The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, July 15, 1949 Page: 4 of 4
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THE UNION REVIEW
GALVESTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1949
FOUR
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LEGAL NOTICE
CITATION No. 74,067
29
vision is perfect, have
our op-
tometrists
Emd
We are headquarters in Galveston
for the nationally advertised
PROPR-BILT
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LEGAL NOTICE
CITATION No. 74,146
Quka desased
HARD WEAR
it's
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Work Clothes
CITATION No. 74,086
UNION MADE ALL THE WAY
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333
At Your
Favorite
Department Store
delivered to him, the said plaintiff, by I income and consequently they would
RENT CONTROL OF THE LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE
OF THE GALVESTON LABOR COUNCIL
Fill out and return to Labor Temple office:
What rent do you pay ?.
.How many rooms ?.
V
Has your rent been raised in past 4 years ? If so, how much ?.
To All Advertisers
Have any repairs been made and what kind ?.
Were they done with skilled labor?!
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Please give street and number and sign name:
day of
(Signed)
Gerald G. Voelkel, President,
Nils Thompson, Recording Secy.,
J. C. Nelson, Financial Secretary,
H. T. Jett,
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OPTOMETRISTS -
and OPTICIA NS J
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elusive.
That on or about the
Southwestern Railway Journal, Fort
Worth, 43rd year.
Weekly Dispatch, San Antonio, 61st
year.
By AFL News Service.
Washington.—New work stoppages
in May rose to 450, more than for any
month since the spring of 1947, the
Bureau of Labor Statistics announced.
Idleness arising out of labor-man-
agement disputes likewise increased
over the preceding month, totalling
3,200,000 man-days in May as against
1,800,000 in April.
Approximately 250,000 workers were
involved in stoppages beginning in
May as compared with 175,000 in April.
Including controversies which contin-
ued from preceding months, a total of
about 600 stoppages, involving 320,000
workers, were in effect at one time or
another during the month.
The nature of said suit being sub-
stantially as follows, to-wit:
That on or about the Ninth day of
April, A. D. 1949, Plaintiff obtained
a Quit-Claim Deed, made, executed and
Work Stoppages in May
Highest Since Early 1947
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Serving Galveston for
Over 42 Years
Farm and Labor Journal, Waco, 41st
year. •
Farm Income Down 10%,
States Agriculture Dept.
f OVER 50 YEARS A PROFITABLE PLACE TO SHOP +
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Labor Groups Organie
Big Registration Drive
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without delay. It is the safe way
to avoid eyestrain.
and that upon final hearing of this
suit, plaintiff have. judgment for title
and possession of the above described
premises, and for his damages, etc., as
is more fully set forth in said original
petition now on file in my office.
If this Citation is not served within
90 days after the date of its issuance,
it shall be returned unserved.
Issued this the 6th day of July, A. D.,
1949.
(SEAL) Given under my hand and
seal of said Court, at office in Galves-
ton, Texas, this the 6th day of July,
A. D., 1949.
ATTEST:
H. H. TREACCAR, Clerk,
District Court,
Galveston County, Texas.
By Claude F. Brick, Deputy.
A true copy, I certify:
F. L. BIAGGNE, Sheriff
of Galveston County.
By Mike Fitzsimmons,
Chief Deputy Sheriff.
Wm. O. Sadler, Treasurer.
Longer Workweek Ups
Average Wage to $53.08
»
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^"HE-MEN"
"ACE HIGH”
DON’T RISK IT
If you are not certain that your
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To protect the public from impostors
soliciting donations for space in bogus
labor publications, year books, time
books and various schemes allegedly
for the benefit of organized labor, the
Texas Labor Press Association was
organized nine years ago by heads of
the various journals and newspapers
recognized as representative of the
labor movement in Texas.
Those bona-fide labor publications
are:
Austin Labor Journal, Austin.
Dallas Craftsman, Dallas, in its 40th
year of continuous publication in Dal-
las.
Union Banner, Fort Worth, 60th
year.
The State of Texas to Robert Bear-
don, Defendant, Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to ap-
pear before the Honorable Tenth Dis-
trict Court of Galveston County, at the
Court House thereof, in Galveston,
Texas, at or before 10 o’clock a. m. of
the first Monday next after expiration
of forty-two days from the date of the
issuance of this citation, same being
the 8th day of August, A. D. 1949, then
and there to answer Plaintiff’s Peti-
tion filed in said Court, on the 24th
day of June, A. D. 1949, in this cause,
numbered 74,086 on the docket of said
court and styled Dorothy Beardon,
Plaintiff, vs. Robert Beardon, Defend-
ant.
A brief statement of the nature of
this suit is as follows, to-wit:
A Suit for Divorce, as is more fully
shown by Plaintiff’s Petition on file in
this suit.
The officer executing this process
shall promptly execute the same ac-
cording to law, and make due return
as the law directs. If this citation is
not served within ninety days after
date of issuance, it shall be returned
unserved.
(SEAL) Issued and given under my
hand and the seal of said court at Gal-
veston, Texas, this the 24th day of
June, A. D. 1949.
ATTEST:
H. H. TREACCAR, Clerk,
District Court,
Galveston County, Texas.
By Claude F. Brick, Deputy.
A true copy, I certify:
F. L. BIAGGNE, Sheriff
of Galveston County.
By Mike Fitzsimmons,
Chief Deputy Sheriff.
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Pamphlets Describe Vets’
Rights in Plant Layoffs
The State of Texas to Burrell H.
Spence, Defendant, Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to ap-
pear before the Honorable 56th Dis-
trict Court of Galveston County, at the
Court House thereof, in Galveston,
Texas, at or before 10 o’clock a. m. of
the first Monday next after expiration
of forty-two days from the date of the
issuance of this citation, same being
the 8th day of August, A. D. 1949, then
and there to answer Plaintiff’s Peti-
tion filed in said Court, on the 22nd
day of June, A. D. 1949, in this cause,
numbered 74,067 on the docket of said
court and styled Ruth Bryan Spence,
Plaintiff, vs. Burrell H. Spence, De-
fendant.
A brief statement of the nature of
this suit is as follows, to-wit:
A suit for divorce, as is more fully
shown by Plaintiff’s Petition on file in
this suit.
The officer executing this process
shall promptly execute the same ac-
cording to law, and make due return
as the law directs. If this citation is
not served within ninety days after
date of issuance, it shall be returned
unserved.
(SEAL) Issued and given under my
hand and the seal of said court at Gal-
veston,. Texas, this the 22nd day of
June, A. D. 1949.
ATTEST:
H. H. TREACCAR, Clerk,
District Court,
Galveston County, Texas.
By Alice Amundsen, Deputy.
A true copy, I certify:
F. L. BIAGGNE, Sheriff
of Galveston County.
By Mike Fitzsimmons,
Chief Deputy Sheriff.
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Washington.—The AFL’s new radio series, “As We See It,” was
inaugurated July 5 over the American Broadcasting Company’s network
and will be broadcast each Tuesday night for the rest of the year be-
tween 10:30 and 10:45 p.m., EDT.
The programs will consist of news commentary by James Crowley,
radio news analyst, and interviews with labor leaders and high-ranking
government leaders on topics of vital public interest.
In the opening program, Mr. Crowley plans to interview President
William Green of the American Federation of Labor and a prominent
U. S. Senator on the subject of labor legislation.
Time for these programs is made available to the American Federa-
tion of Labor by the American Broadcasting Company and its affiliated
stations as public service without charge.
To keep abreast of the big news and to keep informed on labor’s
viewpoint and policies, every union member and citizens from all walks
of life are urged to tune in to these programs regularly.
Make a date with your radio every Tuesday night to listen to “As
We See It” over your local ABC station.
examine your eyes
t AFL Radio Programs Every Tuesday f
Night, 10:30-10:45, for Balance of Year 1
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Washington.—Seniority and other
benefits which veterans of World War
II have under the Selective Training
and Service Act of 1940, as amended,
and related statutes are described in
three pamphlets recently issued by the
U. S. Department of Labor.
Technological changes, layoffs and
other adjustments in the labor force
which affect the jobs to which vet-
erans returned upon separation from
military service are some of the items
covered in the pamphlets.
One entitled, “Field Letter No. 9,”
deals with the subject of layoffs.
Written in a question and answer
form, it answers such questions as,
“Does an ex-serviceman who entered
military service while in layoff status
have re-employment rights upon his
separation from the armed service?”
The Field Letter also gives opinions
and interpretations, analyses of court
decisions, and general information.
The other pamphlet entitled “A Vet-
eran’s Right to His Old Job,” and
“Information About Your Re-employ-
ment Rights,” tell in detail which vet-
erans are eligible for re-employment
rights under the new law whih be-
came effective June 24, 1948, and how
assistance can be obtained on any re-
employment problem.
Individual copies of the pamphlets
may be obtained by writing to the
Bureau of Veterans Re-employment
Rights, 7318 Labor Department Build-
ing, Washington 25, D. C.
Washington.—The net income of
American farmers in the first half of
1949 is probably running at least 10
per cent below the same period last
year, the Department of Agriculture
reported.
Cash receipts from farm operations,
and probably the gross income of
farmers, will be down only about 7
per cent. The department estimated,
however, that farmers’ production ex-
penses had not fallen as fast as their
Washington.—Responding to a mi-
nor extension of the workweek, aver-
age weekly earnings for the 11.8 mil-
lion production workers in the nation’s
factories moved upward slightly from
$52.70 in April to $53.08 in mid-May
1949, according to preliminary esti-
mates made available by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics.
Seasonal expansion on the part of
lumber establishments and a number
of food products industries were pri-
marily responsible for the slight ad-
vance in weekly hours from 38.3 to
38.6 in mid-May. Gross hourly earn-
ings for all manufacturing continued
virtually unchanged at $1,375.
Mrs. John Baty, a widow, Mrs. Rosalee
Brough, Homer W. Brough, and Mrs.
Lucille Linkey, a widow, as grantors,
on the following described property:
All that certain tract or parcel of
land lying in the County of Galveston,
State of Texas, described as follows,
to-wit': Lot Nine (9), Block Seventy
(70) of Arcadia acreage, Galveston
County, containing ten (10) acres
more or less, according to the plat of
said acreage filed for record in the
deed records of Galveston County in
book 91, page 216, reserving unto
themselves, the said grantors, one-
sixteenth (1/16) royalty in and to the
hereinabove described premises. Said
deed being referred to for all lawful
purposes and recorded in the Office
of the County Clerk of Galveston, Tex-
as, in Volume 805, pages 347 to 349, in-
Labor Advocate, El Paso, 41st year.
Southwestern Bricklayer, El Paso,
38th year.
Union Review, Galveston, 30th year.
Labor Messenger, Houston, 26th
year.
Labor News, Fort Worth, 34th year.
These publications are responsible.
Their editors stand high in the coun-
cils of bona-fide labor.
WM. B. ARNOLD,
President,
C. W. ROGERS,
Secretary-Treasurer.
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Buy War Bonds]
--TODAY—A
“For Future Needs
fe
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leave them less profit. It said the
cost of items the farmers had to buy
was down only about 3 per cent.
The report by the Bureau of Agri-
cultural Economics estimated the
farmers are receiving about $11,900,-
000,000 from marketings this year,
compared with $12,800,000,000 in the
first six months of 1948. Farmers sold
more than they did in the first six
months of 1948, but prices were down
about 10 per cent.
Receipts from livestock were esti-
mated at around $7,400,000,000, 10 per
cent less than in the first half of 1948,
and crop receipts were estimated at
$4,500,000,000, 3 per cent more than in
1948.
Educational Campaign For
Control of Venereal Disease
Announced by Dr. C. W. Cox
New York.—Newsprint production
in North America during the first 3
months of this year was 122,959 tons,
or 8.9 percent greater than in the
corresponding month of last year, it
was announced by the Newsprint
Service Bureau.
Of the total production this year,
70,143 tons were produced by Cana-
dian mills, or an increase of 6.4 per-
cent, compared with the similar pe-
riod of 1948; 25,075 by the United
States, an increase of 12.7 percent;
and 27,741 in Newfoundland, an in-
crease of 34 percent.
H
________________, A. D. 1933, the said
Mrs. John Baty, Mrs. Rosalee Brough,
nee Rosalee Baty, and Mrs. Lucille
Linkey, nee Lucille Baty, were lawful-
ly seized and possessed in fee simple
of all of the above described property,
being the same property conveyed on
the 9th day of April, A. D. 1949, by
them joined by Homer W. Brough,
husband of Rosalee Brough, to the
said plaintiff, C. L. Hoffman, and re-
corded in the Office of the County
Clerk of Galveston County, Texas, in
Volume 805, pages 347 to 349, inclu-
sive. Plaintiff alleges that on said
date, to-wit: April 9th, 1949, he was
also in possession of such hereinabove
described premises, and afterwards on
said date, the defendants unlawfully
entered upon and dispossessed him of
such hereinabove described premises,
and withheld from him the possession
thereof of his damage in the sum of
$2,000.00. Plaintiff herein especially
pleads the Statute of Limitations of
ten years of the State of Texas, being
Article 5510, of the Revised Civil Stat-
utes of the State of Texas, in bar of
the defendants’ recovery and claiming
of the ten year Statute of Limitations
of the State of Texas, which plaintiff
here specifically pleads and relies
upon. Plaintiff further alleges that
the reason of the facts alleged in the
preceding paragraphs of this petition,
that plaintiff is and was prior to the
institution of this suit, the lawful
owner and possessor of the premises
sued for herein.
Wherefore, plaintiff prays that the
defendants be cited to appear herein
the entire nation.
---------★-
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Dr. S. H. Fridner, Mgr.
Dr. M. A. Munster
OPTOMETRISTS
2224 Postoffice St. Dial 2-3021
Trust Bldg.
Yes sir, they'll give you dura-
bility, good looks, solid comfort.
. . . And prices are reasonable.
Miller Bros, work clothes have
been favorites of men of the
Southwest for 75 years.
88 Xs
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The State of Texas to Mina P.
Crook, Carrie A. Foster and Abner
Sisson, if living, and if dead, the heirs
and legal representatives of the said
Mina P. Crook, Carrie A. Foster and
Abner Sisson, and their heirs and
legal representatives, and all other
persons who may claim an interest in
and to the real estate involved, Greet-
ing:
You are commanded to appear and
answer the plaintiff’s petition at or
before 10 o’clock a. m. of the first
Monday after the expiration of 42 days
from the date of issuance of this Cita-
tion, the same being Monday the 22nd
day of August, A. D., 1949, at or before
10 o’clock a. m., before the Honorable
District Court of Galveston County, at
the Court House in Galveston, Texas.
Said plaintiff’s petition was filed on
the 6th day of July, 1949. The file
number of said suit being No. 74,146.
The names of the parties in said suit
are: C. L. Hoffman, as Plaintiff, • vs.
Mina P. Crook, Carrie A. Foster, and
Abner Sisson, if living, and if dead,
the heirs and legal representatives of
the said Mina P. Crook, Carrie A. Fos-
ter, and Abner Sisson, and their heirs
and legal representatives, and all other
persons who may claim an interest
in and to the real estate involved and
Lee Wilson, T. S. Mabry and H. L.
Hunt, as Defendants.
Newsprint Production
Shows Rise Over 1948
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- Childs Posture —
starts with the Feet
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Philadelphia.—A combined registra-
tion drive by AFL and CIO unions
will be started here, it was announced
by Henry L. Shepherd, CIO council
president, and. Joseph Schwartz, an
AFL official.
In a joint statement the union lead-
ers said; “More than 50,000 men and
women in labor, .professional, business
and fraternal organizations will par-
ticipate in the current attempt to reg-
ister the nonregistered people in the
city.”
Shepherd and Schwartz added that
the drive would be augmented by ad-
vertisements in newspapers and radio
stations, street corner meetings and
a door-to-door campaign in all the
city’s 52 wards.
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Austin, Texas, July 15.—A statewide
educational campaign for the control
of venereal diseases, which will be
cariied out throughout the summer
and possibly into the fall, has been
announced by Dr. Geo. W. Cox, State
Health Officer, who states that the
public will be reached by means of
radio, newspapers, movies, and lec-
tures by health authorities.
“While it is true that great advances
have been made recently in the control ■
of these diseases, nevertheless a lack
of full information on the part of the
public has hindered the complete suc-
cess of the program,” Dr. Cox said.
“There has been a steady decline in
the incidence of new cases reported, in
infant and adult mortality rates, and
in adrissions to mental institutions
due to syphilis, since 1938 when inten-
sive measures for the control of ve-
nereal diseases were initiated. But this
decline has not been great enough,”
Dr. Cox added, “and this is partly at-
tributable to a lack of accurate infor-
mation and the general apathy con-
cerning venereal diseases which fol-
lowed the termination of the war.
“The spread of many completely
false ideas about these diseases and
their treatment has also led to a feel-
ing of complacency, and the belief that
a patient can diagnose his own case, •
and treat it with self-medication. This
is a particularly dangerous untruth; .
only a competent doctor can diagnose
and treat venereal diseases, and it is
the purpose of this educational cam-
paign to fully inform the public of the
actual dangers of venereal diseases,
and what measures must be taken to
control them.”
Dr. Cox said that this campaign of
the Texas State Pepartment of Health
will coincide with other similar educa- •
tional campaigns, which will be con-
ducted by health officials throughout*
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The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, July 15, 1949, newspaper, July 15, 1949; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1438617/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.