Newspaper Page Text
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
Published every business afternoon
except Saturday, and on Sunday
morning by
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
Brunswick, Ga.
The News Bldg., 1604 Newcastle St.
CLARENCE H. LEAVY
President and Editor
Entered at the Brunswick, (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
Weekly .......... 20
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
the use for publication of all news
credited to or not otherwise credited
in this paper, and also to the local
news published herein.
ALL DEPARTMENTS PHONE 1S8
Sme Die —with -T^Ti-7-*r' the accent on the
su gj x
Do your Christmas shopping this
week- -or let it alone
Glynn is growing—and glorious.
Coolidge and Copper. How illiter
ative ?
A Thanksgiving dinner given by a
society of Americans in London has
caused pumpkin pie to be much
sought after in the British capital.
If export or increased export of the
product is to follow, it may be regard¬
ed as fortunate that the pumpkin has
a tough hide and “keeps” a long time.
Brunswick is always glad to w el
come those Bostonians who come this
(way. These delightful tourists, from
“The Hub” are representative citizens
of Massachusetts and they are the
guests of Brunswick. They are thrice
welcome, and the hope is entertained
that they will pass along this way
again.
Editor W. T. Anderson is credited
with saying at Columbus that the
farmers ought to work twelve .months
in the year like other folks. We have
heard talk like that before. The aver¬
age farmer does more work in three
months than most -people do in twelve.
But the thrifty farmer works some
times when he is not plowing—like
the lawyer when not attending court.
A Detroit young woman who is de
scribed as young, pretty and possess¬
ed of a million and a half dollars,
would like to marry, but declares she
hasn’t a prospect in the world.
What’s the joke ? Does the lady want
a perfect iman for a husband? Does
she lose the million and a half when
she weds? There’s a Senegambian
somewhere in the fuel repository,
says the Albany Herald.
One point we have not seen made
relative to the Ford presidential
boom. Mr. Ford naturally wants to
be a great man. In this he is like all
of us. But it is a good idea to un
derstand just what a great man is.
Perhaps the best definition is that a
rnan is great in proportion to the dif¬
ficulty there would be to find some
other man to take his place. Mr. Ford
is just now doing a work that proba¬
bly no man, or few 1 other imen, in the
country could do. But any of us could
suggest from twenty to one hundred
men who could fill the job of president
of the United States quite as
torily as Mr. Ford. It might be well
for Henry and others to reflect un
this.
The Albany Herald, one of the
brightest papers in “God’s Country’
has this to say in passing- along its
way: “ ‘The poultry raisers of Glynn
are making a reputation that is at¬
tracting statewide attention. This in¬
dustry, during past two or three
years) has made phenomenal progress
and is today one of the greatest
sources of revenue of any in this
county. The stock is the best obtain¬
able and there are thousands of chick¬
ens now on the farms of Glynn where
but a short time ago there were but a
few of the common stock. Glynn is
making progress in every line of en¬
deavor, but none that shows greater
accomplishment than in the poultii
and cattle industry—and these can’t
be very well excelled.’—Brunswick
News. The party who wants fresh
£ggg for Christmas, and who consid¬
ers himself or herself fortunate if
able to buy them at CO cents a dozen
_a nickel apiece—is apt to realize
that there is ample room for incress
ed production. Georgia hens arfe lay
ing now as never before, but the state
still imports the indispensable egg in
enormous quantities. We are pro
' grossing surely, if a little slowly, and
such encouraging news as the Bruns
wick News publishes will not fail to
be appreciated.”
WALK AND BE HEALTHY
If there is anything in the Darwin¬
ian theoi-y of evolution it will not be
may generations to the time when
people will have very poorly devel¬
oped feet and legs. People are not
using their legs in the manner in
which they were intended. People are
not walking. The trolley car and the
automobile are depriving millions of
our people of the desire, if not the
opportunity to walk, and the result
is a growing'inability to walk very
far without fatigue.
A century ago a far greater per¬
centage of the people >vere strong and
healthy. They walked long distances
without fatigue. Children walked to
school, to the church and long dis¬
tances to the neighbors’, and they
could do so without becoming tired,
and not only that, but they could walk
home again and arrive fresh and in¬
vigorated.
Today people arc not walking.
They are riding. Every street and
hgibway in the country is fairly alive
with a moving mass of automobiles,
and the trolley lines are carrying
mulitudes of people to and from their
work and for even very short dis
i I tances. People, „ many of ; them, ride ,
even for a c ouple of blocks; walking
j iS t( '° t,1 ' psome -
H God had intended that the peo
i pie should g» about on wheels they
would have had wheels instead of
feet and a motive power to propel
them, but such was no part of the
Divine program. Men and women
j were given feet to walk upon, and
as they are not now using them they
I are becoming weakened and will in
time, at the -present rate of neglect
become entirely useless.
Muscles that are not used grow soft
and flabby and almost disappear. Our
tefctli were made to last as long as
wc would need them, but we have
| departed from the coarse food of our
ancestors and good teeth are nqw a
rarity at middle life, and if we con¬
tinue to neglect to use our feet and
legs for the purpose for which God
intended them they will, in the nat¬
ural course of evolution, disappear or
become useless.
Fortunately, howevsr, there is a
strong movement among certain red
blooded and middle-aged people
throughout the country to revive
walking, and clubs have been organ¬
ized all over the country for the en¬
joyment of out-door sports, and walk¬
ing is the leading sport; but there
are not enough people going into this
movement at present. The great ma¬
jority prefers to ride, regardless of
consequences.
j ONE MORE FALLACY
Moses is generally accerdited with
having written that portion of the Bi¬
ble that details the hardships of the
Children of Israel when Pharoah in¬
sisted that they furnish their own
straw for making bricks. Conse¬
quently, Moses is more or loss re¬
sponsible for the belief prevalent
among an amazingly large number of
persons in this modern age that brick
are still made with straw.
This belief is further cemented by
reason of the fact Hat whisps of
> t ra w can be sc-xti protruding from
b
i p jj e 0 f f ace brick stacked near the
; cul .b during the erection of a new
j building. 1 The announcement that
this is straw used in packing the brick
for shipment, and is not a part of the
brick itself, usually brings expres¬
sions of surprise.
The Bureau of Public Roads, De¬
partment of Agriculture soon will is¬
sue a lantern slide lecture and has al
■ rea( jy se nt out; motion picture films
ou i?j-iek Road Construction iwhich go
j ; nto ( } c tail concerning the manufae
hue and use of vitrified paving brick.
Incidentally the word “straw” is not
mentioned. 'One sees in the pictures
that brick of all kinds, face brick,
fire brick, common brick or vitrified
paving brick are finely ground shales
or clays mixed with water and burn¬
ed.
The secret of the special type of
brick used for paving is in the vitri¬
fication, the burning process which
heats the clay.particles to just short
of the melting point where they fuse
and are transformed into an entirely
different substance, thus producing a
unit uneffected by heat cold, (mois¬
ture or age and as hard as granite.
Common and face brick do not require
this high degree of vitrification.
The reason straw was necessary in
Moses’ day was because the brick
were dried in the sun instead of being
burned and required a “binder” to
insure their remaining whole.
IT ALL DEPENDS
j “Though the mills of God grind
j s i ow ly, yet they grind exceedingly
j fi ne ,» has been quoted in connection Not often
i w ; tb a thousand causes,
j ; s j t applicable to roads but in at
> least one instance, no glove ever fitted
: tighter!
Two friends lived across a county
| ]j ne f rc >ni each other; in the one coun
jty was good roads, connecting -with
the faKUNswidK Mews
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the nearby county seat, in the other
was opposition to good roads, and no
good connection with the county scat.
The two friends had many an 3.rgu
ment on the subject, he of the good
roads county exulting in what the
poor roads being glad at the small
oor roads being glad at the smallness
ness of his taxes.
There seemed no winning the argu¬
ment for either. The one had a defi¬
nite saving in hauling and time, the
other had much smaller taxes.
Then the farm house and the barn
where lived the opponent of good
roads, caught fire. He telephoned in¬
stantly to his county scat, meanwhile
his friend was also crying “fire” to
his county seat, over his telephone!
The fire engines from the up-to
date county seat arrived and put out
the fire before those from the poor
road county were seen!
Of course the poor-road advocate
had to pay the cost of that fire run;
it was not in his county! And of
course the cost was .much, much more
than a load tax would have been.
But he paid it cheerfully.
“Either we get good roads next
election, or I’m going to move across
the line!” he said.
Adequate fire protection is just one
of Ol hundreds nunuicus of ox reasons why any other
kind of a road than a hard road is
uneconomic, expensive,
and foolish!
_ —
DAVID’S FIRST YEAR AT SCHOOL
Many • little children arc becoming
acquainted . with their first teacher, . .
,
'
They are telling . ... their . . mothers abqut .
'
. her at night. . , „ Perhaps . they refuse to ,
answer questions * about her, but they
imitate . her . talking . ... . to , the ,, . bab>, oi
m
in driving the cows home tiom the +v ._
pasture, they she . does. , nx
sing as
is . making . . them over and , they .. . aie ic
cording the ..... xaet in many ways.
Do ,, the r mothers .. know . her? , 9
, her home, , mother, ,, and i sec tne young
son , s pride . , as . he .watches . . her cat
our delicious ___-11- rolls and —I baked ap
She. to like ... them , almost , ,
pies. seems
as well as he and father do.
The teacher will thereafter seem
—i ?ssrar£ ‘v“? r, ri
"
that ., , , boy needs
far a „
a away ■ person 1
to be afraid of. She ou is • i;u like a o ,ionr
who to , h use
Aunt Jane comes
sometimes; a guest the family will
ways be glad to entertain.
Father handed her the paper when
mother left to put the last
to the meal and she told father hj.v
interested the big boys and girls a:e
in the dally paper at school. David
wonders how soon he can learn to
read well enough to go to the school
; reading table and read the daily pa-
1 per. He means to work very hard at
! reading so he can do it before long.
j when the new teacher left she told
mother how glad she is to know
1 David has such a happy home; when
j David thanked her that night for in¬
- viting the teacher, mother said:
“Mother, at one time, taught school,
David and she has not forgotten haw
much better the work went in the
| districts where se was invited to the
homes.”
EXERCISING EQUAL RIGHTS
Legislation now being urged in con¬
gress to extend the “equal rights”
conferred under the nineteenth
amendment would seem to be super
fl U0lls , for such extension is steadily
,, rogre ^i n g and sometimes in ways
that tend to take away the breath of
the 0 i d -fashioned conservative citizen,
No few women are now assel . t i ng
their right to do what only a small
proportion of men dared to do in the
past. Two recent .press dispatches
may be cited in illustration. One of
them relates how a lone woman ban¬
dit help up trembling- bank clerks in
Fostoria, Ohio, grabbed some bundles
of bills and got away with a large
sum. The number of women bandits
is increasing, and what else is to be
expected? Given the necessary
"nerve” and acquired knowledge of
the handling of a « gun) >< it appe; ft s to
bc as e3sy fm . a , woman a3 for a man
to do this sort of thing-.
The other news item tells of the
m . UTiag . c of a wcalthy woman of 4C
a-.id a pretty boy of 16, of how the
soon bored youth escaped ‘ , to , the ,, roof
or his parents, and of , hew he-was
coaxed , , back , to . his . well-seasoned , bride .
f ' Uevei a - n “ ie-ci ed *1,000
for his services. “And why not?’
the lady . . the doubt , , ask. ,
m .
case no
Do not old men run after young *»,*’ girls .
and get them, loo, if money is . plenti- 1 ..
Haven’t old women the same
*Sht . . , to . the ., youth? ,, „ „. The
1 pursuit ot „
. be rather difficult
ou.-iness may more
tor the , , latter ,, than . for ,, the former, ,
b °y s beln » less P 1 table and less de
lighted with jewels than girls, but no
doubt | ,...... lazy and unambitious ..... L . youths _____
can be found who are willing to be¬
, xSS , at so
i much a month, with frequent vaca
At a: 1 events it 13 unquestionable ..
, at free . “equal .. ,
women sre to , enjoy
1 l “
with men in these matters,
^ ^ the
^ ^ fQr
j “what people will say.”
^__
Get busy> Spend the dollar you
eainec ] j n Brunswick right hare in this
town _
______
„
J fY |
( * or ^ Grants ^ ana Children
j In Us© For Oyer 30 Y®arS
always bears .^7
t Children Who Are ^aio and Weak
need Give them a good Quinine and Iron°Tonic,
GROVES TASTELESS chill
TONIC, it is the best of Quinine and Iron
in tasteless form. It purifies and enriches
the blood and builds up (he whole system
A General Strengthening Tonic for Aduita
and Children. 60c.
HIGHWAY GARAGE, INC.
* Corner Norwich and O Sts.
*
* Repairing of any make
* automabile and second
* hand parts at reasonable
prices.
Free air and water service. *
We sell gasoline and oil
in connection with our es¬
tablishment we have a hot
lunch and cold drink de¬
partment which is sanitary
in every way.
G. T. M’CASKILL, Mgr.
M\y is the body
warm?
—because it is like a furnace. Our j
food is fuel, which is burnt up by oxy- j
gen in the air wc breathe. One result
is bodily heat. For soothing inflamed :
skin,
"Buneimi
Rubbing Alcohol
is a lotion cooling and refreshing.
Fine for a rub-down when muscles
are lame from athletics. Equally good
for a gentle, bracing bath in nursery
j and sick room. Splendid in case of
j excess j ve perspiration.
i One of 200 Puretest preparations for
| health and hygiene. Every item the
best that skill and conscience call pro¬
duce.
Andrew’s Drug
• Store
52u? Sru & Stcra
MONDAY, DEC. 17, 192'j.
will start yon New in n
ft Tlext next Christmas onrisimas \ e ^m r
:
1L ^°1L have
tmtssmsubMii
We Carry a Full Line
Woolsley’s Celebrated Paints
and Varnishes
WE GUARANTEE
that ANY BUILDING that is not satisfactory after being
painted with WOOLSEY’S STANDARD MIXED PAINT, we
will furnish enough paint, FREE OF CHARGE, to repaint the
building. This paint is a PURE LINSEED OIL PAINT- con¬
tains no Benzine, Water or Chemicals; works smoothly und¬
er the brush am! has great body, and its durability after
forty years’ thorough trial is established beyond question.
WRIGHT & GOWENCO
PHONES 336 — 33 ? ... MANSFIELD A BAY STS..
Cook with Ga
It saves you fuel bill and a dds comfort and satisfac¬
tion. Let us figure with you on ELECTRICTY for home
and offive or store.
Mutual Light & Water Co.
PHONE7
THE imiVEBSAL CAB
looking Ikw^umgWor
at the new touring car from the side, you are at ossca
favorably impressed with the effect of longer, more graceful lines
secured by enlarging the cowl and raising the radiator
Slanting the windshield and one-men top lend material aid in givmj
entire car a Iowa, more stylish appearance.
An apron connecting the radiatcar with the lender skirts is also
a decided improvement.
A comfort feature much appreciated by owners,is the
leg room provided by the enlargement of the cowl.
Allow tui to show you the entire line oi new Ford cam now go
dilplay in our show room.
These cars can be obtained through
the Ford Weckiy Bar chase Plcm*
GLYNN MOTOR CO
CAB.S * TRUCKS * TRACTORS
Hi—mi mill n |j|7i~iSSi£B5asqgfi