Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
FOR REAL SAVINGS IN HOME FURNISHINGS
"I
1
ini.iinniiniMmiiiji w r.i
A B|[ jT jy
„ < • ’’' .. •'••••.•.•.' ••>s*s£&*• v- z< • •••• •• y/rZpl 1— JI ks^^Sß: : ' ;
LIVING ROOM SUITE SCQ9S
Pleasant and restful to look at! Luxurious to sink into! The generous proportions ■
spell downright comfort. The massive design brands it a real aristocrat. Honor-Bilt
construction and steel under-structure assure you years of service. Tailored in genuine $5.00 DOWN 56.00 MONTH
Angora Mohair. . L . Plu * Charge.
LUXURY MATTRESS BED SPRING
' ■’<•• ( '■■■ _ . ~J,. J. I
Ji ■
-
vUUILEE ibAlUnfc I H give you in this spring! 90 fine premier wire jk 4 J
Easily America’s finest mattress! Designed B- £ coils for resiliency .. . wire ties top, angle steel T
for superb comfort . . . 848 barrel-shaped base and steel cross slats for long life. Smartly A
coil springs in individual muslin contain- ■■ finished. 39 or 54 inch size. We've reduced ■.!
ers. Ventilated for sanitation! The peak of . .... BB
perfecton from a standpoint of beauty and CASH the price for a limited time only. See it today
perfection! Also Sold On Easy Terms in Sears new store.
_ _ _ _ ..... J _ ... t
6 UNPAINTED CHAIR BEACH UMBRELLA SLING CHAIR
79c Sfc' $2.49 ■ /IB 79c
Sear* bring, you a real .en- \ „ . ~ . r . „.. h
sation in thia panel back Cathe- EnJ ° y outdaor comfort wlth AWJO/I summer necessity! Sears
deal type unfinished chair. The ] this drill covered, steel rib- brings you this one at a
heavy seat and turned leg. tell I bed umbrella. Has 7 foot special low price. One-piece
■ s.‘„M X po ' e •• • Bprc ‘ ds 812 ,eet - ‘^ n n^ il
humonlM wl.b your .urround- Equipped with hwidy tilt- wood Irame with adjustable
ings. in ß device. back.
★ ★ -fc 4-STAR Hfifc
JUBILEE FEATURE L
CDLDSPDT Wffll
$1 ejso II
$5.00 Down Delivers It! Up to Three Years to Pay. ■
To celebrate Sears Gqiden Jubilee—the proudest refrigerator in Sears
history and the greatest value in the history of an industry. Call it ■ •'~l ~
beauty, call it convenience, call it performance—the words don't mat- ■ I ‘
ter. The fact is that here is the finest refrigerator ever priced so low — J L y . K-Z I
a refrigerator that represents 50 years of merchandising progress.
Before you spend a penny—investigate this amazing refrigerator
“The Big Buy of 1936!”
■* WHI ■
Mn BTrW ■ wfi
-5-:pnJtgJwjw ' F I U
•>:>•> zsiq j k swv yw u .uauu«j.v 3 I
WKJ. CHECK these features
igß Like magic! The slightest touch of finger tip or elbow on the
-zxx— smart chromium bar opens the massive door gently even when
aBL> jHMji Costs less to operate than any electric refrigerator that gives
< w j :iw. you such super-power. Only five moving parts, scaled in oil for
I S' loi y€ars of service - With Coldspot 5 Year Protection Guarantee.
!tiaLMWE^v .ttW&Ssk K yIJK Only Coldspot has them 1 Flat, rustproof aluminum shrives de-
/HP veloped by Sears. Stay bright, cannot rust or cause small con-
I tainers to tip over.
Q luS Another Coldspot convenience every woman wants. A large
iOOw !|l|i <:• zis storage compartment for vegetables such as potatoes and onions.
1W Slides out on tiny steel rollers.
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, SUNDAY, JUNE 28. 1936
SEARS-ROEBUCK’S SAVANNAH STORE
KL - irm
f M|H
lww<4JU!
.- - —*~ wgay
- ftlgpWiy Mfi
'*Ht
MANAGER
" I
f&SSSg .-■■■*<..
K'*f4H
||f ?'
, [?»SS3» A j&J
VIRGIL D. JOHNSON
Manager of Savannah Sears-
Roebuck Store.
FLYERS SPEED ON
GOOD-WILL TRIP
AMATEUR SPORTSMEN BE
GIN ANNUAL TRIP TO
CANADA
ROOSEVELT FIELD, L. 1., June 27
(TP) —Ahiateur fliers ignored heavy
weather today and sent' their planes
into the skies on the annual goodwill
flight to Montreal. Forty-two fliers
tuned up their craft at Roosevelt
Field ahd' 14 were in the air bearing
northward before noontime. All were
expected to be underway before 1
o’clock, despite a low ceiling.
In Montreal tonight the fliers will
be entertained by the Montreal Light
Airplane club, which for four years
has sponsored these good-will inter
city flights. The American amateurs
will wing back to New Yor ktomor
row byway of Burlington, Vt., and
Westport, N. Y.
ECONOMISTSWARN
AGAINST NEW DEAL
NEW YORK, June 27 (TP).—Two
prominent.. Amer ic a n economists
charged today that the New Deal is
steering the United States into infla
tion and bankruptcy.
The former secretary of the Fed
eral Reserve board, H. Parker Willis
declared that the New Deal had start
ed a great, credit inflation. Writing
for the American Mercury, Willis
said the whole country has learned to
charge off its obligations from the
White House.
The Princeton economist, Edwin
Kemmerer maintained in a twin ar
ticle that President Roosevelt was al
ready sustaining government credit
by inflationary policies which must
one day collapse. He warned that
the government must immediately
“pare its expenses to the bone” or
face "financial chaos.”
NEW REVENUE BILL
SCORED B YBANKER
HOT SPRINGS, Va„ June 27 (TP)
The banking leader, Robert Fleming,
indicted the administration’s new tax
bill today as a threat to the coun
try’s social structure.
The -president of the American
Bankers’ Association roundly assailed
the revenue bill. He charged it would
retard business confidence and effect
a social . change "without causing
noticeable dislocations in the na
tion's economic structure.”
’TWON’T BE LONG NOW
“Do I bore you?” asked the mos
quito politely, as he sank a deep shaft
into the man's leg.
“Not at all!” replied the man
smashing the mosquito gently over
the head with a book. “And, by the
way, how do I strike you?”
‘LADY LUCK’ SMILES
ON STORE-KEEPER
MYSTERIOUS DONOR SENT
FORTUNE TO COUN
TRY DWELLER
MIZE, Mich., June 27 (TP)—A gen
eral storekeeper, R. W. Ford, may be
come suddenly rich within the next
few days. Even if he doesn’t, he says
business at his store in Mize is boom
ing.
Ford received a plain manila en
velope in the mail recently. When
he opened it, he discovered $142,000
in British army and navy bonds.
There was no return address on the
letter, but the cancellation showed it
had been posted in British Columbia.
Ford says he can’t understand who
sent the small fortune, nor Why. “I
know some people in British Colum
bia,” he said, "but they don’t know
me very well.”
Right now the bonds are in the
hands of postal inspectors at New
Orleans, who are trying to determine
whether Ford has a right to the sud
den wealth.
“Even if I don't get it,” Ford com
ments, “people for 50 miles around
are dropping in to talk about it—
and everyone buys something.”
AT THE
THEATERS
LUCAS— Monday, Tuesday, Wednes
day. W. C. Fields in "Pop
py” with Rochelle Hudson.
Thursday, Friday, Saturday,
Edward G. Robinson in
"Bullets or Ballots,” with
Joan Blondell.
•
BlJOU— Monday, Tuesday, Wednes
day, Jack Holt and Mona
Barrie in "Unwelcome
Stranger.” Thursday, Fri
day and Saturday, Mae
West and Victor McLaglen
in “Klondike Annie.”
ODEON— Monday and Tuesday, Her
bert Marshall and Gertrude
Michael in "Forgotten
Faces.” Wednesday and
Thursday, Frances Lang
,ford in “Palm Springs”
with Smith Ballew. Friday
and Saturday, Rochelle
Hudson and Paul Kelly in
"The Country Beyond.”
FOLLY— Monday and Tuesday, Gene
Raymond and Margaret
Callahan in “The Seven
Keys to Balpate.” Wednes
day and Thursday, Fred
Stone in "The Farmer In
The Dell.” with Jean Park
er. Friday and Saturday,
"Moonlight on The Prairie,”
with Dick Foram and She
ila Manners.
ARCADIA— Monday and Tuesday,
Fred Mac Murray and Joan
Bennett in "13 Hours By
Air.” Wednesday and Thurs
•day. “Together We Live,”
■with Ben Lyons and Sheila
Manners. Friday and Sat
urday, Double Feature,
George O'Brten in “Whis
pering Smith Speaks”
James Dunn and Claire
Dodd in “The Payoff.”
SAVANNAH— Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday. "Dancing Feet”
starring Ben Lyon, Joan
Marsh, and Eddie Nugent.
First local showing. Also
comedy,*' Silly Spmphony,
and Pathe News. Thurs
day, “School for Girls” star
ring Sidney Fox, Paul Kel
ly, Dorothy Lee and Toby
Wing. Also short subjects.
First run. Friday and Sat
urday. Double Features!
Gene Autrey in "Singing
Cowboy” and Alice Brady
in "Lady Tubbs” with
Douglass Montgomery and
Anita Louise. Also "Under
seas Kingdom" and cartoon
“Candyland.” Entire pro
gram first run.
RUNAWAY SCION
ON DUDE RANCH
YOUNG WINSLOW TURNS
UP AT COLORADO VA
CATION SPOT
LYNN, Mass., June 27 (<TP).—
Across the miles today, young John
Winslow proved to his pop that when
the woolly West beckons —youth ha®
to answer. 15-year-old John Winslow
disappeared from the home of his
textile millionaire father on Mon
day. He left a note saying he was
going out West. Frantic appeals to
police got an eight-state alarm out
in no time.
Police had the boy’s description:
Young, healthy lad wearing a ten
gallon hat, chaps, spurs and carry
ing a lariat. There were confident
predictions the youngster would be
picked up in 24 hours.
John Winslow fooled ’em. Today,
he notified hs father that he’s
healthy and happy on a dude ranch
at Buena Vista, Colo.
LAB OR LEADERS
ATTACKED BY MOB
GADSDEN, Ala., June 27 (TP)
Mob violence kept 11 rubber workers
organizers out of the city todr/. The
men were driven from Gadsden Thurs
day night by a mob of 300 men which
beat and kicked them and wrecked
their organization offices. One of the
mobsters threw a typewriter out the
window. The crowd smashed windows,
broke tables and chairs and drove the
union men into the street.
The men, organizers for the United
Rubber Workers Union, were warned
to get out of the city and stay out-
The mob began disbanding. Only a
few of them were stan/tng about
when police arrived and placed the
union leaders under protective cus
today. Bruised and limping, they
were escorted to a nearby town where
they left for Birmingham.
LABOR LEADERS
TO INVESTIGATE
MOB DISORDERS
WASHINGTON, June 27 (TP).—
Representatives of the labor depart
ment and the national labor relations
board are on their way today to in
vestigate labor disorders at Gadsden,
Alabama.
The investigation orders followed a
complaint of officers of the United
Rubber Workers’ Union that a group
of organizers had been attacked by
a mob.
The vice president of the Rubber
Workers Union, Thomas Burns of
Akron, Ohio, declared that although
police were notified to be on the look
out for trouble 45 minutes before the
attack, they didn’t appear on the
scene until it was all over.
AVOID THE HAZARDS OF THE HIGHWAY |
Travel Central of Georgia Railway f
“The Safe, Cool Comfortable Way” /
AT THE FOLLOWING COACH FARES
ATLANTA $ 4.19 KNOXVILLE I 6.53
AUGUSTA 1.94 LOUISVILLE 10.68
ATHENS 3.68 MEMPHIS 10.31
AMERICUS 3.31 MONTGOMERY 5.07
ALBANY 3.31 MOBILE •• 7.76
BIRMINGHAM 6.51 NASHVILLE 8.53
COLUMBUS 4.38. NEW ORLEANS 9.86
chattanooga „ ;• •;;;:;;;;; <£
CINCINNATI 11.00 ST. LOUIS, Mo. 13.59
Proportional Coach Far or to Other Stations. Fares Rood in Pnllmant
Slightly Higher Plus charge For Accommodations Occupied
Air-conditioned Buffet Lounge Coach to Macon and Atlanta on day
train serves breakfast and lunch en route. 11-2 cents per mile ticket*
honored in Lounge Coach plus moderate charge for seats.
Air-conditioned Pullman Sleeping Care to Atlanta, Columbus, Birming
ham and Chicago on night train. Coaches on all trains.
Low rail fares to Dallas, Tex., for the Texas Centennial Exposition,
June 6 to November 29, 1936, also to San Diego, Calif., for the Califor
nia-Pacific International Exposition. Convenient schedules over a variety
>f routes —Air-Conditioned Equipment.
For additional information Phone 5517-4121, Ticket Office, 301 West
Broad Street. H. S. Oliff, Passenger Agent.
NORMAN THOMAS
SCORNS RIVALS
■ 1 f ——
G. 0. P. AN7 DEMOCRATS
CRITICIED BY SOCIAL
-IST HEAD
NEW YORK, June 27 (TP)—The
Socialist candidate for president, Nor- ;
man Thomas, attacked the Demo
cratic national platform tonight, say
ing that it promises nothing specific !
except that Democratic job holders
will be protected by civil service.
Thomas spoke at a dinner in honor
of New York’s socialist candidate for
governor, Harry Laidler. He said the
Democraic platform is less bad from
a labor standpoint than the Republic
an labor plank. He declared though,
that the battle between Democrats
and Republicans is between two forms
of capitalism. Labor leaders, said the
speaker, have got very little for their
support of Roosevelt.
Said Thomas: “The party of Joe
Robinson dared not specifically re
buke terrorism in the Arkansas cot
ton fields.”
SEES ROOSEVELT
ON ROAD TO WAR
{SOCIALIST CANDIDATE
SAYS SINISTER FORCES
BEHIND ARMING
NEW YORK. June 27 (TP).—The
Socialist candidate for governor of
New York state, Dr. Harry W. Laid
ler, charged in his acceptance speech
today that the Roosevelt administra
tion is following the road to war.
Dr. Laidler pointed out that the
United States is arming as never be
fore. He said Uncle Sam is spending
on our army and navy sums greater
than ever before were spent by any
nation in time of peace. Dr. Laidler
charged that there are sinister forces
in the present administration as well
as in the Republican party that
would involve the nation in a desper
ate war to hold trade in the Far East.
Said Dr. Laidler; “Despite the pro
testations of peaceful aims in the
Democratic platform, the present ad
ministration, as was the Wilson ad
ministration in 1916, is adopting poli
! cies which, If not reversed, can have
but one ending—war.”
POLICE SEEKING
MISSING GUARD
DRIVER ARMORED TRUCK
IS MISSING WITH
$17,000
PAWTUCKET, R. 1., June 27 (TP)
Rhode Island police are searching for
Walter Hussey, missing guard on a
bank truck. A warrant has been is
sued for his arrest.
Hussey disappeared* yesterday with
a bank truck containing >19,000. He
was parked in front of a Pawtucket
bank. Then he wasn’t. The truck was
found a short time later. In the truck
was all but $2,200 of the $19,000, Hus
sey’s uniform and his .45 pistol. There
were no signs of violence. Authorities
Immediately launched a state-wide
search.
Hussey is a spare drive of armored
cars. When not driving, he works on
the WPA. He is married and the fa
ther of three small children. Officials
say his record has been spotless.
IOSENSE
, 54