OCR Interpretation


Brownsville herald. [volume] (Brownsville, Tex.) 1910-current, September 10, 1929, Noon Edition, Image 8

Image and text provided by University of North Texas; Denton, TX

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86063730/1929-09-10/ed-2/seq-8/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for EIGHT

f
[^toWBUCTDH. J
*\__COPVR>6MT uta, CENTPAL PgCSC ASSH IKC, ClgVtLAHO, OHtQ.
(Continued from page 4)
But Chatty's voice earned no con
viction. Billie paid no attention to
the defensive pretense.
“If it’s to do you any good, you’ve
got to be really honest. Chatty, dear
I love you. But I understand you.
You can’t hurt me any more, with
talk. You don’t mean to make trou
ble—at least. iSe never known you
to do It for the fun of making it.”
Billie looked at her. suddenly
keenly. Chatty flushed. Memories
of the diary, the anonymous letter
come to her. Then she tossed her
head. “The truth never hurt any
body!" flashed into her mind. She
wouldn’t admit, even to herself, that
she was a trouble maker, a busy
body.
“But you do make trouble—for
others and for yourself. Chatty
dear. Pehaps if you put it all
down on paper, you'd be shocked
enough to change—”
! Chatty sighed. She wanted en
couragement. sympathy, not sugges
tions that she wa sat fault. .She
changed the subject.
But when she get home that night
and shut and locked the door to her
room, she put a piece of paper and
a pencil on the desk and sat down to
write.
She did not write. She just stared
at the paper.
Before her eyes, words she had not
written took form
"I. I talked myself out of a Job in
die hat 6tore.
**2. I stole pages from a diary.
"3. I sent them where they would
hurt
*‘4. I got George Mayhew In trou
ble with Billie.
"5. I got Winnie into a mess with
Mr. Van Nuys
"6. I set all the girls In the office
at odds with each other, by gossip.
‘‘7. I told mother about Pud and
got him in bad with her.
*•8. I lost my lover, my dear, dear
Dave—by not being what he thought
I was.
"9. I listened in on his conversa
tions and made fun of him.
"10. I jumped to conclusions about
him and told a terrible tale to Mr
Van Nuys—’*
But not a word of this was writ
ten. And as each self accusation
rose in her mind, Chattv had a de
fense ready. She lied to herself and
believed It!
Some people are like that.
Chatty was one of those people;
sell-deceiving, self-deceived.
The result of sitting in front of
her desk for a bad hour was Just a
piece of blank paper, and a girl
who decided that she was much
more sinned against than sinning!
Every one of whom she had chat
tered had deserved all that was
coming to them! Every one was
better off. because of the things she
had told!
"I am not a chatter box!" she
said aloud. "I just tell the truth—
or what I think is the truth—and
EVF-nyg—■■ '
HBWBWCi
Well print you a Job that will
io your work ... do it effl
jlently and well. No matter
what it's size, always the same
jareful pains are taken with
t. Try us next time—well
lo it right at a price that’s
i
fight. Estimates on any job.
\
Recio Bros.
Printing Shop
722 12th St. — Phene 927
l Brownsville. Texas
_ •
that gets me in bad with everyone!
Well, maybe I better begin to tell
things that are not the truth!”
But there was no comfort In that,
because a still small voioe whispered
to her that that was her trouble
telling the truth and embroidering
and embellishing it with half
truths, untruths, things she just
thought or Imagined.
Chatty didn’t sleep much that j
night.
When she did, a tender little 1
pittylng smile chased her through
her dreams.
Once she woke up with the pillow
hugged tightly in her . arms, wet
' with tears.
She was crying, softly: "David,
1 David!”
• « •
She rose early, washed her face 1
vigorously, and tried to powder out
some of the lines and under-eye
circles. Then she picked up the
morning paper and began patiently
to hunt through the "Help Want
ed” columns for those who needed
PBX operators or filing clerks.
She needed a job right away. Her
, mother was still not well, and the
i sewing was. at best, an uncertain
1 source of income.
After breakfast she started out.
! “I’ll have a Job by night, mother.
I never fear!” she called.
The words were brave, but the
heart behind the ~ps was heavy
heavy with fear and a dull, sodden
I ache that had nothing to do with
Jobs or money or work.
Ii was caused by a little, pitying
I smile.
And Chatty knew there was no
cure for it. except its mate.
(TO BE CONTINUED)
MOWER
SIDELIGHTS I
TEXAS
Buster Keaton battles with rum
runners, navigates a burning and
deserted ship through a storm,
wrecks a theater and a night club,
and indulges in other strenuous ‘
and hilarious adventures in his
latest Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer com- |
edy. ‘ Spite Marriage," now playing
at the Texas theater.
RIVOLI—SAN BENITO
Her talent on the violin launched
Betty Compson on a theatrical ca
reer when she was a school girl in
Salt Lake City. Utah.
That same talent stood her in
good stead when she wsa assigned
to play the feminine lead in Radio
Pictures' all-talking, all-musical
production. “Street Girl." now
showing at the Rivoli theater. San
Benito for the last day. today.
Miss Compson introduces the
1 JWi j H Mg hIl V
— Now Showing —
The funniest honeymocn
ever screened. You’ll never
stop laughing — It's a fun
fest.
— Also —
Comedy — Western
Admission 5c - 10c - ISr
Sept, is appreciation Month
MEETING THE
DEMAND FOR
SPEED
I
4
ch>—————i
// 1ME is of vital Importance... Speed is the
r J bottle cry of business. Telegraph wires hum
with "hurry up" messages. Airplanes flash
their way across the continent with impor
tant mail. "Rush this through" is the constant
urge of shippers and receivers of freight.
"How quickly can I get there?" asks the
traveler. Success means a constant battle
against time. ... Speed is all important.
A rehabilitated railway plant .... rebuilt
roadbeds, new equipment, foster, more
powerful motive power and an armyof loyal
employes, perfectly attuned to the spirit
of the times—thus do the Missouri Pacific
Lines meet the demands of modern business!
To bo assured of speed with safety
and dependability, ship and travel
via the MISSOURI PACIFIC UNIS.
Dependable Service North lata avanlng deporturc
TUB Di AMEED *f01* ^°^*V
iriB aarly morning o'*
rivol at Houston and San Antonio, eonnaciing with
principal trains north. Through stooping cor sorvicn.
for particulars sea Missouri Pocific linos ogont
C W. STRAIN
Pauangar Traffic Monogor
HOUSTON, TEXAS
.. ^ w '■ tip,
PATRONS WIN
DRUG PRIZES
Three Brownsville Stores
Announce Winners of
Jubilee Contest
Three drug stores of Brownsville.
Cisneros, the Eagle Pharmacy, and
Willman’s Pharmacy, have closed a
successful Diamond Jubilee, the fea
ture of which was the offering of
theme song of the Radio Picture in
a violin solo. It is “My Dream
Memory." which already has caught
the fancy of dance orchestras
throughout the country.
CAPITOL
Eddie Dowling. Broadway’s favor
ite son. is a youth of boundless en
ergy. He not only wrote the story
for his first moving picture, the aJl
talking. and singing production.
The Rainbow Man,-’ which comes
to the Capitol Thursday for three
days, but he also wrote the lyrics
and music of the song hits with
Jimmie Hanley, and then plunged
into the work of production, as
leading mar.
Dowling, in seven years of mu
sical comedy, is credited with never
having been in a “flop' production.
He collaborated with Victor Her
bert and Henry Blossom, at the age
of 22. in writing “The Velvet Lady,’ ,
which played a season at the New
Amsterdam theater in New Vork.
Two years later he wrote “The
Greater Love.-’ the story which ele
vated Vera Gordon to stardom as
the greatest actress of mother parts
known to motion pictures._
, Uimann
— L*at Day —
“The Bachelor
Girl”
With
Jacqueline Logan
Educational
Comedy
Admission 30c, 25c, 10c
Brownsville
Today and Tomorrow
Charles (Buddy)
Rogers
Mary Brian
“THE RIVER OF
ROMANCE”
All Talking — Thrilling
America’s Boy Friend at
His Best
Extra A.dded Units
All Talk, Laugh
Comedy
“GIRL CRAZY”
Parasound News
Screen Song
“Chinatown, My
Chinatown”
Coming Thursday—
Eddie Dowling in
“THE RAINBOW
MAN”
AH Talking — A11 Singing
. . ;
Harlingen
— Now Showing —
SEPT. IS K<\0^ !
^ MONTH!
With
Ruth Chatterton
Clive Brook
William Powell
Mary Nolan
Whispers! Rumors! Gossip!
Tongues Wagging! Hands
Hiding Lips! What Is It?
The Handsome Doctor Flirt
ing Again! A Beautiful
Blonde! His Wife Knows!
Divorce! Scandal!
— Added —
The HU
Barbers Baby ‘
I’a lighter Daze
Movietone News
several valuable prizes to patrons
having the highest number of mer
chandise votes.
The winners are announced as fol
lows:
Eagle Pharmacy:
Du Pont pyralin set, Miss Custer
Yates; Coy L'Orlgan set. Miss Vera
Cook, Amity pocketbook set. Dr.
J. L. Rentfro; Wahl pen and pen
cil set, Billie McGuire; stationery
cabinet. Mrs. Del Perkins; Peach
Blossom toilet set. Miss Alice Crowe;
Miller Household rubber set. Mrs.
W. O. Washington.
Willman's Pharmacy:
Pyralin set. Mis* Carmen Puma
re jo: Coty set. Mary Margaret Cha
pa; Miller set. Mrs. A. H. Fernan
dez; stationery set. Mias Malvina
Garibay; Mrs. James F. Jennings.
Peach Blossom set; T. J. Rom me r.
amity set; John Young, Wahl pen
and pencil set.
Cisneros;
Pyralin dresser set, Miss Pauline
__-. .— i
The Valley s Perfect Talking
Picture Theatre H
ban Benito
Today and Tomorrow
fTDFFT
The show that kept New I
York Humming and “*■ * p
Cheering for Weeks b |M I
here at last .... IS **■ fH |^L^t
Radio Pictures Gorgeous Romantic Drama of the
Children of Midnight!
with
BETTY COMPSON
Ned Sparks — Jack Oakie
Joseph Cawthom
Gus Amheim’s Band
Cimini Singers
100 Dancing Beauties
Also All-Talking Comedy
Movietone News
Vitaphone Vaud. Act
Marler; stationery cabinet. Miss
Elodia Pacheco; Coty L'Ortgan toil
et set, Mrs. H. L. Thomas; Miller
household rubber set, Mrs. Henry
Barreda; Peach Blossom toilet set.!
Mrs. A. 8. Putegnat; Amity leath
er case, Sinfiriano de Luna. 2-Piece
Amity leather set won by Sam Perl.
BRITISH HEAT CONTINUES
LONDON, Sept. 9.—(if)—The un
usual heat which has scorched the
British Isles for the last few days
continued today unabated. A tem
perature of 88 degrees fahrenheit
was recorded over a large part of
England Sunday.
'Announcing
the Winnerg
of the prize* offered in the Diamond Jubi
lee Sale at the Eagle Pharmacy
Du Pont Pyralin set, won by Miss Custer Yates- Coty
L’Origan set, won by Miss Vera Cook; Amity pocket
book set won by Dr. J. L. Rentfro; Wahl pen and pen
cil set, won by Billie McGuire; Stationery cabinet,
’won by Mrs. Alice Crowe; Miller Rubber set. von by
Mrs. W. O. Washington.
The Eagle
Pharmacy
1135 Elizabeth Phones 26 and 693
ipiy * iiifii
1 The Guarantee’s i
Sale of Sales
I Begins Tomorrow I
1 Wednesday, September 11 |
I Ladies Shoes rfl I
OFFERING A FINE OPPORTUN
ITY TO PURCHASE SHOES AT
COST AND LESS, — FROM SUCH
MAKERS AS PEACOCK, JOHAN
SEN, AND QUEEN QUALITY.
FORMERLY PRICED TO $12.50,
NOW—
Children’s
Shoes
HERE ARE REAL SAVINGS IN OUR
CHILDREN’S DEPAR TMENT
ALL SHORT LINES PUT IN ONE
GROUP — TO GO NOW AT—

HERE IS ANOTHER GROUP THAT
OFFERS A SAVING —ALL OUR
SHORT LINES OF LADIES’ SHOES
FORMERLY PRICED TO $8.50 —
NOW TO GO AT
4
______ B
Men’s Shoes
PACKARD AND OTHER FINE
QUALITY MAKES RADICALLY
REDUCED.
(Edwin Clapp’s Excluded)
Z™.$5.90
Zz.$7.9o
Short line, in
other makes .. .. ^ 9 W
I The Guaranteel
I Shoe Store I
I 1231 Elizabeth Street I

xml | txt