Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 8, 1924, Page 9

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SUNDAY, JUNE 8, 1924. ss, ; ‘ Che Casper Sunday Cribuye —— PAGE NINE ~, So SHE OO _o+ooON>rNNN0ON0-—NNVTVAAAI@]-"-—“«cw1.-""O0C1:-"0@0.0C:I-’-"—*—T”0—u~T™”-.86"«-—0@™@”0”"0”—”—@_——@—4#o4choOT.:0T-T7—-,-"—-—-NOTCOTOOOemRRODO@DODO SOO OOOne’_OOOWPO_—————— ee | Pe il :: Finance :: Bonds :: Stocks :: Grain :: Livestock :: All Markets é NEWS AND QUOTATIONS BY LEASED } omsecurimies ||REALTORS TO SEEK Colorado Field Will Be 9 | 252°S.25S the situation existing in the cotf6n textile industry. The industry is BETTER ADJUSTMENT), Linked With Refinery at [{Sf 20.2", as these ‘word-of-mouth’ re Bertie: BE letste It or Le Parco Wath New Pipeline 22s ee Bosto1 80 Examining e@ textile Indu: z Buck creek ———----- 18 1° |“Take It or Leave It” Policy of Landlords co Wit e TP OLIVE | ss wrote we and that employers 40 fans its totals 431,010 rest 32 | - Brings Reaction When Conditions a Bek 484,771 for April of 1923, This shows Should the Moffat field in northern, tant. Connection to be made|a loss in employment of 11.1 ppE] easel Survey {From Special Triliune | Reports ‘Watch business in Wyoming. which, with a reasonably warm June, should idly, 2.00 S Colorado, south of Rawlins, Wyo.,| with four 55,000-barrel tanks at|cent. If we make this same stu pia, order that yon may do so the) Deis Nocent” fall” ok ser 125 Do Not Satisfy Tenants. Dts tofbelm lanwe pihusarvanerl Oval ‘Chronigh a cubsldary, the| for the cotton Nuit tine one eee uhuattted, te tie beniee, og] ches of rain and snow ts giving 05 - further ‘wells have been’ drilled, the | Kasoming O11 company, the Prairie | exam! ctual spindle hours me ee ete ey atone he tat | small grains and hay a good start. 208 Prairie Pipe Line company will, ac-|has purchased 160 acres of land one| find that the United States a Che pate soe. taatate Pinedale—Hay crop is in fine con- 06 By J. C. ROYLE. direct income basis or workshop| C°ring to a contract entered into] mile ‘West of Craig to be used as aj whole averages 77 per cent as athe? dition. +87 | (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune.)| value and the community basis, or | With the Texas company Inst week,| tank farm. Reports are being re-|as in April of last year. ‘The south* Remember: 1925 is to be Wy0-) shawnee—Small grains doing well. nennsweenen = 07 NEW YORK, June 6.—New build-| farm home value. The question | lay an eight-inch pipe line from the| celved to the effect that a force of| has suffered least in. this curtaile ming year the country over, Corn has been slow to come up be-|ffantz --------------- 7.00 lings for dwelling, business and in-|a farmer’s character and domestic | ‘¢!d to the Prairie refinery at Parco, | 500 men will soon be at work there| ment and show% spindle hours totale Following are this week's reports:] cause of cool weather. The past] Gates ---------------— dustrial purposes, still aré in de-| happiness enters in. In case of a} the Union Pacific railroad. on pipe line and tank farm jobs. ing 86 per cent of last year, New few days have been warm and pros- hand throughout the country, but|loan on a farm by a banker, the Last January the Moffat field near Whether the Texas company will] England has dropped down to 66 per 4 ” . Craig, Colo., was opened up by the| trade its Moffat Ol! for Salt Creek 2 . Livestock. pects good for all crops. the “take it or leave it’ policy of] latter; wants to know whether the ee cent of April, 1923. Unemployment Putsevhe tancet:coantyh=v 2.00 landlords, builders and other men | borrower is honest, a hard worker,| T®*4* company's test well which| oll from P. & R. and Kasoming (both | in tho latter section has become @ ; sto ga i oun bots Oil and Mining. Ne HORE ebony con [ave suffered a decided change. | whether he is married and content| tM? in at the rate of 4,500. barrels} Prairie Oll and Gas company sub-| real problem. those there are doing ‘very well.| Cokeville—New | structure called Sheep just finishing lambing. ‘The| [he SneeP Creek district, has peer [Pt lamb crop Js approximately 90 to 95] 0% peEn ‘a yaad ah Sher’ Jae per cent. All lambs big and strong,| W2° have LP ss pa ahhh 2 ewes in very good shape. Shearing| f4vorably on it. Those interested commenced this past week. Wool | !? cokes Baye Meio septa re4 buyers not active in this section. parkas ling operations m Some wool contracted at from 41% | °° 5 Pinedale—Activity in the Big to ae sents” No offers Being made} piney off fleld, with the Midwest Re: 1" fining and other companies prepar- See ethan arene see ora ing to drill new wells at an early excellent calf crop. Cattle outlook | 4te- better than for past three years. Employment. of the sheep will be shorn b: ” the eat a anise “clips wii| Cokeville—Wages average $60. a not be so heavy because of woot|ohth for ranch labor and $75 for being unusually clean. Very little| Sheep outfit workers, wool contracted for in immediate Retail Business. section, but practically all lambs have been contracted for at 10% to| _Cokeville—Grocery business “here 11 cents. experiencing its biggest turnover at Hillsdale (Laramie county}—Cait| tls Period because of the provision: ing being done by sheep outfits. and lamb crops are reported very good. A great deal of intevest is} , Shoshorii—Retall business ‘in all being taken by the small farmer in| nes represented ts keeping up very 4 st bad of high gravity light ‘oll daily. Other] sidiaries) leases for use in its Cas-| Mountain & Guile -—- 1.400 1.45 Pade” aid atne ids ORE localities |e tog neh aoa erie whether: welts: ate/ now delng idritied on the| per refinery, hax not been deter-| this slewine rnc te he etree a waaarn=n—aan— 02) 4 LO citering. thei. method of iving| family is a financiat burden or te) #tfucture and upon the-showing of| mined. A possibility ts, that the|we find it due to a decline ineog Preston —------------- 01% 00st | oe ene accont, conditions ot | able 10 helo lta Unon theab jroma| these depends the fulfillment of the| Moftat production will be pushed| eral activite at home ean ty ne Red Bank eek TO Tay, EE chee een ce to help. him: - “Upon these items | new pontract. through a ling from that fleld to| usual increase in Imports ar Reon Piped eae As a DonNda panos TART estate| farmer's skill, depends ‘the ‘ikell.| Already the Prairie company ts| Parco, there being shot into thelcotton goods. Study. shows that ance Stes SS React aU etek ews eattiecatne i tprcarcen'| ova of loans Using: repmia premanty Be TIA Geer ee ree ee ine tom! the | countries’ recarering trots a rane Western Exploration — 3.40 3. tion of the National Association of| Other real estate men pointed out | OM the field to Craig, 17 miles dis- refinery here. from other similar disaster “ras Western States --..-. Real Estate Boards in Washington] that while a factory, a warehouse organize their economic machinery’ ed seme seceee. are considering methods which] or even a store property might live P. y we following order: 1, food; 2» Yr Ou <... Would attract tennants and pur-| down the effect of one or two bad t i] P t | B clothing; 3, shelter; 4, luxuries and Loa gparecnond chasers. Points of attraction were] tenants, office buildings and apart- e ro eum agean O e all other gods. Our exports fo NEW YORK CURB found to differ widely in various| ments soon were put on the down- Europe of food were very high dirt pooner Face ad - be ait sections, but the general feeling was|grade by an undesirable class of} S ing and. immediately following the roe — —_ - “ - ) " ’ var. The! Euro: be ga “. a Salt Creék Prda. = age galag | CzPressed today that while a man’s | occupants. Held In | Uu isa Next k a i | war. Then Europe began again to ait Creek’ Cons. business created a value for the| ‘The owner of an office building.” feed itself. Our large exports of Pict anaiatetre. locality he was occupying, the local-| said J. C. Martien of Baltimore, “is cloth lasted until the European tex- New York Oll ity and neighborhood often did] of necessity interested in the suc- tile mills got back on to a producing. Cosden equally as much for the business. cess of his tenants and must know] TULSA, Okla., June 7.—Visitors|pageant in October had already been| P@S!8. Instead of buying heavily This idea has always been vigor-}when to decline a tenant whose en-}¢> the second International Petro-|arranged it was deemed unwise to| ftom us as these countries have for ously expressed by H. C."Bohack of | trance would be detrimental to the hold the water celebration in Sep-| the past few rs they have ene Brooklyn, .who runs a series of| success of others in the building.” tember. month being too short| tered the market with goods of their chain grocery stores. H@ declared} ‘Tho trend of building throughout |JoY ®n added attraction tn the cele-}an interval for two big pageants so,|°W manufacture and those who the ideal place to start a business| the larger cities is declining in gen-|bration of the completion of the|after a conference between the| Were customers have become com- is where the most baby carriages eral ,although there are a npmber of | cl $7,000,000 Spavinaw water|chamber of commerce and the ex-| Petitors. Exports of cotton cloth are seen. exceptions. In spite of this ten-|project. This gigantic enterprise,| position directors ' was arranged} have dwindled and imports have in- leum pageant in October will en- e atten satisfactorily. “Every time I want to open a , however, the movement of}bringing pure water from Ozark|\to couple the celebrations, creased Nine months, elt (Fremont county’ ing Hillsdale — Retail. business slow store} he said, “I go to the strests| wages in the skilled building trades|mountain streams 60 miles away, “The marriage of these events, | ending 8 imports valued a »—Ow! ricd -vathe nw: has been in progress, for two years, o tw | at $3.3 > ame {othe eeoeht ator -enttie’ have nat | DOP where I see the most perambulators.|is upward rather than downward prog: © two years,|making the twain one, will present $ over the same period -- 103% | p, * and the succesful terminatt ft 2 8 the previous American International Corp 2044 People who have baby carriages| according to telegraphic dispatches ation of|a pageant of unusual beauty and previous y aynbe lean ilncomotive 2 have homes and live in them. No|received today. ‘There have been|the municipal scheme marks the|magnitude,” said Edward F. McIn-| “A comparison of percentage ao American Smelting and Retg i matter how good a street is for any| several recent revisions upward in|Cconsumation of a real job to be fit-|tyre, general manager of the ex-| tivity for March and April, however, American Sugar — other business, I would not take| various sections of the country and|tingly commemorated so the world|position. A close scrutiny of all| would ind © a gradual and rela. ‘American T. and oT. mine there unless there were plenty |it is unquestioned that additional|may know, The water is to be} forecasting “dope” to date indicates| tive improvement in conditions heros rican Woolen of kids in the nelghborhood—the | demands will be made on employers | turned into Tulsa mains in Septem-| that 200,000 visitors from all’ oyer| March, for Instance, showed Dubols—With the prospects of a good many tourists, the general mercantile and hotel business is showing quite an improvement. gained during the past week. How- amy ever, the moisture was just what ‘was needed for the ranges. Rapid improvement is expected. Pinedale (Sublette county—Cattle and sheep in good condition. Outlook and Resume. a Cokeville—The future for the} Anaconda Copper ~. more thé better."’> before the end of the mid-year] ber: the country will be at the ofl andj spindle hours total 74 renee erik pl nssane evi sheep business is looking up. With Atchiéon = The value of desirable tenants | period. As the International Petroleum gas show in October. the previous March, but well. Rat win comotive , “ . totaled 77 per cent of Ap: heavy and--ranges‘are in excellent fair prices for wool and lambs, the Baltinore ana’ Obio also was emphasized by the real Almost exactly the opposite trend per mn! f April, finanvial condition of the sheepmen will be greatly improved \at the close of the year. Agriculture, Shoshoni—Recent rain has as- Cokeville—Alfalfa coming along| sured excellent range conditions and good, Rains during the past week | livestock of af] kinds should be in have helped out the prospects won-| fine condition this fall. For the derfully. Wild hay will be short] past several years sheepmen have from all indications now. Will re-| made little headway and the current quire numerous rains to bring the| year's outlook is very encouraging crop up to average. Old timers pre-}and should place him in much dicting a hay shortage for this fall.| healthier condition. The cattle in- What few grains are seeded are) terests have not fared so well. How- coming up, well but it as early to|ever, optimism prevails for the make a good guess on the outlook. | present season and better prices are Shoshoni— Very little farming | anticipated pn cattle shipments this adhe in this section other than pro-| fall. duction of alfalfa on ranches along Those furnishing the above re- Wind river; ranches so located not| ports are the State Bank of Coke very numerous. , | ville, First National bank of Sho- Hillsdale—The recent yains have|shoni, Hillsdale State bank, Dubols left the ground in fine ‘shape for] State bank, State Bank of Pinedale craps which are rather late but’ and the Bank of Shawnee. estate men. F. §. Stroheker, vice-| exists in the bituminous coal indus- The activity in cotton growing president of the Bankers’ Mortgage| try. Virtually all the Independent by | paced ge 84 per cent for March company of Kansas City, said today|coal and coke companies in the an , t t and 86 per cent April as coms Chandler Motors the value of a farm was very con-| great Connellsville district are ex- ver Ss vestmen pared with a year ago. Even. in Chesapeake and Ohio ~..2 siderably dependent on the kind of| pected to announce a wage reduc: ay ngland whero the textile peas Chicago and Northwestern .. 52 a family which lived in it. That he| tion of 20 to 30 per cent and some By GEORGE T. HUGHES. bonds B cy ple hit the hardest March Chicago, Mil., & St. Paul pfd, 12. | declared, was the factor which made] have already done so, This will] yy, rs eagteg 4 deal of talk ab ese batatine 4 es Pye epbver: showed activity 63 per cent of last Chile Copper ~----«. 27% | it so difficult to determine scientific-| bring the scale down to pre-war See tree Cee eee eee Lt thew poula at thie eles year, while April improved to 66 Consolidated Gas ally just how much a farm was|levels. Coal experts expect the|t@X exempt securities and tax ex-| or. taken away. Howover that| Pet cent: Comparisons of activity Corn Products worth. | é W. J. Rainey and the H. C. Frick |¢mption. Many people, however. do] TO” ye tax exemption a ot mo im] DY_States show “practically a_ unis Cosden Oil -~~-. “Farm valuation. he continued,| companies will maintain a higher|®°t know just what is meant in r "| versal’ improvement in this figure Criothle - SSL “must rest upon two bases: The! level than the other producers. either cage. A tax exempt security |Pon cor a larger creturn for nie | Of,percentage activity: Cuba Cane Sugai reer et geen a ieceersasnamanan, | {8 one the’ inconie trom which, that el Ranga co Meds oh pa IRON he cotton industry {s marking Famous Players Is to y the interest, is not sub-|™oney in a taxable bond even when 9 General Asphalt ~ ject to federal or state income taxes Pa amount of taxes he has to pay Ben Eager tend PARC, caw | | JK | : ‘tbe nas |{8 deducted from the return. It : ae ; S N \ All state and municipal donds, DPALabIyctruk Chak ovine aie Cole the new crop is determined and fienera! Electric — eneral Motors federal land bank and joint stock “i prices for raw cotton are set ase land bank and the 3% per cent Nb.|!"vestora buy more tax exemption Great Northern pfa. Great Northern pt ind than they really need. Treen ot | basta for another season, Stocks of el a a ees DEMAND A L SE erty bonds come within this class!-| iO ihes have carefully. worked cut} 000s are low at present. Condle fication. tables showing for investors of vary- tions in the industry may improve Now this tax exemption 4s offing incomes the difference between| ®t that time, My study of tho ue to the investor in direct pro-|the prices to be paid for taxable| *!tuation,” concluded Mr, Babson; International Paper q Kelly Springfield Tire -----. 13% rtion to the size of his incomes/and for non-taxable bonds in order | |!©%8 me to believe that conditions rger a man’s income the more/that the net return may be the|/™ the textile industry may get na &’|Marked Strength Also Shown by Industrials condition. Bethlehem Steel California Petroleum Cerro Ge Pasca Copper Mack Truck Marland Ot Maxwell Motors afford to pay for tax ex- worse than they are tods nd that Middle States Oil ie : same. iy ane thn r Se a Ps - ie ° emption. It follows that these bonds 7 the next turn may be upward, Afte! ° ; New York Central — I N yi, k aT din: b Oil d S ome Unless you are subject to surtaxes apward, After (e} odit T r de y Rorthern Pacitie n New York lrading but Oils and Specu- are in demand by very wealthy|{t ig unnecessary to pay any atten,| 2 with general business as Ted . / Ss Pacific Ol . persons. Some of them go so far|tion to tax exemption. This, how.| fected on the Babsonchart running Pan America: roleunn: lative St Are Weak. as to put their entire capital intolever, is not to reflect in any way | ®t 10 per cent below normal {t is not E Mrphianta aaa Roetiners id this class-of security. The result ; surprising that so gefi an ine upon the rating of tax-exempt se dustry as textiles should be suffer curities which as a rule is very Bure. Ol} :/ 2.5 is that they pay no income taxes at Republic Iron ana Steel Tron and Steel. Grain, PITTSBURGH.—There is no no- OKLAHOMA CITY.—The ! Soe toe NEW YORK, Jun@ %.—Moderato) President Coolidge of the tax pili|ii. {thas heen argued that fur-/high. In the matter of safety they|!ns from a tempora pression." tiedanio tneeieaes Wi GagsdSd ier. wig Mencia in thereenaral eoetiban et eee on recovery from today's early decline | and the decision to adjourn this|ther issue of tax-exempt securities) come at the head of the lst, ‘The eras comes fron in this section, although other |Okiahoma wheat crop ham resulted |Southern Pacitic in stock trading here was led by | week. of refuge for largo taxpayers shoula| ent, 1% that investors of large} Nebraska Drilling Promised. sections nearby report a slightly|from insect ravages in the last few| Southern Rallway _ railroad shares and industrials, but| Improvement in car loadings was be means must have this kind of in-| Botween 60,000 and 70,000 acres of be eliminated. So far congress has " that prevailed} shown in railroad repo: the w bearish sentiment that prevailed n in railroad repor h suutiaadl fay takes thie tice during closing days of the week con-| ended May 24 being the largest Standard Oi] of N. Studebaker Corpo better inquiry all around. Prices|weeks. Condition is 84 per cent of remain stable at 22 for bessemer,| normal, compared with 90 per cent yestment and so the price !s out of|lands in Blaive, Thomas, Brown and proportion to that asked for tax-|Cherry counties, ‘ation aska, haye 20-for basic and 20.50 for foundry,| May 1, Hay crops are good and the {Texas Co. - tinued to predominate in spécula-|early in March. ‘Top prices were| States and cities can sell theirlable bonds. * been leased by ¢ reste f. 0. b. furnaces. first cutting of alfalfa was heavy Transcontinental O#1 — tive issues. New low records for|touched by some rails on the which promise to start drilling with ‘ ined of wood ainsalts Union Pacific —.. the year were established by many | strength of this’ news. ° in the next 90 days. It is expectows GLEVELAND.—Ore experts here ae oe So ol, sugar and stes! abares in early! Reduction in crude of! prices in REI IEF | E¢ IS] A | ION that Dakota and Lakota sands é¢at redict the iron ore requirements ¢ i 4 State: bber sales, The closing was steady with|the Mid continent field reacted © reached within 2,000 . Gax thik year will mot exceed $80,000,000 onForruns, petals, United States Steel 4 | total sales placed at about 400,000|ngainst the oll issues. Reports of has already heen found in the struce told toptanared wich ebiphventacthst f ietiadas ‘EB, EDR SPREE minthg I al Satara Electric shares, cuts in gasoline prices were also in- ture, H. lL, Funkhouse of Casper, year of 59,088,204. ‘The averane ves-| draspects for a talrly tarea cron | colorado Wool and ire 3,°*|_ Ungettiod trade conditions were| terpretated“as unfavorable to imme- a | | RE IS BEARISH is agent for the owner of the leasess sel cargd this year is only 8,000] tion, AD SE m_---~ 34 |iargely responsible for the wétback| diate improvement in these shares, A —————— tons and vessel men look for a lean year. May ‘shipmi@nts were 6,653,- 615 tons. given stocks duriug recent days,| Crude production likewise showed Sand Draw Active offsetting the bouyancy caused by|an increase. Three wells are drilling in thé ; favorable developments in legisia+| Professional operations against ‘ : Sand Draw field at this time. The Standard Oil Stocks tion at Washington. Industrials| the of! shares and the success that Wheat Prices Given Sharp Setback on Plans Riverton Petroleum Drilling Come were slow but the strength of rail-| attended them encouraged bear at- pany has its well down 1700 feet. Coal. PARKVIEW, Pa.—The Haddock Simnatoas. . Mining company of Silverbrook has FORT WORTH.—Long strings of |SPCMt nearly $1,000,000 in modern- . road and public utility shares was| tacks on other speculative stocks, * . : \ + |The Producers and Refiners Corpor freight cars are being Brain 4 by pied its plant and briaging it to tage id 15 | sustained to a marked degree, The} and before the end of the week the For Adjournment Without Enacting the ation atrings of tools al ‘Texas railroads ready to handle the| Civ Fis ie eg eaten tM {| Continental 42. |most encouraging factor in the buy-] weakness had extended to leading McN H . ar retlon 28 the hole ts nov verment. 6 ' " 0 by! in ials, Ps « at nbout 700 feet, while o area tar Ths Dag [the anthracite field which Indleate| Guizns? =" IA eal ln ae aa cNary-Haugen or Other Bills. ern Sire aed ig rg caging rd a heavy increase in anthracite pro-| Ilinois A+! : canines by duction this year. Indiana Tobacco. 2 ‘ PHILADELPHIA.—Cigar manu- Nat, Tran, ~. N. Y. Tran, CHICAGO, June 7.—Failure of] had been overcome, in the grain 7a congress to proceed toward adjourn. | belt ij DEAF HEAR ‘ool. * ‘tagturers report a demand that ts} KERRVILLE, ‘'Tex—over 1,700,| Ner. Pine o ment without enacting legislation | , Ty's range of grain and pro better than fair. Resistance to pre-| 00, pounds of spring wool has been spp ‘ Sor. tutm rellehl dank vision prices follows: seat prices has not been effective |#ld this week to Adams and Le-| Prairie Pipe i037 | BOSTON, June 7.—The new bank state campaign Inunched by the| tumbling during the week, ees Open High Low | Close although most of the call is for the|!4nd, Hallowell, Jones and MacDon-| solar Ret. - 183 185 |opened here by the Brotherhood of] Georgia Industrial Bureau and sup-| tons today showing declines of 21% feat om “C grade. The volume of unfilled|*!d, and Winslow and company of| guy. Pipe _ 95 96 |Locomotive Engineers will not join| ported by business interests is mak.|to 3%c In comparison with a Pc ae 1.04% 1.03% 1.04% | orders has not fallen in the last] Boston. Prices ranged from 45 to month, . 47%c for 12 months fleeces and 40 to 42c for 8-month clips. An- other half million pounds will be of farm | offered shortly. 1.06% 1.06% 1.06 1.08% 1.07% 1.08% | Amazing Invention Brings Immed- jate Relief to Those Who are Deaf, 39 39%] the Boston Clearing House Associa-|ing such progress that it 1s hoped|“80 While corn scored fractional 104% 105 | ton, owing to the decision of the} the general assembly can be fauced| eins. Reports of cold weather in 232° 235 |iatter to require member banks to| this summer to authorize a seventy|the corn belt supplemented by rain charge $1 a month on checking ac-| five million highway and paving| Were interpreted as unfavorable to counts 4s amall as $100. Cambridge,| bond tasue, which failed of approval) crop Prospects and some loss in Farm Implements. NEW ORLEANS.—Sal {inplements throughout this and ad- —~ A Wonderful invention which en- ables anyone whose Vacuum Di Y ided to allow| by a few votes last year, prices was recorded toda joling territories are the smallest Clothing. 8. O. Ind. Be cre te etnts are’ tees |” hese ithe SE MMT otis ao. Is still active to hear FS ears Ae erent Suir etme |. Ser races ante. tn than $990-to-draw-only three checks! PrTLADELPHIA, Pe. June 7.--| cline on:the day that the hou (ror, asa. Giatioaly | ae, &. child 2 Ls BL A, * — e 01 h louse as bee rerfected 7 . ete Steiara. generally: savy. men's shirt’, ‘overalls, ‘suspenders a month free. More than that num-| There is a slight surplus of skilled| Voted to adjourn at the end of the . anh ba rfected by the Dicto Lumber. toe tail asllvery tina ge apagtde 5 bey will mean {imposition of a ser |Iabor here, although some trades| Week. ‘This was construed as» mean PAA THOLA, 320 -We Nee s : i : vice charge, A scientific survey 18] have suffered wage reductions of | ine eat of all farm measures ar 10.88 York City. ‘Ther SEATTLE.—Lumber shipments] Dealers, however, fear possible can: Ley GuMasenbaie’ toi inarsesy. tha | nynrarch ree: eet cea ae pated ap ipa eyed gd 10.87 10.02 19.97 | York City. ‘Th > by ra{l have fallen below 1,700 cars| cellations of orders if the wheat and foreign, teade’ Ge! New England sn@l inno wage le about tt nakillec coll i Megat | | 10.60 10.67 10.60 10.67 |elay, no danger posts . ; : b i a abo! © is abo! 10 Same a ment, Bo ecovery dé Peicerp: 3B * & week and there is no buying from apple crops turn out badly, ies teas tian tes ise lawa tit tratg’ dub | eke eect me as a ak, meme taporery o> | pectitantaneoun i : 2 Mig aoeibed rt a 4 popu . sI8 7 ould be ere) ee nes { : west will be cloned down by June SACRAMENTO.—Olive growers Te OFeei: 1, foe wee shifting of pop ST LOUIS, June The Bell Tel.| Would be sut who suffers “rom deafness will be 15 because of slow demand and in-jof this district will receive as high} Greybull —- 1 yp esied X ephone Company here has announced Wheat was further weakened by - 1047 amazed and delighted with t , creasing fire hazard due to pro‘/as 16 cents a pound for this year's | poroplight 1 f 5 RE that it will erect a 19-story buliding| reports that dry weather handicaps! s Br - 40.77 | markable invention that they are longed drought. olive crop, according to contracta| a. pastn ri ST. LOUIS, Juno 7.—There {s a] to aceommodate its local headqua offering to t es already made. Prices range a8 low) Rock Cc; gradual deeline in business activity] ters, which will cost about $8,000,000. for 10 days t Dairy Products. ax 2 conts, however, for the poorer] gat creek 170} noticeable here, but the attitude of ee €. 0. D.—no MINNEAPOLIS.—Dairy products | qualities. The crop will be slightly Big Muday 1 the LE Rede is calm and no pronounced Hepp Well Smali 4 If you suffer » ady priges here are lower than for any| under norm Sule Creek core re en eels, The situation.|. Inatead of being good for 1,000 their iberal free of ; y" cosy June in years, with fresh ose DOE BED eli 1401 financiers way, $s working out along | to 3,000 barrels of oll dally, the Mid: them your name an rosa t nery extras at 37 cents a pound Uncompahgre Tesis Projected Hamilton ome 1 expected lines. There has been &) west well on the Hepp se, Lake P OVE ME A m and 20 cents a dozen paid to farm. MONTROSE, Colo., June 7. (Unit. Ferris 1 Seasonal reduction of employment in| Basin structure in southern Mon. J Mig ors for om ed Press)—Several of the 70 oll Bryon ~ i this territory, but this has been bal-/ tana, is through the sand, which The oldest of Mur rc HOUSBTO. A falling off in pro-| companies which have taken a tre: Sashes 2. anced largely by activity in farm.) was only about a foot thick and pS E EAE oa i the Danish. duction has caused an inerease of|mendous interest in the ofl pros. Pilot Dutio road and river work. good for not more than 50 to 100 Se 1 cent in cost of wholesale eggs here| pects of Colorado, have turned their ae Building trades artisans are fully | barrels daily,. It is believed the pro- R W Gi Cc * : to 23 und'8@ cents a. dueen- attention to Uncompahgre Valley, it| “@nder employed and there is some scarcity | ductive ‘eand encountered wag, a|L*OBer VV Babson Gives Facts on Cotton Situation " ——__ is reported here. S of fruit plekers. Unseasonable| stray and the hole will be contin I V pp: 7 O ti isti F I iebel will pre Acorplanes, oil has ever been discovered Guernsey Well Spudded weather has retarded retall garment | ued deeper in hope of soon picking n Voicing puiimuistic forecast on In- pert this ticket to our cashiel CLEVELAND.—The Glenn Mar-|{n the immediate vicinity, but ex+] Using coal for fuel, the test well] and dry gooda business but whole-| up the Dakota and getting a> real hin three days th wilh enttiae tin Alreraft company has recelved| haustive tests of the posibilities}on the Guernsey structure, near| sale orders are improving aslightly,| gusher that will hold up dustry for the Near Future. h f and guest to our orders for 30 aeroplanes and parts] here are anticipated during the sum-| Guernsey, Wyo., was spudded in the|!ndicating short stocks. Curtail-|, ————__——— I} specia combination for 80 others at the navy depart-|mer months by those companies| middie of ment of dry goods production con-| Some {den of the vast extent of }| dinner 5:80 p.m mont ct totals about] which now have their scouts bus- ——_—— tinues but a retail spurt would soon|the mouth of the River Amazon] BABSON PARIC, Mass, June T—| which does much to pee to 8:30 p. m.—Coffee Shop ar $1,000,000 t will necosaltate thal ily “feoling” for the Uquid gold. SEND IT TO THES end this, may be had from the statement that | Re W. Babson, the statistician, | tu attending this situation || Main Dining Room 0 workers to a BRAND McHICH TAGLAR oo it ing an Jaland larger than| today issued a ntatement regarding iness men in Hotel Townsend ?? ? Wyoming Motorway ? 7 2 PHONE 1702. ALTANTA, Ga, June 17,—Tho!l the state of Delaware, the position in the textile industry | ieast those pessimistic ir 5 =

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