"During the year disputes between railroad companies and the Brotherhoods resulted in the establishment of twelve Railroad Emergency Boards to investigate disputes and to report to the President. The President also established on October 9 a Railway Express Emergency Board to investigate the dispute between the Railway Express and a union.
"To implement the directives of the National War Labor Board, the Office of Economic Stabilization directed the cancellation of all priority applications, allocation applications and outstanding priorities and allocations in the cases of three clothing companies and one transportation system which refused to comply with orders of the National War Labor Board." Arthur T. Vanderbilt, War Powers and their Administration, 1945, Annual Survey of American Law (New York University School of Law), pp. 271-273.
[72] 8 Fed. Reg. 11463.
[73] 56 Stat. 23.
[74] 322 U.S. 398 (1944).
[75] Ibid. 405-406.
[76] See Corwin, The President, Office and Powers (3d ed.) 302-303.
[77] Charles Fairman, The Law of Martial Rule (Chicago, 1930), 20-22. Albert Venn Dicey, Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution (7th ed.), 283-287.
[78] Dicey, Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution, Chap. VIII, 262-271.
[79] 7 How. 1 (1849). See also Martin v. Mott, 12 Wheat. 19, 32-33 (1827).