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Brownsville herald. [volume] (Brownsville, Tex.) 1910-current, March 13, 1929, Image 2

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86063730/1929-03-13/ed-1/seq-2/

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WILBUR MAKES
MANY CHANGES
/ -
Interior Department Shake
up Startling to Official
Washington
By JAMES L. WEST
(Associated Press Staff Writer)
WASHINGTON. March 13.—(/P)—
Far reaching changes in the poli
cies and operations of the interior
department are being effected un
der the Hoover administration
with a rapidity which has startled
official Washington.
Although Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur
has been in charge of the depart
ment only a week, a new major
policy, that of the complete con
servation of* government oil in the
ground, has been adopted and a
series of changes made in adminis
trative officers with several more
to follow in the near future.
Joseph M. Dixon, former gover
nor of Montana, has succeeded E.
C. Finney, as chief assistant to the
secretary; Mr. Finney has replaced
Ernest O. Patterson as solicitor,
and three bureau chiefs are to be
deposed as soon as their successors
can be found. They are Charles
H. Burke, in charge of Indian af
fairs; Winfield Scott, commissioner
of pensions, and W’illiam Spry,
commissioner of the general land
office, who has been in ill-health
for months.
While the interior department
has been under general fire in
congress for a number of years,
friends of Dr. Wilbur assert the
changes in policies he Is inaugu
rating are more the result of his
own studies of the whole field of
activities of the department than
of any assaults that have been
made from the outside.
Senator Walsh of Montana, a
democrat, whose prosecution of the
naval oil lease investigations has
made an indelible imprint upon
i jn
I
R. L. Lackner
Jeweler and
Optometrist
Local Headquarters for
$30,000.00
In prizes for pictures anyone
can take. Enter as many as
you wish.
Developing, in by nine—out
by ive: but be sure and buv
your films from us. Fresh
ones on hand all the time.
Also Cine Kodak Films
R. L. Lackner
110 Elizabeth Street
Phone 641
congressional history, has question
ed the authority of the chief execu
tive to refuse to issue permits for
further oil prospecting on the pub
lic domain when congress in the
general leasing act of April, 1920,
said leases for oil exploitation in
that domain may be issued.
On the other hand. Senator Nye
of North Carolina, chairman of the
public lands committee, which has
conducted the whole series of oil
investigations and of which Senator
Walsh is a member, has endorsed
the president’s polio, and so has
Senator Borah, of Idaho, who
also hails from one of the public
land states.
Hidalgo Attorney
To Prosecute These
Injuring Highways:
(Special to The Herald)
EDINBURG. March 13.—Careless
tractor drivers, those who dump
prunings from trees on the roads,
and users of the highway right-of
way for irrigation ditches, may be
prosecuted if such practices arc not
stopped at once, A. F. Buchanan.
Hidalgo county attorney announced
Tuesday.
The highways cf the county are
being injured by such practices, it
is declared here and members of the
commissioners court have called at
tention to the statutes governing
these violations which provide fines
not to exceed $100 in the first in
stance and $200 in the second.
Violators of these laws are not
l only destroying public property
which the people have gone to great
i expense to provide, but also they are
subjecting themselves to a heavy
fine, Buchanan said.
BUSINESS AIDEdIBY
REVOLT, DEALER SAYS
i -
SAN BENITO. March 13.—The
revolution in Mexico may be doing
some damage to the business of
gambling house owners in Tia
Juana, as reported in the papers,
but it is benefiting the homeseeker
traffic to the Valley.
This is the verdict of a local land
man, who. when asked if the revo- j
lution is keeping any homeseekers j
away, replied. “No, they are coming
down to see it.”
REVIVAL CONSIDERED
HARLINGEN. March 13.—A three
week’s revival here by Rev. Ray
mond T. Richey of Houston is being !
considered, if the Valley Fair park
auditorium can be secured, accord
ing to E. N. Richey, brother of the I
evangelist, and who was here today.
Rev. Richey is pastor of the Hous
ton Evangelistic Temple.
No More Gas
In Stomach
and Bowels
if you wish to be permanently re- j
lieved of gas in stomach and bowels,
j take Baalmann’s Gas Tablets, which
are prepared especially fer stomach
gas and all the bad effects resulting
from gas pressure.
That empty, gnawing feeling at the
pit of the stomach will disappear;
that anxious, nervous feeling with
heart palpitation will vanish, and you
will again be able to take a deep
breath without discomfort.
That drowsy, sleepy feeling after
, dinner will he replaced by a desire 1
I for entertainment. Bloating will
! cease. Your limbs, arms and fingers
will no longer feel cold and ‘‘go to
sleep” because Baalmann’s Gas Tab- j
lets precent gas from interfering
with the circulation. Get the genu
ine, in the yellow package, at any
good drug store. Price $1. Always
on hand at W. G. Willman’s.
ASA G. CANDLER
DIES AT HOME
Coca Cola King Succumbs
To Illness of 2 Years;
Mourned In Atlanta
ATLANTA, Ga., March 13.—(JPi
—Atlanta today mourned Asa G.
Candler, a former drug clerk in a
country pharmacy, whose faith in
a soft drink formula brought him
millions in the manufacture of
Coca Cola. The 78-year-old cap
italist. civic leader and philanth
ropist died late yesterday after an
illness of more than two years.
The story of Mr. Candler’s rise
is a story of the romance pf
American business. As the pro
prietor of an Atlanta drug store,
more than forty years ago, he pur
chased the formula for Coca Cola
for a reported price of $500. and in
1915 sold his interest in the im
mense Coca Cola manufacturing
company for $23,000,000.
He was married, while still a
pharmacist, to Miss Lucy Howard
of Atlanta, who died in 1919. Soon
thereafter he was sued for $500,
000 damages in a breach of promise
action by Mrs. Onezima Debouchel
of New Orleans, but won the ver
dict after a lengthy trial. In 1923
he married the former Mrs. Mary
Little Reagan of Atlanta, who sur
vives him.
Mr. Chandler s path to success
was not without its obstacles. He
was ten years old when the Civil
war began. The family farm was
near the path of desolation spread
by Sherman's march through Geor
gia and when the war had ended
the fa^m was stripped of negroes,
stock and provisions. He did his
share of the work of reclaiming
the land, at the same time attend
ing the public schools. This he sup
plemented by the study of phar
macy and when he was 21 went to
Atlanta, Ga.. with a capital of $2.50.
Going to work in a drug store he
remained until November 1873.
when his father died and he re
turned to the family farm to take
charge of it.
When conditions at the farm
were such as to enable him to do .
so he returned to Atlanta and in j
1873 made his first start in bus
iness, forming a partnership with
the late N. B. Hallman in the drug
business. After four years he pur- i
chased his nartner’s interest and
conducted the business alone for
six years. I
Started Small
In April. 1388. Mr. Candler first
became connected with the manu
facture of Coca Cola and three
years later became the sole own
er of the business. Having con
fidence in its future he staked his
fortune in it and devoted all his
time to it. His first factory was
a small shed and he personally
stirred the kettle in which the
syrup was manufactured. The first
year the sales amounted to only
500 gallons.
Mr. Candler organized the Coca
Cola comnany of Georgia Febru
ary 22, 1392, and continued as Its
active head until 1911, when he
was succeeded his son, Charles
Howard Chandler.
In addition to his gifts to char
ity. which aggregated several mil
lion dollars. Mr. Candler’s life was
characterized by numerous in
stances of practical altruism—acts
which in their inception appeared
like tossing away money for the
benefit of the public. During the
money panic of 1907 he offered to
YOUR HOUSE NEED PAINT? .... THEN CONSIDER
On one end you went the hand
of a skilled painter—on the other,
pure had paint
The 31 aster
PaEVTER—there’s the man
who knows best how to pre
pare a surface for painting and
how to apply paint. Lead paint—
there’s the paint to give your
home 1009o protection.
This partnership has existed
for years. It safeguarded the
beautiful Colonial mansions cf
our forefathers... preserved them
for us to see and admire.
i The master painter today, as al
ways, uses pure lead paint, the'
kind made wdth Dutch Be*' white
lead. Look for such a painter.
Let him protect and beautify
your home.
Sold by leading paint dealers
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY . ,
New York, 111 Breed way Boston, 800 Albany Street
Buffalo, ! 16 OeJc Street Chicago, 900 Wert 18th Street nearest branch
Cincinnati, 659 Freeman Ave. Cleveland, 820 West Superior Ave. for new booklet
St. Louis, 722 Chestnut St. San Francisco, 235 Montgomery St. On painting— "i It
Pittsburgh, National Lead Ot Oil Co. of Pa., 316 Fourth Avenue ii u m r • r ,»
Philadelphia, John T. Lewis Si Bros. Co., Widener Building
Paint with LEAD..DUTCH BOY WHITE-LEAD
purchase from business men prop
erty they wished to sell, not at
panic prices, but at the peak prices
preceding that period. As a result
he paid out $1,100,000 in cash for
Atlanta real estate without de
manding sacrifice from the owners.
Aided Cotton Grower
When the World war cut off the
European cotton market and the
price dropped to six cents a pound.
Mr. Candler went to the rescue of
the southern cotton growers, an
nouncing his readiness to lend on
cotton up to $30,000,000 .n the ba
sis of six cents a pound. After a
large portion of the amount had
been distributed he took off the
limit and offered to lend as much
as the South wished to borrow.
In 1915 Georgia found it neces
sary to refinance an old bond is
sue, one authorized by the carpet
bagger government and which had
been repudiated by the state dur
ing the reconstruction days after
the Civil war. Mr. Candler vlfer
j ed to take the entire issue. $3,850,
000 at par. an unprecedened ac
tion in the South on the part of
an individual.
Mr. Candler was born December
30, 1851, on a farm near Villa Rica.
Ga„ the son of Samuel Charles
and Martha Beall Candler. The
family was of Irish descent, trac
ing to a William Candler of Callan
Castle, Ireland.
DAWES MAY BE
Former Vice President Ex
pected to Replace Hough
ton In Britain
WASHINGTON, March 13.——
Although he has relinquished the
vice presidency and returned to
Chicago, the question, what will j
Charles Gates Dawes do next, re- |
mains a subject of lively specula
tion in the capital.
Of course, it is known he has
gene back to his Chicago bank, and
he plans to go to San Domingo
soon to help organize the fiscal '
affairs of that nation. It is also
known he has been making plans j
to an to Europe this summer,
j When that was first mentioned, j
the inference was that his Euro
; pean trip would be a personal af
fair. Now, however, the idea is!
gaining credence that he will not
go as a private citizen, but as
• America's new ambassador to
Great Britain.
Alanson B. Houghton, the pres
ent ambassador, it is assumed, is
preparing to retire fom that post
and. possibly, from public life.
President Hoover is maintaining
his position that he will make no
diplomatic appointments pending ]
the arrival of his new secretary of
state. Henry L. Stimson. but he is j
known to have a very high regard
for the former vice president’s j
abilities.
REALTY MEN TO HONOR
NATIONAL PRESIDENT
(Special to The Herald)
McALLEN. March 13.—Real estate
men from all sections of the Valley
are expected to be here Friday,
March 15, as Harry H. Culver, presi
dent of the national organization of
realty boards, will be here at that
time.
Mr. Culver is from Culver City
and Los Angeles, and is making a
tour of the country, appearing be
fore realty boards.
SANTA MARIA BOYS
ENTER GUILTY PLEA
Weldon Shipley and Lawrence
Cornett, Santa Maria boys, each 19
years of age, plead guilty to a
burglary charge when arraigned
before Judge H. B. Galbraith Tues
day afternoon. Both filed applica
tions for suspended sentence.
The boys were charged with en
tering the store of Ed Cabler at La
Feria on February 22.
STOWAWAY HUSBAND
St. Paul. Minn.—James V. Corlin
testified in his divorce suit that
he was “just a stowaway” in his
own home because his mother-in
law insisted on living there.
“SCATTER MY ASHES”
London.—Edward F. Phelips di
rected in his will that his ashes
be scattered “wherever it is con
venient and most economical.”
MOFFETT STILL
AVIATION CHIEF
Hoover Reappoints Head of
Naval Department De
spite Opposition
WASHINGTON, March 13.—(VP)—
The veteran hand of Rear Admiral
William A. Moffett today took over
the control stick of ihe naval air
service for another period of service
despite the belief of a number of
high ranking officers that the po
sition of chief of the bureau of aero
nautics should be passed around
among officers.
President Hoover, however, has
reappointed him for another term
and this w-ill enable him to see the
completion of the five-year naval
aircraft building program. This
program was recommended by the
Morrow air board which inquired
into the nation’s air defense after
William Mitchell had made startling
charges against the administration
of the army and navy air services.
Whether the opposition to Mof
fett was made known at the White
Houes is a matter of conjecture. It
also is unknown whether Moffett’s
continuance in office was objected
to by some of his brother officers
for other reasons.
WEATHER SUMMARY
Barometric pressure was moder
ately low this morning from the
Rio Grande Valley northward into
Canada, and moderately high over
the eastern and far northwestern
states. Moderate to heavy rains
occurred within the last 24 hours
practically throughout the Gulf
states, and light Id moderate gen
eral precipitation thence northward
and northwestward to the Cana
dian border. Temperatures con
tinue seasonable to mild through
out the eastern half of the United
States, but were slightly sub-nor
mal in portions of the great Norh
west.
WEATHER BULLETIN
First figure lowes temperature
last night; second, highest tempera -
ure yesterday; third, wind velocity
at 8 a. m.; fourth, rainfall past 24
hours.
Abilene . 52 — — .00
Amarillo . 32 — — .00
Boston . ~>0 — — .00
BROWNSVILLE. 65 90 — .00
Chicago . 54 — 12 .01
Dallas . 54 — 16 1.26
Del Rio . 53 — — .02
Denver .. 22 — — .00
Detroit . 46 — — .00
Dodge City . 23 — — .00
Galveston . GO — 10 1.56
Helena . 26 — — .16
Huron . 40 — 10 .36
Jacksonville .... 62 — 18 .02
Kansas City ... 48 — 10 .32
Louisville 54 — 10 .02
Memphis . 58 — — .44
Miami . 72 — .24 .02
New Orleans ... 56 — — 1.32
New York . 46 — 30 .64
North Platte .... 30 — 10 .04
Oklahoma City .. 44 — 12 .02
Palestine . 50 — — 1.52
Pensacola . 62 — 24 3 90
Phoenix . 40 — — .00
Pittsburgh . 43 — — .00
St. Louis . 54 — — .42
St. Paul . 40 — — .28
Salt Lake City . 28 — — .01
San Antonio ... 54 — 14 .36
Santa Fe . 22 — — .00
Sheridan . 22 — 18 .58
Shreveport . 54 — — .72
Tampa . 66 — — .04
Vicksburg . .r4 — — .58
Washington .... 50 — — .00
Williston . 26 — 12 .31
Wilmington .... 53 — — .01
LEGION TO OBSERVE
10TH ANNIVERSARY
SAN BENITO, March 13.—Mayor
J. Scott Brown of San Benito has
issued a proclamation declaring May
14. the tenth birthday of the Amer
ican Legion, a holiday, and prepar
ations for observance of this day are
being made by the local American
Legion post.
V/. W. Housewright is in charge of
the committee making arrange
ments for the birthday observance.
LADIES NIGHT
HARLINGEN. March 13.—Ladies
night will be observed by the Ki
wranis club of this city on Tuesday
night, March 19. with a banquet at
the Woman's club building here, it
w-as announced following the Tues
day luncheon.
•! !©
•| "SINCE 1303 THE OLD~RELIABLE* i#
® 5 :i®
• ;:®
•1 EXPERIENCE ill
||: •
V ;; When you use the services of a bank you are
& |; asking that bank to Vvrork for you, and its abil- @
^ ll ity to work well decides the safety of your
Q!| money— *||
• i! •
®|! Your Bridge to Prosperity ;j§
your fence to keep out misfortune. You want • > ^
J? <! to know that the bank you patronize has learn- 1:1^
2«: ed how to do its work by actual experience.
w|; Make your banking home with this institution ;> ™
which has worked successfully with and for ]!w
£ your neighbors for 25 years.
$<: 1:0
A:; Capital and Surplus, $500,000.00 O
• \®
ImepchantsI!
bank];
Minstrel Planned
By Drum Corps To
Purchase Uniforms
Preliminary plans for a minstrel,
proceeds from which are to pur
chase uniforms, are being made by
the bugle and drum corps of the
Borwnsville American Legion post.
.Jimmy Holmes, who has handled
numerous productions of this kind,
has tentatively been named direc
tor of the minstrel.
Definite arrangements are expect
ed to be made at the regular meet
ing of the corps Monday evening,
according to W. R. Kiekel, post
commander of the legion. The
corps, which won first place in Tex
as at the national convention of
the legion held in San Antonio,
has been somewhat reorganized and
new officers elected.
New heads are; Captain, Hawk
ins White; lieutenant. W. B. Deer;
Lee Adamson; bugle instructor and
drill sergeant, Frank Bebon; drum
instructor, D. W. Price, and quar
termaster, Edmund Levy.
The new uniforms are to be of
j a West Point cut. Uniforms last
! year were furnnished by the city
of Brownsville.
O. K. SWITCH CHARGE
ON CARS FOR ICING
(Special to The Herald)
AUSTIN. March 13.—The state
railroad commission has entered an
order authorizing the Texas-Mex
ican railway company to assess a
charge of $3.15 per car for round
trip switching between the Texas
Mexican and S. A. U. & G. connec
tions at Corpus Christi and ice docks
of the city, on cars loaded with
vegetables or empty cars for vege
table loading.
CRIMINAL APPEALS COURT
AUSTIN, March 13—The fol
lowing proceedings were had in the
court of criminal appeals today:
Affirmed: B. A. King, Hopkins;
Sallied D. King, Harris; Glenn
Jones, Floyd; Roy Neaves, Hill;
Harley Holland and J. D. Pierce,
Comanche; Sylvester Gates, Wil
liamson; J. C. Smith, Collin; La
ruin Gunter, alias Buddie Gunter,
Collin; O. C-. Roberts, Hill; A. L.
Flowers, Liberty; Homer Motes.
Jones; A. H. Beasley, Cottle; George
Harland, Lubbock; Margarito Silva,
| San Patricio.
Reversed and remanded: P. T.
| Calloway, Lubbock: J. R. Sands,
i Wichita; Nelson White, Panola;
Dick Hazard. Comanche; T. D
Wooten, Llano; James Elliott, Cot
tle: Mollie Turner, Lynn; Ernest
Bridewell, Cottle.
Appellant's motion for rehearing
j overruled: Bob Davis, Hopkins;
i Roy Gaunce, Clay.
Appellant’s motion for rehearing
j overruled without written opinion:
i R. M. Fiatt, Mason; E. A. Dunn.
Wheeler.
BALL SCHEDULE ARRANGED
MISSION, March 13.—The base
ball schedule of the local high
school is now being arranged, ac
cording to Coach Kellam .and
though so far the only definitely ar
ranged dates are those with Fal
furrias and Pharr-San Alamo, the
others will be filled out as soon as
possible. Mission Eagles will play
their first game with Pharr-San
Juan-Alamo on April first.
Air Mail Carries
Crop Reports To
Northern Dealers
The air mail is being utilized by
W. E. McDavitt, Brownsville vege
table dealer, to keep his customers
informed, on Valley crop conditions.
The first air mail north from
Brownsville carried 1.000 letters to
northern dealers informing them
that the Valley cabbage production
had been over-estimated 20 to 30 per
cent.
By using the air mail complete re
ports on Valley crop conditions and
movement of fruit and vegetables
from this section can be placed in
the hands of northern dealers in
less than half the time formerly re
quired. This is expected to prove
of material value in stabilizing mar
kets for Valey products.
Roman Question
Treaty Is Given
O. K. By Ministers
ROME. March 13—t#*)—The coun
cil of ministers today approved a
bill which Premier Mussolini pre
sented for fulfillment or the Italo
Vatican treaty for settlement of the
historic Roman question.
The bill contains four articles of
which the first renders the treaty,
concordat and annexed agreements
valid: the second concerns necessary
' xpropriations; the third concerns
the financial consideration provid
ing for necessary change sin the
budget and the fourth says that the
bill, when made law, will go into ef
fect with a formal exchange of rati
fications by the Vatican and the
!fr.;y See.
The premier's report on the bill
and the text of the accord will be
made public tomorrow.
DR. CRUTCHFIELD TO
TALK IN HARLINGEN
HARLINGEN, March 13.—Dr. E.
I D. Crutchfield of San Antonio is to
i lecture here Friday night at 7:43
! at the high school auditorium, un- j
I der auspices of the women's eham- j
ber of commerce.
Dr. Crutchfield is an authority
on cancer.
He will address school pupils
during the day.
PRISON BILL IS :
STILL ENIGMA)
Joint Committee Drafts I *
Proposal But Moody
Disapproves It M
AUSTIN. March 13.—(A5)—A nighi
meeting of a senate-house confer- ^
ence committee failed to solve thi
enigma of prison centralization. ,
Senators A. J. Wirtz and T. J
Holbrook and Representatives A. P
C. Pctsch and O. P. Chastain la
bored late on a third prison bill
acting under instructions from thi tj
conference committee. The meas- 5
ure was to be submitted some timi 2
today to the full committee.
The compromise plan outlined be- _
fore the committee and arounc *
which the four lawmakers palnnec
to draft their new bill gives thi
state prison board of eight mem
bers blanket authority to locate anc
centralize on any of the 78,000 acre!
now comprising prison prop^’U^s i
without direction from the 1
ture. If farms now owned as
of the prison system, are found un
suitable for a concentration point
the board will be required to invest I
igate other locations and furnisl [
recommendations to the legislatun \
at a special session.
When the proposed draft was ex
plained to Governor Moody, thi
state’s chief executive disapprovec
it with the statement that thi
Young-Turner-Loy bill passed in thi
house earlier in the session, provid
ing for reorganization on either tht
Barrington or Ramsey farms, woulc
have been preferred.
Folders and Booklets
Skillfully Executec
This Agency, with a staff of skille
workers, artists and printers at it
comanind, is in a position to prepar
for you, folders and booklets of th> .
first quality. Anything from smal J
“flyers” or letter inserts to artisti
booklets and folders of the highes
quality and workmanship. We wil
be glad to submit “dummy” an
plans for your approval. No obliga
tion of course. James Advertisin
Agency, Inc., Hidalgo Bank Bldg
Mercedes. Phone 309.
BEWARE THE COUGHS
THAT FOLLOW FLU!
They May Weaken Your System nml
Leutl to Serious Trouble
You can stop them now with Creo
mulsion, an emulsified creosote that is
pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a
mcuical discovery with two-fold ac
tion; it soothes and heals the inflamed
membranes and inhibits germ growth.
Of all known drugs creosote is rec
ognized by high medical authorities
as one of the greatest healing agencies
for coughs from colds and bronchial
irritations. Creomulsion contains, in
addition to creosote, other healing
elements which soothe and heal the
inflamed membranes and stop the ir
ritation, while the creosote goes on to
the stomach, is absorbed into the
blood, attacks the seat of the trouble
and checks the growth of the germs.
Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfac
tory in the treatment of coughs from
colds, bronchitis and minor forms of
bronchial irritations, and is excellent
for building up the system after colds
or flu. Money refunded if not re
lieved after taking according to direc
tions. Ask your druggist. Creomul
sion may help you avoid flu, but is t
not sold as a flu remefly. If you have 4
fever, or think you may have the flu,®
see your doctor immediately, ladv.)
mo am so ml
CRE.QMUL5IUN
1 FOR THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG ON
_ _ __ '
I
A colorful Spanish shawl..I
how it flatters the vivid beauty^ *
of the dancer!. Everv woman i
*■' ** »- * —
knows that a spot
m. \ \
tastefully placed on hat or frock
-» AHe-' -**-"— * ** ■atlf"
may make the ensembleAYour
home may be given'this^subtle
advantage of color.! TheTcolor
ful blends of Face Brick} bring'a^tint^and texture to the home
<» -ft'*-* * v *■' '•*«* * •
that is unmistakablyychicTpiWithout£clash*or ^"splotchiness^
your Face Brick y walls?blendkinto’, the natural surroundings,
as do the tones of a rare old tapestry'. Nor need you build :
a new home fffrom the ground up’’ to gain this subtle color I
advantage. The Face Brick * veneering process enables you to 1
remodel with all the advantages of new Face Brick construe- 1
tion. To your great advantage are the books pictured below. I
1 a fl
May we send them? r 1
Southwest RACE OBIUCK Bureau
FIFTH FLOOR MAJESTIC BLDG. * * DALLAS, TEXAS
Southwest Face Brick bureau, Dept E-3
Fifth Floor Majestic Building, Dallas, Texas.
D Enclosed find 25c. Please send me your Plan Book of
"Charming Face Brick Homes.” Q Please send Free Book:
"Face Brick—Colorful, Permanent and Distinctive.”
Name..
Address_ ___
City__Stole _—_
kaaAaaAaaaAAAA44AAAa4a4*444444 4

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