Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 297, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 28, 1935 Page: 1 of 8
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BROWNWOOD, TEXAS, SATURDAY,
nt Strikes Boldly A t His Critics
PreM
Masonic Chief
Reviews Parade
A1 Smith Flays Red Rule of Hate
fWtDM, { RETAIL DEALERS
AND CONSUMERS WANT
CONTROL DISCONTINUED
WASHINGTON. 8ept. 38-(UP)
—Sharply conflicting opinions of
hog raisers, packers, retail meat
dealers and consumers were offered
Fecretary of Agriculture Henry A.
Wallace today as a basis for for-
mulating a 1936-37 corn-hog control
progT&m.
Corn and hog producers through-
out the middle west were unanimous
In urging continuation of the con-
trol program, with the processing
tax retained, during the two years
beginning next Nov. 5, when 1(34
c< ntract* expire.
Packers arid retail dealers, assert-
ing that a serious shortage of pork
products is inevitable, urged that
the agricultural adjustment admin-
istration abandon 1U corn-hog con-
trol program and encourage the
greatest possibi production of
Lfw ] !|j: | J.
consumer*! represented by heads
of consumers' councils and house-
wives. took a middle course, recom-
mending that any renewal of the
program provide for a substantial
increase to pork.
New Program Studied
Wallace ■> expected to announce
within the next 30 days whether a
new lm-fl program will be offer-
ed producers, and . If wo to what
form His decision will be determin-
ed. It was indicated, by a study of
evidence presented at two-day hear-
ings before the AAA. If
Edward A. O’Neal, president of
the American Farm Bureau Federa-
tion. and heads of Kansas. Mb-
•ourt Indiana, Texa*. Iowa. Ne-
braska, Illinois. Virginia and Minne-
sota Farm Bureau Federations
urged a continuation of the AAA
com-hog control program. ^
William W. Woods, president of
the Institute of American Meat
rackers led!s ooocerted demand of
processors that the entire control
I rogram be abandoned and the "law
of supply and demand" be restored.
pioneers arrived la Brown
countv prior to 187C, and alx are
natives of the county.
Th- Mullins "ehUdrenf as reg-
lstered with The Bulletin, are J.
W. C i Bud • Mullins. Laineaa.
bom in 1856 came here with his
parents in 1857; Mrs. Mary Me-
Donouirh Thrifty, bom here m >jg
1866. Mrs Julia M Baker, Brown- BMyH
wood born here in 1868. Mrs. J.
M. (Jennie) Warren. Fort Worth. 1
born in 1870; l. C. (Ike) Mullins. r* vie wine a full
Brownwood county treasurer. bom | qj Kn ehts
hi [ 187*; Mrs. Bl mc .e Mullins to the openin
Baker, Thrifty, berg to 1818; and1 activities of the 1
Mis. H. L* (Finnic) Allcorn, gree Scottish Rite. 1
Bangs, bom after 1876, In addition Sovereign Grand C
lo these sons and daughters of the ! vln m7! Johnson
pioneer; Mullins family, two sons-;shown here. Vlaltlr
in-law. E. O. Bak^r.l of Thrifty, eluded sovereign |
and L. L. Baker, of Brownwood. ders from RnglaDC
art also registered as pioneers of Canada.
ring life under Communistic rule as a paradise of hate* and
I lor lb* umiiui:i. r.ism of the Eucharist to overcame red attoe-
lacks. AlfYed E. Smith swayed jo u00 Uientrs at the National
sue Congress to Cleveland. O. Shown on the platform as they
to Smith's gddress are th; Most Reyj.! Amleto Giovanni Clco-
left. apostolic delegate, and Patrick Cardinal Hayes, right., Pep-'
s legate at the congress. ’
‘ My father was one of the earliest
settlers who came to Brown county."
Mrs. L. L. Baker, k daughter, says.
He settled m 1857 on a ranch
where the town of Mullto now is
located, and the town was named
for him, that area being to Brown
county at the ttow. I remember
very well when the Indians killed
las. Williams and burned her baby
almost to death, and I remember
when my father and otters rushed
to the scene and brought the baby
over to our house. It lived about
sill weeks. The Indians took Ma-
tilda little Williams girl, with them.
A lot of men followed the Indiana
■to the head of the rlear fork of
the Brazos river ant* there they
fgund Matilda tied up in a tree
with ber mother's side saddle over
bpr head. The birds had pecked
out her eyrt. - ]
'•'I hearu my near mother tell
about anting out by the vide of the
house one morning while father
was a little distance awajr, and a
lor which
ADDI8 ABABA S:pt. 28.— (UP)—
Italy is going to make its drive di-
rectly soulhaard from Eritrea to-
ward Lake Tana, heart of the great
British project for irrigating the
Sudan and Egypt it was reported to-
da.*.
Italian troops were reported coo-
ls called the
T PERSON IN EAST AFRICA CASE BEGUN SEVERAL DATS
lEVES WAR Wil l. BREAK ACO RESUMED BEFORE
I IN THREE WEEKS JUDGE MILLER TOdItT^
—-4 _ | — —
UY ALFRED STRLFT Certified copies of city records
l Prma Staff Correspondent from 1897 to 1906 were introduced
BOUTI, French Somaliland, as evidence today and three wit-
28.—< UP>—French military 'nesses were questioned by attorneys
RUcs worked frantically today before District Judge E. j. Mlllsr
bouti. through burning deserts in a hearmg brought bv Texas
•jouth. and along all the fron- power As Light Company, u- *.ng an
.butting on Ethiopia and the | injunction restraining R. O. Ma-
Rlian colonies, to perfect pr:p- thews from construction of
crntraiitiK to what
Slttona jTHangtt. a salient 60 miles
w ide which juts down Into Ethiopia
at the western extremity of Eritrea.
The salient borders directly on the
Sudan u.ud a drive from U would
parallel the Sudanese frontier as the
Italians thrust southward.
R port* here that the troops were
massing caused shifting of a por-
tion of the Ethiopian army under
Ras Ksasas, oowmsfidsnt of the
Gondar area, westward to readings
to meet an attack.
a light
i^hi^^VeS *U‘ breftk( The records brought into court
Ihlnthrea weeks. (prtocipaUy from the fllca of the
Itertntog DjibcuU commercial;Texas Tower As Light Company and
d nflitary capital of the coast gbd certified copies of city records that
ad jof the railroad that f’-eds have b;-cn lost. It was brought out
ruopia, was gripped by the most that records including the city
ulefl w?r fever *een »h»ce 1914. franchise book and record or ordl-
tav|ge black nattvg of French naners for the above dates had
rtitoy joined their racial brothers been lost and the only record* were
littiopla yesterday in wild d?to- the certified coplea mace Ur*1912
it^OMlhrough Djibouti streets by the clly .ecretary.
>ncn,d,d
nMt and rfconnaH-anie l ian.a ™.tr,iIc*nlnd'oMr««
>nep overhead in trial flights. i.^Ln
'Nor hours, while In distant Addli J*04 P0"*? P1*"1 ln *>r0 n:
ab« th; Ethiopian Emperor and recorcU M
I priests celebrated the Maseal ttl or finance passed in IDOL. Thera
st—traditional ceremony at (he a franchise *n
I of the rainy season-the black#.^ WM tjrou«ht ^to lhe rfcords
Djibouti paradtd, danced, yelled < Ity Secretary Testifies
d waved Ethiopian flags. Author-| F. E.jigcott. city secretary testl-
» lgnor d the display, but the fled that he had searched forwthe
IT 41,1 AN CABINET SATE WILL
NOT LEAVE LEAGUE UNLESS
FURTHER PROVOKED
ROME. 8ept. (UP)—Italy
extended A tentative olive branch
today to the League of Nations and
Great Britain with A promise that
It would not leave the International
measures
ltd do mj
body unleg further
against Italy" are tal
statamsot that Italy has no ; "aims
which might hurt British lntfeests."
After a cabinet meeting to HhMI
Premier Benito Mussolini, reported
on recent developments to the
Halo-Ethiopian crisis, the ministers
issued a communique embodying
four main provisions. They were:
"I. Italy will not abandon the
League of Nations until the day
when the League has egtimad full
responsibility ‘for measures’ against
Italy." ,
"2. Italy's policy has no Imme-
diate or remote alms which might
injure efforts of Great Britain."
"3. The Fascist government de-
clares to the most solemn manner
that tt will avoid everything that
may extend the Ethiopian conflict
to a wider field.”
"4. The Cabinet taka note of the
calmneg and discipline of which
the Italian people are giving proof
in these days so full of events, an
attitude which to characteristic of
a strong people."
Louts Oarnrt. of Bangs
rived here November 1, 1J
that he will attend the
celebration October |3.
tm media
Still another name that looms
large ln the pioneer history and ap-
pears on dose ns of land deeds la
that of Oreanlcaf Fisk. Green leaf
Fisk. Jr., son of Judge ;Oreenleaf
Fisk, the elder, game here when 2
years old^ln I860. His father sur-
veyed Brown, Mills and Lampasas
counting In 1846. and moved to
Brown eounty in i860. “I knew
Brownwood when it had leg than
Irqve a military highway to- An ordinance granting Boysen the
Dikii, where ;last year border right to sell his light plant which
i attacked a frontier garrison was passed to 1906. was Introduced
111 the French sub-governor, as was the franchise granted to
armored, machine gun- 1906.
:=S,~ —”=sKSwSk
hundred flenegaleae riflemenf duced. The charter of the Texaa
Uirough the Sues Canal to- power As Light Company was then
n route to join the exlatlng J introduced as evidence. The charter
of ‘Somali riflemen and was datrd to Mawl912.
tots, native cam l soldiers who Murwhey Om ■ *
desert are the most fonnid- *|. p. Uorpaey. manager for
Ighitog men Of Africa The -TV,., Power At Urnht Commnv ln
T
WNWOOD BULLETIN
ijNewgpaper, Serving the Heart of Texas With Today’s News Today, Every Day Except Sunday
! I ' I t i 111 _-
VOL
NO. 297
—
I THE PARSON’S 1
COLUMN |
{"A Thing of ghreds and Patched t
U................\
TWO MORS of the Parson’s
friends have passed away dur-
ing the week—Mr J. B. Turner of
Brownwood and Mr. John Savage
of Brady. Two men more unlike to
many ways could scarcely be found,
lut they were both good friends of
the Parson and both to some di-
rections admirable. God grant them
eternal rest, and may perpetual
light shine upon them.
The Senate has passed a "bone-
dry law." according to the Bulletin.
It forbids the sale of Intoxicants bv
the drink and specially mentions
hotels, restaurants and the like
The Parson does not know how
hotel men at large feel about the
matter, but the late Harry Cook of
Brady told the Parson once upon
a time that the last thing he wanted
to see was the recall of the bar
to his hotel.
The Supper-Tabie man told a
story the other dav of a dog which
bit a Republican and was so asham-
ed that he went out and bit two
more with suicidal Intent. The doc
was either making a grandstand
play or was sorely lacking to judg-
ment. If he really wished to commit
suicide, he should hive bitten a
large. Juicy chunk out of the calf
cj a predestinated Democratic edi-
tor.
In the Reader's Digest for this
month to an .article on King George
V. It to worth the reading since
it shows admirably the real feeling
of the average Englishman toward
the sovereign and how a king can
reign and not govern.
Speaking of the writing and
other activities of Mrs. Roosevelt s
writer to McCall s says that all she
imItm jn that way is given away to
various welfare associations and to
private charttr* “While she is
hard-boiled about appeals for char-
ity. as everybody must be who re-
ceives so many of them, all that
round urgent are quietly turned
over to investigators." Oood . for
Mrs. Roosevelt!
SAYS AAA NOT
PORARY RESCU
PERMANENT
K ME!
PRIN
The Parson found to The
Brady Standard the following prayer
written by Mark Twain when he
was seventy years old. and which he
considered one of the best things
he had ever written: saying: "I
have told the truth to that prayer,
but only dead men are entitled to
tell the truth to this world. It can
be published after I am dead "
FREMONT. NebL
(UP)—Striking boldly at
President Roosevelt today
the New Deal farm pouc
pression cf human ri||us per-
petuated by the constituqkn itself.
Speaking to thousands jfr Nebras-
ka and Iowa ciUaeQs to |he heart
of the agricultural west Mr R.xW-
velt used the ammunition" of hto
political foes to a sweeping
cation of the AAA aftd the a
tratlon’s monetary pt - grain i .Sir
Aa his audience ehtf t-<i :.tiu on
he declared:
“What counts is not so much the
methods of the mometti as the
pathways that are
the years. I like to*
agricultural adjustment;
merely as a temporary ; means of
rescue for a great Industry but as
the expression of a principle can -
ed to st:ne by a nation come to
maturity—a nation which has for
ever left behind the old
ble ways of its youth—a nation fi
tog the realities of todajff and pru-
dently taking thought lay the mor-
row.
Libel ty and
T like to think that
will this nation lew!
fall back into decay,
the fanners of America
be able to guard the
liberty and democracy
their farmer ancestors
"I like to think that
adjustments is an e
concrete form, of the hiipan rights
those farmer patriots Itoughtfl'to
win when they stood at
at Concord, when they .
the Declaration at I
and when they perpet
ideals by the adoption
stitution.
“Methods and machinqrr change,
but principles go on. and I have
faith that, no matter what attempts
may be made to toar it down, the
- principle cf farm equality ex pi
This is the prayer:—-Ta>rd our ^ ^ a?ncujtural adjustment will
Cod. help us to tear their youth to TOt die -
bloody shreds with our shells, help« Mr RoCsevelt stopped at Fre-
us cover their smiling fields with the mont for 20 minutes to del.ver the
pale forms of their patriot dead: a£jdress. It emoraced a Spirited de-
help us to drown the thunder of fenM of experirr.ont.it.on set f:: t: 1
their guns with the moans of their !n supple language to the audience
wounded writhing to pain: help us that swarmed about th#' rear plat-
to lay waste their humble homes form of his private car iron which
with a hurricane of Are: help us to ^ spoke. J ’ I
wring the hearts of their widows . Proud of Efforts
with unavailing gr'ef. help us to f proudly exclaiming that recovery
turn them out roofleg with their j efforts along moqetarjf lings had
l ttle children to wander unfriend- dosed the gap between whAt the*
ed through the waste* of their deso- j farmer had to sel and erh*t
fated land In rag# and hunger and
thirst, sport of the sun-flames to
Summer atwl the ice-fields of Win-
ter. broken to spirit, worn with
Davel. imploring TheVf°T ^
uge of the grave and tented «T
for our sakes who adore Thee W*
blast their hopes.
protnet their bitter pilgrimage,
make heavy their steps, water their
way with their tear*, stain the
white snow with the Wood of their
wounded feet! We ask of One who
to the spirit of loveand ^nd o
all that are tore be*et’
His aid with humble and
heart*. Orant our prayer O Lord,
and thine shall be the praise and
the honor and the rlory. now and
for ever, amen " Bitter, but true,
every word of It. J
Go to church tomorrow and pray
for “Peace on earth to the men of
good-will." .. . .'J
Lad to buy, he ph-dged a contin
tkm of his broad piogram to retain
West Texas County
Judges Will Go To
Wichita Next Year
AMARILLO. T«x, Sept. 38.—(UP>
—The West Texas County Judges
and Commission: rs Association voted
today to meet next year to Wichita
Mti 1 “H
Resolutions adopted pledged the
organisation to “keep politics out of
administration of old age pensions,
to relieve the general fund of coun-
ties from supposedly unneceseery
expenditures; condemned unlicensed
insurance companies and urged more
stringent laws governing them.
The association protested to
Harry Hopkins, federal relief admin-
istrator. against the immediate dis-
continuance of relief until federal
works progress projects are under
way and urged that counties be al-
lowed to convert scrip warrant* into
bondJ.
Oth'r resolutions urged collection
of delinquent taxes and abolition of
tax “red taps."
those gains.
• Three years ago. he s
not promise the mlllentub
tulture, but I did promise tha. m
attempt to meet'that totW-
blight their lives, tItble situation to eve J
■ human effort and^R
possible I said that I
test, and that if mv et
unsuccessful. I should t*T.
trv frankly and try somfthlng else.
But that was not necsifary.”
•I was not meeting a t'
reminded them. "I was J
condition. Foremost among the
efforts of my administration when
we came Into)6 office were practical
means to Improve the Situation on
the farms of this country.
"I recognized In March 1933
efforts to improve agriculture
oi necessity be two-fold
attempt first to lift
burdens by raising fi
by lightening the
hecond. I pledged
term efforts extending
immediate emergency
stabilize American
long-term planning
Money Serving Fwpl®
In approaching the .question of
better prices for farm products Mr.
Roosevelt explained that he moved
in two fronts, first “to free our
monetary system cf bondage to a
sufficient extent to permit money
to serve the people rather than
to force people to ae
ellberately choae."..he explato-
•to disregard tho« who said
before a balance oould be pro-
duced ln our economic.Hie, olraoat
universal bankruptcy would be
necessary through deflation.:]
• "as I now
hold, that the
lo tike
price*.
modltie* to such An
things the fanner had
enable him to bqy th
.he needed lo suppo
i (CONTINUED
STORM TO HIT
FLORIDA LATE
TODAUONPT
THOUSANDS HOMELESS ' IN
C UBA. STORM CUT SWATH
188 MILES IN WIDTH
HAVANA. Sept. 28 - UP - Thirtv
persons were killed and 800 Injured
by the hurricane which struck een-
tral Cuba today, according to navy
report). .
The deaths were to the vicinity of
Cfcnfuegoa where the hurricane
first struck the island at a velocity
estimated at 80 miles an hour.
The reporta also said 1,000 houses
were dam
Clenfuegca
coast of Cubk.
Cienfuegos m Santa Clara - pro-
vince was to the chrect path of the
Storm and it* 90 000 resident* suf-
fered heavy property lossg despite
early advance warning*. •
Earlier re porn Indicated that the
sioimJertileR wa#jsweeping north-
ward toward Florida, had cut a
path approximately 100 miles wide
scrag Bants Clara and Camaguey
provinces.
first reliable reports on the num-
ber of casualties were received by
La Puna radio station from the
Gunboat Veinte De Mayo now to
Cienfuegos harbor*. The ship ap-
pealed for medical supplies to be
rushed to the arsa. \
The navy said a Racial relief
train with dorters and nurses
aboard was leaving for Oenfugeo*
as soon as it eouM be mads up.
Cities In Florida
Prepare For Great
Winds, High Seas
lit oalt—» ; j
MIAMI. P1a„ Sept- 28.—(UP)—
The southern Florid* coast took
swift precautionary measures today,
running a race witty a hurricane
sweeping into this reaert area.
[The Florid* Keys islands that dot
th9 southernmost Up of the state,
w ere being evacuated of all residents
as a humane moved toward Flor-
ida after sweeping Cuba.
An emergency rrfpsrednsw or-
gamzation operating with head-
quarters here sent eight bosks and
two passenger ba "I Into the Keys
to ressowe all lni.^dtsnts.
Key*, which felt the brunt of
the Labor Day hurricane, were still
u the process of rehabilitation when
hurricane warnings were ordered
flown all along the east coast from
Key West to West Palm Beach.
Coast guard boats wtre nosing
among the Islands to the Keys re-
gions. attempting to locate and warn
any person Isolated from the hurri-
cane warnings that spread by word
of mouth, telephone, trlepraph and
radio. Keys resident* were to be
taken from their homes to more se-
cure structures j where they could
W'at her the ‘ blow."
I Unofficial reports of drops to
barometric prgsuw In th* region of
Bun in 1—and that such eeflon
swing the storm away from th* pec-
tnusula—were not recognized in
weather bureau bulletins.
“Too much warning be
given," said Enust Carson(, metero-
logist here declaring he could see
no possibility of *>v storm i"|M|"y
the esflg coast. |
Miami already was feeling the
iMnRI.Of high Winds generated by
the disturbance;
{Tbs Miami barometer reading at
II a. m. was 29.69 and th* wind
velocity! WA* 20 mile* an hour from
the east-northeast
west palm Beach and its terri-
tory was more exdtsd about the
approaching storm at any 6*"*
struck to 1828.
aaeh. Palm Patch
and Lakaj Worth fbstdsnte were
boarding up their windows and hun-
dreds were preparing to Mare their
cities. ] I
Are
houses re-
calls lor
rooms oroas persons wishing to watt
cut the "blow" to th* rtort secure
building*.
Amateur radio operators were
forming a artwork covering the
enure state, ready to replace regu-
lar comm uruc*uon lines if those
suffer damage^ j
Under Instructions of the Rad
holding port-
ng units in
to move into gay devas-
tated areas near West Palm
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 297, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 28, 1935, newspaper, September 28, 1935; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1045962/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.