Newspaper Page Text
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THE BRUNSWICK NEW S
published every morning except Mon
ti. day by
i NEWS PUBLISHING CO.,
Brunswick, Ga.
CLARENCE H. LEAVY
President and Editor.
(The News Bldg., 1604 Newcastle St.
► -
at the Brunswick, (Ga. Post
Office as second-class mall matter.
t r*
SUBSCRIPTION RATQB
One Tear 17.50
Six Months..*. 64.00
Three Months 62.00
One Montii 70
Member of the Associated Press.
The Associated Press is exciusWtuy
•ntitled to the use for publication of
til news credited to it or not other
wise credited in this paper, and also
k> th e local news published herein.
4 * *
ALL DEPARTMENTS PHONE VSS.
Would have pleased ta have those
trap shooters with us this
morning. No, we said trap shooters!
If the dear old month of September
Wanted to show her warmth of feeling
for us all, she has succeeded admira
bly.
,Moonshine liquor and a steering
wheel is a very poor combination for
any pedestrian to come in contact
with.
The Womans’ party is in session in
Washington. Here is where the pride
of lip sticks, powder puffs, etc., In
the national capital, ought to go right
UP- ; ,
So after all ft develops that Lloyd
George is not coming to the Arma
meftt conference. We wonder if Lord
Northcliffe and the London Times had
anything to do with tills conclusion?
“Agenda” Is anew coining of the
diplomatic bunch these days and be
lieve us, they are working it to a fraz
zle. Program would sound better and
all of us would know what they were
talking übout.
The source of the liquor supply at
that infamous Arbuckle party soems
to be giving 'Frisco officials more cojf
cerp than apparently the less heinous
crime of murder, which wus commit
ted ou that occasion.
If half tho things tho members of
congress, on tho tow sides, believe
about each other is really true, how
then can the House enter into any
"gentlemen’s” agreement to murk
time until October 4?
editorial
Atlanta Is busy on the job of "Ax
ing” the political slate of the state for
the elections to occur next year.
Those Atlanta politicians certainly do
believe in taking time about u year
and a half ahead of the forelock
It seems to us that the Ku Klut
Kian, whatever It may be in the way
Of good or of evil, Is getting some
powerful good free advertising theso
days. After awhile, we will begin to
believe that W. J. Simmons Is sortie
"wixard” after all.
Tle plan to make Armistice day!
a national holiday and to observe it j
this year in the form of a great cere ]
moniul of a solemn and serious nature, j
in connection with the Armament con
ference, is u great patriotic sugges-)
tlon and ought to have the cordial CO
operation of the American people.
Senator Uorah Is “proving to be a
Veritable thorn .In the side of the
Harding administration. He now an
nounces that he is going to wage war
on the Herman treaty ratification In
the Senate He believes the ratifica
tion of the treaties with Hetman?.
Austria and Hungary would ho to dab
ble in the diplomacy and the politics
of Europe, The Senator says he will
have the support of u number of Re
putdtcauH and several Democrats.
After fifteen year* lr. W. J. Me
Naughtoa has bean paroled by Gover
nor Hardwick. There ts no question
but what there was some element of
doubt in the ease and the chances
are that Governor Hardwick has "tent
iHoe<t justice with mercy” in coming
to the aid of McNaughton.
It is the very candid opinion of
Tb* Hews that tf the Clyde Mallory
line will do H share for ttrunswick,
then ttrunswick will do its full duty
k> the steamer lines, in the days
gone hv these did a good mau>
titifvHor Wijtotvrtek and
iudtnectiy cooperaidu In the unbuild
ing of the commerce of the port If
they wilt go their full measure again
itrunawttek will sot hesitate to recipro
iti There is no ti <>! a ueeaMeo
about this
BUY IT IN BRUNSWICK.
People sometimes tell the home
merchant that he does not sell as
cheaply as metropolitan stores oy mail
order houses in more or less distant
cities.
Any person wishing to compare the
two scales of prices should inquire
whether the distant store was selling
the same goods. Second grade pro
ducts can be made to look very hand
some in* a catalog cut. But the home
merchant cannot float that kind of
goods. They come back to his store
too' easily.
It is amusing to see the bother peo
ple will take for trfling sums they
think they are saving. They will trav
el many miles, spend street, car fares,
pay for lunches, hotel bills and tips.
They get tired and foots .-’e tramping
around.overgrown stores separated by
long distances. They wait for change,
carry bundles and pay express. They
pay a high price in mono/ and energy
for supposed economies.
When ycu buy goods away from
home you rarely take them back. The
bother and expense looks prohibitive.
When you buy at home you would re
turn them if dissatisfied. This takes
the time of clerks, frequently the
goods have been injured while In vour
hands. ) 1
Where it is so easy to return goods
the customer must be given both the
worth of money, and something suited
to his needs. A higher grade of sales
people is thus required in the home
store. To make a sale that will stick
so near home, the customer rhust be
given intelligent advice.
Thus the public detnar.dk from the
home store more compe efit service
than it exacts from in? distant mer
chant. This means additional ex
pense, which is counterbalanced by
lower rents and like economies.
When you consider how generously
the home store responds to all kinds'
Of demands reasonable and unreason
able, the rarigo of its prices is remark
' ’ ' low. ,
The Brunswick merchant is certain
ly entitled to the trade of the Bruns
wick people!
OPPORTUNITY FOR THE THRIFTY
The thrifty soul Is he who stands
on his own feet. There Is no confi
dence. there Is no capacity for con
structive work or for helping one’s
self like that begotten of “money in
the hank,” of having a sizeable little
y’stfckti?’ in case of emergency. The
siivfhg habit is one to be acquired
early, but once achieved it flings
more tenaciously than addiction to
the seed of the poppy.
There never was a day when there
were so many opportunities for the
man with a little money to get into
some line of business on a small scale
and build up to a point where more
than the certain comforts of life are
his. There has been talk that big
money has pre-emptied all Helds of
profit, that only the men who can
command pools of capital have a
chance to weld from the material at
hand of Independent fortunes, or more
than mere safeguarding against act*
uni want.
On every side of us we find con
crete and increasingly recurrent evi
dence that this is not so. that the man
w'th a row hundred dolars has still
many and many on opportunity If hts
eyes are open, to cut loose from the
payroll and "get In business for him
self.”
But he must have the few hundred
dollars and it is only by saving that
he can get the necessary nest-egg
There is no income so small but some
pittance per week, if it is but a nick
el dime or quarter, can be spared
without actual hurt. There is no bank
account so small hut that time and
adding to It regularly, no matter bow
smal the amounts, will make it re
spectable. and whut is more, a unit
of prwer in the economic, industrial
and financial organization of the com
munity.
| For men to keep some money to
gether instantly available t a good
thing for everybody who touches that
mcnov. The man who has it has that
Independence of spirit horn of at least
temporary security that goes so far
toward impressing those with whom
1 he has to do business no mafter on
j which end of the payroll he does it.
J The banker with whom the money is
| left uses It to the general develop
i mem. strengthening and prosperity of
; the community, fertilizing the field
j ** a matter of fact for the time when
! the owner shall put it into that field
tn some enterprise of his own No
man of family, of course, need he re
j minded ef what it means' to hate roon
jey ahead. It is as necessary as insur
am e.
Gradually the American people,
frem having been the most pmdiga 1
on earth, are coming to nor
- t.>. ilrftt * the * numbm *•'•
wtnepay twVnty jwr tor da
cdukl gtadc <n article jgkt
tomobedv is looking and they hvtr to
ap|ear "rbip” by pr,de**ii*t4. Is
steadily len*tb*nmg Tlx* wimbei of
\ .wmg mm a and women who have pjHb
In thdr bank books has reached in
overlive proper-, jr, am' as individ
uals, jrin the side of the thrifty so
the opportunities multiply for them
to use the fruits of thefr thrift to
their own further increment and prog
ress. The grouping of money is bound
to increase the demand for it and en
hance the returns from it. That
sounds paradoxical but in the larger
and actual sense it is literally true.
a “Public defender.”
Tj&ire Is always a public persecutor
—wiy not a “public defender?”
Why not a public official to safe
guard the interests of a man, charged
with crime? That is what M. C. Gold
man of the New York bar wants to
know. The idea has been adopted
in Oklahoma and Los Angeles, and
he would jiave their example followed
in New York staife.
The' point ik that in the case of a
poor man the legal battle is likely
to be unequal. The prosecutor, by
virtue of his position and his well or
ganized system of gathering and sub
mitting evidence, has an advantage
over the counsel employed by the poor
prisoner cr counsel assigned to him by
the court. If there was an official of
equal standing with the prosecutor,
whose duty consisted in presenting
tip prisoner’s case just as the prosecu
tor presents the case against him, he
would have a fairer chance.
Opponents cf the plan declare that
with the jury system and the elabor
ate set of safeguards our procedure
throws around an accused person
there is more danger of the state suf
fering than the prisoner—that in seek
ing to protect innocence we have made
it too difficult to convict a guilty man.
This, however, is seldom strictly
true except of the prisoner who has
money eough to employ a good law
yer and to pay all necessary fees. It
is generally easy enough to impede
and delay the processes of justices.
And that is what makes the idea of
a public defender at least worth con
sidering.
THE TEST OF CULTURE.
A University of Chicago professor
is credited with' anew system for tell
ing whether a man or woman is really
educated. He has no pedantib notions
alout education; he doesn’t care
whether it’s acquired in college or in*
the factory or on the farm. Th<* es
sential thing, he maintains, is not
what a person has learned, but \vhat
sort of person he has become. \
And sd tli* pfofefcsor suSmiuf. these
homely tests:
Do you see anything to loVe in a
little child?
Will a lonely dog follow you in the
street?
Can you be high-minded and happy
in the meanest drudgeries of life?
Do you think washing dishes or hoe
ing corn is just as compatible With
high thinUing as pia&o playing or
goir?
IT you can answer these questions
in the ufllrfnatlve, a cultured
m n or woman, says the professor.
And if this scheme of culture val
ties is correct, irmy a bachelor of arts
at and doctor of 1 hilosophy could afford
to sit at thp jet of a kitchen mechan
ic or street sweeper.
m
• Marsh hen season is on— *
* Let me put your gun in '
* first-class condition.
• *
T. ATKINSON !
i
* Bicycle Repairing
* —and—
* Dun and Locksmith.
* Bicycle Sundries Always
on Hand.
* Prices Reasonable and
!* <
Satisfaction Guaranteed ,
204 Monk Street
h
„SEEDS
Seeds Seeds
We have just received anew
line of vegetable Seeds including
Kuta Begas, Purple Top Turnips.
Onion Sets, etc. Try us tor your
Uruges.
UNION DRUG k SF.FD CO.
Cor. Monk and Oglethorpe Sts.
> Phone 14d
f $ and"
Norwich Street
Pharmacy
1024 Norwich St. Phone 79
THE fcfclJMSWfC*
24% Million Dollars
Invested by Employes
~wof Swift
... More than 21.000 employes of
Swift & Company own or are pay-*
ing for shares in the business. These
men and women have attested
their faitE in the integrity and good
will or trie company by investing
their savings in the business.
Their holdings represent a
total of nearly 250,000 shares, the
par value (SIOO a share) of ’Yhich
is more than $24,500,000.
These 21,000 represent more
than one-third of our average
number of employes!
*
One man out of every three, in
plant, office, and branch house,
from the handworker on the floor
to the brain worker at the desk;
working with us as well as for us,
devoting himself to his own busi
ness while devoting himself to ours;
promoting his own interests in
every motion or moment saved, in
every product improved or main
tained at perfection, in every service
rendered through prompt,thorough*
effective distribution of products.
4 This interested, eager group of
fellow partners Working with us for
the good of Swift & Company and
the public which we serve, consti
tutes one-half of the ownership of
Swift & Company in point of num
bers, and nearly one-sixth in point
of shares outstanding.
It represents practical and suc
cessful progress toward the end at
which enlightened modern industry
is aiming for the solution of indus
trial problems—to ward cooperation,
mutuality, brotherhood in busi
ness, for the good of all.
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
Get Your Coal For Next Winter NOW
Prices are bound to advance each month from now' on. Buy
while prices are reasonable.
Coney & Parker Company
Phone 17 and 18. 1129 Bay Street
Will the World Please
Come to Order—
While we give you the correct information on the only line
of Chocolates in tl|© world that are worthy of the name.
Get, your mind on WHITMAN'S Qhocolates. There are two
kfmis of Chocolatd# in the world, WHITMAN'S Chocolates
a\d ail others, aiKj>don’t forget that we are the only firm
in this husk/ village who are allowed to sell you these
Chocolates. They are the climax of the candy maker’s
artT ancTany time WHITMAN'S Chocolates get you in bad,
the bitter joke is on us and we will hand you back your
coin jSntfijeg your pafrdon for being on earth. Try WHIT
MAN’S Chocolates; they make the others taste like mil
dewed hay and you will wish was as long as a fire hose.
“Our mission on earth is to m ake happy—for cash
or credit.”
k | ; f .-ta • t ; J . ■>' r .
Glynn Drug Cos.
PHONE 827
HOME BANKS
Coincident with the beginning
of the new school term we have
received a large supply of very
attractive
HOME SAVINGS BANKS
Teach the youngsters to
S-A.V-E
ONE DOLLAR WILL START <
“THE BANK Wl TH A HEART.”
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM.
Be Extra f't.iral of Yotu Kitchen!
When the new home is built, how proudly you will show
your new kitchen to friends! And how much prouder
you will be if this handsome new Roimd Oak Ironbilc
Range graces the kitchen. Arrange to have one installed
-select it now and have us hold it. You are fully pr
tected in the matter ofprice—sec note below. By seeing u*
au once you will be the gainer in more ways than one
ask fok particulars.
ROUND OAK
IRONBILT RANGE
v The Round Oak Folks have GUARANTEED to us
their present prices against any possible decline until next '
December 1. Should a price revision occur at any time
this year you will receive the benefit of the full amount of
it from us. Buy or contract now. Come in and talk it over.
Wright & o owen co.
GROCERIES AND SHIP SUPPLIES
PHONE 336*337. BAY AND MANSFIELD STS.
Cook With Gas
•
The cleanest, handiest and cheapest fuel. Don't be
a slave to your old kitchen stove. Cooking with gas '
is the modern way of living —it saves money, time,
worry and work. Come in and let’s talk it over.
Mutual Light & Water Cos.
PHONE 7
SPEEDOLINE
l Brunswick, Ga., July 30th,
Mr. J. W. Duggan, • * *'?*
George, Glynn County. f *' 1 * . / > r
To Whom it May Concern: 1 have ur.ed Hpeedoline and made
.peat with it in my Ford car. Also car, and hnd that it is, a gas
saver and improve the running of the • ngine. Speedolifte cer
tainly deserves credit for being all you claim for It, and it saves
thirty per cent of the gasoline bill.
• Ycurs very truly,
* * J. B. HINSON. Merchant.
Georgia. Glynn County.
To Whom it May Concern: 1 hare ummJ spotdoline and hnd that
1 can get more miieagtie by uring Bpeedollne. On ten gallons
of gasoline i got fifty mile* more by using Spccdoline. I can
a it to any of my friends to come up to wnat, It j*
cIK. IJ. WELCH. f
ONE QUART SAVES SI2 TCi SIS IN GASOLINE BILLS
J. W. DUGGAN
I6O<V Reynolds St. SOLE AGENTS Phone 653
THURSDAY, SEPT. 22, 1921.