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About Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-???? | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1936)
PAGE EIGHT VARIOUS CHARGES HEARD IN COURT S. Leo Tracy, age 27, was fined $25 I the alternativ? of serving 30 days on the Brown Farm and held for city court on the charges of carrying a pistol without a license and pointing a pistol at another not in hi., own defense after the de fendant had been brought before Act ing Recorder Edgar L. Wortsman in police court this morning. Police Of ficer W. P. Mann made the case. E. O. Huff, 24, and Ruth Clark appeared before the court on chares which grew out of an altercation in which Huff was alleged to have beaten the woman. Huff was sen tenced to serve 30 days on the Brown Farm and the woman was sent to Hampstead Hom? for an Indefinite period. Police Officer F. B’. Smith and Mrs. Kathleen Moore, city police woman, handled the case. Roscoe Finch was given a 30-day Brown Farm sentence on th? charges of disorderly conduct, by being drunk and beating Mrs. Mozella Finch. Of ficer Mann arrested Finch. George Y. Brown, Jr., charged by Police Officer W. M. Worrell with speeding on Victory Drive ab the rate of 50 miles an hour at 1:30 o'clock this morning was sentenced to pay a fine of $25 or serve 30 days on the Brown Farms. FOUR INJURED • IN AUTO CRASH Slight hurts were suffered by four persons in an accident about 3 o’clock yesterday afternoon at the 11-mile post on the Louisville road in which two trucks and a passenger auto fig ured. Those receiving medical atten tion ere were: Mr. and Mrs. J. Leon ard Rountee of Summit; Miss Ruby Brantley and Marlon Cox. All were occupants of the pa c senger car. Sergt. Waters and Officer W. M. Sheppard of the county police inves tigated the accident. Mr. Rountree was driving the auto and in trying to pass a truck driven by Ollie Mc- Neill the two vehicles collided. En deavoring to avoid smashing into this truck and automobile. W. A. White, driving in the opposite direction, ran his truck off the road. BOY, RUM VICTIM, SUFFERS RELAPSE Gus Floyd, Jr., five-year-old negro boy, taken to Charity ospital after po lice said he had been made to swal low a large quantity of whisky, was said by hospital attaches to be in a serious condition again today. The child was suffering from convulsions tls morning, it was stated at the hos pital. Attendants here, however, be lieve the child will recoWr. Police continued their hunt today for the negro man said to be respon sible for the boy’s condition. A ne gro woman, an intimate friend of the man. was arrested Monday and held for investigation at police headquar ters in the hopes that the where abouts of the negro sought might be gleaned from her. Police released this v.oman today after falling to gain any information from ther pris oner. Parents of the child said a man known as "Bouncer” visited the Floyd home before any members of the family were awake Sunday morning They said he took the child away an dreturned him in a drunken stu por Sunday nigt; WOOD-ROBINS CO. OPENS BUSINESS The new home of the Wood-Robins Co., Inc. at 516-22 Harris street, west, is being formally opened today. Friends and customers are invited to inspect the new plant, with its mod ern facilities for the manufacture of sausage and specialties, which Will be open throughout the day and eve ning. Refrerhments will be served. Mr. Wood has been connected with the Cudahy Company as local man ager until recently. Mr. Robbins has been in business for himself from 1921 until the organization of the present concern. The move to new and larger quar ters was necessitated by the rapid growth of the Wood-Robbins Com pany since its organization in March of last year. TRUCK KNOCKS DOWN ELECTRIC LIGHT POLE I. B. New, a clerk employed at the Atlantic and Pacific grocery company’ store at Waters avenue and Ander son street, reported to Police Ser geant S. J. Williams this morning that a truck of the Five Transporta tion Company had backed into a pole of the Savannah Electric and Pow er Company at Waters avenue and Henry street lane and knocked down th? pole. The police report gave the name of the driver of the trwek as Harvey Barber, 522 East 33rd street. Mo docket case was made after dam ages were assumed by th? truck trans mutation company. OCCIDENT CHARGES TO BE AIRED IN COURT Frank Heidt and Mrs. Elsie Tom in will be given a hearing before Al terman Edgar L. Wortsman, acting >olice court recorder, tomorrow morn ng on charges of reckless driving of heir automobiles tereby running into »,ch other. Police Officer T. M. lohansen made the case at 7:59 j’clock yesterday morning. W. E. ?uten, 2519 West Broad street, has aeen issued a summons as a witness in the case. CHICKENS STOLEN Eliza Lucas, negro, living at 913 Reppard stret, complained to the po lice department at 5:45 o'clock this morning that a thief had visited her yard during the night and made away with three chickens. POLICE HOPEFUL OF EARLY SOLUTION TO CARELLAS’ MURDER CASE MYSTERY County Police Chief W. F. Chap man announced today he had added another $25 to the reward of SIOO posted by Solon Chapter No. 5. Or e'er of the Ahepa, for person giving information leading to the arrest and conviction of the slayer, Sunday aft ernoon, of Peter Carellas, district gov ernor of the Ahepa. Carellas operated a filling station and auto wrecking lot on Bay Street Extension about a mile west of the city viaduct. He was found dead with his head brutally battered in the wrecking lot about 5 o’clock Sunday afternoon. The funeral of Mr. Carellas was held from the Sipple Brothers chapel and from St. Paul’s Greek Orthodox church yesterday afternoon. Inter ment was in Bonaventure cemetery. The dead man was a World war vet eran and military services as well as special rites of the Ahepa were con ducted at the grave. Early tthis afternoon two young \Uhite men were still being detained by county police as they continued their investigation. Police remained tight-lipped as to what their findings were as the probe progressed but Chief Chapman appeared encouraged with the progress being made in the investigation. It is known that so far officers have not been able to locate anyone who saw Carellas later than 4 o’clock in the afternoon. His body was found PEEK NAMED HEAD EXCHANGE CLUBS CEDARTOWN MAN ELECT ED PRESIDENT OF GEOR GIA ASSOCIATION At its closing session yesterday the Exchange Club unanimously elected Charles W. Peek, Jr., of Cedartown, president of the Exchange Clubs for Georgia, to succeed Carl W. Seiler of Savannah. R. L. Sumerau, of Augusta, was chosen for the vlc?-presidency, with Charles Vance, Cedartown, sec retary and treasurer. The board of control selected includes: Luther Bloodworth, Macon; J. B. Mooney, Griffin; Richard M. Charlton, Savan nah, A. O. Johnson of Waycross, and Burt Smith of Rome. Chairman of the nominating committee which made the selection was Andrew A. Smith, of Savannah. The new of ficers were Installed by William H. Beck, Jr., of Griffin, national Ex change president. Robert K. Jeffries of Montgomery was accorded a ris ing vote of thanks for his attendance at the convention and the interest he has shown in the organization. Mr. Bsck’s conduct of the office of Na tional president was indorsed by re solution. Six other resolutions were adopted. An attendance of thirty delegates at the convention won for Augusta the silver attendance trophy offered by the state club, while the Cedar town club was commended for its large representation under the handi cap of being such a great distance from Savannah. A shore dinner at the Shrine Coun try Club for the delegates, their wives and guests, follower! the busi ness session and adjournment of the body. ALLEGED~SLAYER TO FACE TRIAL NEGRESS TO BE GIVEN PRELIMINARY HEARING Lucille Harris, 21-year-old negro woman, who was arrested in Allen dale, S. C., last night, and returned here by Detective Sergt. E. A. Fitz gerald, will be given a preliminary hearing in police court tomorrow on a charge of murdering Rosa Jackson, negress. Rosa died after an alterca tion ab 541 West Boundary street which took place Saturday night. The woman was stabbed. In connection with the murder case John Blackshear, 5, and Jeffery Har ris, 21, both neroes, will be given a hearing tomorrow on charges of aid ing and abetting a fugltiv from jus tice, The pair are alleged to have assisted Lucille Harris to escape into South Carolina. The names of Sergt. R. P. Crowder and Police Officers A. G. Hayes and R. T. Russell are on the docket sheet to testify in the case. Police held to day in the station house as a material witness, Ola Dunningham, negro. Detective Sergt. T. H. Ellis said this afternoon the woman charged with the murder admitted the kill ing and said it was done in self-de fense . NEGRO YOUTH HELD FOR FEDERAL GRAND JURY Edward Martin, negro youth, was held for action of the federal grand jury after a hearing this morning be fore Maj. G. H. Richter, federal com missioner, at which officers of the internal revenue department charged the defendant with possession of a half gallon of non-tax paid liquor. Martin yleaded guilty and was re leased on bond of SSOO. Officers in timated they expected to find a much larger quantity of liquor in making the arrest. OFFICIALS TO RETURN Col. Creswell Garlington and Capt. Akerman, who left yesterday for an inspection of the new Savannah riv er dam below Augusta, are expected to return this afternoon. BP ~ BOX KNOCKED DOWN Mounted Police Oficer W. J. Morse reported to police headquar ters at 11 o’clock this morning an unknown automobile driver had es caped after running into a post and knocking it from it Fire Alarm Box No. 92 at West Boundary and Cohen streets. an hour later. The two dwellings closest to the murder scene ar? oc cupied by negroes. Queries there elicited the information that occu pants of both houses had been away all day Sunday. As far as could be learned from po lice the murder weapon was still un discovered today. The belief today seemad still strong among investigat ing officers that the man who killed Carellas was known to the business man and that the slayer had lured his victim into the auto wrecking lot on the pretense of buying a second hand bumper. Many were puzzled at the audacity of the slayer in ap parently entering and leaving the premises of his victim by the public highway on which they are located. They remarked at the' usual heavy Sunday traffic of automobilists with its attendant likelihood of detection of the murderer. Some light was thrown on this feature of the case today when police revealed that there is a little travelled thoroughfare by which the killer could have fled in a car from the rear of the auto wrecking lot quite some distance from the public highway. But regardless of this and other details subsequently brought to light the large field, graveyard of hun dreds of discarded cars, this afternoon apparnetly still held tightly from in vestigators the real secret of the identity of the murderer of Carellas. DELEGATES OPEN CHAMBER SESSION MAYOR GIVES ADDRESS OF WELCOME TO ASSO CIATES Associates of the Chamber of Com merce in the Coastal Empire gather ed last night at the Hotel DeSoto in one of the most successful meetings ever held. Persiding was D. S. Owen of Allenhurst, president. Speakers included men of such prominence as Mayor Gamble, State Senator John C. Beasley of Tattnall County. L. M. Sheffer, State supervisor for the Ag ricultural phase of vocational prog ram; Claude E. Boggs, educational manager and editor of the Forestry anfl Geological Review, State Cap itol; Harry L. Brown, director of Ex tension Service, College of Agricul ture, University of Georgia; C. G. Arnett, president of the Georgia-Car olina Live Stock Association, Hal cyondale; Byron Dyer, county agent in Bulloch county, and others. Vocational education, live stock de velopment and agricultural extension were discussed as important features in the future progress of southeastern Georgia. Mayor Gamble in his address of welcome stressed the importance of the gatherings, and their vlaue to both participants, the Chamber of Commerce of Savannah and the Coastal Associates. LAGUARDIA TO TRY PUBLISHER’S CASE MAYOR OF METROPOLIS SITS AS JUDGE AT LIBEL HEARING NEW YORK June 10 (TP)—Mayor LaGuardia will serve as New Lork’s chief magistrate today ip the hear ing of a man charged with criminal libel. The summons was sworn out by the mayor. The defendant is Robert Edward Edmondson, a publisher of racial phamphlets. Edmondson has pub lished and distributed more than a million leaflets attacking the Jewish race, Mayor LaGuardia, Governor Lehman.., President Roosevelt, Gov ernor, Landon of Kansas and other prominent. When he was served with the sum mons from LaGuardia. Edmondson made a new attack on the mayor. Said the grey haired publisher: "Be ing a radical Jew himself, LaGuardia thereby exposes his own prejudice and racial antagonism by attacking a purely patriotic movement.” La- Guardia is of Italian descent. Edmondson denied tht he was con nected with the Black Legion, the Klan or any other organization. He claimed that he put out his leaflets through purely patriotic motives. HIGH SPOTS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) and a peace hc”se for president and vice president by the Democratic con vention . General George B. McClellan was nominated unanimously. His contem poraries spoke of him as one who would rather lead his men into bat tle than become president. Others from Kentucky, said that he would be expected, as his first presi dential act if he were elected in the following March, to open the prison doors and free all those whom Lin coln had caused to be incarcerated. One delegate, who asserted that he spoke in fear of his life, declared that some of the most prominent and yolal citizens of Kentucky, including some twenty or thirty women, were im prisoned in Louisville and were ex periencing extreme conditions of hardship. States’ Righter George H. Pendleton of Ohio was unanimously nominated as vice prey dent and in his short speech at the convention he made a promise to re spect the rights of the states, the freedom of its people and that as one of his man tasks he would do all in his power to gather up the fragments of the now broken Union and rebuild it for the next generation. But the Democrats failed to gain a hand in the rebuilding of the nation. And the reconstruction era became a dark pag? in the nation’s history. Whether the Democrats could have SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1930 MAD DOG BITES FIVE VICTIMS TYBEE ROAD DWELLERS ARE GIVEN PASTEUR TREATMENT Five persons living on the Tybea road have begun the Pasteur treat ment after a report by the city health department said a four-month-old dog, which had bitten these persons, was sufferin gfrom rabies. Word to county police headquarters yesterday said it was possible several CCC en listees at Fort Pulaski had been bit ten by the same animal. County Of ficer Wadley Petit communicated with the CCC camp today to check on the report. He was informed that a check up was under way and a re port would be filed with the medical officer at Fort Screven. Those now taking the Pasteur treatment are Mrs. Strikland and her three sons, Waldon, James and Jo eph Strickland, and Henry Strick hnd an uncle of the children. The uncle lives at the Bull River bridge and t he others at Lazaretto Creek. Some CCC boys picked up a stray dog as a pet last week on Wilming ton Island and gave it to Ed Waite at the Lazaretto Creek bridge. He gave it to Mrs. Strickland. After members o sher family had been bit ten she sent it to Mr. Strickland. The dog bit him and he shot it and sent the head to the city health depart ment for examination. STATISTICS SHOW ROSIN INCREASE An increase in production of rosin of 50,000 barrels for the 1935-36 sea son was noted in the report of the Department of Agriculture just re leased in Washington. A total of 2,276,491 barrels was produced with 602,908 barrels of turpentine. This was a decrease of 185 barrels in the quantity of turpentine produced. More than half of the gum turpen tine collected last year was produced by Georgia, the report shows. The annual report on naval stores covers details of turpentine and ros in production.., distribution, and stocks in the United States for the last three yeasr, an dimports and ex ports of naval stores last season are given. Copies are obtained by ad dressing the bureau at Washington. HULLASKEDTO DELAY TREATIES SECRETARY IS PROMPTED AGAINST RENEWALS BY MANUFACTURERS WASHINGTON, June 10 (TP).— Secretary of State Hull was asked today by American Manganese pro ducers to delay renewing present trade treaties with Russia—at least until after extensive hearings have been held. The president of the American Manganese Producers Association, J. Carson Adkerson, said in his letter that If the Mangenese reduction granted to Bfazil is extended to Rus sia it may lead to abrogation of the Brazilian trade pact. Said Adkerson—“The Brazilian agreement, cutting the duty on Man ganese ore and extending the same cut to Russia and other nations, means a loss to the United States treasury of approximately $2,500,000 annually.” He maintained that there can be no adequate national security as long as the United States remains depen dent upon foreign Mangenese. JURIST ON TRIP Police Court Recorder H. Mercer Jordan left by plane this morning for Washington, D. C., on business. In his stead today Aiderman Edgar L. Dortsman sat on the police court bench. Recorder Jordan is expected back in Savannah Friday morning. SUMMER CLOTHING Members of the city police depart ment were somewhat light-hearted today and it was because of the sum, mer regulation regarding their cloth ing. In pursuance of an order issued by Capt. J. J. Clancy, executive head of the department the officers have discarded their coats and now bare blue shirts to whatsoever breezes as may be available. CHILDREN BROADCAST The Colonel Henry Lee Society, Children of the American Revolution will broadcast over W. T. O. C. Mon day evening at 8:15 o’clock in cele bration of Flag Day. Mrs. Ralph West, senior president of the society is in charge of the pro gram and the members of the society are asked to meet at her home this Friday morning at 10 o’clock for a rehearsal of the program. MORTUARY LEONARD P. LIPSEY Funeral services for Leonard P. Lipsey, 42, who died last night at the home of his daughter, Mrs. H. A. McGill, 420 Macon street, East, after a short Hines, will be held at the chapel of the Irvine Henderson Fu neral home at 11 o’clock tomorrow morning, with the Rev. Arthur Jack son, pastor of the First Baptist church officiating. Interment will be in Bonaventure cemetery. Mr. Lipsey was a native of Brunswick, but had lived in Savan nah for 36 years. He served for 18 months in the World war in the air service. Besides his daughter, Mr. Lipsey is survived by his wife, Mrs. Eva Lipsey; one son, Leonard, Jr., and two grandchildren. changed the era will be a matter for debate presumably for ages to come Next: A Warrior Nominated. EDWARDS TALKS TO PILOT CLUB MOTION PICTURE INDUS TRY PRAISED BY LO CAL EXECUTIVE The guest speaker at the Pilot club meeting last night at the Hotel Sa vannah was Hudson Edwards, man ag.r of the Bijou theater, who de livered an interesting address on the motion picture industry. Pictures are not only educational, said Mr. Ed wards, but keep the public up to the minute in styles and information. Miss Merle Bray Gordoi chairman of the program committee, introduced the speaker. A secret ballot was em ployed to elect the chairman of the membership committee, with only the president, Mrs. Vera Allen, knowing her identity during the year. The president of Pilot Intemation al, Miss Mabie Clair Speth, pres?ntc each member a Mexican hat ash tr: as a souvenir of her recent visit t Mexico. Mrs. Vera Allen, preside, of th? club, presided. The progra; committees for the year were a. nounced as follows by Mrs. Ethel Me ree Copps, chairman of that commit tee: > June —Jane Ives, chairman; Merle Gordon, Ann Fawcett Oliver and Bthelyn Allen. July—Anna Schwaab, chairman; Martha Singleton, Adele May, Ang:la McDonough. August—Lois DeLegal, chairman; Emily Clark. Elizabeth Buckshaw and Margaret Broks. September—LHlian Rivers, chair man; Erma Aspinwall, Sara Johnson and Bertha Ingman. October Mary Esther Brook?, chairman; Catharine Rourk, Edna Grantham and Margaret Byington. November—Lily Belle Frost, chair man; Eva Martin, Mary Williams Hendry and Merle Gordon. December—Viola Davis Knight, chairman; Mildred Cooper, Angela McDonough and Joephine Sutlive. January, 1937—Dorothy Gordon, chairman; Ahna Schwaab, Lois De- Legal and May Fraps. February—lola Gilbert, chairman; Elizabeth Buckshaw, Mildred Cooper and Ethlyn Allen. March—Josephine Sutlive, chair man; Edna Grantham, Bertha Ing man and Eva Martin. April—Sara Johnson, chairman; Mary Esther Brooks, Margaret Brooks, and Gertrude Jones Sterne. May—May Fraps, chairman; Vi ola Davis Knight, Lillian Rivers and Dorothy Gordon. LEGidOEAD (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1) Georgia’s Share Large Georgia, with 58,583 veterans, will share in the bonus division to the extent of $32,262,946. Chatham county’s share of ths will be in the neighborhood of a million and a quarter dollars to be divided between upwards of 3,000 veterans. New York state with $221,373,- 427 to be divided between 377,382 veterans leads the states in its slice of the bonus melon. Pennsylvania with $155,594,459 comes second and Ilinois with $141,172,589 ranks third. Nevada with only 3,066 war veterans on her state roster receives the smallest bonus plum which totals $1,771,846. The amounts and number of vet erans to share by states follow: State Number Total Alabama , 50,867 $26,888,528 Arizona | 10,870 6,668,187 Arkansas 43,849 21,993,238 California 200,424 122,833,011 Colorado 34,259 19,362,059 Connecticut | 44,043 26,914,018 Delaware 4,884 3,527,070 Dis’t Col’bia 28,281 16,278,716 Florida 39,535 21,921,858 Georgia 58,583 32,262,946 Idaho 13,575 1,411,798 Illinois, 253,343 141,472,589 Indiana 95,587 50,730,624 lowa 79,814 41,019,480 Kansas 57,114 31,436,036 Kentucky 63,696 34,261,787 Louisiana 53,885 27,849,762 Maine | 21,412 12,121627 Maryland Massachusetts 137,113 83,147,947 Michigan 134.009 77,476,794 Mississippi 36,802 19,308,411 Missouri 111,706 60,820,922 Montana 18,106 10,281,687 Nebraska 40,233 21,802,190 Nevada | 3,066 1,771,846 N. Hamp. 12,370 7,298,113 New Jersey 116,440 69,579,645 New Mexico 10,101 5,810,422 New York 377,182 221,373,427 N. Carolina | 63,926 j 34,622,162 N. Dakota 16,174 | 8,762,475 Ohio j 182,692 | 106,061,344 Oklahoma j 67,181 I 35,202,766 Oregon ; 35,376 | 20,679,034 Pennsylvania 259,931 I 155,594,459 Rhode Island 20,789 12,356,883 S. Carolina 1 35,747 i 19,316,831 S. Dakota 22,713 j 11,757,600 Tennessee 59,009 j 32,497,536 Texas 148,771 I 83,696,221 Utah 14,387 | 8,035,096 Vermont 8,243 | 5,042,465 Virginia 63,132 j 36,811,791 Washington • 56,335 ; 34,079,306 W. Virginia 43,294 23,345,392 Wisconsin 88,036 47,177,680 Wyoming 11,177 j 6,329,955 HENDERSON IMPROVES County Police Officer Claude Hen derson, who underwent an operation yesterday morning at St. Joseph’s hospital, was reported showing satis factory improvement this morning. At the hospital it was said his con dition was good. FINE CATCH Johnny Haris, well-known local hibiting yesterday a fine string of night club proprietor, was proudly ex of 65 bream and red breasts caught by himself at Jones Lake. Mr. Harris pronounced fishing very good at that point of the Ogeechee river. MARRIAGE LICENSES Marriage licenses were Issued yes terday to Desmond V. O’Driscoll and Miss Gertrude E. Mock, both of Sa vannah, and to James Edward Mount of New York city and Miss Dorothy W. Hutton of Savannah. MARKETS NEW YORK, June 10 (TP).—The stock market gained ground today on more active trading. RaHs and spe cialties were in the van with gains up to two points. Utilities were also a firm spot. Motors and steels were quiet. Corporate bonds forged ahead frac tions to a point. U. S. government isues tended lower.- Wheat and cotton were little changed. At 1:30 o’clock today the following prices were quoted: A Air Reduction 65 1-4 Allied. Chem 198 Am. Can 129 7-8 Am. Loco 27 1-2 Am. Pow. & Light 12 Am. Rad 20 7-8 Am. Sugar 53 Am. Tel 169 3-4 \m. Tob. B 95 1-4 naconAa 33 5-8 mour 11l 4 2-4 ; hison 73 3-8 /lation Corp 5 1-2 B -Id. Loco 3 3-8 <fe O 18 5-3 . endex - - - - 27 7-8 eth. Steel 53 Briggs 47 3-8 C Canad. Pacif 12 3-4 Case 165 Cer-teed Pds 10 1-4 Chrysler 95 1-2 Com. Solvents 16 1-2 Consol. Oil 12 Cur. Wright 5 3-4 Cur. Wright A 15 1-8 D Del. Lack 16 5-8 Douglas •... 57 1-2 Du Pont 145 7-8 Del. & Hud 41 E Elec. Auto Lit 35 Elec. Pow. & Lit 16 1-2 Erie 13 F Firestone 27 3-4 G General Eiec 39 1-8 General Foods 40 5-8 General Motors 63 Goodrich 19 7-8 Goodyear 25 Grt. Wes. Sugr ........ 36 5-8 H Houdaille Her. .., 23 1-2 Howe Sound .'. 53 Hudson ....... 15 Hupp 2 3 8 I 111. Cen 21 7-8 Int. Harves 87 1-8 Int. Nick 47 Int. Tel 14 J Johns Manvll 96 3-4 K Kelvinator 19 5-8 Kennecott ••••.. 38 3-4 L Loews 45 3-4 M Mack Tr 31 3-4 Marine Mid. ........ 91-4 Mid. Cont. Pet u 18 5-8 Mont. Ward 44 7-8 N Nash 15 1-2 Nat. Bis 35 5-8 Nat. Distill 27 5-8 Nat. Steel 66 1-2 N. Y. Cen 36 O ' Otis Steel 151-8 P Packard 10 1-4 Paramount 8 5-8 Penn. RR 31 1-4 Ply. Oi. 1 14 Pub. Ser 45 3-8 R Radio 12 Rem. Rand 20 1-4 R -° 5 1-4 Rey. Tob. B 551-8 S Sears Roe 75 Simmons Co ...... 29 1-4 Socony 127-8 Sou. RR 16 3-8 Stand. Oil Cal 35 5-8 Stand. Oil NJ 58 3-8 Stand. Brane’s 15 1-2 Stone & Web. .’ 19 1-2 Studebaker 113-8 Swift 21 1-8 T Texas Corp 31 1-8 U Union Bag 39 3-4 Union Carbide 87 Unit Aircrft 23 3-4 United Corp 7 Unit Gas Imp 15 3-4 U. S. Rubber 28 3-8 U. S. Steel 62 V Va. Car Chem 5 1-2 W Warner Piicts 10 1-8 Wesson OU 35 Western Union 81 3-4 Westinghse WUson 7 7-8 Y Yellow Truck 18 Youngstown 62 1-2 Z Zenith Radio 22 1-2 Zonite Pds 6 1-2 AUTOMOBILE OF JURIST DAMAGED IN ACCIDENT The automobile of John J. Rourke Jr., was slightly damaged at 3:05 o’clock yesterday afternoon when a tourist car collided with the man’s machine at the intersection of Bull and 37th streets. Mr. Roure was going north on Bull street when his car was run into by D. Elliott, of Toronto, Canada, who was going east on 37th street. Mr. El liott ran over a boulevard stop. Po lice Officer B. W. Harper investigat ed but made no docket case at the request of both parties. CHICKEN SUPPER A fried chicken supper, the pro ceeds to be applied against the church indebtedness, will be given by the Parsonage Aid society of the Lutheran Church of the Reformation this after noon from 5 until 9 o'clock at the church. Tickets are 35 cents, and a generous response from the public is requested. NAVAL STORES Turpentine Yester- Last Today cay Year Tone Firm Firm Firm Regs 35 1-2-36 1-4 36 45 Sales 50 98 241 Rosin Tone ... Firm Firm Firm I .... 42 1-2 442 1-2-445 435 1-2 X ... 470 470 600 WW . 465 465 600 WG . 460 460 505 N .. 55 450 -460 480 M ... 50 445 -447 1-2 440 K ... 45 445 437 1-2 I 42 1-2 442 1-2-445 435 H ... 40 435 -440 435 G ... 37 1-2 435 -440 432 1-2 F ... 35 435 415 E .... 30 340 ' 395 1 D ... 25 425 380 I B ... 375 375 340 1 Sales 375 481 1254 • Statement Spirits Rosin 1 | Receipts today 364 1,594 I ! This day last year 415 1,610 I 1 Receipts for month 4.318 17,672 Receipts for month last year 4,829 14,857 Receipts for season 22,227 83,733 Receipts same date last year 26,963 92,807 Shipments today .... 2*4 13 Shipments last yaw 525 Shipments for month 3,462 10,440- Stock today 27,436 62.259 I Same day last 1 y ear 29,778 120.636 : Stock April 1 37,488 57.626 Stock April 1 last year 23.791 , 115.102 COOK WITH OIL AND SAVE MONEY jli High-Power Ml . 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