Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 19, 1924, Page 6

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PAGE SIX. Che Casper Daily Cribune SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1924, RAILS LEAD IN STOCK TRADING Early Trading Today In New York Mar Firm Undertone YORK, Ji 18.—Stock da firm tone at the N prices disp opening of today’s stock market which was featured by a renew demand for the railroad shares, se board airline preferred advancing to new 1924 high but the initial in this and most other issues we small fractions. Good buying also was noted in the coppers and olls. Rails continu to vance, additional new being established by common, Missouri I Southern Pac! K Southern, Wheeling » common, Chicag Western, “Nic Plate B and General ngmed climbing goleum advanced tional Harvester geet and M ctric, the last to 246%. Con- points, Interna- and American Water Works common and Good. year preferred 1% each. Fresh weakness cropped out in Stewart Warner, which droppe points Atlantic Refining . For- s opened firm, lp LIVESTOCK Chicago Prices CHICAGO, July 19.—(U. De partment of Agriculture.)\—Hogs « eipts 6,000; ve er; mostly 10¢ up; Mght weight} scored full advz light lights and sh ghter pigs $8.20; bulk good a cholc 300 pound wi ing sows $7.00¢ weight slaught timated holdover 4 $8.00@8.30; mediy 8.20; light weight lights $6.60@7.90 smooth packing hogs rough $6.75@7.10; slaughter pigs $6.00@7.00. Cattle—Receipts classes uneven|y 1c lower; most- ly 50@7ic off; grades light grass steers, yearlings, heifers and in-between grades fat cows showing most run; many grassy cows prac tically unsaleable; late at $1 decli jbulls sharing general downturn; veal 48 $1@1.25 lower; stocker and feed- er trade light, less supply smallest of the season; extreme top handy weight and welghty steers $11.00; best long yearlings $10.60; grass: tlve southwestern steers nume: at- $6.50@7.75; wek’s Wulk prices of the week of beef steers $8.50@10.00; stockers and feeders $5,50@7.00; fat cows $4.35@6.35; fat heifers $6.50@ 8.00; veal calves $9.25@10.50. Sheep—Receipts 10,000; today's re- ceipts practically all direct; market nominally steady. For week 8,400 direct; 68 cars feed lots, compared with week ago, fat lambs and year- 170 to + $6.50@7.00 500; heavy wee weight .$7 0; myst Killing lings around 50c higher; sheep steady | to strong; feeding lambs 25c higher; top ranger lambs, $14.50; natives $15.00; yearlings $12.00; feeding lambs $12.25. Week's bulk prices fol- low: Fat ranger lambs $14.00@14.50; culls $9.00@10.00; fed yearlings $11@ 12.00; fat ewes $4.50@6.00; feeding lambs $11.75@12.00. Omaha Quotations OMAHA, July 19.—(U. 8. Depart- ment of Agriculture.—Hogse— Re- ceipts 8,000; better grades eetivo, fully 150 higher; others slow, mostly 10c higher; buli® 200 to 825° pound butchers $7.60@7.75; top $7.85; bulk of all sales $7.15@7.75; average cost Friday $7.82; weight 250. Denver Prices, DENVER, Colo., July 19.—(U. 8. Department of Agriculture).—Hogs —Receipts, 300; one load choice 291- pound butchers, $7.85; odd cholce drive-ins, $7.80@7.85; strong to be higher; packing sows, $6.00. Cattle—Receipts, 200; calves re- cepits, none; arrived today, four loads cows and helfers; unsold early; for week: fat steers, arlings, fat she-stock mostly 25@50c 1- top, steady; yearlings, $8.75; best heifers, $8.90; top cows, $6.75; can- ners and cutters, steady to weak; bulls around steady; calves mostly 50c lower; practical top, around $9.00 early; late, $8.50; tentative load stockers and feeders. Sheep—Receipte—None; for week: lambs, 25@35c higher; top, $13.25; bulk, $12.30@13. other classes, steady; yearlings, $10.50; aged wothers, $6.50; medium to good ewes, 34,50. POTATOES CHICAGO, July 19.— Potatoes, trading rather slow; market rather weak; receipts, 37 cers, 174 on track; total U. S. shipments, 866; Kansas and Missour! sacked Irish Cobb! $1.40@1.65, a few fancy $1 sacked -Early Ohios, $}.35@1.50; North Carolina barrel ‘obblers, $2.00@2.65, according to condition; Virginia barrel Irish Cobblers, $ @3.10. Butter and Eggs CHICAGO, Jt stealy to weak; 5 CHE cut@aco, July er; twin daisie: daisies 18@18%¢ Long Horns 18% @18%c; brick single rl WHEAT PRICES CTILL SACEINE Rains in Canada and Wheat Belt Cause Fresh Decline Today d by | | W@1se high 5@25ic higher; top| demand (per 10.00; Tokio, CHICAGO, July 19. ket easy; fowls, 16@2 28@35c; roosters, 14 bonds closed. 3 ; fourth 4%, 10) ernment 4s, Big Indian Boston Wyoming Buck Creek Blackstone Salt Creek Kinney Coastal mace Creek Royalty ~ eeoceenenmnnn= 8.00 3.15 Mike Henry --... Mountain & Gulf -... 1.43 1.45 Mountain & Gulf York Ol -.. Picardy oo weneennce Royalty & Producers — Western Exploration - 3.00 3.25 stern Oil Fields -.— Western States -..... Wyo-Kans -—..-------- NEW YORK CURB Mountain: Producers enrock Oil... Salt Creek Pras. Creek Cons. «Cheese high-| 19.—Rains in nd in parts of the domestic ng crop belt led to fresh declines in the price of wheat today during the early dealings here, Unexpected quotations only a temporarily bullish in- fluence on the Chicago market. Re- ports, however, t the next few day the rust question for South Dakota Minnesota attracted Furthermore there were complaints of a wet Opening prices, nged from half cent decline the weather of would determine September and December $1.27% 2 e followed by a material setback all around. unfavorable for tended to strengthen After opening un September values sagged some- a general sympathizing rt was un- © off, Septerhber 47% Further losses sensued. Higher quotations on firmness to provisions. hogs. gave Foreign Exchange 19.—Foreign Quota fons in Gemand 438%; y bills on banks, 13; cables, 38.01; WNor- , 26.69: Denmark Spain, 194; Jugo 0014; Ru- Argentina, 32.50; Brazil, Montreal .99 9-16, SILVER - W YORK, July 19.—Bar silver Mexican do! Poultry mar- 0%; broilers, LIBERTY BONDS 19.—Liberty first 4%4s, third 4\%s, U. 8. Gov- OIL SECURITIES By Wilson Cranmer & Co, 28 05 85 15 27 30 16 18 08% 09% Central cipe -----~--- 1.90 2,00 Consolidated Royalty. 1.19 1.21 Cow Guien 3 05 12 06 229% OT 7.00 09 01 09 01 00% - 1.83 1.36 - 9.00 11.00 04 06 01% 02% 29.50 30.00 04.05 03% 04% 15% 16% 14 16 20 = 1.00 04 06 CLOSING 17.50 17.75 0 8.25 59.00 60,00 204.00 205.00 10.00 55.50 Standard Oil Stocks Allied Chem: American Car & Foundry American International American Ameritan Ameri American Tel and 1 American Tobacco America American Onaconda Atchison Aulantic Coast Line _. Baldwin Locomotive Ba'timoré and Ohio Bethlehem Steel iz California Petroleum Canadian Pacific Central Leather ~ Cerro de Pasco Chandler Motors Chesapeake and Ohio Chicago and Northwestern —. Chicago, Mil and St. Paul pfd Chicago, R. I. and Pac. Chile Copper ~ Coca Cola . Colorado Fuel and Iron — Congeloym ~~... Consolidated Gas Corn Products new - Cosden Ol) --. Crucible Steel Cuka Cane Sugar pfd. Davison Chemical -. Du Pont de Nemours Erie “2: Famous Players Lasky — General Aspha't —-._. General Electrio Great Northern pfd ---.. Gulf States Steel -___. Houston Of] -------.-..--. Illinois Central ~-.--..__.. International Harvester - Int. Mer. Marine pfd. -----. 38% Int, Tel and Tel, ---------. 76% Invincible Oil woesennmnce Il Kelly Springfield Tire Kennecott Copper ~.—.. Louisville and Nashvil! Mack Truck Marland Of . Maxwell Motors A — Middle States O11 Missouri Kan and Tex. Missouri Pacific pfd. National Lead --. New Orleans, Tex and Mex... 9915 New York Central Norfolk. and Western Northern Pacific Pactife Ol . Pan American Petroleum B.~ 49% Pennhylvania ¥ Producers and Refiners Pure Oil Reading — Republic Iron and Steel ReyTolds Tobacco B Seaboard Air Line Sears Roebuck ~ Sinclair Con. — S'oss- Sheffield Steel.and Iron 6714 | ler wild animals and the singing and Southern Pacific Southern Railway . Southern Railway pfd. -. s 2 S 8 3 : a 1 i H H ; i i H ebiddae Let FS ea titi ti i 2 2 ekaosn wabea 2 " SS 3 2 7 SS3ss SSeS : 4 Ras BSen38 Kees : RR RRR SO FSRRSEES z : oS RRR E RE sy sc IE EN ta La tte a aa ae = ERA at 2 Sid i aR aR SE ee Eade oR de Standard Ol of N. J. Studebaker Corporation ‘Texas Co, ..--.. Transcontinental Oil Union Pacific United Drug United States Rubber United States Steel Utah Copper Westinghouse 56% BARNEY GOOGLE. AND SPARK PLUG ‘ THE BANK Gave ME How's THE JM Lucky Ive Gor some ONE LIKE HER To HANDLE MY MONEY.-. | OF THE ToiwsT « Tuat ‘s¥sTem © HAD WHERE I COULD ONLY DRAW OUT A BUCK AT : 3 % & TIME was Ale ; RUE OMEN SONS WET- LM LETTING 4 MN LANDLADY KEEP MY Rou FoR ME GOSH ,DOC, SAVE * THAT FOR THE NEXT FOG. You SOUND LIKE AN OCEAN LINER. PLANING MILL.! You SAY “The LANDLADY WENT OUT StorPiNG? Financtac BACK MY MONEY - > o ME AND Tete SATUATION. They WERE AFaniD I Tu is rae Me eee News BEUs!! BARNEY WAS*GowAa BUST hER To ; I SHOULD HAVE KNOWS GETTER THAN TO GIVE HER, THAT % ISCO S - HOw LONG HAS a GASOLINE ALLEY—THEY CAN'T TUNE HIM ‘OUT 1 TELL You! WASN'T SNORING. 1 KNOW WHAT 1 WAS DOING. | WASN'T EVEN: By Billey De Beck TD ZIIIZEELE psa ZEIT feo “Uf nase 1 SPOSsE bo you NOU WeRE CALL IT = FILING A YODELING ? | ¥ prican Can . Locomotiv: an Sugar Woolen - ‘wrence McKie are: 22-year-old twins of Lincoln, Neb Vera, or maybe it’s Verna, is golmg to marry Lawrence, or maybe it’s Loren, All four are going to be married at the same time, Each girl says she knows her fiance from his twin. They met at @ dance when partners were chosen by lot. Each boy drew the girl he is to marry, On the iett are Verna and Lawrence and on the right are Vera and Loren, Holiday Spirit Reigns "ith Circus in City It’s a holiday for everybody today, for the largest wild animal circus in the world is in town. ; Thousands have come to see the great show unload from the long ‘line of circus cars and coaches, And what a-sight it is! Picturesque, glistening trappings; 1,200 wild educated animals from every jingle under the sun; hundreds of pretty girls from ‘sunkist’’ California; an equal num ber of fair equestriennes with over a hun- dred handsome, gold-colored dancing horses; great steel-lunged calliopes, | Users, feopards, ounce, jaguars, pu- and three tribes of full-blooded] mas, ocelots, rimau-dahans, lynx American Indians from Arizona,|chetahs, hyenas, wolves, ding: New Mexico and Nevada. Amid the trumpeting of elephants, roaring of lions, shrill cries of smal- Y., N. HL, and Hartford sentation later to the English queen amid surroundings of splendor. ‘Three tribes of Indians from the arid desert of Arizona; the cactus jackals, bears, sea-lons, seals, kan-| covered plains of Nevada and the garoos, zebrus buffalo, yaks, ox, ga-| wild, rolling hills of New Mexico, zelles, deer, antelope, chamois, gi- dily attired in barbaric costumes, raffe, lames, tapir, rhir®cerous and} their faces streaked with warpaint Lotus, the 5-ton largest,’ and only} will have a part in the gigantic, his- blood-sweating performing hippopo-} toric pageant. | ‘ tans in the world; are only al ai Gq. Ba ‘a 2 56% | dawn. ‘The tumult increased in vol-| gmail part of the exhibition of wild| very door m feature that aha 34% | UMe as the train came to a stoPtanimals from) many parts of the] travel to the tamed “painted des. and the cirous folk, 1,080 of them,| wort, ” * ae Hn including performers, officials and Sih Ane AP Sone Very. Yoav tO 7WIE- chattering of various colored birds and monkeys of every species, the big show steamed into the city at andard O11 of Cal -.. nelus 1] Every year the Al G. Barnes cir-|ness—the famous “snake dance” of Texas and Pacific — Ped Reds cecal ara unloading” equip:| us grows larger and more gorgeous| the Hop! Indians. With the savage Tobacco Products 62% pe 4 ang this year it is larger than ever|tom-toms beating an aboriginal ca- 4%, | Soon the huge, white billowy can- yas circus tops began rising, sil: houetted against the skyline at the show grounds, and the Al G, Barnes greatest wild animal circus with hundreds more animals and] dence. the feathered warriors,dressed birds, including more gorgeous trap-|in the skins of wild animals, dancing pings and many more tableaux wag-| the weird ceremonies, deadly rattle- ons; not forgetting the most sensa-|snakes are wound about their bodies tional clreus of the age, “Pocahon-| and heads. on earth hung out its “At Home} tas at the Court of Queen Anne,"| At 2. o'clock this afternoon and 8 card. the great American historical ex-|o'elock tonight when the three wild Then preparations were quidkly|travaganza that @pens the big pro-| animal arenas, the stages, the rings and systematically made for the| gram at each performance und the great hippodrome track are equent performances for this af-| In this gorgeous is en-| filled with the hundreds: of daring 8. Cast Iron Pipe 8. Ind. Alcohol County Attorne the accident was an unavoid is the opinion expres: ecutor following ate yesterday afternoon.» c ‘The coroner's jury which was com- ntuating the posed of D. E. Mitchell, James Ham-| man died of mon and Z. LOEB ADMITS STRIKING BLOW THAT KILLED ROBERT FRANKS CHICAGO, July 19—Richard Loeb,| The youth's millionaires’ sons anh” awaiting trial! with Nathan Leopold on charges of kidnaping and slaying Robert Franks, has admitted that it was he who actyally struck the blow Killing their victim, the Chicago Her- ald and Examiner says today. blow wad struck with a cold chisel, wrapped with tape .and drove the automobile in which they riding at the ti university’ graduate students, in their first confessions told identically the same story with the excaptiop that each accused the other of strike The} ing the fatal blow. Loeb, the news- per says, made the additional con- Leopold| fession after learning the penalty was the same for both regardless of which was the actual’slayer. NOBLAMEFIXEDINDEATH OF AGED MAN HiT BY MOTOR No setion will be taken against) cident occurred and. they Officer W. A. Baker of the police | Swering a call to West B street, The department whose motorcycle struck an aged man in front of the colt} “he sday morning, the acci-|had at the hands of the attending dent resultthg in the death of the to ter. That, ble one the pros. held were an- d of the motoreycle is supposed © been 20 miles-ah hour, treatment which the vidtim uso brought into ti Z ed by the doctor it had been impossible to make ures of the skull at first ble condition use the doctor 2 hypodermic for fear injury. The a fractured, skull, . Miller neither exon- The name of the v tin has not erated the driver of the motorcycle | yet been discovered ough it is nor fixed blame for the accident. Baker had been accompanied by Captain James Farris when the ac- thought that it may have been Meyer, according to testimony from men ho had worked with him. Showers Are Forecast for Coming Week ASHINGTON, July 19. for, the week beginn! fississippi and lower Mis- scattered showers storms at beginning, abott middle Temperatures near John W. Davis Goes to Maine For Vacation BOARD ROCKLAND , ENROUTE TO BORO, Maine, July 19.—Having se lected his campaign ‘m Shaver pf West Virgini fixed August 11 as the date for his|and the agre formal notification. Johf W. ; was speeding northward tod bound: coast of Maine search of solitude In which to study accepting the Demo. nager, Clem and Davis | lived slong in out his address cratic presidential nomir Tils destination is § Acre Island, off Roc mer home of Charles Ds whose guests M will be for the next ten days. 5 turning to New York at the end of | LONDO) that time he will put his address in| lated Press.)—A te . the sum na Gibson. ni acted the adventure of Captain John , in a depiction of page- Barnes glisten-] Smith, the intrepid English explorer; led in the show world, ing colored tableaux wagons, reflect-| his rescue from death by the Indlan is who sit in the great ing back from the sun and smiles of} princess, Pocahontas, after he had|colliseum of circus seats under the which if placed end to end would be} young and old standing in the long] beon sentencefl to die by her father;| big-top, watehing the wild. beasts lonk enough to reach to Constan- | line of spectators, the dignified cam-| the subsequent marridge of Poca:| and actors, will stir and. thrill. to tinople. : els, the sharp, striped zebras, Hons,’ hontas to John Rolfe and her pre-|the wonder of it all, i ————_-._ __ Eight persons were killéd and s eral wounded here INVEST ORS IN GERMAN LOAN TO GE SECURED Will Have Priority on All Resources of ,- Germariy. ‘DON, July 19.—(By The As- ted Press.)}—The committee of the inter-allied conference in charge ° netions in the event of Ger- many's Uefault under the ~Dawes scheme today unanimously agreed to inshre investors in the loan to Ger- many of priority on all German re- ources in the event of Germany's default. , The committee also unanimously eed to preserve all the rights en- Jeyed by the ‘nations .which signed t sailles treaty. These two is sues stood in the way of the nego- Uations of the conference yesterday ment on them, it, is b expediate the work of a general agreement on plan. reement on tke preserva- rights of the signator!« uilles tregty was a cpr mier Herriot of Frat it preserves the right y Separate action on the part vf Trance Davis ————r.—__— July 19.—(By The Asso: m of ithletes representing thé United Sthtes to- day defeated a, British team by seven ¢yents to three in a post- Olympic games athletic tournament, under the auspices of the Amateur in a|Athbletic aaseociation sat Stamford shooting affray between soldiers of Hill. Most of the athletes had par- the republican guard and police, icipated in the games at Paris.

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