Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 257, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 13, 1927 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 26 x 20 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
^ agate--
Member Associated
rJ>tii\Thil2Jl-«c?Td*t.*<1 *n lhl* l***P*'r. »“<1 also the looal
of aU new*
.__- oredMed in tM«
PuMUhed herein.
Any erroneooa reflection
WMUtkn of an> [x-rwin. flmt, or corpotwsfc
»** tb* column* of The Rruwawooti
! e'?#^— 1
haracter, standing
rorporatsotT which
-■wnwood Bulletin
r. ^y WTOf l"*<« 1" advertisement* will
’ Its. t to attention of the prfbl
f£* hahlUty of thie paper is limited to the amount t
tne space conaumed by the error In the advertisement.
n, _ . ■ SUBSCRIPTION ;
r by or ‘**Tlef. Cooper month; 99.T5
New
mpnth;
§*::? v
Mexico., Oklahoma. Ark-
>i »lx months, H00; one
RIGHTS
la Texas who thinks
conservation meeting called to meet In
is a mistake and “an effort to try
-------. outside of legal channels."
Be is* State Senator A. J. Wlrtx of 8cguin. Sena-
Wirtz to counsel for certain rice, growing interests
In Wharton and Matagorda counties which are op-
* poking the efforts of Brownwood to establish a water
•*#«»*-eupplyi. by, damming one of the tributaries of the
Colorado river whose waters the rice growers use: j.
It h natural that Senator Wtrts would Njprd the
as a mistake. Nobody blames him
manner; but aU the same
it In that
considered
and every other
for
the
to West
of vital Importance
section of Texas where mo-
--- I WWW# - wwivn VS A CASU) WIKI c u
nldpahtiee and trrtgation districts are in search
be garbed In the regulation
the recent legislative session
will tend to end what_____
pot forth to enfdrde traffic laws,
uicker- that law can get before the higher
be declared unconstitutional the better it
Texas, and the mors safety there will be
*4 Vi .
and some few other towns have announced
will pay no attention to the ruling, trusting
rule charters jo get them by the law's
HOLLER VNUEM
Hurt cat WOPfc
FOOTiMiT WES,
AM ILL rtETtrt t
HOSS f£R *
p v’
sn&RiP an’
sneak Btrtwao
th,cooK'£»hacv<
SO V\tL CAinT
OOIM'
'go git iK
fetlRttOP •
FONMEA- V4E?».
1 TrilUVC
DOWN iki *iW*
OOGrOoT*.
CAlNfT *TPtiNV< ,
WORE AltNifsi
*T V<1CV< 'iM, |
HORtT&O f
W* GOim'aF-
rr r icshT«
•VdHtN.Hev
orrs one foot*
IN Irt’eilRRoP.
he’ll haue.
-tvMO rtAVIOS .
ah’ one foot v
LEFT T V<Efcrt
jtH’ HOSb VdlTH
*
the booh rule cities will be able
special charters and still enforce
But whether they do or
unconstitutional or re-
fer other cities or fi
counties
. i
As we understand 1L the conference Is for the pur-
determlning what rights, if any. West Texas
>WTOC dete
• oammuniues
It la to find out whether
to cease the eoastruction of
and Irrigation purpoees. -
Wlrts dedans that ah effort
array the farmers against the
we see It. that to Merely
or not West Texas
for domestic
i'y,
reservoirs
is being made to
Interests. As
71
power
a parttof the question at Is-
sue. The whole principle of municipal and commun-
ity rights In the waters that fail In West Texas and
jigo roaring to the sea to at stake.
*— -1 **" that conflicts with the natural right
the water that falls within
Investigation, and th^t
peepsata tp investigate,
rate, thto to tae big question that
before the conservation conference to be held In Abi
lens a week from today.
Any “right"
communities to
their boundaries to subject to
to what West Texas
At i
Many of the cities of
to park improvement
M>—i
Texak
for. making mom attractive places in which to live.
attractive parks and
clean streets has a
playgrounds
distinct adv*
the city wlps
wdn kept lawns And
advantage over tie cl y with uninviting, llly-
hbjt suiTetindtnga. poorly pevta. Uttered streets, and
of
or playgrounds
.V
will
h
are turning their st-
and are laying plans
is the mecca
the north ind east, and they are
favorably or unfan rably with the kind of
they see as th ry go about seeking s
Brownwood could vejl afford to take the
tu appeanpee.
We can not believe that the law will hold good
before the higher courts, and If It should then there
Is red need for.-a, constitutional amendment. That
a state law should prevent any peace officer from
making an an-ta^ when he sees any law violated to
unthinkable, but the mere passage of the law re-1
ferred U> has brought a lack of enforcement that Is
causing the general public to disregard all highway
regulations , X,
Counties and cities are failing to supply their Offi-
cers with the prescribed uniforms and the state
failing to supply officers
state highways. . ,
; In its attempt at remedying
tolature has destroyed all regulation, and
streets
highway evils the leg-
not the onlj[ thing with which the law-abiding
lie has to contend ]
The law requiring the proper adjustment of head-
lights was one
books, but its
of th^ best ever p
usefulness was, d
ced in .it. and the
placed on the statute
destroyed
highways
teeth were placed
with glaring headlights at night.
People who are willing to observe
the right to expect protection from
no regard for thq lawf and certainly highway
are In such condition at present that there to no
tection from those who are
law’s provisions lightly.
If another speclalfmssion of the legislature
ed its first act shot!Id be a thorough revision of teaf-
mcltned
-letter
One loot
rest are easy, j
In physics to indicate unit of work or
to equal U> 13300.000 of these unite. MemtP
r
■ mm m mm m
WHY YOU BLINK MOKE RAPID-
LY UNDER; EXCITEMENT
fic tows, so that they may
be enforced..-
—IT 1
wHEN
W denly
Two
Ponder
“HorfTMoveTJp," says a market report,
they would in our street cars — American
For the benefit of European critics
pointed out that we do our dollar chasing
in our Q«m country.—Arkansas Oasett
After dicuiting to his
New York man has married her
for a-fRirn-about —Charleston
ri. We5 wish
Lumberman
it might be I
L&mg largely
B Apparent 1;
dent on the
a few yean that floating
be succeeded by a flying ui
a higher education j—LoulsvUto1 Times.
■. ■ j j .°
foe seven yean,
ell. It was about
will prob-
aasuring our
null II1*> IflWI
instead every
mal banking
by external i
ttme and spend the money
Ji critical survey of the
places where Just
cs
y to pi prove
town reveals
a little labor
that there are
labor and attention
lul to*
homes
very profitably be employed People like • to
la a beautiful town. They Ska to show a beauti-
toem to visitors, who when
wlB carry, with them an
thqy return to their
____________impression that they
^thentertvea would’ like to live ptere. Other towns and
^cities are working out thto problem In all parts of
Texas, and Brownwood,
ly. win bo left behind
unless it gets to work short-
The press has had hutch to aby about the you who
an army camp in Georgia, and who. accord-
ing to' regulations, ha I to submit to the
aad rqgulred inoculation against'typhoid,
f.
^jike a dutiful youth he wrote
the folk! at home,about his experiences and since ha
waaOt right sure aba it the worcf- iinoculation," he
-L- gold them that he ha< beep "shot in the arm." His
^^^torents became storms d and took up the matter with
their .congressman, w x> set
In motion and
Inslfa<1 of bring som (thing
of the author ties and
i Abe
to-his
£5»ttfted. and aH to
■Am
ever lastly;
—1
jne machinery
ere long
that would
of the
that
procure ?Us d
something tha
. The parents
3 reran thsv the
to have
m to defend
interesting* 1
really
benefit,
peace once more.
warrant a
discharge
that
- n-----j r r - - -
, \oa' column of The Brownwood Bulletin to open only v*
4a **---— whA ka»a ar ma e»ri t iriem tn maWa MBlaaflteR '*»
sdme crlUcUm to make or^aome
Instead ttjto open to all who
put before
rP*c
e the
U IVjM l
discuss.
The Bulletin
1-
or -a practical
people. The only require-
be
in
to that all* articles submitted for publication
will glady give them space.
i
have Just been
spelling bee
of the dvic dubs
an o
and proved!
wondering how
would continue.
as a luncheon
pulled off by the
long old-
if put on by
day stunt.
Ro tartans at
The old
-Abie backed spefcr was
^^Harians chosen as leaders, they
yd.members to
rteiitted teat
*1pword.
quite entertaimag.
used, and two prominent Ro-
in tum selecting oth-
The match was said to have
tie, neither side being able to spell the
-o-
jL .. I
"•/ ^terownwood people will be
asked
Nrgter consenation meeting to
to attend the
be held in AbUene on
It trill be an exceedingly
called by the West Texas,
and It is urgent that Brown-
wood bo well represented A special train has been
^ ordered Thto train will leave Brownwood at
.afte returning will leave Abilene about the same hour
”, Ttnmrsday df next
! -r* fImportant
^--Chamber of
j the evening
'L * *—^
Rev. Will Hogg is cond
-
«*Ml-
r
Daily ^Washingrton Letter
r
- [
BY
t
RODNEY DUTCHES •
IlTASHINarrON. Aug. 13—The net reeult of Prm»-
W dent OooUdge’s^Wmsrkable announcement ^te
Rapid City has been to throw a Whole crop erf po-
litical experts Into utmost ^confusion
The president didn't say that he wasn’t a candi-
date to succeed himself;; tf he had. there might be a
little less confusion He said:r
H do not choose to run for pre.-«idcngf In lOT*."
an object is brought sud-
denly toward the eye. the aver-
age man Minks. Frequently he blinks
without my apparent stimulation
British physiologists. Drs.
ind Kennedy,; decided to
find'opt Whether blinking to, auto-
matic or roluntary and to study the
various conditions which bring
blinking goout.
itly blinking Is not depen-
perception ol light, they
found, although a sudden illumina-
tion may produce a few rapid blinks;
every individual has a nor-
rate which is modified
stimuli. The rate of
blinking ig more
eyes are fixed on a
when they are looking at a
Each bunking movement
dated with the mov
itself. If a person tries to
eyes without blinking.' he iWlfi Rnd
In from ten to twenty seconds an
almost uncontrollable desire to
blink At this time. U be will jalter
the position of his eyes and look
elsewhere, he may avoid the blink-
ing movement. \
Irritation of the eye. as in sinok-
ing; increases the blinking rate as
dods also stimulation of the bear-
ing- Whereas the average man
blink every two and a half
if hr* becomes angry he to
lhat the world] looks to
guidance. The papers are
1st* of great men and chal-
Butler's assertion But
which the Parson has seen
do not contain a min
mjeasufes up to the standard
either specialists in some
iventkm or, as in the case
men great' only' In a
irmiu-d \ kpbetfc. The Parson Is
waiting to do homage to the great
man of our time, great in the sense
he has defined. |
* of inven
Mussolini.
heathen
The Parson’s favorite
says: Ti ( discussing Lie blessed life,
do not s rawer me after the manner
ol a veu r in a u< vision ‘This seems
to be t le majority.; Indeed so,
much the Worse for that. Human
affairs qre not so arranged that the
votes for the best tnras-
crowd argues the worst. Let
Tore, what It'is best to
is most- usual; what.
rapid when the
near point than
os in the
not
happinc ss.
val of : he
interpreter of truth. More-
over. Juft as I .cs 11 those
mantles a mob. s> I call
wear crowna. ~T do not.
look at the. color of
broidervd robe. .[ do
men by the eyei I
and more certain light
distinguish the fitoe
Let the soul find the
POSSCMIO
it what
mob- the very
OM I'.UIF, ON K)
m . - • •— • • — — • ••• • •••
f conference
on Thursday,
this fight as
ihich has ever
of Texas and
the Syndicate
tie up the entire
wptet shed as an as-
;hts of the people of
(CONTI NUED FI
•••«•••••%-
this. evidence
scheduled in
Blanton c
one of the gra
confronted the
views the at
Power Com
Colorado
sault on the
Texas.
Senator Woodward of Coleman.In
1 HORIZONTAL
1 One thoroughly versed in the
•Bible.” >
11 Hither.
12 Submerged as a boat in water.
14 An imitation pearl.
16 TO adhere. 1
18 Crippled
19 Unit of energy.
21 One of a tribe of 8iouah Indians,
j 22 Remaining verdant through
. < winter, .
25 To finish.
126 Abbrcvistlqn for "each.
127 Hypothetical structural
<29 Any place of refuge.
!31 Protected
36 Smooth.
' 3S Wing part of a seed. i
*39 Not coarse.
40 One wtio gazes fixedly, j
42 Receivers used in telegokphy
44 Minute opening In the
45 Spikes of corn.
46 Members of -the lowqr "branch
a state legislature
VERTICAL
- 2 Set Of bells In a clock
3 To venerate. ►
’ 4 Wrath,
! 5 To "become exhausted.
I 6 Custom.
15 European white fish
' 17 To congregate.
30 Insurgent.
23 Form of fuel.
24 Egg of a louse.
28 To disfigure.
29 Too.
30 Nibbles. « -
32 Serai-
33 Part of a coat collar.
34 To wash lightly.
35 Writing tablf.
37 God of lovt.j
41 Before. L
43 Horses: foodJ:
» f
a
t
i
i
<■
for:
Puzzle
7 Rodent
8 In.
9 Metallic runner for the shoe
on Ice. . j , r
spot c
10 Dark-colored
13 Lean-to.
on the uliin
laOJlu L3L1C3 UUQ
□□ □□□ QDU UG
□□□□□[J OrjHUOG
□ □□□»□□□□□ ^
EJdCa UU kJUQDiJ
□□ QJS3 aa ULJ
aacaa □□ aass
n a
□aaaau auGLiuu
□□ aac aaa uu
□ed □□□ E-jaa
Lt,
long distance: telephonb' conversa-
tion with Homer D. Wade of, the
West Texas Chamber of Commerce
declared that ^neter before had the
rrglonsd chamber of commerce been
called upon to fight Bo Important
a battle for the people of West Tex-
as. He urged Wade to forget every-
{thing else and concentrate the work
of the organisation upon this fight
until the rights of the peopto of
Texas are made secure. He to work-
ing In Ms section tq arouse hli
ing Is allowed to stand that such
will be the case In West 1%xas. It
U the situation which the West
Texas Chamber of Commerce is
fighting to avoid..
The water 'rights question is com-
paratively hew to Te?as and few
persons have given it thought. West
Texas Is comparatively a new coun-
try and only within the last few
ars have Its people given thought
conservation of flood waters for
yean
to
irrigation At prerant, many sec-
tions hsve irrigation projects In the
VICTIM. NOT CARTER
NEW YORK. Aug* 13.—UP -A
detective of the bureau of missing
persorfc announced today that aa
smnesia victim held at the Brook-
lyn Naval Hospital was positively
not Lieutenant' Commander Fidelio
S Carter. 74 year old retired naval
f .’herd who baa been missing since
February 1. )Tbe patient had pre-
viously been tentatively identified as.
Carter. 4 - ’ . K -
Detective Gisselbrecht said thdl *
U
4 bette;
[which
,the true
id.of the
to the gravity of the situs-! formative stage an<| several have
that he , recently completed projects.! No
°' Co1" ■,( ]
and announced today
head a delegation
i was now certain the man was not
Carter from persons who had gone
- Thi
SR
t meant something, but it might Btean any-
and everyone in. Washington whose opinion
worth
If one
JjL'SEt-,
— f president
If hli kenn
seeking suggested a different explanation.
Man’s guess is as good as another’s then
Is preranted herewith that the
say in effect
will not
preai-
in any dog
blink every second
excited he wtU
he is likely
during speech
mental tension is
connection
the study brought out,
SS
will
’ seconds,
likely to
If a iperapn to
kink more rapidly,
to blink more rap-
. In othei words.
Important in this
participate
kennel can’t lick the other kennels, he
to step In. and dictate tha result. One
doesn’t care to risk being
•The
fight.
is not going
teason to that
up and the other reason to -that such a course, would
be regarded as poor sportsmanship." > , |
( arefaUy Worded
statement as the one Mr.
CooUdge actually gave apd the fact that ha refused
ray art strong lhdtcatkme that
president hi\1l> meant that he was definitely
ng re-election. If he had meant that, there was
to restrain him from saying Just thati >
Tour correspondent. Having observed the president
on numerous occasions, once suggested to one who
Table difference between
vomen It is generally
he attention of women
So
araeo as ptwr sjwrt*
sUUmenl Cm
r a ref illy worded a
to amplify
the
ttd-
and
that
in-
rospectlve and net so well fixed aa
hat of men. Men and women were
in a reading roorgL'lIt waa
found that the women would blink
►very fiver second* compared with
11J seconds for the men.
The continual wandering of atten-
arrompanM br
soul,
taken
within
has wtvsted the
1 mm ~
undone
have said.
deem wha. I halve wished far to be
a curse inflicted or my enemies.
Oaod gods! How much lees bur
densome have jren the thii igs which
I feared than those which I desired
While I have borne enmity against
returned
man people to Abilene for the con
ference. »• f
Wheat i’rslAu
I laugh
. I halve
h at much of it. 1
many and
mlty into
friendship
liave retun
friendship;
among evil men
O how often, if the soul has
>£rif. n thmt1U I
ESS sZ,tTu» f».
lure of the region and feels that ll
[the Colorado River, passes into the
| hands of private interests that soon
other streams will pass from the
1 {hands of the peopl* , The West
Texas Chamber has already secured
w >dpnce that plans are already un-
irom en- & arise the Braaoa. Trlnl- Jj
ty. Ouadalupe ahd other streams of j
I position In'their efforts to
from streams In
impound
thrtr coun-
if there Is
not yet reconciled to myself
11 bmgenc«*
I am
I have
aU (jhgence to shdw myself
to the multitude and to makei my-
self notsb)«; by some gifts; what
have I done other than r ppra
self to darts] and show ill-vriu V
knew Coolidge well that the president was
one
a nervous
Hon In some i.
movements of the head and
made the count 4f the blink*
difficult In women than u<
■late of abstraction ron of
of mind is associated wi
■I I K
this
t _____replied thto prominent person. "But
never seems af fcase. One geU the Impression that
isn’t sure of hlmstif. • He Is very easily embar-
by conditions Immediately alfecUng himself,
although he has found from experience that a policy
of waiting and doing nothing to the safest when It
comas to Issues whioh are his official rather than Ms
personalfconcern.* t\ ! " :T ;. J' . j .
Hltswilu w n New Imminent
DM the situation in which Coolidge recently found
himself finally become intolerable to Mm? Is be the
sort of man who must have full and whole-tafcarted
support of hto party or none at all? Did he f<
the continued “third term" discussion, the
faction of the west and the flood areas, and
vious fact that many Important men In Ms own party
would be glad to get rid of him —that all these things
placed him to an uncertain position against which he
ought to rebel and demand a showdown’
rate of blinking: A state-
tal tension without an
let is accompanied b)
ing rate.'
:ym.
more
men. A
nlcnc*?
alow
of nen-
.liul I'Ut-
biink-
West Texas,
i Dean T. U. Tay
of engineering of
to a tetter to r. w
dent of the West Texas*
Commerce. wanu\ Hr.
It might bite? Do you see those '*** W™- liberty,^and
mwlae Vour i pur^ happine*., of all West
what amounu to the same thing— 1 ■ * f--' - - —
my-
Where
waters
Uea ' .
The re^i meaning of the fatal it
Just becoming apparent to the peo-
ple. and how Brownwood and 8an
Saba are but Incidents to what
West Texans declare is a fight over
a principle. The Abilene meeting
certon end
issues up-
be fought
promises to be,a warm,)
will no doubt decide
battle
,T
Water Fi?ht
may be enemies The crovnd of those
who envy you is es great as that of
those who gdmire you, i-
Oo to .church tomorrow
THE PARSON’S
COLUMN
WNTOWN RAMBLES 1
i
Thme «f 6hr*Sa and FatchM*'
son. T»d. whom
many of . Me readers will re-
member as a bog. spent last week
MbRAatoewMf acquaintance and so
forth.- The night before he left he
bore thto testimony: *1 have travell-
ed over
, retting hotter again—<r may-
s It 'S Just the humidity.
Qesrgto
‘ If so.
and the
Either
aDdge dignity
to is toimtoen
has been maintained
the Cool
showdowf|| ___
s majority of the party leaders will break
or they will stand by the president. At this writing
it is probable that most of them are comptetelv flab-
bergasted. They may have been hoping with all their
hearts that Coolidge would decline to run for re-elec-
tion, but the way to wMch he did so could hardly in-
spire a cautious politician with hto eye on the feed
box to let out an Immediate whoop
dktote. At thto writing they
vergent opinions as to Just what the
many
many places, but
ever met live in
*Flve distinct
ndes by
letta
tin alone!
states'land lived to
.t .the loveliest folk I
little burg "
ureters and sul-
to Friday s Bui-
the revolver. .
The further
Uve. the more
/hem. oplneTO
ClDEWAtJCCR
Who has
•way your relatives
can brag about
PE8T
rhoop lor another ean-
contlnue to expreas di-
at the president means.
a Coottdge
I It amuses, when it does not dis-
gust. the Parson to bear and read
the thousand and one meanuigv
some of thaas cunningly , hidden
which are being attached to the
President's doc tors Una that he
’does not choose to run tor Presi-
i
a revival to Lubbock*
the opinion that he
as to hov'jtalt
or else iiubfcxk te Just about on a
It will be much easier
to express regret at the
go on their ways rejotdhg. bat the
may actually strengthen Me portion,
harder to shoot at a candidate who
Ofltee must seek the man. and tf
nominated', the disappointment will
on the fence
wal” and
stroke
It to
be less
there were
party were
ard-bearer oould
stronger
to win to
hold
much
that the
to not
emhar-
after a
dent to UM.N The
a betting 'man. but
Lire a very large
Coolidge meant
er more nor toes,
not believe that
r ass tog than the crushing rebuff of a
nomination openly and falling to get It.
It to unlikely that CooUdge acted without advtoe.
It may even be that he received strong Mate
' M behind
Parson to not
be would ven-
that Calvin
Ue said, neith-
Parson does
Coolidge will
the matte*, but
lates oh
at Slake
of West Texas
at stake, and the strug-
to-hand struggle be-
commercial use of water,
me. I haw studied
court dedsfcxi bearing
on the question and es-
Motai vs. Boyd., I do not
overestimate it when I say that the
liberties and Che ike,of Wear Texas
farmers along tqe streams to 'n
Jeopardy. If
whose bond
Street can have 4 prior right
farmer along the creeks to West
Texas, then it teems to me that
life, liberty, ahd the pursuit of hap-
mu to Texas is dead.1* j
Dean Taylor will atterid the Abi-
lene conference and will be a prin-
cipal speaker of the mee
The West Texas Chamber of
j r i f ! 1 ■
Wpodward Backs
t}
If ifl
8TAHFORD. Aug. 13—<<Pr—VkO-
tent concern over the water rights
■Rustic n to Texas was expressed oy
Senasoi Walter Woodward of Cole-
man Friday Speaking before.the
Kiwanii Chib. Senator Woodward
declare I that the Interests of West
Texas and of all Texas are Jeopar-
bp the forthcoming decision of
8tete Board-of Water Engineers
whether the water of the
BRADY GAS FRANCHISE
BRADY. Texas. Aug. 13—An
{amended franchise has been granted * '
Roy M. Ragsdale who brought .to a
gas well on the P. C. Dutton ranch,
twelve miles north of Brady. It to
ht likely that RagMate wlB
his franchise to some coo-,-*^
which will pip® tl* »•- Bra- ^
within the next few months tor
to have a gas supply foe the
city before the winter. The well to
flowing approximately 1.56a 006 cu-
bic feet dally.
Oniy^25»\
Fair Grounds
mission to
tee "
i
Ort
fact
nates the
Michelin is,
or the Syndicate Pow-
which has succeeded to
drop of water which
watershed of the Ool-
creek and
Jitney
■ran* this
like “old times
and flappers raising <
kind of way as thfijr
Austin avenue . [.
deep conversation
a red
away from
. . Man with a
Another horse.
- • •
Crowd
Cam to a
leetiM-
, . ---------Chamber
. _. j . Commerce has ignored efforts made
A pedestrian | tp involve farmer* living further i
* 1 UfUL down to the flgJiL taking th* poel- [
m •, tion that such efforts are but a
1W' •."smoke screen” raised to t
Jor*e. minds of the people off the
m “* •* ^ *** Wwt
about the last
"smoke screen" raised to take the
minds of the people off the real is-
sue at stab*. Mast West Texas
streams are but wet weather streams
l and contribute nothing to the flow
u‘ of the rivers In the season*
*3,down river farmers use water
River belongs to the peo-
ple
tie tog
fall i upon
orago and of
bra ich whtoh , ,
U oodward declared that every
man interested'In the welfare of
Wet Texas should attend fhe meet-
^ Conservation Association in Ab;len»,
and stated that he would organise a
delegation of Coleman county peo-
ple to attend the session He called
Homer D. Wkde.- manager
West Tfxas Chamber, by long dis-
tance telephone to pledge his su;
port of the regional chamber to
fight and to urge Wade to redouble
Ms efforts to the fight.
“The people must not tjrlTflSTed by
smoke screens to this matter." he
said. "The fight is not between land
owners to different sections qf Tex-
as but it Is a matter of principle as
: New Arrivals in :
U AM fine
fin- ;
irrigation. Futhermore. large lakes
to West Tens by storing flood
whether the man who owns land
entitled to urn the water which
*Kt falls on hto land. Western States
for have had terrible strife ova* water ,,
’ll
i 1
ikes rights,
wa-i Tin
California there are entire ] ]
PROBABLY one re
* Scotch use the bag-plpq
cause you dont have Ip bt
music to go with tt.
Hon. J. Pendleton McOoofe-
ters wUl helpthe man Bvtag further! fommunities where land owners may
■ w - not dig a well because water rights
have been taken up by other Inter-
ests Texas to face to face with this
grave crisis and the Abilene meeting
down the river by preventing floods,
***• i and by supplying drainage and eeep
i water to dry weather when the
streams have no flow at all. In the
the Republican party that
candidates than he and If the
1921 It must be sura iU stand-
the great electoral vote of New
NMTA1 6tnttk
forces referred to had
• ago
There have
say any more
that anyone who
withdrawing what
find himself very
has stirred up, a
by hto assertion th*
the first time to twb
ybara*the, world to without a [great
man. By Arcat man
means a man whose
TIMMONS and
SANDERSON
i
has said will mammoth dog parade.
Iw«»i»l00%
Peters
J.. _ $3,000 stock
ha evidently!This ti our 1
personality to 1* ,1* 1^
Vtohegr
the
rights has existed
some of'these states,
have been jto
Texans an
this issue
their rights
rainfall”
not1 The Issue to
opportun!
before the (
to the god-given
ity to
people
with the new Pali arrivals. ‘
Shop at-;?
lif
*N
on their
"water or wa-
imres of garden
land
Woodward eakl. and for this rea*
many people do not understand “its ; ;
Importance.
must purchase from' the power cam*
pames the right to use rata
‘falls upon hteasm
GILLIAN DRY :
GOODS CO.
; Everything to Webr
>
v
■4 . »,
Jl
'
* A
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.
Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 257, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 13, 1927, newspaper, August 13, 1927; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1025756/m1/4/: accessed June 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.