Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, April 09, 1936, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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THE TUTTS by Crawford Young CWsfe ‘iMD A N&CrUBoR. Klb *f£U.S MON\ HOW ME KNOW<S Tret STUBBY OUSTED THE WATER 5-fußßy TRADEP Mt HIS \ L [ MA6IC LANTERN ropL , \ /ay RUBBER BOOY6 an I I RI&H T away-the wA F \X WST-5 -50 W\ z y<OVw^S«f- 1 c °pyrtt h u by CenUal Prt—AmoeUtion, !nc. z/ T i X (JW* i TH--TUTTS by Crawford Young' Clai?a Bud f-Z-s, GrRACIE VIEWS A PkERrSIdRiG 5K£ LE.Tok/ Ti*’*. Z Hixs wr MSV \zt^s- L nvy«§&-- < *»!»> Htfhi HI.J6. h> Crntml l*n*t» Awtti uilioii. In*- r • PRIVATE LIVES OF PICTURE PEOPLE T —■ REGINALD DENNY _ _ ’ BMP" " EL [His horne in Hollywood J r Ife-H at T ' w i Iw ar Si \ 11 € , W 7< j p !■< 3MT ' : v~ \ a it i p? ; . ■k ; With a plane he designed gk weWwwWM? ...i b.ii t r...„ t i, WsWim ygfe < ': <iai *— EMISMeB ' ,z Ww i :.?* ■ ■^ < ' -- : ■• wSffisßg WW* b Wm { - 6, ■' fcWfss y*tT v --~ z Olli WiR —’ WflW That Denny smile (at the height W.' ? •<• - Hi* daughter, Barbara WBI of hi> fam> ) R-p] J MRS. SABIN TO WED FORMER WAR OHIEF WASHINGTON. April 9 (TP)— Mrs. Charles H. Sabin, head of the Womens National Organization for prohibition reform, will march to the altar with former Secretary of War Dwight Davis sometime in May. . , Both Sabin and Davis are prom i inent in the nation’s political and social spotlight. Mrs. Sabin is the widow of the President of the Guaranty Trust Company of New York. Since winning her fight a gainst prohibition, she has been prominent in the Republican Party. Davis is a former Governor of the Philippine Island, a world war hero, and Secretary of War under Coolidge. He is donor of ths fam. ous Davis Cup trophy for Interna tional Tennis supremacy. The date and place of the wedding was not announced. pff A K£Ti i! i i?v-z- by PAUL ROBINSON |I E— TO SEE TOU AGOUT UNCLE CEn'S f I'M I2EADN TO TU2N NGUQ. _T 1 tefN F '^~ = A « A,l? 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COPYRIGHT '936 CENTRAL PRtSS ASSOCIATION 1 U f | j/ti///,/ 'J BP J< KpADFORD-~Q n the Isles Beyond the Ice l Wil I lAM PITT jfl ADCKirr: mav THORKILL WANTS TO MAKE ME AN I YET WE'LL BE~TI pVE AN IDEA— I'LL SUGGEST HE OP rivr tupml V ~n "~~ CLARICE GRAY FJfV™ J CAW>r WE AWFULLY HURT MVE THORA AND SIEGFRIED 4- 1 '2mJ^ ST 6ENEROUS A™ THEIR WED- HE SAID ' I YES"-CEE, JUNE, IT is] YOU ARE HAND-1 TO RETURN TO jjFYOUREFIgj RULE OVER UQTUN HEIM y .y y y ?rr H 0 41 Ww4 ZL k Hfeijy ! ®- ! - COPYRIGHT. 1,936. CENTAL PRESS ASSOCIATE U- 0 SfliY > | 'Jill V IK^AS!®^* U *\ \ U -> ™.lll lfl H T/i<M l ‘ lll| iJdll>\^^- aw^< \ X \ \ C L T ?n'^T <^'JLS NO THEV / 1 COME OUT IOCAY VUITM yUMV OOmYyOu ~\ BIT N ? ROTTEN- 7 ( SNAP AT FLIES- I TRY (. GRU6S AND TUEN I WEAR r>POP 'EM A MPMiI ) \tMBTRE U.TTIN ON Z 7 - de? ( BMb 'fit. u A_£>* '-'wM nV-jFC \dOL&T L 17 *IV/i L, <~Wj r™ v -' JU- W-gSjjrSL 1936, King Features Syndicate. Inc., Great Britain righto reaerve? Z TSE -'" 1 J'- 1 ■• ~ 3J — , _ . HOUSE GROUP TOILS ON REVENUE BILL WASHINGTON, April 9 (TP)— Weary Democratic members of the House Tax Committee are working to draft the final 1936 Revenue Bill. The committee concluded its open hearings last night long after mid night. Chairman Doughton ordered SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1936 Democratic members to return early in the morning to start draft ing their report? At the present time the tax fight seems to have boiled itself down to a strictly par tisan matter. Doughton indicated that Republi can members of the committee will not sit in the bill.drafting sessions. They are expected to be called in after the Democrats have complet ed their work. The committee mem bership consists of 17 Democrats and 8 Republicans.- ATLANTANS HOLD DIVERS OPINIONS ON RIVER PLANS ATLANTA—Divergent opinions on the economic feasibility of developing the Ch?tt?hoochee river from Atlanta to the gulf were ex-pressed by Atlanta business leaders Theodore Brent, one -f the Mississippi valley development engineers, declared waterways have proved of imT.sasurable value to all ini:nd cities having them. • A committee of five is to be appoint ed by John Cooper, executive vice president of the Chattahoochee and Gulf Association to investigate the possible value of another economic survsy cf the Chattahoochee valley at a cost of more thin SIO,OOO. Brent, who resides in New Orleans, was invited here by burlness loaders to explain the werk of conducting an economic survey. He declared that ill cities which have developed waterways hie benefited materially through the lowed cost of transportation, resulting not only from the waterway itself but from decreased rates of railroads. Proponents of the Chattahoochee va.ley project aiserted they were ern vinced thit to open a waterway from Atlanta to the gulf will "put Atlanta bick to its place in the sun as a transpsrtatUn center.” They said high rail rates are caus ing industries to settle |n other cit ies, thus producing a decrease in At lanta’s business and incidentally in real estate values. Opponents of the project pointed out that 3 $25,000 survey has already been conducted by an engineering firm at the instanc of the city of Columbuc. and that the board of engineers of the United Statss army rep.’rtsd on the survey unfjvorably from an ec onomic aspect although the waterway is feasible from an engineering stand point. W. B. Mitchell, vice president cf the Georgia Power Company, and Norman Elsas, manufacturer, were named to the five-man committee by Copper be cause there two expressed themselves doutful as to the feasibility of the proposed development, Croper will name three other members soon. Preston Arku right, president of the power company, if it would prove beneficial to the people as a whole, and provided that electricsl power de veloped was u?ed constructively. Cooper and others pointed cut that the development wil bring many oth er benefits to Georgia in addition to lower transportation rates. ‘‘lf this thing is feasible, then we want fro push it to completiin,” Cooper said. “However, if it isn’t, then we BLANKET OF OZONE KEEPS HUMAN RACE FROM RAYS OF DEATH WASHINGTON, April 9—(TP) If you are enjoying life today, you can thank a protective blanket of J rare gas ozone that completely en ’ velops the earth about 20 miles up t in the stratosphere. > Dr. Florence Meier, of the Smith ■ eonlan Institution, announced today > the discovery of a deadly wave in the ultra violet ray spectrum. This wave Inegih has the power to kill living organisms. Were it not for this t unusual ozone blanket in the stratos phere, Dr. Meier declares, this wave would hit the earth making life im possible. The unusual construction of this blanket, however, robs the wavns of their deadly powers. MAINES GOVERNOR AFTER SENATE SEAT AUGUSTA. Me., April 9—(TP)— Governor Louis J. Brann is a candi date for the U. S. Senate today. Governor Brann is the first Demo cratic governor to serve two term* In Maine since before the civil war. w< * psj’tlcal plans had remained in the dark since he recently announc •d that he wonl dnot be a candidate for reelection to the governor’s chair. So confident were Maine Demo crats that Brann would run for the eovernorshiis next fall, however, that thev b’oi’ght forward n ©candidate to ren I '''e Brann. The governor’s senatorial candi dacy announcement was accompanied bv a statement from Harold F. Du. candidate for the senate who sold he was withdrawing from the senatorial race to run for governor. SPIKE POSTPONED COLUMBUS. o. Anrll 9—(TP) A threatened city-wide strike of dry c’eaninsr worker* was nortnoned to day. Strike l»»ders exnlalned that Easter week is the busiest of the year and that the ydidn’t want their em ployers to lose the Easter week busi net*. Thev threatened to strike next week —when the Faster rush is over— un less the en*moyers meet wage and hour demands. want to drop the whole matter. That Is what we must decide within a short time.’’’ He declared he was in favor or raising the *IO,OOO from Atlanta businessmen and going on with the > economic survey. HASTY MEAL FOR HASTY ACTORS ■ - jEC"""**' j S V '' A> - t x * John Roosevelt, Lynne Russell and Laurence Davis A hasty meal for Hasty Pudding club players may well furnish the title of this photo. John Roosevelt, left, youngest son of the president, is seen dining in New York with Lynne Russell, center, and Laurence Davis. Ail three are members of the Har vard univpsity dramatic group. FORMER ACTRESS ILL DETROIT, Mich., April 9—(TP)— The former movie actress Kathryn Crawford is ill in * Detroit hospital. She Is believed to have taken an ac cidental overdose of deeping powders. Miss Crawford, who now is Mrs. James Edgar the second, was strick en In her room at a Detroit hotel. One of the nicest things about be ing a small boy, we recall, is that there are only three seasons— foot ball, basketball and baseball. AUTOISTS BEWARE! BALTIMORE, April 9—(TP)— The Association for the Protection of- Pe- ’ destrlans is displaying the word "in corporated” after its title today. The group, formed "to protect the pedes trian’s rights”, has been granted in corporation papers by the Maryland state tax commission. The pedestrian association recent-. ly was criticized by a Baltimore mag istrate for failing to press charges after causing the arrest of four motor- ' kt*. .. . - *-r <* ■ *▼ PAGE FIVE