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ADVANCES BOSTON, Oct. 31.—The Commer- cial Bulletin tomorrow will say of the wool market: “The demand for. wool has been of very fair proportions during the weeksand prices show a strengthen- ing “tendency in this’ market, al- though actual quotations can hardly be advanced very much on most de- seriptions, and where advances have been made they have been off- set, In a-measure by the granting of January 1, dating. Some scour- cd descriptions however, are dearer sThe clothing and manufacturing sit- uation is~not greatly changed, ex- cept for @ further-slight advance on goods. “In the west contracting has be- cdme more general, with prices gen- erally from 45 to 46 cents for the best wools ‘in Wyoming and Mon- tana and 42@43c in Utah, while 50c and bettér has been paid in Texas for, 12 months wool. Up to 53c pald for twelva’ months wools Sat Angelo this we “The foreign pritr markets are lowly hardening. Yorkshire is feel ing more confident consequent upon the English election results. “Mohair is. very steady. Prices in in BY WOOL IN MARKETL- te 50@52c, Michigan and New York fleeces— Delaine unwashed 57@5S8c; half ch e@ Casner Daily Tribu Bond Stocks :: Grain == NEWS AND QUOTATIONS BY LEASED | RECORDED || ‘New You soam STOCK MARKET [WHEAT MARKET POTATOES 5 Market Gossip CHICAGO, Oct. ' 31.—Potatoes | ; market dull; receipts, Marine Oil Operations, 1 U. S,, 1,286; Minne Operations of the Marine Oil com orth Dakota sacked Red Texas touched. 6c for straight hair pany in Salt Creek are shown as| River Ohio, 90@ $1.00; South Dakota f and §0c for kid hair.” | follow: sacked round widtes, 80@90c; bulk, The Commercial Bulletin will pub- Smelting & Refs. —— Restraint Imposed by Elec-|Close Was Firm After Fine] section 20.39.78, ‘Taylor §— Well Minnesota ‘sacked round lish quotations as: follow - Sugar -.---------- tion Shaken Off in Day of Trading With producing since October 32. + T0@85c; bulk 60@7be; Decadal teeta menial ta, ee es =e Tod 5 Trades General Advances Bection 18-40-78, Wyokans 6. —|an sacked round whites, 90 sible ject yr ay’s s OW consin sacked round whites, fleeces—Delaine unwashed 62@63;17 Tobacco ~~... se traightening uv ol hole, depth at | co sa) round whites, Woolen Zinc, Lead and Sm. 1,979; Wyokans fancy, shade higher, half blood combing 60@61; % blood yokans 6, rigging up. ih CHICAGO, Oct. 31—Liberal buy- combing 69@60c. Fine unwashed ing apparently for eastern interests turned the wheat market upward today despite a weak opening. The close was firm at the same as yet terday's finish to lc higher; De- tail 5 OIL, SUMMARY i Edmonton showing Medicine Hat Butter and Eggs rain. Minnesota, Calgary and Swift t Current cloudy. NEW YORK, Oct. 31.— Today's stock market shook off the restraint heretofore imposed by. election un- certainties and bounded upward un- der the leadership of Standgrd In- blood unwashed 58@59; % blood un. washed B8@E0e;.% blacd unwashed dustrial issues. Gains of 1 to 6] cember $1.41% to $1.41%, and May| Wheat 163,000, corn, 212,000; oats} CHICAGO, Oct. 31.—Butter, high- 57@58c; fine unwashed 47@48c. points were quye common with more | 31.47% to $1.47%. 226,000, ‘Shipments wheat, 228,000; |") crea y extras, S8%c; _stan- Wisconsin, Missourt and average than 20 issues attaining new peak showed conaider-|.corn, 289,000; oats, 97,000. dards, 87c; extra. firsts, 36% @37 4 firsts, 3214 @340; seconds, Eggs, unchanged, receipts, cases. 30@ 30% 6,729 New England—Halt blood 57@5: blood 57@58c; % blood 55@s6c. Oregon eastern number 1 staple, $1.45@$1.48. Fine and F. M. comb- ing $1.35@$1.40 $1.20@$1 $1.32. Territory—Montana and similar— finestaple choice $1.50@$1. lood combing $1.35@$1.40; % prices for the year. Sales approxi- mated 1,000,000 shares. Stock prices made further recoy- ery at the opening of todays’ market with buying undoubtedly influenced by easy money rates and more fa- vorable trade news, Merchandising issues continued to display marked strgngth, Sears Roebuck and Associ: i Dry Goods attaining new 1 day during the early dealings, Liverpool quotations being mudh lower and Argentine sorecasts pointing to beneficial rain. On the downturns in price however nouses with seaboard connections ook to the buying side and helped to bring about rallies. One hous purchased more than a million bush- els ‘n a few minutes. Opening quo- Studebaker earned $1.05 a share on common in third quarter, Sale of ethyel gas forbidden in New York city by health depart 1 ment. London cables state directors of Mexican Eagle Oil company have postponed declaration of dividends on first preferred stock until end eastern clothing valley number 1, $1,28@ SILVER 01% halt NEW % blood YORK Oct. fean 31.—Bar sil. Colorado Fuel dollars, 63%4c Congoleum 04% 06s combing aes S be Year: miei obemn 5 1.15@$1.20; % blood comb- - 4 3 a 123% re ns, whch ranged from % to|°* > x is 8 y Ganentids ede F prices at and 1234 -whch, x : On: ing $1.00@$1.05, Spacey sak Crane a 2 staa ar st spectively. Mack Trucks and Mis-[ 1c lower, with December. $1.40%| | Professor Burstall of Birmitg-} Jo... 0m ee ae Pulled Delaina $1 $1.60. A. a, |COrm Products new - vi Plors = 3.15 * Isourt Pacific preferred each ad-§ ‘° $1-41, and May $1.46 %to $1.46%,| ham, England, university, prodicts eror —— ga $1.50. Fine A supers $1.30@$1.85;|Cosden ON — Western States - ee as okt were followed by slight further de: | Petroleum famine in five years and | duction in tho South Texas and Guilt A supers §1.20@$1.25. Crucible Steel — ¥jon yess 05 08 The main price mavement contin: | ‘nes and then-by arecovery to| that only discovery of cheap effec-| fields slumped 1.915 barrels in the Mohairs—Best combing 80c@865c;}Cuba Cane Sugar pfd. ------ ued «upward throughout the early | 2b0ve yesterday's finish. tive gubstitutes will save motor car, | "st week to 4 total of 145,770, Blev best carding 70@75c. vison. Chemical NEW YORK CURB,CLOSING specu'ative interest}, COP? and ogts were | @rishly af-| aviation and other industrials. en new producers were brought in trading with Foreign Bond Problem. Tam sometimes “asked “what 1 think about foreign bonds: Are they good for inyestmenhis? Are they safe? Would you advise nie to buy them? Now no one answer can be given to.all-the peop:e who ask tliese ques- tions. For some investors foreign securities fre desirable, for others they are not. ~ As;I have repeated’y explained in this -weries everything depends upon the* prospective investor's resources.” No. one is justified in putting all his funds into foreign bonds or for that matter into any one class, of security, If his capital is small ‘he must be content with the compara- tively low return whieh high, grade domestic ronds afford. If fis re- sources ‘are a Httle larger he may properly. réach out for larger re- turns. Even then, however, foreign bonds. can not be considered as a whole. They vary in merit just as do domestic bonds. Some are high grade and.conservative investments, some a speculative in the extreme. are financially strong govern- 4 and theré are ipsa wank, ‘The trouble is hat the average American investor divides all secur- ides into two br esat: 3 American and others. The matter is not so simple. The eon of one of the greatest gas wells ever drilled in the Rocky Mountain territory is at Cisco, Utah, in Granl county, on what is locally known as the Green River desert, 65 miles west of Grand Junction, Colo. Cisco consists of two water tanks, a fair hotel, a pool hall, one store, two filling stations, two section houses, Wf dozen shanties and four or ive corrals. It is probably as deso- late a locality as can be found in the entire west and why anyone should live there has been and still is as much of a mystery as ever, and Yet Cisco may become a real town in the neaw future, with many peo- ple and many homes, for both oil and gas have been found there, and where these are in quantity, nothing is impossible. The drilling in of a 90,000,000 cuble foot gas well by the Utah Oil Refin- ing company, a suljeidiary of the Standard Oil of Indiana, has attract- ed much atention and caused much comment throughout oil circles from California to the Mid-continent field; for the reason that this is the first favorable showing in Utah and be- cause itis in a locality from which . in the past, the least was expected. Cisco is located directly upon the Denver and Rio Grande Western Yailroad and has been nothing but a true ‘tank town’ to date, the rail- road company having to water all engines there. It is about four miles from the Colorado river from which any amount of water ean be obtaiu- ed, The Ocean-to-Ocean highway Also passes through © and prob: ably 200 automobiles per day go through Cisco on the way to or from the west coast cities. In the sum- Mer, Cisco lived off the tourist and in the winter it lived off the sheep- herders and cowboys who occasion- supplies for il'y come to town to ithe sheep and cattic The developments so far consist of ithres or four five or six barrel oll ells around the town of Cisco and he 90,000,000 foot gasser just drill- pd in by the Utah Oi! Refining com- ny. ‘The oll wells aro only 430 feet in depth ahd the big gasser 1, 460 fect in depth. The Cisco field pan be drilled at moderate co is to the shallow depths. The bic well is,15 milues northwest of isco and on the same anticline as ie small off wells, so it would seem though there were. very likely hanceg for g large pool or of sever B pools along the axis of the anti ine. It will be a poor man's field pr the ri m that wel's can be ed for from $1,000 to $10,000 ee the equipment fs on the ground id being on a transcontinental rall- pad, material can be cheaply deliv- dat any location and supplies dily obtained from Gand Junc- pn, Denver or Salt Lake City. Re- jeries are located at % Lake, ah and Florence, Col., so that a dy market is assured for all oll. ae F Everyman’s Investment UTAH BOASTS ONE: OF BIG GAS WELLS iu Pont de Nemours --. in the coastal fields. fected by fine weather aud by lack} American Petroleum Institute Erie Bld Asked | converging on the specialties. Asso qe oie cxeene an declines, As us 2 > a Mountain) Producers - 19.87 20.00] ciated Dry Goods was bid up to kd . After | compares production by fields Oc- nr ine ives See Glenrock Oil _---_-.— HSSMiGE iD)" 3. Yalnte”.above "taat eee giog tts o1 ame ower: De- | tober 25 ays October 18 as follow: icone’ euyenipr lesen tictoae atrae Sener! Fae se Zalt Creek’ Pras. nights’ close and United Drug, Fed-| C°™ber $1.03 to $1.04% the corn] Hast of California, 1,356,950 and to high cost. of feed and low: stocks. fe aE market sagged furtner and then re-| 1,266,850; Mid Continent it Creek Cons. excluding General “Motors pape ets eral, Mining and Smelting preferred. | covered most of the loss. Sree hens 043.480 and] DBC, exbect a price of 750 a dozen Great Northern pfa ~ few York 2 -_.-.. sen Motors, General Electric.” Gate started %o to %4o off, De- ys wr 78. azo:| O8 extras shipped to New York. In a general way.the credit of « > Prairie Oll -.._-.--.-- Arlecitane Radlater, Yellow Cay 942,500; Burbank, 72,450 and 73,450; Gulf States Steel . foreign borrower corresponds to the |ougton ofl Mutat -2_-—-"_-—- “14:00, 4142] Manufacturing and International | Snead vomewhane o> ont then hard. well, 40,500 "ana 88,000; ‘Btroud,| FOO TO. CLASSIFY return which its obligations give in| Tine” contra, = =----_56.87 7.00} Telephone, were among the score of | “Provisions .were weak, eympathis- 4 40,5 800; § . FOR RENT—Comfortable sleeping for man only. 250 N. Beech, Apt. the open market, This is not an in- fallible rule but you wilt not go far wrong if you fol’ow it. For example, the bonds of the Dominion of Can- of the United Kingdom, of Switzerland and of Sweden sell on a lower yleld basis than those of oth- er foreign governments and these cuntrile: uk among the strongest finan After them come the na- 45,100 and no change; and 74,600, 5,900 and 8,050; Bristow, 6,000 and Corsicana Powell, 72,00 Smackover light, 33,800 Hull 16, lumbia, $4,400 and and 67,950. 000 and no 138,000 and atocks to climb a point or so. He: selling of Mexican Seaboard sent that stock “down 2 points, Foreign exchanges, cpened easier with trad ing quiet. ‘The buying movement gained add ed momentum as trading progressed with the so-called pivotal industr: assuming the leadership of th International Harvester -..._ Int. Mer, Marine pfd. --... Int. Tel. and Tel. Invinelble Oil. Kelly Springfield Tire ~ Kennecott Copper Louisville and Nashville Mack Truck Marland Oil ing with a downturn in*hog values. Subsequently, the corn market de- veloped relative firmness, owing to a letup in selling pressure. The close was irregular at %c net lower .o sc advance, December $1.06 to $1.06 In the last part of the wheat day the market strength was well main- room, modern, $12.50 month, 10, upstairs. LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Oct. 31—Hogs 4000; uneven; steady to 25c lower; mostly 10 to 16c off; medium arid heavy- 35,500; Balt Creel 65,500 Santa Fe Springs, Long E Hunting Have you seen the 1925 ad ally ance. United States Steel Common tained notwithstandl ; 7 : f t Maxwell M A Weight show maximum. declines; un-| “nce. United States Ste: p ng assertions ch, 40,000 and 39,000; Torrance tions of ncrthern Europe which were Toes Bt Ole lerweight unchanged; demand nar-|:rossed 109, Baldwin touched 120 that most of the buying had come| senoe aud awace bits Hudson Coach? neutral in the grqat_war and oné or lateecun Kan and row; top $9.80. Bulk better 240 to} 2nd Ame: selling ex-divi-§ from shorts, : aha two of the more prosperous South Missouri Pacific pf. 325 pound butchers $9.25 to $9.70;|Jent 1%, s 133%. The sharp Open High Low Close American’ countries. Is-it not evident (hen that foreign bonds of this class are on a differ- ent plane from those offered by- the newly organized mid-European coun- tries as well as those who suffered severely in the war? Remember I am not saying that these other bonds &re_not worthy of Investment con- oun up of 3 oints in United States Cast Iron Pipe common, which at- ained a new peak price at 118%, was brought about by urgent cover- ng of bear traders who had sold heir stocks short on the announce- nent of a recent court dectrfon in favor of preferred stockholders. Yhile industrials and specialties re 17 to 22 pound averages largely $3.00 @$9.15; bulk 140 to 150 pound weight $5.50@$7.75; strong weight slaugh- ter pigs mostly $6.00@$6. packing sows largely $8.25@$8.51 average cost of packer and shipper drove of hogs here Thurs(ay $5.68; weight °27 pounds; heavy weight hogs $9.20 80; medium $8.50@$9.10; light National eLad -)..-----.... New Orleans, Tex.@ Max. .... New. York Central . +1.40% 1.42% 1.4016 1.414% + 146% 1.48% 1.40% 1.478% 1.33% 1.80% 1.321% Tower Talk With all the big talk about can- didates going about, don't forget to do a little work against proposed ‘amendments No.1 and?2. Both are 1.06% 1.03% 1.06% 1.10% 1.05% 1.1 111% 1.08% 1.103 Pan American ePtroleum B -- sideration. I am: only pointing out |Pems¥ivania ex div. --...2- 5@$9.20; light light $6.00@$8.00;| orded the largest gains," there was maar Ad f asig' [amet tO beoaies Gow) Kad wha that there are degrees of strength ners. packing hogs smooth $8.30@$8.65. | zood buying in the railroad group 4% 154!) (.5gig:] thiaratate: needs at this time is “ in foreign securities as in all other Packing hogs rough $8.00@$8.30;|with Southern Railway, Wabash 52% 52% 52% 5214 ing up. kinds of investments, slaughter pigs $5.75@$6.50. yreferred A, Missiuro Pacific pre- words in this fie'd as elsewhere. you Cattle receipts.6,000; steer. market} ' Northern Pacific, Amert- 1.20% 1.23% 1.20% 1.21% | |, Douglas has sattied Its water, pol- get what you pay for. If you insist practically at standstill, quality gen: |! r refining;-May Department 4 126% 1.23% 1.24 aina! nea poe Sara "$100, ee ae upon a high. return on your invest> erally very plain; best yearlings held d Virginia Railway and ateeutninte caverkl’ Weeks ment you must take the risk that without bid; better grade fat shes%ower so.d 2 or more points above +15.10 15.12 12.05 15.12)? ts ao but was at first refused. The mon- ey will be used by the town to wipe out one-third of Its bonded indebted. ness, it is said, «13.92 goes with it and that fs true wheth- er the investment is domestic or for- efgn. stock not moving; lower grades and }canners and cutters fairly active; steady; bulls steady to weak; veal calves around 25c lower.. Bulk to packers 39.50@$10.00; few to out: anne _$10.25@$10.50; stockers and slow, weak to unevenly low- or one load of fleshy feeders for short turn $8.40. Sheep—Receipts 9,000; all classes generally steady; sorting light Bulk desirable native lamb $13.50@$13.60, Top to outsiders $13.75, Culls most- ly $10.50; comeback westerns $13.25 @$13.50, Fat ewes $5.00@$6.75; comeback as! feeders $13.75. Short mouth native breeding ewes, ,$6.50. Jast nights’ final quotations, 13.95 13,90 ‘money renewed at 2 per cent. There were reveral soft spots in “he comprehensive advance of the afternoon which swept numerous stocks, materially aboye the early high prices. Cushman dropped 3 acints,. Penie) Boone Woolen Mille 1% 10-7%, a new minimum and ‘Standard Plate Glass preferred, 8 to 80, also a new low. Meantime Bald- win moved up to 121%, and Ameri- can Can to 135%. Associated Dry Goods sold 4% higher. “Soo” five and General Electric 5%. The closing was strong. Buying orders continued to pour Into the market in large volume during the tate trading, Crucible Bteel, Ameri- can Sugar preferred, Union Tank Car, Virginia Railway and Power and Commercial Solvents B, being bid up 3 to 5 points. Call 13.92 Penis: Steel and Iron 12.00 11.70 ithern Standard Oil of Cal, Standard Of! of N. J. Studebaker bis ional Texas Co. --- Texas and Pacific -_-....-.. Products ~..---.-... Transcontinental Oil —-----.. Union, Pacific ~-.-------....- ‘United Drug --.-_-....--- 53) 8. Cast Iron Pipe - “8S. Ind. Alcohol --... Rea States Rubber -. United States Steel —.... Gtah Copper ---...----.. Wertinghouse Wlectric --.-. Among noted oil experts who will deliver lectures this winter to the class in ofl and gas production at Oklahoma. university is EB. L. Wsta- brook, petroleum production engin- eer of the Midwest Refining com- pany. His subject will be the Salt Creek field, As the olf capital of the Rocky mountain region Casper needs per- 18.12 12.2 LIBERTY BONDS ey will be‘used by the tow nto wipe bonds closed—3%a $101.5; first 44s $10 205, we nd 4%e $101.2. manent club rooms for its Wyoming 2.10; fourth 4448 $102.2. Petrroleum Club. Now is the time . Uv. 8. covernmans 4%4e $106.31. to act. a No ‘long pipelines need be ‘built-as most of the field is mot’over 4 miles from the rallway tracks. Oll men from Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas and Texas and Oklahoma are expected to visit the Cisco field in inereasing numbers and much}; drilling will undoubtedly be. done] during the next year. There are sev- eral antclines worthy :of testing. in the vicinity of Cisco and now that: Always Big Value for the Money You Pay KANSAS CITY, Mo., Cattle—5,100 calves, $3.00; no fed steers offered, few loads grassers to killers, $4.75@6.50; steady; she stock, scarce, steady, butcher cows and heifers, $3.75@5.75; can- ners and cutters, $2.50; vealers Oct. 31.— LUE Pennant NOTICE and bulls, steady; practical veal ig top, $10. medium and heavy . Cords for highest vill atts t te co will attract attention for some calves, $3.50@7.00; western bulls, i Defend ee Re ES #2180226; native’ bolomnas, $3256 anally «UE aees cy “4,00; stockers and feeders, st¢ady. N Ye , Oct. Bt. Rocky Mountain area and the cheap- 16% 16%] Hoga—-8,000; uneven; shipper mar- be ul abtesieconps ria pete VOTE OF Cords for cord quality hess of drilling to moderate depths S00ir'380 cae tiastis ie; to, 166 Nowersd Pattee he } RS OF THE FIRST WARD at a low price. And habe nent to. the be an sTuOR Saab 59°60 $9.25; packer market opened 10 to] “Tin, tirm; spot and futures, 63.37. st . packers top, $9.10; bulk o i 00. Zing cost ye fortune 10 StU sively 50 | sales, "$8.05@0.10; bulk desirable tek i: Cater got asd te L J Daddy Baerthel biogas yaunsangiviced 4 200 to 300-pound butchers, $8.75@ | tures, $6.50@6.52. , * i tread and strong con- struction make them first choice in the 137 82 55 115 106 9.10; packing sows, $7.75@8.25; tock pigs steady, $6.00@6.50 000; odd lots native and steady at $13,00@13.75; Antimony, spot, $11.75. WHEAT NOT TO Candidate for Councilman from the First Ward IS A RESIDENT OF THE FIRST WARD LONDON, Oct. 31. ‘Bar silver, 34% pence per ounce; money 2% Gal. Sig. New pfa. —.-_-103 BE EXPORTED. MOSCOW, Oct. 31.—The soviet government has been obliged to ibandon its plan for the exporta- tion of wheat, Leo B. Kameneff an- nounced at a plenary sitting of the clippers 10 to 15c higher at $11.85. per cent. fabric field, wn-------- 126 128 a6 OMAHA, Neb., 5,000; Oct. 81.—Hogs, mostly 10@15¢ choice lights, 225 pounds and up, $8.40@8.75; top, $8.85; de- and ABSOLUTELY QUALIFIED FOR THE OFFICE National Transit —__. New York Transit Northern Pipe — Ohio Oj -----. MONEY | The Brodie Rubber NEW 31.—Call YORK, Oct. International Pete sirable 160 to 225-pound weights, bleh; 41 lows Ss bak Co., Ine. } central comyuittee of the commun-|Penn. Mex. --—_ $7.75@8.50; packing” sows mostly anaing Was, Se Obbecex Rumors to the Contrary Have No Foundation b ist party. ‘This, he sald, was due] Prairie Ojl $7.75@8.15; bulk of all sales, $7.50@ nc Feo Hd Mh wr ' (The Store with a Smile.) to the failure of the governrment|Prairie Pipe 8.40; average cost Thureday, $8.52; | ee ne net acme, 1845 Une loan ~ organizations to realize their orig-| golar Ref. welght, 252. Soaps taReea boliateentt 0 bb “cava; 130 W. Second St. nal. plan of acquiring 400,000,000 So. Pipe -. Cattie—Receipts, 1,600; fed | SLM; eee eua@ay, Prine oods (7,222,600 tons) of grain tolgo. Penn Ol| .2 steers and yearlings, scarce, steady; Wiad adhe Sb ae YOUR SUPPORT AT THE POLLS WILL BE 1 paper, 3@3% cover the state needs. 8. W, Penn Of1 — ‘The importation of foreign goods 5. O, Ind. .. top long yearlings average around 1,000 pounds, $12,15; other killing The Federal Authorized APPRECIATED Sales Agenc id Sign are would be Mmited to articles of ab-]s5 6, Kan, Classes, generally steady; stockers by. ety om solute necessity, among them $50; and feeders nominally steady; bulk Foreign Exchange Deal on Quality, Price and th of American cotton. grass cows and heifers, $3.35@5.50; Service. $3.00@3.25; $2.40@3.2 8. O. Ze nocenmpecees 000,000 we —Political Advertisoment. bologna bulls, ind cutters, canners practical 8. 0, Ohio 8S. O. Ohio pfd, -.--.... NEW YORK, Oct. 31.—Foreign ex wan eal top, $10.00. changes Steady Quotations in COPPER LOSS cAslalnngt hc Sh Pe 6,500: all clasees| Cent#’ Great Pritain demand 452% vi Ace: , fed lambs, $13.25@13 cables 452%: 60 day bills on banks : ; SHOWS LARGE son Seb = inane cn rag tia.s; ate Seer ire Savana e 80, jeaples | Auranai £0 SALES AGEN 13.40; fed clipped, $11.4 Ttuly demand 4,34@; cables § eantine, $9.50; New top, $6.1 Belgitiny demand 4.80; cables LF EDE ERAL NEW YORK, Oct. 31,—Calumet ing lambs, upward to $13.26. ar chenieon eae ahem wiviee TIRES milRapartte pienrery Bry! rea DENVER, Colo,, Oct. 31 y demand 14.93; Sweden és: FOR COUNCILMAN Fa teticgeh it peli ices ae Ms 400—Holdovers 1,00; fairly active; 2 Denmark demand arter ended September 30 after to 150 Iower than Thure.| 17-33; Switzerland demand 19.24; depreciation and depletion against tac ea che pea nds hy eee 23g | Sbaln demand 13.44: Greece demand THIRD WARD loss of $104,799 in the Ee rg pound averages: few heayies aver-| 1-74; Poland demand 19%; Czecho Federal Ti 5 quarthr snd loge_of $150,506 (An /she aging 201 pounds $$.75; bulk others | Slovakia 2.98%; Jugo Slavia 147%; ederal Tires may be obtained first quarter of the year. 175 to 225 pounders $8.15@$8.60- few | AUstria demand .0014%; Rumania from the following Casper CRC OT aie iam Greybull de 1 56%: Argentine demand W. A I I A CE D EVANS Federal dealers ° Torchlight 36.60; Brazil Cemand 11.56; Tokio de . : . : Tidewater Has Bik Basin . 26; stockers $6, mand 38 7-16; Montreal 100, Public Service Station Rock Creek Salt Creek Big Muddy Mule Creek Sunburst ~----------------..-— Hamilton Dome -----------... Ferrig ---------------2-2------ Byron --+--------------------- Notches Pilot Butte ae SUGAR NEW YORK, Oct. 31,—No changes were reported in refined sugar prices which were listed at $7.15@ 7.50 fou fine granulated, with trad- Cattle 1,600, calves 100—around steaGy; fat covs $3.50 to $5.00; heif. *rs $5.00 to $6.00; medium t> fond 2 $7.)) to $8.00; heavy calves $2.50; stock steers $6.25; dcsirable y-anners 200. Eheep—26.900: several ‘ont xfitl hack; fat lar.be strong: twelve Jocks 74 to 77 pound averages $1 R. N. Van Sant Warne & Crosby Art Gaylord B. & D. Auto Supply Co. Good Earnings AMERICAN PARTY NEW YORK, Oct. 31.—Tidewater Oll company, in the nine months of 1924, earned net income of $3,848, 023 equal to $7.69 a share on the al stock against $3,454,748 or Election, Tuesday, November 4, 1924 Home Products and Business Administration a share in the same period last very few feover lambs on sais: Evansville Filling Station sole early, ing Neb, Refined futures wero nominetl, Lander year.