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PAGE FOUR
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AFTER ‘ME’ THE POLICE
It is gratifying to the citizens of the City of Savannah that
there is a possibility of the Mayor and City Council restoring a
portion of the policemen’s salary.
At the same time it is saddening to note that the Mayor and
council do not see fit to restore in its entirety, plus a substan
tial increase over the 1928 salary basis, the full quota of pay
cuts to the policemen.
The police department who protects the citizenry, day and
night are grossly underpaid, and it may be termed public crime
Number One that the Mayor has seen fit to accept a raise in his
behalf and neglect to raise the salary of the police department
first. It may be said that in-so-far as Gamble is concerned “after
me, the police department comes first.”
It is with regret to know that the Mayor does not put his
police department in the category in which it belongs, that is,
a group of men who risk their lives for the people should draw
a salary in accordance with their duties, which at the present
time, even with the five per cent, increase, are grossly under
paid.
It is hoped that the police department will not be forced to
tolerate much longer a Mayor who first seeks for himself with
out the interest of the city’s employes at heart. And uses as an
excuse the lack of the city’s finances, while at the same time
there are sufficient funds for an increase for himself.
OUR READERS’ FORUM |
I
(All communications intended for pub
lication under this heading must bear the
name and address of the writer,
will be omitted on request. Anonymous
letters will not be given any attention.
The widest latitude of expression and
opinion is permitted tn this column so
that it may represent a true
public opinion In Savannah and Chatham
County. Letters must be Imited to 100
W< The Savannah Dally Times does not
Intend that the selection of P' I’’ 1 ’’
lished in this column shall In any way
reflect or conform with the editorial
views and policies of this paper. The
Times reserves the right to edit, publish
or reject any article sent in.)
Editor, The Daily Times:
They may be plain Joe Brown In
overalls and felt-toped boots back
home—but when they’re delegates at
the Republican convention, “Solo
mon in all his glory was not arrayed
as one of these." a
Delegates from farm states, with
their necks burned red from hours
behind the plow, are setting the pace
Jn fashions at the convention city.
The principal item of nearly every
farm delegates garb is a linen suit.
And nearly every linen suit in Cleve
land, it appeared, could be used in a
pinch for an acordion solo. Damp
winds which have swept in off Lake
All Os Us
By MARSHAL MASLIN
HATS AND PEOPLE
AS I STOOD on the comer wait
ing, I put in part of my time looking
in windows ... Not window flop
ping, you understand, but just look
ing and waiting more or less patient
ly .. . And. in the big window of one
little ahop that obviously sold hats to
women, I saw forty-seven hats on
forty-seven pedestals. All forty-seven
hats were made of the same material,
which I can’t describe, all turned up
on the right at the same angle, all
were the same shade . . . And those
forty-seven hats were for forty-seven
different women!
Os course it’s not my business, sell
ing hats to women, and I may be
completely mistaken, but I asked my
self as I looked: “How would those
forty-seven hats appeal to a woman?
Will she tell herself that she simply
MUST have one of them because
forty-six other women will be wearing
that same hat, or wil Ishe decide that
she doesn’t want one because THAT
hat will be so ‘common ?’ ”
Seems to me I have seen some
shops that put Just ONE hat in the
window and let that ONE hat sell
itself to hundreds of different women
. . . Some merchants use one ap
proach, others use a different one,
and perhaps both are effective.
Perhaps men are different , . .
I’ve seen many a man's shop that
filled the window with men’s hats,
all alike, and no man cared . . . The
average man doesn’t mind wearing
a hat that is just like Jack's and
Pete’s and Frank's, but the average
woma n.see ms to want her hat to be
the same in style but different in de
tail from the other woman’s
We work on our characters in the
game way . . . W ewant to be “dif
ferent” but not so different that we’ll
be lonely. We like the fellow with per
sonality, but not the kind that sets
him so far apart he can’t speak the
same language we do or understand
what we are trying to do ... We des
cribe two individuals as being “as
alike as two peas’’, but did you ever
examine two peas? . . . They axe as
different as any two human beings.
Erie have raised hob with the fine
creases left by the tailor’s iron—and
the linen suits get baggier and bag
gier as the white shoes get dustier
and dustier.
But if the suits and shoes are
wanting, the neckties are not. Colors
which would have made Joseph’s
coat seem a drab affair clash on the
throat of many a rural delegate in
Cleveland hotel lobbies. Although
their speech ranges from the nasal
twang of New England to the easy
going drawl of the Carolinas, their
neckties, to all appearances, were de
signed by the same mad genius.
Shirts range from pink to purple
and back to pink again. Suspenders
are of many hues, with no one pat
tern enjoying preferences. Collars
range from the vertical, ear-grazing
type to the byronic, low-hung model
which sets off the Adam’s apple.
Let it be said, however, that the
women delegates, be they from Man
hattan, Georgia, or Minnesota, are
smartly dressed. In their cool whites
and pastels, they form a welcome re
lief to the acordion-pleated, vividly
neck-tied menfolks.
A GEORGIAN IN CLEWELAND.
Trouble with father fc, he really
doesn’t know how to carve a roast.
But then, he never has boasted
that he did know.
Out in his house, as in most of the
homes he knows, it seems to be the
thing to assume that the father or
usband will feel hurt, or inferior, if
he doesn’t do the carving.
But father doesn’t know how . . •
He has sat and envied the precision
with which some other fathers, sit
ting in their chairs, follow the subtle
lines of a piece of meat and cub thin
with fork and knife, and don’t get a
slices surely and deftly, .and lift them
DROP of gravy or a SCRAP of
meat on the clean cloth.
Father can’t do that ... He can’t
even sit down at the job. He has to
stand up and tackle the thing by
what is practically main force. He
hacks it off and serves chunks to
his polite guests.
The other day father saw a mo
tion picture of an Arabian meal In
Africa ... He saw the cooks pre
paring whole carcasses of mutton
over an open fire, then carrying the
meat on wide platters to a table and
laying it before the hungry shieks
in their spotless robes or togas or
whatever you call them . . . And
then he saw those chieftains picking
off scraps of meat with their fingers,
neatly and efficiently, without knives
or folks . . . And he almost envied
them, because there was no "head of
the table,” and nobody had to carve.
But the worst thing aboub father’s
carving—the family seems to agree—
Is that he doesn’t carve enough . . .
Something about being on his feet
before a roast loosens his tongue,
and, instead of carving, he talks . . .
He bells tall stories, he makes atro
cious puns, he laughs at his own
jokes, he keeps people waiting till the
food gets cold.
i Something should be done abqpt
it, but I don’t know what . . . Per
, haps it would be better to serve
, chops.
CAMP FOLLOWERS!
fCONOtA*:\
UN*esT\ i
•> j .CFt..
/to
- *~ ■ j
—WASHINGTON AT A GLANCE—
THIS CONVENTION DRYER
Because Liquor Costs More, Says Stewart
THAN ONE IN “DRY” ERA
Central Press, Bureau at G. O. P. be they could do it by concentrating
Convention. . >
By CHARLES P. STEWART
(Central Press Staff Writer)
CLEVELAND, June 9.—Cleveland
enjoys the distinction of bein the
first city to entertain a post-war con
vention with legal drinks.
Not that the earlier ones really
were dry, but they were supposed to
be.
The Republican convention of 1924
when Calvin Coolidge was named for
the presidency, also was a Cleveland
affair, and in the same auditorium as
this year’s.
The nomination was made in a
ringing prohibition address in the
course of which the expression, “The
law reigns,” was used again and
again.
Now, about half a city block from
that convention hall was a neat little
speakeasy, where customers could
and did sit, sipping their hooch and
listening to the nominating orator’s
words as they were brodacast by ra
dio.
Dry?—Ha!
Prohibition officialdom swore, In
advance of the 1928 conventions, that
they actually would dry Kansas City
and Houston up, and I thought may-
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SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 193(5
their full national strength upon
those two spots.
Accordingly, I did a bit of investi
gating. My estimate was that there
were 75 speakeasies in K. C.
At this one of the local papers was
much Insulted. It said editorially
that that city was as well supplied
with speakeasies as any town of its
size—at least twice or thrice 75. And
it argued that I should have counted
drug stores, too.
• • «
Not Arid Here, Either
Houston had a whole row of drink
ing joints right across the street
from the auditorium.
There, as in Cleveland in 1924, it
was possible to quaff a glass of
moonshine on the front porch of one
of these places (they even served the
stuff outside, in plain view of pass
ersby) and follow the convention
I speeches at the same time.
The Houston oratory wasn’t dry,
: however. That was a wet conven
tion—the one which nominated Al
Smith.
Chicago, of course, was simply
dripping as always, in 1932.
♦ * •
Prices High In Cleveland
Yet inebriety in Cleveland this
year, with drinks legalized, has seem
ed to me less prevalent than I have
observed at prohibition-day political
gatherings.
For one thing, the prices are al
most ruinous. They are everywhere,
for that matter.
Forty cents for a small shot of in
different liquor, plus a sales tax on
top of it, is too much for the average
convention delegate’s pocketbook to
stand very long.
This as compared with a maximum
of 15 cents for a similar dose in the
pre-prohibition era. In fact, it is
only 10 cents less, not to mention
the sales tax, than ordinarily was
charged during the prohibition pe
riod.
No Fun Any More
Besides, there is less fun in walk
ing up to an open-and-above-board
bar and buying a perfectly lawful
drink than there was in sneaking
into a dirty hole-in-the-wall and en
i joying the sensation of fracturing
the United States constitution.
Cleveland’s, Kansas City’s, Hous
! ton’s and Chicago's speakeasies were
packed to suffocation in 1924, 1928
and 1932.
This year my observation has been
i that their barrooms have been the
least crowded spots in Cleveland’s
, hotels.
I HOROSCOPE FOR SUNDAY
Persons whose birthday is Sunday
’ ma; be close in money matters, but
sometimes show a marked generosity,
especially toward friends. They are
faithful and loyal to what they con
sider their duty.
—WORLD AT A GLANCE-
YOUTH IN DESPAIR
For Failure to Meet Realities
AT CONVENTIONS
By LESLIE EICHEL
Central Press Staff Writer
CLEVELAND, June 9—There. ifi
one marked thing concerning this
convention: The despair of the new
young newspaper man—the man with
ideals—covering his first convention.
The convention itself is largely col
orless.
But the men who come to write
of it are interesting to observe. To
all of them, names mean nothing. To
the majority of them, accomplishment
means a great deal. They are eager
to find a man of accomplishment.
They desire to write of him.
Newspaper writers ever are in
search of a hero. When they are
young, they believe there are heroes.
But when newspaper men become
older, they realize thre are few heroes.
And they realize, too, that progrss
comes only with the bitterest of
struggles.
« * *
Youth Hopes
If the spirit of the young newspa
per men at this Republican conven
tion represents the spirit of the youth
of the nation, then the Republican
party is a long way from victory.
Rather, if would seem on the road to
oblivion.
Matters discussed by political lead
ers Seem so far from the realities of
the times —which may be true of the
Democratic convention, too—that
youth out on the street, and in plants
and in offices. This writer has stopped
to hear them—many of them—in
Cleveland.
Were it only youth that turns
away, party leaders still would have
a considerable following. But age,
now, is far more radical. Youth and
age are walking hand-in-hand at the
moment.
And party conventions go on in the
same tweedle-dum-tweedle-dee man-
MyNew York
By
James As well
- --i—l-1 n
NEW YORK, June 9—lnterview
With a Tango Team ’-
Q. Why do the very fashionable
restaurants and night clubs always
book at least one tango team?
A. (He) Because they’re all alike.
It’s a standard article and they can
be sure of what they’re getting. If
they hired a comedian he might ad
lib and distress the patrons. But
tango teams, like middle-aged women
who sing piquant songs at the piano
in low lights, can always be depended
upon to serve up the trademarked
commodity. Therefore the very fash
ionable night clubs always employ one
middle aged lady to sing piquant songs
and one tange team.
Q. Is your work hard?
A. (She) Certainly not. If it were
difficult, like juggling or wire acro
batics, we would be worth only SIOO a
week as a team. Because it’s a cinch
we draw down SSOO.
Q. Have you ever danced abroad?
A. (He) Sure. But whenever you see
a dance team advertised as “just back
from a triumphal tour of Europe’’
you know that they have had rocky
going for a while. Those European
joints don’t pay any money, and
sometimes it’s had to take what you
do earn out of the country. Some
times when business is slack we go
to Europe as a sort of vacation and
we’re lucky if we make expenses.
Q. I notice the lady wears a beau
tiful but very gossamer and traily
gown while dancing. Aren’t you ever
afraid of stepping on it?
A. (He) Ido step on it! Once
my partner had a very special danc
ing gown made. There was 175 feet
of train and flying ends. Actually 175
feet! One night I fell on my face
when it got under me. After that I
discovered hoW I could simply get
aboard and ride during most of the
number. So she got a new gown.
Q. How often do you devise and
present new numbers?
A. (She) Oh, frequently. But the
ballroom dance is really as rigidly
formalized as the sonnet—only easier
to do well. It’s really a series of poses.
It always gives us a laugh because the
audience never sees the difficult steps.
But let my partner whirl me eight or
ten times in any direction and the
applause is thunderous.
Q. Do you ever forget your routine?
With so many dances, I should think
an off-beat in the music might con
fuse you.
A. (He) Once in a while I forget.
My partner (bowing humorously)
never forgets. But after we had been
doing a dance of years, the newsreels
asked us to do it on the terrace at a
Southern resort. As soon as the cam
eras started griding I completely for
got every step in the routine and had
to sit down on the balustrade to think
it over.
Q. Do you think a tango team is
necessary to the entertainment of
patrons in the uppity cases?
A. (He) Oh, sure. I wouldn’t say
no, would I? But the elderly folk
who frequent these places put them
selves in our places, as it were, and
imagine that they are sailing about
airily without benefit of rheumatism.
It’s good psychology. But the young
folk always go to a supper room be
cause of the orchestra that’s playing
there at the time. They never even
think about the acts.
Q. What was your most embarrass
ing moment?
A. (In Chorus) That time we
found the joint was bankrupt, in
Czechoslovakia, and we weren’t going
to get paid at the end of the week.
Q. I mean on the floor—your most
embarrassing moment while perform
ing.
A. (She) Oh, we once danced in a
mountain resort in New Hampshire.
The altitude was 2,500 feet. After one
brisk number we both fainted in the
middle of the floor.
ner, oblivious to realities.
• * •
There They Sit
One young newspaper man remark
ed, after observing party leaders of
long standing sitting in judgment on
delegate contests:
“There they sit—as they sat twenty
years ago. They do not seem to have
suffered. They speak of unreal things,
in parables, at that. ‘Paragraph such
and-such, section so-and-to —amend-
ed.’
“There they sit, condemning and
determined to hang on till they totter
with age.
“But out in the world terrible
things have happened. And what are
they offering?”
Perhaps Governor Landon will offer
something. In fact he is offering
something—a sort of states’ lights’
New Deal, requiring a constitutional
amendment or two, which makes the
hair of the Old Guard stand on end.
The bitter-end attitude of the Old
Guard toward Landon develops from
the fact that he is viewed as favoring
social evolution to a degree.
The Old Guard shivers when it
thinks of that.
* * •
Insurmountable?
Actually the problems of the Dem
ocratic administration suddenly have
become the problems of the Repub
lican convention.
Efforts of the newer blood within
the G. O. P. to write a constructive
platform have brought the party face
to face with the voters.
There is no denial now, the su
preme court, in its 5-to-4 decision kill
ing the New York state minimum
wage law, and denying states’ rights
as well as federal rights in the mat
ter, dealt the Republicans a blow.
Even conservative men begin to fear
that a judicial oligarchy— perhaps
merely five justices—could vitiate ev
ery forward movement.
Also, what kind of a farm act would
be constitutional? it must be remem
bered that even Republicans cannot
forecast what five men on the su
preme court bench may Interpret as
constitutional or unconstitutional.
Furthermore, if an anti-monopoly
plank is adopted, will it hold water?
Some well-known Republicans and
anti-New Deal Democrats have been
using every legal effort to vitiate anti
monopoly New Deal laws.
- All Os Us -
OCCASIONALLY I receive a kind
letter from someone who praises my
“philosophy”.
And whenever that happens I feel
like a faker . . . Because I know I
am receiving praise under false pre
tenses.
After all, the test of a “philosophy”
is: Does it work when it’s needed?
Does it support a man in poverty and
riches, in sickness and health, in
victory as well as in defeat? ... Is
it a good tool, or is it merely a doo
dad for the mantel-piece? . . . There’s
your test of a sound philo :ophy, be
cause wisdom is in action, uci Just in
words.
Back in the first year of the war,
in 1914, that great Frenchman, Ro
main Rolland, who hated war because
he loved mankind, refused to change
his principles and became unpopular
in France . , . When his friends beg
ged him to find reasons for support
ing that war, he said he did not see
why he should abandon his prin
ciples just when they were necessary
to him.
That’s how I feel about any man’s
philosophy, that’s the way I feel about
my own . . . And I cannot accept that
praise before I know I have earned
it ... I have been happy, I have been
well, I have had friends, I have al
ways had a Job when I needed one, I
have known no great tragedy, no suf
fering except what I have brought
upon myself, I have never, known
months of illness, I have never been
abandoned and friendless, I have far
better fortune than the great major
ity of human beings ... So far I
LUCK HAD THE BREAKS op
Can any man who has lived that
sort of life, a life that has made no
extraordinary demands upon his wis
dom or his courage, accept praise for
his “philosophy”, blandly, smugly, as
though he had properly earned it?
Once I paid good money for a saw.
... It looked like a fine tool, it was
guaranteed to be of good steel. But
it lost its edge quickly, and when I
took it to an old fellow to have it
set the teeth broke under his setting
tool and he told me it was worth
less: the steel in it was poor and I
might as well throw it away. Noth
ing could be done for it.
Praise no man’s “philosophy”.
Learn first hether it is a true re
flection of his character!
The Grab Bag
ONE MINUTE TEST
1. What is a philatelist?
2. Who succeeded the late Joseph
W. Byrns as speaker of the house of
representatives?
3. Where is Lombardy?
HINTS ON ETIQUETTE
Once considered the height of rude
ness, it Is now proper to suggest defi
nitely the length of a guest's stay
when inviting someone to your home.
The invitation should be short, cov
ering only those points which apply
to the visit.
HORD OF WISDOM
The ripest peach is highest on the
tree.—James Whitcomb Riley.
TODAY’S HOROSCOPE ,
If your birthday is today, you tend
to be willful, determined, shrewd,
penetrating, harsh at times, but gen
erally kind and loving.
J Today is the Day
' By CLARK KINNAIRD.
Copyright, 1936, for this Newspa
per by Central Press Association
Tuesday, June 9: Children’s Day.
Morning stars: Mercury, Venus, Sat
urn, Uranus, Jupiter (which becomes
an evening star tomorrow). Evening
stars: Neptune, Mars (which becomes
a morning star tomorrow.)
SCANNING THE SKIES: This is
a notable weather anniversary. The
first tornado recorded in America
struck the new town of New Haven,
Connecticut colony, at 2:30 o’clock
p. m., June 9, 1682.
• « •
NOTABLE NATIVITIES
Raymond B. Fosdick, b. 1883, law
yer and humanitarium —president of
Rockefeller Foundation . . . Fred
Waring, b. 1900, architect who became
a popular orchestra leader . . . Titta
Ruffa, b. 1877, opera singer and de
signer of wrought iron . . . Count Felix
von Luckner, b. 1886, German sea
raider famed for gallantry and hum
anity . . ?
• * *
TODAY’S YESTERDAYS
June 9, 68 A. D.—Nero, 6th and
most illfamed of Roman emperors,
died at 31 by his own hand, after
servants had contemptuously denied
bls last request and refused to kill
him. Thus he fulfilled a prophecy of
seers who had also warned his moth
er that he would become emperor and
kill her. “Let him kill me, but let
him reign,” she had said, and mar
ried and poisoned Emperior Claudius
to pave the way for him.
To kill her, Nero had a boat built
that would fall to pieces at a given
moment, and affectionately coaxed
her into taking a trip in it. She
escaped by swimming out of the
wreckage, so he sent soldiers to mur
der her in her home.
♦ ♦ ♦
June 9, 1628—“1f you don’t lik/
this country, why don’t you go bade
to where you came from” may have
been uttered for the first time. The
first man was deported from one of
the American colonies—Thomas Mor
ton was sent back to England from
Plymouth colony for “licentious con
duct.” Specifically, Morgan “became
a lord of misrule, and maintained a
school of atheism, spending one
pound ten worth of liquors in a
morning, setting up a May-pole, and
drinking, frisking, and dancing about
it like so many fairies or furies.”
Morton was a lawyer, and the au
thor of the first book published about
the country and the Indians.
* * *
June 9, 1672—The child who was
to become Peter I, the Great, might
iest of Russian czars, was born. He
developed a powerful army, then in
stalled a substitute emperor secretly
while he joined the army’s ranks as
a private to see if it was properly of
ficered. The woman he loved most,
Ludy Mary Hamilton, an English
woman, he had beheaded when her
child was found murdered, and her
head is preserved today in alcohol
among the imperial archives. As his
empress he chose the laundress of a
Protestant clergyman.
• * •
June 9, 1791—John Howard Payne
was bom. He was 18 when he be
came the first native American to
play “Hamlet,” and 31 when he wrote
the words of “Home, Sweet Home,”
the best known. American non-patrlot
ic song. But it isn’t an American
song; the music was adapted by an
Englishman from an old Sicilian air.
June 9—Among State Histories:
1625 Sarah de Repelje was the first
white child born in what is now New
York, the world’s largest city. Her
parents were French Huguenots . . .
1732—George II granted a charter
for a colony in Georgia to James E.
Oglethorpe.
♦ • *
FIRST WORLD WAR DAY BY DAY
20 Years Ago Today—Americans
were not permitted to enter Mexico
at El Paso. That news was in the
paper. Something much more import
ant wasn’t, because Americans
weren’t allowed to know about it.
Washington learned France and
Britain made a treaty relative to
Turkey. Both powers “afe prepared
to accord recognition and protection
to an independent Arab state or a
confederation of Arab states”; Eng
land to obtain the ports of Haifa and
Ancre and rights elsewhere; France
"is autorlzed to establish such ad
ministration ... as they desire . . .
to establish after the agreement with
the (contemplated) state or confed
eration of Arab states” France is
given commercial right, etc.
This was one of the Secret Treaties
about which there was to be a bitter
flurry in the U. S. Senate in 1936,
dhen President Wilson was declared
to have falsified his testimony before
a Senate committee in 1919 concern
ing his pre-knowledge of the treaties.
Wilson declared that he knew noth
mg of these until the Versailles Peace
Conference. But the British govern
ment, Colonel House’s published
‘Papens”, Walter Lippman and oth
er authorities have furnished evidence
that Wilson did know long before
Verdailies of how far the diplomats
£ Pari5 ’ and Rome had gone
m dividing up the loot the U. 8 was
to enable them to win.
(To Be Continued)
one minute test answers
9 ws^ llector of stamps.
2- William B. Bankhead.
3. In northern Italy.
As early as 1794, the United States
supreme court indicated that it had
declare an act of
However, it was not
until 1803, in the case of Marbury
held US <J2 a ? + L ? n ’ that the court
held definitely that the power was
one of the necessary corollarie® of
the constitution.
One of Harold Lloyd’s films, "The
Freshman" took in more money than
any Charlie Chaplin movie.
In playing Hamlet, Edwin Booth
used a real squll of a Hamlet, that
of George Cook, first actor to play
Hamlet in America.