The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1963 Page: 2 of 4
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October 25, 1963
PAGE 2
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PRINTING NEEDS
J MEMBERSHIP APPLICATIONS
J WORKING CARDS
J MAAWS
J DUES BOOKS
J ENVELOPES
/ LETTERHEADS
J RULED FORMS
J PUBLICATIONS
J Any Other Printing Needs
8660 Garland Road
Printing That Pleases
DA 7-3288
6
CHARLEY CONERLY SAYS:
HA 8-8385
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Reilly Publishing Company
• •
THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
41
Member Better Business Bureau
• N.
I
grmmuza
CARPET & LINOLEUM
Local Union No. 1870
M. R. “Frenchy” Caron, B.A.
Reilly Printing Co., 1710 South
Harwood St., HA 8-8385 ( can sup-
ply with union label printing.
Reilly Printing company, 1710
South Harwood. HA 8-8385,
WONDER
BREAD
Builds Strong Bodies
12 Ways!
mana
■Ka
UNION WATER-MARKED PAPER AND ENVELOPES
CARRIED IN STOCK
|
.1
Business Office and Plant —1710 S. Harwood, HA 8-8385
Editorial Office — Labor Temple, HA 8-8385
"Heres the bourbon ft*
men who know the score
HILL
THOMAS C. ROGAN, JR.
ADMINISTRATOR'S EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS
R€$
• ■'I
THE HILL AND HILL DISTILLERY COMPANY, LOUISVLLE,K
KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY. 86 PROOF.
$
HILL
2
125)
figure out how this could happen.
The Dallas progressive club will
meet at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 10
in the American Legion Hall on
South Zangs. All members are
welcome to attend.
TERMS OF ADVERTISING
AND SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One Year ............. *2.00
Adv. Rates Furnished on Application
Entered at the Post Orfice, Dallas,
Texas, as Second-Class Mail Matter
Under the Act of March 8. 1879.
I
THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
Issued Every Friday
Founded 1913 by Wm. M. Reilly
Send your notices in to be printed
each week. Be a booster. A labor
paper is an asset to you.
-
* cd
V.--
M * $. ■
38e Bsesse
HILL"
Maurice
HcMIfCUtt
It is reported that the Melton
Printing Company has signed with
the Dallas Typographical Union
after several weeks of dispute.
It looks as though the referen-
dum vote on the per capita tax
will be turned down. I just can’t i
IBEW Local 3 Wins
38-Hour Workweek
New York—A 38-hour work-
week is provided in new contracts
negotiated by Local 3 of the Elec-
trical Workers with the Rab Elec-
tric Co. in the Bronx and the Ad-
vanced Onyx Co. in Brooklyn.
I CARPENTERS' LOCAL
UNION NO. 198
By CHAS. HENDERSON
We are all working fairly steady
and hoping it will stay that way.
We are in need of two or three men
right now.
I have talked it over with the
president and the other officers
and we decided that our union
meeting is a place to attend to
business and not a place to come
and drink and cause trouble. The
next member that comes to our
meeting drinking and disrupting
the meeting will be fined severely.
This is in accordance with our
By-Laws and Constitution. This
pertains to the writer, you or any-
one and is not against any certain
one.
Any of you can ask questions,
gripe or make suggestions but we
should stay in our place and act
accordingly.
The apprentice committee has
dropped three apprentices and they
will not be allowed to go to school.
This is in accordance with our
By-Laws. We will not accept any
more dues from these apprentices.
I was ordered out of the Jeter-
Millar shop last Saturday and was
told never to step back in there
again.
They have not showed the right
attitude about apprentices and
have been working six apprentices
while working only 12 journeymen.
We will meet on this later.
Machines Are Driving Out
Unskilled, Uneducated Workers
THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
Published by the
REILLY PUBLISHING COMPANY
1710 South Harwood Street
Mall Address: Post Office Box 9306
Telephones: HA 8-8385-8
Editorial Office: Labor Temple
1727 Young Street—HA 8-8385-6
T V ?
None But Authenticated Labor Pub-
lications Are Permitted This TLPA
Emblem.
Chicago Bldg. Industry
Marks 50 Years of Peace
Chicago—For 50 years, jurisdic-
tional disputes in Chicago's con-
struction industry have been set-
tled peacefully through a labor-
management Joint Conference
Board.
More than 900 union, manage-
ment and civic leaders hailed this
half-century record at an anni-
versary dinner, and Mayor Richard
J. Daley expressed the city’s thanks
for “the best labor-employer rela-
tions” in the nation. Harvard
Prof. John T. Dunlop, impartial
chairman of the national Construc-
tion Industry Joint Confidence,
said the Chicago board “was born
out of travail and turmoil; now
it serves as a model for the entire
nation.”
Hazard passed away following a 1
long illness. We understand that
he had a malignancy. His services
were held Sunday afternoon with
interment out of town. Saturday
morning Bro. Onnie Davis died in
his sleep from a heart ailment that
he had suffered for several years.
His services were held Monday
morning. We went to school with
Onnie and have watched his family
of eight boys and one sister pass
or until there are only two broth-
ers, Ephie and Dewie and the sister
left. We had known Hazard since
World War I where he picked up
the nick name Waxahachie. We do
not know why it happened to him
instead of the rest of us, possible
some instance that we are not in-
formed on. We regret that we do
not have adequate words to ex-
press to Bro. Scott and the families
of Bro. Davis and Hazard our heart-
felt sympathy in this sad hour.
Bro. Edwin K. Maeckel, who re-
ceived a severe arm injury in a fall
recently, is now at home but will
be off the job for some time. He
lives at 1014 W. Ninth St.
We attended the meeting at
Austin along with Business Agents
Christian and Anderson. The meet-
ing was held Saturday and was
attended by over 40 delegates rep-
resenting about 30 locals. The
Yarborough Appreciation dinner
was held that night and we stayed
over for it. It was reported that
around 5,000 attended and were
served at tables in about 30 min-
utes which, within itself was quite
a show. From the indications of
the enthusiasm shown at the din-
ner we would say that the ultra
conservatives are going to have a
hard time finding anyone that can
beat him in the primaries next
year.
Members receiving arrearage
notices this week are urged to give
it their immediate attention. And
please remember they say the last
day of the month not several days
after the first.
The Dallas Craftsman represents
the true trade union movement, voic-
ing the aspirations and achievements
of the American Federation of Labor-
Congress of Industrial Organisations.
It does not represent the Bolshevik.
I. W. W.. Anarchists. Radical, or any
other movement injurious to the peace
and stability of American institutions.
It is for America, first and last, and
for the honest, moral, upright, cour-
ageous and true unions all the time.
employed today are either unskilled
or semi-skilled but only 25 per cent
of the jobs in the work force can
be put in that category.
Two-thirds of today’s unem-
ployed have less than a high school
education but this group makes up
only 45 per cent of the work force.
The first approach to this prob-
lem is passage of the tax cut bill,
Wirtz asserted. More jobs is the
primary need, supplemented with
more education, training and re-
training, he added.
"The figure that haunts me,”
said Wirtz, "is that there are three
million people in the work force
with less than a fifth grade level
of educational attainment. I don’t
think there will be work for them
unless that problem is met in two
ways. First, more jobs, and edu-
cate them up to the level neces-
sary.” —
Washington — The development
of automation contributes "quite
significantly" to the "strong, dan-
gerous, bitter concentration of un-
employment today in the unedu-
cated, in the unskilled, in the un-
trained,” Labor Sec. W. Willard
Wirtz has declared.
He told a Washington press con-
ference “the machines are driving
out the unskilled and the un-
trained” from the ranks of job-
", holders and that there is a "strong
coincidence” between the increase
in productivity and the concentra-
tion of unemployment among the
unskilled, uneducated and un-
trained.
Wirtz cited the following figures
to support his conclusion:
Thirty-four per cent of the un-
V CHECK YOUR
COWKdpttg:f,
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—MinimWTil—IW
We regret to report three deaths
since last week’s column. Monday,
Oct. 14, Mrs. R. J. (Bob) Scott
passed away after a long illness.
Her services were held at Spark-
man-Brand Funeral Parlor last
Wednesday. Last Friday or early
Saturday morning Bro. O. S.
WALLACE C. REILLY........Editor
JOSEPH B. COX ..........Reporter
SHEEHY T. WHITE......Adv. Mgr.
P. B, SMITH . ..........Advertising
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Reilly, Wallace. The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1963, newspaper, October 25, 1963; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1549834/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .