The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1963 Page: 3 of 4
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I
October 25, 1943
PAGE 3
1
, 1.25
.50
.25
No. 6—State Building Trades
Total
$4.03
Clarence H.
EMERSON
J
Patronize our advertisers.
INSURANCE
GO
ATTEND CHURCH
SUNDAY
I
i
Phone RIverside 1-1066
RIverside 2-4493
Brother W.
E. O’Donnell, Sr., has
Bell Cleaning & Laundry
$ SAVES YOU MONEY $
ON LAUNDRY & GLEANING
n
•143 Scyene Rd.
EV1-4156
1 •
1
U.S. Medical Education Aid
Meeting 'Acute Social Problem'
Keep Up With Labor
The Dallas Craftsman
.18
.10
for Dallas
members,
No. 1—FU. per capita tax...$1.75
No. 2—State conference per
ROEDER & MOON
Mercantile Bank Bldg.
Phone RI 2-6886
BRICKLAYERS
Local No. 5
By Y. C. OGLEE
4
IRON WORKERS'
HAPPENINGS
LOCAL NO. 481
By DAVID KEELER
Bell Cleaning & Laundry
BRANCHES IN ALL PARTS OF CITY
PAINTERS LOCAL 53
SEC DAN HOLLON, JR.
For Better Savings and Better Service
Go To
SCYENE GARAGE
Specializing In Brake Service
New Motors . Moton Overhauled
All Types of Body Work
Bumper to Bumper
I
1
I
Carhart of Texas
LADIES SPORTSWEAR
Smart
N’
Gay
. . . Accident and
Fire . . Life .. Automobile
Sickness
THE ROSE SHOP
YOUR
UNION FLORIST
FALSTAFF DISTRIBUTORS, IN OF DALLAS
3000 Junius Street
TA 6-6051
LYON-GRAY LUMBER CO.
Complete Line of Power Tool*
Hardware and Paints
WE SPECIALIZE IN SERVICE
700 Marsalis Pkway at Clarendos
Phone WH 3-4323
EASE THE STRAIN ON TOUR EYES
Bring Your Physician's Prescription to Us fat A-1
QUALITY GLASSES
RUGS NEED CLEANING?
call
ORIENTAL
Rug Cleaning Co.
TA 1-9135
STEIN'S
America’s Largest Maker Seller
of Fine Men’s Wear
1K1e Meta st.
439 w. JefTerson Av
1540 H. Buekner Bld.
Cbarge Ut
Toko up to 6 monthi to pay
Which leaves us $2.47 for our
own local to operate on. On that
we have managed to pa our bills
and build up the treasury some,
largely because we have had an
unusual large number of initi-
ations the past year.
THOMAS OPTICAL COMPANY
Pacific Ave., Ground Floor, Medical Arts Building
THI PALLAS CRAFTSMAN
licensed to practice in this coun-
try ran between 20 and 25 per cent.
“We need to ask ourselves
whether, in view of our position
in the world and our scientific
achievements, we should be mak-
ing training resources available to
other nations rather than using
the graduates of the education fa-
cilities of foreign nations to make
up for our own deficiencies.”
field as a candidate for place No. 6.
Brother O’Donnell has been a mem-
ber of Local 53 for over 25 years
and has served as business agent,
president, trustee, executive board,
convention delegate; and various
committees. He has offered his
services to the working people of
Dallas County and he will serve
them to the best of his ability. We
would like to urge the members to
vote on Nov. 9.
capita..............
No. 3—Local sick benefit
per capita..........
No. 4—Local Building Trades
per capita..........
No. 5—State AFL-CIO per
capita..............
Southwestern Life building at the
corner of Akard and Ross. This
should be a good job m 1964. There
are several big schools throughout
the county which will come up in
the spring of 1964. Carrollton win
have a large addition to the R.
L. Turner High School. Richard-
son will build a new Junior High
School along with several new
class room additions, Garland is
building new schools and addi-
tions. Practically all our contrac-
tors are reporting they have plenty
of work which has to get ready.
There is a very important elec-
tion coming up Nov. 9. We hope
to repeal the poll tax and elect
very hard to have something to
report to the meeting next meet-
ing night. We will be contacting
each of you in the very near fu-
ture. This is very important that
when you are contacted by the
committee, you- must either give
a pint of blood or get someone to
donate one for you or get a re-
jection slip from the bank stating
that you have made yourself avail-
able but could not give blood. This
is the only way we can keep a
bank operating.
The following apprentices gave
blood for Brother Joe Goodwin:
Lawrence Phillips, William Rasse-
lot, Donald McCarrol, William Bell,
Wayne Adcock, Jerry Waugh, Sid-
ney Glasscock, and James Bailey.
Thanks fellows.
FTC Crackdown
Hits Labor Digest
1 Washington—The Federal Trade
i Commission has cracked down on
1 Labor Digest magazine, ordering
• the self-styled labor publication to
stop claiming union endorsement
• and to cease using “threats” to ob-
’ tain advertising from business
firms.
The AFL-CIO Int. Labor Press
1 Association, which wages a con-
tinuing campaign against "racket”
publications, first called the FTC’s
: attention to the Labor Digest op-
erations.
After an investigation, the gov-
ernment charged that the New
York City publication had sought
to sell advertising by falsely claim-
ing on various occasions that it
was published or endorsed by the
AFL-CIO or affiliated unions.
Furthermore, the FTC complaint
said, the publication’s representa-
tives “threatened, directly or by
implication, that if business con-
cerns did not purchase such space,
their products would receive un-
favorable treatment by union
members.”
Labor Digest also was charged
by the FTC with having “engaged
in the unfair and deceptive” prac-
tice of runnigg advertisements
without authorization and then
trying to bill the companies for
the cost.
All of these techniques, ILPA
Pres. Bernard R. Mullady said, are
typical of “racket sheets” which
the ILPA has exposed and helped
prosecute over the years.
The FTC’s final order, which the
Labor Digest did not contest, di-
rected the company to “cease and
desist” from the practices item-
ized in the complaint.
Named in the order were Ernest
J. Modarelli and Harry B. Simon,
identified as officers of the pub-
lishing firm; Charles Cole, listed
as editor; Alex Adler, identified
as officer manager, and Ralph J. ,
De Meo, described as a former (
officer of Labor Digest.
Work is still slow. We have a
number of people out of work. We
have some good jobs coming up
and when they get ready it should
help conditions quite a lot.
Friday night, Oct. 25 at our
meeting we will vote on a resolu-
tion requiring all steward to be
in the hall when the steward re-
ports are read. The rule is now
the steward reports can be mailed
in and you do not have to attend
the meeting. So you members
should be here, that we might
have a representative number
present to decide if we want to
go back to the old rule of requir-
ing the stewards to be present or
maintain the By-Laws as is.
In the recent past there has
been two or three attempts to
raise the dues in order to hire
another man in the field; (which
in my opinion we desperately need),
and because of those attempts,
there has been considerably dis-
cussion about what we do with all
the dues money we collect. So I
will breakdown the $6.50 per month
dues in order that you may get a
better picture of how those dues
are divided:
Starting this month the Local
Union office will not remain open
on Saturday. This action was
taken by the body in the regular
meeting of Oct. 7.
We are again in the process of
setting up another blood bank. In
the past we have not had too
much cooperation from our mem-
bers in keeping blood in the bank
as we need it. Brother John Wood,
Clyde Platt and Dave Keeler will
be the committee. We will try
quoted government estimates that
the cost of obtaining a medical
education exceeds $11,000.
This means, she added, that “up
to now training in medicine has
been largely limited to people in
upper or upper-middle income
families.”
Miss Bamberger pointed out that
in recent years graduates of
foreign medical schools have, in ef-
fect, been subsidizing medical care
in the United States.
“In the last four years,” she
said, “the proportion of gradu-
ates of foreign medical schools
two new legislators
County. One of our
Washington — The new federal
aid to medical education program
will help meet the need for more
doctors, dentists and nurses, an
AFL-CIO spokesman predicted.
Lisbeth Bamberger, assistant di-
rector of the AFL-CIO Dept. of
Social Security, praised Congress
“for taking action, finally, on a
really acute social problem.” The
United States, she said, has been
■lipping behind other nations in
health care.
Miss Bamberger, interviewed on
the Mutual Broadcasting network’s
Labor News Conference, said there
is a need for 50 per cent more medi-
cal students and double the pres-
ent number of dental students.
The $175 million in matching
construction grants Congress au-
thorized, she said, will enable
schools to expand their teaching
facilities, and the loan provision
will allow more students to under-
take a medical education. She
........UM....... ....... ■■■■
Business-Professional Directory
LEGAL
On Tuesday, November 5, 1988, at
2819 North Beckley Avenue, Dallas 8.
Texas, we will sell to the highest bid-
der. between the hours prescribed by
law to satisfy accumulated storage and
other charges, the following described
cars :
1956 Buick, license No. NES121,
TAX An 1962 ‘
1946 Chevrolet, license No. MP317,
Texas, 1962.
1956 DeSoto, license No. PN5970,
Texas. 1988
..1956.Dodge pick up, license No. NB-
6241, Arizona.
1956 Ford, license No. PP9808, Tex-
as. 1962.
1950 Oldsmobile, license No. PS4679,
Texas, 1962.
Whitehead Super Service Co.
2819 North Beckley
Dallas 8, Texas
Brother Richard Bristow fell
. while working for Joe Bailey in
. Nocona, Texas. We haven’t had
i much information anout him since
i he went into the hospital.
Brother K. C. Naylor is in Vet-
■ erans Hospital. He has a very
1 sore hand from an injured finger
which is pulled out of socket. He
should know by the end of this
week if he will need surgery. He
is in ward 4C at Lisbon.
We want to wish both these
brothers a speedy recovery.
The Bechtel job in Waxahachie
has been hiring several members
and they have been working a lot
of overtirhe. They were supposed
to work all night Monday after
having worked many hours over
the week end. This has helped
many of the brothers.
The work is a little slow at this
time in comparison to last sum-
mer. We do anticipate needing
tape and bed mechanics after the
first of the year on the First Na-
tional Bank building. There should
be painters working on the dormi-
tories at SMU by then also. Sha-
han Inc. has these two jobs. Harold
Land should have painters work-
ing on the Ling Vought Temco
building this winter along with the
work on the apartment buildings
at the corner of Belmont and
Greenville Avenue. These buildings
should furnish a lot of work for
our members. Floyd Shaffer, who
recently signed up with us has
several jobs which should be get-
ting started soon. The Goldcrest
apartments on Turtle Creek, some
dormitories at East Texas College
in Commerce should be ready soon.
He has maintenance work on sev-
eral buildings. Brothers Emmit
Davis and Jess Berry are hanging
some fabric and scenes for Shaf-
fer in The Sheraton Hotel, Adol-
phy Towers, Medical Arts Hos-
pital, Gulf States and others. He
should be hiring some painters 1
soon. Mr. Bill Berry has the
6315 Lindsley TA 7-1119
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Reilly, Wallace. The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1963, newspaper, October 25, 1963; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1549834/m1/3/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .