Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, April 05, 1936, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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KHOIF WwJ • n - j ShHI- Ml H ' ip “ “I have confidence. . in Grants I The few times I had to bring back things, my money was cheerfully re- I turned.” Effective! Inner-Belt COMBINATIONS av s | ■ ;* 4 Firmly ' . EX Z ' U made to w z c 7 Bu P P r e.s s , ; f bulges I i; * f/' Elastic pan / •■> ,/a'b 1 jM els for com<i ■'* J fort! 34 to 42 ’ Tryone! • ■ ZLyncrest” Pure Silk CHIFFON V J HOSE HJ 69 e V TVwl ' Ringl* 88 * P®r- •' fec *» 45 .gauge, E'k clear and sheer. jK Compare the yy quality and price! New tCLx Spring shades. c. 9 Different New Styles! ';. •> Rayon fVCL UNDIES 25 C ea., Better styles, V'^/ / VpW\' lace, finish. c i| vests, bloom- ©rs, 7 styles .., /> /| •■ panties- Regular, extra, and .triple ex -.Wk tra sizes. Men’s SHORTS and 8 SHIRTS 25‘ea. Non-Shrink... ; ' Hon-Fade! Men’s broad cloth shorts ’ and'fine ribbed ■ cotton shirts.- ■ Full cut sizes. ' ’ ’ I roo nald i I duck /Z/ 1 Pull toy R flaps its wings . *’ j X and quacks! Ji-— rrz>tf ♦ W / BIG . -• 'BUNNY XdLJ I 24-In. Pink (tv WWI: i k plush. Ador- Z’-’LrA ts\ A able long C rw i ear * - i SfP ’ F LOVE AT j r hrstb, t i, j I Easter bas- S’ I 1 kat of can- Wfr MfA i A dies toy , IK 71 r *bbit on.—-*VV m Y I topj z ! P 5O C tWP I y BASKET A 4 | DE LUXE! < I A beauty " i full of sweets EffWfccjg , BL -nd toy ( LaGRANGE, GO?, April 4 (1P) There’ll be an al| day “singing” in LaGrange tomornpw. They're hold ing theannual TCoup County Sing ing Convention. gia, Alabam and gwth. i •ring for the meeting. 1 PAGE TWO MONTANYE POST GIVEN TO WOOD Savannah Man To Head Writers Project In 17 Counties Raiford Wood has been appoint ed WPA district supervisor of fed eral Project No. 1, otherwise known as the Writers Project, to succeed Carlton S. Montanye, who has been transferred to the Braille projeqt. Mr. Wood, who is well known fbr his activities in the Georgia Historical Society, will have charge of seven teen counties. His Savannah head quarters will be at 16 East Bryan Street where the Writers Project is now housed. . . Work on the Braille project is awaiting an allottment of funds from Atlanta. This project will train teachers to assist blind members of the community. Under FERA it was a thoroughly organized project glv ing aid to nearly a hundred white and colored blind persons, who learned to read Braille and to earn a little money of their own with weaving baskets, making brooms and doing other light work. Mr. Montanye was in charge of the project at that time. Gilbert Hogg, state director of non manual projects br6ught about, the transfer during his visit here Fri day. Also in Savannah at that time were Mrs. Caroline Dillard, state di rector of the Writers Project, and C. P. Murphey, of Atlanta and Wash ington. Dillard, state director -of the Writers Project, and C. P. Murphey, <F e WiliW j (v v JF Cl? . . V-y*f Prevailing Spring Styles At At Glendale Hat Shop 25 EAST BROUGHTON STREET Prices from $1.98 to SIO.OO s A ’ • ” I •* .. Best Wishes For Con r Successto SAVANiv DAILY wW times “It Is Better to be Safe Than Sorry” Inglesby, Torrance Bell ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE EXCEPT LIFE Prompt, Faithful Service Realty Bldg. Dial 4521 INSURANCE FIRM HEAD HONORED BY MEMBER OF SAVANNAH AGENOY A. M. Burton, president of the Life and Casualty Insurance Company of Tennessee, was honored at a dinner at the Savannah Hotel given for him by the members of the Savannah agency of his company last night at 7 o’clock at the Hotel Savannah. Mr. Burton arrived in the city from Nashville yesterday morning. Those present at the dinner were G. H. Williams, manager of the lo cal company, A. G. Foster, superin tendent, Miss Evelyn Wyndham, member of the office force, eleven agents and their wives, and the fol lowing guests who were Invited to meet Mr. Barton: Mayor Thomas Gamble, Dr. John S. Wilder. Mrs. Joseph Mendes, president of the Chatham Gounty Council, Parent Teacher Association; T. S. Brown, Boy Scout executive, and Dr. and Mrs. Luther A. DeLoach. HOTEL MAN VISITS CITY The Morrison Hotel of Chicago, said to be the tallest hotel building in the world, was represented in Savannah when Leonard Hicks, man aging director, stopped off here on his way home from Florida. Mr. Hicks who was accompanied by his wife, left yesterday. The readers of this newspaper are Its greatest asset. They can make It an even greater success by patronizing its advertisers. of Atlanta and Washington, member of the department of investigation of the Works Progress Administra tion. SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 1936 PRESIDENT OF ORGANIZATION 'IL;* „ : SHk - —Photo by Rich. t. julius McGinley President of the corporation publishing the Savannah Daily Times EDITORIAL STAFF I j ( . ..SB - iMMni ■ W' 1 is kI wl. «Hs a xg —Photo by Rich. Left to Right: N. J. Gillespie, editorial contributor; Jack McQuade, reporter; Miss Marie Davis, society department; F. Basil Abrams, managing editor; Mrs. Gerald Chan Seig, reporter; Peter Roegiers, reporter; Roy Blank, reporter. William Bis choff, member of the staff, who is ill at home, is not in photo. CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT 8 ■ ILjSwi J|i.j! | 'W|t3P lllll '!B. 1 SB" W W* '-B —Photo by Rich. Joseph Landfoli, Walter Edwards, Mrs. N. J. Brewer, Nash Pickle, Mrs. John Downs; John Downs, circulation manager; J. H. Dugger. District managers not in the photo are Jack Cooley. William Kelly, John Davis. ■ ■ i -■■ ■ H ■ ' ijj uh ■l— COMPOSING ROOM - - ■■ • ' J 7'M —Photo by Rich. Left to Right: L. Witt, B. E. Crawford, R. Ferrell, F. J. Kladden, F. C. Crute, T. L. Allen, J. F. Carter, F- L- Wilson, Lester L. Rimes.—Others employees of the composing room not shown in the photo are: C. C. Renfroe, Leo Parkman, John T. Barnes, A. C. Humphreys, R. C. Blake, E. Van Vandt, Richard Walsh, and R. G. Dugger. DR. DOOLEY ILL Dr. R. A. Dooley, well known Sa vannah dentist, is ill at St. Jose, ph’s Hospital. Advices from the bos. 1 were to the effect that Dr. Dooley’s condition was serious but he was resting comfortably last night. TREES ARE UPROOTED AS STORM WINDS UP THROUGH LOS ANGELES LOS ANGELES, April 4 (TP Winds of gale-like intensity struck Los Angeles and vicinity late to. day. Trees were uprooted. Power lines were damaged. Coast guard vessels rushed to the aid of small power beats in distress in th© harbor at San Pedro. STATESMEN SEEK RRINELAND PEACE PARIS, April 4 —(TP) Rival statesmen worked overtime tonight to get their plans for solving the Rhineland crisis in shape for formal discussion. France may insist on thrashing out the problem when the league cf nations committee of 13 meets Wednesday. German officials were indignant because the committee advanced the date of the meeting, which had been planned to follow the easter holidays. Germans Say the French had the date changed so the other Locarno na tions—Britain. Italy, Belgium and France could get together without calling a separate meeting. The French have a hastily-drafted plan ready to present to the league members. Officials Indicate that they will refuse flatly to let Germany fortify the Rhineland. Fr t n S h did Propose to lay this plan before the Locarno powers at . a meeting to be held in Paris lle « lea Suers are at Geneva. Tne British foreign secretary, Cap tain Eden, turned down that pro posal. Eden didn’t believe the Lo carno powers ought to hold a sepa ijjt-c session during the league meet- FUTURE WAR VETERANS BARRED FROM MARCHING IN ARMY DAY PARADE WASHINGTON, April 4 (TP) The Veterans of Future Wars will not march in Washington’s Army Day parade next Monday. This order was handed down to day by Major Edward Bettelheim, Jr., who is in charge of the parade. Major Bettelheim denied the re quest of the Future Veterans on the grounds that the Girls Auxilliary Organization was a slap at “Amer ican Motherhood.” The Future Veterans Organiza tion is composed of a group of col lege men who are seeking to se cure their veterans bonus before they go to war. College girls took up the idea and organized an auxil o? icl \/ hey called “Future Gold Star Mothers.” The name has since been changed to the “Home F!re Division” but Major Bettelheim said the insult still remains. SOCIALIST SPLIT VOTE PLEASING TO THOMAS Y °RK, April 4 (TP—Nor man Thomas pointed proudly today to the thorough shellacking the left 'viug °f the Socialist Party handed to the Old Guard right. The Old Guard faction, led by Louis Wald man, was soundly beaten in the state primary election Thomas’s So cialist wing was swept in with 20 out of 24 delegates elected to the National Convention, from New York City alone. Thomas claimed 45 of 62 members of the state com mittee. At the same time. Republican Old Guardsmen promptly predicted the collapse of Senator Borah’s White House boom in the eastern states. Borah’s candidates were thumpihg ly defeated everywhere they ran. HOPES GIVEN UP FOR BURIED WPA WORKER EAST WALPOLE, Mass , April 4 (TP) —The W. P. A. worker, An tonio Cataldo, was given up for dead today in the trench where he was buried alive. Cataldo and about 20 other dig gers were working in a deep trench. There was a sudden slide of earth. Cataldo was buried beneath tons of the debris. Police, firemen and Cataldo’s fellow workmen dug fev. erishly at the trench. They gave up when another earth slide buried the man still deeper. LOCAL RED CROSS ASKS DONATIONS TO SUCCOR CORDELE STORM VICTIMS An appeal to Savannah to aid the sufferers in the storm stricken areas of Georgia was wired from Red Cross national headquarters in Washington late yesterday after noon to Mrs. Louis Roos, executive of the local chapter of Red Cross. Mrs. Roos reportde that the mem bers of the local unit had just finish ed counting the receipts from the tags sold yesterday morning fro the relief of the destitute thousands in the flooded valleys of the east, when the telegram came. Donations amounting to $250 were the result of the tag sale. Several generous persons, Mrs. Roos said, laid checks for $5 in the boxes of funds. The local Red Cross raised $4,000 altogether for the aid of the flood victims. It is hoped, Mrs. Roos said, that Savannah will be as generous to the Georgia sufferers. Donations of any amount will be received at the office of the Red Cross on Dray ton Street. ALLIANCE BOY SCOUTS TO PRESENT NAUTICAL SKIT, MINISTREL SHOW Boy Scout Troop 2 of the Jewish Educational Alliance will add anoth er achievement to its already lengthy list when it presents its minstrel show and an original skit. “Join the Navy,” written by the members of the troop, tonight at the Alliance at 8:30 o’clock. Harry Applebau mis director of the show, and the boys are ’inviting the pub lic with no admission charge. Black face comely will be put on by Mr. Applebaum and Harry Richman, with Milton Llpsitz as interlocutor. Musical numbers will add a rousing gayety to the pro gram, while the playlet is said by those who have seen the dress re hearsal to be unusually comical and well put on. The skit is in two acts. Assisting with the entertainment will be Edward Krieger, well known musician, who will play the ac. cordion. Troop 2 is the outstanding troop of Sava .nah. having won numer ous medals and trophies offered for excellence in Scout work during the last two years It was awarded a silver cup for achievement at the annual dinner of Boy Scouts during the eariy part of the year. i NEW FIRE HOUSE BE OPENED SOON Men Start Full Force City Projects Tomorrow ' —Goebel The new fire station in the south eastern section of the city will be the first of the civic projects to be finished, it was learned from A. S. Goebel, city engineer, yesterday. In six weeks the handsome strusture will be ready for the Fire Depart ment to have its grand opening day. The fire house will be one of the finest Savannah has ver had, with complete equipment for the men to stay on duty all the way around the clock. A modern kitchen where fire men can scramble eggs or make coffee, a dormitory, a living room, Print Dresset The garb of Springtime Sheer Jacket Frocks The favorite costume of the moment r Sportswear A Proved favorites at all re . sorts. The last word in Dinner Gowns / and Formal! aJter-Ea s ter Prdms. Eit, Style, Quality and Value —“Simple words, but thoroughly important because they alone determine the true ‘ TVTarien Shop ( ] |Readxrk> I ’* L Savannah. Oa I 325 Bull Street 'i Phone 4396 , w ■ . . e ...... ■ » . . ... j I 1 JI - J I /-I 71 I I \ J • .... .. Ford Village OFFERS RENIWLD R&G GUARANTEED SOLD WITH A MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE LOOK THESE OVER I 1935 Ford V-8 Coupe withTfcadio, perfect condition $550 1935 Ford V-8 Tudor with Radio, excellent condition 550 1934 Ford V-8 Tudor clean throughout bargain 450 1933 Plymouth Sedan, new paint, A-l condition 1932 Chevrolet Coupe, new paint, a splendid buy Many More All Makes and Models Ford Village 12 WEST LIBERTY ST. PHONE 3-MiH p USED CAR DEPT. \ ' A r GEORGIA MOTORS CORP. V LINCOLN V-12 FORD LINCOLN ZEPHYR V-12 j Congratulations and Best Wishes to ■ SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES s fl v fl n n nji and a system of showers are some of the features of the iron railing will sense off the - fire station’s lawn from the rest of the block. Chief Walter Blanton is plan ning a big opening affair to which the public will be invited. Men will start to work full force on all the city projects tomorrow morn ing, Mr. Goebel said. Much delay has been caused during the past week by the heavy rains and by the fact th*t under the PWA regulations no work er can make more than 130 hours per month. Most of the men were forced to take a holiday in order not to have more hours to their credit than the rules allow. Gelatin Thickening c\x When making pie of home-egn ß ed cherries which are often not very bright red, add two tablespoons cherry or raspberry gelatin juice. It is necessary to add flour qr cornstarch to thicken the juice, biit the gelatin gives a richer color and a nice flavor, too.