
. ‘ . Gl , P k 01 , ow ng . _ .
‘ 29.32%" ’l‘lgllrrd,BJohri3 xii.S Hail-gland,yCodiYigr-Journal, supply the hometown newspaper either ed to a period of 4 to 12 weeks, exceptll FPUlthh;
‘ “ Louisville; Fourth, James M. Willis, Messenger, ' ' ' _ ' ' . 1cat10n
‘ Brandenburg: mm Virgil p. Sanders, Newsmemm free or by paid subscription to mem in unusual Circumstances. Itis not the P _
. J . crat. Carrollton; Sixth. FredWBlk Waz’glhs,R fgfrald- bers of the armed forces. For enforce- policy of the Wage-Hour DIVISIOII to is apprentice
‘ . t ; th, . o nson, . . .
‘ hill-gig, riffriisiziiig; Esigirllii, J. w? Heerddon, Algvocfif, ment purposes, therefore, he has adopt- sue learner certificates for such occupa- mformagit
. , Mt. Sterling: Ninth, Harold A. Browning, epu - ' ‘ ' ' ' _ ’ ue5[_ o
. . i can, Williamsburg: Immediate Past President, Harry ed the policy that the limits in ctrcula [ions as porter,.sweeper, and watchman, ‘l . j
: . Lee Waterfleld. Gazette, Clinton. tion contained in Section 13(a) (8) are which occupations require insuffiuent posting 0
,i Kentucky Press Women‘s Club - ub I‘l _ k. - - . sent out
n 1 Miss Mary E. Hutton, Herald, Humming, President; to be exclusive of any and all 5 SC p 5 ill. to warrant a learning period at sub . ht b
Miss Mildred Babbagenreekenridge News, Cloverport, tions sent to members of the armed minimum rates. ms 16
. Fl st Vice President; Mrs. J. 0. Young, Journal, Dixon, . . .
1 Sercond Vice president; Mrs. Mary Henderson Pgwell, forces. Mr. Walling also pomted out that an ihtngxrel
‘ Record. stearns. Third Vice President: Mrs. . R. . _
. ‘ . Wallace, Advertiser, Walton, Recording Secretary; Olili the other harlild,hthere aremanl); apprenticel under the Act is an em‘
. Mi U lth L , Inde dent, Maysvllle, Corres— i a m ——-
, , ”Islam; Secrettxggss’; Mrs-par} L Bradley, Enterprise, snia 'newspapers w c eng ge JO p oyee at east 16 years of age engaged
' ______________ printing, and in certain instances such to learn a skilled trade under the terms B kh
1,: ‘ printed matter or some portion of it of an apprenticeship agreement which( an e‘
«i NATIONAL EDlTORlAI eventually moves in interstate com- provides for at least 4,000 hours of tea-l Support
l 1‘ merce. An em 10 ee of these news- sonabl continuous em 10 nt, ar-
t ; Assocumo Y P , - - Y . P ”“6 P 'i SEW
, 1‘ “fig-‘2»; I papers who works one-half or more of t1c1pation in an approved schedule of ' troduced
. ‘ 3 "4‘3“" 1 ” his time on job printing work in a par— work experience through employment, play adve'
y __________ ticular week is not subject to the ex- and at least 144 hours 0f related class- nection w
H emption and therefore is entitled to room instruction for each year of the1 activities,
1 3‘; ‘ MEMBER fiffi the minimum wage established by the apprenticeship if such classes are avail-l L, Buckle
‘ 1 “Lu wage order and to the overtime pay able in the community. The rates‘ bama Prt
3 provisions of the Act for that week un< agreed to must average over the apw nificently
i . K ‘ TUCKY PRES less exempt under some other section of prenticeship period at least 50 per cent its incepti
‘ ASSOCIATION the Act. Employees of the printer (even of the wage rate paid skilled journey- Latestl
. “um” “NW". I", though he also publishes a neWSpaper) men in the same occupation. Applell'I for eonce
fall Within the general coverage of the ticeship agreements which have beenl It borls d1
' ' . ‘ atel -
Volume Fourteen, Number Ten Act where at the time the work is per approved by.a recognized local or St dl only is tl
‘ _ . formed the employer has reason to be- apprenticeship counCil are con51der€ , part of u
f C l" 1'” l N lieve that any unsegregated part of the temporary certificates until final acthfl some wh¢
« er I ICC] es fcessory printed material will later move, dl- has been taken on them by the Wage are losing
i For Begmner- earners rectly or indirectly, across state lines. Hour Division of the United States DC", tipal reas
- l ' . .
1 This and other associations have Pre' Thus, coverage eXists even where ma- partment of Labor. If no approved 10'} lSunw1lli
‘l' sented inquiries upon request Of pub- terial is printed for a local purchaser cal or state apprenticeship counCll 6’“ In the sli
:1 lishers of weekly and semi-weekly 1321- if, at the time of production, the print- ists, agreements may be filed CllI'CCllE' supervisic
pers to the Wage-Hour Division rela- ing firm has reason to believe the goods with the Wage—Hour DiviSion which, 3' ' . Doyle
l , five to the wage order in view of the Will subsequently move, directly or in- ter consultation with the Federal Com- IS that CV
exemption in the act, and particularly directly, outSide the state. . mittee on Apprenticeship, may issue a effort to
51 in connection with the possibility of As to the employment of learners and certificate. . RCPI‘esenl
.I‘ employing student - learners, learners, apprentices in the Printing and Publish- The Student - Learner Regulations 1 §0mmlttel
j and apprentices. In an effort to clarify ing and Allied Graphic Arts Industry at were primarily designed to meet the” 'emitors
1 the status of these papers and to answer rates less than the basic minimum of needs of training students in vocatIOna ' mg four
“ questions submitted Director L. Met— 40 cents an hour, Mr. Walling pointed training programs by providing for the Regard
calfe Walling takes these positions: out that, although no hearing has been employment of student-learners for I)?” (Imiway
3, ‘ Section 13(a) (8) of the Fair Labor held to determine the need for adopt- of the working day or for alternating :Imbly 1
.~ ‘, . . - . . . . . . . - ~ (7 '
i k Standards Act exempts from its mini- ing subminimum rates in the industry, weeks, or for limited periods (llllmn Ong ml
3 1,; :l _
I. 1 H ‘ ~ ‘\ 7 7 , , /V

 . Uri »
4.33:? IIIIIII .
» 5? ‘ I i 53 ’3
>43 , August, 1943 THE KENTUCKY PRESS Page Five tgti
I .11 ..
er SectionI the year. A student-learner application neglect or be ingloriously killed in re- Poultry and hog houses need a fall “iIIII
cation for I should be filed by a school official and treat. The newspapers would gain much going over, with sales of lumber, ce- 3 i 'i‘ “I i
minimumI the relation between the school work popular favor either by coming out merit, disinfectants, repair items, paint, Ii ‘.I
:ation Will and the employment training on the open with the declaration that “we've and so on. III I
la] merits.‘ job should be shown. The wage rate to decided it might be a mistake” or else Cecil L. Kirven, former Kentucky iIll ”
I dependsl be paid must average not less than 75 getting vigorously into the ring and manager of the Southern Bell Tele- ' II
I that theI per cent of the applicable minimum fighting for this measure to a definite phone company and an associate mem- II
‘oposed to 3 over the training period. conclusion one way or the other. Cer- ber of KPA, was found dead in his of- III.i .
tly skilled Until apprenticeship agreements have tainly if the press of the nation lets fice in Atlanta on Monday, August 9. 3 .3 Ii‘ I i
Lubstamia] been approved by the appropriate au- Senator Bankhead down in this instance He left Louisville July 1 to become I E II.;I ‘
iced work. thority or favorable action has been we may find future champions discon- head of the Atlanta district office of the .i'» 3 III-Iii: I
nploymentl taken by the Wage-Hour Division on certingly scarce. Telephone company, IIIITI
it curtailI the learner or student-learner applica- ————————————————_ ______~___________ III
a 10 m I tions, learners, student-learners, and a - ;.,‘ :I .313} g3
spdeiiieii.1t prentices as well as other employegs RUies Set BY P- 0- Dept. "ml"mm"i"iiii"ii"i"i"""iimiiiiiiiiiiiim" I III
3pr0videdI covered by the Act and not exempt For Post-Remstotements - Im3“1:“ui3.“Ii:uui:mu:umu:um:iliiiiluiumuiut I I
teps up to from the mmlmurn wage provisrons Here is the text of the amendment to ii I i
tour. TheI tlIereslf must be pat: at least the aP‘ the Postal Laws and Regulations: E“ I "
:e is limit-3 pica émlmmum W g6; , “Order No. 22077, Para ra h 1, Sec- M h ° I -_ ‘
:ks, exceptI I’ublishers contemplating making ap- tion 528, Postal Laws andg Rleigulations eC CinICCl fl iII 1; '
is not the phcatlon for certificates for learners and of 1940, is amended by the addition of ;. . “Ii-I I I
ision to is‘ apprentices may secure some additional sub-paragraph (b) reading as follows: 0 .3 2.: , I
:h occupa- informatlon from this office upon re- “ ‘ (b) No newspaper Or other period- Hyglene ‘ I .iI I
watchman, quest. Some attorneys advrse that the ical publication which has been ac— It: -I '
nsulficient posting Of the mmimum wage notices corded second-class mail privileges, and IIy
iod at sub- SCI“ 0111 by the Wage-Hour D1v1510n which has voluntarily suspended publi— Y L- d h IEII’I
.might be construed by courtsas an cation, or shall hereafter voluntarily our moiype eservesf e .31 III .i
ut that an acknowledgment 0f the applicability 0f suspend publication, for the duration . _ 1‘ InI‘I
is an cm the Fan Labor Standards ACt' of the war because of conditions attri- same aflenhon f0 ”5 care III II
;e engaged —————————————————— butable to the war effort, shall be re— d k h t“; I
the terms . uired u on resumption of regular pub- an U 99 f of OU ivc. ‘ ,H 3.1/3 3
ent whichI Bankhec‘d Bi” Needs. lication ti; pay any of the fees provided P P Y 9 . I [III I .
urs of rea-I Support Of Every Editor for by the act entitled ‘an act to provide #0 our bod or other I; IIIiiiiI
nfindt’lpari I Senator John H. Bankhead, who in- forlfeles of entry of a (pulfflicaticiln as sec- Y Y , iI IIIIIiIIi _
3 e 116 0 'troduced 8-1073 to'authorize aid dis- 0119C 355 matter, an or 0i er Piii' - II C‘ II ,.
iPiOYmeninI play advertising by Governmenif in con- P0565; approved July 7’ 1932’ as valued meChamsms' In sad, E II III: Ii j
Iated C1355' nection with Bond sales and other war amended, if SUCh newspaper or period- I I5 “ I II
ear of the; activitieS, represents Alabama. Doyle ical publication resumes regular publi- matters fhe expression I1 1’“ t .
are avail-I L. Buckles is field manager of the Ala— cation prior to the end of the sixth I 1 II .3
The rateSI bama Press Association and has mag- month following the expiration of the about an ounce ofpreven- I , II 1
33 the app nificently sparked this campaign from ulniimideii) “Etiogai demergen‘fg’l 1);; I II,I I 1
per cen its ince tion. caime y t e resi ent on ay , . . g I ,5th _ .,
d journey-I Latesif bulletin from Doyle gives cause 1941: Provided, that before, any such “on being worfhapound 0' I III jII I
,. Appren‘v for concern to supporters of the bill, newspaper or periodical shall be en- . . . I IIIIQIt
have mm It boils down to the conclusion that not titled to re-entry as second-class matter cure Is anything but fnfe. I. . I‘II.,II j
:31 or 5W“ Only is the attitude indifferent on the without payment 0i any application fee 3I I); II 2;
considered I part of uncommitted Congressmen, but the publishers shall furnish to the Post- I II II '_
inal action some who early endorsed the measure master General satisfactory evidence is, I I :I II 3
the Wage-I are losing their enthusiasm. The prin- that the suspension Of his publication “W’s. _ I I” ‘ I; 1
States DI?1 tipal reason cited for cooling sentiment was because of conditions attributable . :{EESWY I 3' III Ii ‘.
uproved 10-I Is unwillingness to submit the free press to the war effort.’ (PUbiiC Law 124’ 78 ‘./"”»i ' II II; III
:ounc11 6X“ m the slightest degree to Government Congress, approved JUIY 9, 19433)" I t’. f
3d diieail’I supervision or regulation_ ———-—————-———-—————————- I". I iII
WhiCii’ai'i' . Doyle Buckles’ pertinent suggestion Concensus is that the new Selective II V” i_
leraI COm'I Is that every newspaper man make an Service Order does not change the status I “I Ii} I
lay Issueil effort to discuss this matter with his of newspapers—except to make more INSURE U S VICTORY' I I": _
. Representative in Congress and that urgent the need for registering your ' i i I 3‘ WII
LegulatiomI Committees be appointed to wait on the men and asking early for maximum KEEP ON BUYING WAR II IIIiI T. ‘
meet thCI §€nators sometime during the remain- deferment, while taking every human ' B