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~ WELCOME NIGHT BASEBALL.
To be ushered in with the blare of bands and attended by
high dignitaries of the city, Savannah’s dream of night baseball
will become a reality tonight when the Savannah Indians trot
out onto the field to play against the Augusta Tigers. To make
its auspicious start under the eyes of President Wilder who is
to officiate in the ceremonies, Savannah’s debut into the select
circle of cities with lighted fields will be watched with interest
by the entire South.
Little is known of the trials and tribulations which beset
the best efforts of leading civic heads and officers of the base
ball club before they were able to accomplish the task of instal
lation of the magnificent flood-light system which surrounds the
field. First, there were troubles with the City Council about the
working agreements. Then the all important task of the final
setting up of the lights which fought the best efforts of the city’s
leading engineers, finally through perserverance and untiring
zeal the final check-up was had and the system pronounced ready
for work.
This flood-light system is an important factor in the city’s
hopes of regaining some of the lost prestige suffered through
long years of dormancy in the national field of sports. One time
a mecca for leading athletic enthusiasts of the nation, Savan
nah’s drop in the past decade to the relative obscurity enjoyed
at the present time, was a source of all-important worry to lead
ers in the civic life of the city.
The Savannah Daily Times takes this opportunity of wish
ing the Savannah baseball club and all officers connected there
with, together with those men who have donated their time and
patience to the perfection of the floodlight system, every good
wish for the continued success of the club, and its heart-felt
felicitations for the task of bringing the city of Savannah to
the forefront of Southern athletics.
OUR READERS’ FORUM
(All communlcatioM intended for pub
lieatlon under this heading must boar the
name and addreos of the writer. Names
will be omitted on reqneat. Anonymous
letters will not bo given any attention.
The widest latitude of expression and
opinion is permitted in this column so
that it may represent a true expression of
public opinion in Savannah and Chatham
County. Letters must be limited to 100
words.
The Savannah Daily Times does not
Intend that the selection of letters pub
lished in this column shall in any way
reflect or conform with the editorial
view* and policies of this paper. The
Times reserves the right, to edit, publish
or reject any article sent ta.)
Editor Daily Times:
I am a constant reader of your
excellent paper. I wonder if a few
words of warning could be inserted
In your “Our Readers Forum” col
umn telling all the bonus boys to be
on the lookout on every front for
the barrage of Chislers, selling to them
cheap “trash” at high prices, In gen
eral, thing that are worthless.
Gyp joints are machine-gunning for
you; rackets have you on their suck
er lists; snipers are set to pick your
pockets. Get wise, buddy, do not
throw your money away. Remember,
the dollar is your friend.
A Veteran.
Editor Savannah Daily Times:
The Towwsend plan is not merely
■■ ■■■■——
NOT—In the News
• • • * » •
COPYRIGHT, CENTRAL PRESS ASSOCIATION
A MATTER of curious interest to
Ue has been how some married cou
ples over met in the first place.
Perhaps you have seen couples, es
peolally those varying in size, weight
or age, who have aroused in your
mind the question'- ‘'Now I wonder
just how that started?”
We have a strong suspicion that
there are many interesting, if not
amusing, stories associated with the
beginning of romances that, unfor
tunately, are never told. We don’t
mean the usual procedure of a formal
Introduction, keeping company, fall
ing in love and marrying. We refer to
romances that start from some un
usual incident or circumstance.
To Illustrate, we present the true
story of Bill and Margie. Bill is a big,
strapping fellow; Margie a small pee
wee type, sweet and demure.
Not long ago Bill and Margie work
ed in the same office building in De
troit. Margie worked on the eleventh
floor and Bill on the tenth, but they
never knew the other existed until
one day they boarded the same des
cending elevator.
The elevator was crowded and little
Margie found herself pushed into a
corner. In front of her stood Bill,
but to Margie he then represented
only a pair of broad shoulders in a
tweed suit. And to Bill, Margie then
was just a whiff of perfume in a
brown coat.
The elevator slipped swiftly to the
ground floor, but as it came to *
• stop there was a lurching motion
which threw Bill off balance. At
tempting to retain his equilibrium, he
stepped back suddenly—right on
Margie's little toes I
i J-t happened very quickly, but Mar-
a pension plan, but a means of re
covery from our almost perpetual
“depression”. The first important
thing is to find employment for the
idle. The Townsend plan was devised
to do this important thing, solely.
Those who possess the wealth of
this country are apparently blind to
the actual conditions of our country
today. Their money can be made as
useless as waste paper, by the com
bined vote of the people. Gold has al
ready been made useless for monetary
purposes, and other Issues can be
thus declared of no use.
Natural causes have brought this
country to this crisis. The eagerness
of some for larger profits has led to
machinery which has thrown men
out of employment. Now there Is a
sufficient number who have no wages
or means by which they may purchase
the needs of life to make our finan
cial conditions steadily worse.
Nature in the past has been pro
gressive, and never reactionary.
Whether you want it or not, we have
got to prepare for a change. The
Townsend plan has been introduced
for a better form of life. This change
is based on co-operation, instead of
selfishness.
A Townsendite.
gie’s ire was even quicker in rising
She was furious; her eyes flashed in
anger.
“I am sorry,” said Bill.
“You ought to be,” she shrieked,
“you big, clumsy ox.’
Fuming, she scampered off the
elevator. Bill, surprised and bewilder
ed, watched her little form lose itself
in the crowd. He turned to his com
panion. Did he know her? No, but
he knew who she was and where she
worked. Would he arrange a meeting
for Bill? Sure.
The introduction was staged, and
a fast romance resulted between Bill
and Margie. So fast did it develop
that about a month later Margie be
came Mrs. Big Clumsy Ox.
Do you suppose, after all, it could
have been love at first sight?
“Boot” shoes that cover the in
step to the ankle will be worn in the
fall. They come both with low cut
or built up sides.
Thermometers adorn some of the
new Schiaparelli prints for summer
wear. The red cercury in these ther
mometers runs all the way from “In
difference” at the bottom of the scale
to “P assion” at the top. Radio sta
tions, sound waves and zig-zagging
airplanes are other summer designs.
Today’s Horoscope
Persons born on this day are in
dependent, fond of home and family,
to whch they will sacrifice their con
venience and comfort if necessary.
They are loving In instinct and can
odapt themselves to home circum
stance. Their literary ability is above
the average. ■
THE RE-WRITE MAN!
lEi
W"*'
■dSWWiJii i
—WASHINGTON AT A GLANCE—
CAN ITALY BORROW
In View of Antagonisms Aroused
MONEY IT REQUIRES?
V. .xSHINGTON, June I—Com
merce department officials hear that
Premier Mussolini already has agents
abroad seeking foreign loans to ex
ploit Ethiopia.
That he will be able to raise much
money is spoken of as extremely
doubtful. In the United States it is
downright illegal to make financial
advances to nations which are in de
fault on their obligations to Uncle
Sam, and Italy is one of them. The
British and French, slapped in the
face by the Italian defiance of their
objecitons to Fascist activities in east
Africa, are deemed unlikely to favor
a bankers’ policy calculated to aid the
new empire tn consolidating its posi
tion.
The Itlalian government not only
has no ready cash of its own, but
probably has exhausted its domestic
as well as its foreign credit, while its
taxation rate is so high now that it
seems impossible It can squeeze out
another lira by increasing it.
And, anyway, it is semi-officially
predicted that world capital will not
consider the Italo-Ethiopian empire a
safe field in which to invest.
• » •
Ethiopian Outlaws
Another complication threatens.
As was to have been expected, al
though Haile Selassie is gone, Ethio-
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SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, JUNE 1, 1936
pian outlaws continue to loot here,
there and everywhere.
Foreign sojourners’ lives and prop
erties are endangered and Italy has
assumed the responsibility of protect
ing them. Indications are that Italy
will not be in a position to give this
protection on into the indefinite fu
ture.
“Mussolini may find that he has
bitten off more than he can chew,”
as one Washington diplomat, speak
ing in the American vernacular, ex
pressed it.
• • ♦
Wrong Guess
Il Duce, to tell the truth, went
much farther than Old World states
manship had anticipated.
What it had hoped for, encouraged
by military forecasts, was that the
campaign, delayed by guerilla war
fare and rainy seasons, would string
out so long that the Italians would
wilt under the financial burden of it,
and have to compromise.
The big powers looked for a cutting
up of Ethiopia among them.
Or, they thought, Mussolini would
be satisfied with a mere mouthful of
the African kingdom, leaving the re
mainder to Haile Selassie.
If they had sensed the danger that
he would grab the whole thing, un
questionably they would have resist-
ed him more strongly—physically,
maybe. Even yet they do not believe
that he counted on so complete a
conquest. Pure, blind luck, they rec
kon, was with him.
• • *
Anything Won?
Diplomacy and militarism alike are
skeptical that Italy has won anything
in the long run worth while.
They think that Ethiopia finally
will prove to be a liability.
But momentarily, from the stand
point of prestige, they agree that it
is a huge asset.
Danger May Spread
The United States is not immediate
ly concerned.
It will be, however.
Italy cannot get conveniently to
its new dependency except through
the Suez canal. Britain can close it.
Technically it is not entitled to do
so—but. in an emergency, who cares
for technicalities! Today the Brit
ish are mobilizing in the eastern Med
iterranean.
Let a war start there and it will
not be a war exclusively between the
Italians and the British.
The slothful hideth his hand in his
bosom; it grieveth him to bring it
again to his mouth.—Proverbs 26:15.
SONG
I saw the day’s white rapture
Die in the sunset’s flame,
But ail her shining beauty
Lives like a deathless name.
Our lamps of joy are wasted.
Gone is Love’s hallowed light;
But you and I remember
Through every starlit night.
—Charles Hanson Towne.
-WORLD AT A GLANCE—
U. S. PRISONS FILL
In Costly Physical Drives Against Crime
AS ENGLAND’S EMPTY
By LESLIE EIOHEL
(Central Press Staff Writer)
An American educator recently ex
pressed deep concern over the in
creasing number of American youths
being doomed to the electric chair.
The number of executions of persons
under 25 and even under 21 has
reached an appalling figure.
As executions have risen, murder
and other crime have increased.
There is hardly mention of the put
ting to death of “unknown” indi
viduals any more. The entire proced
ure is accepted as a matter of course.
Critics imply that we are turning
barbaric and have accepted crime, its
causes and its consequences as a
matter of course, and expect police
and courts and electric chairs “to
straighten out the istuation.”
Os course it is not being straight
ened out. Prison population reaches
new high levels in the United States
—while prison population in England
drops, and prisons even are aban
doned.
Why the difference? Nobody seems
to know. There has been no v de
termined effort to find out.
♦ ♦ ♦
Keeping Them Out
In Ekigland, efforts are made to
keep people out of prison. In the
United States costly efforts are made
to put them in. Prison population in
the United States is 15 times that of
England. (The United States has only
three times the population of Eng
land.)
Regaring the English situation, the
Manchester Guardian comments:
“If Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Webb are
right in supposing that “the most
practical and most helpful of “prison
reforms” is to be found in processes
which ’keep people out of prisons al
together,’ then the newly issued re
port of the prison commissioners for
1934 may well be regarded as offer-
My New York
. By
James Aswell
sasssss=s=3C= ] »" -
(Copyright, 1936, Central Press As
elation)
NEW YORK, June I.—lnterview
with an expert riddler:
Q. So you came 2,000 miles to at
tend a meeting of the New York
Riddlers’ society?
A. Well, it was my vacation and
since I am a member of the National
Puzzlers’ League I thought it would
be a good idea to drop in on a meet
ing of the Riddlers. They gather
once a month in New York, you
know.
Q How much time do you devote
to puzzles and riddles?
A. Oh, when business was bad dur
ing the depression I fooled with them
eight or ten houis a day. but now
that there is more to do I can’t af
ford more than three or four hours a
day. I’m a dairyman, you know, and
I often tell my family I could work
on a good puzzle until the cowscomfe
home.
Q. Do you enjoy crosswords?
A. Oh, they are kindergarten stuff.
I let my eight-year-old son practice
on them, but he finds the ones in
the daily papers too easy most of
the time to be worth solving.
Q. How did you become so inter
ested in puzzles?
A. Good gracious, man, I’ve been
interested in puzzles all my Mfe. The
universe itself is just one big anagram
that no one has ever solved. When
I was a boy I whittled interlocking
rings and other puzzles for myself.
Once I whittled one that I couldn’t
solve when I was about 14. I worked
on it for weeks, neglecting my school
work, and I was very unhappy. Fi
nally I took it to an old-time riddler
and he pointed out to me the fact
that it couldn’t be solved. I can’t
tell you how relieved I was. I think
that was the happiest moment of my
life.
Q. I suppose at meetings of the
Riddlers and the National Puzzle
League there are plenty of strange
rings-and hooks and knots to be un
crossed and unhooked and untied?
A. Oh, not so many. Most of us
have graduated from the purely me
chanical puzzle stage. The riddles we
attack in meeting are for the most
part mental. Cryptograms, anagrams,
rebuses. Take the firstclass anagram.
It can have drama, pathc. and even
humor.
Q. Would you mind giving me an
example of pathos in an anagram?
A. Not at all. An anagram, you
know, is the reshuffling of the letters
in a word or phrase into another
word or phrase with a similar mean
ing. Well, not long ago an ana
gramatist took the phrase, “Board
of Aidermen” and what do you think
he got? Why, “Hard men after
boodle.” There’s pathos in that, isn’t
there?
Q. Plenty of it. Now how about
an anagram with humor in it?
A. Offhand I remember the prize
winning effort with the words, “The
Music Goes ’Round and Around.”
The result, using those same letters,
was “Damned Tune on Radios, Hu
man Scourge.” That’s comical, isn’t
it?
Q. Well, I think there is humore
and pathos in both of those, almost
equally distributed. But now that
you’ve attended your meeting do you
propose to look a’ound New York?
A. Oh, no. Not interested. But I’m
dining with a few riddling friends to
night and I wonder if you’d do me
a big favor? I wonder if you’d drop
by my hotel around 6:30 this evening
and render me a real service?
Q. I’d be glad to, but what is it
you want me to do?
A. Well, you see, I must put on a
tuxedo and I want you to tie my
bow tie for me. I never got the
knack of the dem things.
ing evidenca of great advance in the
direction of reform.
“As compared with what was hap
pening when our late king came to
the throne we are keeping people out
of prison with marked success. One
sign of that is th? actual decrease in
the gaols themselves; whereas there
were 56 local prisons in this country
in the year 1910, there are now 26.
At th? beginning of King George's
reign people were being received into
prison at a rat of moer than 186,000
a year, but 25 years later the figure
has dropped to well short of 57,000.
Some of them, of course, are the
same people who have gone to prison
two or more times in the same year,
but that aspstc of 'reception’ figures
applies to both periods, «n!d the daily
average ‘prison population’ of the
country also shows a handsome re
duction from 20,826 in 1910 to 12,233
in 1934.
“Obviously people are being kept
out of prison in very considerable
numbers, and the difference between
now and 25 years ago may be under
lined by the reflection that the pop
ulation of England and Wales has
increased by some four and a half
millions in this period which has seen
the ‘prison population’ drop so
steeply.
. “Another point which the commis
sioners emphasize is the difference in
the prisons themselves and the great
er efforts to create a more wholesome
and active atmosphere within the
■walls of >a goal. Idleness, physical and
mental, which does nothing to dim
inish degradation but has precisely
the opposite effect, is the besetting
danger of prisons. In all the efforts
which have been made during the
past 10 or 20 years to reduce that
danger th? ccmmisioners claim that
their aim has been ‘r.ot to make pris
ons pleasant, but to construct a sys
tem* of training such as rill fit the
prisoners to re-enter the world as a
citizen.’ ”
* * *
Cruel
The Manchester Guardian calls at
tention to an injustice that still ex
ists for thousands. The prison report
of 1934 showed that 51 per cent of
the commltals in England still were
of persons unable to pay fines or oth
er money orders. In other words, those
who have the money do not have to
serve; but the tunfortunate who do
not have the money must serve.
The same applies in th? United
States—through the inequity of fines,.
* * *
Chief Reason?
The Guardian intimates that the
reason fewer persons are being sent
to prison in England lies in a fuller
lift, a better economic life, thus a
better social life, enjoyed by a larger
and larger part of the population.
Economic and social betterment
therefore becomes the chief dfeterrsnt
of crime.
You’re Telling
Me?
Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg, the
old meanie, has taken away the pri
vate and personal army of Austria’s
Prince von Starhemberg. The least
Kurt could have done was to have
given th? prince a box of tin soldiers
and a popgun in exchange.
* ♦ ♦
However, news dispatches say
Schuschy permitted Prince Ernst
to kep his uniform so he could
continue to look at himself in a
mirror and imagine himself a '
rsal-for-sure, honest - to-goodness
general.
* • *
Maybe the prince didn’t mind las
ing his personal troops. It was get
ting near pay day. anyway.
• ♦ ♦
The Starhemberg storm troops
were an idea Ernst had borrow’d
from the old Roman ■emperors
who maintained household bat
talions because they were afraid
of burglars—with a weakness for
stealing thrones.
» ♦ ♦
The Roman household battalions
had but one job. This was to clout
any visitor to th? palace, whom the
emperor didn’t like, over the head.
Sometimes the troops, to keep in
practice, would clout the emperor
himself. Then the Roman people
would have a change of administra
tion-
* * *
In one year the Romans ex-
* perienced a half dozen emperors.
The household battalions had a
lot of fre? swingers in the line-up
that season.
Now Prince Ernst will never realize
his ambition of being a dictator. <But
he should worry. He never did have
the kind of face that fitted a Charlie
Chaplin mustache or. a Grade A, No.'
1 scowl.
The Grab Bag
One-Minute Test
.1. Has the American flag always
had 13 stripes?
2. Why is Friday generally con
sidered an unlucky day?
3. How many columns are there to
a page of the ordinary-sized Ameri
can newspaper?
Hints on Etiquette
Conversation between persons not
well acquainted with each other
should be kept on an impersonal
basis, especially at formal affairs
Words of Wisdom
Knowledge is, indeed, that which,
next to virtue, truly and essentially
raises one man above another.—Addi
son . i
Today is the Day
By CLARK KINNAIRD
Copyright, 1936, for this Newspa
per by Central Press Association
Mnday, June 1; Feast of the Holy
Ghost in Greek Catholic calendar.
National Cotton*’ Week. Moon: first
quarter. Zodiac sign: Gemini. Birth
itone: Pearl.
Scanning the skies: Communities
with “daylight saving” time may
think they have an hour of It a day,
yet they don’t. Nonuniformity of
the Earth’s motion around the Sun
in its orbit, causes the Sun to dis
agree with “standard time” by as
much as 16 minutes.
* • •
NOTABLE NATIVITIES
John Masefield, b. 1875, novelist
and England’s poet laureate. . . .
John Drinkwater, b. 1882, British
dramatist and biographer whose favo
rite subjects are Americans . . .
Clive Brook, b. 1891, cinemactor . . .
Frank Wupperman, known as Frank
Morgan, b. 1893, cinemactor. . . .
Arthur Curtiss James, b. 1867, rail
road magnate whose favorite means
of travel is by ship . . . Peggy Fears,
b. 1907, stage and screen actress.
♦ ♦ •
TODAY’S YESTERDAYS
June 1, 67 A. D.—<<o,ooo Jews were
massacred when 58-year-old Titus
Flavius Bespasianus, Roman general,
captured and destroyed Jotapata, Ju
dea. Only Josephus the general and
historian and 40 men were able to
survive the holocaust by hiding in a
cave.
‘ The men refused to permit Jose
phus to surrender and were resolved
to die,” it is recorded. “At his sug
gestion th yecast lots, and the first
man was killed by the second and so
on, untl al were dead except Jose
phus and (perhaps) one other. So
Josephus saved them from the sin
of suicide and gave himself up to the
Romans. He had prophecied that
the place would be taken—as it was
—on the 47th day, and now he pro
phecized that both Vespasian and
his son would reign over all man
kind. Te prophecy saved his life.”
Vespasian and Titus did become
Roman emperors. Surprisingly un
der them—the men wh had caused
1,000,000 Jews to be slain in their
conquest of Jotapata and Jerusalem
—Jews enjoyed equal political rights
with non-Jewish subjects and free
dom of conscience in the Roman em
pire for the first time!
* * *
June 1, 1789—The first-law enact
ed by the Congress was approved by
George Washington. It was “an act
to regulate the time and manner of
administering certain oaths.” The
citizens may have felt like uttering
some oaths. Congress had been in
session for three months before it
squeezed out that first law!
June 1, 1831 —James Clark Ross,
31, discovered the north magnetic
pole 78 years before it was found! On
his second trip to the Arctic he, the
son of the first Arctic explorer, made
observations wheih enable him, on
this date, to establish the position
of the. pole by mathematical calcula
tion.
It is to the magnetic pole, not the
North Pole, to which compass needles
point, of course.
June 1 Among State Histories:—
1691—William 111 seized
for a royal province . . . 1774—Brit
ish closed Boston harbor in retalia
tion for tea destruction by anti-tax
mobs . . . 1792—Kentucky admitted
to Union, 15th state; 1796—Tennes
see admitted, 16th state . . . 1861—
First pitched battle in War Between
the States at Fairfax Courthouse, Va.
. . . 1861 —Richmond, Va., became
capital of Confederacy. ... 20
Years Ago Today—Louis D. Brandeis
of Massachusetts, was confirmed by
Senate as first Jewish member of U.
S. Supreme Court after bitter fight.
♦ * *
FIRST WORLD WAR DAY-BY-DAY
20 Years Ago Today—The world
got its first inklings of what Berlin
announced as a tremendous victory
at Jutland.
An outline of this No. 1 naval en
gagement of the war was given here
last week. Summing up its effects,
Liddell Hart says:
“For the British navy, Jutland
would better not have been fought
at all . . . It undoubtedly depreciat
ed British naval prestive in the eyes
of Allies and the home public more
than the fact of Britain’s continued
supremacy at sea could redeem. That
supremacy was to ensure the ultimate
downfall of German power to con
tinue the war. But no victorious
battle helped, as such a battle might,
to shorten the process of exhaustive
slaughter on land. Jutland merely
insured what was already insured
without a battle.
“On the technical side. Jutland
was more significant ... It showed
that the German standard of gun
nery was far higher ... In mate
rial, Jutland showed also that the
Admiralty had failed to see or profit
by experience as well as the Ger
mans.”
Germans were likewise superior in
organization, training and aggressive
ness—in everything except numbers
—to the British.
Those readers intrigued by the de
tails of*Jutland, the most fascinat
ing naval subject In modern history,
are referred to the chapter in ths
revised edition (1935) 6f Li(JdelJ
Hart’s “A History of the World
War,” “The Riddle of Jutland,” by
Gibson and Harper; and “TM Battle
of Jutland,’ by H. H. Frost, Comman
der U. S. N.
(To be continued)
* ♦ •
IT S TRUE
(Help me tell the truth.)
Speaking of the compass, as wa
were above, you can used your watah
for a compass by pointing the hour
hand toward the sun. Due south is
then exactly half way between the
hour and the figure XII.
June was the fourth month in the
calendar originally, and derived its
name from the fact that It was dedi
cated a Junioribus, that is to the jun
ior branch of the legislature.
Tennessee was named by Andrew
Jackson, who got it from the chief
town of the Cherokees, whom he
fought!
Queries, reproofs, etc., are welcom
ed by Clark Kinnard.