Newspaper Page Text
HEATERS
' 4t
Are you thinking of putt^
heater in your home? mo i^
IF YOU ARE
Come to headquarters and make
your selection.
Our Prices Are Most Attractive.
All Kinds and Sizes
Wood, Coal, Oil and Gas
United Supply Cos.
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS
(lAAA Insurance policy and The
ipIUUU Brunswick News for $7.50
BOTH FOR A N ENTIRE YEAR
COLE’S
HOT BLAST
HEATERS
331-3 Percent Less Fuel
BE WISE
Lynn-Gould Hardware Company
THE WINCHESTER STORE
Gloucester 9£ - ; Phone 261
And we will pay the fare
and the hotel bill if we lose.
A Brunswick man was; telling
, j x his friend about buying a suit in
Savannah and savng money on
it. And the friend told us.
*' ' • . !' j _ ,f J J
Here's what we said:
We will pick Out of this stock
MfEIiCS. a Michaels-Stern suit-marked
S3O-— we '** ' n a $7.50
18 suit case, deliver it to you at
ik I\) % *he Union station—let ;you take
JJ the outfit to Savannah, hire a
O * n|\\ room, also a taxi, look in all the
h 1A i best stores, let them send their
MS H 11\ v selections to your hotel and IF
*> if L W y in your room on your own fig-
I- a/' in s' ures, our S3O value does not
shine we’ll pay
} the railroad fare both ways, the
/ /' hotel bill, and throw in the best
f . dinner in Savannah to boot.
% MJCHAELS.STERN VALUE
FIRST CLOTHES
530.00J0J40.00
Zero Hour, 2 to 3 p. m. Sunday
Nov. 12. Red Cross Drive.
Lorentzson & Sheffield
Pir-fIE NETS
fHMIIip
'“ig Lassie S
,tn But it T
NORMA TAliy to Accc* 3
%C 'J IN THI
' '• /
To the many Brunswick
worked all of yesterday '
pies for the American 10ws !low o
much credit ccr.not be " brunetts UKe
the result accomplished an f-' more
sucesfu( than rea]).\ tll .‘s antici
pated. In ail $147.00 was the sum
realized and this will assist the lo
cal Post to accomplish much good for
the ex-service men who are really in
need.
Some patriotic citizens brought
three or four poppies while others
gave more than fehb Price asked, 10
cents, for only one. It wa s a hard
day’s work but the .girls were on the
job and it was really dangerous to
walk on Newcastle minus a poppy on
the coat laPel. It wa s seen that the
supply ordered would not be sufficient
and a number of young ladle s got
busy Friday and m&de a supply that
lasted and with only a few left over.
The project was a‘success and the
legion thanks all who so kindly assist
ed and made the results show up so -
well. ■
11. S. IS KOTO
KEEP POWDER DRY
i
Alton B. Parker, Who Presides
at Conference of National
Civic Federation, Says the
World Powers Planning War.
(By Associated Press)
New York, Nov. 11.—America’s
attitude on .the great international
problems blocking world peace was
discussed today at the opening ses
sion of the National Civic Federa
tion’s conference, attended by repre
sentatives of 55 national organiza
tions with a membership of 30,000,-
000. Hasty disarmament by the
United States was criticized by sev
eral speakers whose view s on Amer
ica’s entrance into the League of Na
tions were as varied as their views of
disarmament were similar.
Alton 'B. Parker ,who presided, de
clared the United States , needed a
well manned navy and a strong army
to be kept at the highest state of
efficiency as a nucleus for a great
military maching in the event war.
“It appears,’’ he said, “that the
Powers, loaded with debts, plan to
wi n with newwwasr s what they lost in
past wars. They have gone mad, but
the Monroe Doctrine will prevent
this, hemisphere being drawn into the
conflagration.
“We should work for peace but
never forget to keep pur powder dry.”
TRAIN OPERATION
JBE MADE SECURE
port Will be Made to Have
/ Federal Laws Enacted Which
1 Will Deal Harshly With
| Those Stopping Traffic.
’Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 11.—With the
arraignment and trial in Georgia of
strikers in connection with train
wrecks, attention is directed here to
day to legislation pending in the na
tional senate to mak e it a feleny un
der the federal law for any person or
persons to interfere with the opera
tion of trains engaged in inter-state
commerce. It provides that such per
sons be chargeable with murder in
that lives are lost as a result
of sucl/interference.
Commenting on the legislation of
which Senator Sterling is the author,
a number of newspapers and other
publications think it rather singular
that such a law is not already on the
statue books. These publications
point out that murder is murder, but
as they show, some kinds of murder
are more astrociops and abhorrent
than others. Many of M-.esg publica
tions declare that the friends who de
liberately and with malice afore
thought, plan the wrecking of trains
as an act of revenge against the own
ers of roads, and thus, through the
execution of their designs, cause the
death of innocent and helpless pas
sengers, should be .held to be beyond
the pale of human mercy. No pun
ishment, in the opinion of those who
have studied the situation i n this
state, could b e sufficiently severe for
the criminals of this class.
Business men, farmei-s and railroad
men—in fact, all who have been in;
terviewed o n the subject here—say
Senator Sterling's bill should become
a law. Difficult as it is to believe
they Point out, there are in this coun
try many men who seek to justify
such slaughter a s an act of reprisal
against those they hold to be their
enemies. The logic of this murder
ous philosophy, it i s asserted, is the
same as that practiced by the ad
vocates of German frightfulness dur
ing the world war.
“Murder—the murder of innocent
and defenseless men, women and
children—at the hands of autocratic
groups has become too common in
the past,” said an Atlanta business
man. Let the criminal code be
strengthened in the nation.
FIFTY PER CENT
MEN EXAMINED
PHYSICALLY 0. K.
SELECTIVE DRAFT EXAMINA
TION DURING WAR SHOW
THIS TO BE A FACT
By Frank C. Gilreath, Jr.
Gainesville, Ga., Nov. 11.—Declar
ing that the war department’s re
ports amt on our man
power as indicated bv.selective draft
examinations during the world war
showed that 50 P er cent of the Amer
ican youth examined were subnormal
Physically, many with eradi cable de
fects, Secretary Week, has announced
in dispatches just received in At
lanta, that he has invited several
Prominent civilians connected with
educational institutions and national
and local organizations interested in
the mental, moral and physical de
velopment of youth to attend a con
ference on the subject.
This conference will be held at
the war department, i n Washington,
beginning November 16, and those
invited are asked to discuss with rep
resentatives of various branches of
the federal government ways and
means of co-operating for the men
tal, moral and physical development
of American youth.
Colonel Sandy Beaver, president of
the Riverside Military Academy of
Gainesville,. has received a special
invitaton from the Secretary of War
to the conference. It is stated
that the invitation was extended to
about seventy-five prominent Ameri
can . educator, ohters connected with
national organizations. He is the
only souther n prep-school educator
invited to, the conference.
In> addition to being president of
Riverside academy, which i s under
supervision of the U. S. war depart
ment, Colonel Beaver is secretary
treasurer of the Association of Mili
tary Colleges and Schools, which con
sists of more than ninety-five per
cent of the private military schools
of the country, to which officers of
the army are detailed as professVs
of military Science and tactics. A
close link, therefore, exists between
the federal government and the mili
tary schools. Colonel Beaver i s the
only southerner connected with the
association in an official capacity. Th e
Riverside academy, as announced a
few day 3 ago, was the recipient un
der government orders of two mag
nificent silver cups for its record in
military training at the last govern
ment cthnps.
WANTED
10,000 loyan Rrunswickians to carry this city “over the
top” at “Zero Houh,” (2 to 3o’clock,) Sunday afternoon.
y Join the Red Cross and gi ve your dollars and your prayer
to the furtherance of the work of the “Greatest Mother in the
World.”
A. Kaiser & Bro.
POULRY SHOW
PLANSARENOW
MOVING ALONG
•
DECIDED AT MEETING
POULTRY ASSOCIATION
DATE TO HOLD FAIR
The Glynn County * Poultry Bied
ers’ Association hold their regular
November meeting the Board of
Trade rooms.
Plans were formulated for the
Poultry Show that will be held dur
ing Thanksgiving Week in connec
tion with the county fair which will
be put on by Mrs. Madge B. Merritt,
Glynn county’s efficient home dem
onstration agent, assisted by the
Woman’s Club, the Board of Trade
and other civic organizations of the
city. Last year the. show was held
in a snpall tent, 16 by 30 feet, which
did not provide sufficient space to
show (o advantage the birds that,
were housed in it. This year the fcs
siociation expects to have a large 30
by 60 feet tent so as to take ample
care of a'.l the poultry that will be
entered and leave atsle s between the
coops at least feet wide. Thre
are many noro pi "e. bred chickens in
Glynn county now than were here
last year and the association expects
to be able to properly coop and care
for all that are entered.
Mrs. Merritt announced that Mr.
McCoy, the field poultry specialist
of the State College of Agriculture
at Athens, would be present duping
the Poultry show and would judge the
chickens. He will also lecture’to the
public each afternoon during tlie
show on judging stock for shows, se
lecting a Pen for breeding and culling
for egg production.
The association decided to put on
a ra t extermination campaign duing
December at which time the College
of Agriculture expects to have a
man in this territory to assist with
the campaign. •
REV. GILBERT TO PREACH
ARMISTICE DAY SERMON
Mr. Gilbert, minister of First Bap
tist church, Union and Mansfield
streets, will preach a special shmon
today on “The- New Heaven and New
Earth,’’ or the meaning of the great
war. The church most cordially in
vites the ex-soldier s and sailors in
the city to worship with them at 11:30
a. m. The music will be inspiring
and the service helpful.
A. B. & A. SCHEDULE CHANGES
I Effective Sunday, Nov. 12, A. B.
& A. train No. 5 for Savannah, and
I beyond will leave Brunswick 10:15
!i a. m. instead of 9:25 a. m. Train No.
6 from Jacksonville and Savannah
will arrive 11:55 a. m. instead of
! 11:45 a. m. No chfinge in other trains.
/
Wanted
—You to aid in sup
plying little children of Bruns
wick with milk.
. .In bringing health and hap
piness to children through Red
Cross Clinic.
In assisting ex-service men.
In bringing wealth and hap
great disasters where the
nyghty American Red Cross
stretches the strong arm of mer
cy. ,
Join the Red Cross
. ’- ■ _ \ ■ t k *■ ■
\ . i
Home of Hart, Shaffner & Marx Clothes
SUNDAY, NOV. 12 1922.