The Brownsville Evening Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 261, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 14, 1925 Page: 1 of 4
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PUMPING MACHINERY * BARB WIRE rHfi I
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■ i ■ -' ^ ■»
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I 1 1-2 to 15 h. p. Fairbanks Morse and | . ’ .. _ .
1 | Staple. A complete line. Send us your
I | 1 Kreuger Atlas Oil Engines in stock. ‘ / / v inquiries
i Centrifugal Pumps. J1 "y _
Wu PflTFfiNAT fO 4 Alamo Iron Works
. n. rUIDUIlAl vw. 8AN ANTONIO AND BROWNSVILLE
_ ___
VOL. XXXII No. 261. ESTABLISHED 1892 BROWNSVILLE TEXAS SATURDAY. MARCH 14 1925. * 4 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS A COPY
M’CLINTOCKHEIR
HELD IN JAIL BY
STATE COUNSEL
Shepherd Taken From
Home at Midnight for
Questioning; Denies
Stolen Germ Story
CHICAGO III. March 14.—
Questioned for hours early to-
day after Dr. Charles Faiman
head of a germ culture school
said he had sought information
in administering typhoid germs
without trace to a person Wil-
liam D. Shepherd foster father
and chief heir of William Nel-
son McClintock. “millionaire or-
phan” who died of typhoid last
December was held in technical
custody for further interroga-
tion.
Taken from his home at midnight to
the office of Robert E. Crowe state’s
attorney Shepherd was confronted with
Dr. Faiman and flatly denied his story
that he had asked about methods of in-
troducing germs into the human body.
His wife a co-guardian of young Mc-
Clintock was later taken to the p-rose-
cutor office but permitted to return
home after brief questioning.
Crowe planned to renew the interro-
gation later today and also to take
meuns to block announced plans of
Edwin Hedrick attorney for Shepherd
to apply for a writ of habeas corpus if
his client was not released immediate-
ly-
Dr. Faiman who also was held for
further questioning and who was sub-
jected to nearly 36 hours of steady ex-
amination before he told his story said
Shipheid had posed as a lawyer seeking
information on germs in defense of a
client accused of administering them.
Later Shepherd gave him'$50 for a let-
ter he had written to the school in-
quiring about bacteriology courses Fai
man said.
Round Lp witnesseH
Beyond asking if they had a warrant
Shepherd offered no resistance to de-
tective* who went to his home. Mrs.
Shepherd was hysterical and declared
“this is persecution.” She was calm
several hours later when brought to
the state’s attorney’s office :;nd told
assistant slate’s attorneys tha “if they
realized how much I loved Billy Met
Clintock the case would be dropped.
During the questioning of Shepherd
by stute’s attorneys police rounded up
a number of witnesses who have been
prominent in testifying before the cor-
oner's inquest into McClintock’s death.
They sought Dr. George Fosberg who j
told the coroner’s jury that he had
been consulted by Shepheid about the
effects of germs and subtle poisons and
probability of their detection in an
(Continued on Page Two)
Girl to Serve Six
Years for Slaying
(By The Associated Press.->
TULSA Okla. March 14.—Mildred
Odom 17 years old was found guilty of
manslaughter in the first degree and
sentenced to six years in the state pen-
itentiary by a jury in district court
here today.
She killed Mrs. George Bliss with «
knife in a rooming house fight July 4
1924.
. THE WEATHER
Brownsville and vicinity: Partly
cloudy and much colder tonight lowest
about 45 degrees; Sunday fair and cold.
East Texas: Fair and colder tonight;
cold wave in south portion; freezing in
interior; frost to the coast. Sunday-
fair; not so cold in north and west por-
tions. Fresh to strong northerly winds
on the coast tonight subsiding Sunday.
Small Craft Warnings indicated for
the west coast.
Weather Conditions
The disturbance over Kansas yester-
day morning was central over the lower
Great Lakes this morning while the
Northwestern "high” increased in in-
tensity and extent moved southward
an I covered practically the entire west-
ern half of the United States at the
morning observation. It is attended by
unseasonably low temperatures through-
out the central portion of the country
and southward into northwestern ex-
as. Moderate heavy rains occurred
sin-e lout report in the Ohio end middle
and southern Mississippi Valleys ligh
scattered showers in eastern Texas and
snow in the northern Rocky Mountain
states. . .. .
The lowest tempernture last ment at
Texas stations ranged from 20 at Am
ar'llo to 70 at Brownsville and Corpus
ChrUti. „. . _
r-
AVERSION TO SELLING OF
* * *
LIQUOR STARTED ‘CALS'
* * *
ru/p ro wwte house
NEW YORK. N. Y. March 14.—The
aversion of Calvin Coolidge to sell-
ing liquor now is revealed as one
thing that possibly started him on the
road to the White House.
The story came from Col. Coolidge
while bound to Washington with Olds
for the Harding inauguration. As
Mr. Olds told it:
“Colonel Coolidge warmed up and
told me that when Calvin was 15
years old it was a serious question
whether or not he should be sent to
college.
“Colonel Coolidge said he was not
sure his son was the right type and
that he finally decided he had better
apprentice him to a pharmacist. At
that time all drug stores had liquor
in stock and after the colonel told
Calvin of his decision his son thought
for u minute or so and then said
'Father sell turn.’ That ended it.”
Calvin Coolidge was graduated
from Amherst in 1895.
LINES DRAWN IN
WARREN BATTLE
Administration Forces
Doubt Ability to O. K.
Nomination
fRv The Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON D. C. March 14.—
Lines were drawn in the senate to.iav
for another battle between administra-
tion forces and the opposition with the
calling up in open session of the once
rejected nomination of Chailes B. War-
ren to be attorney general.
With the personal influence of Presi-
dent Coolidge actively thrown into the
equation administration leaders urged
in conference with the executive to
put up a fight for consideration of his
cabinet appointee were bending every
effort to pick yp the votes necessary
to accomplish it. The president in fur-
ther conferences with senate leaders
last night urged particularly that Mr.
Warren’s qualification be vigorously
presented before another vote on con-
firmation. While hopeful of a different
result this time republican leaders
still were unable to see where the added
strength necessary to put the nomina-
tion through would come from. In the
face of the latest canvasses which indi-
cated in fact that they are more apt
to lose strength they were trying to
improve the situation by pairing off
some of their absentees against the
presence of several opponents who were
absent when the tie vote was taken
T uesday.
They also faced the disadvantage of
the adverse committee report giving op
ponents the upper hand in any strategic
moves.
Claims Descent From
Christopher Columbus
NEUTRA. Hungary March 14.— Ru-
dolf Columbus a piano player employed
at a local restaurant bar claims to be
direct descendant of Christopher Col-
umbus.
Rudolf's father in 1019 read in a
Vienna paper that the heirs of the great
explorer were called upon by the Span-
i>h government to make known any
claims upon certain estates left by
Christopher. Convinced from the tradi-
tions of his family that he was a direct
lineal descendant he began to trace the
family tree. This required much money
however and searching of official rec-
ords in Portugal Spain and Austria-
Hungary and he died without accom-
plishing his purpose.
Rudolf has now announced! that he
will continue where his father left off
and will lay claim to the fortunes of
the House of Columbus-Veragna in
Spain.
North Texas in Grip
Of Zero Temperatures
WICHITA FALLS Tex. March 14.—A
cold wave hit this section last nighL
temperature dropping to 29 degrees ac-
companied by a 20 mile wind. The
thermometer registered 20 at Texline
while at .Forgan Oklahoma it stood at
15. It is not thought the fruit crop
here has been damaged by the freeze.
roURT BILL TO PASS
The Cameron county court bill is not
expciti u to come up in the house until
some time next week possibly Monday
or Tuesday according to Harbert Daven-
port who has been in almost daily com-
munication with Representative Harry
Faulk. It will pass without opposition
when it is brought up. he believes.
CALLES aOSES
CO CHURCH
SCENE OF RIOTS
Both Sides of Apostolic
Row Found Guilty of
Disobeying Authority
President Says
fRv The Associated Press.1
MEXICO CITY. March 14. The Sole-
j dad church has been closed to worship
by order of President Calles in settle-
ment of the conflict created by the
Knights 'of Guadalupe followers of the
Mexican Catholic apostolic church who
recently took over the building and
ejected the Roman Catholic priest
Father Silva.
I President Calles found no evidence
j that Father Silva had willingly handed
| the building over to the Knights or was
in any way connected with them. ns
charged. Consequently he declared
“Patriarch Perez of the new sect and
his followers had broken the constitu-
tion by taking national property under
the keeping of the Roman Catholic
church without fulfilling the require
ments rf the law.
On the other hand the president
found the Roman Catholic clergy had
declared themselves in open rebellion
against the constitution “despising the
authorities through their most promi-
nent spokesman.”
The Roman Catholic clergy the state-
ment continued refused to recognize
state ownership of the church buildings
and the government’s right to exercise
control over church worship and prne
tices and were allegedly arousing the
peonle to take justice into their own
hands.
Desirous of enforcing the laws nt
whatever cost the president therefore
oidered the Soledad church withdrawn
from religious practices.
100 MISSING FROM
WRECKED STEAMER
(By The Associated Press.)
NAGASAKI. Japan March 14.—One
hundred persons are missing from the
Japanese steamship Uwajima Maru No
0. which is believed to have foundered
in a storm on Wednesday off Kahashima
Island.
The purser and fifteen passengers
have been picked up thus far and five
destroyers are searching for other pos-
sible survivors.
Ball of Hair Taken
From Girl's Stomach
FITCHBURG. Mass. March 14.—Sur-
geons who operated on a 13 year old
girl at a hospital here removed from
her stomach a ball of hair weighing 19
ounces. Her parents said the child had
been in the habit of swallowing strands
of her own hair from infancy. Physi-
cians said she wil recover.
LAST WAR RESTRICTION LIFTED
LONDON March 14.—The last of the
war-time restrictions on the postal ser-
vice as put into effect by England was
removed early in .February. The post-
master general announced that the
money order service between Great
Britain and the Duchy of Luxemburg
suspended in August 1914 had been re-
sumed virtually on the same basis as
eleven years ago.
WHEAT PRICES PLUNGE
.CHICAGO 111. March 14—Wheat
made a wavering start today and then
plunged downward far below yester-
day’s bottom figures. The dive car-
ried the market five cents a bushel un-
der the preceding close May delivery
touching $1.02. Trade was of huge
volume with repqrts current that wheat
at Liverpool was unsalable.
MOOSE TO BUILD
CHICAGO 111. March 14—A com-
bined Loyal Order of Moose temple and
office building to cost $3000000 will be
built in Chicago’s downtown district
James J. Davis secretary of labor and
director general of the order announced
here yesterday.
STORM WARNING
WASHINGTON. D. €. March 14.—The
weather bureau today issued the fol-
lowing storm warning: “Advisory 10
a. m. southwestern storm warnings or-
dered Delaware breakwater to Eastport.
Maine disturbance over Lake Ontario
moving northeastward ill cauwse strong
southwest winds this afternoon and to-
night shifting to northwest Sunday.”
r ——
PARENTS-IN-LAW SUED
* * *
BY RIDING MASTER FOR
* * *
MMC Bfl/D£ FROM HIM
CRv The Associated Press.\
MILWAUKEE Wis. March 14.—Je-
rome W. Bradley riding master was
prepared to testify today in his suit
for $250000 against his wealthy par-
ents-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Charles G.
Forster whom he charges with keep-
ing his bride Emily from him. The
hearings are being held before Com-
missioner Emil J. Ludwig and young
Bradley’s testimony will follow that
of Mr. and Mis. Forster given yester-
day.
Bradley married Emily Forster re-
cently following a romance of the
hi idle path. The girl took lessons
from Bradley.
W. B. Rubin attorney for Bradley
indicated that he will attempt to
piove that Emily proposed marriage
to Bradley rather than that the young
horseman did the proposing himself.
CUBANTREATY
GIVEN OKEH
Senate Calendar Cleared
of Pacts With O. K. of
Isle of Pines Paper
(Rv The Associated Press !
WASHINGTON L). C.. March 14.—The
senate calendar stood cleared of all
foreign treaties today but only by a de-
cision to return to committee the
Lausanne pact to re-establish diplomatic
and commercial relations with Turkey
with action thus going over until the
next session.
Pr.or to its decision late yesterday
on the Lausanne treaty after thei ad-
ministration had redoubled its efforts
to obtain ratification at this session
the senate ratified the treaty recogniz-
ing Cuban sovereignty over the Isle of
Pines. As approved by a vote of G3 to
14. the Cuban treaty carried only
minor reservations.
The world court question also has
been definitely put over until the next
session under an agreement of yester-
day to make it a special order for next
December 1.
The action of Chairman Borah of the
foreign relations committee in moving
for the return to his committee of the
Lausanne treaty. resulting from a
canvass of the senate situation which
convinced him that the necessary two
thirds majority for ratification could
not be had. followed a conference for
which President Coolidge had called the
Idaho senator to the White House earl-
ier in the day.
After the pact was recommitted Sec-
retary Kellogg went to the senate for *
conference with Chairman Borah on the
subject but the senator was understood
today to still hold the view that the
virtual solid opposition of the dem-
ocrats would result only in rejection of
the treaty if pressed. The administra-
tion has stressed that with action de-
ferred on the treaty until the Decem-
ber session the situation might prove
embarrassing both to American resi-
dents in Turkey and those trading with
that country.
Smoot Taken 111 in
Senate Recovering
(By The Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON. D. C.. March 14.—
Senator Reed Smoot of Utah who was
taken ill on the senate floor yesterday
and removed to his home was said today
to have spent a fairly comfortably
night.
Physicians decided after an early
morning examination of their patient
that he would be .able to go to the sen-
ate long enough to cast his vote in the
event the nomination of Chas. B. War-
ren to be attorney general conies to a
vote. Otherwise the senator will ro-
main in bed.
PROMOTER’S HOME SOLD
CHICAGO 111. March 14.—Memo-
ries of Leo Kort Koretz promoter of
a $2000000 Panama oil bubble who
died in the Joliet penitentiary a few
weeks after his arrest as a result of a
year’s search were stirred yesterday
when his former home was sold for a
reported $90000. The woman head of a
costume company was the purchaser.
COOLIDGE PLANS
CONFERENCE ON
ARMAMENT CUT
—
Failure of Security Pact
at League Meet Seen
as an Opportunity to
Seek Nations’ Stand
(Ry The Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON D. <\ March 14.—
While awaiting more complete and
1 authentic advices concerning the dis-
armament situation abroad President
Coolidge believes recent developments
there as already indicated have opened
the way to a more definite approach to
the pioject of another arms limitation
conference to he called by the United
States.
As soon as more definite advices
are in hand as to the effect of recent
developments at Geneva concerning the
league'of nations disarmament and se-
curity protocol the president proposes
to give close attention to the matter in
1 conference with Secretary Kellogg.
Any step approaching formal presen-
tation to of the conference idea to the
rations introduced however will await
a survey of the situation on the basis
of more authentic advices to be received
through official channels.
As yet there has been no actual ap-
proach to any of the powers on the
subject and conferences planned by the
president with his secretary of state
will in fact be the initial move in get-
ting the many preliminaries attending
the project under way.
While it will be for these discussions
to determine the plan of procedure Mr.
Coolidge at this time favors a simul-
taneous approach to the various powers.
Under such a plan it would remain for
Secretary Kellogg to lay the project
before the governments at London
Paris Rome and Tokio through the Am-
erican ambassadors there with the re-
action of each to be reported to Wash-
ington. While hopeful that it would be
favorable received by each of the gov-
ernments it is the present intention of
President Coolidge that in the event
of a contrary development the Wash-
ington government shall go forward
with the project with such governments
as are agreeable.
Mrs. Pulitzer Hurt in
Auto Accident Dies
(Bv The Associated Press !
NEW YORK N. Y. March 14—Mrs.
Joseph Pulitzer Jr. of St. Louis wife
of the editor and publisher of the St.
Louis Post-Disnatch and secretary of
the Press Publishing company■ publish-
ers of the New York World died last
night from what was originally thought
to have been a trivial injury sustained
in an automobile accident Thursday.
Death was due to a blood clot which
had formed in an injured blood vessel
in the neck and passed on to the brain.
Her husband on a fishing trip in
Florida was located yesterday after Mrs.
Pulitzer’s condition became suddenly
serious and is now en route to New
York. Her three children are at home
in St. Louis where Mrs. Pullitzer was
born. Her maiden name was Elinor
Wickham.
Egyptian Tomb Sealed
To Await Director
(Bv The Associated Press.)
CAMBRIDGE Mass. March 13.—The
tomb discovered by the Harvard-Bos-
ton expedition at Giza has been closed
and sealed to await the return to Egypt
of Dr. George A. Reisner professor of
Egyptology at Harvard director of the
Boston Museum o£ Fine Aits and head
of the expedition who now is in Bos-
ton. Announcement of this decision
! was made today at Harvard.
Texas Constitution
Builder Succumbs
FORT WORTH Texas March 14.—
W. I’. McLean. Sr. 89 member of the
convention which drafted the present
state constitution died Friday after a
brief illness. He had been judge con-
gressman and legislator.
McLean was born in £°P*sh county
Miss. and was brought to Texas as a
baby. He served Texas as a member of
the legislature from which he resigned
to join the Confederate army. He had
four years at soldiering leaving the
army with the rank of major.
Seven Germans Killed
In Communist Clash
HALE Germany March 14.—Seven
persons including two women were
killed in the clash here last night be-
tween police and communists.
’? - A
j ]
f
COUZENS BRINGS
ROW IN SENATE
Charge of Treasury Ef-
fort to ‘Discipline’
Causes Debate
fTv The Associated Tress.)
WASHINGTON D. C. March 14.—
Senator Couzens’ investigation of the *
internal revenue bureau and his charges
of treasury efforts to “discipline” him.
provided the fuel today for a senate de-
bate that crackled with personal ac-
cusations and flamed into a white heat
of bitterness.
Replying to the Michigan senator’s
recent jibes at Secretary Mellon* Sen-
ator Ernst of Kentucky another re-
publican member of the investigating
committee of which Mr. Couzens is
chairman declared a “personal ani-
mus” against Mr. Mellon had prompted
the attacks on him; that Senator
Couzens had not been seeking facts but
openings to attacks the treasury; and
that the tax returns of the Mellon com-
panies had been put on the committee
grill for no other reason but because
#they had connections with the present
treasury secretary.
In return Senator Couzens declared
he had attacked Mr. Mellon because *he
became convinced that the secretary
has a personal interest in some of the
tax assessments under examination;
had asked for the records of the Mel-
lon companies because of grave charges
that had reached the committee; and
intimated that ne had suspected that
important committee files were disap-
pearing because of close contact between
treasury agents and Senator Ernst.
After Senator Glass democrat Vir-
ginia. former secretary of the treas-
ury had concluded a speech assailing
Secretary Mellon. Senator Ernst asked
the chairman “If there was anything
under the rule of the senate that would j
permit him to call a fellow senator a
wilful malicious liar.”
A dozen senators were immediately
on their feet demanding that Senator
Fess. republican Ohio who was presid-
ing enforce the rules and compel the
senator from! Kentucky to sit down.
After much confusion a motion was
made and a roll call ordered to deter-
mine if Senator Ernst was out of or-
der.
THREE MEN TAKEN
IN HARLINGEN RAID
Three men in jail and nearly three
full gallons of mescal with six quarts
of tequila and one quart of cognac in
the custody of the sheriff’s office were
the results of a raid upon three houses
in Harlingen at 2:00 a. m. today. All
of the houses were in the same neigh-
borhood being within a block and a half
of each other.
Deputy Sheriffs D. H. Ferguson H. A.
Bettis Charles Wroten Constable J. H.
Ferguson and Marshall W. H. McMinn
raiding one of the houses found a one
gallon jug partly full of mescal and one
full quart of cognac. Following this
they raided two others in rapid sue
cession and found one gallon of mescal
at one place and one gallon bottle
nearly full of mescal and six full quarts
of tequila at the other.
Following the raid Officers D. H.
Ferguson and Bettis brought the prison-
ers and evidence to Brownsville where
the prisoners were lodged in the coun-
ty jail awaiting action by the grand
jury. Men held are Encarnacion Bene-
vides Silvester Trevino and Juan
Villareal.
Dallas Home Robbed
Of Fine Silverware
(By The Associated Press.)
DALLAS Texas March 14.—Silver-
ware valued at $2500 was taken from
the home of Mrs. S. I. Munger early to-
day. Members of the family were away
last night. A servant who went to the
residence to work this worning is be-
lieved to have scared the robber away
as a suitcase which had been filled with
silver was left in a hall. 1
MAN HACKS SELF
AND CUTS WRIST
AFTER KILLING
Missouri Garage Keeper
Threatens Wife as She
Hears Child’s Cry;
Cause Undetermined
KANSAS CITY Mo. March
14. — Maurice L. Gibson of
Prather Hill Mo. near North
Kansas City killed his four
children with an axe early today
whiie his wife was in another
part of the house and then hack-
ed himself with the axe' and
later slashed his wrist. He is
expected to live. No reason has
been assigned for the quadruple
killing.
The children were Maurice Jr. and
Marjorie twins 7 year old; Hazel 5;
and Helen. 1 1-2 years old.
Following the slaying Gibson ran t*
the home of his sister-in-law a hun-
dred yards away where he hacked him-
self with the axe. Later when search
was being made for him he went to
another part of the house and slashed
his wrist.
. Gibson was brought to a hospital
here in an unconscious condition. The
twins and Hazel were found dead and
the baby died on the way to a hospi-
tal.
Gibson a garage man lived with hi*
family in a two story house at Prather
Hill which is a small summer camp
near North Kansas City. When Mrs.
Gibson arose she heard her husband
rummaging about in the living room.
She prepared breakfast and not long n
afterward heard the screams of the
baby Helen. She hurried to the stair-
way. according to reports and met her
husband coming down with an axe in
his hand. At her exclamation he seized
her wrist she said and made a motion
as if to strike her.
“Don’t strike me. Maurice” she ex-
claimed.
He pushed her aside ran down stairs
and out of the house.
Mrs. Gibson screamed and neighbors
rushed in and found Hazel and Marjorie
jn bed dead. Maurice. Jr. asleep in
another bed also was found dead and
the baby was gasping in his cot. A
doctor was summoned and ordered the
baby taken to a hospital but it died
on the way.
Gibson recovered consciousness later
at a hospital and was removed to the
citv jail. He appeared irrational police
said.
“Where am I?" he asked repeatedly.
He attempted to leave his bed and
officers were compelled to tie him down.
ACTTY'ITIES DRAW WOMEN
BERLIN March 14.—Recent elections
in the Evangelical church throughout
Prussia the largest Protestant area in
Germany resulted in the choice of
33 1-3 per cent of women as church
officials in many parishes and work-
men assumed a much more important
part in church affairs than in the days
of the monarchy. About 75 per cent of
the church membership voted in most
parishes which is regarded as a man!«
festation of unusual interest in church
affairs.
Truck Markets
T*ovr Via Naval Radi*
1 UUdy Fort Brow*
(Texas Warehouse and Markets
Department)
AUSTIN. Tex. March 14.—Shipping
point information—Cabbage Kansas
City 2 Texas. 1 other 12 track un-
changed; Chicago 5 Texas 2 other 43
track. $2.50-$2.s5; St. Louis 4 Texas 1
other 17 track unchanged; Cincinnati
2 Texas. 2 other 14 track. $50 ton;
Denver 0 Texas 3 other weak $1.75-
$1.85.
Carrots—Kansas City. 1 Texas 0
other. 4 track $1.50; Chicago 1 Texas.
0 other weak $1-$1.2S; St. Louis 1
Texas 0 others. steady $1.25-$1.50;
New Y'ork 12 Texas 2 other stronger
$1.25-11.50.
Spinach—Kansas Sity. 0 Texas 1 oth-
er 1 track steady unchanged; Chicago
1 Texas 2 other 2 track steady un-
changed; St. Louis 1 Texas 0 other 5
track steady $.75-f.85; Cleveland .1
Texas. 0 other. 5 track. $1.25; Denver
1 Texas 6 other. 3 track strong $.85;
New York 1 Texas 12 other steday
$.60.
Beets—Chicago 1 Texas 0 other 1
track dull $1.50; St. Louis 2 track
steady $1.25-$1.50; New York 1 Texas
1 other 0 track steady $1-$1.25; Phila-
ielphia 1 track 0 other 3 track nothing
>ffered; Baltimore 1 track dull $1.75-
12.
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The Brownsville Evening Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 261, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 14, 1925, newspaper, March 14, 1925; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1378937/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .