The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, March 14, 1930 Page: 4 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 23 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1930.
FOUR
SHGHHEHEHEHEHHBHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHIHHHHGHHHHNHHHHHH
Dixie Theatre
ARE YOU SATISFIED?
Rex Laundry and Dry Cleaners
PHONES 2000
1901-AVE. C.
REHHHHHHHHHGHGHHIHHHIHCHHWHHHHHHHHIEHHIHGHHRHHHHHHHHHOHSHHHHHHHHHHH
E. G. DANTIN
W. M. PIERSON
SPURN “PEACE” PLAN
2317 Market
Phone 851
GHHHHHHHHHHBHHHH
PHONE 266
2208 AVE. D
ROBERT LYONS DEAD
WRBHCHHEAHCHSHGHEHCHCHSHGHHHCHSHGHGICHSHGHGEOHGHGHCHCHGHSHGHGHSASHEOHCHGHSGHCHOHGHHHHHHHHH
-CENT FARE UPHELD
FASCISM NOT DEAD
0-
0
Galvessoa, Texas
TO THE PUBLIC
<
TELEPHONE MIO
<
<
sSHHeHodKHACHOHGMSHOHOHEHINHGNGIGNWONGHCHSHENENHONOHSNSHEGHSHEHGHSNSNSHSNEHSNKCHSHGHSNCHZHOHOHGMGHOMONG
<
<
<
D
<
P
P
D
M)
D
Anything for Better Work or Servies
D
STYLISH
GLASSES
ag8eee000egsme0609000000*@00099090e00*0000*00
P
■
2443e
-0
favored by
HUTCHINGS, SEALY & CO.
SEALY HUTCHINGS,
GEO. SEALY.
the
The witness opposed this plan
We study carefully the
features of every patient
and supply the glasses
which are most becoming.
“business
ask . for
OPTOMETRISTs
ndOpTCIAN5-.
Call
•SOO
Dr. S.H. Fridner. Optometrist, Manager
Ground Floor Trust Bldg. 2224 Postoffice Street
New York. — The Fascist League of
North America, Mussolini’s organiza-
tion of black shirts, which alleged to
disband last December, is being re-
organized.
We wish to advise that the business of Hutchings,
Sealy & Company (Unincorporated) will be merged on
April 7, 1930, with The South Texas National Bank.
We make grateful acknowledgement at this time of
the many favors shown us during the seventy-six years
we have engaged in the Banking business in Galveston,
and earnestly bespeak for The South Texas National
Bank a continuation of the business and confidence which
we have in such full measure enjoyed.
. Knapp Brothers
Stationers and Printers
“THE MODEL HAS IT*
814 TREMONT ST.
Corner Alley
POSTAL HEAD HAS
ANCIENT LABOR PLAN
PIERSON’S ING.
UNION MADE DRESS PANTS
CARPENTERS AND PAINTERS OVERALLS
MEN’S WORK CLOTHES
FURNISHING GOODS
WOMEN’S NIGHT WORK
URGED BY FEMINISTS
PHHSHRSHRSHSHSNSHSHNSHCHGHSHKCHSHSHCHSHGHSHGHNGHSORKCHOHOHSHGHHCHSHSHSHGHHOHHHHDHOHHNHNHOHH#A
THE STORE THAT UNDERSELLS THEM ALL |
I SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY $
The present official staff of the South/Texas Nation-
al Bank will be augmented by Messrs. Sealy Hutchings,
George Sealy, John W. McCullough and others from the
organization of Hutchings, Sealy & Company, and clients
of both banks will continue to be served by officials with
whom they have been accustomed to deal.
The Model Laundry
Cleaning and Dyeing
I where
. hours.
8 And ft
§ NEWS REEL F
3 TALKING TOPICS g
--------
*0-0-0-0-0-G-S-G-G--C---c-mooGEa
I Martini Theatre I
Friday, Saturday
March 21, 22
"RIO RITA”
Featuring
BEBE DANIELS
JOHN BOLES
Also
Talking-Singing Picture
Greensboro, N. IC.—(Robert Lyons,
organizer Hotel and Restaurant Em-
ployes’ and Beverage Dispenses’ In-
ternational Alliance, died at a local
hospital. He had been assisting the
Southern organizing campaign.
----------o----------
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday
March 16 17, 18
"THE MISSISSIPPI
GAMBLER”
Featuring
JOSEPH SCHILDKRAUT
Also
ALL TALKING PICTURE
and
ALL TAKING COMEDY
PATHE TALKING NEWS
G64G9HEHGHOHSHGHSCHOMGHSHSIGHGHDIGNGHEHOMGGHGHSHGAGHGHGMHGAHOHGHGHGHGMGHH-HMoGGBMM
I Muller Printing Co. I
I PRINTERS—PUBLISHERS |
Send your next LAUNDRY bundle to us
and note the difference.
While the present quarters of The South Texas Nation-
al Bank are not entirely adequate, a new building will in
time be erected. Property was purchased and plans were
drawn a year or more ago, in anticipation of the present
change, but construction had to be deferred pending ex-
piration of certain leases.
; ployes on a
$
8
SENATE PROBE REVEALS
“WATER” IN UTILITIES
S March 19, 20, 21 g
| "THE LOVE RACKET” §
S Featuring $
§ DOROTHY MACKAIL
g and Others in Cast g
8 ALL TALKING PICTURE g
8 Also a
5 Two Big Vitaphone Acts g
§ And ft
9 Fox Movietone News Reel 5
commmuHHHHH
The Department Store With a
Personality
44-hour week schedule,
present schedule is 48
#WHEBPHBGHEHBSHCHSHGBSHIBPHGOHHGHRNGHRGNFHNIENHRHIHHIHHSHNHRHGHHEBHGHOHRHWHGWHHMHHH,
I ELITE CAFE
1 QUALITY, QUANTITY AND SERVICE !
~AVAVAVAVAVNSAVAVNVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAV[
I. . -------------------- -N]
D
A
D
I
March 15 16, 17, 18
ALL TALKING
PICTURE
LOVE COMES ALONG”
With
BEBE DANIELS
ALL STAR CAST
Also
ALL TALKING COMEDY
And
FOX MOVIETONE NEWS
Washington. — An eight-hour day
for all Federal employes, rather than
a short Saturday work day, and a
wage system based on the number of
unemployed, were included in sensa-
tional testimony by Postmaster Gen-
eral Walter F. Brown in opposing the
Kendall bill before the House Post
office Committee.
The bill would put all postal em-
WANTED TO EXCHANGE—For
filthy lucre, sheckles, seeds, rocks,
dust, dough, cold plunks, mazuma,
rhino or gold, we will exchange .Rub-
ber Stamps, Stencils, Seals, Time
Stamps, Number Machines, Time Aids
at 2205 Ave. C. J. V. LOVE & CO.
I and suggested an eight-hour day for
all Federal employes.
The cabinet official revived the dis-
carded theory that wages are subject
to the “law of supply and demand”
and said waiting lines of job seekers
should be the standard for setting
partment be placed on a
basis”—whenever workers
improved conditions.
The present system is 1
CITATION No. 40,022.
The State of Texas to the Sheriff or
any Constable of Galveston County,
Greeting-:
Oath therefor having been made as
required by law, you are hereby com-
manded that, by making publication of
this citation in some newspaper pub-
lished in said county once a week for
four consecutive weeks previous to
the return day hereof, you summon
Arnie Lee Long, Defendant, to be and
appear before the District Court, 10th
Judicial District, to be holden in and
for the aforesaid County of Galveston,
at the court house thereof, in the City
of Galveston, at the next regular term
of said court, to-wit: on the first
Monday in April ,1930, then and there
to answer the petition of Evelyn Flor-
ence Long, Plaintiff, filed in said court
on the 25th day of January, 1930, and
numbered on the docket of said court
No. 46,022, against the said Arnie Lee
Long, Defendant, and alleging, in sub-
stance, as follows:
That plaintif and defendant were
lawfully married on July 29th, 1927,
and lived and co-habited together un-
til October 31st, 1929. That the de-
fendant is a man of violent temper
and fussy and quarrelsome disposition
and that the married life of this plain-
tiff was rendered very unhappy be-
cause of the constant fussing and nag-
ging of the defendant. That the de-
fendant cursed and abused this plain-
tiff and mistreated her in many ways
and caused her much humiliation and
embarrassment by constantly being in
a state of intoxication. That the acts
and conduct on the part of the de-
fendant as recited above constitutes in
law such cruelty as renders the fur-
ther living together of the parties as
husband and wife impossible and in-
supportable. Wherefore, this plaintiff
prays that the defendant be cited to
appear and answer this suit that on
final trial hereof she have judgment
forever dissolving'the bonds of matri-
mony now. existing between the par-
ties, for the restoration of her maiden
name of Evelyn Florence Lavender,
and for general relief, with costs of
suit, as is more fully set forth in said
petition now on file in my office.
Herein fail not, but have you then
and there, before said court, this writ,
with your return thereon, showing-
how you have executed the same,
Issued this the 3rd day of February,
A. D. 1930.
Witness: J. C. Gengler, Clerk of the
District Court of Galveston County.
(Seal.) Given under my hand and the
seal of said court, at office, in Galves-
ton, Texas, this the 3rd day of Feb-
ruary, A. D. 1930.
Attest: J. C. GENGLER,
Clerk of District Court? Galveston
County;
By Wm. I. Worst, Deputy Clerk.
A true copy I certiX: E KIRK,
Sheriff of Galveston County.
By C. J. Allen, Deputy Sheriff.
------------Q_------------
New York. — The 5-cent fare con-
tract between the city and the Inter-
borough Rapid Transit Company was
upheld for the first time by any court
in a decision handed down by Su-
preme Court Justice Ingraham. The
decision affects both subway and sur-
face lines.
services now performed by the de-
partment for which the department
receives no credit. Subsidies for air
mail and merchant marine develop-
ment are also charged to the depart-
ment, said the witness.
Postal employes have repeatedly
protested against antiquated financial
methods in the Post Office Depart-
ment that result in large losses, while
post office officials insist that the de-
Thompson
wages. He said his department has
no trouble in getting employes ‘‘to
take the job.”
The statements recalled the days of
Burleson, President Wilson’s hard-
boiled postmaster general, who like-
wise. ignored the tendencies of the
times.
Mr. Brown said the Kendall bill
- would mean additional financial bur-
I
•AVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAV£V
Washington. — The American Gas
and Electric Company sold public util-
ities to itself for $112,129,000 that cost
$62,690,000. The sale was made to a
subsidiary. The evcess received by
the company was $49,438,000, accord-
ing to A. R. Colbert, accountant of
the Federal Power 'Commission, testi-
fying to a Senate committee.
The next day after the transfer,
said Mr. Colbert, the subsidiary
“wrote up” the assets it had acquired
from a book value of about $72,000,-
000 to $139,000,000, more than 91 per
cent. The company serves 250 com-
munities in Kentucky, Tennessee, Vir-
ginia and West Virginia.
----------o----------
Albany, N. Y.—The National Wom-
an’s Party joined hands with anti-
union manufacturers and restaurant
employers in urging a legislative com-
mittee to favor the Kirkland-Jenks
bill, which would permit night work
for women in restaurants.
The feminists are professional and
.business women who pleaded that
prohibition of night work by women
is a diabolical plot that male labor
has hatched up to debar females from
“favored” employment.
----o-----------
Phone 90
2207 Mechanic
those who profit by subsidies and by
low-wage employers who are not will-
ing that the government set high
working standards.
Post office employes are disappoint-
ed at the labor policy of Postmaster
General Brown. Only recently he ap-
proved salary increases from $9,000
to $10,000 for his four assistants, all
political appointees, and also in-
creases for postmasters in the 50
largest post offices in the country,
with salary ranges up to $8,000 per
annum. At the same time post office
laborers receiving $1,600 per annum
are denied wage increases because
this conflicts with the President’s
financial program.
-----0_——--
CITATION No. 46,057.
The State of Texas to the Sheriff or
any Constable of Galveston County,
Greeting:
Oath therefor having- been made as
required by law, you are hereby com-
manded that, by making publication of
this citation in some newspaper pub-
lished in said county once a week for
four consecutive weeks previous to
the return day hereof, you summon
George H. Hall, Defendant, to be and .
appeal- before the District Court, 56th
Judicial District, to be holden in and .
for the aforesaid County of Galveston, .
at the court house thereof, in the City
of Galveston, at the next regular term •
of said court, to-wit: on the first ■
Monday in April ,1930, then and there
to answer the petition of Virginia H. '
Hall, Plaintiff, filed in said court on
the 14th day of February, 1930, and
numbered on the docket of said court
46.057, against the said George H. '
Hall, Defendant, and alleging, in sub- .
stance, as follows:
That plaintiff and defendant were .
lawfully married on June 23, 1925, and
lived and cohabited together until Feb- ■
reuary 28th, 1929. That the married ■
life of the parties was extremely un- ■
happy; that the defendant was a man ■
of violent temper and fussy and quar- •
relsome disposition and that he cursed
and abused this plaintiff; that he was
constantly in the company of other '
women and that on said 28th day of
February, 1929, he left and abandoned
plaintiff, declaring that he no longer
wished to live with her, and that he ..
went to Oklahoma in the company of
another woman; That the parties have
not lived together since that time and
that the defendant has not contributed
to plaintiff’s support since that time.
That the acts and conduct of defend-
ant constitute in law such cruelty as
renders the further living together of
the parties impossible and insupport-
able. -That there is one child of the
marriage, Ethel May Hall, now aged
four years, and that said child is in
the care and custody of plaintiff, and
plaintiff desires that the care and cus-
tudy of said minor be decreed to her.
Wherefore, plaintiffs prays, that de-
fendant be cited to appear and an-
swer this suit; that on final trial ■
hereof she have judgment forever dis-
solving the bonds of matrimony now
existing between the parties; for the
care and custody of the minor men-
tioned above and for general relief,
with costs of suit, etc., as is more ful-
ly set forth in said petition now on
file in my office.
Herein fail not, but have you then
and there, before said court, this writ,
with your return thereon, showing
how you have executed the same,
Issued this the 5th day of March, A.
D. 1930.
Witness: J. C. Gengler. Clerk of the
District Court of Galveston County.
(Seal.)' Given under my hand and the
seal of said court, at office, in Galves-
ton, Texas, this the 5th day of March,
A. D. 1930. , ,
Bv E. T. Holman, Deputy Clerk.
Attest: J. C. GENGLER.
Clerk of District Court, Galveston
County.
A true copy I certify: ......
R. E. KIRK,
Sheriff of Galveston County.
By C. J. Allen, Deputy Sheriff.
----------O----------
dens on his department. The deficit
includes millions of dollars for ship
subsidies, encouraging air flying and
other grants that have 'but a remote
relation to the handling of mail.
The postmaster general said he
wanted to run his department on busi-
ness lines, to produce more and in-
troduce labor-saving devices. “Em-
ployes could produce more by work-
ing longer hours,” he said.
“Lengthen the day, speed up that
less workers may be employed and
have wages set on the standard of
unemployed,” was the substance of
Brown’s plea.
Thomas F. Flaherty, secretary-
treasurer National Federation of Post
Office 'Clerks, showed that postal re-
ceipts increased 55 per cent the past
several years, with an increase of
but 17 per cent personnel. “That’s
some speeding up,” said Mr. Flaherty.
He called attention to the many free
Pittsburgh, Pa.—Striking taxi cab
drivers rejected a “peace” plan that
was intended to end their walk out that
has been on since January 12. The
vote was 1,153 to 1 against the pro-
posal that would grant a small in-
crease and set up a company “union.”
The drivers demand a substantial
wage increase and union recognition.
The Parmelee Transportation Com-
pany is leading the fight against the
cab drivers. The company shows a
net profit last year of $1,305,408, as
against $729,476 the previous year.
This increase of nearly 50 per cent
in profits is announced after taxes,
interest, depreciation, depletion and
other funds are cared for. Despite
these immense profits, the company
refuses to pay a living wage.
----------0----------
THE UNION REVIEW
Wednesday, Thursday
March 19, 20
"CHRISTINIA"
Featuring
JANET GAYNOR
CHARLES MORTON
FOX MOVIETONE
TALKING PICTURE
Also
TALKING COMEDY
And
NEWS REEL
TALKING TOPICS
Fiye Phones (all at your SERVICE
18 Red Autos L
PEOPLES SHOE STORE
2321 Market Street Phone 98
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, March 14, 1930, newspaper, March 14, 1930; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1426314/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.