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PACE POUR
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 (Ga.) Post Office as second
class mail matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One year $7.50
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 lhe County of Glynn, and the United
States bankruptcy court for this district.
Prtf Associated Press is entitled to the use for publics
tion of all news credited to or not otherwise credited in
this paper, and also to the local news published herein.
Advertising Representative
Thomas F. Clark Co., Inc., 205-217 West 42nd Street
New York City; 140 South Dearborn Street, Chicago
Illinois; 1031 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
We haven’t heard from Rudy Vallee in some time.
Probably the price of grapefruit is too high.
Mickey Walker has denied that he and his bride of om
month are to separate. Just another “foul."
.Tai k Diamond is being held in jail on an assault c harge
end his future does not appear very "brilliant."
A1 Smith is proposing one more law. lie says then
ought to be a law against making so many petty laws.
In Alabama even the near beer i bootlegged and if
-that, isn’t the height of something we woidd like to now.
Two women are now planning hops across he Atlantic.
Such flights should be called “So-long" flights instead
of “solo."
There are only thirteen inoriarchs left in Europe and
anemone will have to drop out soon to get rid of that
unlucky number.
The way some of the old gentlemen are taking to golf
it will not be long before someone is going to turn in a
“plus fourscore.”
The rebels in Honduras lost two men in a skirmish
with federal troops the other day. They must use rap
pistols over there.
Guess the royal palaces in Spain will be turned into
movie houses now that Alfonso and Victoria are through
with them as show place .
Clean-up week has been proclaimed in Ilomerville.
Probably they are getting ready for the newspapermen
who are to meet there soon.
President Hoover called Sordino a "cold blooded mur¬
derer." We wonder if the bandit leader should conwidei
himself properly blessed out.
Give Dorothy Maclvaill, the movie actress, credit for
being original. She left her husband-to-be at the altai
instead of later in a divorce court.
llow in .In world do they expect people to obey the
Eighteenth amendment when they arc continually try
i:tg to break the law of gravitation.
Revulutiotis are jumping around ™ rapidly that it',
difficult to tell where they will land anil it necessi
tales u student of geography to follow them.
The South will pay tribute to the Confederate veteran,
living and dead, tomorrow. The valor and courage of
those great men will never be forgotten in the south.
Those New York showgirls who reach the top imw!
believe in getting buck on earth as rapidly as possible
judging from the number who recently have leaped out
of twenty-story windows.
Hoover planted another tree on the White House
grounds Tuesday and after hi- administration the people
will be able to go there and point it out as one of his
great accomplishments,
In Clarksdale, Mis .. children are going to school drap¬
ed in net; as means of elect inn against the invasion of
buffalo gnats. Wonder if that system can he Used in
lighting sandflies?
The Rotarians who flew with Bill Alexander to Athens
had a rather thrilling flight and were furred down twice
en route to the university city. The trip nearly turned
into a "good will tour,"
Shoos,-. Raskob and Smith conferred in New York tin
Other morning but what they discussed was not disclosed
to the public. But we don’t believe they talked about the
present price of butter or the Einstein theory.
Mayor Walker has filed his defense with Governm
Roosevelt and now his accusers contend they have tin
right to reply to his answers. The whole affair probably
will result in nothing but a battle of statements.
“The hottest thing in town- beach pajamas," reads an
ad of a local merchant. They might he in their proper
places but on the main .streets of the city they make one
think a minstrel troupe is ift town, but there’s one thing
about them —they do cover a multitude of “shins.”
Mark Ethridge is to leave the Macon Telegraph where
he has been managing editor for several years am will
return Yo the New York Sun. The newspaper folk of
Georgia as well as the readers of the Telegraph will Vo
grot losing Mr. Ethridge lie's one of Georgia’s Out¬
standing journalists.
STARTING THE BALI, TO ROLL
Seeing the immediate need of an airport for Brunswick
and the future growth and development of this city, the
Brunswick Kiwanis club has taken the initative in the
movement with a unanimous endorsement or approval
of a bond issue, if other method fails, to provide suffi
ient fund- for the undertaking.
1 he action of the Khvanis club shows an eagerness on
the part of the members of that organization to make a
definite step toward the establishment of an airfield in
this city and are anxious to have the people of Glynn
minty and Brunswick express their opinion on the mat
'er through the ballot box. It. is hoped, however, that,
otrie other plan which would save Brunswick and the
county from issuing bonds might he adopted but in all
nrobability it will not be done.
There Was not a dissenting vote among the members
of the Kiwani. dub for the project and the
as a whole , . realized .. . ,. that .... this city . can no , longer progress
without suitable landing field. If the city arid thi ,
a
i ounty have not sufficient money in their coffers to bear
be expense of the construction of an airport there i
only one way out and that is through the issuing
bonds and we are of the opinion that there is sufficient
favor in the city and county t.t the present time to carry
the issue a! the polls.
Aviation is no longer in the state of experiment in
his country but today is one of the leading modes of
1 lansportation, both passenger and mail. The Kami
identical thing which happened to Brunswick and caused
his city to miss a main line railroad is again facing thi:
city relative to aviation. Unless Brunswick does some¬
thing quickly she will lose any possibility of developing
that industry here.
We commend the Brunswick Kiwanis club on the stand
they have taken in the matte* of an airport for Bruns
wick and hope that their endorsement or approval will
prove fruitful. Our need for ari airport is as great a
was the need of the coastal highway, • the -■ St. Simons "• 1
Hiiseway or other major improvements during recent
years. As it stands today Brunswick is sacrificing one of
its greatest opportunities because of the failure of the
city and county to provide a suitable airport and we can
not well afford to pass it by without having the voters
of the county and city expressing their views on the
matter.
If the city and the county authorities feel that they
( ini not afford the expenditure of taxpayer; ’ monies for
an airport it is up to them to exercise their power and
call an election for the issuing of bonds to provide the
necessary funds. Then it will be left entirely to the
people themselves.
Again we commend the Kiwanis club for their unani
omus approval of the project and hope that their recom¬
mendation will bring immediate results.
THE SON-IN-LAW’S BLACK
The Georgia Court of Appeals has ruled that a son
in-law is not a member of the family. "Neither for that
matter is a daughter after she becomes a son-in-law’s
wife," further declared the court. “There is no obliga
tion on the part of the father-in-law to furnish food,
clothing or anything else to the son-law’s family.”
This decision comes under the heading of What is
known to the layman as a legal technicality. Actually,
whether the .son-in-law is a member of the family de¬
pends on the attitude of the son-in-law himself. .Some
Erne:. he likes to lie considered a member of the family
and even, we have heard, has profitted financially there¬
by, in spite of the court rule that the father-in-law is
no obligation to him.
Sometimes the son-in-law comes in so handy around
house that members of the family are glad to have
him. He is often under an obligation to be more oblig
mg to his adopted family than he was to his own. Thi.
lead: hint into confessing that he can perform certain
that he kept carefully hidden at bis own home. H
lie fixes blown fuses and repairs broken furniture and
washes the family ear with which he, of course, has no
connect inn he becomes a member of the family
in the fullest sense. Not every son-in-law can do these
things and not every one is disposed to even if
can. If he doesn’t he is pretty much of a deadbeat,
the fact that he did the girl’s old man a favor In
taking her off his hands. The old man thinks he stole
the girl ami is generally pretty noeflunt.
It’s a difficult relationship and one entirely too tenu¬
to be regulated by as abstract a tiling as a court
Some sons-in-law will be glad to know that
they are not members of the family; others will hope
that they will begin to he treated more like guests by
their in-laws. Our advice to them is not to take the
decision too literally. Fathers-in-law arc not under
any obligation to help and sons-in-law cannot be forced
to assume domestic chores but a little dish-drying now
and then may make the old man loosen up later.—Macon
Telegraph.
MISSISSIPPI PAYS PRICE OF NEGLECT
The hankers of Mississippi have shown both wisdom
and foresight in coming to the rescue of the state when
it. is threatened with default upon certain of its bonds
on May !. hut the existence of such a threat certainly
constitutes no tribute to the people of that state.
The financial integrity of the state is essential to the
well-being of every institution within it;- borders, and
the outside world no doubt read with amazement that
the citizens of Mississippi had permitted that great com¬
monwealth to get into a situation where its credit is
under suspicion.
Too much politics and too little sound judgment is the
answer to the situation. Mississippi has been too often
disposed to listen to the demagogue and too little dis¬
posed to look for efficiency in the administration of pub¬
lic affairs. The people have played politics until the
financial structure of the state is threatened and until its
once great educational institutions have been sadly clip
pled. They have subordinated the weighty prejudicial matters flub¬ of
clean and efficient government to the
dub of political showmanship, and will continue to pay
the penalty until they perform an nbmu-fremi.
Mississippi is a great state; it has produced many
great men, and it is capable of much greater things than
now appeal. But it must turn to its able and pu¬
tt iotic leaders if it is to obtain a government that is in
keeping wih the fundamental characteristics of the peo¬
ple a.- a whole. Rome News Tribune.
Helen Keller took her first plane ride the other day
and she says she could tell what the ship was doing
while in the air and that’s more than some aviators
catt do.
)
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
THE GRAB BAG
And There Are Others
“I'm the happiest man in the world.
I have the best wife in the country.”
“Well, who wouldn't be happy with
his wife in the country?”
-Tit-Bits.
Didn't Take .Much
“Ini a self-made man,” said the
pugnacious clubman, glaring around
the room in the midst of an argument.
“Sir,” said one of the older mem¬
bers, “we accept your apology.”
-Tit-Bits.
' HrH **
Asthma -'Why is . it that persons
who , cant ,, carry a tune . , claim , to , , like , ,
highbrow music','”
Adenoids--“I guess it’s because
highbrow music don’t sound like no
tune!”
—Exchange.
The fritic
“Well, 1 jus*, sold tha' tine new en¬
cyclopedia 1o Eddie Knowull. ’
“Why, I thought he already knew
more than any encyclopedia.”
“Yes, he admitted that but said he
would get a thrill going through it
arid picking out all tin* errors.”
—The Pathfinder.
Alas, Alaska!
Recalling that March 30th marked
the 67th anniversary of Alaska’s
purchase by the United States, a
itor from the Yukon asks why, with
its exports to the United States 10
times it: purchase price and its im¬
ports 1-2 times the amount, it has
never been admitted as a state?
“Because,” cagaeiates the Birming¬
ham News, "it doesn't owe enough
money yet.
-Exchange.
Theme Songs
The rent-a-car-song: “My Phae¬
ton’s in Your Hands.”
The telephone company song:
“Somewhere a Voice is Falling.”
The stylists’ song: “Hippy Days
are Here Again.”
The evildoer’s song: ‘Theres a
Long, Long Trial.”
The forger’s song: “Auld Lang
Sign.”
The beach song: "It’s Worthwhile
Wading For.”
The Pathfinder.
Spring Fiction
“Hiram Maxim Was Right,” by
Charlie* Chaplin.
“The Shanghai Gesture," by Aimee
Semple McPherson.
"Not Ye! But Croon,” by Rudy Val¬
lee.
“Lafayette, I am Here,” by Tom
Heflin.
“The Sermon on the Mint,” by An¬
dy Mellon.
“Steel Away,” by Charles M. Schwab.
“Watches For Favors,” by Clara
Bow.
“How I Made Mud Pies,” by Edgar
Lee Maxtor
The Pathfinder.
(Had She Was Fooled
After overhearing a remark Jay bis
father that the age of a tree may he
estimated by the number of rings
about its trunk, a small boy threw
a scare at hix mother’s party. The
boy looked confidently into the face
of one of the guests, who was on the
further side oi 40 and was fondling
her necklace, and remarked:
“Lady, 1 can tell how old you are.’
Amid frantic attempts at hushing
he managed to get out: .
'You are 22. 1 counted the num¬
ber of rings ui your necklace.”
The lady hugged the boy and the
mother sighed her deep relief.
—Exchange.
His Suit Went
A certain Washington woman em¬
ploys a negro high school s'udert’ alt¬
er alters at odd jobs. The lad is in¬
dust riou ■- and the kindly lady often
seeks to favor him, eve.i to giving him
the cast-oil’ clothing of her husband.
Now it happens that the husband itas
never been received at the White
House. s > what was the good wom¬
an'.- astonishment when bed colored
helper, after finishing a cleaning job,
donned his latest* acquisition from her
hit; band, explaining:
"Yes. ma’am. I’ve got to go : > the
While Hou*-e. iris is the day Presi¬
dent Hoover receives the honor .stu¬
dents of my class and I’m one of
them!”
—■The Pathfinder.
He Pas- <1 the Tees
The .- porting Scotch squire
anxious to discover if the new parish
minis * :• wits u go *d fellow. He ask
td him i- dinner. Whey they com¬
menced the m-.'-.d the host said:
"Might 1 ofi'er you a ;;las- of chant¬
ing;, Mr. MaeTavish?”
"There x no occasion for eham
-A* "
1 >
•Oh.*' said the squire. “Well, per¬
haps you would take a glass of Cha¬
teau Y quem.”
“There’s no occasion for Chateau
Yquetn.returned the parson it
dole toils voire.
"Me;!," said the squire, de
is v final retort, "would you take
whiskey ami soda, .then? '
“There’s no occasion " for the soda,
said the pars m.
And that was well.
and Pacer.
fell .. :h
! mmi#m
V
*
The Source: .-1 Venerable Goat and his
Progeny of Kids.
[M1E most unaesthetic animal in
the world is the most fashion¬
able The Goat. Bearded, stubborn
and uncouth in his habits, he never¬
theless caters to about a hundred
million dainty feminine feet a year,
clothing them in delicate kidskins.
black, white and till the colors of
the rainbow. The goat and his
progeny as style arbiters make the
French dressmakers look pale, for
By BOBBIN COONS
Hollywood, April 23.—With
wive.; il’x spring cleaning, hut with
the movie producers it has been
j"-
PEGGY BOSS
The producers are banking on what
some of these names may mean later,
hoping that from the
ranks may mine the Garbos and
the Dorothy Lees and Janet
of tomorrow.
Motley Assortments
Some of these girls have had
or stage experience, others a little,
and some have none at all. They come
from homes, from high schools, from
society, from convents, from
villi* and from the stage.
Samuel Goldwyn has signed
for United Artists. One is Shirley
Gray, young stage actress, the
is Betty (Gable. 1(5, who had done
only two screen bits when signed.
M-G-M with Madge Evans,
child star; Dorothy Appleby,
BotI, Janet Currie and Karen
and Universal, with Sidney Fox
Bette Davis, have gone to the stage
fur their new blood but Radio, with
Anita Louise, Ruth Weston, Rochelle
Hudson, Arline Judge, Roberta
and Katya Sorina, has a varied assort
men: of experienced players
novices.
Schoolgirls Signed
Warners-First National took Gladys
Ford from a Beverly Hills high school.
which she still attends when she isn't
working, and Mae Madison, a Los An¬
geles girl of Hungarian descent, front
an acting school.
At Fox there is blond Peggy Ross.
who was born in .Canada, but lives in
exclusive Flint rid ge. a society girl
with no acting experience.
She was discovered by Frank Bor
sage three yeans ago on a Catalina
beach, where he made a test of her
with a pocket movie camera. That
*d tost was unearthed recently,
1 she won a contract.
There also are young Linda Wat¬
kins. from the stage: Rosalie Roy.
from Texas, hailed as a “Clara
type.” and Cecilia Parker, another
Canadian-born youngster.
Carmm Brine; and Claire Dodd
are Paramount's hopes in the new
talent quest.
j
MIGHT. * COUGHS
| Positively stopped almost in-
35 c s tantly with one swallow of 66 e
THOXINE
spring
—the gleaning of
talented young
hopefuls from the
highways and
ways of beauty
and ambition.
Virtually every
maj o r studio’s
contract list has
been increased re¬
cently by names
which now mean
nothing to movie
tans: -
THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1931.
The Finished Product: A Smart Summer
Ensemble of White Kid Shoes and Hat.
i fashion consistently proclaims kid
as the smartest shoe material.
United States tanners u.-.e about
50,000.000 kid skins annually. Some
of these skins come from the Afri¬
can bush where they are collected
by olive-skinned Arabs and traus
ported by camel trains across the
desert to Gatling posts, lu Shang¬
hai, coolies son and bate the
Chinese skins. In Calcutta. India
-■ -r*-' — - .-----T -
..
IPiMiieys!
Kidney Disorders Are Too
Serious to Ignore.
-3 bothered with bladder irri- r.- ?
lotions, getting tip at night 4
and conr-tr.nl backache, don't #' ■
take chance;' Help your kid¬
neys ul lli* first sign of uisor
e'er. Us c Doan’s i’ills.
Successful for more than
50 years. Endorsed the world
over. Sold by dealers every¬
where. *
50,000 Users Publicly Endorse Doan’s:
JOHN G. SMITH, 615 S. BELNORD AVE., BALTIMORE, MD„ says:
“I am glad to recommend Doan's Pills because they did fine for me. My
i.-.a i- -- » was worried. The secretions scalded and
•ains in my back and attacks of dizziness
.ad me feeling like myself again.”
Itaan’s Mils the A Diuretic Kidneys for
For Coughs Too Deep
To Risk A Lesser Help
Creomulsion was made to deal with
coughs from colds which hang on.
A three-day cough is a danger signal.
There the utmost should be done.
.But a trifling cough may develop in
to»Something deep and difficult. Don’t
you think it wise to use the utmost
"help, even if a lesser help might do?
Creomulsion combines seven major
helps in one. The seven best helps
known to medical science. One is
best for one type of cough, one for
others. Nobody can tell in advance.
So the best way seems to be to com¬
bine all in one prescription.
" Creosote stands first. Here it is
blended, emulsified and tasty. For
soothing membranes and combating
cold germs, the world knows noth¬
ing better.
.
j READ THE NEWS AOS
j
1
!
1
ATTEND
| The Gas Co.
Cooking School
Oglethorpe Hotel
Tues., Wed., Thurs., Fri.
MRS. FRANCES Y. KLINE
Home Economist
MRS. KLINE
Is Using Our
Fresh Vegetables and Groceries
ERNEST CR1BB
1412 Gloucester Street Phones 26-27
the trading takes place in a great
bazaar which teems with buyers
and sellers of every nationality. *.t.l
is reminiscent of the ancient Flor¬
entine bazaars'.
Then the skins are shipped to
die Unkeil 3t,>o:s where they are
taut; .1 and tinned into chic kid
pumps, oxfords and sandals to
adorn An: .h'icu's smartly dressed
womanhood.
But some coughs best yield to
white pine tar, some to wild cherry
bark, some to menthol, some to ipecac,
etc. So we combine all these factors
at their best in a single formula.
For some coughs Creomulsion is
better than you need. One of its
factors might do. But don't you feel
safer when a minor cough is treated
in the utmost way?
If- so, get Creomulsion. It costs
a little more than lesser helps—
$1.25. But your druggist guaran¬
tees it. He returns your money if
you are disappointed. You will feel
safer in any cough if this master
kelp combats it. Use it promptly.
CREOMULSION
for Difficult Coughs
from. Colds