Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, July 22, 1936, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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PAGE SIX 1 ' ON THE AIR RADIO PROGRAM •L Wednesday, July 22 CBS PM 4:00 —Margaret McCrae, songs 4:3o—Buddy Clark, songs s:oo—Raton Boys, quartet s:3o—News: Sports Resume if Party Speaker 6:3o—Pray and Baum, piano duo 7:oo—“Cavalcade of America in Mu sic.” 7:3o—Burns and Allen, comedians B:oo—Kay Thompson. 8:30 —"Come On Let’s Sing. 0:00 —Gang Busters B:3o—March of Time 10:08—Joe Rechman’s Orchestra 10:30—Don Bestor’s Orchestra 11:00—Jan Garber’s Orchestra 11:30—Bernie Cummins Orchestra 12:00—midnight, Eddie House, organ Ist. AM. 12:30—J. Cherniavskys Orchestra Thrsday, July 23 7:00—On the Air Today 7:3o—Salon Musicale B:oo—Larry Vincent songs B:3o—As You Like It. 9:oo—Fred Feibel organist 9:3o—Salon Musicale 10:00—Blue Flames 10:30—Chicagoans x 11:00—Poetic Strings 11:30—Summer Rhythm 12:00—noon, Matinee Memories | PM 12:30—Academy of Medicine Program I:oo—Between the Bookends I:3o—Music in the Air 2:oo—Mabelle Jennings. 2:30—D0 You Remember? , 3:00—All Hands on Deck. 3:3o—Greetings from Old Kentucky 4:oo—Bluebirds. Wednesday July 22 NBC ✓4:3o—The /5:00 —Flying Time . s:3o—News: Entertainers AT THE THEATERS LUCAS—Today, "The Devil Doll,” with Lionel Barrymore and Maureen O'Sullivan. Thurs day Friday an<y Saturday, "San Francisco'’ with Clark Gable, Jeanette MacDonald, Spencer Tracy and Jack Holt. ODEON—Today and Thursday, "Champagne Charlie,” with Paul Cavanaugh and Helen BL.. Woods. * /FOLLY Today and Thursday, “Till ~ We Meet Again,” with Ger trude Michael and Herbert * Marshall. AECAT’A—Today and Thursday, "Personal Maid’s Secret,” with Margaret Lindsay and Walter Hull. SAVANI JAH—Today and Thursday, "Dizzy Dames,” with Mar jorie Rambeau, Florlne Me- Kinney, Lawrence Gray, * \ Fuzzy Knight and Inez >i Courtney. ' Z T“ Crossword Puzzle ACROSS ANSWER TO S—Those who show PREVIOL’S PUZZLE solicitude I—Flat and round B—lmproperly plate 7—Poured 6-Stlff pieces of paper fiTTRK.UI 8-Radlcally different 10—Greasy compounds _JA|M|E|N|Eg !P|A|P|E|RL, 9—Gymnasium shoes 14— Part in play Il=|U Ay E OLIO R IIS oIn! 10—Most swift 15— Without delay hi, w£L U-LI 11—Opposite ot IS—Genus of plants fj 1 pM_T Rl aweather > 17—English school lix A |R|tlSMP|u Gl 12—Ripped 18— Wash tn water r~l. ,|, ai < kTreWrUTI 13—spies 19— Burn l=|—J— J— .. B' I 31—Falsehoods 20— Frames made ot |T|S|A|R|SMS|N|&|E|Z|E|S| 23—Brew JQlcfeOlßG A|P|EL__ 36—Adds to, to give nee 92—Wooden shoes I 7~1-L CLtnS?? 7 appearance 24—Makes public |A|N|S|W|l=|R|SMK|A|R|A[T| 27—Ward off 28—Small West Indian A llSlP O OLUlt_ n PIEI 28—Aged beer tree Tol 29—Whiskers 28— Prices |E|T|Ams|P|l |E|S|Us|O|P| 30—Coronet 29 Bore brant of InUtISIBP l_ A TKJIiM i I 31-Horn-shaped sclero- 33 Members of Uguan I—Li_ , , LBSL LI tium of fungus tribe I~IR|OIU P Er|s I N B AID! 33—Considers 34 Back M B E RHtTH E E 34—Withdrawal 35 Rim of wheel b 1 IgiL XM UXXXJ—> 37—Part of horse’s 38—Margaret foot (pl.) 37 Fuel found tn bogs 40—Sycophants (slang) 38- of life 80-Rmployer """ho™ for curr,sl « 3«-Be predatory Wickedness "H”” «—Maker of metal suits 41—Measure of area a, 43—Make glancing SMKKJgffj?- (col.) 44-Sa°ld ,m emphasl. upon for - burnU * dtunits o? P ?.we' nP °° device for 48—Aquatic biros A weight winning 49—Thrash , t 47—Reposes tn ehatr . 50—Kind of flower ‘ 48—Bacillus DOWN 51—Kind of sword , 49—Girl’s garments 53—Undulation •’ • 82—Gifted I—Pulled 54—County In New Tork ‘6B—Thick cord 2—Small particle State , .* 57—Rends asunder 3—Silt 55—Small valley 9—Unusual 4—Half horse, half man 68—Strive for superiority Q.,-1 , —. Ws*. | a 3 * > nB 9 I 10 »» It »® 1 *— '' ■ ■- ■ —— —— I *’ 1 r~“ 1 z ■ 50 3 ( 32. I ..-rfe- I. ■ ■ « • £4— . 11 1 1 F- I • ' - n 1~l . ? ’ -V.' 6:oo—Amos n Andy 6:30 —Lum and Abner 7:oo—One Mans Family 7:3o—Wayne Kings Orchestra 8:00—Col. Stoopnable and Budd, Amateurs. B:3o—Symphony Orchestra 9:oo—Your Hit Parade and Sweep stakes 9:3o—Dancing Party 10:00—Amos n’ Andy, sketch 10:30 —Xavie; Cugat’s Orchestra 11:00—Shandor, violinist 11:30—Luigi Romanelli, Orchestra 12:00—midnight, Keith Beecher's Or chestra. Thursday, July 23 A.M. 7:oo—Morning Devotions 7:3o—Cheerio. B:oo—Breakfast Club; Orchestra 9:oo—News; Alden Edkins, songs 9:30 —Ralph Kirberry, dream singer 10:00 —Wendell Hall, songs 10:30—Fiddlers Three 11:00—Girl Alone, sketch 11:30—Dan Harding’s Wife 12:00—noon, News; Market and Weather Reports P.M. 12:30—National Farm and Home Hour. I:oo—Thursday Matinee k I:3o—Jos. Llttau’s Orchestra 2:oo—Music Guild 2:30 —Angelo Vitale’s Orchestra 3:oo—Woman’s Radio Review. 3:3o—Light Opera Company 1 4:oo—South Sea Islanders. ‘CLEVELAND DAY’ AT EXPOSITION CLEVELAND, July 22 (TP)—To day will be “Cleveland day” at the Great Lakes exposition. All Cleveland will turn out for the exposition celebration which will mark the 100th anniversary of Cleveland’s graduation from the status of a vil lage to a full-fledged incorporated community. Featuring the day’s festivities will be a huge parade, scheduled to wind through the downtown streets of the , port city at noon. Bands, floats, marching units and costumed groups will make merry as the exposition crowds give the city an uproarious 100th birthday greeting. JUST TOO BAD! SELF STYLED “STUDENTS” FAIL TO ASCERTAIN FUTURE FOR “COPS” BALTIMORE, July 22 (TP)—Two Gypsy women who modestly admit they are “the world’s greatest lady students of the Orient” are being held in SSOO bail each in Baltimore , today. (Two patrolmen in plain clothes said they went to the Gypsy shop kept by Rose and Betty Stevens to have the bumps on their heads felt and to see what the future had in store for them. The policemen said that by a strange coincidence both Gypsies predicted the same future for each of them in the exact same words. But neither of the Gypsies was able to predict her own future. A magis trate did that by holding the two , self-confessed world’s greatest lady i students of the Orient” for the grand jury. RAILROAD TO LINK CZECHS, SOVIET? XP O L AND { X / ‘ {RUSSIA / \nnF<XA RUMANIA rfF* ________\_____ Map shows route of proposed railroad. A strategic railroad, to connect Russia and Czechoslovakia, is being planned, according to informed sources from Bucha rest, Rumania. The projected road, shown on map above, is said to have been insisted upon by Czechoslovakia and to be financed by Prague to give Russian troops quick access to the heart of Europe in the event the Franco-Czech-Russian alliance is obliged to take defensive action. Meanwhile, other advices from Prague described the strategic railway as a myth and said what actually was being built was a motor highway through the tip of eastern Czechoslovakia and into Rumania. JUDGE’S REMARKS CAUSE OF PROBE HARRISBURG, Pa., July 22 (TP) A legislative investigating committee today will hear Judge Benjamin At lee’s answer to the impeachment charges lodged against him. The Lancaster county jurist is charged with a misdemeanor for a remark alledgedly made to a negro prisoner. The Emanuel Jones, was sentenced by Judge Atlee to two and a half years in jail on a statua tory charge. A former district attorney, S. V. Hosterman, told the house committee that he heard Judge Atlee tell Jones that Lancaster residents would have bsen justified in lynching the negro. Jones, himself quoted the judge as saying: “If you were on the other side of the Mason-Dixon line, citizens would have saved the courts this trouble.” . Courtesy Good Housekeeping It’s a toss-up whether to choose one of the season’s gorgeous prints for our summer vacation dresses, or to take solid colors, with perhaps a dash of something very gay for accent. Both are equally popular. Prints come in every material—silk, cotton, lihen; and solid colors are equally colorful. One of the pretty splashy prints in linen is sketched at the left of the picture. It has a becoming turn-down collar with wide points, and edged, with a fagoted border. The yoke has a series of tucks, and the frock has pearl buttons. It comes in navy blue or Alpine green with white. It is an adorale model for business, shopping ’ ~ - . ~ ■■■■ ■ f,, KETT ■■ imii..,,, „ by PAUL ROBINSON I IDEft a ”'.n• nW 111 i LI Sd,o ■/ SPREADTH-SHEEW ; LL Z - 1 ™ IMM \\Z MX [»C U S PAT W COP A, .^r C IT MUGGS AND SKEETER b y WALLY BISHOP . H'l HEAR, you Z \ h_ f vmeu, , last week X. , Z *1 ; H AiM-r Tjaui/E.RiKl* ] / Th^ts |a ®(How -lUgERT CALLED AIE YT.. AMO THE. KIEXT DAV He I FbR / ORDCERy AN/ ) Zz ' y VORK FASTER / yfeAM I DAV AFTER r WEKiT BACK . it —Z || ' \HEWAS6oia ( « ) To WORK AUO Me. FIRED ME !! VT\ W Z7-> xTTTP ' Z ( A6AIMSIHEU UESAteAW \ r U Z'J-JL ~i fi? <Z e -Jg- • \ ibAMcsmssK'.6.:u' ; T PETE THE TRAMP Lcopwght. 193 d, central press association r, iszsss) LT KxatHs&'sJs ieS I tr dollars FOR X J /f r\ V-T /x \ A course of Z% Q ZA W 1 1 X-. \ ZT /53 \ AM avLESsoNS \ teV \ . 11 >'T peorz.:NK J . ,1- I ,U. ~ BslliHvA* -rME T eeAcy» VWIKMI ■ G # \TZ rai^ —“ ■ L ' ■■ )■ { // H S / iN[ & /Y. \j I/ / 7/ * i / \\ c T/ I|\ I 6 ■‘‘l7“ \ i"*? I —4C \\yZ>T/v\ . JIL / ! ' • X A- © 19)6. Kins Futures Syndicate, Ine.Tworld rights ruervea <** fi.QIISSFI I jAlinmaiii *— SAVANNAH, DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1930 REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS ALIKE , FETE G. 0. P. HEAD BROOKLYN, N. Y. July 22 (TP) —The lion and the lamb will link arms tonight—politically speaking— when Coney Island Republicans and Democrats join to honor a veteran Republican leader. The guest of honor of tonight’s celebration will be Frederick Oppik ofer, G. O. P. leader of the 16th as sembly district. Co-chairman in charge of the silver jubilee celebration to be held in Oppikofer’s honor at Ulmer Park tonight are Republican leader Mary E. Dillon and Democratic district leader Kenneth Sutherland. Oppikofer has been a patient at Coney Island Hospital for the past several weeks. Doctors, however, think the veteran political leader will be well enough to attend tonight’s festiv ities and greet his old political friends —and foes. or town wear, at home or abroad. Contrasting linen crash makes the other frock which is a two-piece with several new details. One is the talon fastener for the opening; another the high, square neck; and still another the way the pocket tabs are put on. It is appropriate for office shopping or traveling, and may be obtained in brown with natural or gold blouse; black with aqua, or navy with white. A nifty little frock of natural che nille string has brown leather lacings and bow and a brown leather belt. The tiny sleeves also have leather draw strings—no end to the clever things one sees this season, is there? I BANK DIRECTORS TO SURRENDER * OFFICIALS OF DEFUNCT GROUP ARE CHARGED MISREPRESENTATION NEWARK July 22 (TP)—Three bank directors accused of filing false financial statements are expected to surrender to Newark authorities to day. The men are Salvatore D’Aurla, Henry S. D’Aurial and Camillo Massa, all directors of the D’Aurla Bank and Trust Company which was closed a week ago. Antonio D’Aurla and Joseph D’- Auria, also directors of the closefl bank, are free on bail after their ar raignment before a federal commis sioner. The five men ae charged with mis representing the bank’s financial con dition in a statement to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Fed eral prosecution officials said the al leged false statements were made to qualify the bank for deposit insur ance. Depositors of the closed bank will be paid off by the F. D. I. C. RAINS “WASHOUT” SOCIETY BIG EVENT DEBS PRESENTATION TO KING EDWARD HALTED BY DOWNPOUR LONDON, July 22 (TP)—There’s many an aching heart among Lon don’s social set today. The first out door presentation ceremonies ever staged at Buckingham palace proved a distinct “washout.” A torrential downpour that sluiced down from the skies in the midst of the presentation ceremonies sounded the death knell to what was to have been the big moment of many a deb and dowager. Besides s:eing their presentation finery ruined by the heavy rains, more than half the wom en who were to have made their cur tesy to the king, never got to see the British monarch. After King Edward ordered the out door presentation ceremonies can celled, those who had not appeared before his majesty were asked to hand their introduction cards to the court chamberlain. This, officially counts as a presentation—but, the women asked tearfully, where was the thrill to handing a card to a chamberlain while chilly water dripped down one’s neck? Fruit Printed Hankies Fruit prints are popular this season in handkerchiefs. The fruits are in many colors, like Joseph’s coat, and the hankies are usually in pastel shades. Paisley patterns and small flower designs, such as those quaint patterns seen in challis, also are liked. The handkerchief is such an import ant part of a woman’s costume these days that the new designs are always intriguing. A Great Dancer Dies * , IVi : lip ; WltrS W, Ar ■ ' ' ■ ■ :3i b Wt ''' ' ' raMSr* fexaa La Argentina, greatest of all modern Spanish dancers, died of a heart attack in her home, Villa Miraflores, near Bayonne, France. Her con summate artistry had endeared her to millions of Americans in her many tours in this country. She last appeared here in 1928. (Central Press) ALL FOR BLACKIE! DAIRY HORSE TO BE FET ED ON TWENTY-FIRST BIRTHDAY NEW YORK, July 22 (TP)—A big basket of rosy-cheeked apples and snowy lump sugar will be the main course at this morning’s party to be tendered in honor of “Blackie’s” 21st birthday. "Blackie” is a slek-coabed psreheron who has been hauling u, milk wagon around the streets of Brooklyn, rain or shine, for the past 15 years. Heads of the company for which “Blackie” and his driver, Henry Seeba, work planned the birthday party in recog nition of the horse’s long service rec ord. "Blackie” probably won’t know it’s his birthday; he won’t know that the WHOOPS, MY DEAR! PRINCE FREDERICK, Md., July 22 (TP).—lf you can stand a pun this early in the morning, it might safely be said that Marguerite Gray, thinks her unwelgome visitors had no "bees-ness” to make their new home in her bed. Miss Gray was about to retire for the night, but she gave up her plans in a hurry. On turning down the bedcovers, she found a swarm of bees that, somehow, had entered her room and settled down for a cozy visit. Miss Gray slept on a cot until a bee expert came around and gave the swarm the order to ‘buzz off.” dairy company’s president will be the first to hand him an apple and he won’t know why all the crowd is gathered around. But you can bet he’ll know just what to do with those apples and that sugar, SHAW WONDERS WHETHER MAN IS WORST ERROR IRISH DRAMATIST MAKES STARTLING STATEMENT IN INTERVIEW NEW YORK, June 22 (TP) George Bernard Shaw admits he’s beginning to wonder whether man may not be the worst of all nature’s ' mistakes. The bearded Irish dramatist made this uncomplimentary suggestion in an interview with the writer, George Sylvester Vkreck. Shaw’s remarks ap pear in the current issue of Liberty magazine. “I believe the universe,” Shaw told Viereck, "is a colossal revolutionary appetite for knowledge and power over circumstances, continually experiment ing in the creation of new agents. Many of these experiments have been failures.” Shaw mentioned the locust and the Cobra as two of nature’s failures. Then he went on to say: “It is a wide open question whether man is not himself the most mis chievous of all failures. If he is, the next experiment nature might try may produce some creation that will wipe him out of existence.” CRIMINAL EXPERT LAUDS ROOSEVELT MISS HENRIETTA ADDING TON THROWS SUPPORT DEMOCRATIC LEADER NEW YORK, July 22 (TP)—MiM Henrietta Addington has served no tice on New York Democratic chiefs that President Roosevelt may depend on her help in his re-election cam paign. Miss Addington, one of the world’s most noted women crime prevention experts, for four years has been dep uty commissioner in charge of the Crime Prevention Bureau of New ' York City. She credited Mr. Roose; > velt’s social security and housing pro grams for her Democratic support. Her allegiance to the New Deal cause was announced today by the women’s division of the Democratic National Campaign Commitee. The crime prevention expert opens her Democratic stump-speaking tour today in Watertown, upstate New York. She plans to make several other speeches in various empire state cities before election day. IRENE HERVEY TO WED SINGER ALLAN JONES HOLLYWOOD, July 22 (TP)— They’re tuning up the wedding bells in Hollywood again today. The pretty actress, Irene Hervey, has announced her engagement to screen singer Allan Jones. The couple expect to be married within the next few days.