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4
Z¥L BRUNSWICK NEWS
Published every morning except Mon
day by
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.,
Brunswick, Ga
L 1
CLARENCE H. LEAVV
°resident and Editor. ;
The News Bldg.. 1604 Newcastle
Centered at the~Uru {Ga.*
Office as secoud-cljss mall niatcer^
SUBSCRIPT lit RATES
One fez r t . Jf, f . S7.WJf
Six Months J.v 1 $4,00
Three Months... $'P
One Mon th .f,t 70
Member of the Associated Press.
The Associated Press is exclusive
sntltled to the use lor publication o’
all news credited to It or not other
rise credited in this paper and als*
iO th e local news published herein
ALL DEPARTMENTS PHONE ’.SS
Baseball is King for the moment!
i
That English-Irish muddle seems
to have taken a rather long delayed
vacation.
It Is the earnest desire of the Young
sheep skin for a homer in this world
series, many American boys are head
ed for serious heartaches.
If any man in this town or any wo
man or child for that matter, is not
tickled to death to live in a climate
like this, then there is some hopeless
pessimists in the community, *
It sithe earnest desire of the Young
Men’s Club to complete the work of
stock selling for the City & Interur
ban today. If you have not yet sub
scribed, you can help the cause ma*
tericly by doing So during the day.
Congress is all tanlged up on the
Tax revision measure and bpth parties
seem to be lost in the maze of uncer
tainties, etc., that seems to exist in
tlie minds of the members, as io what
the people really want in the way of
a revision of the taxes! What a joke!
After the most successful meeting
since Its organization, tne League of
Nations has adjourned its sessions at
Genova. Net results nave been au n
med by experts, who pronounce the
last session the most far reaching
one in the history of the league.
Each day wltmpises a few additions
to that groat Florida trip now planned
by Brunswick business men for the
latter part of October. The idea is a
uniquef and interesting one and it is
our opinion that the journey will re
sult in some good results to Brunswick
in several different ways.
The conviction of Glenn Moore Hud
son at lAlbany on Wednesday for the
brutal murder of two of his step chil
dren concludes u chapter in one of
the most heinous crimes ever com
mitted in Georgia. Mrs. Hudson, the
mother of the murdered children Is
charged with conspiracy {n the crime
and will by placed on trial next Mon
day.
The alumni of the Georgia univ€rsi
ty in showing a groat spirit. It is tak
lug in hand the tu*k of raising one
million dollars for the great old in
stitution ami it’s dollars to doughnuts
that they succeed. The drive in
Brunswick is to be opened next Tues
day evening with a dinner in a local
hotel, In which the alumni of several
south Georgia counties will partici
pate. Here Is success to ‘he splendid
movement.
The News feels assured that hUr
meny and a better understanding
will come out of the school meeting
scheduled for this evening. We are
ail working to the sain? common end
and wo feel very li'rtaln that the
Board of education nnd its patrons
will get together In Ihe old spirit of
•the greatest good |to the greatest
number." U la a vttai Question far
reaching In Its natureiand entering In
to the very firesides td a majority of
the Brunswick honw|s We sincere
ly hope that the conchiston of the ses
•am this evening will And everybody
happy!
City and county officials are work
ing In conjunction with each other on
the very Important matter of that St
Simon bridge. A Joint meeting of
the City and County Commissions was
hi hi yesterday and another Is called
far Monday afternoon *t three o'clock
Hap* have not been given |he pub
Br for th? kvvnga b qfr not yet
detail* enough for that. However,
the pei|4c can rest assured that ev
erything possible u being dune to at
cunt tbU geest impieveiarnl aad Just
■ eve as it i deemed wise the *
ore plan will he announced.
WHAT WE GET FOR OUR MONEY.
To the frequently heard complaint
that our. wondrous mechanical inven
tions have served to increase rather
than reduce the cost of living, a far
looking economist replies that while
this is true a's regards prices, it should
be noted that incomes have
mounted with the development of ma
chinery, says the AtfaMa, Jprfrnal J
/’The reward jou reedtitejli&!povr dal *
iy toil,” says he, lb
what you are able to fur
n'shings cf, yeur homefThe food on
your table, the pleasures you procure,
Individual articles cost more than in
the days of Jjand but ma
chines enable' us to
comforts to every one commonly en
jcyed before the mechanical age.”
The more concretely this idea is
considered, the richer its truth ap
pears. When Lucullus cooled his ban
quet wines with snow fetched from
the caps of distant mountains, the
cost of living was far less for the run
of Roman families than for the aver
age American household of today;
but only the wealthiest could afford
such a luxury then, whereas now the
cobbler as well as the king eats ice
cream and shares in hundreds of
viands mode available by refrigera
tion. In the year 1730 or thereabouts
it took Benjamin a fortnight to travel
from Philadelphia to Boston; today
he would make the journey between
breakfast and luncheon —and would
not grumble, we fancy, at the increas
ed prices which an age of mechanical
marvels has brought. When Hardy
Ivy built his pioneer cabin on what is
now the corner of a roaring Atlanta
thoroughfare, he hewed cord upon
cord of hickory and pine for the kitch
en fireplace, and sat long winter even
ings through by candle or faggot light.
As frugal a life it was as heart could
wish; but are you, earnest sir or mad
am, ready to abandon your gas burn
ers and electric, buttons, with the
countless comforts and amenities at
tending them?
-No doubt we could live on a great
deal less were we to destroy the mech
anism which the last century or so
has produced, and some could live
more wholesomely. But as it is, unde
niably we receive more for cur money,
and those who so will can keep life
wholesome, . however complex living
may become.
*A NEW KIND OF JUDGE.
Long centuries have inculcated In
Tto layman’s mind a taste for dignity
in Judges and the magistrate who
deals flippantly with matters and
clowns it in the court room wins little
respect. Our desire for decorum and
sobriety is so strong and cold blooded
bumptious magistrates who are all but
radical, are countenanced for the sake
of tradition in spite of the resentment
their Imperiousness stirs.
But New York City has anew and
unusual kind of judge in the person
of Justice William Morris of the Sec
ond District Municipal Court. Recent
ly a number of landlords, who threat
ened to evict tenants for failure to pay
increased rents, appeared before him
Justice Morris brought his clinched
(Ist down on the desk with u resound
lug thump and announced that if
there wee any “grasping, gouging
landlords present” he was prepared
to tell them in advance that if they
wanted eviction warrants signed they
were going to be disappointed. The
landlords should have taken the cue
and left, but one o fthem tried to ar
gue and threatened to appeal to the
Supreme Court, Then Judge Morris
got into action.
He peeled off his Judicial robe, roll
efl up his sleeves and pointing his
Anger at the unfortunate pleader
shouted; "Go to the Supreme Court!
Go to Hell- 1 think more of the little
Anger of one of The children of one
of those tenants than all of the grasp
ing landlords combined.”
Before the courtroom had ceased
echoing to the angry voice of the
judge the room emptied of landlords,
who tread upon another’s heels in
their eagerness to get away.
The Judge's outburst may have been
undignified and his conduct may have
been out of keeping with time hon
ored traditions of the bench, but we
•re inclined to believe that the God
dess of Justice has a faithful servant
in the person of a pudge who ehn get
good and "mad" in a righteous cause.
-
THE MINNESOTA WAY.
The federal bureau of education
quotes with gratification a general in
crease in teachers' salaries scheduled
for the 1932 school year, taking the
country as a whole; which denotes a
hopeful and encouraging trend of con
ditions.
But even with th* general increase
in salaries, the mean level of teach
era*. pay is still far from being o<*m
pmttsurulc with justice 16 the letch
ing profession, or with the needs of
the public. Asa matter of fact, the
teachers in most part* of the coun
try. even with the increases provid
ed for the nest year, will be woefully
imdrp*id, whjtjitheir importance and
value to the communities they serve
is taken into consideration.
And the blame for this, at least in
most of the states, rests upon the in
dividual communities rather than up
on the states.
In Georgia, for example, the state
is doing perhaps all that it could rea
son? bly be expected to do in the mat
ter of providing financial assistance
for the public school system; but.
that cannot be Said cf the great ma*'
-jority of the counties: and the indi
vidual communities.
For years efforts have been put
forth to induce the counties to aid
their public schools by the levy of
local t?xation specifically fer educa-
Vosal purposes. One county after
-nether was for a time added to the
list voting local school taxation, un
til the summer of 1919, when the total
number of local taxation counties
having rerched only seventy-five, the
legislature enacted the Elders-Cars-'
well bill, making the county school
tax principle state wide in its applica
tion.
Even with thta, however, the com
munities and county units of govern
ment in Georgiaa are doing nowhere
nearly ?s much as they should do for
their schools, particularly in the mat
ter of adequately compensating their
teachers. , <
Minnesota has adopted a plan that
in substance ought to be adopted by
Georgia: That is, the refusal of the
state aid to schools which do not at
least pay SIOO a month to normal
school graduate teachers, and $l2O a
month to graduates with two years
experience.
Georgia, and practically every city
and school district in the state, has
suffered and is suffering from a short
age of teachers, which state of af
fairs is due solely to the failure of
tha counties and communities to hold
out to teachers adequate inducements
in the w3y of salaries equal to those
paid in other lines of empoyment.
In other words, the general atti
tude of the communities has been
that of “Let George do it!”—“George”
in this instance, being the state of
Georgia.
Their whole inclination has been
to hold back and hoard their resour
ces, relying upon the state to carry
the whole, or the major portion of
the burden of educating their chil-
dren.
The result is, our teachers, are com
pelled to subsist upon what. i Virtual
ly starvation wsges. *
i " " ■ "T"""""* ■ .. 4in<v’'.
PERSONAL
My beauty parlor has been in op
eration for over a year, and I have
successfully treated ladies from New
York, Jacksonville, Chicago, and oth
er places, who say they have never
received more thorough or more rea
sonabUy pricod work.
I have studied and worked in New
f \
( titans, Richmond and Athens.
A share of your patronage is so
licited and will be sppreciated.
Mrs. H. D. Cummings, 1416 Union
Street, Phone 1090. _ 9-11
Vigor of Youth in
A New Discovery
t
Science Produce* a Vitalized Super.
lor to Famous Qland Treatment.
Magic Power of African Bark.
Have you loat your youth, vigor and
"pep"? Does life seem dull and work
n grind? Don't worry. Science has
discovered anew vitaiizer superior
even to the much discussed "goat
g'and" and “monkey gland" treat
ment.
The principal Ingredient is an ex
tract from the bark of an African tree.
It is said to be the most amazing in
vlgorator ever discovered. Combined
with it are other tonic and vitalizing
elements of proved merit. In most
cases, the compound produces mark
ed improvements in a day or two. and
In a short time the vitality is raised,
the circulation Improved and the
glow of health is felt in every part.
The new vitaiizer contains expen
sive chemicals, but manufacturing in
•normous quantities has brought the
cost within the reach of all. Further
more, the laboratories producing this
new vitaiizer. which is called Re-Nu-
Tabs, are so confident of its power
chat they offer it on the basis of “no
results, no pay "
Any loader of this paper may teat
Ihd new discovery without risk. Send
no money, but Just your name and ad
to the Re-Nu Laboratories.
260-C Gateway Station, Kansas City.
Mo., and a full treatment of Re-Xu
Tabs will be ms Had. Deposit $1 and
puatage with the post man m dcliv
ery. If hot delightvd by the results
At the end of a week, notify the lab
oratories and your money wUI be w
funded in fall. Do net hesitate about
* con pit ns rtm test offer, as it is full*
guaranteed. * *
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
Miss Mattie
Gate
Has Rcooened
t
Private Nch ol
at h a
ii c i < c
S # ■
70r.; ’
Norwic; Street
oil Septeiiifcter
19th, yjll
' t
Phone 612
Homelike
What make a home “comfy”?
It is the care used by the build
er in the selection and use of
the materials.
The final result shews a touch
of quiet harmony that is the
real spirit of the home-. Pride in
the little, yet important things,
is characteristic of the work of
VIERRITT, THE BUILDER
Brunswick, Ga.
* , _ ' _ --
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ti l.i \ ' s * p **^ fc
JjjJ
fjfcrxS^L
1 1 Pmoi" ’smSP
l 1 \ * ration*
Ai \*l t- ’’’
SOLO __ v
Tofc Si A’Jfi U&
WRiTcro* DOOKLL* XAi*|h<4UOliU||lM SABY me*
uld (Uuulator r 0.. cer. D. Atlanta. va.
>SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES-
Allen s Foot*. Eat, thn Aitil'cj 'At jiottJct to be
shaken Into Uie ahocs and sprinUej in she foofr
bat!.. Tbt I’luiUUnit; Camp ManualaUvl#emen
in training to uae Foot—En*j in their ahoca eactf
morning, ft prevents MUt. r nndacre * pot* and
relieve* painful, wo!le:i. atnartlnt; fret and lanes
the Ming out < f (•.•rim u! t.:.ni.>*,<>. Alwnva
it* AHau a t'Oot-Eaae tu treau; in Dew a hoe*.
. We Are Now Agent
for
The Savannah Press
The Florida Times Union
i he Macon Evening News
H. TREADWAY’S
Let Us Serve You
in Your Drug Line
Accuracy and service are the two
real foundations in the drug bus
iness. We strive to make them
the aim of this store.
Soda water and cigar departments al
ways at your service, phone trial order
“Our mission on earth is to ra ake others happy—for cash
; or credit.”
Glynn Drug Cos.
PjHONE 827
Save Money
Shaving with your safety ra
zor will be a pleasure if you will
send your dull safety razor
blades to the Velvet Edge Cut
lery Cos. Gillette and Durham
Duplex are specialties.
Leave blades with H. Tread
way, 1528 Newcastle Street.
THE EFFICIENT WOMAN.
4 We hear a great deal nowadays
about the efficiency of women. In the
rarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract
novels tifty years ego, who ever
heard a woman praised for her execu
tive ability, force and energy, in the
sense that it is used today? The frail,
delicate, helpless ideal of womanhood
has passed away. How is it possible
to measure up to the ideals of mod
ern womanhood? In the first place,
we must keep our bodies in the best
possible condition.
H. T. EVERS
1322 Oglethorpe Street.
Has now installed a modern
Wood-working Plant, and
will begin the manufacture
of auto truck bodies, cabs,
ytc., door and window
screens, mantel boards, in
fact anything in the wood
work line.
We will also operate a mod
srn blacksmith and horse-'
-shoeing shop.
NOTE: Furniture repaired
and shipped.
SEEDS
Seeds Seeds
We have just received anew
line of vegetable Seeds including
Ruta Begas, Purple Top Turnips.
Onion Sets, etc. Try us for your
druges.
UNION DRUG & SEED CO.
Cor. Monk and Oglethorpe Sts.
Phone 143
Norwich Street
Pharmacy
2024 Norwich St. Phone 79
Let Us Re Your Book-keeper
'cJ? 'v.. ' ,
A dozen short years ago few people kept personal hooks of account.
Today, however, the requirefnents of the income tax are such as to
necessitate the keeping of boons or some form of record by nearly
everyone.
\ . * fff
More and more peoplq are using tlio convenience of a checking acecunt
in this bank, and thus, an immediate and complete record of all cash re
ceipts and disbursements.
ONE DOLLAR WILL START
“THE BANK WITH A HEART.”
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM.
Be Extra Your Kitchen!
W-ien the new home a built, how proudly you will si tow
your new kitchen to friends! Ana how inui I, prouder
you will be if this handsome new Round Oak Iroubtlc
Range graces the kitchen. Arrange to have one installed
- select it now and have us hold it. You are fully pr
tccted in, the matter of pnee—sec note below. Ely seeing us
a onca you will be the gainer in more woys than one
ask fot particulars.
ROUND OAK
IRONOILT RANGE
The Round Oak Folks have GUARANTEED to us
their present prices against any possible decline until ne> t ,
December 1. Should a price revision occur at any time
this year you will receive the benefit of die full amount ot
it from us. Buy or contract new. Come in and talk it over.
WRIGHT & G OWEN CO.
GROCERIES AND SHIP SUPPLIES
PHONE 336-337. BAY AND MANSFIELD STB.
0
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
Brunswick, CJa., July 30tb, 1921.
Mr. J. W. Duggan.
George, Glynn Cpunty.
To Whom it May Concern: I hare u>ed SpeedpJhe and made
test with it in my Kord car, also car, and fiirtf that it is a gas
saver and improve the running of the engine. Spoedoline 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. HIXSON. Merchant.
Georgia. Glynn County.
To Whom it May Concern: I have used Speedoline and find that
1 can get more miieague by using Speedoline. On ten gallons
of gasoline I got fifty miles more by using Speedoline. 1 can
recommend it to any of my friend* Cos omaup to wpat it is
cMmed.. E. B. WELCH. *
ONE QUART SAVES SI2 TO sls IN GASOLINE BILLS
J. W. DUGGAN
1608 Reynolds St. SOLE AGENTS Phone 653
FRIDAY, OCT. 7, 1921.