Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 155, Ed. 1 Friday, April 15, 1938 Page: 1 of 8
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'
til
Maximum 77. minimum 54
Rainfall. J3 inch
WNWOOD BULLETIN
4 I
A Home Owned Newspaper, Serving the Heart of Texas With Today’s News Today, Every Day Except Sunday
Latest News First
PAGES
'OOD, TEXAS, FRIDAY, APRIL IS, 1938
VOL XXXI
NO. 1S5
flOOSEVELT PUNS 2 NEW PHILS TO CONGRESS
a ... ' • I If * T W ★ ★ *F ★★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * —4—
500 Are Attending
League Meet Here
I GaowmCM*
h
'Literary Contests• for
District 8 Students
* Being Held Today
More than 500 students, teachers,
'coaches and visitors from eight
counties
1 II * T * * * ★ - * * ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★
Insurgents Split Loyalist Spain
^MOTHER WORM baa . turned.
We see by the papers that a San
Francisco poet has successfully sued
his physician-wife for 575 per month
for his personal support.' and se-
cured an injunction to prevent his
ejection from their home. It seems
the woman In the case has r -^Information,
their prenuptial agreement,
J^n^hTS ^hiTe^he1 remained I *» ctaif. of the
St home and looked after the house-
Hrk. He is therefore performing a
material service to mankind
seeking relief from the courts.
gathered at Howard
Payne College this morning for the
annual district g Interscholastic
League meet.
The meet opened at 9:46 s. m.
in the college auditorium with a
general assembly of all competitors
for special announcements and gen-
J. Horace Shel-
ton. vice-president of Howard
Payne and director of the meet, was
ibly.
by
Even Emily Post agrees that when
s woman is financially able to ear-
ly the family’s financial burdens it
Is her duty to do so. The dinging
vine typr of wife went out when the
nineteenth amendment capie in.
snd now the menfolks have s right
to insist that the ladies take no
Store than their equal rights.
With the exception of the one-
act play contest which will be held
in tl>? auditorium tonight at 7
o'clock under the direction of Mis*
Lets Newby Shelton, head of the
college speech department, all lit-
erary events began at 10 a. m. to-
day. Events included in the meet, 1
with directors in charge, follow*. 'f
Boys snd girls debate. J. T. Runkle, fr*
All Land Communication U
Severed Between
Principal Grist .
I 1 ■ ' ' ______
Hj$ N D A Y;fc. April 15—(UP)
—Nationalist troops occupied the
Mediterranean seaport of Vlnaroz
la tat today, cutting Loyalist
. ________ Span
In two. Nationalist headquarters at
Burgas announced.
Nationalists thus severed all
communication between the
capital at Barcelona in
the*, north and Valencia and Ma-
drid |
Qenerallssimo Francisco Franco’s
tea. were expected next to push
the north of Vlnaroz completing
Coleman; rural and high school
declamation. J. D. Bramlette. Co- the-encirclement of Tortosa^pn the
manche; three-R and externpora- £*«=*§) of the Ebro river. Capture of
neous speech. A. H. Smith. Gold* city would ghe the Insurgents
thwalte; ready-writing. Mrs
ley Lynch. Howard Payne;
from Chicago, where many inter- ! owan* Payn*'
Wes- • *plcndid seaplane base close
type- ;*** Lovalisf territory. Many
H. J. Eppe, todr Plants so far have been oper-1
High school students entered
literary events totaled over 150 wit]
athletic entries e Ececding
acting election day stories have orig- '
tea ted. In the fifty-first precinct of j
the twentieth ward there was only
one qualified voter, a lady named J Counties represented
Mr*. Polacek. She was a good busi-
ness woman, apparently, for she
rented her apartment as a polling
ctidg from the Island of Majorca
The Nationalist forces advanced
three highways in the Vlnar-
RAIL EXECUTIVES
* ♦
WARN LABOR TO
♦ ♦> ♦ ♦ ♦
TALK WAGE CUTS
WASHINGTON. April 11—
(UF)—Railway taker leaden te-
<sy flatly rrfwsed le accept a
tmr
■ and defied a
management te
I
In the ann
r ssrassr ski claims of rural srx
Mason and Hamilton.
dollars for ■ Tennis matches, which were
At a con- scheduled to start this morning. | J
venient hour she prepared and cast failed to get under way until early ^utrriiv
Hr* ballot while four election jud?- this afternoon because of last night’s ; ddlt. .
__J - 1______--- rain TraxW knl. “ ‘
place and received ten
tts use during the day.
HOOLS STUDIED
threat by mad
invoke Use railroad
set te enforce
demands far pay cote.
WASHINGTON, April 15— UP
—The Association of American
Railroads warned rail labor exec-
utives today that unlem they agree
to discum voluntary pay reductions
the carriers will set machinery In
motion to force wage cuts.
All Indications were that the ex-
ecutives of the labor organizations
representing} nearly 1,000 000 rail-
road workers would stand firm In
their refusal to aocept less
President J. J. Pelley of
aociation of American
after conferring with
executives on the economic plight
of their $26 000.000.000 industry,
announced that the executives would
give the labor chiefs one last
chance to oonsider their proposals
for salary reductions. {
"If the labor unions would talk
•bout a voluntary reduction It
would be only until times get bet-
ter. If we are forced to utilise the
labor act machinery, we
formally request a reduction.”
said no specific wage cut
Fatal Attack on
Girl, 7, Confessed
Body of Child b Left in
Clump of Weeds After
. Brutal Assault
i
LOS ANGELES. April 1S-(UP>
—Sheriff Eugene Biacatluz said to-
day that Charles McLachlen, 55-
yenr-oid house painter, has oon-
fese:d that he killed Jenny Moreno.
7, and left her body in a clump of
weeds where It was found last night. |
McLachle was taken Into custody
after neighbors reported smoke was
coming from his home. Deputy in local schools to
sheriffs said that they found M<
JUNIOR PATROL
SAFETY FLANS TO BE DISCUSS-
ED WITH SCHOOL BOARD *
] . AND CrtTjfrOUNCIL
Organization of a Junior Patrol
assist in direct-
Lachlen burning blood stalnM
e rails and a child’s undyr-garment
A few minutes
a
i undyr-
later t]
lng traffic at school buildings as a
safety feature!: was endorsed by
Brownwood Civic Advisory Council
at a meeting last night. Heads of
local civic clubs were asked to act
as a -committee to discuss the plan
board and City
body was found about lDO feet from
McLachlen's home. -
Sheriff Biscailuz said the stocky ^th ““
painter confessed he mistreat'd tip !CouncU*
girl but had not; attacked her. [ ! Council also voted to proceed with
McLachlen told the sheriff he Art*** to ask for an election on
took the girl into his home at about **veral proposed city charter amend-
11 a. m. yesterday. ' f *«t». A rommlttee from the
Sheriff BiscaUux said McLachlen Co*"*0 wiu dteruss the matter with
FLEET MYSTERY
♦ ♦ ♦ l ♦ ♦ ♦
IS UNSOLVED IN
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ❖
PHILIPPINE AREA
TUI EXEMPTION
CHANGE LISTED
I If PRESIDENT
Favorable Response of 7-1
Margin Claimed on Plana
For (Recovery Drive *
MANILA. April 15.—(UP)—The
21 mysterious vessels which anchor-
ed in Davao Harbor., In the eouth-
ern Philippine*, are warships, the
Collector of Customs at Davao de-
claied today In a radio message to
authorities here.
“It has been established beyond
doubt that warships entered Davco
Waters,” the Collector at Customs
wired. He based his statement on
declartions by the captain of the
motorship Rizal and the master of
the launch Daisy.
The report ateo included a state-
ment made by Major C. D. MacOee,
retired United States Army officer,
who made a sketch of Che vessels,
the wire said. Major MacOee*
statement read:
“I saw around 17 warships in
column formation. I could identifyjing local governments; reciprocal
the wireless but could not Identify taxation of the of state and
jj WASHINGTON. April 15-<UP>
—President Roosevelt swept his new
recovery drive Into high gear today,
outlining new proposals ho will sub-
mit to Congress to accompany his
14.512 000.000 spending, lending and
$39,000,000400 credit expansion pro-
gram . 4 •!
Mr. Roosevelt reported a 7-to-l
ratio of favorable responses in the
700 communications received thus
far at the white House on hie new
pump-priming program,. He outlin-
ed his next steps, in a dramatic re-
vival of original New Deal icoovery
tactics. t- i
IF Two new messages will be sent to
Congress. They will ask;
1. Removal of tax exemption
privileges on bonds of the federal
Peli.’y
15- < UP)— Eight
began audn-
(tUBTIN. April
H ■■ij, ■ men today
9*“**.ns '*****£: “'-pndicUta. for n» rurtl KhooU
Pf* p?®*?fr!phrr! w!tf,h*d ^ y I fan: slate aid. making eleven
judgea receiv'd eight dollam/each Literary events will be computed
Xar the day’s work, while the clerk this afternoon and tonight, anti
ten dollars.
complete resulu will be announced
tomorrow, officials said
Winners in district events will
represent district I In the regional
me:t in Abilene later this month.
• • • •
The country needs more voters
like that, because if every commun-
ity had one or mor: of them it would
do more than the Townsend plan
to end unemployment and restore
prosperity. The bost. of course,
high, but not entirely out of line
■-cul‘- th6 othCT d*r FOUND
that every time a congressman casti r a v v v w 1 v v u 1/
his vote at Washington It costs the1
country a million dollars.
" JEWELRY WORTH
men
engaged in the work, first assistant
Stete Auditor Fladger Tannery an-
nounced today. |
- vie additional force was put to
waft in order that rural school dis-
may know how much money
will have available. Born* were
rted preparing to close their
for lack of funds.
The new state law for distribution
efijg000.000 stele aid to rural
schools requires tn« State Depart-
ment of Education to check the ap-
percentage bad bean
But It was reported
cent proposal
eetlmatd this would reduce oper-
ating expenses about grooooooo a
year.
Machinery for enforced discussion
ot wage cute is provided under the
railroad mediation act.
wevx i
trtfts
they v
lepprti
t- rm s
described lndlgnitl.s other than as-
sault which he said he had inflict-
ed upon the child.
When the child started to
scream. McLachlen killed her with
a hammer, the sheriff said the
panter confessed.
The blood stained hammer was
found In McLachlen's house early
today. He was arrested while 4-
.empting to bum his clothing.
“After I killer her” Bl*
quoted McLachlen as saying. ”1 left
th? house and started drinking.
*T was with another man while
I was drinking.
"Then I went back to the house
and carried the body out to the
weed patch, and then did some more
drinking.”
the flags or numerals of any of the
•hips. The mothership moved up
from the rear to the front of the
column. She had a low flat deck
with a slightly elevated poop as the
City Council before 'submitting the 1 only superstructure «»ygynng It
In city | might have been an airplane car-
rier. although my assistant said she
could have been a collier.'’
list of
laws.
proposed
changes
HIGH WINDS HIT
1IN WEST TEXAS
prevailed
over moat of West Trade and the
Panhandle during the past 24 hour*,
according to U B Weather Bureau
reports today.
. No serious damage from the high
winds was reported however.
Amarillo, which had experienced
dust storms during the past week,
had thunder squalls during the
New Deal's Relief,
Recovery Costs Due 75 FOUND SHOT
To Reach 20 Billion * w n u ^ ^ reponw) 1J1,,
FORT WORTH MAN ^ ^ _
Central and Northeast Texas re-
15—
WE BEE by the papers, further,
” that Mr. Roosevelt has Invented
another plan to cure what remains
of the depression, and since it was
announced yesterday w? may be
fairly certain that by this afternoon
the wolves are already howling on
his trail and thirsting for his blood.
The President wants to spend four
«nd a half billion dollars during th"
next eighteen months, to speed up
employment and provide heavier
consumption of commodities, and
If his enemies do not accuse him of
buy the year's congres-
eketions it will be becaiue
they are able to think of something
much meaner to say.
HOLLYWOOD. Fla., April
'UPj—Jewelry that may be won
5150.000 was found Wednesday in
negro cemetery. Sheriff Walter
Clark reported today.
The discovery was made bv a gang
cf negro convicts while trimming
shrubbery. Clark said. The jewelry
wrapped in a towel, whs in a
beside a grave.
Bracelets, rings an
watches were found.
tions snd make iU recommen-
ona. The State Department of
pliga
n dale
n Education recommendations then
a must *“ **“ —---
several
Ranting to
ptonal ekcti
Rail Wreck Kills 15
15—(UP)-»ghU
..J < I
CAIRO. April
een persons were killed and 15 in-
jured today In a collision of a rail-,
road workers train and a lorry lead-
ed with highway laborers near,
Suez.
auditor's
mtjfet be checked by the
rtment.
accounts must be checked for
allowances claimed for transr
port at l' n teacher aid. transfer ot
WASHINGTON. April 15-f<UP)—|
President Roosevelt’s new recovery {
program will boost New Deal spend-
ing for recovery and relief well
above 520.000000400.
Spending for this purpose up to
the present fiscal, totaled 515.566,-
Dallas 41
11.02; and
• continued
of an
000.000. This year
52400400.000 Is
spent. The net
J.i.vt short
hole pupils and many other details.
Fink Case Gets Study
A8HINOTO#. April
8. Am bn ■Odor Josephus
advised the
C#y.
at Mexico
t
Foreign
the
B Paso,
who is in
of
expected- to be
proposed program
involves at least 52.062.000.000
spending budgeted to this account.
That will bring the grand total to
at least S20427.000400 by July 1.
1939. and additional works progress
, expenditures from February II, *1939,
15— (UP) j to June 30. 1930, will Increase the
sum accordingly.
streams.
Other rain reports included
Dan
the Stete
the Mexi-
promLsed to
-
LIMA. Peru. April
of William N.
H
| g* it beats the band how people turn
^gainst their friends because they
can’t always agree with them. The
whole country has been depending
upon Mr., Roosevelt for relief ever
since he became Pres id nt. and now
about half the people are aa fln-
nteky as a baby that refuses his milk
because it isn’t served in a union-
made bottle. In our opinion, such
a baby would merit a spanking, and
tbat la what some of ttese Congress-
men need.
SOUTHERN KI0GKAt| READY
TO FIGHT HEN NAGE MEASURE
1 M
15-KUP)—
Twenty persons were killed In a
mining engl- landslide caused by heavy rains at
at Chihuahua j the mining camp of Alto Cielo. ac-
cording to persons arriving at Tlrap-
ata. in the department of Puno.
Well,
ril Tell You
we were
Defeat Predicted if N<
Administration B i 1
Reaches House Floor
TN OUR EARLY jouthl
* taught just a few things, but they |
were carefully Impressed upon our
consciousness. Among them was the
principle that ther? Is no possible
consideration which would justify
the betrayal or desertion of a friend,
njthough there may be many ocea-
Arions when friends are not In agree
* ment and some instances in which i
m: seriously offends another
The President Is the friend of this
nation, and has already given am-
ple proof of his fidelity. For one.
we propose to stick to him like a
country cousin until he complete*
|u administration and leaves the
qrhtt? House. He isn’t always right.
WASHINGTON. April 15 - UP>
—Southern Democrats, instrumental
In killing a wage hour Mil In a bit-
ter House fight last year, organized
solidly today against a new wage-
hour Mil and predicted U will be
defeated if K reaches the
floor.
The Southern bloc organized |a9
1 the House Labor commute* ending
months of bickering and deadlock *
reported a bill designed to eatabi
Hah a minimum wage of 49-dsnta
an . our and a maximum work
cf 40 hours by gradual
of wage-hour standards.
Rep. Sam D. McReynokla. O,
Term , who deserted the administra-
tion last year to akl the
against the previous Mil. said
sou-hern members were even more
hoetile to the new measure than the
one billed last jfgar, since the earlier
mbaeure had provided differentials
in favor of the iouth.
the floor, it's
great dis'.urbance.”}
The other fight
aa to what
bft-
L
By BOB
FORT WORTH. April 15-/UP)-
John P. Ball. 33. department store
employe, was found shot above the , opting another rise
heart today in his automobile park- j sirt+nu>.
ed in the driveway of a farmer’s
home a mile east of Fort Worth.
Ball told police that the wound
was Inflicted by a hitch-hiker, whom
he had picked up before he left
Fort Worth on a trip to Dallas. The
hitch-hiker, described as 25 or 30
years old, robbed him of $3 at gun-!
point before he shot and fled. Ball
said < \
Police said that Ball was shot and
wounded four years ago. reporting
that he had been held up and rob-
bed of the receipts of the grocery
store for which he worked.
inch; Carrolton
McKinney 1 inch. Rain
to fall early
In rivers and
LITTLE DAMAGE
CAUSED BY HAIL
Heavy min te Brawn
nlg t was accompanied in
areas by hall, but little crop dam-
age was reported. Places reporting
hall were Blanket, ftjr and Oroa-
venor.
Rainfall in Brownwood totaled 42
inch. /
Rain reports received by 8outh-
weetern States Telephone Company
lene .40 of an Inch; Austin. 22 and
San Antonio 44.
Into several
late
in Antonio
Small twisters dipped lr
West Texas communities,
roots were
Plf it does
ciuiee
Reynolds
won't even be
this one will
^he new mssaura
initial 25 cents minim
a 44-hour maximum V
all Industries in
except
would
farmers.
time I^n
■psultuls.
I become 40
* OO^rimta 49 hours in two ye
cento in
yean and the hour ‘'ceiling”
by gradual
---pointed out that
Pt^dent Roonevelt. who last night
tea demand
by this
but bB avenge is far above that of | it Is doubtful that the new
storv
bunko racket It's
provides an about some city slicker that beats
urn wage and the so-called “yokel" out of some-
work week for j thin’. Maybe the reason you don't
Oom-; hear so much about the other side
wage of the story la because the "yokel"
Is too slick to be found out.
I remember some city people usete
drive out to my uncle's
milk. One day when I
my uncle looked down the
he hollered to my aunt
"Rare comes them city
Ambassador Scoffs
At Japs’ Report oi
Chiang Being Hi
TOKYO. April 15.—(UP)—The
Foreign Office arnetted today that
It had received reliable reports that
Oenerallsrimo Chiang Kai-Shek had
been wounded In both legs during
the Japanese bombing of Changsha
on April 10.
The Foreign Office spokesman
added that the same reports Indi-
cated that T. V. Soong, Chiang'*
brother-in-law and China's Min-
ister of Aviation, had been wound
ed In the stomach and right arm.
terday and latet night.
At Colorado. Tfcx., the
blown from several buildings in the
western outskirts of the city.
Childress had heavy showers with
some hall. , j
. Some barns
Clarendon
: A few
Brice.
county, by a small twister late
tetxlay.
Oamanche reported more than an
and hall; Brady, .75 inch; Coleman.
49 inch; Comanche. Mg rain; Dal-
las. heavy rain; Fry. hail and heavy
rain; Dublin, big rain; Fort Worth.
. . . „ __ ««xl rain; Ooidthwalte. 145 inch;
ly todaJr’ ,ore: I Abilene, heavy shower; Orosvenor.
hail and 1 Inch rain; Lampasas, big
I rate; Mercury. 1 inch; Indian Creek.
AM- good rain; San Angelo, good rain;
eanta Anna, Mg rain; Waco, good
rain; Brookesmuh. heavy rain;
Cross Plains, big rain; Burkett, Jb
inch; and Byrds, 1 inch.
» V* V
Tr
m|
1 don by high w
sw buildings
in the western
were overturned
winds.
e unroofed at
part of Hall
inch of rain.
Warning Hoiated
( HOUSTON. April 15. — (UP)—
Small craft warnings were hoisted on
the Texas coast by the U. 8.
Weather Bureau today because of
fresh to strong southerly winds. A
low pressure area was centered in
the vicinity of Trinidad, Colo.
Slayer of Officer
In Montana It HeU
RYEOATE. Moot.. April. 15 —
<DP>—Lee Simpson, a rancher who
killed a deputy sheriff last night
when officers went to hie home to
question him about reports that he
was threatening to kill treapmaet
today surrendered and confessed
that he also had killed two broth
era.
|Pqq4 Qnii Drop
WASHINGTON. April 15.—(UP)
—Food costs have declined 10 per
cent since last September, cutting
approximately 51 a waft from costs
of the average city family of five, a
nationwide survey by the Depart-
ment Of Agriculture showed today.
WASHINGTON.
____Oarner and ail the other dou-
Ms 1 rnnirrs who are trying to block
rvery effort he makes for the wel-
fare of the country. It is and he is.
.. will reach the floor.
Alt*ough reported by the Labor
oommlttee. the bill must be g: anted
a rule for. House eonMdmatlfl%
an antegonJette rules
a labor
erentlalg when
i
he
last year
Admintstra-
hurry up and \
You know they
the cow."
adopted the principle by
a 956 mont'ly wage in
York and a $15 wage te
be said.
1 3*
■ -i— «■
the milk up.
it fresh from
IT''
April 15- (UP)
Dr. Chang*
ting T. Wang today scoffed at Jap-
anese reyorte that Oenerallasimo
Chiang Kai-Shek was wounded at
Changsha, China, during a Japa-
nese bombing April 16.
He aald the Tokyo reports that
Ohlang's brother-in-law. T. W.
Soong, also was wounded were equal-
ly ’(illogical."
_ _
Confession Is Made
In Slaying of Trio
YOUNGSTOWN, O , April 15—
(UP)—Sheriff Ralph Etav an-
nounced today tltet
a farm haadt 1
he killed Mr,
JAPS AND CHINESE TANGLE IN
TURNING PGINr GF CONFLICT
federal employes,
i 2. Methods af meetim
of business monopoly and price fix-
ing. r ^ *
The president would not asp
whether he will ask action at this
session ot Congress on the tax and
Imriaoas problems. Yesterday, In
outlining his new recovery drlva, he
mentioned both issues but did not
indicate he would demand that the
present session pass legislation.
Agencies Raah Campaign
Government agencies, the Presi-
dent revealed today, are working at
Securities and Exchange Omni
Is drafting new securities legtalntlon
requirements oef ignM to MBMD ww
coet and simplify the teak of ■eeuri-
ties flotation by amall enterprises.
Mr. bootevelt said he would leave
up to Congress the quest len of
whether to combine all legislation
needed for the campaign In one
omnibus measure.] He declined to
ladeate whether he would seek to
continue the authority he exercised
under the old Public Works pro-
gram Of personally approving all
PWA project*. One congrrwtenal
attack on the recovery program
probably will center on this Issue,
with critics sacking to earmark the
PWA funds to remove possible use
of the program In reprisals against
congressional cnemiesi* •
President Roosevelt made plain
today that he believes—contrary to
some Supreme Court interpretations
and constitutional authorities—that
the government has full power to
end bond tax exemptions and tax
governmental salaries under the lfth
amendment to the constitution.
The 16th amendment. Mr. Iloosc-
velt asserted, declares that income
may be taxed from whatever source
derived. These Is not a single ex-
ception. said the President declar-
ing that Interpretation of the clause
as "garden variety’’ English support-
ed his position.
The President made no estimate
of the revenue Involved in the new
tax proposals. However, fiscal ex-
perts have mid about 9140495499
in taxes could be collected If tax
exempt bonds were eliminated. Off-
setting these reflections would be
the coat of higher Interest rates.
Last nght Mr. Roosevelt dedicat-
ed his new program to a distribution
of prosperity among all the people.
Tb that 9hd ha shot mUUone of
Idle gold Into the
pool and
\
night in
_
Troop* Oath on 60-Mile
Front h* Bitterest
, Battle of War
. SHANGHAI April 15- UP)—The
bitterest battle df the Chinees-
Japanese war ragad today along a
80-mile front from Haachwang to
Lteyl te southten Shantung prov-
inoe. iccnt
Honan te an effort to halt the Chi-
nese drive on the jetty of Ylhalen.
The Japanese rtatmart they had
outmaneuverad the Chinese and in-
flicted "Irreparable losses.* How-
ever, they made no claims to gains
and admitted openly for the first
time the fall of Tlerchwang to the
Chinese.
Taking advantage of thd heavy
withdrawals of Japanese troops
from the Plnghan lias and Shansi.
of Chinees troops re-
iQow rtvor Into
aa sf-
nottfled eo
a fireside chat to their
constituents, that he wants a wages
and hours bill passed at this session.
In swift revecaal of baiance-the-
budget economy plans the New Degl
snipped federal purse strings- Ex-
plaining his new strategy last night
to a nationwide radio audlsnca, Mr.
Roosevelt called for popular TT"**
of a government strong enough to
cope wttk "the forces of buttneas
depression."
He said dictatorships grew out of
weak helpless governments, not
out of those which were strong- Hi*
chat was conciliatory with a goad
word for the merchant—big and ti-
tle—and the ban!
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 155, Ed. 1 Friday, April 15, 1938, newspaper, April 15, 1938; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1026527/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.