Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 1, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 21, 1940 Page: 4 of 34
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Sunday, July 21,1940,
VALLEY SUNDAY STAR-MONTTOR-HERALD
Page 4
Willkie Man
9
L**
rrakze that
Undermining Individualism
<
r
Bullitt Returns To America; Tells
I
EDINBURG — Thirty-six
young
larly employed by the city.
Different War
gram
Preparedness
outside the county will be charged
WILLIAM C. BULLITT
Dope Seized
This
in
Asked if he expected to return
that the Government itself will start
Louisiana Oil Men
the German Reich.
she
I
everybody—will
relatives
On the Gulf of Mexico — Near Brownsville
Thursday
9
FEATURED
9
Cottages
fn
MONDAY 9 A.M.
r
WOMEN’S
I
9
t •
a
t
NEW ECONOMY PACK
3
■
a
/
I
purp< »ses.
36 to Box
6
&
K i
f
"We consider It a reel ornament.
After all what
I
could be more appealing than Hygeia pure milk?*
I
9
\
«
<
I
t
M
A
'i
1
r
A
i :
which could be spared from war
German radio reported from Rig*
VALLEY FOWL
SHOW’S PLANS I
Customs Agents Hold
Jap Suspect
Premier Urges That
Latvia Join Russia
BERLIN- .4»» -< Via Radiol—The
CLUB CHARTER
FETEPLANNED
36 Edinburg Men To
Be Listed
Scrap Iron To Move
From Brownsville
THREE SHIPS
DUE AT PORT
Ambulance Driver In
New Trouble
Former Empress Also
Aboard Clipper
From Europe
For lleaerrationa
Phona Del Mar 1-F-l
Low Mid Week
Rates
Now in Effect
Sunday through
Friday
Home-like rot’at** ara
available at reasonable
rates.
3a’he. ftxh. play or hist
oaf in an invigorating
ionosphere.
Myrtle Miller, home demonstration
agent, will have charge of the lec-
turing and demonstration programs
at the Edinburg Country Cl.b
Officers to be installed are Bon
I cock. Jr, first vice president; George
P Brown, second vice president
neth S
Hardy. Arthur
extended
in Nebraska.
emphasized that "ihe French peo-
ple today have all the magnific-
ent qualities they always had '*
The ambassador disclosed that
*
effective confidential contact with
the state department in Washing-
HOME AFTER VACATION
PHARR—Mr. and Mrs Joe Bow-
Again Become Nazi
NEW YORK —<4*- A British
broadcast heard by NBC said Sat-
MR. R. L. GARRETT
OF HARLINGEN
Announces the Opening of
"BOB S WATERMELON
DRIVE IN"
Madison A Commerce
HARLINGEN
Caf*
Seafood
Dinners
Dancing
RAYON MESH PANTIES
So Cool You Will Want Several Pair*
to Finish The Summer With
PEN-CO-NAP
Reg. V. S. Pat. Off.
Form Fitting—Larger Type Napkins
39c
HARLINGEN, TEXAS
J
V • J
15
Hygeia
L ■■’*•*'
gine room of the Nanmaaan Maru,
which docked here from the Orient,
via Los Angeles, late Friday.
___
FLATFOOT COP ISTHING OF THE PAST;,
HE GIVES WAY TO SCIENTIFIC EXPERT
Water Main Job Is
Approved
QUICK RELIEF FROM
Symptoms el Distress Arising from
STOMACH ULCERS
DUE TO EXCESS ACID
Free Reek Tells of HomeTraatment that
Must Help or It Will Cost You Nothing •
<>vrr one tnillloa bottles of th* W1IJ_ARD
TREATMENT have been do Id for relief of
symptom* of diMrena arising from Stems* It
•nd DuoUensI Ulcers due to Ctcstt AsM—
Peer Dlgrsfien Sour or Up««t Stomach,
Csttlnett. Heartburn. SleopteMmee. ett.,
d i* to Cieett Acid. A<dd on 15 d»v«'trlell .
Ask for •Wlllerd'E which fully
explains tiui treatment—tree—at
CENTRAL ( I T RATE DRfO
Walgreen Agency
Harlingen Phono Cl
opined it was worth at least ten
times that much, and paid iL
Madden said the Japanese was
seized by customs ag- nts in the en- i
NEW YORK—<4*i—Peter Muir. 42
who drove an ambulance in France
BROWNSVILLE — Three vessels
arrived in French Alsace-Lorraine
to take a census determining per-
sons of German and those of French
origin. The announcer said this ac-
' tion apparently foreshadows incor-
Advise Curtailment prov,ncc’ inl°
BATON ROUGE. La. —6P>— Lou-1 *
down through credit that will be
allowed on use of city equipment
and on labor of technicians regu-
l.wltr Kv the jUftw
• Cottages
• Bathing
• Fishing
• Picnic
Grounds
• Sunshade
• Games
• Bar-B-Q
Pits
• Tables
15.
BROWNSVILLE — President
Roosevelt has given Brownsville's
S23.771 WPA water main project the
final approval necessary, and all
needed to get the project under way
is a WPA work order, city officials
said Saturday.
Word the president had approved
the project was received late last
week.
Z6
Rancher Candidate
Is Discovered Dead
BURNET—<4*>—A searching party
Friday night found the body of
Sam H. Munn, 71. Burnet county
rancher, in a shallow pool of a creek
running through the Munn Ranch.
I he would return.
Inspection Of Canal
Is Now Completed
BALBOA. C Z —i4*i— Three mem-
bers of a House military subcom-
mittee completed an inspection of !
Canal Zone defenses Saturday and
left aboard two army bombers for
Miami.
Renreeentat’ve Charles I Fiddis
(D-P-'i. head of the committee
and t * n other members will
the f’ •>'! back home Sundav by
Way of Central America and
At Del Mar Beach you'll find every
convenience for spending a day.
week, month or entire vaca’lon with
little expense.
X *
J f
I <'
it
WPA PROJECT
UP
Del Mar Beach
O' ■’
fci?...
Serious-faced Sen. Eduard
R. Burke. (D-Neb.), is shown
in his office at Washington
where he made public a
letter to Wendell Willkie
in which he promised to
work for the GOP nominee s
victory. He said mainten-
anceof the two-term tradi-
tion is assential.
i
McALLEN — The days of the
gun-toting, flatfoot police officer
are over, succeeded by the officer
who uses scientific aids in crime
detection, deels res Henry Mallau,
McAllen policeman and only Val-
ley member of the Texas division
of the Association for Identifica-
tion.
Mall u returned recently from
Galveston, where the association
conducted its annual meeting,
with some of the nation's leading
identification experts on hand to
discuss new developments in the
field of crime detection.
Although Mallau will be trans-
ferred from the police to the sani-
tation department August 1. he
will continue as identification of-
ficer for the city, the Hidalgo
County sheriffs office and other
cities desiring his services.
He owns his own fingerprintng
paraphernalia and cameras and
is constantly adding to his equip-
ment
Okfuskee Oil Well
Presages New Field
TULSA —<4»>— A new oil field
was opened Friday eight miles
southwest of Okemah in Okfuskee
county when the wildcat test No.
1 Berryman was brought in for an
estimated 1.000 barrels of 36 grav-
..
Along the Milky Way
Escape From Death
Was Closer Than
Reported
er crashed in flames.
Five of the crew were said tn
have died, while th* wireless opera-
tor was taken prisoner.
R A F bombers were said
h.i\e started fires at Fl Gubbt.
Libya, and to have scored direct
hits n a new attack on the I'al.an
naval ba*e at Tobruk, Libya.
and arrested a Japanese, while the
state narcotics chief hinted the case
would have international ramifica-
tions and involve contraband worth
more than $1,000,000 when it was
••cleaned up”
Paul F Madden, chief of the Cal-
ifornia Narcotics Enforcement Di-
vision. said the narcotic seizure
Saturday was the largest "in a long,
long time.” and that the lot taken
would be valued “wholesale” at
$81,000. and probably would bring
well abo\e $200,000 in illegal street
gales.
■’ ’ , *•*
r
4,
MEXICO CITY—<4*i—War Min-
ister Geqgral Jesus Agustin Castro
informed the Mexican people Satur-
day that the government would not
have to * make great outlays to
establish compulsory military serv-
ice ”
The minister, in a press inter-
view, said the economic aspect of
such training had been studied care-
fully and that the government be-
lieved a healthful, efficient and
practical program could be under-
taken economically.
The extraordinary session nf con-
gress scheduled tn convene Ju'y 25
has enabling legislation for compul-
sory military training at the top
of its agenda.
He disappeared from home Fri-
day.
Munn was a member of the county
board of education and a candidate
for county commissioner.
T
der to prevent further increasing
stored crude and gasoline 4o/ks.
The Standard Oil Company of
Louisiana suggested an 11.47 per
cent curtailment in allowables.
Some companies, including the
Texas Company, asked for greater
production, however.
KSWIMl
FOR
HEALTH]
_______________________________________________________J
Brownsville, one nf them to load
the second cargo of scrap iron out
of the port in about as many weeks.
Due here Monday to pick up the
scrap is the SS Pankraft of the
customs official. Fuehrer Adolf
Hitler.
Neither Bullitt nor the former
Empress w’ould predict what the
next European developments
might be.
Bullitt, however, talked freely
of what he had seen and experi-
C O O L OFF
While Bring Served in CADY'S
Modern AIR-CONDITIONED
BARKER SHOP
105 E. Jackson Harlingen
Singer-Model Given
Divorce From Actor
T.OS ANGELES —14»— Vivian
Wildman, singer and model, was
granted a divorce Friday from
Robert Wildman, actor, after she
testified ' He couldn't make up his
mind whether he loved me nr not”
She charred he took her earn-
ing* and allowed her only 25 cents
a day for herself Because he fail-
ed to pay the rent, thrv were forc-
ed to move right times in one
year. Mrs. Wildman declared.
He said he was deeply impress-
ed with the way the French stood
up under the shock of defeat, and
spoke with admiration of the ef-
forts of Aged Marshal Henri Pe-
tain to “bring order out of des-
perate disorder.”
"And by disorder.” he explain-
ed. “I do not mean public dis- •
turbances; for the French are
showing magnificent discipline in
a tragic hour. But the problem
of reorganizing production, com-
munications and the whole life
of the nation after such a defeat a
is the most difficult task the
French have ever faced”
After they occupied Paris, he
said, the Nazi troops were con-
siderate and correct in their be-
havior and German military au-
thorities showed the American
ambassador and his staff "every
courtesy.”
“We were under no restraint
in the occupied territory, and
moved about as we pleased, with-
out escort.” he said.
Communications were disor* *
ganized, however, and it became
M. Quezon Defends
One-Party System
MANILA — <4*— A two party sys-
tem nf government is all right for
the United States, President Man-
uel Quezon of the Philippines
agreed Friday, but added the Filip-
inos must do their "own thinking
and learn from lessons of contem-
porary history nr bust ”
Quezon defended his advocacy
iO
r • .
impossible for Bullitt to maintain
enced in war-torn France, and
ton after June 12. There was only •
one way left for him to make a
full report to his government,
bombs dropped on Paris bv the ,n? lo ho"w’
Germans came even closer to k.ll- t A2ked ,f e?p~ted "‘“J?
ing h>m than first reports mdi- F"n"\the "Pn’
ed he had received no instruc-
tions to the contrary, and that
in the absence of such instruc-
tions he could only assume that
A I
British Reporting
Italian Air Raids
CAIRO. Egypt —m4*— A Royal
Air Force communique Saturday
remrted Italian air raid* nn Mens
Mstruh. m western Egypt, from
through earlv Friday
Nazis Are Growing
Souds On Airfields
WASHINGTON — <4*'— Holes jn
airfields may mean potato-digging,
not bomb scars, advices from Ger-
many indicated.
An economic report received by
the commerce department sa.d that
potatoes, grain, hemp and
agricultural commodities were be-
ing crown on military airports,
esnrcialtv in corner* and sides
SAN FRANCISCO— <4»> —U. S
Customs agents seized 17 pounds,
three ounces nf narcotics aboard a
Japanese freighter here Saturday. constantly moan that
general Nazis Behead Woman
Alleged To Be Spy
BERLIN —<4»»— Maria Diecker,
first woman to be executed in Ger-
many since February, 1935. was be-
headed Saturday on conviction of
spying for an unnamed foreign
power. A peoples court held
was motivated by "avarice.”
Mexico Is Planning
Military Training
and was captured by the Germans. ■
returned to the United States only
to find himself on another battle-
field—matrimonial.
In a snappy American field serv-
ice uniform, he stepped off the Man-
hattan Thursday into the arms nf
officers with a desertion warrant
sworn out by his ex-countess w ife
i who has been pursuing him for
some six years.
She is the former Countess Vic-
toria Louise de Montglat whom he
married in Japan in 1924 after a
varied career which included news-
paper reporting in Pittsburgh.
She sued his mother and step-
father. Mr. and Mrs. Cary T. Hutch-
inson. for $250 000, charging alien-
ation of affections.
Saturday that the Latvian premier
Professor Kirchenstem, spoke at a
six-hour demonstration and urgea
the union of Latvia with Soviet
Russia.
cated
As originally reported in cen-
sored dispatches, one of .the 23
bombs dropped on or near the Air
Ministry headquarters. where
Bullitt was lunching with French
officials, crashed through the ceil-
ing of a room through which they
passed, but was a dud.
Actually, the ambassador said,
it was a time-bomb. It hung half-
way through the ceiling, looking
like a dud. but an hour later it
exploded, demolishing the place.
Babson Says Average Man BGETsS$23jn
taking FORM Is Not Ready To ‘Sacrifice’
Fanciers’ Department
ployers: they penalize expansion,
•hey cripple industrial efficiency
This wm our experience
years from 1920 tn 1922.
Of Experiences With German Army
* -----
the two-party, check and
form of democracy.
So far the talk seems to
on "excess profits’’ taxes
j ties of determining “excess profits,"
.very" -not
j Bob
fanciers' department for Hidalgo ,<,thrr .meTber^. , — — —— -
coqnty exhibitors, but persons from Aldrich. . r.. Ronald A Case. Royce Aside from the practical difficul-
outside the county will be charged <'’Ical-ure. Jack U. C >lsom Ster- . biTj>
25 cents for a single fowl or 50 "■ ,, D’ l!51* *• dangerous for two reasons
cents per pen. An attendance t. "11"
6,000 persons Is expected this jear ne’h s Glock. Millard Hammons,
"'h Hardy, Arthur C. Hatfield,
Frank K Eidclbach. George T. Le- pmgram for the sake of our national
mg. David Lee Molder. Bnb Roberts. !
William H. Saddler. Bill Sanders, courage
Rnb Schnber. A. J. Shary, Jr.. W plenty of evidence to show that high , German'S^ea°mshm Line the first
A Skinner. J.n>« A. Smith .nd .urI„„ de(„, the:r p,rp„., XI w d«K M
Earl West. Such taxes do not raise the antici-< _ort
; ---; i p£ted ’’•venue; they discourage em- ' w Ph w>t>rm>n on. the i>rffest '
Playwriter Is Given
$10 For Lot Of Work
HOLLYWOOD Writers
their
i well-turned, efforts are butchered
by directors should meet Preston
Sturges He's solved the problem
Surges wrote a story, developed
it into a motion picture scenario,
sold it and then directed it.
He parted with it. incidentally,
for $10 He didn't want anything for
, it. but the studio insisted on pay-
j ing him to make the transaction
legal. He replied he d settle for $1
Rut when the pnxlucer read it he
ness corporations—must be made
to feel the burden of this defense
A..ntR C Rorweil A«ist .nt Farm H Smi,h- -’ecre'arv; Paul Hender- ’ 7/ ’
Agent K G. Burw ell. Assistant r arm • provide adequate defense
Agent W. H. Gardner and Miss »’"■ nnrrI” ® SurUxe, Unbound
Hamme. William P. Smith, Jr. Scott i
Toothaker. George Voss, directors;
i raising money for our defense pro- i
grarn .k- .-IL, ----- I
Oliver C. , center
taxes to meet the defense program,
but Congress must not saddle the
entire burden on th*m. Business'
job ft to make tanks, airplanes,
rifles, and shells. Its job is not to j
collect taxes for Uncle Sam! The
Treasury experts must find new
taxes that give business men in-
centive to work for defense, to ex-
pand their plants, to increase em-
ployment. and to make America
safe from the dictatorships. I be-
lieve that the soundest tax—and the
best revenue producer—would be a
flat, but fair, income tax on every
person in the country!
The hope of America today is that
we will all get back to the funda-
mentals on which the growth of
this old city of Gloucester was
founded. — hard work, self-denial,
and independence Now. more than
at any time in the last half century. , ’’F °“ a di,y-
cl aracter—among political leaders,
manufacturers, merchants, worker*
of • “one-party Democracy" for the farmers, everybody—will dictate
Labor Controversy
Arbitration Begins
WASHINGTON — <4* — A three-
member fact-finding b< ard appoint-
ed by President Roosevelt began
hearing testimony Saturday in the
controversy between the Railway
Express Acencv and the Brother-
hood of Railway Clerk*
The brotherhood is demanding a
44-hour week for all express em-
ploye* represented by it. A strike
was called for Julv 12 but this was
i averted, temporarily at least, w hen
the President named the fact-find-
ing board under authorization of the
. railway labor act.
other J
j iiit« nuw uviuuvv nut u^uiiw
to be the same as that which de-
charter flight”, dm- "troyed France and which threatens
England. France was defeated by
New Deal pap. shorter hours, and ;
by since we suddenly realized that
our defenses were vulnerable. Yet.
anything for the sake of the new
riands for shorter hours will wreck
the United States. They fail to see
how these things can help Amer-
licr's defenses. Yet. even here in
this cradle of individualism, funda-
mentals are losing ground year after
year. Inefficiency in government
politics in "relief", chain stores and
high schools are undermining this
city as they are many another.
Viewed in the light of the prin- i
ciples that were taught in this
community when I was a boy, the
United States is sailing or a danger-
men will become charter members i°us c™1"* The attitude of our peo-
of the Edinburg 20-30 Club when l this new 'defense war" seems
the organization is officially rec-’
lognized at a “charter night”- din-1
| ner-dance Saturday night. July 27.
high costs. Two months have gone
v. v..c t.- w n _ bv since we suddenly realized that
McAllen for lectures, furthering the pr ,,d n f „ur defenses were vulnerable. Yet.
educational purposes of the show ’K- r • „ 1 have found but few P*ople who
Texas A and M College authorities * '‘BC*irpreS‘d’n’ have any understand.ng of w hat
will be among the speakers. District " Hrir' *• J? face *n ,he months ahead to
New Pipe la Slated
The project includes digging up
about 4.000 feet of unused 12-mch
main in the Riverside area, to be
cleaned and used to replace three
blocks of eight-inch and seven
blocks of four-inch pipe on S. E
Levee street, from Palm boulevard
to Tenth.
The salvaged eight-inch pipe will
be supplemented by some new pipe,
and lines will be laid on Ringgold
and Tyler between Fourteenth and
Sixteenth streets to serve the
Brownsville Housing Authority.
New pipe will be purchased to *
lay a main 900 feet north from the
intersection of the San Benito high-
way and the Boca Chica by-pass
road.
Cash Outlay Held Down
The WPA will provide $15 102 of
the $23,771 for which the project is
set up. and the city's share as spon-
sor is $« 669 The city, however,
will be allowed a salvage price on
the 4,000 feet of 12-inch line that
will amount to about half its price,
according to City Engineer Johrt O.
Kelley.
Actual cash outlay of the city for
the project will be further held
Among the prominent speakers
at the convention were Lt Col.
Clark W. Thompson. U. S. Marine
corps, Galveston: George H. Gy-
mer, commissioner of fire and
police. Galveston: Col. Homer
Garrison. Jr, director department
of public safety. Austin: Forrest
V. Sorrels, supervising agent.
United States secret service;
George J. Laey. Houston, criminol-
ist; E. E. Conroy, chief special
agent. FBI. Dallas: V. A. Leonard.
Criminologist. Fort Worth; and
Joe Fletcher, chief of the bureau
of identification and records, de-
partment of public safety, Aus-
tin.
"Joe Fletcher, the state identi-
fication expert showed a sound
movie taken at the scene of the
crime, stressing how and where
to look for evidence and what to
do with the material obtained.”
Mallau said. “Fletcher declared
fingerprint experts are of a new
school, aiding police in appre-
NEW YORK —<4^- Trans-At-
lantic Dixie Clipper brought home
from broken France Saturday
United States Ambassador Wil-
liam C. Bullitt who narrowly
escaped death in the bombings
which preceded the French col-
lapse.
In the same plane came the for-
mer Empress Zita of Austia-Hun-
gary. Driven into European exile
when that empire crashed in
1918. she was seeking a new and
more distant refuge now—thia
time from the military conquests
of the son of a pre-war Austrian
fi3
17 Candidates Fail
To Record Expenses
DALLAS—14»>—Seventeen Dallas |
county political candidates Saturday
were open to $1,000 fines or peni-
tentiary sentences.
County Clerk Ed Steger reported
they failed to file second campaign
expense statements by Friday mid-
night's deadline.
Steger pointed out. the penalty
has never been imposed in Dallas
county.
spirit. Second, we must not dis-
> business men. We have
Melvin F. Hearne, song leader and
Th^7winVe noentrv‘f^7n‘the Mitchell Stribling, club pianist
fanciers' department for Hidalgo i . Other members are _r
years the way we have in the past
' h is unpleasant to say so but ' ^VVcurity0' i.^a
I have seen no indication yet a w are and a de|ug|On to them. They
the average worker, business man Jhink wpA and rehef are maki
politician !s ready tc g.ve up bl,m> QUt of unfortunate They
- believe that unreasonable union de-
future of the New World—and the an
fowls, and pigeons of pure bred
atrains. Entries are now being re-
ceived.
Manager Hill declared this year's
show, financed by the McAllen
Chamber of Commerce with mer-
chants donating merchandise
awards, will be the largest ever
held here. The show' managed by !
Hill last year was said to have been
the biggest poultry congress ever
held in the Valley.
Exhibit Space Set
Many feed mills, poultry appli-
ance factories and hatcheries have
already engaged exhibit space.
The show’s mam feature will be
the exhibit of the choice pens of
five chickens from lots of 50. which
were placed among 4-H, FFA and
Scout groups. A total of 5.000 baby
chicks, purchased principally with
funds provided by the McAllen
ChambCT of Commerce, were plac-
ed on Hidalgo County farms in
March and April. The flocks are un-
der constant observance of Manager
Hill, who carries on a eontinuous
poultry training course with the
farm boya and girls.
Specialists Are Due
Outstanding poultry specialists
of the south will be brought to
Tug South American, will bring an-
other large cargo of Texaco gaso-
line from Port Arthur to Browns-
ville Wednesday. '
messing around with the defense
job. The moment it attempts to ,
1 do this it is “curtains'* for de-
, mocracy in the United States as
well as in Europe.
Flat Tax Soundest
Business men and investors will _
be glad to pay their share of higher i<lana oilmen Friday w ith few ex-
ceptions recommended a |
cut in the state's production in or-
Philippine* after Francis B Sayre, ’he security, the progress, and the en and children have returned from
U. S. high commissioner to the r
Philippines, expressed a prefer-1OM
pnee for the two-party, check and
morning in w hich one Italian bomb- ence for
balance.
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
WANTED Experienced m-lhnery near here,
saleslady. Good salary. Chance
for advancement. State age. past
experience, and references in
first letter Write Box C-117,
Monitor, McAllen.
herding criminals and protecting
the innocent as well."
Fletcher said police executives
realize the average criminal of
today is of a higher degree of in-
telligence than in years gone by.
Police must equip themselves
with modern methods of appre-
hending them A good fingerprint
file Is one of the most valuable
assets. He urged attendants to
tell their chiefs of police of the
work done at the convention and
to let the public know that they
have a modern and up to date
police department He urged use
of newspapers for this informa-
tion.
"Work of the FBI in connection
with fifth column activities was
described by E. E. Conroy of the
FBI. Colonel Garrison lauded
identification officers for their
cooperation with the FBI In com- t
bating fifth column activities by
accumulating information and
forwarding it to the FBI.
visit with
v/if,
Almazan Vavations
In Cuba Says He Won
HAVANA. Cuba— ..4»« - General
Juan Andreu Almazan independent
candidate who contends he over-
whelmingly defeated government-
supported General Manuel Avila
Camacho in Mexico's recent presi- t
dent.al election, arrived here Sat-
urday on a “vacation ”
“I am awaiting August 15 for
congress to meet and canvass the
elections." he said. "I was elected
by the votes of 9<) per cent of my !
countrymen; I will occupy the post j
of chief executive ”
Camacho backers contend on the
other hand that their man won by
20 to 1.
We must not lose sight of the
fact that in addition to our defense
program we still hare unemploy-
ment. If we handle th* defense pro-
gram properly, nearly every "em-
ployable' should be able to find
a job. However, if we retard the
expansion of business and discour-
age the starting of new businesses .
by “heads-I-w in. taiis-you-lose" 'n;p*
taxes, we will be missing the boat
on
we
I
Congress must be extremely care-
ful in seeking new methods of ,
With Waterman one of the largest
U. S line* in the foreign service,
the cargo is expected to go abroad.
tbe Here recently was the SS Con-
dyhs. a Greek ship, which also
sailed under sealed orders with a
large cargo of the iron.
The SS Henry R. Mallory of the
Clyd Mallory Lines is due Sunday
to 1< general cargo for New York.
Boji,oi\ and Houston. The Philen
Shipping Company is agent for both
the Waterman and Clyde Mallory A]sace Lorraine May
The Barge Tulsa, in tow of the '
creating new job*. Above all.
must not tax and discourage
legitimate business to the extent Jurday a German commission had
brought here recently with 360,000 -------J ---u ‘ --------
gallons.
Ry ROGER W. BABSON
, Mas*—Talk
——— - — „ v. , uiidiv rias r??"* o a a o — ■ *' ™.—• • • • • „ —1 new (_ v __—_____ ___ _ _ — — —— ___ - ——----.
ed to the annual show, which will profits tax worries me. O^'22.usly' yFar 1 8pend my birthd«y in this .
be held October 3. 4 and 5 this ‘ ~ —*— *’ * "
year. defense without raising at least part This community is the seat of re-1
Prizes are to be awarded in all money ;
announced Saturday that a
all new taxes should hit every per- fir centuries has been from the sea
Added At McAllen States All New Defense Taxing Should Hit
--- Every Person’s Pocketbook
McALLEN—Manager Harrv Hill
of the McAllen Poultry Congress ■>' ROGER W. BABSON (defense program. This thought
announced Saturday that a fowl GLOUCESTER. Mas*.—Talk in struck me forcibly during the past
fanciers' department has been add- Washington about a new excess few days here in Gloucester. Each
1U> lax WUIIICT mr. VU4IUUJ1J, jrai t wn u.uaj ,,, .
cannot spend $14,000,000,000 for old colonial city where I was born. '
■- ■ «*• loiet rx'iv't Th t rnrrnsiinitv i«r tha aaot r\f
_ _ n % fc F'sa • * •••*•» %.vraa«aa«Maaa **y a«z *aa« «■ «. v* • w .
- ■warucu in au - — — • ',s ue *° .Leed'im ,n .he I ruled States,
classes of noultrv bantams water- formula, however, should be that ; is a city whose principal livelihood
*— ’ - - all new taxes should hit every per- f< r centuries has been from the sea.
son s pocketbook to make every- I come here each year to "reorient”
one realize that this country is myself, to view national and world
er terIng a changed order.—a new affairs through the perspective of
era All should realize that we can- the traditions of my ancestors.
not go on living in the next five
I The older, hardy fishermen of
New
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Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 1, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 21, 1940, newspaper, July 21, 1940; Harlingen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1327167/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .