Evening Star Newspaper, November 6, 1925, Page 27

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1925. 27 ———— e e $8,000,000 INVOLVED CUNARD LINE FINANCING l BUTTER LOWER TODAY. BAMAGED Eun[]N ?‘Eyc: Fl;l:;sn glg;zbo NEW ST PAUI. PLAN " g.Bil%LAETL(;(;F‘E%PP()E’:K;;N ALSI'MA AU;:EI;E&O;%?“H IN COPPER COMBINE| COMES TO NEW YORK | 1% i V7 e NEW YORK, November 6 (&) extrs s rds, 46%; ex- 2 Smallest Yield Since 1919, While Denn-Arizona and Shattuck Com-|moval of the British embargo loan | tra_first 2 i firsts, 44ad4'4; Seat on Exchange e 3 : : fEarey R Gtions s e 5, 41a ’ = anada Will Need Supplies | More Machines Made During Octo-| Panies Unite—One Firm Needed |$50.000.000 international loun. to the | I langed; receipts, e = ot Home: 2 New Financing. German potash Industry, in which | case: inefi ol e ber Than in Any Other Four L New York will participute, but has Henry A. Anderson, 26, who bes Ey;thia pAsecaled Tine: Weeks in History. By/ti:6 Asscaimed Braes: Caiue K00 date om0l fonsiondag Buying RowerdinaSouthiNay jineiestnesicarsss o fatenand Both Old Schemes Opposed Canada has only enough potatoes BISBEE, Ariz., November 6.—Final [ ankers a 37,500,000 piece of financing | & e, o of Grews Graduate boy on the floor of the New York for the Cunard Line, one of Grew: radual to meet home consumption, despite negotiations in the merger of the | B, i ; oy on the floor he D 5 g % Rt eGP e ritain’s largest shipping ¢ a | Be Seriously Reduced b Stock ISxchange, yvesterday pur- 7 reports of emergency shipments to | BY Ine Amoctated Pross. | henn-Arizona Mining Co. and the| Cunard officlals have clo cvo- || Dr. CLAUDE S. SEMONES ) chased a seat for $135,000—the by Powerful Bankin Chicago from that source, the De- W YORK, November 6.—More ing | tlations with Brown Bros. & C y g G i N automoblles were manufactured In Oc- | Shattuck and Arlzona Co., involving [ WAUORS With Brown Hros & Co. of| tober than in any month in the his-|o o o ; 0 e i . The crop in"the eastern part of {o0Cr than In any motth o i Au. |epproximately $8,000,000, have been|ghort-term swtes to finance a_ship- | completed, according to announce-|bullding program. A public offering | Rai d Frost peak price recorded in the present ain and Frost. bull market. Mr. Anderson now is i e DR Group in New York. Canada, which usually sapplies o |tomobile Chamber of Commerce plac. P of Jacquena e Cappet. Five ; R e 3 o . . ng program. A public offering | o RO other seats also changed owner- _ Bt an one of the lightest in many | INE the total at 434,327, The previous |ment by T. O. McGrath, general man. | f the issue s cxpected next week. ey £ ship: By the Associated Press. years, while some recent trouble has | MEh mark was 404,376 in May, 1923, | ager of the new company, known as a1 Disbat . - & October’s output was 120,000 in ex- = Special Dispatch to The Star NEW YORK, November 6.—Op-|Tesulied from potato rot. Potatoes | (etobers outbut was 13RO i S5 the Shattuck-Denn Mining Corpora- mcaiet S W YORK, November 6-—The < i from most of the large shipping 5 - o tion. RK, November APPLE wEEK WINDOW posed to both the Kuhn, Loeb-Nattonal | F0, OR ol 00 10l e harred | 293,338 in October, 1924, Nbeqiiof: adeatiats fnanatis ifom (e r W available for spin- i 5 e s Producti r onths amount of cottan available for spin City and Roosevelt reorganizatlon | from the United States by quaran- T u;',’f,l','{";q\ffi';.‘ the ;g”j&"}’};*‘gé develbriments b ttiai extenslue: ol ing_purposes will be more than a S ians sother nowestul banking gzoub | tine ut D O sonC | Ings of the Denn company, embracing million s less than the lates PR'ZE ARE AwARDED’hdS entered the fight over the Chicago,| The crop in the United States is R oximately 3,620,- | 155 2 djolning claims in this alstric Government estimates for the cotton Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway. the smallest since 1919, production 5 £ s given as one of the prime fac- crop, even though the Government ey Edwin C. Jameson, as chairman, an- | averaging only three bushels per per- tors dictating the merger. The Denn figures are correc pprehension | ganitary Store at 800 K Street | nounced the formation of a bondhold-| son, the department said, adding that | NEW CORPORATIONS LIFT |proverty = produced nine million Overcoats over the true meaning of the Gov- ers’ defense committee. Mr. Jameson a short crop and high prices is pounds of copper in 15 years of oper- ernment figures is lkely to cost ; is president of the Globe and Rutgers | usually followed by a large crop ” ation, but was forced to suspeud in Dusiness in the United States mi- | N- W. Gets First Honors—More Fire Insurance Ce. yoar and low prices, “a fact which | mSBI‘A;rE E,T‘e,x TOTALS }9“ due “"h""vy expenses of s llons of dollars. Conditions which i 0 farmers should consider carefully in | “PSel* o Vol — ng water from lower levels of the Good looking, well have brought about the discrepancy Than 100 Stores in Contest. Members of Commliter: planting potato acreage for next |, BALTIMORE, Md., November 6.— |main shaft. tailored, doublebreasted bebwean estimates actual supply e e EE Members of the committee include | & =) That many large corporations are be- models with 3-piece belt already are having on the : = Leroy Baldwin, president of the Em- | SPring: |ing attracted to Maryland and incor- e Tl aatiwt516 tadl for prospe; of producers and reflex | It prize of $15 for the best retail | pire Trust Co.. New York; former porating under its laws Is shown by ihie Winter'a: scason: All the popular shades action is heginning to be felt in |Store window display of apples in ob-| Senator Joseph S. Frelinghuysen. who | PAN|C IN STOCK BUYING. |the fact that earnings of the State that a becoming to manufacturing and distribution all | Servance of National Apple week has | is president of the New York and New Tax Commission for 1925 will be larger over the Nation | been awarded to the Sanltary Grocery | Jersey Land Bank, Newark, N. J., and 3 ! than for any year since the commis- G Revival Servi st Dispatches today from the great|C%3 Store at 800 K street northwest. | Thomas Read president of the Union | Paris Market Active in Spite of |sion's creation in 1914. reat Revival rvice i : 2 cotton-producing Sections show that | g econd Prize of $10 went ‘to Me | Ferry Co, of New York and Brookiyn. e S pobtincipal source of income 18 in the i Sizes 10 to 16. there remains of the 1925 crop more | g e cut avenue and K| Counsel include former Gov. Nathan J bonus taxes levied upon concerns in- ow in pro; SATURDAY SPECIAL than 1,000,000 hales of cotton of such | §iT6ot northwest, and third prize of |I. Miller, Prentice & Townsend| pyRis, November 6 (P).—A buy- | Sorborated under the ‘laws of this now in progress at | U, $5 to the Piggly 'Wiggly store at 1803 | New York i inferior quallty that it cannot be de- & 0 (e & ® 8 New York, and John Dickey. jr., of |, jc" is the manner in which . : ; . Connecticut avenue, Philadelphia. the Dyerworked Dbrokers are describ. T Y bonns fax aioutet Mt. Vernon Place M. E. .98 and is too low in| “hhe Atlantic and Pacific store at 0, according to figures com- ing purposes. Several T Horte ot et ornares The new committee, a statement |’ tho buslest working day the | nidq 1 % AR i R orthwest, re- | adn 4 st & of the |iNE the bualest worl ¥y the | pie J. Enos_Ray, chairman of und bales QAdItONAl Are | Colieq mesial honaranie oremtion. it | Addressed to Junior bondholders of the | ptiy "Stock ~ Exchange has - known | B Gy i, s, Hay, chairman of Church South Ertne Thove o onta'a pona | 70" [the Atlantic and Pucifc ‘ore 't 353 | O 4 iont imimeaiatels in mecessary to | fince, the armistice. | Desplte ‘can |4 total of 376,318 for the entire year Ninth Strgt and yaachascts |, Nuch Damaged Catton. | Crocery 6, o, A0 Georiia avenvie | e o fen Obiocionn 1o | o e ot paper DROpory. - Nove ' Rev.W. A Lambeth, DD, Paitor Bov' Bpguotay § s plgor, & month much of the cotion | More than 100 stores competed in | the Kuhn, Loeb plan will be presented | iransactions were recorded yestordny OIL IMPORTS INCREASE. | s S ‘ MACKINAWS - Overcoats and weather conditions (hat it | s eompesen o o Sty “SardS | Commerce Commission. and an appll | 1180, S8 boloe, SO0 L YGRS | BALTIMORE, - November 6 (Spe- Dr. Luther Bridgers Mackinaws Outfitters Of pure Virgin Woul. in plain’ colors_and overplaids of the proposal. dled durin; the trading r ed 2 6 " e - ! ize » st the ¢ weaters B e e e ders handie & ading | tober totaled 27,845,000 gallons, a daily Singing Evangelist s Swe. rs. verage of 92 gallo . Flong 2 i moisture is selling around 1 cents « | LIVE STOCK MORE ACTIVE, | Asked To Deposit Bonds, =~ |hours. e With R2126,000 galions. aad o daiy WA al inter long. S Knickers pound or $35 a bale in some of the e R olders of bonds were called upo 12,726,000 gallons V fday Specia e Statos O ngvember 8 J5be |0 deposit their securlties with the BOURSE IRREGULAR. [average” of 424200 gallons for Sev-|| Sanely Spiritual, Enthusiastically i It costs $30 a bale for picking, gin- s of cattle and calves and | CoTMittee. Those having certificates, \Ris, November 6 UP).— Prices | - Evangelistic, Powerful and Department ning and bailing this cotton alonie out- SRR o and | o deposit from either the Kuhn, Loeb A e S bai 3 N D side the other expenses incident to fts | e S Detobes by the et I | or Hogsewelt Sactions, Wevs ucged tp | Toved drvcEuiscly i | PAINTIN Effective. Floor production. About half of this 1,000} Yard Co. of this city, compared with | [acPosit them with the new Eroub: | iiree per cent rentes, 44 francs %0 G WEEK-DAY MEETINGS 000 bales of low grade cotton is 10-|¢he " correspor S eaaat - “The amount of bonds already repre. | . 2 S, S PaperhubgingDesovaling G s cated in the Southeast and Total e OF cars Teceived ‘qa. | fented by the committee.: said the | SSRLRSL | o {ondon, 121 francs 35 fsteenosns, 16 B Oilhcrs aud Tone Total umber of (Cars received de| SiiChent, “gives reasonable assur | Excha London, 121 francs 33 P. F. GORDON T growers recelving from fhe sams Dumber Wap Slowh B i |ence that they will net *;; penalized | O /€0 cent loans, 51 francs 90| 355 Cedar Street N.W. 1 pound for their whole production, e sty for a lawful and proper effort to pro-| _ s 3 90| £ | they hoped carlier in the season, | BuMber of cars shipped. i centimes. y aas et Phone: Adams 5488 Special Mosie by Dr. Brldgers und it now looks as if the average price The dollar was quoted at 25 francs Quality—Service the Maunt Vernon Chorun. would be adjusted around the 15 to| BANKERS BUY COPPER FIRM. Sicantimes Tt Vel Secording G0 acknow| epiatanoona, tonn vorere: | FARMERS LIKELY TO SELL edged experts! ke it n., 2 b There seems small doubt that some |5 ‘l‘f"’ Aunonncemeni 18 imade diste FEWER HOGS THIS YEAR of the cotton now in the fields is of | °f the purchase of the Ducktown Sul- | 4 such a grade that it will never be|PRUr. Copperand Iron Co.. Ltd., <-| Winter marketings of hogs this Dieked. This will mean 4 redgetion |OWM. Tenn., from a British corpora. | vear probably will be smaller than o ihe Government figures which in | ton. by Chattanooga and New York |was indicated by the June, 1925, sur e et e o ety | Pankers, the value of the property be- | vey, the Department of Agriculture of 15,000,000 bales. Even if 15,000,000 | "% Placed at more than $5,000,000. declares, the conclusion being based bales are produced and ginned, srow- . [on the Eround that lower corn prices s will feel that they have sustain wad encouraged farmers to hold bac readjustments CHICAGO, November 6 (#).—Poul. by feeding. - try, ulive ipts, 16 cars;| The June, 1925, survey Indicated a Losses Reach Heavy Figures. fowls, 14a1935: springs, 1912: turkeys. | Spring pig ¢rop in the corn belt more This sum may well reach $100,000,-[3?: roosters, 3 ks, 21; geese, than 10 per cent under that of 1924, 000. It is difficult to compute it ex-| 16a1S. or a decrase of around 3,500,000 head. actly, but the total will be sufficient to discourage a large amount of buy- ing in the South and to curtail pur- chasing power in that section to an appreciable degree. This, in turn, will | affect production and distribution of ) . o goods in other sections which sell to R the South. T 1 of the low-grade cotton is | ple and the loss of this source of revenue will cut down a big item el - . > . ~ . P in the cotton planter's income. Some | The Vogue of Velvet is for Girls, Too! of the wiser dealers on the Cotton Ex- | rld markets have | Ireses po: ities which this \ condition t cause, and their view | \ T Vi has been reflected in some late mar-| . ket advances. These, however, have | only an indirect effect on the position financed by the local merchants and bankers, and dispose of their cotton through local channels. Cloth Market May Change, . The situation is not without its pos- e siiation ia not witnout ita pos for Girls the basis of a 15,000,000-bale crop, cot- ton goods prices have been in process of readjustment downward. If the 1,000,000 or more hales of low-grade | ) S‘/wria[ at cotton is removed from possible mill | use, the carry-over of the 1 crop | Benvy: “This’ will send toward nigner | Ly $ 95 ) The middleman gets no cut in the profits—that's why ‘ 14_ Bell Clothes are the best values offered in the city. Di- down, it has D cedingly diffi it— that the Sllrio Dt e b e e rect to you means only one profit—and that is Siffauliedenant, i i The Prep Girl Shop of Erlebacher presents smallest possible. We urge comparison—a look costs S 4 a selection of charming Frocks of Velvet for ing—: i i re i DECISION VERY NEAR both daytime and evening A you nothing—and it will prove to you that thelev e N copies of models designed for la petite Pari- gaving of from $10 to $20 on the purchase of any Bell BIG POWER PROJECT sienne. Shown in wine, navy and brown, and trimmed 4 garment. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. with ribbon and embroidery of gold and contrasting color- BALTIMORE, November 6.—Nego- 5 e el ap tlations between the State Roads Com- ing. A very special offering! 3 mission and the Philadelphia Electric ) Co. to effect agreements concerning wingo bridge by the power company Y Y replacement of the present Cono- are expected to be completed within a few days, according to John N. | € o Mackall, chairman of the State Roads Commission. - Final action on the power develop- 5 . -- ment may be taken next Mondas Exclusively Different wnen the Maryland and Pennsylvani: commissions and the Hederal ERWAL TWELVE-TEN TWELVE-TWELVE F STREET Commission will meet at Harrisburg to @gree upon orders they will issue. DEFICIT IS WIPED OUT. NEW YORK, November 6 (#).—In contrast to a deficit of $76,298 for the Erbt‘ nl(l;ie months last yi ar, & - . . v i Pure Milk Makes Sturdy Bodies $15.60 a share on the first preferred stock, on which no dividends have heen paid since 1921 raw mates . while it is easy to put price rished goods | —that’s all the more reason why you —————— should be sure of the Milk you drink ORANGE GRO §:?;5:figff:~;,";;vh We are so critical concerning every feature Tl 27 o€ ot and phase of our Milk Service that you are Concord_Grapes, Targe basket .. 51" i i Gaoas, by e o g1 Simpson’s Milk. All ‘other fruit at lowest prices in town The discriminating dealer sells Simpson’s P Milk—and the discriminating consumer will be runes : : ’ on the safe side by depending upon Simpson’s New Crop Milk. Fancy California Fruit = Ask for it by name Silk' he : The SUITS - The OCOA'lS Si hy rsteds in every new, ular color Featuring many hard finish cloths, with g g ISC —zt’s wori ”l it Lin e d mg‘m ;e::e. Feaélurinz the la&gf—(}nnlto warm, fleecy plaid backs—tailored in single Pound. . cxweamsieom ith wids Grays and Prussian Blues. Also plenty of and double-breasted box coats with e #0-50 Size— 18¢ t.br:ymuch-wuntad blues in unfinished wors- | peaked lapels. Also showing all that is new Pound. vomiamiic o teds, cheviots and serges. Single and double- in storm coats, town ulsters and medium- i reas 1s. Styles for the conservative weight coats. Remember, every mew color o | 2% Milk Tuxedos | mitizie e Sr R ; g : ; : s Tacing, "Balared. feont”tha. best of TWO STORES IN WASHINGTON Pound Walker Hill Dairy unfinished worsteds. All sizes. Magruder Inc. s it o SP B i 920 F St.-941 Penna. Ave. Best Groceries Price Values Conn. Ave. and K St. 530 Seventh St. S.E. Atlantic 70 T nfaantetcanatnttabaanssititninaaniandanat asassnnssanan Phone Main #4180, Established, 1875

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