Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 16 , 1932 .
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V^eS'fV?|.
LUDEN’S
Menthol Cough Props
£.8 a D h c 1
J * xj
I5y ( LAI l)i: A. .1 \0G1.R
Associated Press Financial Editor
New York, Nev. I'i. 'A'.- - Stocks
were a bit unsettled today, but trad¬
ing during most of the session was
too dull to afford much idea as to
what the market’s intentions really
were.
Although a few issues were affect¬
ed by special developments, of a div¬
idend or earnings nature, leaders on
the whole remained in the trading
area they had occupied earlier in the
week and the market appeared to be
retaining its professional aspect.
Wheat’s early steadiness helped keep
I raders cautious.
R. H. Macy flopped more than 4
points when directors announced dis¬
continuance of the annual 5 per cent
stock dividend, although the regular
cash payment of 50 cents was main¬
tained. American Telephone, off a
couple of points prior to its dividend
meeting, firmed when the directors,
as expected, voted another “regular”
of $2.25 a share. Otherwise, fluctua¬
tions were small. Such stocks as U.
S. Steel, American Tobacco “B,”
American Can, Case, Harvester, U.
S. Industrial Alcohol, Allied Chemi¬
cal and New York Central were occa¬
sionally off from a fraction to about
a point. regular quarterly
Ordering of the
dividend ol American Telephone had
been anticipated in well informed
quarters. While the company’s earn¬
ings, equivalent to $5.92 a share in
the first nine months or about $1 less
than dividend requirements, made it
necessary for the company to dip into
surplus, it was held that the company
was well able to do this. On Decem¬
ber 31 last it had more than $50,000,
000 cash and temporary cash invest¬
ments of about $210,000,000.
NAVAL STORES
Savannah, Nov. 10. TAp—Turpen¬
tine firm 40 1 -i ; sales 78; receipts 282;
shipments 45; stock 19,705.
Rosin firm, sales 651; receipts 948;
shipments 7,355; stock 162,389.
Quote: B 225; D 240; E, F. G and
II 260; 1 262' .; K 310: M 375; N 390;
WG 145; WW and X 535.
CALL MONEY •
New York, Nov. 10. (/-P)—Call mon¬
ey steady. 1 per cent all day. Time
loans steady, 60-90 days W: 4 mos.
"i ; 5-6 mos 1 per cent .
Prime commercial paper l 1 -.
Bankers acceptances unchanged.
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
NEW YORK
Stocks, heavy.
Bonds, irregular.
Curb, easy.
Foreign exchanges, irregular.
Cotton, barely steady.
Sugar, lower.
Coffee, higher.
CHICAGO
tYheat, steady.
Com, barely steady.
Cattle, steady to lower.
Hogs, active and higher.
COTTON SEED OIL
New' York, Nov. 16. UP )—Cotton
seed oil closed easy; prime summer
yellow 3.85; prime crude 2.8714-3.00.
Nov. 3.85; Dec. 3.89; Jan. 3.90; Mar.
4.05; May 4.19; June 4.20. Sales 2
contracts.
COTTON TABLES
NEW YORK COTTON
Prev.
High Low Close Close
Dec. ....... 6.35 6.24 6.30-33 0.27
Jan. ...... 6.42 6.30 6.39 0.33
Mar. ........ 6.52 6.40 6.48-50 6.4 1
May ....... 6.63 6.50 6.57-58 6.53
July .. 6.72 6.60 6.68 6.64
Oct. 6.87 6.76 6.82 6.78
RENEW YOUR HEALTH
BY PURIFICATION
Any physician will tell you thai
“Perfect purification of the system is
nature’e foundation of perfect health.”
Why not rid yourself of chronic ail¬
ments that are undermining your vi¬
tality? Purify your entire system
by taking a thorough course of Cal
ctabs—once or twice a week for sev¬
eral weeks—and see how nature re¬
wards you with health.
Calotabs purify the blood by acti¬
vating the liver, kidneys, stomach and
bowels. In 10c and 35c packages.
Ail dealers. (adv)
K1TGHTC0UGHS
Positively stopped abaostia
a* rtaustty with coe swallow at «,
THQXINE
% Meet THE NEW PRESIDENT/
'.«V> "*0
(EDITOR’S NOT! : This is
the fourth of .six articles on Pres¬
ident-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt,
.( waling little incidents on his
every-day life, his trails of char¬
acter, his philosophic 1 .- and inter¬
ests.)
ID WALTER T. BROWN
(Associated Pn Staff Writer Who
Accompanied Roosevelt on His
Campaign)
Albany, X. Y.. Nov. 16. (IP) — To
President-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt
his physical condition was a situation
to be met and nothing more.
He seldom refers now to a handicap
it' his walking, the result of an infan¬
tile paralysis attack he suffered
ten years ago. When he does,
speaks in a detached way.
Only once during the campaign
he refer to it. That was at
when he stopped to talk with
children at the hospital.
Sitting in his automobile ami
down on the invalids on cots and
wheel chairs clustered around him he
said: "I too have known what it is
not to he able to walk.”
While campaigning, Mr. Roosevelt
was greeted at Worcester, Mass., by
8-year-old Kathryn T. Murphy. He
already knew Kathryn, because
had suffered from infantile parlysis
and Mr. Roosevelt had written her
letter of commendation when she later
offered her blood to other patients.
“Hello, Kathryn, how are you?”
came the greeting from Mr. Roose¬
velt. “Keep up your courage. You
are going to get well.”
The president-elect then told Kath¬
ryn that he and the mayor of Worces¬
ter would arrange to send her to a
hospital Mr. Roosevelt had founded in
Warm Springs, Ga. So Kathryn is
looking eagerly forward to, restored
health.
Once, on an up-state inspection tour,
Mr. Roosevelt stopped at a Watertown
hospital to see a state trooper whose
hack had been broken in a motorcycle
accident. The year before he had
ridden as an escort to the governor.
The trooper, in a wheel chair, was
rolled out to the Roosevelt har. The
governor, leaning far out of his seat,
talked in a low tone but the linai words
were caught by those near by. They
BONDED CALIFORNIA
IE WAITS REPEAL
GRAPE STATE WILL THROW
MILLIONS OF GALLONS ON
M \HKFT IF LEGALIZED
By RENNIE TAYLOR
Associated Press Staff Writer
San Francisco, Nov. 16. (JP )—Ten
million gallons of bonded California
wine long impounded behind prohibi¬
tion's flood gates, and another 10,
000,000 gallons in the making, will
he at hand to slake the great Ameri¬
can thirst almost immediately when,
and if, its sale is legalized.
California champagne, port, sher¬
ry, claret, and all the other vintage
types that tickled the taste of bon
vivants in the so-called good old days
and then crept; into oblivion as the
“drouth” spread, are available.
And they are even better off for
thfe.r long imprisonment, say the Vint¬
ers, because of the traditional im¬
provement of wine with age.
For weeks the wine presses of the
Golden State have been running at
boom time speed.
This awakening of a long dormant
industry was described today by Kd
mund A. Rossi, wine maker and vice
president of the Grape Growers Lea¬
gue of California as due to two fac¬
tors: First, a glut in the eastern mar¬
kets which prevented the sale of
fresh grapes, and, second, the in¬
creasing conviction among growers,
and vinters a change in prohibition
was imminent.
The 10,000,000 gallon production
this year amounted to about twice the
average annual wine output of the
state since prohibition became effect¬
ive. Rossi said the state could, with
its 500,000 acres of grapes, produce
80.000. 000 to 100,000,000 gallons an¬
nually should the demand arise.
There is nothing particularly bac¬
chanalian, Rossi said, about a mere
100.000. 000 gallons of wine as an an¬
nual offering from California, which
produces roughly 90 per cent of all
wine made in the United States. As
an example he pointed to France,
with an annual production of about
1.000. 000.000 gallons arid a per capita
consumption of about 32 gallons year¬
ly.
Before prohibition the per capita
consumption in the United States was
about .45 of a gallon, in addition to
the volume of whiskey, gin, brandy
and beer. On this basis the country
could drink its entire wine output and
the per capita use would he less than
one gallon a year.
77 Miles
On 1 Gallon
Ga. Saver Laboratories, B-274 St.,
Wheaton, Illinois, has brought out a
new auto Gas Saver Oiler that saves
up to 50G of gas and OILS inside of
engine at same time. THERE IS
NOTHING ELSE LIKE IT. It fit;
ail C.'ai s Easy to put on. LOW
PRICE. Sold on 10 day money-back
guarantee. They want Users, Boost¬
ers. Agents everywhere to earn up
to $1,000 a month helping introduce
it. 2060 profits. THEY OFFER
ONE FREE TO START. Send your
Add re - and Name of Car by Postal
or Letters. Hurry.—Adv.
I
President-Elect Franklin 1). Roosevelt has shown a lighting spirit
in overcoming a physical handicap that resulted from infantile pa¬
ralysis, and lie has inspired others so afflicted, lie is shown above with
Kathryn T. Murphy, Worcester, Mass., girl, who greeted him on his
campaign and whom lie told ol plans lo send her to a hospital al Warm
Springs, Ga., for treatment.
were;
“Don’t quit fighting, my boy. 1
know what it is. Bet me hear from
you.”
SEA FOOD WEEK WAS
SUCCESS IN GEORGIA
(Continued From Page B.i
foods are concerned.
The front of the attractive green
and black menu carr ies a map of
coastal Georgia, showing the location
of Savannah, Tybee, Ossabaw, Sape
loe, Br unswick, Sat ilia River, St.
Marys, Sea Island, Jekyll Island,
Cumberland Island, Crooked River.
Glancing over the menu one finds
many dishes hearing names of points
from which the palatable sea foods
are obtained.
Of particular interest to this sec¬
tion the Piedmont had on its menu;
Brunswick Shrimp en Cocktail.
St. Mary’s Oysters on Half Shell en
Cocktail.
Cream of Crab Soup, Gualo.
Clam Chowder 1 , Oglethor pe.
Broiled Blackboard Red Fin Sea
Bass, Parsley, Butter,
Point Peter Speckled Winter Trout
Broiled, Shrimp Sauce.
Crooked River Crab Flakes Au
Gratin.
Crooked River 1 Glams in Cocktail.
St. Mary’s on Half Shell .en Cock¬
tail.
Filet of Cumberland Sound Flound¬
er, Sauce Tartar.
Baked Oysters on Half Shell, Clois¬
ter.
Baked Sapeloe, Drum with Raisin;.,
Doboy Croker Fried with Cucum¬
bers.
Terrapin a la Sea Island.
Deviled Crabs, St. Catherine, Tar¬
tar.
Brunswick Shrimp on Hearts of
Lettuce.
It is believed that through the ob¬
servance of Georgia Sea Food Week
many of the dishes similar to those
offered by the Piedmont Motel will
find regular places on menus through¬
out the state during seasonal periods
of the year 1 .
Never Dangerous
To Cure Eczema
Some people have an Idea that it is
dangerous to try to cure eczema through
that the “poison” will go
your system.
That’s all wrong, doctors say.
Nobody knows exactly what causes
eczema, but plenty of folks know how
to stop it—how to get relief that’s
nothing short of magic.
Eczema—tetter—salt rheum — no
matter what you call it, no matter
how long 1 you’ve had it, nor how many
things you have tried—
When it itches so it almost drives
you crazy—when you think you just
can’t stand it another second-—put
some Moone’s Emerald Oil on it.
If that doesn’t give you—instantly]
—greater relief than anything you’ve
ever tried, money hack.
Don’t be afraid of its hurting you
or your clothes—use lots of it.
'remember that J. L. Andrews, drug¬
gist. guarantees it. (adv)
CHROMIUM FLUTING
ALSO NICKE L SILVER GOLD ETC
SIMMONS PUTiNO WORKS?
PST fii a.*-STA GA -
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
Mothers fund relief
from the burden of colds
With new VICKS PLAN for
bettor CON TROL-OF-COLDS
THE PROOF..in Results!..
lnchnic.il tests among thousands last winter
in schools, colli gea and homes Vicks
Cold:-Conttol l’lcn cut iho number and
duration of colds in Imlfl saved almost
tu/o*thirds of the time lo .t from si bool due
to Colds! — reduced the Ctrl'* of colds more
than halfl... I ho satisfaction of hundreds
of thousands l>l enthusiastic users
con firms these tests.
Vicks Colds'Control Plan was introduced BRIEFLY, HOW VICKS PLAN WORKS
last winter, along with the new aid in When rolih threaten At that lit t feeling of
JnwcntinR colds—Vicks Nose Throat fstulli i lessor lu.w.il imtatiuiv - Nature’-, usual signal
Drops. This new formula is the idea! that a cold is coming on use Vic ks Nose Drops at
companion Vicks VapoRuh, standby of imet ! 'I hey soothe irritation nnd aid Nat ure’s func¬
to tions in throwing off the infection that threatens,
mothers (or two generations in treating i lu y prevent development of many colds.
colds — externally. If a cold has developed, Vicks VapoRub—(now
Together with certain simple rules of available in Stainless form, if you prefer) rubbed is the
health, these preparations form Vicks proved, dependable treatment. Just on
Plan for better ('onirol of l (olds. I low you throat nnd chest at bedtime, its double action —
follow it in home is fully continuing through the night — brings quicker,
can your ex¬ surer relief. Use of the Nose Drops during the day
plained in each Vicks package. udds to comfort - helps shorten the cold.
Read The News Want Ads
You know how it in. II ;j cigarette is iniltl— that is, not
har-h or hit lor, hut smokos oool an<l smooth — then you like
it and don’t worry about how many or how often you smoke.
And if it tastes ri^ht— rthat is, not oversweet, not Hat—
then you enjoy it all the more.
The rij'lit kind of ripe, sweet Domestic and Turkish to¬
bacco... the right ageing and blending...make fdiesterfields
19-A, I iw,rrr it Mam 'lutvj.ii r.q, milder, belter-lasting .. .They Satisfy!
HACE THREE