Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 59, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 23, 1926 Page: 4 of 8
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•T
TKunmvtM
i i iiAvaa waiNTiNa
Member Asm
' H«s Associated Press Is «
gefesag*^
^UbUSMERS
I rely «nUUM to tk* see
es credited to It or
Md also tm total
the character, standing
■ or corporation which
■ Brownwood Balletia
being brought to the]
4
Any error made la advertisements will be gladly cor-
sasdsd upon beta* brought to atteation of the publisher*
SJ»d the liability of this paper Is limited to the amount of
the pa os consumed b^the error ta the- advertisement-
tic per month; k.78
T coaaty. New Mexico. Oklahoma. Arhan-
* Louisiana, 7S« per month, alx months |4.M; one year.
p VVCCAl
r:fF>
£j*s- UNCONSCIOUS KNOCKERS
lUSE somebody knocked. Denlaon lost two
r * w: “proapectire citliens who* visited it wltk the
« view of making investments and becoming 1
Uiied with the bint bom internets of the
*** county." the DeafroN Herald reports. The
•*- goes on to aky that benisan is in no worse condi-
*n tldn than any of its neighbors, and that the few
vaount business houses there do not realty ikdl-
cate a business slump. “You can't convince the
i ;*i world that the town has a future or offers induce-
* v -pouts to iaveotment when the stranger is met with
a frown and tdd that he had better move on." Edl-
^ 1 tor KUis concludes.
1 There are not many downright knockers in any
com mu
almost
"7! almost ail other cities there are persona who knock
tunintentionally. It frequently happens that^a man
a ho ia most enthusiastic for his community is one
of Its worst handicaps because, ta his snthnstasm.
ho continuously complains ef conditions that ap-
i pmrently handicap the growth of the town and lm-
dede the progress of certain Industries and move-
ments. To the ears of the stranger, such Impatient
“^rpnplaint can net be dietiagutabed from out-right
^ fanlt finding with the town. Frequently the, town
enthusiast ia heesurd to voice complaint Of the work
ZZ that ia done by the Chamber of Commerce or slmi-
^ 1« civhs agenciea, by the newspapers, the city gov-
's- ernment or dther public and sem-puhlic enterprises
., , or institutions, becanso so msny things appear to be
■* » needed and so few Sre actually accomplished; and
» « every snch complaint. U heard by the stranger who
te' has come to look over conditions, sounds more-like
—- knocking t han boosting and gives evidence of a
Xf* tack of community nph-it
We ought to be careful about criticising indi-
r’ visuals or agencies w ho stand out with prominence
f .*£3!• community life. W« need to be cetttiovs about
publicly the abort comings of local in
SS-»i
leaks are to be placed upon an aU thd
cell doira. We do not expect to entertain so very
dbM^ gaeets in our Jail, of course, bat we do want
those- who must stop with us'tu be comfortable,
and to stay where they’re put.
There’s no use having a Jail unless U is a
jk* -rv, v • • .•
■ fV V • V 1
m wai
wm Xw
iSv
, sbouli
enterprtoei! that do act seem
S* much for the community as
d do We jilted to be ^discreet
•
to be
they
in Our Inter-
*»M«|lil IIH
■ ;> Contemporary Thought
Key ■■**». M»e|» ■»>!»■« e i . . .ys.
'A DUTY TO VIOLATE TO LAW “u '}
New Bedford Evening Standard: - ft is the duty
1 the citlxeu. says Clafente If. Darrow. to violate
« Volstead act. not only because the Eighteenth
Amendment was put over by a minority of the peo-
ple. but because that minority wrfs composed mostly
of superstitious bigot a religious taaatlca and pi«M-
ure-hating lineal descendants of tho Puritan wtteh-
huuterai
If Mr. Darrow defended violation of the law on the
ground that he wanted a drink—we do not know,
for t|mt matter, whether he drinks or not—bln PO«U
tion would do him more credit than the one stated
.Most lawa are enacted by a minority. , President
Coolidae holds Office by virtue of the vote of q mi-
nority of tbf electorate, even If he had the support
or more than half of those who voted. We dare say
that the people who voted for the members of Con-
gress supporting the measures wers a minority of
the entire voting body. . t -• ' , ,
Mr. Darrow'» other point amounts to a dtafran-
chisouenf of the bigots, the religious fanatics and
the Puritanical* pleasure haters. We have ao great
admiration for aay of thee# I species, but they have
in many civic rights as the reet of us. and we are
not Justified In flouting the law' because we do not
like the people who passed it. Neither esn we tee
bow It is the duty of a cltlsea who approves a law
to violate It simply because some other people do
not approve it.
< i o - .
FUTURE -lift CITIES*
Chicago News: There is s school of thought
which urges the abandonment of this big cities and
believes that electricity will operate to tkat end by
decentrslicing industry. But bigness in .cities has.
and always will have, greet moral and spiritual
advantages, even with radio, vitaphoaea and auto-
matic players widely used to democratise the arts.
Cathedrals, opera houses, aft museums, adequate li-
braries. aquariums, zoological gardens, fine hotels,
theatres, great dally newspapers and many other
desirable cultural Influences presuppose Mg cities
to patronise and enjoy them. Hostility to big cities
has been inspired by dislike of congestion, din. dust,
smoke sad ugliness. Science and public spirit should
be able to .rid big cities of all thoee obsolescent and
accidental features., '•> •/.
By Williams
I
p . ...........—
| course With strangers—discreet and truthftt, pro-
riding the information that is sought and refraining
m. Atom the expression of opinion* that might create
the impression that Abe city Is aot prospering and
h Oat ha people are not working together lh harmony.
XT TKKre ia not: a «nu l town anywhere that can boast
• v qT-faultless civi^ leaders or public eaterprlaes or
rt institutions. AO of them make mistakes.jione of them
&ahmtareq fatly up. to the eeqelremauls -of tho- critical
—- etafaas- Browuwood is sxtreaaely fortueste iahav-
tag.* citizenship that is unselfish and sympethstic.
^ ns^ expert ing, too much of the individuals sad inatl-
m: tutions who.are striving to servo the community, and
^sympathetic and helpful rather than critical. All
Mof u caa point out faulta and failures, and node of
us is entirely satisfied, else we would he a
aes stagnant community that could never hope to grow;
** hob we must seek to remedy the faults and overcome
the failures, and must, refrain from calling a*|+e*;
ta tion to them at the strangers come and go.
5 TV >---
£ THROUGH A VISITORS EYES'
MANY visitors come to Brownwood each
______— hotels being* filled to capacity
*’» tins* and so msny new faces being seen on the street!
Scientists have found relict of a losg race ta
Wyoming which prove that their users were farm-
ers Which is. no doubt, why they lost the race.—
Cleveland Plata Dealer. t
body being, vorth only
round, may hare been
women that they
' -TMd.story about a man
Me, now going on its as
started to conriu^e the
got a bargain.—Toledo
Daily Washington Letter
■l »»»M S'S
I
Senate unseats
h1
charges
A ORE*T
{%' day; the hotels being! filled to capacity all the
faces being seen on the
^Vev»nr day that we e’d-tlmers are beginning to feel
:w, Hhta.st rangers. ..
^ Occssionslly a visitor cdbies who has access to
tltar editorial columns ot a newspaper somewhere,
j^ xod it is always interesting to resd the coounents
made after a brief stay in this city. Such
» »a visitor.- who* came here recently, was "Big MU'’
Zdkitit*. who holds the two positions of District
iA-Oawernur of Rotary International and editor and
Uf**publisher of the Denton-Record Chronicle. He wrote
-r follows about his visit hera: .1
"This section of Texss is further behind In the
r«wgpr of rest:y good roads than 'any other part of
*’ tho western half of the state. Ia dry weather they
- -aren’t so hod. Just roggh. but in wet weather, very
- - wot" weather, such ae they are having here now.
they are almost impassable. A very heavy rain fell
* yesterday all over'this part of the state.
“Without making a great deal of aoiae about it.
has come to be a very considerable oil
Brown county production is now running
barrels a day of unusually high grade oil.
around 12.50 a barrel. The consequent income
4cu« -a lot to bring permanent prosperity to busi-
Institutions here, sad the development la coa-
". tiuuing With the-hotels full of men obviously Inter-
r Cited in the oil same. The town is attractive. Its
‘.ifcFOUt is distinctively different from that of any other
*-Stv ta i he state with which one is familiar. The
* trihuguUr streets In the business section keep the
visitor v rondoring at times whether he Is going or
7 Misi— but the citisens themselves do not appar-
ad if.
^"Brownwood la as educational cenur. Howard
1 Daniel Baker colleges are here, one a
ad the Other a Presbyterian institution,
have done a lot lor Brownwpod. both in
ai educational way and In. the day of a magnet for
atpmctinii high-type citisens.'
^ BY R0D\F.Y DI TCHER
117A8HINGTON. Dec 22.—the
VY Senator Arthur R. Gould of Maine Itta
will go down In the record* as aa Important prefe-
d»-nt
Gould’s flines* is questioned because of
that ha paid a brftm of f IbO.OOd into a political cqfn-
paitn fund in Maine’s neighbor Canadian proviuue,
New Brunswick.
It never has^hen definitely established whether
the Senate can or can aot expel a member for tur-
pitude to his private life, alihougu the Eeuate dekld-
*d 7T to ? that It cov'd sad would investigate a
Canndlsn. Judge’s charge* that Gould paid tha lirlbe.
Parallel cases in this country lend no guide to
the nreoeut Senate. Their history seems ouljr to
obscure the issue. Gould’s csss is altogether dif-
fer- nt from thoee of William B. Vare and Frank I.
•tmlthi+hn h involve primaries sad elactloos. Jj
V Thirty-three years ago a special session of the
Senate considered the case of Senator Wii'iarn N.
Roach of North Dakota. A resolution proridlng for
a committee investigation of the charges acainst
Roach similar to the preaent Gould investigation
was introduced by Senator George Friable Hoar of
Ma-.-iachusetts. who was bswlbd by Senator William
E ( handler of Near HauMIta
T There wets an allegation that Roach had. ta his
comparatively younger days, been involved In • an
tlx.ooo bank smbasslemnat ta ' Washington. He
moved to the Dakota territory ia 1S7* and started
life all over again. He became a mayor, a terri-
torial egislator and ran twice uneaceessfully for
governor when North Dakota becama a state.
He was then elected to the Senate, whither he
came In 18M. He had never been prosecuted on the the child from infections at the root
The last name of a woman who has won fame as an opera stager
will appear when the correct letters afs placed-in the cfirclds.
to
X
1*J
8s
.«! .f v
■nigrar as* sasdUgBC.
-
—^ r y «■ .........
Daily Health Talk !
EJW“’ JSirSttytE?{££tim I
".f isas
B..Um
EDITOR’S NOTE; ThU Is Ihe
third of g series of auricles qp
motherhood. '
4 _
THE proepectlve mother should
eat simple, easily digested food,
consisting largely of fruTt. leafy
vegetable*, cereals sad s little meat.
The old «uper*tition that s pros-
pective mother must eat for two.
causes a good many mothers to eat
too mm h for their eww- or the ba-
by’s good.
Overeating throws .two great s
burden on the already strained
system. f
Water and XUk
Flashes of Life
Large quantities of fluid are ! Persia g pale star;, to empire pass-
needed. The mother may take eight; ed away
ten glasses of water a day. awl From Harold's brow—bat he dls
at Jeast a quart of milk. Coffee aadi daifled to live!
tea may be taken according to th*[ Aubrey de Vqre: Waterloo,
babits of the mother as usually fol-1
lowed. fr. - *
Alcohol should not be taken dur-
ing this period, because there is
good evidence both from the labor-
atories slid from .psdfcsl practice
that alcohol Is a specific poison for
the developing child.
The woman should take outdoor
exercise without getting too tired.
She may do the usual housework,
but never carry oo aay physical ac-
tivity to tbs point at which she is
worn out! She should sleep aj little
longer at night, aod, if possible,
take a brief nap during the day.
' T%ie physician wtl' instruct the
mother as to tho proper steps to be
taken to avoid constipation.
The prospective mother should
her whole body with warm
water every day. sad should avoid
hot or coid baths. It probably is
best not to take tab hath* during
the last four weeks before the chIM
ia bora. Shower or sponge hath*
are recommended. (
rare of fmk
The old aaytag, "For evenr child
a tooth." hi associated with a lack
of modecn knowledge concerning
the cars of the teeth. Any donts!
work necessary to pr< serve the
teeth should be done daring the
early month*, but Mg John of re-
comtructhr^ dentistry should not be
undertaken
Infection* of the month should be
cleared up and teeth with abscesses
1st the roots extracted. The danger
to the nrospectlve mother and to
Real Estate Transfers \\
\ WARRANTY DEEDS
Mrs. Mabel Lawson et si to J. W. 40.
Bumpier lot ,4 block 2 Daisy sddi- 1 41.
tion. November 2. $4W. '4*.
1.1/HV have the Mightv lived_I Clyde McIntosh et ux to w. K. 44.
^ .hy L8 .h.y mit Wtoi »lq> j» ».l»w
I, II w .*«. wllb Id,. .r~k R to Mr. £
Fl.ld. ..ch .. Ibid.. rtmoTMlM. 1^2; H Iro" •urT'r :2-
Waterloo? December 17. $928. 50.
llopeleR* the lesson! Vainly ever
hath cried
Stern fate to man—’ So perish hu-
man pride!” '
Still must the many combat for the
- r
Still must the noblest blood fair
earth bedew; . \ * [
Tyrants, slaves, freemen, moulder-
ing aide by side!
On such a day the world was lost
and wop.
By Potnpey at Pharsalia; such a
day
Saw glurious Hannibal a fugitive;
Bo faded neath the Macedonian sun
TO IMPROVE OUR JAIL
T -if
m±. rx,E;
; grunt prida ta the Brown county Jail. It was a thing of
*lmnoty and a Joy forwver. tho finest Jail in Mid-Texas
-mk‘‘ ' —1 “ ^ Tbxns smd prpod of it.A
Borne smart prisoners*]
vHy eaay ’td Saw tho
*
and civic pride haa
.'slumped trsmsudously.
go it is, gratifying o note that the county com
♦ Ynisoloners hsre decided to make whatever itap^vt*
may bo necessary to kqep our Jail in Mood
i‘*oud*low. and to Fr«ld »«*• ,h^
T-lho heat *» tbls part of ths country. Brand
^ to b# taMuttotf. with<1#
^dwfn “Eivtlibhce^' aid the Mtta and soot
bonk incident and restitution was said to have been
mads: -nevertheless hi* fitness was questioned and
tfonnideisble debate followed introduction of Hoar’s
n-Kolutiou March 2t, 1892. Dut no vote wsa over
taken on the resolution, for some reason or other;
the charges were not investigated aad Roach served
from lift until 1898. He died ta New York ta 1902.
Argumi/it advanced by Hoar. Chandler aad oth-
ers 'probably will be stadled during the Gould in-
vsstlgntion.
. ‘ ; V,
hi 1798, the governor of Kentucky wrote to tV
vice president citing charges of "aross fraud and
perjury" ta a court case against Senator Humphrey
Marsha l of Kentucky. Public charges had been
brought against MarahiV. the governor said, but
it appeared that he never had been prosecuted. On
the motion of Marshall himself, the governor's pro-
test was referred to a special committee. ,1 j
The committee subsequently reported back that
Marshall n-ver had boon tried ia his home atttp.
where courts were beat able to Judge his guilt qr
inpoqeoce. that no explanation of this failure
try kfrk %ad been offered, that other Keqtucklaa*
CoV^ess apparently deprecated tho charges,
that “there is no prosecuting action ftota the
stitueacy.”
' Thyt 'dbded it and today Oou’d probably recal
the Roach and Marshall cases with satisfaction.
jpptorious simitar caaa before the Hous«
in ia ----- -TTFITI l-'W
jtad Representative Jamas Brooks of New
_ wers accused of•'kqvteR bribed congressmen
some years before their election to thd forty-second
Congress.
. Jh 1 petes 1 commutes Isvemigsted and Voted to
rttpef Amis and Brooke Bui the House Judiciary
committee decided that the House could not expel
of expulsion were
t or
•i
recall*
ta such a case—that Its rights
remedial rather than punitive.
Bo the House didn’t vote to throw out Asms aad
Brooks, but pasted- separate easotstiops of
condemnation against the. accused ceifreseat
of the teeth are greater than any
dangers associated with removal of
the teeth during thf early rabnths
“Bdo-Hur” WUl T
Attract Throng*
f L
The Chariot Race and the Sea
Fight in “Ben Hur" are thd out-
standing sensations of the cinema
world. Ramon Navarro as Jthe
galley alave and charioteer. Msy
McAvoy aa the sweet
Francis X. Bushman
centurtan. exert a potent
Usui on every spectator. This
magnificent attraction which cost
$4.0<K),oflo to product, will ho sesn
at tho Lyric on Tuesday, January
4th‘ ________
anoicsr, may
l Hathar, had
as the cruel
otent magne-
■ n ..................
illy The Associated PresaJ
NEW YORK. Dec. 23.—GP)—The
disclosure of a young womaa’a an-
kle to a juror to optional. Miss An-
ns Polsteln. suing for injuries caus-
ed by a fall, refused a request qf
the defendant's < ounsol aod was
upheld by the court. She won d
verdict for $500.
CAMBRIDGE. Mass. — Anybody
who receives a Christmas card
A Rsdcliffe girl should have no
opinion of college penman ahi
Two hand red freshmen were
ered to write holiday missives wit!
their toes. The purpose wsa
else to prevent fist feet.
1 r oate^l >T
WILKES BARRE. Pa -A judicial
definition: “A forceful, rhythmical,
uplifting, highly inspirational, ter-
plSchorean gyration of the lower
limbs, which . sapient legislation
has aot yet made criminal.’* 8uch
is the Charleston, a* described by
County Jndge Henry'A. Fuller.
BEVERLY HILUS. Calif.-What
this town nseds. in the, opinion of1
Honorable Will Rogers, the new
mayor, to "some good looking wo-
man to shoot someonq." . Ho could
pick the victim and he prepeee-i
enlarging the suburban Jail.
LAKEHUR8T. N. J—A marine
haa lauded here with the situation
tn hand—a kite balloon that ran
away with him. When a LAW foot
cable parted. Lieutenant Frank J.
rihlg refused to use a parachute
even; if the balloon did start toward
After a trip of eight miles,
auto, a blimp aad a plane
him. he lassoed a tree
with the broken cable. \
OIL AND GAH LEAKER
L. L. Hemphill et nx to J. H. Dav-
is interest 40 ajrres ft. T. 4k 1).
Railway Company survey, Decem-
ber 7, $10.
Mrs. H. Holeman et al te Lydia
H.~MacMullen % Interest 150 acres
Kerr county school lands. December
*. IL
J. H. Keller to Mac T. Anderson
V interest 4 *3-100 acres W. B.
Travis survey. November 1*. $1. {
T. K. Ward et ux to E. ft. Gehrke
▼4 interest 12114 screa J. W.
Dr ver. survey. December 21st.
I«». _
tsimGYXEvr of oil ash Ijan i
LEASER
A. J. Brown to Pandeni Oil Cor-
po ation all right* 100 acres J. J.
('Ifiland aurvey. November 10tb.
*,James H. Green et al to Bhiiler-
Davies Company all rights 23 acres
II J. Henderson survey. December
nJ $3o*o. K
Wl J. Halionn to C. B. ghafttr'
all rights 60 here* E. T. Railway |j
Company survey. November 32nd,
MOOO. . j
Tom C. Patton to Hugh M. Hen-
derson V4 interest E. T. Railway
Conipuny survey. August 1?. $1.
O. II. Bhoup Jr. to L. J. Ward all
rights 10 sere* T. A N. 0: Railway
Company snnrey. pecqmber 17th.
•HT- , ■; , ^ ^
HORIZONTAL
Fence formed with pickets.
Ptaaiw. I , -
King) of the hearts.
Sun god.
Opposite of sour.
Work of geuiui. r 1
Honest or just.
A monk in Tibet. •
Exists. i\
United into a company.
Cavity. .
Officious.
To perish.
Point of compass
To wander about.
Sensible.
Myteir. *
Corded cloth.
Stratagem*
Suitable, j
To correct and amend a writ-
Ing. , r '
Mather, j
Compartment in a house.
Organ 6f smell.
Jta!miH$Mm4. \ *
Mistake.
You and I.
Flame.
Cooked slowly. ,
Flower pistil.
, j VERTICAL
Level [ land.
Ventilates. 1
Quantity.
Within.
To concede.
Bone.
Shoemaker's tool,
harvest,
ath.
Political division i
To help, i j
Agricultnriat.
Scarlet. \.t
To carry. y
Cessation of axe. j
Italian river.
To-reDere-
Official statement.
Point of compass.
Ft: mg to horses.
Writing Implement.
Gets up. -
Hardened.
Ripped.
To promise.
Soft, deep mud.
To cut as grass. '<
Not bright.
Se< ond note in scale.
Fourth note in scale
* V
S
J
mkm/
Solution
Yesterdays
b’ zy.rv:n
4
ni] rjKiranKSib : i-
1 ULiM ii bM-u- in.
lanniw..*: L";nr-,n^
lw nisKnaEb1 —f-j
l(S)b’M L» All
3lll^Kll V
mu u«iawin: Nui a
1M UfflU -1:
irfianmnn
Useful Gifts
Girona Foyr Stamlard Portable Typewriter $60
L. C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter $105.00 and up
Dalton Adding Machines and Gmh Registers
........... ..............$100.00 and up
All makes of re-built and second hand machine*
at...................;.____$20.00 and up
\ Terms as low as Fire Dollars per month
| JOHN A. COLLINS. Factory Repr«KnUtrre
x* L. r. Kmlth A ( eraua Typewriter lam
x Dalton AddhMr IsritaSa
Phene J-711 say thus 1111 Yhte Et
nary kind—75c to $10.
Proimwood Floral Co.
Friday is Doable
£t*tavpDay» Paycash
and get S. ft H. Green
Stamp*.
—Roussel-Robertson
Company.
SPECIAL
OFFER
Special Tomorrow
; Special sale of fine plaid Blankets, beautiful color*, J |
; good full sizes, extra qultfity.
>4S1LK HOSIERY—
even it in
Ireland J
with an ■
purnulnf;
KATT WAGE INCREASE
DALLAS. Texas. Dt*<-. lo -<&)—
A wage increase totalling flbo.ooo
annually, effective January 1, haa
been granted all mechanical aad
car department employes of tho
laaouri-Kanaas-Texte lines. W. M
vice president, an*
bora todqy.
HE
CSTMfy
ROASTING
in jour
BEFORE
of the pecan.-Looney More.
C» 'Ti .■ i
New colors »-*
new beauty
for faded furniture
To prors the remarkable ease
with which you can renew a
worn and faded piece of furni-
ture with Acme Quality Bn-
smel-Kote, we make this
special offer for a limited time.
Look arooad you pow. Whet small
piece of flmiturc have you thfl*
needs refimshing? Make up year ‘
mind, thea tear out the coupon
above, siga your name and adttoem
on it ta pencil, bring It ta and let
the special 35c combination of
Enemel-Kot* bod brush.
We make the o6er only because we
want you to pet acquainted with the
wonderful finishing qualities of tho
world-renowned
fCME QUALITY
Palat^Varnlah
Stan the ce«$aaj|'and .'!
T bring
I \ Wayne Knit Chiffon H6se in ail the prevailing col- J ^
! ► ors, lisle top. k \
t A* AA IlMljfJ: IV.
■$1.39
;; Wayne’s Service Stoidtmg. extra quality, special at-!
i J Wayne’s Finest Silk Hooe, all the leaching shade*
l! and a full run of sizes.
■MR $i.» I ■
! > Military Brush Sets
> Belt Sets .......
| Fine Leathre Bill Folds
Wonderful Assortment of Ties
$2.50 “‘$31
Bofcd Street Broadcloth Shirts
■Hr" 'v * x
| Men’s Lounging and Bath Robe* all price*.
| Men’s House Slippers , • • 48*° ^
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 59, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 23, 1926, newspaper, December 23, 1926; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1027008/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.