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4
r HF. BRUNSWICK NEWS
lf ,N M#^<Vy<VNA^VVVVVAA-WV-vwwvwvs~vV'.
Published every morulug except Mon-
day by
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
Brunswick, Ga.
The News Bldg., .1604 Newcastle St.
CLARENCE H. LEAVY
President and Editor.
Entered at the Brunswck, (Ga.) Post
Office as second-class mail matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One Year ; , ..$7.50
Six Months 4.00
Three Months 2.00
One Month 70
The News is the official newspaper
9f the City of Brunswick.
Member of the Associated Press.
The Associated Press is entitled tc
the use for publication of all news
credited to it or not otherwise credit
'd in this paper, and also to the local
news published herein.
ALL DEPARTMENTS PHONE 188
Senator Felton sounds pretty good
at that!
Governor Hardwick is fond of a race
all right enough and he does not seem
to care in the slightest how it winds
up.
If you did not announce fcr that
seat in the United .States senate, then
you have missed the opportunity of a
life time.
Well, we suppose those delegates to
the Macon convention yesterday had
a fine time as no harm was done, why
what’s tile cdds?
Well, the Giants yanked . the first
game in the world series, but you had
better keep a weather eye on the
Yanks this afternoon.
Today is the last day for entrants
in that Senatorial race, if you want to
be among those who also ran, you will
have to get a lively move on.
I
We wonder if the City Commission
ers cannot be persuaded to do some
badly needed improvements on the
Boulevard. Really, gentlemn, it is al
most a necessity!
Another cheery note from the Amer
ican Bankers Association now in ses
sion is a resolution on their part to
adopt a less selfish policy toward for
eign banking. Verily we are return
ing to the old moorings.
David Lawrence has discovered that
both the Democratic and the Republi
can parties have gone to pot in Min
nesota. That being tne case, on what
ticket is Senator Kellog making his
race for re-election?
If Mayor Murray Stewart, of Savan-1
nah, will consult some of the leading |
and most representative business men (
in Savannah, we are quite sure, he
will find out that he lias been misin
formed about the real status of that
Darien bridge obligation.
Those New Jersey women are in
open rebellion against Senator Fre
linghuysen. They have discovered
that the Senator pretend .o be a dry;
votes the dry ticket, hut keeps a big
cellar in his home and visits it with
wonderful frequency. Why, Senator!
It seems that it cost IJon. J. J.
Brown abound SS,OOO to he elected to
the position of Commissioner of Agri
culture of Georgia. As the salary is
only $4,000 per annum we can see that
the job has its hardships.
All of the Arkansas Democratic can
didates were elected on Monday with
the largest majorities in the history
of the state. Another sign of wlrinii
way the wind is going to blow next
month.
The Republican spell binders all
over the country are again putting out
that old fallacious argument that a
tariff as high as the mountains is ben
eficial to the American farmer. There
never was a worse misrepresentation
of the facts in the case.
The Board of Trade is taking the
right step in protecting local mer
chants from advertising tricksters and
Secretary Warde is to be commended
for the prompt action in stopping this
practice which has caused many a
dollar to be thrown away.
There is a fall feeling in ,the air
sure enough and there is also a feel
ing "that tlje merchant who expects
his .ihiare of trade ’ at' this season
should tell the people ' what he. has.
News advertising rates are : not high
and a representative will call if a
phone message is received. The
phone number is 18S. Cal it and call
it for the sake of vcmr business.
BROADENING ITS SCOPE.
Negotiations were consummated
yesterday whereby The News Publish
ing Company takes over the physical
assets of the afternoon newspaper,
which has been published in this city
for several years. In taking this very;
important step, which very naturally
marks an epoch in the life of this
newspaper, it ought to be said, that it
was made necessary, largely by the
conviction, arrived at after many
years of trial, that Brunswick is a
one-paper city; that it cannot support
two newspapers in such a way as to
mak Q them really representative of
the city or successful in the matter of
earning dividends:
lh this local situation and its final
culmination it merely is a matter icf
fixed rules of -business being finally
sustained against supreme efforts to<
go against the well regulated law of :
supply and demand. What has hap
pened with the two Brunswick news
papers. is happening or ip time, will
happen in every small city, where the;
effort is made to publish two, where
only one newspaper is needed. It is
no reflection on any man ter set of
men who have striven to do the im-
Ijossible; 'it is merely the nautral
thing coming to remove and correct an
unnatural state of affairs.
That’s all.
With reference to The News, in its
broadened field, we only want to say
that we are going to improve this
newspaper and strive to make it more
readable, more reflective of the splen
did community in which it is publish
ed and more valuable to its city, its
patrons and th e public weal in gen
erai. The publishers realize their re ;
spotisibility to the whole public and
we only wish we could make the peo
ple know hew thoroughly we have'
com e to feel that they have and will
always have our best and truest con
sideration.
Tima teaches much; has its refining!
influences on all of us and convinces,
those who think, that at best, error
upon top of error creeps in; that
judgment is often faulty and that in
fallibility is a thing however devout ;
ly. desired on this mundane splice, is
absolutely beyond r: ..eh of all of us!
As we have said already, we are go
ing to bring our experience of the past
' to the task of making The News, the
medium of all of the people of this
community; every movement fcr the
best interest of Brunswick and Glynn
county and the state of Georgia will
have our hearty support, as we shall
strive to keep down those things we
know to be- against our pro'per growth
'and development. We prepose to es
chew local politics and to raise our
voice always against factionalism,
which long years ago, did much to
blight and retard the growth of the
city.
Brunswick today is cemented to
gether in a better and broader har
mony and understanding than has
ever been the case in the past—her
people are united in her interest;
/they are working together with an eye
! single to her good and to enlarge and
develop that situation, shall be our
constant aim.
i Little else needs to be said. We
are going to merit your approval and
your support and if conscientious,
wholesome effort counts, we shall suc
ceed!
UNITED STATES SENATOR
FELTON.
L
There is something really unique
and charming in the appointment of
Mrs. W. H. Felton to the vacancy in
the United States senate. Many
states have their grand old man; men
who have won distinction in the realm
of statesmanship, in letters *nd in
other lines. Few of them are blessed
with a truly grand old lady, who
stands out far abov-e all others as a
leader of thought, as a great thinker
and author, who in the field of liter
ary attainment has gained high rank.
However, such is the distinction
that has com e to the first woman in
the United States to became a mem
ber of the most august deliberative
body on the face of the earth. For
many years Mrs. Felton has occupied
a prominent place in the hearts of
the people, not only of the Southland,
who are near to her heart, but to the
entire people of the nation. This fact
was evidenced early in the year 1921,
when as President-elect, Warren <l.
Harding was busy on the job of inter
viewing th e best minds in the country,
to get a line on public opinion’as to
what should be the big aims of has ad
ministration. He very promptly sought;
the advice of Mrs. Felton and after a
long and interesting interview with
her, in the historic city of St. Augus
tine, the then President-elect, gave
out an interview, in which he speke
of Mrs. Felton and her wisdom, com
mon sense and abilities in many di
rections, in the most glowing terms!
At first blush, the. idea of :a woman,
occupying the exalted public station,
to which Mrs. Felton has been 1 called,
seemed rather inattractive to us; it
j appeared as a heavy burden to place
on feminine shoulders already burden
ed with the weight of eighty-seven
years. However, as th e appointment
of Governor Hardwick soaked in, the
more it impressed us, as being not
only a gallant act in recognition of
the women of the land, but it finally
appeared to us as a .wise, juiicionsi
move in extended deserved recogni
tion to “Georgia’s grand old lady";
who is loved, respected and : honored’
from the mountains of Habersham to
the marshes of Glynn.
Our hat is off to Senator Feiton;
may the decrees of fate call an entra
session between now and November
7th and in that event, we here and'
now make th e prediction that the jun
ior senator from Georgia, whether in
debate in the senate or in the admin
istration of the great office, will re-1
fleet credit, as sh e will uphold the tra
ditions of Georgia, the empire state
of the South.
We salute you, Senator Felton-
THE SOUTH ANO PROSPERITY. '
From the session of the American'
Bankers Association now in annual
conference in New York conies a most
cheerful sign of the times and one cal
culated to inspire the w’hole South
with anew confidence and a nejy real
ization of tire fact that an unprece-'
dented era of prosperity is in the off
ing and that two years of real good
business is ahead of us.
It must be remembered that this
opinion comes from the hankers of
the whole United States; all sections!
ar P represented at this meeting and
the forecast's the concrete opinion of
the whole!
Of course, the South will reap its
full share of this prosperity. Her
business men are progressive; they
are making their bid for it and they
arc going to get it.
Discussing the situation, the esteem
ed Savannah News says;
As to the South, bankers say
the upward trend has not yet
reached the “boom'’ stage, and
perhaps it is just as well that it
has net —and that perhaps it will
not. The South’s building up
should be steadily up, not like a
skyrocket, because, too rapid up
building is sometimes followed by
a slump. The outlook is then
that the building of the South,
while steady, is certain and sure,
is being based on a foundation
that will endure, and that’s the
sort of foundation the South
wants.
Nobody needs to have more
than a superficial knowledge of
what is going on in the South to
expect that this part of the coun
try will have its full share of the
nation's prosperity. The South is
learning and putting into effect
some of the things it is learning
about marketing, about living at
home, about co-operation, about
diversified farming, and there
should be nobody in the South
who has any excuse for being a
"bear” in the market of the South.
The fundamentals are present in
this section for prosperity; .they
need only to be taken advantage
of. The Southern farmer can
make money, he can keep at home
a lot of money he used to send
away, he can produce much of
what he used to have to buy, and
so save money for himself that
used tc represent profits for some
body else. The development of
Southern ports is going to im-
their business increase.
The increase in Southern manu
facturing is going to be considera
ble and rapid. The man who !s
pessimistic about the South ought
to be ashamed of himself.
Population helps to make val
ues; indeed, population of itself
does make values, and there is
evidence that the population of
the South is going to show a very
decided increase in its rate of
growth in this decade.
JUST
■ IN
No. 1 WHITE HONEY
IN SECTIONS
ONLY 25c
SOMETHING GOSH3,
TRY IT!
: LJh
hr St
Rhone 321 We Deliver
SPORTING
-> ’ NEWS
GIANTS WIN
FIRST GAME
ran men
MAKE EIGHIH
INNING GASH
Yankees Seemed to Have Cinch
on Game But Lost Out
in Eighth Inning.
JOE BUSH WAS KNOCKED
FROM BOX; HOYT PUT W
Over Thirty-six Thousand Peo
ple Saw Game.—Nehf Pitched
Wonderfully, Walking Only
One, But Was Removed in
Seventh for Pinch-Hitter.
Polo Grounds, New York, Oct. 4. —
With the batteries Nehf and Snyder'
for the Giants and Bus hand Schang
: for the Yankees in the first game of,
the World Series here, Babe Ruth was
the first man up in the first inning
and -struck out on wldes curves from
Nehf.
Tlic Giants won the game by a score
3t.0 2, after Ute Yanks had scored two
in the early innings. But the Giants
scored three in the eighth and held
the lead, turning apparent defeat into
victory.
Jo,, Bush was knocked from the box
and relieved by Hoyt.
Over thirty-six thousand people wit
nessed the game. Ruth was out four
times at the bat, made one hit and
knocked in a run with it.
Nehf pitched wonderfully, striking
out three and walking only one buf”
was removed in the seventh for pinch
hitter. Bush was unbeatable up to
the eighth but the Giants got onto him
them.
THE GAME BY INNINGS,.
FIRST INNING—Witt flied out to
center; Duggan out, third to first;
Ruth Struck out. No runs, no hits, no
errors.
Bancroft out, second to first; Grob
hits to third who fumbles; Grob safe
>n first; Firseh singles to left cen
ter; on pass ball Grob goes to third
and Frisch to second; E. Meusel
truck out. Young pops up to first
base. No runs, one hit, no errors.
SECOND INNING—Pipp grounds
out to first; R. Meusel struck out;
Schang singled to left field; Ward
out, third to first. No runs, one hit,
no errors.
Young only short to first; Kejly
strikes out; Stengel filed out to left..;
No runs, no hits, no errors.
THIRD INNING—Scott filed to
right field; Bush flied out to left cen
ter who made great catch while run
ning; Witt out, second to first. No
runs, no hits,' no errors.
Nehf grounds out to first; Bancroft
out, second to first; Groh hits a triple
to center field fence; Frisch flied out
to center field. No runs, one hit, no
errors.
FOURTH INNING —Dugan singles
to left center field; Ruth grounds to
second, forcing Dugan out; Pipp
strikes out; Ruth was doubled, steal
ing second. No runs, one hit, no er
rors. • I
E. Meusel out, short to first; Young
struck out; Kelly singles to left field;
Stengel out, pop fly to second. No
runs. on e hit, no errors.
■FIFTH INNING-—R. Meusel hits a
fast grounder to short for infield hit;
Schang bunts to pitcher, putting out
Meusel on secr-fid; Ward walks; Scott
flied out to left, who made great
catch; R. Meusel was doubled off sec
ond. No runs, one hit, no errors.
Snyder flied out to right field; Neh t
out, pop fly to. second; Bancroft out
short to first. No Tuns, no hits, no
errors.
SIXTH INNING—Bush out, short to
first; Witt triples to deep left field;
Dugan grounds, to short and Witt is
/ffttght tfiiwl and Koine; * nfifgj
anVgofrg to second; Ruth singles td:
enter, fi'ctirlrig 'Dugan'; Pipp
grounds out to first. One run, two
hits, ,one error.
Groh walked, caught sealing sec
ond; Frisch out. pop fly to catcher;
E. Meusel struck out. No runs, nc
hits, no errors.
SEVENTH INNING—R. Meusel
singles to left field; Schang grounds
to pitcher, who threw wild to short;
!Meusel going to third; Seining going
jto second; Ward Hied jp left field,
j scoring Meusel; Scott Hied icut to
short; Bush grounds to third, putting
Schang out. One run, one hit, two er
rors.
Y-oungf flied out to right field; Kelly
gets infield hit; Stengel singles to left
field, Kely on second; Snyder singles
to deep Short; Smith batting for Nelif,'
grounds to short, forcing Snyder at
second, and Smith is doubled on first.
No runs, three hits, no errors.
EIGHTH INNING—Ryan pitching
for Nationals; Witt struck out; Dug
an flied out to center field; Roth
strikes out. No runs, no hits, no er
rors.
Bancroft singles to right field; Groh
singles to right field; Frisch singles
to left field; E. Meusel singles to cen
ter, scoring Bancroft and Groh; Bush
taken out. Hoyt now pitching; Young
flied out to oenter, scoring Frisch;
Kelly struck out; Stengel struck out.
Three runs, four hits, no err; rs.
NINTH INNING—Pipp singles to
left center; R. Meusel out on line
drive to second; Pipp being doubled
off first; Schang out, second to first.
No runs, one hit, "no errors.
\
Score: R H E
Yankees V. 2 7 (I
Giants ' 3 11 3
To Fortify the System Against
Colds, Grip fend Influenza
talvc GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC, It Pur.
(i-3 and Enriches the Blood It Builds up an.
•Strength? the Whole System. It Fo- ifiee .ti
System I ftnst Colds, Gup end mfluensa. Price tut
ALBANY HARDWARE &
MILL SUPPLY CO.
Bruriswick, Ga. T Albany, Ca.
The House of Quick Service and
Low Prices.
Lechens Red Strand Wire Rope
American Steel Split Pulleys
Simonds Cross Cut Saws
Black and Galvanized Pipe
Rubber and Canvas Belts
Bar Iron
Steel Shafting
Nails - "
Bale Ties
Simonds and Hoe Saw Bits & Shanks
Clipper belt Lacers and belt Hooks
Valves, Lubricators, Pipe Fittings.
7 NO ORDER TOO SMALL, NONE TO LARGE.
We appreciate every order
' f— SL,
1218 Bay St. Phone 371
Mgr
The People Who Believe
This Bank
They are the ones who have made possible its growth, its strength
and its* ability to be helpful to t-he community. The relation .be
tween The Bank & Trust and its patrons are, in a high degree con
fidential and intimate.
Always taking into account the human element, we have sought to
do for our customers a little better than was expected. When the
character of our banking, service is recognized by our patrons, it is
but natural that they think of some friend who will be benefited by
an introduction here. AND SO WE GROW.
4 RER CENT AND SAFETY FOR YOUR SAVINGS.
'THE BANK. VVi iH A-HEART.”
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM.
Coal-Coke- wood
CEMENT SEWER PIPE
LIME SHINGLES AND LATHS
PLASTER FIRE BRICK
“THE” COAL
rvE HAVE LIME IN SMALL PACKAGES FOR WHITE
WASHING AND ALL DISINFECTING PURPOSES.
Coney & Parker Company
Phones 17 and 13 ;= : 1129 Bay Street.
(DJI AAA Insurance policy and The
ipUJUU Brunswick News for $7.50
BOTH FOR AN ENTIRE YEAR
THURSDAY, OCT. 5, 1922.