Born in the rural Northwest, Carver was the child of an alcoholic sawmill worker and a waitress.
He was a boy when his father, Leroy, a sawmill worker, was killed in a mill accident.
First, the sawmill workers set up their own rough cabins.
He took nearly 100,000 sawmill workers into the union in 1935, but only as second class members with no voting rights.
His father, a skilled sawmill worker from Arkansas, was a fisherman and a heavy drinker.
His father was a skilled sawmill worker from Arkansas.
They said the unemployed sawmill worker went to his sister's house Friday afternoon and shot her and her husband.
He was born in Namsos as a son of a sawmill worker.
It was a bit steep for parchment spectacles, but he had to make up for lost revenue from the sawmill worker.
Lumber prices fell sharply on signs that a strike of Canadian sawmill workers would be averted.