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FACE FOUR
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
_ _
Published every busintsss afternoon except Saturday,
and on Sunday morning by
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY,
The Newa Building, 1604 Newcastle Street.
cu^ciiniA^
President and Editor
Entered at the Brunswick., (GCt). Post Office aa second
class mail mutter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One year - S7.50
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 Clynn, and the United
States bankruptcy court for this district.
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press is entitled to the use for pub¬
lication of all news credited to or not otherwise credited
in this paper, and also to tb*. local news published here
Advertising Representative
Thomas P Clark Co., Inc., 128 West 31st Street, New
York City; 140 South Dearborn Street, Chicago, Illinois;
1031 'Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
It seems to tal^e as long to straighten out 'injunctions
in London as it does in America.
By the way, did you attend the birthday celebration of
prohibition, or were you among the rest of us who had
forgotten we had prohibition?
Judging from warnings sent out, and occurrences as
well, gunmen intending a visit to Chicago would save
money by buying one way t ickets.
Deaths from heart failure in New York and Detroit
MV a said to be negligible, and we had supposed that not
much water war used in those cities for quenching thirst.
The growth of the dairy and poultry industry in this
par^of the state is attracting much attention, and is
gratifying. It is predicted that this section will make
ever, greater strides along thojje lines.
Not so long ago it was a common expression that mur¬
derers were let off light in Georgia, butThi.s has all
changed with the last few months. Just this week,
Governor Hardman refused to interfere in the execution
of a man sentenced to die in the electric chair. Firmness,
r.uch as this, will have a salutatory effect in making men
and women think twice before taking human life in this
state.
Miami society plana to attend the Stribling-Sharkcy
fight, in large numbers, large block ; of tickets having al¬
ready been purchased to bear rut this statement. A few
years ago, if a woman were to Ik* seen at a ringside she
Would bo outlawed from society instantor. Before long,
pa and ma will be as apt to be -in itttendance at lights
within tiro roped squares us they are sard to be by humor¬
ists, with nothing better to “humor" about, outside the
arenas.
Brunswick Jrus a splendid board of trade and judging
from all available information, the now secretary elected
has t*. fine record back of him to keep the organization in
the “go get ’em" class. We do not know how far back he
traces Iris ancestry, but judging from the results he has
been able to accomplish in other cities he has served, Mr*.
Job evidently has inherited much of the same kind of pa¬
tience n certain man making the name famous was en¬
dowed with.
There is ulwuys an ending. Several years ago fre¬
quent stories appeared in lire news concerning the acts
of what was known a t the Ashley gung, composed of a
number of outlaws who frequented the cart const K»f
Florida. Tuwsdqy the lust of the gang was taken care
of*definitely by way of Sheriff “Bob" Baker’s gun, when
Haywood Register dropped with several bullets in his
body while blazing away at the sheriff in the hopes of
"getting" him. The way of the transgressor is hard,
ami its ending b always harder.
Science enters into practically every phase of human
life nowadays, and with each devet >jum*nt reduces drudg¬
ery. For instance, the vacuum sweaper is said to have
ubout put the broom out of commission, as fewer* and
fewer of them ore being manufactured and sold. Aside
from this pointing out that the drudgery of hand sweep¬
ing, marie necessary for housewives desiring to be "tidy ",
is being eliminated, it also removes from rheir hand a
ver> able ally, when the eat needs to he run out. or the
old man gels too vehement.
In states more thickly settled than Georgia, highways
ore policed their entire length. It is too bad that Geor
gir.’s highways could not bo patrolled from end t© end
with stalwart I How* who would make life safer along
tho routes. Th* •term that it rs two expensive i> 1 st sight
of when the eo* of net of banditry nod oth *r form; of
outlawry la»kli the state is taken into consideration,
Scarcely a day |*w but that we are advised of some
death at the hand outlaws of someone living along u
veil traveled highway in Georgia, The fact that »n
thtroufhfarea are not policed is u tun* for ihis class >
bandit. It wyuW in* conservation of the highest tyi
to put suitable safeguards on the highways in the $h*q
of mounted urtii«r,i with power to act.
it hit and run driver si truck leaded Vs q ?
I* tables near Tam on, Tht of the truck Stt’
ltd and the kilter own
> wd gathered ate*-it the
p bo*** piatigiM*« theiMigh
feral more. According
* e st, plainly wader tin
virg and ds vjng wfeif > m ,u
ihn and those who eoKtrttl? actx such « , ;l
iny ahewW h* promptly handled by ■ourts. Ain!
, arre. t* ghoaM not br dt*k«yr*i until are snuffed
t, hut guardian* of the highway > ho (p|i in j;| the
it .nwtralMM* m4 •arwk.. mmmmm*, mettke or reckjcas
t driver* «f auto ear*. A step tirar, in such
a, iroahl mean manor fete* *av*d and many mjurte*
tgd.
BRUNSWICK’S BOUNDEN DUTY
John D. Rockefeller, Sr., was widely quoted a few
ago when he made the statement that saving the
made the dollars grow.
While saving pennies may seem to be a matter of
moment, when it is brought to the attention that a
here and a penny there saved in the way of initial
on pounds of food stuffs, wearing apparel, in fact all
« necessities of life and manufacture, we should all sit
and take notice.
This, while not the subject text used by W. A. Fox,
his very able talk before Brunswick Kiwanians
day, was the theme he intended to convey to the
of his hearers. In pointing cut what had been
plished by himself and associates in the way of
ing a distressful situation confronting Brunswick
necr, and manufacturing enterprises, he might well
gone still further and stressed the point that without
steamer connection now enjoyed, every householder in
Brunswick|territory would be compelled to turn
more pennies than they are now compelled to use in
chasing goods and wares.
The enjoyment of water freight rates, we fear, is not
as thoroughly appreciated as it should be. Without
steamer connection, Brunswick merchants would be
upon to pay a higher freight rate. This higher
would also add to cost of raw materials coming here
manufacture, as Wei) as to the cost of delivery of the pro¬
ducts to the outside world, thus, in the latter case,
this city, which should by all fairness be a really impor¬
tant port commercially, in the position of inability
competition.
The ramification of the result of loss of steamer con
noction would be so many and so varied that a long dis
.notation would be necessary Vr> set them before the peo¬
ple, but it should be readily seen that Brunswick is in
duty Douncl to encourage this enterprise with every ounce
of cooperation possible. It must be sustained and the
only way it can be sustained is for the shipping to br.
given to the steamer, both incoming,ana outgoing.
less this is done, the Brunswick Transportation Company
will naturally become discouraged. It must have tonnage
to carry, because this is the only source of revenue it
has. The encouragement thus far has been gratifying
to the management of the company, but they should be
given more business. It is vital to the interests of Bruns
vv ; ck that each and every one continue to support such a
worthy resource to the city’s advancement.
Remember the adage: Save the pennies, the dollars
will take care of themselves. Save in freight rates and
Brunswick will continue to grow.
INTERESTS ALL OF IE
The report has gone forth that all signs point to n
good outlook for a successful year for south arid middle
Georgia farmers. This may notVrccm of much interest to
Brumwickianr -but it should be.
It will not take* any of us long to figure out that Bruns¬
wick really is vitally interested in whether the section
I.- !errcd to prospers or not. If the farmers of squth and
middle Georgia have a good year, they will have money to
'.pend. If they have seme money to spend, Brunswick
w” 1 get h r share of i‘. They will want to come to the
ea .'••!•>. They will need something on the trip and it v/ili
be in to Brunswick to supply part of these neoris to so }
the least. - «*>
If Iha coming * ason is a profitable one, it means that
Brunswick retail merchants, hotels, restaurants, ga ami
auto supply stations, and a hundred and one other lirr*.
of business will feel the eiTeels. To what extent r< main:
or the business ocoph* of the eity to determine.
With the highways leading into the eity growing bet
l r am! Letter, the so-called local tourist buxines* is bound
to Le on the increase, and with a good crop year, thir
;• Li earn will be added to immensely.
Too, if the territory spoken of has a good yeah, Bruns¬
wick wholesalers will derive a benefit through increased
business on the road; better collections and a general re
tu*'n to that status enjoyed until the last two lean years
caused a setback. Therefore wc see that whether the
fanners in the territory prosper means very much to ah
of us in more ways than one.
AN ENCOURAGING NOTE
The n ws that the Cloister is already compelled to in -
crease its capacity ts most welcome news. However, it *,
not unexpected news. N’o one knowing the wonderful
natural endowments surrounding the islands off the coast
here had any doubt that tin* Cloister would prove any¬
thing but popular with the class they built to accommo¬
date.
The fact that the hotel’s success has been so marked
points to only one result, and that is that within a very
few years this section will become as populous with resort
hotels as any port of the country, excepting n me. „
It simply took the genius of the builders of the Cloister,
together with the able management of the hotel after itr
opening. t«> demonstrate to the world at large that there
was a vacation spot here that c* uld not be surpa-ced it
natural charms.
FOOLISH FIG!’ICING
Ever since the night of Nov. ♦*, 19*38, some Demo * ratic
pnit> managers, and Alfred E. Smith al *.y with th: IYI.
hu* e been attempting to console themselves for th. ir ov
c. whelming defeat by playing with statistics. <ay % th?
New York Times, They haul evolved comforting little
tabulations which purport t » show that if 125,511 < f the
votes cast for president hud been given to
Smith ins*cad of to Hoover, the Democratic Candida* *
would have got a. majority in the electoral college. The
termer governor even mentioned this in hit? rad: speech
the other cvenng as proof that h> defeat w»v not 0 great
as the popular and electoral vote appeared to demon
strate.
Ti n always play with statistics like rhe^e. If c«m
putt Republican committee headquarters w 1 go
[ho * i|>» of tnh"’g cut their pencils and ’ Uny oi
'talkies :n the few states which he carried,
iver that u change* of less than IHJ.ObO vote
o(H) would have placed every state ir the
the Republican comma! As the Irishman aid:
If y. ire talking history, I know something about . hat
On ot Ire fact* « f King Gt : g. ’ court is hr - jvr
e;„ That the p&i *t rs a** greatly kttached i the
rch as- tbs king in the bird is tvidtMtii m the fact
-.i;t during the ki: * illness the parrot pined in his
refusing t© be cc.aferted. until order* were given to show
it to he brought to the bedside.
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
THE GRAB BAG
How Does a Pickle Taste?
Pickles taste good enough to want
more but if they start this beautifi¬
cation idea on some of the 57 varie¬
ties they are liable o get in seri¬
ous trouble.—Thomasville Times-En
terprise.
j Not Yet, Son
Commissioner Whalen, of New
York, seems to have done a good job
in driving the g angsters and crim
! j na ] s ou t of that city New York is
1
now a perfectly modest and modern
city._Athens Banner-Herald.
-
j From Dry Tennessee
Liquor a thousand years old has
been found in Rome, which makes it
just exactly 999 years and 364 1-2
days more elderly than any that is
on tap in this vicinity.—Nashville
Banner.
Subway Justice
An English judge has ruled that it
is no crime to wink at a girl, which
is much in conformity with the laws
of this country, where a young man
may take forty winks on a girl’s
shoulder without being aroused, much
less arrested.—Stars and Stripes.
!
1 Dead, But Doesn’t Know It
Ex-Kaiser Wilhelm has had anoth¬
er day of glox*y and gone back to his
. retreat. After hearing a sermon ex>
, tolling him welI mav he exclaim
vvith the prophots of ol{3; “How are
t ; K> n ,;<rhty fallen.’’’_Augusta C-hron
p.j^
I ___
j j Manhood Wins cowards,
The world has iio room for
J T’e must all be ready somehow to
| toil, tess noble suffer, because to die. \ «u drum-beats .*s is not the bc
no
p ore vou * w hen you go out into ,\oiu
-
:> 1 f il - v battlefields, and no crowds shout
about >’ our commK ’ ' vm n you return
from your daily victory or defeat.
Robert Louis Stevenson.
Worse Than Booze
An archdeacon of a New York
church revises “Many mere dig their
graves with their tpeth" to read:
‘‘Overindulgence in eating is breaking
up more American homes than over
indulgence in liquor.” Domestic un¬
happiness that eventually leads to the
divorce court is caused, he says, by
the bad 'dipositions engendered by
overeating and consequent indiges¬
tion.—Albany Herald.
Marked For Life
Yes, it happened in 1929. A news¬
boy on Market street, between Fourth
and Fifth streets, chased a man half
a block to restore a banknote the man
had accidentally jerked out of his
pocket. And then the hoy was re¬
luctant to take half the amount of the
banknote as a r ward. We read so
much about crook and embezzlm-s'
and sharper? .hat sometimes w won¬
der how the vast bu mess < >? the c« on
try ever gets carried on. That kind
of boy is the answer.—San Francisco
Chronicle,
Can Be Stalked
A fish’s feai of man is born, the
Carr.egie Institute’s bulletin sugc-ts,
by the fact that he approaches from
above, a direction from which the fish
has learned to expect attack by birds
i or other enemies. When *rae walks on
the ocean’s floor in diver's dree, fi* h,
large and small, display the greatest
curiosity. Even the fierce barram;-!*,
after nosing the diver in friendly a d
inquisitive fashion, mud lx pushed
out of the Wny and gees without
showing undue resentment. — San
Francisco Chronicle.
What’s the Fare to Canada?
The Canadian whiskey combine re¬
ports to its stockholders that the
total manufacturing cost of its pro¬
duct is between 8 and 10 cents per
American quart. If it cost s only 8
to 10 cents to manufacture a quart
of rml w*hi- key, it must eo i a p<> od
deal b.* s to mako fake whbkc; y. Th •it
may t*x plain why the profits in b ad
1)0031(1* C. an te* Hpbt .so many w a>*a a ml
give al! concerned a lot of m*. •ne*y. If
it were n' t ,Vr the « cm rmou . prof
th *r*e ruirjhi be more *»>f- of curki
the boot legge Boston Transcript.
Numskuvx
v C'rZSy-y
c 1 fL/?/
cue *to Ttt
PtCK ■_£.■£>> *VUC *> THE*
■ntfc SA*n*
NUT ':,C2R '
1
PLUMBING
NEW WORK
REPAIR WORK
HOT WATER
STEAM HEATING
GAS FITTING
Phone 1298
W. ^HEng G ish
Phone 1298
1310 Ogiethorjje St.
“Make a Health Examina¬
tion of Your Home”
Unsanitary plumbing is the
source of illness. Be sure
you have good sanitary I
plumbing and protect the t
health of your family.
Gilmore & Woods
Plumbing He&ting
Metal Work
1418 Richmond St.
Phone 228
Your Electrical
Needs! j
Lei us serve you. Ask olht-rs
who have tried us. No job
too big. None too small.
Estimates cheerfully fur¬
nished. 3
A. T. Harrison
Electrical Contractor
2222 Elli, St. Phone 165
**\V> can repair am clolhfs
you wear”
NEW YORK
TAILORING SHOP
Cleaning, Pressing,
Dyeing and Remodeling
Men'- and I.vdir •* Soih Tailored
Gimrar**ccd (o l it
Expert Furrier
20 J (.'.oneester St.
Phone SSI II. E 1 Jmar. Ib. p. j
Draswick, Gs.
THURSDAY, JAN. 31, 1929.
Thousands of others have gotten rid ot theira by my simple
and efficient method of fat reduction without starvation
diet or burdensome exercise, often at a very rapid rate and
WITHOUT PAYMENT until reduction has taken place.
♦ I am a licensed practicing physician and have made a
careful study of the physiological requirements of the human
body. This has enabled me to select such ingredients and irr
such proportion as in my opinion will produce not only a loss
of weight without harm and an improvement in health, butt
with it an alleviation of atl of the troublesome symptoms
which frequently accompany and often ;flre a direct re&utt of
overstoutne&s, such as shortness of breath on slight exorrion,
palpitation of thei heart, etc., not to speak of the relief from
t he embarrassment of being too stoat. : tout persons <n»flermg
from such diseases as Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, L< zc;:.a,
Asthma and high blood pressure are greatly relieved by a
reduction of their superfluous fat.
My treatment will relieve that depressed, lire j, deepy feeling, giving you the
renewed energy and vigor which come as a result of the loss.cf superfluous fat.
If vou are overstout do not postpone hut sit down right now and send for
my FREE TRIAL TRKA7 ME NT and my plan whereby I afh t > ha PAID
ONLY AFTER REDUCTION HAS TAKEN PLACE if you so desire,
DR. R. NEWMAN, 2SS> Fifth Avc., New York - Desk D
Coal-Coke- W ood
4 BRICK
PLASTER SLAG & GRAVEL
LIME FIRE BRICK
SAND BLUE PIPE
SHINGLES SEWER PIPE
LATHS FLUE LINING
Carey Asbestos Shingles National Steel Fabric
CONEY & PARKER CO.
OUll F5 *3 ding 1 • supplies n i ®
We are rleadquarters
Brick Paints and Otis
Lime M:ta! Lath
Cement
' Plaster Asbestos Shingles
Sand Sash be £ oors |
Gravel • j 3
Exclusive dealers for
ihn & rvianv s:r.ci U. 5. G>pson Products
■-j© ■ ot*r prices before buying.
fT*T /> Go
W »Wi i* i f i i 6£ wen jO.
Ps fy *r» r-n Jj ***}r
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