Battle News Continues To Hold
Side Of Peace Stocks On Market
_ ___
pjE\y YORK, Nov. 12—(M—The
battle nev/s still was on the side
cf peace stocks in today’s market
but profit cashing was a restric
tive factor and trends generally
were notably irregular throughout
the post-holiday session.
Dealings dwindled after early ac
tivity and pressure lessened on
m0St of the recently weak war
issues, but this group generally
failed to put on much of a re
covery show. While scattered
strong spots were in evidence at
{he close declines of fractions to
a point or so were numerous.
There was some lightening of
commitments on the idea victory
enthusiasm recently may have
been overdone. Conversely, special
situations brought in buyers for
individual favorites and real weak
ness was a rarity in most depart
ments.
The Associated Press average of
60 stocks was unchanged at 40.6,
h was another broad market. Of
828 issues traded, 321 were down,
256 up and 51 unchanged. Trans
fers totalled 704,680 shares com
pared with 772.220 last Tuesday.
Despite erratic shifts, new highs
for the year were pretty well dis
tributed. Among these was Amer
ican Can. Johns-Manville, Colum
bia Gas, Standard Oil (NJ), Com
mercial Investment Trust and
fommercial Credit.
N. Y. Central, liveliest gainer
of the day, was up 7-8 at 1 1-8
in the wake of yesterday's $1 divi
dend. first since 1931. Pennsylva
nia directors today voted a pay
ment of $1.50 on the common,
bringing this year’s disbursements
to $2.50 a share against $2 in 1941,
but the stock held an advance of
only 1-8 at 25 3-8.
Clinging to modest improvement
were Southern Railway, Great
Northern, Canadian Pacific, Beth
lehem. General Motors, Chrysler,
General Electric, Texas co., West
inghouse. Goodrich and Montgom
ery Ward.
In tne losing division were Doug
las Aircraft, American Smelting,
and Du Pont, off 1 1-4 each ;U. S.
Steel. Santa Fe. Southern Pacific,
Glenn Martin, Allied Chemical,
Dow Chemical. Kennecott, Inter
national Nickel, Western Union,
American Telephone, Internation
al Telephone, Radio Corp. a n.d
Consolidated Edison.
On the upside in the curb were
Aluminum of America, Great At
lantic & Pacific, Gulf Oil, Humble
Oil, American Gas and American
Cyanamid "B.” In the minus sec
tion were Glen Alden Coal, Fair
child Engine, Pantepec, Wright
Hargreaves and Pittsburgh Plate
Glass. Turnover here aggregated
13,100 shares versus 131,350 in
the preceding full session.
WHAT STOCKS DID:
Thu. Tues.
Advances __ 256 215
Declines _ 321 399
Unchanged _ 251 219
Total issues_ 828 833
-V
NEW YORK COTTON
NEW YORK. Nov. 12—(fP)—Cot
ton futures declined sharply today
with closing prices 35 cents to
SI.10 a bale lower on increased
hedge-selling and liquidation.
Demand from trade and mill in
terests to fix prices against gov
ernment textile orders enabled the
December position to resist the
general decline with a loss of only
35 cents a bale. Later .contracts
were off at least 65 cents.
Easiness in later months partly
was caused by price control un
certainties. Local interests light
ened commitments pending war
developments and New Orleans
selling increased on the downturn.
The range of futures follows:
Open High Low Close
Dec . 18.66 18.67 18.56 18.56 Off 07
Mch _ 18.74 18.74 18.61 18.61 Off 13
May _ 18.82 18.82 18.66 18.66 Off 16
Jly 18.84 18.85 18.69 18.69 Off 18
Oct . 18.94 18.94 18.77 18.76nOff 22
Spot middling 20.25n; off 7.
n—Nominal.
\7 _
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
NEW YORK. Nov. 12.—(^)—Clos
ing Foreign Exchange rates fol
low (Great Britain in dollars, oth
ers in cents):
Canada: Official Canadian Con
trol Board rates for U. S. dollars;
Luying 10 per cent premium, sell
;r>g 11 per cent premium, equiva
lent to discounts on Canadian dol
lars in New York of buying 9.91
Per cent, selling 9.09 per cent.
Canadian dollar in New York
open market 11 9-16 per cent dis
count or 88.43 3-4 U. S. cents, up
1-16 cent.
Europe: Great Britain official,
'Bankers Foreign Exchange Com
mittee rates) buying $4.02, selling
sL04 open market; cables $4.04.
Latin America: Argentina of
ficial29.77; free 23.66, off 1-20 cent;
Btaz-i official 6.05n; free 5.20n;
Mexico 20.66n.
Bates in spot cables unless oth
erwise indicated,
n—Nominal.
—-v
dry goods
NEW YORK, Nov. 12—OP)—Small
amounts of wide sheetings, drills
and sateens were sold today on
Priority orders but only a drib
'mg amount ot cotton materials
'as sold to civilian buyers.
Reports from the woolen trade
Paicated a substantial improve
-ent in garment inventory busi
e~s resulting from the good retail
mover in women’s wear,
textiletiVlty continuect Ln , rayon
ALLEN C. EWING & CO.
STOCKS BO^DS
105 MURCHISON BUILDING
PHONE 6281
Closing Stock Quotations
Bt THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Adams Exp _ 7s/4
Air Reduction _..I’ 37yg
Alaska Jun _ 3
A1 Chem and Dye..141%
Alleghany - 5-16
Allis Chal Mfg. 26%
Am Can _. 72 yj
Am Car Fdy_ 25
Am For Pow _ 1%
Am Pow and Lt _15-16
Am Rad and St S_ 6
Am Roll Mill . ny4
Am Smelt and Ref ..._ 39
Am Sug Ref ^. 20%
A T and T ._.129%
Am Tob B _ 44%
Anaconda _ 27
Arm 111. 33^
A T and S F _:_ 45%
ACL .. 31
Atl Ref _ 18y2
Aviat Corp _ 3%
Baldwin . 12%
B and O .. 3%
Bendix Aviat .. 35%
Beth Stl _ 58
Boeing Airpl .. 16%
Borden . 21%
Borg Warner.. 26%
Briggs Mfg . 20%
Budd Mfg ... 3
Budd Wheel _ 7ys
Burl Mills _ 18%
Bur Add Mach _ 3%
Calumet and Hec _ 7%
Can Dry . 13
Can Pac .. 7
Cannon Mills _... 34%
Case J I _... 72
,Caterpil Trac _4_ 36%
Champ P and F_ 18%
Ches and O _ 3414
Chrysler _ 66%
Coca Cola _ 81%
Colum G and E _ 2%
Coml Credit .. ... 26%
Coml Solv _ 9%
Comwlth and Sou _ 5-16
Consol Edis _f._ 16
Con Oil _ 7
Cont Can _ 26%
Corn Prod _ 54%
Curtiss Wright _ 8%
Curtiss Wright A _ 22%
Davison Chem _ 11%
Del Lack and W_:- 3%
Doug Aire _ 59%
Dow Chem _ 125
Du Pont _131%
Eastman Kod _13814
Elec Auto Lt _ 29%
Elec Pow and Lt_ 1%
Firestone _ 20%
Gen Elec _ 29%
Gen Foods _ 34
Gen Mot _ 43
Gillette .. 4%
Glidden _ 15%
Goodrich - 24%
Goodyear _ 22%
Graham Paige - 1
Gt Nor Ry Pf . 22%
Hud Mot . 5
Hupp Mot - %
111 Cent —.-. ,8%
Int Harvest - 34
Int Nick Can _ 29%
Int Tel and Tel - 5%
Johns Man _ 67
Kennecott _ 30%
Kroger Groc _ 25
Libby O F G1 .. 30%
Ligg and Myers B - 60%
Loews _ 43%
Lorilard __ 16%
Louis and Nash _ 62
Mack Truck _ 30
McCrory Stores_ 12
Mo K T. 1
Mont Ward _ 33%
Murray Corp . 6%
Nash Kelv _ 6%
Nat Biscuit _ 16%
Nat Cash Reg _ 19%
Nat Dairy Prod_ 14%
Nat Dist _ 24%
Nat Lead _ 14
Nat Pow and Lt _ 2%
N Y Cent . 12%
No Am Aviat _ ±1
North Am _ 10%
Nor Pac _ 7%
Ohio Oil -. 10%
Otis Elev _ 16%
Pac G and E _ 24%
Pac Mills —. 18%
Packard _ 2%
Param Pix _ 17%
Penny J C_ 74
Penn Dix _ 1%
Penn R R _ 25%
Pepsi Cola _ 24%
Phillips Pet . 41%
Pitt Scr and B _'- 4%
Pub Svc N J . 12%
Pullman _ 28
Pure Oil .. 10%
Radio _ 4%
Rak K. O . 31/2
Rem Rand - 11
Rep Stl .. 15%
Reynolds B _ 24%
Seab A L... Vi
Seab Oil . - 15%
Sears _ 59%
Socony Vac _ 9%
Sou Pac _ 16%
Sou Ry . 16y8
Sperry . 26y4
Std Brands _ 4%
Std Oil Cal...- 27%
Std Oil Ind _ 26ys
Std Oil N J _ 45
Stewart Warner.. 8
Studebaker _ 5%
Swift _ 21%
Tex Co . 38%
Tex Gulf Prod... 3
Tex Gulf Sul.. 37y8
Timken Det Ax _ 28%
Trans Amer _ 5%
Trans and West Air_ 15
Un Carb _ 74%
Un Pac _•_.. 81%
Unit Aire _ 27y4
Unit Corp _ 13-32
Unit Drug _ 6%
Unit Fruit _ 60!'s
Unit Gas Imp _ 5
U S Ind Alco _ 30%
U S Pipe ___ 28
U S Rub _ 24%
U S Smelt and Ref _ 42%
U S Steel _ 5C%
Vanadium __ 17%
Vick Chem _ 34%
Va Caro Chem _ 2%
Warner Pic _ 6y4
West Mary _,_ 2%
Western Union _ 27 y8
West Elec and Mfg _ 78
Wilson _ - 4%
Woolworth _ 29%
Yell T and C__— 13%
Youngs S and T _ 31%
Final stock sales _ 704,680
FINAL CURBS
Cities Service _ 3%
Colon Dvmt _— 2
El Bond and Sh _ 2%
Gulf Oil _ 37%
Bond Quotations
DOMESTIC
A T and S F 4s 95 ..- 111%
B and O Cv 60st_ 22%
Can Pac 4s Perp - 70%
C B and Q 4%s 77.- 66
Chi and E 111 Inc 97.. 32%
Chi Gt West 4s 88 .. 65%
Cri and P Rfg 4s 34.- 18%
Clev Un Term 4%s 77c- 61%
D and R G West 5s 55- 3%
Fla East Cst 5s 74- 17
Hud Coal 5s 62a - 43
Hud and Man Rfg 5s 57 — 46
111 Cent 4%s 66 - 44
Lou and N 4%s 2003 - 94%
Mo Pac Gen 4s 75- 9%
N Y C Rf 5s 2013 - 52%
Nor Pac 6s 2047 .-. 66%
Penn R R Gen 4%s 65-101%
Phil Rd C and I Cv 6s 49- 11%
Seab A1 Cn 6s 45 .. 12%
So Pac Rfg 4s 55 .. 70%
So Ry Cn 5s 94 . 92
So Ry Gen 4s 56- 71
West Md 4s 52 . 86%
Foreign
Australia 5s 55 - 74%
Australia 4%s 56 - 70%
Brazil 6%s 26-57 .- 31%
Poland 8s 50- i2%
GOVERNMENT
Treasury:
2%s 54-52 ..103.25
2%s 60-55 . 109-17
2%s 67-62 ----. 100.14
2%s 72-67 ——. 101-2
Federal Farm Mortgage
3%s 64-44 - 1°3-4
CASH GRAIN
CHICAGO, Nov. 12. — (tf) — No
wheat.
Corn new; No. 2 yellow 82 1-2
84 1-4; No. 3, 79-81; No. 4, 76-81;
No. 5, 74-77 1-2; sample grade yel
low 73-73 1-4; old corn; No. 2 yel
low 83 1-2-85 1-2; No. 3. 82 1-2
85 1-4; No. 5, 81-82 1-2; sample
grade yellow 79 1-2-80 1-2.
Oats No. 2 mixed 51 3-4; sam
ple grade mixed 48; No. 2 white
thin 49 14; No. 3 white heavy
52 1-4; sample grade white 46 3-4
47 1-4.
Barley malting 84-1.04 nominal;
feed 54-67 nominal.
Field seed per hundredweight
nominal.
Timothy 4.75-5.00; Alsike 17-21.50;
fancy red top 7.00-50; red clover
18 000-22.50; sweet clover 7.00-9.00.
-V
CHICAGO BUTTER-EGGS
CHICAGO, Nov. 12—Iff)—Butter,
receipts 778,395 (two days); firm;
prices as quoted by the Chicago
price current are unchanged.
Eggs, receipts 12,215 (two days);
firm; prices unchanged.
GRAIN TRADING
FAIRLY SMOOTH
Except For Gains In Rye
And Corn Pits, Little
Activity Seen
CHICAGO, Nov. 12.—UP—Except
for gains ranging up to almost a
cent a bushel in the rye and corn
pits, trading in grain futures was
quiet today as dealers awaited an
nouncement of details of the gov
ernment subsidy program to re
lease sufficient wheat from the
ever-normal granary to meet flour
requirements.
Wheat closed unchanged to 1-4
higher compared with Tuesday,
December $1.25 7-8-1.26; May
$1.28 1-2-5-8; corn 1-8-5-8 higher;
December 84 1-8; May 89; oats un
changed to 1-8 off; rye 3-8-5-8 high
er. No sales of soybeans were re
ported but bid and asked quota
tions were unchanged to 3-4 lower.
Open High Low Close
WHEAT—
Dec -1253/4 126 125% 126
May -128% 128% 128% 128%
Jly -128% 129 128% 129
CORN—
Dec - 83% 841/4 83% 84%
May - 88% 89% 88% 89
Jly . 90 90% 90 90 %
OATS—
Dec - 503/4 503/4 50% 50%
May - 53% 53% 53% 53%
SOYBEANS—
Dec .. . . .164%
May ._ . ..170
RYE—
Dec - 62% 63% 623/4 63%
May _ 68% 69% 68% 69%
Jly _ 71% 71% 71 71%
LARD—
Dec _ _ _'_ 13.80
Jan _ _ _ _ 13.80
-V
NAVAL STORES
SAVANNAH, Ga., Nov. 12.— W)—
Turpentine 63 3-4 cents per gal
lon; offerings 162 barrels (50 gal.
each). Sales 2,150 gallons; receipts
241 barrels; '•’"'oments 6 barrels;
■Stocks 26,615 barrels.
Rosin: (Drums) offerings 755;
sales 606; receipts 637; shipments
838; stocks 87,400.
Quote; (100 lbs.) B 3.26; D 3.36;
E 3..42; F 3.46; G 3.48; H 3.47;
I 3.46; K 3.52; M 3.55 N 3.60; WG
3.70: WW and X 3.75.
-V
MIDDLING
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 12.—(/P)—
The average price of middling 15
16tbs-inch cotton today at 10 desig
nated southern spot markets was
45 cents a bale lower at 19.32
cents a pound; average for the
last 30 market days 19.36. Midd
ling 7-8ths-inch average 19.43.
-r ' '-*—
THIS CURIOUS WORLD By William 1j
— - - _ '
HUBBUB
IS A MODERN TRANSLATION
OF A l&TH CENTURY IRISH
BATTLE CRY DESCRIBED AS
“00500^00. ~
£
i(si WHAT AAONTH IS THE O'
SUN V
THE EARTH f /
L ^ COPE. 1942 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. * j
T. M. REG. U. S. FAT. OFf,
IN 42 YEARS,
AMERICA PRODUCED
66 /VI/4Z/OV
MOrO/Z V4£5Y/CZ-£X
r-D—
. I—. -STREET
\ <^AR
i \ 10 egcKs
ANSWER: January.
FOREIGN LOANS
MAKE PROGRESS
Issues Of Occupied Coun
tries Of Europe Show
Fresh Gains In Mart
NEW YORK, Nov. 12.—(tfl—For
eign dollar loans of occupied coun
tries of Europe made fresh gains
of fractions to a point or so in
today’s bond market as the main
domestic list held in a narrow
range with the trend slightly ir
regular.
Marking the third consecutive
response to the new turn in war
developments, Czechoslovakia 8s,
Denmark 4s, Norway 4 l-4s, Oslo
City 4 l-2s, Warsaw 4 l-2s, Aus
tralia 5s and Argentine 4s were
among loans making new progress
on light demand. The Associated
Press average of 10 foreign bonds
attained another 1942 peak at 52.4,
up .2 of a point. This group has
made a new high every trading
day since the invasion of North
Africa. Other components of the
index showed little change.
Sales of $7,507,000, par value,
reflected a tapering off in activity
in the domestic section, and com
pared with $9,724,000 on Tuesday.
Among issues ending with small
net gains were American Tele
phone 3s at 107 1-2, Boston Maine
4 l-2s at 39 1-2, Chicago Al
ton 3s at 24 5-8, Rio Grande West
ern 4s at 20 1-8, Erie 4 l-2s at
55 3-4, Missouri Pacific 5s at 36 1-4
and New York Central 4 l-2s at
48 7-8.
Losers included Northern Pacil
ic 6s, Southern Pacific 4 l-2s, At
lantic Coast Line 4 l-2s, Baltimore
— Ohio stamped convertibles of
’60, Rock Island 4 l-2s, Childs Co.
5s, International Telephone 4 l-2s
and 5s and St. Paul 4 l-2s of ’89.
U. S. governments were narrow
and mixed on the stock exchange
and outside markets.
-V
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 12—(^P)—
Cotton futures closed 50 to 75 cents
a bale lower.
Open High Low Close
Dec 18.88 18.88 18.74 18.75 Off 10
Jan _ 18.92b_ —- 18.78b
Mch _ 18.97 18.97 18.81 18.88 Off 13
May _ 18.02 19.02 18.88 18.88 Off 15
Jly „ 19.06 19.06 18.95 18.90b
Oct . 19.15 19.15 18.98 18.96b
b—Bid.J
Negro Slayer Declares
He Is Ready To Succumb
RALEIGH, Nov. 12—(A*)—“I am
ready to die,” William Lang, 31
year-old Pitt county negro, told
Chaplain L. A. Watts tonight.
Lang is to be executed tomor
row morning for the murder of
his wife and her aunt. He was
convicted in Greenville in Septem
ber. The crime was committed
on August 8.
The chaplain said the negro ad
mitted he was guilty and said he
loved his wife but had to kill her
because she was not true to him.
Lang, who did not appeal to the
Supreme Court, was to have died
on October 23 but Governor
Broughton granted him a reprieve
while the case was under study.
-V
Restrictions Placed
On State OPA Workers
RALEIGH, Nov. 12—(A>)—T. S.
Johnson, state OPA director, an
nounced today that no members oi
the OPA office personnel will be
given any part of their annual
leave at Christmas if taking the
leave would involve travel on a
common carrier.
This will be in accordance with
the Office of Defense Transactions
program of travel conservation, he
said.
OPA offices will remain open
on Thanksgiving also, but will be
manned only by skeleton staffs.
.— -v
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
NEW YORK, Nov. 12—(£>)—Sales
closing price and net change o:
the 15 most active stocks' today:
N Y Central 23,800—12%; up %
Int Tel and Tel 23,150 — 57/s
down %.
Columbia G and El 20,500—
up Vi.
Comwlth and Sou 19,100 — 5-16
no.
Cluett Peab 18,050—31%: no.
Curtiss Wright 14,800—8%; up %
Radio Corp 12.900—4%; up %.
Canad Pax 9,700—7; up %.
Am Cable and Rad 8,300 — 3
down %.
Gen Motors 7,200—43; up %.
Stand Oil N J 7,100—45: up %.
Curtiss Publish 6,800—1%; no.
Int Nickel 6,500—29%; down %
South Pac 6,500—16%; down %
Penn R R 6,100—25%; up %.
United Corp 6.100—13-32; no.
-V
NEW ORLEANS SPOT
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 12—(iPi
Spot cotton closed steady 50 cent:
a bale lower. Sales 6,688, lov
middling 15.94; good middlin;
19.64; receipts none; stock 315,565
FAYETTEVILLE RESIDENT
DECLARES POW-O-LIN WAS
JUST WHAT SHE NEEDED
Felt So Tired. Achy, Sluggish And
Let Down Her Housework Was A
Burden. “Pow-o-lin Brought Me
Blessed Relief From M„ Harrow
ing Distress,” She Declares.
There is no end to the stream of
grateful, public statements from
well known men and women
throughout Carolina who pour out
their grateful praise to Pow-o-lin,
the purely herbal medicine that
brings happy relief from suffering
and distress. For instance, Mrs. H.
G. West, well known resident of
Route 2, Fayetteville, declares.
"I don’t believe there could have
been a more miserable woman in all
North Carolina than I was. Indiges
tion, gassy bloating,' headaches and |
distress after meals made me afraid
to eat until I felt weak and let
down. I was so constipated I was
forced to take the harshest kind of
laxatives and they kept me so up
set and nervous I was discouraged
about myself. This toxic clogging
made me feel so achy, worthless
and miserable, X could hardly do
my housework. I didn’t know where
to turn for relief.
"Pow-o-lin proved to be just the
medicine I needed. It is a joy to
eat the foods I like again, sleep
soundly and feel so energetic and
ready for the days tasks when
morning comes. I don’t have to take
MRS. H. G. WEST
harsh laxatives, and am relieved ot
the gassy bloating and headaches
that hurt me so they freightened
me. My daughter has taken Pow
o-lin with equally gratifying relief.
It is the best medicine we ever had
in oyr home.”
Pow-o-lin is a purely herbal, laxa
tive preparation for the relief of
distress as plagued Mrs. West when
due to constipation. Thousands
praise it. Pow-o-lin may be obtained
at TOMS DRUG STORE.
Babson Declares Length
Of WarDepends On Labor
BY ROGER BABSON
BALTIMORE, Maryland, Nov.
13. — At the risk of being con
demned by Washington as an
“arm-chair strategist,” I wish to
say a word on how to shorten the
war. I’ll take for my text: Ec
clesiastes 3: 1-8 inclusive.
Labor unions, like most every
thing else, have their usefulness.
L-'-'or leaders are as patriotic as
financial leaders. For every bad
labor actor, whom Pegler names
from Main Street, I can name a
bad financial actor from Wall
Street. No one group is today free
from blame.
But, just as the Interstate Com
merce Commission has checked
bad railroad presidents and the
Securities and Exchange Commis
sion is now checking banking,
utility and fire insurance dictators,
so James F. Byrnes should crack
down upon labor leaders. The Unit
ed Nations never will win this war
until labor leaders are rationed as
other present non-essentials. The
recent Republican victories indi
cate that this latter will now be
done.
Let’s look at the record: If
France had held out, World War II
would now have been won without
the loss of an American boy. Yet,
it was the labor unions of France
which caused her downfall. If
England were not controlled by
labor unions, no Germans or Ital
ians would today be in Africa. We
are probably justified in giving
our 18-and-19-year-old boys help to
England; but England should help
herself by curbing labor unions.
Another thought: Our labor un
ions should help the submerged
foreign labor by striving to elimi
nate the Colonial System which
Wendell Willkie is so vigorously
denouncing. This would hasten
world peace. Besides, if the poor
people of India, Persia and the
Dutch East Indies were free to
sell their oil, rubber and miner
als to any nation, then Hitler, Mus
solini and Tojo would be unable
to hold their armies longer. Their
only logical complaint would be
answered and this also would help
us win the war.
The simple truth is that Eng
land and America, shackled by
labor unions and bamboozled by la
bor leaders, are trying to lick Ger
many, Japan and Italy which are
entirely free from these handicaps
Of course, we will win sometime,
but it will not be until England
and America suspend the labor
unions “for the duration” and re
organize the Colonial System.
Of course, I will be flooded witt
letters from paid labor union of
ficials as to reasons why thej
should be interfered with. Othei
persons will write me telling how
certain bankers, fire insurance of
ficials and industrialists are abus
ing their powers. I am not now
disputing or arguing with such
people. I am even willing to agree
in advance to their claims. I am
now discussing only one questino,
namely: “How Long Will The
War Last?”
The war will last until the la
bor leaders turn over their unions
to the government the same as
employers, colleges and others are
turning over their property and
hard-won privileges. Concurrently
with the elimination of the Colo
nial System, if labor unions in
England and America would now
voluntarily suspend for the dura
tion, as Rear Admiral Emory S.
Land urges, World War II could
be over sometime next year, at
least as far as Europe is concern
ed, although it may take 1944 to.
crush Japan. Otherwise, with the
present wrangling between govern
ments, colonials and labor leaders
it may take ten years to lick Hit
ler and Tojo.
Of course, collective bargaining
is sound and, in ordinary times,
should be defended. Today, how
ever, we are at war,—fighting for
our very existence. This is a total
war—for all except colonial
barons, organized labor leaders
and cowardly bureaucrats who are
afraid of both. To such, the big
“Vs” which we see appear to
stand for “votes” rather than for
“victory.” Let every mother who
has a boy in the armed forces give
three cheers for Rear Admiral
Land.
In conclusion, let me humbly add
that I speak with some authority
on this subject. During World
War I, I was an assistant to the
secretary of labor in Washington.
Under Mr. Felix Frankfurter, now
supreme court justice, I worked
very closely with President Wood
row Wilson and finally was ap
pointed by Congress, director gen
eral of information and education
for the federal labor administra
tion. For several years, I was sec
retary of the Society to Eliminate
Economic Causes of War There
fore, I ask readers to give this
message very careful considera
tion.
-V
In starting your car you may
save 50 per cent in gasoline by
not exceeding seven miles an hour
in low and 15 miles an hour in
second gear.
I T A n h V AT fading
| I OD AY THEATRES
■HflCBUflAlBJi ^
m AND SAT. ^
| Betty Grable, John Payne, 1
|j Carmen Miranda, Harry 1
|i James and Band — In I
B “SPRINGTIME in ROCKIES” M
m Musical in Technicolor!
Shows 1:00 3:00 5::03
_7:06 9:09
P*8**™**™^ AND°SAT. B
W On Stage 2:30 4:30 7:10 9:80 B
1 The Hit Show of Shows! ]i
I “ALL AMERICAN FOLLIES” M
I On Screen—Geo. Sanders ^B
^••THE FALCON’S BROTHER”JH
TODAY ^B
m AND SAT. m
m America’s Favorite! m
I GENE AUTRY — In I
1 “The Bells Of Capistrano”. B
B Also! “PERILS OF NYOKA*' M
^ Shows 11 12:40 2:30 4:20 ^
6:10 8 9:50
i TODAY
I AND SAT. V
W “THE DEVIL’S TRAIL” ■
■ —With— jj
I Bill Elliott, Tex Ritter, ■
B Noah Berry, Sr. M
Also Chapter No. 10 ^B
^^“JR. G-MEN OF THE AIR”^flH
1 CHRISTMAS SPECIAL PORTRAIT
| One Beautiful 6x8 Goldlone Portrait
i 89c Goldcrait Studio 89c
[ 603 Murchison Bldg. 12 Noon Till 8 P. M. Phone 21532
* This Offer Expires November 25th, 1942
1 Limit One Coupon to A Person — Selection of Proofs — Clip
This Coupon and Present at Studio with 89c.
T O Y L A N D
l " 1 .. 1 "i
TEDDY BEARS
Pandas QOc
Monkeys.«/0 up
FOR LITTLE TOTS
PULL TOYS
With
Chimes . up
DOLLS
25 kinds to $| .89
select from 1 up
VELOCIPEDES
A Few Left
Get Yours Noat
>■ ' ■■■■ 1 n
SCOOTERS
With Rubber
Tires
DOLL CARRIAGES
Leatherette
Folding Type
r■■■■ — .
HUNDREDS OF
OTHER TOYS
TO THRILL
YOUR CHILD
THIS
CHRISTMAS
TABLE & CHAIRS
DESK SETS
Large Selection
USE OUR
LAYAWAY
PLAN
BUY NOW!
TAUBMAH'S 16 S. Front SI.
h *