Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE EIGHT _Che Casper Daily Cribune DAILY [= s#sie« = | TRIBUNE STATE TEAGHERS ELECT TODAY: INSTITUTE BROUGHT 10 GLOst delightful mu- them of er § the Ity chools un- | supervisor mem sity In the welfare of the public schools hag been manifested by sident and faculty. The Stat Association of Teachers appreciates the expressed sympathy of the state school in the work of the organiza spirationa! | tion. given by un-] “It been generally recognized group meetings | by the cators in this mb clarify the educa-| that the county-unit plan 1s the most the teachers and] efficient and economical! method of in thelr methods of | operating our public schools. Jn ded by of been ple er people. feels great- fatic 2 hapy of t pie assem: 1 by the To com- rendered by I and the conyen- t ation facilities have m an attendance at the convention of a representative bod The te rs of the state would ex- press thelr appreciation of the cour- tesies extended to them by the rail- sad and bus companies “The working comit the association are to be cc ti ons to tion, communities. be regular w mation It is recomm carried reports offered. | 1 1 surveys rk of ih or nded t hould to all loc as nve nat these teachers 1 institutes that the be made general in all It Is considered of es: pecial importance that all teacners become acquainted with the th incurred dards of service may be main in the future, it is urged that a reg- is the teaching ing in the nec of ethics splendid year has brought bi; body sarily added expense high That pr ‘ogram dc ypted without {ts shar- suc h ined view of this fact, it is recommended that the and {ts individ- ssociation ual members devote energy and in ffuence toward the e blishment ot tem of school go’ nd that a committee be to formulate the best w ing detai's of euch a plan “THe exploitation of throu; stablishment state of state department merits the val of the association by the of Its leadersiip to check this hers of the re urged to unite in working : a system of school operation that will make lorable misuse of educational imposs! WwW funds » the members of the Wyom- vachers’ association in an £ assembled, resolve that the preceding expressions of ap- preciation and the offered recom- mendations stand as the sentiment will of the organization." he resolution was «signed by Clayte Hume, ¢ mith and Mrs. Marcia Hollinr: $150 LIMIT ON FUNERALS FOR SUB VICTIMS WASHINGTON, Oct. 16.—()— The navy department declared that in returning bills set to it by fam!- lies of the victims of the Shenan- doah disaster covering funeral ex- penses that it followed the only course permitted by law. Under the law and rulings of the comptroller general, navy officials asi i, $150 was the maximum al- lowed for burial of a member of the navy killed in line of duty. This, it was declared, was allowed for the Shenandoah victims, but in several cases bills were received from fam- A. istration fee of one dollar be charg-| ilies to cover additional expenses. ed those teachers who receive di-| These have not been honored. rect benefit. SS “The interest of the state univer-! Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. WHEAT PRICES SCORE GAINS Unfavorable Yr c tod from Crop Reports Bullish Factor. HICAGO, 0x y, influenced a crop reports from erations in Canada. Contin sence of rain in Australia tend mr the outlook for wh stil! more er wheat ™m already bush Ss cur ida as much itical, Australia Are 16.—P)—Wheat Australia to es scored a brisk early un) ad A b3 threshing op- with early deteriorated accyrding to some ad- and that in some parts of were ab- d to at growth sown 50,000,- Iso esti- as 90 per cent of threshing yet remains to be done. The opening, %c to 2%c higher, new yle, De er $1.45 to 1.45% and May $ 1.44, was followed by et for December and nd t rtions i n record to $1.44%, and May $1.43 Corn and oats reflected: tho strength of whe After opening at %e to %e higher, December 75% 76%c, corn made moderate addi- at %et upturns Kc to ats 1 at starte @%e 1s both wer in. Ww fe) 1 ICAGO, ¢ 1 rdened a little m rmer ins and Provisions v nf to the w corn helped la- 0 sustain the market until wheat Corn closed unsettled et advance, December 2 up, Decem- the owing to in hog values and in STOGK ADIANGE 5 UNCHECKED Speculators for Rise Con- tinue in Control of Ex- | change Trading NEW YORK, Oct. 16.—(P)—Pro- al bear traders acting on the of the ility of the stock had undetermined by advance in prices, f thec ry en scent» rapid poured an avalanche of selling or- ders on the floor of the stock ex- change around mid-day, after prices of many stocks had been marked up 1 to 13 points above last night's clos- ing quotations, The market totter: ed for a while under the weight of elling, but soon recovered its equilibrium and swept f a on another wild wave of bu! 16.—UP)- was d vigor at the c market, blocks ion increa: re 00 share om Alk: rading at a fast pace throughout the early trading with the motors again assuming the leadership of the upswing. Retention of the 3 per cent rediscount rate by the New York Fed Reserve bank, the an- nouncement of the Locarno security t and additional reports of bufl. s improvement all helped to cre- ate -bullish enthusiasm in stocks United States Cast Iron Pipe jumped 10 points to 190, an extreme advance points in two days; General 8 imbed nearly 5 points and £ Cigar, National Dairy Products, Kinney and com- pany, Chrysler, Pat Fisher Body and United States Rubber common to 3 noints higher before t | the first half hour, Kresg: | 6% points to 749% on one | Foreign exchanges failed to | mnke any appreciable response to | the Franco-Geyman Rhine agree- French france sagged a few 4.43 cents, placing them 2 points below the Belgian rate, but the firmness of Italian lre around 4.00 cents lent color to the belief that government support had temporarily pegged therm around | that figure. Demand sterling ruled at $4,834, apparently diare reports of additional gold nents Heavy accumulatio: y which of Southern “% to 110%, a wll time, sup- set by United ral Motors and 129 re vints of strength y despite de some extensive g which was most | prenounced tn Unt Stores nd radio, Equipments were bought amc Baldwin rising American Locomotive four Iwas OvT WITH YouURE FRIEND, QL BRINGING UP FATHER HOW DID YoU EAT OUT OF YHE HOUSE TOOAN ? points. Shattuck, Childs, 4%. all per cent. money Wyoming Oils Quotations by Bias Vucerevich, Broker 203 Consolidated Royalty Building Western Exploration — Cons. Roy. ex div. Central Pipeline — 2. T. Williams - Bessemer — Western States Kinney Coastal Columbine Jupiter '_ Elkhorn —. Domino Royalty Sunset Picardy Atlantic Great No Quaker ©: Chappell Buck Creek .. : Riverton Pet. Argo. Oil Petroleum -- Ohio Oi) Prairie Oil Mountain § Salt € Contine New Y« ek k Ol eek Cons Ov Ind, oil Kinney moved up six points and Chrysler, Mathison Alkali, F, G. Yellow Truck, Al- lis Chalmers and Fisher Body 314 to renewed 10.00 MAGGIE WENT TO THE NEW HOOSE AN’ LEFT ME TO TAKke CHARGE OF THE MOVERS -1 SNEAKED at 5% Last Sale Allis Chemical and Dye American, Can American Car and Foundry American Locomotive American Sm. and Ref. ex. div. American Sugar --.. American Tel and Tel. - American Tobacco American Water Works -. American Woolen Anaconda Copper Atchison Atl Coast Line -. | Baldwin Locomotive Baltimore and Ohio ex, div. Bethlehem Stecl California Pet. Canadian Pacific . Central Leather pfd. Cerro de Pasco .. Chandler Motor . Cehesapeake and Ohio Chicago and Northwestern Chicago Mil. and St Coca Cola +-.--. Colarod Fuel ~~. Congoleum-Nairn Consolidated Gas Corn Products 4 Crucible Steel — 3 e Sugar pfd. on Chemical Dodge Brothers pfd. - | Du Pont de Nemours - Pow. and Lt Idlectric Motors: ‘orthern ptd. f States Steel < Motors -- lino: Central QO. and 1 1 : = Lance Creek 1 Grass Creek, ight ——. 1 Greybull -_.. ay bat 25 aboard Of ~ Netaynuique:reramarere aie Mid-Continent Pet. .. Bale ¢ reek ..-.. — aH Mo., Kan. and Texas -. ah og | Mistourt Pacitic ptd. - 2 a 81 ere y Setar apt he niranecy Ward .. Hamilton Dome -—-—----—--~ 1. Taal Beers ono enn 1.05 | New York Centra ReaD “an | N- ¥., N. H. and Hartford ~. Lee Norfolk and Wes Pilot Butte -—-----------— 1.35 ‘| Business Briefs orth American .. Northern Paclfie .. ifle Oi -.. American ePt. B COLUMBUS, Oct. 16. — () - George EB. Roberts, vice-president of | Pure. Ol the National City nk of New| Radio ¢ sees a long period of good | Reading the ment present is maintained. es ahead for the United States. conservative senti- In a paper read today financial udvertisers’ convention he de in agricultural price relationships. Natio erts’ It City Bank, absence: is Mr. Roberts’ country’s prosperity will not suffer industry gets uropean again. H Potatoes : association ared improvement conditions sulted in the restoration of northal The paper was read by H, G. Hodapp, also of the Rag. C. and I, .. ot p. Iron and Steel ~ Reynolds Tobacco B Louls and San Fran, aboard Air Line ears Roebuck .. Sineiair Con Ot - Southern Pacifle ~ Southern Railway Standard Oil Cal. ~. Standard Oil, N, J. rfore the hag re- in Mr. Rob-| Stewart Warner... Ss Studebaker opinion this} Texas Co. ‘Texas and Pacific Vobaceo Products ‘Transcont, OL Union Pacific ~ 8. Cast Iron Pipe Ind. Alcohol CHICAGO, Oct. 16.—Potatoes, re-} \ahash pfa, “A* ceipts 111 cars; total United States | \vostinghouse Electric .. shipments 1,371 cars; trading just) winys Overland fair; market shade easier; Wiscon-| Woolworth sin and Minnesota sacked round | chrysler whites $2.45@2 Wisconsin bulk aenceeernneteanscee round whites § ; Minnespta sacked éarly Ohblos 2. 32.90, Tribune Want Ads Bring Results, Asco New York Stocks * n: BY GOLLN? KNOW: 1 MOST HORRN HOME BEFORE THE LAST VAN GOES- | Livestock | Chicago Prices CHICAGO, Oct. 16.—(U. S. Depart- ment of Agriculture}—Hogs — Re- colpts 18,000; active; mostly 10c,.to 20c higher; bulk desirable 100 to! 326 pound weight $11.60@11.90; “140 pound weight topped at 12.10; best [190 to 220 pound averages $11.19; bulk packing sows $9.60@10.10; heavy welght hogs $11.80@11.90; light lights $10.50@12.10; slaughter pigs $11.25@12.10. Cattle—Receipts 4,000; slow, life- less trade on most classes; buyers usually indifferent; undertone weak to lower; about 15 loads of fresh western grassers offered; few early sales yome medium weight *fed steers held around $14.00; vea and bulls steady; most bologna bulls $4.00@4.50; few strong weights $4.65; largely $11.00@12.00; market on Weal calves, Sheep—Receipts 10,000; fat: lambs slow, few early. Sheep, receipts 10,000; fat lambs, slow, few early sates native, weak to 25c lower; early bulk $14.50@14.75; few loads of trimmed and docked offerings $15.00; sorting severe; best western lambs held above $15.25; few early sales feeding lambs about steady at $16.50 and $15.75; odd lots ut native ewes unchanged at 36.50 @7.50; heavies downward to $5.0. Omaha ¢ OMAHA, Neb., s. | Department of Agriculture)—Hogs— Receipts 5,000; steady to 10¢ higher: lght offerings gene steady; bet- ter grade 150 to 330 pound weight $11.10 to $1 top $11.35; rouzh heavy king sows $9.40; bulk of all sales » cost Thursday fed teady steers nd year qual ) plain grass steers ac erat loads up t bulls weak stockers and feeders nom! steady, g 65@5; ly cows canners and cutters $3@3.50; bologna bulls $3.75@4; pr; top $11.50; heavy cows $6@6.75' asH Shgep—Receipts 4,000; generatly “dy, fat native In $14.50 14.768fed westerns $14.75; fat range mige held at $15: fat ewes $7.50@ ; early sales feeding lambs $14.75 no cholee feeders offered. ee Poultry | CHICAGO, Oct. 16.—Poultry alive, dy; receipts 9 cars; fowls 15c@ springs 20%c; roosters 16¢; turkeys 25c; ducks 19c; geese 20c. Butter and Eggs CHICAGO, Oct. 16.—(#)—Butter unsettled; receipts 7,703 tubs; cream: ery extras 50c; standards 47%c; ex- |tra firsts 47% @4%o; firsts 45@46%4c; seconds 43@44c., Eggs higher: re- celpts 4,498 cases; firsts 40@410;\ or dinary firsts 30@34c; 83% 65% 49% 50% o4 8% 159% 188% 91% 14% 12744 69% 73% 29% 194% 198 NEW YORK, Oct. (ined sugar was quiet and unchanged at $5.05 to 6.20 for fine granulated. ————. 16,—(P)—Re- Foreign Exchange, NEW YORK, Oct. 16, — Foredgen exchanges irregular. Quotations,in cent Great Britain, demfnd 483 11-16; cables 484 1-16; 60-day bills on bankg 480 11-16. France, demand 447B; cables 4.48, Ita'y, demand 4.47%; cab'es 448, Italy, demand glum 4.56%; Germany 28.80. geile aats A Caken 138 South Center Jack KEEFE ust LEFT WITH Your FRIEND QL FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1925 HA, HAHA Y CrocoviLe— HARA, YT ” i x 5 WN RAN WN) SN" Wy ©1925 ev Inve Feature Service, Ine. Building Work in U. S. Creet Britain sights reserved, Metals ~~ NEW YORK, Oct. 16. — Copper, barely steady. Electrolytic spot and futures 14%@14%c. Tin, easy; spot and nearby $62. futures | $62.12 Iron, steady; prices unchanged. Lead steady; spot $9.50@9.60. Zine, steady; East St. Louis spot $8.30; futures $8.25@8.30. Antimony spot $17.25, | Cotton . NEW YORK, Oct. 16.—(?)—Cot- ton spot, steady; middling $21.65. |___Money __| NEW YORK, Oct. 16.—()—Call money, easy; high 51; low 4%; rul- ing rate 5%; c.osing bid 444} offered at 4%; last loan 4%; call loans against acceptances 444; time loans, firm; mixed collateral, 60-90 days 4%; 4-6 months 4%@5; prime cer- cantile paper 4%4. TESTIMONY OF MRS. LELAND IS RULED OUT SPRINGFIELD, UL, Oct. 16,—(#) ~Mrs. Charlotte Leland failed in her attempt-to tell the story of alleged relations with Dr, Carl D. Case, Oak- Park clergyman to the state supreme court toda: rhe case was taken to the high court by the minister, was named as co-respondent, after the appelate court had ordered trial court to give Albert R. Leland divorce. who After hearing lawyers for the hus- band argued that # divorce should be granted him upon ber confession, find an attorney for the minister plead for their client's good name, Chief Justice Dunne called Mrs. Leland to the bar and informed her that the court could hear only ar- gument and not testimony, a WEARING OF SPECTACLES IS DECREED PARIS, Oct, 16.—()—Dame Fash. fon’s last vagary has been all the women to wearing spectacles The pretty eyes of the 1925 Pari sienne are no weaker than those of 1924, but the celluloid frames of the eye glasses, made in any variety of colors, are novel and chic when they match her dress. A Paris optician {n the Rue Rivoll, who advertises himself as an “Amer- fean Optician” displays in his: win- daws a large,tray filled with cellu- loid frames in mauve, green, biege, blue, rose and, in fact almost any conceivable hue that might be re- quired to harmonize with Mademol- selle's sult or frock, “I sell about 100 pairs of spectacles with plain glasses, through which anyone can see, every day,” said the optician. “The correct thing is to have the ‘rames made in colors to match the dres: fier alc a Saal A, Tell the Acvertiser—"I eaw it In The Tribune, a to set To Hold Up By J. ©. ROYLE (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune) WASHINGTON, Oct. 16.—More men in the buiding trades will be employed throughout the coming winter than ever before in the his- tory of the United States, according to reports of the department of com- merce Thursday, This is due to two distinct factors, One, and per- haps the more important, Is the tre- mendous bui'ding activity at present in evidence in every state south of the Potomac and Ohio rivers, and east of the Mississippi. Florida and other gouthern states are bidding for men, skilled as well as unskilled artisans. There is no question that -& MIN A FINE FIX: WHEN 100 FIND \T- 1M GOIN’ TO GIT BEAT OP ANY WAS! for Winter a serious shortage of housing faclll- ties exists in Florida at the present time. Since the south climate offers few obstacles’ toward building acti- ties, every effort will be exercised to supply this pressing demand, A corresponding, if not smaller activity, exists in Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, but it ts not only in the south that tho in- crease in building activity during this winter will be apparent. The move initiated by the department of commerce iowasds the encourage: ment of winter construction unques- tionably is succeeding, LANSING, Mich, — Of the 1,500 new companies incorporated in Michigan this year, more than 60 per cent, of $19, were located in Detroit. The total included 450 real estate firms. ' HOUSTON—The* Texas corn crop promises to reach 35,604,000 bush- els, or an average of only nine bush- els per acre, owing to dvoughty con- ditions during the growing season. Silver NEW YORK, Oct. 16—Bar 54% 71%; Mexican dollar a Tribune Want Ads “duplex” wires securities, Commodity Trade News Coal PHILADELPHIA—The Philadel- phia Electric company has stored 250,000 tons of coal on Petty's {s- land, in the Delaware river, to tide it over any shortage which may re- suit from the anthracite miners’ strike. Turkeys FORT WORTH — Texas will not produce its usual big turkey crop this fall and winter, owing to the mid-summer drought, gar NEW ORLEANS—Imports of su- gar by local refiners to date have broken all yearly records with 4,273,- 000 bags brought in. This compares with 5,000 bags last year. We beg to announce the opening of a Casper office in the Glad- stone Hotel with direct private connecting with all eastern and local markets for the handling of stocks, bonds, grain, cotton, sugar, oils and local \ MARGIN AND CASH ACCOUNTS SOLICITED ill, Weaver & Co Correspondents A. A. HOUSMAN & COMPANY (Mezzanine Floor Gladstone Hotel Entrance on First Street) M. A, VER BRUGGE, Resident Partner Phone 3024