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4
TH£ ttP.TTNSWTCK NEWS
Published every mornlDg. except Mon
day by
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.,
Brunswick, Ga
CLARENCE H. LEAVY
°resident and Editor.
[The News Bldg., 1604 Newcastle 8L
*—
■entered at the Brunswick, (Ga.' Post
Office as second-class mail matter.
ji,'/. t . ' '
SUBSCRIPTION RATCB
One Year 67.50
Six Months 64.00
Three Months $2.00
One Month .70
. Member of the Associated Press.
The Associated. Press is exclusivity
entitled to the use for publication of!
ill news credited to it or not other-;
arise credited In this paper ana also j
.O th e local news published herein.
ALL DEPARTMENTS PHONE .36
!
Why of course it can be done! It|
must be done!
Teacher attacks Atlanta spirit, says
a headliner of the esteemed Atlanta
Journal. Spirit or spirits?
The (American peace delegates are
to hold their first meeting toihorrow.
They seem to be coming early to
avoid the rush.
The Yanks and the Giants are into
the home ijtreUth and as y<?t, both
teams have a good chance of win
ning.
Now, alter all, who would not like
the job of Imperial Wizard at an an
nual stipend of |12,000. Really, It
takes a wizard to pull such stunts.
We note that a change of venue has
been granted to Governor Small of
Illinois. What he needs is a change
of heart and a change in climate!
Col. House declares in oue of those
syndicated Interviews, that the peo
ple and not the press are demanding
publicity on government matters.
Wonder how the Colonel fcnows?
If we can accomplish one half of
the things here In Brunswick that
we have on hand in 1022, thut i* going
to Me some sweet new year for Bruns
wick!
The IrlHh and the English have
been in session in Downing street
now for two full duys and no explo
sions have dostroyod the furniture uh
yet.
We arc rather afraid that the
searchlight which the government is
turning on te Ku Klux. Klan will have
to have some very powerful rays, if
it proves equal to the emergency.
Wow! The war tax on Pullman
rara and railroad tickets la to come
oil on January lirat. We hope to run
over to Savannah and see PlUy Sut
-11 v shortly t her after!
if there it* to bo an open dlcu*lort
on Novombor 2 of that plan to devel
op one Of the Georgia porta, then
UrunawUk and her vmrtcus commer
cial organisations have inur* to do
*1 the meantime. This la a real op
portunity and If we can place luruns
wlck’s advantages before tnls com*
mission, wo ought to win. hinds
down.
There Is no gainsaying the faei that
there Is anew and an uw kened
llruaswlck spirit abroad In thin town
today and that's the great motive
force that's going to put that St. Si
mon bridge over. Too tong have we
watted for someone to come here *nd
build and develop our own city for
~* W* must do it ours id'ea or the
job won t be done.
Those participants in that unem
ployment conference announce that
they are going to remove the.C*use
of idleness. If they do. they will first
havt* to convince labor and labor agi
tator* that we are living In times of
peaie with peace price* and peace
w agesJ
editorial
11% upmrely up to the people O*.
Hrtittswick now to say whether or uot
y v want tMt St Simon bridge. We
II • jPMNUpK we.Htnow nhal
h m* cost ou W* km w there >* <nt
one way ob %•**!** *arth to get it.
Will w<* gt*- \t* wort amt grt t* tlmt
wa> ’ VW believe I* k®'
lag u |S* \ttet Ve ; v this* It* l *.
It a in’the atmosphere VVeki*t rant
altcud tv win the opportunity.
NOW THEN, LET’S GO TO WORK.
It’s all set!
We either want that St. Simon
bridge or we don’t!
If we want it, we know now whal
it will cost and how to go about get
ting it. It will cost around $293,000,
and the plan is to bond city and coun-'
ty ot produce this revenue.
For our part we believe the project
is the one great big thing for thhr
community to do and it can be done,
there is no question about that!
, It can be done, it must be done and
it will be done, because Brunswick
has purged her lexicon of that nega
tively *slothful word “can’t” or “can
not,” and qailed to her masthead the
synonymous terms —performance and
achievement. Every day witnesses
performances of notable sort, and ev
ery day sees achievement of the kind
that builds for the common good.
There was a time, and not so long
ago at that, when St. Simon Island
was considered hopeless as a civic as
set. Today all Brunswick acknow
ledges its potential worth to city and
state, once it is made easily accessi-'
ble to vehicular travel which will be
certain to bring ramifications in de
velopment nearly if not quite as val
uable in dollars and cents as is the
port’s marine business. And this
statement is in no sense a hectic view
of a tremendously big undertaking.
It means just this and perhaps more.
It is not premature to say that in a
general sense the construction ex
pense of conecting St. Simon Island
with Brunswick Is merely an inci
dental item in the development and
expansion of an asset too long dor
mant. but one which when quickened
will be practically boundless and lim
itless. Tradition and heritage are
more or less xacred institutions and
should be so guarded. St. Simon is
full cf folklore and history of the
sort worth conning at times and re
membering always, but they have no
place in the affairs of the world and
could not possibly be turned into any
thing resembling a spoke in the wheel
(*f civil and state progress. That we
are lust new planning to give the Is
land to the world proves that we have
too long clung to and ter riled the im
practical; Instead of clarion-sounding
the actual wealth and value of that
particular thing. Thank G;d. that
day has passed and forever, albeit
the tradition, the folklore, the ro
mance and the history of old St. Si
mon will always furnish inexhaustible
themes to those coming thousands
sure to follow the building of the
■tmuseway.
Upon Brunswick and Glynn county
will fall the major burden of throwing
•open and developing the empiric rich
es of an Island too long neglected
from the viewpoint of commerce and
Industry, with the social side as an
ever increasing fountain ot wealth.
The News firmly believes that Bruns
wicktans are now fully allveHo what
St. Simon Island means to them anti
those representing them after they
have passed. The News believes these
bond issues will be speedily called
and that the awakeued Brunswick
spirit will put It through with little
or no difficulty. The Young Men’s
Slub, the Board of Trade, and other
aggressive civic bodies have said it
must be done and it will be done. The
Brunswick spirit of forging ahead lu
sted or standing still, with our eyes
to the ground and our minds cud
dling the past, will not be denied.
WHY NOT INDEED?
y
The following from the Way-cross
Journal-Herald Is full of real common
sense.
Certainly It would .be refreshing if
si me of the things suggested by our
Waycross contemporary should really
and truly happen.
Here Is what The Herald says about
it;
There are days for this and days
( r that and days for the other cause
ami occaslou.
And there are weeks for dttto.
"Pay-up week" and then "buyers'
week;" "fashion show week." and
then "candy week" and "fire preven
tion day." soon it will be "orphans'
day” and then "some other day."
There have been scores of these six'
dal days set apart ot the observance
Of this and that virtue, for the booe-
lit of lhi*t*gtd the other cause.
Their acuteness came- from the war* j
time period when the heatless days
and the llghtless nights, the wheat
less meal times and the days of spe
cial prayer, the drive days and the
campaign weeks all called for the
overt op ness of tht/ extra efforts. In,
economic and ether senses they are
much' like the revival seasons in re
ligious m*tier*. They # are also some
time* much like the fast days and
special service day* in the schedules
of some of the churches.
They art' all for the purpose of em
pi-.mixing especially the extraordl
f-or 4 need' fkr v
.there should be necessity for these
extraordin r> k> a*ions of observa
tion. education, celebration, means, id
'CCttrWM, that therw-i* a lack of s
whlhn. a wanting of •..**! hp* to
bMiig condition* up to
dard; The Quitman Free Press has a
suggestion for another special week
not before mentioned, we believe:
It is rare that the average
newspaper boosts its own busi
ness, but it gives quantities of
space to boosting the affairs of
others.
Somebody suggested that it
was time for the newspapers of
the country to adopt a week in
which their own business should
be given preference, and the date
set is the second week in Novem
ber, from the 7th to the 12th, in
cluding that great world event,
Armistice Day.
The official title for the week
will be “Subscribe for Your Home
Town Paper Week.” Thousands
of papers will, join in this event,
and our readers will hear more
about it as the time gees on.
Ever ready to help in any cause
that is in the interest >cf a bet
ter community, better living con
ditions, and better government,
we now ask the readers and ad
vertisers of the Free Press to
turn in and lend a hand during
“Subscribe for Your Home Town
Paper Week,” and bocst it.
(Now, that’s all right.
But—
Why not every week “Boost-yoyr
ov.n-home-town-paper-Week?” That
wrnld be natural, the normal thing.
are. laggings and lapses, one
ca not stick around high pressure all
the time, things will relax in spite of
al! wa can do; yet how much better
it wolild be for the home folks to
every week in every year,
stand by their home paper with a
consistent’, persistent loyplty that
w< uld insure the right sort of back
ir r without! now-pnd-then extra pull
and special push..
' So with the other things: Why not
qvery week in the 1 year s fire preven
tion week; it ought to be that way.
Why not every week pay-up week;
that ought to be the normal rule. Why
net every week a “buyers' week”
uniform and steady and natural in op
eration. Why not every evening the
evening of another Thanksgiving Day
and every morning the beginning of
another New Year’s Day?
' .N OW they tell us that Japan is tp
bring up the Philippines at the Arma
ment conference. However, we imag
ine Japan Is going to be pretty busy
with ether and more important mat
ters than the Philippines on the occa
sion in question.
That was a very earnest meeting at
the Board of Trade yesterday after
noon, when the St. Simon Highway
Campaign committee was launched
and plans were thrashed out for the
success of the forthcoming bond is
sue for the St. Simon bridge. These
present were enthusiastic and it is a
very fine indication of the sort of
work that is going to be done in the
Interest of this magnificent improve
ment, which we all want and want
bcdly.
THANKFUL H- WAS
NOT A WOMAN.
The late Laiwnon Tait. of England,
ihe great woman’s doctor, said he
never went to bed at night without
thinking heaven he was not born a
woman. No doctor ever knew better
than he what women have to suffer
n some times cf their lives. It was
an American woman, long since P*
od to her reward, who Introduced s
e, mbination of roofs and herbs called
l.ydia E. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Com
pt.und, that has proved wrnderfully
successful In mitigating suffering and
relieving diseases of women. It has
b: ought relief to thousands of worn
on who suffered from female ills.
INDIGESTION
Busy Public Official Says Thed>
ford’s Black-Draught Helps Him
Keep Physically Fit.
flay City, Ky.—~l have been In
business here for twenty-one years;
aru also coroner, riding the Kentucky
hills and hollow* in all kinds of
weather and under all klndi of con
d lions,” say* Mr. Sam T. Carr, of this
place. “To be able to do so, I must
keep physically fit, and Thedford**
Black-Draught is my stand-by.
"These trips used to give me head
aches, and that. 1 found, came from
hurried meals or from constipation.
”1 was convinced that Black-Draught
a.- mod, so now I use it. and it gives
) feet satisfaction. It acts on ths
H'. jr, relieves indigestion, and certain
ly ! splendid. I am never without It’-
When yon have a feeling of dlscom
fort after meals, causing a bloating
sensation, headache, bad breath, and
similar common symptoms, try taking
• pinch of Riaek-Draught after meals—
s Pinch of the dry powder, washed
d-'n with a swal’ow of water. This
hf/ Jjcen-*fpund to assist the stomach
*r,i liver fo carry on their normal
w,T-V. and trips prevent, or relievo
c< * sUpatton.
*ar druggist can supply you with
t! * well-known. purely-v**re:*hle llvei
t Iciue Insist npuo Tbedford s. the
e -rtn*l and onlv f'Tjuhw Black
Draught Hvec medicine. NOIJT*
THE
Mrs. Rose M. Brown
Gained €0 Pounds in
Four Weeks Time
Declares it’s Simply Astonish
ing to See the Wonderful
Benefits She Has Derived
From Tanlac.—Says Terrible
Headaches Have Disappeared
“It sounds unreasonable, but I have
actually gained 20 pounds in less than
a month’s time by taking Tanlac, and
the wonderful benefit I have derived
from, the use of this medicine is sim
ply astonishing,” said Mrs. Rose M.
Brown, 111 Third street, Manchester.
N. H.
“Why, I am so happy to be relieved
“f rrv troub’er. I can really never
praise ibis medicine enough. Up to
the time I irgan taking Tanlac. I suf
fered something ever two years
with a very b and fornf cf stomach trou
ble.
“My appetite was so poor I could
scarcely oaf a thing. My stomach
w'uT-i be so brdly bloated with gas
sometimes T whs almost a’raid to go
tc bed for 1 would actually
smother. I felt tried and worn out
most 'of the time and became teribly
discouraged over my condition. I of
ten h.ad such violent headaches I was
unable to l>e out of bed for two or
three days at a stretch.
“Four bottles of Tanlac completely
restored my health and any:ne # can
see at p glance the wonderful change
that has taken place, in my condition
i have a splendid appetite now and
the stomach trouble has entirely dis
appeared. I can eat just anything l|
want without ever feeling a sign of!
Try News Want Ads
Portable Saw service
Now is the time to have your
wood cut. Don’t wait until we
are swarmed with orders. '
Prices Right - Phone 389
APPLY AT 1527 (iRANT ST.
BROOKER NEWS AGENCY
We Are Now Agent
'for
The Savannah Press
The* Florida Times Tnitm
The 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 an! cigar departments al
ways at your sjrvice, phone trial order
**(>ur mission on earth is to m ake others happy—tor cash
of credit/* # f
Glynn Drug Cos.
PHONE 827
MRS. ROSE M. BROWN.
indigestion. The best of ail, I am
never bothered any more with head
aches and this was the greatest relief
of all. I want to tell everybody what
this medicine has done for me.”
T-lilac is sold in Brunswick by
G. V.JCates.
Let Us Be Your Book-keep r
A dozen short years ago few people kept personal books of account.
Today, however,, the requirements of the incomejtftx; are such as to
necessitate the keeping of boons or some form of record by nearly
everyone. ' ./ ' • | ■ < 4
More and more • people are using t he, convenience of a checking account
• f *■
in this bank, and thus an immediate and complete record of all cash re
ceipts and disbursements.
* rri
ONE DOLLAR WILL START
/it
“THE BANK WITH A HEART.” ;
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM.
Be Em. Your Kilt hen!
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 Round Oak Ironbilc
Range grr ees the kitchen. Art jnge to have one installed
-select It now and have us hold it. You are fully pr
leered in the matter of price—sec note below. By seeing u*
ai once you will be the gainer in more vay3 than one
- for particulars.
ROUND OAK
I RQNBILT RANGE
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 anytime
. this year you will receive the benefit of the full amount ol •
it from us. Buy or contract now. Come in and talk it over. ' ,
WRIGHT & G OWEN CO.
GROCERIES AND SHIP SUPPLIES
PHONE 336-33/. 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
SPEF.DQLINE
Brunswick, Ga., July 30tb, 1931.
Mr. J. W. Duggan.
George. Glynn County.
To Whom it -'Uy Concern: Ihave urW Speedoline and made
test with it Tny Ford car. also car, and finf |tl|ttt It Is a gas
saver and improve the running of the engine. Speedoline cer
tainly deserved credit for being all you clainrT<ir It, and it saves
tbirty per cent of the gasoline bill.
Ycurs very truly,
J. B. HINSON, Merchant.
Georgia, Glynn County.
To Whom it May Concern: I have used fcoeedolino and find that
l can get more rrileagtie by u.nng Sps-edoline. On ten gallons,
of gasoline 1 got fifty miles more by using Speedeline. I can
reqotnro* nc it to any of my frier dp to ootuo up.
Rioted V E. B. WELCH.
ONE QUART SAVES SI2 TO SIS IN GASOLINE BILLS
J. W. DUGGAN
160S Reynolds St. SOLE AGENTS Phone 653
THURSDAY, OCT. 13, 1921.