The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, November 9, 1951 Page: 3 of 4
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International
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Phone RIverside 1066
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DON’T
A
BUY YOUR
k
POLL TAX
To All Advertisers
We Always say
George did do it in ’50!
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TRUMAN TO RUN, TOBI SAYS
2172
Buy...
A. F. OF L MEMBERS
ADAM HATS
THIS MEANS
MEMBER
1
AUTHORIZED
DOUGH TO YOU!
“Meet Yow Friends When Yow Friends Meet"
1
THE CLUB ROOM
6
N
TELEVISION FOR YOUR PLEASURE
£eme
Yomy Street
Labor Temple
O
Pains, distress of “those days" stopped
Dollars.
OR
Print Name
‘Be A Good Union Member
Print Addna*
to
By Being A Voting Citizen
Kame
Phone
City
Street Address
Buy Your & Your Wife’s
I
=
POLL TAX TODAY
*
I
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I
1
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4
—
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EE
)
George passed some of Texas worst an-
ti-working people laws.
He also made sure that the Special In-
terests did not have to pay more taxes
while the working class pay til it hurts.
The Georges made sure the cost of liv-
ing would go up. They made no atempt
to protect the working people.
Wm. J. Harris
Resigns From Wage
Stabilization Board
S
On
mps‘
1618 Main St
DALLAS
UNION
MADE
Let sf Make Sure George
Doesn’t Do It In 1952!
Dollars.
....Donars Monthly.
or amazingly relieved
in 3 of cases
in doctors* tests I
WITH 10-BLADE
GILLETTE DISPENSER
ed, reads
: account
ion mem-
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V
Printing Pressman
Organizer Assigned
To Dallas Area
ee colors
the slave
rhe book
‘s Russia
n, is free
di slaves
ms titled
lave Life
i by Es-
in Soviet
Against
Paid herewith...
Balance payable.
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NLRB Ends
Union Polls
Nowadays the ordinary man has
to do a lot of high thinking just to
get a plain living.
Don’t expect too much from the
man who talks about what he did In-
stead of what he's doing.
wf
3
a t
th
ca
of
Asheville Printing
Pressmen Win
market price.
Paid in full herewith
ly in the
lildren.
booklet,
is,” pub-
onfedera-
is now
gle copy,
orders.
be sent
U public
W 40th
telephone
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STOCK APPLICATION
TO JACK CAGE & COMPANY
8336 Richmond Street, Dallas 14, Texas
Asheville, N. C.—Asheville Printing
Pressmen and Assistants Union, Local
No. 202, received an overwhelming
majority vote among the employes of
the Asheville Citizen Times, a daily
newspaper, when the National Labor
Relations Board conducted an election
among the pressroom employes on
Oct. 9
COLD BEER ... SOFT DRINKS ... SANDWICHES
Noonday Ludchee Ow Specialty
The greatest economic security a
working man can have is the union
label on all bis purchais.
Mambw
redenat DepoSIT rwa coar.
t
t
t
1:
1
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t
n
t
Labor in Texas has purchased the controlling interest in The Insurance Company
of Texas and you as a member are entitled to purchase stock and become a
share holding partner in this rapidly growing company, which in its first six
months of A. F. of L. ownership has doubled it* copitalization. Fill out the appli-
cation below or the section requesting additional information.
DO IT RIGHT NOW . . . REMEMBER THIS MEANS DOUGH TO YOUI
ESOFTNE
SEA-HORSES
ARE
INCUBATED
BYTEMALE
PARENTS!
6
4
les
52
usually
Sie’S
tissues,
it prove a
aranteed.
News of The
Printing Industry
From the Secretary ot the Dallas
Typographical Unlon
EASE THE STRAIN ON TOUR EYES
Bring Your Bye Physlelaw’s Presertptlons to U* tor M
QUALITY GLASSES
THOMAS OPTICAL COMPANY
Paeine Ave, Ground Fleer Medleal Arta Banding
Z/P ,~,sss>r“
Gillette
a&SUPER-SPEED
A83882, OME-PIECE
pm-Seeyrum RAZOR
had assigned
Brother J. A. Cheneval to the Dallas
<5
‘ING!
a
He awr
• at said price at WOO per share. I agree
“Suffered 7 years
-then I found Pazo
brings amazing relief!”
says Mr. M. W.t Loa An galea, CeliL
Speed amazing relief from miseries of
simple piles, with soothing Pazo*! Acts
to relieve pain, itching instantly—soothes
inflamed tissues—lubricates dry, hard-
ened parts— helps prevent cracking, sore-
ness—reduce swelling. You get real com-
forting help. Don't suffer needless torture
from ample piles. Get Pazo for fast, won-
derful relief. Ask your doctor about it.
Suppository form —also tubes with per-
forated pile pipe for easy application.
• "PazoOinimentanduppositoric®
ASTHMA
Don't let coughing, wheezing, recurring at-
tacks of Bronchial Asthma ruin sleep and
energy without trying MENDACO, which
works thru the blood to reach bronchial
tubes and lungs. Usually helps nature quickly
remove thick, sticky mucus. Thus alleviates
coughing and aids freer breathing and better
sleep. Get MENDACO from drugist. Satis-
faction or money back guaranteed.
the nervousness and tension,
weakness, irritability — and
pain—no often associated with
'those days"!
Remember Lydia Pinkham's,
too — if you're suffering the
"hot flashes" and other func-
tionally-caused distress of
"change of life.”
Get Lydia Pinkham's Com-
pound or new, improved Tab-
lets with added iron (trial size
only 590. Start taking Lydia
Pinkham's today!
“Let George Do It”
1
K i
January first is the deadline on automobile liability insurance. Make sure your
agent place* your coverage with your own company.
Area on a permanent basis for special
organization work.
Brother Cheneval announced that
plans called for immediate action in
organizing the Printing Pressmen in
the Dallas area. He also stated that
he would sincerely appreciate any help
that other unions could give.
Printing Pressmen's Local Union
No. 46 announced Monday that the
You are hereby requested to enter my order for
THE INSURANCE COMPANY OF TEXAS, at the pri
of your agreement to make Mid stock available to ma
to accept the same upon delivery to me.
k -23
C a 42
,k.. T..
94e
Backache
For quick comforting help for Backache,
Rheumatic Pains, Oetting Up Nights, strong
cloudy urine, irritating passages. Leg Pains,
circles under eyes, and swollen ankles, due
to non-organic and iion-system!c Kidney and
Bladder troubles, try Cystex, Quick, complete
satisfaction or money back guarauteed. Ask
your druggist for Cystox today.
Washington. D. C. (ILNS)—Daniel
J. Tobin, president of the Internation-
al Brotherhood of Teamsters, said in
the union's monthly magazine that
President Truman would oppose Sen.
Robert A. Taft of Ohio in next year's
presidential election and that Truman
"has a good chance to win."
i । — ;—
qTme
f2---
PERSONAL LOANS
Personal Iqans, business loans,
automobile loans, collateral
loan,—ye*, there'* a Chy State
Bank loan to fit any need.
Reasonable rates, prompt
service, convenient payment*.
CITY STATE BANK
of DALLAS
I—-h paLas momais UM US*
commence STREET at Hutner
Seek $18,000
Troy, N. y.—Local 533 of the AFL
Hotel and Restaurant Workers Untom
seeks $18,000 compensation for wages,
tips and meals which it charges the
Troy Restaurant Assoctation withheld
from members during a 1443 lockout
Action to recover that amount wna
brought before the New York State
Labor Board in a case charging the
Troy Restaurant Association with un-
fair labor practices. The case is be-
lieved to be the first of its kind in the
country.
THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
Signature
NOTCE: Mak. ehecks payebletMereamfileNartionel SmA. Pinery Agent.
INFORMATION COUPON
I am snterested to stoek am the Company I am a *—Ser *t;,...... — • —
Pledse vend me Aurther anformation or have a Company repreventative can on ma.
I am a membet ot .............................. '.............. Local1 Undon
No. , and a resident at...........*...................... Texas, and • citizen of
Washington.- The era of the gov-
ernment-conducted union shop elec-
tion is dead. •
President Truman signed the
amendment to the Tft-Hartley law
permitting employers and unions to
negotiate a union shop agreement
without the union firct winning ap-
proval of 51 per cent of the workers
employed in the bargaining unit
The National Labor Relations Board
promptly dropped all petitions and
cases involving union authorization
polls. It is now working on a re-
vision of rules to eliminate all regu-
lations pertaining to the union shop
election requirements.
Despite the amendment, unions are
still required to file noncommunist
affidavits of their officers and finan-
cial statements before they can sign
a union shop contract Employers
don’t have to file anything with the
government.
In signing the bill, President Tru-
man said:
“Although E. 1959 eliminates only
one of the act's defects, it neverthe-
less constitutes recognition by the
Congress of the necessity to move in
the direction of a new statutory
framework—-one which will enable
both managernent and labor to con-
duct their aftairs without arbitrary
government intervention in the col-
lective bargaining process.”
In four years of union shop elec-
tions, unions won 97 per cent of the
more than 48,000 elections, which cost
U. S. taxpayers more than 13 million.
To protect the public from im-
posters soliciting donations for
space in bogus labor publications,
year books, time books and various
schemes allegedly for the benefit
of organised labor, the Texas La-
bor Press Association was organ-
ized 12 years ago by heads of
the various journals and news-
papers recognized as representa-
tive of the Labor movement in
Texas.
Those bona fide Labor publica-
tions are:
Dallas Craftsman, Dallas, in its
37th year of continuous publica-
tion in Dallas.
Weekly Dispatch, San Antonio,
63rd year.
Southwestern Railway Journal,
Fort Worth, 43rd year.
Farm and Labor Journal, Waco.
41st year.
Labor Advocate, El Paso, 38th
year.
Southwestern Bricklayer, El
Paso, 35th year.
Union Review, Galveston, 37th
year.
Labor Messenger, Houston, 35th
year
Labor News, Fort Worth, 6th
year.
These publications are respon-
sible. Their editors stand high in
Wm. J. Harris, president of the
Texas State Federation of Labor, re-
signed from the Wage Stabilization
Board, effective Wednesday, November
Mr. Harris gave as his reason, the
press of other business.
Byron Abernathy, regional direc-
tor of the board, stated R. L. Bruce,
international representative of the
Machinists Union of Fort Worth,
would supplant Harris. Bruce has
been serving as alternate.
M. M McKnight, member of the
Typographical Union of Fort Worth,
has been named as alternate to Mr.
Bruce. The alternate serves during the
absence of the principal.
Yiow
GARMESTSAR z
WoR By 9%
MONGOLIAN ,9
NEWLYWEDS $
FoRAWHOUM V
YEAR... ■ I. I
woo good LC,VW-
AND BuesSiNG8! ( .
Hew Lydie Pinkham” works
it has a "calming" and toothing
effect on the uterua . .. quieting
the oontroettona (see the chart)
that so often comm menatroal
pain, cramps, other tUatreaa.
MAYBE THEY'U WORK
SIXTY HOURS FOR FORTY
yOURS PAY
at a family reunion . . . Ulysses Mor-
gan, day ad sub, is our one day a week
man. This has been going on for the
last four weeks. Morgan recently re-
ceived a letter from his son, who
holds a situation on The Wall Street
Journal. Morgan, Jr. to tn Korea on
the front line and is getting along al-
right to far . . Homer (Main Street
Play Boy) Herring, night ad man, has
been off sick with bronchial pneu-
monia. His condition is greatly im-
proved, but he is still a pretty sick
man . . . John (.Wynnewood) Anglund,
night ad man, also one of the lawyers,
had an absces lanced that was on
his lung last week. He spent several
days out at Baylor Hospital . . . Roy
Wilson, night ad man, has worked 8
days this month because his wife and
son have been sick with virus pneu-
monia . . . Jessie (Freddie Norville)
James, night ad min. and Clyde Gay-
dosh, night ad apprentice, have made
a statement to the night shift that if
Fred Benner, SMU fooball player,
made All-American that they would
eat the Sunday Edition of both papers
Jessie would eat the Sunday Dallas
News and Clyde the Sunday Herald. I
think that these boys are sticking
their neck out a little bit there . . .
Louie Phelps, chairman a JCS, visited
us Saturday . . . Carson Sullivan, day
make-up, came in Saturday evening
dressed up like a country preacher
. . . Appleknocker Dyson, day make-
up, came in Saturday evening and re-
ported on his latest flame . . . Clyde
Gaydosh, night apprentice, tried to
present the foreman with a big red ap-
ple Saturday night and he really bad
it polished up too ... I still don’t
know whether he ever got one of the
foremen to accept it or not . . . Albert
(Four Eyes) Fenley, day ad man, has
recently bought a new pair of glasses.
The first couple of days that he wore
them he was stumbling all over him-
self . . . Fred Alton, day operator,
came to work Saturday morning with
his hands and eyebrows all singed up.
The reason for this was that his gas
heater went off during the night and
he happened to wake up in time to
smell it. Fred went and opened the
door of the heater and the fire flashed
up before he could get back from the
heater. The pilot light was still on.
Anyhow, there was a lesson in this.
NEWS FROM WNU—John Alton,
brother of Frank. Fred and Bill, now
deceased, who came in from Denison,
has been showing up for the past sev-
eral weeks . . . George Rogers, Homer
White and Rabbit Orman have left
. . . Harry Nowell, who will be a
candidate to the ITU Convention this
coming year. Is still going full blast.
NEWS FROM JCS—Shorty Kersey
was off one day this week sick . . . The
mother of J. C. Mabry underwent a
major operation last week . . . Law-
rence Wittkamp has bought a new
Chevrolet . . . Business is slow . . .
Dick Chiles is back from vacationing.
NEWS FROM WALL STREET
JOURNAL — J. B. Pannell, who
wrenched his back when reaching
around the proof desk, came back to
work Wednesday. J. B. has had his
back strapped to a board and I know
that it has been pretty miserable . . .
Jumping Joe Owens has been work-
ing in his place and left for San Anto-
nio 'Wednesday . . . We have received
word from Joe Wooten, who is in the
Printer’s Home. Joe reported that he
had took a sputum test and that it
had showed negative. Members, I am
not a salesman for The Insurance
Company of Texas, but it you need any
Insurance, get it from a labor organi-
zation. You will butter your bread
at the same time. —HONEYCUTT.
THE INSURANCE COMPANY OF TEXAS
LABOR'S OWN — LABOR-OWNED
6336 RiChmond $3.—Mm 1103 Calumet Drive— Houston
HEART ATTACK OR
INDIGESTION?
THANK HEAVEN8I Moat attacks aregustacid
fndigestion. when It strixes, taxe Ben-ans
tabiu. They contatn the tastest-actin*
medicine, known to doctor, for the teller ot
beareburn, (M »ad amnar dustresk 284.
NEWS FROM THE HERALD
The union meeting went ot with a
big bang Sunday. We offer our con-
gratulation. to our new veep, Neal
Route. The delegates who were elect-
ed to the Lou Etex Conference, are
Cotton King, Wild Bill Reinle and
Senator Fred Martin. This Conference
will be held at. Marshal, November
18th. John J. Conley who resigned as
vice-president and also as a member
of the Scale Committee, is devoting his
full time to The Insurance Company
of Texas. Pluto (I have spoken) Reese
is the new member of the Newspaper
Scale Committee. Forty and fifty year
buttons were presented to the follow-
ing members: Frank Chrisman, (50
years), Harley Stevenson (40 years),
B. V. Whitehead. (40 years) and Har-
vey Campbell (40 years). Walter Esry
acted as Master of Ceremonies and
made several humorous remarks. The
wives of these members were presented
corsages. Forrest Ormsy took pictures
of this memorial event. In closing on
this subject this chapel would like to
offer their congratulations to these 40
and 50 year members who have made
our union what it is today . . The
Ladies' Auxiliary sold Christmas Cards
In the Labor Temple Sunday . . . W.
A. (Pappy) Richards, retired Herald
member visited us Monday and report-
ed that his son-in-law, D. C. Price,
died of an heart attack October 27th.
Our deepest sympathy is offered in
this time of grief . . . Harry Emmons,
assistant night ad foreman, reported
this week that his wife is in Baylor
Hospital with an infection of varicose
veins. At the present time her condi-
tion is greatly improved . . . Doug
Wright, dsy operator, who has been
off from work recuperating from a
kidney operation, visited us Monday
Doug has lost quite a lot of weight
and was very sick. At the present time
he does not know when he will be
able to come back to work . . . George
(Dalmation) Fenley. proudly an-
nounces the birth of thirteen baby
Dalmatian puppies. George has the
papers on these too . Mrs. George
Boyd, wife of George the Bookworm,
night operator, visited us Saturday
night . . . Jimmy (The Boy Wonder)
Singleton, lobster operator, has an-
nounced that he will be married by
Christmas . . . James (The Oklahoma
Kid) Swiggart. assistant night chair-
man, was noticed sitting at the Gen-
eral Foreman's desk Friday evening.
Could it be that Swiggart has ideas?
. . . Luther Perry, day ad foreman,
celebrated his 16th wedding anniver-
sary Tuesday by taking his wife out to
dinner at one of the higher class places
... I am hearing plenty of complaints
about taxes going up. I understand
that it costs a man with one depend-
ent 75c a day . . . Think this over
members! ... A notice has been posted
on the board that Ferris McKool is a
deputy poll tax collector and can be
reached on the night shift. Ferris is
also doing some promotional work to
get everybody to pay their poll tax.
There has been a cartoon in The Dal-
las Craftsman that has been running
every week for the past month that he
is responsible for . . . The roof nearly
fell in when Hunter Bill Lofton at-
tended the union meeting Sunday.
This was the first one he had been to
since the last scale negotiations.
Where money is concerned these boys
really turn out and. I am glad to see
them do It . . . Roy (Doc) Meason, day
ad man, reported the death of his dog
Tuesday. Roy had raised this dog from
a pup of six weeks old. This man’s best
friend was 12 years old .. . R. L. Hicks,
day machinist, is back from a vacation
spent all over East Texas and other
parts of the country. Hicky also broke
in a new Mercury that he bought re-
cently . . . Ed Hubbard, night opera-
tor. also reading clerk of 173, spent
the week-end at Chickasha, Oklahoma,
En ESGLAaD. DURnG TE Re
OF queen EUZABET, IT WAS
THE CUSTOM TO wEAR SHOTS
vow the Owners •OKIRAT
PAINTEO oMETPS,T,—»
PREVBLWE& BEUNG stoue"
* 1181" •0
• Here’* wonderful news for
women and girls, who — each
month — suffer the tortures of
"bad days" of functionally-
caused menstrual cramp* and
pain — headaches, backaches,
and those “no-good,” dragged-
out feelings.
It's new* about a medicine
famous for relieving such suf-
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Here is the exciting news.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound — gave complete or
strikbiy relief of such distress
in an average of 3 out of 4 of
the cases in doctors’ testal
• Yea l Lydia Pinkham’s hat
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This new* will not surprise
the thousands of women and
girls who take Lydia Pinkham’s
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And it should encourage yon
(if you're not taking Lydia
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W•FImIES=N IW4# \ WERE THROWN IN THE ckobDiLE-
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in oil, Formed the REMEVY TO . PIHIs WAS THE PENALTY FOR X
restore- hair in ANCIEN=®YP• “t
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Reilly, Wallace. The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, November 9, 1951, newspaper, November 9, 1951; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1549721/m1/3/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .