The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 341, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 7, 1922 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 20 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
1
-V ■ -
More O’-ato^s Scheduled than!
Eves Appeared at Any Con-
vention in That City
M!I.V\ \I i\EE Wis. June 7.—The
number of speakers ever
brought to a single convention in Mil-
v ik.-. )i national and international
• potation totaling 200 prominent
•::« :i '.il! address the Associated Ad-
' id .ncr Clubs of the World in their
«-• • ntion here June 11 to 15 in-
« 1’isive.
T«ie convention will be broken up
iito departmental sessions rather
general meetings. It is in the
departmental that the men who
ifako business move will exchange
'• • * on a given set of conditions it
v.. caid by Homer J. Buckley the
'• i"an of the program committee.
T'ro of tbe departmentals which
v f! P^ay an important part in the
C •hf nng will be those of church ad- i
‘4:?ing and community advertising.
I ending civic workers throughout the
• oo-itry will address these meetings.
r >r the general program Sunday I
afternoon June 11 the principal
r; miters will be Sir Charles Highani
- nber of parliament and a leading
dvertising expert of the British era- '
re; also Dr. Charles Aubrey Eaton
president of the American Educa-
tional Association.
At the Monday and Wednesday
•eneral sessions the discussions wiil
enter around the power of advertis-
ing tn move the $$2000000000
worth of manufactured and farm
nrr ducts in the United States and the
-a? t amount of world products.
Conferences on Plan-Anierican
trade industrial advertising the ed-
. ' t’oral work of organized adveris-
ing #»nd the vigilance work or truth-
in-? dvertising student advertising
»'T inizations and the wome n’s adver-
rising clubs will be held in depart-
>' '’^tal sessions.
The Agricultural Publishers associ-
will discuss just what ndvertis-
nn do for the farmer and the ru-
; immunity. The speakers at this
inn will include Gov. S. R. McKel-
• <f Nebraska; Henry C. Wallace
: mu ary of agriculture; Eugene
♦ft-ver. chairman of the war finance
•’•noration: Sen. Arthur Capper of
Kansas; and E. T. Meredith former
secretary of agriculture.
C. D. McCaw known n« the Kcr*-
ueVy farmer-nreacher-legislator will
address one of the strongest depart-
mentals that of the Associated Re-
mil Advertisers.
Horace Wade the boy novelist re-
ierter and ad writer fourteen years
old will speak Tuesday afternoon
e” “Getting Under a Bov’s Skin.”
t i •’ Tr;ving Fletcher New York
v -"I ke *he principal speaker on the
•i^rc’ nrogram Monday afternoon.
The National Association of news*
f •• executives will have as speak-
. T . J. Boug'nner” Chicago Daily
•■.<?• George M. Burbach St. Louis
n * Dispatch; B. L. Chapman New
r *-k World; M. E. Foster Houston
Chronicle; and Frank T. Carroll qf
*’ *» Indianapolis News.
ike Thurch Advertising depart-
rr ent has on its program the follow-
• .• -ipeaker-: Bishop Thomas Nich-
• 1 on Chicago: the Rev. C. W. Mack-
enzie Grand Rapids Mich.; Rev.
.’•■bert Starsel Milwaukee; Rev. W.
L Young Beaver Dam Wis.; R. A.
^urnquist Milwaukee Journal; F. T.
Carroll advertising manager of the
Indianapolis News; Rowe Stewart of
’he Philadelphia Record; A. C. New-
meyer New Orleans; Rev. E. E. Eliot
of Kansas City: Rev. P. B. Hill San
Antonio and Rev. E. II. Chase Chi
cago.
The Pan-American association
which will be in session Tuesday
morning is to be addressed by W. A.
Austin of the Baldwin Locomotive
Works F. K. Rhines New York: and
Dr. Julius Klein director of foreign
and domestic commerce Washington.
Discussion of municipal appropria-
tions for advertising tourist and auto
camps as a community asset and ad
'/ \ ;
I . I
• "T"
I WORM I
g tl. S Reg. Serial No. IJW53 *
« ClARAXTUD TO PREVENT |
• Sm* Worms and Heal Hounds g
! I'sed on all mis. sorts and after g
• all operations and casiralions g
• I sr this prescription lo keep mi g
g llles. slop Itching and burning g
g ol Mounds on animals. g
• Sr liusa rn tnda clase de •
• rorladas. granjs > lambien •
• drspulsde oprranones yrasi- I
• rations 1st rsfj preparation ♦
• porarvllar mosras.eomrion *
• > dolgr de lodes animates. *
Manufactured only by J
• HADDEN PHARMACY '
g MEICEOES THIS g
t-•
♦ WILLMAN’S handies it in
| Brownsville. If your druggist
• • ImiEle ft writ* to Had-
den’* Pharmacy. Mercedes Tex.
|
■ ---
vcrtising medium and the interrela-
tionship of town and country life is
to be taken up at the session of the
community advertising department.
The financial advertisers* association
will have bank officials from all
parts of tin- country to discuss wider
publicity on financial and investment
problems.
CHAMPION CUT-OFF
ON HIGHWAY READY
(ۥ T'tinued from Ps-c One)
ton! v ■ • <• i • «• 1 ud should
Im* nt ' i ’ 1 !** • ha* * in
Septem’" r. - - • i'v.iy .7nd/e
Ogi ir < ’ ■ '
Oth « Pond v/nr‘ •
While * • ?»• - is being giver
by the ••• t"i’ i ■»rti t tins permanent
construct •' <* n '•'•eat d<*nl of pc.
tivity aM nv •• i*omv on general dirt
r- I'd mi.s' i' 1 -n» : v ce nt The
'•nrrytng of the ’ >1 i<- >•(. on Saturday
county < fficiids sil t and th<* egpeetattnn
of federal aid will eompleleljr remove
«ts'e hijd" ;iv N-*. 1‘.* frum the mad amt
bridge mn<ntenane(> tat. allowing th«*
use of that m r.ey on side reads TMrt
is now flying as fast ns three tractors
himT grad* rs enn throw It.
Two of tbe tractors are now in use
In the Brownsville pmeinet. T!ie ten
Ton tractor end the twelve foot grader
last week finished the mad from Olmi*
to to near the I os Fresno* pumping
plant and is n w at work on the main
road Pei we? I os Fresno* and bv way of
the Phampion ent-off to Brownsville.
The five ton traetor and the eight-foot
gra b r are now littsy eonneeting Four-
teen tb street with tlie red bridge. Tlii*
i* expe* led to he finished today or to-
morrow. and will prove of great benefit
to the people of the F.l Jardln section.
RESULTS YESTERDAY
Texas Lfiirur.
Shreveport 3. Galveston 1.
Wichita Fails fi. Beaumont 3.
Fort Worth-San Antonio rain.
Pailas-Houston rain.
National t eacue.
Boston 7. St. Louis 2.
Pittaburgh-Ph'ladelphia. rain.
Chicago-New York rain.
Cincinnati-Brooklyn rain.
American League.
St. Louis Boston 2.
Washington 3 Cleveland 0.
New Y*>»k 3. Chicago 1.
Detroit 11 Philadelphia 1.
American \ssoriction.
Minneapolis 12. Kan: as City 5.
Milwnnk e 0 St. Paul 4.
- Indianapo’ia f». Toledo 4.
Columbus 7 Loc'svilJe 3.
Southern Association
Mobile 2. Little Rock 1.
t ha’tat oora S Atlanta 4.
H r .'i' .r* am It. Nashville 4.
!•- ;< Oklahoma l.ergac
* *♦ ! '* r ' 4 • va 1
‘ h - t. - ns •’ oat.
I... F “1 "I •'NCF.R well-known
* * nod -j.p tied citizen of Wa-
ItTii.w >i. ' . . v.-J» -jpcrls he ha*
i'4 *d ! S i*t' im e beyan
taki.K ! .. i. 1: *»■ i!' -»y* te'i* hi* |
friend.. n«>w ?(•* n .-itt *:e restored |
Kir h**auh. |
_ !
“My friends often say: ’Never snv-
you looking better; what are you do-
ing for yourself?* and I always tell
them: ‘Well 1 am taking Tanlac
now/ ” recently declared Henry
Spencer 415 East St. Watertown
a well-known ami highly respected
citizen.
"For more than a year’* he said
“I seemed to be run down all over.
From 160 pounds I fell off to 135
lost my appetite and my stomach
gave me no end of trouble. The lit-
tle 1 ate caused me to bloat with
gas and I was subject to dull hea-
vy headaches. I had no energy and"
it was all I cculd do to get around
the house. 1 had dizzy’ spells when
everything would blur before my
eyes and I had to catch myself to
keep from falling.
"Well now I have gained 15
pounds feel better in every way and
can work as well as ever since tak-
ing Tanlac. I relish what I eat with
a fine appetite and gas indigestion
headache and dizziness arc complete-
ly gone. Yes sir I just can’t say
too much for Tanlac.”
Tanlac is sold by all good drug-'
gists.—Adv.
x
considerably reducing the distance tr<>ia
there to the e.ty fur a great mam res-
idents there.
Poiinty t*omin:sdoner Sam Bell of th«
Brownsville preeinet is planning as
so..n ns the I .ns I'res'.oa vv.-rk is com-
pleted. to put both of the*e tractors and
graders on the Point Isabel road. Plans
also mi foot while tins equipment 1j
»n tliis pre-duet to grade up the road t<c
t!ie moiitb <f the rivf end Bo a Chicn
Money for this work however is expect-
ed to come from private scbscnpnou.
4* mnty ("< tmnissioner A. V. Logan of
the Sun Ilenito preeinet htis a ten toil
tract or and a twelve foot grader build-
ing a lirr read lietween ltio Hondo and
:V.: Ilenito. wl.iHi is expected to !»*• fiu-
shortly.
M Is expect--d that a ten ton tractor
nud twelve foot grader will arrive in
J J*| • }?1 ties week and at an early
ii:)K err n work in that precinct. Pinna
r •• m foot to grade up and open the
»«;:d from the southwest corner of the
V’o^om «rn t f the Hidalgo lounty lire.
Thia e«»i| will give a detour road when
a ii" In-gins.
Tin* state highway has recommended
• » flip road from Harlingen to 1’ay-
irondville lie locateil on the east side of
the railn ad and . circulations are afoot
t.V H e Harlingen ("hand er - f 4 oitiRierec
to obtain the necesssarv right of way.
The county now lias a coiisidpr.nhle
nnioiuit of road building equipment. Till?*
iliobule*: thtee P-n ton llolt tractors
two of which were obi allied from the
highway department and one five ton
trn<tor. obtained from the same source
making a total of three obtained from
the state. There is also one Case and
rue Cleveland tractor for maintenance
toirpo«ea. The county now has. or will
have in n few days three twelve foot
graders two eight foot graders one
«;ev*n foot grader n:.d eleven six foot
iTnders. and five five-foot graders.
There are also tbirtv-four steel road
drags twelve wood drags sixteen fre-
r«'v and also one Towner grader-drag
wide?! takes sixteen feet at a time.
•\V« are not rn!y pienared to Imi’-i
reads." R. id County .fudge Oscar C.
ffancy "hut with the great number of
rmal 1 graders and drags we are also
nt-epered to maintain them. The matter
of maintenance however will have to
b*> left largely to the road overseers.
With the people and the road overseers
furnishing tit id «fearing rights of way
miring back fences doing scraper work
dragging and so rn. leave g the tat
money to he spent in grading with these
big 11actor- we should in the next
tv. Ive months have the best earth roads
in the state of Texas." «
------
At the Movies
DITTMANN THEATRE
One of the big m< uu-uts in “(JimI'.c
Crucible" tin* pieturizatiou of Italph
Connor’s novel. “Th* Foreigner.” wliieh
is now < fie red to tin* patrens of the
itittmauu Theatre lakes place in a eourt
room where the young hero is on trial
fin- iiis life. When llalph Come r wrote
the novel he described thin court mom
at very great length and because it
played so prominent a part in the en-
folding of the storj. in fullest detail.
II. was enabled to do this because lie
di 1 not call upon his iraagiration but
i*a*l *>r described an actual court room
which existed in the City t f Winnipeg.
W hen ?1< nr.v Alexander Macltae went
to \Vint!i|»eg to bring Mr. Connor’s nov-
el to the s reel he at first thought that
it would he necessary to reproduce this
court room in Ili«* studio hut was de-
lighted to learn that through the cour-
tesy of the city officials it would be
possible for him to -shoot” Ins scenes
right in the very room described by Mi.
Connor in the novel.
jut uirv i in mmi** in*'
1 court room mene in “Hod’s Crucible"
they will In* seeing not n make-shift l ut
the real thing. N< t oi 1> that hut the
fVurt f'rier and the t ** and many ot
tie attendants r.re men who have offi.
eiated in their respective offiees for a
giear number of years therefore their
; technique is quite perfect. Kven the
newspaper men ere not ”extras" but
netinl report rs connected with the t'a:..
■ admit Free I'res*.— which seems to in-
sure the last word in realism.
QUEEN THEATRE
Not for taught did Wanda liawlcy
go in for nthleti- sports when she was
n gay little co-ed at the Fniveraitv of
Washington. Her rowing on the girl's
cl t w. her basket-ball experienee. and
other vigorous exercises have all stood
her in good stead since sin* became a
! motion picture star.
Besides keeping her physically fit.
these exercises frequently have to be
performed before the cameras. In her
current release “Her Fnee Value." Mat
she wing at the tjueen Theatre the star
has to let herself hand over hand down
a hundred-foot rope suspended from a
broken bridge over a mountain chasm.
Miss Ilawley says she got a real chill
down her spine while doing tli«. aivl
she hopes the audiences who sec tha
picture v ill also. Those who have seet
the “H*w Face Value" guarantee the
j thrill all right.
BROWNSVILLE BOY
TO MAKE LONG AUTO
TRIP THROUGH WEST
Will be One of Party of Geol-
ogy Students of State U.
Who Will Visit Points of
Geological Interest
AUSTIN Texas June 7—Points of
niaj* r geological inter* t in the Rocky
mountain; are on the chart which the
department of geology of the University
of Texas has decided to include on the
itinerary of the summer camp trip this
year which is to be the most extensive
and instructional one that lia3 ever
been conducted Py the department. Four
cars will leave Austin J.me U5 with the
following men: H. P. Bybee of the
geology department and his assistant
L. T. Barrow who will be in charge of
the party; Robert C. G.vskill of Austin
Charles D. V'ertrees <f ilicwnsville
Carroll K. Cook of Sii.tcn Gerald F.
Drought of San Antonio S. D. Brough-
ton of Tyler R. W. Byram of Houston
A COMMON ERROR
THE SAME MISTAKE IS MADE BY
MANY BROWNSVILLE PEOPLE
* _
It’s a common error.
To plaster the aching hack
To rub with liniments rheumatic
Joints
If the trouble conies from the kidneys.
It’s time to use Doan's Kidney Pills.
Here is convincing proof of merit.
Mrs. S. It. Thompson Mercedes Texas
says: “Quite a number of years ago I
was taken with a severe backache. When
j ! stooped it would catch me making it
hard for r.io to pet up apain. My head
ached terribly and I was awfully dizzy
at times. My kidneys did not act right
and this too annoyed me. I read of
i Doan’s Kidney Pills in the paper ami
thought. 1 would try them. After taking
'our boxes my hack was as strong a<
ever and kidneys again acted regularly.”
Price 60c at all dealers. Don’s simply
ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s
Kidney Pills — the same that Mrs.
Thompson had. Foster-Milburn Co.
J Mfrs. Buffalo N. Y. Adv. (72»
We Have Received Another Shipment of
Floor Coverings
6x9 $24.35
9 x 12 $39.50 to
$53.50
{ __I
\ Cold Seat
Floor-covemncs
(i x9 RUGS d»A QA
only.fJ.Dv
: $11.60
9 X 12 RUGS d?1 Q CC
only.iplC.Dl)
GOLD SEAL
CONGOLEUM
By the Yard
Per
Yard
WE HAVE THE LARGES1 STOCK OF
Armstrongs Linoleum
Jor Every Room w House
in the Valley. Newest Patterns and Designs.
Prices from $1.00 a Square Yard up.
Come in and See the (
New Floor Coverings
ALL PRICES
SUBJECT TO TEN
PERCENT •
DISCOUNT FOR
CASH
..
. —.- !
_WE DELIVER TO
ALL POINTS IN THE
VALLEY WITHOUT
EXTRA CHARGE
II. II. Henderson of New Braunfels.
J. A. Rose of Denton Alfred VV. Dehorn v
of Austin H. E. NY.-sly Wichita. Ka/is..
D. W. McGregor of Austin L. D. Cart-
wright of Beaumont J. C. Orr and Cluj
Green.
The only state west of Texas not in-
cluded in the trip is Nevada; and a
visit to Pyramid Lake may oe made.
During the entire trip a* nut 7500 miles
will be covered. An outline of the stops
of interest includes the following points:
Raton N. M. crossing the Continental
Divide Denver Colo. ('ripple Creek
Pikes Peak Rocky Mountain National
Park of Colorado Kates Park Ch« yenne
Wyo. Salt Lake City Utah a visit to
Yellowstone Park it guysers and min-
eral springs and north through the min-
ing districts of Montana to Glacier Nat-
ional Park to Spokane arid Seattle |
Wash. Visit. to Mount Ranier and
Mount I.a> i n Ore. -nd Yosem.te Valley
will be made; then the party will turr
south through Sequoie through the oil
fields of California to Los Angeles by
Roosevelt reservoir project to the Grand j
Canyon. The Elephant Butte Reservoir
and El Paso will be among the last stops
of the trip which will come to an end
Sept. 1 in Austin.
The department of geolog;.- conducted
its first summer can.p in the central
mineral region in the summer 1917 at
which time the granite industry was
given a thorough study. No trip was
made in 191H on account of the war.
The geology of Mason County was work*
ed out and is now being prepared for
publication as a result of the work
It • I M
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
ANS
25< ond 75$ Pjck jj! 's Evcry-wher*
•luring the summer# of 1919 «n*l 192".
H. I.. Whitney and eight >tudcnt* made
an exploring expedition into Wcat Texas
in summer 11*21.
■ ■■■■■ « «m»—■ in——
NOTICE!
To the public in general and to rart-
men in particular that I will prosecute
to the fuil extent of the law any per-
son or persona found taking dirt cut-
ting wood or making any other u»e of
my land without my permission and it
would also be well for persons buying
dirt to inform themselves as to where
the dirt is coining from. Mr. Juan
Brown will look aftrr all vacant lots
and acres belonging to me and he will
report any trespassing or damages that
may be caused to said properties.
June X 1922. HOMER L. FITCH.
■ ■ .- - -
You can stand
PAT with
STROLLERS
1 €\k fifteen
cigarettes
^e/ve a Coc<S
the'X ^.R
A Movie Star inTvery Package
I Remember the wonderful
Selected
Jewelry Stock
of Lawrence R. Olmsted
will be for saie at auc-
I tion regardless of price.
Must raise cash at once.
Free Presents Given Atvay
Two Sales Daily
Beginning Today June 7
I 3:30 and 7:30 P. M.
I Lawrence R. Olmsted
I 1015 Elizabeth Street
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 341, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 7, 1922, newspaper, June 7, 1922; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1377968/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .