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PAGE FOUR
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THE SELECTION OF LANDON
The selection of Governor Alfred M. Landon as the torch
bearer for the Republican party in the forthcoming presidential
election is Indeed a compliment to the endeavor expended by the
delegates to the Cleveland convention from the country-at-large.
Highly respected by both Democratic and Republican par
ties for the marked ability shown in the disposal of the duties
pertaining to his position as chief executive of his home state.
Kansas, this nominee is indeed a good choice to carry his party s
banner against the Democratic ticket, and will run as fine, if
not finer race as any man willing to pit his fortunes in a fight,
predistined to fail, in the face of an overwhelming foe.
Perhaps one of the greatest tributes ever paid to any one
person in the glamorous setting of American politics was to this
diminutive, dynamic personality, as the entire convention se
lected him as their choice, by acclamation. Probably such a
sight will never before be re-enacted as the huge hall, packed
from floor to rafters with a seething mass of humanity repre
senting districts from the far-flung rocky promonitories of Maine
to the gentle, shelving beaches of California, and from the icy
blue waters of Lake Michigan to the tepid warmth of the Gulf
stream at the tip end of Florida, rose en masse and paid homage
to the be-spectacled political master.
It is not to be doubted that both major political parties
recognize the true worth of Landon in the role he Is now occupy
ing in the niche of American political endeavor. Every state
echoes with proud acknowledgement the sentiments of the Re
publican party in bestowing its greatest tribute onto the shoul
ders of any one person in its organization.
Landon’s beaming personality, remarkable foresight and
overwhelming courage promises to inject into the coming cam
paign, a man who is loved by both friend and foe alike, and a
man whose integrity and ideals have accorded him a place in
both the industrial and political life of our country.
OUR READERS’ FORUM
(AII communlcßtlonn Intended for pub
liratlon under this heading miat bear the
name and addreag of the writer. Names
will be omitted on requeat. Anonymous
letters will not be 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 United 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
views and policies of this paper. The
Times reserves the right to edit, publish
or reject any article sent in.)
pditor of The Daily Times:
The details of two contests for farm
boys have been announced by the
Agricultural Development Bureau of
the Barrett Company.
4-H boys growing an acre of corn
or cotton and using at least 100 lbs.
of American nitrate of soda will
compete for an educational trip
to the National Club Congress In Chi
cago, a trip being awarded to the
winner in both cotton and corn. The
second highest scorer in each crop
will receive a S2O prize, while four
gold 4-H emblems will be given to the
four highest county winners in each
of the state's four extension districts.
This makes a total of 36 prizes, In ad
dition to which the county agent
whose boys make the best showing
In these twin contests will be award
ed a trip to the Congress.
Students of vocational agriculture
are invited to compete in a cotton
production contest. Three cash prizes
totaling S3O will be awarded in each
of four districts, and vocational
teachers will receive SBO in prizes to
be awarded on th ebasis of the num
ber of boys competing and their rec
ords.
The bureau is also again conduct
ing the American Farmer Contest.
The winner of this coveted award
will be selected by the State Execu
tive Committee of the Georgia F. F.
A. and will be given $75 to be used
to attend the National Convention of
Future Farmers in Kansas City.
In addition to these contests, the
bureau is also sponsoring an eveping
class attendance contest with prizes
totaling $215. Besides the cash awards
each teacher receives 200 lbs. of Amer
ican nitrate of soda to be used on a
supervised school demonstration proj
ect. Reports are that this incentive
has done much to promote interest
in this important phase of agricul
tural education.
THE BARRETT COMPANY.
ATLANTA, GA.
Editor. The Daily Times:
Having just returned from a trip
to Washington, I pass on to your read
»ra. an account of an episode I wit
nessed there.
A young thief in Washington must
know his Greek mythology, especially
that story pertaining to Atalanta, the
young princess.
Atalanta, you remember, agreed to
marry the suitor who could outrun
her. She was pretty safe because she
could run faster than anyone in the
kingdom. But one of the suitors beat
her to the tape by dropping three
golden apples which Atalanta stopped
to pick up.
Well, Washington’s young thief
tried the same trick and got away
with It.
He snatched $64 from a street car
conductor at the car barn and start
ed running. Several of the men
around started after him. The boy
dropped, several of the bills. The men
stopped to pick them up.
It was a grave error. The boy dis
appeared. When the men pooled the
bills, they picked up, they amounted
to only sl4.
How is that for fast thinking? If
the youth decides to put his brains
to upright endeavor, he may become
a brilliant man, but if not let him
remember that crime never pays and
that you can’t win—always.
AN UPLIFTER.
Editor Daily Times:
I herewith submit this interesting
question to which I appeal to one of
your readers for an answer:
"Do birds follow each other by any
of the senses other than sight and
hearing? I believe that one bird can
follow another of its own kind by the
sense of smell . . . Many times I have
seen one bird follow another through
the woods, five to 15 seconds apart,
with no chance for sight trailing, and,
then alight on the same limb of the
same tree. It can happen only when
the air is still. By estimating the air
drift with the smoke of a clgaret,
I’ve found that the second bird al
ways follows the first by taking a
path a few feet to the right or left
according to the a’rift. The second
bird makes the same dips in flight,
changes in altitude, and curves
around the same tiees as the first.
The phenomenon occurs frequently
during the migratory and mating sea
sons, and infrequently from June to
September, except among the doves
and members of the woodpecker fam
ill.
“It Is common knowledge among
astronomers that in observing the
moon, dozens of traveling birds cross
its face every evening during the mig
ratory season. It is well known, too,
that when one bird is seen, one or
more is likely to follow the same
path immediately after, or within a
few seconds. They are, of course, far
enough part to avoid the drift of the
bird immediately in front. By compar
ison of silhouettes, wing motion, etc.,
I’m sure they usually are the same
kind. In many cases this might be
coincidence, for many birds travel in
flocks. It is likewise true that many
kinds migrate singly or in small
groups.
J. O. WYTHE.
A well known woman who was
asked to a public function, was as
signed a place between a bishop and
a rabbi. Eager to be the lady of the
moment, she said:
"I feel as if I were a leaf between
the Old and the New Testament.”
To which the rabbi responded:
"That page, madam usually is a
blank.”
WHEN LANDON WAS NOMINATED
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Sketched bv Alfred E. Buescher, Central Press Artist
Atlanta
(Central Press, Bureau at G. O. P.
Convention)
By CHARLES P. STEWART
(Central Press Staff Writer)
CLEVELAND, June 12.—The Re
publicans’ campaign policy evidently
is to be one of attack upon President
Roosevelt's way of running things
rather than a fight for any particu
lar constructive program of their
own.
This is assuming that Senator Fred
erick Steiwer, in his keynote speech
at the Cleveland convention, and
Representative (Bertrand H. Snell, in
his address as the convention's per
manent chairman, correctly outlined
the G. O- P.’s plans. Presumably
they did. Convention keynoterj and
permanent chairmen usually know
what they are talking about.
Neither Steiwer nor Snell suggested
much as to what the Republicans, if
they win, propose to do. Both dwelt
upon what their party proposes to
undo that *has been done under the
Roosevelt administration.
• • *
A Distinction
It was not so much the New Deal
that the two G. O. P. spokesmen
criticized; it was the Rooseveltian
method of doing the dealing.
Steiwer especially said that, at first,
he thought rather well of some de
tails of the present White House
tenant's general scheme to lift the
depression, and support them.
But when the president began put
ting his system in operation it turned
out, the keynoter charged, to be al
together different from what he, or
anyone else except a few brain trus
ters, had expected.
F. D. R. Blamed
It was Roosevelt personally whom
Steiwer and Snell alike blamed for
effecting what they described as a
very radical change in the American
form of government.
To be sure, congress voted to him
the authority under which he did it,
but congress, as remarked by Steiwer,
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—WORLD AT A GLANCE—
CAMPAIGN OF ATTACK
For G. 0. P. Battle This
LIKELY TO BE POLICY
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1936
who admits that he voted for several
New Deal measures, had no idea
what use he was about to make of
the powers it conferred on him. Snell
goes so far as to put It that he ‘se
duced the legislative branch by bil
lions in pork barrel patronage.”
(Os course, the permanent chair
man didn’t mean to imply that
Steiwer was "s?duced.” Steiwer sim
ply was deceived. The folk Snell
meant to refer to as having been se
duced were members of the Demo
cratic majority on Capitol Hill.)
And now, added the chairman, the
chief executive “casts a calculating
eye upon the judiciary”—the federal
supreme court, which has knocked
out so much of his legislation as un
constitutional .
A Dictator?
Anyway, Steiwer and Snell agreed
thab Roosevelt is a dictator.
They appealed to the electorate to
get rid of him next November, be
fore he becomes too firmty Intrenched
ever to dislodge, and let a Republican
regime restore to the country the
form of government it enjoyed until
he landed in office.
This can’t exactly be called con
structive.
It’s destructive of what we have
now in order to have again what we
had formerly.
Turn Back?
And will we be back where we
were even if the Republic
ans do win?
Grant (for the sake of argument)
that Roosevelt is a dictator.
It doesn’t follow, however, that the
folk who overthrow him will be able
to re-establish just what existed until
he dictated them out ert lb.
To the contrary, "revolutions never
go backward.”
So it would be interesting to know
what the Republicans plan in the
way of reconstruction after they get
through with the destructive part of
their job—supposing that they suc
ceed at it.
—WASHINGTON AT A GLANCE—
STEWART EAVESDROPS
At Republican Convention;
FINDS PARTY CHANGING
Central Press Bureau at G. O. P.
Convention.
By CHARLES P. STEWART
(Central Press Staff Writer)
CLEVELAND, June 12.—This
year’s political developments bring
out more clearly with every passing
day how almost completely the two
major parties have changed places
since 1932.
The Democrats now are federal
centralizationiste, whereas they for
merly stood pat for states’ rights,
with as few exceptions as possible.
The Republicans, erstwhile central
izations, today defend the doctrine of
states’ rights.
» * *
Split on Tariff
Also on such issues as Secretary
of State Cordell Hull's tariff policy
the parties are at least mixed if not
actually each in reverse.
Secretary Hull, a genuine old-time
low tariff Democrat, is framing up
reciprocal trade agreements between
the United States and other nations
as fast as he can, with a view to
getting world commercial barriers
down. This is sound Jeffersonianism,
but numerous so-called Democrats of
the present era object to it violently,
having become high protectionists of
late.
Contrariwise I have heard many
delegates at the G. O. P.’s Cleveland
convention speak well, with certain
qualifications, of the reciprocal bar
gains. They say that the last tariff
schedules, enacted during the Hoo
ver administration, were entirely too
high.
• • •
Actually Treaties
The reciprocal dickers in reality
are treaties, but they cannot be call
ed treaties.
A treaty, after being negotiated by
the state department, subject to
presidential approval, then must be
ratified by the senate before becom
ing effective. Now, the administra
tion, including Secretary Hull, did
not want the new bargains delayed
by senatorial discussion each time
one was concluded.
Therefore, congress was induced to
empower the president, through the
state department, to frame up recip
rocal "agreements,” not “treaties,”
independently of the senate.
The concentration of so much pow
er in the administration assuredly
would have scandalized the average
old-line Democrat. Now Democrats
defend it in principle, even if they
dp not like the cuts that are being
made. It is the Republicans who are
scandalized. They desire a treaty
cal..led a "treaty,’ 'for the senate to
act on to make it valid—even those
of them who believe in the reciprocal
idea do.
(As a matter of fact, the system is
of doubtful constitutionality.)
• « «
G. O. P. Gone Democratic?
The truth Is that much talk at the
Republicans’ Cleveland convention
has? sounded Democratic, in the by
gone sense.
And much of the talk at the
Democrats’ Philadelphia convention,
in the same sense evidently will
sound Republican.
As I once heard the late Wu Ting
Fang, famous Chinese diplomat, ex
press it. "The bottles have been
changed but not the labels.”
* ♦ »
Will Voters Sense Cange?
How soon the voters will realize
that this swap has been effected is
problematic.
Possibly they will begin to do so
during the coming campaign.
There are signs that some of the
G. O. P. leaders sense it at Cleveland
and possibly some Democratic lead
ers will show similar signs at Phil
adelphia.
The trouble with political leader
ship is that it senses various things
which it prefers not to mention lest
explanation fall to "take” satisfac
torily with the rank-and-file of the
voters.
The latter are very slow to recog
nize a change in the bottles, unac
companied by any clarifying read
justment of the labels.
You’re Telling
Me?
OHIO WOMAN has a hen egg
which she preserved for 50 years.
Still going strong, eh?
♦ » *
London scientist says the hu
man race will be entirely bald
Within another 1,000 years. How
ever, it may be just another hair
raising rumor.
* * •
Maybe the real reason most women
lie about their age is that if they
told the truth other women wouldn’t
believe them anyway.
• • «
A suspect grilled after the
shooting of a policeman said: "I
wouldn’t hurt a dog—let alone
a cop.” The police shouldn't get
too sore about that—they finished
runners-up.
♦ • *
Clothing experts report that women
today can dress more cheaply than
at any time in history. Maybe that’s
why they buy twice as much clothes
as they need.
♦ ♦ ♦
Mounting climbing is increas
ing rapidly in popularity. In fact,
one might say this sport is near
ing its peak.
• * •
“Better late than never,” is an ex
cellent proverb, the only trouble be
ing that everyone believes in it—ex
cept your boss.
The earth is slowly losing its sup
ply of oxiy.gen and will not be able
to support life for more than another
billion years, according to Prof. H.
N. Russell of Princeton university.
MyNew Yor
By
James As well
NEW YORK, June 12—There is a
story around that a man walked into
the Waldorf the other afternoon and
headed straight for the reservation
clerk.
"How far in advance do you reserve
rooms?” he demanded.
"Oh, as far as you like, sir. A
month or more if you desire any par
ticular suite—”
"I don't care about a particular
suite,” the man said, rather trucu
lently, ‘ J just want a room and bath.
For 1939—sometime in the summer,
I am coming to the World’s Fair and
I am going to have my hotel accom
odations fixed. I tell you, it’s a
shame and a caution. I'm so mad,l
could chew nails.”
"What's the matter, sir?” the
clerk asked with the tone indicated
by chapter four, paragraph eight, of
‘‘The Hotel Clerk and His Behavior.”
"I've just been out to Cleveland
and I couldn’t get a thing. I stayed
two hours and caught the first train.
It makes me boil, I tell j r ou—”
♦ * ♦
It’s a funny thing, and doubtless'
of too little consequence to mention
even in a column of bable like this
but I have changed my mind about
Jack Dempsey and. Gene Tunney.
When Tunney took the championship
away from Dempsey I was sorry. I
liked Dempsey and I didn’t like Tun
ney. Many people felt that way.
Dempsey was a magnificent animal.
Tunney was that, too, but his Shake
spearian stuff was just the least lit
tle bit revolting. There is a standing
tradition that pugilists should have
no mind, and when Tunney claimed
one you thought he was putting on
airs.
Perhaps it’s the old resentment
which runs in the mob; if a man has
several talents, there’s a word all
ready to take him down a peg—dilet
tante. And if a prize fighter reads
the classics, surely he must be pre
tending; a man shouldn’t have every
thing, body and mind, should he?
But Tunney, by the good taste and
sincere desire for knowledge which
he has shown since his retirement,
has won this reporter entirely on his
side. He putters about his garden on
his Connecticut farm, reads a lot,
writes a little, keeps in condition. I
don’t care, now, whether he licked
Dempsey or not.
Besides, I glimpsed Gene the other
afternoon in Lexington Avenue, and
I’m sure I spotted a fleck of gray at
his temples. When he was arrested
for speeding recently and behaved
with perfect propriety (he wasn’t
really speeding, it seems, but hit one
of those constable-traps) the reporters
kidded Gene about Shakespeare in
writing him up. I felt like he ought
to have taken a poke at the kidders,
the first time he met them.
♦ ♦ *
A friend, deep in thought and ac
tivity with the Republican conven
tion, postcards from Cleveland and
sticks a clipping from "The American
Mercury” to his card. The clipping
reads:
“On the eastern shore of the Adri
atic lies the little country of Dal
matia. Its people, though they lead
generally happy lives, are much be
deviled by one irritating nuisance.
This is a great and gusty wind of hot
air which blows over them from the
northwest.
‘The wind is known locally as The
Bora.”
- All Os Us -
GARLIC IN THE SALAD
IF YOU want the salad to be "just
right” you take a clove of garlic, cut
it across and rub it all around in the
salad bowl . . . Then, when you mix
your green stuff in the bowl the en
tire salad is suavely permeated with
the flavor of the garlic and it has
just the proper personality.
(This isn’t meant for those odd
human beings who don’t like even
the faintest, suggestion of garlic . . .
They don’t count.)
If your salad is a success a guest
will say: “Mmmh! How do you make
your salad dressing? Mine doesn’t
taste like this.” And then you ex
plain that it isn’t the dressing, ex
actly, but the garlic that was rubbed
around the bowl.
And .if you're a solemn amateur
philosopher with so little sense of
humor that you can t help preaching
at the dinner table you proceed to
discourse on the subject of garlic in
salads and garlic in living.
You compare that powerful stuff,
garlic, so disagreeable in chunks, so
pleasant In essance—you compare it
with certain happenings in life that
are unbearable in great chunks, but
that give zest to life when they are
mixed in proper proprotion with the
rest of existence.
Disappointments . . . Drudgeries . .
Routines . . . Grief .». . Disillusion . . .
Humiliation . . . Self revelations. Dis
coveries about your friends. Insights
into the business of living . . . The
young bric’e learning that her hus
band is sometimes “a big baby”. The
young husband discovering that she
isn't always as “sweet” as he thought
she was ... A young fellow realizing
that the world is bigger than he
thought . . . The bright young lady
forced to accept the unpalatable fact
that she isn't even the center of her
own world . . . The grim understand
ing that life can be, and sometimes Is,
harsh, cruel, selfish, rough, tough,
gruff or even dull . . . Well, these
are the garlic of living.
These give it balance, contrast and
savor. Without them a life is tame,
tasteless, stupid . . . Avoid them, flee
from the rougher side of experience
and you have a salad that's not
worth serving to human beings.
(And I still insist that salad with
out garlic is no salad at all . . . It’s
just something to eat.)
ONE MINUTE PULPIT
So teach us to number our days,
that we may apply our hearts unto
wisdom.—Psalm 90:12.
Today is the Day
By CLARK KINNAIRD
Copyright, 1936, for this Nfiwyx
per by Central Press Association
(Copyright, 1436, Central Pvms JbflßO
eiatdon, Inc.)
Friday, June 12. Morning alnw:
Mercury (stationary kn R. A.), Venus,
Saturn, Uranus, Mars. Dvwntag atom:
Neptune, Jupiter. Mocnt Loot quar
ter.
Scanning the sines: The ekmds nro
higher now. In general, each type of
cloud is higher in summer than in
winter. In autumn, they’ll sink down
again. In all seasons, clouds are high
er over arid areas. The greater the
phere, the lower are the cloud levels,
water-vapor content of the atanos
because moisture-laden aiir does not
have to ascend so high to reach its
"dew-point,” or condensation tempera
ture.
NOTABLE NATIVITIES
Charles L. McNary, b. 1870, sena
tor from Oregon . . . Anthony Eden,
b. 1897, foreign secretary of Britain
... Sir Oliver Lodge, b. IBM, Brit
ish physicist and spiritualist , . .
• • •
TODAY’S YESTERDAYS
JUne 12, 1776—Foundation of Dem
ocratic government in America was
laid in the Virginia convention at
Williamsburg, by George Mason, 51,
planter, whose declaration of rights
was adopted unanimously. It declared
that all men are by nature equally
free, and are invested with inalienable
rights—namley, the enjoyment of life,
liberty, property, and the pursuit of
happiness and safety; that all power
is vested in, and consequently de
rived from the people; that govern
ment is, or ought to be, instituted
for the common benefit and security
of the people and that when govern
ment shall fail to perform its re
quired functions, a majority so the
people shall have the inalienable
rights to reform or abolish it, etc.
As may be judged, Mason’s declara
tion suggested the Constitution of
the United States. He even was a
member of the Constitutional conven
tion. but he refused to sign the U.
S. Constitution and, with Patrick
Henry, led the fight against its ratifi
cation by Virginia.
June 12, 1798—Samuel Cooper was
born, in Hackensack, N. J„ son of a
Revolutionary soldier. Though a north
erner, his love of his wife, a grand
daughter of the aforementioned
George Mason, caused Cooper to re
sign as adjutant-general of the U. S
army and acting secretary of war, in
1861, to join the Confederates. He
was made adjutant and inspect or-gen
eral of the Confederate army and
first on the list of generals. Thus a
northerner outranked Lee in the
southern army in the opening years
of the rebellion!
June 12, Among State Histories:
1775—First sea fight of the Revolu
tion took place at Machias, Me., a
victory for the Americans . . . 1838
Territory of lowa erected, inchiding
all Wisconsin west of the Mississippi
river, wtih Burlington as Ms capital
. . . 1905—The highest speed ever
attained by a passenger train was
reached by the Broadway Limited of
the Pennsylvania R. R., fa a stretch
near Ana, O.—three decades before
streamlining! It’s record: 127.2 m.p.h.
FIRST WORLD DAY-BY-DAY
20 Years Ago Today—Comulsory
service replaced voluntary enlistment
in the United Kingdom. Thus Brita n
dealt with a shortage of manpower.
There was no shortage of seapower.
The government requisitioned 43 per
cent of all shipping under the British
flag for military and naval purposes,
allocated another 14 per cent for car
riage of foodstuffs and war materials,
and placed the remaining number un
der strict regulation as to use.
Publication of Lloyd’s Register of
ships on the first of June had shown
how futile were Germany’s alms at
destruction of Great Britain’s mar
time power. In the 12 months preced
ing; 655 new streamers had come
from the ways or been acquired from
other countries, whereas Britain had
lost only 268 ships because of sub
marines or other causes.
British submarines were now tak
ing heavier toll of German shipping.
In one day, in the Baltic, about this
time, a British submarine sank three
German cargo carriers and shut up
German steamers loaded with ore In
the Swedish port of Oxlesund.
(To be continued)
The Grab Bag
One-Minute Test
1 • In what state is Lake Okeechobee
situated?
2. What analogous document pre
ceded the United States constitution?
3. Define gubernatorial.
Hints on Etiquette
Membership in men’s clubs should
never be self-solicited. Simply cul
tivate the friendship of members of
the club you wish to join until some
person suggests putting your name
up.
Words of Wisdom
In every parting there te an image
of death.—Gsorge Eliot.
Today's Horoscope
Persons born on this day are apt
to be cfose-mouthed regarding their
affairs except with their very inti
mate friends. They seek advice but
do not always follow it, especially if
it is contrary to their own intuition.
One-Minute Test Answers
1. Florida.
2. The Articles of Confederation.
3. Os or pertaining to a governor
or the office of governor.
King Faruk of Egypt carries a
watch which shows the date, the po
sitions of the moon and stars, the
planets whose influrnce is greatest
at the moment, the altitude, the tem
perature and, of course, the time. It
took a Swiss four years to make it.
Twins are born more often ta
blonde mothers than to brunettes.
.tlon of Detn-