The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, May 16, 1952 Page: 4 of 4
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THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
LET LIGHTING HELP WITH THE LAUNDRY
1
a
7737
‘o
2.8
h
THi
Clarence H.
EMERSON
Fire ... Life ... Automobile
1621 Kirby Bldg.
RA-5108
1
. . Accident and
Sickneet
Insurance
ROEDEE a MooN
Baby beavers are called kittens.
Dine and Dance
GEORGE CHAMBERLAIN AGENCY
LAND CLUB
DA
Any Kind of Insurance
1°
Li
WILSON BUILDING
PR-8572
DALLAS
nt CORINTH
-9482
is under considerat
all wholesale trade
B. A G. TRADING POST
1j
Deloach-AG-Food Store
¥
INFLATIONARY THREAT
k
4107 Worth
TE-0218
C. & C. Gro. and Markel
TE-0409
015 So. Henderson
SILVER CROSS
HA-9065
No. 2-3411 Meadow
3426 E. Illinois
DR--4-9331
WILL PROTECT YOU!
822 So. Peak
VI-1520
RI-0108
1410 Sullivan Dr.
RA-0995
AUTMORIZED
MUM.
PAYS
Surgical Fees
Doctors’ Calls
Ambulance
AND MANY OTHER SERVICES
8008 So. LAMAR
HU-9026
2800 Sharon
wo-0282
Omfiee: YA-7270—1A-6066
The Workingman’s Company
WRITE TODAY FOR IFORMATION
Accurso Gro. t Market
EDWARDS - NORTHCUTT A COMPANY
MM JEFFERIES
HA-9070
Name
Fire
Reble and Jack
Ph. ED-2-9898
Address.
HET
Auto
BEN’S GRO. A MARKET
City.
Life
MEATS and GROCERIES
023 So. Harwood
RI-088
VI-2577
3615 Gaston Avenue
THE
INSURANCE
COMPANY
4614 W. Unfversity
DI-6147
OF TEXAS
—
4 P<
2200 Mar Crest Bird.
Free Dellvery
Ph WI-0000
4
1
(
)
,i
r 2
F 3
is on
7:d1
You never know when you’ll wind up flat on your back
with hospital and doctors’ bills piling up. But you can
know, every day in the year, that a trip to the hospital
won’t put you flat on your back financially as well as
physically.
Wo-0851
wE-0023
GROCERIES and MEATS
VEGETABLES—COLD DRINKS
The special workingman’s SILVER CROSS Hospitaliza-
tion and Surgical Insurance Policy will provide you with
the best possible protection against those hospital and
doctor bills. Labor’s own company, The Insurance Com-
pany of Texas, has just the policy to fit your needs . . .
and your pocketbook.
Continental Liquors
WHISKEY—W1N eS—BEER
R. H. MeGHEE, Omder
1950 Morrell
115 Wentworth
potat
want
FOR FASTER LONG DISTANCE
SERVICE... CALL BY NUMBER
MereaatSe Bank Bldg-
PHOn RA-6886
$5-$7.50-$10 Hospital Room
Good for a fell year-365 days in hospital
Charles Balmos Joins The Insurance
Company of Texas Salesmen
Morris Liquor Store
LIQUOR—WIE_GI
I Appreciate Tear Bustness
Charles Balmos, left, member of Plasterers and Cement Flmishers Local
178 of San Antonio and Korean War veteran, geta Ue application for
state securities salesman lleense notarized by Ed Weimar, board mem-
ber of The Insurance Company of Texas, while W. P. Sehwertlich, ICT
distriet supervisor, looks on. -------
3W
1A
Texas seceded from the Union to
join the Confederacy February 1, 1861,
and was readmitted March 30. 1870.
GROCERIES — MEATS
COLD DRINKS
The Workingman’s Policy
with
Thomas Nast, American cartoonist,
was responsible for the donkey and
the elephant as symbols of the Demo-
cratic and Republican parties.
The right forefinger on the Statute
of Liberty is eight feet long and five
feet around.
The Alaska Highway stretches 1,-
523 miles from Dawson Creek. B. Cl
to Fairbanks, Alaska.
The five civilized Indian tribes of
Oklahoma are the Cherokee, Choctaw,
Chickasaw, Creek and Seminole.
Residents of the District of Colum-
bia do not rote on either national or
municipal matters.
Amerl
had read
•A
A
up 1
day
thia
What price good news?
So often it’s the price of a
telephone call . . . and
that means just a few
pennies.
Worth more? Of course.
Many telephone calls are
practically priceless in
their value to you.
And yet the average cost
of each local call, including
tax, is only about 2%44.
Can you think of a better
bargain?
FREE DELIVERY
We Appreciate Your Bustness
al Stock Companies
ent Auto Financing
0-K Black’s Nifty Gro.
O-K Means a Friendly Store
A Friendly Service
CATERING TO WORKING MEN
ROT CARPENTER, Prop.
■ember Painters Unio
Judy’s Hilltop Club
WELCOME UNION MEN
OPEN 10A.M.
2534 W. DAVES
A gallon contains 16 standard sups
of water.
W.U
W
HONEY SPRINGS
DRIVE-INN
SANDWICHES — BEER
$1.88 FOR 39‘s
I DOLLAR’S WORTH
Anthony’s Gro. and Mkt.
A Complete Line of
GROCERIES — MEATS
COLD DRINKS and BEER
Blair’s Gro. and Market
GROCERIES — MEATS
No. 1-2850 Metropolitan. HA-0281
BARBECUE, CBEAM and DRINKS
rhe Insnrance Company of Texas,
6336 Richmond Ave.
Dallas, Texas.
Without obligation, please send me complete informatlon
an Silver Cross Hospitalization and Surgical policles with Labor’s
Own Company.
Bonde
Burgiarg
Hospital
Bill Grant Liquor Store
LIQUOR—WINE—BEER
New To rattan
mckinney at hall
LA-0276
W M -BILL- GREEN
Rax EX-0696
GLYNN 0.
—
George Washington had no middle
name.
FUN-BAR
THREE FLOOR SHOWS NIGHTLY
Featuring the Character*
SOUTH HARWOOD MKT.
Your-AG-Food Store
1888 So. Harwood AA-1000
New York City's mayor receives a
lary of $40,000, while New York's
avemor receives $25,000.
CLUB PACKAGE STORE
LIQUORS • WIE . BEER
L. B. GOLDMAN, Owner
571# HINES
DALLAS, TEXAS
STOP AT THE
BandB DRIVE IH
GROCERIES - MEATS
COLD BEER and DRINKS
(<S4 80. LANCASTER Rd.
DANCING
738 Ft Worth Ave.
SAMMY’S LIQUORS
EVERYTHING TO DRINK
Member
OPERATING ENGINEERS
*
We Ineure Boergthing Again* Angthbig
tn
IOUR FRIENDLY LIQUOR
DIALER
ROCK INH
DINE AND DANCE
1 Mile South of Jefferson St
ea Ledbetter
GLYNN a GREEN
Res TB-3488
AGENCY
LIQUORS—GROCERIES—MEATS
NOTIONS
MM Thoma* Ph. RA-5807
Representimg
The Insurance Company of Texas
one pictured at the left above depend
on one lone bare bulb to light the
whole room. In addition to uncom-
fortable glare from the bare bulb,
much of the room remains in deep
shadow which doesn't promote a cheer-
ful disposition.
By simply installing a new over-
head fixture with two 25-watt foures-
cent lamps notice how generous the
lighting is on tubs as well as through-
out room. The new fixture which has
shielded sides for greater eye comfort
assures at least 25 units of light on
working area when centered over the
trays.
Membw
FEDERAL DEPOSIT sNs. conv.
5114
t^-y -e " J
A “Texas Leaguer" I* a baseball
that drops between outfield and tnflela,
out of reach at either outnela or m-
field players.
C. B. SEARLES
with
Highfill, Gulledge and Terry
GENERAL INSURANCE
Have you ever considered how much
lighting can help with your laundry?
Actually, well-planned lighting in the
laundry not only speeds work but
saves energy.
Many basement laundries like the
are cl
have |
as
mills. I
OPS
publii
conti
cientl:
age pi
Fact
In
-/not 11
crop
markt
in the
spurit
repeal
contri
in the
vide a
gan da J
The |
suit of
is trui
potati
shorta
Pot
conti
was _
posed
velopi
prices I
reduct
and tL
traceal
the rei
prices
main!
port pi
Aerea
Prii
potati
thereu
to red]
of rec
suppoi
weathe
of the
The
millioi.
normal
busheli
last tr
1952 ui
in. The
old ci
the net
rive in
Until
below
fense
impose
crop i
among
develo,
Oct 151
er pric
a bushi
After
100 pei
ceiling
full pal
with ai
with th!
numero
keteerh
sales
have ki
busy.
Clear]
be Inci
harvest
of prici
only to
Ing moi
“IN OAK CLIFF ITS THE"
ALBERT ROLLINS INSURANCE AGENCY
428 WEST JEFFERSON BLVD.
Equipped to Service Tear Every Insurance Need
Night: -8041
OBILE LOANS_______
Taste
five men
STEGALL FOOD STORE
Groceries—Meata— Fresh Fruits and Vegetable*—Refrigerated
Hlekory Smoked Barbeene—Cold Drinks, Beer
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK-7 TO 11
San Antonio. — A union member
whose Korean war injurles blocked
him for all time from his chosen trade
has joined The Insurance Company of
Texas field force as a salesman.
Charles Balmos, member of Plaster-
ers and Cement Finishers Local 178 of
San Antonio, lost his fingers and toes
as a marine in Korea. Realizing that
his injuries would prevent him from
working at his trade, he looked around
for other fields of work.
"When I learned that The Insurance
Company of Texas was actually own-
ed by locals snd members of the Texas
State Federaflon of Labor and realized
what was being done tor organized la-
bor in Texaa through the influence of
good public relations by this company,
I felt that I was indeed fortunate to
have the opportunity of working for
the company,” Balmos declared.
Balmos bad followed in the footsteps
'of his father by going into Local 178.
He worked as an apprentice under
the San Antonio Plasterers and Ce-
ment Masons Joint Apprenticeship
Program until his graduation from
I high school. For a short time after
graduation he worked full-time at the
trade, then was called to active duty
with the Marines. He served in the
Marines from July 24, 1950 until dis-
charged Sept. 1, 1951.
ek RA-6804
MEMBER DAELAS‘"ASsocATON OF nosumANa AGENTS
1
£y 7elb"
agody
itjon. since 3-5 of
*n wuviepaI iinue is at peak prices,
and barely a Sth are at prices "signi-
PERSONAL LOANS
Personal loans, business loans,
automobile loans, collateral
loans—yea, there’s a City Stale
Bank loan to fit any need.
Reasonable rates, p f o at p t
service, convenient paymenu.
CITY STATE BANK
•1 DALLAS
•-ot, oALas amts nan taa*
COMMERCE STPFE1 at MUEMy
Net vi
corp"a:
380 9 bil
and Exd
Work in i
pay ope
tertals.
Corpo
in cash.
Holding
creased
billion.
(At t
hers of
in Cong
was hea
You must pay 31.83 to buy what 81
bought in 1935-19. That’s the report
of the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
which announced that the new con-
sumer Index ts at 118.
An advance in the cost of living of
1-10 of 1 percent In the week ending
March 15 was reported by the BLS.
The Index was 1J percent above a
year ago, and 10.5 percent over prices
just before the Korean War began.
Retail prices remained unchanged.
Rents and miscellaneous goods went
up.
At the same time, Ellis Arnall, price
stabilizer, announced removal of price
controls on 16 items now selling be-
low ceilings. Arnall said no wide-
spread suspension of price controls
)
"If we Ml best II—Will tet if
Jake’s Cut Rate Liquors
400 80. ERVAY ST. PR-0282
' J. R. COLE, Owner
---CALL---
W. ARNOLD DIFFEY, JR.
For General Insurance Service
Tower Petroleum Building
STerling 1061 Dallas 1, Texas STerling 2306
pwned by Members of the A F. of L-
SSCENS
Governor Allan Shivers has won st
least a five-to-one victory over the
Loyal Democrats in county conven-
tions over the State, and will be In
full command of the State convention
May 27 in San Antonio.
The Governor's sweeping victory in-
cluded all the major cities except
San Antonio, Beaumont, Port Arthur,
San Angelo, and Galveston, plus most ■
of the smaller counties.
This is the first time there has
been a real organisation of conserva-
tive* over th* State, and it clicked
smoothly to give Shivers complete
control of the 52 Texas votes in the
national Democratic convention. In
addition to Shivers' own staff organ-
izers, Weldon Hart and John Van-
Cronkhite, a great deal of spadework
was done by various conservative or-
ganisations like the Texaa Manu-
facturers Association, the real estate
boards and others.
The effectiveness of this type of
work was shown in one typical pre-
cinct where an open-shop contractor
pulled up to the convention hall in a
pick-up truck. In the back end of the
truck were seven of his employes.
When the convention was over, the
contractor and one of his hired hands
were the two delegates to the county
convention. Multiply that by several
thousand and you can see what hap-
pened.
For years, conservatives have urged
their people to attend the precinct
conventions, but tt has been only In a
few counties like Harris, Dallas and
Tarrant that they have actually or-
ganized their people. Thia year they
were organized all over the State in
very effective fashion.
By contrast, the Loyal Democrats
' were not organised well. In counties
where a few labor and liberal leaders
had been able to handle county con-
1 ventions In past years, they were
smothered by the well-organized con-
servatives.
Take another typical Texas precinct
1 as a case study to see what happened.
1 There are 95 AFL members in the
’ precinct, and about five CIO members.
Count in the wives, and you have a
potential labor turnout of nearly 200.
among the 1000 voters In the precinct.
But only 19 of the 200 turned out for
the Democratic precinct convention,
and as a result, the loyalists lost to
the conservatives by seven votes. On
the other hand, every single member
of the Real Estate in the precinct was
there, with his wife and a couple of
friends he had convinced.
The smaller the minority group the
easier It is to organize. Precinct con-
ventions are struggles between vari-
ous minority groups. with 90 or 95 per-
1 cent of the voters staying away.
What makes the conservative sweep
: of Democratic conventions even more
Impressive is the fact that the same
group of people also captured the Re-
publican conventions on behalf of
General Eisenhower. In some eases
the same people who attended both
the Democratic and Republican con-
ventions. In El Paso, a banker was
named on the pre-prepared list of
delegates being sent to the State
Democratic convention. At the last
moment he had to be taken off, be-
cause he had been named on the GOP
delegation a few minutes earlier.
. Many of the Shiverserat conventions
would have endorsed Elsenhower if
that had been the Shivers line at th*
, moment. and we have a feeling that
i the loyalty pledge which would have
I carried in many "Democratic" con-
ventions was one to support the
nominees of the Republican Party,
I whoever they may be.
But there's no use crying over pled
type. The Loyal Democrats will car-
ry the fight on to the national con-
vention, to advertise to the Democrats
of the rest of the country that those
who own the party machinery In Texas
refuse to say that they’ll abide by the
decisions of the party In national con-
vention.
Loyalists have one very real prob-
lem to explain on the matter of bolt-
ing from conventions. On the one
hand, the Loyaltists charge that the
Shlvencrata plan to bolt from the
Democratic Party after the party’s
nominees are chosen, and the Loyal-
ists say that is bad. Yet the Loyalists
bolt from precinct and county con-
ventions where they are outnumbered
snd the pledge to support the nomi-
nees is voted down. It’s hard for a
person not versed tn the Ungo to see
that the Loyal Democrats are being
consistent.
The bolts at precinct, county and
state conventions which refused to
take the pledge were bolts into the
Democratic Party, not away from It
The bolts of the Texas Regulars in
1944, the Dixlecrats of 1948. and the
proposed one of 1952 are bolts out of
the Democratic Party, into another
party, as a means of defeating the
nominees of the Democratic Party
It’s a fine Une, but a very clear
one.
4lat
/1 on your back/
se Cees • Comoam. Under-yifieg Memgo c= •
LOWREY’S LIQUOR
STORE
We Cash Payroll
, Cheeks
Clyde French,
2 C. L (Jerry) Woolen,
1 7610 Greenville Ave.
■ HIGHWAY 75 s,
W Phone EM-2963
“The long-range outlook is for just
the opposite of deflation or recession.
Heavy arms spending, business spend-
ing. consumer spending—all will
threaten to touch off a new inflation-
ary spiral. The problem then—to keep
prices and coats in line.”—Newsweek.
Marcus S. Miller
Special Insurance Service
1720 CEDAR SrRINGS
Will Appreciate You Remembering
Me Ob Year Insuranee Needs
Ph. RI-9300 It no answer all RA-8566
Based upon 1950 Census returns, the
Bureau of Census estimates U. S.
population at 154,843,000, including
armed forces overseas.
The
its 6th
of prot
Coital
med lat!
the U.
Service
officials
Represe
employe
AFL Co
charged
bargain
From
became
are takii
not offe
Tet
firm's re
Amoni
a’ iion
system <
ices A
Western
ness of
merger
‘ "n
and red
telegram
of any I
on these
GEO. A. COX & COMPANY
Est. 1923
Insurance—Real Estate
Phone PR-8032 DALLAS National City Bank Bldg.
Casselman-AG-Food
GROCERIES Store MEATS
VEGETABLES and NOTIONS
ficantly" below post-Korea highs.
Arnall said price controls will be
restored on any of the 16 commodities
if its prices rise close to the sus-
pended ceilings. The suspended com-
modities include raw wool, cattle
hides, calf skins, tallow, lard. crude
cottonseed oil, crude soybean oil, bur-
lap, and alpaca.
Raw Wool is now selling at 91.50 a
pound, with a celling of $2.66.
Arnall said he was considering sus-
pending controls on cotton and tex-
iles.
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Reilly, Wallace. The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, May 16, 1952, newspaper, May 16, 1952; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1549744/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .