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ASKS HELP
IN PICKING
HER MATE
OfRL NOT SURE WHICH OF
TWO YOUTHS
SHE LOVES
By VIRGINIA LEE
••DEAR VIRGINIA LEE: About
three years ago I met a boy with
vrhom I fell in love. We went together
tor over a year and suddenly began
to quarrel and parted for a while; but
we couldn’t stay apart.
, “Ever since that time we have been
parting and going back again until
about six months ago I met the sec
ond boy. We seemed to get along
so well and have so much in common
and I thought I loved him. But the
memory of the first boy never left.
Up until now I thought that the sec
ond boy and I would always be hajy
py and I even planned to marry
him, but recently I have been think
ing of the first boy. I am so un
decided. I can’t decide which one I
love, but I think it is the first one;
otherwise, why would we keep going
back together and why does it last
so long?
“Could you help me? Just a sug
gestion on how I could decide which
one I love would be greatly appre
dated. MOUSIE”.
Maybe I can help you to analyze
your feelings for the boys, Mousie.
Possibly that may help you to de
cide between them.
Some Happy Quarreling
You say the first boy and you quar
rel, but there is an attraction there
that brings you together again after
each fight. Is the attraction physi
cal only, perhaps? There are a few
couples who can be happier living
together and continually quarreling
and making up than they could liv
ing in peace with any other person.
And there are people who are attract
ed to each other by some queer physi
cal allure, which wears off after the
two have been married a while, and
leaves them with nothing in common
to go on. To hold each other's inter
est there must be more than a phy
sical attraction. There must be sim
ilarity of tastes, interests and ideals.
Os course it may be, too. that your
feeling for the first boy goes deeper
than the physical. There may be a
real love that draws you together no
matter how you fight, just as I said
a while back is often the case with
other couples.
On the other hand, as you do not
quarrel with the second boy, it is
possible that he is your true mate—
the one with whom you will live hap
pily. Could you let him go out of
your life and settle down with No. 1,
whom you are Inclined to think is the
one you love? If so, that is your
answer.
Have I helped you at all? I un
derstand your trouble. It is not an
uncommon one.
fwOMAN EDUCATOR IS
HONORED WITH DEGREE
MOUNT BERRY, Ga., June 8
(TP) —The woman founder of the
Bern’ schools for mountain children
has been honored by Oberlin college
In Ohio as a leading educational .pi
oneer.
She is Dr. Martha Berry, who de
veloped the school system for Geor
gia’s hill children 34 years ago. Dr.
Berry is 69 years old now. An hon
orary degree was conferred on her
by Oberlin. It was the eighth she has
received from American schools. Dr.
iEferny’s school has carried enlighten
ment into a mountain region where
superstition and ignorance on/: ruled.
Buttons have been made in the
United States from marine shells
since 1855 and from freshwater
shells since 1891.
AT THE
THEATERS
LUCAS—T oda y, Tuesday and
Wednesday, “The Unguard
ed Hour,” with Loretta
Young and Pranchot Tone
BIJOU —Today and Tuesday, Stage:
“Dan Fitch’s Dixiana Rj
vue,” Screen: "Speed,”
with Wendy Barrie and Joe
Stewart.
ODEON—Today and Tuesday, “Abso
lute Quiet,’’ with Stuart Ir
win and Ann Loring.
FOLLY—Today and Tuesday, “The
Case of the Lucky Legs,”
with Warren William and
Genevieve Tobin.
ARCADIA—Today and Tuesday, “I
Married a Doctor,” with
Pat O’Brien and Josephine
Hutchinson.
IAVANNAH —Today, Tuesday and
Wednesday, "Cal lof the
Wild,” with Clark Gable,
Loretta Young, Jack Oakie
and "Buck,” the wonder
dog.
with Mother jrap
BRAHO OF
you BE THE
U1 TOUR OWN TASTE OECIOE^-^
Food for rhe French Strikers
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Taking a tip from the Akron, 0., rubber strikers, these workers in th.
Renault auto plant at Billancourt, France, went on a “sit-down” strike
refusing to leave the factory. Two boys are shown aiding the strikers
by sending up food. (Central. Prea*
ON THE AIR
RADIO PROGRAM
Monday, June 8
CBS
P.M.
4:oo—Broadcast from Republican
Convention
4:ls—Dorothy Gordon; Children’s
Program.
4:30 —Vocals by Verrill.
4:4s—Wilderness Road, sketch
s:oo—Chicagoans
s:ls—Eddy House, organist
s:3o—News: Baseball Scores
s:4s—Renfrew of the Mounted
6:oo—Broadcast from Republican
Convention
6:3o—Russell Dorr, baritone
6:4s—Boake Carter, commentator
7:oo—Eleana Moneak’s Ensemble
7:ls—Herbert Foote, organist
7:30 —Joey Nash’s Orchestra
B:oo—Radio Theater
9:oo—Wayne King’s Orchestra
9:3o—March of Time
10:00-^Jack Denny’s Orchestra
10:30—Pick and Pat in Pipe Smoking
Time
10:45—Geo. Givot’s Circus
11:00 —Buddy Waple’s Orchestra
11:30 —Hawaii Calls
12:00 —midnight, Alida Struman and
Organ.
Tuesday, June 9
A.M.
7:00—On the Air Today
7:ls—City Consumers’ Guide
7:30—80b and Rennie
7:4s—Salon Musicale
8:00—Bugle Call Revue
B:ls—You and Your Happiness
B:3o—Richard Maxwell, songs
B:4s—Rustic Rhythm Trio
9:oo—Betty'and Bob, sketch
9:3o—The Reporter
9:4s—Three Stars, trio
10:00—The Goldbergs, sketch
10:15—Romance of Helen Trent.
10:30—Just Plain Bill.
11:00—Broadcast from Republican
Convention
11:15—Mary Lee Taylor
11:30—Mary Marlin, sketch
12:00—noon, George Hall’s Orchestra
P.M.
12:30—Rhythmaires
12:45—Between the Bookends
1:00 —Concert Miniatures
I:ls—Happy Hollow
1:30 —Eddie Dunstedter Entertains
I:4s—Benny Feld’s Orchestra
2:3o—Mayfair Singers
3:oo—Charles Hector’s Orchestra
3:30 —Columbia Chammer Orches
tra.
4:oo—Broadcast from Republican
Convention.
Monday. June 8
NBC
4:00 —Top Hatters
4:30 —Singing Lady
s:oo—Flying Time, sketch z
s:ls—Edward Davies, baritone
5:30 —News; Three X Sisters
6:oo—Amos ’n Andy.
6:ls—Uncle Ezra’s Radio Station
6:3o—Gabriel Heatter, commental
6:45 —Education in the News
7:oo—Hammerstsin’s Music Hall,
Musical Show '
7:30 —Melodiana
B:oo—Greater Minstrels
B:3o—Studio Party at Sigmund
Rombergs.
9:00 —Contented Program
9:30 —National Radio Forum
10:00—Amos ’n Andy
10:15—Ink Spots
10:30 —Glen Gray's Orchestra
11:00—Rudy Vallee’s Orchestra
11:30—Gene Beecher’s Orchestra
Tuesday, June 9
A.M.
7:00 —Spareribs
7:ls—News; City Consumer's Guide
7:3o—Cheerio, talk and music
8:00—Old Doctor Jim, sketch
8:15 —The Streamliners
9:oo—News; Alden Edkins, songs
9:ls—Dan Harding’s Wife, sketch
9:3o—Armchair Quartet
9:4s—Today's Children
10:00 —David Harum
10:15—Mass. Inst, of Technology
Commencement Program.
10:30—House Detective, sketch
10:45—The Voice of Experience
11:00 —Happy Jack, songs
11:30—Girl Alone, sketch
11:45 —Merry Madcaps
12:00—noon, Words and Music
P.M.
12:30—National Farm and Home
Hour •
12:45—Music Guild
1:00—Golden Melodies
I:4s—Rhythm Octet
2:oo—Nellie Revell Interviews, Mary
Small.
2:3o—Vic and Sade
2:4s—Have You Heard?
3:oo—Foxes of Flatbush. sketch
3:ls—Backstage Wife, sketch
3:3o—Gene Arnold and the Ranch
Boys.
3:4s—Magic Voice, sketch
4:00 —Top Hatters’ Orchestra
LIQUOR BLAMED
NEW YORK, June 8 (TP) —Cheap
bootleg liquor is blamed for an attack
of blindness which has robbed WPA
worker, Louis Ben-on, of his sight.
Berson, the father of three chil
dren, is at a Brooklyn hospital where
physicians said he will never see
again.
PUT YOUR BONUS MONEY
IN SOMETHING SUBSTANTIAL ‘
DROP IN AND GO OVER OUR LIST OF HOMES,
INVESTMENTS AND LOTS—
See
MENDEL RENTAL AGENCY
13 EAST YORK ST. PHONE 6171
Flat hunting was dreaded by poor Mrs. Ghent,
Days and days even weeks she spent,
While smart Mrs. Brown
Found the choice of the town
Under the heading of “Flats to Rent!”
I
Savannah Daily
Times
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1938
A READER
IS WRITER
OF COLUMN
LAWYER-HUSBAND, DAD
TELLS OF TALKS
IN HOME
By GARY C. MYERS. PH. D.
Head Department Parent Education
Cleveland College, Western
Reserve University
SOME OF MY readers write more
forcefully than I can. I therefore
let them write occasionally for me.
The guest writer today is John A.
Hadaller, a young lawyer of Califor
nia. He says.
“Confessions are good for the soul”, •
and confessions are good reading,
confessions are very enlightening from ;
several standpoints, and confessions
are humbling. This is not a dig, but
a compliment to yourself and wife.
Both my wife and I got a great kick
out of your boy with his shirt-tail
sticking out, wanting to do things
backward, because that is just like
an imaginative boy. How sweet sleep
is to a youngster. How funny a boy
can become in his adolescence.
"I remember very distinctly, out
of my early days, being reprimanded
for something that was not according
to family standard. My reply was:
‘You should have reared me differ
ently’ . . .
“My own personal opinion about
your instalment is that it is very ef
fective. Too many people get the no
tion that because one has a doctor's
degree that he and his wife have a
sort of heaven in th:ir heme in rela
tion to their children. It just goes
to show that with all a man's ad
vanced ideas about this child psychol
ogy, there are so many very practical
things coming up every day, which
he non-doctors have to meet in some
kind of a manner and which they do
meet, that when a doctor of this or of
that has to meet the same kind of
problems, he still belongs to the com
mon herd because of a common ex
perience.
Shown to Be Human
“It shows you to be human, and
disabuses the non-highbrow that with
all your learning you still have your
feet on the ground. That is one of
the drawbacks of practically all high
er learning, as I experience it. High
er learning too frequently doesn’t
know its subject too well, and when
some of the advanced ideas In child
training come in contact with every
day practical experience, they seem
so far in the clouds as to be altogether
out of reach of the ordinary mother
and father who have so many other
problems of bread and butter, rent
and doctor's bills, that the child
training program in the home has to
take a back seat . . .
“Our most effective procedure is
the quist supper talks with everybody
expressing himself and herself, with
calmness and what reason we have,
illustrated with frequent examples’
taken from actual life. On the
strength of what Cicero once said In
the Roman senate ‘Semper haeret ali
quid’,—something always sticks—we
find that our daughter already be
gins to solve the problems she will
have In later life by the principles
we have sought to inculcate by these
little table talks.
“I have a hunch that your today’s
instalment will bring you a lot of
mail. I can be a sort of first lieuten
ant to your captaincy in showing my
appreciation and lending my encour
agement to a task that is very need
ed.”
Style Whimsy
A new version of the black and
white color scheme is the black skirt
worn with a white tailored jacket
and matched by white accessories.
Some black dresses are trimmed with
a dusty pink or pale turquoise blue.
KNOX WARNS
AGAINST NEW DEAL
LAKE FOREST, 111., June 8 (TP)
—Col. Frank Knox appeared at Lake
Forest College, accepted a degree and
sternly warned the June graduating
class that the New Deal is keeping
young people out of jobs.
Col. Knox, who would like to sit
in the White House, became an hon
orary Doctor of Law's. After the
formalities were over, the Republi
can began speaking. He said: “For
three years we have been living
through a period of political experi
mentation that brought a tremendous
increase in public debts and a feel
ing of general alarm on the part of
our people.”
Col. Knox charged: “No plan could
Cold Alone Is Not Enough
“Lay on Macduff”
BY JAMES CULLEN :
* n ■ • . - .
Poet Laureate of the Ice Industry.
Through years just passed, we gave advice, In magazines and on the air,
Which, you’ll recall, was “Save with Ice;” 'Twill soon be proved, we icemen dare
But now for bolder, stronger stuff— To make foes sledding mighty tough,
'fis “COLD ALONE IS NOT ENOUGH 1” With “COLD ALONE IS NOT ENOUGH!”
Truth tells, how ice refrigerates Refrigerators, modern, smart,
By Moist, chilled air, which circulates In this campaign, play leading part;
W ithout a pause so it sno bluff. They’ll show the world we’re up to snuff
That “COLD ALONE IS NOT ENOUGH!” And “COLD ALONE IS NOT ENOUGH !”
‘ • ' • • . * *?'
Since ice gives more than just mere cold, So rally ’round to right our wrongs,
All ice-kept foods their freshness hold; And put ice up where it belongs;
Hence here’s the secret “in the rough,” Our battle cry “Lav on Mac Duff,”
Os “COLD ALONE IS NOT ENOUGH!” For “COLD ALONE IS NOT ENOUGH!”
DIAL 2-0134 AND LET ONE OP OUR COURTEOUS DRIVERS, DELIVER YOU REAL ICE MAN S
ICE WITH A MODERN AIR-CONDITIONED REFRIGERATOR* YOU GET—(I) CORRECT TEM
PERATURE; (2) CORRECT HUMIDITY; (3), CLEAN, PURE, BREATHABLE, BALANCED AIR
THE THREE THINGS THAT ARE NECESSARY TO SAFELY PROTECT *N ASSORTMENT OF
FOODS IN ANY REFRIGERATOR
SCHLITZ BURGER
SUNSHINE VITAMIN “D” BEER “VAS YOU EFFER IN ZINZINNATI”
“The Beer That Made Milwaukee Famous.” -On Sale At All Taverns-Savannah’s Two Most
Popular Brands. (
-We Keep You Cool in Summer With POLAR BEAR ICE. Warm in Winter With Hand
icked BLUE STAR COAL, and Refreshed At All Times With SCHLITZ or BURGER.
Distributed By
Polar Bear Ice & Coal Co.
\
DIAL 2-0134 W. D. GARVIN, SR., Prop. 1402-20 EAST BROAD ST.
The F/nesf in Radio m
u Aye AfV furniture!
lIAYbRTT COMPANY
~ BROUGHTON AND JEFFERSON STREETS I
be devised which would more effect- 1
ively keep young people out of job- !
than bureaucratic control of private
business by the government.”
POLICE QUIZ SUSPECT
IN FIRE KILLING SEVEN
SAN FRANCISCO, June 8 (TP)— !
Fire marshals are questioning a sus
pected “fire bug" today in a hotel
fire which took seven lives in San
Francisco.
The name of the suspect has been
kept secret but officials said they
were positive that the fire was of
incendiary origin.
The blaze broke out in the four
story hotel when more than 30 peo
ple were in the building; Several
were trapped inside. Others were
killed in jumping from windows.
I FLORIDA BOASTS
NATIONAL FOREST
■ •
WASHINGTON, June 8 (TP)—The
[ State of Florida boasts of a new na
| ticnal park tonight by proclaimation
j of President Roosevelt.
Comprising over 300,000 acres in
the middle of western Florida, near
Tallahassee, the new park is to be
known as the Appalachicola National
Forest. Department of Agriculture
officials explained that much of the
land consists of what is known as
the old Forbes grant dating back to
the Spanish regime.
Foresty experts said much of the
land is swampy and timber stocks
depleted. But the forest service plans
to rehabilitate the area and develop
trees suitable for timber and turpen
tining.
PAGE THREE
! BRITISH TROOPS GUARD
STREFTS IN JERUSALE!
JERUSALEM, June 8 (TP)—He ‘
detachment of British troopi patro .
Jerusalem’s streets today after a ni
of fighting between British soldic
and Arab attackers.
At least six Arabs are known ! ■
have been killed. The new outbreak
followed attacks by the Arabs on
Jewish owned busses. After the at
tack the Arabs fled to the hills.
Several prominent Arab leaders
were arrested and sent to concentra
tion camps.
Historians say the Portuguese start
ed the African slave trade in 1481,
and that by 1777 more than 9,000,000
natives had been carried into slavery
on other continents.