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PhUt TEN
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
Published every business afternoon except Saturday,
and on Sunday morning by
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY,
The News Building 1604 Newcastle Street
CLARENCE H. LEAVY,
President and Editor
Entered at the Brunswick (f>a.) Post Office as second
class mail matter.
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The Newu is the official newspaper of the City of
Brunswick and the Gounty of Glynn, and tne United
State* bankruptcy court for this district.
" ^ Press
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The Associated Press is entitled to the use fur publica¬
tion of all m-ws credited to or riot otherwise credited in
this paper, and also to the local news published herein.
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New York City; 140 South L>< arbnrri Street, Chicago Illi¬
nois; 1031 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Better join Amo. and Andy and get busy on thut in¬
come tax report!
Indeed Mayor Rag dale, of Atlanta, ought to take a
few lesson; in prudent*
Wo atsttme thut the mnrint arc marking time whip
the commission t in ■*i , ni in Haiti,
France m.-v chance her {-.vernment a often a dio
pleases, but her position at the London naval conference
never changes.
If there is anything in diver ity, then the month <>i
March has nicm ure.l up fully in the mutter of the differ
ent brands of weather R has furnished in a very short
time.
Those complacent citizens who argue that the Cum
munistfi have not design - on America, are requested to
read the front, page.-, of the newspaper; for the past few
days.
France hn moved onto the London naval ciml'i reitee
again with TuNlieii and Hriand a*, the big guns. N.av
then, let in hope 'hat the eonferenee will soon get down
to brass tacks.
We oh. rve that one of our Georgia senators oppo. ed
very stoutly any sort of a tariff on lumber, while the oth¬
er is fighting very hard for heavy duties on imported
jute. And there you are!
Mrs, Ruth Bryan Owen, of Florida, has finally won the
contest over her seat in the house am! a unanimous repot i
sustains her. The basis of the contest that she is not a
citizen of the United Statius proved to be a very flimsy
Brunswick must not get away from that airport mat
ter. It is ui gent ami we must solve it. What is needed
is a reasonable nil vy. at a reasonable co. I, well fix ated
and ample to uise for the needs of the present and the
immediate future.
Those mimiiii: t ration : * - 11 . 1 1 * i; are lighting veiy haid
to keep the (pie t imi of | s e cut unemployment from being
discussed on the floor ot the -mate. But it is hound to
come. Th: very impotnni subject cannot be made a
political fcofbail of forever.
Every large husiui>. concern ;:i Brunswick should have
a representative in the Young Men' Club. There i-. m>
question about Hint I ie dub i- devoted to the best
interest of tht u y; i! is. behind every good movement
and it should have the upport of leading citizens.
Who! a traces" «•/: ifi > lit > i' -1 cm to he that th
Soviet gffvermnem head . it'ing in Mo coo in the oi sr
proud Kremlin, cai: or lore and ! avr an ' eipt to
follow thtm. t to . - t< ;a"i m co m large city, in
the United Mat amt that, too, an a certain davl 1. ,
that sink in.
One pretty lough one that the dies are trying to ex
plain just now in then hearing in Washington i that
the preachers, Bishop Cannon, the hi jackers, the hoot
loggers, the gamblei and the makers of liquor, are all
Ardent In the iau*< . pidiibitiun. We ay it — a pretty
hard one to crack.
Admiral Von '! -pit , perhaps tin preate-t no ml leader
of modern time i,< (in i -any, hated ami feared during the
World war. e di a ' ii • v. Von Tivpitz helm-god (■
the old regime '* h ■ eld Genmu \ and the adoption
of the republic; u fm in o: p. lermneat (here was a sad
blow to la- si —
Mayor Ragsda'e cf At'ar.ta, - ay he int * • > i •<! no
wrong. He um . th • or , f the city in his private enter¬
prises. but he interna <1 is w v That’s an old thread¬
bare answer, (Vrlsn::.l\ t' - mayor of the great city of
Atlanta does md plum that he does not know the differ¬
ence between wrong and .it lit'
What Gocrgiat’s \e. :,k. > c at the moment is the
ennouncemev 11 • -n< ■ citizen f, r s;.i\erii"r.
We have reference t. .. r >.»! eiti.-en, qualified !>., public
service, intel go: e and --.unilmg and not to the me. .<
time-serving politv , ; «1 1 » are hearing of at the mo
Hunt. I* not .-ud> a man available?
Independent a he ami generally hewing
straight to the line, there always something in what
Eenator BoP»h ray the ». ate. Ho is neither a talker
for the sake vf talk t; a - ''ghtor for the sake of fight.
So, we have cone to look w ’Us favor on most of the great
things that Borah mivocnv ‘ cf that and (d>\ tou« rea
aons, we think he fi- j gh, m h;- pw# for Amerl *n pa
tience with the Lon.h i. i.av# . fi as He thinks it is
going to aid the Unite : Ntat. ■ and that should give
the eonferenee our su t> ft our patience and Aur best
.Wishes. Surely we could not *L> h v
SANCTIFICATION
(By T. E. Davenport, Pastor McKendree Methodist
Church.)
In one respect man i ; like a thip. Ships are made to
go on the ocean, through the storms. As long as water
keep; out of the vessel it sails* all right. But if water
ge-;t into the ship it will founder and sink to the bottom.
So a Christian is left to go in the world of temptation
.•nd sin. A: long as in keeps out of the heart the per
on is safe. But when * in get: on the inside it will blast
and wreck and ruin the character (Ezekiel 18:30). As
a basis for *.vhat follows read 1. Thesalonian 5:23. There
ai<• three agents of sanctification; the word, the blood,
end the Holy Spiro. When these three are found in
one lile, that person is said to he sanctified wholly-
that i , in mind arid sou) arid body. Such persons are
: aints in tlx - hurch; they are the .- alt of the earth; they
are light to tie* world.
T h- ru*i l cue representative.-, of Jesus, Christ in the
world. They are witnesses of the power of God to trans¬
form a oil),non vessel of clay into a victorious child of
God.
(1) 'I i. • word of God is the eternal truth of scrip
tun ; revealed to man and written down by men inspired
I, God. That truth read and remembered and believed
and obeyed, sanctifies, or preserves the brain, the intel¬
lect from all error and sin.
As when fruit is preserved the water and the acid is
taken out: and the sarrarine put in by heat, then the
fruit i i . * ri ved and kept. So the brain, the intellect
is pro nve d or sanctified by the word of God from all
error and false teaching of men.
(2) The blood of Christ sanctifies the heart, and cleans
it. from ail sin. The heart is the source of blood supply.
“Tht blood i the source of a pure life or n tainted life.”
When blood is poisoned by dir ease, destructive germs
wreck and ruin the body. But if the anti-toxin for dis
c a si i introduced int othe blood it destroys the poison
-nd tie- bided is purified and life preserved. Sin tainted,
poison the blood of man; death will come as. a result.
But the pure .unless blond of Jesus Christ is the anti
I : in f n in. It i ■; the “blood of Christ that cleans from
all sin.”
if I y faith, the atoning sacrifice of the blood of the sin
h . Cliri 1 1 -Jesus on the cross is believed in and accepted
that Wood is the anti-toxin for the sin-tainted sou! and
I he h art is made clean thereby.
Try it and *e: it works in every ease. The blood of
cl.ii t Jo:- e. will cleanse the heart from all sin; if be¬
lieved in, accepted and applied.
Tin pure in heart shall sec God. The blood of Christ
! Jin - the heart of man.
ft) The spirit of God sanctifies the temple of man’s
bod;, and possesses and guides it into all truth. There
re legions of spirits, good and bad. When the temple of
mat body is empty, swept, garnished the evil, if allow¬
ed, will come in and take possession and direct the life’s
rnergic . the will, the intellect, the sensibilities along sin¬
ful lines, that degrade and destroy. But if the spirit of
G .1 is prayed for, believed in, invited in; he will come
in and ■ nullify the temple of man’s body and dwell there
and guide into all truth.
The Holy Spirit's presence drives out the evil spirit
like formaldehyde drives out dise ase germs. Devils can
not abide the presence of the Holy Spirit. They leave
the body when he comes in to stay. The body then is
sanctified and kept by divine power.
Some good people are sanctified in part; but the saints
nr sanctified wholly- mind, body, soul. God has need of
u. h in the church. The world ha. need of such salt to
- savo ,L
THE (} l ’ ESTION OF M MtlNK PARITY
In this 1 uidnn delude a - to naval parity nothing seems
to lie aid about the relative strength of the merchant
marine. This i an important factor in peace as well as
in war. lax air ,■ it form a vital auxiliary to battle fleets
in case of emergency. Great Britain, of course, is far
in the lead of the United States when it comes to vessels
of commerce, and yet we only speak of battleships and
iruisirs and submarines.
Hi r e, it ic of great satisfaction to realize that the
l i.i!ed Stats i awakening to the value of the merchant
marine and ha-- definitely started a mov ement to increase
it, to bring b;: 1 the Star- and Stripes to the sens. Low
loan rates to encourage ship construction have been made
possible, white large mail contracts are being awarded to
American shipping concerns.
trir , . for the construction of 25 new vessels and
a a evief’ddmv of more than 50,000,000 will he
nil -d : . i . 'Ifi; was made known in the announce¬
ment «P' Be sin:; ter General Walter E. Brown of four
p.i w ocean mail r infracts. These will represent an outlay
of $28,500,000 for new tonnage of 00.000 tons to he built 1
io American shipyards. .
This will bi.om the activities in shipbuilding, call for
much lahm, ai d will reduce the disparity between Eng¬
land and the United Slat-c. Our -hipping laws should
nl a he mr.iii' either Ire. strict in regard to American
owned and opercited vc; -els, or else they should be ap¬
plied to a!! irrrign hipping which Uses our ports. Kv
cry effort ms ! he made to equalize the eompetitivi basis
of the me: , hunt lire. me. America -hould he or. a par
with Urea Britssa ill her fleet of peace; not alone in
THE LADY PAYS
Of inert :h m a o.demic interest are the statistic* which
show that Aim ; i m women nov. pay taxes on $3,000.
000.000 of indivuimti ir, mif annually, that they inherit
TO pet cent of the estates left by men and 01 percent of
the estati left by those of their sex-. Me say of more
than academic interest because the ittferene, i-> plain that,
if the pr> ent trend continues, the male American will
m ' have a cent that he can call his own by the end of an
: :ber century. The jiveragre hush.tntl, however, will no;
allow himself to le greatly perturbed over this outlook,
The difference between H'3U and 2030, in the last analy
sis, will merely he the diffeionce between actual tweedlo
Jutn and legal tweedledee. The passing of the lust male
:uu, in view of the ladies' penchant for dominating
exchequer under any circumstances, should he a mild.
painless and quite unimportant formality.
That was a very cheerful interview in The News Fri
day afternoon with Vice President Clots. F. Redden, of
f he Sea Island Company. The situation at the Cloister
hotel is most satisfactory and surely the condition ex¬
isting there will soon be remedied. There is ample re nr.
for another hotel at Sea Island Bench and it should be
provided before another season comes.
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
THE GRAB BAG
One Way Out of It
If the wets would dry up, the
lem of prohibition enforcement
solve itself.
Topperiish (Wash) Review.
Real 1’arrot Trouble
While psittieosis is causing
the worst disease that parrots
cau|ht from human beings is that
logorrhea, or talking too much.
-Springfield Republican.
Hearts Expected
“Don’t go. You are leaving me
tirely without reason.”
“1 always leave things as 1
them.”
-Merthyr Express.
Barbarian
“1 want some winter underwear.”
“How long?”
“How long? 1 don’t want to rent
them; I want to buy ’em.”
- -Arcanum Bulletin.
Where’s She?
Here's to the girl who steals, lies
arid swears—Steals into your arms,
lies there, and s wears she'll never love
another.
—Humorist.
Made Him Talk, Perhaps
One shudders to think what Los An
geb'.s might have done to Mr. Coolidge
if it had got hold of him on one of
his presidential vacations.
—New York Times.
So There You Are
True, street widening is making the
sidewalks narrower and narrower, but
it is also making the pedestrians few¬
er and fewer.
- Detroit News.
An Expensive One?
She—“Spent my vacation ii
mountains.”
He-—“ Really? Did you have
guide?”
She “Well, my conscience.”
Border Cities Star.
Burning Them the Wrong Way
Statesmen in London ought to be
cautious, no doubt, but the discour
agem< nt of some suggests they are
determined to burn their bridges
of them.
—Norfolk Virginian-Pilot,
l iano; Not Pianissimo
“Who’s that on the piano upstair; ?”
“That’s dear Marguerite; she's pro
gre sing by lefeps and bounds.”
“Um! I thought she couldn’t he
doing it with her hands.”
—London Punch.
A Point in View
A medical expert now'comes
ward with the statement that
up exercises are not beneficial and
may even be harmful, a discovery we
made many years ago by standing too
near a radiator while doing them.
- New York Evening Post.
And the Mint Mas Gone to Seed
Pussy l.ady (who has been a long
time in selecting her purchase)—“But
I don’t think this is lamb. It looks
to me liko mutton.”
Exasperated Butcher — "It was
lamb when 1 first showed it to you,
ma’am.”
—Montreal Star.
And Docs
'Why (fit a woman always add"
postscript to her letter?” asked a
man who had just received a letter
fn op his wife.
Wr 11.” answered hi- ungallant
chum, “she probably figures out in
her mind what her letter has
u '*' think, and tries to have the last
•
u '
—Exchange.
Mixed Bis Card Index
A syndicated doctor -avs that to¬
bacco, besides nicotine, contains other
poisons, such a ammonia, prussic
acid, carbon monoxide, carbolic acid,
marsh gas. etc. Just offhand our
guess is he grabbed a card that had
the recipe for bootleg liquor on it.
stead of the one on which the weed’s
faults were listed.
Cincinnati Enquirer.
DEAfi NCAH - IF ITS PCRC-U
PJN» FCfc . EAT C-fSOUNO HO&’
Mgs C L . XVTCMEUC
> X X .-Li: .ii- HCxa _
^
DEA’? noaa - if -nie- Dfcivee.
IS FAT. IS ~te <5AS-0-i.ENE •
P?5 ‘.05 uiftote cxce ^ 5£,5 IN
s*n D-eae c »uii= • > ■■
-- -
j V$ist£eu-JuvA l K\7 a*\
STAL.S Corvc WITH
A Cksvl’'’ ..'.‘MV'S N‘E SAflCH
■. -v v -- —, V .WCUICgg vi s
DSA^ NOAH - —,——N
IF THE c ASMJtl* CiANt W\S CLEIgN
THE A'l* WOULD 7ME«5* ■JS A BANK'
DS40T5 A C ju C-e
--- 1 LOVE— 1
—THE LABOR OF 4
<£---- -
By BOBBIN COONS
Hollywood, March 8.—The younger
movies cannot aspire as yet to
pete with the stage in the matter
x ■■
D lores Costello
to Crawford, already a star.
The son and daughter of Francis X.
Bushman, the ne-time matinee idol,
also arc in pictures. Francis X., Jr.,
and Lentirc now arc engaged in the
struggle for recognition in their own
right, while Phillips Holmes, son
Taylor Holmes ot stage and
has. made much progress toward
end.
Heritages
Many of (ho win once, as the
stage expression gees, “lived
trunks,’' now aie ensconced in Holly¬
wood homes, thunk; to the
phene, and are contributing their lux
11 ’” ^ u ’ >C!tH ’ n ! ' H chances for
establishment of “regal lines.”
Iwo of the three Barrymores,
and Lionel, of the stage’s "royal, fam¬
ily," have been screen fixtures
ye-rs, and the union of John and Do¬
lores Costello, si tn of Helene and
of Maurice, the early screen
hero, amounts to a wedding of silage
an d screen.
At least four ether Broadway
dies are ivpi. intel in
no 'v, with the love daughters of
Richard Bennett. Joan, Constance
Barbara, setting a pace in talkies, and
Davis here with his two
Owen Jr., and Don.
The Gleasons. James Lueile, and
their son. Russcel, are established i-i
Beverly Hills home, while
Eatons, Pearl.
and Mary, who is the wife of
Millard Webb, the director, all
their mother’s two grand¬
children.
Budanova, Russian aei rv-«, who 1 -
Hollywood for vaudeville. : - l u-k
town . . . Mary Doran. wh > has
played sinister, unpleasant little
Kills, is to get her chance at a
feminine lead in “Father’s Day" . . .
Another "Lone Wolf” Gory is to
filmed, this time as a talike. . . It's
"The Last of the Lone Wolf.”
You Know a Tonic Is Good
when It makes you eat like a hungry
boy and brings back the color to yom
cheeks. Ycu can soon fee! the
Itrengthenl-ig, PROVES Invigorating Effect of
TASTELESS CHILL TONIC
10c
“royal frfmilies”
yet one does not
have to look far
in Hollywood to
see beginnings of
a new cor*
ty of histrionic
dynasties .-ach tu
tlr.' Drews and
the Barrymores.
Douglas Fair
banks, Jr., is
most successful
representative cf
the “second movie
generation” to
date, and is mar¬
Diet and Health
S/tULU HUNT PETERS, M.P, AUTH03 OF'DIET AWD HEALTH*AND"0IET FOR CHILDREN
E 5 , HUNT PETERS, M. D.
Balanced Diet
M "fir 1 markedly H : The affected fur of by animals deficient is
da ta, and it Is reasonable to suppose
that the hair of humans may also
j
i
i
'
|
I
,
|
1 fc* Lulu Hunt
I Peters, M. D
iGo very necessary to have the cal¬
ories you do consume, consist of the
correct foods. I think it would be
wise to run the foundation for a re¬
| ducing diet. (This is also a good
foundation for a gaining diet.)
j Daily Foundation Diet
j FIRST: At least a half pound
every day of some whtery vegetables
(the green leaf vegetables are espe¬
cially desirable) — lettuce, spinach,
celery, asparagus, watercress, beet
top greens, cabbage, tomatoes, etc.
A half pound of these, cooked or un¬
cooked, without fat, will bo approxi¬
mately 50 C. (Have raw carrots, raw
cabbage, tomatoes (raw or cooked),
and spinach oftsr, for they are high
in vitamins and minerals.)
SECOND: One-half pound of other
vegetables, such as carrots, beets,
onions, parsnips and squash, etc.,
every day. These will approximate
about 100 C.. without fat.
THIRD: 200 to 300 C. of fruit
daily. (Good-sized orange, apple,
pear—100 C. each.) (It is best to
takg a largo share of the vegetables
and fruit raw.)
FOURTH: One pint of skim milk
or buttermilk (ICO C.) in some form
•—tn cooking, drinks or cheese. Vou
need it for lime *cd complete pro¬
tein. (Children remrring should have
at least three glasses of whole milk.)
FIFTH. One medium small potato.
100 C., OR one large slice of whole
wheat bread, one-half inch thick,
same number of calories, OR two
thirds of a cup of cereal If you
READ THE NEWS ADS
STOP! Eat With U s
Where Every Bite Is Just Right
Ciean, 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*4 Norwich St.
SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 1930.
be affected by a
similar cause. In
fact, it is; so tf
you are begin¬
ning to lose your
hair while on a
reducing diet, I
suspect you
haven't been
careful in the
choice of your
foods. Remember
that it is not
only necessary
to count your
calories and
limit them, to
the reducing
number, but it is
hav, starchy or sugary desserts, you
can omit there.
SIXTH: One to two teaspoonfuls
cod liver oil (35 C. each), or livo to
four cod liver oil tablets (praetieally
no calories), or one tabtespoonfut
butter (100 C), or two ounces thin
cream (100 C.)— to be sure of your
vitamin A. (If you do tala' cod liter
oil tablets, be sure to get the brand
that is accepted by the A. M. A.
Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry.
This fact is Stated on the bottle, so
yon will know.)
SEVENTH: Protein. Vou must
have more protein, besides what you
get ir. the milk, so take two to three
ounces of very lean meat or fish or
two eggs (100 to 150 C. total >.
What I have outlined for you
comes to 750-950 C. If you go on a
1200 calorie day for your reducing
diet, you have quite a few calories
left for the things you tike. But l
advise you to not take sweets and
fats because it is best to learn not
to care for them.
Our pamphlet on Reducing and
Gaining will give you some addi¬
tional helps in reducing. See column
rules for obtaining it.
* * *
Miss W.: If the discharge from
your navel doesn't clear up with hot
water and soap cleansings, twice a
day, followed by a little boracic acid
or peroxide, you should see a phy¬
sician.
Your other questions are answered
in our pamphlet on the Hygiene of
Women.
* * •
Miss P.: We have an article on
superfluous hair which may help
you. See column rules for obtaining
this.
Editor’s hole: Dr. Peters cannot
diagnose nor give personal advice.
Your questions, if of genera] interest,
will be answered in the column in
their turn. Requests for articles or
pamphlets on hand must be accom¬
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. The
pamphlets are Reducin'i and Gaining,
llyt/icne °f Women, Kidney and
Bladder Disorders. Disorders. Address Dr.
Peters, in care of this paper. Write
’cgibly, and not over 200 words,
• . ,
Tomorrow: Answers to Mothers, i.