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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 ii LLAVY
President and Editor
Entered at the Brunswick, (Ga.) Post
Office as second-class mail matter,
" TuBSHlPllOhrKATIS'
One Year .......... - SLlki
Six Mouths ...............................— 4-00
Three Months ...._................ 2.(10
One Month ........... - -70
Weekly ......................i--------------- .20
T na 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 la entitled to
the use for publication of alt news
credited to or not otherwise cmfivad
in this paper, and a!so to the k<v.i
uewft published herein.
At i- DEPARTMENTS PHONE Dm
lWep that date June ID in mind!
The baseball fan is in flower again
Coolidge is a sure winner of .he
Republican nomination. However,
the ides of November will tell anoth¬
er story for him!
Hairy M. Daugherty says he has
not yet finished with Ohio Republican
politics. However that may be, per¬
haps Ohio Republican politics has fin¬
ished with Harry.
Senator Copeland of Nsf.v York
made a great talk to the people owe
in Columbia, S. C., the other night.
•■The New York senator is a dank horse
in that Democratic nomination tight
and may yet win the toga.
Premier MacDonald in a .long dis¬
sertation on the subject has told the
Russian soviet government what he
.expects cf it. What a real disap¬
pointment Rams:.: has- in store for
himself in that line.
RepresentsMve Langley, Republi¬
can, of Kentucky, has been one of the
busiest members of the house of rep¬
resentatives lately—giving b ml
against various grand jury rnditt
ments. '
.
We are now told that Germany ha
accepted the report of the experts as
a basis for negotiations. We assume
that translated into common sense
that means another of those “in prin¬
ciple” acceptances.
It strikes us that the Japanese am¬
bassador in Washington has Spilled
the beans in the matter of that Jap¬
anese exclusion clause irf the pending
immigration bill. The threat of no
country can influence American leg¬
islation!
June 191';-, has been fixed as the date
for the opening of the Brunswick-St.
Simon’s Highway. Let’s all conspire
to make that date a memorable one. <
It will commemorate the completion i }
of a great feat of which any people
may be justly proud.
President Obregon says things as
very quiet in Mexico. Perhaps so, i
yet the A -soeiated Tress of yesterday
told of the shooting by court martail,
after a drum-bead trial, of four gen¬
erals, four colonels, three lieutenant
colonels and one major, just a few
days ago. We wonder what it would
fake down there to disturb the quie¬
tude?
Hon. N. . Emanuel, well known
Brunsw-ickian, is engaging in a small
factory plan that ought to stir the
imagination and min the support of
the people of Brunsvv'rk. He is man¬
ufacturing syrups •*.:<( candies and
plans to begin in a small way and
■work up to large proportions. If llw
people of Brunswick would aid small
industries of that type, then they
should patronize this one.
The whole country will hope for the
speedy recovery of Senator Couzens
of Michigan, who, after several op¬
eration:'. for gall stones, is no-.v rest¬
ing well. The senator lias shown him¬
self to be a big man and the whole
nation admires him. He is the Re¬
publican successor to Newberry in the
United State-; senate.
The selection of Dr. J. W. Sim¬
mons as general chairman of the
committee in ^charge asf the 'cere¬
monies incident to the opening of the
Brunswiek-S't, Simon’s Highway in a
very happy em; and comes in the na¬
ture of u deserved compliment to that
progres .ivc l!run:swkki»n. Dr. Sim¬
mons has always been devoted to the
public weal and in this now. and im¬
portant call, he will give a fine ac¬
count cf himself.
OLD AND NEW METHODS
“Teaching the young idea how to
shoot” is a many-sided problem. It
involves a great deal more than di¬
recting the young idea along ap¬
proved lines in the schoolroom.
In this modern day tire young idea
is being taught where once it was
allowed to find its own way. The
swimming-school has supplanted the
old wash-hole in the creek. Play¬
ground;; teach children how to play,
athletic clubs develop athletes accord
ing to how they are built and not in
view of what they prefer doing, and
ascertaining a young person’s bent of
mind is considered of very great im¬
portance.
And so it is. When a boy is not
bookman led, it is a waste of time
and effort, as well as cruelty to him,
to seek to make him Shine in a course
of literal y study. If he has in him
the making of a first-class artisan, it
is a pity to insist upon making of
him a mediocre scholar.
Put thee arc some fields of ethi¬
cal Vn in which a young person should
bo permitted to work out his own or
her own salvation. The matter is in¬
terestingly and entertainingly touch¬
ed on by the Memphis Commercial-
5 the fo!Iowin?i in which
conflict between “yesterday” and “to¬
day” is noted:
But even yesterday (will not
cilspifie the beneficial results to
beaks and strength that are pos¬
sible from the rules of sanitation
and ' y.giene that are enforced to¬
il v upon the young of both sexes.
It i ■ indeed very inconvenient in
the warm, balmy days, of spring
and -aminer, when the whole out¬
doors is vocal wtih invitation to
be compelled to keep bare?feet;
clean and to attend to all the oth¬
er duties, of cleanliness that sci¬
ences imposes. At least yesterday
will believe it is. Besides it is
doubtless somewhat embarrass¬
ing to have youthful defects in
cleanliness and hygiene exposed
for ,the inevitable teasing and
bantering such exposure could
cause.
The business, of directing the
intimate personal habits and cus¬
tom,-' as well as the pleasures of
youth has its drawbacks as, well
as Us advantages. At least, it
so impresses those (whose youth
was left somewhere back on the
trail of life. But there can be
neither question nor doubt over
. .the later:..' attempt of youthful
'■’pleasures • Yesterday and today
will unite in reprobating the sci¬
entific edict of the medical direc¬
tor of schools at Manchester,
England, that vacations are in¬
jurious to the mental and physi¬
cal well being of school children.
The heartless English individ¬
ual insists that contagious dis¬
eases of various sorts spread
more rapidly during vacation for
the reason that the children are
not subjected to the same close
scrutiny as when they are in
school. Furthermore, with cal¬
loused disregard of the glory and
the happiness that may have pro¬
duced it, the same stern medical
director declares that children
lose weight and strength during
vacation. He does .not. consider
the joys that took off flesh;
neither does he figures the needs
of youth in the equator when he
opines that the mental acuteness
of the children is dulled by vaca¬
tions. But for these and other
reasons he would put the ban of
interdiction upon vacation and
compel children to attend school
constantly through the year.
Our scientific friend would es¬
tablish the postulate that all
work and no play will make Jack
a rather smart rather than a dull
boy—a thing that Jack himself
will rc ent with all the strength
of his boyish being. These be
i rue! days, indeed, and someone
is always trying to take the joy
out of life.
THE SHADOW OF LA FOLLETTE
The nearer President Coolidge ad¬
vances toward the nomination of the
June convention the deeper grows the
T.adow of Mr. La Folletto and the
third party upon the November polls,
Mr. La Folletto fights only on fields
of his o'wn choosing. Wherever he
elects to join battle, there the admin¬
istration meets defeat, as in Wiscon¬
sin; or, as in North Dakota, achieves
victory at a price that makes it more
costly than defeat. Such a battle¬
field was. that in the house of repre¬
sentatives Thursday when the Repub¬
lican ' irregulars, who acknowledge
Senator La Folletto ns their only
leader, routed the regular Republi¬
cans. mid the administration scouts
led by the president’s private secre¬
tary.
The administration forces attempt¬
ed to unseat Representative Bloom
of New York and thus give a majori¬
ty of the New York slate delegation
in the house to the Republicans, This
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majority would mean that Nc|w York’s i
vote, in the event of a presidential ;
deadlock, would be cast for the
publican nominee. With Mr. Bloom
in his seat, the vote would be cast for ;
the Democratic nominee. The situa-1
/ion was ideal for a demonstration of
the strength and attitude of the third
party foi’ces which Mr. La Toilette
leads. They threw their weight to the
Democrats, and Mr. Bloom retained
his place. Again the shadow had fall¬
en athwart the president’s path.
And on the very day when the Wis¬
consin senator, by his proxies in the
house, revealed again his determina
tion to prevent the administration
from gaining any election advantage
in advance of the Cleveland nomina¬
tion, Hiram Johnson was issuing from
the senate chamber a blast against
the president and the Republican par¬
ty which will be played on many
Democratic trumpets from June to
November. He said that regardless
of his own fate at Cleveland—and
that is foreordained—he would con¬
tinue to light to “smash the crooked
alliance between crooked big busi¬
ness and crooked politics which dom¬
inates the Republican party.” A
smaller shadow because it is that of
a beaten man and has been cist many,
many times before—but still a sha¬
dow.
Nothing is definitely known of the
final intentions of Mr. La Follctte and
those who follow him. The leader has
said that if lie finds no support for
what 'he regards as progressivism in
the Republican candidate and plat¬
form he will not support them. He
has not said that he will support the
Democrats. The assumption among
politicians is that he will not , make
known liis final course until both
great party conventions have been
held. He will then have the choice of
supporting one or the other; or of re¬
fusing support to both and forming
a third-party ticket; or of attacking;
both parties nationally and, by con¬
centrating his attention on congres¬
sional candidaes in the eight or nine
states where he is powerful, assuring
his control of both house and senate
should 'he assault on the two great
parties cause each to fail to muster
enough electoral votes to induct a|
president into office. This latter tie
vice would enable those irregular Re
publicans who stand with La Folletto
to avoid bolting their party, some
thing Mr. La Folletto has always
avoided on his own account.
PENSIONS ---------------------- j
FOR CONFEDERATE
VETERANS
-
The announcement, that the pen¬ j
sion; for Confederate veterans and
their widefivs will be paid this month
■".ill be received with unusual interest
m Hie part of those financially inler
c-f.Lcd as well as the general puldict
For litany years it has been a custom
to postpone and delay the payment of
pensions not intentionally, howovt i
but for the reason of a depleted tres i
ury of the stale, says the Athena
Banner. This year, however, Gover
nor Welker In; seen to it that the
money for the veterans and
their v.blows wi]l be forthcoming ami
is win hi. The pension fund will
amount to $1,300,000 which is less
previous years,; the number of
pensioners are rapidly decreasing and
in a fev.v years only the widows of
veterans will bo drawing pensions.
“The muffled drum’s sad roll has
beat
The soldier’s last tali'.oo;
No more on life’s parade shall
meet
That brave and fallen few.
On Fame’s eternal camping
ground
Their silent tents are spread,
And glory guards, (with solemn
round,
The bivouac of the dead.”
So long as they are with us, let us
how lo them the honor they are due
and our appreciation of the sacrifices
they made for the protection of our
country and of our homes.
Maplo Syrup now on sale. Made
by Brunswick Gandy Co. Ask your
grocer for it.
IS til®
sea jgfaoite
sandy?
■f>!f
Srftw,
i —because the ::ea, never still, has
‘^‘an’w'mth’of'tbis
, ashorc _ 'Slow Work, compared
A: tjirin
Tablets
^ vd , ()irl; . ol ,. e and pnsB i,fi 0 lhe s y s .
em •urtnnt.ly.- That’s why
quickly relieve colds and pain.
Absolutely true aspirin,, tablets so
made that their bcnclkia
begins in 15 seconds. Highest
never irritate cr bum.
One of 200 Furetc 1 pcoparatloryi
for health and hygiene. Every item
the best that skill and cere can pro
dure.
Andrew's Drug
Store
Maplo Syrup now on sale. Made
by Brunswick Candy Co. Ask your
grocer for it.
I wish to announce to my old
friends that I am back in the
city a!I and time I am going invention to devote and f
my to
development work or me¬ f
chanical engineering work in
general.
PATENTS SECURED
I will be located with the Ellis
Engineering Co., 1314 Rich¬
mond street, Phone 101.
LEATHER PUMPS
of rare style and beauty are
among our special offering this
week. Their pretty appearance—
unusually attractive — issupple
mented by a comfortably snug
fit, and elastic resiliency of the
leather, giving the foot a firm
footing, the eye satisfaction, and
tiie pockotboolc, pleasure,
“ST
Nick Sotorin, Prop.
_1328 NEWCASTLE ST.
OAK, Vm AND LIGHT
WOOD
81 , 50 “
,
PROMPT DELIVERY
Phone 586
HQLTZEND0RF WOOD CO.
0 at Ellis
wwmcsmv, APRIL 16, 192%.
wooc-1 mm
Not so a
Rubber Battery, which
costs no more than many
batteries.
fees* Batteries as low as
$27.50 if you want a re¬
liable battery at a still lower
price, we have Willard
Wood-Insulated Batteries
low as $ 17.50
Says Little Amperes
“Subtract the cost of
reinsulation from the
price, then try to
figure out how you
can beat it.”
STORAGE <4
BATTERIES if# ™
fit if *
8.7®^'P r fir 9 T*IW
l .
t3CC
A fi
t vsuwe.
© u VI
Ml WANSFIEU) * BAY STS.
V. '/on, limy ciBil Save
.... ........ . ...... .. 1
— v * itt t . *l rr._— t?—— — '*
.7 § ivi with
It saves you fuel Mil and a dds comfort and safisfre
hon. Let us figure wtih you on ELECTRICTY for home
suad of five or store.
Mutual Light & Water Co.
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