Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 301, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 3, 1925 Page: 13 of 15
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I
Here'9 the Weather Foreeaet for 9926 a
TWO SUMMERS TO BE SUM ME,
BOSTON'.. Oct. 1—MUr kaepJ Humphrey*, add will *9 support*! trailer
____.____a .____.... <_ k<. w.. p,«r rinriM^V 1 Al»
Aiwvr normal rainfall on the
;iflc coast particularly In eontb-
i California. wluch should have
lrecipitatiOQ of W Inch**.
Rains la Nevada. Arlaonla aad
ia his stand by Prof. Charles F
Brooks*of Clark rnlrvrtiiy.
Depend* oa Maa’s Heal. „
Browne's theory is' that weather
conditions are mainly the result
of ocean temperatures; that ocean
temperatures depend upon th'
amount of heat generated by the.
sun: and therefore, by study of the
variations in the sun's radiation. U
is possibly to prediet accurately
what the weather Pill be In any
r *NtfVBR&A¥ 'EVENT which was *eld last year at this time-4 w
hen, inspired me to burst into print, this showing we have now for this
lire* me lo seek a broadcasting station and shoet from the house tops aeto
talk about, such a'bewildering array ofslylesand values to offer dur-
IF BETTIS ft GIBBS’
ff the merchandise toe >hdd
our Second Anniversgry in
speak. We'hnveso much1!
Washington, probably , the world's
leading authority on long distance
weather forecasting say a meteoro-
logical conditions bow are exactly
similar to those just prior to 18f€-r
“Tlto Year Without Bummer.’*
* touring that summer, our great-
great -grandpasents had to celebrate
the fortieth anniversary of the re-
public lg ueiow frvesiag weather.
Two weeks before a aaowatortn
swept down from Canada and
blanketed the eastern part of the
country , as ,far south as Maryland.
erffs Fallarev
Disastrous crop failures resulted
and ’Brown,. predicts the asms
“hard times’' far the'farmers dar-
ing the next two year*.
Browne, known as a “yadjcal'j
among the meteorologists, expects
to present big mews to the Babson
conference on meteorology which
opens its session Acre Sept. ».
ini; this event, thstl'fscd’Ttmtot ’pickmud choose and present to yo ur notice only the High light* from
the enormous stoSa
' .*Vt \
Piedmont of Its customary prectpl
tntlon. j j, -
"Beware of early frost ia ibc
corn belt. . [*
• “One great volcanic explosion li
19SC—llhe that of Ttomboro in lb»
Dutch; East Indies Ini 111*—will -toll
the upper air with k-loud' of vol-
canic dest and -tUlfUnUe^diUj
off the sun’s beat, flUlHI
“The growing will
be late, there will bo lete frost it
the spring aad killlgg frosts in the
1st* summer and early fall
given locality years h» advance. .*
Arufe so he sefa:
• Beware of J92€ and 1927.
“Conditions in 1927 will be par-
ticularly bad. It will be a ’sum-
merles* year -a replica of 1811.
•The Year 'Without a Summer.’
when crop failures brought disaster
to the land ■■
“The (x-eans are great reservoirs
of the sna’si heat. They do not,
however, react to U imemdiateiy.
h. takes from one to are fears.
“Now in Uie arty part of 1932
the sun's heat fell below normal.
CREPE S ATIN
Perhaps the leader among
frock fabrics, especially for af-.
ternoon dreooeo.
COLORSr—Black «. moat
popular, hazel, cedar, pencil
blue and bokara furnish an
abundance of color.
Every mory about fall and Winder frocks begins and
ends with much talk of Bares. Consider the various
forme this skirt fullness takes; igodets, from panels
fully shirred; gkirt cut on.* circular design, often fall-
inf into a multitude of ripples. Oftentimes the front
in straight and the flare is introduced in the back.
You can be sure that what you select here during this
our second anniversary event, is really new and chk.
f Every dress is grouped and priced with the idea of mak-
ing the event the greatest thing we have ever held.
, / Group 1
8Sc'° $14.95
dropped to its lowest poliit since
I9i»5
"At the present time we afe feel-
ing the effect) of, that drop, and
during tbs next two yean we will
t. Marvin head of the
■ linked States Weather Bureau, who
says that any weather predictions
■■toto^Wore than a few da>.$ la- ad-
vance are pure guess work, beads
the conservatives. Long range
weather forecasting, he tiji, Is a
sopuufic Impossibility.
Browne Is not alone in his views
and the two op:u:on-« are certain
to bring »•clash at the conference.
Dr K. E. De Lniry. assistant dj-
i rector of the MlMaa’Oi»i>fUef‘y<
at Ottawa, Canada, backs Bro./ne's
opinion aad ^bfle prof. H. H. Clajr-
toa of the Smith«ocijn Astro-Phys-
ical Observatory.' does not hold
tdeatical views, he. does agree RUh
Browne on several' points .
Marvin will h, represented at the
conference by one of .hJs lading
her of sunspots during »be afctt
few years will be the greatest ^ia
2C2 years
In . the Dominion observatory are
charts showing that an increasing
number of sunspots during the
period from 1784 to 1809 had these
Increased rainfall and low tem-
peratures.
Greater growth of lha CsMforaln
redwodo trees.
Birds left for the south earlier.1
Commodity priors Increased. In-
dicating crop failures. * < y
The carves on the chart show]
that these conditions were * most I
pronounced about isit. or Just af-
ter sunspot-, were most frequent.
feel it still more.
“The change started last year-
the aRtarcitic were chDietl and
their volume Increased They then
started poshing the warm currents
of the northern hemisphere farther
northward sad blocking off their
return- *
Check I p an This. \
Group 2
College Judge
On Her Own
Church Finance
The two
anniversary event rovers the entire range, the kick
pleat skirt of the same materiel or contrasting ma-
terial There* I* velvet with satin hktrt. velvet vtoh
fancy woolen checks, plaids or stripes, metal doth
btonec with velvet skirts. aH of these are weadtr-
fully trimmed smart Jersey ones too.
\ JfltoH lEfK
llpre I mhst pause to glee the MchapM^he pehltel-
ty' is deserves-for many a Ntodeck tp»Mn la
this collection of two pie.vdedeses. and It Ig n fas-
ter# parlirul..r,evl... toto »•«••
(be slim nockod snUtog na. . * , a.
$6.95, $14*96 Id $29.75
PttidcJy Ntw
J^JRS. STANLEY BAUMGART-
EV. WILLIAM K. TOWNER of
Son Jose
UER metit election as Justice of
the pesie atHi.aWburg III., will
enable Mis i HtlsrN Carr. 11. ob-
tain a colli re educative rj-l event,
ually becoi le a lawyer. She has <*n-
freahman aK Knox
We could not possibly
mention all of thb -won-
derful value* in this de-
partment — wutfy of
wbiclrtoito re*l highlightt»
but, we. mutt ttokc
NER wife of oee of the PhBa
del pis Athletics’ star pitchers, isa*
satisfl-d to bask in her husbtto'!''
glory. Bo ake s signed aa nuinagei
of Lou Sokelovc. light heavy
weight boxeri. She's the first worn
an manager (n Pennsylvania.
California tried to
t religion and stnclp seG.rtg and
i been resiled befog* the. state
uric I***, i nin-n’iL'ior He proqti*-
a profit of 8€of> on each $100 in-
ted in gold miniqg stock and
;ed all thnee buying. stock to
-ote. half their profits to rellg-
s work.
rolled
College thdre and will pay hertool
lege expea tea, in addition to shp
porting tw > small brothers, by act
ing as Jus Ice of the peace out o
school hours.
and metallic novcitieo. t »
Little Dressy Hats of fold and
Metallic Hats on new ebtetof
And the new tadored eAert* ii
alao Velvet, Feb and Velour.
Amaud Election
of Local Leghm
Next Friday Night
Nearly Twelve ,
Inches of Rain
Hare This Year!
witfc this
Event you may have itlin ell the feeding
tl.KperrH
mm to
Rainfall regisMRMx 1“ Brosra-
wood daring thr pam ouartep to-
tals S.91 Inches, and for the past
throe quarters, siaee Jsawary 1st,'
1925. to October 1. It*5, t^ total
amount to 11.93 inches.
. The second quarter. April, May
and June, recorded tha. besvlesf
rainfall of the three quarters with
a lots! of €.80 laches. April reeelv-
The first quarter record was Ita-
ly 1 12 inches of tain. Jahnary re-
ceived .45 of an inch. Pehruary in
'reived .07 of aa inch aad march
was shoolutsly void of moisture.
September, the month Just clos-
ed. recorded the heaviest rainfall
for the last quarter with 1.90 Inch-
mail airpuae which has not
heard from since R passed
Hart let on. So mites .east the
landing Held shortly before
Rfliit Thursday An Rs flight
Now York to dbesfo.
Mot-s dua 100 men scoured
mountaJnouH country hetf
Haftletqii sad Brn«fcale ygstei
without finding a trace of.
plane or Its pilot. Charles H. Ai
_ A heavy rain last night tern,
j-TBM GiNEH SIMMY.
CINCINNATI. Oct. 3- 4*)^'
rincinnatl-Plttsburgh game pc
poasd today on account wet grog
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 301, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 3, 1925, newspaper, October 3, 1925; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1140212/m1/13/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.