Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1925. 3 1529 RUBBERCRISISONUS| [ coxmammm mmme R T e e Ineotis Tomte e NEWSPRNT RECORD PUT ON ANERIGANS British Authority Says Deal- ’ ers Could Have Saved Big Sums by Future Orders. = =———— 5@—_———_# WIRED STAR FROM | | HOLDS VERY HEAVY| Uses 30 Pages of |RECORD TOMATO CROP| ... Yexs v wier oo o s = | = Advertisinggin Day et i e pen S SHERWOOD FOREST Increase of 75,000 Acres Is Plant- | tion in Canada has run ahead of the| " ed—State Second in Country. Car Loadings and Motor Bus Busi- ness Show Goods in Lively Demand. PHILATELPHIA, June 16.—Large | quantities of sugar are coming to lo 4 cal refineries from Manila. Two ships | in the last week have brought 115,419 | bags of Philippine product. Refiners | are busy on orders from canners. SOMERVILLE, Mass., June 16 NEW YORK., June 16.—With motor Title to the land where the Ford Co. | trucks now used to a growing degree contemplates erecting an a wmmv|fnr short hauls of merchandise, rail- plant here has now been cleared, and [road traffic experts point out that L8] S expe d the Ford Co. will shortly load! 1 - \sure i taniton e "t et “n",d ??Sih;"‘fizfil‘fm‘:r_‘cunisu PORK TRADE T ti e 5 June 16.—Very ur. | {[80G" (otee, SOLON aking il BEST IN MANY YEARS output in the United tSates, the total !for May having been 130,013 tons, (| compared with 129,026 tons below the border. In February, Special Dispatch to The Star PORTLAND, Oreg.. June 16.—In order to stimulate sales at a time when purchasers normally are saving for vacations, one local de partment store used 30 pages of newspaper advertising {n one day recently. 5 CGRABHRY aotll “A Restricted Community Under Club Control” produced 115,624 tons, while domestic Invites you to examine into its clalms to dlstinction. I Sftuated on very high land, it is swept by prevalling breeses. It manufacturers turned out only 113, g tons | |l Nights are proverbially cool and mosquitoes @ negligivle factor; || e | —porches unscreened. il EXTRA ON GINGER ALE. . For those not caring to keep house 5 Commurity Dining Halls H NEW YORK, June 16 (#.—An ex-| [ll 8re convenlently located and arranged with an eve to comfort ||l | tra dividend of 50 cents a shar 1 nas| (lll in hot weather. i been declared by the Canada Dry Gin ;H A epléndid Bathing Beach and Pler is safeguarded during bathe | [ [ ON THE SEVERN RIVER I | Special Diepatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, Junb 16.—Maryland’s tomato crop for canning this season | will_be 75,000 acres larger than last vear, according to John §. Dennee, | Maryland _statistician of the United States Department of Agriculture. This means 24 per cent more acre | | Br the Associated Press BY J. C. ROYLE. ) LOS AD age than in 1924 and about 40 per|ger Aie Co. on the class A and B ' E | ity S s B gent East and, occasioned bY | jjon"a week indicate a much larger | cent ‘more than the average harvest |atock. in addition to the regular quar "f:n;";:'::,:’,yp:,d':::;:d o ostcniessHllEh bRt Hole Sher il i NEW YORK, June 16.—The British | hot weather, has caused the prices of { (o b BECH (020 Gy “(han they did | Secal Dispaich to The Star. acreage for the three-year period|terly disbursement of % per cent, all[ | i Sl e it rubber growers and dealers are per-|lemons virtually to double in the last | SQOSPINOR, O 8O (G80 TIEW, T Xl CHICAGO, June 16.—The mr:"mm 1922 to 1924. payable July 15 to hoiders of record | ||| Furnished Cottages by the Season—$300 and Upward fectly willing to have American manu- [ month. They are now around $10 & | poc” heen given to the car loading | (A0 has been astonishingly &00d | Marvland ranks second to all other|July 1. i e T e A ;flvmrer.\ continue the course they | box at shipping points statistics by the fact that a high aver. ‘fl:rlnc (h|n n:!!beweek J‘nckir!l saY | States in tomato planting. coming B S Po! ates for shorter periods. ave followed herstofore, buving = b age has be intained throughout | {heY are in the best cured pork trade|next to Indiana and being followed by i only for immediate consumption ATTA 1.Ca., June Jf-carmen :g;erhn:h u:'l"\"n\'mlfln?e:ylr(‘verh! in almost | Situntion in many vears. Beef is in|Qclr S .l i MERGER RULING IN FALL. For Further Particulars Apply They are also thoroughty willing for | peaches now moving to market | & period of tow | “{a bealthy condition with the outlook | 4 503 Fourteenth St. N.W them to attempt to encourage pro-|and bringing $3 to §1 a crate of six . optimistic. Export trade was more | e NEW YORK, June 16 UP).—Indica . IN. WYL Telephone—Main 7523 eringen inter-| f| | NET INCOME FALLS OFF, |tions that the Van Py duction by Dutch growers to the |baskets. e active than in’some time. ; Eenaengic exclusion of sl : = . P - . ecisio | . ) i The rubher. mamifactaers ot Ameries | , JANSAS CITY. June 16— Millers TRUMBULL STEEL'S NET. NEW YORK. June 16 (P)The|ihe Incerstate Commerce Commission | Beautiful drive by way of Marlboro. Road in excellent il devote whatever sum they deem ade- L I o o as| NEW YORK. June 16 UP).—The BOLT PRICES UNCHANGED. | o igicers and Refiners Corporation |on their projected “Nickel Plate” | condition. o quate to that end. Such policies Fop flour o tide over the harv. |Trumbull Steel Co.’s net income for| NEW YORK, June 18 (P).—Pitts-|reports ne\ income of $1,197,322 formerger before next Fall were seen yes F= 8 would leave rubber prices high, the Serion I st four monthe of 1925 was|burgh manufacturers of holts and|1924, after depreciation and charges,|terday in the postponement of the S —— == x,g British assert, according to|® T t 5. after depreciation. depletion | nuts have opened books for third-|but before depletion, compared with|Erie Railroad’s annual meeting to Oc- | Fred B rson, prominent dealer . and Federal taxes quarter business at unchanged prices. $2.819.256 in 1923 | tober 15. and importer. who has Just returned| STOCKHOLDERS TO GET American Dealers Blamed. | $1,000,000 PAYMENT “The British rubber men feel that | e Tty hemacives o Hama. far. thaiy | ComPlete Liquidation of Danville, present situation.” Mr. Peterson said Va., Concern Has Been “They did not take advantage of the | provisio of the Stevenson plan | Arranged. which we have worked for their| ¢ .., patch to The Star. . % henefi Feeded on the assump: | 1650 DUSEOL ST B SE 8 s As an oil burning mechanism g W oul i Rec |for the compiete liquidation of the Nokol today offers guarantees “?v‘l'u’es HesE e ‘;rm ;\x' John E. amghe.;hcly Inc of economy and efficiency ap- from hand to mouth [have been taken, the stockholders ap proached by no other home- Juld have secured rub. | Pointing —a liquidation board and e Boston. 166 fieeh cane 16 although they ber for future delivery well under the spot price had they been willing to has reduced the supplies r to a point where the don now around s compared with 50,000 vear ago. They are scrambling nall amount to fill their needs, although they can uture delivery later this vear at prices well under the spot market.” | authorizing the payment of a_million | dollars to the stockholders. This will | be paid out on July 1, the mony being |in ‘the bank already, us result of {recent sales of tobacco leaf and phy | sical properties. As the estate owns 58 per cent of the holdings it will |derive §580,000. and this money will {be placed to the account of the trus. |tees of Hughes Orphanage. | “About 60 per cent of the business remains to be sold, and from time to less than that of hard coal. It is also to the best of our knowl- s edgelessthan thatof anyother oil burner regardless of the grade of oil used. Rubber Famine Scouted. |time payments will be made until » Nokol can be installed in any »eterson added that next vear's|$1,500.000 has been disbursed, in addi-| type of home-heating plant— 1 now be bought for around tion to the million dollars to be dis hot water, steam, warm air »ound, although spot quota re hovering around 75 cents. He declared there was no possibility of a famine in rubber and said this was show ers to contract for future supplies. But Dutch srowers are not go- |new 9-9a issue of $3,000,000 Kansas ing to ‘bleed their trees for the sake|City. Mo., 4i3 per cent bonds due of obliging the American manufac- 20 vears, which_has turers,” he continued. ‘They are in the business of producing and selling rubber and are not anxious to take such action es will tend to loweg prices for their own product. Then; too, a very large percentage of the plantations in Dutch controlled by British c: ample. the Anglo-D: 63,000 acres of plantations. Co. has A consid- erable portion of the output owned by | Dutch capital is controlled by British dealers who have contracted for it in advance. “If the American manufacturers in tended to go into the business of plant ing rubber themselves, they could have secured plantations for a song when rubber was down. but the cost now is likely to be in direct propor- tion to the advance in prices and profits to the growers.’ Use of Old Rubber Limited. The use of reclaimed rubber, Mr. Peterson indicated, would become widespread in view of present prices, | but he showed that this would not suffice to fill the demand for new crude product can be utilized. This applies he willingness of grow- | ilrmule.l on July 1 | NEW BOND OFFERING LOOMS. | NEW YORK, June 16 (#).—Public |offering will be made shortly of a serially from 3 to {been vought by syndicate headed ‘h\’ George H. K & SPEND YOUR VACATION OVER THE FOURTH IN Florida 14 Degrees COOLER than Washington ‘emperatures June 14— | June 26th Hold the pin close to the lower part TO UNDERSTAND this you do not have to be an engineer. But you must e or vapor, without alterations. - built oil burning BUT THERE ARE only three meth- ods of burning oil—preheating, lining the = plies I he manufa f hard- B . . . . . . ;‘dfiélf‘hém!'uf»l‘; ',%32::] iSZY;{T'Ld lil‘.ib Welsia-tionr navt T understand it to buy an oil burner. boiler with firebrick, or using a combustion S e e steri 2 A : only'a certain percentage of sajvaged | 12.Day flame. If you do so it becomes sooty. chamber. The latter method is exclusive with also to the use of guayule rubber, pro- duced {rom a shrub which grows in the high altitudes of the northern part of Mexico. Guayule can be produced easily and cheaply, since the process involves little more than the macera- tiog of the shrub and coagulation of the rubber under water, but the prod- uct is soft and sticky and suitable only for special purposes. PLANT NOW ON FULL. TIME. BALTIMORE, June 16 Special).— The plant of the Davison Chemical Co., the largest fertilizer manufactur- ing concern in the South, is operating on full load, turning out sulphuric acid and acid phosphate, also other chemi- cals, for delivery this Fall. Orders al- ready booked are sufficient to take up the full output of the company for the balance of the vear and well into | 1026 Boat-and-Land | Rourid-Trip Tour f 1 Expenses $8 9 | Included 4-day boat trip to Florida: 6 days of touring all the principal east coast cities and return by rail. Open Every Evening Until 10 P.M Phone Us at Once— Main 347 and Main 6755 and 6756 Homeseekers’' Realty Company Agents for the of the flame and it gets red-hot with- out soot. It is heated b{craadiant heat which is quicker and cleaner. The success of automatic oil heat- ing for the home dates from the day the Nokol combustion cham- ber was perfected. It is radically different from any other method of burning oil. It meant a complete reversal of previous oil burning practice. It is fully patented and @ IL HAS BEEN USED as fuel for 60 years industrially—in factories, on ships, inlocomotives. For 53 years engineers attempted to adapt the two industrial methods of burning oil —the vaporizing or preheating method and the refractory brickwork method—to the home without success. & EN 7 YEARS AGO came Nokol. It brought an entirely new method of burn- ing oil —the Nokol combustion chamber. The Nokol. Itis fully patented, and may be used by no other oil burner, except under license. S CONSEQUENTLY the other 346 manufacturers have had to fall back upon and revive one of the two other methods, meth- ods which have been in use for 60 y&ars, and which prior to the appearance of Nokol had never been considered successful for home heating. These methods are no different today from what they were in the past. RUSH TOMATO PLANTING. ive wi 2 2 S ; o et e : : hcla oot exclysivewith Nokol. success of oil burning, of automatic oil heating 2 SEORGE N. Del., June 16 (Spe. || Hollywood, Fla.” J. W. Young, This combustion chamber con- e, e oL tomstess | [l S G HYMANITERY fines a very large flame (the flame for homes, dates from the day when the first HEN YOU HAVE READ this heen resumed, and one day last week n"'"';‘z‘él‘;"\,“r",““fi""{; DC would be from 10 to 24 feet long Nokol, with its combustion chamber, was z 5 ’ 10,000 acres were planted. Canners e if allowed to burn openly) ina very ) ki if you want to know the technical rea- . are contracting for fruit at $15 to $18 a ton Challenge Refrigerators in all sizes and styles, in wood or porcelain; known the world over for their durability and appearance. We would be pleased to show you their many ad- vantages. Specializing in Lawn Swings and Porch Furniture The Hot Weather With These Two Nationally Known Products. Demonstration of Perfection 0il Cook Stoves June 8th to 20th A representative of the Standard Oil Co. will be with us. We invite you to test the stoves and sample the cook- ing. small space (from onetotwo cubic feet). It reaches the 1600° neces- sary for the proper combustion of oil in 30 seconds. To do the same thing with a refractorybrick lining in the boiler requires hours. With an open flame burner this temper- atureisinmanycasesneverreached, because an efficient automatic oil heater should not operate more than an hour at a time.This is done without preheating the oil,with its consequent carbon and loss of fuel. It is done without the application of any pressure on the oil line. The Nokol flame is confined to the combustion chamber. It does oot touch the boilersurface. Itacts entirely by radiant heat. If an oil flame is allowed to touch the boiler surface, which never reachesate ture much higher than 2129 the boiling® point of warer, it coagulates and forms soot. Soot represents a loss of fuel value, less flame. Its high efficiency isre- sponsible for the low operating cost of NokoL. It enables us to use a grade of fuel higher than most burners dare use. It enables us to use the grade of fuel necessary for {‘automatic heating service at the lowest cost. installed. ) AT HAPPENED? In 7 years Nokol became a nation-wide institution, with 22,000 owners, in 48 states, 900 cities, 6 foreign countries. Nokol grew as a result of the service it rendered to home owners. ) SOMETHING ELSE happened also. Nokol revolutionized home-heating meth- ods. It developed an entirely new market. To- day there are 347 manufacturers of automatic oil burners. In other words Nokol built a new industry. It built oil burning. Special limited offer sons for the success and uniqueness of Nokol, then read the technical description to the left. But what interests you is not how it is achieved but the result. ) 'Y OUHAVE MADE UP your mind your home will be oil heated in the near future. You are faced with a definite choice. You choose one of three methods. One of the two revivals or the one which built oil burning. 1+ F YOU WANT to be certain of having your Nokol by fall, get in touch with us today. A limited number of installations are still available on our special ofe fer. Attractice discounts for installation now with payments to begin 1719 Connecticut Avenue N.W. Phone North 627 L] it means dirt, and insulates the later. Hundreds of home owners have already taken advantage of this boiler surfaces. offer. You can save money by bringing or sending in the coupon today 'l'hed Nokol :::ibc.ufifio?‘fm: i Challenge Sty s coolass emkelese S50 AUTOMATIC HEATING CORPORATION NoKol " EATING CORPORATION ¥ . 1710 Conn. Ave. N.W. H ® Gentlemen: Please send me, without obli- THOMPSON BROS § B S IPSON 1 R R tomatic Oil Heating for PR IR L e ested and Listed its Standard nderwriters’ Laboratories ; 1220-26 Good Hope Road e % oH ANACOSTIA, D. C. w Phome ..ooiiininiinns Manufactured and Guaranteed by AMERICAN NOKOL COMPANY, Chicago . Lincoln 556 :\ : 4 : i ewww: