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PAGE EIGHT
aBOR tribunal
F ISSUES ORDERS
RE-INSTATEMENT OF DIS
CHARGED WORKERS IS
DEMANDED
WASHINGTON, July 11 (TP)—
The National Labor Relations Board
which Is under fire in half a dozen
federal courts, today ordered one com
pany to reinstate eight discharged em
ployes and issued a complaint against
a second manufacturing concern.
The Hardwick Stove Company, Inc.,
of Cleveland, Tenn, was ordered to
re-employ eight workers who were
found to have been fired for joining
a Union group.
The board Issued a complaint
against the Goodyear Tire Company.
The complaint charged that the com
pany used violence against workers
and that it discharged twelve Union
workers for their labor activities.
The board charged further that
the Goodyear Industrial Assembly is
not legally a collective bargaining
agency since It is under company
domination.
The charge of company violence
contained three citations. One in
volved the president of the United
Rubber Workers, S. H. Dalrymple.
Another Involved workers in the com
pany’s plant at Gadsden Ala. The
board alleged that 11 workers had
been attacked and beaten.
TWO NEGROES KILLED
IN AIRPLANE CRASH
CHICAGO, July 11 (TP)—An air
plane crash near the Rarlem Airport
in Chicago killed two negroes today.
The men were Frank Mallory and
Willie Roberts. Mallory’s home was
aald to be In New York City.
The plane took off from the air
port and flew only a few hundred
yards before it crashed In a nearby
field. Both men lived a short time
after the crash, but died before re
gaining consciousness.
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tlSpWi
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3- III!
tHUffr ..®T
Delbert Green (above), convicted of
murdering his wife, her mother, and
an uncle six years ago, has spurned
all offers of aid for Supreme Court
appeal -with statement he is ready
to face a Salt Lake City firing squad
in prison yard and “take it like a
* man.”
Proa a)
MOTION PICTURE HOUSE
'TO AID HEAT VICTIMS
BALTIMORE, July 11 (TP) .—One
of the largest mitlon picture thea
ters in Baltimore will open its doors
to the public after the last show to
night an dinvite residents to come in
and keep cool free of charge.
The manager of the theater, Wil
liam Saxton, says that a full staff of
engineers will be on the job all night
to keep the theater air-cooled. Ushers
will see to it that persons are not
disturbed as they sleep in the rows
of eats. The first group that comes
to the theater will be provided with
comfortable cots on the mezzanine.
MRS. OWENS WEDS
CAPTAIN ROHDE
HYDE PARK, N. Y., July 11 (TP)
The American minister to Denmark,
Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, was married
at 5 p.m. today to Captain George
Rohde, of King Christian’s life guard.
It was her third marriage.
The ceremony was performed in St.
James Episcopal church, in the pres
ence of President and Mrs. Roosevelt.
After the wedding th- newly married
couple were supper guests at the
president’s Hyde Park home.
The wedding ceremony was simple.
Mrs. Owen wore a wedding gown of
powder blue chiffon. By special per
mission of King Christian, Captain
Rohde wore his life guard uniform,
with plumed cocked hat, scarlet tunic
with light blue collar and cuffs, and
light blue trousers with silver stripes.
Is That The Reason?
POLICE TO DON COATS FOR
FIRST TIME THEIR
GUN IS STOLEN
CLEVELAND, July 11 (TP).—
They have been having something of
a tempest in a teapot in Cleveland
over the question of policemen weav
ing their coats —and in a hot teapot
at that.
Police Chef Matowitz ruled on Fri
day that the officers must have their
coats. It was a harsh order, for the
thermometer hovered up toward the
100 mark.
Matowitz got scores of protesting
phone calls. People told the police
chief his order was a cruelty, espe
cially since he can sit in his office
in shirt sleeves.
Today Matowitz relented.
“All right,” he said. “Ttie police
can take off their coats. But, mind
you, the coats will be ordered on
again the first time any policeman’s
gun is stolen.”
SAVANNAH, GA., SUNDAY, JULY 12, 1936
Slain in Ambush
V -
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jsR a
Reports from Rome say that Major
Antonio Locatelli (above), the
/‘Lindbergh” of Italy, proceeding to
Jimma, Ethiopia, on an assignment,
:was ambushed and massacred, to
gether with three others, by natives
who had previously welcomed the
flyers.
SC antral Preen I
POSSE SEEKING
KILLER OF AGENT
INSPECTOR IS SHOT FROM
AMBUSH BY MUR
DERER
TALLAHASSEE, Fla., July 11 (TP)
—A sheriff’s posse dashed into the
Liberty County backwoods tonight to
hunt the slayer of a state liquor in
spector.
The man killed was John W. Mor
gan of the Florida Beverage Depart-
NAVAL STORES
Spirits turpentine this afternoon,
firm, 36. Sales today, 200.
Spirits turpentine yesterday, firm,
36 @ 361-2. Sales yesterday, 96.
Rosin
Noon Day Last
Today Before Year
Tone .. Firm Firm Firm
X 550 550 520
WW .... 550 550 520
WG 525 525 475
N 500 500 470
M 500 500 440
K 500 495 -497 1-2 432 1-2
I 500 495 432 1-2
H 500 492 1-2-495 432 1-2
G 500 490 -495 432 1-2
F 500 490 -495 420
E 485 480 405
D 465 465 395
B 440 440 360
Sales .... 533 603 1475
Spirits one year ago, firm, 42 1-2-
42 1-2. Sales 276.
Statement
Spirits Rosin
Stock April 7 37.488 57,626
Receipts today 673 2,166
This day last
year 612 2 316
Received for month . 5,314 19,621
Received for month
last season 6,142 23,307
Received for season . 37,226 136,521
Receipts same date
last season 42,420 152,490
’hipments today .... 10 715
'hipments for
month 6,329 19 173
Shipments for
season 44,898 125.724
Shipments last
season 29,820 141,665
Stock today 29,816 68,423
ment. He was slain frem ambush
during a raid on the farm of Mrs.
Hadasa Rawall, six miles south of
Hosford. Morgan had arrested Clif
Braswell and was guarding him while
his companion completed a search.
The companion, federal agent Geor
ge Cook, fled when Morgan was kill
ed. Cook brought the news to Tall
ahassee. Morgan was the first mem
ber of his department to fall in line
of duty since the state liquor commis
sion was set up in 1933.
EVICTED, PICKETS MOTHER’S HOME
SON M
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Kapal Lory, his wife and son
Evicted by his mother for non-payment of back rent, Kapal
Lory, disabled, pickets his mother’s home in Brooklyn, N. Y.,
with his wife and one of his three children at his side. Neigh
bors contributed the $33 back rent demanded by Mrs. Sarah Lory
and the son and his family moved back into their three-room
apartment. —Central Press.
SHE CURED
CHILDREN
OF FEARS
MOTHER MADE COOKIES
LIKE BOGEY MAN TO
BANISH FRIGHT
By GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D. .
Head Department Parent Education,
Cleveland College, Western
Reserve University
Here is how a mother cured her
little children of certain fears.
‘ Dear Dr. Myers; In your article
of March 4 I saw a mention of a
bogey man. My children were fright
ened by a neighbor boy of Negroes
and bogeyman. A Negro cook solved
the first problem and a cake of
white soak and cookie cutters the
other. My eldest made men from the
soap, with the idea that the child
who was afraid of the bogey was also
often afraid of being clean. The
cookie cutter in the shape of a man
was used by the child with the sug
gestion that the cookie was a bogey
and could be eaten, and so need not
be feared. Making cookies solved
hundreds of rainy day problems for
my four—now grown.
‘•My 13-year-old boy /reported a
friend who was running about at
night—girls and drink—his opinion
might interest you. ‘The trouble with
Alfred is that he isn’t interested in
his home. His mother never reads
to him.’ My experience with Alfred
is that he has never learned to listen,
for he did not cdre to hear any of
the stories that held my boys spell
gound.
"We find your articles most valu
able.”
Another Writes
Another mother writes her ap
proval of my article some time ago
on what I wanted my child to get
from Sunday s.hoil She said she
saw the article reproduced in a Chris
tian Science paper. Several other re
ligious journals also reprinted it. She
particularly liked my plea to Sunday
school teachers not to talk so much
and to let their pupils talk. Then
she told of her experiences with a
class of youths at Sunday school. “I
try to raise questions whch will
bring them out. It creates a happy,
spontaneous, joyous session, and
while my pupils seem to learn in
(x
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LET THE ADS.I
HELP YOU DO YOUR SHOPPING!
Plan your shopping day while sitting comfort
ably at home by shopping first in the pages
of The Savannah Daily Times! The ads will
• show you where to buy ans how much to
spend. Get the habit.
Read the Ads Every Single Dav in the
Savannah Daily Times
poise and expression, I, too, learn
with them.
“So I have wondered with you and
no doubt many others: Why do Sun
day school teachers talk so much and
let their pupils talk so little?”
And when I feel very low para
graphs like the following help me to
take heart again:
“Ten years ago I tuned in and al
ways listened to your talks on the
radio. Now I never miss them in
the .
“I like your advice to parents be
cause you can always see and appre
ciate what good we have accom
plished, or tried to, and commend us
for that. Most psychologists see
what we haven’t done, and spend all
their time ‘raving’ about that until
we feel we haven’t accomplished any
thing worth while.”
I have really tried to do what this
mother says I have, and it makes
me happy to learn that someone
thinks that I have not wholly failed
in my purpose.
ENGLISHMAN TO CONFER
WITH NOTED ECONOMISTS
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., July 11 (TP)
—A well known English professor,
C. G. Allen of the University of Liver
pool is in Cambridge today for a
conference with American econom
ists. Harvard’s Professor William Yan
dell Elliot and Dr. Elizabeth Boody of
Radcliffe will discuss the increase of
Japanese exports with the Liverpool
educator.
Mrs. Boody has made a careful
study of the economic expansion in
Japan, with emphasis on the years
since 1929. The Bureau of Interna
tional Research at Harvard is spon
soring the study.
STREAM-LINED ‘MERCURY’
BE PLACED IN SERVICE
NEW YORK, July 11 (TP)—The
New York Central Railroad announc
ed tonight that its new streamlined
train, the “Mercury”, will be put on
the run between Cleveland and De
troit July 15. The train consists of
seven light steel cars with a total
length of 641 feet. The locomotive is
a steamer of the Pacific type.
The train is expected to cut more
than an hour off the fastest present
schedule between the two cities. The
only stop will be at Toledo.
POWER CONCERN IN
ADVANCED STAGES
RURAL PROGRAM
ELECTRIFICATION PRO J
ECT TO BE STARTED
SOON
ATLANTA, July 11 (Special to The
Daily Times)—Plans for a four .mil
lion dollar rural electrification pro
gram in Georgia to bring electric ser
vice to 15 000 rural families by 1938
were announced here today by Pres
ton S. Arkwright, president of the
Georgia Power Company. The
company’s line mileage will be more
than doubled under the new program.
In announcing the rural expansion
program, Mr. Arkwright said his com
pany was prepared to co-operate with
government financed corporations
which are building lines where his
organization does not have facilities.
The Georgia Power Company plans
to furnish power to all customer oper
ated lines which have been financed
through the Rurah Electrification Ad
ministration, he said.
Under the federal REA plan farm
ers may band together, form a com
pany and borrow money from the gov
ernment to build electric lines to their
homes. Arkwright said where the
government financed companies were
unable to furnish their own power,
his company would sell it to them.
In addition to the feur million dol
lars which the company will spend,
Arkwright said customers would spend
another $1,250,000 in having their
homes wired and for electric appli
ances.
Completion of the program will
swell the company’s payroll and ex
penses by more than $350 000 a year,
he said.
The company will hire at least 100
full-time employes in addition to the
construction crews for the duration
of the construction period and at
least 300 electricians and helpers will
be employed in doing wiring and in
stallation work in homes, according
to Arkwrigrt.
The program is the biggest rural
electrification program ever attempt
ed in Georgia, the power company
head said.
MAN ~IS ACCUSED
OF SETTING TRAPS
SAN FRANCISCO, July 11 (TP).—
The trial of a man accused of set
ting wolf traps to catch children got
under way in municipal court this
afternoon.
The defendant is 56-year-r> Hy
man Gorwitz, proprietor of a second
hand store. Two of his women neigh
bors charged the man with setting
the traps in his back yard and con
cealing them with a thin layer of
earth. The women said Gorwitz put
shiny pieces of metal over the traps
as bait. The complainants quoted
the merchant as saying the young
children broke his windows—and he’d
teach them to keep away.
Municipal Judge Dunne said that
if the women prove their charges
the court would teach the defendant
a whole lot about neighborly be
havior.
IhiKBShH
MBF
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