Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, April 05, 1936, Page 14, Image 14
14
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Congratulations To Savannah’s New Daily Paper
a. ,■> SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES
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I ft Pre ■ Easter Special
H X v Men! Hers Are Spring Clothes
9z J ‘1 at Bargain Prices. Just When ■ t.
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■Maryr-' you Need Them! -
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BbL?- {This special selling event was planned several months ago so that we could
(offer you these unusual values in spring suits now. I
this special group, we have added odd suits carried over from last season,
P that s< Id at much higher prices.
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®fe>' • LESTER HARRIS
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STYLE CENTER FOR MEN IN SAVANNAH
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ITALIANS MEAT BALLS
new version of dish
By MBS. MARY MORTON
Mena Hint
Italian Meat Balls—Boiled Potatoes
California Fruit Salad
Sponge (Jake With
Chocolate Frosting—Tea
Meat balls are economical and
there are a variety of ways of cook
ing them. My favorite is to season
them highly, and drop them Into a
combination of tomato, chopped
onion and green pepper, and cook
them slowly until they are done.
They may be browned before cooking,
if you wish. These Italian meat balls
differ, but are a& tasty as my favo
rites.
Today’s Recipes )
Italian Meat Balls— One pound
chopped lean veal, one-half pound
chopped ham, two or three onions,
two stalks celery, two or three car
rots, butter, spices. Remove any fat
from veal and force through food
chopper. Mix with ground ham. Sea
son with a little mixed spices and
finely chopped mixed herbs. Mix in
TALES IN TIDBITS
<4 B y bill braucher
Central Press Sports Editor
Hello, Prosperity, How Have You
Been?
Whatever slight difficulty Pros
perity had in coming around that
Hoover corner seems now to have
been dispelled. Aided and abetted
by Michael (Tex) Jacobs, the eph
emeral figure has come out of hid.
Ing and is boldly strutting up and
down the street in full view.
What’s this all about? Well, af
ter biting a pencil for a couple of
weeks, Mr. Jacobs has decided to
charge ringside spectators S4O (a
months rent to you, Gus) for the
Schmeling-Louls fight at Yankee
stadium in June..
If Mike gets away with that kind
of swag for the bout between the
German and Negro, he bas deep
dark plana to assess the witnesses
all the way from SSO to SIOO for a
Braddock-Louis’ championship bout
in September. He’ll wait to see
how the flock eats up the S4O paste
boards before making up his mind
what kind of price to fix for the
title battle.
Upward and Onward
looking back at the way Pros
perity has been flirting with Pugll.
ism for the last year this corner
is ready to guess $75 tops for a
ringside glimpse (from perhaps as
far back as Mamaroneck, at that)
of the Braddock-Louis gestures.)
Max Baer and Jimmy Braddock
drew $200,000 last summer, but that
Best Wishes To Savannah’s
New Daily Paper
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES
Clean Clothes Wear Longer and this fact, combined with
the important news that DURDEN’S CLEANERS AND
DYERS cleaning method is safer and dependable.
2 PLAIN GARMENTS sl.OO
GIVE US A TRIAL
Durden’s Cleaners and Dyers
1521 BULL STREET DIAL 9202
one or two eggs, shape into small
balls and roll in flour. Chop the
i onion and other vegetables and put
Into a saucepan with three table
spoons butter. Saute over a low fire
until vegetables start to brown.
! Sprinkle with one tablespoon flour
stirring it In well and when flour is
blended, add three-fourths cup boil
ing water. Season with salt and pep
per and until, smooth. Put meat
balls into this, cover and simmer
from 45 minutes to an hour. When
cooked, remove to a hot platter and
strain vegetable puree around them.
Sprinkle with » few drops of lemon
Juice.
California Salad—Twenty-four large '
cooked prunes, three-fourths cup grat
ed raw carrot, three-fourth cup shred
ded pineapple, one-third cup shred
ded coconut, one-elghth teaspoon
salt. Remove pits from prunes. Mix
carrots lightly with pineapple, coco
nut and salt. Stuff prunes with lib
eral amount of mixture but dn not
pack filling. Leave carrots fluffy.
was only the beginning. Just as
soon as Joe Louis stepped into the
picture, people started digging for
bucks that had been buried since
the well known flnancia’. “readjust
ment” started in 1929. The take for
Louis and Camera rolled up to
$350,000.
Then came the affair of Louis and
Baer. number of old baking
powder cand emptied by Gus Phann
and his fellows in order to buy
space on ringside stools for that im
broglio must have been tremendous
When the grand total was added
up, the figure was $1,000,832.17, ac
cording to Frank Menke’s excel
lent sports; record books. Os that
sum the pifeture rights sold for $25,-
000 and radio $27 500. By the way.
before feeling too sorry foi Mister
Baer, stop and think that he took
$150,000 for his share of the fight,
and might have taken $181,114 if he
had been willing to gamble and
hadn’t sold out to Jacobs before
the brawl.
These Are Nice Figures
Jacobs doesn’t blush a bit when
he says the Schmeling.Louis en
counter will bring into the box of
fice a million and a half smackers,
the biggest gati since the dear,
dead days of Dempsey-Carpentier,
which drew $1,789,238.
One is almost afraid to ask Mis
ter Jacobs what he thinks the Brad-
dock-Louis bout will lure into the
till. He’s likely to pipe ‘Around
free millyun” at you Just like that.
The shock would bv too much.
STATE OFFICIAL
FACES OUSTER
Gov. Horner’s Group Threaten
To Impeach Treasurer
of Illinois.
SPRINGFIELD, 111., April 4—(TP)
—Spokesmen for Governor Homer .
administration threateened impeach
ment action today against State
Treasurer John Stelle.
Illinois Senator L. O. Williams to
day said he will try to have Stelle
removed for holding up nearly 3,000
state pay checks. Stelle withheld tne
checks April 1, charging that work
ers wro were to get them were Gov
ernor’s campaign workers.
The threatened impeachment mo
tion came Just after Stelle released
most of the checks. He held back
several until the attorney general's
office investigates harges of payroll
padding.
Congratulation and Best Wishes to Savannae’s New Daily Paper
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES
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SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, SUNDAY, APRIL B.'IKG SATOAVAJ.
t.I’iEACH .
MORALIH
*-■ BY EXAMPLE
Educator Tells Parent to Ex
press Ideals in Life
By GARY C. MYERS, PH. D.
Head Department Parent Education
Cleveland College, Western
Reserve University
SYMPATHY, kindness and respect
for tne sacredness of tne pexsonauuy
oi oniers are aesi.aJxe
traits.
Some while ago I listened eagerly
to a fine audress by Dr. Paul tuny
—kust known, perhaps, for his 00-k,
‘ Trie Gang Age ’ —beiore tne Parents
Forum, conducted by the Health a«d
Parent Education association oi
CliVc.and, O. By the way, it was
held in the aucntouum Oi a large
department store.
Among other things, Dr. Furfy said
that our best hope, in the long run,
for expression of high moral ideals
througn good laws made by legisla
tive bodies, is for parents to cultivate
these ideals chiefly through example
in their children.
As I sat there listening I was
thinking of such everyday practical
relationships as we parents have with
our trades people and our public and
private servants — with the grocer,
postman, maid, for examples. Un
awares we beguile our social atti
tudes and habits in the presence of
our children in our daily living with
them, toward the many other per
sons on tMise services we continu
ally depend. Have you ever heard a
sermon preached on such matters?
These many persons who serve us
are practically compelled to be cour
teous, no matter how rude we may
be to them. Whe nwe are servants
ourselves —and most of us afe in
some way—we may still be inconsid
erate toward other servants. Never
theless, just because we don’t have
to be polite, or even civil to them,
is a strong moral reason why we
ought to hold ourselves up to a lofty
plane in our relationships toward
them. In other words, we may gain
best moral values by doing toward
others difficult things we don’t have
to do.
Sink to Low Levels
On any single day, I wonder how
often you and I sink to low levels
of refinement toward the man who
brings our mail, the clerk who waits
on us at the baker’s, grocer’s, butch
er’s; to the bus driver, trolley car
conductor or trainman; or even to
the folk who wash our clothes, scrub
our floors or cook our food. Don’t
they have sacred personalities, just
as you and I have?
The standards of consideration,
sympathy and justice which we con
stantly manifest toward our fellow
men in the presence of our children
will, as surely as we are alive, be
echoed and mirrored almost literally
in them when they will have grown
up, and by their children’s children
onward through the ages.
If there are to be any gains in
mercy, sympathy and kindness, it
will have to come, I suppose, through
the efforts of some of us e’--g the
line of cultivating these virtues in
ourrelves. But by nature we are lazy
and are not inclined to take the
harder road when the easier one is
so alluring to us. Perhaps I am old
fashioned, but the longer I live the
more character value I see in self
discipline, inept though I am at it
myself.
OKEFENOKEE SWAMP
ATLANTA April 4—(GPA) An
nouncement that the federal govern
ment has secured options on the
entire Okefenokee swamp area brings
nearer the time when this unique
tract in South Georgia will become
a nationafy-known wild-life sanctu
ary, according to reports. Working
under the resolution snonsored by
Senator George in which six million
dollars is set aside for the purchase
of the Okefenokee and two sim’lar
tracts the Bureau of Biological Sur
vey of the U. S. Agricultural de
partment has for many months be°n
engaged in securing the necessary
-'ntirn-, pnd now al that remains is
forth? d~p~rtm?nt of justice to ex
amine the title to the land.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn . April 4 (TP)
—The Philadelphia Athletics knock
ed the ball all over the lot today in
trimming Knoxville 16 to 3.
DEPENDABILITY
The Thinking Woman Knows
Westinghouse
Is Always Depen 'able
She Knows There Is More I
Real Dollar Value In i """"I I
'Westinghouse Quality H I ||MBw
'Westinghouse Convenience M
'Westinghouse Economy H Ir MM
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DISSENSION—InternaI dis
sension over policies in the
Townsend old-age pension
organization is reported as
the reason for the resigna
tion from the organization of
Representative John S. Me-
Croarty of California, above.
Mr. McGroarty has been the ,
official spokesman for the e
—— ———— r
COLUMBIA. S. C., April 4 (AP) f
—The Cincinnati Reds punched f
over three runs in the ninth in* p
ning today to nose out the Detroit e
Tigers 9 to 4. The Reds out hit the h
world champions, 11 to 6. s
Boys of 8 Learning to Use New "Toys*’
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While Americnn hds of the same age are playing with paper hats and wooden swords, eight-year-nld
Italian meinLc.s of the Halilla, Mussolini’s military organization of children, are studying the opera .im
of modern machine-guns. (Central Preaa)
When news of the execution of h
er husband was brought to Mrs. A
nna Hauptmann, waiting in the lit
tle room of her Trenton, N. J., hot
c!, she collapsed into the arms o
I a friend, above, moaning, “Oh my
poor Richard. I don’t want to liv
e.” Confident almost to the last t
hat her husband would again re
saved from the electric qhalr, sh
e broke down completely* when in
foimed tnat he had di:d.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. April 4
(TP) Rogers Hornsby’s St. Louis
Browns turned back the Baltimore
Orioles, 8 to 4, today.
MONTGOMERY, Ala., April 4
(TP)—The Chicago Cubs jolted the
Phillies, 11 to in a sprint
training game. The National Lea
gue champions cracked out 15 hits
to 8 for the Phillies.
I Mil I »«»»»■ I *■ » ■ ——-W--CANON
-CANON ‘ CITY, Col., April 4
—While the country is cheering the
busine:s recovery. Warden Roy Beet
of the Colorado State penitentiary is
worried about the depression.