The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 1950 Page: 2 of 4
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TWO
THE UNION REVIEW
GALVESTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1950
Che LCnion eview
+
Pupllshed Every Friday Morning at 217 Tremont Street.
Phone 6635
"Make This Your Bank
M. E. SHAY...........
.........Publisher
888383
*********++*******+*****++**************
*********************+******+*******************
ARE YOU SATISFIED?
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NATIONAL
pRESS
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1328 31st Street
Phone 5771
*****±±*******+++**+*+*++++*****+**+**+*******+**-*
GALVSTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1950
Oldest Union Shop in Town
Much Still to Be Done For Youngsters
Union Watermarked Paper and Envelopes
Dial 5-6635-5-6636
2
It is our responsibility as parents, as labor leaders, as teachers, and in **3*****+******4***+*********6**--**e
±***********+*+*+****++**+****+*+*+*******
ALL EVANS STORES
Stewart Title Guaranty Co.
In Galveston, Alvin and Texas City
NOW OPEN
■
EACH NIGHT
CAPITAL, $1,700,000.00
GALVESTON STORE LOCATIONS
LEGAL NOTICE
ATTEST:
OUR PRICES
NO INCREASE
CITATION No. 76,058
NOW GOOD
IN EMPLOYEE
WORKING
HOURS
★
Lauds Gompers
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THE UNION REVIEW
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18th and Broadway
39th and Avenue O
51st and Broadway
29th and Broadway
14th and Postoffice
20th and Market
❖
Every union in Galveston should
have a press correspondent. You
want news of your union to ap-
pear in The Union Review. See
that someone is especially ap-
pointed to send it in. See that it
reaches the office in time, for
every paper has a closing time.
All local news should be in
The Union Review office not
later than 11 a. m. Wednesday.
Address all news matter to
❖
❖
TEXAS CITY
102 North 6th Street
Send Your Next LAUNDRY Bundle
to Us and Note the Difference
HE DONT
LOOK.
IT!
Entered as Second-Class matter May 9. 1919, at the Post Office at Galves-
ton, Texas, under the Act of March 3, 1879
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IF THIS
DOESN'T
PROVE. IT.
YOU CAN
SUE.
2 ME?
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When You Deal in Real Estate—Be Sure
the Title is Guaranteed
ALVIN
201-3 Gordon Street
EL
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MARKET FOR.
A GOOD, BRAVE,
FIGHTIN', )
FEARLESS r
DORG!
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 E. W. Garner, Deputy Sheriff.
3
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THIS DOG
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MEAL OFF’N LIONS
ALONE — AN' YOU
SHOULD SEE WHAT
HE DOES TO TIGERS:
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"AVAN
By KATHARINE F. LENROOT
Chief, Children’s Bureau, Federal Security Agency
ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL LABOR PRESS ASSOCIATION
5
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RAQEENL2COUNCID
.ene,
FEees
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.
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.
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Lab or
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MAIDEN EMBARKATION . . . The S.S. Liberte, French line, former-
ly the Europa, leaves her home port of Le Havre on her maiden voyage.
Third largest liner afloat, the Liberte has been transformed into a
virtually new ship at a cost of $19,500,000. The big, 49,850 ton luxury
liner arrived in New York recently and was accorded an official wel-
come to the city and the United States by Mayor O’Dwyer’s committee,
which is headed by Grover Whalen.
V/80 STOWai
BETTER FOOD FOR LESS*
5EtF-SERVE • G ASM AND WAnO¥ ?
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EDPRINT-,
f TRADES^^^COUNCIL >
The publisher reserves the right to reject or revoke advertising contracts
at any time. Copy of this paper will be sent to the advertiser.
Communications of interest to Trade Unionists are solicited. They should
be briefly written, on but one side of the paper, and must reach this office
not later than Wednesday 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
correspondents.
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all our 53 states and territories are putting in many, many hours of their time
in preparation for the Midcentury White House Conference on Children and
Youth, called by the President to be held in Washington the week of December
3, 1950.
This widespread interest and activity by both professional and lay people
points up not only the general concern about the unfinished business in better-
ing child welfare, but, more important, how we cana bring together and utilize
more fully our knowledge, our material benefits, and our spiritual values to
greatly enhance the well-being of our children in the future.
The 4 previous White House conference on children, held at 10-year inter-
vals, under the auspices of the President, considered specific problems about
children, and each made possible notable advances in child welfare.
In contrast, however, the focus of the Midcentury Conference is “to con-
sider how we can develop in children the mental, emotional, and spiritual qual-
ities essential to individual happiness and to responsible citizenship, and what
physical, economic and social conditions are deemed necessary to this develop-
ment.” In other iwords, how can we give every child the chance to develop a
healthy personality.
The challenge of the midcentury is to find for our own children, and through
international cooperation for the children of the world, the means by which
they can be helped to develop their fullest power for creative living. Only in
this way can we help to build the kind of world in which enduring peace, with
freedom and justice for all, will be achieved.
------*------
Labor to Honor Cahan at Ninety
eria fharfan Kan. mir.lt.
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The State of Texas to Thomas Edi-
son Courtney, Defendant, Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to ap-
pear before the Honorable istrict Court
of Galveston County, 10th Judicial Dis-
trict, at the Court House thereof in
Galveston, Texas, at or before 10 o’clock
A. M. of the first Monday next after ex-
piration of forty-two days from the
date of the issuance of this citation,
same being the 2nd day of October A.
D. 1950, then and there to answer Plain-
tiff’s Petition filed in said Court, on
the 10th day of August, A. D. 1950, in
this cause, numbered 76,058 on the
docket of said court and styled Doris
Pauline Courtney Plaintiff, vs. Thomas
Edison Courtney, Defendant.
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 not be returned
unserved.
(SEAL) Issued and given under my
hand and the seal of said court at Gal-
veston, Texas, this the 15th day of
August, A. D. 1950.
teAis
PRREss--
ASS’N
I NITED STATEG
• NATIONAL BANK •)
MARKET AT 22 ND STREET
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS ONE MILLION DOLLARS
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
By ARNOLD BEICHMAN
New York Correspondent for AFL News Service
New York.—-A grand old maan of 90 will be honored Sept. 9, at a birthday
luncheon given by friends who have known him as a life-long friend of labor,
and a foe of totalitarianism.
This grand old man is Abraham Cahan, the editor-in-chief of the Jewish
Daily Forward, largest Yiddish daily newspaper in America.
Speakers will include AFL President William Green, David Dubinsky, presi-
dent of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union; Alex Rose, president
of the Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers Union and Jacob Potofsky, president
of the CIO Amalgamated Clothing Workers.
The celebratioon of Abe Cahan’s birthday is particularly appropriate this
year, the centennial of Samuel Gomper’s birthday. Because when the Socialist
Labor party more than 50 years ago started warring against the leader of the
Americana labor movement, Abe Cahan sided with Gompers. Thereafter, the
Forward supported Gompers anad the Americana Federation of Labor.
Abe Cahaan’s major contribution to the labor movemenet was his unremit-
ting struggle against Communist infiltration. The Forward unceasingly ex-
posed Communist attempts to seize power in the trade union movement and
particularly in the New York metropolitan area.
Another of his many achievements (Re’s also a highly regarded novelist,
essayist and critic in English as well as Yiddish) was his realization that the
immigrants who were pouring into this country from Europe needed to be edu-
cated into the American way of life, to understand the meaning of American
freedom. The energies of his newspaper were thrown into a realistic job of
Americanization coupled with a campaign for trade union organization among
immigrants.
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‛ THIS is
TH' MARKET,
MISTER. DUFFY, .
GO NO
L FARTHER! L
8 y AFL Fewg Service.
Camp Tamiment, Pa.—That Sam-
uel Gompers was becoming an in-
creasingly active advocate of labor
and social legislation toward the end
of his life, and that he would “un-
doubtedly have been classified as a
believer in the welfare state if he had
lived through the eventful years in
the last quarter of a century,” were
among the contentions of Dr. Harry
W. Laidler, Executive Director of the
League for Industrial Democracy, at
the Tamiment Institute of Social Sci-
ence, sponsored by the AFL Interna-
tional Ladies Garment Workers.
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TWO SOLDIERS OUT OF COMBAT ... A wounded South Korean
soldier helps his more seriously-wounded buddy as they make their
way to a first aid station behind the fighting line somewhere in
Korea. After initial setbacks, the South Korean army made a game
comeback and is now in the conflict shoulder to shoulder with the
KNAPP BROS., Inc.
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MEdLDEVEUTPHIERT
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Washington.—On this Labor Day of 1950 working people across the land J
can take justifiable pride in many of the advances in child welfare during the •
1
past half century. . I
Labor unions took an active part in the pioneering struggles to bring free *
educatioon to all children, to regulate child labor, to improve health services +
for mothers and children, and to extend social services to children needing
them. Since the turn of the century, child welfare has come a long way. ( •
But organized labor must be concerned, as must all thoughtful citizens, 4.
with the unfinished business in advancing the well-being of children. ;
many other capacities concerned with children to give every one of oui 48,000,- ,,,,3****************************,**************4
000 childreen a fair chance to achieve a healthy personality, to free them of our
fears and taboos and help them face reality. *
This Labor Day finds thousands of citizens throughout the nation busy at •
work carrying out this responsibility in trying to find out the best ways to ad- •
vance to the well-being of children in the years ahead. Some 50,000 citizens in 3
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT WITH
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of Galveston, Galveston, Texas
Southeast Corner 22nd and Strand
Duly Authorized to Act as Executor, Administrator,
Guardian, Trustee and in All other Fiduciary Capacities.
SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT
--- INTEREST PAID ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ---
We Solicit the Accounts of Corporations, Firms and Individuals
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
AL
-ya
30%
j • V .. 3
217-23rd Street
___________________1
$452
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BALONEY! Y COME N
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YOUR. WORD FOR. /DONT JUMP OUT?
IT AN’ ITS -SILLY K..CONCLUSIONS!
TO AST YOU TO
, PROVE, IT! 1
s A O’CLOCK
TIL III Closed on
JL “ Sundays
_=— United States GI’s.
। +*********-********
Midcentury Child Conference Notes ! ™wG™vie.Y^ 1
T JOHN M. WINTERBOTHAM, Vice President C. F. URODA, Assistant Cashier A
3 A. F. HOEHN, Assistant Cashier T
X' ---- TRUST DEPARTMENT ---- A
3 ARTHUR E. A. CATTERALL, Trust Officer T. F. HARLING, Assistant Trust Officer *
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REG-LAR FELLERS—-A Alezo’s Diet
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The Union Review (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 1950, newspaper, September 8, 1950; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1441480/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.