Evening Star Newspaper, August 27, 1931, Page 14

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FH OF GAS PICTURED, Recent Experiments of Deep Rock Corporation Show ‘ Utility of Product. BY BENNETT WOLFE, Associated Press Staft Writer. ‘TULSA, Okla, August 27.—Natural was pictured as America's great re- mnnmotthemtm in & report of recent experiments by the Deep Rock ©Ofl Corporation. mmm of the company’s experiments fire the imagination with a vision of a vast pipe line system carrying the gas from Southwestern fields thousands of miles to the big centers of popula- tion to cool office bufldings, make ice, freeze ice cream and do all the other a refrigerant ‘is called upon-to do. e picture may be a fantastic one, but A. W. Melton, engineer for the Deep Rock Company, doesn't think so. Cooling Agent. “I am confident,” he said, “that the ultimate utility -of natural gas has scarcely yet been explored. - Each year our chemists find new uses for the gas itself and new properties in its com- ponent hydro-carbons. “The day is not far off when gas will be used to cool our homes as well as heat them. And, as a result of our expanding gas pipe Mnes, all America can cool and heat itself from the same producing region.” Propane, a hydro-carbonic property of natural gas, is the cooling agent. Formerly considered a waste by-product of natural gasoline, it later was found to possess valuable qualities. So ofl companies began to liquefy it md sell it in pressure bottles as a gas fuel for farm and suburban homes. Believing that propane might be use- ful also as a cooling agent, engineers of the Deep Rock company h?n to nt. They built a small ice- ‘machine, consisting of a com- The machine worked perfectly, Mel- ton related. Gaseous ne Was com- pressed into a liquid, expanded thi the valve. run through the coils in t] brine tank and sent back into the com- pressor. Ice was produced. To determine whether the experiment had practical value, a larger machine with a small gasoline-driven compressor was constructed at a gasoline plant of the company at Shamrock, The utmhmdudl‘l~wnwol jce daily. The ice is sold to farmers and oil jeases employes in the vicinity. mt‘mmmr’wm the ex- periments came as a by-product from plants, a more plentiful sup- is obtainable from natural gas and said. A e ‘Wheat—No. 2 red Winter, export, no qumunu No. 2 red Winter, garlicky, domestic, 49%,; August, 49%; 2 vellow, domestic, 57a58; cob corn, 3.00a3.25 per barrel. Oats—No. 2 white, new domestic, 30; No. 3, 29. Rye—Nearby, 40a45. ‘Hay—Receipts, none. General hay mmn is qum W ample and llllkil'l( Ibelf !elt hl.l' to clover Mle——necelpu ng nutkttn to dwlct 'l 3 6.25a7.00; fair wm 550 a 700 head; light 3 .25. —Choice to prime, none; NEW YORK STOCK EXC Received ~Prev. 1031 Hish. Low. 2915 10% 78 Shell Union Ofl 28% Simmons Co. . 15% 10: Sinclair Ol1 pf (8) Skelly OIl. ... Sketly Oil pf ww. . Sloss-Shefl Steel pf. Socony-Vacuum 1.60. Solv Am pf ww(5%). South Port Rico Sug. Southn Cal Ed (2 Southn Pacific (6)... Southern Rwy (m#). Spicer Mfg..... Spiegel-Ma; Stand Brands (1.20). Stand Gas&El (3%). Stand Gas&El pf (4). Stand 01l Cal (h2%). Stand Ofl Exp pf (5). Stand Ol NJ (12). .. Starrett(LS) (12%). Sterling Secur (A).. Sterling Secur pf.... Sterling Sec cv pf(3) Stone& Webster ( mZ) . Sun Oil pf (6). rior O11. of Amer (1 Corp (2) . Tex Gulf Sulphur(3) 714 Tex Pacific Land Tr. Thatcher Mfg pf 3.60 Third Avenue. Third Nat Inv(méic) Tide Water Asso Ollf Timken Roller B(2). Timken-Detroit Axle Tobacco Products. . . Tobacco Prod A t95¢ Transamerica uou. ri-Contl Corp Trico Products Ulen & Co 11.60 Under Ell Fish: . Union Bag & Paper. . 43% Union Carb & (2.60). 14 Union Oil of Cal (2). 186 Union Pacific (10) 20 Un Tank Car (1.60 20% Unit Aireraft. .. 46 Unit Afreraft pf (3). 31 Unit Biscuit (2). . 13 Unit Carbon. .. 4 Unit Cigar Stores. 44% Unit Corp pf (3).... 408 F3 o g Soreat anE awn~— " - 2 ore B I L - T by Private Wire Direct to The Star Office. | ~Prev. 1931~ | High, Low. Prev. | 67% 481 Unit Fruit (4). 37% 25% Unit Gas&Im(1. 1064 Unit Gas&Im pf(5) 50 U S Gypsum (1.60) U S Indus Alcohol U S Leather. U S Pipe & Fdry « 178 Realty & lmv(l) U S Rubber...... U 8 Rubber 1st pf 1 8 Steel Corpn (4) U S Steel pf (7).. United Stores (A)... United Stores pf (4). Univ Pipe & Rad. ... Utl] PEL(A) e12.15. co Sales Curp Close. Glowe, 55% 54% 204 3T _19% 36% 131 20% 10% 36w 17 | 1525 88% 150 1861 9% 3% 52 35 14 191 ‘abash RR. . . Waldorf Sys (1%). Walworth Co. Ward Baking pf (7). Warn Bros Pictures. Warren Bros (2.. Warren Bros cv pf 3 Warren Fa&Pipe(2) West Pa Pwr pf (7 4 Western Dairy (A).. Western Maryland. . Western Pacific Western Union (§ Westinghse A B i Westing EI&Mfg (4) Weston Elee Inst (1) Westvaco Chlor (2).. White Motors (1) White Rock (141 White Sewing Mach. Willys-Overland. .. Wilson & Co pf. Woolworth (2.40) Worthington Pump. Worth Pump B (6) .. Wrizley (Wm) (4). 5% Yellow Truck. 38 Yestwn Sh&Tube(2) 2 Zenith Radio 2 2 10% Zonite Prod Corp (1) 1% 1% Sales of Stocks on New York Exchange. 100,000 12:00 Noon 500,000 500,000 2:10 P.M. siven in the above table are the annual cash early delcllnmm in 162 8 Dividend rates Payments based on the latest quarterly or hail iy extra <Plus 1%l slock. (Fius 9 oo 3 a TPus 8% 1n stock. b preferred stoc) 3P special T Pald this TeAr— | To Fesutar Tate. n Plus 8% in s 3%a% in stock. AMERICAN DIRECTS BIG SOVIET PROJECT Arthur Powell Davis Tells o(i Vast Irrigation Work in | Turkestan. ; | i f ¥ i £ ! i ga il i : i '%%g i | | I | i i} i EB i £ 2 i : fi | 4§ i i i g 8 1 E : i b 5?%55% : § § i i i | AUES ; il g i ¥ gyl s | L i_% i § 5 GEORGE WASHINGTON RECEIVED HIGHEST SALARY OF HIS TIME There Were No Movie Stars, Base Ball Players or Boxers Whose Staggring In- comes Exceeded That of Chief Executive. As President of the United suw.m 500, with $3.000 to the Speaker and | George Washington probably was the | ‘ $3,000 to the President pro tempore of the Senate when there was no Vice | highest-paid working man of his time. | pregident. But the next year this act ‘There were no corporation exscutives, | was e and Q"I: ks:n-wm nm} movie base prize | ntatives went back to a wage o — i S |$8 for each day of attendance at ses- . The two exceptions were the might have embarrassed the mmllm[pmlden( pro tempore of the Senate Mflud‘yh’bfln(h}‘hflmwlndmewr,vmm”ldly Executive's pay. | extre. Chief | | It was nearly 50 years until Congress man of the time may have had higher |, Xl %as ey 50 years unil Coneress ‘probably T S iay | at the annual salary of $3,000 in the | e g o~y Y B e ¥lact of August 16, 1856. But this . n of | time the President pro tempore of the Senate was given $8,000 & year and the Speaker $6000. At the next raise, in 1866, we hear | nothing more of the President pro tem- | pore of the Senate, but Senators, Rep- I vesentatives and Delegates were raised to 85000 a year and the Speaker to 1873 these salaries were 1925, Senators, Representatives and Delegates have re- the present salary of $10.000 an- with the Speaker raised to the | cabinet wage of $15,000. !n thus increasing its own pay Con- came in for some good-natured Inm.é but after all it had been gen- erous to others and modest toward | itseself. It did raise its members from $6 a day for an honest day's work to ‘no (Aon a yur but it nuowed 136 years COTTON CROP BAN . WIDELY DISCUSSED 1873, when the President’s pay | T pointed out that work is proceed- on all the rivers mentioned. though by no means on all prdjects. The Dal- versin project is nearly com- picted. At present the amount |, of work is being done on the Vaksh | project. In many other p'.eu espe- cially dn the Pergana cot alley, new works or new clnlll have been add:d to old systems. Davis btlievu that the complete irri- nuon projects of Central Asia are a| ice, 450a4.75; medium to 50 fair to medium, 3.5084.00; 250a3.50;, common w[v&kr'hal.pounrmuv Heiters—Choice to prime, none; good to choice, 6.50a7.00; medium to good, S Ehech and “tambe-Receipte. 1300 | am light supply; market nenay light sup- | 00810.00. | reaucracy Davis was sent to survey pot |lift to $4,000. But the Attorney Gen- r.mmua !BPOBTED. NEW YORK, August 27 (%) —North American Car Corporation reported for the June guarter net income of $115,- 838, equal to 45«cents & common share, compared with $139,012, or 61 cents a share, in the June quarter last year. Chalfant & Co. reporied first net of 81,268, compared with $1.881, in the first half of 1930. 1 Beach Ol Co. reported for the first half net loss of $1,884,020, mhn net loss of $1316,164 in the period last year. —— s CHICAGO DATRY MARKET. August 21 (®—Butter, 27 'm firsts l”-'l score), 26a26; score) 231;a24';: seconds (86- . standards l'l score) :nzc' (90 score centralized ca iom 2. Bggs, 1019 o task not for five years but for a ~t eration, the task of harn lll‘?):e moun- in snows and making it fertilize vast | 'l'h,;nendm tr';l.ned.bow more thn 0 ' TRmen! asked Presidint Tatt 1o recammend an it be hfia- Hlyl Hunmmd came over, lonked | mines, grain elevator projects and frri- lll-lvfl and then cabl*d for Davis. Crarist Trick on Davis. ‘Through a trick of the Czar's bu- | the Hu:gr’ynw but the Karakum tifne and money ooy e oty MBS irrigate. On his way back he not to survey it. Eleven days’ riding | me: over its good, level, but unwatered soil led him mw:u'k; recomm-=ndations !or a ‘‘concess ; survey. had a na- gi | at Secretaries of War and the Navy got mission to visit the Hungry sm;.;te Fout | lutnvu‘ Proposal to Stop Planting Grips Attention of Southern States. was doubled to to $50,000, the Vice Presi- Aftn again. But in 1907 lhe“ President beat his chief to the next | salary raise, when Congress him $12.000. The presidential 10 $75,000, in 1909, left the Vice at a pay ratio of less than | 'kw:n‘: 1925 Wlll’u;- ‘O;D‘;'!ymemenm Press. e oo e oi815,0 | _ Plans to ban cotton planting in 1932 officers were, from the begin- on the ground floor. It| rated parts of the Cotton Belt. look back and learn that | (e foed a Ohiene (nited | has called & conference of Senators from hese days might be sniffed at by the | nine Southern States for Priday and ubassistant to the credit manager of | Saturday in Washington to canvass the department store. Yet Thomas Jef- | cotton situation with the Farm Board. {fu. out first Secretary of State, was| Senator George will ask the board paid precisely $3,500. So was the first | and conference to consider his sugges- ,man to hold the office now filled by | tion for reducing acreage next year. [Andrew W. Mellon. The great Alexan- | This plan would have the Farm Board der Hamilton drew down his $3,500 and | pay farmers 12 cents a pound for their {no more. “As for Washington's Secre- | cotton, 6 cents immediately. and the [tary of War, Gen. Knox, he was let | remaining 6 cents in October, 1932, pro- with 'a mere $3,000. During | vided the farmers carried out promises thm‘mnud.mmummmuuumw\ to plant no cotton next year. Bu'u Attorney General had so little, He said he would ask the board to to do that it was a part-time job, and | consider this “and any other construc- its holder had to rely on other sources | tive program” and would urge immedi- 4 ‘n“;\.cl}nuux:nno the Louisiana Legis- t e the Louisiana Cullines Salaries Ratood. sature had before it & bill which would ‘The cabinet which consisted of these | prohibit the planting of cotton next four original members in 1789 had be- year in that State. The bill carried an rome & cabinet, of six in 1799. By then ' amendment authorizing the Governor the Secretaries of State and the Treas- | t, suspend the operation of the act un- ury were raised to $5.000 a year. The less three-fourths of the cotton-produc- ing States enact similar legislation. The Legislature was called into extra ses sion by Gov. Huey P. Long for the pu | pose of enacting a ban on cotton plant- ing next year. Cotton "interests of Georgia met in conference at Macon today to consider jeral still was the poor member of the th- situation. John L. Morris, secretary | family. on a salary of $3.500. |cr the Macon Chamber of Commerce, | In 1853 Congress placed the entire | sporsor of the conference, announced cabinet on an even basis at $8.000 & |that Senator George's plan would be your, and by then there was a seventh | presented for consideration. —the Secretary of the Intes rkrr,‘ A great deal of interest centered m {In !l’ll the yur when the President's | the attitude of Gov. Ross S. Sterling of | salary ‘went o $50,000, a generous | Texas. Congress cabinet salaries to $10.- | State, any action Texas takes will be | 000 each. In 1907 the salary wum::e big factor. NEW SECURITIES 184,500, and the Attorney General and | the Postmaster General drew $3.000. In 1819 the Secretaries of State, the Treasury, Woar and Navy were given $6.000. The Postmaster General got a securities offered todayeinclude: State of Maine, $2,000,000 3 cent bonds, due September 1, 1951, priced to yield from 180 to 350 te headed by the g:r e B tional Manhattan Co. ‘Washington, the S | -~ | Congress were treated, from a salary | W!;mflkwlmserv- | standpoint, as day laborers, and their lce Co., $1,500,000 4'; per cent notes, |endeavors in mmmhlfi seem to ' due July 1, 1932, priced at 99'; and In- | have besn regardsd as piece-work. At | they were paid a dally e e |~ Milwaukee County, Wis., $1,200,000 | | were considered today in widely sepa- | W Senator Walter F. George, of Georgia, W As the largest cotton-producing | NEW YORK, August 27 (#).—New/ ‘l’n"r Sfll terest, to yicld absut 5.06 per cent, by | Mer 3 syndicate headed by Hulsey, Stuart & | 15 GIVEN SUPPORT Trading COntmues at Slow Pace, Foreign List Is Irregular. BY F. H. RICHARDSON. Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, August 27.—Bonds were steadier today, with substantial re- coveries in some of the rails and in- activity holding the rest of the domes- tic list in its grip. Foreign dollar bonds ‘were firregular. In both sections of the market, how- ever, there were evidences of selective buying of a constructive type. Bond men ‘were encouraged by reports that + )& large investment trust and an incur- ance company were both in the market for sizable blocks of bonds, and Wed- nesday's run-ups of 2 to 3 points in some of the better grade rails were equaled again today. The buying came in bursts, which were quickly offset by renewed offerings, but it was & much better-looking market than any recent “;lm: f th I ost of e early tradingg was in railroad bonds. The bears l’fa‘d for an argument a compilation of the earnings of 35 railroads for July, which showed a decline of 38.7 per cent in net oper- ating income from July, 1930, against a decline of 154 In June. The com- | pilation also showed that July net | operating income was 58.5 per cent be- low that of July, 1929. On the other ‘hund the constructive element was in- {clined to view many issues, still on the legal list for savings bani funds in New York State, oversold. Baltimore & Ohio 4125 of 1933 were up !5 point and more than 2 points above their low. The first 55 of the same road gained a point. Boston & Maine 5s improved a point. Gains were rmrded by Canadian Pacific 4'2s and ke & Ohlo B 4l2s, Rock and trust d Chy Isiand re: undln. 4s, Delaware & Hud- son n!undln‘ , Great_Northern Ts, Soo Line New York Central debenture 4s, Northern Pacific 45 and 8s, Pennsylvania 4145 and General 4155, Southern Pacific 4!5s, Union Pacific first 4s and Wabash 5s. 5 Strength in the becfter grade rafls caused a hardening in speculative car- rier issues, including Baltimore & Ohio convertible 4';s, Chicago Great West- ern 4s, St. Paul 5s, Chicago & North- | wastern 43;s, Eri> 5s, MissourisPacific 55 and 5'cs and Nickel Plate 5s and 141;5, but these issues were more s:nsi- tive to stocks and reacted later. Sugar company issues w:re depressed by the default on the Eastern Cuba Sugar 7'; per cent mortgage bonds. Barg2in_hunting in the foreign de- partment was confined to issues of Aus- tralia_and its stat's, Colombian Mort- | gage Bank bonds, Brazilians, Japancse | descriptions and German industrials. | Great Britain 5.5 were steady. Other Europeans were qulel l?ro-t llemtmz Com some parts of the Middle West the cumvltion of corn is attended by, considerable risk by reason of the fact that the frost is likely to be experi- enced before the corn has quite de- veloped. For this reason some interest- ing experiments are being made with the idea of arriving at a frost-resisting corn. This work is conducted on some 1of the State farms and consists of the use of a large tanklike affair which runs on tracks across the cornfield. ‘This is really a refrigerator designed for the purpose, and it makes rather fre- quent trips along the growing rows of Co’l’n. Every féw feet it is dropped over a group of the growing plants, which are subjected to a chilling experience for a few minutes under the supervision of a scientist, who stands by with his watch in his hand. Results have al- ready justified the belief that a hardy corn will be the result. Washingten Stock Exchange SALES. Capital Traction 55—$1.000 at 84%. Washington Gas 0s “A"—$400 at 1023, $100 at 1025 Washington Gas 6s * $500 at 107. | Capital Traction Co—10 at 35%, 10 at 351 Liberty National Bank—10 at 190, Lanston Monotype—10 at 851;. The Carpel Corp.—10 at 1704 AFTER CALL. Cnplm Traction Co.—10 at 35%, § at Pmomu Electric Cons. 55—$1,000 at 106, |Gty & Suburban 55—$1,000 at 69. | Mergenthaler Linotype—5 at 77'%. i Bid and Asked Prices. { BONDS. { FUBLIC UTILITY. Amer,_Tel. & Tel. 428 39 Am. Tel & Tel ctl tr. 85 | ~-$100 at 105, & z 5 12 g 45388, 538es 8! MISCELLANEOUS. Barber & Ross, Inc. “al Chevy Chase Club 3ta o Golumbu Countn Shlh l‘:s aper §. 507800 Blotase 5 STOCKS. PUBLIC UTILITY. Amer. Tel. & Tel. (). Gapitl Traction Go. (¥ Light Co. (18) o W tenmboat Gz Por “lec. Bower 8 pid Pot. Elec. Power §7:% pfd. . Wash. Rwy, & El. com (i) Wash, Rwy. & EL pfd (5) ! NATIONAL BANK. Ped -Amer Nail. Bk, & Tr. (3 Liberty (74) g Lincoln (12) T Metropolitan (id) Bless (55) ... Becone Wathiheton (18) 'rRUs-r COMPANY. Amer. _Sec. Tr. Co. (18) Continental rHust i) & Trust (iai) Phince Georges B & Tr Union Trust (8s) Wash. Loan & Trust (i4) BAVINGS BANK. Bank of Bethesda (61) Eit) i States (30) . Mechanics (20). Wash: p FIRE INSURANCE. @0 ational 'Union (1§ TITLE INSURANCE. [culnmbll (60 Real Estate ( &, | Chi M & St P 45 ‘89, | C M&St P 43589 - | Grt Nor 4% 77 mkm ! Secw UNITED STATES. (Sales are in $1,000.) Sales. High. Low. TAb 3148 32-47, . 102 11 102 10 Ti1st 4%832-47 40 102 31 102 28 L 4th 4145 3338204 104 26 104 24 US3%s"4 61 101 4 101 US3%s41-43.. 6 102 18 10218 US3%s43-47.. 4 102 25 102 26 l'qla‘l“““ 4 106 4 106 4 USdsd 31 108 107 29 L'Sfl(lfl-u 210 112 4112 38 Bales. Abitibi P&P 68°53. 10 ‘Alleghany Cp 65 '44 12 Allegheny s '49. 5 Allegheny bs '50. Allis-Chalm 5= ‘37, Am Chain 6s'33 1 1 1 Am Sug Ref 6837, Am T&T cv 4%8'39 Am T&T c tr bs Am T&T 538160 A T&T 5%8°4 Am W Wks 58 ° Am Wat Wks 6 Argentine 5s Arpentine 634 Argentine May '61. Argentine 65 Ju's9, Argentine 65 Oc'59. Argentine 68 A '57. Argentine 65 B Arm & Co 4% Arm Del 5%8°43. Atchison gn 48 '95.. Atchiscy 424848 . At & Danv 2d 45 48 AtIC L Ist 485! At Gulf 58’59 Atl Ref db 58 Australia 43 '56 Ausiralia 5 Australia 58 ‘57 Austria 78 '43.. B&O 4848 B2l » ReRm2udI e selile~on o Bk Chile 6% Batav Pet 434 Belgium 63 '5! Beigium 638 Belgium 7 Belgium 78 Bell Tel Pa bs B Ind Loan Berlin Cy Berlin CEl 6128’51, Beth Sf1 pm 58 '3 Beth St rf 5s "42 Bordeaux 6s 34 Bost & Me 4% 561, 0 ~ERa Sk~ Rannnnnuhan Brazil 88 '41... Bklyn Man 65 '68. Bklyn Unss'45.... Bkiyn Un Ist 55'50. Budapest 65 °62.. .. Buenos A 6s'61 Pv. Buff Gen El 415 ¢'81 Bush Ter con 58 '55 ! Bush T Bldg 55°60. Calif Packing 5s ! Canada 43 '60 | Canada 5s ‘52 e =32 Can Pac 4% Can Pac 58 ct! Can Pae 58 54 Cent 11l GRE Cent Pac 536 Cen Ry NJ g 5 Cert-td db 548 Ches Corp 5547 C&O 4% B9 CB&Qgends” CB&Q4%s"T C B&Q 1st rf 55 Chi& Alt3s. . “hi& Est 11’5 Chi Grt West 4559, OuARmmasBaauenEandna~e s C M StP&P 5s C M & St Padj 55. C&NW 435 C 2037, Chi & NW cn 4%s.. Chi RI&P gn 45 ‘88, Chi R1& Prf 48’34 ChiR Lev 414860, € TH&SE n 5360, Chi Un Sta 435 '63. Chil Un Sta 58 B "63. Chi Un Sta 6355 '63. C& W Ind on 45852, C& W Ind 5%s'62. Chile 65 °60. Chile 65 '61. € C Md 1st rf 58'50. Con G NY 4%8°51.. ConGN Y 5%8'46, Con Pwr Jap 6%s Con Pow Japan Copenhag 4 Copenhag 58 Cuba 5%s "4 Cuba RR 58 Close. 02 10 02 28 04 25 101 102 18 | 1 M Co bs rec41 102 25 | Ine Match bs ‘47 106 107 29 12 8 High. Low. Close. 4 53 102% 100 70 94 % 191 103 105 128% 109% 107% 1091 110% 65 65 65 66 65 76 61 9% . 112% 39 49% 101% 101% 106% 110% 106% 39% 106% 4 10"6 101% 104% % 104% 1017% 119% 112% 1% 96% 102% 100% 7% 97 108% 1% 931 9815 56 363 il 107% Del Pwr&L 4348 71. Del & Hud 1 45 '34. Denmark 4%8°62.. 1 Denmark 518 '55. . Denmark 684 A Denver Gas D&RGW DRG&W & | Det E G&R4 6 Det Edison rf 58’49, - | Deutsche Bk 6s'32. | Dodge Br cl 88 "4 Duquesne 418 67, Dutch East I Nov.. Dutch East I 65'47. Dutch East I 6862, East C Sug 714837, Erie 1st con 45 '96. . Erie con 4s A '53 Erie cony 48 B Erie gen 45 Erie 55 Finland 58 '58. Finland 6s '4 Finland 6145 Finland 7s '50. French 78" é French 718 41 Gen Baking 534s'40 Gen Motors 68 '37. , 9 German Bank 18 50, German 78 rep 49. ET Goodyr Rub Grt Nor 58 '73. Grt Nor gn 5% Grt Nor gn 78 '3 [ 65 °6; Hud & M adj 58 '57. Hud & M rf 58 '57.. Humble O 5148 '32. Hungary 7%8'44. .. 111 Bell Tell 58'56. . 111 Cent rf 4855 28e = 100% % 2 L 105% 108% 43 Int Rap Tr Int Rap Tr Int Rap Tr 7 Int Cement i Int & Gr Nor Int& G Na Int Hydro El AFFEBTS GRMRS Apple Interests Are Watch- ing Movement to Pass Tariff Law. Int Pap 58 A *4 Int Pap 6 '55. . IntRy C A 614847, Int T & T4%s"52. Ist TAT cv 43w'sd "% | Bpecial Dispateh to The star. WINCHESTER, Va. August 27.—The political crisis in Engiand is being ntcneld with keen interest by com- it !mhenlndo:'figl: growers of the fifin h ‘West Vm Maryland and Pennsylvania, it was stated today leading growers of the ;{fi; “ = The of the Virginia crop has been exported to English m:rkm for many years, and in recent years hun- of growers in nearby amu have muz e Mthly satisfactory trade with conoern, it wes -Een""m 17 in the as les la 2¢* |fact that n some British quaciers 9914 | has been predicted an mhuxn on for- 4« 108y | eign apples may be passed to aid the 128% %123, | local economic situation, 98% 98% | A cable was received from . A. Motz, Federal specialist in 714 1074 42% 947 Italy Pub § Javanese $31 65 . 48 Japanese 61 Tugost Bk 7 51, Kart CPSaM is36. 1 Kan City Sou 54’50, 12 Kan City Ter 4s'60. 2 {Kan G&E 4%5'80.. 7 Karstadt 65'43.... 3 Kresge Found 6536 8 Kreug & Toll 55’69, 49 Lackaw St 5x '50 14 94 L & N uni 45°40. L &N 4%82003. Manh Ry 1st 4890, Man Ry 2d 45 2013, Mexico 65 A *45. Mar: ceeee 19 Mil E Ry & L 5861 Mil El Ry&Lt bs INVESTMENT TRUSTS Mo Pac 5358 A '43. the-counter ATt 31 UR—Over- Mont P db 5s A "3 Mont Pow 6s 43 Montevideo 78 ' Q0 - 5> L) BERREREREREEE, ] PRz e 1 3 Cd 9% h yuunnn 4., N Y Ed 1st 6%8'41, 15 66, H&H clt 65740, NH&H ed 6248, Y O&W gn 45 '55 ! NY Rysing 62°65. . NY Rys 65 A 6! NY S&W 1st NY Tel 4% N Y Tel 6841, Nia Sh Md §%s '50. Nord §%s ‘50 Nort South 5 No Am Co 55 °61. Nor Am Ed b8 '57. Nor Am Ed 55 C 6% Nor Am E 5% Nor O T & L 68 '47. Nor Pac 4597 Nor Pac 4348 2047.. Nor Pacr i 682047, Nor St Pw 58 A '41. Nor 8t Pw 6a B '41. Norway 58°63. Norway 5345 '65. !8.:8;..:.-!!22:;; -a-a:n:--»- Beie Norway 65 '52. Oreg-Wash 45 ‘61 Qrlent dev 53 t dev 6853, .. Ple G&E 8342 Plc T&T 1st b - Wmmos koo - [5 a7 e 1 i oF3F Por R Am T 6; n. Pos Tel & C 3 Public Serv Pub SvG ¢ Pub SvG 4 Pure O1l 5348°37. Queenslana 8s '47.. Read gn4%s A'97. Rem Arms 6s A '37. Rem R5%8 A '47.. I Reaelonws S a¥oneawnd B aa =% Tokio El Lt 1 | Un Pac 1st és '(1 101 4 101 15 96% 101 59% 63 54 54 681 86% CO Suomennnhpen » ° 2 6% £33 99% i 335 = 3 - 2 13 L E g i ooy Serbs-Cr- Shell Un 011 Shell Un Oil Shinyetsu Sinclair Of1 6 5-’“ Sinc O 7scv A ‘37 Sinc Cr O 53%s '3 line P L 58 u s§a%3 =3 L FEH el B :B.-.-:..»-E- 2 & Wabash 414878 Wabash 2d 58 '39. . ‘Warn Br Pl 39, S!:-aunnnm“-uu: HE0 i§ FEEED % 3 l“!t IM 1045 19 100% 100% 100% 20 107 107 4,, per cent court house and nurses’; Te-. Ret. home bonds, due Scptember 1, 1932 to | The t'vfl to yield from 2 to 3.58 per | W, e A1 a syndicate headed by H. W. wm-ua l 111 Cent 4% "66 11 Cent 65 '55... 111 Cent 6148 °36.. .. Il CCStL&N 4%s. . 111 CCStL&N 68 A. . lllltlfll‘%l'l Inland St 4% m'l‘“l,'!l Int Rap Tr &s '08. u, S5t Bix 3| Weat Union g1 80 P Wes: Un 634536, . usS faasieguina.y Bealon weds ol waSeSunn3Baads g3 §§i§:l§:= L ; ffijiuiasitge ] g;% B |_°:.__;_m..“:‘."..“"’m‘£ nm-hlvd - LTI

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