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THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
Published every business afternoon except
and on Sunday morning by
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY,
Tha News Building 1604 Newcastle
CLARENCE H. LEAVY,
President and Editor
Entered at the Brunswick (Ga.) Post Office as
class mail matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One year _
Six montha__ __
Three montha . _
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Weekly ________
The News is the official newspaper of the City
Brunswick and the County of Glynn, and the
States bankruptcy court for this district.
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press is entitled to the use for
tion of all news credited to or not otherwise credited
this paper, and also to the local news published
Advertising Reprewentatlva
Thomas F. Clark Co., Inc., 206 217 West 42nd Street
New York City; 140 South Dearborn Stre«t, Chicago,
Illinois; 1031 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
About the only thing the pr< .cut adtnini Million hat*
given the people are the “work;
With the hunting i'u on opened 11n' meal market
probably will expcrti-nie a light slump in fin im ■
Many school in Mabamu have been forced to elose
Attention Brunswiekians who haven't paid their lao t
Koine buntei don't : : eem to understand the meaning
Mat purpose of a big . mil. ll' the real sportrunnn who
(teen.
Modification of the Georgia bom dry law i proposed.
We first thought they would put it into effect and then
repeal it.
In China they behead president' of defunct hank In
this country the president- usually do the job them
solver.
By the Unit ale* of hook, on the new bridge rule
become slack expert, will get together and make more
eliang*
Now it': ."Wire In Christina- " with some of tile wet
organizations and the tuff inadi that month will he
“vintage ot ’UK”,
They have started eOlti-1 1 'urt tort of the Hoover dan)
and it'll he another "depression" a. a monument to hr
administration.
{'oldel weather r- predicted fot this -eet.inn and he
tween tin chill) clime and the depres ion people have
lots to shiver about.
The European nations are trying to handle the debt
problem with notes. The trouble now i that there have
Teen too man) notes.
Cuhimbti: i- preparing for the Auburn-Georgia foot¬
ball gaim and if.- a mo l weliome event for the hotel
owners and restaurant keeper
That co-ed who goo: I6u mile.-- daily to school will
h-iast of tlu fact to hei children just like parent of to
day talk about their -hold day-.
Scientists say that thirty trillion tin lie within reach
of the present tele eopii light hut yout gm r just a
good as theirs when it come- to that.
Now they are teaching agi ictilUn e-ts scientific mettl¬
ed;- of hog raising. What in tin mattei with the old
evstem of letting them root for their living'.'
Ovi-t i.level! billion- of tiollni is owed the United
}ftate it that could he collected we might he Hide to
find s-'till solution to our financial problems.
It’d he splendid if the Democrats would start cutting
down expen t" b) appoint h i: only halt the number of
I eopb- for positions in tile pie-elit adlutiust rat ton.
It apparently r the youthful bandit: who are doing
nil the killings- these days. I he older uiu - ate more r\
j.t, neneed and know how to get bv without shooting.
__________________—---
Uehevi it .1 not hut Dovern-u UooseveH i-n’t Mtpjmsed
i-- know that hi has been elected president ot the United
.State, He’ll he told about it by the electoral college.
,
Those who -at up last night to watch the show of the
meteors probaldx Were disappointed because - wn
mete rehvaisal to what the scientists thought it would
„
he.
The Kepubla ana apparent!) an trying to pi. !b e
cdt into the debt question hut the New Yetk governot
nnd president-elect is too shrewd to permit anything like
that.
Four thousand federal prise-net; are lend) U -eck
pardons in em-v they repeal the prohibition law. I heir
strong hopes at least make their stay in prison more
thearful.
Thirteen thousand persons attended the Rockefeller,
HI, willing u Nt w ^ ik the day. John 1* St .
however. wu> tH*t out* uf pn-M-nt. llv had a
date at Ui mat a.
The prole*; ionai hoboes have start*- watching tie
vaper- for annouitctunents *-< team to it ie; for relief
work and they aw taking advantage of them by hurry
lag U> the respective eolBauinitie-.
Kansas ( ity. Me., reports a cow was truck and killed
by a hit-and-run driver on a city itnr . The
part about the story is the fan that thi automobile was
able to run after hitting the bovine.
DEBT ISSI E BECOMES AC I IK
As war to have been expected, the result of the
"d election hu; brought the foreign debt issue sharply
the front and it i made clear that European
will seek reductions or cancellation with renewed
vstence if not with former assurance.
It. i unfortunate for Europe, as well as for this
try, that this issue war not met promptly arid
ly at the very outset. The administration
rrntribijted to the European feeling that the United
'-late v.a> willing to make large eonee: - ion. , and the
fuet, that such a policy was at variance with public sen¬
timent here could not he fully sensed by those abroad.
Hope of material reduction- Ido. omed quickly
the certainty of ultimate cancellation, and thu. a false
structure wa- built, up in the public mind and the diffi
i ultic- of European statesmen, who perhaps understood
the dilation fetter, were complicated by this over-opti
mi lii feeling on the part of the people, comments the
(tome News Tribune.
The. i ■ .ilt of the recent election here di-posed de< i -
ivrly of the high expectations of the eaneeflal iorii I and
nyw they are toned to rome down to earth and fare the
eold fact.; of the situation These fad are not plea.
lit to those who had exported to -hull these debts upon
the A merit an people, but the people here me not .*•
■poo ible tor the structure of fai r a suraru-e. they
have not been, nor are they disposed at this time, to as
ume any additional burdens.
A a matter of fact, too inmh -Ire , has been placed
by Europe upon the ; ignificanec of war debt; . The bur¬
den, vvlurh would be crushing to thb nation, is compara¬
tively light when spread over the numerous notions that
borrowed the money, and payment constitute. only a
fraction of the national budget in any instance. In no
i use doe: it amount to o much as 3 per rent of annual
outlays, ami in no ru. r does it compare with the sums
expended for armament:.
But for the mistaken encouragement extended by of¬
ficials here the pre cut late of mind iii Europe never
would have been created and by now the payment: would
have been accepted us a matter of course and proper
provision would have been made for meeting them.
America rut tin sc obligations, in half and gave over a
half century in which to pay. That i enough and i even
i.me than the country ran afford. To in i t upon more
i. unreasonable and unjust. Moreover, the votes of the
people here proclaim that they have no intention of as
: urning any more of the burden.
ONE M \\ TO RELIEVE I NEM IT.O V M ENT
Speaking over a radio hookup about ten day- ago, Dr.
Julius Klein, a. I.- 1 ant wretary of commerce, discus
mg “industrial house cleaning,” said:
"How ran trieken or sluggish inilus! i ics he ivtived?
"hat vv.e the weightiest problem before the great eon
n tenet- of hu me - leaders which met here m Washing
Inn at. the invitation of tin- president last August. <tut
of that, meeting came plans for a number of campaign
focused specifically upon this very objective of more
iole and quickly.
"One of the e campaigns, under the aide leadership of
Mr. A. W. Robertson, has concentrated on the task of
inducting industrialist;- to re-equip their plants with
;i-w machinery and tools. New if you do not happen to
work in a machine factory or engine shop yourself, you
may wonder why I am bothering you with such a story.
But thi. particular fight ran become one of the major
I sector of our whole battle front in the drive for recov
ity, The pre,.cnee of obsolete machinery is a serious
impedin-etil to profitable business. It. replacement will
j rovi-le a : reinemiou siiinulus, not only to the nmffhin
i- i v producei.i but to the users also, us a valuable econ
i,in) in rutting cost. . Low price- are today a command¬
ing influence ill every market place, to stimulate the
t-inid buyer: ■> economy in production costs is impera¬
tive,"
V, Hiding to the best information available, there are
ten million unemployed in the I nited Slates, i’roviding
(la- with jobs, that they may become self-supporting and
i< mam elf n |no t inix, is one of the nation s major prob¬
lems.
Dr. Klien’s -ugg'ition is not all iilfigicai. It looks to
the increase ot efficiency in industrial plants, but it doe
not make provision Ji>-r ineteased employment, cave to
ii- exient that the manufacturers, of factory equipment
might eiiliiigt- then working force,-, and ruilroads might
rhovv a few morn car bindings.
There i- one way to decrease unemployment, and that
very queikly! Efficiency experts hold up their hands in
shocked protest at tin- voiy mention of it, but that ifi.
not necessarily mean that the thing can not and should
not he done. For one tremendous obstacle ill the way of
it iliist rial recov cry is the nn-ehanixaliivn of all American
industry, av: the Albany Herald.
1 a hoi owing machinery on farms, on highways, on
lailwav -. in mills and fin tone , in hank- and offices, in
telephone exchange- and telegraph offices, at ship ter¬
minal- m tact, wherever work is to he done and human
nun supplied, ha displaced an army of workers. It
bus speeded production, reduced the cost of innumer¬
able every day necessities and luxuries, and made mdus
tiud \met lea j-‘--ode. But it hu- thrown millions out
ot work.
The modern captain of industry would he profoundly
shocked by thi suggestion that he discontinue the use
ot a machine doing the work ot twenty men, and in its,
piace - si pie \ the twenty, The farmer who use- a tractor
and gang plows ha.- no idea iff going 1 ask to horse- and
uig.e \ I >xv, hut In- could make the horses feed them
,
• vixes, and could give employment to as many farm
hand- a- Ms lug tractor with its gang plows have dis
I !,i. V<|,
j 'Ac do tt. ; i i-cl nnldsDy to take thi backward step
Mi are no rely nunooning a wonderfully simple method
, i imtting iot-ie - nun to work. There is no reason why
mi i ad. -pied, but there an many reasons why
; xv di not Ih-.
Eugene ialn gee.- into office earlier than usual
| thank- to tiei 11 The voters of this state have been
km*! to the agr rai lomnuss mnci.
These cam. dates who were suffering with s.-*'e throat;
J last week and r*“.civt-d defeat are now pio'-ahiy suffer¬
j ing with headaches and fir,«m tai emhar; ussments.
j
Em-, pear, di-’.-tf.rr to the United States a:e Topical
that Hoover ami Roosevelt will ho able to find some so¬
lution to thi debt problem. Wu.h the Dvmo* ratio plat
ptvifieaH) «pp*-smg any cancellation Hoover
i hardly expect any sympathy for Ins beliefs from that
I party.
I Hfc HKUNbWILK.
THE GRAB BAG
Some Consolation
Anyway, when they take all the
trains off there won’t be so many
grade crossing accidents.
Safety
A friend of ours says he feels sure
he alway has his ear under control
when he has his wife in the hack seat.
Exchange,
Exchange.
The Difference
A horse race may he won by a nose,
but in the race for a girl’s heart a
boy may win by a roadster.
Exchange.
Not His Fault
Will "What happened to your ear,
old man?”
Bill- “Aw, one of these darned cul¬
vert posts ran into it.”
Valdosta Times.
Her Error
A woman who, i learning to drive a
ear was asked if it. made her nervous.
She replied, “Goodness, yes; 1 ran over
a white cat and thought it was. a cow."
Valdosta Times.
Into the Bright Lights
First Mosquito “Why are you
making such a fuss?"
Second-Ditto “Whoopee! 1 passed
the creon test.”
Stray Bits.
Observation
I hirtgs urc appear to be lean,
Times worse than we’ve ever seen,
But with all the flurry,
Talk, gabble and worry,
They continue to buy gasoline.
Valdosta Times.
A Ureal Surprise
He was at the fountain pen counter
making a purchase.
He “You see, I’m buying this for
my wife."
Clerk "A surprise, eh?”
He “I’ll say so. She’s exjccting a
< Chrysler."
Exchange.
Bikers
Every man has resources of hap*I I
pine— and hope, of improvement and
power, quite beyond his knowledge -I
wells of water on hi.- own little field, 1
ready to spring up into life. And with
all our good, none of us claim as much
a- belongs to us.
Exchange.
It’s Golden
A certain amount of silence and se¬
clusion is not only the best cure for
jaded nerves; it is a fine mental ton¬
ic. It is indispensable to the develop¬
ment of character, of true individual¬
ity and true culture.
Exchange.
Elygy In « Traffic Jam
The curfew tolls-the knell of parting
day,
A line of cars winds slowly o’er the
lea,
A pedestrian plods his absent-minded
way
And leave: the world quite unexpect¬
edly.
Valdosta Times.
(an You?
Two great dangers to night driv¬
ing on the highways continue unabat¬
ed: Thi- dazzling headlight and the
one-eyed car. Some ears seem to be
equipped with searchlights instead of
legal lights. These powerful search¬
lights are a menace to every driver
they meet. Yes, there is a law against
dazzling headlights, hut who can re¬
member a prosecution under the law?
Exchange.
No Mistake
The little niece was riding with the
fi-mily of Perkins when Mr. Perkins
asked for road directions at a filling
station. The attendant said:
"Go tast until you hit the gravel,
then north to the next town,"
After having driven a few miles a
piece of gravel wn- thrown against
the window by a passing car.
Niece (-peaking up from the hack
seat) "Now we hit the gravel, didn't
we ? "
Valdosta Times.
Speed
A Milwaukee. Mis,, woman broke
the speed laws, and a judge broke the
laws in speeding her to jail at least
that is what she alleged.
However, the courts may finally:
deckle she is typical of .Americans.
They would rather "get there" and
wait than arrive on time. They iike
the thrill of speed and this causes
-vMi- than a third of automobile cas¬
ualties.
An English editor who recently
came to this country for a visit later
tel • his readers that Americans arc
"-peed crag) .* They are a:-.d have j
been foi some time. The fact accounts j I
in some measure for the depression.
S.h asylums. ; is filling the hospitals and]
insane It is rendering futile
the efforts of science to prolong the!
a vet age human life. It i> clashing!
business and knocking the profit out!
i-f life insurance.
Speed has become to U- a \k. for!
which there may be no remedy other j
than speedy application of the penal¬
■ ties of the law.
t - Exchange.
SCHOOL DAYS -— By DW1G
HOLLYWOOD
JUf/ttlandJoUMti
By BOBBIN COONS
i
Hollywood, Nov. Hi. There arc
at me expensive faces on the cutting
room floor these days, perhaps the
natural outcome
of the desire to
put "name play¬
ers” evyn in min¬
or roles in pic¬
tures. Sheets Gal¬
lagher played a
comedy bit in
“The Conquerors”;
and is listed in
the east—or was
but no Skeel: ap¬
pears.
If you have
MELt-N VINSON good eyes and are
quick, you may catch a glimpse of him
in a line of soldiers on parade -he’s
the chubby-cheeked fellow next to
Richard Dix, the star.
Bat O'Malley had a few of u. over
the other evening to inspect his latest
achievement a one-room brick cabin
he constructed himself in his backyard
for a total cost of $6. It’s a cozy spot,
with high beamed ceiling, big open
fireplace and an air of old-fashioned
comfort.
No I ime To l inish It
He began it some six' months ago,
occupy his time while picture parts'
were slow in coming. Friends eon-j
tribute*! old bricks, he got others from :
old buildings, and other cast-off ma-1
terials challenged his ingenuity to bo j
included. It isn’t quite finished yet,]
testimonial to his sudden Come-] know]
hack in film favor -he doesn’t
when he’ll have time to do it.
The tin roof, by the way. was for-!
merly a 24-sheet billboard for a real
subdivision.
"No, I haven’t any qualms of c-n
u-icnce about it," he commented.
'You see, the company had folded
anyway." ,
Southern California's outdoor life
can he over-rated. Helen Vinson learn¬
ed. In New York Helen rode horse
lack regularly during her theatrical
career, but in Hollywood she hr-sn’t
had time. And until recently, when
scene called for her to ride a horse
in "Lawyer Man," she didn’t get to]
ride even at work.
ihat Type Bogey
Hard a- it is to hi-iieve, William
Haines broke from type in films -once
upon a time. He started, you may:
remember, in the "bashful hoy” role :
made famous by Charles Ray. and fans
didn't hesitate to accuse him of imi¬
tation.
Just for a change, Haines began
wisecracking in "Slide. Kelly Slide”
and ever since has been trying, in
vain, to gel out of the flippant mold.
666
I IQl H> - TABLETS - S U VF
Checks Malaria in 3 days. Golds first
da*. Headaches or Neuralgia in
minutes.
666 Salve for Head Colds.
Most Speedy Remedies
Known.
Wednesday, nov. ie>, 1932.
Special For This Week
Men’s Half Soles 85c
Men’s Half Soles and Rubber Heels $ 1.00
Men’s Half Soles and Hard Heels $1.25
Men’s Welt Soles and Rubber Heels $1.75
Ladies’ Soles and Heels 75c
Ladies’ Taps—Rubber or Leather 20c
Special on Men’s Rubber Heels 35c
Brunswick Shoe Repair Hospital
1328 Newcastle St. Phone 184
N. Levine, Prop. Next To Drug Store
We Will Audit Your Insurance
Policies Without Charge
Get tin insurance audit. It is just as important as
Auditing Your Books
Parker, Burroughs and Way
INSURANCE
READ THE NEWS ADS
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The PERFECT REMEDY
for Children’s Colds ....
If your Druggist cannot supply you
with D & P send 10«* for a carton of
Cry stals or the Old Fashioned Kind
on a string. Address
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82 Leonard Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.