Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, June 12, 1936, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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VERSATILE MAYOR TO OPPOSE McNARY POLITICAL “BAD BOY” TO RUN AGAINST IN CUMBENT SEATTLE, Wash., June 12 (TP).— Senator Charles McNary, the Repub lican whip from Oregon, has had things pretty much his own way In his home state. But now, for the first time in many years, he faces formidable opposition. That opposition is coming from Willis E. Mahoney, the aggressive mayor of Klamath Falls and Demo cratic nominee for the Senate. He has a large personal following In ad dition to having the support of the Democratic and Townsend organiza tions. * Mahoney is a colorful and ingeni ous personality. He is 40 years old and looks more like a bank clerk than a politician. The singular inci dents surrounding his election as mayor gives you an idea of his char acter. The clerk refused to put Mahoney’s name on the ballot because he had not lived there two whole years. He refused to be stopped, however, and took to the radio, appealing to the people to write in his name. The result was that he won out in a three-cornered election. His oppo nents again played on the residence angle and brought legal action against him. But Mahoney again outwitted them. He skipped to Seat tle until his term of office began, then returned and affirmed that he had been a Kalmath citizen for two years. A century ahead of his time: 125 years ago this month L. A. Berblinger, a tailor of Ulm, Bavaria, leaped from the city wall with wings on his shoul ders, and crashed into the Danube as thousands cheered. Ulm shops still sell comic postcards of a man so rid iculous as to try to travel by air. NONSENSE OfAC. op- WIH6S OF just eesvueM ore- «■ C < • If p o wiv > iBM ; ! i I ’H i ilir iIH JIJt fep ?Jy Summer heat causes blow-outs. Why risk trouble and delay driving on dangerous worn-out tires? Equip your car now with jB Hn Goodrich Safety Silvertowns, the Safest Tire Ever Built and pay »» you ride on easy, convenient terms. It only takes a couple W minutes to open your account. 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B Stores I BRA TON AND OGLETHORPE BILL KEHOE, Manager PHONE 3-1128 The Nicaraguan Rebels—and Their Leader v ' J American-trained Nicaraguan national guardsmen ' A v forced President Juan Sacasa to resign. A machine gun un ’L w ’th a number of marksmen, is shown at ' IT'- Managua during the fighting. In the inset is the IT 5 ia \ A * W rebel “Strong Man,” Gen. Anas tacio Somoza. YOUNG FOLK CAN’T COAX SWEETIES TO BE ENGAGED THEY COMPLAIN By VIRGINIA LEE Two letters, both requiring personal answers, with the same problem came to me together. One is from a girl who is in love with a young man; the other from a man in love with a girl. In the first case the girl would like to win the man for her own but he isn’t ready to settle down to an engagement yet. In the second the case is reversed, the young man is anxious to become engaged, but the girl is not ready to tie herself to one man, although she admits she cares for the boy. Now, girls and boys, I know it hurts like blazes when the One and Only wants to go out with others and wont’ give you the privilege of going “steady” or of being engaged. But you never, never can win a person by holding the magainst their will. You couldn’t be won that way either. Give your beloved plenty of rope if he or she feels restless. It is the only safe thing to do. If the boy friend says he wants to have dates with other girls, tell him to go ahead. But be sure to give him such good times when he is with you that he can see for himself that you are the one with whom he can be appiest. You may lose im, it is true, but if you don’t happen to fill his specifications for a wife, you won’t get him anyway, and if you do you will, and he’ll have the satisfied feeling that he picked you, knowing that you were the one he wanted. Better let him get the yen to go with other girls out of his system while he is young and free, rather than later, when he has a wife and maybe children. It will be a tragedy then. Don’t Mourn And if he decides that another girl suits him better, don’t mourn too much. It sounds Pollyannish to say that what happens is for the best, but it often is if we work to make it so- There are always—or nearly always— other boys. And if not, well, there are many happily unmarried women in the world, too. There are so many interesting things to do and places to see, that it is hard to be unhappy even if a woman doesn’t wed. And the same is true when the young man canont persuade the girl he loves to accept his ring and go with him alorn*. You, my boy, surely don’t want to marry a girl who will have the feeling that she is not quite satisfied; some other boy might have suited her better or, at any rate, she would have been better satisfied to have had experience in going out with othr boys. You don’t want a wife to feel that she has been rail roaded into matrimony and have her going about looking for a man who may suit her better than you, do you? Give her plenty of rope and she’ll probably not go far. And if she does meet someone else she likes bet ter, better she do it now than later. You too, like the girl in a similar case, should make an effort to think SA VAX. AH DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1936 %* i ■ that it is “all for the best,” and look for another girl. CONNIE: I am sorry to say that your letter was delayed somewhere along the line and did not reach me in time to be answered. I hope you did send the boy friends mother some little gift for Mother’s day. It would have ben a gracious thing to do. M. L. Phares contributes: “Gunsen houser, the real name of a real fam ily, can be spelled 42,640 different ways, and this doesn’t exhaust the possibilities. If for n, mn as in mnemomlcs, pn as in pneumonia, kn as in knowledge, etc., and other in tricacies of English spelling are in cluded, the number of ways Gunne sohnn-howse-ehrr can be spelled runs into more than a million.” w BRANS OF BEER W BE THE JUDGE. IFT TOUR OWN TASTE LISTEN, FOLKS! —TO WILLIAM RITT— This month the air waves will hum with more activity than has been the lot of the listener to listen in on for a long time. June’s two major events are, of course, the Republican and Demo cratic conventions, which will be on the air a good part of the time the delegates are convening in Cleveland and Philadelphia. However, politics will be given a good run by sports during the month of wedding bells and busing bugs. Tops, probably in national interest, is the Max Schmeling-Joe Louis fight. The national open at Short Hills. N. J., will be the golf high light Quality Furniture AT SALVAGE PRICES —n IITT M 3 -Pc. Bedroom Suite Special-Consisting I I of Large Poster Bed, Hollywood Vanity I and Large Chest of Drawers. I NEW SHIPMENT OF LANE CEDAR CHESTS AT SALVAGE PRICES GENUINE SIMMONS BEAUTY-REST MATTRESSES $29.95 SEVERAL ODD NEW VANITIES, DRESSERS AND CHEST OF DRAWERS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. SPOT CHAIRS, $3.95 SPOT ROCKERS, $4.95 DOWN SPRING CONTRUCTION. Complete Line of Office Furniture SALVAGE SALES CO, Inc PHONE 4611 118 WEST BROAD STREET PHONE 4430 51JWlfAll'gy*BJiJi * N Ii ips pSHB I si- w IB KSEx Hi O Here’s the greatest refrigerator im- I I ' provemeot in years. On its hinges or ' snapped on the door, Sav-A-Step sc- T .. ..; £ E* S, tually puts that hard-to-reach back i|j ■..L■_ l shelf space at your fingertips, saves L * I * o I » steps, saves current. Only Stewart- i | 9 • I • o Warner has it. Yet it’s just one of a I 111 L „.. J dozen great Stewart-Warner improve- | ments. See it here today. j H STEWART-WARNER I I E B I ' illi'’ 5-TUBE RADIO IN CARRY CASE :j|iili! aa _- JI I— $19.50 MBI I LET US DEMONSTRATE THIS 5-TUBE RADIO ',WIP IN THE NEW CARRY CASE lllll HiMlllillll PAY ON EASY MONTHLY TERMS Arthur J. Funk 15 EAST PERRY STREET with Wightman cup and Davis cup tennis matches also adding to the aerial sport fare. The Princeton invitation track meet and the Harvard-Yale regatta will also be aired this month. « • • Women announcers will eventually dominate in radio, though there now are but few of them—according to a noted radio observer. He gives as reason—television. The British Broadcasting system has already indicated the trend by selecting two very pretty girls for an nouncers for the television service de veloped by the BBC. The two girls, 22-year-old Jasmine Bligh and 23-year-old Eliabeth Cowell are now announcing over the regular radio system, to familiarize them selves with the work. They were picked from among 1,100 applicants. • ♦ ♦ NOTES —Walter Winchell goes off the air for the sumemr on June 28 . . . “The Romance of Dan and Sylvia,” a local KDKA, Pittsburgh, program, joins the NBC-WJZ network . . . Television field tests will start in the New York area late this month . • . New York will have a new ra dio center. Columbia has purchased a site at Park avenue and 59th street. Plans call for a new headquarters, with ultra modem studios . . . Ed Wynn will continue through the sum mer . . . You will hear a description of that total eclipse of the sun, sched uled for Siberia, June 14, via the networks. . . . Tim Ryan and Irene PAGE SEVEN Noblette, air. screen and stage com edy team, will fill the spot of vaca tioning Jack Benny . . . Fritzi Scheff steps out of the “Lavender and Old Lace” show for the summer . . , Richard Gordon, the radio "Sherlock Holmes,” rarely reads crime news. J. P. Morgan wears a tin lid—hit own idea—over a pipe when he smokes it, so his home folk can’t complain about dropped ashes. The paper on which is the will ol Joseph Stanley, who died in 1770, if now worth more than the amount t-hat it devised. Because it bears the rare signature of Button Gwinnett signer of the Declaration of Indepen dence, it is worth SIO,OOO. SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES PHONE 6183