Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Society ~ Home Makins ~ Milady’s
Lucile Deupree Guest At Many
I arties In Honor Os Her Coming
Marriage To Francis C. Stanton
Miss Lucile Deupree, lovely bride
iact has been honored with num
irous parties. Her marriage to
b'rancis C. Stanton will be a sash,
.onable event, taking place at high
noon, Saturday, at the Independent
Presbyterian Church.
Yesterday, Mrs. Howard Foss,
mtermined with a luncheon at her 1
iiome ou Washington Avenue, and
aer guests included a few close
tiiends of the guest of honor.
In the afternoon Mrs. O. B. Wood
complimented Miss Deupree with
i tea, at which time she shared
honors with Miss Esther Roberts,
who will be married to Dwight i
James Bruce* on next Tuesday.
The tea table was covered with
a lace cloth and centered with a <
large silver bowl of pink roses,
flanked with silver candelabra hold- 1
ing unshaded pink tapers. Mrs. W. i
E. Dunham poured coffee and Mrs. j
Mildred Roberts Clark poured tea.
Mrs. Wood receive her guests in
a smart hostess gown of cerise taf- i
feta, the bodice of which was fitted 1
with tiny rhinestone clasps down
:he front.
Miss Deupree wore a taffeta gown 1
of petunia taffeta, made along old |
Mrs. Glenn Landers New
Huntingdon Club President
Beginning what will become an
annual custom of the Huntington
Club was the luncheon on yesterday
at the General Oglethorpe Hotel.
Mrs.* Glenn Landers was named
president and was presented with
a double- corsage of spring flowers.
Mrs. Roy Chalker, the retiring pres
ident, was presented with a large
silver compote and engraved on
1* was “Huntingden Club 1936”.
Officers elected for the ensuring
year were: First vice president,
Mrs. Luther A, DeLoach; second
vice president, Mrs. W. E. Harper;
corresponding, secretary, Mrs. J. E.
D. Bacon; recording secretary, Mrs
J. W. Morgan; treasurer, Mrs. Carl
L. Tillman, Jr.; members of the
executive committee, Mrs. Roy
Chalker, Mrs. Willard Gregory. Mrs.
M. Berman, Miss Phoebe H. Elliott,
and Mrs. Otto Schwalb.
The nominating committee was
composed of Mrs. John Paulsen,
Mrs. M. Barman. Mrs. Karl Sister
heim, Mrs- .George Hunt and Mrs.
Otto Schwalb.
The luncheon table was arranged
in a U shape and was effectively
decorated with bowls of azeaaeas
and Easter Hiles. The place cards
for the distinguished guests were
arranged in crystal holders.
Mrs. Roy Chalker. th© retiring
nraeident, pre-sided. In her annual
report, Mrs. Chalker toid of the
rmembership of the club being in.
creased by the admission of 50 new
members during the year. She spoke
MRS. THESMAR HOSTESS
AT BRIDGE PARTY
H’OR VISITOR
Mrs. Alexandre Thesma; entertain
ed with bridge, this morning, at her
heme on East Huntington street, hon
oring Mrs. John Words Caldwell of
Honolulu, H. I. who is the guest of
her aunt, Mrs. B. F. Bullard.
Assisting Mrs. Thesmar in serving
was Mrs. Melvin Leopold Adler, Mrs.
Charles Whitfield and Mrs. Haskell
Theemar.
The guests included: Mrs. H. D.
Pollard. Mrs. Hudson Boyd, Mrs.
Hunter Claghorn, Mrs. Raymond De
mere, Mrs.’ Thomas Hilton, Mrs.
Malcolm Maclean, Mrs. Julian Ch*s
holm, Mr& R. L. Clancy, Mrs. W.
Walter Douglas and Mrs. Gerrard
Haines.
This afternoon Mrs. Bullard is hav
ing, a tea at the Colonial Dames
House in honor of her nelce, and has
invited a number of her friends to
call between the hours of 5 and 7
o'clock to meet Mrs. Caldwell.
Receiving, with Mrs. Bullard and
Mrs. Caldwell is Mrs. Peter W. Mel
djlm, Mrs. John L. Cabell, Mrs. F.
B. Screven and Mrs. W. L. Bird.
Mrs. Carleton B. Gibson of New
York will serve punch and Mrs. John
Seymour will pour coffee. Those who
will serve during the reception will
be Mrs. Q. Hunter Claghorn, Mbs
Caroline Meldrim, Mrs. Joseph G.
Stovall, Mrs. Samuel L. Varnadoe,
Mrs. W. Spencer Connerat and Mrs.
Julian C. Hartrldge.
Mrs. Caldwell will be the recipi
ent of many delightfully Informal
parties during her stay here.
LOCAL CHAPTER D. A. R.
HAS ANNIVERSARY
PARTY TODAY
Mrs. j. H, Calais is ostess this
afternoon to the Savannah Chapter
Daughters of the American Revolu
tion at her home on east 50th street.
The occasion will be in celebra
tion of the birthday of the chapter,
as well as Thomas Jefferson’s Birth
day and Patriot’s Day.
Mrs. Dudley Evans, Jr., is chair
man of the program for the after,
noon and she will read a paper on
“The Ministers who were in the
Revolution.”
Mrs. lola Bishop will give a brief
talk on an ancestor of hers who
was. & minister during the Revolu
tionary period.
Mrs. Harold Tuthill will make
a few remarks on the life of
Thomas Jefferson.
The meeting will be a most in
teresting one, for tomorrow the
delegates of the chapter, Mrs. John
W. Daniel, Sr., and Mrs. Luther
A. DaLoach will leave for Wash
ington, where they will represent
•■A* oftapter at the National Society
Daughter* <jf the American Revolu
tion, tfmir annua’, congress. Mrs.
fashioned lines. Her lovely blonde
hair was braided coronet fashion,
and her corsage was of pale yel
low’ roses and lilies of the valley
Miss Roberts wore a most becom
ing chiffon afternoon gown of nile
green.
Mrs. William Wayne Deupree of
Memphis, Tenn., mother of the bride
elect, was attired in a gown of black
net and her corsage was of talis
man roses.
Mrs. W. W. Newsum, also of
Memphis, Tenn,, who will be Miss
Deupree’s matron of honor, wore
an afternoon gown of flowered
ctiiffon with the green shades pre
dominating.
Today Mrs. Porter G. Pierpont
entertained with a lovely luncheon
in honor of Miss Deupree at her
home on East 50th street, to which
a few intimate friends of Miss
Deupree was invited.
The luncheon table was most
beautifully arranged with a lace
cover and the center was a silver
bowl of orange blossoms.
Tomorrow afternoon Mrs. Ben.
jamin S Barnes will entertain in
formally at her home in Gordons
ton for Miss Deupree.
of gratifying financial condition of
the club and told of its activities
during the season just ending. The
club has assisted with the sale of
Christmas seals and also has donat
ed to the City Federation’s scholar
ship fund at the Armstrong Junior
College.
Interesting reports were made by
the treasurer, Mrs. Moses Berman;
the corresponding secretary, Mrs.
J. E. D.Bacon and the department
chairmen, Mrs. Glen Landers, Mrs.
J. H. Allen, Mrs. George Hunt, Miss
Lois Pugh and Mrs. William M.
Roberts.
Reports were also made by Mrs.
John Paulsen, Chairman of the
house committee. Mrs. Karl Sister
heim and Mrs. Luther A. DeLoach,
chairman of hospitality; Mrs. W
M. Gregory, chairman of refresh
ments; Mrs. C. J. Redmond and
Mrs. Otto Schwalb, chairman of the
bridge tournament and Mrs. Elliott
Wilson, chairman of membership.
Mrs. Allen introduced Miss T>ois
. Pugh, who gave a toast to the re
tiring president in her own delight
ful way. and after Mrs. Landers
had taken the chair. Miss Pugh also
made a toast to her.
The luncheon opened with the
singing of “America” and .closed
with “Old Lang Syne”. A musical
program was presented by Hugh
Taylor, tenor, accompanied by Miss
Delores Cowart, and by David
Odrezln. violinist, accompanied by
Mrs. Eunice Finn.
BAGLEY CAMP WOMEN
MAKE PLANS FOR
TWO PARTIES
The Ladies’ Auxiliary to Worth
Bagley Camp, United Spanish War
Veterans held a most interesting
meeting yesterday. Plans for a card
party on May 5 and a birthday
party on May 12 were made. Mrs
Lottie Powers was appointed chair
man of the card party which will
be held at the E. & W. Laundry
and serving on her committee will
be Mrs. Nell O'Brien, Mrs. Mary
Blocker and Mrs. Fannie Stratton.
The birthday party will be held
at the close of the Veteran’s meet
ing on May 12 and Mrs. Mary Knox
is in charge of all arrangements.
The Auxiliary will participate in
the Memorial Day parade. Cars
will be furnished all members who
wish to attend and Mrs. Fannie
Stratton is chairman.
Mrs. T. Hunter Henderson, State
Department president, was given a
rising vote of thanks for the delight
ful manner in which the national
president, Mrs. Irma Vogel, and
the national chief of staff, Mrs.
Mildred Rhodes, were entertained
during their recent visit to the local
auxiliary.
Reports of the salad sale were
gratifying. At the close of the bus
iness session, Mrs. Nell O’Brien,
chairman of the entertainment com.
mittee, presented some of the pupils
of Alicia Baran’s dancing class in
a program. A tango was danced by
Gloria Carswell, a toe dance by
Joy McGinn and a tap dance by
Jeanne Colvin and Jane Joyce ac
companied by Mrs. James Gleason.
Delightful refreshments were serv
ed at the close of the program.
SACRED HEART SCHOOL
STUDENTS TO GIVE
1936 FROLICS
The children of the Sacred Heart
School, will present The Junior Frol-,
ics of 1936 on Thursday afternoon
at 3:30 o’clock and again Friday
evening April 17th, at 8:30 o’clock
at the Municipal Auditorium.
The program is entirely new and
is presented under the auspices of
the Parent-Teacher Association, and
is directed' by Miss Alicia Baran.
There are over 400 children in the
cast.
The performance will consist of the
latest song and dance hits of the sea
son and a collegiate minstrel winds
up the show in true college style.
Tickets nay be obtained from the
pupils of the school or at the mu
nicipal Auditorium on Friday morn
ing.
Daniel is th© State Regent of the
D. A. R., and Mrs. Luther A. De-
Loach will serve on the house com
mittee.
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Beige and brown combine in
Carole Lombard'* beige suit, with
brown hat, table scarf. .
Young Folk
Get Habit
Os Fighting
Wife ToidTo Mend
Her Ways So Mate
May Follow
By VIRGINIA LEE
FOLK CAN get. into the habit of
quarreling as easily as anything. And,
contrariwise, as Tweedie Dee says,
they can make it a custom not to
quarrel; to think twice, or count
flve-and-twenty before saying an an
gry word.
Twenty-one-year old Brownie, who
wrote to me yesterday, and her hus
band, had gotten into the habit of
squabbling, and in consequence they
were thinking about a divorce.
Now if they did not love each
other, I suppose it would be the best
thing to tell them to separate, but
Brownie said in her letter that she
loved her husband and he cared for
her, and neither was interested in
anyone else.
Then it seemed the simplest, as
well as the most sensible thing, to
tell them to stop bickering, and see
if they can’t be happy together.
Now I told Brownie what I thought
and said she should start right in by
not saying any more mean things
about her husband’s family, even if
they were hard to bear. I’ll prob
ably be accused o f'.'picking on the
woman’’ again. But she was the one
that wrote to me, and so she should
taJce the medicine prescribed.
You see, if she starts to reform it
will give her husband something to
think about, and he may conclude
that he hasn’t been treating Brownie
any too well. And when each begins
to think that he is to blame and
tries to do better, things are in a
good way to mend.
SARAH was invited out to dinner
and requested to ask the blessing.
She did not know one and wrote to
ask me for one so that she may be
prepared next time.
“Bless us, our Lord, and these. Thy
gifts, which we are about to receive
from Thy bounty, through Christ, our
Lord. Amen.”
FINAL CONCERT OF
PHILHARMONIC TUESDAY
The final concert of the Philhar
monic Orchestra will be given next
Teusday evening at Lawton Memorial,
it was announced by Frank Damore,
director, this morning.
Mr. Damore and William Wolf, con
cert master, have arranged a program
of unusually brilliant numbers to close
the season of symphonic music. Two
overtures, “ The Poet and the Peasant”
by Suppe, and “ The Calif of Bagdad”
by Boieldieu, will be included in the
program. Other numbers will be
"Blue Danube Waltz” (Strauss) “Ech
oes from the Metropolitan Opera
House” (arranged by Trbani) ’’Hun
the Ballet Coppelia” (Delibes).
Tickets may be purchased at the
door.
AUTHOR STARTS FARM
NEW YORK, April 15—(TP)—Au
thor Sherwood Eddy is starting a co
operative farm in Mississippi for
evicted cotton share-croppers. Eddy
was prominently identified with the
Y. M. C. A. before and during the
World War. Recently he took a trip
through Arkansas, Tenni'see and
Mississippi. Said Eddy: “I found
peonage, serfdom, poverty, disea: e
and sometimes terror and violence.”
He added that share-croppers make
an average of only about SSO a
year.
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 193$
THE SUIT
IS VARIED
It May Be All One Color With
Separate Scarf, or Contrasted
Skirt and Coat
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Printed taffeta drew with yellow and ribbon bow, a Stein &
Blaine modeL.
Testing Efficiency
Os Bodily Control
HOW SECONDARY NERVOUS SYSTEM WHICH ADJUSTS
ORGANIC FUNCTIONS IS TRIED
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
WE SPOKE yesterday of our won
derful secondary nervous system, not
part of the brain and spinal cord
and ordinary nerves, but the nervous
system that works while we sleep
and adjusts all the internal func
tions of the body so that they will
work smoothly, if it were not for
this series of nerve ganglia we would
be mixed up indeed —our digestive
system might begin to move the
wrong way; all the blood vessel in
the kin might dilate so that most
of the blood in the body was stag
nated there, and the consequent re
frigeration would drop our tempera
tures to the point where life would
be extinct.
Indeed, occasionally we see exam
ples of the paralysis of this system,
as when a man receives a heavy blow
in the abdomen and goes into a con
dition known as “shock,” with pro
fuse, clammy perspiration, deadly
pallor ot the entire surface, feeble,
rapid, heart beat, and unconscious
ness. If death occurs not a single
injury can be found in any internal
organ to account for it. He had died
a physiological death from paralysis
of his automatic nervous system.
A famous example, which made the
system familiar to the newspaper
readers of my youth, was when Fitz
simmons hit Corbett in the solar
plexus. The solar plexus of ganglia
is part of the automatic nervous
system.
Sweating is One Test
It U well that we have some tests
to determine the efficiency of this
controlling body. They are based on
two or three of the most important
functions of the automatic nervous
system. One is control of sweating.
It is possible to test very delicate
ly the degree and amount of sweat
ing in the body by painting the skin
with an alcoholic solution of cobalt
blue. The patient is then put into a
heat cabinet which has an environ
mental temperature of 130 degrees
Fahrenheit. In the presence of mois
ture the blue stain is changed to
red, and the contrasting colors give
a graphic representation of the
amount an dlocation of sweating.
For instance, there is a condition
in which the blood pressure falls
with changes of posture. In these pa
tients, the sweat test shows that
sweating occurs only on certain small
areas of the skin surface, and this
is undoubtedly associated with ir
regular dilation of the Mood vessels
of the body surface.
Another test of measuring the ef
ficiency of dilation or constriction of
the small blood vessels is called the
“cold presser test.” One hand is im
mersed above the wrist in ice water
for one minute. Reading of the blood
pressure in the opposite arm is tak
en every 15 seconds. An increase in
the blood pressure should occur. Af
ter the arm is removed from the
water the blood pressure should, re
turn to its normal level within two
minutes.
These, with several other teats,
have been devised to give us informa
tion about that important regulator
of our functions, the automatic ner
vous system.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Six pamphlets
by Dr. Clendening can now be ob
tained by sending 10 cents in coin, for
each, and a self-addressed envolepe
stamped with a thrae-oent stamp,
to Dr. Logan Clendening, in care of
Savannah Daily Times. The pamph
lets are: ' Indigestion and Constipa
tion,” "Reducing and Gaining,” “In
fant Feeding,” "Instructions for the
Treatment of Diabetes,” “Feminine
Hygiene” and “The Care of the Hair
and Skin,”
BUSINESS GIRLS TO
PROVE THEY CAN
LIVE ON $22 WEEK
CHICAGO, April 15—(TP)— Pert
stenographers, secretaries and other
Chicago business girls have just fig
ured out they can live in perfect
comfort on $22 a week. What is more,
they are going to have a style show
to prove it.
The girls jotted down their living
expenses in a survey conducted by
Y. W. C. A.
The results showed that apart from
board and room, clothes take most
of the girls’ money. They figured
they pay about $8 for an office dress,
S2O for a coat and about $5 a pair
for shoes. Hosier)' and other acces
sories ran in proportion.
Just to show the nice clothes they
can afford on the estimated $22
weekly salary, the business girls will
have a style show at one of the Y.
o W. C..A.
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Striped whipcord shirk is topped
with black tailored jacket, with
< Marguerite Churchill posing.
Non-Talker
Is Worry
To Parents
Mothers Needlessly
Lose Sleep Over
The Problem
By GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D.
Head Department Parent Education
Cleveland College, Western
Reserve University
UNDULY long delay in speech de
velopment may indicate deafness or
mental retardation. Yet many a
mother loses needless nights of sleep
worrying over the baby who won’t
talk. Perhaps the youngster has been
urged too much to talk. Perhaps he
has a good sign language well obey
ed by others of the family-
From the University of Oklahoma
comes a study by Dr. M .M. Nice, of
a girl who had a vocabulary of only
five words at the age of two years,
and only 49 at the age of three. But
at the age of 40 months she began
to talk like other children, and hence
forth. developed speech very rapidly
having at the age of four years a
vocabulary of 1,135 words. When this
child did talk her speech was not so
much for conversation as for self
expression.
Dr. Nice believes that children
learn through imitation to talk much
earlier than they need to. Do you
know that twins, as a rule, speak
later than dp other children? Ap
parently they can communicate with
each other with little, or no conven
tional speech.
Wean at Nine Months
Most pediatricians advise that the
breast-fed baby be weaned at the age
of eight or nine months. Now sup
pose the baby were nursed 12 months
or more? Suppose, on the other hand,
he were nursed but a month or less.
Dr. M. Freeman of Smith college
made a study of mothers at an insti
tute of child guidance. It was found
that half the mothers whose infants
nursed but a month or less had re
jected their children, while two-thirds
of the mothers who nursed their
children for 12 months or longer
were described as over-protective.
This business of. weaning is more
than a mere physical problem.
From Smith college also comes a
study of nail-biting, by L. E. Veitz.
Nail-biters were compared with no
nail-biters. It was found that girls
bite nails most frequently between
the ages of 8 and 15; boys between
9 and 12. (I wonder if nail-biting
is not on the increase, thanks to in
creasing strains of our civilization.)
No relation to intelligence nor
physical condition was found. Nor
was evidence found to support the
popular association of nail-biting
with masturbation or introvertive
tendencies. But there was evidence of
much greater tension in the families
of the nail-biters — as you and I
would expect.
STINGING CRITICISM
IN RESIGNATION OF
WPA ADMINISTRATION
TACOMA, Wash., April 15— (TP)
The WPA administrator for the state
of Washington packed plenty of
stinging criticism into his resigna
tion.
The administrator, George Cannon,
pointed out that the WPA under his
guidance had furnished jobs for 50,-
000 men and had spent only $14,-
offo:ooo.
On the other hand, Cannon said,
other federal agencies in the state
had spent $55,000,000 to employ 4,-
000 men. The difference, Cannon
hinted, was too much for him to
swallow. He handed in his resigna
tion at the end of a Jefferson Day
banquet speech, > " ■ __
Church Women Make Annual
Tour of Historic Homes Friday'
Mrs. F. B. Screven is general chair
man of the tour of historic homes,
which will be open to the public Fri
day afternoon. Sponsored by the
Woman’s Auxiliary of Christ Church.
The committee in charge of arrange
ments are: Mrs. A. H. Stoddard,
Mrs. H. T. Dearing, Mrs. Frank S.
Baggett, Mrs. Frank Bragg, Mrs. W.
B. Stratford. Miss Sadie Kfent and
Stephen N. Harris is in charge of the
transportation committee. Reserva
tions may be made by telephoning
Mrs. M. H. Barnes, 2-0322 or Mrs.
Stoddard 2-2058.
The hostesses at the various homes
will be: Christ Church Rectory, Mrs.
H. T. Dearing and Miss Jane Wright;
GIBNER-TRAIN
Tomorrow the thoughts of many
Savannahians will travel to far away
Hawaii, and their best wishes will
go to Miss Charlotte Bruce Gibner
and William Frew Train, Lieutenant,
U. S. A. who will be married in the
little post chapel, at Schofield Bar
racks, Hawaii, at four-thirty in the
afternoon.
Miss. Gibner is the attractive
daughter so Col. and Mrs. Herebrt
Charles Gibner of Schofield Bar
racks, Hawaii. The wedding will be
a full military afafir, after which
Col. and Mrs. Gibner will entertain
with a reception at the Officers’
Club.
Lieut. Train, who is the son of the
late Mr. and Mrs. William F. Train,
spent the greater part of his boy
hood in Savannah and has many
friends who are deeply Interested in
his marriage tomorrow. He was grad
uated from the United States Naval
Academy in 1931 and for the past
year has been stationed at Fort
Shafter, Hawaii.
O» the Air
CBS
WEDNESDAY—APRIL 15, 1935
4:00 p. m., Curtis Institute of
Music; 4:45 p. m., Clyde Barrie,
bar.; 5; 00 p. m., Benay Venuta,
songs; 5:15 p. m., Wilderness Road,
sketch; 5:30 p. m., Robert Mack,
bar.; 5:45 p. m., The Goldbergs,
sketch; 6:00 p. m., Buck Rogers,
sketch; 6:15 p. m., Buddy Clark;
6:30 p. m„ News; Eton Boys, quar
tet; 7:00 p. m., Myrt and Marge,
sketch; 7:15 p. m., Paris Night
Life; 7:30 p. m-, Kate Smith’s Hour,
Jack Miller’s Orch.; 7:45 p. nj.,
Boake Carter, commentator; 8:00
p. m., Cavalcade of America; 8:30
p. m., Burns and Allen, comedians;
9:00 p. m„ Lily Pons, sop.; 9:30
p. m., Refreshment Time, Ray
Noble’s Orch.; 10:00 p. m., Gang
Busters; 10:30 p. m., March of
Time; 11:00 p m., Dance Orcb,;
11:30 p. m., Bob Crosby’s Orch.
THURSDAY—APRIL 16, 1936,
7:30 a. m„ Organ Reveille; Fred.
Feimel organist; 8:00 p. m» On the
Air Today; Ted Strater, pianist;
8:15 a. m., Song Stylists, quartet;
8:30 a» m., Salon Musicale; 9:00
p. m., Greenfield Village Chapel;
9:15 a. m., Dan Kelly; Orch; 9:30
a. m., Grand Duchess Marie, man
ners and etiquette; 9:45 a. m., Fred
Feibel, organist; News; 10:00 a.
m., Fred Skinner, songs; 10:15 a.
m., Music in the Air; 11:00 a. m„
Mary Lee Taylor, cooking talk;
11:15 a. m., Romance of Helen
Trent; 11:30 a. m., Just Plain Bill;
11:45 a. m*, Rich Man’s Darling,
sketch; 2:00 noon, The Voice of
Experience; 12:15 p. m., Poetic
Strings; 12:30 p. m., “Mary Marlin",
sketch; 12:45 p. m., Five Star
Jones, sketch; 1:00 p. m., Jimmy
Brierly; Orch; 1:15 p. m., Matinee
Memories; 1:45 p. m.,' Academy of
Medicine; 2:00 p. m., Between the
Bookends; 2:15 p. m., Happy Hol
low, sketch; 3:00 p. m., Oleanders,
Male Quartet; 3:15 p. m., Jimmie
Farrell, bar.; 3:30 p. m., Do You
Remember?; 4:00 p m., Salvation
Army Band; 4:15 p. m„ Howells
& Wright, piano duo; 4:30 p. m.,
Greetings from Old Kentucky; 5:00
p. m., Lewis Gannett, “Books”.
Theater and Radio.. News -
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LUCAS THEATRE
Wednesday *
Margaret Sulla van in *** -
“THE MOON’S OUR HOME”
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
Shirley Temple In .
- . '* ‘ CAPTAIN JANUARY ” <
BUQU THEATRE f
Wednesday t
Stage: Say It With Ladies.
SCREEN: “LOVE ON A BET”
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
Jeanette McDonald and Nelson Eddy In
“ROSE MARIE” ,
1 "" '■ 1 ■
ODEON THEATRE * * (
4 t’ Wednesday and Thursday
“TRANSATLANTIC *
TUNNEL”
With Richard Dix and Madge Evans
"" * »»■ " «'■ - I Ul ■ 1V •
FOLLY THEATRE
Wednesday and Thursday )tr
Jack Benny and Eleanor Powell in
“BROADWAY MELODY” 1.
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■ i»Lywtiwi' 1 . 11 q
ARCADIA THEATER ■
Wednesday and Thursday ;
Jane Withers In 1 1
" PADDY ™ AY '’ - *4
igjK SAVANNAH THEATRE 7
Eddie Cantor In '
\ <BT£IKJB me raig” w
Meldrim Home, Mrs. Peter W. Mel
drim and Mrs. George Noble Jones;
Colonial Dames House, Miss Eugenia
Johnston and Mrs. Garrard Haines;
Randolph Anderson Home, Miaa
Marie Nisbet and-- Mrs; Robert Harri
son; Thomas home, Mrs. R. L Mer
cer and Mrs. F. B. Screven.
Three homes in the southern
section of the city wall be shown.
The homes of Mrs. E. S. Trosdal,
Mrs. Thomas Hilton and Mrs. John
J. Bouhan. These three homes are
modem, but lovely.
This tour is conducted annually
and is anticipated with muph inter
est. Cars plan to leave the rectory,
211 East York Street, promptly
3 o'clock.
mvww-mmmmhk.
MERCERS ENTERTAIN
FOR MRS. E. J; MEDHZLIi
Complimenting Mrs. Edward J.
Medhill of Orangeburg, N. Y. who is
the charming guest of Mr. anfr Mr*.
P. S. Moses, MF. and Mrs. George
A. Mercer, Jr. entertained last even
ing with % dinner party at their
home on East Forty-fourth street.
Mr. and Mrs. Mercer’s guests in
cluded only a few close friends.
Numerous parties have been plan
ned for Mrs. Medhill during her
here.
PUREBRED’’ COBttgCT
The terms, “thoroughbred” and
“full-blooded,” are often mistakenly
used in place of the term, “prebred,”
Strictly speaking. Thoroughbred is
the name of a breed- of’ light racing
horses. A purebred animal Is a mem
ber of some particular breed and 1*
registered or eligible to registry in
the herd book of that breed, A. pure
bred animal usually possesses a di»
tinctive and useful type which it has
the power to transmit to its offspring,
because it is backed by a long line of
ancestor®; of the same type.
WEDNESDAY—APRIL 15, 1936.
NBC
4:00 p. m. f Womans Radio Re
view; 4:15 p. m., Backstage. Wife,
sketch; 4:30 nj„ Girt Alone,
sketch; 4:45 p, m», Magic Voices
sketch; &01h p> m„ Navy Band
Symph, Orcb>; fc3R p. m>, Twin
City Foursome; 5:45 p. m„ Top
Hatters’ Qrch.; p, m„ Flying
Time, sketch; ftlfc p. m.» Clajk
Denins, tnr.; Qrchj fcao p. m>,
News; Jackie Heller; 6;45p> nt,
Lowell Tbonw, commentator; 7:00
p. m„ Amos ’n Andy; 7:15 p. m„
Unde Ezra’s Radio Station; 7:30 p.
m., Lum and Abner; 7:4ft p, hk,
Roake Carter, commentator; 8:00 p.
m., One Man’s Family; 8:30 p. m,
Wayne King’s Orqh.J Sfc 00 r. pt,
wru. Coo ripe Club. of Virginia;
9:30 p. m„ Nat’l Catholic Educa
tion Asaln Prg®.; 1.0:00 p. m», Your
Hjt Parade; 10:30 p. m>, Democratic
State. Committee. Dinner, Postmast
er General Farley, speaker; 11:00
p. m., Amos ’n Andy; 11:15 R.
Henrq Busse’s, Orch; 11:30 p. pl,
Phil Levant’* Ortgb; 1:45 p> nt,
'Mrs. Jesse Crawford, organist.
» THURSDAY—APRIL. Ift 109 ft
7:30 * m., Jolly Jane;
7:4ft am., Yoichi Hlr.aoka, xylo
phonist, New*; 8; 00 a. j®>,. Morning
Devotions; 8:15 a, m., Good. Morn
ing Melodies; 8:30 a. m„ Cheerio;
8:45 a. m., LandtTrio and White;
9 :00 a, m., Doctor Jim, sketch; 9:15
a. m., The Streamliners; 10:00 a.
m.. News;, Wife. Saver; 10:15 a. m..
Music in the Air; 10:30 a. m.,
Today’s Children, sketch; 10:'45 a,
m., Master Builder; 11: OO a. m.,
Laying Cornerstone of Dept of In.
terior Btdg. Pres. F. D- Roosevelt,
speaker; 11:15 a, m., Laying of a
Cornerstone; 11:30 a. m«, Fountain
of Son; 12:00 noon, Gene Arnold
■and Ranch Boys; 12:1& p. m., Hon
eyboy and Sassafras; 12:30 p. m..
Merry Madcaps; l:0hp. m», News;
Market and Weather Reports; 1:15
p. m., Maurice Spitajny's Orch.;
1:30 p. m., Gias* pianist and
ter; 1:45 p. b*, Dot and Will,
sketch; ?:00 p. m,, Words and Mus
ic; 2:30 p. m., Rirth of a Song; 3:00
p. m„ Oieandere, Male Quartet;
3:15 p. m,, Ma Perkins, sketch;
3:30 p. m.. Vio and Sade.