Evening Star Newspaper, January 19, 1932, Page 8

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L THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1932. IGHT NOW THE NEW WARES of America’s greatest industry are on display throughout the country. Every person who hopes to see business stage a sound and early recovery should consider what this brilliant array of new cars can do to make that recovery come true. The automobile was responsible above any other single product for the prosperity of the last decade. American Payrolls Depend EACH YEAR THIS ONE GREAT INDUSTRY CONSUMES— 15.5% of all steel produced— 14.8% of all copper— 53% of all malleable iron— 9.3% of all cotton— 18%of all hardwood lumber— 82.6% of all rubber— 68.7% of all plate glass— 26% of all lead—- 17.4% of all aluminum- 30% of all nickel- Now, do you realize what it means to the future? Just to maintain the annual registration at its present level, the motor car factories of this coun- try will have to build another 23 million cars in the next seven years. Merely to replace the automobiles which wear out in the next five years, the industry will have to duplicate the mighty production records|of 1925, 1926,1927,1928 and 1929 —starting now. THE SATURDAY “AN AMERICAN

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