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PAGE TWO Motor Outlook For 1935 Is Declarer! To Be Good Bui Babson Warns Legislators Against Higher Taxes on Automobilesj Motorists Pay One Out of Every Eight lax Dollars; Industry Can Stand no More »i\ KOGKK \Y. BAUSON. < np\ right ! . Publisher* Financial Bureau. Hab.son Pirn. Marts.. Nov. 2.—Au tomobile factories ate now shutting: down production of 1933 models. It has been a good your—the oesl since 1930. Passenger ear sales were up 3* per cent over last year, while truck production was 99 per cent higher. The last, two mouths of 193-1 will uu rurallv b* very dull, although sales are holding up bitter than anticipat ed—esppi ia.Jy truck ,-. les It i- iiucr esting to note that cat sales so tar jn 1934 have increased 10 per cent ovr 1933 in the drought areas, where as in o’lhet sections the gain is only around 3*> per cent. Outlook ilepelids on Building \etivi<> With the 193 J avr-on practically over a survey of me industry’s pros pect s pii 1933 i timely. it is, how ever, to « rly to hazard any definite forces si .l« n» l9,'sf> It) ill. cany TOrrlh.- of the yea!, business will pro bablv he -low: hut by the middle or spring there should he hri.-s activity it l ah divi- on.-' of iln tra.de. A great doil depends on the building 1 indus try over half of whose workers are new unemployed, It milding shows signs cf a strong revival in the early rrenths >f P3f> and the buying' flow er of building' woi kefs can he recto, a,l 193a hou!d hr a much better year than 1931. Titer will lie some interesting: changes in the motor indu-fry next year. For 1 instance, the New York Automobile Show will he conducted by dealt rs rat hoi than by the Xa tienu, Automobile Or mher of Com merce. as in the past. This m ans that will '•<' able to exhibit hi? eras We Sell Complete Line of Oliver Mowers, Stalk Cutters, Disc Harrows and Plows The Cooper Company PIGGLY WIGGLY Watch This Paper for Opening This Bank Is— FOR YOU A Growing Account Hero Will —help vou economize. —build up your credit. —stimulate your courage and confluence. —enable you to take advantage of financial op port unities. —protect your funds from loss by robbery, fire, or other forms of destruction. —banish the likelihood of your ever s'l'fonng personal injury or death at the hands of robbers. —enable you to gel ahead during the produc tive years of your life. These are only a tew of the reasons why it is profitable for you to be identified with us as a depositor, and to keep up the good work as consistently as possible. deposits insured |g| I The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation I ‘ WASHINGTON, D. C. ] | SSOOO 5R 1 EACH DEPOSITOR I First National Bank In Henderson , this year at the New York show. As | was the case, last year, Ford will he j among the first to get into produc i tion. It is a well-known fact that the . first car on the. market, has tremen dons advantage during the entire year i Plymouth and Pontiac, along with Ford, will probably be among the fir.si 1 to announce their 1935 linos. .Model fL'liail&es Confined to Body Design j As for the new models, the major j changes will he in hotly design. These ! wi»l he drastic enough to give :he { tooling and die-casting companies con siderable business. There will b. the ! usual improvements in motor con ! .struction;, hut no announcement eon ! cerning the development of n ralically new motor ha < been made v any j manufacturer. I am told thai the long j iwaited light-model Packard will he j introduced sometime in January and ! 'r. appearance may resemble the 192: I Chrysler Air-Flow. Among Iho “Big j Three.” Chevrolet will cut out tn ; -imilnriiy of style of it.s Master and i Standard series, while the new Fords I will have a much longer wheel bar,-, j P.o far as is known now, these are 1h j outstanding change in 1935 motor ! plans. t The low-priced car makers ave a j gain dusting off the. Bigger and 13et | ter slogan for 1935. Tin question is j how long low-priced automobiles can t grow bigger and better. Early in 1931 f ith? .public clearly showed that j would ba.k at higher prices. Costs of i everything going into an automobile.. I however, arc rising. Eventually car 1 maker in this class will bo forced lo i stress comfort, riding qualities and j economy: and forget a'':our size. If J manufacturer continue so overlook j the tremendous demand for cheaper j war of getting around somebdy may l -lip into the fiohs with a modern j Model T. I Motorists Pay One Out of Every Kjglit Tax Dollars | Speaking of taxes. I wonder how j many readers realize that motorists pay one out of every eight lax-doi urs today? The 1933 total receipt's were $1,137,000,000 compared with $202,000,000 in 1919. State taxes have jumped 300 per cent per car since the War —and 1934 receipts will hit a new peak. Th- multiplicity- of taxes on motor users is bewillering. There are innumerable federal and state taxes of ail kinds, and in addition cities and countie in certain states are tak ing their slice. The gasoline tax is xiov used in every State in the Union. Since 1919, the retail price of gaso line. minu • the t.ax, has been cut in half; hut in the same period the aver age tux has jumped from one-half j cent to nearly six cents per ga.lon. * The gasoline tax has proved to be a wonderful revenue producer. Motor- HENDERSON G*. O.) PAHA' DISPATCH, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 2. 1954 y v• • " > ' SATURDAY GRID SCHEDULE j EAST Big Three Horn* 1-&33 Team Scores Harvard-Princeton Other Game* Albright-Moravian Allegheny-Oberlin American-Gallaudet 0-35 Amherst-Mass. State Baltimorc-Shenandoah I^-0 Bates-Bowdoin •"-* Boston College-Villanova 9-0 Brooklyn-Uowell Textile 0-0 Brown-Springfield 13-6 Catholic-West Maryland I)NP Clarkson-Buffalo 20-0 Coast Guard-Conn. State 0-0 i .'olumbia-Cornell 9-0 Cortland-Trenton 51-9 Delaware-Dickinson DNi' Edi nhoro-Th iel 9-20 V. & M.-Muhlenberg 3-11 Gettysburg-Lehigh DNI’ Grove Cit.v-Westminster 12-0 .1 uniata-Lehanon Valley 7-27 hock Haven-West Chester ... .DXP Majixe-Colby 18-7 Manhattan-O. C. N. 5' 24-0 Montclair-New York Aggies ....0-0 New York—Carnegie Tech 7-0 Northeastern-A mold 12-13 Penn Slale-Syrueusev-. 6-12 Pennsylvania- Lafavctfe 16-7 Hensselaer-Hamilton 6-20 IHiode lsland-Wooster 20-7 Rochester-Hobart 0-0 Itutgers-Boston University ....DNI 1 St. Joseph-Penn Military 6-37 St. Lawrence-A If red 12-C Swarthmore-Johns Hopkins ....26-7 Temple-Holy Cross DNP Trinity-Wesleyan 14-6 Tufts-New Hampshire .....6-3 Union-Wiiiianis .0-13 Ursinits-prexel 7-0 Vennont-Norwioh 19-0 Wash. College-Susquehanna 0-6 Waynesburg-Geneva 7-14 Yale-Dart mouth 14-13 - PACIFIC COAST Coast Conference Oregon - M onlana DNP U. C. L. A.-Stanford 0-3 Washington-Oregon State DNP Other Games California-Santa Clara 0-7 Chii ■» State-Cal. Aggies 0-13 Columbia (Ore.)-Albany (0re.)..13-0 •Ye.-no State-San Jose 0-1 S Idiiho-College of Idaho ~13-0 i-.ii! Diego-Whit tier 0-0 s.tuf.9 Barbara-Occidental. 6-0 Wii la;. ii 1 1 e- Pacific U, 6-0 NOx’K DNP means Did Not Play. its arc glad to pay a small tax in ol der to finance highway improvements As with any form of revenue producer however, there is a saturation point. The automobile industry was one of ilie biggest factors in our 1920-30 in dustrial bom. Good business in mo unt omobik industry goes a long way toward good business in every idnus try. In weighing a. further increase in automobile taxes, legislators should constantly keep in mini Englanl’s ex perience. If the present trend of taxa tion continues, the motor inlustry in Aim rioa mri.c be terribly handicapped just as it has been in England. Motor Stocks Good For l.ong' Full The automobile industry is one of , our five largest industries. Ten per j cent, of all gain full wrokerg in the ITnite-l states are employed directly : or indirectly in this huge business. Furthermore, these workers are a laong the best paid in all industry. Since car plants have been working on the spread-thc-work principle, workers’ income per week has not i been as large as in 1929 but the hourly wage rate is higher. When in ■ motor industry is operating at. a sat . is factory rate, four and a half mil lion workers have a tremendous ouy ; ing power. Furthermore, the industry | is normally the largest consumer of nine leading commodities. These figures give some inkling of | the tremendous influence which the ; automobile industry has on general j business. If costs and taxes can be i k-pt low, the industry has a. wonder ! ful future. It,is a progresixe and cap ably managed industry-—it is now ready to reap tl>e harvest of the. po le.ilia! 'demand/’whiefe*. has. bedn-'did-j I cumulating since 1930. Figuring Ihe I average life- of a ear at 7 2-3 years, | production has not kept pace witn junking since 1930. This is the big* best reason wh> I can talk optinns - ticallyto all those connected with j the motor industry—workers, lealers, salesmen, and investors. In fact. I 1 feel ound motor stocks arc a fair | investment for the long pull as a. part ! of of a well diversified list. j Business, as registered by the Bab* ! sonchart, now stands at three per : cent above a year ago and 8 per cent below normal. rTrnMlr v ' JUMBBmm J - L Est .c%- fti I m mmt. E ■ m jHft mk M # flH| mm i mK ;■ R & I Sm jßat 1 §? J|- mm i JBr JML Mu Jftftßft Wt flw m aH- mm % .tobßil. Jlilib IL mm -1 JMI M m dftHH m. Paul Cholet and his famous “Cocoanut Grove Revue” on the stage— Tuesday, Nov. 6, one day only, at the Stevenson Theatre. NOVEMBER 3, 1934 INTERSECTIONAL Home 1933 Team Scores Detroit-Oklahoma A. & M DNP Fordham -Tennessee DNP Furman-Buoknell °'l - Washington-Vanderbilt DNP Illinois-Army 0-6 Mercer-Washington & Jefferson.DNP Pittsburgh-Notre Dame 14-0 Navy-Washington & Lee DNP West Virginia-Ohio University.DNP SOUTH Southeastern Conference Florida-Georgia 0-14 Kentucky-Alabama 0-20 Louisiana-Mississippi State 21-6 Tulane - Mississippi DNP Southern Conference Maryland-Virginia 0-6 N. Carolina State-Clemson 0-9 S. Oarolina-Virginia Poly 12-0 South Intercollegiate Conference Louisiana Col.-S. \Y. Louisiana. .0-20 Louisiana Tcch-Millsaps 0-3 Louisville-Centre 0-30 Wofford-The Citadel 0-14 Other Games Alabama Poly-Duke 7-13 Bowling Green (Ky.)-.Howard.DNP Carson Newman-Cumberland ...25-0 Centenary-Ouichita DNP Georgia Tech-North Carolina.. .10-6 Hampden Hydney-St. John (Md.)6-13 Mem phis-Murfreesboro 20-6 Miss. College-Chattanooga 0-0 Piedmont-Jacksonville 0-40 Hichmond-Georgetown DNP Sewanee-Tenn. Tech 13-0 Xavier (N. 0.)-Sam Huston DNP SOUTHWEST Southwestern Conference Texas-Southern Methodist 10-0 Texas A. & M.-Arkansas DNP Texas Christian-Baylor 12-0 Bordev Conference Arizona-New Mexico 0-7 Other Games Canyon-Las Vegas 7-6 New Mexico Mil.-Panhandle.... 33-0 Riee-Texas A. & 1 7-0 Texas Tech-El Paso Mines 12-0 Wayland-Amarillo DNP MOUNTAIN Rocky Mountain Conference Brigham Young-Utah State.... .0-14 Colorado Mines-Colorado 0-42 Colorado Aggies-Wyoming 7-0 Denver-Colorado College 31-0 North Central Conference S. Dakota State-Morningside,,. .13-7 Other Cannes Madison-Sioux Falls 12-0 Moorliead-N. Dakota State u-20 S. Dakota State-Dakota Wesley.DNP Compiled and Copyright by Central Press, I^3i. How to / peal t hat Stamp tn Last Hour of Work Day By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. Y< >t; FEEL IT, and the industrial ! engineer can record it statistically. ! I mean tlint last hour slump in the j afternoon work. Vou may not be* conscious of it, j but usually you j - L_l__ morning tha n ; *ir Clendening during the last j hour. The industrial engineer has reeog- j nixed, over and over again, that in i the last hour or two of the working-j day there is a marked falling off j of ihe worker output. It varies aj lit He with the typo of work, but is j practically a universal occurrence. I>r. Donald A. Laird, director oL the psychological laboratory at Col- I gate university, whc> has contributed ! so many things to our knowledge of I ordinary, everyday living, suggests a J way to prevent it. lie does not be i Itje.vo. -.that, wf ihe many explanations j ‘ tVPifdli ltax'e been advanced to ae- j Count for the last hour' Slump any , one will explain all cases, But he j regards it of significance that the accumulation of sodium lactates in the blood as by-products of the utilization of blood sugar, or gly cogen, due to muscular action, might be a cause, as also might be de pletion of the available glycogen for u-c by the muscles. The primary fuo! used by the muscles is carbohy drates. These carbohydrates are converted into glycogen. \\ hat. more natural, then, that in fiPMion of something- which can he MID-WEST Western Conference Home 1933 : Team Scores Chicago-Purdue 0-14 Indiana-Jov a DNP Minnesota-Michigan 0-0 North western. Wisconsin DNp Big Six Conference lowa fitate-Kansas 6-2# Oklahoma-Missouri 21-® Valley Conference Creighton-Grinnell 6-6 Other Games Adrian-St. Mary (Midi.) 39-* Akron-John Carroll 7-13 Albion-Alma 6-6 Ashland-Kenyon 19-0 Augustana-Lake Forest 7-9 Beloit-Monmouth DNP Bowling Green (O.)-Toledo 7-26 Bradley-Illinois Wesleyan ......7-18 Capital-Heiclelberg DNP Carroll-Ilipon 9-7 Case-Baldwin-Wallace 7-14 Cincinnati-Marshall 19-0 Coe-Carleton 19-0 Columbia (la.)-Parsons 7-18 Cornell College-Knox 6-3 Danville-St. Joseph DNP DeKalb-Normal 7-19 Denison -Otterhein 12-0 DePauw-Georgetown (Ky.) ....DNP Drake-Haskell DNI* Eau Claire-Stout 13-20 Elmhurst-North Central 7-47 Evansville-Wabash 0-0 Ft. Ilays-St. Benedict DNP Hillsdale-Hope 13-0 Illinois College-Cartliage 0-0 Kalamazoo-Wayne 20-6 Kent State-Hiram 0-0 LaCrosse-River Fails .0-0 Lawrence-Defiance .DNP Macalester-Hamline 6-7 Manchester-Ball 7-0 Marietta-Mount Union 0-20 Miami (O.)-Ohio Wesleyan 24-0 Michigan State-Marquette . .6-0 Mflwaukee-Lawrence ..........DNP Rose Poly-Earlham 13-46 St. Ambrose-lowa Wesleyan ...,0-20 St, Olaf-Luther 14-0 Terrt Haute-Franklin ......... DNP Upper rowa-Central (la.) DNP Valparaiso-DePaui 0-25 Wartburg-Nortix West ..... 0-56 Washburn-Kansas State DNP Washington (St. L.)-Bat!er ..36-12 Western Reserve Ohio State,,. ,DNP Wheaton-Eureka .............. Wiitenherg-Ohio Northern ... DN P Wooster-Muskin&um ............6-9 Ypsilanti-SL Viator 13-7 j Quickly converted into glycogen and j will restore ihe balance, would pre j vent the last hour slump? j A warm milk drink fulfills all these requirements. Milk sugar is j rapidly converted into glycogen, and j when the milk drink is re-enforced j with some maltose, which is one of j the quickest sugars to leave the I stomach and also quickly becomes j glycogen, it is even better, i The value of this was tested out in a group of girls working in the laboratory. One Type of work was ban cl-ad dressing envelopes with a fountain pen from a printed list, and the other was inserting in these envelopes two standard letter sheets and a return envelope. In addressing the envelopes there ! was 2.4 per cent more output the last half of the afternoon, when a ! 3-minute rest separated the halves, ; but when a warm milk drink was ■ also taken, the last half output, was j per cent greater. In the work of j bisecting sheets into the envelopes I an even greater gain was obtained | by the same means. As I have intimated before, 1 be i sieve the rest period is a very im | portant. part of the treatment. The 1 use of a warm milk drink with malt ui it is somewhat like a treatment j used by a prominent California ! physician for what lie calls “shop | pen's headache" or “golfer’s hcad ! cche”, which he believes to bet-due : (o the accumulation of acid in ihe ; body, for the prevention u/-which lie i ffccommeiidsi'ihe tjtc of a glass of orange .juice before going shopping or before playing a round of golf. EDITOR’S NOTE: Six pamphlet* by Dr. Clendening can now be ob tained by sending in cents in coin, for each, and a self-addressed envelop® stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, in care of this paper. The pamphlets ate: “Indigestion and Constipation.” "Re ducing and Gaining,” “Infant Feed ing,” “Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes.” “Feminine Hygiene” arid “The Care of the Hair and Skin.” Tar Heels Off For Tech: Leave Shaffer And Moore Chapel Hill, Nov. 2—Charlie Shaf fer, star halfback, and Bill Moore, re gular end, were left behind with in juries as the Carolina gridders pack ed their bags and set out this morn ing for Atlanta and the site of the stiff game they have scheduled with Georgia Tech Saturday. Coach Carl Snvaely said just before the squad left that “Pepper” Martin hardworking little Senior, would pro bably start in Shaffer’s place with the 190-pound sophomore. Buck McCarn, at the vacant end. Martin’s punting abiltiy won him the call over Harry Montgomery, but the latter is slated to see much service too. A party of 31 players, led by Cap tain George Barclay, a leading candi date for All-American guard, and ac- Radical Program Awaits Congress (Continued from Page One./ made by Benjamin C. Marsh, execu tive secretary of the Job ay. The lobby always has been closely affili ated with the progressives. Says Mr. Marsh: ‘The People’s Lobby, of which Pro fessor John ewey, of New York, is president, has adopted a. slogan. “To balancee consumption and production by eliminating' profit. “Its program includes: “I—lncreased taxation of the rich, socialization of ground rent and re duction of interest rates as steps tow ard the elimination of profit. 2. —Public ownership of ranking, natural resources. transportation, communication and all basic, indus ■. rios! “3-—Government: marketing and gov ernment housing corporations. "i International co-operation through increased freedom of ex change and allocation of natural re sources and raw materials. Bills wiil.ibe introduced in the next ROSE’S 5,10 & 25c STORE 10th Annual Peanut Sale Saturday, November 3rd through Saturday. “Nov. 10th. Fresh Roasted New Crop Spanish Peanuts Special IQ/ Pound B I rrulaied BUT I NO RG E ■ ROLLATOR REFRIGERATION ■ J The most Important p&rt of any ★ THE ROLLATOR mechanism. Norge —and only Smooth, easy rolling _ _ , . . . „ power instead of the Norge —has the simple, extra hurried back-and- powered, almost everlasting Rol forth action of the , , . , . , . _ ordinary refrigerator l«or cold-mak.ng mechanism* mechanism. Result — t he one which actually improves ■ far better cooling .. ... . „ power for the current Wlth use * Sho P all y ou hke ’ bUI used. Only Norge has don’t buy till you’ve seen the Rollator. H 2G-D-56 the Norge. I Loughlin-Goodwyn Phone 118' eompanied by a retiuno of 00acl and managers, made she trip , r squad will stop over in Gi-eem-," S. C., this afternoon for a ; ,. l 0 1,1 tice on the Furman Univer.suv ' arriving in Atlanta, at 8 o’cio v* u night. The probable lineup against To-h remained uncertain as Coach . ly has juggled the personnel >. . ably since the upset and tie by N State, and is anxious to try om H ~ results of the shifts under fire “We prohhaly will open with E u ~' and McCarn at end,” Coach Snav-u said this morning, “Tatum and Evi, ' tackles; Barclay and Kahn, guard Gardner or Danile, center; Sn V < 1« , blocking hack; Martin and Cooim Dashial, halfbacks; and Hut oh ii, fullback.” Congress to carry out this prota'am Higli Thoughts This e.ection campaign, or. ratne the period in which this camp;*, is occurring, seems full of unusuai, interesting expressions, as opposed i'. periods of the past. We shall bring some of the ; he.ii', e to light. Farlej Postmaster General Jame.g a. j,- ;i , ley denounces attackers of the I'u - dent in such words a a these: “As I define a dictator, it will clear To every one that Franklin p. Roosevelt and his great program so lifting the American poopl tr a hr h er plane of living is innnediaiely acquitted of any such momron charge”. A Three Days' Cough h Your Danger Signal Don’t let them get a strangle hold Fight them quickly. Creomulsion combines 7 helps in one. Poweriui but harmless. Pleasani to tnke No narcotics Your own druggist is «n thorized to refund your money on the spot if your cough or cold is not re lieved by Creomulsion. —(Adv.)