Newspaper Page Text
BRUNSWICK NEWS
. „. ,
.
-<V-~v--------- - -- --- --———■——
Pabllahed every morning except Mcn
w . day by
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
^ \ «'■ Brunswick, G#«
, The News Bldg.. 1604 Newcastle St.
CLARENCE H. LEAVY
President and Editor.
Entered at the Brunswick, (Ga.) Post
as secoiubclass mail matter.
Subscription rates
One Year .................... $7.50
Six Months .................. 4.00
'Wtree Months .................
One Month ...................
The News Is the official newspaper
of the City of Brunswick and the
County of Glynn and United States
bankruptcy court for this district.
Member of the Associated Press
The Associated Press is entitled to
jhe use for publication of all news
Credited to or not otherwise credited
In this paper, and also to the local
news published herein.
Li. DEPARTMENTS PHONE 18S
,
Atlanta, adopting Brunswick's
cy, is getting to be something of a
convention city herself.
—-----;- .. . — ■ ■———
-The resignation of Premier Bonar
Law doesn’t mean that Lloyd George
js coming right back. The king hasn’t
even looked in his direction.
|§5 i Greece is again ready to fight Tur
key. It takes some nations, as well
is individuals, a long time to
enough of a thing.
% 1 ---'--— Walker is said be
Governor-elect to
prepared to call an extra session of
the legislature if the tax reforms pro
posed by him are not adopted at the
Coming session of the general assem¬
bly. It is to be devoutly hoped the
* next legislature will not talk itself
•to death, as has been done on more
than one occasion by its predecessors.
v Screen your open-grate fires i!l
winter, swat the flies in summer,
stop, look and listen at grade cross¬
ings, don’t, start the kitchen range
fire with the kerosene can, keep your
nose out of other folk’s business and
maybe you will live to be run over by
a drunken joyrider, says the Louis¬
ville Courier-Journal.
There were only twenty-four per¬
sons killed and one hundred and six¬
ty injured in week-end motor wrecks
in twenty-nine cities in the United
States. At the same ratio, including
every city ana town in the country,
the number would reach, enough to
populate a fair-sized town, instead of
populating the land to i.c i t a >
have been unwillingly suit.
‘ ~
The astonishing growth .. of , popu . ,
lar sentiment for
president ... is causing . deep , concern , to
F
Democrats and Republicans _ ui- alike. ri
The Detroit manufacturers name s |
a household word, and that is a polit
ical asset that is not to be lightly re- j
not seeking the office, but rather the
office - is • seeking • • him. ■ ' But political
sentiment has been known to undergo
several changes in the course of a
twelvemonth
The selection of Col. F. E. Twitty.
of this city, as the third member of
the directors for Georgia of the Dixie
Highway Association, which now
seems assured, will be an honoi
worthily won. There is not a more
enthusiastic good roads advocate in
the entire country than Col. Twitty
and hr. is especially qualified to fill
the posl made vacant by the resigna
tion of Hon. Frank G. Bell, of Savan
nah.
A citizen of Newburgh, N. Y., *ioti
to the President that if Governor
Smith signs the Mullan-Gage act
Congress Should be convened at once
to suspend the Governor and legis
lature of New York. -“With much
that you say I am fully in accord,
replied Mr. Harding in a letter more
lengthy than definite and logical.
whereat the disgusted ' New Ne»v York 1 oi K
World printed an editorial leader un
der the irreverant caption, “A Mud
dle-Headed President.”
In discussing the ten books he likes
best, Johnny Spencer ventures to as
sert: “In his list of the ten books he
liked best William Allen White names
‘Tom Sawyer’ and ‘Huckleberry Finn
and it is a joy to kriow that in that
matter at least this distinguished
gentleman’s mind ‘runs along with
ours. But so far none of the pickers
favorite tens has named the book
we liked best of all, namely ‘Jack the
Gittt JSlterV 'ft was a first;love, ar-.
feting one. Now an«Ubheh : we -read
it JSrgajnL just for -instance, as >' f,d
mi^rht^sVy. The ojd-time thrill is lack
^.hfet-thc .memory of that lone gofi.c
ecstasy clings to it still. And we can
thirik•’of any number of thirigs we'd
jra^njr, pqrtwith than that.''
GROWING SECTION?
--
South Georgia hits .been growing
more rapidly than North Georgia for
some time. It has made greater gains
.in population, and the center of pop¬
ulation, in the, state therefore has
move,? steadily southward. Atlanta
has grown phenomenally, and is still
setting -the pace for Southern cities,
*>i»t that one city is probably tile only
j part of North Georgia that is grow-
1 ing more rapidly than the lower sec
! tion of the state as a whole,
i It is believed the census of 1930
will show South Georgia, to be grow
j ing. more rapidly than North Geor
S»n» and that Southwest and South-;
east Georgia in particular are out
j state. growing any other section of the
■
The Florida Times-Union, casting
an observant eye northward, sees re
| has newed this evidences to by of these of things, interested and
; say way
. comment:
"The housing problem is not con¬
fined to Florida. Construction is in
progress all over this state with a vol
ume that promises to meet all needs
for a time, only there, is no chance
long of meeting it in Florida for a very j
, time. People are pouring into
this state either as tourists or as
■ permanent settlers in large numbers
i every year.
I “This prosperity overflows the bor
ders of the state and is enjoyed al
most as if not auite as greatly in
j j South Georgia. The housing situa j
tion at Waycross is giving trouble to
the people of that rapidly growing j
j city. houses It is state,? needed that five hundred in-, j
new are for the
crease, iq population that is not only
in sight hut is eager to find quarters ;
in Waycross. The -South Georgia
city, which now has about twenty
thousand people, had only about five
thousand, twenty years ago, and the
t iem--ni! for homes for five hundred
new families there now shows that
this year’s growth is about as great
as was the entire population of the
town thirty years ago.
“While Waycross is the largest
town in Georgia south of the parallel
of Savannah its growth -is not pecu¬
liar. Brunswick has taken a new'
growth and promises to grow up to
the natural advantages of its splendid
j lar p, 0 r Albany lias gotten well into
the ten thousand class. Valdosta,
Thomasville, Cordele, Dublin, Moul¬
trie and many other cities have dou¬
bled their size in the last few years
and scores of smaller places are
growing with equal rapidity.
“All this is backed and made pos¬
sible find even necessary by the rapid
growth of the country. Tho greater
part of the growth of Georgia out
side of Atlanta for the last two de
cades or more has been in South
Georgia. But the growth in popula
( j on j ]ag no (- p,g en as great as the in
„,.„o=q crease ; n prosperity. Two or three
years ago the low price price of cotton
! - ave South c , ., Georgia ,, . a , temporary
backset but, with as vital and pro¬
gressive * . a section, any misfortune . ,
^ te „ in its effects.
The ^ ^ ^ ^ 1qw
. , ,
J™* ThTy produled their
° wn foodstuffs and with barns over
flowin ^ with grain and smoke houses
well stocked with meat with all the
j, and syrup, they could use
they could wait for the return of good
prices of their principal crop.
“South Georgia is going forward
ra P ldl y and !t wdl not be long b efo rc
the majority of the people of „ the , ,
state will live south of Macon.” 1
LOST TRAILS |
i
the world— ;
Tne finest pavement in
Roman road built centuries ago—is !
discovered four feet under the earth’s
.
surface at Colchester, England. |
This superb highway was put to¬ I
, gether by the tessellated or checker¬
pat¬ i
board system, like the mosaic
j terns of tiles inlaid in many colors
as flooring for modern bathrooms,!
j building entrances, etc. j
j The design is worked out in seven j ! j
. colors. The tiles in places are ar
j range,-! to form dragons, bulls, flow- j
, ers and dolphins.
; j j t st arts you thinking about the j
g ] or i es of lost civilizations. Grim,
but a trifle more interesting, is a skel-;
! oton found on top of this ancient I
' pavement in England. The bones of j
a young woman. Why was she left:
| there? You picture a speeding char- 1
| iot, knocking her down, the driver
i g a jj op ing his horses ahead without.'
stopping. 1
If you ever visit, Peru and explore
! what remains of the wonderful Inca
j civilization destroyed by Spanish con
! querers, the Inca roads would impress
j you most—particularly if you drive i
i a car.
| Qjie-of these roads was nearly 2009
■- Twenty ifect wide.
: stretches over the mountains, praoti- ;
v:] \\y as good today as when it Inca v.a: j
, bujlt centuries ago. First the j
... of
. road m8 k e ,-s laid down huge slabs j
1 covered this with
gtone Tbey a Tim? j
coating of bituminous cement.
lias hardened this cement into solid
rock.
Descnblng tliis road, Charles J.
Finger says in his book, “Lost
izntions”: ,
recall _
“I the great stppc road of
the vanquished people, perfectly level
or gently sloping, leagues of living
rock being cut -for passages, ravines
filled with solid masonry, precipices
carved. Nor was the road left a
mere mechanical triumph. On eith¬ _____
er side there were
rip-rapped with stone, and trees and
flowers were planted.”
The good roads movement started
when barbarians began clearing trails
through the .dense jungles.
— .--o--- . - , ,
ditions. And this is true fee how now more more
than ever before, because
of population require adequate
teries of traffic.
Our good roafis movement is mak
ing rapid strides. It is really amaz
ing when you compare with the dirt
pavements of only 20 years 1* ago.
When our cbjta*.
'
-
under the ground, future excavators
may not think much ich of of us ... as they
earth some of the bum
we have laid. However—
While we do not build our roads
with the permanence of the Romans 1
Incas, possibly this Is bcca.sc »>
intuitively feel that it will not be j
many year's until most of our travel !
will be be by bv airplane airplane with with the the “roads "rnad."
in the air.
A WARNING TO HIS RACE
-
The exodus of many colored ^ peo
pieto the North is suffering a relapse, j
This is due to the fact that a great j
majority of those that have gone have 1
it to be a vevy difficult propo¬
to be comfortable on the money
they make, even though it is above
they have made at home. j
In a recent edition of the
was printed a letter from
of the negroes in which he tellf#
the folks at home that it’s a
and a delusion and he is so homesick 1
he would mortgage his hope o j
for just another chance to gel;.j
down to his old home place again.
He wants the negroes, who are rush¬
into going north to go on and lie
the folks down here that they
all be wanting to come back just
he has done.
It is regrettable that the propagan¬
who are spreading tliis fake j i
are not caught and punished,
are bringing to these ignorant
a vision of prosperity that
never be fulfilled and are using
and usual incidents of prosper
as a fitting example of what all 1
expect. Some have succeeded j
rich. The great '
gotten fairly
have been buncoed and hum
until they are a nuisance to
and a care upon those
whom they are making then
YOU STOPPED TO THINK
That the city that gets the public
gets the business ?
That the city that gets the adver
gr vs?
That advertising properly done i:
its weight in gold? !
That advertising a city is business, j
child’s play? }
That people will go miles to a good
city to trade?
That the property will increase in
value when the outside world know
city is wide awake?
That people from neighbotin;
towns will come where there is some
thing doing?
That now is the time your city an<
business needs advertising more that
ever before?
That if you don’t get out and g
after the outside trade some neigh
boring city will ? •
That if they do they will get th
,
business you should get?—Th
Fourth Estate.
Q lle 0 f the other problems in th
exodus of the negroes is: what an
they they going go j ng to to do when they retur
home a|1(t find t i 1P i r p i aC es filled b
ilnpor t c J white laborers?
q’i le war claim, which the Unit
states has against German amount
to more t | 1;m $1,400,000,000. It wi'
pro b a bly. go to $2,000,000,000 bcfoi
jj. j s a || pa id. There are 12,400 claim
^| ie i ar g es t being for $366,000,00(
wh ;i e t he smallest is for $1. Th
c i a j ms from individuals growing on
tbe s j n ^j n g 0 f the Lusitani
amount to $22,606,000.
The newspapers continue to ref
in a hopeful sort of way to the fu<
that George Harvey and the Prcsi
dent do not agree on the League <
Nations and that there is therefor
a strong probability i hi^.^^attiar4a^tw ’ ?.. $hat, L the ; ' QolpqL
may. 'resign’ 1. : . ... .. ‘
Ntv^gr: a‘efiangej, Js^ilp^oi!
[ resiunin.c sort, and th^, oni
way the .... President ................ will -ever .... get ir
resignation will ho peremptorily
demand it, declares the Albany Ho
ald-
Drink Water i5dt to
Help Wash
Kidney Poison
Your, Back Hurts «r Bladder
.You,, Begin
Taking Saits
When your kidneys hurt and ydtir
I
j nffid/hanfileM
move the body’s urinous waste and sfjm
; “wvm. In.24 Jiours they strain from'
j:;it 1 :, can it 500 ow.grams readily grains understaiMj oj ot add acffi.and and the waste,-so vital impor- we
drink too lotTSf much; also lsod&^a%i^' from phar
macist about four get any
£fj* bre^si eich ounces of Jad Salts;
*
r
few days and your kidneys may then
® ct finffi-, Tift? famous, salts is made
JUlLt, 'vUUUrlilCu M 11,11. Ululd, ailQ lirtS DCCfl
use( late ] clogged for.years-tp.lvclp kidneys; clean and stimu
. .. . also to neutralize ______
ttl r> noldn „ <« ' iL/. ....1-^- rt.___ ____ ...
relieviijg bladder ’
weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive; can, not in
jure,- s makes 3-delightfiil-effervescent
their kidneys dean and active. STS Try
'hist also keep up tlig water drinking,
ache. By °yS, SfelUSS big '
all means have your physi
rian, examine your kidneys at least twice -
■ iear.
ECZEMA—ITCH
Skin Troubles
Quickly and Permanently cured with
BARACHOL
used by many Hospitals and Skin!
Specialists, '
An important
ot a Famous Specialist,
BARIACHOL Ointment, known as an
,s01ute an<1 Permanent <ure in SIX
HJKHTS for Eczema and Itch. A
case seemingly hope , ess wrote:
“Givej^Xip'after 10 years by Doc
tews—cured in 3 nights with Bara
clKri.’’ Huh Barachol in your hands
only; it will reach the sore spots. No
interruption from work, disagreeable
odor or soiled linen. Disinfects
while curing. ONE DOLLAR brings
a . TUBE sufficient for a SIX-NIGHT
treatment. Guarantee with each
TUBE. Mailed in plain wrapper en
tjreiy seetled.
p anc j p CHEMICAL CO.
Dept. BN Passaic, N. J.
WHERE IS MY WONDERING
BOY?
Ask
Murdock
NEXT WEEK
DON T YOU
s tgs.m *riME?v~
-
‘SMART Y ' ^ *■
If you’d look Spring¬
like smart and nice.
You’d better take our
clothes-advice. 0
L OOK over your ward¬
robe and pick out the
garments that need
J last cleaning. Perhaps your ^
year’s spring suit
would suit you tp a “T.”, '-V
1 s
BRUNSWIC ’TTT
'eta Gas Stove
You will need a gas
stove. We have them
in ail styles and at mod*
erate prices- We are
agents for the celebrat¬
ed Clow Gas Steam Ra¬ i
diator.- Come in and
See them. f-u. '• ■>'
DOMESTIC ENGINEERS
uix Richmond strwrt
■H: Eiumbort '
* 6*66
is .a Prescription for Cj13s,
and/LaGrippe. Its the most
remedy entfng
Quickly Relieve#
pYorrea
.and ail mouth
ailments
At ail druggist
khkeaes. sent postpaid
ia
Cum Remed, C, Atianta, ,
J. .4 X. .,» ,U
♦ 444 4>T* ♦ ♦44
* 4
V ♦ Any and Everything in
♦ AtflHulBILl- REPAIRING
4
♦ and always at
X Reasonable Prices.
4 Out-of-town as well as city
work solicited, and
Satisfaction Guaranteed ■
4
♦ B. M- BLUE, Manager. 4
V 1306 Oglethorpe Street.
+ > >
♦ 4
•|. 4 ♦ ♦ 4 4 4 4 4
4444444-* 14 4 4
4 4
4 E. MATHIS & SONS. 4
4 4
4 Makers of 4
4 4
4 Automobile Tops- Trim* 4
4 ming, Supplies & Painting. 4
4 4
4 Side and Back Curtains— 4
All style glasses 4
4 4
4 Sewing department under 4
4 supervision of Mrs. R. J. 4
Churchill, is prepared to 4
make Shirts, Dresses, Boys 4
Blouses, girls’ Dresses- in 4
fact, everything in sewing
—fine and plain.
4 4
Special: We manufacture
and make over Matresses.
4 2520 Norwich St.
♦
4
*I« 44 44*4444444
In the electric line we are known
a s experts Folks are told that we
made a thorough study o£ electri¬
cal science and that we are equip¬
ped to give proper, service. Our
repair department expeditiously
and efficiently attends to your
wants. And we sell standard
brands of electric goods.
Brunswick Electric!?.
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING & SUPPLIES
PHONE-99 1528 NEWCASTLE ST
♦ ♦♦4**444 *
♦ ♦
4 4
CITY FISH MARKET 4
212 MONK STREET.
4 Phone 495
4
4 Luke Dawson
4
4 We have Fresh Fish every
4 Day.
(•
4 BASS, SHEERHEAD AND
4 MULLET, AND FRESH
4 WATER FISH.
4
+ 4
FRESH OYSTERS 4
At 35 Quar'
. . r--_ ' . _ .. .
We deliver and Dress 4
Fish when requested to
do so.
4 4
444444444
WEDNESDAY MAY 23, 192$*”1
ri HW5a. * mrryrm
/ BUl
Our Policy
Lo cincourage every member of this community to take on
iftcreased efficiency=== project in making tins , bet¬
To edvoperate in every practical a
ter community Til which to live= =
To cause every individual entering our doors to feel a cordial
atmospheres ambitions of integrity—
i To encourage every person
To further financial advancement.
4 PER CENT AND SAFETY FOR YOUR SAVINGS.
j wpjNswsc:^
company #
| “THE BANK WITH A HEART.’'
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM.
Coal-Coke-Wood
CEMENT SLAG
LIME SEWER PIPE
PLASTER FIRE CLAY
BRICK FIRE BRICK
SAND FLUE PIPE
SHINGLES jFLUF LINING
LATTE
tfE HAVE LIME IN SMALL PACKAGES FOR WHITE¬
WASHING AND ALL BISINEECTINU PURPOSES.
Coney & Parker Company
Phones 17 and 18 1129 Bay Street.
SUMMER
VACATIONIST!
Summer will soon be here. Now
is the time to make your plans.
The glourious Mountains of West¬
ern North Carolina welcome you.
“THE LAND of the SKY”
The Vacationists Paradise
All Out-of-Door Sports
Reduced Summer Fares, beginning
May Fifteenth.
SOUTHERN
RAILWAY
SYSTEM
BY GE O.A.KRAUSS
I'M A VERY VEPl- I'M A T
RETIRING volcanizerM
tlAN
LET the vulcanizer have his little Joke—lie’s an expert
at that. They had a tire in here the other day whose fun¬
eral was set for six for the road as if it never had been
in the hospital in its life.
fe
4410 NEWCASTLE ST.