The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 67, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 20, 1931 Page: 1 of 22
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I EARLY |
I SUNDAY EDITION 1 Pg
y*~- THE VALLEY FIRST—FIRST IN THE VALLEY—LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FORTIETH YEAR—No. 67 BROWNSVILLE TEXAS SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 20 1931 TWENTY-TWO PAGES TODAY 5c A COPY
-- — ' • . ■ ■ ' -- ' --.
Mail Bandits Loot Texas Depot Kidnap Agent
- ********** ********* *********
YEGGS ESCAPE
IN CAR AFTER
PLACEROBBED
Baggageman Released
Unharmed Several
^ Hours Later
HOUSTON. Sept. 19 (4»i—Police
and federal officers today were
searching Houston for two men who
early this morning robbed the M
K. T. depot baggage room at Sealy
of an undetermined amount of mail
and kidnaped A. P. Brandt. 35.
night baggageman there.
The holdup .v-urred about 12:15
a. m. shortly after Santa Pe train
No. 18 had passed through Sealy.
Brandt after being bound and
blindfolded was held prisoner un-
til about 4 a. m . when he was re-
leased about seven miles from
Houston on the Richmond road.
Sheriff Notified
At 2 30 a m Sheriff Remmert of
Bellville. about 14 miles north of
Sealy unsuccessfully gave chase to
a large car containing three men
having been notified by Houston
authorities to be on the lookout for
the kidnapers.
Shortly before 6 a m.. Brandt
who had walked into the city from
the point where he was released
got ih touch with a Katy special
agent and later went to the police
station where he made a full re-
port of his adventures.
V had just taken a friend home
got back to the depot about
o'clock.” Brandt said "when
tirb men armed with pistols slop-
ped me as I stepped up on the
station platform. They had al-
ready stuck up Hamilton the night
operator.
1 and* Tied
•'They tied my hands with some
light cord and blindfolded me with
a handkerchief. Then they made
me get into a car they had parked
in some high weeds near the sta-
tion.
"They drove off at an extremely
rapid pace the car switching from
side to side. I couldn't tell which
direction they drove in.
••When they released me they
drove off toward Houston. I
walked into tow. and hunted up
Mr. McGee.”
Reports from Sealy indicated that
until an investigation had been
made by postal authorities the
value of mail taken would be un-
known.
Brar.dt said he felt some object
with his feet in the car while he
was held a prisoner^ “It felt as
though it were a small box wrap-
ped up. It might have been a
package in a mail sack. I had no
way of finding out.” he explained.
PIRATE DEATH
CLUES FALSE
COPS BAFFLED
NEW YORK. Sept. 19 (^-Puzzl-
ed more than ever by the drowning
of Benjamin P. Collings from his
cruiser Penguin in Long Island
Sound. Dist. Atty. Alexander G. Blue
of Suffolk coui y left on a yachting
trip himself today. He said it was
only a weekend vacation But the
i nature of it aroused surmises.
The coroner's maucsi was suaden-
lyl halted yesterday by Mr. Blue
when a brother-in-law of his Fred
Meyers Long Island lifeguard told
him of two mysterious men hiding
on an island. The district attorney
postponed the inquest for a week
announced two arrests were immin-
ent and departed.
Attorney Baffled.
Two hours later he returned to
the Huntington town hall and said
Meyer’s clue was valueless adding:
"I am right back where I started.”
Earlier in the day he had changed
his mind about net c alling Mrs. Col-
lings from her home in Stamford.
Conn. to testify ana demanded her
i presence. Her attorney Homer S
i Cummings.' notified Mr. Blue this
was impossible as she was under
care of two physicians.
Several policemen testified to
Coroner William G. Gibson of the
story told them by Mrs. Collings
when she was found in a motor
boat on the sound.
Sticks to Story.
She said her husband had been
killed by two men. who after club-
; bing hin and binding his arms and
feet tossed him into the bay. His
body floated to shore at Lloyd’s
neck last Wednesday a week after
his death. Mrs. Collings said she was
attacked bv the men. who removed
| her from the Penguin and took he*-
aboard a canoe. later transferring
her to a motor boat. Her daughter \
Barbara five years old. was left on
the orifiing Penguin where site was
found by C. L. Noteman a West-
chester yachtsman.
Mrs. Collings described her two
assailants as a man about 50 and a
bov. 18.
TODAY’S MARKETS
*
NEW YORK STOCKS
NEW YORK. Sept. 19 (AP)—A rush
to Mil securities accompanied a further
break in the British pound Sterling to-
day. giving the financial markets a
gloomy closing for the week-end.
Although stock losses averaged small-
er than yesterday the list was well i
spotted with net declines of 2 to near- I
)y 6 points.
Evidence of uneasiness over British
financial affairs was rellected in Ster-
ling's drop of a full cent to $4 84 3-4
for cables and in reported future offer-
ings well under that quotation. Bankh
here discouraged attempts to sell the
exchange short. Cables closed at $4.85.
off 3-4 w w
A weak opening In stocks here was to
have been expected following Friday’s
weak market Initial losses quickly en-
larged as heavy offerings were dispoe- j
ed of but after the 700.000 share turn- i
over of the first half hour the market I
steadied
American Telephone was hardest lit.
going to 140 1-4. the lowest since 1926
when It touched 139 5-8 The last tale
was at 140 7-8. or a 5 3-8 point loss.
Wooiworth. Eastman. Consolidated Gas.
American Tobacco. Union Pacific pre-
ferred. Byers. Bohn Aluminum. National
Biscuit preferred. Purity Baking. Stand-
ard Gas. Texas Gulf Sulphur. Worth-
Slngton pump and Youngstown lost 3
to 4 1-2 U. S. Steel closed rt the bot-
tom 75 1-4. off 2 1-4 American Can
also' finished at the lowest. 80 3-8.
•w wm" Canadian dollar tumbled to 97
■Li . cuts to a discount of 2 1-2.
CHICAGO GRAIN
CHICAGO. Sept. 19 (APl-Regard-
Qf hwdllnw. wnMt unci
corn both plunged lat* today to new
bottom-price records for the seasrn.
Stop-loss selling because of increased
■tram from stock market instability
reached a climax after securities trad-
ing had ended the week In semi-br-
at erta Earlier todav there was bur-ng
of Wheat on account of .Tapanese-Chi-
n«se hostilities and as a result of sug-
gestions that Russia might he drawn
in. but every bullish factor as to grain
wa« ignored later
Wheat closed nervous at almost the
day’s lowest level. 1 1-4-1 3-4 eents
under vesterdav’s finish eom 5-8-1 1-8
off. oats at 7-8-1 1-8 setback and pro-
Tt''ons Ul to 35 cents down
Remarkable flrmnev shewed itself
In wheat until *he Unai hour d*«e“e
perl«tent tottering of stock ex'-hanve
ouetattons Warlike activities In the
Orient counted temporarily aa an ado
quate offset to unwelcome news from i
Wall street
Corn felt the Influence of the break
In stocks before wheat was affected.
Oats and rye moved to lower levels In
sympathy with corn and wheat.
Provisions responded to downturns in
hog values.
Closing Indemnities; Wheat—Sept. 46
1-2; bids: Dec. 47 1-2 to 5-8; 49 3-8 to
3-4. ay. 52 1-4 to 3-8; 53 7-8 to 54. Corn-
Sept.. 40 1-8 to 1-4 ; 42 5-8 to 3-4; Dec..
36 3-8 to 1-2; 37 3-4 to 7-8; March 40
offers.
NEW YORK COTTON
NEW YORK. Sept. 19 <AP> —Cotton
broke Into new low ground for the
season here today under heavy southern
selling and liquidation which seemed to
be promoted by the increase In south-
ern offerings combined with some ner-
vousness over the situation in China
and uncertainty as to the further action
of Sterling exchange December con- j
tracts sold off to 6 40 or 16 points net
lower and closed at that figure with
the general market closing easy at net I
declines of 13 to 16 points.
Liverpool cables Vere better than due
on the New York close Friday but this
was attributed ehlefly to readjustments
following yesterday's decline in Sterling
which might tend to widen New Y'ork- 1
Liverpool differences and the market
here was Influenced bv the appearance
of heavier southern selling orders.
The volume of southern ' -isrtng tap-
ered off somewhat afte- Mr eany o*-
ferlngs had been absorb i. but the
pressure from the source continued
1 or css n cvt{fhece and weakness
J th<“ tock mar!rt was probably re-
flected by some Wall street selling
t8«2awmore ETA ON N N TA O NN
Cotton on shipboard awaiting clear-
ance was estimated at 62 000 bales
against 94.000 last year
NEW OR1CANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS Sept 19 <AP»-Cot-
: ton was very active for a short Satur-
day session. Prices were easier from the
start and made new low levels for the
season.
Although Liverpool wa* surprisingly
good the market here opened un-
changed to 2 points down and was
soon trading 4 points under the previous
I close on rather heavy hedge selling and
i selling by ring traders and recent buy-
| ers owing to the weakness In the stoev
1 market and the continued fair weather
I in the belt
WAVES GIVE UP BODY IN MURDER MYSTERY OF SEA
His hands and feet tied the body of Benjamin P. (rollings. New York broker floated to the surface of
Long Island Sound near the spot where he is alleged to have been thrown overboard from his cabin
cruiser. Penguin. Finding of the body pictured here after it* recovery was partial substantiation of the
story of (rollings’ wife who told Long Island authorities that two men boarded their boat from a canoe
bound her husband tossed his body into the water and then abducted her. (rollings' head was found to
have been wounded as if by a blow.
‘BOOTLEGGING’OIL
CHARGES FILED ON
OKLAHOMA GROUP
OKLAHOMA CITY Sept. 19.—
tif)—A suit filed in district court
here today by the Kedburg Oil
company and Prank L. Ketch
trustee alleges that the ChampUn
Refining company of Enid instal-
led hidden pipes to conceal the
fact it was running oil wells un-
lawfully in the Oklahoma City
field "up until the night of Sept.
15."
The suk named three causes of
action and In addition to alle-
gations of violation of the corpora-
tion rules charged that its own
well the Burris No. 1. block three
of Compton park addition was
almost ruined.
The petition states that Cham
plin had two wells within 300 fee:
of the Burris No. 1—the Seal No.
1 and Seal No. 2—and alleges
that the refining company "pro-
cured a welder to weld a certain
pipe connection from its Seal No.
1 to a gas vent approximately 375
feet east for the purpose of al-
lowing the well to flow to its full
capacity without detection.
It charged further that the
Seal No. 1 was so connected that
gas from it was discharged from
the mud-hog muffler of Champ-
lin's No. 1 Central giving tho ap-
pearance that Seal No. 1 was shut
in completely "while in fact it
actually was flowing in full cap-
acity.”
OIL MEN SEE!
BETTER PRICE
IN PRODUCTION
TULSA. Okla Sept. 19. — (/TV-
Published predictions of a $110
top for a barrel of crude oil and
a tighter squeeze on production
from the vast Texas fields sent a
ray of sunshine Into depressed
oil industry offices today.
The Tulsa World says it has
learned a major purchaser is ready
to announce an increase to the
$1.10 scale and that oil men be-
lieve the announcement may come
tomorrow or Monday.
This followed a recession by
Phillips Petroleum from its lone
posting of $1.00 oil to the 70-cent
top of other large buyers.
Mid-continent oil leaders the
World said were convinced steps
were being taken to stabilize the
industry because of the Texas rail-
road commissions’ action In re-
ducing the east. Texas per well
allowable to 185 barrels a day. The
previous allowable was 225 barrels
and it was estimated the reduc-
tion would t#Ae 75000 barrels
from the total daily production.
This would make the daily aver-
age about 350.000 barrels from east
Texas.
Reports were that the only
question to be settled in connec-
tion with the predicted price hike
was whether the variation between
gravity crudes would be 2 or 3
cents.
Gov. Murray has demanded do*r
lar oil before he opens Oklahoma
flush fields closed under martial
law sinot August* -
SHOREMEN ARE
AT ODDS OVER
PAY PROPOSAL
GALVESTON Sept. 19. —(/T>—
Negotiations between shippers and
representatives of the longshore-
men's unions relative to a pro-
posed reduction in wages were
deadlocked here today.
Refusal of the unions to accept
the salary cut indicated that con-
siderable difficulty would be met
in drawing a new longshoremen's
contract to replace the present
one which expires Sept. 30.
Last Tuesday when the unions
filed their first objections to the
reductions shippers asked for a
reconsideration but yesterday
union officials again announced
their opposition. Tfcey asked that
the current wage scale be main-
tained and that double time be
paid for Sunday work.
M. Dwyer president of the long-
| shoremen s organizations said
that labor interests have reiterated
their stands would wait for the
stevedoring and maritime interests
to make the next move. He said
the labor committee would be
ready at any time to discuss the
matter further.
Capt. Edwin Goudge. head or
the committee representing steve-
dores and maritime interests in-
dicated that he did not consider
the disagreement near solution.
He said that at present he did nos
know of any further action con-
templated by the Interests which
hi represented.
NEGROES ARE
QUESTIONED IN
ATTACK CASE
Pistol And Ring Of
Victim Found
On Pair
" —..
WICHITA FALLS. Sept. 19.—<A>)
—Two negro suspects in the slay-
ing of Aubrey N. Nodurft were
held at separate Texas points for
questioning today.
Nodurft was fatally wounded
Sept. 9 and his young woman
j companion attacked.
Suspects Separated
! One of the suspects was reported
by Tarrant county authorities to
have been placed in the county
jail at Fort Worth late last night.
The negro was taken to Fort
Wcrth bv Sheriff Browning of
Wichita Falls.
Charges of murder were filed
against one of the negroes. Robert
Pope who admitted to officers
he wV an escaped convict from
the Texas penitentiary.
‘Looks Like Sian*
A ring which Nodurft gave his1
fiancee and n heavy pistol same
type as the one which fatally
wounded Nodurft. were found by
officers. The negro told officers
he purchased the pistol and ring
from two other negroes the morn-
ing after the crime
i Before officers carried the sus-
pect away from Wichita Falls yes-
terday he was viewed by Nodurft’s
fiancee who said he looked ‘Tike
the man*.
“It’s the same voice.” she said
when officers forced Pope to
speak.
Trio Indicted
DALLAS. Sept. 19. (An—Three
alleged robbers were indicted here
today by the county grand Jury.
M. H. Fat’’ Harper and Barney
Manicchia were charged with rob-
bing Mrs. E. L. Reed of Waco of
$150 and an automobile on the
night of July 24.
Woman Killed
McKINNEY. Sept. 19. <A*i— Mrs.
Ed. Bryan 50. was fatally injured
■ last night when she stepped from
an automobile Into the street and
was struck by another automobile.
Jack Buckley driver of the car.
rushed her to a hospital but she
died en route.
Sanitarium Burns
GLADEWATER. Sept. 19. (A»u_
Fire of undetermined origin de-
stroyed the Smith sanitarium and
damaged two adjacent residences
here early today.
Six patients in the sanitarium
were carried from the burning
building*
COMPROMISE
COTTON BILL!
ACTION SEEN
Crop Rotation Plan
Favored By Both
Houses
AUSTIN Sept. 19 —t/Pi—Texas
legislators at odds over the terms
5f pending cotton restriction laws
were hopeful of reaching a com-
promise today as conferees from
the house and senate met to dis-
cuss their differences.
Agreement Looms
House conferees showed an In-
clination to recede half-way from
the percentage of the house bill
that would limit cotton acreage in
1932 and 1933 to one-third the
cultivated area. The senate bill
would restrict cotton planting to
one-fourth the cultivated area for
the next two years. Both bills pro-
vided for crop rotation by prohib-
iting planting the same land to
cotton in successive years.
While the house was trying to
obtain a ouorum in order to con-
duct business the senate met and
adjourned until Monday to permit
its free conference to work. Ad-
journment of the senate made It
impossible for final legislative
action to be taken on the cotton
bills before Monday.
Probe Bill Fai's
A call of the house was ordered
during the morning and sergeants-
at-arms were instructed to bring
in all absent members in the city.
Speaker Fred Minor did not put
to a vote a motion made by Rep.
G. J. Cox of Paris that the sheriff
of Tarrant county be instructed tc
return all members of the house
who were attending the horse
races today at Arlington Downs
near Port Worth.
A resolution to appoint a com-
mittee of nine to investigate ana
discover new uses for cotton was
defeated. The resolution memorial-
ized congress to urge the nation
to return to the use of cotton
products as a means of relieving
the nation-wide distress.
The house adjourned shortly
before noon until Monday.
Officers Freed
BRENHAM. Sept. 19. ffli-Three
Brenham peace officers stood freed
today of killing a negro accused of
making advances to a young white
woman here.
District court Jury without leav-
ing the box. today returned a ver-
dict of not guilty in the ease of
Sheriff H. L. Reese. City Marshal
Newt Humphreys and Constable E.
O. Routt charged with slaying
Mose Burrell young negro last
April.
Hoover to Address
Legion Convention
WASHING-ON. Sept. 19 MV-
Pres. Hoover will leave his Rapklan
camp tomorrow n\|ht for Detroit
where he will address the annual
American Legion convention.
Texan Shot Down
AUSTIN. Sept. 19 M> —Gilbert
Smith. 20 storekeeper at Bluff
Springs near here was brought to
a hospital here today after having
been shot in a pasture some dis-
tance from his store early today.
Smith was shot with a rifle. He
was In a serious condition.
A man was arrested but no charge
had been filed pending completion
of an investigation.
Wreck I. Fatal
TERRFXL Sept 19. i/Pw_Mrs. J.
M. Griffith of Tyler died at a
hospital here last night from in-
juries received yesterday in an
automobile accident on the highway
•art ef Terrell.
ARMY PLANESi
PATROL ALONG!
BORDER POINTS
Big Bend Ranchmen
Flee River With
Families
MARFA Sept. 19- iyp.—Persist-
ent reports of projected bandit
raids along the Brewster and
Presidio county borders of the Rio
Grande Big Bend country have1
caused ranchmen In isolated sec-
tions to remove their families to
safety in towns more distant from
the border.
Planes Arrive
Presence of army planes from
San Antonio with machine guns
mounted and a tr* .sport plane
with soldiers armed with automatic
rifles has been attributed to the
unrest along the Rio Grande caused
by the expected raids
Peace officers here maintain the
strictest secrecy but it is known
that both counties are being guard-
ed against possible raids of bandits
from across the border.
Post Guarded
Three army plaies landed here
Thursday and it was reliably re-
ported that a transport airplane
with a squad of infantry armed
with machine guns and automatic
rifles had spent the night at the
ranch of Elmo Johjson who main-
tains a trading post 150 miles south
of Marathon in Brewster county.
This ranch is located in one of the
wildest sections of the Big Bend
country and is 50 miles from Ter-
lingua the nearest town.
This is the second time since the
World War that armed planes have
visited border post* as result of
conditions of unrest across the Rio
Grande. In 1929 a 'quadron from
the third attack group was sent to
Arizona when fighting between
revolutionists and federal forces
threatened to endanger lives on
the American side of the inter-
national border.
S. A. SAYS PLANES
ON ROI TINE FLIGHT
SAN ANTONIO Sept. 19—/;p._
ine i.ign? or lour planes visiting
the Big Bend country this week
wan on a routine training mission
such as must be carried out at
periodical intervals. MaJ. Gen. Ed-
win B. Winans commander of the
eighth corps area said Saturday. He
said that conditions along the
border are quiet in so far as re-
ports coming to corps headquarters
disclose.
The planes making the flight
were from Dodd Field and included
a transport and three observation
type ships.
Time Allotted In
Rate Hike Hearing
WASHINGTON Sept. 19. (JP—
The Interstate Commerce commis-
sion today allotted time for argu-
ments on the application of rail-
roads for a 15 per cent rate In-
crease and at the same time re-
ceived 24 additional briefs.
Sen. Brookhart of Iowa the Wis-
consin public service commission
and various state commissions in
the western rate group filed the
principal briefs. The arguments
began Monday.
Holmes Honored
ATLANTIC CITY. N J.. Sept. 19
The American Bar association
awarded its medal for distinguish-
ed service in the law today to As-
sociate Justice Oliver Wendell
Holmes of the U S. supreme court.
Justice Holmes for more than
30 years noted for his liberal and
dissenting opinions in the supreme
court could not attend the conven-
tion due to illness.
City Marshal Shot
WICHITA FALLS. Sept. 19-hVP
—Will Detleff city marshal of
Iowa Park and Calvin C. Morris
were wounded in a shooting affray
at Iowa Park. 11 miles west of
Wichita palls last night.
Detleff was struck in the right
leg by a charge from a shotgun.
Morris was wounded in his shoul-
der. his neck and Jaw.
Judges Elect
SAN ANGELO. Sept. 19—(&\—
Judge Thomas K Eplen of Abilene
Taylor county Judge was elected
president of the West Texas Judges
association last night and Midland
i was named as the 1932 convention
city.
CAPITAL CITY
OF MANCHURIA
SEIZED HELD
.
600 Chinese Captured
Several Killed
In Battle
TOKYO 3epL IS- fV-Oap*neaa
troops fought and routed Chines*
forces and seized Mukden capital
of Manchuria today precipitating
a near crisis between China and
Japan but the situation was some-
what relieved when Japan decided
to cease all aggressive actum and
cancelled orders for military move-
ments.
The trouble started at Peitaytnf
a suburb of Mukden when Chtnraa
soldiers allegedly attempted to
destroy a bridge of the South Man-
churian railway. Jaitanese soldiers
repulsed the first attack but the
Chinese forces obtained reinforce-
ments and renewed the assault.
Casualties Estimated
Japanese sources estimated thetr
own casualties at two dead and
seven to ten wounded and the
Chinese losses at 13 dead IS
seriously wounded and goo to aoo
captured. The Japanese said they
fired possibly a dozen shots from
their artillery and the Chinese
were said to have used light field
pieces without inflicting any dam-
age.
Subsequently the Japanese '
cleared the railway zone of Chinese
called all their nationals out of the
native city disarmed native officers
within the Mukden walls and oc-
cupied the capital.
A Rengo news agency dispatch
from Changchun. Manchuria said
the Chinese garrison at Kwan-
chengtse near Mukden which pre-
viously was reported to have been
occupied by the Japanese still was
holding out tonight in the face of
repeated attacks by t’ e Japanese
Orders to reinforce the 120m
Japanese troops in Oh# Mukden
zone were Issued by Japanese
military authorities and troops were
started In that direction from
Korea and Dairen An air squadron
was reported moving from Korea
toward Mukden and Japanese naval
officers were ordered to be wady
for emergency duty.
The Japanese cabinet met In ex-
traordinary session to deal with the
situation. Subsequently it was an-
nounced that all troop movements
i In Korea and Datrer. had been
cancelled by the government and
that the cabinet had decided to
instruct the Japanese commander
in the Mukden district to cease all
aggressive action.
City Captured
Mukden tonight was in complete
control of the Japanese. The In-
vading troops held the walla of
the ancient city marched through
the streets and occupied other
strategic points in the area in
retaliation for the alleged attempt!
to destroy the railway bridge.
The South Manchurian railway
runs through Chinese territory bus
is under Japanese control and oc-
cupies a right of way in a treaty
area which is protected by Jap-
t anese troops
I Although there were no reporta
here official or otherwise to In-
dicate what had Inspired the as-
serted Chinese attack Japanese)
authorities assumed it was due tu
aroused Chinese feelings which al-
ready had been at a high pitch as
the result of exchanges between
Tdkyo and Mukden over the ex-
ecution of Shivtaro Nakamura. «
Japanese and three other persons
by Manchurian troops.
BASEBALL
RESULTS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
First game—
Chicago . 000 000 201— 3 10 (I
Philadelphia. 200 211 04x-10 16 t
Grube. Garrity; Walberg Coch-
rane.
Second game—
Chicago . 100 000 000—1 6 0
Philadelphia . 000 012 OOx—3 9 fl
Thomas. Bowler Grube; Hoyt*
Palmiesano.
Cleveland .... 010 000 000-1 4 1
Boston . ICO 001 OOx—2 3 3
Hildebrand Sewell; MacFayden.
Connolly.
St. Louis. 000 000 000—0 4 (1
New York ... 010 001 10x-3 9 l
Cooney Kimsey Bcngough; Pip-
gras. Dickey.
Detroit . 000 200 000 000 1—3 7 3
W’h'gt’n .010 000 001 000 C—2 14 l
Sorrell Hayworth; Brown Spen-
cer.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Boston. 000 000 000—0 5 1.
Pittsburgh ... 004 101 Olx—7 2 \
Frankhouse. Bool. Haid Brown
Spohrer; Brame Finney.
- |
First Ramr —
Philadelphia.. 000 200 001-3 11 3
Cincinnati ... 100 000 001-2 4 J
Benge. Davis; Rixcy Carroll*
Sukeforth.
Brooklyn .... 001 000 000—1 4 q
Chicago . 100 120 'lx—9 12 q
Vance. Moore. Lope*; Bush*
Hartnett.
Philadelphia.. 000 010 031—5 10 I
Cincinnati ... 101 000 100—3 9 «
Dudley Collins. McCurdy; Frey
Asby.
New York .. 000 312 04G-10 15 1
St Louis .... 020 020 020— 6 9 i
Mooney OTarrell; Rhem Man-
CUSO. I
THE WEATHER
For Brownsville and the Valley i
Mostly cloudy •uid unsettled Satur-
day night and Sunday probably
with occasional showers; continued
i warm. — —- - .
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 67, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 20, 1931, newspaper, September 20, 1931; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1393658/m1/1/?q=rubarth: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .