The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 255, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 17, 1928 Page: 4 of 6
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©l|p Snmmsufllf Herald
Established July 4 1892
Entered as second-claw natter In the Postoffice
Brownsville Texas
THE BROWNSVILLE HERALD PUBLISHING
COMPANY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES—Dally and Sunday (7 Issues)
One Year..... *9.00
Six Months . *4 50
Three Months .. *2.?5
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The Sunday Herald
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Three Months .60
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use
for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or
not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local
news published herein.
■ 1 1 1
TEXAS DAILY PRESS LEAGUE
Foreign Advertising Representatives
Dallas Texas 512 Mercantile Bank Building.
Chicago 111. Association Building.
Kansas City Mo. Interstate Building.
New York 250 Madison Avene.
The World Court Issue
The submission this week to the foreign -relations
committee of the senate the Gillett resolution asking
President Coolidge to renew negotiations with the
signers of the League protocol with a view of com-
posing the differences existing between League mem-
bers and this country over the fifth reservation ap-
pended by the senate when it voted adherence to the
court in 1928 has aroused considerable interest in
Washington as to whether the world court will again
be injected as an issue in a presidential campaign.
The decision of the committee to discuss the reso-
lution gave the friends of the measure new heart. They
are more hopeful that it would be reported and mni-
mately adopted by the senate and supporters of the
resolution oelieve that resumption of negotiations
would end in the European powers accepting the fifth
reservation which would mean that the United States
would join the court.
The real object or the Gillett re* 1 tior. ir t» asc"!-
tain the senate’s detinue view upon t;.e fift.. ie.-t Vv
tion which some of the League signatories believe to
be cloudy in language and which constituted the stum-
bling block in the way of American membership in the
court. The fifth reservation stipulates that: “The
court shall not without consent of the United States
entertain any request for an advisory opinion touch-
ing any dispute or question in which the United States
has claim or interest.”
This reservation was framed because under the
court's organization there is a provision allowing the
League of Nations to ask the court for an advisory
opinion upon any question or dispute it chooses. As
the United States is not a member of the league and
ao could have no voice in deciding whether an advisory
opinion should be requested and because the court
would have no jurisdiction over any dispute not volun-
tarily referred to it by this country the senate did not
wish the court to he able to take such jurisdiction
through an advisory opinion.
Ths league members attached to their acceptance
of the fifth reservation a condition that if the situa-
tion created by its acceptance proved unsatisfactory it
could be withdrawn at any time by a two-thirds vote
of the League signatories. However they offered an
opportunity to the United States to enter the court on
perfect equality with League members pending a de-
cision regarding the unanimous vote and also suggest-
ed “such further exchange of views as the government
of the United States might think necessary.’*
The “bitter-enders’’ of the foreign relations com-
mittee have no objection to the senate’s consideration
of the Gillett resolution. They are convinced they say
that the senate will not approve the resolution for the
reason that it would authorize the secretary of state to
construe the senate’s meaning of the fifth reservation
which they maintain is so clear as to require no eluci-
dation. To permit Secretary Kellogg to read a meaning
into the reservation they say would be giving him un-
warranted authority.
Public opinion is in favor of the fifth reservation
and it is believed that the American people would wel-
come entrance to the world court if that reservation
could be accepted by the other members. Further
negotiations may result in a satisfactory solution of
the matter and if there is even a remote possibility
that this can be done the senate should endeavor to
reopen negotiations at the earliest possible date.
Judicial Exaggeration
Judge John G. Pollock of Wichita Kansas Is quoted
as having recently stated in a charge to the grand jury
that “not one-third of the rases that come before you
today would have been in this court twenty years ago.”
Many newspapers have seized upon this statement
as authoritative and also as indicative of the changing
order created by th^ m*iltipl’<*f*y of laws ar.d restric-
tions imposed in recent year... Apparent!'- none of the i
newspapers have questioned the ba*i« 'or such a state-
ment concluding that because it was uttered by a
judge it was authoritative.
Judges however are only human and like other
humans are prone to exaggerate occasionally. Judg.
Pollock doubtless is justly peeved over the grist
ground out by the various law-making bodies in recent
years but the district he serves is decidedly different
from the average judicial district if two-thirds of the
* crimes investigated by the grand jury would have had
no place before that body twenty years ago.
It is true that the liquor laws have added immensely
to the work of the grand juries and courts; that mod-
ern vehicles of transportation industrial changes ana
a myriad of innovations have created new conditions
and added to the work of the courts but the old crimes
the crimes which have cluttered the court dockets for
centuries are still the most numerous.
Murder assault to murder burglary and robbene?.
swindling embezzlement crimes which have existed
ever since the human race was created still comprise
the majority on the dockets of the criminal courts and
will probably continue to so long as the human race
exists. The automobile and other medern transporta-
tion methods added new features to these crimes
but fundamentally they are the same as in the days of
Moses. The prohibition laws have added a large vol-
ume of work for the courts but liquor cases by no
ffleans comprise the majority.
No one will dispute the fact that we have too many
laws and that publie sentiment is fairly unanimous in
disapproval of the law-making habit which seems to
afflict the United States more than any other country
in the world but this habit cannot he eliminated by
exaggeration or attributing to it conditions which do
not exist in fact.
According to a sports journal chess-players seldom
die young. They would never finish a tournament if
they did.—Punch.
•
Opponents of lynching are not defending the ro^n
lynchtd. They merely want him punished wiutoat de-
greeing civilization eny worse.—Albany tOre.) Herald.
■■'I ■ ■ — ' ■ I II ■
If ignorance is bliss then the happiest man in the
world is an oil magnate on the senate committee's wit-
ness stand.—San Diego Unio«
HOW MUCH UNEMPLOYMENT?
(S’-'nmont Enterprise).
Theodore Dreiser famous American novelist says
there are no bread lines in Russia. Thera are bread
lire* in the "prosperous” United States end they are
growing longer.
It i= high time for the American labor department
to make a survey of unemployment in the United States
as it hat been ordered by a senate resolution to do.
And it will not mend matters for republicans to assert
that the request for an investigation ig another “sin-
ister plot” to embarrass the republican party in the
presidential campaign.
A survey by the labor department both of unem-
ployment and part-time employment will at least af-
ford governmental and private agencies definite infor-
mation on a subject that is at present ve#y indefinite.
No one knows just how much or how little unemploy-
ment there is in the country. As a result conditions
are misrepresented by persons who do not know and
cannot know what they are talking about.
There may be 4000000 or 5000000 idle workers in
the United States. The actual number may exceed this
estimate or it may be lower but no one can deny that
there is much idleness in some branches of industry
and among unskilled workers white in some cases there
is acute suffering.
It is a paradox for a country declared to be the most
prosperous on earth to have bread lines while “red”
Russia pointed to as a horrible example of the eco-
nomic demoralisation to which unsound political doc-
trine can bring a country has no bread lines. This does
not mean of course that all is well with Russia while
all is wrong with the United States. As ore observer
said recently there may be no bread lines in Russia
because there is no bread.
The point is that the United States should not
have bread lines. There is too much wealth in this
country for millions of persons to be without employ-
ment and many in want. If such conditions obtain
something must be wrong either with the administra-
tion of public affairs as Senators Walsh of Massachu-
setts and Copeland of New York assert or with indus-
try itself.
Once the facts are in hand and we know how many
workers are idle it may be possible to devise a sys-
tem for a better distribution of the labor supply and !
to provide employment on public improvements ani
otter picjvcts that will prevent the recurrence of pe-
riod. of idleness dar;.g vhich men cannot find work.
THE MYSTERY OF RIVAL AUDITS
(Chicago Daily News).
Some years ago the Daily News published a series
of articles on the municipally owned and operated De-
troit street railway system. In those articles facts and
opinions were presented without bias. At that time
the success or failure of the system was a subject of
spirited controversy. V> hat are the facts today after a
somewhat extended trial of municipal operation?
Curiously enough the people of Detroit do not know
yet whether their street railway system is self-support-
ing whether it is earning a surplus or operating at a
loss.
Two sets of auditors are trying to throw light on
that rather important question. They are unable to
agree. According to the firm employed by the city the
system had a smell surplus last year after all proper
deductions had been made. According to another firm
of excellent reputation the municipal street railway
system lost over $1000000 in that same period.
The Detroit newspapers are at a loss to account for
so serious a variance. The rules of accounting are
pretty well settled. Little if any difficulty arises now- i
adays in interpreting the records and figures of a pri-
vate corporation or a public utility under private man-
agement.
Writers on government have said that proper book-
keeping and sound accounting are essential conditions
of virtue in public affairs. The advocates of public
ownership and operation of public utilities insist that
good service at cost is possible only under that plan.
Manifestly however questions of cost a^d of ultimate
profit or loss can not be settled under chaotic methods
of accounting.
The people of Detroit perplexed oy the annual
comedy of auditors’ quarrels should demand the sub-
mission of the dispute over the financial status of their
street railway to an impartial inquiry. Surely a thirl
set of auditors of known competence would be able to
solve the puzzle.
“COMMON HONESTY"
(Springfield Republican).
For returnir.g to the owner bank a package con-
taining $52000 in bill* after h« had discovered thai
the package contained that amount of quirk wealth a
New Vos k painter has been given $1500 as a reward.
He deserved it. The man had been out of work when
he found the money which had accidentally dropped
out of a trucking company** armored car. Unemployed
and low in funds of his own the painter acted promptly
in restoring the property. The case has attracted much
attention. Here is something you can believe and re-
joice over when you read it in the paper.
The press has so much to print concerning crime
villainy stealing maladministration in public office
unfaithfulness in prvate life and the general laxity of
morals that when an Alexander Lubrowsky turns up
one likes to salute and welcome him to “our columns.’*
He is an exhibit that heartens and exhilirates. Here
is the real thing—that “commcn honesty” we have al-
ways read about. It does exist.
Please note also that the unemployed painter who
found $52000 in bills and gave it all back to the owner
is named Lubrowsky. Not a Mayflower descendant or
a Son of the Revolution but some one clearly who came
to America on one of the last boats. The “skjs” ev-
erywhere should be proud of their New York represen-
tative. Their immigration quota might be increased on
the strength of his gallant performance in renewing
public confidence in the human race if quotas could
be apportioned by law on such a basis.
Where does honesty come from? What is its na-
ture? fan you segregate it. like a germ or a bacillus
in a laboratory and learn from analysis of it how to
make synthetic honesty as one would make synthetic
rubber or synthetic gin? “Honesty is the best policy.**
wrote Poor Pvichard; but that sort of ethics does not
seem to account for Alexander Lubrowsky. There *s
nothing synthetic in his honesty. Mere policy might
have let him slip away with the $52000 without
ever being detected as a thief.
The old moral philosophy of intuition could have
accounted for him: or his church would claim him as
a well-taught child. Perhaps he is something for the
modern behaviorists to take notice of. What pleases
most is that he was just a common man evidently a
“lowbrow.” with an empty stomach and no work—and
still could resist the impact of $52000. He encourages
one to think well of mankind.
American capital is considering investments in
Afghanistan. Marine corps interpreters will now be-
gin learning Afghanistanese.—San Diego Union.
The fact that Lindbergh left December 13. visited
thirteen fo-eign countries anj got back February 13. is
tf liuie Interest and less impc-t*“ce.—Tampa Tribune.
Necessity has alto been the mother of intervention.
—Boston Herald.
So the G. 0. P. got a nice drink from the Teapot.—
Tampa Tribune*
'i_ ....
ERIN GO BRAGH!
-j
ST. PATRICKS DAy --- - ’ I
IN THE MORNING-AFTER
. A . .—'
/oah\
[(MCGIONE
__ _ __ _____ _ _ _ u rincAM//
&UTHORcf 'fAV SON'S SWEETHEARTS* 'CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE.* etc. V y
-. ■ — CoFTrtfkt mj bj Ccctnl ftm KmxiW. ta*. . -. —
•v
“If I were here all the time I’d make you love me
darling.”
!
CHAPTER X
A NEAR PROPOSAL
Against Lynda’s silent protest
they went over the house together
searching every nook and corner be-
fore they gave the check up as lost.
“Let’s don’t worry about it any
more Lynda.” said David at last.
“I'll go to the bank this noon and
stop pnyment. It’s numbered. I’ll
make out another and even if by
some unforseen circumstance some-
one finds it and cashes one hundred
dollars won’t break me. Have you
a per ?” he asked taking out his
checkbook.
But LyndH did worry. She was
sure she could not have been so care-
less as to have taken off her dress
without thinking of the check. .
She kept going back to her bureau
drawer. She had a rant* feeling
that she put it thera.
She wondered—and then she told
herself that she was wicked to have
the slightest suspicion of her father.
She made up her mind that she
would take no more money from Da-
vid. and seeing him with his check-
book open answered.
“Yes I have a pen but I’m not
going to let you give me another
check. Father left me twenty-five
dollars.”
* But that won’t help much. Any
place you get a room and hoard will
make such a hole in your pocketbook
that there’ll be nothing left around
the edges.
Impulsively Lynda made a sud-
den resolution.
“I’m not going to board and room
anywhere. I’m going to stay right
here.”
“You can’t stay here alone Lyn."
said David with more impatience in
his voice than he had ever used to
her before.
“I don’t t.ee why. I’ve been alone
here many nights as you know.”
‘That’s different very different.”
sil'.A David and i Lynda wondered
whether ha was going to be “bossy”
with her.
*’If you do decide to stay you’ll
have to get some gir: to come and
live with you until I can take you
away. It will be only a short time-**
“Take me away? Where? What
do- you mean David!”
i
“Lyn will you never wake up?
Can't you see that I love you?”
The girl turned an almost coquet-
tish face toward him.
“You just awakened yourself late-
ly didn’t you? Did Emily Andrews
do it for you Davie?” Lynda was
sorry she said that as soon as the
words left her mouth especially as
David said honestly:
“Well she made me see how much
nicer you are. if that's what you
mean.” Lyn. dear that day I lunch-
ed with her I knew I had loved you
all my life. When I looked at her
mouth it was your mouth I wanted
to kiss and then darling I knew.
Lynda by the first of the year 1*11
be able to ask you to be mv wife.
You ll love me by that time won’t
you dear?”
“W hy Davie. I love you now.”
David sighed. So much had he
learned since going to work for Ar-
mitage 4 Son that he realized that
what he knew as love and what Lyn-
da called love were entirely dif-
ferent.
“If I were here all the time. I’d
make you love me. darling.” said he
tilting her chin and pressing a kiss
upon her cool childish mouth.
! Lingeringly he released her. as the
chiming of the church clock brought
them to a realization of - everyday
affairs.
“It’s time to go to the office* he
said reluctantly. “Have you fully
decided to stay here sweetheart T'
“I will if T cm get someone to
stay here with me. and there is only
on# girl I know that I would ask.
and thafs Claire Stanhope. Surely
you remember her when we went to
school.”
Lynda wondered why David hesi-
tated before he saidt
“Yes. I remember Claire Stanhope ”
he Ta-wered. slowly.
“Well did you know that she
works in the office?”
“I es. I heard so but I’ve never
met her in all the two years that
I've been there.
Again there was a slight science.
David put bis arm around her and
drew her close
“Lyn there's a good deal of gos-
sip about Claire*”
’iiiilSiitli jiSii!i Jife „ i ftiugit*MBi;
Jt- 1 ■ " ? as. "1
“Well I don’t care.” indignantly
flared Lynda. “I like her much bet-
ter than that would-be vamp Emily
Andrews whom you seem to think
is a plate of ice cream sweet enough
to eat.”
It was then that David made his
first mistake in all his long friend-
ship with Lynda Fenton.
**Lyn you're not jealous of Emily
Andrews are* you?”
“Heaven forbid. What reason have
I to be jealous of her? You have
shown me that you don't particularly
care for her. I don’t like her. She's
a poisonous little cat if you ask
me. and if there is any gossip about
Claire I'll bet she is the one who
started it.”
This was so near the truth that
David did not answer until he said:
“I suppose it would be a good
thing to keep this house as long a::
possible. My father told me yes-
terday that he had a good offer
for ours. I persuaded him to hang
onto it as I know the money would
all go to gambling houses if he sold
it. Look around very carefully for
the right kind of a girl to stay here
thought. I'd think a long while be-
fore I took anyone in to live with me.
I suppose I’ve been unconsciously
thinking of asking you to come and
live with me some time ever since
the first day we went to school
together Some day dear we will
either live in your house or mine.
Did it ever strike you Lyn. that
neither of us knows very much about
girls in general?”
“Well I suppose about the best
way to learn is to herd with them"
answered Lynda.
David said nothing. He had a
habit of silence—which Lynda had
always loved. Strange she felt that
angry mood come over her row at
his continued silence. Vaguely she
wondered whether she were getting
too sensitive. She did not know
that although David had told her he
loved her. and that her lips were
still burning with his Kiss she was
jealous of Emily Andrews.
(TO BE CONTINUED)
LOSES TEETH IN JAIL
CHICAGO.—Carl Vosberg explain-
ed his indistinct utterance when tes-
tifying in bis own defense against
a charge of fraud that ha had lost
his false teeth in jail.
STOMACH SPELLS
Oklahoma Lady Gives Inter-
esting Acconnt of Lang
Use of Black-Draught
In Her Home.
Sageeyah. Okla —"I have taken
Black-Draught ever since I was a
child and can recommend It as a
I splendid medicine for family use.'*
cays Mrs. Cora Maberry. of this
: place. “My mother used it in
bringing up her family snd after
I had a home of my own. I con-
tinued to use it. as I thought it
was especially good to give the chil-
dren.
“My children did not mind taking
Black-Draught and so when they
got upset with stomach spells or
were constipated. I gave them
Black-Draught tea.
“If I found that they were tak-
ing cold. I was quick to start giving
them Black-Draught as It helped
them to throw off the impurities
which caused the trouble.
"My children are all grown now
and have homes of their own. but
I still keep Black-Draught in £ie
house and use it myself when I wake
' up in the morning feeling dull and
'headachey*. and have a bad taste
in my mouth.
“Black-Draught is a simple rem-
edy for constipation and I prefer
it to others because it is purely
vegetable. I always feel better af-
ter I have taken a course of it*
• .
Today’s Radio Programs
FEATURES ON THE AIR
Saturday Mar. 17
«:$&—Sutler** Pennsylvaniana—WKAF WOT WWJ KOA ___
7:00—New York Bymnhony-WJZ KDKA WLW' WJRKYWWgC KSD
wren yvoe who WOW wt>AF \VHAS Wwmc "_
t:00—PlvHcc Hour; -Eileen-—'WJZ KDKA WLW lyrvSo^WRAP
WTMJ K5»r* WCCO WOC WHO WOW WPAl KA OO WBAP
M.nS'lM o!?h®.t™_WBAr WWJ WSAI Kir. ™ wow
KVOO WFAA WOAl first half hour; WEA* WWJ K»D vvh »
WOW KVOO WFAA WO AI second half hour; WEAF HSU w MO
10:00—RCA Presentation—KHQ KOMO KPO A EOWKCtOitPOK^lirivj
11:00—Phllco Hour; Fro*ram of Music—KHQ KOMO KFOA KQW KOO
KPO KFl
81S=t5SSST?^».W D»e. p™a„-KFOA KQW ICOO DO
first hour; KOMO KC.W KPO second hour. ^
SATURDAY MAR. 17
(By The Associated Frees)
Programs tn Central Standard time.
All time 1* P. M. unless otherwise in-
dicated. Wave lengths on left of call
letters kilocycles on right
526—KYW Chicago—570
6:06—Uncle Bob
6:10—Serenade rs
7:00—New fork Symphony
8:00—Phllco Hour
9:05—Congress Carnival
10:80—Serenaders
889.4—WBBM Chicago—770
7:80—Concert Music
8:30—Old Time Favorites .
10:00—Musical Comedy Selection*
12:00—Old Gray Mar* Club
S69.6—WEBH-WJJO Chicago—620
6:00— Palmer Symphony
7:00—Edge water Orchestra
8:00—Palmer Studio (8 hrs.)
10 :C«— Edge water Orchestras
416.4— WON-WLIB Chicago—720
6:tlV-Uncle Quin: Ensemble
7:00—Old Fashioned Ahnanak
7:30—Novelty Orchestra
8:00—Oil-O-Matics
9:00—Hawaiian: Dance Music
9:30—Wynken Blynken and Nod
10:10—Songs
10:35—Popular Programs
844.8—WLS Chicago—*70
6:00—Supperbel! Program
7:00—Scrap Book; Jack 4e Jean
7:30—National Barn Dance
9:45—Hookey Game
1:00a—Barn Dance Resumed
447.5— WMAQ-WQJ Chicago—670
6:15—Topsy Turvy
4:00—Concert Orchestra
7:25—Radio Photologue
8:00—Popular Song Cycle
8:45—Concert Orchestra
10:00—Dar.ce (3 hrs.)
428.3—WLW Cincinnati—700 .
4:00—Organ
7:00—New fork Symphony
S:00— Phllco Hour
9:00—Studio Features
10:10—Vocal: Orchestra
361.2—WSAI Cincinnati—830
7:00—Cleonldes Culpepper
7:30—Studio Program
8:00— Musical Program
g:30—Twin Pairs of Harmony
S:00—Dance Orchestra
10: VO—Maids of Melody
399.6— WTAM Cleveland—750
6:00—Cleveland Orchestra
7.00—Blue Flash Indians
SiOO-WBIart CmTaMere
5.00—Wandering Minetrels
374.9—WOC Davenport—aoo
5:45—Chlmee Concert
«:2ft—Dinner Mualc
7 00—New York Symphony
1:00-Philco Hour
533.4—WHO One Molnee—560
0 SO—Orcheetra .
7:00—New York Symphony
5:00—Philco Hour tprrAir
10:00—Dance Music from WEAF
11:00—Younker Orchestra
440.9— WCX-WJR Detroit—680
8:00—organ
Music
7:0*—RCA Hour
3:00—Philco Hour
3 V—Cotton Picker*
10:00—Blue Room Orcheetra
3527—WWJ Detroit—*58
4/4—Tea Dance Mualc
3:'MV—South Sea Islander*
6:30—Rich Jinkers
5:00— WEAF Programs
370.2—WOAF Kama* City—810
Stor’8 String Trio
«:00—School of the Air
7-00—New York Symphony
*HH)—Philco Hour
>:««—Pla-Mor Orchestra
11:15—Nlghthatrka
293.9— WTMJ Milwaukee—1Q»
6 .to— Badger Room Orcheetra
7 30— To Be Announced
8.<>«—Philco Hour
$-.10—Old Favorite*
10:04—Panes Program
4C5.2—WCCO Minneapolis*St. Paul—744
6:15—Dinner Concert
7 00—New Yerk Symphony
*:(>*—PhJfcoo Hour
9:0ft—Fireside PhUoaophlae
P:!5—Music
lft:00— Dance
&C8.2—WOW Omaha—590
* 6:00—Courtesy Program
7:(.>—New York Symphony
S/o—PhUoo Hour
9:"ft—Dance Orchestras
I* ft—spice of the Program
545.1—KSD St. Louis—580
7:08—New York Symphony
8:Philco Hour
9:00—weaF Programs
948.0—KVOO Tulsa—860
fi mi—Sunday School Lesson
7:00—collier’e Orchestra
9:0ft—Palais d'Or Orch**l|»
9:30—Lorraine Ohchestr*
30 04—Vocal Ft
10:80—Bridge Lesson
EASTERN
491.5—WEAK New York—610
5.00— Waldort Astoria Orchestra
$.00—South Sea islander*
$:30—Statler's Pennsylvanian*
7:00—High Jinkers
9:00—Little Orchestra
8:30—Twin Pairs of Harmony
9.00— Three Dance Orchestras
454.3—WJZ New York—660
6:00—Orchestra
K:«o—poems: Astor Orchestra
7:0o—New York Symphony
8:00—Fhileo Hour
9:00—Keystone Duo
9:30—Merry Three
10:00—Slumber Music
422.3—WOR Newark—710
61S— Ensemble; Tenor
«:30—Levitow’s Dance Orchestra
T; (M»—Interviews—Steistersinger*
(t:U0—Bamberg* r Little Symphony
9:00—Saturday * Children
Hos*1 laihi orcntstra
10:10—Witching Hour I
302.8—WGR Buffalo—990
G;<T0—Catholic Charities Address
315.8— KDKA Pittsburgh—950
5:15—Westln* house Band
«:»<>—Address; Kadto Club
8:39—Concert; Literature Gems
7 ini—New York Symphony #
8:60—Phllco Hour
379.5—WGY Schenectady—790
8:00— Li t tie Orch estra
8:29—1Tuneful Troupe
9:98—Organ
1 :0i—Daaco Music •
468 5—WRC Washington—413
4:00—Parnassus Trio
6:00—Dinner Music
7:00—New York Symphony
8:c0—Phllco Hour
J
SOUTHERN
475.9—WSB Atlanta—630
1:30—U. of Georgia Program
6:0ft—Sunday School Lesson
6:3(1—Packard Parade
7:oft—New York Symphony
10:15—Red Head Club
243.8—WDOD Chattanooga—1230
7:0ft—Sunday School Lesson
7:30—Ensemble
461.3—KRLD Dallas—650
7:0ft—Eddie Graham
9:ftC—Music
11;00—Dance (3 hrs.)
545.1—WFAA Dallas— 550
6:00—Music
7:<i0—Varied Programs
1ft: oft—Dance
11:30—Theater Features
499.7—WB A P Fort Worth—SCO
6:0ft—Seven Aces
6:30—Sunday School Lesson
10:(;ft-^Concert; Dance
11:3ft—Wooden Piano
12:00—Dance
384.4—KTHS Hot Springs—780
7:0ft—Farmers’ Chautauqua
8:00—Weems’ Orchestra
S: 30— Music
9:45—Dance Frolic
293.9— KPRC Houston—1020
8:10—Ford and Glenn m
? «•*—Half Hour with Parson ^
7:3ft—Orchestra
8: ur—Studio Concert
9:0o—Th ea t. er Program
340.7— WJ AX Jacksonville—888
f:3o—Popular Entertainer*
7:«H’— Recital
7 ;30—Popular Entertainer*
S:WP—Philco Hour
9:00—Dane® Orchestras
3224—WHAS Louisville—930 {
4:0(1—Piano Recital
4-:*i—Extension Studio
7:09—New York Sympnony
8:00—Dance Music
#18.9—WMC Memphis—#80
7:00—New York Symphony
8:00—Music
8:00—studio
830.9— WSM Nashville—88# \
8:15—Dinner Concert
7:*h»—New York Symphony
8:00—Barn Dance
£98.9—WS MB New Orleanc—1W0
8:S0—Musical Program <2 hr*.)
499.7— WOAI San Antonio—808
9:00—Dance Music
WESTERN
■8
352.9—KOA Denver—920
7:00—New York Symphony
10:00— Dance Music
468.5—KFI Lot Angeles—(‘Z
3:00—Dinner Music
8 90—Symphonet
10:09—RCA Program
11:09—Philco Hour
12:00—Concert Orchestra
1.00a—Midnight Frolic
336.9—KNX Loe Angeles—5'3
9:00—Charles W. Hamp
9:30—Playgoers Club
10:00—Feature Program
10:39—Mr. and Mrs.
11 :<*0—Feature Program
12:00*—Arrshelm'e Orchestra
12:00—Midnight Espr. se
1:00a—Burt nett* orchestra
334.4—KGO Oakland—783
*.oo—Home Songstets
10:09—RCA Hour
lt:M—Philco Hour
ST"
12:«#-XBC Program
1:00a—Dance Music
491.5-KGW Portland—410
4:00—Dinner Concert
9:05—KOMO Concert
i i-ijo—PCA Program
11:<iM*— Phileo Hour
12:0#—Saturday Night Dance
422.3— KPO San Francisco—ftO
^"►—Instrumental Tt!>
fi 00—'< •> Towns Crrer
—Dinner Dance
7 .Od—Children's Hour
10.00— NBC Programs (4 hrs.)
348.5—KJR Seattle—860
• 30—Dinner Concert •
9:30—Studio
12.00— Dance
370.2—KHQ Spokane—810
7 ity— Service Hour
■ Hi—Merrick** Orchestra
14. fni—EC A Jiiur
11 •’!» T H ! f #Mh *-I o ur
The Farmer’s Friend
This bank has always tried to be a real friend
to the farmers of Brownsville and Cameron county.
We are both sympathetic and helpful and no
worthy man has ever been refused help here.
We always maintain the same attitude towa *
the business man the working man and to all cl
es.
If you do not have an account here START/'TO-
DAY. I
No account too large
None too small for us to handle.
4% Interest Compounded Semi-Annually
Paid on Time and Savings Deposits #
First National Bank
Brownsville Texas
“THE FRIENDLY BANK"
i i „ ti
i .. .
%
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 255, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 17, 1928, newspaper, March 17, 1928; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1380209/m1/4/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .