Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, June 28, 1936, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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CONVICT KILLED BY JAIL GUARDS IN FREEDOM DASH OFFICIALS BREAK UP AT TEMPTED SCALING OF WALL TRENTON, N. J., June 27 (TP).— A Jailbreak in the New Jersey state prison was blocked today after guards had fired on 50-year-old Joseph Stod dard with fatal effect. Officials said four convicts made the break. One of the convicts boost ed Stoddard to the' top of the wall. Stoddard ran toward a prison tower, intending to attack a guard. Anoth er guard, Leon Kennedy, fired on Stoddard, wounding him four times. ■IB* SEMINOLE JACKSONVILLE J FLORIDA , CHARLIE GRINER, M®i. S e< ’ .YOUR indiviJu.l comfort .nd «nt.rt«inm<nt ’ I ii « milter of great importance at thia modern, fire-proof, home-like hotel located in the heart es down-town Jacksonville. Every room with tub and ahower, toft water, iteam heat, radio and ceiling lan... every bed with inncr •pring mattreti and individual reading tempi. t AIR CONDITIONED * COCKTAIL LOUNGE . COFfEE SHOP r— — Relet—Single with Privete Bath —— 78 Room. $2 00 . 80 Roomt $2.50 f 40 Roomt $3.00 -24 Rooms $3.50 10 Sample Roomt with Private Bath $4.00 Slight increase for double occupancy ** Other ) 8 POUND Hol.l, HOTEL PATTEN HOTEL D r SOTO Chattanooga, T«nn. Savannah, ■ - •• I SUMMER SALE OF USED CARS Two Days Only, June 29 and 30, in This Sale I We Offer Practically Every Make and Model THE CHATHAM MOTOR COMPANY BY FAIR DEALING AND HONEST VALUES HAS WON THE CONFIDENCE OF THOUSANDS OF CUSTOMERS IN THE PAST 20 YEARS. MR. SOL KAMINSKY, PRESIDENT OF THE COMPANY SAYS: "NOW, WE VALUE THAT CONFIDENCE MORE THAN EVER BEFORE. IT MUST BE HELD REGARDLESS." SOL FURTHER SAYS THIS IS NOT A MONEY-RAISING SCHEME, BUT AN HONEST EFFORT TO REDUCE THE NUMBER OF USED CARS NOW IN STOCK. OUR SALES OF NEW CHRYSLER AND PLYMOUTH CARS HAVE FAR EXCEEDED OUR ABILITY TO KEEP THE USED CAR STOCK iiORMAL. NEW CAR SALES ARE NOW FAR ABOVE EXPECTATIONS. SIIYCE OUR PROFITS ARE DERIVED FROM NEW CAR SALES, WE HAVE DECLARED WAR ON USED CARS. WE WILL SELL THEM REGARDLESS OF COST. / I 1935 CHEVROLET 1935 PLYMOUTH MASTER “6" COACH DE-LUX SEDAN J r Driven 3,000 miles—Only In perfect condition, f f $195 DOWN $195 DOWN ' Balance Small Monthly Payments Balance Small Monthly Payments 1935 FORD “V-8" 1933 PLYMOUTH / DE-LUX SEDAN FOUR-DOOR SEDAN / With radio and accessories. A real good value—For only t $l5O DOWN $125 DOWN I Balance Easy Monthly Payments Balance Small Monthly Payments 1932 CHEVROLET 1931 FORD “A” J FOUR-DOOR SEDAN TU-DOOR SEDAN New paint, good tires, new upholstery— Good paint, tires and upholstery— only Only $95 $75.00 Balance Small Monthly Payments Balance Easy Monthly Payments 1934 CHEVROLET 1933 CHRYSLER STANDARD COACH ROYAL SEDAN . , . . . , Almost new tires, perfect appearance A real economical value for and mechanjc F al condition . $l5O DOWN $175 DOWN Pay Balance As You Ride. Balance Easy Monthly Payments 1935 PLYMOUTH 1934 CHEVROLET DE-LUX COUPE MASTER “6” SEDAN The perfect 2-passenger car. A rea l n *2. e $l5O DOWN $145 DOWN Pay Balance As You Ride. Balance Easy Monthly Payments 1932 PLYMOUTH 1931 PIERCE-ARROW TU-DOOR SEDAN 7-PASSENGER SEDAN See this one today for only— In perfect condition—For only— -575.00 DOWN $75.00 DOWN Balance in Easy Monthly Payments. Easy Monthly Payments. CHATHAM MOTOR CO. LIBERTY AND DRAYTON 415 WEST LIBERTY ST. Stoddard died in the prison hospital. He and three prisoners had made a successful break in 1931. Today’s break was made in the recreation [yards where 1000 convicts were exer cising. The other men were marched into their cells without disorder. F. D. R. ACCEPTS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) "There was no place among this , royalty” he continued, "for our many thousands of small businessmen and merchants who sought to make a ! worthy use of the American system of 1 , initiative and profit. They were no more free than the worker or the farmer.’’ ‘‘lt was natural and perhaps hu man,” he said, "that the privileged princess of these new economic dy nasties, thirsting for power, reached out for control of government itself. They created a new despotism and wrapped it in the robes of legal sanc tion. "In its service,” he declared, “new mercenaries sought to regiment the people, their labor and their prop erties. “It was as a result of ■ this,” he herd, “that the average man once mere confronts the problem that facea the minute men.” The chief executive said those who tilled the soil no longer received what was due then. "The small measure of their gains,” he declared, "was de creed by men in distant cities. Opportunity Stunted Throughout the nation,” he said, “opportunity was limited by monopoly. Individual initiative was crushed in the cogs of a great machine. Private enterprise became too private. It be came privileged entet prise, not free enterprise. “For too many of us,” the president said, “the political economy we once had won was meaningless in the face of economic inequality, “A small group had concentrated into their own hands,” he declared, "an almost complete control over oth er people’s property, other oeople’s money, other people's labor—other people’s lives. "The collapse of 1929,” said Mr. Roosevelt, “showed up the despotism Vassar Girls W ork for American Youth Congress f IWj|f T|| Jrs d®TTT ■Bfc. * Jib? Jlf z W •• 'Milk, qBP i . >• -.Jis*: ■ Is f■ : ■■ 111 V<■ ' wF&h aw?/ z > zak, ■Bp?' * r The Misses Felicia Lamport, Sheddon, Katharine Meyer and Constance Dimmock (left to right), all Vassar undergraduates,.arephown in New York aa they prepared for the National Youth Congress, which will send 3,000- to Cleveland in July- They are to represent more than 2,500,000 young people lof (the nation. (Central Press) for what it was. The election of 1932 was the people’s mandate to ena it. “Under that mandate it is being ended, he cried. Then the president attacked those who opposed the New Deal. “The economic royalists complain that we seek to overthrow the in stitutions of America,” he said. "What they really complain of,” he answered, "is that we seek to take away their power.” "Our allegiance to American insti tutions requires the overthrow of this kind of power,” he said. “In vain they try to hide behind the flag and con stitution. In their blindness they for get what the flag and the constitu tion stand for. Now, as always, the flag and the constitution stand for democracy, not tyranny—for freedom, not subjection—and against a die- SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES. SUNDAY, JUNE 28, 1936 tutorship by mob rule and the over privileged alike.” Hands Platform “The bravz and clear platform adopted by the convention, to which I heartily / subscribe,” he said, “sets forth that government in a modem civilization has certain inescapable ob ligations. to its citizens, among which are protection of the family and the home, <ihe establishment of a democ racy o Z opportunity, and aid to those overtejken by disaster. For more than three years we have fought for them. This convention has pledged in every word, and deed that the fight will go on.”* “We tire poor, indeed,” the presi dent declared, “if this nation cannot afford to lift from every recess of /American life the bread fear of the t /hemployed that they are not needed Ai the world. We cannob afford to accumulate a deficit on the books of human fortitude.” Governments can err, Mr. Roose velt said, "presidents can and do make mistakes.” But, he then con cluded, “better the occasional faults of a government that lives in a spirit of charity that the consistent ommis sions of a government frozen in the ice of its own indifference." POLAND LIFTS SANCTION AGAINST ITALIAN TRADE WARSAW, June 27 (TP)—Poland today became the first member of the League of Nations to raise sanctions against Italy. This action was taken independent ly by the Polish Ministerial Council at Warsaw. The council ordered that Poland should raise the economic siege at once. Strategist Hur ja ■R . jRi ife X?? W| ! \ - f - 'J* \ ’X F jUI \\ w % W-. 77 a'! / P Z h Emil Hurja, political strate- ® gist of the Democratic party ; and first lieutenant to Postmas- ' ter General James A. Farley, is k seen at a caucus of Michigan Democrats at the convention in Philadelphia.—Central Press. Sallys Sallies ~Z /i W 7 VOU NEXT S' WEEK, HITHER, I “Happiness," says the Old Doc. "is the I pursuit of something, not the catching of Q A Vanderbilt Runs JPHiil William H. Vanderbilt William H Vanderbilt, wealthy Rhode Island socialite and son of the late Alfred Gwynne Vander bilt, has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for governor of Rhode Island -Central Press p/?^ £ SAFE AND Lr GLORIOUS FOURTH A GLORIOUS FOURTH WILL BE YOURS IF YOU ARE WISE AND SEND YOUR DRY CLEANING-WASH SUITS AND LAUNDRY TO LOWE’S THIS WEEK. TO MAKE YOUR FOURTH SAFER, WE WILL RETURN YOUR CLOTHES TO YOU “GERM-FREE”—AN EXCLUSIVE PROCESS FOUND ONLY AT LOWE’S. THIS SERVICE CANNOT BE FOUND ELSEWHER IN SAVAN NAH. WE CLOSE JULY 4TH. PLEASE HELP US BY SENDING YOUR WORK EARLY AND AVOIDING THE LAST MINUTE RUSH. —BEST WISHES FOR THE FOURTH- PHONE 2-3168 L .oB 1415 PAULSEN LAUnDRIjWF SUCCESSOR TO HAMMOND CLEANERS SEND YOUR LAUNDRY WITH THE DRY CLEANING HELEN HAYES NAMED IN ALIENATION ACTION CHICAGO, June 27 (TP)—The act ress Helen Hayes will be called to Chicago next Wednesday to face a SIOO,OOO alienation of affections suit. She is acused by a Chicago dram atic critic, Carol Frink, of breaking up her marriage with playwright Charles MacArthur. Miss Hayes mai tied MacArthur afte his divorce from Miss Frink. The suit has dragged on in Chi cago courts so rnearly four months This will be the first time Mies Hayes has appeared personally. MacArthur will accompany her. GARNER (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) follow where the commander leads. I accept the rules of way as laid down in the platform." Gamer said the Democratic New Deal took the nation’s helm at the end of an “old deal” Republican ad ministration which had left the coun try in the midst of "despondency, gloom and despair.” "The old de,',” he said, "is a polit ical system which fosters an economic order giving special privileges to a few favored ones.” Then he added: "The New Deal is simply an adapta tion of the laws of the country so that the greatest good will come to the greatest number.” "That New Deal,” Garner said, "is our platform in this campaign. On that platform I stand. ‘ Franklin Lelano Roosevelt is my leader—my commander-in-chief. LSU liSessss If you put whole cloves into coat pocket! and between woolen blankets, they will have the same effect as moth balls. Be sure your blankets or garments are clean, however, before putting them away for the summer. WITH >mTHEn3iL BRAND OF BEER., YOU BE THE JUDGE HI TOUR OWN TASTE RAIN GODSEND PHILADELPHIA, June 27 (TP) Senator Robert R. Reynolds of North Carolina said the rain in Philadelphia today was a blessing in disguise. If there had been definite assur ance of clear weather, half a mil lion people would have been turned away from Franklin Field tonight, Senator Reynolds de clared. The cloudy skies kept the crowd within the limits of what could be acommodated. As a sidelight on the final hours of the convention, the North Carolinian said: “Vice President Garner spent the day sampling Pennsylvania cigars and stogies.” Hudson Terraplane B— SIZE -ROOMINESS O -COMFORT -SAFETY N -ECONOMY —POWER U- PERFORMANCE -RUGGEDNESS S-LONG LIFE - —STYLE THE SAFEST CARS ON TODAY’S HIGHWAYS. PAYMENTS AS LOW AS $25 PER MONTH I. Oglethorpe Motor Co. SALES AND SERVICE 307-309 BULL STREET DIAL 2-3177 PAGE SEVEN I LOCAL HOTEL TO OPEN POPULAR COFFEE SHOP ( Reported as the only air-condition ed restaurant in Savannah, the mod ernized and remodeled Coffee Shop of the Hotel Savannah, is to open to morrow. Os interest will be the an nouncement made by the manage ment that although the improvements made on the shop have been exten sive, popular prices will still prevail. The new restaurant is expected to be the most beautiful and comfort able in this section of the country. Hours to be observed on the open ing day tomorrow are noon until mid night, and thereafter from 6 a.m. un til midnight.