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Casper Star-Tribune from Casper, Wyoming • 8
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Casper Star-Tribune from Casper, Wyoming • 8

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Casper, Wyoming
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8
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TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1929 PAGE EIGHT DAILY TRIBUNE MARKETS Stocks and Grains Of and Financial News 1 LIVESTOCK SMS KILLINGS N. Y. Curb Stocks By as. E. Bennett Co.

STOCK VALUES CRUDE PRODUCTION If! WEEK-SHOWS DECREASE Oil FINI BASIS TO MAT PRICES IT AVOIDABLE New York Stocks I Last Sales I By The Associated Press Allis Chemical and Dye 265 American Bank Note 77 American Can 1221; American Foreign Power 96 American Car and Foundry 78 American Locomotive 101 American Power and Light 84 ns American Sm. and Ref. 72 American Sugar 60 American Tel. and TcL 222H American Tobacco A 199's American Tobacco 204' American Water Works 94 lS American Woolen 7 Anaconda Copper 75'i Andes Copper 33 3 i Atchison Railway 224 Atlantic Refining 38 Baldwin Locomotive 31'i Baltimore and Ohio Bethlehem Steel- 94 Calumet and Ilecla 29 Canadian Dry 66 "i Canadian Pacific 190 Central Alloy 32 Cerro de Pasco 63 'i Chicago Trices CHICAGO, Dec. 31.

UP) (U. S. Department of Agriculture) Cattle Receipts, 6,000 head; calves, supply of fed steers and year lings comparatively light; better kinds strong active; others steady; fat she stock generally steady; bulls strong; vealers weak to 50c lower; stockers and feeders steady; siaugn- ter classes steers gooa ana cnoice 15.50; 1.100- ,300 16.00; $12.50 16.25; fed yearlings good and choice, 750-950 $12.75 -to 16.25; heifers good and choice 850 lbs. down, $11.65 II 15.50; cows good, and choice (beef). $9.253 9.75; milk fed vealers good and choice all weights, $10.50 10.90.

Sheep Receipts. 10.000 head; slow, around steady; early sales fat lambs $12.75 13 00; early top, $13. feeding lambs steady: lambs good and choice 92 lbs. dostn. $12.50 13.50; ewes medium to choice 150 lbs.

down, $4.50 6.00; feeder lambs good and choice, $11.50 12.65. Omaha Quotations OMAHA, Dec. 31. UP) (U. S.

De partment of Agriculture) Cattle Receipts 5.500 head; calves, 400; fed steers and yearlings uneven; year lings and light steers fully steady; medium weights and heavy steers culpability or purcnasers cl uquor slow and weak; she stock and bulls under the present law was advo-fnllv steady- vpals weak: stocker cated today by Senator Jones of Good Prices at Gulf Mexico Reflected in Chicago of By JOHN r. BO UK HAN, (Associated Press Market Editor) CHICAGO, Dec. 31. (P) With United States wheat at the Gulf of Mexico commanding the best price basis this season, the wheat market here displayed notable strength today. The gulf basis for No.

2 hard winter wheat was quoted as equaling the price for May delivery to Uc under that delivery. Liberal chartering of vessels fcr wheat shipments overseas were reported as being made from Galveston and Houston. Wheat closed unsettled He to lc bushel higher than yesterday's finish. corn closed at ls8c net decline to ViC advance oats lc off to up and provisions unchanged to setback of 10c. Wheat Open High Low Close Dec.

Mar. 1.2614 1.28 1.32 's 1.33 1.26 1.27 1.32'i 1.33 May 1.36 July 1.36 1.37 1.37 1.36 1.37 1.36 .85 Vi Corn Dec. .6 Mar. .92 May .95 July 97 Oats-Dec 44 Mar 47 May .49 July .86 .92 .92 .95 .97 .43 .47 .49 .92 .95 .97 .43 .48 .49 .48 .55 J7 .45 .48 .49 Rye Dec 1.03 Mar 1.05' Mav 1.04 1 Lard-Dec. 9.75 Jan.

10.02 Mar 10.25 May 10.50 Bellies-Dec. Jan. 11.47 May 12.12 1.06 1.02 1.06 1.06 1.04 1.04 1.05 1.03 1.03 9.75 9.95 10.15 1040 11.37 11.45 12.C5 10.05 10.27 10.50 9.95 10.15 10.40 11.47 12.12 11.45 12.05 Cash Grains and Provisions. CHICAGO. Dec.

31. UP) Wheat No. 2 hard $1.29. Corn No. 5 mix ed 78-5 78c; No.

3 vhite 84c. Oats No. 2 white 45S45; No. 4 white 44c. Rye no sales.

Barley, quotable range 60 9 67c. Timothy seed J5.25 W6.20. Clover seeds 10.5013. Lard $9.75. Ribs $10.50.

Bellies $11.50. WYOMING OILS Quotations by Bias Vucurevlch, Broker, 209 T. and C. Building, Phone 444. 1 I BARNARD EW BOARD (Continued from Page One) the licensing of real estate brokers and salesmen as provided in the same measure which established the board.

Effective tomorrow, all real estate brokers and real estate salesmen will be required to obtain a license to conduct their business, the original fee for a license will be $15, and the annual renewal fee $10. This regulation applies to real estate brokers. The original license fee for real estate salesmen will be $5 and the annual renewal fee will be $3. Mr. Barnard is a member of the real estate firm of W.

B. and P. N. Barnard in Casper. Mr.

Fitch is chairman of the board of county commissioners of Albany county, president of the Albany County Pioneer Abstract company and is in the real estate business in Laramie. Mr. Downing conducts a real estate and insurance business In Torrington. Mr. Oldroyd said today that.

th board will hold its first meeting in Cheyenne January 6 Flashes of Life (By The Associated Tress) r.EW YORK Citv ir.no must decide whether Jack Kearns mamea or not. in an afridavit submitted in behalf of the sports promoter he avers a woman wno is buing mm is Miss Edith Angel. The woman has nresented nthnr- offM. davits in which Kearns admits she is Mrs. ivearns and refers to her as Legna Kearns (Angel reversed).

Kearns claims that a contract for payments of $500 a month was signed under duress. WASHINGTON A former hafcv of the White House is a bride. Mrs. iviartnena Harrison Williams, who lived with her parents in the White House during much of the administration of her grandfather, Benja min narnson, nas married Robert Lewis Armstrong of Providpnrp. R.

I. NEW YORK With holiday greet ings Ray Barbuti, Olympic. 400-meter champion, is receiving congratulations on being a 'benedict, a fact wnicn friends have just discovered. He was married last March to Miss Marian Sylvia Hicks, sister of Helen, me goner. WASHING ION Mrs.

Tearl Pe- den Oldfjcld, member of congress, hopes man will continue to domi nate government 100 years from now. "There are so many thines a woman fan do that a man can't," she explained. "Why not do them and let the men do what thev can?" Mrs. Oldficld has decided "not to seek re-election. NEW YORK Social life in colleges is too strenuous and too poorly organized and often results in phy-sicial breakdowns, in the opinion of Dr.

Lee Ferguson of Western Reserve university. He gave his views a the meeting of the American student health association. MADRID Alfonso and Primo know their automobiles. In different cars king and premier became entangled in traffic. Each got out.

made signals, ordered cars hither and yon and soon had affairs running smoothly much to the relief of some distressed policemen. NEW YORK Big Cossacks have big appetites. George Mosloff, who runs a cafe, had his doorman. Alexander Matzieff, six feet four, pinched for a disturbance. George said that at one sitting Alexander con sumed six plates of soup, four steaks, a dozen rolls, a nound of butter and a quart of coffee.

The rase against the former soldier of the czar was dismissed on his prom ise to keep away from the restaur ant. BALTIMORE The stito commission has tabulated the total amount watered through pari-mu ue I machines this year at rimlico, Laurel. Havre de Grace and Bowie at $54,419,686.50. BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO, Dec. 31 UP) Butter weak; receipts.

14,308 tubs; creamery extras, 37Vc; standards, 37c; extra firsts, 25Mc to firsts, seconds, 29-30c. Egges steady; reclptes, 6,640 cases; extra firsts, graded firsts. 4243c; ordinary firsts, 3841c; refrigerator extras, 38c; refriger ator ursis, aoc. Close City Service new 25 Canadian Marconi 3 Continental Oil 14 Ford Motors of Eng. Gulf Oil 138 Mountain Producers 8 Ohio Oil 71 Salt Creek Producers 10 Fokker Aircraft 13 Standard Oil Ind.

53 Standard Oil Ky 33 irans. Airway Elec. Bond and Share Shattuck Denn Int. Pete Ltd. Curtis Flying Service com 6 84 8 21 5 Adidtional Exchange Stocks Briggs Mfg.

Co. 15 Continental Shares 31 White Eagle Oil 27 American Steel Foundry 45 Brunswick Balke 19 Calumet and Helca 29 Central Alloy Steel 311 '3 fl1 Gold Dust 3934 Graham Paige 9 Indian Refining 18 Mexican Seaboard Oil 18' iviisour, K. and T. 50 Pathe com. 3 Pathe pfd.

5 Radio Keith Orpheum 20 Remington Rand 36 United Aircraft 47 United Corp. 32 Colins and Aikman 15 Burroughs Adding M. 45 Commercial Credit Trust 23 Packard Motors, new 16 Intl. Com. Eng.

5 Alleghany Corp. 24 NEW YORK, Dec. 31. UP) Closing Curb prices: Arkansas Nat. Gas.

Com. and Southern Contl. Oil Cities Service new Elec. Bond and Share Ford Motor Ltd. Gulf Oil Mountain, Producers Salt Creek Producers Standard Oil Indiana 8 3 14 26 84 11 138 8 10 54 Vacuum Oil 941 I FOREIGN EXCHANGE NEW YORK, Dec.

31. UP) Foreign exchanges steady; Great Britain in dollars, others In cents: Great Eritain demand 4.87 9-16; cables at 4.88 Vi; 60 day bills on banks at 4.83 7-16. France, demand 4.93 13-16, cables 5.23. Demands Belgium at 13.98; Germany 23.87. E'iG HORN BASIN MAN KILLED UNDER CAR BASIN, Dec.

31. UP) Sam Smith, a pioneer of the Shell coun try, was Instantly killed Sunday near his home when he was pinned beneath an automobile after it plunged down an embankment. Smith and his son were driving up a steep and icy road. Smith got out of the car to help the machine up the incline. The car plunged backward off the road and carried Smith down the cliff.

The son was not injured. LIBERTY BONDS NEW YORK. Dec. 31. LP) Lib erty bonds closed: First 4's, 101.6; fourth, 101.10.

JUDGE METZ TO OPEN Judge P. W. Metz of Basin, will open district court Thursday to hear a number of civil actions be fore Judge Bryant Cromer, head of the local court, returns from the east. No hearings have been held at the court for the past few weeks STATE ARMORY WILL BE READY JANUARY 10 With minor interior jobs nearing completion, the new $45,000 state armory for the Wyoming national guard at Fifteenth and Durbin will be ready for occupancy about Jan. 10, according to Capt.

E. E. Murane of the headquarters troop, 58th cavalry. The new structure will have facil ities for housing all departments of the guard and will be one of the finest and most complete structures of its kind in the state, It is said. HERE THURSDAY TULSA, Dec.

SI. Crude oil production in the United States registered another downward swing with a loss of 25,200 barrels in the total daily avei-asre for th week ended December 23. the 0 1 and Gas Journal said today. The total daily average out pv, i was 2.595,320 barrels compared 2,620,580 barrels for the previous week. General reductions in the c-i'f coast and southwest Texas heavy and Rocky Mountain areas were reported, with the eastern section advancing slightly.

Santa Fe Sprir-s deep drilling area in Califoriv dropped 12,000 barrels e- DENVER PRODUCE DENVER, Dec. 31. UP) Trade in the poultry division of the market at Denver Tuesday continued quiet. Receipts of eggs at Denver Tuc.rdcy were liberal and prices locked Butter was unchanged Willi cuou-tions steady. SILVER NEW YORK.

Dee. 31. W-Er silver, 45c; Mexican zbc. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS Notice is hereby given that annual meeting of the stockholder5; cf Midwest Outdoor Advert isir.s Co. a Wyoming corporation, v.ili fce h-ld at the office of the company, at 630 West Yellowstone, Casper.

counts', Wyoming, on January 11th. 19D0, 10 o'clock the forenoon, for the ff electing directors and officers rf company for the ensuing year, and such other business as nay properly come before the meeting. Dated at Casper, Wyoming, December 31st, 1929. george Mccormick, President. II.

H. DARNELL, Vice President and General Manager. JAMES WILSON, Secretary end Treasurer. Publish: Dec. 31.

1929. NOTICE ror PUBLICATION Department of the Interior U. S. LAND OFFICS at Cheycr.ne, Wyoming. December 27, 1529.

NOTICE is hereby given that Charles P. Johnson, cf 523 East Thirteenth street, Casper, who. on November 17, 1P24, made additional S. R. homestead entry, ferial No.

0389C4. for S'-, section 13, township 33 range SI Cth P. meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three-year final proof, to establish to the land above described, before Marie Har-kins, a notary public, at Casper. Wyoming, on the 10th day of February, 1930. Claimant: names as witnesses Phillip Seely.

Pete Fiores. Hill, A. Larson, all cf Carper, yo-ming. MART T. CHRISTENSEX.

Register. Publish: Dec. 31, 1929, Jan. 7, 11, 21, 28, 1930. NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS MEETING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the regular annual meeting cf the stockholders of Wyoming Trust company of Casper will bs held at the 'office of the company in the Citv of Casper, County of Natrona.

State of Wyoming, at 2:20 o'clock in the afternoon on Monday, January 13th, 1930, for the election cf a board of directors to manage the business of the corporation for the ensuing year or until such time as their successors are elected and qualified, as well as for the consideration and transaction of such other business as may come before the meeting. LEO A. DUNN, Cashier. Publish: Dec. 31.

1P29. Jan. 8. 1930- RENT A SAFE DEPOSIT BOX For your stocks bonds, insurance policies and other valuables at a cost of a trifle over one cent a day. $4.00 A FEAR AND CP WYOMING NATL BANK mi mm Bulls Conduct Demonstration in Final Session of Year tfv STANLEY W.

TKENOSIL Associated Tress Financial Editor NEW YORK. Dec. 31. The final stock market session of the jrenr tenia found the bulls making a grand posture of defiance after their reverses of the patt two months bv markir.gr up scores cf issues 2 to 20 points. The advance, wmcn was most effective in the steel, public vtilitv.

railroad and electrical shares. t--ok place on a relatively small of trading. Cash pales for the purpose of establishing income tax losses were in unusually heavy volume, estimates of the number of transactions tanging from one-fifth to one-third oT'the day's total trading. Cash trades are cleared today, making any losses taken In 191.9 incomes whereas stocks snld in the ordinary manner are not cleared until Thursday, bringing them within the new calendar year. The dav's business news threw lit'le light on the trend cf buruness.

Iron Ace in its weekly review, pointed cut" that producers find encouragement in the undiminished demand of the railroads, the structural tteel industry and the farm manufacturers, and fresh evidence rtren-th tn tn.e scrap t-rtrr pt forth that lat seven oi mu- ingot output at between 40 and frnt of raoarity, compared th S3 per cent, a year aco. but im- i Irp.) fmd nrodue- current wcck. r. i at 55 to 60 per cen- at CO per cciv at Cr ij-- per cent at Fitbbmg.i. in the val- aicago and Midland Steel Piociurts Pc" was the spectacular individual in today's market, soaring points.

Philadelphia company ri un 12-L. Western Union 10 r.enrral Electric 8 and Columbian Carbon. Detroit Edison. American rvWworlcs. Air Reduction.

Auburn r-r1 T. I. Case, Mien- auw. a. ii cm -an Steel and Auiea to 7 points higher.

Among the rUnv stocks to advance 4 points or Republic Steel, Westmg- ie Electric, Salmons company, vcluaon Canadian Pacific and Jer-central. United Eitates Steel com-rVon. which sold down to la6- to V-l recent reaction, crossed 1.0 for "rataot more thi.n 3 pomg and trm ran Into some profit taku. Coppers and oils were rather slug- Call money "newd unchanged at 6 rer cent with ind.ca ion that the rate would be mrmtamed Wall Street is looking, forward to a distention of mo than one billion Snars in dividend and interest payments next month. The closing tone as strong.

Total gS approximated 2.700000 shares. MONEY NITW YORK. Dec. 3 Call money steady, six i er cent a day. time loans steady, 20 days 4.5, CO-90 days 4 55; 4-6 months 4 prime commercail paper fcankers acceptances unchanged.

I FLAX DULUTII, Dec. Close flax en tracK -j May $3.14. NEW YORK. BONDS nttw YORK. Dec.

30. UP) rne following are the closing quotations en bonds at tne JNew lors. slui-a. change today: U. S.

Liberty Bonds First 4S 101.6 mirth 4S 101.11 Foreirn Bonds Argentine 6s, 60. Sept 94 Belgium 6-. 43 r-annria 5s. 52 ---102 I Chile 6s, 60 90 Cuba 5s, 53 1001 Germany 7s, 49 106': I Italy 7s, 51 93- Japan 6s, 54 101? Norway 6s, 44 102 Domestic Corporations American Smelting 5s 100 American Chain 6s 96 American Sugar Rs 103 American T. and T.

Cvt. 4s.l37 Bethlehem Steel 6 A 104 Cal Pet 5s 98 hlle Conner 5s Ftsk Rubber 8s -76', General Motors Accept. 6s 100 Goodrich 6s 105 Goodvear 5s 911 Humble O. and R. 5s.

37 100 International Match 5s, 47 97 t-i3gett and Meyers 5s 100 Market Street Railway 7s 92' Montana Power bs 100 Northern Ohio T. and L. 5s 99 Pacific Gas and Elecetrlc 5s. 100 Faclfic T. and T.

5s 103 Tennessee Electric Power 6s .105 United Drug 5s. 53 94 Utah Power and Light 5s 87 Wilson and Co. First 6s 100 Youngstown S. md T. 6s 101 Railways Atchison 4s 93 99 IB.

pnd O. Cvt. 4s Canadian Facific Debt. 4s 84 C. and N.

W. 4s 95 Cuba Railway 30 Great Northern 7s 110 Missouri Pacific 4s Northern Pacific Cs Northern Pacific 5s Union Pacific First 4s 75 112 104 93 Curb Close Electric Bond and Share 82 Gulf Oil 133 Hudson Bay S. and M. 8 Newmont Mines 100 Oil oi Indiana sji Vacumm Oil 84 Cities service, new Cis Service, pfd. 25; 888 From Fatre One).

most nrominent camoaimers asSerted that the faults of prohibi- tion enforcement lay with those charged with making the law effec tive and that with the present personnel "from top to bottom" nothing couldbe done. Later he declared that saloons ere running wide open in the jur isdiction of "district attorney after district attorney" and charged that a "scandal" exists in the administration of the alcohol permit sys tem. The last two assertions have "-uauu. ator Borah reviewed the situation with President Hoover at a lengthy luncheon conference but what was said was not revealed, although the senator made it clear that his posi tion had not been changed. TEST OF BUYERS' CITLPAEILITY ASKED.

WASHINGTON, Dec. 31. OP) A test before the supreme court of the Washington, Republican dry leader, connection with the legislation now pending to make purchasers equally guilty with bootleggers. Senator Jones withheld comment his views on such legislation proposed by Senator Sheppard, Demo- crat, Texas, pending final action by the courts. He said conflicting de cisions on this issue have been ren- dered in the federal district courts an(j exDrcssed the hope the depart- ment of justice would press for a SuDrcnie court decision GUARDSMEN STATE LIQUOR, CLAIM NEW LONDON, Dec.

31 UP) Seven coast guardsmen were under arrest and several others were on report today with an in quiry being made into the theft of liquor by guardsmen from the Flor-Del-Mar. a rum runner seized Saturday night with 4,000 cases aboard. The investigation into the theft was ordered by Captain L. T. Chalk er, chief of staff, after a rooming house brawl in which a sailor at tached to the submarine base and a guardsman were beaten.

The seven guardsmen were arrested by coast guard officials. They face court martial. xhe Flor-Del-Mar was unloaded Sunday night, having been towed to the port here earlier the day Many cases of liquor had been broken on the boat because of an explosion, and thefts were easy. OFFICER DIES OF WOUNDS IN BATTLE COLUMBUS, Dec. 31.

UP) -Wounded during an exchange of shots between two parties of dry raiders, each of whom believed the other to be monshiners, John Crawford, a deputy constable, died here early today as officials con tinued an investigation of the af fair. Ora Folk, a deputy sheriff, wounded in the left lung and head is recovering in a hospital. The shoting occurred Simday night at the mouth of an abandon ed coal mine five miles north of Columbus. Both groups of officers were seeking a still believed oper ating in the mine. CHICAGO-CLEVELAND FLIGHT COMPLETED IN HOUR AND HALF CHICAGO, Dec.

31 -(A3) Chicago hour and a to Cleveland in an half. The record was set up yesterday by a tri-motored Fokker plane on the Universal Air line, traveling at an average of 203 miles an hour and carrying 12 passengers and two pilots. Pilots Ray Fortner and Garnett Caldwell, left the Municipal airport at 4 p. and dropped down on the Cleveland airport 326 miles away at 5:37 p. m.

It was the fastest trip on record between the cities and one of the fastest flights turn- cc ln Dy a commercial liner on a regularly scneauiea ingnt I POTATOES CHICAGO, Dec. 31. UP) (u. Department of Agriculture) Pota toes Receipts, 111 cars; on tracs, 239; total U. S.

shipments, 657 cars; trading very slow; market barely steady; Wisconsin sacked round whites. $2.452.60. No other sales reported. GASOLINE 'ALLEY WE'LL WATCH THE OLD near. OUT RIGHT HERE, PHNLH9.

THIS IS BETTER THAN NAAKlKlG WHOOPEE AT A ABE RET. ZXL MLJH fM and feeder steers scarce; firm; fed steers and 1,198 lb. weights, mixed year lings 900 $13 50; 1,000 lb. weights. $14.00: 1,130 lb.

kinds, 50; heifers, beef cows all cutters. $5.005 6.23; medium bulls. $7,755 8.25; practic- al veal top. $12 50: stocker and feed- cr steers, $10.005 11.00. Hogs Receipts, 13,000 head; shipping demand broad at 10c low- er prices; early top, with trt -ion 1 V.

i 1 i iu.i., icw nu- iau i.uuy.iu; pacsing suws. $8.00 5 8.25; feeder pigs. $7.50 5 8.00. Sheep Receipts. 9.000 head; lambs opening 15-25c lower; sheep and feeders steady; early sales fed wooled lambs to packers, $12.50 12.60; ewe top, good grade feeding lambs, $12.50.

Sioux City Prices SIOUX CITY, Dec. 31. UP) (U. S. Department of Agriculture) Cattle Receipts 2.000 head; calves 100; market Beef steers and year lings steady to strong; she stock and veals firm; bulls and stockers and feeders strong; choice 1,000 lb.

yearlings, $14.75: few medium weight beeves, several loads 1.310-1.375 lb. bullocks, bulk grain feds. $12.00 down; short fed heifers. down; bulk cows, $6.75 5 8.25; most medium bulls, oooo; meaium to gooa siocsers and feeders mostly $11.00 down. Sheep Receipts 500 head; mar ket opening fat lambs bids fully 25c lower, $1250 bid freely for de sirable fed kinds.

Denver Market DENVER, Dec. 31. UP) (U. S. Department of Agriculture) Cat tie Receipts, 700 head; calves, 65; run includes six loads billed through to Nebraska and two cars direct to packers; slow on moderate demand; steady; beef cows, in between heifers, extreme top veals, stock steers, 10.75; stock calves, feeder cows, own.

Hogs Receipts 1500 head; three loads direct to California; fairly active; stfadv to 10c lower: bulk cutter, 200-260 $9.00 5 9.40; ex treme top, $9.50 on few 180-250 several bunches held higher; few light lights. $9.00 5 9.15; packing sows. $7.50 5 8 00; stock pigs, 25c higher. Sheep Receipts 25 head; few fat native lambs steady at other prices quoted higher, nominally. FLOUR I MINEAPOLIS, Dec.

31. OP) Flour unchanged. Shipments, 48, 203. Bran, $27.005 27.50. -3 1 CRUDE MARKET I Salt Crees.

29 to 29.9 30 to 305 31 to 31.9 32 to 32.9 33 to 33.9 .81.10 1.15 150 1.25 1.30 34 to 34.9 1.35 35 to 35.9 36 to 36.9 37 and over 1.40 IjU 13C Other CTeTOs. Grass Creek Dip, Muddy Lance Creek Rock Creek Grey bull -Elk Basin $1.65 1.43 1.68 1.40 .1.65 1.651 Torchlight .1.65 51. I VJOULD FELLOWS BUT PROMISED THE UTTLE VMiPG WE'D HAVE A QLWST TIME AT HOME. 1 1 1 in of 1 1 Bid Asfc Central Pipeline .40 .50 E. T.

Williams .05 .07 Bessemer .04 .05 Chappell Oil .01 .02 Kinney Coastal .12 .14 Buck Creek .02 .03 Jupiter Oil .02 .03 Elkhorn .03 .04 Domino .01 .02 Argo Oil 1.15 1.25 Burke Oil .10 .12 Ficardy .00 .001 Merrico Royalty .04 .05 Riverton Pete 2.75 3.25 Gates Oil .04 .06 Preston Oil per 1,000. .50 1.00 Boston Wyoming .23 .30 Mackinnie O. and D. .06 .08 Humphrey Oil 5.00 7.00 Johnson Ranch Roy. 25 .40 Purple Sage .12 .15 Holly Oil 4.00 5 00 Holy Development .40 .10 Rock Creek .35 .45 Oregon Bas.

O. and G. .08 .10 Wyo. Gold and Copper .75 .85 Western Mines. Inc .85 .95 Mineral Royalty .60 .70 Golden Dome .25 .30 Mountain Dev.

100.00 105.00 Chesapeake and Ohio 202 Chicago, St. Paul pfd. 43 Chicago and Northwestern 85 Chicago, R. I. and Pacific 114' i Colorado Fuel 36 Ts Chrysler Corporation 36 1 a Colorado Gas and Electric 75 Coca Cola 1331 Commonwealth Southern 134 Commercial Solvent 31' i Continental Shares 31 Continental Can 51; Consolidated Gas 1001 Continental Motors 6' Continental Oil 23 Corn Products Crucible Steel 90- Curtiss and Wright 7U Drugs Inc.

78 5i Du Pont de Nemours 117 Eastman Kodak 177'i Electric Power and Light 52 Eng. Public Service 40 3i Erie Railroad 561i Freeport Texas 63 General Public Service 35TS Granby Copper 53 Great Northern pfd. 95 Great North. Iron Ore ctfs 20 Graet Western Sugar 31 Hudson Motors 58ti SECOND ADD 1 RC Hupmobile Motors 21 Illinois Central 129'i Independent Oil and Gas 22 'i Int. Int.

Int. Int. Int. Int. Business Machine 67 Harvester 80 Mer.

Marine 25 Nickel 32 Tel. and Tel 74 Kansas City Southern 81 Kelly Springfield 3 Kennecott Copper 58 Lehigh Valley 74 Liggett and Myers 98 Lorillard Tobacco 16 Louisville and Nashville 132 Louisville Gas and Electric 40 Mack Truck 70 Magma Copper 46 Miami Copper 23 Midcontinent Petroleum 27 Midland Steel 175 Missouri Pacific 87 Montgomery Ward 43 Nash Motors 53 National Biscuit 179 Nevada Copper 29 New York Central 170 N. Y. N. H.

and Hartford 111 Norfolk and Western 225 North American 87 Northern Pacific 84 Otis Elevator 275 Pacific Gas and Electric 59H Packard Motors 16 Pan American Petroleum 59 Paramount Famous Lasky 51 Penick and Ford 29 ennsylvania Railway 74 Pere Marquette 1G0 Phillips Petroleum 33 Radio Corporation 44 Reading Railway 123 Republic Iron and Steel 76 43 89 24 Reynolds Tobacco Sears Roebuck binclalr Cons. bouthern California Edison 57 Southern Pacific Southern Railway i3g ocanaara Brands 27 Standard Oil California III" 61 Standard Oil New Jersey 66 acanaara oil New York 33 Stewart Warner hm; j.i ciuutuaner corp. 43 Texas Gulf Sulphur 541 Texas Corporation 5514 Texas Pacific u9v Timken Bearing 77 Tobacco Products 2 Union Carbide 79 Uuion Pacific 315 United Fruit I United Gas and Elec. 3311 U. S.

Industrial Alcohol 136 U. S. Rubber U. S. steel 17i Vandium cnu Wabash 53 Warner Brothers 132 Western Union 19714 Westinghouse Air Bk.

44 Westinghouse Electric 1441 White Sewing Willys Overland 714 Woolworth 70 100 1HRESTS NUDE BT, POLICE LAST 30 DAYS Over 100 arrests were made dur ing the first 30 days of December by the Casper police department, according to a report Issued today. A total of $1,582 were assessed to 102 persons during the month, but only $1,112 have been collected from the assessed fines so far, it was an nounced. The charges were based by violation of traffic ordinances and others including larceny, drunk enness, disturbance and illegal pos session of liquor. METALS NEW YORK, Dec. 31.

UP) Copper quiet, electrolytic spot and future 18c. Iron quiet, unchanged. Tin steady, spot and nearby future $40.25. Lead steady, spot New York East St Louis $6.10, Zinc quiet. East St.

Louis spot and future $5.45, Antimony $8-50, a a 4 COFFEE NEW YORK, Dec. 31. UP) Coffee spot steady, demand quiet, Rio No. 7 9c; Santos No. 4 14c.

Rio futures closed firm, approximated sales 18.000 bags; January March May July September Santos futures are firm; approximate sales 7,008 bags; January 12.35; March $11.35: May July September $10.33. POULTRY CHICAGO, Dec. 31. UP) Poultry alive steady; receipts, 2 cars; fowls, 26c; springs. 21c; roosters, 17c; turkeys, 21-24c; ducks, 18c; geese, 17c.

fv rv. SEASON'S GREETINGS yr aw come on, there's WALT, A MEW ONLNOU5 I VJOUU BE DEAD ftU KNOW. DUTCH. I mm yPilF fr Mv- 0 mHhm kTa i i.

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