The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1931 Page: 4 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 23 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1931.
FOUR
SHCHECHEEECHCHEGEEHHGHSESGHSHSESHGHGHGEHHGAGHCEHGHGAGHEECHGEGAHCEEEGHAEEAGAHEEEHHIEHHHNHA
00o0000-00000000-00-0-0-0-000-000000000000000000°00°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°
wvti:
9
I
DOUBLED--
■
.1
8 GALVESTON STORES
HOME OWNED
2.
OWNED BY PIGGLY WIGGLY
8
EVANS COMPANY
A GALVESTON INSTITUTION
8
C. P. EVANS-President-Galveston, Texas
FAY EVANS-Secretary
< (
EDWIN W. PIETSCH-Treasurer
0
9
csan
/ 8898
8 ■
1
2206 AVE. D 4
PHONE 266
7
e
MeNHISIOHCMGBCAHCRCHGAEHGESIGHOHOMGIHSHGIS-CHDLGHCHCNCHCHGHGHOHCHCHCHOHCHCHGHCHSHCHOHHCHHHCHGHHNO
C
11
PEOPLES SHOE STORE
Phone 99
2321 Market Street
1
executed the
same.
A .
Thompson
caeeauunacadadadsdsan-ssseeeHc-euunuucee-CHG-CHHC-GHGHEHHHCHHGHSHHHHDHOHWHGEHCHHPFHFG
& 33 : ■
$333 3;, ■'
h
See PIERSON'S for Union
Made Merchandise before Buying
elsewhere.
8
%
V
Attest:
Change of Address
GANSTER MAIL
\
t
X
O
8.8
88
S
1
RS
4
A%
/)
O
7
buildings in Modesto and Sacramento,
ICalif., under union labor conditions,
according to a statement by F. C. Mc-
Donald, general president of the State
Building Trades Council.
In addition to employing union la-
bor the company agrees that the con-
tractor shall use local subcontractors
and material men whenever it is prac-
ticable.
"He spent his health to get his wealth..
And then with might and main
He turned around and spent his wealth
To get his health again.”
FOR SUMMER DAY MEALS
Galveston, Texas, this 1st day of June,
1931.
The Department Store With a
Personality
. — ..................—a ■
GEO. F. BURGESS,
Clerk County Court,
Galveston County.
■ --
FREE TEXTBOOKS DENIED
NIGHT SCHOOL STUDENTS
sMrTHPI-:
g333333
/ /
f -
8
---o----
CHAIN STORE ADOPTS
UNION LABOR POLICY
THE STORE THAT UNDERSELLS THEM ALL
SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
11
,938
f
E
i
"I
■
<< RA L M EC.
/70
---
FURUSETH SAYS UNIONS
ARE LABOR’S STRENGTH
PIERSON’S UNION STORE
2317-2319 Market. Phone 851
BIG BASE STEALER
A. -
Mot
L-...
V
<>
Witness my
E
cemaecdcodeGAEHaEGHGLEMSACHCHECHCACICHCHGHCHCLCHGHGICMCHGOINCSCHGMDE-NDCHSAEAMHSHNGHMOICHCHAH
Strawberry Fluff.
Put one egg white, one cupful of
powdered sugar and a cupful of straw-
berries into a deep bowl. Whip with
a dover beater until the mixture will
keep its shape. It will take about 20
minutes. .With an electric beater, this
is simple. Serve in sherbet cups with
a custard sauce.
When wearing our glasses
you’ll have double satisfac-
tion — confidence in your
better vision and pleasure
in the smart appearance
of your glasses.
THE STORE WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE
EHONCHCHOHCH"HEERHGHCHGHHHCHOHGSHECHHCHHHHCHGHRBHHHHHHIHGHGICBGBHGHBHHRHHGENHHHB
| ELITE CAFE
| QUALITY, QUANTITY AND SERVICE !
S c
They’re Trying to Convert America to Buddhism
*°
sea
official signature at
G V 3
2_—(
Eggs in Peppers.
Cut a thin slice from the stem end of
peppers and take out the seeds. Drop
an egg into each and bake until the
eggs are set. Serve well seasoned
with butter, salt and pepper, on but-
tered toast.
For a quick luncheon on a hot day
beat the yolk of an egg, add a glass
of orange juice and serve very cold.
lightened one. My devotion is to the
norm of Buddha, the task of emanci-
pation from selfishness. I am with
Buddha now. I am a member of his
f
a
gzoeeEdha
465)
/ it *
• 33
holy family.” Thus she abandoned
her country, her relatives and even
her name. Henceforth she is known
as Un-Kan, which means “Cloud in the
Valley.”
“I expect to sail for Japan before
the year is out,” she said. “I don't
know yet how my fourteen-year-old
son, Robert, is to be cared for in my
absence. I am expecting they will
make him a chela to serve on the altar i
of the temple in San Francisco.”
(tv
vali/estertiQ&aIG))
,-m‘erSTEAETZ898V22NEC2-K2020%
I Dr. S.H. Fridnen. Optometrist, Manager
! Ground Floor Trust Bldg. 2224 Fbstoffice Street
San Francisco, Calif.—The S. H.
Kress and Company, operator of a
chain of five, ten and twenty-five cent
stores, will erect their new store
By J. R. Platte, Deputy Clerk.
A true copy I certify:
R. E. KIRK,
Sheriff Galveston County.
By C. J. Allen, Deputy Sheriff.
■-----------------o------------------
RAILROAD LABOR OPPOSES
WAGE CUTS; OUTPUT ON
THE JUMP; 471,000 LESS MEN
RANDOLPH PIERSON,
. Justi e of the Peace, Precinct No. 1,
Court B, Galveston County, Texas.
Issued this 1st day of June, 1931.
RANDOLPH PIERSON,
Justice of the Peace, Precinct No. 1,
Court B, G lveston County, Texas.
A true copy 1 c rtify:
R. E. KIRK,
Sheriff of Galveston County.
B - C. J. Allen, Deputy Sheriff.
---
k t
r 1
388
■ C
S. 3
33:333: 3
’ 3:
l ■ :$
L •:
Every time Ben Chapman, outfielder
of the New York Yankees, catches
sight of a base he has an uncontrol-
able desire to steal it; and he knows
just how that feat should be per-
formed. Consequently he has been
leading all players in both the Amer-
ican and National leagues in the num-
ber of purloined bases.
------O------
PHE old-fashioned dish which has
A been called various names, comes
down to us as the
Squaw Dish.
Cook together small new potatoes,
new onions, carrots and peas, adding
each in time so that they will all be
tender at once. Add one-half cupful
of diced browned salt pork cut into
small cubes with the fat, a pint of
milk and pepper and salt if needed.
Serve in vegetable dishes.
$5-
V ''i
% . 8
1
I
I
i
Cleveland, Ohio.—“The railroad or-
ganizations are ready to assist, and
have so declared themselves, in every
way possible to fight all forms of un-
fair competition with which ithe rail-
roads are confronted, such as the
busses and trucks which, free from
government regulation, ‘hog’ the high-
ways, the government-subsidized in-
land waterways and the pipe lines,”
asserts Carl Rudolph, editor of the Lo-
comotive Engineers’ Journal, the of-
ficial organ of the Brotherhood of Lo-
comotive Engineers, in discussing a
possible drive for wage cuts by rail-
and the rat drags him off. Steel traps
nailed to the bottom of the water and
operating dictaphones that imitate a
snore are very effective in reducing
this pest.
This one trying to decide whether
this oyster is awake or not, has a pa-
per-shell pecan body and a filbert head
with ink-spot eyes attached. The ears
are half peanut shells, and the legs are
cloves. A cast iron toothpick makes
a serviceable tail.
(© Metropolitan Newspaper Service.)
(WNU Service.)
------O------
Dixie Tie-About Liked
by Majority of Women
Jr -
§ h 8
8
33333383:3333:
F 3333 3:
■ 1
p UDDHISM has gained a good many
• converts in the United States, es-
pecially in Boston and vicinity, and
now it appears that determined mis-
sionary effort is on foot to win mem-
bers to the religion throughout the
country. Yekun Furukawa, head of
the Rinzai sect of Buddhists, has come
from Japan to give five years to the
work in America. He has served as
a priest for forty years. Yukun is
shown in the center of the illustra-
tion.
Above is seen the consecration, in
San Francisco, of Margaret Ledson,
the first and perhaps the only white
girl in this country to become a Bud-
dhist nun. While a monk, Nyogen Sen-
zaki, held a razor that signified her
head must be shaved, Margaret repeat-
ed the w ords:
“My devotion is to Budda, the en-
“2"
-.8
w
233338832588:333:
T HAS been found that dahlias keep
I best when they have opened in cool
and cloudy weather. They do not
last well if the weather has been very
dry, even though it has been possible
to apply water artificially. Flowers
to be used for decoration, either in
the house or at a show, should be cut
early in the morning, and immediately
put into cold water, after which they
should go into a cool, dark room for
a few hours before they are taken into
i the living rooms or shipped to the
gs
Deaca
8 • m
8888888 8333 338888989 $ 8 882 8 1
888882823 39888
Il 0
"\e- lum
' A
RBook
_i
0'
(—-TA
— — g
A LIHOUGH nearly exterminated
-- by the oyster farmers, this crea-
ture continues to make noctural raids
on the oyster beds, especially during
the “R” months when prices are high.
Crawling out from their shore nests
along the muddy bottom of the bay,
they will come up on a bed full of
sleeping oysters. Finding one that is
snoring loudly, the rat will insert his
tail in the oyster’s open mouth, where-
upon the oyster clamps down tightly
CITATION No. 38156.
The State of Texas to the Sheriff or
any Constable of Galveston County,
Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to sum-
mon E. M. Harvey by making publi-
cation of this citation once in each
week for four consecutive weeks pre-
vious to the return day hereof, in some
newspaper published therein, but if
not, then in the nearest county
where a newspaper is published, to ap-
peal- at the next regular term of the
Justice Court of Galveston County,
Texas, Precinct No. 1, Court “B”, to
be holden at the courthouse thereol
in Galveston, on the first Monday in
July, 1931, the same being the 6th day
of July, 1931, then and there to an-
swer a petition filed in said court on
the 1st day of June, 1931, in a suit,
numbered on the docket of said court
No. 38156, wherein Evelyn Lindsay is
plaintiff, and E. M. Harvey is defend-
ant, said petition alleging that he is
indebted to her in the sum of $75.00,
being the principal sum and secured
by a lien on one Whippet roadster,
engine No. 98-A76756, license No.
D9-3804, of the value of $75.00, and
plaintiff prays 'for a foreclosure of her
lien.
Herein fail not, but have you before
said court on the said 6th day of the
next term thereof, this writ, with your
return thereon, showing how you have
dke •
railroads had .1,805,000 employes and
their operating expenses were $829,-
000,000. In the first two months of
1931 they had only 1,334,000 employes
(a reduction of 471,000) and their op-
erating expenses were $566)000,000. It
is very evident that reduced payrolls
made up by far the greater part of this
saving in operating expense.”
Mr. Rudolph also points out that
during the last ten years the railroad
men have gradually increased their ef-
ficiency measured by the amount of
work done. Expressed in tons of
freight moved per mile per day, the
railroad men are moving a ton 822
miles a day compared with 606 miles
ten years ago.
“This increased efficiency on the
part of the railroad employes,” Mr.
Rudolph declares, “is still maintained
and is continually enhanced.”
----O--
WORK RELIEF SCHEMES
GIVE JOBS TO THOUSANDS
No. 8300
The State of Texas to the Sheriff
or any Constable of Galveston County,
Greetings:
Joseph Levy, administrator of the
estate of Benjamin Knowles, de-
ceased, having filed in our County
Court his final account of the admin-
istration of the estate of said Benja-
min Knowles, deceased, together with
an application to be discharged from
said administration.
You are hereby commanded, that (by
publication of this writ for 'twenty
days in a newspaper regularly pub-
lished in the County of Galveston, you
give due notice to all persons inter-
ested in the administration of said
estate, to file their objections thereto,
if any they have, on or before the 29th
day of June, A. D., 1931, at the next
regular term of said County Court,
commencing and to ibe holden at the
court house of said county, in the City
of Galveston, on the third Monday in
June, A. D., 1931, when said account
and application will be considered by
said court.
’Witness: 'Geo. F. Burgess, Clerk of
the County (Court of Galveston 'County.
(Seal) Given under my hand and
seal of said Court, at my office in the
City of Galveston, this 27th day of
May, A. D., 1931.
THE UNION REVIEW
2
s 7
J
SB
road executives for railroad employes.
“But when it comes to a reduction of
wages in order to continue dividends,
no union labor man can go along. For
railroad' men have already taken a
very drastic cut in wages. The men in
engine and train service only work
when there is work to do. They work
on a mlieage basis at so much per
mile. The fewer trains the railroads
handle ithe less revenue they get; the
fewer miles the engine and train crews
make the less pay they get. In other
words, these men work on a piece
work basis at so much per mile.
“In the first two months of 1921 the
Codfish a la Mode.
Flake one cupful of codfish that has
been soaked in cold water. Mix the
fish with two cupfuls of mashed pota-
toes, two cupfuls of rich milk and add
two well-beaten eggs. Season well and
pile into a well-greased baking dish.
Bake 25 minutes. To brown, brush
with melted butter the last five min-
utes of baking. Serve hot from the
baking dish.
Cook a fried egg in a greased frying
pan, adding a tablespoonful of water;
cover and steam in the pan.
—ds
-
Tongue and Spinach Salad.
Mix two cupfuls of cooked spinach
with one cupful of diced cold boiled
tongue, one-half cupful of diced celery, . — 2
salt and cayenne to taste. Place in showrooms. The plan of dipping the
small molds, mixing with enough stems into very, hot water is a 800d
boiled dressing to moisten. Unmold ! Piek-me-up but dowers that have been
and serve when chilled with a spoonrul ( revived in this manner will not last
of mayonnaise dressing on each. , through a long S oW. e
<©1931. Western Newspaver Union.) 1 (Copyright.) WNU Service.
Washington.—The legal adviser of
the government of the District of Co-
lumbia has decided that night school
students can not have free textbooks
because night schools are not specifi-
cally mentioned in the free textbook
law recently enacted by ICongress. The
law was urged for many years by the
trade union movement of Washing-
ton. Labor leaders believed the phrase-
ology was comprehensive enough to
includ all schools whether night or
day.
0
-e"" as,
1’ ■
w
The idea for this . popular wra
around apron-frock came from Geor
gia, and has been spreading rapidly
around the country. It is simple to
make, and its edges are all bound with
bias tape. The ties at the waist make
over-the-head maneuvers unnecessary.
There is a certain flavor of style in
the molded lines and subtly full skirt.
All the materials can be bought for
less than a dollar.—Woman’s Home
Companion.
San Francisco.—The labor move-
ment is about to enter the most stren-
uous period in its history, Andrew
Furuseth, president of the Internation-
al Seamen’s Union of America, told
the San Francisco Labor Council. He
claimed that big business is in control
of the country and the only thing its
leaders can think of or understand is
to follow in the footsteps of the old
capitalistic master. In his opinion
"rationalization is eating up and de-
stroying our civilization.”
Mr. Furuseth expressed his faith in
trade unionism as the protector of the
workers in these times of stress. Labor
will have to fight for the preservation
of the conditions it has established
throughout the years, he said. It will
find a way through the wilderness and
make a reality of the principle that
all men are equal and entitled to equal
opportunity.
...
-
-
en
1- L
g
39 L
- A gu i g ,
!' a “ 2
_ W 1 A
M.Iu
I MPh-
tCogsrizht, w N U I
\ABy,:
9(/ - .
9 /<'
e 1 '
n
Nutty NATURAL f
History f
4 BY HUGH HUTTON ♦ g
THE PINK-WHISKERED
OYSTER-RAT
M6OIN0TO ASK UNCLE SAM FOR
A KVBBER STAMP OF "LEAVEN WORTH
" KANSAS’* T WOLD SAVE ME A
LOT OF T FORWA RD I NO THI S
London, Eng.—The Unemployment
Grants Committee states that on April
24, the latest date for which figures
are availagle, there were approximate-
ly 59,000 men directly employed on
schemes of work presented by local
authorities and approved for grant on
the recommendation of the committee,
or on schemes specially provided to
provide work in necessitous areas dur-
ing last winter.
The estimated cost of schemes re-
cently approved is over $17,000,000 to
provide employment for about 7,500
men.
Under the unemploment grants
plan the British Government advances
to local authorities a portion of the
money required to construct public
works.
.=A(I
APT
/ 68n 1
2
35*2:3332855 2
W
bv88*}
b wwBRr '
Le
"hm
I
I
l
I
“2
--s
/ h
( -A
I _ i
id
w .>-
#2e ' 308 §g.3 : 98
—ugvgyegugcgezy-uc- ---3
Old Gardener
Says:—
C ( ((
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1931, newspaper, July 24, 1931; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1426383/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.