Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 105, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 15, 1933 Page: 1 of 6
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SIX PAGES TODAY
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BROWN WOOD BULLETIN
— . / “ j" ■[ <*v %
A Home Owned Newspaper, Serving the Heart of Texas With .Today's News Today, Every Day Except Son day
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY IS, 1933
VOL. XXXIIL NO. 105
the weather and the
Legislature and the gasoline tax
their interest as topics for
there is always available
the subject of the costs of medical
care; and a distressed constituent
writes this technologist today to
his Interest in a movement to
the masses by reducing the
income ‘This humble
efttaen,” he writes clearly but briefly,
“believes that the doctors of-our good
city are charging too high for their
services. Why should a poor man.
and all others, be asked to pay a
doctor from six to twelve dollars an
hour for his services? It is too much.
lilt
“Why should there not be an
ordinance passed to limit the fees foe
doctors' services, and including
maternity cases? It costs to6 much
to be bora and its costs too much to
die and be buried, and it costs too
much to keep well while you live."
Tie sad, \ls true, slack and alas,
and It has ever been so. People who
JAPAN IGNORES LEAGUE NATIONS
--»... .. — - - - — ■ ..—.-i ^'' —♦1 * ■ — . —- —----o > i ■ ■ -
nrmnim nan i ......... nillnllrT n, aam S YYTY'LY ~ TIJ L—. .-rt
r
Getting: Ready for the Inauguration
♦—-—-
! BANQUET PUNS i
*
BY OTIS PEABODY SWIFT,
United Press Staff Correspondent.
NEW YORK, Peb. 15.—Regional
railroad consolidations “looking
eventually to a single national sys-
tem" for the United States kre re-
commended In the r^xjrt of the na-
tional transportation committee,
made public Tuesday.
The report is the first result of
four months' hearings and surveys
mw weflMnetimes wish they coidd g^the amm^ot^u^ich ***
5Sh*tb^eSiild1fiv?SCany°price ‘^°uld bc, **#*!?* and
• •I# where nfccssary, enxorcecL
| nxtrm mnK ^ nf ,, The report was signed by Bernard
T®"mOH 0M* medical care is ^ Baruch, vice chairman, Clark
_ ***5“*® wo,^rtn* Howell end Alexander Legge.
the medical profession almost if not jj urges such regulation of auto-
gjrtte as much as the general public m2tlve transportation “as is necto-
Thetw recently was compieted-and ^ l0T pubilc protection."
discussed in a fragmentary manner A minority report by Alfred E.
ftn this space—a five yean study oC smith, member of the committee,
the coats of medical care by a group expresses ‘ substantial agreement
of outstanding pubiic health leaders. Wlth that of the chart" of the
Ih which it was found there are too committee report, but voices a num-
many doc'ors from the doctors bt>r 0f the recommendations in-
•Undpoint. and not enough doctors cludin* oppoMtion t0 the c^nstruc-
ftom the standpoint of the public. tlon 0f the St. Lawrence waterway
Amoog other things it was declared u waste of funds.. AboU.
4 it ten per cent of the people can tlon of the interstate Commerce
m»t afford adequate medical care, commission, replacing it by "a new
and that adequite dental service is Department 0f Transportation,
toyood the reach of a little more headed by one man. or a one man
Wfto half the people. bureau In the Department of Com-
merce" also was urged by Smith. He
/In 1939 the American people spent disapproved' extending the Recon-
^ 6 800 000 for medical care, which struction Finance Corporation s
was $30.08 per capita. That is a power to make additional loans to
high figure, to be sure. The doctors railroads without full collateral. t
Justify their rather high fees on the While the report had not taken I
ground that in a large percentage of form at the time of the death of |
cases they ask but do not receive Calvin Coolidge, the commute^
them, being compelled to give free chairman, it was emphasized that]
Service to innumerable patients each “the committee has tried to carry on
year. Further, there really are too in the spirit of his leadership."
many doctors in the average small Eight Major Points
city, and if they should ask for small Eight major points were stressed
fees some of them might be seeking in the final document:
places in the breadline, [ l. Parallel railway lines and sys-
As Death Cult Went To Court
' One week from tomorrow, the an-1
nual membership banquet of Brown-
wood Chamber of Commerce will oe
held. Details of the banquet and
year's program for the organization
were discussed by members of the
board of directors in weekly lunch- (
eon meeting today.
Several of the speakers and enter- I
t liners have been secured and a
complete program will be announced
in a few days. There will be discus-
sions of trade extension, suggested
as the chief object of the organiza-
tion during the coming year, of
Browuwood as a market center for
cotton, wool and other products and
other things tending toward the
building of Brownwood.
The banquet will be held on the
roof garden of Hotel Brownwood and
tickets will be sold at seventy-five
cents esch.
Some of the plans for the ban-
quet program have been completed
by the program committee appoint-
ed Ifcst week, composed of three pres-
ent and three past directors, and
anotlier meeting of the committee to
complete the details will be held ou
Thursday or Friday.-
Printing Tickets
The tickets for the election of
BE POSTPONED
a a a •
terns were branded
wasteful.
TT WOULD NOT be practical for regional consolidations looking to-
* the city to attempt to fix a yard an eventual national system
schedule of fees to be asked by **** urged. ^_
doctors. There already Is too much 3. Uunprofitable railroad services
Interference of government in bust- should be replaced by alternative
ness. We do not know, however, cheaper transport methods,
whether the doctors are justified in 3. Railroads should be permitted
Kiting their own schedule of fees J? own and hand the Chinese authorities
either with or without agreement vices, but regulatory junnstion , w
among themselves so as to eliminate should be extended to water rates, manding -hey
and $• Governmental assumption of
On this platform franklin D. Roosevelt will become President of the ln a short time.
uni"«
organization. Other directors sug-
gested that monthly meetings of the
! entire membership of the Chamber
should be held for the discussing of
! business and activities. These
j monthly meetings could be held and
1 the board of direct:rs couid continue
* to meet weekly. Many directors con- •
!curved in this idea. ‘ j
TOKYO. Japan. Feb. 16—C/P>—
Japan served notice today that It
had ceased negotiations with tha
League of Nations in the Man-
churian depute but that its anti-
cipated withdrawal from league
membership Is not expected foe
about one month. * T
The Tokyo stock exchange was
closed at noon today. Osaka and
Nagoya exchanged also shut down
owing to a severe slump ln prices
caused by indications of increasing
Anti-Japanese sentiment at Gen-
eva.
TOKIO, Wednesday, Feb. l&->
Formal steps necessary for Japan’s
withdrawal from the League of Na-
tions will be started within the
next few days, the United Press
reliably understood today.
As soon as Premier Makoto Sal-
to receives the recortmendatiops
adopted at Oeneva today by the
committee of 19, he will ask per-
mission of Japan's leaders to with-
draw from the League, it was said.
The recommendations urged the
League to recognize Chinese sov-
ereignty over Manchuria.
Salto will call first on Prince
dl^fcV)r* arc,btlnK Prlnted today ana In a trance and gibbering “The Tongue," John H. Mills Is shown here as Saionji. last living member of the
will be mailed out at once to all he was carried to court at Inez. Ky.. for arraignment with eight of his “Oenro " or advisors to the grand-
^fn£dnq™d f0lY^'Vn lh* death cult sacrifice killing of his aged mother. The rope father of the present empeiorSsti-
arf £ _ and *1U go oa carded by one of the deputies was used tb tie Mills to a chair in the md* living In quiet retirement in
courtroom Hundreds of mountain people trekked to Inez to attend the a modest home ln a fishing village,
______freartP^ ■___Is one cf Japan's most powerful
figures.
ULTIMATUMS
TO BE GIVEN
CHINA SOON
BY HERBERT R. EKINS
United Press Staff correspondent
t PEIPING. China, Feb. 15—Japan
had an ultimatum ready today to
de-
withdraw their
troons from Jehol province im-
mediately. or threat of war
IS RECEIVED
BE BOETTCHER•
BILL PROPOSES DEPOSITORS IN
IEI
AodU Committee Named
. Chester Harrison. W. O. Streckert
and Will Talbot were appointed as
audit committee with Mr. Harri-
son as chairman. A financial state-
BY WILLIAM H. BAILET '«?»>'
I'nltrJ Pr» SUII OrrrH—SSiSt -111 h.
TUITIGNFEES
Alarm*. Texas. Feb IS—<>P>—
Proposed increases in tuition fees
at state-maintained Institutions of
DENVER. Colo.. Feb. 15-Claude ^ ^ To hl«,,iBr >«»rtilng have aroused cp-
K. Boettcher, prince of western at the b^Siuet. The portion of the student body at the
Industry and finance, hks received t aUo wlU ^ mime- University of Texas,
a note from the kidnapers of his JJJSEJd tnrsyearinsUad of being Hexvy increases in tuition fees
the element of competition-- , ^ „
Tn a tn t,fl i n n higVi layal for Sill of tll^En. RLll OT PGTt o! th( COS 15 of inefficient ; - - • uaiaunuu viua »v ai atowa^a «*
It Isn’t done successfully in any competing transport as a defense The ultimatum, the United Prewi son. Charles Boettcher II., held for printed as a matter of economy, boU1 °f resident state students and
other profession or business, so lar against, management,^is no ^ongei learned, was ont^of^s Mri” of^at ransom. .1 directors decided. bea^proposed In'^Wls StUitrodi»ed
S^Ypan^e hTre note never ChwIyT wSlTs? <S^Jd rad «0
litTry to the Chinese. _ _ _ Yn nublir but was re- Secretary Hilton Burks said he would. ^ th« bm*' woukl
as our limited knowledge goes.
^“^ucT^nn^ u*1 tj:Cm«u“rc-ssci^-
id three separate ultimatums all; ?^rnort, thnt ,w_g npw n(A- W1S tee at once tc discuss the question, student# and triple it t
Among thot
t^^i-T^nd should be provided such regulation
dav 88 “ necessary for public protection.
that no taxation nor regulation
SLi \y the people. £££
S.venTSri.eW « V”’
nd the « Wages and working condition ahy to Manchoukuo. the
direct! ln transportation were described as pci state
iffSrTrf tS? not within the scope of the inquiry.' 2 A demand 1
5L5 v!rnI?n2S frL^mlv 7. The report declared that air! Chang Hsueh-Uang.----
■Bhou0l It ha . been frequently bracon8 weather devices and similar mander of Chinese forces in North
patched and mended during the past ftUXllwriw w hlf traffic should be! China, withdraw his troops from
Sty-erven ycers^. ^ ^ mamtained at public expense and the Jehol front.
ISSUES mm th.. th. «ywy h* ,
warranted and should be abandoned.
• . • . jin general the waterways should
_ K. ,, nf ,-.l, bear all costs of amortization, inter-
♦SfJwn .g ^ maintenance and operation:
MTA there w“ “ the St. Lawrence waterway should
^ be tested against this rule, and if it h>rf ___________ u . w
which was a -tended by a number 01 , , ,>,• 'Mn/tinir , raa, v naa mice set»i*vc u> Reports that the
^ “ssr^nra ^ m ^1^
Bro^e Smith, a recent in a “rrasrinable period" the, Jes, Jrdav were d^cSdltS connection’
begin “large scale it is known however that a note I -:-*--- :
The ultimatums were understood ^ rrCeivrd
to comprise: | The new note development re-
1. A demand that Gen. Tang -■ immediately In a confereneo
Lin. governor of JehoL swear toy-. ln fhe offirj, tf Chirf of Pchce A'.-
^ M“^ho,,k,,A thP n,“w ' bert T. Clark. wh*h lasted nearly
tha* Marshal two h3urB- at th<* conc>»sion of
which Clark announced definitely:
report declared that air' tinang naurn-iaai^. young J^>hi*| >Th(, drpartnirnt expects to
make an arrest tonight."
'How many are to be arrested."
he was asked.
“I can only sky that we expert
to arrest t-mighti the same party
who has been un$*T suspicion right ,rhe United States Senate today
along." the chief j replied voted 58 to 23 to take up for con-
“Wlll you annbunee the text of Islderation the Blaine resolution to
the new note frqm the kidnaper?”
resident
on out-of-
An other bill would increase the
re*ident fee to $175 for Teggs resi-
He will ask the advice of Ad-
miral Togo, naval hero of the Rus-
so-Japanese war. Field Marshal
Uyehara. Counts Yamamoto and
Klyoura, Ex-Premier Katasukl and
Finance Minister Korkekiyo Tak-
ahaahi were also to be consulted.
The list included both past and
present leaders of the military,
parliamentary and royal household
groups.
Ex-Premier Wakatsuki is leader
of the Mlnaelto party. Approval
__ j of the Seiyukai party to withdraw-
al was regarded as ar^ired. as the
DETROIT. Mich.. Feb. 15-0*- “super-partv cabinet headed by
Going Into the second day of the Premier Saito has a Seiyukai ma-
extraordinary bank holiday that jority.
Governor Comstock proclaimed yes-
terday. Michigan's 900.000 bank
depositors were encouraged today
by promises that part of their bal-
ances would become available by
tomorrow.
GET PHOT PIT
! GUILTY PEERS
< _ _ ,
_ | air transport should bc encouraged. | 3 A demand that the Nanking
/"kN THE EVENING of February *<BUt we believe that every such ser- j government order withdrawal of
v15th, 1978, a* we have said, there vice should ultimately pay its owa
was a party at the home of C. M. way," the report said.
Scott, and on that same evening a g. The committee made no recom-
particularly charming little daughter mendstions on pipe lines.
was born to Mr. and Mrs. Scott. — ---
The assembled young people claimed _ y _ ** .
the privilege of naming the new- R$p. OvertOfl bay#
comer, and after much discussion
SENATE VOTES
TO CONSIBER
BLAINE BILL
•greed that she should be known ai
. llary Young Constitution Scott,
I which name she carried until she;
1 was wedded to A. B, Garret:.;
Today, therefore, is the birthday of
Earl Long Told
falsehood Tuesday
the Chinees troops ln Jehol.
The Japanese said at the lega-
tion they were undecided whether!
the three should be delivered si-
multaneously or at brief intervals, j
They said that it was realized i
withdrawal of Chinese forces in1
WASHINGTON. Feb 15—<j*—
"If the family! has received
new notes they have . not tur
. . , ,. ____.. . them over to me." was his ansv
Jehcl wtnild mean an optmHon pf -j.0 m knowledge, nothing
magnitude, hey <»er*Uons ^ ^ hpjmJ from the ^
Asked if it was possible
were not regarded of immediately
imminent. '■/"■*
Meanwhile the Chinese author-
her life and
residence on Avenue K.
Bister of Mrs.
Mattie Emerson.
• • • •
a falsehood when he testified yes
terday that Overton was to get
$200,000 if the proposal by the
Nashville Bridge Company to build
toll bridges in the state had. been
adopted.
Borne years later, on February
15th, in the home cf J 8.
Weatherby at Gold th waite, a bounc-
ing baby boy was born who since
then has become known to fame as ri 71
I. j. Weatherby. He grew up in LrOl?. t erQUSOU I O
and around Gold th waite, spent some
time as a traveling salesman, then’
Brownwood ln '1920, to;
erne to
supervise the distribution
of Ford
Give Details Of
Highway Shortage
AUSTIN, Texas. Feb. 15—(Ag-
itator Company products here. 81nce
that time be has made himself quite
useful ln this community, serving as1 Governor Ferguson announced to-
M'dent of the Chamber of Com-; day that she would send addltlon-
K president of the Rotary J
Club member of the Water Board,
director of the Citizens National
and director of a number of
other organizations and enterprises.
He helped build the Central Metho-
•Mt church, and otherwise hss
ff!ducted himself ln an exemplary
manner. He and Mrs. Weatherby
have three children and one grand-
•on whom Bert recommends most
■iMr- - ‘_
al detailed information tp the sen-
ate tomorrow dealing with her
special message of Monday ln which
she charged more than a million
dollars had been lest to the high-
way fund.
The senate plans to resolve it-
self into a committee of the whole
tomorrow to Consider matters sub-
mitted in the governor’s message.
FLYING CADET KILLED
MARATHON. Texas. Feb. 15-
Cadet P. Vlar; Kelly Field. San An-
tonio. was killed Tuesday when the
plane he was piloting crashed near
hare. Vlar lived at Lennox. Tenn.,
before joining the aviation corps.
He was enroute to Port Bliss, El fired through the
Paso, on a training flight. # home last March.
• t ■ f
order, but would again send firm
inatructiops to Gen. Tapg Yu-Ling
to stand his ground, and, If nec-
essary. fight.
Acting Premier T. V. * Soong,
here from Nanking, when inform-
ed of the Japanese ultimatums,
emphatically declared they would
be rejected unequivocally. Boom*
likewise reiterated that Japanese
troops would remain ln Jehol. and
“bitterly oppose any Invasion of
our "overeign territory."
The Japanese contend that Je-
hol outside the great wall of China,
is not a part of China proper, but
part of Manchoukuo.
kidnapers to communicate with
Boettchers without his know!
the chief replied affirmatively.
----
t THE WEATHER
TRIAL DELAY DENIED
UVALDE, Texas. Feb. 15—Dis-
trict Judge Lee Wallace Tuesday
overruled a defense motion for con-
tinuance of the trial of Lawrence
Latta, chanted with murder of his
wife. It eras expected attorneys
would complete selection of a jury
today. Latta Is alleged to have
fatally wounded his wife when he
door of their
BANDITS BURN
AGED VICTIM
; - • v
V - ,
TUCUMCARI, N. Mex.. Feb. 15 —
(JPl—Two bandits sat on a desolate
prairie early today and watched
their penniless victim, Lee Marshall,
50, a homesteader, sizzle ln flames
chaining and throwing gasoline on
him. then setting him afire.
After apparently believing Mar-
shall dead, the men loosened _ his
bonds and left.
Marshall staggered three miles
through zero weather to neighbors.
Physicians mid that Marshall was
probably fatally burned.
The Detroit Federal Reserve
Bank, which remains open, is re-1
celvtng millions of dollars from
Chicago and New York federal re-
serve banks.
The clearing house association
here has arranged to make $25,000.- j
000 available tomorrow, permitting,
dents and $350 for out-cf-stote depositors to withdraw not exceed-, _
Rodents at the University of Tpx-| lng flve p*.r cent of their balances. AUSTIN. Texas. Feb. i
STtoal^ --- i “ ch^of^r and^rimmaJ
levy a fee of $150 on resident stu-, - . ,T 1 1 assault and was amrsaed a life sen-
dents at the teachers colleges and, lllHarnPnT 1 RKPH III *•“* *»»
$300 on non-Texas students JUUglllCIll lORUl Ui vu indicted for murder
Student opinion at the University j * rv e>i 1 in the sUying of Edgar C. Arledge.
of Texas has been expressed as I K 1 MTk l University of Texas student, here
fctronglv opposed to the Increased *-*• 1 '• ^ v last September He made a con-
i fees. It was pointed out that many, } — fesslon after frnvner District At-
j itudcnts arc unable to pay them ip the suit of the State of Tex- tomey Brooks had. promised that
l and that hundreds are taking as v*. L. R. Clark, et a. judgment the death penalty would not be de-
|-courses now. owing to the lack of has been taken at the instance of manded.
employment, who would be barred District Attorney C. L. South.
If the rates were hiked as propos- Judge South came to Brownwood
this morning frrjn Coleman and
OppositicA also has been put while here went before Judge Mill-
repeal the clgh^nt^amendmont j lortJ^to^the plan ti)hboaa^he tor- er to rcqiirst^ that judgment be
The vote was
to a real test of the senate wet and
dry strength at this session of con-
gress.
Inapm. * ™i
if TOWN CAPTURED
\ nw nn^nuniinn
EAST TEXAS—Probably rain
west coast, frrezing interior ear.
portion, not so cold northwest to-
night Thursday partly cloudy,
warmer north and west
WE?T Texas Partly cloudy, ris-
ing temperature north tonight.
Thursday' partly cloudy, warmer
north anil eart
Brownwood Temperature
Maximum 58, mlnlmugn 29
Local forecast: Partly Cloudy, not
so ccld tonight. Thursday partly I that the six robbers were gunmen
cloudy and wanner. imported her* only yesterday
No Clues Founds
In Dinner Party
Rpbbery At Dallas
DALLAS, Texas. Feb. 15.—<>*—
After hours of investigation, police
had found no clues today in the
$3,500 robbery of a dinner party at
a Highland Park home here last
night.
Some detectives are of the opinion
BOGOTA. Colombia, Feb. 15—
{^—Colombian troops captured
the town of Tarapaca today, eject-
ing the Peruvian force which had
occupied the Putumyo river port
eight miles north of Leticia.
Details of the engagement were
lacking- This was the second de-
velopment in open hostilities be-
tween Colombia and Peru which
began yesterday* when Peruvian
planes bombed the Colombian gun-
boat, Cordoba, ln Brazilian Ama-
zon waters.
The Colombian foreign office to-
day handed passports to the per-
rcnnel of the Peruvian legation
here.
; ■ K"
Prison Sentences
Affirmed Today By
Coart of Appeals
AUSTIN, Texas, Feb. 15.——
Life imprisonment and 99-years con-
finement sentences against W. H.
Bybee and Harry Roberts, respec-
tively. convicted in Stephens county
for the slaying of Ollie Parks, an
aelgg preper-.
agsffistB
tended that Texas’ standing as a The Judgment as be;
first class educational Institution <*| by Judge South Is agifhst L. R
has gained in prestige as the result Clark, now under a two year prison
of large enrollment of out-of-state sentence for forgery, and John
entrants. The low registration rate Lewp, and J. T. Naron. sureties on
has permitted hundreds of stu- a $1500 bond made by Clark for
dents to come to Texas and en- his appearance in district court,
roll, thereby giving the University here last November 9. Lewis lives4
more and better publicity than it in Coleman county and Naron is a
could get otherwise, it was claimed Brown county citizen.
The object of the bills to raise
the registration fees was to make
the state educational institutions
Clark failed to appear In court
here last November when his case
was called and the sureties failed
10 Produc<f when requested,
only )W .na fUr th.t th, student S? th" Jtid^
who benefited by the education pav pointed out the
a part of its cost rather than force
U* ,ntlrc burden ou th, UM»y^. ’°£X ■£
state in bringing a beat his arrest
had to pay out over $190.
Clark was tried last week on an
Indictment charging forgery and
was given a two year prison sen-
tence.
Medical Society
Heart Talks by
Dallas Physicians
President Hoover’s
Arms Embargo Plan
Approved fly House
WA8HINOTON. Feb. 15—(ypi—
The house foreign affaire commit-
tee today approved . President
Hoover's arms embargo proposal
with an amendment limiting it to
the Americas.
officer, were affirmed by th* court, yond the
FEAFTING MUST GO
SHANGHAI — The day of great
feasts to commemorate weddings
and other festive occasions will soon
be past. Part of a Chinese economy
program is the establishment of a
Society for the Promotion of Tem-
perance ln Feasting. To Insure sup-
port of this society, the Kwantung
Government has imposed a 10 per
cent tax on all feast considered be-
appeals today .
means of those
glrix*
Tank Cars Not To
Be Spotted Until
Approval Obtained
KILOORE. Tex., Feb. 15—The
Texas Railroad Commission has no-
tified every railroad in the state
that no tank care are to be spotted
for oil loading until commission ap-
proval has been obtained.
Commissioner Ernest O. Thomp-
son declared here last night that
“we are not Interfering with inter-
state commerce, but are simply
using our authority to prevent shtp-
This plan," he
problem.
ment of illegal oil. "This
said, “solves a great
».* *
A good attendance of members of
Brown County Medical Society and
visitor* heard Interesting discus-
sions given by Dr. Robert B. Giles
and Dr. Curtice Rosser, both of Dal-
las, at the meeting of the society
held at First Christian Church
Tuesday night.
Dr. Giles conducted a heart
clinic and illustrated his talk with
numercus lantern slides. Dr. Ros-
ser led a round table discussion on
common rectal conditions. He fol-1
lowed an outline and answer
questions on the diagnosis
treatment of these frequent ail-
ments.
Those present were: Dr, R.
Loveland and Dr. T. R. Sealy
Santa Anna, Dr. Roner and Dr.
Giles of Dallas and Dre. D. R.
Scott, C. C. Bullard. O. N. Mayo,
E. F. Cade ahead, H. L. Lobsteln.
R. N. Smith. Ned 8nyder. Joe C.
Young. J. M. Horn and C. W. Drake
of Brownwood.
Officers Find'No
Liquor But Part
Of SHll in Raid
Sheriff Jack Hallmark and Depu-
ties Ivan Ellis and Chester Avinger
raided a house at 1707 Eleventh
Street Tuesday afternoon on a
search warrant that was issued on
the belief that liquor would be
found there.
' The officer* found no liquor but
did confiscate parts of a still.
Sheriff Hallmark and hie deputies
had to batter the doOr down be-
fore gaining entrance to the houses
Jfo nests were made.
• S
ygi
.. 1
Ik'
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 105, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 15, 1933, newspaper, February 15, 1933; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1040850/m1/1/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.