Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 61, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 26, 1935 Page: 1 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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
SIX PAGES TODAY
I f NOT « 1
■ ’If IF T ■!" i 1
1 lli Ml I- -1 '■ ■ "[■ ti"
BROWNWOOD
ll
1 1
I'
LET IN
A Home Owned Newspaper* Serving the Heart of Texaa With Today’* New* Today, Every Day Except Sun day
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26,1935
VOL. XXXVI j NO. 61
THREE iRMr RESERVE OFFICERS DIE IR ARE
ri-i____. .. .'V|., IvIM1 IL'i '’'‘hi. f -H ■ i ' 1 Mr ■--IH ---- "I1 1-4—-~-♦ • I
HIGH EPISCOPALIAN CHURCH-
MEN URGE REUNION WITH r
* HOMAN CATHOLIC CHUBCH
NEW YORK. Dec. M.—CUP)—
The clergy of the United States
generally responded critically today
to a plea by a committee of 29
high ■ Episcopalian churchmen foe
reuniting of the Episcopal and Ro-
man Catholic churched.
Cameron J. Darla, btahop of the
Epdvopal Diocese of Western New
Yom said he had not heard of the
proposed reunion and that the
Committee or V was not an of-
ficial body, but was self-appointed”
The Right Reverend Clinton 8.
Episcopal Btahop of Houston,
•aid he favored -a union of
all churches.* but not a reunion
alone of the Episcopal and the
Catholic churehas.
VATICAN CITY, Dec. M.—(UP)
—Vatican dignitaries rxprisesd
pleasure at news from New York
today that a group of high Episco-
Bitter Christmas
Blizzard Causes
OverTlOO Deaths
j
1
——
—
iockn
»■ (
,a,
i at His Fatal Hobby
J.Liw,.. . ■ . --ZLJ
C
BY UNITED PRESS
At least 108 lives were lost
the United States In
mas bustard, *
disclosed today.
Most of the fatalities V«re
trlbutable to automobile accidents
caused by blind, rig snow awl Icy
roads. Many Uvea were lpet, how*
deer, as
in I to fab-aero
a direct
to tempi
let in a bitter Christ. : penetrating *y a
l po6t-holidafr(|ur«e| I j ' ijemperafurea
. > l; feerpi In the midd
r '
LESS STI
> . I. j
Catholic
paJMn authorities have
union with the Roman
cbureh.
The New York manifesto eras
characterised as “exceptionally well
timed and praiseworthy," because It
followed the pontiffs speech Tues-
day to the college of Cardinals in
which be dlscuawd the “futility of
other forms of Christianity."
TRENTON. N
—Oov. Harold O. _—r_T;r _
contemplate granting a reprieve t»
Bruno Richard Hauptmann if the
Bute Court of Pardon* refuse* his
plea for clemency the governor*
pram aide said today.
The aide. William S. Conklin told
result of exposure
mperaturea made more
stiff nor wester,
sank far below
aero In the middle west last night
rnd weither forecasters predicted
f>ub-zero readings again tonight be-
for* the peak of the storm Is pass-
ed I It was 23 below at Devil's Lake.
If.IjD.. 19 below at Spencer. la . 14
telow at Charlee City, la.. 14 below
|tt ^Alexandria. Minn., and 10 below
Inlihe twin cities of Minneapolis
n.d St. Pflll.
Hear Jamestown. N. D, Paul An.
togowtu was driving to his farm
hoite from fried. N D . In an old-
.aslnoned sleigh pulled by a team
Tier blizzard «U *o intense
Antonowlt* perished in the
His wife her arms and legs
abandoned the aletgh and
reached a farmhouse. The horses
froae to death.
finite Ti
idled of cold
ts' car
lor. an li-year-oid boy.
1 and shock when his
became stalled in a
irdrtft Heir Clinton. 111. An
&
Ifwl
m
i.
Thirteen Texans THREE OTHERS
Die m| Christmas
Holiday Tragedies
;
* *’
K
y
X.
unable to
had to
a newspapermen:
• — ■ BAN
“The govern: r has
to say that at the present
does not contemplate a
Hauptmann should the
dons refuse clemency.
The governor has power
three 10-day *Uvs of
If the pardon court
commute Me
Hoffman holds to
cision regarding a
marm win (he in the
at state prison the
U.
The pardon court Is
onslder the case of
Lindbergh baby murderer
Conklin
undertaker,: i
bed hearse.
seven mile* to rrturn the boys
body. Bndwdrlfts ten feet deep
t reported In many sections,
iroad and automobile traffic
seriously delayed where It was
altogether paralyzed
AlrpUne travel was resumed to-
aftST having been grounded
C h.-istmas.
holiday death tod by states:
7: Ohio. 11; Pennsyl-
13; Louisiana, 7; Mississippi.
4; Masourt, A; Ken-
1; Iowa. 8; Indiana, 9: Ne-
ll Maryland, 3; Tenn-
C: Wisconsin. I; North Dakota
Georgia, 11; North Carolina, 8;. -
^“ 4; Alabama. 7. WASHINTON. Dec. 26 UP -
Brig. Oen. Prank *1.; Andrews,
commander of the Army General
Headquarters air force, was advanc-
ed today to the temporary rank of
major general on the recommer. la-
tion of Oeq. Malin Craig, chief of
stafT.
Andrews will retain his rank as
major general for the term of his
command as chief of the OHQ air
Ethiopia. Dec 26 — UP) force. War department officials ex-
hioptan forces shot down an plains that the promotion was In
plahe at Daggahbur today. uue with the desire of Secretary of
■ p— w“ f°rced down ■** war Oeorge H. Dera to give the
rifts' south of Daggahbur by rifle 0HQ ^ forc«. gjeiiler ^
fife from Ethiopians biding In a tactical scheme of the'array and to
W# Pit- ' J place It In It* proper relative posi-
fcwo occupants of the plane e*- tlon with other combat organim-
A third was captured and tlon* now commanded j by major
to have beet, decapitated. general*,
se plane was one of two which It wu Mid Dem considered the
r* over paggahbur at 9 a m. advancement In rank of the com-
ing out the Ethiopian position*, mander of the CJHQ *ir force was
fl
use a motor-
send a sled
of OM Protestant lpiecopal
of ObHfarhla. sold today a
urging reunion of his
church with the Roman Catholic
church Issued by the Church Unity
Octave Council, In New York was statement
"of no consequence." Oov. Hoffman, whose activities in
“I have never heard of this coun- connection with the ease were view-
dl and don’t know wrfaat It is," he ^ by many as contributing to the
said. ""However, what It charges Is decision of Col. UndberJJJo move
manifestly nonsense. It certainly Is his family to Europe. Hoffman pre-
net representative of the church." rlously has Indicated he did hot b«-
-- , heve all aspects of the kidnaping
Urges Prstestani Union case had been solved entirwlir.
UK OF 1
ax. LOUIS. Dec. -38.—(UP)—Dr.
If an Lee Holt, president of the
“JH i|!
(UP)—Pear that he maytytt escape
the electric chair has broken through
Hauptmanns stolid
TRENTON. N. |U.. Dec.
brief emotlonej%utbur*t
Council of the Churches of
in America. Issued a state-
ment today appealing to the Prot- Bruno Richard
estsnt churches of the United States demeanor for
to "consider union." 1 in a
• His appeal was Incorporated in he revealed that h* had hoped that
B discussion of the statement of a interrogation of Col. Charles Lind-
group of Anglo-Catholic leader* In berth by the Court of Pardon* or
the Protestant Episcopal church t plea to win Its consent to mefefr.
proposing union with the Roman might save his life. The hep-
Catholic church^ when his wife tcld him i ue*d*jr
"There are two approaches to Lindbergh, his wife. Anns arid I
ecumenical Christianity." Dr. Bolt j-year-old son. Jon. had —
I for England.
"Why didn't he guy
gg-_- „ , | a a out?" Hauptmann «crlsd
TWO Hurt in AUtO relapsed into a morose alienee which
WrPrk ^pae* Sunt A persisted through a ion*|jr-;-Chri*t
nrecK ix car sania mas day m w* ae.* Za, kb »m»ir
Anna L*&8t IVl^nt Christmas present, s photograph of
—. i his 2-year-old son, seemed only u>
COLEMAN. Dec. 28—(Bp )—Bill i Increase his glocm.
Yeager. Abilene CCC supervisor, and The small freight and passenger
(CONTINUED ON PAOI FIVE)
n
Shortly after Dr Robert W. Hockman (left). 29-year-:ld American
doctor In charge of a hospital mission on Ethiopia's Ogaden front,
took 'apart the dud Italian bomb pieces of which he Is shown exam-
ining. he was killed while attempting to dig up another dud at
Daggah Bur. target for many Fascist air raids. Hunting dud b;mbs
was the only hobby that Hockman permitted himself in the few hours
be stayed out of the operating room. Beside Hackman above Is Cap-
tain R. H. R. TayL r, BrltUh Military Attache of Harar. who find* II
Duces bombs entrancing. H. V. Drees. NEA Service staff cameraman
pictured Hockman at hla fatal hobby.
BY UNITED PRESS
Christmas holiday accidents caus-
ed thirteen deaths In Texaa. Ten
P rsons were killed by automobile*
one by a train, one by the premature
explosion of an improvised cannon
and one from being shot.
Ed Corley was kill Ml Wednesday
at Brown.dx.TO when g cow he eras
FILE MURDER
CHARGE AFTER
BURNS DEATH
i TT_n ■
WEATHERFORD, fixu. Dec. 20
y» < UP) —Murder charges were filed
pert today agiinst w. A. Webb.
Oodley, in connection with the au-
tomobile accident In Which William
turn* Jr., was killed near Cresson
t'uesday.
Webb also was charged with
driving while drunk. Two com-
inlons. Weldon and Floyd Tubbs,
r with him. were chirged as
ipllcea In the driving while
charge, j
RIFLEBULLET
GUN FIRED ACCIDENTALLY BY
YOUTH WHO WAS CLEAN-
ING IT
Funeral Today
Funeral services were held this
at three o’clock at the
ill Crek Baptist Church for
NdLson Burn*. Jr , IS. who
died Tuesday night In an ambulance
en route to Fort Worth as a result F
of injuries received In an automo-
bile accident near Cresson.
Young, Bum* with hi* parent*
and a brother, Ted. w-re on their
way to Brown wood Tuesday from
their home In Port Worth and were
to spend the Christmas holidays
Mth relatives mi. Their car was
:truck by another car near Cresson.
Three m’n believed to have been In
the other car were arrested near the
scene, and were held in the Parker
‘ county jail last night awaiting a
hearing on charges of driving whil;
drunk and negligent homicide, re-
ports here today statd.
A number of relative* of the Bums
family live in and near Brownwood.
•hip on which the
ed Sunday morning
Three Highway
Workers Killed
Early Thursday
PARIS, Tenn, Deo. Jg.—<UP > —
Three county highway worker* vet*
killed, another was Injured critically
and two others were hurt in a grade
crossing crash here today,- :
The dead: Tom Collier,^2t; James
Snyder, 30. and Dorris Owg#li. :
Virgil Dowdy wag believed dying.
Lancy Jackson and Fleetwood Lowe
were Injured leas seriously;
4-14-4
rently seeing- nothfrg, they
low and th* Etni'v.ians crept
the pit and cun ed flrg. At
hgdn two more plane* m rived, look-
ing for the men who bad trashed.
Charles Blair. Coleman Coca Cola
employee, were injured last night
while returning to Coleman from
Santa Anna when Yeager lost con- |
trol of hla car apd plunged Into a
dlfirh. The accident occurred at i
about 10:30.
Yeager was critically Injured and .
is In the Santa Anna hospital today
Blair received treatment tor cut*1
and bruises here today.
Yeager had been to Santa Anna
to deliver a Christmas present to a
girl friend and the accident occurred
about two miles west of that city a*
he was returning to Coleman.
SGoleman County
Cotton Parity
Checks Received
COLEMAN. Dee. 28.—(Sp.)
Santa Claus came a day late for
3M0 Coleman county cotton pro-
ducer*. who this week will get $75,000 „Y UNITED
parity checks. ’ _ , EAST TEXAsX Partly cloudy
The checks were received by ,rith occasional rain Friday and in
County Agent C. V Robinson today ^ p-rUon tonigM.; Not
end win be distributed this week. quite so cold In the northwest, with
the temperature 34 to„|| ih the
L. W. BALDWIN BXSIGNS northwest, with the temperature 24
— i — to 38 In the north and nags fredNlM I
- ST. LOUIS. Dec. 28.-(UP)-L. on the coast and In the^tra) por
W. Baldwin, president at the Mis- tlon tonight. Wanner Fridayk }
•ourl Pacific railroad and eo-trus-| WEST TEXAS—Cloudy with cc-
Priday
In line with the growing *Ue and
Importance of this force, tally
in view of the reinforcement* which
will be givan It during the coming
year by the addition of over 500
new. modem combat plana* under
the army * air purchasing program
The purchase of 100 new pursuit
ship* will round out the army air
To U. S. Congress ^ri£*£chVlnf prot:r*m un<*r
823,000.000 allott<d from: the 1935-38
war department budget.
—President Rooaevelt utilised the tW0 W**u 00X1'
poat-hobdiy calm today to con- tr~*. have been awarded for the
te on his annual message to p,jrc^fcM‘ 115 »ttack apl|
so-
ber*
President Works
On Annual Message
|WASHINGTON. Deg. 38—(UP)
Rooaevelt utilized the
of going to his executive
Office, the President remained In
tie White House proptr. where he
pled himself with the message
with hla mall.
fci ■ M
hur W. Cutten
purchase of 115 attack ships; 103
bombing plane*, including 13 of the
fo-called! “Eying fonreawg" manu-
factured by the Boeing Co , and 115
training and observation planes,
ordered several weeks ago. The to-
tal cost was approximately ,$15 000,-
000.
Is Stricken*Again Seven Fishermen
Frank H. Sweet, local attorney,
was In a serious condition at Stump
Hospital this afternoon as a result
of a gunshot wound received acci-
,dentally at the Tom Epley home. 708
Avenue G, at 1:30 o'clock this after-
noon. '1 |_4 ji[T
The bull:t was fired from a rifle ! j — ■> *- .j. » i
which was being clraned by Tom /,1
Epley. Jr. aged 13 or 13 years. The OlUIll Clearance
bullet went through a door and PrOCTam Will
itruck Judge Sweet, who waa altung va 7 Ji \ ,
In an adjoining room at a table. ISeW Deal Backing
drawing up some legal documents, J1 'iw_l
In the left aid* In the region of th* WASHINGTON, Deg. 26 UP)—
kidney and passed almo*t entirely Actminiatration backing will be
through hla body, lodging just under yiven a billion doU»r Hum dear-
the skin of hi* abdomen. trnce and low co*t housing plan
He was rushed to Stump Hospital cording to word circulating
where doctor*, who had not rfiUroty iioday from new deal aourceg.
completed their examination at 2 Secretary of Interior Harold
o'clock, aald his condition was “very Ickes. th* report* d wtf endorse
arrioua." An emergency operation publicly n'Xt week a MU *pon*or-
Wobably will be ninMMry, they said. *d by Sen. Robert r. Wagner, D..
Young Epley, waiting at the has- N. Y.
pital for word from the operating while President Rooaevelt . In-
«s In a highly nervous and lends keeping ibis IsgislaUve pro-
exclted condition, and was crying pram sharply curtailed. It was lntl-
broken-heartedly. mated he might r-quest action on
Mr. Sw et was reared In Brown-housing measure, as well a*
wood, eldest aon of the late B. G. the neutrality and social aecurity j
Sweet, who was an early days po- nreposais on the White House
lltical leader and county official, echtdul*.
He graduated from Daniel Baker An appropriation of between |
college and secured hi* law educa- 800.000.000 and *1.000 000.000 Is
tlon In the University of Texas. He ^-omrmpUted. Si-bsldmlwould be
Is a former Judge of Brown county, limited to long-range permanent
harvlng resigned some years ago from projects on the theory that the
entitled
taking to his bam dragged him Into
the path of a train. The cow waa not
hur;i
Two of the d atha occurred In San
Antonio. Betty Lou Collins, five
months old. was killed when an au-
tomobile driven by her father col-
lided with another machine, then
struck a bus. Henry Reddle, 25. died
Wednesday In San Antonio of ta»-
jurl'* suffered Tuesday night In an
automobile-bus collision.
Tommy Carroll McNary waa killed
Wednesday pear El Paso when hla
automobile ovtrturned.
Four persons awre killed In Hous-
ton. making a total of 10 accident
fatalities there since last Sunday.
C. C. Deff nbaugh, 00, was struck
by a hit-run automobile, Charles A.
Drucks, 44. waa killed by an auto-
mobile as he walked across a street.
8am Dancy. 35. negro, waa killed by
a passing car as he stopped to
change a tire on hla automobile.
Fred Bays was killed by an auto-
mobile a* he was creasing a street at
Felly, near Houston.
The explosion of an improvised
cannon at Mineral Wells caused the
death of Miss Dorothy Westbrook,
21.
Two Killed at Caeew
Miss Dorothy Parks. 18. of Cuero,
and Daniel Machac, 19, of Yoakum.,
were killed early Thursday nw
Cuero, as they were returning to
their homes from a dance at Yoak-
um, when their automobile crashed
into a tree. Wealry Henkhaua. 19, of
Yoakum, waa Injured critically.
E. M. Hughes, farmer, living near
Sherman, waa shot accidentally
Christmas night as hla brother, P.
M. Hughes, wax demonstrating how
quick on the draw" he was with a
pistol.
William Bums, Jr, *13, died
Wednesday night of a fractured
skull suffrred when the automobile
in which he was riding crashed
headon into another car.
W. W. Walton. 89. of Oraperine,
died yesterday from Injuries suffer-
ed in an automobile crash south of
that town."
THREE OTHER RESERVE OFFI-
CERS BURNED SERIOUSLY
IN BARRACKS
l
Oil Wells Bought
In East of Rockies
Higher In November
WATSIBURY, Vt.. Dee. 38.—
(UP)—Trapped by fire in their
wooden barracks, three army re-
serve officers perished and three
others were burned today at Camp
Smith.
The dead were identified as:
Capt. Edwin W. Boothby, Water-
town. Maw.
capt. Roland D. Potter, North-
field. Vt.
UMR. Leonard B. Buahey, Con-
cord. N. H.
Fort Sill“Soidiers
Killed Under Tons
Of Gravel and Sand
A
PORT SILL. Okla, Dee. 38^—(UP)
—Two soldiers working In a crew
of 10 In a gravel pit on the mili-
tary reservation were killed today
when a 15-foot wall of gravel and
sand caved In on them.
Pvt. Rlsley B. Rogers, 35, of An-
adarko, Okla, was dead when he
was removed from beneath several
tons of the material.
Pvt. Fred Riiiinger, 23, of Dallas,
Tex., died two hours after he was
taken to a hospital.
Privates Richard Q. Toler and a
R. Bishop were hurt lees seriously.
They were burled only partially
when tons of gravel and —
crajfced down upon them«_4 Tbler
suffered several broken riba and
Bishop suffered a fractured kg. *
All were members of tha* hind-
quarters battery of the first field
artflfiry.
Ten men were workfe* in the crew
but tlx fled to safety when the high
wall started to topple.
More than an hour elapsed before
Rogers' tawy oould be removed from
the gravel. Crews were summoned
to dig the men out Immediately after
th* accident occurred.
Tax Legislation
jAt Next Session
j Congress Unlikely
riTTSByRCH. Dec. 38.—(UP)—
Oil well complftions east of tht
roc kies In November Increased 131
over October, the Oil City Derrick
rtpo^ted today.
Tots; complftions In November for,
all field* wen 1,773, representing
1.244 producer*. 393 dry hols* and
138 gas wells. In October, there
were 1.141 completions. 1,141 of thsm
producers; 171 dry holes and 115 gas
welh. “*T:
Daily initial production of all
flrids east of the rockles total 591^09
barr la, comp*red With 484JM
October,
Completions in the Bradford and
West Virginia ‘
WASHINGTON, Dec. 36—(UP)—
Chairman Pat Harrison of th*
feenate Finance Committee aald to-
day ."In my opinion there will be -
r.0 general tax legislation at the
coming session of Congress.”
Harrison also aald be believed a
bonus compromise would be reaefe- '
ed which would dispose of th* vet-
eran* question and secapa a peek-
Uentlal veto.
He predicted an ’"unusually abort"
•e** ior, Of Congress at which the
principal business would be pasM**
of appropriations bills and naos*-
t 'nary amendments to existing kgls-
la tion.
Harr.von repeated his last year**
opposition to the Townsend plan.
■lav
, _ fields declined in
f0rm*I beln« 17 sendlteTwotdd make
r.t* preceding month and the latter
15 less.
in Fis
Dro*
-r
(CONTINUKO ON PACK FIVt)
on
{poorer dames art
housing as well as
t*nd hospitalization.
Federal Judge Is
Again Threatened
KAN8
(UP)-Ui
to aid In
drowned today in seas rearmblin?
tidal waves which struck the Brit-
tany coast. ’ * in J
The fishing boat Avenir Du Mar-
in. with a crew of seven, wgs bat-
tered to pieces and the debris was
ctrewn
roast.
for three
»04 along
—
lee of th* properties Included In the
Missouri Pacific system, resigned as
today. Baldwin had been
with Guy A.
Jung, IMS.
rain tonight
and not quits r> oold
sr in southeast portion
Maximum 40,
'CHICAGO. Dec. 26- UP -Ar-
tlur W. Outten, nationally known I loriunt. Prance. Djae.
Main operator, rtcently dismiss'd (UP)_ Seven fishermen were
a hospital after an attack of
was placed under an
tent today following a heart
tad:. | > j J
I Cutten was released from Paaea-
Hoepital Monday, apparently
from the pneumonia which
his entrance into the
l November 28.
He collapsed in his suite at the
Hotel a short while later, It
learned today.
I Dr. Alb rt F. Byfield, who or-
dered the oxygen admimst red aald
he waa not concern**^ over his pa-
tient-. condition, however, describing
simply as “too many visitors over
holiday.”
said U was a "minor setback”
the pneumonia attarif.
tt*n enured the hospital the
after the Unted States Court of
voided a ruling of ths Oraln
wn In France Murder Theory Is
Advanced In Death
Of Man, Texarkana
-j-
Harvard Receives
TEXARKANA. Texas. Dec. 38 —
(UP)—Apparently murdered, the
body of a man ab&ut 35 yean old
was found today In a w:odl*nd area
in the eastern outskirts of Texar-
kana. The man s throat had bee^
cut and there war* numerous knife
wounds In his obey* and abdcmgR.,
A slip of paper found near the
*500,000 Present 3L*S5?artSqSB
and that poaalbiy he was a
teacher at Oreenvllls, Texas
Trousers and shoe* wi
The man waa five fart
tall, of aallo
hair and waa
Persons bring in th* vicinity told
officer* they beard cries of
at midnight last night but
28.—
CA MBRIDGE, Mass, Dec
(UP)—Harvard Uni vend ty j
a Christmas present of half a mil-
lion dollars President James B.
Conant announced Thomas W. La-
m:nt. New York banket, had mad*
an unrestricted gift! lor that
amount
Building Contract
Will Be Let Today
AS CITY. MO., Dee. 28 —
—Judge Merrill E. Otis of the
federal c*>urt who declared the
education Wa8Ber unconstitutional
ita a derision here last week, today
threatened with death.
It is the second time in four
AUSTIN,
—Chairman
8UU Board
the board t*
for th* state
Central
this
Centennial
s artenioon
38— (UP)
•er of the
Control said todry
to let a contract
at the Dallas
tomf
building at the l
nnUl Exposition
Board member* met today to cou-
gar revision* that are expected to
tag the building coat within the
ble appropriation
w a r ••"•wii •
available
e mlaatag
M inches
month* that Judge Otis has been
threatened.
Today's threat was by letter from
Chicago. There was no handwrit- I
»ng in the letter which contained a
clipping from a Chicago newspaper
with the stcry of Judge Otis’ de-
cision, The clipping reviewed the
decision and carried a picture of the
Pasted on the dipping were print-
ed words cut out of another part of
the paper which read, “your last
Christmas.” Below thkt w
paper photograph of an
Pistol pasted in such a
the barrel of the gun era*
t:wards Judge Otis' picture
and indicated he believed Town-
no prog wes at
the new eesrion.
Praising the AAA. he said If the
Supreme Court should lnvahdats it,
another program of agricultural aid
would be evolved.
So far as any general tax leg's-
lation is coneemed," Harrison said,
"I don't look for It and I dent
think it Is in the realm of possi-
bility."
He was more emphatic In disease-
tag proposals for a manufacturer**
•katee act and aald flatly such r.
bill would not be
Ne Delay an
Harrison aald there would be no
delay In the Senate In <*w*a4d«4ng
bonus legislation the House might
pass. .
“I think we can get together on
bonus legislation." he said, “but I
am not prepared to say exactly
what It wlU be. ’The bffl I advo-
cated last year would not hast been
. U .. Dec
Ware, if, was killed
Arcadia, La
ha was riding
Of the Townsend plan, he said)
"It Is an absolute Impossibility tor
a government that has had to meet
tUturee because
of extraordinary oondttiona to un-
further expenditures that
to . f3i009.000.000,
proponents of fee
plan admit they oap raise only
•boat 84,000,000.060 oat of the pro-
tax."
particularly
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View two places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 61, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 26, 1935, newspaper, December 26, 1935; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth987313/m1/1/?q=sweet: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.