Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, June 07, 1936, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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MICHIGAN VOTE PLEDGED LANDON LANSING, Mich., June 8 (TP)— Michigan'* Governor Fitsgeradd, chair man of the Wolverine Republican delegation said tonight that Michi gan a 38 votes will go to Kansas’ Gov ernor Landon if a Landon stampede developes at Cleveland. Governor Fitagerald said the Michi gan delegation will go to Cleveland to do everything possible to further the candidacy of Michigan’s Senator Van denberg for the presidential nomina tion. “But," said the governor: “If a Landon stampede should oome. we’ll support Senator Vandenberg for the vice presidential nomination ” Senator Vandenberg said in Wash ington today that he would not ac cept the nomination as Governor Lan don’s running mate. NASH AND LAFAYETTE Guaranteed Used Car Bargains EVERY CAR GUARANTEED TO BE IN FIRST-CLASS CONDITION OR YOUR MONEY REFUNDED. 1935 Plymouth 4-D. Sedan DRIVEN 10,200 MILES— SE7C fifi A REAL BARGAIN 3-vU 1934 Ford 4-Door Sedan WITH $375.00 1935 Willys 4-Door Sedan DRIVEN 93,000 MILES— $375 AO Looks and Runs Like New 1933 Chevrolet 4-D. Sedan New Tires, Perfect Condi- $375 00 tion, Upholstering As good * As New— -1932 Dodge 4-Door Sedan New Paint and new Tires, $295 00 Upholstering looks like new PLENTY OTHER MAKES AND MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM Southern Motors, Inc. USED CAR LOT ADJOINING SHOW ROOM DISTRIBUTORS NASH AND LAFAYETTE BROUGHTON and LINCOLN Sts. PHONE 7137 I I Where Else Can | As Much Be Had I I For So Little Money? I As in INDUSTRIAL CITY GARDENS, “The Salaried Man’s Paradise,” where you may acquire not a . city lot but a little country estate of one to twenty acres, or more, of fertile, well-drained land, on which ‘ we will build, and sell to you on terms like rent, a lovely frame or brick bungalow, with modern bath, . running water, electric lights, telephone and street car facilities. On this property, you may not only enjoy city conveniences but all country advantages, in that you may have a profusion of flowers, an abundance of vegetables, fruits, poultry, a pony for your boy, your shooting dogs, etc., with the city ! only five minutes away. Go out and see for yourself that it is not only a pleasant place to live, but a safe, sound and profitable ©lace in which to invest, as the three hundred odd happy, thrifty, prosperous residents in INDUSTRIAL CITY GARDENS will testify. Also, in SILK HOPE FARMS (shortly to be offere 1 to the public), you may acquire, on or off the ■ concrete, one to one hundred acres of as fine land as is to be found in the entire country; yet, only three . I miles from the city limits of Savannah, on terms as low as $5.00 cash and $5.00 per tract per month, with NO interest, NO taxes, and your life insured for the first three years. When you will have paid in as much as S3OO, we will either build for you or lend you the money with which to build a lovely ! frame or brick bungalow, with city conveniences, where all the joys of country life and pleasures of home ownership may be had, and where you may have the satisfaction of knowing that you can make a good living at home on your own land should you ever quit or lose your job. When you will have acquired and paid for such a lovely place, you may justly swell up with pride in that you invested your savings and the money you were paying for rent in such a place instead of squan dering it. | . ! y v *• 4 . a I L. H. Smith & Co. 10 DRAYTON STREET TELEPHONE 7833 I PAGEANT SKETCHES BROOKLYN HISTOR CONEY ISLAND, N. Y., June 6 (TP)—Plain Mr. and Mrs. Sweeney brushed elbows with bigwigs from Manhattan tonight as the big Brook lyn Historical Pageant neared its close. Surf Avenue was jammed to the curbs today as the sparkling pro cession marched and rode. From beginning to end, the pageant sketched the history of Brooklyn. It began with Hendrik Hudson s landing 300 years ago and came right on down to the present day. The two prize oxen were there, all right. The pag eant-makers had all kinds of trouble finding the great beasts for the show. At the last minute, they turned up a New Jersey farmer with a span of them. The massive animals shuffled along today in the middle of the pro cession, symbolizing a slower genera tion of long ago. 1932 Oldsmobile 4-D. Sedan WITH RADIO AND JUST C97C ftft OVERHAULED >£/3.WV 1929 Ford Roadster $50.00 1933 Terraplane Coach hon l CONDI :_..._ 5345 - 00 1930 Chevrolet Coupe jain ALBAK $125.00 1930 Graham Coach 4-Door SEDAN—Six Wire Wheels CIOC ftft -Don’t Miss This At ♦ liM.VU PARKER DEFIANT AGAINST POLICE MOUNT HOLLY, N. J., June 6 (TP) County Detective Ellis Par- ker, Sr., shouted defiance at four •Brooklyn detectives today when they demanded the surrender of his son. The Parkers, senior and junior, are both under indictment on charges of kidnaping and maltreating Paul Wendel. Wendel is the disbarred Tren ton attorney who signed a spurious Lindbergh kidnaping confession. Said Parker heatedly. “My son won't go to Brooklyn, and neither will I. You've all being duped by a clever crook!” Paul Wendel has filled you with so much bunk it's coming out your ears.” Francs advanced 3-4 point to .0659 cents today in terms of the dollar. Sterling gained 5-16 cents to 15.01 9-16. SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, SUNDAY, JUNE 7,1936 CENTENNIAL SETS SPEED RECORD TEXAS EXPOSITION CUTS TELEGRAM MARK IN HALF DALLAS. Texas, June 6 (TP)—The record for speed in sending a telegram around the world was cut in half to day at the opening of the Texas cen tennial exposition. The message was: “Texas welcomes the " world.” The Postal Telegraph Company flashed the words clear around the globe by wire and radio. Two minutes after one operator started the message on its race over land and sea. another operator re ceived it back in Dallas. The old rec ord was four minutes. Secretary’ of Commerce Roper opened the $25,000,000 exposition in place of President Roosevelt. The president was unable to get away from Washington. He promised, though, that he will see the exposition later and make one or two speeches. Of ficials say that exposition visitors have doubled the normal population of Dallas. Advano? ticket sales were more than 2.000.000. The exposition offers everything from the “Streets of Paris” for men, to “Southern Gentlemen’’ escorts for ladies who com? twithout boy friends. NAVAL STORES Turpentine Last Yesterday Friday Year Tone Steady Firm Firm Regulars 37 37 45-1-2 Sales No Bids 64 255 Roein Tone Firm Firm Firm X 470 470 620 WW 470 460 470 620 WG 460 460 - 525 N 460 455-460 490 M 460 455-460 450 K 460 450-455 450 t 457 1-2 450-455 445 H 457 1-2 445-455 440 G 455 445-450 440 F 450 445 425 E 430 425 435 400 D 425 415 380 B 375 370 340 Sales 406 1759 1488 Statement Spirits Rosin Stock April 1 37,488 57,626 Receipts today 505 1,896 This day last year 795 1,911 Receipts for month 2.665 10,293 Receipts for month last season 2,894 9,043 Receipts for season 20,574 76,354 Receipts same date last season 25,028 86,993 Shipments today .... 1,845 4,570 Receipts for month ......... 3,248 9,784 Receipts for season 32,065 78.444 Shipments last season 19,452 82,188 Stock today 25,997 55,536 Same day last year 29,367 119,907 COTTON MARKETS NEW YORK, June 6 (TP). —Cot- ton moved erratically today in re sponse to nervousness over weather conditions in the eastern cotton belt. The July position held steady with « los of only 2 points. Other futures broke 10 to 15 points. New Orleans futures closed unchanged to 15 points lower. French Leftists Remember Commune Massacre Kw* ■ - 'lf. X, ' x '■ -W On May 27, 1871, thousands of Parisians and hundreds of leaders in the Commune were massacred by the army from Versailles, under Gen. Vinoy. French radicals make yearly pilgrimages to the scene of the massacre. This picture shows Leon Blum, Premier-designate and head of the Popular Front party, who led the parade this year. He’s the man with eyeglasses and mustache, in the middle background. With _ A general strike looming in France, the power of the assumes enormous proportions. MARKETS NEW YORK. June 6 (TP).—The stock market finished off the week’s trading today in a somewhat improv ed position. Industrials, rails and utilities were generally higher. With few exceptions gains were well below a point. Steels and metals were fairly active. Sales tapered off to 250,000 shares. The corporate section of the bond market worked higher. The federal list showed an easier tone. At closing yesterday the following prices were quoted: A Air Reduction 65 Allied Chem 145 Am. Can ••••.... 127 Am. Pow. & Light 11 1-8 Am. Rad .. 20 3-4 Am. Tel 165 Armour 11l 43-4 Atchison 70 1-8 Aviation Corp 5 3-8 Atlan. Ref 27 B Bald. Loco 3 1-4 B <fc O 17 5 8 Beth. Steel 50 1-2 C Canad. Pacif 12 5-8 Case 158 1-4 Cer-teed Pds 10 1-4 Chrysler 93 3-8 Com. Solvents 16 1-4 Consol. Oil ... 115-8 Cur. Wright 6 Cur. Wright A 15 3-8 D Del. Lack 15 3-4 Dcuglas 56 1-4 Du Pont 142 3-8 E Elec. Auto Lit 39 5-8 Elec. Pow. & Lit 15 F Firestone 27 3-4 G General Elec 37 7-8 General Foods •• • • 39 5-8 General Motors 61 1-2 Goodyear 23 3-4 Grt. Wes. Sugr 36 1-2 H Houdaille Her 23 1-4 Hudson 14 7-8 Hupp 2 3-8 I 111. Cen 20 1-2 Tnt. Harves ’.. 84 Int. x Nick 46 3-8 Int. Tel. 13 1-4 J Johns Manvll 93 K Kelvinator 18 3-4 Kennecott »•••»... 37 7-8 L Leows 44 1-4 M Mid. Cont. Pet 18 3-8 Mont. Ward 42 1-2 N Mash 16 1-2 Nat. Bis 34 1-2 Nat. Distill 27 7-8 Nat. Steel 64 N. Y. Cen 34 1-4 O Otis Steel 14 3 4 P ; Packard 10 1-4 Paramount 8 , Penn. RR 30 3-4 I Ply. Oi. 1 14 I Pub. Ser ......... 43 R Radio 111-2 Reo 5 1-8 Rey. Tob. B 53 1-4 S Sears Roe 71 3-4 Simmons Co 27 5-8 Socony 12 3-4 Sou. RR 15 3-8 Stand. Oil Cal 36 1-8 Stand. Oil NJ 58 1-2 Stand. Brands 15 Stcne & Web 18 1 8 Studebaker 111-8 Swift 21 1-8 T Texas Corp 31 1-4 U Union Carbide 83 1-2 Unit Aircrft 23 1,-4 United Corp 6 3-8 Unit Gas Imp 15 U. S. Rubber 27 1-8 U. S. Steel 59 3 8 V Va. Car Chem 5 W Warner Picts 9 7-8 Western Union 79 1-2 Westinghe 110 1-4 Wilson 778 HORNBOSTEL WINS TRAVERS ISLAND, N. Y., (TP) The former Indiana university run ner, Charley Hornbostel, sped to vic tory today in the special three-quar ters of a mile run in the 136th New 1 I Let Us . I Bring Back |i the Hidden II Lustre to | Your Rugs 11 YOU WILL BE ASTONISHED TO SEE HOW OUR !l| NEW SYSTEM RESTORES THE COLOR TO YOUR I i RUGS AND CARPETS THAT HAVE BECOME DULL I AND DINGY. I , EXPERT WORKMANSHIP AND NO SHRINKAGE I ON ORIENTALS AND DOMESTIC RUGS. OUR t SYSTEM IS ALSO GUARANTEED NOT TO TAKE J THE SIZE OUT OF YOUR RUGS AND LEAVE I THEM LIFELESS AND FLIMSY. |l! LET US CLEAN AND STORE YOUR RUGS FOR YOU THIS SUMMER Ask For an Estimate on All Your Rugs | HAVE YOUR SUIT OR DRESS GERM-FREE CLEANED | THIS WEEK. THEY ARE NOT CLEAN UNTIL I THEY ARE GERM-FREE Ml L“oWe 1 LAUfIDRIIW' — I PHONE 2-3168 I 1415 PAULSEN j; SUCCESSOR TO HAMMOND CLEANERS II SEND YOUR LAUNDRY WITH THE DRY CLEANING York A. C. track and field games. Bill Bonthron, the world’s record holder for 1,500 meters, finished fourth. Hornbostel’s winning time was ' three minutes, 5.5 seconds. PAGE FIVE WRECKED PLANE IS TOWED HOME MITCHEL FIELD, L. 1., June 6* (TP) —A repair crew from Mitchell field tonight towed home the wreck age of a SIOO,OOO airplane. The ship crashed after two army flyers took to their parachutes. Expert® blamed the wreck on the failure of one of the engines. The machine began spinning at an alti tude of 8,000 feet. Pilot Delaine Bail ey found the plane entirely out of control. He shouted to Sergeant P. G. Smith—"We got to jump. Go on over.” Smith went over the side at 7,000 feet. Bailey stayed with hisship a while longer. It fell another 6,000 feet, then he jumped. Both flyers wafted to earth without injury. The plane caught fire when it struck the ground. The machine was known as the B-10. It was one of a new fleet sent to Mitchel field. Mechanics believe they may be able to salvage some of the parts. The curb market was narrowly ir regular. Oils made the best show ing as a group with fractional gains. Turnover was 66,000 shares. BRAND OF W BE THE JUDGE • LH WHIR OWN TASTE