Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 2, Ed. 2 Sunday, July 25, 1937 Page: 1 of 26
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Price 10c
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20 Big, Comics
World’s Greatest Features
VOL. XXVIII, No. 119
Vol. 1, No. 2
FORTY-SIX PAGES
/■•ctaM Fna mU Uaftat hw
A VALLKT-OWNKD INSTITUTION
New Project Chief
TgRTcMflgE
THIS SEASON
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Medical doctors here were of the
old lady who enjoyed bad health.
Probe Committee
Draft Of Bill
To Be Reopened
RAYMONDVILLE — As silence
(See Leaden Ask page 1 col. •)
The Valley Morning Star
Congratulates
In Death Of Police
congress might not over-ride the
>
valley Dread Disease Found
iff with a knife Jan. 22. 1936.
in the coun-
<See McMurray To page 2. col. 7)
Saturday night.
ty.
I
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I
(See Turning On page 2 col. 7)
9
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1.
/
VALLEY SUNDAY
■ ’r'si'
* 'i-
carnero, the Insu
Brunete is the pivotal town in this communication base for the siege.
to do at any one time, why get so;
Worried awui u ui»i wc ncrrp uui-
■elves in poverty through our in- |
LOCATION FOR I
MEDICAL ARTS
HOSPITAL DUE
Downtown Site May
Be Named Soon
Mattern Will Fly To
Moscow
Hidalgo Leads All
Valley Counties
Texans Await Okeh
From Uncle Sam
New Deal Facing
Legislative Cut
Crocodile Escapes
Matamoros Circus
As Doors Barred
Committee members said they
would burnish off the rough cor-
RUSH TO QUIT
IS THREAT TO
FDRPROGRAM
Power To Levy Tax
Is Requested
DECATUR. Ala. (JP)—Swift court
action in the Scottsboro
five others under sentences
ing from 20 years imprisonment to
death Saturday.
r
WATER CHIEFS
ASK STATE TO
TAKE ACTION
'6MUGHTMD THE PEOPLE
pu mo map own hw
Patterson.
years.
Raymondville.
Ranger Captain Bill McMurray,
whom Colonel Carmichael. Ranger
commander, reiterated would re-
main in charge of the Blanton in-
vestigation until it is solved, was to
come here the first part of the
week Ranger Ernest Best has al-
so been assigned to the case, and an
intensive investigation is slated to
get under way here.
LaMadrld Silent
However, the commission was in
session Saturday, and will continue
sitting Sunday. If Fenner appears,
Carmichael said, the commission is
ready for a hearing if he desires it.
Fenner had made no statement.
Action was still pending on the
Mr and Mrs. W. P. Kimbrough,
of Itta Bena, Mississippi, on the
birth of a son, W. P. Kimbrough III.
Mrs. Kimbrough is the former Miss
Lois Thompson, daughter of Mr.
■nd Mrs. Lloyd H. Thompson, of
Harlingen.
nete had been their prime objective.
The fighting Saturday, govern-
ment sources said, was the most se-
4
navaFf terce which Japan maintains
here swarmed through the Hong-
kew district. dealnrtng they were
searching for Sad^Mtyasakl
Quite a few. among them Speaker
Bankhead. have.said they were anx-
ious for passage of new farm legisla-
tion at this session. Yet the opposi-
tion of senate farm leaders, coupled
with the desire of many in the
house for a slow-paced study of
the measure before committees does
not seem to augur precipitate ac-
tion.
I
I'
»I
0 N ITO R - Seraltl
VOL. XXVin, No. 125 VuL XLV1, Ne. 29
HYll
11
GENERAL FRANCO
campaign, 15 miles west of Madrid.
If the Insurgents can dislodge Gen-
eral Jose Miaja's strong force there
they may defeat the government's
attempt to lift the siege of Madrid.
A successful government advance
from Brunete would aim at Naval-
irg#t*’ supply and
» SUNDAY, JULY 25 1937
SPANISH INSURGENTS TAKE BRUNETE
3
i
I -:.aw
/ ¥ >
> nx
WASHINGTON - A rush for
Saturday to
ONNEWCOURT DENY FE;
PLAN IS SEEN FlfcED A
-WAR THREATS
AGAIN HURLED
INSINO-JAP
were under sentence for rape after
, a series of retrials and one, Ozie
Most P°ueH. for assault with intent to
nconlc who *lurder in ’lashing a deputy sher-
Twice returned to Alabama by
Mr. and Mrs Jack Cherry of San
Benito on the arrival of an eight
and one-half pound boy at the Val-
ley Baptist hospital Friday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L Hoskins of
on the birth of an eight and one-
quarter pound boy at the 1
Baptist Hospital Saturday.
tion has intervened.
In drafting their substitute court
“practically blind” bill, members of the senate judi-
ciary committee stuck close to their
MADRID OP) — Spanish Insurg-
ents entered the important town of
. day will involve an expenditure
of 5431,090.
The projects on which work
already has been started are a
bridge and canal construction east
of Raymondville. Julian Mont-
gomery. formerly head of the
WPA in Texas, has begun his du-
ties as eonsulting engineer on the
irrigation system.
No reports have been received
concerning the activities here of
Luis LaMadrid, who was arrested
for carrying a gun and imperson-
ating an officer, after he had start-
ed a one-man investigation on mon-
ey supplied by Col. Carmichael. It
was not known whether he would
return to work on the case, nor w*as
it known here whether Walter Hale
and Marvin Simmons would be as-
signed to the case.
Contrary to Saturday morning
news statements attributed to Col-
onel Carmichael, to the effect that
Fenner had verbally indicated he
would appeal his suspension, the
Texas Public Safety Commission
said Saturday that it had received
neither verbal nor written request
from the suspended Ranger for an
appeal hearing.
Safety Heads Meet
SHANGHAI (>Pl — Charges that
a Japanese bluejacket had been
kidnaped by Chinese brought the
widespread tension between China
and Japan to Shanghai Saturday
MATAMOROS — Matamoros
residents barrod their doom
Saturday night when the Beau
Modelo circus reported that a
seven-foot crocodile had
caped from the show grounds
and was hunting a meal some-
where in the city.
* Circus employes reported that
the big “crock” had escaped
several tunes before in other
cities, but that it “always re-
turned at meal time.”
The crocodile has been used
in an set in which Professor
A. Blacaman, billed as an In-
dian fakir, purports tn hypno-
J
■c
TH,
I
-»
X is estimated that if the maxi-
I mum tax, permitted under the pro-
posed law. is levied that approxi-
mately 528.680 a year would be
raised. This money would be used
for financing all efforts to have
the federal government initiate
............ •
BROWNSVILLE - The Legisla-
ture will be asked to pass a law,
at its special session in September,
setting up the Lower Rio Grande
Valley Reclamation and Conserva-
tion Distirct as an organisation to
seek a settlement of the Rio Grande
water problem.
Steps in this direction were tak-
en Saturday by a committee ap-
pointed Wednesday afternoon at
Weslaco. Members of the committee
in attendance here included H. I*
Rangerville. 676 Valley Gin Com-
pany accounted for 577 additional
bales
Juan S Cross, manage^ of the
Compania Algodonera Mexicans Th
Matamoros, said Satuq
ficent cotton was
the United States supreme court,
the case left the prisoners in this
status today.
Clarence Norris, convicted for
the third time, death.
z ■ a •
You Can’t Gauge The Amount Qf Religion In Pews By The Horse Power Of Machines At The Door,
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _ ____________________________________________________________________________ _______________
RAYMONDVILLE — With con-
struction already under way on
two units of the huge 54.599.009
Willacy county irrigation project,
the work program will be fur-
ther augmented Monday when
construction begins on eight ad-
ditional units.
The units being started Mon-
I'
Ki
set up a new farm plan
Senator Barkley has said that
wage and hour legislation would
pass th? senate by late Tuesday The
house labor committee is still trying
to put such a measure into shape
for action on that side of the capi-
tol.
Government reorganization has;
not been heard of in some time.
The joint committee set up to study
the presidential proposal will meet
Monday or Tuesday to choose a new
chairman. That post was vacated by
the death of Senator Robinson of
Arkansas.
Behind the wage and hour bill
on the senate side stands the low
cost housing plan. Republicans are were set for next
arguing, however, that once the Wheatley for next Wednesday,
court compromise has gone through,
both this and the wage and hour
plan will be pushed aside in the
rush to adjourn.
The study by a joint committee
of methods used in dodging taxes
goes ahead next week. Some mem-
bers already have suggested that
the worst spots shown by the in-
vestigation might be patched up at
this session and the others left for
action next year when a general tax
revision will be necessary.
General Farm Bill
struck a dangerous snag.
Japanese troops began searching
passengers on trains of the Peiping-
Hankow railway, on which normal
service was suspended.
General Hsiung Ping, vice-chief
of the Chinese general staff, came
here by airplane from Nanking on
orders from Generalissimo-Premier
Chiang KM-Shek
It was with General Sung that
the Japanese military command
Monday made an agreement to end
the two-weeks crisis around Peiping,
and the first point was withdrawal
of the 37th division of General
Sung’s command, which had been
fighting the Japanese intermittently
since July 7.
Japanese headquarters at Tientsin
charged that troops of the central
Chinese government were pouring
into southern Hopeh province,
which Japan declares is a violation
of a 1935 north China agreement.
AUSTIN i/F-Gov. James V. All-
red smashed a bottle of Buchanan
Lake water on a sleek airplane Sat-
urday and the ship chistened "The
Texan.” needed only approval of
the department of commerce be-
fore Jimmy Mattern, noted Texas
aviator, attempts to pilot it non-
stop from California to Russia.
Backers of the projected flight
over the top of the world and Gov. ;
Allred hoped that Senator Morris
Sheppard would prevail upon de-
4
The Weather Bunday Will Be Cloudy
Temperature Yesterday: High. 97; Lew 71
Weather Details, Page 8. Section 1
nance to that chosen by Russians
who recently made the hop via the
“North Pole route.”
Mattern chose Reg Robbins and
Nick Greener, Texas endurance fly-
I ers. for the refueling task which
will be done from a tri-motored
plane.
“The Texan” will be taken to
Houston. San Angelo and Fort
Worth Suifiay and Mattern planned
to spend the night in the latter city.
Airlines Walkout
Outlawed By Mexico
MEXICO CITY OPl — The week-
old strike of Mexican Aviation Com-
pany employes, which halted ser-
vice linking Mexico City to Los
Angeles and Brownsville. Texas,
was outlawed Saturday night by
the Federal labor conciliation
Board.
Rock. Ala., March 25. 1931.
The charges were assault in a
gondola car upon two white women
mill workers, R Vy Bates and Vic-
toria Price.
Of the five other negroes, four
Apartment officials to grant a per-
mit
Otherwise the ship, a stock
American model equipped with the
newest of navigation and safety
equipment was ready for the take- -
off, planned about Aug. 1 from San
Diego.
With a cruising speed of 200 miles
an hour, Mattern hoped to nego-
tiate the 6.400 miles in 40 hours, re-
fueling while in flight over Fair-
banks. Alaska.
H. S. Jones of Fort Worth will
be navigator on the proposed trip,
which for 1,000 miles in the Arctic
regions will follow ■ course at va-
Frank Robertson. San Benito, |
president of the Valley Baptist Hos-
pital Association, said this week
that construction of a Medical Arts
. it___ • • «
—, --------■ pro- j
lEARLY BALLfll^AFETYHEADS
N£R
PEAL
WASHINGTON (Jpi - The senate
judiciary committee, foregoing its from Ranger Power Fenner regard-
fa olid ay, ing appeal proceedings apparently
indicated he would make his sus-
pension permanent, the limelight
of the Blanton mystery investiga-
a panel of three judges.
6. Permission to resign on full
after ten years service for
Ozie Powell, convicted once of judges of administrative tribunals.
Recent Vote
Physicians here recently voted to
open negotiations for the construc-
tion of additional hospital facilities
to augment or supplant those now
afforded by the Valley Baptist Hos-
pital. James R. Collins Los Angeles,
agent for the group, said that 570.-:
000 of the proposed 5100,000 to be
spent on « Medical Arts building,
would be forthcoming as soon as
doctors here definitely decided to
1 build the office and hospital build-
A RE YOU A CHRONIC worrier’ ing. z
What were you worrying about “
on the last Sunday of July. 1936?
Ninety nine per cent of our worry-
ing readers cannot remember. But
they are very sure that deadly fear
of something possessed them.
You had a worrying spell last
month. What did you fear? I
as follows: Edinburg. 1.513; Mission.
1.537; McAllen. 938; Pharr. 360:
Alamo. 485: Donna. 737: Weslaco.
1865: Mercedes. 1 242: Edcouch.
2.685 Valley Gin Company gins in
Edinburg. Mission. McAllen. Pharr.
San Juan. Alamo, Denna, and Elsa
ginned 2846 bales.
Willacy had 12 597 bales, ginned as
follows: Raymondville. 3.417; Ly-
ford. 1.732: Sebastian. 2.643; San
Perlita 1.034; Willimar. 604; Lasara.
! 1.196 Valley Gin Company had
tion, the past week centered at Aus- j 1 971 in Sebastian. Los Coy-
tin, Monday was to be spotted on
------ EASTLAND UP) — Dr. F. T. Is-
Mr. and Mrs. N. G. Ryall of Los bell. Eastland county health offi-
Fresnos on the birth of an eight cer, Sautrday reported two cases
pound girl at the Mercy Hospital of infantile paralysis
Prepares Notice
Yates is preparing a notice to the
legislation which is required tor
legislation to be introduced at the
special session.
The district, as it is described to
the tentetive form of the bill drawn
up and approved by the committee,
would include Cameron, Hidalgo,
Starr and Willaoy counties. X would
have the power to levy a tax of
not here than five cento on each
valuation of one hundred dollars
for the purpose of ‘procuring and
equitable division of the waters of
the Rio Grande river, and to assure
to the district an adequate supply
of water from said river for domes-
tic, municipal, irrigation and oth-
er lawful purposes, and for the so-
curing and preservation of the wa-
ters and flood waters of said riv-
er, and protection of said lands
against overflow, and in order to
achieve such purposes said district
may use all efforts to procure such
treaties and the construction, main-
tenance and operation of all such
dams, reservoirs and other works
as are necessary or desirable to
achieve, secure and safeguard the
purposes herein sat forth . . . . •
Tex Amount
Alfred Christens Plane
PEIPING UP) — Japanese army
leaders Saturday night declared the
north China situation, which for
two weeks has kept China and Ja-
pan on the verge of war. again had
become ominous because Chinese
troops were not leaving this area
rapidly enough.
They charged that units the Chin-
ese had undertaken to withdraw
actually were digging in for resist-
ance. Peaceful settlement of the
— — ; crigig which Friday appeared in
■y that suf- proces8 of being carried out, had
Jhing Mata-1
moros for about 800 bales to be gin-
ned daily. *.
1
J
Committee, appointed by doctors
at a recent banquet, to investigate
the proposal is composed of Drs. L.
L. Starkey, chairman. Thomas J.
dent’s original court bill.
Their tentative draft did not even
refer to the supreme court
Texan Files Plan
In the house, some administration
supporters revived proposals for
limiting the supreme court’s power
to declare federal laws unconstitu-
tional.
Asserting that 80 per cent of his
colleagues favored his plan. Repre-
sentative Dies (D-Tex) suggested
a constitutional amendment author-
izing congress to reinstate by a two-
mass rape I thirds vote any act invalidated by
case freed four negroes and left | the court.
rang- A similar proposal was advanced
| by Representative Belter (D-NY),
with the further stipulation that
congress might not over-ride the
Prosecutors agreed to dismissal court's decision until after one elec-
of charges against two who were
“juveniles.” one who was ill, and
one who was
when possemen dragged nine ne-
groes from a freight train at Paint verbal agreement with administra-
proclaim to the world that they nev-
er get excited. Perhaps bye and bye
they would remember to be sick
the fire was out and they had noth- Bur&eons in the Southwest.
„... FIVE BLACKS
then without worry and fear play-1 f
Edcouch Leads
Edcouch in Hidalgo county prob-
ably led the entire section for indi-
vidual town ginnings, with 2.685 |
bales to Saturday morning. San
Benito and Harlingen ire Cameron
had 1.968 ad 1.986 bales respectivelv
I Weslaco had 1885 Edinburg 1513.
and Mercedes 1242 bales
At Harlingen, the Aransas Com-
press Company Saturday night re-
ported that more than 6.000 bales
had been handled Friday and Satur-
day. of which about 3.000 were
pressed and shipped to Corpus
Christi. Friday the compress hand-
led 3.082 bales, the largest day s
bumness since its construction here
jn 1923.
Following is the estimated t<
of ginnings by towns. In addition
to those reported, the Valley i
Companv totaled 2846 bales in Hi-
dalgo. 1971 in Willacy. 577 in Cam-
eron, and 147 in Starr county.
Hidalgo 14.208 b|les was divided
ton. according to an un-official sur- | ment announced late Saturday.
Ever since the Insurgent troops of
Generalissimo Francisco Franco
launched their violent counter-at-
tack last week, battling to regain
territory taken in a government
drive westward from beseiged Mad-
rid. the shell-battered town of Bru-
3.277 bales by hast Saturday Cam-
eron lagged behind with 9 078 Starr
?e S; «>• '•>' b.tterly-contMt«l wetor.
telhUned. Lwt week it had 560 Qovernmenl troop, were subjected
I to intensive shelling and machine
gunning before Insurgent infantry
engaged them at close quarters.
Government reports said the In-
surgents reached the outskirts of
Brunete shortly after noon but
were hurled back to their original
positions west of the town. The In-
surgents relentlessly attacked again,
and. official reports Saturday night
said, entered the town.
The government said many Moors
were in the Insurgent ranks.
Heavy fighting was still going
on in Brunete. government advices
said, as the Insurgents strove to
drive the derenders completely out
of the town Casualties were high.
otes. Porfirio. Raymondville. San
Perlita. t
In Cameron, ginnings were as fol-
lows: Harlingen. 1.968; Combes. 595:
Santa Rosa. 700; La Feria. 650;
Brownsville. 696; Olmito. 210; Bar-
i reda. 16: San Benito, 1.986; Rio
Hondo, 304; Los Fresnos. 700; and
building or any other similar
ject. would mean the death of the i
*vu ■ wuujiut existing hospital. Robertson said the!
month. What did you fear? Nine directors were willing to dispose of
oat of ten of you cannot now re- the hospital plant and grounds to
member. So It is with life; we fear *ny reliable group such as the doc-
disaster which never comes and tors-
then, almost impatiently eject that T" “ ‘ 1 '
fear to make room in our hearts for opinion that purchase of the hos-
■ new fear Some people must wor- pital. or construction of additions
ry in order to be happy—like the to it. would not be feasible.
Do you fear bad health To fear it Probe Committee SenatOl'S Speeding1 RlantOn Case Pl’Obe
is to invite it We mean that: we — —
generally find what we are looking
for. The way to be healthy is to be
happy. Our bodies are soundest
when we think the least about
them. Eighty per cent Of the peopie | E J A’h’
Doctors said the proposed build-
Yates of Brownsville, in whose of-
fice the tneeting was held. Emory
Watts of Donna, Julian Montgom-
ery, Raymondville; Sawnio B. Smith
of Edinburg, and Mayor Hugh
Ramsey of Harlingen, who to serv-
ing in the place at H. R. Hudsoa
i of Brownsville.
ing else exciting to do.
• • •
J>EOPLE DO GET SICK
^5---» •■a^aMaaa * m aj
ing any part in it. But it is not of'en
We worry until w? make ourselves
sick Then we worry more because
we are sick. Consequently we get If
sicker and are therefore justified in ** OUr £166(1 1T1 MUSS
worrying still more Atta nV 'Triola
The savage gets sick. He is sure UrtlA 11 la lb
the evil spirits dominate him. The
medicine man puts paint on his face
to make himself frightful and beats
the discordant tom toms in front of
the wigwam to scare away the evil
spirits. Presently the patient is con-
vinced that the evil spirits which <
made him ill, have been frightened
away. He gets well at once. All of
which doesn’t prove that the evil
spirits made him ill. It only proves
that his .'ears did.
Are you afraid of poverty’ If you
are, yon invite it- You make your-
self unfit for work by your worry.
You are too distracted to think your
troubles through to a solution. You
say you can't help yourself—and at
once you cannot. But you probably
could have if you hadn't thought)
you could not.
• • to
11JHAT OF IT. ANYWAY’ Most
of the billions of |
have lived on this earth have been 1
poor. Time, poverty, or something
else, finally killed them all. But we
haven't seen any rich men get out
of the world alive yet. We admit
the inconvenience of poverty. We
have felt it. But usually it is not
the inconveniences of today which
bothers us—we w’orry about what
will happen tomorrow. Anyone can
“tough” it through one day. Since
that is all we are ever called upon time. 75
to do at any one time, why get so
worried about it that we keep our- rape, who pleaded guilty to assault such as lhc court ot customs and
■elves in poverty through our in- [ with intent to murder. 20 years patent appeals,
capacity to cope^ with it? As long as The original accusation against him e ~
why worry about the miles lying
■head Perhaps, if we “thumb” dili-
gently enough, we may catch a ride.
It requires courage to live buoy-
antly. With courage we can live
buoyantly in both sickness and pov-
erty. Good physical surroundings
add comfort, but never happiness.
Happiness is generated from within
HARLINGEN — Committee of:
local physicians continued to map
construction here.)
tion chiefs.
The measure would provide for:
1. Direct appeal to the supreme
court in any lower court case in-
volving the constitutionality of an
act of congress
Assign Extra Judges
2. Intervention of the attorney
general in any such case.
3. Assignment of extra judges to
over-burdened district courts, by
the senior circuit judge in each
court.
4. Recommendations by the at-
torney general for the appointment
of new district judges on a basis of
Andy Wright, convicted second nee<*- not a8e
time. 99 years. Consideration of constitution-
Heywood Patterson, convicted al questions in lower tribunals by
fourth time. 75
Charlie Weems, convicted second
• years. P«y
pEAR IS MAN’S GREATEST en-
emy When fear enters the heart,
peace of mind departs- Man then
loses his sense of relative values;
his initiative is destroyed; his judg-
ment impaired. Fear super-induces
mental paralysis.
ajnytn. a ghost, a boggy- plans for the
probably on Harrison Street, of a
proposed 5100.000 Medical Arts
building, looking toward designa-,
ELDORADO. Ark. (Jp) — A spac-
ial grand jury returned ten indict-
ments against six men late Satur-
day in connection with the slaying
ot Policeman J. A. Youcum follow-
ing a 560 drug store holdup here
Wednesday night and subsequent in-
vestigations
Those indicted included:
Thomas J. Hutto, Dallas, first de-
gree murder, kidnaping and rob-
bery.
A. C Wheatley. Eldorado taxi
driver, first degree murder and rob-
bery.
Paul Carpenter. Borger. Texas,
kidnaping.
Trials of Hutto ud Carpenter
Tuesday and
VALLEY GINS Rebels Clamp Siege
30,030 BALES Qn Capital In Most
Severe Fight Of War
------ toz
Loyalist To Attempt
Attack On Base
HARLINGEN — With the first
week of entirely clear harvesting
weather behind it the Rio Grande _
Valley. Saturday morning had gin- Brunete. 15* miles west of MadricL
ned more than 80.030 bales of cot- after a day-long attack, the govem-
vev made Saturday.
Hidalgo county led the four for
the second week, with estimated
ginnings in >xcess of 14 208 bales
Hidalgo last week at the same
time had ginned some 5.597 bales
Willacy county was again second
u’ith 12.597 bales, having ginned
them. Eighty per cent of the people
who are sick in bed would proceed
to forget their ills, if the house got
on fire. They would throw the clock
out the second story window; earn- «««« and dentists would have lower federal courts
the pillow safely in their arms, lay p *
It down carefully on the lawn and nee? fo,r <reater hospitalization and,
under direct supervision of doctors ners of their legislation Monday,
iney wouia rememoer <o ue sick *n the building. would command the and hand it to the senate late next
again, but it would onlv be after serv’ices of the best specialists and week as a substitute for the presi-
I it** nriflinnl Vail
man. It is a nega-
•tive thing—a va- f
cuum caused by
an absence of
courage. Yet that
vacuum, like the
heart of a cyclone,
can be devastating
beyond belief.
Ninety nine per
cent of the fears
which give us 1
sleepless nights I
and foodless meals I
are caused by an- I
ticipated evils, I
which never come. |
If none o< us were ..
fearful except Carl
when reality justified the fear, most
of us would find ourselves tranquil
as the Ivory soap ratio—ninety
nine and forty four one-hundredths
of the time. We borrow most of our
troubles and needlessly pay com-
pound interest in misery. Yet some
of us never learn
tion for Harlingen of “the Valley’s I
medical center.” spokesmen said!
Saturday.
Negotiations were under way this
week for building lots inside the
downtown area Architects had vir-
I tually completed first drafts of the
I proposed building, and preliminary
1 estimates of costs.
* ***—• •» adjustment seemed
threaten the five point program that
President Roosevelt has laid out
for this session of congress
Senator Barkley of Kentucky,
freshly crowned with the laurels
of Democratic leadership, traveled
down the Potomac with President
Roosevelt to figure out with him
what might be salvaged from the treaty negotiations with Mexico and
presidential program. build dams. All past activities have
Representative Woodrum of Vir- a
ginia, frequently spoken of as a ba,“ *h,fh ***,£"■ «ound yery
man who talks for the administra-' unsatisfactory with some individ-
tion in the house, said that anv ef- U*u advancing money suffering
. h.nw nm personal financial losses as well as
fort to jam through a heavy pro-,
gram now would fleet wide opposl- *lv*n® Sponsors of the
tion; that If a broad group of disinct claim that it to an effort
to from • P*M-the-hat"
OTM will atm Fw whpn the basis ®P«rations and distribute
W-ess will still be here when the expenge of working towards
frost is on the pumpkin ” g amon‘ all
Paaage Dae Tuesday son* who would benefit from su
The president has listed as “de-
sirable’* for this session bills to fix
minimum wages and maximum RA-,—
hours, to reorganize government de- HlQiaea
partments. to provide low cost hous-
ing, to plug tax loopholes, and to
g..
with intent to murder. 20 years, patent appeals.
can keep taking one more step, was dropped.
Freed after 61-2 years of jail life
and court appearances were the fol-
ing:
Olen Montgomery, once convicted
and sentenced to death.
Willie Roberson, once convicted
and sentenced to death.
Eugene Williams, once convicted
and sentenced to death.
Roy Wright, whose first trial end-
ed in a jury disagreement.
customary week end
_________ u w vuim- worked on ■ 8>x-point program Sat-
ing. in which all Harlingen medical urday to speed up the ^ction of
uv/viuio auu IWUMJILS WUU1Q nave
offices, was conceived out of the
nwu iur greaier hospitalization ana j
medical facilities. Such a hospital.
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Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 2, Ed. 2 Sunday, July 25, 1937, newspaper, July 25, 1937; Harlingen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1327193/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .