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Oil MIDWEST D ANOTHER eae 4 “Mountain and Gulf well No. 1-A, p> 0-79, Salt Creek, is the only west completion for the week. “There was no flow when the sand drilled through and prepara- are now being made for Doting. An account of Midwest ling operations is given as fol- Basin Field—Well No. 2 Elk still having trouble with crooked due to formation; 350 ft deep. Creek Field—Well No. 19-A y, rotary; 1,010 ft. deep; mud. casing. ‘ell No. 19-A Meeteetse, 2,850 ft.; ning out and working pipe. er Basin—Well 6-X, NEY 11- 04; 2,740 ft. deep and drilling on rreamer lug. olden Eagleo—Well No. 1, SW% 5-97, 2,520 ft. deep and Grilling. ands in Big it the Utah Ol Refining com- ly of Salt Lake City is seeking equire Big Piney ofl lands, is n in the following article from Big Piney Examiner: Word was received by the miner on going to press this through what seems to be mtly authoritative sources Charles Lackey has finally con- mated a isfactory deal with Utah Oil, a unit of the Midwest ining company. Details of the jon are lacking but it is tood that the above company bought the w from Lackey some of the adjoining property he Cretaceous Oil company for Ih bonus of $25,000 plus $1,009 barrel capacity of the well to be jputed on a barrelage basis on a y test. In addition to this an| ON, Mass., Nov. 80. — The mmercial Bulletin will say to- moderate demand for wool jtinues and prices are very firm- throughout the list, the tendency of prices so far be observed, still upward. ufacturers réport light weight as rather indifferent but fare buying to cover some re- business and also, it wou'd ap- in anticipation of heavy ight demands. Whether the wywelght season will justify wy purchase at this time, how- , 1s a question on which there no definite opinion. The foreign markets are very oyant, Liverpool showing an ad- ce of par to ten per cent, most- about five per cent over the close London, Australia and New Zea- Ind still show an advancing tend- ey and prices at the River Plate) the Cape are fully firm. “Buying in the west has been ore or less halted through the cis- osition of growers and loca! deal- | to advance prices to a prohibi- ‘0 basis. The Del Rio, Texas, fall ols were sold at about the same FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1923 Finance RILLS IN PRODUCER Only One Completion Reported by Company for the * Week Just Ended and Preparations Are Made For Shooting ‘Well No. 1, SW% 11-45-97, rotary; 2,050 ft. deep. Shut down. Broke fly wheel on engine. Nieber—Well No. 1, SW%4 13-45-93, 3,445 ft. deep; underreaming 8%-in. North Casper Creek—Well No. 36, 37. 1,097 ft. desp; shut down. Skull Creek—Well No. 16-44-62, 3,687 ft. dee; Lakota at 3,668. Having trouble with bad hol New Mexico. Ambrosia Lake, well No. 31 5. NW 13-25-10, McKinley county; 1,876 ft. deep and drilling. Hogback, well No. 5 (8X) SE% 19-26-2, San Juan county, 763 ft. deep. In of] sand. Well flowing. Jones Dome, well No. 1 SW% 25- 12-23, San Miguel county, 18 ft. deep. Rigging up and spudding. San Mateo, well No. 1 SW\% 14- 14-8, McKinley county. Rigging up. Jtah Oil Refining After Piney Region 8 per cent royalty over the govern ment royalty figures in the deal in favor of Lackey and his associates. What appears to be most important is that the Utah Of! Refining com- pany must lay a pipe line to Kem merer or some other point on the raflroad jf their test justifies such an installation. “It will be remembered that Lackey brought In the well on May 29 this year which caused much ox- citement in the oil fraternity the result being that representatives of operating companies visited the fleit last summer with their field en- gineers. Since that time the Mid- west Refining, acting for their western subsidiary, the Utah O11, have been endeavoring to bring to a head a satisfactory deal mutually beneficial to both parties. Vool Prices Holding Firm; Aoderate Demand Is Seen Mohair is moderately active and ‘The Commercial Bulletin will pub- Ush the following wool quotations tomorrow: Domestic: Ohio and Pennsylvania fleeces; Delaine unwashed .54@.55%4; fine unwashed .48@.49; half blood combing .54@.55; % blood combing 53, and New York fleeces: all the important intermountain oil | * Bonds ene Stocks Caspet Dally Cridune Grain Livestock :: NEWS AND QUOTATIONS BY LEASED WIRE | Gy Wiem, a American American American American American American American Anaconda Atchison -..----------------- AtL, Gulf and W. Indies --.. Baldwin Locomtive ex div. -. Baltimore and Ofio Bethiehem Steel ex div. California Petro‘eum Canadian Pacific ex div. Central Leather Cerro de Pasco Copper Chandler Motors International Corp Locomotive ------- Smelting & Refs. - Sugar Chicago and Northwestern -- Chicago, Mil., and St. Paul pfd Chicago, R. I. and Pac. -. Chile Copper Chino Copper Consolidated Gas Corn Products ----.-. Cosden Ol Crucible Steel ------- Cuba Cane Sugar pfd --. Erie Famous General Asphalt General Electric General Motors Great Northern pfd Gulf States Steel Mineis Central Inspiration Copper International Harvester Int. Mer. Marine pfd ---—. International Paper -—----- 35 Invincible Olt .~---. — 10% Kelly Springfield Tire ~~. 30% Kennecott Copper 35 Lima Locomotive 65 Louisville and Nashville ssyn Mack Truck 84% Marland Oil --. 27 Maxwell Motorm - - 18% Middle States Of! - — 5% Missouri, Kan and Texas new 12 Missouri Pacific pfd - 27% New York Central - 1037 N. ¥., N.HL, and Ha -- 14% Norfolk and Western ex div. 103% Northern Pacific - 54% Pacific Oll ------- 42% Pan American Petroleum B-. 59% Pennsylvania ~ - 41% Pecp'es Gas - 95% Producers and Refiners - 28% Pure Oil --.- 19% Reading —~ 78% Republic Iron and Steel --. 48% Sears Roebuck -. Sonclair Con Of] - Southern Pacific ex div. ---- Southern Railway Standard Oi] of N. J. ----. Studebaker Corporation woow—-- 85 a-- 19 Tobacco Products A -.------ 90% Transcontinetal Oil --------. 2% Union Pacific ex div. - 131 Unite Retail Stores -------. 3 U. S. Ind. Alcohol --------—- Tinited States Rubber ------~ United States Steel --------- Utah Copper ~-.------------ ‘Teet'nghctine Electric Willys Overland American Zina Lead and Colorado Fuel and Iron ----. Michigan Delaine unwashed .52@.58; fine un-|yfontana Power -------------61% B washed .48. Wisconsin, Missourl and average New England: 44 blood .52; % blood 49@.50; % blood .47@.48. Scoured aris; Texas fine 12 months 1.25%1.30; fine 8 months 1.10@1.15. California northern 1.20@1.25; mid. dle county 1.10@1.15. Oregon eastern number 1, staple 1,30; fine and fine medium combing 1.20@1.25; eastern clothing 1.12@ 1.20; valley number 1, 1.15@1.18. Territory: Montana fine staple choice 1.30@1.32; 44 blood combing 1,20@1.25; % blood combing 1.05@ 1.08; % blood combing .88@.90. vel of values realized for the simr wools at San Angelo. According to figures collected by the American Petroleum Institute, Pacific Coast office, the total pro- duction of crude oil in California for October amounted to 24,576,400 bar-| rels, en average of 792,787 barrels per day. This is a decrease of 65,- 963 barrels per day under September production. Stocks increased dur- ing the month 2,852,942 barrels. The total stocks at the end of the month were 88,349,550 barrels. The total Market Gossip Pulled: Delaine 1.20@1.25; AA 1.10 @1.12; A supers 1.00. Mohair: Best combing .78.83; best carding .70@.75. California Production Is Falling Off at Rapid Rate stock increase for 1923, up to, Oc- tober 31, was 27,164,822 barrels. In- dicated consumption for October was decrease of 78,900 barrels per day under September consumption. Ninety-nine wells were completed during the month with an initia] daily production of 127,758 barrels, compared with 93 wells completed during September with an initial daily production 139,960 barrels. and Briefs On Operations in Oil Fields Texas Operations ‘The Texas Production company !s doing.no drilling in either Big Muddy | or Salt Creek. In the Lost Soldier district Good No. 2 is sidetracking 10-inch casing. Wertz No. 1 is fight- ing eavey formation at 2,115 feet. On the Dutton anticline well No. % is drilling at 200 feet. Billy Creek Test Failure. Well No. 4 which the Carter 91 company has been drilling on the Billy Creek structure, is producing water at a depth of 3,600 feet. The Carter Oil declares it was put down off structure. It is probable that well No. 3 on the same structure will be started up again. This hole stands at ap-| proximately 3,900 feet. It ts thour!.t ‘his @an be pushed to completion within the next two weeks. After going over the log and in-| vestigating bailings from the bottom of well No. 4, the conclusion is that what were thought to be the Wall Creek of Muddy sands are not oil sands at all, National Lead 126 Shattuclé Arizona ---------- 6% ——(-+-— Grass Creek Tachtlight -. Elk Basin .-. Greybull 60 Balt Creek aR Te" Big Muddy. -—-———-to acoso Mule Creek ---------—------- -40 Sunburst -~---.. a .70 Hamilton Dome ------------ .52% Standard Oil Stocks Bid Askol ANGIO = opeeeonnena ae 16% Buckeye - ~-—--—-- .73% -74% Continentat - --—. 38% Cumberland - --------1,10 ON PET DERE SAREE Ulinois - Indiana - Nat Tran Y Tran Nor Pipe ----——---1.00 Ohio Oll —---_-_---.. .64 Pratrie Oil ----—---.2.20 Prairie Pipe --------- -97 Solar Ref --.--. 1.70 Sou Pipe ------------ 91 8 O Kan .------—..- « 8 Oo Ky ----—. 8 O Neb _—--— SON Y ....--—-. 42% |/8:0 Ohio -__- 3.18 . 8.88 Union Tank --——---- .90 .95 LIBERTY BONDS. NEW YORK, Nov. 30.—Liberty bonds closed: Liberty 3%s, 99.22; first 4348, 98.06; second 4%s, 98.03; third 4%s, 99,02; fourth 4%s, 98.06; ' U. S. government 4%s, 99.17. Sugar LOCAL OLL SLUCKS Bid Asked Bri Mu 24 90 Consolidated Royalty 1.21 Cow Gulcn -.....---.. .03 DGS corewnsseees 0S £lkhorn <2 .03 E. T. Williams -._._ .44 Fargo at Frantz 4.75 Gates 07 Jupiter . - 00% Kinney Coastal .... .15 Lance Creek Royalty .01% Marine ~...--—--.... 2.00 Mountain & Guilt New oYrk Ott Picardy Preston ---.----—-.. .00% Red Bank --.....— 2.00 Royalty & Producers — .05 Sunset . ..-.-.--..-. .03 Tom Bel! Royalty ~~... .02 Western Exploration ~ 3.35 04 16 18 50 55 08 10 NEW YORK CURB CLOSING Tfountain Producers - 14.12 14.25 (lenrock O}} -.. 60 65 Salt Creek Pris. 17.87 18,00 Salt Creek Cons. 6.75 7.50 Mutual ~.... - 11.00 11.12 (ities Bervice Com._ 137.50 139.50 Livestock Chicago Prices CHICAGO, Nov. 80.—(U. S. De martment of Agriculture.}—Hogs— Receipts 45,000; strong to 10c higher than Wednesday's average; bulk good and choice 225 to 325-opund butchers 7.00@7.10; top 7.10; desir. able 150 to 210-pound averages most- ly 6.65@6.95; packing sows largely 6,.50@6.75; better grades woighty slaughter pigs 5.50@6.00; heavy- we'ght hogs 6.80@7.10; medium 6.75@7.10; light 6.50@6.90; light ght packing sows smooth packing sows rough 6.2: 6.456. 6.45; slaughter pigs 5.00@6.00. Cattle—Receipts 12,000; active; steady to strong: spots higher; odd lots fat steers and yearlings sorted out of show herds 12.50@13.00; few long yearlings 13.25; some weighty steers 12.75; most jort fed steers and. yearlings 8.25@11.00; rejatively long fed kinds 11.00@11.50; canners slow; other she stock moving; fat cows mostly short fed kin yearling beef heifers 9.5 strong weight bologna bull: ‘bulk vealers to packers upward to 10.00 and above to outsiders; stockers and feeders scarce, firm. Sheep—Recelpta 24,000; fairly ac- tive; fat lambs 25 to 50c lower; good and choice fat lambs 12.75@ 18.00; top 13.25; fat sheep slow; scarce, around 25¢ lower; no early sales feeding Iambs, Omaha Quotations OMAHA, Neb., Nov. 30.—{U. 8. Department of Agriculture.)—Hogs —Receipts 6,500;. market low and steady to strong; bulk good and choice 200 to 825-pound butchers 2.40@3.40; top 6.65; mixed loads carrying packing sows and lights 6.10@6.40; packing sows 5.75@6.60; rage cost Wednesday 6.22; weight ep Cattle—Recelpts $8,200; fed steers and yearlings generally*steady; bulk 10 to 1be lower; top steers 10.00; best yearlings 9.60; Dulk fed steers and yearlings 7.50@9.25; she stock and. bulls strong; bulk grass cows and helfers 4.00@5.50; canners and cutters 2.25@3.25; bologna bulls 3.00 @3.60; venls steady; top 9.00, few up to 9.50; stockers and feeders un- changed, mostly 6.50 to 7.00. Shvep—Receipts 8,000; lambs low, mostly 40 to 50c lower; early sales of wooled lambs 12.00@ 12.10; sheep strong; ewes top 6.49; top feeding lambs Denver Prices DENVER, Colo., Nov. 30.—(U. S. Department of Agriculture.}—Hogs —Receipts—1,000; 15 to 20c higher, medium to choice 185 to 215-pound averages 6.50 to 6.75; top 6.80; few Ught lghts 6.25; packing sows steady; mostly: 5. slaughter pigs steady to strong, mostly 5.50 to 6,00. Cattle—Rece!pts 2,000; calves 100; slow, around steady; medium beef steers 7.00 to 7.25; early sales cows 3.25 to 4,50; best held around 5.00; heifers 4.50 to 5.00; several loads held above 6.25; western bulls 2.85; plain canners 1.75; best feeders 7.30; bulk 6.70 to 7.30; horned stockers 6.25; odd choice vealers 8.50. Sheep—Receipts 4,300; opening sales fat lambs around 25c lower; late bids off more; best lambs 12.00 |flat, weighing 85 pound | steady; few fat ewes 6.01 lambs strong to 25c higher; four loads good and choice Colorado's 12.45 memo, Potatoes CHICAGO, Nov. 30.— Potatoes dull, receipts 54 cars; total U. 8. CHICAGO, —Butter| NEW YORK, Nov. 30.—Refined|shipments 630; no voles reported on higher; stand-| sugar was quiet and unchanged at/Northern white stock; Minnesota ards 49%; extra firsts 499.51; 5 for fine granulated, and North Dakota sacked, Red firsts A5@A6%; seconds 420.43. || s futures closed steady; ap-|river Ohios, U. $. number 1, 90c@ Eess unchanged; receipts 1,815! proxi ales 17,000 tons; Decem-|$1; Idaho sacked Ruralis U. S. rum cases; firsts 44@-47; ordinary firsts, be 4.50; May a5 e.49. 30; sacked Russets STOCKS RALLY IN LATE SALES Upward Trend Is General During Afternoon Ses- sion of Exchange NEW YORK, Nov. 30—Prices fiuc- tuated frregularly in today’s dull stock market until late afternoor. when practically the entire list strengthened in sympathy with the steady buying of special shares in- cluding the low priced olls. Many traders were absent for the week end. Sales approximated 650,000 shares. NEW YORK, Nov. 30.—Opening prices in today’s stock market were mostly frregular, little indication as to the trend of sentiment. Maxwell A again appeared to be in supply, dropping 1% on the first transaction. Davison Chemical advanced 1%. Fluctuations either way became more extensive with a continuance of the recent buying in several of Wednesday's strong issues, notably American International and a few railroads. Selling orders, however, were abundant in other quarters; Gulf States Steel dropping 3%. United States Cast Iron Pipe 2% and Maxwell Motors A 2%. Omaha, New Orleans, Texas and Mexico, Lehigh Valley, Virginia Carolina Chemical preferred, Royal Dutch and Market Street Railway second preferred and prior preferred were lifted 1 to 2 points. Jones Brothers Tea dropped 2 points to duplicat- ing its previous low the year. For- elgn exchanges opened trregular. Absence of many traders for the week-end and the contrary course pursued by several of the popular speculative stocks Mmited the volume of ‘business in the forenoon today. The rank and file of traders found it difficult to determine the trend. Weakness of Gulf States Steel and Maxwell Motors A had little effect on other membere of their re spective groups and the rise in sev. eral oll and tobacco shares failed to stimulate higher prices for stocks of similar companies. Tobacco Products and Maraicabo Oil cach touched a new high price for the year and conspicuous strength was shown also by all the Market Street Railway issues, up 1% to 6% points. United Railway investment pre- ferred, Goodrich, Associated Dry Goods, and Central Leather. Sugar stocks gave ground steady and Dayison Chemical broke about four points from its early high figure. Call money opened at 4% per cent. Rallies of 2 to 4 points from the earlier low levels by Maxwell Motors A, Davison Chemical and United States Cast Iron Pipe, the last men- tioned reaching a new high figure for the year at 58, influenced a gen- eral upward trend in the early after- noon American Can, Famous Play- ers, Coca Cola, Texas Company and Iron Products sold 1 to 1% above Wednesday's final figures. Call money stiffened to 5% per cent. The closing was steady. Shu'te, Pierce Arrow preferred, Loose Wiles Biscuit and the minor oils were con- spicuous fn the late rise which pulled! the general list up to around Wed. nesday's closing levels. Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, Nov. 30.—Foreign exchanges {rregular; quotations in cents: Great Britain demand 433 1-16;/ cables 433 5-16; 60-day bills on banks 430 13-16. France demand 6.34%; cables 8.35. Italy demand 4.804 cables 4.31. Belgium demand 4.61%; cables 4.62, German demand -000000000014; cables .000000000014, Holland demand 37.82; cables 37,87. Norway demand 14.96; Sweden 26. Denmark 17.98; Switzerland 17.46; Spain demand 13.00; Greece demand 1,87; Poland demand .000030; Czecho Slovakia 2.91; Jugo Slavia 1.14; Austria .0014; Rumania .50%; Argen- tine 31.25; Brazil 8.98; Montreal 7%. aI ee Cotton Price Breaks NEW YORK, Nov. 30.—After sell- ing at 37.70, a new high for the season, December cotton this after- noon broke over 100 points to 36.67. Later deliveries broke 80 to 100 points from the forenoon prices, ew Seo Cec FLAX DULUTH, Minn., Nov. 30.—Close flax November 2.40%; December 2.40%; January 2.42; Mey 2.29. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Nov. 30.— Flour unchanged to 5 cents lower; family patents 5.95@6.20; bran 26.00 @27.50. OIL LIGHT BEATS _ ELECTRIC OR GAS BURNS 94% AIR A new ofl lamp that gives an amazing brilliant, soft, white light, even better than gas or electricity, has been tested by the U. 8. Gov- ernment and 35 leading universities and found to be superior to 10 ordi- nary ofl lamps. It burns without odor, smoke or noise—no pumping up, is simple, clean, safe. Burns mon kerosene (coal ofl). W. Lake St. Chicago, Ill., is offer: ing to send a lamp on 10 days’ FREE trial, or even to give one FREE to the first user in each locality who will heip him introduce it. Write him today for full particu: |lars. Also ask to explain how you can get the agency, and without experience or money make $250 to *$500 per month.—Advertisement. 94 per cent air and 6 per cent com- | The inventor, G, H. Johnson, 609 | 'GRAIN TRADING [3 UNSETTLED Prospects of Big Wheat De- liveries Saturday Domi: » Prevents Climb French Republic 143 pana as Japanese 4s - Kingdom of Belgium &s Kingdom of Norway 6s -—— Rep. of Chile &s, 1946 -___- State of Queensiand os U. K. of G. B, and 1., 5% te RA! American Smelting 5s American Sugar 6s American Tel and T American Tel and col. Anaconda Copper 7s, Anaconda Copper 6a, 1 CHICAGO, Nov, 30.—Further setl- ing out by traders unwilling to accept delivery on December con- tracts had a bearish effect on the wheat market today during the early transactions. May as well as December showed declines in price July, however, in which business was Ughter than in the other months, scored something of an ad. vance. The opening, which ranged from %@%c lower to ‘4c gain, with December §1.01% to $1.02 and May $1.08 to $1.08%, was followed by continued weakness of nearby de- lveries and by strength in July. Subsequently, the market kept within narrow limits. It was est!- mated that wheat deliveries here to- morrow would total 2,000,000 bushels. The close was unsettled at %@%o net lower to ‘%c gain,. December 1.01% to 1.02 and May 1.08% to 1.08%. Wet weather over part of the corn belt gave firmness to prices of corn and oats. After opening un- Baltimore and Ohio cv. Montana Power 6s A--...... Northern Pacific ret., 68 B --..—. Northwestern Bell Tel. Pann. R. R. gen.. 53 .-----. Sinclair Con Oil col Ta —.. Union Pactfic First 4s U, 8. Rubber fs 2... Southern Pacific ev., 48 ——. Utah Power and Light 5e -. Western Union 6% .. changed to %o higher, May 74 to| Westinghouse Electric 74%io, the corn market sagged a| Wilson anc Co. cv., és ---- little as @ result of profit taking, but then rallied again. Later the far off months were in- clined to weaken prices which closed unsettled at %e lower to %c gain, May .73%@.73%. Oats started at ic off toa advance, May 44% to 45 held near to initial figures. Provisions were firmer tn tine with hog values. ‘and later! NEW YORK, Nov. 80—Call money stronger; high 6%; low 4%; ruling rate 4%; closing bid 5; offered at 5%; last loan 5; call loans against acceptances 4%. ‘Time loans firm; mixed collateral 60-90 days 5; 46 months 5@5%; prime commercial Open High Low Close! papers 5@5%. WHEAT— Abs - Dec. . 1.01% 1.02% 1.01% 1.01% May . 1.03 1.08% 1.07% 1.08% July, 1.06% 1.06% 1.05% 1.06% ieee Metals Dec. . s-.72 72% 11% 12% 14% 7a “tam eo at 4g| NEW. YORK, Nov. 20—Copper quiet; electrolytic spot and futures Dec. . --- 42% 43% 42% 42% | 34 @13N- nt eae rt eet tie pit) Tin steady: spot and nearby 47.75; JULY . rn 43% 48% 43% 14914 | TUtUTES 47.25. LARD— Iron steady; prices unchanged. Jan. . .---11.90 11.90 11.82 11,83] Lead steady; spot 6.85@7.00; Zinc May . -----11.82 11.85 1182 11.83| Wet; east St, Louis spot and nearby Rive 6.37 6.40. Waar 25 Antimony spot 8.80@8.95. Mas 4 six Cash Grains and Provisions CHICAGO, Nov, 30—Wheat num. At. T. and San Fe., gen 49 --.-.. PAGE NINE All Markets FIRE WIPES OUT BLOCK IN TAMPICO TAMPICO, Mex., Nov. 30,—Fire early today swept a block of small Dusiness houses and offices on the outskirts of the city’s commercial district. The di is estimated at about $200,000. There were no casualties. A strong north wind hindered the firemen, as did the darkness and failure of the water pressure in con- sequence of the electricians’ strike which has left the city without light or power for the last two days. ———_— Cotton NEW YORK, Nov. 30.—Spot cot- ton steady; middling 37.55. rr Samuel E. Lyons of Montana ts a business man spending several daya here this week. ber 2 red 1.0513; number 2 hard 1.04 and 1.06, Cort. number 2 mixed 73% @.7414; number 2 yellow .76%@. Oats number 3 white 44% @.45%; number 3 white .430.44@. Rye number 2, .70%; Barley .64@ -78; Timothy seed 6.50@8.00; Clover pen btdited 3.75; lard 12.35; ribs 9.25 D. W. GRIFFITH'S “ONE EXCITING NIGHT” MYSTERY—LAUGHTER—SUSPENSE _ Our Store Is Open Every Night Until 9 o’Clock SATURDAY Canvas Gauntlet Leather F Gloves, Pair 25c duplicate. SUITS Many with 2 pairs of pants. In all styles and colors. $17.50 to $35.00 After All YOU CAN DO BETTER HERE SEEING IS BELIEVING—QUALITY AND PRICES TALK You will find that our quality is the highest and our prices the lowest. A hundred cents in value for every dollar spent. We can prove it. EXTRA SPECIAL FOR SUITS AND OVERCOATS As fine a selection of Suits and Overcoats as you will find anywhere. suit every taste, a style to fit every man and young man at prices you cannot OVERCOATS A variety of Overcoats that you will be proud to own. $16.45 to $32.50 Sweet-Orr Work Clothes Sold By Us Exclusively LEARNER Shoe and Clothing Company 260 South Center Street Our Store Is Open Every Night Until 9 o’Clock A color to aS hiphe "ihe a pia DOD sires puis a aia eRe Baal weneeayy