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PAGE FOUR
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS J
Published every morning except Mon
day by
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
Brunswick, G&.
The News Bldg., .1604 Newcastle St.
clarencelTleavy
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
of the City of Brunswick.
Member of the Associated Press.
The Associated Press is entitled to
the use for publication of all news
credited t 0 it or not otherwise credit
ed in this paper, and also to the local
news published herein.
ALL DEPARTMENTS PHONE 188
Newberry, Goldstein and Daugher
ty were the three graces of the Re
publican party that literally broke the
elephant’s back!
Makq it a rule to be courteous to
the tourists who pass through Bruns
wick _ Point out the scenes of in
terest and tell them of Brunswicck
and her ideal climate.
“The new tariff is having its effect
on retail prices,” observes the Savan
nah Press. Quite true, and we are at
the opinion that it is also having its
effect on the voters of the nation!
Remember the zero hour in the
American Red Cross roll call between
two and three o’clock Sunday after
noon. Respond to the call of mercy
and aid an organization whose .good
worke Is universal in its shope.
And Senator Peindexter of Wash
ington, another of the golf partners
of President Harding, went down in
that avalanche of Republican votes
on Tuesday.
When another Armistice Day conies
round. Brunswick will have finished
the erection of a great memorial
school builditag, whi-ch is to be dedi
cated to the Brunswick boys who
made the great sacrifice.
We would like to witness that
great throng of Americans who will
march into S street in Washington
today to acclaim Woodrow Wilson.the
great war presi'dednt of the United
States. It would do the soul good
to see it.
Governor Hardwick will still per
sist that we should do away with the
county unit system in Georgia. We
do not at first blush agree with him.
Th e old convention and caucus plan
would hardly improve the preseut
method.
Col. Gaston, the gallant Democrats
leader of Massachussets made a very
fine fight. There is a recount going
on and it is barely possible that Sena
tor Lodge will yet have to say ‘‘after
you, my dear Gaston,”
John P. Adams, chairman of the
Republican national committee is
quoted as saying that the results of
Tuesday s election were gratifying to
the Republican leaders. If Mr.
Adams is correctly quoted, he is the
most bunglesome liar on record.
No man in the ciay of Brunswick
who feels that this is his home, is
doing that home full justice unless he
jS affiliated with the Brunswick Board
of Trade. Keep this great truth in
mitad when Chairman Davenport
launches that new membership
drive next Tuesday.
The arbiter of political fortunes in
America has been kind to the Demo
cratic party during the week, ft will
not control in either branch of the
congress, whiCh in the present cir- j
cumsaances is fortunate for the party.
Let the Republican party of Harding
play the whole string out up to 1924.
Armistice day! What a flood of
holy memories this day brings to the
people of America and what a wealth
of love goes out to those countless
graves in Flanders field, where sleep
thousands of brave youths, who made
the great sacrifice. We must not, we
cannot, forget those boys and what
those silent mounds in far away
France mean to to civilization.
If there had been no Board of Trade
Making,in conjunction with the ioeaj
y*4f>le toy the St, Siinon ftiglfway,
fhefjNr would be no advertiseirients'to
day,-calling, for bids for the construc
tion of that magitificant development,
one of the most farqreachiug ever at
tempted by th e people of this com
n.uity.
ARMISTICE DAY!
At eleven o’clock on the mornihg
of November 11, 1918, the sword of
the allies was sheathed; the cannon
of the allies was silenced and Ger
many, cringing in defeat, trailing in
the dust of ignominious failure, bent
low her head, and on bended knee
begged for mercy and for bread.
Thus ended the wildest dream that
ever found lodging place in the mind
of an emperor, since that memorable
march of Napoleon’s grand army into
the snowy peak of Russia, there to
be famished by firv and sword and
hungry wolves.
As the instigator of the crime of
that century pined away to. death in
the desolate wastes of St. Helena, so
will the fiend incarnate of Potsdam
pay for his mad fight into world do
minion and the rule at might.
This is Armistice Day; we are free
to think and well might we forgel
the miserable wretch i'n Holland and
revert Briefly to our own part played
so heroically in the greatest of all
wars. It was th o strong arm of the
allies; it was the undaunted bravery
and Inherent patrotism of the Ameri
can soldiers that first turned back
the hardes of helmeted Germans aul
made the victory possible!
We can think of Chateau Thierry,
the Argonne and many other battle
fields and find glory in the thought
that here, the forces of right whipped
to a finish the troops of might; that
here again was emblazoned on the
pages of the world’s history the great
troth that once again Afhieriea had
struck for liberty and for justice, for
freedon and right.
And today, in the homes where
there is a vacant chair, whose former
occupant sleeps in Flanders field or
the Argonne, there must come the
satisfying thought that this death has
not been in vain; that this life has
been sacrificed at the altar of a na
tion’s creed and in the redemption
and the protection of a nation’s hon
or.
To fond mothers and fathers ev
erywhere today, whose hearts are
bowed in sorrow,- whose thought are
concentrated around a little mound
it: far away France, we carry a mes
nsage of cheer. The lives. of their boys
liqve not been given in vain; they
died for the same reason that Wash
ington’s ragged Continetals gave up
their lives.one hundred and fifty years
ago!
Brunswick can take a righteous
pride in this Armifetic Day. Her
sons measured up to their full duty
and several of them sleep beneath
the poppy clad hills of Sunny France.
Her citizens responded to every call;
her great facilities were used jto
build ships and to manufacture ex
plosives; her people were free of
heart and they can with the
pardonable begree of satis
faction this morning, feel that their
duty to the government was always
and at all times full and freely per
formed.
So today, let’s enjoy the pleasure
of the occasion, let’s/forget all elst
and give ourselves to the delightful
pastime of experiencing Armistice
day and all that it means to liberty
to right and to America.
WOMAN, ACCORDING TO THE
BIBLE.
Ambassabor Harvey’s assertion that
vomen are without souls and that
the Ten Commandments do not ap
ply to them was made, we sffiill al
ways believe, in a spirit of levity
Nevertheless, it has created anew
topic of conversation and discussion,
for which we thank the Ambassador.
A Nashville, Tenn., rabbi commenting
on Harvey’s remarks attributed the
utterance to ignorance, but generous
ly suggests that it was du e to a lack
of knowledge of the language in which
the Oid Testamemnt was written. To
.which opinion the Nashville Tennes
seean yielded slightly, but insisted
that even the English translation o
the Bible _ coming through an inter
mediary language, “tells the story o,
woman as equal in value and signifi
cance with that of man.” Continuing
,the Tennessean submits the follow
ing comment;
No liistor ever written has kept
woman-more constantly and in
tegrally a part of its rtfeord than
that of the Bible.
From the story of that day in
Eden, when the symbolic fash
ion of Eve’s creation made lier
man’s companion and his equal,
down to that of that wonder
time when a man named Joseph
went from Nazareth ;n Galilee to
Bethlehem “to be taxed with
Mary, his espoused njjfe,” woman
lias gone into the report with a
full share in its beauties and its
woes.
Far back in an early chapter in
Genesis, but a short way down
the long story from Eden, comes
Naamah, the sister of Tubal Cain,
remembered' that to
“fife tiling miiyi' Oiat / she ! '^was fair
and pleasant to see. Just before
her, Ada and Zillagi remembered
that they were sympathetic and
that they listened to Lamech’s
lament.
Come then always with stories
of the patriarchs, the stories of
their wives and their daughters
and of all the women with whose
influence and destinies their own
were bound up. Sarah and Re
becca and Leah and Rachel, Ha
gar and fotiphar’s wife, the
mother of Moses, who saved his
life, the princess of Egypt, who
reared him, the daughters of the
priest of Midian, who took him
to their home, and Miram, the
sister who sang for him the song
or lseral’s deliverance.
Comes Rahab, letting the spies
of Joshun down from her houst
on the wall, seeing Islael’s God
as Lord of lords, scarlet woman
as she was, becoming a mother
of David’s royal line.
Comes Achrah,Caleb's daughter,
winning her father’s blessing in
his gift of ‘‘the south land ” with
the‘upper and nether springs.
Comes Deborah, judging Isreal
under her palm tree, speeding
Barek into battle, and singing
with him her inspired hymn of
(Humph. Comes Jae’ stnit'og
Sisera to his death with her
treacherous iihit, and Sistshjs
mother watching vainly for his re
turn, crying from her lattice,
‘‘Why is his chariot so long in
coining?”
Comes Bathsheba, weeping with
David for his little lad, rejoicing
with him in the wisdom of young
Solomon, her son. Comes Ruth,
whose loyalty has passed into a
proverb and whose words live in
countless hearts; comes Esther,
who risked her life to save her
people; conies the beauitful Shu
lamite, for love of-whom a great
king wrote a deathless song of
songs.
All of these —yet but a begin
ning of the names of good wo
men and .of bad, whose inspiration
and whose leads, with full respon
sibility in the matter of right and
wrong are unquestioned parts of
the long story of God’s word as
we know it be taken as the basis
for our discussion, man has no
claim to immortality which wo
man may not shard!
Ambassador Harvey is not a dull
ard. H 0 is, in fact, a scholar. It
cannot be suspected that he does not
know all about what it said in the
Bible about women. It’ he had not
been a scholarly man he would not
have dared to make the assertion
that he did. But as a scholar he
did not expect anyone to take his re
marks seriously, it is to be assumed
A REAL HUMANE MOVEMENT!
Next week has been set aside by
the American Society for the control
of cancer as cancer week.
Few persons realize that cancer
today Is the greatest plague known
to the civilized world. _ Its ravages
are amazing and shocking.
Every year one man out of every
fourteen dies of cancer.
Cancer kills more people than pneu
monia, typhoid fever and tuberculosis
combined. The average, both male
and female for th e United States is
one out of every ten persons.
The Ao’ iican Society has given
out the following facts about cancer:
During the great war the United
States lost about 80,000 soldiers. Dur
ing the same two years 180,000 peo
ple died of cancer in this country.
Cancer, is now killing one out of
every ten persons over forty years
of age.
Many of these deaths are prevent
able, since cancer is frequently cur
able, if recognized and properly treat
ed in Its early stages.
Cancer begins as a small local
growth which can often be entirely
removed by competent surgical treat
ment, or in certain external forms,
by using radium X-ray or other
methods.
Cancer is not a constitutional or
“blood” disease; there should be no
thought of disgrace or of “hereditary”
taint about it.
Cancer is not a communicable dis
ease. It is not possible to “catch”
cancer from one who has it.
Cancer is not inherited. It is not
certain even that a tendency to the
disease is inherited. Can c er is so
frequent that simply by the law of
chance there me/ be_ many cases in
some families, and this gives rise to
much needless worry about inherit
ing the disease. .
The beginning of cancer is ussu
ally painless; for this reason its insid
ious and is frequently overlooked,
and is too easily neglected. Other
danger signals must be recognized
and copetent medical advice obtain
ed at once.
Any sore that does not heal, par
ticularly about the mouth, iip e 0 r
tongue, is a danger signal. Picking
and irritating such sores, cracks, tti
ceratons, etc., or treating these skin
by.hermft r , wteg
poultices, caustic*, etci, is ! playing
with fire. Warty growths, moles or
other bithmarks, especially those
subject to constant irritation, should
be attended to immediately if they
'change in color or appearance or
start to grow. Avoidance of chronic
GOOD MORMNG
1 A woman who had been visiting
in the West and who had seen many
interesting Indians nought som
Indian dolls for her little Now Yort
friends.
The dolls were dresse in Indian
fashion—shawl, colored ham'- r
chief about head, moccasins, patch
work skirt and hand-made stock
ings. When she got dome she
looked to see what kinu of under
wear the Indians had made for the
Indian dolls, and every one of them
wore a georgette chemise!—New
York Sun.
" “See that woman over there?"
5 “Yes, what about her?”
“Well, if it hadn't been for three
words she said ton rears ago, I
would be as wealthy as Croesus
now!”
“Delightful situation. Go ahead
with the tale!”
“Well, her father nvned all '.h?
safetypin plants in the country and
the family was just .oiling in
wealth. And with all her riches
she was mean enough to deprive
me of my chancep of making ten
million dollars at a blow! Imagine!”
"What's the rest of the dope?
What are the famous three
words ?”
“Why, I was going to marry >r
and then all her millions would
have been mine but—”
“But what?”
“But when I acked her to he mine
she said; ‘No. You food' ”—Am
herst Lord Jeff
irritation and removal of just seem
ingly insignificant danger spots may
prevent cancer.
Persistent indigestion in middle
life, with loss of weight and change
of color, or with pain, vomiting, or
diarrhoea, call for, through the com
petent medial advice as to possibili
ty of internal cancer.
Radium is a useful’ and promising
means of treatment for souls' kinds of
cancer, in the hands of few skilled
surgeons and hospitals possessing
sufficient quantity of this rare and
very expensive substance, i't must not
be thought of as a cure for all ailment.
No medicine will cure cancer. Doc
tors and institutes advertisse
“cures without the jSSfo” play upon
the patient’s fear of operation in a
way that leads too often to the loss
of precious time and fatal delay in
seeking, competent reatemenj. Go
first to your family physician.
►
► J. M. PITTS
►
' Contractor and Builder
►
►
►
y . Estimates Cheerfully Furn
r ished.
►
► Large and small jobs will Receive
‘the same prompt attention.
► I have been in. this line of
► business in Brunswick for the
► past twenty-live years. My best
‘ references are furnished by those
► 1 have worked for.
1203 Gloucester St.
0$) The Great
—Radient
iflr H° me
Heater -
> ii ii 01 namen^ant^a rua *
pjfeh joy and comfort to any
household. Keeps fire all
night, and most econom
ical heater manufactur
“Ask the Lady Who
fey i Owns One.”
Georgia Hardware Go.
phone 835 -83 b
-• r —V < _
“Money Saved Is Money Made
IF OUR SERVICE FAILS
IN ANY WAY, PLEASE
TELL US. WE WANT IT
TO BE AS GOOD AS IT
IS POSSIBLE TO MAKE
IT.
*
BRUNSWICK LAUNDRY
Geo. Griffin, Mgr.
DON’T FORGET WE ARE
DRY CLEANERS
HELP BRUNSWICK
}
RED CROSS
Be ready to Join Sunday
afternoou at “Zero Hour. ’
Phone 321 We Deliver.
BRUNSWICK SEA FOOD
MARKET
/
Corner Monk and Grant Streets -
O. W. BRADY, Proprietor
We have tot^ay: —
Red Snapper, Bass Sheepshead,
Altamaha fiver fresh water cat- ■
fish, Trout, Crab Meat, -,Cedar ■
Key Mullet.
Bear the fact in mind that we
dress all fish and make PROMPT ■
DELIVERY.
OYSTERS DELIVERED 40c
PER QUART
Don’t Forget the Phone Num- -
her, It’s 89. N H
SELY RELIEVES ]
u'H--> CO PAS 2 A AN!? CUBEftS §
~s r:,- i m:tatlONS - |
Holiday Notice
> The Governor of the State of
Georgia Having Proclaimed
1 ARMISTICE DAY,.
NOVEMBER 11. 1922
as a holiday, this hank will be
closed for business on that date.
4 PER CENT AND SAFETY FOR YOUR SAVINGS.
“THE BANK WITH A HEART.”
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM. .
1 e are the Acknowledge
Headquarters for
Auto Accessories
we have in stock the proper
device for
ANY CAR
J. H. Morgan
Good Dry Wood
$1.50 per Load or $6 per Cord
Cut in stove lengths
Prompt Delivery—Leftge Loads
Satisfaction Guaranteed
R.B. FROHOCK
Phone 956
READ THE NEWS ADS
Try Our
Hardwear Cord Tires
built for hard use.
*
Quality higher, pricesjlower
Call and See Theth 41
HELP BRUNSWICK RED CROSS
Be ready to join Sunday afternoon at
j zlero Hour
„ ' * i-
WRIGHT & GOWEN CO
PHONES 336—337 .. MANSFIELD & BAY STS.
SATURDAY, NOV’. 11. 1922