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PACE EICHT
QUALITY MERCHANDISE TRUTHFULLY ADVERTISED
WEEK-END SPECIALS ON SHIRTS
For this week-end we oiler 20 dozen high grade
$3.50 shirts in fancy patterns. In this lot you will find high $2.00
$4.00 count percales, domestic and imported madras and $2.50
$5.00 broadcloth. All collar attached, cut full, finely tail- $3.00
SHIRTS ored and every shirt guaranteed. SHIRTS
$^.65 We lections. have It divided will pay these you into to see two them groups and for select easy your se- $1 .65
needs for future. All sizes, 14 to UV 2 . Sleeve lengths
32, 33, 34. No white shirts included in this lot.
W. A. O’Quinn & Co.
W. A. O’QUINN WHERE QUALITY IS HIGHER THAN PRICE A. M. LORENTZSON
ST. JAMES LUTHERAN
Gloucester ami TV oil streets.
Rev. Paul M. Counts, pastor.
Sunday school 10 a. m., A. Korietz
superintendent.
Morning service, 11:15 o’clock.
Evening service 7:.'i0 p. m.
Luther League, 7:01) p. in.
The public is cordially invited to
these services.
FIRST BAPTIST
Corner Union and Mansfield Sts.
O. P. Gilbert, minister.
Sunday school 10:15 a. m., Andrew
supterintendent.
Preaching by the minister 11:30 a.
and 8 p. m.
The B. Y. F. II. meet as follows:
6:45 p. m., Intermediates and
at 7:00 p. m.
George Cook, organist and director
the choir.
The public is cordially invited to
with us.
ADVENT CHRISTIAN
Corner Union and 11 streets.
Edwin C. Hardison, minister.
Sunday school 10:30 a. m., Robert
supt. worship 11:30 and
Sunday a. m.
j). in.
Prayer meeting Wednesday 7:30 p.
Loyal Workers Thursday 7:30 p. m.
Cordial welcome to all.
CHURCH OF CHRIST
1526 Johnson street.
Sunday school 10:30 a. m.
Preaching at 11:30 a. m. and 7:30
m.
Bible study Wednesday evenings,
Everyone cordially invited.
ST. MARK’S EPISCOPAL
Corner Gloucester and Egmont Sts
The Rev. Royal K. Tucker, rector.
Holy communion, 8 a. m.
Church school, 10 a. m.
Full celebration and sermon, 11:15
VH'”: .Swwh 79:, offing 3,795” W” V K‘- 5 l
gay.“
By CHARLES P. STEWART
•Washington Correspondent for
Central Press
AY/ a SUING TON, D. C.—raci
r,W flsm can take forms which X
■ consider queer.
1 The principle is all right, I do be
ilieve. Also I believe that the ex¬
cuses which governments give, for
taking up arms,
^ROSIKA 'SCHWIMMER. ■
L-——
’that pilgrimage, as I did, among to
inewspaper correspondents, will agi-
iWith me, I feel sure.
\r Admitting that it was a queer
pedition, it seems to me it folio- o. -
a matter of course, that the : -
j :t> who Henry tiiought Ford, up was the idea, queer, and too- o i ' •
■
necessarily queer in all respec -. t»u
■ so pronounced a pacifist, as to l>
itermed a visionary on that subjc . t a
Heast, without exaggerating.
l * * *
.
if TO W E V ER. is Mme. Schwinirv-r
T i queer enough to be deemed in¬
eligible for American citizen.-h.p?
1 Federal Judge George A. Can en¬
ter says she is.
i Rosika applied to him for natural¬
ization. in Chicago, quite a long time
'ago. The judge, recalling the Ford
fpeacexpedition, asked her if she
;ist war justifiable under any
. UiaLO.lAV.e3. instances. Mme. -AAlilC. Schwimmer OLUOIUIU.V4
f wered that she positively did not.
a. m.
5 . 1 . S. L, 6:30 p. in.
Evening prayer, 7:30 o’clock.
M’KENDREE METHODIST
Norwich and K. streets.
T. F. Drake, pastor.
Sunday school 10:30 a. m., J. M.
Dorsey, superintendent. p.!
Preaching 11:30 a. in. and 7:30
ni. by the pastor. B.!
Epworth League 6:30 p. in., A.
Patterson, president.
Prayer meeting Wednesday evening
at 7:30 o'clock.
Public cordially invited to attend all!
of these services.
CALVARY BAPTIST i
Corner Dartmouth and Oglethorpe! |
streets.
L. M. Rouse, pastor.
Services 11 a. in., and 7:30 p. m. j
Prayer meeting Tuesday night 7:30
o’clock.
Public cordially invited.
FIRST METHODIST
Monk and Norwich streets.
W. P. Blevins, pastor.
Sunday school 1:15 a. ni. All de¬
partments meet at this hour.. T. E.
< 1 lover, superintendent.
Morning worship and sermon by
the pastor, 11:30.
Evening worship and sermon by the
pastor 7:30.
Don’t miss Ortner’s special offer for
photographs.
TO THOSE WHO HAVE
INDIGESTION
Don’t worry any longer afiout dis- j
after eating, heaviness, tablespoon-1 gas orl
sour stomach for just one dp-1
ful of Dare’s Mentha Pepsin, a
liglitful elixir, will stop the distress
and make your stomach feel fine and !
fit.
Thousands will vouch for the truth]
of this statement and thousands more ]
will tell you that the most stubborn;
eases rapidly yield to this wonderful]
medicine and that stomachs overwork habitual- j j
ly weak and upset from or
abuse, or a dyspeptic condition, are
Try one bottle. If it doesn’t help i
you Andrews or any druggists wilL
gladly return the purchase price,
uickly benefitted.
almost a, mi u » l always o-i" aj j
are the bunk. I I
believe further
that the expres- |
sion “defensive
warfare” is i- .
nearly pure blah
as purity can ">
But a tiling
like the 1" cl
peace exr» :
tion! — I re A
think that war. a
little creentr
to say the leas'
A A , NY nc>r:i >•
indiv.li"
who went ■'>
Whereupon her application waa
turned down.
Itosika appealed. The court of ap¬
peals pooh-pooh-ed what it called
Judge Carpenter’s ‘‘trick question*
and ordered her naturalized.
Did that end the case? Not at all.
Naturalization Commissioner Ray¬
mond F. Crist, of the labor depart
nient, holds that Judge Carpenter
was quite right. So he, in turn,
through the justice department, ap
t0 the federal supreme bench,
%v has just called for the appeals
r . our p, ; findings, to be passed on by
chjpf justice Taft et ai, in Wash
jugton.
• * •
QTLAN'GE as it may seem—to
people, like me, who view even
i n over-developed love of peace, as
:,r error on tho right side, if an
all—Commissioner Crist Is a
liberal-minded official.
In the main, he conceded to me,
;>p of the opinion that lime,
i .Miner would make a first-class
: n. .a!
\ TRY fir.THELESS, Commissioner
i “ Crist takes exception, he ex
, u> the appeals court’s ruling
■ what < ounts is how an appli
nt for naturalization always has
■.. .!; not his mental quirks—or
hers.
e. fvhwimmer’s behavior hav¬
ing been uniformly excellent, said
i. •• appeals court, o. k., naturalize
he: —who cares what she thinks!
The law says that what she think*
matters, too, according to Commis¬
sioner Crist. That is the point ha
wants the supreme court to settle—
not so much because he finds fault
w ith Mme. Schwimmer, as for refer¬
ee, e m connection with other casis
which may come up later on.
* * *
A A LL the same it looks pretty se
- vere ---- on Mme. Schwimmer to
me, especially just after the labor
department’s abandonment of its ef¬
fort - to ‘ ' deport -' George Remus, who
killed his v. ife.
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
30 Beautiful Rural Acres Homesites
Near Brunswick’s Most Talked of Waterfront
On Wonderful Belle Point
Just 12 Minutes From the Post Office
Plenty of room for a country A waterfront reservation for
home, a small chicken farm, sjurv your boat an() f or fishing, crab
and ample garden, cows and . king, . shrimp . . and . oysters.
fresh milk.
Here Is Everything to Make a Suburban Home Worthwhile
At Last You Have a Chance To Buy One or
More Acres on This Superb Peninsula
BELLE POINT ACRES
Only 30 Lots in This Limited Offering
Each Lot as Large as 8 Average Subdivision Lots
Sale Begins Oct. 15th and Ends Nov. 1st
At the Astonishly Low Price of
$250 and only $50 down
The Balance In 18 Papments
THIS WONDERFUL PENINSULA SITUATED LESS THAN THREE MILES NORTH
of the Brunswick city limits, on the Atlantic Coastal Highway, is made beautiful by
stately moss live-oaks, towering pines, palms, and kindred vegetation. The balance of
this unusual piece of property is certain at some time to become either Brunswick’s
most charming Country Club and Golf Course ,or some rich man’s Paradise.
These Homesites will undoubtedly become invaluable and it is unthinkable that their
owners would be willing to part with them. To own a homesite in BELLE POIN I
ACRES means to have a foot-hold on the most beautiful waterfront property adjacent
to Brunswick.
W. Jennings Butts, Real Estate
Oglethorpe Hotel Temporary Office for This Sale Andrews Drug Store
Robert Stanton, Sales Manager
SUNDAY, OCT. 14, 1928.