The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 323, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 22, 1929 Page: 4 of 12
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' - _ - •
teSnramsuflk flenrtd
« Established July 4 1892
Entered as second-class matter tn the Postoffice
Brownsville Texas.
THE BROWNSVILLE HERALD PUBLISHING
{ f COMPANY
Subscription Bates Pally and Sunday (7 Issues)
One Year. 18.00
Six Months .........1450
Three Months ...$2 25
One Month . .75
MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tha 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.
Harlingen Office Reese-Wll-Mond Hotel
Phone 1020.
TEXAS DAILY PRESS LEAGUE »
Foreign Advertising Representatives
•alias Texaa. 512 Mercantile Bank Building.
Kansas City. Mo.. 306 Coca Cola Building.
Chicago. Ill* Association Building.
New York 350 Madison Avenue.
St. Louis 502 Star Building.
Los Angeles Cal. Room 1013 New Orpheum Bldg.
•$9 8. Broadway.
San Francisco Cal.. 318 Kohl Building.
Beattie. Wash.. 507 Leary Building. ""
Garner Sees Problem Solved
Congressman John N Garner sees hope of solution
ef the Valleys farm labor problem In the Johnston
bill recently passed by the Texas legislature.
The bill In question sets a license fee on labor agents
no high they will be unable to operate In the state
and the congressman believes this will do more than
conserve the supply of labor now on hand.
Labor agents will be required under the new Texas
law to pay a state license fee of $5000 and a county
license fee of $2500 for each county in which they
operate. _ „ .
Being unable to pay this prohibitive fee. labor
agents wil be unable to enter the Valley and entice
workers now here away to compete with skilled labor
in other sections of the United States.
This will csu&f labor organizations to modify their
opposition to laborers entering the United States. Con-
gressman Garner believes. He foresees that is may
be possible to so amend the Immigration laws that
farm labor may be Imported when a real need arises
It now Is |K>ssible to Import skilled laborers when
there Is no supply or unemployment in this country
Gainer argues the.same rule should apply to farm
1&The reason he thinks this may be permitted with
the Johnston bill in operation Is that farm labor so im-
ported never would come In competition with laborers
further north There would be no labor agents in
this section to entice them away.
Garner also thinks the farm relief measure may
bring about a change of sentiment on the Importation
of labor from Mexico. He points out that farmers
of the mid-west wtll favor any move which will tend
to reduce competition In staple crops
Permission to Import labor from Mexico will tend
to turn more acres of Valley lands from the produc-
tion of cotton and com to the growing of truck the
congressman believes
As fewer acres of cotton and com are planted and as
Valiev farms produce more and more vegetables there
will be less and less antagonism to the Valley having
an adequate supply of good labor In the belief of this
leader of the house democrats.
Annual Cost of Prohibition
There is an organization nationwide known as the
Association Against Prohibition Amendments. This
organization has issued a statistical survey making
the claim that prohibition Is costing the taxpayers ot
the United States almost a billion dollars annually.
This sum includes * an adequate but conservative
allowance lor the loss ol federal and state revenue."
Lest we forget pro agents staged a big raid or rather
a drive in the county of Somervell.
They made many arrests. They seized hundreds
of gallons of whisky. Glen Rose is a summer resort.
There Is a splendid highway linking the city of Port
Worth and the summer resort.
Moonshine making has been more than a straggling
industry in the county of Somervell for years and
years.
Now the Wesley Jones dragnet has gathered In
many of the veteran makers of booze There are not
a dozen foreigners in Somervell county but moonshine
making in that county is not numbered among the
lost ;.rts.
Two Texans on Deck
Sen Tom Connally and Minority Leader John N.
Garner are in the headlmes of the press of North
America Texas appears to be coming into its own
Connally says the tariff is a bounty. This is admitted
on all sides. If the manufacturer is entitled to a
bounty why not the farmer? If the lumber king is
•ntitled to a bounty why not the farmer? If the
railroad kings are entitled to bounties why not the
farmer? If the financial interests are entitled to
bounties then why not the farmer?
Champions of a high tariff or a bounty system of
government insist that all Americans should be treat-
' ed alike. Then why denounce the export debenture
plan as unsound and uneconomic and at the same
time hand fat bounties to the makers of things under
the skies of America. As for the minority leader with
98 years' splendid service behind him. he agrees with
ghe junior senator from Texas that the farmer is en-
titled to real protection and not fake protection
To be exact that If a bounty is the thing then th-
farmer should be given his share of the rich picking
Long of Louisiana
Gov Huey P Long of Louisiana escaped Impeach-
ment and ouster from office by one vote. There are
$9 senators. Fifteen are Long supporters. The 15
declared that the house impeachment procedure trial
was unconstitutional for the reason that it had been
ordered at a special session of the Louisiana legisla-
ture. and was not included in the legislative program
set forth by the governor in making his call.
Not a word of testimony was taken. The 15 sen-
ators held the whip hand It requires a two-thirds
rota to convict and oust from office and the 15 Long
supporters declared they would vote to acquit the gov-
ernor regardless of the testimony as they considered
the impeachment proceedings illegal and unconstitu-
tional.* Long escaped by the skin of his teeth and
the constitution was the last refuge and alibi of his
15 followers. It Is ail over now but the young gover-
nor of the Pelican state would do well in future to
i watc§ ki» ***•» s
L V- ■. y
\ t* *
i Tk® Omc® Ow
By E L PHILLIPS
. ...i
YOU NEVER CAN TELL BY THE PHONE
CONVERSATION
She: Hello la ths you. dear?
He: Yea. Why so excited?
She: 8he's much worse since you left. Im really
alarmed. _ .
He: I think you're unduly disturbed dear out
tell me what's happened?
She: I can't get her up at all now.
He: Hasn't she been up at all?
She: Not at aH. except for a minute and she went
right back again. She acta awfully strange I've never
seen her like that.
He: Perhaps she's Just tired. She was up late
last night you know.
She: Yes but it can't be that. She's really sick
I'm positive there's something radically wrong with
her.
He: How's her tongue?
She: 8he won't let me look at It. That’s another
thing; she never acts like that ordinarily.
He: Is she in bed now?
She: Certainly. Just lying there in a sort of stu-
por or trance. Don't you think I should call the
doctor?
He: How about breakfast? Did she eat anything
She: No. I got up a nice breakfast of Just the things
she lov>* but she wouldn't touch It. Now you know
when she acts that way there is something to be wor-
ried about. I'm really dreadfully distressed. It might
be pneumonia you know.
He: Has she a fever?
She: Of course she has. I thought I told you that
in the first place.
He: Well. Just watch her a while and phone me
later. There’s no use getting upset yet.
She: Of course YOU wouldn't get upset. That’s
Just like a man. The poor dear Is lying there sick
and perhaps with a critical illness. She may be
dying and yet you say watch her a while. You Just
haven’t any heart. You're Insensitive to suffering
You’re cruel. You're ....
He: Oh. all right get a doctor. Oet Wymess. the
specialist. You've got me wrong dear. I Just thought
it would be all right to wait until noon. I’M JUST
AS FOND OF THAT DOG AS YOU ARE!
MORE BAD NEWS
Well the worst has happened; even the animated
cartoons have become “talkies.’' This definitely re-
moves moving pictures from the world of entertain-
ment and places them among the world’s major dis-
turbances.
• • • •
Add Gluttons for Punishment: The fellow who
sleeps mornings next to a skyscraper full of steel
riveters goes to the talking pictures in the afternoon
and spends the early evening at the beach where the
outboard motors are being demonstrated
• • • . •
Bernarr McFaddens new financial tabloid is out
and is. obviously urging the public to buy no stock
that doesn’t pay sex per cent.
• • • •
Possibly the physcal culture king will tell how a
weak market ran be made strong and muscular
through deep breathing regular exercise plenty of
fresh fruit and lots of water.
WasRibgftom L®ftft®r
By HERBERT C. PLUMMER
WASHINGTON. May 22 -When President Hoover
announced the appointment of Charles Evans Hughes.
Jr. as solicitor genera! of the United States more
than a passing interest was manifested in the chief
executive's selection.
It was heard on all sides that it was a matter of
congratulation. The introduction of young blood of
Hughes' character—he wtll not be 40 until next No-
vember—into the public service was held to be a
splendid thing
Chief Justice William Howard Taft was pointed to.
He became solicitor general at the age of 32 And it
was an Important step in his distnguished cereer.
• • • •
I
DISTINGUISHED FUTURE
Friends of the younger Hughes declare that his
most outstanding characteristic is his modesty. It was
this quality that set him apart as one of the most
popular students at Brown university where he grad-
uated In 1909
Even at that time hi* father's name was power-
ful. Everywhere he went he was pointed out as the
son of Charles Evans Hughes. While he was a sopho-
more at Brown his father was elected governor of
New York. He was subjected to much kidding from
his fellow students for Brown has ever boasted of
the fact that it is one of the most democratic institu-
tions in the world and that it matters little what the
man s father is.
The ‘ Liber Brunensis." the university annual
jibed young Hughes in its calendar of events of that
year with the following paragraph:
“Nov. 7 —Election returns come in Brown men win
all around Charlie’ Hughes. Jr. celebrates his
father s victory by lunching with himself at the Wal-
'dorf.**
The Waldorf was the one-arm lunch room in the
vicinity of the university.
* • • •
COLLEGE PRANKS
His classmates also delight in telling of the part
young Hughes played in the freshman-sophomore
fight in the year that he was a second classman.
Hughes' class had attempted to kidnap the leaders
of the freshman class and thereby prevent them hold-
ing their annual banquet. A battle royal ensued. It
became so heated that a country constable in the
town of Cranston took a hand.
Some say that the boys were peppered with bird-
shot from the gun of the constable. One or two are
known to have been hit. but whether “Charlie was
among the number is not known definitely.
Hughes had a fine record in the world war. He
trained al Camp Upton. N. Y. in 1917 and sailed for
Prance in April 1918. In July of that year he was
promoted from private to a battalion sergeant ma-
jor In the field artillery and detached for service In
the Samur artillery school preparatory to receiving
a commission.
He was commissioned a second lieutenant served
as an instructor at Samur and was discharged May 9.
1919.
Before and after the war he was connected with
prominent law firms in New York.
When Preaidant Hoover announced Ida appoint-
ment aa solicitor general ha waa a member of the New
York firm at Hughes Schurmaa and Wright.
v -5;v
.......... J I.mmmmm * I i -
Believe It or Not By Ripley
fWOUIMS or OUANTAlTAMBO
~ veigfang tfoosinds V Poonds
• Wsc huge stones were transported many miles
Across rivers and ravines without the aid or
MACHINERY OR DRAUGHT AnuMAls OF ANY KIND '
I
• yfemki -wv
Jf- " BROTHERS and SiSTtM 1 HAVE NON)
4 BUT THAT MAN'S FATHER IS M>
Jimmie Marino ^ fathers son -
PLAYS EXPERT POOL Ano BtLLlAKSS WHOSE P/CTOpe h he locking
WITH HlS MOOlK at ?
UNDERGROUND MYSTERY STORy!
I
By J.Jefferson Farjeon
CHAPTER XL VIII
Rupert turned to Joscelyn. With
deeper love than he had ever felt j
in his heart he spoke to her fiercely. ■
•Oo!" he shouted. "Do you
hear? Weve got three minutes—"
‘Then don't waste them. Rupert"
she answered with a sudden smile.
"Do you think life could ever mean
anything to Miss Cunningham and
me if we deserted you and your
friend now—after the way you’ve
both stuck to us?" She shook her
head. “Let's try and lift him to-
gether—and get him as far away
from here as we can!"
And then round a corner a large
form suddenly ohot into view
"Miss Mcrlowe!" exclaimed the
newcomer pausing and staring
Joscelyn stared back.
“Mr. Jarvis!" she gasped her
face suddenly becoming illuminated
with inexpressible relief. “Quick!”
she cried. "Don't ask questions.
Lift this man. and carry him out.
We must be out of this in two min-
utes—out of Coomber House—as far
from it as possible—"
Jarvis knew his job. He knew
when to ask questions and when
to postpone the asking. Before she
had finished speaking he had
sprung forward and had begun to
lift Charlie on his back and in ten
seconds he had completed the task
“Oo back!" he shouted to the
constable who had abruptly added
his startled form to the company.
“Oet out of the house*quick! The
lot of you. And out Into the lane!"
The constable needed no more.
He led a race which he subsequent-
ly described as the queerest he had
ever known or ever hoped to know.
He tripped and stumbled through
dark passages and scampered up-
stairs. with a crowd of breathless
folk after him and he hadn't the
slightest idea what he was running
from Even when he was back in
the hall of Coomber House and
was shouting to all and sundry to
leave It. he was totally ignorant of
the cause of the trouble. So were
all the other constables who fled
I with him.
But when they actualy reached
; the lane the mystery was revealed.
; An explosion the sound of which
I exceeded anything within the con-
stable’s previous experience sud-
' deniy rent the air. Coomber House
; shook tottered and fell. And all
1 along the countryside as far as the
old mine hill ihe thunder of the
} explosion reverberated and the
land opened yawned and belched.
Oo ses there's no earthquakes
j in Nort hcumberland ?” demanded
i the constable that night.
• • •
Another man listened to the
earthquake and viewed its results
j with considerable Interest. He was
a tall rather stately rather mili-
) tary-looklng foreigner and Brown
bumped into him as he was escap-
ing along the lane.
“What is happening?" asked the
foreigner.
awn's reply may have been
' injudicious for it countered the
1 prevailing impression of the catas-
trophe: but he was to a frenxy of
j emotion when the question was put
| to him. and was not in ^mood for
! sagacity.
“A damn skunk s been blown up!"
j he answered.
The foreigner’s interest was not
decreased by this picturesque state-
j ment. He stared at Brown rather
searchingly for » moment then put
a second question.
“Was the damn skunk’s name
Simon Brill by any chance?” he
queried.
Now it was Brown who stared.
That’s right." he ensv:ered. “Si-
mon Brill. Why did you know
him?”
The foreign smiled faintly.
“I had a little hnsiness to com
plete with him.*’ he said. *l.:t. of j
course—if the damn skunk is dead
—the business will have to be com-
pleted in another world. Good eve-
ning. sir.”
And the stranger turned and de-
parted. And was never seen in
Byford Moor again.
And not long afterward. Brown I
left Byford Moor himself. The lo-
cal excitement that might have
held him in Byford Moor continued
for several days. (An earthquake is
not an ordinary sort of experience. I
especially when its victims number j
an old man found beneath a house
a tramp found in a ditch and a
couple of horsy looking strangers
found at the foot of a steep hill.)
Browm refused to be lured also by
certain other events of a quieter
nature that contributed to make the
sleepy village Interesting. A stout
young man. for instance made bla-
tant love to the daughter of a pro-
fessor In whose house he was re-
cuperating from a wounded leg. The
professor himself spent consider-
able time in meditation and in de-
stroying certain papers which al-
though they possessed financial
value had grown suddenly distaste-
ful to him. and had appeared in
his new philosophy better out of
the world than in it. And two
other young people fellow guests
at the Yellow Stag took suspicious-
ly long tramps over the moors and
returned home in the evenings sus-
piciously happy.
Yes. there were many things to
: interest Brown in Byford Moor
after the military looking foreigner
had departed from it. but Brown
resisted them. Perhaps he felt that
1 Byford Moor was no longer inter-
ested in him. Perhaps he felt that
reality could be too exhausting and
1 too sparing—In its fruits—and that
i dreams after all. were the only de-
pendable things for a lonely hum-
ble man. Or perhaps he felt he
could not risk losing his Job
Whatever his reasons he left By-
ford Moor deliberately and abrupt-
ly and only one or two people in
the neighborhood remembered that
he had ever been there. But Brown
remembered. And he still remem-
bers. Once a week he goes to a
restaurant in King s Cross and or-
ders a poached egg on toast. And.
while he eats it pertty eyes watch
him through soft mists and he ex-
periences the thrill of the unattain-
able. He watches covertly for ad-
venture. too. Will it return one
day? It has not returned yet.
Maybe that is because while
Brown eats his poached egg on
toast there is no longer a poor
laborer to keep him company three
hundred miles away with bread
and cheese.
• • •
Par some imagination: far oth-
ers. the reality. Two days after
the so-called earthquake. Joscelyn
Marlowe and Rupert Blake sat in
the garden of Moor View—where
with Charlie Carfax they were in-
stalled as temporary guests—talk-
ing for the hundredth time over
the amazing adventures that had
thrown them together. And. .for
the hundredth time. Rupert found
himself on the brink of a topic
that was even more amazing still.
Or seemed so. For when our af-
fections are engaged we are always
amared at ourselves forgetting
that we are merely responding to
the dictates of normal nature.
“And now It’s all over." Joscelyn
was saying “we shall return to our
prosele pursuits I suppose and be-
come ^ ordinary human beings
“Rotten prospect" murmured Ru-
pert* "Don't you think ■©?"
“How do you mean?” she in-
quired.
“Well—an adventure always
throws you back upon yourself—
unless It leads somewhere.” he ex-
plained.
“Oh. now I see what you mean.”
she nodded. "And I agree. But
hasn't this led anywhere?”
' Has it?”
She looked at him quickly and
flushed a little. His question waa
embarrassingly obvious.
"It's led to the—the fulfillment of
what we set out to do—to discover"
she said refusing now to meet his
eye. The cloud has Ifcen lifted
from the Cunninghams’ home—and
I've—found out what happened to
my father—*
She stopped abruptly. Her eyes
filled with tears. Rupert watched
her gravely and then spoke quietly.
“Yes. and you're now alone.” he
said. Don't you feel thrown back
upon yourself? Why—you must
feel it more than I do.”
“Perhaps.”
“Yet you questioned Just now
whether it was a rotten prospect or
not. Tell me honestly—do you like
your prospect?”
“I don't believe in self-pity. Mr.
Blake.”
“Nor do I! And Mr. Blake* be
hanged. Joscelyn. After all we’ve
been through together am I still
to be Mr. Blake ?”
She smiled through lashes that
were still wet.
“Not if you don't like. Rupert.”
“I don't ’ike Joscelyn! And now
let's get back to my question. Do
you like your prospects?”
“I don’t know.”
"Does that mean—you dont know
yet what they are?” he exclaim-
ed. eagerly.
“Of course it doesn't mean that!"
she replied now flushing frankly
“My prospects are—”
‘To be my wife! Aren't they?”
“Rupert!” she gasped.
“You've not denied it! And. if
your prospects are to be my wife
are they still rotten? Oh. my darl-
ing. don't let s feel we've ended our
adventure—let’s feel that we've
Just begun it! May we? Can we?
• • •
Charlie Carfax recuperating be-
hind a window on the first floor of
the house glanced out suddenly
and exclaimed:
“Softly. Celia! Approach! And
feast your eyes on a goodly sight.’
And as Celia drew up to him he
slipped his arm around her waist
and whispered “But w« got there
first didn't we my child?”
am END)
——■■■■■■—.... - - ■■
No More Gas
In Stomach
and Bowelf
If you wish to permanently re-
lieved of gas in stomach sad bowels
take Baalmann's Oas Tablets whici
ar« prepared especially for stomach g»
- and all the bad effects resulting trow
gas ressure
That empty gnawing feeling at thi
pit of the stomach will disappear: tha
anxious nervous feeling with hear
: palpitation will vanish and you wtl
•gain be able to take a deep breaU
without discomfort.
That drowsy. aieepr feeling aft*
1 dinner will be replaced by a desire fo
• | entertainment. Bloating will cease
i Tour ttmba anas and fingers will n<
longer fee! cold and "go to sleep** be
cause BaaImanti’s Oas Tablets proven
gas tram interfering with the etreqla
' tton. Get the genuine in the yetloe
package at any good drug store
t Price H.
Always on hand at
W. G. WILLMAN’S
. ■> t
Health and Right Living |
BY ROYAL ft. COPELAJO M. D.
Former ContmJackmer of Hmltli
..-.-.-.-. .
Babies are subject to many little
ailments and other more serious
ones. One of the latter is rickets.
. This disease appears between the
sixth and eighteenth months It is
unusual to see it in younger Infants
and it rarely comes later than the
third year of life.
It is really remarkable the propor-
tion of the baby population that
has rickets. Students of the sub-
ject contend that more than half of
them hare the disease in one form
or another.
This disease is founded on a fail-
ure in the nourishment of the child.
Its effects are not confined to one
part of the body all of the tissues
are involved. But. of course it is
the abnormal condition of the bones
that is most important
Everybody knows about the “soft
spot” in the head. The bones of the
skull do not harden and knit to-
gether until the brain is developed
That is Nature's wai to protect the
thinking machinery.
This soft spot normal in early
life gradually closes By the time
the eighteenth month is reached
the closure should be complete But
in rickets there may be delay in this
process and the soft spot persists
till the third or fourth year.
There are certain general symp-
toms. Among them are sweating of
the head paleness of the skin weak-
ness. restlessness and much crying.
Of course the muscles are soft
and flabby They always are in
general debility from any cause But
in rickets the weakness of the
muscles may be so pronounced that
the baby can't sit up and is very late
in attempts at walking.
Because of the muscle weakness
the abdominal walls gives way. In
consequence there Is "pot belly."
The poor little legs cannot sup- j
port themselves. There is “knock- ;
knee.” The bones are so soft they
bend. Flat-foot is another effect of
rickets.
"Pigeon breast and bending’ of
the ribs are other symptoms. Early
decay of the baby teeth Is another
sign of the disease.
In seeking the cause for rickets
we go at once to errors in feeding
and to the lack of sunlight. Unless
the food given a baby is rich in
lime phosphorus and the vitamins
there is sure to be trouble.
In a curative way the mo6t valu-
able food is codllver oil. As a pre-
ventive of rickets too. it Is very im-
portant. Cod liver oil and sunlight
or artificial lights that possess the
ultra-violet rays will cause all the
symptoms to disappear. If he moth-
er has good health and an abund-
ance of milk It is well to continue
the breast feeding as long as pos-
sible. It must not be forgotten how-
I ever that a full supply o! good milk
1 is essential to the child’s welfare.
This is the child’s ch.ef source of
the lime supply.
Bear in mind then that proper
I feeding sunlight and cod liver oil
are the essentials. Your doctor will
prescribe the remedies needed.
—
< ANSWERS TO HEALTH QLERiLS
A Reader. Q.—What will cause the
ankles to swell when the heart and
kidneys are all right?
A —Poor circulation may be the
cause of this trouble. Build up your
general health and you will benefit
generally. For details send a self-
addressed. stamped envelope and re-:
peat your question. '
| Grab Bag
Who am 1? What river did I ex-
plore with my father? Far what
poet is my brother Theodore batag
considered?
Who was the founder of the So-
ciety of Friends more commonly
called Quakers?
Why was Capt. William Kidd
made governor of the province of
New York.
“Even as I have seen they that
plow Iniquity and sow wickedness
reap the same.** Where is this pas-
sage found in the Bible?
Today's Horoscope
Persons bom on this day are seri-
ous thinkers but they do not always
think coherently. They can be
or cruel with equal facility.
Star Lore
A Skyfteld Foil of Galaxies
By Arthur DeV. Carpenter
Evening skies of the month ef
May are not favorable for viewing
the Milky Way for then its summer
belt lies along the eastern hortwn
bedimmed by the atmospheric moke I
and mist. But it is a great time lor t
taking account of spiral nebular »
profusely scattered in the area be- *
tween the Big Dipper and Virgo. 5*
Bootes and Leo. Coma Berateae la
in that center and Coma is the *
of the galactic belt. And in 1
Coma is directly overhead
member that Is the direction in
which big telescopes will be pointed
taking long-time exposure photo-
graphs of thousands of spiral galax-
ies.
'More Tomorrow*
Answers to Foregoing QswUms
1. Kermit Roosevelt; River of
Doubt; governorship of Porto Rico.
2. George Fox.
3. To as 1st in suppressing piracy.
4. Job tv. 8.
I ‘Sinco’
* > i i i
Southern Iron & Machine Co.
I (Incorporated)
San Benito Texas
Largest and Most Complete
Shop in Southeast Texas
Complete stock of steel and shapes—
Electric and acetylene welding—
General and specialized machine work.
Manufacturers of
St:'j Screw Lift Irrigation
Gates
San Benito
I ' ~ \
immmmmI— —i——■ ■ ^'■■■■STroS^ZiiZMiiiiSSiSiSiSBr
The Idea of
Borrowing
Money - -
—to pay up yeur debts meet emer-
gencies and other worthy uses may
eause you to hesitate.
working in connection with the
Retail Merchants Association vs
make loans of actual cash to cit-
izens so they can square up the r
debts.
I
» Repayment privileges in convenient
; —- ji
Personal Financing — Lowest Interest
Rates
>
VAmr.HtBM WIMAL DANK
r
r
Valley State Bank Bldg.
Harlingen Texas
Horace L. Starnes. Pres. Mary B.
I ‘ HH ‘ ' r ' *
SX . .
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 323, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 22, 1929, newspaper, May 22, 1929; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1380784/m1/4/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .