Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, July 12, 1936, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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MOTHER, FATHER OF SIAMESE TWINS i "''■'-x. 1 r:- C_-« "W\ >•. m WR ■ ■■" /XI \ V ■ .> i I Z / I J~j I'J '• v. ■ JSr ■Hr? ir ■ ■ ■ . 4 \ / ■ . Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Glick Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Glick, above, are the parents of the Siamese twins born at Michigan City, Ind. _The babies, girls, were born joined by a bone fusion at the base of the brain. One of the twins died within 15 minutes and the other died a day later. Attending physicians said an operation to save the sec ond would have been futile. —Central Press. GOVERNOR LANDON-BACK ON JOB ’'Ml ■ RUF wl OW < ***** I sjMll- B v1 B 1 » Jkll Jo ■ / I flfife. A' s ' • ' & wk ' •••» < Willard Mayberry Governor Landon Back on the job in Topeka, Kan., following his vacation at Estes Park, Colo., Gov. Alfred M. Landon divides his time be tween national politics and state legislative affairs. The gover nor, Republican presidential nominee, is shown at the right above, discussing problems of the day with his secretary, Wil lard Mayberry. —Central Press. vcuiiai a iv DROUTH, ’HOPPERS PLAGU E MIDWESTERN FARMERS - MMf J* x IMpF * »Vfi A-Sw ? ~sfe* iwfysi \ v v f ? 3»W r > X 7 i¥ ; ? Xm * ( iWBMBMMI |i<L ' l it - W' f> • 1 * <^ ■ . > > 4 *’* x' V * * ■'7* •'J”** 1 aHL fW’*'**''’ ' ' : 4 < <•?::.^.•.•■■£• :" ' Grasshoppers!— in Kansas Devastated fields near Pierre, S. D. These pictures tell at a glance how the drouth and grasshoppers are plaguing farmers in Midwestern United States. At the left is a mere fence post, on the farm of Marion Sanders, near Lone Star, Kan. The ’hoppers have attacked the post after destroying all the wheat and •orn in sight. At the right, top, is what is left of a corn field near Pierre, S. D., after the drouth and grasshoppers had paid a tragic visit, and below, a wheat field, barren and dead. Central Press Solon Quits in Anger i iff wi • W. W :; x ,/ ? John R Davis Because the Ohio Legislature deferred consideration of unem ployment insurance legislation, necessary to tie in with the fed. eral act, State Senator John R. Davis (D.) of Cleveland, above, denounced the body from the floor of the Senate in Columbus and then submitted his resigna tion. Davis asserted that the legislature had ‘ ‘ sold out to spe cial privilege.” He added, “I > am ashamed of the Senate and ashamed of my own record J here. The Senate, which voted r to postpone unemployment in . surance laws until the U. S. Su preme Court had ruled on the constitutionality of the Federal Social Security Act, also voted against acceptance of Davis’ resignation and without a rec ord vote demanded an apology from him. —Central Press. Quits Ickes Jill --v -A' / A Louis R. Glavis Louis R. Glavis, assistant to PWA Administrator Harold L. Ickes, has quit his SB,OOO post to become counsel for the Sen ate .committee investigating campaign expenditures at $3,- 600 a year. President Roosevelt 1 has arranged the transfer. • Glavis recently appealed for a - presidential riding on a dispute ’> with Secretary Ickes over the ■ best method of stopping illegal ’• <1 production in East Texas. —Central SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES. SUNDAY. JUL? 12.1936 NEW DEAL’S PACIFIC COAST HEADQUARTERS? • -.AX A :>•••:■ ~ . V .A A,. • ~ a —tM l Ground« of Car! Boldt estate x _ _ M X jrxi.ißri.ilit~ • ••• ■.“'•• ■ '^s? -n IKb VWw Encanto hotel . < r» A < A- Headquarters of Democratic campaign activities may be shifted for a brief period this summer to these two beauty spots at Santa Barbara, Cal. According to Washington reports, President Roosevelt’s family may pass several weeks on the Carl Boldt estate, which indicates that the President and his advisors may use the Ei Encanto hotel, nearby, as their Pacific coast campaign headquarters during the month of September. The top photo shows stairs leading to an outdoor swimming pool on the Boldt estate. A group of garden homes at the El Encanto hotel are pictured below. —Central Press. MAX RECEIVES CONGRATULATIONS FROM HITLER " “““”■"“ wmb. mm Smßf ill lOL t -* " JwM MMr ■■ J , iJaB *i A" ■k Jhv IBHB < w/S fSWBBBBMi z iQy-’wSI (m •t ; JHBH * t IMI .HUI- u IBbH ™R*WI/ z » x I "tBUj r 1 Anny Ondra Max Schmeling Fuehrer Hitler Max Schmeling is sthl receiving the plaudits of his countrymen for his sensational victory over Joe Louis. In this exclusive photo from Berlin, Max gets the glad hand from the No. 1 man of Germany, Fuehrer Adolf Hitler. Anny Ondra, Max’s actress-wife, is at the left. Won’t Change Name Making Comeback Woman Executioner HE s. - * > '' ■*• ' ' ~ .-. s ! *«O; «Md*di>«i Mi****-*.. -•-•.• irttk#-- -«,-•• ■•• •. wUlt. . ’i32n O’Connor Found, at last, a good Ameri can ballet dancer. She is Eileen O’Connor, 17-year old Fort Worth, Tex., girl, who says that she wouldn’t add a “ska” or a “ski” to her name for any thing. (Most famous ballet dancers have been either Rus sian or Polish.) Miss O’Connor, who is visiting New York, holds a pessimistic outlook for ballet dancers in the U. S. She says American ballet dancers lack incentive and proper teaching. I —Central Press. IggF <: hr z W - w George Uhle This isn’t a new rookie, hot off a minor league diamond. It is George Uhle, 37-year old coach of the Cleveland Indians, who long ago came off the Cleveland sandlots to enjoy an illustrious stretch in the major leagues. George is back in har ness, taking the hill as a relief pitcher for the Indians. Man ager Steve O’Neill thinks that George will help bolster the mound staff.—Central Press. ly IS ||F « fil lllk < a a ... . c. • ‘ Mrs. Florence Thompson A man is doomed to be hanged > in Daviess county (Owensboro) > Kentucky, July 31. And Mrs. Florence Thompson, the county sheriff, says she sees no reason > why she should “dodge her 1 duty.” Mrs. Thompson, mother ’ of four children who succeeded to the sheriff’s job on the death of her husband, said she per • sonally will hang Rainey Be < thea, 22 year old negro, sen ( fenced to die for the murder of a 70-year old woman. SELASSIE PLEADING AT GENEV O \ ■< ■' i|Mmi gyar t IK tßlW—Br-r- n&i MHb nV ? I J Haile Selassie before League of Nations Standing before League of Nations’ members assembled in Geneva, Haile Selassie, the former emperor of Ethiopia, is seen pleading for justice for his country. But Selassie was doomed LEWIS “WARNS” STEEL LEADERS . > •: '- - «W . ■' 'A -■ > -' ' X s Sy* lx << ' x. j jg|b: OMfey fcg < ;gS7W M J k JOHN L. LEWIS In a radio speech from Washington, above, John L. Lewis president of the United Mine Workers of America and lead<i of the move to unionize steel workers into one industrial unior, predicted that the steel industry would “deliberately provokt strife and bloodshed” in the labor organization campaign nov under way. Lewis added, “We shall pursue our purpose Relent lessly but legally and peacefully. He warned “those who reprt sent the steel industry that their unlawful, ruthless taotics t former years will not be tolerated by our committee. We shr, bring to justice anyone in the steel industry who is guilty RB*« lawlessness. ” —Central Press. DANZIG’S NAZI OPPOSES LEAGUE 4h| * E MB J JSF JiflEi J < IBs::. <i : ' W : ‘> '*o? * H s:J I I A x '' MM • Wwi- pT/O O r/yJFMKIA jHt j| o 9W .W This is a new portrait of Arthur Greiser (above), Nad pres!- ’ dent of the Danzig Senate, who advocates the removal of H^b'l** 1 Commissioner Sean Lester, appointed by the League of Nation* | to see that the Free City of Danzig’s constitution is upheld. Euro- < pean observers believe his demands mean a coup to change from league stewardship to that of Nazi Germany. —Central Press, 1 ~' PAGE FIVE