Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 5, 1925, Page 8

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BAP Le S. PAGE EIGHT Che Casper Datly Cribune | — MOUNTAIN HOS open shop basts for | 25 years. The| the unfon has ex- to | rkers of Wo: s Vegetables, SPRINGS we qf this Rallroad Equipment. | LOUIS.—The Missouri Pa. ad will at once 3 of road be. Jefferson C! Louls and Kan. double-tracked years at a turbin ric Powe! TUCK TREND BULLISH LOSE GROUND, tail and Oil Shares Lead | Upturn on New York Uncertainty Regarding Waricat Forthcoming Crop Report 83 . Is Factor. Vv. YORK, Par basic: c highe: CHICAGO, May 6.—Influenced by e rates and | Unexpected downturng in price at ey provided | Liverpool, wheat values here suffer: © uncertainty 8. government P report due on Friday of this eek would show as compared with the recent unofficial summaries tended also to weaken the market. Another depressing factor was an assertion by a trade authority that the United States stock of at on 1 was 28 per cent larger than Was the caso a year previous, Chi!- cago initial quotations, unchanged boaih ata Conssliaated , May $1.61 to $1.62 ted to new peal prices for the | 2nd J $1.51 to $1.52%%, were fol © Maxwell motors B moved | lowed by declines all around with t to within a fraction of the | May touching $1.59% and Jul; high. R ied doa xck u point in furten refle Subsequently rallies failed to last, reecntly instituted | no improvement tn export demand y by the De For-} ent. Wheat closed heavy net lower, May $1.60 to 1.61, and July $1.51 to 1.61%. ney rates continued to Corn prices averaged higher ow- 1 effect on sentiment | ing to talk of possible difficulties in ements were g wpeculative contracts for May by professional ries. After o: at 4% , 14 y 31.06% the mar- né@ $1.11 NEW YORI © opening ¢ me ona that the corn move- from the countr would re. time led to ad-| later. Co net higher, and July et gains of a polr e recorded by Americ Bio alan wer Univer is , | terd nish July 43Xc, shy y Umits of an upward r 80 old a - 169 ing jure — 6.85 4 t «+ -9.00 19.10 19.06 19.10 19 | 3%; clos: } laet Ioana 3% Bonds | BRINGING UP FATHER WHAT WOULD NOD LIKE TO jee sin? ~~} ae | | Oil = Finance :: A BIG STEAK WITH OF MILIC ANA CRACKER - Allis Chemical and Dye ~ Western Exploration Consolidated ‘Re Central Pipel! E. T. Kinney Columbine — Calif GRAIN PRICES Great North Quaker Ol! Preston Oil 1 Leather pfd. - ndler Motor esapeake and Ohio jcago and Northwestern -- Chicago, Mil t Chicago, R. 1. Chile Copper Colorado Fuel Congoleum --- Consolidated Gas -. Corn Products Gulf States Steel Houston Ol -- Hudson Motors - Illinois Central -. Mugs $ best to Mer. Marine pfd. Kennecott Copper -. Lehigh Valley Louisville and Nashville -. Mack Truck -. Marland Ofl - Max. Motors A -. Seaboard Oil Mo,, Kan, and Texas Missourt Pacific pfd. Montgomery National Blscult National Lead - $5.35; veal; calves barely mostly $5.00@9.00 to packers, Sheep—Recelpts 17,000; fat lambs opening steady to strong; desirables 83 to 97 pound clippers $13.50@14.00 no action on wooled lambs; eight cars of gpod to cholce California springers averaging around 70 pounds $17.00 sorted; seventy eight out; some held higher; fat sheep “holee 141 pound shorn | stead: wethers $9.50, ” , and Hartford Norfolk and Western Louis and San Fran. .-. Seaboard and Air Line Sears Roebuck ers scar cows $6.25@ $8.50. Sheep 9,500; lambs strong to 25c higher; early sales strong weight wool lambs $15.10; best held around 75 y sales desirable weight lamba $12.76@18.10; best Southern Pa: ment ¢ 3,000 wt choice higher: load $6 to 39.75; cholo lambs $14.50; nyerages $14.25 flat; pound fat ewes $7.25 :: Stocks :: NEWS AND QUOTATIONS BY LEASED WIRE Grain :: Livestock : : All Markets 5s ‘WYOMING OILS | (Quotations by Blas Vucurevich;| * Broker) 208 Consolidated Roya Ity Atlantic Petroleum — rr Curb Stocks. Mountain Producers Ae Salt Creek Producers - ~ 26% Continental — ~ 25% New York Oil - - 10 Salt Creek Consolidated -.... 7 S. O. Indiana - 64 LIVESTOCK Chicago Prices CHICAGO, May 5.—(U. 8. Depart- ment of Agriculture)—Hogs 21,000; ac average, all good and cholee 160 to ay sows $10.10@10.25, Cattle receipts 11,000; fed steers strong to 15c higher; yearlings and handyweight kind showing most ad- vance; in between grades »redomt- nating; bulk $9.00@10.50; top year- mixed steers and heifers ck steady trong; bulls generally steady with Monday's average market; bulk e, mostly steady at Monday rages $11.3! eavies $11.10; she st y bolognas $5.00@5. Omaha Quotations, OMAHA, May medium wels! ba held at $13 6.—(U. S. Depart $10.90; f $10.65 to $10.70: packing sows $9.50; pigs steady to 26¢ lower; | fat kind $9.60 to $9.75. Cattle, 650; calves 60; fat she < steady to strong: calves e vealers $11 to $11.76. Sheep reo dy; Wisconsin stock, demand and t market stronger; Florida ‘riumphs, 25.60 LOOK AT ©1925 ey Inve Feature Service. Inc Great Britain rights reserve: pound 45; bulk packing 6.—(U. 8, Depart- ment of Agricuiture)—Hogs 9,500; active; mostly steady to ; top $11; bulk of sales $10.80 6,700, fed steers and’ year- rately active; steady to + bulk $9@ 10.40; handyweights $10.85; she active 10@15c higher; bulls and veals steady; stockers and feed: stendy; bulk butcher practical veal top ture)—Hogs recetpts $11 for three loads 50 pound averages; 180 to 250 pound averages $10.75 to classes steady; better grades cows $7.66 to $8; medium several loads steers $9 | heifers 39,25: good i mixed steers and heifers |for April were $269, 00; fat lambs are one deck 72 pound 94 }) ne ‘[~ POTATOES | May 5.—Potatoes, re new, 36; total U. 8. | Money value, trading moderate; } 16G@ 9c; bulk, 80@96e ed round whites, 76 Sic; sacked Russets, $1,26@1.35; ding Spalding Roe, No. 1, Louisiana @acked Biss Tri NOW JOHN -LET ME THE WORD"WELCOme” || +p SEE “OR C € THAT POOR ING ME SOUP: Ali RUShaconS On SOY-HE'S J) | SOME FISH-A BIG * UNSER, WOO LATE | STEN - POTATOES DOCTOR'S ORDERS rem & J | ONIONS: TEA SO BRING ME AcLASS \ NOOR aBeetite ; THIN ft WE ANY eee GOOD Tepay, DESSERT- Kidnaped Girl, 11, Says She Went Willingly (By Central Press) MIDDLEBURY, Conn., May 5. — The poetic love.of a “bad man” for a pale, wan ll-year-old girl, stands revealed as a result of the ‘ abduc- tion” of Lucille Chatterton by Earl Woodward, ex-con sequent ‘capture’ by an armed posse of Vermont farmers after they had been alone in the hills for a week. vict, and their sub- Woodward surrendered without a fight when surrounded and told the men he took Lucille away because she was being abused at home. “I was going to marry her when she grew up,” he said. went with Earl of my own free and he was kind to me,” says cil! It wasn't nice out in the hills. I was cold and hungry. Most of the nights we slept outdoors. ‘But Earl was good to me. He never abused me around the farm or out in the hills, He was good to me. “Once Earl cried because we had to sleep out on the mountain in the cod. My father neyer cried over me, not that I remember.” ‘Walter Chatterton, the girl's fath- er, denies that she was mistreated at home. Nevertheless, Lucille may be taken from the custody of her par- ents by state authorities. She says Woodward's story of her bad treat- ment fs true. In the Middlebury jail Woodward vealed his dreams of love as e he vowed that Lucille, throu trangs woodland wanderings received 0: ndnese. from | Business Briefs BOSTON.—Prattically all the building trades unions here have signed a thrée-year agreement wit! employers at prevailing wages: ATLANTA.—Eank clearings “here 708,954, an in crease of over $40,000,000 over Apri! 1924, and the largest for any month since 1920, Bullding permits, large: ly for residences, totaled $974,563 A waa the first month this year to fall below the million mark 3ST, PAUL.—The volume of bus! in the northwest in the last month way about the same in phy volume hat of April, 1924, sical but was about 25 per cent larger in SUGAR ‘\ NEW YORK, May 6.— Refined sugar was unsettled. List prices were unchanged at $6.60 to $5.70 but | all refiners were suid to be accepting No. 1, $8.25@5.50: Alabama | orders at $5.60 for fine granulated with only a lght inquiry reported Refined futures were nominal Sugar futures losed trreguiar, Ap- 48: Yept 0; Dev 2.80 pai The posse which captured Earl Woddward, Walter Chatterton (left) and Lucille Chatterton (right. GHW CHICAGO, May 5—Buter higher: Louisiana-Planters ‘To Rely on Prayer Instead. Of Hir ing Rain-Maker NEW YORK, May 5.—Foreign = By GEORGE N. COAD, (Copyright, 1925, Consolidated Press Association.) NEW ORLEANS, May jana planters, facing another year have (decided to rely the prayers of of drought, once more upon Christians and the nocturnal rites of yoodoo doctors rather than spend their shrinking funds buying showers from Charles maket? of the Im- perial Valley of California, A brief shower on Friday deprived Hatfleld of a contract to deliver two Inches of rain for $4,000 per inch. In the old St. Charles hotel, where planters from up the river used to juleps, the commit- tee met to sign the contract with But while they debated, a rain drop spattered on the window to bring rain, clouds were the natural ‘0 rites, whith were | formed at nigh Friday's shower, ot so sure that they didn't trust too much to prayers and sorcery Jecting Hatfield's offer 1 to go back to the where he has con- OSE MOUICA CALLS AMERICAN 252 INZZ'FOLK MUSIC’ OF THE ison ar a ws worn as aj Attorney Takes another as a But no mat in re- man may find his locomotive engine: 4 : surgeon, and so forth H 6) L fi ter what it if, so long as it is the| is wn ue thing one loves, it is art—the thing} the doer will most enjoy—the — thing that takes possession him and| PHOENIX, Aris, May 6.—R. E. becomes his ve! (Continued from Page One.) rif it be the bitterest of win- 1 walk from 15 minutes ter weather, whether I am tired or not.” The singer says he does not even | sincethat diversion would be bad for comes | Counsel Bledsoe of the Santa ¥ It takes prac-| Railway company, with headquar nd hard|ters in Chicago ended his own life “I haven't been a dance for a ly because T could not stay the satistact of nights and keep in condition. Ex I have to catch a train, I gleep about eight On the road it is difficult to keep in condition.” ALL WORK IS ART SINGER DECLARES. “T believe that every person capable of success in some }ine of There is something that him that his audience understands, | dead when they that {t knows what he ts trying to] - Oo ress, then great joy comex to the| WASHINGTON—Secretary Hoover There ia then of feeling between hin Asked If th niew 97,000 tone: Muy | exis TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1925 On! vES IIS BUT Tim GOING TO A CORNED |emer sno CABmMAGE CINNER TONIGHT intrigues and fights that occur sometimes among artists, I believe, son any place. But one of the most difficult things I have to do is to |control my temper sometimes. | “Temperament, however, is ne cessary to all artists. By tempera- ment I mean ability to change from one mood to another. Every piece of music requires a different mood and the artist must be able to adapt himself. There are different’ roles in which impersonating must be done. These moods and the imper sonating must be done _ sincerely. The singer must honestly feel the moods Into which he must fall, ‘Control, always control, that i the big thing. The artist must be master of his feelings at all times. That is why mere temper is harm- ful. Control applies to all other things as well as singing. The artist must have no fear and must not dis- play anger. He must be strong minded.” Don Jose has been a professional singer for seven years. He says he started singing at the time of hie earliest remembrance on his father’ ranch in western Mexico. He came to this country at 19 years of age, when he joined the Chicago opera, and today at 26 he plays leads op- posite Mary Garden, Galll-Cure! and other popular stars. This year he ~‘*ll go abroad to star opposite Mary Garden at the Paris, Milan and Brus. sels grand operas, His appearance in Casper tomor- row night will be the crowning event of music week and of the concert season in Casper. ear _ Butter and Eggs ‘ are useless. They don't get a-per creamery extras 40c; standards 40&- extra firsts 3314 @39c; firsts 37@38c; seconds 32@35%c. Eggs higher; Receipts 43,216 case firsts 28@ 28%c. Ordinary firsts 27c; storage pack extras 30%c. Firsts 29%. —$$—<———— changes firm, Quotations in cents: Great Britain demand 485 cables vinced folks of his prowess in bring-] 485%; 60 day bills on banks 481, the weather gave every| France demand 524; cables 524%. appearance of being fair forever. Just as the great drought of last| gium demand 506%. Germany de- summer started. As sun after sun|mand 23.80. the cloudless sky, in summer great fleets of clouds should float, armada-like in the molst gulf wind every day, the crops dried up and fishermen on the bayous rowed scores of miles for a few gallons of water, while the were dotted with thirst- killed animals. Then toward the end of July, the whites went to their churches and prayed, but the Negroes and the mixed races along the bayous, where suffering was the greatest, turned to the other powers. They laid their wealth before the voodo doctors of thelr communities and went deep into the marshes to the charms which the weird men required to bring clouds to the i By candle light in I E bl h id ver s Establishe the prescribed rites o save their crops and thelr animal: he rains did not come until And so, in spite the planters are Italy demand 41%, cables 41%. Bel- NEW YORK, May 5.—Cotton, spot quiet; middling $23.85, —— iy Flour. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., May 6! Flour 15c to 20c higher, family pat- ents $9@9.10. Bran $24.50@26. _— Dollar Price On Hair Bobs CHICAGO, u —Men are about to dictate milady'’s hair bobbing prices by a standard scale proposed by the Master Hair Dressers Asso- elation of Chica it was disclosed :|today, The 3} rt Halr Dressers have eet $1 as the standard. As well as $2 for a mud pack and the same for a herina shampoo, At present, say representatives of the association bobbing has run from Bledsoe declared to be q son of Chiet ‘s|by shooting himself through tt s from | heart here early thi morning. The dead man's wife and his sister-in pleasure | law were in an adjoining room when « under: | the shot was fired and called the po- to} ice immediately but Bledsoe war arrived. we urged safety Instruction ta pubic ‘cools along the line proposed by National Conference on street and highway pes et de ne “Olty Feed Garbage to Hogs mean read hogs ne fur javt = = = = as

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