Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, June 14, 1936, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8

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PAGE EIGHT COMPANY REPORTS ENDING OF STRIKE _ REMINGTON -RAND SAYt /< TROUBLES “ VIRTUAL LY ENDED” UTICA, N. Y., June 13 (TP).—An Official of the Remington-Rand Com pany said tonight that strikes have Virtually ended in all of its plants in New York state except in Syracuse. The company official said the two Units of Ilion are operating under a full force and the three units at Tonawanda had taken back all the former employes considered accept able. The Brooklyn plant was never affected by the strike. President James Henry Rand told a citizens committee tonight that the WANERR J? -A Seal that 9 y Safe-Guards Your Health! Your Garments Are Not CLEAN Until They Are Germ-Free GARMENTS liMB may LOOK clean and FEEL clean - but w i t h o u t the GERM-FREE Pro -1 cess they are NOT rs clean. j/ / I* ’ s a P roven f ac * « 1 that germs cling to *!■ clothes. It is also known that ORDI |' 1 NARY cleaning, by > use th e cleaning JIKII ® 8 0 1 v en t s alone, f®iM ft does not kill all the /JnUi germ ? found in f Hti 09 clothing. jfefirZ 9.9 k gamble with health when Germ- CLEANING costs no more? Phone 2-3168 IfWe IT LAUnDRqW Successor TO HAMMOND CLEANERS Send Your Laundry With the Dry Cleaning. plant in Syracuse would close down permanently unless 800 employes re turned to work by Wednesday. In Ohio the plant at Marietta was reported operating at 100 per cent capacity. At Norwood the company expected 1,200 men back at work Monday. In Middletown, Conn., a citizens’ committee said it hopes to have 900 employes ready for the re opening of the plant Wednesday. TRACK STAR EQUALS WORLD’S DASH RECORD COLUMBUS, Ohio, June 13 (TP). The Ohio State flash, Jesse Owens, equaled the world record for the 100- yard dash today in tne Ohio State- Southern California dual track meet. Owens won the 100 in 9.4 seconds. Draper of Southern California was second. Boone and Talley of the coast team tied for third. DEARING TO HEAD NEW CONCERN HERE The organization of the Colonial Chevrolet Company, whch is to take the place of the two distributing agencies formerly operating in Sa vanah, was announced yesterday, and will comprise practically the entire personnel of the old concerns. A. K. Dearing will be president of the new r organization, and will move here from Atlanta with his family at once. Although the formal opening will not be held until June 26, the firm will be open for business tomorrow. Departmental heads will be as fol lows: New car sales manager, J. G. Harmon; secretary-treasurer and of fice manager, J. M. Cumming; serv ice manager, W. O. Lucree; used car manager, F. F. Coker; service sales men, L. B. Troughton and N. P. Johnson; parts manager, M. K. Smith, and assistant parts manager, A. E. Walmsley. The Colonial Chevrolet Company will now be the only authorized Chev rolet dealers in Savannah. WELL KNOWN AUTHORESS TO SUMMER AT BEACH A well-known Georgia authoress and new-spaper woman, Mrs. Willie Snow Ethridge, of Louisville, Ky., will spend the summer at Savannah Beach at the cottage of her brother, James Snow of Savannah. Mrs. Ethridge is the husband of Mark Ethridge, for mer Macon newspaperman, who is N IVERSARYjfIgy / L_o-n.qnatulation6. To the Georgia Press Association on a half centurg oF Progress and Service ☆ a DIXIE ENGRAVING C 9 Savannah Geanqia €NCRfIVfRS TO GEORGIAN LEADING NEWSPAPERS Where Else Can As Much Be Had F.or So Little Money? As in INDUSTRIAL CITY GARDENS, “The Salaried Man’s Paradise,” where you may acquire not a city lot but a little country estate of one to twenty acres, or more, of fertile, well-drained land, on .which we will build, and sell to you on terms like rent, a lovely frame or brick bungalow, with modern bath, running water, electric lights, telephone and street car facilities. On this property, you may not only enjoy city conveniences but all country advantages, in that you may have a profusion of flowers, an abundance of vegetables, fruits, poultry, a pony for your boy, your shooting dogs, etc., with the city only five minutes av’ay. Go out and see for yourself that it is not. only a pleasant place to live, but a safe, sound and profitable place in which to invest, as the three hundred odd happy, thrifty, prosperous residents in INDUSTRIAL CITY GARDENS will testify. Also, in SILK HOPE FARMS (shortly to be offere 1 to the public), you may acquire, on or off the concrete, one to one hundred acres of as fine land as is to be found in the entire country; yet, only three miles from the city limits of Savannah, on terms as low* a.'-e>ss.oo cash and $5.00 per tract per month, with NO interest, NO taxes, and your life insured for the first three years. When you will have paid in as much as S3OO, we will either build for you or lend you the money with which to build a lovely frame or brick bungalow, with city conveniences, whene all the joys of country life and pleasures of home ownership may be had, and where you may have the satisfaction of knowing that you can make a good living at home on your own land should you ever quit or lose your job. When you will have acquired and paid for such a lovely place, you may justly swell up with pride in that you invested your savings and the money you were paying for rent in such a place instead of squan dering it - L. H. Smith & Co. 10 DRAYTON STREET TELEPHONE 7833 SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, SUNDAY, JUNE 14, SPURS ’N ALL COWBOY IS RIDING HORSE FROM ARIZONA TO MASSACHUSETTS SANDY HOOK, Conn., June 13 (TP) —A real Arizona cowboy jogged through Sandy Hook today on a horseback irrp from Arizona to Bos ton. The cowboy introduced himself as "Arizona Duke.” He said he saddled his cowpony last September and started East to visit relatives in the Massachusetts capital. He has been riding ever since, except for an oc casional halt to rest. The “Duke” still wears his cowboy costume of chaps, spurs, and somb rero. In deference to the laws of the East he left his six guns in storage somewhere west of the Mississippi. The Duke’s sombrero brim was drooping in the rain as his roan broncho dodged automobiles on the streets of Sandy Hook. He said, though, that he and his mount are still going strong. The horse has worn out nine pairs of iron shoes and now is shod in the tenth pair. The Duke said he had averaged 25 miles on days when he traveled during his nine months’ ride. now editor of the Louisville Courier- Journal. Mrs. Ethridge attended the con vention of the Georgia Press Associa tion which ended here yesterday. A story of hers, “As I Live and Breathe,” with a Georgia setting, will be pub lished this fall. Helps Those oh Doi |F%*j % A Mis* May Curwen According to Miss May Curwen, general secretary of the Young Women’s Christian association of Great Britain, the British govern ment, through special funds granted the Y. W. C. A., is do ing considerable work in certain “distressed areas,” where most of the population have no jobs and have been living on the dole for 10 to 12 years. Miss Curwen came to America to attend the national convention of the Y. W. C. A., and to observe the opera tions of the organization. “The tendency to feel segregated and apart from normal life had al ready developed in these com munities,” says Miss Curwen, “and it was the wish of the gov ernment that more natural and helpful interests should be avail able.” —— <i i . , ... - i. » r—— — OSENSE | NO 7 c ’ oT A * - . • • MUSICAL CIRCLES HELPED BY WPA DESTITUTE MUSICIANS AIDED IN GOVERN MENT AGENCY NEW YORK, June 13 (TP).—The WPA pointed out a little bit proudly this afternoon that thanks to its ef forts floods of good music are being brought to more than 25 American cities this summer. Not accidentally at all attention was called to the fact that at the same time more than 15,000 formerly unemployed musi cians have been given employment. In the east, it was pointed out by Nikolai Sokoloff, the national pro gram director, concerts have been scheduled regularly for New’ York, Brooklyn, Syracuse, Buffalo and oth er New York stete cities. Philadel phia, Boston, Hartford and Bridge port, Conn., also have their own con cert orchestras under the WPA. In the mid-west concerts will be heard in Chicago and many other Illinois cities as w’ell as in Detroit, Minneapo lis, St. Paul and Tulsa. In the west symphonies will play at Denver, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, San Fran cisco, San Diego, Portland and Seattle. Some of the counrty’s leading uni versities also have taken advantage of the WPA music-charming activi ties. Some of the sponsors of cno certs are the University of Illinois, Syracuse university, the University of Pennsylvania Temple, Minnesota, Harvard and many others. SEARCHERS~FEAR CHILD KIDNAPED MONKTON, Md„ June 13 (TP)— More than 200 CCC workers, firemen, and neighbors beat through the woods near Monkton, Maryland. today searching for missing two-year-old Jane Fuhrman. The baby was last seen late yes terday. Police today began checking the theory that she might have been kidnaped. Her mother, Mrs. Ella Fuhrman, reported that a strange car was seen near the child's home about the time Jane disappeared. In a search which lasted until mid night last night and began again at dawn today, neighbors pumped out garden pools, stalked along nearby railroad tracks, and beat through the heavy woods. No trace of the child was found. LEGION~SQUADRON ELECTS OFFICERS Chatham Squadron No. 36, Sons of the American Legion, yesterday elect ed R. Wayne Dillon as captain to succeed J. Homer Daughlan, Jr., the first captain of the squadron. Othe officers elected are: First lieutenant, G. Warren Barnett, Jr.; second lieutenant, J. Read Gaudry, Jr., adjutant, Lawrence Steinheimer, Jr., finance officer, G. Herbert Grif fin, Jr., sergeant-at-arms, J. Alfred Naismith, Jr., chaplain, Joseph L. Gnann, and historian, Robert H. Laughlin. Captain Dillon, a member of Boy Scout Troop No. 12, is the son of Arthur B. Dillon, chairman of the Veterans Council of Administration, and a past commander of Chatham Post No. 36. KNOX LINES UP WITH TEAM-MATE ANTICIPATES HARD FIGHT FORTHCOMING PRESI DENTIAL RACE TOPEKA, Kan., June 13 (TP) Republican Presidential Candidate Landon received a telegram from his running mate, Colonel Frank Knox to day. The telegram read: “I prize high ly the opportunity under your lead ership to fight a battle to a victori ous conclusion in a far graver crisis than that of 1912.” It was in 1912 that both Landon and Knox support ed Teddy Roosevelt in his Bull Moose campaign. Landon said he agreed with Colo nel Knox that the present crisis sac- I Im Zfc? sHH MORRIS LEVY Has made all arrangements to keep you cool and well dressed all summer. AIR-COOLED SUMMER CLOTHES Featured here in Se-Breez tropicals—Sport and plain model*. Specially Priced At $lB 50 Erin Isle-*-imported linens—the well tailored Kind that •* r hold their shape. SIO.OO Every type of Summer Suit can be found here— all correctly tailored—latest models—newest shades —all sizes—to fit all men—Celanese trimmed. THE BEST MERCHANDISE FROM THE BEST FIRMS. SOCIETY BRAND I BOSTONIAN SHOES CLOTHES I INTERWOVEN SOCKS KNOX HATS I JANTZEN Bathing SUITS ARROW SHIRTS | MANHATTAN Sportwear Morris Levy’s THE HOME OF SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHirS SAVANNAH , GA. ing the Republican party is perhaps the most critical it has ever faced. i Said he: “The Republican party i hag a fight on its hands. But we are ready, and with such a fighter as , Knox in our ranks, we’ll put up a battle that will bring victory.” The Kansas governor iridicated that he is perfectly satisfied with the Re publican platform. In speaking of it, he said—“l think it is a very strong, straightforward and sound platform.’’ WOMAN TO SURRENDER ELKTON, Md., June 13 (TP)—The woman who was convicted in Mary land’s “community gossip” shooting case, Mrs .Walter Gillespie, will sur render to officials tonight to begin a four-year prison term. She has been free on SIO,OOO bail. Mrs. Gillespie was found guilty of shooting Mrs. Emily Fisher at the door of her Perry ville home after unfounded gossip linked the name of the dead woman with that of Mrs. Gillespie’s busband.