Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 170, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 2, 1929 Page: 8 of 14
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1 i~ A CHANCE FOR ROBINSON
* RITTER protest against conflrn^on of the nonuna-
* tton of o. B. Oolquitt to «jeiahmhip In the P*^
J Railway Mediation Board hat fcaen voiced in m*°>'
5 <*uaner* Nineteen members of the Texas Senate sent
5 u formal and vigorous complaint against confirmation.
T and hvindrada of letters from representatives of afl the
parties in this state have gone to Washington in sn
* el fort to block the former Qovemor’s ambition to gel
* a 113.000 Job. Senator Connally seems to have taken
2 **°t utUe acUvt interest in the case, ■probably because
Z ftm a new member of the Senate and doesn't want to
* ** *°° consptdous. but Senator Joe Robln-
Arkansas. Democratic vtce-preaidenual nominee
* last fall, is interested in the case, and it is rumored
that he will oppose the nomination on the floor of the
8enet*.
If Senator Robinson wants to block confirmation of
Mr. Oolquitt. hs can 4o ao, in -all likelihood, merely by
, voicing his opposition in the Senate. The -Senatorial
* eourteay- rule enabled Bari* B. Mayfield to block
i confirmation of former Pat M. Neff, who had been
* nominated for the Mediation Board. Just before be
1 rtf4rsd from the senate; and Mr. Robinson can do st
* *** « much as Mr. Mayfield did.
« Mr. Robin top. moreover, has a heavy score marked
- »P Mam Mr. ColqUiU. The Dallas man was one of the
* leaden In the movement that placed Texas in the
Republican column last fall and brought about the
* overwhelming defeat of the Arkanms Senator in the
national campaign. It seems to be generally conceded
* that Colquitt's appointment is in payment for the
service he gave the Republican party in that campaign,
although he is named as a Democratic member of tbe
Meditation Board; and It would probably be sweet
2 revenge for Senator Robinson If the appointment were
* turned down by the BaagM,
However that may be, it occurs to ut that Mr.
“ Robinson has an opportunity to show that he is s
- much bigger man than Earle Mayfield, or than 0 B.
Z Colquitt, by refusing to block the noounaticn W
■ ■ - invoking the **s£iatorial courtesy” rule. He has a
* dmnce to heap coals of ftre upon the head of s politi-
^ <ja*-enemy by permitting the Colquitt nomination to |0
tT ’’forward without his active opposition. One wonder*
* what Senator Robinson will do about it.
Porary Thought J
__i
JBOLECTH) KIND or INSURANCE policy.
‘N,eW . **emng Poet: Governor Roosevelt's
advocacy^commimton * ***** ^ *
old *** PI!7» mov®* Dr- Fabian Franklin to call
■“£2 JiU** WBM he terms “a strangely
neglect^ Poaibihty 0f provision for old age in the
PMaan* move fortunately situated
. wh0#e IWMB the State pension policy
U a. ** ^ to mlnd An insurance
\L* X™0** penon fob the benefit of
»» °*1*r 'T**- *• own statement of the matter is
50 that we quote his words
■ . J Z* insurance policy taken out by a
J* * O'™* <* Wa mother, for example and
payable owy to the event that she survives him. would
** * TVJ^tk)n M toe coat of the ordinary policy.
In a hot mconuder^,^ number of cases (though, of
course.^* small proportion of the whole) the sole
motive St a young man In Insuring is to protect a par-
ent. or *°®e othen older person, against the material
hsrdddP -that would be csundVw. unacted
desth; And in many other cases he would W^dto
take ou- specific additional Insurance for this object
alone a he knew how small its cost would be. That
the cost would be small it obvious when we consider
a. he company would not be called on to pay any-
aun<*t *XC*J* to the rare eases when the mother
.rv vpd the son; and H U plain that the coat would
* much ,m*Ue*’ *U1 by call in it for payment to
the beneficiary if he or she did survive, not as a lump
sum. out in the form of an annuity for the remainder
of W* or her life.” '
A* Dr. Franklin remarks, probably every Important
life insurance company is ready to write insurance of
thk Lnd but that readiness is about as effective as a
light hid mdtr a bushel. The persons who would be
interested in such a policy have never heard of
it end will not hear of it unless somebody makes it
hi* business to see that they do. Either a company
!hould orfani*ed for this express purpose or some
rxut.ng company should make It a specialty and im-
p«*i H upon the public by systematic advertising.
R l« » reflection upon our vaunted spirit of enter-
?rje and thrift that this simple end inexpensive
mstliod of making some provision for old sge has been
virtually
IRSDAV, MAY 2, 1929
OUT OUR WAY
By Williams
MAH -4AV-1 . 1 J
WHAT tvits o Do -‘bo
1 WA*ftUftO - HA MA
IVjt A COT OF
FA<ST STARTs 4 0c>T-
Nct — »t%» a
goooTUivsigi -That
SCRtEsi OOOC? WASMT
MOOUtC* -
Old -riOH -vi /
VAiMM-BOlOM* VOO
WKiOW 'AT , M A ?
vvMW . FQOCa \.EGiS>
Always Tumps
Am f\MiTC*A6.«b
LIKE AT
voo’pe coov<im'
EM. iT^, Th*
KlEPMEfe F<?
vAieuu, voo v/e
A LOT Of
A^K«MCt wE TO
Cook sajcva
-TVavwjOS* — CiET
Tv4EM OUT of
MT KOUS6-
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DALLAS SEEMS ADC AND TECH
LEAGUE CELLAR
BY GAYLE TALBOT. JR.
Associated Press Sports Writer
The co6tly Dallas Bandwagon,
which started the season with a
nkw coat of paint and with the
firm Impression it was going To lead
ihe Texas League parade, appears
instead to oe headed ior the oase-
ball junk yard.
The Steers defeat at the hand.-, of
.he San Antonio Indians yesterday.
7 to 6. was their second strkignt to
the tribe and their fifth ih a row
since Wichita Falls took a double
bill from ttiem Sunday They have
dropped in almost leas time than
It takes to tell it from second place
to a tie with Fort Worth for lirth
And the Steers hud no intention of
asroctating with the Cat town crew ________
Failure of the 8leer pitching WallsiCC MdltiOFlfd
'tail to live up to specifications
seems to be the seat of the diffi-
culty. It is doubtful that a Texas
IN DUAL MEET,
ABILENE. Tex., May 1— <Spj-|
The Abilene Christian College tract-'
team and the Texas Tech team wil
meet here in a dual meet Saturday
The Abilene Christian tradcster-
hsve been undefeated so far thb
season in dual meets, and have alu
won a triangle meet.
coach J. Eddie Weems' track
finished in a tie Tor fint place i
the Oklahoma Aggies in the FYar
Worth Stock Show meet, and wo:
the relay in the 8. M. U. meet a
Dallas. The Abilene Christian-
iiave defeated the Sam Houston
neacherr:. T. fc. UN and Daniel Bak-
er ih dual meets, and won ; frotr
Simmons University and McMunj
College In a triangular meet.
Coach Weems/Will take his track
team to Sen Marcos May 10 and l(
for the annukl T. I. A. A. meet, ancj
his team is slated to repeat this ye?r
and again win the conference title
to Meet Millei
League club ever spent more nmney
Assembling talent than bid Steer
/
/
y
/
/
v a mv on
MOMEmTt. vweo UKE gTO uv;e. ov/eR
t * * •
—, -5
( t 1 o M* •< '
DETROIT May Biliy
Wallace. Clc\-eland lightweight: wil
be the nert foe toss;d into the rinj I
With Ray MiUcr. savage left hook- '
cr from Chicago.
W^lace today was - mashed id
meet Mllle:. challenger for the
worlds light weight title, in an-
t
gafi
Miller a decidedly unpopular f* {
titicn over Billy Petrolic, Fargo Ex
a» Del Pratt! prw' i11 thctr t*n f^hd battle her*
Of vounesLerii hSlbL
moguls during the winter, and tlieir
rficrts were applanded by the snort
rrtbes of the tXafc, many of whom
picked them Inst and very few ot
•vhem thought they could finixti
owe: titan third.
The sw^lonat'Tpurr^the Waco CPht*fct’ **
Cubs, which has ‘ceased to be a M alt of th<* ***h
tpuri and is c.i .tie point bt be-
cotnuig nionolonou . gave no Inal
-at ion of subsiding
irove his collect jon of youngsters
. TINKERING WITH TAXATION
; . TT1 T _ | A
ELABORATE schedule of' special taxauon 4e-
• signed to eliminate the ad valorem tax and mcreaw
the state’s revenue is provided in measures now before
the Legislature. The bills were pepared and present*
by*Representative T. N Mauritc of Gaaado. aod *
important are their contents that public hearuip
be held on them.
It may be that Mr. Maurlts' tax plan ts t rood oar
-*nd It may be a very bad 0°* Public hearings will at
least give an opportunity to determine its menu. It
any. and to point out its probable demerits. The preset t
ad valorem tax is not at all satisfactory, because it is
nof equitably assessed all over the state, and tor
several years the Legislature has been seeking me
kind of substitute for It. The same tax me for the
support of the state government is levied in si the
counties, but there are varying bases for valuation in
the different counties, and a rata of one dollar k one
county is equlvant to a rate of fifty cenu in soother
on that account. It has always seepied to us ths: by
comparatively simple processes the state cooU rase
these differences, and levy equitably an id vaiorvn tax
v throughout all the two hundred and fifty-odd coun-
ties: but H is clear that no effort is to be made to do
mx At the same time, a desperate complaint againa the
ad valorem tax has been made by farm ovnen and
others whose properties have been carrying 1 very
larpe pait of the tax burden; and this conphtr. has
not fuller upon ears that are pntiitly deaf
‘.Tinkering with the tax system, however is a
dangerous pastime, and .the Legislature ^
proceed with the utmost care in 1U r/^4 &
the Mauritz proposals. It offers a posahtty of
improvement, but a probability of makuq $ bsd st -
ation worse. And since the called sets** mi mnUr*x
lor less than three weeks, there seerm to to lilt*
cfmnce that the who* tax system can be rtva- during
the present meeting of the Legislature
1 • __’ \
THE ULTIMATE PHILIPPINE ARGUMENT
y* ^ork World: Publication of Mr. Stimaons
irttimony before the House Ways and Means Cotn-
■uttee shows that he relied entirely upon economic
sad moral arguments against the proposed levy on
Philippine sugar. He demonstrated that free importa-
tion of this sugar does not affect the price of the
American product—it is Cuban sugar which regulates
the price; and he made the flat accusation that the
prime movers for the duty are American corporations
interested in Cuban sugar. He added that this attempt
to exploit a dependent people would inflict a lasting
ttew upon our national good name in the Orient and
tisevhsre. With this Mr. SUmaon rested his argumsnt.
But we may be sure that he had in mind another
consideraitan of which, as former Governor Oenqral.
he hesitated to speak.
If the Timber lake plan is written into the tariff
bill the movement for immediate independence in the
Philippines will flame out instantly and more tiercely
than ever. The fuel is laid. Senor Quezon end others
have given notice that the match will be applied. The
talandsi wtl) at once revert to the unhappy position in
which they tfert during the Wbod regime, aod the
Hoover administration will find on ite hands a vexa-
tious and almost insoluble problem. Fur months now
IN NEW YORK
BY GILBERT SWAN
VIEW YORK—If youth may be
^ said to tow iU wild oats in the
bright lights belt of Manhattan,
then the grandpas and, grandma*
must be enagged In harvesting their
last crop.
What happens to the gray-beard
Daily Health Talk ANNIVERSARY
__ By Dr. Meerla Wltkbeln j I q~
K4iU>r JounoU of the Amerlown
Mediea) kstsl* and vf Mrs*la.
tbw MmJUi UagwslM
is rftnaritable that the tuper-
ctltlon that cutting the hair will ih7t this
diminish the strength and the
’ growth of a child has perrlsteu
ed old codger, when they get to/»>cng mankind from the earliest
the big city has furnished material' times.
for the tale-teller, ever since the | Everyone knows the legend of
days of Uncle Josh.
U. 8. PARCEL POST
rpODAY is the anniversary of the
1 start of parcel post In the
United States. It ia difficult to
vast and compli-
cated system was begun Just 17
years ago today, und then only in
an experimental way.
On May 2. 1912. an appropria-
tion bill was passed providing 1780.-
Sampson and Delilah and how the, 000 for a survey of the problem
But in late years grandma has j giant Hebrew warrior was finally
been having her fling. The way: overcome by iht Philistines after
that many oi the dear oid ladies go I the young woman to whose blan-
giedy and cut up is enough to make : dlshments he had succumbed ar-
your white hair turn blond again, ranged to cut away his curly locks.
And there are hundreds more, with j That story in one form or another
locks as white as snow, who come to 1 is to be found among the fables of
catch upon all that they've misled
during their lives.
These are fbr the most part, eld-
erly widows with income- from their
estates. Tlie Times Square hotel-,
are filled with them They arrive
in Manhattan and settle down as sgin
regular guests. Within a few days .skin
many aboriginal tribes today. The
truth of the matter is that such a
conception arises only in igno-
rance.
The hair ia merely a horndied
growth ol taitue. Die same us the
Hair cells he within the
and project this growth to
they've laid in an assortment of the exterior. Obviously, removal of
if any-
pt neral
the hair can have little,
thing, to do with ilk
strength of the body.
The cut simple and dim l evi
birds from the nearest pet shop and
have a couple of vernal urns in their
Window: With uses* reminder., of
. one - -line home life they then pro-
before he left Manila. If he wins the fight, the islands |*}x>rlJ ^rilr!Lvfa^ and Wburely occupation ol breaking
stone. The hair la cut. however, in 1
the latter case to prevent the de-
Parcel post package* were not ac-
cepted in the mails until the first
of the following year.
Parcel post 1* not. however, a
modern thing The ancient Egyp-
tians. Assyrians and Persians had
a similar ayatem worked out to a
highly efficient degree. A docu-
ment written in 270 B. C.. and
found in the Nile valley, affords an
Interesting glimpse of the post of-
itces of the anrtentx Careful note*
were kept of the day and hour of
each messenger'a arrival and of the
number of packages he carried. Ser-
vice was leatrteted. however, tc
and state officials
co Pok) wrote too. of a high-
ly developed postal system in (Jnlru
from the earliest ages, which includ-
ed the handling of packages.
the beautiful new snappy
dresses, cheaper than you
have ever bought them be-
tao of the Buffs' fore.—Looney.
1 vice v
should continue their peaceful progress. If he loses,
the result will be agitation, demonstrations, govern-
mental deadlock and a general mess for which Con-
gress will bear the blame.
\
PA Washington Daybook
By HERBERT C. PLUMMER
rASHINGTON—If
approves the bill drop-
ties down irght after breakfast and.
except at meal time, never leaves
a window which tooas out on the
Broadway crowd*. And she Just
has more darn fun watching folks!
Flashes of Life
The Associated Press
. C LEVELAND—There >s curiousity
velopment of Insects and vermin not tbout Morrow a engagement
with the
THE most active liotel bead to
* hit Manhattan for many a year
turned out to be two slate: a who.
appearances could be credited, were
nice middle-aged ladies of the *>rt
that used to crop in for Sunday
dinner Because of this appearance
the Osborn sisters were able to hop
ring. She was in the receiving lint
Vti Into Ih. hopnv of Ut. hou* of r,P™~m»-|tromh>*£'u“> ^ ^>n> .
Uvea the other day by Rep. Oeorge Ttnkbam of Max*
achusetts one of the most hallowed spots in Wash-
ington win be disturbed.
It is Statuary hail—in the national aapttol build-
ing—where stand the marble and bronae statues of
illustrious citizens from the various states of the re-
public.
The famous gallery of sculpture had Its origin by
an act of congress in the year 1M4. Mr. Tlnkham
thinks it has served its day and that the crowded
condition which prevails there “has been a source of
ridicule and contempt for America's lack of dignity
and culture for years '
He propoaet the establishment of an American
hall of lame to house the statues now reposing there
as well as those yet to be received
well-groomed transient. They seem-
ed so oldf ash toned, and all. that.
^ V] ney wen*, they took
s cat 1 ^ <■*««• Th‘» *•*
•rough m the taiM-bail-
ed of li »era All in all. the
Osborn orked” 14 New York
2 mechanical brains for banks
ir
A MECHANICAL age such as this there seems
_ , to be- no limit to the inventive pr thkt
— art revolutionizing business and industry jjrw
r. ,h« ™»t recent .inventions, which it is ap-
— proved by a group of1 bankers who (wggmc a
1 ■? company for it* manufacture and RkfeZaZT fc a
mechanical contrivance known as a • bUM*4 brain”
which does the work of eight or ten pen®, and i»
• * particularly adapted to hmsdimg the org^ clerical
— work of bank employes. The machine w^ tnvented
by'a young Norwegian, Rolf Hofpj^ •
Functioning with absolute accuracy the machine's
X brajins consist of a series of ro-ma^aem placed
^ in a cabinet at some convenient place, and connected
, «•> w,th the keyboard of an operator by efeetric wire.
ZZ "Ax the operator writes out the invoice of a ^or
-e instance, the machine— through its central -brains.*'
4 w^h "“I b* located m some other part of tt* bulld-
v ln«—wU1 cmJculaU' and record the pr** ,Biich ere
.* simultaneously added, figure the desired.
X recording m proper classification the tfounts and
•V’ net totals, multiply the pounds and fractions In
'J wights by a fraction in price, and parti of the cal-
*" cuMtlon. and. at the end. give the gram total of t*#*
~ vahous subtotals of the columns, fc Edition to
~ adding and multiplying, it will perfor* dlx**0*1
'Z anil subtraction.” , -
~ When machines of thtt type ^ ^jicd » all
Z tho banks the number of holiday* can he greatly »*
T All that will be nectary * , be *« Pui*1
a button, start the machine.; to and then
go fishing for the rest of the day
Desecration '■
Tinkham's proposal more than likely will meet
with opposition We have discussed the question with
•everal representatives, and. while they deplore the
crowded condition In Statuary hall, they nevertheless
are reluctant to see the old hall of the house of rep-
resentatives lose its occupants.
jinlrequently associated
criminal class | gl a reception at her grand mot he r>
Other curious old supersuiLions, home and guests could detect not
also dating back to the Infancy of the slightest gleam ot a diamond,
the race have to do with children . -
wetting the bed They are in al-| MADISON . Wlz. — lieutenant
most every instance symbolical Donald Keyhoe expects that 11.500
magic. Thus they have to do with will be due Phil Love from Colonel
dreams of running water of Niag- Charle* A Lindbergh perhaps next
arm Falk of flowing streams and month. Sometime before the Parts
cxedi"t Jkimilar copception*. {flight they made a wager as to
The notion that playing with which would be the first to wed
matches or fire will lead Inevitably . -
to an involuntary action of the NEW YORK—The most beautl-
rhlid's bladder during sleep is no ful Jewish girl ever seen by David
doubt, related to tl»e idea that Wurk G.imth is to be a bride
dream* go by opposite* This Idea Friends have been Informed that
ia not entirely without scientific Carmel Myen of the screen ts tc
foundation, since the Froudean in- marry Ralph H. Blum. Los Ange-
hoteb *y *«« arrected- , trrpr*taUon of dream* provides fc, attorney
and the led such tony places thal one obtain* in dreams the j -
as the 4or- N things that tie wishes for In the LOS ANGELES—Louise and Lucy
It wa mlly cat. which they making sUte and that not infer- Young. twins wlttf alliterative
just cc save behind, which j ouently the Inhibition of these runner, are tire wives of twins kith
llnally tneir undoing, for wishes or their suppression, slnc'e rhyming namem Byrl and Earl
when t » finally got on tlse thPy alc frequently opposed to They had! 4 <*«fble wedding twi
trail tl notice to look out normal standards of conduct, months ago and a joint lioncymoan
for tax *dles with a black iaUJ* thP dream to be the oppo- now the twm wives are seeking di-
cat as 1 heir retinue .ite ol the thing actually dealred. 1 vorcfsT.the troubles to life
with a logical mind under WPMatiH ropf with their hus-
bc able to see band's parents
of 1 -h society domager-1 the relationship between playing -
who ha t Utt age of $5— re- alth fire and the condition of fail-| NEW YORK — Dotty Deckard
vealed had left 125.000 to Lure of bladder control that physi- would seem to hold a llying cRim-
Anyone
-pHEN * other day. the will should therefore
I «ori»tv dowaver— the relationship
One referred us to the statement of
Cummons Schenck of Ohio, made
resolution was up for discussion in 1846.
"I never peas through tho old hall of the house
of representatives.” Schenck said upon this occasion,
“without feeling myself reproached by the spirits
that haunt tfc* place
”1 look around to see where the venerable John
Quincy Adams trembled In hi* seat and voted, and
I see a huckster woman selling gingerbread. I look
to see where Calhoun and Ciay sat. and I find a
woman selling oranges and root beer I look around
the floor where these men stood and uttered their
patriotic sentiments In the day when patriotic senti-
ments were heard with reverence everywhere and by
every man. and I see a floor rotting and trembling
under my tread.”
Senator Morrill of Vermont once saW in refer-
ence to the place;
“Nature formed but one.
“And broke the die in molding”—
The “democratic simplicity and grandeur of
style” profoundly impressed the late senator Its
“wealth of association with many earnest and eloquent
chapters in the history of our country deserves per-
petuity at the hands of an American congress "
the 30- gigolo who accom-
>ut. The youthful
Almost a Wi
At present there are 54 statue* in the hall, and
the fifty-fifth—that of the late Senator Robert M.
La Follette qf Wisconsin—soon ts to be unveiled.
Each state wa* invited by the Preaidant in 1866
to provide statues of two of its illustrious sons or
daughters. There were 36 states in the union at the
time.
The first statue arrived in 1878. and was a stone
effigy of Nathaniel Greene of Rhode Island. Nineteen
years later there were only 188 statues In the hall
There are 42 statues yet to be received. Mr. Tink-
ham thinks that by the time these are placed In their
positions 8latuary hall will have the
a warehouse.
A THOUGHT
Rep. Robert j panied -nMttv - Wlth
at the tune the escort 1 1“* “!*•*{*; w>t"
wavy h bad been the aged
woman for a couple of years
and ws uid for his services. ____________
SldWb« *5 'for 7ohmTu££ CREATION'S heir, the world the
tl —who was younger ----*" —ci«m«»,i*i
clan* call enuresis nocturnu
ptonship of some sort, probably
I having spent a greater proportion of
■J her life in the air than anybody else
I 8he has been up a total of 30 hours
t and is 17 months old. She is so alr-
♦ minded that she slept most of the
time when she. her mother and
that tf -who was
than se the children, by the
way—w irry their mother,
tjyi pe me into all of her
matmy. sighed with relief
when the wtl ended all argument*
• • •
PIR8T NIQHTER8 at the Broatl-
* way theater* have regretted tbe
death, during the winter of one of
the most persistent of the front seat
holders at opening night perform-
anoet She was a woman, well in
her seventies who always accom-
panied her son — a veteran first
night attendee They always occu-
pied seaU A 1 and 2 and had been
accepted as estoaliahed figure;,
along with the critics and manger-
1*1 personalities >
• # •
ITS a 75-year old musical enthu-
1 siaat, if you please, who backs
Earl Carroll's newest musical ven-
ture. She is said to have put 8300 -
000 into the production of "Floret-
La," largely because of Interest In
two young composers in whose ca-
reers she has taken a personal in-
terest. She is said to have spent 81.-
000 a week getting some of their
work broadcast over a radio circuit.
A six-sided airplane liangar. some-
appearance of what reminiscent of a roundhouse.
„ fc being built at Los Angeles.
.other* went In a seaplane from New
world, te mine.—Goldsmith. • jyork to Albany and return In eight
Neither can they prove the things jIninute, than it takes the crack
• hereof they now scone me.— Twentieth Century train to make
Aett 24:13. the trip one way.
. i • • • . . _
I ET tbe Judge answer to th#. lITCHTIELD. Conn — Farming
question of law. and the Jurors anywhere in the west for Marion
to the matter of fact. -Lew Max- yaHey possibly will be In this state
bn- j within easy distance of New York
---*--and the fulfillment of contracts for
Relief From Curse 7.™ T £
Of Constipation '”**’ —
_• r J NEW YORK—Boy* are to run the
A wm on man. ^
nTtnI“'rLdli«nn&t'tZ “Sin'*”’ *S*
But Immediate relief b^.n gtudles. fc to «rve as president,
found. A tablet called Rexall Or-!0lh#r ^ ^ oLfcgr execu-
derlies has been discovered. This Uve capac|Lies It will be the ex-
tablet attracts wat*r_from the chgncf l ^nual observance of boy’s
system Into the lazy. dry. evaruat- £jay
lng bowel called the colon. The. ’\\
water loosens tbe dry food waste rjo DE JANEIRO Bfcltop Bryan
and causes a gentle, thorough, nat-)^ Q^jvcston rtLi.rd tl»e fourth-
ural movement without forming a coming Beauty Pageant a* a return
habit or ever increasing the dose, to Paganism of body worship in the
Stop suffering from oonsttpatlon. gUja of physical culture- He has
Chew a Rexall Order lie at night cabled Monsignor MaiDt>*rtl his
Next day bright. Oet 34 for 35c views urging that Mis* Brazil re-
today at the nearest Rexall Drug main home. Ireland, Austria- Poland
Store -Camp-Bell Drug Oo. and and Hungary already have wlth-
Peerieas Drug Oo. (Adv) drawn their candidates.
• i -i ’
KIDDIE SHOP
pt
Tt _ i5
and veteran* to thietr second straight ^1* Wallace-Milfcr bout will b<
jver Shreveport, 11 to 10 live Sports staged in Navin FBM, June 6. I'l
Jrove Pitcher Thurman to the ^ill be the first outdoor show 08.
dtowers and forced the league lead-1 major importance ot the season. They
•rs to use tour pitchers, but the Cub winner has been assured a main*,
-lugger* likewise waxed fat on the with Sammy Mandril, llghtweigh
altering' of two Shreveport hurl- title holder
?r*. Including the Ace Joe Brown.' . ■■■ — , ■'
.t was tin Cubs' fifteenth win in 17 S'udents studying infant rearing,
.tails, which fc against all the taw» at Texas technological college wltifi
of averages. adept an orphan.
With Big Jim Lindsey tight in Vmi*w '
the pinches. Houston squared tt» ALL SPRING Mercnan-
•cries with Wlchtts Falls. 7 to 3,' j; :nrlllJ.J ' UL C..
and clung to undisputed pomeeetnn dltC ,nC,uded m “Ie* 5H|
tl second place. Martin. Burru-s and
Jordan each got three hits off
Jteengrale and Stiely. includutg two
-louble.s arid three tnple*. amount
ing for ail but
blows.
Cxi* Win Agkin
Charley Sullivan turned in one of
the finest performances of the early
earon as the Fort Worth Cats took
mother from the lowly Beaumont !
Sxpt>:ters. 14 to 2. The Panther star, j
vho has had trouble getting start- I
ed. held the shippers, to five hits {
and struck out 13. the greatest num- \
wr of whiffs yet recorded Not only
that, but he smacked two homers,
t double and single to lead tile Cat
*x:*u!t. Four double plays by the
Beaumont inlieki helped hold down
che Panther score.
All teams play in the same cities
today. ... .
DALLAS REACHES
POLO FINALS
HOUSTON. Tex . May 3.—lAh—
Kalla* Riders wtU meet either Abi-
lene or the Air Corps in ihe finals
<»f the elimination polo tournament.
under way at tto« Houston Riding
and Pclo Club Sunday.
The Dallas four broke through to
the finals bv defeating the. Houston
Hutsache Malleteen. 16 to 11 yes-
terday. Tomorrow th? Abilene and
Air Corps teams will meet in their
bracket of the semi-final* to decide
which team will meet Dallas
THE~Ol5 FASHION
Barbecue at Looney’s Mar-
ket is different.
Kid^^^hsthei
Mothers find it
magic for scuffs
Out touch of the dauber *nd stuf» dutpptor
Suooth. uQiiaro color cone* beck »-faded
drees. More than 50 marvelous »hu>e9—
cri.t* Colors for bLck. brown, tan and white
■hoc* - a neutral po^*h far others
O BARTON’S
DYAN$HlMg
SHOE POLISH
SAVE!
f
1
SAVE!
S A V
By Reading Our Page
Ad On Page 8
Section 2
Shop a
GILLIAM DRY GOODS CO.
BVEBYTUNO TC
*• a
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 170, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 2, 1929, newspaper, May 2, 1929; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1040863/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.