The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1934 Page: 2 of 4
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1934.
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Your Account Here Is Insured
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M. E. SHAY
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CAPITAL AND SURPLUS OVER
$1,000,000.00
TIME TESTED SERVICE
Your Deposits Are Insured Under the U. S. Government Plan
O-OHCHGHGITHSCHCHCHSCHCHGHRHGHGHSCHCHTHGIGHGHSHIHGCHGHSHHSHGCHSHHHIHHHHCHCHHHHSHIHHIHIHIHIHHHHH
ARE YOU SATISFIED?
Rex Laundry ami Dry Cleaners
1328 31st Street
Phone 2000
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Phone No. 90
W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES
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Union Made, $5.50 to $7.50
v Local Dealers
CLARK SHOE STORE
414 Twenty-Second St.
Stewart Title Guaranty Co.
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CAPITAL, $1,500,000.00
2109 Market St.
Phone 647
A. M. Hoffpauir
H. A. Landry
Completely Remodeled
4203 Ave. S
Phone 977
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2208 Avenue D
PHONE 266
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Send Your Next LAUNDRY Bundle
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KOL-AS A
FRIEND— TQ
ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL LABOR PRESS ASSOCIATION
GALVESTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1934?
WHY THE OPPOSITION.
When You Deal in Real Estate—Be Sure
the Title is Guaranteed
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LEND ME
IFTEEN POLLARS
e4mericcsBest
4nownhoes
NEW ADDRESS:
217 23rd Street
Hutchings-Sealy National Bank
ESTABLISHED 1854 '
genADvEen62
Breocsceanomn
KNAPP BROS.
Stationers and Printers
Union Watermarked Paper and Envelopes
AgEX,
—Emamss
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ELITE CAFE
Quality, Quantity and Service
-----o----
MILL OWNERS AND MACHINE GUNS.
— EIGHT —
I STORES
| No. 1 Store — 2017 Market Street
| No. 2 Store — 2711 Market Street
| No. 3 Store — 33rd St. at Avenue O
| No. 4 Store — 35th St. at Broadway
| No. 5 Store — 14th St. at Avenue E
| No. 6 Store — 18th St. at Avenue N
| No. 7 Store — 39th St. at Avenue N%
| No. 8 Store — 23rd St. at Avenue M
I ALL OWNED BY A GALVESTON CITIZEN
$ GALVESTON IS MY HOME
I C. P. EVANS, Owner
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PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS
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“Always the Best at a Fair Price”
Satisfaction Guaranteed
WELL-I’LLBE-
FRANK ABOUT— '
IT—ER—l’D LIKE
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Law enforcement officials of the Federal Government have made
abundant complaint in recent years of the ease with which bands of
criminal and outlaws of the Dillinger type have equipped themselves
with machine guns. .
But now come tile mill owners in Southern textile centers with
an array and assortment of machine guns and multiple rifles at the
windows and ro the noofs of their plants that would make Dillinger
and all of his ilk blush in puny comparison. Not since before the
Civil War has there been such an abundant display of varied fire-
arm equipment in the Southern States.
The question is naturally asked why is it so easy for these mill
owners to convert their plants into veritable arsenals and fortresses?
The question is asked where they got the machine guns and high-
powered rifles in such abundance and in such quantity? Every mill
center—large and small, including the little conutry crossroads mills
—bristle with firearms in the hands of armed guards, deputies and
strikebreakers.
With mill owners acquiring guns with such ease and rapidity,
it is small wonder that gangsters and bandits have been able in re-
cent years to get them with the same ease.
Literally, thousands of armed thugs surround the Southern
mills. Strikers and pickets are beaten, intimidated, threatened, shot
in the back and killed. The six victims at Honea Path were not even
armed with lead pencils. They are all victims of the community
nondescripts that have been hastily mobilized by mill owners to
intimidate and even kill unarmed and peaceful pickets. Tales of
unbelievable horror are found in the letters from workers in these
Southern towns whose condition today is plainly no better than that
of the Negro slaves in the South before the Civil War.
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The publisher reserves the right to reject or revoke advertising contracts
at any time. Copy of this paper will be sent to the advertiser.
Communication of interest to Trade Unionists are solicited. They should
be briefly written, on but one side of the paper, and must reach this office
not later than Thursday afternoon of each week. The right of revision or
rejection is reserved by the publisher.
Names must be signed to items (not published, if so requested), as a
guarantee of good faith.
We do not hold ourselves responsible for the views or opinions of cor-
•respondents.
Subscribers who change their addresses, or fail to get their paper, should
immediately notify this office, giving both new and old addresses and the name
of the organization with which they are connected.___________________________
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which may appear in the columns of The
Union Review will be gladly corrected upon its being brought to the atten-
tion of the publisher.
Che LCnion Review
Published Every Friday Morning at 217 Tremont Street Phone 90
Entered at the Postoffice at Galveston, Texas^ as Second-Class Mail Matter.
I NITED STATEC
V NATIONAL BANK >
MARKET AT 22 ND STREET
GALVESTON
Capital one million dollars
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S Fred W. Catterall, President S
Q H. A. Eiband, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. S
■6 Mart H. Royston, Vice-President E. Kellner, Cashier g
☆ W. C. Schutte/ Assistant Cashier A. E. A. Catterall, Assistant Cashier 3
X You are cordially Invited to open an account with 3
| The First National Bank |
§ of Galveston g
| SOUTHEAST CORNER 22nd AND STRAND g
* Duly Authorized to Act as Executor, Administrator, Guard- g
3 ian, Trustee and in all other Fiduciary Capacities. g
g SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT §
g Interest at 2%% per annum on Savings Accounts. g
g We Solicit the Accounts of Corporations, Firms and g
§ Individuals. g
g ----DEPOSITS INSURED UNDER U. S. GOVERNMENT PLAN---- S
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There is abroad in the land a spirit that it would be well for
employers and public officials to understand. The depression years
have stripped wage earners and professional workers of jobs and
property. They have little to lose if they make a fight for their
rights. Deep seated, burning resentment of what business has done
to them is apt to burst forth in situations that ordinarily would not
be serious to industry. Grown wise as to words that mean noth-
ing, wage earners insist on something real. In the face of wide-
spread unemployment, only desperate, determined people strike.
Employers who refuse to concede to their employes the right to
organize in unions and to representatives of their own choosing", and
who refuse to meet with such representatives for the purpose of
talking over problems and reaching joint agreements, in the opinion
of the Memphis Labor Review, are the main cause of the present
unrest and strife. Every job rests on a work contract—oral or writ-
ten, specific or implied. Wage earners want to choose their own
representatives to have a hand in making these contracts, which for
practical reasons cover groups of workers. This is a most reason-
able position which is the accepted basis for justice in all human
relations. If employers were not trying to protect a special interest
they would not resist so stubbornly. Employers are apposing re-
cognition of workers’ equities in production and the definition of
rights accruing therefrom in order to retain their practice of dictat-
ing distribution of income from joint production as well as all other
conditons of work.
The National Recovery Act assures workers’ rights conceded
when industry was so sick complete collapse seemed iminnent. Each
step toward recovery has found industry less willing- to follow the
prescription for balanced control instead of employers’ domination.
Wage earners refuse to be put off by customary practices of indus-
try or by substitutes for real rights. Armed guards, gas bombs, and
all the other equipment for warfare will not settle the issues raised.
Men and women do not strike for perversity or for excitement.
A strike means personal loss and suffering—it means taking a se-
rious risk. When large groups of workers begin to consider a gen-
eral strike it means a protest against the power of organized society
used to prevent justice being done. Striking unions are not revolu-
tionists, but they maye become victims of revolutions and unwise
counsel, when employers act like the Bourbons of old. Wage earn-
ers without jobs, without income, have only inadequate, humiliat-
ing relief between them and starvation. Such an experience leaves
indelible marks on character and minds.
Only the will to justice on the part of employers, as well as
employes, and adequate agencies for enforcing justice will prevent
or settle strikes.
TODAY'S
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A’FRIEND
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THE UNION REVIEW
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“Our Work Speaks for Itself
Ladies’ Garments a Specialty—Work Called for
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The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1934, newspaper, October 5, 1934; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1411072/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.