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Is FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1923. STARTED BY P. & R. Bodie Dome Test in Natrona County Down 200 Feet and Drilling Started on Simpson Ridge and in Baxter Basin Field * New operations feature the weekly drilling report of the Producers & Refiners. i The company is spudding in its well on Simpson Ridge, section 20-21-80, and is down 200 feet on its Bodie Dome wildcat, southwest of Casper in the Bates Hole country. In Baxter Basin, well No. 86 has just been spudded in. In the Salt Creek field the P. & R. Ising at 385 feet and weil No. 12, same erecting a rig at well No. 8, section | Section, is down to 2,025 feet. 15-40-79; rigging up to resume drill-| The Sherard Dome well, section ing on well No. 3, section 33 | 14-25-89, is drilling at 1,565 feet. and erecting a derrick for well No. $| The two Lost Soldier field wells on in the northeast corner of the south-| leases recently taken over by the! P. & R. from the Wyoming-Illinols,! east quarter of section 6-89-78. In the Salt Creek fleld, well No. 1,| $004 Progress 1s being made.- Well section 18-40-78 is cleaning out| N® 4 and No. 3. on section 11 are preparatory to being shot at 2,724| 20th down to 1,200 feet. feet. ‘Well No. 2 on section 14 in| baxter Basin well No. 1. section parte ae a Maa at 13-17-104, is drilling at 600 fect. The Hinos Crock geil im the ‘Big| , Het Marti of Cheyenne has taken Horn basin ts down to 2,785 feet and| quoce & Renee with poate ae the Thornton well, section 848-65, !8| jn Gearon cuieine i, ondauarters eee se. » 18) tn Casper, relieving R. W. Gibson. 5 at 1, . The latter will assume charge of one In the Ferris field, well No. 22, a| ot the company's wildeat operations Geep test on section 25-26-86, {s drill-! in the northern part of the state, Drilling Crew Leaves to Resume Picket Lake Test Immediate resumption of opera-) by the Texas Producing company in tions on the Anna Belle Wyoming| the Lost Soldier fleld. It is expected well on the Pickett Lake structure ot| that drilling on this sito, which is considered proved territory, will be- the Red Desert region, plans for) gin early next month, all arrange- which were announced recently, was| ments for the new work having been assured yesterday when W. B. Pat-| made by Mr. Patton on a trip to ton, president of the company, left| Rawlins, when he also inspected the for the field with a drilling crew and] Pickett Lake camp for the first time complete supplies for beginning work.| this year. Within a few days it is expected that] Both operations will be watched the bit will be pounding at the 2,400-| with interest by some 700 share- foot level, where work was suspended! holders in Casper, comprised largely last winter in a Ime formation be-|of refinery men. The Pickett Lake dome is considered one of the best A complete standard rig and equip-| prospects in the state and with a ment is also being moved by the| minimum amount of stock outstand- Anna Bell Wyoming company to ita| ing stockholders would benefit ma- 20-acre tract adjoining the acreage of| terialty in the event of a strike. Oil Good & Nutting recently taken over| and gas showings are said to be good. ; Meved to be over the oll sand. Market Gossip and Briefs On Operations in Oil Fields California Crude Goes East. EXTRA DIVIDEND DECLARED. NEW YORK, May 18.—The surplus NEW YORK, May 18—The Pen-| production of California crude oll is mock Oil company has declared an|fast finding its way to eastern re- extra dividend of ten percent in ad- pnariogt During the week ending ition to. the regular quarterly divi-| May 2 @ total of 1,100,000 barrels was shipped from California to Gulf and end, both payable June 26 to stock) atiantic coast ports as compared with of record June 15. 974,000 barrels the week before. — MART ACTIVE NEW YORK, May 14—Copper, Bteadier; electrolytic, spot and fu- tures, 15%@16%c. Tin, firm; spot) NEW YORK, May 17.—Wall street! and nearby, $42.87; futures, $43.12.| scene of two recent efforts to rig th Iron, easy; No. 1 northern, $30.00@| market by means of fake aeine at $82.00; No. 2 northern, $29.00@31.00;/ orders, has learned of additional ao- No. 2 southern, $27.00. Lead. steady: tivities of a band seeking to profit by spot, $7.25. Zinc, steady; East St. trickery. Louls spot and nearby delivery,) p eterred shareholders of the Quak $6.70@6.75. er Oats company, it was learned, have Piggly Wiggly |r 2visresae sod anes Tut score of instances and advised that the company was if@suing new stock | Quick action by company officials pre- Not Confirmed vented any loss to stockholders. ————> MEMPHIS, Tenn., May 18-—Clar- HOTEL PROJECT 1 ence Saunders, president of Piggly Wigsly Stores, Inc., would _ neither effirm nor deny that the Natlonal Tea company was the purchaser of the Chicago Unit of the Piggly Wis- gly, which Mr. Saunders has an- nounced had been disposed of for a consideration of more than a mil-' y or Gratiot of the Wyoming Fi on dollars. nance corporation denied this morn- ing that he and H. C. Barber of Lan- Mitk Complaints der contemplated building a hotel on Are Dismissed the property on the northeast corner of East Second and Durbin streets. did not have option on tho property, which is owned by the Methodlst church, WASHINGTON, May 117—The fed- ral trade commission announced that it had dism'ssed without nreju dce ts complaint against the He! Yetia Milk Condensing Compan; Highland Ils, and same 45 other con- densed milk manufacturers as inter- vYening respondents. The comp‘aint alleged that the practice of these companies in guananteeing against Price declines was an unfair method of competition. = WAN UNDERREAMERS: Valuation of Railroad Low, WASHINGTON, May 18. — Tho terstate Commerce Commission upon the property of the Great Northern railroad was described in a protest filed by the Great Northern company as “grossly inadequate to represent the value of the company’s property as of present date.” Substantially all material and"lab- or costa, the fF creased since 1916, on which dato miatasia e valuation engineers of the gov By po sceror Tt ernment based their figures. It was ; if added that land values also have in- LOSE NO CUTTERS, “AT YOURISUPPLY STORE creased and will continue to hold the higher level. Oil -:- Finance. -:- Bonds ~ NEW OPERATIONS ARE - New York Stocks Allied Chemical & Dye --...-- Allis Chalmers Car & Foundry Hide & Leather Prd. Internationa! Corp — Smelting & Refg. -- T and T. -: Consolidated Royalty. Cow Gulch Domino Bighorn | —____. B. T. Williams ---.. Frantz Fargo Gates Kinney Jupiter - Kinney Coasta’ - Coprer -----—-. Atl, Gulf and West Indies -- Baldwin Locomotive Baltimore and Ohio Bethiehem Steal 5 Chandler Motors Mike- Henry Mountain & Guilt New York Oil Chicagu, Mil and St. Paul Chicago, R. I. and Pac. Chino Copper - Colorado Fuel and Iron Crucible Steel Players Lasky — Western Exploration - 3.60 Wyo-Kan —_ Western States — Great Northern pfd. Illinois Central Inspiration Copper TnterHatioaial Mountain Producers -$ 16.00 $ 15.25/ Harvester —---. Glenrock Ofl 85 88 Int, Mer Marine pfd, ----- International Paper .. Invincible On Kennecott Copper -. Lou'svilee and Nashville Mexican Petroleum National Lead Miam{ Copper —. Middle States Oj1 Midvale Stee! Citles Service Com. - 160.00 162.00 New York Oil Mammoth Oil w Yorle Central --------s--- ‘Northern Pacifico Oklahoma Prod. and Ref. Pan American Petroleum Pennsylvania —. People's Gas Pure Oil ----. Ray Consolidated Copper |Sears Roebuck Southern Paciile -. —.---. Southern Railway Standard Oil of N. Studebaker Corporation Copper --~-. Texas and Pacific -. ‘Tobacco Proctucts Transcontinental tl United Retai! U. 8. Ind. Alcohol United States Rubber -------— United States Steel -.. Utah Copper --------—-. Westinghouse Electrio --- Willys Overland -------.------ American Zinc, Lead and Sm. -1345 Butte and Superior Cala Petroleum .. Montana Power Shattuck Arizona Chicago and Northwestern Maxwell Motors B -..---. Consolidated Gas -~..---~----- Great Northern Ore --—. American Linseed Oil SWINDLERS IN, Standard Oil Stocks and that 1 was necessary to turn the| old shares in, endorsed, { ‘a | Sale Report ‘[a:t em Sere een | [Prairie Of -—_—_-—-— Prairie Pipe ------- Solar Ref. .. BY INTERESTS NAMED Mr. Gratiot sald that the undertaking | had been considered but had been} abandonec, He further stated that he} Lance Creek Grass Creek Rock Creek -. Complaint Says Mule Creek valuation tentatively fixed by the In- NEW YORK, May 18.—There was no improvement in the demand for refined sugar today and prices were In second hand quarters is going on toes os low as $9.26 for fine granu- fined futures nominal. approximate 000 tons; July, $6.20; Septem: $5.80; March, otest said, have in-| Che Casper Daily Cribune 3 | Columbine Capitol Pete Lance Creek Royalty Lusk Royalty Picardy .-...- .. yalty & Producers Aimee one Tom Bell Royalty - Western Oil Y on NEW YORK CURB CLOSING Fourth 4%s -. Victory 4% Livestock Chicago Prices. U. S. Department of Agriculture) | against secondary specialties, many | for the year, weighed the entire list | and the uncertainty surrounding the business outlook. ‘Trading was on an| | American Cotton O11 slipped off frac- tionally to a new low. The tradi-| | tional “selling on the gocd news” | point. Foreign exchanges opened) - Stocks -: Grains -:- STOCK TRADING 5 IAREULAR Favorite Issues Make Good! Showing in Face of Many | Low Priced Stocks. NEW YORK, May 18—Pressure of which established new low prices| down in today’s stock market. Buy-| ers hesitated to enter the market in| the face of the wholesale liquidation| I scale, sales ap-| 000 shares. | exceedingly 5 proximating 45 NEW YORK, May 18.—Indecistve price movements characterized to-| day’s opening dealings on the stock} exchange. Heaviness was again ap- parent in the copper and chem! shares but the initial losses were limited to fractions. American Can advanced a point and U. S. Steel %, but Studebaker and Union Pacific yielded small fractions. Good buying power again was noted in Peoples Gas which added nearly a point to its previous four point gain this week. When the overnight selling orders had been disposed of, prices strength-| ened materially. Copper shares re-( covered all or part of their early losses and a good demand was noted for most of the equipments, steels| and oils, American Locomotive and| American Brake Shoe and Foundry| each advanced one point and Bald-| win %. Underwood Typewriter jumped five points to 160, a new top. Brooklyn Edison climbed 2% points, General Cigar 2, May Department) Stores 1%, and Stewart Warner} Speedometer one, Mathieson Alkali} dropped a point, DuPont 1% and followed the announcement of two extra dividends of fifty cents each on Fleischman Yeast, which dropped a} easier. Demand sterling was un-) changed at $4.62%. French francs dropped a point to 6.66 cents, and| German marks dropped to within %| @ point of the extreme low for all| time, selling at .0020% cents. Upturn Started by Crop Dam- dence. The opening, which varied on crop damage reports, failed to last Jin the face of predictions that a Trading was unusuglly quiet dur- CHICAGO, May 18—Hogs, receipts 'ns the morning and new buying was 35,000; slow, m tly 10 to 10 lower;| largely restricted to the customary Corn— top $7.85; bulk 160 to 240 pound aver-| leaders. A better inquiry prevalled ages $7.75@37.85; 250 to 325 pound butchers $7.50@$7.70; packing sows $6.25@$6.75; des'rable 110 to 130 co stocks, Operations on the long side wero restrained somewhat by pound pigs $6.50@$7.25; big packers! further lquidation of many low bidding 15 to 25c lower; heavy weight 81%! hogs $7.25@$7.75; medium $7.55@ 8% $7.85; light $7.50@$7.85; w----- 134% $6.775@$7.75; packing sows smooth 75B $6.50@$7.00; packing sows rough! 56% | $6.0034$6.60; killing pigs $6.00@ 51% | $7.35. Cattle recelpts 4,000; active; all killing c’asses generally steady to trong; top matured steers $10.35; few loads cholce handy and heavy steers $10.00@$10.25; bulk beef steers and yearlings $8.50@$9.65; stockers and feeders active; strong; clearance good late Thursday at $7.50@$8.00; veal calves mostly $9.50@$10.50 to: packers; upward to $11.00 and above to outsiders; desirable helfers mostly | $7.50@$8.50; bulk bologna bulls $5.25_ @$5.50. Sheep receipts 9,000; very slow;! around steady; bulk clipped lambs $15.00@$15.25; choice 83 pound aver. ages $15.40; handy weight ewes $7.50; few fed yearlings $13.50; asking high-| 2enia springers. Omaha Quotations. OMAHA, Neb., May 18.—U- 8. De- parement of Agriculture.)—Hogs—Re- cepts, 9,000; fairly active, mostly | 5@10c lower; bulk packing sows. $6.10@6.25; bulk butchers, $7.10@7.25: top, $7.35. Cattle—Receipts, 2,200; all classes generally steady; bulk beef steers, $8.50@9.50; top steers and yearlings, $10.00; bulk she stock, $6.50@8.2 bulk bologna bulls, $4.75@5.00; best| feeders included, $8.25. Sheep— Receipts, 6,500; lambs| steady to 10c higher; fed clipped. $14.75@16.00; California spring lambs, $16.75; sheep and feeders, steady; shorn ewes, $7.50; no feeders included Denver Prices. DENVER, Colo., May 18.—Cattle— Receipts, 3,300; market steers, $7.00@9.35; cows and heifers,| $3.60@8.50; calves, $4.50@13.50; stock- ers and feeders, $6.00@7.75. Hogs—Receipts, 930; market steady. close lower; top, $7.35; bulk, $7.00@ 7,30. Sheep — Receipts, 2,600; market steady; wooled lambs, $15.00@16.00; lambs, $13.00@14.00; ewes, 50, Potatoes CHICAGO, May 18.—Potatoes, dull; receipts, 71 cars; total U. 8. ship- ments, 613; Wisconsin sacked round whites, $1.00@1.05 cwt,; fancy, $1.15 ewt.; Wisconsin and Michigan bull round whites, $1.15 cwt.; Minnesota sacked whites, sacked Russets, asking $1.90 cwt.; new stock slightly stronger; Florida barrel Spaulding Rose, No. 1, $7.75@ 8.00; No. 2, $5.50@5.75; Alabama Triumphs, 100 pound sacks, No. J, $5.00@5. mostly $6.25; No, 2, $3.50@3.75. eas ET Silver NEW YORK, May 18.—Foreign bar silver, 6644; Mexican dollars 60%. ter. Chemical common and preferred, Vir- ginia, Carolina Chem!cal common and| preferred, Davison Chemical, Inter-| national Agricultural preferred and allied Chemical; the net losses rang-| ing from 1% to five points. DuPont| also was weak, losing 3% points. | Call money opened at 4% per cent. | In the early afternoon, representa. tive shares fluctuated feebly, but they made a good showing in the face of the acute weakness of many low priced stocks. A few of the mar- ket leaders were strong. including] Gulf States Steel, Anaconda, Amer!-| can Smelting, Cuba Cane su | ferred, International Paper, Products A and Reynolds tobacco “B" but speculators appeared unwilling to buy freely because of the uncertain- ties surrounding the business out-| look. International Agricultural preferred dropped 7% points, Virginia Carolina Chemical preferred 5%; All'ed Chemi- eal ahd American Agricultural Chem- {eal preferred 3% and Phoen!x Ho- slery and Sears Roebuck 3 points, The closing was heavy. Operators for the advance abandoned their ef: forts to get prices up in the late af- ternoon when late selling of numerous specialties increased. Central Leather common and preferred, Famous Play-| ers common and preferred, United| States Realty, American Woolen, American Writing Paper preferred, declined two to three points, ee es epee areas Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, May 18.—Foreign ex-| changes, easier, Quotations in cents:| Great Britain, demand, $4.62%4; cables, 4.62%; 60-day bills on banks, 4.60%. France, demand, 6.65%; cables, 6.66%. Italy, demand, 4.85%4; cables, 4.86.| Belgium, demand, 5.73; cable 3% Germany, demand, .0020%; cables,| 0020 Holland, demand, 39.10; cables, 39.13. Norway, demand, 16.30. Sweden, demand, 26 Denmark, demand, 18.57. Switzerland, demand 18.02, Spain, demand, 16.22. Greece, emand, 1,90. Poland, demand, .0021. Crecho-Slovakia, demand, 2.97. Ar- gentine, demand, 26,13. Brazil, de- mand, 10.40. Montreal, 97 6-14. for various public utilities and tobac-| Jul: *|Swedish industrial enterprises which recommendation involves more gen- eral recognition of labor unions, while |tablished in industrial plans of 25 or measure is approved by the author. than three representatives of the em- ployer. It shall be the duty of the op- eration council to utilize the technical experience of the individual workman employer must furnish the council with necessary information regarding production. The council also may pass on questions of change in the equip- ment and methods of the plant. Butter and Eggs CHICAGO, May 15.—Dutter, lower; creamery extras, 49%c; standards, 41c; extra firsts, 3914@40c; firsts, 38% @ase; neconds, 37@38 Eggs, higher; receipts, 37,154 cases; firsts, 24 @244 ordinary firsts, 22@22%c; miscell %4 @24c; storage pack extras, ; storage pack firsts, 26%4¢ inidlate | The boots of a deep-sea diver weigh forty pounds each, the soles being of lead. to keep him upright in the wa. oun, LOSE GROUND age Reports Not Sustained in Market. CHICAGO, May 18.—With weather | conditions favorable, wheat showed a| tendency to sag in price today during the early dealings. Crop damage re ports from the southwest remained | serious, but failed to bring in much} buying. On the other hand, profit) taking sales were more or less in evi- from unchanged figures to %c lower, with July, $1.17% to $1.17% and September, $1.15% to $1.15%, was followed by moderate downturns all around and then something of a rally. Subsequent upturns, based chiefly warm wave would follow showers er a good portion of tho winter wheat belt. ‘The close was heavy, 1%e to 1%e net lower, with July, $1.16% to $1.16% and September, $1.14%. Corn and onts were relatively firm, owing to smallness of receipts, After opening at 3c decline to %c advance, July, 80%e to 80%e, the corn market ‘ored slight general gains. Forecasts of a warm wave had @ rish effect later. Corn closed un- led, %@%c to 1e net lower, July, se’ 80c. Oats started at %4@%c off to a like advance, July, 43%c to 43%@%ec, and held near to the initial range. Lower quotations on hogs made the provision market easy, Cash Grains. CHICAGO, May 18.—Wheat—No sales. Corn—No. 3 mixed, 83@83%c; No. 2 yellow, 86@87%c. Oats—No. 2 white, 45@46%ic; No. 3 white, 44@46c. . Rye—No. 2, 79%c. Barley—T0@73c. Timothy seed—95.60@6.25. Clover seed—$12.00@17.00. Pork—Nominal Lard—$11.05. Ribs—$! Wheat— Open. High Low Close 1.109% 1.20% 118 1.18 1.17% 1.18% 116 1.16% 1.16% 1.16% 1.14% 1.144% Sept. May - 81% 80% 80% 81% 79% 80 Sept. 80% .78% 78% Oats— Livestock -:- All Markets WHEAT PRICES Czechoslovak Rep.. §s ctfs -. Dominion of Canada, 5s, French Republic, 95% Kingdom of Be'gium, 8 100% Kingdom of Norway, 68 ———. Soe Oak, Republic of Chile, &s, 1946 — 103% State of Queensland, 63 100% U. K. of G. B, and T, 53% 97 Bethlehem Steel con., 68, ser., A -—-——---—. Chicago, Burlington and Quincy ref., 68 A -——— Chicago, Mil., and St. Paul ev., 44 Chile Copper, 6a ~~ Goodyear Tire 8s, 1941 — Great Northern 7s A Montana Power, 5s A — Northern Pacific ref. Northwestern Bel] T Southern Pacific ov., 48 Union Pacific first 45 -. rate, 4%; closing bid, 4%; offered at, acceptances, mixed collater: 4-6 months, 6@6%; prime commercial paper, 5. Hot Springs Springs business interests have pre-| sumption at the smelters, district pared to petition the department of! operators are confident of a rushing the interior to provide better drainago! pusiness. of the mountains surrounding this) Ioxperts who last winter estimated city as a precaution against @ recur-| the output for the district at between rence of the flood which swept down) 55,000,000 and 60,000,000 tons have Monday and, with a subsequent fire,| raised their maximum estimates. 6,- caused the worst catastrophe in the! 990,000 tons. In case this latter fig- history of this little mountain town.| ure is reached there will be a new been determined. It is estimated how-| rake Superior mines. ever, that {t will aggregate well over! with the Lake Superior docks al- & million dol! May -—. 43 ABM ADH 48H priced shares especially the farm im-| July 48% 43% 42K 42% | plement, fertilizer and chemical 4e-| Sept. ALK 41% 40% 40% f sues, many of which established new, Lard— : aa eta low figures for the year. July ------1112 11.20 1142 11.17 Among these recording _ minimum | Sept. 11.42 11.43 11.42 rrices were International Harvester, | Ribs— American Cotton O!l common and 817 912 9.17 preferred, American Agricultural, 40 0 9-40 SWEDISH WORKERS ASK VOTE IN MANAGEMENT OF COMPANIES, REPORT STOCKHOLM, May 18.—Organized influence and participation of work- men in the direction and control of employ 25 persons or more is recom- mended in a plan just submitted to) the government by the official com- mittee on Industrial Democracy. The forcing the employer to heed admin- istrative and executive advice from his employes. According to the committeo's scheme, so-called councils may be es- moro employes, providing such a ized labor union concerned, In the larger concerns these councils shalt consist of three to nine delegates for the workmen, sitting with not more for the god of the concern, and the SUGAR FILLS WAREHOUSES CHICAGO, May 18.—Eight Chicago warhouses, the Chicago Herald and Examiner said today, are filled with wo hundred million pounds of sug hat paper stated its investigators were told that sugar is coming in at the rate of 35 carloads a day, 800 sacks to a car. Box cars loaded with sugar, were lined three Ceep on side tracks at ono warchouse, the paper said. | SWAN UNDERREAMERS \T YOURSUPPLY STORE Bric SF Or THE PIPE FOLLOWS —The Mendenhall Torpedo company/ the 64,000,000 ton record mark set in of this city will transport nitrogly-! 1916, cerin in an aeroplane, according to| New ships have been added to the an announcement of officials of the| Great Lakes fleet, increasing the sea- company. The first cargo, according; board capacity several million tons. to present plans, wil! be six quarts} Ope of the nitroglycerin, which will bo| all available laborers for work in the taken from this city to an {solated| huge open-pit mines which supply field near Aztec, Mexico. This method most of the or PAGE NINE. 4 99 1952 RAILW. merican Smelting, 6s 89 American Sugar, 68 ~— eo 103 American Telephone and Telegraph cv. 114% American Tel. and Tel., col. tr, bs -—-—. 7% Anaconda Copper, 7s, 1938 Canaconda Copper, & nd Ohio, 45 -. 8. Rubber bs — —. Utah Power and Light, 5s Western Union 6%s -. Westinghouso Electric 7s — of transportation will be used in pref- erence to the usual means of travel, Money |due to the rough roads leading to the |fleld, according to the announcement of company official NEW YORK, May 18.—Call money, last Ioan, 4%; call loans against) von". cots.) TN IRON ORE SHIPMENTS DULUTH, May 18.—Encouraged by reports from the lower lake smelters that fron ore is being melted on a oe2 larger scale than had been antich To Petition pated, controllers of the Lake Su- | perior mining district and its kindred = industries are looking forward to a For Drainage season of new records. Everything depends upon the d= mand for ore from the Lake Erie : ports, but with the dock stores dimin- HOT SPRINGS, Ark., May 18.—Hot} ishing sharply under the heavy con- ‘The éxact property damage has not/ record for annual shipments from tho ready piling up with cargoes for tha SRR on 1 es freighters, experts assert there is suf- “SOUP" BY AEROPLANE. ficient equipment and man-power WICHITA FALLS, Texas, May 18.) available to force the movement past ors are reported to be hiring PIPE WRENCHES Double Acting Jaws Non Slip Adjustment Will Not Grush Pipo TWO IN ONE it of Monkey oh Jaws to fit Note Frame Construction Guaranteed un- breakable under any strain or side pull— Jaws cannot get ont of line— Use a Larco on your next job—and get a new kind of wrerch satisfaction. Pipe wrench sizes—S’, 10", 14",18", 24" Your supply house has them or write LARCO WRENCH & MFG, CORPORATION CHICAGO, ILLINOIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIAL 20 Per Cent Off on All Boys Suits Sizes 4 years to 36 long Trousers. Double reinforced seats and knees. Come in and look them over. Public Market Clothing & Shoe Store Fifth and Center