El Heraldo De Brownsville (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 92, Ed. 1 Friday, October 4, 1940 Page: 4 of 8
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UroumstiilleSHtrald
Sttablltbcd M ft Dftlly Nswvpspvr July 4. IMS.
_ by im» O. Whww.
_ Utohtd Bvsry Wsskday Aftsnxxm u Tbinssatb and A damn Streets
■rownsvm*. Texas.
totered «• Second-dam Matter at the PostofflM at Browns vtlls.
Coder tbs Act of Congrs— of March 3. 1«T».
Publishers BROWNSVILLE HERALD FCBL1SKXNQ CO.
Browosnile. Texas.
J. M. STEIN. Publisher
Member: The Associated Preee (API Newspaper Enterprise Association (NBA)
Audit Bureau of Circulation (ABC).
National Advertlstns Represents tire:
Burke. Kulpert Ac Mahoney. Inc. 387 Southwestern Life Bids.. Dallas. Tex-
£*: 301 No Wabash Avenue Chicago. Dl; Oraybar Building. New Tork City;
Rhodes-Harerty Bldg. Atlanta Oa.; Pint National Bank Bldg. Oklahoma
City. Okie.
The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use for publication of
all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper
and also to local news published herein. All rights of publication of special
dispatches herein also are reserved.
Any erroneous reflection upon the chameter standing or reputation of
any person firm or corporation which may appear In the columns of The
Brownsville Hersld will be sisdlv corrected upon being brought to the at-
tention of the management It Is this newspaper's first duty to print til tht
news that Is fit to print honestly snd fairly to mil. unbiased by any con-
sideration. even Including Its owh editorial opinion.
Buhecrtption rates:
By Carrier Per Week .*.... 30e
By Carrier Per Month ...... El
By Mall In the Lower Rio Orande . 3 00
_By Mail outside the Lower Rio Orande Valley . § 00
The price Includes the Bundav edition the Bter-Monltor-Rerald.
FRIDAY OCTOBER 4. 1&40
0
U. S. MUST MOVE CAUTIOUSLY
**■ HE statement of Hoshio Mitsunaga president of
1 the Nippon Press Association suggests that Jap-
an has a price for better relations with the United
States.
It is a one-sided price.
The price includes the abandonment of the
United States naval base at Pearl Harbor Hawaii.
Pearl Harbor is the key to United States defense
in the Pacific.
It will not be abandoned by the United States at
the behest of Japan or any other nation.
Mr. Mitsunaga wants something else. He says
that if the United States wants peace with Japan it
will also have to resume normal trade relations.
That will be duly considered by the United States.
This nation appreciates the importance of normal
trade relations with other nations as a paramount
mauer.
However Mr. Mitsunaga’s suggestions should not
be considered too lightly here in the United States.
They are seriously advanced by the head of the
Japanese press association. They are not from an of-
ficial governmental source but most likely they were
enunciated by the newsman if not with governmental
approval at least with its consent.
Mr. Mitsunaga's suggestions though unofficial
convey to the American people Japanese discontent
with American decisions to embargo the shipment of
scrap iron and steel to Japan and other American
policies in the far east. They reflect the fact that
the Japanese perhaps cocky because of the German-
Italian-Japanese military political and economic pact
are thinking aggressively.
Mr. Mitsunaga should not overlook the fact that
the United States continues 10 buy Japanese gold and
silver that large quantities of Japanese gold are
coming to this country almost weekly. These pur-
chases are of no small aid to the Japanese in their
Chinese campaign. The United States has not stop-
ped the importation of silk Japan's greatest ex-
port and amounting to some $60000000 annually.
But it c«n be done.
That Japan has initiated a propaganda barrage
is further indicated by an editorial in Tokio’s Asa hi
which warns Great Britain and the United States not
to ban shipments of oil rubber and tin to Japan. If
this is done says Asahi Japan would “choose an all-
or-nothing struggle rather than wait for death.”
It is just possible that the United States has put
its diplomatic “foot in it.” The United States is
definitely in no position to go to war with Japan or any
one else nor should it permit itself to be put into a
position of being forced to cut down on help to the
British. That is what Germany and Italy are after
and they are using Japan to this end. Japan deeply
and far from victoriously engaged in its China cam-
paign is in even less prepared condition to fight the
United States. Her strength has been sapped by
more than three years of warfare. And the end is
not in sight.
The main purposes of the United States are:
National defense hemisphere defense aid to the
British as America’s first line of defense in the At-
lantic ocean.
We have set aside billions of dollars for these
purposes. A gigantic task is ahead of us. It will
take several years to complete what has been begun.
And Germany Italy and Japan despite their three-
nation pact will not be able to shunt this nation from
the road it has chosen to take.
A BRIGHT SIDE OF THE WAR NEWS
THERE has been so much suffering and killing in
the first year of the European war that it’s
something of a surprise to find one lone indication of
a trend in the direction of human progress.
Six diseases which in the past have claimed more
lives than bullets and bombs have so far been check-
ed. The germs of influenza smallpox typhoid
dysentery typhus and cerebro-spinal meningitis have
all appeared but they've been conquered.
Better housing better food new drugs and new
treatments and—most important of all—watchful
medical examiners have combined to prevent a re-
currence of the great epidemics of former wars.
Science which has repeatedly increased the ef-
fectiveness of tools of destruction also has done
much to alleviate the horrors of war.
Views of Other Papers
THE SOl'TH KNOWS WHAT
INVASION REALLY MEANS.
When the Gallup poll investi-
gators put the question. "Is it more
important to keep out of war. or
to help England?" the West Cen-
tral 8tates voted. 57 to 4S. that it
i? mow important to keep out of
mar. and the East Central voted
52 to 4B the same way. New Eng-
land voted 52 to 48 that It Is more
important to help ESigland. and
thf west Coast voted the same
way 54 to 45 The starting thing
'lowever. was the me of the South
which declared. 70 to 30. that It i*
more important to help England.
Why Is the Sout.n so tremendous-
ly emphatic on this subject while
! the rest of the country is pretty
evenly divided? What is there in
the history of the South that
might be expected to give it a dif-
ferent attitude toward war from
i that held by other regions? The
i answer is obvious. The South is
VTfARHINGTON — Mr. Roosevelt
turned off lightly but definit-
ely the French official story that
the expansion of its naval base in
Martinique a as just one of those
things the Vichy government had
contemplated long before the war
and was Just getting around to.
The new Vichy ambassador. Gas-
Ion Henry-Have had not been out
of the White House more than a
few hours with this explanation
before the president spoke force-
fully his opposition to the con-
templated expansion.
Behind the counter exchange of
deft diplomatic thrusts Is the con-
viction that the Japanese signing
with the Axis was only the first
step in a Hitler campaign of threat
diplomacy against the United
States. The French naval expan-
sion at Martinique could well be
the second.
In fact Mr Roosevelt's diplomat-
ists are working with silence and
great seriousness on the assump-
tion that they will oe faced with
an ever-widening diplomatic ef-
fort by Der Feuhrer to prevent the
accelerated shipment of needed
oeten«e materials to his enemy
Britain
It will be a shadowy indirect
came but apparently will not in-
duce any change in the established
line of administration action.
R ROOSEVELT held up ap-
pointment of draft control
administrator because he has been
teaching high. A persuasive sound
out effort was made several days
ago by the White House to get
Robert Maynard Hutchins the
president of Chicago university.
His reputation as a strict but fair-
minded scholastic executive was
apparently what the president
wanted in preference to the nvli-
tary authorities who are thorough-
ly familiar with the mechanics of
the draft and who will do the work
anyway.
I
"THE PRESIDENT'S design*tion of
Lowell Mellett to his official
secretarial family was not nec-
essarily a recognition of the new-
comer's exceptional success with
coordinated publicity during the
campaign although a promotion
was due. The change will not in-
volve any lncprase in salary above
the $10000 which Mellett has re-
ceived as head of the office of
Government reports. But Mellett's
expanding activities personally for
the president had apparently con-
flicted wltn a non-political attitude
being maintained by that depart-
ment. The switch was engineered
to give him a freer hand.
Mellett. who has b«en the
Michaelson for the president in
the present campaign will assume
complete publicity coordination
control in event of emergency. The
groundwork has already been laid
for it.
CUGOESTION8 that domestic or
international politics insmred
the three meeks delay in effect-
iveness of the embargo against
Japanese scrap iron do not ap-
pear Justified by the facts. The
effective date of October IS was
chosen apparently as the fa-rest
possible concession to American
scrap iron export »rs They can
Hear before that date about half
the orders they had on hand when
the embargo was announced The
other half will be scrapped.
A CONFIDENTIAL suggestion that
the administration is planning
a series of allowances for families
of draftees that may run the draft
cost into unexpected millions has
been dropped to senate and house
tax leaders Only the bare outline
of the plan was dropped but this
indicated an extra allowance of
$15 a month might be given by the
government to the wife of any
riaftee who chose to allot half his
own pay. The effect a-ould be to
laise the ultimate allowance of
draftees to $45 A similar arrange-
ment to pay mechanical experts
extra allowance. for their sendees
was also mentioned
Congressional leaders nearly
fainted at the prospect of the cost
until the treasury men suggested
it would be postponed until next
session.
So They Say
War Is not the worst possibility j
we face The worst is the com-
I plete triumph of totalitarianism.
—Dr. James B. Conant. president
of Harvard University.
• • •
The national defense program
will continue no matter what man
• • •
Nothing could be worse for high-
er education in this country than
to have it thought that enrollment
in a college or university is a meth-
od of avoiding conscription.
—Dr. Robert M. Hutchins presi-
dent of Chicago University.
• • •
Do you know where Dong Dang
i*? Do you want your boys to die
for Dong Dang?
—Representative Bruce Barton of
New York. »
the only part of this country that
has tasted defeat. The South alone
has been invaded overrun and
conquered The South alone knows
by experience what it means to be
under the control of an army of
occupation. Therefore the South
is in favor of stopping am pos-
sible invader just as far away from
this country as circumstances will
allow.
It might be love of England that
makes the South so strongly In
favor of helping her. but it is much
more probable that it is a keen
realization of what invasion means.
KEEPING ALL LINES BUSY
1
«&%*!*
\
?o y Tjtffrt i
/) >
Answers
To
Questions
BY IKEDKKIC J. HASK1N
A reader can get the answer to
any quss’ion of 'act by writ-
ing Tha Brownsville Herald In*
formation Bureau. Frederic J.
Hasktn Director. Waablngton.
D. C. Please encloaa three (3)
tanta for renlv
Q—What b meant by Boston
Common? J. F.
A—Boston Common situated in
the heart of the city has an ex*
terior boundary of m mile end is
unique among municipal public
grounds. Boston. A Guide Book"
by Edwin M Bacon says: “Its in-
tegrity rests primarily on a town
order passed in 1640 reserving it as
an open ground or common field.
This was strengthened by a clause
in the City charter forbidding iu>
sale or lease Subsequent acts pro-
hibit the laying out of any highway
or street railway upon or through
it or the taking of any part of it
for widening or altering any street
without the consent of the citizens
It dates actually from 1634. four
years after the settlement of the
town when it was laid out as ‘a
place for a training field’ for ‘the
feding of cattell...’ 4ts present ex-
tent is 46 2-5 acres exclusive of the
Old Bun ing Ground on part of its
south side at Boylston Street."
Q—Were the Hawaiian Island'
ever known by another name? W-
A. H.
A—The Hawaiian archipelago
was formerly known as the Sand-
wich Islands after the Earl of
Sandwich. After the native name
cam* into use the name Sandwich
was discounted*
Q—Do soldiers ever travel on
skis? P. D. R.
A—The infantry soldiers of Swe-
den and Norway are equipped with
skis and accomplish long marches
over snow-covered ground.
Q—Where Is the highest road In
the United States? C. C. B.
A—It Is said to be the recently
completed stretch of road leading to
the summit of Mount Evans in
Colorado. 14.259 feet high.
Q—Worn what poem Is the Une
'I only know 1 cannot drift beyond
His love and care?" W. S. L.
A—It Is from The Eternal Good- i
ness’ by John Greenleaf Whittier.
Q. Is President Roosevelt Insured
by the Georgia Warm Springs
foundation? If so for wharf
amount? VN.
A. President Roosevelt is Insured
by the Georgia Warm Springs
Foundation for 1560.000. The an-
nual premiums of this insurance
are paid directly by the Founda-
tion. which completely controls the
insurance and all of its preroga-
tives and assets
Q. What newspaper In the Unit-
ed States had the first rotogravure
ection? W.B.F.
A. On April 5. 1914. the New
! York Time* published the first ro-
togrovurr section consisting of eight
pages. The paper was printed on
presses imported from Germany by
the late Adolph S Ochs.
NQ. What la goldbeater's skin? W.
L. S.
A. It is the outside membrane of
the large intestine of the ox which
is used by goldbeaters.
Q. Where Is the largest sheep
'hipping market In the United
States? C.T.
A The largest sheep shipping
market in the world is Denver.
Colorado.
'«
OUR COUNTRY
Twenty-third of 24 articles on
•'Our Country.’* written exclu-
sively for NEA Service and The
Brownsville Herald by the na-
tion’s most famous authors.
• • •
By STL WART EDWARD WHITE
Author of “Long Rifle- "Story of
California" • Ranchero” etc.
It is a commonplace to say that
it is up to us— th* United States
—to “preserve democracy for the
world.” now that it has practically
collapsed out of Europe. But I think
cur job is bigger than merely pre-
serving a form of government.
There is to be drastic readjustment.
Nobody—anywhere—is going to liva
just as he lived before. There is
going to be a new pattern and we
have the chance to blueprint that
nattern. And it haa got to be a new
rattern. Otherwise we shall land-
later—Just wher* th * one has land-
ed the rest of the world.
History has conducted itself on
the basis of self-preservation with
the accompany-
ing greed indif-
ference to the
other fellow
hatreds cruelties.
»nd treacheries
necessary to car-
ry out that
scheme of things
*Ve have fatu-
ously returned to
»hat basis every
time we have
been Jarred away
from it by catas-
trophe. though
mere self-preser-
vation Is no long?
er the vital issue And our devo-
tion to it has obscured for us the
two underpinning truths on which
this democracy” we talk about de-
pends.
The creator Is more important
than the thing created no matter
a hat it Is. When the thmg-created
is made more Important you have
totalitarianism.
Now we have this Job of “pre-
serving democracy’* and redesign-
ing the pattern for life simply be-
cause originally our republic was
laid down pretty much in accord
with those two principals. Original-
ly. We have backslid somewhat
especially lately. We have been ex-
alting the thing-created at the ex-
pense of the creator.
It has not taken us many years
to build that golden calf but the
things we are beginning to sacrifice
to it are the slow growth of age
long struggle. Such simple things
Stewart
Edward White
4 Large Colored Mas
of the l otted State*
What do you know about the geo-
graphy and history of these United
State*’ Are you familiar with the
largest cities the capttala of Bute*
and the location of placet mentioned
In the datl- news? Can you tell when
erch colony was settled and when
the States were admitted to the Un-
ion? The anawers to these question*
and score* of others are given on our
map of the United States It Is 21«
2# inches In size and printed In five
colors. Order your copy new. Ten
centa postpaid.
Thl* Coupon—
Information Bar can
Tha Brownsville Herald
rrederlc J. Raskin. Director.
Washington. D C
I enclose herewith TEN CENTS in
coin icarefully wrapped lr paper i
for i cnp* of the MAP OP THE
UNITED STATES.
Name
Street or Rural Route
City
State
(Mall to Washington b. C.)
as sacredness of promise; seme of
moral obligation; ordinary vera-
city; personal integrity; individual
liberty; elementary justice—what
we call the homely virtues spiritual
values. And by just that much we
are turning totalitarian no mat-
ter what we call ourselves. Democ-
racy is not r. form of government:
it La a pattern for government
j Lately v e have been forgetting
that. Nevertheless most of the old
.staunchness is still Intact.
We can do the job But not on
the old material basts that has col-
lapsed—each day for itself and devil
take tomorrow—man is made for
the thing he fashions including
government. Rather on the rock
bottom principle—I reoeat—that
democracy is the union of all parts
in the common good of all. with
complete opportunity for each in-
dividual to do unhampered what
he can do but only to his capacity
—though to his full capacity—with
no obligation to do more—or less.
Shall we have that much common
'•♦n/e?
All of which is the practical wav
of saving that we must get bark
to building on spiritual rather than
material values.
Katherine Brush sums un the
American case presents the ten-
ets by which we live. In the con-
rludinr article nf this series on
"Our Country."
MISS Dt'NBAR GOES
MISSION — Miss Helen Dunbar
left Sunday morning for Houston
and from that point she went by
plane to Butler. Penn where she
is employed as a technician. She
had been the guest of her parents.
Mr and Mrs C. O. Dunbar lor
the past two weeks.
--
Harrison
In
Hollywood
By PALL HARRISON
NEA Servlet Staff Correspondenl
HOLLY WOOD—In case you'd
i like to look over a new crop of
| movie cut lea. the Warner lot Is the
best place these days. Eight glim-
mer girls are unde stock contract
1 and they are working too. They're
mostly doing bits but the studio
calls these parts "conditioning
i roles." implying that better Jobs
are coming.
It might be Interesting to survey
these eight along with their back-
| grounds and qualifications.
Here’s Average Picture
Let me present then the Mteseg
Joan Brooks. Lucia Carroll. Su-
j zanne Carnahan. Mildred Coles.
Peggy Diggins. Anne Edmonds.
Phylls Hamilton and Maris Wrixon.
Put ’em all together and you’ve got
j f t 19-year-old gal who Is S feet
1 1-2 Inches tall and weighs 116
pounds. Light brown hair blue eyes.
I large mouth excellent teeth and
the kind of figure that has dona
so much for the sweater Industry.
Nothing unusual so far. Several
[Other averages are easy to strike:
j Our composite ingenue didn't go
) to college can't cook doesn t diet.
| is mediocre at sports doesn't want
to get married until she has had
j more of a career comes from a
j middle-class home. Is craxy about
clothes. I kes music but cun t really
>lay. never studied singing or danc-
ing. Is sup-rstitious. wants to be a
| second Bette Davis snd thinks
Hollywood is perfectly wonderful.
Four Were Models
Only three ever set foot on a
professional stage and their ex-
periences were not impressive Miss
Brooks only 15 now' appeared in
vaudeville and night clubs with her
i two sisters The precocious Miss
Diggins who is 16. displayed thisa-
and-thata as a show g*rl In Broad-
way’s International Casino Mias
Hamilton had a small role In a
short-lived play in New York fol-
low-ng a little-theatre apprentice-
j 'hip in Connecticut
The M'sses Carroll Brooks. Dig-
gins and Carnahan all did model-
ing although the latter got her
screen test and contract on the
'strength of her performance In a
local little theater.
Mis* Coles and Miss Wrixon also
are little theater products.
Only contest winner is Phyllis
Hamilton. She entered a "move
doubles'* competition in Ohio and
won $5 for looking like Loretta
Young She didn’t realise it at the
time but close resemblance to anv
established star is the toughest
hand rap In Hollywood. Fortunate-
ly. she headed for the stage and
bv the time Director Edmund
Goulding spotted her in New York
she had changed her makeup and
hair-dress.
Needlepoint And Tolstoi
In an effort to learn interesting
biographical details all studios
submit questionnaires to new play-
ers. Most of the eight ingenues
ciaim pointing and sketching
among their hobbies. One. who’s
beet known for her flitting shout
night cluhs. says she does needle-
point. Apparently none of them
reads anything trashier t h ■ n
Shakespeare Tolstoi or Dostev-
. :ky. As her suppressed desire one
admits. "To tear up the sides of
mountains to music like Wagner s
Die Walkure
The youngster In whom studio
executives see most pronvse is 15-
\ ear-old Joan Brooks <real name.
Brodelli. She already has played
adolescent bits in several pictures
and now she can qualifv as a gen-
uine glamorist. Best of all. though
is th* fact the kid seems to be a
natural-born actress.
HOME FROM VACATION
MISSION — J. C Thompson has
returned home from a vacation trip
spent in Crystal Cttv. Del Rio and
Sah Antonio. Mrs Thompson went
from the latter place to Atascosa
snd Pampa to continue her vaca-
tion.
/«. POWER op the TIDES
COMES FOOM THE SA/S7?-/.... MOT
PROM THE AIOOV/ IP THE EARTH
0*0 MOT REVOLVE THE TIDE3
WOULD BE ON IV A STATIONARY
BUMP OP WATER. ONI THE OLOBE
WITH NO POWER WHATSOEVER.
.tMlYW MHvtCC. I
T.miCIllMTOW
ARE MAOS UP OP
MOLECULES MOVING
RAPIDLY THROUGH THE
EMPTY SPACES LVINO
BETWEEN THEM. . S
ANSWER: Right. But • number of specie* have lost the use of
them.
NEXT: lioektac a Ash in the scale*.
LABOR SUPPL1
GOOD IN STA-
Governor Discoura
Treks For Workei
Industrial employers In T<
Pave no reason to tear ahortaf**ua*
construction workers for buiktta-
national defense projects. Ooverfay
W. .Lee O Darnel stated Friday iBV«.
letter to Walter Me>en. Del a
More than 4J.00O workers exp
lenced In construction occupant'**'**
were available for employment. r°m
cording to an inventory of la'*rn
supply Just completed by the its1**
Employment service.
The Inventory reflected not or*"*
a sufficient supply of the worke'*®
essential to the construction indu m
try but also an adequate dtetribi**
tion of available vomers througi
out the state. Governor O Dam ^
said n
"Our folks In Texas are entitle*
to and must be given first consid*
erai ion for the employment oppor-%
tunnies created within the state**
the governor declared. It Is essen-
tial to all of us that we devot%#g
much care to the protection «nd
use of our human resources as we
give to the conservation and use
of our natural resources.**
Governor O'Daniel indicated that
the principal difficulty In meeting
developing needs for workers would
arise from Lie failure of employers
to plan their employment require-
ments in advance. “A sufficient
supply of experienced construction
workers la available If those work-
ers are u.*d on a planned orderly
oasis If workers are encouraged
to make long and aimless trips in
search of employment by short-
sighted employment managers la-
bor will not be available w’hen and
where it la needed with conse-
quent losses both to workers and
employers." he said.
He urged employers and worker*
to coordinate their efforts m pre-
venting haphazard dislocations of
labor geographically and between
important and essential industries.
STATESOLONS
NOT IN DRAFT
50 Legislators In Texas
Eligible
AUSTIN —While there hU
been no official ruling or Interpre-
tation of the law here the national
conscription act specifically defer*
from military training member* of
the legislature
The question ha* caused soma
mild consternation In view of tha
fact approximately 50 prospective
member* of the next hoa<a are
within the draft age bracket.
The law compels them to register
on Oct. 16 but in aection 5. sut*e>
tion C paragraph one. they along
with governors state and federal
judges and the president and vice
president are deferred “while hold-
ing office "
The question arise* whether mem-
bers—elect or members — fit thia
classification but local draft boa da
are authorized to defer anyone typy
deem neces&arv to civil life. An
important factor in this respect is
whether the names of any member
of the legislature which convene*
next January will be drawn for
military service before he take* tha
oath of office.
If none receive* a call until after
the general se.vinn begins they ob-
viously win be legislators and thus
deferred.
But their status prior to that time
Is doubtful since they are now
members of the next legislative body
and presumably all will be mem-
bers-elect after the November gen-
eral election.
Tha adjutant general* depart-
ment has made no ruling In thia
connection although the question
along with manv others is expected
to receive official interpretation be-
fore local draft boards soon to ha
appointed by the president begin
functioning.
4
Boogey Woogies
Give Real Test
To New Building
BAN BENITO— “Jumpin’ Jlva"/'’
was given a real chance to prove
itself here when the city admin-
istration allowed several hundred
Negro Jitterbugs to stomp their
hearts out testing the new dance
flood atop the Alter building.
Toe-t«ppmg “jigs’ burned the
leather off their soles playing
' Beat Me. Daddy * on the boards
which came through the severe
workout tn A-i shap\ inspection
revealed.
Several sepia swingxtera caus- .
*d a riot when they switched
from ‘ rug-cuttin' ** to “th oat cut-
!n'” in one easy lesson Result:
One dusky damsel received hos-
pital treatment for stabs and
slashes during intermission.
Now that the floor haa passed
Its “barrelhouse beat inf” th*
rooftop will be rented to club*
and other group* desiring to hold
“Jive sessions."
SULLIVANS HOME
BAN BENITO — Mr and Mrs O.
W Sullivan have returned from
a month’s vacation visit in Colo-
rado witn former San Beni tans.
Mr and Mrs. James Gustafson and
children Mrs. Gustafson the for-
mer Miss Loretta Sullivan is ma
daughter of the local couple. *>
TO CHICAGO
MI8SION — Charles Wagner left
Wednesday for Chicago where ha
will be employed this winter.
The Body Is Said To Be Susceptible To /600 Different Diseases Nearly Any Or All of Which Can Be Brought Out by a Draft.
k
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El Heraldo De Brownsville (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 92, Ed. 1 Friday, October 4, 1940, newspaper, October 4, 1940; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1405931/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .