Newspaper Page Text
6
SOCIETY
Mrs. C. W. Dixon of Jacksonville.
Florida is visiting Dr. and Mrs
A. De Loach.
' Mr. Ward Morehouse is stopping
at the DeSoto Hotel for a shor'
time.
I«* * *
Mr. and Mrs. John Hancock will
arrive in the city tomorrow to visit
KNIGHT’S
JUAVAQ 1-Lb. Can
L Talc Djerkiss
F 19c EASTER u Talc
SUGGESTIONS ’ 69c
Ammens 1 * Cordial Cherries ___2sc
Heat Barbasol
Powder ''
16c 1 lb Assorted Cordial ’ o **’
Fruit and Nuts 39c _
FAIRY
SOAP —— 5 Lbs.
3 for Dlx
14c 1 lb Chocolate Peppermint 8
Patties 29c 89c
75c Size
Baume -
'■ ' Shaving
° Oc 2 lbs Candv in Leatherette Cream
27c •
Handkerchief Box 98c
12
Kninaps “ 7 ’ Quart
(Napkins) „ t ' Mineral
15c Full Assortment of Qi]
" 1 Pangbums and Rollings- 69c
»
One Tube worth ,
PRFP
Candies. 200 Squibbs’
Free with t . . .
each regular ' - AsD,rln
Jar.
BEACH
EPSOM SLIPPERS—49c -
SALTS , • 43c
10c
" PALMER’S GARDENIA FACE New
Six and Eight POWDER ' ®” d ' rS
Inch House- Extract -, - Zol ,f
held Free wlth
SHEARS SI.OO every pack Os
"T B'ades
69(5 35c
Congratulat.ons To The
SAVANNAH DAILY
TIMES
On Entering The Daily Field In Savannah
Hotel Savannah
and
Drum Room
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J.
Elkins.
• • •
Miss Betty Smart has returned
to Vassar College after visiting her
parents in the city for the spring
holidays.
• * *
Miss Alice Mooney will leave to-
Jay for Los Angeles, California to
spend several months visiting rela
tives.
♦ ♦ w
Miss Eleanor Futrell has return-
1 F* T
ed to college after spending the
spring holidays in the city.
* • *
Mrs. Hugo Frank has returned
to the city after spending a short
time in New York.
* * •
Miss Loraine Lovenstein has re
turned to college after spending the
spring holidays visiting her grand
mother in Boston. Mass.
ECKENER MAY LOSE OUT
AS CHIEF OF NEW ZEP
BERLIN, April 4, (TP)—The Nazi
government is believed preparing
to remove Captain Hugo Eckener
from his con .and of the great
“Von Hindenburg” and possibly
from the Zeppelin works.
This startlin., ...urmation leaked
through iodav while the famous
Zeppelin commander drove his new
01 .wards Sou a America on
her maiden voyag- It is under
stood that Eckener clashed wii,.
the government when he refused
to use the new “Hindenburg” in
Adolph Hitler’s Plebiscite and
Reichstag flection. Eckener was
compelled to use the airship, any
way. It is sa ! d that Eckener then
ordered campaign posters removed
from the Zeppelin plant and made
several synical remarks about the
election. Today the veteran com.
mander of the kid “Graf” and the'
new “Hindenburgz is said to be
ready for the skids in Germany.
Perfect flying weather kept the.
mighty airship “Von Hindenburg”
tearing off che miles today on her
maiden voyage to South America.
The giant Zeppelin slipped through
storm clouds northwest of Liscon
and ate up rhe long miles aerbss
the South Atlantic. The great Zep
pelin is due in Rio De Janeiro by
Saturday.
SOVIETS LAN TO SPEND
THREE BILLION DOLLARS
IN ARMY UPLIFT WORK
CHICAGO, April 4—(TP)—Soviet
Russia will spend mote money on
her army this year than any nation
ever spent in peacetime, according
to Professor Paul Haensei of North
western University.
Professor Haensei, writing in the
April issue of “Tax” magazine, says
three billions of dollars will be u ed
to improve the Soviet military forces.
He adds that another two and a half
billions will be used ’or education.
The professor declares the Russian
people are laboring under the heaviest
taxes in the history of the world, be-’
cause of such appropriations.
LIGNITE USED AS FUEL
IN NORTH DAKOTA STOVES
BISMARK, N. D„ April 4 (TP)
A thriving new industry has brought
the smoke and noise of steam-shov
els and railroads into the peaceful
wheat field regions of North Dakota.
Unprecedented blizzards that howl
ed oyer the northwest this winter
brought heavy demands for fuel
any kind of fuel. Farmers promptly
found the answer. They simply took
their shovels and scooped the un
dersoil of their back yards into their
stoves.
Rich veins of lignite he a few
inches underground in more than
half the state. Lignite, according to
scientists, is a sort of “missing link”
between coal and peat.
The new lignite Industry has al
readv boomed to two and a half
■ Jo
I Im
NEW CLOTH Mrs. Alfred
Wagstr/T, 3rd, NeXv York social
ite, in her new gown of Mount
Airy cloth she planned to
et th? perfume show of the
Junior Emergency Relief Society
cn April 2. It was designed by
Gladys Parker, illustrator.
NINE PASSENGERS HURT
WHEN TRAIN HITS TRUCK
GRANITE CITY., 111., April 4—(TP)
—Scores of passengers mksed death
by a hair when an interurban train
smashed into a huge trailer truck
near Granite Cfity.
The train rolled into the ditch
and the truck was sliced in two. Nine
people were injured, but only two
seriously.
The tiuck driver said his machine
stalled on the grade crossing as Mie
interurban brre down upon it. The
crash tore up interurban tracks for
150 feet.
BOSTON U. DEAN GIVES
TIPS ON PROSPERITY
BOSTON. April 4 —(TP)— Dean
Everett Lord of Boston University
says that alumni of the school be
lieve “lack of confidence in the gov
ernment” is the greatest bar to pros
perity’s return.
The dean made a survey among
old grde, sending out 3000 question
naires and receiving 600 replies.
Other factors listed as hampering
business recovery were:
“Too much outside interference in
bus’ness.”
‘ Over taxation and governmental
ext’-avagance ”
The survey revea’ed a br’ght side
Almost 78 percent of the alumni be
liev’d that bu-lness conditions al
ready have greatly improved.
HANDWR t TTNG
MEETS SHARP REBUKE
AMHERST. Mass., April 4 (TP)
Professor Robert Rogers loft a
tern little lesson today in which
’•? charged that modern school
’hi’dren are being neglected in the
’’"ching of the three famous R’s.
"’"•’ers. teac’s English at M
r . T„ said: “Th” ability to write and
n lk like a gentleman is whoHv im
’•’•tant as mathematics or seogra
’’hv.. Onr teaching is too highly ver
’ al. Why,” said the professor, “the
nf modern d»v stiid°nt®
' n ks like the meanderings of an
*ox ! cated cockroach ”
VF’V. GOES Pi.*CES
lows. April *—<TP)
- "nrri’v>--- , pr nf th? pr»nd a - mv
remih”" t s not Iftt’ng gj
nrev«rt his vlsl‘ , r<T the
rr '“t du r ’re th® civil war. O’ey
D. A. P ohl'f. has left Drs
on a 7 oco-rn'U fnvr which
w’h teke b’m “one
-n tn a n 4 h-m«
yoi<. nn |, o j, a _
in the Tl-n” Fn-bnd
•‘''a. aiirt 'n m a on the
'at he'd like to spin y?ms with.
mirrwr-jp TO yv N
V«e.-r. A 4__ f - r nx_- rl , n
'•■''-"’mil- HtOe vi n ’<re nf V”:t’ H’h..
? a Church tndo« a r~'’'’’r<r
d’tf’oved th® We».ho J, t r’-H—h
*’'<• o nl y ewe ’n ar-isiq. ’r—n h""”*
"•’d n r-hool building .were a’s®
••"oVsbed.
I PI7ONE 32783
crnur n o-,- I
I IDEAL BEAUTY SHOP i
117 EAST BROI'GHTON STREET
• • • • SAVANNAH, GA. ....
Ml O'her Beauty Aids Reduc'd
Other Permanents Reduced
KESSEL’S
THE
“NO SUBSTITUTE”
BAKERY
SPECIALS:
ORANGE CAKES .... 40c DOZ
BROWNIES 30c DOZ
Sally Says
About Society
Two engagements have just been■
announced, both romances having
culminated trhough the mutual in
terest of the couples in their par
ticular vocation: Esther Roberts
ind Dwight Bruce, whose love of
music was the theme song of their
romance, and Lucille Deupree and
Frank Stanton, whose devout inter
est in Religious Education brought
them together. Both of these popu
lar young couples will be married
just after Easter. Esther and her
sister have been familiar sights in
Savan’Zh since they were little
tots rolling their dolls in the park,
while Lucille, though she has lived
here only a,very few years, is al.
ready one of the “home folks.”
• • •
HERE AND THERE:
Yesterday was Ethel Hewlett’s
wedding day/ She and her nice new
.usband, Thomas Clapp Fisher, Jr..
>f Salisburg, N. ,C., are off on their
honeymoon, and their many friends
in the younger set can relax, after
• the- numerous round of parties that
were given in their honor. There is
always a tear drop in the gayest
wedding bouquet—when the bride
goes away to make her home in
another city.
The Doctor Maners moving Into
their new home on 45th Street and
many of their friends sent over
plants and flowers for their new
garden.
• • •
And speaking of gardens, the
Meldrim garden blossoming forth
in lovely, soft colors this week just
before the cold wave. Pink roses
were climbing over the arched trel
lises and paleas nodded rosy heads
along the lawn on the pavement.
Now and then Mrs. Peter Meldrim
was seen on the long veranda chat
ting with visitors, with the sun on
her beautiful white hair.
• • •
Lilia Train Varnedoe (Mrs. S. L.)
still receiving tribute from child
ren who saw “Snowdrop and the
Seven Dwarfs”, which was dramat
ized and directed by her and put on
by the Junior League.
• • •
Harriett Cann (Mrs Samuel) at
a recent lecture wearing a Chinese
coat most exquisitely embroidered
in flowers.
* • •
The little Cope twins, Jean and
Girl’s Romance May Be Spoiled
By Careless Remarks of Friends
By VIRGINIA LEE
FRIENDS ARE wonderfuL We
couldn’t possibly get along without
them. But occasionally even the best
of friends get on our nerves, especi
ally when they offer unasked-for and
unwanted advice.
They can tell you exactly how to
manage your husband and children
and how to run your house. Os course
you may get many useful hints from
their counsel, but you also may be
much more confused and uncomfort
able than if they left you to manage
your own affairs.
A little friend of mine is to be
married soon. She ordered her wed
ding dress from a reliable house, but,
being excited, she worried a bit
about whether or net it would reach
her on time. With the wedding three
weeks away her loving friends were
prophesying that she wouldn’t get
it; that they knew folk who had or
dered costumes from that shop and
they didn’t come, etc., and the poor
bride kept calling the shop up and
worrying the sales folk and herself
about her wedding dress. It came
of course, in plenty of time, in spite
of ,what “they” said.
A mother troubled by friends’ re
marks writes that her daughter is
engaged to a fine, clean-cut young
man who haopens to be a few years
older than the girl. They seem suit
ed in every way, and although the
girl has tried to go with other boys,
"earer her own age, she is not hap
"y pvcept with her fiance.
“They” say. however that there
is altogether too much in
the young people's ages and the
mother is puzzled.
I would advise you to d’st’ga r d
wh’t friends say. If the man is. as
vnu say, a fine, clean-cut chan, and
they are congenial and happy in
MASSACHUSETTS PLANS I
FREQUENT VOTE ON RUM
BOSTON. April 4 (TP)—Citizens I
of Massachusetts will vote on the
'iquor licensing question every two
years if a bill now before the Bay
State legislature rolls through.
The measure calls for a biennial
•eferendum on the ale of all alco
•olic beverages in package stores.
According to the sponsors of the
•eferendum bille, the measure is
•''most certain to become a law. It 1
’’ready has passed the state sen n te
• n d is now before the House for
•tion.
GREEN ISSUES WARNING
NEW YORK. April 4 (TP) -The '
"icrican Federation of Labor Pres
et. William Green, left a warn
• with workers today against Fas-1
te t government tend'ncies. At th? |
'•me time, the labor chieftain start
'1 his listeners by advocating gov.
' nment ownersh ! p of nrivat? enter
prise when emergencies arise. He
aid: "When private enterprise, br
•avse of mi'smpnag''rnent. fails to
?r e the pu’-’lc welfare, the gov
nt m- t as.ume management
d con’rol.” •
Joan, wondering what the Easter
ounny is going to bring them.
♦ ♦ •
Lorena Smtih. popular dramatics
teacher of the Savannah High
School, wearing white flowers in
her dark hair and at the throat of
a blue dinner dress, seen at a re
cent reception.
• • •
ON THE BOULEVARD: ""
Ruth Metts (Mrs. J. C.) wearing
a smart brown wool jacket suit
with white accessories . . . Lovely
Marge Eberlain of Shawnee, Wis.,
stepping along with her charming
hostess, Mrs. Luther A. DeLoach.
Marge attends school in Boston and
spent the Spring holidays here . , .
Mrs. Pratt Adams in a very chic
green tailored suit, the skirt of
checks, with blouse of mustard
color and hat of the same shade.
Jessie Levy shopping in a little
navy straw hat with a gay posy on
looking exceedingly attractive in a
the brim . . . Mrs. Emmanuel Lewis
white straw with jaunty brim and
a white spring coat . . . Mrs. John
Sizer, mother of the blonde Frances,
seen on Bull Street after a winter
in the north. Mrs. Sizer returned
just in time to view the glory of
Forsyth Park at its zenith . . . Mrs.
John B. Seymour coming down the
steps o.f her Harris Street home in
a coa suit of soft green and .carry
ing (as usual) a spray of flowers.
*• * •
DAME FASHION SAYS:
And now that our First Lady of
the land has chosen for her -Easter
gown, a rint, with a design of mus
tard greens, this will be decidedly
an Easter of printed dresses. Vogue
says: “Take the prints. Down oc
the nursery walls parade the figures
for many dresses: Babar. the little
elephant, three little pigs and their
progeny, all twenty-six letters of
the alphabet thrown pell.mell. For
others: jewels-glowing and vivid on
dark mavkgrounds; agile harle
quins, dancing Bretons; dominoes,
Abyssinian lions, vegetables, fruits
And flowers, minus stems or leaves,
that have their names penned a
round them in microscopic letters
that you distinguish only upon close
inspection. From a distance, all of
these prints give the impression of
small, meticulously precise designs.
It’s only in a close-up that you can
get the daisies an< the rest of the
prints to tell their story.”
each other’s company, what mo<* «>>
you need?
Stop worrying, dear mother,
when your friends speak of the <L
ference in the young folks' "g-«.
merely say that you do not con.idcr
that too great a handicap, and
change the subject.
Don’t take such remarks so seri
ously. Be sensible.
DISGUSTED is a hard wroking
girl. She has been going with a boy
for two and one-half years. Sne is
18. When her mother gets provoked
witr her she tells her to leave h:me
and threatens not to let the boy
friend come to the house. Disgustea
feels she is being too much “bossed”
at home, and wants to know if she
should leave and work for her liv
ing away Lorn home, and if her
mother could put her in a home, or
make her come back if she leaves. An
other of her questions is how often
should a girl of her age be allowed
to go out at night, and how late
should she stay out?
A girl of 18 cannot be copelled to
go to a home or to go back home
if she leaves, I believe. She gener
ally is considered of age when she is
18. You might be happier away from
home as long as you have to work
hard anyway, and the nagging you
nrght f’nd that after all you a re
not so badly off as you think; you
might discover that your mother !•
net ?s mean as you supposed. It
mi»ht be an enlightening experience.
A girl of our a<re should not stay
nut more than two or three exen
<ngs a week, and then you should
be in by mlc?ni<rht. or shortly after,
because you need plenty of sleep and
r est: as vou have to work
Sari dn-'ng the day, and get up
early, I imagine.
I NEWEST WAY TO PREVENT
DEATH GAS DISCOVERED
NEW ORLEANS. La., April 4 (TP)
—An invention which it is said will
• prevent automobile exhausts from
giving off deadly carbon monoxde
gas started visitors at the national
inventors congress today.
The inventor, Charles Miner of
San Francisco, claims the mechanism
transforms the carbon monoxide into
harless g?ses by a special filtering
device. Robert Brothers, prominent
i Louisiana political leader who ex
amined the invention, said he is go
ing to seek legislation ordering all
automobiles in the state to be equip
ped with the device.
Miner also is the Inventor of an
al’ metal stratosphere dirigible pro
i n-Ped bv heated air. The d‘r’Tble is
one of the tree types of llghter-than
rir ships now being considered by
. congress for construction.
RADIO HEARINGS JUNE 15
WASHINGTON. April 4 (TP)—
Federal Communications Com
mission announced today that hear
!ngs will be held June 15 to con.
sidsr allocation of new radio broad
cast channels. The whole Commis
’ion will hear of
i tlenbone, t-l''rr-nh. r' d : o stations
and broacasting service* ’
Congratulations and Best Wishes To
Havannah’s New Daily Paper
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES
THE PUBLIC’S OPINION IS
THAT FOR PERFECT |
Laundry DRY Cleaning
SERVICE YOU ONLY HAVE TO CALL
7-11.1
. -’• - jf; • : '• « >
A Plain Dress or Suit 65c
. ’ I
FOR A PLEASANT EVENING
VISIT
The T avern
Hotel Desoto
SAVANNAH’S SMART SUPPER CLUB
Music by . . . / , ■
ED COURTENAY
and his TAVERN ORCHESTRA
MUSIC CHARGE
40c After 8:30P. M. ...
KENNETH WOLF
TAVERN HOST
■—■■■...
H |r
HERE’S YOUR CHANCE TO
BUY NOW FOR V .
■. ••
ou’ll save money and have
> u quality merchandise
Thousands of yards
of brand new .
36in. Printed Dimity 19c yd.
1 hese are small rose bud and floral patterns with white
ground. Guaranteed washable.
36in. Printed Batiste 15c yd.
Dainty patterns. Guaranteed fast colors.
40in. Dot Organdy 19c yd.
These are white grounds with colored dot. Just the
thing for kiddies dress.
MILLINERY DEPARTMENT
EASTER AND ALL SMART HEADS TURN TOWARD
EXCITINGLY GAY NEW BONNETS
HATS ifgaj?
DESTINED TO HEAD THE
HAT PARADE
No need to tell a woman t
what a new hat will do for wWO
her—and this goes double i MAJ
when its an Easter Hat. \
si.oo-s.i 19
$1.29
C ILVERS’S
5-10-15-25 c and sl. Store
'