The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, April 1, 1949 Page: 3 of 4
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THURSDAY APRIL 7 AT 8 p?m.
Second Church of Christ, Scientist, Dallas, Texas
ALL ARE WELCOME
YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND A
FREE LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
entitled
“CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
The Revelation of the Healing Christ”
by
DR. WALTON HUBBARD, C. S. B.
of Los Angeles, California
Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church,
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, M Massachusetts
ADAMSON HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
Beckley and Ninth Streets
TUESDAY, APRIL 6 at N p. w
This lecture wiU be repeated
L A S..CRA FTSMAN
i
3
1
job of wrecking.
R.N.F.
Yon Can Save Hone* by Buying Front
C. B. Anderson & Co.
FURNITURE
of
tan.
SUvem Bars Radies
CASH OR CREDIT
Printing Ind. News-
(Continued from Page 1)
UM W. Lo'ers lane
Phone Mxon.4937
-------U4---7--------
. OlVf.tf
Geo. Clifton Edwards
ATTORNEY AT LAW
wfi&a st.
First Block MH of Court Sense
Pheae Crtrtrol 4885
---------------£---------------
joining have shown much more judge-
ment than the man who appointed
them, because be signed every one of
them into law. We hope Justice Grif-
fin will follow in the pattern of the
court, and not be swayed by the fact
that the laws thyy are striking down
are the handiwork of the man who
appointed him. We feel sure he will.
Once again, the Democratic Party
in Texas has enfolded In its bosom
the vipers who have twice proved' produce a majority winner and that
that they connot be trusted. At the ‘
Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner in
Austin, we saw, sitting on the plat-
form, one loud-mouthed Dixlecrat
who. on November 1, 1948. was pro-
claiming that he just couldn’t go along
with Truman, and that be was going
to cast his vote for Thurmond, the
Dixlecrat.
J. B. Smylie Is the new chairman
at the John A. 8<ott chapel. Best
wishes to him in his new undertak-
ing.
From the Times Herald and Doug
Wright comes these items:
Roy Meason, makeup, will take on
the double harness of marriage come
April 9. He and his bride will take
a plane for New Orleans as they
make a flying start.
Mrs. Cornett, mother of Raymond
Cornett, has been ill but is getting
along better now. She is eighty-nine.
Virginia Van Pelt, copyholder in
the proofroom, la coming out of the
shock of the death of her mother.
Hugh Luak has been enjoying a few
days off while Elton Jonee has been
subbing for him. » j|
James Raieoff is in tba hospital re-
covering from an opera tl<*i. Rumor
has it that he and Luther Perry are
in the same room. That proximity
should result in many a verbal clash
over economic theories, etc.
Pete Kason and J. E. Emmons and
their families are spending a few
days at Possum Kingdom. Pete said
This week's award for meritorious
performance goes .to chairman Lewis
Easterling and tbq Dallas News chap-
el. Lewis got hie pards at 10:00 a.m.
At 5:46 he brought to the secretary's
office the result Of his days collect-
ion efforts. He paid for every card
that had been sept to him, adding
one more for gopd measure. That's
100 percent plus.
B. V. Whitehead of the News is
, at Baylor Hospital trying to make
it after an operation for appendicitis
and his bad tummy. Benny has been
off the job lor quite a spell while
attempting to build up strength for
the surgery.
of the Wall Street Journal has said
he will serve if the union ’ wants
him to, and wo hear that Brooks
Haughton of the News would con-
sider the job under certain condP
tions. Political prognosticators are
agreed that the first ballot will not
-----a--.— ---_ . -__j
at least two balloting! will be nec-
essary. All in all. it should be some
meeting.
WSCENtS
By our Austin Correspondent
heard introduced .
loud-mouthed Texas Regular, who in
1944 said that he just couldn't go
along with Franklin Roosevelt and
who headed up the Texas Regulars
campaign in the Houston district.
We also heard Speaker Sam Ray-
burn say to the crowd that while
the Democratic Party is big enough
to take a lot of people Into its folds,
that be is beginning to get pretty
sick of these birds who found some
little thing to fall out with the party
in 1936. 1940, 1944 and 1948.
We were watching the Texas Regu-
lar of 1944 and the Dixlecrat of 1948
as Rayburn said those words. They
have been forgiven and so placed in
positions of honor and trust that Ray-
burn’s indictment of them, flung right
into their teeth, didn’t even make
them flicker an eyelid or quiver a
double chin.
One of them holds the oflQ^e
National Democratic Committemn:
the No. 1 Democratic Party officer
in Texas. The other was a big fac-
totum of some sort in arranging the
dinner, and was called on to read a
telegram from some absent big-shot,
who was so busy in Washington try-
ing to sabotage the Truman program
that he couldn't got away to attend the
dinner. This overstuffed reading clerk
of whom we speak was truly In a
fine position. He had helped prepare
the fatted calf which wi» served at
his return as a prodigal son. And
what was more amasing, he was al-
lowed to make the speech welcom-
ing himself back into the fold.
Actually, we don't want to de-
tract from the success of the dinner
put on by Mayor Tom Miller of Austin.
It was put on to raise money, and
for no other purpose. It raised' right
at 350,000, which will be used to help
President Truman elect some more
Democrats to Congress In 1950. Mayor
Miller’s record as a Good Democrat
is unstained, and when he is assign-
ed to scrape up the filthy lucre, he
has to go where it is, and has to as-
sociate with characters with bank-
rolls as thick as their skins.
We were pleased at the large num-
ber of labor men and women we saw
at the dinner, and were reminded that
before the Democrats won the White
House back from Hoover in 1932,
there wern’t any working men with
825.00, the price of admission to this
dinner.
The Texas Supreme Court has
struck down another section of one
of the 1947 anti-labor laws, in a case
carried to that court by the counsel
for the Texas State Federation of
Labor. It was the Velasco Laundry
Co. case, in which the lower courts
hsd upheld the strangest and moat
vicious idea over written into an anti-
labor law.
The Texas Manufacturers Associa-
tion and Brown A Root lobbyists
in 1947 wrote into the Jaw that a
picket line could not be maintainel
unless a majority of ths employees of
the company being picketed were on
strike or had a bona fide grievance
against employer.
Take a newspaper, for example.
Under the terms of that law. the
printers could not picket unless they
made up 51 percent of the total em-
ployees of the newspaper. And when
you aay employees, you count |n ev-
eryone from the publisher down to
the apprentice pressman. Under that
law, before the pressmen and stero-
typers could join the typos on the
picket line, those two crafts would
have to find a “bona fide grievance,"
too.
And then there is the Taft-Hartley
angle, which, permits the employer
, to hire strikebreakers to replace the
Pickets, and thus declare that the
men on strike are no longer employees
and therefore not entitled to picket.
The Texas Supreme Court took one
look at that law, and held that sec-
tion unconstitutional, as the lawyers
who wrote it knew it was. It was a
violation of the free speech amend-
ment to the U. S. Constitution, and
therefore was striken from the law
of Texas.
The court has shown that it can
rise above the blind ignorance and
hate which characterized so many
members of the 50th Legislature
which blindly wrote into law this
and many other ideas equally aa
unfair, illegal and unconstitutional.
Starting April 1. there will be five
members of the Texas Supreme Court
who have been appointed to their pre-
sent positions by Governor Beauford
Jester. One of them, Meade Griffin
of Plainview, will replace Associate
Justice A. J. Folley, who wrote a fine
climax to his career on the court with
the opinion striking down the uncon-
stitutional limit on picketing.
Others of Jester's appointees, in
Friends of John C. Travis were
saddened to hear of the loss of his
wife. Mrs. Travis died last week and
, .. . was buried Saturday. Floral offer-
mrt 'Jm^ucST £ £Xh‘ lng’ Were Pr°tUS* ‘nd elabor“t<‘
body wanted to I
the Ashing. '
George Rease;
tor. brother of ,
let the medicos
cently.
Lefty Gorman (still is afoot five
weeks after he wrecked his auto while
chasing business *tor Intertype Cor-
poration. He meal have done a good
he was going to 4>U> possum if some I
M too vigorous about I
Mgr-Teelgram opera
JHuio Reese, bad to
I .Whittle on him re-
QUALITY LAUNDRY, DRY CLEANING, HUGS, LACE CURTAINS,
DRAPERIES BEAUTIFULLY CLEANED
Ideal Laundry and .Cleaning Company
T8-9141 Dallas Quality Laundry fur 88 Yean 8818 Hess
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cartons of six bottles, er by the
ease of twenty-four bottles.
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MAIN OPTICAL CO.
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I THE ALL AROUND FAMILY DRINK I
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Printing
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The Dallas Craftsman
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“Meet Your Friends Where Your Friends Meet"
THE CLUB ROOM
FOR SPECIAL PARTIES CALL R-S341
Labor Temple
Young Street
COLD BEER—SOFT DRINKS—SANDWICHES
Noonday Lunches Our Specialty
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Reilly, Wallace. The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, April 1, 1949, newspaper, April 1, 1949; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1297539/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .