Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 12, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 28, 1931 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR
.kMttRWansa.
“saggj
MUebM crSlud to It
votes ;»
'firxs
•»»«'•... __ _ „ ,
‘ ■ ;
The B31 Murray Boom
M ft formidable candidate
Democratic, presidential
pRI*ND6 of Oovernor William H-
Murray of Oklahoma are dtocw-
taf seriously the poaHUhty that he
may become
for the
nomination next summer, and yw<4
onjjr In Oklahoma bat in Texas and
Other southwestern states are indus-
triously singing the praises of their
hero. Before the winter ends, unless
they encounter too much resistance,
they probably win be organising
dubs and otherwise setting up the
machinery for a definite campaign
during the spring pre-convention
Mr. Murray himself is carefully
silent as to any presidential aspira-
tions ha may have fluttering around
in hie system, but he it not inactive,
fe Is not neglecting his official
duties as chief executive of the state
. of Oklahoma, and is still delivering
ultimatums on a quantity production
basis, but between fits is going here
there,, and everywhere making
■peaches and presenting himself as a
reincarnation of Thomas Jefferson
Xt may be that he will miss his goal
of becoming well liked
but he certainly Is becoming well
known. Sines that Is one of the
steps necessary to political success,
he is apparently investing his time to
good advantage.
Oovemor Murray, in spite of all
the spectacular fireworks Incident to
his administration, is a level-hesded
individual who knows what he Is
-doing. [Moreover, he knows what his
friends are doing, as they somewhat
timidly but nevertheless actively
..attempt to promote his presidential
boom. If he actually becomes a
candidate for the pomtnatlqnc it will
be safe to wager that he will have
formidable support.; If he Is not a
candidate, it will be because he is
lag to the beet knowledge available
And, most of the time, we acfept
their word. But we are always ready
to listen to some amater--*--*“
his Indications in unorthodox ways.
Of course, the amateur can be, and
often is, sadly mistaken. But we like
to listen to him. Just the same. The
tee used his methods for many,
many centuries, and it etia has a
lingering fnnrtn— for them.
\JLL
T
rV^ewpointa
convinced the support
able.
Is not avail-
Dispersing the Peddlers
rjOUNTY authorities are to be
commended for having dispersed
the group of peddlers who for several
months have been camping
streets surrounding the
courthouse and creating a n
with their business operation^,
should never have been permitted to
establish themselves there,
wonder is that they wei
to remain ao long, with,
absorption of parking
accumulation of Utter and trash and
,'ttietr general unsightliness, to say
nothing of their competition both
with the growers of produce and the
' legitimate retailers of it throughout
the city. I j _
• The public square has always been
recognised as the stopping place for
Taman end other produefr* who
BOOTLEG GASOLINE
BOSTON TRANSCRIPT: We ad-
** verted a few days ago to extrava-
gant taxes on gasoline as stimuli for
racketeering, bootlegging and eva-
sion, but the subject is by no means
exhausted. A recent nation-wide
rvey of tax laws and other en-
forcement throughout the country
brings out the fact that In one state,
Oklahoma, as high as 9 per cent of
sollne succeeded In evading the
tax, in Texas 4\ per cent, in Illinois
2, in Washington 1H and in Iowa,
New Jersey end Idaho more [than 1
per cent. In some of the Mississippi
counties, where the evasion ran as
high as Sty per cent, the direct cause
was the imposition of local, county
motor fuel taxes, which had climbed
to 7c a gallon. Gasoline was being
bootlegged from Louisiana and other
counties where only the state tax of
5c a gallon was being collected.
About 10 per cent of all gasoline
used is tax exempt, including that on
farms, and here Is found a conven-
ient source df evasion. Pennsylvania
curtailed her evasions by collecting
from distributors instead of from
dealers, but even under the new sys-
tem It was found necessary to main-
tain s water patrol to stop suspicious
barges. Two of the most common
methods of evasion are hauling
across state lines and undue claims
for refunds by the farm trade; but
In Texes nine and In California eight
schemes of evasion were uncovered,
and so on down to quite a group of
states. In some cases the laws are
at fault. In others the companies
have made false reports to the state
suthorlties; but It is agreed that the
primary reason for sneaking the
taxes is that thCy have been made
too high. There Is a lesson In all this
for many Legisla
straw'
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28,1931
\
OUT OUR WAY
By WflUams
IflltfD ?f
mem
/•
A
A
OTING -
QENCER:
Senators and
Congressmen exprsps an opinion as
117HXELINQ
11 If a few
to tax revision, no
ntraw vote will be
required to ascertafci the lineup
There are thoee
the pound sterling
substitute for gold
tie.—Vlrginian-Pikt.
who predict that
will find a good
In Britain's met-
Latest Invention teems to be wage-
saving machinery that throws thou-
nds of dollars okit of circulation.
New York Evening Journal.
Which way wae prosperity headed,
that time it was re wrted just around
the corner?—Arkansas Gazette. -
t Washuiirton t
t Who’s Wbe aa
Nattanal
1 Why ta the *
MMB . {
. •
f By BERBER,
t a.-JITS
r PLUMMER 4
•
vyASHINC
young man
a movie star
American
A quiet, studious
ho looks more like
a diplomat Is the
vs eyes In
the 8ino-Japanese
quarrel.
Laurence Eustl* 8alUsbury. second
secretary In the American embassy
at Tokyo, was ordered Into Manchu-
ria immediately by the state depart-
ment when trouble developed. With
George Hanson from Harbin he waa
instructed to visit the* troubled area
and keep Washington informed,
and the Salisbury know» the Par Bast. The
•Bowed year 119 *“ graduated from the
University of Chicago with a bachelor
***** [of philosophy degree he elected to go
their i to the Orient. For a year he taught
English In Japan
A specialist on Japanese affairs,
he Is said by his superiors at the
department to be one of the most,
promising young diplomats in the
foreign service. His record thus far
hu been brilliant. In fewer than 11
he has climbed from the ob-
scure post of student Interpreter to
second secretary.
‘**^1 •*ie, •
S •. -VMbta
f}*n '* •*.. ' m
V*o,
-UT'ih
1 -
•«
LW.aear.wv..
BOPM TMiRW NEAPS Too SOON
J9t»*LUStatf ^
fllUtt fT fE* —air m
TOKYO. Oct.
of a
tatlon” of
mlslntrrpre-
mllltary opera-
ncumuiu-
ns along
border,
rations, .the
an unpleas-
as well as
lUOTATIONS
—
Is no crime problem in
cur land today, murder, thefts,
lust and lawlessness to the con-
trary notwithstanding
—Et. Rev. Ernest V. Mhayter.
• • •
'THE question of the relative guilt
x of brtbf'Kiver and bribetaker le
Of more than academic interest, -
-Edward T. Devine.
vyOMAN today values hereelf ae-
11 cording to the number of peo-
ple who love and court her. and
net b'* the real friends she has.
—Or. Oka Knopf.
• • •
FUNDAMENTALLY, the solution
x of the world crisis bails down
to the question of getting the un-
employed to work again, i,
• • •
MY fingers ache to produoe from
clay the works of art.that win
proclaim me as a great sculptress.
loan Crawford.
GOG
'THIS repeated cycle of accelerated
x Increase, climax, sudden de-
crease and increase again Is com-
mon to a great many animals.
—Johan Huxley.
RESCUED EMM MO
ITER Sll MORrnS SEN
; BALBOA. Canal Zone. Oct.
(JPV-Thrre Americans, steaming to-
OEUEIED DISCOVERED
IT SEMIS, GILILEE
Oct. 28 —
ANN ARBOR Mich ,
iypi—Th6 University of Michigan r-,™.
ward this port aboard the gunboat < Institute of Archaeological Rcseafcnj
8Hrra:nrnto today after their res- j announced today that an expedition^
cue from six months of shipwreck directed by Professor Leroy Water- gzo
existence on a lonely Pacific Isle,; man had discovered remains of what
wrrs trying to make up for enforced probably was an early Christian
tobacco abatin'nee with constant church at Scpphorla. ancient capital
smoking. i of Oallfe.
The castaways, clad only in loin Ths expedition first found • a
' Roman theater, existence of which at
the site of
unknown,
closed a Mosaic
tlons, the Japanese foreign mtBla-
ter, Baron Bhidebara. dispatched a
"friendly nbte of warning" to Mos-
cow today i equestlng the discontinu
anc? of trcop demonstrations
the Manchurian Siberian
The Russian demonstrations,
note said, krere causing an
ant effect on Japanese
Chinese troops In Manchuria
The Japanese consul at
Western Manchuria, reported
between 20,000 and *0.000
soldiers were concentrated
Manchull and in the vicinity
Pogranltchnaya. These two
are on the borders of Manchi
each end of the Chinese Eastern
Rahway, which runs through Man-
churia and provides a short cut for
the Russian Trans-Siberian Railway
between Chita and Vladivostok.
Vernacular newspapers here pub-
lished reports from Harbin stating
that Russians had sent arms and
ammunition to the Amur army of
Chinese and Mongolians, which has
at various times reportedly aimed at
establishing Amur aa an independ-
ent state with TSitsihar as the capi-
tal.
The dispatches said Amur troops
endangered Japanese interests on
the T ronan-Anganchi Railway,
constructed on capita) lent by the
Japunesf-owned South Manchurian
Railway
It was announced further that
the 8ou h Manchurian Railway was
sending an engineering force, ac-
companied by a small detachment
of trooi s "to serve as a guard" ;lo
repair (he Nonnl river bridge, re-
cently (amazed by Amur troops. It
will msirk the farthest point to
which Japanese forces have gone in
Manchuria since the restoration of
Rusao-Jiapaneee relations in 1825.
«■—t \ ' 1
Broken Treaties
Oct. 28.—(JP)—Japan de-
to lay before the League
Council as part of her
the unsettled Manchurian
a list of treaties which
l tends China has failed to
.
Is Useful Here
HORIZONTAL YEMTERDAY’H j AXMWRR
1 Wrong,
A Tanned skin
of e sheep.
11 Female horse.
IS Most famous
football coach.
14 To think.
18 A white '
earthy sub-
stance.
1? Myeetf.
If Fixed course
of study.
II Honked.
20 Eccentric , .
wheel. . 87 Unit 2 Hohee'e neck
21 To attempt. 28 Closed autoc hair.
T2 Those who are 29 Jeet. 2 Wrath;
\J-\
IHJJlMiUli: lij(£ ■ 2jTlr-lri
nyij' nin-4 ie iiir«i
tin wir n arjH
: hi4W : -* :> «im; b
SQilH -WIJJli.H teaia
y U i*918 WOM OlriO u
iiWM IIIH 3®
3*iiiillJW WK!B
iiHiiH pone
overscrupu-
Iona
SS To flick.
24 Pronoun.
25 Boxed.
28 Alreraft.
27 Froth.
28 Press*'
28 To ant^a
SI To desire.
28 Minor note.
|4Flat-bottonief
ship.
22 Taciturn.
If Poor actor.
40 Toward.
41 To feel co»
trition.
42 Piercing, blat-
ant auto horn.
42 Foolish ol*
4 South
f Kicked.
8180 square
rods (PI.).
7 To side-si’
8 Data. _
44 Skillets. 9 Northeast.
45 Heritable land 10 Chief eprlni
ownerships. whfcat produi
45 Chief potato ing state la
state In \ TJ. S. A.
G. 8. A. v 12 Smallest state 42 First notOTa
VFRTICAI# \ In U. R A. scale.
1 Friendship. 12 Disposition. . 44 Father.
15 Minute opea- ;
tag of the skin.
If Race horse '
tipster.
17 Principal.
19 Boxlihe coal
ear. , .
20 CEque.
22 To Implore.
22 Floating lei
field.
25 Black com-
bustible min-
eral.
24 Harbor.
27 To run away.
28 Coal boxes.
20 Opea •
fabric
21 Acta of aiding.
22 Confined.
23 Body of water.
85 Calyx leaf.
Steed.
Caterpillar
lr.
59 Demon* of
- wif
41 Wa
42 Cap
monkey;
»
1
cloths, were found by the gunboat
yesterday afternoon on the beach of
the Island of Cocos. 550 miles south-
west of Panama. Their presence
there was discovered Saturday by
understood to be her re-
statement by Dr. Alfred
In a letter
lde Briand. chairman of the
that China recognizes she le
the League covenant to
treaty obligations.
The list is to be handed to the
Council when it reonvenee next
toM
Counci
bound
■A
■ ill
V
soon became clear that an early (nutted would go tooths J
Julius Fleischman, son of a for- Christian church once existed there, views of the treaty Question
mer mayor of Cincinnati, who 1*1 Sepphoru. only aa hours Walk The atitude as intimated is that
cruising to the South Seas In the from the home of Jesus of Nazareth, I jtpan ^ntw»' colder the sucm-
and a note signed by the three men Jewis courts, was located there. The interpretation Furthermore the
which indicated they had been on inhabitants of Seppborts took part Japanese ala prepared to _
In an uprising against Rome in 4 A. »u to become of Japan's interestsI Peadence now
D. and the city wsa captured and Manchuria while awaiting The nomic collapse for
Independence for Philippines at
Present Might Mean Economic Ruin
For Islands, 3ays President Hoovfer
WASHINGTON. Oct. 28—(A*>— Philippine sugar would
Two fixtures In the Philippine In- ruin of that industry.
ir_i — ---- ;---
mean the
dependence picture' are the cocoa
nut and the sugar leans
the spot 48 hours before.
The note said the castaways had
been
ask what *r
M
1 A THOUGHT
J
TJONOR la the moral conscience of
xx the great.—Sir W. Davenant.
V
Radio Day by Day
>4
to town for salt and who do. not sell
In bok to local retailers It should
as .Brown wood has
1 place where
who
with them. But
to the
selling hie
Mnsrant
One la
■nd the
• stock of
•toM is bought to ths
and offered for resale.
the other a
quare la
the establishment of
we believe the
to see that
by peddlers on
/ashington to
examination.
Salisbury's start in diplomacy was
to 1990. He had Just finished serving
two years to the British army as a
second lieutenant In the world war
When he presented himself at Lh»
State Department In Wi
take the foreign service
Five months later he was on hie
Kobe, Japan, to act as ah
With the exception of a
detail to the department In
Washington and a few months in
Paris, he has been in Japan ever
since.. He is now only 97. ■
He served at Kobe and Nagasaki
before going to the embassy to
Tokyo.
When William Castle, Under-Sec
retary of State, went to Tokyo last
to serve as special Ambassador
during the London naval conference,
he met young Salisbury.
It perhaps was Castle who se-
ated to Secretary Stlmaon that
Salisbury was the man for the job In
l
Authority on Japan
aahebury was to Washington last
month. He sailed for Tokyo on
5 September Ith and arrived there Just
about the time that trouble develop-
ed to Manchuria. Secretary 8timaoa
who ggg* bim to hit the traU immed-
we sew going to haval Hie years to Japan have made him
the squirt ah' familiar with the language and
lea1 toms of the . Jape
. Jaoanese fluent! v
or -
to the
earefully as they
He le tall, bespectacled and hand-
le. Hanson, his Manchuria trav-
eling companion, is an authority on
the Far Bast, too. He has had much
MaaSnria sSTkSi ‘pSSTmS wUl
rnme Is Central Standard
Throughout.!
NEW YORK. Oct. 28—(Ah—Three
orchestras are to replace for the
time being, ‘ Sto < organtoattoa built
up by B. A. Rolfe 4n three and one
half years of broadcasting.
Starting next year on WEAF-NBC
and continuing for four week*. Out
Am helm's orchestra from San An-
tonlo will play on Tuesday nlgbu.
Wayne King from Chicago on
Thursday nights and Andy Sanel-
la’s group from New York on Sat-
urday nkrhta. It la the plan to pro-
vide a variety of tempo to place of
the rather fast rhythm with which
the Rolfe orchestra has become as-
sociated.
Rolfe ii to take a rest tour
abroad.. . .
Try these on"yow*radio tonight:
WEAF-NBC: fl OO Special girl
scouts program; 8:15—Harold Lan-
in's orchestra, 8:2b—Olive Palmer
and artists; .8:9b—Ely Culbertson,
contract bridge expert, interviewed
by Orantland Rice.
WABC-CBS: 9:15—Ul] ton Roth
and PUaer orchestra; D:0b Miss
Pa tricola guest of the pfrsonallUes
program; 8:15—Oooeerti program
with Dtoo Borg toll and N rvada Van
Der Veer; 11:0b—RonuujeUl's or-
chestra from MontreaL
WJZ-NBC: 7:00—CoDe w memor-
ies by the Fireside Singers; 7:20—
Onnandy s orchestra i nd Oliver
Smith, tenor; 9:00—Rock sster Civic
Orchestra; 11:00—Mlldfed Bailey
and;the King's Jesters.
h-
Ann Harding Star
Lyric's Midnight
Hallowe'en Show
The Igrie Theater's annual Hal-
lowe’en midnight show win be this
year. "Devotion.- starring Ann
■ardtofl. This Is Ann Harding's lat-
est picture and movie-goers will wel-
come another chance to see tM+
great star of “Holiday
exhausud the supply of eoceanuts destroyed. It was rebuilt by Herod Hague court s verdict.
Ring The
Possibly
Ik B.IU Ui>v auK a l
Their nrveence irtgnt
*n In the mind of Prei
yesterday when hi
would r
for the
He wants the p;
'hilippine-s
their financial affairs to better
they strike out 'for
The cocoanut and the sugar cane
on that side of the taiaiwi and had Antlpas * the Herod of the New Tes- would be delayed for
SSSS4 * SH(^I VjS I ben . to the .pperenu
ssrj- ^018*° >«*»uch „^
Guns and fishing tackle, salvaged Plecentia. written to the sixth een-! _
fl^ slS to^r^ “Sherof Jesus, took place there!; MOSCOwT Ocl. M.-^-du.
months’ struggle to keep supplied mnd • Christian cathedral was erect- 'patches that Soviet troops were being
■ed to mark the Holy place. The - -..... ^ ^
Among the Filipino political Mad-
era, even those ldudest to their de-
____east.? have mands far to
President Hov- includes the
he said tode- immfdiat' independence Would
tie island ■> severe financial
and pains.
Some want independence to be
taken-like the average prescription
—moderate doses over a certain
period—until the Islands have ac-
customed themselves to the change.
mean an eco-
l&landv * , •
tail
■* * “ *'*' ' ■They have not been convinced by
IflshB
^mountain
streams, but later the dr*1 of the annunciation.
they had not been
quarters said
informed of
fish became wary of their belt. They I Apphoru was the moa: important j japan’s request that alleged^ demon-
built a dug-out canoe and attempt- Jewish learning to the sec- Jstrations be discontinued.
ed to fish to the ocean with not ond Caesar Constantius.Oallus. 18
much | was rebuilt a short time later but
Their shelter was a rude hut made “»ver regained Its former Importance
of trees and tightly thatch’d to modem times a school has
keep out an almost constant heavy buUt on the site of the church
rain. Tito Inland Is only 18 miles in R^abh theater, so excavations
rircum ferenpe. It was once s ren-, limited to vacation periods,
desvous for pirates. \ - I ■ " 1 “*
They were overjoyed at their res- r I n •
cue. A whaleboat from the Bwn. Coleman rUSOntTS
mento was unable to get to the
beach and the three men had to
swim to It.
Aboard the Sacramento they were
given clothing and tobacco, the
totter being one of the things they
said they miseed most during their
Robinson Crusoe existence. They
were much browned by the
sun and wind
sentiment for Independ
ence to cangrees.
There; are Americans who feel t
the c:
able
meat of the cocoanut. and sugar
make it harder for farmers to'this
ere are Americans wno reel'
: mpetltion of Filippino veget-
oils. made largely from the
of the oocoanuC and sugar I
.V
Will Be Delivered
To Pen Authorities
Hospital Notes
of Alvin
IS
Blanket, haa
major opera-
The Sacramento la due at
Friday morning.
Flashes of Life
COLEMAN. Trxas, Oct 28- 8p»
—Sheriff Frank Mills haa four men
tropic to the Cotoman county jail whom he
J expects to deliver to prison authort-
Balboa Met this week to serve penitentiary
sentences at Huntsville. He expects
others to be added to the list before
the journey starts.
Those to jail now, whose cases
have been affirmed by the court of
criminal app- als. are C. M. •'Fatty’*
Morris. Slim Dunham. Hauley
Tcwnsen and I. 0. Clements. Clem-
ents is a negro.
The case of C. W. Lawrence of
Oouldbusk. convicted of the killing
of Henry Underwood and given
___three years, hat been affirmed, but
Nugent blows j commitment papers have not been
stops. T7i i' raerived. \
Morris waa convicted of driving a
ear while intoxicated; Dunham was
convicted of liquor sale. Clement*
was convicted of assault with in-
tent to murder and Townsen was
convicted of burglary.
** The
PHILADELPHIA— Promptly ajt
12:45 p. m. every day a chow do«.
antecedents and owner, unknowi,
approaches traffic Policeman John
Nugent on Broad street and bariji
for the right of wap.
his whistle. Traffic
chow crosses the street, gives ajn
acknowledging bark on the oth*r
slde and trots on
ELYRIA, O —The path of glory I
leads but to the grave. It's the;
same with golf to Brookdale cent-! ^ _ _
etery. The dty sendee director has'
to pro^ul, the hen; Know jiut how food Cof-
fellow caught tfetag off a tomb, i£ ^ 1ir|i.n r___i p___,.j
Baltimore, Md.—High oost of!9*® ** when rreth Roasted.
medic*1 Tin, women spend! Order J. R. L. from Loon-
more for comities and candy. Dr.
J. H. M. Rowland, president of the
medleal and ehlnirglcal faculty of
Maryland.! told the state league of
MILWA
tors we
to love
came.
The midnight show will follow1 litlcal candidates
t write let-
advice to gentlemen
°** the phonograph
Kelley has two
"wrti on which she
vs Robert P. Melius pledged un-
dying affection. She intends to
present them to a jury and ask flO.-
000 because Mr. Melius didn't mar-
BUFFALO. N. Y.—Bilk-hatted po-
•yV
A,.
Sc
«*WW will start at 11:10 otkxk
i the
parade
GILLIAM DRY
GOODS CO.
0i Oar New
Dayton Lelfest, son _____
fast. Llano, has been dl ichatged aft-
er a minor operation.
Miss Ruthie Dabney,
been dismissed after a
Uon.
Mrs. K D. Nabors,
returned home after
ment.
Leon Adams, Ortod Dairy, was
admitted Tuesday night for an
emergency operation.! He to fet-
ing today, according to reports
Mgs. Mate Slade.; 1815 Austin
avenue, has entered' for a minor
operation.
**• *■ Harkierpad. Southern
HoMl, has been admitted for a
minor operation. •
arguments that there Is little com-
petition between Filippino oils and
American butter and oleomargarine
and that sugar from the islands
makes slight difference one way or
the other.
Filippino products enter the
United States duty free. In 1920. 72
per cent, of their total of 8122,000.-
000 to export and 1123.000D00 to
imports came to this country.
The far away islands had a fav-
orable trade balance with this coun-
try tost year of 827,650.000
Wowld Raise Tariff Wail
If the islands were freed, moa-
of thetr pr. ducts, sugar and veget-
able oils included, probably *ould
find a tariff wall to hurdle before
they were placed on the shelves of
American stores. That, at toast. Is
the plan of most congressional ex-
ponents of Independence.
Dwight Davis, governor general
of the Philippines, said frankly tost
•year that a United States duty on
AN AIK RAID
PITTSBURGH.—Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Damor acre enjoying an eve-
ning siesta on the housetop of their
home. Their peaceful rest was
rudely Interrupted by the sight of
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Meklas neigh-
bors, shaiglng upon them from an
•djotolng roof. Meklas was brand-
tohinf a chisel and hammer and ht*
wife a plank. The Damors were
beaten and Injured and have sued
for 820,000.
*
in buyinq..
you save in
■usinq
‘ BAKING
POWDER
h
n
15 ounces for 25t
• i
Safe
for Eyes of children s*
well as of adult! ^ 2
j
Since 1895, mother* the wodA
over have been using Meritor inf
theirown and their children ’$ Eve*.
This harmless lotion free* the Eyes
of school children from chalk dust,
and relieves Ere strain caused by
over-study. Use it daily to keep
Eyes dean, dear and healthy.
1m
tSl
—> ■
T
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 12, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 28, 1931, newspaper, October 28, 1931; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1024475/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.