Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 15, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 27, 1940 Page: 2 of 40
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68
•4
42
64
64
. 57
. *1
... 60
... 44
49
50
44
41
54
M
.00
.00
.00
.06
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.00
00
1 04
.00
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.00 I
.00 i
.00 |
.00
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.53
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.15
J3
83
.on ;
.00
00
.00
Ark 58
.... 57
...... 61
8 D.....’. 42
Jackwonville F’s . 52
Kansat City Mo
Loa Angele* ....
Memphi* Tenn
Miami. Fla......
Abtlene .......
Albuque’que ..
Amarillo ........
Atlanta. Oa. ....
Boiae, Idaho ....
Bo* ton. Mim ..
Brownsville ...... 80
Br vllle Airp t .. 70
Chicago. Hl...... 51
Cincinnati. Ohio . 48
Cleveland. Ohio . 37
, Corpus Christi ..
De! Rio .....
Denver. Colo
Fort 8m; th.
Fort Worth
■ Houston
Huron.
.oo ;
.00
00
.00
.10
.01
07
1 S3
.00
J7
.00
.84
The tabular data Is ter the II hears
pr.t.d ir yealerdav at 8 X0 a. m
STATION Lowest Hl<be«t Preclpl-
last last tat ion
Night 24 hours (laches' I
75 “
78
19
83
57
55
82
88
60
81
58
78
78
78
82
85
78
82
78
85
68
83
83
63
78
83
83
70
89
73
77
73
78
71
83
74
84
83
64
34
.50
69
Mpls. St P Minn. 48
New Orleans, Io. 68
North Platte. Neb. 45
Oklahoma Cl tv .. 57
Pensacola. Fla....
Phoenix. Aria. ..
Port Arthur ..... 67
i Toswell, N. M .. 48
| Salt Lake City .. 50
San Antonio .... 67
San Diego Calif. 58
San Francisco Cal. 54
Sheridan V n .. $$
Shreveport La.
Tampa. Fla. .
The Tides
The tides for Sunday: high tides
at 12:21 a m. and 12:55 p m. low
i tides at 6.40 a m. and 6.36 p m.
Considerable
showers near
Monday part-
<Official V. 8 Weather Bureau Fereeattl
THE VALLEY: Considerable
cloudiness, possible showers; Mon-
day partly cloudy. Light to mod-
erately mostly southeast winds be-
coming fresh Sunday. J
LOUISIANA. Partly cloudy Sun-
day and Munday, scattered showers
near west coast Sunday. Light to
west coast Sunday. Light to
moderate easterly to southerly
winds on the coast.
ARKANSAS: Partly cloudy Sun-
day and Monday.
EAST TEXAS:
cloudiness, scattered
upper coast Sunday;
ly cloudy. Light to moderate most-
ly southeast winds on the coast be-
coming fresh on lower coast Sun-
day.
NEW MEXICO: Partly cloudy
with showers or snow squalls over
mountains north portion of central '
mountain range and continental di-
vide Sunday and Monday with de-
creasing cloudiness over South por-
tion Monday. Colder central moun-
tain range westward Sunday and
over east portion Monday.
WEST TEXAS: Increasing cloudi-
ness with scattered afternoon show-
ers over southwest portion Sunday
and Monday and over southeast por-
tion Sunday. Slightly colder south-
west portion Sunday night.
OKLAHOMA: Partly cloudy, cool-
er Panhandle Sunday. Monday most-
ly cloudy, showers east and south
portions, cooler.
(Continued from Page 1)
(Continued from Page 11
CANADIAN SHIP
SUNK BY NAZIS
The construction of London bridge
was begun in 1824.
an objective ‘the securing of con-
trol of the high seas.”
•'They threaten peaceful nations
with the direst consequences if
those nations do not remain acquie-
scent. while the conquerors are
seizing the other continents and
most of the seven seas of the earth."
"We are in the presence not of
local or regional wars, but of an
organized and determined move-
ment for steadily expanding con-
quest. Against this drive for power
no nation and no region is secure
save as its inhabitants create for
themselves means of defense so
formidable that even the would-be
conquerors will not dare to raise
against them the hand of attack.**
set afire or heavily damaged by ex-
plosives.
DNB. official news agency, said
two British pursuit planes were
shot down in an extended fight over
the English Channel in these raids
and a third forced to make a land-
ing on the French coast. No Ger-
man losses were reported.
On the home front. Adolf Hitler
ordered Reichsmarshal Hermann
Goering to start a second "four-year
plan” and adapt it to the needs of
war. He told Goering that first
4-year plan, intended to make pre-
war Germany self-sufficient, was
a great success.
83
• nrL MAR ..... 75....
OBITUARY
WEATHER
SLAVE NATIONS
DICTATORS SEEK
MRS. OTHO F. HYDE
McALLEN—Mrs. Otho F. Hyde
died Friday evening at the home
of her son, Bolton Hyde, South
Jackson road.
Services will be held Sunday at
3 p. m. at Kriedler Funeral Chapel
with E. J. Lappart of the Christian
Science Church reading the rites.
Mrs. Hyde had been a resident
of the Valley for about 10 years,
coming here from Michigan.
She is survived by her husband;
two sons. Bolton of McAllen and
Homer of Detroit. Mich.; two sisters,
Mrs. W. W. Bridges. Marine City.
Mich, and Mrs. Ella Sprowl, Cross-
well. Mich.; and a brother, Frank
Niggerman, Beaverton. Mich.
Interment will be at Rose Lawn
cemetery here.
WASHINGTON—'#*'—Financial reports from four major political or-
ganizations were filed with the clerk of the House Saturday and listed
$1,527,911 in contributions for the last seven weeks. The Republican
national committee s report for this period is yet to be received.
The Democratic national committee said it received $642,320 and
disbursed $603,742 in the period from September 1 to October 22
The Associated Willkie Clubs of America listed receipts aggregating
* $624 60S and expenditures totalling
$464,376 from September 1 to Octo-
ber 20.
The Democrats-For-Willkie or-
ganization. New York, reported
$148,720 in contributions and ex-
penditure of $117,001 from Septem-
ber 10-October 20.
The national committee of inde-
pendent voters, which is working
for re-election of President Roose-
velt. reported $112,266 received and
$50,088 spent from September 20 to
October 22.
Contributions reported by the
Democratic national committee in-
cluded:
John R. Brinkley. Del Rio. Tex.,
$1,000; Amon G. Carter. Fort Worth.
$5,000; Mrs. William L. Clayton.
Houston. S5.000; Col. W. P. Knight
Wichita Falls. Tex., $1,000; P. D
Bowlen, Tyler. Tex, $1,000; Gus F.
Taylor, Tyler. Tex., $1,000; A. S
Underwood Athens, Tex , $5,000.
reported to have suspended
Greasy Burglar
Miami Prowler Gives
Police Headache
nounced that the long expected
Italian offensive in Egypt was about
to begin.
Old Bancroft Home
Is To Be Preserved
SPRING VALLEY. Calif—<#».—
An adobe house long occupied by
Hubert Howe Bancroft. American
historian, is being converted into
a community clubhouse. Efforts
have been under way for years to
preserve the landmark.
I many believed some
action against the Greeks was im-
minent.
The official Rome radio also an-
London repudiated any agreement
between Hitler and the aged Petain,
terming “any association, direct or
indirect, between France and her
mortal enemy” a “sacrilege.”
King Wiresh Petain
Earlier in the day informed cir-
cles in London had disclosed that
King George had messaged Petain,
extending courage and sympathy to
the French people, and expressing
the conviction of an ultimate Brit-
ish victory. Vichy dispatches did
not mention the communication.
President Roosevelt also had sent
a communication to the French gov-
ernment. Secretary of State Cor-
dell Hull, revealed. That message
went across seas Thursday while
Petain was seeing Hitler somew here
in occupied France.
While the diplomatic moves went
forward on the continent, the mili-
tary phases of the war continued
at increased speed. London had
seven daylight air raid alarms and
an eighth shortly after nightfall
with an untold number of casual-
ties and considerable property dam-
age to private homes and apart-
ments.
Activity In Channel
There was considerable activity
in the Channel area. Within sight
of watchers on on the English shore
RAF squadrons bombed a German
convoy and English coastal batteries
shelled a small fleet of German tor-
pedo boats maneuvering along the
French coast.
British pilots also resumed theft
attack on the German long-range
guns near Cap Gris Nez.
The Germans, intensifying the
war at sea. claimed to have hit the
42.348-ton liner Empress of Britain
with aerial bombs off North Ire-
land and to have left her sinking
The ship was used on the return
trip of King George and Queen
Elizabeth from North America in
the summer of 1939.
The British admiralty declined
comment.
RAF Over Germany
The British air ministry announc-
ed the usual RAF flights over Ger-
many and German-occupied terri-
tory again took placf with bombs
dropping on the naval base at Kiel,
on Bremen and Cuxhaven and the
Channel invasion bases.
Various industrial centers like-
wise were attacked, the ministry
said.
In the Mediterranean area. Italy
was reported to have suspended
air service to Greece until Novem-
ber 4, and
MIAMI. Fla — uPi— A grease-
smeared burglar dressed only in
trunks is giving police here new
problems in crime detection.
On at least one occasion citizens
gabbed at the elusive thief and got
only handfuls of grease.
Officers can’t decide whether he
is a white man or a negro. They
think he may be white, though,
because there appeared to be char-
coal dust mixed with the lard left
on one citizen's hands.
Nevada Shows Gains
In Population Count
RENO, Nev—<#*>—Nevada gained
18.506 population in the last decade,
but remains the most sparsely set-
tled state in the union. The 1940
census figure wag announced as
110.014. It is the only state without
a street-car line.
Gas Buggies Exempt
On Double Parking
WORCESTER. Mass—<A*>—A dis-
trict court judge suggested amend-
ing city traffic ordinances after ,
counsel for a double-pnrker inform-|
ed the court that present laws refer
only to carriages and horse-drawn
vehicles.
American Business Throwing Away Red Inh As Sales
Show Steady Gains; Defense Should Boost 1940 Totals
And
States as long as our people are
It no longer
economically.
Not Insane
(Continued from Page 11
as
at the state prison.
H W. Stanton, Lubbock feeder,
has constructed a ground silo 400
feet long. 60 feet wide at the top
and 40 at the bottom, and 20 feet
deep. It will hold more than 10.000
tons of ensilage.
own and England s salvation. No,
money is today of little real value.
We must have tangible resources,
the courage to sacrifice, and the
character to keep our heads.
Tuesday morning for the death cell
I mailed a letter to the presi-
.. ___________________ I didn’t
re-
of Bexar county at San Antonio.
They accepted the sentences.
The sixth man. Jose Rodriguez.
who turned states evidence and
testified against the other five un-
der an agreement that he would be
! granted immunity, remains in the
county jail here, w here he too has
been for four years.
When the Martinez sentence is
finally disposed of. the charges
against Rodriguez will be dismissed
and he will go free.
taxes Even war talk and a I
that the right side is winning brings
increased activity in the stock mar-
ket The demand for labor will put
more money into the pockets of the
man on Main Street and into the tills
of stores Only unbiased historians
years hence will be able to judge
whether nr nnt wars ever provide
I lasting economic values. Surely, real
1 prosperity can come from our pres-
ent situation only as it strengthens
our character and teaches us needed
lessons.
Let’s Remember 1929
Unfortunately* we have not yet
recovered from the effects of the
last war. Furthermore, fundamen-
Saturday, T
On the arm of his naval aide, Capt. Daniel J. Callaghan, President Roosevelt Wed-
nesday night waved in reply to the acclamation of a crowd which heard him say:
“It is for peace I shall labor all the days of my life.”
Martinez, were given life sen-
tences a few months ago whcji
. shall on the fourth day they were tried in district court
of rising values. Then came the 1"
swift kick in the pants so many of
ua remember Now. we are on the
eve of another great outbreak God
grant that it will not come before
we are prepared.
Our country is like a sick child
who before recovering from an ear
I abces.s breaks out w ith chicken pox.
We are not yet nut cf the depression
starting in 1929. Temporarily, the
economic situation will ease up.
bringing us to a false sense of se-
curity and prosperity Geograph-
ically aux euuntry a to large, and
have to say before sentence is
passed?” asked the court.
’ There Is.” said "C.......
have discredited my family.'
Whom he meant by "they” was
nnt explained.
He added quickly:
“I’m not insane!” He shifted his
feet slightly.
“I know the governor is repre-
frailty. Some day a leader will rise will change. It no longer takes
in some other country who will be money, as we know it, to finance
With machine tool companies Hitler s match. Until then, we must Germany. If it were of any real val-
working day and night to provide keep prepared economically as well ue. the gold which we have buried
the necessary equipment, there is a as militarily for whichever way the at Fort Knox would guarantee our
scarcity of skilled labor. Men must tide turns.
be trained for many important and I may sound like an alarmist If
technically-skilled jobs Blueprints so. forgive me I am anxious only
must be drawn, sources of supplies that we Americans are not caught
arranged, transportation schedules sleeping, economically, at the
by rail and highway checked. Law-,--
yers must study contracts, prices _#
gotiated. Our industrial X’£ Chon Martinez Tells Court
coming to a state of intense ac-
tivity.
The great agricultural sections of
the country have not yet felt the
increased tempo of our industrial
cities. How ever, as movement of the
business cycle swings from East —
to West, all sections of our land w ill;
ultimately be caught up in this
rush to arm. Young and old, rich
and poor, will all take more of a
part in whatever the future holds.
Business Will Improve
War prosperity for some few peo-
ple is a delightful state to contem-
plate Unfortunately, such people
do not come into contact with the
actualities of war. These are far senting me"
more cruel than those of the last He chatted a moment with the in-
conflict. My business associates terpreter. who then quoted him:
know that I never side-step a scrap ”1 .
dent—President Roosevelt.
write the governor. I haven’t
ceived a letter from him.”
Judge Gives Sentence
The judge conferred briefly with Three ethers. Rraulin Yanes.
District Attorney Tom Hartley and Fmiliano Martinez and Bonifacio
!•» t if i«it ■><*♦ T.xs-L- D,.re **.*■»* Ilf* — —».
In a moment he intoned:
“You . . .
of December, 1941, be electrocut-
I District Attorney Hartley, who
- on October 12 had worked exactly
four years on the "Donna river
r-i. •» •Tk murder case” as a public prosecutor.
< hon. 'hey walked from the courtroom to his
« office and smoked a cigaret.
“Four Long Years”
"That is the last of them,” he
commented quietly. "These have
been four long years.”
Of six men originally indicted
for the slaying of the unknown man
and woman after each had attacked
the woman, only one faces any pros-
pects for freedom.
Placido Handy, given the death
term in court here, was electrocuted
at Huntsville several months ago.
Now’ Martinez faces the electric
chair
Three
I thrive on trouble. Give me some
new upset to face each day and I
am a happy man. I am no pacifist in
busincs. religion, or war; and I am
all set for any actual participation
in the current fight abroad But I
also know that when our enemies his assistant. Jack Ross
suffer we also suffer in the end.
Dividends may increase, but total
incomes of business men and invest- __
ors will be drastically reduced by ••
feeling The handcuffs rattled again
Ingram picked them up.
Martinez remained on the witness
stand.
Ramon Longoria, court-appoint-
ed attorney for Martinez, whose
chief counsel. Kenedy Smith of
Raymondville, was not present at
the session, a-ked Judge Fergu-
son to allow Martinez to remain
in the county jail here through
Monday, thus Riving the mini
family time to have him exam-
ined by two physicians, ostensibly
regarding his sanity.
Martinez may still present evi-
dence of such physicians* findings
tally, we profited little from it. the court and for * ,anity
either financially or spiritually. We hc”r'nR .
- - f Otherwise. Sheriff R T <Bob»
Daniel, who had made preparations
By ROGER W. BABSON i our numbers and resources so great, i switch. I am hopeful, too, that all
BABSON Park, Mass —I have said that many have the impression we will realize the price our young
in recent articles that business is cannot be licked However, in HiV people must some day pay for the
getting better. As long as the de- ler's eyes we are already tottering present expenditures and brief re-
fense program continues to broaden from internal labor troubles and , spite from unemployment Hitler
there will be no lessening of ac- Congressional fights. And the has no idea of invading the United
tivity. Yearend reports will show thought may not be far fetched States as long as our people are
more plus than minus signs. Manu- Germany now’ has the great bulk prosperous. He. however, believes,
facturers and other business men of the resources of the Continent, that through labor and political dis-
are throwing away the red ink bot- let alone the Scandinavian coun- 1 tensions, unemployment will be so
ties and stocking up on black. It tries With this backing, anything great and nur people so divided
takes time for war production to can happen to us economically. One that we will turn to Fascism as a
get under way. The country is still saving graee is that In all history remedy.
in the inertia stage Once the ini- no man has yet conquered the world. As my grandchildren cnnstanly re-
tial problems of planning, financ- If I have learned anything in the mind me. times have changed. Our
ing. and production are overcome, last forty years, it concerns man’s conception of money and wealth
things should move fast.
Don't Be Impatient
machine tool
had a slump in business after the
armistice, followed by several years
f«»r Huntsville, will start with him
(Continued from Page 11
Durham Institute Is
To Locate Here
CONTROL OF
PRICES SEEN
HARLINGEN — President G D
Durham of the Durham Business
Institute. Austin, and other officials
of the school visited in the Valley
during the past week, deciding to
open a branch school in Harlingen.
Durham said a lease has been
taken on a home for the new enter-
prise in the Embee building, and
that complete equipment and office
machinery is being installed for
opening of the Harlingen branch.
’ president of the American Federa-
tion of labor.
The CIO, he said, was "tom with
dissension, divided politically be-
cause its leaders seek to compel it
to support a political party." The
AFL. he added, “has evolved and
followed a non-partisan political
policy.”
Green Says CIO Split
Some officials of the United Mme
Workers, foundation stone of the
CIO organization, disagreed with
Lewis. Hugh V. Brown, president
of District 7. a Hazelton. Pa., unit
and one of the big L'MW locals, said
the district membership would "go
down the alley battling” for Roose-
velt. On the other hand. Ray Ed-
mundson. Illinois district president
of the UMW. made public a resolu-
tion by 16 UMW officials pledging
support of Lewis and a “vigorous
campaign” against a third term for
President Roosevelt.
(Continued from Pago 1)
critical point in the fight to hold
prices down.
Steel mills operated at about
the highest percentage of capacity
in history, around 95. with actual
amount of steel turned out undoubt-
edly the greatest on record.
Automobile production was the
largest for this part of the season
in three years. Orders from deal-
ers were said to be heavy.
Retail Trade Better
In retail trade, snappy weather
drove people to stores for winter
clothing. Sales in steel and heavy
industry towns led the pickup.
Heavy construction awards —
largely for factories which will lat-
er add to swelling employment and
payrolls—topped $127,000,000, near-
ly 100 per cent ahead of the same
period last year.
Not only m steel, but in textiles,
motors, electric utilities, and else-
where expansion appeared to be in
the offing. The aircraft companies,
with an estimated $3,500,000,000 of
orders on their books, and more
likely to be added as these are fill-
ed. already is rushing millions in
plant construction completion
DEMOS ANSWER
JOHN L. LEWIS
$1,527,911 Contributed Now NEW BUSINESS
To Major Political Parties SCHOOL OPENS
AIR SERVICE
IS SUSPENDED
France Enters Axis
Orbit In Pact
(Centinued from Page 1)
(Continued from Page 1)
the
Congratulations
MANSFIELD IS
OUTSPOKEN IN
RAIL ATTACK
Valley Is In A Sack,
Holland Says
McAllen Stolen Car
Regained In Mexico
By City Patrolman
Virginia State Debt
Lowered During Year
To Mr. and Mrs. Brad Smith of
McAllen on the birth of a son. Wade
Bradford, weighing seven pounds
five ounces. Saturday at 2:15 p. m.
at McAllen Municipal Hospital.
McALLEN- The automobile own-
ed by A. A. Vohs. allegedly stolen
here Friday night, was recovered
Saturday night at Reynosa and a
man arrested in the car was jailed
City Officer Richard Bales
brought the man to jail here and
returned the rar to Vohs. Bales
said General Avila Durantes and
other Reynosa officials were "very
co-operative” It was the third car
Pales has recovered in six weeks.
Auto owned by O. E. Gomez was
recovered at Reynosa and one own-
ed by W. H Wickline was recovered
at Falfurrias.
RICHMOND. Va.—i/P>—Virginia,
which has a balanced budget, also
reduced the state debt by $1,295,000
during the fiscal year ending June
SC, 1940. _
« 5
Man Killed Saturday
At Los Indios Baile
LOS INDIOS — Jose Canales
about 40, well known Los Indios
character, was killed at a Mexican
baile here about 11 pm. Saturday,
his throat being cut. Persons near
the scene said they also heard one
or two shots fired. The Cameron
county sheriffs department was in-
vestigating.
been given to the railroads as a
bonus.”
He said further that "one of the
members is as railroad-minded as
hell itself ”
• Valley In A Sack"
Colonel Holland also criticized the
railroads declaring that they had
"the Rio Grande Valley in a syk:
in a sack tied at the top with a
ribbon called the Robstown dif-
ferential .*’
The rail carriers were charged
with responsibility for the load
limit on trucks in Texas. He said
that this was the first time in 35
years that he had ever criticized
the railroads, "but >hen they come
to us in this unfair way and get
our report to examine it at their
leisure in their swivel chairs I am
not going to be mealy mouthed
about it.”
Holland’s reference w#as to the
fact that Eugene S. Coghill, Jr. of
Houston, representing the Associa-
tion of American railroads, had ap-
■ peared at the public hearing Friday
and requested 90 days in which to
examine the report supporting the
proposed extension filed by Briga-
dier General G. A. Youngberg and
to file a brief if desired Col. F. S.
Besson of Galveston, U. S. Army
district engineer conducting the
hearing, granted the railroad or-
ganization 45 days.
Canals Aid Railroads
Miller said that it had never been
the policy of the rail association to
oppose the railroads and pointed out
that there had never been a w-orthy
water project which has not in-
creased business for the railroads
He said the railroads were given
land equivalent to the area of New
England to build transcontinental
lines and one-fifth the area of Texas
tn build lines in this state.
"Every foot of the line from Al-
goa to Brownsville and Rio Grande
City was more than paid for by
land donations.** he said, quoting a
former publicity man of the rail-
roads w ithout giting his name.
"This probably will be the last
hearing we will ever have to hold
to assure completion of this proj-
ect.” said Miller in describing the
Youngberg report submitted at Fri-
day’s hearing as "conclusive.”
He brought out the fact that con-
struction of waterways with a 12-
foot depth and 125-foot bottom
width was practically an adopted
policy.
Bailey T. DcBardeleben of Hous-
ton. representing the Coyle barge
lines, declared that barge operators
would fight any efforts on the part
of the Interstate Commerce Com-
mission to raise barge rates under
its new authority under the Lee-
Wheeler Act.
J. E Bell, manager of the Corpus
Christi Chamber of Commerce and
formerly at San Benito, issued an
invitation tn attend the interna-
tional celebration which will be
held in Corpus Christi when the
canal is completed to that city prob-
ably early next summer.
Bowie Urges Reduction
James C Bowie, director of the
Port Isabel harbor, declared that
if cost of handling fruit could be
reduced 10 rents a box to the pro-
ducer that it would mean the dif-
ference between easy living and in
many cases today inevitable bank-
ruptcy.”
The association authorized an-
other three-year program of activi-
ty beginning January 1. 1941 when
the current program expires
Saturdays convention of
canal association followed a hearing
on the proposed extension held by
• the U. S. Army district engineer
Friday. Delegates to the hearing
were taken on a tour of Port Isabel,
the Port of Brownsville and Mata-
moros Friday afternoon and had
dinner in Matamoros Friday night
»
I
f
Tor Peace I Shall Labor
Sunday, October 27, 1940
VALLEY SUNDAY STAR-MONITOR-HERALD
Page 2
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V.,
MAXIMUM FOR YOUR
LIFE INSURANCE DOLLAR?
/
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in selecting your life
insurance agent that
you use in selecting
your physician!
I
I
k
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of Life Underwriters should be refused for the same
reason.
After studying the objects of the National Associar
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YOUR INSURANCE.
I
F
Wash & Lubricate
$J.OO
Cisneros Rervicenter
Day 4-Corners Night
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HALLIBURTON'S
To
To
»
Here are the Objects of the
National Association of
Life Underwriters:
To support and maintain the principle of legal reserve life
insurance,
advance public knowledge of legal reserve life insurance
and Its uses.
To promote the adoption and application of higher standards
nf ethical ronduet in the profession of life underwriting
and the business of life Insurance.
increase the knowledge of agents concerning legal reserve
life insurance. Its uses and Its sale.
To provide through local associations for rendering community
service and for forming enduring friendships.
To create and maintain a sound public opinion, to promote
cooperation and good will, and in all other ways to pro-
mote the best Interest of legal reserve life insurance.
The Following Agents Are Members of
The Valley Association:-
Q ... of the delicious food
Decause prepared by the best colored
chefs in the Valley, milk-fed Southern fried
chicken, big. thick, juicy steaks, so tender
they’ll melt in your mouth, tasty Mexican
dishes and delicious sandwiches, along with
all kinds of fountain drinks and beverages,
including ice cream sodas, will be found on
the menu—all at resonable prices.
p ... it is without a doubt
Decause one of the most unique places
of its kind in the entire South. Either in the
setting of the Patio or the modernistic dining
rooms, you’ll find a jovial and most pleasant
atmosphere that will lend zest to your meals.
Most people meet someone they know at Hal-
liburton's.
i
WESLACO
ALTO THEATER
1
LA 4ERIA. TEXAS
SUN.—MON.
My Favorite Wife
AND
*
1
Pack Up Your
Troubles
10c—15c—20c
SAM WEEMS
CARL LA DUKE
J. W FINCHER
RAYMONDVILLE
L B. LOE
MISSION
O. E. CANNON
W. C. CARLISLE
BOY CONWAY
PHARR
M. B. GORE
SUNDAY DINNER NOON TILL 9 P. M.
WEEK DAYS 5 TILL 9
HALLIBURTON’S
PHONE LA FEBIA - 32
Located between Mercedes and La FerU
DRFVE IN FOR CURB SERVICE
HARLINGEN
H. H. JOHNSON*
V. E. HOWELL
J. O. HARRIS
W J WILLIAMS
D. B. ME ADOW >
MRS .MARIE GRAPPERHALS
EDINBURG
C. 8. JACKSON
McALLEN
I A. PATTON
PAUL MOORE
GEO. E. ELY
C. W. DAVIS
Rnr/incn * * * there is alwa-V8
DCCQUSC of room for dancing, whether
it be "F t Your Little Fovt.” a «c‘ ottSr
polka, nr fox trot, assuring both young and old
a most delightful evening nf dancing Make a
data to stop at Halliburton s.
it*
. yr
Jr W
K r
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Valley Sunday Star-Monitor-Herald (Harlingen, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 15, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 27, 1940, newspaper, October 27, 1940; Harlingen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1327181/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .