The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, October 28, 1921 Page: 2 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.
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THE UNION REVIEW
TWO
8220x23200/202022030303013030203000500
Ohe LCnion Seview
Phone 2410
Published Every Friday Morning at 214 Tremont Street.
He can see starvation and want* in the families of
good members.
He is a
his fellow workmen as serenely as he can carry a story.
Entered at the Postoffice at Galveston, Texas, as Second-Class Mail Matter.
TOYS--DOLLS--GAMES
Publisher
M. E. SHAY
UNION MADE SUITS
HAMMERSMITH’S
9 7
NATIONAL
Gg
BLACK KID
83
2020
13
BROWN KID
2
OVERALLS AND WORK CLOTHES
GALVESTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1921.
WOMEN WAKE UP.
2317-19 Market Street.
Phone 1998
UNION HOUSE
NOW ON DISPLAY
American Cooking
Phone 651
with turn-down collar attached
KHAKI BLUE GREY
Capital
$200,000.00
4% Interest Paid on Savings Deposits
and waterproof.
2.50,3 00 to 5.50
JOHN SEALY
SEALY HUTCHINGS
T
EsxeeeeeuueeeupureeexexxgrecagataHHHHBHIHEHHHHHHHHHHHGHNG-KHSHGHHEHHPHHHNHN
Established 1854
24th and Strand
P
H. O. STEIN
GEORGE SEALY
J. LE
& BRO.
PHONE 321
WE HAVE RE-OPENED WITH THE MOST
SANITARY AND UP-TO-DATE CAFE IN THE CITY.
MIS AVENUE D
HOT BREAD
319 Twenty-Fifth St.
Phone 484-W
EVERY 30 MINUTES
COFFEE CAKE, PASTRIES AND CAKE
Juller Prinling Co.
EVERYTHING STRICTLY HOME MADE AT
PRINTERS—PUBLISHERS
Boening’s Bakery
TELEPHONE 2410
414-23rd Street
$8.00 and $10.00
$9.00 and $12.00
.. 100,000.00
.. 33,569.40
.. 333,569.40
.$3,599,175.62
Most of them with a satine
neck band to prevent shrink-
ing. Prices are considerably
less than you have paid for
the last two seasons.
>
<
Hosiery
Too!
2207
Market
A Full Supply of
Flannel Shirts
A service based on sixty years experience
is extended to firms, corporations and indivi-
duals who might have any transactions in
this’part of the country.
Surplus ...................
Undivided Profits.........
Capital, Surplus and Profits
Deposits ..................
ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL LABOR PRESS ASSOCIATION
3
3
5 anu walepuJl. ,
6-2* ••e" 332-532425*2622333333333235
214 TREMONT ST.
Corner Alley.
Union Made
ALSO UNDERWEAR ,HOSIERY, ETC.
szneem-WWMi
NOTICE TO THE! PUBLIC.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which may appear in the columns of The
Union Review will be gladly corrected upon its being brought to the atten-
tion of the publisher.
At Eiband’s
Make Selections Now for Christmas.
of the union, and the first to kick, and swears that the union is no
good, if it does not win every point, and pay him back five dollars
for every cent he has invested in dues. He breeds more discomfort
and creates more strikes in his sneaking way than would a thousand
Si0“Ei==iilaila
2207 Market.
UNDERTAKERS—AUTO EQUIPMENT
AMBULANCE SERVICE
DAY OR NIGHT
‘ A. L. PIERSON MFG. CO. 9
Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent $3.00 per Annum Up.—Our Safe Deposit
Vaults are the strongest and largest in the South and are fire, burglar
2 . ESTABLISHED 1868 S
THE MAURER STUDIO
418 Tremont Street
*
50036-*®333***6333****3363*26*3*23633*02633
| South Texas State bank
of GALVESTON, TEXAS
3 (Guaranty Fund Bank, Member of the Federal Reserve System)
2 ■ ■ • ■ ..............
3
3
3
2
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3 MEN’S WORKING CLOTHES, OVERALLS, JUMPERS, 5
5 SHIRTS and UNDERWEAR at 5
3 L. HALFANT 5
3; BARGAIN STORE 5
Have all the wearing and fitting qualities of the very
highest priced Shoes made. We have a model for the
most conservative to the most extreme style.
---------------o---------------
DIVIDENDS ON WATER IS CRIPPLING NATION.
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Under New Management
THE WEST END CAFE
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EMPLOYE- sk ana
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deadhead on the down-hill road to starvation wages and ten hours
per day, and will get there like a tin can on a dog's tail, if the dog
don’t die. If he is in your branch, “fire” him out, but don't kill
him, as he would use his last breath calling for his funeral benefit.
—Quarrymen's Journal.
I
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•3x3x30303*203002 20—-
SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY |
AT CUT PRICES
Clarks Economy Shoe Store
421 Twenty-First Street ..
9
VISIT OUR ART PICTURE DEPARTMENT
Just recently opened up. In it you will find Sheet Pictures and
Framed Pictures which make delightful Presents.
WE DO PICTURE FRAMING
He is in our ranks. He joined the union from force of circum-
stances. His name is enrolled on our list of 4adheads. He made
one effort to think for a moment, was jerked away from the bosses’
coat tail, and there he sits squat-legged, afraid to move, lest he
offend his boss, or be asked his opinion. He occasionally attends a
meeting, opens his mouth, drinks in the proceedings and lets it run
through him like water through a sieve. When the meeting is over
he sneaks out the back way so as not to be seen by the boss. He
hitched on to the union as a hobo hitches on to a freight train, to
be drawn somewhere with no effort on his part. He never takes
any unionism on the works with him for daily use. The burdens
he cannot conveniently cast upon the other members he will lay
before the foreman. He don’t enthuse or encourage the other mem-
bers. He never tries to add to the list of new members. He is
the first to criticise the officers, the first to demand the benefits
The Biggest and Best Selected Stock in Galveston.
Hundreds of New Toys.
Oodles of Pretty Dolls.
All Sorts of Jolly Games.
— and Prices are Lower! —
SaAdazad—
J OPEN DAY AND NIGHT - £
■! ) 5
hold in your keeping your children's future. Shall they be forever
held to the slave’s life or shall they meet the world with head erect
and clear eye, controlling their own destinies? Be the power be-
hind the throne, and on the throne, and in the ranks. Give us a
world of real men and real women with backbones, and the wretched
20030202030330210930-003020202303205323830203/30203/2022322323303230252022232232283
t i
| Muller Drinting Co. j
I
| PRINTERS-PUBLISHERS
| . = ' |
| TELEPHONE 2410 214 TREMONT ST. |
Corner Alley. g
1
2282620322358322233630302133830303520355130583X8303303830325835328383203392383033033303888
Women, wake up ! Take hold. Lead in labor’s cause, not drag! 3
Talk and read until you know what it is all about. Then help. 3
Help as only a strong-hearted woman at the fireside can help. You
High Class Suits that are really the very best
Suits we have shown in many years! See
these Union Label Suits right now.
Great in value.
$35.
(Columbia (Cate’
828320220213022022205388830230222957200083053/823030083050802220320330303030029301830230
The publisher reserves the right to reject or revoke advertising contracts
at any time. Copy of this paper will be sent to the advertiser.
Communicatiofis of interest to Trade Unionists are solicited. They
should be briefly written, on but one side of the paper, and muet reach, this
office not later than Thursday afternoon of each week. The right of revision
or rejection is reserved by the publisher.
Names must be signed to items (not published, if so requested), as a
guarantee of good faith. . ,
We do not hold ourselves responsible for the views or opinions of cor-
respondents. .
Subscribers who change their addresses, or fail to get their paper, should
immediately notify this office, giving both new and old addresses and the
name of the organization with which they are connected.
-AEERINT~
TRADES (pARFjN COUNCIL > 8
PG4LVESromE
Women are waking up to the principles involved in the organi-
zation of labor, and are entering wholeheadtedly into whatever
their brothers are attempting to do.
The education of women in the principles involved in united
labor; their awakening to the great goals which may be gained
by solidarity, must become even more widespread and complete
than it is today. A chain is no stronger than its weakest link, and
women are an inevitable part of that chain.
No man can afford to be indifferent to what his wife thinks
regarding his union. If he takes no pains to make the principles
he understands clear to her, he must not be surprised if when sacri-
fices are required and risks must be run, that wife should become
a stumbling block in his path. Women should feel humiliated when
they are made an excuse for their husbands’ faint hearts. We have
heard men make excuses for not joining the union, for not attend-
ing meetings, have heard them say. “When a man has a wife and
children to support he has to look out for himself. He can not take
time to go to meetings, he can not run any risks.” Have you ever
heard anything of this kind? Every woman should resent such
statements and repudiate them with all her might. Whatever helps
labor, helps most of all the women and children. Shall then, the
women and children be made an excuse .for indifference and weak-
ness ?
When the good of the workers and the welfare of all the people
is at stake, surely women should urge on to the uttermost the spirit
which will stand for principle and the common welfare unflinch-
ingly.
Relief “from the intolerable railway rates that have brought
on business stagnation throughout the country” was urged by Mr.
Capper in a senate speech. The Kansas lawmaker has introduced
a bill which would repeal the six per cent guarantee to railroad
stockholders.
“I have never known a more alarming situation, so far as the
business of the West is considered,” he said.
“The people have paid the railroads nearly $1,000,000,000 with-
in the last few years by way of a government guaranty. On top
of that they have paid higher rail rates, amounting to from 50 to 83
per cent.
“When railroads get more for hauling farm products than the
producers are paid for producing them it is evident that freight rates
are entirely too high.
“Texas rice growers can ship rice across the ocean to Liverpool,
and from Liverpool back to New York cheaper than they can ship
it by rail direct from Beaumont, Texas, to New York.
" Cotton can be shipped from Galveston to Bremen, a distance
of 3,000 miles, for 35 cents a hundred pounds. But to ship by rail
a bale of cotton from the interior of Texas, a distance of 300 miles,
costs 95 cents a hundred—about three times as much.
"Spinach, cabbage- and onions rot in the fields of Texas; hay
and corn are wasting in Kansas; fruits are stacked_in California,
and hides are going to waste in all parts of the country because
these products can not be shipped over American railroads at profit.
“Mr. President, nothing is going to be gained by maintaining
rail rates at a point which makes the railways too expensive for the
people to use.
“The way out is to encourage the people to use the railroads
by making it possible for them to ship goods and travel; to give
business a chance to create more business. There is no profit in
rusting rails for anybody.”
THE DEADHEAD MEMBER.
EEMEE
ESTAsicura
i
wrongs of today will be promptly righted.—The Garment Worker. 5
8
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The Store for Men
I Kmerican Jndemnitp Company
I - Home Office
GALVESTON, TEXAS
| CASAULTY INSURANCE SURETY BONDS
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1921.
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The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, October 28, 1921, newspaper, October 28, 1921; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1416596/m1/2/?q=central+place+railroads: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.