Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 277, Ed. 1 Monday, September 5, 1932 Page: 1 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 26 x 20 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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e Heart of Ti
News Today, Every Day
VOL.XXXIL NO. ZT?,
hanges Remits Comanche Races
;e, I- the femj^ °r TM,?"EciEa m texas j|«^iM|e fiffii
0* ; HEXIBfl BEGINS NUKES BITTER
8 r ATTACK m
Paaeual Orth Rubio, who's rede-
nation fu accepted by a jointLma-
«oo of congress Sander. Ortk
Rubio toft for Lands on route to
Hot Springe, Alt, Where he plan-
ned to spend several months for his
health. He travelled to the border
on the presidential train with a
strong military guard of .honor.
One of the first acts of the new
president was.to define the govern-
ment's attitude toward the United
States. My policy toward the
Co* sad they believed
would not Sacred *260,000
and gained a cocas to the
rom a second story a part-
wve. The !WO families oo-
lite apartgnent were held
un.rado by jtfcie gang While
Ot about the systematic
Fish Peddler Told
He Can Go Home Btri
w there are several million labor-
ers who had rather-wort than rest
today, an account of so many of
them having been compelled to red
ataoT continuously for the -past
three years. This period of unem-
ployaaent has been very difficult for
organised labor, the tendency hav-
ing been to break the lines of the
untom and decrease their Influence
braauar when men are idle and
their families are suffering they
are net disposed to haggle over
wages and working conditions. We
do not mean to infer that organised
labor is engaged in the business of
bugling, but its soMdartty depends
upon the principle of collective
bargaining: and When Jobs are aS
scarce as they have been during the
past three years there is very little United
bargaining to bo done.
The prospect •pr the lmmediaie ^*^
future J® much bttterthon ontost JJgJ
Labor Day. Very slowly, but stead- ^
Oy. industry t* reopening and men
are going back to work in groups n
gt tens, fifties and hundreds. Pur- toaad
the period of ousntity produe-
Remains in Castody
^EARTTKLD. Pa. Sept 5—Oar-
Schenck, abducedliBopewwU. W.
When the executive commitu;
(CONTINUED OH WAOfl TtflHUC I
NEW YORK Sept. 5.—William
Randolph Hearn, oniy New York
newspaper supporter of James J.
Walker, former mayor, today warn-
ed the resigned Broadway Idol that
he would desert his cause if he ran
for re-election in a move to punish
Franklin D. Roosevelt. Democratic
candidate for president.
The warning served to increase
chances that the play-boy who serv -
ed as mayor of America* largest city
would not be a candidate to succeed
himself this fall, even though the
leader of Tammany Hall announced
Find Man** Body In |
Basement of Da Ojas |
Advertising Houtip^
n.vf *a flent d—htavtnn
The United States Weather
Bureau here warned stockmen to
remove livestock aid lowland dwel-
lers between here ai id Fort Worth to
evacuate because of high water
sweepinr down the Trinity river.
Mrs. Christian l ms trapped in
the car with her I m
J. moat h with
started for her
The man claimed he i
from Hopewell by a prla
tlve on June 10 and beli
until this wmk mid. He 1
word to Mayor Eddie I
Johnstown
The detective the l
guarded Schenck day and
iom she had
tome at Bon-
the night. Half
at found in the
batl. tntas. durir
a gal lot i of liquor
the Iowa pnmany—received no con-
tributions and "had no hotal bills
for I slept In my own car and afeg
very sparingly sway from horns." •
Charles M. Howell, unsuccessful
Tropical Storm Is
Approaching Coa
Of Florida Mom
Walker “has not strengthened
himself" by his “unjustifUbleTilH
lack.” Hearst said. “Oovernor
Roosevelt is more honest than
shrewd or he never would have al-
lowed hlmmlf to be precipitated In-
to this conflict,” he said.
• Meanwhile John F. Curry, boss of
(CONTINUED ON FAQ• TMMI1
can of the needs of the next three
pm. Now the supplies have been
cxiwusted and more goode must be
manufactured, move raw materials
must be produced and more distri-
buting facilities must be put into from ^ Wsst to Dai
of work for hundreds of thousands ^ West Qc
of idle hands. west coast by the Uc
_ * * * M . Weather Bureau today
nSRT HOT. chief of police in The warnings probel
D this fair city, was celebrating changed to hurricane w
the hobdav bT working aa usual this afternoon, R. W: C
although today Is his birthday, weather observer, said. 1
Potwmen iwver aet hoHdars. but bureau reported a 90-n
usually work harder on holidavs wind accompanying *
than at anv other time. Chief Hise disturbance approaching
was born in IViinessee September the norkls east coast tt
Mi and In Ilk his parents moved: -
to Brown countv. settling in the WASHINGTON. Bepl
Blanket community. Mr. Hise re-; Weather Bureau today
trained there or thereabouts until tropical storm of hurri
1918 when he and his family moved sity approaching the F
to Brown wood In the Miami. West P
• • • area.
The chief has done considerable The disturbance wag
office holding during bli fifty >10 thlamomlng •#_
Business Boom Rides Flood Waters
Into Fairfield as Many Motorists <
i Are Stranded; All Hotels Are Full
FAIRFIELD, Texas. 8ept. 5 -The flood brought a business
omes
Mrs. Ft
Maio
FAIRFIELD. HUM. Sept. 5 -The flood brought a business
boom to Fairfield today.
Unable to leave town, hundreds of motorists filled the two
hotels to the aavas and crowded every restaurant.
- The hotels ware full before midnight and by morning stranded
motorists were sleeping in filling stations.
Some occupied the Jail and more than 400 slept about the
courthouse. • |‘, # 1} I a
Estimates of the rainfall here were to high St 14 Inches for
fall ot 1913
bam dropped
M I > <•*.
: -M'.
\ 1
Flu
|V|> v
lit o'
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 277, Ed. 1 Monday, September 5, 1932, newspaper, September 5, 1932; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1094150/m1/1/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.