Evening Star Newspaper, November 9, 1935, Page 15

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G. L HUNTIS DEAD BF HEART ATTAGK Retired Navy Department Official to Be Buried in York, Pa. Gurney L. Hunt, 61, who because of his valuable experience in the Navy Department was relieved from foreign service during the World War, died yesterday at his’ home, 6628 First street, after suffering a heart attack ‘Thursday. Mr. Hunt, member of an old Quaker family, was born in Martinsville, Ohio, and was first employed by the Navy at the yard in Boston, where he was chief clerk of the equipment office. After a shake-up in this de- partment during the Theodore Roose- velt administration Mr. Hunt was transferred to the accountancy de- partment as chief clerk. At the outbreak of the World War, because of his experience in large- scale management, he was brought to ‘Washington, where he was chief clerk in charge of the purchasing depart- ment. His handling of supplies dur- ing the war earned commendation from a number of the officials here as well as the officers active on the high seas. Following the war, Mr. Hunt con- tinued in the Navy Department here, and at the time of his retirement two Years ago was chief accountant in the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Millie G. Hunt; a daughter, Miss Mabel Hunt, and a sister, Miss Florence Hunt, Funeral services will be held at the home at 9:30 am. Monday. Burial will be in York, Pa. RETIRED FEDERAL WORKER EXPIRES Miss Elizabeth F. Barry Was Em- ployed in Patent Office 40 Years. Miss Elizabeth F. Barry, employe of the Patent Office for 40 years prior to her retirement five years ago, died yest.:day at her home, 1316 New IT"ampshire averue, after a long illness. Miss Barry, a native of Michigan, came to Washingtor 50 years ago with her brother, David 8, Barry, who untll two years ago was sergeant at erms of the Senate. Miss Barry was a member of the ‘Women’s Republican Club and of the ‘Washington Club. Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Fannle Barry Bates, and t o brothers, David and James. Private funeral services will be held at the home at ¢ o'cloc™ this after- hoon. The body will be cremated. RETIRED GROCER DEAD IN APOPLECTIC STROKE Wilmer G. Fewell, Formerly of | Norfolk—Funeral Services at 2 P.M. Today. Wilmer G. Fewell, 304 P street, ' retired retail and wholesale grocer of Norfolk, Va., died here yesterday fol- lowing an apoplectic stroke a week ago. He was 66. Funeral services were to be held at 2 p.m. today at the W. W. Chambers funeral home, 1400 Chapin street, fol- lowed by burial at Norfolk. Mr. Fewell had been a resident of ‘Washington since 1926. He was & member of Emory Methodist Church, He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Mabel M. Fewell, and a son, Roger B. Fewell. MRS. H. V. HUBBARD DIES; FORMER WASHINGTONIAN, Consulting Widely Enown as Author, Lecturer and Landscape Architect. Mrs, Henry V. Hubbard, 48, former Washington resident and consulting | librarian, died yesterday at her home in Milton, Mass., according to word received here. She was widely known as an author, lecturer and landscape architect. 4 From 1918 to 1919, Mrs. Hubbard was chief of the reference library of | the United States Bureau of Indus- trial Housing and Transportation. She also was an expert on zoning informa- tion for Secretary Hoover's Advisory Committee on Zoning and member of the Committee on Research, Presi- dent’s Conference on Home Building and Home Ownership. Surviving are her husband and a brother, Piske Kimball, who is head of the Pennsylvania Museum of Fine Arts in Philadelphia. e MRS. MARIAN MONROE, CHURCH LEADER, DIES Funeral Services This Afternoon for Wife of Retired Mail Carrier. Mrs. Marian Monroe, for many years an active civic and church worker in Northeast Washington, died Wednes- day at her home, 336 Eighth street northeast, after an illness of three months. Funeral services were to be held this afternoon at 2 o'clock in Epworth Methodist Church, followed by burial in Cedar Hill Cemetery. A native of Washington, Mrs. Mon=- roe was the wife of William Edgar Monroe; retired mail carrier. Besides her husband she is survived by five daughters, Mrs. Elsie M. Firmin, Mrs, Elizabeth Fox, Mrs. Sopha V. Carr, Mrs. Mildred M. Long and Mrs. Al- freda M. Conway; three sons, W. Emory, Charles and Fred Monroe, and 15 grandchildren. SERVICE RADIO FEATURE Immaculate Conception Church Program for Tomorrow. The solemn Lourdes procession and the blessing of the sick service will be held at the Immaculate Conception Church tomorrow at 5 o'clock in cone Junction with the radio broadoast. The pastor and director of the hour, Rev. John K, Cartwright, will preside. Rev. J. E. Gedra will be the celebrant of benediction. Very Rev. Ignatius Smith will preach on “Christ's Civilization Censored.” mmmwmmw‘nz,'l.lll. 9, 10:15 and 11. The high mass at 11 will be celebrated by Rev. J. E. Gedra. ‘The ‘Little Flower novena services will be conducted 'muthy evening by Fev. Thomas J. Kilduft Librarian the bureau. head of the fingerprinting unit. D. C. COURT HEARS GUFFEY ACT HIT | Coal Company Counsel De- nies Congress Has Wage- Fixing Power. By the Associated Press. The troubled labor history of the soft coal industriy was recited in Dis- | trict Supreme Court yesterday, where the Guffey coal act again was the target of attorneys contesting its con- stitutionality, Philip Murray, international vice president of the United Mine Workers ol America, told the court of in- stances where martial law, and Fed- | eral troops were used in strikes he | said resulted from failure of coal pro- ducers to “recognize the stabilizing influences of collective bargaining.” William D. Whitney, counsel for James Walter Carter, coal company executive, who is seeking to invali- date the act, summarized the basis for the suit, listing five points on which he said he would rest his case. Attacks Shift. As his first “trench” for the assault, Whitney said the shifts of tonnage from one coal-producing district to another do not give Congress the power to regulate the industry. The | Government has argued such shifts of production were the primary result of price fluctuations and that they interrupted the flow of commerce be- tween the States. If he lost on that count, Whitney asserted he would contend Congress lacked the power to fix prices as a regulatory measure. “If Congress had the power to fix wages,” Whitney said, “it would not have that power without fixing a | standard and could not delegate that power to agreements between operators and miners to fix wages any way they liked.” Sees Curb on Liberty. Finally, the attorney assailed such “enforced agreements,” sanctioned by the act, on the ground they “deprive the workers of their liberty.” Whitney injected the latter complaint into the case after Murray testified the union's | wage contracts provided penalties for miners who strike in violation of the agreements When the court recessed for the week end, indications were the trial would continue through next week. Government attorneys disclosed they planned to call five additional wit- nesses and Whitney said his rebuttal testimony would require at least one full day —_— PASTOR TO PREACH Rev. C. B. Austin to Be Heard at Both Services. Rev. C. B. Austin, pastor of the West Washington Baptist Church, will preach at both services tomorrow. Miss Annie Moats will address the B. T. U. at 7 o'clock. Missionary Circle will meet Tuesday evening. T. E. L. Class will meet in the Sunday school house Wednesday eve- ning. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. Dinner, University of Indiana, Uni- versity Club, 7:30 p.m. Meeting, Philosophical Society of ‘Washington, Cosmos Club, 8:15 pm. Banquet, Wilson Teachers' College, Mayflower Hotel, 7 p.m. Bingo and card party, Linooln Women's Relief Corps, No. 6, Soldiers, Sailors and Marines’ Club, 1018 L street, 8 pm. Dinner meeting, J. Raleigh Hotel, 7 p.m. Dance, Fort Stevens Post, No. 33, Sons of the American Legion, Indian Spring Country Club, 10 pm. Meeting, Writers Rendezvous, 701 Ninth street southwest, 8 p.m. Meeting, National Union Assurance Bociety, Pythian Temple, 1013 Ninth street, 8 pm. Banquet, West Virginia Wesleyan College, La Fayette Hotel, 6:15 p.m. Dinner, Phi Kspps Fraternity, la Fayette Hotel, 7 pm. ‘TOMORROW. Luncheon, Lulu Temple, Legion Honor, u-yflom Hotel, 12:30 pm. Dinner, Lulu . Tem +Temple, Legion of Honor, Mayflower Hotel, ¢ p.m. Meeting, Southern Women's Educa- tional Alliance, Mayflower Hotel, 10 a.m. mmnm May- flower Hotel, 5 pm. Dinoer, Phi Delta Delts Alumni As- sociation, Mayflower Hotel, 7 p.m. 0. U.'A M, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1935, Grand Jury Fingerprinted Members of the District grand jury indicated their interest in gen- eral fingerprinting for identification purposes by having their own prints taken yesterday at the Federal Bureau of Investigation during a visit to Left to right, in the tenter, are J. Edgar Hoover, director of the bureau; Norman Towson, foreman of the jury, and L. Clark Schilder, —Star Staff Photo. TIGHTENING URGED IN BUILDING CODE Brightwood Citizens Rap Alleged Encroachment on Road. Congress may be asked to amend District building regulations to pre- vent construction of bulldings on thoroughfares not in according with the street highway plan as the result of a discussion last night at a meeting of the Brightwood Citizens’ Associa- tion in Paul Junior High School. Property owners residing on Rock Creek Ford road between Georgia ave- nue and Thirteenth street contended this thoroughfare, said to be 40 feet on the highway plan, has been re- duced to an “alley of 30 feet” as the result of construction of two-family apartment buildings on the triangle bounded by Concord avenue, Thir- teenth street and Rock Creek Ford road. A resolution was adopted by the association at its previous meeting claiming the apartment buildings oc- cupy 10 feet of street space, with no provision for a sidewalk on the south side of Rock Creek Ford road. Last night it was voted to ask the Commissioners why a permit was is- sued for such apartment construction. Protest Bottleneck. Why the District should permit con- struction of a bottleneck on Sixth street between Tuckerman and Van Buren streets is another matter to be brought to the attention of offcials. C. E. Bogardus, secretary of the asso- clation, protested in a resolution that Sixth street was being reduced from 30 feet to & 24-foot alley between Tuckerman and Van Buren streets. That property owners who may be delinquent in the payment of taxes or special assessments should be s0 ad- vised by the District tax office was the | subject of a resolution presented by Willlam McK. Clayton, which was adopted and will be forwarded to the Commissioners. The association went on record as indorsing the Community Chest drive. More Busses Urged. Additional busses for Brightwood on the Takoma Park line will be sought as the result of action last night. The matter is to be taken up with transit officials. A protest will be filed with the Com- missioners against the proposed con- struction of garages of metal type facing residences on Twelfth street between Rittenhouse and Sheridan streets. Complaint was made that this narrow street would also give the appearance of an alley if construc- tion of this type of garage was per- mitted and would greatly depreciate property in this vicinity. ; New members were elected as fol- lows: Emest J, Linthieum, W. Stanley Taylor, Robert M. !yns. ‘Wil- lam J. Kanof, Horace E. Cromer, Marion L. Kirby, Clarence E. Bowen, Maj. D. C, Campbell and Bertha A. Payson. Frank “Buck” O'Neill, & newspaper man from New York, addressed the members on the value of citizens’ as- sociations and the voteless citizens of SLIDING GAS SCALE PARLEY HITS SNAG |- Negotiations Are Suspended, Probably to Be Resumed JANSON RITES TODAY Clarendon Man’s Burial to Be in Congressional Cemetery. BUSINESS GAINS DURING OCTOBER Industrial Output Is Best for Month Since 1930. Stocks at Year High. By the Associated Press. Continued betéer business on a wide front in October was reported y-unuy by the Depart- In " the monthly survey of current business, the department said: Industrial output reached its high- est point for October since 1930— nearly 90 per cent of its 1923-1925 average. Automobile production expanded steadily. Steel output advanced for the third successive month. Cotton and silk textiles gained ground along with lumber, Soft coal production showed more than usual October gains after the short September strike. ‘Weekly electric power output reached & new high. 8tock prices advanced to a new m for the year. Bond prices were The retail sales situation was spotty, however, after a “favorable showing” in September. Gains in that month were attributed to expanded employ- ment and pay rolls and increased agriculture income. Construction Improving. The volume of construction work in October was reported still low, though improving. Although retail sales were not as heavy as in September, the depart- ment sald it expected final figures to show them much better than in October, 1934. The Labor Department’s September survey of employment, covering in- dustries that employ more than half of all the workers, showed an increase of 335,000. Industrial stocks were helped by “the favorable nature of reports is- sued on profits for the third quarter.” Issuance of new securities continued. Exports in September increased 15 per cent, a normal gain. Imports dropped 4 per cent, as compared with an ordinary decline of 1 per cent. The department attributed this to a drop in Cuban sugar imports. Real Estate Tone Improves. Construction contracts in Septem- ber increased 12 per cent over August, when allowance was made for fewer working days. Real estate conditions were reported better. Preight loadings were up § per cent in October. Loadings for the first 43 weeks of the year were 1 per cent bet- ter than for the corresponding week last year. October auto production exceeded 200.000 units, compared with 90,000 in September and 132,000 in October last year. WOMAN JURORS HELP CONVICT WOMAN DRIVER Judge Hitt Fines Miss Lloyd $25 in Case, Charging Injury of Three. Miss Mary M. Lloyd, 1747 K street, defendant in a reckless driving case, faced six of her own sex on a jury in Police Court yesterday and emerged the loser, becoming thereby the first person convicted by the new jury panel which was sworn in Monday. There have been five acquittals. Miss Lloyd was accused of having caused the injury of three persons on September 23 when she collided with an automobile operated by Robert Reisberg, 17, of 3808 Kansas aven:e at Sixteenth street and Alaska avenue J“sd" Isaac R. Hitt fined Miss Lloyd $25. REDEMPTION DELAYED. NEW YORK, November 9 (#).— Holders of more than $2,000,000 of the $48,800,000 Consolidated Oil Corp. bonds, which were called for redemp- tion last August, have not yet pre- sented the securities for redemption in spite of the fact that interest stopped on the date of call, the cor- poratica announced, ———e- Marriage Licenses. Wayne C. Gro 2! st., and ¥ ther ‘nom uit'Lake &1l uiehe ‘Willls ‘The 48, d t] ond 2. Tocn of Richmond. Vao AT Foore George Bimms. 21. and Alice A bam or 1618 Manchester :-we 5 xwllklnlon ang Lauanta P. oy both of lur(olk "'"fl. burm 132 o202 a'il enlbuu Wi ‘t‘h 5t 1013 1&!4 E u'll 31, Tsaac i) David_Wal 7, 1008 d la Car u"mh‘ 1005 U el..' J\lldlz u" eNi"81. 23 and Mary E. Braneh, 24. \chmond, Va.s Rev. J nh LT bl o Xy rh !I‘l ll 2 Massachugetts jace. 3156 18th ! it Mar]! ro | Han, ‘10, 1138 7t g:fiklh 35, 923 Sth 20, Roanoke, Vi ol 81604 B 8 Blrths Reported. imuel W. and Eli 3 3 o E:m nd Eu-ufi?')gnm; Bov. B. Mvnw dt wirl. i" Srwsod fin. |lrL W. ] Iul:v.?‘z; Gunning- gl‘lig.brl‘ul k-fiul’ boy, T fi%»fv“ ‘"u.sn ‘-é‘iii m ‘n":fi'au_.,:fi‘"mu i Deaths Reported art 'Q "q;fl;&“.%.‘i‘uw his n"nu\ ‘Tea dance, Delts Phi Sigma Soror- | g, w,hmml”pn. Lecture, Mmm Continental Hotel, 3 p.m, Breakfast, Wmn Overseas ao.{muumuumm oo : When Star Meets Star Lupe Velez, petite and flery stage and screen star, cried “Jon'ee, American yesterday. HERTZ NEGOTIATE NEW ARLNE DEAL man, However, Is Silent on Latest Venture. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 9.—John D. Hertz, banker, transportation de- veloper and sportsman, is off on an- other lap of a business race which started 45 years ago at a Chicago newsstard. The negotiator of the deal by which Lehman Bros. and the $110,000,000 Atlas Corp. obtained a controlling in- terest in Transcontinental & Western | Air, Inc., Hertz is silent on the new- est phase of his career. One of his close associates, how- ever, quotes him as saying: “I've eaten, slept and lived trans- portation all my life. Aviation? A new kind of transportation. to fuss around with it.” ‘Was Born in Austria. Born in 1879 in Austria, Hertz came to this country at the age of 5. His family moved to Chicago and he be- came successively newsboy, reporter and fight manager. In 1905 he went into the automo- bile sales business, the story is, to please his wife. He made $850 his first year. The next year he netted $12,000 on the same job. known ventures, was started in 1915. He sold it to General Motors Corp. for a sum said to have been more than $40,000,000. Tall, heavy set, with slightly stooped shoulders, Hertz appears little different from the thousands who climb out of Wall Street's subways at 8:45 am. his stocky neck. No white piping trims his vest. Straight, neatly parted hair streaked with gray tops a broad forehead and blue eyes. Exhausted From Resting. When not in New York, Hertz lives on his 1,000-acre farm at Cary, I, Count, retired in 1928. In that year Hertz got out of uuve business because he was tired. In 1934 he jumped back again because he was exhausted from resting. He entered the investment banking business as s partner in Lehmap Brothers, and has had a hand in sev- eral important transactions, including | the reorganization of Paramount Pic. tures. years. “I LIVE MY LIFE” GETS ANOTHER WEEK HERE Miss Crawford Is Becoming a New Woman Under the Revised Rules. IN “I LIVE MY LIFE” the crusading spirits of Hollywood take a gentle sideswipe at the idle rich, the party | hounds, the gentlemen whose life is Jjust one darned chukker of polo after another, and others of our decorative citizenry who are more active than literate. Having for years swooned with delight whenever some one sug- gested they resembled Long Island’s .| worst, the good people of filmdom apparently have decided that barren corn, however golden from afar, makes bitter bread. We take it, therefore, that “I Live My Life,” which returned to the Co- lumbia for another week yesterday, presages a new credo of the cinema muses. Whilst comfortably employing the elements they purport to renounce, we find them no longer salsaming before gowns by Adrian, polo by Abercrombe and Fitch, and love & la carte by Miss Joan Crawford, and whatever titillative juvenile happens to be at hand. These they treat with E ] hs 3 FT i i Eggi & ¥ ST EEE% 1 B Chicago Banker and Sports- | I'd like | His Yellow Cab Co., one of his best | each day. No stiff collar sets high on where his famous race horse, Reigh | |YOUNG PEOPLE’S SERIES | & .| Wall Street thinks it may see Hertz | “fussing around” for & good many Jon'ee, Jon'ee” as she jumped into the arms of her husband, Johnny Welssmuller, noted swimmer and “Tarzan” of the screen, when Lupe sr- rived in New York from Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro on the liner Pan ~—Copyright A. P. Wirephoto. ENEMY AT GATE Rev. J. Hillman Hollister to Preach at Chevy Chase Presbyterian. At Chevy Chase Presbyterian | Church tomorrow morning, Rev. J. Hillman Hollister will preach on “The | Enemy at the Gate.” The young people's groups will meet Sunday as follows: Hearthstones, 5 ‘o'clock, young people’s room; Alpha {and Omega, 6:30, church house; Fire. | side Group, 7:30, home of Mr. and ‘Mn. 6. W. Boggs, 219 Elm street; | Junior Collegians, 7:30, home of Mr, | and Mrs. James G. Wright, 5311 Con- necticut avenue; Senior Collegians, i" 30, home of Mr. and Mrs. Jay H. Bowker, 3212 Morrison street; Young People’s Society, 7:30, young people’s | room. Mrs. Emory 1. Ireland will enter- tain the Radcliffe Sewing Circle Tues- |day at 1:30 in the young people’s room. The Woman's Guild meetings next week: Section 3, Tuesday, 1 o'clock, home of Mrs. L. A. Reynoldson, 5319 Thirty-third street; Wednesday, 1 o'clock, Section 6, home of Miss Em- ma Hays Heck, 3421 Northampton | street; Section 8, home of Mrs. C. G. Tilman, 3229 McKinley street; Sec- tion 11, home of Mrs. Roger Wells, 5607 Chevy Chase parkway; Thurs- day, 1 o'clock, Section 1, home of Mrs. Henry C. Fuller, 3704 Huntington street; Section 9, luncheon, home of Mrs. W. Le Roy New, 208 Primrose | street. Banford Bates, director-of Federal Prisons, will be the forum speaker Thursday evening at 7:45. “Christian | Attitudes Toward Crime” will be his | subject. | A program has been planned by | the Missionary Soclety for Friday at 2:30. —_— REV. A. P. SHIRKEY PLANS | \ Francis Asbury M. E. Pastor Will Preach First of Sermons Tomorrow Night. At Prancis Asbury M. E. Church South tomorrow morning “How Are | You Facing Life?” will be the subject of Rev. A. P. Shirkey and at 8 pm. “The King of Kings,” the first of & series of five sermons especially for young people. At 6:45 pm. the young people will conduct a service for the youth of the community. Missionary Soclety activities for the week include: Circle No. 1, Wednesday, 2 p.m,, with Mrs. C. W. Humphreys, 3010 Wisconsin avenue; Circle No. 2, with Mrs. Cranford, 1356 Oak street, Tuesday, ? pm., and Circle No. 3, 2 pm. Thursday, (Pund Tr with Mrs. Caroon, 1514 Emerson street. SERMONS ANNOUNCED Rev. W. F. Locke to Preach at = St. Paul M. E. Church South. At S8t. Paul M. E. Church South tomorrow, at 11 am., the pastor, Rev. W. F. Locke, will preach on “What Is & Christian?” and at 8 p.m. PASTOR' THENE s FINANCIA Washington Exchange City & mmm.n Bs—8$1,000 at 90%. umnmn Gas S5 1958—$1,000 at c;plul Traction 56—$500 at 95% cash. Riggs Bank com.—1 st 212. City & Buburban 5s—$1,000 at 90, $1,000 at 90, $1,000 at 90. Capital Transit Co.—10 at 17%, 80 at | 3 17, 10 at 17, Capital Traction 56—$1,000 at 96. Bid and Asked Prices. BONDS. Tel. & Tel. 4%s. prng i % ol K l-'hu é'-“ sl °° ). pm. m).- IANI AKD ‘TRUST COMPANY. Columbls ¢.30) Real Estate (8) Cnml Corp (1.80)__ onotype (&)= lrlertlenlhnllu “ :‘l ‘ - eoples Dru enl Est ¥ . 5“ 20! g (W o.\ ot 'I’.. 113% wizd l Chicago Grain I By the Associsted Press. CHICAGO, November 9.—Failure of Liverpool to respond to yesterday’s sharp price upturn this side of the | Atlantic led to early setbacks of | wheat values today in Chicago. In contrast with wheat, corn advanced. Opening %-% lower, December, 96%, the Chicago wheat market soon showed an additional sag. Cormn started unchanged to % off, Decem- ber, 58%a7%, and then rallied. Going hand in hand with downturns of wheat prices were reports of in-| creased offerings of Argentine wheat | to Europe and of cheaper offers of new L. e-pound mrints (02 score), $13 BUTTER—One. 32; tub- 31; 1-pound prints (90 score), ‘ul. . = 1-pound prints (80 score), JYeal, ); po oked. ! comapotn “the Unil ,lam BOGS—Market ensy and unsettled 15 to 1 lfl'll on United States Oovuanm-n: "l . extras. gtnnery whites dated wi lnd mlrl'fl 8, ex 1fa ha strip_bac Patents Bureau of S, ‘extras. larec. costs) : al U. 8 % 1 medi [ s, e s S 1.00 s pa nd u tom: : No. Zs. 18a2 1d 1 0 BONDS ON THE CURB MARKET. DOMESTIC BONDS. Alabam P' 4 Aithama Fow 4 E 4 R P 5s A Canadian Pc fig b5 A 9034 1073, o Consm_ Power 55 % 58 A Cont G&E 5 FaiPomks e: s 5% FPederal ‘Wt 5 i Gatineau g:unilu Pow (s B '41 Hysrade Fd Hysrade Fd s filos Cent RR ts lins Bow e L B b4 M Ind Elec 8 d d Australian wheat. Before long the | } wheat market here receded more than & cent a bushel below yesterday's fin- ish. Meanwhile Winnipeg messages told of only meager overnight takings | of Canadian wheat for European ship- | ment. Eager watch by many grain traders was kept on Washington dispatches about conferences between President Roosevelt and the Canadian premier. | Particular interest in various quarters | centered on the point as to whether | any lowering of the United States’ import duty on wheat would result. ," Estimates were current 10,000,000 bushels of Canadian wheat, duty paid, | 3 have been imported by this country in three months, with bonded Cana- | M dian wheat stocks this side of the border continuing to increase. Unfavorable weather gave relative strength to corn and ocats. Provisions reflected hog market firm- ness. l.lnvml Grain Prices. LIVE] .. — (i IVERPOOL. Nevember 9 (F.—Wneat b Low. 3 ;"I’Kh NV' Clole clooee B A8 B4 84'y B4% INVESTING COMPANIES NEW YORK, Novem! (P —New York Security Dealers’ Hu:‘:uan Bid. Asked. Admin_Pund 2nd Inec. 15835 - - 13431500 e I C) 5220 Dok 0 D e D 2BRLERIASSE 53288 19D ik d e BRSNS & & lu Mutual Invest | Nation Wide muonn kwm- o on “A Fool There Was."” Dr. John O. Knott, who has several | §¢ times visited the Holy Land, will ad- dress the young people on that sub- ject at 7:15 pm. The public is invited. ‘The Women's Missionary Society will meet Tuesday st 11 am. The Board of Stewards will meet Tuesday at 8 pm. On Sunday evening, Novem- ber 17, Rev. Mr. Locke will begin & series of five sermons on “Some Night Scenes From the Bible.” FOREIGK nm_n. By the MDM rx‘ l l 8y, lxm “‘%'s.':':}.m -cmu U. 8. TREASURY POSITION. By the Associated Press. ulmon of the Treasury on b-rr:f ngum; S50 1 e pea ftures. © 324 l_- “ Ju ,760,098.64 g S 26, "1' e %1 nfi.d’: ?‘ .s.lt -'ll" ‘fi??”u ll’oa 12,91 uull. year (since July 1), $1 2216‘91. 779.480.1 u '7?2.457 071, h VE- ' par l'l. ipencer Trask Stand Am tand Ut juper of Am per o 3 sum % Tristes Thisteed Trusteed N ¥ 3 E2 R e R e ltln HE5s A Intern Sc Am 35 Intersta Pow 5 Intersta Pow s t In: Jim Kan Par 5B Ken Ulll st Ken Uil 5: Ken Util s overs G&C 5 hish B 8 8 by 104 10 3 053, 033 107 ‘107 2 RO 2, s 1104 1108 ]|m Netaner, Bros: as - oty 4 10m15 Nevada Calif ’sr" 14»:*.1no'xml" ey i 10 3 100% 108 3 0903 90 90 00la 0% 102 ¥ 10115 10113 DR, 0R% ORI, N3, 0R3s OK%e R m Y 1 ll’. 14")’4 ll\fl: 10335 1023g 107 S o oy 03 Ko%, St 100 033 1031 107 }MX' mu: 104 Yufiin e & d FOREIGN BONDS. le 6s 31 mat__ 10% oonun 75 47 T 3R Rio de ejln H‘/n 'Bl\ romex EXCHANGES. c mu"' in Seliary: fl ‘B X l“‘n Q" e 13% Rus 6%s ctf NC '16.. 1 s - t wars LI bzl growiien e B —stem lg?.d 1 ired by maturity. {Ookrpanies reporied in ‘Teceiversnip. POWER NET IMPROVES. NEW YORK, November 9 (Special). —American Water Works and Electric - Co, for the year ended September 30, | reports net earnings equivalent after payment of preferred dividends to i | $1.08 per share on its common stock, comparing with $1.06 per share for the year ended'September 30, 1934.

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