Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 170, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 2, 1928 Page: 7 of 10
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PAGE ONE
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
V3
*>>
MAY 2, 1928
\
HiII Billies Trounce Buffaloes Again 15-7
COLEMAN. May 2 —i8p.l-Ham-
turned tables on Coleman Tues-
*■*2 and won their first victory of
the 4Jjial count being 6
* Hamlin pitcher, turned
une, allowing the heavy
stnan dub only 5 hits,
catered. Bond, slugging
for the Piper aggrega-
a home run over the
Md fence, the first ball
sr this season. Agricola,
game for Coleman, gave
seventh for a pinch hit-
credit for the lose.
' ABRHPOAE
..... 3 0 0 2 2 0
.....3 1 1 4 1 1
1.
-2t 1 5 27 10 2
.....i I lit
i*'.at a ii ae tri
y batted for Agricola in
A
I •«•••)
>. Bond:
.000 111 030-4
.000 100 000—1
two base hits.
TVANIEL BAKER made a clean
U sweep of the two game series
with the West Texas Teachers by
taking Tuesday's game 15 to 7. in
a ragged, loosely played and unin-
teresting game. The Billies (chased
in 7 runs in the first inning and
scored in every inning except the
fifth and seventh. Canyon scored
two in the first inning but were nev-<
er dangerops after the opening
round until the eighth when 3 hits
and a flock of errors ga/e the Buf-
faloes 5 runs, bringing the score to
12.and 7. The local came bade in
the last half of the eighth and scor-
ed 3 more runs to bring the final
count to 15 and 7.
Although Daniel Baker garnered
4 of their 12 hits off 8train in the
opening round, ortly one earned run
.was scored in this hectic stanxa. A
walk, an Infield hit. an error and a
sacrifice hit gave the visitors their
two tallies in the first round. After
the first round. Cl yd us Jones, pitch-
ing for the locals, turned the Buf-
faloes back with 4. bingles until, the
eighth inning, the visitors getting
more than one hit in only one
round, this the fourth when the
first two men up got hits. The third
man flew out to center field and
Jones struck the next two batters
out. . .
•] * ; ■ 1
Erratic Game \ •
A total of 18 errors were chalked1
.W.O
Baseball Calendar
WEST TEXAS LEAGUE
Yesterday’s Result'*
Hamlin 6. Coleman 1.
Abilene 12. Midland 7.
.Lubbock 5, San Angelo 4.
Standing
Played Won Lost
Abilene ...... 7 7 0
nubiiijin ......7 5 2
Idibbojck ..... 7 4 3
kgwtiym .....7 2 . 5
Sanlbgeio ..7 2 '* 5
......7 I- 0
Where They Play Today
Midland at Hamlin.
Coleman at Lubbock
Abilene at San Angelo.
★' ★ ★
★ ★ ★
* * *
* ■¥■ *
+ . *. ★
Howard Payne Track Team To Simmons
t TEXAS LEAGUE
Yesterday's Results
Dallas 7. Waco 6.
Port Worth 9, Beaumont 2.
Wichita Palls 8. Houston 6.
San Antonio 10, Shreveport 5.
ABLHAO^TK
-fte -T^AAA IS
oar—a
BA^T0AJ-L.
XL
Standing
Played Won Lost1
Pet.
Wichita Falls. 17
12 •
5
.706
Houston .....21
14
7
.667
Fort Worth ..18
12
6
■867
San Antonio .20
13 ,
7
.650
Waco .U.......20
'lv
10
fiool
Dallas L...... 18
12
.3331
Shravnport ...17
5 v
12
.294
Beaumont ...21
4
17
.190
Where They Play Today
Houston at Dallas.
Waco at Wichita Palls.
Beaumont at Shreveport.
San Antonio at Port Worth.
r* J. Horace Shelton and hla Howard
Payne track team left Brown wood
this afternoon for Abilene where the
local cinder path artists will meet
the spiked, stmdal wearers of the
Simmons University Thursday after-
noon in the final dual meet of the
season for the local track team. One
week from now, the Jackets will re-
turn to Abilene for the annual Tex-4*
as Conference track and field meet,
to \ which Slmmoi
be host this year.
Although the Yellow Jacket track
team is one of the best in the his-
tory of the school a tough battle is
expected with* Simmons tomorrow
afternoon. If for no other reason the
intense rivalry between the two
Baptist colleges. Dope favors the
Brownwood aggregation to win by a
BASEBALL]
'fi 1
TODAY 1
CONTESTANTS
NEW YORK. May 2.-W/P)—Jack
Delaney's 73-second knockout defeat
by the Boston sailor. Jack Sharkey
is to undergo a thorough scrunity
by the New York State Athletic
Commission.
Rumors that the figfjt was not
*on the level” and that Delaney had
not properly trained have led the
boxing fathers to start an investiga-
tion that will bring drastic action
iBy The Associated Press)
The American League race so lai
as it concerns the New York Yan-
kees and. Washington Senators
seems to have resolved itself intb e
personal duel.^between Babe Ruth
and Bucky Harris' crew of pitchers.
Ruth cracked out homer No. 5. a
triple and two singles off Marbe:\y
and Van Alsytne at the capital
Tuesday and the Senators took tbc\r
eighth consecutive beating, 8 to 5.
it was the Yankees sixth straight
win.
Pour of Ruth’s five homers have
been achieved -at the expense of,
shoud> an^ evidence of wrong-doing.' Washington pitching. The Bam-
bd uncovered: • ] bino has been the leading light ,n
The vanguard of Brownwood High
School's entries in the annual Tex-
Managers of the boxers scoffed at i
the persistent reports that the bout
was not “on the up and up.” ’
James A. Parley, chairman of the*
commission, revealed that before
the fighters were .called into the
ring at Madison Square Garden
practically all of the five victories
thfc champions have scored over the
Senators, i l
Athetltrs Win ‘ . •. •
Connie Mark's Philadelphia Ath-
letics key* pace with tire tille-holu-
ers by bektini? the Red Sox at Bo:.-
Monday night, he had instructed j ten. 5 to 3\stretchmg their winning
more or less decisive score but the as Interscholastle Leagu** meet to be Lou Magnolia, the referee, to Inform streak to seven in
"HR 1C AN LEAGUE
|_ , Yesterday's Results
Detroit 10, Chicago 5.
Cleveland 4. St. Louis 3.
Philadelphia Z. Boston 3.
New York 8. Washington 5.
Standing
rthy, Kile. Pounds; sac- UP &g*lnst the two clubs. Canyon
Pounds 2. Stebbim. and * **-*—*- '"*■
en bases. Qloasup.
kson: bases on balk, off
i 7 innings, off 8mith. 1
k. 2 in 9; hit by pitched
(Ron and Glossup by
c out. by Vick. 8 In t.
winning pitcher. Vick;#
er. Agricola time of
its and 20 minute; um-
pires. Chase and White
Abilene Aces Win
Seventh Straight
ABILENE. May 2.-<8p.)—Ed Kal-
mi stick played the lead-
a sMgr*-* which went to
to 7. over the Midland
Tueeday. It was Abilene's sev-
ht win.
lit a home run with two
on In the second and doubled to
clear the loaded sacks in the sev-
enth. .
Abilene . ......... 060-U0 21x—12
...»-----200 HO 111-
__getting two-thirds of the total. With
KUe I airtight support Strain would have
yielded only 6 runs that many being
earned off his delivery 1 Jones al-
lowed-only 3 earned tallies, the rei
maimng 4 made by the Buffaloes'
being'donated on errors.
Mac Miller. Hill Billy short stop
and all around athlete, led In hit-
ting Tuesday with a home run. dou-
ble and a single. In addition to this
Miller played a nifty game at short;
handling 8 chances and made only
one bobbin, that a difficult chance.
He scooped up several hard hits
balls that were labeled hit*, to throwl
the batter out. Baker, Davis and
LeSage collected a pair of hits each,
each getting a doyble. Clydus Jonas
also contributed a two baftr*?. *
Saints Are Next
Daniel Baker rests today andf-
Thursday but will resume play Fri- 1 Brooklyn
day afternoon with St. Edwards Cipcinnal
University furnishing the qppo&i-
tion in the first of a two game series
with the Billies. !
. ' 4.
Played Won Lost
Pet,
New York ..
.14
11
3 '
7r6
Cleveland ..
.19
13
81'-.
681
Philadelphia
.11
7’i
4
.636
8t. Louis ..
.,20
11
9
550
Chicago
. :>e
T \
11 I
Detroit . L.
..21
8 \
13 .
.381
Washington
.14
5
9
.357
Boston . L.
15 •
4
11
.267
Where They Play Today
4
Inj meets that have ^>rf‘n this
season, the Jackets have be* n mnk-
i ing bettir time in the various events
‘than have the Cowboys. Likewise Rtalcun
S the Jacket weight men have been
making -better marks than those
.7F61 registered by the Cowhand ..
Hope for Revenge
The dual meet tomorrow will give
All I heard before the fight,
said Rarley. were the sam^ rumors
that a lot of other people heard. Ii
iipl___M__|__________ ____ w _____________________________T_ K_____ a row. Cobo s
Cowboys may spring several surprLs-1 held In Austin Thursday. FridayLnd Hharkey and Delaney they would be 1 single in the\eighth drove in Uie j5.
es. \ ^'y . 1 Satusdav of this week, left Brown- ! thrown out of the ring if -------l*"1—
wpod Wednesdflv morning, with oth-jknythlng wrong with
ers to fallow Thursday morning. |
Seven representative* of the local
High School, accompanied bv J. R
instructed Magnolia when he called I P®”?-
the fighters to tjie center of the t
ring to tell thym what I had heaid |
“I had told him to say that ill
there was a/ivthlng wrong with 1 Brow
five hits, all of which came in the
first four innings; George Grant-
ham had a perfect day at bat wuh
two singles and a double that drove
in two runs.
Bunched hits off Wajsh and M^-
ler gave the Boston Braves their
second straight win over the Phils.
5 to 3. Burrus of the Braves hit his
second homer ih tv*o days.
Major league leaders;
(Including games of May 1) i
National:
, -vW . # A L { I •' •
Batting—Grantham. Pirates. .451.
Run^-Frisch. Carding!*. 15.
Runs batted in—BLssonette, Rob-
ins; Frisch, Cards; Grantham. Pi-
rates. 15. % v
Hits—Douthit, Cardinals. 30.
Doubles—Brown. Braves. 7.
Triples—L. Waner, Pirates. 4.
Homers—BLssonette Robins. 4.
Stolen bases—Frisch. Cards. 6 .
Pitching—Blaker Cubs, won 3, lost
|L
American:
Batting—Kress. Brpwns. fill.
Ruth—Ruth, Yanks. 19.
Runs batted in— Meusel, Yauss
20;
Hits—Gehrifiger, Tigers; J. Seweli,
Indians, 27.
Doubles—Meusel. Yanks, 9.
Triples—Regah. Red Sox, 4.,
Homers- -Ruth, Yanks. 5.
Stolen bases- Barnett, White 8oX,
S,
principal ot Senior High:
Mrs. J W Damron, moth*— of one
of the contestants; ahd Mrs J. L.
Burton. sister of one of the contest-
ants. left in two automobiles fur
the Mkw . ch^re to mi » bit trtTJSv «ukl or thrown
Vate and Eli/aoelh McGee,
tennis champions; Dunbar F,\her.
there was 'tying and Winning mm L* fty Grove j’ Pitching—Pennock. Yanks, won 4.
their actions I was batted fte^H' by Boston for six j lost o. Uhle, Indiana, won 4, lost
innings and wax rr moved Cor a 0. \
pinch hitter durirte the rally, that J , ----————
won the grfme for N|ack and com- GAVUZZI LEADS
i
i
revenge for defeats handed them
this year bv the Cowhands ot^ the
and in basketball. Simmons , Mn|{1„ ^nnu
8t. Louis at Cleveland.
Philadelphia at Boston.
New York at Washington.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
\ S, ^^ i
Yesterday’s Resvlts
Pittsburgh 4. Chicago 1.
New York 4. Brooklyn 2.
Cincinnati 6. 8t. Louis 3.
■Boston A Philwch fpbia *. -
\
triumphed over the Jacket* at live Mar<0u*t I>aniron and w.lllr Fav
annual Texas Conference meet last McCroy winners of the district title
May and are eager to. repeat the-fn Rlr^ drbafe. ^ MKs ^^4
oi a \e*r **^° .. , .' Weatherford., winner of the senior
Vic Urban, captain if the local declamation at the district meet
track team; Nig McCarver. Cates. ,Bnd Ivls champton
Key Agee. Clark. Shannon. Fisher, iporaneons speaker of this district.
of the# ring. I haven't seen
Magnolia since the fight. I assume
he obeyed orders.”
Joe Jacobs, manager of Delaney
said . • ' ' ■
Cle veland retained wnQd plage, a LINCOLN, 111.. May 2.—(A*)—It
step ahead of the Mackmen. by was a 33-mile trek that faced -
taking a 4-to-3 battle with the St Charley Pyle's transcontinental run-
toe {ners today. Normal. III., being the-
In- ixteenth control point calling them,
j Peter Gavuzzi. the bearded Englisli-
|s Blue's error in
eighth paved the way lor
tdians winning run.
Sixteen hits, seven of them dou- j man. increased his lead yesterday
when he walked and ran the 31.6
miles from Springfield in 3:52:24.
Sanderlin and other Jacket track
•tars are due to give the Cowboys
plenty of misery Thursday and
again next week at the Big Six track
and field meet.v' •’,LF T
Hill Beats HubHelJ*:
in Pitching Duel
7 Another Ragged One
Played Won Lost
Pet.1
New York
.1..12 N
8
4
.667
Brooklyn
.4.-15
.<•
6
.600
Cincinnati
i--17
10
7
.588
St. Louis .
ii.. 16
8
8
500
Pittsburgh
1.15
7
8
.467',
Boston .
6 !•
7
.462
Chicago .
.1 20
9
11
.450
■280
Philadelphia .14
4
10
Training of Horses
at Fair Park for
July Races Begins
Others l.eave Thursday
Those to follow Thursday morning
Include the boys’ debating team of
Brownwood High School composed
of Brooke Smith and Steve Heather
land Coach Youngblood's tra*k ft Hl
»<eam Brownwood High SchoaTs ™
1 rhftm
;Delaney was at 178 pounds. Ids!
best fighting weight, and in as good
condition as he has ever been. He .
was simply hit oh the chin as any!
i other fighter might be.*'
Said Johnny Buckley. Sharkey s
‘pilot: *
“It seems to m*» that the only
thing wrong with the bout wa« that
bles. allowed the Detroit Tigers |
bury the Chicago White Sox .under
a 10-to-5 score. Billings ran |nto
a storm of White Sox hits in 'the
•eventh including a home run by
Bamabe with two on base. He was
rerpoved and Stoner stopped the &?x
splurge at five runs.
Giant* at Top
1 By scoring their second straight
' win over Brooklyn. 4 to 2. the New
York Giants moved Into first place
in the National League Vace a half-
1
Training of four
horses which
rd in proposed
SAN ANGELO. May 2.—*Sp.l—
Rad mil of Lubbock and Lefty Hub-
bell ot San Angelo encaged In a
pitcher’s battle Tuesday afternoon
in the dosing tilt of the three game
series. Lubbock winning out in the
ninth inning. Bean. Hubber first
baseman, clouted one of HubbeU’s
offerings out of the park in the
ninth to glue Lubbock the game.
San Angelo opens a three game ser-
ies with the league leading Abilene
Aces today in San Angela
Score by innings:
San Angelo ......000 loO 090— 4
Lubbock . ........-.. 030 OOf 001— 5
SAINTS HERE
tOR OPENING
GAHF TOOL
* • ' * \ . > . *
toward Payne Collage and St
sards University were billed for
the opening dash this afternoon of
a two-game series on the Jacket,
own diamond, the game tp start
promptly at 3:30. The Saints arriv-
ed today and will be in Brownwood
until Saturday night. Coach Jack
Meagher’s team playing 4 games the
rest of the week, 2 each with How-
ard Payne and Daniel Baker.
The Jackets and Saints have met
twice this season in Austin, the two
clubs getting an even break. The
games today and Thursday are Tex-
as Conference clashes and due to
this fact Coach Amis and his men
will exert every effort to put both
In the win column, in hopes of fin-
ishing the Conference standing.
MEETS STRANGLER
LOS ANGELES, California, May
2.—<£»>—Nick Lutxe, popular young
Chicago mat star, tonight will ma<>
a bid for the world! l*a»ywelght
wrwtlihg championship, mbeting the
famous headlock hold of the title
hswer Ed 'Strangler” Lewis, with
*£ benumbing lack knife scissors
tofcf the champion’s greater weight
and experience with rspeed • and
ftreagth of youth.
• f LIM8Y~FEATHERS ARE _
BAD FOB FLAPPERS
CINCINNATI. (NEA>—Along with
the news from a Parisian physician
that scantily clad girls will enjoy a
long a*d healthy life comes word
from Dr. Mark Milliken of Hamil
ton. Ohio, that flimsy feathered
flappers are courting tuberculosis.
The disease, according to Dr. Mh-
Itkan. Is increasing among girls be-
cause they don't wear enough cloth-
ing. Among boys, howeverr he says,
the disease is decreaMog
LeSage. rf .....
Broad, cf ......
Baker If ......
Davis, lb .......
Miller ss ......;
Vilhu 2b ......>
Jones, p
McWilliams. 3b
Dye. c
A. C. Jones. 3b *,
Where They Play Today
Chicago at Pittsburgh.
Boston at Philadelphia.
Cincinnati at St. i^nta
Brooklyn at New York.
3 and 4 by the Brown County Fair
Association Is now under way.
Two of the horses belong to S L.
Morris, patrolman, and
lng two to Coy Mclnto
II’
chances at placing high in the an-
' nual state track and field meet have
been lowered by the inability of
1 Clarence ■ Harris to make the trip
due to the Illness of his father.
Coach Youngblood will not enter a
relay team. Only four boys will rep-
resent the local high school in ti*ack.
these being the Dunkin ♦wins- Ed-
ward and Delbert, whp will run in
the 440 and 680. respectively;
O Neal Archer, an entry in the mile
and Bosco Brinkley, who will
te in the discus; _
Sharkey fought as he is capable of ‘ *arte oi tfw ™e
— —- —*■ -—^ vr . . Giants hu Dirzy Vance at opportune
moment* while $ie Robins were
wasting hits freely. •
Old Grover Alexander a as sub-
knocked
say the
1 merits,
my-
was
and Deiancv was
lout, I think it is silly 4o
fight was not waged on N
I know so far as Sharkey
•ell are concerned, every'
strictly on the level ” \
Promoter Tex Rickard said: \
“I failed to see. anything wrong. «^vpn
Rather I saw Sharkey in one of mat
greatest exhibitions of flghtgigv
.1 Totals...... 40 15 1*27
West Texas
AB R H
Oee. 3b .......... 4 1
Wilson, cf 5 1
Ward, if .........4 1 1 0
Newman, lb ..... 4 k 2 5
Cleavenger. 2b ,..4 I 1 3
Godfrey, ss____... S A 0 1
Christian, rf ..... 3
Boyles, t _____ 4
Strain, p ----.4
Gerald, rf
12 6
BUFFS BUTTLE
1$ remain- tun.
• compf
One of the horses. 1 co^t named Preliminaries iin girls* tennLs will
Camrock. is showing real promise.1 K^t uhder may Thursday morning.
Mr. Morris said. and preliminaries in boys' singles
Races also will be held during the, *tart Thursday aftemooc.
i annual fair in September. ^ ' Prelimlnarie* in some of the Jlter-
•Appliration by Houston men t3 »ty contests will aim begin Thurs-
train fourteen horses here has been! d*y. Preliminaries in track will be
VI
Totals......38 7 9 24
Score by Innings:
\ R H El
Daniel Baker 711 102 03x—15 12 6
West Texas . 200 000 05a- 7 9 12
Summary.' Home rim. Miller; two
base hits. Miller. LeSage. Baker,
Jones. Davt»; sacrifice hits, Jones I
and Newman; earned run*. Daniel
Baker 6. Canyon 3; hits and rum
off Johes. 9 hit* and 7 runs in 9
innings, off Strain, 12 hit* and 15
runs in 8 inning*; bases on balls off ,
Jones 3. off Strain 4; struck out by
Jones 8. by Strain 10; Une of game.
2 hour* and 24 minutes; umpire.
Harris. 1 N.
'By The Associated Press*
q 2 The battle for first place in .he
0 . Teaas League * between the Houston
0 J1 Buffs and the Wfchlta Falls 8puu-
. . ders continues apace. After.! days
. . absence from it. the 8pudders Jump-
4f,d back into first position Tuesday
0 j when they defeated the Buff*. 8 to
2 0 8. and won the last game and their
q j only one of three-game aeries.
0 0 The idder' started things In
__; the first inning by getting two
8 runs and built ijp a substantial lead
by annexing two more in the fburdi
while Cvengro*. twirled excellent
ent bail
scoring
_
ome pilfers swear off play-
ing and others just swear
and Itept the Buffs from
The
Houston sluggers got busy in the
fourth however, nicked up a run in
that inning and another in the
fifth, tfnd drove Cvengro* from the
mound ih the seventh. Rushed into
the fray.\8teetigrafe silenced the
Buff guns save in the ninth when
he yielded onf rtin.
Continuing their winning streak
that has reached three games, the
Port Worth Pkpthers copped a
freakish contest from the Beau-
mont Exporters. 9 to 2. Both teams
scored all their ruhA hi the first
inning, byt after Rue] Love had
been relieved in that frame by Ad
Hclzhauser for Beaumont. and Den-
ny Bums seemed to get ttys bear-
ings. the game was comparatively
well played. \: j\
\
1
tatCAjrcvv
voo'ca*« e
By rallying for five runs In the
eighth inning, the San Antonio
Bears took a game featured by
hard-hitttng all aVound from the
8hreveport Sport* by a 10-to-5
score. The Sporu started like a
house afire In the first frame when
they counted twice, but found Hin-
kle and Watt hard to hit thereafter.
The Bears started in the thl«l wUi
four yuns. and sewed things ii> with
their eighth fratne scoring prgy.
A late-Inning rally llkewlM won
for the Dallas Steers over tnc
Wacp Cubs. 7 lo 6. Entering the
ninth a run behind, the 8teers Won
the game when Mulvey’s single
scored Glnglardi and Morse, the
former of whom had walked and
the latter of whom had gotten on
base through a muff of his ground-
er.
■‘I
t ‘ j..
h
r
Stumped bridge covers
and luncheon sets at
Blanche’* Gift Shoppe, 707
Coggin. 171
s'- - ’ ■
received, it wa.«> said.
j,held Friday with, the finals in all'
'event* scheduled for Saturday.
-JBH.ia.-i j 1 ■ '■ ■ .
ability and ring fury.
NEXT M
Month, and eachyieck'will
be paid a bonus if
make May,
than May, *1
bidding k J
trade ny(f month.
Merc.
Jected to a terrific barrage as the
Cincinnati Reds beat the Csydy
at St. Louis. 6 to 3. Alex gWfiTed
12 hits and all alien runs in trie
innings he worked,
men Hill turned in another
performance at Pittsburgh as
^the Pirates beat the Cubs again. 4
L The bespecatcled mound star
I Joe McCarthy's aggregation to
/e Have Exceptional
Values In
Straw Hats
,» 1 | , • j
rSeason
smar:
QUi
LOW PI
HOWARD
EDMIST0N
112 Center Phone 1618
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ey can
better
f<
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you/
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Harmless
Stainless
Odorless
a.
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SciENTKtS
inform us that a
simrle^ fly carries
lonsogdisease
T^est
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Budweiser
teller
germs,
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f,
these
contami-
nate all food on
which the fly set-
tles.
’ ; / A ■ \ j
SbrayGULF VEN*;
OM-kill all flies
and preserve the v
family*s health
■K
le more than two
Quality Malt Syrup has becom
from coast to coast. And the reason can be told
in just three words: Anixuscr-Buscb quality/
* This is possible only because we insist that what
is good enough for Ordinary malts is not good
enough for Budweiser Malt. Every operation in
our $40,000,000 plant is completed under tbe
watchful guidance of America’s foremost malt-
sters—our guarantee of quality.
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Baked with JSudweher Malt Syrup * * bread, cookies,
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 170, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 2, 1928, newspaper, May 2, 1928; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1127713/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.