McAllen Daily Press (McAllen, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 82, Ed. 1 Monday, April 5, 1926 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the McAllen Public Library.
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Brownsville
•P1CI,
DOE8 N
TRAVEL
ONE
ONLY
Consultation
Dr. Msllenthli
uickCotdd Stand/feTestl
Crawfort,
BurckburnotL
Humble,
^e^rBUICK
appendicitis^
GATLING BUICK GO
McAllen Residence Lots
AN ORDINANCE
pacts
THE-
undoubt
City
are
'inn or corporation
warn
Borderland Hardware
pany
McAllen Press Office
For Address" of Party
SEAW1
City Secretary.
list
room
because
charac-
formed
dec-
just
.tion,
LTY
ray.
r—si
ribute
Issued
HOTEL
pril 10
m. to 4 p.\m
grounds in th6 C
as,. provided. th;
ordinance shall
firm or corporate
any printed hai
other advertising
vate place of bw
residence within
Alien. 1
* Any person, J
yiolat-tng any qffl
ordinance shall!
|e shall be published1
•f some newspaper
f regularly and conti-
M in McAllen, Hldal-
ras. for a period- of
le year, ancT shall be-
from and ’after its
Publication as herein
help themselves,
public attraction
broad and grow-
campaigns is an
and leads to the
ty of'McAllen. Tex-
t nothing in this
Ire vent any person,
in from distributing
Ibills, circulars or
fnatter in any pri-
Iness pr any private
said ’City bl Me-
lt the <
Jitjron
APPRi
Something Electric*
edly be Ker . choice
she knows h<w har
the City of Me-
’rom and after the
iinance and publi-
lerein provided, it
for any person,
i .to distribute.,or
to weave more tightly the
criminal net around “Candy
Kid** Whittemore . and the
’TBillion-Dollar” bandit gang.
durable structures. With well-drawn
end enforced housing laws requiring
adequate light,. air, prtvacx.. '5JTd »«-
HAND-
ARS OR ADVER-
N ANY VEHICLE
tC STREET OR
LttEring tiiET
LNY PUBLIC
jEWALKS WITN-
KTE LIMITS OF
ALLEN AND TO
ALTY FOR
LEOF. '
tion th er edit
sum, not less
lar nor more
(8100.00).
This ordinal
in one Issue
t which has be<
' nuously publis
• go County, T
not less than i
’ come effectivj
| passage tend 1
provided.
Passed anti
adequate, reasonable fi-
home seekers also help
home ownership. The
public utilities may be
It is possible to secure an ideally located resident lot in Me
Allen at a reasonable price by paying cash • *
i, that consul-
ba frat and
Ifforsa*.
t be aceom-
-AN ORDINANCE TO PROHIBIT
ANY PERSON, FlgM OR CORPO-
RATION FROM DISTRIBUTING OR
PLACING ANY POINTED
BILLS OR C1RCUL'
T1SING MATTER I
UPON- ANY PURL
ALLEY OR " SCJ
SAME UPON 1
GROUNDS OR Slj
IN THE CORPORj
THE CITY OF Mg
PROVIDE A PE ft.
VIOLATION THE®
BE IT ORDAINfJ
Commissioners of<
Allen. Texas-that |f
.passage of this ofc
cation thereof as mi
shall be«-unlawfu('
firm or corporatim
Every Buick operating pa
“sealed” inside a dirt-tight, oil-t
water-tight iron or steel hou
'■ Standcmi Six ' . 7
Sedan >
Pt^Tiiplo Seal” (air cleaner, gaso-
line filter, oil filter) stops injurious
outside elements at every engine
port of entry.
Road slush and grit cannot reach
Buick vital parts. Rain and mois-
ture cannot cause short circuits in
the Buick electrical system. Even
the spark plugs are covered!
Come in and see, with your own
eyes, why Buick motor cars are
tonpre dependable. Only a Buick
tfh&l stand the “shower bath” test!
■erate for chronte
stones, ulcers of
r adenoid*.
For Further Information (Call at the \
credit wonderful
ba of the stomach,
pd, skin, nerves,
Idder, bod wetting,
unge, rheumatism,
rectal ail-
:Ro*drt«r 1405
t Touring U1S
.try Club H«S
stress the value of home BTe now
for many forces are at work, to
wvaluin um fomlly Ues.. *ml in the
BUICK MOTOR COMfANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN
Division of Qeneril Moton Corporation
nitary facilities, they can do much
to prevent the growth of slums. Laws
relating to the transfer of real estate
and recording of mortgages, s.-me
phases of taxation measures, and re-
gulation of home financing institu-
tions, are other points at whyh gor-
ernment policies relate • to home
ownership. "T ' .
“High standards of business deal-
ing among those who build and sell
homes, and
nancing for
to advance
services of
extended into a greater number of
hdmes by sound policies worked out
in friendly cooperation with local of-
ficials.
“The Better Hoines movement- af-
fords a direct, practical opportunity
for public spirited groups. The ’local
JemdfiStratjtans are planned for fam-
ilies who want to
and they also focus
on the homdf The
ing support of the
encouraging eign,
hope that they may reach more fully
into all our communities.”
The story told the New York
Grand jni’y~1»y a woman
.whose name is given as “Mrs.
Florence Carter,” to conceal
Remember above A
tation on thia trip w
that his treatment le
Married women mi
panled by their hueb
Addreee: 811 Bradbury Bldjp, Los
"Angele*, California. 1 ,
approved by the City
of the City of Mc-
regular meeting held
af the Mayyr -in said
st day of April, 1928.
F. B. FREELAND,
WASHINGTON, D. C., April 8. —
One ideals to which America can
bold fast, in the hurry and change
wanton intrusion by means of sane?
comprehensive city planning and
zoning ordinances, playgrounds with
easy walking distance of children in
closely built districts, parks for
breathing spaces, safety on the
streets, and effective public health
measures. Building and plumbing
codes should allow economic^ con-
United States, as in most other
modern nations, many groups do
not have such good shelter as they
have food, clothing and many luxu-
ries.
“The home is fundamental
It is the mold in which the
ter of the next generation is
It is basic in our economic system
as the principal point at which men
ttd women consume the final p<*o-
ducts of our farms and mines and
factories, or adapt them to their
own needs, as any typical family
budget shows. The primary divisioi
of labor still lies within the ^family,
with breadwinners employed out-
Buick has the only chassis built
today that can take a “shower
bath” while die engine Is running
and driving the wheels. j
Only "Buick provides the desiu
which cocfi^jindergo such punish-
ment. Ofallcl^uilttoday,BuA
alone has the conMkie protect* n
Of the “Sealed ChassiTSmd “Trifile-
Sealed Engine.** >
Me has to
result* Ip die
liver, bow* I*,
Mart, kidney,
sed by the . St
He dees nol
appendicitis, fl
jtoniBolty tonsil
pe deemed jffilfiy or
;.and upon a^cjan.vic-
ta.ll be fined faany
an One (81.00) Doi-
ihank One . Hundred
Mrs. Henry Wlrfi
• nthritis.
HL ' A. Newton, CH
Mrs. H. D. Brows
rheumatism.
Mrs. C. T. Kaiser^
stonef.
H. G. Fenke, Riesi
structure and the homemaker who
keeps house, prepares food, and at-
tends to other personal wants.
“Most people make their home- the
center <Jf their social life, and spend
most of their leisure hours there.
Home influence can be dominant in
-nurturing the religious impulses
which are so needed if we are to
have a finer, more human develop-
ment of our nation. -------------
“The ideal of true home life is the
detached house with at least some
space around it. We cannot expect
"nfifas finest flower of family life from
tenements nor even from some ‘flats.’
A single-family house which a fa-
mily owns is much more apt to em-
body -ear idoaL The family , has a
sense of security and solidarity; ’it
has an incentive for maintaining the
house and home.
“Through our civic bodies and local
governments we should assure pro-
1 -tection. for residential districts from
Ms many satMliad
Mrs. J. T. Tucker, Clarksville, gall
Bidder.
Mrs. A H. Welter, Lexington, heart
Roadrtcr $I2SO
Towint .
ioor8vd.n 13?5
ioor Sedan 1495
Coupe - 1795
“ of modern'iTfe/h a higher andTner"
typo of borne lite, says Herbert
Hoover. Secretary of Commerce, in
the current issue of the Child Wel-
fare Magazine, published by the Na-
tional Congress of Parents and
Teachers. The entire issue of the
magasine is given over to the cause
of — of I
which Mr. Hoover is president. "Mr.
Hoover’s statement entitled “The
Home and Nation”, is brief. It fol-
lows:
“In the restless, shifting currents of
our modern life we are sometimes
at a loss for ideals and standards to
help us keep our bearings. But a
higher and- fined type of home Hfe
i is one ideal to which we can well
hold fast. We have a timely duty to
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McAllen Daily Press (McAllen, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 82, Ed. 1 Monday, April 5, 1926, newspaper, April 5, 1926; McAllen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1199421/m1/3/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+Hidalgo+County+-+McAllen%22: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting McAllen Public Library.