The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 1950 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Labor Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rosenberg Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
FOUR
THE UNION REVIEW
GALVESTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8,1950
4*+*****±****+**±*********+++++++***+*+*+*++
CLOSED THURSDAYS 1 P. M.
LEGAL NOTICE
CITATION No. 75, 192
-¥
Choose Your
CITATION No. 74,173
BLANKETS and COMFORTS
i
From Galveston's Most
b i
Salveton QudicalC
GALVESTON’S LARGEST DEPARTMENT STORE
ordinarily consider
a boxful of dead
fleas as
very much of a gift.
Who. desnasd
88
Work Clothes
J
CITATION No. 76,022
UNION MADE ALL THE WAY
■
1
The Texas Health Department
was
•' J
the only health
agency in the nation
Eg
|
At Your
Favorite
Department Store
OF THE GALVESTON LABOR COUNCIL
Step
by step, they traced out the
Fill out and return to Labor Temple office:
process
What rent do you pay ?.
.How many rooms ?.
Has your rent been raised in past 4 years ? If so, how much ?.
Have any repairs been made and what kind ?.
(Signed)
•+***************************************
Prints Available
OPTOMETRIS TS
and OPT!CIA NS j
| AFL Radio Programs Every Tuesday
•I Night, 10:30-10:45, for Balance of Year
Complete Showing of
Nationally-Known Brands.
Were they done with skilled labor?__________
Please give street and number and sign name:
j
!
SEIZED AS SPY ... The FBI has
arrested Mrs. Ethel J. Rosenberg
as a member of an alleged Soviet
spy ring. She was identified as the
wife and sister of two other sus-
pects already in federal custody.
She is the first vzoman seized in
roundup of alleged spies.
Yes sir, they'll give you dura-
bility, good looks, solid comfort.
. . . And prices are reasonable.
Miller Bros, work clothes have
been favorites of men of the
Southwest for 75 years.
w
J
Gompers Stamps Amaze
Asiatics
+
❖
❖
❖
I
i
i
Washington.—The AFL’s new radio series, “As We See It,” was
' inaugurated July 5 over the American Broadcasting Company’s network
, and will be broadcast each Tuesday night for the rest of the year be-
[ tween 10:30 and 10:45 p.m., EDT.
1 The programs will consist of news commentary by James Crowley,
radio news analyst, and interviews with labor leaders and high-ranking
government leaders on topics of vital public interest.
In the opening program, Mr. Crowley plans to interview President
William Green of the American Federation of Labor and a prominent
U. S. Senator on the subject of labor legislation.
Time for these programs is made available to the American Federa-
tion of Labor by the American Broadcasting Company and its affiliated
stations as public service without charge.
To keep abreast of the big news and to keep informed on labor’s
• viewpoint and policies, every union member and citizens from all walks
I of life are urged to tune in to these programs regularly.
Make a date with your radio every Tuesday night to listen to “As
1 We See It” over your local ABC station.
Gerald G. Voelkel, President,
Nils Thompson, Recording Secy.,
I. C. Nelson, Financial Secretary,
H. T. Jett,
Wm. O. Sadler, Treasurer.
—*-------
USE OUR LAY AWAY PLAN OF PAYMENTS
IF YOU PREFER
‘With These Hands”
X e
4++*+**+**+*********************************+
I
TEXAS STATE DEPARTMENT OF
HEALTH, AUSTIN, TEXAS
Geo. W. Cox, M.D., State Health Officer
Austin, September 8—You wouldn’t
ver in Lavaca County in 1944-46.
HARD WEAR
it'*
New York.—Arrangements have been
made with Classic Pictures, Inc., New
York, for the handling of all distribu-
tion of “With These Hands,” film his-
tory of the AFL International Ladies
Garment Workers. This includes the
35 mm. and 16 mm. versions of the pic-
ture both for commercial engagements
in theaters and for showings by organi-
zations, institutions.
All inquiries are to be addressed to
Classic Pictures, Inc., 1560 Broadway,
New York 19, N. Y.
----*----
N
< \ «
Ka.
gj
eng
Ao’HE-MEN’
"ACE HIGH"
Decca, East Pakistan.AFL members
of the Asian mission of the Internation-
al Confederation of Free Trade Unions
amazed their trade union brothers here
by presenting them with a few copies
of the Samuel Gompers memorial 3-
cent stamp.
The stamps were distributed by Gor-
don W. Chapman, secretary-treasurer
AFL State, County and Municipal
Workers, and Richard L-G. Deverall,
AFL representative in Asia.
----*----
■
I
I
ch '
43 YEARS
OF SERVICE
On August 15, 1950, this Gal-
veston firm will reach its
44th year of service. Through
these years of service we
have gained valuable experi-
ence in all phases of eye-
sigh care and protection.
AUG. 15 MARKS OUR 44TH
YEAR OF BUSINESS IN
THE SAME LOCATION
RENT CONTROL OF THE LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE
The State of Texas to: Ellen Des
Lourier, Defendant, Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to ap-
pear before the Honorable District
Court of Galveston County, 10th Ju-
dicial District, at the Court House
thereof, in Galveston, Texas, at or be-
fore 10 o’clock A.M. of the first Mon-
day next after expiration of forty-two
days from the date of the issuance of
this citation, same being the 18th day
of September A. D., 1950, then and
there to answer Plaintiff’s Petition
filed in said Court, on the 3rd day of
August, A. D. 1950, in this cause, num-
bered 76,022, on the docket of said court
and styled Claude L. Des Laurier, Plain-
tiff, vs. Ellen Des Laurier, Defendant.
A brief statement of the nature of
this suit is as follows, to-wit:
A Suit for Divorce, as is more fully
shown by Plaintiff’s Petition on file
in this suit.
The officer executing this process
shall promptly execute the same ac-
cording to law, and make due return as
the law directs. If this citation is not
served within ninety days after date
of issuance, it shall be returned un-
served.
Issued and given under my hand and
seal of said court at Galveston, Texas,
this the 3rd day of August, A. D. 1950.
(SEAL)
ATTEST:
H. H. TREACCAR, Clerk,
District Court,
Galveston County, Texas.
By Claude F. Buick, Deputy.
A true copy, I certify,
F. L. BIAGGNE, Sheriff
of Galveston County.
By Mike Fitzsimmons,
Chief Deputy Sheriff.
--
MILITARY STATUS UNCERTAIN
. . . James Roosevelt, Democratic
candidate for California governor,
visited Washington to find out if
he is going on active duty in the
marines. If summoned he will
leave his campaign te supporters.
O’DWYER NAMED AMBASSA-
DOR . . . New York’s Mayor Wil-
liam O’Dwyer will resign his post
as mayor to accept the U.S. am-
bassadorship to Mexico. He suc-
ceeds Ambassador Walter Thurs-
ton, career diplomat, who will get
new diplomatic post.
3
❖
I
❖
❖
❖
❖
❖
❖
*
❖
3
3
❖
i
I
$
+
❖
❖
❖
3
FUNNIEST FACE . . . Nancy Hunt,
9, Cedar Rapids, la., was adjudged
possessor of the “funniest face” at
the Chicago fair. Her flair for
funny faces has involved her in
trouble with teachers, but this time
it won her a big box of candy.
But entomological workers—special-
ists who study insects which spread
disease—at the Texas State Depart-
ment of Health, recently were “thrilled”
by a gift of Pacific Northwest fleas
from Dr. C. Andersen Hubbard, for-
merly head of the Biology Department
at Pacific University in Oregon. He
has made similar gifts, collected during
a lifetime of studying disease spread-
ers, to 20 of the world’s outstanding
institutions in biological sciences.
State Health Officer .Geo. W. Cox,
acknowledging the gift, said it was
something of a compliment” to be
classed as a leader in biological studies
along with the British Museum, Cana-
da’s National Museum, Brazil’s Escola
Nacional de Agrimonia, the Parasitolo-
gical Labortaory in Sevastopol, Russia,
Pakistan’s Malaria Institute, the Amer-
ican Museum of Natural History in
New York, and “many others of equal
prominence.”
Il
is
6
F l
■ .b
A
I d
Wp h
by which rodent fleas spread typhus
from rat to human beings.
In 1949, they finished a study which
showed bubonic plague—the black
death of the middle ages—was infect-
ing wild rodents in four South Plains
counties in West Texas.
“Our entomologists are disease de-
tectives,” Dr. Cox says. “The gift from
Dr. Hubbard will help them run down
insect culprits.”
To All Advertisers
To protect the public from impostors
soliciting donations for space in bogus
labor publications, year books, time
books and various schemes allegedly
for the benefit of organized labor, the
Texas Labor Press Association was
organized nine years ago by heads of
the various journals and newspapers
recognized as representative of the
labor movement in Texas.
Those bona-fide labor publications
are:
Dallas Craftsman. Dallas, in its 40th
year of continuous publication in Dal-
las.
Weekly Dispatch, San Antonio, 61st
year.
Southwestern Railway Journal, Fort
Worth, 43rd year.
Farm and Labor Journal, Waco, 41st
year.
Labor Advocate, El Paso, 41st year.
Southwestern Bricklayer, El Paso,
38 th year.
Union Review, Galveston, 30th year.
Labor Messenger, Houston, 26th
year.
Labor News, Fort Worth, 34th year.
These publications are responsible
Their editors stand high in the coun.
cils of bona-fide labor.
WM. B. ARNOLD,
President.
C. W. ROGERS,
Secretary-Treasurer. T
I Buy War Bonds!
’--TODAY—J
-For Future Needs-
rA >
E_. c.
P / C
r W‘
® s'
P MW
r
i
_ I
I J
RJ
LEGAL NOTICE
n
•I -
Mc *98858
"y
0
328888888888882880043 38
H
t
-
le
T
MMn —_
V.
ms—
—al
8% S
Apen
Jr. -7
1-, P
1 -
t"g
I O S
DR. S. H. FRIDNER
DR. C. C. MARLOW, JR.
OPTOMETRISTS
2224 Postoffice St. Dial 2-3021
Trust Bldg.
! --f State of Texas to Lonnie Clyde
Brigance, Defendant, Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to ap-
pear before the Honrable District Court
of Galveston County, 10th Judicial Dis-
trict, at the Court House thereof, in
Galveston, Texas, at or before 10 o’clock
A. M. of the first Monday next after ex-
piration of forty-two days from the
date of the issuance of this citation,
same being the 18th day of September
A. D. 1950, then and there to answer
Plaintiff’s First Amended Original Pe-
tition filed in said Court, on the 2nd day
of August, A. D. 1950, in this cause num-
bered 75,192 on the docket of said court
and styled Mae Brigance, Plaintiff, vs.
Lonnie Clyde Brigance, Defendant.
A brief statement of the nature of
this suit is as follows, to-wit:
A suit for Divorce, as is more fully
shown by Plaintiff’s First Amended
Original Petition on file in this suit.
The officer executing this process
shall promptly execute the same ac-
cording to law, and make due return
as the law directs. If this citation is
not served within ninety days after
date of issuance, it shall be returned
unserved.
Issued and given under my hand and
seal of said court at Galveston, Texas,
this the 2nd day of August, A.D. 1950.
(SEAL)
ATTEST:
H. H. TREACCAR, Clerk,
District Court,
Galveston County, Texas.
By Claude F. Buick, Deputy.
A true copy, I certify,
F. L. BIAGGNE, Sheriff
of Galveston County.
By Mike Fitzsimmons,
Chief Deputy Sheriff.
---★---
I T-g 1
W
L i
vn
—
xTx,)
to benefit from the presentation. Its
disease vector collection is reputedly
one of the finest in the world. Dr. Cox
says the entire assortment, including
ticks and mites as well as fleas, is open
to study by graduate and advanced un-
dergraduate students in Texas colleges V
and universities.
Departmental entomological studies
are described by Dr. Cox as a “deter-
mination of the specific types of in-
sects of medical importance in the
state, their distribution, seasonal abun-
dance, and how they can best be con-
trolled.”
Department entomologists conducted
a two-year investigation of typhus fe-
The State of Texas to John T. Sykes,
Cross-Defendant, Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to ap-
pear before the Honorable District
of Galveston County, 56th Judicial Dis-
trict, at the Court House thereof, in
Galveston, Texas, at or before 10
o’clock A. M. of the first Monday next
after expiration of forty-two days from
the date of the issuance of this cita-
tion, same being the 16th day of Oc-
tober, A. D. 1950, then and there to
answer Defendant’s, Rogers Transfer
and Storage Company, Inc., Amended
Answer and Bill of Interpleader filed in
said Court, on the 23rd day of August,
A. D. 1950, in this cause, numbered
74,173 on the docket of said court and
styled William Knorbin, Plaintiff, vs.
Rogers Transfer and Storage Company,
Inc., defendant, Wherein Defendant,
Rogers Transfer and Storage Company,
Inc., files its First Amended Original
Answer and Bill of Interpleader against
William Knorbin, Plaintiff, and John
J. Sykes, Cross-Defendant. A brief state-
ment of the nature of this suit is as
follows, to-wit: That on or about June
6th, 1949, defendant received from the
cross-defendant, John J. Sykes, for
storage in its warehouse at Galveston,
Galveston County, Texas, the following
items of personal property, to-wit: Meat
Block; Showcase—used; Commercial
Sink — used; Electric Refrigerator,
Commercial—used; Electric Refrigera-
tor, Commercial—used; and on or about
June 28th, 1949, the defendant received
from the cross-defendant, for storage
in its warehouse in Galveston, Galves-
ton County, Texas, the following items
of personal property, to-wit: Wicker
Bottom Chairs (71 chairs); 2 High
Chairs; Straight Chair; Coffee Urn;
Small Table; 3 Dish Washing Racks;
Small Gas Hot Plate; Water Cooler.
Defendant issued on each of said
dates its non-negotiable warehouse re-
ceipt, for said items of personal prop-
erty. That cross-defendant, John J.
Sykes, has not surrendered the receipts
issued to him for such items of per-
sonalty, and has not authorized this de-
fendant, either in writing or otherwise
to release the same to anay other per-
son or persons.
Said items have a reasonable value
of $2,200.00 or thereabouts, and there
has accrued as charges for drayage, and
tax, etc., the added sum of $248.54, to
and including August, 1950. And there
will accrue storage charges at the rate
of $12.75 per month so long as such
items are held subject to the orders of
this Court.
Wherefore, defendant prays that
plainitiff and cross-defendant, and each
of them be cited to appear and answer
this petition in intervention, and that
they be required to interplead in this
cause, and upon hearing hereof defend-
ant have judgment dismissing it from
all liability under the warehouse re-
ceipts issued to cross-defendant, Sykes
above mentioned and described, and
that such receipts be surrendered and
cancelled, and if not surrendered that
the same be held for naught by the
judgment of this court, and considered
cancelled for all practical purposes,
and that the rights of plaintiff and
cross-defendant in the goods described
be determined and delivered to the
party or parties entitled thereto, sub-
ject to the lien for charges due to this
defendant, that defendant have judg-
ment against the proper party for all
charges accrued for storage, etc., for
foreclosure of its lien and that there be
allowed a reasonable attorney fee to the
attorney representing defendant here-
in and that the same be taxed as a lien
and charge against the property in-
volved herein and paid out of the pro-
ceeds of any sale of said property or-
dered by the court to satisfy the lien of
this defendant, and that it be allowed all
of its costs in this behalf expended and
that same also be paid out of any pro-
ceeds from the sale of such goods if
ordered to be sold, or by either cross-
defendant or plaintiff as this court
should decree or adjudge; and for all
such other relief, general or special at
law or in equity, which it may show it-
self entitled, as is more fully shown by
defendant, Rogers Transfer and Stor-
age Company, Inc., First Amended
Original Answer and Bill of Interplead-
er.
The officer executing this process
shall promptly execute the same ac-
cording to law, and make due return as
the law directs. If this citation is not
served within. ninety days after date
of issuance, it shall be returned un-
served.
(SEAL) Issued and given under my
hand and seal of said court at Galves-
ton, Texas, this the 1st day of Septem-
ber, A.D. 1950.
ATTEST:
H. H. TREACCAR,
Clerk District Court,
Galveston County, Texas.
By Alice Amundson, Deputy.
A True Copy, I Certify:
F. L. BIAGGNE, Sheriff of
Galveston County.
By Mike Fitzsimmons, Chief
Deputy Sheriff.
------#-------
W
1 * I
Il j
sg
9
ft l
H.l Ik®
SOAP BOX WINNER . Harold
David “Butch” Williamson, Char-
leston, W Va., 'vinner of the an-
nual all-American soap box derby
at Akron, Ohio, cuddles up to his
trophy His time was 27 50 seconds.
He gets $5,000 scholarship.
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. 31, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 1950, newspaper, September 8, 1950; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1441480/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.