Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 26, 1925, Page 8

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NE nd me on! are al ret 2h) du, NOs PAGE EIGHT DAIL Che Casper Daily Cribune MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1928 NY OCR eeeerieesen Y [_seacm | TRIBUNE [__ctetrmaine | MARKETS STOCK FLURRY HAS Production Maintained Over U. S. With at Normal Level All Employment Stull Plentiful in All Lines. By 8. C. ROYLE. (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune) WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.— Busi- ness encountered no serious obstacles and received no appreciable check ing the past week. In fact, it be- came evident that the trend of pro- duction is incrasing tn some lines and being fully maintained in the majority of others. The slight note of hysteria which crept into the market exerted no appreciable ct on the course of business in neral or of individual enterprises, ar as could be ascertained to- g £0 day. These facts are substantiated by the amount of electric current con- sumed both for power and lighting purposes in industry. Hydroelectric plants are being operated as close to capacity as water power will permit in the majority of industrial sec- tions and the steam plans are be- ing called upon for additional cur- rent. Employment is still being main- tained at a high rate and a number of industries’ payrolls are being tn- creased. Even the itinerant workers released from the harvest fields are finding ready employment on high- way and engineering projects. Car loadings are still within reach- ing distance of the peak of the year. The traffic in the south, particular- ly in Florida, is growing constantly. The fron and steel industry exhibited definite signs of strength. These were rendered more impressive by pared with dividends for the same period of 1924. Automobile sales have been extra- ordinary. Truck production is pro- ceeding at a higher rate than ever before in history, with demand keep- ing full pace. Although production of passenger cars ts being held close to demand, production {s far ahead of October, 1924. Textile industry_continued on the upgrade, with an increased number of spindles in operation. Lumber output has dropped siight- ly, but continues ahead of this time last year, Bituminous coal production con- tinues at a rate that is piling up a surplus of nearly two million tons a week, but there is still sufficient anthracite on hand to prevent any urgent demand for soft coal in the anthracite-consuming regions. statements showing that the earn- ings of several steel corporations for the third quarter of the year have yielded substantial profits as com- FORT ORTH—Yearling stocks on West Texas ranches are sejling at ) per. head, $10 higher than a year ago. Yearling ewes in the San An gelo district 33 higher than last ear. oil. TULSA—Some petroleum refiners in this district are cutting runs of crude of] to the stills and curtail- ing manufacture. Increase in ship- ments from group three territory ts reported, owing to the return of more favorable weather there. Automobiles. ATLANTA—Passenger automobile license registrations in Georgia for the first nine months of 1925 were 209,159 and truck registrations 25,- 908, a total increase over all of last - NOEVIL INFLUENCE] | | YOU KNOW ME AL—Featurng Jack Keefe player but that f weild a mean chin once start it. He talked hi partners with me in estate game and now big coal magnet all het some land. I staid night showing him a life, Yee, M2 REE, PTHINK PRETTY Bo DICK. 10-26-25 New York Stocks Last Sale :. Little change was shown in cop-| Alls Chemical and Dye - 108 per prices, but the market was firm | America 1 255% with reports that foreign deman ge ei would shortly make itself increasing Jee ey par aide) iat In the petroleum markets, kero-j Amerjcan Sm. and Ref. -—--— 10% rene showed far more strength than] A™mercan Sugar -——-- Seta gasoline, ,which seems to be re-] American Tel. and aos fleeting the seasonal drop in de-| Ao ertcan Water Works - ie nit f Rubber readjusted itself after the| American Woolen ~ Set pper -. - % news of the loss of an 8,000 ton| Anaconda Copl erate cargo at sea and Cay hangs around ‘Atl. Coast Line _ ~ 197 thersiis nonpaa Baldwin Locomotive - ~ 123% There ts nothing in sight at pres-| pudvin Locomotive -------- 128 The grain markets showed some| calfomia Pet. — att anadian Pacific ---— ~ 148 weakness and this was reflected In| Canadien Farltle --—— ae siightly lower prices for cattle and] Central Teather p pte) hi Chandler Motor ~ - 4 Chesapeake and Ohio 108% Chicago and Northwestern -. 70% Chicago, Mil. and St. Paul, pfd. 15% Chicago, R. I. and Pacific -. 48% Coca Cola -— 162% Colorado Fuel - 41% year of 81,144. The gasoline tax] Congoleum-Nairn 24 paid was $3,073,476 more than a mil-| Consolidated Gas - 93 Von dotlars higher than receipts all] Corn Products vas last year. Crucible Steel - Thy ———— Cuba Cane Sugar pfd. > 81% Bread. Davison Chemical ~ ~ 41% NEW YORK — The Continental] Dodge Brothers pfa. — - 88% Baking corporation, which has in-| Du Pont de Nemours — 206% creased {ts chain of bakeries by 61| Blectric Power and Light, ctfs 32% in the last six months, is preparing | Erie First pfd. -. wwe-- 43% to construct baking plants in New-| Famous Players -—- ~ 110% ark, N. J., Little Rock, Ark., Hart-| General Asphalt 59 ford, Conn., and Clarksdale, Miss.] General Hlectric — 302% Additions are planned at the Bos-|General Motors — 134% ton and Kansas City plants. ‘Textiles, BIDDLEFORD, Me.—The perell Manufacturing company plans to start a full night shift Monday on | Interest Harvester one-third of its wide looms, as a result of the increasing demand for | Int. Nickel -.--. wide double sheetings, Livestock Chicago Quotations. CHICAGO, Oct. 26,—(U. 8. Depart- ment of Agriculture)—Hogs—Re- ceipts 36,000, mostly steady strong big packers doing little, bulk better 170 to 210 pound averages $11.30@ 11.45; good and choice 240 to 300 pound butchers largely $11.20@11.35. Majority 140 to 150 pound description $11.50@11.75: top $11.85; bulk. pack- ing sows $9.50@9.80; bulk desirable ldiling pigs $11.75@12; 60 to 80 pound roasters sold at $12@12.50; heavy weight hogs $11@11.40; light lights $10.75@11.85; slaughter , pigs $11@12. Cattle —Receipts 29,000; better grades fed steers scarce, steady; others slow; uneven; few early sales stockers and feeders firm; atured steers sold above $16; ly nothing done on range g steers, she stock nd bologna und steady, vealers mostly largely $12 downward to sipts 16,000; mostly strong to 25¢ h Ik comeback and natives fat lambs cher; early to pack- ers $14.75@15; city butchers and shippers $15@15.25; no rictly choice range lambs on sale; fat sheep fully steady, desirable range wethers $9; odd lots fat native ewes $7@7.50; few range yearling wethers $10.50@11.50; nothing done on feed ing lambs OMAHA, Nebr, ‘ 8 Department Agriculture.)—Hogs —Receipts, 000; fa mostly 10@1be higher; de sto 220 pound weights $11.10@11 top $11.25; good and choice 5 pound but $10.85 @11.15; rough and heavy packing $9.35@9.60; smooth ft all sales $9.5¢ Saturday $10.50 ost for the week s weight 259. Cattle— and yearl $9.00@11.25; sor steers fully ste she stock m steady; veal # stockers lis d calves active, and fe fully cows | 53.75 @5.00 ers and c Us $3 can logna al top 5 alves feede is feeders $8.00@ Sheep—Receipts, 4,500 ASSES c bulk native fed lambs $14 top ); fed vlipped me Denver Quot DENVE { ¢ —(t Ss Department of Agricult top $12.00 for choice 195 pound load; other 162 to 240 pound load $11.55] Louisville and Nashville to $11.75; driveins $11.40 to $11. packing sows steady at $9 steady; small bunches fat $10.75. Cattle—Receipts, 13,600; calves, 1,500; over 1,000 head billed through; stockers and feeders steady to strong; numerous loads $7.15 $7.65; other loads $8.00 to $7.00; other classes generally steady; load $11.75; 1,175 pound beef steers $8.00; several loads cows $4.15 to $5.50; medium helf@rs around $5.50; good kind held at $6.50; good vealers $10.00; kind above $7.25. Sheep—Receipts, 46,400; only few loads on sale; practically everything | pure oll on through billing; fat lambs c higher; feeding lambs fully ste at out FRENCH INVOKE. LAW TO CHECK FALL OF FRANC PARIS, Oct. 26.—(4)—The drop in the franc was brought to a sharp halt today by government interven- tion in the market and a grave warning to speculators in the form of criminal proceedings opened by the minister of justice against un- named parties for ill!cit exportation of capital. before deciding to make use of the Morgan loan, having, according te information around the _ caught some French bankerf larg short of francs on foreign exchar principally Amsterdam, bou |; Of Summary Furnished by Hill-Weayer and Co, Gladstone Hotel Building. Estimated off output of Venezula} Grass Creek, Ught ———---—— 1.90] ign exchanges irregular. 175} tions in cents: —————————-- 1.75] mand 485%; cables 484 15-16; 60-day by end of 1925 will exceed 18,000, 000 barrels or double the quantity in | Torchlight 1924 uthern California of! output Inst week averaged 384,600 barrels daily, 2400 over preceding week. pat edad Wealth | Business Briefs (Copyright, , Casper Tribune) STROIT — 2 ‘al employ- t the past v creased to 226-, record, adding is wae the elghth con- to set a new record rease Pep-| Illinois Central - ; pigs | Marland Ott to] Nat. canners and cutters active} Pacific Oil at $2.50 to $3.75; common to good] Pan. American I stock calves $5.75 to $7.00; best held | Pen: ce Minister Calllaux allowed | Woolworth anc to reach 25 to the dollar | Chrysler -~ | Great Northern pfd. Gulf States Steel Hudson Motors Indpendent O. and G, — Int. Mer. Marine pfd. 36% Kelly Springfield -. = 16% Kennecott Copper -. - BT% Lehigh Valley .--------—---- 80% Mack Truck Mex. Seaboard B Mid-Continent Pet. Mo., Kan, and Texas — Missouri Pacific pfd. - Montgomery Ward Biscuit -. Nat. N. Y., N. H., and Hartford ,-- Norfolk and Western — North American Northern Pac! lvania Phila. and Rdg. Phillips Pet, -.. fo Corp. ding < Iron and Steel nolds Tobs B- Louis and San Fran. Seabo: Air Line -. Sears Roe’ Sinclair Con O1 Southern Pacif Southern Ratlwa: Standard Oil, Cal. — Standard Oll, N. Stewart Warner Studebaker .. Texas Co. Tobacco Products -~. ‘Transcont Ofl Tinfon Pacific U. 8S. Cast Iron Pipe ~. 8. Ind. Alcohol - 9% U, 8, Rubber -..---. 78% U, S. Steel - ~ 130 fWabash pfd. A wenwep 10% Westinghouse Electric ~ 74% Willys Overland -.. - 30 194% 215% “I Crude Market _ | t Creek, 36 to 36, t Creek, 37 to 39. ock Creek ----~-~. g Muddy ~.. Elk Basin —.. - 1.90 Cat Creek ..---------------~= 1.90 Lance Creek 1.90 gravity . 1.87 1.75 1,75 Greybull .... WHEAT ENJOYS MARKED RALLY Falling World Shipments With Bad Weather in Canada Boost Prices CHICAGO, Oct. 26—(4)—Unexpect- ed higher prices for wheat at Liv- erpool led to a decided upturn early today in wheat values here. Falling off in world shipments, together with reports of severe damage by drought In Australia, tended also to Uft the market. Inclement weather, likely to delay threshing in Canada as well as hinder the seeding of win- ter wheat in the United States, was an additional bullish factor. Chi- cago opening quotations %c to 2%c higher, new style, December $1.44 to 1.45% and May $1.42% to 1.43% were followed by a jump to $1.46 for December and $1.43 for May. Later the wheat advance was halt- ed by profit taking sales and by weakness of corn but the effect in the wheat market proved to be‘ only transient, wheat closed strong, 2%c to 8%ec net higher, new style Decem- ber $1.46% to $1.46% and May $1.48% to $1.43%. Corn and oats responded to wheat strength. Further rain in the corn belt was also conducive to higher prices. After opening % to %c up, December 73% to 74c, corn reacted a little and then rose higher than before. Subsequently, all deliveries of corn dropped to a new low price record for the season. Increasing re- celpts and relative scantiness of de- mand had much to do with @2press- ing the market. Corn cicfed unset- tled, %c to 1c net lower, December T25he. Oats started at %c to Uc to N@ %c advance, December 39 to 39%c. Later, the market scored some fur- ther gain. In line with hog values the provi- sion market was steady. Wheat— Open High Dec, ome 1.44 1.46% Low 144 1 1.25% Close 146% 1.4344 1.26% CHICAGO, Oct number 3 hard i 80% @81c; num- ber 3 mixed ber 2 yellow 81@8l%sc. Oats 39@40%c; number 8 white 38% @ ty. um ber 2, 8le. Barley 63@ Timoth; seed $6.75@7.50. Clover seed $: 5 @29.25. Lard $14.85. Ribs $17.15. Bellies $15, Silver NEW YORK, Oct. 26.—Bar silver 71%; Mexican dollars 54%. vical sada Butter and Eggs CHICAGO, Oct. unchange receipts 12,885 tub: creamery extras 49%c; tandards 4614 @ 480; firsts 444% @45%c; seconds 42@430, Eges unchanged; receipts 9 cases; firsts 42@45c; ordinary firsts 26.—C)—Butter gravity -$1.79 | 32 @39¢. Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, Oct. 26—(P)—For- Quota- Great Britain de Mule Creek ---------—-—---——~~ 1.25 | pills on banks 471%. France demand Lander .-----. Osage Sunburst cnet eee eene een Hamilton Dome 1.05 Ferris —-... 1.06 Byron .--.... 1,30 Notchep ~+-----. 65 Pilot Butte ----.<. we 1.36 Poultry CHICAGO, Oct, 26—UP)—Poultry alive firm; receipts 13 cars; fowls \6@25%e; | aprings turkeys 28c; roosters 16c: ‘ duc BE Rt 7 Tei the Adveriiser—'s 19 Tribune. saw | 170) 4.29%; cables 4.30. 2.18) 3.99%, cables 3.99%. Demand: Bel- 1.65] cium 4.49%; Germany 23.80. OOo Italy demand NEW YORK, Oct. refined sugar was light and for 26.—Business tr immediate requirements only with prices unchanged at 6.00 to 6.10 for ve granulated. Sugar futures closed steady, ap- eximate sales 51,000 tons. De- cember 195; January 2£.03; March eld; May 2.24; July 2.36, ee eee Wyoming Oils | Quotations by trim vi MARKET AGAIN Western Exploration Consolidated Royalty — 9.80 10.00 Central Pipeline —.-. .65 60 EB. T. Williams... .10% 11% Bessemer -----------. .12 4 Western States. .07 209 Kinney Coastal -—-. .07 08 Columbine “-.--.—---. .04 06 Jupiter -.----------— 01 202 Elkhorn eerenee = -03 04 Domino ~~.--.----..-= .06 08 Royalty Producers -. 03 04 Sunset .------------. 00% .00% Picardy -~----------. 01 02 Atlantic Petroleum -. .00% .00% Great Northern, 1,000. .50 1.00 Quaker Oil wnnm——~ 00% 00% Preston Oil, 1,000 -.-. .75 1.00 Buck Creek ~--.-.---. 08 09 McKinnie -----------. .10 12 Riverton Pet. mow 2.65 2.85 Argo «---------—---- 3.50 4.00 New York Oi! .. Salt Creek Cons. 8. 0. Ind. -. Humble Oil Ohio Oi! ___. Market Gossip Furnished by Hill-Weaver and Co. Gladstone Hotel Building. Western rail rate hearing resumes today. French cabinet session adjourned until Tuesday with collective resiz- nations or resignation of Caillaux. Supreme court meets at noon, D, L. and W. September net in- come $815,213 against $1,513,997 for September 1924. Pittsburgh and West Virginia Sep- tember surplus after charges $195,- 192 against $222,460 in Septmeber, 1924, 8. D. Warriner, chairman anthra- cite operators conference declares no conference between operators and miners 1s scheduled or in prospect and that there was no basis for ru- mors of negotiations to end strike. Professor Wisher's index number third .week October. 156.1 against 156.5 and 156.1 two weeks ago, F. H. Russel, vice president of Curtise Aero Plane announces in a few days they will contract with English airplane manufacturer for large number of Curtiss motors to be placed in British planes. Kuhn, Loeb and company are of. fering $12,000,000 Inland Stee! year 5% per cent debenture bonds due November i, 19 and accrued interest to per cent to maturity. Cotton Crop To Exceed 1924 By Large Margin gold WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.—()—A probable cotton production of about 16,226,000. bales, the department of agriculture announced today, is in- dicated by reports as of October 18 on condition, abandonment, probable yields, and ginnings. A probable crop of 14,759,000 bales was indicated two weeks ago. Last year's crop totalled 13;627,936 bales. Cotton of this year’s growth, ginned prior to October 18, totalled 9.519.784 running bales _ counting round as half bales and excluding linters, the census bureau today an- nounced, Last year 7,615,981 or 55.8 per cent of the crop had been ginned to that date. Potatoes CHICAGO, Oct. 26.—UP)—Potatoes receipts 166 cars; total United Btates shipments Saturday 1,393, Sunday 82; trading good, market very strong prices advancing; Wisconsin, Minne- sota sacked round whites $3.00@ 3.15; fancy shade higher; Wisconsin and Michigan bulk round whites $2.90@3.10; Minnesota and North Dakota sacked early Ohios $3.40@ 8,50; Idaho sacked russets $3.50@ 3.60. _—_——__. ‘ FLAX, DULUTH, Minn., Oct, 26,—Close flax: October $2.57%; November $2.67%;' December $2.57; May $2.62. —_— eo Tribune Want Ads Bring Results, U. 8. Steel Reaches ‘New High Mark for Year and Others Follow NEW YORK, Oct. 26.—()—Stock prices surged forward again today despite a rather large volume of profit taking. Fears that the deficit in reserves jn last Saturday’s clear- ing house statement would result in @, temporary scarcity of loanable funds on stock market collateral caused some liquidation during the morning but good buying support was forthcoming, and there was a marked increase in outside participa tion. Motors were again bid upwards at the expense of overcrowded short interest, Chrysler soaring to a new high record at 208 and General Mo- tors rallying to 134. Favorable steel trade news stimulated the buying of the steel shares, Bethlehem crossing 49 and American Metals touching a new top at 57, buying of the last named being based on expectations of an {crease of from $3 to $4 in the annua] dividend rates. Rails took on @ new lease of life under the leader- ship of the Van Sweringen issues. “Nickle Plate,” Marquette and Erie all mounting to new high ground. Copper, tobacco, merchandising and food shares also gave good demon- strations of group strength. Loose Wiles Biscuit jumped six points and Federal Mining and Smelting, Sav- age Arms, Schulte Stores and Unit- ed Cigar Ctores sold 3 to 6 points higher. NEW YORK, Oct. 26.—(?)—The stock market gave another impres- sive exhibition of strength as trad- ing was resumed today with the ex- ecution of large buying orders which had accumulated over the week end. United States Steel led off by estab- Ushing a new high price for the year at 130% with the Bethlehem Steel, Mack Truck, Chrysler, Fisher Body, Dalaware and Hudson and General Motors scoring initial gains of 1 to 2 points. The early flow of buying orders reflected a tavorable public response to week-end business developments and the optimistic views of indus- trial leaders, Apparently no re- straint was imposed on trading by apprehension over the money situa- tion, although last Saturday's bank statement showed a large deficit In reserve resulting from the great ex- pansion of brokers’ loans. High priced industrial shares continued buoyant.. Meanwhile, under lead- ership of United States Steel, an orderly advance took pice in other stocks, embracing DuPont, Youngs- town Sheet and Tube, Packard and Hudson Motors, Union Bag and F per, Pittsburgh Terminal Coal, Cerro de Pasco Copper and: North Amert- can, Wall Street viewed favorably @ quick r ry of twelve points in the French franc to around 4.20 cents which brought reports t the French government was coming to {ts support. Sterling held firm around $4.84 11-16, The market later showed poor re- sistance to general selling caused by Mberal. offerings for both ac: counts. These were Inspired by the stiffer renewal rate for call loans and fears that bahks would curtail accommodations to repair the deficit In Saturday's bank statement. U. 8S. Steel, Studebaker and General Motors were among the influential issues, that sold a point or more under last week's final figures, Re- newal rates on standing loans were raised to 41% per cent. The closing was strong. The ready absorption of realizing sales encour- aged a general resumption of bullish loperations in the final dealings, causing a retreat of the short in- terests all along the line, Buoy- ancy of the high priced industrials became more pronounced while many standard rails forged into new high ground under the leadership of New York Central, Southern Railway and Nickle Plate, Gains in Loose Wiles Biscult and Chrysler were extended to about 12 points aplece, Sales ap- proximated 2,200,000 shares.’* ee Cotton NEW YORK, Oct. 26.—Cotton spot quiet; middling $20.75. pesca Ld eat Hay KANBAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 26,0%)— Hay: unchanged; number 1 prairie $14.50@15.50; number 1 tmioth $19.00; choice alfajfa $23.00@24.! clover mixed ght $18.00@18.50. a Flour MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Oct. 26.— Flour unchanged; family patents $8.50@8,55 a barrel. Shipments 61,- 765 barrels, Bran $23.50@24.00. ‘ Tahra By JACKSON Y. JACOBS Central Press Foreign Correspondent PARIS, Oct. 26. — A livg corpse,” immune to pain, will soon demonstrate in the United | States “the scientific phenomena of Hast- ern Occultism” (as he calls it) that has been the sensation of the sea- son in French theaters, After walking about with knives and needleg sticking into him, he proceeds to other things. He puts himself into a cataleptic trance by swallowing his tongue. His head and feet are then laid on two trestles, the length of his body apart, and a man jumps on the human suspension bridge between them. xt a peice of granite weighing eighty-two kilograms is laid on the fakir's stomach and broken there by a workman wield- ing a pickaxe. After this the fakir comes out of his trance, with a good deal of twitching, and lies down on a board spiked with nails, while another man wa about on top of him. Other tricks (or miracles, i Ing to the way one chooses to look on them) in the fakir's repertory consist of thought transference, sending animals into cataleptic trances and mesmerizing members of the fakir's entourage who, while in a lethargic condition, answer questions of the future put by mem- bers of the audience. Seance for Spanish King. The last trick consists in being “buried alive” for a certain num- ber of minutes in a coffin, which 4 then half-filled with sand and coy- ered by a mound of sand. This fakir, Tahra Bey, sald to be an Egyptian, first attracted at- tention in Europe early this year, when talk of him filtered through from Greece. He moved on to Italy, where he gave semi-private seances, and where the police interfered with his performing the greatest fakir trick of all, which consists in being buried alive for a d. a week or a month, and being dup up still living at the end of the period. All Paris has been “fakiring" since last July. So have the French resorts, such as Deauville, that were wealthy enough to pay Tahra Bey to visit them. At the Spanish royal summer residence, San Se- bastian, he gave a seance to mem- bers of the aristocracy. -Arrangements are sald to have been made for a theater in London, After that comes New York, then other cities In the U. 8. Tahra Bey is the son of a fakir. Brought up by members of that mendicant priesthood, he was early initiated into the secrets of the pro- fession, of which he {s now giving nightly demonstrations on the stage of a Paris music hall at o rate re- proted to be $9,000 for 14 perform ances, Calls Himself a Prophet. The fakir insists that the only “Living Corpse” Feels No Pain; Coming Soon! Bey. reason he consents to appear Ta t a the stage Is to make known to larger public “the scientific phe- nomena of eastern occultism.” He represents himself as a sertous prophet and propagandist. Immunity from pain, when de sired, {s one of the privileges of fakirdom. It is supposed to be due to a control over the nerves and muscles, acquired by dint of fasting and holy exercises. Doctors who have for many years been interest- ed in the performances of | takirs and dervishes say that, thelr art is simply a species of self-hypnotism, which can be learned just as con- juring can. The doctors explain the corpse” phenomenon much ag they explain the immunity from path. When the subject has swallowed his tongue, thus shutting oxygen out of his body, he has, according “ving to this explanation, himself tnto a state of as in which all the vital tunetio: temporarily suspended, It is said that one fakir, hay! put himee’ Ls If Into a catale) ti anc in 1899 and arranged the. aged oe “me he would stay tn {t, remained buried until this year; then he was + dug up, came outsof his trance, ana slowly resumed the normal func Hons of his body. ‘This is the record as to length of burial. ‘Tahra Gey says the hero of the story cannot expect to live much more than six months after such an exercies of his spiritual or mental powers NEW YORK, Oct. quiet; electrolytic, 14% @14%c, ‘Tin, weak; spot and near 26.—Capper, spot and futures y $03.12; futures $63.12. ms Iron, steady; 1 northern 0@22.00; No. 2 northern $20.60 00; No. 2 southern $20,00@21.00, 5 1. yer Spot $9.50@9.60. ne, firm; East St. Louis spot $8.65@8.70 futures $8.60@8.65, r Antimony, spot $19.00, Tell the A¢ vert} The Tribune SPECIALIZING In Consolidated Royalty estern Exploration E. T. Williams Will be glad to furnish any information of any of these is- sues, All stocks bought ‘and sold. Blas Vucurevich, Broker 208 Consolidated Royalty Bidg. Phone 166 , — A leer—"I saw {t in ~ j

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