The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 255, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 11, 1922 Page: 1 of 4
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Every Loyal Citizen of Brownsville Will Wear an S. 0. S. Badge
I Cl;iB mums in Ur Hrralft
\OL. XXVIH No. 255. • BROWNSVILLE TEXAS SATURDAY AFTERNOON MARCH 11 1022 FOUR RAGES TODAY ESTABLISHED 1IN3WOULD ORM
FINANCE PLAN
IS PROPOSED
Sound Currency Assn. Takes
Note of ‘Violent Fluctua-
tions’ in Exchange
IHv The Associated I’ress.)
T.<>NIH► \. Mar. It A plan of fin-
ancial reform lias lieu prepared '•> the
executive committee «>f the Sound t'ur-
rency Association of tireat llritaiu and
»ent to tlie t'hanctdlor of the Kxcheipier
*"K consideration at the pioposd inicr-
naiional economic eoiwereiice at (••nori.
Jhe coiiiiiiittee asserts that “violent
fluctuations in the rate of exchange he.
tween countries are among the principal
causes of the present Worldwide de-
pression of trade’’ and that these flue
tuatious are partly due to the dw*orguii-
fzuiion and de|irecia>ed condition of the
currencies of various count ri< s.
If asserts that excessive government
expenditure and ill-regulated budgets
contribute to the disorganization of ex-
change.
To meet this situation the commit- 1
tee nr.tposcs the following methods:
A decision on the funding or adjust- j
merit of inter-Ally war debts and Her-
man reparations.
JMiisth* in ml itlinist ration
wifli it view to reducing taxation and
the cost of production and thereby stim
ilia I e trade. •
Restoration of an equilibrium 'in the
budgets of ilie various countries through
out tbe civilized world.
•Removal o| all artificial oarriet 4 11
tbe free interi liangc of commodities be-
tween nations.
Am a first step toward re-establishing
the par of exchange between gold
Miamian! countrie** the committee ad
vocates the gradual contraction of paper
currency in all countri> a where there is
an excess.
Tin* '-oiuniittec admits that it Is not
en*> To decide brtw best to reduce the
redundant currency but suggests that
one met hod woulil he to convert the ex-
ivm into funded debt.
When par of exchange has been res-
tored. if says that prohibition of the
export or melting of gold coin should
be removed.
Some European countries says the
committee probably will not be aide to
leatore their paper currency to its pre-
war parity and 0 fresh parity may have
to be established; but it is declared to
he certain that ** a currency svstetn bas-
ed on gold must be adopted by all coun-
tries interested in tbe re-establishment
of the general trade of Knrope."
f.nnns and credits to all countnes
ahotild be based only on th-ir own prac-
tical recognition of the imperative ueed
of reform says the Hritish financiers.
The committee ndiJs that only thru
united effort on the part of all conn
tries to follow tlie-e pi iu«*iple* of sound
fiinime are trade and industry likely to |
revive. Tin* committee asserts Ibal fin-
ancial machinery exists in London. New
York ami elsewhere sufficient to pro-
vide the necessary credits where the
security is sound Continuing ike
committee de«lare4l:
•‘The 1’nited Kingdom should aim at
the early restoration of the old e«jui\
Aleuts between tlu* pound sterling ami
1 1 grains of standard gold. Such
restoration would tend t<* give stabili-
ty to prices ami encourage countries
with still more depreciated currency »«> j
take the necessary steps to stabilize 1
them in relation to gold ami so < nu»c
the gradual return of steadiness in in-
ternational I rade.
. ■ • • _ _
"The resumption or coin specie pnv-
ni>ts in tld* coinllry would imiiiedi nelv
Jiuvc n beneficial affect on British nn
tional credit. An improvement in nation-
al credit. All ii«l rovcmciit in national
credit which would enable this country
to refund the national debt would save
the state many million* a year in inter
eat charges.
Other countries having depreciated
currencies are invited h.v the committee
to organize sound currency association*
with which the British a*so. iation would
|>e willing to affiliate.
---*•-- —-
•
Art you a true and loyal citizen of
Brownsville? Or are you a slacker?-
The S. 0. S. badge or its absence will
aaswer for you. _
WEATHER FORECAST
Tonight generally fair wirm r. Sun
day. partly cloudy: to f»v*li. rm:h
to southeast winds.
The following weather observations
covering the 24-hour period ending at 7
a m. today are reported hy Mrs. A. W.
Reed. United States voluntary wtather
observer:
Maximum tmperaturr .
Minimum temi*eratur» ..
IVremeter .. —* d_
Temperature at Noon ..
Actors Take Hand
• • • • •
in Competition of
• • •
Radio Telephones
. ■
(By the Associated Press)
NEW YORK N. Y.. March 11. Appre-
ciative hut non-paying amateurs who
have been sitting in their homes listen-
ing to world-famous entertainers face
the edict of the Actors’ Equity Associa-
tion that such performers must he paid
for their work. The announcement was
made that the council of the association
ruled that the radio phone is in compe-
tition with theaters and that those who
talk or sing in transmitting apparatus
must he compensated.
In the last few months there have
been numberless frve concerts stage
performances lectures ant! other fea-
tures supplied to owners of radio phones.
ROTHBLUM DALLAS
IS TO TESTIFY ABOUT
A RECENT KIDNAPING
—
(By The Associated Press)
DALLAS Tex. Mar. II. Philip Rotn J
blum picture framer kidnaped from his
home here and flopped by unidentified
men Monday nipht. returned to Dallas i
today from Little Rock with Captain of
Detectives Moffitte wso was sent to
Arkansas to serve a prand jury sum-
mons on him.
Mrs. Rothblum also returned. Both
will appear in the prand jury invest ipa-
tion of the floppinp. They returned i
voluntarily after Moffitt assured them '
of po'ice protection. At police headquar-
ters. Rothblum said he believed he will
be able to identify his assailants. Mrs.
Rothblum previously had said she be*
I loved she could identify one of the men
Fourteen witnesses besides the Roth*
blunts will po before the jury today.
-• --
OKLAHOMA CITY HOI.DI P
BY TWO PXM \SKED MEN
(By The Assqpatcd Press)
OKLAHOMA CITY. Okla.. Mar. 11.—
Two younp men. unmasked held up a
•cwelry store in a downtown section this
morninp while scores of persons were J
passinp by. They escaped with jewelry
and money said to amount to $2000.
They escaped in an automobile parked
in front of the store.
- -- »» —..
Only a slacker will refuse to wear an
S. 0. S. badge in Brownsville
HOLD WOMAN IN
NEW BRAUNFELS
HOLDUP AFFAIR
Is Only Development Over-
night In Sensational Bank
Robbery of $75000
.—
(By The Associated Press)
SAN ANTONIO Tex. Mar. 11.—The
arrest of a woman and an all-night
starch by HK1 armed men in the cedar
1-rakts near Brecken were the overnight
developments in the sensational $75000 !
Lank robbery of the New Braunfels State f
Bank Friday afternoon.
The woman's husband was put in the i
Comal county jail Friday afternoon for
investigation. When she stepped from
a bus in the p!a/.a Friday evening after
returning from San Antonio she also
was arrested.
'iiic car carrying the loot of the rob-’
bers was trailed to Smithson Valley j
Dense forests of cedar cover the hills i
During the night off.cers from San An-
tonio New Braunfels and Austin aided t
by a hundred deputies stalked the hills |
and valleys in the hope of finding the j
bandits. It i.- believed the bandits aiian- ‘
cloned the car and on foot are making
their wav through a sparsely settled
country to the railroad to make their j
getaway.
lCeinhold Bream* r. an old Texas trail- I
er followed the bandits’ car. but lost J
his way where the Bat Cave road ruts ]
off Trum the* Boerne road about three j
miles this side of Bracken
--•«-— I
TWO OFFICERS SHOT
TO DEATH BY BAND
OF ARKANSAS THUGS
|
(Ry the Associated Press)
PLARKNItON. Ark. Mar. 11. Sheriff
James Ryals and Jack Camp special dep- I
uty today were shot and killed and Wil-
liam Camp another deputy father of !
Jack was probably fatally wounded at
Monroe in attempting to arr*?st two un-
identified men wanted on charges of j
robbery. The bandits escaped.
This is no time to parley. **S. 0. S.”
means Save Our Seaport. Come across
dear Brownsville.
“Bible Not a Collection of Texts for
Ministers But of Rare Literature”
(Hv Tin* Assoeiated Press )
CIlirAhM. 111.. Mar. 11 "(Vntrarf |
f«> general snnpositioii the Uil*le is not
a eollei tioii i f texts for ministers to .
preaeh from." Theodore <1. Soares. pro-
fesor at the Tiiiveisitv of Phieago an I I
pr*ea< her at tin* 11 \«I• • Park Pougr egn
tioiial Phui'li deviated in an :tild-<*»»
here. "It is i eollei lion of literature
lh«‘ greatest whieh was developed he
fore the eotmiig of the (■ reeks. 1 •«* 11 -
jatniti Franklin re. ogniz«*d that" Prof
Soares substituted a dramntie reading
of Until for a usual sermon from « text
"While Franklin was in Frame dur-
ing the period when the 'age of reason'
had swept away rev* r» n* e for the Bible."
said Prof. Soares "he remarked at a
meeting of a 'keptieal soriety. "in tin*
eour-e of my antiquarian researelies I
have diseovered a rare Oriental tale in
an oh sen re volume. I should like to
have it read at some future gathering
of this i itvle.* The members enthusin'
tieall) insisted that the esteemed |tr
Franklin’s disvoverjr he iutrodtn-ed at
their next meeting.
"Aeeonlingly. Franklin proeured a
skilled reader xxln* read dJutli before‘he
soeietv. Pliarmeil hv the >torv. whieh
they supposed was a IleW diseoverx . till’
members voted that it be published in
tin* roi ords of the organization.
"That would he mmeeessarv.’ said
Franklin as the story is already widely
published in a volume whieh eontnins
many others of equal merit the Bible.’
Prof. Soares said that aside from it
purpose whieh was to eomliat nation
ali'tie bigotry Until is a beautiful prom
idyll
WINE SUPPLY HOLY
ROSICRUCIANS IS CUT
OFF BY PRO AGENTS
IP- The AsSMiittel IVessA
lAN FRANCISCO. Cali.. Mar. II.— 1
Ceneral Prohibition Apent Stroup to lay j
has taken a hand in the affairs of the
rult of Holy Rosicrucians and cut off
the wine supply accessible to them from
the cellars of the California Wine Asso* |
c'atior.. He stated the action was 1
prompted by a desire to determine |
whether the Rosicrucians* worship harks
I ack to Bacchus. The supply will he cut
off. he said until he determines wheth-
er the cult members have a recent thirst
for a new rtlipion. or whether it is a
new rclijrion for an old thirst.
-•• — •
BANDITS SECI’RE $850 IN
FT. WORTH EARLY HOLIH’P
1 Pr T1"' Associated !’ros».*
FORT WORTH. Tex.. Mar. 11. Two
bandits entered the Palace Theater in
the heart of the business district at
S o’clock this morninp. tied and popped
two- n* pro porters knocked the combi
nation off the safe and escaped with
$H50 in cao».
■ - —-- —
Don't be a quitter. S. 0. S. must
put deep water over.
To Check Up Accurately
the results of any advertisement is impossible. It of-
ten happens that one satisfied customer gained through
the advertisement brings to your doors scores of other
buyers. Advertising builds up your reputation.
THOUSANDS OF S. 0. S. BADGES
APPEARING ON CITY STREETS
REDUCTION IN
RATE ON FUEL
OIL IS COMING
A reduction in tlie freight r.t*e on
fuel oil ranging from Mi to i ear.
or from T» to 1l! tints a barrel will
be put into effect l»y the tjqlf Coast
1.nos :n about thirty (lays i. •oiling
to m vices tot lay to A. S. lii.iiitio gen-
eral agent here for tin* tJulf f oist
l.iiies from .1. A. Itiown. geneial freight
ngent. at lloiision. The amount if
the reduction on the individual tar. it
was understood. will tlepend on the size
••1 tlie car.
Hie reduction is expected to resu!'. In
r. great saving throughout the tmver
Ilia t.rundc Valley irrigated district as
nil the pumping plants use oil for feel
commuting around half a million ban ds
of oil nuniiaily. 'taking eight tints a
barrel as an average it is .oiut d the
having effected will be about flO.MKJ
a y« ar for the Valley.
SHRINERS’ PARTY
TO ARRIVE IN CITY
EARLY ON SUNDAY
A telephone message to The Herald
th>s afternoon from II. I.. Fitch at Mc-
Allen. said the San Antonio Shriners
want to visit Taint Isabel Sunday
morning. Manager f. I.. Jessup of the
Chamber of Commerce requested that
all persons who have promised cars
be at the Chamber of Commerce at
8:30 o'clock Sunday morning as well
as those who may not hate promised
hut will be available with their rars
and drivers.
A sjiih tal rrafn of seven ear* bear
ing about 1J." Shriners from San An-
tonio. will arrive in Brownsville about
- o'clock tonight from Harlingen and
will spend most of Sunday in the city
leaving for San Antonio at I o'clock
in the afternoon.
II. I.. Fitch chairman of n local re.
ception committee today called <>n the
Citizen* of Brownsville to extend the
"gitid hand ’ to the vistors. ninny of
whom have friend* here and see that
Miev are given an opportunity to see the
•*ity aul surrounding district.
A local reception will greet tin- Shrin-
ers nt s;;;*i o’l-liwk Sunday morning ni
the railroad station and arrange guests
for those furnishing automobiles.
The Shriners* gave a minstrel show
this afternoon at McAllen and tonight
• he performance will be repeated at
Harlingen. Inst year they showed j»
Brownsville and Mercedes
U. S. DEMAND ON
ALLIES CAUSE OF
MUCH SURPRISE
Iliy Tin* Associated Press.]
PARIS. Mar. 11 The demand of the
I’tuted States for reimbursement of
SdI.IHtO.IMNI expenses incurred hi tin* nc-
iiiirtion of tlte Ithinela 11 1
surprise and perplexity in Frmeh offi-
cial circles. Th *re «. m s «• (••■•nt««l
comment in several of the timmins
newspapers
A French semi-official statement says
• hat the .American claim ••nines at a
.inono nt when accord based on the Can-
nes project was about to he realize |
and it tends to destroy the whole sys.
tern of reparation. Tint Helm dc Paris
declare* it undoubtedly is too late to
Civ* the Fnifcd States its share of the
billion murks paid by tiermnny August
;:o. as lteigiurn and Kuglnud already
hove revived their allotments.
• T'v Tin* Associate 1 l’ress. 1
PARIS. Mar. 11 ltest information
m French and Prit sh official circle*
t< day was to ill** ♦ffect Ibti t he Arucr-
•••an claim for reimbursement of ex-
penso oft he American fore* s in the
Rhineland would be referred to the re
pare lions eomuuaaion.
I
Initial Mass Meeting For Windup
of All Campaigns For Harbor
Draws Large Crowds
The S. O. S. campaign is off to a fly-
ing start.
Placards signifying that busint
houses and homes are "llMl Per Cent
S. O. S.” have begun to appear in
Brownsville windows.
Also thousands of the little white
ribbons signifying that the wearer has
“kicked in” with any amount from a
dollar up for the railroud and thaunel
fund are seen on the streets of Browns-
ville. Coat la)H*ls not bearing the rib-
bons are conspicuous by their absence.
Last night K! Jardin held its own mass
meeting in behalf of the S. O. S. Rev.
E. P. l»ay explained the purpose with
the result that the meeting attended by
less than a hundred persons raised
$411.50 which includes several tons of
cabbage to be sold today. The meeting
ended with a record of list per cent.
Plans were adopted to complete the
campaign in El' Jardin ar.d make the
entire community loo per cent S. O. S
A central committee of five was selected
io work out the details of the campaign
and push it to a speedy completion. The
committee consists of l*r. H. C. Richard-
son chairman; Rev. George Dennis sec-
retary; Messrs. W. D. Rogers Georg**
[French and J. E. Graham and this com*
uiunity assisted by u large number of
volunteer workers is busily engaged to-
day.
So much for El Jardin which has
taken an aggressive stand with refer-
ence to the railroad and harbor propo-
sitions.
In Brownsville last night one of the
largest and most earnest audiences that
has ever been held in connection with
the railroad and harbor improvement
gathered at Tenth and Elizabeth streets
to hear D. A. O'Brien whose address
was supplemented with talks by 0. L
Jessup manager of the Chamber of Com-
merce and Jesse Dennett tiie latter talk
ing in Spanish for the benefit of the
Spanish-speaking portion of the audi-
ence.
Mr. O'Brien’s argument in behalf of
completing the coast projects hud to
do principally with the savings that wiil
be effected once the harbor at Brazos
Santiago is opened to water trans-
portation. lie referred to a eott-
wrsution with a New Orleans shipowner
who recently offered to establish a boat
line between New Orleans and Point
Isabel and while he at first said that
if he could be guaranteed a cargo he
would transport ;t for seventy-five per
Cent of the present railroad ra’.e still
later after further consideration of the
proposition offered to make it sixty-six
and two-thirds per cent of the freight
rate.
Mr. <» Hrien repented previous
merits that he has made in which he de-
clared that the city of Brownsville i»
paying from $100000 to $150000 a month
in freight charges arid that the imuuiil
is more than the value <>f the product
shipped out of the district which meant
he declared that the people of this sec- i
lion are growing poorer “with every
rising of the sun." He a-.erted that
with watt r transportation the city of
Brownsville would in six months save
enough money to pay the entire cost
of the coast projects.
He said that before the establishment
of deep water at Houston that city was
paying M cents a hundred on sugar be- ^
tween Houston and New Orleans and
that with the deepening of Buffalo
Bayou there the rate has been reduced
to 21) cents a hundred. He cited further
the fact that when there was water
transportation between New Orleans and
Brownsville sugar was carried for 41
cents a hundred and that with the de-
struction of water transportation the
rate has grown until it is now 9*5 cents
a hundred.
“Wherever there is water competi-
tion" he said "the rate- have been re-
duced; wherever there is no water com-
i petition the rate - have been increased’
Discussing the depth of the proposed
[ channel over the bar of eighteen feet.
and that across the Laguna Madre to
i the dock sixteen feet deep and 14.0:0
feet long Mr. O'Brien said that the
.depth was sufficient to handle boat of
i large size lie pointed to the fact that
a boat loaded with .'1950 tons of sulphur
recently left Freeport Texas drawing
only feet and 6 inches and he cited
other examples of large boat# touching
at harbors that afford depths not much
greater than that proposed at Burnt Isa-
i Let as a starter.
“There arc men aim tell you that the
channel at Bnuae .Sai <ig* * uu
over night” Mr. O Hrtea >* J. “Thai
statement is an in-alt to I nit* 4
Static Army hoard i>t K«g >nt» *w at-
tack «n the integrity tntel )>*• nn .and
sincerity of every member of that board
and of its engineering corps aha i ■ the
past ten years ha» r< ported on tr br»-
zea Santiago project l»o you thi 'A fur
a minute that the fatted Stall s am. i » i
engineers would waste the purer*meat**
money on a propositi on that wsu * he
[ lost in a night ?”
Mr. O'Brien thru pi.*<•-. • i. I tu i >y a n
the purpose of the present campaign to ;
raise IjoRk) of which fept- j
sents the amount defaulted by a num-
ber who Were pledged in the sale
of the $191 .mm worth of the coa.pat y e
1 second mortgage binds and ft - of
shortage in th< channel fund.
"Some people” Mr. Obrien sad.
“have fallen down on their promise to
corn.- across with $ui o»*»* M. re g ..ag
to appeal to the* entire Valley ta*
evgry-day sort of fellow In th * cam-
paign we're going to a*k the wum% n t«
help us then we are going after th
boys and the girls and then we're guing
oh down the line until we reach the
babie« and we'rv going to a-» lh« m *u
open their little* saving- bank- and . ■
their inckeH and dim** to thi- pr*-j
sition since some of the rich men have
faile d to carry out their proa*1 -t »
Mr O'Brien p*>d his reaped* ta aes
! uncertain terms to those citizens who
I ar*- said to be opposing the harbor pro-
| ject. He said: “Mr will >h<*w them up.
[and they will appear »o cemtempt.hu
[that a cur dog would*'* f w them
i down the street even if they i *d t* -
de r tin n beefsteaks tied around their
i necks.”
"Somebody asked me what »t are
going to do with the w«rth of
bonds remaining in the* rail rood coin*
pany'a treasury'* They'll remain ia the
company's treasury M hat else could*
1 do with them unless I wanted to go
to jail? Y**u. the people of the Lower R »
(•rande Valley a* majority -tuckowner.
in the H o <1 rande K»>!r*ad owa -u
per cent of them.”
The address was a passionate appeal
to Brownsville to save our seaport pro
jeet and break the shack!* * «»f
c;al oppression which kr.i> th*- %'a»l»i
in bondage and impoverishes ail both 1
city and farm dweller*.
Following Mr CJ Bnrn. Jr*** Hri.i. rtt
addressed the aud . nc« n Spot »h e*
plaining briefly the remarks *.f Mi
O’Brien and the purr ■•*- of «h. can i aiga
and the mass ascot mg. telling what th-
S. 11. S. badges * d. and <**< *» ■ tig
them that no one of then* should ap *
pear on the streets after today u*te*a
he wore an S i> S. ladte.
Mr. Jessup f ix * i Mr I* i *•? -a
“this is not the lime to ta.a ■» l>n*o
has com* for action lists and I have
had our differences of opinion; why. I
often have difference* of opinion with
my wife hut w.- a'tax mak« up
Mr. Jessup »a d that hr •*< aot a
property owner in Bro*maw*ll* of any
con*« <|uence but that hr had put tfn*
into the channel fand. had irv« »lcd fiiml
*li» the railroad bond* had given a large
part «f bis lime in the past thr* - year*
to thr caat| i. s t*M*i -ng ap and damn *
the Valley at an trip- n»e of about f'.*«<
but he d. flared i have fid for th.*'
campaign in my w.f* ■ fame. I hav* ||o
in my own name and l v« got the most
wonderful "polf parrot at home an4 |i
is going down to his credit."
Mr J< »sup delved into H.b! c* *
lory for **m* aarwrretices. which h« *» 4
con-pared in great measure to th* 1 ea
•iluat on.
Ilia talk was to the jw. nt and k* *f».»ae
w:’h the greatest fervor tkrsttftaat
The crowd applauded all the speakers _
repeatedly.
1 he rrowd last night at its peak a
estimated to have numbered «i<r ore
thousand people and over ninety peg
cent of the»e remained throughout tho
meiting. with rapt attention *\.a the*
speaker* md’catiag to the manager* of
the cumpuigtt the deep >nter< »t mth
which the people of Hrownitille and
surrounding community are regaidiag
the present efforts.
I*eneral pleasure was eaprea ~d hy
the managers with the • acre as of tb*
meeting which they pointed out afforded
an evcellent opportunity fur a more
thorough explanation of tho *t untie*
than has been had for torn* tims.
*
0. UNDERWOOD
TELLS WHY HE
VOTED FOR PACT
Did So la Sum Spirit Tkat
He Voted For Treaty oi
Versailles la 1919
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 255, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 11, 1922, newspaper, March 11, 1922; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1377881/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .