The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, November 27, 1964 Page: 2 of 4
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T H E PALLAS CtAFT S M A N
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D. P. C. Recruits
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The Dallas Craftsman is labor’s
spokesman in Dallas county. We and party will be held at the South
appreciate your news items.
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Demand the AFL-CIO Label.
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Freeway Loop Routing Open
For Area Discussion by County
Reilly Printing Co., 1710 South
Harwood Street, HA 8-8385 for
fine union label printing. Call us.
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The Dallas Craftsman is labor's
spokesman in Dallas county. We
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Telephones:
moFuQEeieaa aar.
Carpenters' Ladies
Auxiliary No. 3
By Mrs. Buster Henderson
ROEDER A MOON
Mercamntile Bank BIdg.
Phone RI 2-6886
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will not be necessary. If one is
necessary, it will be very small.
‘ If the county’s past pattern of
growth continues, no increase will
be necessary,'' Judge Sterrett said.
"Dallas County has been able to
sell its bonds in recent years with-
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Demand the AFLCIO
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Adv. Batos Furnished on Apv"caton
Entered at the Poet Oro, palaa,
Texa, aa Seoond-Claao Mall Matter
trader the Act of Marc I. III*.
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We had 99 per cent of our mem-
bership present at our Monday
night meeting and a good time was
had by all.
Following our business meeting
the members played Bingo. Prizes
were donated by the Entertain-
ment Committee, consisting of
Ollie Christian, Helene Murrell and
Leta Adams,
Twenty-two members, husbands
and friends turned out for the
forty-two party held in Grand
Prairie. Donnie Driver and Dor-
othy Fielder were co-hostesses and
assorted cakes and coffee was
served. Chris Christian won high
score prize for the men and Peg-
gy Toumi won high score prize
for the women.
Our Christmas card sales are
going very well . . . we have the
greatest variety of union-made
cards at reasonable prices on hand
this year than ever before, so
don't forget the auxiliary at card-
buying time
Our annual Christmas dinner
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Oak Cliff Community Room at
/ p.m. Friday, December 4 . . .
so be sure and keep this date
open. Turkey, ham and all the
trimmings will be served to mem-
bers and their husbands followed
by a forty-two party. High and
low score prizes will be given to
both men and women as well as
exchange of gifts among mem-
bers. Please remember to bring
your card tables and dominoes
and hope to see you at 7 p.m.
Friday, December 4!
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THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
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lamed Every Friday
Vounded 1913 by wm. M. Remy
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Against Poverty
Washington. — "Wanted: Men
and women over 18 for difficult
work in grim surroundings. Must
be willing to live in slums. Long
hours guaranteeed. Pay, $50 a
month and living allowance.’’
That's an ad for VISTA, Volun-
teers in Service to America, a kind
of domestic Peace Corps as pro-
jected by an imaginative (reporter.
10 years, there has been no count
tax increases at all and there have
been decreases in 1055, 1958 and
1960.
“This gratifying fiscal condition
has been made possible by the
growth of the tax rolls through
new urban development, hew busi-
nesses and new residences. The
proposed Outer Freeway Loop will
stimulate similar development
"I an increase should become
necessary to pay for this bond
program, it would amount to only
15 cents (10 cents for road bonds
and 5 cents for hospital bonds)
per $100 assessed valuation. This
means that the owner of a $10,000
house (which is assessed at 20
per cent of its current*’ market
value for tax purposes) would pay
only $3.00 more a year in taxes,
less than a penny a day. The
owner of a $15,000 home would
pay only $4.50 more a year; a
$20,000 home, $6.00 more. “This
is a tremendous bargain. The
importance of the passage of this
bond program to insure the con-
tinued growth of our country pro-
gram cannot be over-emphasized.”
The Dallas Craftsman represents
he true trade union movement. volo-
tag the aspirations and achlevements
i f the American Federation of Lebor-
Songress of Industrial Organisations,
t does not represent the Bolshevik.
W. W., Anarchists. Radical, or any
other movement injurious to the peace
and stability of American institutions,
it is for America, first and last, and
for the honest, moral, upright. oeur-
egeous and true unions all the time.
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Leadership of all county towns
and areas will be given an oppor-
tunity to express their opinions of
the most desirable routing of the
outer Freeway Loop in their re-
spective areas before final loca-
tion of the route is adopted, it was
announced this week by Elgin B.
Robertson, Sr., chairman of the
Committees On Countryside Thor-
oughfares.
Immediate acquisition of right-
of-way for the loop, before land
prices increase further, will be
voted in a special bond election
called for Saturday, Dec. 12. A
bond issue for hospital improve-
ments will be voted at the same
tirhe.
The loop will circle the outer
edges of the county but the exact
routing is as yet only generally
delineated and is still flexible, Mr.
Robertson emphasized. Maps be-
ing distributed by the bond pro-
gram information committee are
designed to show the general route
and not the final exact location.
Mr. Robertson’s committee of
38 citizens from all county areas,
which was appointed last month,
will advise with the area leader-
ship on the most desirable routing
and will then make recommenda-
tions to the Commissioner’s Court
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President’s War against poverty,
Glenn Ferguson, a former Peace
Corps, official now recruitng for
VISTA, explained on Washington
Reports to the People, AFL-CIO
public service program, heard on
more than 700 radio stations.
Volunteers in the war against
poverty, he said, would be high
school graduates aged 18 to 80.
who can provide day-care, assist
elderly citizens, provide recrea-
tional or community development
assistance, teach plumbing, car-
pentry, or other building trades,
and teach pre-school youngsters.
They would receive training of
from four to six weeks, srve
12 months, and living in the area
they serve.
Ferguson said that VISTA re-
cruits will be an essential part of
Community Action programs,
working closely with community
organizations set up under the
program and with local and state
public agenices,
Ferguson said VISTA does not
anticipate that its recruits will
face physical or other dangers.
"I think the greatest danger,”
he said, "is the question of ad-
justment. Very few Americans
who are not among the one-fifth
who nee help—who are not in the
poverty cycle—-understand the re-
ality, psychology and posture of
poverty. We will seek in the train-
ing period to give volunteers from
middle-class America some idea
• of this way of life to reduce the
difficulty of adjustment?'
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GLAZIERS LOCAL
No. 1837
CHAM. A. ERRRARDr, B.A.
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is to notify all members
that our next regular meeting will
be held December 8, 1964 and we
wish to urge each and everyone
to be present.
We are glad to pass on to you
the good news that Bro. Harry
Carroll has recovered nicely from
his recent illness and has again
resumed his duties as organizer.
Work is slow at this time and
we have several men off. We ex-
pect it to begin opening up again
around the first of the month, how-
ever.
Bro. Dutch Keith is still recu-
perating from his recent surgery
and is expected to return to work
most any time now. -
We want to take this opportuni-
ty to wish all of you a very nice
Thanksgiving.
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on final locations to be adopted,
he stted. r.heie
•This question of the exact
routing has caused much discus-
sion among the area chambers of
commerce,” Mr. Robertson said.
"Early determination of the route
location is needed by the county
towns to guide their own local
planning decisions, and we want
to emphasize that every individual
and organization having an inter-
est in the exact routing will be
given an opportunity to be heard
before final location is adopted.
The committee will also study
the programming, priorities and
timing for the financing of sub-
sequent needs in the county’s high-
way development program, and
the committee’s same policy of
advising with area leadership will
be followed particularly in regard
to the location of any traffic way,
Mr. Robertson said.
Financing of the bond program
was discussed by Judge W. L.
(Lew) Sterrett who stated that it
is probable that a tax increase
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November 27, 1964
out raising taxes. In the last
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Reilly, Wallace. The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, November 27, 1964, newspaper, November 27, 1964; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1552112/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .