Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 301, Ed. 1 Friday, October 2, 1931 Page: 1 of 10
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TEW FACES TODAY
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BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
Bnae-Owned Newspaper, Serving the Heart of Texaa Section with Today** News Today, Every Day Kxce pt 8nnday.
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with Today's News Today,
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4 VISITOR whose past record
** noteworthy as the position
is as
position he
now holds was in Brownwpod last
night and today, for a conference
with one of the local business and
professional groups. Thomas D.
Brooks of W%co was mavor of his
boom city and dean of education in
Baylor University for a long time
before he became governor of the
41st district of Rotary International;
and the experience he gamed in
those positions admirably equipped
him for the service he la now
rendering to the Rotarians of West
Texas. . Baylor University has ar-
ranged his duties in the school so
that he can spend about half his
time in the field, and fully half his
time is required in looking after the
administration of the sixty-odd clubs
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 2,1931
(\
1 i • - . ; /
VOLXXXL NO. 30t
CARDINALS EVEN SERIES
♦ * * * * M. r \ /* * ' * » *' * « » . + + ■* ' /' it M.
STERLING TH
IS DETERMINED
of the district.
•l * • 0
-
Mr. Brooks is called “Long Tom
for obvious reasons. As a name,
such a nai
mayor, or other public exsbutivc
named “Slats.” which proves there
tooT any such thing. Mr. Itrooks
isn't a mayor now, haring «caped
from the bondage of that pcsltion
a remarkable
rvto# dug idea
years. . Inci-
Tex., Oct. 2.—l/Pi—
8. Sterling intimaud
AUSTIN.
Oow-rncr R
as "SMm“ or even I l°day th*t »4nl— the Legislature
in which event he could o°w nearing he dose of Me second
have been elected ma or of extraordinary session, passed an ac-
Wa have never hear I of a cepuble Cong regional redutrcitliK
bin. he wouk reconvene it imraea-
iately and submit that subject.
“Don’t you think the people want
the state rearranged Into 21 Con-
gressional districts to make room for
three additional national represen-
tatives the last census gave ust“ he
asked newspaper men when they in-
quired if he, would let the legislators
go home tomorrow night.
The Legislature would be obliged
Veteran
iltmd Beloved Yachtstnan Dead
/ _• \ |- . i ' :
jW • • •
been
growth of the M
during the past few
dentally, such chibs are no longer' to quit next Wednesday under the i
known as civic, or luncheon cl iba as constitutional limitation of 30 d.\vs
they once were. In 1920, whin the for ex raordinary sessions, it had
local Lions and Rotary clubs were , set 4:00 p. m. tomorrow for sine die \
organlmd as the pioneer orggniza- adjournment after reconsidering a
ttons of the kind in this part bf the. previous decision to quit last Tue*-
there were not more than day night. The Ooveroor forced
twenty-five or thirty meh organic*- legislators to stay on 19 pass
ttons In all Texas. But thq idea river bed oil bill.
*T make the
redistrict the state and I
make it remain In session but I
reconvene under the e
and ttw» same constitution
redletricting In an emergency
this kind.” Governor Sterling said.' !
A motion was pending in the
Bouse at noon to indefinitely post-
pone. consideration of redistricting
and Within
a abort time the Klwanls chib
here and half a
' king and under
all manner of names appeared In
Ihxas with local organizations in
every town., '■ f .
Trims. once known m the lbh
district of Rotary Internationa:
ham divided Into three district*, and
this dtotrtet, thi 41st. now has
tosoattored all the way
to Dalhart Similar
Aona and Ktwanis
ids la recent years,
as that MMrtot governors of these
I DESIDES travelling- 1
I °Oovernor toboks wi
■ - ■ - * a. _ ana ‘
NS ANOTHER LEGISLATIVE SESSION
Dir GREETED
BY EDWARD 1. NHL
Associated Press Hports Writer.
SPORTSMAN’S PARK. St. Louis.
Oct. 3.—(A*)—The purple haae of
another soft Indian summer day
settled down upon the National
League ball park as the world
champion Philadelphia Athletics
sought today to beat the St. Louis
Cardinals attain In the second game
of the world series.
It was another good day for fast
ball pitchers, cloudy enough to keep
the sun in hiding most of the time.
It suited Oabby 8Meet, manager of
the Cards, too. for he had “Wild
BUT Hawaiian, left-handed con-
queror of the champions in one of
the 1030 aeries games, one of the
fastest pitchers in the National
League, primed to get back the ad-
TO CELEBRATE
Completion of the education build-
ing of the Austin Avenue Presby-
terian Church will be celebrated to-
night when members of the congre-
gation assemble at 7:00 o'clock for a
dinner to be served in the basement
of the new building There will be
several visiting ministers of the
Presbytery and other invited guests
of the various members of the
church. , ■
The building was started on June
14th and except for a small amount
of varnish will be oompleted by the
time the guests assemble, it was said
today. , .
Dr. Oeorge W. Fender, who rep-
resents the Board of National Mis-
sions of the Church as well as the
Oeneral Council, will be the chief
speaker. Rev. Pred 8. Rogers of
San Angelo, Rev. Bdwln Kerr of
to go to Vienna, which w
somewhere In Europe, to attend the
International Rotary convention, and
next spring will be con.pe,.-*d to _
to Seattle for a similar meeting. Met
doesn't seem to mind thee# trips.1
however, proving that he is a ntoe.l
agreeable man and that his expenses
are paid by the International organ- j
Motion.
• • * - ! *
\ This is an age
’there Is a club
association for every
any man or woman is unable to find,
a group whose function and person -
nel la satisfactory, the natural thing
to do M to form.a new organisation (
to answer, the requirements of the.
situation. The wonder is that in spite
of what sometimes appears to be a
superfluity of organizations, so many
things are left undone. Perhaps we
need mofe clubs to attend to the
ur.a'iei.ded tasks.
The motion was made by Repre-I
aentative John Mathis of Houston,
who charged the groats was
to "own' an unparfacted bill
the throats of Mfciae members
apply lug preaure late to the
*•
to:
districting bill was laid on
W. R. Poage of Waco, author of
present Senate bill, and Julian
Oreer cf Athena sponsor of
Sional redlstrictfng in the regular and
first called sessions by Mathis.
tne tnroau or
•‘SS'srs
UtMfci !■ and*
Sir Thomas Lipton
s Dead- In London
of oigsnlsattan. j
• or: society or,
y purpotrf*. and if
is unable
■tlcn apd
the natun
SENATE FAILS
NOIL
DILL Of HOUSE
AUSTIN. Texas. Oct 3-UPl—1The
Texas Senate refused today to con-
amendments to the bill
■ ♦
LONDON. Oct. 3- 4*. Sir Thorn-
es Lipton died hrre tonight
The 80 year old yachtsman. as
popular in the United States as he
was at home, became gravely ill
from the effects of a chill contracted
several days ago and yesterday was
reported near death,
j Sir Thomas Llpun was born at
• Olaagcw. Scotland in 1830 and was
of Irish extraction. As a boy he
ran errands for a ciungow station- __
> er and at IS moved tjo the United' *~at'-r front in
yed SB (trike orders
Longshoremen Fail
Accept Wage Cats,
f' Strike Continued
\OAIiVEBTON, Tcxav Oct. a—(jpi
—Lending activities mere at a stand-
t docks here today, longshore-
remaining
s’lll si
i nv n
away from the
_____________compliance with
! States, where he wa» employed as gtrige orders issued by union of ft-
a grocery store cierk iia a tram-car i clals tn protest against an attempt-
driver. as a traveller lor a portrait ^
ri’-m and on a pMnto In South. pepper, for longshoremen
xs issues, r
expanded until at the time of his
death, his firm ranked with the
(CONTINUkD ON PAON TWO!
cur in Hi use
authorizing the atatt to develop river
bedv for oil. and a Conference com- ^cwld a largest,
mu tee was appointed. | |T in recent years Sir Thomas Lip-
, medlatr special session unless the
■ tale were empowered to protect Its , the
sliare of the oil underlying the Sa
rer bed In the East
There are six or eight public
two colleges here, but we nave a tune
riF citizens of mature age who can
#1!her read nor write, There arej Lieutenant
forty or fifty doctors, but they have ‘ appointed to the conference commit-
been unable to banfth disease. There tee Senators Oeorge C. Purl of Dal-
werr consplctous by their absence
The San Francisco Maru waa the
on.y steamer awaiting cargo at the
Galveston docka tdoay. There was
no disorder anywhere along the
waterfront.
Shipping company Officials sa-
ne. > meed they were determined to
enforce the proposed wage reduc-
whirh would out the base scale
cents an hour. ‘ The former
<kni v
to fir.
it a first clan fire department, but
ire still have fire losses. There are a
great yachtsman won the ad-
miration and love of the American
Texas, people for hla great display of contract, which expired Sept. 30,
sportsmanship in n peau d defeats, t provided for longshoremen receiving
Governor Edgar Witt j *4gIS*u“ ®0 cents and hour and 18 cents a
- bale for cotton.
Shippers proposed to put cotton
taa. Frank Rawlings of Fort Worth.
Margie Neal of Carthage,
OLNEY OIL DKTLLER IS
^ SHOT TO DEATH
FOUND 81
hundred lawyers, and in spite of, Woodul of Houston and
them the courts occasionally send a
criminal to.the penitentiary. There
Walter
Waller j OLNEY. Texas. Oct 3—M*)—Mar-
Woodward cf Coleman. vin E. Bpilth. 42. 'an oil driller was
Senator W. R. Cous:n.s of Beau-j found shot to death at hta Home
are two banks full of money, but mont Introduced a resolution cen- ' here today. A pistol lay beside
most of us are broke There are four surlng .the purported r :marks cf ' the body. 1 •
service clubs, but we have a list of Governor Sterling, in commenting
community needs a yard long and on action of the Senate last Mon- {-f ......- 1 ,«,j .
little is being dene about It. i , day tn atlfting the river bed bill by
. * * ';* * . '1 rules which governed consideration
We don't Intend to be gloomy, as of legislation within 24 tours of sine
these things are mentioned, but to die adjournment. Sine die adjourn-
the contrary the purpose la to ment at that time had been set for
comfort those who think their own 8 p. m Tuesday. After the Dover-
Individual tasks are being accom- nor took! the legislature to task for
pushed slowly. Dr. S. E. Chandler;’--■ ■ ■
for Instance, has been seventy years *e.QNx«sfu«p
rpachlng the birthday he is celebrat-
ipper*
handling onrthe same basis as other
cargo at a flat nu* of 85 cents an
hour.
Union leaders pointed out that
due to the periods of idleness In
(CONTINUSD ON FAOB TWO)
on wane nvg>
i
rW-WMSiSS t Section Foreman Is
i8«Ci end a considerable part of his ,. ni IF* =4 -s
three score years and ten has been! ' DlQmcd t OT UCdtllS
t in Daniel Baker College, when?1
won and held the genuine
of the hundreds of boys
spent in 1
he has -i
affection
Of Four On Aug. 10
and, girls who have come under his
Instruction
2—GP>-
to sta-
aa to
ways was
Commerce
accident
ugust 10th,
Constitutionality
ot Tax Moratorium
Law Is Questioned l
styi influence during the WASHINGTON, Oct
marly years Of his amociatlon with yaUure of a section t<
the school. Likewise he has won the Uon his men In such a
gratitude cf friends end ^them to wfttch
l, patrons of the school, became of the hlamed by the Intersta
[ Aevoted service he Mm given to the Commission today for
[ fcietltution as instructor and presl- Wicket:, Texas, on
\genl. . (in which four section men were kill-
j! —.—— - - ed and one injured.,
DALLAS YOUTH INJURED The accident occurred when east
; SERIOUSLY IN ACCIDENT bound train number .18 on the Texas
^ CWHANNINO. Texas, Oct 3—UP) & Pacific Ralload Struck a motor
—Johnnie PlttBhgli, son of Mh. E. ear on which the five section men
O. ntahugh. of Dallas, waa injured were riding.
seriously to an automobile accident! The report blamed Section Fore-
on the highway near here today, man Dowdy, who was killed, for the
‘The car In which be waa riding accident. It said the testimony of
| with hla mother and three other the laborer who waa not killed show-
chiidren ran into A ditch when a ed all of the persona on the ear were
tire blew out | looking forward at the time and no
Tthe child was taken to a Dalhart provision had been made for a look-
hospital tor treatment out toward the rear.
1 '• • • • • • ’ ‘
quept ti
measure
tnvol
AUSTIN, Texas,
legislature’s “moral
taxes,
pending
ic conditions, had
its potency today
i eral James V.
the bill probably
tional
2—UP)—The,
on delln-
a relief
econora-
rehevad of
Attorney Oen-;
opinion that
unconstltu-
all taxes,
The bill provided that
except those due in corpora ted cit-
ies. delinquent to and including Oc-
tober 20 this year, would not bear
Interest and penalties If paid on or
before January 81. next year.
“I am directing your attention to
this act because it is my opinion that
its validity la so doubtful that it
cicrht not to be respected by the
comptroller of public accounts and
the several tax ooUaetors of the
state until its validity has been de-
urminrd by the supreme court of
this state." Allred wrote Sheppard.
“All county tax collectors hgve
given official bonds for the faith-
ful performance of the duties im-
posed upon them by law. For a
tax collector to accept only the
amount at taxes due and not col-
lect the interest and penalties
which have accrusd would perhaps
make said officer and hla bondsmen
liable for the amount of penaltias
and interest not collected by him
should House bill number 80 be held
unconstitutional by the supreme
court.
“In order to properly safeguard
the tax collectors of the state. It
is my Opinion you should immediate-
ly Wire each one ot them to collect
no delinquent taxes unless an to-
tersat and penalties due there-on
are.fully paid in aecordanes with
existing laws, and to disregard, in
its entirety. House-bill number 80
until its validity has bean
ed by said court,”
Estranged Wife Of
Slain Man Defends
Slayer At Amarillo
- AMARILLO. Texas. Oct 2.—UP)
—Mrs. Elnora Stanley, estranged
wife ot B. O Stank y. shot to death
here last August, today took the
witness stand in defense of John P.
Williams. ‘ her husband's slayer.
Mrs. Stanley said she was em-
ployed as housekeeper by WtlUan.1
on the evening when her estrang-
ed husband was slain in the front
yard of the Williams home.
, She testified that Stanley came
to the door and said, “I'm lookin?
for this man Williams." She said
be waa accompanied by four other
men. and that he stood wtth hli
hand on his hip. Williams, she
testified, asked the men to leave,
then went Into the house and re-,
turned with a gun.
Mrs. Stanley denied charges made
by Mrs. Ed 8. Eubanks, housekeep-
er tor Stanley and the state’s chief
witness yesterday, that she and Wil-
liams made themselves ’ obnoxious"
when they visited the Stanley chil-
dren on a farm near Clarendon, and
that Stanley had called on Wil-
liams to reprimand him far his
conduct
Williams waa on the witness atand
Just before noon. The story he told
was similar to the testimony ot Mm.
Stanley. He said Stanley told him
-we have come tore to get you." and-
that to Bettered his life was in
(CONTINUED ON WAOB TWO)
vantage the A’a gained yesterday1 Ballinger and other ministers will
trouncing Big Paul Derringer in the-1 have a few words, It waa announced
opening game. {by the committee in charge. Mem-
There waa every Indication Connie i here of the building committee, the
Mack, off to a great start in quest |__ ___■
of his third straight world cham-
pionship. would answer spef-j with
•peed. His logical pitcher
Jorge” Eamahaw. second oi
not always that, to the
Lefty Grove.
While an apparently Indefatiga-
ble band, strengthened by toe addi-
tion of a crooner and lortfied by
an extra day of practice,
ed the bleacher crowd
Interpretations ot the very
blues, the gossip filtering al
park concerned this same Oi
Grove’s
The lanky
dins la reported
•car an the tip of the
ot MB pitching hand and! there
seemed a slight chance that the in-
jury slight restrict his efforts to re-
lief hurling, at least until late tn
the anrles. Coupled with this sit-
uation was the report that Bam-
•haw, generally accepted as the
“Wild Bill” Wins
•ILL MALLAHAM
WUd Bill Hallahan. veteran south-
pa.w of the 8t. Louis Cardinals,
turned back the World Champion
Athletics today in the second garni-
of the 1831 World Series, giving the
faqs a wonderful exhibition of
pitching. By defeating the Macks,
Hallahan put his team back on ev-
en terms with the Athletics as the
teams depart for Philadelphia where
the aeries will be resumed Monday.
Flans are complete for the fair to
bqfceld at Bangs Saturday with the
cammituees In charge as follow*:
qnaror of the Oar-tflsasaral chairman. Mrs. Parry Eads;
today -nth a tots- Wtkttng, Mrs. Rpy Mafthews; cull-
f the middle finger rmry, Mrs. ~C8mKm
Using. MBs. Ohcatsi
rating. Mrs. Foreman; quilt, Mrs.
John totoa; textile. Mrs. A. B.
Myers; agricultural exhibit, Meant.
AJlcorn and Kennedy.
Clubs exhibiting trill be Bangs,
Concord. Clear Creek, McDaniel and
OroRvcnof. ' j
The fair will open at 8:00 o’clock
Saturday morning and continue
through the day. Sandwiches and
lemonade will be sold by the dub
women at the noon hour.
Judges for the women's depart-
ments. as formerly announced, will
be Misses Eula McFarland and Sn-
ells Clark of Brown wood. County
Agent O. P. Orifftn will judge the
agricultural exhibits-
A large number of Brown wood
people are expected to attend the
fair during the day. The Old Oray
Marc Band will play at the fair to-
morrow night, the concert to begin
at 7:30.
W DEFENSE1
; GIVEN FRIDAY
WICHITA FALLS, Oct.
Tot Johnson. Tarrant county nlgM
jailer testified in the 88th
court today that Oua Boyt,
the state’s star wttnssses tn
murtor triaLot
given bear kpoL ,
district totomiy. tn the
county Jatl after midnight on one
oecaaion when Boyt waa bung quae-
BIEL HALLAHAN
STOPS CHIPS
IN FAST CAME
_ Y.
SPORTSMAN’S PARK. St. J
Laeis. Oct. I._(AFi—Wild BUI
a. frail lesktog saeth-
» ttm am the Phlla-
A thirties to the 1838
rise, whlta-wMhed them
8 tod today to the second f*ma
to pm the 84. Lotos Cardinals
back to the thtek ef the fight
far the 1181 ehamptonahlp.
The following story Ot the eeoond
world aeries gamss ie by Alan
Ooukl, Associated Press Sports Ed-
itor:
lop up:
called.
Ball one high. Strike
one caned. Ball two high and in-
side. Bishop ducked away from the
plate Ball three high. Strike two
called. Bishop was out to Frisch to
Bottomley.
Ham up: Ball one tow and a fast
one. Foul Strike one It caromed
back Into the screen. Foul strike
two. Haas bunted and the ball
rolled off the third base line. Haas
struck out swinging at a tow fast
balL
Cochrans up: HMki one called.
Strike two called. It waa a bt«u^.
Ball one inside. Cochrane struck
out swinging at a curve.
No nma, no htta. no errors, none
toft-on baee. * \ '
|F|^| iHHflRCa
i ana, he swung.
>}
=2 jggHSKS
_ raced ie second .jas
tofeldh^ft \
hoisted to mm
was A.
i. state Tested its rebuttal tea-
wben court convened today,
opened its rebuttal with
on attempt to impeach the evidence
liven by Boyt. W. L. Hill, former
dty alderman and school board'
member at' Albany, Texas, and
County Judge 7. L. Kuykendall, of
Shackleford county, both testified
that Boyt'* reputation for truth and
veradty waa bad.
Jeese Martin, present district at-
torney at Fort Worth, testified that1
Boyt had told him that he waa of- 1
fend beer in the Tarrant jail but'
that he only tasted It because ttj
was green and too sweet to drink. |
Leo Brewster, one of the defense :
attorneys, took the stand and told ;
Bottdntoy up: Bottomley (lied out
to Haas.
No runs, one hit, no errors, one
left on base.
Sinupons up: Simmons drove a
long fly to Hafsy.
Poxx up. Ball one. inside. Ball two.
( CONTI NU BO
paoi eivgi
(CONTINUBO! ON PAM FIVE)
ANNE RESCUED
THE WEATHER
WBST TEXAS: Partly cloudy,
showers in extreme weal portion,
tonight. Saturday partly cloudy,
probably she wen in west and ex-
treme north portions.
EAST TEXAS: General* fair,
except partly cloudy and pmbably
showers on the const tonight and
Saturday: wanner in extreme north-
west portion tonight. Light to trash
northeasterly Triads on the coast
OKLAHOMA: Partly olpudr.
wanner in extreme east and extreme
west portions tonight; Saturday
pertly cloudy, probably showers in
northwest portion
ARKANSAS: Partly cloudy to-
night and Saturday; wanner tonight
tn north and central portion*.
LOUISIANA: Partly cloudy, ec-
ralns near the coast to-
‘Whistlers Are Morons,’ Says College
Professor, Thai Troubles Began as
Whistling Public Filed Protests
Editor's FfCto:
nutrias Gray Show, the New
Ted Ui
all the talk
aa that be
new hew to stop tt.
A tow days age he saM In an
HANKOW, Oct. 3.—-(Jft—Thrown
into the turbid flood waters of tho
Yangtze river when their plane
capsized here today. Colonel and
Mrs. Charias A- Lindbergh woaped
a fate that bad overtaken scores of
thousands of Chinese in recent
test. It
"ST:
why his
ORAY SHAW,
Pkttoaoptoy
rational
night si
and Saturdaf.
the eomt.
New York University
NEW YORK, Oct. 3-UPJ— The
dosing days of Bsptonibur saw a
strange event taka place in the pram
and pubUo Sttnd. The common fig-
ure of a man whistling became an
absorbing topic and, to on* notable
instance, waa twtoe turned into
front-page stuff.
The now decline in the
market, the nnatoailimn of the
pound starling. Eurooean unrest,
various unsolved murders and even
the world’s series oould not compete
wtth the news that men of tow
mentality adverttot this by whis-
tling.
The reaction of the. man who ao
innocently started this poychoiogi-
cal eruption was that of qnbonnrtad
' a mat-
been annoyed by
as furnished by whistling and. as it
were, just for the fun of it exptam-
ed the Idea that whistlers were mo-
rons. The response of the press and
the reaction of the public has been
of a nature puzzling to a psycholo-
gist.
The plane,
bearing
and Dr. P. Z. King
the Lindbergh*1
Chinese relief
. upset whan one wing struck
ter as the Colonel was.tum-
rurprtsc Behold how groat a mat-
ter a ttttto fire had kindtodt Tbto
man, which to only mymi had toof
the water
log to about preparatory to taking
off from the river on a flood survey
night. • ■ • • r
Tossed into tha swift stream while
The papara prtntad tha ttuff the!w*u3
editors thought the nubile wished to h ,onK with the doctor by a lifeboat
read. Tbenthe trouble began. The crew from the British aircraft car-
editors were bsaieged by letters of rier Hennas.
protest, a* was also the author of I The plans had just been lowered
the trivial idea. Ha to particular was from the flying deck of the Hermes,
burdened by mall and bothered by where IJndhsrgh had been keeping
■phone calls by people who protect It during hto sojourn here, with the
ed. Only a meer minimum took hla flying couple and the physician in
hatural point of view. The others the cockpits. They ware about to
revealed resentment j leave for the Tungting Lake region.
A professional whistler ot high re- 7» miu. southwest ot here,
put* demanded an Intelligence test. As the Oolonal turned the craft
A promtoent iqwywr ffled the oh- shout, the wing dipped Into the
jection that ha and his bar aaw>- stream and Us human cargo waa
elates were ever to the habit of.catapultod into the flood,
whistling m the bathtub. | Hennas low-red a life boat
ton ss strips rSoTSTth; z
™ K The accident halted the survey
TLmS*
Of ooune, tha jaded cotumntota ^ ”1 “ of
"* “"*•but (SSTSE
Tha idea stems to be jutt this- Ltad*
that we have been forced to read **“ M
to much serious ttuff about the
Plight of the world that a trivial “• . _ ___
remark about tha ttmbto but bad1 n w* that Colonel ami
their
and return-
habit of
tary relief
of life.
X? °"
The author
• Miwiwu uw
if from tha stress and i
Hardly anything else
««• tauws an too wel
and strain
can
a
wtth
an too well
unimportant
Re wtll ttart
aim, if only
planned to go
day* anyway
i tttapa for the
flight and that
was to the latter
11
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 301, Ed. 1 Friday, October 2, 1931, newspaper, October 2, 1931; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1024154/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.