McAllen Daily Press (McAllen, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 4, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 23, 1928 Page: 6 of 10
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THE OUTSTANDING CHEVROLET
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DECEMBER 29.
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Wisconsin Boxing Law
Brings State $74,094
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WEBER MOTOR CO.
EXTENDS THE GREETINGS OF THE
Fashionable Graf Zeppelin Dress Shown tn Leading Berlin Shops Will He
Introduced in America.
cher, Karl Schuricht and
Instructors.
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made the thrilling journey through
the air in order to place an American
con- llmented for their enterprise.
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International News Service
MADISON, Wis., Dec. 21.—In the
15 years thru the Wisconsin boxing
law has been in effect. Badger resid-
ents have paid a total of 13,378,040
for tickets to these glov^ swinging
contest's, according to the records of
Uhie secretary of state’s office.
The Redding boxing law- was pas-
sed in 1914 with strenuous objections
to it. Since it has been in operation,
however, there has bean little or no
protest.
The state gets
. the receipts at
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Intrnatioiiai. News Beevice
CHICAGO, III, D«5- 22.—Bull-fight
ing la on the wane in Spain. ac< ording
to Margherita Salvl, Spanish color-
■tors soprano who la making her de-
hut <U the Chicago"Civic Opera asf
Roeina tn “The Barber ot Seville." i
Association football is the great
Sunday attraction ’In Spanish cities
today, she said, and it draws crowds i
• larger than any which ever saw the
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1 five per cent of
all boxing matches
With report compiled in the secretary
of staters offices today showing that
the state general fund has profited
from this source during the last 15
years to the extent of |74,094. ‘
International News Service
BERLIN, Germany. Dec. >1.—Guests
in the German capital next summer
will find fhimxd.M ky .B
embarrassment of artistis riches such
as no other eity has ever before of-
fered in the months between the con-
' elusion and beginning of the regular
. — r. .. . w. » • • • W..U WMW. V V. , ,VM.
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talk of a "season", such as London
Sunday, December 23, 1928.______________________________
Bull Fight Losing Ground In Spain
Says Famous Spanish Opera Singer
’ color, particularly when the king la
1 present and all Madrid society fills
. But "sangre y arena"
I (blood and sand) are nof for me.”
14
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Wishing
Y OU A L L
—A-fthnvy
. and - - M
gt Happy Naw Year
. H J. W. DAVIS ELECTRIC COMPANY®
_.....
Han works and two first'performances
of works by modern composers.
Such eminent conductors as Blech,
Kleiber, Klemperer and Walter will
direct, and noted singers will take
, part. Italian artists wilt*come—with
: Toscanini, it is hoped—and the Vien-
I ria Opera will give Strauss’s “Rosen-
ka valier.”
The state theatres, under the man-
agement of Leopold Jessner, will pre-
sent Schiller's “Fiasco” and Shakes-
peare's “Merry Wives of Windsor,"
among other offerings. Max Rein-
hart will stage tlie first performance
of a new play by Gerhart Hauptmann
on May 28, and there will be many
lighter dramatic works.
The outstanding musical feature
will be a flute concert by Frederick
the Great, presented in the "golden
fiaanous "Oorrlda de Toros”.
“When I was a little girl the bull
riag always Was packed on Sunday >
afternoons", said Miss Salvi. "But ;
todgiy there are many vacant seats
Only when a corrida real is billed ,
in Madrid are all the seats taken.
“Do you enjoy the bull ring?” Miss
Salvl was asked.
"No, I don’t enjoy it for incither the
horses nor the bull have a chance.
It is too painful. Of course, there is
not a sufficient attraction for me to
ebjby the spectacle. It Is less painful.
y«. But I don’t like it.”
The American term, bull-fight, is
incerrect. Miss Salvi pointed out.
The proper translation wlould be “rujn-
ning the bulls”. There is no element
of battle about the contest. Froani the
time the heavy oak doors of the stall
are opened the animal has no chance
“Of course there is a great deal of
now totals 5,743.
contains names
homes range from South Africa to
Norwalk, from England to Japan, and
from Argentine to Canada. There are
representatives from thirty-three for-
» ww x». — eign countrle8 and from every state
as much difference between the aver- ln the uhion- *< ■
I The student list indicates that the
(Yale varsity sports team have 2,299. other capital has so. many—will give
by artists clothed in the costumes
of that period and grouped to repro-
duce Adolf Menzel’s famous picture
of a similar concert 175 years ago.
. Musical Season
The musical season will ^begin on
May 27 with a concert by the Berlin
Philharmonic Orchestra and in the
week of June 20 the Vienna Philhar-
monic Orchestra will unite with the
Berlin organization to give a great
symphonic concert. Mahler’s Eighth
Symphony will be presented by Bruno
Walter, and two choral concerts are
on the program. Chamber music con-
certs will be given in the Rococo hall
of the New Palace in Postdam, the
favorite summer residence of Kaiser
Wilhelm II. One of the city's opera
houses will remain open all summer.
From June 3 to August 31 the German
Institute of Music for Foreigners will
present their master courses for ad-
vanced pupils in the Charlottenburg
Palace, with such great ^rtists as Eu-
gen Gieseklng, Willy Hess, Edwin Fls-
lers as
/ CHEVROLET^
PT5HB world has heard about only
ene stowr ay on the Graf
EeppeUa’s return flight to
Ceiaaany on October 29th. But there
wss a second; albeit an inanimate
one. The model
of.a gown design-
ed in honor of the
flight was a stow-
away on the voy-
age. It was part
of the baggage of
Joseph D. Jessel
and William Ull-
man, New York,
who were passen-
gers 6n -the his-
toric flight.
The designers
have Introduced
the ribbed effect
of the Zeppelin in
do band of horisontsd tucking
I the hips, the semi-circular
A at one side being suggestive
i nose of the airship. The
was executed In georgette
The flair ot the shirred raffle r
Baattve zf the billowy waves, fashion .before the world' are-being
I >a loaf, plain b Joe .sug-
J
gests the expt se of air. It is « flat-
tering style, id while it is sugges-
tive of the flight r- honor o', wtiich it
is called the Graf Zeppelin Dress, it
is conservative enough for dress
wear.
The model was-, displayed In the
Telt Department ftore in Ber 'n.
Because of thfe in-
ternational char-
acter of the flight
and the interna-
tional Influence in
the model the gar-
ment has aroused
much Interest.
The introduction
of an American
style in Europe is '
unique. Copies of
the Graf Zeppelin j
Dress will sdon B
be on display-*
t h r o u gfaout the
United States.
.Mr. Jessel and Mr.
Gemany Puts Ban On
Hifh Powered Fuels;
Are Called Poisonous
x----
I CHI
JOYOUS CHRISTMAS SEASON
TO ITS MANY FRIENDS
*
y11; *** AdmlttM ilntor Germany b».
cause of their poisoning rihttfmfffl*-
Reports tjiat these American fuels
will be Imported Into Germany via
England shortly have resulted In a
storm. of protest from industrial clr-
‘cies. Germany, it Is pointed out, has
yery excellent anti-knock fuels in the
gasollne-bensol mixtures of German
firms and therefore does not need
the import of Ethyl gasoline.
Besides unfavorably influencing the
German trade balance, ft Is charged,
these American fuels will only serve
to poison the air In busy strset traf-
fic through lead-conftlning exhaust
during the coming year, and can assure you that we will do-even
more than in the past to merit that fine support. - *
Call at our store and receive your new calendar.
But even- the maaier matadors are Scientific School 669.
sity schools are shown thus:
man year 890, medical 208; divinity,
217; law 318; fine arts 327; music
115; forestry 39. and nursing 70.
States sending the greatest num-
ber of students to Yale are Connecti-
cut 1,449. New York 981, Pennsylva-
nia 330, Massachusetts 324, New Jer-
sey and Ohio 274 each, Illinois 139, ,
and California 101.
Missouri has 80 students here, Min-
in closing the most successful year^our
rienced, we desire to pause and offer our most cordial wishes for
your happiness during the Holiday Season.
The loyal support of the people of the Lower Rio Grande Val-
ley has made this business outstanding among its kind.
We have endeavored in the past to give our customers value in
quality and the most in tire service that was in our power to give.
YALE IS GROWING----------------
YEAR’S ENROLLMENT
STATEMENT SHOWS
NEW HAVEN, Conn., Dec. 22.—Yale' operatic, theatrical and concert period,
is growing. The annual statement of For two or three years there has been
enrollment issued by the University talk of a "season", such as London
heft> shows the student body, this fall,' has long had, but only now has this
is 286 larger than a year ago and _ led to definite results.
The program now announced was
whose ’ work waiting for. Thirty operas, dra-
_________, orchestra and
music concerts and many
actions will
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PALM CITY TIRE AND RUBBER COMPANY
'\|,P MeALLEN . " J. &,
The student list ]
of people r-*----
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matic performances,
chamber
other attractions will signalize the
week from the end of May to the end
of June, 1929.
Three Opera Houses
Berlin’s three ‘ opera
own great pro Persons to choose from, for Yale Col- 30 operatic performances, including
Other Univer-1 (with “Parsifal’’), six by Strauss, Ita-*
fresh- I‘
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McAllen Daily Press (McAllen, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 4, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 23, 1928, newspaper, December 23, 1928; McAllen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1283679/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting McAllen Public Library.