Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
Red Mother and Her Chicks
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Bloor, 74-year-old Communist, is shown watching the 300,000
'leftists who took part in New York’s May Day Parade. For the first
time in their history Socialists and Communists marched side by side.
(Central Press)
Swanson on the Mend
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HI .rce last February, when a fall in his home fractured a rib and re
timewkV«t U P r JXiv ° f u thc Navy Swan son, whose condition
. e was extremely grave, is shown recuperating at the Naval Hospital
m Washington. (Central Press)
DAILY CROSS WORD PUZZLE
I 2. 3 4 5 e> 7 a
—
a %% to it
* w* ——
f—
IS l€> n 77/ ‘S
777, 19 20 21 777/ 22
-
22 Z 4 25 777/ 2G 27
' 28 30 31 "
3X - ’
— Mb
3€ 777 37 7/M 3S 7/7 39
JzZ* 40 44 7/7, 4-2
L_ _l_
V/dfa 8 6
ACROSS
deity
28— A river of C.
China;
tributary to
Yangtze
29 A Jewish
measure ot
capacity
>l—Provided that
82—Japanese
•ash
88— Short, erect
tail of an
animal
85—Oil—symbol
38—Second note
of the scale
• 38—Preposition
89— A seaport
of Finland
40—A gem
42—Quaker term
for you
48—Encroaches
upon
I—A fragrant
East Indian
wood
♦—An Indian of
Algonquian
stock
to—Abandoned
IS—A beam of
light
IS—Term for
father
14—Left center
(abbr.)
It —A river of
west Siberia <
ild—A suggestion
18—Greek letter
corresponding
to T
10—Three-toed
sloth
20—Lubricate
23—Credit (abbr.)
W—A long,
Render spear
I<—A Wjodiand
DOWN
5— A flat, tree
less plain
«—Plural I
7 Often
(poetic)
8— Diminutive
■uffix on
English
words of *’*
I—Ornamental
work of
scroll pattern
3—One of the
Arabian race
3 French mar
shal under
Napoleon I
4 From—prefix
infinitive
30—Skin and hah
on the skull
; 34—Personal
pronoun
35—Musical
instrument
37—Open
(poetic)
39 Expression*
of pleasure
40— Co-ordinating
conjunction
41— Adverb
42 Till sale
(abbr.)
French origin
11—Opprobrious
13— Greek letter
corresponding
to P
14— Lace-like
16— A rustic
17— It is (contr.)
19—An indefinite
> article
21—Final
24 A river in
France •
25 Goddess of
dawn
27—Sign of the
Answer to previous
pusale »
p alp c I u a|w
D E. P R I VAtToN
ET D D
oTs OF F A N
PV I NDO
p ti y
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ANTI-NOISE GROUP
IN ACTION AGAIN
NEW YORK. May 5 (TP)—The
league for less noise will bob back
into the limelight tonight. Lord
Horder of Ashford, the personal
physician to King Edward VIII.
will be honored with a dinner at
A Real, Live Unicorn
Y’our'e not
seeing things. 1® /
7 his
“Bo»>,” a real I
,ive ~l Jy ; vW
unicorn created 3 '
* Dr- '■ X.
Franklin Dove, ' x s ,4
biologist L,
of th? I)nicer-
•“yof N^U^y , ->
Maine. ‘ Roso," wHHH K 'Wff W
aside
from having W B| 1
L J* ■ W
one horn.
like th? fabled jfl V
is a perfectly
normal < j|
bull in all other
respects. | 5|
He cats hay and I B. "
bellows ■
just as if he W... >
had tico ||K
horns, like ell qH|
his kind. >IT B
(Central Press) jSR BBmHHRMRHI
BRICK BRADFORD—And the Lord of Doom by WILLIAM Rin ond CLARENCE GRAY
SIT DOWN, BRADFORD—I'M GOING TO 1 IIN THE FIRST PLACE—IT WAS NO ACCIDENT TWO OF B I'M GLAD YOU ESCAPED FOR I NEED VW I FIRST LET ME INTRODUCE MYSELF—I AM 1
TELL YOU SOMETHING THAT WILL v - ' MY SHIPS MOPPED YOURS—VW SEE, I DIDN'T KNOW ■ AND YOUR FLYING GENIUS TO WORK TEMUCHIN. LORD OF THE GOLDEN HORDE, I
MAKE YOUR EYES POP/ 1 WHO YOU WERE/ OUT A LITTLE PLAN OF MINE/ r TRUE DESCENDANT OF THE GREATEST ’ v
N f CONQUEROR WHOEVER LIVED—GENGHIS KHAN? J
"W M iiWm mHH fl cht >9 j 6. cintml »«tss association '' I 15“5 f I | ■
gAKEn r-T-T-n by PAUL ROBINSON
I inS / pNEQE PRETENDING 1 [ CSOOOMOfcNINGLI II Y TWE FOOD IS P&2FEGT S CEI2TAINLY NOT*? WHOEVER. K >
BRI CApS S WEQE MAOCEOIO L.
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MUGGS AND SKfcklEK by WALLY BISHOP
| CAUT urry.(SET lA(kiT MERITS There'S H6MiH’UHSCRUPLILOOsY_
k )TO TWE. SUoWEFT'S * rn-IAT PITCHER 1 Y AQOUT UIM. n r* /■ A / \ PITCHBS |
T\-, _ ( >teß finished WTH. J-J-he's k ' C UQH .VsaH? I \ x ’/z ) underhanded! I
TEAM. Jr -f UNSCRUPULOUS' “* / WATCH I «. K x Y J
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COPYRIGHT. 1936. CENTRAL PKESS AMOCIATIOIM ''* SS *«• Z ~ ' A V 4a.
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II L y-Q C.D.RUSSgLL
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES. TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1936
Manhattan's Astor Hotel. Lord
Horder is chairman of the Anti-
Noise league of Londo.n
Among the 50-odd organizations
Hedged to co-operate with the
league to soften New York's bat
lory of noise are Actor’s Equity,
he American Fine Arts Soceity,
The New York Federation of Wo
men’s Clubs and the Young Men’s
Board of Trade.
POLICE PLAN ENDS
THREE DAYS STRIKE
IN OATMEEAL PLANT
MINNEAPOLIS, May 5 (TP)—
Sixty employes of the Northern
Oats Company went back to work
today at the suggestion of Minnea
polls police.
The strikers have been sitting
"American Mother of 1936”
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Mrs. Frances Eleanor Smith (above), 53-year-old wife of a Claremont,
Cal., ranch manager, mother of four stalwart sons and two daughters
and grandmother of three children, has been chosen by the Golden Rule
I Foundation Mother’s Day committee as the typical American mother.
’ T ~s. Smith was born in Virginia and moved to California when she
was a girl. fCentral Press)
quietly in their chairs at the fac
tory during the past three working
lays. They refused to lift a finger
0 help keep up the factory’s pro
duction. Their presence prevented
•ompany executives from calling
in strike-breakers.
The company appealed to police
for help. The police worked out the
terms of the truce by which the
employes went bak to jvork.
WOMAN ASKS DIVORCE
BUT CAN’T REMEMBER
MATE’S FIRST NAME
BOISE, Idaho, May 5 (TP)—Try
as she may, Mrs. Edith Prater just
can't remember the name of the
man she married back in 1912.
Mrs. Prater Is sueing for divorce
THE TUTTS by Crawford Youiq
Dad SMSBY cuwh
AT FlfesT CLAP A WAS TRoOD OK HER COLLEGE &>?
duT he is developing- a very Silly sTreak
/ ALL HE DOES
u B srr ANP WRR.y
W \ Because we wonT\
/ W3|f home ANJ> BTV£n\
Zafektl $ «
Jffi MJas
wli '' nlB
Copyright, IgSS. h>«.~ X-2»
on the grounds that her husband
deserted her only a tew weeks
after they were married. In her
divorce complaint, the wife says
that she thinks her husband’s
name was Wilfred, but she isn’t
sure. She also was doubtful about
the exact date that they were mar
ried.
But she wants a divorce—Mrs.
Prater is sure about that.