Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 25, 1922 Page: 4 of 5
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BROWNWQOD BULLETIN OCTOBER 25 1922
'J;.. Classified Advertisements
LOST AND FOUND
ljjfriT One tapestry upholstering for
frittee on Coggin or Third. Finder
Jeee notify C. L. Ponncey at W. IL
Serisngeour & Son. 9c
Reward for return to Bulletin office
snft.)l diamond stud lost Tuesday in
or aear "Wcsten Union Telegraph of-
c"a. 10p
WANTED
Grecer clerk wants job. Phone R-970.
iip
JOB WANTED For a man the band
bronght back from New Orleans. Ex
perienced truck driver meat cutter
and restaurant will consider anything.
I&cation for this man -Rill be big ad
dition to our hand. This man served
overseas with the old 142nd and de-
sires to star with his old outfit He
impersonally known to Capt. Wright
Arpetrong. Phone or see Lieutenant
Geither. -9c
We want to buy wood cook stoves and
wood heaters. Phone us. No. 975. New
Second Hand Store. 203 West Broad-
Fay. 15
WANTED Room furnished for light
iMHB-ekeepIng. Raymond Collier 1005
Melwood Ave. lOp
WANTED To rent or lease furnished
rooming or boarding house by couple.
Address Box 41 Zephyr Texas. 13p I
WANTED Sewing to do reasonable
prices. Phone J-564. 13p
P.
REGULAR MEETINGS
of BrowRwood Lodge No. 279 A.
& A. M. the first and third Thursday
nignts or each month.
R. E. LEE W. M.
C. H. MURPHY Secretary.
Professional Girds
T. B. BAILEY M. D.
Practice of Medicine and Sure-Mr
Room 407 First Nafl Bank Building
Phone 509
Mills McHorse Sc Peck
Plawbers Gas Fitters and Tinners
Badlaters Repaired
115 Xsyes Street.
PJiene 432
CHAS. J. WEST
Plumbing Heating and
Gas Fitting
1418 Are. E. Pnoae 1298
OK 1
SKULL OF CONVICT
DOLLY GAUDXERi FAITHFUL WIFE
OF DESPERADO APPEALS TO
ATTORNEY GENERAL.
WANTED You to trade in your old
tantttnre for new. Empire Furniture
clothing.
lraop
WANTED Useful articles
etc. 'Phone 1202.
TO EXCHANGE new furniture for
old. . or pay spot cash. W. C. BOW-
DEN FURNITURE & RUG CO.
FOR SALE
" - ' . i . ....
FO SALE Fletch man's Yeast at
isysen'B Market. 'Phone 444. ltfc
FRO SALE OR RENT 6 1-3 acres 4
room house plenty water grass
truck patch etc Out Austin Avenue on
nuus ureeK. i. u. winn .rnone
X-S19. 10c
uk salk un cmrrerooe one
buffet gas range art square and
other house hold goods for quick sale
call at 8'S Malone Ave. 10c
FOR SALE OR TRADE 40 acre farm.
Phone R-325. Dp
ED BLINN
Plumbing and Gas Fitting
Phone R-1315
"ir ri n ju ir nj-uurij-ir-n-riMrLi ux ilfu .
McINNIS & SON
Undertakers and Embalmers
119 West Lee Street
Office Phone 69
R. R. RANKIN
Plumbing
N Jeh Too Blgr None Tee Small
for ib j- carefsl attentlen.
Phone 111S
FOR SALE At a bargain nice little
heene. 1711 First Street. 11c
FOR SALE Two fine Registered
Belstein cows and their calves which
I will sell at & bargain; -would con-;
rider a good automobile in the deal.
Jf interested see me. 'Phone 299. J
W. Sfitcm. 20Stfc
lOK SALE I oner my home on
Melwood Avenue for sale. Nine rooms
isclnding two sleeping galleries two
paths 184xlS4 feet lot. barn garage
tardea etc; about 3 blocks from the
Howard Payne College; hard surfaced
street to college schools churches
etc. If interested see me. 'Phone 299.
J. W. S talon. 30Stfc
DR R. L. FARRIS
Osteopathic Physician
67 First National Bank Building
Murphy & Perkinson
REAL ESTATE
Brownwood Texas
OMce: Bair Balldine;
Phone 1352 or X-645 Residence
HOUSES FOR RENT
FOR RENT furnished house
wkh two apartraattU; modem
msI conveaietitly arranged.
Ste X F. Reofro Phone 11.
FOR BENT To couple unfurnished
apartment and garage modern. Phone
B-223; lip
FOR RENT Modern apartment 402
Austin Avenue. '-Phone R-834. Mrs. C.
Y. Jackson. 12c
TYPEWRITERS
L. C. SMITH & BRO.. Dealers
AIMmjhs for all Makes
All makes rented sold and repaired
Collins Typewriter Exchange
Bernay BIdg. Browawood Phone 413
FOR RENT 2 rooms partly furnish-
ed. Phone R-508. 1522 Fisk Ave. lip
FOR RENT One furnished room two
unfurnished rooms and garage. Phone
R-412. S17 Austin Avenue. 9p
USED CARS
FOR SALE or trade on milch cows or
house and lot in Brown wood Buick
roadster 1918 model in good condi
tion. 404 East Chandler. 'Phone R-248.
Pipes. n
CARS FOR SALE
One Morman Chummy 6 Sf.OOO car
for $750.
FOR RENT My house two miles
west on Bangs road modern conven
iences. Including gas; ideal location
for dairy and chicken farm. Mrs. X
C. "Whidden 'phone 183. Hp
One Buick Six Touring with extra
Rex all weather top Jot winter use:
priced right.
LEAVENWORTH Kan. Oct. 24
Staring dry-eyed out ofvthe window
of her home at the huge gray walls of
the Federal Penitentiary wherein her
husband. Roy Gardner daring train
robber is conflned Mrs. Colly Gard-
ner sits hour after hour praying that
Attorney General Harry M. Daughcr-
ty will grant permission for an oper
atlon on her husband's skull. The
faithful wife said she wants to stay
here as long as possible as the
thought of being near consoles her.
Mrs. Gardner believes that in the
event her husband is operated upon
and the pressure on his brain remov-
ed he -will reform and. soon regain his
citizenship. She declared six special-
ists have examined Roy and each of
them stated he could be cured of his
desire to rob trains. On the other
hand Dr. Yohe prison physician in
his report to Attorney General Daugh-
crty indicated that in his opinion am
operation would not remove Gardner's
craving for banditry.
Hurt In Mines.
"Roy was injured in . 1908 while
working in the Copper Queen Conner
Mine at Elsbee Arizona" Mrs. Gard
ner explained. "Up until that time
he had never committed u crime. He
suffered a compound fracture of the
skull.
-"Snortly after that he began his
criminal career. Each day he became
worse br that I mean more daring.
in all of this time Roy had never kill-
ed a man.
"I have X-ray pictures which show
that there is a piece of bone about an
eighth of an inch long pressing
against Roy's brain. I will take these
with me to Washington if my request
for an operation is denied. If neces-
sary I will appeal in person to Presi
dent Harding for permission for the
operation on my darling Roy.
"Roy wants to be cured and has
consented to the operation although
ho thinks it will mean his death. He
is getting old. I noticed many gray
hairs in his head when I visited him
at the penitentiary. If the is kept in
there in his present condition he will
either die or become hopelessly in-
sane." j
Gardner is thirty-eight years old.
His father and sister reside at Okla-
homa City. Several of his relatives
declare he was one of tho finest men
until after the cave-In at the copper
mine. In his younger days he attend-
ed the University of Colorado.
Pulled Rip Job.
Up until 1920 Gardner was not very
widely known. Petty crimes and in
significant hold-ups got him into some
trouble prior to that time but April
6. 1920 he "pulled" a "job" which set
tongues wagging in all parts of the
country. On this date he held ud a
mall truck at San Diego. California in
daylight. His loot consisted of riceo-
tiable securities -worth $67000. part of
tne contents of a registered mail
pouch.
Some weeks later Gardner was can
tured and sentenced to twenty-five
years in the Federal Prison at Mc
Neil's Island. While en route to the
penitentiary he covered - the two
guards with hsi revolvnr
cd( He was. recaptured a short time
later.
Dofkster&fTfMtftQ
Detefrfne if Harding
Is Seeking Reelection
By GEORGE R. HOLMES.
International News Service Staff
Correspondent
WASHINGTON Oct 21.6 SO
often the national capital gets excited
and engages in feverish speculation as
to'tho plansi of Warren Gamaliel. Hard-
in rr In 1004 'l If
Vm-Et
Will he bp a candidate for- a second
term? V v
The" rail birds that6Tc 4 on' the
fences of the race tracks ifithY stop
watches ahd form charts" (n their
hands haye absolutely nothing orj the
Washington dopestors when it comes
to "figuring out" a candidate.
Every utterance Mr. Hardinsr makes
either officially or socially; every bus-
iness venture he may make on tho
private side of his busy life as wolj as
his" writings and his official papers
are coming more and more under
searching scrutiny for indications as
to which way the winds of 1924 may
blow.
Not long ago the President was
talking informally with a number of
newspaper correspondents.
"When some of you boy3 get to be
President" he began.
Then he stopped and smiled a bit
sadly.
No I dont wish you that much
hard luck"
fhe stop watches of the rail birds
clicked and the impression began to
be conveyed about that "Harding is
tired of his jdb."
As a matter of fact he was tired of
it that day. He had been fighting rail-
way executives labor leaders coal op-
erators coal miners and not a few
Senators and Representatives and the
net result was not conducive to peace
of mind and contentment of spirit.
Now Mr. Harding has given the rail
birds another thrill by purchasing the
old farm in Morrow county. Ohio.
where he was born. It comprises
some 2o0 acres and with improvements
Mr. Harding plans to make on It
should prove an admirable retiring
place according to. tho capital rail
birds.
It can be stated authoritatively.
however that Mr. Harding's purchase
of his old homcplaco has nothing to
do with any retirement plans he may
or may not have. Mr. Harding want
ed to own his birth place long before
he ever dreamed of occupying the
White House. When he moved into
No. 1600 Pennsylvania avenue his de-
sire to possess the farm was intensi-
fied. It is extremely doubtful if Mr. Hard-
ing himself knows what he will do two
years hence. Many things can hap-
pen in two yeara. Even his closest
confidants do not pretcn dto say with
any degree of certainty what will be
the President's mind th 1921.
They his confidants say there have
been many times-since March 4 192J
when "Warren G. Harding
Washington's Youngest Hostess
The youngest woman who yet ha s ventured to act as hostess for
Washington society is Miss Elizabeth Hanna daughter of the late Dan
Hanna and granddaughter of Mary Hanna.
Women Kick About -Gambling
Told to
Quit Home dupes
-1
" :
(By International News Service)'
GLENROCK. Wyo. Oct. 24. Waen a
'lelegation of women attended council
meeting here and petitioned Mayor
'John Anson to stop gambling and put
slot machines out of business they got
an "earful" from his majesty.
He told them gently but firmly that
whenever the women stopped car4
playing and gambling at boats fan-
would see to it that the men s4oyyed
down town but not uatil then. iH
was slightly more conciliatory regard
ing slot machines. jShenld Hare Exchanged. . m
(From the Boston Transcript :.Mrsi
A My girl; has left me. She snidT
had so much company there was too
much work to do. I.
Mrp. "B. Mine hag gone off - to.
She said I had so little company it
showed that I had.no social position.
R&dl fiep&rtee.
Fay My engagement Is temporar
ily off.
Rap Sort of spark-ap. Eh.
wished himself back In the United
States Senate; where his friends were
his friends and whore every casual
caller did not have some ax to grind
as the reason for his coming.
It has been one of Mr. Harding's
chief complaints In tho White House
that the job stripped him of friends.
And whatever else W. G. Harding of
Marlon 0 may be ho is essentially a
kindly friendly man. He craves a
companionship that was his in the
sbenate in which Is impossible in the
White House.
President Harding lost considera
ble weight this summer. The weath
er was notoriously hot and did not
make battling against the twin rail
and coal strikes any easier By Sep-
tember he was pretty well fagged out
physically and mentally. Then came
Mrs. Harding's nearly-fatal illness as
the final straw. He lost much sleep
and more weight over that so that all
things considered. Wr. G. Harding has
had a fairly strenuous summer and
one not calculated to make him love
No. 1600 Pensylvanla avenue overly
much.
There are those among his friends
though who say that any talk.of Mr.
Harding's not accepting a second term
is poppycock. Not only will Mr.
Harding want a second term two years
hence but political conditions are
quite likely to demand that he run
again according to these savants.
Beyond all these considerations
however Is one stronger than all oth-
ers." It is the cold fact that no man
has ever turned down a Presidential
heartily nomination for the second term.
DOG CAPTURES TRUANT
MOXKEY AT LIBERTL ON
XAUMEE RIVER A WEEK
DEFIANCE O. Oct. 21. After
leading the countryside h merry
chase for a week and successfully
evading capture the little West In-
dian monkey which had bjen the
proud possession of Charles Yearling'
finally fell a victim to a Defiance
county dog.
The monkey was received by
Yearling early in the summer from p
relative who is engaged In Govern-
ment work in the West Indies. Re-!
cently he made his escape from the
box in which he bad been confined.
All efforts at capture failed. He speat
his time along the Maumee River and
was likely to turn up almost any-
whorc. From Delaware Bend nearly
to Defiance people got in the habit of
looking In the treetopB for the chat
tering truant. .
. Whenever the monkey was sighted
farmers left their work and spent a
while in futile effort to coax him back
to captivity. It was no uncommon
thing for a farmer to get up . in'
the morning and find the monkey
swinging through the orchard trees I
helping himself to plums and peaches j
and apparently following a futile tho
not fruitless quest for some real West!
India coccamits. I
Even bananas failed to tempt the
little fellow to again submit to cap-
tivity. And then came Frank Swaxt'a
dog in a surprise attack. He left the
monke y no chance to escap.? and
with two good bites and a shake tho
animal immigrant was no more.
Thursday and Friday
and Saturday Specials
at Norwood's.
Black Satin Strap Puraps in inlli-.
tary Baby Louis and flat heel3 &M
Lauie3 rai. strap rumps iow neeis
at $it
OUR BIG LINE OF FELT
SHOES
In Ladies Men's and Children's on
sale Thursday and Friday. Most;
every color and pattern. See our
window.
SPECIAL CLOSE OUT '
prices :r
on all our Rubber Overshoes. "
Ladies' Overshoes with straps 7$c-
Mon's Overshoes 85c and $1J;
Children's Overshoes 50c and fC':
CHILDREN'S UMBREL
LAS
- .c
. . .8c
Men's Umbrellas at $1.45
Short handle
Ladies' Umbrellas at
BVRT NORWOOD
20 Ford truck pneumatic tires cab
and bed. A good buy at $250.00.
One
$450.
Essex 20 model now rubber
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
FOR RENT Furnished apartment
vrivate entrance. Phone R-629. 16c
FOR RENT Two rooms furnished
fer light house keeping: Water lights
ind. gas $16.00. 1009 Booker St. lip
FQR RENT TO COUPLE Modern
new furnished apartment 'Phone J-
226.' 20
IV "RENT Furnished apartment;
den and clen. Sleeping porch. -Nc
fclrR. 1412 Avenue X. 13c
Fbft XENT Furnished apartment.
H MelWood. 14p
FOR RENT TO COUPLE Modern
furnished upstairs spartsient Mfs.
W. A. Butler 408 Wet Anderson lip
Furnished aMUintents. Pfceae 302. tfc
ROOMS FOR RENT
FOR RENT Twe Mnfurnisbed rtorac
1012 MelwiMd Avenue. lip
FOR RIXT 'A nice oilce room well
Heated. Phone 7-)2. 10p
FOR RXNT L4ht bovsc keep! or
bed rsewn modern; close in. 'Phono
23. 10P
FOR. -RKNT Two reotos unfurnlehed
' Hi Avenue B. 'Pe 445. Dp
H) RENT Frnl8hed bed
Ml East -Chandler Strwt.
Hi.
rora.
'Phone
une Overland 83B -new cord tires
on rear good running order $85.00.
One Overland S3 good shape thru
out $175.00.
One Hudson Speedster; a bargain
One Chalmers 6 n real buy Jit our
price. "Let's talk cars."
W. R. SCRIMGEOUR & SON
905
NOTICE!
J. L
'Phone
Good homes on easy -terms.
Thomas Lumber Company.
460. Night Phone 428.
HOMI! lUlLDllg TAKE 50TICEJ
We have two hundred thotfeand
S-2 F. C. Shingles with all other
building- materials we are offering at
xtremely low p" rices for the' next
.0 days It will pay ysH . to call and
get our prices. Yard located a tot to
Santa Fe station.
J. L. THOMA ft CO.
S23j ipfcMM 481
misceuaSitoOS
MOVING CRATING STORAGBJ ANb
Drayage of Heutthold Goeds and
MercBsndise. Ramey Brokerage -and
Storage Company: 'Pboae loOfl.
BECOME our local saleemati gelling
high grade shoes direct to ceneniher.
Liberal commiesion. Capital or ix-
erience not ncOHKftry. f'er Mrtkm-
lara address Tanaera Shoe Mathtfac
taring Co. 4t d Street. Boatdn!
The fashion for ornamental buckles
on the hips is too conspicuous for any
woman to avoid It. Each designer
thinks of something more curious and
aruui tnan his competitor. Three
colored pincushions made of tiny bin
feathers are really remarkable as
hip ornament don't you think? Large
stiver -and onyx disks Indian-like are
desirable. The. highly colorod orna
ments are kept for frocks. They are
not used on coats long or short.
Four hundred species of hummlng-
oirds among them the smallest and
most beautiful in the world are
found in America.
WEAK; RUN-DOWN
JutDrif. "CirMBiytMt
Up" Shjfeckftt
Kerne rs rills N. a In an tateteat'
iI ttateaMat regarding C&rdui the
Wemaa's Tonic. Mrs. Wealey Mabt ot
near here recently said; "I have
kntwn Cardul for Tears but merer
knew Its worth fcitlL a year- or ao ago.
I wu la a weakened run-down con-
dition. I became draggy didn't eat of
lleef to do any .feed; couldn't do any
thing without a great etrort. I tried
different remedlet and medlclAM. yet
I eeaunnea to a rag.
"I decided to girt Cards! a trial
andfennd It wu jat what X mlly
needed. It made mt xeei suet ttrettt
'feeei altar I luge" to nee it I be
gam. to eat mere ana the nerreua
week feeling began to laaTS lm I
wee Ueeplng geod.
"Cardul bnftt me wf an & other
toiM rar did.
fl need'Cerdnl with ee danghtor
wm trad Mwr. feH bad and tired Mt
aK.thetiae. It brought her Tight ent
dud too eke wee as wail as tAgtrl
tM04 be. jrg think there U atalag
; Co let allow yonrself to Veoaiie
wMk.acd rnn-dowm frniM TTiiitnr
trdMUi. TalwCardnL Tenmarfti-d
H Jttet whet yott really need. Fer
men then 40 years It has been need fer
theaesede and tbnneanda lennd
At 7tr droggltfa -' MO-14I
f. ?:f'":''
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The Tvoe and Ihl
University
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 25, 1922, newspaper, October 25, 1922; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth343970/m1/4/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Howard Payne University Library.