Newspaper Page Text
Page Four
fflg BRUNSWICK SEWS
Published every morning except Mon
day by
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
Brunswick. Ga.
The News Bldg-. .1604 Newcastle Bt.
CLARENCE H. LEAVY
President and Editor.
Entered at the Brutiswck, (Ga.) Post
Offlc e as second-class mail matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One Tear J 7.60
Bix Month* 4.<JO
Three Months.. 2.00
One Month . .70
The News }s the official newspaper
eft the City of Brunswick.
J %£' f
of the mess.
Tffin '
the'use for all
credited l t) it creil.l
>d in this paper, the local
news published here!™
ALL DEPARTMENTS PHONE 188
Watch out for the Goblins this eve
ning. It.'fi Hallowe'en day!
What surprises a man raking his
lawn is how a tree, found accomoda
tions tor so many leaves.
The Chicago professor who advo
cates clothes and few of them for girl|
evidently believes in the liberal view.
It is fcenaraily understood that the
•word ••'protective," as In "protective
tariff,” is not intended in anyway to
I refer to the consumer,.
Here’s another scientist hoping to
say something to Mars, hut what the
Country needs Is more policians who
Will say something to the point.
It’s getljng to be a terrible bore to
explain to evey foreign visitor who
ponies alcng how Mr. Daugherty hup
attorney general.
iP^
i\' 1 ' I 'JT G. O. I*,. will e-ni'j' ihof
The unspoken ohjec®n a hfl of
presidential norjUdJiafSt have tossing
k'heir hats In the ntig now is that Umy
■wouldn’t have anything t i U‘
■through lor a couple of rear? ■
correspondent asks witat an nn-
Kirttten law is. There's a s.m j cion
■abroad that several of them are belli;.:
■enforced around the country n< w:-<
■toys.
Flrit tv'anpr. Imys the old home
stead mid later announc*';- he will run
again unless it appears his adinlnh
(ration is a failure; all of which mean
his hat is ju the ring with an elasti •
attached.
Unless we are badly off, it seems to
us that the women foil s are day by
day learning to do the 1 Hi*' ihat used
to be given over exclusively to man.
Shooting straight with a thirty-eight,
for instance!
Even viewed from a disinterested
standpoint it is admitted the'
coming congressional elections will
result In a great victory for the Hero
erratic party, It is expected that the
victory will he a sweeping on and will
cover many (sections of the country,
With the new United States sctia
tor, State Superintendent of S hoots
and an Abjntant General all in a
short time at that. South Ge'rgja
seems to be doing betti r from (lie po
litical point of view.
Andy Gump, in hisjndependent race
for congress is having some very hard
luck and just at the moment the regu
lar party press is right behind hie
Andy will learn in his first political
venture that party regularity, has be
seme a necessity these days.
The ladies of the Y. VV. C. A, are
Waking an earnest effort (lijs week
to procure sufficient revenues to in
sure the operation of the organization
for another year We are poke sure
that Brunswick will respond to tin
most worthy call. The local Y is very
close to the hears and the homes ot
the people of this city
_ -1.
If tlie program is carried out today,
•thj*n the city and'county bonds tin
|M>^ceds ; iof which arc to he denoted
; to tV’ building of the St. Slitton high.
•way will' be .validated in Glynn super-'
‘ ldt'comt. Thus' another steft is made
in the direction of ihc*great timprove-
A REAL SERVICE TO BRUNSWICK
- Brunswick has enjoyed the splendid
religious meetings that have been 1 n
progress iu the city for the past two
weeks They were conduct'd along
broad and libera) lines and in a series
of splendid sermons by able divines,
tb'- people of the community have
brought to Dijffik more seriously ot
i their religious aspect.
ft is a fine thing when any ccml
inanity makes up its mind to pans®
and .-five a portion of its time and
insideratioa to the spiritual sid< of
jts life; its a finer thing, yet, when the
people of that community, respond to
a call to devotional services and enter
into the spirit of the thing, with -i
real porpojfc- to Income better ac
quainted tin religious side ot
their lives; and if need he to give
serious thought and attention to that
sid(. which is often neglected!
In the meetings which came to a
Clone on Sunday, there was no effoit
at the sensational, but instead ei
cral of the moat eminent. minister
of this, and other state*, •in eonjum
t’ioii with the local pastorate of till
ed ty, Have for two we- k Ik—n deliver
lug many wholesome and clckiui nt
religious mc.'iF.agHs to the pimple if
Brunswick and (hi:; whole community
This (s the sort of work that makes
better men and women in a city; it
brings us to a serious consideration
of the jri'Ofit, vital things in life and
(here j no bettor evidence tin* prop
er sort of growth than Is here pre
en ted. |
Tiic"city would d'-vclop and prospi r
in Die material things of life, must,
also develop along truly rellgirus
lines. To llrs,. Roberta, Cleveland
and Lane, the visiting clergymen and
to all of the local pastors who partici
pated in these meetings, wo want to
express our sincere thunks and atp
preciathui
They have rendered a real service
to Brunswick!
THE TARIFF AND GLOVES
Certain i-x-tiongressman and ex- sent
a tors' have proved themselves very
successful lobbyists whenever we
have had a cUPfiri-ac, . hat revised the
tariff upward. Kx-,Senator Liptpi-tt of
Rhode island, a cotton goods 1 manu
facturer, was Die chief lobbyist for
the New England manufacturers dur
ing the Inst session cf emigres end
the s< nute was kind enough to adopt
)■ss *')
i N. I.lttauer nt N> w
Y rk,. He is always a famjffiar flfenra;
in Washington when a tanff hill is 1
■ being ,prepared,. He is a gif.' - mftnc
fapturer and is thoroughly convinced
that the tariff should always be re
vised by its frjende. That be sincere-,
ly believe; in a high tariff way con
clusively proved 'when It v .ui con
victed of smuggling and sentenced to
six mrnths in jail and fined SX,(IOU.
The tariff on .leather gloves was,
from x cents to -111 cents per pair un
der the Underwood law. Mr. Llttaurr
cud his collaborators succeeded in
having the rates fixed in the Fordncy
McCumfeer ticitT law at from fifi 1-::
cents to $1.87 per pair,. Under the
old law -cur lecher glove were l:!
•per cent of our total domestic pr
dnetion. Substantially all of the im
ports were of gloves not made in the
United States, and they yielded the
government some revenue.
The new tariff is practically an ern
bargo on foreign gloves and the gov
- rumen I wjll bn*- tlr,- n-t-nm i|
recetveil under the old law. At a
time when the price of everything
i; fixed by son\e sort of ‘trust, it is
disheartening to see the et tigress of
the United State . ursh on to the aid
of (he profiteers.
A tariff' that equals the difference
in the cost of production here and
abroad, is all that the glove matin
laefurers could, honestly ask, hut the
Vmerican Fair Tariff I.eaguc which
■; retested against these extortionate
cafe.., says they arc more than three
times the total wage cost entering
mto (tie manufacture of the gloves.
A tariff of this kind is an invitation
to plunder the consumer in the name
of protection to American labor, and
Die invitation was extended by iron
who were elected to congress to rep
resent tha* public..
THEY KNOW WHAT WAR IS
A few minutes before adjournment
of their convention, the
Legion delegates in Now Orleans reg
filtered what is by all odds the in u
Important conviction yet voiced by
that organization,. That is a stand a.
sumed without a dissenting voice, f., r
an international court that will out
law war. The .signficauee of this -e n
elusion sail not he over estimated,
especially since it \va„ .conceived by
the Inter Allied Yeter.ian.’s Com
mitte.o, v.'-nnpoacd -mil iroiy of A;u. ri
ifafl.s. hut of men rept-o.roruing the
armies ot her old alhes.
various civil agencies who
"comb ni|u war may be guife able to
mipraicfte the insane folly of t with
out direct -nartifcipat ion, when the
fighter himself, reared in the tradifon
al belief that war is the heritage of
the young and brave, brands it in his
diffusion an unspeakable evil, the ca:; e
against war is indeed complete,.
In war the soldier achieves in
credible heights of courage and self
sacrifice, and many, hut not all, non
combatants feel a sublime ephemeral
patriotism. That is war’s sole sav
ing grace. For no conflict ever was
waged that was not rooted in the
greed < f one or both euphemisms to
describe the worst activity of himans,
as well as some of the best.. Ware
are conceived because greedy men
promote them and weak inch are im
potent to stave them off, But soldier
lho world over since 1018 have grown
to see that they are the ones who pay
for wars and continue to pay until
their gonoriffion is dead,.
Before thl late war the pica of the
peace joy J was that civil (power
from Die hands of the
Soldier. Today there are no safer
hands than throve of the former fight
ors. If the, same antipathy to war
voiced by the Legion and its foreign
* omrades were universal another eon
filet in this era would be impossible.
These men 'have been most intimate
ly associated with war, and their
verdict against it is a conviction
bought in the blood of thejr kind,.
ANOTHER DAUGHERTY DUD ,
Tim department of justice state
ment that the government has lost
billion of dollars through war con
tract frauds because (he evidence has
disappeared may be accurate or it
may be a chfmsoy way for Die ile
partment to construct an alibi or it
may lie a cowardly slap at the M\
duct of a great war which was win
yulaily free from administrative
scandals.
it seems strange lndA>d, that with
the department in if tie
matter alive March 4, 1921, tl has not
been able to expose and pros) cult
the frauds il now alleges were, iprau
lined. Tiro country is familiar with
Die ‘‘smelling.’.’ committees organ
ized by a Republican congress to do
tfict war scandals and Ihe utter faff
lire to produce the goods,. For that,
reason 'the people "'lll-.no he imprest
• and with this latest attempt to die;
credit the Wilson administration with
out again producing tiro goods.,.
For a long time the department < i
Z % •ac
coiicluxlWw so 111 - - x t in**
were started boh r- tWB depart men*
took ore- Jfe Work. It lias laid err
tain etlden.e before grand jinies and
instituted Boffin suits but troffl a R
publican standpoint the nrt reset
lias been disappinting. So ft reeui"'
appropriate that something he don
to create an lnsprC-tsirit that the v.,>*
job han wickedly p.-rforvm-d., Th do
vice ui not convincing, rite depart
men! will have to do more than il In
to eonvitt e the people that from th
standpoint if honesty and effleieno*
Dio Anroriran end of the World Wa
was not the <4*1.1 nest in the history i
;rs.
DANIELS AND OUR NAVY
Neither the perhaps iminF nt ion ■
- (Tort of Ihe late Seer-Haft f ail,-, or
ftie Wilson cabinet nor the pi hal
''signed effort of Admiral Shin, (■
infiiltle the remarkable conduct rf
Die navy d-pr.kment during So, 1 e
(ary •Daniel.'s administration will
have Die desired effect..
Mr. Lane's letters to Intimates
posthumously published credits Km
rotary Daniels with opposing the con
voy system during the war because it
was dangerous.. Happily, as he him
self says, Secretary Daniels kept a
diary of the times and the cabinet
meetings at which this statement i
alleged to have been uttered is on
of the diary entries.
11l that record Mr,. Daniels show
that his policy was to recommend th '
convoy system, that it was endorse
by President Wilson and pressed up
on the English through Admiral Kim
as one of the most effective was
te light th o -U-boat. Mr.. Daniels in
a statement says: f
"Our navy placed rmterewa on
merchant ships"before the United
States entered the war. It was
dangerous and th,- hardest sort
of service,. Neither before the
war was declared nor during th
"ihe war did 1 hesitate to adop
or carry out any policy, no mat
ter how dangerous, that prom! ,
ed protection and the story , f
how the navy dared perils and
danger proves (his statement.."
One of the penalties of all wars is
that thp lighting does not end with
the armistice,. Probably f r yeai
unnumbered various issues and poli ■
ies of the war will be fought,. Bmi
no amount of oral or written v.a
fare will dim for as, long as a fle.-d
lug serohd flm .snperh {banner in
whiuh the United States met its do'
afld the pefforinattees there f.
The attack: on Secretary Daniels.”
administration of the navv depart ;
maut are not new nor io the etfec
GOOD MORNING
A Gothamite in Havana asked
entral to connect him ’"ith a cer
■ain number in New York, adding,
’Tell the party who answers that
I wish to speak to my bulldog.”
..p |
After a brief inter 1 .;.;, gues‘3
Hooding nearby heard a faint
"Woof, woof!” coming from tho
receiver. Then centra' cut in
sweetly, “Your time ia up; that
will be twenty dollars.”
“Dog-gone!” growled the New
Yorker, "that’s ten dollars'a woof.”
Boston Transcript,
Charles Gibson tells us of a
down-and-out who cam; into tho
railroad office with -' tab of woe
old tried to work him for trrsposv
’union out of tovvr.
“I came to Cleveland - Kith goe':
prospects three, month- ago,” ex
tiiaified the unfbrtvmnt 1 i:e “I
thought 1 could Mm! a goad posi
tion with a certain eame-anv >n ac*
:-oi-iit of the work I'd done in mV
own town on llu-i. line. Rut they
Jultf’t know anyt.’.ii.g ah ut me,
mil they turned me down. 1 took
my letters of introduction to an
other firm; same result. I was
some pumpkins at home, but they
couldn’t see me here. 1 didn’t have
no pull Then 1 tried !he railroads.
1 u; etec work 111 the deopo, back
there. But ,11 Cleveland tl. didn't
seem to think that arno'- .ted to
anything. I wanta go !- k. Now.
as I said. 1 useter be a railroader..
Gould I git a pass'.’”
“My do; man." explained. Nr.
Gibson kindly, "the law allows tu
to give p-ro.es to windy, There’s
no exception iioa-dy’"
“That’s rn.■!” cried the derelict.
’’Gimme the pa. —Clevcltw?
Plain Dealer.
Ivi nero with which Die truth repeal.-;
-hem,. .Mr. Daniel-.' eomluei of his
n.-pavl tin nta liar ol the war was
11. plring,. Never d'd tl-• navy 01
sny nation rea li a bitiher grade of.
•:a elh-ne- r meet it:; iliffteiflt I®l
langerouw lacks with finer devotion
and spirit, •
An effort ol turn 'a- day make it
appeal that M . Danieis ip. k and foree-j
lulne; s: or courage 111 r.i .-kiit. Ihuj
1- of Du war 1.;
tain to tail been"a- he bi
did a coieiat- *( it<-■ -tt _
a * I optlU^|HjJ^a^^J|||^M*v
SAYS RED PEPPER
HEAT STOPS PI
IU FEW MOTES
Rheumatism, lumbago, neuritis, back
ache, stiff neck, sore n o 1 .strains,
sprains, aching joint.-;. When you are
suffering so you can hardly get around,
just try'Red Pepper Rub.
Nothing has such -< -ecenti ated, pene
trating heat as red p ppers, and when
heat penetrates rig* down into pain
ami corniest ini relic comes at once.
soon as you apply Red Pep
per Rub you feel the tingling heat. In
three minutes the sore spot is warmed
through and through and the torture is
gone.
Row ies Red Pepper Rub, made from
red peppers, costs little at any drug
store. Get a jar at once. Be sure to
get the genuine, with the name Rovvles
on every package.
, < 1 he Great
R adieu t
•V- ■ .V - \
\/." ' ”v.-x Home
1 Ifl Heater
1; C’i;-j-a' ;n!
VP'f m An ornament and a real
||i| t ' jot- and comfort to any
£if 5 household. Keeps lire all
'fcl nip lit. and most econom-
ical heater manufactur
v. toua s”
“Ash the Lady Who
fc£z / Owns One.”
Georgia Hardware Cos,
riiooe 835 -83 b
“Money Saved Is Money Made
QUILLIAN’S PHARMACY
Successors to
HATCHER & LUNOBERG
DRUG CO
We fire now prepared to
fill your Prescriptions and
assure you that they will
have our best attention.
Phone 47
and try our service.
Your Business will be Ap
preciated.
Dr. B. 0. Quillians office
phone is 47. Residence
phone is 1054. Calls an
swered night or day.
North Ga. Graham Flour
Buckwheat Flour
Pancake Flour
Maple Syrrfp
Ocoijrc Syrup
S,l,rainod Honey
Comb Honey
JupauenC "<,liali
Yelbav Squa li i
Green Cucumbers J
Snap Seans |
Iceberp Lettuce M
large White Celery
/:
lnln River Oranv.vs Jtjs&i
Italian Ki'.er tirapefij^S'ig*^?-:
Apple jmf*
Grape:.
"
111
llapi W< Delivt.-i .
ircKUNSWICk SI:A FOOD
MARKET
Corner Monk and Grant Streets
O. W. BRADY, Proprietor
We have today:
Red Snapper. Bars Sheeprhead,
Aitaniaha river fresh water cat
fish, Tr ut, Crab Meat. Cedar
Key Mullet.
Bear the fact, in mind that we
dress all fish and make PROMPT
IJMJVFRY.
OYSTERS DELIVERED 40c
PER QUART
Don’t Forget the Phone Num
ber, It’. S!).
4 ’Come in and sign the Declaration
of Financial Independence. Let us
hajMUogether, lest we hand separ
|U r 1 , IIK V'M K SAVI.'.I .
ungwicy
Hii ■ "
. I -THE BANK WITH A HEART.”
■B MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM.
[Auto Accessories
w we have in stock the proper
device for
. ANY CAR
riLMorgan
WO O D
Pine Ligktwood
Oak Mixed W ood
PHONE 600
SMITH’S WOOD YARD
READ THE NEWS ADS
Just Received
PRAWN NETTING
and
ACCESSORIES
Come and Get Yours Quick
WHIG IIT & GOWEN CO
' - r.T ■--'.Cl'" -
PHONES 336—337 .. MANSFIELD k BAY STS.
TUESDAY- OCT. 31. 1922.