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|MB| never before
! l .Jiy*&yK HASIT BEEN
POSSIBLE i
■’ J TO OFFER SUCH V.
-JkL'lfcC USED
\ CAR
I- Come In Today ( SETIHESE I VALUES
I ’ Examine These \ BEFORE J A Few of Our Many
Car Bargains USED CAR SPECIALS!
1932 1932 1933 1930
” Pontiac Sedan Pontiac Sedan Plymouth Coach Chevrolet Coach
" $145 Down $125 Down $145 Down SSO Down
S2O Monthly sl7 Monthly s2l Mw/hly „ sls Monthly
1931 K 1932 1933 1931
’ Plymouth Seda' Ford V-8 Sedan Chrysler Six Sedan Ford Tudor Sedan
$75 Down $95 Down $145 Down $75 Down
sl7 Monthly S2O Monthly $29 Monthly sl7 Monthly
1929 1935 1934 1932
L r Buick Sedan Plymouth Coupe Chevrolet Coach Chevrolet Coach
SSO Down $lB5 Down $l6O Down $125 Down
sls Monthly $36 Monthly $23 Monthly sl7 Monthly
CHATHAM MOTOR CO.
I; USED CAR DEPARTMENT I
|L 415 WEST LIBERTY STREET.
: ENTER THE BATHING
BEAUTY CONTEST
—SATURDAY—
MAY 30, 1936
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I iß*te >■> M
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BhSwlswuß
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Ii IN CASH PRIZES!
I • FILL OUT COUPON LISTED
I BELOW FOR ENTRY
I ; TWO GROUPS—Those from Chatham County ami
I : Those From Out of Chatham County. Same Prizes
I I in Each Group. Mail the Coupon Listed Below to
I the Chamber of Commerce.
■ "■ ■
I ; Please enter my name as a contestant in the Bathing
I I Beauty Contest at Savannah Beach on May 30, the Win-
I ner to receive $50.00 in cash, first prize. Signed:
I NAME
I 1 ADDRESS
JAIL SEEKS CURE
FOR WANDERLUST
FOURTEEN PRISONERS AT
LANCASTER HAVE ES
CAPED IN YEAR
LANCASTER, N. H„ May 15 (TP)
The embarrassed commissioners of
Coos county got busy today to try to
cure its jail prisoners of their wan
derlust. An investigation of jail con
ditions was turned over to Judge
Thornton Lorimer who promptly de
manded action to stop the escape of
prisoners. The Judge said that no
less than 14 prlssners escaped from
the county house of correction in the
past year.
Superintendent Evan Cole blamed
the successful breaks on the fact
that he has only one guard for every
15 or 20 prisoners on the field work
gangs.
Cole said the prisoners don’t es
cape from the jail. It’s only when
they get out into the open that the
prisoners turn their wanderlust into
action.
AMY MOLLKON
BACK IN LONDON
LONDON, May 15 (TP).—A large
crowd was on hand at Croydon air
port today to greet the woman flier,
Amy Mollison, when she grounded
her plane after a record flight around
Africa in 11 days.
Mrs. Mollison flew her speed ship
in from Vienna today.
About two weeks ago she left Lon
don. for Capt Town. She flew down
the west coast of Africa in a little
more than three days, breaking the
old record by 11 hours. On her home
ward trip she went up the east coast
to Cairo and Athens. The return
flight set a new record of 112 hours
and 17 minutes.
The British fliers hailed Mrs. Mol-
Ikon’s circuit of Africa as the great
est feat of flying made this year by
either man or women.
RABHAN’S
E & W
MARKET
Telephones 2-2105—6
715 EAST BROAD ST.
Ga, Round, Loin
or T.Bone ZUC
Beef, Hip or 1 t-
Shoulder Roast . IvV
Beef or Veal 2 «)1 /
Pot Roast /2C
Boneless Veal or f Q
Beef Shoulder Roast ... lOC
Rib Veal Chops. QC/.
2 lbs. for JJC
’ Western Round, Loin Qfl-
or T Bone JUC
Western Hip or 1 Qz,
Shoulder Roast lOC
Ricefield Leg o’ 1 Q_
Western Lamb 2 (I
Shoulder, Boneless .
Western Leg
o’ Lamb m«)C
18V2C
Our Own Smoked • Ot-.
Hams £DC
White’s Cornfield QQ/s
Sliced Bacon aJOC
Rineless Sliced 0
Bacon
Rorsters. 1
(Young)
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY. MAY 15. 1936
TOWNSEND PLAN
BEFORE VOTERS OF
OREGON TODAY
SENATOR McNARY FACES
STIFF FIGHT TO WIN
G. O. P. NOMINATION
PORTLAND, Ore., May 15 (TP)
The strength of Oregon Townsendit:s
will be put to a test today when pri
mary voters go to the polls.
Officials of the Townsend plan or
ganization in the Beaver state insist
that 63 per cent of the thousands of
Townsend club members will vote ac
cording to their leaders’ orders. Or
ganisation Republican and Demo
cratic leaders, however, maintain that
squabbles among Towns: ndite fac
tions will split the pension plan
forces’ power considerably.
President Roosevelt is unopposed on
the Democratic presidential primary
ticket and Senator William E. Borah
has no opponents on the Republican
ticket. However, a heavy write-in
vote for Governor Alf Landon of
Kansas and Colonel Knox of Chicago,
is predicted by campaign managers
for the other two leading G.O.P.
nomination aspirants.
Senator Charles L. McNary, minor
ity leader in the senate, faces what
threatens to be a hard fight to win
renomination on the G.O.P. ticket.
Townsendites have declared war on
McNary and have entered two can
didates, T. G. Nelson and Sam H.
Brown, for the senatorial nomination.
AVIATOR HUGHES
AIR RECORD ADDS
SSO TO MILLIONS
FRIEND PAYS OIL MAN
AND PRODUCER BET
LOST ON FLIGHT
GLENDALE, Cal., May 15 (TP)—
The young movie producer, Howard
Hughes, can add SSO to his oil mil
lions today. Hughes, one of the na
tion's foremost amateur pilots, won
the SSO by breaking a Chicago-to-
Glendale oir record in his powerful
low-winged Northrop Gamma plane.
A friend bet hughes SSO that he
couldn't lunch in Chicago and have
dinner in California. The young movie
producer snapped up the wager, fueled
his special-built plane and roared
away from a windy city airport at
2:05 p.m., Eastern Standard time yes
terday. At 7:15 p.m., Pacific Stand
ard time, the wheels of Hughes’ plane
touched ground at Glendale and the
young millionaire was at the dinner
table a few minutes later.
Hughes covered the distance in
eight hours and ten minutes—four
hours faster than the previous rec
ord for the ditsance. The old record,
however, was set up by an ordinary
transport plane and was not regard
ed as much of a mark for Hughes to
shoot at in his blunt nosed streak of
lightning.
The movie producer also holds the
coveted transcontinental speed record,
the Miami to New- York record, and
the high sped mark for planes flying
in an enclosed course.
BOY, 16, LOSES PLEA
TO ESCAPE CHAIR
JERSEY APPEALS COURT
TURNS DOWN APPEAL
OF KILLER
TRENTON, N. J., May 15 (TP)
Sixteen-year-old Jacob Ciemiengo's
one hope for escape from the electric
chair lies in the New Jersey court
of pardons today-
The boy, condemned to die-for the
murder of a 65-year-old poultry farm
er, lost his appeal for a new trial
after the state’s highest tribunal, the
courtof errors and appeals, upheld f
lower court verdict. Unless te court
of pardons commutes Jacob's sen
tence to life imprisonment, the boy
will go to the chair.
Ciemiengo’s death sentence roused
a storm of controversy over whether
one so young should be executed
Clergymen, legal groups and social
service workers joined in pleading for
reversal of the death sentence. If
Jacob dies in the chair, he will be
the youngest execution victim In New
Jersey history.
‘ ‘ ENCEPHALOGRAPH”
WILL TELL HOW BAD
YOUR “HANGOVER” IS
KANSAS CITY. May 15 (TP)
A group of Harvard medical
scientists has inventde a machine
to- measure “hangovers.”
The scientists demonstrated
the machine, called an encephalo
graph, before the convention of
the American Medical Association
in Kansas City today. It record
the pulsations in an individual's
mind, quickly telling the differ
ence between the person with a
hangover and one who is strictly
sober.
A sober mind subjected to th’
machine records a beat of 50
microvolts. The machine goes into
high gear, however, when given
the hangover test. It reveals that
a mind under the influence of
alcohol packs a wallop of 200
microvolts.
DEMOCRATIC LEADERS
IN CONNECTICUT MEET:
TO SUPPORT NEW DEAL
NEW HAVEN. Conn., May 15 (TP)
—Democratic State Committee mem.
bers from all oarts of Conecticut are
convening in New Haven today. The
•'utmeg state New Dealers are meet
ing to choose their delegation to the
Philadelphia convention.
A 100 per cent Roosevelt ticket Is
exoected. although some Anti-Roose
velt Democratic committeemen may
voice a plea for opposition to the New
, Deal at the state session,
FILM NEWLYWEDS “SETTLE DOWN”
A**
* WsSI f-
will- * rr 1
1
Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Lowe
The honeymocu is over when the husband starts giving his
wife pointers on cooking. From the looks of the kitchen scene
in Beverly Hills, Cal., we’d say the Edmund Lowes are through
hcneymooning. Lowe, film star, and his wife, the former Rita
Kaufman, film stylist, were married recently in New York.
VICTIM OF ETHIOPIAN UPRISING
TELLS OF HORRORS ENCOUNTERED
ADDES ABABA. May 15 (TP)
Eleanor Meade today told details of
the terror which broke loose in the
riot maddened city of Addis Ababa
just before the arrival of the Italion
army. • . • .
Miss Meade is 30. She was once
a reporter in Massachusetts and in
Brooklyn. She joined Transradio to
become radio’s first woman war cor
respondent .
She wore meh’sblue trousers, a
white shirt and men's socks which
did not match. All her personal pos
sessions, the things that women find
implacable, were stolen by the Ethi
opian looters.
“I’ve searched native houses by
the score,” Miss Meade said, “in an
effort to find my belongings. For a
time at the height of the looting I
went hungry. Food still is scarce.”
A courtplaster was across Miss
Meade's nose—symbol of the hor
ror she encountered at the height of
the madness in Addis Ababa.
She was forced to barricade her
self in her quarters. Fires were break
ing out in the city. Looters were ob
eying the law of the jungl?, killing
and destroying. The rioters finally
beot down the door that protected
Miss Meade from the wild cltv. A
Harlem negro woman. Eudora Paris,
saved her from assai’ants, but not
until she was beaten.
“We fled into the streets of the
burning city,” Miss Meade said. “
think I was more dead than alive.
We hid wherever we could find any
shelter until a relief car found us.
I was taken to the Japanese lega
tion.
LEGAL NOTICE
STATE OF GEORGIA
CHATHAM COUNTY
TO THE SUPERIOR' COURT OF
SAID COUNTY:
The petition of ALFRED H.
SINGER and PERRY J. SINGER,
both of the City of Savannah, Geor
gia, respectfully shows:
1. That they desire for them
selves and associates to be incor
porated under the name and style
of
A. H. SINGER COMPANY
for a period of twenty (20) years
with the privilege of renewal at
the end of that period.
2. That the principal place of
business of the proposed corpora
tion shall be in the City of Savan
nah, but shall have the right and
power to conduct its business any
where else within the State or the
United States.
3. That the capital stock of the
proposed corporation shall be One
Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars di
vided into equal shares of One
Hundred (SIOO.OO Dollars each,
with the privilege of increasing
the same from time to time and
in a manner to be determined by
the stockholders to a sum not to
exceed Twenty-Thousand ($20,000..
00) Dollars, and in a like manner,
to decrease same to a sum not less
than the original capitalization
That subscription to the capital
stock shall be made by cash, mer
chandise or personal services.
4 That the object of the proposed
corporation is pecuniary gain to
its stockholders in the operation
of a brokerage business dealing
generally in the buying and selling
of food stuff, grain, and similar
commodities, for its own account
or the account of others.
5. Petitioners pray the right to
purchase, lease, hold, and sub-lease
real estate, with the power to sell
or otherwise, dispose of the same
as is incident and necessary to a
corporation o r this nature, to bor
row money, give security therefor,
and to generally exercise all pow
ers and rights incident to a cor
noration of this nature under the
laws of the state of Georgia.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray
to be made a body corporate, under
the name and style aforesaid, and
entitled to the rights, powers and
nnvileges herein stated and in
cident to a corporation of this char
acter.
EMANUEL KRONSTADT.
Attorney for Petitioners.
Original petition filed in Clerk’s
Office, this 9th dav of April, 1936.
J. EDWARD WAY.
Deputy Clerk, Chatham Su
perior Court.
(Seal of Court)
“Even there,” said Miss Meade
“the food was scarce, but at least I
found »:curity. Right now I’d like
most to find my belongings. I much
f:ar the search is hopeless.”
ROGERS
QUALITY FOOD SHOPS
PILLSBURY 1 m
Cake Flour Bx 25c
PHILLIPS
PORK & BEANS, 6 No. 1 CANS 25c
TOMATOES, 4 No. 2 CANS 25c
SOUTHERN MANOR
FRUIT COCKTAIL, 2 No. 1 CANS, 25c
FRESH GEORGIA
EGGS, Doz. 22c |
JOHNSON’S WAX OR GLOCOAT—LB.
CAN OR PINT BOTTLE WITH n n
FREE FURNITURE POLISH K </•
AND SILVER POLISH
TETLEY’S TEA, 1-4 Pound 21c
Wesson Oil ffg 20c
WOODBURY’S |
FACIAL SOAP, 3 CAKES 22c
SEMINOLE TISSUE, ROLL 5c
SNOWDRIFT. 6-LB. CAN 95c
NUCOA, POUND 20c
OCTAGON POWDER OR
Soap, st”t LL lOc
GRITS, o x't’UNDS 12c M
COLONIAL
LIMA BEANS, 2 No. 2 CANS ____l9c
SUNSET SARDINES, 2 tall cans ___lsc
SOUTHERN MANOR
Catsup, 2 Bottles 23 1
QUALITY MEATS
BRANDED WESTERN
BEEF
SHOULDER ROAST, Lb. 18c
STEW, Pound . 15c
DRESSED HENS, Lb.
DRESSED FRYERS, Lb. 31c
WHITE MEAT, Pound 17c
-REAL COUNTRY SMOKED MEATS—
HAMS, Pound 23c
SHOULDERS, Pound 190
RIB SIDE, Pound 22c
STRANGE FISH
MISS PUXLEY TELLS OF
ONE THAT SOBS LIKE
A CHILD
NEW YORK, May *ls (TP).—The
briny deep and its denizens are famil
iar sights to W. Lavallin Puxley. If
there are queerer fish in the sea than
man has ever seen, then this woman
probably wil pull them out.
For W. Lavalin Puxley is a wom
an, an authority on fish. She w r as
born 58 years ago in Ireland and
started roaming with her father and
brothers when she was very young.
What she loves most is the sea *and
the life that swims in it. In a book
just published, called “deep Seas and
Lonely Shores.” she tells of fishing
experiences all over the world. She
tells in a non-ecientific, readable way
what goes on fathoms down in the
ocean. She tells of fish with rows
of lights that gleam like port-holes
of a pocket-sized ship. She tells of
a fish that sobs when caught like a
heart-broken child, and of islands
built Os oysters and sponges of glazs.
Auathor Puxley is not a philos
opher, She doesn’t say that sea ser
pents do or do not exist. She just
hints that she's hanging around out
of curiosity.
SWANiTfABOOED
AT WOMEN’S MEET'
FINERY, EVENING GOWNS
NOT NEEDED TO ATTEND
CONFERENCE
WASHINGTON, May 15 (TP)—
Swank will be taboo at the associated
countrywomen of the world confer
ence to be held in Washington next
month.
The vanguard of the thousands of
delegates expected to attend the con
ference already are gathering in the
capital. Their reports that some dele
gates were reluctant to attend the
conference because they feared their
modest wardrobes would be overshad-
I NEW QUALITY LOAF
Poncy Bread, 5c
KRE-MEL, 3 Pkgs 11c
ARGO GLOSS STARCH, 3 Pkgs. __loc
SHORTENING, 4-LB. CARTON ____4Bc
SHORTENING, 8-LB. CARTON 95c
LAND ’O LAKES
BUTTER, lb. 33c
SOUTHERN BELLE BUTTER, LB. __29c
NU-TREAT OLEO, LB, 15c
N. B. C. RITZ, Lb. Box 20c
TOMATO JUICE, 2 No. 1 Cans 9c
BLUE ROSE
RICE, 5 lbs. 22c
II , ■ ■■■ 1 ■■■ —, I
FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
FRESH GEORGIA
Beans, 3 lbs. 2Oc
FRESH CORN, 3 EARS 10c
OLD POTATOES, 5 Lbs. ——_-14c
I YELLOW ONIONS, 3 Lbs.
NEW RED BLISS
Potatoes, 5 lbs. 14c
BEETS OR CARROTS, BUNCH ___sc
TENDER SQUASH, 2 lbs. 15c
SLICING TOMATOES, 2 Pounds 15c
FANCY ICEBERG
| Lettue, Head. 6c
MILK FED VEAL >
SHOULDER ROAST Lb. 14c
STEW, Lb. .. . . .11c
RIB CHOPS, Lb 23c
PLATE MEAT Pound 15c
Mock Chicken Legs, each 5c
FRESH FISH, 2 Pounds . 9c
ROGERS OR BANQUET
SLICED BACON, Pound 34c
PICNIC HAMS, Pound 20c
IDEAL DOG FOOD, 3 CANS 25c
LOVE OF SNAKES
WINS YOUTH JOB
REPTILE ‘FAN’ IS MADE
KEEPER AFTER LONG
JOBLESS TRIP
NEW YORK, May 15 (TP).—The
average person may want to put as
much distance as possible between
himself and a snake —but not Jack
Hawken. Jack has crossed a conti
nent to get a good look at a whole lot
of snakes.
Hawken, a 20-year-old members of
the California Academy of Science,
is a snake fan. Last March, when
word reached his home town of Bur
lingame, Cal., that the first Interna
tional Snake Exposition was due to
open in New York in May, Jack went
into action.
With 85 cents in his pocket, Haw
ken started for New York, aboard his
bicycle. He went broke in San Jose,
50 miles from Burgingame. There,
he sold his bike for $3.50 and start
ed hitch-hiking. This week, he ar
rived at the Grand Central Palace ,
and feasted his eyes on the snakes
on exhibition there.
Now, Hawken is one of the staff of
keepers who guard and care for the
reptiles. Next week, the young Cali
fornian starts out on the 3,000-mile
return trip to Burlingame. He’ll use
the same means of transportation
that he used to get to New York, be-’
ing careful to skirt Ilinois and other
states in which hitch-hking is illegal.
owed by gorg:ous gowns, brought an
announcement from conference Chair
man Grace Frysinger. Miss Frysinger
said:
“No woman should stay way from
the convention because she can’t af
ford to buy special finery. Formal
evening gowns and the like will be
out of place at these sessions. Inex
pensive summer dresses, such as are
worn to church at home, will be all
that Is required.”
The conference chairnjan today an
nounced the arlval of delegates from
Norway and New Zealand.
f SAVANNAHAND
STATESBORO
FOR FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY •
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PAGE THREE