Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 205, Ed. 1 Monday, June 14, 1926 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brownwood Bulletin and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Brownwood Public Library.
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beet efforts at
>«. Labor la living wall anti
lac a Tittle, la aon ettiee. Ip
i It la organising Itself. j
ployers and employe hav*
d ouch othar toward raallaa
4 ah economic draaia that la i
er to outsiders.
W""!*
firm ar individual will |k
f the attention of the pu
4o act want to make errt
r ta make away off .them
WISH GFJf
B .fWpateui'd
Mt an aapir-
.MB' HAWt
it Fer gosh
SAKESt’yj
O&GoMwrT!)
J The aspiring lad with Herculean
cheat anil mighty bleeps did crave a
policeman to be. Night afteir night
he buriMg tha midnight oil portn«
over those ponderous tom«M which
enlighten one on tha beat manner
4o return lost children to tbelr
homes, to help falfw ladles across
the teeming thoroughfares, and to
fall the vilest villain In his den of
dark'Iniquity.
He was summoned to appear be-
fore the great cSty’e safety director.
Chest protruding, shoulders squar-
ed. shoes agleam. face alight with
the future that was to be. he stood
before that arbiter of his fate.
Then the mighty director boomed
out
"8plt out that gum and get out!"
insideiMUy. the Supreme faurt’4>ulin« in this
ie becomes an Important addition to the long llat
_Iks atmtn* HhJ liW
iterpretlng the state; libsj lawa.
dreeslag. . _
v«t bi.om.Vs *Se»&*
PARIS—A contest, announced It-
cently by the editor off a French
Journal. IflvUea radio listeners to
try to tell ' the complexions at
speakers sod' singers by their refe-
rs. The competition la heppAoa
the fact that the Mfed can . Mien
porary
1 1 THAT HESTER* FBKttiMt B^fE C^BE
Chloago Dally. Napa: After months M hem
rxs.r.svtr. r»t::
increase in freight rates has been submitted l
InterstateCommerce Commission for* 'decision.
' The iadstlgatioo of the several ;§ep*cta o
application seems to hnve bee^ faljfly exhau
It develop** certain surpiaes as It proceeded. I
industries, notably lumber, stfeduousljr oppose*
proposed Increase, alleging that, af a whole
West el* jUroade were paying moderate dlvl<
and seating mltUoae on luxurious equipment
“prettf pjetUres." Certain representatives of 1
ential business organ list Ions, while expressing
ey an^ physical equipment caa make It. We are
fortunku. Indeed.
Ini spite of our good telephone service, however*
nanny ff us loo* patience while using the telephone.
Hen vhp pro able to meet the great crises of life
without batting an eye, who heroically uuderuke
immenes responsibilities without quivering an fye-
lash, are knows to go to pieces in ten seconds time
while holding a telephone receiver in tbelr hands.
If necessary to watt a moment for Central to an-
swer, or M <the party called to respond with the
customary "Hello,’* some or us feel that we have
beep mistreated by the whole world and that there
is no virtue is mankind Men who are unfailingly
courteous and unselfish In their dealings with other
seen frequently forget, when they challenge the at-
tention of Central office, that fifty or a hundred other
nmn are also seeking telephone service at the same
switchboard; and when somebody falls to respond
rpromptly to the telephone ring, they forget that the
'party called may be In an Important conference,
may he out of his office or 'otherwise so situated
derived rroni an Ihci
mg the linen 'earning
tinplated by the truns
presented 1 to the :co
Its. It la said thijt •
isa among Eastern f
it smacked of social
BV WILL H. MAYES,
or Austin. Tout
DUAR a Davl
years of dtoapj
get oil la the L
many
efforts
Id. was
>rt of thwmpplicatloa asv
their counsel made dial
i relevant figures ,l| u
is plenty of pleasure for you to
ful mqeaufu, an* Ur by need jaa
worry |t all?
You only live once and your
youthful time stunts will to* In
yodr mind when you’re grown. Get
all tha| you can ere they call you
• man. for then you are put an1
jump mm./i j
The Frees and Its Banders
WU1 Allen White thinks that the
daily press, with its pages of com-*
tea. its emphasis on crime, its
poorly written sex stories, its gen-
eral light diet, is underestimating
the mentality of the ruadiag public,
which ’’should He given more to the
iioiiiimoat and the philosophy and
the facts that are pregnant with
th- fate of humaa society?* The
light and even fqoltoh (blags of
the daily press may be all right in
tbelr due proportions, but the press
Is under uhUgsHnns to feed the
mentality cl thoee who desire better
Ihiags than these, and who look to
lb* newspapers largely for their
iateM* rlusl pad literary tmprove-
4.0M.OM of the totol
in principle, und«
it some them v
ink of Insolvency. I
* managed with ad
•©US economy here
r insolvent
iws further
to omit
Ible to fl-
improvemenfs. !
iaestloo to complicate^ bjr a demand
i of the (eight charges up farm produce
Altogether, the ^nterjfiate Commerce
tees no easy task |in dealing with the
BOBIftratr
Living.
Upper human
1. Uriel
5. Seam.
11. rental
it. Tools
sit ion
13. Pad.
15. Ventil
If. Run |
17. Defen
really lieta’ the life of
may require
Light
Sweat
Long !
Heavy
that the gov-
(h r that they
Ik Virginian-
IS ON YOUR SAX: “T
te Battling Works Is
. TR1 1
- -flirt 11
Corker.'
If tie Average person took ktlf
as • much clothing on vacation It
would be twice ee much as they
actually* needed
J . . ’ —1—“
J A certain girl got a letter from
J an aclor. and couldn’t imagine
p where he got her*home until she
remembered haring written It on
DISCIPLINE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
v T F V ’ 1
QOME of the eastern newspapers are engaged in
J n lively discussion of the problem of controlling
cigarette smoking by young women students of col-
leges and universities. Some think the question
should he left to ,a decision by the young iwomen
them naive e. while others hold that the girl’s Imprests
should decide what the college rules should be. The
former think that student eelf-govgranseat should
be encouraged by the submission of such problems
to the students lor decision, wliile the lamer bold
that moremjKature minds should fix certain policies
lor the wSsre of the students.
Strident self-government bss been successful^
employed in nanny Institutions of Iiarnlg, but it ha*
■ot been uniformly successful everywhere. It is
kneed upon the theory that students can be depend-
.ed upon to maintain adequate rules of discipline
and to conduct themselves In a creditable manner,
and that the training of self-government la college
lu of grunt value as a foundation of experience that
may be usefully employed later. j- ^
Not all phases of discipline, however, can safely
ba iRt la the hands or students; for students, even
at (heir beat, are susceptible to the influence of
hod leadership. .Many who have had experience in
•what lu termed fyourig people’s work.'
(he way the girls i
Ulie easy to see tl
ige world’s a stage
>r every, ocean-
lleve sincerely
la Di»pat<h
torm to charged bjr short term pnt-
oners an the farm wkh brutally
beating another prisoner to death
hecaunr he was m* doing as much
work as the guard thought g*
should be dolqg. .The physician*
riba attended dead man swore'
that the prisoner bad received 1"<>
toeken rilth a plaited bull whip, any
one of which would have produced
death. After being beaten Into a
dying condition, according to wit-
nesses. the poor fellow was left In
the hot eua for two bourn without
attention. The cruelty, aa related,
is an unthinkable brutality, la a
vWashi
Solution for
Yesterday’s Pus
M. Avert*
37. Cor re I
38. To rui
3S». .My sell
or checked,
ive of either.
away and mai
I birds of a i
By CBARLBS P. gTKWART
|! . , t 1 I *' ■
Thomas .J.
. the gloom-
A girl wanted her hair fluffy, and
of another shade, no tk* barber
Just curled up aad dyed.
* 1 " * -m » .
Th* Chinaman 1s the only one
who 1 sows the answer to the ques-
tion. "What are the wild waves
lag granted to Texas prisoners to
absent themselves for 0* to M days
from prison indicates that some-
body think* this to the vacation
time for (hose sentenced to prison
tor theta misdoings. It to hoped
that there to no close connection
M^eea the new popular furlough*
Ing system and the "week-end1;
burglary visits which every Texas
Civilised country. Hen who violate
city ordinances are not necessarily
criminals, and even If they were
the basest vtlhans. they are enti-
tled to everplegal protection while
in the tolls of the tow and In charge
Guards who fcullwhlp
either does It look i
hat disagrees with
expression ta dyap
tad a school teach*
fie was a dandy I
■ferity.
of offloera.
prisoners, except la . self-defense,
are worse than the, hardest crimi-
nal. for they are law officers
sworn to protect law, Texas most
Hop brutal treatment of prisoners.
several high
ool principal—
maintain cant-
himself gras princlj
his youth. Aad a h
*ru one, who know* I
line—la what he rew
a cold, hard eye—the ki*d U
class-room cat»np.
mth closes in n sterq tin*. 1
■to mustache accentpatea It.
kies, carving downward from
VBm forhiddinrlv
FABLES IX FACT
Mo her made some chariot
ruesej comma If that’s the corn
way to spelt It comma and p
some lady fingers ground the ed
of it period sonny came home fn
school aad spied M comma fii
l&ISff comma gad lady lagerj wt
not tie only kind that were In
pcrloL*
The Jey ef Learning
In an address to the graduating
Class of Rice institute at Houston,
(hr. Amos, of Johan Hopkins IJnl-
teraity. deplored the present ten-
dency to crowd the (raining of Mu-
dents In preparation for college
and after they are Ip college to ex-
act toe much of them la prepare*
Aton for the professional stadias or
for (.raduatioo. That students are
hgidtned with theta risdu aad
wwh books to evident to thoee who
clonely observe our educational
system. They matter over many
sti»*Kcls indifferently Instead of
have found
of cases the young people can
DAILY HEALTH TALK
forbiddingly.
I extent Walsh’s ap
relentless,
nerve and purpose i
in’t a superior in t
1 constitution back
i'l famous,
lacks a sense of hi
Editorials
iomas J. Walsh gets
knows It's going te
This information m
ut it won’t entertain
Read of Mtosourf «i
sh but he’s witty. ]1
and sparkles. Sou
id's, though deadly*
■ ^LOXGIYIS A SI OBIT
EUROPEANS who coase to Amers
Wa marvel at our shccesa. TIM
pre glreu various reasons tor IL
each ta our vast natural resources*
creating a prosperity which they
regard more or lees as undeserved
Andrew W.*MelIot> made a speech
the o her day and In It he gave a
few r ‘aeons for our prosperity that
mlghf well ha handed dq to aajj
guest* from other countries whu
drop In on os.
"We hays found in this country
that, iy mvuBtlag heavily in labor-,
earing devices, wo can increase the
productive capacity per capita of
labor'and also Eliminate Waste]
thrilling.
hurt if handled wrongly.
A RULING ON THE LIBEL LAW
is very dignified. 1
ie. Back talk or ai
>upils to fatal to n hi
old days, aeheol t
X. At least, that Is the turn and substance of a
Supreme Court decision the other day In a case ap-
pealed from Hays county, in which n San Antonio
newspaper wise being sued for libel because inad-
vertantly an error had been made la the caption
of a picture published ip the paper. Through owe
of tbwwe unexplainable mistake* that occur at fire-
quest Interval* lu most newspaper offices, the Sun
lot—*- JtlgrtN ’tad published tk* picture of g
AW* county wemsu under o heading that belonged
•pqr the pictnre of u murderess; oad la the (rial
aoert a verdict of fTAH damages was awarded the
r, and the
that that
e>dr'iifc*^ j■ jt, i..-
CONSIDER THE TELEPHONE
' i
5.7*
m
•what to termed
that In • majority
he depended upon to do the thing that ta right; but
that la many Instances It ta necessary for older and
mg*e mature persons to directjptm in their thought
and act Iona This ta no reflection upon the sincerity
ef'the purposes (if the young people; rather H is a
tribute to their sincerity of purpose, for whether
right dg wrong, they may be depended upon to do
the thiqg they think la right. 8o.. in matters such
an a decision ak to cigarette smoking by young wom-
en students of colleges aad universities, the stu-
dents themselves are aot to be depended upon, for
Eton queatkm upon which the opinion of the stu-
dents themselves may be variable, and which can
to their
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tin annnn □ pip
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To rub gently
Cries.
Heron. .
To face toward. ?’■ W4
Night.
To aew the edge of a shirt.
To scheme.
Female sheep.
Avenue or road (ahbr.J..
Second note In Male. V * *
Father. ~ } gl
> »»*■
1 - ' t!
cloth. •
er aits.
wood is a moth
TEBTICAL
Like. ‘
Burstl Into fragments,
Point [of compass.
ling ferns**.. ; v
r ef.i wbjmiliM 'jr.
i.w w&in: i'
Itln S 4
[4 liTiri a ?
@naaa ^ *•
■ranr-i iiur
HESOPf n ‘ :• <
lr; nw Hf3H
KM
ilm::’ -i
est ef Narrow Laces-
e Laces Are Geedj'
Prices are lon er than you’ll find them
here.
good as the best V
are^8HHI^I
tees, Cluny’s Fillets and Handlcer?
Edges. Buy here and you’ll save*
Exceptional qualities in Women’s High
Shoes in the newest of
white and in colored leathers. J
made on comWnatioi| lasts fit
port the feet Tfiat is the sort of
v-Mi
qw >*}■ sris: j t . it ■
i4 mi ii am iiy
IHLUVUI ill
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 205, Ed. 1 Monday, June 14, 1926, newspaper, June 14, 1926; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1040429/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed April 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.