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PAGE SIX weet 1 Buying Orders Re- leased on Exchange This a of Morning YORK, Jan. 3.—Stock prices displayed a firm tone at the y's market, Oils brisk demand, the issuing _ecl'psing 2 a number of ractionally on in- ectric storage battery 4 Warner each opened a Trading in Radio fon” seems to have quieted the stop opening unchanged 4 then reacting slightly. ffield a need 2% polnts. dof buying orders was re. high after the opening and up 4. American nghouse Electric each nced 6% points, touching 168 82 respectively. Bosch Magneto 21 moved up three torage Battery ex. to 2% and American 1 2% pointe above last Cent fc sing Quotation, the first i block of 3,500 shares. re than a score of issues climbed more, the list includ’ng Famous Playe: Stay 1 ( Jersey. The Pan of New California Petrol Cast Iron Pipe Radio Corpora and General Elec ered its losse pints above last ‘ Foreign exchanges rong, demand _ sterling | wing $ > highest ra March, 1919. — New York Stucks Last Sale 4% 161% 205 108% 99 stern -- I d St. Paul pfd. 26% | id Pac. Coca Cola -.- Colorado Fuel eum - Consolidated orn F Gosden. ¢ ructble Marland Ol! ell M ors A aboard Ot! 1 and T Pacifi Wa Es NEW YORK, Jan. Mexican dollars, 52% 6 EAPORT TRADE BOOSTS WHEAT Prices Higher at Opening of Short Session at Chi- cago CHICAGO, Jan. 8—Indications of larger export business overnight led to a material upturn in wheat prices today soon after the opening. The rise in values here was facili- tated by the fact that the spread be- tions on May delivery of wheat was the wildest in weeks, considering ad- vances in sterling exchange rates. Upward swings of the . market were accompanied by a good deal of covering by shorts and by some reinstatement of lines recently un- loaded. The opening, which ranged from %c decline to %c advance, with May $1.76@1.76%, and July $1.51% @1.51%, was followed by an all around advance to about two cents above yesterday's finish. Corn and oats sympathized some what with wheat strength, but were under considerable selling pressure on account of increasing stocks. Af- ter opening unchanged to %c off, May $1.28%@1.28%, the corn mar ket scored moderate gains, but soon eased back, LIVESTOCK (U. 8, De ulture).—Hogs— weak to 10¢ mostly good and chers $16.7 40 pound kind $11.10 0 pound weight $9.90@1 pigs and Ught ght 15 to 25c lower; most 3 off; bulk good choice strong weight s $8.00@8.50: d shorts better nughter p few upward to $8. timated holdover 7,000; heavy weight h $10.70@11.10: medium $10.00@ ight @10.50; Weht Ught $7.75 @10.10 $10.25 @ 10.65; Cattle—R week ago; c lower ing me eceipts fat 1,000; exten extrem weight st s $11.00 handwe'ght }$12.00: yearlings $13.50. Fat cows| 25e higher. Helfers mostly 0c up; bulls 75c to $1 higher: veate >| | @4.00 lower; short. fed | ing among all killing clase ers and feeders : bulk prices follow: Beet sand yearlings $7.85@10.00 kers and feeders $5.00@6.25: fat $4.00@6 beef heifers $5.0 canners and cutters $2.75@3.3' veal calves $9.75@12.00. heep—Receipts 7,000; today's re- elpts Include around $5,600 direct today's market fenera'ly steady meiilum to good fat lambs $16.00@ 17.00; feeding lambs $16 for week nround 21,600 direct; compared with werk ago, fat lambs $1.75 to $2.00 earlines mostly $2.00 off; fat | lower: feeding lambs week's bulk Fat lambs $1 week's $19.00; closing bulk $16.50@ closing top clippers 0@14.50; yearlings $14.00@ fat ewes $8.00@9 week's top 210.00; closing top $9 foed ing lambs $15.75@16.50; top $17.00. | Omaha Quotations, OMAHA, Jan. 3.—{U. S. Depart- ment of Agriculture.)—-Cattle—Re. celpts, 270. Compared with week fo: Fed steers and yearlings, mostly lower; bulk, $§.75@9.00 top, $11.00; butcher cows and heif. ers, strong; veals, strong. to 25c higher; bulls, 15@25c higher; stock- ers and feeders, around 2 ower. k prices follow: Butcher cows and hetfe a6 cutters bu 140 pound averages, $8.00 to| Cattle—Recetpts, 50; calves one tween Chicago and Liverpool quota Oats started to %cl down, May 6 and then averaged lower. Provisions were easier, influenced by further y deliveries of lard here Che Casper Daily Cribune ich et! ian bode BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG ~— LEST We FOREET= “THIS 1S THE DAY oF THE { #3000 2° annicar-* | ° SPARK PLUG HAS BEEN / ONDER THE SUPERUISION OF MR.SULLIVAN SINCE { MONDAY = 1F SPARK PLUG WINS THE # 3000%2 PURSE WILL BE SPLIT. 50-50 BETWEEN SULLIVAN AND GOOGLE «THe LATreR PAYING SPARKY:S TRAINING EXPENSES OUT OF His END OF THE WINNINGS © AFTER TODAY) UNDER AGREEMENT, BARNEY ASAIN ASSOMES SPARK PLUG'S RESPONSIBILITES FoR, “Tue FoToRE «= SPARK PLUG WINS" @ Hovse MRIDS KNEE wy ss ma Reg. U.S. Pat. Of; Copyright, 1928, by The Chicago Tribune. I GOTTA TAKE THE Kick Ins WITH $is00 28 - HALF OF THE PURSE ~~ WHEEE-EE IM ON EASY WAL NO LOOK, ONCA TRAINING EXPENSES OUT OF Your. SHARE FiRer. I GOTALL THE ‘TEMS HERE-> TLL READ‘ EM OFF To You pes » GASOLINE ALLEY—NOTHING SEEMS TO BE PERMANENT HERE BELOW LT. WAGONS BUST DOWN. cood. IM CHARGING You $730 99 For THe LSE OF MY STABIE |. $j0020 For OATS FoR STABLE BCX - - TRAWER—~-- $ES22 - com MASSEUR #15922 —veT—-.-4 4.90 FoR ME NIGHT WATCHMAN ~--- ano Segoe For THE DAY WATCHMAN -— THAT LEAVES You ¢qqoo ‘To THE Goon, - SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1925 #5022 For Hay —. $a300 $0080 For THE By Billey De Beck Wis isA PRIVATE WARD MR. SULLIVAN SAID To GWE NOODA OIL SECURITIES THE DAREDEVIL By Wilson Cranmer & Co. Gessemer on Wyoming Creek Buck }t Williams Jupiter Kinney 01 % 01 1.08 New York Oil 9.00 Pleardy ~ 2.04 Preston - 01K 01% Bank . .00 24.00 yalty & Producers. .03 0314 unset : ‘om Bell Royalty Western Y of EW YORK CURB CLOSING untain Producers 18.37 18.50 OL Creek eek Con, New York Ol] Mutual --. S. O. Indiana Standard Oil Anglo American Ol! Borne Scrymser Buckeye Chesebrough Mfg. Chesebrough pfd. Crescent States Cumberland Bureka Gal. Com. Gal Old pfd. Gal New pfd. P For Tae Luva_ \ Te, DONT |} oe Clementel to open up informal’ex-| Ambassador Herrick said he could for week: beef steers, fat she stc | 10c to 15c higher; calves higher; stockers, feeders ] Hing cl r ly! bulk ifers, $6.75; top cows cows and heifers, $4.01 $5.00; practi€al top vealers, $10. $10.50 to $10.75; stockera un generally $4.50 to $6 ep—Receipts, none; late Friday three loads 57 pound feeder lambs $1 For week Fat lambs, | 1 $1.25 lower; other classe ' fat lambs, early, $17.40; Inter ie bulk early, $16.50 to $17 later, $15,50 to $16.00; few fat $8 wv averaging $6.00: few feeder ewes, early, $14.00. changes of views of the funding of| make on statement regarding the Big Muddy the French debt, American Arhbas-| memorandum further than it con Mute Creek sador Herrick today said that he} tained an unofficial suggestion re Sunburst ---—- had not yet forwarded to Washing-| garding the manner of payment of Hamilton Dome ton the memorandum which the| the French debt. Perris minister of finance had handed him. : - pyrcheges Hs pallens atarne cine ae Mi WASHINGTON, Jan, 3,—Ambas- tches . mi rma] ectiae Pra Kell t London ot Butte sions with various officials of the | dere Prank Kellogg at Londo: and Myron T. Herr'ck at Paris, with Colonel James A. Logan, will ri resent the United States governs ment at the allied finance ministers government concerning the contents | o€ the memorandum. POTATOES | meoting to convene in Paris next Gieybull —. of vos Tor CHICgGO, Jan. 3.—Hotatoes early UE morning trading slow; market is| DETROIT.— Packard Motor steady; receipts 65 cars; tval U. S.| Car company has reduced the pric shipments 705; Wisconsin sacked | of its single si ed cars by frem round whites $1,15@1.25; one carload | $840 to $840 cach, bringing the clos r $1.10; Minnesota Ked und | ed models te th la results. whites few sales $1.16, open care. * i CHICAGO, Jan. 3.—Butter high- creamery extras 41% @42c; stand- NEW ORLEANS.—Owing to the holiday, lumber orders to Southern Pine association mills fell off 29.8 per cent last week to 438,600,000 feet. Shipments decreased 34,8 per » 45 million feet and produc- cll 86.6 per cent to 42 million Unfilled orders total 234 mil t results ‘try a Classified ad MAMA WOMAN [FOUND SLAIN Continued from Page One to tho hot yesterday When came upor ody, | huddled in @ heap on the floor. A |doctor was called and he in turn alied police | Mrs. Hahne formerly, Mae | Schaeffer of Colorado Springs, Colo., |and was Hahne’s second wife. She | said to have been highly educated, | recelving degrees from the Univer of Wisconsin and having gra ated from the Methodist logical “seminary at Chicago. e is survived by her husband, a brother, Edward Schaeffer of T Okla., and her two sisters, Mrs. Her- man Rothcoff and Mrs. Charles Le Croix, both of Denver. An inquest is to be held today Hahne was not arrested until after he had gone to a mortuary and ee- | lected a casket for his wife, and made plans for the transportation of her body to Colorado Springs for burial. According to Habne his first wife died in New Yor about ten years ago. WYOMING SEES MINING SPURT (Continued from Page One.) shattering their way into the granite until it yields {ts precious core of quartz; stamp mills. thundering night and day to separate the yellow metal from its baser shell—this is the picture which they expect to become reality before more than fraction of this twelve-month slipped into history has a The focus of this prophetic vision utters, U'linols Pipe is the Homestake mine at South $3:25@3.75; veal top, $10.00; stock-| Indiana Pipe Pass, owned largely by local men. Receipts, none. Compared | New York Trani than at any of tl e amb ; rihanna aeibel projects within Wyoming's borders, Bethe eee een | oie Olle NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—Foreign ex-|4nd production will be pushed to sia Sal rnationa changes firm; quotations in cents: |.capacity next spring with the in- n 8. $18.50@ | Penn, Mex Grfat Britain, demand, 475; cables, | stallation of a ten-stamp mill, cap: aan M4 Bp Praria On 475%; 60-day bills on banks, 471%;| able of reducing 50 tons of ore daily. C : ‘ 50: | Prairie Pipe FUS France, demand, 5.42; cables, 6.4214;| With an eight-foot vein of rich Mabe Receipes ithe caer tee ee Italy, demand, 4.23%; cables, 4.24%;| quartz, running $72 to the ton, this Se Tene een: Blow eerty oa SIG - Belgium,.demand, 5.004%; _cables,| mine alone bids fair to justify the oan’ wens aoa tata be an Ns 5.01; Germany, demand, 23.81; Hol-] optimism of the old-timers who have i ae \ Sa V enn On ‘ land, 40.46; Norway, 15.16; Sweden, | maintained staunch in the face CORR Ree ea eehs BUOMTan WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—(By The Associated Press.) | si!55, Denmark, 17.07; Switeerlaed, | ot lane seats ae discouragement and a llc ri rye magni sy Ewe at +—Manifestly puzzled by the flood of contradictory reports | \9.49; spain, 13.99; Greece, 1.81; Po-| ridicule, that Wyoming had « poten, CHE STOOUOIOR Erik aratreitn bh ect which have emanatedsfrom Paris during the last 24 hours, | tana, 19%; Czecho Slovakia, 3.01%] tial store of gold and silver ifttle te @10.50; average cost Frida 0. Ohio administration officials concerned in the war debt discus- | Juso Slevis 1.56; Austtie,, 00143; any inferior to those of {ts nelghbor 10.25; welght, 211 0. Ohio pfa. — siéns with France, determined today to form no opinion re ufo; 38%: MaWisea, a atining Rapucetion soutien niet ae | Swan and Finch garding latest developments in the French capital until ever since the days of '49 mining _ Denver Prices | Vacuum --. they had recetved a full official re- ‘The document which M. Clemente! ——Saeee developments have come tn cycles DENVER, Col Ja - Washington port from Ambassador Herrick. handed the ambassador was entitled lof 16 to.20 years. ‘No major dis- ent of Agriculture O. Neb. PARIS, Jan. 3.—(By The Associ-|“an unofficial memorandum cor | ts has been made since the pts, 150; desirable —— ated Press)-—Pressed from all aides| cerning French pubiic opinion on thc Butter and Eggs | Goldfield. favar‘early in the present « ys loa aad 183 c for further information as to the| payment of France's debt to the cen ‘and the elrcle is about due averages, $10 0c to c y ™ Tnited States.’ y , be . few parking sows, $9.00; oat iae|| CRUDE MARKET |] step taken by Finance Mintster | Unite {to swing around again this y That mining investments p: ear an er aver return many-times that of ards 4lc; extra first 40@d1c; firsts|/any other business is pointed out T@IS%c. Seconds 32@85c. by those interested in starting Wyo- Eggs unsettled; receipts 4,626] ming on a new minera] boom. The case firsts 61@53%sc; ordinary| mining industry, they show, rarks firsts 45@48c; refrigerator extras/second in the United States, and on M%@41Mo; firsts 43% @4de the basis of government statistics egy has paid a return of 182 pet cent | Taarabee: to investors, compared with 11 per cent on insurance, 6% on national banks, and 4 per cent on railroads. Dry Good: ST. \PAUL—Traveling — salesmen are off the road owing to the holi- day and trade has fallen off in wholesale lines, accordingly. How: ever, both wholesalers and retailers | |inethe Twin- Cities declure the vo! {ume of business for the year will | equal’ that of 1923, EVERTHING NO GOCD, ONCA WALT. CHRIS' MAS COME PRETTY SCON ? Fruit. SAN FRANCISCO.—It is expect ed the supply of oranges and lemons from California the coming summer will be sold at considerably highe: prices than for several years, ows to damage of 25 to 40 per eitrus crops by recent cold snaps. St Lo bees | Agricultural Products, ATLANTA.—The value of Georgia crops th 1924 is officially estimated at $26,085,896, an increase of $126, 009,000 over 1923. The increased value. of the cotton crop alone nted to$17,000,000, while tobac nuts and fruits accounted fot of the balance. PHOENIX, Ariz.—Fifteen per, gent of Arizona's 1925 crop @f 12 months wool has already, been contracted for, according to 12, O. Oglesby, buy- ton : You Would Have An Expert. Buy For You | If you were in the market for soms very fine painting. It is only right that: you would request some one whose judgment was good and sound to on so valuable an ar@icle. The advice of the reliable banker is nearly always sought by one whe is contemplating investments. in stocks with which he is not familiar. most We claim to know automobiles. If you are in the market for a used car, consult vu we will save you from purchast that will dis- please you HUDSON COACH, 1923 model; and rear, nd extra tire in paint shop; ut latter part of wéek. Let us show you this fine car at the low price of.-.2..-- “$85! FORD SEDAN; very good me- chanical condition. You could as good a car 00; but you the this an b conservatt this one price of at FORD COUPE, 1925 model, in extra fine condition; good rub- ber and uphojstery; looks like new; paint good. See this at OVERLAND TOURING; model; good rubber, paint. at 1924 geod This car ts a real buy DORRIS TOURING; if you want a high-grade, powerful auto mobile in first-class mecha: cal condition, with good ru ber, and one extra tire fail to see thi car a CHANDLER TOURING; 1923 model, new tires, good paint job, motor has ently pcen thoroughly overhauled, “A car is in fine condition. A gain at Tf the. car you want ts not hese | call us up and possibly we can it for you MeBINLEY . wi)