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PAGE TEfsi
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
Published every business afternoon except Saturday,
and on Sunday morning by
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY,
The News Building 1004 Newcastle Street
CLARENCE H. LEAVY,
President and Editor
Entered at the Brunswick (Ga.) Post Offlci aecoml
clans mail matter.
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The News is the official ncv. paper of the ( ity of
Brunswick and the County of Glynn, and the United
States bankruptcy court for this district.
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The Associated Press is entitled to the use for publica¬
tion of all news credited to or not otherwise credited in
this paper, and also to the Ideal news published herein.
AdvertLing Kept iswn !afire
Thomas P. Clark Co., Im-., 205-217 West 42nd Street,
New York City; M0 South Dearborn Street, Chicago Illi¬
nois; 1031 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
It takes more than bucking bronchos and malaria fever
to down the intrepid Prince of Wale .
The task of disillusioning one elf from one’., ideal:, is
about the hardest task that ever fell to the lot of man.
Former (thief .Instil < Taft tight: i n bravely, hanging
on to a very slender thread of lift 1 . Million: of Ameri¬
cans are hoping and praying for him.
King Alfonso, of Bpian, -'s to m; he a good will trip to
Portugal. In the light, of recent event.-, in hi: own satte,
he should make such a trip in Spain.
Senator Less says that the Hoover administration has
been the he: ( ever thus. far. What a really all round ad¬
ministration man the senator really i d
Secretary of State Stinson send hopeful note Irom
the London naval conference. Let us hope that he has
real cause for the encouraging attitude.
When one comes to think of it, v.imt n quect >i t < , a
French cabinet that would bo without that old wur-horso
of h statesman, Aristide Brio ml, in the portfolio oi min¬
ister of foreign affairs.
The record show.- th; 0 thirty thousand , meric; lost
their lives through th, automobile last y ear. I
safe to estimate that seventy percent, o f these ilea ills
could have been avoided?
If Senator MeKellar lm. furnished the true lory oi
why the senate has revet ?• .1 itself on the question ol a
tariff on raw sugar, then indeed the situation in that once
august body is nothing less, than pituide.
Mayor Walker, of New York, has mid the* vfc a;
the Communists in that city. Now, then, lot h m enxom*
bus terms. Good order and decent conduct mu - be forth
coming from that group in this country.
Gun egiun franklin !>. Kiuisevelt, the ltemO' •ratio gov
ornor of New York, is waging a line tight e.g. jrtjgt a Ro
aublivan legislature and is managing to foia ti through
some good legislation for the people of New York.
No anti-prohibition] -t on the top of the earth ueiiev- >
that whiskey is u blessing. On the contrary, if is a curse
and has drowned more souls than all the oceans, the
present trouble is that prohibition brings all the woes
of other days and a great many more.
One thing Mr. Hoover must certainly In Uu
the very early days <-f his first, year in the White 1
and that is how easy a pro ideal of the United Stall
representing a patty with a majority in uie etc
lose control of that body!
Her * is one in artihmetic: 1 they MU rued on that
tariff bill in the United Statu- senate ins t Septe j liber
am! if t he record now totals in L ,.”00 jutfce- in the Con*
grossi uut! Record and if they an now hohii night SOS
> ions. the i jUSt Vv hen the tariff ! ill be pa s ed ?
Now that actual indictments ha*« been drawn againsi
some sixteen Atlanta office holdc $, the invest igatim
should be pushed to the very limit, Since the thing hu
boon started, the probe should he comp etc and even
handed justice should be meted out ;o all •{fendors At
!until should not be satisfied with F
It h unfortunate that Georgia i> to F.-x t uv ‘u-rviuv of j
such a man a v Uon. Sam Trio fru-u ihc/stuto bujhway i
hoard. Still, Col. Tate has boon told by hi* physician* j
that such a Me; is necessary for his health's sake and
then, again, ov take it that condition? on the hoard were
not such as to at'.rail n business man of the Tate type.
Fays the Albany Herald*. “President H as ap
proved the bill providing $7,000,0000 to b * enters
in fifteen states, including six in the soul I storm
and flood have imp- -ed Imrdsiiip. F tub» of the
bill, the money is to be used to ass hi fame e urine’
seed and fertilizer with which to make the ,K>0 uTv ns.
Senator trapper, of Kansas, in exc!au.ed rut over the
wonderful acconij lishimiits of the Hoover i 1 ministration
in its first year of service to the nation, say k it has come
to be a great fact-finding administration* Yes* a great
commission-naming, junket-taking bunch. An ad minis*
truUon of in ck-pa? sing ami sidc-stepfiinsi, with the great
engineer at the h<
We arc frank to cunfe>.'- that wc agrw with Chairman
Perry, of the Georgia public service commission, when
he repudiate;: the foolish charges made by the Municipal
Utilities Rates Association after its Macon meeting t\
few days ago. The charge that the public service
mission is in colleague with utility concerns i > levy
bit ant rates in Georgia is too absurd for thinking people
it) consider. Such tactics never get any results and
serve to injure the cause in which they are made.
THK NAVAL COXFFRFATK AS OF TODAY
By now it is pretty well agreed that the London < ■ on
• l not result in reduced naval armaments u.:
the United States eon non is to assume certain vague re
a possibilities for France's security.
Recognition of this fact has prompted the? New York
World to demand the negotiation of a treaty which would
give France the promises she wants and thus buy her off.
The World has even asked Mr. Hoover to speak out and
exercise bis influence in preparing American public opin¬
ion to accept the idea of an entanglement with France,
The New.-- doe-, not believe that Mr. Hoover would
make the mistake of sponsoring an entanglement with
France even to ave his reduction program. There is not
the slightest 1 elibood that the senate would tolerate
such a bargain there is not the slightest likelihood that
American pub! opinion would support it. The only re
suit would be a repetition of the league fight which took
place during tf closing days of the Wilson adminhstra
lion.
The plain tn Us oi (he matter /? (hat reduction i.-: not
important to a nation rich a the United Staten. The
con!crenee, it. i ? true, was called for the purpo.se of c"-
tabli. hing “reduction and parity,” md there was not, in
ini.-: country at least, sufficient unde standing of the point
that reduction and parity might be contradictory. What
was important to us was not, reduction, b t parity, and
: modus vivendi with Britain. Apparently we are going
to get parity and a modus vivendi with Britain, in other
words, all that is important to us.
There does remain the thought, however, that the con¬
ference was nomally called for the purpose of bringing
about induction. Nominally, therefore, the conference
will, in all probability, be a failure. It wan no doubt on
fortunate for Mr. Hoover that at the outset lie so greatly
■cd the word “reduction.” It was unfortunate he
cause a large number of people arc certain to judge th,
success or failure of :he conference by its success or its,
failure to achieve reduction. Many politicians note,that
Mr. Hoover needs a “success” right now, and that a “uc
ii. . at, London would do much towards strengthening
popular satisfaction with the administration. That sort
oi success he is unlikely to get.
L, seems to an that the London conference is going to
be beneficial, on the whole, to the United States. There
i s very good prospect that, the United States and Brit¬
ain will I) 1 able to settle amicably upon the sixes of their
re. pec live navies. There is. further a very good prospect
that, unco this is done, the two powers will enter upon a
period of pooled control of the sen. When it becomes
eb ar to Britain that such an arrangement is workable,
all temptation to enter European or Asiatic coalitions
hostile to the United States will be removed. The United
States will then have a navy strong enough to cope with
any combination of powers on the globe not including
Britain as a member. In other words, we are pursuing
at Lotidu policy calculated permanently to eliminate
as an enemj the one power win •< hostility would he
damaging t us, and nt the same time to leave us our
i )v. • strong enough to deal with the rest of world com¬
bined. This strikes us a:: sagacious, far-seeing, and en¬
lightened ; iai<*:■ii.iiii: hip. We believe it intended to give
us the maximum of . eeuiily at the minimum of cost.
For those reasons it seems to us that the London eon
t i cnco, def ipite* the frequent expressions of pessimism
which one hears, is progressing very satisfactory. If
present developments continue, we do not see how it can
fail to further the interests oi’ American security. Or,
differently, from the point of view of security, we do not
see how the conference cun be a failure, while from the
piont of view oi reduction we do not see hov, it <mn be a
success. It Kicks as if Mr. Hoover cheated himself out
of a nominal- success in advance by choosing that ill
omened word, “reduction.” The trend of events seems
in indicate that the conference will be an actual American
success and a nominal American failure. It is rather a
pity that Mr. Hoover did not choose to make the catch¬
words of the London conference “security and parity”
rather than “reduction and parity.” Then the work
would have been judged by the right standards, and them
wuoid have been no question of the success achieved. Nor
would there have been any agitation to salvage reduction
at. tlif exorbitantly high tort of ontnnglement with
Frump. It :-prm: ruthcr n sail pa lux that Mr. Hoover
will probably 11ml io of his most useful accomplishments
chalked up agfeim him as a failure.
MR. HOOVER'S FIRST 1 K Uf
Wo t!o not know how well itisfi I Mr. Hoc H'l
the accomplishments of his ad m istration d ur
fit/ : year, but wo have lei idea that there is nun
out ■ fly in the ointment of pre,? ientia! sat is f;
the Albany Herald.
Mr. Hoover probal y has done his I ■ t. H Hit
to know the truth al >ut conditions in the lift • of this m
lion of a hundred am twenty million copie, . md his fae
(incline- commission for which ho ha an t ut jineor’s pa
won, hat e l vn ex remedy bus But it t all of su
cess mu !} to kno must be met ured by the
y md st UT aceom s h mem.
The ft* ra 1 farm boarr ard re pi t seats the Republi •an par
ty‘s ivttuvupt to meet one most important ; lilt
pKuu;, i’t ngress hi a delejri ted lai ye nowet tc
iarm board ami placed a a hu<e hmre sum sum of ot money money at at its dis
pos«J, but it ■ <; t :• u*■( yet appear how aicco: ful the board
will be in brin^irur to sirup,e;lin^* agriculture the relief
it demands of the general Kovernmont. A lanye ip
mark forms the ll IV if the ' <»av v ho^c member
are bc^inni y tn their:. mien a last
Mr, Hoover bin the nati
wide depre rio which ; lm truKgii
vie with gov« nment pul His i •imini
eanu* fn with ba nner? phxy
marches by which a 1
or achievement and A VC pi
over. Hundreds o lUsamJ \
are out f work. Industry shot* 1 time Rctrcir
mint is in progress everywhere.
H is nut Mr. Hoover personally but Mi ! r,
that beat, the opprobrium of failure, th< igh
possibly eseane .sharing jhe blame tn some ext
two wings ef Ins pa.-.y. repre enting the agrieul
the industE'..: interests of different sections of the c
t ry, are at dagger s point;. Mr. Hoove:' has laded dis
ly in h\s efforts to b ng them t*.her. The tariff t
on which the Republican party stakes it lift*, is di
“up in the air.” with excellent pros sects o'
maining there,
-------------- — - -
There seems to 5 8 gradual revival of interest in
Island real estate these days. Quite a number of
actions have been reported largely and several new
soon to be erected.
th§ Brunswick news
r THE GRAB BAG
Then and Sow
Chicago was built in a . ./amp, but
VM now it seems to be on the rocks.
.....Ohio State Journal.
j Wet’s Thai?
I “What do you do when in doubt
j about kissing a girl?”
“Give her the benefit of the doubt
j -—Montreal Star.
j Revision
| “There stands Massaehusetts* may
j ow be i c vived by the dry/ into “ I here
tagger? the old Bay-rum state.”
—Louisville Courier.Journal.
Shooshl
yoi keep a secret, Daddy?”
“Yea, Junior; what is it?”
! “Well, mamma just ran off with the
hauffeur and they’ve taken the Cudii
'
Pointer.
He Remembers
“Why did that old gentleman jump
out of your way as you passed?”
"Oh, he u ed to be my dancing
master.”
-Nebelspaltef, Bunch.
Out He Goes
“Well, Erie, how did you like your
first day at school?”
“it war rathe i tun, but there was
y( , ry oM man in front of the dass
and he kept spoiling the fun.
-Faun, Vienna.
Efficiency Test
Tests made by efficiency experts
how that the best temperature “for
real hard work indoors" is between 65
and 70 deg row. Ki - and is there any
known standard for, s*iy just medium
hard work?
—Philadelphia Inquirer.
Add Polar Discoveries
A million new telephone poles were
• acted in America last year, many
nl' i hem, no doubt,-replacements made
nece.-snry by the faster and more
powerful types of motor cars that
have come into use.
Kansas City Star.
Poetry—Weather Permitting
I’v« written themes on babbling
brooks and daisies in the held,
f' v ,.. prad iced a my brand n«>.- uke j
until m> lingers peteled, i
IV® bought me mats and dre
new, !
And even learned to “follow through.”
A lot of good those things’il do—
It’s snowing!
—Syracuse Orange Peel.
A l)r • ef Their Own Medicine
The vicious are very rough with
honest men, robbing and shooting
them on very slight excuse. Musso¬
lini is equally rough with rogues anti
has thereby been able to establish j
moir order and economy than exists.j
in any other counts*.
E. W. Howe’s Monthly:
Frccriom of the Air
Under old English law a landown¬
er could claim possession to the air
above his one... ‘y .. ,ie a.- the heav¬
ens and thee retieally the right still
holds. In this nev- era of airplanes
such possession has practically been
- . -; aside. However, sooner or later
it will be necessary to define by law
F - much ei' the air above the earth!
A I
the property >wmv may te erve ,xor
hi: own use an i how much like the
ocean is free to ail for navigating- the
airways. Otherwise, some skyscraper
may trespe.ss on the public domain.
—Los Angeles Times.
How To Keep Books
Put them in a safe deposit box in
.-side the vault of u large bank and then
throw avvay the keys.
Buy cnly cheap buck.. No one bor
hooks with inexpensive binding-.
Arrange your bookcase so that you |
press u spring- when neighbors] |
cull, causing them (the i. .. . | ' l j 1
in ■ ’. ’. 1 : 0 • v. a i! .a.:',.:,
Buy bool.:- with, cactus covers.
Have youi bock printed in Chi
nese.
Buiy your hi ■' - i n a dese’-t : rland.
Make a careful chart of the isiahd,
hen destroy the chart.
—Brooklyn Erpie,
f HokVS Numskuu. /r*yS
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/fife, fV\ l) -n T»6**
/) A T'° to
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j I r zatz nOAD TUCKS, -vnoco lt= ATJ«U -ticks
I V. a; „H
t cp L - clock, ticks
I OUT A SEP TICK?
DStas. | ri.'OViY CW:l>
ns ah
IF DultfiS CTOULC 3 talk,
WOU -p TTiEV CATiRY
Tale ? ’ Post pa.-e'
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zx ;c '7y\£- ’S^VVii.L
the v.vne Run •
CK'CC'ttc*^ da«nEll CK£ ‘v -n KY *
OEA,^ NOAM* DO Yc»U Cvec STS
OAC iCK. FftOST »?lDfc AN 'C»CuU ?
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'
By BOBBIN COONS
Hollywood, March 7.—There is ro
in roast pork, success in pie,
happiness in dishwashing, right here
...
g 1 ;
yip'
mm*
Blanche Sweet
ly and Hattie Schwarts have been
catering to the appetites of film ce¬
lebrities, without the customary bal¬
lyhoo that; arises whenever a res¬
taurant is favored by the stars.
You cm live in Hollywood a year
and never know the place exists.
Ffora Footlights to Food
Until 11 years ago Betty Schwarz
was an actress, an eccentric comedi¬
enne in vaudeville, a “slavey” in
drama. Her sister Hattie was an ex¬
ponent j.i L a cit 11 l of v'l uumt-.rc.e domestic science. - v .v-..-. v . Betty was ■ --
tired of the stage and they decided
it would be nice to have a business,
They established their inn,
cooking and Betty serving. Today,
pre-pen us, Hattie .-.till cooks and
ty still serves, and there is
ni:y movie celebrity who does not
them both.
Hattie, in the kitchen and
feie i: the background, is as
known to their movie friends as Betty,
who is a quaint character,
ir.g without trying to be.
Sweet. Lila Lee, Priscilla Dean,
Stewart—hosts of stars, can testify
to that.
While You Eat
(in the walk- of the inn are row
upon row of autographed photo
uraphn of .-t.uv of today and yester¬
day, the faded luminaries cherished
their places as loyally as the bright¬
er. of the baby starlets,
Sometimes these old photographs
serve to make' the inn an informal
movie casting bureau. A director at
spies some long-forgotten face
the wall.
“Wonder what’s become of her?”
asks Betty as she brings his tea.
Betty usually knows. If not, she’ll
to find out.
••All right,” says the director, “tell
her ti come sec me. May have some
thing for her.”
Betty quietly inquires around
the day's guests, and “finds
out.” More than one dejected actor
or actress, despairing of ever facing
camera again, ha? been aided thus.
Feathers In His Cap
Justice Hughes is another man
known for th? senate enemies he has
made.
—Indianapolis Star.
in the heart of
America’s city of
tinsel.
On a side
street off Holly¬
wood boulevard,
so inconspicuous
that the casual
p;,sser-by scarce
notices it, stands
the little brown
frame house
marked “Come
On-Inn,” where
for 11 years Bet-
Bf Diet i LULU ■. i i HUNT PETERS, AUTHOR ...Tunn and nr Of "DIET ' Vv . cv AND a .. rv Health. uc HEALTH’' A rTU * AND'CHEt A mn ' n/CT tnn fQR CHILDREN rutt rtOFhl m
.
SwoUe.i Glands
"p\EAR ef DOCTOR: I have an en
larged gland at the side of my
neck. I noticed it about two years
ago, My doctor tells me it is noth¬
ing. It has not grown any larger,
Lulu Hunt .j
Peters, M. D.
come swollen frequently on account
of decayed teeth or some inflamma¬
tory condition in the mouth and
throat or on the head.
If the glands are swollen only in
'the neck and you have no apparent
ill health, I would suspect some
tooth. 1 suggest seeing a dentist,
and possibly an X-ray. to rule out
any root infection.
Sometimes, after the cause of gland
swelling lias been removed, the
glands may still remain enlarged.
You would have to see your physician
to see if he advises surgical removal
or treatment with the X-iays, if they
•were deforming.
Mr. H.: Vitamin B, known as the
j anti-neuritic vitamin because its ab
■sence produces great disturbances in
j the. nerve tissue (first preceded by
intestinal disturbances, lack of appe
. tite and irritation and indigestion), is
now known to have another factor
which prevents pellagra (P-P fac¬
tor.) (It is called by some investiga¬
tors, vitamin G.) The foods high in
vitamin U are tomatoes, cabbage,
• spinach, beans, yeast and yeast ex¬
tracts, and the whole grain cereals
tend breads.
The P-P factor in general is not
affected so much by cooking as the
anti-neuritic factor. Prolonged cook¬
ing in an open vessel, so that free
access to the oxygen of the air is
given, Is much more destructive than
short, quick cooking in a covered
vessel. This is one of the reasons
READ THE NEWS ADS
STOP! Eat With U s
Where Every Bite Is Just Right
Clean, Wholesome, Well Cooked Food
At Prices Most Reasonable
T-Bone Steak —Homemade Pies
Best in Town
Our Specialty only 35c each
PAGE BROS. LUNCH ROOM
2503 Yz Norwich St.
FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1930.
but I do feel two
other very small
lumps near the
first one. They
do not bother me,
and I feel per¬
fectly well, but I
see no reason for
having this con¬
dition. I am 25
years old. M.”
Swollen glands
anywhere in the
body mean an in¬
fection which
they are trying
to block. Those
in the neck be¬
that vegetables should not be cooked ,j
so long. Twenty minutes are usual- j
ly long enough, and many vegetables
can be epoked less than this. They,
aro better to the teeth also whea 1
there is some firmness to them. (la
the such foods tomatoes, that are acid the vitamin to the taste,] B is
as
more stable to cooking.)
Many of these vegetables can be 1
eaten raw, and a good-sized fresh!
raw salad should be part of the daily - ;
diet. Beans, of course—that is, dry]
beans—could not be eaten raw, but
green beans can, or they can ba
cooked very slightly and in a mini-j
mum amount of water.
Vitamin B is receiving more at' ,
tention now, for it has been found
that many obscure cases of loss of
appetite, especially in children and
babies, with consequent malnourish
ment, are due to insufficient amounts ,
of foods containing this vitamin. So 1
now vitamins we are A and giving D, cod liver tomato oil for]
orange, or i
cabbage juice for vitamin C, and vit
avose for the vitamin B.
If you are interested, we have ail;
article on Balanced Diet which you ■
may have. See column rules for ob-!
taining this, (
Miss C.: No, there is no way of
removing a urethral caruncle—ths j
small, reddish mass at the mouth of i
the passage that leads from the blad- 1
der—except an operation, either with j
the knife or cautery. It is a simpla ,
operation, so do not continue To suf- !
for with yours. To my knowledge it'
never goes away of itself. 4
Mrs. B.: Our pamphlet on Hygiene
of Women answers your question.
Send for that, please. See column
rules. tj
- N
Editor’s Eote: Dr. Peters cannot j
diagnose nor givo personal advice. I
Your questions, if of general interest, j j
will be answered in the column ia
their turn. Requests for articles og, i
pamphlets on hand must be acconi-'
panied by a fully self-addressed.!
stamped envelope, plus the following
small charge to help cover cost of
printing and handling: for each
article wanted, two cents in coin; for,
each pamphlet ten cents in coin. Th*’
pamphlets are Reducing and Gaining,
Uunirne of Women, Kidney and
Huskier Disorders. Address Dr.i
Peters, in care of this paper. Will*
legibly, and not over 200 words.
Tomorrow: Jialanccd Diet. ii-.il *2*