Newspaper Page Text
* -BRUNSWICK
Mb* • landlocked harbor, th
tli* South’ Atlantic
volume xxi. n0. 3j0
SENIORITY MUST
PH. OR MEN
Will REMAIN OUT
This Statement Given Out
cago Last Night by Union
Leaders from Conference
STRIKERS NOT SUPPLANT
NEW WORKERS EMPLOYED
- -v ■ . i; 'Jit
To Those Who Remained on
JpThetV Jobs and to Thousands
2 qf, New Workers, Railroad Of
’yjwiats Say, They Must Not Ig
r'Yiore and Wilt Not Do : So.
(By Associated Press.)
Chicago, July 29.—Leaders of
the striking ra((yiray shopmen re
turning from the conferences with
President Harding tonight ex
pressed their confidence that the
walkout would be terminated as a
result of the meeting of the rail
way executives and union com
mittees next week to consider the
Harding proposals.
It is asserted that the strikers
il will return to work with their sen-
rights unimpaired if they re-
at all.
WILL STAND BY NEW WORKERS.
Washington, July 29. —Meetings are
set for next Tuesday, both by the rail
executives and the workers on a strike,
at which time the president’s plan for.
a settlement is expected to be acted
upon. The details of the plan have not
been made public, however, because
it is known that it embraced a settle
ment of all strike 'grievances except
the wage question, which would be
submitted to the labor board for a re
' tearing.
A major section in the President’s
settlement plan is understood to in
volve the seniority Issue, and .it is un
derstood that the suggestion is made
for a compromie on this issue by which
all men hired ince the strike would
retain their positions, the strikers re-,
tailing their former privileges so as toj
just rank behind the men who did not
strike on July Ist and those who have
been since employed.
The strikers, under this, plan, would j
return to their work at the wage scales
set by the labor board in its decision
of July 1, which precipitated the strike, |
but without prejudice to either side I
When the matter is brought up for a I
hearing.
The question of seniority is discuss-]
ed by railroad officials in a public ■
statement which says “a strike was or- j
jdered by union officers who have no
connection with any railroad. Many
employes, in compliance with the or-:
jder quit their’jhbs and left the railroad I
(service; and many did not leave, but
{remained loyally at work, accepting’
government’s labpr board dec is 1 - j
F j/ji' ’ -• '
A, There art> hundreds of such men
T\ip must, under the rules of fair deal-!
-mb, as well as the rules of seniority,!
protected and supported. To desert!
’ hese men'would be ingratitude of the ;
tbssest sort. , ■ . I
--W- i
{ i “In addition to these hundreds of:
nen who remained in the service, oth
ik hundreds who wanted to work have'|
Aeen employed in good faith. The new
''Employes in a great many cases left
;Other employment with, the under-]
iing thia jf competent they would i
.Alned in'their present positions. 1
iese men—-those'" who remained
tiose who enlisted - have kept the
i in Operation, and the needs and
>rts of the; people supplied,
is submitted that to now ask the
ads to set these Miyal men aside
■eplace them with the men. who
s to the Railroads- as well as
jovernmejfty which- is concerned
gh the gctWn of the United States
board, .to be disloyal to these
feds JMTo/al men.’’ -
INST RtSTOft'lNG SENIORITY
cage, July 29-.- —Expressing the
! that the employers a'nd manu
rers in th e Chicago -district, are
red to the rail executives yielding
e question of seniority.involved in
shopmen’s' strike, the Illinois Man
ufacturers Association sent a telegram
“'today to President Harding.
: Included in. the telegram was the
' Statement “we hope you will pot insist
rriri their making th.js sacrifice. We b
fslfeve th ? principle involved is vital
y and if disregarded will cause > trouble
( In the future."
.. . : ♦
f RtfilL EXECUTIVE .MAKES ATTACK
I,:’],, * (By jMgpotawt PYeris.)
f Cincinnati. proposed
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
PROTEST SENIORITY
M YIELD BY RAILROADS.
' I*
► i *1 (By Associated Press.)
New York, July 29. —The Cham
- her of .Commerce of New York
- has wired President Harding that ;
- In negotiating the pail Shopmen’s -
strike settlement be give full rec
• ognition to the loyal employes
■ “who during this assault on es
- (ablished government and the life
■ of the natfon kept the trains mov
■ mg."
I’ . A
A. C. LIS GRANTED
AN INJUNCTION
U. S. Judge Barrett Issues Re
straining Order Which Pre
vents Interference With Work
ers Covering Wide Territory.
Savannah, July 29.—The Atlantic]
Coast Line Railroad has secured a;
temporary injunction in the federal i
j court to restrain striking employes of
| the road from interfering with the op
; eration of the railroad.
I The injunction would prevent strik
ers from threatening men who are now
.working for the road and those ivho de
jsire to work there, prevent them from
(picketing about the shops, stations,
! right-of-way, or other places owned by
; the railroad or the streets of ingress
| and egress in a manner that "would*;
(menace or embarrass the workmen j
1 now employed there
; -Tfie injunction was signed yesterday 1
by Judge William H. Barrett in Au-j
jgUsta. It names about seventy-five!
jmen individually and as members of j
tlieip respective unions. In addition
| there is a blanket provision which
would prevent them acting through
sympathizers to interfere with the op
] sratlori of . the read. '
| The hearing has been set for Au- i
gufet 5. At that time Judge Barrett will j
; decide whether the injunction shall be
made permanent.
j The injunction applies to all employ
(eek of the- At 1-a ntwvt-loastLi n einSuth
ißeorgia, rttxd especially mentions, be-!
sides Savannah, Brunswick, WaycroSs,!
! Albany, Valdosta, and Thdmasville.
•
FyEL-AWWISISTRATOR is
IN ALABAMA
Mobile, Alaklbuly to-{
day restored th&effice of feel admin
j istrator, Roy R. Mobile, being
(appointed to the offiAftt by Ike Gover
nor.
plan, for the settlement of
; shopmen's strike was attacked tqday j
jby.H. A. Worcester, vice presidSv/ od
i the Big four railroad, who declafa*
■if the striking shopmen were granted'
i seniority it ifould mean that the rail
1 executives had .“lied" to the new men
I when they were engaged to fill the
jplacjes Of the striking shopmen,
j Vice, President declared
i that “to grant seniority to the striking
: shopman who left their jobs July Ist
' mearis that the new men who have
j been engaged and been premised per
! manent jobs will" have to be turned
jdown." .
VIOLENCE REPORTED.
(By Associated Press.)
Chicago, July 29. —While union
chij>{6 arid rail heads were presumed to
be oh the verge of .making peace, vio
lence w*s slightly Increased in strike
arehs, reports indicated.
Thirty, laborers were said to
haxfe (disappeared from the Chicago &
Northwestern shops at Milwaukee, af
ter‘a number of shots were fired in the
vicinity,
A non-union employee of the Wa
bash was beaten and another kidnaped
at Chicago.
Two workjnen in shops at Montgdm
]ery, At*., Were beatten by eight men al
leged to be sitjk'ers.
I A non-union ;shop worker at Rose
ville, Cal., was seized while walking
j with his wife. He was carried out of
j the town in an automobile, beaten and .
warned to Stop work.
A deputy federal marshal on guard
a tthe Missouri-Pacific roundhouse at
Jefrerson £ity, Mo., was slugged last
I night.
jßtriking' shopmen of the Mobile &
I Ohio were said to have taken charge !
of thg shops’at West Point, Miss., and ]
driven out new employes.
At St. Louis, two guards of the Mis
souri Pacific and a blacksmith of the
Terminal railroad were stoned and
bbaten. ’ V -, A
{? Troops at Erie, Pa., were stationed
about the homes of men who are nqw
Working in the shops.
THE MEWS IS A MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA, SUNQAYj JULY 30, 1922.
ROSEATE VIEW OF
SI SUN ISLAND
AND It FUTURE
Atlanta Correspondent of The
News Sees Great Future for
This Queen of Islands ‘
HISTORICAL AS WELL AS
MOST BEAUTIFUL SPOT
Now That Bridge is Almost an
Assured Fact, It is Believed
That Extensive Truck Farm-j
ing Will Follow as Well as
Other Big
The Atlanta corresplmdent of The |
Brunswick News sends the following,
which is all true and full of interest:
Brunswick is now authorized to join
Glynn county in providing half the
money for the SL Simon highway and
an election will be called at an early
date.
Glynn county voted for ponds last
fall. At that time the citizens of Bruns
wick were given an opportunity to ex
press themselves for or against the
bond issue. Out of the total register
ed votes of theJß.v only thirteen votes
were cast agJßst bonds for the pur
pose mentioiS.
A vigorous Bmpaign will be started
immediately iißfche citizens of Bruns
wick -to secureyfeie approval of the
bond issue and it IMBpected work wilt
soon be started on tnw||ttDject. whietu
has had the attention of
South Georgia for years.
St. Simon is one of the most attrac
tive seacoast recreation resorts in all
of the South. It is the cilb’ island on
the South Atlantic coast vmicli is now
available for development as a place
of residence and recreatjfti.
A town site is projjfted at Palm
Harbor, which is theJpte of the old
Hilton-Dodge LumberiwMill, also the
site of the home oJflHon. Alexander
Couper, one qf thefirst Settlers of
Georgia. At this ijJRt AereS is a mag
nificent grbve'
set out by Mr. capper more than 100
years ago. Th aK magnificent trees,
vigorous and Mhriant in foliage are
festooned withWpanish moss and occu
py a comma Ming bluff on beautiful
Frederica facing the Marshes of i
Glynn, justjjßposite Brunswick.
Home will be provided for
iGeorgijJpople at this point and it is
expecMwthat an extensive develop
! Satsuma oranges will be un
iderti®n on the fertile lands, upon
wbdp Meade cotton —recently develop
: MBong staple cotton now advocated
S. depaAment of agriculture in
place of sea- island cotton—is being
(grown by the St. Simon Island Invest
‘Went Company.
MAl*y acres of this long staple cotton
has been planted on St. Simon island
| this year and latest reports indicate
i that the proSpeAs are favorable for
splendid yield—some of the cotton giv
ing promise to yield as much as two
bales of cotton per acre.
W. W. Croxton, passenger traffic
manager of the Atlanta, Birmingham
and Atlantic railway, ,has been con
ducting some tests of calcium arsenate
to combat the boll weevil and reports
splendid and satisfactory results from
the intelligent application of calcium
arsenate.
Few people realize that more weal
thy northern people spend their win
ters in Georgia than any other South
ern state. Jekyl Island Club, ''where
the membership of wealthi
est families spend their wifiters is lo
cated n an island of that name, just
west of St. Simon which, together with
Sti Simpn, landlocks the magnificent
Brunswick harbori. 1 Frederica river,
which passes between St. Simon- and
the mainland, is a part of the route of
the inland waterways and alofig the
mainland side qf St. Simon, facing
Frederica river, the soil is particular
ly fertile and splendidly adapted for
| the development of the Satsuma
orange, yzhich has made. Mobile fam
ous. as wel las other vegetable crops.
It is proposed, riow that the bridge
is an assured fact, that extensive truck
{gardens will be established on St. Si
jmon in addition to thq development of
I beautiful building lots for residents at
Palm Harbor. Nature has been most
generous in providing man with many
sources of livelihood and recreation at'
St. Simon.
St. Simon is -the largest island on
the Atlantic coast south of Long Isl
and. The total area of land is about
12,090 4cres. 1
’PLANE LEAVES '
YESTERDAY IN'
WASHINGTON NIGHTFALL
(By Ass&ciflted press.)
Washington, July Lieuten
ants H. A. Elliott asd C. R Reed
arrived here by airplape early, to
night tif-ia flight frofb Aier(pus,
Ga., where took to the. air
early this morning, after repairing
-the ’plans which had been foreed
down t(vo flays ago in/an attempt
ed flight .from Pensacola, Fla. ; ■
ALLEN FREED ON
murder Charge
ijjJßployeeof A„ B. & A. in Atlan
ta Cli L jrrgo?P¥Nll(ipfi((Boti ng Ben
Walton, One of Two Men Slain
irj Trouble Some Months Ago.
, (By Associated Press.) ]
Atlanta. July 29.—G-. P. Allen, an
emplovfee of the Birmingham
and Atlantic railway, was found not!
guilty ’pf murder by a jury in the su- j
perior court tonighL
Alleq;; was charged with shooting
Dan WSton. cne of the two me&slain
in trouble in the local yards of
the road which was followed by a rock
battle Between employees and strike j
sympa||lzerT .<*
MRSeELIZABETH SLOCUM
PASSED AWAY LAST NIGHT
J|pt her home en north Reynolds
imreet, 8:30 last night, Mrs. Elizabeth
Slocum breathes her last, after an ill
ness of something over ,a month and
her death will cause sorrow to the
scores who knew and loved her.
Deceased was seventy-two years of
age. She was first marriqd to -huUWri W
Philips, to which union (hrqe (bildren
were born, Frank E„ Jfe''*Mitch, and
John A. Philips, of She
was married the seixjiid @me to W. L.
Slocum and from this union four chil
dren were born, hut only one Is now
living, Mrs. Annie L. Jofies, of Lak&jj
land, Fla. j;
’“"'fiffs." Slocmfi 1 -has he’eb
member of the Adventoedchrisypu
church for a rinniher mßjUißf;-
highly esteemeu 1 who kneifwer.
She was a splendid Christian writan
and has lived in BrunswlckJH- the
jpast thirty-five years, coramf here
from Camden county.
Funeral services will from
the Advent Christian qjgrircli at 4
o’clock this afternoonJHpr. Edwin C.
Hardison officiating a*SSiiterment will
be held in Palmetto tjpStery.
ROOSEVELT SBftT MARINES
PROTECT NATAL OIL LANDS
~t. (By Associated Press.)
Washington, July 29.—Acting Secre
tary Roosevelt today ordered Major
General Lejeune, commandant of the
marine corps, to send one officer and
three or four enlisted marines to the
Tea Pot dome of the naval oil reserve
in Wyoming, near Casper, to eject the
oil squatters who began drilling for
oil.
MISSING SUBS
ACCOUNTED FOR
FIRST THOUGHT THAT QUARTETT
- -<M?,UNDERSEA FIGHTERS KAO
BEEN LOST.
(By Associated Press.
Los Angeles, July 29. —All twelve of
the submarines en route from Los An
geles to Hampton Roads, Va., under
convoy of the tender Beaver, were said
at the local submarine base to he ac
counted for this morning.
Twq of the submersibles are out of
commission and: ; are being tow*d, it
was said, but no serious trouble, is be
ing experienced.
Early reports to the effect that four
of the submarines were missing grew
out of the statement of Captain Thom
as W. Sheridan, master of the liner
City of Honolulu, that he had sighted a
badty smoking submarine off the Low
er California coast, below Ensenada.
PERCY BROWN, MEMBER
BALL TEAM, IS INJURED-
F Jrtfcy Brown, of Jacksonville, Fla.,
FL Ss playing ball with the local
eTETb, was hit oh the head by a pitched
ball yesterday in a game with Black
shear, and rendered unconscious. AU
ter medical attpntion lie was revived
and r4ntrd th* game, but wa* fore-
DEPUTY SHERIFF
BYRD, OFMAGON IS
KILLED Bl NEGRO
Officers Went to Pool Room in
Search of Criminal and
Shooting Starts.
FOR AWHILE RACE RIOT
SEEMED TO BE IMMINENT
Police Requested All Negroes to
Go Home, After Rescuing One
from Crowd and Seeing Vari
ous Others Targets for Shots.
—Hundreds on Man Hunt.
(By Associated Press.)
&
Mattn. July 29.—Spasmodic firing at
and search by hundreds of per
sons tor “Cocky’’ Glover, nefaro, follow
ed tire killing of Walter C. Mjyrd, depu
ty tppriff of Bibb eountyjßand the
wo&ding of three negro| here to
;nijfe: in a shooting affraya negro |
J||ie police departmentijpged all ne-j
gjgjies to go to their a fter rescu |
ij one from a crowd ajrij seeing many
at. By oujpßne the orders
' P° ,ice a which was
f® ed, was avert(r
j '*he killing oLapputy Sheriff Byrd
i the logffr' into the pocl room
other deputies who
for a criminal. Glover
is alleged to have snot Byrd in. the
back and then the firing became gen
eral.
Glover escaped from the building
while Byrd lay dytng and three ne
groes wounded.
WESTERN ROADS
jjIRE UNAEFEGTED
|poth Freight and Passenger Ser
vice on Line Having ChicagoE
as Headquarters Report najff
convenience Now.
(By Associated Press.)
j (
j Chicago. July 29. —Both freight, and
I passenger traffic on the lines having
I headquarters in Chicago are practical
ly unaffected by the shopmen’s strike,
said a statement of the western presi
dent’s committee on public relational#
the Association of Railway Exedrives.
tonight.
Approximately seven thousand work
ers Were employed during the past
week, it was stated.
SENATOR HARRIS RAISED
ON IMPORTANT COMMITTEE
Atlanta, Ga., July 29.—United States
Senator William J. Harris will move
up one place in seniority on the sen
ate appropriations committee_ after
next March 4 because of the defeat of
Senator Culberson, of Texas, which
places the Georgia senator as the third
ranking Democratic senator on .the
most powerful committee in Congress.
On the minority side. Senator Har
ris is only junior to Senators Overman
of North Carolina, and Owen of Okla
homa, while he is followed by Senators
Glass, o( Virginia, and Jones, of New
Mexico.
Senator Harris is on six of the im
portant sub-committees which handle
aiipropriatios hills under the new sen
ate rules changed to conform to the
budget law.
it is expected thta a hard fight will
be waged in Democratic circles after
next March 4 to fill the vacancy caused
by the retirement of Senator Culber
,so as membership on .the,appropria
tions committee is eagerly, sought.
Senator Overman, ranking minority
member, would likely take the chair
manship of the judiciary cortimittee,
of which he is senior Democrat and
Senator Owens will likely take the
chairmanship of the Banking and Cur
rency committee, of which he is the
senior Democrat, in case the Demo
crats win the senate. That would place
Senator Harris in line for the Approp
riations Chairmanship.
ed discontinue playing in the seventh
Annig account of dizziness. Brown
was .then carried to his room at. the
Oglethorpe, and a physician summoned
| who reported him resting easy late
last night. The accident Is deeply re-
his numerous admirers.
AMUNDSEN ABANDONS
ONE SHIP FOR ANOTHER
(By Associated Press.) *
Noma 1 , Alaska, July 29. —Oapt. •
Amundsen has abandoned his at- -
tempt to reach Point Barrow in •
the Maud, the exploration ship •
and has'transferred to the grhoon- <
er Holmes, according to a wire
-1 less revived here from aboard -
the Maud.
The flight over the north pole -
in an airplane, it is understood, -
has been, abandoned until next •
' year.
REED AND LONG AT
END OFCAMPAIGN
Bitterness Has Marked Fight
Over Missouri Senatorship
With Marry “Rid Us of Reed”
Club>£ Being Formed.
Associated Press.
St- rjjitis,' July 29. - flitted States
|Senatoj|&ames; v A. Reed'hpd Brecken
! ridge fig, t hire assistant-' Secretary
| °f Stadpiuring the, Wilson administra
tion. tgfeht closed tpeir primaVy cam
paign Btr the Demdt; ratio senatorial
lo be decided at the pri
nejet Tuesday. Veteran
polijßans agree their contest has
i waße d
Democratic contest
■phucli attention during the last three
™>nths that little significance has
been attached to the fight among the
six Republican candidates.
The bitterness with which the con
test between Senator Reed and Mr.
Long has beep waged i,s indicated by
the terming of the "Rid Us of Reed”
clubs, in which women have taken
great interest. Banners and placards
hearing this inscription have been
posted in many towns of the state,
while;, others apepaling to the Demo-
to "Win With Reed, Defender
of Me have been de-j
offset tto effect of his op
*(jjadneffi V slogan.
“Senator Reed's wpporters are ex
pecting many vote#from the ranks of
ex-soldiers because of his tight for the
national soldier Jfrnus.
MILITIA W)S REMAIN
AWAYCROSS AMTIILE
jjly Associated Press.)
Atlyjpa, Ga.. July 29. —A communi
been received by Governor
Colonel
Pope in command rvf the National
j Guard on duty in Way cross during the
strike trouble, stating that (he situa-l
tion there had quieted but due to an!
undercurrent of unrest h'e thought it I
advisable for them to remain on duty l
there for some time.
His communication stated that all ■
members of the battalion who found
it necessary to go home were permit
ted to do so, but that the force would
be kept up to 100 men and officers un
til the trouble had subsided.
AMERICAN LAD
MAKES ESCAPE
AFTER FIGHT WITH CAPTORS EU
GENE JOVA GAINS FREEDOM
1 BUT SAID TO BE WOUNDED
Sagua La Grande, Province of Santa]
Clara. Cuba, July 29.—(8y telephone
to Havana). —Eugene Jova, kidnaped
acting American vice consul, escaped
from his captors early this morning
after a fight in which he was wounded;
according to the chief of police here.
The chief said he believed he hail the
bandits surrounded.
At the time of his cature of Jova was
acting as vice consul at, Sagua la
Grande, in the absence of his father.
The state department messages gave
no details of the incident, beyond
those already reported in press dis
patches.
810 INCREASE IN PAY OF
MINERS HAS BEEN GIVEN
Knoxville, Tenn., July 29. —A wage
agreement granting $2.50 a day in
crease to 5,000 miners in twenty-five
operations in the Kentucky-Tennessee
field was negotiated at Cincinnati yes
terday between the unions and the
Kentucky-Tennessee Coal Operators’
Association, according to a statement
given out here by District 19. head
quarters of the United Mine Workers
and made public today.
BR UNf WiCK
Hm th. lowest death rats of
any city its size in, the United
States, a . . . „ , . , ,
2 ; * • j <u r \- &
PRICE FIVE CENTS
EIHL' 1111 -Hi- - J!L MI ■ 1 . 1 . 111 i■■ m*i■ J_J..
DR. DESMISSDRE
IELLS OF HEALTH
CONDITIONS HERE
Answers Request Made by U. S.
Government Engineer
Made Recently
SUBJECT IS FULLY AND
COMPLETELY COVERED
For Past Ten Years There Has
Been a Full Time Health Offi
cer, Energetic in Preventing
Any and AH Ills’ to Which Hu
man Body is Heir to.
Altering a request from the Unit
ed S p,tes engineer's office. Dr-. R, L.
DeSa ssure. commissioner
has i iade the following reiMlT regard
ing t h health and
exist gg here.-
"R ftlizmg thfjNWgent necessity of
consttucJEpetslfealth work, Brunswick
early 4t<§Pcd the advantage of a full
time health officer, and for the past
tun yjpirs there has been a full time
healtjpoftioer in charge of the work of
disease prevention. Asa result of this
constructive policy the dty and coun
ty jfc®s one of the best health records
state.
I jSfialaria—All of our southern cities
•■yVjpeonstantly on their guard-against
| tgjf inroads of malaria. Thanks to a
I tapse-eing policy which includes a win-
Iw campaign against - " the Anapheles
; mosquito, a house to house campaign
[against mosquito breeding places wifi)
excellent results.
“Inspection of Scliool Children.—la
addition to'the routine physical exam
ination of all thfe school children In
Glynn county there has been establish
ed under the of the Bruns
! wick Chapter of the American Red
Cross a free dental and surgical clinic
for white ehidlren of indigent parents.
This clinic has been in 'operation
slightly mere than a year, but already
imorfe than ninety children have had
'their tonsils and adenoids removed,
apd mor.e aod!twd%-
ty-WVe dentil ope/at been
jf Tk
"Quarantine.- —The health oflker is
charged with the duty of insplrtlng
any case of a suspicious charact®/and
quarantine cases of small pox,
fever, diptheria and other comnjßM|fl
ble diseases. Cases are lsjffiorted
promptly to the health offiper and,
when necessary, promptly Quarantin
ed. jfr
“Laboratory Departnu^lft.—An up-to
date laboratory is at the
prompt diagnoses
ampplied inistgtPcwrakyjases. Vaccina
tions small p*S||Moculations
agSWct typhoid fever are gl^fcfree.'
“Dairy Inspection—The damhk, in
and around Brunswick are reguWfc
inspected and graded in three clasSek
each month. To make the grade “A””
the butter fact contents must be at
least four per cent, and the bacteria
count less than ten thousand per cubic
centimeter. To show the high stan
dard required any dairy having a high
er county than fifty thousand bacteria
per cubic centimeter is classed as “C”
grade. ' ‘
“Meat Inspection.—All meat sold in
Brunswick has to be examined and
passed upon by the city veterinarian.
Any cattle, sheep or pork whose vis
cera show signs of disease is condemn
ed and hauled to the garbage plant for
incineration.
“Nursing Division. —A trained nurse
is employed who visits cases of tub
erculosis. assists in the various clinics,
and does follow-up work among the
school children.
“Vital Statistics.—The health office
is also the registration office for Bruns
wick and the rest of Glynn cdiintv,
with the exception of St. Simon island,
which island from its isolated position
has a registrar, who. however, makes
reports to the health officer. A tabu
lated list of the births and deaths in
the city and county, divided into white
and colored, is published each month.
“The city officials and the county
health officer work in close harmony
with the single idea of making Bruns
wick a model health center—the re
sults speak for themselves.”
ATTORNEY GENERAL AFTER
FEDERAL PEN DOPE SELLERS
Atlanta, July 29.—The Attorney
General’s office at Washington has
sent instructions to Clint W. Hager,
federal district attorney here, request
ing an early trial of the three guards -of.
the Atlanta federal penitentiary charg
led with furnishing narcotic to prison-!
[era.