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PAGE TEN MARKET GOSSIP AND FIELD) NEWs)) MONTANA OPERATIONS. REVIEWED = BILLINGS, Mont., April 14.—At least two off tests will be Fam put down near the Canadian boundary line in northern Mon- Convolids ted, ‘Royalty tana to test the upper end of the Sweetgrass arch structure, | Capitol Boston ag NE. ts Buck Creek . Burke Biach Tail on which the Gordon Campbell-Kevin syndicate recently Comma nasa aaa strack oil, Livestock Mart Chicago CHICAGO, April 14—{United States Bureau of Markets).—Cattle receipts 2,000; beef steers uneven, mostly steady; g008 and choice kinds scarce; early top $8.85; bulk $7.40@840; she stock, bulls and stockers generally steady; veal calves strong; packers tho balk of light and medium se 18,000; fairly active, mostly steady to 10c lower than yes terday’h average; big packers holding back; 'top $10.60; buik desirable 200 to 280 pound averages $10.25@10.50; pigs slow; strong weights steady; oth- era-weak: packing sows slow to weak. Sheep receipts 6,000; nearly half packer direct; fat lambs selling steady to 2&c lower; wooled lambs mostly around $15.25; top shorn lambs $13.50 hippers; others largely $13.00@ few head wooled ewes early big 25-eents lower at $9.50. Omaha Quotations OMAHA, Neb. April 14—{Untted States Bureau of Markets).—Hogs re ceipts 6,000; steatty to 10 cents high- er; strong weight butchers up most; 180 to 219 pound butchers $10.10@ 2020; top $10.20; bulk 215 to 325 pound butchers $10.00@10.15; packing grades $2009.75. Cattle’ recepits 1,200; steady to I5e higher; steady to 750 lower; mostly steady. Sheep receipts 2000; lambs weak; best wooled lambs $14.80; bulk elipped lambs $12.40@12.60; sheep and feed- ers steady; shearing lambs $14.00@ 14.50. beet steers veal calves other classes Denver Prices. DENVER, Colo., April 14—Cattle receipts 400; market steady; beef steers 6.25@7.50; cows and heifers $4.75@7.25; calves $8.00@11.50; bulls $2.50@425; stockers and feeders $6.00@7.25. Hogs recepits 600; market steady; top $10.30; bulk $10.00@10.25. Sheep receipts 4,500; steady; lambs $13.50@14.75; ewes $8.75@9.50. ——— Butter and Eggs. CHICAGO, April 14.—Butter high- er; ereamery extras 37c; firsts 33%@ 36c; seconds 31@32%; standards 37c. Eggs steady; receipts 25,324; firsts 33%4c@33%c; ordinary firsts 21% @22c; miscellaneous 22% @23c; storage pack- ed extras 26@26%c; storage packed firsts 25%c. ———— Sliver. NEWYORK, April 14.—Foreign bar sitver 653%; Mexican, dollars 50%c. FIVE TRIBES 15 DOWN o10 FEET With the Shannon sand cemented ata depth of 310 feet, the Five Tribes Petroleum company, an organization which is making an fmportant test of the east end of the Salt Creek field, is marking time before the bit starts its long pound to the Wall Creek sands which should be encountered at a depth of approximately 2,500 feet. Drilling on the-test will in all prob- ability be resumed tomorrow. No in- terruptions will then occur until the first wall Creek formation is reached. With favorable conditions the well should be completed during the early, part of June, Owing to the fact that the Five ‘Tribes company is being financed en- tirely by local interests the Taylor & Clay company is assisting in market- ing the stock to insure an early and successful completion of the hole. Se st HOSPITAL BILL PASSES SENATE authorizing tion of $17,000, 900 for hospital facil!- ties for disabled service men, was passed unanimously by the Senate to- day and now goes to President Hard- ing for final approval. according to Sweetgrass, Mont, structure extends into Alberta several miles and other rigs} =® reports. The ‘will go up farther south this spring. The Sunburst Oil & Gas company of Great Falls has contracted for drilling of two wells on the Sunburst division of the arch and rig ts up for the first of the holes »Stx miles east and north of Gordon ipbell-Kevin well. ‘The Hi over 1,680 a age and will also driil this year. Montana drilling activities in gen- eral are on the increase and the season should bring forth some interesting developments if no sensations. on continues to seep tnto the well of the Bitter Root of! company near Corvallis but operations are being held up by delay in the arrival of a new string of tools, Pintele, Mont., 33 miles from Broad- ng, is interested In the test which the Northwestern Oil company of Newark, ©. :s preparing to start five miles southeast of there. Seven miles northwest of Belle Fouche a second test has been started on the J. C. Lingren ranch after en- countering good showings of oil in a well abandoned at 1,050 feet. The Absaroka Oil company has re- sumed work on its well in section 34- 15-30 of the Antelope Creek field, ad- joining Cat Creek, on section 26 of the same field. H. H. Schwartz has spud ded in for a new well near the Frantz- Homestake producer. Drilling at the Nine-Sfille well near Hardin will be under way again svon arrangements having been perfected te carry the test 200 Ofeet deeper. ‘Western States Oil & Land company will soon spud in its well No. 7 at Soap Creek about half a mile south of the discover well. Rumors that the Rice & Hoffman test had found pro- duction have not been confirmed. The Western States, it ts reported, will complete the Dox test, which encoun- tered both water and ofl. B. E. Le- dow is down 2,158 feet with a weil on the north end of the structure and drilling suspended last fall will soon be resumed. Reliable report from the Craig & Batcheller well on the Sage Hen struc- ture is that the bit is working in gray, sandy shale at 1,178 feet and presum- ably near the top of the first sand. On an adjoining quarter section, the Tip O'Neil well is making good prog- ress in depth. Upon the outcome in these two wells the future of the Sage Hen structure depends. Pipeline Plans Pending. ‘While no atinouncements have been made by the Western Pipeline com- pany as to its Casper terminal, it is understood that a deal is under consid- eration and that announcements will Domino elkhorn spacscese E. T. Wiliams amar} Frants ....-—----.. 2 Of company has taken | Mf! of the Sunburst acre-| ¥ ray Riverton " Refg. Royalty ans Producers Prod. ana Refr’s . Wind River Refg. United Pe . WyoKans Wyo-Tex . Western Oil Ficids - Western States - ¥ OU .... NEW YORK conn CLOSING Mountain Producers .$ 13.00 $ 13.25 Merritt .. 11.25 Glenrock Oil 1.08 Salt Creek Pras. 44.12 Salt Creek Cons - Prod. & Retra. . Marine Mutual S. O. Indiana . Cities Service Com. LIBERTY BONDS 8% .----———— 6:00 oar 9125 206.00 be made before the end of the week if the transaction is completed. No in- timation was given of the prospective location. ‘The pipe for the new etghtinch line will start moving from Youngs- town, Ohio, tomorrow. The White Transportation company will handle the pipe here. Contracts have not yet been let for trenching or connecting the pipe. ALLIES DIVIDED ON RUSS POLICY ATWORLD CONFERENGEAT GENOA (Continued trom Page One) trials. Both conditions are confessions of timidity.” ‘Lenine proceeds to ask whether any bourgeoise government would allow the representatives of the three inter- nationales to attend trials of its polit- ical opponents. He adds that althouch Karl Radek and M. Bucharin, both of whom attended the socialist confer- ‘ence in Berlin acted inco! y “we must adhere to the agreement and draw from ft the lesson that the bour- roisie diplomats proved sniarter than our own and there the next wo rust ‘negotiate and) maneuver more clevcr- ly.” FRENCH KEEP CLOSE WATCH ON DEVELOPMENTS. PARIS, April 14—(By The Assoc!- ate Press).—Premier Poincare and bis cabinet are following closely the pro- ceedings at Genoa, in view of circum- stances"“which are taken in official cir- cles here as indicating tha* the Soviet ceiecates are determined to introduce the idea of disarmament at every op- portunity and that the Gerniens are seeking a chance to link the question of reparations w‘th the economic re- construction of Zurope. The situation at Genoa, as under- stood by the foreign office, is that the allied delegations are seeking to find a basis for a practical start in the economic upbuilding of Russia, separ- ate from all political issues, while it is felt that the Germans and Russians are more and more aiming to mingle politics with economics. Therefore several meotings of the French cabinet have been held in the past few days to consider that dispatches from M. £rfioeiemmentens 1-4 Japanese, 4425 -- -- Japanese, 4s Kelty Springfield; ss Norway, 88 Queensland. 7s . Swift, 7s, 1925 .... Switt, 7m, 1931 . Swiss. §s Western 5 Western Union, 6%s Foreign ‘* NEW YORK, April 14.--Great Brit- ain demand 4.41%; cables 4.41%. 60 day bills on banks 4.39. France de- mand 9.28%; cables 9.29. Italy de mand 5.44; cables 6.44 Belgium de- mand 8.54%; cables 8.55. German de- mand 33%; cables 34. Holland demand 37.92; cables 37.95, Norway demand 18.65. Sweden demand 26.00. Den- mark demand 21.25. Switzerland de- mand 19.46. Spain demand 15.53. Greece demand 4.50. Poland demand 02%. Czecho-Slovakia demand ‘1.92. Argentine demand 35.87. Brazil de- mand 1: Montreal 997% = Mary Pickford. whose present in- come has been estimated at $700,000 a year, received a Whe of less than $35 @ week i nthe early days of her career before the screen. Teaco. ,Barthou, head of the French delega- tion at the conference. M. Barthou’s attitude thus far has met with approval, and he has been promised tho support of the govern: ment in case he finds it necessary to take radical action to prevent politics from creeping into the discussions of economic and financial questions. GERMANS GRATEFUL FOR POPE'S EFFORTS. GENOA, April 14—Dr. Wirth, the German chancellor, who heads the Berlin delegation to the economic con- ference today visited Monsignor Sig- nori, archbishop of Genoa, to express appreciation of and gratitude for the interest displayed by Pope Pius in the work of the conference. This alreacy had beneficially affected the gathering, said Dr. Wirth. Germany, added the chancellor, was looking with satisfaction upon the ef- ‘forts of the pontiff toward universal “Only by following the advice ‘of Pope Benedict, confitmed by Pius XI, can the world again find the peace it has lost,” the chancellor concluded. FINANCIAL ‘TANGLE BROUGHT TO FRONT. GENOA, April 14.—(By The Associ sted Press.)}—Europe’s financial tan- gle was brought to the front for con sideration at tocay’s sessions of the Genoa conference, further discussion of Russian affairs having been post- ‘poned until tomorrow. This special committee, appointed yesterday, comprised representatives of virtually every European country except Russia and its members are re- puted to be the leading financial ex- perts of the continent. They are ex- pected to devise practicable plans for TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY. WANTED—Truck or auto driving; have had two years’ experience; will do other work. Address box A-186, ‘Tribune. 4-4-2t* FOR SALE—Bargan in a ladies’ new blue tailor-made suit, misses size 18; cost $60, will take $32.50. Phone 1088W before 6. p. m. 4-14-tf FOR SALE OR TRADE—Four-room house; mocern except heat; store jon rear of lot; now leased for one year at $40 per month; will trade for Ford car and $1,000 in cash, balance on good contract; pay out like rent. Call 1335 South McKinley street, FOR SALE— Cheap or trade; Stutz racing model (Bear-Cat) two extra wire wheels; motor-meter, clock and ether accessories; will consider trade on other car; can be seen at Post- office, Mills, Wyo. 414-1) FIRST class dressmaking remodeling or designing; reasonable prices. Phone 1859W. 413-3t fhe Casper Dally Cribune FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1322. FLOOD MENACE IS UNABATED Three-Fourths of Beardstown Standing Under Water and Situation at Cairo, Iil., BEARDSTOWN, ML, Apri April 14- 14.—Waters of the Illinois river continued rising today and three-fourths of the popu- lation of this city of 8,500 have been driven from their houses or*were residing on the second floors. the city is under water. So far no relief has been requested except for hip boots. % | straightening out Europe's economic |™orning expecting the arrival of a machinery. Louis Rarthou’s address before th» English and American newspaper correspondents yesterday, the report of which spread quickly through con ircles, was widely commented morning as indicating that| while persistently concilta-| Franve tory, is determined to play no seconé fiddle at Genoa. On tho contrary, the impression is strong that Franco will insist to the bitter end to her “right to live” as the French put it colloquially. ‘The head of the French delegation, who is one of this country’s most per- suasive , Was never in better form than when he scored those 1235 | whom he changed with unjustifiably | es from their homes. An appeal was indicting France as a militaristic na- tion. After sketching France’s contri- bution to civilization in the arts, liter- ature and science, he added: “It ts the very existence of intet- lectual France which is at stake and | we are vain enought to believe that the world still needs France. We are not excited; we are calm and reason- able and ready to work in the great task of saving Europe, for work, not words, is the great need of the hour. France wishes to be judged by her j acta, not words.” POWER PLANT ENGINEER DEAD (Continued from Page One) iscovery before a substitute for Cisco was in control of the engines. The gun with which Cisco—if he were a suicide, and there is no suggestion of probability that hand other than his own discharged the weapon—had hung ‘for months, loaded, on the wall of the office. Supposition is that Cisco, his plan for gplf-destruction mapped out, abandoned the engines, walked past other employes without their mak- ing note of his passage, took the gun fro mthe wall, seated himself on the edge of a chair, placed his forehead against the muzzle of the wéapon Is Serious Swan Patented Underreamer THE TOOL THAT NEVER FAILS— THE SWAN —oses no cutters in the hole, Half of the area of tol Crowds waited until 3 o'clock this supply of boots from £t. Louis and | when they came scrambled for them | many parts of the city ts possible only }in boats or boots. Railroad tracks of the Chicago,| (Seal) Burlington and Quincy, the only road s'0 able to operate trains here, were |threatened hy the rising waters last j night. | During the night, thirty more fam!- ANNU. | lies were compelled to leave their NOTICE “OF THE a homes. SCHOOL DISTRICT eoprigacs i —— The annual meeting of |. CATRO, TIL, April 14—Refugees| voters of School District i 2, in! are coming into Cairo from the dis- State of | |trict north of the city where rising seep water has driven 100 negro fami- iy. HAZEL CO! Clerk of the District Court. Publish March 3, 10, 27, 24, 31, Apr. 7, 14, 1932. (H&M) leaves a smooth level shoukler on which to set pipe, & ~~. —reams a perfectly straight hole, the City of Weematng. ‘on —leaves no knots or lumps on wall Monday, the®ist day of May, 1922. begin | made today to the Red Cross to send | tents to shelter the refugees, ‘The Ohio river has remained above | the 50 foot stage for 18 ¢ays, which |exceeds previous records, and seep water has risen to an unprecedented | height. At Cape Girardeau the levee still was holding today, and it was bellev- ed by engineers that it had been sufficiently strengthened to with. stand the crest of the Mississippi flood, which is not expected to exceed 36.5 feet. —will do your underreaming bet- ter and at a less cost than any ™ other on the market. You Van Bay or Rent One From Any of Our ~ © Branch Stores ‘ ‘THE BRIDGEPORT MACHINE CO. 75,000 ACRES FLOODED TODAY, M'CLURE, Il, April 14.—A report received stated the levee where the Big Muddy river enters the Missis- stppi about sixty miles north of here gave way shortly before noon, and that 75,000 acres of land are threat- ened. Railroad officials had advised residents to move to high lands. and by straining an arm—it was a long reach—pushed the trigger. His body plu forward across the threshold, with the head and should- ers projecting into the main room of the plant and with the gun, still halfgrasped by his dead fingers, lying across his breast. Fragments of his skull were blown through a window beside the desk, into the street beyond. Cisco was in poor health and is known to have been very despondent since he consulted a physician two days ago. He was unmarried and little regarding him is known here --+-on them for oe Name ...---+-+-s--ereese Street and No. .,----.--- x. of AT These Suits are more? At a great big saving. windows and you will CALLA LALAMAAAA badd did dtd, TILILLLLL MD at the values we are offering. YOUR EASTER NECK TIE AND FURNISHINGS STAR 260 SOUTH CENTER ST. LAM LPP OE EPPL ELAR D ELE LSS DS One More Shopping Day Before Easter Take Adveatage of Our SPECIAL EASTER OFFERING IN MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S SUITS Come in and look them over. We know we can please you. JUST THINK OF IT A Sis Set Suit with extra Trousers — strictly All-Wool and hand-tailored, in pin checks or pin stripes, at $35.00. Why pay Mothers! We Can Out- fit Your Boy Head Lamps $7 Pai Connecting Rod—$1.30 JUST RECEIVED A Large Shipment of exw FORD van Brodie Rubber Co, i “Your Accessory House” Phone 1203 Tribune Bldg. arr Chad dé he hed deh he *35 positively the best values offered anywhere. ee ee eh hh al hhh did hhahahad hk hada han < WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF Garden and Lawn Tools WE CAN FILL YOUR WANTS Bets COMPLETE. Attention! Ladies We have just received a shipment: of Ladies’ Boudoir Slippers in suedes, cushion padded, fancy trimmed, in pom poms or straps. Positively a $2.50 value. Our Pricé $1.15 Watch our be surprised \ IILELLLLLLILLLLLLLLLLLLILLLELLLLLLLLL EL ARE HERE. CLOTHING hee CAMPBELL HARDWARE CO. 147 South Center Phone 425 id Ld Chae LLL Lt LL ftp EURNATENARNEYE 2 ee