Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 160, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 20, 1932 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brownwood Bulletin and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Brownwood Public Library.
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Aj
A Horn
SIX PAGES TODAY
\7
spapef, Serving the Heart of Texas Section
BROWNWOOP, TEXAS,
n* 1
r ■ i ■
™/rj - ! ^
f '
* A BIRTHDAY of transcendent
A tnterest, to some of us at least,
oqwnrcd yesterday and will be
relebrated today on account of a
rash of other business that occupied
the time and attention of this.
Impresario Tuesday. Jesse 1C. Perry.I
Heed here so lone thatt
have become mere ind-
in his career, was celebrating,
hi* 75th anniversary Tuesday, on
account of having been bora In Hill
county, Texas. April .19th, 1857.
After beguiling him into our labora-
tory, we began an analysis of his
life and work and secured a rather
extended confession from him. a
part of which will be presented
herewith.
G, 0. P. REFER
cm nirP HfllUllQ Ikansas girl and slayer, Who wa
ULLETIN
Every Day Except Sunday,
¥
\ S- /
I
b/
/
Mr. Perry spent most of his youth
in Harris county, but at the age of
18 years came to Brown county. He
has lived here all of the 57 years
which followed that momentous
I mpSwidrar^Hai^bal^crossJ^ The
Alps or Cleopatra crossing the
I Rubicon. His father, Jesse 1C.
Petty. Sr., was a Baptist
Mr 88 years, and was one
organism* of the First
church here.
.4 • i
DAYS after he became
twenty-one years of age, Mr
I Perry began running for office, and
continued consistently to seek office
[ until about eight yean
upon the reguss♦ of a
'majority of the voters. His first Job
If there are any citizen* of Brawn-
wood opposed to immediate cash
payment of the so-called soldier
bonus, as advocated by R presents-
tlve Wright Patman, of Texarkana.
In his bill now before congress, they
were not present Tuesday night at
the mass meeting held under _th.
auspices of I sham A. Smith Post of
the American Legion at the Soldiers
wnd Sailors Memorial Hall. Those
I attending the meeting, numbering
minister bctwctfn 300 and 400. voted unani-
of the mously t° urge arid demand the
passage of the Patman bill. ‘
l | Of the half dozen or more speal(-
* t era on the evening's program, not
*■ dissenting voice was raided
against the payment of the soldier
bonus and-when a vote was taken,
the audience rose as one to voice
wh«i‘h* approval of the Patman bill.
Tex C. Worsham, former post
commander of the local American
—
4
-•ll
v,
IKANSAS GIRL AND SLAYER, iv HO WAS HANGED BY MOB
-i«v u--■ ........ .j... ».■».? .1 ■ 4j. ■ 4..|, , ■ !.,**>*
14
-
If
: j
sham called for voluntary e
sions from the audience. K. M
vis, state representative f
Brown and Coleman counties.
and for
ce as deputy
Adam/ Then he
city politics.
about twenty yean was city marshal
listed considerable farm** interests, li* »Wler botpis. Other speakers
Hfe. —«»y while included Mrs. W. D. Armstrong. O
___the work. He H. Turner. Gus J. Rosenberg and
a flock of cattle, ': and W. G. Streckert. J
re Urns wandering r*r Patman BUI
are not producing Mrs. Armstrong suggested that
those assembled Tuesday night go
Jon record as favoring the passage
Mr. Perry of the Wright Patman MU and that
MMb K. Cross, a resolution to this effect be drawn
at Riley Y. Cross, who up and sent to proper officials in
| came here and settled in the Thrifty congress. Thu was put in form «f
la 1M. She is a native a motion and carried
ci
i-
it
7
,|
I
operates
i in Ms
oU.
• • •
aunty, aad Mr. perry
while Mm wee still quite
Kptr?<*Dr srtablUh
institutions of strlli
Thrifty.
etvUUatiOQ
» • •
of the
in this
Twenty or more telegrams
sent last night to Rep. Tom
ton. Sen. Tom Connaily and
Patman, urging these men'to
port and fight for
bin.
.H
port and right for the soldiers bonus 1
had five children
whom died In Infancy,
Rufus, pawing away a few
ago. There are two
I children. Many Interesting
grind
e. ^Tri
today
. It Is
names
It will be
’ sent to Congressman Blanton nqt
. later than Thursday night.
I petition U being
one of U* business
and the
expected to have
affixed to it before night.
180
Official Positions
B
The resignation of H. V. Hennen
as city manager oi BrownWood
accepted and the jef flee of city
corder, which has been filled .for
some time by James W. McCartney,
was declared j vacant by city coun-
cil ih regular meeting /Tuesday
officers
and no
places,
council
called session within
day* to name a new
d recorder and to
. .__.ding appointment
officials, including city! for
is:vssor and collec-
tor. fire marshal, engineer, attorney
and others, j
\ Thy resignation of
who
fop three and a half years, becomes
feottve May 1/ The recorder s of-
ice w*s declared vacant Tuesday
rnitht and Mayor W. A. Butler wiU
act as recorder until eomeone is
appointed to that place. \
Gallery Watches Wert
Between 50 and 75 people were
present at the first meeting of the
night
These were the
cn which action was
one was named tc
It vyas indicated
would hold a
the next few
city manager
take action
of other city
secretary.
tfT-t-
£iTEXANS WILL
OBSERVE SAN
JACINTO DAY
SAN JACINTO BATTLE-
GROUND. Texas. April 20—(UP> -
Texans will gather here tomorrow
the 96th annual celebration of\
the battle of San Jacinto, in
Gen. Sam Houston and a
Hennen.
the city
new council, the first session since
Mayor Butler and Aldermen W. T.
Henley,
____ ___ Few peo-
lurtng her!p)e present ted matters to bring
H-rkinnin and Edward B
Jr., p*re elected April 5.
which
small
band of men won freedom for Texas
by defeating an army under Santa
Anna, the Mexican dictator.
The battleground, ndw a pictur-
e.‘q ur park 10 milea aoutheast of
Houston, will be the center of a
statewide observance of San Jacinto
day. a legal holiday Simultaneous-
ly. Wlest Columbia Stttsens wUI un-
veil a marker on the site «f the
firat capttol of Texafcf
w
y ns
VOTE ON PRO
FOR OFF YEAR
X
Ban Antonio, the fiesta De San
Jacinto which has been in proxies
all week, will reach Its climax in
the Rattle o(,]F lowers.
Schools, banks, public buildings
bus'ness
firms will ob-
car
Canon
[HERE
TODAY BETTER Til
MARKET DAY
eftoes are recounted by Mr, Perry, 1 \
covering: his long career as a peace
officer here. There was a time, be
recalls, when children attending the
Thrifty school carried arms for ►
protection against the Indians; and
there were times when bad men
I made much trouble for the officers.
However, that Is ail In the past now, f
and Mr. and Mrs. Perry have no
troubles to trouble them.
Body Of Woman Is
Found In Hallway
ii:
STRY
a more prosperous
Stbclair. chairman
x$cutri» committee of the'
nhed Consolidated CU Cor-
rhebe§4.|\
w.;h mere than a score
a:.d technical experts of
oil company, was here to-'
* tour of mj.pection of mid-!
It oil properties.
icteh Daofel J*.
to the chairman.
Selling
featured
tefefe! the council and the major-
ity Sere present simply to watch
the n«w council at work.
Pie new council quashed an
dinaree which had pam*d to •.«= ^
s* cond reading under the old coun- Gf the Texas republic.
and many bust
Serve the holiday.
fttat'1 Senator T. H. McOregor,
mate the principal address
or-1 here, leaking to a program ar-
the ranged by the sons and daughters
take'Some, of her property cut of
th- city limits. The council would
not phs.s the ordinance, declaring
it a bad precedent to allow prop-
The guest of honor at the battle-
ground i exercises will be CoL An-
BY RAYMOND CLAPPER
United Press Staff Omwsrndcnt
W A SHI NO TOM, April 20—' tTP» —
Yhe' first republican prohibition
referendum plan definitely known
to have i minified from within the
Hoover cabinet has been outlined
to the United Press .
This proposal which later may
become the official administration
plan, provides congress Should by
majority vote call a special Rational
election on prohibition to be held in
an off year. Congress would fix the
time and appropriate for the entire
expenses. j JL /
This election would constitute a
national referendum. Delegates
would be elected to a special con-
vention which would complete the
precess of shaking down sentimcr'.
and crystallizing it either into a
‘ ™ against any change
or into specific proposals far modl-
jTeSuiiMl^St^wouid'stUl be nec-
<sMiry under to* constitution for
congress to ■ takr these proposals
and oltidaUy by a teo-thlrd*
vote of each Hou^e submit them to
the states for ratification
The author of the plan believes It
Would be prefer*able to eliminate
partisanship by an agreement be-
tween' the two parties to cooperate
in the whole undertaking. \ ;
j Influential democrats are anxious
also to get the issue out of party
pcmics. but one of them Who has
(CONTINUED ON WAOE EIVC)
morning of Brownwood Better M .r?
ket Day. Crowds began arrlvt,
early and merchants n port*
i brisk business.
i A large crowd Is expected/*®
present for a program
Hair this afternoon at 4 o'eioek.
jertylto be taken nut of the/city
limits.
Action on the
an (ordinance
(TASmini - rare.* Apr 1
—Determinariorj to Write
iUP>
a tax bin
Merchants cooperating
ing Market Days wiB participate in
the program Prizes ^U1 be offer-
ed to the oldest coup!® prerent. ta
the person traveling the longest
distance to
gram and to th^ largest family
People frotp over the entire of *269.976.371
UmMm4
_____ __ _ H__ rimwdTby 80 people
sponsor- on the a sumption, foreitai govern- askig street lights at Dallas
ments will pay' theijr debts to the and 3 and at Dallas and Syca-
third reading ef
granting f Guy L.
J^nos a dcmestic, commercial and
'nduEtrial gas
franchise
United States durinf the next fts-} mor*
cnl years was ipxprinsed today by i street
members nf the sennp' finance com-
ket Day pro- mittce^ includintl Chairman 8nioot.
Th' budeet contrcti
r
p at®' receipt*
ih foijeign debt pay-
Brownwood /rede territoTy are ex- ments of which abgut *171.000,000
pected at /he Market Day square vould come from Grfat Britain. No
„ , . 4. dance at /Memorial Hall tonight at> provision for Her pr.ynient was
Sinclair said | B A dancing contest will made by Great (Britain ire the Brit-
Pierce. mssis-
co.r.e to its senses
8 P'clc
(be st
and several communities i*h bude* ? submitted.to parhamcru
- • - i \
Although bora and reared
Baptist. Mr. Perry is now
Methodist, on account of
Baptists placing a limit of 825
hone race bets and on account
his wife being a Methodist
believe In predestine
he says. “The country
bad shape, but X still
ClnduniBmlding £Ti^i^7iliTmdy «***danc* in \iw 1 „ n
____” i —__Jl iflS lll?or. ”**£*5^?.iSCJggj? thg/contest. A prize of 85 will be Oortrnrtiant officials other than
Oily
-»UP>-
CLEVELAND. April
A Titian-haired divorcee who acted
as ah Investigator for pnva*e de-
tective agents and reputedly as a
i*deral Informer, was bearer, to today fi
death early today in an apartm:-nt
in the little Hollywood district
where she had gone with three men
**1 still following -a speakeasy party. j
though."; Mortally wounded Mrs. Kathryn
pretty Jones. 23. was f?und by of flee is of
there a scout ear which chanced to hah
a roik bottom
cap succcKsf
I siid
from which
do business, >
ffS
■ni
which Sinclair
■ present bone of (
ofl industry Fierce
leave here
Oklahoma City. Tome
group twill go to the
she
arise a Moses to lead us out of outside the building Just as
our troubles. I do not think, rereamed for help - /]
however, that his myne will be> Her three alleged com par‘ms
Hoover.T He is a Democrat,'were captured as they emerged frmp
naturally, and a practical prohibl- a side entrance of the building Tb.^j
uonist^ and has never
Democratic ticket.
scratched a
happy
IX E attributes his long and
11 life to the fact that he has never
liked prunes, SDmaeh or Ucker,
**ihmit the only thing I am
in now! outside my own
is the soldier bonus. I want
the boys '.o get their money," he
says, and reiterates it. Probably his
conscience is disturbing him because
be served on the load draft board
during the world war and sent so
many
army
dnied knowledge of the killing. 1 |
Detectives began work on the
denied knowledge of the killing v j
• Detectives began * work on the
theory she might have been kilVd
because of her activities as an in-
vestigator They said they had beef)
informed by a former employer she
had acted as under cover operator
for federal prohibition agents.
The officers found the woman
crumpled to the floor at the foot
a flight of stain. She was
but died a few minutes later
ntion
imatedi
there. {
allowable I
for that!
awarded to the best dancers.- y
The street bus today has been
bringing people to town free of
charge at certain periods In the
, rooming and afternoon. Theaters
. have had rood crowds lor the
„ shews on which they are offering
* pedal admission prices. Cafes are
also giving special Market Day
meals at reduced prices
in the dty have their
members of dongrfos expressed
themrelvcs as of the- opinion the
omlrsion by Great Britain chiefly
indicated the Bnu-h < xpoct some
n ad r •v. ent df reparations pay-
ments at the reparations confer-
ence to be held in Jung at Lau-
sanne. They painted to the state-
mettt *
of the Exchc-
was defer-
Lighls
Bond of
in tH« a.
proved and
/ TWo bonds
ing city funds
Bank were a;
The 813 800 1$
of the city in the
was referred to the
IffcDR . . ; E\ "
f of Police Bert Hiae
81.000
HHJUnUiCAClUMTi WUI I*" VAR. Jin- _
drew Jackson Houston.-only living Tff?n prn Aopni* Tfl
son of Gen. Houston. Cot. Houston t 1 WQ rr° 1 u
Get Habeas Corpus
Hearing, San Angelo
Dallas Youth Found d£?£*jaii
Early Today After
Att-Niaht Search
of Gen. Houston,
is custodian of the battfegroutid
P*rtc-
Clarence Wharton. Houston his-
torian. will be the principal speak-
er at West Columbia./
was ap-
813.000 secur-
Ci tire ns National
by the council,
of the money
at the time
(COMTINUttD ON WAOR FIVK)
of dfiancellor of 'th
Nevfll* Chamberlain
Army Lieutenant
Indicted Today On
Bank Robbery Count
FEUUIN, Texas. April HO— <UP>—
Lieut Herbert O.
DALLAS. Texas, April 20—(UP)—
.^-arch for Robert Marshall Hurt
10 sen Of a prominent Dallas fam-
tyy. ended here today when a night
watchman ,dn White Rock Lake
the suburbs found the youth and a
1. Texas. April 20—(UP)—
Attorney William McCraw
plane tomorrow* for
at a federal habeas corpus hearing
for prohibition agents II. D. Hea-
ton and L. C. Smith.
The two agents, held In Jail since
their indictment last Saturday
Murder and assault to
*“ charges, were \ transferred
ID fwwn m*«
friend asleep in ja cabin on the late
Shore at 7:30
/The youth, startled by the ex-
citement
ance. explained he had gooe fishing
after school yesterday and had fall-
en asleep in an empty cabin.
It was thought the youth was
kidnap* d and a widespread search
for him was begun last night.
from state
the order
on
murder
today
to federal Jurisdiction at
of Judge William H. At-
conduct the habeas
The,
names
trans-
to the fed-
| well who will
corpus hearing tomorrow,
transfer was technical, the
?lng merelv
regular to t
Merchants
windows especially decorated
for
latest
qii'-r
supplementary
prerehted after
hud jet would be
the Lausanne eon-
a ;». Oklahoma City,
ferencr. as evidence
had -not con
debt payments
Great Britain
tetnplatrd defaulting ita
nts.: Several
senators
Lichtcnberger,
an army avia-
uon instructor at Randolph Field,
was indicted today by the Ouada-
lupe county grand Jury in connec-
tion
First
Condition Of Girl *
Hurt In Airplane
\Cro8h 18 Serious
with the 1685 holdup of
State Bank at Schertz.
> "Wo have t.hnfe pretentious com- '
Ranks Whloh/fnusi he considered
— anytiung can be said/ he
■I /It la pOKslble, however.'
tig' trip Is concluded, there I
be something to announce.’’i
group found new activity in]
rmttf Seminole area In
■ to Inactivity of recent j
a half dozen new locations,
en staked here and several
were drilling ahead
(privately ekpre^mdj Sympathy With here, Wt February 15
the DTuition of Great Britain.' f . __i___
ferred from the
oral prisoner list.
Heatcn and Smith are charged In
connection with the fatal shooting
of Marion McGlothlin and th?
wounding cf his wife during a liquor
raid near here. .
Claude Cooper, deputy prohibition
administrator, and assistant dis-
trict
17. injured I
here which
of Hatty o.
Galveston!
pv.ltion of: Greet Britain.
jf “Certainly we' will; expect to re-1
celve the foreign payment*/ Chair- |
senate ftnaace |
e i United Prem.
I forgive tho.v
country In the
given so
man Smoot nf m<
, committee told tl
-"Who Is (TQing- tc
debts0 Np othjrr
, world would hgve
iLlchtenberger. a 1826 graduate of
Creighton University at Omaha, was
indicted on a charge of robbery
of the youngsters into the; fractured skull and
Now enjoying good health
e plans
live to be a hundred years oid and
ah of us who know him are sharing
that wish with him.
Scurrying outside, patrolman Mc-
and plenty of comfort, he plans to Cord seised Sol Levy, 40.
' Weiss. 23. and Nathan
as they ran out a side entrance.
They pretended they were drunk
when they learned the girl had
been killed. McCord said.
Police said they learned
“ Using Of Cigaret
U ‘ Stamps Twice Is
iolati
Mr. Perry has always been the
kind of man who says what hei
thinks, disagrees with his
friends j girl and her companions had
*
without getting mad at them, keeps, tended a speakeasy party imme-
Me promises and attends principally
to hie own business. He has been
and still la a most useful citizen of
Brownwood and Brown county,
having earned the respect of
diately before retiring to the apart-
ment. ^
“Waller Brent who occupies a
lower suite, said they started quir-
i
come off packages are being re-us-
by his tong and fruitful life
Personally we have tong
ted Ms friendship, and
heartily congratulate him oh
75th anniversary of his birth,
if nothing happens, we
say what we think about a
who has sent us a couple of
of contraband foodstuffs.
-, reling
l
WEATHER
EAST
By United Press
TEXAS—Partly cloudy,
northwest portion tonight.
Thursday partly cloudy to cloudy.
west TEXAS—Increasing cloudi-
ness. Warmer north portion to-
night. Thursday partly cloudy to
etoudy - Probably showers nortn
portion. \ “'v
About ten minutes before the
fight started," Brent said "I saw*
girt and two "men leave, the apart-
ment. The quarrel kept getting
louder and louder .when it became
a fight."
Test Drilling In J
Slate atj 725 Feet
The Brown county deep oU tost
was at about 1.725 feet today at
noon and still drilling in black
17, minimum 87.
L*M PRODUUCING WELLS
HENDERSON. Tex.. April »*-
(UP)—The East Texas oil field to-
day pawed the five thousand mark
in the number of producers. Re-
ports to the local office of the
railroad commission today placed
the number at 5,011, i
/ • . *---w
m t
on Of Law
20 — <UI’> -Texas
ipe do not stick to
PPcrS; put on cigarette
WTm licRrynolds. chief
enforcement work in
8tate Comptroller
reported today™
p ttlcmentaj as we -gave. I
id n.uT rens4-nt to forgive
- •• : I ' I
mfluuiti.il
f the commit
HOPEWELL. N J. April 20-
(UF»—Pour* and private negotia-
tors continued their search for the
kidnaped son of Colonel Charles A.
Lindbrreh t<-d«y. the 51st day Of
the search, with no apparent pro- j
grew although airplane visitors
yesterday aroused considerable in-1
forest s ; '.
A plane from Kansas City, Mo.'
brought two callers at the Lind-
bergh home. Their identity waa
not disclosed nor wa* their mission
revealfd. The plane land* d at the;
Princeton airport and a man and
woman alights They were driven}
a. r.-s^-... . . --.there by Richard A. Newhauae.
? K manager of the flying field. It was
many stamps that have leamed tel^r the couple
overnight at Put burgh. ^
The woman was described as today pending
ab-nt 45 years old. the man appear-
ed about the same age . jroom here. Names
While activity was at a low ebb and of the woman
1st Hopewell. Dr. John F. Condor. Police said the
“Jafste/ still waa continuing his came here frotp
mysterious trips. , ,
with firearms and assault to mur ■
• der. The latter eras the result of
a shot fired at W. W. Lehr, a cus-
tomer at tte bank New bond of
.ret Mtred upon by counsel.
: i The charges carry b possible
April 20-- UP)
8usic Bell Fain,
airplane accident
In the death
U prominent
business map.
I continued serious here today,
The accident occurred yrsterdayl
as Black president of the Tega#
Nall and Wire C|ompany> was bring-1
nf \tte plane tq the eartf^MM
short flight R
Black.
attorney Jimmie MacnlcoD
left far Sar. Aifeelo today. The
habeas corpus action was instituted
bv e. Crippen. assistant United
States district attorney here
4. A. Roue Charged
With Arson; Trial >
Is Held Tuesday
I V
dear
ittee
ocratic mem-
who prefer-
red not to he quoted told th* Unit
ed Press failure of the British to
pay would not unbalance the budget
duriiui that period.
JI iFi 1 f'
Suspect ed A ttacker
O/] White Woman Is
Held For Inquiry
FORT WORTH Aprilj 20—(UP)
charges carry
death penalty hi Ttxa*.
director of the test Texas Cha
of Commerce and was a lieutenant.
In (he naval
kiih after a T™"
A Rosa, charged with anon In
h a fire i
at 50ft
Tulsa Is Selected
As 1933 Convention
City By Oil Group
tl 20.—(U
a named
Tex., April 20
Oklahoma, was
site for the 1933 meeting of the pe-
tedustry electrical
DALLAS
Tulsa.
county
tierdoul
bited by
a'-orn-v
bit use of tl
y tow
questioned
the stamp is
ion from
An opinion
rilH 11 ta . x: I U1 !*-• "C U/Ulg SN-ns.
learned later the couple stopped - A rmperted negro attacker of
overnight at Pittsburgh. *htt« wonan Was held by poll
ng investlgal
InaJ assault
Names of t
attorney general waa announced
iy, abiding that double use. is a
j
hive been paying.
* for the cancelled
I. McRe
a
police
tlon of an
In a hotel
the aspect
were withhekll
troleum
tlon and
ton was
group at
day/
The
April next year,
officers
of Hous-
of the
the final meeting here to-
ft M. Bayless
named
will conv
J dealers
font apiece
about who
Under the
double
two to twenty
American Woman Is
that the
when used.
-
FORT
tV*>
:
■'; ,V
, April 20—
a favorable
tee oh
tax on
bill wiU
here today
preside nti of
Conservation
return
Found Killed Today
Near Juarez, Mexico
EL* PASO. TexMt-April 30—(UP>
—An American woman, about 40.
was found strangled to death on a
valley farm east of Juarez. Mexico
today. Four men were Jailed by
Juarez police.
One of the prisoners, Jose Ram-
ins. said he rented
to four men last
mid four men and
seen ln,(jND
A baggage check
woman's purse
automobile
Cruces, If. M,
night. Police
a woman were
automobile.
found In the
bsued la Las
woman
1“'“.
!'phuu£
recently vice-president, and H.
cording to advices to I
woman's friends found
unconscious s'
morning, she
assaulted, she
on her face
Okla
police, the
her in an
are C. O. Shirley,
Petroleum Company, TMsa,
E. Browne.
Company,
re-elected
Ac- Sinclair Prairie Pipeline
Independence. Kansas,
secretary-treasurer.
v |
\
4*
FORT WORTH MAN IN
T--»orK5 SoHT
Jail today on
murder
yesterday of
residence
night,
the left
Ing was
ed by hi* ___
•n of Fort worth.
April 20.—(UP'
6. was tekl in When the
pony.
The Babbling^
Bard
shooting Of the bees among the flowers—
‘ days, with
» Wood. 40, In a,Long hot
of a' bullet ^roJnd^ro^h j Fieldi of gr
ft side. Causa of the »hoot-|
* unknown. Wood Is mnrle-,
his wife and two dai
ti ivooq ■ »»«th- i That the folks all
and two daughters, I That they all
■fh I is i . ;
growing, waring grain—
th* time again
rt-to wishing
go a fts/4"**
oommnndcr
He Is aurvtved; by his widow
two children. T•
Miss Fain was at the airport
when Black waa preparing lor his
return to Oalveston. She bad never
flown and ax
and
flight.
Observers ssid
.*• „„ . ....
connection with a
on April 14th,
counte Jail ponding
lection of 8 81.000 bond set
Prrktnaon Tuesday
conclusion of an
trial held in Ms court
Malone
Is being * Id
ding the per-
i tf Judge
afternoon
qi deseed
short file
8 ride. Black ac-
thr couple made a
r the plane was
about 300 feet off the ground when
It crashed. It did not burn. Black
lived but 25 minutes after being
pulled from the wreckage.
Miss Fain is confined in the hos-
pital here. She was a h%h school
student and a resident of Nacog-
doches
.nrf trial
• ,, Luther Outline, city fire Marshal. ,/
oiiered testimony against Mr. Ross
port i.- examining trial. Information/
by Mr. Outhrie led to Mr.
dw.
/1
in the
Brenham Insurance
I Agent Enters Race
For NefFs Place
Texas,
|r 11-
BRENHAM. Texas, April I 20.—
1 up 1 ^43- A. Deware, life insurance
asent who as
foot bn 11
athlete
today
for the
!feff on: the
rho as an A.
I player was
to receive al
A. and M. College
the first
all-American
Texas,
n rec-
Neff
Place o
i
his can-,
term of
state railroad
to the day.
Mr. j Guthrie
indicated that th* Are at the house
occupied by Mr. Roes was of lncen-
belonged ti U. R.
diar>’
The building
Groom
Will Honcitz fe||
I Indicted By Grand
Jury,
Today
been appointed
University. Del
rim regardless
|
JURY
FORT
—A criminal
day resumed
diet In th*
/
lIM
20.—(UP)
eourt Jury to-
" of a eifjf
Of WUllam H. Ds-
with murder to een-
th* shooting of J. B.
Mills foreman, on
LAREDO. Taste. April 25-(UP)
—WUI Horwltz, Houston theater
magnate, his erifs and four other
persordV
In today charging fraudulent use
ol the mails to connection With a
lot ter v conducted from radio sta-:
•on JfED at Reynosa. Mexico
others indicted are Milton O.
Manuel C. Guerra, Manuel B.
and Alfonso Dominguez.
Vft mUrWC Dj
Jury her*. The
for trial at the
May
indictment*
federal grand
federal court
23 at Corpus Christo
The cases were presented to the
jury here by Assistant United State*
District AtUteey Douglas 1L Mc-
Gregor and Albert Thomas, Hous-
ton.
The defendant* twee been At lib-
erty under bond Knee the filing
of original chanra* at Brownsville
April 4 and A McOregor salt new
bonds will ndt b* required. Hor-
wlti and Mrs. HofMta are at Lte-
T
erty under
other* are
tfc*.
1. /
?i0.flSTbSl>te^a
and th*
»•/
: a
n
hi
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 160, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 20, 1932, newspaper, April 20, 1932; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1045307/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.