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SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES
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minimum. One Insertion, 20c;
three consecutive Insertions, 50c;
six consecutive insertions, 90c.
HOURS This office is open
from 8 : 00 a. m., until 6:00 p. m„
every day except Sunday. Adver
tisements will not be accepted for
publication later than 2:00 o'clock
the day of publication.
ERRORS—If there is an error,
phone us before the second inser
tion. The error will be corrected
and the insertion made good.
LET OUR
CLASSIFIED ADS
BE YOUR MEANS
OF
MAKING OR
SAVING MONEY
PHONE 6183
1. Special Notice
TOGO FOR ATHLETES FOOT
AT YOUR DRUGGIST. MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE. IF YOUR
DRUGGIST CAN’T SUPPLY IT,
PHONE 4215.
2. Insurance
MERCER-SEILER INS. AGENCY
Phone 2-1624
Mercer Realty Co. 9 E. York
Personal Service at all Times
30 PER CENT. SAVINGS
On fire, storm, auto Insurance
Policies accepted by U. S. Govern
ment, Penn. Mutual Life Ins., Co.,
local banks and lawyers. You, too can
save. A. F. King and Son. Blun
Building. Phones 6292-5371.
4. Transportation
CUT-RATE BICYCLE STORES
134 WHITAKER ST. AT YORK
PHONE 2-2500
WE REPAIR FOR LESS
1305 BARNAD ST.
PHONE 2-2500
NEW & USED BICYCLES * PARTS
5. Beauty Parlors
SPECIAL
Permanent Waves $1.50
FRANCES BEAUTY SHOPPE
208 Blun Bldg. Phone 7226
MI-LADY BEAUTY SHOPPE
Dial 6-287 for appointments. No
waiting, special individual attention
at all times by Full Master Beau
tians. 20 W. State St.
PAKISAN BEAUTY SHOP
—Suggests—
The most modern and natural Per
manent, no machinery, no electricity,
no discomfort, no oversteaming.
36 Abercorn St. Phone 8342
3. Miscellaneous Wanted
weiserYgold”* SILVER
SHOP
HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID
Old Gold, Silver, Gold Filled Dental
Work.
119 E. BROUGHTON—PHONE 8979
“wanted all kinds of
OLD BICYCLES & FRAMES.
CUT RATE BICYCLE STORES
WHITAKER AND YORK. •
9. Miscellaneous For Sale
GENUINE SIMMONS
Beauty-Rest Mattresses
$29.95
SALVAGE SALES CO.
120 W. Broad. 4611—Phone—4430
WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER
Complete line of Elgin Watches
JOHN THOMAS
118 Whitaker
HOUSE TRAILER for sale. Factory
built. Fully equipped, must be sold
before Monday night. Dot’s Camp,
Route 17, Savannah. Very Cheap.
9-A. Jewelry
WATCHES cleaned, oiled and guar
anteed, $1.95. Leon Deutsch, 348
West Broad Street. Phone 2-1871.
10. Glass and Mirrors
OLD MIRRORS RESILVERED
Broken mirrors replaced and glass
of all kinds. Phone 8362, Artcraft
Company, 1 East Broad.
11. Upholstering and Repairing
W. S. SCHAAF
Upholstering & Furniture Repairing
417 E. Bay St. Dial 2-1246
12. Mattresses Renovated
ESTABLISHED 1901—Jas. R Dooner
Co., Mattresses, Cuishlons, Pillows,
etc. Renovating mattresses a spe
clalty. Telephone 7991. Anderson
and Paulsen streets.
GEORGIA MATTRESS CO.
Let us convert your cotton mattress
Into an innereprlng.
237 Price St. Phone 3-3867
14A Repairing
HAVE YOUR LUGGAGE RECON
DIIIONED FOR YOUR VACATION.
THE LUGGAGE SHOP
32 W. BROUGHTON ST.
NEAR WHITAKER
PHONE 0445
15. Pianos, Musical Instruments
PIANOS tuned. Repaired and rebuilt
by Steinway experts. All work
guaranteed. Terms can be arrang
ed on rebuilt jobs. Alnutt Music
Co., 216 W. Broughton St. Dial
3-3786.
17. Female Help Wanted
THREE WHITE waitresses wanted.
Apply P. O. Box 1038.
17A. Education
WANTED —Men mechanically inclin
ed to train as Disel Engineers. Real
opportunity if you can qualify.
Write or see Mr. Elam, Registar,
Hemphill Diesel Schools Room
1027, Hotel Whitney, Savannah, Ga.
21. Employment Agency
ALL-AROUND PRINTER wants job
Can qualify for machines, makeup,
or ad-room. Box X-5 care Savan
nah Daily Times.
26. Flowers
JOHN WOLF & SON
• FLORISTS
Flowers In all varieties and for all
occasions
919 E. Anderson. Phone 5188
27. Cats and Dogs
BABORATION Puppy Meal for
young puppies. Baboration and
Wayne Dog food. Sneads Pet Sup
ply and Feed Company. Phone 6555,
Delivery 2413 Bull St.
28. Wanted To Rent
i
WILL RENT Five-room cottage in
good section of city if price is rea
sonable. Write Box X-l care Sa
vannah Daily Times.
28A. Apartments For Rent
FOR RENT tnree-room apartment
or rooms to 2 young men. Com
pletely furnished. Use of telephone.
Dentist office, 15 E. Jones street.
Phone 6997.
29. Cottage For Rent
FOR RENT for the entire summer,
5-room cottage, 2-car garage. Com
pletely, furnished. Silver, linens,
radio. Hendersonville, N. C. Apply
Box 13.
30. TYBEE
Several desirable cottages
available for August.
WALTHOUR & LYNES
32. Beer and Wines
YOU CAN EAT, DRINK ‘AND BE
MERRY AT
WHITMARSH CASINO
WHITMARSH ISLAND
35. Salaries Bought
$5 TO SSO
On Your Own Name
Chatham Brokerage
Corporation
502 Savannah Bank Bldg.
clt" I .* —■ , " ======
$5 to SSO
For Salaried People
On YOUR Signature
Our Services Strictly
‘ Confidential.
Neal
Brokerage Co.
206 Liberty Bank Bldg.
$b TO SSO
SMITH-LOWE CORP.
906 Liberty Bank Bldg.
40. Who Can Do It?
NEED A MESSENGER
10c Phone 6000 10c
Indian Messenger Service.
GUARANTEED repairs on all radios.
Terms if desired. Dial 8942,
Hobbs Radio Service, 2608 Mont
gomery street
—ss TO s2s—
SPRAYED
“WILLIAMSON’S”
212 BROUGHTON EAST
ACME PLUMBING COMPANY
Repair Work a Specialty
Lincoln and Liberty Sts. Phone 7030
DROP in at Flgg’i Service Station,
corner Liberty and Price streets
and let us Vacum Clean your car
FREE
LONG DISTANCE MOVING
Anywhere in the United States
All Loads Insured
FIREPROOF STORAGE COMPANY
Phone 7161
AUTO SEAT COVERS. Prices $7.50
to $12.50: DuPont artificial leath
er; $15.00 to $22.50; tailor made.
Aiderman, 310 Barnard Dial 2-2613.
RELIANCE ELECTRIC & RADIO
COMPANY
Electrica Contracting, Expert Ra
dio Repairs. AH Work Guaranteed.
1814 Waters Ave. Dial 7414
BICYCLES REPAIRED
Lowest Prices
VOLPINS
114 Jefferson—Dial 8725
J. F. MASTERS
PLUMBING AND HEATING CO.
125 West Liberty street. Resld ace
311 Price street. Phone 8471,
40. Who Can Do It?
GALLETTA IRON & SPRING
WORKS
ARE LOCATED AT
309 West Oglethorpe Avenue
Phone 4092
WE ARE SPRING SPECIALISTS
OF MANY YEARS STANDING. WE
HAVE NO BRANCHES IN THE
CITY AND ARE NOT CONNECTED
WITH ANY OTHER FIRM OF A
SIMILAR NAME.
BE SURE YOU CALL
GALLETTA IRON & SPRING
WORKS
PHONE 4092
40A Automobiles For Sale
t. b. McCarroll
USED CAR LOT
East Broad and Liberty
Phone 2-0874
Savannah Automobile Company
” Leads Savanah in Used Car Values”
lUICK—7 W. Broad St.—PONTIAC
OGLETHORPE MOTOR CO.
Hudson and Terraplane Distributors
GOOD USED CARS
307-9 Bull St. Phone 2-3177
—AUTO LAND—
USED CAR LOT
EARL BAZEMORE, Prop.
311 Barnard
“TRUE VALUE”
CARS
DIXIE AUTOMOBILE CO,
Just Dial 8181 7 N. Jefferson St.
408. Automobiles Wanted
WE PAY HIGHEST PRICES
FOR USED CARS
VAUGHN MOTOR INC.
220 East Broughton Phone 6105
WANTED to buy one ’29 Ford or
Chevrolet Coupe, not over S4O or
SSO cash. Dial 8471.
41. Auto Parts and Accessories
AUTO PARTS of every description,
highest prices paid for automobiles,
cable wire, pipes, fittings, channel
ircns, I beams and rope. We buy
and sell everything. Liberty Junk
Company. 545 E. Liberty, Dial 8074
TO PAUL AND ANDY DR.
Battery and Electric Company.
Starters, Generators, Magnetos. 124
Barnard St.. Corner President. Dial
2-0221.
41A. Auto Glass Replaced
Shatter-Proof and
Crystal Glass
Libbey Owen, Diamond, Du-o Lite,
Du-Plate. Resident Jobs.
Dial 3-2444
G. W. WILLIAMS
The Glazier.
143 Montgomery St.
42. Auto Repair Service
If it’s Automobile trouble, let our
expert mechanic, Mr. Denham, do it.
OSCAR’S SERVICE GARAGE
212 Montgomery Phone 9558
E. E. HOLLINGSWORTH
ELECTRIC & ACETYLENE
WELDING
AXLE SERVICE
FENDER & BODY REPAIRS
BRAKE SERVICE
FRAME ALIGNMENT
PAINTING (DUCO REFINISHING)
RADIATOR REPAIRS
AUTO TOP REPAIRS
WRECKER SERVICE
WHEEL ALIGNMENT
COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE
REBUILDING SERVICE
FREE INSPECTION
DIAL 6245—C0r. Jefferson and Harris
SEDANS. recovered and woodworked.
If you want a good job send it to
Flint Hugh Davis, 1211 Jefferson
street.
42. Auto Repairs
BULL STREET GARAGE
General Auto Repairs, Expert Me
chanic, Body and Fender Work
WRECKER SERVICE
57th and Bull Streets
43. Swap This For That
THE SWAP-ITSHOP
Buy From Us and Save More
Sell Through Us and Get More
Furniutre, Fixtures, Equipment.
110 West Congress Dial 2-2702
44. Pawn-Brokers
All Kinds of Unredeemed
PLEDGES FOR SALE
SUTKER’S PAWN SHOP
255 W. BROAD, CORNER JONES
45. Home Specials
50 CENTS FOR YOUR OLD
Doormat traded in on a Large
New Rubber Mat. At $2.00 up. Phone
7326.
Homestic Mfg. Co.
DEATH IN PLANE CRASH
ENDS HONEYMOON PLANS
BOSTON, July 17 (TP)—Actress
Gloria Grafton's dreams of a flying
honeymoon are shattered today.
Miss Grafton's husband was Or
chestra Leader Orville Knapp, who
was killed when his plane crashed
near the Beverly airport. The actress
and her young husband were mar
ried on May 10.
The two had spent many a happy
hour making plans for a honeymoon
trip by plane early next month.
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JULY 17,1936 s
AVERAGE TEACHER
IS INCLINED TO
VOTE “LEFTIST”
PROFESSOR COMPLETES
STUDY OF POLITICAL
TENDENCIES
NEW YORK, July 17 (TP).—Pro
fesor George Hartman wrapped up
his findings in a national survey to
day to determine just how far the
average school teacher is inclined to
the left in politics. Professor Hart
man decided that the general ten
dency of American school teachers is
’’leftish” with a ‘pale pink” complex
ion. rather than downright ’’red.’
Professor Hartman is connected with
Pennsylvania State college.
ported in a conference on elementary
education at Columbia university’s
summer session. Said he:
‘‘The average teacher voted for
Hoover in 1932 The preference this
year is clearly for Roosevelt. Very
few will vote for Norman Thomas,
(the Socialist candidate for presi
dent). The teacher approves of re
forms. but his dissent from the sta
tus quo is that of the gradualist.
Rather than the revolutionist.s 75
per cent think a federal department
of education would be beneficial. 57
per cent think that 10.000,000 unem
ployed will never find work again in
capitalist society, 98 per cent think
the school should try to improve so
ciety. Only 15 per cent think teach
ers ought to remain neutral on all
debatable Issues, inside class and out.
Radical teachers are better informed
on social isues and public problems
than their conservative colleagues.”
Dr. Hartman explained why the
District of Columbia was the only
section unrepresented in the survey
‘‘The teachers have been so inti
midated by the District of Columbia
fight against reds,” he said, ‘‘that
they are afraid to return even an
anonymous reply to the survey ques
tionnaire.”
MEXICO FACING
BREAD SHORTAGE
ALL BECAUSE OF GENERAL
WALKOUT OF ELECTRI
CAL WORKERS
MEXICO CITY, July 17 (TP)—
More than 1,000,000 residents of
Mexico's federal district face a bread
shortage this morning.
The shortage was brought on by
the strike of 3,000 electrical workers
whoare demanding higher wages.
Bakeries which use machinery are
unable to operate because of the lack
of power.
All members of the Electrical Work
ers’ Syndicate staged a two-hour walk
out in sympathy with the .3,000 strik
ers. Thirty hours of peace negotiations
were unsuccessful. The workers de
mand 3 1-2 psr cent of the Mexican
Light and Power Company’s gross re
ceipts for 1935. Company officials in
sist that they will not give more than
half the amount asked.
DEARBORN GIVEN
PARK BY FORD
DEARBORN, Mich., July 17 (TP)
The world's foremost automobile
manufacturer, Henry Ford, is receiv
ing congratulations today on his most
recent radio appearance. His voice was
carried on a national network last
night when he presented a park to
the city of Dearborn.
Thousands gathered at the plot, on
lower Rouge river, for the ceremonies.
The park is within two miles of the
place where Ford was born. For years
te city fathers of Dearborn have paid
$1 a year for the use of the ground.
Now it is public property and the
donor told the city that it should be
considered the “Village Gtn of Dear
born.”
Railroad Schedules
Schedule as Inlormatlon. Not ruarsnteed
(■astern Time)
ATLANTIC COAST LINE R. R. CO.
Arrive Union Station Leave
3:40 am 80. NY. Wash. Ric. 10:35 ptr
10:25 pm Jax. West Coast Pte 3:50 am
12:30 pm N. Y.. Was. Ric. Chr. 12:45 pm
1:35 am Miami. Tampa, St. P. 2:30 am
11:27 am F E C &W. Cst. Pts 5:20 pm
5:10 pm Bos. N. Y„ Was. Ric 11:37 am
8:15 am Mont. Way Local 7:20 pm
2:05 am N.Y. Was.. Rie. Chai. 1:50 am
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
Arrive Central Station Depart
8:00 am Macoi., Atlanta. Bii
minjhatn. Chi. Mont. 8:00 pm
11:30 am Augusta, except Sun 6:00 pm
10:40 am Augusta Sunday only 7:45 pm
5:05 pm Augusta. Macon. Atl 7:40 am
Air-conditioned sleepers for Atlanta, Co
lumbus. Birmingham and Chicago on
9:00 p.m. train. Air-conditioned buffet
lounge coach on 7:40 am. for Macon-
Atlanta.
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY CO.
rrive Unlun Station Leave
4:50 am Bos. N.Y Phi Was Ric 9:38 pm
5:40 pm Bos NY. Phi Was Ric 12:09 pm
9:30 pm Mi Tpa St.P Jax .Bk 4:58 am
12:01pm Miami, Tpa. St.P Jax 5:48 pm
2:14 pm Jax and Local 3:55 pm
3:47 pm Fa'x, Den k Col Pts N 2:22 pm
7:55 pm Charleston 4 Hamlet 8:30 am
8:35 pm Mont. Albany, Amer. 8:20 am
10:40 am Americus and Local 5:05 pm
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
Arrive No. Union Station No. Depart
2:25 am 23 Cincinnati
Charlotte 24 12:55 am
1:40 pm 19 Colum. Local 20 12:10 pm
Nos. 23, 24, Pullman dining cars.
SAVANNAH AND ATLANTA RAILWAY
Station Foot of Cohen Street
5:00 am Lv. Savannah Ar. 1:30 pm
10:30 am Ar. Waynesboro Lv. 8:00 am
Daily except Sundav.
Three presidents of the United
States died on July 4.
POLITICAL INTRIGUE IS BLAMED FOR CRASH OF RELIEF
SYSTEM AND SUFFERING CAUSED IN NEW JERSEY
’ 'I-
~z~<jersjm ) _ - »
5 ATLANTIC 4 T * wJt
A WR w i UPw MTHOWm
Since the breakdown of the relief system in New Jersey, normally a rich state, you see old women
scavaglng from garbage cans a stone's throw from the famous Boardwalk In Atlantic City, “Play
ground of the World.”
Richard Cornish New Jerkey
newspaper man, tries to trace, in
this adticle, the causes of the
much-publicized breakdown of
relief in New Jersey.
By RICHARD CORNISH
Central Press Correspondent
TRENTON N. J., July 17—Child
ren slowly starving to death.
Old women scavaging from garage
cans a stone's throw from the Board
walk in Atlantic City, ‘The Play
ground of the World.”
A sick old man, dying for the lack
of medical attention, his only food
a fish or two given him by a Negro
fisherman.
The unemployed of one entire town
given licenses to beg for their very
existence.
These are the people on relief in
New Jersey. If they merely were
isolatd cases, it would be bad enough,
but according to every survey that
has been made, such conditions are
the rule, rather than the exception.
The cases mentioned recently were
listed specifically by the American
Association of Social Workers. Many
others were not listed.
On the other hand, officers of the
state’s chambers of commerce deny
there is any acute suffering or starva
tion end cite a large saving in cost
in the transfer of responsibility for
relief from state to local committees.
Normally Rich
Industrially and commeicrally New
Jersey ncrmaly is a rich state. It is a
state w*hich has suffered no mo r e
than any other during the depression,
and certainly less than some. What,
then, is the reason for the breakdown
of the relief system here? Why is
New Jersey held up to the nation by
social workers as the horrible example
of how not to care for those unfor
tunates who cannot maintain them
selves.?
TIDE CALENDAR
For July, 1936
Information Supplied by the
Branch Hydrographic Office
Savannah, Ga.
The times riven below are for Savannah
river entrance Tybee.
For other points add as follows:
For | For |l
PLACE 1 H. Water; L. Water 1 1
| Hr. Min? Hr. Min.|
Savannah | 1 03 2 03 I
Thunderbolt ... 1 08 1 19 j
Isle of Hope ~| 1 00 1 19 j!
Montgomery .... 1 09 1 25 ||
Warsaw Sound . . j 0 14 0 04 !
| For For 11
PLACE ; H. Water L. Water [
* > Hr. Min. Hr. |Min.! j
Ossabaw Sound .. | 0 09 | 0 25
St. Catherines S. .| 0 30 j 0 32
Sapelo L., D. B. S. | 0 21 | 0 21
Bwk. Outer Bar ..| 0 09 j 0 10
Hilton Head, (S.C) | 0 01 | 0 00
At Savannah current continues to ebb
1 hour and 30 minutes after low water:
current continues to flood 30 minutes aft
er high water.
1936 JCLY 1936
I High || Low
I Water || Water
la.m. | p.m. || a.m. | p.m.
10 I 5:301 6:051111:431
17 1 6:24| 6:55|| 0:30)12:36
1« I 7:15) 7:42|| 1:19| 1.27
19 8:0*21 B:?6|| 2:041 2:14
20 8:47 9:0811 2:48: 3:00
21 9:30! 9:4911 3:30| 3:44
22 10:13)10:30)1 4:121 4:28
23 10:57111:11)1 4:53| 5:13
24 11:41111:541 5:35! 6:00
25 ||l2:2fl I 6:20| 6:50
26 0:421 I:2o|| 7:07| 7:44
27 1:34| 2:1211 7:50 8:41
28 2:28| 3:0811 8:40! 9:37
29 .3:241 4:0211 9:42110:32
30 4:201 4:531110:34111:22
31 | 5:11) 5:42||11:24|
MOON’S PHASES
Full moon 4
Last Quarter .....11
New moon 18
First quarter *.26
The answer is political intrigue.
Taxes are a touchy subject in any
state, but in New Jersey especially
so. The Garden state staggers under
the second highest per capita tax in
the United States. Every candidate
for governor or the legislature for the
post 15 years has promised tax reduc
tion. After election day. political
promises were only political prom
ises, and no one ever did anything to
lower the burden on real estate.
When Governor Harold G. Hoff
man, Republican, took office, he pre
sented a program of tax replacement,
the two main props of which were
a state income tax and a state sales
tax. A howl went up immediately.
Income Tax Defeated
Those who already were paying in
come taxes to the federal government
(most of them are real estate tax
payers, too, and bad nohtnig to gain
by transferring the cost from one
pocket to another) succeeded in de
feating the income tax by bringing
pressure to bear in the prosperous
and influential North Jersey counties.
Hhalf his program gone, Governor
Hoffman nevertheless insisted on a
sales tax to finance relief in 1935.
Ir then ecame the merchants turn to
kick and not without justification
New York’s sales tax does not (and
cannot, under federal law) apply to
interstate transactions. Pennsylvania
and Delaware, the other bo tier states,
lu.d no sales tax at all. Therefore,
argued the merchants consumers
would go out of the state for all but
the barest necessities that they could
buy’ at home, su?’a as food.
Hoffman was ins*stent, and early
in 1935, throng.i a combination with
the Demccarts, managed to get his
sales le”y enacted. It lasted just
three months, om, in that time pro
duced approximately $10,000,000. A
careful campaign by the New Jersey
Sales Tax Repeal association resulted
in its repeal early last fall.
Asks for Ateraative
Meanwhile relief funds were
dwindling. The governor too kthe pos
ition that real estate could not be
called upon to carry the additional
load. He bluntly asked the sales tax
repeal people what their alternative
was.
Their reply was economy—economy
in state government.
The Sales Tax Repeal association
teamed up with the Essex county
(Newark), Camden county and Ber
gen county delegations to form a
so-called ‘ Economy bloc”. Heading
this group was State Senator Lester
H. Clee, of Essex, whose Clean Gov
ernment Republican faction has al
ways been opposed to the Hoffman
Republicans.
All kinds of economy plans were
devised, but almost every one sooner
or later depended upon how mcch
money could be diverted frc/. the
state’s fabulous state highway ac
counts.
Governor Hoffma ninsisted that
most of the cash in the road bureau
was dedicated and could not be di
verted. The other side insisted it
could be. Strangely enough, there was
never an attempt by either to make
a legal test of the issue. While they
argued, relief funds ran out, and the
whole burden was dumped back on
the municipalities, many of which
already were bankrupt.
In fairness to the local governments
it must be said that they have been
trying to do their best under their
very limited finances. But in nine
cases out of ten, their best is a miser
able worst compared to state relief,
for they simply haven’t got the money
and have no way of getting it. True,
they can sock some more or real es
tate, but tax collections throughout
the state are from 30 to 60 per cent
delinquent now and the chances are
they would never collect the addition
al levy.
Thus it appears to most observers
that the blame lies directly between
the governor and the “Economy bloc”
in the legislature.
Governor Hoffman, refusing to
make road funds available so he
could prove the need for a sales tax,
blocked funds on the one hand; the
“economists”, with a view to next
year’s gubernatorial election, refused
to mage new revenues availab.e. And
so New Jersey remains the horrible
example.
DETROIT IS CHOSEN
FOR 1937 SITE OF
SHRINE MEETING
SEATTLE,/Wash., July 17 (TP)—
Outgoing trains are crowded with de
parting shriners today. The 1936
shrine convention ended in a blaze
of glory at Seattle last night ffrid now
the cry is: "I’ll see you in Detroit
next year.”
The automobile city was chosen
last night as the site of next year’s
convention. Closing ceremonies of the
Seattle confab were held on the wa
terfront with a spectacular marine
parade. The pageant which will live
long in the memories of onlookers
served as Seattle’s farewell to the
shriners from all parts of America
who have been guests of the city this
week.
SENATOR ROBINSON
WILL START CAMPAIGN
MORRILLTON, Ark., July 17 (TP)
Deffiocratc Senator Leader Joseph T.
Robinson will yarm up hL speaking
voice today with a non-polltical ad
dress at a meeting of rural letter
cariers in Morrilfton today.
The veteran Arkansas Senator will
fire the first big gun in his campaign
for re-election when he speaks at
Pine Bluff tomorrow. His topic Is ex
pected to be a vigorous defense of
the New Deal and his own record as
Democ/atic floor leaden
Back to a World of Flowers
■r jk ¥\ JR
" "WBr A
UK jf
S a, . \ .
- k
From the shadow of death at Sing Sing, Mrs. Dorothy Sherwood
victed of the drowning of her two-year-old son, James, has won a c
to fight for her life. She is pictured in the garden of Goshen Jail,'
‘ ih» awaits a new trial, /Central I
PAGE SEVEN
TIME MAGAZINE
PREDICTS ANSWER
TO LABOR SPLIT
PROMISES TO SHAPE FU
TURE OF ENTIRE
NATION
NEW YORK, July 17 (TP).—Time
Magazine appeared on news stands
today with the prediction that the
solution to the present split in the
ranks of labor promises to “shape
the future, not only of labor, but of
the nation.”
Time surveyed the current quarrel
between the American Federation of
labor and John Lewis’ committee for
industrial organization. The editors
drew the conclusions that:
First, "The American Federation ”
of Labor is not and never has been
vitally concerned with the laboring
masses of the nation.”
Second, “That victory for William
Green of the A. F. L. would mean
that organized labor was to remain
split in a hundred quarreling groups.
That victory for John Lewis would
open the way for organized labor to
adapt itself to the times, fulfill its
enormous potentialities.”
“Conceivably,” says Time, “Neither
side will win, in which case labor
would probably destroy itself.”
Time draws a parallel between
Samuel Gompers, who organized the
A. F. L. and two-fisted John Lewis,
who opposes it today.
Says Time: “Gompers adjusted
himself to realities in 1886. John
Lewis adjusts himself today. The A.
F. L. has declined for lack of progres
sive leadership and the development
of machines and mass production.
Time points to Lewis’ radio challenge
to the steel industry and ends its
summary. Says time: “After those
eloquent words spoken with the grim
determination of a born fighter, no
one could doubt that John Lewis’
ultimate aim was anythng less au
dacious and revolutionary than to
create in the United States a united
industrial working class.”
SAILORS RESCUED
FROM SMALL BOAT
SLOOP SPRINGS DANGER
OUS LEAK IN DEEP
WATER
GLOUCESTER, Mass. July 17 (TP)
Four young Gloucester summer resi
dents were rescued today after their
25-foot sloop sprung a leak.
The rescued sailors were Mary Du
prey of Pennsylvania; Harry Clark
and Margaret Baker of Worcester,
Mass., and Adolph a Hockling. Jr.,
son of Judge Hockling of Washing
ton. D. C.
The two couples chartered the
sloop for a sea ride. The boat sprung
a leak. Their distress signals at
tracted the attention of Captain
Charles McPhee, skipper of a party
boat. He rescued the four summer
ites from the sinking sloop. Later
coastg uardsmen towed the vessel
ashore.
VOCATIONAL CHAIRMAN
HAS RECOMMENDATIONS
CHICAGO, July 17 (TP).—Mem
bers of the National Federation of
Business and Professional Womens
clubs will hear their vocational ad
visory chairman make her annual
recommendations today.
The vocational chairman is Mary
Stewart, who heads the committee
which surveys national needs in the
field of vocation education for wom
en. Miss Stewart announced that
her report will deal with the part
the 1,500 clubs in the federation
should take in furthering vocational
progirms for women and girls.