Stock Market Leaders Suffer
Minor Setback In N. Y. Trade
j;E\V YORK. Oct. 14—(JP)—Most
,tock market leaders sufiered a
jn0r setback today after the last
week's fast forward run but a
group of specialties took the ball
rear tire close and pushed into sub
ntiailv higher territory.
‘ a few of the Pivotals slipped off
, p0int or so after a steady start
“nci American Telephone dropped
“ While these moves inspired some
"eneral selling the market through
r.,t had resistant spots, notably
r,e steels, aircrafts and oils.
Transactions were well under the
previous day’s.
The tact that selling was heid to
modest limits while a fair number
', stocks attracted higher bids was
essociated with the more cheerful
Wall street sentiment generated' by
. ,e favorable tone of war reports
ever the past several days.
Given a ride in late proceedings
, ere issues of Curtis Publishing,
~iclntyre Porcupine, Homestake,
Ponte"and American Rolling Mills,
for the gold stocks this was re
garded by brokers as a normal re
bound after their recent slump on
•"he \VPB s order for suspension of
production.
The Associated r-ress ou-siock
composite had a closing decline of
2 a point at 39.9. Yesterday’s final
’"vcragc was the highest since No
Umber 6. 1941. Dealings totaled
660.010 shares against 857,200
Tuesday.
Rails were a bit soft both before
and after it was disclosed New
\ 0rk Central directors’ meeting
produced no dividend, thus disap
cointing many in the financial sec
tor who had counted on a break in
Central's 12-year dividend drought
The stock closed down % on an
retire turnover.
Telephone's final loss was 1%
while Eastman Kodak and J. C.
Penney were down about a point
each. Narrower declines were
registered by General Motors,
Chrysler. Goodrich. Montgomery
Ward. Sears Roebuck. Douglas, Air
Reduction. Westinghouse, Dow
Chemical. Southern Railway, Greal
Northern and Northern Pacific.
U. S. Steel closed unchanged and
Eethlehem off s. United Aircraft
caged up G. Standard Oil INJ)
end Teas Co. were a shade higher.
Curb losers included Aluminum
tf America, American Cyanamid,
International Petroleum, Electric
Bond and Share and Penn-Centrai
Airlines. Fractionally higher were
Gulf Oil, Lake Shore Mines and
Northern States Power "A”.
Tiansfers here were 131,745 shares
against 124,465 yesterday.
STOCK AVERAGES
30 15 15 60
Indus Rails Util Stks
Net change . d.2 d.l d.l d.2
Wednesday _ 56.8 19.4 26.5 39.9
Prev. day 57.0 19.5 26.6 40.1
Month ago.. 53.2 17.1 23.7 36.9
Year ago ... 58.8 16.7 31.3 41.2
1942 high_ 57.0 19.5 27.3 40.1
1942 low'_ 46.0 14.4 21.1 32.0
1941 high .... 63.9 19.0 35.5 45.0
1941 low ... 51.7 13.4 24.5 35.4
69-Stock Range Since 1927:
1938-40 1932-37 1927-29
High_ 54.7 75.3 157.7
Low_ 33.7 16.9 61.8
WHAT STOCKS DID:
Wed. Tue.
Advances _ 262 378
Declines _ 314 245
Unchanged_ 220 226
Total issues_ 796 849
--v
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
NEW YORK, Oct. 12 .—(.T)—Clos
ing Foreign Exchange rates follow
|,;reat Britain in dollars, others in
cents):
Canada: Official Canadian Control
Board rates for U. S. dollars: Buy
ing 10 percent premium, selling 11
percent premium, equivalent to dis
counts on Canadian dollars in New
York of buying 9.91 per cent, sell
ing 9.09 per cent.
Canadian dollar in New York
°uen market ]2 5-16 percent dis
®°um or S7.C8 3-4 ET. S. cents.
Europe: Great Britain official,
(Bankers Foreign Exchange Com
mittee rates) buying $4.02, selling
U!j4 open market; cables $4.04.
Latin America: Argentina official
23U; free 23.75; Brazil official
6.0on: free unquoted; Mexico 20.66n.
Bates in spot cables unless other
Fisa indicated.
n—Nominal.
—-V
„ NEW YORK COTTON
NEW YORK, Oct. 14— UP) —Ex
pectations of new government tex
tile orders and active demand for
’he spot staple caused a rally in
cotton futures trading today which
,n-final prices up to gains of 25
’o 90 cents a bale.
Persistent trade and mill buying
»as in evidence and more than
onset some hedge-selling.
‘fade estimates placed govern
textile demands at more than
toO,000,000 yards. The favorable
,'eekly weather report had no ef
’ccl on trading.
T Open High Low Close
‘he range follows;
uct 17.81bl8.00 17.83 18.00 Up 18
Vec 18.08 18.22 18.07 18.17 Up 09
,an - 18.17 18.17 18.17 18.27nUp 09
,!ai' 18.32 18.44 18.32 18.40 Up 06
na-v - 18.45 18.57 18.45 18.51 Up 05
7 18.58 18.68 18.58 t8.64nUp 07
£Pot middling 19.75n, up 17.
h—Bid; n—Nominal.
-V
CHICAGO BUTTER-EGGS
CHICAGO, Oct. 14—(VP)—Butter,
receipts 560,735; steady; prices as
Quoted by the Chicago price cur
tent are unchanged.
Eggs, receipts 7,785, nominal;
unchanged.
Huy Your Ticket Now For
Hi-.vl Symphony Concert
ALLEN C. EWING <& C O.
STOCKS KOTSmS
108 MURCHISON BUIt.BING
t'HoiMB Baal
Closing StockQuotations
BS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Adams Exp. 7V.
Air Reduction _ 3s il
Alaska Jun 2
AJ Chem and Dye_ 142
Alleghany ... v
Aiu^chai m,e „8
Am Car Fdy _37
Am For Pow_15.1 fi
Am Pow and Lt _ 74
Am Rad and St S si?
Am Roll Mill ... . ..
Am Smelt and Ref . 41
Am Sug Ref_ ig3/i
Anaconda__ on3>
Arm 111. 7/4
A T and S F so 8
au Ref.,22
Atlas Pow. -
Aviat Corp__31'?
Baldwin ...
b and o_.
Barnsdall.. llv.
Bendix Aviat. ” 342
Boeing Airpl_ " 17??
Borden ..
Borg Warner_ I 27
BrBiggs Mfg _”” 203i
Budd Wheel. ga?
Burl Mills.. 184?
Bur Add Mach _~~~ gy*
Calumet and Hec. 714
Can Dry...... j2y4
Can Pac.._._ 5%
Cannon Mills . s2
Case J I_ 71
Caterpil Trac ...."HI 3gyg
Champ P and F .. 18
Ches and O_ 53%
Chrysler - II 65%
Coca Cola_ 78
Colum G and E_ 1%
Coml Credit _23%
Coml Solv _ 97/g
Comwlth and Sou_ 5-16
Consol Edis _ i5y.
Con Oil _ 7
Cont Can _ 25%
Corn Prod _ 52%
Curtiss Wright —. 8%
Curtiss Wright A _ 23%
Davison Chcm _* 10%
Del Lack and W_ 4
Doug Aire - 69
Dow Chem _r_120
Du Pont - 129%
Eastman Kod_139
Elec Auto Lt _ 28%
Elec Pow and Lt_ 1%
Firestone _ 19%
Freeport Sul _ 38
Gen Elec _ 29%
Gen Foods___ 33%
Gen Mot_41%
Gillette _ 4%
Glidden _ 14%
Goodrich _ 24%
Goodyear - 22%
Graham Paige _13-16
Gt Nor Ry Pf.. 24%
Hud Mot.. 4%
Hupp Mot _ %
111 Cent_ 8%
Int Harvest_ 52%
Int Nick Can _ 30%
Int Tel and Tel.. 3%
Johns Man_ 61%
Kennecott_ 32
Kroger Groc_ 26
Libby O F G1..- 30%
Ligg and Myers B _ 60%
Loews. 44V
Lorilard ..157?
LoLuis and Nash__ 61
Mack Truck_ 30
McCrory Stores.. 11 v
Mo k t__
Mont Ward_ 3iy.
Murray Corp_' 574
Nash Kelv ___ 6%
Nat Biscuit_1574
Nat Cash Reg_” 1774
Nat Dairy Prof_ 15y„
Nat Dist.. 25%
Nat Lead _ 1334
Nat Pow and Lt___
N Y Cent... ny,
No Am Aviat_ 13
North Am _ 974
Nor Pac. 7%
Ohio Oil _ 9%
Otis Elev _ 1574
Pac G and E _ 22
Pac Mills_ 18%
Packard __ 3
Param Pix _ 17
Param Pf _ 120
Penny J C __ 72
Penn Dix _ 134
Penn R R__ 24%
Pepsi Cola _ 23%
Phillips Pet _ 41%
Pitt Scr and B_ 4%
Pub Svc N J _ 12%
Pullman _ 27
Pure Oil_ 10
Radio _ 374
Rad K 0 . 3%
Rem Rand _ 10%
Rep Stl _ 16
Reynolds B _ 23%
Seab A L_ 5-16
Shell Un _ I534
Spcony Vac _ 9%
Sou Pac. 16%
Sou Ry_ 16%
Sperry - 27%
Std Brands _. 3%
Std Oil Cal ... 27%
Std Oil Ind _ 26
St3 Oil N J .. 43%
Stewart Warner _ 7%
Studebaker_ 5%
Swift--- 21%
Tex Corp _ _
Tex Gulf Prod _... 3%
Tex Gulf Sul_ 36
Timken Det Ax_ 29%
Trans Amer _ 534
Trans and West Air_ 13%
Un Carb _ 74%
Un Pac _ 73%
Unit Air C_ 30%
Unit Corp_ %
Unit Drug _ 7
Unit Fruit _ 5434
Unit Gas Imp_ 4%
U S Ind Alco_ 32
U S Rub.—. 23%
U S Steel.. 50 Vg
Vanadium _ 17%
Vick Chem __ 36
Va Caro Chem_- 2%
Warner Pie_._ 6%
West Mary ..._ 2%
Western Union- 29%
West Elec and Mfg - 76%
Wilson ..._ 4%
Woolworth _... 28%
Yell T and C ..-. 12%
Youngs S and T_... 32
Final stock sales_ 660,010
FINAL CURB
Can Marconi_ 9-16
Cities Svc_ 3%
Colon Dvmt_..... 1%
El Bond and Sh_ —- 1%
Gulf Oil __—.- 35
Bond Quotations
GOVERNMENT
Treasury:
4s 54-44 ..— 106.17
2s 55-51 Dec__100.
DOMESTIC
A T and S F 4s 95 ..111%
B and O Cv 60st .. 24%
Can Pac 4s Perp- 71%
C B and Q 4%s 77. 65
Chi and E 111 Inc 96- 32
Chi Gt West 4s 88 .- 65 Vi
Cri and P Rfg 4s 34. 17%
Clev Un Term 4Vis 77c- 61 Vi
D and R G West 5s 55- 4%
Fla East Cst 5s 74- 19%
Hud Coal 5s 62a - 43%
Hud and Man Rfg 5s 57- 47
111 Cent 4%s 66 . 46%
Inf Gt N Aj 5s 52 __. 4%
Lou and N 4%s 2003 .- 93%
M X and T Aj 5s 67- 21
Mo Pac Gen 4s 75- 8%
N Y C Rf 5s 2013 .. 54%
Nor Pac 6s 2047 ..— 68%
Penn R R Gen 4%s 65.101%
Phil Rd C and I Cv 6s 49 — 10%
Seab A1 Cn 6s 45. 12%
So Pac Rfg 4s 55. 71%
So Ry Gen 5s 94.- »
So Ry Gen 4s 56
West Md 4s 52 ..— &6%
Foreign:
Australia 4%s 56... 6o
Brazil 6Vis 26-57 .- 29%
Poland 8s 50 - "
Rio Gr Do Sul 6s 68 .. 14
-V
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
NEW YORK, Oct. 14—OT—Sales,
closing price and net change ot
the 15 most active stocks today:
N Y Central 27.900-11%-%.
Curtis Pub 23,200—2; up %.
South Pac 13,100—16%; up %.
Colum G and E 11,800-1%-%.
Radio 11,200—3%; up %.
North Am Co 9,400-9%-%.
Com with and Sou 7,400 — 5-16;
up 1-32.
Std Oil Cal 6.600—27%; up %.
United Corp 6,500—%-l-32.
Erie R R Ct 6,100—9%; no.
Am Roll Mill 5,900—11%; up %.
N Y N H and Hart 5,800—9-i6*%.
Packard 5,700—3; up %.
Am Wat Wks 5,600—3%: no.
Int Tel and Tel 5,600—3%; no.
-V
DRYGOODS
NEW YORK, Oct. 14—(/P)—Scat
tered business was done In bag
goods today and involved sheetings
and Osnaburgs for first quarter
delivery of 1943. Otherwise activ
ity in cotton textiles was dull.
Civilian business was restricted
in the woolen goods section and
rayons also were dull.
GRAIN INCREASE
FIZZLES AGAIN
Wheat And Rye Attempt
Comeback But Fail;
Others Fairly Good
CHICAGO, Oct. 14—(TP)—Another
attempt to extend the grain mar
ket’s rally and reduce some of last
week’s loss fizzled out in the wheat
and rye pits today but was more
successful as far as feeds like corn
and oats were concerned.
Wheat registered gains of as
much as % cent early in the day
and rye was up y»-% cent but both
markets weakened before the
close. Wheat finished y4-% cent
lower than yesterday, December
$i.24%, May $1.26%-% and rye 74
iy4 lower, December 66%. These
prices were within fractions of
lows for more than a month.
Corn rose as much as a cent and
closed %-% higher than yesterday,
December 80%-%, May 85%. Oats
were Vs-y4 up and soybeans un
changed to % lower.
Open High Low Close
WHEAT_
Dec _124% 125 124% 124%
May _127% 127% 126% 126%
Jly..128% 128% 127% 127%
CORN—
Dec _ 81 81% 86% 80%
May _ 8574 86% 85% 85%
Jly . 87% 88 87% 87%
OATS—
Dec _ 4874 49 48% 4874'
May _ 51% 51% 51 91V*
SOYBEANS—
Oct .162% lWfc 191% 161%
Dec _.___166%
May ____170%
RYE—
Dec .. 67% 67% 66% 66%
May _ 73% 73% 72 72%
Jly_ 75 75 74 74
LARD—
Oct_13.80 _ .... 13.80
Dec__- —.13.80
Jan_ _ _ _ 13.80
-V
N. O. COTTON
NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 14— (TP) —
Cotton futures closed 40 to 45 cents
a bale higher.
Open High Low Close
Oct 18.02 18.10 18.02 18.08b.
Dec . 18.29 18.40 18.29 19.40 Up 09
Jan . 18.37b .... .... 18.47b.
Mch . 18.54 18.62 18.54 18.63 Up 08
May . 18.69 18.75 18.68 18.74b_
jly . 18.79 18.85 18.79 18.84b_
Oct
(1943) 19.00 19.00 19.00 19.00b .....
b—Bid.
-V
N. C. HOGS
RALEIGH, Oct. 14—(TP)—(N. C.
D. A.)—Hog markets steady with
tops of 14.25 at Richmond and
14.10 at Rocky Mount.
V
m m spots
{ ¥ IN BONDS
General Trend Of Corpor
ate List Clouded By
Many Small Losses
NEW YORK, Oct. 14— (/P) —The
Bond market had a few firm spots
among the rails and utilities today
but the general trend of the cor
porate list was clouded by numer
ous small losses in virtually all de
partments.
Trading was less active than in
recent sessions, with total sales at
58,202,700, par value, the smallest
since September 4, and compared
with $10,026,500 on Tuesday. Indi
cative of the narrow range of the
market was the small changes in
the Associated Press averages.
The rails and industrials each lost
.1 of a point, the foreign and tow
yield groups were unchanged and
the utilities were up .1 of a point.
Several bonds of fhe New Haven
Railroad attracted buyers early in
the session upon approval of the
Interstate Commerce Commission
of a modified reorganization pro
gram. The collateral 6s and 4s of
’47 retained moderate gains but
the 4s of ’55 and ’56 closed lower
Showing modest gains at the
close were Atlantic Coast Line col
lateral 4s, Burlington refunding 5s,
Commercial Mackay incomes,
Florida East Coast 5s and M-K-T
4s.
Losers included many issues of
the Baltimore and Ohio, Boston
and Maine 4%s, Burlington 4%s,
Rock Island 4%s of ’52, Colorado
and Southern 4!6s ar.d Nickel Plate
4%s.
Foreign loans were mixed and
U. S. governments steady,
BOND AVERAGES
20 10 10 10
Hails Indus Util For
Net change . d.l d.l a.l Unch
Wednesday . 65.4 103.2 97.5 50.0
Prev. day_ 65.5 103.3 97.4 50.5
Month ago.. 64.0 103.4 97.0 51.0
Year ago — 62.4 105.4 101.9 50.3
1942 high .... 65.6 103.7 100.6 51.2
1942 low_ 59.4 102.6 93.6 41.5
1941 high — 66.5 105.4 102.2 51.4
1941 low_ 58.3 102.9 98.9 38.0
10-Low Yield Bonds
Wednesday _ 113.1
Previous day_ 113.1
Month ago _ 112.6
Year ago_ 114.6
1942 high.— 113.1
1942 low_ 111.7
1941 high _ 115.1
1941 low_ 112.1
-V
CASH GRAIN
CHICAGO, Oct. 14— (TP) —Cash
wheat sample grade mixed 1.10.
Corn (old) No. 1 yellow 78%
8014; No. 2, 78%-80: No. 3, 77%
79%; No. 4, 77-78y4; sample grade
yellow 70-76; corn (new) No. 3 yel
low 76%; No. 4, 72; No. 5, 70-71%;
sample grade yellow 61-64.
Oats No. 1 mixed 49; No. 2, 48%;
sample grade mixed 44; No. 1,
white 50%-%; No. 3, 44-46%; No.
4, 4314-44; mixed grain 43.
Barley malting 83-1.02 nom; feed
58-70 nom.
Field seed per hundredweight
nominal.
Timothy seed 4.75-5.00; alsike
16.00-19.50; fancy red top 7.00-50.
-V
NAVAL STORES
SAVANNAH. Ga.. Oct. 14—(^)—
Turpentine 64 cents per gallon; of
ferings 9 barrels (50 gals. each).
Sales 450 gallons: receipts 193 bar
rels: shipments 89 barrels: stocks
25,366 barrels.
Rosin: (Drums) offerings, 265;
sales 265; receipts 290; shipments
1,354: stocks 86,350.
Quote: (100 lbs.) B 3.25: D 3.34;
E 3.45; F, G and H 3.47; I, and K
3.48; M, and N, 3.49; WG. WW and
X 3.53.
-V
MIDDLING
NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 14.—(TP)—
The average price of middling
13-16th inch cotton today at 10 de
signed southern spot markets was
45 cents a bale higher at 18.84 cents
a pound: average for the last 30
market days 18.74; middling 7-8th
inch average 17.94.
-v
N. C. POULTRY-EGGS
RALEIGH, Oct. 14—(/P)—(N. C.
D. A.)—Egg and poultry markets
steady.
At Raleigh—U. S. extras large
(clean white) eggs 47 to 51%; col
ored hens, 19 to 21.
At Washington — U. S. extras
large (graded white) eggs 52 to
53; colored fowls 21 to 22.
-V
NEW ORLEANS SPOT
NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 14.—(^P)—
Spot cotton closed steady, 45 cents
a bale higher. Sales 6,926. Low
middling 15.55; middling 18.SO; good
middling 19.25. Receipts 10,850.
stock 293.106.
--V
N. 0. COTTONSEED OIL
NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 14.—(.Pi
Cottonseed oi' close dsteady, bleaeh
ablf prime summer yellow and
prime crude unquoted. October
13.20b: December, J anuary and
March 13.25b
-V
AID TO RUSSIA
TEHERAN, Iran. Oct. 14.—(Ah—
Richard G. Casey, British minister
of state for the Middle East, de
clared on his arrival here today
to confer with Iran government
officials that he had found every
where in the Middle East "A first
class effort for improvement of
aid for Russia.” _
Next time you need caltonel take
Calotabs, the Improved calomel
compound tablets that make calo
mel-taking pleasant. Sugar-coated,
agreeable, prompt, and effective.
Not necessary to follow with salt*
or castor oil.
Use only as directed on label.
36 Pulp And Paper Mills
In Canada Join Electric
Power Conservation Idea
MONTREAL, Oct. 14.—Canadian
Press) — Thirty - six pulp and
paper mills in Ontario and Quebec
have been joined in an electrical
power conservation program en
tailing operation curtailments, it
was stated in a joint announcement
by Power Controller H. J. Syming
ton and Newsprint Controller R. L.
Weldon.
The announcement said: “The
extra power will be made avail
able from all paper and paper
board mills in the power shortage
areas in localities where it can
be used efficiently. The power
saving plan embraces operation of
fine paper and paper board mills
on Sundays and shutting them down
for 24 hour periods on week days
so that war industries can have
more power.”
The statement added: “In work
ing out individual mills’ shutdown
cays great care has been taken to
cause the least interference with
operations and personal and re
ligious considerations. Over all it
has been borne in mind tha as even
a balance of total power released
each day to each major power
distributing system is important
so that the power can flow to
its best use. . . .”
The conservation plan will come
tnto full operation October 18.
BRITISH TARS
AID FARMERS
Sailors On Leave In Vir
ginia Helping Planters
With Harvest
PORTSMOUTH, Va., Oct. 14.—
UP)— Lend-lease doesn’t provide for
it—but British sailors are helping
Virginia farmers with their haying.
It began in a small way,, but
promises to get bigger. A yeoman
aboard a British warship here for
overhaul met a Norfolk county
farmer “frightfully in need of
hands.” The yeoman told the ship’s
chaplain who told the ship’s skip
per who said “go ahead.”
The skipper stipulated that his
crew accept no pay. The farmers
—resourceful chaps — get around
this, however, by entertaining the
sailors in their homes, treating j
them to beer, taking them to
shows. One farmer plans to play
host at a Virginia Beach hotel this
week-end to his group of blue jack-!
eted helpers.
The ship’s chaplain (he asks to
remain anonymous) said “We
would like to place men on farms
in other parts of Virginia. It’s a
grand way to spend their leave.”
(Easy, Hiram, the line forms on
the right and you’ll have to take
your turn.)
Their experiences on the farms,
the chaplain said, “are doing these
boys a world of good. Many boys
came aboard ship at 16 years of
age. This is the first real leave
some of them have had for almost
Choosing laxatives;
These 3 Questions
may be important
Ques. Should you choose your lax
ative for thorouhness, promptness,
or gentleness? Ans. You should
look for all three qualities. Ques
What laxative has been a best-sell
er in the South with four genera
tions because it usually is gentle,
prompt, and thorough when direc
tions are followed? Ans. Good old
Black - Draught. Ques. Is Black
Draught easy to take? Ans. You
bet! Particularly in the new
granulated form.
Black-Draught is purely herbal.
Economical, too—25 to 40 doses only
25c! Be sure to follow label direc
tions. Get this “friendly laxalive”j
in the familiar yellow box today. I
MANOR
Fat O’Brian, Brian Donlevy
IX
'TWO YANKS IN TRINIDAD'
"The Year's top rough and
tumble tropical laugh tornado”
ALSO SELECTED SHOUTS”
T A n A V AT !KAniNr:
1UUAI THEATRES
F I
I DON'T
G-. J MISS IT!
ay Comedy! Thrilling
irama, Exciting Love!
Cary Grant, Jean
mr. Ronald Coleman, In
ILK OF THE TOWN”
lows: 12:40 2:38 4:50
-LAST 1
I DAY!
J Killer At Large—And Dr.
Gillespie On The Spot!
“CALLING DR.
L GILLESPIE”
With Lionel Barrymore
Philip Dorn. Donna
Reed, Phil Brown ^
LAST 1
_ ’ DAY!
VThe Masterpiece
[ Of Technicolor!
Dorothy Lamour, In
l “BEYOND THE
I BLUE HORIZON”
k With Richard Denning
Jack Haley t
rTfmn ;0Da^
MaMi ONLY!
It’s Spy Fun! It's Sly Fun!
A Riotous Romance!
“THE LADY HAS PLANS”
With Ray Milland,
k Paulette Goddard,
■fc Roland Young .
two years. They hadn’t been in a
private home for almost two years.
They need to get 50 or 100 miles
away from salt water for awhile.”
The man who started the ball
rolling towards solving the farm
labor shortage in these parts is
Yeoman of Signals Roy Cooke of
Portsmouth, England. "This is the
first time I’ve had leave in about
15 months,” the yeoman said. "I
definitely enjoyed the experience.
The hospitality shown us was grat
ifying to everybody.”
One night the farmer took Yeo
man Cooke and several others to |
a burlesque show. "It was quite
good, but very blunt,” the English-1
man said. "It left nothing to the j
imagination.” 1 j
-V
ARREST ATALIAN
NEW YORK, Oct. 14.—Lfl—The
FBI today announced the arrest
of Mario Albert Boet, 56, son of
a late admiral of the Italian navy,
on a charge of wartime sedition.
P. O. Foxworth, FBI assistant
director, said experts had traced
to Boet letters containing "disloyal
and scurrilous” material which had
been sent to government officials.
Kryl Symphony Concert Tickets For
Sale Non at T. W. P. Co., Office.
PIMPLES W
RELIEVE ITCHING —PROMOTE HEALING
Ease soreness—burning with antiscptio
Black and White Ointment. Use only aa
directed. In 1(M, 256 and 506 sizes.
Cleanse with Black and White Skin Soap.
i
ALL TRUCK OWN ?S
AND TRUCK DRIVERS
Regardless oi Products Used
You Are Invited To Attend
A MASS MEETING
TONIGHT 8 o’clock
AT OUR PLACE OF BUSINESS
—Where—
U. S. TRUCK CONSERVATION CORPS
Will be explained in deiail by a well informed oui-of-iown
speaker
RANEY CHEVROLET CO.
406 Princess Street Phone 9621
'
spot it every time
YOUTH, in everything it does, goes for the people and
things that are “right”. That’s why youth goes for
ice-cold Coca-Cola. It is “right”... in quality... in taste
... and in refreshment. It’s the drink that belongs to
youth’s ritual of refreshment.
And there’s reason for this. Ice-cold Coca-Cola
has what it takes ... a clean fresh taste ... un
mistakable refreshment. A special blend of
^ flavor-essences merges all the wholesome in
ti gredients of Coca-Cola into an original taste
* of its own. No one can duplicate it. The only
; \ thing like Coca-Cola is Coca-Cola itself.
Just ask for Coca-Cola or, to use its
friendly abbreviation, Coke,
and you’re in for some
thing special in delicious re
freshment. Contentment comes
when you connect with a Coke.
■W * He *
It’s natural for popular names to acquire
jHP friendly abbreviations. That’s why you hear
¥ Coca-Cola called Coke. Coca-Cola and Coke
f mean the same thing ... the real thing
“coming from a single source, and well known
to the community”.
the better buy!
The custom in every neighborhood... to enjoy deli
cious ice-cold Coca-Cola .. . though not as often in war
time as before. And remember when you sometimes
can’t get Coca-Cola, it’s because Coke, being first choice,
sells out first.
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
WILMINGTON COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY