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3.4 0. T0 BUY LOCOMOTIVES, iy St r-Lis eambld i BANK REVIEW CONSERVATIVE OF TODAY’S BOND PRICES. TRADE IN PHILADELPHIA AREA i85 'r'%..-{::: t‘."e-«..;;. T i et o | SR R 3 Line, d with gonsent of the Inter- it General manufacturing is slow | Freach government 8 . 90 [ Desthees Betmey - i state Commerce Commission, the Bal- |- VISIBLE SUPPL! RAIN. imors and Onio rafirond wiil b abls fr.ox 8 to buy sixteen locomotives which| NEW YORK, June 1.—The visible the se-hnn—fl hld arranged to lesse.) supply of American and bonded demands correspondingly The B. & O. has been authorized to |shows the following changes: : : t. o Wholessle grocers 1ai gium 734 s Selleniin 15 he 12 Coused 21000 Dushetty Improvement Is Not Uniform, But Ac-|is.er soeenatis tanoron 8 £ 5 8 8 S ine il 33 | baite Bl B ¥ per cen! n respect o ' A tes Rubbe: equipment_ trust certificat 154000 bushe C e ent 1s pl Sastsia o prioes %23 shrinksge ' in g g reland 5igs 1920 s P N under & Seaboard Air Lin creased 536, ey i 7 o I 4 b o biaeind. . B. 1987 YVacoum Oll Corp. 7s 1508 12 t o or s 2 = Send wasti Vv tsithnoley 000 bushels. tivity - in Some Lines Is Noted. Bagiomant tn, Chicage has, not | W e H v N changed pay rolis ive declins B C di o El wh 5 Buualn. dus to strikes ae well ;fl:_u:" &hll{m idh s se stagnant. e desir conv. 4%s onditions where. Dulla’ 1n strong, bat prospective butld- | Beltimore azd Omio 6o e 5 ers. report conditions are still un- e 9o% favorable, even if labor accepted o% (Dispatches marhing the progress These. have. in- | iower wages. > o e deiativn” and 4, Teadrmstment 77000,000 ithin & weelk Thia | " Dusiness wmen have studled every- ok | process in business is _the firat in_in loans, since the|thing they counld find in relation to country, siviag the dul—ln- al poltcy of liquidation was inaugurated lorolfin le, and interest seems to i -nd-.l correspeadents, who have becn he Reserve Board' last fall. It|have'lapsed under the disclosure that ed 6 ‘Dresent comditions a iniicates that 'the porlod”of contras: long-term credit is interpreted to 0%, Mn as they really exist, .n t'!g'll“:m "fl:fl.uo:"::lu?".i is tflll_l mean an indefinite time. I e printed sty 1n The Bian) also evidenco of improving " oreait i Cram ‘::'“:k"“"“- ‘-2 = FRANI conditions, and of letermination ol ve n taken to = 101 X K D. MeLAIN. o merohants to expand thoit busi. |ize &t Gakland a Erain exchange 1% = Special Dispateh to The Star. ness. through which practieally all the 1014 100 PHILADELPHIA, June 1.—Improve- | Retall trade holds up remarkably |grain of California will be handled. ,‘2* - 100y ment in business in this district is|Well It is running about 15 per cent | This exchange will be the organiza- s 9% 8 under last year, when measured—in |tion of the Farmers’ Co-operative As 100% » not uniform, but the fact that some| dollars. The aciowurnover of mer- | soclations and it will be controlled 1 531 . BTY lines are more active undér a stronger | chandise is, of course, greater. by the chosen representatives of the | International Mercantile Marine 6s. 81% | B demand is encouraging. .The monthly Cetten Interest Lags. ' lm:du-.‘ l’x"ae l’l;mer'-a hllve on-l;fl,ldz :;':{" '::v}’ m“';-n_'ni;,l‘:t ind 1 o =;2 review Issued by the’faderal reserve| The cotton market responded to nu-{yiic o Rereattor all grain will be et ” FOR PERMANENCE || | bank, covering southern New' Jersey.|Terous mredictions of s seven fo elght |naulea in bulk instead of in sacks eastern and central Pennsylvania and | of only 34 2 bale. Speculation is at |88 formerly was the custom. Delaware, 18 8o conservative that it | the lowest ebb in years, the public| The shipping tie-up, addeq to the {s apparently taking very little in- |building lockout, Which has been in might lead the reader to belleve con- | ;o cRPITERY, (AOE effeot for over a month, has materiaily d (3 PEELL T At R . & ditions are "oru m:nben.a bank ot T);e increase in duty on sugar has mle:llfi\;.{n?- 15} ¢hisinecliont o885 s 3 clals éare to say and because of this{so far failed to stimulate a demand ope of a r s sl 3 A gallon of gasoline will take you . | |conservativeness the review may be|for it or ‘add to-its selling prics; e mes sy, uptl thess confiots s ; 1013 misleading to some extent. zh the trade s anticij a -, res, ol ahips ate apn ' .twice as far on a Concrete Road ason e % ot baliaiag in progress | ool advance other commanity on- | tbé harbor, In fact, only a.few tank- T 3 o Basanes 9, at the New Jersey coast resorts dauon- follow ers and a few ships of the larger com- the average dirt road. That's why Teally remmrkable. Many frame cot-| Dry goods—THers was a flurry of |panies have sailed since the strike Roads for themsel i tages are in process of genstruction |buying last week that created a bet- g:m Concrete pay 1or ves. 1 and thers are some moré pretentious| ter fesling than has prevailed for rd : operations. some time. No great improvement 18| PHILADELPHIA, June 1.—Owing (o | Biscieir Cons. O Corb. 7% Retall Trade Slew. looked for until harvesting. the g cost of e A little falling off in retail trade Shoe Trade Holds Up Well and the upwillingness of men in the / CURB STOCKS. Sweets Co. of America may be attributed to the lower prices | Shoes—Business is averaging 60 to| building trades to work at a lower PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION I B eascabio maather Which | 6 e e 'tnst year. Most of | Wage, construction in this city has| Quotations fumished by W. B. Hibbs & Co. | Ri0C Intrrastiooal of Concrete - Iatter cause June surishine will prob- | this decrease is attributed to the|dropped to an extent which cuts (~12:15 p.m.— | Tonopah ..,,,,..;_, To Jmprove and Extend Uses ably remedy. Savings deposits in the | shrinkage in values. Business is hold.|doWn the pay roll in that line from Bid. ed . San Franciscs. district have declined $1,782,000 since ling up well. $130,000,000 a year to $15,000,000. | Aetna Explosives 0% 11 March 1, to $308,219,000, but tirs to otions—Recent incredses in the | PTior to 1917 the average number of Anmx oil e exceeds by more than $16,000,000 the | number o small orders have brought | dWellings erected here each year was s 2 ot B deposits of one .year ago, indicating | the trade in this line up to a point| 7,500, at an average cost of 32,508 1 3 Dnteed Heren PG that the public still has considerable |where the turnover is very near to|During the four following years con- Tnited Texas = resources to draw upon if need be. Jast year's. Depletion of Interior stocks | struction was reduced to an average o el e Local merchants are in the market | is helping out. of 2,500 dwellings, while the cost in w yiand o Sales have been| Lumber—Orders at the pine mills in | 1920 had advanced to $3.700 on the © this section continue to show a mark- | average. Men in the building trades ed Increase. On the first of January | have struck against a reduction in ing in women's orders. on hand averaged about six|Pay. and the daily pay roll has shrunk ness well in hand. The demand ex- | hundred thousand feet per mill. They | from $450.000 to about $50.000. Steel - 3 tends to full-fashioned hosiery, which | now average a million two hundred | Textile operators in this district ¢ 7% 18 searce because of the strike, and | {housand. Prices have advanced on|have rejected a smaller wage cut|(arib Frading 02 to floor coverings. Axminsters offered | nearly every grade of lumber and|than has been made and accepted in | Car Light and Pow ap by the mills are about 25 per cent |ni P 20 cly Gre becoming indiffer- | New England, and only one-half of 1) lower than last year. Wiltons are e t"'0pcue the acceptance of new | Philadelphia’s 40,000 operatives are | firmer because- of their acarcity.|business. 5 at work. Pressmen refuse to work e 2 1 Fair orders are reported by makers in the printing trades, because em- i 1 —_——— of silk goods and some grades of . o R ployers will not agree to a forty-four- Ffl"fifl::fi"‘é‘“" FOREIGN BONDS. O Eoa e orstean. Einenams and | Chicago Retailers Report B Tweek. Job work hangs fire and opper e rsiousk s Dy Ty N other cotton goods. magazine publishers are 8ending | bavieD : Steady-Trade; Jobbing SIOW | work to other cities. Vigilant labor Wextern Electric 7s 1925 . Weatinghouse B. & M. 7s 1961 - gn '3 RN - @ o BEGTL Lt eR, & » e 1 SPETPEREE SESPETF L3 R anis ¥ ] % 52 3 74 £ 15 030 % ~ % Jume Coml Prices. | ickets are, preventing persons will- JLATEs Snbrecte opersiors, mch| mX A . WELTON. ey SR Wy e the i 5f 10 cents per ton on coal at the | Special Diepatch to The Star. . Cramps’ shipyard. trd mines. _ This brings the June prices| CHICAGO, June 1.—Sales of new | *x % % Pederal O re lo 85 met i Jor broken e |automobiles under the stimulus of NOTES. Gilliland Oil 10 I . and 3560 for pea. Some of, the smal lower prices and highly skilled sale: NEW YORK, Jupe 1—There is 5aid | Gagwes bicta 2 * i tors. known as independents, | manship. .bespeak a large reserve : P oux-ymunm. 12 4 - . ” . oo . po R} ST oners: to bé little or no prospect for a 2, in are asking whatever they think they | o T et aaaer e 1% ap 3 n—-,sa T can dvance ovér May prices & power in the nation. Sales of | “jjquidation” of hotel rates in the 3% 3 b Hu 0 ‘R’ or ch Bayef on Genuine Aspm y Baye can get. the a l\‘r)-l;% 50 al,“h.%,gl ton. | securities give & similar demonstra-| pear future, despite the demands that 7 3 [ : Th ket is quiet. with a large | tion. City retailers report a stead . . 81 Warning! When you see the name | ache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Ear- ortion of the output of the mines y e Y jiare being mude by business men Wiho {:{:.':’.‘:3::""' “"?’: 7 e 32 315 SEATng D trade, although the jobbing business Tt I Petrolen w1598 1110 G St | “Bayer” on packa tablets | ache, Toothache, Lumbago and for | going into storage. 2 travel. Likewise there ls little pros- | 316 518 00 y package or on tablets| o, o " “All druggists sell Bayer Tab-| Property owners are taking advan- is slow. pect for a reduction of passenger A s 332 F ‘ablished 1879 | you are getting genuine Aspirin pre- [ 1 3% "4 oF et handy T aabs | tage of the aecline in bullding ma-| The tone in the agricultural dis- fates on mic;:ur?%o;fim:: trou- % 2 £, | scribed by physicians for twenty- terials to make repairs and small|, ... west of Chicago is, however.! cis " The result s that the traveling 2 % ™ Pianos Victrolas of 12, and in bottles of 24 and 100 | improvements. The highest grade of | ("0, ey ‘with optimism. Indiana Sy 3% =y one years and proved safe by mil- | Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayae |fire brick has dropped from $55 per| g, oy seem to be better off than man finds two of his principal items 1 21 lions. Take Aspirin on(l:yo as told in | Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester | 1.000 last Janusry .“’n’o‘.?.‘ l.l?' t:ulxlgfl ose A con- fifl,;‘,‘::“:‘,,"‘;,‘;‘;‘,’,?x :,Zfi";.uonnogl:: E the Bayer/package foriColds, Head- | of iSalicylicacid. I O asand. a decline of 25 per cent | ditions are better than in low. their inability to reduce room rates. |Mason Valler 34 37| ROCHESTER, N. Y., June 1.—A se- P e January. Bank loans 'in thig| In South Dakota and Nebraska, for| They claim that restaurant charges | Memitt Oll 9% 9% | vere shortage of blue serge is being instance, the belief that two yea have been lowered. Midwest 0il cos 21y 3%, " lintrict "continue o shrink becase | ESNT L2, Mor' e recovery of & wered. S 2 3% experienced in the men's clothing b ss can ne. on e ary 2 usine o i diMeult for A tatmer, | PHILADELDHIA, Jume 1—Tazes, | MidTest Betoiag - 12 | trade, and only a few firms have been able to go on with orders for suits T amcRRCoficapitel, looking forward to two possible years | | PEILADELEETA, | JUIE, 1.00axeh - New Orle Betterment of debt, to understand why he should | Trebe® .pacy ‘beaste of the present e e 1 ' ew ans have to pay oln'mrnhe- of Interest | business and industrial situation in 4 | been shopping the market the last i Seen in L Ex i | justified, he s told, by searcity of | the United States, according to busi- 3. 2 |few days have been able to find vir- Is Seen in Loan Expansion |money. when mumn oans are re- | ness men who have been in confer- : - 2 |tually no blue serges ready for im- V. SHANNON. ported as finding a ready market.|ence recently in this city. Until they : 1343 3% | mediste delivery, and manufacturers ] BY L V. SH. g Fhis is ‘merely one more of the in- | SReEINCIN.T M0 Ol abie e 4 4i{| are declining to guarantee delivery ial Dispateh to The Star. . congruities which any survey of the| gree, prosperity in the nation will 2" |at any specified time because of the Lol ; situation discloses. continue to be “spotty” and lacking 2% | uncertain manner in which the ma- and lndm re u ‘Clothiag Trade More Active. in stability: Business is beginning to £ | terial is coming from the mills. . II. imous in the belief that fingncial and The .clothing industry is in better | realize that tax deflation is more 28 EirEss sy silen, business conditions are improving. | condition than for some months, al-|of a dream than-a possibility of the Bl Cater e Boine it The gain is moderate. but continuous, | though it is not active. Prices to the | near future. The more the situation % fact One of the best evidences of this consumer are 10 One large man- | is studied the less relief seems to 8 :wllt;rrhmu ?e open tor‘::m than 1 in the expansion of loa; the fed- | ufacturer said that basic conditions' be in sight. 4% twelve hours in any one day. CRUISE THE GREAT LAKES THIS SUMMER Bauffalo to Duluth on steel steamers “Tionesta” “Juniata” “Octorara” of the Great Lakes Transit Corporation The only through passemger servioe to Duluth Leaves Buffalo every 3rd day 9:30 A M. (Eastern time), stopping at Cleveland, Detroit, Mackinac Islands, Sault Ste. Marie, Houghton. CRUISING BY DAYLIGHT o Clevaland, Detreit River, St. Clair Flats (the Venios of Amarics). Lake n.mlo-nvuw-a-fl-uu-hn&mm the *‘Copper of Ameri includes meals and e DANCING A vm:a!um and an education = ORCHESTRA mlflm-flmflwflm“.“ M. HICKS, 1208 F OBER'S S. S. AND TOURIST AGENCY‘ 1 Wood'lrd Bldt- American Express Travel Department, 1328 F Street N DELTA TOURS, 500 Bomd Building, Phome Main 1472 CANOE PAINT —We sell the % > quality kind that nekthe Vind that will give the best ;flf{; i results. W. H. BUTLER CO. : 607-609 C St. N.W. Maurice F. Flynn Established 1845 Btiuight down the street from the G. A. R. Mosument st Tth aad Pu. Ave. :i. U n.mnul huilulll remarkably low price of the NEW LIGHTSIX is due to quantity production, Jow overhead, small profit per car, and the fact that it is completely manufactured by Studebaker in the newest and most modern ‘automobile plant in the world. “Buy it because ifs a Studebaker L Thisiaa Stadebiaber: Year COMMERC]AL AUTO ‘AND SUPPLY CO 819 l4tl| Street N.W Telephone Fn.nklm 3075 It’s an easy-task to wash a car or truck when the grease and road dirt can be dissolved quickly. MOBO Auto Soap does this, saving the hard rubbing and the work that makes your back ache. MOBOnmmpmthefind:becmeltmm&uenhfi to'dry and crack the vamish.. It is a 100% psre vegetable osl sosp which actually preserves the fimish, keepimg it elastic. For washing leather, mohair or pantosote tops and all-upbolstery it has 0o equal. - 2 Mompmammr-hhpfimmmm'fl will save at least onc repainting during the life of the car. ? Testitout. ' Geta can today from thenearcst Dealer nazied below, 3 s SLBG, 5Bu. $1.56. Also in 15, 25 end 58 B cane, and tn Barrels. ‘WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS | Southérn Automobile Supply Co., 1324 14th St. NW. Rudelph & West Co., 1332 N. Y. Ave. N.W. A SOLD BY THE FOLLOWING DBAI.ERS ARCADE GARAGE, - o “ GEO. 8. 1417 8t . 181783 K St W 1710 14th 8¢, ." 1010 Pa. Av AUTO SUPFLY, Xy o TR comans, | e et 13th and H Sta. N.W. 5 % ht-unlll-.'r \ -nmmumnmmm-mw&!.mu.h.m-z Pot. 1988, c oo