Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 274, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 1, 1936 Page: 1 of 8
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T0VAT8N,
% Home Owned Newspaper, Scrying the Heart of Texas With' Today’s N«fl Todayi Eyery Day Except Saaday
B X I -i! -
BROWNWOOD,
VOL XXXVI4 NO. 274
Miner’s Tip Revives Hunt for Judge Crater
Directs Willys I
Reorganization
Declaring be had met a wandering
prospector who claimed to b? Judge
Joseph Crater of New Yirt, left,
missing for six years, -Lucky Black-
ie" Biackiet. giant miner, right led
a Nq .ad Of police Into the nigged
country near San Diego, calif, on
a search for the mysterious stranger.
Crater left a New York night dub
on Aug. «. ltN. and vanUied with-
out leaving a dew. 1
MEXICO CITY. Sept. 1.—(UP)
—Mexico haa sold arms to Spain
and feels fully Justified in doing ao.
'*n u » KANSAS CITY. Mo.. 8ept: 1 —
**» the (UP)—Walter Welford. Gowemor of
naCnlfl* North Dakota, eras injured today
* muatc when his cab was hit by another car.
mployed Governor Welford suffered two frac-
tot; but tured ribs and body bralaes. J. K.
“A bad Broateun. North Dakota State 8en-
«C some ator. was injured slightly,
wh par- Governor Welford and Brdsteun
W«tory ware going from their hotel to the
municipal airport to board a plane
for Bismarck, North Dakota, when
ivaicade the accident occurred. They con-
ation is ferred yesterday with Oovernor Alf
a much M. I^ndon at Topeka,
that of At St. Mary's Hospital It was said
patriots the Governor’s condition was not
■rtto of, serious, but that he would be kept
■n gave under observation several days be-
mhtic of cause of the danger of pneumonia.
Da the Broateun■* cnly injury was a bump
to out- op the head.
hut that William Young. 42. the taxi driver,
the iat- was not injured, w* C. Newton.
Ind the 22, Kansas City. Kansav driver of
Jacinto the other car. wma arreated on a
» aensa- , careless driving cha^t. He waa not
■hip. banned. Young said Newton drove
Jazz King
FORT WORTH. Texas, Sept.
1—i UP)—Paul Whiteman, a
“rootin', tootin’ cowboy” fronj
New York's music halls, saddled
bis horse today to ride to his
office In th; Port Worth , city
ball—to serve as mayor for an
hour.
Whiteman, dressed In cowboy
garb and escorted by Texas
Rangers, will be the first honor-
ary mayor this city has had In
•7 years existappe. Mayor Van
returns to production in the fall. Ucn ^ b
Thfee rears pf federal receivers:* mem head*
under W . son ended when he became nr
rrrid-r- o' the rsorgsnlxsd com- authorlxed ,
; any. Hr?inning Noe. 1 the company MtlonAlly
plans to build 70.000 can in the next riflse
: m3.
1 ' f~X ' faith in O
rimi iirmnn »nn«
FULTON. Mo, Sept. 1.'—(UP)—
odiea of three brothers were found
day in a gas and water-filled coal
ine near here. They died to a
itile effort to save a fourth
“Ihe best means of Improving an
instrument of peace is not to aban-
d:n it to Us present imp rtrrtions
but to strrngtban it through mom
efficient parttdpetfcm.” - •
Louis Metz. 22. died of mobexide
l»a but it was not known whether
and Harry Meta, it, was gas palm-
ing or drowning.
T. J. Wolfe. Fulton City employe ■■
end father-in-Uw of Louis Metz,
waa the only survivor. He was un-
conscious when taken from the
staft. but laser recovered conscious-
ness at a hospital. It was expected j
he would recover..
Louie Met* and his father-in-law
were draining water from the aban-
doned shaft mine when gas from
i jn Hr | I || I IK prob'em of its foreign debt has not
wJew w#k» ■ • W I U changed. The government’s desire
; | - ■ ■— / i to fulfill all of Its obligations con-
LMI2I AND BUSINESS MEN tinurs tc be subordinated to the
EXPECTED TO ATTEND necessity of applying the major part
FROM IS COUNTIES of the nation's resource* to 1U eul-
—•- tura] and economic progress,*
irm programs of the federal gov- Defending the law of natnnaliza-
neht Yin be the principal topics tier of property, which the Cstho-
iscussion when fanners and busi- lies ha ye criticised. Card-naa said:
i lien from the 19« counties of “The law has been administered
■nsion Service district 7 meet In with a criterion of ample Justice."
■ofcodSeptember • and 10. Retarding labor, he said:
i will bo one of the series of 12 “The government s attitude haa
t.ngs being conducted over the been to respect the right to strike in
. by ^ Texas Agricultural As- accordance with the federal labor
,t#ni i during the last 12 months In which
wjl e of particular lntermt to ^ w ^ ***„ ^
ierk but business men also art r , T ,
:ed to attend The second day ^ <* n tvp-wrUtcn
PM” ~ =o too-
to business men, bu. farmers ernmental affairs, without refbr-
- vit.'d to attend ence politics or the agitation
-tneipal speaker will be Dr. R. for woman's suffrage.
WASHINGTON. Sept. 1—(UP>—
Tfct Spanish government has assur-
ed the United tSates It wffl conduct
a rigid Investigation Into the bomb-
ing of the U. 8. destroyer Kane by
a Spanish airplane off the coast of
Spain last Sunday, the embassy at
I Madrid informed the State Depart-
ment today.
Erie C. Wendelin, third secretary
j hi charge of the embassy, tele-
graphed Secretary of State Cordell
i Hull he had delivered the protest
which Hull had Instructed him to
' make t? the Spanish foreign office
j concerning the bombing.
Wendelin said the foreign office
had promised to make a prompt In-
vestigation of the incident and to
Inform this government of the re-
sult.
Wendelin had been instructed to
“tastM” that instructions be given
Immediately by the Spanish gov-
ernment “In the strongest terms”
th its fighting forces to assure there
would bo no repetition of the Kane
incident.
State Department officials were
waiting for word from Consul
Charles Bay at Seville that he had
made, informally, similar represen-
tations to Oen. Francisco Franco,
commander of the rebel forces, with
a similar demand that the rebel
forces be given instructions not to
firs on American warships to
Spanish waters.
MARSHALL. IWL. Sept 1- 'UP
—Extradition to Arkansas of Charlie
Chapman and Hugh Undscy.
esceped convicts, was opposed today
by Texas officers
W. D. Alien, chief deputy sheriff
of Cass County. Tkx, said the pair
will he tried on charges of kidnap-
ing and bank robbery tn that coun-
ty and any effort to return them
to Arkansas would be oppomj vigor-
(CONTINUXO ON FANS TMNBSI
TETE-A-TETE
War Situation In
Spanish Morocco \
Grows Dangerous
(CONTINUkO ON PAOto ilOMT)
of thd AAA; R. H. Bush, argan-
icnj Specialist of A. AM. Cci-
. and Mrs. Minnie Fisher Cun-
(ham. editor of The Extension
dee Brim, and H. O. Lucas,
an wood, president of the Texas
cultural Association. Also ex-
ed is L. L. Johnson, recreational
sr for tho Extension Service's
» program, who wlQ conduct
900,000 Recruits
Ordered Into Army
By Soviet Officials
brought to the Jail
Oklahoma To Make
No Further Move
To Return Chilton
In addition, in Jumping with the
decree for toirtoem which was to-
wed August U. half of the dam of
1019 was called up. ■
The <oo ooo men In tho 1214 clan
will repines an equal number of Uw
last can, who will bo released The
303.000 men of lll» wfl provide the
New Officers Will
elected Today
y Texas Legion
>NT, Texas. Sept. 1 —
ting Legionnaires pre-
y to select their state of-
the 1937 convention city
business of their three-
a day labortr__
More Confessions
Sought In Death Of
Maritime Unionist
ln< extradition of escaped convicts,
no matter how long they have made
good their escape."
The governor has expressed his
sympathy for Chlltcn. but held to
tho opinion that to let Chtton re-
main free would be lnvtttng —my
attempts on the part of the thous-
ands at others now held ip granite
reformatory, from which Chilton es-
I eaped 23 years ago. and McAleater
Jury Completed
For Chance Trial
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 274, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 1, 1936, newspaper, September 1, 1936; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1026232/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.