Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. [30], No. 76, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 12, 1939 Page: 2 of 36
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I
Sunday, February 12. 1939
Page I
*
OBITUARY
kit;
i
i
1
4
(Continued from Pate I)
I
I
El
i
i
BROWNSVILLE
5
arrangement?
is
Sure
it's
cold and
c«»n-
We know thrt only
attraction
1. 2
I
*
■•OWMBvujji
outboard
n
National
A.«.®»cia-
mectmg
a
NOW OPEN FOR INSPECTION
tn
Hl
E si
i
I
*•>
office
11
l;ini«h Pin lined
s
Easy-to-Buy
PH1LC0
and
•w
SPECIAL
All of Our
NEW APARTMENT BUILDING
1939
PHILCO
RADIOS
BRUCE RAMSEY-Owner
Builder
Harlingen
1206 E. Van Buren
We’ve
DIRECT
This Building Was Furnished and Installed By:
Material and Labor in
Weekly Service
any
t
MILLER
PHILEN SHIPPING
RADIO SHOP
428 - 11th
Phone 391
BROWNSVILLE
F
U
r
f*p mb is«
♦
I
jjaynes expectorant.
Recommendations For New Canned Juice Purchase Pushed
______________ ___a---—»
in
Jardin To Purify
Its Supply
Sure it’s ton early . . . .
hut what size do you
wear?
FSCC TO BUY
150 CARS FOR
VALLEY AREA
Week’s Allotment Is
Released Saturday
AREA SCHOOL
MEN ELECTED
Teacher Unit Names
New Officers
LINEUPS SET
FOR JUMPING
NEWTEX
LINE
of
en-
*on and will be held. in O Daniel's
later dislodged by the wind
NEW YORK
HOUSTON
BROWNSVILLE
Cardinal.®,
member?
parade
night
in
at
CLYDE FAIRBAIRN
Electric Wiring and Fixtures
H. P. JORDAN
Painting
HASSELMIER PLUMBING CO.
Plumbing
RAYBOURN PLANING MILL
Interior Mill Work and Stairway
the
pur-
at
ih-
SOUTH TEXAS LUMBER CO.
Building Material
CLAUDE WARD
Roof and Sheet Metal
RIO GRANDE TILE & MARBLE
Tile Work
WILLIAM CAMERON & CO.
Ideal Window Frames. Sash,
Screens and Cabinets
AMAYA’S
Beauty Shop
giving to her
with
mtn
RS. 31
RAMSEY FURNITURE AND
PAINT STORE
Furniture, Rugs and Paint
BUILDERS HARDWARE
SAN ANTONIO MACHINE
SUPPLY CO.
Steel & Kohler Plumbing Fixtures
VALLEY CLAY PRODUCTS CO.
Brick, Cement, Sand and Gravel
time
began
CSTi i
on
L I
I I
h
Have You Seen
Our . . .
16.
to
-ay
test
of
3
LIND YS’
Sandwiches
and Refreshments
' . IBS
Is Z-
Zu
I
I
Il n
Recommendations 1
we can touch in our
TRUCKS ROAR
OUT OF VALLEY
who
■ •f
W
Is giving to her customers
beautiful Charro Davs cards to
send to friends.
1135 Adams — Phone 1605
cost-
on
mea
aids
well known
one man
will be interested enough in
F
I
II
I
The answer is
God must work
redeem men and
■ • .♦ )'
predirt Exoneration
For Cabinet Member
WASHINGTON Some mem-
ber® predated flatly Saturday the
house judiciary committee would
exonerate Secretary Perkins
charge® of wilfully failing to
force the immigration laws
Both Democrats and Republicans 1
®aid privately the only question re-
maining wps whether tn close a
preliminary investigation immedi-
ately with a vote of confidence in
her administration Nothing has
been presented tn them, they added
to warrant impeachment as pro-
posed by Representative Thoma-
in a dozen
these new
Spring hats to actually buy one but that
doesn't make any difference . . . the other
11 have Spring in their heads and this dis-
play isn’t to sell you a hat . . . it's to sell
you an idea.
WATER UNIT
FOR SCHOOL
INSTITUTED
By the aggregate of those demon-
strations in every condition of life,
comes the proof of the power of
God to help in all the exigencies
of life.
central cut rate drug
WALGREEN AGENCY
108 W. Jackson Harlingen»
COMPANY■
1020 Wash. Phone 866
BROWNSVILLE
t_LEY SUNDAY STAR—MONITOR —HERALD
have
lights
During the entire
there will be a series
THIS FACT brings home to
our
sibilitie®
GIANTS SIGN SHORT
DALLAS- /P M. B Sho t.
*
MRS. OTTO OESTREICH
McALLEN — Funeral services
for Mrs. Ottn Oestreich. 87. who
died at her home Friday will be,
held Sunday afternoon at 3 p m.
Paul's Lutheran with Rev.
John Elser officiating Interment
will be in Roselawn Cemetery.
Pallbearers will be Ernest Water-
Williams on
Edgar Treaty
I.t Alexander
promulgated by J. F
state commissioner of
in connection with the
minimum price program
Only two other firm® are charged
with having pa d less than stipu-
lated minimum prices They are
... Ida Bul-
McAllcn and four grar.dchil- !
----------- ■■
......
production guarantee law ” >n the
Valiev, relief fruit is exempt from
minimum price regulations
The GTC had recommend"'! that
the FSCC again take 200 car® from
the Valley this week but only 15o
cars were allowed It was 'earned
that the purchase program would
finally get under way in Florida
and California. The FSCC will ac-
cept offers of 100 cars of oranges
ea-h from Florida and California.
100 cars of granefruit from Florida
and 150 cars of grapefruit from the
Valiev, it was learned bv the GIC
Th- price this week will be only
one cent lower than for the past
two weeks with the government
paying 46 1-2 cents a sack Allow-
ing 18 1-2 cents for packing, this
would net th® grower approximate-
ly $7 22 per ton. but this would
vary according to actual expenses
in packing
/
The first team of the American.
Army will be composed of Major
Harry A Buckley on Nettie. Cap-
tain Joseph M Williams on Mac
West. Lieut Edgar Treacy on
Ivanhoe and I.t Alexander D
Surlcs. Jr. on Reno.
The second team of the Mexican
Armv will b Major Ortiz Reyes
on Pervert da. Captain de la Rosa
Nunez on Mariposa and Lieut. Fe-
liz Galvan Looper riding Avion
Officers of both teams have ex-
as being very
> Days organizations is
Kenneth Taxon, who
was its pre®ident last year, also
. . . have been marked
at SPECIAL PRICES
for this event.
BROWNSVILLE
PLANS RUSHED
(Continued from Page I)
bicycles and other conveyances bc-
i ing used. The motorized scooter
Officers Assigned To
Horses
LIND YS’
Is the New Name
Fnr the Guinn wood at
Highway 4 and Elizabeth
Brownsville
If the party suggesting
this name will call at
Lindy®’ he or she will be
awarded 810 in trade.
There are 13 other prizes
< ontestants should call to
learn if they are on the
list.
cd by Henry Carlisle nf Harlingen. I
i pressed themselves
glad of an opportunity tn compete
agamst each other and both have a
high regard for their opponents and
it will be an excellent
was called by
O'Damel
McAllen end
Wis: one daughter. Mrs
yer. 1______________
drrn.
Funeral arrangements are in
charge of the Martin-Nelson Fune-
ral Home.
A man wou'd be rr^zy to buy a Spring hat
now . . . but walk over to the mirrnr in
this one!
ANOTHER FIRM
FACES CHARGE
(Continued from Page I)
ino.000 pounds tree run tn Roger®
and Freeman The fruit was al-
leged to have been of various grades
and sizes and that th* Donna firm
agreed to pay $3 50 p-’r ton repre-
senting that it was tn be sold to th*
government It is further alleged
that the larger sizes were placed
in white sacks furnished by the Fed-
eral Surplus Commodities Corpora-
tion fnr relief distribution and that
some of the smaller sires were
placed in red m-'*h hags commonly
used fnr commercial shipments
Marsh seedless Marsh Pink and
Foster pink were alleged tn have
been included in the purchase The
aliened violations were alleged tn
have taken place February
and 3
The firm also is charged
having diverted relief fruit
commercial channels under another
regulation
McDonald,
agriculture
the two teams from the Mexican
Army representative for the Open
Jumping Class during the Charro
Days Horse Show at Tucker Field.
Wednesday, have been announced
by the respective team captains.
The first team of the Mexican
Arm.v will be composed of Major
ly decorated for this event, as well Pr,K'"P1° Ortiz Reyes riding Valien-
te. Captain Francisco de la Rosa,
, Nunez riding Pico Blanco. Captain '
Misael Ramirez Ponce on Adelita
and Lieut. Ricardo Aburto Valen-
cia <»n Monterrey.
arranged easy terms
that will fit into
budget!
as for the rest of Charro Days.
Fndav is one of the big days of
the Fiesta. The spectacular par-
ade in which there will bo two
thousand people on horseback and
every float will be horse drawn, is
to be held at 10 o'clock in the
morning The parade will be un- I
usual in that there will be no com- '
mercial floats
Every period of the border's his- 1
tory will be reproduced m the vari-
ous floats now being made here
The International nxieo will be
which handicaus us
is with us. not with God
Scoffers say. “If God is all-
powerful. why docs He not save a
i sin-sick world?"
apparent enough
through men to
His implemen*® are themselves too
’mperfect to d«» His work of Grace
as it should be done The fault is
with God’s faint-hearted and fal-
tering believers, not with him
God-fearing m*n and women could
make a whole world God fearing,
were they perfect example® of God s
sustaining power.
• • •
BECAUSE WE are weak, and
** full of faults, shall v< e fail to
let our light shine'’ A® Dr Quil-
lian said the other night in ans-
wer tn this question "There is
a great deal of difference between
a dim light and no light at all
God's believers are better than
they would be were it not for their
belief Better that our light shine
dimly, than that it not shine at all
We believe in growth in the
Christian faith. It is by prayer and
struggle that we grow better Wo
can. if we will, make the light of
our example grow brighter and
brighter, as we get a firmer and
yet a firmer hold on G >d and learn
better and better how to avail our-
selves of the vast resources which
He has put within our reach Our
individual responsibility for our-
selves and for our example to
others, s very great.
St#’*'! Wire Plunges
Harlingen In Dark
HARLINGEN Electric power
wa« cut off for some 25 minutes
at dusk here Saturday, caused bv
a short leng’h nf steel wire which
arced u res and blew out ff®000-vo|t
big transformer north
of the city Central Power . and
Light Company Manager E C Ren
n"tt said
Bennett said he was unable to ex-
plam how the wire was carried up
tn th* high voltage line, unless by
a bird or thrown by a boy. and
Business Men Talk
Fair Participation
AUSTIN <P Nearly IM Texas
business leaders are expee’ed here
Monday to map plans for financing I fuse® at ’h
Texas participation in the big fa-rs
this year at New York and San
Francisco
Th* conference
Governor W Lee O'Daniel and
Lieutenant Governor Coke Steven-
‘When you hurt nfflffl
»our$< don't [J JU
saV W z • ^y w w w
> tention. with challenges b?ing huri-
: ed back and forth between various
groups.
A typical Charro Days setting
will be presented Thursday night
■ during the promenade of the busi-
ness section, with people 1
walking through the business dis- ■
trict in costume and with scores f
of strolling musicians furnishing ;
entertainment at every street cor-
ner. It will be a colorful repro-
duction of the romance of earlier
days on the border.
Store windows have been special-
CORPUS CHRISTI Carl S Chil-
ton. superintendent of Port Isabel
schools, vv as succeeded by Robert
Marshall. Be*ville superintendent,
as president of the South Texas
Division. State Teachers’ Associa-
tion after election in the three-
day meeting held here last w<ek
j R Smith La Fena. superin-
tendent. was elected vice-president;
F C McConnell. Weslaco. wa« re-
elected secretary, and L. F Con-
nell. Kingsville A and I College,
was
a veteran at the game, and out-
standing riders of Texas are tn ap-
pear in competition again* some
flashy rider.® from across the Rio
Grande
The r<»de<> vv ill repeated in the
evening, under lights, and will also
br given Saturday afternoon
The children's parade which was
nrobably the most interesting single
event of last year's Charro Days
Fiesta is to be held Saturday morn-
ing.
Thousand® of school children will
come from Matamoros, across the
Rio Grande, all of them in
| ume. while thousands will be
hand from th* schools here
There will be a wide range o'
costumes and the little tots will
appear with pets and some of them
moun’ed nn horses and burro.® At
least 5000 children will take part
i in this event alone.
The grand night parade is to
be given Saturday night This
will be a repetition nf the Friday
morning parade but the floats will
the additional attraction of
St Peter's
advance of
i
..... 3
InK i |
MsU ■ -- 4
-T' «
Usejaync'* Expectorant, a favorite io
many American household* for gen-
eration*. It help* to *often the irritat-
ing mucus, allowing it to he expelled
with lets effort. So pleasant to take,
even children object. Get a
bottle today. Two »ize*— 35c and eOc.
us
terrible personal respon-
Our little world, which
wn peculiar
way. will fail to know God a.® it
would have known Him. had we
demonstrated H’tn m our daily
the walk and conversation Someone
Industry Committee that | is weaker because of our failure tn
of fresh grapefruit would do a duty. We are. indeed, our
brother s keeper*
Np human lives are perfect All
of us have our frailties Our faith
in "God grows weak; or fears rise
within us We know what is right
w’hat is just, what is merciful, but
we fail fully to demonstrate it.
Because we are conscious of our
shortcomings we grow timid, our
inconsistencies over-power us. We
grow ashamed to proclaim with our
lips, what we beLr in our behavior.
It is our inability to more fully
avail ourselves of God s gift to us. held at Tucker fi"ld Friday after-
The weakness noon and will be repeated in the
evening The r«>do<> is being handl-
WESLACO —
for a new government canned
grapefruit juice purchase program
in the Valley went forward Satur-
day as the F*d*ral Surplus C »mmo-
dities Corporation notified
Growers
150 cars < _ „ .
be bought in Texas during the week
ending February 18
A committee of canners named to
advise the FSCC in regal'd to a pre-
vicus purchase program concluded
several month® ago. met with a sub-
committee nf the GIC and with J L
Peters, purchasing agent for
corporation, tn discuss juic*
chases out of the new pack Detail®
nf the recommendation® wore not
available since they have nnt b~»n
transmitted tn Washington and the
committee said it did not wish to
diseuss the proposals prcmat’irelv
Canners present at the GIC office
fnr the conference included GlenJ
G White and Frank L White. Wes- 1
laco: Grant Montgomery. \'an<>
and R L Hill. Harlingen Th* GIC
advisorv sub-committee on the gov-
ernment program i® enmnnsed of E
I Bucklin San Benito; A C Ader-
hdd Edinburg and W G Rice. San
Juan
The Valiev last week took nr
the entire 200 cars of fresh fruit
at 47 1-2 cents ner box sized sack
with the FSCC furnishing the sack.®
A total of 15n cars had original!®'
been allotted to the Valiev but 50
cars later were transferred to Tex-
as from Florida The transfer was
made because Florida insisted that
the government pay the minimum
price of 32 cent® a field box there
the legal return under the ■•cost of (
of commerce, business men
farmers.
They pointed out that Texas with
its 7.000-pound limit, has the small-
est of any state in the Union
Highest is that of Rhode Island,
with 120.000 pound® Others are Dis-
trict of Columbia. 118 800; Nevada.
114.000; Maryland 108 000; Arizona.
90.000. California. 68000; Florida.
34.000; New Mexico. 54 000; Oklaho-,
ma. 55.(100 Arkansas 41 000; and
Louisiana. 14 000.
AguiiaM Truck Limit
McALLEN Twn slogans have
been adopted by farmers, cattlemen,
lumbermen, sheep raisers, oil men
and other producers fnr us* if the
legislature fails to increase the
truck load limit, leaders of the fight
declared here Saturday.
The slogans are
“The fight to change the 7 000-
pound truck load limit law is
squarely a case of the railroads vs
the people of Texas"
"The legislature must either
change the load limit law. or the
people will change the legislature "
Jim Ragland and C C Mcliwam.
farmers and shippers of the Valley,
declared financial aid had been
promised the campaign by chambers
fic®ta week
>f dances and
balls, the two outstanding ones be-
ing the Grand Costum* Ball on th*
night of Thursday. February
I and the costume street dance
i be given Friday night.
The entire business section is to
| be roped off for the street dance
and all those taking part must be
in costume The Grand Costume
Ball is tn be held at the El Jardin
hotel pat o and is being handled by
Lnuis H Palmer.
Dances will also be h"M at the
Fl .Tardin hotel during the other
nights of the Fiesta
The Sunday program includes
the regatta at the Brownsville
turning basin, th mile speed trials
in which Gar Wood Jr. and other®
will attempt to set s<>mo new rec-
ords for the measured mile on
water in outboards and the btpl-
fight and N'»che Mexicana in Mata
moro*.
The outboard regatta and thr
• mile sjieed trials arc sanctioned by
i the National Outboard
tion
The Fiesta here is attracting at-
tention all over South Texas, and
in fact, some national attention
Its particular appeal to the people
of the Valley is the fact that every-
body can take part in its various
"vents
It's Court of the Brush is becom-
ing well known over the Valley,
nnd lesser courts have been char-
tered in the different Valley cities
to carry nn the beard work there
Most Vall.yv cities are waging beard
contests of their <>wn and their win-
ners will comnetc in the Grand
Charm Davs Beard Contest, which
is one of the manv informal events
of the Fiesta
The Charn
headed bv
THRONGS VIEW
EODY OF POPE
(Continuei from Page 1i
period until a new Pope shall have
been selected
The conclave pmbablv vv'll be
convened February 28 the last dav
by Pope Pius’ own order on which
it may b" h"ld. to give American
and other foreign Cardinals th*
greatest possible time to reach the
Vatican
In Saturdays first general con-
gregation the late Pontiffs fish-
erman's ring, symbol of Papal
power, was bmken and a new
one w ill be given hi.® successor
As the Cardinals m"t. the Ital-
ian bishops who had b°en sum-
moned by the Po|>e to hear him
speak on the anniversary nf the
Lateran accord Mere given the con-
tents of his intended address
Thousands nf the faithful Sunday
w ill have a chance tn pay their
h mage tn the Pontiff in the Basi-
lic'i and to kiss his slippered foot.
The first of nine funeral serv-
ices also
Si Pct*r s. v h-'re burial will take
piece Wednesday
Several thousands persons visit-
ed the bier Saturday morning tn
th* Sistine Chencl
Thousands nf persons began col-
lecting in the great
square at mid-day in
the removal of the Pope’s body to
St. Peters.
By the time ‘he bells of the
Basilica began tolling at 3 pm
• 8 am CST' as a sign that the
nrocess.on had started, an esti-
mated 50 000 persons were crowd-
d outside.
Red-rnbed Cardinal.®. purple-
"obed bishops, members of ’he
Papal court in ecclesiast’cal robes
or rich uniforms, and diplomats
and other dignitaries in formal
dress marched in the procession.
Entering St. Peters through the
portico, the cortege passed before
the altar of confession where a
prelate gave absolution
The pr<»cession passed through
the Chapel of the Trinity to the
Chapel of the Sacrament.
The choir sang "The Resurrec-
tion and the Life"
The eight bearers of the bier
low e od it on the funeral c uch so
that the body rested inside the
wrought imn gates nf the chapel
but with the feet outside so the
faithful later could approach and
kiss the Pope's slipper.
The anniversary of the Lateran
accord passed without the world
learning contents of the message
Pius XI was to have delivered tn
the Italian bishops.
scene
ton.
Garrison said he had instructed
the state police not to enforce th"
7.ono pound truck load limit law
while the injunction remained in
effect unless he should receive dif-
ferent advice from the state attor-
ney general's department.
secretary.
Kingsville A
re-elected treasurer
F H Pnteet. Mercedes, and F C
Dodd Brownsville superintendent,
wet" nem"d to th- executive board
GOP ATTACKS
NEW DEALERS
(Continued from Page li
in a change of executive control in
1940.”
Senator Henry Cabot Lodge said
that the names ’’conservative’’ or
“liberal" could not be tagged to in-
dividual Republicans
Addressing himself to
at Boston, Lodge contended.
“Lincoln wanted to keep all that
was old and good which made him
conservative, be wanted tn adopt
everything that was new and good
— which made him a liberal"
The Massachusetts senator also
demanded there he “publicity on
the broad conduct of fore.gn pol-
icy"
r*" " ''
...
I '
I
■
■Fl
(Continued frrm Page ll
expen®" of truckers who carried
j>eri.«h"hle cargoes of fru ts and
vegetables
Judge Ferguson snid th" injunc-
tion was isaii"d bv him tn stop un-
necessary delay in weigh ng. hul
’Jomer Garrison, head of stat*
troopers said he interpreted th* in-
unction as completely stopping en-
forcement of the tmek load limit
law in the Lower Valley.
Injunction was issued as an emer-
gency measure after scores of po-
lice and department officials gath-
Tod Ft a point nine nvle® south of
here Fndrv tn stop all trucks for
weigh ng Truckers were fined SI4
each and returned tn Edinburg tn
unload excess fruit. Truckers were
not allowed to unload fruit or vege-
tables at Falfurrias, presumably be-
cause of ihc quarantine on the Mex-
ican fruit fly.
Truck drivers fined at Falfurrias
made the return trip tn Edinburg
with their loads and rather than
take off the extra load, congregat"'!
, in cafe® and ro-.dside service sta-
tions and packing sheds to bide
their tun" Police moved off the
virtual blockade of the highway
about 3 a m Saturday, when about
I 75 truckers started cold motors and
tried again.
Obtained on p"tition of Sam I.
M Iler, McAllen banker, who sued
as a grower and on behalf of other
growers, producers, processors, and
transporters m the Valley who«e
loads originated in Cameron. Hidal-
go and Willacy counties
The force at least 25 Texas
Highway Patrolmen, under personal
command nf Capta.n Fred Hickman
will be held Sunday in chief of the patrol, and several
weight inspectors directed by Long-
ley. immedia’cly left the blockade
upon serving of the injunc-
and early and every-
thing . . . but here is
you. Spring hat.
Growers. Incorporat'd.
R"id Rikard. La Sera; <
Fruit Growers Packing Company.
L E Berry. Mission; i
; Melch and
I Company. Mission; Pharr C ’rus As-
___________ _______ McAllen Citrus
: Assoc at.on. McAllen: Texes C tru.®
— . x,. .... «....l.----Mwi
1 Q Roller H ' v ’on H
' Packed Products Company. H trim-
the «cn
RIO GRANDE CITY Mr F D
Guerra has returned fr« m Welsh
La . where he was the guest of his
daughter. Mrs Rolland Romero,
and Mr Romero
The purification svst»m includes
an automatic device that feeds pro-
ner amounts of chlorine into the ( Qj,,nts.
water automatically a® th* water
is pumped, it was explained
’Total expense for treating the
water.” Mr Winston stated ’will
nnt amount to more than S25 for a
■ year.”
Part of the materials for the
system were fur .tshed by the sci-
ence and home economics depart-
ments of the high school
Other recent accomplishments m
the school's health program includ"
complet* physical examinations of
all teachers and janitor? vaccina-
j tn ns of student? for smallpox and
immunization of students to diph-
theria. teacher* stated
Sure you can wait . . . tve suggest it . .
but you won't.
Dair Baldridge, Incorporated, of
Edinburg for whom a hearing ha?
already been held and Ru®h Land of
Lyford and R L. Blank’nship of
McAllen, charged jointly.
Other firms, charged with hav-
ing failed to make out proper re-
port form* on harvesting and han-
dling and having failed to sign affi-
davit* guarantying that the mint-
mum price would be paid the grow-
er for fruit handled i'nd"r contract
were a* fol’ows; Rin G-ande Valley
Citrus Exchange We-'rcn; Am"ri-
can Fruit ~
i Weslaco:
Ar,oth"r st"" I*. _’l 2
.... ...v—... .........- been a in the goal of ever- possible Iwalth Edinburg.
1 resident of the Valley for the past protection for ?tud"nt® and faculty Seth Barrett. Miss on;
22 years was a native of Germany- members wa« r"»lized at El J"r- Company. Mission; Pha
She i* survived by two sons. Ed <>1 din school Friday w hen a newly , rociatmn. Phar -; Mr
Paul nf Bovceville. installed water purification stem Assoc, at ion. McAllen:
went into operation, school official.® Fruit Growe-* Exchange,
arro need ? Q ■»«* “
J B W nstnn. Cameron county
sanitation engineer, installed t... ■
system at little exnense »o the |
school d strict and at the request of j
’ members of El Jardin board *'f edu- .
Ci*Th7 ounfication svst*m includes year-old Dallas sandlot out.'teld-r. j
has been signed by the New York
Clarence Jnnnard. Giant
scout, said here Saturday I
B i
| j
i at St
BROWNSVILLE—Line-u ps for
the two teams from the 12th Caval-
here 7/^ strVn ^hadc.sYhe^eet^r.^Ed K<xh
Ernest Biewiener. Frank Schroeder
and George Schmidt.
The deceased who had been a |
T? ®( \l*l the p n ' ■_____
JD and danfternu* T
oot'-nualiiies of burn*
r»v immcdiatelv «pp< ing CSO. This
ncw-tvpe antinepic rmukion g.vet
voothing relet trom pain...effec-
tive control of infection ... and
speed* healing. Apph it full strength
without fea' of extra pain or *ki«
decoloration Tn it...you'll join
the armv of C S O fan*.
19-
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Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. [30], No. 76, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 12, 1939, newspaper, February 12, 1939; Harlingen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1327200/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .