Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 262, Ed. 1 Monday, August 18, 1930 Page: 4 of 8
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H. F. MAYS*,
jambs g. white.
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V
MOHDAY AUGUST 18.T*».
■ *i ■«
V. >1* ^ • -A S#.
Sj^WilUainf
s
—
to oetadvete^tttMl to tbs; om
srs^ss^rsTaS isjs
sharactor, standing
corporation which
Town wood Bulletin
m bioapt to tft
UU.V1U4 Ml uo wiui IV, w ill at tip will
any attempt to Influence the course of
But the fact is that the lady can't
ticipation in the affairs of government.
.Tansy.:
____win
to attention of
ta Qmlted to
In the a4
i? «o per month, •» »
¥sssfl?wr-4l»
some good woman is heard to assert that politics
depraved, that therefore ahe Will stop having
to do with it; will atbir^ifflhf or making
government,
lay down par-
the affairs of government, even If the is
so inclined to shirk her duty. A citizen of a democratic
country is. a citizen without hope of escape from
and responsibilities. A king )tnay conceivably
>t® his throne and another will take his place and
on. Bui aj citizen of q democi
te. He
tlon; he has a
the polity is simply casting half V vote for the things
can not
has a continuing and inescapable obliga-
a part in his government, whether he will
the man or vomizi who stars awav from
.J
p*
r the man or woraan-who stays away from
simp
THE MINORITY RULES I , «*4»_g w ** “pp05”-
_. j i .* ptef have not escaped any responsibility. They
announced jhyt one-fifth of the people in; stUlhawe a.voice in government. They merely bolster
America were going to have the privilege of choosing j those things which they believe wrong.)
' ' * I The democrat who does not Want to
_ _ and deciding on all measures at the j IF1* democrmt who doe* not
primaries, there would be a cry of protest that would back In office can't escape any
front Wall Street to Hollywood. People would at h°m« on August 23rd. That
refuse to vote on a ticket chosen for them by other
when the election rolled around In November.
They would cry out that a grand old America
privilege had been; taken away. That they had as
much right to vote at the primaries as at the regular
election. Ota, yea. we would hear from them In a babel
of tongues. M . .
But those same people are sltjting by now, perfectly
ketisfied to let one-fifth of the nation choose the
candidates on which they will vote eventually. They(
just don't trouble to help their party make out a good
ticket. Yet they think that It should be strong and ab
to carry when the final election comes wound
complain bitterly if it doesn't suit them
xafUM to help th the primaries as evidenced by the vote
In those Just held.
—• • • •
tJUMAN nature Is queer, Especially when Judged by
a political gauge. It is much more Important to
chooae wisely at the primaries and have a worth-while
ticket to present hi the end than to fight to aee which
nan and issues will predominate when only two are
competing.
• ' The people in the United States are given the
privilege of choosing their own men and measures.
They like to think that they have a voice In the
government. But they get hoarse or are stricken dumb
along about time for the primaries.
The primary is the real testing ground. The
November elections are based entirely on this prelimi-
nary material.
Human nature, as we said before, is strange- Tha|t
_why it leaves itk political Interests hanging* In the
letting them get a little musty and moth ea
: then can't understand when someone suggests
people who appreciate and use their ballots should
gave them.
We seem to demand privileges. But we calmly add
,f£et whether we use them or not is our affair. And
BManwhQe one-fifth of the nation decides the fate at
.jjpother four-fifths. *
vote for the Fergusons.
that is the way the
if such thing can ever
votes of men and
that In some manner
of responsibility for the
government.
act means
see Fergusons
ty by staying
Just half a
will be nomi-
brought to pass, by
who labor under, the
can avoid their
jrs+ of democratic
i JOB MEN
Angelo Times: The
men in public life or in high
they hare no imagination,
lera. By) attention to dr
Ho far bo good—but
luality of Imagination whic;
might be. It n
programs and policies, it is
to new levels and sets our feet
perfect world
more
sateh
that
with too many
everywhere la that
are Job hunters and
thek get a Job and
good enough. It Is
makes us see things
tion which makes
tldn which lifts us
pon the road to the
HE WILL SUE
*aris News! W. T. Orant. _
Independent merchant will, ^»,
*nd he always will It dejUida
If he thinks he is going to be
chalp and merger age. he .will be
stamina.
aln store leader, says
■ITlike. He alvmyj
•on the merch-
victim of the
,---- — thinks other-
he will do otherwise. It U a day for busisess
\
—
»-V=WE. VOU SEEK!
mm Pocket Boov<
Aiio ?
HuRRW -The DRV
cuHakier mam
(<=> Vs/A i Tiki Ct J
v
I Kmovm vnhoT t Gif
■’VolD , Ist ^ VER'-/
EARCA^'T iCUL- WA'-/,
VslHENi X A‘»T VNHERE
is> somP'm of MimE:
"1T-&VMRERE W PuT iT?
NOv/M, OOmT THimK I'm
•Telv-iki' Voo That—fCuz.
T aihT — T vmoolDm
ThimH oF iT-oF TalKim*
To MW MOTHER Uv<£ 'AT
H»nOA FimE ma
utfe 1 GOT,
Not Hard, But Not
-------
sr>;-
1
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WI
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VyHW MOTHERS GifcT GRAT- JOTwilliMg*
g-OQAR COATUP._ctwt *»«s wcsic ^
TEXAS AND
k’jBk?
“Afl Texans to
:
4-
A Washington
i Daybook
PLUMMER
■......
—
too strong
AS HI N G TON—It is not putting
say that the social set ip Washington fairly ter than in other
with gife when word wwit out from the White try. It is dry. y
hat Douglas McArthur had been chosen the fairly good, me
Dry Everywhere
The unusual drought extends over
almost the entire douniry and is
j pa'ticuiarly severe m the Eastern
and North Central [States. where
water for stock and fbr drinking has
» ) become scarce in many places, the
| bad water resulting jin much skk-
* i ness and many death*. Added to the
' scarcity of water is the further men
ace of intense heat, parching fne
country and causing; many deaths
to! Conditions in Texgs are far bel-
ts of the coun-
yes: I but
moat ; sections have
1
trulnlng scliool at Ban Antonio—
Randolph Field—which la to be the
targets! in the world alien complet-
ed. I t
Flam For Breville Rote!
Architects have pre;>arpd plans
for a 160 room hotel at Bcevtlle.
Contracts will be made calling for
early construction of the building.
Ttxas towns have about all learned
that good-hotels and plenty of hotel Junior is a good baby qnd
room are essential to town growth splendidly. This on the word Of
and that most well-conducted hotels his grandmother. Mrs. Dwight W
pay B fair return on the investment. Morrow, who is en route to Mexico
The Bee-Picayune reports much City to Join her husband,
ether building under way in Bee —
counity's growing county seat.
Flashes of Life
BY TI1E ASSOCIATED PRESS
ST. Louis—A self-reliant young
man is Charles Augustus Lindberh,
Jr. Although his mother and ddd
are week-ending with the Hoov
a u.ui i
x>verv *
doirti; *-
horijsoxtal
I Hoot big.
«< Pantry,
t| To be In
debt.
|‘J Diner.
14 Coin.
15 Light brown.
Ill Flat surface.
17 Witticism.
1H <'U|»ld.
JO Native metal.
21 Flower con-
. miner.
22 Principal
part »f » j\
Infill.
24 Dimmed.
25 Animal.
20 Sun.
27 Kingdom.
50 Hett rated. J
:tl Nr a rnulv.
55 N'umlmtl |
value.
50 l*ige«»n.
57 Since.
5S tlenves.
40 Chart.
41 Heed hag.
42 About.
45 Bustle.
44 Kmlta vapors.
45 Shoe laee
hole.
VKRTICAL
1 Famous.
2 Conscious.
5 Tooth.
4 Cluster of
fibers.
5flaws of
eagles.
7 Verb.
SATI’RDAVS ANSWER
IIWl* Wls>BI
HWWffa
N v.
III!
mirMMX
o iswymw in
HUM K0W
KA(SI fJ'Jiy ISIIW
iffiWfflislQWiwti Kami*
nlrregwItUT
Indented.
10 Vahwjl. - •
Jt Net weight
of container.
It Not fresh.
SI Good.
St Distinct Ivv
theory.
t4 Kettle,
at Calm.
27 Harvests,
SO Paalclve
50To rent.
•I Quirt.
NS To elude
55 NUtltm.
5H
TODAY IS THE
ANNIVERSARY
OF
aolgood as far as beautiful women
HO."
—James Montgomery Flagg, artist.
• t • I s\t -
SOBRIETY Is not a negative
° condition; it te positive, ac-
tive and enjoyable."
Abandoned Well Sports Oil
About four years ago drillers
{abandoned a 3.193 foot well on the
1 »arm of J. T. Brundige. near Elgin,
uw cow- | u * dry hole, and plugged the well,
crops are’Mr Brundige
* 4**4- A HERO COES WEST
VI NOTHER good soldier has gone west. He has found f
his regiment and sits contentedly in some far lard
bursting shells are no
chief of staff of the United BUi'-es army. i plenty of water,
could have pleased Che group more. And have fallen here
no attempt was made to conceal the elation that mem- rapid opening of
bers of this set felt4 f I ‘Texas has given
The head of ’he army occupies an enviable ■octet ?uc!1 ®JF*
5ssar 4®® SaSr
land residential circles as well doH he ha«------- ***
freshing rams
there, and the
Jtton in Souih
lease e
cf the
Mr. Brundige waited until the
expired, dug around the top
casing to a point below the
plug, and drilled Into the casing.
' The well at once began spouting oil _
mptoywem 4o j ta twads. and Mr. Brundige proba- numoers
jbly has a good oil welL Leasing in "S**
the neighborhood Ima hmtxtb artivw Broalpjm
r >
he ha\e an exalted
( I Cotton Pick*
{present chief of staff. General Summerall.,| Cotton in all that
a high place in the affection of Washington 0f Ban Antonio is at
y. An even higher place |s being predicted for i* being picked as
{MneA^thur. j [ can piqk it. There
- j 1 mand for more
Charming i I 1 f I ! ! could be secured.
Tourists re
and North |
better than
have 4een.
VIRGINIA DARE’E BIRTH.
th^flrtt^Sld**bom In AmertaiMJf j "'J’HERE te nothing to the world
English parents, was bom on Roa- j which will sc humble an indl-
_ , . noke Island. Va.,“now a part of vidual as a custard pie, properly
WASHINGTON — Little America i North Can>#|m> . ^ | placed.'* • ' ■ ^ .
apparently te not America after all | glr Wajter Raleigh was trying to ] —Mack OmeH
Because of his two year absence In found a this region which ’ j, * * ____ ^
antarctic. Bemt Balchen will have he caUed Virginia ta honor of “TF we make art accessible to
to start all over again in his qu*wt Q^n RUzabeth. the Virgin Queen.) A the people, the people wm go
lor American citizenship unless <* -n^ baby, therefore, was nAm-; after art."
Mt: i ed for the country. She was the)
,s ! granddaughter of John White wh >
! was sent out by Raleigh as govsr-! _
NEW YORK—If there are a^v ” * I HARRI8BURO. Pa^ (UP)—Per-
t ! two days after her btrth she v«siaoog ^ eat too rapidly wer»
1 compared with
bill before Congress exempt ng
members of scientific expedition*;
passed.
—Otto H. Rah
URGES SLOW EATING
Where barbed wire, gas and
laager a tortured memory.
Old Cap or Captain, as be was called, was a wire-
hatrrri Griffon, who served with the French Red Cross.
.rn hT. ssSre^ifSssfSteKS £^5®
Through the flames, on where the gas clouds rolled, a Arthur, who lined in the capital for a long time. HU u nradicallv all ca
mask over his nose and eyes, he ran. v 5^A*thur of -
’ 8oin*how *- Aloe Arthurs—Bowman
men. his comrades in the army, who needed help. And Dou|laa II. Sfary and Malcolfi/ctUdren of Mrs
always he came. : McArthur, widow of hi* oroihrr—who take such a
“Cap will find me." one soldier in his outfit would proiptaetit paH to Waahtafton toctetyi at the
ipurmur to another. “Don't worry. He’ll be alons JP™* *»-.** unmarried. Only recently he was
‘most any minute."
All through the
Needed
section south
it all open and
as laborers
been a de-
pickers than
this demand
price being
cents, but at
! as the result of Mr. Brundlge's
curiosity and another good oil field
may be' developed. There is no ac-
counting for the way of oil fields in
Tkxas.
hia!
*\ ■ ■
wgary years Cap performed
duty. If he was scared, nobody ever knew it. Hte
bright eyes would listen carefully to orders and Hti
would obey them faithfully
npKZN the par ended’. An American soldier brought
the dog home. Something must have toltl his heart:)
that war was over. That hte services were no longer
required along the barbed wire.
When he had been needed he had never hesitated (
to go. Now that be wasn't, he stayed Sway from ajll
Wire fences. Nothing could coax him near,
i—rmhrrfrt the sharp, sudden hail . . . the blood
the moans . . . black night with mad red fire,
other day he died at Ware. Massachusetts, at the ripe
old age of 15 years. »
There te a lesson in the life of the soldier-dog
has passed through the western gates. He was never
afraid to risk hte life as long as be could be of service
divorced- by hte wife,
Atwell, the ac
who U flow Wedded
■ctqr.
s youngest major
tho new chief
He 14 a picturesque
and poiailar officers
to Lionel
the active list of
is practically all 01
can be done ri
labor te being sough
fields, it is not best
era to rush off to
out the assurance of
arrival at a parttc;
In prof ;cally all tr
information can be
where Uoo « ino»
KemriUe Builds Waterworks
Kfirville has let contracts for a
IGO.wx) waterworks plant, including
(he laying of 35.000 feet of new
main, the Installation of the newest
■re being made type of fire hydrants, and other con-
that the crop «true tion necessary to make a mod-
ern waterworks plant. Kern tile te
one of the best built, fastest grow-
tmt towns of Texas, and intends to
remain the leading town of Its sec-
tion of Texas.
n and picking
!ly. Although
for the cotton
’or cotton pkk-
ith Texas with-
mplovment on
ir destination,
cltias reliable
obtained as to
needed.
general on the aetlvi
f of staff baa great personal
■que figure—one of the most i
ffleers In tM army.
of hte brother officers tqid thg writer wrhen he
l.rord of MacArUmr ■ appointment that he had served
side by side with him for many years and "whether In
He «Af
Fnu
tim4 of peace or in tune of war.
for my commanding officer tha
in the army." \ j1 |
On May 31st. 1B3J, General MabArthur WtU be
come the senior officer in the ahny.
youtger than J* h*ve ever held the .
They war* Oenerala Leonard Wood and J
lin Bell
General Uneniploymrnt
White experienced! cotton pickers
are in demand, thel unemployment
m nation has chan*rd but little in
the peat month. Tlere are many
__i____ ..-w-.w— 1 people without wrorl; and this te
1 m." m
The men with a stei dy Job at a fair
(wage is fortunate. Texas has Mtes
unempiwweni that moat of the
II*°Out,at*Fort Myer. across
•eii
Potoma
c. a house 1s
Whether
his home
of the
But when he knew that he couldn't, he calmly refused spacious and eomfbrtable red brick house hte
to tkke an unnecessary risk. Ute not particblarty attractive. Jit 1s Auggestfve
t; 8odm o< the gty MU. Mh d«U. u*uy rntth. | L« 0.
rmjy in recent: years who has not occgpSed this house
thai practice of
: Only two men other 'States. The problem te
the [post of chief of m the large cities of the North and
East. It extends to all European
countries, where cogdiUons are far
worse than in this country. More
foodstuffs are being) produced than
can be bought at prices profitable
•o the producers; in ore goods are
being manufactured than can be
paid for; the result \da lessening of
^ the demand for labpr; tod that, in
lly made this , turn causes less demand for
home, ducts. The wealth eg the world ap-i
rnd'more happily If we used the same dog sense. i !a
—1——htrt
establishment of the fact
germs cause disease brought about
i I"...........
! t Dally Health Talk
t - rxm MORRIS riSHBKIN
1 of the American
and of Hygeia
■ I
fi
OF PASTEUR
SPECIALIZATION
[Tin medicine.
the middle of the nlnteenth
the practice of medicine
on by an individual
esumed to be corapr-
every medical field. He ccuid
of a pain in the abdomen,
a cokl. pneumonia, tuber-
an eruption on the skin, in-
or typhoid fever.
for the baby, for the
l and for the grandfather.
; " take off
A iWnh open the abdomen and even
Not infrequently he ov
xtous conditions for the
on that the methods for
onditions had
nor was there
of
the
a dif-
>cuiaung people against menu
iciated with this know ledp*
new concentration on the
as the important medlcm it:
ASI
td£
control of the acuta[infectious dis-
eases. It became possible to pre-
vent their tranamlsaten from one
person to another and to atop the
devastating plagues which used to
wipe out one-half of an entire eon -
munity. In a period of A few weeks,
as a result of the discovery of the
germs causes of many conditknn>
and of need for raising germs and
studyiny their chemistry, it be-
came possible to prevent Infecttrw.
by inoculating people against them
Associated
came
blood
the human body far aiding resist-
ance to disease and for taking care
of disease conditions when they de-|
▼eloped. Obviously ngw^H
had to be devised to study
conditions, since the objects
which one deals are mtecroacopic in
size, some of them eve ntoo small
to be seen by the finest micro-
scope.
■Ai a result of this new knowl-l
to divide >t-
tot^n^btonche^Wtoy of which
Ity to uee^H^^^^Sjte
vices was
becoming staunated
farmer has much for
thankful, for he can produce, atihe
-mallest expense, about all that b
required for a comfortable living,
even though lie may not get much
cash for hia products.
Future of Typesetting
Anotiier marked change is forecast
for tne printing bugine:^ and allied
Industrie* An invention has been
successfully tried ogt with which a
of articles is divided according •» pr^z-hlry operator at one key-
the various Sections of the Amec- I board ^ open ted linotypes in six
lean Medical Association. When wW<?ly separated towns. Just hoar
[subdivisions taecuu they will much this one-mah operation can
Bank Short Course
A bank ut Johnson City holds an
annual short course for farmer* of
that territory, along with a live-
:tock and agricultural show—a sort
of community fair und lecture
course- the bank *.ponsortng it and
footing the bills. Isn't that a pood
idea that other bank* might well
adopt? n Ls a great success at John-
pear* to be centered to such a few *®" AJJ*rt
i nmol# that the buSInc power has sum, tnt cashier of too Johnson
jreople ^ thai trade te:^ *““*• be gUd to teU
- The Texas ,other *»nkers how it te handled,
which to bt
at least
These
subdiv
average man
of eome of t
poses of
sion of what la
by various
Which ia to
l» divided into
specialties
theft many
fine that th.:
■m heard
I tor pur-
the dtecu-i-
accompliahed
in medicine
In this series
to
considered as a part of the sections
discussed.
j ■■
i
—
......
The Mels 9f
•liver and geld,
l TRY W
bom of
TO*,
- J’ti
k»
!1**'
too
r •
it-- ’
| 1
Jh
j
Uh
GHT
the first*
■CTlttelf
Unity am
them. *
breast ai
found ta
FOUND
be extended te not known, but
there te a possibility of almost in-
definite extension pt the principle,
even to the extent of having a tow
compositors do the .newspaper com
porttioo of a vast notion. But with
all this there will always be a de-
mand ioaJocal new % at a ktod that
will mate it
field of the local (ountry
Iwhlch. after all.B
once wheel of th(
country weekly eoopoettor
be safe from the Onei p
Invention.
Track Traffic Dangerem
There u much complaint that bus
and truck drivers use the State
highways as If Utey held the only
itents to their use. making travel
dan|crons for other traffic, In too
many esses they "hog" the center
of the roads, drive to suit them-
■rive*, and do not allow small care
to p)avi them. If matters are allow-
ed to get worse in this respect, the
public, which owns the roads, will
became indignant enough to-demand
that drivers obey the laws or be de-
prived of th« use of the highway*
entirely- [
jer police hacked dowr
the door of a cigar store to free h|m
he told them he had called so map7
wrong numbers that by the time ho
completed hte call the store had
closed.
PHILADELPHIA— Spanish wnr
vets here for their annual encamp-
ment thought for a moment they
had fought their tear, one year too
soon when electric signs on the cijty
hall blazed forth welcome to te *
veterans of 1809. put an electri-
cian* explained it all. There wer*
not enough eights to go round.
HACKEN8AC. N. J —In this C«W
It didn't pay to advert tee Undrr
••business opportunities’’ to the Ber-
gen county record appeared an ad-
vertisement of a saloon for mm.
- Doing 440.000 a year business; new-
er any !eg*l difficulties." Mid the
ad. But Prosecutor West promises a
close watch hereafter on {he thrtv-
tog place.
notTON —here * a fine keUte o:
soup. Captain Larry Oroaa of to
fishing schooner Virginia and Je*n
has arrived in port with a Sir)
pound sea turtle he captured whlk
it was taking a nap.
SCRANTON. Pa. — A wanderer
around the world for 81 year* to
the belief that he waa a murderer.
Michael Rusnock. has come to find
hte wandering tea* needless. He
fled to the belief he had killed a
man in a fight, but upon hte re-
turn learned the man lived eight
years afterward and then died a
natural death.
a frequent result,
he said.
bile drivers, by Or.
tne rite o', j xppel. Pennsylvania
Christian baptism of a North Amer- Health, today. "In both
lean bora white child.
Before Virginia was three years
old, the colony disappeared, and no
one knows to this day what became
of It. The “Lost Colony of Roan-
oke" te regarded as one of the mys-
teries of history. One legend 1s that
the colonists intermarried with the
Indians and are the ancestors of
the present band of Croatan In-
dians living in the southern part of
North Carolina, who number about
300.
William Strachey, on the other
hand, writing in 1613. states "the
men. women and children of the
first plantation of Roanoke we.e
killed by practice and command-
ment of Powhattan.
Theodor# R
Secretary m.
crash occurs,"
i
QUOTATIONS
J
Final Clearance of
Stetson Straw
Hats
Bay tomorrow at these final
Straw Hit price*. Taka your
choice of 110*00*1 ** flats*
quality taller*, values to S3J0
•ad 44.99.
>,
HALF PRICE
AND LEM
THE bo*t •tone* in the world
hart always been both fairy
•torles and lawyrrs statement of
the case." _
—Hugh Walpole, nevethl
• • •
"SINCE the war everything has
changed except the price of
theater tickets, judges' salaries
and political formulae."
■ ■Edgar Wallace.
• • •
“THE most beautiful women
come from the south and!
middle west. New York City te •
the mccca of all beauty, oo it is
of everything else. Boston te not
Choice of etbrt Hats In
on, Milan*. FedaNha,
Y nines to 04S—
GILLIAM DRY
GOODS CO.'
In Oar Now
Santa Anna Glaao Factory
For yean it has been known that
Santa Anna Mountain, at Santa I
Anna. U an immense deposit of thet
very best glass sand, and spasmodic
efforts have been made to establish!
a glass factory. The town now has
on abundance of gas near by. A
glass factory te to move there from
Bristow, Ok 1a. and begin opera-
tions by October the find, with a
$100,000 plant. A successful Blass
factory has been operated at Three
Rivers. Texas, for several ypars. The
Santa Anna factory should be a suc-
cess from the start.
San Marco, Teacher Factory
The leading butenes* at San Mar-
cos. where a Stute Teachers' Col-
lege 1* loco ted. seems to be manu-
B factoring school teachers. That sue-
a kind that!eessful school has 96 applicants for
to usorp the | flegrt— and 800 applicants for
^^■■■MMiiMiailHitalta el llw end of
It is hard
ry weekly,' teachers’,
as the bal-llts 1030 a
The to
to Institution
of | that matte
the worth of such an
to the town. tad. for
r, to the wtlra Mate.
2? amoJ
qf transport
iking first
ynried
i Texas Fed
— .(
■s£hi'
14A i£
• y
Here’s 9 breakfast treat
that’s to crisp k actually
eraeldet in mflk or ereai *
Kellogg's Rice Krispies.
Rice in its roost
form. Toasted bubbles of
flavor. Children love them.
Extra good with fruits or
hoqry added. Order e red-
and-green package from
your groeer. Handy to use
Kellogg In
Bettle Creek,
•TTT:
THE
CRAZY
WATER
HOTEL
•ft
Mineral
WaQa,
(fcAzar
1 . WATER -
A Natural Mineral Water
Has relieved thsasswd* ef people
afflicted with* Constipation, Indi-
gestion, stomach trouble, rheu-
matism, diabetes, kidney sad
bladder trouble, sleepiasaaess,
newoosaesa and other ailment*
brought oa by faulty •HminaHea
It teU probably relieve you! Sen!
us $1.00 for a trial package si
Graay Crystals and you caa stake
Craxy Water at your bama. Crasy
Crystals eeatalw antbteg except
■HsermH extracted from Crasy
Wi
are not
-X
% :
,v
w.<
*^jL
maf i -
«u.
. * - T
RMIDM
Cmsv Wilw Haiti
anmzz
t
, j 11
h,
■ —
Bd
JmM
ty.-* ;
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 262, Ed. 1 Monday, August 18, 1930, newspaper, August 18, 1930; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1094136/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.