The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, August 10, 1934 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Dallas Craftsman and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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/HE DALLAS CEFTSHIAN
WASTE IN ADVERTISING
(HE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
THIS IS so JOKE
2
laugh
KO DOUBT ABOUT IT
Wh the Highway Department is
this town has to hide such thingat *
heard we were in Auatin!
A VERSATILE WOMAN
injurlous to ihe pence
olher
A
JOHN a COFFMAN
DALLAS, nw. FHIDAY, AUG- *
JEWELER DEFIES NRA
ent.
Nave been teM
Sinee
ha
at 7 miles came back just uxe we
A STRIKE IN 1834
1
be
Board Ruling
Washington.—- Ruing that Wheeler
with a daily pint of beer
practice baa been general and that.
Subscribe for The Dallas Craftsman.
BI
tl
»
tial list for re-
l
and
mental right ot working
hi
atrikers are
THINGS YOU
B4
MAY NOT KNOW
len, a
air has been used for
ABOUT YOUR
it Of
A
TELEPHONE
»the Department
law.
dle
JAMES V. ALLRED
A GUARDED PROPOSAL
(This Space Paid for by Friends of James V. Allred).
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.
J
Puerto Ricans Give
Roosevelt Goodwill
Message for U.S.A.
Tea Can save Money by Buyimg From
C. B. Anderson & Co.
Why all the streams in the vicinity
at amatim went haywire just before
for
the other
hood • memders becsuse nt thesr work
in the field or labor organizatiom. The
Newark Redionai Labor Board found
the company guilty at the charg, and
adles her to take eare at the house-
hold laundry work with a slight out-
lay at time and effort.
lauehs
l first
teemed that Reuters gave her perm*
Banc employmnent m a cable editor
Miss Diemer to sun a young woman-
ana her aiuity. versatnity and pluck
ahoula enable her to go tar in her
protesstom.
Gardiner G. Hub-
bard, first busineme
adviser at the infant
telephone industry
... and today the
American Telephone
Another presen day advantage la John Cottman’s timber aspire to pub-
that the machine demands no wages, lice offics": James Martin, attorney
neither does it have to be placated who pointed out that Coftman’s law
Likewise at treat importance to la-
bor. Allred's friends bare pointed out.
Ie hla oppoaition to unfair lobbying,
which lobbying has perhaps done more
than anything else to prevent in Texas
the enactment of equitable labor laws
they used in the rackets the vote in all American Legion quartet, the Junior
probability would have been differ- Jasaera' orchestra. Jack Gardner, Jr.,
Tan men who aided Alexander
Graham Bell in the invention of the
telephone are perpetuated today in
many of the policies, and even in the
form at organization, at your tele-
phone bervice.
14
(a
I
1
I
gir
The Tirst decfaton at the new Na-
tional Labor Relations Board was a
good atari in asaertine owe funda-
of Railroad Trainmen
ng two at the brother-
Among annual sports events the na
tional marble playing contest has be
ome notable, nearly 800,000 young
Haifa having competed this year. Th.
tew United States champion la 13
ear-old Clifton H. Beaver of Spring
Teld. Mass.. who in the finals defeat
d Sidney Dies of Baton Rouge. La
t games to 3. to win a vacation trip
a gold wrist watch and a bicycle.
9-54 hour law. and
all too few — which
of I
1
i. .
Political
Announcements
Why a visitor to oar State Capital
suggested that some one borrow a 3-
inch shell and fire it down Congress
Avenue?
It in a well worn bat not th be for-
gotten axiom that a "friend tn need la
a friend indeed" An examination of
the record of Attorney General James
V. allred wi disclose that be has
consistently championed the cause of
labor throughout his career.
7
SU
-
K
Tl
%
e
Candidates Announeing for Office in
This Column De So Subjeet to the
Demoeratie Run-or Primary, Aug-
ust 2%, 1934:
Why this same town has more poli-
tico to the square inch than we do to
a square mile!
organised labor has sponsored for the
betterment of working conditions Id
Texas
"Certainly, the additional duties of
supervising boxing and wrestling have
not, as aatter at record, added any
dignity to the office of Labor Com-
misaloner ; and just as certainly, thoee
added duties have, left the Commis-
stoner's office less time to devote to
working toward those ideals for which
the office was created, the uplifting
at the laboring man
“I shall propose to the legislature
that administration of the boxing and
wrestling laws be transferred to some
other department, the Adjutant Gen-
eral or the Racing Commission. Cer-
tainly the Labor Commissioner should
not be forced to devote all his time to
this law.’
m
LABOR BOARD MAKES
GOOD START
Unusual among gifts to religious in-
stitutions was that at the former West
Baden Springs 504-room hotel In In-
diana, said to have cast meven million
dollars to buna, presentet to the Jes-
ulu to house a new college Most un-
usual is the fact that the donor, Ed-
ward Ballard. is not a Catholic, and
does not attend any church
WE WoXDER :
Why we met so many of our friends
in Austin last week—Charlie Poe,
Mr. Dolph. Jack Keller, Jim Atkinson,
Fred Leblane, Brother Clark, and last,
but not least, 1511110 Bull." In person
meu. The compear bucked the order.
The old National Labor Board sus-
tained the ruling of the Recional La-
her Board. The company bucked that
order.
The first dectalon at the aww board
was to eonirm tee ruling of tee old
board The decision deciaeed that an-
FURNITURE
We Bay, Sell and Exchange
CASH OR CREDIT
MOM ELM STREET
In an undertaking planned like the
telephone service for the long pull,
what is best for the telephone user
becomes in the end the course that
should bring the surer, more endur-
ing success. For more than 50 years,
the savings from the specialized tele-
phone organisation these men erested
have gone to give good telephone
service at fair cost to the user.
M.
roI
and
Inti
a
Jl
the
Gue
lln.
-
acti
-
Son
overnor. He is the
sponaor labor's own
Texas Labor Com-
himself solely with
A good many readers, tathers with
a sense of humor included . got a
chuckle out of this Newark bakery ad
vertisement: "Father's Day Special-
Parity Bakery's Famous Devils Food
Cakes."
impairs Allred de-
nice at Labor Com-
too important to be
petty politics ind-
Bell himself, the
young inventor...
today his place is
taken by Bell Tele-
phone Laboratories,
with its countiess
improvements to the telephone art
Thomas A. Wat. 4
son, making with his I — I
own hands the first NSI
telephones . . . todayaM
his pl see is filled by"/
the greet shops of F
Western Electric Co., which supplies
st s saving ths materials needed in
the Bell System.
Wheeler Shipyards
Hit By Labor
women It declared teas under tee
National Indrntrtal Recovery Acs sm-
pieyera do not have the legal right
to dtsertmninate agatnst trado onion
members beessse at theif union ac-
tivites.
The decimton was made in the cane
at the Jersey City-Lyndhurat Bus
Company which was charged by tee
Bro
with
Fer Sherif
LEONARD PACK
■ hi
The
l
I
I
J
I
in I
|
Ne
I
I
I
Br
hav
AIR-CONDITIONING BENEFITS
III FEVEE SUFFEEEES
elagedymmnne PF
en5 irtmerzonk
record constitutes a far more
his real attitude to-
[ man than a thou
i re nd id ate meekine
I post A thousand
equal to a single
Ired’s record as re-
rtends say may be
• simple words, the
every friend at la-
kssued Every Friday
WALLACK C. KHUT, Editar-Manegor
A glass bottle 11 inches long and
1 inches in diameter, was found in-
side a 12- pound pike caught by Ken-
neth Peterson of Minneapolis.
tree trade union movemnt, veleing
the asptrations and nehlevements at
the American Federatien at Labor. It
does not represent the Bo is hev ik. L
W. W. Anarehletis, Eadical, or amy
and stablity if Amerlcan Institalions.
It Is for Ainerica, first and last, and
for the boaeel, moral, upright, cour
agenus and tree trades anions nil the
Ome.
In a note addressed to his father,
19-year-old Curtis Warren of Don
ville, Va., specified his own funeral
arrangementa, then ended his Ilfs with
poison.
ba
lb
dd
at
For Governor i
JAMES V. ALLRED
Si
and
I it.I
Rog
The SPOTLIGHT
Bu Coke, the Office Boy
County Commissioner, District Na L
ED VANDERVOORT
(For Re-Election|
I
I
th
w*l
ee book reviewer dor a leveland
daily. later going to New York to
meez her fortune on the stage After
playing small parts in Broadway pro-
auetions and appearing in vaudeville
she decided to try her luck in Parta,
but as a newspaper woman again.
She wrote fashion artieles. art and
book reviews and a goesip column for
various pubcattona, remmaining la
Pans three yeara, stem bar destre for
new experiences led her to Shanghai
juat in time to witness the Japanese
invasion ot that city in 1322
A good many auntness moa are “on-
defing whether te* NRA can really
compel the payment at these wm
moors n senate that the Levy case
might provide a cleer-cut sent in the
eourta.
i
2
For Judge Co. Coart at Law II. 1
JOHN D. COFFMAN
4
am-
"A Thousand Promises Are Not
Why th* candidates in tee run-off
don't inquire into the circulation when,
they give an adv to a publication? It
you andidates will do this you will
not only save money, but win make
friends with the Union boys
dor see him in the run-ot campaign;
J. L. Goggans, D. M. Jones and others.
John Cottman was Introduced to tell
the gathering that he was “over-
whelmed" and grateful to his friends
tor their tributes.
Teacher (having size in mind) :
"What's thedirterence betweeen an ele-
phant and a flea"
Tommy: "Well, for one thing, an
elephant can have fleas. but a nea
can i have elephants"
| "After a comaideradle time had been I
occupied in parleying. the washer-
upon individual estabitshments i ta.
nous imduastries for tee purpose at
1\JO1ARY
In PUBLIC
WILL T. RICHARDSON
(Kember Dallaa Typoaraphiqal Union)
TELEPHONE 40838
The promisee of a candidate tor
governor, he declared, are empty and
without meaning if he must depend,
for their fulfillment, upon a legisla-
ure swayed by a predatory minority
which in turn is controlled by inter-
rets inimical to the majority of the
people.
Those measures which labor has
asked as its right can be hoped for.
Allred said, only when the two great
evils of unfair lobbying and corporate
influence have been eliminated
Published By the
EEILY PUBLISHING COMPANY
etnee: Grouna Fleer •» Labor Temple
Tung nad Evergreen
Lorenzo Dow, an American evange-
list who went to Ireland in 1799 to
endeavor to convert the Catholica at
that country to Protestantism, was
a bold spirit in many respects, bat it
appears that he waa extremely cau-
tious in matters in which women
were concerned.
His tentative proposal at marriage.
Written to a young woman at bls ac-
quaintance, ix a masterpiece at con-
nervatism. He wrote as follows:
"If I am perserved, about a year
and a half from now I am in hopes
of seeing this northern country again:
and if during that time you lire and
remain single, and find no one that
you like better than you do re, and
would be willing to give me up three
years oat of every four for travel in
foreign lands (for if you should stand
in the way I would pray God to re-
move you, whieh I believe He would
answer) and if I find no on* I like
better than I do you, perhaps some
thing further may be said upon the
subject."
It is safe to say that the young lady
could hardly have gotten a breach of
promise verdict on the strength of s
letter like that
Mrs Slmmuc—why do you
at your own jokes!
Mr Simmuo-caz, he that I
last laugh, best, Bo I giggle
Why a town of 60,000 can have
raising funda for cod.
a great many estanii
A
Why some canduidates were disap-
pointed te the labor vote they re-
ceired ' If they had used the money
in an honeet union publication that
How a certain candidate taela to
be doubie-crossed by some at his own
people? We have tried to ten this
brother who hie friends are and we
are now convinced that he will admit
we were right.
at the men was prumptly compiled
with the eompany wonla to cited to
the Nadiomai Recovery adminiatratiom
for withdrawal at the Blue Eagle and
ordered the
violated tea colleetive bargaining pro-
vislons of th. Nazional Industrial Re-
covery Act. the National Labor Reia-
trona Board gave the concern seven
days in which to relmstate three men
whom the board found hud been sub-
ject to dincrtmination bereues at anion
membersnip.
Failure to re-employ the men wt
result in tee boare referting tee
case te tee United States Department
at Justice for legal prosecatoin and to
tee eompilance division of the Na-
tional Recovery admmininttatiom for
ramoval at the Bier Eagie
The board made the following ree-
ommendationa 'or settling ths dispute
between the company and its em-
( ployes:
2 Men hired ainca the strike of May
29 should be tee first laid off when
lay-offs occur.
2 The men who Strack should be
In a recent speech at Brenham, Texas.
Allred said in part:
"I am not apposed to the right of
petition to the legislature in fact,
information conveyed to members of
tee legislature in an open and above-
board manner is to be desired, but the
trouble is that, as has been well stated
by the railroad brotberboods, under
corporate influence a system of lobby-
ing has grown np which ia a menace
to free government." The present law
Mrs W G. Roberts. Mies Juanita
Buckley. Miss Bess Pierce and Miu
Ruth Smith.
cWhs "omereo" wrrtee when Pthy mixed drinka and slot machines and
What young man in Austin can flip
hot cakes like a 43‘er, and incident-
ally. dou" mind demonstrating his
ability as a culinary artist
Why this same man bragged to his
triends that he had quit eating break-
fast, Bad teen in order to demon- !
strata to his bosum companion that he
had not lost the art of eqging. cooked
three slices of trench toast, three aft».
a stab at ham and two caps at coffee
—and devoured all.
against lobbying, be declared, "isn't
worth the paper It is written on."
Examining Allred’s record, the
friend of labor will find:
1. One of Allred’s earliest official
sets in his administration of the At-
torney General’s office was to hold
that the prison system might not com-
pete with responsible printing firms
in submitting bids on state printing.
On March 24, 1921, in an opinion
prepared personally by Allred, the
Board of Control was advised:
"In my opinion, yoa coaid not legal-
ly enter into a contract with the
Prison Board for state printing, or
with anyone else except upon com-
petitive bidding. Since you are not
authorised to contract directly with
ihe Prison Board, we now approach
the question whether you are author-
ibed to let a contract to the Prison
Board upon competitive bidding. Tour
attention t called to that part of the
Constitution which provides that all
printing ’shall be performed under
contract to be given to the lowest re-
sponsible bidder . : The legislature
baa prescribed by law who shall con-
stitute a responsible bidder.’ We do
the past meveral nensona as a retler
from the disuses and haa been nca^-
mended by several Dallas physicians
with tea more general acceptance of
air conditioning as a year round com-
fort, more hay fever sufferers will be
able to find relief this sensom.
Diacovery a tow seasona ago that
eonditiontug removes the dust and
pollen from tew air to permit those
sunceptibie to bay tever to Areathe it
without crying. smeermg and other
suffering, has led to a wider so* of
air conditoning equipment in Dallaa.
tncluding homes, bastneea quarters,
public butldinga and hoepitala. While
persons able to be ap and about spend
as many hours as pomafble in the air
conditioned stores and ocTee bund-
lags of Dallas, sick persons who ora
suaceptidle to hay taaer ana pollen
asthma may have air conditioning
equipment I astel ted in their rooms at
Baylor hospital
A number of Dallas business men
who are hay taaar aattaran have had
air eonditioning equipmemt installed
in their offices and find they can work
through the seanon without lowered
efficiency through tee cool comfort
and protection the conditioned air
gives them Air conditioned homes
are increaaing in number in Dallaa.
A certain physiclan, who is neceesarliy
moving back and forth a good deal,
has a portable machine for flitering
the air. This he carries with him to
be plugged into an electric service out-
let wherever he may be
justice for
and Telegraph Co., parent organisa-
tion of the Bell System whoe staff
members develop more economical
operating methods for the 24 BeU
amodated companies whose finan-
cing facilities make available, at a
saving, funds for necessary extensions
to telephone lines and equipment.
nan» or irsscsimot
rase ss.s*
John D. Cottman, candidate for
Judge of County Court at Law No. 1.
was guest of honor at a lawn party
given Tuesday night at the home of his
brother, David H Cothmnen. Entertain-
meat was furnished by friends at the
Coffman family, and included the
tee London News Chronicie and Reu-
tars. Her work was so highly es-
she wrote
clated Prens,
DRAW OWE
t—"—
Sra. Snimmuc—Do you think it is
good doctrine to -take no thought at
the morrow what ye shall eat and what
ye shall drink and wherewithal ye
shall be clothed" as the good book
says!
Mr Snimmuc—Sure! let prohibi-
tionists do the thoughting and script-
ural followers do the drinking.
, During the hoscnities
• cable stories for the Anso
Be sure yon buy the meet liberal
policy contract ever devised for
man’s earning power and estate
which we are offering.
We have been and are IM per oent
liquid and therefore are ready to
pay, immediately in cash, every de-
mand that may be made upon as.
SEE
HOWARD M. FAULKNEE
Field Supervisor
or
FLOYD L FOWLER
Manager
Colorade Life Company
m-21 Fidelity Bldg Phone 7-5625
DALLAS, TEXAS
Unusual, not to say brilliant, has
been the career to date of Miss Chris-
tine Diemer, an American girl, who is
now an editor of cable news in
Shanghai, China, for the tar-nung
Reuters news agency Only one other
woman. Mrs Elizabeth Koen, also an
American. Is employed in an editorial
capacity by foreign news agencies to
the Far East.
County School Supertntendent
ELLIS W. WRIGHT
trying to shoot another curve at tee ------ _ _
building trades? Intermediate me Why you hear "The Eye Of Texas
chanics is the oew name at 55 cents Upon You" at 6 345 every morn-
per hour. Imet
This is an age of advertising Busi-
neas could not get along without it
Yet many merchants waste a large
share of the money they think they
are spending for advertising and won-
der why they do not get better re-
suits.
Women do most of the buying for
the home. Now, did you ever see a
woman go looking over the billboards,
or reading the movie screen adver-
tisements in order to make up her
mind what or where to buy! Does
she get her shopping information from
a theater program or a telephone di-
rectory!
Outside at the store itself, the beet
and almost to* only way to attract
a prospective consumer's attention to
what you have to sell is through the
newspaper that goes into the home.
The store that advertises adequately
sad persistently in its local new spa
pars has ao need to waste money on
ihe other inferior mediums mentioned
The friendly feeling of the working
men and women of Puerto Rico for the
workers in the United States was
feelingly expressed in the letter of
welcome extended by the Free Feders
tion of Workingmen of Puerto Rico
to President Roosevelt on (be occa-
sion of his recent visit to that island
The letter, presented personally to
the President by officials at the Free
Federation, which is atfiliated with the
American Federation of Labor, said:
"The Free Federation of the Work-
ingmen of Puerto Rico, a state branch
of the American Federation of Labor,
in existence for over 50 years, hear-
tily welcomes yoa to our island.
"We strongly hope that your short
stay among us will be most plsasant
to you: that you will enjoy all the
bleesings with which nature has fa-
vored us, and that your visit will be
a source of inspiration to both the
continental American people and the
insular American people
We also hope that the plans at re-
habilitation of your Administration for
our island, cherished for so many
years by our organisation, will be at-
tective and will prove a success for the
workingmen of Puerto Rico whom
we represent, snd for all the tnhabi-
tents in general.
“Please accept our greeting* and
best wishes for a safe trip bach to our
nation, and let us request you to carry
to the American workers and to all
our continental American fellow eiti-
sens the message of our good will.-
The message was signed by Rafael I
Alonso Torres, secretary, and F. Pas
Granela, acting president, of the Free
Federauoh.
The beginnine this month ot the hay
fever sous aw will tied many Dallas
persons encapimg the unplemsant
aymptoma ot tee dimense toe the first
time, as they enjoy the comfort of
conditioned air Free of duet and pol-
In * 1 II " carporate-minded from long
krends Honor
nent in the firet primary, and who
_ - _ - e em ribed hiun as having the judicial
John Coffman"
not believe the State Prison Board
comes within those terms.
"If the legislature had intended to
authorise a contract with the Prison
Board. It could easily have done so by
express provision of the law."
2. Another little-known fact of All-
red's administration is that he made
a vigorous plea before National Re-
covery officials in Washington for
Strong protection of labor in the draft-
ing of the oil code. Such protection
as the code contained is at least due
in part to Allred’s representations.
5. Allred has consistently opposed
the abandonment of railway lines in
Texas. Every railroad man knows all
too well what the abandonment of a
line means.
4 He fought to the highest court
in the land—and finally won—(a de-
fense of the taw placing the operation
of trucks on a fair competitive basis
with railroads, at the time when the
trucking industry threatened the rail-
roads' very life
5. He has consistently fought against
the growing trend of the larger rail
lines to move their offices out of Tex-
as. which means that the abandoned
town is sapped of its lifeblood.
4. He fought—although unsuccess
fully—to maintain the Texas full-crew
law.
1. He co-operated with the labor
commissioner and others in drafting a
bill requiring contractors to pay labor
the prevailing wage scale on public
works. Subsequently his department
ruled. in an opinion requested by the
Texas Highway > Department, that
terms of this act were applicable to
the construction of highways.
Allred contends that the chief issue
in the race for governor is the issue
he has made—a house-cleaning in
Austin, which will sweep from the
legislative halls the few legislators
who are under the thumb of corporate
interests; the lobbyists who practice
their trade in hotel rooms.
IM vid E Cottman greeted the guests
and then asked Joe M. Hill, attorney
and former state judge advocate of
the American Legion, to preside over
the brief program.
"I have known the Coffman family
many yeara." said Judge Hiram F
Lively “One of the flneat recom-
mendation- anyone could have is the
stemdtast loyalty of this fine family,
father and sons, one to another I
have known John Cottman almost as
long as I have known his father and
he is fully justified in his ambition
to serve the people of his county as
Judge of the Oouty Court at Law."
Other brief testimonials were given
by Lets Skiles Lowery: Judge C. M.
Crumbaugh, who said "It is a good
sign for the country when men of
Strikes occurred occasionally as -omen gained their point, and after
long as a century ago, but they were | takins oplous Abations of gin re
generutg only load i scope and m i turned to their tabs '
solved hew workers in comparison [ A stree of washerwommen may bare
with enose of the present. An ne- l been * Berione matter IM years ago
count of a washerwomen a strike in when the tab and washboard were
the London Times of May 2, 1834, coo- I the only clotheswashime equtpment
teteed too sollowimg available. But such a strike would
“No fewer than t0 at thia useful > be of ““>• concern to the modern
class of females strack at Kensington housewife, whose washing machine en-
for higher wages. It appears that two
ahinings and six pence per diem, and
two hail pints of beer, had been the
regular scale of wages, but a revolt
was agreed upon and the price to be
demanded fixed at tores shillings per
diem and the usua beer allowance.
tailed to pay the amounta demanded
by their code authorities. So tar as
re know, no legal steps have been
taken to collect these assessments up
to the present time, although such
action has been threatened
A case winheh may bring the Moses
meat matter tn a showdown M that
of Levy A Son. manufacturing Jew-
elers of New York, who have given
notice that they refuse to pay an as-
sesemment at 3700 tevtad OR their es-
tadlfahmene by a jewelry code au- I
enority in a letter they say
“We are in receipt of a minvoice for j
$100 for a contributiom to maintain
the code authority of the jewelry m-
dustry We do not intend to pay
in tact, we refuse to pay I We have
been im business for over 44 years.
We intend, se long as our money is
mvested in our businesa, tn ran R on
the same high standards as in the
past. We absolutely retuse to take
any advice or atrectiom tram the NRA
This firm will spena 31.000 to fight
too payment at this 8100."
Il W1H be tntmresttmg to ree eka
General Johnson win say or do aboat
How the doable-eroesere feel after
getting thte man defeated’ We know
that th* candidate has koaned them
money, gone on their notes, and help-
ed them in many ways, and then they
turned around and worked for the
ocher candidate-who baa never car-
ried a card They are known and will
feel the eftects of the double-cross for
boom time
•t-r-a •• Iba Fosteffie- M nau--,
T--, •* ..—a* ua.. _-I m-eter
under Um Aet ef Mareh S. 1879.
Equal to a Single Beneficial Act'
-24 jm7
43 “o3‘
Feeling something was wrong at
home, Mra, Charles Gaitier of Lahr
Torest, IlL. hurriedly loft a receptio
nd arrived fust in time to prevent
woman thief escaping with $10,000
worth of jewelry.
spect to those gen-
up the boxing sad ,
ty,” Allred said.
Why they start to push the tabla
and chairs back at 11 o'clock p m,
in the beat places in a city we know.
' wn •i
■ az 2 -
prosecution under the National In-
dustrial Recovery Act.
Organteed Labor hopes aad expects
the board will continue to hew to the
line in these eases involving the de-
termtmattom of sabeeratve emplozers
to deprive the workers of their clearly
defined rights net forth in the Labor
Section of the Recovery Act and the
codes established by >u authority
It I* also hoped that the Depart-
moot at Justice will act promptiy in
prosecuting the cases cited to it by
the board, and Ihas estabitsh defi-
nitely that Section 7-A at the Recov-
ery Aet means what it says aboat the
right of th* workers to organize sad
carry on trade union work without
interference from employers
niriiiariiisiiirirsrtMi
went! But we did have splendid corn
pany on this trip- Jake Bitzen and
Judge Blair—and both taught us a lit-
tle more how to handle a flyrod.
Man a <<>«««. Fe-tofe Mex SSL
THryS—». 2-120s
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Reilly, Wallace. The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, August 10, 1934, newspaper, August 10, 1934; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1549080/m1/2/?q=a+message+about+food+from+the+president: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .