The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 308, Ed. 2 Friday, July 2, 1937 Page: 4 of 10
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Uhe2nramsuille3terald
fttshlMhei July 4. lttt Aa a Dally Newspaper
bp 1mm O. Wheeler
fBJJbfbad Mery afternoon 1 except Saturday) end Sunday
morning. Entered aa second-claaa matter In tbe Poatoftice
_____ Brownavuie Texa#
VALLEY PUBLISHING COMPANY
Brownsville Texas
"• .. ... —..
MEMBER OP THE OSUtUlKD PRESS
The Aaaocleted Preac la exclusively entitles to the we for
publication of eU new* dispatches credited to It or not
•therwlsg credited la this we per. and also tbe local newt
pubushed herein
TEXAS DAILY PRESS LEAGUE
_ National Advertising Representative
Dellas. Texas. 51X Mercantile Bank Bids.
Kansas City Mo 1013 Baltimore Ava
Chicago 111 ago North Michigan
Loe Angeles Caul 1015 New Ori neum Bide.
tRew York. N. Y SO Beat 42nd Street.
Louie. Mo 505 insurance Exchange Bldg.
Prancicco. Calif.. 155 hansome Bt
“>xae Dally Preae League. Til Bus Terminal Bldg-.
Denver. Colo.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character standing or
reputation of any person firm or corporation which may
OdSttf Utt tbe columns of THE BROWNSVILLE HERALD wi.|
M gladly corrected upon being brought to the attention of
Mo management. This paper s first duty Is to print all the
•ewe that • fit to print honNtly and fairly to all. unbiased
> Jf consideration even Including Its own editorial
^_ •
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
• Brownsville and all Rio Orande Valley
elUaa. IS 00 a year; 75c § month; lie a week.
■f MaU—Outside of the Rto Oreads Valley; Tie per
Rkonth: |S 00 per year; 1 month. 14 50
Mali—In tbe Rio Orande Valley in advance: one year.
IT.00: ala months M-'»; I months. |2
_Friday July 2 1937
MACHINE AGE BOUND TO
BENEFIT MANKIND
You cannot travel far enough these days to get sway
from the problem raised by man's invention of ma-
chinery.
Ernie Pyla roving reporter visited Alaska recently
and in the town of Petersburg met a man who believes
hg has perfected a ahrlmp-plcklng machine.
Shrimp are relatively tiny creatures which come out
of the ocean encased In little ahella. (Setting them out
Of the ahella ao that they can be canned has always
been strictly hand-work and quite a few people get
Jobs svsry year at the canneries doing this work.
But this rbap whom Pyle stumbled across has spent
10 years working on a machine to do the work. He
thinks st last that he has it ready to go; he plana to
Install 10 machinea Immediately in hia cannery' and
each machine will do the work that 10 men used to do.
• • •
The result is that even a small fishing village in
Alaska—which you might suppose would be the last
place In North America to be bothered by 1 technologi-
cal unemployment"—Is going to get a taste of the ma-
chine age. A certain number of people who alvay*.
before this could relv on several weeks or months
of steady work will have to find something else to do
hereafter. Machinery has advanced one more little
step along the road toward the obsolescence of human
labor.
This sort of thing has been happening on auch a
huge scale In the last few d«ades that the Ala.nkan
development looks relatively significant. But It lsnt.
It Is a grim little signpost reminding us—In case any-
one still doubted—that for better or for worse the re- !
placement of human labor by machine labor Is going
to continue.
It Is not merely a problem of the big city; It Is
■omethlng that affects far-away fishing villages Just
aa It affects big manufacturing centers.
• • •
Now there Is no use in bemoaning this development.*
for It la aa certain and Inexorable as death and taxes.
And. Indeed in the long run. it cannot be anything
but a tremendous boon to the race as a whole. Man-
kind is being relieved of drudgery; the mean monoto-
nous. back-breaking jobs that once were part of the
universal human lot are being lifted off his back.
The trouble right now is that we reap the tempo-
rary disadvantages of the nroceas ahead of the per-
manent advantages. It i» hard to rejoice over relief
from drudgery when at the same time one is relieved
of the chance to earn a living. The man who is put
into a bread line by the machine may be pardoned for
viewing the machine's blessines with a Jaundiced eye
To aay that we are living in a period of transition
la trite—but accurate. Our Job new Is to learn how
tr ranslnte the machine's achievements In terms of
the well-being of the entire community.
WAGES OF A GENIUS
The Chamber of Commerce at Schenectady. N. Y..
has been campaigning for 125.000 with which to estab-
lish a museum to the memory of the late Charles P
Btelnmetz. famous electrical “wizard.”
This la interesting not only becauae Steinmetz's
memory amply deserves such a tribute but also be-
... 1 ----
mum 128000 is a great deal more money then that
self-denying genius ever poem—id In hie life.
That one must hasten to add. was In no way the
fault of the big corporation that employed him. Stein-
met* enriched it; In return he could have had prac-
tically any salary he asked. He simply dldnt ask
one. He was one of those rare souls without the slight-
est interest in money. He deserves remembrance al-
most as much for his selfless devotion to his work as
for his genius as a scientist and inventor.
BEAUTY AND BEEFSTEAK
Evidence that even the lowing herd is not Immune
to the current beauty vogue comes steadily from the
nation's livestock shows. One exhibitor et a recent
Alabama stock show reported 68 entries there with
finger waves and said he aw at a Chicago exhibit
many cattle with curled hair and waved horns and
hoofs.
There was a day when to describe a bull as "beau-
tiful" would have exposed e pathetic unwarenem of
fine barnyard proprieties. And to those who always
believed the brush and curry comb were equipment
enough for the bullpen boudoir finger waves and
manicures will seem uncalled for.
Doubtless any number of 4-H youths and pro fas-
slonal stockmen could defend the new trend and
actually there Is no reason why prospective cattle show
royalty should not be crowned in coronation attire.
But. supposing a curly cow doe* win more prizes there
remains the pertinent and hard-to-answer question:
How much does a finger wave help a beefsteak {
Family Doctor
By OR MORRIS riSUBEIN
Editor. Journal of the American Medical
Association and of Bygeta
tbo Hoaltb Magaatno
SOME PERSONS HEALTHY THOUGH THIN:
OTHERS REQUIRE A PHYSICIAN"* CARE
Once people were greatly worried If they were
thin. It la hard to find people nowaday! who
worry about thinness. Nevertheless the person
who la seriously undernourished has something to
worry about. Emaciation with Its tight cheek-
bones and acrawney neck probably is Just as ugly
overweight with its pendulous abdomen and thick
neck.
When the thyroid gland is exceedingly over-
active. emaciation follows if a basal metabolism
tMt Indicates that there la real overaction of the
thyroid gland the person concerned needs much
more rest and the care of a physician to lessen the
overaettvity of thia gland. In many paaes It la
necessary to remove parts of the gland or all of It
by surgery.
• • •
Children who are underweight because of slen-
der build must be separated from those who are
underweight because of emaciation bad health or
malnutrition. It Is necessary for the doctor to de-
termine which of these factors is responsible and
to treat the child accordingly.
Regular weighing of children Is Important as
It calls attention to their health problem. Too
much attention should not. however be given to
overweight or to underweight but rather as to th#
condition of the child in relation to the weight
that It has.
. Many persons who are thin have Inherited a
type of body structure and body physiology which
makes it difficult for them to Increase In weight or
to gain even after eating large amounts of food.
• • •
The term "leanness" generally is applied to peo-
ple who are 10 to 15 pounds underweight. Some
people however are quite healthy with this ap-
parent underweight.
If their muscles are strong if they have plenty
of endurance if they do not suffer constantly with
one or another infectious disease it Is likely that
the leanness Is not significant In relationship to
health but rather that It Is a constitutional con-
dition. Some people bum up much more nutritive
material than they accumulate.
If. however a person Is thin has no endurance.
Is considerably fatigued and easily susceptible to
Infection if the muscles are flabby the posture
stooping and the stomach thrown forward they
are undernourished and require care.
They are likely to have bad digestions because
of bad body structure. They have bad appetltea
and. as a result become thinner and thinner. The
care of such a person la a real medical problem
and he should be under the care of a physician.
We must concentrate all our genius on wrestling
from this Germany of oun what the country needs to
live—Adolph Hitler.
Scott’s Scrapbook-by R. J. Scott
Wrf&H |TWAS DECIDED "To
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COPYRIGHT* IM7. WNC HATWttS SYNOlCAH im. V |* .REPUBLICAN DESIGNS
• *
IJP AT MONROE. MICH.. THEY
^ have a plant of the Republic
Steel Corporation.
At Monroe a new lake harbor
they also have John McMillan a
member of the Monroe navigation
commission.
The steel company had labor
troubles. Thera were threats of
violence.
“There will be no peace In Mon-
roe until the Republic Steel Com-
pany signs a wage agreement with
the Steel Workers Organizing Com-
mittee.” was the challenge from the
workers.
The challenge brought a swift re-
tort from John McMillan who said
quietly. If the union men attempt-
ed to Invade the city a courthouse
bell would ring and “9000 armed
vigilantes will appear within firteen
min u tea."
s • •
VdONROE AND JOHN McMIL-
1 lan are quite a distance from
Brownsville.
The news referred to was print-
ed In papers of June II. Nothing
further hag been heard from that
labor battle front following the
exchange of remarks quoted above.
The point of It all Is this: John
McMillan civic minded business
man. was a year ago or more sche-
duled to become a citizen of
rrownavlJle.
He owns an orchard near La
Perla. comes down occasionally to
visit hlg place.
On his last trip in the spring of
1936. the Port of Brownsville in-
terested him because of his inter-
est In the port at Monroe
He had planned to come down
to remain Then he was taken IU
with pneumonia was down tor
months and his plans were entirely
upset.
John McMillan is the type of
citizen the Valley likes to have.
Sk A *
IJP AT CORPUS CHRI8TI THEY
u have a municipal airport.
Mayor A. C. McCaughan thinks
the Corpus Christl airport should
pay its way.
He is trying to figure out the
ways and means by which this
desirable result may be brought
about.
Airports in the relatively young
stage of air transportation in South
Texas areas seem to be one of the
things communities must expect to
subsidize for the time being.
Brownsville has invested as a
municipal proposition has some
9300 000 tied up in an airport
which ha* been leased to Pan
American Airways for 910 a year.
It has been a good investment for
Brownsville. Pan American has
made Brownsville a highly import-
ant international air gateway. Pan
American turns loose something
like 9400.000 annually in Browns-
ville. In salaries wages and local
expenditures. Indirectly the tax-
payers are being repaid for their
investment.
• • •
DROBABLY MANY OF THOSE
who have secured employment
or business by reason of Browns-
ville's gamble with the future of
this industry by investing 9200.000
with no prospect of immediate re-
turn. are unaware of what the ci-
tizens did nearly ten years ago. and
the sacrifices many of them have
been forced to make by reason of
taxes many of them have been un-
able to pay.
• * m
“IF IT HADNT BEEN FOR THE
old timers the newcomers
would have no reason to be here”
declares one of them.
How true.
The trail blasers showed the way.
The trail blazers made the sacri-
fices of the pioneer—here Just as
elsewhere in this young nation as
It pushed west and south across
the country.
The t'cmll blasers showed the way.
laid the foundation. Every devel-
opment of a rapidly growing civili-
zation made other developments
necessary.
And every development created
new opportunities for someone.
The pioneers the trail blazers
have done a Job—and mostly gone
broke doing it.
Now there are new opportunities
Opportunities created by advancing
civilization. And a different type
of far-seeing men seem to be as
necessary now as the pioneer the
trail blazer was necessary In his
day.
There must be co-ordination.
There must be co-operation. There
must be wise able leadership.
And there Is still much pioneer-
ing to be done.
• • •
QOOD WEATHER SEEMS IN
store for the week-end and the
Fourth of July holiday with Indi-
cations that thousands of folk from
all over the Valley will gsther at
the nearby beaches. Including Del
Mar. Brazos Island and Padre Is-
land.
The largest crowds usually go to
Del Mar and Brazos because of
their accessibility by automobile.
Hiere should be precautions to
guard life. With so many people
foregathered there la always the
possibility that preparedness may
save a life or two.
An ambulance equippeu with pul-
motor should be provided in some
way. with at least an Interne as an
attendant.
We don’t know whose responsi-
bility it may be. Perhaps some one
will just assume it.
WHERE DOES THIS SORT OF THING LEAD? I
WB’LL MAC70TIAT* AOT W|
VWWT SIGN. W1 vnOMT DO
ANVTHU4C TH* COVSRMMSI4T
POfSN'T MAKE
US DO!
I_
"V
. ■ ■ —
Wf'Ll IN\40KS TM« WACNIR ACT
WHW IT Sf ST SUITS OUR PURPOSSS.
WHEN we THINK VtOtlMCS IS
IHORS CPPSCTIVC .
£9l
I'LL TCLL
BOTH OF YOU
WHAT YOU'LL
1)0 • WHY- THAT SOUNDS
lik* ptcTAro«*HiP!
What Other
Editors Say
IN DEFENSE OF THE VALLEY
(Port Isabel Pilot.)
Whatever benefits from the atten-
tion of the nation attracted to Port
Isabel because of President Roose-
velt may have been anticipated it
mu.st be admitted that instead of a
boost to Valley fishing the occaaion!
of the President's brief sojourn here
was the reverse. Not because the
fish were not here nor because
weather conditions were not favor-
able to tarpon fishing but simply
because the President tarried but
briefly here nor did he fiah for tar-
pon.
Press stories chronicled success of
the President's party at Aransas
Pass and failure at Port Isabel the
President being credited with having
caught one lone catfish 9 Inches in
length. Not only were such stories
in newspapers but a number of
magazines as well notably Time a
publication with a nation-wide circu-
lation. However only one individual
was sufficiently arouaed to take ex-
ception to these unwarranted stories.
That man was O. C. Richardson
manager of the Brownsville Cham-
ber of Commerce. Mr. Richardson
resented the insinuations reflecting
on the fishing in Valley waters and
forthwith protested the Time story
In a letter to that publication which
was published in that magazine.
Mr. Richardson set forth the facts
as they were for the purpose of cor-
recting the erroneous impression
that might be formed by a casual
reader of the article who are readers
of Time and read the article in ques-
tion Mr. Richardson was the only
one sufficient!* aroused and inter-
ested to come to the defense of Port (
Isabel and the Valley and vigorously
refute the inuendo in the Time
article.
Not only is Mr. Richardson due the
expression of appreciation that haa
been rendered hjjn by the Port Isa-
bel Chamber of Commerce but he
is likewise due a vote of thanks of
the entire Valley for his vehement
defense of a Valley asset.
Barbs
i
Amelia Earhart said she saw few
roads on her flight across Africa
The natives will appreciate her work
m blazing a trail.
• • •
Fire in Philadelphia was started
by a clgaret smoker who went to
sleep. Illustrating that danger lurks
in the fag end of a day.
• • •
i The National Granga is conduct-
ing a safety campaign for farmers.
This will reduce the danger of any
being plowed under.
• • •
The anti house-to-house campaign
is said to have started from parking
jams on overcrowded trailer lots.
9 9 •
Exponents of evolution overlooked
a point when they failed to point
out street car strap-hanging as a
vestige of the tree days.
• • •
The alert tire firm might adver-
tlse that Its product was used by the
500-mile racer who won In nothing
flat
~ " -.- .
Factographs
It Is estimated that 15.000 homes
In Washington D C. have no bath-
ing facilities.
• • •
Alligators have been known to
reach the age of 300 years.
• • •
It takes 15 months to season the
I wood used in ordinary matches.
\
..._ #
... W- ■" 1 —. -
Answers to Questions
BT FREDERIC J. BASKIN
A reader can set Ute answer to any
question at Feet by writing The
Brownsville Herald Information Bu-
reau. Frederic J. Haskln. Director.
Washington. D. C Please enclose three
Oi cents (or reply
Q. How many secretaries clerks
and stenographers are employed at
the White House? W. H.
A. At present there are 163 sec-
retaries. clerks and stenographers in
the White House.
Q. How many time* has Robert
Frost won the Pulltser Prise? W. H.
A. Three times—In 1934. 1931
and 1937.
_
Q- Is A1 Capone allowed to do
clerical work at Alcatras? T. W.
A. Capone Is assigned to eight
hours work a day In the laundry.
Q. Where is the Lusitania Me-
morial? R. W.
A. It Is being erected at Cobh
Ireland facing the sea where the
liner sank and will be dedicated in
September. The central figure Is an
angel of peace. Inscribed on a
bronze tablet at the base of the stat- i
ute will be the names of those who J
were drowned.
Q. How many employes lire In
Hrrshey. Pennsylvania the model
town? T. B.
A. There are 2400 employes of the
plant living there.
Q. What Is the purpose of the
new club called the National Fed-
eration of Prese Women? R. 8. O.
A. The constitution formulated
for the federation sets forth that the
object shall be “to provide a means
of communication of club courtesies
make possiole the expression of a
common voice in matters of national
interest to press women and other-
wise promote the welfare of press
women.”
Q. Is the widow of the fastens
engineer Casey Jones living? E. 8.
A. Mrs. Janie Brady Jonas widow
of the hero is now sixty-eight years
old and was a guest at the National
Folk Festival in Chicago recently
when the famous ballad about her
husband was featured on the pro-
gram.
Q. W'a# Jenny Lind married? E. M.
A. She married Otto Qoldschmldt
a German musician who founded
the Bach Choir In London and com-
posed some music.
Cheaper and
Better Pood
Every housekeeper is Interested in
providing her family with better food
at lower cost One certain way to ac-
complish this saving and improve the
family tare la to can your own fruits
and vegstablsa.
Now Is the time to act. Bend today
for the 4S-page booklet which outlines
the latest canning methods discovered
in the scientific kitchens of tbs Fed-
eral and State departments at Home
Economies. There is no chance to go
wrong If you have the proper Instruc-
tions Ten cents postpaid.
USB THIS CVllPOD
The Brownsville Beraid
Information Bureau.
Frederic J Has kin. Director.
Washington. D a
i enclose herewith TEN CENTS In
toln (eamully wrapped In paper \
or a copy of the booklet. CANNINO
IND PRESERVING.
Name ..
Stmt ...
City ...
State ....
(Mall to WaablnfUNX IX O.)
_ _
Bridge — by McKenney
By WM. E. MrKENNEY
Secretary* American Bridge League
The careful declarer plana hU
play of the hand aa soon aa the
opening lead la made and the dum-
my la exposed. but auch a plan
should always be subject to Im-
mediate change if unexpected suit
breaks are diaclosed.
In today’s hand the declarer
when he saw the dummy regard-
ed his hand as very safe. He would
have to lose one heart and probably
one club and these with a trump
trick should be all If the trump
suit broke no worse than three and
one.
Many players holding the South
hand would double a game contract
but North had been silent and
South did not want to tip off the
trump situation in any event.
The opening lead of the heart
two was won by 8outh with the
ace. and the jack of hearts was
returned West won with the king
and prepared to draw trumps.
When North failed to follow he
had to replan the entire play as
had could not afford to lose two
I_
Solution to Previous
Contract Problem
__ _ f
trump tricks and still make his
contract.
His next play wa* to lav down
the king ace and a small diamond
ruffing in hla own hand. When
both North and South followed he
iuffed a heart in dummy and led
a diamond from the open hand.
South was on the *pot If he dis-
carded West would discard his
losing club; so he finally played
the trump queen.
West overruffed and led his last
heart which he permitted North
to win. discarding a club from
dummy. North returned a club
which West won.
Declarer led hie last dub and
ruffed in dummy and now he lad
dummy's last diamond. Whatever
South played West had to make
another trump trick and fulfill his
contract. The play required care-
ful handling as the slightest error
might have proven fatal.
On Broadway)
• MAN ABOUT TOWN '
The next marriage threat hi th*
Roomy*It tribe is the baby of the
family (John) end Adelaida Mot-
fett Brooke. whose young fmn
fall from theii 14Ui f.oor home on
Park Avenue several months ago...
Be prepared for sn earning flash
regarding the Leopold Stokowskis
Her chums in the Orient (from
where she returned via Ban Fran-
cisco Thursday). Fear they will go
to the courts... Bill Shakespeare.
ex-Notre Dame gridiron star will
middle-aisle it with a Chicago
doctor* daughter in October.. The
Ixrnis Cameras (Natalia Schaeffer)
have decided to have It molted in
- few months His current comfort-
er is Joan Castle.. Robert Mlxxy of
New York (who was with her th* v
night of her stlckup) and Oypsy
Rom Lm will be married in Holly-
wood next month...The Earl
Spencer-Norma Johnson marriage
plan* were first announced here
November ttrd. 1931
Tony Sanford producer of the
Valle* hours fell down subway stops
a few wMks ago. and has been
working since...They just dlscov-
cred he has e fractured ekull...Th*
Stork Club's hatchecker eyeful.
Bobby and T. Van Dolan of the
Stock Exchange are elopement -
thinking.. Why think? ... Stella
Adler one of the better New York
stage e motors. la under contract to
Emmanuel Cohen th* film produ-
cer. He nye he will make her An-
other Oarbo. but will change flhr
name as it is too Jonah...Bflfe
hardt wasn't Irish toots... Pis-
cine Larrimore. now in London and
recently reported betrothed to a
Scotsman says she ha* cancelled
the whole Idea...Gloria Bakers
latest is Horaoe Holland .. Romeo
Roosevelt end Juliet DuPont added
200 name* of young people to their
wedding—to It will have ‘some
pep."
Craee Field* the. Rrttkh. alar
and Monte Banka of the 30th Cen-
tury Fox staff have been roman-
clnc quietly via the mails since they
met recently...Monte she tells
intimates is the first man she ever
met who doesn’t want her money
success or prestige—he’s had them
all. Stephen Fuld wishes Bectra
Bowmen. Texas heiress would
marry him when she returns from
the old country. A lot of other fel-
lers wish she doesn’t.. Constance
Thurlow and Young Bernte Ridder
are figuring a way.. Bill Cava-
naugh and Nancy Miller are bub-
bling over. too...Mrs M H Ayles-
worth U so much better after being
ill too long... The Larry Doyles
parted over a*Year. have reconciled
.. Martm and Helen Brooka of the
too. too set—are a Renote
Now that the hehy has arrtveC
the Louie Reynolds (Hsian Fortes-
cue > ere cancelling their planned
abrogation ... Rumors have the
Fred Astaires 4'lng. Because. In-
timates sey. that’s why the Henry
Worthing Bulls are heading West
soon—Mrs. Astaire being their fa-
vorite niece ..Is the former Mrs.
Eugene Van Rensselaer Thayer
going to middle-aisle It with Vla-
dlm Makaroff In the Pall?.. Mrs
Sumner Taylor la recuptng at
Rooaevelt Hosp after a major op ..
The Broadway spots the big ones
are playing to as few as 35 people
a night.. Glen Island Casino. Ri-
viera and Surfside. distant placet
are hogging the bis ... Mrs. Dick
Powell (Joan Blondelll may become
a mater sooner than suppoasd.
Miriam Hopkins and Asian Lit*
vak make love right out loud in
coast cafes... Ex-Prlneaaa Rosalie
Mellkoff. just unwound *rom Cmn*-
ton Alsop li to brtfel K ajltt
shortly . Helen Bull Is RenovaitKf
Henry T. Richardson who has al-
ready found a new interest ..
George Atwell will be Peggy Mof-
fett's next when her divorce from
Jay Carlisle. Jr.. Is final.. The Na-
thaniel Wheelers (heir to the sew-
ing machine millions 1 will have
their bundle from heaven In Aug-
ust . Marlon O’Neil has assured
Oeorge Lowther. III. he’s the only
one who matters Shucks!.. Doro-
thy Mallory and Bob Durham art
a merger threat... “Wake Up and
Live” In It# first 10 weeks grosaed
one million.
Francis De teles who played
the role of “Babyface Martin'* in
“Dead End** Juat before It folded
and Elisabeth Martin daughter of
a Kansas City banker were seeled
last week.. Jack Reilly Is married
to the stepdaughter of the widow
Proctor and they art happily al-
! lanced — despite erratum In the
papers.. Mrs. Manny Wolfe who
divorced her Paramount husband
three week* ago. leaves for Broad*
way to resume her romance with
one of the editors of a dally ctnema
gasette.. They met on the coast
recently—and Ignited . luth Blerv.
petrol of the fan mag writers is
regaining her health in a private
sanitarium . Comm. Moss says ha
Isn't resigning—has too soft a Joh
Mary McCoratic Is still wandering
when and If she should break oft
from her 4th groom.. Dennis Clean.
Ion has demanded an accounting
of 8on)a Heme's earnings <a
mint) before bringing an sctlon for
30 per cant of the take. Claim* ha
has a contract etc. Tha late
summer fashions will be Influenced
by Honolulu vogues... Prank Joyet*i
widow and Charles Morrison arc
not so sure about marriage any*
more...W WUkerson has pur*
chased Club Seville In Hollywood
.Roy Del Ruth's direction of
“Broadway Melody" is Us high
mark— besides Soph Tucker tha*
Is.. Ok>ria Vsnderb'lt and A. C
Blumenthai are doing the oomi
spots toge’her—the first time th#
were seen in n-ib»'c since both wtra
smeared on N Y front pagea...
Claire Trevor and Tenninter Rinas
—havs it terrible!... Dontta Rr*
guson will be movie reviewer for
the new Review of Reviews which
lust married the Literary DigaaL
The first Issue Is July 17th . .Only
s few years ago In the Bormwh of
Manhattan there wart 16 dally
newspapers-and now there am '
only I
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 308, Ed. 2 Friday, July 2, 1937, newspaper, July 2, 1937; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1404971/m1/4/?q=112+cavalry: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .