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The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee • Page 14

Publication:
The Tennesseani
Location:
Nashville, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

UTHI NASHVILU TINNESSIAN. Morning. Sept. IS. 1t4f I-ear about those LOLLIPOPS" DO VOU SUPPOSE WE HERt'S ONE L-s f'-7V FOR MX) AND 7 ONE FDR MX) LP10 Smv mirrruf-o --s COULD WORK OUT They'll Do It Every Time liinnnriii "samiinsa in nn A I CACC ifeiidQSlS? Layoff Shows -Gain in State HMM-H-TO PUT HER IN VEAL It SIAHTS OUT I I a a alh Wa tv an.IA aaw SHElL NEED MEW GEAQ 'SVaH a rvx i at" a 7 1 IrlINU loN WORTH THAT MUCH.

IT MRS. BUMSTEACt TT ALLOW M6TOGO FOR SOMETHING; J'tKjfl I At SOMETHING LIKE THIS I IT AU AV Dl-LH fC COST ABOUT. tr. rwa THBEE BUCKS. iIJ1w rii -ai i i a i Job layoffs in Tennessee totaled th, and of last 1bom ot over tha Previous week, whila Job opening! droPPed from 22,297 on September 1 to 18.759 for tfaa waek ndlnf Baptambar 8.

Commissioner W. O. Haka. of the .3 I aepartmant ot security, In announcing theee pointed out that tha Job layoffs totaled 4.457 in tha State Uat Wllk. Th.aa.

lait. k. -vl X. 1 1 Kuii mi nco'ai mAA-A concentrated primarl- AN ESKIMO A BIG PURSt AT WANT TO 7 A waLLx ma rtaanvwe and Knozvllle LUMcU ruaoi KOVLE GETS HlM- wmTsMAKT KEEPa6 J0Bl I -a CCI llvmtn ru-unil' A AKT. HOW ABOUT IT.

I aT? II "LaVOffl In TJaahvlll. I OWID VOUR BOV SOMETHING-SO I 3TOPPEO IN ON MY WAV OUT OFvO TOWN kNO paidoffI; tlnulng Uyoffa In tha aircraft in- vuuy ana layofla Jn tha Knozvllle were primarily at Clinton En- lnf woras," Haka stated. Cutbaeka at Clinton The amDlovmant laMifltu Bi rr vaajo' Cpi iwrt WELLilF VOL) FEEL THAT MISTER THAT MOWER NOISE-T bcLUNG about rTMABE LESS, SELF-SHARPENING, SELF- WU'DUKETOSEaiT I LUBRICATING-ALMOST SELF ANYHOW i TO ME OPERATING. THOSE BLADES mlaalonar attributed tha big reduo-tion in Job opening primarily to at Engineer Worka, which waa tha firat indication that had tarted that project. commlasioner alio disclosed that only 3,851 Job referrals were I i oy local united Statea Employment of flees vin-the atata for 7 THE? CANT HOLD KtSBY CRAKE JUfifiEO 1N6L-V5S LAST MI6HT.

HIM L0N6 ON SUSPICION Aaawrr Previa iaaale TOO LATE. DICE THE P.A. MAS 6LAPPE0 A SECRET rNWCT 1 MENT ON HIM FIRST PStSRKl MURPER-NO BAIL OKSt I SHUT Itt POHT im SO HOT I 3IZZLf! YUH-WTH BUT I VM TO CON-. THM TACT YA! GLASSES 3 AtT US MVSTAT SO CW TBAU IlL HAVE HIM OUT ON A AMAMonEV WF COT DOtLfiU TUC a'lTk' ui waea; enaing September 8, compared with 8,706 for tha week anding September 1. decilnft theM reerrj, due primarily to cessation of recruiting at Clinton," ha aaid.

Total layoffs in tha Nashville area between August 14 and August Including 3,223 in Nashville, 875 in Clarksville and 408 in 1 other aectiona of this area, Hake BEFORE TVA Preparing Tennis Champ iH5E35EMffl FOR BAIL-ANY IN oPEaci unla. ki 2 HORIZONTAL 4 Disturbance 1,8 Pictured 5 Behold! For Peace-Pope 5EH JOSEPH tfMAHONEY U. S. National 6 French river Junior tennis 7 Belgian canal S. C.

Sent 11 champion 8 Foot (ab.) 4 mn ihe construction period for Job 'openings in the Nashville area as of September 8 totaled 3,864. compared with 4,983 the pre-yloua week. Job openings in the Memphis area totaled 4,694 as of September Chattanooga area totaled 8.864. com narnri wits. A Ofl? ITIAiNMUEEUAIGI 11 Scholarly 9 Motive 12 Guide 10 Barked 14 Salutation 11 Town in Tibet the Tennessee Valley Authority is about over and it is ready for its niNlTIEIRTTTolRl permanent work to help tha South overcome barriers to development, 41 Exclamation i4 Tima maafiirtf 15 Nevada city 12 Male child 30 Rely Beveraee 11 Brina 31, Proportions.

LJ-. the previous week; Knoxvllle area H80S as of SeDtember 8 rnmn.r.S 18 Smalt oJf 43 Smut 1 1 'taweicndin-gl JlIreland 4 Greepirig 44. Arrived JVItSl-t. (zool.) 45 Units 20 Watering 24 Finish 1 na me Johnson yore 1,258 3ob openings cmparea with 35 Deputies 50 That man 36 Mails 52 Mountain 40 Hawaiian food (ab.) place 25 Female deer 21 Tiny- 26 Possesses 22 Over (contr.) 27 Skill on eeptemDer l. I CAME HERE TO DO A 9 12 ALL ME? i Cinderella 'wwmuffet I jV 6IVE WHO -Afp OF TH6 POST-- ECIAL SKXY QN OUe -AIRUNE notary jiud address today.

"Tha kTVAJJbeeamr'nhe powerrproduclng concern in America during the war, he asserted, and at the end of hostilities 75 per cent of its power was going into the war effort The real test for- TVA is about to begin. Pope added. "Will TVA settle down as a mere operating agency'or its power or "will TVA pursue a program for continued development of the valley in the way of better farms. -60T WEART OF WAITlNa FOR )0U TO COME HOME.90 I SETUP USHT I IBOTAFILE prON BOTH OF 0U- UT" STUDIED rr ON 1 I THE PLANE COM 1 DOWN FROM THE 11 I V. STATES SC)SeA I irTrM WHAT I KNOW ABOUT 60T A HOT TIP THAT THERE'S if MONKESHINfe 60IN6 ON I DOWN HERE UH HOW CXXI Yl sAtoe xx I TOIt INSIDE OUT? i HOUSBKEEPIH6, MIND XHgE CAPN Scout Leaders Urged To Recruit Members a ft I I SLEUTH, AND I THg CUTE UT.

CHARACTER 23 Augmented 26 Tenders 28 Negative 29 Area measure 30 Barter 33 Leather strip 37 Male sheep 38 Self- 39 Indian 40 Explodes 44 Deals with 46 Courtesy title 47 She lives in new and better industries, a better balanced economy, better incomes scout Executive W. J. Anderson announced yesterday that he has asked scout leaders In thfl Ttfn qVi and better living standards?" Pope said that income could be yilla Council to recruit new mem- Increased by $1,000,000,000 in the TVA states of Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Kentucky, Georgia, North Carolina and Virginia. He said the average income of the valley states and the South as oers now, declaring that the fall season has proved the best time for recruitment Anderson reminded leaders that the Nashville Council has won the Walter W. Head, plaque for Increased membership for seven consecutive yeara and that "we should let.

Memphis, New Orleans, Birmingham and other large towns in a whole is only about half that of TT OH, OH, GET A WRON9 A VOU PON'T I 1 I Uazc lav L. I aa AT the country as a whole. Pope added that TVA always LUAP OF- 1 MAT JUST at 4 (rVOU'REf THAT 'THE TT-. HP DID RET '9 usi run AT 1 II IT JACK TCANA OH. JACK'S LOOK ON JACK'S TROUBLE worked toward developments of 48 Concerning 49 Indian river 51 Remarks 53 Observe 54 Testifies VERTICAL 1 Simmered 2 Shucked 3 Resting COWING OUT uiBB aAar PACfc.

WHAT business to make best possible use OP TUB BOSS' ine area know that we are in the race." of natural resources and thereby THE MATTER, MM EXPRESSION, ft JACK Jr WON'T rtlRB Jmmm. OFFICE NOW. I 6URE HOPE- helped establish 405 new privately- Anderson also announced the following three scheduled meetings of HE GOT THE owned firms employing 18,502 workers in the area. It brought "jobs scouts and scouters: Board of di JOB'' rectors of the Nashville Council, Friday at 12:15 o'clock at the private dining room of the Hermitage to the people rather than letting people migrate to the Jobs." He announced that 16 new dams, 14 hydro plants and a large steam Col. J.

M. Cherry Visits Nashville on Leave Hotel; Senior Court of Honor, September 18.,. at 4 o'clock; Scout and Cub leaders and commissioners at "6:30 o'clock September at Ihe ft Cafeteria. Dr. John L.

Hill J. McEwen Cherry, formerly plant were built while tha war was on. He termed the TVA construction program of the past 12 years the-equivalent of construction of all transcontinental trunk railroads of state selective service head quarters, who is regional field offi 9-l will ba the speaker. in the last 100 years. cer for national selective service headquarters at Kansas City, Mo is home on a 15-day leave.

I Evicted Man Fined $25 for Moving Back Edward B. Hoyt, 53, scion of a pioneer Nashville family who was evicted from the family mansion at 1807 Broad Street aftet it was sold for back taxes, was fined $25 in court yesterday for moving Into a house without the owner's consent. Hoyt was evicted from the old house July 24 and for many days bis personal belongings cluttered Tip on First-Aid CM DM FEEL Mrs. Cherry and their three chil LIKE THW R3GHTI Ncrr at ALL "5Ttf THE CART A Hera's th Method ated la many big factories for treating minor aj JIM THB'- MONT TWOE. tSOtNS FLAT dren, Gloria, James McEwen, and Robert, have moved back to their Nashville home on Estes Ave voO'coa.

RFC Offers 7-Point Assistance Program MiNcrnE. mimo rssoi4e ja-aasc wmcj nue. A LOOKyJIM r. I DIOMTKNOW MOTtCtiO Weather Record Small manufacturers will be as CUTS-BURNS Ba viae. Guard against Infection which may "lay yM up." Th instant roa suffer a minor aDjary cut, ban, term tea, or scald deans Wound and then apply aoothinf OILO-SOL-ah fleetly Inhibitory antiseptic.

Widaly used is factory firet-aid stations; alio used and (raised la thousands ol homaa coast to coast. Quickly helps reliava pain and combats infeo tion modem way. Pleasant to use. Keep the sidewalk in front of tha once- METEOROLOGICAL REPORT a. aa.

m. sisted in financlngthelr reconversion to civilian output by a new elegant house. He was arrested Temperature B7 74 August 17 and jailed on the charge. rreciDitation seven-point program of the Recon struction Finance Corporation, Lee He told policemen that he had the owner's permission when he moved back into the house. VileOBUl, on nana always reaay wnen Precipitation ilnce Sept.

1, 1.03 lncnei; deflelencT inch. Precipitation slnoe Jan. 1. 36.73 inches: excess 82 inches. Bun rises.

6:27 a. m. Sun sets I it p. Moon rises 13:52 D. m.

Moon sets 11:07 s. m. Davis, acting: manager of the Nashville loan agency of the RFC, said yesterday. only mm at arunuta. Moat eeaay or back Oct MoaaVs OIL-O-SOL today.

Present owner of the dilapidated The profitless period or moving mansion, one of the city'a finest during the Gay Nineties era, is old machinery out of war plants and of replacing it with tools for W. T. Holcomb of 210 Main Street. CORRESPOND IN DATE LAST TEAR Maximum temperature. 77 degrees: mint-mum.

85 decrees. Precipitation. .13 Inch. Preclnltation Jan. 1 to this date in -TWO ANP NOW.

FOLKS- II PERHAP3 THE 6AYE.TY HERE AT THE "SATIN QUARTER I Mm. DAC SALLY LA, STMPPiT -THE fcrvsja- i a a 1844. 33 84 Inches. 1844 deficiency to tills BILLIONAIRE WRECKS NIGHT CLUB WST SENSATIONAL BANCER OiTRlCH WIUU TAK.C. MY MINPOFF THE i data men.

civilian products, of training personnel for peacetime production will require strong financial assistance for manufacturers, especially small manufacturers, Davis said. In Swint May Enter Race For Circuit Court Clerk feather: 3k ON SUBJECT THAT THREATENS TO PKIVE WEATHER TABLE JfX 4. In a FIT OF PA6E. PEKKieeP A5 map XWr! au, -t W2i Va Z1K WASHINGTON. 8ept.

iPV Weather bureau report of temperature and rain-tall for the 34 hours ending I p. in the A PEMCNIASALFKENIY BY HYSTERICWJ WITNESSES. BURSI-BOOMA TTCOOMJ cases where -banks cannot assist tha W. G. (Dick) Swint, city claim agent and former city police officer, principal cotton (rowing areas ana elsewhere: i BUCKINGHAM? IA5T NI6HT COMPLETELY VKKKCP IOJ business during its reconversion period, the RFC will attempt to make the loan.

said yesterday that na expects to iSMnlM Hi High Law Free. Station VOLWRE'5 SWNK NI6HT auBTHB become a candidate for circuit court clerk, oppoaing Clerk Hugh Freeman in tha November 15 Dem The Nashville RFC loan agency, as Its part in the seven-point pro ocrats primary, gram which is being extended throughout tha country, is prepared to consider directly, or In ooopera- Swint, a veteran or world war SATIN ACCORPINGTO EEMEP HI USUAL CHEERT SELF UNTIL THE ANNOUNCED SALLY tA STRlPF IN HEK FAMOUS OSTRICH FEATHER WkNCE. ARE NOV FI6HTIN4 A LOSING SATTLE TO FEMOVE THE HU6E OSTRICH FEATHERS FROM THE THROAT. and a past commander of the local 7 Sffil tion with the nation's commercial American Legion post, has been an l.K1r. Amnlnva nf tViai 1tv fnr tha TS.lt fift employe of the city for the past SO -7 IF.

Ashtrllle 78 Atlanta 84 Chicago S7 Cincinnati Denver Detroit i Duluth 65 KnoxTllla S3 LoutsTtUe 77 Memphis 5 Miami 5 Minn. -St. Paul 60 New Orleans New York JJ Portland, Ms. 75 8t. Louie 78 San Antonio gj Savannah if Seattle 75 1.

Loans for working capital, xor years, He is the first person to intimate completion of civilian production ea ym, u-re 1 orders. that he would oppose Freeman for the office. He said his announce t73lNA IS CAUT100SLY 2, Loans against cancelled war SEARCH THAT WAY JUSTASLTHOUSHT. ment would be made later, contracta and sub-contracts. HOT fTH' JAPS POWT IMTEMP FOR I'LL LOOK DOWN THIS ROAD.

WE OUT 0M THE ELEVATOft MUCHTIIAE 3. Long-term loans to finance re A TO LET ME OUT OF fm.l THEY LOOK THBRE, I'LLWUBLE I BACK ON MY TRAIL. I I HEAP FOR TH' WOODS I WHEEE TINA TOLD VWB TO WAIT! -Jf conversion. TB AST 90, TUP UIHT MUST MOT LOSE TKACK Washington 5 California Minister A 4. Financing surplus property pur AND KEEP Or HlrAt RIVER BULLETIN.

at PATE VCTH THE chases. S. Veterans' loans under its own A IS MeTTaUana maaa O. W. T.

Heads Church Movement The Rev. Dr. Albert E. Day. of business loan program or under the AWtBcARH Act.

ill Pasadena, has arrived here to 6. Commltmenta now for future head the new national New Life loans so that industry may proceed Movement of the Methodist Church, RATIOSia it was announced last night. with plans for rehabilitation and ra- rnn version. Dr. Day nationally known ln-the 7.

Automatically guaranteed bank field of evangelism, is a member of the stall of Jioara or uvangeusm, OawBarland Rlrar I 1 loans to industry up to 78 percent with a ceiling of $250,000 for each Burastda. Ky. loan, in participation witn oanics. will maintain an office in the Medical Arts Building-. Ha and his wife will make their home on Hampton Callna.

Tenn. arthage, Tenn. Avenue. Nashrille, Tena. Clarkevllle, Tenn.

jdJyvHk, Ky. 146115 81-0 81 150113 31 51 Closed on Saturdays In his new poat. Dr. Day will .1 I Tenneast Rirer serve aa editor of the New Life 130111.11 -0 Chattanooga. Tenn.

Magazine. norenct. Ala. ARE SOU The County Farm Security Ad- ministration office, 510 Deaderick Street, will be closed all day each Saturday, beginning this Saturday. STILL fl BET IF VER7 WIFE EVER FINOS OUT ABOUT IT- I at I r- II a iytny -art I JEST iMAtSINE-AFTER BfclN WEP 27 YEARS, Robert A.

Boudreau, county super Vlug-abotf LODO visor, announced toaay. UCiH A I HUH. PLUSHBOTU3M' MAMIE CLAIMS UNCLE WILLIE i LW1N' OAVLI6HTS Tha saw sonsdula la In com- X. Jim bi at rviiBUflei New U. S.

Transportation Policy Needed, Hill Says niianoa with an administrative ROMANTIC. order whloh specifies that effective September 9 the workweek for all FSA employes will ba five days of eight hours each, from Monday through Friday. Any change in the regular administrative workweek must have the. prior approval of that much depends on national "A unified, modern and compre-l policy and labor. Hill was- optimistic about thai future of railway travel.

The air hensive transportation policy governing; all forms of transportation and allowing the "development of the natural advantages of each" Is -a -necessity for transportation in" the postwar" according to the administrator. plane will take muoh of the long 1 "T-- LADIES' ANPUBINTt': distance travel; is Men V4mm not to De pre-empted, ne saia. WEDDING RINGS iames a. uiu, president ot ine oiilsvilie" and NashvilTe Railroad, tB-xmaji-rafJr-fiir! 1-AV -w I I m. 1 $750 to- ture railroads are Improved in an address before the luncheon: A ME couloa-CLEAnED UP THAT SAN of steam, wlder adoption of-the deJssltacomotlyeJn areas short of meeting of the Rotary Club here yaittfdayrr" J- 0 a I fuel and possible use of the new 7RANOSa3 CONPE8PNCE IN TWENTY- FOUR.

HOURS; I'M ONJH SKIT" TbLB HER THAI atomio power, rreignt oars wiu Bpeaklng on "Railroads' Contribution to War and tha Future," i WENT INTO TAILSpN. LAftDi I'M tLAD l'W TILL VOLS. TOUJOWl. be lighter in weight and stream- 215 Sixth Av N. red Wgllar SOU yVERENT V0TEO I L--Ji iwr' 1 1 i A 1 he tressed the fact that fovera-luned oars I win add to travelling comfort The L.

and N. -Kallroad mem agencies ooaung nu regulative and functioning aspects INTO iW CLUB, MY RESIGNATION WOUU BECOME EPFECTIVe; Of transportation should be co- SPECIAL WED. and THURS. Clinch alone. Hill stated, has 2S new lightweight, aluminum, stream-lined cars, costing about $80,000 each, which will begin operation Janu ordinated and run by a consistent JANUARY over-all policy, "faithfully admin- MEN'S SUITS- ary- ir tmutjrto" come throu -Nasht LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES Essential as Production II IV-TWs ville.

Aaaa.a.aaataaa.'aal ''Transportation during the war became as essential as production," he stated, pointing' out that the He' called on the public to face the problem, of. tha da-) mands of railroad labor, who advo- cats 28 per cent lncreaae in wages. This cannot be granted, he pointed out, without bankrupting the ralL railroads carried 90 per cent of the CALL' 6-0151 WI CALL f6R AND DELIVER ECONOMY DRY CLEANERS fLANTl S1T-6IW IICHTH AVENUI, SOUTH tj nation's tramc Characterising the future of rail- I reads as "MU of if's," fiiu asidj roads cc rlalni tb tnight ratu..

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Years Available:
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