The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, October 1, 1937 Page: 4 of 4
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1937.
FOUR
118
33
81x99 Extra Long
KalvestonQical
25c
Combating Crime With Speed in Tokyo
I "
82-9
.2
338
82
WG(1
Iv-
by the Long Beach Automobile Deal-
a
x-n
T
The Way of the Cross
FALL SUITS
By DOUGLAS MALLOCH
MOPSY
y
WNU Service.
)
OPTOMETRISTS
and OPTICIANS
$"
9
Here’s 2 Specials for
Thrifty Shoppers
Judge Wilson of Los Angeles Enjoins
Long Beach Auto Dealers From
Using Violence Against! Members
of Auto Maintenance Union.
30,000 STORES COVERED
BY MEAT CUTTERS PACT
Patronize the Advertisers
appearing in this issue
National Retail Meat Dealers Associa-
tion Signs Agreement Making Union
Sole Bargaining Agency for Thou-'
sands of Employes.
South Carolina Farmers Want Unem-
ployed Who Won’t Work Prosecut-
ed for Vagrancy.
COURT BANS EMPLOYER
ASSAULTS ON PICKETS
ring; cylinder press; cupola fur-
nace.
that are great in value
and Correct in Style.
Union Made Suits
$22?° $2750
By AFL News Service.
The usual procedure was reversed in
a recent court action in Los Angeles,
when a labor union secured a tempo-
rary injunction against an employer.
Shortly after Superior Judge Wilson
Unc’ Billy Looked Down to Find His
Old Friend Jimmy Skunk Looking
Up at Him.
75,000 Are Enlisted Monthly In
Unions, Director of Organiza-
tion Hines Reports; All Sec-
tions Are Covered by 325 Or-
ganizers, Who Map Plans In
Regional Conferences.
o)
\o
63
•43
MANY NEW MEMBERS
GAINED BY A. F. OF L.
81-in. Brown Sheeting
fine even texture—Yard
by Thornton W.
Burgess
4
2-4
ght.
Talk, Buy and Use Union
Made Products
Police Urged To Make
Jobless Harvest Cotton
In the effort to suppress crime in Tokyo the police administration
has purchased a thousand bicycles which have been distributed among
the officers stationed at street corner police boxes. These men are usu-
ally the first to arrive at the scene of a crime and now can get there
more speedily.
‘‘PHE Right Word” has present-
- ed some thoughts in connec-
tion with the compounding of words.
The distionary gives “some excep-
tions.” Let us see what they are. -
The first of two nouns often stands
as an adjective under the following
conditions:
When the first noun has the sense
of “made of”; as silk dress; feather
“Paper?”
WNU Service.
---o---
JIMMY SKUNK MEETS THE
STRANGER
Until I, too, was laden down
I think my faith was only dross.
I think a life all gain, all loss—
That not a soul shall wear the
crown
Unless it first has borne the
cross.
© Douglas Malloch.-—WNU Service.
Desert Sardine
A fish called the “desert sardine”
is found in springs in Death valley,
a survivor of the ancient time when
the valley was under the sea.
s
Pacemaker Shirts—
Newest fall patterns—
Union Made.
$1.65
d
AMEMAE-
EERACMEMS
By WARREN GOODRICH
© Bell Syndicate.
SAoscihnmge
52AHIlI/I/II83
—THE---------
RIGHT WORD
By W. Curtis Nicholson
mm-s © The Associated Newspapers •
“SOME EXCEPTIONS”
_“-„eawzil
Stick ’em up!”
CILGAGL—
SB
E
W
at El BAND’S
A Profitable Place to Shop
8
—
IF THIS IS THE
WAY YOU'RE GONNA.
TEACH ME TO <
DRIVE-I'M QUIT- 73
TING RIGHT NOWJ
PA
■
AMIMAAE-
CMACHEES
By WARREN GOODRICH
© Bell Syndicate.
When I had only death to fear,
I think perhaps my faith suf-
ficed;
But faith is not so cheaply
priced;
For they, who never shed a tear,
What know they, after all, of
Christ?
DR. S. H. FRIDNER
Optometrist
2224 Postoffice St. Phone 2443
Trust Building
By AFL News Service.
Greenville, S. C. — Payment of low
wages for cotton pickers is finding more
widespread resistance on the part of =
workers in many sections of the South,
resulting in many odd reports; of at-
tempts to coerce workers in a manner
akin to old slavery days.
An example of this occurred here, when
forty Greenville County cotton growers
demanded that police officers round up
unemployed able-bodied men and prose-
cute them for vagrancy if they refused
cotton-picking jobs. Sheriff Martin and
Detective Chief Hammond were reported
to have pledged “co-operation.” It is stat-
ed the cotton growers, with 20,000 bales
of cotton “standing in the open fields
ready to be picked,” and with in-
sufficient help to harvest it, did consent
to pay 50 cents a hundred pounds to the
pickers. A few indicated they might pay
a little more. The price of cotton is
holding up so well that the Federal
Government is making loans to cotton
growers at $9 a hundred pounds.
Sam I. Williams
Inc.
“Better Clothes For Men”
2105 Postoffice Street
The most important single agree-
ment ever secured by the Amalgamat-
ed Meat Cutters and Butcher Work-
men of North America was recently
finalized through long and effective ef-
forts by Patrick E. Gorman, president,
Dennis Lane, secretary-treasurer, and
James Laverty, vice president, with the
National Retail Meat Dealers’ Associa-
tion.
The new agreement established the
Amalgamated as the sole collective
bargaining agency for employees of
the association’s 30,000 retail outlets
throughout the nation. The national
agreement was aided, it is stated, by
good results secured by members of
the association, who had contracts
with the local unions in many cities,
including St. Louis, Memphis, San
Francisco, Seattle and elsewhere.
The agreement, the first to be ob-
tained in the industry on a national
scale, is believed by many to be a
forerunner of similar contracts with
chain concerns and other similar asso-
ciations by different unions.
THE UNION LABEL is the
SYMBOL OF HIGHEST QUALITY
OF AMEBIC AN-MADE PRODUCTS.
PATRONIZE BUSINESS PLACES
WHICH DISPLAY THE UNION
LABEL, SHOP CARD At BUTTONS*
Union Label Trades Department
Amerlean Federation of Labor Wash., D. Q
‘uer p
2,, B
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS
I -
a
I
I
=
I
=
=
I
“situated in, having a character
naturally implied from situation or
connection”; as, ocean steamer;
school etiquette; mountain streams;
country gentlemen; society man-
ners.
When the first noun has the sense
of “acting in support of, advocat-
ing”; as, Jackson voters; silver ad-
vocate; prohibition speakers.
When the first noun has the sense
“residing, existing, or originating
in, or coming from (a place)”; as
New York schools; Florida oranges;
Bath brick. These should give the
reader some idea of the exceptions
to compounding.
WNU Service.
looked at Unc’ Billy very sharply,
but Unc’ Billy was so very much in
earnest that Jimmy had to believe
that Unc’ Billy really thought he
had seen tins terrible stranger. Jim-
my never had heard of such a
stranger in the Green Forest. He
couldn’t quite believe there was one
even after Unc’ Billy had said so.
But he didn’t like to say so. You
see, Unc’ Billy was an old friend
and he didn’t want to hurt his feel-
ings.
“I think I’ll go up to the pond
of Paddy the Beaver and see if I
can see anything of this stranger,”
said Jimmy.
“Ah wouldn’t if Ah was yo’, Br’er
Skunk! ’Deed Ah wouldn’t! Yo’ don’
know what he may do to yo’ with
those great claws. Mah goodness,
Ah cert’nly does hope he can’t
climb trees!” Unc’ Billy looked so
anxious that Jimmy had to turn his
head so as to hide a smile.
“I’ll go ask him if he climbs trees
and then I’ll come and let you know,
Unc’ Billy,” said he.
Now, Unc’ Billy knew that Jimmy
Skunk is afraid of nothing and no-
body unless it is Farmer Brown’s
boy when he has his terrible gun,
but he also knew that Jimmy had
never seen and had no idea of this
great stranger who had given him
such a fright, and he couldn’t be-
lieve that Jimmy would dare ask
him any questions. He watched
Jimmy march off into the Green
Forest and he grinned just a little.
“Br’er Skunk never hurries, but
Ah reckons Ah’ll see him hurry
right smart if he meets up with
that stranger,” muttered Unc’ Billy.
Jimmy Skunk went on until he
came to the pond of paddy the Bea-
ver, which you know is deep in the
Green Forest. Jimmy was tired and
he sat down to rest. 1 It was very
still there. Paddy the Beaver was
nowhere to be seen. Neither was
the stranger. Jimmy grew sleepy.
He made up his mind that he would
take a nap before he looked any
further, and he started to find a nice
soft spot to curl up on when he
heard a heavy step behind him.
Jimmy whirled about and there just
coming out of the bushes was the
stranger of whom Sammy Jay and
Blacky the Crow and Unc’ Billy
Possum had told, and he was just
as big and just as black and had
just such great cruel .claws as they
had said.
“I don’t know who you are, but
I’m very glad to meet you,” said
Jimmy Skunk politely.
©T. W. Burgess.—WNU Service.
ers’ Association, he issued a temporary
restraining order enjoining three mem-
bers of the association and their em-
ployees from intimidating or using vio-
lence on pickets of Auto Maintenance
Local No. 1126, chartered by the Inter-
national Association of Machinists.
The union alleged in its cross-com-
plaint that, although a peaceful picket
line was being conducted, employees
and representatives of the three deal-
ers mentioned had used vile and pro-
I a
Air-Conditioned Examination
Rooms
HEADACHES?
If your eyes hurt—if you have
headaches—if you feel all
worn out, it is a good idea to
have your eyes examined.
SERVING GALVESTON
SINCE 1906
THE UNION REVIEW
By AFL News Service.
Washington, D. C.—Lewis G. Hines,
director of the new organization unit of
the American Federation of Labor, an-
nounced that new members are being en-
listed in the Federation at the rate of
75,000 a month.
With a staff of 325 hustling organizers
under him, Mr. Hines is reaching into
every section of the country in his drive
to bring new industries and plants under
the banner of the A. F. of L.
In his efforts to blanket the entire
country, he is arranging a series of re-
gional conferences in which the Fed-
eration organizers meet with the rep-
resentitves of local and State organiza-
tions for the purpose of coordinating and
extending their unionization acitvities.
The first of these regional conferences
were held at Boston and Detroit. The re-
sultant gains assured Mr. Hines of the
value of such meeting and he thereupon
summoned the third regional conference
of organizers from Ohio, Indiana and
Kentucky, which was held at the Metro-
pole Hotel in Cincinnati, Ohio, on Sep-
tember 11 and 12.
At this conference plans were laid for
the futherance of organization activities
in the mid-west. All of the 130 organ-
izers and labor organizations which were
represented pledged their cooperation in
a united campaign to increase their own
membership and invade new fields.
With roars of approval the conferees
unanimously adopted a resolution com-
mending William Green, President of the
American Federation of Labor, for his
courageous stand against the raiding ac-
tivities of the C. I. O. and pledging loy-
alty to him.
The next conference was held in At-
lanta, Ga., on September 18 and 19. It
was attended by 300 representatives from
nine Southern States. Reports to the
Conference indicated that the C. I. O. is
rapidly fading in the South and that
splendid progress is being made by the
American Federation of Labor in the
textile and manufacturing fields.
Mr. Hines announced planes for sum-
moning another regional conference in
Washington, D. C., on October 30, to
which representatives from Pennsylvania,
Maryland, New Jersey, Delaware, West
Viginia and Viginia will be invited.
■ 1
533888
kS
Shlimer
aend
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS
\ XT HEN at last Unc’ BiUy Pos-
V V sum got safely back to his hol-
low tree he knew, of course, that
Sammy Jay and Blacky the Crow
and Peter Rabbit were not crazy,
as he had so often said they were.
Anyway, if they were, why he must
be himself, for hadn’t he seen the
very stranger Sammy and Blacky
had told about? If Unc’ Billy
couldn’t believe what they said he
. , , fane language toward the pickets and
When the first noun has the sense in other ways had threatened them.
r l I
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20. >
282 %
Chinese dead sleep peacefully on-
ly in the land that gave them birth.
So Chinese fraternal societies in all
parts of the world band together to
return dead to their beloved native
land. In the shipment shown here
were 47 crates, each containing
eight metal urns in which were
the remains of Chinese who had
been interred temporarily in Los
Angeles.
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bed; pumpkin pie; stone wall; pa- . . ...
per box; stone fence; iron railing, signed a preliminary injunction sought
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felt sure he could believe his own
eyes. He just knew his own eyes
couldn’t fool him like that.
It made Unc’ Billy shiver every
time he thought of that stranger he
had seen deep in the Green Forest
by the pond of Paddy the Beaver.
He ■ was so big! And he had such
great crul-looking claws!
“Ah—Ah hope he can’t climb
trees!” said Unc’ Billy.
Now Unc’ Billy had spoken aloud,
for he didn’t know that anyone was
near. So he jumped almost out of
his skin when a voice said:
“Who is it you hope can’t climb
trees, Unc’ BiUy?”
Unc’ Billy looked down to find his
old friend Jimmy Skunk looking up
at him. He hesitated a few min-
utes. He knew that Jimmy thought
that Sammy Jay and Blacky the
Crow were crazy or else were tell-
ing untrue stories, and he didn’t
like to tell Jimmy what he had seen
himself. You see, he didn’t want
to be laughed at or thought crazy.
But he felt that he just had to tell
someone, and so finally he told Jim-
my Skunk all about it. Jimmy
T THINK I had as much belief
- As most men have who have no
care,
And yet the Christ was never
there
Until I was His kin in grief,
Until I had my cross to bear.
, Wi li-T33Nim)
X -gbje 936
phl./A —333
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I Jo
“geec
w. -
%%'
When the first noun has the sense
“having the shape or the character
or quality of”; as, brother officer;
fellow citizen; man servant; boy
bishop.
When the first noun has the sense
of - “pertaining to, suitable for, or
representing”; as, city officer; dis-
trict attorney; government em-
ployee; railroad supplies; insurance
officer; church furniture.
When the first noun has the sense
“characterized by”; as, diamond
E008
“ ggsssi
MB
Previously, there had been an attack
on pickets, on July 9, with pick han-
dles, wrenches and tire irons, in which
attack several of the pickets had been
injured.
Labor officials have pointed out that
quick and effective resort to legal pro-
tection afforded labor now might serve
as a deterrent to the indiscriminate
beating of pickets.
AU
U U 7
Full Bleached Sheets
Nice wide straight hems—
$1.00
9
qmums
rAnmue
III ll ll II 9
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1W >, TK. M l^lnu to..) CmeK
22
“Along with the breaks in life,”
says erudite Emily, “we must take
the bumps.”
8e“8292e8c8
C 22-6338
6
Last Journey of These Chinese Is a Long One
f (4/6
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The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, October 1, 1937, newspaper, October 1, 1937; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1416900/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.