The Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 89, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 30, 1940 Page: 3 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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
H. •-
' - —r-
r
» * i
m.
I
l *
V ’'
c* ..»•’=■
TMmNfiT VM
)P!
* flf | Ki« *r- M «*>*££
*?»
<* « : •• V
>
BROWNWOOD (Tcxm) BULLETIN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, II
• -r
<?•
'1
> r
•f- #
%
'in
\.
PACE THREE
GERMANY FACES
EIGHTH YE& OF
RULE OF NAZIS
j"11.............................. .............
I That Blonde, Explosive “Maisie
,1
_ I
By RICHARD C. HOTTELET i
United Prm Staff ( orrmpontet '
BERLIN. Jan. 10—<UP>—A sur- ;
prise announcement was made |
shortly after noon today that Adolf I
Hitler would address the nation by j
radio at • p. m. <1 p. m C8T> on !
the* occasion of the seventh anni- :
v«0^ary at his acceslon to pow- j
It was the sole observance of the
day, usually one of parades and
celebratory speeches.
^[he prevalence of the sober grky
army uniform, the rigorous ration-
ing of food and a grim attention
to business marked the anniver-
sary of the triumph of Hitler's Na-
tional Socalist party.
A year ago today bands blared
martial airs in the streets Build- |
ings and houses flew the Nazi,
swastika. Adolf Hitler in a speech I
,. before the Reichstag expressed his
faith in a long peace, emphasized L
« the value of the German-Polish !
non-aggression treaty, spoke ir.
friendly terms of Great Britain and
Prance, and said that Germany aid-
ed the Spanish Nationalists to
prevent the Bolshevist lust of
blood" from spreading.
Today 4.0004)00 German men were
under arms Poland and Czecho-
slovakia. like Aust ria, were no
more. Oermany wns a friend of
Russia
Have 12J00 Planes
" It was estimated by some that
134)00 war planes st eked the hang-
ars of the German' air force and
there was an lncrei sing belie:
many of them wc laid see
this spring. Up to 75 submarines,
also according to < stimates. ' were j . > ■ .
rtady to prey upon commerce The /fUffOn C^l60f<ll€S
Nazi party, as it i as a year ago., .
f SJm:ahnvunch““*n*d *uthority m I Roosevelt Birthday
Thire was no Reicrmag meeting
GOVERNMENT IN
COURT AGAINST
2 COWS, HEIFER
EL PASO. Tex . Jgn. 30— (UP)—
The United States government went
into federal court today to try to
prove that two cows and a heifer
were unwelcome guests in this
country and had crossed the Rio
Grande illegally from Mexico
In a case styled “the United
States versus three cows," the gov-
ernment contended that the ani-
| mals had journeyed across the river
I during March, 1939, two and a tialf
miles above Presidio, Tex. Customs
officials seized the animals in Aug-
j ust. 1939. and are attempting to
I prove that the animals are “ali-
,ens" and subject to auction by the
government.
Ignacio Omealas, a Presidio
' county rancher who claimed that
I the cows belonged to him. said that
the animals were legally * in this
country, when the customs agents
took them Anyway, he claimed,
they never had been on the other
side of the Rio Grande in Mexico.
r
tM
atthf.qjiFFN'") OLDSTATUTEMAY
BE INVOKED
i •*
TEXAS NEWS
♦ ♦ ♦ 4 4
BRIEFS
4 4 4
Equipment Installed
The Chandler Auto 8upply com- j
pany, 'courthouse square, ftas in-
_ _ stalled this week a Sunen piston
District Judge E. J. Mllerwas en- P»h- connecting rod and bearing
gaged today in setting his civil precslon hone,
docket for flte January term of i It is part of a complete motor
35th District ; court of Brown coun- rebuilding plant being installed by
ty which convened' Monday, while the firm
the grand jury sworn in Monday i----
launched its investigation of crimi-
^Crhnlnaf^Jury cases will be set I Civil Service
down for trial next week or for \ Examinations \
MERCURY AT 34
the fifth or sixth weeks of the court *
term. The third, fifth and sixth *•
weeks will be utilized for civil jury 1
trials, while the fourth week will be Q1
and
.........—........
The -civil service commislson has
7 he minimum temperature in .
Brown wood Monday night was 34
degrees, the local observer at the
weather bureau said this morning,
marking the first night in more
than two weeks that the ther-
mometer rose above the freezing
point.
Highest thermometer reading for
the 34-hour period ending at 7 a. m.
Tuesday1 was 65 degrees.
. Daily high and low temperature
I readings in the city for the past
! seventeen days follow. The daily
weather bureau readings are takas
Roy Rogers and Oeorpe “Gabby"
Hayes in a scene'from the Re-
public picture. “Days of Jesse
James, at the Queen today.
r
QUEEN
devoted j to non-jury cases «mu - .. - --------——
soecial venire cases if anv *or aard attendant, neuro-psycilia- j
Judge Miller’s recommendation that }f'^dr^;"hen f,urn,i?iedl *or r,U*!
it investigate all Instances of live- JJJ* S th5 JJ-8 „Yet*1
stock theft and invoke a “forgot- '2?““ Administration facility, Waco
ten” state statute enacted before the iexaa-
turn of the century which makes Additional information, and appli- '
the handler or buyer of stolen live- cation blanks, may be obtained •
stock and meats equally guilty of team the secretary of the local <
law violation as well as the actual board of civil service examiners at
thief. The sweeping statute pro- ^ postoffice in Brownwood j
-i vides rigid regulations regarding 1. .. . .-7—-— (
t ; bills of sale on all livestock and ^ the
—7 - applies to butchers and handlers as , ro??rat* int<TesUj when
I well as dealers' in livestock. !^*LWlth wcl“**' tfar gas »nd ma'
.....
J
ief that
service.
Ann Sothern 'above* is starred with John Carroll and Rita John-
son in an uproarious sequel to “Maisie." This time it's “Congo Maisie"
opening at ; the Lyric today and showing through Wednesday
“Artie Shaw's Class in swing" . . "Judo Experts" with Ted Husing
and News of the Day will be included on the program.
The greatest man hunt in the his-
tory of the nation . . . That's the
screen story of "The Days of Jesse
James" a Republic picture . starring i
Roy Rogers your favorite western J
star coming to the Queen theatre 1
It was suggested by Judge Miller rtSn*^s'2?adt(brQk<‘n up p‘c*Kln*'
.h.. butchers a^)d handlers be died SSbJSoTStTSf '
before the grand jury.
BY UNITED PRESS
COLLEGE STATION — Kincer
and Oreenville won first and second
places in the single variety cotton' for two days, today and Wednesday,
contest sponsored by the East Tex- See “Days of Jesse James” . % . .
as chamber of commerce and gov- It's Roy Rogers greatest picture and
ernment agencies. The staple a rip roaring six gun adventure,
length of the contesting commu
German Raids-
(CONTINUED FROM PAOt ONC)
By official order, celebratory flags VnU£YrJ™f^’te^'carras-
safety but he
Sanders said
was washed away.
nities cotton production averaged
31 -32nds of an inch last year, 1-32.
. shorter than in 1938.
„ -r ’
I TEMPLE— One of Central Texas'
best known bankers. P. P Downs. -
died yesterday at the age of 83. He
“ was founder of Temple’s first bank
—
*
MINERS CHARGE
GARNER THREAT
a. m.
\4
'
Date
High
Lew
, 1
13
75
29 v
1
14
55
21
-
15
50
34
16
50
25 .
*
17
64
16
.
18
23
9
-1
19
33
15
i
20 •
50
18
, 21
37
It
•
- 22
35
—2
23
42
8
ti
24
26
12
25
, 25
16
26
34 .
16
I < 4
27
44
22
♦
28
58
' 31
<
29
65
I 34
* .
—r-
I arrests, and assaulted and killed;
workers.”
i The delegates endorsed a pending
house bill to restrict use of the
: national guard in labor disputes. 1 _____ _ __ _____
I At the last minute plans to sub- by'" Abilene Christian College
ACC TO HOLD INSTITUTE
A speech Institute for public
West Texas will be held next yeaq
jq GNER ACT "liu LPWtAbef>lltlCa* pol*cjr a P°P"
dav were deferred until Wednes
day.
GEM
BY WILLIAM H. LAWRENCE
United Press Staff Corespondent
COLUMBUS. O Jan 30 — <UP> —
Delegates to the United Mine Work- |
More than 300 high school stud-
dents and twdim attended the
speech cUnic fafld Saturday, Jan.
20 at the Abilene college.
Drowsy Insides Get
SSS£-!8S Z53JL Pleasant Awakening
nearly 60 years ago and served In
executive positions in the Texas
Banker's association Funeral will;
were not flown and Germans used _______ _ _
Moat dermal? w«t« convinced. Pt^fde”. ^cS-velF' 1obs°er"vcdUI>hls Unite? P^ ttUM cir/ei^Ident held thla *«ernoon
tato «• year 58th birthday today while the nation LONDON. Jari 30-<UP* -Oer-
. as the total power, that this----
would brln, » U. th. ^ pr,p*^ ,0 ",rtr*,e th* *nn‘VCT-
Hitler yhlmself had forecast that
this would be the most decisive year
in the country’s history and might
m decisive as to the country’s life
or/ death j i I ally every major city.
Z^P*-*** I111!* dou^>t to;. th* ' Nearly seven years after he. en-
ntwnhn
man planes today repeated attacks
of most people that military tered the White House on March
operations would begin In earnest 4. 1933 Mr Roosevelt showed few
when, with spring, the weather physical signs of the pressure of the
cleared Nazi quarters expressed “toughest job in the world " His
confidence that the war would end hair is grayer and thinner than it
with a German victory. Official was at his first inauguration, and
DALLAS— Police arrested a wo-
sary with a scries of birthday balls „ R' lth ' tf th . man ,Mt for
tj:z tzz
Hundred, otthousands will danc ed |*«J ** “ •.«*-.
•t birthday baU» tonljht In virtu-: The Air Ministry said that the £id'“I‘To be’an^ted?°but' when
Royal Air Porce had driven off somebody takes advantage of your
flights of German reconnaissance absence to steal your money it’s'
Another German plane, ac- «»" «>e said $6 had been taken
Irom her purse at her home while
she was gone. i„
their statements emphasized the
rigors still to come
fmphastae Self-Sufficiency
Seven years ago there was a Ger-
man army of 1004)00
100 000-ton navy, with no subma-
rines aad a 10.000-ton limit on war-
ships. There was no air force.
Since then it is estimated that
9.000 000.000 marks <8364)00.006.0001
has been spent on the armed forces
and on defense, including the Sieg-
fried line on the western front
Empa&is has been placed on self-
■uffidcncy, and huge steel works
and factories for making artificial
fiber and fuel have been erected
Most Germans believed that more
important than anything that liad
taken place during the last seven
years would be the events of the
next 13 months.
BOY RESCUED
FROMJCE FLOE
i NORTH TONAWANDA. N. Y.,
^in. 30—(UP)—Constable Amos termer Ethel DuPont; HaU
Voetsch went out into the Niagara : velt- Mrs: Roosevelt s brother- sighted off the east coast
. - ------- ~ Kirk* land
planes
cording to the Ministry, had at-
tacked shipping off Yarmouth and
had been driven out to sea / . ; CLEBURNE w. Funeral services
communiques were worded, how- ' the lines of his face are deeper. But' planes0 ranged *OTe?*400 miles1"*" were heldtodav forHughW. Wm-
•ver A. to avoid the creation of r»r on« MrTntire planes rangeo over wu mues 01 man cieburne resident since 1890.
^SuSifidetl? d aid £de« in . the BrU1&h east coaM’ bombi!}g and He died at his home yesterday He
overconfidence. and leaders m sician said the president wqs lh machme gunning shipping The Air was 70 ve4rs qih
superb phyMcal condition. I Ministry's announcement indicated _
Brief Radi* Addresa j mat the Germans today were at- COLLEGE STATION Fred R
Star of stage, screen and tadib tempting to duplicate yesterday's jonM today headed the department
—— M a arrived here Xo highlight the siix activity • Df Agricultural Engineering at the
iTiere was a ma,or birthday balls in the capi-r RAP fighters and coastal patrol Texas A and M Collee. A member
taJ. Mr. Roosevelt will p&rtici- planes had pursued German planes Df the teaching staff for 19 years
pate only by making a brief radio off Yarmouth but the results were Jones succeeded the late Daniels
speech, <9:15 P M. jCSTi thank- not known immediately, the Mm- scoates by appointment by Dean
ing those wlay are expected to con- istry said. jE J Kyle.
tribute approximately $1,500,000 to It was disclosed today that there i -- —
the paralysis fight. was only one survivor of the crew DALLAS — Police sought a thief
The "ruf Ainu gang.” a group of ot H** E*st Dudgeon lightship, at- j sketchily described as “tall and
Mr. Roasevelt's old friends whose tacked yesterday by a German ■ well-dressed” who stoic $1,539 from
association dates back to the World plane / I a large department store He sue-.
War aays when he was assistant • Seve# Bodies found reeded in having a cashier leave
secretary of-the Navy and the 1920 f The bodies of seven other’mem- her desk on a ruse, then rifled her
campaign when he ran for vice- bers of the lightship s crew! were desk drawers. _
president, will dine with the presi- found 011 a beach near tiie Wreck- ; - .*
dent for a White House birthday age of a small boat V | AUSTIN- The season for trapping
celebration. The name, “cufflinks The lone survivor, exhi
.gang.” stems from Mr Rosevelt's struggled ashore in an east,
(presentation to each of these friends town early this morning Hie said
'cufflinks bearingg his initials and that a German bomber had spray-
I theirs. They gather, annually to ed the decks of the lightship with
1 celebrate hLs Jbirthdav. ' .machine gun bullets and then had
The party will include : the presi- dropped nine bombs The last bomb
dent and Mrs. Roosevelt;, James struck the vessel
Roosevelt, their oldest son; Franklin ! Indication of continuation of the _
D Roosevelt Jr., and hLs wif\ the German raids first came today ; J . .
.-when two German bombers were ; AUSTIN —Tills city had recorded
sighted off the east coast of Scot- , Ita first traffic death of 1940 today, tlon agent
Samuel Roseman.
COUNCIL TO MEET
A regular monthly meeting of the
ers convention charged unanimously Brown County- Home Demonstra-
today that vice-president
Oarner. “reactionary
and “their tory Representatives' in Maysle Malone. Brown county home
Congress." had threatened" the agent. ' This pleasant way to relieve eonstl-
very Ufe of the Federal Wage-Hour The meting will convene at 2 pation and ita biliou&nesa. head-
aches. bad breath combines two im-
portant features. (1) The time-
tested reliability of the famous lax-
i.l
Discovery
r
Lovely. Isn't she? And talented,
too! She's Brenda Joyce. Darryl
P. Zanuck's new star find, who
scored heavily In her debut in
“The Rains Came" and will be
seen at the Gem theatre in 20th
Century-Fox's “Here I Am a
Stranger." Richard Greene stars
In this film: Richard Dix is co-
featured with Brenda and Bar-
gain Day.
law "
I A resolution, adopted without de-
bate asserted that the wage-hour
administrator, appointed by Presi- •
dent Roosevelt, had been "Inef-
ficient and lax" In establishment of'
Industry committees to raise mini-
mum wage standards and in the en- |
forcement of the taw.
j Larger appropriations for admin-
is tart ion were asked as the miners
attacked "crippling ammendments" | ■
offered by “Tory representatives" j
It was during hearings on the)
proposed wage-hour amendments j I
last spring that UMW president ;
John L. Lewis attecked Gamer as
: a “labor-baiting, whickty-drlnklng
poker-playing evil old man."
The delegates opposed federal gov-
ernment loans to Finland or any
other country Involved In war. al-
though they voiced sympathy with
Finland in ita war against Russia.
Secretary-treasurer Thomas Ken-
; nedy declared that loans to foreign
countries were the first step to-war,
1 and UMW A district president C. F. [
Davis of Fairmont. W. Va.. one of 1
j the 58.000 UMW members who served I
in the U. S. army during the World
War. said that it was American loans
l which led to participation in that j
war.' !'.•• - |. '• \
i Another resolution opposed use of
1 the national guard in labor disputes.
-■ —T -—— !
p. m.
i
Quality Furniture Ot Ruga,
New Empire Furniture Ca
Window and Auto Glass.
new flavor.
ative powder and (2)
payability especially
children. Keep Syrup
Draught handy. Use ^ _
needed.
rial 25c
F
'M
yourself or
rr
CU/vMO&A,
Home Agents Meet
| nuo 1 in— 111c season tor vrmppuig . . .. , • j I . - ~ 7
usted. fur-beaniw animals in Texas, which At ESIStl&nd MonQ&y For aaick
coast ' doses Wednesday night, has not' ,
been satisfactory. Will J. Tucker. | Miss Mayesie Malone. Brown coun-j -g
executive secretary of the state ty home demonstration agent, at- i
game, fish and oyster commission tended a meeting of home agents
announced today. Although trap- from several counties held at East-
ping was done during the open land Monday, when instruction in
season and price* were low on prac- the making of feather quilts from j
WHY >u^er from Colds?
666
relief from
imhe CM
LIQUID • TABLETS • SALVE
NOSE DROPS
9£L JthiL b&hJL hoisLin, town.
iLT 0 N H tLTfTj
o AIILKNK
o KL PASO
o LONRVtfW
o LUMOCK
o PLAINVIIW
o AL8U9UKRQUI
New Mexico
• L0N6 BEACH
Coltjorni*
o aad THE HOTEL
SIB PKANCIS DRAKE
Sam Frmmtite*
| tically all pelts.
old beds or pillows was given by
Miss Margaret Blount. . assistant
Eastland county home demijauitra-
T“
ia« to
YThe rescue was made In mid-
1 glr—.. 10 miles abov> the falU.
30 nlBNlas after Joseph Dev. a
rlveraum. had heard calls for help
as he worked on the river bank at
dusk
riven in a canoe last night and for- Judge
Abby. who'sst on sr^lce^sk^drffl- p S^Tvan secretary of the treas-:to have been German was sighted C!L3TjSBLg [^JS^the
toward Niagara Falla. [ ury 8nd Mrs. Henry Morgenthsu off tlie east coast ** •,nitri». was altampung to cross the
Jr., secretary of commerce Harry
Hopkins Dr Ross T Mclntlre, Scotland were first seen flying along
Brig. Gen. Edwin M Watson. Cupt the coast in a nortiierrtly du-ection
Daniel J, Callaghan. Stephen T. One was no higher than 500 feet
Early. Miss Marguerite Lehand. Miss Both were flying close to the
Grace Tully, Miss Malvina Tliomp- sliore.
They were pursued by u Brit- Jtoi Hudspeth, 85-year-old Civil Miss Blount had previously at-
jsh fighter Then a plane believed w®r veteran died after being struck j tended a similar demonstration held
^---—.---- ------ it Big Spring and disseminated In-
_ _ dramtton given at tlie Big Spring
Th^ German bombers retxirted off near his home when struck astherlng
by the sutomoblle. If . , m -,i m ■ ,
Dey saw the boy bobbing along son. Stanley Prensoll, Basil O’Con- When the plane off the east coast
to a. 1
supply
the channel of the ice-clogged river
and ran to a nearby hotel to sum-
mon aid. Police and firemen raced
landing downstream with a
wagon carrying ropes, lad-
der and a canoe. They estimated the
time It would take the boy to drift
Vo the landing and made ready with
'H» boat. _
A rope was tied to one end of the
canoe. Voetach, • a master mariner,
choae the mast difficult assignment
He got Into.the frail boat and pad-
'LANES DOWNED
AUSTIN — Joohn W. Gunstream
of Dallas was named today to' be
director Of the Texas School of the
Air Board of Directors of the
school. They selected Gunstream
because of his background and ex-
perience in radio education, it was
announced He has been con-
nected with radio education In New
York. Columbus and Cleveland.
Ohio, and at the University of Texas.
.........*71
Public Records If
--—--!i
AUSTIN— Oeneral Improvement
nor snd Mr. and Mrs. David Oray. was sighted. Hriash pursuit planes
In keeping With a family tradl- went up and machine gun fire was I
tlon. the presidental birthday cake heard but there was no air raid
will bear Only 21 candles. alarm
Celebrities Present K 1 i ----*----
Motion picture stars here lnclud- 171 hi hi Q AIM 91
ed Dorothy Lam our. Oene Autry. ( * a *» CM
Mickey Rooney. Gloria Jean. Brenda
Joyce. Tyrone Power. James Cag- ,
ney. Pat O'Brien. Ohs Munson. Ed- '
ward O. Robinson. Elsa Kyser and By RALPH FORTE j .
Edward Everett Horton. , .United Pres. Htaff Correspondent
The celebrities will have lunch HELSINKI. Jan 30-<UP)-Ftn-
Mrs. Roosevelt at the White nixh waiplanes and anti-aircraft i 17.55 points, according
died out from shore while those on House at I p. mi. they will attend gvms shot down 21 Soviet planes iby Dr P A Buechel, U T econ-
the bank held to the other end of a reception at a hotel preceding ywtorday while ground forces re- omlit, who reported employment
the rope to keep him from drifting a benefit dinner, snd later will pui^ new Russian attacks, an of-
*- ' i | make personal appearances at tho t Octal Finnish communique said to- i carloadings 2.63. and
dav. *tnr* rrIm 9 37.
Marriage License
D. C. Allgood of Pioneer and
Pauline Runnels of Rising Star.
Legal Transfers
Home .Owners Loan corporation
to L L Stewart and wife for
$1,750. warranty deed to part of
' Mock 4L
Lot 2.
In all Texas Industries, except pe-, Brownwood.
4, Coggln addition to
troleum. was recorded today by the
University of Texas Bureau of Busi-
ness Research for the month of De-
cember. 1939. Run to stills slumped
to a report
In a feW minutes the boy on the! birthday balls.
lee cake loomed Into sight. Voetsch \> —--
paddled furloussly across The chan-
nel. As he neared the boy. he
thought of shouting encouragement
to him.
"What are you doing out here.
man?" be asked. j i
What’s it to you?" the boy called
—TT-
Series of Robberies
gained .77 of a point: payrolls 1.70;
department
I store sales 937.
day.
The communique said that large I -
casualties had been inflicted on the I HOU8TON — Damage from a fire
Russians in fighting northeast of i *hich swept a wholesale produce
Believed Solved
pany vice president at $12,000. There
was $7,000 Insurance.
ashore could see a struggle
as tba canoe and ice floe met in
i. The canor tilted peril-.
Voetsch quickly got the
bop 'aboard and was hauled ashore
rope. He still clutched the
who had seemed oblivious to
peril ahd defiant i^resrtie.
Physicians Mid the-boy was weak
from Clock and exposure, but would
suffer no ill effects. He was taken
home after emergency treatment.
HR explanation of. hew he hap-
pened to be adrift was vague, but
Voetsch believed be had been play-
ing on the shoulder-high Ice cakes
piled along the river banks and
IiaJ ----At m m ‘ ■ *
nlfl m ’MK IK* Wiucn
drifted away with him.
“ toy had to
to get into
to he hadn’t
EL PASO* Tex . Jan 30 — (UP) —
State' highway patrolmen beliqred
today that the arrest of three men.
who were in an automobile being
driven down the wrong side of a
highway, had solved a series of rob-
beries perpetrated from New Or-
leans to El Paso.
The tltee men. L. Brcne, Harold
Shenk ohd Robert Morgan — all
about 30f-were charged in a justice
court wah jobbery in connection
with ,‘thi theft of three typewriter^
from the El Paso high school of-
fice. 1 * ■
The men were arrested when state
highway patrolmen Jesse Heliums
andH
mobile
the
smelter
C. A. Cockrell
lie whifch was
left 'side of a
has been on the offensive for 110
days—and that the Russian sir
while Inflicting a higher toll on
Finns, “cost the Russians dearly in
men and materials."
The Finns also reported they had
beaten off a day-long attack on the
Important fort on Manti Island,
on the northeast shore of the lake,
where Red planes and infantry
Joined a powerful attack.
The fort has been effective re-
cently in breaking up Russian rear
lines and several Russian attacks
on it have failed.
The Finnish communique said
that Finnish airplanes had taken
the offensive In retaliation for the
Cockrell halted an auto- Russian bombardments and had
being driven on'bombed "a certain harbor" as well
highway In the' u railroad stations behind the
nelter district. 1 , j Russian lines. ‘ . I ....
Investigation showed that the cart- Flans Leas Plane
had been stolen in New Orleans and There was no definite indication
£r£ar.
id. tba highway
naval I
HOUSTON—Anthony Sayers, 36
and W. A. Ditech Jr.. 33. cat«ht by
two police officers In a liqdor stare
Dec. 31. were held today to the
grand Jury without bond on charges
of armed robbery.
HOUSTON- A mass meting of
cittern wm called for
night to start a '"draft
campaign in Texas, under
chairmanship of John J.
PORT WORTH—~The
wave broke six records In 1
It was revealed today,
freezing dayz, January
est month In history:
tive days had
lower: IT
and thred days had
H. M. Hughes at al to Ouy Keel
er and wife for $1,000. waranty
to part of Lot. 10. Block 13.
ing Side addition to Brown
H| M. Hughes et al to J/Cleo
Martin for B1.400. waranty deed ta
Lot -3. Block 14, Ford’s Addition
to Brown wooo.
C. P. Urschel et al. trustees of the
estate of Thomas B. Slick at aL to
Brown county, easement for
road on strip 15
the H. T. St B
at law yesterdky as Floyd Hall, ne-
gro. was fined $100 and costs or
charges of csrrylng a gun. Hall wai
led away/ to jjsll after all three tc
whom be referred only is “my
wives, humber one. two, and three"-
hsd kissed him.
PASO— Enlargement of th<
Dodge corporation’s cop-
refinery here was announced
L. 8. Cates; president of the cor -
poration on an inspection trip to-
day. The plant will be Increased to
provide for an approximate
cent output, Cates said.
EL PASO—;! arold H. Hansen. IS.
of Yaleta, Texa i, was Usted today as
Rl Paso county s fifth traffic fatal-
ity of the yeto flbneen was killed
when the motorcycle be wax rid- I
tog. was* strudk by an automo-,[
out driven
• Women |
Meal planning ,
/ ever tiresome?
When the old question, “What To Have For Dinner?” Becomes
tiresome, call us, our shelves are loaded with unusual foods that
will make your menu planning a pleasure.
PHONES.. ■
V*
WE DELIVER
i
Tomorrow!
IS OUR FIRST...
OUR BOOKS ARE CLOSED FOR JANUARY . .
PURCHASES NOW WILL APPEAR ON YOUR
FEBRUARY BILL, PAYABLE MARCH 1ST.
Frank EMIS0N&-S°n
X
/
QUALITY CROC'ERlET
-
-V-
1800
—
/ \
/
V •
\
\
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.
Jones, Ernest. The Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 89, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 30, 1940, newspaper, January 30, 1940; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1094115/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.