The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, March 30, 1923 Page: 4 of 4
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I
FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1923.
THE UNION REVIEW
FOUR
DON’T FAIL TO ATTEND THE
An Outstanding Bank
To build a Good Will for years to come.
•9
Thompson
uadha “ CONIPANM
COR. 2IST AND MARKET STREETS
ORDER YOUR EASTER CAKES NOW
Gengler’s
1*4.1
N
Oxfords
PURE, SWEET AND DELICIOUS
DECORATED CAKE
75c
Vulcan Smoothtop
March 31
LAYER CAKE AND ANGEL FOOD.
Gas Ranges
Angel Foods—Plain
are equipped with
We Will Clean
Enameled Linings
<
Win
Your
KID
[
GENGLER’S
GLOVES
GALVESTON GAS co.
10c a pair
Odorless
Dry Cleaning
)
«ss
Always
$12.75-319.95
Rex
Friday and Saturday
5
5
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
YOU
mixture of Hin-
They are a
dus, Malays, Egyptians, and other far-
$
Ben C. Doherty & Co.
$1.10
65c
50c
35c
25c
YOUR
WAIT.
New York. — Alien strikebreakers
employed at the railroad shops of the
50c and 75c
50c and 75c
50c and 75c
55c and 80c
50c and 75c
.....50c and 75c
Extra large
Large
Medium
Small
Cuts, each
Detroit, Mich.—Officers of the Stove
Mounters’ International Union report
continuous gains in wages and work-
ing conditions throughout their juris-
diction.
Chocolate
Cocoanut
Plain
Caramel
Pecan
Marshmallow
Maple
making them peculiarly
adapted to Galveston
rust producing
climate.
TEN
PHONES
FOR
SERVICE
CALL
6000
WOMEN’S “EQUALITY” BILL
FAVORED BY EMPLOYERS
Printed Crepe, Taffeta, Canton Crepe,
All Tyme Dresses, All The New
Shades and Styles
A
are ready for early Spring
$27.50 Upward
2 Piece Suit
Large Cake
NEW EASTER
DRESSES
LABOR’S “ADVISOR”
UNMASKED COMMUNIST
IS “STOOL PIGEON”
fantilever
NShoe
THE GRAND LEADER
313-15 TREMONT
MANUFACTURERS CANCELLATION
SHOE SALE
FROM NOW
Until
Let us prepare your
spring wardrobe and
put your woolens in
Cedar Bags or Paper
for the Summer.
Cleaning here costs
no more than at ordi-
nary Shops.
Phones 2000
/ “The Shop Quality Made”
Special Layer Cake
50c and 75c
Better Supply a Felt Hat
also—They’ll be worn Easter
NUTICE
and your membership for the purpose of
furthering adult workers education.
---—o-------
DEPORT STRIKEBREAKERS.
ments are complete—choose
your pair this week; and teach
your feet to carry you uncom-
plainingly.
A flexible shoe for your flexible feet.
------ ------- --- President Gompers said: I wish to
SEE F. C. LOBENSTEIN, 1 commend the work of this bureau to you
CANTILEVER Oxfords are
ready to carry you out on the
first brisk walks of early
Spring, and to make them a
genuine joy. If you’ve never
konwn the utter foot-forgetful-
ness that goes with a shot built
to conform to your foot, you’ve
never known the exhiliration
that can lie in the mere act of
walking. Cant ilever assort-
2026 STRAND. PHONE 450.
-----------Q------------
Texas BANKANDTRUST (ompany
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS ONE. MILLION DOLLARS
Galveston
TO give our Depositors the very Best Banking Service
TO afford the Strongest Security in Capital and Surplus
$35. Upward i
3 Piece Suit
New York, N. Y.—Morris Kaufman,
■ president of the International Fur Work-
ers’ Union, has unmacsked one r-r-revo-
olutionist who has been prancing around
New York with his slanderous tales
against organized workers.
The r-r-revolutionist is M. J. Olgin,
editor of a Jewish communist newspaper
by the Delaware, Lackawanna & West-
ern railroad, another corporation that
has locked out its shop men. When the
strikebreakers were arrested it was
found that some of them were afflicted
with the dreaded disease trachoma, also
tuberculosis and other contagious dis-
eases.
Locked out shop men are pleading
that the presence of these diseased
strikebreakers be protested by the pub-
Bargains Galore For Man, Woman and Child
Your Great Loss If You Don t Attend
Priced as low as your sense
of economy will allow you
to choose—
The two remaining days in
which to suit yourself with a
Hart, Schaffner & Marx
SUIT FOR EASTER
stitution, but is now making a com-
paign before state legislatures to remove
the various inequalities against women.
Trade unionists always favored this plan
but the method now being employed, the
workers declare, would wipe out all leg-
islation favorable to working women.
Organized workers and their sympathi-
zers would remove the various evils by
specific enactment, rather than by a
blanket statute that will sweep away the
good as well as the bad.
“Manufacturers could never have lic if for no other reason than self-
thought up such a good scheme against preservation, as deadly contagious dis-
SHOES WHILE
\
\
I x
I
I
I
I
m
sE_ ■
on the executive committee of the work-
! ers’ education bureau.
WE ARE EQUIPPED TO RESOLE - in statement to trade unionists.
St. Paul, Minn.—Employers of this Central Railroad of New Jersey are
state are favoring the so-called women’s being examined here. Many of them
“equality” bill now pending in the state have 'been deported. They entere t e
legislature. country as seamen and then left then
The national women’s party first pro- vessels
posed an amendment to the federal on-
/ ) / - I
-----------o--
STOVE MOUNTERS GAIN.
east peoples.
Similar strikebreakers are employed •
spokesman of the ‘lefts' you have played
the role of a stool pigeon in every labor
organization which refused to give you
financial support—in other words, graft.
You have done it while telling the out-
side world the most terrible stories about
these unions, ignoring the very funda-
mentals of labor ethics.
“Now, when you feel that you have
been called to account in a place where
every slanderer gets his dues, you get
into sheep’s clothing and say that quar-
rels between working class institutions
must not be carried into the open, and
you want us to withdraw our request
to the district attorney to investigate
your accusations, because to bring the
matter into the open would injure the
whole labor movement.
“This is more impudence than we can
grasp. You have tried to get control of
our organization and you have been de-
feated again and again. And as a last
resort you have undertaken to use a
weapon that only irresponsible people
would use.
“One goes to a labor court, of the la-
bor movement, with one who believes in
labor ethics and organization morals.
You are not brought up to such ethics;
your sheet has never had them, because
it has been established to destroy labor
organizations.
“We will, therefore, not go with you
to such a court. We want an investiga-
tion by the district attorney—we have
no fear of an investigation, and we have
prepared to show the district attorney
your sheet plays the role of a stool pi-
geon and informer, and every charge
in your sheet against the Furrier’s un-
ion is a link in the chain in your cam-
paign to destroy the unions.”
. ' G
Cantilever
$ SALE OF 200 3
Dependable Grocers or 71 Years.
from women.”
which they later admitted. During the
entire period of your existence as
eases are indiscriminate in seleceting
victims.
| 2422 D Phone 5300
WORKERS’ EDUCATORS
TO CONFER IN APRIL
working women,” said former Congress-
woman Jeanette Rankin. “If we must
talk equality, let’s talk equality of leis-
ure, so that the girls in industry may
have the time to be human. We can’t
have econmic equality as long as we
have a system of slavery already taking
the life of women in industry. This bill
would remove every vestige of protec-
New York, N. Y.—The workers’ edu-
cation bureau has issued a call for the
third annual conference on workers’ ed-
ucation in the United States, to be held
in this city April 14-15.
Delegates are expeted from workers’
educational enterprises and trade union
colleges as far west as Portland and as
far south as Kansas City. Some 40 or
50 labor organizations in as many indus-
trial centers have initiated plans for ed-
ucational work among their membership,
it is stated.
During the past year the committee
on education of the American Federation
of Labor and the workers’ education bu-
reau have co-operated under a tempora-
ry agreement. At the last A. F. of L.
onvention this joint effort was approved.
Under the terms of this agreement an
exeutive committee of nine members was
created to direct the policies and activi-
ty of the bureau. The chairman of the
A. F. of L. committee on education, Mat-
thew Woll, is chairman of the executive
committee of the worker’s education bu-
reau, and two ther members of the A. F.
of L. committee on education—George
W. Perkins and John P. Frey—are also
who charged in his publication that
members of the Fur Workers’ union
were assaulted because they opposed the
officers’ policies. Olgin said these mem-
bers risked their lives.
To Olgin’s surprise the fur workers
asked the district attorney to investigate
the charges.
Frightened at his unexpected position,
Olgin called upon President Kaufman to
join with him in settling the matter in
a “labor court,” that could be created
for that purpose.
The slanderer was trapped and he
knew it. He no longer was the asser-
tive, blatant r-r-revolutionist. Instead,
he sniveled and fawned to the trade un-
ionist that their differences could be set-
tled “in a comradely way.”
In a letter to Olgin, President Kauf-
man fell on the r-r-revoltuionis like a
load of concrete and told him he is a
stool pigeon, that he has aided strike-
'breakers and that his paper was started
to disrupt trade unionism.
“You have employed every shameful
method to disorganize our ranks and to
smash our unions,” said President Kalf-
man. “In your ambition to annihilate
our organizations, you even dared to
support the work of certain ‘lefts’ in our
organization when they installed a scab
agency to disturb an election, a crime
-oo. vamm-ena- •. -— ----------
0
EG-GHM- > nHBn rm WH DHH-SSASHGHSHNHGHSHSHHEGHEHRHKNHHHHHN
| HERE TOMORROW! EASTER FOOTWEAR! |
$ Newest Creations for Spring and Easter Footwear on
| SPECIAL SALE |
| $3.45 and $4.45 |
PEOPLES SHOE STORE
§ GALVESTON’S POPULAR PRICE SHOE STORE §
§ 2321—MARKET STREET—2321 g
Bncnocnen-e-e-e-a-canssanaaa-ccG-cGG-GC-S-G-G-C-C-C-C-M-G-6-1-0*0-20*0-0-6-*8*0-*10-0--8
$1.00 Small Cake
C-O M f H 1 H 3HE- DHPFFB
Laundry
Laundering
Dry Cleaning
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The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, March 30, 1923, newspaper, March 30, 1923; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1416670/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.