The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 93, Ed. 1 Friday, October 7, 1927 Page: 5 of 8
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SECRETARIES
TO PLAN f
C. of C. Convention In
"Brownsville To Be
discussed
9
^inat details of the program for
the first annual convention of the
South Texas Chamber of Commerce
to be held in Brownsville November
14 and 15 will be worked out Sat-
urday at a called meeting of the
South Texas Secretaries Associa-
tion according to announcement here
Vy William S. West convention
• wirman.
■^The meeting is called’ by Ralpn
tdford president of the associa-
i t<~«»n an organisation auxiliary to
Kl ^ &>«th Texas Chamber of Com-
B^^^ce. to be held in San Antonio at
South Texas Chamber offices in
the National Bank of Commerce
building beginning at 10 a. m.
Chamber of commerce secretaries
from the entire region are being in-
vited to attend the conference in
order that the program may include
for discussion problems which affect
ali parts of South Texas. Special
Arrangements for handling the large
Crowd estimated at between 10000
And 15000 expected to the conven-
tion are also to be discussed at the
San Antonio meeting.
Among the features on the pro-
Kim to be worked out is the distri-
tion of $2500 in cash and prizes
which are to be offered South Texas
bands competing in the band contest.
Prizes will include an assortment of
loving cups instruments and meda's.
Bands will be judged on performan»e
In two classes It has been definitely
decided. There will be a contest tor
one and two-year old bands and
Another for the three year bands.
All bands entering will receive a
competition prize of $50 in cash
whether they carry off any of the
honors or not. Music for the contest
Is being prepared now and band
loaders will be notified as soon as
possible In order that they may be-
En practice at once according to
ly Leeman general manager.
Committees for the handling of
special work are to be appointed at
the secretaries* meeting Saturday
And other committees will be named
by R. W. Morrison president of the
8outh Texas Chamber upon his re-
turn from Canada. A campaign is to
be started by the housing commit-
tee urging all who plan to attend to
tnake reservations early in order to
Avoid last minute crowding.
O. C. Richardson manager of the
Brownsville Chamber of Commerce
will leave Friday night for San An-
tonio to attend the meeting and
help make arrangements for the con-
vention here.
. Real Estate
Transfers
Oico Morris to Christian Panti-
cost Church lots Nos. 27 28 in block
No. 9. West Harlingen addition town
of Harlingen. Consideration $300.00.
C. L. Schaff to hid Berly. north
20 acres of block 6 W'ilson Tract
subdivision of survey No. 25. Con-
sideration $10.00.
Fred W. Tutroe to George W.
Clark lot 6 block No. 2. Landrum
addition No. 1 city of San Benito.
Consideration $10.0U.
Maud M. Bowker to Roy E.
Bowker lot No. 10 block 45. original
townsite of San Benito. Considera-
tion $10.00.
Pat Brooks R. C. Brooks et al to
Art Martin et us lot 1 block 10
town of Santa Rosa. Consideration
$1200.
The Al Parker Securities Co. to
C. F. Honea lots Nos. 14 15 block
No. 12 town of La Ferin. Considera-
tion $400.00.
C. B. Wood et ux to the Valley
Cotton Mill incorporation 2.58 acres
of land beginning at southeast cor-
ner of block 6 Hail A Porter sub-
division. Consideration $2580.00.
C. B. Wood et ux to the Valley
Cotton Mill incorporated 7.42 acres
of land beginning at southeast cor-
ner of block ti Hall A Porter sub-
division. Consideration $7420.00.
Isidro Chamberlain to Texas Land
and Mortgage Company lot No. 13
block 6 West Harlingen addition
city of Harlingen. Consideration
$700.00.
M. D. Dugger to C. F. Thomas
lot 4 block 27 Harrison Manor Ad-
dition No. 2. city of Harlingen. Con-
sideration $210.00.
H. M. Jones to F. P. MrElwrath
Jr. north 11.035 acres of block No.
$6 of H. A H. subdivision N'o. 1. La
Faria grant. Consideration $10.00.
J. C. Tom to Charles Larsen all
of lots 7 8. in block No. 3. Nicholson {
Place addition third filing city of
Harlingen. Consideration $10.00.
H. Fred Hector et u* to Walter
Thieme et ux a tract of land in j
Cameron county. Texas beginning at
intersection of north boundary line
of lot 1 block 8 of second addition
city of San Benito. Consideration '
$10.00.
J. W. Davis et ux. to John G.
Starck blocks 5 and 0. of Highway
Terrace subdivision of lots 42 44.!
48. 48 and 50 of block ~AA”. of ;
Brownsville Land A Improvement j
company’s subdivision share 22
Espiritu Santo Grants Consideration
$5000.00.
Bert M. Cromack et ux to John
Gamier Starck. all of lots Nos. 2. |
$ in block MCM containing 11.54 j
•eres corrected map of the Jardin
Terrace aubdirision. Consideration !
$8800.00.
R. W. Orr of Mrs. Emilia Arr part!
of farm block No. 167 Fresnos Land j
and Irrigation company's subdi-
vision. Consideration $10.00.
Brownsville Land and Improve-
ment company to C. C. Barnes lot
$ in block 87 West Brownsville ad-
dition city of Brownsville. Consid-
eration $10.00.
Harvey R- Houck et ux to Mrs.
Elisabeth Rex. lots >1o*. 19. 20. block
S Citrus Grove errsce addition
town of Santa nosa. Consideration
$10.00.
Harvey S. Houck et ux to Pauline
f Rex lota 21. 22. block 2 town of
Santa Boss Citrus Grove Terrace
addition. Consideration $10.00.
Josephine Wilkinson et vir. to H.
H Gerat. lot 5. Wilkinson addition
town of San Benito. Consideration
$500.00.
W. G. Mathea et al to Otto F.
Johnson all block 147 Harrison Manor
addition No. 2. City of Harlingen;
consideration $275.
F. S. Champion to Antoine Pe Leon
■11 lot 5 in block 10 town of Santa
Ifaria: consideration. $10.
f. S. Champion to Antonio Pe Leon
lot 6 block 10 town of Santa Maria;
consideration $155.
F. S. Glover et ux to L. E. Edwards
lot 6. block 42 Original tewnsite of
Bon t to | consideration $10
f
Vegetable Men
Schedule Meet
A joint meeting of the Rio Grande
Delta Gardeners’ association and the
Rio Grande Valley Vegetable Grow-
ers’ Exchange is scheduled to be
held Saturday night in El Jardin
school house. Members of other
vegetable growing associations have
been invited to attend and will meet
near the First National bank here
at 7:30 o’clock and be escorted to
the meeting place.
Matters pertaining to the growth
and marketing of citrus and vege-
table products will be discussed at
the meeting. Thomas O’Neil head of
the Valley division of the California
Vegetable Union which will market
produce of the Growers’ Exchange
will deliver the principal address.
Other speakers also will be heard.
The meeting will be open to the
public and farmers and local busi-
ness men have been especially in-
vited.
Mr. O’Neil has just returned from
an extensive trip through the North
and East and is expected to impart
much valuable information on mar-
keting conditions as he found them
: there.
Kiwanians Hear
Talks and Music
Civic affairs and a musical pro-
gram occupied the weekly luncheon-
meeting of the Kiwania club held in
the Palm Garden of El Jardin hotel
Thursday. Speeches of John Fanning
local theater owner and J. A. Merva
of the Colonial Building and Loan
Association featured the • business
part of the program while Miss Jo-
sephine Pierce and Miss Margaret
Hughston provided the musical en-
tertainment.
Financial problems were discussed
by Mr. Merva who said that 75 per
cent of the bonds nodr being voted
would not be paid. The bond issue
problem is not one of where will we
get the money but how will be repay
he said.
Mr. Fanning outlined plans for the
new Nix theater now under construc-
tion here and promised a program of
clean pictures. This type of picture
is to become general over the United
States he said as the public is de-
manding such picures more and
more each day.
He also paid compliment to the
city of Brownsville on the paving
and building program which hat
brought about such a material
change in the aspect of the city.
"It is not the natural resources of
a community that make it. hut the
residents of that community” he
said.
I was announced at the meeting
that plans for establishing a branch
of the Young Men’a Christian Asso-
ciation or at least a gymnasium here
would be taken up with city and
county officials.
Pioneer Resident Of
Raymondville Dies
(Special to Tha Herald)
RAYMONDVILLE. Oct. 7.—Fred
Whitbeck age 62 died at his farm
home northwest of Raymondville
Thursday morning about 3 o'clock
and was buried in the Raymondville
cemetery at 6 o'clock the same after-
noon.
Mr. Whitbeck was a brother-in-
law of Dr. H. A. White of Raymond-
ville. He was born in Rochester. N.
Y. but had been here for 20 years
and was well known.
His death was a shock to friends
ns he was feeling well the day be-
fore. and was in Raymondville in the
afternoon. He was not a member of
any organisation.
Good-Will Party of
Legion in England
LONDON Oct. 7. — Great
Britain Thursday greeted the Ameri-
can legion good-will party which ar-
rived here from the continent to
place a wreath upon the grave of
the l nkr.own Warrior in Westminis-
ter Abby and another wreath upon
the Cenotaph.
London for the first time in his-
tory got a view of a body of men in
the legionuire* representing every
state of the United States in the
march of the official party.
At the Cenotaph Howard P. Sav-
aga. retiring legion commander plac-
ed a wreath on the memorial after
which the party marched to Westmin-
ister Abbey where a wreath also was
placed upon the grave of the Un-
known Warrior.
Wm. Penn—S Cents—A Good Cigar
Revival Meeting To
Be Ended Saturday
(Special to Tha Herald)
MERCEDES Oct. 7.—Revival eer-
vices which have been in progress
at the Christian church will close
at the end of this week.
D. G. Wagner pastor of the
church is being assisted by Le
Grand Pace district superintend-
ent of the Texas Christian Mis-
sionary Society with headquarters
at Edinburg. Special music is given
at each service. The Bible drill
for children is being conducted by
Mrs. Wagner and Mrs. Pace.
Wm. Penn—S Cents—A Good Cigar
ISallys Shou1ders/“£
© - KJ fy Beatrice dubton Author op girlt etc.
m 1 ■■ os mw M M t 9 I«XK7WWnHr
. - .. ■ 11 .— .—^go. . —
“What d'yuh mean—pot-luck?" asked Mabel
CHAPTER XXII
It was not Sally Jerome's way to
ran away from things that were un-
pleasant. *
True enough she might long to
run from them—thousands of miles
away from them.
But she faced them anyhow.
For so young and gay and tender a
creature she had a marvelous cour-
age. A courage worthy of a strong
man instead of a little girl of 20.
And so this morning when she
faced Ted Sloan in the kitchen her
head was held high her chin was up
and there was a smile in the corners
of her mouth.
“Don't think that you’re being
asked to a wedding supper!” She
flung the words at him cheerfully.
“We haven’t heard a word from
Beau and Mabel. We don't even
know whether they managed to rout
out some minister or other to marry
them last night.”
She smiled again as she filled the
tea kettle for her dishes. But Ted.
perhaps because be cared for her as
he never was to care for another
woman so long as there was breath
in his body saw that there was no
laughter in the blue eyes. A man
always watches a woman’s eyes when
he is in love with her.
“Then why bother to ask me to
supper?” he wanted to know drap-
ing his body over the back of a
kitchen chair. “Wouldn't you rather
go for a drive with me and pick up
a hamburger and a cup of coffee
somewhere ?”
Sally shook her head. “No I
don’t want you to spend money on
me for a long long time” she said
soberly rinsing out the coffee cups
with cold water. “Beau must havq
forgotten to give you that hundred
I lent him last night. So I’ll just let
him keep it for a wedding present
and I’ll make good that check of his
too. Only you’ll have to giv* me
some time on it. I can give you a
couple of dollars at least every
week.”
She figured that she could.
Now that Beau was gone the
household expenses would not be
nearly so heavy as they had been.
Beau could eat a pound of meat at
a meal and hit laundry bills were
terrible.
“See?” she asked looking up at
Ted from the coffee-cake that she
was wrapping in a clean tea-towel.
He laughed shortly. “Oh sure I
see perfectly” he told her grimly.
“Beau just pocketed that money that
you gave him and walked off with
it—and you're going to let him get
away with it and pay all his debts
for him besides. . . . Well this is
one debt you won’t have to pay!”
While she watched him with wide
eyes he took the two checks out of
his trousers pocket and tore them into
bits. He came over to the sink and
dropped the torn bits into the waste-
basket under it.
Then with another quick move-
ment he locked his arms around her
and lowered hia face to hera.
He was going to kiss her too. But
suddenly she was away from him—
out of hia hands like water. And he
was left standing betide the sink and
feeling very foolish. His face was
flushed with shame and defeat.
‘I tore up the checks” he reminded
her sullenly.
Sally nodded. "Yea and 111 pay
you back the money even if you
did.” she said quickly. “But not
that way Teddy. I’ll pay it back the
way I said I would—two dollar* a
week!”
She saw that he was angry and
she went to him and laid one hand
on his arm. “You did a fine thing
just then Ted snd I was horrid to
you.” she said quietly. “But I just
couldn’t help it—I don’t want—1
don’t want—”
“You don’t want me. I get you!”
Ted spoke briskly and he turned
sway from her and stood at the
screen door biting on his pipe-stem
and staring out at the blue October
sky.
“You’re the world’s best dancer”
said Sally rattling the cups and
saucers in the pan. “And you're a
good friend to me most of the time.
And 1 DO want you. I want you
to come up here for supper tonight
at 6 and I want you to take me to
a movie afterward—or for a ride.
Will you?"
No answer.
“You see Millie's boss has fallen
for her and she's asked him for
supper” Sally explained marvelling
at the lightness with which she
could speak of John Nye now. “And
I don’t want to sit her alone with
them like an old maid aunt. So 1
thought maybe you'd make a fourtn
And would you go and get some
eggs for me if you can find a store
that's open? I used the last egg for
Mother’s breakfast and Millie w-ants
a chocolate cake. . . .”
“Millie wants the earth and a cor-
ner lot in the moon if you ask me!”
grumbled Ted who detested Millie
with all his might and main. “If
she wants a chocolate cake for her
cutie why can’t she rustle it up her-
self? I wanted you to go for a
drive today do£|;one it.”
But he went pr the eggs faithful
slave that he was—at times.
• • •
A woman always finds a certain
happiness in doing things for the
man she loves—even if ne happens
not to love her.
Perhaps that is hwy so many sten-
ographers in this world tail for
some married man who is in love
with his own wife and toil so will-'
irgly and cheerfully.
Perhaps that is why so many sten-
wives whose husbands have fallen
out of love with them go on mend-
ing their socks cooking their meals
and bringing up their children with
high hearts and certain joy.
But at any rate Sally Jerome
sang all day as she swept and dust-
ed the bouse baked the chocolate
cake roasted the joint of beef and
whipped up the fluffiest of mayon
naise dressing in preparation for
the coming of John Nyfe.
She went downstairs too and got
some asters from Mrs. S.'^an who
did not want to give them to her
and showed that she didn’t.
"1 don’t know as they’re ready tc
cat” she said sourly as Sally fol-
lowed her out to the tiny square of
backyard behind the building.
Sally never would have asked for
them for herself. But there was
very little that she wouldn't do for
Millie. So she said nothing but
stood with her hands ready for the
lovely pink and purple blooms that
Ted's mother cut for her.
She took them upstairs and put
some of them in a low glass bowl on
the dining room table and the rest
of them on the top of the magazine
rack in the shabby living room.
"Fix up everything to look as
decent as you can’’ pleaded Millie.
“I think a girl needs a nice back-
ground when she's entertaining a
man in her own home.”
But she did absolutely nothing
herself toward making that back-
ground attractive. All day long
she carried her clothes her toilet
articles her little slumber-pillows
into Beau’s room and piled all of
his belongings into his black tin
trunk.
"There!" she cried at 5 o’clock
when the job was done. “I guess Mr.
Beau won’t bring his bride to that
room now! And thank heaven that
I have a room of my own at last! I
love you Sally but you do get in
nry way sometimes when I’m trying
to dress.”
She dressed herself in Sally’s pale-
blue frock—her best one. And Sally
slipped into the old white mull that
had been new three years before.
“What do I care how I look?” she
asked herself as she hooked it up
before the dim mirror of her dress-
er. “John Nye won’t be able to take
his eyes off Millie—and I’m going
to be working anyway.”
She was in the kitchen slicing
lemons for tea. when John Nye ar-
rived. She heard his car slither to
a stop through the open windows
and as she heard it it came to her
The quickened tempo of this'new age of speed and dash
produced the La Salle. It is the car of cars for people who
desire to move quickly because they think and live quickly
—who are alive in every nerve and muscle. It is primarily
their car because it is the quickest car built today. It accel-
erates more quickly than any other car. It responds to the
steering wheel so swiftly that it seems almost to obey
your mind rather your hand. It is a charming quick
and zealous servant—always ready to do more tl»«n you
really require and doing it more smoothly and willingly
because of its 90-degree V-type eight cylinder engine.
You may poueii a IaSalle on the liberal term-payment
plan of the General Motor• Acceptance Corporation—
the appraual value of your need car acceptable a» eaeh
- «m
m—ammamm^amammammmeemm——uu—*u—.. ... - - ___ . . __
Companion Car to Cadillac— $2495 to $28959 J.o.b. Detroit
M”Denro 'nftMot: ? Colne
VALLEY- DISTRIBUTORS
5th and Elizabeth Browiuville Jexu
that aha had baas listening breath-
lessly for that sound.
"Don’t you be a simp!” she told
herself fiercely scowling at her re-
flection in the mirror above the
sink. "He's not Coming to see you
remember!”
She did not go into the living
room until Ted came up the back
stains from the flat below. Then
they went in together.
John Nye was sitting in Mrs. Je-
rome's chair and Millie was on the
arm of it. They were both looking
at a pale-pink aster that Millie was
holding in one hand.
She glanced up her eyes wide and
shining. '
"Mr. Nye thinks it's so wonderful
that I have a little garden hers ia
the city" she said in her sweet flut-
ing voice.” But I told him I just
love flowers and I've got to have
them no matter where I am.”
For one awful second Sally thought
that Ted Sloan was going to burst
out laughing as he looked down at
his mother's pink flower in Millie’s
hand. Ted had been known to give
Millie away when she was telling
one of her little “white lies."
“Did you grow those asters. Mil-
lie?” he asked bluntly a broad grin
on his face.
Millie nodded weakly and hurried
to introduce him to John Nye. Then
she put the aster in John’s button-
hole and danced out of the room be-
fore Ted had time to say anything
else about it.
“I must help Sally with the sup-
per” she explained with the sweet-
est little housewifely air. “We al-
ways work together and we get
things done in no time.”
But as soon as the door closed be-
hind her she went not to the kitchen
but to her bedroom to add a fresh
touch of powder and lipstick to her
face.
Sally put the supper on the table
alone just as she always did.
She was proud of the table too.
Proud of the bread-and-butter sand-
wiches tied into little rolls. Proud
of the chocolate cake with its surer
icing. Pround of the snowy table-
cloth that >he had embroidered years
before with her own hands. Proud
of the old silver teapot polished un-
til it shone like glass.
She was pink and bright-eyed with
pride when the four of them sat
down to the table 15 minutes later.
Everything was going beautifully.
The talk was cheerful the late af-
ternoon sun flooded the room the
roast beef was done to a turn the
salad was crisp and cold.
“I’m glad everything is turning
out >o well for poor Millie” thought
Sally pouring the tea into her
mother’s egg-shell china cups.
“I haven’t eaten roast beef like
this in years! ” John Nye said with
appreciation. "Millie said she’d fix
up just a pot-luck meal but it seems
to me—”
“Pot luck?” echoed a loud voiee
from the doorway and Beau and
Mabel burst into the room banging
the door behind them. They brought
a heavy odor of cigarets liquor and
strong perfume with them.
“Pot-luck?” What do you mean
pot-luck?” Mabel repeated her
greedy made-up eyes sweeping the
little feast. “I never saw such a
swell feed on this table before and
I’ve been eating here for quite some
time! Beans and bread are what w«
usually get on Sunday night. Ain’t
that so Beau?”
Then her glance went to John
Nye’s face. ’*Welcome stranger!”
she hailed him. "I’ll tell you who
I am even if they don’t have sense
enough to knock us down to each
other. I'm the bride—Mrs. Beaure-
gard Jerome Junior. What's the
matter with all of you? Have you
lost your tongues?”
(TO BE CONTINUED)
Wm. Penn—5 Cent*—A Good Cigar
FALLS TO DEATH
NEW YORK. N. Y.. Oct. 7.—(JPh-
While a party celebrating his sale
of a motion picture scenario was
in progress early Thursday Paul
Fairfax Fuller 29 scenario WTiter
and editor fell to his death from a
ninth floor window of the Park Cen-
tral Hotel.
Wm. Penn—5 Cento—A Good Cigar
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST 1
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago
Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism
| DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART |
Accept only “Bayer** package
which contains proven directions.
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 aod 100—Druggists.
1-
Bell Chairman
Of Band Contest
(Special to The Herald.)
SAN BENITO. Oct. 7.—J. E. Bell
•ecretary of the San Benito Chamber
of Commerce this week was appoint*
ed general chairman of the band con-
test to be staged by the South Texas
Chamber of Commerce at their first
annual convention which is to be held
in Brownsville November 14 and 15.
The appointment was made by Ray
Leeman. general manager of the
South Texas Chamber of Commerce.
Details of the rules and music to
be played and other matters govern-
ing the staging of the contest in
which prises aggregating S2500 are to
be offered will be worked out by
Bell and Leeman and announced some
time this we^jf or esrly next week.
Wm. Penn—5 Cents—A Good Cigar
BIRD FAKER FINED
BERLIN. — Herman Seltner was
heavily fined at Leipsig for the
sixth time for painting female ca-
nary birds to look like males which
are the better singers.
Wm. Penn—5 Cents—A Good Cigar
Serbian Leader
Is Assassinated
ISTIP Jugo-Slavia Oct. T^—(fV—
Brigadier General Kovachevitch by
repute one of the ablest etrategista
in the Serbian army was assassi-
nated Thursday just as be was ente^
ing his home.
Two assassins who are alleged fee
be Macedonians fired three revolve*
shots into his body killing him In-
stantly. The men were reported try-
ing to escape to Bulgaria after having
succeeded in fleeing from the sceag
of the crime.
LIONS KILL MANT
BEIRA Portuguese East Africa.—
Lions driven from cover by huntere
dashed into towns killing many na-
tives.
Tirst in the Dough -Then in the Oven
in using
me baxi N6
rVVPOWDER
Also Finer Texture and Larger
Volume In Your Bakings. Use
less than of higher priced brands
Same Price fa Over 35 Years
25 ounces for 251
r
Millions of Pounds Used By Our Government
T S
n Let your next good tooth
” o
I brush be a Dr. West. Come in
L and let us show you the good
® quality of this brush. A
P
Eagle Pharmacy Inc. J
T i Phone 26—698 ^
Cigars and cigarettes Huyler'i candies station* «p
C try insecticides fishing tackle school supplies
h Free Delivery.
E Coaplete prescription service with two registered
s phamaciete.
i " —11 1 ■ — 11 1 1 / ‘
ROSELAND BUTTER
Made in the Valley
from Valley Cream
r Support Valley Industrie*
Mistletoe Creameries
WESLACO TEXAS
Investigate Before Building
The Herald new home—The Episcopal
Church and others are “Fitchbuilt”
HOMER L. FITCH
Valley Builder Since 1908
Dependable Prompt
BROWNSVILLE TITLE COMPANY
Brownsville
Complete abstracts of title to lands in Cameron
County Texas
La Joya Gravel Co.
INCORPORATED
MISSION TEXAS BOX 6M
0% K*
I
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 93, Ed. 1 Friday, October 7, 1927, newspaper, October 7, 1927; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1379875/m1/5/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .