Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 110, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 21, 1933 Page: 4 of 6
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BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, IMS
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
An Africuhurml Joan
of Arc.
f OUT otlR WAV
B> WOHstHi |
GOOD GA'WW,
stiffs l it
Show must
©€. colo - x
*Tv4©T IT* WA.cj
A LOT FuT*a*v?
. tva vi tv\e.t i
X B£T**e.fcM /
STOPS
11 Oalded.
IS To accomplish.
14 Put of ft
! wtsdow.
ITT* quote.
15 Fena of pool
roMoC fHh
tO Oowm of tho
kai
nruw.
Largent 4k Stevens Ranch of
Brown wood will exhibit one Junior
rteer call In the fat stock show at
Port Worth. Time for entries dos-
ed February 18. Practically all of
the local ranch’s show stock have
been sold since they placed high In
shows a few months ago at Chi-
cago and Kansas City. Stock from
the Largent ranch at Merkel also
Is to be exhibited In the Port Worth
show. ■ . * 7
Three thousand head of South
Plains cattle have been shipped to
California to make steaks and
roast* for Oaliforlna tables. The
cattle were bought by Prank M.
Hauser, president of the Hauser
packing company, from Fred Sny-
der and E. (ft. Rail of Lubbock.
tUftaciUPTlONi
hcvariikjpftjuffis
m rear.
eatsM* souaty. Mew Muioe
Calves which have been fed since
last May 1 by Mason oounty 4-H
club members will be exhibited st
the Sea Angelo. Port Worth and
Houston fat stock shows. Plans
for the showings were made after
a group of more than 100 men and
boys recently mads a tour of the
different feeding demonstrations.
On Feb 27 about 2ft calves will be
brought In to Mason and II head
of the best will be selected to be
shown end will be shlj>prd first to
Houston for the show there March
S to t.
A Million Boys.
____ ——
gWATOR OOUZKN8 of Washing
ton, a mulU-mllhonalre philan-
ready to do her bidding. Through-
out the Corn Belt her influence Is
noUcabto, acoordlng to reports
from that ssotor. 1
This Is Interesting in eonnsctkm
with the serious situation confront-
ing thousands at American farmers.
Passive resistance, a# Illustrated by
the farm holiday movement, Is be-
ing superseded by aggressive oppo-
sition to the orderly proetssis in-
volving the details of ’.gcononiu
operation throughout the country.
It is a situation that ie intolerable
although it Is readjlj justified by
• recitation of the hards! ip* being
endured by thousands of farmer*.
J f? VS.UUAMJ,
a-a<
FeEUNCr TVi*\9 W/W
The Ban Angelo livestock show
will be held March 8 to 1. Entries
from 17 oountles have been made
to date. Intentions to exhibit have
been filed for 160 cftlves, 647 lambs,
Ifl registered sheep. 22 registered
Boats and 47 pigs by dub !*>v* and
girls. Thirty registered bulls and
two heifers have been entered for
the Hereford auction In connection
with the show.
aliant Dust
by PercivaVChristopher Wren -bsauoimr
Viewpoints
Editorial Opinlsn
tag to II Isa Both el Ain. aagment
and strengthen It. even as she
changed from lovely girl to 1st old
woman. For a moorish woman in
her fartIss. 1* old.
' Probably she and the Kald were
“two minds with But n single
thought * on most subjects, and he
admired her ruthteasneas and
strength as much as he had once
admired her beauty.
What a pity one could not talk to
her. get her point of view, attitude
and outlook on life and current
events—If talk she would, to a hat-
ed and despised outsider
Watching her Ss she sat with un-
covered faoe, Margaret thought of
a nagtag Lucrrrla Borgia, a Cleo-
patra In middle-lift, of Catherine de
Med id aid Catherine of Russia Of
such was the Lady Zataub, wife of
Abd’allah Karim and mother of
Ralsul.
And that equally, If differently,
amazing woman who eat next to
her, the Lady El Isa Beth el Ain.
Jules* mother, half-sister of the
Kald. How could she have found
Ufa bearable and contrived to tare
It beneath the same roof, however
vast, as the woman who had tried to
kin her baby, tho little Julia, and
who had put the 4*00* life In
such danger that she the child>
.mother, had sent It away, with
pieces, looked up. opened widr his
great dark exes, gased, into hen
and, as though reading her (bought
united with a flash of brilliant
teeth. Not a friendly pteaaant
smite of kindness and affection, but
a twisted smite, sardonic, sarcastic,
The annual Eastland Oounty
Livestock Show will be held In
Cisco March 3 and 4. A rabbit show
will be held In connection.
San Saba County win hold Its
fourth annual 4-H Club livestock
show st San 8aba April 8 Commit-
tees have been named by the live-
stock committee of the Chamber
of Commerce and County Agent
N. E. Scudder. The list of prises
Is being made up.
Shackelford County Harford
Breeders Association win hold Its
annual Spring show and auction at
Albany March 11. Fifth annual tat
slock show of Bwteter County 4-H
Club boys will be held in Tull*
March ft and 4.
Ignoring him. Margarst'a glance
travelled on and rested for a mo-
ment upon the fat. Jolly, evil and
cruel face of his father, the Kald
Haroun Abd' allah Karim. Watch-
ing him as he sat chuckling and
whispering with Zalnnh. his wife,
whose lively sanies evidently
pleased him much. Margaret found
that her husbands mother, the
Kald* own half-sister, had told her
—as interesting anecdotes and faaa-
“You have on one side in the
United States all the economists,
sn the experts, and all the bank-
ers standing either for cancellation
or rothlesrf scaling down of the war
debts. On the other aide of the
fence you have the great multitudes,
the electorates, and the politicians
standing for payment to the mat
dot. The terror of the politicians In
the presence of popular misunder-
standing Is Intense."
The observation to neither un-
friendly nor Inaccurate But the
conditions are not so desperate as
The estimated price of hogs on
Dee. II. 1822. was 82.73 per 100
pounds, beef cattle $3 41 and sheep
834H. according 4o (he bepartmft
cf Agriculture.
BT RAYMOND CLAPPER,
United Frew Staff Correspondent.
(Copyright, 1033. by United Press.)
WASHINGTON Feb 21—The
attempt on the life of President-
elect Roosevelt threw a new burden
of care on the Whits House secret
service staff today.
There was a shads more anxiety on
the faces of the men charged with
protecting the Ilf• of tha President
of tbs United States
Outwardly they remained calm.
Following the code of the secret ssr-
Sir Norman imagines. The fact la;
that popular misunderstanding 1a
5lowly though steadily diminishing
The noise of pulseholding and Job-
loving politicians can not prevail
Indefinitely against the calm rea-
soning of disinterested and com-;
patent public advisers. The man
on the street is coming to realist
that American recovery must be an
Incident of world recovery. And he
Is beginning to understand that
world recovery must be facilitated
by a liberal debt policy, and that
It is estimated that there are
34.000 lambs. lJor head of cattle
and more than 1B00 hogs on feed In
Runnels county. There are more
individual feeders, but tho total
number of head of livestock on
feed Is teas than usual. More hogs
are being fed. however, with good
results. A number of the herds on
feod will be ready for market the
first week In March.
"Man is falling behind the ma-
chine." states the author of a mags-
Stas article. Wall, that* a darned
sight bettor than falling In front of
stopped through tbs torn opening,
smiling at the alertness of hte pro-
lector.
New Presidents often beoome Irked
by the constant praaenoe of tbs to- i
cret service shadowers. If they want
to walk downtown to temp, secret ,
service men must go with tteto. Tho
Roosevelt* lift. On him rests the
actual jot) of guarding Mr Hoover.
Hr and hu men were most on
guard against nvntsU) unbalanced
Henry Mount
The architect aayi: Ernest
Hr* the peacock feather b
Daybook
Fred Wulff of Brady has enter-
ed one carload of fat heifer calves
to be exhibited in the Southwestern
Exposition and Fat Stork Show at
fort Worth which opens Friday
In the ffflvvn della, quieted huneeff
and driving a wooden hone on ac-
count of tho upkeep: the marmalade
that puts a sweet taste in your
mouth and makes you glad that you
are living; an ex plow bay that
longs for a swank pint house on up
and up highway and a golden spoon
to ladw away all future dissidents.
Hrcando
***.*■»*'«; saayysrssns
freight to Justify such House every two peart occurred as
i la stated but trains usual this year, baft perhaps with a
dd be opened two or ™^0" than at Other
each week ocr a profit- capital wits haft damn to know it
in effort to being made 1 at "Roes Collins V*. Tha Oonerals.”
h-nart, to induce the Hum Collins Is the portly high-
... ^ „ voiced Congressman from Mlaslasip-
o amend the laws so as ^ vho ^ charKei ^ committee
cte operation. that provides the mooey for running
has considers bte Inter- Uncle Sam's military establishment,
u *_ "The Generals" la that group in the
iu
te transportation suua- membership * retired major general,
be short branch line a Judge advocate general and a
J. T. Blair. Jr of near Coleman
has some of the nicest look Inc
Hertford* In the county and win
show some of the bast at the South
Texas Livestock Show at Houston
The cattle, about ooe year old.
traced down the writers art checked
up on and a full report filed with tbs
secret service.
Second ta command is Ookmci R
W. Sterling Both art veterans of
many yeans at the White House.
Jervis Joined the squad during the
Roosevelt administration. These two
men and their assistants have trav-
elled thousands of miles with Presi-
dents without an overt Incident.
It Is when the President travels
the secret sehrice is put to its real
tost. At the White House protection
Is a simple matter of guarding all
doors, inside end out, and of pa-
trolling the White House grounds
day and night. .
When the Resident enters his
automobile,, a secret service man
-.den with him and a squad of as-
sistants ride ta another car Imme-
diately behind Their standing rule
la no automobile shall pass the
President*. •
Ones while Mr. Hoover was driv-
ing to hu Rapidan
headed woman dririr
attempted to pa» the
W ---• WSVI,
have been fed for the last several
months. ’*
Three truck load* of fine white
faced calves have been sold off the
Buster Pool ranch near San Saba
to the Apache Packer? of 8an An-
tonio They were fed on corn.
Collins’ pet aversion is what he
describes “patriotic rackets." The
R. O. T. C. and C. M. T. C. he
pounces upon at every opportunity.
He boasts that he doesn’t have a
fort, training camp or any sort of
military activity ta his district.
What Irks the fYetWralF* most
perhaps those In and out of Con-
gress—is the manner In which Col-
lins rawhides them when they ap-
pear before him.
During tho tearing: on the bUl
before K came before the House a
full-fledged major general appeared
before Collins and made a state-
ment on what te terms the neees-
stty for military training in the R.
O. T. C. and O. M. T. C.
Courthouse No. 2
is Established at
Amarillo, Texas
AMARILLO. I*x7 FVb 31—<*»)-
"Ceurtho .se No r has made Its
ip pea ranre In Amarillo as a re-
sult of the general election last
sgwusnt on ail farms wfll be
re»edt and efforts win be made
to bring up the dairying standards
- Tho farm seed exchange will be
encouraged u> the fullest sad <to-
parmanent pastures wlB be contin-
ued. Organization of 100 bog* Into
4«H clubs Is another goal. The pro-
gram for kilns fee all sorts of pro-
Raisul. as a child, had fftlfen? Had
he not consented to the death of
Me own nephew, Jutes, because of
that Jutes might grow uo to be an
enemy and a usurper? No. proba-
bly th# Kald* htfhienee over °v<-
was nil while (hat of Ralsul over
the Kald was paramount
From the Kald. Margaret glanced
»t hb *wlf#, the lovely Zalnub
who, aoooritag to El lea Beth el
Ata, had been reputed the loveliest
woman ta Morocco, the desired of
the Sultan hlmsOlf the autocratic
all-powerful Sultan whom the Kald
b*d first defied and then defeated
[if a worse condition Is to te avoid-
ed. There Is Just one way to re-
store the body to normal good
tegJth—that is to lot Nature have
a chance Poisons that collect ta
the digestive tract must be ell mins -
Jed before Nature can do her work.
That la why Craxy Water Is eo ef-
fective ta relieving onstipation It
literally washes the potions away.
Craxy Water is not another of
those disappointing ramgdtee It
wastes the waste a way naturally,
withoot irritation, Craxy Water
Crystals Is not a drug or patent
msdtetaa-B te the mineral e».
nauMsfW
ducts arlll be pushed and efforts
will be made to Increase the farm
forestry demonstrations from five
(•-it, ',
Assistance win be given farmers
in production, harvesting and mar-
keting & money crops,.and epreial
aid win be gtten ta emergency dii-
fleultlee. *uch as livestock disease
outbreaks. Insect* and finance
budgeting.
over to
she was
her Into
moan In-
J-HI tew
by. It te the only Ume any driver
and oonstable, respectively, of pre-
cinct. No. ft—f precinct which here-
tofore has been without the ser-
vices of separate officer* Their
names had been written on the bal-
lot by friends.
Now the new officers have rent-
ed a vacant house ta front of which
When tho President travels b*
railroad, every foot of track along
the route te gone over. Switches are
epiked down Bcnmee are on duty,
A pilot engine prooeed* a short dis-
tance ahead and one hkewflto la the
rear- As the Fwldsnttal train atopa
secret service mea and railroad 4e-
oorttony it was cal- 'ersefuiaeas and determination, as
coated for Ralsul did nothing proved by tb# one fact atone that
*itho :t a reason aad a motive. she ted retained her power and
? wou!d **• “b*hav* influence over her ferocious, auto-
like pn PigUsh gentleman" hew ta crater aad untrammelled husband
ffir*0! *>e been fsndytag! jytomfiyTtoo a woman of fasetaa*
l5iJ* hlm* and charm ta that the Kald
» ^ nutr,c, l ^ f *° *ould *** IpparelWy enjoved h#r ioctetv to-
w. hi he had done 30 yaan ifo.
Ridden!v RuIruI who had been What was the secret of ter power
NOTICE
Wednesday,:; February 22,
1933, Ghorft Wlfthinf-
ton'ft birthday, bdfaif i Ufml
<v teen a man and wife
B -stamfead Advocate
retorted Collins, "X usu-
iem about it. ... I do
n the presence of a man
humans to be e general
lot. ... I treat 'em all
mows
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 110, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 21, 1933, newspaper, February 21, 1933; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041236/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.