Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 121, Ed. 1 Friday, March 6, 1931 Page: 8 of 12
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BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, FRIDAY, MAEffJ’—1
/
4
FACE TWO
By Williams
The Bill Didn’t Pass
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
6
7
5
4
3
2,
1
12
11
03
9
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15
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vided the other night when a bill
the government.
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QUOTATIONS
MORRI'S FISHBEIN
I
■IIK COMPANY
COW POLL
Bl
TAXES 3,645
J
hundred million barrels of oil is
commerce and industry lubricated
The voting
Texas is only one of the score of
of Boston.
oil-producing areas
vitamins which are suscepti-.
How can any man, or any
States.
group of men
oil remains in subterranean storage.
—Louisville Times.
tomorrow, and they remain improp-
Shop at
period of six
in Our New Building
Defective Insurance
own.
At least once
suitable for human consump-
3 ,
This would be an everlasting nui-
pected to receive more money from
against glaring headlights
driving
12 .Cross Cut
142
A THOUGHT
3,645
College To Give Passion Hay
ROCHESTER, N. Y — (VP—Naz-
last cigarette and everybody
your
4
hem Otobe-Times.
Jesus Christ,
of a Scottish en-
The invention
nony » a naw
specific odor.
ea
- •
i
[•)
I
ul
fl
B
from well known
■•periods" which are
Impertinent
Paragraphs
$10 annual fee paid by each testing
staticn is to be placed in a fund for
financing enforcement of the law.
for a long time,
field is only one
and proposed the appropriation of
$332,747.74 for the payment of
about two thousand claims against
have them tested for his own satis-
faction. The result is that while the
14
16
17
18
19
26
27
29
30
31
32
who wrote in The Dallas News that
the recently discovered East Texas
field is "good for fifteen hundred
million barrels of oil". and frankly
admitted that his estimate probably
to any insurance organisation in the
world; and the other was that every,
policy holder was promised and ex-
.378
.446
492
. 84
. 41
. 64
.140
. 23
. 21
Brookesmith .........
Chapel Hill .........
Winchell ...........
Anderson ...........
Ceggin Ward No. 4..
Total .................
h
se
GLLIAMDRY
GOODS CO.
.....23
..... 25
..... 74
.....M
.....61
.....27
.....485
LA
1.2
Medical
Tho
1
All work and no play makes jack [
for the nerve specialists.—Harris-
Washington
Who’s Who and Why in the
National Capital
By HERBERT PLUMMEB
J.RWiLLIAMS
■»-(, fl 1031 BY MIA SCRYICt I’iC.
Williams ...
Angel ......
May .......
Holder .....
42 Female
sheep.
43 To load.
44 Detected.
43 Higher.
VERTICAL
1 Dispatch.
• 2 Stranger.
8 Evening.
-4 Youth.
3 Root of
taro.
February Fire
Loss Here $1,400
CEASED HAVING
DIZZY HEADACHE
-—E NON-FOUOWINr FOLLOWERS
----------
save several lives
majority of them are improperly
adjusted most of the time, and the
evil of glaring headlights on the
streets and highways is constantly
with us.
If teeth are to be put into the
headlight testing law. it can be done
by requiring monthly, or bi-monthly,
tests of the lights, and making pro-
vision for the placing of responsibil-
is acting pretty stingy these days.
It shows none of the fine, open-
handed spirit of the bank whose
4
I
Now that the Red Cross has re-
fused to accept the Senate's $25,-
1000,000 relief fund, we are eagerly
.waiting th. senates call for vol-
unteers.—San Diego Union.
What a word: Nobody will take
positions, written after her engage-
ment to Browning, “are unrivaled,
of their kind, in the English lang-
uage. as an exquisite expression of
pure yet passionate love."
record price for in _
have averaged about VW. ;
U
< a
three to one."
He described the Norris plan as a
“far-reaching experiment in soviet-
ism" and proudly declared that he
could not stultify himself by agree-
ing to such a proposition even if it
meant retaining a seat in Congress.
_ Cho ...
20 Blanket
25 Dulin ...........
Salt Branch ....«
35 Sudden roll
of a ship.
M Yellow
bugle.
87 Part of the
Roman
, calendar.
80 Sailor.
46 Grandpe"-
ent al.
41 Bulb plant
similar to
an onion.
urnev VI "
Society and of Hygeta 4
Health Magaine
strength of Brown
this Company carry an
votes by the members of Congress.
An interesting illustra"Won of this
type of legislation, and its effect
upon the public treasury, was pro-
Court House ............
Howard Payne College
Daniel Baker College ..
Jones Chapel ..........
Ricker ................
Mountain View......*.
Woodland Heights......
Bangs .................
Thrifty .................
Viewpoints
Editorial Opinion on
Current Topics
areuII VU44V6Y v» *** - ---i
American Passion Ploy, fashioned
after the world famous Oberammer-
gau play, March 14 and on two
I
wise changed by accident or design of the President's letter at the time.
However, although he was victor- ‘°r Ue
tive writing.
Now there's a new book, salled
“Lo!" It contains information about
the aforelisted phenomena.
Pert is a former newspaper re-
porter He sent a short story to
Dreiser when the latter was a mag-
azine editor and Dreiser published
it Thus began their friendship
Fort's home In the Bronx to filled
with the cases of data. Says he:
"I believe nothing of my own thaz
I have ever written. I cannot accept
that the products of minds are sub-
ject matter for beliefs."
erly adjusted for a
Amending the Headlight
Law
L220
HORIZONTAL
1 Devastation.
3 Anesthtit-
9 Man.
10 Possessed.
12 To insti-
gate.
24 Cow-headed
goddess.
15 To help.
18 Extremity
of earth's
axis.
17 Pace.
18 Opposed
to con.
19 Round-
headed
hammer.
20 Principle.
22 Naps.
23 To tear.
25 Sol/
26 Beast of
burden.
29 re veins.
ill Corded
cloth.
•4 Nothing.
21 Zephyr . .......
22 Elkins .....
23 Lower Indian
24 Jordan Springs
TODAY IS THE
ANNIVERSARY
or
to be discovered by the drill and
j 1 |l
i "
sufficient to keep the wheels of
at the figures._____________
THE SHEPPARD AMENDMENT
WICHITA TIMES: Senator Shep-
• pard’s bill to curb the making of
cider and wine in homes will en-
counter vigorous opposition, but it
runs true to the spirit of the 18th
amendment. If wine and elder may
legally be manufactured in the
home, there is no good reason why
home-brewing and home-distilling
should not be legal also. There is no
difference in.principle. The right to
make cider and wine at home was
written into the Volstead act as an
ostensible concession to farmers who
thus became a privileged class.
Their special privilege is directly
contrary to the purpose of the 18th
KNOWING YOUR TEXAS
WACO NEWS-TRIBUNE: Public-
” ity is the thing and a publicity
J ... . .__.. tecominotee
eager to get it out of the way, but
the objection of Congressman Blan-
ton of this district, blocked its pass-
1/5
I
■
1
Z
t Daily Health Talk
ward four, 7564 . .
The thirty voting boxes, precinct
numbers and number of poll tax
receipts for 1931 are as shown be-
1 1
“When I Cot Rid of Comi-
pation, I Became a Wel
Woman." .
Augusta, Ga.—Mra Callle. Mgr-
ton. of 1959 -^noa^l d2g
CONSERVATION of the petroleum
” resources of the country is the
basis upon which proration of oil
production and marketing is given
legal respectability. Otherwise it is
merely tht restriction of production
in order to preserve a balance be-
tween supply and demand in an
industry that is suffering terribly
from overproduction and from the
competition of foreign production,
and as such proration is clearly an
art in restraint of trade.
But what are the conservationists
.........-1
in or evolution-
ave been atheis-
tow.
I ।
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
588
ITHERE WERE at least two serious
defects to the marriage insurance,
scheme which Judge William H
Atwell declared in his court the other
day was fraudulent and tainted with
the outlawed lottery scheme One of
the defects was that every policy
holder was prepared to claim the
amount of his “insurance" within a
cd in locations in which their pres-
ence has not heretofore been sus-
heard of such a scheme, and no
Legislature had taken the trouble 40
erect legal bars against it. But pros-,
ecutton by state or federal authori-
ties teems to have been unnr cress ry
to curb it, natural economic laws
having taken care of the situation
fairly weli.
asororim-the — headlight lawinhwtheg"gainsetpermmttingn‘fuitandbenignwasihehonored.g
“Buckeye State”
2
n
ment of claims dating back to 1878,
involving more than a third of a
million dollars, and containing mat-
ter that had not even been read by
a majority of the House members
who were ready to vote for its pass-
age. Mr. Blanton did well to object
to its approval under such circum-
stances. although there is no doubt
that many of the claims v re just
and should have been settled by ap-
propriation.
From the standpoint of the work-
ing Congressman, the appropriation
of a mere $330 000 of public money is
a trivial matter, undeserving of care-
6 EAY 1" SEE wHo
AS 1‘ CLEAN HORSES
AM' WHO DOESN
FHERE's A MORAU
HHERE — HE WHO
LEADS IS MOT
‘ALWAS FOLLOWED.
26 Old
• womanisha to
27 Walls of H
rooms. 2 . ’
28 To slumher,
30 To sketch.
81 Antagonist
32 To elude. . )
33 More pallid.
38 Type of
snowshoe.
40 Entirely.
A. Millikan.
GIKATESLL,‘W.EKUPSWlson-
sin fur farms are the world’s great-
est source of silver fox pelte, local
residents have been told by George
Banzhaf, Manistidue, Mich., fur
farmer. A Hamburs,Wis.farm con-
tributed 11,000 of the 27,000 pelts
sold to the New York, marketdur.
ing January, Banzhaf said. Bince
the 1929 “boom," when — ““
ss"
No Dodging For Him
"His presence scarce is heeded,
He dodges storm and strife."
Thus does one of the capital’s best
known rhymesters describe thelt.u.
of the man who failed to keep his 69:20.
seat in Congress.
The description may apply to
some, but not to Reece. He learned
to fight long before he came to
Conrgess. And he is rather proud of
his record to date. In his official
biography he points out that:
He was major in an outfit during
the world war which was at the
well woman. .0a. 1
“Now I take Thedford’sBiach
Draught when I need » 2m
-amms===
portant fields in this state, an
couldn’t get to the polls.
But despite the fact that he is
serving in Congress now to the
capacity of what is generally de-
scribed as a “lame duck." he has by
no means ceased to fight for his
views on this question. As one
observer describes it:
“Reece is ‘Mucle-shoaling’ it to
the very end."
which manifestly is not possible As L probably would
a result, most of the marriage insur- each year,
ance associations have gone out of
business, their period of prosperity
being short and the only winners
being the few policy holders who
made collection of claims early in
gcityornc ossovokiy 17206
in Brownwood during February
This loss was reported in five fires.
Fire Marshal Ivan Ellis reported
that there had been a total of 138
inspections made during the month
and of this number 31 corrections
THE PUBLIC hears a great deal
" about some of the more important
measures passed or not passed by
Congress and vetoed or approved by
the President, but comparatively
little about a great mass of legisla-
is far too conservative? Fifteen
.,..27 some time for my system » to
..1.85 straight. I frequreAly bod sour
.... 29 stomach. I was conpated and
more careful supervision of the test- burg News,
tag stations, and provides that the[
lights on every motor vehicle are
tested at least twice each year, a
Mw/
Undaunted
The 42-year-old Tennessean is
opposed to federal operation of the
Muscle Shoals property. And there
are those who believe it was because
of this—more specifically because
he fought the Norris bill—that he
found such rough sledding when
election time rolled around.
But defeat hasn’t daunted him.
The other day he arose on the floor
------------,---- - uxivung -a-___•------- - - of the house and gave a post-mor-
the scheme than he invested in it. | wherever one may go at night. And temuay wlsatihwssinalcatedatthe
polls," he shouted.
"Let any man enter a Republican
primary in that district today ad-
vocating a federal operation theory
and hell be defeated by at least
E. B. BROWNING S BIRTH
On March 6. 1806, Elizabeth Bar-
rett Browntag, English poet, was
born near Durham.
She early displayed great liter-
ary precocity, composing when only
11 an epic poem on the Battle of
Marathon. When she was 20 her
family moved to London where Miss
Barrett established her reputation
by the “Seraphim" and other
poems.
In 1845 she met Robert Brown-
ing, whose writings she had pre-
viously praised. A year later they
were married against her fathers
wishes. Proceeding to Italy they
made Florence their home and in
1849 a son was born there, Robert,
who became known as an artist and
PPhe married life of these brilliant
poets was singularly happy, and
their mutual influence is clearly seen —
in their verse. Mrs. Browning’s were made.
“Sonnets From the Portuguese,"
which were in reality original com-
ious in the primary, Reece was nos-
- ed out in the general elections by
months before there is another ( something like 2,000 votes. He says
checking by an authorized testing his defeat was because those who
station unless the owner chooses to wuliohxe onotedecton “ TS
put into the markets of the world
during the next twenty or fifty or
two hundred years?
The answer is that no man can
do so. Oil is now being discovered in The fee for testing each motor ve-
and produced from geological for- hiele’s lights is to remain 25 cents as
mations that heretofore have been at present The new bill also makes
erroneously regarded as barren; and [provision for the use of danger
formations or lights on wide vehicles, and places
being discover- upon the Highway Department the.
duty of seeing that uniform head-
a xadDsrrddehkddssreadittvh3havnmet"-antntntsdd4f e mr swan
•?/yya
W 772 ; (s
COCKTAILS do have a certain So-
• cial function.
—Stanley High.
amendment.
Enforcement of the new law would j
-at
V9K
'ble to heat. 1 i
o ... ____—. , | Tills does not mean that a raw
by Theodore Dreiser, who’food diet is the optimum diet for
__________mmxs uuu oue « un -5 —ap man, nor should it be an indica-
The average Wall Street lamb cant skeptics of the.age:_____,L,J tion for the formation
would prefer an unbearable market. I
upon whom gushed streamsaivols. From the opposite point of view.'
—TheForteanstsarersnorhey X the eating of raw foods may be,
They ar Q esasiy stron- dangerous. In the first place, a
doubt sciencezand espeoty the ex- raw food diet does not appeal to
omers. They think a I0—I, sense of appetite and an appe-
rgin Belgium Ute for raw food has to be cuiti-
jvated. In the second place, heat
reserve Forts data will kill harmful germs which is
.11... ncchntisl in tr
OTH RAW AND COOKED FOODS . -Dr
ARE ESSENTIA 11 AM not a politican. I find the job
, PEorE"ivelessentially on 1 of ruling and regulating my own
Lower animals live that have as much a limited men-
IEw love to hear the sins they
" love to act.-8hakespeart.
. । 1,8022, ~Key
J , “e‘eRE.,
E2f
Il________
pected. Even if conservation were
the major purpose of the oil prora-
tion regulations now being made
effective in the Southwest, it would
be ridiculous because there is no
basic need for it; but conservation
is admittedly nothing more than a
subterfuge. and is not the purpose
either of the oil producers or of the
states that are giving their assistance
in enforcing regulations that are
acceptable to the oil producers.
Market control is the one and only
purpose of proration. East Texas is
proving the insincerity of the con-
servation plea.
r»Y«re
Sfi mFAmm#
a "asjg 8
' - was operated in Texas with little or I Any bonus for doughboys seems
beansdtgr.nohoayinthssatehadbe —Times:
HMHE#a"
u.. — —w feature at
Union City, N. J., for the last 17
years. ' .’
Published Every Afternoon Except
Sunday, by Mayes Printing Company.
Brownwood, Texas.________
Entered at the Postoffice st Brown-
wood, Texas, as second class mall
matter.
H. F. MAYES. Publisher
JAMES C. WHITE, Editor
Member Associated Press
The Associated Press ip exclusizely
entitled to the use for republication
of all news dispatches credited to it
or not otherwise credited in this
paper, and also the local news pub-
lished herein._______
Any error made"in advertisements
character, ntanding or teputaticn. of
any person, firm. or corporation which
may appear in the columns of The
- Brownwood Bulletin will be gladly
corrected upon 1t4,being hroucht to
the attention of the publishers.
any erroneous reflection upon the
will be g'adly corrected upon being
orought to attention of the publish-
ers, and the liability of this paper is
limited to the amount of the space
consumed by the error in the adver-
tisement. __________
SUBSCRIPTION:
Brown County, by mail or “trier
65 per month, $3.75 six months; 87.20
onfexas, outside county. New Mexico.
Arkansas. Loutsiana. 75c per month,
six months. $<00: one year, 17.50.
East Texas and Proration
sance, to be sure, but no greater
nuisance than the necessity of
dollar—Bethle- fnt wrs-dedratea with the dis-
___ tinguished service cross, distinguish-
It strikes us that the United States ed service medal and croixe de
guerre with palm. .
And he was cited for bravery by
Marshal Petain, Generate Edwards
and Hale, and Colonel Lewis.
For instance, when ne points 001
that Texas has 1,323,774 families
living in 1,213,674 homes. Texas has
a county. Winkler, which showed a
population gain of 8,775.3 between
1920 and 1930, respective totals being
81 and 6.734 In the preceding de-
________cade it showed a loss of 81.7 per
was taken up on the private calendar cent. Texas has three counties allow-
ing population increases of more
than 5,000 per cent in the 1920-30
decade: Winkler, 8,775.3; Hockley.
6,686.9, and Crane, 5,902.7. Texas
_e guvesaenv. showed mineral production in 1923
The bill was contained inninety- ! cnusinuaed/sgansad: of Es total,
one pages of reading matter, and 1 Investment of life insurance com-
the House of Representatives was! panies in public utility securities in-
creased 1.250 per cent in the United
States between 1906 and 1931, and
that particular kind of investment
now represents almost one-tenth oi
the insurance companies' total in-
vestments and reserves". Texas is a
great gas producing state. During
1929 the American public bought
1,130,000 new gas ranges. Is petro-
leum a valuable product? . Is gas a
valuable product? If In doubt, glance
tnisceunungse.nmeumnanmnias______
MW ll Me-runcn. - loame S bearsrNew Yorker.
the game, and the promoters who
gqt the "velvet" from their organiza-
tion! and then unloaded their liabil-1 A sclentist says the law of gravity
aties upon somebody else before their may be abolished. Quite likelyithe
xt-x-r. gntzealare.ha already been
The marriage insurance business _____
ity upon owners of cars involved in
specified time. which would be fatal accidents caused by improper lights.
offer enormous difficulties, of course.
The government has virtually aban-
doned the idea of dealing with the
! home-brewer. enforcement officials
AN ATTEMPT is being made in : feeling that the results that might be
M the Senate committee on High- iobtained were not worth the effort,
The East Texas ways and Motor Traffic to amend that would have to be exerted... Just,
4 4
By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN 4 | ***********
Editor Journal ofJM^Americjn /NEITHER evol
♦ । -) ists in gener
“* I tic—Darwin least
HHIINCiS STORE ।
MERGING PLANS
YESTERDAY’S ANSWER 24 Looked
MORMQN•RES9EIH
His report also included the toss
and premiums for the year of 1930.
The loss for that year was recorded AUUKE---, A: .. --, -az
as $167,931.25 as compared to a total areth College will present The
premium payment of $139 932.38. He -
also called the council’s attention to
the fact that Brownwood had been gau yang, ------
given a 12 per cent penalty in pre- following Sundays. The play,deal-
___ ________._______ miums for this year, which means an ing with the death of — Chuet
gineer, "a new lubricant, gives increase of approximately $25,000. has been an annual
shen $810W the warning of the danger of over- V ---------------- ------ cu- N ’ fni
sngt pel,prices heating bearings by emitting a Phone 58 for cheap Fence.
Then • said I
Dreiser: are ;
"You'll publish this book or you (tion.
won't publish anything of mine/ .
There was another book, “Ex.
which Fort says he destroyed and
which Dreiser thought "one 9 the
most remarkable pieces of imagina-
Weakley-Watson-Miller Hardware,
ounty decreased 2.731 votes this Ccmpany carry an announcemepsi
year from the number of voters in in their advertisementsinaatodys,
the 30 precincts last year, with 1242 paper regarding the consoudatio
of the loss being in the city ct their two stores. koned I
ctoT^fons^ "mt^ "Be “xinshsgr,S80ru-dmsa
an increase of the poll tax paid last valuable asset to Weaxley-"Atsri
vear as well as to the business —16.011
'oct cher, precinct No. 14, shows Brownwood. However theyasfoumn
of 12 voters over last i tnat the division of their crganiza I
-— empince chow an Iee high overhead and the dupi.N
cation of effort and expense often |
impaired the sen ice and e-E
.vtc ermnanv has at-V
to say about such statements as that ful investigation and thoughtful ac-
the other day by Dr. Robert tion. It is nice to have a conscien-
T. Hill, eminent Texas geologist, tious objector, such as Mr. Blanton.
fait dull and slusgiah. ,__A.
.......M| “We had used Black-Drucht2
.......46 our home for ysasa,sol Mwifof
.......198 : tag a course M this medicne a
‘ the hope that u would help me. 1
found it exactly what I needed,
“Before long I was feeling muoh
better. I ceased having dW beed"
ache, and my bowels becmmecee.
lar. Constipation seemedtobeia
cause of most of my tOMDM• “2 I
when I got rid of tt I became •J
$Aa/l/
{
THE CITY CHILD'S PETS
By Alice Judson Peale
Nothing can take the place of the
friendly familiarity with i
' that a child acquires in the country; i
It is possible for him to experience |
seme of these pleasures thre"gh
possession of such pets as can be
kept even in an apartment. assuwvu anu ... .... -_________
The two-year-old is not too young | changed. In the payments of last 11
> enjoy an aquarium with a Ie year the voting strength of Ward 4
old fish, a pollywog or two, and was listed as being 1.141 ascompar-
u w ue yv-w ——-------। some auais. ed to only 485 for this year. This
digestion by softening fiber and Canary birds seem to have gone h a decrease of 756 voters. Many
"" ■< n>. of tbese were changed into Ward
No. 3 and many have moved to i
other parts of town.
In the other three wards the de-
crease is not so pronounced with .
Ward No. 3 showing the greatest
loss It shows that there were 228 !
more voters in that ward in 1930
than at present and besides this
many were added to that ward with
the change of the boundary line
which were listed as in ward four
el-en,e239
gssf •32
tion that is carried through to final man who distributes or disseminates
passage under rules which permit the factaandrgurssgnowshghburtwa§.
disposal of such matters by unani- and shtnbe, when he points out
mous consent and without recorded
............ 0-0-0^
IN NEW YORK
By RICHARD MASSOCK
................
cut Of fashion for family living-
All of this discussion establishes rocms, but in the nursery they si
o, again a point which is of the ut- repay the care they need by tm
5 2".
zddtdi"omeida,tu5e ““ «
---
A -- 0oG,UP IH TA • 1
ED RAEAE, 14 oigaiN II
SEbr eJcH A uTE /
\-Ia AS MUD.’ /
: Dreiser's Discovery. j 1
Fort is an obscure skeptic dis-,
covered by Theodore Dreiser, who । .0.
thinks him one of the most sigifi-iman, nor shoua 11 ve an, aquuu ETTER a nation drunk than a
B1^ ashonendm
ing data and filing them away on that heating for a long time. even -Rev. James Maicoim Mac .
i tnysheetso s™ an moderatsltemperasur thn r the face of calamity -■»““
blizzards of snails, gushes of peri- ( Vtmins, particularly if the so- 1 in a common effort to drive■ s if wz-s; the Hog Valle- and
winkles from the sky. nows of bicod lution in which the food is held has feting and want from our-country: ! voters in the Hog e---a
I from holy images, strange appear-"'an alkaline reaction.
I ances of never-before-heard-ofian- It has long since been established . — L
mals. earthquakes and droughts and that continued cooking of a vege-l t<qq^......, qq-qq-o-^
the sky turned black with spiders, table in water will cause the salts •..m a
clodness so intense that it destroyed to be dissolved out of .the vitamins f Talks to Parents
illTASHINGTON—It can't be said of | the grand army of Napoleon, into the water, so that some of the |
lights are maintained on all ve- W th t youthul Republican fromna thatssalisgtothusadaynin.Nt valuable constituents are poured
hides. Tennessee-B. Carrol Reece -that Minor,•. faii. down the sink.
These amendments, It seems to us he quit hshtna wnenhe
will do but little to improve the November,
situation, because the mere testing I Reece, if you remember, is the man a.u..
j’xxrx
tsta ana approved ioday sare"zmnaansampams-entjs.™ For a__________ -
readlusted W the owner or other- or Muscle Shoals:. MU* ~ .
the search for reason and razion- odors and flavors which are bene-igold fish. -
I HeW 10 the appetite and which fa- i some snails.
“ • - 2 1 ^11-—Kar eAftenino fiher and ______ hndie
Cronies i by coagulating protein.
Among those who string along
with Fort are Edgar Lee Masters,
John Cowper Powys, Booth Taxi --------------
ington, Harry Elmer Barnes and J tific judgments; namely, there is —
David Stern, Philadelphia and Cam- one track rule in science. A good
den. N.. J., newspaper publisher. AU diet t---------
have praised Fort's first two books, because of the fact that cooking can be
"The Book of the Damned" and helps them greatly; other foods raw .kitchen, chila
-New Lands" both very obscure because cooking harms them. A . Whereitisatalposshercrhis
since they were launched on an ex-; certain amount of uncooked fruits should have a cat or a dog i
tremely apathetic world. F jand vegetables is essential in a well very "un
The first probably would not have balanced diet. At
been printed without the aid. 0 i onuer aivuin —■ nuvu, ae ou......- — -wn.,
Dreiser. The novelist said hestook lilization, man being what he is to- of watching and caring for a mother
the manuscript to his publisher, who day, the majority of foods require . cat or dog and her family. PUPPleS
looked it over coldly. Then sad cooking or preparation before they land kittens can be born and spena
1 - ----------- at least the first few weeks of their
lives quite comfortably in a clean
dry cellar.
Mother cats are especially good
about raising their families in a
cramped environment, our own ca‛
brought up four handsome, well-
behaved kittens in a wood box in
1.^1
0 To occur.
7 Seeds
similar to
tonka bean
s Re-rent,
9 Haze. i.
11 Breezy.
18 ('aids
laving 10
spots.
21 Noney -
drawer.
23 To hurr
. onward./
available to check this careless
tendency.
I^Under modern conditions of civ- .coa, AeShona have the kpeehthee | sn^j^wR^oX^M Slzahthe
----- tet-d -hat h i . -"t-t---"* me"ine for a motner ence in the two years. Ward No. one
shows a decrease of 308 voters and |
7
22a
an inctease <---- , ,
year and Jordan Springs show an 1 tion,
increase of seven votes.
Last year the re-districting, 01 the times apa.— —- ----- . .
county had not been completed and. ficincy that this company has at -
32 voting precincts were listed while tempted to offer their patrons sinee .
this year only 30 are shown. The the business was founded in.,)
.M e "o" 11 Mt When Brownwood was a small Vizf
-President Hoover. I Zion districts were changed to oth- consisting of only a few houses u
l er boxes and the entire countyjandetcres. . J
| changed , Bfere attempting this consolida-
4 | This change placed son:- voters , tLeyewi conduct a store-wide
4 in ether precincts than where they . ,'.hf Winchester Store in
were listed previously. The Hog oScr to reduce their stock at that
' Vamheysbtasheanstrhanggdehanda aore 0»munimumdekorcmovans,
tpeshaundarvoninesh ame" apps The common Englsn btaekbgtty.
animaisiprecincts ‘Which were 1X11 land, spread so fast there, covering
““ 1 shewing decreases because part of thousands of acres of fine ,fcW
the voting strength was changed to land, that thousand of dollars bad
ruah cther precincts. tbe spent in an attempt to de-<
' nr • changes in Brownwood suoy it _______.[
Brownwood itself has been re- l-----------—:---;— 1
districted and the ward boundares ummmmmaneuscaaama I
o 7
6/ Es /
110 —------ 2.
243 tells how she was beneftted
50 ing Thedford's Black-Dru...
is I “I used to suffer from bad spells
82 of indigestion,” wites Mrs. Moiton
86 I “I bad an operation and • to
some time for my astem to 60
, . -8 a
Ke,te?ARug
HeA/Re
Aa
n
• <79-1 =- 2- Ab
326
OUT OUR WAY
thehlvinreoorpets offers an excel-
lent training’in responsibility. Very
little, however, should be expected
of the child in this direction until
he is six or seven years old- Even 10 Wden or
then it will be necessary often to 11 Erosysnot
remind him of his dally task 13 Srrds -u
Lt ---3
F =2-. . - - 4--.-- 3
C22- 1 I ' -Ta-
4-i h h -—I -
age. This bill was for the settle-
' "jZu akluumea-0
xa, nsryeaEe2zz2dhrsa
NEW YORK—Meeting people/
Theodore Dreiser, Ben Hecht and
I Charles Fort. (
Skeptics all and trying to make
the ears of scientists bum. -
JiX site atthe "savoy-pnhaaraw ibods. xcept thosethatthave 5mangertuu -
and the momentous occasion was become so thoroughly dome. t ta p ISir Ernest Benn,
the organization of the Forgan ed that they have become accu3”, -
society. Charles Fort, 76 years pldjtomed to the diet ofmannowjedgc’rHE best preparation for business
“ । Previous to our newer knowledge p engineering education and
^of the vitamins it wainot. realized this\ beconiing "generally recog-
/W
i-eonu ’ aBsa MS' £
i — .....-
"etM"nean storage, more rigid tests of headlights, and a
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 121, Ed. 1 Friday, March 6, 1931, newspaper, March 6, 1931; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1487752/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.