The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, August 29, 1941 Page: 4 of 16
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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THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
That, we think, is suc-
MRS. W. M. REILLY, Publisher
IL L. MeILWAINE, Advertising Mgr.
cess."
DEAN GAULDIN
DISTRICT ATTORNEY’
Dne Year_______$2.00
Advertising Rates Furnished on Application
4c
CORDIAL GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES
TOM CONNALLY
UNITED STATES SENATOR
mh“
ES
M
Greetings to Labor
DALLAS, TEXAS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 29, 1941
GREETINGS TO LABOR
(
DALLAS
' 2
LABOR
J
DAY
“All businesses have
GREETINGS
gone
through
exceedingly trying
23
i
f
Ra
)
I
Fakes & Co
%
ELM, FIELD & PACIFIC
employees have never had their
their working
hours increased.
“Time has proved to us that
7 Reasons
Best Wishes for Labor Day
BUY
UNION MADE
Greetings from---
Dallas Railway & Terminal Co.
PANTS-SHIRTS
Your Texaco
The Only UNION MADE
Dealer
Work Clothes
MADE IN TEXAS
F
^Nursery,
*
Clancy Sales
Organization
Kone Bat Authentieated
Labor Publications
New
1942
Models
Are Permitted to Display
This TLrA Emblem
things in my
Duncan.
“Since the
interests of the employees; and
if a business is to be successful,
that success must have its foun-
dation in harmonious internal
relations.
Let LANG SERVE YOUR
FLOWER W ANTS
ALL
STYLES
AND
PRICES
8 Stores to Serve You!
78 Greenhouses.
100 Employees.
375,000 sq. ft. of Glass.
Lady Hop Is
Doing Fine Thanks
When it’s
PAINT
Be Sure it’s
Sherwin-
Williams
FOR REAL
Hoot Juice
— FLAVOR )
GREETINGS AND BEST WISHES
TO ALL MY LABOR FRIENDS
Why Y ou Should Ride Street Cars
and Coaches
Entered at the Postoffice at Dallas, Texas, as second-class mail matter
under the Act of March 3, 1878.
agreement and added men and
women to our payroll to do the
work that had been done by
these machines. This was done
at a time when manufacturers
E
8
S
LABOR DAY, 1941
Labor Day, 1941, is not just another Labor Day. Nor is it
just another holiday. Labor Day is a day of reckoning for all
the workers in America—yes, for all the American people.
What is Labor Day? It is first and foremost a tribute by
the entire nation to the men and women who have built that na-
tion, who with their hands and with their brains planned and
charted and created everything we see and everything we enjoy
about us.
Labor Day is a recognition by the entire nation of the right
of wage earners, to organize themselves into democratic insti-
tutions of their own, labor unions, for the purpose of defending
their rights and privileges as citizens of a democratic nation.
Labor Day is the day of rededication of the entire labor
FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION
FRESH FROM OUR GREENHOUSES
They look better, last longer.
Arranged by artists and cost no more.
all over the country were cut-
ting down their payrolls and
We also know that in this period of great trial labor every-
where must strengthen its fraternal ties and bonds so that when
the future peace is shaped, our voice shall be powerful, our in-
fluence great for the establishment of justice and freedom in all
nations. That is why the American Labor Committee to Aid
British Labor, which is doing such a splendid job in promoting,
through its relief efforts, the fraternal relations between the
British and the American Labor Movements, has the support
of all organized workers in this country. On this Labor Day,
which brings to mind so forcefully all of the freedoms that we
enjoy, all of the privileges and the duties that fall upon free
and equal citizens of a great democracy, we think of the British
workers in the front lines of the world-wide struggle against
Nazism. We pay our respects to our fellow workers in Britain
and we pledge to them every possible aid.
American organized labor is determined to make Labor Day,
this year, a day that will be long remembered as one on which
the workingmen and women of our country rededicated them-
selves to freedom and democracy. On this Labor Day, therefore
let us give generously to British Organized Labor which is fight-
ing so heroically for Democracy.
THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
Issued Every Friday
Published By the REILLY PUBLISHING COMPANY
Office i Ground Floor of Labor Temple, 1727 Young Street
Mail Address, Postoffice Box 897, Telephone 2-1205
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION AND ADVERTISINGRATES
ma""
Company was organized in Au-
gust 1918,” Mr. Duncan con-
wages cut or
The Dallas Craftsman represents the true trade union movement, volcing
the aspirations and achievement of the American Federation of Labor. It
does not represent the Bolsherik, I. W. W, Anarchistic, Radical, or any other
movement Injurious to the peace and stability of American institutions. It la
for America, first and last, and for the honest, moral, upright, courageous
tad true trade unions all the time
—
The twenty-third anniversary
of its founding finds the Dun-
can Coffee Company complet-
ing another year of most
friendly relations with Labor,
according to H. M. Duncan,
founder and president of the
Company.
“The whole-hearted co-oper-
ation which every Duncan em-
ployee has shown throughout
the history of our Company is
one of the most gratifying
times in the past ten years. The
management of the Duncan
Coffee Company has tried at
all times to keep up the morale
of its employees, because we
all realize that the wage earn-
ers are the backbone of our
Nation. When these wage earn-
ers are deprived of income, low-
ered standards of living, which
undermine our economic struc-
ture, are the inevitable result.
“To prevent this in our own
Duncan Coffee
changeable part of our operat-
ing policy to take the company
employees into consideration in
formulating any change of
plans. After all, the interests
We are proud of labor’s role in this struggle. We do not
boast when we point out that labor has always been in the front
ranks of those who opposed dictatorship, whether from the
right or from the left. Long before the present war started, we
of labor were warning the free peoples of the world and were
fighting, with every civil weapon at our command, the cancerous
growth of totalitarian forces everywhere.
The world may have been surprised at the great role and the
tremendous responsibilities which the British Labor movement
took upon itself to prosecute the war against the Axis aggres-
sors. We were not. They acted in the best traditions of the
labor movement all over the world. They acted in accord with
its finest principles. They are living up to what we all expect-
Mrs. Hop, the female of the
species (she outnumbers Mr.
Hop by 1,000 to 1) that imparts
aroma, flavor and tang to beer
and ale, is doing fine, and her
condition is of major interest to
many localities of the three Pa-
cific Coast states. It is also of
more than academic interest to
millions of beer drinkers in the
other 45 states.
This is the time of year when
the hops, cone-shaped buds of a
high-climb vine, are reaching
their full bloom. Picking starts
about the middle of August.
The hop-picking season is a
The RCA Victrola featured in thia
offer is Model V-100. Alone, it‘s
well worth the coat of all three
items. So come in today —while
this great bargain lasts.
L00K FOR THIS TRADEMARK
Y-—— a BEFORE XOU BUT I
T- “Hi. M..
gesI, ter "s Voice" trademark ie
D"dmelrX your goarantee of quality
teffiPyfrP* — i ideacifseo the one
k----; SI and only RCA Victrola i
movement to the principles of freedom and democracy upon
which they were founded and which President Roosevelt sum- -c.c „
marized so eloquently in his Four Freedoms. Labor Day is the of.the Company are equally the
restatement of labor’s determination to defend democracy
against all its enemies, to defend the principles of freedom upon
which the labor movement is based against every insidious at-
tempt to undermine it in favor of dictatorial panaceas.
Labor Day, 1941, has a greater significance than Labor Day
in a good many years of the past. The world is literally at the
crossroads. It is locked in a gigantic struggle to determine
whether it shall exist in the future as a world of slaves or a
world of free men.
We Employ Dallas Labor.
We Pay Dallas Taxes.
We Dant to Serve Dallas People.
Mowers by Wire Anywhere.
welcome and economically im- _
portant interlude for thousands ---
organization, we junked all
possible machinery used in our
plant operations several years
ago when we signed the NRA
of men and women who, begin-
ning with California, work their
way north, ending the season
about September 15 in the hop
yards of the state of Washing-
ton.
The three West Coast states
produce more than 95 per cent
of the 35 million pounds nor-
mally necessary to fill Amer-
ica’s brewing requirements. A
small quantity is also grown in
Idaho and in New York, which
once produced more than three-
fourths of the nation’s crop.
Over 400 people are in the
Duncan employ at the present
time. This number has grown
from the original six with
which the Company began busi-
ness 23 years ago. In addition
to their regular earnings, Dun-
can employees have received,
every year since its beginning,
an annual bonus of a substan-
tial percentage of their year’s
income.
Admiration and Bright &
Early coffees have grown in
those 23 years from unknown
brands to the leading coffees
sold in the Southwest. Con-
sumer acceptance of Duncan
coffees has made possible ad-
herence to its now well-known
The American Labor movement has also assumed its full
responsibilities and is carrying its burden for freedom’s sake
without shirking and without hesitations. We know that our
fate, our future as free men and free workers is at stake in the
outcome of this war. Our spokesmen have told the nation and
the world in no uncertain terms where we stand. They speak
for all of us. We know that the democracies depend upon our
resources, our war industries, war materials, in order to carry - -
the war successfully to the Nazis. We know this and are work- letting employees
ing accordingly. <—_
After the hops are picked, I
they are air-dried or kiln-dried
and then baled for ’shipment to
breweries, where they are stor-
ed in cool temperatures until
ready for use. Brewers, in se-
lecting hops, aim at obtaining
those which impart delicacy of
flavor, aroma and bitterness, I
and which also coagulate pro-
teins. Hops also serve as a pre-
servative.
Because American growers
are progressively improving
cultivation and picking meth-
ods, the imported variety has
almost entirely vanished from
American breweries.
In 1935 domestic hops netted
growers 9.8 cents per pound. In
1939, according to Federal
sources, they netted growers
27.8 cents per pound. The
present trend is even higher.
The Census of Manufacturers
mygKAlilof
•aQDOUELE PLEASURE OFFER!
H. M. DUNCAN
tinued, “it has been an un-
Dnean C.ffag this procedure was to the best
-Mu-du •-,c, interests of all concerned. Our
Company Celebrate business has constantly improv-
A.Z i 2 ed and our employees are sat-
23rd Anniversary isfied. That, we think, is sue-
With new millions daily demand-
ing the double pleasure of records
and radio we make this sensational
money-saving offer!
Now, at one low cost, you can get
a new 194' RCA Victrola which
plays 10* or 12* records with lid
closed—and provides splendid
radio reception as well—plus 6 su-
perb Victor Records and a hand-
some record rack to keep them in!
life,” said Mr.
. . ... — . „ says breweries purchased $11,-
labor policies, according to Mr. 115,525 worth of hops in 1939.
Duncan.___ Later figures are not available'
go. Duncan
1,035
-5m
—____—
' ■ omma-s,
mnnwamnl
aeEsn
admms
hbddhnmsdseeeh
(p” SWP House Paint
820 $2.89
" Gallon in 5‘s
SMfMtN-WLUAM&
s Live Oak, Ervay and
Pacific—Phone 2-3224
—They are Safe
—They are Convenient
—They are Dependable L
—They relieve you of Driving in Con-
gested Traffic
—They relieve you of Parking Prob-
lems and Expense
—They help to Maintain the Value of
Your Property
—They save you Money on your Trans-
portation Expense
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The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, August 29, 1941, newspaper, August 29, 1941; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1549441/m1/4/?q=music: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .