Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, NEW YORK SUGAR. NEW YORK PRODUCE. NEW YORK, June 7 (%).—Raw sugar | NEW YORK, June 7 () was unchanged early today, with ¢ Teported and spot auoted At 3.98. - oo | 3aouyu e D. C. MONDAY, JUNE 7, 1937. Total business for the period, the report said, reached $20,029,539, com- Advertising Total ag INCREASE 8 PER CENT | pared with $18,557,304 for the corre- I-ABUR S”-UA.I-IUN Mounts Sharply “The No. 4 con- Fats. 233_’,{.:/,:5 athe te, yeer Brinam, Naib'\!ork' in"Montreal,” 10001 4. sponding four weeks last year. Arst tracts were steadier on covering and re- | mediums, 18%-19: ‘dirties, No. 1, 19-197 a8 n—Nominal . fes, No. 1, %ai | France, demand. 4457 cabl 3 By the Associated Press. 1 Over 1936 Level |bmosd s, . opmission hause burieg | aierage eheets, o.181c. Cream | 117 demand.”5.26%; tables, S P CINGINNATL, June 7.—The K SRR RS oo oo o et | 7 BIST T ek 2 Remihii BUG 0 S Sy | RUBBER FUTURES Grocery & Baking Co. reportea. & Flowers Put in Ice edge 31: b e, 3 l, _21.55 vel, . . 'PO! a d he Assoct Press. selling influenced by continued inacti 30%: 25.65; 5 24 807 B o a0 reky in' (e sbol murket. Ty ‘No: vy ! AN . F1 Sohids Do BOEsY padi®0 | NEW YORK, June 7 (#1.—Crude rub- | E8in of 8 per cent in sales for the four- | Frozen fresh-cut flowers are being CHICAGO, June 7.— Advertising | to 1. and March to 1.34, or 1% points 15" 2 State. whole | 2 Switzerl: un- | ber futures opened ateady. 4 to 11 higher. | week period ending May 22, com) y {ing J { a9 0By L . 4 . L . k pe; 3 pared | delivered in ice cakes by Tok! Age reported today retail display ad- | Det higher nm:i were holding around these | milk. flats. fresh. ' grass. 17-17%: fresh 91; | July, 19.93-99: September, 20.08-07; - with the corresponding period of 1936. ' department, stores, y Tokio, Japan, FOREIGN EXCHANGES. |4ty fiui.dusis dacii, maneerr. | KROGER GROCERY SALES NEW YORK, June 7 (P.—FPorelgn 8.801n: Tokio, 76: Bhanghai, QR HEs i A8; Hongkone, "3043; . Mex jites Futures were irregular. levels at midday. ~The Steel Rate Off Sharply. Railroads Start Wage Negotiations. @pectal Dispatch to The Star NEW YORK, June ®—The emphasis placed on the labor situation in cur- rent gatherings of industrial leaders confirms early prognostications that labor would be industry’s No. 1 prob- lem for 1937, according to Business ‘Week today. This week steel activity for the country as a whole dropped 14 points as a result of the strike in independent mills of Republic, Youngs- town Sheet & Tube, and Inland Steel. Meanwhile agitation continues at the Ford plant. ‘This week, too, railroads commenced negotiations with 14 unions requesting & 20 per cent an hour increase in wages, destined to cut into this year's earnings of the roads, which for the first time since 1931 have Peen running in the black. Steel customers of the strike-affected plants are casting about for other sources of supply and have attempteg | to shift orders to plants not affected by labor disturbances. Chances are doubtful, because mills outside of strike centers have an ample backlog of their own to consider before tack- ling needs of new customers. Freight Outlook Good. Though April carloadings were curtailed by the sudden sl "p in coal shipments following the wrief coal strike on April 2, so that railroad | earnings for the month were less than might have been expected after the favorable reports of March, the pros- pects for the balance of the year continue bright. Loadings are expected to continue rising more or less evenly, except for holiday weeks, until the Fall, aided by larger industrial and agricultural shipments. Chief fly in the ointment, as far as earnings are concerned, is the probable size of the wage increase to be granted. Judging from the substantial in- crease in both employment and pay rolls in the agricultural equipment in- dustry in April, there is no apparent slackening in demand for its products from farm areas. Farm income for that month was well sustained, and for the first four months to date 1s running 27 per cent ahead of compar- eble months of 1936. May and June income looks equally promising de- spite the fact that prices received in May, and perhaps in June, tended to | decline Advertising Increases. Advertising activity has gained 10| points since January and in April stood within two points of the Decem- ber peak, when holiday advertising and the pressure of the undistributed earn- ings tax gave newspaper, farm paper and magazine advertising an extra fillip. With the likelihood that the tax will still be on the books through- out 1937, advertising media look to another last quarter spurt this year similar to that of 1936. Stimulated by construction and au- tomobile activity, the plate-glass in- dustry has been recovering rapidly since the production break in Decem- ber and January occasioned by labor difficuities. April set a new high in output. Cigarette production is well on ils way to establishing - new high for 1937. Every month since June, 1936, has been setting a record for the month, April, 1937, was the eleventh such record. INVESTING COMPANIES NE WYORK. June 7 (.—New York Becurity Dealers Association: o Admin Fd 2nd Inc Am Business Shrs Am Gen Eq Inc .- Am Ins Stocks _ _ Bancamer Blair Bankers Nat Inv Corp Basic Industry ___ Broad St Inv _ Bullock Pund ~_ Corporate Trust _ Corporate Trust A Corp Tr A A mod _| Corp Tr Accum Ser Corp Tr Acc_mod Cumulative Tr Sh pos Bk Sh N ¥ “'A"_ epos Ins Shrs *'A Depos Ins Shrs “B" Diversified Tr C Fund Investors Inc Fund Tr Shrs A Fund Tr Shrs B _ Gen Inyestors Tr = Group Sec Agriculture Group Sec Automobile Group Sec Building Group Sec Chemical Group Sec Food Group Sec Invest Shrs Group Sec Merchandise Group Sec Mining Group Sec _Petroleum Group Group Group Instl Sec Insurance Investors Pd “C” Inc .. Keyston Cust Pund B-3 Major Shrs_Corp Maryland Pund Mass Invest Tr vertis'ng for the week ending May 28 recorded a new 1837 high increase over the same week last year, ‘Tabulations of advertising covering 78 cities, the publication said, showed | a total of 22,091,065 lines, against last | year's 18,534,455, a gain of 19.2 per cent. Advertising has gained 6.7 per cent for the year over 1936, the report said. ‘The bulk of Czechoslovakia's popu- lation is Roman Catholic. RECEIVER IS APPOINTED FOR ARCHIE ANDREWS Bs the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 7.—A receiver in | bankruptcy was appointed Saturday for Archie M. Andrews. once a muiti- millionaire and former head of the Hupp Motors Co. Federal Judge Robert P. Patterson named J. Edward Lumbard, New York attorney, receiver on a petition filed by Ashton & Russell, Chicago firm, with a $77,763 claim against Andrews. Andrews opposed the appointment as “unnecessary, futile and useless.” CRUDE OIL PRICES. TULSA, Okla., June 7 (#.—Base crude ail prices Mid-Continent area—Oklahoma-Kansas, le. 98¢ to $1.30; North. North v o 1.2 (Permian Basin). gravity scale. R4c to $1.08° North Louisiana-Arkansas, gravity scale. 90c to $1.22. Rocky Mountain area—Salt Creek, Wyo. gravity scale. 98c to $1.30. Eastern area — Pennsylvania _grade (Bradford-Allegany), $2.67: same grade in y 2.42; same : same grade in Buckeye lines, $1 PHILADELPHIA PRODUCE. PHILADELPHIA. June 7 (®.—Live poultry, fowl. Plymouth Rock, fancy. 20- 21 20: white Leghorn. fancy, 17: aver o 3 Reds. Leghorns. white Pekin. younz. 14; old. colors. 11-12: turkeys. fancy hens, 18; young toms. fancy. 1 Dressed poultry—Fowl.' fresh killed, in | boxes, chickens, ail sections. 24-28: old roosters. dry-picked. 1412a16%2i Spring ducks. Long Island, MONEY MARKET. NEW YORK. June 7 (®.—Call money steady: 1 per cent all day: prime commer- cial paper, 1 per cent; time loans steady: 60 to 90 days. 1% 4 to 6 months. 1 per cent; bankers' acceptances unchange ‘i B0 to 90 davs. f%-la: 4 5 to 6 months. 3a-3: re- ate, New York Reserve Bank, a2 per cent. STEEL QUOTATIONS. NEW YORK. June 7 (P —Steel prices were 100 pounds f.0.b. Pittsburgh: Blu annealed sheets. hot rolled. 2.40. galva ized sheets, 3.80; black sheets, hot rolle | 3.5 steel bars.'2.45. After a smart take-off (above),Dorothyusesthe weight and position of her head to spin her body. This shows her ; in mid-air. Instead of the "pike” with body bent at hips—or the “tuck” with body bent at hips and knees—Dorothy executes the somersault the bard way—by the “layout” with body outstretched. 0. changed to 1 point net lower, with Sep- tember at 248 and January at 2.39. e po slow. Fowls, Refined was unchanged locally ‘at 4.70 | colored. 20: Roosters, 12, for fine granulated. with a lot of inauiry | Turkeys, . Chickens reported stimulated by the warmer weather ~unquote THE GREATEST VALDE This s KELVINATOR ; a WASNERS AR ® The new Kelvina- PRICED FR tor Washer has every feature found in ordinary washers PLUS many exclusive improvements. ® The PRESSURE-ATOR, an exclu- sive new development in wringer design, assures scientifically correct The pressure for every type of fabric. vinator Kelvinator's exclusive new ~FIN- ?"ngsfgfgfgj FLEX 1;11 EX :gimnr quickly, gently and U outstand than thou- thoroughly loosens the dirt by flexing i iEesiltito aRR st AndE the fabrics in an improved cleansing action. The lustrous, all-white exteriors give the modern housewife a durable, distinctively styled washer, easy to clean. i You can choose, from the various 1,' & models, the Kelvinator Washer that U exhctly fits your needs and budget. Convenient terms can be arranged. o CUTS THE COST OF BETTER LIVING NASH.KELVINATOR CORP. Sales—Service 1022 15th St. N.W. Open Evenings Until Nine DI. 2701 This sequence of five pic- tures shows the superb form of Dorothy Poynton Hillin the graceful but dan- gerous FORWARD SOMER- SAULT off the high board. “Y PUT great emphasis on good digestion,” says Dorothy Poynton Hill, Camel smoker. “It’s a long way down when 1 dive from the high board,” Dorothy continues, “and if you add all the spins and twists I do—you can see why I enjoy Camels “for digestion’s sake.’” Mealtimes (right), and between meals, too, Dorothy pre- fers Camels. “I smoke whenever I want to, “’she says. ' Camels never jangle my nerves, and don’t irritate my throat.” By speeding up the flow of digestive fluids and increasing alka- linity, Camels give digestion a helping hand. Take your cue from the steady smokers. Make it Camels! They set you right! Beginnersarecau- tioned not to do this dive without first trying it on the suspended harness used in gyms to teach tumbling. i in, s TVa: quoted: ~ Portugal B14: ' Greece. % 3_was un- 5 held, fancy, 1936, | Poland, 18.97; Czechoslovakia, 3.40; Yugo- cember, 20.18-20. SECURITY for your BELONGINGS LONG DISTANCE MOVING Motor van removals, large or small quantities PACKING and Shipping by freight or express. parts of the world. Rates to all Insurance also. SILVER YAULTS RUG CLEANING FUMIGATION curiky 5tnragt Gflmpfl;g A SAFE DEPOSITORY FOR 47 YEARS HOUSEHOLD GOODS, SILVERWARE, ART 0 MADE FROM COSTLIER TOBACCOS Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS ««sTurkish and Domestic... than any other popular brand. Trustee Stand Inv D Trusteed Am Bk *‘B Trusteed Industry Shrs. Wellington Fund __ « FOREIGN MARKETS. ) LONDON. June 7 (.—Sentiment was improved today on the Stock Exchange resarding the gold-price ~situation and mining shares were firm and higher. Home Tails and oils advanced and the gilt-edzed group and foreign bonds held steady. In- dustrial stocks were in fair demand and trans-Atlantic securities also sold_higher. PARIS —Prices in the Bourse were gen- erally weak with government bonds lower, rentes_closed to R0 centimes down. Buez Canal lost 125 francs and Bank of France declined 80 francs. Royal Dutch Was an exception, advancing 55 francs. U. 8. TREASURY POSITION. By the Assoctated Press. The position of the Treasury June 4: Receipts. $21,642.907.85: e $20.007.802.05: lance. $1,781.020.- 343.90; cusioms recelpis for the month, Receipts for the fiscal year lsince July ). "$4.501.054.663.02; expenditures. $6.- 13.588.000. $2.635,978. There's hardly a stir on the surface of the water as Dorothy cuts trimly into it. It's a perfect dive. And it gives you a good idea ofhowhealthy Dorothy Poynton Hill's nerves are. SmieDDinR I DY DN SEBRBERRIZIRISB PLAYING spectacular golf. Ralph Guldahl averaged less than 72 strokes for 65 rounds of medal play —a newrecord! Speakingofthe strain of tournament golf, Ralph says: “Sure I like to smoke. But give me a ciga- rette that’s mild. I mean Camels.” BOOSTER for Camels.“I “ love all outdoor sports,” says Henrietta Donohue, an enthusiastic swimmer, golfer, and tennis player. “After going at top speed for several sets, I like to smoke & Camel. They are so mild, and yet I get such a delightful ‘lift.” INFORMATION wanted quick! Ray Jones puts in longhoursanswering ques- tions in Grand Central Ter- minal, N.Y. “A nerve-rack- ing job,” he says. “But I'm agood hand with knifeand fork.Smoking Camelshelps keep my digestion on the right track.” . including A 196.20 of emergency expenditure: of expenditures., $2.412.633,337.0( debt, $35.273.9{8,483.24. an inc $309.69: over tl revious $12.056.810.044.31. assets. .3 $825,475.985.16 of inactive gold. MONTREAL SILVER. MONTREAL. June 7 (P, ilver futures gooned steady. 10 lowey July. 44.80b; termber. ¢4.65b; Decepher, 44.705,