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$k(k HOUR
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
Published every business afternoon
except Saturday and cfn Sunday
morning by
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
Brunswicn, Ga.
The News Bldg. 1604 Newcastle St.
CLARENCE H. LEAVY
President and Editor
> WW V\/WWVN
Entered at the Brunswick (Ga.) Post
Office as second-class mail matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One Year —.............................- $7.50 j
Six Months ................................... 4.00
Three Months............................... 2.00
One Month ................................. .70
Weekly.......................................... .20
of The the News City is the official newspaper the |
of Brunswick and
Ohunty of Glynn and United States
bankruptcy court for this district.
Member of the Associated Press j
The Associated Press is entitled, to ;
ttle use for publication of all news
credited to or not otherwise credited I
in this paper, and also to the local j
news published herein.
ALL DEPARTMENTS PHONE 188. I
;
The public schools of Brunswick
and Glyr.n county are still increasing
in attendance and this promises to be
one of the best years.
It is declared that all of Miami went
to church Sunday and gave thanks
that the destruction of their city and
the loss of life was not any greater!
i
Real estate sales continue to be ac¬
tive in Brunswick and St. Simon’s Isl¬
and and big prospects for develop¬
ment are ahead of us!
The members of the Rotary Club '
greatly enjoyed the splendid address
of Rev. Silas Johnson, of Savannah,
on “Rotary Education” this after
.
Much interest is being shown in the
revival to be held at the First Metho¬
dist church beginning Wednesday eve¬
ning and cottage prayer meetings are ,
being held in preparation for it!
According to press reports it seems
that France and Germany are about
to become friends again, but the pre¬
mier of France declares that he will
never yield on the question of Ger¬
many being responsible for the war!
The revival at the First Methodist
church which begins on Wednesday
night promises to be of great interest
to the people of Brunswick and a
large attendance is expected each
night!
i
The baseball fans of Brunswick are i
showing great interest in the world
series which will begin in Nov. - York
Saturday when the St. Louis Nation¬
als and New - York Americans will con¬
tend for the world championship!
Miami is raid to have mid only $7,- ;
500,000 insurance to the dir. i
cover -
-
ter losses which were authoritatively
estimated at $165,000,000. This ap¬
pears to be a very small insurance for
such enormous losses!
Many excellent citizens of Bruns¬
wick are rendering a great service in
their work with the different boards
and clubs without any remuneration
whatever except the joy of serving.
Their work is highly appreciated!
C. W. Lane, one of Bran, vi k’ j
most prominent financiers, declare, j
that Brunswick is still attracting at- ;
tention in Atlanta and other places
and that several capitalists have their |
eyes on the wonderful advantages of |
Brunswick. Mr. 1 ane lias an interest¬
ing announcement to make soon!
Clarence Harrow, famous Chicago
criminal lawyer, justifies Byron
Stone, of Denver, who attempted to
kill his 15 year old son and then end¬
ed his own life, declaring that a par¬
ent is sometimes justified in taking
the life of a mentally and physically
deficient child. This position, to say
the least, is dangerous!
Contributions are still being receiv¬
ed by the local chapter of the Ameri¬
can Red Cross for the storm sufferers
in Florida and, as they always do,
Brunswickians have demonstrated
their liberality in helping in this wor¬
thy cause. The final remittance is ex¬
pected to he made within a few days!
The new automobile route propnsr j
ed by Fred G. Warde, managing sec¬
retary of the Brunswick Board of
Trade, known as the ABC Short Route i
to Florida, running through Columbia,
Augusta, Brunswick, and Jacksonville,
would certainly stimulate interest in
this section and is a splendid proposi¬
tion, which will no doubt receive hear¬
ty s Jipp°rt.
HENRY FORD’S ACHIEVEMENTS
It is wonderful when we think of
the great accomplishments of some
of the men of this age: the wonder¬
ful minds which they have for con¬
structive. service and the great things
which they have done. HenryfFord,
perhaps, is one of the most prominent
.in modern achivements. “In less time
than 22 years,” we are told, he has
advanced from engineer of the De¬
troit Electric Light Plant, a position
paying $125 a month to become the
richest man in the world.”
He seems to have been a genius in
manufacturing and today his business
is said to be “producing a profit of
nearly $100,000,000 per annum, is en¬
tirely owned by himself and his fam¬
ily add there arc no bonds, no mort
gages or partners,”
Some cf the things he does have
been enumerated as follows:
“He employs at present 217,000
men, more than the New York Cen
tral railroad employs. These era
pi 0 yees, on his personal payroll, do,
among other things, the following
work:
“ Produce every month more auto¬
mobiles than are made by all tlje
automobile companies in Great Bri¬
tain in a year;
“Operate a 600 mile railroad sys¬
tem. reorganized, which Ford bought and in bankrupt- operates j
dy, now
profitably, with the highest railroad
wage scale in the world;
“Operate the largest individually
owned fleet of steamers on the Great
Lakes and on the ocean to Europe and
South America;
“Operate coal mines in West Vir
einia and Kentucky; operate iron
mines in northern Michigan; operate
blast furnaces, unsurpassed in reor¬
ganization, efficiency and cleanliness;
operate glass factories, whose product
second largest in the world; pro¬
ducing plate glass in continuous
something which experts de
could never be done; operate
mills i'< r use in motors, making
to the fineness of human hair;
22,000^gallons 0 f benzol daily
sell in Detroit alone. Operate a
acre farm with men and ma¬
showing a profit therefrom;
flax enough, to make one quart
of all the linen requirements for
cars; make 2,000,000 storage bat¬
a year; operate a $10,000,00(1
having 617 beds and 790 em¬
including highly trained med¬
doctors, surgeons and nurses,
expert services are furnished
at lower rates than pri- 1
any
hospital; publish a weekly news- j
with 600,000 circulation; oper¬
stores for clothing, boots, shoes,
and fish, selling $6,000,000 in
per annum to his employes.” j
“Henry Ford is the largest individ- i
bank depositor in the world, often j
in cash on deposit $200,000,- j
subject to check.
“Thus Mr. Ford, who was 03 years j
on July 30, last, is in many re-
the most interesting man ir 1
world, because he has most o'
most men want.”
Some of the secrets of his great ;
is in the fact that ho keeps
with the age or a little ahead of
exercising the best kind of common
sense and g - >od judgment, with the
to make other men successful
happy by constructive planning :
send : . He has recently inaugu¬
rated a 5 day week for his employes,
claiming that it will swell the buying
power and speed business. He de¬
clares that the five day week will pro¬
mo! prosperity in all American in¬
dustry.
TEACHING THE CONSTITUTION
The On:titution of the JJnitad
- of America is a very import
ant document and it is highly im
portant for the coming generation
to ?snow " meLh,r ~ oi; its B™* value
the aml havo at least s ? me
kn ° wle(tet ' of Hs P rovisions > which
rakes it necessary for the Constitu¬
tion to be taught them.. On this sub¬
ject the Florida Time'-Union says:
Remarking upen the report of
tl o National Security League to
tire effect that in thirty-seven
of the states the teaching of the
Constitution is. obligatory, with
pr :?ibly two hundred thousand
teachers telling four million pu¬
pils something about tbs funda¬
mental law of the land, the Chi¬
cago Tribune remarks that it is
pleased to find such interest in a
vital subject, but has suspicions
that the instruction being given
at present is rather slight and
the information obtained soon .
forgotten. “We have a recollec¬
tion from our school days of a
subject called ‘civics,’” rays the
Tribune, “which we met brief¬
ly in high school. It was an af¬
fair of dry bones.” The editor
continues:
“ Real instruction in the Consti
tuiion would be an affair of
flesh and blood. It is of little
or no value to drum the terms of
the Constitution into a youth’s
mind where they cannot compete
with such realities as the batting
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
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averages of the league teams.
But the constitution, while it con¬
tains some very dry facts, con¬
tains also some matter that can
be made as vivid as the story of
the crossing of the Delaware and
the surprise at Trenton. And it
happens these are the parts of
the constitution that most of our
nation needs to know and to val¬
ue. We mean, of course, the bill
of rights. If the teacher deals
with the great amendments as
abstractions they must be mean¬
ingless to any youngster and
most adults. But each of these
abstractions was born of human
conflict. If we want the young
student to grasp them and keep
them, and that is our only object
in teaching the constitution, we
must tell at least something of
the human events from which
they came as shining weapons of
liberty from the fierce heat of hu¬
man conflict. In our days, for
example, what could a lad make
of the third amendment forbid¬
ding the quartering of a soldier
in the house of a citizen? He has
never heard of such a thing and
would hardly think it worth 'both¬
ering about, if in fact he did not
think of it as rather a romantic
possibility to be welcomed. Tell
him of the dragonades and he will
see light. Tell in the concrete
some chapters of the story of the
long struggle for free press and
the cruelties of the religious ware
anil he will know what the first
amendment means. Give him in
short some of too dramatic his¬
tory from which the great guar¬
antees were born from human
wrong and suffering and there
will be born an understanding and
a devotion to his inheritance
which will remain with him amid
the proccupations of later life.”
Those who recall the meeting
.
with “Civics” in the high school
will smile at the reference,, and
they and others must know that
it is of vastly greater importance
to know why there are amend¬
ments and what they undertake
to do for the people and tire coun¬
try—than merely the dry recital
of details. The constitution was
made to li: fit and guide the law¬
makers. defining their authority
and illustrating their duties, and
it was the effort of the framers
to make as few restrictions and
as little interference with indi¬
vidual opinions and actions as
possible, without turning liberty
to license.
An understand!:- - ; of the 'con¬
stitution would blip and oven
guide many who flounder about
and continually undertake the i n
pos.dble through ignorance of the
fundamental law of the land. The
entire document is reflected in
the “bill of right -- ,,'” and while
amendments have been mtide that
some think arc due to misconcep¬
tion of the plan of tho founders,
the greater part of the constitu¬
tion, inc|hiiling amendments, is
vital to the life of th, - * republic.
Study of the constitution, in a
way that at least invites the at-
GARGLE ASPIRIN
FOR TON511ITIS
OR SORE THROAI
A harmless and eftteuve gargle t
ter, and gargie throat thoroughly
Repeat in two hours if necessary.
Be sure you use the genuine Bayer
Aspirin, ' marked with the Bayci
Cross, which can be had in tin b-,Kio¬
to dissolve two “Bayer Tablets of As¬
pirin” in four tablcspoonfuls of sva
of twelve tablets for few cents.
PROA1PNESS AND
SATISFACTION
OVERSEAS DRY CLEANERS
AND HAT I FRS
EARNED PITCHER, Prop.
302 Gloucester Phone 361
BRUNSWICK, CiA.
V; j Will Appreciate Your
Pa voltage
USE YOUR PHONE — WE
CALL AND DELIVER
PROMPTLY
j
*wiik
SAFETY
[& attfOur {
BMJQSTOM
NEAT AND PRACTICAL
Labdilite
Rubber
Apron
Just, the thing to wear
when wfisliiriig the dishes
or while giving baby the
bath. Protects your
dress.
Andrews’ Drug siokl
WSummmntmm
BATTERIES
TUBES
(ALL MAKES)
PARTS
RADIO SERVICING
A SPECIALITY
Make this your head
quarters for radio
parts. It is now time
for you to get your
radio in operation
for the fine pro¬
grams coming this |
fall and winter.
M. V. SPARKS
810 Mansfield street
Phono, 703
IB: u iswick
Laundry
Dry
Cleaning
WESTERN
MARKET
■ivt Monk Si. Phorti 100
BanAftftHAefi Pm*.
WESTERN
and
NATIVE MEAB
POMifH KfelAltc mid “Rijiht
Now” Delivery
Low prtets prevail especially
on th« best Georgia meats.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1926
HOW TO SAVE MONEY
There are hundreds of ways to SPEND money to one way
of SAVING it and you will have little trouble in finding t hem.
How to SAVE is the question. J 2s3 |i"
Here is the answer. SPEND less than you EARN and de¬
posit the savings large or small with us. Keep an accurate
account of income and expense. Avoid debt. It does not
pay to spend profits or wages before they are earned. Now
is a good time to start a bank account. sj.
COMPART
Incorporated 1839
(The Oldest Bank In Brunswick)
INVESTIGATE
Johns-Manville Duplex Asbestos
Shingles
“Just a Little Better”
Price very little more than wood
shingles. Last a life time, cheap f
insurance
Wright & Go wen Go.
Re-Roof for the LastfTime
Phones 336 and 337
Reroof
the
best way
and the easiest way!
^'T Ji. ^HERE'S just one sensible, economical way
to reroof, Leave the old shingles right oil
the house - and cover them with shingles
that insure you forever against another reroofing
job!
You can. do the job right v.itii Carey Asbestos
uhingies. Lay them over the old roof—avoid all
needless expense, hot her and litter. And remem¬
ber thc^y arc weather-proof, fire-proof, decay
proof! The special Carey construction of criss¬
crossed asbestos fibers embedded in cement in¬
sures that. Color effects of striking beauty
natural browns, slate gray, pottery red, blue
black, purple, and forest green.
And surprisingly low in cost! Ask for samples
and prices.
CONEY AND PARKER CO.
1129 Bay Street
ASBESTOS
SHINGLES
Southern Railway Excursion
—TO— i?
* H
Atlanta
Wednesday, September 22nd ^
$6.50 Fare $6.50
Return leaving Atlanta any regular
train prior to Monday night
September 27 th
LAST Of THE SEASON
Make Sleeping Car Reservations now.
Trains Leave Brunswick 9:05 A. M. ami 9 :G5 P. M.
0. C. KADCLIEP, Ticket Agettt,
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM