Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 20, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 6, 1937 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 26 x 21 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PAGE FOUR_
BH0WNW00D BULLETIN
BROWNWOOD (T«xa») BULLETIN,
SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 6.1937
hu violated the boundaries dearly
s«Vby precedent In securing the em-
pleyment of relatives by the state,
but th? present investigation Is a
timely one because It directs atten-
tion to a condition that ought to be
cleared up before it becomes more,
serious than It now is. Nepotism is
the worst phase of the spoils system
in government. It ought not to be
tolerated under any conditions.
suddenly on a dim ray of light
coming from under the door that
opened Into one of bar father’s
two study rooms.
Suddenly, Jill remembered Per*
kins. Her father’s white face. He
must be In the larger study, with
the door open. That explained the
dim light under the door.
8cmethlng had 'happened 'to
.worry him. On an Impulse. Jill
crossed to the door, opening It
quietly. Then she stepped Inside
and elcsed it behind her.
Her father sat, at a table. His
face was evidently toward some
visitor. Jill caught her breath. She
had lever seen her father with an
expression like that cn his face.
It was haggard, fearfully lined,
gray with some inner anguish.
She -could not see his visitor.
Eut suddenly a voice she recog-
nized grated harshly In the silence.
“You fall to understand that a
man might got tired of carrying a
I OUT OUR WAY
By Williams 1
Creator oftOperas
THAT AlNT FAlRj
AMP ALL "THEIR.
TH' SHOP FOOTBALL
TEAM GTTS TWO
HOURS OFF EVERY
PAY TO PRACTICE !
IMAGINE rr-^GETTIKI
F*MP "TO PLAY A
v GAME. V
DOCTOR AMP
HOSPITAL BILLS
PAID *’*■— WHUT
LUXURY/ y
HORIZONTAL Answer la 1
1 Writer of the rFTvUlwlx.rPir
“Ring of the KHEmL g
Nibelung." v HSfflUo ,]\
12 Flightless bird
IS Lions’ homes. Llll
14 Epochs ft fir II**ff*
ie Public riiaAHTr
disturbance. ’ |XMBRAfj-lh|
IT Utmost extent I |TlfJ
18 Mathematical mLn3in^
term. Ij L OmHia L
it Maintained. TreP
21 Having left a loir W.Mul*
will. ISiULLUilnr
22 Sun god. St Apple center,
24 To decrease. 54 Pedal digit
28 Doughy 85 Indian
mixture. gateway.
32 Local position-M Before.
33 To peruse *7 He ranks
34 Wigwam. among the
38 52 weeks. world’s great
38 Musical note.
40 Ministers.
48 Calendar book
50 Bitter herb.
51 Oleoresin
15 Sowed.
20 DrivinJ
QEORGE H. PAYNE, member of
the Federal Communications
Commission, declares that radio
programs are overdue, for reform in
the matter ot the fare they offer
children. He objects particularly to
the blood-curdling tales of gangs-
ters, detectives and straight-shoot-
er j .
“I have had many communica-
tions condemning them.” says Mr.
Payne. “I had f man in hare the
other day who said. ‘My child had
a nightmare thinking he eras being
2 Heathen god. £
3 Dove’r home 36 lS| h™j *PriD<
4 GenUa of auks 29 Fo>zen water.
5 Sudden v 4! SAfing votes!
invasion. \ JJ^rrber’
6 Not bright N44T«S^^a.
7 Scripture. \45BlKc hnT
• Star-shaped ps Wife* vessel.
* ®ow*r- 47 Malle tree. /
heavy load like this, and getting
not enough out of it to pay fcr
'pHE WORLD is thinking much
Just now of p«c.', bow to obtain
and malnteln it in the midst of
conditions which seem so gravely to
Jeopardise it. A study, therefore, of
Christian character and peace la, a
timely one. and no better back-
ground for such a study could be
teund than the declarations by
Paul, the great apostle who lived hi
the midst of turmoil and danger and
yet was always at peace within his
°vm heart and in his relationship to
othe." men.
1 ) % » *
Primarily. Paul wrote. K is large-
ly t a matter of directing our affec-
tions, for "where the treasure is.
there will be the heart also.”
“S*«k the things that are above...
not the things that are on the
earth." It is but another way of
contrasting the conflicting influ-
ences of the Spirit and of the flesh;
of picturing the old man. govern'd
by desires of the flesh- and the new
mo: dedicated to a life of conse-
crated service to Ood. Before ac-
cepting Christ, we are of necessity
governed by the materialistic, the
fleshly, the earthly. Our vision is
net lifted up, hut is kept on. the
sordid plane of life directed by all j
that is evil and destmetiv?. But
regeneration—experiencing the new
birth—automatically lifts the vision,
setting thg mind on things that are ‘
above, "where Christ is." so that
the new life is raised above the sordid J
and the material.
Thus is peace achieved in the
heart of the Christian; and only
when his own heart is at peace can
he hope to be at peac: wtth his
fellows. No better illustration of this
spiritual truth need be cited than I
the material condi tons now existing
in some of the nations of the world. j
Thom nations which now enjoy do- •
mastic peace, relief from worry and
anxiety and fear, are at peace with ;
other nations; but those whose in-
ternal affairs are disarranged, who
are held under the sway of dicta-
torial power in order to prevent the
disruption of national life, are the
forces which now menace the peace
of the world. The Christian has
pace in his own heart, because he
to relieved of the evil impulses of
envy; Jealousy, covetousness, which-
Inspire unrest; and fee dwells at
peace among his fellows b'cause bis
whole life is motivated by love.
How can this peace be achieved?
Primarily, it is a gift of God’s grace
for it is based upon a sure knowledc '
at one’s own salvation. It is nur-
tured by feeding upon God’s Word,
the 8 word •‘of the Spirit, and by fel-
lowship with the Lord Jesus Christ,
the Spirit of Peace.
fi He was-
by birth.
VERTICAL
1 To vex.
• Bird’s home. ’ 48
10 Silkworm. 48
kidnaped and tortured after he had
listened to ooe of thos? programs’."
j" Moat parents probably agree with
After
11 To declaim
Mr. Payne whole-heartedly
all. one does not need to be an expert
psychologist to realise that nerve-
racking. f tar-creating thrillers can
be an over-stimulating emotional
diet for a youngster.
QNR of the unnoticed by-products
of the depr'sslofi—unnoticed, ex- ,
#ej* by those directly Involved- has
be n a rise in the death rate from
tuberculosis . ,
Dr. Kendall Emerson, managing
director of the National Tubrrculoais
Association, pointed this out the
other day. remarking that the death
rate from tuberculosis in the United
Stat s rose from 54.5 per 100.000 in i
193-5 to 55.4 1A 1938. The rise (s small, j
but significant: as Dr. Emrson
says. K should be taken aa "a call
to arms."
The country has made great I
strides in its fight against the white
plague in the last few decades. It
cannot affonfi to see its gains di-
minished ev:n slightly. You might
remember this, when the Christmas
seals go on sale next month.
A Weatherford ’ <Okla.) Indian
uses cough medicine on his flap- /"i UTS IDE
Jacks, an idea lor the waitress who v mg. A
Insists on exposing them to cold be- blanket of
fore serving.—St. Paul Daily News, familiar see
kJ ILL
MARY RAYMOND I
Backstage
In Austin
SYLVIA SUTTON,
ONE-HOUSE LEGISLATURE -
University of Texas students ar
being carefully polled as to wha
they tfclnk about a one-house keg
tslature for Texas. A similar poi
conducted by the-Daily Texan, stu
dent newspaper, (three yean agi
fhowed a tremendous majority ir
favor of the pfoposal. and lt*s I
good guess they .hilll feel the aanx
way. In future jwua, these student)
will form a strong political btec it
favor of the ona-fcouse systemW
AUSTIN. Nov. 6—(UP)—A high
state official says that he has in-
spected the contract which the
Board of Control has wtth Dallas
banks In regard to the $1.6284)00 old
age pension loan, and that there
is no real reason -to pay back the
money at this time. •
According to this official, there
U no way in which the banks can
compel repay -
the
indlffmix*. Mortn*
r*'’ sjziz ssr-ssr,
....... _j -- Just inside the great doers
These Europan diplomats an waited livened servant# with aii-
gerverally pretty cartful to “reserve ver trays. Cards were an unneces- ,
full liberty of action. ” but they never sary formality in most cases as
seem to know what to do wtth it.— trained eyes sw^pt the entering
Indianapolis News. , elite. Familiar faces to socially
—-- ■-■ - ■/ conscious butlers.
— ■ I _• . I
................. In [the drawing rtnn which
{ _ rnriny CAV I’ ^*n*cd ballroom. Jill was re-
l SO llillil oAl I ceningSr aith William Whitman.
♦ [____ ___ . . . f standing by her father and mother. ;
vw last week they told *ue who been Stoking.
IN Texas last week y Jll] saw. came close to her. "You’ll
business had never b:en more fUa- ^ ^ ^ ^ ears Its
prosperous, and I think that* UU What you want, gorgeous gal. isn't
generally throughout the whole gf* ^ j,
country. ^—Secretary Ictaa. i ..pleaae ^y
. . . a,. Jill said. She saw his fact redden
WOMEN are of tremendous tm- ang^y M ^ tumrt away. (,
*cu*.I ‘-A- — >*" — cowl
-Wtatet Baxter tncvie actor. >nd ^y J*,. ^
_____ ^ __^ lighting up si; it ly as he sawf)
—— aa i » I\AU 1 - AS
wouldn’t have been needed, if that
strike we had hadn't been so. pro-
longed.'* ,
"It would
been a risk,"
answering. "And
rometimes a risk seems not worth
taking. A $2 000.000 loan isn’t Just
pocket change, you know."
He was befhg deliberately ugly,
Jill knew. 1
She moved a little, to see her
father's face closer. There wav
nothing but despair there. He had
mem
mcnev
-
lo4*;; rnade or.
•>or: rr:m-
C AT.
• delay tve re-
% k: I patmer.t until it
has the . spare
HARDEMAN cash.
Meanwhile, former Assistant At-
torney General Everett Looney of
Austin, a candidate for attorney
genetal, plans to push his sugges-
tion that the state suspend all pay-
ments of Interest and principal on
this loan until the Legislature pro-
vides more money. ■,
Looney argues that it would be
criminal to pay off this note at the
price of cutting 10.000 old people
off t'.e pension rolls in the dead of <
winter.
“Put yourself in the state's posi-
tion. Suppose you had $100 in cash, j
You owed that $100 to a bank
across the street, yet you had four
hungry children tugging at your leg. i
Would you pay the bank or would
you feed the children? Well, the
state is tn that position—either peg
the bank or feed the old folks,"
Looney said.
There seems to be a good Chance
to get Looney’s idea across and
thus avoid all pension roll cuts
duriiM the winter months.
Mew Officers Are
{ ‘Installed by VffW
must have come to Alan in the
course .of his testing period. One
of them—the hardest to bear^her
own careless plan to pave his rocky
way with gold.
“Thank you for telling me the
story," she said in a low tone..
“I’m gerry I can’t wait to meet
him." Alnsley said. “He is one of
the finest chaps I know. But Tm
to a window and stood staring out.
She felt faint and confused. Lord
Jeffry! Alan was of the Eru<li*n
nobility. Some day he would be an
English lord. They would live in
that splendid old home and carry
cn its fine traditions.
8he tumec from the window,
This must be MUo’g dance. How
angry he would be. having to
search for her. Her gaze focused
WOULD likv’ to be known as the
Great Rjflfcaler. If elected I will
iovc for the repeal of one obsolete
r useless law each w:ek.
Brucei Barton, advertising man.
recently elected to Congress.
Murder Charge
Is Filed Against •
Chat. Paddleford
The first wiui BUI. The second
with that new Englishman, Victor
Alnsley. who w*a leaving the party
early, and wanted to meet her. ac-
centing to Ellse. The third with
Milo, and the fourth—the fourth!
By that time. Alan would have ar-
rived . , .
It was while she was dancing
with the Englishman that some-
thing happened that gave Jill a
queer feeling of apprehension.
Perkins was entering the ball-
room. trying to look as though he
were not doing something that
was distinctly irregular. He was
making|his way to her father. Jill,
dancing nearer to the group where
her father was standing, saw him
look up blankly as Perkins sppke.
Then, she was positive of it, her
father's face looked white and
startled/ He turned and walked
from the room. -
Who,.has summoned him? What
could it mean? Jill heard her
partner’s voice through her troubled
abstraction. u
"I’d much rather talk than
dance." he said. “Goukl we?"
Jill led the way to a secluded
place. Avsmall enclosed sunroom
room of her
Hold Everything!
COLEMAN. Tex.. Nov. $—(UP)—
Charles Paddleford. about 40. local
implement salesman, is under bond
far $1,500 today on a, charge of
murder which was filed in Justice
Barclay Martin’s court.
The charge was filed following
the death Friday morning of A1
Vanell,
CAMPAIGN FUNDS—When an
employee of the State Treasury told
an investigating committee this
week that he had contributed to a'
fund for the re-election at State
Treasurer Charley Lockhart, R was
probably the first time In the stale's
political history that such campaign
contributions were brought Into the
open. . j
Of course, the practice of em-
ployees contributing to their bosses
re-election fund has been going on
for years, but no one has brought
It into the open before.
According to those who know,
there are two rls—as of oontrtbu- |
tlons:
L Compulsory—some public offi-
cials decide that their employees!
should contribute a certain per-'
oentaga say 10 percent—of their
salaries to help them get re-dec ted.
Those contributions • ar^ enforced
because those who don’t pay off get
fired.’",! ^
2. Voluntary—the greater bulk of
such contributions are purely vol-
untary. Grateful for thsir appoint-
ment and interested in the wcljArw
worse; and for that reason it must
be discouraged by every possible
abtut 30. heavyweight
wrestler who was associated with
the. Western States Carnival in this
city for the week.
Vacnell was Injured shout mid-
night Thursday when he and a
companion. Roy Beard, also asso-
ciated with the carnival, were walk-
ing to town. An automobile driven
by ME. Paddleford, witnesses say.
struck Vamell. Paddleford. stated
Sheriff George Robey, offered aid.
The charge against Paddleford was
made as a technical measure—to
hold him for grand Jury investiga-
tion. added Sheriff Robey.
Relatives ef Varaell were expect-
ed to arrive here today to make
funeral plans.
payroll, it was discovered by the l < UCKLESS Ireland.’ some yearn
anti-nepotism investigators, while ’ 7 a«0-.- ,llad B‘a‘ k and T*n
* thirteen department heads have \
among state employ*. Hack end Klan troubles.
OBtensibly, none was employed upon Broadway’s unemployed wlss-
recommendatlon of the state official *yji resting easily otoce more,
te whom b? is mated. Quite Uk«fly iVov f^at ^ Legion has left town.
* each employe is an acceptable work- there’s room for them in the hotel
er. and is earning his salary: Sam? lobby chairs again.
have been on the state payrolls for •
many yean, and their relationship Jtist in case England and Prance
with ar dspartment j can’t Had a satisfactory way of
heads J. merely incidental ■ m^^d
Here h a situation, howevw. that L
affers vast opportunity for evil in JJ*®. » b*°frmPhy tde U* *’
the management of state business > • • • •
and hdhlatton, Rood it has been g^^y. tato ^ store.
noted. IsHhieker than water; and ^ ^ a jj. B. Navy destroyer at
officials who*? relatives art state J the Brookljm Navy Yard the other
emptoyes can not be entirely un- day and stale a quantity of money.
'Mindful of their personal welfare Just one more case of Jack going
when actions likel^ to ashore without leave,
impair their positions. A law maker. ?
for instance, would be loath to reduce The move by which ex-Mayor
. U b. * ««. y
had reason to bettive that one bn- h **
^ ^ "Jf! to have fallen, through, but Walker
Uon of a relative^ salary, or possibly Mys he lent going to cry about it.
his discharge. Neither* .«* gntimers, is the New
There is no evidence, thus far,|York taxp
mat any state official or law-maker (jSopyrlfht, 1«7, NSA Sendee, Inc.J
FREDS
fURNITURB
CO
that led into the fl
father's double stu
"This Is Jolly." Victor Alnsley
was saying. "May X smoke?
Thanks?"
He Mt g ctgaret and watched the
cuffing smoke. "I’m afraid the
technique of the dance was not
stressed enough In my education."
he said. "I much pewter this to a
crowded floor." He liked the in-
formal'ty though of even the most
formal parties tn America. English
people weren’t able to break away
from their natural reserve. Even
when they played. It was a sort of
fully and voluntarily give what they
can to 4be campaign fund. It is
b«.sed purely on gratitude and many
public officials do not even ask their
employees for help.
All this furore Is building up sen*
IF showing r customer how springy
c&ucct mm back toy minute.’
**Thc bed salo?man
U»t U1UIITV53 ifi.
ronnu rsrnnii uyr
^r:inr^ i/lih mMIh
OHnann ra ttnyw; ?p
n r:i^nmnE^r^rs3 utr
Tictirnn^ (tj mran*?. r
MURii RifflGmn raf?ra<iUr
ot ■othw Hfiora
aatHifiHiTiBi-mrj, :i[4nir^r*: B
M
l
sJh
1
1
J
a
it
19
40 Mi
•
w\
"■J54
H53
| r J *
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 20, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 6, 1937, newspaper, November 6, 1937; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1062825/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.